w e a t h e r :
c le a r, c o l d
l o w 36, h i g h 64
r a g !
rn V V m r
A A I
A H
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A J A l L r Y
A r A A m * m am m s
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U / A A I N
^
Student Newspaper at The University of Texas
p a g e 2 :
ru ssia n s v ie w
a s s a s s in a t io n
V ol 63
Price Five C ents
AUSTIN, TEXAS,
*Y, DECEMBER 3, 1963
Eight Pages Today
No. BO
Carr Organizes
Court of Inquiry
Oswald's Mother Critical
O f FBI Security Actions
DALLAS UP)—T e x a s Attorney
General Waggoner Carr said Mon
day Leon Jaworski of Houston, one
of the defense attorneys
t h e
integration
I University dormitory
suit, will be special counsel in ’he
upcoming state court of
inquiry
into John F. Kennedy’s assassina-
, hon.
in
Jaworski personally prosecuted
the first major war crim e trials
at Nuremberg after World War
II.
Carr said in Dallas, where he
conferred with Dist. Atty. Henry
Wade,
inquiry
that the court of
will await the FBI report if the
FBI doesn t take too long.
FBI TO REPORT
Tile FBI, which took over in
vestigation of Kennedy’s killing
and the subsequent slaying of the
accused assassin, is expected
to
report to President L y n d o n B.
Johnson this week.
It will be up to the President
the FBI
to determine
evidence will be made public.
time
the
"As of this time, we are co
operating with the FBI in their
phase of the investigation,” said
Carr. “ After that ha* been com
pleted, it will be time for the
Texas coart of inquiry.”
The attorney general s a i d
it
would probably be rushing things
to expect the T e x a s inquiry to
convene this week.
"The FBI understands
if
they are unusually long in making
their report, we might proceed,"
Carr said.
that
INQUIRY ONLY WAY
The attorney general s a i d a
court of inquiry is the only means
of gathering evidence and hear
ing witnesses under oath short of
a trial.
Carr said he expects his
in
quiry to precede that of the pres
idential commission appointed by
Johnson.
The attorney general s a i d no
site for the inquiry has been sel
ected.
Carr said he and Wade will be
co-counsels, along with Jaworski
and another attorney he will name
in several days.
CARR AND CONNALLY TALK
Carr conferred with Gov'. John
Connally for 56 minutes Monday
in Parkland Hospital w h e r e the
governor
f r o m
wounds suffered as he rode in the
automobile with Kennedy.
recovering
is
Meanwhile, M r s. Marguerite
Oswald, mother of the accused
assassin, says she plans to write
a book about her family.
She remained critical of security
arrangem ents for the president’s
visit. She asked why her son was
not under surveillance. He was an
avowed Marxist.
Mrs. Oswald, still under Secret
Service guard in her Fort Worth
home, renewed her claim that un
FBI agent displayed a picture of
Jack Ruby to her the night before
Ruby killed her son.
She demanded to k n o w why
Ruby was permitted to reach her
son if the FBI was interested in
Ruby.
The FBI flatly denies Mrs. Os
wald was shown a picture of Ruby,
saying it was a picture of another
man.
Secret Service Men
ContinualVigil
On Lynda Bird
A glass-walled office in the lobby
of Kinsolving Dormitory was filled
with quiet, well-dressed men Mon
day as Secret Service agents be
gan a continual watch to protect a
19-year-old coed in Room 309—the
elder daughter of the President of
the United States.
Lynda B i r d Johnson attended
classes as usual, but she was ac
companied by a dark-suited Secret
Service man. Another ate break-
4,000 Seats Left
For Cotton Bowl
Approximately 4.000 tickets are
available to the public for the New
Year's Cotton Bowl game in Dal
las, Al Lundstedt, assistant busi
ness manager of athletics said.
Tile tickets may be purchased as
long as they last.
The 5.000 tickets for the student
section were drawn by last Wed
nesday. Remaining tickets are lo
cated behind the goal line outside
the student section.
‘‘Because of the demand in Dal
las, tickets not sold will probably
be sent back by Friday," Lund
stedt said. About 16,000 tickets had
been sold by noon Monday.
fast wath her, a Kinsolving waiter
said.
Additional
telephones were
in
stalled in the office which is to be
at least a temporary office for the
Treasury department agents. Six
men, believed to be with the Sec
ret Service, visited the dormitory
Monday.
University officials and Secret
Service men refused to comment
on Miss Johnson or the security
■ measures taken for her protection.
All questions are referred to Mrs.
Liz Carpenter, a University ex-stu
dent, now' Washington press sec
retary for the President.
Even the residents of the dormi
tory have been instructed to give
no information on Miss Johnson.
She cannot be reached for inter-
; view s.
Monday evening Kinsolving stu
dent assistants were introduced to
the men who will guard the Pres
ident’s daughter.
Miss Johnson’s plans have not
been revealed. It is rumored that
she will transfer next semester to
a school in Washington, thus cas
ing the work of the Secret Service.
A sophomore history major, she
is a member of Zeta Tau Alpha,
Alpha Lamba Delta, and was on
the Texas Union Speakers Com
mittee last year. She is not par
ticipating
in any extracurricular
activities this sem ester as she is
1 taking 19 hours of courses.
States M ay Exercise
Right-to-Work Laws
Supreme Court Unanimous
In Rejecting Federal Power
WASHINGTON
(A P )-T h e Su
preme Court ruled Monday that
state courts may enforce
their
own right-to-work laws, rejecting
an argument that this is a do
main reserved for the federal gov
ernment.
The right-to-work ruling was
unanimous, S4, with Justice Ar
thur i, Goldburg, former secre
tary of labor, abstain big. It ap
to rn Florida
plied specifically
Supreme Court ruling that the
state's rlght-ta-werk taw baas the
agency shop.
Justice William O. Douglas, de
livering the high court’s ruling,
said it would be odd to interpret
federal law as permitting a state
to prohib it the agency shop but
forbid the state implementing such
a law.
Under agency
shop contracts,
workers do not have to j o i n a
union but must pay the equivalent
of union dues and fees. The Su-
Leon/ Leading
In Venezuela
preme Court ruled in June, 1962,
that federal law perm its such con
tracts but said they may be pro
hibited by state law.
NLRB OR STATES?
The court
left unanswered
in
the earlier ruling whether enforce-
; ment of such state laws is up to
I the state courts or the National
I Labor Relations Board. It called
| for arguments on an appeal by
■ Local 1625 of the AFL-CIO Retail
I Clerks Union.
A group of nonunion employe*
I of Food Fair, Inc. stores In Mi
ami had protested paying fees
the Florida
to the union, and
Attorneys
I Supreme Court upheld them.
for
the protesting
I workers said unions were trying
to use the agency shop to bypass
; right-to-work laws passed by 20
states and thereby were "trying
to convert this land of the free
to the land of the fee."
CARACAS, Venezuela (JI— Haul
Leon!, unspectacular politician run
ning on the government's strong
anti-Castro platform, sailed along
on a comfortable lead Monday in
the race for the presidency.
A stage ti le e s l vote* Indicat
ed heavy popular approval of
Vsaesurls’B demand for stiff ac
tion against Caba a n i lls prime
minister, Fidel castro.
With unofficial
tabulations ap
proaching
the half-way m a r k ,
Leoni's margin over his closest ri
val fluctuated between 75.000 and
90,001 votes.
BETANCOURT SUPPORTED
The 58-year-old former labor law.
y r ma with tile toll support of
outgoing Prerident Remufe Betan
court, chief enemy of Castro in
Latin America.
far
Arm ed Far es# for National Lib
eration — FALN — Ms eeeead
m ajor setback since voters be
gan lining ap In r ecord num
ber* after dawn Monday la de-
flaaee s t death threats from tbs
naiergveaad terrorist organisa
tion. Officials said ta ta ta per
eeat of eligible voter* tam ed eta.
On the basis of tabulations of
more than ane-third of the esti
m ated 3,4 million votes, these were
the standings:
Leon!, candidate of Betancourt's
Democratic Action party, 308,068;
Rafael Caldera of the Social Chris
tians. 223.807; Jovito Villa]ba of
the Republican Democratic Union,
300,458; Arturo Uslar Pietri, an in
dependent, 174,012; Wolfgang Lar-
r ai*bal, 87,773.
FEW VOTES VOIDED
The unofficial tabulations showed
that voided votes were running
about 4 per cent. The FALN had
edited on voters to cast blank bal-
lots, but It could not be determin
ed from the unofficial tabulations
how many of the voided ballots
were blanks.
Raul Ramos Gimenez, Dissident
Democratic Action, and German *
Borregales, rightist Authentic Na
tional Movement, both were out of
the race.
I
Troop* and police maintained j
their guard throughout the conn- I
try. A heavy p a r d was placed
around the building where the
electoral council counted vote*.
As tabulations progressed,
the
FALN girns—active in downtown
Caracas during Sunday's ballot
ing—were silent.
The FALN
its cam
paign against B ttencourt in Octo
ber 1862, after the Cuban crisis.
to sabotage
then was
Its aim
American properties.
launched
Silva Released
From Hospital
I
Felipe Silva, senior pharmacy
student, was discharged Saturday
from Seton Hospital, where he un
derwent surgery for a stab wound I
sustained Thanksgiving Day.
Silva, 23, was injured while leav- j
mg a tavern one block off campus.
He told police that he was jumped
by four men while entering his car. j
PROHIBIT UNION SHOP
Most right-to-work
laws were
passed originally to prohibit union
shop contracts under which work
ers must join a union. The agency
recent
shop has spread only
years.
in
The Taft Hsrtiey taw passed
in 1*47 barred closed shop con
tracts under which only union
members could be hired. Doug
las sold n section was inserted
in that legislation which the late
Mena tor Robert A. Taft, R-Ohio,
said was designed
to m ake
clear that flus law avoids Inter
ference with state taws prevent
ing the closed shop that w a r n
ta effect ta m any states.
In light of the wording of that
section and its legislative history,
Douglas said, "We conclude that
Congress in 1947 did not deprive
the states of any and all power
to enforce their laws restricting
the execution and enforcement of
union-scounty agreem ents."
AFLrCIO P r e s i d e n t George
Meany recently announced that the
13.5-milIion m ember labor organi
zation would use all its resources
to fight nght-to-w'ork law*.
S. D. Cadwallader, president of
the national right-to-work commit
tee, said the ruling "is another
important step in the freedom of
America's 70 million employed
people."
JFK Dinner Funds
Left in Suspension
Money from ticket sales for the
canceled dinner honoring John F.
Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson is
included in the more than $2®,OOO
collected by the State Democratic
Executive Committee headquar
ters.
Frank Erwin, secretary of the
State Democratic Executive Com
mittee, said Monday a final figure
on the tickets is still unavailable.
that no decision had
been made as to the use of the
money. Erwin added that a t least
$25,000 would go to meet the din
ner expenses.
He said
A final decision as to how the
money will be used is up to the
National Democratic Committee
and the State Democratic Commit
tee in conference with Gov. John
Connally and President Johnson.
Erwin said the decision would not
be made for several weeks.
Original plans called
the
money collected from the ticket
sales to be divided between the
national
state Democratic
committees.
and
for
News in Brief . . .
Compiled From AP Report*
JOHNSON PUSHES ECONOMY. President Lyndon B. Johnson
put the stress on economy in government Monday. In a series of
steps aimed at cutting current expenses and blocking future in
creases, Johnson began to work in earnest on the 1965 fiscal
budget, which he hopes to keep under $100 billion. This, he hopes,
will bolster the chances of early approval at the tax cut bill.
SCHOOLS NOT COMPULSORY. The Virginia Supreme Coati
ruled Monday that tile state to aet legally bound to operate
schools. Public schools, It stated, are a m atter el option for
the counties. The ease stemmed (rom the closing of schools
ta Prince Edward Comity, Va., to prevent la tog ration.
JOHNSON URGES SPACE COOPERATION. President Lyndon B.
Johnson appealed Monday to the Soviet Union to take the first
small step in a joint flight to the moon. Ambassador Adlai
Stevenson told the United Nations General Assembly that he
h id been instructed by Johnson to reaffirm the join flight pro
posal made by President John F. Kennedy last September.
’-'A A C l f
* TURRI HH PRIME MINISTER RESIGNS. Turkish Prim e
Minister Unset I Bomi resigned Monday. His coalition govern
ment collapsed while he was ta Washington attending Prest-
dent John F. Kennedy’s funeral, laonu gave his restgaatio*
In President Cental G unel ta aa audience ut the presidential
palace.
OPPENHEIMER GETS FERMI AWARD. President Lyndon B.
Johnson presented Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer the Ferm i Award,
one of science's most coveted honors, Monday. Nine years ago
Oppenheimer was cited by the Atomic Energy Commission as
rn security risk. The aw sti- carries a medal and a tax-free $58,800.
MARG ABET EXPECTING I BOOKP. Ptlnosas Margaret al
Grant Britain ta expecting her second child i t A e t a i of
April, It was anaoueced Monday. Banca Elisabeth II Is ex-
perttag her letulfc child hi late January, A caw l spokesmen
*1881 win he a bumper year far riyal babies "
—Texan Photo—Draddy
Fisher Scores 2 of Texas' 89
Joe Fisher pops one of his field goals that enabled the Lc~g-
horns to d ro p H ow ard Paynes Yellowjackets 89-58 in G re g o ry
G ym M o n d a y night. Ranked No. 9 nationally, the Steers dem on
strated their balance as five players scored 14 points each in the
rout. Fisher also grabbed IO rebounds in the gam e to lead the
'H o rn s in that category. (See story, Page 4.)
Texas on Top
Of Wire Polls
sippi; No. 8 Oklahoma; No. 9,
Alabama; and No. IO, Michigan
State.
The IO teams are the same who
occupied the ladder a week ago,
but their positions, below Texas
and Navy, were changed consider
ably.
Pitt, SI-20 victor over Miami
of florida, moved up a notch as
did Nebraska,
idle after ship
ping Oklahoma the week before.
Mississippi, held
to its second
tie of the year by Mississippi
State 10-10, dropped from third to
seventh. Oklahoma climbed
two
notches from tenth after belting
Oklahoma S t a t e 34-10. Losses
dropped both Alabama, from sixth,
and Michigan State, from fourth.
Texas remained No. I in the
final United Press International
rankings by n board of coach
es. Thirty-one of the persons to t
ing placed the Longhorns on top,
with the other four giving the
nod to No. * Navy. Thus the
IMS team is officially the first
national football champion In the
school's history, although tile As
sociated P ress’ final balloting is
not until next week and
final
certification can not yet be a t
tained.
By The Associated P re ss
Texas and Navy held firmly to
their respective Nos. I and 2 posi
tions, but the rest of the Top IO
underwent a lively shakeup Mon
day in the Associated Press* next-
to-last college football poll.
The final vote
to determine
the IMS national champion
is
scheduled next week after the
important Army-Navy and Pitts-
burgh-Penn State games.
The Texas Longhorns, who com
pleted a perfect HW) season on
Thanksgiving Day with a 15-13 vic
tory over Texas A&M, continued
to top the rankings with solid sup
port from
the coun
throughout
try.
They drew 42 of the SI first
place votes from a special pan
el of sports writers and broad
casters for a total of 485 points.
Navy got eight first place votes,
and the other went to Pittsburgh,
which took over the No. 4 spot
behind Illinois.
Illinois g a i n e d considerable
prestige in beating Michigan State
the Big IO Conference
13-0 for
title and a bid to the Rose Bowl,
moving from eighth position to No.
3 in the list.
Auburn, 10-8 upset winner over
Alabama, also took a large leap,
vaulting from ninth to fifth.
Completing tim Top Tea were
No, «, N ebraska; No. I Missis
Annual Minstrel Show
Scheduled for Feb. 8
The Cowboy Minstrels variety
show has been
rescheduled tori
7:30 p.m. Feb. 8 in Gregory Gym.
TW* year’* abow, with Cacti!*
Pryor as interlocutor, will present
the Wanderer* Three, Buck Owens,
end Sonny Ju n e s.
Highlighting the evening will be
the presentation of the IIM Cowboy
swMUwirti
C i t M k A i l t A M a i l
Proceeds from the event will go
to the Austin Council for Retarded
Children. The abow was postponed
after the assassination of Presi
dent John F. Kennedy.
Tickets purchased tar the Nov.
23 Blow will be honored in Febru
ary, or purchase price will be re
funded In Speech Building 101.
IO Miss Austin Rivals—Bouffant and Beautiful
O ne of these lovely finalists will be Miss Austin on Dec. IO when
a five-member panel of judges will gather in the Texas Union A u d i
torium at 7 p.m. to choose the winner. Picked M onday to vie for
th* honor o f representing Austin in the M iss Texas contest are
(left to right) Susan Conine, Jeanne Wehmeyer, Irene Busk#, Sharon
Aldrich, Kay Solomon, Mimi Montgomery, Jean Bybee, Key Daniel,
Ginny Kinney, and Mickey Jo Lindgren. The contest is sponsored
jointly by the Union Charm Com m ittee end the Austin Jaycees.
—Texas Photo—Draddy
No Witch Hunts
Some persons are using President Kennedy’s death as
an excuse for trying to step up efforts to weed “subversives
out of the government.
Among the persons embraced by' that term when
used by the farthest right until Nov. 22 was the late Pres
ident Kennedy.
This is no time for a fear campaign. This is no time
to try to bring back the groundless panic of a decade ago.
We grant that the maintenance of freedom is a dif
ficult and time-consuming task. It is one which requires de
dication on the part of each man, a dedication to tole! anre
that can allow men to speak their minds and advance their
theories on how our freedom can be presell od and strength
ened. This is not done by burning those who are believed
to be witches.
The preservation of freedom requires some degree of
control. Without this control, society becomes a survival
situation. Men decided before history ever began to be rec
orded that the game of life needs some rules.
Those rules must be protective and thereby to some
degree restrictive. They should not strangle the men who
are thinking ahead to meet the future.
We must protect ourselves from outside forces which
attem pt to kill our prized free way of life. Overprotection
will result in the infliction of that same terror from within.
A Salute
F or the first time in 43 years, the Longhorn football
team went through a season unbeaten, untied.
Texas A&M President E arl Rudder gave the Aggies a
holiday Monday because of their tremendous, though los
ing, effort. They deserved it, for they played a wonderful
football game.
But the Longhorns were back in school as usual Mon
day. Winning the national championship, no m atter how
worthy, is still an extracurricular activity.
We realize your tremendous effort, Longhorns. We
salute you for a magnificent season’s performance.
Reaffirmation of Faith
The Longhorn Band paid tribute to the late President
John F. Kennedy at the Texas-Texas A&M game by m arch
ing in his honor. They marched w i t h o u t m ajorettes or
twirlers, and played classical music.
Shortly after the half, this telegram was received:
TO TH E STU D EN T BODY O F TH E U N IV ER SITY
OF T E X A S:
YOUR T R IB U T E TO P R E SID E N T K EN N ED Y R E
A FFIR M S FA ITH IN GOOD P E O P L E O F TEX A S.
P H IL IP D. SULLIVAN
M ELRO SE, MASS.
Not Tower's Fault
Communist propagandists were not alone in their a t
tempts to blame right-wing groups for the death of the late
President John F. Kennedy. Senator John Tower received
more than IOO wires and letters from persons who accused
him of being indirectly responsible for the assassination.
It is true th at the Texas Republican was often op
posed to programs being pushed by the Kennedy adminis
tration, but his opposition was based upon political rather
than personal considerations.
Unless those who blame Senator Tower can prove
that his opposition contributed to an extrem e militant feel
ing in persons who disliked the late President, their accusa
tions are groundless.
The hatred for a conservative which caused a minis
ter to write that he would do everything in his power to
send the Senator into “political oblivion” is the same brand
of hatred that cost the world a great leader on Nov. 22, 1963.
— ERICK KANTER
T h e Da il y T exa n
‘ first C o liege Daily in the South9
Opinions expressed in T h e T ex a n are those o f the Editors
or o f the writer o f the article and not necessarily those o f the
University administration.
All editorials are written by the editor unless otherwise
designated.
T h e Datlv T exa n , a itu d c n t new spaper o f T h e U niversity of T e x a s. Is
published dally excep t M onday and S atu rd ay and holiday periods Septem -
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In c D raw er D U n iversity S tatio n . A ustin. T exa s 78713 Second-class postage
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M ailed out of town
D elivered in Austin (th re e m onths m in im u m !
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PERMANENT STAFF
EDITOR ............................................................................. DAVE MCNEELY
MANAGING EDITOR ....................................................... RICHARD COLE
ASSISTANT MANAGING ED ITO R.................................. LAURA BURNS
NEWS ED IT O R ............................................................. CHARMAYNE MARSH
SPORTS ED ltO R ...............................................
BILL LITTLE
FEA TU R E EDITOR ......................................................... JANE PAGANINI
AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ....................................................... J E F F MILLAR
C H IEF AMUSEMENTS C R IT IC .............................. HAYDEN FREEM AN
EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR ...................................... KAYE NORTHCOTT
PANORAMA EDITOR ..................................... JO YC E JANE WEEDMAN
German People
Grieve Loss
Of President
By LOIS MADISON
I am a former University stu
dent notv spending a year in Ger
many, and have been deeply im-
pressed by the reaction in Ger
many to the late President John
F. Kennedy's assassination, so
that I feel it must be of some
assurance to Americans to hear
of it. I know it is of interest to
university students, no
less
to
University of Texas students who
I found always sympathetic.
I heard today of form er P resi
dent Eisenhower’s rem ark about
people overseas probably being
bewildered b e c a u s e murder
doesn't happen
in a
civilized
country.
M r. Eisenhow er apparently
doesn’t realize how popular Mr.
Kennedy was here. It w asn't
m urder that shocked G erm ans,
hut th at the m urder — the out
rage of It! — took their friend
from them . That left them be
wildered and
speechless, e x
cept for the few com m ents re
peated thousands of tim es: “ I
it.”
‘ ‘I don't
couldn’t believe
think a man should be asham ed
lf there a re te a rs on his f a c e ."
(from a man Interviewed on
television), and “ I feel as lf I’d
lost a m em ber of my fam ily—
m y father or a brother.” The
last Is no exaggeraiton. That
was G erm any’s reaction — as
Individuals.
As a country, of course, G er
many feels it lost a leader as well
as a friend. They not only ad
mired, and respected the man,
but trusted him, and loved him.
When the sorrow is so sincere,
it must somehow come to that.
June European
When Mr. Kennedy returned
from his
tour,
some Americans wondered if it
had accomplished a n y t h i n g .
There was no such question here.
realized
Ile convinced them, as he had
convinced Americans,
already
whether
it con
they
sciously or not, of his vitality
and of his sincerity. He assured
them that Americans would de
impor
fend Berlin and that
tant. He made them feel that his
ideal-world peace and prosperity
might somehow be possible for
he believed in it. He showed them
as he had shown to others the
wonderful warmth of his person
ality.
is
B E R U N SORROWFUL
Germany felt the success of his
I ’m sure you have heard
tour.
of the I a.m . m arch in Berlin
on that Friday night when thou
in silence, carry
sands walked
the people
ing
in the windows
burned candles
for them.
I had never before
seen sincere widespread sympa
thy; but it was here. Today Ger
many's flags still fly at half mast.
torches. There
emptiness.
The horror and shock w ear
into facts — and they must.
His wife will, of course, feel
I personally
the
hope she will la te r tour Europe
on behalf of p eace an d /or work
there for the progress of our
Am erican culture. She can a c
complish a g reat deal. Europe
adm ire* her, sym pathises with
her, and feels that she too Is
their friend.
He was taken too soon. But now
we wait and hope that President
(the name sim ilarity—
Johnson
Andrew Johnson—hasn't escaped
us) will do his best.
JOURNALISTS SCOLDED
Saturday night, a panel of lead
journalists were discussing
ing
the problems created, expressing
their opinions as to what the fu
ture will bring. Mixed in this was
a small amount of pessimism and
lack of faith in Mr, Johnson, ex
pressed
re
marks. They phoned the German
foreign correspondent
in Wash
ington, Tilo Koch, and asked him
for his opinion. His reply was
downright scolding.
few critical
in a
leader of
I was Impressed by that, and
furthermore, by the title with
which he referred to Johnson—
the Western
the
W'orld. It's a great tribute to
our country. I think the real
recognition of our President as
the leader of the Free World
was, to a great extent, earned
by the late President Kennedy.
To use a trite expression sin
cerely. I hope, as we all hope,
that Johnson wears the title well.
It Is a necessity. He assumes re
sponsibilities, perhaps the heav
iest in the world, earned by a
dynamic man.
STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE
NIGHT ED ITO R................................................................ RICHARD BOLDT
DAY EDITOR ...............................................
DESK EDITOR ............................................. ................. LEE MCFADDEN
DOTTIE LILLARD
COPY DESK C H IE F ................. ............................
Akee Powell
Night Reporter .........
Copyreader ................................................................................... Wendell Fuqua
Night Sports E d ito r
....................................................... Frank Denton
Night Amusements E d ito r ............................................
Je ff Millar
Night Wire Editor ...........................
Virgil Johnson
Editorial A ssista n t........................................................... Mary Jane Gorham
JOHN DE LA GARZA
Official Notices
from
Notices
th e University L i
its branches a re
b rary or any of
com m unications
official U niversity
requiring Im m ediate attention. Stu
to L i
dent* who
to
to
brary notices will be
the Dean of Student
the Office of
Life.
referred
respond
fall
A. MoXXit, Librarian
Tu*sd«yi Ddcdmbdr 3, 1963 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N Pig s
Jungle Jibing
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OH,! POOT KW U*
HOtt X LE%
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T H O W
BUGOUT
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ARE WE DOT
mm sue .
nghoms meet T * x » •
f tp Wesleyan Wednesday night a n d
Tuiane Saturday, both here. Th#
Yearlings join them Saturday for
a game with Wharton Junior Col
lege.
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47
Baylor Sets Sights
On Offense Record
Texaa
DALLAS til—Baylor already has record of 2,146 set by SMU.
Baylor would
sacked up most of the passing rec-
h . v , ,o t » w i | g s a s r ,. : ; i
ords. can get the last one that has b a c k w a r d s
against Southern Le*»e .......... s
2
eluded it by making only 98 yards Methodist Saturday to keep from Rio *5.*
against Southern Methodist Satur- winning the
'** ]
day. and Is certain to finish as the pionship. The Bears have averaged, Crawford "... o
Southwest Conference total off erne 341 8 yards per game through nine
leader.
total offense cham-
games.
OH Mar Cat. f* tem ti tim rah
1
Greenwood
4
IS
s
3ft
7
2 ft
ft*
12
5
24
til
ll
5
.1
2ft
TS
17
12
17
32
5
3
4 ft
ll
The Bears have r e p l a c e d
Southern Methodist In the rec
ord book In most passes attem pt
ed aud moat completed with 2M
a n d IRS respectively. Southern
Methodist tried t i l a n d com
pleted IM in ISM.
Baylor's total y a r d s is 2.049,
Texaa, In second p l a c e and
their schedule,
having finished
averaged 364 *.
Texas appears to have won the
defensive crown. The Longhorns
allowed only 194.2 yards per game,
which is 26.7 better than second
place Arkansas, which also has
which Is only 97 yards short of the finished their schedule.
SI. I
Pe nest
ft f | * ft tim rah Of to
Ta i m Freak
2 IS
8 9
is 4
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Rothchild ..
4 ll
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W hite........
7
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Gammon
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4
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Overall
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4
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Patteaon
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Small . . . . . .
77 SS SS 41 CS 14 79
Talala
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Pereau*
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parte**!
I n n h r
CM Mar
73
37
.............................TR
TW
7*
Texaa Freahmen . . . . . . . 41
*
Parks, Appleton Top
NFL Draft Choices
Women sMmwk
Tennis doubles continue Tuesday
with Bowers-Moore. Blanton, play
ing Amold-Grace, AXS). Matches
scheduled for Thursday include:
P annell-W enver (B LA N T O N ) sa Sw*.
OI*•-Boland (AP) vt. OlaoaBankaton
bod* Monk
i RRD)
(KENS*
P arker-H am U ton (IN D ) VS w in n er et
M m * (KAT) va Varnado- la-
(ADP)
bcil
The only match scheduled tor
Saturday is Barces-Garce* (Oo-opi
vs Yeary-Behne (IND*.
The final round in archery will
be scheduled the week of Dec 9.
an a Gym IJS
Gym ITS
Volleyball prelims which began
Monday match the following teams
Tuesday;
ACO v» Almvtrli it 4 p na la Wom
ACP vt (a rt at I » rn. ta Woman a
A P va a h o al I pm. ta W arn** t
K A T ta co-op at 7 p rn ta Wanwa a
WHITEHALL va. A X ID at 7 p as. ta
J HOUSE va DG at • p rn
In W©m-
Vol ley bail garnet scheduled for
wn'a Gym lift
Thursday include:
KINS v* PM at 4 p m,
Gym 135
Gym 135
Women ■ Gyro 133
ie Women *
HK . va LITTLEFIELD at » p ai.
Gym ISS
Women* dim tat
Weatea's Gym tai
Newman received a bye in the
IN D at f pm. ta
ALP VI. A I s r IN
la
tournament.
Volleyball players are reminded
that proper attire it thorns or tong
pant* shirts, and tennis shoes
The first round of table tennis
singlet will bt played beginning
at 7 p m. Thursday. All entries
should be present from 7 to 9 p m,
Anyone who cannot play at this
time will be declared a default,
unless the Intram ural office to noti
fied by I p m. Wednesday.
City's third-round pick.
The Pittsburgh Steeiers select-!
ed Paul Martha. 6-foot, 190-pound
halfback from Pittsburgh s Panth
ers.
j
The Cleveland Brown* selected
halfback Paul Warfield of Ohio
State. Warfield I* a breakway I
j from Warreai, Ohio, who alee ex
celled em paaa defense,
i Th# New York Giant*, search-
I ing for a hard running back, picked
Joe Don Looney of Oklahoma.
Looney left the Oklahoma
team
in midseason after an argument
; with the coaching staff.
Green Bay s Packers p i c k e d
; Lloyd Voss, 246-pound Nebraska
J tackle. Voss was the second mem
ber of the Orang* Bowl-bound Ne-
i bra ska team selected In th* first
round.
CHICAGO
(A P)-T h e National j
Football League struggled for a
record eight hour* end eight min
utes before completing
the first
round of its annual player draft
Monday and then proceeded long
into the night on the job of comb
ing the collegiate r a n k s of 1963
for talent,
No. I choice by the San Fran-
cisco 49ers, launching th* draft,
was end Dave Parks of Texas
Tech.
The lowly Del lea Cowboys pon
dered two bour* and at minute*,
exchanging meninges hack and
forth with their cen ching dele
gations hack home, before pick
ing Scott Appleton, 286-poead
Texan tackle, ta the first round.
The 14 first round choices final
ly were completed when the Chi
cago Bears selected Dick Evey,
240-pound tackle from Tennessee.
BEARS TAKE TIME
Th* Bears added to th* drawn-
out first round arith a l o n g de
liberation after Baltimore had tak
en halfback Mary Woodson of In
diana,
th* Bears’ original first
round preference.
Evey had been the No. I choice
by the Buffalo Bills in Saturday s
draft by the rival American Foot
ball League. However, the Bears
announced Evey has been signed.
Fogs of th* first round NFL
picks duplicated selection* mad*
by th* eight-club AFL which
took two mere of
Initial
round NFL picks la Ha second
round. As a result of the pro
league
longed first round,
the
the
delegates agreed to piece e te
round
rn Ln Ute llmll af second
picks.
The 49ers, awarded the No. I
pick because of their current cel
lar position, surprised many by
selecting Parks.
Philadelphia tried to bolster its
bettered line
picking Bob
by
Brown, 6-fool-4, 269-pound guard
fj-om Nebraska s Orange Bowl
headed Cornhusker*. Brown was
rated by Eagle Coach Nick Skorich
as “ the best college lineman In
th# country.”
Washington, in dire need of a
running gam# to back up Norm
Snead s passing, leaped at half
back Charley Taylor of Arizona
State. Th* 6-foot-3, 205-pounder
averaged 6 J yards per carry and
rolled up Impressive totals on kick-
off and punt returns.
LIONS GET BETHARD
Pete Bethard, brilliant Southern
California quarterback, was draft
ed by the Detroit Lion*, making
th# fifth first-round pick.
The Minnesota Vikings, wha
drafted Bobby Bell af Minnesota
last year nod lost him to the
kansas City Chiefs af th# rival
American Football L t i | i » ,
quickly grabbed C a d Eller, M ,
245 pound Miaaeoota tackle.
The Los Angeles Rams picked
off Bill Munson, Utah S t a t e
quarterback.
Mary Woodson, fleet Indian half
back who underwent a knee oper
ation during the season, was se
lected by th* Baltimore Colts.
KORT A i NINTH CHOICE
The S t Louis Cardinals, pick
ing ninth, selected Ken Kortas, 6-
foot-4, 295-pound tackle from the
University of Louisville, as their
first-round choice, Kortas was tak
en ta the AFL draft as Kansas
INVISTIOATI
MARKETING
CARIER
OPPOITVNITIIS
AT
TI
H IC T M B IC
SALIS IB 4 IB IIM N 4
TRAINEES
. . . will he —farted by Tenet fatoremcau Ie
earn w hit ♦mining far WWNNMfR§il!^p TI market-
fag pestilent. H yep sane wW receive yeur IS
fa EC ar physic*.*.and tams « cnnsumfai
tatar** ta wifing. . . fait nay ha lh* im po rieet
opportunity yankee tine* awaking. Yeti win
Shady aa aa tater**!, personally-oriented,
cesto i training program fa Dallas far 12 to
l l manta*, fallowing TI products trees de-
r rn I mfc
mmA todMhtoiRPlunilR aum.
▼wew^M^^wee*
fawge a vnroiMn
marketing. UHtawto atiignment la cheke mf
TI offices fa mafar U J . cities.
K l ASI AIRMAN.
yow raceme fa Hemanni Department,
Alto. IQ I HtNSUt
SIMKONOUCTOt*
COMPONENTS
DIVISION
TEXAS
■NM M IX
P. 0 . MMC MIS
•AUAS, TIXA6 7 f t t t
Ae
The University Students'
Link With Old Mexico
The serene Atmo sp here of
Old Mexico and sn p ith
Mexican Food combine to
make the B ig FOHT tho
perfect piece to dine,
AUTHENTIC
MEXICAN
FOOD
1964
COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
PREVIEW
The spotlight la aa AD-America
college bank et hell ta J an nary
ISPORT. Read about the player*
wha figure to atar ta eoUepa ball
toto M M I! Piua daa*t aum tho
“cacfajfad*- ariki#, WHY PIO
FOOTBALL PLATERS RE
VOLT. U r n wheCs behind tha
Unasnam the* la fostering ta th*
pm fantail ranks? Wh* tm toe
^nnMn
they sri away with It? It** only
aweel the many startling articles
Ii JwMtarf SPORT, lh* mags-
tone (Awl keeps yen apnea t i att
apart* seen*. YonTl sn fay asport
January
m tm m r
TmoSTum
Fs customers jus*
think so- H a s
faithful, friend'/
and an expert in
cad^q for your
w ardrobe.
W ho is he?
EL TORO
A Touch of Old Seville
1401 Guadalupe
RU 9-4121
EL CHARRO
Delivery Service
t i l Red River
ta i 9-7736
MONROE'S
Mexicon Food to Co
IOO Esto Ave.
DR 7-6744
a MAT
az----af Aka (U -l.il
“Crispy T o to ?
IM last Aum
Dll 7-7023
16th & San Jacinto
OPEN EVERY DAY
HE'S YOUR
SAN JACINTO CLEANERS ROUTE SALESMAN!
Cell GR 2-3166; He'll come to you!
T u .i d .y , D a c a m b a r 3, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN F a g . 4
'Mona Lisa Jonas
Keeps Smiling
Mysteriously
The Texas Exes alumni center
During rush as a sophomore, af
has been a dream of the Ex-Stu-
ter attending Del Mar Junior Col
lege her freshman year, everyone dents’ Association since 1885. Con-
struction w „ tdMduled to befit,
fSt s lo of phone | reinembered hfr name And . . «
rushee* rem em bered j
member of Alpha Gamma Delta. in November, but it uill be delayed
x. ___,
s h e found
.
of the National
her name this fall. " It la a toplr at least three months because J60.-, Burkley. editor
of conversation. I've used It a lot OOO la still needed to make the TS- Review and a son esman (or poi-
tical conservatism, will be the first
to get people * minds off other year-old dream come true.
person to visit the campus under
things by just discussing my name
on Wailer Creek: spQnsorship of the Students Asso-
It was certainly handy in rush.
* elation’* new Visiting Fellows Pro
To be built
said
...
i
Dr. Allen to Begin
BSU Religion Series
Baptist students at the Uni vers- 1 will be conducted at 4 pm . Tues-
in
ity may participate in the Baptist day through Thursday.
Student Union's Religion in Life | Dr. Allen, pastor of the Broad-
way Baptist Church in Fort Worth,
Week through Friday.
will speak on "Lord of the Flies —
A Study of Man s Predicament," at
7 p.m. Tuesday.
Dr*. J. P. Allen, Kenneth Chat
ta, John Newport, and Cecil Sher
man will conduct seminars and
lectures
the Baptist Student
Center, 2204 San Antonio.
From 7 :30 until 7 :40 each morn
Dr. Newport, professor of philos
ophy at Southwestern Seminary,
will lecture on "The Knowledge of
ing, Harles Cone, associate in the God and the Modem Mind" at the
Division of Student Work, will lead same
time Wednesday, and Dr.
morning meditations. The seminars Qiafin, chairm an of the Depart-
mcnt of Evangelism at Southwest-
eern Seminary, will speak on "The
Chemistry of Conversion" at 7 p m.
Thursday.
-------_ _ _ —.
..
Buckley to Speak
As Visiting Fellow
A meeting for representatives of
the organizations which will hear
William F. Buckley Jr. Dec. 9-13
will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in
Business-Economic* Building 102.
Phil Strickland, cochairman of the
academia excellence committee.
gram.
Visiting Fellows will live in stu
dent residences, lecture to classes,
participate in debates and discus
sion groups, and meet informally
w'ith students while at the Univer
sity.
SA to Sponsor
European Tours
The Students’ Association wf 111
again sponsor a summer flight to
Europe.
The chartered round-trip flight
from Texas to Paris. France, will
cost approximately 3350 in contrast
to the regular $700, or round-trip
from New York to Paris w ill be
$250 instead of the regular price
of $500 The flight will leave In
! early June and return Aug. 31.
Europeans tour plans are not in
cluded in the project, which is lim
ited to 80 students.
Interested students should leave
their names at the Students' Asso-
I ciation office, Texas Union 323.
Let Us S h o w
Y o u the D istinctive
GORHAM STERLING
From Our
Complete Silver Selection
E x te n d e d Terms A va ila b le
JOE KOEN & SON
Jewelers
Since 1 8 8 8
. . - —
“W h e re A u stin ite s Sh op W i th Cott/tdence”
105 E. 6th Conveniently located Just Off the Aveny#
£0 rj j P £ 4
aad Md them tho was Mona
U s a J o n e s.
"I’ve even made people mad by
telling them my name."
When she told one young man
her name, he snapped, "And I'm
Leonardo da Vinci.” On another
occasion, a disbelieving y o u n g
man. wanting further proof asked
her last name. " W h e n I said
Jones,’ he really thought I made
up the whole name.
"A lot of people never bother to
look it up. They just don't believe
me when I tell them."
When people do b e 11 e v t her
name, they don't forget it.
CONVERSATION TOPIC
Fund Shortage
Delays Center
But most of her friends rail
her Mona. "I usually get a lot
of stares if someone calls me by
both nameV And of course, when
Mother calls m e ’M o n a U s a ’,
she’* usually mad."
What d o e s
this slim, blonde
think of her nam e
*-
from Memorial Stadium,
across
the Center will he a "hom e" for
ex-students visiting Austin, view
ing the campus, or attending Long
horn football games. As part of
the building project, the creek will
he landscaped.
j
Mona Lisa
sake?
"She's fat a n d certainly not
pretty." But she likes some of Ute Association
Already, 3.400 exes have contri
buted to their Center. To raise the
the Ex-Students'
needed SOO.OOO,
to sfu-
j later versions of the song written dents and ex-students who have
j about her.
j out, I didn't like it. I was in the
furnish 344
gracje, an(i ^ e boys would bricks, 26 cubic feet of concrete.
feet of electrical cable.
2
medium landscape shrubs, or l l
chase me and sing the song to I IOO
m e,"
"When it first came nnt
Ten dollars will
is appealing
contributed,
And as she recalled the incident, sets of door hinges. Contributions
she sm ile d -hut not m ysteriously.1 are tax deductahle.
Theses — Dissertations
t y p i n g a e r v i c e
2013 Guadalupe
GR 2-3210 GR 2-7677
Experienced typists- Meticulous attention to detail. Surprisingly
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T )p m g — Theses mats — Printing — Bmdtng
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A nuts tact Feature Editor
Her # bad Mod of paint and repair but
I th* price—$13.700.OO-will amaze you
as Utero Is nothing like It anywhere
at this price, and
location. Call Jim
Walla. GR $-dM7. GR 7-5253.
KINSER & SHACKELFORD
MMWMWWMMWMVIWWIWWHmMnAAMMM
For Solo
I M JAGUAR SPORT Coupe. XK 130
In beautiful condition. Mutt tell thia
week. $1,39$. HO 5-8850. $111 LuUwood
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OLDS OPERA MODEL sitde trombone,
Like new. Only $135. HO 5-1850
4111 LuUwood Road.
REMOVABLE HARDTOP FOR SB to
’CO Austin Healey Sprite. GR $-4410.
CLEAN ONE OWNER 1937 Plymouth
hardtop. Air. new tire*. 1907 Pearl,
SACRIFICING NORMANDY'* CLAR
INET. $180 00 new. one owner Sell
for $25.00. Ask for Jim. GR #0787.
UNIQUE LARGE MODERN one bed
apartment. Carpeting, drapes,
O OO. Open-look. EWS Groom*.
room
bar. t i
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RADIO LISTENERS’ AM-FM Ben
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$75.00 with
$45.00 without changer,
changer GR 2-4737.^ m
NORTHEAST TWO BEDROOM du
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ports. closets anti laundry r a w w A m -
par kina. $95.00 water paid. HO #
^
Thro# block# directly North of <*m-
pus. easy welkins durance. One bed
(twin bftUi, Nicely furnished.
room
I n d I v I d ii I a heat and air condi
tioning, » w I rn rn I » * Pool
lo lly
equipped kitchen with Formica bar
also study bar AU utilities except elec
tric paid by owner Only 190.00 per
month. See manager at Apt C 2 7 1 1
Hemphill Park. Or call GR $14M ar
Spsciid Notices
s
to New York City area
students of South-
■ H B B B B fnlverslty during Christmas
holidays. Contact Michael Sarro. Box
l i t . S. U Station. Georgetown, Texas.
Lost #nd Found
LOST: GOLD LADIES Gruen watch.
Reward offered. If fouad please call
Judy Stewart. GR 1-1598.
Typing
For Ron?
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,
Tuesday, December 3, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page $
Soprano and Harpist
To Share C o n ce rt Date
A highlight of the coming w eek's
m usical events will be the joint
concert perform ance Thursday of
Lorene Michalopulos, dram atic so
prano, and K atherine Branfield,
harp. Miss Michalopulos will be
assisted by Rudolph Pieardi, pi
ano, m usical director of the Op-
HH J B i n
O P E N 11:45
LAST DAY!
t
n
r
O
v
C
v
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IN CINEMASCOPE
★ ANO COLOR I ★
p lu s!
E iirare. W ill
. ravel
Only A dult T icket* Sold
No One I nder 18 Tear*
A d m itted
STARTS TOMORROW !
| e ra Workshop. The performance,
a presentation of the D epartm ent of
Music F aculty Concert Series, at
8:15 in Re ital Hall, is open to the
public without charge.
Miss Michalopulos was heard
recently in the title role of ‘Tos-
the Opera
ca,” produced by
I Workshop last season under the
direction of Pieardi. The prev
ious season, she appeared with
the Houston Grand Opera Asso
ciation in productions of “Lucia
di Lammermoor” and “B o r t s
Godminov.” Last February, she
appeared as soloist with the San
Angelo Symphony Orchestra.
Miss Branfield is known through [
t
her appearances in Austin a
solo
ist, accom panist and as a m em
b er of orchestras and cham ber en
sembles. Now in h er fourth y ear
as a U niversity instructor in mu
sic, Miss Branfield Is also first
harpist with the Austin Symphony
I orchestra. She is a form er m em
ber of the F o rt Worth Symphony,
associations,
Opera, and Ballet
Pieardi cam e to the D epartm ent
of Music last y ea r from San F ran
cisco w here he was an assistant
of the San F rancisco O pera Com
pany. He form erly coached and
c o n d u c t e d a t the Hochsohale
fur M usic
the
Vienna A c a d e m y of Music,
the Conducting S c h o o l of the
N etherlands Radio In Hilversum
and the Conservatory of Music in
Vienna.
in M u n i c h ,
[ ^ R o u a r g l
r n - * - * DICTUM OI Colo. b r T tC W N C M O ^
J U D Y 6A K L A N 0 ■
V A N
•
J O H N S O N
J U N E A L L Y S O N U
F R A N K S I N A T R A
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* D I N A H S H O R E H i
R O B E R T W A L K E R
V A N H E F L IN H
[ K A T H R Y N G R A Y S O N
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WM MGH* IMSIUIT • TQNT MMTIH BbBB!
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VIRGINIA 0 UU" M
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TOMORROW ONLY
VARSITY
BO X O F F IC E O P E N S 6:0*
A D M ISSIO N 70c
K ID S U N D E R IS F R E E
AllDon't Give Up the
Ship"
J e rr y L e w is A D in e M errill, T:M
— P in e —
‘ROCK-A-BYE BABY”
Jerry Lewis A X. Maxwell, 1:11
B O X O F F IC E O P E N S 6:30
A D M ISSIO N 70c
K ID S U N D E R 13 F R E I
“The Man Who
Knew Too Much”
Jim<-* S te w a r t A D o r is D a y , 7:90
P lu s ------
“Trouble With Harry”
A. Mar I. s i ne A John Foray th e. 9:18
M
' n
. ' r a
L A ST N IT E
ONE C O M PL E T E SH O W IN G
O N LY AT 6:30
55 DAYS AT
PEKINS
C H A R LT O N
H E ST O N
AVA
G A R D N E R
— F ir s —
"H O R RO R S OF
THE BLACK Z O O "
TODAY A T I N T E R S T A T E
sm v rat a mote
D I S C O U N T C A R O
N O W S H O W IN G !
-eature*: 1 2 - 2 - 4 * 6 - 8
IO
lee
■ W H t t l t f dealer meets s e t APW R.'
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jjWHEEtfRPPH g y i
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JAMES
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FEATURES: 11:35-1:40-3:44
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LAST DAY!
Features: 2 - 4 - 6 - B - IO
|g|
TU MIRICH COMPANY WKtNT*
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LAST DAY!
6:00 - 9:05
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M c Q U E E lB
color: * pmuviskw
Tuesday, December 3, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6
Concert in Review
'As Sweet and Musical
As Bright Apollo's Lute1
By RAYDER FREEMAN
Chief Amusement Critic
An evening of music loosely In
spired by the writings of William
Shakespeare would not be hard to
select, but in presenting a tribute
to that author’s quadricentennial
(occurring next April) last night,
Conductor Ezra Rachlin and the
Austin Symphony weren't content
with accepting work* to be played
at t h e i r composers’ evaluation
tendered ta the title, or subtitle of
a relationship to a specific play
or to the general genius of the
Bard.
That that distinguished and gen
ial old theatrical person, B. Iden
Payne, the University’s guest pro
fessor of drama and pre-eminent
expert on both the letter and spirit
of Shakespeare, should have given
introductory remarks, g a v e the
proceedings an inprimatur of auth
enticity as to the worthiness of the
music to be related to the drama
indicated which was betrayed wily
once.
This was in William Walton’s
music from the Laurence Olivier
film, “Henry V.” A trashy piece
indistinguishable from the best of
Johnnie Greene or the worst of
Dimitri Tiompkin, it was woefully
em barraged by the composition*
surrounding i t
that, showman
Perhaps never has there been a
more successful stage-setting piece
1 than Mendelssohn’s overture to "A
Midsummer Night's Dream.” It is
undoubtable
that
; he was, Shakespeare would have
j loved to have had this to warm
up his audiences. The overture and
three of the four additional
in
cidental pieces which Mendelssohn
composed 17 y e a r s later, were
played by the local orchestra with
a verve which was generally pleas
ing if at times a bit much for the
winds’ undeveloped attack.
UNIFORM CENTER
r
a
a
n
o
For Mon and Women
W
P
o
r
e
e
s
s
f
l
i
D O C T O R S
R EC E P T IO N IS T S
D EN TISTS
B E A U T IC IA N S
N U R S ES
R ES T A U R A N T S
H O S P IT A L S
IN S T IT U T IO N S
I
I
I
W
. 5t
h
S
t
.
G
R 2-6891
( B t )
then
Tschaikovsky's
Certainly worthy of special com
ment ta the nocture were Grover
Pittman’s sublime bom segments.
The “Scene D ’Amour’’ from Ber
lioz’ “Romeo and Juliet” was a
well handled second number on the
program particularly notable for
its fine flutes.
romantic Rus
sian Leibestod, the overture and
fantasy from "Romeo and Juliet,’"
was developed to about three quar
ters of its intrinsic glory, which ta
all that can be expected from an
orchestra of toe Austin size. It is,
of course, a masterful work which
After an intermission came the some moderns accuse of sn excess
disgusting Walton end
the ’ of schmaltz, but, ss in the Men-
real suprise of the evening. The delssohn work, Shakespeare would
score fix* Borts Bls cher’* ballet, have probably loved it and been
“Hamlet” was a w o r k of an moved by it.
excellence for which few if any j a program such es this should
Of the audience were prepared. It have been of interest to University
was obvious that the author of; English, drama, and music ma
ths program notes had never heard j Jots—almost none at whom I saw
this work and probably none of
in the crowd. Rather
t h a n (lie
the composer’s.
“very old and very young” I had
mentioned as having attended a
previous concert,
t h i s one was
sparcely attended by mainly to t
old. I hate very much to seem un
chivalrous—but the factor of age it
a germane one.
There are, to my knowledge, no
records of this “Hamlet,” but it
la a searching and powerful work
which has gone unnoticed amongst
the fraud and filth of “modem”
music. Blacher never loses sight
of the need for order while search
If Austin is not prepared to sup
ing for freedom ta the derange
port a symphony with attendenc#
ment of rhythms. He seems a
rather than the “chamber of com
Thomas Jefferson in his hostility
merce” type money which permits
toward the tyrany of the bar line city boosters to tell new industry
rather than a Thomas Paine: He I "we have a symphony aking with
knows that the best way to re- our more than adequate sewage,”
place something limiting is to re- we might as well Junk It and spend
place it with something good, not that money on the sewage—we'll
need it as this city goes down the
to destroy it and allow anarchy
Colorado.
to fill its void.
BROADWAY THEATRE LEAGUE
“FUNNIEST COMEDY OF THE SEASON" - Tao
lAWRENCt WHCHU I KENNETH J. STEW N . - w i U i .N
f KEO COE I ARTHUR CANTO* i
JOHN IRELAND*
a ls o sta m m g DONALD BARRY
V O * . . H E R B G A R D N E R ^
Tomorrow-Dec. 4
Municipal Auditorium — 8:15 p.m.
TICKETS ON SALE AT MUNICIPAL
AUDITORIUM AND JACOBSON S
MEN S WEAR — ON THE DRAG
$5.00 — $4.00 — $3.00 — $2.00
LIMITED NUMBER IN STUDENT SECTION $1.50
For Information Call GR 6-5461
FREE TICKET DRAW ING!
Continua for
$17.74 BLANKET TAX HOLDERS
Al Fin* Arts Box Office
HOGG AUDITORIUM
OPB4 9-4
SPARTAN DISCOUNT
SMOKE SHOP
5501 Airport Blvd.
LA BOHEME
Houston Grand# Optra Association
Starring
WALTER HERBERT, Conductor
re n ato cora
Star of La Scala, Royal Opera—
Covent Garden and San Francisco
Opera
L R VtNORA
Star af New York City Opera
• • • and athar leading singart!
Municipal Auditorium, Tonight, at 8:00 p.m.
Doors Open 7:00 p.m.
CHARTERED BUSES AVAILABLE
BUSES DEPART AT
6:45
7.-00
7:15
MAKING STOPS AT
1. Moore-HIR Haft
2. S irlo in s H a ll
3. Scottish-Rite Derm
4. Kinselving Derm
I. Cofather* Derm
6. University Co-op
Buses wR leave th# Auditor*
turn immediately end 20 mkt*
the perform*
Ute*
following
Round-Trip Fem 25c
n I
I
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
a r e *
.
.
1
*
S i n g l o A d m i s s i o n ; A d u l t s
NO ADVANCE S A U OF SINGLE
$2.50, Child thru Jr. High $1.00
O MO RESERVED SEATS
ADMISSIONS
A D R A W IN G by John Ro+hgeb, assistant
professor of drama, after the Robert Edmond
Jones design for The Man W h o Married A
Dumb W ife ," his first professional assignment.
Included in the original design were sketches
of several human figures.
Jones Scene Design Exhibit
On View in Drama Building
An exhibit of 58 R obert Edmond
Jones drawings of stage settings
and costumes Is on display on the
second floor of the D ram a Build
ing. The exhibit contains m any of
Jones's draw ings never previously
exhibited.
cu rren t style, which la te r becam e
known as
the “ new sta g ec ra ft.”
Basically, the goal of the style was
to make settings and lights m ore
beautiful and expressive and
to
m ake
the realistic d ram a m ore
’ illusive.
dr
Jones who died In 1954; is con
sidered by many theater critics
to be the “father of American
•cene d e s i g n . ’* In 1915, New
York first saw a setting by tho
American designer for Anatole
France’s farce, “The Man Who
Married a Dumb Wife.**
Jones w as working in the then-
I
Jones had done some random do-
signing since leaving H arvard in
1911, studying in R einhardt’s B er
lin theaters for some months be
fore World War I drove him back
to A m erica.
★
“H I s
“Tho
Jest,” “Richard HI,’* and “Ham-
“Redemption,**
IN PERSON!
"A pianist in the grand tradition!
_...------
—KY. HmM If ibwna
-
MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM
Friday, December 6— 8:15 p.m.
TICKETS $5.00, $4.50, $4-00, $3.00 and $2.50
On Solo: HEMPHILL'S BOOK STORE No. 2, 2501 Guadalupe
BLOOMOUIST-CLARK, 617 Congress Ava.
STARTS TOMORROW
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
CHIEF
5601 N. Lamar Blvd.
LUSTIEST SAGA OF IH E SOUTH PACIFIC!
rn
u m e s ^ ^ H
HEFLIN MORENO MacARTHUR
rh*
Plus!
HERY HR MTW WEST WU MT TO IOU. M f 4 ^
G UNFIG H T
a t C O M A N C H E C R E E K
AUDIE MURPHY c o l o b MMMnsor ^
Another Beautiful Woman'* Drama, I* Tradition af "L-Shapad Room I
■MR (Maw fntMfi
• v
* :
M n * * ...
jfou#..
■ sta r ts
TOMORROW!
ADULT
SNEAK
P R E V I E W
TONIGHT AT I
One of the Year’* Top Movie
Experiences. T e m Courtenay
{oin* Rita Tushingham and Al
bert Finney in "THE LONELI
NESS OF THE LONG DIS-
TANCE RUNNER" . . . Regular
Feature—6 and JO p.m.
“MURDER AT
THE GALLOP”
let”—showed Jones to be Amer
icas leading stage designer of his
time. Although hts command of
color Is not to be seen in his
'‘Drawings for the Theatre,” the
black and white prints show the
beauty and warmth of imagina
tion that was united in his best
works.
★
This exhibit has been made pos
sible through the help of Robert
Lynn Batts Tobin, who recently
obtained many of the drawings
from the estate of Kenneth Mac-
gowan to add to his collection of
designs for the theater.
★
The J o n e s exhibit has been
planned to coincide with the pro
duction of "D octor Faustus” and
I "The New Tenant,” which will be
presented in the Drama Building
Theater Room, Friday, Saturday,
and Dec. 9-14.
Tickets aud reservations tor
the productions may bo obtained
at Hogg Auditorium Box Office.
SAVE UP TO 25% ON B
PIPES
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HANCOCK
SERVICE STATIONS
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■ CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE
BOB RAY
g
o
e
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i i n t V M i
OB M N T
B lob s-?sm
Awe ae ( n a Brisk!!!
I
i i * b. wa J
m
Delegates From 39 Schools
To Meet on Higher Education
By MARY JANE GORHAM
Texan Staff W riter
Student leaders from 39 colleges
and universities
the
state will meet In Austin Friday
and Saturday to discuss current
problems facing higher education
in Texas.
throughout
Sponsored by the Texas Intercol
the
legiate Student Association
conference will present four guest
speakers,
including Lanier Cox,
vice-chancellor of the University,
scheduled to discuss current issues
facing the financing of higher edu
cation in Texas.
body. All are currently enrolled In
the University of Texas Law
School.
EDUCATION PE R SE
The conference m arks the first
tim e student leaders from screes
the state have come together to
discuss education per se rather
than
said
student government,
Green.
"TISA is an association of stu
dent leaders, and in the past we
have made it a point at conven
tions to deal more directly with
problems of student governments
and problems of students, rather
than discussing the entire field of
education In the state,” he said.
about the conference which will
look a t present conditions and how
they relate to other states.
*T don’t think delegates will
com e Ie any decisions na the
right reads to take to create
bettor education because the con-
fore are win be too short aad
problems too complex,” Green
coo tinned. "But
those student
leaders, because they do have a
coo ce na, w ill become leaders In
public education aad public of*
flee In tho future.
By seeing the issues and
Increasing interest in the condi
tions of education in Texas brought
Other speakers are H. H. De-
w ar, member of the Board of
Governors of the New York Stock
Exchange and co chairm an of
the Commission on Goals for
Higher Education In the South,
to speak on goals; Dr. Joe Ray,
president of Texas Western Col.
loge, to discase who controls de
cision making in Texas colleges;
and Stewart Allen, employed by
the Texas Commission on Higher
Education and form er dean of
the graduate school at Sam
Houston State Teachers College,
to speak on Issues facing higher
odncatton in Texas relative to the
establishment of curriculum pro-
grants.
Discussion groups will follow the I part of a nationwide program to j
the
m any answers offered, both pro
and con, they will be given a bet
te r background and more expert-
ence in trying to become decision
m akers, rather than people w h o !
talk about problems and don't
know how- to look into the answers j
to pick tits erne most applicable.”
Cox will present financing
sues relevant to both state support
ed and non state supported institu- I
tions, and will Include
im
portance of universities in the ec
onomic development of states and
communities, tuition, and scholar
ships. Dewar will present a 20-
minute film based on the Commis
sion's Goals Report and will ex-
Dr. Little will visit under the
pend on it through his work with
auspices of the American Associa
tion of Physics Teachers and the | the Texas Commission of Higher
American Institute of Physics as | Education.
Physics Teacher
Off to Kerrville
The Schreiner Institute of Kerr-
Ville will host Dr. Robert N. Little
Jr. professor of physics, Dec. l l
and 12.
the
is- >
speakers and will be led by Tom j stimulate
G I W , pr*.Wm< Of TISA: Dtvid It,
Malone and David Beck, peat p re ,, i (imported by the National Science j I t l u ^
and Charles Foundation.
idents of TISA;
Groves, past president of
the
Abilene Christian College student
physics. In ^
to
interest in
y*«r,
‘
"
Dr. Little will give lectures, hold
Informal meetings with students,
and assist faculty members with
curriculum and research problems
while in Kerrville.
DECISION CONTROL
^
-
deal
COBtro, of fe c U io v a u U n , in
>cqujred
^
^
^
their power, and by what rational
they defend their right to power.
Delegates will analyze the struc
tures of power in universities, such
as legislative groups, professional
agencies, civil rights groups, and
campus political organizations.
UNIVIRSITY
BROADCASTS
mt'T rif. ss 7
TtwltV
J to —t i * " On
X
S YVRrmnd-Up
a t o - P r o * r a m G uide
* 0®—1Transition
in Review
a 41V—e u ro p e a n Review
7 OO—Evening Edition
7 IV—Sport* raj*
. . . . .
9:8 9 -
« to—Tua*d»y Opera
IO 43— Kina! E d itio n Hews
New*
Twentieth Century New*
E L R lf-T V . ( S U M I •
T a a e d a r
* t o —O ff to A dventure
S « A - m » n 4 l y G ian t
p no—Active Spanish
a ilk—Newt
* to —American H eritage
» to —Prim ary Spam eh
to 03— N ew *
30:07— Rclenr# S
JO.to—-Community Calendar
IO ST—S cience 4
31:00—N igh N oon
3 2 OO— P ublic A ffair*
1 OO—P rim a ry S p a r lh
I : t o —A ct Iv# S p an ish
I : t o —New*
3 to —S cience S
3 'r t—r o m m u n tty C alen d ar
3 IO— American Heritage
2 t o —New*
2 SO—F in e Art*
I rn —W orld G eo g rap h y
.1 t o —Elim P a ra d e
X 45—Thriver fid ural ion
4 SO—T h e C h ild ren s H our
5 30—T he A m e r i c a
E rnnom i
P u ttin g th* M arket Tool* to ;
Work
* OO—P i vchology
t iS —riper*lion Alphabet
7 ii- N e w *
7 t o —Science R e p o rte r: Or Mur- ;
cav G ell-M ann to p re ie n t re
cent developm ent*
th e
•tu d y of »ub-atom !c p arti- 1
cltai
In
8 t o - l e i H ora M exican#
the Meeter*"
S tre tc h in g j
wrvwmn*
He received all his degrees from
Rice University, and was associat
ed witit Shell OU Company from
1936 to 1940. L ater he was on the
staff of the University of Oregon
and worked a l Cbnvair Division of
General Dynamics. He has been
a professor of physics at the Uni
versity since 1948 and la also a
research scientist in the Nuclear
Phyiea Laboratory.
Dr. U ttle'a present research In
terests include neutron t i m e of
Sight spectroscopy a n d
physics
or
follow,
Certain aper I fie problems Al
ien will present include whether
general education should pre
cede,
accompany
special education and if general
education should Imply or ex
clude any particular methods of
Instructions.
Delegates from TISA member
schools have been selected by
deans of colleges at their schools,
reactor ' and include outstanding students in
moat areas at campus activity.
32 Negro Universities
Receive $19.2 Million
Th* U n ! tad Negro College De
velopment Campaign h a t received
gifts touting $19 2 million toward
the ISO-million goal to be allocated
to 32 Negro college* and univers
ities in the South.
i i
Fonde WHI he spent for
major campo* building and reno
vation p r e ! n e t t , tmmodiato
special education projects, t o !
additions I e n d e a r m e n t * Ie
strengthen (acuities and enlarge
scholarship eld.
The Ford Foundntkm made a
grant of t i s million to the eam-
General Foods Fund, Inc., gave
$125,000 to aid Negro colleges,
Charles G. Mortimer, chairman
of the General Foods Corporation
and national chairm an of the cam
paign, said, "Business and industry
cannot afford to continue just to
wish and wait for more sufficiently
educated Negro candidates.
"We all need to wade In and
J
| help create more trained, educat-
! ad, and qualified Negro appti-
I cants for some of the Jobs that
•re open.”
In September. President John F.
Rockefeller Foundation I Kennedy told the committee: "The
the 32 colleges within the United Negro
to have
_
f-un(j are going
probably the most pressing and
significant educational responsibili
ty of any colleges in the United
States over the next IO, 15, or 20
years. For the good of the country
this campaign must be successful.”
Faulty
'Different" Gift*,
Indian Jawtlry
Navajo and Oriental A u ** —
M **ic#n
Import*
* ^ C h e m i s t n?^R«havtor * Th# provided OLS million, and
ATTENTION - Students
'64 VOLKSW ACiN
By Guaranteed Motors
TV* Gr**t*st da ai sa Factory Frock DILUXE (kelt medal) VOLKSWAGENS.
Why sett)* far stripped dews medal wk** yes get the kerf for eely
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anywhere for 12,000 milos or 12 months.
HI 4-1681
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Festerf Delivery rn Tom*"- Inter cace
EN6MEERM6 OPPORTUNITIES
for Seniors and Graduates in m ec h a n ic a l,
AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL,
ELECTRICAL, NUCLEAR,
and METALLURGICAL
ENGINEERING
ENGINEERING MECHANICS
APPLIED MATHEMATICS
PHYSICS and
ENGINEERING PHYSICS
C A M P U S IN T E R V I E W S
WEDNESDAY, DEC. l l
Appointments should ba mad#
In advance through your
College Placement Office
Pratt &
W h itn e y ^ ^ H
Aircraft I M M
~ K ~
m ss
Charities Need
Christmas Gifts
Clothing and Toys
Roquostod I toms
Donations of toys fen: unfortunate
Austin children and miscellaneous
item s for patients at the Texas
Confederate Home
being
sought.
a r t
In the annusl "Toys for Tots”
campaign, the Marine Corps Re
serve has distributed 39 red bar
rels throughout the city. New and
slightly used toys wiU be accept
ed, repaired if needed, and dis
tributed.
Donations
to Goodwill
Indus
tries' annual Christmas toy fund
will be repaired Iv handicaped
workers and sold at two local re
tail stores.
Ticket Drawing
For 'La Boheme'
To End Tuesday
Approximately Half af tim
MHO tickets available to Hal
vers! ty students for "La Bo-
heme” had hem drawn by 4
p.m. Monday, said Pauline
Camp, director of pub!ic pro
gram s.
Tickets may be drawn un
til 4 p.m. Tuesday at the Fine
Arts Box Office in H o n Au
ditorium.
The performance of "L a
Boheme,”
fourth event of
the Cultural Entertainment
Committee series, w i l l be
performed a t 8 p.m. Tuesday
at Municipal Auditorium.
Stars of some of the na
tion's m ajor operas will sing
the leading roles, necompan-
led by m embers of tile Hous
ton Symphony Orchestra un
der the direction of Waiter
Herbert.
WILLIAM E. HAM
Ham to Present
Geology Lecture
Gifts also are needed for patients
at the Texas Confederate Home,
j Item s such as decorations, books,
magazines, used clothing, food, and
cigarettes are needed. For addi-
j tional
information, Mrs. E ster
j Trekell, coordinator of Volunteer
I Services, may be called at GR S-
William E. Ham, associate di
rector, Oklahoma Geological Sur
vey, Norman, Okla., will present
a lecture on ‘‘Basement Rocks and
Structural Evolution of Southern
Oklahoma,” at I p.m. Tuesday in
the Geology Building Auditorium.
The lecture will be sponsored by
the American Association of Petro
leum Geologists. The address will I
Marines* collecting barrels
be made to graduate students and ,
staff of the Department of Geo ogy. m ay ^
outride stores in the
Other interested persons may at- foilowing shopping centers: North
tend.
Loop. Allendale, Twin Oaks, South
Plaza, Delwood. Cameron Village,
Windsor, and Capital Plaza,
^
Dealey Selections
To Start Dec. 30
Auditions for the G. B. Dealey
Memorial A w a r d of $1,000 for
i young artists will be held Dec. 30-
31. The auditions a r e sponsored
by the Dallas Symphony Orchestra
I League and will be held in Mc*
t h e SMU
Farlin Auditorium on
campus.
| The auditions attem pt to locate
[qualified young artists who may
j begin professional careers by ap
pearing with the Dallas Symphony
Orchestra.
'Indigestion' Cured,
Walk-Outs Halted
Eating conditions at Scottish Rite
to normal,
Dormitory are back
several residents said Monday.
There have been no walkouts
since residents protested their food
conditions on Nov.
waiters resigned.
l l and
One coed said, "Because the food
has improved, there have been no
protests.
Absentee Voting
Reported Heavy
Travis County voters began east-
ing absentee ballots for the Dec.
117 congressional runoff and junior
I college maintenance tax and bond
I issue last Friday.
| The voting was reported heavy
by County Clerk Emilie Limberg.
Only 14 votes were cast for the
Nov. 9 special election, while ”5
I votes were cast for the coming
; election.
The congressional race
is be
tween Jim Dobbs and J. J. (Jake)
I Pickle. Both are seeking the Tenth
| Congressional District seat vacated
j by Homer Thomberry.
j Although the junior college won
approval in the Nov. 9 election,
i voters rejected
the maintenance
I tax and bond issue which is need
ed to support the college, and both
must be reconsidered.
The auditions are open to resi
"Food has improved and I'm
dents of Texas, Oklahoma, A rkan-, sure everything will be all right.
Girls and adm inistrators see each
sas, Louisiana, and New Mexico;
other’s point of view now.”
residents of any of the five states
studying outside
their state: or
residents of other areas studying
in any of the five states named.
Another girl rem arked, "Food is
just as good as it a l w a y s has
been.'’
Physicist on K IR N TV
Physicist Dr. Murray Gell-Mann
will examine recent developments
in the study of sub-atomic parti
cles during
"Science Reporter"
at. 7 30 p.m. Tuesday on KLRN-
TV.
Tile G. B. D e a l e y Memorial
Award v* i 11 be presented by the
Dallas Morning News to a winner
in either strings or piano. The
winner will also receive a gold
medal at his appearance with the
Dallas Symphony Orchestra Feb.
24 and will be placed under the
management of the Southwestern
Artist Service for one year.
Auditions will be held for vocal
ists, but the winner in this cate
gory is not eligible for the Dealey
Awrard. The winning voc alist will
recede $200 and the previlege of
a recital sponsored by the Dallas
Symphony Orchestra League, He
will also be considered for parts
in the Dallas Civic Opera and the
Dallas Summer Musicals.
If additional information is de
s ire d , write Morgan Knoll, Sec
retary of the Auditions, P. O. Box
8171, Dallas 5.
Tippit Fund Rises
To Above $2,475
Contributions for the special fund
set up by Austin police for the
widow’ of Dallas patrolman J. D
Tippit, slain Nov. 22. reached $2,-
477.32 Monday, Chief R. A. Miles
office reported.
The stream of contributions was
down to a trickle Monday, but po
lice said that money was still be
ing received for the fund.
1961 CHEV. IMPALA, P. G„
P .S ., P. B.( R. Ii H., Air, $1895.
603 W. SIK
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B&B M O TO RS
Automobilo Insurance
For Studonti!
TERRY J. SASSER
717 Wast 6th St. G R 6-6333
RENT
W a s h i n g M a c h i n a *
V a c u u m C t a a n a n
$ 6 . 0 0
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p a r m o n t h w h ila t i t t y l a s t
L o n g 's V a c u u m C J a a n a r C o .
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HI
THESIS DISSERTATIONS. Y E A R
BOOKS, LAW BRIEFS OR ANY
OTHER TYPE OF PRINTING, RE-
PRODUCTIONS OF CHARTS AND
PHOTOGRAPHS AT A REASON-
A ILE PRICE. TYPING, MULTILTH*
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Schluodor Printing
I l l S a n J a c i n t o
Phan** GR 2*1820 ar GI 24962
STUBE STEAK HOUSE
"HOHE OF NARD TO FIND
FAVORITE FOODS"
(1) Tues. Special— Turkey Creole Okra Gumbo
(2) W ed. Special— Chicken & Dumplings
(3) Thurs. Special— Ham Creole Gumbo-Cajun style
(4) Fri. Special— Shrimp Seafood Gumbo
FAVO RITES SERVED DAILY:
St*a l Slaw
Corned Beef & C a b b a g e ar Seurkrsut
Spaghetti with M e aty Italian Sauca
A bove Dinner* Served With Sated* and Dessert*— $1.00
W e Give Second Helpings on
Above Items A t No Extra Charge
Huge Steaks From $1.50 to $2.10
1025 Barton Springs
(Closed Monday*)
WHY?
Do half of America's college students either quit
or flunk out before graduation?
Are so many students today suffering from emotional disorders?
Is the suicide rate among young people rising dramatically?
A timely
and critical
report on
the crisis
in American
college life
hp Rickard I. Gardaa, M.D.
Katherine K. Cardon
I M L M * i t
boatel, to *
THE
BUGHT
P S T ;
i r
a
IVY
ApgHdiito'AkeiiMR'
IBy'
J
Written by the authors o f
one of the most talked-about
bestsellers — The Split-Level
Trap— this new b o o k e x
poses the harsh rea lities,
fears, anxieties and tensions
running rampant through today's campus generation.
Through dramatized case histories based on thousands
of interviews, the authors show how the socio-economic
patterns and the u n realistic goals and pressures in
America today are creating problems of emotional ill
ness, sexual deviation and promiscuity, insecurity and
• lack of moral fiber in the lives o f college students.
Here, too, are dynamic proposals for preventing these
•motional ills.
This is must reading for parents, students and all con
cerned with the college scene.
Gel your copy today.
S4.95
T*k# this c o u p o n lo your hoofcetore rn Null to publisher.
PRINT1CE-HA1X, B C , Dept *->* E lw o o d CIMA K I.
Pit*** Mad m a
copy- Postpaid rf I enc lo** Q chack Q money order.
copita of SLIGHT ON THE IVY
s o s par
r 1
B
B
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N A M E .
ADDRESS-
CITY.
%
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B
B
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B
IO
'Texas Taps'
A
UT Fight Song
Writer Dies
Walter Scott Hunnicutt, w h o ;
In 1957, Hunnieutt returned hi
the University, where the Longhorn
wrote the music to the University
fight song, "Texas Taps,” died last Band honored him during halftime
of the nationally televised Texas-
Wednesday in El Paso. He was 74.
Texas AAM f o o t b a l l game. Thn
The pep song (rf the Longhorn*
hand formed a script Texas for
was put to music by Hunnicutt
mation that year and paraded off
in 1928 when he collaborated with
the field playing the familiar "Test-
Burnett Pharr, director of the
Longhorn Band, who wrote the
as Taps.”
words.
Hunnicutt was a law student at
the University when he became di
rector of the Longhorn Band in
1910.
Engineering Secretary
Dies After Retirement
After graduation in 1914. "Hunni ’
began practicing law in the office
of Tom Connally in Marlin.
Mrs. Sarah Harlan, retired sec
retary for the College of Engineer
ing office for 40 years, died last
He served in the Army in World Wednesday.
elected Falls County
War I and attained the rank of Mrs. Harlan besan ber career
colonel. He then returned home | under the first engineering dean.
Dean Taylor. In 1958. she was giv
and was
en a silver disc bracelet bearing
judge.
the insignia of the engineering hon
or societies by the engineering stu
dents as a surprise appreciation
present.
When the late Tom Connally
went to Washington, D. C., in
1989 aa a CS Senator, Hunnicutt
moved to El Paso where he be
cam e assistant United States a t
torney In charge of the El Paso
and Pec os districts.
Mrs. Harlan was a Texas alum
na and spent her entire life in Aus-
i tin.
New Police Phone Installed for Public
Austin police have a new tele
phone number for the use of per
sons requiring emergency service,
police chief, R. A. Miles, has an
nounced. It is GR 6-8311.
Although
the emergency phone
will be prim arily for c a s e s of
arm ed robbery, persons who feel
they need Immediate help should
not hesitate to call the number,
Miles said.
For administrative purposes that
do n o t
require emergency dis
patching of police units, the regu
lar number, GR 6-3541, will con
tinue to be used.
THE UNIVERSITY’S O NLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO
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d e o d o r a n t
Tuesday, Dtcembar 3, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 7
setcuusTs IN M i l t . . . eowta aaa eaeeut»iew-rewta re* auxiuaay ststcms.
tUaatMT UTUIXATIMS MMlJllNNMf* Mfc V-
, m um m , tam* v fa iiiw , a aam* awa mauwatoi Apeuanewi.
-IONE
...STAl'l-
S H U L T O N
1Scheherazade Rescheduled
Tile annual Scheherazade ball,
sponsored by the O rganization of
A rab Students, will be held a t
7:30 p.m . F rid ay in the M ain Ball
room of the Texas Union.
Campus News in Brief
O riginally scheduled Nov. 23, t h e , resen tativ es
to
the International j sist
in service project* for the
following
p ro g ram of dance and song w as c 0 m m i s s i o n ' s “Opportune; Army ROTO.
The new name of the fraternity i
rescheduled,
I resident
^ ie confcrence will inform Uni- was derived from the unit of the |
John F . K ennedy's death, H isham
Q addum i, publicity c h a i r m a n , Versity students of the variety of Roman army whose m e m b e r s !
tours, study program s, and jobs served as honor guard to Roman j
sa5d-
F in a lis ts for Scheherazade, queen available in foreign countries, Sig emperors, and w e r e influential In !
Abroad Conference.”
H erm ansen, International Commis- Rome.
sion m em ber, said.
comedy-opera a f t e r Menander,
“The Metropolitans,” with music
by Hans Vogt.
it
Publicists Meet Today
The Challenge Publicity Com
mittee will m eet at I p.m. Tues
day In Texas Union 840.
★
Insurance Men to M eet
J. Carlton Smith, educational di
rector for Southwestern Life In
surance Company in Dallas, will
speak to the University Insurance
Society at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
in
the Business-Economics Building
lounge. He will speak on profes
sionalism in the insurance business
and the importance of advanced
training for insurance men.
'The 400 Blows'
Next Batts Film
The fraternity will meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in ROTC Build
ing 211.
A&M-Texas Film Today
A film of the Longhorn-Aggie
football gam e, which Texas won
15-18, will be shown at 4 p.m.
the Texas Union
Tuesday
ll,
Auditorium. Roy A. Jones
senior manager, will narrate the
free nim.
in
★
it
British Poat to Spook
in Harry’s
"Contemporary English Poets,"
“The 400 Blows” (“Les Quatre
a lecture by J. Christopher Middle
ton, will be presented by the D e - : Cents Coups” ) will be shown at
partment of Germanic Languages I
4. 6:30, and 9 p.m. Thursday
in Batts Auditorium. English sub
at 4 p.m. Thursday
titles will be used for the French
Place Auditorium.
dialogue.
Middleton is one of the younger
contemporary British poets. He is
The story, based on an autobi
author of the recent publication, ographical childhood experience of
is an intimate portrait
“Torse 3” and two earlier codec- Truffaut,
tions of poetry published in 1944 I of a boy. Ih e character is uni-
| versal in concept and is presented
and 1945.
in a near clinical analysis, but the
tions from modem German poets film lacks the social jargon that
and stories by Swiss writer Robert might intimate that the individual,
Walser, essays on modem German as a member of society, is partly
writing, and
libretto of a i responsible for his actions.
Other writings
transla-
include
the
Cards Available
For Registration
Must Ba Ratumad
To UT by Jan. 6
Pre-registration cards for stu
dents who have attended or are
attending the University are avail
able through Jan. 6. The cards
must be returned by Jan. 6.
The cards may be obtained In
front of the offices of the Registrar,
the Dean of the College of Busi
ness Administration, and the Dean
at the College of Engineering.
In the future, the student’s ac
count number wall be replaced by
his social security number. The
social security number will be the
one used in all processing at the
University.
If a student does not have a so
cial security number, he is urged
to apply for one and return his
pre-registration
card when he
knows this number. Applications
for social security cards m ay be
picked up at the Registrar’s office
or post office stations.
Students are reminded that regis
tration dates and times are not
issued alphabetically or according
to when the pre registration cards
were returned.
The date cards are shuffled and
then issued alphabetically to stu
dents. An early or late registration
date is a m atter of chance.
UT Gradi|Bte|Htesids
Local
District Judge Mace B. Thurman
Jr., University graduate, will head
the January Mareh of Dimes in
Travis County.
The announcement was made
Monday by J. O. Rountree, chair
man of the Travis County chap
ter of the national foundation that
helped give the world the S i l k
and Sabin vaccines.
Judge Thurman will direct the
efforts of hundreds of volunteers,
seeking support
throughout the
country against the two afflictions
that cripple more children than
any other, birth defects and ar
thritis.
ATTACK TWO FRONTS
"With the same magnificent ef
fort that brought about die defeat
of polio, the nation’s No. I health
organization now turns its full at
tention to conquering th* tw o
dread cripplers that still threaten
our children," Judge Thurman
said Monday.
“Oar prime weapons, as In the
battle against polio, wig be in
tensive research bito tho etui
mystifying causes of arthritis
and birth defects and the de
velopment of new and better
said.
treatment methods,” ba
“For tide, we need the help of
every Travis County ctttsea.”
He added that the MOD a l s o
continues to provide all necessary
care and treatment for thousands
of post-polio patients, many of
them in this community.
Judge Thurman noted that 250,-
000 babies are born each year with
a significant birth defect Another
l l million Americans suffer from
rheums tole arthritis, he added.
PROGRESS MADE
He pointed out that progress has
Club to Plan Wrestling
The University Sports Associa
tion for Men will hold an organiza
tional meeting for its Wrestling
Club at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Gregory
Gym 5.
Interested persons are invited to
attend the meeting, as competition
will begin immediately.
bern made in the five years since
the MOD first began to fight the
diseases. Already nearly 70 MOD
financed treatment centers are in
operation. At the same time, sd*
enlists now supported by $4 milfoil
in MOD grants are working on
cu m and preventions of the die*
eases.
This win be the second time
Judge Thurman has spearhead
ed the MOD fight against crip
pling disease la Travis County.
In 1S45, be also headed the drive.
Accepting the chairmanship of
the forthcoming campaign, Judge
Thurman said, “I know that all
of us in Travis County want our
children to be bom healthy and
live happily. Each one of us here
can help to assure this by giving
generously to the March of Dimes
this January."
Glenn Makes Appeal
On Behalf of UNICEF
Col. John Glenn, United States
astronaut, appearing in a television
public service appeal for the United
Nations Childrens’ Fund, says, "To
the mimesis of underprivileged
children of the world, UNICEF ex
tends its hand and heart.
"I hope you will extend yours and
join me
in buying
this year
UNICEF Greeting Cards,” he adds.
Ihe greeting cards feature 21
designs by 13 artists from nine
countries. Each bern of IO cards
sells for $1.25. Money from the
sale of these cards provides medi
cal care for needy children over
the world.
of the ball, are Gloria McCullom
Carolyn Lee Davidson. P am Heath,
Sharon Anderson,
Ja n Regan,
A drianne Ann Hamilton, Marion
Holbrook, Gone W interbotham.
Elizabeth Doremus,
and Linda
P utnam .
Any University student m ay a t
tend w ith a
ticket, available ai
51.50 per person in Texas Union
352. ‘T ick ets sold last week are
still valid,” Qaddumi said. Ap
proxim ately 500 students attended
the program and dance last year.
★
O il Drilling Speech Topic
M echanical problems of oil well
drilling will be described by F .
Jersey Production
\ . Smith,
Company,
the
Am erican Society of M echanical
E ngineers at their sem im onthly
m eeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday In
T aylor Hall 138.
to m em bers of
★
Committee Meets Today
The International Hour com m it
tee of the International Club will
m eet at 5 p.m. Tuesday in Texas
Union 350. P rogram plans for De
cem ber and Jan u ary will be dis
cussed.
The Publicity Com mittee
also
will m eet at 7 :30 p.m . Tuesday in
T exas Union 350. Publicity work
for D ecem ber will be discussed
and another com m ittee coordinat
or will be appointed.
M embers of
the
Club are
meetings.
invited
International
the
to attend
★
A&S Meeting Canceled
The College of Arts and S ci
ences faculty m eeting scheduled
T uesday has been canceled due
to a lack of business.
“ A special faculty m eeting will
be held In the spring, the date lo
be announced later,” said Mrs.
E leanor F ertseh , adm inistrative
secretary to the dean of the col
lege.
★
lchthus to Show D ram a
The aw ard winning play, “ Five
F in g er E x ercise,” by P e te r Shaf
fer. will be presented a t the Ich-
thus Coffee House in th e Methodist
Student Center, 2436 Guadalupe.
by
the Ben B ard d ram a group
Dec. 6-7 and 13-14.
The play won a New York
D ra m a Critics Circle Award, and
Shaffer w’on recognition as the best
new author of the season.
The play tells of m em bers of a
prosperous fam ily who have deep
em otional needs and are unable
to com m unicate their needs.
★
M e d Tech M eeting Set
D r . A. O. D aSilva, head path
ologist at Brackenridge Hospital,
will speak on “ Specific ( ase H is
tories
in M edical T echnology,”
at the m eeting of Alpha Phi Tau,
fraternity for m edical
techni-
clans, at 7:15 Thursday in E x
perim ental Science Building 223.
★
Travel Conference Set
O rganizations sponsoring oppor
tunities for student travel, work,
o r study abroad are asked to con
tribute displays and personal rep-
The U niversity ” Y” Crossroads
Africa, Ihe E xperim ent in In tern a
tional Living,
the P eac e Corps,
and v arious Austin trav el agencies
are scheduled to send rep resen ta
tives, H erm ansen added.
D ie conference will be held
in
Texas Union 215 and 217 from 2
to 6 p.m . Thursday and from 9
a.m . to 4 p.m. Friday.
Interested organizations should
contact Tom Gilliland a t GL 3-3118
or H erm ansen a t GL 3-4852 for
further inform ation.
★
Class Will Go to D allas
T he H om e E c o n o m ic s
826
c la s s w ill ta k e an o p tio n a l, a ll
to D a lla s T h u rsd ay,
d a y
le a v in g A ustin by c h a r ter ed bus
a t 6 a .m .
trip
In D a lla s th e c la s s w ill h ea r
a sp e e c h by A nne R a n d a ll a t
tw o
X e im a n -M a r c u s and v is it
fa sh io n h o u se s w h er e th e y w ill
s e e how clo th in g Is m a d e .
★
N orw egian Visiting UT
Olan M. Trovik, d irecto r of the
U niversity of Oslo, arriv ed in Aus
tin M onday for three days of con
ferences w ith U niversity adm ini
strato rs and state education offi
cials.
A p articip an t in the State De-1
leaders p r o I
p a rtm e n t’s foreign
g ram , Trovik is visiting selected !
j A m erican universities to observe j
university adm inistration and the 1
forces a t w ork in A m erican high
e r education.
H osts for a Thanksgiving lunch- 1
eon in T rovik’s honor were P r o
fessor and M rs. M illard H. Ruud,
Dr. and Mrs. Wayne Holtzman,
and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johan
Thorsen.
★
Toes to Twinkle Tonight
D a n c e lesso n s w ill b e h eld a t
7 p .m . T u esd a y in th e T e x a s
U n ion J u n io r B a llro o m . T h e y a re
sp on sored by th e U n ion D a n c e
cen to
C o m m ittee. A d m issio n kl 5
per p erso n .
0
j
I
★
Three to Speak on Taxes
R ichard M. Townsend and E .
Charles Lewis will speak a t 8:30 j
a.m . and I p.m . T uesday a t th e
second d ay ’s m eeting of th e Uni
v ersity ’s fifth Institute for Tax As
sessors. William G. M urray, pro
fessor of economics and sociology,
Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa,
also will speak and conduct a work
shop.
consulting
Townsend,
forester
and ap p raiser who holds a m aster
of fo restry degree from Yale Uni
versity, will speak and conduct
a workshop on ap p raisal and as
sessm ent of tim ber land.
Lewis, a real estate consultant
and ap p ra iser who has been active
in the business for 17 y ears in the
Southwest, will speak and hold a
workshop on ap p raisal and assess
m ent of ranch property. Dr. M ur
ray, m em b er of Phi B eta Kappa,
also will speak on the appraisal
and assessm ent of farm property.
★
Chemist Spe aks Today
D r. R . E . E ak in , p r o fe sso r of
c h e m is tr y , w ill sp ea k a t the M i
cro b io lo g y S em in a r a t 4 p .m .
T u esd a y in E x p e r im e n ta l S c i
e n c e B uilding 224. H is topic will
he “ T h e O rigin
o f M etab olic
S y s te m s .”
T he sp e e c h w ill b e open to the
pu blic.
’f up*.day
8-5—Absentee balloting. Travis County
Clerk s Office. Court House.
8:30 and I —Institute for T ax Asses
sors. Villa Capri.
9-5—Coffee, "Y."
9-11—Snack
Building 129.
sale. Home Economics
9-4—Rf.se d a tio n s for “ The Tragical!
H istoric of Dr, Faustus " and ' The
N ew T enant," Hogg A uditorium box
Off if'".
9-5—Tickets for Van Lilburn recital.
H em phill's No. 2,
2-§~~ Record
9-5 _..Nominations for International Club
Siveetheart. Texas Union 35o o r 342.
9-12 and 1-4- Cotton Bowl tickets on
sale, Gregory Gym,
lending
south foyer of Texas Union,
I ti-6--F acu lty a rt exhibit. Art Museum.
I —W illiam Ham to speak on "B ase
m ent Rocks and Structural Evolu
tion of Southern Oklahom a," Geolo
gy Building l l.
3-11— KUT- FM. 90.7 mc.
3-5—V arsity Debate W orkshop, Speech
lib rary
open,
Building 201
3 30— Prof Andrew Jaszi to speak at
Germanic Languages Symposium on
' Symbolism and L inguistic P ara
dox Reflections on Goethe s V. orid
View, ’ Academic Center A uditor
ium.
4.... \&M g a m e films, Te.vas Union
Auditorium
4—Orange Jackets. Texas Union 336
4—Microbiology Sem inar: R. E. La- ,
kin
to speak on "T he Origin of :
Metabolic System s.” Experim ental I
Science Building 223.
5—International H our Committee, Tex- ;
I
as Union 35o.
6:30—Dr. William S Burford to speak
to Pill Beta Kinsolving. Klnsolvlng
Dorm itory.
1 Men s G ist Club, Texas Union
401.
6
7-10—Study rooms, first floor of Texas
Unton.
7—Ceram ics class. Texas Union 333.
7—Chess lessons, Hillel Foundation
7 -D a n c e
lessons, Texas Union Ju n
ior Ballroom.
7:30—Publicity committee of Interna
tional Club. Texas Union 350
8—'"La Boheme,” Municipal Auditor
ium.
Dorm to Hear Burford
Phi B eta Kinsolving will host Dr.
William Burford, assistan t profes
sor of English, who will speak on
the R ussian poet Yevtushenko a t 4
and 6:30 p.m . Tuesday in the lob
by of Kinsolving D orm itory. An in
form al questioning period will fol-
low the talk.
★
★
Sin g -So n g Set Dec. 7
T w en ty -th ree gro u p s w ill per-
form
in Sing-Song Sa tu rd a y a t
7:30 p .m . in M unicip al A u ditor
ium . A d m issio n Is fr ee .
j
:
T he Sin g Song C o m m ittee
Is
w orking on final p la n s for the
ann ual e v e n t, rep orts J a n e A us
tin, p u b licity c h a irm a n .
T he so n g fe st is sp o n so red and
su p e rv ise d by r e p r e se n ta tiv e s of
P a n h el tonic and In ter fra te r n ity
co u n cils.
;
★
*
Pershing Rifles Reload
The m ilitary fraternity at the
a new
U niversity has
chosen
nam e, P raeto rian Guard.
The fraternity, formerly called
is an hon
the Pershing Rifles,
orary service and social organiza
tion. Its alm s are to build leader
ship am ong its m em bers and as-
Tuesday, December 3, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pege 8
hr!atmas is
carols gay
a frosty day,
and a gift of
cardigans
SWEATERS
by
J B T
SUPERB SWEATERS FOR MEN FROM ENGLAND
CARDIGANS
Pure Cashmere
Cambridge Grey, Tan
35.00
Imported Lambs Wool
In Heather Tones
17.95
Goldamming Cardigan
W ith Elbow Patches
27.50
Trimmed Alpaca
Grey, Blue, Black
PULLOVERS
Pure Cashmere
Blue, Grey, Tan
29-95
Imported Lambs Wool
Heather Tones
13.95
Crew Neck Shetland
Heather Tones
13.95
V-Neck a b l e
Imported Wool
25.00
U j o r r H l ^ c h a u f e r & ^ J r o w n
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. TILL 9
CONGRESS AT SIXTH
PARK FREE WITH PARK k SHOP
AS ILLUSTRATED
A. Sumptuous pure camel
hair cardigan in camel
color from England .
.
.
.
^7.50
B. Shaggy "Bearcat”
Mohair, cardigan, bulky
in looks, light in w eight. . . 18.95
C. Pure a m e l Hair
pullover . . . . . . . 25.00