W E A T H E R : Cloudy, M ild Low 58, High 75 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student New spaper at The University of Texas See P A N O R A M A Supplement Vol. 62 Price Five Cents A U ST IN , TEXAS, 4 A R C H 24, 1963 Eighteen Pages in Two Sections No. 136 Aid Program Should Be Cut WASHINGTON (ZP)— A special comm ittee headed by Gen. Lucius D. Clay recommended to President Kennedy; Saturday that he cut his foreign aid program by half a bil- j lion dollars as soon as possible and reduce it even further! in the future. ASSISTANCE ENDORSED But the group endorsed the principle of continuing sub- j stantial assistance programs under tightened-up manage­ ment and with closer controls over the way the recipient nations use US aid. The guidelines the committee laid down would result in a $500-million reduction in the present $3.9-bilUon level of spending. An immediate cut of that size is not feasible because of commitments already made. “We belive,” the committee said, “that we are indeed attempting too much for too many, and that a higher quality and reduced quantity of our diffuse aid effort in certain countries could accomplish more.” •-------------------------------------------♦* Clay, retired general and corporation executive, put it less formally in a New* York interview. Who Slipped Up? The Texan did not print the returns of the races for R anger and Cactus editor be­ cause two positions have been m ade appointive by the Board of Regent* these Due to an unchanged elec- J tion code, the position was left on the the ballot. Enwgr «!"*■ 1 '""»■- '"w - t r n y i r * UT Sweetheart To Be Selected U niversity Sw eetheart elections w ill be held W ednesday. Twenty- flve nominee* will be cho*on by a fe r r e t selection com m ittee from n am es subm itted by m em bers of a sw eetheart election com m ission. lift of nominee* wilt be pooled In the Alpha Phi Om ega office, Texan Union *07, Monday afternoon. The R U N O FF THURSDAY Sw eetheart runoff elections will he held Thursday am ong the five finalists Cam paigning is prohibit­ ed. WASTED F I NDS "I feel that a lot of m oney has been w asted ," he said. 'T t's got to he tightened up. To continue to roc econom ic assistance to coun­ little or tries that h a v e d o n e nothing to h e l p is throwing m oney a w a y .” th em selves Tho** m em bers of C ongress who com m ented w ere nearly un­ anim ous In predicting that the co m m ittee's f i n d i n g s would m ake it doubly difficult for Ken­ nedy to get anyw here near th# 94-t billion he ha* budgeted for foreign aid In the rooting fiscal year. Without m entioning t h e pro­ posed cuts. K ennedy thanked Clay in a public letter for the com m it­ tee s “ im portant s e r v i c e " and found "very heartening" the "com ­ m ittee s expression of support for properly adm inistered m utual d e­ fense and developm ent program s." I SS-PAGE REPORT The 25-page report of the ad- v isory group clim axed a t h r e e - month study ordered by Kennedy on how w ell the giant o verseas a ssistan ce program is contributing to US security. Som e of the com m ittee's major co n clu sio n s: • "Properly com eh rd a n d - Im plem ented" foreign add Is "es- sential to the security of our na­ tion. “ Higher quality a n d re­ duced quantity of our diffuse aid effort in certain countries could accom plish m ore." Sw eetheart election com m ission m em bers are Burke Mangrove, chairm an, paat p real dent of APO; handy Hanford, preaident of the Student** A ssociation; Ham Klnch J r., editor of The D aily Texan; Barbara Toach, secretary of the Students’ A ssociation; Hay P oage, president of Silver Spur*. # G reater use of private enter­ Also, Dick Bettie, president of Cowboys; Bd P rice, faculty chair­ should be encour­ prise abroad aged, w hile not i n s i s t i n g that m an of C entral Round-Up Com m it­ te e ; Col. D avid Thom as, assistant others copy the Am erican system dean of student life; Miss Helen Flinn, associate dean of w omen; Ja ck Steele, director of the Texas Judy Schleyer Blanton, Union; president of M ortar B oard; and Sally Lehr, president of O range Jack ets A lp h a Tau O m e ga House Looted Friday M orning The Alpha Tau O m ega house, 2308 N ueces, w as burglarized F ri­ day morning som e tim e between I and 6 a m. VOTE AT ANY POLL In Sw eetheart elections, Mus- grove said, students can vote at any poll on cam pus. The Sw eet­ heart w ill be presented ut Round­ up Revue April 6. Arthur E ads reported to city po­ lice early Saturday three tablelam ps had been stolen, and a brass candleholder broken. There that i were no suspects Saturday night. 7 to fc o P ' X a ri * OO p O H CD H* CD f-» 3 co CD I < M* a CD » attorney Frank C. Erwin -hosen Regent Friday a* co 9 a rn By JOYCE JANE WEEDMAN Texan Staff Writer at that time th at G arw ood’s rejection was due to some of his liberal views. _ F ran k C. E rw in Jr., A ustin atto rn ey , w as nam ed F rid ay Jov ;e W. St. John Ganvood as U niversity Regent. E rw in still faces approval by the Senate, th e body which denied Judge Garwood the position Feb. 19. It was assum ed A key figure in Gov. C onnallv’s cam paign, E rw in is John B. C onnally as the m an to replace rejected the present Secretary of the Texas State D em ocratic Ex- ecu five Committee. When contacted by The Daily Texan Saturday, Erwin stated th a t he did “not wish to make any comment (about tho appointm ent) at this time.” o o Peru Painter Visits Campus By H E I.EN Y EN N E Texan Staff W riter A contem porary Peruvian artist within 1 rent situation in P eru w here there recent bloodless "c o u p ” w a s a junta which had deposed P resident M a n u e l P rado last sum m er. the m ilitary Allan Shivers, f irm er governor and personal friend of Erw in, said. " I think he is one of the U niversity’* staunchest supporters and will m ake the U niversity a g’*xi Regent ’’ Erwin w as bom in W axahachie in 1920. He attended the U niver­ sity from 1937 in 3941, was interrupted by the US Navy, and returned to receive his I.!. B in 194* He is now a partn er in the law f i r m Brown, Sparks St I n u n . \ PHI BETA KAPPA tv bile in st .boo. Erw in received a Phi Beta K appa key and w as a m em ber of K appa Sigma, Phi E ta Sigma, Phi Sigma Alpha and Phi D elta Phi. Erwin is presently associated with the Austin Country < lub, the H eadliners Club. The Driskill Club and the A dm iral’* C lub. He Is also a m em ber of the Forty A cres Club and the Episcopal C hurch of the Good Shepherd. A past president of the Austin Symphony O rchestra Society, E rw in is now on its Executive Committee. He is a F irst V ice-President of the T ravis County B ar Association, past president of the T ravis County I T Ex-Students Association, organizer and founder of the Longhorn Club and honorary m em ber of the "T ” Association. DEMOCRATIC CHAIRMAN E rw in w as the chairm an of the 1962 Trav is County D em ocratic Convention, P resident of Texas Kappa Sigma Educational Foundation, vice-chairm an of the Citizens Commission th a t drafted a new city c h a rte r for Austin in 1952 and is now a director of the Q ty N ational Bank of Austin. I rwin J* m arried to the form er June Carr of D allas and ha* a sev en .year-old son. Dr. H arry Ransom, U niversity Chancellor, could not be reached for Two Connally-appointed Regents. Rabbi Levi Olan of D allas and Mrs. J. Leo Johnson III of Ft. Worth, w ere approved by the Senate in F ebruary. Erw in will com plete tho nine m em ber Board of Regents upon his Senate approval and will serve in his capacity until Feb 2, 1969. GREAT INTEREST IN I T conservative Szyszlo described the present liberal and m ilitary rulers a* added that H oya de la T orre’s Apr* Party, contrary to prcx a il­ ing opinion here, has turned to a ideology. He hope* that the new presidential elections promised for June by j u n t a will rom e off a* the scheduled. Hi* own choice for president I* Fernando Belaunde Terry, and he pointed out that Belaunde is a form er U niversity student. viewed in the office of Dr. John P. H arrison, directo r of the In­ stitute of L atin A m erican Studier I^ast N ovem ber, de Szyszlo and Dr. H arrison attended a unique sem inar on P arad ise Island in the B aham as. The Peruvian artist was Inter- com m ent on 'the appointm ent’ Wool. tolerance." Brainchild of Robert M. Ckw. Connally said of his new appointm ent. "H e is a p e r s o n who has dem onstrated a great interest in the University. He is intelli- then an editor of t h e m agazine cent, aggressive, and reasonable and I feel that he can add a g rea t deal Show, the sem inar drew together to *“ e Boat'd. He is a person who can weigh issues with reason and leading L atin A m erican and US a rtists a n d intellectuals. In the is­ idyllic, relaxed setting of the land estate of Huntington H art­ ford, president of Show, the guests sought to establish com m unication between the a rts of the two A m er­ icas. (Wool now' heads a founda­ tion dedicated that com m unication. ) Gov. Connally told tho Texan that he had been eon*iderlng E r­ win for sonic tim e. “ I have only thought seriously abont him for the Inst week, however," he said. Connally and Erwin have known one another since their college day* at the University. Connally also appointed Rev. C A Holliday, Negro m in ister of F ort Worth, to a six-year term F riday—this one to the Texas Board of Corrections. In announcing the appointm ent, Cm nally said he believed it w as the first tim e a Negro has been appointed to the board. A form er ^ a r ^ chaplain. Rev. Holliday is 47, and an "outstanding m em - ber of his race, said Connally upon the appointm ent, De Szyszlo f e e l to furthering erKi>u:.igt ^ t h e prospects of g re a te r ______ ___ _____________ ___ ______ ____ ___________ _ __ about recognition of L atin A m erican a r t­ ists in this country, He mentioned a forthcom ing exhibit a t Cornell and said he had discussed plans for one here w ith U niversity of­ ficials. Asked his opinion of US painting today, the P eruvian said without hesitation, " I t is the be>t in the w orld." UT Coed Arrested A U niversity coed gave Austin police a run Saturday afternoon after a collision at 2000 Guadalupe The coed s c a r contained a beetle of pure alcohol, j Police said she would probably spend the night in a eel] She w as booked for possession of ar alter­ ed driver s license. posses>i*m of alcoholic beverages by a minor (Everclear*, driving while intoxi­ cated. and reckless driving Jerry Lee New Engineer Sweetheart J e rry Lee w as < rowned Miss E ngineer for 1963 a t the E ngi­ n eers' Ball F riday night ected from a field of seven can­ didates, Miss Lee w as n rui­ nated by the A m erican Insti­ tute of Chemics! Engineers. E l ­ A sophomore elem entary e d ­ ucation m ajor, Miss Lee a m em ber of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority and Angel Flight and was a Cowboy Sweetheart nom i­ nee. She was one of laeak a t 4 p.m . T u esd ay in P h y sic s Building 313. Dr. C. P. Hanson, head of the physics departm ent, said D r. Low is a world authority on elem entary particles. "W e a re fortunate to get his services this w eek," he added. for "This looks like a well equipped, well-staffed University, ’ Dr. I .ow said. He rem arked th at he p articu­ larly liked the spring w eather that has been the norm lately. Maid Confesses To Dorm Thefts A T’n iversity.employed m aid has confessed theft from room s in Andrews and Caro- th ers Dormitories:. to six counts of She confessed under ir.tei cog a hon at police h eadquarters, ending search for the thief. No prosecution was brought and the charges w ere m arked "theft from individual." By LYNNE Mc DON ALD Science Editor An authority on elem entary p a r­ ticles Is le< hiring here. Dr. F ra n ­ cis E. Low, M assachusetts Insti­ tute of Technology, is visiting as part of the D epartm ent of Physics V isiting L ectu rers P rogram . A theor« tk a1 physicist, Dr. Ixjw Is working to understand the exact nature of the e lem en ­ tary particle*, or those particle* sm aller than the atom . Tiles/- are strong Inter . acting particle* wlilch can crea te nuclear force*. Dr. Low’s rese arch Involves find­ ing regularities m the behavior of these particles, " I t's not any dif­ ferent from Uie science of the past IOO y ea rs." he said. The m ethods a re the sam e as used by Galileo m determ ining the nature of falling bodies. But in­ stead of m etal balls dropped from the Tow er of P isa, particles are studied. D ata is gathered by “ m achine people," or scientists who work in laboratories recording inform ation on the particles. The m ain la b o ra­ tories of this type a re a t Berkeley. Calif. Brookhaven, and "C ERN . ' the C enter European R esearch Nu­ clear. The serb** of fl\c lecture* by Dr, Low began on Thursday and through Tuesday. w ill continue Texan Staffers Cop Conference Honors Two Daily Texan staff m em bers have received fellowships the William Randolph H earst Founda­ tion national spot news w riting competition for F ebruary, it was announced F riday. in the B arb ara Tosch. assistant m anag­ ing editor, won fifth-place aw ard, a 5200 fellowship, for "S tu­ dent Found H anging by Neck in T railer H om e." the story of the death of UT Sophomore Ja m es Duff. Advisers Needed For New Students Would-be orientation advisers m ay apply and be interviewed from I to 5 p. rn Monday through F rid ay in T exas Union 319 and 321. Additional interview s will be held to 9 p m. Tuesday and from 7 Thursday. T raining sessions for accepted advisers will be held April 30 and M ay I, and will include leadership training and a sum m ary of the material to be presented in­ coming freshmen. to Summer advisers will ac t as counselors and will lead several discussions during the four one- week sessions to be held in Kin- solving D orm itory beginning in July. In the spring and fall, a d ­ visers will lead a one-hour discus­ sion during Orientation Week prior to registration. D ave McNeely, editor-elect, won a SKX) "Senate T urns Down Judge Garwood as UT R egent." fellowship for Spot news stories a re those in which no advance notice or prep­ aration is possible. They m ust be published within 24 hours after the news event occurs. The two winning spot new* stories In the February com peti­ tion gave the Texan a total of six Hearst award* for the year. The other Texan fellow ship hold­ ers are Bill IJttle, (Tarlton Stow­ ers, and Larry I/ee, two stories. The H earst Foundation, in seven monthly com petitions, is aw arding $40,900 in fellowships and grants this year. it it L arry Lee, form er m anaging edi­ tor of Tile Daily Texan was nam ed first prize w inner in news w riting a t Journalism Congress in Denton F rid ay night. the Southwestern ★ ★ Jeff M illar, junior Radio-TV m ajor and associate am usem ents editor of The D aily Texan, was chosen vice-president of the Stu­ d ents’ P ress Club a t a convention in Denton F rid ay and Saturday, M illar will direct the program for the P re ss Club convention next j y ea r in N orm an, Okla. The Club consists of from ! in | m em ber A rkansas, Oklahom a, Louisiana, I i and Texas. representatives student new spapers Model UN Registration at ’Y1 • • . Dick Simpson, GiH KuJick, Aim! Rostmary Gillett -Texan Photo—Owens —Texan Photo—Owen* Miss Jerry Lee • « . Engineering Sw eetheart Sunday, March 24, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 retrospect: a review of flic week JFK Pens Declaration For American Alliance for xx :th t v P ii t -. . -yt K ennedy xxent .i " San jo s e . Costa Rica, v c hi d a vs i n s t w eek inly m in im u m protec* t Luis Somoza pres- bien f of t inv N icaragu a felt ; i n u r r t h a t hi? was re by - t i rn a t e d Th b o d \ - ; w .v.ord a n d h y p o a isy th a t s o r e c\n:»-dl o b se rv e rs saw behind the irefu lly polished p h rasin g of the D e c laratio n of C e n tra l A m erica in San Jo se T u esd ay by s gned P re s id e n t K ennedy a n d the chiefs o ' s ta te of C o sta Poca Nil ara* K ia, E l S alv ad or G u a te m a la , H o n d u ra s, a n d P a n a m a . The la*t n a rn e d rountry I* not tech n ically a part of Cen­ tral A m erica, but its president, 'JRRUMPI Anti-Rep Campaign Missed the Target Jordan Rests Nervously Am id Revolts in N ations the Arab world have been rocked by w a v es of in Iraq and Syria, revolutions and Jordanite* w ait apprehen­ siv ely to see whether the motion engulfs the H ashem ite throne of King H ussein, as hi* en em ies have foretold. C itlsens of the Middle E a st­ ern rountry a r e nervously faithful to the words of their Wing . . . that Jordan w ill not be rent with anarchy. the RESISTANCE TOUGHER As leading Jordanites and dip­ lom ats v iew it, King Hussein and the governm ent of Prem ier Was- fi Tell are much tougher forces than lim p regim es over­ thrown in Baghdad and D a m a s­ cus, They g iv e Jordan s 1.7 m il­ lion people one of the clean est and m ost progre>sive govern­ ments in the Middle E ast region. Even T eil’s many en em ies admit that, dom estically, con­ dition* have never been better. The king and the prem ier, are. m oreover, brave and active men who believe in m eeting crises head on. and who function best during a tim e of crisis, OPPOSE KING M ost of the 900,000 Palestinians Jiving w est of the Jordan R iver are belived to oppose the king, or at any rate Jordan's foreign policy of friendship with the W est and suspicion of N asser. Although diplomate In Jor­ dan are Inclined to take a more com forting view of the present situation, they do not dism iss that would possibly threat* plunge the Middle E ast Into war. E ven the m ost optim istic sup­ porters predicted a runoff be­ tween presidential candidates Julius Glickm an and Arthur “ Butch" Schechter in W ednes­ day's cam pus elections. The top scorer's m argin, they thought, probably w ouldn’t be enough to com prise the n e c e s­ sary m a j o r i t y when tallied against votes going to the other three candidates, including Man- sel Wood and Gilbert Shelton. TH R EE WAY 9 P U T Further forecasts w ere that many of G lickm an s, W oods’, and Shelton’s votes would be, at least in part, “ p rotest” votes against the R epresentative P arty m ach­ inery, with w hich Schechter has been identified. These protect votes, split three w ays, could help can cel anti-R ep sentim ents, som e thought. Not so, the blackboard showed W ednesday night as G lickm an pulled ahead with 53.3 per cent of the total votes cast. BATTLEFIELD GRIM But the battle field w as grim , as m any stu dents—those who w ere neither socially nor politi­ cally aligned with any of the candidates before the Hat in the Ring cerem o n ies—had a tough tim e m ak.ng up their mind?. U tile help w as offered Ideol­ lib­ ogically. Shelton's avowed relative eralism and W oods clear-cut con servatism w ere enough, and Schechter sounded too sim ilar. but Glickman th is w e re M au rice O lian an d C a m e ro n Hightower, both inde­ pendent candidates—though they had support of the unofficial m a n y Rep P arty m em bers. FIR E O FF TARGET So. if anti-R ep-tism w ere to b e a v alid point of d e p a rtu re am o n g v o te rs, it m ig h t h av e b een m o re effectiv e in th e A ssem b ly race* . y e a rs —an d R ep P a r ty co ntrol of the As­ lo sem b ly h a s been notorious th e se m a n y that se em s to be the p lac e w h e re le g ­ is islation p asses, o r in tro d u ced . And R e p s triu m p h e d a g a in th is y e a r. Their m a jo rity is b ig g e r th an ev er. fails, or the th e E v en stro n g e st cf p re s i­ d en ts can h av e a difficult tim e try in g to g ain th e co o p eratio n of u n sy m p a th e tic a sse m b ly m e n . v o te d id n 't lf 4.1*64 of W ed n esd ay 's v o te rs - those who for S c h e c h te r- m a d e th e ir choice not in fa v o r of G lick m an , Wood. n r Shelton, b u t a g a in s t R ep P a lly , th ey could have sav ed th e ir x- m a rk s for w h ere th ey w ould h av e in th e A s­ done r . t . sem b ly ra c e s . th p m o st good in San Jo se even w i t h o u t Ja c k ie along- t h e r e w as di*- f • * - ; em Roberto C’hiari, w as invited to participate in the conference. One of the p a ra g ra p h s in th e d e c la ratio n e x p re s se d th e hope th a t P a n a m a would ‘'p a rtic ip a te . m o re closely in t h e C e n tra l A m e ric a n m o v e m e n t t o w a r d eco n o m ic in te g ra tio n .” N ICA HAGI A I UNDEMOCRATIC The d e c la ra tio n c a re fu lly av o id ­ ed th e u su al sta n z a s p ra isin g the rig h ts of m a n and p led g in g al­ le g ia n c e to d e m o c ra c y . N ic a ra ­ g u a, th e fief of the Som oza fa m i­ l y , h a s n t s e e n d e m o c ra c y * s le n d e r shadow’ fo r m an y d a rk y e a rs . Since Shick w as th e Som oza- p ick ed c a n d id a te in th e F e b ra u ry e lec tio n s, no one e x p ects th in g s to ch a n g e m u c h in N ic a ra g u a . A lthough it w as a source of sa tisfa c tio n fo r the U nited State-: to th in k th a t P re s id e r” K ennedy sco red such a p erso n al triu m p h tin c ’ly sob ering aspect* of the co n fe re n ce to be considered. BANANA K E P I B U C BEW ARE The C e n tra l A m erican coun­ trie s, th e s o c a lle d b a n a n a re p u b ­ lics, a re acutely’ c o rs e , ous of th e ir v u ln e ra b ility to subv ersio n from C astro s C uba. d ire c te d T h e ir p re sid e n ts w ere hoping for th e p ro m ise of actio n a g a in s t the C uban d ic ta to r from P re s id e n t K ennedy. stro n g But the President, despite ail criticism from within and w ith ­ out his own party, soft-pedaled talk about deposing Castro at the conference. He is convinc­ ed, a s he told the six other presidents, “ that e c o n o m i c prosperity the handmaiden of political liberty ,” is He spoke of build.ng a w all a ro u n d C uba a w all of not m o r ta r o r b ric k or b a rb e d w ire b u t * w all of d ed ic a te d m en d e ­ th e ir own to p ro te c t te r m ined fre e d o m and s o v e re ig n ty .” “ That freedom , however. Is constantly endangered by C om ­ munist subversive activity. To cope with this threat, the p resi­ dents assem bled In San Jose sum m oned a m eeting of their Interior m inisters next month to “ put Into im m ediate effect com m on m easures to restrict the m ovem ent of their nation­ a ls to and from Cuba and the flow of m aterial, propaganda and funds from that country.” T he U. S. e q u iv alen t of an in ­ th e A tto rn ey is te r io r m in is te r G e n e ra l, who is. of co u rse, th e P r e s id e n t's b ro th e r, R o b e rt. Sec- r e ta r y of State D ean R usk, w ho ac c o m p a n ie d the P re s id e n t to San Jo s e , said he declined to ru le o u t th e possibility th a t th e A tto rn ey G e n eral would atte n d th e p a rle y on counterin g su b v ersio n . Site of th e m eetin g w ill p ro b a b ­ ly be M anagua, a not too happy’ choice in view of the p ro p a g a n d a th e C om m unists an d o th e r h a y a n ti-Y an k ees will be a b le to m a k e o u t of th e p a rad o x of a m eetin g fo r the defense of d e m o c ra c y be­ ing held in a co u n try ru led by a d ic ta to r. KENNEDY EFFECTIV E P re s id e n t K ennedy on this his th ird trip south of th e bo rder, a g a in pro v ed an effective s a le s ­ m a n of fo r P i t i ­ th e A lliance le s s . He visited an A lliance-fi­ n a n ce d housing p ro je c t a t El B os­ que. n e a r C osta R ica With P re s id e n t O rlich of C osta R ica ar his side, K ennedy told a c h eerin g cro w d th a t by O ct. I a lm o st 8,000 C o stta R ican s w ill h a v e new h o m es p rovided u n d e r th e Alli­ a n ce for P ro g re ss. Perhaps the moat rewarding of the P resid en t’* personal a p ­ pearance* wa* that on W ednes­ day at the U niversity of San Jo*e. At he jokingly told stu ­ dent*, he had heard that Latin - A m erican universities w ere dan­ gerous places for presidents. A large proportion of his a u d i­ en ce no doubt rem em bered that it w a s a P e ru v ia n u n iv ersity stu ­ d en t who sp at on fo rm e r V ice­ p re s id e n t R ic h a rd Nixon w hen he v isited L im a chi a goodwill to u r _ h . Y. in 1958 E d i t o r D e m a n d s Get Out Of SEC The Kentucky Kernel, student newspaper at the U niversity of Kentucky, advocated this w eek that Kentucky withdraw from the Southeastern C onference and begin rec nil ting Negro athletes. DIVORCE FROM P O U C Y "If the U niversity is to live up to its m oral obligation and m ake significant progress as a m ajor institution it m ust divorce itself the segregation p o l i c y from which dom inates the Southeast­ ern Conference, the new spaper said in an editorial for F riday edit ion.' "Wo have the golden oppor­ tunity to becom e leaders. We can stand up and tell the world that we, a southern university, are sick of having a doctrine of racial inferiority rammed down our throats.” The new spaper quoted A thletic D irector Bernie Shively as sa y ­ ing that the U niversity would lose trem endous prestige by pulling out of the conference. r * ■■ m m m * m m m m m m m 'm m m Candy Sheds Prison Attire C andy B a ir, one-tim e D a llas s trip p e r co n v icted on a narcotics c h a rg e in 1958, w as pardoned T h u rsd a y by Gov. John Connally. She will be re le a se d fro m G oree S ta te P riso n fo r W omen in H unts­ ville in a b o u t tw o w eeks The State Board of Pardons and P aroles recom m ended her three month release after a study of her record at the Prison. She ha* recorded about five years of her fifteen-year sentence. Candy, a native of Edna, once to 52,000 a w eek by m ade up perform ing to shouts of “ Take it o ff:” There w ill be checks on the place w here to m ake h e r future home, the w ay she plans to m ake a living, a n d who h e r a sso cia tes will be. she p lan s Job Opportunities T h e 19®3 Selective S e r v e college to t e s’ w ll he given q u alif ic atio n college men Apr.I IS. co l l e g e o*en des rin g t h e test ma;, o b ta.n Instruction s and a p ­ plication d r a f t hoard* Applications m ust be post- m arked than m i d n ig h t. Ma rch 28. '•a rd* fro m l a te r local take r o t to T h e Apr : 18 tes t vv.ll be th# o n lv one offered d u r i n g the 1982-83 school y ear. the Scores ’vade on test will be used by d r a ft b o ard s as one gu ide for d e f e r ­ In eonai'ler.ng T e s t m e n ts sc ore s i n f o rm a t i o n a b o u t Individ uals sch olastic c o n t i n u e req uests stu dies to are the Studen t* p l a n n i n g to ta k e t h e t e a t a r e urged by t h e s t a te d r a ft d i r e c t o r to ap p ly at once for In form ation an d fo rm s a t an y d r a f t board. W. F. Walla** Jr. Awin ta e t BeglaSrar and i a z l r t i i t l a a —UPI Telephoto P R E S I D E N T K E S S E D Y lr -h n l e a f i n g th e S a l t o n * ! T h e a tre i n : K ca n u h t x ( A m e r ic a n pre relents. H e a g re e d, u u h r e r p r e s i d e n t a Yr a ecrgt re terr, that ce • c r.th n u n d e r th e ’n m ’ g r P r gee • ; t h e > ■: t ti a\ to l i g h t c o m m u n is m a n d r t .u tion a ry a g at; n n t o e u e fern hents p b e re . Thousands Flee W rath Of Bali i lese Eruption .>ot a touch o f green re m a in * in tho shadow of A gung V olcano, w hose fu ry ha.* killed m o re th a n : j'I»t people n e a r B ertasih B all B ekaaih, a n o r th e a st v illa g e islan d , h a s on the In d on esian b een xhovvcpei;<)R ............................................ JOYCE JA N E WEEDMAN |)f K C H I E F ............................................................ RICHARD COLE < C Y I v . New s E d it o r .......................................................... Hank E zell Imt M cF addfn, Jim G sell, Fred Bum* ( ............................................................................ B ill Little N bt N rhf A” u«r merits Editor ................................... .................... H ay d en F re e m a n Jim F o w ler 1 Ni hr W cr* Editor ....................................................................... Barbara Tosch E d it o r ........................................................................Carol ie Baity t E d i t o r ............................................................................ N athan Fain ! “ ' o r ....................................................... ' Y‘ Retrosfx p w J ditor - C l S E R O F F A m e a l hear// i. cete. t s m a i T I T e leph oto pa p er P uh- C ' i ernm t u t I n j or ma- * V « sui h man • . h opt n cd igi rn h J 'I e Ca b. ti I C fi'ii. House Hearings Become News Media W itchhunt the m c r 's of So the last two candidates we e judged on their hacking While G lirkm sn r- ay he just an inch or two to the left of Schechter politically on a 36-;n« h scale , he w as associated with both liberal and conservative stu­ dents. Schechter s principal s ,ppoi t w as a n c h o r e d within the Rep Party’, considered a fairly right­ w ing group, though it certainly doesn t have a m onop iv on the c a m p u s ’ N ineteenth Century minds. PARTY AT STAKE The m ain issue, it turned out, the field narrowed and as the spotlight centered on these two, w as what right Rep Party had to "continue runrur.g the show B it the attack appeared rather i f s been som e the Old Guard has superfluous, as tim e since sw ivelled the president * cha r. im agination It ’would take som e strew-', o' any th e h .g h e ri n a ­ ’ w hich, I tional security, had to be with­ held from our adversaries ** for * d i n g e r further in-i«ted that "a group of g o v e r n m e n t pres* a g e n ts did not arbitrarily and haphazardly invent gnx e m i n e n t Information policy from day tn day and hour to hou r” during that crisi* As th e subcom m ittee h ea rin g s p r c e s s e d the d a r k e r * ie of the news g a th e rin g arid p u b ­ it \ ■ , a m e e\ ider-t lish ng f e n st by the end of th e w eek th a t spe- in r.fc bandi ng new s wi r e r e - p o ssib le. — v f . not va*’ agen.-ic*. individual* in vol re d ir.tr> '“T ~ 1 ' I T T I his Week in science p • I • lu n a 11-rj na* neon c i t e d a* a t y p h o i d e p k J e - a p ‘ xiblo k . i l c r tw o r^A’ forrn % ni ic v accin e w e r e re - o f re le a -rd a- 1 n se n*;-’ stre w e d ra c k e t d e i elopm enf this w eek in st lin te l s A 61 „• our e ( , n of A I P b ran d t a r : pe< if I in the poisoning d ea th of tw o D e 'rm t housew ives W ednesda food *' r*“ - ham < 4 ••• d its sh elv es of the tu n a rn 4 400 s u p e rm a rk e ts. ’he n atio n w id e th e W est C oast, Supposedly’, the Ja p a n e s e tuna w a s c o n ta m in a te d d-jr.rg van- rung on r e liv ­ ing th e w om en to die of hot ilism F ed er ii auth* i :ne.* have check ed sa m p le s a c ro s s the natio n but so far h av e tu rn e d up no in d icatio n s of o th r r d e fe c tiv e t a n s . la s t T he r a ;e of botulism in th*' United S t a t e s w as in the mld-192f) s an d O riginated w i t h (arm ed olive* TY PHOID EPIDEMIC Alm ost 3 i.j0 persons are be­ lieved to Im? affccied with typhoid r e s u l t of the Zermatt p* a e p id itn ic A Sw iss widow, m other of 13 children, died Saturday; the first fatal victim . F t cia* one • a*e w as d isco v ered . .< n e a rly In New York A m en.-ans a re behoved b' n exposed VV A lpine re s o rt oti*h-eak t o h av e i r e v ;! ’ of the C o n firm ed and su « ;e . *cd rase* a • e u n d er tr e a tm e n t in an e m e r­ g en cy h o sp ital sr? up in Z e rm a tt o r a re w aitin g re g u la r Swiss ho*r ?a!* * »* ’.'•jm caca*. to he flown to .-.ft A i h •• i tie* va id q j a r u m w ., ! • e o f 7.' rn* sp re a d of the d c e a s e Also q u a r­ a n tin e Is ag ain st Swiss law „ p ’ ii n Z er Lo ; I the d .- m a tt c o n stru e ti* >n w o rk er is " said off ise wax i ought to Zer- Ita lia n la s t m onth bv »n >1] Xxi j s x x i i i s y I- V. as! n g ’ rn T hursday g o v ern m en t re le a se d fo r g e n e ra l u se tv. , fo rm s of rn ca tie s v a c ­ cine. S urgeon G e n e ra l L u th er L. T e rry sa.d he e x p e c ts to see • * \ cry >ha r> d ecrea se” rn m easles next season. Terry said no m ass im m u n iz a­ tion c a m p a ig n s are planned, but with w idespread uxc o f the van- th e dise.-ixr could be vir- cine. tually eradicated w i t h i n two _ l . McD. years. I HE RO C K lies abandoned o ff San Francisco as th§ la it inmates were rem oved from the federal prison this u ecb . T h e g o t e m m ent is closing the m axim um security prison because it w o u ld lo s t 5 5 m illion to repair the d e ­ terioratin g bu ildin gs that con tributed to recent est ape a ttem p ts. __UPI T efephet, A G D Sponsors 'Splurge T o J o y CBA Fall Honor Roll Announced by White A lpha G am m a D e l t a Sorority A l p h o l G a n i m a D P I t a ^ n m r i h ' w ill sponsor a “ S p ag h etti S p lu rg e ’’ Sunday from 5 to 7 p m . a t th e ir chapter house, 807 W est 25th, Cam pus News in Brief in fo rm atio n a b o u t th e p lay will be p re sen te d a t the m eetin g . :rnmmm)9.mamtm* » ■ n«*»n *■■: , .•««■*,.,...■»....... ■,„-. A I | I _ ^ « l l Sunday, March 24, 1963 THE DAILY TEXA N Pag* J ■- m m m m m m m m m m m ew m m a m m zm m m m m m tm L All p ro c e e d s will go to the A us­ tin C e re b ra l P a ls y C e n te r in con­ nection w ith th e sorority'’s In te r­ n a tio n a l A ltru istic P ro je c t. T ick ets a re J I a n d can be p u rc h a sed from a n y m e m b e r of the so ro rity . The m en u e n clu d e s sp a g h e tti and m eat sa u c e, to ssed sala d , fren ch b re ad , iced tea, Ice c re a m , and cookies ★ N o m in a t io n s Cactus Nominations Due f o r O u ts ta n d in g S tu d e n t a n d G ood fe llo w a w a r d s m u s t h e tu r n e d In b v 4 :3 0 p .m . F r id a y In J o u r n a lis m B u ild in g 107. S c h o la r s h ip Im p o rta n t Is q u a lific a t io n fo r an O u ts ta n d in g a n S tu d e n t, b u t p e r s o n a lit y Is m o r e I m p o r ta n t fo r a G ood fe llo w . le a d e r s h ip , O th e r q u a lific a tio n * fo r c ith e r a w a rd s h o n o r a n d an d h o n o r s, p a r tic ip a tio n In c a m . p u s o r g a n iz a t io n s , a n d stu d e n t a c t iv it ie s . A n y s tu d e n t o r g a n iz a tio n o r In d iv id u a l m a y ta k e n o m in a tio n s . * Peace Corps Talks Set Two re p re se n ta tiv e* w ill bp on c a m p u s M onday and T u e sd ay to to Ile w ith ib id e m * about o p p o rtu n i­ ties In the P e a c e Corp* M iss P a t M athis of th e public a ffa irs division and D ouglas H ik er Inform ation will chief of public hold open d iscu ssio n s In T ex as T’nion 329 on four occasion* d u rin g th e ir tw o-day visit The m eetin g s w ill h e held 4 5 p m M onday; 9-11 a rn.. 2 30-4 30 p m , en d 7 30-9 p rn T u esd ay . th e tm sic o u tlin e of The p u rp o se of the m eetin g s is to give th e P e a c e C o rp s' p resen t p ro g ra m and to a n sw e r an y q u estio n s W hile a* the I 'n i vert sty. M s s M ath is and H iker will also speak to classes and mee* w ith student group* ♦ Students to Use Both Imw S tu d en t* w ill In itia te a new la n d m a r k M o n d a y , th e fir s t off! \ a tin g b o o th on c a m p u s . r ia l B u ilt b y D e lt a T h e ta P h i le g a l fr a te r n ity a n d th e Ae b o o l o f l a w * B o a rd a f G a y e r th k e t w e llin g , O ars, Is a n d m o n e y c o lle c t in g b o o th s m o u n te d o n w h e e ls an d com#** a p a r t It r a n h e tw o b o o th s or on* . flnan crx! b y th o r a t in g , s e c tio n a l lik e a so fa . T h e b ooth w ill fir st b e u%#*d M o n d a y for s e llin g t ic k e t s to l.a w G u y a c t i v i t i e s A p ril 4 a n d 5. J»»e H o o d , p r e s id e n t o f th e S tu ­ d e n t B a r A s s o c ia t io n , th e A P O * c a n u se th e b o o th if th e y w a n t for c a m p u s - w id e e l e c ­ tio n s a t th** l a w S c h o o l. s a id to it Year of Study A b ro a d A fully p c id a c a d e m ic y e a r o f g ra d u a te stu d j a b ro a d d u rin g 1964- to a m a le student 6;> is o ffered w ith p e rm merit in o r n e a r Kit! en. r e s i d e n t Appl ie.tu ts should see Jo h n Dod­ son, d ire c to r of stu d en t fin an cial aid s, in W est Mall O ffice Building 203. C om pleted form be m aile d by A pni 15. m u st T he a p p lic a n t m u st be betw een 20 and .3 y e a rs old, single, and a citizen o f the U nited S tates. He m ust Iv* ab le to read w rite, arx! sjw'fik the lan g u a g e of the country in wh ch h" d e sire s to s tu d y . H e m ust hoi I a b a c h e lo r's de grot* o r its eq u iv ale n t by th e tim e the fellow ship begins and h av e high sch o la stic a tta in m e n t A r m y Dress C a p Lost \ T art H od lie u te n a n t a t t e n d ­ ing a form :!I d a n c e an c a m p u s la s t w e e k e n d , fo u n d , on le a v in g , th a t h is SJO \ r m v d r e s s c a p w a s m is s in g . A n y o n e fin d in g the c a p sh o u ld retu rn It to the To t a * U n io n lo st a nd found office w ill tx* a s k e d . P A S F to Be O r g a n i z e d D ie first U niversity -lev el ch ap ­ te r of use p a n A m e rica n Student F o ru m will be o rg an ized at a m e e t­ ing a* 7 >0 p rn ’T uesday in T ex as Union 336 The P a n A m erican S tu d en t Fo- r im is a statew id e o rg a n cation of student-- of Spanish and re la te d stu­ d en t- M ost of i*s c h a p te rs a re sn h,:,Ti th e re a re ju n io r colleges and c h a p te rs four y e a r colleges s h o o li, though .n O re m iz itio n will ta k e p la ce In p re p a ra tio n for the s t te conven­ tion in R rn A ntonio M arch IN-30 Geologists to C o n v e n e I n lv e r s ltv g e o lo g is t s w ill b e a m a n g i Mirth I pa n u In un \m#*r ★ Delk N a m ed Sweetheart M a r y J o D e lk , A lp h a O m ic r o n P l, h a * b e e n e le c t e d s w e e th e a r t o f th e p le d g e c l a s s o f D e lt a R ig. n ia P l, h o n o r a r ' ^ m s i n e s s f r a t e r ­ n ity . ★ loans Student Loans A v a ila b le L im ited funds h a v e h e e n re ­ se rv e d for stu d e n t the for su m m e r session u n d er th e N atio n ­ al D efense S tudent Loan P ro g ra m . P rio rity w ill be given stu d e n ts who h av e a lr e a d y been ap p ro v ed for p rio r loans, but new a p p lic a ­ tions w ill tx? accep ted A pplications w i l l be a ccep ted from g ra d u a te and u n d e rg ra d u a te stu d en ts a tte n d in g the session s u m ­ m e r full tim e. M axim um loan will be S200. A pplications m u st be su b m itte d to tho O ffice of Student F in a n c ia l Aids by A p r i l 15. A pplication form s and in fo rm atio n m ay he ob­ tained in W est Mall Office B uild­ ing 203. UT Prof Conducts | Computer Classes D r C h a rles T. C lark, a sso c ia te p ro fe sso r of b u sin ess sta tistic s, re ­ cently co nducted a session at Tu- lane U n iv e rsity on sc o m p u te r edu­ cation in buiness schools. He a lso p rese n te d a p a p e r w hich ex p lain ed th e m ethods he uses at ti c U n iv e rsity te a c h bu sin ess to stu d e n ts how to use the co m p u ter. at T u lan e w,ts scheduled as a follow-up st -s. n fo r a s e m in a r conducted last su m ­ m e r at th e U n iv e rsity of C hicago. The m e e tin g le a n A s s o c ia tio n G e o lo g is t s m e e t in g M o n d a y th r o u g h T h u r s d a y . o f P e tr o le u m in H o u sto n T h e m e o f th e m e e t in g Is “ D e e p ­ e r G e o lo g ic a l a n d G e o p h y s ic a l P r o s p e c t in g ." R e p r e s e n tin g th e G e o lo g y D e ­ p a r t m e n t w ill Is* H r s, W illia m Cf. B e ll, R o b ert E . B o y e r , E a r l I,. M ein F . M c B r id e , W illia m t ir e , R o b e r t L . F o lk . J o h n A. W il­ s o n , W illia m R . M u e h lb e r g e r , S c o tt, K eith Y o u n g , A la n J . S te p h e n g e r s o n , an d S a m u e l P . E llis o n . C la h a u g h , F a r ! In B u r e a u o f E c o n o m ic G eo lo g y s t a f f m e m b e r s w h o w ill a tte n d I t . M acon and in c lu d e J a m e s D r* . V ir g il E . R a m e r , W illia m I* F is h e r , P e t e r T. F la x en , R o s s A. M a x w e ll, D on E . O wen, a n d P e te r F . R o d d a . it B e ge m an Attends Meet M >con L. B egem an, p ro fe sso r of m ec h a n h <1 en g in eerin g , is in C an - brid g e. E n g lan d , this w eek for a m e e tin g of officials of an in te rn a ­ tional re s e a rc h piogT tm on p ro ­ jection w e'dm g. The p ro g ra m , sp o n so red b y the N orth A tlantic T re a ty O rg a n iz a ­ tion. is being conducted -at th e U ni­ in KnglaHd. F ra n c e v e rs ity and B elgium , P ro f B eg em an d ire c ts the Un: , et by s p a rt in th e re se a rc h . and G e rm a n s ,V> R o n a ld B ilk e r w ill te n c h a ph«> to g m p h y c l a s s , free to s tu d e n t* la n o n .stu d e n t* . an d in the fro m 7 t i » p .m . M o n d a y \ r t s a n d G ra fts ( e n t e r , T e x a s I nion SSS. c e n t* * ★ Eulenspiegel to See Play A sre n e of the an n u a l D e p a rt­ m e n t of G erm an ic L a n g u a g es p lay w ill b e p rev iew ed in re h e a rs a l at the E u len sp ieg e! m eetin g at 7 id p m . M onday in the Tobin Room The play, to be p re se n te d April 4 and 5, is the sev e n te e n th annua! p re se n ta tio n In G erm an by th e de­ p a rtm e n t. “ D ra u sse n v o r d e r T u r ” by W olfgang B o rch e rt, t h i s y e a r s play, is d irec ted by D r. W olfgang M ichael, p ro le sso r of G e rm a n . An e x p la n a tio n an d back g ro u n d License Plate D eadline— Too Close for Com fort The d e ad lin e for buying licen se is grow ing n e a r. p lates, A pril I. M otorists should buy th e ir p la tes now to avoid th e last-m in u te rush a t the end of th e m onth. D riv e rs should not fo rg et a n ­ for ve­ o th er dead!.ne, A pril 15, il Ie in sp ectio n stic k e rs. Col. H o m e r G a rriso n , d ire c to r of th e D e­ p a rtm e n t of P ublic S afety, has urged m o to rists to get th e ir stic k ­ e rs 1 before tim e gets short and the lines g et lo n g .” th e \ o q u e stio n * P h o t o g r a p h y Cl ass O p e n GET READY FOR ROUND-UP W E S T E R N S H I R T S For M e n a n d W o m e n M A T C H I N G ............. $4.98 • a c h & up O T H E R S .................. $3.98 •ach & up W E S T E R N P A N T S W o n d e r f u l Variety LADIES' & M EN S' $ 4 . 9 8 p air I u p ALI THE LATEST STYLES • Squaw Boots • Western Ties • Western Belts C O W B O Y B O O T S • Justin • Tony Lama • Handmade Boots • Texas • A c m e Books for M en and W omen Prices $10.95 to $39.95 pair M e m eans beau tifu l . . . and fhe F Petros' Michael H, B er w ic k , ..lame* L e e B la c k ­ . arm-* A l ­ well Mar' J o Ann B ia z ek bert B o o r m a n M artin Hugh Boozer. S h e lt o n VV B oyc e, and J a m e s H ow ard B ra d le y Jr A ltg elt S t a n le y A J 111, .' n Howard D B re c ht Michael B re n ­ ner A le xis J o a n B r o w n ’ m- oths B ro w n D u n c a n T B utle r S a m ­ uel P B u r fo r d J r . W a - n e G eo rge B ur nsid e M orga n S Campb ell R oger I- Campb ell W i n f i e l d M Campb ell i h e Pr Richard P ( A r r Jr . Manuel M ('ave M haet VV. Cate. Frank A J e r r y E. C hile s, an d Rob ert Lee Ch ran# ■John VV es le v Clar k Robe rt Lee Judith I-aura !>*e Coekrei C lark Bee C om pton Michae l Copland Ann- to stilo w , w i l l i a m Robert t'otham Ed­ ward B Creager Fred R*> Culber- *°n. «Ohn R. Currv Diane L Dai Iv John U a \ n e Davenport Jamos L Da­ R obbln R Dawson Sw tier vis Jr L Deason. Luis A d o lf o de la Garza Ben de la Rosa, Claire D Dennl* Ira J u le s D o lm h T h o m a s Boyd D o u g ­ in* H e n r y G. Dov e. Jack R D u g a n and Gary I. D u k e P a t r i c k VV .Iona C harles D u k e Hr a f.an B r u c e Alan D uncan Mel­ vil le V. S h i e r s Jam** I> Ellis David D evon Emm# rt. F rederic F Fiel d s Kent T h o m a s Fiel d s J H i t t e r D an A dolph F lee k m a n Mich- S t o n e w a l l r C n j l T w V ; 7 , " r K '‘ “ n K« * David Robe rt F ree P a t ricia P r ic k (.aliaJier Elo y P ila r Gar J u d it h b cia n a v e l VV Garne r N ola n R av Garrett R o b e r t E d w ar d Garrison Ann ‘ rerrard b r a n k A Ga ye r Jr . Richar d (B a sse tt . B o b b v a G r lg s bv O m ln K 1 ,r ov e R o n a ld o F. Guerra. Ana C G ue rre re C ha rles R. Gusta fso n Adolph G*"orge H a j o v s k y . and N o r to n B Hargl* Jr David Harris D elbert Heckman. lf en rv Hnrm* R obe rt L ouis I H aw k in s B onnie J a m e s Richar d Herbs! er oho R obe r t H o lm e s R o tie n M H opi ?P", GS#»in F. Joh n Edw in J o h n s o n ye lle r Tames ( Klnnrd Frank Ross B ette Je a n R ip e r Dona ld King .lr 21 Initiates Named To Pi Sigma Alpha The U n iv e rsity c h a p te r of P; n a tio n al political Sigm a A lpha, science ho n o r society, has initiated 21 new m e m b e rs. R obert VV C a lv e r t chief ju stice of the T ex as S u p re m e O w l spoke »n the topic “ A ppointed vs E lec­ ted J u d ic ia rie s ” a t the initiation banquet. New m e m b e rs a r# Cha He* R a n ­ dolph Cunt on. R ow land B ru ce F o s­ ter T h o m as [>*• H u tcheson Rob­ e rt Jo sep h F ra n z e tti. M rs Susan A nderson G oodloe, C aro ly n C age F ella rn, A lice B etty M iller Ron­ ald I>ee H icks, M a rg a re t Sue Dut- !°n, and \ irg in ia H ull M cK inim on. O thers a re D ick W eldon Simp- 'On, l u r ­ .Jerry Bob Poole, Ja c k ing C argill J r , C a ro ly n C ornelius M rs C arol W ilson, D onald A. Tor- to rice R ic h a rd W ayne B ord. M ar­ in Hang Je n se n , l*onald R aym ond Hoehm, K a th e rin e R o b erta Stew ­ a rt, and C h a rle s N a th an Curry' E k l r s o p p Bart H Kiveli. Id* Marie Kle.n and W illia m A nth ony K o b j B ron A, V ic tor A K c r m e ie r Matth ia* F John Paul Kramer. Pau l G Kus.*, J a m e s VV L a w so n 1^^ U*vell. Davy D e an L in g J a m e s D o n ly ju derm ik. VV airer VV M cA ll is ter III S h e r i l y n e A. Met. >>v. R obert Fr v Mc­ C ull ou g h, P a l VV . n i t o n M cC utc nin Ha rold E. McDonaid. J a m e s R Mel ( .o o d w .n , Chari-!. G M cQ uaid ' and D a m o n Brad M c W i llia m s J e r r y L e e M auie r son, P h lliip L. M ed el lin F u g e n # Ernest B Mi ier I’. Miller, Mrs Katnrv n P S M(x>re A lbert S M orr is i l l W il b ur C Mojv n s Jr Pa tricia J Mos.-le M ari lyn (' M othner. W a l l a c e H. N a tio n s W a i t ­ e r L. N e w Jr.. Mrs D a n e C K N e w b e r r y . Jr W ill ia m T h o m a s N'ourbe, and Ge org* A N u g e n t. I^vrrv T a t e N ie r t h U ill ia m B e n n e tt P a l a m o u n t a . n II Ro be rt l-oFrer P a r k e r W ill ia m M anle y P a r n s n M ary Joh n Perlovv ski. R a y E d w ar d P r i c i e r S J r J a m e s W e ld o n P o p e J o h n Elree* Poi c he J r Ed ga r VV a > ne Ha - T erry L a m a r R o b in so n . Rona.,1 G R ose n and W il f rid F e w R y ia n d e i t h e n P a r s o n s J r Sle epe r. F r a n k M C lin to n C. S c h u h m a c h e r t'rajvci* C. Jychulte. R obe r t E van S h a w Jr Alan L e s i e S m e a l Charles W e ld o n S m it h , Fred H S m it n K ir k la n d G S m .rh S t e p h e n W i llia m S m olk in . ' l e d d v L a v n e Sp ark s T o m ­ my Leoti S p r in k le J a y R ic hard S t a n - iey. Richar d B. S t i l w e l l , a n d J o h n VV ebb Stor m * Fred C Strong Joseph P Stultz, Robert Da - T aylo r J r B arb a ra A. I’om riln. K u ge n e D o u g l a s T r a y n h a m , Pf'ffgy C. T r e a d w a y J o h n G Treamor Richard F V e r in d e r A ubr e v R. W a l ­ J e r r v L v n n ton Robe rt E W a t ’ s, D avid W ilc o x . VV lek I Iffe l>«rry ( harie s H ow ard W o o d , J a m e s ^5rs 1 nda R, M. W r ig h t, an d VV VV rren V e a g er R E M O D E L IN G APARTMENTS AND HOUSES Free Estimates Candide Contracting Co. g e n e r a l c o n t r a c t o r s 1905 R I O G R A N D E c a l l WAYNE SMITH GR 6-5428 S C I E N T I F I C ^ WATCH REPAIRS • W A T C H RE P AI R • JEWELRY RESTORATION • SOLDERING • CUSTOM DESIGNS Estimates FREE CH ARTERED E X C U R S IO N BUSES • Parties • Field Trips • Retreats B u sei a va ila b le with re it room s abo ard , turn a ro u n d seat* and card tables for you r enjoym ent; while traveling. A ll buses air conditioned. Kerrville Bus Co. I i G R 8 - 9 3 6 1 P r o t e c t Y o u r W in te r Clothes FREE — • O d o r Proofing • Moth Proofing • Mildew Proofing -H Y G IE N IC FRESH - When you have them cleaned at the KWIK WASH Coin-Op 19th and Rad River D R Y C LEA N IN G J iitin c tiv t d o . or men "its J ‘ /CVQi Sunder, Merefc 24, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg# 4 Eleven National Track Stars To Compete in Texas Relays E leven of the nation « top track- J Entries through Saturday totaled A total of 19 m en placed In the m en who placed in the NCAA and 30 schools in the Urn versify-C ollege nationals last June after com peting N ation al AAU m e e ts la s t s u m m e r Division including the l l who help- I will p a r t ic i p a te in the 1963 T e x a s ed set 15 rec ords in the 1962 R e- R e la y s h e r e Api i] 5 and 6. NCAA cham pions back for the us in c assic. j lay s here. fh e * r n S C O n A P P L E T O N D A V I D M C W I L L I A M S 36th R elays next week include Jim D upree of Southern Illinois (880>, P at C lohessy of Houston (three- m ile) and Fred Hansen of R ice, who set a R elays s ta n d a rd of lo- the pole vault. Clohessy, 6 'j in who also finished fifth in the mile and w as fou rth in the AAU 3-mile, now j* a g ra d u a t e stu de nt In history' at the University. NCAA r u n n e r s u p who will be back for th e R e la y s include J e r r y Dyes. Abilene C h ris tia n 's g r e a t athlete, who th rew the javelin 246 feet and tw o - some of Bill Cornell (mile* and B rian T u r n e r < 3-mile >. .Southern Illinois’ in O thers who placed the n a ­ tionals who h a v e e n te re d here in­ clude Bill M iller of M c M u rry , ’62 R elays c h a m p in the b road ju m p ; O klah om a s R ia c h a r d I n m a n (shot pu tt, Bd R e d of Rice ^javelin', R a y Saddler, Ie x a s Southern s g r e a t q u a r t e r m iler and R a y Cun­ n in g h a m , from Texas. C u n n in g h a m will join three c u rr e n t I T h u rd lers rn the special shuttle h u rd le fo r m e r h u rd le r relay. A m ong the schools who have en­ te red to d a te , outside of Texas, a r e LSI , N o tre D am e. O klahom a, O k laho m a State Southern Illinois, D rake . F lo r id a State. P epperdine, O klah om a City, Oklahoma Baptist, K a n sa s S tate T e ach ers of E m p o r ­ ia. F t. H a ves ( K a n s a s ', N e b ra sk a State, etc. A special feature of the Relays this y e a r wall be the H onor D ay for Clyde Littlefield, v e te ra n Uni­ versity coach who is retiring. Tile R elays a re dedic a ted to Littlefield. in his honor will be A banquet held T h u rsd a y , April 4 the time b s D n sk ill hotel at which m a n y form er athletes, coaching friends, and others will honor him. in A ggie s Dow n Baylor, 2-1 CO LI. E G E STATION, Tex 3 F r a n k S ta r k 's 2-run h o m e r in the sixth p ow ered T ex as A&M to a 2-1 Southwest C o nference baseball vic­ to ry o v er B a i l o r S aturd ay. It w a s a c o m e -from -behind tr. um ph. B a y lo r took the lead in the first inning on R on nie Goodwin s h i t F r o s h C o i f T r y o u t s Set for T ryouts f r e s h m a n go’f the te a m will he held M onday and T u e sd a y at 2 p rn. at Austin Coun- trv Club. Appleton, McWilliams, Ford Named Grid Captains T ailb ack T o m m y F o ld , c e n te r Dav id McW illiams, and tackle Scott Appleton w e re selected last week as tr i-c a p ta in s for the 1963 I/>ng- h o m football te a m . Tile th ree w e r e elected by tea m vote. Coach D a rre l l Royal an n o u n ­ the S a tu rd a y ced th e re s u lts at s c r im m a g e . Ford. Appleton, both all-SWC, and McW illiams, consistently g re a t linem an, a r e all tw o-year let­ te rm en . a The th r e e will hea I the an nu al O ran g e-White g a m e S a tu r d a y nigh? in M em orial S tadiu m , as spring p ra c tic e w ra p s up, Tn the Satu rd ay, s c r im m a g e T o m m y Wade and M arvin Kris- tyn.k to a 14-6 w ,n o v e r a D uke Carlisle- q u a r t e r b a c k e d O ra ng e the White sq uad led The s c r im m a g e fe a h ire d m ainly the p a rs in g of (thee those th r e w 50 t i m e s ', and the ru n n in g of fullbacks E r n e Koy for White. an i H a m id Phillip for O range, th r e e W ad e running first t e a m , m a d e a favorite ta r g e t of end P e te I ^ m - mons. and the combmatsesf Apple* on and Mc Will, am a led the O ra n g e l i n e Watching in the stan ds for the second straight week wa* Gov Joh n B Connally. Gemmily visited the d res sin g ro om a ft e rw a rd talk­ ing w ith C m c h Darnell Royal, and the new ly elected c a p ­ m e etin g tains. tackles R u nn ing f i r s t on the sides chos­ the con fir**; w e re White en by ends, Ben House and Pern te a m L a m m o n s ; Hensley and C li v ton Iwhcv ; gu ard s, F r a n k B edrirk and Oien U nderw ood; c e n ­ te r Mike Kelley; q u a r t e r b a c k tailback, F o rd , billback W ade; Koy; a n d vvirgback, Joe Dixon. O ra n g e te am ends, I tan M aul­ din an d S and y Sands; tackles. Ap­ pleton an d Ken F e rg u s o n : g u a r d s Ken H a lm ami T o m m y N ob is; r e n ­ ter, M cW illiam s; q u a r t e r b a c k C a r ­ lisle; tailback , Hix G re e n ; w ing ­ back. J i m H udson; and fullback defense T o m m y D oerr, Harold Phillip (o ffense'. IN MWN dw-cuanim IN FAST DRY CLEANING! 'N SILK FINISHING! 6th ANNIVERSARY S A L E H I 39.95 NATURAL SHOULDER Suits A n n ive rsa ry Price 3475 Dacron Cotton Poplin N a H ;r a ! $ h o u 'a e r eoa» w t h w e* team*, Looked vents, b u tt o n a n d p o c k e t ' tb s trousers t m a n d t a D e ^ e d (no pleats). h : i oi-ve a n d tee Hie new ; ght g^-ev ca s a H a g . 'o r e . I R egu lars, Long*, a n d Ex’ra -L o n g * Bermuda Shorts r ■ • V t ' N M Va Pl®! I* T wo s*yes t 0 c h o o s e from b o t h Pla'n Fronlt Be ” Hep shy *, S a ta «e--p r / « with tab and buboes. La rge »e action o f checks p H es n sm^!! ^^4 large var-ety. D e e p beautiful rotors. Last-Second Basket Gives Loyola 60-58 Victory Over Cincy LOUISVILLE, Ky. (3 —Incredible first free throw on a one-and-one | Tom Thacker fed Shingleton a Loyola of C hicago won the N a­ bonus situation with 12 seconds to court-length pass against a Loyola tional C ollegiate Basketball Cham­ go. pressing defense for a layup with pionship Saturday night, dethron­ But Shingleton m issed the se c ­ 2:15 showing on the clock and It ing two-tim e cham pion Cincinnati ond The l e a p i n g R am blers w as 58-all. 60-58 on a tip-in by Vie Rouse with grabbed the rebound and Hark­ Ixjyola, winding up with a 29-2 one second to go in an overtim e. Tn becom ing first at-large the te a m to win an NCAA title in 13 ye ars. G eorge Ireland s rem ark­ able R am blers overcam e a 15- point second half deficit, caught the top-rated B earcats at the w ire jum p shot by All-America on a J e r r y H arkness. tile heights of college basketball when the 6-foot-6 R ouse cam e up with a perfect follow to a 10-foot jump shot bv Les Hunter. then scaled Another sellout crowd of 19.153 its hands during a th a t sat on ra g g ed third place gam e won by- Duke over Oregon S t a t e 85-63 roared throughout t h e gruelling, nev er-give-an-lnch title battle be­ tween two trem endous team s. Loyola third-ranked nationally and playing in the NCAA for the first tim e, got it needed when Cincinnati decided to '■it on a 15-point l l lend with m inutes. 45 seconds remaining im petus t h e The B earcats of Ed l u r k e r , seeking an unprecedented t h i r d s l o w e d -traight cham pionship things down so much the% that scored only two field goals in the last 14 m inu tes of regulation piay With Harkness steadily peppering aw ay after a m iserable first half Loyola gradually into w h a t looked like a safe lead. cut first With 4 29 rem aining, Harkness field goal and his hit his fourth and fifth points of the gam e He wound up with 14 points over­ all. Cincinnati, losing only its sev ­ in 89 gam es played enth gam e under Jucker In three years, still had a three-point lead at 53-50 with 45 seconds left in regulation tim e and was two points ahead when the little Ijirry Shingleton sank let fly ness flew down the court, from the side about IO feet from the basket and got Loyola even for the first tim e since the first 3 minutes of the gam e In the o v e r t i m e . Harkness grabbed the ball on the tip-off and in for an e a sy shot for streaked a 56-54 Loyola lear], Cincinnati's G eorge Wilson tied it at 56-56 with a tw isting, close-in shot. With 3 m inutes left. Ron Miller'* 25-foot jump shot put Loyola two points ahead again. tried to control the hall recon!, for one final shot but Shingleton forced a jump ball against John Egan at I 21 and it cam e down to which of the two 5-10 guys the sm allest men on a court of bounding, leaping kids could con­ trol the tip. It turned out to be Ixiyola. M ill­ in a rare er grabbing the ball the R am ­ with Tony Y ates and blers stalled out until Hunter s final *hol and Route s trem endous leap and tip-in Steer Tracksters Take Corpus Second By CARLTON STOWERS Texan Sports Staff CORPUS CHRISTI tSpl' A b i­ lene Christian College track and field team . faster than a speeding bullet, m ore powerful than a loco­ motive and able to leap tall build­ t'x>k an­ ing* w ifh a sin gle bound other i?« cinder Saturday night, as it took hom e its fourth in winning the Corpus m eet title Christi Invitational to w a rd s building here dynasty step the The W ildcats copped title with 79 points, w hile a vastly im ­ proved T exas team ne led d sen the number two tho* Baylor was third and SMU fourth The Longhorn* took wins in the spring m edley and two mi;p re lays, while ACC won the m il* and distance m edley even ’s, and Bay­ lor took hom e the gold m ed al in the 440-yard relay Texas finished third behind ACC rn all three baton events The I/>ngboms' Rex Wilson saw I his w in-streak snapped in th# 120- y a rd high hurdles, w hore SMU s Bobby Johnson used a rocket start to take an early lead and finish a step ahead in 14 1 W ilton w a s second team m ate J a m e s Cooper w as ere lited With the s a m e tim e in th rd place in 111 and Wilson bounced b a c k »n win r t e interm ed iate barriers sn •CO-yard a breeze With SMU s Billy Foster sid e­ lined du e to a pulled m uscle. ACC'a Dennis R ich ard so n w as a shoe-in w inn er the 100-yard d ash winning in 9-7 Texas B ubba Jones wax fourth, and David Col­ ley fifth in the century in Jer*-y Dye* AGT I Johnnv-on- the-spof, won javelin with a the ?»•«* of 2,39-fret Topped the broad leap jum p with a and for fifth big O i r s t i a n The was favoring a slightly injured leg. and d d not see duty' on any of the Wildcat rela y team* s u b -p ar 22 5 the shot 50 feet tossed place JORACE MEN WEAR Suggests: the young man who tabs his collars VERNO BLO M Q U IST 617 C O N G R E SS HARLEY CLARK seconds to pick. up your cleaning with claim check! All Alterations Done FREE By Our Tailors: A N D Y ROJAS and LOUIS MELENDEZ NUECES at W H O p e n 7 a,rn. - 6 p.m . de ly; til 8 p.m. M on. thru Thur. 2270 Guadalupe GR 6-0277 ... nears CR1CKETEER Black and N a v y Suits He depends on the Cricketeer approach to t r a d i t i o n to take him throug h his most important days (a nd evenings). He finds these dark tones make a business luncheon successful . . . dinner for two even more so. these exciting coolrs look their traditional best in racketeer's Magna 2 x 2 tropical, and unbeatable blend of 5 5 % Dacron* polyester and 45% worsted. Tailored on lean natural lines. 5 9 5 0 * Reg. T.M. O u r collection of neat tab-collar shirts in solids and stripes . . . 5 . 0 0 Providence Wins NIT , 8 7 - 6 6 NEW YORK IM—P rovid en ce’* cool and clev e r F riars raced to their second N ational Invitation Tournam ent cham pionship Satur­ d ay , m ethodically sw eeping past C anisius 81-66 in tile title gam e of th e 26th annual basketball cla ssic. P arlaying their versatile talents, the F riars turned what had been a close gam e Into a romp in the { •econd half before a packed M a d i­ son Square Garden house of 18.499. A c lo s in g s p u r t of s e v e n s tra ig h t p o in ts g a v e P rovidence a 41-32 h a lf-tim e e d g e a n d th e advantage was steadily increased in the sec­ ond h a lf a s t h e Friars thoroughly j o u tp la y e d an outm anned C anisius c lu b . Providence, w inner of the NIT in 1961 with som e of the sam e players, posted its 15th consecu- tive victory Getting the bulk o f its scoring from R ay F lynn, voted the tour- ; nam ent s Most V aluable P layer, and Jim Stone, the F riars hustled into a com m anding lead by the mid-way point of the second half. Georgia Official1 Sunday, March 24. 1943 THE DAILY TEXAN Paga 5 ATLANTA LB — A tty. G en. E u­ To Ask Lie Test JCU Frog Baseballer Torpedo Longhorns, 3 to A th letic D ire c to r W ally B u tts su b m it tests a b o u t fo o tb all-rig g .n g c h a rg e s by the Saturday ev en in g Post, gene Cook said Saturday he would a s k Coach P a u l " B e a r '’ Bn. ant. of Alabama and fo rm e r G eorgia lie d e te c to r to new DACRON AND COTTON SLACKS ARE NUMBER ONE ON CAMPUS'S EVERY­ WHERE ■ Ja . M s C o " © re, wa* T 'c b e o* i - . j w- ♦ v a r , EV I'S . c * d e c r " ••cl ’ Ow I w ant „ w a rt a w ho'e , : j se e B a * N a .y , Be 9 5 , C - • s e e e - i Chare P riced 5.98 MN M - • l l C O N G R E S S TP? FA' ''T h e y w ill be in v ited by le tte r to tak e p o ly g rap h te s ts, to be ad ­ m in is te re d by th e s a m e m an who w ill be a n e x p e rt," Cook said. took th e y lie d e te c to r B utts and B ry a n t a lre a d y have said tests w hich s flowed they told the tru th in d enying P o st c h a rg e s of collu­ sion in a Sept. 22 football g a m e w hich A la b am a won 35-0. Cook q u estio n ed an official of th e P o st a t his office S a tu r d a y P o u rin g the full re so u rc e s of his office into sla te the w eek - old th* g ra y -h a ire d Cook said probe, th e scope of th e in v estig atio n had b ro ad en ed . ""This is going to be a sw eeping in v estig a tio n o f all a sp e c ts o f this m a tte r, including ans- connection w ith fed e ra l, sta te , or civil la w s," sa id t o o k 17-v e a r v e te ra n a tto r ­ ney g e n e ra l. a-e also In v estig a tio n s being conducted by a US S en ate su b ­ c o m m itte e w hich co n cern ed w ith gam b lin g , and by the South- c a - 'e m C onference. ; s • We r e going into th is fully an I c o m p le te ly ," Cook said . Ile indi­ c a te d defir.,te p ro g re ss In th e in­ v estig a tio n been m ad e . a lre a d y h a d 1963 — SUMMER SE SSIO N S ABROAD U w v s w t y of San Francisco GUADALAJARA M t i e o —. I14C OO inciiidti Nit.on, 'OOI-. t « d ac Hv hi ts 7*A«g ) toot'd and VALENCIA Set AALMA C t MALLO A CA, S p t >—J« y I - toot-d t ' d J« "t TO - Awgui* ll te tit t-om UIS OO 'oe>r i«di» <3. t i »e- S t.t'tc pi'tni inc -d ’-g q tirtm e rli ♦u ' 0- tt * -it ti t ' d ACJ N O - r iit l r ALANI NEW yoak-madaio-valincia A«gj«* J4 S t « f t l p i t m totiiremeett ». * o - t - d s o u n d T* * vc**.m a d * D - P a l m a . t- e- - UTI OC toot'd e« d roe-n, i t d ' . i d « t l *t- ne ud ig l r p l a n e n e * t e t » * ti tit t e INFORMATION- Of C t ' e* G S t' tto te U t i w t i t f e t S t ' E'tAclKo 'O'* it St* f ’n t i t e IT C t BACK DOOR 5 th s t NECHES OUALITY STEAKS tiled *k# TO 289 ...... i p J P l N * P H m * rn **%■ lf iv4. wC ?• A h I % . BOB M Y E R • . . p itc h e s well in d e f e a t Humphrey, Gilbert Make All-District Tw'o T e x a s c a g e rs from the su ­ p e rb 1962-63 te a m re ceiv ed further honors S a tu rd a y w hen they we - n u rsed to the NCAA aii-D istn . • 6 second te a m by th e N atio n al As­ sociation of B ask e tb a ll Coaches M ike H u m p h re y , 6-8 ju n io r cen­ ter. and J im m y G ilb e rt 5-9 sen io r floor g e n e ra l, w e re th e m e m b e rs B oth w e re n a m e d to the all- Southw est C o n feren ce te a m , an d G ilb ert also m a d e th e "S m a ll A m e ric a " te a m for p la y e rs u n d er 5-10. Jo in in g th em on tile second te a m w e re T o m m y B o y er of A rk a n sa s, B a rg e r of H ouston, an d E s te s of U*ah State. Two A rizona S hite s ta rs , J . rn B a rn e s of T ex as W estern, K en d all Bb me of R .ce, a n d B en n ie Lennox of AAM m a d e up the in itial te a m . Th© 0 0 a h es te a m w as Ar* H ey m an , D uke; Ron Bon­ all-A m erica h am and T om T h a c k e r, Q n c in - ; n a tl; Bill G reen , Colorado State; Iycyola of and G e rry H ark n e s, 1 O u c a g o . B y E V E R E T T FT F T J . C M T e x a n S p o r t * S t a f f FORT W O R T H (Sp!.) — TCU ’s H om ed F rogs crippled T exas’ chances of repeating as SWC cham ps by defeating the L onghorns 3-1 here S a t ­ u rd ay before the l a r g e s t c ro u d to ever a tte n d a TCL baseball game. Some 1,500 fans overflowed the seating area, spread on th e hill behind right field, and down the baselines, to w atch TCL beat Texas for the first tim e in F o rt W o r t h since 1956. TOT1 leads the Conference Rader, UT Senior Take Racing Wins I race w ith a 2-0 record, and j has now won IO gam es in a row. Texas is 1-1-1. h i m * . B Et icy Trie Frog* co upled * 330-'oof b y e e n te rfie ld e r Fiob -h the 11-strikoout p itch the vic- ne a l L an ce B row n for r u n I tory. I only four. T ex as left l l m en on b a se , T C I’. T he H orns «ta rtin g p itch er Bob M yer, did a c re d ita b le job in a - low-.ng TCL" only fo u r hits, bu* 'h o se included a trip le and a hom e run. M eanw hile T ex as g a th e r only five h ts none of them. p a rtic u la rly solid. the L ong­ As a m a tte r of fact, to get a horn': w e re n e v e r able size ' > . > unk of B row n s d an cin g b aseb all Two of the hits w ere in- trip le wa* m is- ludged b v *he let* fielder, and the lazy bloopers, o th e r w h i c h r a m p in the top of the ninth tw o w p r e ta ffie s. A I fto'1 I w ith tw o out. B t TOMMY FOS TI It Seguin < Spl I — Hom er R id er’s ' l i n g little L otus 23 d a rtin g be- w ' veen laager < ars like a goldfish in an o cean full of w hales, screa m - e i hom e with in Saturday’s feature ra e f-r A, B C Production an I G M xiified < ars. ’hn Pool. U n iv e rsity sen io r, took first ov erall second in B P ro d u cti on. Sunday s ra c e s begin a* noon th e R a n d o lp h A u x illary F ield , a t t vo H iles e a s t of Segu.n on high­ l y 9QA The Course is 3.3 m iles >ng, with eig h t tu rn s an d a 5,'OOO f of straight. R a d e r s co m p etitio n Sunday in IV will the C a rre r a del A lam o co m e f r o m Bob M arkle} H o ly - wood, in a P o rsc h e R SK ; Jim, R ay II ill, H ouston, in a De v in -C orvet­ te ; and G e o rg e K oehne J r ., d riv ­ ing a C ooper-B uick. The lone L onghorn ru n c a m e in the firs t innm g on a sacrifice fly­ by B utch Thom pson Bill B ethes i ex a s sh o rtsto p , got on on an e r ­ ro r. an d m oved to se ond w hen T C V 's B ill M cA dam s bobbled a d o u b lep lav a tt e m p t to B eth ea the R ig h tfie ld e r Folsom Bell pushed th ird on a bunt dowm saw all th a t 1 h a n d s co m e up safe Th* w pson lin e r to left to th ird b aselin e laced an a rc h in g sc o re B ethea M y e r re tire d -he side handily in the T C V 's h a lf of th*8 first, bu* F ro g s' Don R eynolds opened tho not tom o f th e Record w th a *irgie B ig le r followed w ith his tow ering j b la st ov e r the le 't-c e n te ,*fie]d fence to give TCH a 2-1 lead In th e la st of th ird , TCL added an in su ra n c e ru n . M cA d am s opened the inning w ith in n e a r a looping fly to d eep left field th a t d ro p pod the fence fog a 'n ’plc C huck K nutson, T e x a s' all- A m e ric a left fie ld er w ho d a n ce d a n d o r tho b all b efo re in behind h im sc id on B oating b ack the b all kept it TCI.’ s Ronnie M cLain s a c n f od f ir tic A d a h o m e w ith a to re n te r. lo n g "foxas could ro m e close to p ro - d u c in g a ru n only tw ice a f te r th a t In the fo u rth G a ry London w a l k e d a n d ad v a n c e d to second on a field­ e r s choice. J e r r y O rm a n d w alk e d , to p u t m en on first and seco n d , hu t M y e r forood O rm a n d a t soc ond, an d London w as o u t try in g to sco re. M y e r w alk ed tho sov- to open on?h an d wa* safo n* second on an e r r o r a M e r B e th e a b unted Then Bell h it d eep Into the hole loaded Mi* and the K nutson stru c k o u t inning the base* w ere to e n d In th e ninth T ex as put two m en on b a se on a couple of le t • •« bu* lack e d the p u n ch to ja b a e r ss th e re e d e d ru n s. Box Score T E X A S B e t h e a »* K m j x t 3b B c ’i rt Knutson lf 3 IOO T h i r n a n l.ondon K and v c f O r m a n d a-Nr\s M cr p T n t* !. I fi t 3-1 l b r h b l TC I i b r b b l o S I I 0 Mc A ds 2b - 5 0 1 0 M cL ain sa S 0 2 o W lr t h lf J • ____ S . R v d s lb 4 0 I o r 3 o 0 e Biirio- l h S 0 0 I P R v d s r f 3 2 0 0 3 .» r» r 3 ■ v Cl 4 m i o H o " 3b 2 b 2 0 a n J or <« r I m , o Bro’.' r p 3 0 1 0 Total* I U l l f a S tru ck fo r O r r is n l rn y T r \ to* t < i ........................... I bo OOO OOO— I J. * ........................o ; i ooo Ofix— :< 4 4 E— Ko spar 2 Ormand McLain I 24-12 27-11 D P —M yer and 2 u-— - n P O - A — T e x a s n m , M c A d a m s * * -. c * r. Mc A dam* •f'V d am* son M c L a in . L O B —T e x a s H R —Blgle* SF ay -p- l l . T C U M - er fL 2-*'* Brown > w , 4 - 0 r e r bb •« ip b : I 4 a 3 ............. « I n 5 .......... 0 4 3 1 ip lres- Capos R ussell. T im e. 2 is A V e n d a n c e I.>00 Summer Harburt SKIRT SALE Quality and fit you demand — a savings value you cannot afford to miss. Da cron Cotton Poplin that is wrinkle- free and easy to care for. Sizes 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, IO, 12, 13, 14, • " A " SKIRTS • WRAP-AROUNDS • STRAIGHT SKIRTS • HIP-STITCHED NOW OPEN! The University A reas Most Complete AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE CENTER • FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY • WASH • LUBRICATION • POLISH • WHEEL BALANCE • SERVICE CALLS Service Until 1(h00 p.m Nightly! AMAZING N EW OU A I* A N T I ! ’ t M t t * n t I* *0* t t y N M O* ( # * c tp t Uh n . i o o H wMHtrf rn te n t IO M I rn w f l i m 6 * to*tod lift dot* tot provt it<.ic** bit H i Hi a n lia ■'* t h H u t t d tor a c r e a m m « retil p u r p c m I i ' t n ! f t d - lf tnt ctuM it ttf tr ti.t j 1 * t " - r a n t * I aam lira we IM iii tftirt*. II •.-.'I Hi ~»l 0 ?>» - tit. ti you rn # ISI -tut* ll t", cfh,, f#H0B !hw, a i l ai . o u t tx t a d i m tu t , tfh>«nn« c t d . f H i em* o o d t o t al tP t p t i r t t i t t t pftct rapt**tilted by tfe* VBifMl mmtmtffN (ii MtMd IVf af tfm |f%' td lo t i tdiustmwrt t i foitctt MOmu( fc|J|w • OFFICIAL INSPECTION STATION • FRONT END ALIGNMENT • BRAKE WORK • TUNE-UPS • TRANSMISSION REPAIRS • ALTERNATOR AND GENERATOR REPAIRS All Work Guaranteed! It. V. M O RGAN GR 7-9343 Morgan Service +2 TEX ROBERTSON GR 6-2075 29TH AT GUADALUPE "Courtesy and Integrity A ll Salat Final, Plaata Ctqdt, Ca/mpMf— H n t b e r S t t p £i>jfjop 2350 GUADALUPE t T h e D a il y T e x a n Amusements Sunday, March 24, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 Character in Decline Decadence of th# modem Airier-i ican theater can be traced to the ' disintegration of characterization. dram a critic John Gassner s a id • Friday. Gassner gave another lecture In a series dedicating the new drama building. He is the author of sev- j era! books on drama Including “ Masters of the D ram a.” “ Produc­ ing th# P la y ,” and “ Theater in Our Tim es.” Maintaining that modem charac­ ters are being manipulated for symbolic effect rather than for reality, he said. “ E ve ry playwright has given us a puppet rather than a person. The hunt has been on for the symbolism rather than for the reality’.” Gassner said that a disappear­ ance of man himself from the stage constitutes “ The Nineteenth Century would have placed charcateT first rather than last.” a decadence. He added jokingly. “ If the choice is between decadent theater and dull theater, I would not hesitate to pick the former “ Coming to the aid of the often neglected playwright he said, “ The I modem theater beearn# signifi­ cantly modem only when it be­ came a playwright's and not an actor's theater. It was the play­ wright's look at the world, rather than his look at the stage, that de­ termined his im portance.” “ There have been great im prove­ ments on nineteenth century stage design and production,” he said. “ In contemporary dram a, you can not have the Idea alone. You need a concrete presentation.” “ Musicals have offered our the­ ater that which it can do best— production,” he continued In the question and answer session after his talk. “ The older producers of musicals had no interest in a r t- only In show business—sentiment, com, and girls.” W ith an introduction of folk spir­ it and regionalism, Am erican dem­ ocratic patriotism, social consci­ ousness and idealism, and ballet, “ the Am erican musical has de­ parted, to a great degree, from corny music and girls, girls, girls.” In spite of the fact that he work­ ed on both “ Oklahoma’’ and “ C ar­ “ I don’t ousel,” Gassner said, 29th & RIO GRANDE "Famous Corn-Beef Sandwiches" I O P E N 6:14 • F IR S T S H O W 7:15 A D FLT ® 7ft* T E E N D IS C C A R D Ste C H IL D R E N E N D E R 13 F B E I LOVE! LAUGHTER! M E L O D Y ! I f yon Ilk* D O R IS D A T find R O C K H I P S O N . . , w all till yon a*e her with S T E P H E N B O T I) in color! Ent*rt&inm*nt Guaranteed DORIS DAY in "■ i i m m t k • ------ in PANA VISION*) and MCTR0C0L0R W IT H ST E F H F .N BOVO. J IM M Y O I K A N T E A N O M A R T H A R A T E --plus-"RACHEL & STRANEGR" R O B E R T M IT C H E M — in oolor — I.O R E T T A TO C NQ A I)l l.TS 70*. T E E N D IS C C A R D 50* Child I nd*r 6. F R E E . O P E N 6:15 P M I R E E R ID E S ON “ U L T O O T " FINT. F O O D S A P L A Y G R O U N D BREATH-TAKING ADVENTURE AND ACTION ON OUR 80 FT. SCREEN IN "JUNGLE COLOR" " S H E R M A R IC . .. To v would not molt# a m istake seeing it " —N. Y. Post "PUT THIS ONE ON YOUR‘MUST1 UST’ — D a ily Newt •THRILLING, ABSORBING’ —Cue MV' «. Ti t * y WAT} / ■ ■ I ' m —Gassner the Am erican m usical think is a new form or a very signifcant one.” He attributed its popularity to the Inclusion of many entertain­ ment forms in one package for .the once-in-a-while theater-goer Xvho likes to get his money’s worth rrom his high-priced ticket. “ When you haven't got one good product. I you can sell a combination of products.” Of toe future, Gassner noted, “ Sentiments of the general public always lag behind the intellectual sentiments, perhaps as much as a century. We w ill continue to see a strong emphasis on surface real­ ism, and playwrights w ill continue to w rite psychology rather than character.” Umlauf Show Continuing At El Paso Museum The E l Paso Museum of Art w ill hold over through the period of Lent nine sculptures and two drawings from its recent Charles Um lauf exhibition Um lauf, professor of art. is de­ scribed in the museum’s newslet­ ter q f “ one of the finest of con­ temporary Am erican artists who for more than two decades has been a dominant figure in the ar­ tistic growth of the Southwest.'' Longhorn Washeteria 65c FLU FFD RY, 9 lbs Finishing Service Shirts, Levis, Etc. E. 19th GR 2-6619 DRIVE *IN THEATRE 3901 Lest Aa Dellwood, B O X O F F IC E O P E N S 6 Of A D M I S S I O N 70* K ID S U N D E R 13 F R E E Jack, The Giant Killer K e n rla Mathew*— Judy Meredith Start. 7 OO — plait— GERONIMO Chack Connor*—tin intl. Devi Start* 8 SO BOX O FFICE O P E N S 6 OO A D M I S S I O N 70* R ID S U N D E R 12 I R E R Billy Rose's JUMBO Dona Day—Stephen Bojd. Martha Rm * S t a r t * 8 SO —pin*— THE DEVIL’S PARTNER EdwlB Ne!*«n—Joanna AIH*on S t a l l * 9 70 THE TRIFFIDS ARE COMING TO DEVOUR THE HUMAN RACE! 'DAVID AND U SA ': M A G IC SA N S TRICKS B y TONY PFANNKUCHE “ David and L is a ” could have been made 200 times for what It cost to f i l m “ Cleopatra.” The photographer a n d director, the producer and the script w riter had never made a movie before. W ith the exception of Edward Da Silva (as the psychiastrist), the actors were novices. We should then expect the pro­ duction to be at best Inept. And there are mistakes: Janet M ar­ golin (L is a I occassionally speaks in a very “ stagey” voice; at the beginning the continuity is had;! the background music at times tends to be noisey and cliche rid­ den. And yet David and Lisa current­ ly at the Texas is, without ques­ tion. the best Am erican movie of the year. The screen play is taken from in semi- a case study novel form by D r. Theodore Eu- j bint of two adolescents patients In a school for the m entally ill. (written Lisa, who is about fourteen, is suffering from chronic childhood schizophrenia, in the hebephrenic f o r m which is characterized by fear and rejection of physical m a­ turity’. At times she is Lisa, a four year old, who speaks only in rhyme patterns; and she is also M uriel, w h o, though completely mute, is more mature, and seems embarrassed by Lisa's c h ild is h ­ ness David iK ie r D ulles) Is a b o u t sixteen and has rinse to genius IQ He also has chronic anxieties and neuroses, which are manifest­ ed bv a fear of intellectual and emotional contact He protects himself with sarcasm and condes­ cension His fear of death is path­ ological: he w ill not allow him­ self to be touched, and he la ob­ sessively Interested in docks and time. Previous psychiatric treat­ Art Contest Scheduled Texas Fine Arts Association win sponsor an art contest for h gh school students M ay 2. S. and 4 in the Texas Union Art G allery The T F A A High School Art Com­ petition is open to tenth, eleventh, a n d twelveth graders In T e x a s public high schools. First prize is $250; second prize. $150. Third and fourth prizes are $75 each with four honorable men­ tions of $50 each. ment has not been 8ble to reach either Lisa or David. Unlike most couch movies, this is not a story of psychiatry or psychology or sociology or even mental Illness. At the risk of ban­ ality, I ’ll have to say David and Lisa is about identity, communica­ tion, and love, a kind of dark and terrifying love which means the death of personality for both. And j the death of their illness. The success of the film is due j not so much to the story as it is to t h e extraordinary sen sitivity; with which it is told. L isa ’s adoles- cent love for David Is revealed j p rim arily through a recognition of: her identity’, and not through overt action toward David. In one of the finest s c e n e s , she says to ! David. “ Look at me. Who do you see?” David answers in her rhyme pattern, “ I see a girl, a pearl of a g irl.” She smiles and runs to her toearapist. “ John. John, I ’m a g irl— a pearl of a g irl.” This fol­ lowed by a sensuous, yet innocent scene at night in bed. She holds her hand in front of her. Then, in recognition of herself and her ma­ turity, she caresses herself. Now she can w r i t e for her therapist: “ Lisa—M uriel—Me.” And there Is the scene In which David reacts with terrifying vio­ lence to being touched. And the scene between David and the psy­ chiatrist In which David begin* to recognize his obsession w i t h clocks in pathologic. And toe fine talk between David and his father, which is a study in noncommuni­ cation. And the scene . . . but you must see it. Without t r i c k s or gimmicks “ David and Lisa ” reveals the ter­ rors of the m entally ill. And w itlv out condescension of sentimental­ ity, It reveals their humanity. "Hus is an intelligent and beautiful mo­ tion picture, with no papier-mache social conscience. (Cf. S t a n l e y K raem er), and no sensationalism (also Cf. Stanley Kraem er.) At toe end U sa and David are not cured. Their “ love” at best, means only that communication has been established. But is with communication t h a t treat­ ment can begin. It R O M E I N N N o w Features LENTEN SPECIALS (MEATLESS DISHES) PIZZAS: OH v« Cho# so Anchovy Shrimp Groon Pepper Mushroom ALSO: Spoghofti A Mushrooms Spoghotti A Sauce Choose Raviola Open: 5 p.rn.-I a.m. Fri. A Sat. Till 2 a.m. ROME INN 2900 RIO GRANDE G R 6 - 5 1 t i N O W mmmm „ MASTER VALET 2704 Guadalupe offers you Tuxedo Rentals and a Complete Alteration Department st ^ etds. STATE Reasonable Prices G R 2-3468 "on the drag A N UNUSUAL LOVE A d u lt. I 25 S tu D !.r I C hild .35 Nominate# for 3 Academy Award* “ Beat Director’’ “Beat Screen Play of the Tear’’ TRIPLE A W A R D W IN N E R I •'Best Actor!* “Best Actress!* -v'jd r/i e-tee f ■•'n fen se/ “Best New Director!* — Vr-vce FUm Fest; st! CAPITOL % THE ADVENTURES OP O P E N 145 Feat. 2-4-6-5-1# W V R W f U NOW ! OPEN 11:45 THO OF TOUR FAVORITES d a n g e r o u s l o v e ! iW tfJG M T Girns S T A R R IN G B IL L Y F A L B O A N D F L A T M A T E S Starring AGNES LAURENT The French Star N O T E — Positively No One Ender I i Tra. Admitted No Child Ticket, geld Free to $17.57 Blanket Tax and Season Ticket Holders! An opportunity to hear the Metropolitan Opera’s most brilliant Wagnerian soprano . . . Birgit Nilsson in Concert Sunday Afternoon A t 4 p.m. March 31 Municipal Auditorium Drawing Begins Monday, March 25 at the Music Building Box Office - Open 9-4 Daily. THO G r e a t e s t A d v e n tu r e E v e r L ived B e c o m e s THO G r e a t e s t A d v e n tu r e E v e r F i l m e d ! M U I W I iOWAR RICHARD HARRIS ADVANCE TICK VT SALK Starting Tomorrow at th* VA R S I T Y Op»n in - ho a m. and th* PARAMOUNT HUGH GRIFFITH- RICHARD HAYDN STARITA T*ERCY HERBERT • CHARLES LEDERER • LEWIS MILESTONE H HD a* MKI m n MU FILMED IN ULTRA PANA VISION TO Bum rn aa taal * ONUS 'T E C H N IC O L O R * Winner of 7 Academy Award Nomination* including Best Picture STARTS THURSDAY MARCH 28 \ # A O C I T V V A R J I I I COME BETWEEN 6:18 AND 8:00 AND SEE SNEAK AND "SON OF FLUBBED' Thtameunt T O D A Y a t i n t e r s t a t e 'PREVIEW ■tonight! COME BETWEEN 4:48 AND 7:07 AND SEE SNEAK AND "COURTSHIP OF EDDIES FATHER" amt lot A MOMS DISCOUNT Cato NOW SHOWING! FF AT I B F S : I 44 - 4:01 - 6 1* (S N E A K 8 (Kit 10:09 The NUT g&te a BOLTY Walt Disney S o n o f RUBBER — FRED NANCY W W W MACMURRAY OLSON WYNN *EUA2C SY KXM WST* Or '9'8UTX»tt.. K C K MT BMY StOOUOnU AduJU I OO M D C ft* Child SO E v e r y b o y n e e d s a 'm o fh e r*I ...even if Dad Has to marry hen__ M-G-tf ■ t k « O M 4 | t s h ip • F E * W id F a t t ie r M K S d e mm, m f * - . A J j Glenn FORD V^Ak Shirley JONES STEvBlS-D LA MERRILL* ROBERTA SHERWOOD-RONNY HOWARD' 5A>*AY!Sioir»n< wteraooxon ■ i ,■ .............. — ANNOUNCING THE PRESENTATION OF Tho L o n d o n Film s P rodu ction HILBERT & SULLIVAN starring KOBERT MORLEY m t GilbaH wnh FETT* n ftat m cro n y ca*t* • TECHNICOLOR • MAURICE EVANS ai Arthur SulTiw TODAY AND TOMORROW ONLY Varsity FEATURES 2-4-6-8-10 STARTS TODAY! F E A T T R E S : T O O - 3 : 5 5 - I M 7:45 9 40 MJIfmN-HIRNER urns gut* rn m n? £ - - a EDOff WALTER PAUL J im ii ii R ift n w o n K a t n a w i a O w v T M M IX I OHI fflrwrnw/FOH) NOW SHOWING! F E A T U R E S : S . 4 :4K (S?TF. A K 7:0“ > Last V *atar* I Si PLUS! “ JUNGLE FIGHTER” f* NOW YOU CAN SEE THE i t BEST AMERICAN FILM OF 1962!” —Time Magazine Home'Moving Drama Sunday, Mardi 24, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Today s Music Today Page 7 B y L A R R Y L E E S a r a h W h e la n . M is s W h H a n d o es T e x a n A m u s e u m e n t* S t a f f a w o n d e rfu l jo b w ith the p a rt. Home-made theater can be em­ barrassingly bad at times. The Austin Civic Theatre ha* an uphill fight. Its productions take place in a disreputable looking old warehouse down by the tracks and its budget is scantier t h a n its audience. Little annoyances creep into its plays. P re tty y o u n g things a e forced to masquerade as 103-year- old women. Plastic tablecloths ap­ pear in settings purporting to re­ present a kitchen of the e a r l y 3000's. And there are those te r­ rifying little silences when one of the rhildren forgets a line. A II of these s m a ll th in g s ra n be d e s tr u c tiv e o f the Illu s io n a play* d e m a n d s , but th e y a r e c o m ­ p le te ly sh a d o w e d he c o m p e te n t d ire c tio n an d s o m e fir s t ra te a c in g In “ A l! the W a y H o m e ,” the A C T '* c u r r e n t p la y . “ A il the W a y Hom e” is L i d Mosel * adaptation of ‘he J --me' Agee novel " A Death in 'im F a m ­ i l y . ” The don. wh h takes place lr toil - o' a family Knoxville in 1911 touched b y death, and is simple honest and trentendou* .'.-proving I* w a s an a r t of co*.’•agr 'o r the ACT to ta k'e a p'av like th * and their hard work -now s jp a prod lo­ tion which offers some b e a u tifu l m o re e n ’ s A C T s d e -'o r . J i m M a r v in p la y s J a y F o l i c ’ H e a p p e a r* only rn the firs t a c t. for- the p la y h in g e* >n this c h a r e t e r s s idd en d ea th n a c a r a* o ld e n ’ M a r t in , w h o se w .fe D or’s jo in ed in the d ir e c ’ ion o ' th is p 'a v does Ilia* act. H e rrn k p * ii« b e lie v e in J a y s p ro b le m s in lr. m g up to h s in e x p la in ­ w ife e x p e c ta tio n s an d fine w >rk in ing the w o rld to h is son, R u f u s . T h e p la y k e e p s h e r o n sta g e a l ­ m o st e v e r y m in u te , and sh e Is In p e rfe c t c o n tro l. In A c t T w o , a f t e r J a y I* k ille d , M is s M t i t ­ ia n '* jo b o f c o n v e y in g t e r r o r , s o rro w and a n g e r a t h e r tak e n fo r g ra n te d b ra n d o f G o d c o m e s o ff w ith o u t o v e rs ta te m e n t. I t is a p e r fo r m a n c e o f g en u in e p o w e r, a n d I g u a r a n t e e th a t, a t $1.50 top, M is s W h e la n ’s w o rk is w o rth s e v e r a l tim e s w h a t you w ill p a y to see It. is tall Happily the A C T come u p with a fine young trouper, Ronnie Ho­ to play Rufus His only fault pe; ;s that he for his t o o character s age. b ,t his perform ­ rn ;*>t ance la s t evening w as—I u«e I the word sensitive, and might add. thoroughly profes*ion- a, Mr. Rope is one ch I actor w h o doesn t lean on cuteness o r rr.a n r;» v .•*-•■ s to s e e ■ e c h a n ir a ! h rn through. T ile m a in p ro b le m w ith the is th a i m ost of rest of th e r*iAt th em a r e too y o u n g for the p a rts th e y a re p la y in g — the old p eo ­ ple in th#- f a m ily . •Judith Anne She:' is a \o u n p lady f>; ed for example. im o tak- g ?he ro e of Ll...an Gish rre- ’ he par? of a "ed on Broadw ay, Fortunately, d e a f grandmother. ■ is a par- w :’h some laughs w-.t- ’n be­ ten lieve in Miss Short ’ he g i:!-of-the­ mas!'h in "ae cut • en’ R age- as a deaf old I ?dy. ,n because I refuse R a y makes given as M which P e e . e; . as M a r. s father the most of u na' he is to --a; and Steve Sanders, iry'.s brother, Andrew. ef- Sy p . * off ti a n he breaks .Ja ■, s death to s r o r e M a r y , th e w ife , Is p la y e d b v play s best viers has rn omen vs one of - the sc ’he -ne where A n d re w tells Rufus about J a y s f .neral and how a bu” er- fly perched on J a y s coffin, * its w ings beating lik e a h e a r’ . ’ L u c ia R o m b erg H a rt Is Aunt Hannah Lyn ch , a wom an who bs to utter the p lay s few forced impose a m oral clich es and whi« h r e a lly didn t need to he said aloud. H e rs is a w arm and b e lie vab le p o rtra y a l, and her scene* w ith R u fu s w ere e x c e ll­ ent. The M aru ns a iso got fine work from Eth e l Lith e, an ACT *al- w art. as Ja y s mother, and from M elvin Hande.’rran, making h.s i l­ eal debut, as Ja y s father. Charges Ellison, as Ralph. J a y s troubled brother, performed rather stiffly and. despise the fact that he was supposed to be drunk, a bit too loud for A C T s small a editor.urn. Bu t the evening re a .'iv was M >.« W helan's, I know it rn tat be dis­ couraging for an actress of he? obvious throw herself to into a role hue rh.s and fa e only relatives and the ne\*-door neigh­ bors across t ie footlight?. talent When the AC T set* up the ha: in =?od the tables ’he playhouse they and produces a -px comedy are fighting to g<*” in. When they po .r so mu'-h more time and energy to a play of genuine mer.* like ?t s '■’-e everyone sits home and wa? .bes channel I m u st h e re d ro p the c r it i c a l pose to s a y y o u a r e do in g y o u r ­ se lf a s w e ll ss the th e a te r, a d is s e r v ic e a freeform a n r e of “ A II f.iil lf you to c a tc h the H ay ' It is a r a r e c o m m o d ity ’ H o m e p u re t h e a t e r , u n a d o rn e d by tr ic k s or un f la s h y p ro d u c tio n w e lc o m e b u rsts of v irtu o s o s tru t tin g , It w ill m a k e yo u lau g h and C e r ta in ly it w ill m a k e you e r y . How lo n g sin< e yo u h a v e w e p t In a t h e a t e r ? T le a s e phone <,R 6 0.V41 for v o u r re s e rv a tio n s . The rn. .sic of contemporary co r.posers w ill be featured Sun­ day in a cont ort by the Sym- ph mio Band ar 4 p m n Texas Union Ba ll roc rn charge, Riegel-'s The program, open to 'he p ;b includes he without ' Dam • Wa I ngford Rhythm s ” in which the com ­ poser uses iividne-s and \ • a .sry rn - v of in rhythm ical pa’terns u«cd dance in exploiting ideas The band w ;' \ also pl a' c i t i n g by is still the Int ant;." rn and e J B Cham •• so Dance new in manu-< ript it rn A graduate of ’he Um- I B Ch A .ne ve-shy o the first < omp'm? s to re- ceive a special grant fr a u toe I ' >rri Foundation. Ai«• > inc vied m Sunday s pro- g am are tho “ R o yce H all S *e by H ealey W illan. tbie "Chorale and Fu g a to " by Erick- vc] 'D iv e rtim e n to for B a n d ” by Pe--., h r:'i, "C o rn rn a n do Ba Ik t the M ii C'jr,r-<-"t Mar h "M ed allion ” by Kr % out-; md m g con- < ert bands. pops rd ■ r pf-,-ar ."he Mumo Hour and THE UNIVERSITY'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 S p e e d w a y G R 8-6609 Serving the University Area for 12 Years E E 1 3 W A V H IG H FID ELIT Y AT R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S ATTENTION SENIORS O r d e r your >963 B U IC K T o d a y U n d er O u r G ra d u a te Plan. G ra d u a tin g Sfuden+s W it h L e t­ ters o: Em ploym ent M a y N o w Q u a lify for Pur­ chase of N ew 1963 B U IC K S W it h Little or N o Down Paym ent. See O u r R e p rese n ta tive T o day for C o m p le te Details. O rd ers M u st Be Placed KELLY SMITH CLEANERS D R Y C L E A N I N G I H r Sand ca (N o E itr* C i a * g t ) Coiva- Do * t r y S o n co Acct. PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES Soon to Insure D elivery. I. EXPERT CAMERA REPAIR Hallmark Cards and Plans-A-Party Shop Sfudtman Photo Service COVERT AUTOMOBILE CO. Your BUICK Dealer in Austin for Over 50 Years. GR 8-6621 5fh at San Antonio M ic h a lo p u lo * a n d Im m e l r e h e a r * * f o r " T o s c a Opera 'Tosca' Opens Monday In UT's Hogg Auditorium in Dallas, ( .e rrra ! a d r to a I I per- form afces is 51 for ado < and To cents for students The Wcdnes la y es enirg perform in- e vt .! he for the benefit rd 'he Pine Arts S h o la rah ip bind. WHO . . ME FLY? Why Not N t n t Longhorn Flying Club of tnt Unive*-j fy of Teia* F o r In f o r m a t io n P u ccin i'a 'Toacn'* will »pcn Mon­ day evening n H > A u lit Ti im as the vco.md prod rn lion of th** Opera Workshop S e r i f * , with Rudolph Pi* ra rd i a* m ivies! djofctor and con­ ductor and O rville White an stage director Sung in Knghah the of*? a \ h* presented or Monday Wednes day and Saturday evm ing* a: « o clock im pretsive prod .rtior of Th;* “ Toaca - regarded aa or* of the mo** difficult to pe rform on co bv a pnof^avgiona] w ill he *ugumented by a 50 piece or chetra The aet* have Imen design cd by Ja rre * Pringle guest assist­ ant professor of D ram a who is a> technics] adv iA »r for the staging company Imad.ng roles will he sung on aitem**e nights by I mr enc Micha Daniel tapukM, Norm a New*.or Curb n Mars n Jam es 'vnsard. Rent Nee:v and Frsrw « Sweeties with Grmm d I rn me I s nging the role 'or a I three pv*’-#. r of S-arpia ma nee* For die oper'ng night and again en Wednesday N om a Newton o' c an Anton. > a grad v e / the Uru- v ersity, w u sing the title role She studied here with W ill* Stew ­ art, and I V ) *he studied in Pa- * tinder a F . V g‘-t Scholarship Mis* Newton was regc»ra! w ruler i. of the Metnapo i»an Ope -a A n non* 'ira st a»* year a- I a <>-t> ua« the New y >rk aud •*>„>,« alan w nne- of ’he v o ra 1 d I * on o f t h e O R De* ey Competition last year She has a p p e a r e d e« ao'oi*! with the Oklahoma City „nd Austin Syrr fj»nry orchestras as well sa the San Antonio Symphony ess at the State Her recent * , F a ir Musi H i i in D a lla s in “'The M erry pymeded bv \ \ i.-ns bar s vier < et OI vie Opera poid muon of * > , Angelica e u in the I> I*>rene MichaJopt, os a graduate of the University whc’ e she is now a ie turer in rr is a'so PIZZA HUT 1809 Guadalupe mg ar* the title role for e on S 1 ‘ irday n M iss M hal< the H oum Co!-i :r hi a I ’n. • and h a s st d ied in N e v V k ,n F impe w here vhe ga.ped 'ur* er professional exnerier r c -» Iv of volcp wa continu eg he** *■ W lim Stewart The r* > of M a : rn Ca arado ?n an < pere ti* wall sung c*r Monday and W ed­ nesday evenings by Daniel Cor b n and on Sa ’urds y evening by M a r ­ vin SL*w,ani Daniel Carbin is a senior student a* the University. now in b's third re a r of s’udy vv;*h Mtxs Stewart Th « s ('.->rh,r s fir-’ appearance r» " v(nee his succev' of last reason as Rodolfo rn " t a Bohenae,” a wa* - shop production th e trie r o le rn gTje” and previous'v the rMe* m rm i Fa n T i t ” ” 7 n mem in Segre*o * ' lea fire J Ma* a ” and a ’ po d i< tions of the H ep»rtr* net of Ma s. M r C i r ? n is Ah cr. F<>*” V. * •** In !hfi0 h« sang ' I . l.rfant Prod L T ’aJiani In Alger the bla*n n Soward wha s.-*,** the role of Mar » an Satu* i'i\ even * .* ! mvers • v s a grad late i Ste • - when* h e stud *d w h U a-* While there he sang the .'.ri­ ng role* in Opera Workshop r-o- ductions of ‘Cava e n * R u s tic tn a ” and “ The Nf.kado A is*m and San Ar.tor y and p*- - .a director rd rr ;v,c a* tee ently and a* First : J Temple Rem Israel h a s recerdy made his th "A rn .* f- ing of sanresl song* He has c ** --r*,;x1 ‘ Gianni Srh ’c'” Methodist Chur h sir S w in ‘ Gianni Schicch. J perf»rrr,an es bv The demanding role of ’be B«r- t*e * mg a ’ a.. vn Scarp,a w U-rn rad ’hree Im me! studer’ ,n ’ ne Depn’hmen? of M .*.c, now in his fourth year of study with W ills Stew art. H s most recent success was in the title ro e produced in Ja n u a ry as the first in the current Opera Workshop serif*. Last season he sang M- Gohineau in "T h e Medium ’ an I \y, p Sc ha un* rd in " I a Boherr.c U niversity opera production* In addition role* M r to operatic Im m el has been soloist w-*h the U niversity Symphony and ’ne ’ n • versity Symposium orche-tras and will appear next month rn the concert version of "Carrr.cn w vh the Austin Symphony Orchestra. A finalist in the regional Metro* poUtan Opera auditions th.s month. he was second place w.nner in the J pper Codette Men s D.v .vi n rn the National Amos sa hon of Tear tiers of Singing com petit, n last November. M r. Im m c s home Quality a n d Flavor Reign Supreme PH O N E GR 2-7511 Eat In or Carry-Out 1963 STUDENT TOURS TO • EUROPE • HAWAII • MEXICO C o m * t * i« * ut! W # cr* « (j*n tt for all U rg * Tour O p e rato r* offtr'mq Stud en t Tour* in g r* « t v * rl* ty to »uit your lotto and fit your pock*tbook. Stud y Tourt, and C o l ag * Radiator Tour* to iu ro p o , o ic itin g , difforont a p arty all tk* way. It Pays to See Us W hen P lannin g a Trip W a k *v* tk# wkol# world ®« d>tpl«y O u r J * yaart trava l aipariane# it our guar«nt#a of d#p#nd«bit>ty . . . our #ip*r+ fa e ilitia i ar* a® aw ,r. aa ca a f tk# fin a it f* world you wont to go! Ah%r %%e «g ut, you Witt know wh«r§ \n THE ANITA SCHUTZE TRAVEL SERVICE • ■■MV A u th o riia d Bondad Traval A g a n tt for A L L S T E A M S H IP S . B U S , R A IL R O A D A N D A IR L IN E S C O M M O D O R E P E R R Y H O T E L — B04 B R A Z O S ST REET GR 7-9423 CASTRA G UTS " W e specialize only in Italian food" T r y u s . . . w i l l you? Lunch: 11-1:45 p.m. Dinner: 5-9:45 p.m. Except Friday and Saturday, 10:45 p.m. Closed on M onday A r s T I N ' S F I N E S T ITALJAN RESTAURANT H a v e You Tried O n e of the u h ; t o r n ? D IN I OUT IN THE Q „ ET ATMOSPHERE OF OLD M EX IC O AND E N J O * SUPERB M EX 'C A N FOOD IT' FIXED AS ONLY THE B S FOUR C A N F'X L EL T O R R O I6tk It G u a d . G R 8-4321 M O N R O E'S SOO E. A va . G R 7 8747 EL MAT S04 L A va . G R 7-7023 EL C H A R R O 912 Rad R ivar GR 6-7735 D or t C o c k T o n ig h t C all lchickentdelight ■ I H I T I K S B * , C H I C K E N • S H R I M P • B A R -B Q U E R I B S • F I S H • P I Z Z A FREE DELIVERY C A L L GR *-*21* 4 p.m. • 11 p.m. W o o k d a y t l l a.m .-I I p .«*i S a’ .. S-n., He d ayt I6C8 L a *a c a RELAX IN A TRUE DINING ATMOSPHERE Victor has an ideal location. A distinc­ tive atmosphere with a variety of good food. Ample free parking in the front or rear of the restaurant. SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS OF ITALIAN FOOD, STEAKS, AND FRIED CHICKEN Victors Italian Village 2910 Guadalupe GR 6-1600 Sunday, M arch 24, 1963 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 8 Semifinals Reached In Court Contest W inning te a m s in F rid a y 's H ilde­ b ra n d Moot C ourt sem ifin al co m ­ petition at the School of L aw w ere M ike H atc h e d and B uzzy M eyer. a n d T om C onnally and R aym ond K e rr. T h e finalist* will a r g u e on I-aw D ay. April S. be fo re t h e S u p r e m e C o u rt of T e x a s . Chief ju s tic e s for th e sem i-finals w e re Ju d g e s R o b ert H ughes and C K. R ic h a rd s. T h e M oot C o u rt C o m p e t i ti o n be g in* in O c t o b e r w ith all e n ­ t r a n t * p r e p a r i n g b rie f * a n d a r g u ­ in g in t e a m * of tw o . T e a m s a r e e l i m i n a t e d a n d r e m a t c h e d a s in th e t o u r n a m e n t , a s p o r t s final a r g u m e n t on is t h e “ c h a m p i o n s h i p m a t c h . ” I-aw D a y a n d Tlte H atchell-M eyer t e a m d e­ fe a te d G eorge C arson a n d Bill The c o n te sta n ts w ill arg u e law in effect. The vvin- V a n c e in F rid a y ’* a r g u m e n t . Con- piers of the I j h v D ay a r g u m e n t will re c e iv e a $20 aw a rd . P riz e for the na I iv and K e rr w ere o p p o s e d bv ru n n e r-u p te am is $100. R a \ B e r n ' and P a t C lark. v e rs u s equity, When You S 5 > > l 3 Think of Food... think of the ^ BIG FOUR in aut he ntic EL MAT "H o m e of the Crisp) TACOS" 504 E. AVE. GR 6-7735 EL CHARRO "B ig Steak— Mexican Style 912 Red River GR 6-7735 EL TORRO "Austin Original Mexican Restaurant" 16th & Guadalupe GR 8-4321 MONROE'S ''Mexican Food to Go' 500 E. Ave. GR 7-8747 OPEN EVERY DAY W here M exican Food is a Specialty . . . Not a Sideline Life on the Canal: Tote That Barge' is is- th e A b o a t c a u g h t w ith in n u m e ra b le b a r r ie r B y BOB DUPONT J R . T exan Staff W riter J ing a turn and ru n n in g aground. its b a rg e s W inding its w ay alo n g the h a lf -I aground w ith the tid e m oving out m oon sh a p e d T e x as c o ast, hiding c a n o fte n count on w a itin g until behind to® m oon re tu rn s w ith th e w a te r lands, d a rtin g a c ro ss shallow' p ro -j b efo re leaving, tec te d b a y s C anal. play unkind tricks on the coast- Tile c a n a l p ro v id es a m e a n s of w ise shippers. Not only doe* the tra n s p o rta tio n fo r 32 m illion tons w ater freeze on boat and barge in- decks, but also the winds aceom - of c ru d e o il, m o lte r su lp h u r, d u stria l c h e m ic a ls, steel pipe lines panylng jack- and shell. T he liquid p ro d u c ts a r e knife em pty la r g e s that are be- h andled b y th e th o u san d s of b a r - 1 re ls , ste e l pipe a n d shell by th e ton. A b a rg e th u s tu rn e d in a th irty - is c a p a b le of ing tow er behind a boat, the w inter norther* the visitor can In tra c o a s ta l D uring m ile-an -h o u r w ind sinking even a 200-ton boat. o v e r the right-of-way with ships d isp la c in g hundreds of thousands of tons. DAYS NOT DULL B o ats — and the canal — lik t people have a funny bone in them so m ew h ere. P ra c tic a l jo k e s a r e com m on. A p erso n w ho douses a crew m a te w ith w a te r can e x p ec t s a lt in his bed, o r anything. The telling of sea stories over a full house or an 81-Iowboy hand Is an excellen t way to keep rn straight fa c e; each boat has its perennial winner to be challenged at the risk of the ch allen ger’* Rut the Intracoastal is m ore than 12 feet of w ater confined within a 120 foot wide dredged channel; m ore than black Ink In a bookkeeping ledger; m ore than barge* loads of products. The canal Is a w ay of life; It to is puzzling is |>enple; it is boats. It includes both the Ca jun, w hose speech th e T exas b o atm an , an d the college stu d e n t, who c an be ju s t a s difficult to un­ d e rsta n d T he su m m e r w orking student le a rn s the lan g u a g e of the b o a ts ; but, acc o rd in g to th e T ex as tow b o a te rs, th e C ajun is a hope, less c ase CANAL L IF F Tn m an y w ays the boats a re as Ship c h an n els to tile v a rio u s h ar- w a l le t , b o rs in the s ta te in te rse c t the c a n al G irl-w a tc h in g is not hin d ered too in s e v e ra l place s. Tow b o ats and m uch on th e In tra c o a s ta l, th ere is ships u se the sam e ch a n n e l in these a lw ay s an a d e q u a te supply of girl- o rn a m e n te d y a c h ts re a d y to splash c a s ®*- fresh ly p ain ted B o a ts d isp la c in g h u n d re d s of sa lt w a te r on a tons a r e in no position to a rg u e deck. and the p a in te r. R-U Tickets on Sale Monday for Dances T ic k e ts for R ound-U p W estern D ance and R ound-U p R evue and to m idnight. Si Z en tn er's O rche*. ,r a provide m usic for the he ll rn G re g o ry G ym S a tu rd a y A pril the people th a t is h a rd to keep h olders com plex as them . A b o at up w ill m a k e the . pew g ru m b le A p n | , h(, , „ „ , n , „ m „ nd , a e re w boat an unhappy p erso n a lity . a b o a rd B ull w ill he offered to B lan k et Tax th ro u g h ta to rm „ jon d ,.sk of b u s |. th at B ru m b ie, g iv e . f r o m M onday the „ fh, ne** o ffice of t h e T ex as Union And the (a n a l itself h as milch to do vvi'h a Ixia! s p e rso n a lity at any one tim e Home p la c e * In the c a n a l a r e so s t r a i g h t t h a t e v e r y m il e s e e m * to the p r e v i o u s o ne . t h e m i r r o r I m a g e of lie D a t e t i c k e t s m a y lie r e s e r v e d s t a r t i n g M a r c h 25 arui p ic k e d up 13. G e n e r a l a d m i s s i o n \ p r I I t ic k e t* w ill he on s a l e April I t h r o u g h April 5. W e s t e r n D a n c e t i c k e t s a r e $1; R e x u e a n d Ball t i c k e t s a r e $1.30. T h e r e w ill he 6.000 W estern Is “ A W e s t e r n V i l la g e ” t h e t h e m e of th e d a n c e a n d d e c o r a ­ tion s xxiii In c lu d e th e w i n n e r s of the W e s t e r n S to r e F r o n t c o n te s t , a t ( • u n h u n g xxiii) p l a y m o n ey the C a s i n o M **l he a f e a t u r e a t ­ t r a c ti o n . Ti< k r i s for the barber ie go on s ale W ednesday he bought at the Co-Op. T ex as U nion, and from Cowboy* on c am p u s and m a v TEXAS A T O M I C ENERGY R esearch Fou nd a- fa c u lty on th e - v- m re . f\ io ch an n el tw o U niversity n e m b e rs *0 g : . •.*. - o nu- ck mc fellow ships ;n re sea rc h rn mi# K—n pov# er of the H -b o m b to w a rd p e a c e fu l D e p o s e -. D r. Iva sh, a s s o c ia te professor of am C . Duesterhoeft, pro- al engineering, are the first to E u g e n e V. a n d Dr an t U t V. )r of e ectri te ' receive research fellowships under a visiting p r o ­ fessor p ro g ra m smarted at the G e r e r a l A * o m :c Labora^or'e s o f G e ' e r a l D yn a m ic s n San D ego, C a l f. The two U niversity p rofe: .»or w ii be -air­ ing part in the first privately f a r ed a n d c o n ­ trolled fusion research p rogram , jointly s p o n ­ sored b y G e n e ra l D y n a m ic s a n d the F o u n d a t i o n Geologists Get Valuable Rocks th a n 40,000 A geological collection contain- T e x a s and M exico. Som e a re from from o th e r p a rts ing m o re ro c k sp e cim e n s has been given of th e so u th ern U nited S tates. to the U n iv e rsity B u re au of E c o nom ic G eology by i h e Rio B rav o Oil C om pany of H ouston. fossil and C alifo rn ia and hie o r g a n i z e d t h e S o u t h e r n P a c i f ­ ic, C o m p a n y ' s g e o lo g ic a l d e p a r t ­ m e n t — th e first th e oil In ­ d u s t r y , T h e R io B r a v o Oil C o m ­ p a n y w a* a n o u t g r o w t h of the d e p a r t m e n t . in R e p l a c e m e n t v a l u e o f th e col­ le c tio n w o u ld In* a b o u t $150,000, B u r e a u D i r e c t o r P e t e r T. F l a w n e s t i m a t e d . M uch of t h e m a t e r i a l is u n i q u e , h o w e v e r , a n d < a n n o t be r e p l a c e d , he a d d e d . M ost of the sp e c im e n s a re from T he R io B ra v o collection is "of im m en se value as a geological re ­ se a rc h to o l,” D r. F la w n said. On loan to th e B u re a u since 1931, the collection has a lre a d y been basis of 14 published scientific pa- p e rs an d for two additional studies now in p ro g re ss. T h e c o lle ctio n w a s b e g u n In IHS', w h e n t h e l a t e E . T. Durn- M a t e r ia l for ihe collection w as the g a th e r e d durin g many y e a r s of fi®ld ex plo ration s by D u m b le, a f o r m e r d ir e c to r of the Geological S u rv ey of T e x a s; C. L. B ak er, now re tire d in Illin o is; an i fo u r o th e r R io Brav o geologists, now (jct e a s ­ e d : W. F , C um m ins. W illiam K en­ nedy, J . A. T aff, and G. IX H a r­ ris. i t s P U N t o o w n a b o a t * In AEPi Sorority House BILLY DISCH F S /1 X X P l I IM f~ S i l l B U R N E T R O . Joudah to Talk M o n d a y A hm ad Jo u d ah . fo rm e r p r e s i ­ dent of th e O rg an izatio n of A rab S tudents, will sp eak to m e m b e rs of A lpha E psilon Phi so ro rity at 6:15 p m . M onday at the so ro rity house. His talk , sponsored by th e OAS as p a il of the group s le c tu re pro­ g ra m , w ill t>e "T h e W om an s P o s i ­ tion in the A rab W orld.” T h e m u d flat* so u th of C o r p u s t h a t a b o a t C h r is ti a r e so dull th is s t a g e of th e going t h r o u g h b e c o m e s m o n o t o ­ I n t r a c o a s t a l the n o u s ; c a p t a i n s o ften a llo w c re w * to s l e e p t h r o u g h thl* p a r t of th e th e d r e a r i n e s s a n d th e s u m m e r h e a t In th e a r e a . W hile life < n and w ith a h o st can his B lan k et T ax ti k rt. D ance tic k e ts <5,000 B lanket T ax I (XKI g e n e ra ' ad m issio n ! and 6.000 g ate W inner* of R e v u e tic k e ts (5.300 B lanket T ax, TOO g e n e ra l adm i.ss (o n 1. If a stu- p rize s aw a rd ed a t the b a rb e c u e d e n t w ish es to re s e rv e a g en eral T h e b a r b e c u e , h e ld a t F r e s h - ad m issio n leave m a n M e ld . xxiii l a s t f r o m I a rn. his n a m e on a list w hil# d raw in g T h e r e xxiii he b a r b e c u e a n d fiats The tic k ets co*’ $1 if bought t>e. fore the b a rb ec u e and $1 25 af ’he the h e a r d g ro w - ing co n te s’ xx ill tie announced a n d t r i p b e c a u s e of bo th tick et, he m ay T h ere is tao m uch to lie done Tho c a n a l h a s m a n y m o re tw ists and " I 'm M avin' On and tu rn s th em stra ig h t ru n s ; th e re for the W estern D ance on the M ain is al ways the d a n g e r of m istudg- j H ank Snow. re c o rd e r of such fn r City slic k e rs a re w a rn e d to w e a r hits a* " I ve Been E v e ry w h e re w e ste rn duds on W estern D ay . T he ' will p la y S ilver S purs will p lace a n y o n e including pro fesso rs, in the s ta rk - ad e fo r not w e a rin g pro;*»r d re s s . April 5, from 8 p , ((W> stu d e n ts. Mall F rid a y l)e dull, it m o st often is not S&% rn H I B la d e -look for Spring news '63 THE DAILY TEXAN C L J iJ / C l A S S I KI I l l A D V F R T I SI M I R I T K S C I A S S I K l I l l A | ( \ I I L T I S I N I I R A T E S (15-w ord m in im n o ................................ Ae E a rh W ord M in i im C h a r g e ................................................. ............... $1 20 < a s s i f e d Display I c o lu m n x on e Inch one tim * .................................$: OO Each Additional T i m e ................................ 90 20 Consecutive Iss ues 8 w o r d s .................... ..................................................................SOO 15 w o r d s .................... ..................................................................8 ' to ......................... .................................... l l OO 20 word* tNo copy cha nge for consecutive issue ra t e si CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINES it .30 p rn. 3 30 p rn. .T 30 p rn. 3 30 p m 3 30 p rn. th*- e v e n t of e r r o r s m a d e In a n a d v e r t i s e m e n t , t h e p u b l i s h e r * T u esd av T e x a n ................................. Monday, VV e d n e s d a y T e x a n ...................................T u e s d a y , T h ursday T e x a n ......................... W ednesday. F r i d a y T e x a n ..........................................T h u r s d a y . S u n d a e T e x a n ........................................ Friday. in i m m e d i a t e n o t i c e m u s t b e g i v e n a s a r e f o r o n l y o n r e s p o n s i b l e l n c o - r » c t i n s e r t i o n . C A L L G R 1 -5 2 4 4 Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments For S a le Typing cance llatio n Choice I n ex pected im m ed iate!' g a ra g e a p a r tm e n t r a te A ir ron- aval la bl*. R educed room , s e p a ra te d • bedr r e new u nit nd trin ed. 907 W es t 23rd. u tilitie s d i t l o n i n g T W O BEDROOMS. C E N T R A L alr-con- furnished W a lk in g dis­ tan ce Univer sity. Clean qu iet all ut I i - ' es paid ' tree s t o ­ ( Duplex SXI5 • • len'* im a id service! $135.00 GL 3 7422. $ 7 9 5 0 LOVELY R E D E C O R A T E D a p a rtm e n t Spacious Tastefully p u ­ (inse t, nish ed, A / C w alk UT C onvenient bi.- shopping. 2013-C Red River. O pen OL 2-5519. GR 2-0952 fro el oodles Rooms for Rent SPA C IO U S. CLEAN room C e n tra l heat. a r ro n d it o n;ng. P ri­ area. F ren ch Q ’ If T P lace v a te $45 00 GR 7-7368 e n tra n c e U N I V E R S IT Y A P P R O V E D av ailab le for two no# s $30 each 2714 Whitis. ( a : . Mrs < I R 2-5876.___________ _____ R O O M ic mon th Palm er , 3 bi SIMER RA'1 ART A P R IL ks fro m the itioned e f f c ■ c arp etin g pc GR 6 [EM PH ILL BARK n; vers it \ . ncy a p art- )! w as h er my $75 00 ipartm e nt 6-8033 or im sh mod* break fast Carpet ng T w o dou- Help W anted SUMMER J O B Box * war.;. I ■ n rail ii r eset ! m a n a g e r b e llm a n porter* o p e r a ’or. clerk Roe a r y an d i v e of fa -: T o m J o h n - r I. P.’ -.ort P h o n e Lake pool PBX s a l ­ t ie . Contact r h Re- pander. board 460 $2 OO AN H( ink and R GU A R A N I I- ED xx -rage earn in g s o r , hou r xx pf'ic. Neat a b T itx r>irec» rofer- om inuni.-ate t*dui a t io n a i ic cr rrar (not •rn P ro s p e c ts fu rn ished S u m m e r e m ­ ploy men* a s<> available Cal! for a p p o i n t m e n t Mr. Leon H ar ris . T e r ­ race Motel. n suranc)" 1953 MO RRIS MINOR, new eng ne rad o, excellent condi- tran sm ission rn A f te r 6 oO p rn GR 2-5812 ! B E A U T IF U L 1957 F O R D H AR D- T O P C O N V ER TIB L E. Yellow and l e a th e r e tte up­ xxi ie xx th black tran sm iss ion. holstery A utom atic heater power tire s with m an e xx nite-sidewall tv, es of " c a r left, Pet feet me- i Tan cal condition, Only $775 cash, GR at ( o w n e r ', “ 7126 2900 Guadalupe. M organ Gulf s te erin g radio, see or 1950 BUICK b rak es F O U R - door Engin e In good tr a n s m i s s i o n n. O n e $100.00. Call C L 3- and tire s N ard' •58 GVxi S u p er s nroof coupe M ch en X steering e x ­ xx nee' haust. c h e r e x tr a s co m plete with na nua is record, asa-.ng $21"",« radio, Birch se n d e e Beck er tools GR 2-9457 VKC R E G I S T E R E D F R E N C H pood es e Male a nd fem ale $50 00. GR VV 8- 54 46 N o rth A'.ix’ .n e r r !\ I XX A d d n on " vo b r l m om s k n o tty pine kitchen i n t d ,n in g ar ea W a s h e r conner- h eater, rar- (haiti link to bus and sh opping -Vn EHA appr oved. 8-5 a f t e r 5 30 I,cs new ; rt • n #■ ... - p m or S.,-urday GL 3-6921. iii GR 1-576! large -• i pa nr Ira forage Duplex— Unfurnished 3-3548. IRRA! Bnf Ifield a p a r t r a parti m o t h e r boy Knf c d 7-2536 O P E N I N G FOR EOI R men. Part- t tic white No Co!'vetions or de- ■ <-r\ xx ork Above a v e r a g e ear ning" App ly 1503 Guadalupe. Office 2"3 7.(sr p n ' Monday Special Services MAV I VO BEDROOM carp eted duple* Built-in kitchen, disinvash- ( a r p o r t , w a s h e r connections. C e ntral •< r a n d heat. 1911 F a i r ­ t o n A p a r t m e n t 2 $110 00 month, lease for ye a r $105,00 month, I Ca I GR 6-1606 AR A LA RGI .se M odern open. 33o3 I R E T O U C H E D JO B P H O T O S . I ss p o r t . . 24 hours for proofs , G R o r p r i n t s ! ow p r mos . . S tudio G ilm ore G R 2-4484 Houses— Unfurnished ' n-nplrtcix U N F U R N IS H E D . 3508 W E S T Avenue. '"o dern ized F x» rooms. T o o tiled baths. Si* closets Central an c#ind:‘ on ng Garden maintenance. Adu lts on ly $135.00 mon thly. HIGHLY Q U A L IF I E D T Y P IN G A E D IT IN G S E R V IC E I) sie rra Mons Reports T e r m P a ­ p er. LAW W ORK SP EC IA L IS T . D IS T IN C T IV E ACC! R A T E T Y P ­ ING on IBM Electrom atic. Z eros p hoto copies Courteous cons#- r>n- t ious personalized s e n ice Enfield area GR 8-7079 T H E M O O N LIG H T ER S - IBM Multi- tithin g After 6 OO and weekends M a rg u e r i t e Costello. GL 2-91,30 1908-A VV est 33rd T Y P I N G S PEC IA L RAT E S Pro fessio n al for s t u ­ typ;s> c a l l a f t e r 5 p rn d en ts IBM Ruth W illiam so n GL 3-7838 VIRGINIA CALHOUN L E G A L T Y PIN G S E R V IC E fields tx ping, Pro fes sional Sym bols p noto copy n otary. Off P a r k P lace a t T ow nes Hall. a1! 291 4 Bean na GR 8-2636 D E L A F I E L D T YPING. PAGE. G r a m m a r, spellin g corre ctio n. H I 2- 20e 6522. M A RTH A ANN ZIVLEY MB A professional tailore d com plete ty p in g A servlet the needs of t o I m versitv st u d e n ts Special k e \ - bn ard la n g u a g e >i mnce and en g in e e r in g th es es and dissertations e q u i p m e n t fo r P h on e GR 2-3210 A GR 2-7677 2013 , G U A D A L U P E T Y P I N G RE A S O N A B LE RATER. Bradley, GL 3-8848 or H u n t e r , GL- E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G SERVICE. A ccurate r easo n a b le near Allandale. HO 5-5813. T Y P IN G P IC K -U P and delivers- I f u rnish pap er and carbon. N ew IBM. N eat work GL 3-5081. T H E S E S . D IS SE RT A TIO N S . TERM paper* Electro m atic. N ear campus. GR 2-8402 T H E S E S R E P O R T S REASONABLE. E le ctro m atic Mrs B r a d y 2317 Old­ h am GR 2-4715 W A N T E D — T Y P IN G REASONAB LE rates. CL 3-3925. Mrs. G eorge R ob­ ert*. TRI TY I FRRAX IO T r i n i t y m d ap cd tivr. >ne bedrpx rn a r condi- .rtmcnts Ma hogany pan- ig h o u t and f u rn is h e d in id em . C o m p lete m odern wo blocks f ro m Capitol, to U niv ersity $95 0" < >f , lobs For Rent MRS A L B R IG H T will typ e y o u r pa- LAKE A! MYN. S M A L L co t t a g e j u st E x ^ i e n ^ u V ^ k * ^ AS ONABLY- work, books, disser- Electro m atic. G L 3- inside and out $45.00 fu rn- ! titfm x. re done theses is hod $40_'X> u n furn is h ed GR 8-63K.3. 2941 Alterations ALTERAY’IONS DRESSMAKING, RE- W E A V IN ti on moth, c i g a r e t t e holes M o n o g ram s : At #c,("unable rates 9"3 West 2213 GR 2- 7736 Ladicii gents W ork W anted HAVE DRUMS- W I L L TRAVEL. Can mad, plax- a n ' thin g p refe r Jazz Six e a r s e xp er cnce GR 61645, GR 1-7356. T Y P I N G - L O W R A T E S Satsifacfic-n g u aran teed . G L 3-5124 Mrs Tulia*. S H O R T ON TYPING, tim e an d m o n ey ? Miss G r a h a m G L 3-5725 F A S T N E A T A CC!'RATE t y p i n g mv them es o r ('all GL home P r e f e r m anu script, notebooks Reaso nable rate* 2-7182. iibr P lan t sell for $3(i»1 1 si ca.»i ( u n i ty for a yoi xx Rh E ast " > x a s cl*' D-3 Univer sity T ex as. a nice re tire J u l y and office ra.«h Excel you nj? Im ^ income f cst W ill eq u ip m em nt nppor- »r to st a r' good I n q u i re Dra er S tatio n, Austin ; t h is to he here s u m m e r ' R VILLA has a special Urn e 5 s u m m e r pack ag e plan. Re- s w i m m i n g pool, p r iv a te len ibership . Call GR 7-1064 y o u r r e s e r v e room (dub r**nt a n d 55 to p 2 12 I R d e n t now. bit', o n e owner, 196-' CHEVROLET IMPALA convert!- like new, ail pow- En ber Red. GR 2-9198 GR 8-8518. 2-4615. See a t 2527 H a r r i s Blvd. of T e x a s T h eater. R e w a rd LO ST : GOLD CHARM e r GR Lost and Found ----- —------ ---- ----------------------------------------- In f ro n t of W o m en'* Gym o r a t cu rb offered. No tify S a n d r a K in g sb u r y . HO 5-8550. bracelet 1957 C O R V E T T E . CLEAN. $1850.00. 62 engine, four-spee d tran sm iss io n , fuel top. S olid white. Call i n jectio n h ard GR 2-4791 af tPr 7 p m LO ST O N E SM A L I. dim e spiral note­ blur N ear English Bldg. Rob- book R Field. 3902 Sp eedw ay. Printing Xeroxing Multlllthlng—Mimeographing Theses — Paper* — P rinting AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS 400 East l i t h P h o n e GR 66593 S L A C K S . Original Post-Grads, thp natural look slacks that other slacks try to look like. Smooth, pleatless, tapered to a lean fare-three-well.Dacron polyester and cotton in blue olive, suntan, field olive and flagstone gray, 6.95 SHIRTS. Two new but ton-downs from Gant, on the figure, the slipover in lustrous cotton *tripe* of red, olive or blue on white, 6.50 from GANT, on the figure, the . . . Also GANT Batist Oxfords dress shirts in maize blue and white. 6.50 Officers — S p e a k in g o f Cfharches K a p p a Epsilon Elects Officers for Spring m iss p a t I Sunday, March 24, 1963 THE D AILY TEXAN Page 9 Theta X i Observes 50th Anniversary R ho C h a p te r of T h e ta Xi f i r e r - R o m .-uv.... and H a T .a u a v heil nity , founded a t th e U n iv ersity in 1913, is celebrating its fiftieth an­ n iv e rsa ry S u n d ay w ith a brunt h FO U ND ERS COMING Seven of its o rig in a l l l f a n d ers wL’I be p re s e n t a t th e c e re m o n ies After th** Theta XI house w as destroyed by fire In 1951. a Hen­ house w as opened In RWT for seven officers a t 3410 San Ga brie!. A new JI man dormitory will be dedicated Sunday. T he sev en o rig in a l fo u n d ers c p eele d to be p re s e n t to re c e iv e m e m b e rsh ip pins a re G. P.. Alc - arider. H. W. H a rris , P.. O. J a m ­ ra .s e r . Don C a ra v T h ese a w a rd s w lure h e m S atu rd a y tiv es, Hind fa th e r h ers. W illiam J. jr e - i d T h e ta X i p ro g re ss of Rho la s t IO y e a rs in I luncheon. A d an e and :»* S a tu rd a y a t Ans' S pecial gu ests in Novvotny, d e an o! Int* Don M gb.eil of ac Hod ie, C hao imru, a c ­ l e m em - n a ti -na] toe .re d the in r m on w e it h eel Country- Club. led D ean A m o u d en t i.fe. and ■a te rm tv Coun­ b r e a k s held a - ie c the D o m s T o p s H o n o r Roll eson, E . C. Sinks, L. D. Snow O f Architecture S c h o ol R. E K illm er, an d E. B. R o b ert- son J r . Illn ess k ep t E. P . Wood- arm o u r..ed T • S T ile S*.h o d of Ar; u te c tu re has stu d en ts in th e hon­ o r ro ll fo r ’he fall se m e ste r. The Fugue-' g ra b pom* a e ra g e wa* 3.0 h eld b ■ >e M lier Dor the*-*.-ran* rn Robert S Ma •O’ A r th u r T f w Alae L**va Bobbitt. Fur- P. bharti Cam Tommie A. Evans VV; . a A* md Bedford Ba.. nos Homer 0 Craig. I onaId n Th eod* tx* Ka wa; "s 6 s I' Hi, : , un*! J ca, pp h H ” av-;d Sn* th V! titer T er- T h e o d o r e N at■.«. J o h n I* tr.arr. Nflehae! i i Gen* id P a u l S t a y ck T b els. W a lte r netts Watson. v'acker J, "id G erald K PH- Coed to Appear In May Glamour G la m o u r m ag az in e s M ay issue will include an a rtic le on C eciie Aubrey * re a c tio n s to b a l l s and c ere m o n ies giv en by th e S h ah of Ira n w hen the H ilton H otel opened ill T e h ra n in Ja n u a ry - M iss A utrey. a ju n io r w ho wa- t r i s e n one of th e IO Most B eau n - w as selected by G la m o u r She t h e ty p ical A m e ric an re p re se n t college g irl a t the hotel'*: opening. left N ew Y ork on a plan e w r i C la m o u r sta ff m e m b e rs hotel officials, g o v ern m en t n ew sm en , and a gro u p of m ovie sta rs. A m ong th e m ovie s ta rs w ere Bob C u m m in g s, D ina M e rrill, and Cliff R o b e rt'o n . official "T h e w hole cm of T e h r a looked g o ld er ' w hen she a rriv e d said . The a t daw n M iss A utrty early’ sun shown, and the bg! of a city of tw o m u.ion w ere s on. She am ended a b anque- in * hotel « P e rs ia n Room 'h e night h e r a rriv a l. The n e x t d a y .Shah of Ira n c it the ribbon to ti hotel. t he M iss A u t r e y * also a tte n d e d a ro y al ball, a palace b an q u e t, and the P e rs ia n F a n ta s y G ala B all. Sp*, ing offit ers for K ap p a E sil n, h o n o ra ry w< m en's p h a rm a < so ro rity , a re Ann s M .n y ard . p re s­ iden t; Lillie T hom pson, v ic e -p re s­ ident S u san Be rn bow 1. >rta Game.a, coiTc*ponding sec­ tr e a s u re r re ta ry ; M arily n G olaz, and R a y m a K ara k o sta s. reportf* se retary \ 8LAZiN>3 SAH T£ by vJ S! Pa 1" Th* freshajt c oak for i , — f a r , ir*-* ,»» , , ais c jre **>’* ta (rem top *o bo*+of- In $♦#» aoli Ame sleeveless, croo-*cp »ium» *r ace'a**. T-a ♦ t h * I - 9 p « a * « d g h » - y ct' ti I rf . , . w *h the pleats perm#-#" *iy precsic'* ta. er*d, SK HT 7.98 iiei 5 5. In »- t* O' - TOP 4 98 Braswell's Humble Sta. 24TH ST. & RIO G R A N D E Phone GR 8-5813 'ridgeStudio o f Slustin 1500 W . 34th STREET Duplicate Bridge Lessons S P E C I A L R A T E F O R U N IV E R S IT Y STU D EN TS 50c Per Session on Non-Master Point Games S P E C IA L B E G IN N E R S D U P L IC A T E T U E S D A Y 7:30 P.M. Please call H O 5 -1546 for Information concerning •’ 1 ated. Church School is At 7 j p rn. M o n d a y , M rs G e r- !*• I ** Ko* ii Keehn. author and lo fire* will sjicak in the chapel * ★ "Christian t. vWtentialism of Paul T illich” will be discussed b y D r . J. Rodman W illiams at £.30 p m. Sunday a t the HlUel Suppf r Forum in the R n al B rith \ n. Hill* I Foundation, 5195 Nan tonin. F ir. W illiams is associate p ro - f »sor of system atic theologs and philosophs of religion at the Aus- Presbyterian Theological t i n st m ln a rs. l Ut tat (joes On 04cn **«J n ;1*Y w ard and C. G. V inson from a t­ 'h e fo u n d ers. W tending. Two of E. B row n J r . a n d H. S M cM as- te rs, a re d e c e a -e d . O FFIC ER S CHOSEN re g istra tio n C eleb ra tio n of th e c h a p te rs ’ fif­ tieth a n n iv e rs a ry beg an on S a t­ u rd a y w ith follow ed by the annua! m e e tin g of th e T h e ta Xi A ssociation of T exas D uring this m eetin g , new o fficers w ere elec ted for th e com ing y e a r. N ew ly elected officers of Rho Chapter are president. Harry Flavin, vice • president. David Pullen: treasurer. Steve Frueeh- ten lch t; pledge m aster, John R oans* Ville; rush captain. Don Wills; corresponding secretary, John Rowland. A so , sc h o la rsh .p . L a rry JU . Je rry ’ Wills in tra ­ special event? m u n i c h a irm a n . A rt F o re s te r; and so cial c h a irm a n . K enny Reh- ler. C h a p te r a w a rd s w e re p re se n te d for o u tsta n d in g a c h ie v e m e n t m ade o v e r th e la s ' y e a r. R ecip ien ts r f 'h r s e a w a rd s w ere hex! * ‘ive D avid P uller,; bes* pledge. Don frie n d sh ip seven. John C a ra w a y ; '*>—C o f f e e H o u r . H l l e l F o u n d a t . IO—Coffee Hour \ M o rs e C o le C ans T e x a s I • m .'-5—R«*f"Y lend rig library oper Tex­ i . a s U n io n to* cr 2 a n d 4— D r K r a r .r .s E L o w to o n - t m u e h is lectu re* , o n a to m • a r I r clear rh * s-.-a Ph*.«:>*, B u ild in g J — T e x a s - M ln n e a o ta b a s e b a ll ca C lark K eld 3 5^—Won-K* un* Cho Korra~ dan to give Illu str a te d le c tu r e and pcr- la n c e . !-at>orator>* Theater. 4— C a m p u s Alfa ' s Stud** Group ♦“-Union Committees _ T e » a » U n io n 315 M I rn 32t* T-i > S * u d v r o o .o s op en , o n f % Bu o f B u s ; n e s s - H»s; * ii * • ■ fl - 7 P h o t o g r a p h y C la s s , T e x a s U n n 13.1 7 3*5— E u lr r ^ p ie c o l t h e fr o m I p irtm e n * of GerTr.a" T-* n Riv K a u * H a ., fort** o m ln g _p ia\ * * to s»*e s r e a l s « 7 30—T ex as Un! * A m a 'e u r R ad * 5* n e t v, T e x a s I n m n 315 S -Opera Workshop present* P.; To#oa " Hogg A1 aitorlu-*- Tutors Sought For Junior High AJthough a 11 openings in th e Z av ala E le m e n ta ry School tu to r­ ing p ro je c t sp o n so red by the U ni­ v e rsity " Y " h av e been filled, stu ­ den ts who w an t to w ork w ith ju n ­ ior high pupils m a y Mill join a to h elp a special c la ss of gro u p seventh g r a d e r s at U n iv ersity Ju n io r High. S tu d en ts m ay ap p ly af the “ Y ” office, 2200 G u ad a lu p e St. the The g ro u p m e e ts w ith a c lass of 26 pupils from I 30 to 3 p.m . each T h u rsd a y a t school. Special tu to rin g in m a th e m a tic s and re a d ­ ing, a s well as field trip s and p ro ­ g ra m s d esig n ed to im p ro v e re a d ­ ing re a d in e ss a re conducted. This c la ss Is being studied by the H ogg F o u n d atio n for M ental H ealth in an e ffo rt to im prove the holding p o w e r of the school. Pu p ils a re from S panish-spcvklng fam ilie s, h u t sp e a k in g Spanish is not re q u ire d for stu d en ts who w ork w ith th e p ro je c t. to trip T his w eek s field took th e L e g isla tu re and the (la s s to the D a u g h te rs of the R epublic of t h e C ap:ic! T exas m u seu m on g ro u n d 1. T ra n sp o rta tio n w as p ro ­ vided bv th e school. T TUTORS AT ZAVALA . . p laces stitl o p e n a t U JH . *c ee F re e . l l a rn. w\»rship service a t Uni- D is e m in e n t — P r e l u d e to Blind. B e h m u n Ii nit cron P i s c o r i f y fo r the sp rin g sc- F a ith ” will b* the su b ject s t the c e rt and o p e ra in New Y ca go, an d San F ra rn .sod. m e s te r a re Alice S a n d ra F o rsy th , p re s id e n t; B ev erly G ay Brow n, v ic e -p resid e n t; Cam den J e a n n e D ra p e r, reco rd in g se e m ta n ,’; K ath ­ leen Isab el R isin g s c o rresp o n d in g Sm ith sec re ta rv ; Lynn E llen Owen, trea s- u re r ; C arlo A ngela Colby, door- p reach at the 7 p m k e e p e r; N an cy H ay Robb, w n lc r P a n h e lle rm d e leg a te M arv Jo . .* , r« „ Delk, ju n io r P an h e lle n ic d'dega*'*; Virginia Louise Castine fraternity der” Hca!th Center, will continue ed u catio n o ffic e r; and S haron t e e his d iscu ssio n of "S ex T ilt D im en sions" w ith University students a - E l l i s , h isto ria n A’«o, Margaret Claire Rroman, 8 p m , in the recreation room of ^ 0 ‘h e r solos w ill be sung bv L* B a rtle tt, soprano, te a c h in g assi an t in m usic a t tho U n iv e rs tv a • , (Jerald O C r n ' will vv!rh th e San A ntonio O p e n C c rin e B ran fse'd , in str’) ’o r in r and I Vina Id W r;c ’ ence re s e a rc h a s w i a 'e a t the Stu- '■’* p u lp " D r B ilk * T he o r hex-- . w pa or service Student B uildm g m< I ade K*i Dr R f)hrr, T h e Re* , h a rp ist w ho I pa ny. , rl :u< ,, in .« , - scholarship officer; Ton. I,>nn nay, public re la tio n s o fficer: Ju d ith Isabel Wright, rush captain; R uth Matin# Villareal assistant rush captain: P risc illa Ray Finlay, pro- gram d: rector: Rebecca Mary Thrasher, philanthropic c h a irm a n ; and I>ee Fv angeline Emory, assis*, an t p h ilan th ro p ic c h a irm a n Others elected are P a m e la Rob- * * “ M astery or S r n lr r f " will tie the topic of Dr. Lewis P. apeak er a sermon a t IO v t am i. Sun­ day at the First English Luth­ eran (h iirrh . T h e E p is c o p a l C h u rc h c»f the # a sen io r s ta n d a rd s ; M ah etb ‘ ;ood ShG * e rd e n s , Brow n, ju n io r sta n d a rd * ; W anda Je a n n e G ra h a m sophom ore sta n d ­ ard* ; M a rg a re t J e a n L ay, re c o m ­ m en d atio n s c h a irm a n P a m e l a R ohert*. social c h a irm a n ; A m e Fr- vin Bolton a s s is ta n t social c h a ir­ m a n ; Toni Lynn Cooney, a c tiv itie s C h a irm a n : L inda I>ee M ason as a iita n t a c tjv i’ n^ c h a irm a n . R uth p ro fesso r of h ist M axine V illa rre a l, and L inda l y e Ma •■on c h a irm a n *:t> W!‘* d ire c t lea d e r n tram song p re s e n t a per- o rm sn . e of the ' R e q u iem " by G a ­ briel F a u re a? its l l a rn serv ice Sunday. and o rg an D r Joining the ch u rch ch o ir will be a chan*ber o rc h e s tra of string* h a rp , S tanford L eh m b erg o rg a n ist and c h o irm a s­ the c h u n h an d a*sis!ant te r a t the Urn vc r- # O fficers for the I9«.1 pledge elaas of S igm a A lpha I o ta . h o n . e rw rr prnfeoaional m usic fra te r n lty for w om en, a re M artlvn Koa. h , p re s id e n t: N an cy f le r r r , rice- prw aldent; V irg in ia S trin g e r sec r n l a r y ; J a n a Allen, re p o rte r. * * A zrri A bdul-Ha>11 w as c lr red p re sid e n t of the In to rn a 'io ra l Club T h u rsd a y O th e r officer* a re Lnr;* e-p resid e n t; Ruth que Flore* and K rish n a G a rc ia , J a m bu N ath an , They wnll be Installed A pn! 20 a t a d n- net m eetin g \ s e c re ta ry ; tr e a s u re r Ann Webb Named To Phi Beta Kappa ac^vrano, P rin c ip a l solo>-*s w.Il he M rs K ayelaine R yan, and M ayes B e h r m n , b a r .f i r e M rs R yan is a m u sic g ra d u a te of the U n iv ersity and d ire c to r a l choral m usic at th e S tate School for the PiKA Group Hosts District Meeting The Pi K appa A lpha c h a p te r at the the U n iv ersity w as host a t PiKA d istric t co nvention ;n A ustin S atu rd ay . The goes* sp e a k e r w as Jo e C Scott, natio n al p re sid e n t of th e f r a ­ is p resid en t of the te rn ity . Scutt B an k ers S ervice Life In su ra n c e C om pany in O klahom a Q ty an d is a fo rm e r com m ; ss line** of a g ri­ c u ltu re for th e sta*e of O k lah o m a He is also a m e m b e r of th e Ok- .|i»hn (". T o w e r s vs I It p r e a c h on " T h " H o l i n e s s o f th e l l a rn. ss or. P e r s o n a l ' a t t h e s h i p s e r s l c e f o r t h e C o n g r e g a t i o n ­ al ( h a r r h of V i s t i n , lux It T ss en. t s th irst v t. ♦ * The U n ita ria n F o il.rn w ill nre- tlif* fir<: * of tw o d iscu ssio n s on the f lu o n la t, on of th*' A ustin w a te r sup; :>* S 'md a y J a m e s W. L a ssite r. M D w ill c>prv>*e flu o rid atio n a* a t Lh*' F.r-x* U n ita ria n IO a rn g 3 G ro v e r Av r S unday, Mfrn . h 31. D r. C arlo s Lo­ /a no dircrtf-in o f th e d e n ta l divi- the S tate H e alth TV part- sxvn of m en t w ill « ippe-rt flu o rid a ’ion. for " \ Jkiv of Recoils ('e th a n e stu d en ts will l*e held from 10:15 a m. to 4 p.m . Sun- d m at Ht. M a ry ’s \< adorn v U ni­ v e rsity In a g ro u p a t IO a r n . from t h e \> w m an d u b , ?07 U Twcntv first s t. Box lunches a re ca cen ts. stu d en ts will go U n iv ersity C h ristia n C h u rch will hold m orning w o rsh ip a t 10:50 a rn Sunday, at w hich tim e pled g es will A lp h a G a m s to Sponsor Th rifty Sun d ay Supper D in n er ort Sundav night ll not thic w eek. fo r th--* bo a p ro b lem .Ylph-i G e m m a D elta so ro rity is sponsoring a sp a g h etti su p p e r lo benefit the N atio n al C rip p led Chil d r on an d A dults A ssociation Sort n o f the proceed* will also the local c h a p ’c r p ro jec t, benefit the C e re b ra l P alsy C e n ter in A tin. D in n er vv.d be se rv e d a t the Alpha G am house, kl 7 W, Tw enty- fifth St , from 5 to 7 p rn. a n d the T e re sa Ann W ebb, ju n io r Span- lahore.a S tate U niver»ity % H ^y of cost is SI the in P h i B e ta K ap p a, P resider* s T rad e M ission to l-a*,n it a m e m b e r of to F a m e . He Uh m a jo r, ha* been e lec ted m e m b e rsh .p A rt* a n d Science* leading n atio n al A m erica •c h o la stle h o n o ra ry society. She is th e d a u g h te r of D r. WU- the stu d en t life staff, also spoke at the convention; fred W ebb, a sso c ia te p ro fesso r of and B unny C lark n atio n al pledge g o v e rn m e n t, a n d M rs. W ebb. tra in e r, w as p resen t Don M ighel! of W e are honored to announce that— has joined our Sunray, March 24, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page IO Adult Hatred, Funeral Ardor Dwarf Neither Hero Nor Villain B y JOHN PARSONS “ The Tin D rum ” by Gunter G lass Pantheon, 592 pp., $6.95 Some of us drink, some of us p l a y m usical instrum ents and im itate some of the m ore popular. non-popular e t h n i c folks ingers. Some of us dress sloppily, and som e of us ju st say to hell with it and conform to w hatever there is. R egardless of this wide variety frustrational of em otional a n d Mexican Historian Will Speak on Diaz relea ses, nothing can touch the v eh icle created by Gunter G lass In his new n o v e l , “ The Tin D rum .” In G rass's new novel, the m ain c h a racter is a hum pbacked dw arf nam ed O skar M atzerath. O skar, a t the tender age of three, decided ; that the world of adults was not I for him. He proceeded to fall down a flight of stairs and stunt his growth, thereby rem aining a gang­ ling 31 inches. BOOKS critiques for the serious reader Teens Making Culture Rules Futility Proves Futile By RICHARD 8HAVEY “V : A Novel,” by Thomas Pyn- chon (Lipplncott, 492 pp, 9B.9B.) Thomas P ynchon’s first novel un­ derlines a basic futility present am ong the m iddle sections in the United States today. The charac­ ters deny any objective or real ground of truth. D estruction of the is desirable present organization even when there is no other pro­ gram or idea to replace it. CONGLOMERATIVE TRY The book is unorganized both in an unknowing comic, who rela x ­ es la the wain straggle, doing his best to resist Hie temptations of success. The m ain story line deals with Stencils unending se a r ch ~ fo r ~ h is m other “V .” Profane cro sses his path m any tim es and finally they collide in the futile quagm ire of the sew ers. POOR ORGANIZATION “V" is rem iniscent of a John D os P a sso s novel in som e respects. Pynchon ex a g g era tes the m eetings o f the m ain ch a racters m ore than Dos Passos would. The ise, but was not quits ready to tackle “V .: A Novel.” Douglass to Head Library Meeting Dr. Robert R. Douglass, Un b a ­ sify of Texas G raduate School of L ibrary Science director, will pre­ side a t a Texas L ibrary A ssocia­ tion conference Wednesday through Saturday in Dallas. Dr. Douglass will com plete a chance one-year term a s TLA president tim e and sequence and setting. It jum ps back and forth betw een th ree distinct generations with a com plete lack of chronological Or­ , , Them e of the D allas conference will be “ Texas L ibraries, 1980-- new novel ie also less organised , h e F u tu re.” of and m ore eccentric. Pynchon can Mrs. J a m e s Moll, a reference librarian at the University, is pro- gram chairm an. She will p r e s e t a program preview a t the first , der. The setting va ries from t h e ■ not m atch Dos Passos in w riting skill. He does not give the life and Middle E ast to the sew ers of New vitality to the lengthy work that in Cairo, York w ith brief stops the older author seem s to so eas. general session N orthern Italy, and A ntarctica. ily exude. on July I. Pynchon'* “yo-yos" or average men act out a bitter, weird com ­ edy that is life. Basically they have simple natures with no com ­ plexes or Ill-feelings. Stencil is a foreign service agent who con­ tinuously a r u but accomplishes nothing. His opposite Is Profane, The more recent “Catch 22” by Joseph Herlen Is a closer rel­ ative to Pynchon's “V,” still this “ far-out” bestseller Is not as dull and bulky. The erratic style of “ V " can be if a catchy and readable device used by a Dos Passos or a Heller Pynchon him self s h o w s prom- ary science. O thers from the U niversity who will speak are F red Folm er, as­ sociate librarian ; Dr. William • . Livingston, governm ent professor*, Dr, E sth er Stallm ann, library sci­ ence p r o f e s s o r ; Dr. Llerena Friend. B arker History Center librarian, and Dr. Sarah K. Vann, visiting associate professor of libr- S |i& fE 5 MMMI it is tends “ A m erican civilization to stand in such awe of its teen-age segm en t that in danger of becom ing a teen -age society with perm anently teen-age standards of thought, culture and goals. As a resu lt A m erican society is grow ing down rather than up.” Since the teen age population is in the neighborhood of 20 million, the authors m ust generalize. “ We a re fully aw a re th a t not all teen­ agers and th eir paren ts have fallen victim to teen-age tyranny. M any have retained th e ir freedom and upheld th eir standards. But even those who have resisted the trend know th at the stronger the tide, the h a rd e r to move against it. We hope that our efforts little easier for will m ake them ” it becom es it a n m By JANICE BAXTER “ Teen age T yranny” by Grace (M orrow, and F red H echlnger 259 pp, $4.50) This is probably the first book to analyze teenagers not psychol- ogically but th eir m a ss through m edia, including m agazines, mov- records. The television and , ies, ' l5chinse rs say -T h e m ost inse- | cure and the m ost im m ature adol- fiftieth a foundation s the 1 orating anniversary. in Ja n u ary ev°ke Prof. Cosio retired the past. Throughout m em ories from the past while he, 1 now a t the age of 30. is an inm ate of a m ental hospital, TOY DRUM MEMORIES The m ain prop in the novel is toy tjn drum . When O s k a r beats upon this instrum ent, he can the from the presidency of E l Colegio entire book, the dw arf drum s up de Mexico, a center for graduate research and teaching in language, literatu re, and the social sciences. At the U niversity, he will give a series of six lectures In Span­ ish, analyzing the Porfirio Diaz in M exico of 1877 1911: regim e “ E ra of P eace,*’ April 9; “ Era of Prosperity,’’ April 16; “ Era of Consolidation,” April 18; “ E ra of D ecen cy ,” April 23; and “ In­ strum ents of Control" (two le c ­ tu res), April 25 and 29. All will be held at 4 p.m . In Business- E conom ics Building 105. Prof. Cosio also will participate in an Econom ics D ep artm ent g rad ­ uate sem in ar on “ Econom ic D e­ velopm ent and C ultural Change in Latin A m erica.” While teen-age." teenagers of One of the ea rlie r scenes reveals escents establish their own inde- sovereign culture: O s k a r ’s m a tern al grandm other pendent and sitting in a Polish field, roasting potatoes and hiding a fugitive un­ der her skirts while the police run to and fro in a helter-skelter m an­ ner. the 1930's took adults as heroes, the new generation prefers to idolize peo­ ple of its own age group. Take as exam ple the recent rise of E lvis P resley, Tommy Sands, Ja m es D arren and others. The symbols of the new heroes a re disguised dollar signs: Cadillacs and sw im ­ m ing pools, “ They share with teen­ ag ers a sem i-illiterate jargon and total absence of original alm ost ideas.” As a result of this scen e, Oskar alw ays dream s of hiding beneath his grandm other’s skirts. In a c ­ tuality, he does m anage to hide under the dining room table and w atch his m other play footsies with Jan Bronskl. Further ob­ servations of the adult world can do nothing but r e p u l s e the grotesque dw arf and build up his hatred for adults. O skar has the power to shatter This new teenage subculture has glass w ith his voice (at one tim e he tak es his w rath out on the city been raised and fostered by par- of Danzig and leaves it in heaps ents who w rre also brought up in teen- of broken glass). He dislikes adults child-centered hom es. Tile in general, e x c e p t for certain a g e r form s a definite m arket for friendly women, but “ 45 r e c o r d m an ufacturers nereis. in business today sub-culture, visiting cem eteries, w h e r e each w ithout service is increased in its pathe- M agazines featuring stories on the Realness. th e m ass m edia. r.p .m .” f e w pleasures is would not be l o v e s fu- One of his teenage Single a in tim e With his wife, who will accom ­ pany him here. Prof. Cmio will spend considerable the L atin A m erican Collection of the L ib rary , continuing research for a book he is w riting on the internal history of Mexico during the Por- firian era. He has alread y com ­ pleted a volume on M exico’s for­ eign relations during th a t period, as well as th ree volum es on gen­ eral political history during the y ea rs im m ediately before Porfirio Diaz cam e to power. A fter m uch h ard work, O skar "n ew s." becom es a celebrated jazz drum - m er, only to have his career cut ag ers for BECOMES CELEBRITY Prof. Cosio w as the founder and first director of M exico's forem ost scholarly publishing house, Fondo founder de C ulture E conom ica; and first editor of three scholarly short by being accused of m urder, journals (in economics, history, ! He is indicted for m urder of his and international relations and po- adm ired nurse, Dorothea, whom litical science), and w as resp onse be tried to love under the disguise hie the organization of El Colegio de Mexico. He has taught at the National U niversity of Mex­ ico, and has been director of a g rad u a te center for studies of m od­ e m Mexican history and contem ­ p o rary Mexico. Before this tim e, O skar w as in­ volved in a s e r i e s of episodes which seem to p arallel the van­ dalism and juvenile delinquency of m odem West G erm any. Such scenes are revealed as a group of juveniles who s t e a l religious pictures and perform blasphemous acts to express th e ir rebellious in- habitions. o f Satan. Ho of new “ young H eroes" sell millions to th eir young friends eager for |l j the is not with The m ain problem with teen- individual but w ith the group. The Hechin- gcrs suggest th at schools and p a r­ ents m ake their own rules for their off-spring, not to w ait for society. Dr. May Writes Marketing Article in one’* collection Dr. F rancis May, professor of business statistics, has w ritten a m anuscript which appeared in the M arch issue of the Southwestern Social Science Q uarterly. is tho author of several books on M exican history. His fam ous essa y s, “ Am erican E x trem es,” has been translated by Dr. Amerioo P a ­ redes of the English D epartm ent for publication this year by the UT P ress. Dr. N ettie Le>e B en­ son. librarian of the U niversity's I^atin \m erica n Collection, trans­ lated his “The US A gainst Por­ firio D iaz.” to be published by the U niversity of N ebraska P ress. The m ansucript, entitled “The P ra ctical Applications of O pera­ tions R esearch to M arketing,” r e ­ ports research has been applied in some cases to solve m arketing problem s suc­ cessfully.” T h e point to rem em ber In reading this novel Is that it Is flowing conglom ­ a continuing, eration of even ts which remain vivid im agination, hut w h i c h provide no meaningful answ er to any particular query. Oskar is no one's hero, but also no on e’s villain. G ra ss's novel is a presentation Prof. Cosio has been active in of new, exciting, and probing ideas im agina­ stim ulated by colorful, tive, vivid p r o s e coupled with Dr. Charles C. Sprague, who re . philosophical overtones. And after ceivod his doctor of medicine de­ one m anages to decipher the whole gree from the U niversity Medical m essage, the m ost likely answ er is B ranch in Galveston, has been ap ­ that m aybe the best w ay to rope pointed dean of the Tulane Uni- with lunacy in the world today is , versify School of Medicine effec by lunacy itself. governm ent, as well as scholarly circles. He was Mexico’s am b assa­ dor to Portugal a t th e tim e of the S panish civil w^ar and was instru­ m ental in bringing to Mexico a larg e num ber of professional men from the ranks of exiled Spanish loyalists. Sprague Appointed Dean O f Tulane M ed School that “ operations tive April I. cfi Daniel Cosio V illega, distinguish­ ed Mexican historian and econom­ ist, will be a visiting lecturer at the U niversity during April, Dr. John P ark er H arrison, Inst.'Ute of Latin A m erican Studies direc­ tor, announced Saturday T h e Rockefeller Foundation m ade a gran t for the lectureship which is one in a series commem* Olan Sees hope For Better Life At least one m an on the Board of R egents believes in the n >*to chiseled on the M ain Building of the University. In an a r 1: de in the w inter issue of Southwest Review. R abbi Lc\ i d a n expresses his op­ tim istic philosophy. TO P F R F E 4 T ' I XN the th a t Rabbi d a n proposes to perfect m an through education. He says, in his article entitled “ New Re­ sources for a L iberal F a ith ." that “ ignorance is the onfy obstacle pre­ venting m an from achieving the best life on earth " H e ex p lain s lib eral philosophy Is hosed on the belief th a t h u m an Improvem ent conies intelligence. th ro u g h o rg an ized N a tu re and rea so n a re the two te n e ts which support th e lib eral outlook. N a tu re is th e clue to a good life an d reae. n Is th e m ost e f f e c t s e w eapon against evil. According to Rabbi O lar the lib e ra I vision of hope is fading as a resu lt of w ars and atom ic weep. ors. A rtists and philosophers tran s­ m it a mood th a t is cu rren t in our generation—despair. The poet cre ate s a sp irit of pes­ sim ism and nihilism . Rabbi d a n cites Ja m es Joyce as rep resen ta­ tive of the m odern novelist, along w ith Camus, Hem ingway, F aulk ­ ner. and Salinger. All of these authors cre ate ch ar­ a c te rs who a re the opposite of heroic. They a re plagued by the problem s of th eir tim es and bur­ dened by them. R abbi Olan says th e m odem creative a rtist has im ­ m e rse d him self In d estructive ele­ m ents. The mood w hich m odem w riters convey is disillusionm ent. PR A Y ER WEAPON The resources wfcnsh Rabbi Olan would use to com bat thic feeling of d esp air and the hopelessness include p ray er and a view of the | w orld as one with infini’e possibili­ ties. Man Is the Iva sis of the solution to h is own p ro b lem , b e c a u se m an Is th e la te st e m e rg e n t of ev o lu ­ tion. He has the a b ility to t r a i l s , m lt hi** ex p erien ce and c u ltu re fro m g en eratio n to g en eratio n . T he ch an ces th a t m a n will o v e r­ co m e the evils th a t th re a te n him a re b e tte r to d a y th a n e v e r be fore. The cd ucatjonal philosophy which reflects the R egent's belief in the motto can be seen in the follovv- M r e v e s t v. ca po i m ind to Perce goals a n i th th p m ." Tried with the ■ survival —- a ruth and select fulfill to cans He suggests two steps urgently needed to revive hope: to recap , lure imaginative leadership and to shake off the urive dei a whi< -rn- per run Rabbi Olan is s e n rn as rabbi <, l l there, while lr * ex tem porary J in P erkins School of Thool w as appointed B oard o f Regents b\ John Cofinal!v. recent!) and MU He to Council Issues Permit For ‘D ead Uncle’ Parade Law-Science Dream Finally Brought to Life B y SHARON PEDROTTI T exan Staff Writer A from I iirv a rd Jaw student > .\as. talking with a classm ate in h; p<" hon- 1930 about the antiquities of h:,d an idea Today th at long distance science advocates (holders of the and he answ ers phone cads at alm ost system atic diplom a for passing 350 hours of intervals. A cadem y w ork)," E xactly w hat is the law-science : “ Some of the m ost outstanding in A m erica, who idea la ™ ltw l™ ens'OTa[ » P P ™ ch to lo- w ant to keep ab re a st ct cu rren t attend law m('n e m e n ,? D r‘ Sm ith ca,Js integration of | thought technique a I tria l law yers and the W : gal problem s, law with i reality which has alread y begun lo < n proa h rs p ractice. tho these sessions. Scholarships are fundam ental ap- psychological, social, and spiritual available for prom ising law and e to legal education and sciences. It is based on the thesis m edical students " the physical, m edical, Dr. H ubert Winston Smith. Uni- m an behavior, and only law can sity that “ only science can explain h u - ; Dr. Smith said about 15 Univer- law students h ave received r versify jaw professor, called the ret' u| ate scholarships for this sum m er, f un : of the law -science m o v e -1 rn tnt ' in “ Who's Who," kept the answ er d rea m alive for 24 years. It cam e tru e in 1954, when the Law-Science A cadem y was established in Crest- An integration p arad e to be call- cd Butte. Colo. Dr. Smith was Is D ead" will be nam ed Lifetime Chancellor of the od “ Uncle Tom sponsored by the Cam pus Inter- Law-Science Academy, r a d s 1 Com m ittee on April 5. at He received a bachelor of arts p.m . The Austin City Council degree in economics and a mas- the p arade te r ’s degree in business ad m in is-. _____ tration a t the U niversity. By 1941 he had a bachelor of law from the Wlth move . er i j cx)ii U niversity and a doctorate of med- icine from H arvard. from issued T hursday. a perm it for The parade wdU G uadalupe and 27th S treet to Con- n ■ i gross and the Colorado R iver A coffin with segregation inscribed on the side, picket signs taped on se v eral cars, thought provoking floats, and a band will be featured in the parade. a re btying to provide an conducts the recen t com plaint of; “ sh ort courses" a t schools through- law out the country The A cadem y also Justice W arren lo la8 behind that science.” he the im pression his to credit for the developm ent of D r. Smith has alw ays believed hers te nds sa id ‘ ' We m ust look constantly science for the answ ers ” Dr. Smith refuses to take all the the law -science m ovement. He rem em - friend th a t dorm itory that m edicine would be tile appro- m ade on him in priate science to begin with, be- conversation at H arv ard 33 years cause “ medicine is the science of ago. Tile friend had objected to m an ." The m ovem ent today con- j law based solely on precedents . ............................. ers around medico-legal technique hope that a11 the sciences will eventuaUy be integrated into the law-science program . Dr. Smith says the law-science ideal to Roscoe Pound, form er H arv ard law dean, m a-io r activities of j whom he m et w hile teaching there! dem yi a no"- Pound has participated actively in hundreds of y ea rs old. ,h? T . , first belonged .. _ , , , H e returned to the U niversity to h ead tile Law-Scicnce Institute at 1 ,■ . - . j . . V , U i n s u m T e aT profit ch a n ta b le organization with the law-science m ovem ent Now th .! that t a b l i s h e d ^ 1952 Tn its general p icketin g for the integ ratio n of p riv a te business tile building instead of an idea, and science training and teaching cen- last few weeks, the GIC h as placed 12 OOO copies of a public le tte r ex- baUing on its own m om entum , Dr. plaining problem s blocking Austin Sm ith doesn’t sit back and relax. business integration in th e hands His of the public both dow ntow n and eight inches of pap ers and hooks, takes 25-mmute lunch hours, rn A ustin shopping c e n te r.. School standing law yers and physicians, of Law, he said, also has been a is developm ent of a national la w -1 leader in enthusiastic support of the m ovem ent am ong law schools > I Dr. Sm ith’s wife, whom he calls the m ost talented m em ber of the sions a re held. Law students and fam ily, is an a rtist and a rt teach- two in the in classes taught by em inent mad- U niversity and two in 'h ic h school leal men and distinguished law- "No law yers so f a r " he said lug desk rem ains hidden by seasoned trial law yers sit together e r He has four sons toe law-science m ovem ent is snow- —- • ~ “ E ach sum m er, 12 one-week ses- .I * * the A cadem y ter in Crested Butte, Colo. W3S * , is a * — e than 700 out-1 P ag e Keeton, dean J A_ —I I H e - - pj. - s 8 , CELL iported black silk . Mi M A W A one tor number spring ’63 the elegant, always impeccable hear­ ing of one-hundred percent i m p o r t- ed black silk is n o w trim and tailored lo o k. this traditionally styled s u i t is the most advanced idea to keep you lo o k- || ing cool and crisp during the com ing the cellars w o r ld ly n e w in BE months, and— black is the one color above all which makes a successful transition from d a y tim e to special late evening occassions w ith equal success, shop n o w w hile a com plete range of sizes are available . . . $75.00. i f ? K l r n ® 3rr!t^§jchaefe^n=jrown CONGRESS AT SIXTH P A N O R A M A ton A im Vol. I MARCH 24, 1963 No. S A Monthly Supplement of T h e Daily Texan Though It Alay Be the Pride of the Campus; It Lacks Enough Volume for Its Volumes By L A U R A M c N e i l Panorama Editor T he em inent lib ra ry of T he Uni- v e rsity of Texas, envy of all o th e r S o u th w estern schools, is not w ith ­ out its problem s— n o r its d e tra c ­ to rs \V i t h 1,500,000 volum es, the in th e lib ra ry ra n k s seventeenth n atio n . H a rv a rd is first. S peaking to m em bers of service h o n o raries a t th e T exas T o d a y and T om orrow kickoff, D r. Joseph Sm iley called it “one of the best re se a rc h lib ra ries in th e c o u n try .” D r. G eorge H offm ann, professor of geography, c l a i m s, however, th a t th e lib ra ry lacks key re fe r­ ence w orks, especially N ineteenth c e n tu ry journals. “ V ery basic referen ce m aterial is not available,” he said. “ I am one of the persons w ho does not u n d e rsta n d th e value of aq uiring th e ir special collections. T hey only help th e scholar in a narrow ’ field.” H offm an said th a t when he was doing rese a rc h on th e tra n s fo rm a ­ tion of B ulgarian ru ra l settlem ent lie had to o rd er dozens of re fe r­ ence key w orks from o th e r lib ra ­ ries—“ not ju st in g eo graphy.” To his mind, he said, th e re a re m any m ore basic needs fo r s tu ­ re se a rc h e rs w h i c Ii dents and should receive priority. lion. Dr. David V an Tassel, as- A. II. M offatt, head lib rarian , said “ E v ery lib ra ry is stro n g in certain fields of research. It is con­ ceivable th a t if a new p e r s o n com es in, he m ight not find the books he is used to w orking with. “ B ooks a re added for teaching o r rese a rc h purposes. You c a n ’t lim ited editions, rarities, and let m an u scrip ts be used indiscrim in­ ately. Q ualified rese a rc h w orkers, g ra d u a te stud ents, faculty, and re ­ search people from o th e r in stitu ­ tions use them . T he fresh m an s tu ­ dent does not use th em .” Som e special collections a re gifts and som e a re purchases, M offatt says. As to w h e th e r g i f t s ar e m a d e for tax purposes, he r e ­ m ark ed th a t not all donors have them appraised. F u n d s for books a re allocated in th e fall to th e various d e p a rt­ m ents, w hich select th e books th ey w ant to buy for th e library. If a its d e p a rtm e n t does not use up book fund, rem aining funds a re reallocated to d e p a rtm e n ts which need them . “W e get v e r y little m oney tu rn e d b ack,” M offatt said. A nother facu lty com plaint has to do w ith the new spaper collec­ tion. D r. David Van Ta.ssel, a s ­ in sociate professor of h istory, J a n u a ry sent to C hancellor H a r ry R a n s o m a le tte r requesting a “ very large a m o u n t of m oney for b u y i n g new spapers, especially T w entieth C e n tu ry newspapers.** Van Tassel said he sent th e let­ ter, to be signed, to “all d e p a rt­ m ents which would be in te rested in using m ore new spapers.” T he le tte r w as signed by “e v e n P sy ­ chology,” he said. H e said he had received no re­ ply yet. “So fa r as I know’, we have no com plete ru n of foreign p apers,” V an T assel said, “Even th e T exas papers a re incom plete.” M offatt said he had h e a r d nothing about th e letter, b u t th a t a n u m b er of T exas new spapers a re being received on m icrofilm s as well as th e N ew Y ork Tim es, th e lo n d o n Tim es, th e C hristian Sci- (See LIBRARY, p.2) Q lX fl SW H** Ex-Students’ Association Faces a Problem A s to Its Image By FERNANDO DOVALINA JR. Getting students interested in the Ex- Students’ Association is the main prob­ lem facing the association today. While at the University, students usually contact the association for only three purposes, and two of them have unpleasant aspects which make the as­ sociation look like everything save the hope for the students it wants to be. The student deals with the associa­ tion when asking for loans. “ Most of the loan funds w ere set up a long tim e ago when several cum ­ berso m e req u irem en ts w ere tacked o n ,” J a c k M aguire, executive d irector of th e association, says. One of these is a five p er cent in­ long te re s t rate . The association has trie d to change it, but the legal blocks d iscou rag e m ost efforts. A nother req u irem ent is a co-signa­ tu re. “ Asking students to com ply with th e req u irem en ts ju st isn t good public re la tio n s.” M aguire said. Ile added th at the requirement.'> m ake th e association look m ore like a bank th a n a help for students. association’s Students also deal with the asso cia­ tion when they ask for refunds from vending m achines put on cam pus by th e com pany. C am pus Services, Inc. All profits from the m ach ­ ines go to the U niversity to help stu ­ dents. Two students, for instance, wall the Air be sent to a conference at F o rc e A cadem y on the m achines. A n o t h e r portion goes for fo r scholarships. receipts from The third contact is not as em ­ b a rrassin g . Short-term loans a re m ade av ailab le to seniors o r g rad u ates who do not have the rea d y m oney to travel for job interview s out of town. To try to reach the students while at the U niversity, tile association has re ­ lied on publicity. M aguire him self lec­ is tu re s frequently before groups. He a lso a m em lier of several com m ittees on cam pus. Once leaves “ We offer our conference room to w h ate v er group w ishes to use it,” M c­ G uire said, “ hut th ere a rc other room s av a ila b le on cam pus, and few o rg an i­ zations tak e ad v an tag e of o u rs.” the student the Uni­ v ersity , getting him to join the associ­ ation becom es m ore difficult. M aguire c o n tra ste d the U niversity with T exas A&M, ad m itted ly a unique school, w here 87 per cent of the association. Based on accu rate records of 90.000 living form er stud ents of the U niversity, only 20 j>cr cent a re m e m ­ bers. Tile percen tag e of ex students in the association lower. A nother 100,000 fo rm er students a re a l­ so I i \ i n g. according to M aguire, but old, incom plete U niversity records have prevented the association from tracing th e m . is really m uch the stu dents join is p a rt of is constant “ AAM is different in that if is a sm all college, and the cadet corps ac ts like one big fratern ity . T here a student gets the feeling he never le a \cs AAM. O urs, on the other hand, is a com plex insti­ tution, M aguire said, and “ th at s why soli cl tat if rn on our th e n ' p a rt to build a student backing fo r the asso ciatio n .” T racing job of ob­ taining m em liers since, th e association has found, one third of ex students m ove e v e ry year. The association m ails m ore th an 100,000 r e l a ­ tives, and friends of ex students W ork­ ing closely with tile association buys the telephone d irec to r­ ie s of all the m ajo r cities in the world. T hough M aguire drew a dreary pic­ tu re , m em b ership has doubled the six y e a rs since he becam e executive director. the Post Office, to p a r e n t s , tra c e rs the in “ M aybe som eday we can have a Page 8 staff just for students. But today we are in a situation, as are other large universities, where large portion of students leaving the institution does not know anything about the associa­ tion," Maguire said. Student apathy, the major though the problem, is not the only one. “We would like to do m any things but we just do not have the staff or the bu d g et.” The association em ploys 23 persons. The budget for this y e a r is 1206 OOO. the budget M em bership dues support w ith $110,000. The rest m ust com e from other a re as. The association is com ­ pletely non-profit, and m ost y ea rs op­ e ra te s in the red. In 19G0, th ere was an operating reserv e of $1,000 which im m ediately w ent into a perm anent fund for scholarships and other a c tiv i­ ties. Com plaints from ex students is an­ other problem . “ One com m on one is football ticket seating during footliall gam es. The a s ­ sociation provides tickets to ex-students, but apparently som e of them expect 50-yard-line t i c k e t s e a ts,” M aguire, a fo rm e r D aily Texan editor, explained, sm iled, and then added, “ but I guess every alum ni association has that prob­ lem. T here s no answ er to th a t one ” The association also serves as a students fo rm er for sounding board again st the U niversity. “We encourage it; Two hundred m em bers it s healthy, but often it ’s a t the association’s exj>cnse.” term inated th e ir m em bership in the association last Ju n e when N orm an Cousins, a liberal, spoke during com m encem ent exercises. the sam e when a con­ servative speaks. Some liberals will dis­ like the idea and put an end to their m em bership,” M aguire “ We w ant to be a sounding board for the alum ni, but we hope th e y ’ll continue being m e m b ers,” M aguire said. added. “ And is it lait letters, Integration a t the U niversity caused tile m ost num ber of the m a tte r was two-sided. All the asso cia­ is pass tion can do with com plaints the adm inistration, with them on w'hom the frequently, a n d Board of R egents, w ith whom it m e c u occasionally. to it m eets the association had a Seldom has the adm inistration. d isagreem ent w ith When it has happened, the association used the editorial pages of its publica­ its weapon. Al­ tion, Tile Alcalde, as than not, calde editorials, m ore often though, applaud, than deride, ra th e r an ad m in istra tiv e action. S everal tim es in the p ast, how ever, the association, which has no connection with the U niversity, has lieon angered to by the adm inistration and decided move its q u a rte rs off cam pus, but tho association h as alw ays moved back. Unlike the U niversity, and fortunately for it, the association is not connected with the S tate, for often the U niversity cannot buy equipm ent because of red such tape o r cases, the equipm ent and given it to the U niversity as a gift. the association has bought im pedim ents. legal In State funds, for instance, could not lie used to purchase an autom obile for the Chancellor. In this case, the associ­ ation acted as a liaison betw'oen a don­ or and tile U niversity. A form er stu ­ dent m ade a gift of the car. In an o th er case, an electron niicro- scof>c w as needed at the m edical school in G alveston, a branch of the U niversity. G alveston students who needed it, had to trav el to Austin every w eekend to use the one in the C apital City. The assot i- ation bought a m icroscope and presented it to the m edical school In relation lo legislation, the u j j i a u - to favorable tion concentrates on getting g ra ss root* support the U niversity, rather than operating directly with the Legislature. Each time a budget is sub­ mitted to the Legislature, the associa­ tion, along with groups from other state schools, arranges a meeting betw een state officials to give educators a chance to present the needs of education in the state. In the past, how ever, the association has not hesitated to tak e a stand on a public m a tte r such as higher educa­ tion tuition rate s. “ This y e a r,” M aguire said, “ the as­ sociation has not taken a stand. If the proposal to raise tuition is form ally in­ the association will probably troduced, take a stand G enerally speaking,” he said w ith caution, "w e have lieen re ­ lu ctant to see tuition raise d .' is unique The association am ong alum ni associations in that it d ie s not m eddle in sports. The ex-atudents do sponsor two banquets during the year, one for football players and tile other for other sports. Tho association d>>cs tho athletic have a council and distributes the D arrell Royal N ew sletter during the football season, but it contributes no funds. rep rese n tativ e on Of course, indiv idual alum ni do w ork to help athletics, p rim a rily through the Longhorn Club, but the < lull has no connection with the assot iation. In y ea rs past, tile association has contributed to tho construction of M em ­ orial Stadium , and G regory and Wom­ e n 's gym nasium s. The association also helped tniild tile T exas Union w here its located until 1959 when offices w ere the Home Econom ics they moved to eventually association Building. The hopes the Alumni C enter to to m ove which wall be com pleted in 1964. S tarting out w ith $110000 given by the U niversity, the association q u i c k l y raised m oney and passed the $200,000 m ark “ The first part w as ra th e r easy. It s the last $100,000 that will he difficult,” M aguire said. Not only will the Center (louse the association offices, but it will also I*' a place for alum ni to m eet. The C enter will he able to en tertain 3,000 people a t the Imffet and will be able to seat 500 in a dinner hall in s ta rt “C onstruction m ay I he spring or su m m er depending on the a r ­ chitect and the funds,” M aguire said. "We hope w e’ll I m * able to open it for the first football g am e of the 1964 se as­ o n .” he said. When com pleted a c r o s s from M e. m orial Stadium , the C enter will be m ade a gift to the U niversity, and the associ­ the ation, U niversity. turn, will it from lease in the U niversity. One o th e r service rendered by the association to the U niversity is "O p e ra­ tion B rainpow er,” a special rec ru itm en t p ro g ra m designed to inform the s ta te ’s top students of the academ ic program s Ixx-al ch ap ters of at the association sponsor visiting te am s of U niversity officials, faculty m em bers, students, and one association m em b er who talk to the top 25 p er cent of the seniors and juniors in the area. H ie association also w rites lette rs to all N ational M erit Scholarship w in­ ners, and to sa lu ta to rian s and valedictorians of each class in every Texas city. E specially bright sudents a re visited a t their homes by an association rep resen tativ e. letters of congratulation The U niversity ami the association have grown hand in hand, but the road w as not easy for the association when it w as form ed. Tile U niversity adm in istratio n stood in the w ay of m any of tile asso ciatio n ’s activities. Ironically, first one University official was later to say the association is the University’s best asset. Started by the 13 junior law students of the class of 1885, the club formed was the forerunner of today’s associa­ tion, With it cam e the Annual B anquet. At each reg u la r session of the original Annual Banquet, an o rato r was elected by ballot from am ong the m em b ers of the association the Annual A ddress to deliver the following y ea r By 1895, tile Annual M eeting w nt so big the association took up tile m a t­ ter of reduced rate s with tile railro ad com panies. A round trip fare of f.»ur cents a m ile was secured for tile 1896 m eeting In 1897, the students decided to cel­ e b ra te M arch 2, T exas Independence Day. An old brass cannon was d ragged on cam p u s from the Capitol grounds to lie discharged When the ad m in istra­ tion ruled no dism issal of class for the celebration, the students staged a w alk­ out anil attended Hie firing en m a sse. the U niversity P re sid en t Winston at ” 1 tim e m ade his oft quoted re m a rk w as L im in the land of lilierty, nursed on the bottle of liberty, rocked in th e crad le of liberty, and grew up a son of liberty, tau the students of Tile Uni­ versity of T exas take m ore liberties than anybody I e v e r sa w .” Hie 1904 Annual Meeting brought forth a resolution urging each g ra d u a t­ ing class to select a se creta ry and plan its first reunion three y ears a fte r g rad u ­ ation with other reunions to follow a t five y e a r is still followed in connection w ith the annual R ound-l’p C elebration intervals. The plan In 1912, an alum ni publication w as authorized. The first Alcalde, as it w as called, was distributed in 1913. D uring its infancy, the Alcalde was largely a literary m agazine and practically all of the incom e of Hie association was need­ ed to pay for its printing. Today, the A lcalde does not quite break even, lait the loss can lie a ttrib ­ uted to an accounting procedure, said M aguire Of tile SH) m em bership dues, $2.80 goes into the Alcalde. Life mem* bership can I m * bought, but all th a t rev­ enue g o e s fund. (Cost of life m em bership is $250. Stu­ dents can Imy the m em bership for $100 within a y e a r of gradu atio n .) the endow m ent into D uring the association is now bigger than the Annual the depression, Meetings w ere continued and accom ­ included plishm ents of the the building of the two gym nasium s Union, and Hogg M em orial A uditorium . The association it has e v e r been According the p u r i n e to M aguire, of an alum ni association is to support the to help students eaintain close contacts w ith the cam pus, to im prove the quality the Uni­ and enhace fellowship versity, am ong U niversity graduates through 135 local clubs and events like hom ecom ing and Round-Up. the prestige of to prom ote is also designed institution. and It But to offer the Texas E x-S tudents’ Associ­ the ation also has som ething m em bers. Tho Alcalde is m ailed out I O tim es each y e a r and the D arrell Roy­ al N ew sletter is distrib u ted during the football season. Also included am ong the serv ices a re lib ra ry privileges, a c ­ cident low rates, use of Hie directo ry service of the association, obtaining hotel reservations, and recom ­ m ending baby sitters for ex-students visiting Austin insurance at At one tim e, one of the requirem ents for m em bers was a d egree from the U niversity. Today, anyone wlio has a t­ tended the U niversity for one long ses­ sion is an ex-student and is eligible for m embership. MARCH. 1963 from precetfmp page Dim light (ttx'TMtmenon photographs w ill be taken to gather data on aodia- •a1 light ami night airglow from outside the earth’s atmosphere. Z o d ia c al light is believed to be su n ­ light re fle c te d fro m free ele< Irons and large d u st p a rtic le s distributed o u tw a rd from the sun. N ight airglow »* visible right a f te r sund ow n and is se en as a glow’ alo n g die horizon. lf there Is a definite cut-off p«>int In this light, returning Apollo astronauts could g e t a defin ite "fix" for se ttin g at­ titude controls for earth landings. R e tu rn in g m oon voyagers will ap­ proach d ie e a r th at speeds of ap p ro x i­ m ately M ach 40, o r 40 tim es tin speed L 0 B S T E R S 1 N 0 R B 1 T i i i MARCH, 1963 of sound. A stro n a u ts m u s t co m e w ithin a 40-mile c o rrid o r of th e e a rth s a tm o s- jih e re o r die, a task as sim p le as th re a d ­ ing a neacecraft and on h e a t losses into fre e s[*ace w ithout th e c a b in coolant sy s te m on. If little h e a t e sc a p e s in the fu tu re w eight c an he cu t b y c u ttin g dow n on the coolant sy ste m . A h ig h -fre q u e n c y H F a n te n n a te st, d ire c tly re la te d to P ro je c t G em ini, w ill p ro v id e m e a s u re m e n t of a n te n n a p o la r­ ization a n d a tm o sp h e ric effects. in te n sity A g ro u n d light ex[>erim ent will b e c o n d u cte d o v e r A u stra lia a n d A frica to pi-ovide d a ta on th e a p p ro x im a te m in i­ m um so u rce of light v isible a t s p a c e c ra ft a lti­ g ro u n d lig h t, 3 tudes. A h ig h -in te n sity , xenon m illion can d le p o w e r, will If su c ce ssfu l, g ro u n d lights m a y b e used for n a v ig a tio n p u rp o se s. fo r a point lie u sed . VV i n d o w a tte n u a tio n e v a lu a tio n s, know n a s the s ta r exfinsion e x p e rim e n t, w ill be m a d e T his will o b ta in d a ta to lig h t e v a lu a te tra n sm issio n th e of th ro u g h the s p a c e c r a f t window. T h e win­ in p re v io u s c r a f ts have clo u d ed dow s rig h t a f te r la u n c h in a m anner as if they h ad been sa n d -b la ste d . M ic ro m e te o rite im pact studies w ill b a in an a tte m p t to d e te r m in e m a d e th e a n d m o m e n tu m of a v e ra g e n u m b e r s m a ll p a rtic le s s trik in g the s u rfa c e of the s p a c e c r a ft. H an d -p o lish ed sh in g le* will b e m o u n ted on th e top o f th e s p a c e ­ th ese w ill b e e x a m in e d w ith a c r a f t; 600-power m ic ro sc o p e b e fo re a n d a f te r th e flight. in p a rt, by T ile co lo r of fu tu re s p a c e c r a fts w ill tho w h ite be d e te rm in e d , p a tc h to b e te m p e ra tu re e x p e rim e n ts m a d e on C o o p e r's flight. T h ese em p lo y th re e o th e r sh in g le s w ith w hite p a in t b aked on. T he o th e r b la c k o xid e sh in g le s pull in h e a l; th e s e w ill re fle c t it. If C o o p e r's flight is su c c e ssfu l, it w ill p ro v e co n clu siv e ly the overall su c c e ss of P r o je c t M el e u ry , thereby paving th e w ay to b ig g e r am i better space explor­ a tion fin- th e United States. (EDI I OR N O IE: Te xan Science Editor, L y n n e M cD ona ld, went to N A S A to write about equipment a nd experiments tor Astronaut L. G o rd o n C ooper’s scheduled flights. She is one of the first science writers in the nation to do so.) Higher Education Requires Variation in Systems By DAVE MCNEELY individual so A m e ric a 's u n iv e rsity sy s te m se rv e s th e th a t h e m a y se rv e A m erica Since th e sy ste m s e rv e s both its func­ th e indiv id u al and his society tion m ay affe c t e a c h p erso n d iffe re n tly . '‘preservation a n d U n iv e rs ity p u rp o se s m a y ra n g e from th e tra n sm issio n of k n o w le d g e’’ to " k e e p in g th e kids off Ute s tre e ts for a n o th e r four y e a r s ." T he c e n tra l p u rp o se of e v e ry e d u c a ­ im ­ s y s te m h a s been c u ltu ra l tio n a l p ro v e m e n t. S im ila rly , lie a b le to th e y m ig h t T he anc ient G re e k s b elie v e d th a t the f ir s t goal o f e d u c a tio n w a s to tr a in young c itizen s sn im . p ro v e th e ir society. E a c h G re e k sta te , h o w e v e r, had its ow n sty le of e d u c a tio n b e c a u s e the se v e ra l s ta te s held d iffe r­ ent view s on w h at th e y n eeded for p ro g ­ re s s th e A m e ric a n u n iv e r­ sity sy ste m is founded on th e lielief th a t the re su lts it p ro d u c e s c o n trib u te to th e d e v e lo p m e n t of th e U n ited S ta te s T he d iffe re n c e s of opinion c o n c ern in g edtt- m tin n a l p u rp o se s re s u lt, a s they did in G re e c e , fro m v a ry in g in te rp re ta tio n s of w h a t help s a so ciety a n d how th a t h elp is h est a c co m p lish e d . Since e d u c a tio n is sla n te d a t the ln- div id u a l, a c c o rd in g to D r. J a m e s R. R o ac h , a s s o c ia te p ro fe sso r o f g o v e rn ­ m e n t, and F. L a n ie r Cox, v ic e -c h a n ­ c ellor. schools and e d u c a ttonal fa c ilitie s of all kinds a re n eed ed to p ro d u c e a la rg e n u m b e r of peo p le w ith v a rio u s kinds of skill to o p a e rte o u r in te rd e p e n ­ d en t p ro c e sse s if to a n ed u c a tio n , w e h a v e " O u r so ciety ” said R o ach , " is to sa y d e c a d e s. U n til o nly recently, as Lynn Whit# Jr. po ints ou t. "our education has been lim ited to th e Occidental m ale aristo­ c r a t ." S om e p eople apparently still cling to th e v ision of education for only the fre e , w h ite. W e ste rn m ale. Bar/un sa y s, in speaking of intellect, " I t is in peril, though not yet in mortal d a n g e r .” The future of the American univer­ sity sy s te m a n d consequently of A m er­ ic a n society- d epends on m ass education w h ich must be implemented in a m anner th a t w ill not betray the tremendous p o ­ tential of the m ental elite. Pao* 7 H o n k A bout It Though You May, Parking Problem ’s H ere to Stay By RICHARD CO LE One-half the 19 958 students enrolled the U niversity possess autom obiles. In T here a re 4.050 parking spaces on T here a re 7 750 parking permits Is­ cam pus. sued. T here a re 20,759 pink traffic viola­ tions cram m ed behind w indshield w ipers ev e ry year. Yet there a re v acan t parking spaces en cam pus every day. W hether these vehicles a re used m ain­ ly for joy-riding, job transportation or com m uting to and from classes dives not m a tte r. They are here. And their pres­ ence causes problem s. M inor scrapes and barely m isses, traffic snarls a t St. P e te r's (late. and m aelstro m s of blinking, honking, flash­ ing escapades In front of Kinsolving one m inute before curfew- are but a few. "A pproxim ately one-half the students h ere have c a rs ," said E, H. Van Cleave, ad m in istra tiv e assistant in the P arking •n d T raffic Division. "All don't buy p e r­ m its, how ever, they sim ply reg ister their vehicles in the fall, spring, or su m m er sessions. They a re eligible for decals without charge if they agree not to park on U niversity grounds.” He pointed out that a h igher {ier- eentage of g rad u ate anil m a rrie d stu­ dent* have cars and buy perm its. (.♦•tting all those sorority T hunder­ b ird !, g rad u a te flivvers and freshm en hoopies into the few asphalt spaces is as sim ple as {wonting Hie sky m etallic blue and chrom e-plating the muon be­ sides. 7,750-plus hunks of b an i m etal into 4 050 orange- just will not slide bordered slots even with all the axle g rease H umble Oil and Refining Com- pany could supply. A* of Dec. 17, 1962 (latest figures com piled), 2 GOO parking spaces w ere av ailab le to students. “ They purchased 5 500 class C p erm its," Van (Heave said. "An additional 150 bought freshm an F ones " E arn in g 14 hours of B 's during one s fii-st se m ester is necessary for his shiny statu s symbol and an exem ption from the F resh m an C ar Ban. Per sons w hose hom e residence is in Trav is County o r just outside anil m ust drive to the F o rty Acres to attend classes • re eligible for this privilege Tile favorite, ubiquitous Class C stick­ er rn*t* $5 a y e a r and entitles th«*se w ith LIBRARY. (Continued from P ag e Oriel It has not yet been al­ lib ra ry space lo tte d . lib ra ry participates •n e e M onitor, the Wall Street Journal, and M exico C ity’s El U niversal. The U niversity the F oreign N ew spaper P roject, m aking the principal new spapers of every' country c f the w orld available on m icrofilm on request. A vailable p ap ers d ate back to 1956. in Space is the problem which M offatt Is concerned about. An entire section of th e 1961-62 lib ra ry rep o rt is concerned w ith this headache. "T w entieth C entury m a teria l now in the rare books collection is boxed -put back in boxes for lack of space to shelve It.” Cataloguing is scattered in various places throughout the lib ra ry as it has Increased; one cataloguing room was •n ee a corridor. "W e are operating in the sam e space as whefc the number of volumes and the student enrollment were half the size they are now,” Moffatt said. Moffatt pointed to shelves in the I-a tin American collection's room, where one mane book a quarter of an Inch thick could not be squeezed in. In a cataloguing room stands a col­ lection filling one end of a section of shelves. "These are books few the Latin Amer­ ican Collection. Where are we going to put them?" Moffatt asked. In the stack in the Tower, if a set c f books is added, a dozen shelves m ay have to be moved to put it in. On the fourteenth floor of the stacks, books a re being catalogued and pecked aw ay for the U n d ergraduate A cadem ic C enter. T his C enter will open with 60,- 000 books on open stacks, p rim a rily w orks selected by the faculty. Some ere new books, and some a re being tr a n s ­ fe rre d from the Main L ib rary 's stacks. T he space now being used to catalogue th e books will be added to the stacks. The R e serv e Reading Room will also b e moved to the A cadem ic Center, but th e space it now occupies m ay not be Page 2 the A nother crow ded section of li­ b ra ry is the D ocum ents L ibrary. Some docum ents are on m icroprint, and take up little space, but the docum ents most used. those on the US D epository I *>cu- m ent list, a re not available in this less bulky form. Space is being added to the I .aw Li­ b rary , and the Fine Arts L ib rary will lie moving into a new building, but "no One has ex tra sp ace," M offatt said. The m ain com plaint of students which the A cadem ic C enter should soothe, is having to w ait while librarians hunt the books requested. M offatt says that in a check nm the m orning of Feb. 22, the m edian am ount of tim e required to deliver a book w as six m inutes. "T hey m ay have been on thei- hest behav mr that m orning, and it w as not one of our busiest time*; at th<»se tim es w e ’re too busy to m n a check ” What takes the tim e is reporting on m hook the librarian cann** find in the stacks 12 m inutes or m ore in m ost cas- N . Students have m ade w a i t s a* long as too, only to find that this for m agazines the issue they w anted is at the bindery. When they lib ra ry has rn ut! i pie copies of the sam e publication it trie s to have only one at a tim e at the bindery', M offatt said it that lib rary P aradoxically, It is at the tim es when is most tho is busiest the shorthanded. Moffatt said th at at tim e of rep o rts and the y ear when them es are due, and students are truing to rese arch them , to check bocks out in the li­ students who work part-tim e b rary quit their jobs because they, too, have pap ers due. "W hen they do, we som etim es fall behind Moffatt said. "It takes longer to shelve the books and when the book* a r r not in their pro p er places, it m akes u even hai-der.” 26 or m ore sem ester hours, 21 year-old freshm en, and m a rrie d freshm en who a re living with th eir spouses to {Kirk in num erous areas. "The yearly charge w orks (Kit to 42 cents » m onth — rea s­ onable enough,” Van Cleave pointed out. One m ay buy the right to p erk in the spring for $3 and in the sum m er for JI. F acu lty and staff scooped up 2,100 p erm its last y ea r and each day vie for the 1.450 spots allotted them . D r H arry Ransom chancellor and IT Josejih R Smiley pi evident pay $36 a y ea r for RO perm it* 'th e elite p arking hadgesi and m ay drive to a sm all, se­ cluded area directly behind the Main Building and park Class A perm its »$12> m ay Ive issued to staff and faculty m em bers vv Im earn $415 or m ore a month on the* regular U niversity payroll. They also m a y lie issued for health reasons to this group and to students. Persons who qualify for A decals m ay double their paym ent and buy R p erm its in order to have a better chance of lo­ cating an em pty spot. L ast year 523 flag ran t tickets w ere given, m ostly for speeding. One of these erro rs imp*lee* a 12 m onth penalty no* recipient.* Two m ajor e rro rs such as not show*, ing proper p erm its gives the sam e pe«v altv. D uring the 1961-62 school y ear, 13.788 w e r e handed out. Two m inor cam ­ pus traffic faux pas and one m ajo r cir four minor ( a t t je su its in the sam e haz­ ard. "M ost ti< kets com e from parking on cam pus v* ithout p e rm its," the traffii ex­ pert continued "M eters give the second larg est am ount " One hundred m eters on street* su r­ rounding the U niversity and som e invid# the bound* give rive to scam pering h o t scurrying lictween classes to feed m ore nickels into U niversity coffers. "W e have b e tte r cooperation bena fin n you would find anyw here in A m er­ ic a vv bere th* re a re th a t m any people in Mich a congested a r e a ," Van C leave stressed "W e have only a very sm all m inority of h abitual violators. "Tile rush hours are I ie tw een 9 and the l l on M M T m ornings; M onday is peak ." Class B '$6» and D i$5) a re avail­ able to faculty and staff m em bers as a re drive through perm its for those who do not feel up to coping with the hectic problem . ( fr e e 1 Tem **) lessen* at 5 p m w eekdays, • t ll 15 a m S atu rd ay s, and all day Sundays when restrictions are not en. forced Then anyone m ay park w here he i,* lucky efKsigh to find a hole Disabled are a s a re located on inner cam pus driv e and other are a s convenient to classes By shortly liefore C hristm as last year. 25 E perm its had been issued to U niversity poi sonncl ami 41 to stu­ dents. U n d ergraduates and even professors, if they like, m ay ride motive cycles scoot­ ers. o r bicycles to class if they pay the $3 required fee Small {talking are as • re prov ided. "Z” Hall N orth of the Main Building in f'T»nt is a sm all cem ent strip of ' For V -Pons Only ’’ M em ber* labeled of the B oard of Regents the D evelop­ m ent Board and others condo* ting im ­ portant business with the A dm inistration m ay use th s stretch only afte r thev have contacted the Chief Traffic and Secor.ty Officer. E ach y ea r despite constant yam m er- in*'s from policem en and paren ts and from governors and safety m essages president*, cam pus violations ranging from m inor to flag ran t a re m ade to the o rd er of 20 759. Tile spofd lim it on si! part*, of (lie cam p u s is 15 m iles ;»»r hour and pedes­ tria n s a t ail the right of tim es have w ay. D espite all the Stentorian cursing ms w eekday mom* ami the silent gnashing of teeth late at night caused by’ too few la te -d ate jam , vacan t »l*ace* and slots go unused ev ery day. the "D uring the cu rren t high school Iw s k e th i ll tournam ent*, visitors a re d irec t­ ed to p.trking h* N um ber 2.” the perking ' The University im ­ ad m in istra to r fund proved in •{‘proxi­ m ately 1955 ” lite M 395 spaces L ocated south of M em orial Stadium,, the kit ca llid "fresh m an hole," stre tc h ­ es from San Ja i into to Rod R iver and is seldom filled c\< rp t during m a jo r afb- letic es eof* " It usually has from 25 to 30 r a m m It ’* he said " l o t Number I (between Fled R iver and Sabine fro m T w e n tie th Street ive th one h a lf block) wall be m v prrtv f*d if the U niversity deem s it nece#* It is a field with sca tte re d b e e s s o v in it now Of the < n th ism for not building huge parking centers \ . , n (le a v e said U te U niversity* policy is not to go info the ih e com mer* iv, I {silking b u s i n e * * charge would have to lie LHO to SH* a y e a r P riv a te business, how ever, i* en- e* sn agist ** P A N O R A M A M arine Institute A t P ort Aransas The University Gets Into Salt W ater availa b le through part-tim e research a s­ sista n tsh ip s. C lim ax ut the program w ill be an eight-day tu p to the coral reefs at V eracruz M exico, w here students w ill ob sreve tropical flora and fauna. fiekl The ( su m m e r • c o u rse s are part of an inters# lenee program that m a y s e rv e a* a m a rin e s< ie n re m inor for graduate *< icncc m a jo rs at an y university of tra in in g p ro g ra m Sim il ar s u m m e r pro­ fit.tins have been conducted a tthe In­ stitu te u n d e r N S F au sp ices annually sin ce 1959 The b alm y gulf w ith Its off-w hite sand and co n stan t sm ell of the sa lty sea w ill lie a w elco m e s u m m e r re fu g e fo r the A c a d e m ic w ith stac k in g . By JO Y C E JA N E WEEDMAN . I» u '.ti e P . i n ’*> t^ il do th#* t ’n \ fi ks! ^ anatom ize T e x a s- southern const intricacy h a r n i g r a d u a t e H ie Institute of M urine Science at I'*n * A ransas is a m ajor fin ger of tin* U n u e is it y ’* sc ien ce r e smirch re- I* I- < incom e I prim arily w th basi in *■•1 in!.- i i*o>l teai'hing progi im in M oane S< !•••■« ♦» m ade up of th.* com se offerings of th-* Institute and rela t'd departm ents of s once and engineering ai die m ain ca ■ piss. t n i e i k m w i t h i n H ie Institute is live ated *o rti<* barr ii p island i M ustang Padr e Island I d on g the j e l l \ of Aruns ts P a ss inlet in the villa g e of I ’ t A ransas at*»ut 30 m iles from Corpus Christi, T1i > location is favorable with respect to the va riety of environm ents av ailable to study Close at hand ire turtle g? irs f lit m ud-bottom ed buys o y ster reefs, continental sh#*!f environm ents. rock je t­ ties th#* open beaches, and the oil drill­ ing platform s. The Institute w as found-*d in 1941 bv hie U n iversity through th.* initiative of l>’ .T, Lund w ith the lid of the ('.en­ cl ii I duration Board I in activ ity of the 7.»»log> I K'part* A merit early stud ies w ere m ade im bo* p h i s 's and physiology fi un in old pier and building of the US Corps -»f I h g i- n<*ei s along the aps.s F lee en acres of land w ere obtained from the feller ii gov­ th ■ new ernm en t arid construetion of high flier and two fram e builtin - ,s a- -om plished in 1945 Hues.* buddings are used today as a dining ‘ * «11 and a dot 'ary >logy of o ysters in A building w as added to th* pi- • uvl fen tti.' low er area in 1948 VV wk -un the phv late 19! i s un- der I >r I Kind w a s follow ed bv studies t ixonam y on - hthyology (study of fis h 1 etiology, g#*nernl distribution <>f inverte- br ate faunas, estu arin e ecology related fen salinity gradients, and p aleo-ology. the A boat suitable for operations on these Gulf shelf w as added Studies to aid in to facu lty program s ( b a d ual diversification im dude a resident m arine geology program a sta- tion library, regular su m m er teaching. and tavonom ic reference collections w as foilowi*d by form al association witli c a m ­ pus teach ing departm ents in 1956 R e si­ dent in m arine m i­ crobiology, m arine botany, and m arine c h em istry w’ere added in 1958 and 1959. F ollow ing an authori/-ution bill passed In the legislatu re, a new air conditioned headquarters and research building w as (Built in 1960 along with a boat basin, and Im proved g o Kinds and o o n e i'te ponds. renovations w ere startl'd with Salt) OOO from the regular building fund of the U niversity, the US P u blic Health S erv­ ice the N ational S cien ce Foundation, and (tie A tom ic F n ergy C om m ission With the new fa cilities, a sum m er dining room, an organized N SF su m m er institute, and a sp ecia l program for v is­ itors sixty sta ff m em lrers and students h a v e l>oon aeeommodat#**! m cou rses and resea rch projects, It has been recen tly arm.Minced that this sum m er is b lessed w ith a JO OOO N SF grant for a graduate study program Ten graduate students will be aw arded stip ends of J300 each , plus additional allow an ces for tuition, m ilea g e and d#*- pendents, reports Dr Howard T Odum , Institute director. Other support will be feta mmm< rn PANORAMA A T U F Cali tor .............................. I Aura M cNeil A h-s.m into Fldltor . . . . . . -loyc-e g # n lm a n A dviser ............................. Rill M cR eynolds W riters tJii.s i s s u e ............... R ichard Cole, Jim D avis. L ynne M cDonald, F ernando D ovalina Artist ....................................... G ilbert Shelton Ilio to g r a p h e r ........................ By em B lack Ma r c h , i ?63 W ater W ild life Specimens Labor’s Place in State Politics — A H ard One to Define By JIM DAVIS In that s tra n g e g a m e ca lle d T e x a s try in g th e re a re m a n y tea m s p o l.des to light up the sc o re b o a rd . T h ese te a m s lobbies, a:<* ca lle d the a b ility an i th e b a sis «»f sc o rin g is in te re st g ro u p s o r lo in flu e n c e g o v e rn m e n t and get d e s iie d results. the One of te a m s p a rtic ip a tin g in this gam e h a s over o n e -h a lf million m e m ­ bers; yet the strongest team a n d is not a b le to d o m in a te the league. T his is o rg an iz ed lab o r. is not it T he s tre n g th of o rg a n iz e d labor in a n y a r e a is g e n e ra lly c o n sid e re d to be re la tiv e to tile am o u n t of i n d u s t r i a l s - tion. F o r v a n -s is social and econom ic re a s o n s , T e x a s arui o th e r S o u th e rn sta tes have g e n e ra lly lag g ed behind other ar­ in the nation thus o rg a n iz e d industrialization, ea s of and labor has never a c h ie v e d the p o w er en jo y ed by its coun­ te r p a r ts in so m e o th e r s ta te s, p a rtic u ­ la r ly those in the N o rth e a s t. re c e n t y e a rs , h o w e v e r As Texas and o th e r S outhern s ta te s h a v e slow ly b eco m e m o re in d u stria liz e d in it h a s 1k*- e o m e c le a r th a t th e p o litica l s tre n g th of unions h a s sim ila rly the u p ­ sw ing T h e stro n g show ing of u nion -su p­ in re- ent Texas poh- p o rte d c a n d id a te s in d ic a te tic a l c o n te sts th a t to lo n g er n e ce s­ union su p p o rt should no s a r ily ‘ kiss of th e Ik* co n sid e re d as d e a th .” l>c.*n on ten d s Y et ju d g in g e x a c tly how fa r unions s tre n g th h a v e p ro g re sse d in T e x a s ta sk . T h e re a r e m a n y v a ria b le s w hich seek to d is ­ to rt is not an e a sy tru e p ic tu re . in p o litic a l the O ne w ay th a t m ig h t l>e used to g ain in sig h t into th e b a ll-c a rry in g a b ility of o rg a n iz e d la b o r in tho g a m e of pol ties is to ta k e a look at the le g isla tiv e r e c ­ o rd s How m any law s h a v e l**en p a sse d th a t cot!Id be c la s sifie d as a n ti unio n? How m a n y pro-union? S ta tu te books in T e x a s a n d in lie r S o u th e rn s ta te s in d ic a te re la tiv e ly w'eak union p o litic a l p ow er. im p o rta n t It to note th a t T e x a s ark! e v e ry o th e r s ta te in th e so u th e rn p a rt of the U nited S ta te s e x c e p t I-o u isian a, O k la h o m a , an d K e n tu c k y h a v e - e x tr e m e ly h a te d by o rg a n iz e d rig h t-to -w o rk law s la b o r is T h e re a r e 19 law s in this s ta te w h ich H ank Brown p re s id e n t of T e x a s A FL- O O , considers to Ik* clearly anti union in nature. Ail of these law s w ere p assed betw een 1941 and 1955. Rmwai claim s law* there are m ore an tiu n ion that in T ex,is than any other state, and that there hasn t iK'en a pro-union law p a ss e d sin ce prior to World War I lin s m ethod of testing political is hindered by s tre n g th that there us a wide d ifference of opinion o v e r what constitutes pro- or a n tiTailor fact the legislation Also, legislation p a ssed m any y ea r s ago cannot give » clea r picture of political strength today ex. ept to hi­ de ate tliat is not stn x ig enough to alumish it lab o r to indicator of organized la­ \n o th er influence governm ent b o r s ability m ight Im* to look at die num ber of pio- labor legislators as opposed to die num­ ber of a n tila b o r is very hard to do, how ever, b eca u se few politicians who are actually anti-lalxir legislato rs. Thus want to lie classified as such and will for all working claim they ais* that men both organized and unorganized. The extent to w hich organized labor can get the support of all its m em bers is m other im portant factor Sm all mi­ ti-** nion new spapers are published in and towns ill over T exas and on sp. . n | occasion s, such us just before in el. - - radio and television are used to tion try to -.hi iii interest am ong m em b ers and gel them to act unitedly. i com m on g<>al C onnected with this is the ability of Ha* various union organizations to P u ­ get their differences m d work together 'Die AKI (TO low m l iii T exas rep resents univ aliotit half of (lie organized the other half us represented bv various independ­ ent unions How well t h e s e unconnected is union., n e able very im portant in Pie field of polite ii influence to w ink tog et bel force: lalxir in the present sessio n of from B a w n says that the AIT CIO arid the Independent unions are working very tin* e l.>sely legislatu re R ep resen tatives the various t United ;i Kips have form ed I -abor ('.Hmm it tee on le g is la tio n w hich m ee ts m e a w eek to d iscu ss con in :.ut w ith few g re a t fa ilu re s a b d few g re a t su c c e sse s In th e end in Als.) im portant is the ability of o r­ ganized Jailor to work iv,lh other gnu [is in te r ­ with which is est. No perm anent a p p a re n t and any am ount in T exas u t coop erative wen k se e m s u> depend . minion tyjw* o f a llian ce it sh are' a ' O ne thing ss c e rta in w hen L cg isla- 'lie fu tu re c o m e to A ustin , they tui es w ll u ndoubtedly lobby th e find w a itin g lu r them How s tro n g (hey w ill find it and how m u c h th ey will bo uv fluenced by it is anyone's guess. la b o r Page 3 fey LYNNE MCDONALD d is tin c t F o u rte e n e x p e rim e n ts a r e p la n n e d fo r M a jo r L. G ordon C o o p er's te n ta tiv e ly 22 a p a c e fligh t. T h e flig ht, o rb its , w ill p ro b a b ly be th e la s t in th e P r o je c t M e rc u ry se rie s T h e la u n c h d a te , po stp o n ed b e c a u se of A tlas b o o ste r p ro b le m s, has yet to be is hoped d e fin ite ly se t b u t e a rly M ay fo r. As in o th e r flights, th e re will be a e ro ­ m e d ic a l stu d ie s su c h a s C o o p e r's h e a rt • n d blood v e ss e l re s p o n se to c o nditions o f e x te n d e d o rb ita l flight Also, b e c a u se • f this flight be­ y o n d 30 h o u rs, su fficien t re s t, ear, a n d drink p e rio d s are n eed ed th e tim e e le m e n t in T w o e x e rc is e p e rio d s a r e se t A c a li­ b r a te d p u ll s y s te m fa s te n e d to the s p a c e ­ c ra ft will be used to give C ooper a p r e ­ c ise q u a n tity of w ork to do. food, Food for d ie flight w ill be b ite -si/e , re a d y -to -e a t d e h y d ra te d food a n d d rin k in p la s tic c o n ta in e rs re a d y fo r re c o n s ti­ tu tio n T he su ch d e lic a c ie s a s sh rim p , c h ick e n and g ra v y , an d beef an d g ra v y , is a new ty p e of fro w n d e ­ h y d ra te d food c o m m e rc ia lly a v a ila b le to an y o n e w ho w an ts food w hich will k eep a n in definite perio d of tim e. At a re c e n t p re ss c o n fe ren c e in H ous­ ton. C ooper c o m m e n te d he w ould p ro b ­ the a b ly h a v e flight l o f t e r for b re a k fa s t on “ It ju st d e p e n d s on w h a t I'm m ood for w hen I w ake up.'* h e saw! in the C o o p er r e m a r k e d he tim ught he w o u ld the to sleep ve ry w ell w ithout be ab le is sc h e d u le d u se of sleep in g pills T h e eight b o u r sle e p in g p e rio d to begin d u rin g the n in th o rb it of d riftin g flight. C oo per w ill be aw a k e n e d by a sig n al sen t d u rin g the M u ch es g ro u n d sta tio n . th e fiftee n th o rb it by T he first 01 bit-to-ground telev ision will be u sed in C ooper s yet to-be n a m e d s p a c e c r a ft. It w ill be live t e l e v i e w on a slow sc a n b a sis, w eig h in g IO pounds. to th a t p ra c tic a lly be a flying c a m e r a .” C o o p e r said “ I m ight sa y is going this T h e re w ill be four c a m e r a s u sed in the e x p e rim e n ts NASA o fficia ls sa y die rlu a e d -c i i . u lt TV p ic tu re s will be re le a se d to the pub­ ta p e s lic A w n o th e r flig h ts w e re re c la s o l T h is the s a m e w ay the voice in m e a n s th ey wfli b e issu ed a a • feeleyed the tim e a m e b e sts e e ry t r i f l e m issio n. to n se aiv a a n d re c o rd fete d ie feeiuy being T h e re e r e ie b e t h r ^ n a tio n s a ro u n d th e w orld c a p a b le of r e c e i v e ^ d ie M e - VMH*n tra n sm issio n ! M e rc u ry G enera! C e n te r. G ape C a n a v e ra l w in h a v e tt>* m ost «nm p ie ta C ardines O th e r re c e iv ­ ing p«»inta a r e th e P a cific C o m m an d S hip a n d th e C a n a ry Islan d s. in sighting a A flem ing bea con e x p e rim e n t will be c o n d u cte d to d e te rm in e C oo per * c a p a b il­ ities light at a distance up to 13 m iles fro m the s p a c e c ra ft This inform at ma will aid s. u-ntists in plan­ ning rendezvous opera ti. wa* ha future flight* such ae G em ini sc»! next page A S T R O N A U T C O O P E R C ooper in Procedures Trainer Page 6 Astronaut C ooper in Ig ress Training PANORAMA by byron, block Obedience is here: even the silent flowers Speak to the inmost ear. MARCH, 1963 Fag* S T h e s e p h o t o g r a p h s all r e p r e ­ se n t vivid, Intense Im p re ssio n s o f the b e au ty o f t h I s m o st allen civilization. The pictures o f the B u d d h i s t m o n a st e r y were taken at Eiheijl, J a p a n ; the s e a c o a s t pictu re s are o f t h e J a p a n e s e w est S e a o f (on J a p a n ) . c o a s t the T h e picto rial essayist o f J a p a n Is B y r o n Black, first-year g r a d u a t e student In Linguistics w h o was In J a p a n from J u n e until A u g u s t o f last y e a r s t u d y ­ ing J a p a n e s e a n d te a c h in g E n g ­ lish. By r o n w i l l return to J a p a n this J u n e f o r a y e a r In T o k y o where he will continue his J a p a n ­ e se studies a n d d o d i r e c t e d re­ se a r ch In J a p a n e s e linguistics at T o k y o University. a first impression PA N O RA M A