What Is God? Lecturer Puts Forth Definition T h e Da^ T exan *Fit$f C ollege Daily In the South' I Vol. 61 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1962 Six Pages Today No. MI B y B I L L E A S O X T exan S ta ff W r ite r What is God? The discoverer and founder of Christian Science, M ary Baker Eddy, gives a definition •v'hich was cited Monday night by lecturer Charles M . Carr, Carr, a member of the Board of Ix;cturesiiip of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, of Boston, Mass., quoted from Mrs. Ed d y’s book, “ Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures:’' “ God is infinite, the only Life, substance. Spirit, or Soul, the only intelligence of the universe, including man . . . He is divine Principle, Love, the univer­ sal cause, the only creator, and there is no other self-existence.” The lecture, .sponsored by the Christian Science Organization at The University of Texas, was given before an audience of over IOO per­ sons gathered in the Texas Union main auditorium. C arr w’as intro­ duced by Miss Ju d y Rowland, an officer in the U T student group. In his lecture entitled “ C!1iristian Science and Ever>’day Livin g ,” inventions “ M aterial C arr said, and advances alone have not led mankind to find better ways to lasting happiness, peace, an un­ derstanding of one another or even unfailing health. Much less have they given the an.swer to life ’s pur­ pose or to life’s real meaning.” that I s S p irit, C arr continued, “ Christian Sci­ ence is giving m any people satis­ fying answers to these challeng­ ing questions by encouraging them to know there’s a better w ay to solve life’s problems than the usual m aterial, human ap­ proach, which is predicated on the .supposed reality of matter, or ma­ teriality. That w ay is through a spiritual understanding of God and His creation — man and the uni­ verse.” The t a l l sp eaker explained, ♦'Christian Scie n ce teaches that God is in fin ite ; therefore H e Is AU. Be cau se H e Is A ll, H e Is One. Im m a te ria l, And GcmI without lim itatJon. T his one God can have only one effect, and this efftv’t — m an and the uni- \erse — m ust be entirely like God, therefore m ust i>e as good, a s |>erfect, as sp iritu al, aa inteill* gent as the cause that created th e m .” He referred fi'equently during the talk to the Bible and the w rit­ ings of M ary Baker Eddy. He as­ serted that what is needed is more thought devoted to spiritual real­ ity and less time to m aterial un- reabty. “ We need to know that true prayer is the realization of the absolute Truth, the absolute perfection of God and His crea­ tion. and of the utter nothingness of m atter, or m ortality.” Several times during the talk, C arr referred to healings tlirough the Christian Science religion, He explained, "The healings of Chris­ tian Science attest the verity of its teaching*!. W itli consecrated practice its Science becomes an art Inspired by divine Love. “ Its w h o l e phUoeophy, Its w o rld w ide a c tiv itie s , a re a ll b as­ ed on th© p ra c tic a l proofs of the Scie n ce of G o d ’s a lln e ss; that Is that God, or good, and H is c r e a ­ tion fill a ll space, and that in this e%er presenc© e vil, or m a t­ te r, has no place. T his S cien ce is provab le bv an yon e.” C arr Is from M ontclair, N, J. He attended M.T.T, and later left the business world to devote full time to the study and practice of Christian Science. He w'as for ten years on the Christian Science Committee on Publication for the State of New Jersey, and has been on tour as a lecturer througlt most of the United States. * Texan Ranks 3rd In Its Coverage Of World News A w ard Presented To Hoyt Purvis In N ew York City Th© D aily Texan has received the third place national award for World News Reporting and Inter­ pretation among daily s t u d e n t newspapers. The award was presented to E d i­ tor Hoyt Purvis in New York Sun- I day In conjunction with the Col­ lege Editors Conference, sponsored by th© Overseas Press Club and the National Student Association, This Is the fir*-.t time the Texan has w^on an award in this e*>mpeti- tion, although the paper has re­ In other national ceived honors competitions, and currently ranks as one of three all-American col- : legiate dailies. The award c a rlie , with it a $.50 cash prize from the Reader’s D i­ gest Foundation. Sunday afternoon P u r is and editors of four other prize-winning papers were special guests on C BS’ nationally te le vise College Bowl. First place winner among col­ lege dailies was the University of Colorado D ally. The Michigan D aily placed second. The top prize In the non-daily competition w'cnt to the Stephens Life, f r o m Stephens College In Missouri. Runner-up was the New' Mexico University I.^ho. T h i r d prize went to tile Davidson iN . C.T College Davidsonian. Editor Purvis .said. “ We are very pleased to have done so well in tough and meaningful competition. Keeping students Informed about important International happenings is an essential task of the con­ temporary college press. Of course w e're always trying to retain top campus coverage, too, a^d trcst of the other editors feel we am doing a good job in this category.” Over 200 collegiate editors at­ tended the four-day conference in New York. TTiey heai-d top speak­ ers on International affairs and participated In seminars and clin­ ics on current world problems. Among the speakers or panel members In the conference were Sargent Shriver, director of the Peace Corps; Sen. Wayne Morse, |D-Ore., Just back from Punta del Este; Under Secretary of State .Roger Tubby; E a rl Cocke of the W o rld Bank; and famous newsmen such as Jam es Wechsler, Robert ;Considine, Harrison Salisbury, W il­ liam Lawrence. Tad Szulc. Kath- I leen McLaughlin, and Charles Fer- gu.son. Included on Iii© program was a visit to th® United Nations and j program on the role of the United i States in the UN. Specific ccMicen- : tration was given to UN activities j in the Congo. M any of the editors, including i Purvis, traveled to New York with : the help of scholarships made * available by the Reader’s Digest ' Foundation. in US M usf Toughen Policy, States Senator Tov/er in d e p e n d e n c e :, Kan. (iP 'The | Ignited States must act tough in | dealing international affairs, i Sen. Joiin G. Tower, R-Tex , de- ' | dared Monday night. “ I don’t think that Am erican pol-1 icy should be shaped on a nebulous j thing called world opinion,” Tower I told an annual Lincoln Day Dinner crowd. Rusk Rejects K's Bid For Summit Meeting B y T h e A.ssociated Pre.ss W ASHINGTON^— Secretary of State Dean Rusk rejected Monday night Soviet Prem ier Khrushchev’s bid to open the forthcoming disarmament conference with an 18-nation sum­ mit meeting. Bu t he left the way open to a top-level gather­ ing later. Rusk said also he did not think the Soviet release of American U2 pilot BYancis Gary Powers "moves us very far in the great issues that divide the Communist and the free world." The W hite House dixlosed earlier that President Ken­ nedy and British Prim e Minister Harold Macm illan pro­ posed last week to Khru.shchev that the three keep their representatives at t h e Geneva disarmament negotiations "until concrete results hav’e been obtained, however long this m ay take." This 18-nation scs.-^ion opens March l l and is to report its recommendations to the United Nations by June I. It was hinted a summit meeting might come b e f o r e that date. Speaking on a recorded radio interview program, Rusk underscored unofficial word on reaction to the latest Khru.shchev proposal like this: "W e believe that what is now called for is some systematic, seriou.s, hard and deter- 'mined and quiet negotiation to translate these agreed gen­ eral di.sarmament principles which have been endorsed by the UTs’ General Assembly into reality and fact. "And we do not believe that this kind of negotiation can hest be canned on at a heads of government level because, among other thing.s, there are problems of time and there are problems of commitment. "B u t these ought to be explored first through other channels with a possibility that heads of government may be able then to remove any remaining points of difference and put their final conclusions into operation. ' k ★ "Summ it meetings ought to l)e handled with considerable care and advance preparation— it is important that when the summit meets that it be successful. "There are considerable dangers and disadvantages if a summit meets and ends in disagreement, and an increase in tension." Ru;;k said of the Powers release: " It is of some advantage to get iinneccs.^ary irritations out of the way, and when peo­ ple are l)eing held in each other’s country, this is an irrita ­ tion that we could do without. "B u t I would not draw any conclusions from this return of Mr. Powers with respect to questions like Berlin and South­ Like to Go to Europe? Official for Tour Here A representative of Southwest-' em Collegiate Tours w ill be in Tex­ as Union 340 at 4 p m. Tuesday to confer with students Interest-, ed In taking one of the two Union- i ' sponsored tours of Europe. Miss Shirley Bird. Union pro­ gram director and University co-; ordinator for the tours, said that any shident who is considering the pos?*J)iIity of a jburopean tom' in the summer Is Invited. Tile tours, now In their third j year under Texas Union sponsor­ ship, were designed exclusively for the students at eight South­ western campu.ses, East Texas State College, Lam ar State College of Technology, Sam Houston State Teachers College, Southern Meth­ odist University, Tarleton State College, Texas Technological Col­ lege, Oklahoma University, and The University of Texas. Fo r 111© student with most of his summer available, there Is a 66- Frantz to Be Honored A t 'Authors' Evening' Dr. Joe B . Frantz, chairman of the Department of History, w ill be honored at the Altrusa Club’s "A n Evening with the Authors ’ Tues­ day at 8 p.m. in the Crystal B a ll­ room of the Dri.skill Hotel. I Dr. Frantz w ill shar® honor* ■ with M n . Cordia Sloan Duke, : whose reminiscences of ranch life : on the XTT Ranch form the sub-1 I ject of their book, “ 6,000 Miles of; : Fence.” The two co-authors W'ere , previously honored at the Theta | Sigma Phi W riters Roundup last I fall. Mrs. Duke, now 85, was the wife of Robert E . Lee Duke, divi- ! sion manager of the famous ranch, Dr. lYantz holds three degrees from the University—bachelor of journalism, master of arts, and | doctor of philosophy. While doing ' I undergraduate work, he was night ; ; editor of The D aily Texan. In i ; ho was national vice-president of I I Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history ! society. I In 1951 D r. Frantz received the j Texas Institute of I.»etters award j for the best Texas book of the year—“ G ail Borden, Dairym an to I a Nation.” He is author of “ Busi- ; ne.ss History Is Good Business,” } ; and has co-authored "Th© Am eri-; I can Cowlx>y: The M^ih and the | ; Reality.” He was recipient in 1957 I of the Lemuel Scarbrough Faculty ! Award for excellence in teaching. At the annual fund-raising bene­ fit Tue.sday everting, Mrs. Homer Garrison w ill be emcee. An auto­ graph party w ill follow. Committee To Discuss B-Tax, Texan The Campus Affairs Com­ mittee of the Student As.sem- bly w ill meet Tuesday at 4 p.m. in Texas Union 319. The portion of the meeting from 5 to 6 p.m. w ill be open lo tho public, at which time a discussion on the blanket tax and its relationship to the Texan w ill be held. E d ito r ’© note: See page t for e d ito rial dealing w ith B lan k e t T a x appropriations for the D a lly Texan and comment© on action© of pre. vlous Student A ssem bly com . mute© m eeting*. day tour through 14 countries. In­ cluding Scandinavia. The t o u r price of $1,395 includes steamship transportation to Europe and trav­ el back to the States, parties with foreign students in seven countries, accommodations in private homes in Germany and Switzerland, an optiwial visit to Berlin at no extra cost, plus all hotels, transporta­ tion, tours, and services of a trxir director and multi-lingual courier. Fo r the summer school student and the student with less vacation time, there is a 35-day tour of sev­ en countries. Round trip first-class jet fare is included in the tour price of $995, and the student par­ ties and social events of the long­ er tour ar® available for a $20 supplement. Extensions a r e av ailable to Greece from the longer tour and to Spain and Ireland for both tours. Students not able to attend the meeting m ay contact Miss Bird at Texas Union 342 for full informa­ tion and an explanatory travel folder. “ Steamship space Is very lim it­ ed and we have been informed that many re.servaticwis already are being made,” Miss Bird said. “ We w’ould like to have a ll interested students attend the meeting so that we m ay have as large a group from Texas as we have had in the past two years.” Assembly Slates Special Session | A special session of the Student j As.sembly w ill be held Wednesday j at 6:30 p.m. Its purpose is to intixxiuce new | legislation, submit nominations for I appointments, and to debate and ; possibly vote on legislation con­ cerning Te.xas S t u d e n t Publica-! lions, Inc.*, according to Maurice i Olian, president of the Students’ , Association. -east Asia." K e n n e d y and Macmillan ; told the Soviet Prem ier that ■ because the arms race threat- ;ened to "erupt in a disaster" : for all, the t h r e e of them should "accept a personal re­ sponsibility” for guiding their i representatives at the 18-na- lion Geneva p a r l e y opening March 14. They proposed that the conference start off at the foreign ministers’ level. It was this Kennedy-Maemillan message, dated Feb. 7 and made public by the White House Mon- day to which Khrushchev respcsnd- ed Sunday. He made the counter­ proposal that th® Geneva parley begin with a heads-of-state meet­ ing for all 18 nations. Kennedy and Secretary of Stat# Rusk were busy shaping a formal reply. ★ ★ Th® British ambassador. David Ormsby Gore, Indicated the line of the Western response after a 20-minute session with Rusk. Ormsby Gore said, “ We don’t think it is suitable that the heads of gov’ernment start the conversa­ tion” at Geneva. Whether a sum­ mit meeting would be w'orthwhil® “ at a later date’* is a m atter to be kept open, he said. So far East-West disarmament talks have been marked by failure. An attendance of 18 government heads at one meeting is regarded here as more conducive to propa­ ganda speech-making than serious negotiating on a complicated ques­ tion like disarmament. Not ruled out, however, was a possibility that enough progress could be made at a lower level to justify summit attendance before Juno I, when the Geneva group is to report to the United Nations. Khrushchev’s c o u n terprcposal was regarded by some U S author­ ities as a propaganda move in­ tended to persuade w w ld opinion of the Krem lin’s desire for dis­ armament and to focus blame on the West if the Geneva conference does not pan out. Oscar Williams To Read Poetry Oscar Williams, American poet and antlwlogist, w ill speak cm “ Poetry and Its Relation to Real­ ity” Tuesday at 4 p.m. in English Building 203. On Wednesday at 4 p.m. he w ill read and comment on his own poems in the Humani­ ties Re.search C e n t e r Library, fourth floor, main building. During his visit hero, William s w ill present to the University a 11 collection of manuscripts, fii-st ed- I itions, autographed b illo n s and letters of George Barker, British poet who visited the University in 1959, The collection also includes a portrait of Barker. W illiam s i.s editor of “ The Pock- I et Book of Mcxlera Verse,” “ A Lit- ijtle Treasury of Modem Poetry.” “ Immortal Poems of the English Language,” and “ The New Pocket I; Anthology of American Verse.” His anthologies are used in many col­ leges and universities. Round-Up Revue Tryouts To Continue in ‘A ’ •Hall Tryouts for Round-Up Revue have been extended for another night. Prospective show members ar® invited in “ A " H all from 7 to IO p.m. Tuesday, la id director Norris Domiogut. to audition Study Break, in the English Building — Photo by Draddy M ike Levy, freshman business adm inistration major, takes a quick break from studying in tho English Building M o n d a y night. The building is open M o n d a y s through Thursdays from 7 to IO p.m. for studying, and provides o quiet haven for ab o u t .ISO students per week, says supervisor M o rris M assey. Prominently displayed are the "gro u n d rules" for the use o f the em pty classrooms: "n o smok­ ing, no Cokes, and no loud noise." Th® facilities are provided by the Dean o f Student U fe S ta ff throughout the semester. C H A R L E S M . C A R R "Christian Science and Everyday Living" —P hoto by I'raddy Powers Denies Hatred of U S By People in Other Countries B y C H A R M A A N E .M A R SH Issue News E d ito r ’The Russians have created a false picture and Am erican news­ paper readers probably think the people In the other countries hate the United States, Joshua Powers, international publishers representa­ tive, said Monday. “ This Is not true,” Powers said. “ Certain sectors In some foreign countries liave been organized against us, but tiiey are L r from Including the m ajority of the peo­ ple.” Powers called the Russians the most persistent enemy of freedom In Am erica. He said that while the enemy ha.s made progress, es­ pecially among the young, this ha.s not become fixed or ma.ssive yet. In an In fo rm a l question and an iiw er perioa w a s l»rought h I m i u I through an orgaiiiTallon set up by the the K usslans In M exico in Powers explained the organiza­ tion as being somewhat like a pn institutions to review, revise, strengthen theii offerings to keep pace with the advancing frontiers of knowl­ edge,” Dr. Green pointed out. and As for a closer relation and working activities among the col­ leges, D r, Green complimented the efforts of B. W . Musgraves of the Texas Education Agency. “ We need this kind of open com­ munication and joint planning, and I think Mr. Musgraves’ depart­ ment has taken giant strides in the research and coordination activi­ ties,” he said. T h e T e x a n Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1962 Six Pages Today N o . I l l ‘Firsf Co liege Daily in the So uth" ejects K s Bid Rusk For Summit M eeting f W A S H IN O T O N- B y 't he A ssociated P ress mined and quiet negotiation to tran slate these agreed gen- -S ecretary o? S tate Dean R usk rejected eral disarm am ent principles w hich have been endorsed by M onday night Soviet P rem ier K hrushchev’s bid to open th e ; the UN General Assembly into reality and fact, “ And we do not believe th a t this kind of negotiation can forthcom ing disarm am ent conference with an 18-n ation sum- I m it m eeting. B u t he left the w ay open to a top-level g a th e r-1 best be carried on a t a heads of governm ent level because, am ong other things, there a re problems of tim e and th ere mg later. Rusk said also he did not think the Soviet release of are problems of com m itm ent. “B u t these ought to be explored first through other A m erican U2 pilot F ran cis Gary Pow ers “ moves us very far in th e g re a t issues th a t divide the Communist and the free | channels with a possibility th a t heads of governm ent m ay be able then to remove any rem aining points of difference world.'* T he W hite House disclosed earlier th at P resid en t Ken- and put their final e x clu sio n s into operation, nedy and British Prim e M inister H arold M acm illan pro- j posed last week to Khrushchev th a t the th ree keep their representatives a t “until con crete results have been obtained, h ow ever long sum mit meets th a t it be successful. this m ay take.*’ “ Summit meetings ought to be handled with considerable t h e Geneva disarm am ent negotiations ‘ care and advance preparation— it is im portant th a t when the “T here are considerable dangers and disadvantages if a This 18-nation session opens M arch 14 and is to report summit meets and ends in disagreem ent, and an increase in ^ ★ its recom m endations to the United N ations by Ju n e I. It tension.’’ was hinted a sum m it meeting m ight come b e f o r e that date. Rusk said of the Powers release: “ It is of some advantage to get unnecessary' irritations out of the way, and when peo- Speaking on a recorded radio interview p ro gram , Rusk pie a re being held in each o th e r’s country, this is an irrita - What Is God? Lecturer Puts Forth Definition By B U X EASON Texan Staff W riter What is God? Tile discoverer and founder of Christian Science, Mary B ak er Eddy, gives a definition which was cited Monday night by lecturer Charles M. C arr. C arr, a m em ber of the Board of le ctu re sh ip of the F irst Church of Christ, Scientist, of Boston, Mass., from Mrs. Eddy’s book, quoted “ Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures “ God is infinite, the only Life, substance, Spirit, or Soul, the only intelligence of the universe, including man divine Principle, Love, the univer­ sal cause, the only creator, and there is no other self-existence.’’ He is ! and advances alone have not led mankind to find better ways to lasting happiness, peace, an un- Vol. 6 ! dcrstanding of one another or even I ------------ unfailing health. Much less have they given the answer to life’s pur­ pose or to life’s real m eaning.” . The lecture, sponsored by the Christian Science Organization at The University of Texas, was given C arr continued, “ Christian Sci- before an audience of over IOO per- sons gathered in the T exas Union I ence is giving many people satis- tying answers to these challeng main auditorium. C arr was intro­ ing questions by encouraging diem i duced by Miss Judy Rowland, an to know th ere’s a better officer in the UT student group. way to solve life’s problems than the usual m aterial, human ap­ proach, which is predicated on the supposed reality of m atter, or ma- j teriality. That vvay is through a spiritual understanding of God and I His creation *— man and the uni- { v erse.” The In his lecture entitled “ Christian Science and Everyday Living,” inventions C arr said, “M aterial that Texan Ranks 3rd In Its Coverage Of World News A w a r d Presented To Hoyt Purvis In N e w York City The Daily Texan has received the third place national award for World News Reporting and In ter­ pretation among daily s t u d e n t newspapers. The award was presented to Edi­ tor Hoyt Purvis in New York Sun­ day In conjunction with the Col- teaches t a l l speaker explained, that “ Christian Science God is Infinite; therefore Ile Is All. Because Ile Is All, He Is One. And God im m aterial, Is Spirit, without limitation. This one God can have only one effect, and this effect — man and the uni­ verse — must be entirely like God, therefore must be as good, as perfect, as spiritual, as intelli­ gent a * the cause that created frequently during * He” referred lf*ge Editors Conference, sponsored the talk to the Bible and the writ- by th* Overseas P ress Club and ings of Mary B aker Eddy. He as- the National Student Association, {% the first Ume the Texan sorted that what is needed is more . , „ , thought devoted to spiritual real- ity and less time to m aterial un- reality. true prayer is the realization of J ceived honors the absolute Truth, the absolute perfection of God and His crea­ tion, and of the utter nothingness of m atter, or m ortality.” as won an avvard !r» bus competi- “ We need to know that hon, although the paper has re- in other national competitions, and currently ranks as one of three all-American col­ legiate dailies. ^ , Several tim es during the talk, C arr referred to healings through The award carries with it a $50 cash prize from the R ead er’s Di­ teachings tian Science "attest1 its With p ractice art Inspired by divine Love. its Science becom es an v erity 1 of j Sunday consecrated ILL?™ °vv ° ? r papers were special guests on C BS' nationally televised College Bowl. The top prize “ Its w h o l e philosophy, F irs t place winner among col­ lege dailies was the University of I Michigan i ' d orado Daily. Hie Its world-wide activities, are all bas­ ed on tile practical proofs of the Scien ce of God's alln ess; that Is that God, or good, and Ills crea- j Daily placed second. in the non-daily lion fill all space, and that in this ever presence evil, or mat- competition went to the Stephens ter, has no place. This Science is Life, f r o m Stephens College in provable by anyone.*’ Missouri. Runner-up was the New is from M ontclair, N. J . M exico University Lobo. T h i r d C arr He attended M .I.T. and later left prize went to toe Davidson (N. C.) the business world to devote full College Davidsonian. tim e to the study and p ractice of Christian Science. He was for ten years on the Christian Science Comm ittee on Publication for the Keeping students State of New Jersey , and has been on tour as a lecturer through most of the United States. « r i i d L a s K / w * * * X T £■***? 4 fXV'*«*,£3.xr * C H A R L E S M. C A R R "C h ristia n S c i e n c e and Everyday Living'' — Ph oto by Drartdy Powers Denies Hatred of U S B y People in Other Countries Seience religion, i t e gest Foundation. underscored unofficial word on reaction to th e latest I tion th a t we could do without. P u n ,:* and K hrushchev proposal like this: “W e believe th a t w hat is “B u t I would not draw any conclusions from this return of ! n o w c a lle d for is some system atic, serious, h ard and deter- Mr. Pow ers with respect to questions like Berlin and South- Like to G o to Europe? Official for Tour Here A representative of Southwest- year under Texas Union sponsor- j day tour through 14 countries, in- *east. A sia.’* K e n n e d y and Macmillan told the Soviet P rem ier th at because the arm s ra ce th re a t- ;ened to “erupt in a disaster’* I for all, the t h r e e of them should “accept a personal re- I sponsibility” for guiding their representatives a t the 18-na­ tion Geneva p a r l e y opening t o u r ! M a r dh 1 4 . They proposed th a t Editor Purvis said, “ We are very ern Collegiate Tours will be in T e x - 1 ship, were designed exclusively i eluding Scandinavia. The eased to have done so well in i as Union 340 at 4 p.m. Tuesday for the students at eight South- price of $1,395 includes steamship the conference Start off a t the pleased tough and meaningful competition. I to confer with students interest- western campuses, E a st Texas transportation to Europe and trav- foreign m inisters’ level informed about ^ ^ taking one of toe two Union- State College, L am ar State College I el back to the States, parties with of Technology, Sam Houston State foreign students in seven countries, ! A______f __ _________ . j s ____ ___________ __________ . rn ■vt*______ _____ I „______________ je mrs _ ........... t___ e s a . _ _ * t _ - Miss Shirley Bird, Union pro- Teachers College, Southern Meth- accommodations In private homes ? iessag* ’ dated F eb . State in Germany retain top ordinator for the tours, said that College, Texas Technological Col- 1 optional visit and Switzerland, an P to Berlin at no extra C', , Khrushchev respond- c by was bds Kennedy-Maemillan and mad# toe \Vhite House Mon- important International happenings sP°nscred tours of Europe is an essential task of the con- tem porary college press Of course i gram director and University co-1 odist University, Tarleton we’re always trying to cam pus coverage, too, e~d most j ; of the other editors feel we a r c ! doing a good job in this category.” Over 200 collegiate editors at- ! tended the four-day conference in New York. They heard top speak­ international affairs and ers on I participated In sem inars and clin­ ics on current world problems. any student who I* considering the possibility of a European tour in the sum m er is invited. Fran+z to Be H o n o r e d A t 'A u th o rs' Evening' lege, Oklahoma University, The University of Texas. in their third tours, now D ie F o r the student with most of his sum m er available, there Is a 66- and cost, plus all hotels, tr a n s p o r t s - .^ Sunday. II© mad© the counter- tion, tours, and services of a tour proposal that th© Geneva parley director and multi-lingual courier. with a heads-of-state meet- F o r the summer school student aU 18 nations, * is and the student with less vacation _ Kennedy and Secretary of Stat# tim e, there is a 35-day tour of se v -1 wrere busy shaping a formal en countries. Round trip first-class I re PJy* je t fare in the tour included Th© British am bassador, David price of $995, and the student par- ties and social event* of the long-; Ormsby Gore, indicated the line er tour are available for a $20 of the Western response after a supplement. Extensions Ormsby Gore said, “ We don’t G reece from the longer tour and to think it is suitable that the heads Spain and Ireland for both tours, j of government start th© eonversa- tion” at Geneva. W hether a sum- meeting may contact Miss Bird at m it meeting would be worthwhile T exas Union 342 for full informa- “ a t a later date” is a m atter to tion and an explanatory Students not able to attend the 20-minute session with Rusk. travel be kept open, he said. available a r e to ★ - I , . . fo!d* r - . * 50 far East-W est disarmament . cam ship sp ice Is \ery *imM“ j talks have been m arked by failure, ed and we have been informed An attendance of 18 government that m any reservations already are ; heada at one meeting is regarded being made, . mss Bird said. We , |iere as more conducive to propa- would like to have all interested ganda g p ^ h - m aking than serious students attend toe meeting so j negotiating on a complicated ques- that we may have as large a group tion like disarmament, from Texas as we have had in the past two y ears.” By CBARMAYNE MARSH Issue New* Editor The Russians have created a false picture and Am erican news­ paper readers probably think the C astro, Powers said, Is a “ tool anywhere In Latin A m erica they J th * world with com paratively lit- tie risk or trouble. The world has want to. the long w^ay traveled a from It knew for the party.” He said C astro’s peace and prosperity main purpose was to disturb the p e n c e , and for the last three Pow ers pointed out that then we then,” he said. Among the speakers o r panel m em bers In the conference were j Sargent Shriver, director of the P eace Corps; Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., just back from Punta del * “ J oth 'r count*',h a t.) th . United States, Joshua P ow ers,; international publishers re p re se n ts-; iast tive, said Monday. “ This Is not true,” Pow ers said. “ Certain sectors in some foreign liave been organized countries against us. but they a rc fa r from including the m ajority of the peo­ ple.” spMchi Pow ers cited the chines ti, It could h im us into sou l I that fifty years as y ea rs j “ brought more minus signs than plus.” “ F ifty years ago there was gen­ eral world peace ami order. You could travel almost anywhere In loss numbers ” such as Ja m e s W echsler, Robert j room of the DriskiU Hotel. Considine, Harrison Salisbury, WU-; One of toe first m em bers of the ; ham Law rence, Tad Szulc, Hath Inter-Am erican P ress Association, j leen McLaughlin, and Charles F er- it as one of he described prim * defenders of freedom . toe guson. ma I S d Included on Hie program was a ! Pow ers further stated that free- visit t° th© United Nations and dom of the press and other means program on the role of the United of communication had helped hold States In the UN. Specific eoncen- the line for the Am erican way of Nation was given to UN activities life against a most serious attack. ] “ The believers in freedom are j Many of the editors, in the Congo. Dr. Jo e B. Frantz, chairm an of the Departm ent of History, will be D r. F ra n ts will share with Mrs. Cordia Sloan honors Duke, S S ' ’v ti'm 'm e 'T u th o r^ 'V u e ." | ° ‘ T * T and famous newsmen day a t 8 p.m. in th . C rystal B a ll - j on the M T Ranch form the sub- ject of their book, “ 6,000 Miles of J F en ce .” The two co-authors were previously honored at the Theta Sigma Phi Writers Roundup last : fall. M rs. Duke, now 85, was the wife of Robert E . Lee Duke, divi­ sion m anager of the famous ranch. Dr. Frantz holds three degrees from the University—bachelor of journalism , m aster of arts, and doctor of philosophy. While doing undergraduate work, he was night editor of The Daily Texan. In 1960 he w'as national vice-president of Phi AI pita Theta, honorary history C om m ittee To Discuss B-Tax, Texan The Campus Affairs Com­ m ittee of the Student Assem­ bly will meet Tuesday at 4 p.m. in Texas Union 319. ; society. including Purvis, traveled to New York with the help of scholarships made available by the R ead er’s Digest Foundation. US M u st Toughen Policy, States Senator Tower IN D EPEN D EN C E, Kan. UP-T h e in United States must a ct tough dealing international affairs. Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex , de­ clared Monday night. in “I don't think that Am erican pol­ icy should be shaped on a nebulous thing called world opinion,” Tower told an annual Lincoln Day Dinner crow'd. The portion of the meeting from 5 to 6 p m. will be open to th© public, at which time a discussion on the blanket its relationship to tax and the Texan will be held. Editor’s note; See page 2 for editorial dealing with Blanket T ax appropriations the Dally Texan and for comments on actions of pre­ vious Student Assembly com- mitt©© meetings. Assembly Slates Special Session In 1951 Dr. Frantz received the Texas Institute of L etters award for the best Texas book of the year - “ Gail Borden, Dairyman to a Nation.” He is author of “Busi­ ness History Is Good Business,” and has co-authored “ Th© A mer!- i at 6:30 p.m. can Cowboy: The Myth and the R eality .” Ile was recipient in 195? of the Lemuel Scarbrough Faculty ! Award for excellence in teaching, possibly vote on Its purpose is to introduce new legislation, submit nominations for appointments, and to debate and legislation eon- At the annual fund-raising b en e-; cerning Texas S t u d e n t Publica- fit Tuesday evening, Mrs. Homer ! lions, Inc*, according to Maurice I Garrison will be em cee. An auto- Olian, president of the Students’ graph party will follow. Assembly will be held Wednesday i Association. A special session of the Student j of Pow ers called the Russians the Tickets Still A v a ila b le most persistent enemy of freedom Poy Ferrante, Teicher in A m erica. He said . th . e n .n Vv has m a d . prugross, es- chased pecially among the young, has not become fixed or rn yet. , T ickets, which m ay b« pur- o f p, he that w h ile; to x . Ul._ this lives be­ l i v e Music Building, are still available cause they will have a bigger fight | for Tuesday night’s Ferrar.te and ! on their hands to keep it than any ‘ ’ other generation has ever had,” le ic h e r concert. lead exciting going to LA —A pair of storms lashing the central Atlantic Monday cast rt o u b t on, _ whether astronaut John ll. Glenn Uommisslon on Highci Education, J r . will orbit the earth on Wcdncs- • said Monday night. day. . . . . . .. . . ., . . .. , , In an Informal question and an awer period following his speech, Powers said the Communist take­ over of Culut was brought about through an organization set up by the Russians the 1920’s, In M exico In the governments Pow'crs explained toe organiza­ tion as being somewhat like a poli­ tica l party dedicated to overthrow­ in L a t i n ing A m erica. He said the sam e or­ ganization has lO.OtX) paid agents in tho Americas today who can provoke demonstration* and riots W e ath e r A g a i n Clouds US O rbit Shot Horizon C A PE CANAVERAL F la . B u t National Aeronautics and Space Administration officials de­ cided they would go ahead with plans to s t a r t the preliminary countdown in the hope the weath­ er would clear. Admission Is TS cents for blanket he said, tax holders, season tick et holders, Powers, a form er University stu- and children and $1.50 for adults, j dent, referred to his return for The concert begins at 8 p.m. in Monday's speech as the anniver- the Municipal Auditorium. (Sec re- sary of an AWOL student. Powers lated story on Page 4.) left the University in 1913. I960's M a y Present Educational Problem The decade of tile I960 s could j --D r. Ralph G r e e n “ At this time there are growing I well go down in history as that of I currents and cross currents of fer- j higher education problems, Dr. I ^ f ^ ^ L o n , Dr. Green said. “ Some fairly clea r but tentative patterns Ralph C .r«n, director of the Texas [ arc boK,mling l0 cmorg(,..P“ . 'Hie m ajor patterns a re : • Devotion of far m ore attention jhan ever before to the quality of U colleges’ programs and offer- ings. _ Speaking to the -1st annual J un* ior College Conference a t toe Dris- kill Hotel, the form er economics • Recognition of the need for instructor at Baylor University careful planning, closer inter-insti- pointed out that the present age could be visualized as a huge r e s - ; tutional cooperation, and coordina­ tion of the colleges’ overall effort. Tho main ingredient for a high quality program is students of high reservoir represents our “ D ie colleges and universities as they quality or of high potential Wa1 te r Williams, P ro je ct M er-! cr-\*oir into which rapid mounting cury operations d irector, mission review team he w as kecp-i ing a close eye on the w eather. told a J stream s pour. 'Hie 14-hour countdown is con- will need lo Ire by 1970, and Hie ducted over two d a y s . The Inst flcRsling stream is one of college- half is scheduled to sta rt Tuesday age population which has its head- morning, with the final seven hours ! w aters in the increased bi rill rate a f t e r of to begin Wednesday, shortly 1950’s ,” Dr. midnight. the 1940’s a n d Green explained. “ There will Ire more limn enough, able students. The g reater pres­ institutions to sure will review, strengthen their offerings to keep pace with the advancing frontiers of knowl- lh’ upon revise, and Uncertain Not Certain U N C E R T A I N , T e x . H W l h © C ity of Uncertain will hold a local op­ tion © lection M a r c h IO on t h e sal© of a l l a l c o h o l i c beverage*. Being in toe midst of the p re sen t. edge,” Dr. Green pointed out. nuclear and electronic age. great- u . opportunities and achievem ent. workint£ ic in pi aspect for the leges and u n iv e r s e s . relation and among the col­ le x a s col- 1 leges. D r. Green complimented the l)f u w M usgrave* of Ute As for „ clustr j ’’Higher education cannot stand I J e x a s Education Agency, A p e t i t i o n c o n t a i n i n g 75 s i g n a ­ still or lag under these circum- j t u r e * — IO of w h ich w e r e t h r o w n out— w a * p r e s e n t e d to Ute adju st, arui ad apt,” he c i t y coiiu n istd o ii t o d a y . T h e r e only a i e d tain. l a t e r sta n ce s . . . It must m o ve, change, the l a r g e number of junior college ad- in Un- m in istra to r* and presidents in a t ­ elig ible voter* * tendance. told i r e “ We need this kind of open com­ munication and joint planning, and I think Mr. Musgraves* depart­ ment has taken giant strides in the research and coordination activi­ tie s,” he said. Not ruled out, however, was a possibility that enough progress could be made at a lower level to justify summit attendance before June I , when the Geneva group is to report to the United Nations. Khrushchev's c o u n terprcposal was regarded by som e US author­ ities as a propaganda move in­ tended to persuade world opinion the Kremlin’s desire for dis- arm am ent and to focus blam© on the West if the Geneva conference does not pan out. Oscar Williams To Read Poetry O scar Williams, American poet speak on and anthologist, will ! “ Poetry and Its Relation to Real­ ity” Tuesday at 4 p.m. in English I Building 203. On Wednesday at 4 I p m. he will read and comment I on his ow n poems in the Humani- j ties Research C e n t e r Library, fourth floor, main budding. During his visit here, William* will present to the University a collection of manuscripts, first ed­ itions, autographed editions and letters of George Barker, British poet who visited the University in 1959. The collection also includes a portrait of Barker. Williams is editor of “ The Pock­ et Rook of Modem V erse,” “ A Lit­ tle Treasury of Modern Poetry.” “ Immortal Poems of the English Language,” and “ The New Pocket Anthology of Americ an Verse.” His anthologies are used in many col­ leges and universities. Round-Up Revue Tryouts To Continue in ‘A ’ Hall Tryouts for Round-Up Rev a e for another have been extended night. Prospective show members a r e invited rn “ A” Hail from 7 to IO p.m. Tu esd ay, said director Norris Duuuoguo. to audition Study Break-in the English Building P h o to by D raddy Mike Levy, freshman business administration major, takes a quick in tho English Building M o nd ay night. The break from studying building is op en M o nd ay s through Thursdays from 7 t o IO p.m. for studying, and provides a quiet haven for ab o u t ISO students per week, says supervisor Morris Massey. Prominently displayed are the "ground rules’* fo r the use of the e m p ty classrooms: no smok­ ing, no Cokes, and no loud noise." The facilities are provided oy tho Dean of S tu d e n t l i f e S ta ff th roughout tho sem ester. Tutsday, February 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag© 2 Little Man on the C am pus Bv Bi bier Pam phleteer Criticizes CD f No Time for Ignorance Tile special S tudent Assem bly com m ittee appointed to Investigate th e Texas S tudent Publications, Inc., B oard of D irectors and student publications h ad its first official m eeting M onday. Of th e five m em bers of the com m ittee, four eventually showed up, but only th re e w ere th e re for any considerable length of tim e. It w as obvious from th e questions asked by the com m ittee th a t th e ir knowledge of the operations of The D aily T exan—its controls, its censorship, its problem s —is quite inadequate. F o r an h o u r the com m ittee asked questions w hich should he basic knowledge to anyone in­ tending to “investigate’' TSP . . . questions w h I c h a thorough study of th e T S P H andbook could easily answ er. Vet the chairman of the committee, Johnny Weeks, arni a committee member, Sandy Sanford, have introduced into the Student Assembly a bill which would take The Daily Texan off the blanket tax. Such a move obviously has important ramifications to th e students and those closely connected w ith The Daily T exan, yet for an h o u r the persons invited to appear w ere asked no questions as to how th e bill m ight affect the T exan. A t 5 p.m., when th e m eeting was called, the ch airm an of the com m ittee had n o t contacted an y of the following peo­ ple about th e bill or a n y investigation of the T exan: Dr. D e w itt C. Reddick, director of the School of J o u r­ nalism {although W eeks has an appointm ent scheduled T uesday). Dr. N o rris G. Davis, chairm an of th e executive com m ittee of TSP, chairm an of th e faculty com m ittee on stu d en t pub­ lications, and associate professor of journalism . H arrell E. Lee, editorial m anager of the Texan, an d as­ sociate professor of journalism , w ho is charged w ith tile responsibility of seeing th a t Daily T ex an copy follows TSP H andbook provisions. (The m em bers of the Board investi­ gating com m ittee did not know’ M r. Lee’s name, n o r his duties.) Olin H inkle, tre a su re r of TSP, long-tim e m em ber of the TSP B oard, and associate professor of journalism . Loyd Edm onds, general m anager of TSP, who prepares th e budget, in w hich blanket tax m oney is 39 per re n t of The D ally T exan’s income. ★ ★ A t least, tw o student m em bers of th e TSP Board h ad not been contacted by W eeks at the tim e of his com m ittee m eet­ ing M onday, although K eith Cox, a student TSP B oard m em ­ ber, w as th ere. O bviously th e bill h a s been draw n in haste, w ithout pre­ vious s tu d y w ith th o se persons w ho are intim ately con­ nected w ith TSP, an d who seem th e logical sources for v a l ’. inform ation. T h e bill as w ritte n seems m ore like a spiteful g estu re a t th e B oard of R egents, who approved a recom m endation th a t th e editor of T he Daily T exan be appointed, th a n a g e stu re aimed at im proving th e Texan for s tu d e n t benefit. We h av e no q u arrel w ith the purpose of the com m ittee. W ith th e new appointm ent procedure such a com m ittee m ay be th e logical place for the assem bly to s ta r t to keep an eye on TSP, to see th a t stu d en t interests are carried out. F or exam ple, the com m ittee could recom m end th a t re ­ moval pow er of the T S P Board, now' in th e hands of th e 3-2 faculty m ajo rity executive com m ittee, be left w ith th e 5-4 student m ajo rity board. But a com m ittee, acting on assum ptions r a th e r than facts, can n o t do any w atchdog job; it c a n ’t know a t which shadow to bark, and a t which shadow' to wag its tall. ★ ★ Tuesday, then, is a potentially fru itfu l, or om inous day for T he D aily Texan. 'The TSP B o ard m eets a t 4 p.m. in Jo u rn alism Building 307 to h ear com m ittee re p o rts which concern th e se Items: Q ualifications for appointed editors. P ro ced u re for ta k in g applications. P ossibility for additional $4,000 in Texan salaries from present budget sources, to encourage m ore journalism stu ­ dent participation. And a t 5 p.m. T u esd ay in T exas L'nion 319, th e C am ­ pus A ffairs com m ittee of the S tudent Assembly m eets to consider th e W eeks-San ford bill concerning the blan k et tax. If the full com m ittee is no more p rep ared to discuss the issue th a n th e co-sponsors of th e bill appeared M onday afternoon, we suggest th a t they spend their tim e in the TSP B o ard m eeting firs t, to find out w hat steps a re being taken to p rotect stu d e n t rig h ts in publications, r a th e r than heading o u t with a chip m arked “ H am string th e T exan” on one shoulder, and an o th e r labeled “ Slam the R egents.” These point* are made aside from our firm conviction that no student interests will be served by approval of this bill. The merits are for the assembly to decide. B ut no Assembly, o r com m ittee, can m ake decisions con­ cerning $70,000, and th e only new spaper read by (o r paid for) by 17,000 students w ith the lack of knowledge of the situation th a t has been displayed so fa r. ★ ★ Tile A ssem bly in th e pa .si often lias shown its backbone and determ ination to protect students in such area s as civil rights an d academic freedom ; th e y rightfully aspire to do so w ith th e W eeks-Sanford bill. B ut r a th e r than a c t in haste a t th e special Assem bly m eeting W ednesday night, we suggest th a t through th e bill 1 hey use th e ir b argaining power of th e blanket ta x to build into T S P some protections for th e student, r a th e r than take aw'ay chance fo r even a m ediocre campus new spaper to exist. The Assembly rightfully should be able to ask that some protections he given to students. It should watch T u esd ay ’s T S P m eeting carefully for elem ents of cam pus politics or bias w hich will spell certain doom fo r The Daily T exan, if the stu d en t m ajority on the B oard re so rts to th e m in making appointm ent procedure. The B o ard ail cady h a s expressed its intent to c re a te the l>est possible system , un d er the lim itation of appointm ent. By ac tin g too hastily now the A ssem bly can destro y these effo rts to salvage T he Daily T exan until the tim e when it is clear th a t an off-cam pus new spaper is the only feasible solution. But clear, informed decisions m u st be made by th e TSP Board and the Student Assembly in these crucial three days. W ith o u t them, there is no hope of survivial fo r The Daily T ex a n of today, and dim pro sp ect for any student new paper on or off-cam pus, tomorrow. —JIM H T ATT, Managing M i to r J (E d ito r ’s n o te : T h is is lh© sot-, ocid p a r t o f “ C it S ta n d s for . . fr o m M a r g r e t H o fm a n n ’s Ixm k let, A K e y to S u r v iv a l. C o p ie s o f th o b o o k le t m a y ho o b ta in e d fr o m th© a u th o r a t CIO C a r d in a l l ^ n e , Attain 4.) B y M A R G R E T H O F M A N N Mr. Cousins m ade the follow­ ing ob servation s: “ T he p r in c ip a l p r o b le m Sn tit© c it ) w ill he g e t tin g Into a s h e lte r In th e fir s t p la c e , a n d g e ttin g o u t of It In th e s e c o n d p la c e . It Is b y no m e a n s c e r t a in th a t an a tta c k w ill he p r e c e d e d b y a w a r n in g . In fa d . th e fa c to r o f su r p r is e Is a m o le c u la r part of th e m a k e -u p of m o d e r n w a r . A n d e v e n lf w a r n ­ in g sh o u ld p r e c e d e an a tta c k , It w o u ld be on th e o r d e r of m i n u t e s . “ Tlie average underground sh el­ ter could not offer protection to hum an fire system , storm . The ventilation drawing in air from the outside, would quickly convert the aver­ age shelter into a hot air furnace. with air heated to tem peratures as high as 1,000 degrees. Tile in a nuclear life i J U M E W A HOEK IRLE e u \ v ? e . — D-IAT THE WILL peCpUlRE ALL f ^ U f 5 ^ 5 U R 6 T O fA f»5 "TH' £ SILANCE EXAM'7 Texas Institute of Letters In History - Making Stand By L O X T IS K L R B job Critic, The Dali.. M o r n i n g N e w s ( R e p r i n t e d by P e r m i s s i o n ) The Texas Institute of L etters - its 26th annua! w hich w ill hold in D allas next aw ards banquet Saturday, Feb. IT, m a y have m ade history last w eek. Expand­ ing its scope and its activity, the Institute asked perm ission to ap­ pear before the L e g isla tu re s House com m ittee on textbook se ­ lection. Four form er presidents of the Institute and one award w inner (two of the ex-presidents w ere also award w inners) testi­ fied to what they considered dan­ gers of censorship and of pres- sure-group self-appointed censors In T exas. 1986 b y r e so lu tio n s sp o k e n out w ith It w a s th© first tim © th© In stl- tut© . w h ic h w a s fo u n d e d b y l e g ­ i s l a t iv e a c tio n th© In T e x a s C e n te n n ia l C o m m is s io n , Its c o ll e c ­ h a d t iv e str e n g th In m a t t e r s o f pub!!© th© g r o u p of in t e r e s t , alth o u g h a b o u t IOO le a d in g T e x a s w r ite r s h a d s e v e r a l tim e s In th e p a s t c ir ­ c u la t e d c o n d e m n in g e x t r a l e g a l c e n s o r s h ip a n d a ll ban n ln g s th e d u ly c o n s titu te d p r o c e s s e s o f la w . Quite understandably, witness J. F rank Dobie (w ho served as In stitu te president for a 4-year period) stole the show in Austin. H e w a s in top form . But it re­ m ain s Important that a com m it­ tee from the Institute publicly de­ nounced what it fee ls ar© unoffi­ cial and inexpert attem p ts at censorship. to b y p a s s tr ie d th a t The Honorable W. T. Dungan, ch airm an of investigating the com m ittee, and his fellow-m em - bers w ere patient and courteous to th e I n s t i t u t e presentation w heth er they agreed or not. Do- b ie ’s appearance had been w ide­ ly publicized: an overflow crowd cau sed Mr. Dungan to m ove the the old Supreme h earin gs Court cham bers In the Capitol building, but still throngs hover­ ed ou tside unable to find places inside. to This w as nearly true of the In­ stitu te's com m ittee. F ran k Ward- law and Ernest M ossner and the and I R ev, J. M. D a w s o n all sa t on the floor Just in front table. Dobie of the com m ittee found a place at the w itness table, n ext to the ring-leader of the totally different group, J. K vetts H airy and h is T exans for A m erica, who had th e first part of the afternoon session and then returned for the la st part, also feelin g the need for a night ses­ sion. T h e a u d ie n c e a t lh© h e a r in g w a s m o t l e y : th e r e w a s a p r e l i m d e r a n c © of U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s s tu d e n t s an d of w h a t m o s t T e x ­ “ in t e ll e c t u a ls ” a n s w o u ld (y o u th e y c o u ld w o r e m u s ta c h e s or b e a r d * an d d id n o t c a ll a u th o r s “ a rth u r * " or r e f e r to D r e is e r a s “ D r e e s e r " or s a y “ g it" and “ c a l n ’t " ) . c a ll te ll, b e c a u s e But the audience seem ed to be clea rly friendly to the point of view o f th© Institute's Com m ittee on F reedom to Read and Write, and g a v e applause and laughter. C hairm an Dungan, occasion ally Official Notices Graduate* In business adm inistra­ tion a representative from th* Uni­ versity graduate of Pennsylvania achoo! va-ill be here T uesday, reb . 13, to recru it student* for the Wharton school. G raduate Division of A ny student* interested in a master of busine*.* should com * to Business Econom ics Office B u ild in g 203, or call GR 6-8371, ext. 412, for appointment*. adm inistration that Mrs, J t r r y Mo o re. Kenlnr Secretary, Office af B e a n J. A. Whi t # Job Opportunities An Interviewer will speak Tuesday, Feb. 13 fro rn IO a.m. to ( p m with physical education m ajora or anyone w ith abilities iii cou n selin g in vari­ ous activities about cam p counselor lobs at Camp Longhorn at Burnet, T exas Jobs will be availab le from Jun e through August. Salary is HOO to *175 for boys. and *90 to *150 for girl* plus room, board, and laundry. F or additional Inform ation and ap­ pointm ent* contact th e Stu dent K m - I m jm H jlU S t* am used at Dobie's forthrightness and charm like everybody else, gaveled aw ay patiently for si­ lence. What the Institute com m ittee said in denouncing pressure-group criticism s of duly constituted ex­ port groups to se le c t textbooks has been reported in the press. The im portant thing here is to note that at last the Institute is a ctiv ely doing m ore for the state of books in our society than m ere­ ly to preserve high standards of taste by its annual prize awards. Such active contribution seem s m ore a necessity than ever. The very m orning the Institute repre­ sentatives appeared at the Austin hearing, news the A m arillo Junior C ollege had re­ m oved from its sh elves ten or so “ controversial" books, including novels by John Steinbeck, Ernest H em ingw ay, Oliver L aFarge, and Bud Guthrie ( “Tile Way West," "The Big Sky"). ca m e that It w a s th© purpos© o f th e T e x a s I n s tit u te o f L e tte r s to s p e a k forth a g a in s t th e c u r r e n t fe a r of Id eas th a t s e e m s to be p a r a ly z in g th e good s e n s e of a s u r p r is in g n u m ­ b e r o f our p o w er fu l c it iz e n s . A lo t o f th© c u r r e n t b a n n in g an d burn* Ing o f g o o d b o o k s s p r in g s from d is tr u s t o f good s e n s e . This m atter of w hat it consid­ irresponsible censorship will ers be the prim ary concern of the Institute's annual m eetin g her© this weekend. Main speaker at the aw ards banquet w ill be ex- D a lla siie M argaret Cousins, au­ thor and editor of international fam e, w’ho recently left McCall's to becom e an editor of Doubieday & Company. Also on the banquet program w ill be a discussion of censorship by the R ev. J. M. long a individual leading Baptist, D aw son, m inister and form er president (in 1946 * of the Institute. D aw son’s stirring talk at the Austin tex t­ book hearing—in which he stern­ ly defended constitutional guaran­ tees of freedom of thought and religion —w'on an o v a ­ tion which could not be stilled, It w as Dr. D aw son who first secured the distinguished spon­ sorship to accom pan y the In sti­ tu te’s annual acvard for "the best T exas book of the year." Carr P . Collins of D allas gave SI.OOO to go with the honor, and has con­ tinued to do so for the past six ­ teen years. This prize is nocv for tile best nonfiction volume. The Jesse H. Jones SI .OOO Prize, offered by the Houston En­ is given for the dowm ent Inc., best work of fiction. The friends of the D allas Public Library offer a $500 prize for the best Texas work of a scholarly nature published during the year. Other prizes include the McMur­ ray Book Shop $250 award for the best “ first n ovel" ; the Cokes­ bury Bookstore $100 award for the best “juvenile"; the Institute $100 poetry prize; and the D allas M useum of F in e Arts Award for the best book form at and design. Under the current presidency of Frank V andiver, author of “ M ighty Stonewall" among other books and professor at R ice U ni­ versity, the afternoon session of the Institute w ill feature talks by literary agent P aul N ew York (M c­ R eynolds Graw-Hill) Edw ard Kuhn Jr. publisher and The charter of the Institute, as founded by the Centennial Com­ m ission, requires it to “foster the reading and w’riting of good books in T exas." Guest Editorial Those Textbook Hearings On the book page of The N ew s today, a sparkling a c ­ count of th e S ta te L egislature’s hearings on public-school textbooks is given by the new spaper’s v eteran book critic, J . Lon Tinkle. M r. Tinkle is given the privilege to in terp ret th e hearings as he viewed them . The problem is this; A group of Texans, politically con­ servative in their views, sincerely feel that too many history and soctal-soience texts distort th e facts In favor of N ew Dealism and big government. Opposed to th e m a re m a n y educators, authors, and lite ra ry figures w ho rightfully a re concerned about effo rts to w ard censorship and th e rig h t of a h isto rian or social scientist to reco rd and in te rp re t history as he sees it. W ithout question, m any textbooks w ritte n the last 30 y e a rs deliberately o r unw ittingly have channeled thinking in favor of the N ew Deal and succeeding ad m in istratio n s w hich have followed its general philosophy. Millions of young people have been graduated from secondary schools a n d higher educational institutions thoroughly indoctrinated with the theories of Harry Hop­ kins, Roosevelt, Lord Keynes, and the Americans for Democratic Action— to the exclusion of anything and anybody else. Now’—try in g to prove th is by w h at is said in a tex t is B u t here are general exam ples, w ithout reference to any difficult. a u th o r o r tex t: W hen a h isto ry te x t leaches th a t the TV A experim ent begun in 1933 b ro u g h t cheaper electricity ra te s to farm ers, th a t is th e tru th . B ut when th e te x t neglects to say th a t ra te s are cheaper because th e tax p ay er is footing the bill, th en it is guilty of distortion. I t is propagandizing by th e a r t of omission, It has told th e tru th , but only half th e tru th . Is academ ic freedom by a u th o rs the freedom to create only one side of th e picture? isn ’t objectivity, ax well as the pursuit of new idea©, a basic foundation of learning? T hese are th e objections, prim arily, of J . Eve tis H aley and o th ers w ho fee! they have a right to question these tex ts. C ertainly th e y should be heard. Nobody wan tx censorship by authority. It is un-Ameri­ can. But the definition of censorship can tx* vague. And so can Itx application. T he obligation of the S tate of Texas and of local school boards is to tu rn out students w ho have th e tru th . E duca­ tion which d isto rts and gives only half th e tru th is n o t education. — T he Dallas Morning New* “ Tbo.se w ho survive would sur­ vive by chance: A m issed bomb, a change in the wind. From that point on, they would have to im ­ provise. Few of them , probably, would enough; im provise w ell m ost would die a little later on. “To talk of victory in such cir­ cum stances, as som e of our m ili­ tary com m entators still do, is to m ock. Even if, by som e m acabre calculations, one side or the other would be adjudged to have ‘w on,’ the victory would be m eaning­ le ss. All that w e prize of freedom and hope w'ould be lost in a w el­ ter cf death and terror; all that m an has created of beauty and dignity would be am ong the ra­ dioactive p articles floating down to poison the whole earth." (Al­ fred H assler: N either Run nor Hide.) I a m c e r ta in ly n ot a g a in s t p ro ­ te c tio n in t h e f a c e o f d a n g e r . B u t r e a l c iv il d e f e n s e p r o v id e s no p r o te c tio n fo r th e fo llo w in g r e a ­ s o n s : • T h e m o m e n t w e b e lie v e w # hav e a fo o lp r o o f c iv i l d e f e n s e s y s ­ te m , th© o p p o n e n t m a y , a n d w ill s im p ly s te p u p th e num t>er o f b o m b s o r th e ir p o te n c y . • T ho d e a d ly r a y s o f th e n e u ­ in t* tron b o m b w o u ld p e n e t r a le th© d e e p e s t s h e lt e r . for • l f a c o u n tr y a s h u m a n e an d th© w ith a s h igh a r e g a r d in d iv id u a l a s th e U n ite d S t a t e s e v e n a d v o c a te d th e u se of U B R in w a r , It m u s t c e r t a in ly b e a s ­ th a t o u r o p p o n e n t p r o ­ s u m e d ta p o s e s a s im ila r p o lic y . A n d, us© o n ly o n e e x a m p le , th e r e I* a b s o lu te ly no p r o te c tio n a g a in s t n e r v e gases. Finally, with such an a r r a y o f w eapons available, wbieh e n e m y would be fool enough to a p p ly only the e f f e c t o f which w e can protect ourselves? these from ; . . . . . . . . . . . . . tween the horns By H O Y T P U R V I S T e xa n E dito r IF I W ERE A collector of odd literature and goodies. I could probably build up a considerable collection during m y tenure os Texan editor. This office is a target for all sorts of odd-b a 11 publications, along with som e highly interest­ ing stuff too. Lately w e have com e across literary efforts that de­ the m erit several serve mention, with varying. But one of our m ost recent floods of m ail included another form of cultural accom plishm ent —this being a genuine Tanganyi­ ka African Elephant hair lucky bangle. According to a l e t t e r “ They are worn for luck or just for the fun of it by m en and wom ­ en of all races in our country’." The letter w riter said that for receivin g the h a i r bangle w e should place an advertisem ent for him in the Texan. Can t do that, but if you’re interested write to B. Graae, Box 133, Kilosa. Tan­ ganyika. If you can ’t afford one, com e by and look at m ine. As for the literary side, som e of the more w orthy publications include: ★ ★ THE DISPLACED PERSON S ALMANAC. This is a 133-page ef­ fort by J o h n Pairm nn Browm, which tells the reader how to get along with fallout, religion, bad dream s, foreign policy, etc; In other words, it is a satire on the life and habits of m ass man, done in alm anac form . An exam ple: “ A m erica in her postw ar boom, helped by a lot of arm am ents, is as good as a Sun­ day-school picture: here w e all are, w ashing o u r overpowered ears, raking the lawns and tum bl­ ing our kids in the leaves, while the drier growls in the laundry. the Dutch But under the bark elm -disease is spreading: a n d w hy the phcnobarbitol? why the protestations of altruism in our gifts to the Middle East? why the whipped-cream com forts of the funeral parlor? why the lead- shielded am m unition depot?" M aybe that gives you an idea of Mr. Brown’s p o i n t e d and slangy cleverness. If you want a better idea you'll have to pay $3.50 for this Beacon P ress pub­ lication. ★ A THE NECESSITY FOR CHOICE This is Henry A. K issinger's ef­ fort on the prospects of Am erican in foreign policy, now available an Anchor paperback for $1.45. It is a very thorough presenta­ tion, with a real attem pt at fair­ ness to different points of view s and a good breakdown of pros and cons. K issinger thinks that, any soc­ iety faces a point in its develop­ ment where it m ust ask itself if it has exhausted all the p ossi­ bilities of innovation inherent in its structure. Says he, “ W h e n this p o i n t is reached it has passed its zenith. From then on, it m ust decline, rapidly or slow ly, inevitably. Only but nonetheless a heroic and deliberate effort can arrest narcissism and t h e col­ lapse which starts at the m om ent of seem ingly greatest ach ieve­ m ent." Like many others, K issinger be­ lieves America is now at this critical juncture. “ The question liefore America is whether it can m uster the dedication and c r e a t­ ivity before the w orst has hap­ pened." ★ ★ THE SECOND COMING. This is a new m agazine, w i t h th# M atch issue being its third vol­ um e. This u n i q u e publication takes its nam e from William But­ ler Y eats’ p o e m predicting a m odern revelation. It is edited and published by a staff whose m em bers are all under 25. Its contents vary greatly. For exam p le there is a documented essa y contending that the Eich- m ann trial served only to under­ m ine all hope for international rule of law in our tim e; a bril­ liant interpretation of com m erical w restling as a serious dram atic art form; a review of the A m er­ ican "academ ic n o v e I," plus poem s and art and photographic portolios, som e of which are very good. Certainly this is an im aginative that could publication and one becom e a very positive contribu­ it has a number of tion though m ass-public handicaps to over­ com e. T h e T e x a n O p in io n s e x p res se d in Che T ex a n are those o f th e Editors or o f th e t i n t e r o f th e article a n d not necessarily those o f the Id ni v e t s i t) a d ministration. Is Th* Dally Texan, a student newspaper of The University of Texas published In Austin Texas daily except Munday and Saturday and holiday periods. Septem ber through May and monthly in August b v Texas Student Publications, inc Second-class postage paid at Austin, Texas The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of ail new* dispatches credited to It or not otherw ise credited in this newspaper. A S.SKK I ATK!* PURKS WISK NKItt IC IS in Austin Malted Maned out of town Delivered rn Austin (three months m inim um ) ............................... ....................... . . . .. M USCH! p i I (J N It A THS ................. *1.0 0 month 75c month 73c month Associated Collegial# Press All-America# MLMBER I ni***r*itv Press Service Southwestern Journalism Congress News contribution* will he accepted bv telephone (GR 2-2-173) or th* editorial office. Journalism Building ’Od or ai the Newts Laboratory J B the advertising a in e * is* J S'U m ° nest possible system, under the limitation of appointment. B y acting too hastily now the Assembly can destroy these efforts to salvage The Daily Texan until the time when it is clear that an off-campus newspaper is the only feasible solution. But clear, informed decisions must be made by the TS P Board and the Student Assembly in these crucial three days. Without them, there is no hope of survivial for The Daily Texan of today, and dim prospect for any student new paper on or off-campus, tomorrow. — JIM H Y A T T , Managing Editoi. (E d i t o r ’* n o t e : T h is Is the see- ond p a rt o f " C D S tan d s fo r . . . " , fr o m M a r g r e t H o f m a n n ’s b o ok let, V K ey to S u r v i v a l. C o p ie s o f the fr o m bo ok let m a y b e o b ta in e d tho au th o r at fill) C a r d in a l I.a n e , \usin 4.) By M A R G R E T H O F M A S S M r. Cousins m ade the follow ­ ing ob servation s: " T h e p r in c ip a l p r o b le m in the city w ill bo g e ttin g into a s h e lte r in the firs t p la c e , a n d g e ttin g out of it in the s e c o n d p la c e . It is b y no m e a n s c e r t a in that an atta c k w ill b e p r e c e d e d b y a w a r n in g . In fa c t, tlie fa c t o r o f s u r p r is e is a m o le c u la r p a r t o f the m a k e -u p of m o d ern w a r . A n d eve n If w a r n ­ ing should p r e c e d e an atta c k , it w o u ld be on the o r d e r o f m in u tes. "T h e a v e ra g e underground shel­ ter could not o ffe r protection to fire human storm . Th e ventilation system , d raw in g in a ir from the outside, wculd qu ickly con vert the a v e r­ age shelter into a hot a ir furnace, with air heated to tem peratures as high as 1,000 degrees. T lie in a nuclear life 1 JUST HEAfcP a fJOZXipLB CU\\2«C— 7>IAT THE TfSL^'nEEf? f£? f A ^ 5 T H ' Z tfT & A flC t E X A M / W U L p&pLJlKE A L L Texas Institute of Letters In History - Making Stand By L O X T I S K L E B k Critic, The D u ll. M orning Mews ( Reprinted by Permission) The Texas Institute o f L etters - which w ill hold its 26th annual aw ards banquet in D allas next Saturday, F eb . 17, m ay h ave m ade history last w eek. Expand­ ing its scope and its activity, the Institute asked perm ission to ap­ p ear before L egislatu re's the House com m ittee on textbook se­ fo rm e r presidents lection Four o f the Institute and one aw ard w in n er (tw o o f the ex-presidents w e re also aw ard w inners! testi­ fied to what they considered dan­ gers of censorship and of pres- sure-group self-appointed censors In Texas. in J9S6 by It w a s the firs t tim e the In s t i­ tu te. w h ich w a s fo u n d e d by le g ­ the is la t iv e action T e x a s Centennial C o m m is s io n , h a d spoken out w ith its c o lle c ­ tiv e stren gth in m a t t e r s of p u b lic the g r o u p o f In te re st, a lth o u g h a b o u t I 0 0 le a d in g T e x a s w r it e r s h a d s e v e r a l tim e s In the p a st cir* c o n d e m n in g c u la t e d e x t r a le g a l c e n s o r s h ip a n d a ll b a n - n ln g s that trie d to b y p a s s the re so lu tio n s d u ly constitu ted p r o c e s s e s o f l a v . Quite understandably, witness J. Fran k D obie (w h o served as Institute president fo r a 4-vear p erio d ) stole the show in Austin. H e was in top form . But it re ­ m ains Im portant that a com m it­ tee fro m the Institute publicly de­ nounced what it feels are unoffi­ c ia l and inexpert attem pts at censorship. T h e H onorable W . T . Dungan, chairm an o f investigating the com m ittee, and his feLlow-mem- bers w ere patient and courteous to the I n s t i t u t e presentation w h eth er they agreed or not. Do- b ie 's appearance had been w id e­ ly publicized: an o v e rflo w crow d caused M r. Dungan to m ove th* the old Suprem e h earings C ourt cham bers the Capitol building, but still throngs h over­ ed outside unable to find places inside. to In This w as n ea rly true o f the In ­ stitute's com m ittee. F ra n k W ard- la w and E rn est M ossner and the R e v . J. M . D a w s o n and I all sat on the flo o r Just in front table. D obie the com m ittee o f found a place at the witness table, next to the rin g-lead er o f the to ta lly d iffe re n t group, J. K vetts H a ley and his Texan s fo r A m erica , who had the first part o f the afternoon session and then returned for the last part, also feelin g the need for a night ses­ sion. T h e a u d ie n c e a t the h e a r in g v .a s m o t le y : t h e re w a s a p r e p o n ­ d e r a n c e o f U n iv e r s i t y o f T e x a s stu d en ts a n d o f w h a t m o st T e x ­ “ in t e lle c tu a ls ” a n s w o u ld they b e c a u s e (y o u co u ld w o r e m u s t a c h e s o r b e a r d s a n d " a r t h u r s ” d id not c a ll a u th o rs o r r e f e r to D r e i s e r a s “ D r e e s e r ” c a ll te ll, o r s a y “ g i t ” a n d “ c a ln ’t " ) . But the audience seem ed to be c le a rly frien d ly to the point of v ie w o f the Institute's C om m ittee on F reed om to R ea d and W rite, and g a v e applause and laughter. C hairm an Dungan, occasionally am used at D o b ie ’s forthrightness and charm like everyb o d y else, ga v e le d a w a y patien tly for si­ lence. W hat 1he Institute com m ittee said in denouncing pressure-group criticism s o f duly constituted e x ­ pert groups to select textbooks has been reported in the press. T h e im portant thing here is to note that at last the Institute is a c tiv e ly doing m ore for the state o f books in our society than m ere­ ly to p reserve high standards o f taste by its annual prize aw ards. Such active contribution seems m ore a necessity than ever. The v e r y m orning the Institute rep re­ sentatives appeared at the Austin the hearing, news ca m e A m a rillo Junior C ollege had re­ m oved from its shelves ten or so "c o n tr o v e r s ia l" books, including novels by John Steinbeck, Ernest H em in gw ay, O liv e r L a F a rg e , and Bud Guthrie ( ‘ T lie W ay W e s t," “ T h e Big S k y " ). that It w a s the p u r p o s e of the T e x a s In s titu te of L e tt e rs to s;>eak forth a g a in s t the c u r r e n t fe a r of Id e a s th a t s e e m s to be p a r a ly z in g the g o o d sen se o f a s u r p r is in g n u m ­ b e r o f o u r p o w e r fu l citizen s. A lo t o f the c u r r e n t b a n n in g an d b u r n ­ in g o f go o d b o o k * s p r in g * fr o m d is tru s t o f go o d s e n s e . This m atter o f w hat it consid­ ers irresponsible censorship w ill be the p rim a ry concern o f the In stitu te’s annual m eetin g here this weekend. M ain speaker at the aw ards banquet w ill be ex- D a lla site M a rg a re t Cousins, au­ thor and editor o f international fam e, who recen tly left M cC all s to becom e an ed itor o f Doubleday & Com pany. A lso on the banquet program w ill be a discussion o f censorship by the R ev. J. M . Guest Editorial long a individual Dawson, leading B aptist m inister and fo rm e r president (in 1946' o f the Institute. D aw son’s stirring talk at the Austin text­ book h ea rin g--in w hich he stern­ ly defended constitutional guaran­ tees of freedom o f thought and r e lig io n - w o n an o v a ­ tion which could not be stilled. It was D r, D aw son who first secured the distinguished spon­ sorship to accom p an y the In sti­ tu te’s annual a w a rd fo r "th e best T exa s book o f the y e a r .” C arr P . Collins o f D allas g a v e $1,000 to go with the honor, and has con­ tinued to do so fo r the past six­ teen years. This prize is now' for the best nonfiction volum e. T h e Jesse H . Jones 51.000 P rize, offered b y the Houston En­ dowm ent Inc., for the best w ork o f fiction. is given The friends o f the D allas Public L ib ra ry o ffe r a $5C0 prize for the best Texas w ork o f a scholarly nature published during the year. O ther prizes include the M cM ur- ra y Book Shop $250 aw ard for the best " f ir s t novel ”; the Cokcs- bury Bookstore $100 aw ard for the best " ju v e n ile " ; the Institute $100 poetry p rize; and the D allas Museum o f Fin e A rts A w ard for the best book fo rm a t and design. Under the current presidency o f Frank V a n d iver, author o f "M ig h ty S to n e w a ll" am ong other books and p rofessor at R ice Uni­ versity, the afternoon session o f the Institute w ill feature talks by lite ra ry agent Paul N e w Y ork Reynolds ‘ M c­ G raw -H ill) E dw ard Kuhn Jr. publisher and Th e charter o f the Institute, as founded by the Centennial Com ­ mission, requires it to "fo s te r the reading and w ritin g of good books in T e x a s ." Those Textbook Hearings On the book page of T h e N ew s today, a sparkling ac­ count o f the State Legislature’s hearings on pubiic-school textbooks is given by the newspaper’s veteran book critic, J. Lon Tinkle. Mr. Tinkle is given the privilege to interpret the hearings as he viewed them. The problem Is this: A group of Texans, politically con­ servative in their views, sincerely feel that too many history' and social-science texts distort the facts in favor of New Dealism and big government. Opposed to them are m a n y educators, authors, and literary figures who rightfully are concerned about e ffo rts tow ard censorship and the righ t of a historian o r social scientist to record and interpret history as he sees it. Without question, many textbooks written the last 30 years deliberately or unwittingly have channeled thinking in favor of the N e w Deal and succeeding administrations which have followed its general philosophy. Millions of young people have been graduated from secondary schools a n d higher educational institutions thoroughly indoctrinated with the theories of H arry Hop­ kins, Roosevelt, Lord Keynes, and the Americans for Democratic Action— to the exclusion of anything and anybody else. N o w — trying to prove this by what is said in a text is But here are general examples, w ithout reference to any difficult. author or text: Official Notices Graduate* in business adm inistra­ tion: A representative from the U n i­ graduate versity or Pennsylvania school w ill be here Tuesday, Feb, 13. to recruit students fo r the W harton that achool. Graduate Division of A n y students interested in a master should of business come to Business Economics Office B uild in g 203. or call G R 6-8371. ext. 412, fo r appointments. administration .Mrs, -ferry M oo re , Senior Se cr et a ry , Of fice of D e a n J. A. W h i t e job Opportunities An Interviewer w ill spook Tuesday. Feb 13 from 10 a.m. to 4 p m with physical education m ajors or anyone with abilities in counseling in vari­ ous activities about camp counselor Jobs at Camp Longhorn at Burnet, Texas Jobs will be available from June through August, Salary is $100 to $175 for boys, and $90 to $150 for girls plus room, board, and laundry. F o r additional Inform ation and ap­ pointment* contact th * Student Km- Trnumm mju. K * W hen a history text teaches that the T Y A experiment begun in 1933 brought cheaper electricity rates to farmers, that is the truth. But when the text neglects to say that rates are cheaper because the taxpayer is footing the bill, then it is guilty of distortion. It is propagandizing by the art of omission. It has told the truth, but only half the truth. Is academic freedom by authors the freedom to create only one side of the picture? Isn’t objectivity, as well as the pursuit of new ideas, a basic foundation of learning? These are the objections, primarily, of J. Evetts Haley and others who feel they have a right to question these texts. Certainly they should be heard. Nobody wants censorship by authority. It Is un-Am eri­ can. But the definition of censorship can be vague. And so can its application. The obligation of the State of Texas and of local school boards is to turn out students who have the truth. Educa­ tion which distorts and gives only half ihe truth is not education. — The Dallas Morning N e w t "T h o s e w ho su rvive would sur­ v iv e by ch an ce: A missed bomb, a change in the wind. F rom that point on, they would have to im ­ provise. F e w o f them , probably, would im p rovise w ell enough; m ost would die a little later on. " T o talk o f v ic to ry in such c ir ­ cum stances, as som e o f our m ili­ ta ry com m entators still do, is to m ock. E ven if, by sem e m acabre calculations, one side o r the other would be adjudged to have 'w o n ,’ the v ic to ry would be m eaning­ less. A ll that w e prize o f freedom and hope would be lost in a w e l­ ter c f death and te rro r; all that man has created of beauty and dignity would be am ong the ra ­ d ioactive p articles floating down to poison the w hole e a rth ," ( A l ­ fred H assler: N eith er Run nor H ide.) I a m c e r t a in ly not against p ro ­ tection in t h * fa c e o f d a n g e r . Hut real civil defense p rovides no protection fo r the follow ing re a­ sons : • The m om ent w e believe w e have a foolproof civil defense sy s­ tem, tho opponent m ay, and w ill sim ply step up the n u m ber of bo m bs or their potency. • The d eadly ra ys of the neu­ tron bo m b w ould penetrate into the deepest shelter. • If h country as hum ane and for the with as high a re gard individual as the United States even advocated the use of G B R in w a r, it m ust certainly be a s ­ sum ed that our opponent p ro ­ pose* a s im ila r policy. And, to use only one exam p le, there Is absolutely no protection against n e r v e g a s e s . Fin ally, w ith such an a rra y o f weapons availab le, which enem y fool enough to ap p ly would be the e ffe c t o f only which w e can protect ourselves? these fro m . & . horns By HOYT PURVIS Texan Editor I F I W E R E A collector o f odd literatu re and goodies, I could probably build up a considerable collection during m y tenure os T exan editor. This o ffic e is a target for all sorts o f odd-b a 11 publications, along w ith som e highly interest­ ing stuff too. la t e l y w e h ave com e across several literary' efforts that de­ serve mention, with the m erit varyin g. But one o f our most recent floods o f m ail included another form o f cultural accom plishm ent —-this being a genuine Tan gan yi­ ka A fric a n Elephant hair lucky bangle. A cco rd in g to a l e t t e r " T h e y a re w orn fo r luck or just for the fun o f it by m en and w om ­ en o f all races in our country’ ." fo r letter w rite r said that The receivin g the h a i r bangle w e should place an advertisem ent for him in the Texan. C an't do that, but if you ’ re interested w rite to B. G raae, B ox 133, Kilosa, T an ­ ganyika. I f you can’ t afford one, com e by and look a i mine. As fo r the lite ra ry side, som e o f the m ore w orth y publications include: ★ ★ T H E D IS P L A C E D PE R S O N S A L M A N A C . This is a 133-page e f­ fort by J o h n P a irm a n Brown, which tells the le a d e r how to get along with fallout, religion, bad dream s, In other words, it is a satire on the life and habits o f mass man, done in alm anac form . foreign policy, etc; An ex a m p le: "A m e r ic a in her postw ar boom, helped by a lot o f arm am ents, is as good as a Sun­ day-school pictu re: here w e all are, w ashing o u r overpow ered cars, raking the lawns and tum bl­ ing our kids in the leaves, w hile the d rier grow ls in the laundry. But under the bark the Dutch elm -disease is spreadin g: a n d w h y the phcnobarbitol? why the protestations of altruism in our gifts to the M iddle E ast? w hy the w hipped-cream com forts of the funeral p arlor? w hy the lead- shielded am m unition d ep ot?" M ayb e that gives you an idea o f M r. B row n ’ s p o i n t e d and slangy cleverness. I f you w ant a better idea you 'll have to pay $3.50 for this Beacon P ress pub­ lication. ★ ♦ T H E N E C E S S IT Y F O R C H O IC E This is H en ry A. K issin ger's e f­ fort on the prospects of A m erican foreign policy, now availab le in an Anchor paperback for $1.45. It is a v e ry thorough presenta­ tion, with a real attem pt at fa ir­ ness to d ifferen t points o f view s and a good breakdown o f pros and cons. K issinger thinks that any soc­ iety faces a point in its develop ­ ment w here it must ask itself if it has exhausted all the possi­ bilities o f innovation Inherent In “ W h e n its structure. Says he, It has this p o i n t is reached passed its zenith. F rom then on, it must decline, rapidly or slow ly, but nonetheless inevitably. Only a heroic and d eliberate effo rt c a n arrest narcissism and t h e col­ lapse which starts at the m om ent of seem in gly greatest ach ieve­ m en t.” juncture. Like m any others, K issin ger be­ lieves A m erica is now at this " D i e question c ritica l liefore A m e ric a is w hether it can m uster the dedication and c r e a t ­ iv ity before the w orst has hap­ pened," ★ ★ T H E SEC O N D C O M IN G . This is a new m agazine, w i t h the M arch issue being its third v o l­ ume. This u n i q u e publication takes its nam e from W illiam But­ ler Y e a ts ’ p o e m predicting a m odern revelation. is edited and published by a staff whose m em bers are all under 25. It fo r Its contents v a ry greatly. F o r exam ple there is a docum ented essay contending that the Eich- mann trial served only to under­ m ine all hope international rule of law in our tim e; a b ril­ liant interpretation of com m erical w restlin g as a serious dram atic art fo rm ; a re v ie w of the A m e r­ ican "a c a d e m ic n o v e 1," plus poems and art and photographic portolios, som e o f which are v e ry good. C ertainly this is an im agin ative publication and one that could becom e a v e ry positive contribu­ tion though it has a number o f mass-public handicaps to o v e r ­ com e. T h e D a i Io T e x a n Opinions expressed in t he Texan are those o f ihe Editors or o f the writer of the article and not neces sarily those of the University administration. The Daily Texan, n student newspaper of The University of Texas la published in Austin. Texas daily except Monday and Saturday and holtdav periods, September through May and monthly in August In Texas Student Publications. Inc Second-class postage paid at Austin. Texas. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or nut otherwise credited In this newspaper. A SS O C IA T E D PUKSS W IB K SKR\ ICE in Austin $1.00 month Maned 7 5 ,. month Maned out of town Delivered in Austin (three months m inim um ) ............................ ] . ! 75c month ................. ... ......................... S U B S C R IP T IO N ItVI I S Associated Collegiate Press All-Am erica* M E M B E R I niv*-rsitv Press Service Southwestern .J <>u rnaliMii Congress News contribution* will he accepted bv telephone (G R 2-2473) or th* editorial office. Journalism Bunding ’Od or at ihe News Laboratory J B. (G R 2-2473). and the advertising 102. The circulation o f b 107 office Is J j (G R 2-275(J) ii 111 f E D I T O R ..................................... H O Y T P U R V I S M A N A G I N G E D I T O R ................... .............. ........................... J I M H Y A T T P E R M A N E N T S T A F F S p o rts E d i t o r .......................... H a r v e y L it t le C a m p u s L i f e E d i t o r ........................................................................ p at R u s c h A s s o c ia t e C a m p u s L ife E d it o r ............................................ C a r o ly n C o k e r A m u s e m e n t s E d it o r ................................................................. B ill H a m p t o n A s s o c ia t e A m u s e m e n t s E d it o r ................................................ M ik e M u n c y E d it o r ia l P a g e E d it o r ..................................................... A n n A p e l shelters w ould have to be sealed in from the outside and would re­ qu ire manufactured oxygen. But the entire supply o f oxygen man­ ufactured in the US in 1960 would not m eet the needs o f a city o f in an under­ 100.000 population ground shelter for more than tw o w eeks. "No ven tilatin g system has yet been m ade available that can guard against gases that produce h eart sickness, or disease germs that spread cholera, plague, diph­ fe v e r, smallpox, theria, m alaria, a ll o f which are now in tho arsenals o f the m a jo r powers, and prim ed fo r instant use. typhoid the m issile The hydrogen bo m b Is to the Is to shelter what evacuation. The relative cheap- ness of m anufacturing hydrogen bombs, and their av aila b ility by the thousands, virtu ally insures the fact that any attack er w ould d e liv e r as m any of them a s w e re necessary to w reck any un der­ ground system . The purpose of a therm onuclear bom b I* to p u l­ ve rize a city and all the people In It; as m any sueh bom bs as a re requ ired to execute that purpose w ill bo used. the case o f " A g ra v e m oral problem arises those shelters in w h ere people w ho have been hit by ra d io a ctivity are still able to seek cover. Presen t civilia n de­ fense policy plans call fo r b arrin g contam inated persons, by force, if necessary. Indeed, each shelter has a capacity quota. As soon as this quota is filled, people who tried to get in would be refused force — adm ission w hether they are contam inated o r n ot." - again by I h e one excluded by fo rce m ay be your child, o r m ine, running in from a playground! I f w e w o n ’ t even let the con­ tam inated livin g into our shelters, w ho w ill bury the contam inated dead? Quoting from "H iro s h im a " by John H e rs e y : “ T h e y did not m ove and be realized they w ere too weak to lift them selves. He reached down and took a wom an by the hands, but her skin slipped off In Huge glov e-like pieces. He hail to keep consciously repeatin g to h im self: ‘ These are human beings’ . . .” W ho would take care of the b lin d ” Quoting fro m The R otar- ian, S eptem ber 1960: faced "B u t in this m atter o f taking shelter, a d ifferen t factor, alw ays known, but never, to m y reco l­ squarely, would lection, create such a hideous situation that no p rogram could be im a g­ ined that would control it. G rant­ ing c le a r w eather, the explosion o f a m edium size H-weapon, day o r night, would cause all people, indoors or out, w ithin v ie w o f the fireb a ll to look at it by un­ controllable reflex. And such peo­ ple would be m ade blind instant­ ly, even at a distance o f fo rty m iles from the explosion. Sudden light, 1,000 tim es brigh ter than the sun, w ould m ake them turn around to see the source, and that instinctive glance would burn their retinas so that they would be sightless. T h e ir cars, trucks, trains, planes would smash. P e o ­ ple would be unable to find their w a y hom e o v e r an area on the ord er o f 5,000 square m iles per sh ot." " , . . and th ey w e re all in the sam e nightm arish s ta te : T h eir faces w e re w h olly burned, their eye sockets w e re hollow’, the fluid from their m elted eyes had run down their cheeks. TTieir mouths w e re swollen, pus-covered wounds w h i c h they could not bear to stretch enough to adm it the spout o f a teapot . . ("H ir o s h im a ,” by John H e rs e y .) I f w e build com m unity shelters, Into In order to get everyb od y them so as to avoid panic and blindness, w e would have to take sh elter before the attack, before the w ar begins. The lew , If any minutes w arning tim e w ill not su ffice to get m ore than a sm all handful of people sheltered. As A lfre d H assler (in " N e ith e r Run nor H id e ” ) points out: "W h en would the m ove be m ad e? I f the attack did not occu r as expected, when would people if go back to their hem es? Or, tension they stay underground indefinitely? continued, would "W o u ld not the decision to take shelter itself precip itate the at­ tack it w'as intended to a vert? I f w ord cam e to us that the popu­ lations c f ail Russian cities had been ordered to m ove under­ ground im m ed iately, would w e not conclude that an attack on us w as im m inent? W h y should w e suppose th eir reaction to be any circum stances d ifferen t w e re reversed ? I t would be a self-fu lfillin g p rop h ecy: C reatin g the disaster to a v o id ." it had sought ihe if R a re ly Is there a m ean ingful discussion of the “ a ft e rw a rd s .” H ow do w e know, how does a n y ­ body know, w hen it Is over? And w h at is " i t " ? A fte r the p re s c rib ­ ed tw o w eeks, has the w a r auto­ m atically ended? W ho w ill have If one can even speak of won, winning? W hich side, each with m illions dead and m ore to die soon, with its cities w recked, food and drink contam inated, and co n ­ tem plating the prospect of c a n ­ c e r and stillbirths for y e a rs and y e a rs to com e, each thoroughly hated by the rest of the w o rld in fo r having involved m i s e r y and death— which side w ill have proved w hat? W ill c o m ­ m unism have au tom atically d is­ ap p e ared from the surface of the earth? W h at sa fe g u a rd s are there to prevent a repetition of the disaster? W h at peace and fr e e ­ dom w ill then !>e in store fo r ths survivors? It too, N e w s E d it o r ................................................ S a m K in c h J r . N I G H T E D I T O R .................................................. B E T T Y S W A L E A S T A F F F O B TIIIN I S S U E D E S K E D I T O R ................................................................ D O R O T H Y L A V E S I S S l E N E W S E D I T O R S .................................... C H A R M A Y N E M A R S H , N ig h t R e p o r t e r s ........... G A R Y M A Y E R B ill E a s o n , G a y l e H a r r i s C o p y r e a d e r s N ig h t S p o rts E d i t o r ...................................................................... w J a m e s V o w e li, J u d y P a y n e H o c k e r ................... . A s s is t a n t ........................................................... ......................... H a r v e y L it t le N ig h t A m u s e m e n t s E d it o r ..................................................... B ill H a m p t o n N ig h t C a m p u s L i f e E d i t o r ............................ C a r o ly n C o k e r A s s is t a n t . . . . ........................................................ S u sa n T r o s t e l E d it o r ia l A s s i s t a n t s ..................A n n A p c I, T o rn C o o p e r , M ic k ie C r a n fo r d > | _ j o r n s y r a v e ! T u * s d a y ' F e b ru 8 fy I U 962 t h e d a r t t e x a n p « y I M IK E H U M P H R E Y . . . in rem atch? TITCHE • GOETTINGER Em ploym ent Representatives W IL L BE O N C A M P U S Thursday, February 15 Friday, February 16 To Interview Ju n e and August G rad u ates for application in our executive remail training program. Ma e and female positions for grad­ uates in Business Administration, Home Eco­ nomics and libera! arts. Interviews may be scheduled through the Stu­ dent Placement Office and the Business Admin­ istration Placement Office. Outstanding op­ portunities for these desiring a career in re­ tailing. A g g ie 'Fight' • Gregory Gym since Coach B ra d ­ ley took over the job. The Aggies were the last SW C foe to topple In the Texas. The defeat came Tlte hardwood w ill also provide a meeting ground for Aggie Je r r y Windham and ’Horn Mike Humph­ rey The two paired off in the last encounter to bring the fans to their feet. With the game being crucial to both teams, the action should be fast and furious. TIV’ Steers hav e been unbeatable on the home hardwood, but have failed to enter the vin column on the road The ’Horns have won all IS conference games played In B y B F S H O C K E R Texan Sport* Staff An armed guard at the gate to check fans for dubs, hatch­ ets, sling shots, and o t h e r havoc-making devices might not p r o v e impractical at 8 p.m. Tuesday, as the Texas Longhorns invade Aggieland in the up-for-grabs game of the week in the SWC. the Tem per* flared and fans roared last Longhom-Aggie en­ at counter in Gregory Gym, which saw the Fa rm e rs humbled 64-57, The Tuesday night clash will weed the men from the boys as far as the top contender against Texas Tech is concerned. SM U is tied with A& M for the second place spot, but the Mustangs will have their hands full with league-lead­ ing Texas Tech In Lubbock. the Fights seem to be the tradition when ’Horns and F a n n e rs meet, and this game may prove no exception. C arroll Broussard w ill be playing his last game against the Longhorns. No love seems to be lost between the Steers and Broussard. To Farmsville next to last game of the ’58-'59 season The Longhorns beat Rice in the final game of that year, and haven't suffered a loss at home since. Bradley thinks the road jinx is ail mental. He a Ko said that, it was a question of m aturity. "A n experienced team that is mature w ill win any place," he said. “ W e’ve been making fewer and fewer m istakes," the former Duke coach stated. " I'm pleased with tile w ay our sophomores are com­ ing through, and also the w ay Jim m y B r o w n played against Rice.’* Brown, 6-7 senior guard, poured in 27 points Saturday in the Steers’ | tight 83-82 win over R ice, The to- • tai was a career high for the for­ mer Austin McCallum star. Brown shoved 21 points through die hoop against SM U eariier last week. when Texas lost a close overtime battle in Dallas. The Texas freshmen, unbeaten in seven starts this year, meet the Agige Fish in a 6 p.m. preliminary' game. J IM M Y B R O W N . , last try at AA M MID-TERM B E G IN N IN G F EB R U A R Y 5th f DON’T LOOK FOK A JOB • a e I C A R R O L L BRO U SSA RD . . . last try at Texas, L E A R N HORTHAND r e JE R R Y W IN D H A M . . . contender » O I » « C O » O P « C O * O f » * C O « 0 ! * « e O * O P « C O « O P « C O * O P * C O « O P « C O « O P * C O * O f » « C O FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY $25 TRADE-IN for arr old camera on purchase of a •ZEIS? IKON TENAX C a m e ra I 0 CL o • o o • CL o • oo £ 0 1 O S s CL CL 0 1 a 1 2 € V CL. 0 THIS INTRODUCTORY OFFER Is your chance to trade up to a famous Zeiss Ikon automatic 35mm camera at remarkably low cost. Take better pictures with greater ease. This camera has the world-famous Zeiss Tessar f/2.8 lens, Gat one of these 35 gems today. Cam era Shop— Second Floor N I FIe i n t s r u r i N i s o w n m o r e g 2246 Guadalupe Street • O P * C a e O P e C O e O P e C O e O P e C O e O P # C O e O P e C O # O P e C O e O P # C O e O P # C O e O P # C O o TS © o’n © o o "0 o ? ! o o # 0 a • 1 ? © o o 5 © © © © o rn © -ti ♦ © © ©'n Longhorn Golfers Begin Qualification The U niversity golf team entered the first round rn qualification for the Massingill trophy at the Aus­ tin Country Club Monday. The linksters completed 18 holes of the 72 holes to be completed, The low qualifying varsity golfer will take the annual trophy home. Charles En d w ell snagged t h e award last year. Graduation kept him out of the competition this year. a1 After the opening rounds Mon­ day, T erry Dill led the qualifiers with a 68, two under par B ill o'n Munn was second with a par TO. ^ Mike Symons was third with a ^ o I 0 A g a K h an Twists A nkle ------------------------ i three over par 73. J? Practicing in Ski G a m e s q C H A M O N IX . F r a n c * t* — Sev. th# Aga including eral skiers, Khan, were injured In accidents Monday while practicing for the World Ski Games, 2 The young Aga Khan, compet­ ing for Britain , twisted an ankle in a fall while preparing for the I men s downhill race scheduled for j Sunday. He failed to qualify Sat-1 urday for the slalom final, and j British team officials said It was not sure whether he w ill b« ahi# to start in the downhill. Also hurt in spills wen# S w i t ­ zerland's Philippe Stern and It ­ a ly ’s I\x> Mahiknecht. Stern #uf- fered a wrenched collar bone and probably w ill have to misa the rest of the meet. Buckeyes Slash M ic h ig a n AN N A R B O R , Mich, lf* — De- I spite the mysterious absence of itj usual basketball magic, Ohio I State set a Big Ten record of 24 consecutive victories Monday night by outlasting Michigan 72-57. With an overflow throng of 9.510 —the largest in Yost fie ld House history — looking on, the first- ranked Buckeyes were extended to the final four minutes by a deter­ mined Michigan team. Using a collapsing three-man Je r r y Lucas, Michigan zone on kept the Buckeye all-America bot­ tled up through most of the game Seniors and Graduates Y es . . . heres your LAST CHANCE [....AND THE JOB WILL LOOK FOR Let Durham 's train you in courses and place you in a Accounting Bulimus Adm!niitr«tio*p Saeraiarial Offic# Machina* Shorthand Typing (G r a g g ) one of their S P EC IA LIZ ED top-notch position. • Stcnographio • IBM Complata Automation • Drafting (Enginaarmg Computers Drawing) • N a ncy Taylor Charm and Folia JO B S A V A IL A B L E W H IL E Y O U LEARN DURHAM'S BUSINESS COLLEGE W R IT E, C A L L O R VISIT TO D A Y 600 A L A V A C A P H O N E G R 8-3446 J T 3 D DIRECT ENERGY CONVERSION TU RBO JET ROCKET LIQUID HYDROGEN 1 1 5 M A G N E T O H Y D R O D Y N A M I C S FUEL CELLS MACH 3 SATURN N U C L E A R to have an individual picture in the 1962 C A C T U S ! The Cactus Studio will be open TUESDAY, Feb. 20 W E D N E S D A Y , EEB. 21 T H U R S D A Y , FEB. 22 C o m * b y Journalism B u ild in g 107— 8:30-12:30; 1:30-4:30 to fill in cards an d p a y $2.50 fee. N O A P P O I N T M E N T S NE CES SA RY N o individual pictures will be m ade after these dates. Select and return your proofs prom ptly as th# class section will b# sent to th# printer soon. 11 en Hor bel flair (to bist Hora than Chubby to the Twist More Hungarian than Liszt More then Pompadour Lo Louis Mo-e then Franny d to Zooejr More than panty is to raid Common Market to foreign trade Brothers Smith to sick giraffe More than Barry is to YAF — lr proof, whereof. I send to yo* The Valentine of 62 The dernier a i (the berries}, The book UNCLE SHELBY’S ABZ BOOK By She! Silverstein 4th printing. $1.50 Simon and Schuster T H E R E ' S C H A L L E N G E T O D A Y FO R V I R T U A L L Y E V E RY T E C H N I C A L T A L E N T AT P R A T T & W H I T N E Y A I R C R A F T Almost every eaetwiftcafhr trained men ens find artffrtli ltftf end wwerdlot N M T opportunities within the broad spectrum of frau A Whitney Aircraft acuHue*. From the solid Foundation of 36 seers as a world leader its flight propulsion m m n a P A W A development activities and research investigations today are far ranging Ie addition to continuing and concentrated development effort on att breathing and rocket engines, new and exciting avenues ara being explored in every (held of advanced aero­ space, marine, and industrial po* ct applications. The reach of the future ahead is indicated by current program s. Presently, Prats A W hitney Aircraft is exploring the fringe areas of technical knowledge ta majrmroAnk*- dynamics , . . thtt minutes and M erm en Verne cnnyrmnrts , , , jreprrso mc peopoiskm . /met cr Us and nuclear power. To help move tomorrow closet to today, we continually seek ambitious young engineers and scientists Your degree1* It can be rn: M EC H A N IC A L ■ AERO N AUTICAL ■ ELEC TRICAL ■ CH EM ICAL and N U C LEA R E N G IN E E R IN G ■ PHYSICS ■ C H I M IS T R Y ■ M E T A L L U R G Y ■ C E R A M IC S ■ M A T H E M A T IC S * E N G I­ N E E R IN G S C IE N C E Of A P P L IE D M E C H A N IC S . The field still broadens The challenge growl greater And a furore of recognition and advancement mav he here for you. For further information regarding an engineering career at Pratt A Whitney ’? to M R P A,: v - ' A Engineering Departm ent Pratt A Whitney Aircraft East Hartford 8, Conn. nt c t f** yr or , •? r ! i , P R A T T & W H I T N E Y A I R C R A F T S T Division of United Aircraft Corporation COMMtencUT OPtaanoia* r**t Warrior*. ConnocinnM rio e to a Aiea a rc h a h o oevviORasearr cc arm a Fair* B w > Cow«ty. Rowda> »— r—gsrymetCl a il'.nut rtMmsfft in I i.« fits appt. A;> Rotor or nation*! otvtm. B Pianists Ferrante and Teicher[,oyt To"ns,ey , , |PacultyConcert In Joint Union-CEC C oncert . . I . . . - - - - A u s tin S ym p h o n y: Brahms vs. C h o p in than two million F e rra n te and TH cher, the key­ board duo whose versions of “ Exo­ d u s” and “ The A partm ent” sold records, m ore will present a program that will range from show tunes and popu­ la r music to the “ pop” classics at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Municipal Audi­ torium . Since first perform ance w ith the Toledo S y m p h o n y in 1947, their In performing for college and civic audiences. they have played in 48 states and Canada. their perform ance* they combine classical m usic with They have appeared on every their own arran g em en ts of tunes m ajor radio netw ork and on tele- of Gershwin, Rodgers, K ern. P o rt­ the G arry Moore, vision, er, and other popular com posers. Steve Allen the late E rnie Kovacs shows, to the Ding Dong School. They have recorded exten­ sively for Columbia and W estm ins­ ter and a re now recording exclus­ ively for U nited Artists Records. Traveling by car, accom panied truck by their specially-designed two concert with d riv er grands, they have b arnstorm ed b ark and forth across the country, from a n d and They have appeared frequently with P ercy Faith on the Wool- U^Y worth Hour and appeared weekly for two y ears on ABC's Piano Playhouse. They also composed and played the music, with orig­ inal sound effects, for the motion picture “ U ndersea Conquest.” F errante and Teicher trave been playing pianos together since they were six, when they first m et as in New Y ork’s Ju illiard students School of Music. F erran te was born in New York Q ty , the son of a violinist. Introducing Mr. Orange Pin Meet him, make a strike with him and bowl a free game. A ll bowling 30c per game. Yes, bowl for fun. Save some mon. BO W LING IS GREAT FOR A DATE. No leagues — recondi­ tioned alleys — ABC approved. New hours IO a.m. to 12 p.m. BOWLING CENTER 3409 Guadalupe GL 3-9196 THEATRE IN THE SOUTHWEST, PRESENTS The W o r ld s MOST TALKED-ABOUT FILM! rTHE TEXAS, THE M OST TALKED ABOUT talons » I a u g e r e a s e ? ROGER VADIM’S UNCUT MASTERPIECE ABOUT A MOST FRANK AND UNUSUAL MARRIAGE: TICKETS WILL NOT BE SOLD TO CHILDREN’ WITH OR WITH­ OUT PARENTS Starts Tomorrow! R O A D S H O W E N G A G E M E N T S E A T S NOT R E S E R V E D P A S S I IST S U S P E N D E D THIS IS THE PICTURE THE FRENCH GOVERN- MENT DIDNT WANT YOU TO SEE . . . THE ONE THAT CAUSED ALL THE IN CONTROVERSY AMERICA!! herm * frcm En!* T f iu Cnntinnoun fr«ra It Noon r*«itre» 12-2-4-6-9-10 p rn. Prtr#* SI t i A SI OO for Student Discount Uardt typf MORUUJ m GRAfffi PWIFE HU UAS9R WIKMHSEr“ 5 cai mi ^owusiucfisEriju I mb* ca* w e * The Union Talent Committee and the Student Cultural Entertainment Committee PR ESENT FOR THE FIRST TIME FERRANTE and I heir r—w— f I • AN YW H E R E ! r r y r u e d A III I v j l l L I V Lids! FAMOUS for their recordings of themes from "EXO DUS” and •TH E APARTM ENT* UNITED ARTISTS RECORDING STARS T h e Most fig Team of Our Time ’ M u n i c i p a l A u d i t o r i u m , I u e s d a y , F e b . 13, at Alada hie Ticket f pan. —Get Yours Today! on ADM ISSIO N: 75i LOR BLA N K E! TAX & SLASON T I C K E T HOLDERS (Blanket Fax and Season Ticket Sales at M usic Building Box O ffice U niv) G ENERAL AD M ISSIO N : CHILDREN T H R U JR. H F, 75< A DULTS, SIAO rickets Available at J. R. Reed Music Co., The Co-O p, Mu s ic Building Box O ffice, and Texas Union 3 i i and composition. D ichterlebe, which resulted from <**oire, particularly During the next few y ears, they Schum ann's creative urge of the when all the the old fam iliar pieces W ednesday afternoon a t 4 p.m. in R ecital H all, the F acu lty Con­ cert Series will present Floyd ; Townsley, tenor, assisted by guest Teicher, born in Wilkes B arre, artist B etty Serafy, pianist, in a lieder Schu­ m an n 's facous song cycle, Dleh tarliebe. featuring concert his Pa., moved to New York a t five and a half, fam ily having moved chiefly with a view to his entering Ju illiard Institute of Mu­ sic Art. During th eir school days, A rthur The poet, Heine, who w as greatly adm ired by Schum ann, gave the m aster thirty-eight of his poems. Schum ann found in them , together and Louis studied with the sam e with an echo of his contradictions la te r were gradu- and changing moods, the attraction teachers and ated from Juilliard as piano ma- of a m usic which responded mys- jors under C arl Friedberg. After teriously to his own and w’hich be- a brief period of concertizing, cam e one with it in an alm ost phy- thev returned to Juilliard as fac- sical sense. m em bers, teaching theory J The m agnificent song cycle, In 1947, they re s ig n e d !of combined teaching with a lim ited year 1840, w as a total achievem ent. I schedule of concerts and worked it com prises the sixteen songs um- together creatin g new duo piano que in th eir astonishing diversity m aterial. and inspiration, from teaching in order to devote j ‘‘atm o sp h ere.’’ full tim e to concert work. Mr. Townsley started his ad- Tickets for the perform ance are vanced study with O scar Seagie. 75 cents for Blanket Tax and CEC who took him to Europe to study season ticket holders and can be ! with tenor Jean de Reszke, obtained only a t the Music Build- ; Although the Dlchterllebe is the im portant work on the Townsley- mg. G eneral admission tickets at SI.50 m ay be purchased a t J. R. Serafv lieder concert, the program Reed Music Co., University Co-Op, will open with B ach’s Benedictus and Texas Union. The concert is without charge. composition IN-I AR H E A T E R S • _________________ SNAC K BAR O P E N S 6:15 S E Q S E to, U H M I M O V IE E N T E R T A I N M E N T G U A R A N T E E : BE O C R I F VOL DON T A G R E E ! F IR S T SHOW 6:45 • M N E F O O D S G I E S T P L A T O R O I M I S E x c l u s i v e G i m p e d E n sr a x o m o n t O n e Show i n s Only a t 7: 15 ) j- Y f a t t D f s n « y F ''\ f Ik* A b s e n t " f m rn W ed ■ N ' - P f t f e ' o r r : A llo: “ Po*-os BHI** and “ P in to Jr.* lECaRiMlOR__ rmESi 'IB a w U M T I D Jgr CQKPaAjno* *t E X O D U S PAUL NEWMAN - EVA MARIE SAINT Pin*: “ G ala D ay at D isn e y la n d ” amv rot a mow D IS C O U N T C A S O I N O W S H O W IN G ! F E A T I R E S I ll: SO - 2 IM - 4 SI 7:03 - 9:34 TODAY AT INTE RS TA TE PARAMOUNT A D IS T IN G U IS H E D ADULT E N T E R T A IN M E N T By DAVID ARMSTRONG Associate Am usem ents Editor At interm ission of the Austin Symphony's concert last night, I had just about decided to w rite a review which would begin som e­ thing like this: “ A provincial sym ­ phony orchestra, generally speak­ ing, has no business even trying to play w arhorses of the concert rep- in these days, exist in nine or ten recordings by all the best orchestras in the coun­ try and abroad. No; it* business is to buy itself a harpsichord and sta rt in on the eighteenth century repertoire, play Schubert sym ­ phonies and Haydn m asses, and otherwise take advantage of the im m ense backlog of pieces w ritten by g re a t com posers for sm all or am ateurish groups. Tho Austin Symphony gave an excellent p a r­ ticular illustration of this general point last night by giving the least rendition of B rah m s’ im pressive First: Symphony ever heard. F a r from contributing any­ thing to w'hat every concertgoer already knows about this piece, it reduced its nobility’ *nd passion to the I *vel of a $2.98 recording of Victory at Sea. This is not to say that the notes w'ere not there - quite a few of them w ere. Nor that some parts of the orchestra did not play w ell- the strings were the solo quite work of Leopold la Fosse, the con­ certm aster. On the other hand, their notorious horn section, at the point where according to the pro­ gram note they should have in­ toned a melody of consolation and fair, particularly have I to w rite, This, I say. courage sounded pretty gloomy to me, and were generally too dism al for words. If there was any a t­ tem pt at presenting a coherent overall conception of any of the movem ents, rhythm ic or intellec­ tual. it escaped me com pletely.” is what I had in mind but the Chopin Piano Concerto In E Minor drove such sour thoughts out of my head. True, that hom ist was still there, baying softly away like a distant the Baskervilles; but Hound of that w as the only Jam es flaw’. Dick’s playing m ade all the dif­ ference in the world, and as Cho­ pin was indifferent to tire orches­ tra, the piano part, is nearly all there is to hear. Mr. D ick’s style is distinctly re­ strained, but instead of chilling the music, it was the m eans of allow- ing it to speak perfectly for itself, classical and to a conclusion, some m usic its of projecting its own emotion ra th e r than injecting that of th# soloist. His inflection of the first few notes of the slow movem ent, it w as charm ing, as original as was only long the prelude series of trium phs over the prob­ lems this difficult, delicate musio presents. the Symphony In that w’as took up technical n earer com pass, B ritten ’s Soirees Musi­ cales, and did a very creditable job with it. This is not to say th at I like the m usic, which derives all its virtue from the original Ros­ sini pieces and none from B rit­ ten’s sm arm y anthology of orches­ tral effects out of Rim sky-Korsa- kov and Glazounov. But it was a good hint of w hat the Austin Sym­ phony can do when not afflicted with folic de grandeur. to being in Tuesday, February 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page Bishop's C o m p a n y To Play Paton D ra m a The Bishop’s Company of Santa B arbara, Calif., will present a dram atization of Alan P ato n ’s “ Cry, tile Beloved Country” Fri- A D U L T S EWI MDC 50e C R IE D 25c r n STA TE BIG DOUBLE FEATURE LAST DAY! TWI a OTY. . TWf (SAU ANTSY O f THI GttATW KNIGHT OE ALII T CCMrocOCXX* SPLENDOR OF KING ARTHUR’S COURT! Knights th, Round Table in COLOC ! A T M i l t - l i l t - 9 : 0 1 A D U L T S 90-» MD C 45« AT I M 5:56 - 9:47 CH ILD ZIG* — . VARSITY LAST DAY! D O O R S O DE N I M F E A T U H E S : 1 : 5 9 - 3 : 5 0 - 8 : 5 9 7 :5 0 - 9 : 5 0 BRUMMELL GRANGER-TAYLOR USTINOV • MORLEY IMZAMTH OOM*? M il* AUSTIN I . AHT DAT ! ONE S H O W IN G O N LY! 7:30 P.M. The Epic Story of Everlasting Glory! uuuucnos E X O D U S P A U - NEWMAN EVA MAKIE SAINT . Ptrtm VAwmwn ■ UM 4 Cue# •AU"** •AL MINCO•#:««« UCMCM -MUOK «Wr»TM T A I F N T I wm WMH mmm I mI I IQ N F F H F n I f o r the I * Lmb tm* 1*kF mm* CAMPUS REVUE AUDITIONS TO BE HELD IN SEVEN CITIES BEGINNING IN FEBRUARY A full S u m m e r ’s E m p lo y m e n t fo r R e g istere d C o lle g e S tu d e n ts s elected a t th e s e auditions inc luding 1 4 w e e k s a t $ 7 5 . 0 0 p e r w e e k and 2 w e e k s o f r e h e a r s a l s a t V2 s a l a r y b e g i n n in g M a y 2 8 t h a n d c o n t i n u i n g t h r u S e p t e m b e r 3 r d . S p e n d a g lo r io u s v a c a t i o n w i t h pay a t A m e r i c a ’s g la m o ro u s fa m ily re cre a tion c e n ­ t e r l o c a t e d m i d w a y b e t w e e n D a l l a s a n d F o r t W o rth . SI X FLAGS OVER T E X A S W rite to day fo r full inform ation an d audition dates a n d locations tot SIX FLAG S OVER T E X A S CAMPUS REVUE • P. 0. BOX 191 • ARLINGTON, TEXAS A Pinch of Pepper...a Nip el Ginger... a Oath of Maria rd... in as Spicy a Pish of Adult Cinemafare as you'll ever taste! Meet Pierre’s Playmates • . . AS COMELY A C O V IY OP CURVACEOUS QUAIL AS SVIR A N Y HU N TIR SIT HIS SIGHTS O N N OUR GUARANTEE.. . You'll tem m ore and laugh more than ever bef ore! THE ADVENTURES OF A I w h y r ia era P r o d u c tio n W rn d iM o d b y D A V I! F R U M A N - D i r . c t . Z b y H W U H G O R D O N FULL COLOR Showing! N O W ADULTS O N LY OPEN I [ day at 7 30 p.m . at the University i P resbyterian O iurch. “ Cry, the Beloved Country,” by I toe author of “ Too L ate toe Philan- ; thrope," “ The Land and People of I South A frica.“ and “ South Africa in T ransition,” is the story of a white m an black m an and a locked in the g rim m est of hum an emotions. Beyond the intense and insoluble personal trag ed y is toe story of toe beautiful and tragic I land of South A frica—-or any land or any world w here racial ferm ent I and unrest break the harm ony of { men. Founded to bring dram a back Into the Church as p a rt of th* worship service, the Bishop's Com­ in 1952 by pany was organized J Phyllis Benbow B eardsley. Cur­ rently on its ninth national and I fifth international tour, the Com­ pany travels throughout the nation : and Canada with a skilled cast and a repertoire of eight plays. I An Inter-racial and inter-faith j organization, Tile Bishop's Com­ pany independent group I nam ed in honor of Bishop G erald j H. Kennedy of the Methodist j Church. an is Since 1952, the Company ha* traveled m ore than 600,000 mile* I playing in churches and unlversi- j ties, touring i units which travel coast to coast 51 week* of the year, a Bishop s I Company Duo is currently touring In addition two to high schools. Six of tile original eight leading actors with the com pany include Miss B eardsley, Hat Bokar, Minna Caldwell, M erle H arbach, Jam es Wheaton; and EJ] zn bo th Wolfe. • T # R BOX O F F I C E O P E N S 6:09 A D M IS S I O N FLA M IN G STAR E lvis P resley, B a r b a r * E d r * S t a r t * 9:4ft —- Pl u» — A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE V ivien F etish, M a rio * B ra n d * Starta 8:40 SOUTHAUSTIN 3900 SO I T il C O N G R E SS BOX O F F IC E O P E N S 6 09 A D M IS S IO N bOr. Now a t K rR iilar A d m iss io n EXODUS P a u l N e w m a n , E v a M a rie S t a r t a 6:45 a n d 10:39 t a i n t Broadway’s peat show lift* the scrawl with warm and wonderful fun! ROSALIND A! EC 4 RUSSELL GUINNESS 'A Majoritu of One’z=l \ RAT OANToV-’ mAOLTN RH Ut-/ Ka IN TECHNICOLOR / STARTS T O M O R R O W S T A T E Aggie Fight' • G regory Gym since Coach B rad ­ ley took over the lob. The Aggies were the last SW C foe to topple in the Texas. The defeat came T ie hardwood w ill also provide I a meeting ground for Aggie Je r r y j Windham and ’Horn M ike Hum ph­ rey. The two paired off in the lust encounter to bring tile fans to their feet. W ith the game being cru cial to both teams, the action should be fast and furious. The Steers have been unbeatable on the home hardwood, but ha\e failed to enter the win column on the road The Horns have won all IS conference games played In B y B E * H O C K E R Texan Sport* Staff An armed guard at the gate to check fans for clubs* hatch­ ets, sling shots, and o t h e r havoc-making devices migh1 not p r o v e impractical at 8 p.m. Tuesday, as the Texas Longhorn,? invade Aggieland in the up-for-grabs game of the week in the S W C the Tem pers flared and fans roared at last Longhom-Aggm en­ counter in G regory G ym , which saw the Farm ers humbled 64-57. The Tuesday night clash w ifi weed the men from the boys as far as the top contender against Texas is tied Tech is concerned. SM U w ith AA M for the second place spot, but the Mustangs w ill have their hands full with league-lead­ ing Texas Tech In Lubbock. the Fights seem to be the tradition when ’Horns and Farm ers meet, and this game m ay prove no exception. C arro ll Broussard w ill be playing his last game against the Longhorns. No love seems to be lost between the S te e n and Broussard. 'H o rn s Trave! To Farmsvilie next to last game of the ’58-'59 season. The Longhorns beat R ice in the final game of that year, and haven't suffered a loss at home since. Brad ley thinks the road jinx Is a ll m ental. He also said that it was a question of m aturity. “ An experienced team that is m ature w ill win any place,” he said. “ W e’ve been m aking fewer and fewer m istakes/' the form e’- Duke “ i'm pleased with coach stated, the w ay our sophomores are com­ ing through, and also the w ay Jim m y B r o w n played against R ic e ." Brown, 6-7 senior guard, poured in 27 points Saturday in the Steers tight 83-82 wm over R ice . The to­ tal was a career high for the for­ m er Austin M cC allum star. Brow n shoved 21 points through the hoop last week. against SM U ea rlie r when Texas lost a close overtim e battle in D allas. The Texas freshm en, unbeaten in seven starts this sear, meet the Agige Fish rn a 6 p.m. p relim in ary game. JIM M Y BROWN . . . la it try e t A A M MID-TERM B E G IN N IN G FEB R U A R Y 5th L O O K FO R A JOB... tafeL*.-* .TU J k st. .v.,. /Mi-, tm C A R R O L L BRO U SSA RD , , . lait try at T e m . LEARN HORTHAND IN t I * * rn J W E I H S ...AND THE JOB WILL LOOK FOR T u e s d a y , F e b r u a r y 13. 1962 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N S e q * I MIKE HUMPHREY . . . in rem atch? TITCHE - BOETTINGER Employment Representatives W IL L BE O N C A M P U S Thursday, February 15 Friday, February 16 To Interview June and A u gu st G raduates for application in our executive rata,! tra ling program. Ma * and female positions for grad- nates in Business Administration, Homa E.o- nomics and liberal arts. Interviews may be s:hedu!ed through the Stu­ dent Placement O ffice and the Business Admin­ istration Placement O ff ce. Outstanding op­ portunities for thoie desiring a career in re­ tailing. JE R R Y W IN D H A M . . . contender I • O P « C O * O P « C O * O P * C O « O P « C O « O P « C O « O P « C O * 0 ! » * C O * O P « C O « O f » * C O * O P * C O o J o FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY $25 TRADE-IN for any old camera on purchase of a TENAX Camera THIS INTRODUCTORY OFFER I* your chance to trade up to a famous Zeiss Ikon automatic 35mm camera at remarkably low coit. Taka better pictures with greater ease. This camera bai the world-famous Zeiss Tessar f/2.8 lens. Get one of these 35 gems today. Camera Shop— Second Floor 6 • a o • o 0 1 fL © * © £ o s £ Cl O A o £ 2 0 1o rn O o £ _ 2 » Q P * C 0 * O P * € O * O P * C O * 0 P » C O « O P « C O « O P » C O * O P * C O t O P * C < > * O P * C O * O P # e 0 , , 2246 Guadalupe Street ?o a rn O c © ♦ o ? « 8 # O J o s© r> © • 0 1 f t o o 3 0 1 © I o © a © • o ca © rn rn a a • © "0 Longhorn Golfers Begin Qualification The U n iversity golf team entered the first round in qualification for the Mass ingill trophy at the Aus­ tin Country Club Monday. The linksters completed 18 holes of the 72 holes to be completed. The low qualifying varsity golfer w ill take the annual trophy home. t h e Charles B rid w ell snagged aw ard lasT year. Graduation kept him out of the competition this year. After the opening rounds Mon­ day, T erry 1X1] led tile qualifiers with a 68, two under par. B ill M ural was second with a par TO. Mike Symons w as third w ith a three over par 73. Aga Khan Twists Ankle Practicing in Ski Games C H A M O N IX . Fran ce i* — Sev- the Aga including *>r&] skiers, Khan, were injured in accidents M onday while practicing for the W orld Ski Gam es, The young Aga Khan, compet­ ing for B rita in , twisted an ankle in a fall w hile preparing for the men s downhill race scheduled for Sunday. He failed to qualify Sat­ urday for the slalom final, and B ritish team officials said it was not sure whether he w ill be ahi# to start in the downhill. Also hurt in spills w ere S w it ­ zerland's Ph ilip p e Stern and It ­ a ly ’s Iv o M ahiknecht. Stern suf­ fered a wrenched collar bone and probably w ill have to m iss the lest of the meet. AN N A R B O R . M ich. Buckeyes Slash Michigan — D e­ spite the m ysterious absence of its usual basketball m agic, Ohio State set a B ig Ten record of 24 consecutive victories M onday night by outlasting M ichigan 72-57. W ith an overflow throng of 9,810 —the largest In Yost F ie ld House history — looking cm, the first- ranked Buckeyes w ere extended to the final four minutes by a deter­ mined M ichigan team . Using a collapsing three-man zone on Je r r y Lu cas, M ichigan kept th* Buckeye all-Am erica bot­ tled up through most of the game Seniors and Graduates Yes. . . heres your LAST CHANCE Let Durham * train you in one of their SPEC IA LIZ ED courte* and place you in a top-notch portion. • Accounting • Bu ii nail Adndniltta+i©* • Secretor!*! • Office Machine! • Shorthand (G r e g g ) 0 Typing • StaneHiraphia • IBM Com plato Automation • Drifting (Engineer ng Computers Drawing) • Nancy Taylor Charm and Baile J O B S A V A ILA B L E W H IL E Y O U LEA R N DURHAM'S BUSINESS COLLEGE W R IT E . C A L L O R VISIT TO D A Y 600 A L A V A C A P H O N E G R 8-3446 JT3D DIRECT ENERGY CONVERSION T U R B O J E T RO CKET LIQUID HYDROGEM JIB ® ^ i f SSM * H h ■ O S ® l i % I I rn*# FUEL CELLS M A C H 3 SATURN N U C L E A R M A G N E T O H Y D R O D Y N A M IC S to have an individual picture in the 1962 CACTUS! The Cactus Studio will be open TUESDAY, Feb. 20 W E D N E S D A Y , PEB. 21 T H U R S D A Y , PEB. 22 Come by Journalism Building 107— 8:30-12:30; 1:30-4:30 to fill in cards and pay $2.50 fee. N O APPOIN TMENTS NECESSARY No individual picture* will be made after these date*. Select and return your proof* promptly at tba clat* section will be tent to the printer soon. Wale*fine, bel intr du Mst More than Chubby to the Twrfst More Hungarian than liszt Mora than Pompadour to louis More than Tranny Is to Zooey More than panty is to raid Common Market to foreign trade Brothers Smith to sick giraffe Mort than Barry Is to YAP — lr proof, whereof. I send to yod The Valentino of 62 The dernier czi (the berries), The book UNCLE SHELBY’S ABZ BOOK By Shel Silverstein 4 th printing. $1.50 Simon and Schuster T H E R E 'S C H A L L E N G E T O D A Y FOR V IR T U A L L Y E V E RY T E C H N IC A L TALENT AT PRATT & W H I T N E Y A IR C R A F T Almost emery scteetifkaify trained m s et® find stimuli stng end nwfordfng ateed* opportunities within th* broad spectrum of Pratt St Whitney Aircraft activin**, From the to lid foundation of J f> wears aa a world tender in flight propulsion m eant, PA W A development activities and research invest! tattoos today are far ranging Ie addition to continuing and concentrated development dTort on air breathing and rocket engines, new and exciting avenues are being explored us every field of advanced w e * 'pact, marine, and industrial power applications The reach of the future ahead » indicated by current programs. Presently, Pratt A Whitney Aircraft a exploring the fringe areas of technical knowledge in mafmtoMrdte* dynamic* . . . the' monies and thermo*elettrt6 eom rmons » . . kvpt+some propulsion • /wet cells and nuclear power. To help move tomorrow closet to today, we continually seek ambiuous young engineer* and scientists. Your degree' It can be in: M E C H A N IC A L ■ A E R O N A U T IC A L ■ E LE C T R IC A L • C H I M IC A L and N U C L E A R E N G IN E E R IN G H PH Y SIC S rn C H I M IST R Y rn M E T A L L U R G Y • C E R A M IC S ■ M A T H EM A T IC S » E N G I­ N E E R IN G SC IE N C E or A P P L IE D M EC H A N IC S. The field still broader* The challenge grows greater, And s future of recognition and advancement rn* v be here for you. For further information regarding an engineering career at Pratt A W h in e y Aircraft, consult your college placement officer or write to Mr. R. p Aiinger, Engineering Departm ent Pratt A Whitney A ircraft East Hartford 8. Conn. P R A T T S. W H I T N E Y A I R C R A F T Division of United Aircraft Corporation CONNtCneirr OPtRATiOH* rsxt Hartford, Connect*** Fvomoa e o f arch ah u Deva l ohm* arr c a irn * Pan* a—on cwnty, «fo»«£x AX qualified applicants wig reco n * eeM M eraO o* for t —rtrvnorm m ito u t -foja.nl ie a t e * t i n t or national aright. - .. e I6TH A N D SA N JA C IN T O GR 8-3984 ★ A Furnished Apartments Rooms for Rent For Rent For Sale Dance Sessions Still Open F o r additional Information, con­ tact Abdul-Hadi at O R I!-:AIT or Box 7674, U niversity Station. A it | “ It is not the, person who knows ■ many steps, but the person who knows the basic steps w ell who is a good dancer,” he said. JUST^ FOR FUN, members of the Texas Union Dance Committee go over ballroom steps demonstrated by dance instructor Larry Reed, right, who conduct* the weekly dance session the committee sponsors. Left to right are Lynda Painter, James Rush, Berh Shocked Doug Reese, Jan Casiiicw, and Leah Ann W eaver, group chairman. Exhibits on Campus An exhibit of Arab books, carv­ ings, maps, and tapestries, spon- a tli feint HP “ rST. A T a a l o h a d o LOW PRICES ALL SIZES GR 2-669/ • ve-ybody Qjsi • i ga ft' d t sored by the Organization of Arab Students, will be on display until Feb. 17 on the ground floor of the M ain Building. The organization will provide students to lecture on social, eco­ nomic, and cultural aspects of the Arab world interested groups, announced Azmi Abdul- Hadi, publicity chairman of the OAS. for any The literature and culture of South A frica In (he subject of a display now in the showcases on the firvt floor of the English Bu ild ­ ing. borne of the now South A f­ rican literature 1$ in the young language Afrikaans, dm eloped In the eighteenth and nineteenth cen­ in tauries by European settlers South Africa. W hat’s Cludlenge? ‘ The Chal­ lenge movement, burn at Yale U niversity several years ago, pro­ ‘challenge’ poses students* minds wish ideas and c mcepts which concern us all.” to So reads the display in the Tri- ion showcase, first floor. Lou Ann W alker summarizes the challenge movement in the Union showing. c m m N to'iSm ES PLUS COMPLETE SE R V IC E AND CAMERA REPAIR'. STUDTMAN Photo Service Telephone GR 6-4326 222 West 19th SAN JACINTO CAFE Now: Pf** Parking In tke JADE ROOM lot— next door Parking SPECIALIZING IN D ELIC IO U S M E X IC A N AN D AMERICAN FOODS Visit Our Rainbow Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK mg Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! EL M A T 504 East Ave. G R 7-7023 EL T O R O 1601 Guadalupe G R 8-4321 EL C H A R R O 91 2 R e d R iv e r G R 8-7735 M O N R O E 'S "M exican Food to Take biome" G R 7-8744 Delivery Service 7 Days Austin’s “Big Four” in Authentic Mexican Food ««**» " r Tuesday, February 13, 1962 THE D A ILY TEXAN Fag* I Art Students Tour Capital " r Astaire Ex-Pupil Coaching Draws G o o d Attendance . Forty-seven University art stu- dents are back in Austin after an A foi moi disciple of I* rod * jnformal visit at the Washington A sta ire now studying tit the home of Mrs. Lyndon Johnson and U n iv e rsity is again c o a c h in g ." tour cf five eastern seacoast! U n iv e rs ity students who de- j art mu«eums. sire to smooth out their hall- room techniques. . J " Mrs. Johnson s home where Jo h n ; Peppermint Lounge in New York Walker, director of the National | city. , in Centrai parfc sightseeing on i I ” roadwab and an even|?« that had been arranged by Mrs. Johnson. The tour would have in­ cluded art and Interior decorations collected by Mrs. John Kennedy. Other highlights of the tour in tkixSg riding U n d e r th e s p o n s o rs h ip o f Art G allery, spoke on present-day; M a rc e ls Houston and Carl Em- the Texas Union Dance C o n , T ^ , r t Z U H S ! m itte e , L a r r y R e e d , a m a jo r in a d m in is t r a t io n o f V O U t h s e r v in g a g e n c ie s , c o n d u c ts t w o : a * * ? plcassos are ,he « 0 » dance sessions a week. They I are open to all students. W alk er pointed out that "T he i television show “ Who Do You hast Supper" by Salvador Dali and T ru st?” The two won $125. The G alle ry never admits work mural i Accompanying tho student, w ere ' due dons at the gallery painted by P a u l Hatkil, associate professor of! art who painted tile City of Austin! contemporary artists. in the reception room of Johnson’s Austin radio sta­ by an artist who has not been dead Mrs, tor at least 20 years. W alker said, lion, K T B C : Wendell Herdiburg, The D ali and Picasso paintings are chairman of the trip; Susan and Stephanie Am ster; George Bogart, on loan. instructor of art; and Albert Al- The students arrived too late for a special tour of the W hite House badoff. Meeting at 7 p.m. every Tues­ day in the Junior Ballroom of the Texas Union is the basic class. It started last Tuesday with a large turnout, but Reed says that the class is still open for the duration of the five-session series. “ At the end of the series,” he said, “ a student w ill know ail the fundamental steps to be able to dance to any music normally play­ ed at a dance or from a juke box.” But Reed ’s coaching, following professional methods he learned while working in the Astaire, Ar- ! thur M u rray, and X a v ie r Cugat studios, doesn t stop there. Besides demonstrating the basic ballroom steps, emphasizing L a t­ in Am erican rhythms, he gives pointers on how to lead and how to follow, how to look poised, and how* to present the best appear­ ance while dancing. A more advanced class, meet­ ing at 8 30 p rn. Tuesdays in the Junior Ballroom , .in- designed for students who want, to perfect tech­ niques of the steps they are al­ ready doing The advanced sessions concen­ trate en developing self-confidence ; and demonstrating new steps. j Reed, who coached 200 students a week in the Oklahoma U niversity Student Unit rn besides conducting classes for fraternities and sorori- ; ties, said ii is not usually the bad dancer who comes to his classes, ‘ I am continually surprised by i student doing a perfect samba step on his first try ," he said. “ Wanting to dance well and liking to dance are the only things the students attending sessions ■ have in common.” I M any indents, Le said, attend the sessions mainly lreeau.se they the ! arc a lot of fun. Reed went into dancing imrne- j diately after getting out of Arm y ! service. He invested his savings to study under Astaire in New York, and when Astaire began set mig up a national chain of dance .studios, Reed took over one of the first. j H e conducts the sessions using the same professional methods which cost $5 or more per group I s e s s i o n. Cost of the Union-spon­ sored sessions is 50 cents ca- h. 1r " » Clubs Rocket lo Dast Off /* /* f-v D a v i d T o r re a lb a , s o c ie t y p r e s i­ d e n t, s a id c o n s t r u c t io n o f th e f ir s t s ta g e and nozzle h a s been com­ p le te d , T h e 25,000-foot s h o t m a y t a k e p la c e b e f o r e t h e e n d o f th e s u m m e r . T h e p r o b a b le la u n c h in g s it e w i ll be F o r t S i l l , O k la ., p r o v id e d Un g r o u p c a n a c q u ir e p e r m is s io n f ro m a u t h o r it ie s . T o r r e a I b a s a id th e r o c k e t w i l l be e q u ip p e d w i t h a t r a n s m i t t e r h a v in g e ig h t c h a n n e ls , on w h ic h d a t a xvii! be r a d io e d t o t a p e r e c o r d e r s o n the g ro u n d . A t p r e s e n t , H ie s o c ie t y h a s a n e x h ib it o n d is p la y in th e n e w et gi- , p e e r in g l a b o r a t o r y . •CO*OPe€0*OPeCOeOPeCO«OPe€0<* PUT Y O U R HEART IN A N ENVELO PE For the young and young in heart. See our wide selection Valentine* ^ v 2246 Guadalupe Street • C O e O P » C O * O P e C O * O F * C O e O P » C O « MRS. LYNDON JO H N SO N greets University art students Bill W ith erspoon, Anre Mumm©, Marcel! Houston, and Barbara Math­ ews at an informal reception in her Washington home. rwn I lit 0s e s __ 25 years of experience Maverick - C lark, Stationery I IO East N inth Has an O pening for a Student Sales Representative For Their Social Stationery Division F E A T U R I N G Form al Invitations for Fraternities, Sororities and Clubs, Dance Program *, Inform al Invitations, Coffee, Tea. Luncheon, etc. Business Cards, Letterheads, Envelopes and Announcements C on tact U n iv e rs ity E m p l o y m e n t O f f i c e fo r Particulars ty p in g service 2u 13 Guadalupe GR 2-3210 A c o m p u t e p ro fessio n al ty p in g s e r v ic e ta ilo re d to the s p e c ific needs of University students and faculty. DAILY TEXAN C L JiJ jk l / S i m a A DV K R TIS I N O R A T H S C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T H S ............................. Ka eh Word < I 5-word m inimum ) ........ M in im u m C h arg e Classified Display I eolumn x one inch one t i m e Ka ch Additional Tim e '.‘ii Consecutive Issue* 8 w ords ......................... I ii v, ords 2° words ............. ............. * Mo copy change for consecutive issue rates) $b OO 8 oo . . . . . . . I LOO ............ ........ I ! OO ,90 4e $1.2>) Cl A S S U M E D A D V ! RTI M S U OK A D K IN KS ’ ! sday Texan . •........................ Monday, 3:30 p.m. Wednesday Texan . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tuesday, 3:30 pm. Thursday Texan .. . . . . . . . . . Wednesday. 3:30 p.m. .................. T h u rsd a y 3:3r> p.m. Frid a * T e x a n F rid a y . 3-30 p.m. Su n d a y T e x a n In the event of e r ro r s made In an advertisem ent, immediate notice muse he given as tee publisher* are responsible for only one incorrect insertion. ........................... CALL JO H N N Y — GR 2-2473 cy Ample storage. N E A R U N I V E R S IT Y Q U IE T efficien­ Free parking. Bins paid $65 00 single $70.00 double. G E 8-8084 V A C A N C IE S Room and board, F O R MID-Si M E S T E R . I L blocks from campus Brunette Student Louse. 15 4 Wichita, G R £-4131 U N IV E R S IT Y S T A F F W O M E N have D O R M IT O R Y r o o m FOP. men. Cen- home to share with graduate stu-j Ira) heating, air conditioning, w ail to dent or staff *10.00. Call G R 6-3561 or j wall carpeting, Via id sendee, ample G R 8-4291 parking $25.00 per month Carl us Dorm itory. 2212 San Gabriel. G E 8-9232. spare. T R IN IT Y T E R R A C E 1300 Trinity New. modern, one bedroom, air conditioned c a r p ■ t e d tile bath $95.OO per month W a fe r and gas paid. GR 7-129* U N IV E R S IT Y A P P R O V E D FO R men Block daily, Wichita. from campus. Rooms cleaned 2614 up. GR "-” 127. $22.50 1908 SA N AN TO N IO . A ir conditioned room.v L r men. D a lly maid service. Two blot ks to campus G R 7-7342. F O R R E N T Choice Home in I • E M B E R T O N JI E IG H T S S U I T A B L E I-OL F A U L 'E T Y F A M IL Y Livin g room and dining room combination terce bedrooms equivalent, two bath*, den and la: ge k itch< n, double carport, lovely Jot, H as central cooling and heating W a il to w all car­ pe mg and drapes. Phone H I 2-5752 THE TEXAN D O R M IT O R Y F O R M E N L A K E A U S T IN G A B IN 20 minutes Private boat dock, from campus, $30 m onthU G R s- • * - G R 8-9191. J A G I; A R SIK I I I -M C R O A D S T E R . Sell or trad* Sears. G R 2-1968. S P E C IA L S T U D E N T A N D F A C U L T Y discounts on musical Instruments. New and specialty. < IR 8-5863. guitars us* d our N E W A N D U S E D furniture, applian­ ces Reasonable prices. Austin F u r­ niture and Appliances, S I I W est 43rd, HO 5-1423. S A IL B O A T S N K W , ’.'S L D . kit*. H ard­ ware and trailers. N .r!boat Sales. 50-1 West 7th < Ai 6-3009, ' IR 8-8118. 1959 Lam bretta Deluxe Scooter with windshield. Cost, $465 new. sad to highest offer abnv $200 or trade for ham equlpnn nt, See at 2600 ll pc * re C L 2328 1905 - 0 7 Nuts es $30 MO. A !r conditioned. C en tral heat p o rter send* r. M r and M rs, C h a r lo M organ, M anagers G R 6 5812 A I R C O N D IT IO N E D R O O M S F O R M E N r o o r n * T w o fo r spring semester. D a ily p o rter service a va ila b le T H E B R I D G E W A Y D O R M IT O R Y 2618 VV lek ta G R 7-0427 S A N A N I ON IO south fo r girls air conditioned I pper sui!,- L iv in g room bedroom, bath. Carpeted No kitchen I® * »/ fo r tw o $50,00 for o n i G R 6-3720 Alterations A L T E R A T I O N S A N D D R E S S M A K IN G 715 W e s t 25th Street. G R 6-3360 A L T E R A T T O N S. D R E S S M A K IN G . E I L A V IN G on moth, cig a re tte holes Monographing. reasonable G R 2-7736, A t L a d i e s , gen!- rates, 903 W e st 22 1/2. A L T E R A T I O N S AND B K L T m akin g- tWO o r more S - Pick u p and delivery garm ents Mr---. P o tts. ’GI- , i j ; I N u r s e r i e s Lf T IN G C A L L F O R infantIs. TvV 6 weeks to one year, Lu! ab y N u rse rv Linens cd for and ex tx‘rieneed nurse G R 2-2534. Ed n a Conner. In fa nts S p e c i a l S e r v i c e s R E N T - - P U R C H A S E T. V s i i levis ion R e n ta l. G R 2-2692 A lp h a E X L E R I 1 TNCK!> L A D Y W I L L do tat,in­ in h er home. Spec laiize shir tl- d ry panta-dreasea. G R 2-3431. M i s c e l l a n e o u s S O L V E Y O U R P A R K IN problem. Reserve y o u r own spa*.'e, Open in• KS availab le for second semes ter Rent by month o r semester. Ut b lock to ca rn* pus 2607 Util t r s liv. C L 3 5. 8 ’H S C R I B E N O W D A U .AS Mortu ng New s D e live re d d aily. ear!iv moi in * bv i■ar r it r. G R 6 Vc-I O pen 8 ■■ JO a rn - VI 3IO. Printing S H , M E R C U R Y M O N T C L A IR tm * door hardtop, M int condition. Radio, a* •. $6* *5. C an fin a n ce ratin g, heater w ith L i b down w ith c re d it G R 8 1961. G R 2-7998 «ut 1954 O L D S .S U P E R S3 a m p lifie r, D in a P r e am p, Dua I *c D changer, S h u rc c artrid g e anat A ltec L a n c in g speakers. F o x , G R 2M988, M ti* ids G it 8 3296. FORMA-! KNOW - HOW a il s y m b o l s , M ss, D e B u tta , T U R E L M O N T E R R E Y a p a r t m e n t s 2103 Red R iver . if ice swimming pool Beautifully fu r­ nished one bedroom apartment*. Large party room Washers and dryers. See manager in Apartment 108. G R 7-0751 T H E CO L O N A D E £200 Nueces t*rrn furnished B e a u tifu lly rates. SHO per month P e rfe ct Lo catio n , two blocks W est of campus one bedroom apartm ents. W a lk - in closets, concealed air-conditioned, in pool, patio, and charcoal fenced area. E x tra storage I* u n d r v w ith washer-dry cr T h ree statio n TV antenna N o p ark in g problem . Y o u r from Is 3 m inutes w a lk kitchens. lockers i ap artm en t T im c o n s t r u c t io n s r i ! L u n c h i n g class! of a two-staged rocket is the cur- M AH c a m p u s , b e a u t i f u l l y tur­ nlshed large three room apartment ret p project cf the Southwestern Rocket Society a group composed san Cabrie?0 's-ioni' R’*5 paid‘ 2503 of nine U niversity students and a — -----l ~.J- -----:----- ...— faculty adviser, Dr, TI. A. Ripper- p r i v a t e , a t t r a c t i v e e f f i c i e n - A ir condi- g e r . slid in g glass finn gas paid. $85.00, I. G R 8-3169. •Ion 4 doors. 2407 W e s t 9th. G I panelled waits vV a ter 1 C Y apa rt men t-eot t a gc 2017 F R E D R I V E R U p p e r garage ap artm en t. A ir conditioned L iv in g room, d in ­ ette two bedrooms, kitchen, bath F o r £-4 $7O-*80 G R 7 8228 GR f 15720 O N SA LE W E D N E S D A Y ! You too w ill be moved to action by the February Special Sec­ tion on Parking in the RANG ER. Like this happy couple, you w ill hardly be able to restrain yourself. Like them, you w ill hardly be able to w ait to try out some of the handy hints. Next to a Parking Permit, his copy of the RANGER is essential to every Student owning an automobile and a chick to go in it. Get your W ednesday! On sale at Better RANGER Booths around Campus, TEXAS 26.JKKHSrn (25c plus I cent fax) February 13. 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 UT to Host Band Convention Ja m e s Jacobsen, TCH band di­ recto r, and V incent DiNino, Long­ horn Band director, will give the opening addresses of a M arch 16-18 band convention. The convention is expected to draw approxim ately 200 representatives from 46 col­ leges and universities. The D istrict VI m eeting of Hap- ■ pa K appa Psi, honorary band fra- , ternity, and Tau B eta Sigma, hon­ o ra ry band sorority, will include leaders from schools in Texas. Ok­ lahom a, A rkansas, and lo u isian a. ■ Co-chairmen of the hosting UT group and are Carolyn Shaw W ayne Sebera, TTiey w ere advised la st weekend by A. F ran k M artin, national executive of tile o rg an iza-1 lions, who suggested plans to pro­ duce a discussion of common prob­ lem s of m em ber chapters in the southwest. A cover p icture and five-page sp read on the Longhorn Band and activities of the local chapters will be featured in the M arch issue of Tile Podium, national m agazine of K appa K appa P si and Tau Beta Sigm a. Business I n t e r v i e w Set S t u d e n ts I n t e r e s t e d In a m aster o f b u s i n e s s a d m i n i s t r a t i o n d e g r e e t h e U n i v e r s i t y o f P e n n s y l ­ f r o m s c h o o l, W h a r to n v a n i a g r a d u a t e G r a d u a t e D iv is io n , w ill h a v e th e o p p o r t u n it y to c o n s u l t w ith a r e p r o - t h a t s c h o o l Tuesday. s e n t a t i ve o f to B u s i n e s s - E c o n o m i c s O ffic e B u ild ­ in g 203, o r c a l l M r s . .Je rry M o o re , f i K 6 RSTI, e x t . 412, f o r a p p o in t ­ m e n t s . s h o u ld go I n t e r e s t e d T h o s e ★ ★ Scouts to Sell Cookies Cookie tim e is here again for the G irl Scouts and Brownies of Austin. The girls will he on cam - C am pus News in Brief i,i. i ii i ii i T T n r r i i w r ir r ' i i ■ m i, • miiiii'fi i if M a ii n j s s ® I pus F riday tem pting to sell their goal of 49.OOO boxes. through Feb. 26 at- | n fe r v je w s fo r C h a lle n g e for challenge will continue through T hursday. Those interested should go either to Un- ion 320 or Union 321 betw een 3 and 5 p m. lntcrvirW 8 Camp Texlake on Lake T ravis, the Girl Scouts, and Brownies will the sale. get the proceeds from Cookies will be sold throughout the city'. 12 Orat ors to C o m p e t e ★ They will be 50 cents p er box and offered in four varieties. ★ l a n g u a g e s , w ill Shatt uck to S p e a k a t *Y R o g e r S h a t tu c k , p r o f e s s o r o f R o ­ m a n c e to t h e f i r s t m e e t in g o f a ne%v “ I ” c o m m i tt e e o n s p i t e p u b lic e d u c a ­ tio n a t 4 p .m . T u e s d a y . A ll s t u ­ d e n ts a r e In v ite d to t h e d is c u s s io n a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y “ I V ' s p e a k T h e c o m m i t t e e w a s f o r m e d b e ­ c a u s e of s t u d e n t i n t e r e s t in h e a r ­ in g s o f th e T e x a s H o u s e c o m m i tt e e i n v e s ti g a ti n g c o n te n t s . R e u o e n B r o w n a n d M a r y M a r ­ g a r e t C a r ls o n a r e c o r h a i r m e n . t e x t b o o k Twelve speakers have entered j the prelim inaries of the Ed Gossett I O ratorical Contest to he held a t j 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in Speech B uild-! i n s 201. Each speech will be from eight to ten minutes and approxim ately j six out of the 12 speakers will go i to the finals at 7:30 p.m . Feb. 27, j ut Geology’ Building 14. Both the prelim inaries and the | finals are open to the public. i t Reservoir Talk Planned “ Transient Behavior of Multi­ la y e r R eservoirs” will be the topic j of Dr. B. J. B e rry 's speech to the Newsman to Examine C ampus C onservatives M. Stanton E vans, author of] "R evolt on C am pus,” will speak | at 8 p.m . W ednesday in the Texas Union Ballroom. The address, sponsored by the U niversity Young A m ericans for Freedom , will concern the conserv­ ative revolt on cam pus, L. T. Zim­ m erm an, secretary’ of the group, says. Evans, a graduate of Y ale Uni­ versity, is the editor of the Indian­ apolis New* and a re g u la r con­ tributor to National Review M ag-; azine. Described in the Feb. 9 issue of Life m agazine as one of the “ in­ tellectual heroes of cam pus con­ servatives,” E vans says that stu­ dents tie conservatism to tho ideal of lim ited governm ent, that they find political freedom inseparable from fundam ental m orality, and th at they consider com m unism the g reatest threat to conservative val­ ues. No admission will be charged to students attending the speech. A m erican Institute o f M e c h a n ic a l E ngineers a t 7:30 p . m . T u e s d a y in Texas Union 317. D r. B erry is d ire c to r of exploita­ tion research for Sinclair Oil Com­ pany in Tulsa, Okla. ★ W a r r e n to S p e a k at lY f R e v . D o n a ld W a r r e n , a m e m b e r o f H ie f a c u l ty a t C h r i s t i a n F a i t h a n d L ife C o m m u n i t y , w ill s p e a k a t I p .m . T u e s d a y to t h e P s y c h o l- j o g v a n d R e lig io n C o m m i t te e in t h e C o m m i t te e R o o m o f t h e U n i­ v e r s i t y “ V .” t o p ic . “ I s G o d D e a d ? " w ill b e R e v . W a r r e n 's I l e w ill d is c u s s t h e x ie w of t h e I n th { V n tu r y p h i l ­ o s o p h e r , F r i e d r i c h N ie tz s c h e , a n d t h e r e l e v a n c e o f h i s i d e a s to t h e 2 0 th C e n tu r y . R e v . W a r r e n Is a g r a d u a t e o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y a n d f o r m e r p r e s i ­ I l e a tt e n d e d d e n t o f t h e Y M C A . H a r v a r d fo llo w in g h is g r a d u a t io n h e r e . T h e p u b lic to h e a r R e v . W a r r e n ’s t a l k a n d t h e c o m ­ m i t t e e is o p e n t o n e w m e m b e r s . i n v it e d i s Emanuel E d rich O f English D e p t. Dies in H o u s to n Dr. E m anuel E drich, 33, instruc­ to r of English, died early Sunday in a Houston hospital. Services w ere held la te r Sunday before the body’ was sent to Oshkosh, Wis., for burial, Dr. E d rich had been in receiving Houston i treatm ents. a week for Coming to the U niversity in 1960, he taught a sophom ore writing ! course for science m ajors and a general literatu re course at the sophomore level. His specialty was George Orwell, English political I author. Survivors are his wife and daughter. I i i / aes On LL e r e 0 -4 -- R eservation^ a n d tic k e ts for “ The Good W om an of S e tz u a n ,” Music B uilding box office. 9 -5 --M a tis s e s “ J a n ” in p rin ts, and sm all bronzes. R e g e n ts Room. Main B uilding. 3-5 T raveling S m ith s o n ia n exhibition o f Civil W ar P ic tu re s , M em orial M useum . 10-12 and 3-5—T ex a s H e rita g e exhibi­ tio n . L ag u n a G loria. I —Rev. D onald W a r re n to address P sy ch o lo g y an d R e lig io n C om m ittee, 2 :3 0 -P re lim in a rie s In a n n u a l TA Gos­ s e tt O rato rical C o n test, Speech B uild­ in g 201. 3-5 -P ic tu re s b y M rs, C h risty Monk and Mrs. T h elm a B. P a rk . TKWC G allery. 3-5~-Intervlew s f o r in p ro g ra m . T exas Union p a rtic ip a tio n 320-321. 3 :13—C h ild re n 's b r A ustin S ym phony O rc h e s tra . M unicipal Au­ d ito riu m , c o n c e rt I -S tu d y group*- I t i n Am erican Af­ f i e s . »nd S ta te P u b lic E ducation, '4 O scar W illiam s to sp e a k on “ Poe to R e ality .” Its R e la tio n t r y and E n g lish B uilding 203. to s tu d e n ts 4 —S o u th w estern C o lle g iate T ours to be explained interested in su m m er trav el. T e x a s U nion 340. speak to A ustin Society o f In d u s tria l E di­ to rs. E ngineers Club. 7—D r. W illiam L. R iv ers 7-9—S tu d y room s op en on f irs t floor to of E n g lish B uilding. 7— B eginning d ancing U nion J u n io r B allroom . lessons, T exas 7—A m erican M a rk etin g A ssociation to h e a r P aul S to tts sp e a k on “ Do’s and D o n ’t* of In terv iew in g Ijtrg e Busi­ ness C oncerns,” T e x a s U nion Ju n io r B allroom , 7:30—Chess Club, T e x a s U nion 300. 7:30—D r. W alter K. K in k to give pub­ lic ta lk on ‘ G eology of th e Amazon B asin of Brazil a n d C ase H isto ry of E x p lo ra tio n ,” G eology B uilding 14. 8—A rth u r F c rra n te a n d L ouis Telcher, p ian o duo. M unicipal A uditorium . 8—D r. Allen N ew ell speak on “ T h in k in g M achines a n d th e Sin of P r id e .” B atts A u d ito riu m . to 8 :30—Advanced d a n c in g lessons, T exas : U nion Ju n io r B allroom . THE U N IV E R S IT Y ’S O N L Y EXCLU SIVE R A D IO A N D H I-F I SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedw ay G R 8-6609 S ervi ng th e Un i versi t y a r e a for 11 years EE I m o w ’H IG H FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES” We a l l m ake ER A SE W I T H O U T A TRACE ON E A T O N ’S CO RR ASABLE B O N D Touch-type, hunt-and-peck, type with one hand tied behind your back—it’s easy to turn out perfect papers on Corrasable. Because you can erase without a trace. Typing errors disappear like magic with just the flick of an ordinary pencil eraser.There's never a telltale erasure mark on Corrasable’# special surface. Corrasable is available in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In convenient IOO-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. Only Eaton makes Corrasable, A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON P A P K E CORPORA TION ; J E } P IT T S F I E L D , MASS.' Juniors, Seniors here s I low to be an important executive before you’re 30 Join Richardson-M erreirs Career Developm ent Program. For over 25 years, it has produced outstanding young executives in all phases of m anagem ent At ftichardson-Merrell (formerly Vick Chemical) young m en in key positions are the rule—not the exception. Men in their twenties and thirties head departments . . . influ­ ence policy . . . are responsible for millions of dollars worth of business. Some typical cases: * John Williford . . . advertising manager for Cavorts Mouthwash and Oral Spray at 28. * John S c o tt. . . vice-president in charge of Vick Inter­ national operations for Europe at 35. * Kevin Dalev . . . manager o f new product development at 31. '(ere it’s ha rd to get lost. Most executive positions are filled from within. Prime example is Mr. H. R. Mars- chalk. He joined the program 24 years ago . . . held his first management post three years later . . . has been president of several corporate divisions . . . and now at the age of 46 is president of the entire enterprise. Kichardson-Merrell is a corporation comparatively as young and fast-growing as its executives. Since 1937, sales have doubled every five years, mushrooming to 151.5 million dollars. Its products are now sold in 120 nations. Besides Vicks VapoRub, Lavoris Mouthwash, Clearasil Medication, Richardson Merreli now markets thousands of diversified products through its world wide enterprise of 12 divisions. For example: The Wm. S. Merreli Company Division The National Drug Company Division ............ethical drugs M e rreli-N a tio n a l (Overseas) Laboratories ethical drugs (international) * W after Laboratories W k M anufacturing Division Vick Chemical D iv is io n ....................... Vick International Division ................. . . .vitam in and nutritional products athlcal drugs . proprietary drugs . proprietary drugs (internationaD . .proprietary drugs (m anufacturers) advertising agency company owned . . . poultry anim al feed medicines Has* & Clark Division Jensen Salsbery Laboratories, Inc., veterinary medicines J. T. Baker Chemical Co. extruded Plastics, Inc, , . . .fine chemicals plastic containers M o n a International, Inc. .............. . . . . . . . Opportunity for both juniors and seniors starts this sum­ mer with Richardson-Merrell. For complete details, see your Placement Director now. LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKYJUFFERS " THE D "N O B O D Y LEAVES THIS D O R M TILL W E F IN D O U T W HO P U T SPAGHETTI IN THE PROCTOR’S B E D !" IW m m -V = | 'i’m well aware,'Hookshot/ that you scored 48 points against State. Unfortunately, you scored only 46 on your Math exam.. THE DEAN AS A HELPER. Supposing that after you've paid all your fees, you discover you haven't enough money left for Luckies. What do you do? You go to the Dean. The Dean will help you. That's what the Dean is there for. The smart Dean knows that college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular. The Dean will tell you to get a part-time job. Then you’ll be able to enjoy the rich, full taste of Luckies. Deans certainly are knowledgeable. s / m x r I B B S ''tom**-** © a , f. re, is Cur ><#*#» CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some for a change! Pianists Ferrante and Teicher [ioytT°wnsley: ^usic in R!view_ In Joint Union-CEC Concert F e rra n t# and Teicher, the key­ they h ave p layed in 48 states and perform ing for co llege and civic I T eicher, b o m in W ilkes B a rre , . bo a rd duo whose versions of “ E x o ­ C an ad a. In their p erfo rm an ces audiences. d u s ” and “ The A p a rtm e n t” sold m ore than two m illion records, w ill present a p ro g ra m that w ill ra n ge from show tunes and popu­ la r m usic to the “ p op ” classics at 8 p m. T uesd ay in Municipal Audi­ torium . Since p e r f o r m a n c e w ith the Toledo Sym phony in 1947, their f i r s t they com bine classical m usic with their own arran g em en ts o f tunes of Gershwin, R o d gers, K ern , P o rt­ er. and other popular com posers. Traveling b y car, accom pan ied by their specially-design ed truck two concert with driver a n d grands, they have barnstormed bark and forth across the country, They have ap p e ared on every P a ., m oved to N e w Y o rk at five fam ily having and a half, his m a jo r radio netw ork and on tele­ m oved chiefly with a view to his entering Juilliard Institute of M u ­ sic Art. m concert featu rin g Faculty Concert A u s t i n S y m p h o n y : Brahms vs. Chopin W ed n esd ay afternoon at 4 p.m . in R ecital H all, the F ac u lty C on­ cert Series w ill present F loyd Tow nsley. tenor, assisted by guest artist B etty Serafy , pianist, in a lieder Schu­ m an n ’s facous song cycle, Dtch tertiebe. B y D A V I D A R M S T R O N G A ssociate A m usem ents Editor The poet, Heine, w h o w a s greatly admired by Schum ann, g a v e the master thirty-eight o f his poems. Schum ann found in them, together had just about decided to w rite a with an echo of his contradictions and ch angin g m oods, the attraction ! re view w hich w ould begin some­ is w’hat I had in thing like this: “ A provincial sym- but the Chopin phony orchestra, gen erally speak- j p ian o Concerto In E M inor drove ing. has no business even trying to ] such sour thoughts out of m y head, courage sounded pretty gloom y to 1 of projecting me, and w ere g e n e ra lly too dism al 1 for w ords. If there w a s any at­ tem pt at presenting a coherent ! o verall conception of any of the ! m ovem ents, rhythm ic o r intellec­ tual. it escaped m e com pletely.” its ow n emotion ! rather than injecting that of the : soloist. His inflection of the first few notes of the slow m ovem ent, as original as it w as charm in g, long w as only the prelude to a series of trium phs o v er the p ro b­ lems this difficult, delicate m usio presents. This, I say, ; mind to write; Sym phony’s concert last night. I A t intermission of the Austin In conclusion, m * D u rin g their school days, A rthur and Louis studied with the sam e teachers arid la te r w ere gradu - ated from Juilliard as piano ma- of a music which responded mys- jors under Carl Friedberg. After teriously to his ow n and which be- a brief period o f concertizing, ! came one with it in an almost phy- they returned to Juilliard as fac- sical sense. ultv members, and composition. teaching theory song During the next few years, they combined teaching with a limited schedule of concerts and worked together creating new duo piano material. they resigned from teaching in order to devote full time to concert work. In 1947, The m agn ificent cycle. D ichterlebe, which resulted from Schumann's creative urge of the year 1840, was a total achievement. It comprises the sixteen songs uni­ que in their astonishing diversity of composition and ‘ ’atmosphere.” inspiration, Tickets for the performance are Mr. Townsley started his ad­ vanced study with Oscar Seagle, 75 cents for Blanket Tax and CF.C who took him to Europe to study season ticket holders and can be with tenor Jean de Reszke. Although the Dlchterllebe is the obtained only at the Music Build- ing. General admission tickets at important work on the Townsley- $1.50 may he purchased at J. R. Serafy lieder concert, the program Reed Music Co.. University Co-Op. w ill open with Bach’s Benedictus and Texas Union. The concert is without charge. I N - C A R H E A T E R S m in e «s xsmuz ( M O V I E E N T E R T A I N M E N T G t ' A R A NT F.E : B E O U R ) Ex r ln si v o L im it e d E n m r e m e n t O n e S h o w in g On ly at 7:15 U I E S T I F Y O U D O N ’T A G R E E NN At K R A H O P E N S « : F I R S T S H O W « ; 4 5 P I , A YG K O I \ I)S F I N E F O O D S • T t o t D f c w y V (G* AbSeift-^ mWed CW&T&t&tf?R? 9f mmo 4 cOKPctunoM v E X O D U S P A U L N E W M A N • EVA MARIE S A I N T P i n t : “ G a l a P a y at D i t n e y l a n d " Alto: “ Poeo# B i l l ” and *’ PIn to Jr.” T O D A Y A T I N T E R S T A T E PARAMOUNT N O W S H O W IN G ! FEATUR ESi 11:30-3:01-4.33 7.03 - 9:34 A D I S T I N G U I S H E D A D U L T E N T E R T A I N M E N T Amy k * a mow D I S C O U N T C A B D1 • * i J ^ . . _*! play w-arhorses of the concert rep- True, that hom ist w a s still there, ! bay in g softlv aw'ay like a distant Hound of the B a s k e rv ille s; but that was the only flaw. J am es D ic k ’s playing m ad e all the dif­ ference in the w orld, and as Cho­ pin w as indifferent to the orches­ tra, the piano part is nearly all there Is to hear. M r. D ic k ’s style is distinctly classical re­ strained. but instead o f chilling the music, it was the m eans of allo w ­ ing it to speak p erfectly for itself, i ertoire, p articu larly in these days, 1 when all the old fam iliar pieces exist in nine or ten recordings by all the best orchestras in the coun­ try and abroad. No; Its business Is to buy itself a harpsichord and start in on the eighteenth century play Schubert sym­ repertoire, phonies and Haydn masses, and and in som e m usic the Sym phony that w as took up its technical n ea re r to being com pass, B ritten ’s Soiree* M usi- cales, and did a very creditable jo b with it. This is not to say that I like the m usic, which derives all its virtue from the original Ros­ sini pieces and none from B rit­ ten’s s m a rm y anthology o f orches­ tral effects out of R im sk y -K o rsa - kov and G lazounov. But it w a s a good hint o f w h at the Austin Sym ­ phony can do when not afflicted with folle do gran d eur. I have otherwise take advantage of the immense backlog of pieces written by great composers for small or amateurish groups. The Austin Symphony gave an excellent par­ ticular illustration of this general point last night by giving the least impressive rendition of Brahms' First Symphony ever heard. Far from contributing any­ thing to w'hat every concert goer already knows about this piece, it reduced its nobility and passion to the 1 ’vel of a $2.98 recording of Victory at Sea. Tins is not to say that the notes were not there— quite a few of them were. Nor that some parts of the orchestra did not play well—the strings were quite fair, particularly the solo work of Leopold la Fosse, the con- eertmaster, On the other hand, their notorious horn section, at the point where according to the pro­ gram note they should have in­ toned a melody of consolation and T h e d a i l y T e x a n Amusements Tuesday, February 13, 1962 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 4 Bishop's Company To Play Paton Drama The Bishop s Company o f Santa Barbara, Calif., will present a dramatization of Alan B aton’s “ Cry. the Beloved Country” Fri- S ’/n e c tJ t from and the G a r r y M oore, vision, Steve Allen the late E rn ie K ovaes shows, to the D ing Dong School. They have recorded exten­ sively for Columbia and W estm ins­ ter and are now recording exclus­ ively for United Artists Records. They have appeared frequently with Percy Faith on the W ool- worth Hour and appeared weekly for two years on ARC s Piano Playhouse. They also composed and played the music, with o rig ­ inal sound effects, for the motion picture “ Undersea Conquest.” Ferrante and Teicher have been playing pianos together since they were six, when they first met as students in New York's Juilliard School of Music. F erran te w as bom in New York City, the son of a violinist. Introducing Mr. Orange Pin M eet him, make a strike with him, and bow! « tree gam e. AH bowling 30c per gam e. Yes, bowl for fun. Save some mon. B O W L IN G IS G R E A T F O R A D A T E . No leagues — recondi­ tioned alleys — A B C approved. New hours 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. BOWLING CENTER 3409 G u ad alu p e G L 3-9196 THE T E X A S , THE M O ST TA LKED A B O U T TH EATRE IN THE SO U TH W EST, PRESENTS The W o rld * M O ST T A LK E D -A B O U T FILM! L « Liaisons D a n g e rtw se s ROGER VADIM’S UNCUT MASTERPIECE ABOUT A MOST FRANK AND UNUSUAL MARRIAGE: ’ I C K E T S W I L L : O T B E .SO LD O C H I L D R E N V I T H O R W I T H - IT.'T P A R E N T S Start* Tom orrow! R O A D S H O W E N G A G E M E N T S E A T S N O T R E S E R V E D P A S S I 1ST S I S F E N D E D THIS IS THE PICTURE THE FRENCH GOVERN- MENT DIDN'T WANT YOU TO S E E . . . THE ONE THAT CAUSED A IL THE IN CONTROVERSY AMERICA!! A r r o « « from f n l v T r i t * C on ti n n o u . from 1! Noon F na tn rra L2-3-4-G-S-10 p m. Trlroo LUW 108^ « GENS) N i f t tl£S UASfflR M i O l M T - ^ K a n o i w a r n s The U nion Talent Committee and the Student Cultural Entertainment Committee PRESENT FOR THE FIRST TIME FERRANTE and ANYW H ERE! I blCHhR F lip FAMOUS for their recordings o f themes from "EX O D U S” and 'T H E A PA R TM E N T” +»iattun d o , ***** to 1 j | "MatlrrUtchructara" j | "Ploying of holt. I trigger prtcau n U N I T E D A R T IS T S R E C O R D I N G S T A R S ‘The Most Exciting Team of Our Time” Municipal Auditorium, Tuesday, Feb. 13, at 8:00 p.m. Tickets Available Non—Get Yours Today! ADM ISSION: 75c FOR BLANKET T A X & SEASON TICKET HOLDERS (Blanket Tax and Season Picket Sales at Music Building Box O ffice O n ly) G ENERAL ADM ISSIO N: CH ILDREN T H R U JR. HE, 75c; ADULTS, 51.50 Tickets Available at J. R. Reed Music Co., The Co-Op, M usic Building Box O ffice, and Texas Union 342 A D I U T S 100 M DO 50e C H I I . D 35e S T A T E B IG D O U B L E F E A T U R E L A S T D A Y I w u k t » t a Y L O R G A R D N E R T A Y L O R G r e a t S t a r s in 2 G r e a t T h r i l l i n g A d v e n t u r e s ! m i «o c r ~ TWf 6AUANTIT Of THl GREATEST OflGHl Of AID Both in C O L O R From MG-M THE SPLENDOR OF KING ARTHUR S COURT! of Knights the Bound Table in COLOR I TcCMN)COU>« A T 1 5 : 1 9 - « : U A D U LT S 90« 8 01 M D C 45«i A T 1 0 5 3:50 - 9:47 C H I L D V A R S IT Y L A S T D A Y ! D O O R S O P E N 1:30 F E A T U R E S : 1:50 - 3:50 - 1:50 7:50 9:50 Mm MNMMM 1 - ( TtWART H UA MT H S r u m m e u GRANGER-TAYLOR I USTINOV • MORLEY * ■Vr*O4Ol0w'**‘MA««i m i* , nTWHIIUW --------------- UCHJucaofi vmrtD A/trtsn corwmncm E X O D U S P A U L N E W M A N • E V A M A R IE S A IN T «mh. *«nco .jow aertiK • mrXAMDSOM . PtTtn UWPTWn ■ ux 4. COBB awmrH MUM AUSTIN Is M M I D A Y I O N E S H O W I N G O N L Y ! 7:30 P.M. The Epic Story of Everlasting G lo ry! T A L E N T I S N E E D E D for the CAMPUS REVUE AUDITIONS TO BE HELD IN SEVEN CITIES BEGINNING IN FEBRUARY A full S u m m e r ’s Em ploym ent for Reg istered College S tu d e n ts selected at these auditions Including 14 w e ek s at $ 7 5 .0 0 per w eek and 2 w e e k s of r e h e a r s a l s at V2 s a l a r y b e g in n in g M a y 2 8 th an d c o n t in u in g th ru S e p t e m b e r 3rd. S p e n d a g lo rio u s v a c a t io n w ith pay at A m e r ic a 's glam orous family recreation c e n ­ t e r l o c a t e d m i d w a y b e t w e e n D a l l a s a n d Fort Worth. SIX FLAGS OVER TEXAS W rite today for full information and audition dates and locations to> S IX F L A G S O V E R T E X A S CAMPUS REVUE • P. 0. BOX 191 • ARLINGTON, TEXAS A Pinch of Pepper...a Nip of Ginger.*, a Pash of Mastard... in as Spicy a Pish of Adult Cinemafare as you'll ever taste! Meet Pierre’s Playmates . . . AS CO M ilY A COVfY OF CURVACIOUS QUAIL AS IVIR ANY HUNTIR SIT HIS SIGHTS O N !I OUR GUARANTEE. . . You'll see m o r e and laugh more than ever beforeI THE ADVENTURES OF Im m m a tr G tm w a JC S i m s r v m p o m \ IN FULL COLOR Showing! JSirfi N O W A D U L T S O N L Y O P E N 11:45 C A P I T O L A lucky PI .r r. Production Prodocod by DAVI* FRItMAN - Dir.Ood by t l W I * M GORDON day at 7:30 p m. at the University Presbyterian Church. “ Cry, the Beloved Country,” by the author of “ Too I.ate the Philan­ thrope,” “ The Land and People of South A frica.” and “ South Africa in Transition,” is the story of s white man and a black man locked in the grim m est of human emotions. Beyond the intense and insoluble persona! tragedy is the story of the beautiful and tragic land of South A frica —or any land or any world where racial ferment and unrest break the harmony of men. Founded to bring drama back into tiie Church as part of the worship service, the Bishop’s Com­ pany was organized in 1952 by Phyllis Benbow Beardsley. Cur­ rently on Ps ninth national and fifth international tour, the Com­ pany travels throughout the natron and Canada with a skilled cast and a repertoire of eight plays. is an An Inter-racial and inter-faith organization, The Bishop's Com­ pany independent group named in honor of Bishop Gerald H. Kennedy of the Methodist Church. Since 1952, the Company ha* traveled more than 600,000 miles playing in churches and universi­ ties. In addition to two touring units which travel coast to coast 51 weeks of the year, a Bishop s Company Duo Is currently touring high schools. Six of tlie original eight leading actors with the company Include MLss Beardsley, Hal Bokar, M inns Caldwell, Merle Harbach, James Wheaton; and Elizabeth Wolfe. • T # l » B O X O F F I C E O P E N S « .0 0 A D M I S S I O N SO* F L A M IN G STA R Elvia P r e U e Y . B a r b a r a E d r a St ar t* 6:45 — • F lu * — A S T R E E T C A R N A M E D D ESIR E Vivian Urlich. M a r i n a B r a n d * .Starts 8:40 SOUTH’AUSTIN 3900 S O U T H C O N G R E S S B O X O F F I C E O P E N S « 00 A D M I S S I O N W e N o w at K<*Knlar Admiaatoa E X O D U S Pa ul N e w m a n , E v a M ar t* Saint S tart* 8:45 and (0:30 \R A T OANTOR - MAOLTR DHUfW m te c h w c o lo * / STARTS T O M O R R O W S T A T E Dance Sessions Still Open UMP Tuesday, February 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page I J U ST ^ F O R FUN, members of the Texas UrJort Dance Committee g o over ballroom iteps demonstrated by dance Instructor Larry Reed, right, who conducts the weekly dance session the committee spc are Lynda Pa'n+er, James Douq Reese, Jan C a n iii Weaver, group chairman. -or:. Le“ to righ t lush, Beth Shocked r, and Leah Ann Exhibits on Campus An exhibit of Arab books, carv­ ings, m aps, and tap estries, spon- QU 2689/ SAN JACINTO CAFE Now: Fr»* Parking In fk * J A D E R O O M lot— next door Parking S P E C IA L IZ IN G IN D E L IC IO U S M E X IC A N A N D A M E R IC A N F O O D S Visit o ur Rainbow Dining Room O P E N 7 D A Y S A W E E K Eat Me xlcan Food Once A Day! I6T H A N D S A N J A C IN T O G R 8-3984 Sr * EL MAT 504 East A vc. G R 7-7023 EL TORO 1601 Guadalupe G R 8-4321 EL C H A R R O 91 2 Red River S R 8-7735 M O N RO E'S Mexican Food to Take H o m e " G R 7-8744 Delivery Service 7 Days Austin s ‘ B ig FourM in Authentic M exican Food sored by tho O rganization of A rab Stodents, will bo on display until the ground floor of Feb. 17 on the Main Building. 'Hie organization will provide students to lecture on social, eco­ nomic, and cu ltural aspects of the Arab world interested groups, announced Azmi Abdul- Hadi, publicity chairm an of the OAS. for any The F or additional Information, con­ ta m , Abdul-Hadi at OR 2-5817 or Box 7674, U niversity St aion, ★ * literature and culture of South A frica Is the su b je ct of a d isp lay now In the show cases on the Aral floor of the EnglBh B u ild ­ ing, Some of th e new South Af- jo u n g rica n in la n g u ag e A frik a an s, developed the eighteenth and nineteenth cen ­ turies by European In South Africa, lite ra tu re settlers Is In tho W hat’s Challenge? ‘T ho Chal­ lenge m ovem ent, horn a t Yale U niversity several years ago, pro­ students’ 'challenge* poses minds with concepts ideas which concern us a1!,'’ and to So reads tile display in the U n­ um showi ase, first floor. Lou Ann W alker sum m arizes the challenge m ovem ent in the Union showing. camas nwSSmits PLUS C O M PLETE cep VIUF A N D C A M E R A REPAIR*. STUDTMAN Photo Service Telephone G R 6-4326 222 West 19th A sta ire Ex-Pupil Coaching Draws G o o d Attendance A former disciple of Fred Astaire now studying at the University is again coaching University students who de­ sire to smooth out their ball­ room techniques. Under the sponsorship of the Texas Union Dance Com­ mittee, Larry Reed, a major in administration of y o u t h serving agencies, conducts tw o dance sessions a week. Tney are open to all students. M eeting a t 7 p.m . every Tues­ day in the Junior Ballroom of the T exas Union is the basic class. It [ started last Tuesday with a large turnout, but Reed says the class is still open for tile duration of the five-session series. that “ At the end of the series,” he said, “ a student will know ail the fundam ental steps to be able to dance to any m usic norm ally play­ ed af a dance or front a juke box.” following But R eed’s coaching, learned professional m ethods he while working sn the A staire, Ar­ thur M urray, and X avier Cugat studios, doesn t stop there | Besides dem onstrating the basic ballroom steps, emphasizing I-at­ ilt A m erican rhythm s, he gives pointers on haw to lead and how so follow, how to look poised, and how ?•> present the best ap p ear­ ance while dancing. “ It is not the person who knows ■ m any steps, but the person who knows she ba-ic steps well who is a good d a n c e r," he said. A m ore advanced class, m eet­ ing at 8:30 p.m . Tuesdays in the Junior B allroom , is designed for students who w ant to perfect tech- the steps they are al­ j niques of ready doing. The advanced cessions cor con­ tra te on developing self-confidence and dem onstrating new* steps. Reed, who roached 200 students a week in the Oklahom a U niversity Student Union besides conducting classes for fraternities and sorori­ ties, said it is not usually the bad dancer who com es to his classes. “ I am continually surprised by a studer.* doing a perfect sam ba try .” he said. stop on his first I “ Wanting to dance well and liking to dance a re the only things the students sessions have in com m on.” attending the Many students, lie said, attend the sessions m ainly because they are a lot of fun. Reed w ent into dancing im m e­ diately a fte r getting out of A rm y service. He invested his savings to study under A Aa ire in New York, and when A staire began setting up a national chain of dance studios, Reed took over one of the first. lie conducts the sessions using the sam e professional m ethods which cost $5 or m ore per group s e s s i o n. Cent of th® Union-spon­ sored sessions is 50 cents each. C lu b s Rocket T o Blast O ff The consume ti on and launching of a two-staged rocket is the cur­ the Southwestern rent project cf M o c k e r Society, a group composed •if nine U niversity students and a faculty adviser, D r. E. A, Ripper- ger. David T orrealba, society presi­ dent, said construction of the first stage and nozzle has been com ­ pleted. The 25,000-foot shot m ay take place before the end of the sum m er. ’Hie probable launching site w ill be F ort Sill, Okla., provided the group can acquire perm ission from authorities. T orrealba said the rocket will be equipped w ith a tra n sm itte r having eight channels, on which d a ta w i l l be radioed to tap e recorders on the ground. At present, the society has an exhibit on display in the new engi­ neering laboratory. • c o * o p * c o * o p * c o * © p * c o * o p * c o « I Art Students rn Tour C ap ita l Forty-seven University a rt stu­ dents a re back in Austin after an inform al visit a t the Washington hom e of M rs. Lyndon Johnson and a tour cf five eastern seacoast a rt m useum s. In W ashington, students visited Mrs. Johnson’s home where John W alker, director of the National I Art Callery’, spoke on present-day I a rt and the problem s of keeping a multim illion dollar collection. that “ The L ast Supper” by Salvador Dali and a few Picassos are the only pro­ ductions a t the gallery painted by contem porary artists, W alker pointed out Th® G allery never adm its work by an a rtist who has not been dead { for a t le a st 20 years, W alker said. I The Dali and P icasso paintings a re on loan. The students arrived too late for a special tour of the Whit© House th at had been arran g ed by M rs. Johnson. The to u r would have in­ cluded a rt and interior decorations collected by Mrs, John Kennedy. O ther highlights of the tour in­ cluded riding subw ays, ice skating in Central P ark , sightseeing on Broadway, and an evening at the P epperm int Lounge in New York City. t w o U niversity M arcel Ie Houston and Carl Em - brey, students m aking the trip, appeared on the television show “ Who Do You T ru st? ” The two won $125. in Accompanying the students w ere P aul H aiku, associate professor of a rt who painted the City of Austin m ural the reception room of M rs. Johnson’s Austin radio sta ­ tion, KTBC; Wendell H erdiburg, chairm an of the trip ; Susan and Stephanie Am sta r; G eorge B ogart, instructor of a rt; and Albert Al- badoff. M RS. L Y N D O N J O H N S O N greeds University art students Bill W ith erspoon, A n re Mumm®, More® I Houston, a - J Barbara M ath­ e h informal reception In her Washington rome. er T h eses 25 year* of experience Maverick - Clark, Stationery I IO East N inth I las an O pening for a Student Sales Representative For T heir Social Stationery Division F E A TU R IN G Form al Invitations for F ra te rn itie s, Sororities and Clubs, Dam e Invitations, Coffee. Tea. Luncheon, etc. P rogram s, Business C ards, L etterheads, Envelopes and Announcements Contact University Employment G it ice for Particulars Inform al t y p i n g s e r v i c e 2013 Guadalupe G R 2-3210 A com plete professional typing service tailored to the specific n e e d s o f I Adversity students a n d f a c u l t y . DAILY TEXAN CL J; J JU* ' E a c h W o rd CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING KATES . . . . . . (1 5 -w o rd m i n i m u m ) . . . . . . 4c i nch on e t i m * ............... ............. .. l i m e C la s s ifie d D isp la y I c o lu m n x o n e E ach A d d itio n a l 3b C o n s e c u tiv e Is s u e s 8 w o rd* 15 w o rd s 20 w o rd s .......................... .............. .............. .. ........................ ...................................... ........................ ........................... .. (N o c o p y c h a n g e f o r c o n s e c u tiv e ............. $6 OO v (VJ ie rat.* •J w TI F t ................ C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G D E A D L IN E S sd a v T e x a n 1n< sday T e x a n irs it av T e x a n !aj T e x a n ................. d ay T e x a n . th e e v e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e r a d ia te n o tic e m u st be g iv en as re s p o n s ib le f o r only on- M o n d a y , 3 30 p ......... T u e s d a y . 3 :3 0 P W e d n e s d a y . 3:30 ti T h u r s d a y 3 :3 0 p F r i d a . 3 30 p in a n advertise!® ! th e p u b lish in c o r re c t In se rtio n , ........... CALL J O H N N Y — GR 2-2473 Furnished Apartments Room s for Rent For Rent For Sale cy A m p le s to r a g e . NISAR U N IV E R S IT Y Q U IE T e ffic ie n ­ F r e e p a rk in g . B ills p a id $65.00 s in g le $70.00 d o u b le. G R 8-8084 V A C A N C IES R oom a n d F O R b o u rd . M ID -S I M E S T ! fr o 1 J3 b lo c k s c a m p u s B r u n e tte S tu d e n t H ouse. 1908 W ic h ita . G R J ii31 F O R R hm m to s h a r e w ith g r a d u a te U N IV E R S IT Y S T A F F W O M E N h av e D O R M IT O R Y ROO M F O R m en, C en- to se rv ic e , a m p le | p a r k in g m o n th . I C a c tu s D o rm ito ry , 2212 S an G a b rie l. d e n I o r s ta ff. $40.00. C a ll G R 6-3561 G R 8-4291, ■ o r . w a ll c a r p e tin g . M a id space, $25.00 t m I h e a tin g , a i r c o n d itio n in g , w all s t u - 1 j o t G R 8-9352. T R IN IT Y T E R R A C E 1300 T r in ity N ew . m o d e r n o n e b ed ro o m , a i r c o n d itio n e d , v a r p e t *■ d, tile b a rn $95.00 p e r m o n th . W a fe r a n d g a s paid. G R 7-329$ U N IV E R S IT Y A P P R O V E D F O R m en fro m c a m p u s . Room * cle a n e d B lock d a , A 2614 W ic h ita . u p . G R 7-0427 $22.50 1908 SAN A N T O N IO . A ir c o n d itio n e d ro o m s fo r m en . D a lly m a id se rv ice T w o b la c k s to c a m p u s G R 7-7342. T H E E L M O N T E R R E Y A P A R T M E N T S 2108 R e d R n c r C e n tr a l a ir-c o n d itio n in g , p o r te r se rv ­ f u r ­ n ish e d o n e b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n ts L a rg e p a r t y ro o m W a s h e rs an d d r i e r s . S ee m a n a g e r in A p a r tm e n t 108. ice. s w im m in g pool. B e au tifu l!} G R 7-0751 THE TEXAN D O R M IT O R Y F O R M EN 1905 - 07 N u e c e s $30 MO. te r m S p r in g B e a u t fu lly T H E C O L O N A D E 2200 N u eces ra te s . SHO p e r m o n th P e r fe c t L o c a tio n , tw o blocks W e s t of one k itc h e n s , In p o o l, p a tio , c a m p u s b e d r io m a p a r tm e n ts , W alk -In c lo s e ts, i a ir-c o n d ltlo n c d , c o n c e a le d a n d c h a rc o a l fenced lo c k e rs L a u n d ry a rc a . E x tr a s to r a g e w ith w a s h e r-d ry cr T h r e e s ta tio n TV a n te n n a . No p a r k in g p ro b le m Y o u r J — a p a r t m e n t is 3 m in u te s v a i k c la s s I fu rn is h e d fro m nished N E A R C A M P U S B E A U T IF U L L Y f u r ­ th r e e ro o m a p a r tm e n t A ir c o n d itio n e d W a te r , g as p a id . 2503 S a n G a b rie l, G R 8-1030. la r g e P R IV A T E , A T T R A C T IV E E F F I C I E N ­ CY a p a r tm e n t- c o tta g e A ir cond!- I H oned, p a n e lle d w a lls, door*, w a t e r a n d g as p aid . $65.00, I — 2407 W e s t 9 th . G E 5-7371. G R 8-3169. s lid in g g la s s 3017 F R E D R IV E R U p p e r g a r a g e a p a r tm e n t. A ir c o n d itio n e d L iv in g ro o m , d in ­ e tte . tw o b e d ro o m s, k itc h e n , b a th . F o r 2-4. $70-$80. G R 7-8228 G R 6-3720 A ir co n d itio n * d. C e n tr a l h e a tin g , p e r t e r se rv ic e . M r a n d M rs C h a r le t M o rg an , M a n a g e rs G R 6-5812 ATR C O N D IT IO N E D ROO M S F O R M E N r o o m s fo r T w o s p r in g s e m e s te r . D a ily p o r te r service a v a ila b le T H E B R ID G E W A Y I S'.PRM ITO RY 2616 W ic h ita G R 7-0427 2422 SAN A N T O N IO s o u th s i r c o n d itio n e d I p p e r s u ite room . fo r g irls L iv in g D dr torn. b a th . C a rp e te d No k itc h e n . $60.00 fo r tw o $50.00 fu r o n e GR 6-3720 1932 B SAN A N T O N IO . No I c o n d itio n e d A ir l i v i n g b e d ­ room , d in e tte , k itc h e n , b e th . F o r fo r one, $50. tw o . $55 W a te r a n d g as paid. G R 2-2372 GR 6-3720 2422 S A N A N T O N O. N<* I & 'I c o n d itio n e d A ir S m a il c o tta g e . h a th T w o S in g le s $40. B b ls p aid . boys. room s in room . $25 each. T w o f o r G R 6-3720 a p a r tm e n t. W O U L D L IK E T O fu rn is h e d J u n i o r o r S e n io r p re ­ f e rr e d . T w o b lo c k s o f c a m p u s . $30.OO. B ills p aid . G R 7-2870. s h a r e 1001 W E S T 29th. U p p e r g a r a g e a p a r t ­ k it c h ­ 865.00. m e n t. L iv in g ro o m , d in e tte s b e d ro o m s. b a th . t w o e n . G R 6-3720, T ile b a th , N E W A N D C O N V E N IE N T L Y lo c a te d . F u rn is h e d w ith s h o w e r ta s te . A m p le p a r k in g Id e a l fo r f a i n i h . c o u p le , o r s e v e ra l In d iv id u a ls . R e a s o n ­ a b le H I 2-09ir >. C L E A N . Q U IE T , L a rg e C O M F O R T A B L E . ro o m s a n d c lo .-e u . C a rp o r t. T w o b e d ro o m . $110. O ne b ed ro o m <2 b e d s ) see, c a ll HO 5-8198. $87.50. W a te r p a id , T o A I IR B T KOR A U S T IN L U X U R Y L IV IN G F O R C O L O R E D O PEN H O U SE A t T h* IM PERIAL A P A R T M E N T S w ith F U R N IS H E D R O O M S F O R BOYS ro o m s. M aid m rv ice a n d te le p h o n e in ro o m s. 2812 H e m p h ill P a r k . G R 7-1811 b e tw e e n s h o w e r tile ROO M S F O R C O E D S 1600 C o lo ra d o W a lk in g d is ta n c e fro m U n iv ersity a n d C a p ita l, O n e b lo c k fro m w ash - r e s t a u ­ a te r ia , c le a n e rs , lin e r a n t Q u ie t, b u ­ ba t h an d sh o w e r. U tilitie s p aid . $3u m o n th ly . g ro c e ry , b u s fu rn is h e d , kitchen* :• la u n d r y , ch : r< 'n. G R 2-0690 Room and Board T H E S T A G C O -O P 2101 R io G r a n d e G R 8-5013 H a s O r o V a c a n c y F o r R o o m a n d B o a rd (21 m e a ls p e r w e e k s t $53 p e r m o n th ) A nd a I u n ite d n u m b e r of v a c a n c ie s f o r h o a r d e r s T w o m eal* p e r d a v $42.St) m o n th $L’tu*> m o n th L u n c h o n ly $27.50 m o n th S u p p e r o n ly T h e s e p ric e s In c lu d e a la r g e S u n d a y d in n e r V ACANCY ROOM A N D /O R B O A R D M rs. H i t t 's L A S S A T E R h o u s e 2100 N u e c e s C a ll G R 7-830$ G R E A T F O O D M AN -S IZ E D S E R V IN G S I' EA I B E E T O N H I IIG H T S S U IT A B L E F O R F A C U L T Y F A M IL Y th r e e L iv in g ro o m a n d d in in g ro o m c o m b in a tio n , b e d ro o m s tw o b a th s , d en a n d eq u iv a le n t la r g e k itc h e n , d o u b le c a r p o r t, lo v e ly lo t. H a s c e n tr a l co o lin g a n d b e a tin g . W a ll to w a ll c a r ­ p e tin g a n d d ra p e s . P m e fro m JO m in u te s \ B IN , A U S T IN c a m p u s. P r i v a te b o a t dock, $30 m o n th ly . G R 8 - n - G R 8-9191. A l t e r a t i o n s A L T E R A T IO N S A N D DID SSM A KING 715 W e ft 25th S tr e e t. G R 6-3360 A L T E R A T IO N S , D R E S S M A K IN G . R E ­ W E A V IN G on m o th , c i g a r e tte h o le s : g e n ts At 22 1/2. M o n o g ra in ln g . L a d l e a , r e a s o n a b le G R 2-7736. 903 W est r a te s . A L T E R A T IO N S A N D B E L T m a k in g . P ic k u p a n d d e liv e r y tw o <>r m o re g a r m e n ts M rs, P o tts , O L 3-2348. Nurseries L O V IN G C A R E F O R In fa n ts. T w o w e e k s to o n e y e a r . L u la by N u r s e r y in fa n ts . E d n a C o n n e r. L ic e n se d f o r a n d ex m e r ic n eed n u rs e . GR 2-25.34. Special Services R E N T - P U R C H A S E T .V s T e le v isio n JU m a t. G R 2-2692 A lpha E X P E R I E N C E D L A D Y V I L L do la u n ­ lie r h o m e. S p e c ia liz e s h ir ts - d ry in p u n ts -d re s s e s , G R 2-3431, Miscellaneous P A R K IN G S O L V E YOUR R e se rv e y o u r o w n s p a p ro b lem . O p e n in g s a v a ila b le f o r s e c o n d s e m e s te r R e n t by m o n th o r s e m e s te r . U b lo ck to c a m ­ pus, 2607 U n iv e rs ity . C L 3-5723. S U B S C R IB E NOW -D A L L A S M o rn in g e a r ly mr rn - > G „ m 8 N e w s D e liv e re d d a i c c a r t a r . < i n to T x . . . m c iv, a m -12 30. Printing For Q U A L IT Y P R IN T IN G Call V U U , r r i n t C o . L U N U 47 P r i n t i n g • ! Hi p lica t . is sr • M ailing I A< RJA Ft X K • I IO - MC R O A D S T E R . S ell o r tr a d e S e a rs . GR 2-1968 S P E C IA L S T U D E N T A N D F A C U L T Y d is c o u n ts on m u sic a l i n s tr u m e n ts . N ew a n d s p e c ia lty . (.IR. 8-5863 g u ita r s u se d o u r ces R e a so n a b le prices. A u stin N E W A N D U s HD f u r n itu r e , a p p l i a n ­ t u r ­ n s .re a n d A p p lia n c e s , S I I W e s t 43rd. H O 5-1423 S A IL B O A T S N E W , US HD. k its . H a r d ­ w a r e a n d t r a i le r s S a ilb o a t S ales. 504 W< sr "th . < IR 6-3009, G R 8-81 IS 1959 L a rn b r e tta D e lu x e S c o o te r $465 m tth w in d s h ie ld o ffe r to se ll new , a b o v e $200 o r I r h a m r a d io e q u ip m e n t. S ee a t 2ft** G u a d a lu p e C ost h ig h e s t t r a d e . P h o n e C L 2-2328 1955 MER- URY M O N T C L A IR ttv » d o o r iv rd tup. M in t c o n d itio n . R a d io , fin a n c e r a tin g , h e a te r, *5, C an w ith $225 d ow n w ith c r e d it G R 8-1961. G R 2-7998 it -mat \ 1954 O L D S S U P E R sg U L T .) . N ew s te e rin g . V e ry p o w e r b ra k e s, c le a n $395. C huck, C L 3-6536, L re s feet c o n d itio n . N ew o v e rh a u l, I >50 SIM CA T W O d o o r h a r d to p . P e r - tir e s , R a d io , h e a te r , $895, 8250 d o w n . b a l­ a n c e fin a n c e d . G R 8-1961. .us G R 2-7998 be 11 A LIA' R A F T E R S : S-38C. c o n d itio n . P e r f e c t f o r E x c e lle n t th e b e g in n e r . B ill G R 7-5038 y p i n g DX P E R U NCI A c cu rate, n D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E , w m abo*. C a ll HO 5-5813. M ARTHA W X ZI? LEY M U A . p ro fe s s io n a l ta ilo re d c o m p le te tv p in e A th e n eed s of se rv ic e U n iv e rsity s tu d e n ts . S p ecial k e y ­ la n g u a g e b o a rd sc ie n c e th e s e s a n d d ss* e ta tio n s e n g in e e r in g e q u ip m e n t a n d f o r to P h o n e G R 2-3210 M ore P o n te o ie n tH L o cated A t O u r New A d d re ss 2U134-, GI AD A L U R E N E E D A T Y P IS T ’ E le c tro n un ie. CUI- v TSU} area. C all G R 8-5446. A L L R IG H T A c c u ra te l f it s done h> A L B R IG H T , i t 's do n * r e a ­ s o n a b le o x e p rie o c e d ; n e a r U n iv e rs ity ; C L 3-2941. t y p i n g : T H E S E S . R E P O R T S . R E A S O N A B L E . E !ec(rem ain*. M rs. B ra d y . 2317 O ld- ham GR 2-4715 T Y P IN G W A N T E D . IBM E lite . F a s t, a c c u ra te , c o n v e n ie n t. Jo '> 5-1030. I tit a t h i n g M im e o g ra p h in g X e r o x in g T h cs o s-P a pe rs- P r i n t n g Al. S -T E X DL P L IC A T O R S 4U0 .a s t l i t h P lum e G R 6*6593 W anted B L O O D D O N O R S —AU n e e d e d fo r u sa g e sio n a l d o n o rs now C o u n t x B lood B an k . 2907 B R ed R iver ty p e s of blood in A u stin P ro fe s ­ T ra v is a d o p t e d Help W anted THJE MOC >N.LUJ HT IERS— I B.M M u l- t iii th m g A ft* r 6 OO a n d w t-ekend* 3217 Ma rg u e riti f Cos Ie! lo,. G R 21-1535. H a rn p io n .Road. DK L M T E ]LD CIram m a;r, H I 2-6522 T Y P ING. % p e 1 l i n g 20c p as* . c o rre c tio n . S T U D E N T S E A R N E X T R A MONEY' S e llin g a d v e r tis in g f o r A u s tin 's m ost P r e f e r p o p u la r m o n th ! > m a g a z in e . so m e w ell g ro o m e d r e lia b le s tu d e n t in te r e s te d in p a r t tim e w o rk S t r a ig h t co m m issio n . C a ll G R 2*5444. M r. F r y . e x p e rie n c e d , in te llig e n t W A N T E D , M A L E S T U D E N T to w o rk 4 :3 0 p .m .- 9 :0<) p.m . w ith e x c e p tio n a l I c h ild r e n , R o o m n o d b e a rd : c a l l M rs. J a n a s k y , i i i 2-4874 fu rn is h e d , i fro n t 8 a .rn . -I p .m . B A R T E N D E R : E V i. N I N G S A N D w e e k e n d s M u st e la n on b e in g l u s t in a t le a s t a y e a r Sec M r O v er­ to n a f t e r 3:O O p .m . d a ily . T h e T a v e rn , : 922 W e st 12th. ^WVVIW-»VVV» ^ VVVV»Vs a n d b a tte r ie s . S m a ll U S E D T V 'S . $25.00 up. T r a n s is to r r a ­ tu b e s a t 20% d is c o u n t U n iv e rsity TV S erv ice. 5533 B u r n e t R o a d C L 2-2415. V IK I.IM A C A L H O U N L e g a l TV P IN G S erv ice N o ta r y liK 8-3636 ;•>14 H e n a n * — N o r t h T o w n e s H a ll D IS S E R T A T IO N S . T H E S E S BOO KS. r e p o rts , N e v s> mbol- n u r e c a r t r i d g e anc. 1O06 D c h a n g e r . S hun* c a r tr id g e a n d I iw o I A lte c L a n c in g s p e a k e r* . F o x , G R 2-1968, * G R 8 3888 fie ld s iictu s. ON SALI WEDNESDAY! You too will be m oved to action b y the February Special Sec­ tion on Parking in the R A N G ER . Like this h a p p y couple, you w ill hardly be able to restrain yourself. Like them, you will hardly be able to w a it to try out some of the h a n d y hints. Next to a Parkin g Permit, his copy of the R A N G E R is essential to every Student o w n in g an autom obile and a chick to g o in it. Get your W e d n e sd a y! O n sale at Better R A N G E R Booths around Cam pus. TEXAS 2 6 (25c plus I cent ta*) / For the y o u n g a n d y o u n g in heart. See our w i d e selection V ale ntin e? "■■PW Street Floor U N I V E R I S I E i h4 duo hit i ow* wont A u s tin 's f ir s t e x c lu s iv e a p a r tm e n ts fo r c o lo re d , f e a t u r i n g : B ig k itc h e n s T ile b a th s L a r g e < Insets A v a ila b le C o m p le te !) F u rn is h e d L u x u r y U sin g , o n ly $25.00 p e r w e e k IMPERIAL A PA R TM E NT S * 2400 E a s t 22nd S t. (O ff M a n o r R o a d ) Houses— Unfurnished rn Pi ? ^ f o u r ro o m M o d e rn T W O B L O C K S W E S T o f U n iv e rsity u n f u rn is h e d h o u s e L a rg e liv in g a n d b ed ro o m , d i n ­ k itc h e n wi t h in c lo s e ts , e tte , w a lk c a b in e ts , ice box. r a n g e F u r n a c e a n d a i r c o n d itio n in g . $125 p e r j m o n th . A d u lt* o n ly la r g e a n d Ti I 2-6445 Y 2246 Guadalupe Street • C O t O P t C O * O f t C O * 0 8 # C O t O I » t C O * TuMrfay, February 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 UT to Host Band Convention Ja m e s Jacobsen, TC I' band di­ re r tor, and Vincent DiNino, lo n g ­ horn Band director, will give the opening addresses of a M arch 36-18 band convention. The convention is to draw approxim ately expected 200 representatives from 46 col­ leges and universities. t The D istrict VI m eeting of Kap­ pa K appa Psi, honorary band fra ­ ternity, and Tau B eta Sigma, hon­ orary' band sorority, will include leaders from schools in Texas Ok­ lahom a, A rkansas, ami Louisiana. Co-chairm en of the hosting UT group and are Carolyn Shaw W ayne Sebera. They w ere advised la st weekend by A. F ra n k M artin, national executive of the organiza­ tions, who suggested plans to pro­ duce a discussion of common prob­ lem s of m em ber chapters in the southwest. A cover picture and five-page spread on the Longhorn Band and activities of the local chapters will be featured in the M arch issue of Tile Podium, national m agazine of Kappa K appa Psi and Tau Beta Sigma. it * Business I n t e r v i e w Set Students Interested In a m aster of business adm inistration degree the U niversity of Prnn-yl- from vanla graduate school, Wharton Graduate D ivision, will h a \e the opportunity to consult with a repro- sentative of that school Tuesday. interested should go to B usiness-E conom ics Office Build Ing 203, or call Mrs, Jerry Moore, for appoint OR 1-8871, ext. 412, m ents. Those Scouts to Sell Cookies tim e Cookie is here again for the G irl Scouts and Brownies of Austin. The girls will be on cam - Campus News in Brief ■" m s m i ss rn i - rn mumm m mmmm i rn i pus F riday through Feb. 26 at* i tem pting to sell their goal of 49,000 boxes. Camp Texlake on Lake Travis, the Girl Scouts, and Brownies will the sale, get the proceeds from throughout | Cookies will be sold ■ the city. They will be 50 cents p er box and offered in four varieties. ★ languages, will speak Shattuck to Speak at *Yf Roger Shattuck, professor of R o­ to m ance the first m eeting of a new “ V** com m ittee on state public eduea lion at 4 p.m . T uesday. All stu­ dents are Invited to the discussion at the U niversity “TV* The com m ittee w as form ed b e­ cause o f student interest in hear­ ings of the Texas H o u se c o m m itt e e in v e s tig a tin g c o n te n ts and Mary M a r ­ R eui»en B row n garet Carlson are co-ehalrm en. te x tb o o k Interview s Interviews for Challenge for Challenge will continue through T hursday. Those interested should go either to Un­ ion 320 or Union 321 betw een 3 and 5 p rn. 12 Orators to Compete Twelve speakers have entered tile prelim inaries cf the Ed Gossett ‘ Oratorical Contest to be held at 2:30 p rn. Tuesday in Speech B u ild -: ing 201. Each speech will be from eight . to ten m inutes and approxim ately j six out of the 12 speakers will go I to the finals at 7:30 p.m . Feb. 27, I in Geology Building 34 Both the prelim inaries and the finals are open t r the public. ★ * Reservoir Talk Planned “ Tram ient Behavior of M ulti-J L ayer R eservoirs” will be the topic of Dr. B. J, B erry ’s speech to the A m erican Institute of M echanical E ngineers at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday in Texas Union 317. Dr. Berry is director of exploita­ tion research for Sinclair Oil Com­ pany in Tulsa, Okla. it Warren to Speak at i Y' R ev. Donald Warren, a m em ber of the faculty at Christian Faith and Idle Comm unity, will speak at I p.m . T uesday to the P sych ol­ ogy and Religion Com m ittee In the C om m ittee Room of the U ni­ versity " Y ,” “ Is God D ead ?” will be Rev. W arren’s topic. Ile will discos* the view o f the 19th Century phil­ osopher, Friedrich N ietzsche, and the relevance of his Ideas to the 20th Century. R ev. Warren I* a graduate of the U niversity and form er presi­ dent of the YMCA. He attended H arvard following his graduation here. The public Is invited to hear Rev, Warren's talk and the rom m ittce Is open to new m em bers. Newsman to Examine Campus Conservatives M. Stanton E vans, author of “ Revolt on C am pus," will speak at 8 p.m . Wednesday in the Texas Union Ballroom. The address, sponsored by the University Young A m ericans for Freedom , will concern the conserv­ ative revolt on cam pus, L. T. Zim ­ m erm an. secretary of the group, say s. Evans, a graduate of Y ale Uni­ versity, is the editor of the Indian­ apolis News and a reg u lar con- tributor to National Review Mag­ azine. Described in the Feb. 9 issi Life m agazine as one of the telleciua! heroes of cam pus se rya t ive.-.” Evans says that stu- dents tie conservatism to tho idea! of lim ited governm ent, that find political freedom inseparable con from fundam ental m orality, and gen that they consider com m unism the sap greatest threat to conservative val- j Gee ues. ; hey he us tret • ■ g u sh e r com es v- *h each pa - c f pajam as. The pajam as, 5.95; the shorts, 1.50 Juniors, Seniors lure's How to be ail im portant executive before you're 30 Join R id b a r d s o n - M e r r e ir s C a r e e r D e v e l o p m e n t Program. For over 25 years, it has produced outstanding young executives in all phases of management, At Richardson-Merrell (formerly Vick Chemical) young men in key positions are the ru le-n ot the exception. Men in their twenties and thirties head departments . . , influ­ ence policy . . . are responsible for millions of dollars worth of business. Some typical cases: • John Williford . . . advertising manager fur I averia Mouthwash and Oral Spray at 28. • John S co tt. . . vice-president in charge of Vick Inter- national operations for Europe at 35. • Kevin D a ley . . . manager of new product development at 31. (ere it s hard to get lost. .Most executive positions are filled from wuhin, Prime example is Mr. H, R. Mars- chalk. He joined the program 24 years ago . . . held his first management post three years later . . . has been president of several corporate divisions . , . and now at the age of 46 is president of the entire enterprise. Kit hardson-Mcrrell is a corporation comparatively as young arui fast-growing as its executives. Since 1937, sales have doubled every five years, mushrooming to 151.5 million dollars, Its products are now sold in 120 nations. Besides \ irk* VapoRub, Lavon* Mouthwash, Llearasil Medication, Richardson Merrel] now markets thousands of diversified products thry, &?.•.; yj&xg • ■ :: 'A I vW:- ’ 1 .1 :■ U C K Y P J F F M S 4(THE DEAN f t THE DEAN AS A HELPER. Supposing that after you’ve paid all your fees, you discover you haven’t enough money left for Luckies. What do you do? You go to the Dean. The Dean will help you. That's what the Dean is there for. The smart Dean knows that college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular. The Dean will tell you to get a part-time job. Then you’ll be able to enjoy the rich, full taste of Luckies. Deans certainly are knowledgeable. C H A N G E TO LUCKIES one/ get some taste for a change! B K © A. f.'re. Prwfuct oJjJ& J'/nW lf& vn (Jcfwxc-£cTry> a try ~ u Cur mi MU