’ WEATHER: Sunny, W arm Low 38, High 70 YoL 62 HST W M T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The University of Texas TODAY: Last D ay- Poll Tax AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY. JANUARY 31, 1963 Eight Pages Today No. 99 ON THE BEACH— For final-weary students, registra­ Ifs time to sign up— fo r tion means more writing. classes, clubs, polls, political parties, and insurance benefits. On e trip through G re g o ry G ym , a stu­ dent seldom runs across a booth that asks no pledges, promises, or checks— as this one. The Civil Defense and Student Peace Uniorr people are giving away their information. But, as viewed by Texan p h o to g ra ­ pher Dale Owens, their deserted booths seem to need only the mushroom-shaped cloud. James Meredith ill Remain At Mississippi Negro Visualizes Better Conditions For Spring Term JACKSON, Miss. UFI — Jam es H. M eredith said Wednesday he plans to continue in school a t the Uni- i versity of Mississippi, and will reg ­ ister for the spring sem ester Thurs­ d ay or F riday. “ I see signs that give me hope j that I will be able to go to school in the future, under adequate, if not ideal conditions,” he said in a prepared statem ent. The 29-year-old Negro, smiling frequently, read the statem ent to a b attery of 200 new sm en and tele­ vision ca m eras a t a news confer­ ence here. ‘NEGRO’ BON T R ETI IIN “ The 'N egro' should not return to the U niversity of Mississippi,*' he said. “ The prospects for him a re too u nprom ising.. However, I have decided that I, J. H. M ere­ dith, will register for the second sem ester.” M eredith knocked down m ore than a century of white#—only tradition a t the U niversity when he gained enrollm ent last fail— a d ram atic registration follow­ ing a lengthy court battle and a night of cam pus rioting that kill­ ed two and injured hundreds. He rem ains as the only m em ber of his race attending a public school with white persoas in Mis­ sissippi. Looking back on alm ost four m onths of studying, eating, sleep­ ing and attending elapses under the guard of federal forces a time of lasting right up to the end of the sem es­ ter. M eredith said he pondered the question for several days before deciding to return. sporadic harassm ent TALKED TO BOBBY D uring th at tim e, he said, he talked with US Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, whose Ju stice D epart­ m ent staff helped fight his legal battles and helped guard him. He d idn't reveal the details of their conversations. At Washington, the attorney general heard of M eredith’s de­ cision to return to the university, and s a id : “ I believe alm ost ail A m ericans share his hope that he can continue his education in peace.” E arlie r, P resident Kennedy told a news conference: “ I w-ould be sorry’ if Mr. Meredith did leave. I hope he continues. It would be a loss not only to Mr. Meredith, but to the university.” Gov’. Ross B arnett, who stood at the front of M ississippi's st niggle to keep the Negro out of the uni­ fall, declined c o m - j versity last ntent on M eredith's announce­ m ent. At Oxford. 200 m iles to the north of this capitol city of Mississippi, the cam pus w as quiet. Most of the students w ere aw ay for m idterm holidays — the period between the end of the fall sem ester last Mon­ day and the sta rt of registration T hursday. Defense Head Asks Fluidity WASHINGTON (AP)—S ecretary of De­ fense Robert S. M cNamara said Wednesday the United States m ust build a flexible force of strategic weapons th a t can absorb the first blow in a nuclear w ar and hit back at Soviet m ilitary bases or cities. “By building into our forces a flexible capacity, we a t least eliminate the prospect th a t we could strike back in only one way, namely, against the entire Soviet target sys­ tem including their cities,” McNamara told the House Armed Services Committee. “ Such a prospect would give the Soviet Union no incentive to w i t h h o l d attack against our cities in a first strike,” he said. “We w ant to give them a better alternative. W hether they would accept it in the crisis of a global nuclear war, no one can say.” U S C A N DESTROY As things stand now, M cNamara said, US strategic power is sufficient to take the first blow “and still d e s t r o y the Soviet Union.” UT Presents Money Needs And he added an increasing share of * the n a t i o n ’» retaliatory forces will be intercontin­ ental ballistic missiles in dispersed a n d hardened sites—“all with a very high probability of survival un­ der nuclear attack.” M cN am ara spent all day testify­ ing before a closed session of the com m ittee and will retu rn Thurs- should be going and how it should day. F rid ay and perhaps Saturday, get there A censored version of his sta te ­ m ent was m ade public. By DAVE MCNEELY Texan le g isla tiv e R eporter U niversity adm inistrators under­ scored graduate teaching and re ­ search as the U niversity’s g rea test need when they appeared before the Texas Senate A ppropriations Com m ittee W ednesday. Judge W. W. H eath, chairm an of the Board of Regents, pointed out, however, th at “ We’re itching in IO or 12 places; i f s hard to tell which one is itching the w o rst.” Headed by Judge H eath and Dr. H arry Ransom , chancellor of the U niversity, the entourage outlined idea of w here the U niversity its ECM Exclusion Unites British LONDON CB — P rim e M inster H arold M acm illan’s governm ent and opposition spokesm en united W ednesday in deploring B ritain ’s exclusion from the E uropean Com­ mon M arket. But they proclaim ed the nation will survive this blow F rance dealt to W estern unity. a t challenge, Tile governm ent wroked on a back-to-the-wall program to m eet and the abroad. Continental friends were to preserve active in British p o w e r influence against the th rea t of a decline in earning capacity. the effort home and NEEDS OUTLINED Although graduate teaching and research was pointed to by Dr. Joseph R. Smiley, president, as the m ost pressing need, Dr. Nor­ m an H ackerm an. vice-president and provost, (and Judge H eath) in­ dicated that a good university needs m any good departm ents. Or. as Dr. H ackerm an said, a good a physics departm ent good m ath departm ent. requires Adm inistration representatives said the am ount they a re asking for the University is only enough to m aintain the statu s quo. To level of excellence achieve the roughly desired would double the U niversity is asking, according to Dr. H ackerm an. _ _ F. L anier Cox. vice-chancellor. the am ount which require TELLS PLANS The 163-page statem en t told of Pentagon plans for the fiscal y ea r ahead, and broad defense pro­ g ram s anticipated over the next five years. M cN am ara asked Congress to g ra n t the adm inistration author­ ity to spend $55.2 billion on pro­ gram s that will be launched in fiscal 1964. Some will extend over m ore than one year. M cN am ara sketched his also view of the world situation and Com m unist m ilitary plans. He said the Soviet Union now has about 17,000 m ilitary men in Cuba. H ie R ussians have put up about 12 surface-to-air m issile sites and sent in about 40 MIG-21 jet ! said that the adm inistration is pre-1 fighters since la st July, he said, p ared to “ support any ta x bill and M ore than 60 Soviet fighters al- any tuition bill” which would help read y w ere there. to realize U niversity excellence. Dr. Ransom em phasized r WW . . . a -TM J C S M cN am ara said m ost of Cuba's air defense system , including the an tiairc ra ft m issiles and MIG-21 fighters " a re probably con­ je t the S o trolled and m anned by that “ excellence is as h ard to m ain­ tain or retain as it is to g e t.” He the p ractical, spoke financial to the problem , stressing vie ts.’ needs of that “ F irst-classness (or progress) j in education m eans updating by the biennium .” Econom y is definitely required, Dr. Ransom said, but he p o in te d out th a t it is good econom y to pro­ duce well-qualified people. He said that the U niversity is “ determ ined to elim inate frills and fads and useless duplication.” NSA Petition Still Short 250 TEXAS MAY G ET LEFT A petition calling for a referen­ dum election on participation of M acm illan hopes to counterbal­ the U niversity in the National Stu­ But teachers and scientists are ance the loss of B ritain ’s bid for dent Association lacked about 250 mobile and will go w'here oppor­ Common M arket memi>ership, ve­ tunities are best. Dr. R ansom said, tunnies are best. Dr. R ansom said, signatures Wednesday night, ac- toed by F ran ce in B russels Tues- day, through a mighty, united ef- an(* it is therefore needed to offer cording to Burke M usgrove one those opportunities in Texan, The fort by all to work harder, and U niversity has an opportunity to m ake and sell m ore to keep B rit­ b<» first class, but D r. Ransom ain a m ajo r power in world af­ fairs. th a t U niversity pro­ pointed out g ram s a re behind ,he institulurs o( thc is necessary in Washington The US State D epartm ent took an optim istic view. A statm ent issued tile breakoff a t Brussels “ can do no tile m ovem ent m ore tow ard a strong and united E u­ rope working in effective p artn e r­ ship with the United S tate s.” than delay said It em phasized P resident Ken­ to push ahead nedy’s with policies aim ed a t tightening tile A tlantic com m unity. intention th at elsew here Dr. R ansom noted th a t 6,500 T exans have left the sta te in the la st decade to pursue th e ir edu­ cation elsew here. Ju d g e Heath those who w ere stressed lured financial grants and better schools were for the m ost p a rt studen ts of g re a t potential. A ppropriations C om m ittee mem- (See UT PRESEN TS, p.3) by A total of 15 p er cent of the n u m b er of voters in the previous to general election force Hie Student Assembly to cal] an election. Since 4.992 voted in the F all General Election, about 750 signatures a re required for the petition. The petition states th a t “ We the undersigned students of the Uni­ v ersity of Texas, by statutory in­ request itiative and referendum , th at the following question be sub­ m itted to the student body in a special election on W ednesday, F eb ru ary 27. 1963: ‘Should the Uni­ versity of Texas, or any body thereof, be affiliated w ith tile U nit­ ed States National Student Asso­ ciation ?’ ” Miles Announces Police Vacancies “ A? present, there a re 37 vacan­ cies in the Austin Police D epart­ m e n t,” according to Police Chief R A. iBob> Miles. in Positions tile Austin P o lite D epartm ent a re under Civil Serv­ ice and are filled by com petitive is exam inations. S tarting salary S34O.00 a month, with an increase to $362.00 after s u m onths. To be eligible, a young man m ust be 21 to 35 years of age, be least 5'8" tall. and weigh a at minimum of 140 pounds. He must be in good physical condition and have a high school education or it# equivalent. Applications are available at th# City Personnel Office or the Aus­ tin Police Department. The spring trek through G rego ry G ym has been made by 12,288 .W illiam W allace* s tu d e n ts so fa r, including 3,687 on W e d n e s d a y . assistant registrar and registration supervisor, p re d icte d sp rin g e n ro llm en t o f J 9 ,6 0 0 s tu d e n ts . to ta l Registrants by the Truckload Texan Photo—Ow en* Fate of Padre Island Studied by Committee Action on the bills w as delayed by a long line of w itnesses. Jerry’ Sadler, sta te land com m issioner, who for a long tim e opposed a na­ tional park and w as in favor of a State park, reversed his stand. “ lf this legislative body does not feel th at a State park is feasible and the people of Texas w ant a seashore area. I will not oppose the creation of a national p a rk ,” he said. S adler said that he now feels that recom m endations in the bills in proposed by Senator R eagan the Senate and Menton M urray in the House will protect the m inerals of P ad re Island that belong to two- and-one-half million Texas school children. The land com m issioner pre­ sented a m ap which showed the sta tu s of the lands of the Island. In this, 45,000 ac res on the island within the park a re a a re undis­ puted. State owned subm erged lands total 39,000 acres. The own­ ership of 50.000 acres within the park a re disputed. The problem of land ownership dates back to 1800 when P adre Nicholas Balli received a grant of l l leagues of land from the king of Spam. During the revolution of 1811, the padre lost his records. In 1827 his gran t was reaffirm ed. A survey m ade at that tim e showed that 48,708 acres w ere included in the g ran t. P resen t owners trac e their titles back to the P adre g ra n t but there is a discrepancy. Total area of the island is 135,000 acres without the subm erged lands, and 256,000 acres w ith the subm erged lands. in It w as indicated that a test case m ight com e up future, w hereby the state m ight try to re ­ the disputed cover ow nership of lands, or a t least the rights to the m inerals under them . the ll J OME WILSOM T axjui Staff W riter The House State Affair* Com­ mittee met Wednesday night to consider two bills dealing with the making of Padre Island into a na­ tional seashore perk. Congree# passed the Padre Is­ land Seashore Park Aet in Septem­ ber The Legislature must approve a similar bill before the national park can become a reality. Harlingen were considered. In general outline, the bills fol­ lowed the pattern of the compro­ mise bill passed by Congress. in The chief difference occurs the Bridges bill, which restricts lying the use of property now along the Port Mansfield cut in Willacy County. The bill would prohibit the use of this property for taverns and other com m ercial businesses. TWO BILLS CONSIDERED The State Affairs Committee, Bills by Representative Ronald like the Senate State Affairs Com­ Bridges of Corpus Qiristi and by mittee which met Wednesday aft- Representative Menton Murray of emoon to consider Senator Bruce R eagan's P ad re Island bill, heard the sam e w itnesses STUDY ORDERED Senator R eagan failed to get a recom m endation on the bill. The Senate com m ittee ordered another the bill despite week s study on protests that a delay might kill the measure. Similarly, al a late hour Wed­ nesday night, the House State Affairs Committee had passed no positive legislation. The two bills being considered had to be rec­ onciled and It seemed likely that the Mils woald be passed M ite a subcommittee for f a r t h e r study. Rabbi Levi Oian From '75' to 9 making it a U niversity of the first class. “ I will be ready to do w hat­ ever is necessary to m ake it one,” he said. “ Serving on the Com m ittee of 75 prepared m e for understanding the problem s of a university.” Rabbi Olan said. By CHAR MAYNE MARAH Texan Feature Editor Rabbi Levi d a n , one of the three new Regent# named by Governor Connaily, will bt the second Rabbi to serve on th* University board. In a telephone interview with the Texan, Rabbi d a n said that as a University Regent he would aim at fulfilling the original charter and Spiritual leader of D allas’ Tem ­ ple Emanu-El, Rabbi d a n was a member of the U niversity's Com­ mittee of 75 which m ade an in­ tensive three-year study of the in­ stitution's needs. News in Brief. Compiled From AP Reports • • FROST. The body of poet Robert Fipst was cremated Wednes­ day. Relatives and a few close friends of the 88-year-old four­ time Pulitzer Prize winner will attend memorial services Thurs­ In a day in Harvard University Memorial Chapel in Boston. m essage to the Frost family, Soviet Premier Khrushchev added his tribute to previous ones from Vice-President Johnson, Presi­ dent Kennedy, literary personalities, political leaders and leg­ islatures. PLANE CRASH. A new Navy plane, rn submarine hunter on rn practice mission, crashed toto the Atlantic Wednesday about SM miles southeast of New York. None of the 14 persons aboard the four engine jet prop aircraft Is believed to be alive, a c ­ cording to officials at the plane’s home base at Patuxent River, Md. Twelve bodies have been sighted In the ocean. ROTC. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara presented a statement Wednesday In which the Pentagon proposed withdraw­ ing support of the junior ROTC course in high schools and stream­ lining the college program. Included is the suggestion that an elective two-year course leading to commissions in the Army or Air Force be added to the current four-year course. BRITAIN NUCLEAR POWER. Prime Minister Harold M ac­ millan announced Wednesday that Britain would keep IU nu­ clear power until there la na agreement on world disarmament, adding, however, that lie would not go back Mi his Nassau agree­ ment with President Kennedy. Under the pact, the two leaders claim ed the right to aaa nuclear weapons assigned from their countries to a multinational NATO force in cases involving “supreme national Interests.’* NEWSPAPER STRIKE. New York’s newspaper blackout went into its 54th day Wednesday with Mayor Robert F. Wagner at­ tempting his fifth straight day of meetings of publishers and striking printers in City Hall. Two strike-born dailies, the Chron­ icle and the Standard, have ceased publication, due to “distribu­ tion” and union troubles. A trade magazine reported that supper club business in midtown hotels was off as much as 50 per cent. APPOINTED THURSDAY At a press conference inst Thursday, Governor Connaily an­ nounced the three new Regents and said each one appointed was In accordance with his own ideas about the people he wants to serve on boards of higher educa­ tional institutions. Rabbi Faber of Tyler was the first Rabbi to serve as a Regent in 1915-16. Rabbi Olan is a graduate of R ochester, N. Y., High School and received his bachelor of arts de­ gree from the University of Cin­ cinnati in 1925. Ordained as Rabbi at Hebrew Union College in 1925, he was awarded an honorary de­ gree of divinity in 1955. ACTIVE MEMBER Active in civic and educational I affairs, he is a member of the Board of Jewish Welfare Federa­ tion of Dallas; the Executive Board of Circle Ten, Boy Scouts of Amer­ ica; Board of Directors, Dallas Services Music Association; and Advisory Council of the Dallas Cit­ izens Interracial Association, Inc. In addition the Rabbi is a mem­ ber of the Committee of 50 of Southern Methodist University; Board of Dallas Council on World Affairs; and is President of the United Nations Association of Dal­ las. Since coming to Temple Emanu- El in 1949, he has seen it grow to a membership of about 5,500. It is considered one of the major re­ form synagogues in America. Rabbi Olan Is a noted author and lecturer. Among other books, ho Is the anthor of “On the Na­ ture of Man,** “ Rethinking the Liberal Religion,'* and “Juda­ ism in Modern Theology.” For many years he has deliv­ ered Sunday sermon# on KRLD- TV, KRLD radio, and WFAA ra­ dio. He also has been a visiting lecturer at Perkins S c h o o l of Theology at SMU. Friends, Knowledge, New Ideas Gained During Chilean Seminar Thursday, January 3 1 , 1 9 6 3 THE DAILY TEXAN P a y 2 A Question of Monopoly The Austin American-Statesman, o n l y One of Austin’s two great monopolies has taken on the other in a crusade against monopoly. One of the points in the Council resolu- tion that has been most objected to is as follows: “After the third contract year all rates shall be subject to adjustment by the daily newspaper in a town of 200,000, is City Council so as to yield the distributor pitted against the sprawling empire repre- a fair return on the fair value of its in- sented locally by KTBC-TV, only eommer- vestment.’’ Even if there were no other ob- cial VHF television station in the same town jections to this point—and there are—what of 200,000. The empire is that of Mrs, Lyn- would remain questionable is the wisdom of don B. Johnson—the LBJ Co., affectionate- allowing a future City Council—of unfore- ly named for the vice-president of the same seeable composition—to set cable TV rates initials. on an individual contract basis. * * ★ ★ , iero ls’ The monopolistic A m erican-Statesm an's course, a solution in all this. standard-bearer, Dick Brown, acting man- aging editor, is struggling against the would- 1 *1e cornpanies involved are interested in be monopolistic Capital Cable Co. (rather, dlscuf ^ k fu rth er’ let them consider these the LBJ Co.) about a third monopoly—this possibilities. one concerning cable television in Austin. Dick Brown, in a private capacity, incor- I* Let t h e American-Statesman is Porate as a commercial television company, part owner of Independent Cable Television, grant a second \ HF station for Austin, and let this new station—owned by the Ameri- one of several companies which bid recently can-Statesm an—compete with KTBC-TV. for a cable television contract. 2. Let the LBJ Co. establish a second daily newspaper—morning and afternoon— to compete with the American-Statesman. The villainous Capital C a b l e Co., of which 50 per cent is on option to the LBJ Co., got a contract w ith the City of Austin for bringing cable television into Austin for 3. Let the City Council award an ex- a period of 20 years. Tile contract is not an elusive cable TV contract to some out-of­ town company, since cable TV would flop exclusive one, but Capital Cable Co. has an anyway in a town w i t h commercial TV exclusive advantage in th a t KTBC-TV does have a tower from which both stations can competition, operate . . . giving both cable and eommer- cial television. 4 £ jrct a new Citv Council, ★ * * * This new and greater plan would allow’ Independent Cable Television of Austin objects to several things: the 21-point resolu- both monopolies to compete against each tion, which K T says is not necessarily “in other in both the newspaper and television the best interests of the public” ; the haste fields. And election of a new City Council with which the Capital Cable Co. first made would provide a third battleground in which both monopolies could compete for voter application for the cable TV contract, then support—in order to see which of the two the City Council the haste with w h i c h awarded the contract to Capital (’able: and monopolies is the most, and least, popular, The only thing that could mess up this the difficulty—if not the improbability—of plan would be for the Austin voters to be­ another company’s being able to compete come sick and tired of both monopolies. with Capital Cable for the “pay TV’” field. Those Big Fat 'Eyes' fees varies, but the Eyes of Texas Fund Is A resolution which would change the of- ficial Texas state song from the little-known the only source of money available to stu- and little-sung “Texas, Our Texas” to “The dent government which is not appropriated by the Student Assembly. As such, it is an Eyes of Texas” will be heard by a House im portant source of revenue for unexpected committee Monday. and or excessive expenses. Introduced by Pwep. Bill Walker, a form er University law* student and undergraduate from Cleveland, the resolution thus far has faced l i t t l e organized opposition in the House. T hat “The Eyes of Texas” is more well known than “Texas, Our Texas” is unques- tionable. What is at question Is whether Aggies and other n o n-University persons Details are now being worked out in re- would be willing to let “The Eyes” serve both the University student body and the entire state. gard to protecting the Students’ Association copyright proceeds from use of one version of “The Eyes.” Income from use of this version goes into the SA Eyes of Texas Fund for use by student government. The amount of income from copyright We feel the University student commun- ity would be more than happy to share “The Elves” with the rest of the state; after all, the rest of the state shares the University. Last Time's Today Persons over 21 and under 60—unless to vote without having paid the poll tax, they are Indians, ir-ane, disabled, blind, or antiquated though it may be. convicts— SHALL (according to Texas law) pay a poll tax. Tile poll tax certainly is not a “back­ bone” of the Texas tax structure, but it This is a positive statement of the letter would be a handy thing to have around— to vote for of the law, far from the practice of the law particularly which is. if a person wants to vote, he pays abolition of the poll tax. a poll tax. Fortunatelv there is no {penalty for not Deadline for poll tax paym ent is mid- night tonight—after which time all offen­ ce! mg in Texas, as there is in many coun- ders of the state law will be subjected to the penalty of not being able to vote during tries. 1963. The unwritten penalty is not being able if it allows one Guest Editorial Easy to Get Unhitched Divorce is too cheap in Texas; the state's lax laws weaken the holy bonds of m atri- mony. The soaring rate of broken marriages proposals are, of course, subject to and broken homes is an appalling comment- arv on our social order, and a tragic influ- ence on the lives of children. through court conciliation and stricter regu- individual lations. While the merits of the legisla- tive study, the committee’s recommenda- tions in principle are vital, looking to the alleviation of a dismaying condition. An studied series of measures to help save marriages I) T h e creation of conciliation courts in interim legislative committee has the problem and recommended a Among the measures recommended are: i f if Ic —I f T h e D a i l y T e x a n O p m < r mr , . m T h i in .ire those of the E t:a nrs or of m c ur-tcr of um article a n d metropolitan counties. 2) C h i l d welfare boards to assist the courts. 3) The appoint­ ment of attorneys to represent children in- volved in divorce actions. 4) Require the defendant parent of children to appear at ,h " the divorce hearing if possible. 5) A 90-day waiting period between the filing of a di- V t-ilK i f aum"n ° T e sa f daily vorce action and the trial of the case. 6) Prohi bi t remarriages for six months after the divorce. 7) Require a five-day waiting ni,,RS Inc period between the issuance of a marriage staff for this issue Mu HT kditor ......................... LAI RA Mc .v eil license and the wedding. 8) Prohibit future issue news e d it o r ................ rodvey davis common law’ marriages. 9) Require that sup- DESK editor payments be made to the district clerk LO Pl DESK CHIEF Night R e p o rte rs Dave MeNeely, Helen Yenne, of the court Ordering the support . . . vrrstTy fenTilrr VhTo'Ifgh A u m * ' jim davis FRED BIRNS po,taKe paid at , ., m .. . . . ' ' Hank Ezell If the Legislature can pass laws that will Copyreader ................................................. Hilly strong curb cur shocking divorce rate and thereby reduce the juvenile delinquency rate, it will Night Sports Editor service of a high order, and " " J * » N i t Feature E ditor ............ Editorial Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cindy Km v it Charmayne Marsh m a k e history. — T U E H O U ST O N PO ST Everett Hullum One Week Shows Changes in South Based on Courage By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst Two Southern governors and two Southern Negroes have, with­ in the past few days, taken the way of courage along a road which for much of its way has borne only p o o r l y discernible signs of it* destination. It goes much farther back than Supreme Court decisions about racial segregation and o t h e r civil rights. It began with the change from an almost solely agricultural in­ society industrialized one. to an MAKING, BUYING Production a n d consumption are the twin keys to industrial progress. B ecause of ingrained w ays of thought, the South has drastic­ ally lim ited participation of a large part of Its population in both Industrial production and consum ption. There are \ arious causes for this, causes which are seldom understood except by those who have there, lived and worked and not by any means by all of them. industrialization began COMPLEX CAUSES Among these causes are differ­ ences in color and ancestral cul­ ture; a need for participation of the Negro in production o n l y to since outgrow the white population; a lack of preparation by both Ne­ groes and whites for develop­ ment of Negro skills; and an shortage of money for actual general purposes educational such as is required for philoso­ phical changes. Politicians have played upon ignorance and u p o n ingrained tradition which is based upon some very real grievances borne bv people of Hie South who are still alive to remember. DEMAGOGUERY OLT But aa knowledge and toler­ ance progress, t h e d em ago­ gues begin to lose their holds. Tl^e other day North Carolina’s Gov. Terry Sanford told the state press association, ’ The time has come for American citizens to give up this reluctance to em ­ ploy Negroes, to quit unfair dis­ crimination, and to give the Ne­ gro a full chance to cam a de­ cent living for his family and to contribute to higher standards for himself and for all men.” That means the time has come for more people In the South to become both producers and con­ sumers, as machinery diminishes the need for fhem on the farms. The Idea U by no m eans new If. Southern business and Intellec­ tual circles. But so far as I can recall .Sanford Is the first Impor­ tant Southern political leader to express It. G A N T T C A S E A few days later a Negro, Har­ vey B. Gantt, enrolled by court order at Clemson College, SC, to prepare himself to become a producer- an architect. Gov Donald S Russell of South Carolina, newly elected, said the state which lit the long-laid fuse of a war over federal encroach­ ment w'ould now peacefully sub­ mit its ancient educational cus­ toms lo the federal law and at Clemson it was so. Nothing happened, except that a Negro boy quietly entered the state's major institution for the teaching of technical skills. M EREDITH STAYS Then Wednesday, at Jackson. Miss , a Negro who had beconte world known because of the oppo­ sition of a politician, decided that he would not retreat. The nation had spent close to t i million to support his right to an education in a school of his own choice, and he decided to keep on bearing the personal in ­ dignities which have been heaped upon him, them Is necessary. if bearing Four examples of courage amid the hundreds which have been re­ curring the South during a time when not only world opinion, but its own particular interests, are dictating change. in Firing Line To the Editor; An editorial in the Jan. 13, 1963, Texan asks, ‘‘Does not impeach­ ment of the Chief Justice smack of anarchy?” I don’t think so. Can the questioner or any reader give any reasons why impeach­ ment of a Chief Justice sm ack* of anarchy? I'd like to see them . Max Watson 3203 B everly Rd. Official Notices from Notices th*- University Li­ b r a r y or anv o f its br an c h e s ar e of f i n a l U n iv e r s it y c o m m u n ic a t io n * rr q u i r i n g Stt d e n t s w h o L , br ar y n o t ic e s w ill be referred to th< office of the Dean of Student Life A. Mott it, Lfbrsria- I m m e d ia t e fail to r es pon d a tt en tio n . to (Editor’s N o t e : Susan Campbell was one of 14 University students w h o participated in the Chilean Student Leader Seminar last summer. W i t h an­ nouncement of another exchange of Chilean stu­ dents to visit the Univer­ sity in F e b r u a r y and March, it is appropriate to present M i s s Campbell’s reflections on her owm ex­ periences.) By SUSAN CAMPBELL A Chilean coed had scrib­ bled “death to the invaders” and “Yanqui go home” on a bulletin board in the cen­ tral hall of the Pedagogical Institute of Valparaiso. I drifted into the build­ ing to meet the IS other University of Texas stu­ dents participating in the fourth Texas-Chile ex­ change, and found a clus­ ter of excited students (Texas and C h i I e an) around the message, talk­ ing and gesticulating in a high-speed m i x t u r e of Soanish and English. It was a matter of seconds be­ fore I was enlightened. Garbled and vague reports had been com­ ing over short-wave for several hours, concerning a reputed US re-invasion of Cuba. Not even the Red paper ‘‘El Siglo” had designed to solidify these rumor* in print, hut the student govern- ment called an urgent assembly and issued a somewhat precipit­ ate declaration of solidarity with their oppressed Cuban soulmates. BAY O F P IG S Our band of Texans held an equally hasty meeting of a more Informal nature a n d decided, with some trepidation, since up had been grilled over the coals of the Bay of Pigs calamity the in an assembly, previous d a y true we that would indeed e x p l a i n to the Chileans the distinction between Yanqui s and TEXANS. if rum or pro\cd from lunch Luckily our schedule took us to a beautiful *«*a- for restaurant com fortably a I d e far the heart of V al­ paraiso and Its branch of the U niversity of Chile. There In com parative calm amid pr o - Am erican students, we learned that the Invasion was not per petrated by a task f o r r e of I S M arines, plainly marked but by a sm all n u m b e r of largely Ineffectual young and Cuban ex iles In a l o n e PT- boat. Relief was the order of the d ry : the exchange between The University of Texas and the Uni­ versity of Chile had been estab­ lished by our State Department in 1959 to counter-act anti-Amer­ icanism as evidenced by t h e Nixon reception in lAtin America a year earlier, and I for one did not relish being the object cf another incident. EXPLOITATION In the grueling assembly the day previous, a few quite voluble Valparaisians spewed f o r t h at barely translatable rates a jar- gon-stream of charges of US ex­ ploitation, aggression, and insin­ cerity. I deliberately separated myself from the other Texans in order to watch the Chileans and to hear their reactions as audi­ ence. Neutrality was non-existent at that juncture, probably be­ cause of the extreme stand of our “opponents” (to use a par­ ticularly appropriate d e h a t e term). least a to defend I found m y self as the other “ fr in g e * ” hard-pressed to keep from becom ing ae extrem e in defense. For at few mom enta w e all becam e red- hot and true blue patriots, and things we w illing never could have agreed upon in leas tense spot. Our 5-day orientation session in Washington DC prior to the trip had not prepared us for this. We had heard lectures and panel dis­ cussions of current Latin Amer­ ican and Chilean situations and problems, but no one had bother­ ed to define to 14 undergraduates of mixed aptitudes, interests, and educational backgrounds, the best manner of rapid but thorough preparation for a defense of the diplomatic, military, and eco­ nomic relations of our nation with Latin America and specifically "Chile over a 60 year span. Nor had they briefed us on the >ersonality traits of the Latin Vmerican student, but we had vcen caught up for several weeks 'receding our visit to Valparaiso imparted i a program which > us several ideas on the subject. la rounds of meetings and pri­ local vate conversations with mad national student leaders w e had sensed the urgency of their desire to confront the spectors of illiteracy, maldistribution of eco­ nomic and political power, and Indus­ a trialism . strangled em bryonic This mood, coupled with a flair for dram atic action epitomized by the extensive use of the “ huel- g a” or strike, and with resent­ ment of Yanqui monopolies, pa­ ternalism, and naked power poH ides, official and private, real and alleged, creates eagerness for expression and action. And Cuba proved the favorite stimu­ lus. “ Castro is a symbol,” we were told by a spokesman for the stu­ dent moderate left “ of a Latin American leader standing up to the colossus of tho Americas ” Tile impression I received from the Chileans was that a blow at Castro was apt lo strike the ten­ der national pride of many Latin Americans. THE CALLAM PAS It was my first visit to one of the slums called “ rallam pas ’ (mushroom in English) which made me begin to understand the sense of wrong and urgency of our Chilean friends. One of the worst areas is only a few blocks from the stadium in which the world soccer series was held ihis the students are summer, and still burning over the govern­ m ent’s action: “ They put up a wall around turistas wouldn't sec what exists here. They walled -t rn instead of do­ ing something ai>out it.” .t, so th'’ The *j>eaker wa* a Chilean boy who wa* working on plan* for a literacy cam paign designed by leader* of the national aturtent university. It I* a im e d a t the In­ the*** |>aU’h work, h abitan ts of multi m a te ria l, two room, * ardiae packed dwelling* with no sa n ita ry faclHtie*, e le c ­ tricity, or running w ater. and one Despite national st ilus T R A P has I vcen taking a hiding from the Christian Democrats in the past tw’o years in University elec­ tions, and the school which we visited in Valparaiso was ore of the minority in which FRAPistas scored last year. For this rea­ son, the events and atmosphere we experienced there w’ere not representative or typical, the Vte lived for a month, except for two short trips, in the dorms of Institute Pedagogico of Santiago, which has a sm al1 but prized campus, thing among Latin American universi­ ties. rare a DORM LIFE for interpreter My roommate was a beautiful, petite, musically talented biology student whose “ pololo” p- pmg rides through the Andes in a blanket-wrapped flat tru e% with a ski-lodge destination: from a Texas-ChiDan ba-.k'riball game at which my favorite Communist lucky rabbit’s foot gave me a with obvious nasty symbolism when the Texans lagged far be­ hind, to an Impromptu song and dance fest in the center of the campus which We arranged by capturing a piano being moved to the auditorium from dumbfound­ ed workmen; from all-night par­ ties at the annual dorm celebra­ to a sobering, atoniach- tions, and-emotion-w' r e n c h I n g trek through the callampas, In Chile: Borne of our bent tim e# were •pent on board our " m icro.” three cia sac* of (There are busses the great “ bu*,” the medium sited “ m i­ cro ,” and tiny “ Uebre” which m eans hare and I* driv­ en a* though R w ere.) One of the hoi* had a banjo, and on the our bus trip we sang, twisted, ate orange#, drank wine, wrote letters, slept, had bull #es#loMt, knitted, and read. On one of our journeys we vis­ town small provincial ited a named “The Serene,” which con­ tained one of the new junior col­ leges which the Ministry of Edu­ cation hopes will alleviate th# lack of university space. On Sunday afternoon we stood in the square and listened to tha weekly concert of the chorus of the town s Technical University, and later attended an assembly of high-school boys who question­ ed us on the Alliance for Prog­ ress and seemed surprisingly po­ litically conscious. In for stav ed high schooler* th ree d ays H e th e ir with iMvardiltg schools, and though w** m ay have had a few com* plaint* about the d o rm s In Hub- t t a g o before visiting las Heron*, they certainly d is a p p ea re d a ft­ e r. S antiago ut leant had lu k e­ w arm w a te r in the hath* < HILF,AN FOURTH in and th e ir took I* on re s t way When departure time arrived. four of us couldn't Ive dragged away', no we stayed an extra the “ dlez-y- week and Ocho ‘ !$th of lev' \ ties Hie September is the Chilean Uh of July Pe pie « ■ .p stands oil over the parks and v 'I w mo and bread and tho wonderful meat-and-pas* fry' empanada*- and hard-boiled eg g s Rn^ ‘ hicha, which is fer­ ment d < .dei and other juices, and g a th e r to eat drink, dan-r, and sing in the open or under large ten** to spend the But the d ie t v w h o • biti* fundi#, We w orc Invited by rn girl nicknam ed IO Million Mllly (with to m e reaso n ) to s hag# ran ch e sta te , w here si! h e r f a ­ m ily and v*o rt,t * w ere e atin g steak and em p a n a d a s **«>k**il over a hug# open pit, drinking wine. dane* big the c a e c a to the tunes sap* plied by a com bo dressed in th# "bus*© " (C hilcAn cowboy) log*, and getting re a d y to ride In a rodeo. That day was f*ne of my lost in Chi \ and it congealed wm # of my imprek'ions. The contrast of Iho life of the owner of th# latifundio (who also, in this case. owned the most conserv ativ# dally newspaper in Santiago) and that of the workers, who have little hope of cm aping from tha eternal drudgery of unskilled la­ the government will bor until supply to create a cli ss of laborers with intermediate skills, spins a rwtv fold vision for me of th# futur# of Chile. the school necessary friend* On# part is bright; it picture# an awakening of conscience and a sense of social responsibility in the educated, upper classes. The other it riaik and vague: th# inevitable ic'ul? of a clash of risking expectations and a class which refuses to aid the evolu­ tion of the lower levels of society to a higher rung. Little M atron the Campus By Biblcr I 36 h a i « e to erne th'ew es lux » s f r as w a n m f x m i sem i ca s a w R a g ,' eo n s t * Deans Say Premarital Sex At US Colleges Increasing WASHINGTON GB - Premarital sexual experience by college stu­ dents ii increasing, and new and comprehensive programs of sex education are urgently needed, a group of experts said Wednesday. The N ational Association of Women D eans and Counselors devoted the entire Ja n u a ry Issue of He scholarly Journal to the problem. The contributors said that col­ lege students reflect tile chang­ ing social forces that shape them, and that much of the blame be­ longs to adults. Adults, they said, aet m oral sta n d a rd s for youth which they do not til em selves follow, and a r e evasive and dishonest when Issues involving sex arise. Anoth­ e r Im portant factor, they said, Is th a t college youth a re very m uch on th eir own, because a t the late adolescent level adult control p ractically disappears. K ate Hevner Miller, editor of journal and a professor a t the Indiana University, said: i “ Youth is ignorant and reckless but the world is harsh and un­ forgiving and the dean's job as mediator is a difficult one . . . “ It Is the counselor, not the clergym an, who m ust develop youth’s conscience; It is the edu- I ca tor who Is called upon to take the leading ethical role.” Prof. Lester A. Kirkendall, a sociologist from Oregon State Col­ lege, said what is really needed is “ openness and objectivity in the educational process, and faith in the capacity of youth to make judicious re­ spond m aturely to those expres­ sions of trust and confidence ex­ tended them .’’ judgments and to Thursday, January 31, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Raga 3 W k a t CjoeA O n O fe re Timradar 8-5—R e g is tra tio n . G re g o ry Gym. 8-12 and 1-5— E xhibit o f m iniature book*. H u m a n itie s R e search C en ter. 8-4—C o n su lta tio n h o u rs. H e a lth Cen- i ter‘ S-5 - R e g is tr a tio n for M odel U n ited N a­ tio n G reg o ry Gym. 8-5— P o ll ta x on tale. G regory Gym 8 45—A dvanced p lacem en t e x a m in a tio n In E n g lish B u ild in g 201 G erm an , W est M all O ffice B u ild in g 401. and S p an ish F ren ch 9-5 A pplication ro u re fo r F o rtr a n , C o m p u tatio n C e n te r 18. s h o rt In 9-5— E x h ib it bv “ N u estro s M a estro s de S an C a rlo s ," La p una G loria. 9 30-9:30—K L R N -TV p ro g ram s, I IO C o ffee H our, H i l l e l F o u n d a tio n 10-12 and 3-5— E xh ib it bv artiste o f the South P lain s. El I sa bet N ey Mu­ seum . 3-11— K U T -F M . 90 7 mc. 4 —D r. R o b e rt K u e h n e le c tu re on • A p p licatio n s th e B io lo g ist of H o rto n C la ssific a tio n of S tre a m s ." E x p e rim e n ta l S cien ce B u ild in g 115. 7-9— R e g is tra tio n fo r ev en in g course*. fo r to U n iv e rsity J u n io r H ig h School. 7—N ew stu d e n t* Invited to see special ‘ T h e L av en d er HIU M o b ," sh o w T ex as U n io n A u d ito riu m . 8 T e x a s U nio n o pen h o u se fo r new s tu d e n ts . M ain B allro o m 8 - “ U n d er th e Y um -Y um T r e e ." ACT P la y h o u se . F if th a n d L avaca. 11—A ssesso r s ’ O ffice rem ains open t a fo r paym ent of poll tax. m id n ig h t T ra v is C o u n ty C o u rt H ouse. CASH Dividends Mean More f R M f t * ; r n Co-Op Used Books COST LESS (HECK THE FACTS: WORLD’S LARGEST ULtCVON O f POINT STY LB For the past 3 semesters, students who purchased Co-Op TH ISI RO WTI SRI CULLY RICOMMMDID ROR SCHOOL USI Pen Counter—Street Floor or over $101,000 used books and turned in their dividend slips were able to: •Save 40% of Publisher's Price •Save 14% MORE With CASH Dividends * POINT TOR ^ th o rn right point for the way you write...by number SAVE MORE Y0URST0RE One-Stop Shopping for A ll Supplies IN NEW SHINE-BOY SHIRTS, members o f A lp h a Phi O m e g a , men s service fraternity, explain the c a m p u i to bew ild ere d new students d u rin g Or eniation. T hursday O rie n ta tio n activities in- c Ijd e a d v a n ce placem ent exam inations from 8:45 to noon in E n g ­ lish Build ng 201 for Sp anish and French a ~d in W e s t M a !! O f f 'c e Building 401 for G e rm an . Texas U nion will show The L a ve n d er H ill M o b in ’he A u d ito riu m at 7 p.m. and hold an op e n house a* 8 p .m . —T ex an P h o to —Owena Construction Slowed Down By BARRY JAGODA The federal government dished out $1,800 000. arch tecta drew up the plan*, and construction on the JOO-unit Brackenridge married cou­ ples apartment project was to get under way early this year Then, someone read the deed to the property, donated to the Uni­ versity In 1910 by G. W. Bracken­ ridge, a former member of the University Board of Regent* A question ha* a r i e n a* to the intent of the usage of the property, and am interpretation of Brackenridge* wishes la necessary before con- •truction can get under way, The Board of Regents must, however, ask for a clarification of the State Attorney th# deed by General's office, and until the Board takes th a action there is no construction. The board will meet February 15-16 on the University Campus to $80. Married student* desiring ex­ tremely cheap housing are not however to be helped to a great extent with the proposed project With rental fees for the one and two bedroom apartments ranging the monthly from $68 charges will be more than twice the $25 to SSO fees for the one and twv bedroom unit* presently filled to capacity. Meanwhile, the wait­ ing list for th* type of housing moved to It* present location from Wichita, Kansas in 194D, continues to flourish. Although the present barrack- type apartments will continue to F O R RENT (2 Hoe** From C e » p u l) 1 Bedroom House 2614 W ooldridge — also— 2 Double Bedrooms, University Approved Call G R 8-9889 G R 2*4562 (after 5 p.m.) S C IE N T IF IC WATCH REPAIRS • W A TCH REPAIR • JEWELRY RESTO RATION • S O L D E R IN G • CUSTOM DESIGNS Estimates FREE Fine Jew elry Authorized O m eq a A qancy 2261 GUADALUPE be available, there is no projected plan for increasing the number of In fact, apartm ent! of th:* type a university housing authority said that it is an impossibility to obtain any additional structures like the original post-World War Ii frame structures. Married student* desiring cheap housing had better get on the wait­ ing list for the original structures and those who are looking for per­ manent type buildings with outside masonry and nicely furnished in­ teriors have a while to wait while legal technicalities are Ironed out Student Workers Needed for KLRN Student volunteer workers for the University s productions on KLRN educational television sta­ tion may contact High Greene, TV' production supervisor for Ra­ dio 'IT , in Radio/TV Building 120, Students may work, depending on their proficiency and experi­ ence, as floor assistants, cam era­ men, and assistant show directors. Because of th* production schedule of KLRN. volunteers may easily be fitted into a work program. EDUCATIONAL BROADCASTS KIT-KM I ha rad ar F irs t T u itio n (N ew s) Alm anac Sport* A lm anac i ranaitlon Washington Report Evening F d itio n D eb riefin g S OO 3 IS 5 55 a ot k i i 6 45 7,00 R A F e a re y adv lie r U nited S tate* Emt>*a,»v. T o kyo 25—C o m m en tary SO N eth e rla n d s C o m p e e rs H 'm kem an*. G igue W etting: D ue C anzoni l ’u**a<'aglia a n d t OO Key board Kantax T rio Bach T rio S o n a ta No. 4 In E M inor B ash Bach T rio S o n a ta No. 5 in C in F Bach A n a Bach T rio S o n ata No. 6 in G h a 'h T rio in ti 9 '»k v h a rn b er Muxic In D m in o r I Km la n d r i « * e » f o r L u t e Me<*ihovcn, G r a n * F u g u e B flat 10 OO—N o ctu rn e 10.45—F in a l F d itio n in K l,It V T V Thursday 9 30—Spanish 9 -15- F ilm IO Ole - T e a t P a tte r n IO 06—A m erican H e rita g e 10 36—Science 6 11 «xi—N igh Noon 12 OO W rite rs of T o d ay 12 30—O rig am i I; OO—Spanish I 15—H orizons o f Science 1 36 P rim ary Science 2 OF l im e to D ance 2 25 —T e st P a tte r n 2 .lo—Jazz Casual 3 OO—Geology 3 3o— I* i Int 3 IO—Teacher In-Service 4 OO—Davey a n d G o liath 4 15— P la t m ate 4 S t—W h at a New 5 OO—Science 5 5 25—P atro n * 5 30—A round th e W orld 6 OO—T o be an n o u n ced 6 30—M an a t P la y 9 :4 5 —N ew s 7 OO—C olloquy 7 3 0 —C om puter* a n d th e M ind of In q u iry M an 8:00 8 30—T h e I louse W e L ive In 9 OO—Ja zz Casual 9 30—A m erican E conom y A COMPLETE LINE OF CAMERAS, PROJECTORS, AND ACCESSORIES, Hallmark Card and Plans-A-Party Shop Studtman Photo Service 222 W E S T I9 T H G R 6-4326 FINAL It EDUCTION S I r m . r; . iii im im I — SUITS SPORT COATS CAR COATS SPORT SHIRTS SWEATERS ^ / 4 t o V 2 o f f I Pair at R egular Price, Second SLACKS $ 1 .9 9 mz, -mm d i s t i n c t i v e s t o o r m e n Get a BETTER GRASP on gour COURSES with... Barnet * Noble Educational Paperback* C O L L E G E O U T L I N E S E V E R Y D A Y " H A N D B O O K S OVER 140 TITLES IN A WIDE RANGE OF SUBJECTS including ANTHROPOLOGY ART BUSINESS DRAMA ECONOMICS EDUCATION ENGINEERING ENGLISH ‘ ETIQUETTE GOVERNMENT HANDICRAFTS HISTORY LANGUAGES MATHEMATICS MUSIC PHILOSOPHY POLITICAL SCIENCE PSYCHOLOGY RECREATIONS SCIENCE SOCIOLOGY SPEECH STUDY AIDS START RIGHT...bug gour Outlines and Handbooks when ijou get qour textbooks! Textbook*—Downstairs Thursday, Jam m y i i . im THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 4 EVERY S U N D A Y IN THE P O ST $10,025 IN C A S H PRIZES J U S T S IX T Y P U Z Z L E S T O S O L V E , T H R E E E A C H S U N D A Y F R O M J A N . 27 F O R 2 0 C O N S E C U T I V E S U N D A Y S . F O R C O M P L E T E D E T A IL S , SE E T H IS S U N ­ D A Y 'S E D IT IO N O F T H E . . . T h e Ho u s t o n Po s t Se® or C a ll You r Local Post Distributor or G e t Your Post on Your Local N ew sstand Sports Briefs GLENDALE, Calif. IB—The 1962 season wag a big disappointment to the owner*, player* and man­ agement of the New York Met*. . . . Casey Stengel. ★ ★ MIAMI, H a . (B—Mr*. Moody Jolley * Ridan, 3-5 favorite with the crowd of 21,614, scored an Im- pre**ive victory Wednesday In the 529,600 P alm Beach Handicap at H ialeah P ark . Ridan, w i t h veteran Jockey Steve Brooks m aking up m ost of his 127 pounds, beat G eorge D. Widener’s Jaipur, at t h e same weight with John Seller* up, by lengths. H. O. H. Frelinghuysen’* M erry R uler w as third and Boheia Sta­ ble’s Kelso, horse of the y e a r in '61 and '62, finished fourth. 1860, Ridan, m aking his second sta rt this m onth, ran the 7 furlongs in one m inute. 22 4-5 seconds and paid $3.40, $2.50 and $2.10 across the board. ★ ★ LOS ANGELES abor day, with K ansas City the visitor. The traditional P residential open­ ing gam® is set for April 8—one of the earliest sta rts in history— with the Washington Senators play­ ing the B altim ore Orioles. The rest of the AL gets under­ way the next day. The world cham ­ pion New Y ork Yankees, once again favored to cap tu re the pen­ nant, open a t K ansas City in quest of their fourth consecutive A m eri­ can League flag. Cleveland is at Minnesota and Chicago a t Detroit. Boston opens a t I jOg Angeles in a night affair. the m ost night The Angels and the Orioles will play game®—59 each. The Athletics a re set for 57 and the Senators wall be under the lights in 56 gam es. Only 79 doubleheaders are sched­ uled com pared with 82 a year ago. Going to a Movie? EAT AT Hank's Grill 2532 Guadalupe and SAVE $ Thursday, January 31. 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 5 Out on a Pier By KINCHEN PIER T«x«n Sports S ta ff Longhorn Tracksters Debut Indoors B y CARLTON STOWERS T ex a s Sport* Staff I cham p la st aprinf. G unter i i the ( L angham , and Lynn Saundem and | J defending cham pion in the 1000 ■ R ichardson from ACC. Merritt won I country star, finished fourth in last clition to anchoring O k l a h o m a Steve Strickland, Steer cro ss - 1 last w inter, w ill run the 600 in ad-; In addition to the large collegial* field, a cham-pa^ked high school J year's mile, but w ill run only the State's world record holding m ile schedule is on tap, w ith a few wa- the two-m ile relay this year, to spice With w eather m ore suited for ^ard run> w *11 not defend his j the even t last y ear. 'Horns G et to Business E xam s are over, the last of the J Lennox has hit 99 field goals this non-conference gam es have been season and is am ong the leading m aj,es lts dobut played, and i f s now time for the scorers m en w ith the basketball talent to ham resum e their rules of fighting for the SWC, the coveted Southwest Conference cham pionship in the conference. Wind- leading rebounder in the having boards 106 tin v s for an average of IO 6 per game. day night. cleared is the . . . fireplace eating popcorn, relay aquad. Running with un mg or Jus si ng aroun the anchor le g o f L o w o m ’s . ! htle Saturday night, Gunter w i l l ! The second, fourth concentrate a ll his efforts on the p la ce finishes in the one m ile run . . ( uc the 1963 edition of Coach T. J. "Frog- gie'* Lo w o r n 's track field squad m er Jacksboro great wall be Larry j list o f returners, but a pair of na- w eek. The Aggie is back intact Other Texas runners who w ill Jerl sophom ore w ill ihe night s outstanding races with Franklin La the high jump, Water- the anchorer! by Richardson. 300, Wilson and Robert Spellings and yard dash. Charles Strong. Okla- SMU. and T exas all fielding strong rn the 500, Jones and Boyd Henry foursom es Running for the I/ong- in the broad jum p, and Charles the shot put. Jordan tors will run under favorable con- not run in the Lubbock affair. The W alker, should sco re points for the boards in Kansas City s Coliseum Dalton. Charlo* Barnhill, and Tom placed third in tho Gulf Federation m eet in Houston earlier this year. Ted Nelson wanner of the 500 two-m ile are back. M arvin Sillim an, TCU's over Olympian Karl Young last the fo r - 1 little distance sp ecia list, heads the year, will m ove up to the 600 this either Charles R odgers or Preston a stern test. L aurie Elliot, Univer- record holder for the D e v il. relay cornix) The OSU squad sped m en ’s races added to a 3:13 8 last year and the team show up a bit, tem perature drops, com ped- m uscle pull in his back and m ay beat Another Houston entry, G eoff who clipped off D avis is suffering from a slight j ACC's John L aw ler w ill be hard to boma State's prem ier quarterm iler in Lubbock Satur- R h ® d e s , Steve Strickland and tive-born A ustralians w ill give him toe the mark against the world Texas A&M anchored by Nelson, the horns will be Jam es Cooper. Mike Jordan San Antonian won Cougars. He w as third the Big Hight Championships Wa erston The rn.Ie relay should be one of com pete But w hile the wind blows and ston and Chai I es Simons indoor 410 ACC, last year. , in in Lubbock of Houston third, and a 48 6 on indoor af- standout, sity are the in in in the hills, A rkansas still dm ons. The m eet. an long-legged several fair held on a board track in Lub­ bock'* M emorial Coliseum, drawn the m ost im pressive entry * lot hst of any' m eet since the indoor ,ent Steer d istance brigade, sport w as in Fort inaugurated Worth year before last. has lMt w inter and 11 * * * * * * * to add to the ahead:- po- regained his eligib ility and will / ” Ymerican R ex Wilson has individual titles indoors last year's national cham pion free throw accuracy, the conference in scoring with an to be a even 20 point a gam e average. He - - - - leads th e con feren ce in free-lh row L e g h o r n kquad w ill be L oy G u n -, )nclude S teer j um£)r in in ok lahom a State pow ered r - is second d ista n ce L ead in g ii u — j r Heading a large list of team s 'vear tn te m J are T exas ACC New Mex- 6 0 >'ard ' ^ Oklahoma T exas AAM,* and < * * * * * and in hun*1* event. Junior the Cooper, runner-up 120 >ard *lm b€r event in Decern- oer's Sugar Bowl, is also entered O ther stan d ou ts in tile hu rd les field in CBRL STUDENTS W ISH E S to share her two bedroom Enfield apartment ,5 ° °°- GR 2* S e w e ll, X.& 2 8no’hPr student- Another te a m with a 2-2 record, on 33 of 58 shots. *■—- - O k lah om a's sp rin ter-h u rd ler, and d e a d lin e ss w ith a 91 4 p e r ce n ta g e ,|,r - S ou th w est C on feren ce m ile | SMU s B obby John son . J. S. T ier. UNIVe r s i t y MEN TVVO rooms nri. 1 T e ch 's R onnie Biffin. iiinwrr vale bate o ra tiv e «-no ling It ie*- pit id nings weekend! GR 3-1043 entrance Fvap. '-lean in g service ti t i I - Inn u i re 2U55-B Sabine eve­ At this point in the season, the lurks as a threat to take the title. team to beat appears to be the T exas Longhorns. TTie 'Horns are Som ething interesting could de- currently sitting atop the heap in velop this Saturday afternoon when for a the SWC race, followed closely by AAM the the A ggies of T exas AAM. very invades F ayetteville im p ortan t g a m e with Up Most ex p o rts feel that an 11-3 P o rk ers. m a r k w ill tak e the title this sea- , , tor forward Tommy so if their prediction holds •on true, Hie only team s out of the mn- Bing w'ould tx' Tech and TCI'. , _ . The R azn rb ack s’ top man is Sen- „ „ Boyer. Boyer, Baylor, with a 2-2 conference - t h o record, doesn't appear te r io u s c h a lle n g e r although did hand SMU a loss . . R ice. doesn't seem to poise a great threat, but the O w ls can be mighty tough in Houston They might also in the conference be the sp o ilers t o m s Texas AAM, SM U. and Arkansas nil have good shots nt en terin g the Conference throne room. The rest of the , , , * t% * Severa! persons have already . oJ.4 I >oni«s Af CM! counted the P o n ies of SM U out But we sa w the P on ies drop the A ggies and last S atu rd ay then night, n fier a tw o w e ek la y o ff for exam s, th ey c irre ha< k m d put on • fan tastic t h o ' ng sp re e on ly to 1 ai‘* Jose a h e a rtb rea k er to the m uch ta ile r O k lah om a City U n iv e r sity C hiefs Arkansas' other is renior center Jim Wilson with a 10 8 average. top scorer Individual stars are rare on the Horn squad as Coach Harold Bradley has used quite a few p la y ­ ers this season. J im m y Gilbert is in eon- Ute leading Texas scorer . ferem e piav with a 12-point aver- age But center Mike Hum phrey is averaging l l 5 points and is look­ ing better each time out. , r 1 Sophomore center-forward John good and .spurts an 8 5 a v e r a g e . '’®s a ls® looked very Another Sophom ore, L a r r y F ran ks has done so m e f.n e w ork for the Longhorn*. SMU wns red-hot from both the field and the charity stripe as they ita y ed with the Chiefs until their two "btg men*’ leM the gam e he- cd a good shooting eve causa of fouls. Texas certainly Joe F isher is the teams* second leading rebounder and has devek-p- is the team to But still, the most serious threat heat st this sta jr of the ,«< ramble to the Steers w .ll probably tie from and a win next Tuesday at College Station over the Agg.es could f • m- their age-old rivals AAM the S’eers rn firs’ iy entrench r ference s be«t outs de shooters in place But tile Cadets have a Junior guard Bennie Lrrnox and wanning »trtak a* home and are a ftna equaliser in 6 >: -enter Jerry going t. W .ndham . Tha Aggies have one of the e m- tough bur ch to be a bandie. REX W ILSON . r e e d y f o r a c t i o n DAILY TEXAN Classified Ads GR 1-5244 Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartm ents R oom s for Rent Typing $150 P re fer I per i D >5 GR 2 5212 SHO AI .i APAR I'M EN T S RI TSH - 04 Leon in hones that the "A N T E D MALE ROOMMATE in n s na to *hare Eve room furnished apart- men! 127.y> monthly, utilities paid. -------- and ~ * “ (,R 4 'An>>'------ — ★ A ir C o nditio ned ★ Utilities Furnished BEST DEAL IN ENFIELD ★ M j c ed C o u p 'e s An o u tstan d in g d ash field has rn form er se t by heon axsem hlod neen a ssp m o ien 6 0 w orld m ark Longhorn R alp h A! spa ugh N orth east L ou isian a State s D a v e Styron w ill go by the w a y sid e B oyd T i m m o n s , U n iv e r sity of H ouston sop h om ore, w h o vias third last y e a r and cop p ed the sprint in H ou ston 's r ec en t G ulf C oast F ed eration m e e t, w ill he the fa v ­ orite. He w ill g e t stron g c o m p e ti­ tion from ACC s D en n is R ichard- on, 1961 T e x a s R e la y s IOO yard dash ch a m p , S M U ’* B illy F oster. »nd O k lah om a's O lym p ian Anthony W atson Senior B ubba Jon es and Sophom ore B ob Crou< h w ill handle the du ties for T e x a s. W atson. NCAA ch a m p and 196o O lym p ic T eam m e m b er , w ill battle M cM urry s ju m p in g b e a n , B ill M il­ er in one of the night s spotlight e v en ts M iller w a s T exas. K an sas, and D rak* R e la y s broad jum p ch am p ion last se a so n Tftre# 15-foot p e e v a u lte rs w ill com pere in th e u n der-ihe-roof c a r ­ nival. R i c e s F red H anson and W arren B r a ’loff and T ex a s Steve G uyne* wall be the ones nr .st vvatrhed. but AAM * L ouis P oland ,.nd A O ' s B illy P e m e lto n could Mirprise. D ie 300 yard d ash 'ju st over •wo laps around the board o v a l' wall he a h otly c o n tested battle a m o n g som e < u m onth O w n er pay* w ater A- gas Se/* m a n a g e r a* A p artm en t H or call OL 3-3973 o r GR 6-4143. student* o r coup e R e c r.k- po/ Id* « FURNISHED LOWER FLO< d : r I - ir g e I iv cg pi ■cm r TXI R O ne or ATT EC APARTMENT** 2511 Peer' n m en * tu d en ts E fficien- ro n d t inned Je n k in a-—o ffi e air re n tra ! r $■* per m onth Ca GR S-1621 or v s t a t n gh* heat 165 00 DARLING O N E bedroom * ?* “ - merit a u to m a '.'' heat A C <-urta na, B ce ■ fu rn ish ed vs a; k CT Hee ■ ate » 17 A Red R iver GE 2-5519. GR 2- 0662 TARRYTOtVN T R A U T IVE cloned* AT- F U R N IS H E D . o tta g f. . I*:.v at- Mature , , o r ‘VaVic* 1> 6 r n "g*. 5296 i or appointm tat v» • HO 5- T.ARTE DOW NSTAIRS two bed­ turn shed apartm ent. Titre* from U niversity room bIocK* Seton Ho*pit*: On bi * I ne street p ark in g distal) e •ch/v i r t m 7-4471. I IV OO m onth P riv a te W alking pp ng h s v a il GR l* block off- h Rule Change May Eliminate Safety MIAMI BLACH H a F- A p r o pused rule ch a n g e w h ich would i elim inate the possibility of a safe- ty being scored on a penalty was _ UM ed WedBMday by the N ktlm al WJ F'ootball L eagu e. Act.on cm th'* p r o tx sa ! wag post­ spring le«igue s the poned until m eeting. It grew out of * D a lla s-P itts- that P itts­ la s t fall burgh g a m e burgh won 30-28 on a ‘•afetv The pro;- -ed c h a n g e w ould enf r c e a penalty attains* d e fe n siv e team at the me of s c r im m a g e instead of in the pnd zone for an au tom atic sa fet v 1932-B SAN ANTONIO I A 4 e r Living-bedroo n d net*/- KC pr vale h a th - thO”-er He: A wood beds A ir cond.t oned Water-gas pa d $60.00 or ------ ------------------ the ^ a'aofl7° °° !° r ° n* GR .ew ­ i m End zone p e n a lties again st defensive team now are enforced — — from th* spot of the foul A proposal w a s d efea ted that w ould h a v e p er m itte d th e clock to nan in of injur­ play ed its leg a l tim es out the even if a p la y e r w a s if a team e x h a u sted tw o minu*c apartment VU© a ttra c tiv e !) fu rn is fo r gentlem an. P riv a te bath. ca rp e te d .er.cy epic entrance. Ca.l a: :92 Speed vay GR 7-68'. s . ____ The leagu e adop ted one change SPACIOUS COTT \G E O M bedroom 9 , " V m * W h . n*R . . It w ill provide m ore room for a ^ kick in g team to o p e r a te deep in its 2-2:53 ow n territory. “ “ TTie lea g u e a lso voted to renew the annual P la y o ff B ow l g a m e i>e- tw een the runner-up te a m s of the H aktem and W estern C on efren ccs. The the M iam i is p layed the w eek O range Bowl, after the ch a m p io n sh ip gam e. tilt, p layed in air central T W .) BEDROOMS eonditinnm g-heat f u n s ied. VS b ik­ ing dis ta ne* U niversity. Clean, quiet all u tilities paid C ouples <$3 20 00 3 Students (Maid Service1 $14o JO GL 3-7422 • BUY Y O U R B O O K S EARLY SAVE 40% PUIS YOUR [Y lR R t m K R A H HEMPHILL'S D I i e B r a e ! u r n N O W L E A S I N G ate' n s ancress of d V - ; r 'o n 3401-11 speedway • B e a u t.fu lly fu rn .s h e d • A ir conditioned • .S-.Grrming pool • I and 2 bedroom s • $115 and $135 O ne u n fu rn ish ed a p a r t n en t ava.;abi* T h e B ra e b u rn c a 'e rs to ' oung m arried* an d ad u lts 25 ‘ ea-x an d older, l o r an ex p erien ce in gracious a p a rtm e n t living see -euRRRison- unison PtflRSOB REAUrORiT a w ut. iv 0 * 2-UCD COLLEGE r-& r COURT C4M°U5. APARTMENTS ♦ Dan'sh M o d e ”' Furnitur* ♦ Graduate Students $1 17.50 M o. B s P H 3 0 0 1 - 0 7 Du va H a r r i s o a - W e 3 rS09 305 VZ. 6*h Streef G R 2 6 2 0 T H R E E L O C A T IO N S a p a r tm e n t 5119 00. o r A l lev* w ith larg e, fu rn is h e d , o r e TR 1 W est -6 b d 1 b edroom paid lease 1212 W est 13 v erv nD e fu rn is h e d one bedroom a p a r ’ m en t A ir c n- d H oning and 5301 A\o~ w a te r gas p a d $-<7 OO r . e G l e o b e d ­ a t 53rd S tre e t room a^d den ho«se $ '0 00. a~ d th re e room a p a rtm e n t $50.00. W a- t>-r paid en bo n a i d b e th u n ­ fu rn ish ed . Ca . GF. 7- 79'. G R 7* 79,51 CL 2-6258 o r GF. 2-1838. t itrm o s ta t e h NU ELY FURS■ ISH ED a I con aitlo n - cd one bedrocm . slid ing g. ass Aoors. iijrp< ■ r f A •0 ra g e m a h$69 50 ency. p a r k - 2XaL t r g GR 8 8 A l M O DERN TW O BEDROOM N,- • iv fu rn ish ed N ear cam p u s 2406 R o •>inodat*a three. G L 2-1339 O rs nd* or GR 6-3-.1 ROOM AND GLASSED porcn yr .a t" bat! r sleepin g (D ra g * room share b ath one do GR S-427 VACANCIES APPRO V ED BOYS room !ng house n e a r U niversity. Al; en- -ed c r < r .n / r a l o r ir a . ti ed sit- t cg r o c - 1 w >b double 1805 P ear GR 2 -6 8 2 6 . 'a e s u n ud> nd • : EXPERIENCED Klectromatlc T - ping. i S ym bols 1 m in o r e d itin g , d is s e rta ­ reports Mr* (Enfield areal GR clo* e-in these* books tio n - Hitch!* 6-7079 t i - lr.c ie ----------------------------------------------------------- - TERM D IS S E R T A T IO N S THESES P aper* E la c tro m a tic Near C am pus. roem . one GR 2-8402 « .<• a- Ro/ : (tinned 1 < ine*s ma sh a re bat;: G abriel < BOYS C'v p r e a te h eired . $1 2696 a r pc ted. Maid .OCR E ST BEDROOM , m n- st c.e 4 f ) el double. H I 4- service $2 ert* quid d en t bus- en t ran ee ca rage stu d e n t. USU San 6-3368 :S w ith b ath ROO It e Air i-ondit oned-stean (IR * 1.391 V Pvt 29th. W A N T E D — T Y PIN G R EA SO N A B LE ra te s GL 3-3925. M rs G eorge R ob ­ D IS SE R T A T IO N S T H V S G S P O R T S R E - Sv rn bol* fo r lan ­ *<<,encp* m a th e m a 'i/- en g in e e rin g g u ag e accents. G reek Ca , GR 2-9617. IHM Sen lr T H E S E S R E P O R T S REASON A B L E E ifc tro m a tir Mr* B a d ’. 2317 Oid- ham GR 2-47X5 P R IV A T E Rc» M Double— $25 * r OR men. $27 5 2710 W hit.*. GR 2- 0952 C O LLEG E HOUSE 2505 P. o G rande Open; n gs double roof from Un vi p ark in g nr L inen - op- call G R 7 •in g le or hree blo/'k* off-*tre< t !■ sho'.vrrs. in fo rm atio n W ilkinson. Mr, u t ’ ag 2416 SAN ANTONIO N ■•/• roo--* f " q »• ties paid. $35 •> tor o n - tw o GR 6-3720 nr GR 8-808" r en f■:rr.:sh**d IJt.fi - SS’J.OO for DOR'BLE P.' R M S FOP m en / r ron- d • oned Ma d serv. * L n am bree p a rk .n * GR 7-0501 3 4 F a it 30th SIN G L E ROOM Q U IRT study. a ell fu rn is h e d B reak fast r - ■ leg-* Sh a r - b a th on* stu d e n t. $25 > GR 2-4 21. for SU- IL E S $28 ’n $35 R> f sn shed. Q u.et D oubles $«r’ OO. 15 P a r k Place. GR 2-0558 T RAVIS ARMS 2" A NNP-es ,R 2-2-97 ng t r th e ma ie An proved dorm stu d e n t Be*' value on ca m p u s— $2') 'JO, Se* fo r % ourself Da. Ma.1 Ser M VIT: S T U D E N T bath, Quiet. A d istan c e Un!v a n ity . •IR 2-6090 P r a 'e en tra n c e Maid W alk ng Call GR 2-"105 or G IR L S ROOMS loge*. Close WITH $25 >• loc* Col /rado. * -063* VIRGINIA CALHOUN LEGAL T Y P LNG SER V IC E Prof**s Iona! ty p in g Sym bol* pnoto copv P a r k P lace a t T ow ne* Hall. a Reid* notarv Off 295 4 B - a n r a ijR 8-2636 T Y PIN G PIC K -U P f jrn isn nap/ ; a r t N eat w ork GL 3-5ohi an d d eliv ery I room N e* IEM . SH O RT ON T Y PIN (» Miss G rah am C L 3-5725 tim * and m oney7 T Y PIN G - LOW RAT ITS S a tilla ‘ - n g ,.aran tn cd GL 3-5124 M rs T ul a* co m plete MARTHA ANN ZIV LEY U B A p ro fessio n al R ping A / f service U niv ersity student* S p r n ke - board lan gu ag e science, and e n g in e e rin g th eses a n a d isse rta tio n s e q u ip m en t th e needs tailo re d fo r to P hone GR 2-3210 A GR 2-7677 3013>, G U A D A LU PE SYMBOL E Q U IP P E D IBM E 'b * r i e '" v ed R eaaonabl*. These* ’ Ions R e p o ru - M rs De B utts GR 8-3298. a I > »*erta- field s Close rn b> experienced e ie < tro m at|e X U L SE S D IS S E R T A T IO N S ^ R ep ort* tv n .s t RFA g rad u ate M rs G oodw in C k 3- 2029 Q o s* to cam pus. PR O F E S SIO N A L T Y PIN G SER V IC E. re p o rts Eie^- m achines. T a rry to w n area. GR d v sertatlon* These* t r 7-2614. IBM ACCURATE B E A U T IF U L TY PIN , - LAW W ORK P h o to - COP e* sarvico. GR K erry co nscientio u s e le tr o m a tlc S P E C IA L IS T C ourteous, 8-TOTS D E L A F IE L D T Y P IN G G ram m ar sp ellin g 30c co rre ctio n PA G E. H I ROOM IN' O,A RA v at# e n tra n c e NY ■ •* (IR 6-5T.VI rm sh e d $3o ■“nt P ri- I-arce 6-4435. bat h GR 421’. PR O FE SSIO N A L IBM. (.e n e rsi. T Y PIN G . LEG A !^ H I 3- L o.* K .nse- T H E MOON L IG H T E R S — I B M M . 't - Itthing A f'er 6 OO and w eek end s 3-1535 3217 Marg u er te C este . . 0 GR H am p to n Road Special Notices R oom and Board D BOARD tw o I U napproved, a • per m onth. A. ■ en H ouse A pp.s a n A n to n .o. locks fm c o n d .Hoi ;o v* a r M rs. Bov M ' • D HOARD- H ud so n H ouse GR 8 7659 a - cond it mer! S T A F F M EM BER W IL L sh a re T a rry - sta ff or or n ho;; •• w *h w om an stu d e n t. 85747 i,R t APPLY cd for \ ' g- id ;.a lc GR 8-4291 W est 'prine m onth GR x. AR se B E I N G s t e r ep re* d helem e Co-op, 30 T A L APAR I'M RN * s. One and NEV. U LTRAM ODERN C O N T IN E N ­ tw o • r c o n d itio n ­ id to M em orial b edroom u n its C entra ing Pool $115 IO-S165.00 M anor R a' O ldham (3 block* S tad iu m 1 i.R 8-1362 l.R 8-867 A M USI on th e w a y to th e s u m - • D riftw ood A p a rtm e n t-. 22*2 E nfield R oad GR 8 7 '9 8 $65 X) BiLT-S i o m fo r'a b e PA ID I r a n one bedroom apartm ent Wa. * to c.a>s GR 2-0952 or u L 2-2519. b<.d •. - Ing P .r'rig - " r a 'o r P hone Lrfn ' dr-, facilitie s. N e a r U niversity. GR 2-251- L i m i t e d - t h r e e s ~g!e* H AVE LOST MY v. e fu rn ish ed a p a r tm e n t a t 1911 a ro o m m a te w ell N u t r a . GR 7-28" GR 6-3S37. Rooms for Rent p e a c e f o r 2165 T W O stu d e n ts GR 2- N IC E Q U IE T •tu d e n t $3f BEDROOM i.R 2-8739 I fo r m an DOI B LE ROOM FO R r e " A lso va c a n c ' in la rg e do u b le room >, block a r . pus. GR 7-535* 2612 V\ ichita O N E BLOCK LAW SCHOO L U n u su ally q u .et, a r co n d itio n ed c e n tra l heat ■ a rp e te d is a good dea fo r som eone w ho w a n ts a q u ie t place to stu d y . Off s tre e t p a rk in g av ailab .e $45 iv* See a t 2407 S abine J M R ow ley. GR 8-0635 GL 2-4.HS8 n ig h ts r h is U N IV E R S IT Y BOYS k itch en F u rr, shed rom s C a rp e ts d ra p e r- iea " e s N ear U ni­ v e rsity . In q u ire m a n a g e r 702 W est 2 1 s t fa Board >r da $ ■ 5 0 nor r $40 OO per d a \ . T h/ 22rd G it 81 2 3 A p a r tm e n t s — Unfurnished HONEYM OON C O T T A G E PR IV A T F On" bedroom b att An pie cl •'-"ti 6 6 " '/- s t 31st $55 » La gh GR 2-6143 "^iled k itch en a r . " ’ ’ N F ’ RN LSH ED S T ” DIO m en! $8 1 .0CV~b.il* p aid N < in c re.tm . w o o d -b u rn in g f ire ; a e bedroom Block w est E n field pool an d t e n t 1 :r*s F' \ e rn c u te s to : T P e^t* a1 befn re 12 OO or a f 'e r 3 »■. i.R k itch en an d ha' sria ! 2 5336. H o u s e s — Furnished Air «-o n d it!o n e d Livxng 2418 SAN A N TO N IO >, block cam pus, room d in ­ th r e e bedroom s ing and b ath , $110 * GR 6-372.1 o r GP­ S-8 87 room , k itch en , $89 5 D A R LIN G T W 1 be .room. . ; • L iv in g room ‘ real firep lace * d in in g room , k itc n e n . tw o bedroom s an d bath furnace refrigerator w ith f r e e ? /r , w asher c u r ta in s < lean. C ouple. G R 2-m.*‘:2 Cl. 2-3519 a r co n d itio n ed For Sale W agon 8 P A S S E N G E R P LYM I960 G olden C om m a/ e v e r • - .. a . - . ■ P w e t .4 c o n d i t i o n Cs. GLe.nda . . 4!" tn d itio n ed c e ) S e n ' a - $17;* ra d it O L IV E T T I L E T T E R E R 22 porn a I * t\p ew r;ter. P e rfe c t co n d itio n . GL 3- 2649. H IL L M A N M IN X s ta tio n w agon 195? co n ditio n ex cellen t tire s $650.00. GR 7-*98T3. 397-C E x tra clean W W D eep E ddy. W a n t e d W IL L F U R N IS H A P A R T M E N T and u t I life* tin g le V D raw er D-1 fre e fo r u pper 'as-; a" ng *0 m anage b o '* house I niver* I S tatio n Air conditioned for men now available for spring sem ester. room s Nurseries Porter service and grill. Just across from campus. ROBERT E, L E E HALL 101 W est 21st GR 7-0233 LULLABY N U R SERY FO R L oving c a re fo r infant* in fan ts tw o week* to tw o y ears L icense GL 2-6293. Alterations G IR L S ROOMS " I T H k itch en p riv i­ lege* { a tv e r tlty approved 2401 Rio G r a n d e Mr- L a n d r u m H k m a n G R 2-5583 Mrs. Ct .a C ooper G R 7-2331 ALTI R A T IO N S DRESSM A K IN G R E W EAVING on m oth c ic a r e tte h o i'* At M onogram m ing r e a * o n a b i # r a t e s 9o3 VV e st 22'-, G R V 7736 Ladies g en ts IDEAL SITE LAKE AUSTIN e aly GR 89096 five >-■ * te est a t ■ ne five »#- I ’ ;a*f *h-. < eve! arr»‘S. - ad e l. p,e b o a' b erths Iso. F’av • m ent A i l e r m a H I 3- g a rd e n spana ’■■a fo*>' Booi(b:nding ■e—» U s - ria on* R ep o rts lou.-ra * t ..sto o l B ind in g s UNIVERSITY c r n ; D v w 'w ' I- I N U C A J ' 9* n s - r e " a r e d So uth G R 2 - 9 8 0 3 Spec al Services “ ~ FREE WAKE UP SERVICE r e - r t v s P c R( a a s b T elevision R ental G R 2-2692 a a h a RETOU' P assp o r o r pr; I^nw* pr CP. 2-4! [LD 'O B PH O T O S 24 h o u rs fo r proof* s c ' ud o (j m er* Miscellaneous BALLR im D A N C IN G GLASSES no w b e;r,s form ed L im it ten couple* p er ' cia-vs Call Don H ash em ed L im it te C L i-7938 IRONING Ironing F IR S T CLASS verv e JA *2 Lax* A'oat in Blvd. Mr*. H erm an GR 7-1774 Ironing Printing X erox.nx Muitlilthing Mimeographing The*** — Papers — Printing AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS 400 East U th Phan* GR 88583 H e lp W a n t e d in e\< b an g e fo r c a rd w ork HI 2 -3 :'J ROOM W IT H P R IV A T E e n tra n c e Mrs D ar. n g to n UU " e s t A p r< I ARN a T R I P TO E u ro p e by r-pr* se n ' n e U n iv e rsity T o u rs fo r J . co,,eg* le a d e r '* W rit* to Dr B Ada - Ba to r . niv eralty . " a* co T exas WI ICH • It I < ' 11 j ‘ 1 1 1 1 means a l « ) l . . . r> more body in the blend more flavor in the smoke c u d more taste through the filter I fs the rich-flmvor leaf that does ill Among L&M’s choice tobaccos there’s more longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. And L&M's filter is the modern filter—all white, inside and outside—so only pure white touches your lips. L&M's the filter cigarette fo r people who really like to smoke. T h e H a h a T e x a n Amusements Follow That Alligator! The producer* of this potpourri of paleozoic peril ere to be com ­ together mended f o r piecing these bitt to give us a look at what kept mom and dad squirm­ ing In the movies all day Satur­ day. We are able to both laugh tile at stylized production and respect the movie founders’ learning and development. the melodrama a n d A nd y ou should n o t b e a sh a m e d in watching the pursuits in if, “The Great Chase,” you occasion­ ally forget to laugh and find your­ self—-like mom and dad—chewing your popcorn a little faster. I feel I must w a r n you lo come only a t the exact moment tile feature begins. The Texas has exhumed a short subject to precede It that Is guaranteed to than empty sulphur dioxide. theater faster the CONVENIENT 'Angel' Cast Readies ette University of T exas De­ partm ent of D ram a has announc­ ed the company of third production of Its 25th anniver­ the sary season. The play, “ Look Homeward, Angel,” under the direction of Ja m e s Moil, associ­ ate professor of dram a, will be presented Feb. 20-28 in Hogg Au­ ditorium. ‘‘Look Homeward, An­ g el” Is an adaptation by Kit ti Flin gs of die Thomas Wolfe nov­ el. son, George Morris, Judy Shaffer, and Freddie Good son. is The stage manager for the pro­ Judith Burke. The duction building crew includes Alicia An­ nas. Robert McMahon, Heather M cFarlin, Joe Luther, Ruth Deas- on, and Janene Bohanon. Prop crew members are Nan­ cy Maurer, Ann Weynand, E l­ len Deacon, Dlantha Davis, and Lynn Greetiburg. Paint crew In­ cludes Bennett Averyt, Carloyn Moritz, Linda Hay Fisher, Judy Short, and Ginger Benedict. Members of the cast include Light crew members are B arb ­ Jones, R ay Hood, Dwane a ra Brown, Gary Gipson, and Carol Cha po. Run of the show crew in­ cludes Bill Hooper, Jack Stewart, Ilameta C arr, George Morris, Lynn Chadwick, and Suzie Falk. Costume crew members are Dal­ las B axter, Vivian Rosales, Sean Powers, Maureen McIntyre, Elo- ise Kraem er, and Jam es Hender­ son. Reservations for the show may be made at the Fine Arts Box Office beginning Monday, Feb. 4. Admission is 75 cents for students and $1 for adults. Mike Wheeler as Ben; Helen P er­ ry as Helen; Barrie Teague as E liza; Jim McQueen as Gene; R ay Pond as W. C. G ant; and Su­ zanne Martin as Laura. Other members of the cast are Karen Offer, L a rry Geddie, Bill Fowler. B ill Hooper. Donna Atkinson, lla- m eta C a rr Lynn Chadwick. Ja c k Stewart, Suzie Falk, Bob Thomp- v < v ■ - .J ? KUT Looking for Announcers K 1 T F M , the University's ©d- ucational radio station, will hold auditions Saturday at IO a.m . in the KLT-FM studios, Journal­ ism Building 212. Bernard C rocker, station man- ager, Jam es Mahoney, program director, and John Thompson, chief announcer, will supervise the auditions. Auditions will be held for an- nouncer-englneers and other sta­ tion positions. All interested stu­ dents are Invited to attend. t e e h ew c a m u s old w orld nite club j; r n t a r t n r o m a n t i c — e n c h a n t i n g F aurin x E R S IE M A E M ILLER at the piano in the Creole Room FRI. & SA T . F O R D A N C I N G ER B :E B O W S E R A N D T H E N E W O R L E A N S P L A Y B O Y S " S W I N G A N D T W IS T M U S I C " O p e n Daily 7 p.m. 1125 Red River Phone G R 8-0292 IN ALL OF MANKIND’S DAYS ON EARTH ... NO SIN OR SPECTACLE TO EQUAL IT! B A SIL S ID N E Y and Dorothy Turin are pictured in a scene from "A n tigo ne , ' the Jean Anouilh dram a to be televised Friday at 8 p.m. on K LR N -T V , Channel 9. Williams to Lead Symphony IN ME R S ON - * c Toter, and cfliary the San Antonio conductor of Symphony Orchestra In Its sub­ scription concert Saturday even­ ing, Feb. 9 in San Antonio’s Mu­ nicipal Auditorium. Williams will conduct his own work, “Festi­ val,” as the overture to the con­ cert. The San Antonio orchestra presented the premiere of “ Fes- th a i,” also under the composer’s baton, in November, 3961. Williams has appeared as guest conductor of the San Antonio Sym­ phony in performances of three of his OUT! works, for a total of twen­ ty-three appearances. On the Sym­ phony's west coast tour in Janu- t-y, Williams conducted eight per­ alternating between formances, "F estiv al” and his m arch from ‘Symphonic Suite ” Lehman Scripts Donated to HRC One of Hollywood's most suc­ cessful screenwriters. Ernest lehm an, has p r e s e n t e d his scripts and associated source material to the Tnt versify of Texas Humanities Research ( en­ ter. The papers will enable scholars to trace the development of film Inception; projects ’hrough first notes outlines and from their drafts, and over many revisions to their final form. I,ehmnn s writ­ ten commentary on documents enhances the;- value the various Lehman, who ha* wm Acad emy Awards and other prize* for hi* movie scripts, wrote the for “ W e a t Side screenplays the T errace,” Story',” “ North by Northwest,” “ Sweet Smell of Success,” “ Somebody I p There Uke* Me,” “ The king and I.” “ Sabrina” and “ Fxeeu tive Suite.” "F ro m Clifton Williams, composer and faculty Department of Music member, will appear as guest R E N T T A P E R E C O R D E R S $12 M O . Spring Semester For $39. 2234 G uad alup e G R 6-3525 L W E D . FEB. 20 M U N I C I P A L A U D IT O R IU M $ 1.95 - 2.90 - 3 95 M a il O rder: En­ close *e!f addressed, d a m p e n envelope with check or m oney order to: "Peter, Paul A M a r y " P. O Bo* 420, Austin, Ten.; Tickets on sale at Hem phill s Book Store No. 2 2501 G uad alup e ; Bloom- quist-Clark 617 C o n g re ss Ava. ATTENTION FACULTY: The CLU B C A R A V A N is Now Serving Lunches from Noon. r - FULL RESTAURANT SELECTION AT RESTAURANT PRICES Dine Leisurely or Speedily in the Plush Atm osphere of the CLI C ctra v a il Austin's Exclusive Dinner Club A t the Villa Capri Hotel A ROARING CAVALCADE of the Screen's Mightiest Thrills! From 60 Years of Great Movie C h a se s ... Here are the — (JRWiu M ost Action Packed ■. of Them All! ” ! •av la w va w m m ««avrr MTT' rn * TU U U ! {USE HEATON ( TAIWAN AS, Sr ( M A R I j G I S N F U R T H U T O R N O T O S KF . A M I K O K T H U A O I NO I N H F . A B T T O B t M F M H F B : l e a t . : 2 : 4 0 - 4 : 3 0 - 6 : 2 0 - 8 : 1 0 - 1 0 . 0 0 Defiuxtod O R I V E - I N T H E A T R E 3901 Last In B O X O U K H K. O I ’ ! N S 7 OO KII>S I NOK Ii It I RIF GIRLS! GIRLS GIRLS! F H I * P r wa l e v — S t e l l a S t e v e n * S t a r t * 7 OO — p lu *— MYSTERIOUS ISLAND .Michael Oui* — .loan (Irrenwnod Start* 8 15 B O X O I KH K O P E N S 6 OO A D M I S S I O N 70. K I D S I N D F R I t F R E E W hat Ever Happened to Baby Jane? B e t t e 1 D » * i » — . l o a n C r a w f o r d S t a r t * 7 OO — p i n * — S A M A R G e o r g e M o n t e o m e r v — . l o a n O ’ B r i e n S t a r t * 0 75 O P E N « P . M . • F I R S T S H O W 6 30 6 4 0 0 B l B N K T R O A D S A K E I M A K H E A T E R S E N T E R T A I.X M E N T ( . I A R A M K K D : j.Girls! iris! Girls! v * TKWtCOLOP Color by D ELU XE ’ C T , LOTS WIFE TURNS INTO A PILLAR OF SALTI STARRING STEWART GRANGER PIERANGELI • STANLEY BAKER ROSSANA PODESTA • ANOUK AIMEE S T A R T S T O D A Y FEA T U R ES 12:17 - 3:12 - 6:07 - 9:02 P A R A M O U N T C H IL D .25J M D C .50 A D U L T S 1.00 F E A T I B E S I t 05-2:30-4 SS I IO 9 45 N O W . . A O D A MOTION PICTURE TO T H E WONDERS OF T H E W 0 R 1 0 I mm_ C U R T IS M E R A D I'!.T S I OO A W U 7 MltVISttl EASTMANCOLOR wmSwSa XI D C 5 0 C H I L D .35 S T A R T S T O D A Y ! I i - at ur * - * 2 4- 6- 8 IO Held Over! 2nd Big Week E N T E R T A I N VI I X i «.« A R A N T ! . ! I) B y J E F F MILLAR “Th* G reat Chase,” now play­ ing a t the Texan Theater, la of laughs. It course, mostly f o r provides a goodly amount of these, for we are always able to get a chuckle or two out of lack of the quaint sophistication of our elders. taste and At the same time, to anyone in­ terested in the history of the mo­ tion picture industry, it offers a fascinating the develop­ look at ment of many of the cinema tech­ niques that raised the motion pic­ ture from a vaudeville novelty bit to the (occasional) art form it is today. In the first movie that told a story, “The Great Train Rob­ bery,” we see the movie people learning about editing, and In an early D. W. Griffith picture, suspense how to h e i g h t e n through skillful rutting. As the movies became b I g business, simple suspense became more elaborate, and. In the days when California was mostly e m p t y space and production costs were low, more spectacular. It is easy to laugh at the gothic horrors to which ihe serial hero­ ines were subjected, but it should be remembered that back in the days when movies were young, whatever was put on the sr-rem t h e enraptured audience before was believed. Tile explorer caught in a slithering sea of alligators is 'em hilarious spilling their Cracker Jack back in 1920. today, but it had Come t Sing Along With The Banjo Band at the DELTA austin’* dixie cabaret 3405 GUADALUPE O P E N S AT 7:30 P.M. CHARTERED EXCURSIO N BUSES • Parties • Field Trips • Retreats Buses available with rest rooms aboard, turn around seats and card tables tor your enjoyment while traveling. All buses air conditioned. Xerrville Bus Co. G R 8-9361 Buy One DeliciI C I O U S i r p iz z a And G et One FREE! Plus— ‘‘BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S” Al DREY REPH I R N — IN CO I.OR—OKO ROK PEPPARD CAPITOL ST A R T S T O D A Y ! D O O R S O P E N I 1:45 Two of Your Favorites! 'Eve and the Handyman" S T A R R IN G A N T H O N Y J A M E S R Y A N Plus! Thru Sunday, February 3 AT R O M E INN 2900 R IO G R A N D E O PEN AT 4:00 P.M. M O N .-SU N . GIGOT f i / M f e e>: a. K A T H E R I N E K A T H ‘mw of D obu ijtU u", ode ) CALPURNIA, HERE I COME Now , aa the college y ear approach es its m id -p oint, on# f a d em erges clea rly ; you are all g u n g to flunk e v ery th in g There are two things you can do aliout it. f irst, you can marry money. (I don’t mean you marrv the money vt*elf. I mean you marry a perton who ha* money. Weddings lie tween tieople and currency have not been legal anywhere in the I nited M ate* erne* the Sm oot-Hawley Aet. M arlboro Cigarettes on the other hand, are legal everywhere and are. indeed, smoked with grunt pleasure and enthusiasm in all fifty states of the I aion I brmg up Marlboro Cigarettes because th « column is sponsored by th** maker* of Mart boro, and they are inclined to brood if I omit to mention their product ) B u t I digress I was saving you can m arrv m oney la it, al co u rse, you will not lieeause you are a higlvHsunded. clean­ living, p u re-h earted , freck le-fared A m erican k»re you could sa y p rrra ferliler, in rushed the Goths, the Visigoths, and th e Green Hay P a c k e r s ') Well nr. that's the way the empire crumbles, and I <1,gross. l e t ’* abo say a word about T e t '* get back to lecture note* Marltxuro Cigarettes. The makers would Ik* no pleased! And is it not fitting that we should plea**? these honest tobacconist* — ther-e fine men, fond of square dancing, waler sfiort*. protein, these tireless p erfectio n ist* who spend all of their and tattoos day* trying to p ie s** us searchin g everyw here for the l>est of all possible to lia cco s, aging them w ith p a tien ce, blending them with tender, loving ca re ? M arllioroe are a v a ila b le in so ft pack and flip top box. You will find X X cig a re ttes in each package. C I MS M u Shul a a # • a • Mar thor urn am o, Tom M arlborum am at, Dick M arlborum arnut, Harry M arlborum am at, J u n e M arlborum amat, Joan M arlborum amat. Jea n M arlborum am at, Ja n e Marl• borum am at, quique M arlborum am ant — et M arlborum q u o q u e a m a b i t i t . Historian Dr. Perkins Tapes Fourth Lecture in TV Series Thursday, January 31. 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 7 By H E L E N Y E N N E W herever historian D exter Per- i»!«* «tw>nt during s. recent three- day v isit to the U niversity he left behind a trial of lucid com m ents on everything from the Monroe D octrine to M assachusetts politics. He is an authority on the form er and an observer of the latter. "T h e Monroe D octrine Is rn great phrase to rally A m erican public opinion around, but not a good one to use historically. It doesn’t add a thing to a diplom a­ tic argum ent,** Perkins said. As fo r politics in the B ay S tate, he thinks th e situ atio n is d e p l o r ­ a b le. At th e s a m e tim e D r. P e r ­ kins is unw illing to ju d g e th e new S en a to r from M a s sa c h u se tts, E d ­ w a rd (T ed) M. K ennedy, u ntil the ju n io r S e n ato r h a s h a d an op­ p o rtu n ity to p ro v e w h a t he c an do. th re e to ta p e T h ese w e re m e re ly tw o of m an y p ro v o cativ e opinions ad v a n c e d by D r. P e rk in s d u rin g his v isit to the U n iv e rsity le c tu re s for th e tele v isio n co u rse, "T o p ics in A m e ric a n C ivilization.” T h ? co u rse th e d irectio n of D r. W a lte r P re s c o tt W ebb, p r o - ' 1 frsso r of h iso ry , w ho h a s invited ’ a long list of o u tsta n d in g h is to r­ ians to the c a m p u s to reco rd th e ir; i view s of h is to ry fo r g e n e ra tio n s of fu tu re stu d e n ts w ho would other- i w ise know th em only thro u g h te x t­ is u n d e r books. Previous historians participat­ ing In the course have Included Professor* Arnold Toynbee, Al­ lan Nevils*, and Sam uel F lagg Hernia. P ro fe sso r Bomi* and D r. P r r - ! kin's a re frien d s although they do not a lw ay s s h a re the sa m e view of history’. Inuring a v isit to the J a n u a r y , D r. Bemix cam p u s said the U n i t e d S tates is now forced to defend a fourth cold w a r ! front the C a rib b e a n . He contend­ ed th a t the U nited S tates w as a l­ re a d y f u l l y occupied defending fro n ts on th e A tlan tic, P acific and A rctic O ceans. in Cotton W ool Pull Peopl e Scorn Over Eyes E L PASO UP — G re a te r ef­ fo rts to p ro m o te cotton and c u rb u n fa ir c o m p etitio n and d e ce p tiv e a d v e rtisin g a re urg- ed by th e N atio n al Cotton Council. R epresenting; all p h a se s of industry’, 1.100 d eleg a tes th e adopted resolutions s t a t i n g th e se a n d o th e r a im s before closing th e ir a n n u al m eetin g T u esd ay . T hey elec ted R o b ert C oker of H a rtsv ille , S. C . to su c ceed B u rris Ja c k so n of H illsboro, Tov , council p resid e n t. Ja c k s o n w a s n a m e d c h a ir­ m an . a s •29 t o *45 IN IOT Y f U O W . *50 •34 TO IN tor W H IT E G O iD . et>CH e tui t i * A FULL YEAR TO PAY! 2236 Guadalupe A M A Z IN G VALUE D IA M O N D S IN I OP PINGS. I OK GOLD, STARTING AT JUST *7R°° UI INCLUDED A YEAR TO PATI ■ Z A L E 'S ■ R " ” " ’ * > * t -5 f : — O n Th* Drag DINING OUT?... TRY A N Y ONE OF AUSTIN S BIG FOUR For that Sereno atmosphere and superb authentic M exican Food. EL M AT “Home of the Crispy Tacos" EL TORRO “Austin's Original Mexican Restaurant“ 504 E. Av*. GR 7-7023 16th I Guadalupe GR 8-4321 EL CHARRO “Big Steaks— Mexican Style" MONROE S “Mexican Food to G o” 912 Red River GR 6-7735 500 E. Ave. GR 7-8747 OPEN EVERY D AY Where discriminating young women may live luxuriously and dine sumptously for LESS THAN $80.00 PER MONTH! * * * ' D r. P erkins does not go along! with his colleague s idea of a j fourth front. "Cuba is no physical danger at all to the U n i t e d S ta tes,” he photography can a s c e rta in a c c u r­ a te ly the p re se n c e of offensive weapons in C u b a .” insisted. "M o d e r n ^ He w ent on to voice his faith in the A m e ric a n p u b lic : " I t is out of tile body of th e people, in th e b ro a d e s t sense, th a t foreign p o l­ icy m ust com e. T h e im p le m e n ta ­ tion of ideas is the function of the ex e cu tiv e b ran c h of the C o n g re ss ." A prolific author, Dr. Perkins Isn’t sure of the exact number of books he has written, hut he knows which book he likes hest —"The A m erican Approach to Foreign P o 11 c y .” Ironically, is not best known in this country study of the Monroe D octrine, for that work, but rather for his originally published under t h e title, "Hands O f f.” P resently, Dr. Perkins has a new, up-to- the m i n u t e treatm ent of the Monroe D octrine due to com e out In paperback soon. D r. J . Lloyd M ccham , p ro fe sso r of g o v e rn m en t, w hose ow n book on tile s a m e su b je c t is a U n iv e r­ sity P re s s b est se lle r, a sk e d D r. thought P e rk in s h e re w h e th e r he left of the th e re w ould be m ilch M onroe D octrine if w e did not s t a r t enforcing it soon. D r. P e rk in s does not think the M onroe D o ctrin e is d ead, b u t he dries think it m ig h t be b e tte r if the US d id n 't ta lk so m uch a b o u t it. "T h e w ords ‘M onroe D o c trin e ’ a re offensive to L atin A m erican pride. F u rth e rm o re , we a r e bound not to in terv en e u n ila te ra lly in th e h e m ­ isp h ere by se v e ra l protocols and tre a tie s I^at in A m erican n e ig h b o rs o v e r the y e a rs t h e since 3 933. U n fo rtu n ately , know d o e sn 't public A m erican m uch a b o u t the protocols of Monfe- v ideo, B uenas Air es, o r the tre a t} of R io de J a n e iro .” signed w ith o u r The visiting historian Is eon vine cd, however, that if our own national security Is Involved, we lf It proves will act unilaterally Im possible cooperation to get from our hem isphere allies. A lthough D r. P e rk in s technically re tire d a de c ad e ago, he h as con­ tinued to le c tu re a n d to w rite. He holds the M ellon D istinguished P ro fe sso rsh ip a t th e U niversity of P ittsb u rg h . the course on television A m erican C ivilization D r. P e rk in s co n trib u ted th re e le c tu re s on the M onroe D octrine, foreign policy u n d e r F ra n k lin D , R/x>scvelt, and the philosophy of A m erican foreign policy. F o r in in It w as ideology’ in A m erican the la s t le c tu re t h a t he a rtic u la te d his own hopes for the fu fure in light of re c e n t c h an g ­ es the fields of foreign a ffa irs . He said : "Wa have com e to recognize m ore fully than u « have e v er recognized before that our posi­ tion In the world as a whole d e ­ pends upon the m aintenance of our physical jvower. We know that only the strong can he truly free. The avoidance of a holo­ caust depends upon the m ain­ tenance of our strength. Were we to give up. h r would prob ably have our choice between subm ission to intimidation, and resort to war under circum stan­ ce s not favorable to su c c e ss.” Designed O N L Y For COLLEGE SEN IO RS A M IC A B L E '^ COLLEGE CAREER PLAN FOR C O M P L E T E I N F O R M A T I O N C A L L GR 2-8916 CL 3-0830 R E N E ’ R A M I R E Z A M I C A B L E LIFE I N S U R A N C E CO. BUY Y O U R B O O K S E A R L Y S A V E 40% PLUS YOUR RIBAK HEMPHILL'S RENT TYPEWRITERS S T A N D A R D O R PORT. P0R £ 0 0 yLL s p r i n g SEMESTER By th# Month 6 50 WE SERVICE WE DELIVER A D D I N G M A C H IN E S ^ BY M O N T H J ’ 50 S P R I N G SEM ES TER 2234 Guadalupe G R 6-3525 FOR SPE C IA L RATE REDUCTION For Spring Semester $50°° 4 per Apt 3 per Apt. • • 2 per Apt. • • $62°° $ 7 5 0 0 LATEST ALL LUXURIOUS rjC e F o n ta in e b le a u -F p a r tm e n ls UN IVERSITY APPRO VED FO R Y O U N G LADIES 13 FU R N ISH ED A PA R T M EN T S 803 W. 28th Mid-Torm Applications Now! Information Housemother Mrs. Walters G R 2-6480 2 Bedrm. 2 Bath Liv. Rat. Kitchan I N o el Guest Lounge .. , Utilities I I Swimming Peel Maid Serv. Rd. Walk-in Closets Laundry Facilities A Storage. Provided. Private aff-street park­ ing. 4 or Fewer Per Apt. Rates: Per Person >50°° DEPOSIT Call Resident Manager . Mrs. Mahlon Walters GR 2-6480 i f * * * Cf» p t ^ * H i t e 4 louse Ss, in Awhile ! Can be S t i . Thursday, January 31, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* • BETSY B O N N IN purchases a poll ta* at the Y o u n g Dem ocrat booth located rext ‘o G re go ry G ym . Fifty such tax ng staticrs located through­ out the city will offer the p c : taxes until mid- fVaWliVi — Texan Photo— Owens night tonight. Price of the poll tax is $1.75. The Tax Assessor and C o llector's office in the county court house will remain open until 12 tonight to accom m odate latecomers. Married? Bowl at Union Penny-a-pin bowling, open to any married student, will be held from 7 to 9 p m. Friday in the games area of the Texas Union. The bowling, sponsored by the Married Students Council, will cost IO cents per game. PAY YOUR POLL TAX! Braswell's Humble Sta. 24TH ST. & RIO G R A N D E Phone GR 8-5813 / 2234 Guadalupe f im r u W r - K E N T I \ GR 6-3525 TAPE RECORDERS Dictation Machines F M -A M RADIOS PHONOGRAPHS ADDERS TUNERS T.V. TYPEWRITERS s t a n d a r d , rlis rtrio a n d p o r ta b le CALCULATORS AMPLIFIERS 90 Days Rent Applies on Its Purchase THE UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO A N D HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 B y CAROLIE BAITY Serving the University Area for 12 Years E E E ) W A V " H I G H FIDELITY A T R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S " you are a N E W STU D EN T this semester you FA ULEP to get a copy last fall! you LOST your copy during exams! High Schoolers To Get Training NSF Grant* Ruth Science Education Sixty-five secondary superior school students will get special training in mathematics and biol­ ogy at the University next sum­ mer In an effort to accelerate their educational development. The program s supported by Na­ tional Science Foundation grants totaling $18,070, are also designed to identify talented high school stu­ dents with scientific potential and to foster cooperation between uni­ versities and high schools in in­ creasing the quality of scientific education. for Deadline applications is March 15. High school students who will graduate in 1964 are pre­ ferred. Students will live in special sec­ tions of University dormitories. Limited funds for living expenses will be available to those needing financial assistance. All students will be at the Uni­ versity for six weeks, from June l l to July 21. Approximately one- half of the biology group will be selected to continue work on re­ search projects for three addition­ al weeks. Tile program s w ill offer training beyond that normally available in high school courses. The students w’ill hear lectures by University faculty members and guest speak­ ers and visit scientific laboratories. In addition, the biology students will participate in group and in­ dividual research projects super­ vised by faculty members. Additional information may be obtained from Dr. Irwin Spear, Botany Department, or Dr. II. J. Ettlinger, Mathematics Depart­ ment, University of Texas, Austin 12. Wrecks Injure 2 UT Students Brackenridge j been named. Two University students were injured in separate accidents this week. Roger Tolar, 33-year-old Univer­ sity graduate, suffered f a c i a l lacerations and a neck injury in a one-c a r turnover Wednesday morning. Hospital officials said his condition was not serious. The accident occurred on the Interregional Expressway near the north city limit. Robert Turner, University law student, was described by hospital officials as in satisfactory condi­ tion Wednesday afternoon a f t e r j being in Hospital since a one-car w r e c k Tuesday. retained Turner was treated for a frac­ tured jaw and ribs. The accident took place 6 miles west of Bas­ trop on State Highway 71 at 1 :55 a.m. Ronald Edward Luna and Turner, both of 1514 Bentwood, were in the car. Patrolm an Henry Manning investigated the accident. ★ * R O IC Program Stated S tu d e n ts who h a v e a t le a st S' i y e a rs re m a in in g a t the U n iv e r­ sity a re eligible to e n te r th e Air F o rc e KOTC p ro g ra m and u|>on com pletion of th e ir d eg re e r e ­ q u ire m e n ts, be com m issioned a s second lie u te n an ts, U apt. W. T. A dam s, a s s is ta n t p ro fesso r of a ir science, h a s announced. ta k e c o u rse s T he p ro g ra m now en a b le s th e stu d e n t to the a ca d e m ie a s w ell aa the m ilita ry field an d still ob tain his c o m ­ m ission. M inim um d e g ree c re d it is allow ed in the p ro g ra m . in In te re ste d stu d e n ts r a n obtain fu rth e r d e ta ils In R oom 115 of th e ROTC B uilding. University Given Funds Funds for graduate fellowships in geology and petroleum engi­ neering have been awarded to the University by S h e l l Companies Foundation, Inc., New York City. The petroleum engineering fel­ the lowship provides $1,800 Long Session, with additional al­ lowance f o r dependents, tuition and fees. A recipient has not yet f o r Sailer N a m ed to Board D r. Robert E . Seller, associate profeasor of accounting, has been appointed to the editorial board of the Internal Auditor, national publication of the Institute of In- tertial Auditors. D r. Seller attended the board’s sem iannual m eeting this month In Chicago. ★ Conference Picks Prof. Prof. Pierre R. Lei.se aux of the is a new University Law School t h e National Bank­ member of ruptcy Conference, law professor ever to be selected from Texas or the Southwest. the first T h e conference is a voluntary' organization composed of individ­ uals and representatives of groups interested in the improvement of bankruptcy law and practice. limited Membership in the organization is is equally to 50 and divided among attorneys, judges, anil law' professors Prof. Loiseaux, 37, is one of the Higher Peace Corps Post Given Moyers Rush Starts Saturday , The first convocation for tho IWS spring F raternity E n a h period convenes s t I p.m . Satur­ day In H ogg Auditorium, sa d all students desiring to partielpato In Rush Week activities m ast a t­ tend. * Prof to Talk in Chicago few members under the 40. He is the second Texan to be elected to membership; Elmore Whitehurst of Dallas was chosen In 1962. Before that time membership was restricted to persons from tile East Coast and California. Je rre S. Williams, professor of law, will speak on “ Rights of In­ dividual Employes in Labor Arbi­ tration Hearings” Friday in Chi­ cago, The organization was founded in the 1930’s because of dissatisfac­ tion with various group interests attempting influence amend­ lecture to ments to the National Bankruptcy Act. Since 1938 the National Bank- some 290 of the nation s leading ruptcy Conference has worked on arbitrators of labor disputes be- every amendment to the federal longing to the National Academy bankruptcy laws. Ile will deliver , of Arbitrators. the to ... UT Presents (Continued from page one) hers seemed to agree with the edu­ cators, but said the necessary hinds probably will not be avail­ able. Dr. Ransom spoke out for ‘'real­ ism ,” emphasizing that the needs of and the need for higher edu­ cation should be presented to the people. PH D ’S N E E D E D p roved facilities, Dr. Hackerm an aaid. Dr. Ransom severely questioned the current Legislative Budget Board proposal to disallow use of state funds to solicit out-of-state foundation grants. He pointed out that are many, and that state institutions will he able to realize tremendous benefits for a small expenditure of state money. the grants available Hawaii Study Available The adm inistrators related some educational needs to the demands of industry for more research. Dr. Graduating seniors with interests Smiley mentioned that estimates in Asia, in diplomatic indicate the Dallas industrial com­ teaching Asian affairs or other ca- plex will need 1,600 PhD's by 1970. j reers related to the Far Fast, may Currently apply for a 1963-64 East-West Cen- that number, he said. | ter scholarship Application dead- j line is February I, 1963. they have about half service The U niversity produces sh oat 200 P hD 's annually, sud to join other universities at the fore of education would require turning out 500 P hD ’s rn year, the sdm tn- tstrstors said. This would require a larger and m ore highly c o m ­ petent faculty mad m ore and Im- The East-West Center in Honolti- I IU offers expeme-pa d, 21-month scholarships for study at the Uni­ versity of Hawaii and in Asia j Further Information may be ob­ tained by writing to the East-West Center, Honolulu 14, Hawaii. r e p o r te r and a rad io -television w rite r, w orking full tim e aa a s­ s is ta n t new s e d ito r fo r KTBC* AM-TV in A ustin. M oyera d e c id ­ from T he ed a fte r g ra d u a tin g U n iv e rsity of T e sa a to to go W ashington. He studied two years at North Texas State College in Penton where he was twice elected presi­ dent of his ch.4S and twice named most outstanding student. W hile a t th e U n iv e rsity ho r e ­ th e C ahot A eholam hlp ceive d Award a s the sen io r jo u rn a lism stu d e n t w ith the highest four y e a r sch o lastic re c o rd . He received the Rotary Interna­ tional Scholarship in 1956, and aft­ e r a year of graduate study at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. he returned to receive his bache­ lor of divinity degree in 1959 from Southwestern Theological Semin­ ary in Fort Worth. As a Union speaker, he visited the University campus in Decem- l>er, 1961. He called the Peace Corps the way for Americans to participate directly in the revolu­ tion of a newly developing world MID-TERM B E G IN N I N G FEBRUARY 4TH 4 5TH m H T H S M HORTHAND IN ( J W ffK S ...AND THE JOB WILL LOOK FOR V ip e e d w n tm g SIGNS RO SYSI01S USES H C S Let Uurnam t train you in one of their S P E C IA L IZ E D course! and place you in a top-notch position. # A c c o u n t in g e Butin*** Admini»tr*t on 0 Secreter**! 41 Office Machine* # Shorthand ( G r e g g ) # Typing • S te n o g r a p h ic O IBM Co m p • ♦* A u t o m a t e * C o m p u te r * e Draft.ng {Engineering Drawing) # Nancy T eyW Chart* end Bot*# J O B S A V A IL A B L E W H IL E Y O U L E A R N DURHAM'S BUSINESS COLLEGE W RITE, C A L L O R VISIT T O D A Y M O A L A V A C A P H O N E G R *-3444 HEMPHILL'S Has Everything You'll Need For Roulette W heel ........................$4.95 F u n : Playing C ard s ...................... 59-$7.95 Checkers .................................. $2.95 Chess S e t s ...................... $2.95-»25.00 Brief C a s e s ............... $3.95 up plus ta* N o t e b o o k s ............................... 75 up Desk Book R a c k s ............................ 85 Floor Book Racks .......... $3.95-$5.95 Typing Paper, R e a m $1.15-$1.29 Lindy P e n s ............................... 39-.49 Fountain Pens ................ ,..$ 1 .0 0 up Bulletin Boards ....................... 85 Staplers ...................................98 up Electric Clocks .................... $3.98 up LAMPS: G o o d Sturdy L a m p s ..............$2.75 up Fluorescent L a m p s I tube $7.65 double 95.45 up 2 tube $12.95 A t L O W E ST prices A N D you get the EVER-READ Y R E B A T E - your campus cash! (Bring your cash register receipts.) Bill D. Moyers is President Ken­ nedy's choice for deputy director of the Peace Corps. The Senate approved the appointment Jan. 23 after a debate over the $19,500 salary’ he is to receive. Moyers, a medium height, trimly built man of 28, is tough enough underneath. He left a hospital bed to testify at the Senate healing over his salary’. Senator Frank J. I^usche, rth $22,500 and whether some aren't making more than they ever did before re la tio n s fo r Sen. Russell B. Long (D-I-a ). recalling his own first election to the Senate, observed that “ the peo­ ple of my state took a chance on me when I w’as 29.” President Ken­ nedy the young eft president ever to have l>een elected, so the testimonies proved their point. is Is M oyers th e y o u n g est a p ­ pointee in th e K ennedy A dm inis­ tra tio n , but he h a s been c a re fu lly tra in e d for the Job. He was aide to Vice-President ’60 Lyndon Johnson during campaign. He was pic ked as asso­ ciate director of the newly organ­ ized peace corps in 1961. the M oyers h a s been a n e w sp a p er SHEFTALL JE W E LE R S O R D E R N O W ■ F O R SHEFTALL JE W E L E R S 2268 Guadalupe yon need a copy of the 1962-63 Official Student Directory now 49c (Plus Ic Tax) ON SALL- FOYTS All 4 HEMPHILL'S THE CO-OP GARNER & SMITH UNIVERSITY NEWS HEMPHILLS t . "tjM. tykUtf 'Btfi S&le*. F O U R C O N V E N IE N T L O C A T IO N S