Weather: Partly Cloudy Low 63, High 80 T h e D a il y T e x a n Studen AUST VV* it at The University of Texas SUNDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1964 Student Assembly editorial (See Page 2) Eight Pages Today No. 6! Vol. 64 Price Five Cents ACCENT O N THE WORLD Saigon Airport Shelled SAIGON, South Viet Nam—OP)—A Viet Cong mortar barrage crashed into South Viet Nam’s second largest airport early Sunday morning, killing four US service- men, wounding about 20 other Americans, and destroying or damaging 17 planes. ^ Six of the planes destroyed were US Air Force Bo7 jet bombers that have been in this country since the Gulf of Tonkin crisis in August. According to preliminary reports, the Communists began pouring 81mm mortar fire into Bien Hoa Airport lo miles northeast of Saigon 26 minutes past midnight local time— 11:26 a.m. EST, Saturday Viet Nam Installs New Premier SAIGON, Niet Nam—CZP)—The high National Coun­ cil formally confirmed Tran Van Huong tonight as South Viet Nam’s premier. In his first public address, Huong promised sharp domestic changes and improved efforts in the war against Communism. The confirmation by the 16-member council was brief. US observers who attended the session came away strongly impressed with the new7 leader, 61. “This man looks really tough and really honest,' one American said. Astronaut Dies in Plane Crash HOUSTON — IP — Astronaut Theodore C. Freeman, who one day hoped to pilot a space ship to the moon, died Saturday in a plane crash on a soggy Texas plain. First reports indicated a goose might have caused the crash. Workers at the crash scene were reported to have found feathers among the wreckage. Witnesses said Freeman, a 34-year-old veteran test P^ot usually rode a bicycle to work, was approaching the Ellington Force B a s e for a landing when a, .VO to SOO feet the canopy of hts swept-wing T38 jet trainer suddenly flew off. Soviets Told W hat to Expect MOSCOW — in — In a major effort to calm the fears of Soveit citizens shaken by the overthrow of Nikita S. Sundav pledged there would be no return to secret police rule in Russia and that a better life for the average man remained the Kremlin’s goal. . The main organ of the central committee also promised to continue a war-avoiding policy of peaceful coexistence with the West and. indeed, to work for •'the improvement and development of relations with all capitalist countries.” tTnMud States That would obviously mean, first of all, with the United States. For the first time since Khrushchev’s ouster, Pravda returned to an attack on the Chinese Communists - without naming them and repeated the call for an international Communist congress on ,he Without1 mentioning Khrushchev by name, the newspaper praised manv of the achievements — especially in space, agriculture and industry — made while he was the Soviet Union s leader. It urged the need to proceed from there. This was Pravda’s first word to the Soviet reader of what he tan expect under the new leadership of first Community party Secret ars Leonid Brezhnev and Prem ier Alexei Kosygin. The Twist Corrupts Red Girls MOSCOW — IP — Teen-age girls in Russia are being led astray by the twist, by Brigitte Bardot’s hair styles, by sexy Italian films, and by their passion for meeting boys at dance halls. This was the glum conclusion of Vladimir Mentsov, a Soviet pedagogue, writing Saturday in the newspaper Sovetskaya Kultura (Soviet Culture). . . He quoted from a number of letters from teen-age girls ex Dressing their views on life in Russia. Mentsov complained that som e foreign films were corrupting Soviet youth and advocated tighter controls. “Otherwise, all the children will see ‘Divorce Italian Style. GirL, for example, can get quite a lot out of this, he said. ^ . . . . “We will not close our eyes to the fact that our girls can find in such films examples for imitation that are not of the best.” Mentsov also bemoaned the popularity of the hairdo that Russian girls copied from a Brigitte Bardot film. Turning to dance floor courting habits, he wrote: “practice shows that the majority of the girls are not in the least attracted by ;he business of dancing itself, hut they go to dance halls looking for new acquaintances ” TV to Predict Winners Early NEW YORK — (if) — Television news executives expect to tell the nation the name of the probable presidential winner before 8 p.m., CST. Tuesday—an hour when voters still will be marking ballots in 23 states. The networks are confident that their multimillion dollar com ­ puter system s for projecting the outcome on the basis of returns from carefully chosen precincts will quickly show the winner. For the first time, all three networks, along with the Associated Press and United Press International, will cooperate in gathering returns nationally and the figures will be simultaneously available to all participants. Largest Star Sapphire Stolen NEW YORK — UR — Two men were arrested in Florida and another here Saturday in one of the century’s most astonishing jewel theft cases. The FBI, which reported the arrested, said none of the gem s had been recovered, however. The precious stones were stolen Thursday night from the famed Museum of Natural History here. They included the world’s largest star sapphire, the renowned “Star of India,” and a star ruby termed the m ost perfect In Hie world. LBJ Sees Golden Era Barry Predicts Upset Texas Topples Mustangs, 7-0 Texas Speech Last in State For Goldwater Johnson Kids G O P About Deifying Past WILMINGTON, Del. — SAN ANTONIO—^ —Sen. Barry Goldwater sw7ept into Texas and the Old South Saturday in a last effort to lock up these two crucial areas in his quest for the presi­ dency. On the next to last full day of campaigning and after 80,000 miles the Republican candi­ of travel, date “strange, distorted minds” those who would unilater­ ally disarm the country. called FROM A RALLY in his home town of Phoenix, Goldwater flew here and then to Columbia, S.C., for a speech to be televised over the whole South. The senator feels Texas and the South are two big keys in the vic­ tory he says he’s going to gain Tuesday in the “biggest political upset of the century.” Soldiers fighting in South Viet Nam are “short on rifles” and other “basic needs of the foot sol­ dier,” he said in Phoenix. TO KEEP THE PEACE, Gold­ water said, the US has to stay strong militarily because “That's the way it has to b e.” Goldwater claimed events after two world wars showed the US could not disarm “ to prove its peaceful intentions,” even though this can be some still believe done. “These strange, distorted minds are at work today in our govern­ m ent,” the Arizona senator de­ clared. “ They are too close to the seat of our government for our own good.” HE SAH) he was referring spe- ! cifically to Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. “This good bookkeeper should be removed from his seat and sent back to somebody’s books,” Goldwater asserted. A crowd estimated at some 15,- 000 in Alamo Stadium gave Gold- | water a rousing ovation in San An­ tonio when he was introduced by the Texas Republican senator. John Tower. TOWER ATTACKED the Presi dent as a “Texan who doesn’t act like a Texan any m ore.” strength He sounded again his call for it military preparedness, saying takes free and strength to keep the peace. He said he didn't mean arms alone, but also spiritual, moral, and po­ litical strength. to be By RICH ARD LYNCH Assistant Sports Editor The Texas Longhorns, making j the most of Southern Methodist : mistakes, mastered the Mustangs, 7-0, before 59.000 fans Saturday afternoon at Memorial Stadium. The tenacious Texas defense had in hobbling the passing Ponies as four passes and consistently kept SMI at bay when they moved close to the Texas goal. they picked off ! a hand SMU, behind the passing of quarterback Danny Thomas, pene- I trated sometimes-sagging Texas pass defense, but always it, I when the occasion called for a Texas defender was there to the I pick off the ominous pass. In contrast. Texas completed on­ ly one pass during the entire game, and that was a tailback pass with Ernie Koy doing the throwing. Utilizing power up the middle, Texas drove for its first and only score in the game shortly after the beginning of the second quar­ ter. A JIGGLING, ONE-HANDED interception by Tommy Nobis on the SMU 38-yard line set in mo­ tion the wheels which eventually rolled across the Pony goal line. Koy and Harold Philipp displayed an excellent example of inside power running, that driving, chur- ning, fight-for-the-last-inch type of (See DEFENSE, Page 4) Nowotny Honored By UT Ex-Students “ In your heart you know he’s tall,” Greg Lipscomb, president I of the Students’ Association, told guests at an appreciation dinner for Arno “ Shorty” Nowotny Sa- | turday night. Gov. John Connally, Chancellor Harry Ransom, and Stuart Long, I news service director, also paid tribute to the former dean of stu- ! dent life who is now a consultant to the Regents and curator of the University’s Ex-Students’ Writings I Collection. EX-STUDENTS’ presented No­ wotny an “Eyes of Texas” clock at the dinner at the Country Club of Austin. Lipscomb added that Nowotny was more than competent in stu­ dent life and more than dedicated to the students who need help. “A lighthouse to guide students I and exes,” was Gov. Connally’s description of the dean. RANSOM told the group e stim at­ ed at 350 of Nowotny’s contribu­ tions to the University during his 46 years work. In his amusing history of B Hall, Long said that when he cam e to I the University rent was $2.50 and board $9, which was too high for him. Long presented Nowotny with an orange and white bound history of B Hall which he had , compiled. Dr. Frankl First Union Speaker Dr. Viktor Frankl, the first guest of the Texas Union Speakers Com­ mittee, will discuss “ Man’s Search for Meaning” at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 8, in the Union Main Ball­ room. Professor of neurology and psy- | chiatry at the University of Vien­ na Medical School, Dr. Frankl is also head of the neurological de­ partment at the Poliklinik Hospit­ al of Vienna, president of the Aus­ trian Medical Society of Psycho­ therapy, and a well-known lectur­ er the United States. in Europe and lf) — President Johnson, discounting the worth of “the good old days.” pre­ dicted Saturday his election would trigger break­ “an American through” to an era of unpredict­ ed abundance. This was the central theme of | the campaign speech Johnson pre­ pared for delivery in Wilmington, j Earlier, addressing cheering thou­ sands on the tree-shaded colonial square in front of Deleware’s old state house in Dover, the Presi­ dent promised to declare “a war on w aste” throughout government. CAMPAIGNING IN Deleware on his way to a major rally in New York's Madison Square Garden to- j night, Johnson said his opponent, GOP presidential nominee Barry Goldwater, wants to turn back to what he said Goldwater and his supporters “plainly believe were ‘the good old days.’” The President did not mention Goldwater by name in a text pre­ pared for a Wilmington appear­ ance but he made it clear he was talking about the Republican can­ didate. Alluding to the depression that | started in 1929, Johnson said: “THOSE DAYS were not good. I remember them. I grew up in the middle of them. So did many of you.” “I believe that generations from now people will look back on the 1960s and will say: There was the special moment. There the Ameri­ to a can people broke through new level of moral, spiritual, and material blessings.” Johnson began his day in Dover with what he called the declara­ tion of a “war on w aste.” He said he will fight against needless fede­ ral spending, economic waste caus­ ed by recessions, and the waste of wfar, which he called the “most awful waste of all.” LYNDON JOHNSON booked last moment vote appeals Monday at Houston and Austin and prepared the election results at I to from his Hill learn Austin, 60 m iles I Country ranch. M iss Rountree and Carlock . • receive annual aw ards from D a d s Association. Outstanding Pair Chosen by UT Dads Sharon Rountree of San Ange­ lo and David Carlock of Honey Grove were named the Universi­ ty’s outstanding girl and boy Sa- turady by the UT Dads’ Associa­ tion. Dr. Courtney M. Townsend of Parjg, incoming president of the Association, presented each with an engraved wall plaque. Both students are seniors and have participated in a wide range of campus activities. The winning students both have maintained “B ” averages. Miss Rountree is majoring In radio-television and history. She the “National Recogni­ received tion Award” in 1964. Five such awards are presented annually by the Freedoms Foundation of Val­ ley Forge. Miss Rountree is pre­ sently national vice-president of Alpha Epsilon Rho, radio-television honorary society. On campus, Miss Rountree is a member of Motar Board, women's honorary organization, and presi­ dent of Chi Omega social sorority. Carlock is finishing w’ork on a in government bachelor’s degree and beginning his first year in law7. He is a board member of Texas Student Publications, Inc.; m em ­ ber of the Texas Union Advisory Board; chairman of the Represen­ tative Party, a major campus po­ litical organization; president of the Silver Spurs, m en’s sen -ice organization; and, a member of Sigma Nu social fraternity. Carlock has just been elected to Friars, UT honorary society for and outstanding men for served on committees has Round-Up and Campus Chest. students, No Sale at LSU For Lieun's Mag last week at Lieun Roger Adkins, former edi­ tor of Tile Ranger, w7as apprehend­ the Louisiana ed trespassing I State University for and the unauthorized sale of a college humor magazine. C. R. Anderson, campus secur­ ity chief, reported that Adkins and Robert Brant Browoi, of Ft. Lau­ derdale, Fla., were picked up within an hour of each other in the student union for selling the magazine, the Charlatan. Adkins, editorial assistant of the magazine, admitted they w e r e I working for the editor of Charla­ tan. The magazine is an off-campus p u b l i c a t i o n distributed from ! Gainesville, Fla. Adkins and Brown had failed to secure permission from the Comp­ troller's Office to sell the m aga­ zine on the campus. 6 New Members Chosen for Friars Society Six men have been selected as new members of the Friar Society, oldest and highest m en’s honorary on the campus. Tapped for membership were George David Carlock, Thomas Braden Daly, Bruce Arthur Kow- ert, Edgar Allen Mitier, Comer O. (Pat) Patterson, and Stephen Daily Busman. Founded in 1911. the organization annually chooses the “ 12 or fewer most eligible men selected from each senior class or higher” for the honor of membership. New Friars are announced twice a year, at Dads’ Day and at Round-Up. include Clar­ ence Bray, Drew7 Cauthorn, John Cope, Jim Dudley, Jim Fletcher, Leon Graham, Magne Kristiansen, Active m&nbers Lowell Leberman, Greg Lipscomb, Bob Odic, John Orr, Howard Rob­ erts, and Larry Schoenbrun. Honors and activities of the new Friars are as follows: DAVID CARLOCK - first-year law student; Sigma Nu: executive : council; Silver Spurs: president, trainer, executive council, rowel chairman, Round-Up Rally; Stu­ dent Assembly: chairman, Aca­ demic Affairs Committee; cochair­ man, Student Activities Handbook; TSP Board of Directors; Grievance Committee; OU Dance Host; Cam- j pus Chest Steering Committee; Representative Party: chairman. J steering committee; Senior Cabi­ net; Cactus Goodfellow; 1964 Dads’ Association O o u t s t a nding Boy Award. I TOM DALY—senior in architec­ ture; Tejas Club: executive coun­ cil, financial commitee; Phi Eta Sigma, Alpha Phi Omega, Tau Sig­ ma Delta, Sphinx; Inter-Club Coun­ cil: president; Student American Institute of Architects: president, treasurer; Newrman Club: advisory board, executive council; Men’s Glee Club; University “Y” : Cabi­ net; cochairman, Campus Bowl. Also Student Assembly; Round­ up: cochairman, R-U Showcase; Cactus: associate editor, section editor; Image (student publication in School of Architecture): editor, associate editor; University Party Steering Com m ittee; Outstanding Junior in School of Architecture; Student Leaders’ Seminar in Chile; student delegate to AIA; student observer at International Union of Architects’ Convention; numerous scholarships. BRUCE KOVVERT—graduate stu­ dent; Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Phi Eta Sigma: Alpha Phi Omega; Long­ horn Band: president, executive council; Kappa Kappa Psi: presi­ dent, vice-president, secretary; Te­ jas C l u b ; Cactus Goodfellow: Merck Index Award; NASA Trainee Fellowship; Student Labor Com­ mission ; t e a c h i n g assistant in chemistry; B.S. in chemistry with honors. EDDIE MILLER—senior in en- gineering-science; Delta Upsilon: president, vice-president; S i l v e r I Spurs; Interfraternity C o u n c i l : vice-president, cochairman, Var­ sity Carnival; Student Assembly; Representative P a r t y : steering committee; Cactus Goodfellow and Outstanding Student. Also, Tau Beta Pi; Outstanding Freshman Engineer; Engineering Fellow; National Science Founda­ tion Fellowship; Boeing Scholar­ ship; highest ranking junior in en gineering; Phi Eta Sigma: presi­ dent, junior and senior adviser; Cochairman, Operation Brain pow- cr; C a m p u s Leaders Seminar; Challenge; Campus Chest; frater­ nity scholarship award. PAT PATTERSON—graduate stu­ dent; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Phi Omega: president, treasurer, cam ­ pus projects director, distinguish­ ed service award; Election Com­ mission: chairman, revision rom- mittee; Texas Union: secretary- treasurer, chairman. Exhibits Com­ m ittee; Union Leadership Aw'ard; Orientation adviser; Challenge: treasurer; Cactus Outstanding Stu­ dent; comptroller. Students’ Asso­ ciation: BA in Plan II with honors. STEVE SUSMAN — senior law; Texas Law Review : editor-in-chief, associate editor: Grand Chancel­ lor; Outstanding First-Year Stu­ dent; quizmaster; Phi Delta Phi; Phi Kappa Phi: best brief in Moot Court Competition; highest student in English magna in class: BA ; cum laude from Yale University; at Yale: Dean's List four years; ranking scholar two years; varsity debate; football; manager, Asso­ ciated Student Agencies. DAVID CARLOCK TOM DALY BRUCE KOWERT EDDIE MILLER PAT PATTERSON STEVE SUSMAN “When th* so^e CANT 'IDU J im PACS U P ANR POWM UKE OTHER COSHES*'1 IC D E A N R I N D Y ' S Gotterdammerunq Election Time Platitudes Fall Like Leaves —THE STAFF E le ctio n tim e h a s com e. and The Squabble W ednesday, 18.5 per cent of the student body fum ed out to vote for Student Assemblyman. T hursday night, the Assembly—in a special called m eet­ ing—blamed The Daily Texan for the image created of the student political body. The Texan drew partial blame for tile scanty turnout the day before. One Assemblyman pointed out—erroneously—that the Assembly is the “ focal point of the cam p u s,’ and that its image is created partly by the Texan. We beg the Assembly’s pardon, b u t as far as this news­ paper is concerned, student government is not the focal point of the campus. The Texan exists to serve 24,000 students, plus faculty mem bers and residents of the University area. To the ex ten t th a t the Assembly is a part of this community, we recognize it. But the paper's horizons are not limited to the 34 mem­ bers of the Student Assembly. We have given the Assembly prominent page one space this y ear—attention which so far it has not deserved. F a r too much space has already been devoted to an Assembly which seems to have a bloated opinion of its importance. In a readership survey of the Texan taken last spring, only 2 per cent of the readers indicated they were interested in campus political news. On the other hand, students—both in and out of campus organizations—said the}’ th o u g h t an ex­ cessive am ount of campus political news was printed. The Texan cannot justify the amount of space given the Assembly this year. The Texan cannot serve as a po­ litical organ nor can it handle tho Assembly’s public rela­ tions work. We can only report its actio n s In the final analysis, w hatever image results is not up to us. The Senate Race Texas voters face a distinct choice in the Senate race. C andidates with different views are pitted against each other. George Bush is a Gold w ater Republican and Ralph Y arborough in a liberal Democrat. Incum bent Yarborough is from East Texas, he worked his way through the U n i v e r s i t y , holding such jobs as a w aiter in a boarding house, and graduated with honors, He has served since 1957 in the Senate and while lie has been criticized for not having established comraderie w ith his colleagues, has been called by President Johnson a man who votes for the people Among o th er things he ha- favored the test, ban treaty as far back as late 1956, when he joined Adlai Stevenson in expressing concern over the results of air pollution from nuclear tests. He co-authored the 1958 education act which provided for college loans, sum m er teacher training institutes, high school and junior college equipment in foreign languages, sciences, engineering, and m athem atic- In 1964, th e New Republic noted th a t Yarborough had favored IO of 12 proposals it considered im portant to the general w elfare— mass transportation, youth conservation corps, test ban treaty , vocational education, the wheat sale, tax cut, civil rights act, w ar on poverty, hospital care for th e aged, and a w atering down of the conservative attack on the reapportionm ent ruling, George Bush Is an attractive personable candidate. He is the son of a form er Republican senator from ( 'onne-ti- cut. An honor graduate from Yale University, he is a suc­ cessful oilman. D uring the campaign, Bush has indicated he favored less federal aid to build college classrooms. He does not favor the area redevelopment act which gives assistance to fledgling industries and communities in trouble. The Idea of a w ar on poverty by government action lie opposes. He has expressed opposition to medical care for the aged. Before the 1964 Civil Hights act passed, he opposed it and still does not favor it. The United Nations, he says, has failed to preserve the peace, and he f a v o r s all countries paying their dues or he made to get out. He favors the United States recognizing a Cuban gov­ ernm ent in exile, giving it economic and military aid and then, when the government goes to liberate its homeland, for the US not to be lacking in courage. We urge voters to conscientiously and thoroughly think about which man can offer Texas more before they vote Tuesday. Guest Editorial Poor Sports P a rts of the seamier side of the current presidential race were present a t yesterday’s Minnesota-Michigan H o m e ­ coming football game. As the 60,000-plus crowd stream ed into the Stadium they were continually pestered by persons trying to give out single-sheet “ lineups.” In the past a similar sheet had con­ tained only innocuous advertisem ents for local m erchants, but this one revealed the gory details of the Jenkins case on its backside. Slightly later, as the band finished up its salute to the United N ations for United Nations Week, a helicopter ap­ the southern horizon with an advertising peared over stream er trailing behind proclaiming in big, red l e t t e r , “Help the US get out of the UN.” Well at least the football game was clean. — M I C H I G A N D A I L Y L ittle M a n on th e C am p u s By B ib icr U ncertain or Disgusted Could Decide In Midwest Many Dislike Choice Republican all m y life, but this year I ’m on ed g e,” Hanson says. “There is som ething about C old­ w ater I don’t like. I ain’t saying I w ill vote D em ocratic, but I m igh t,” • In R acine. Wis., Susan J. P feiffer is certain that Gold w at­ er is the last hope for local gov­ ernm ent. “ A vote for Lyndon Johnson.” sh e sa y s, “ is a vote for so c ia lism .” • In Springfield. Mo.. Charm ae P ollock, who w orks for a health stu d io , sa y s: “ I think if w'p had a write-in candidate this tim e h e’d w in .” Out here they’re accepting the negative. And the M idwest m ay be the best cross-section w e have. FROM OHIO to K ansas to the D akotas, these 12 states show a s­ tonishing variety within a n d am ong them selves. Within these states are five of the nation’s largest cities, C hica­ go, D etroit, Cleveland, St. l/)u is, and M ilwaukee. Traditionally R epublicans do well here. In 1960. when the Midwest had 15*4 electoral votes, Richard M, Nixon won this area. 82-72. IN 1964, GOLDWATER has four sta tes he considers vital to his cau se, and two of them, Ohio and Uinois, are in the M idwest. Tile o th e rs a r e California and T exas. A nyone w ho c a n win big in th is a r c a h a s ta k e n a g ia n t s trid e to­ w ard th e 270 e le c to ra l v o tes n e e d ­ ed to c a p tu r e th e W hite H ouse, and so Jo hnson and C o ld w a te r com e h ere a g a in and ag a in . talk in g politics THIS RETORTER h a s to u re d the a re a fro m C lever, Mo., to Ann A rbor, M ich., from M inneapolis to S tra tfo rd , Ohio, O ther re p o rte rs for th e A s­ so c iated P re s s an d m e m b e r n ew s­ p a p e rs h av e in te rv ie w e d v o te rs in e a c h of th e 12 s ta te s. T hese highly in fo rm al su rv e y s, ta k en indep en d en tly of e a c h o th ­ e r. all p ro d u ce th e s a m e im p re s ­ sio n s: T his m a v he a v ita l b a ttle ­ ground in a vital election, hut m any voters neither notice nor care — and som e who do care have trouble working up enthu­ siasm for either candiadte. BLT LET S GO OFT and get the feel for ourselves, and a good p lace to start is with dedicated partisans in Milwaukee. Jam es Jackson is a 79-year-old lively, talka­ N egro cab driver, tive, opinionated. “ I’m not particularly for Mr. Johnson,” he says, “ but I’m a D em ocrat and I’m not going to ch an ge.” Though not particularly f o r Johnson, h e’s particularly against Coldwater, in words ungram m a­ tical but positive: “ He’s backslidded on his own words. If he w as in there now. do you know where Cuba would be today, In the P acific Ocean, that’s where. We don’t need no m an like that for no president.” Now for the other extrem e. THE HOMES in the 900 block of North 72nd Street in Milwau­ kee are neat, affluent-looking, well-lived. “Coldwater One has a “ This house is sold on C oldw ater” sign on its lawn, a for President” stick er on its door, and a large in United States the brisk breeze. flag whipping A huge m an, 6 feet and big all over, has just visited the house, to lend a book. “ I belong to the John B irch S ociety,” he said, even before identified him self as “ N or­ he m a n E . W ynn, the h earin g in aid business at 205 East W iscon­ s in .” A REPORTER m entioned th a t tr a il­ th e polls show C oldw ater ing. “ He is like h e ll,” Wynn said. “ I ve talked to hundreds of peo­ ple, an d the polls sim ply a r e n 't r ig h t.” Wynn would like m ore details on B obby G. B a k er and Billie* Sol E ste s, and he sa id : “ lf Jo h n ­ son is a C h ristian , and a b eliever , 'n 'T /> e c h r i r u r i. ‘L et’s bring in God. he'll say, things out let the chips fall w here they m a y .’ ” in the open and NOW to a m ore rural setting. Norman Lon, a real estate m an is a Re* in P e rry sb u rg , Ohio, publican who voted for Nixon. to “But tell you “ We don’t have a real ch oice this year,” Ixm said. As a one­ tim e insurance m an, Len d oesn ’t like Coldwater‘s stand on Social Security, the truth, I don’t know whether I want to vote for Johnson or n ot.” Ben M angiopane of Shadyside, Ohio, does a lot of traveling in his table g la ssw a re business. He looks upon h im self as an indepen­ dent, having v o te d for D w ight D. E isenhow er and for John F . K ennedy. then “ IN THE N IN E MONTHS John­ son h as been th e re he has proved he can get things done,” M angio­ p an e said. “ I d o n ’t see anything ra d ic a lly w rong w ith this coun­ try . Sure, t h e r e s Viet Nam and Cuba. But n e ith e r M r. C old­ w a te r or M r. Johnson is going to solve th a t—and no p re sid e n t w ill in 20 y ea rs ” In the hund red s of interview s the m ost su rp risin g —“disturb­ ing” m ay be a b e tte r w ord— a r r those who sa y they ca n ’t sup­ p o rt neither m a n . THIS MAY EXPLAIN w hy the polls a re being looked at su sp i­ though they show ciously, rvon startingly the P resid en t doing well. civil Not m any of those interview ed rights u nless m entioned it up. But the reporter brough! an im p o rta n t D em ocratic leader in this a re a s a id : “This back­ lash frightens m e. We have tried to m inim ize it, but I ’m not sure we can m inim ize it. I don't think anybody ca n thing y e t." re a d this On such in tan g ib les will Repub­ licans ba^e th e ir hopes in their final drive the Midwest, w here the a ttitu d e s a r e so strangely n egative in all di­ rection. for support in On Other Campuses Students Fight Name Change By ARTW K EDSON CHICAGO - IB - This m ay be the strangest of all presidential elections. It will be — at least here in the decisive M idwest — an election in which m any voters sa y they they don't like either Lyndon B. Johnson or Barry C oldwater. IT WILL BE an election in which, although the polls show Johnson doing unusually well in this area, large num ber of a surprisingly voters concentrate on C oldw ater: T h ey’re either en ergetically for, or dead set against, the Repub­ lican challenger. It could be an election that, ironically, m ay be d ecid ed , by those so listless or uncertain or disgusted they won't vote. Listen to w hat the M idwestern­ ers are sayin g: • In Fargo, N .D ., Oscar Han­ son. 72, a retired farm er, sum s up his feelin gs. “I have been a in a d eq u a cy by s ta te s m a n ; m a y b e he will, though I w an d er if a m an can red eem such the sim ple ac t of v ic to ry . I w onder, too, if the fac t th a t it is of long e n d u r­ less a n c e ca n re p re h e n sib le . re n d e r dishonor T he c a n d id a te s re fle c t us, and w e a r e disappointed. I cannot sa y e x a c tly wily, hut in this elec­ tion we do not so^m to notice the good m the sy ste m ; all the focused on sp o tlig h ts a r e the bad. P e rh a p s our sick n ess h as ju st m a tu re d to the point w here w e a r e a w a re of it. A vague fea r, a vag u e disquiet c o n ta m in a ­ tes us a ll; and it is not a p a rtis a n infection but a g e n e ra l disease. T he co u n try se em s a little sick of little sick of th e ca n d id a te s, an d sick, p e rh a p s, b ec au se it has seen so m a n y ugly glim p ses of itself. the c a m p a ig n , and a B ut w e will sw allow o u r r e ­ the se rv a tio n s and vote. All of li­ lib e ra ls who w anted a r e a l b e ra l and all the co n serv ativ es w ho w an te d a b e tte r c o n s e rv a ­ tive w ill the polls an d s a y “ no” to one of the two. Then w e w ill w ait two m on­ ths fo r N ew Y e a r's E v e, an d on a night as m e lo d ra m a tic as this se n te n c e w ill hid a sa d , glad goodby to 1964. troop dutifully to A group h as b een o rg an iz ed to fight th e n a m e c h a n g e fo r Texas T ech. Tile B oard of D ire c to rs h as proposed T ex as T ech U n iv ersity , but stu d e n ts and fac u lty h a v " v oted a g a in st th is nam e, T e x a s S ta te U n iv e rsity is the n a m e fav o red by electio n s in the la st two y e a rs. The T o read o r, ca m p u s p ap e r, sa id . “ T he p rin cip al a rg u m e n t a- g ain st m e re ly changing T exas T echnological C ollege to T exas T echnological U n iv ersity w a s The Firing Line less typed Editors Note: Firing line let­ ters should be: addressed “ To t r i p l e the E d itor:,” spaced, lh a n 250 words, contain w riter’s address, and telephone number. If a writer does not have a phone he should bring his letter to the T exan office with identification. Rest R o o m s E x p la in e d th e th a t e n te rin g em ployes “ w hite re s t ro o m ” an d v ic e v e rsa . I w ill th e colored em p lo y e sa y tend to use only one of the do re stro o m s, but if R obbins had in v e stig a ted fu rth e r, he w ould h ave found th a t the p o rte rs and cu sto d ia n s h av e lo ck ers fo r th e ir h a ts and c o a ts and c h a irs for lounging d u rin g th e ir c o f f e e b re a k s, etc., lo cated in one of th e re stro o m s. two fem a le), they m a y be used by p ersons of all ra c e s and re lig ­ ions. In this w ay, no one would be offended and deep-thinkers like R obbins w ouldn’t be “ sa d d e n e d ” at the sig h t of m ultiple restro o m s. Ed Scott 4523 Caswell ‘R a n g e r ’ S u g g e s t io n s To the Editor: As an a lte rn a tiv e , p e rh a p s R ob­ To the Editor: In r e g a rd to Rif h ard Robbins* bins would like to a p p ro p ria te R E the R a n g e r c o n tro v e rs y : thoughts upon co n tem p latin g a H ealth C e n te r rest ro o m : In th e firs t place, all four of the re stro o m s on the g round floor of the H ealth C e n te r a r e c le a rly m a rk e d “ E m p lo y e es O nly” and th e re fo re a r e of no co n c ern to R obbins, w ho is not an em ploye. The re stro o m s for stu d e n t p a ­ tie n ts a r e lo cated on floor, and th ere a r e o n ly tw o of thp , , first , , so m e m oney from nex t y e a r ’s B- T ax an d u se it to h a v e sig n s p a in te d on all doors of all four em ploye re stro o m s, ex p lain in g in d e ta il th a t, although th e re a r e four re stro o m s (tw o m a le and Official Notices b r a n c h IN S E P T E M B E R . P R E M E D IC A L S T L D E N T S A P P L Y - in c t o s o u t h w e s t e r n m e d ic a l S C H O O L A N D T H E U N I V E R S I T Y OK f o r 1965. Admissions Com- S o u th w e ste rn Medical c am p us school Dallas, win be on I uesciav . Nov. 2 and 3 for thp purpi>s€. of havinK informal interviews with s tu d e n ts who are »v~ for e n tra n c e p h i n g to S o u th w e ste r n the th em (one m a le and one fe m a le ), t e x a s m e d i c a l „ T A, In th e second place, the H ealth Members of from . . . A D M ISSIO N , m itten „ ,, , , , , . . . , I . . . th a t effec t h av e f n r t i i n n frUv M oM *^ anc! C enter building w as c o n stru c te d c n m o I ^ vnjiT-c so m e lo y e a rs ago. u n ro rtu n a te iy a t th a t tim e , th e re w ere s e p a ra te , provisions for th e w hite an d col- m septem ber i%5 oral employes. The designations to j „ > been rem o v e d and p ain ted o ver w hich th a t c a n be done ab o u t R obbins w ould su g g e st th a t e x tra up or p e rh a p s co n v e rted to som e m ia , so rt of g a m e room s, hnrvthc n r cm n k i n t r n a r l n r c D o o m s , o r s m o K i n g p a r l o r s . is ab o u t all telephone the , . immediately. £ » « long since Medical Branch. Galveston will also be on cam pus. T u e s d a y and W edne*- day. Nov, ti and 12, for the purpose informal interviews with rf holding stu d e n ts applying to their in stitu tio n , th e Situation unless for admission In September 1965. ------------- D iplom as fo r stu d e n ts w ho received 1964. arc n o * d egree* o n May 30. I h a v e b e e n a n e m n l o v e a t t h e r e a d y f o r distrib u tio n . G r a d u a te s who their two dip lo m a s may do so. at th e R e g istr a r .« I. M o n d a y H ealth C e n te r y e a rs and h av e seen the colored o f f i c e . Main B u i l d i n g th r o u g h Friday, u t n dn LinF*u^e ril 111 for alm o st they wished to call stated , u „ for ta k in g M r. S eym our H onestly, M r. M orrison, c r iti­ cism s of the R a n g e r a r e alw ays w elcom e but they should be tem ­ p e re d by a bit of reason. I w on’t b o th e r to task for his review , but T know you to be a perso n of good judge m e n t and h u m o r. I believe you a r e sen sib le enough to a g re e that th e best w ay the R a n g e r is to su b m it som e of your own w o rk —and old enough to know' th a t a revolution for its own sa k e is NOT N E C E S ­ good. D on’t dem and SARILY c h a n g e if you (or a boycott) a r e n ’t w illing (or able) to assu m e so m e responsibility. im prove you a re to Dennis Dick Asbury Hail Story Criticized To the Editor: R e : UT E n g in e e r's Saga by P e rh a p s this a r tic le 's g re a te st good is th e w a rm feeling it gives D ave W ilson to se e his n a m e in p rin t. Howard E . Collier 809 Winflo, Apt. 211 two re stro o m s be b ricked mittee should rome to' the Premedi- cal Office, W eft Mall O ffice B uilding , D ave Wilson: th a t a ’T echnological U niversity* teaching only im plied a school th e su b je c ts and technological w ords ‘u n i­ ‘technological,’ and v e rs ity ’ w ere incongrouous in th e sa m e title .” L e a d e rs of th e Joint N am e- Chango C o m m ittee o s ! i m a t e m em b ersh ip a t 3.000. The g ro u p plans to send its fight to the s ta te le g isla tu re a t its m eeting in J a n ­ u ary . it C rim son-W hite, campus paper at the U niversity of A lab am a, in re c e n tly stru c k a t an ed itorial th e aw a rd in g of the Nobel P ea c e P riz e to M artin L u th e r King. The editorial sa id : “ We do not deny th at D r. King in c u rre n t so­ Is m a jo r fig u re cial and political history*, and th a t he has been extrem ely in­ s tru m e n ta l in brin g in g his race from the d a rk a g e s to the fore­ front of our m o d ern w orld.” tactics h av e "H ow ever, D r. King’s non-vio­ led d irectly lent to bloodshed and rioting in a n u m b e r of citie s across the na­ tion during p a s t few years. E ven though his follow ers were p as­ sive th eir v a lia n t stru ggle, they a re still in d ire ctly responsi­ ble for the bloodshed.” in The ed itorial sug g ested the la te P re sid e n t John F . K ennedy as th e “ top c a n d id a te .” ★ C am puses a r e still ask in g for in C a li­ sp e e c h ” “ freedom of fornia. A Study C o m m ittee on C a m p u s P o litic al A ctivity w as form ed by the A dm in istratio n a t B e rk e le y in, supposedly, an a g re e m e n t w ith D em o n strato rs. D em o n stra to rs w ere not in­ form ed of the firs t m eeting of the group but a tte n d e d the m eetin g and staged a w alkout. The D aily Californian quoted the d e m o n stra to rs, m em bers of the “F re e S peech M ovem ent,” as . . We respectfully re­ say in g , q u est itself this body consider illegally constituted and d isband.” il­ They considered the group legal because it w as form ed uni­ laterally by the adm inistration rather than with both sides. p la titu d e s a r e falling around us like au tu m n le av e s. A m erican p o litic a l co m p etitio n s a r e in v a r­ iably w aged on the th e m e of y o u r good and th e ir evil. Y our own p a rty p re se n ts a group of rig h te ­ ous public s e rv a n ts to c a m p a ig n a g a in st a p a c k of u n re g e n e ra te sc o u n d re ls the public in ten t on ruin. I used to enjoy the ritu a l this naive, pom pus, b o m b a stic s p e c ta c le ; I w as c h a rm e d by it. B ut not this tim e. B ehind in c an t^ - tjons cf p ro g re ss, behind the u s­ u al d e m a n d s to tu rn the r a s c a ls so m e th in g p ro ­ o ut, foundly d istu rb in g and p rofound­ ly bad. th e re is tills S uddenly it is N o v em b er, and is not a th a t one re a liz e s d e b a te or a decision for the lec- to ra te but a sh a b b y co n te st in fro n t of a m ob. In a stra n g e , e- this m o tio n al but d efin ite w ay. election se em s v ery w rong. is T h ere is som ething u n h e a lth y ab o u t th e c lim a te of th e tim es. so m eth in g u n h e a lth y T h ere in voting for a m an b ec au se he is not th a t d an g e ro u s o r th a t c o r­ ru p t. It is frig h ten in g w hen v o te rs think they a r e choosing betw een a m a d m a n and a thief. The only thing w o rse than a c le v e r hypo­ c rite is an honest fool. T h at is a sa d axiom to em ploy in a p re s i­ d en tial election. th e re In O klahom a the U nited S ta te s. is a foot­ b a ll co a ch ru n n in g fo r th e S en ate of In C ali­ fo rn ia a n ex -p ress a g e n t is c a m ­ p aig n in g w ith huge p ic tu re s of a d ead m a n ; an d in N ew Y ork the v ic tim 's own b ro th e r not only b orrow s th e m a g ic cf the nam e. but ta k e s w ith him in his quest for v o tes th e d e a d m a n s widow an d in fa n t son. television T he R e p u b lic an s a sso c ia te L yn­ th e c o m m u ­ don Joh n so n w ith n ists, T he D e m o c ra ts p ro d u ce vi­ cious show s hinting th a t B a rr y C o ld w a te r is alm o st c a g e r to poison o u r ch ild ren w ith ra d io a c tiv ity . N egroes, w hites, b u sin essm en , w o rk e rs—we h ave all been given so m eth in g conven­ ie n t to hate. And so m e of us h av e rec eiv e d this venom gladly. T he Apolo­ g ists hypnotize th e m se lv es and re m a in blind to th e ir c a n d id a te 's im p erfectio n s^ but th e w o rst a r e those who sold for p o litical ad v a n ta g e . th e ir souls John so n , now T hus the p a th e tic p a ra d e of li­ b e ra ls who—ju st th re e , ju st tw o, ju s t one s h o rt y e a r ago—d e s­ pised love him , o r s a y they do. T he m o re hon­ e s t ones a d m it p o litical m otia- \a tio n ; th e ir ed ito rials p ro claim th a t “ he has been m o re re sp o n ­ sible sin ce he w as forced to ally h im self wish the p ro g re ssiv e ele­ m en ts of his p a r ty ." T h ey m ean he r a n b e used. I re fu se to b eliev e th a t Jo h n ­ slow ly, h a s so n ’s lib e ra lism like a itself b rig h tly unfolded th e re is b lossom ing flow er. No, so m eth in g suspicious ab o u t L B J ’s p a te rn a l r e g a rd for his c o u n try ­ m en. We se e before us th e se n a ­ to r who took c a re of his own and won v otes w ith g o v ern m e n t p ro je c ts and d efense c o n tra c ts . Suddenly he ow ns a co u n try , and h e re a c ts by shoveling fa v o rs to e v e ry re sid e n t of his v a s t co n sti­ tuency. It is te m p tin g to sa y th a t Johnson I know b e tte r. H e and th e coun­ tr y a re se d u cin g each o ther. is seducing us. b u t If th e re is som ething which Johnson h a s not prom ised so m e tim e in his c a r e e r a t to som ebody, I can n o t sa y w h at it is. B ut h e w ra p s his p ro m ise s in so we h u m a n ita ria n rh eto ric , to le ra te th em . He pro m ises now a “ G re a t S o cie ty ’’ which he does not e x p la in ; yet w e a r e s u re th a t w e w ill be v e ry rich and v e ry happy, an d o u r votes w ill be v ery , v ery D em o c rat. T hen th e re I still to contend is C old w ater. He ro d e nobly into the a r e n a a few y e a rs ago a g a in st think he believ es evil. m o st of w h a t he s a y s ; b u t th e m a n 's in te g rity h as been eroded b efo re o u r ey es. In a h eated c a m p a ig n , his id eas h av e m e lte d like w a rm dishes one by one of ice c re a m . W orse, w e ca n n o t r e a lly se e th e m a n ; w e ca n n o t d efine him behind the fogbank of his ow n am b ig u ity . H e h as been v ag u e , an d in a sim p le w ay. N ot one of the c a n d id a te s has to c o n tra d ic t o r c o m p ro ­ failed tim es. m ise him self a sco re of re lu c ta n tly , S om e do so m e it w ith P olitical p re ssu re gusto. h a s red u c ed th em to c a r ic a tu r e s —to p u p p ets m outhing w ords th e y do not m e a n and c laim in g em otions they do not feel. Y et som e of us e x a lt this as c le v e r­ ness, a s “ p ro fe ssio n a lism .’’ We them in effect, “ F o rg iv e sa y , F a th e r, know w h at th ey they d o .” for to th e ab d ica tio n we T h e re is a difference betw een in­ honest co m p ro m ise an d te lle c tu a l h av e fo rc ed upon o u r le a d e rs. R esp o n ­ th e people h as b een sib ility d e g ra d e d into a docile su b s e r­ v ience. T h e re is obedience only to a v ag u e g e n e ra l will th a t is defined by p o llste rs and pu n d its an d public re la tio n s e x p e rts. T he G allup Poll h as becom e a politi­ c a l th e rm o m e te r, and our le a d e rs a re slig h test to v a ria tio n in th e public fev e rs. se n sa tiv e th e th e m So we e le c t not m en, bu t ta p e re c o rd in g s of o u r p reju d ices. W e do not c a m p a ig n , b u t advertise. We p a c k a g e ca n d id a te s in c a r d ­ b o ard m y th s w ith b rig h t colors like a b r e a k ­ and peddle f a s t food. F o r w e h av e d estro y e d th e se m en, even as they a r e in the p ro c e ss of d estro y in g us. T hey them and see h a tre d on one side and fe a r on a n o th e r, a n d in betw een a v a s t s e a of g re e d y palm s, o u ts tre tc h ­ ed and w aiting. look ab o u t F o r m a n y , nothing is left but cy n icism . W e a r e rem in d ed th a t th e re h a s alw a y s been c o rru p ­ tio n ; an d th e re has. We a r e told th a t this c a m p a ig n is just a con­ tinuation of a long tra d itio n ; and it th e w inner c a n pu t aw ay his m a sk a fte r the election and becom e a is. We a r e assu re d th a t T h e D a i l y T e x a n TK# D « i l y T « i # r • s t u d e n t n # w * p # p # r a* T h * U n i v * r * i f y of it p u b l i s h e d d « y <>*<.• e t M o n d a y h a l l w a y p e rio d s, S e p t e m b e r t h r o u g r M a y a n d m o n t h l y A u f a i t b y T a r a * S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n * , Inc., D r a w e r D U n i ­ v e r sit y S ta tio n , A u s t i n , Te«e» 7 8 7 1 2 . S e c o n d e a st p o t t a g e paid at Auttin, Tate*. S a t u r d a y e n d in Newt c o n tr 1 b u on» will b a accepted by telephone (GR I-S244) or at the editorial office, J.B. 103 or at the newt laboratory, J.B. 102. Inquire* concerning delivery should ba mad# (GR in J.B- 107 and advertising, J.B. I J227.J Ill A S S O C I A T E D P R E S S W I R E S E R V I C E r h # A s s o c i a t e d Pr es s it e s c l u s i v e l y e n t i t l e d t o t h e use f o r r e p u b l i c a t i o n o f all n e w s d i s p a t c h e s c r e d i t e d t o it o r n e t ethi »rw ise c r a d l e d in t h i s n e w s p a p e r , e n d l o c a l i t e m s et s p o n t a n # o ' j i © r . g n p u b l i s h e d h e r e in . R g h t s o f p u b !:e e L o n cf ail o t h e r m a t t e r here n a l s o r e s e r v e d . O n e m a i l w i t h i n T r a v i s C o u n t y p a i l s e r e d bv m a il o u t s i d e T r a v i s f o u n t y b u t w it h i n IX J*. 3.SP i d 75 » PO 6 . : # The opinion* expressed in tho editorial colum n a r e tho*r a f the editor. All editorial* u nless signed are w r i t ­ t e n by the editor. Any opinions e x pressed i n T h e P a t ly T e x a n ara not n ecessarily th o le o f The U niv ersity of T exas a d m in i­ stra tio n or Board of Regent* PERMANENT STAFF C H A R M A Y N E M A R SH EDITOR JAMES VOWELL M A N A G I N G E D I T O R N E W S EDITOR .................... DOTTIE LILLARD SP O RTS E D IT O R ........................PAUL BURKA A M U S E M E N T S E D IT O R .............JIM SE Y M O U R EDITO RIAL PAG E EDITOR: M A R Y A LIC E EV A N S G A Y N A G L E FEATURE E D IT O R STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE I uc News E d ito r Glo? a Bl wn Make-Up E d ito r........................ Larry Jackson W I re E d i t o r ............................... C h a rles G u p t I Night Sports E d ito r....................... Bi!! Halstead Night Amusements Editor . . . . . . Ginger Hamii+on Editorial Page A ssistant................Mervin Benson Copyreader .................. Mr«. Bonnie Binfnrd, George Arnold Sv/uky, November I, 1964 THE D A IL Y T E X A N Page 2 YR Says Daily Texan Ignores Barry's W ins Chemical Plant Management Utilizes Scientific Principles Dr. Townsend Heads Slate For UT 'Dads' Dr. Courtney M. Townsend of Paris, Tex. was elected president of the University Dads’ Associa­ tion Saturday. He succeeds Jack S. Josey of Houston. Dr. Townsend, a physician and surgeon, attended Austin College and the University and received a doctor of medicine degree in 1932 from the UT Medical Branch in Galveston. Twelve vice-presidents w e r e named. They are Rex G. Baker Jr., Houston; H. Macon Boddy, Hen­ rietta; Allen Cowden, Midland; Federal Judge Joe J. Fisher, Beau­ mont; Dr. Hamilton Ford, Galves­ ton; Lester Foran, Corpus Christi; Col. Homer Garrison Jr., Austin; J. L. Rebmet, Sherman; Dr. Hugh W. Savage, Fort Worth; Robert B. Smither, Huntsville; J. Clyde Tomlinson, Longview; and Angus G. Wynne Jr., Arlington. George H. Marsh, Austin, was re­ elected treasurer, and W. D. Blunk, assistant to the University chan­ cellor, was re-elected secretary. % Several hundred wives of Dads' Association members attended a i fourth floor of the Academic Cen­ ter. Mrs. Harry H. Ransom, wifp ; of the University chansellor. and Mrs. Josey received the guests. Book by Frankl I To Be Reviewed “ Man s Search for Meaning” by Dr. Viktor Krankl. Vienna psychia­ trist, will be reviewed Thursday at 4 p.m. in Texas Union 202. The review and discussion are sponsored by the Texas Union Speakers Committee and the Uni­ versity Religious Council. Dr. Demetrios Papageorgis, as­ sistant professor of psychology, Dr. William Cody Wilson, assistant professor of educational psycholo­ gy; Rev. Gerhard Linz, Episcopal chaplin to students; and FYank L. Wright, University YMCA execu­ the tive secretary, will discuss book. UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS govern its destinies successfully on the strength of limited informa­ tion,” Bartley said. The use of computer technology is increasing find weak to help management spots and analyze the cause of failure, thus helping all. concerned to do better Jobs. Representatives from more than IOO institutions of higher education are expected to be in Austin when the University hosts the Texas As­ sociation of Collegiate R egistrars and Admissions Officers meeting Nov. 10-12. Meetings will be held at the Commodore Perry Hotel and on the campus. Colonel Virgil J. O'* conner, Registrar of the US Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, will give the keynote address at the opening session Nov. IO. W. Byron Shipp. University R e­ gistrar and Director of Admissions. is in charge of local arrangements for TACRAO. Darner Cox, Univer­ sity vice-chancellor, and Dr. Joe B. Frantz, professor of history, al­ so will speak. TACRA will conduct a series of panel discussions Nov. in the Academic Center Auditorium. l l Printer to Retire A fte r 38 Years Serving C a m p u s George A. Greis, who has done for University students printing and faculty for 38 years the basement of Hemphill’s Book Store 2244 Guadalupe, retires Sunday at the age of 68. in A veteran of World War I cam ­ paigns In France and Germ any, Greis first c a m e to Austin In 1926 after being discharged from the Army. Upon arrival In Austin he was employed at the Texas Book Store, setting up his printing shop in the basement. In 1953, when the s t o r e was sold to T. J. Hemphill, Greis was given the supplies and equipment. all Since then Greis has rented the basement for his printing business. Prior to 1953 Greis also supervised typewriter and fountain pen re ­ pairs. The University Christian Church will celebrate its anniversary Sun­ day. Parents of students will be honored at the morning worship service at 10:50 a.m. Student deacons to be installed at the service are John Moore, Mike Myers, Ben Judd, Bill E ar­ ley, Louie Huffman, Wendell Fu­ qua, Emerson Smith, Marvin l^w is. Charles Howie, and I>ee Hensley. A debate of the national cam ­ paign Issues by two Young Demo­ crats and two Young Republicans from Southwest Texas State Col­ lege will be given at IO a m. Sun­ day the Austin Unitarian Church, 4700 Grover Ave. at An election sermon, “This am az­ ing Democracy of Ours,” will be given by minister Brandoch Love­ ly at the l l a rn. service. The Rev. Blake Smith, pastor of University Baptist Church, 2130 Guadalupe St., will preach on “ Hope Is a Mystery” at the l l a.m. service Sunday. Mr. Smith will present “ His Last Hour With His Friends” at the 7 p.m. service. The Lord s Supper will be observed. A student discussion will take place at 8 p.m. in the Recreation Room of the Student Building, and fellowship will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jam es Wells. 4509 Small Dr., at 9 p.m. Die Rev. John C. Towery will preach on the 1964 elections at the Congregational Church of Austin at 408 W. Twenty-third St. at thp ll a.m. service Sunday. Becky A le xa nder Barry Bar ker Becky Beckneil F r a n k Bedrick E l e a n o r Beyea L i n d a Black D a v i d Carlock C ha rl es Crites P a m C ra in Pete C o n e w a y J o h n C ope Joe D ix on T i m D o e r r Cl if D r u m m o n d R o n n i e Earl R o n n i e E d w a r d s D i a n e Fitts J im Fletcher Julius G l i c k m a n ( h a d e s G o l d b e r g T o m Flagan Susan H u g h e s Joie Jones M a r g a r e t K oy Ernie K oy M a r t h a La m m Sam Lane Lo w el l Leb e rm a n ( ' h u c k Lindsay C r reg Lip sco mb P r u d e n c e Mah affe y R o n n i e Massey D a v e M c K e e Iv Eddi e M iller ( laudia M o r g a n R on N e l s o n K n o x N u n n a l l y J o h n O r r Janie Ostler T e r r i Pitts Mickev San dg a rtc n Bruce Schnitzer Suzanne Shelton Bob Slagle D o n R ic hard Smith W a r r i e Lvnn Smith Fr ances Spivy Sue Stiles T i m von D o h le n C at hy W e a v e r VOTE FOR LYNE)ON Political Advertisement Paid for bv The University of Texas Y oung Citizens for Johnson. Charles Crites, Clif Drummond, Co-Chairmen Sunday, Novainb#f l« 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN P19* ^ P A U L l U R K A ' S Outlook- ! Something Is Missing It ha* bo**n firm ly established for some tim e nom th at Texas is not blessed with superior m a te r­ ial this year, T here is a definite lack of speM , plus a shortage of experience. But certain attributes have m ore than balanced the m inuses on the Texas balance sheet. These go by the nam es of pride, execution, and quickness, but physically all a re reflected by aggressiveness. IT WAS THIS Q I’ALITY which Texas so sorely lacked Saturday against SMI*. F or the fifth consecu­ tive week Texas w as in a fight for Its life. but the old power so evident against Army, Oklahoma, and oxen Arkansas w as missing This is not a great football team . At the begin­ ning of the season P arrel! Royal felt he did nof SPORTS analysis have a football team capable of going through ano­ ther undefeated season, but this is a feeling Royal would have if he were coaching the Green Bay Packers in the neighboring kiddie league. Nevertheless, in no game this year was Texas’ performance as consistently fine as it w as last year. B I T B H A T HAS K E P T T E X A S A U V E thus far has been its attacking fury. Against Army Texas used 65 yards of sheer power and stead) defensive pursuit to conquer an inspired Army team. Then Oklahoma's huge linemen wore chopped down to size by Texas’ methodical methods. In each game, however. Texas started sluggish­ ly. The Longhorns were down 0-6 to Army and 0 " to Oklahoma. Against Arkansas an almost hopeless first half effort was finally obliterated with a me­ morable fourth quarter desperation struggle. Each time the comeback started later and later. Last week against Rice it never came at all. Fear the first time this season, the Longhorns had the fight carried to them. Texas’ defensive effort was a fine one. of course, but the Longhorns were un­ able to move the ball whatsoever. ANT) TH IS W E E K T H E G A M E seemed similar Texas could not move, and what was worse, it could not fathom SM U defensively. The lateral swing pass worked time and again for the Ponies, and Texas appeared helpless on third dowm and medium yard­ age plays as Thomas hit short passes consistently in such situations. Texas has always had trouble with the Mus­ tangs, of course. The Oklahoma-Arkansas-Rice gauntlet always takes its physical toll, even when the Longhorns mn it successfully. In 1961 Number One Texas played a scoreless first half with a hapless Pony team before win­ ning. In 1962 Texas had just lost Number One when the Ponies scrapped all the way before losing 6-0. And last year Texas was again Number One but had to fight to defeat SM U 17-12. O F T H E T H R E E Y E A R S , It is now clear that 1962 most nearly typifies this Texas team. That xear the Longhorns had their problems at quarterback and were unable to move the ball well agaiast any­ one in the conference. Ernie Koy’s punting helped set up a win over Oklahoma, and a punt return led to the sole touchdown against S M I’. Texas' increased reliance on the kicking game this year is an indication of the weakness in the Longhorn attack. True, kicking is part of the game, but it still means giving up the ball. There is a dif­ ference between having a strong kicking game and being dependent upon one. The roundly-criticized Longhorn pass defense should have merited praise instead. Tony King, Joe Dixon, and Garry Moore broke up key passes near thrf goal line with hard-hitting tackles, and pass in­ terceptions staved off the Mustangs time and again, T H E ( K IT H ISM , however, should be directed at the Texas line. Even on a hurt leg Danny Tho­ mas often had time to limp around and inspect his receivers. This weakness must be eliminated, for any time a passer has time to throw, he’s going to complete enough to hurt most teams. Texas beat Staubach, Glynn Griffing, and Don Trull with aggressiveness in the line. It will have to beat Baylor next week, then T C I' and AAM with just those tactics, It had better read its football hisory book soon. UNIQUE M O D E R N T W O B E D R O O M a p e n m e n ' New Q u iet P a t h - -open G R 6-3937. neighborhood fu rn itu re . 21- 3 IK K B r d e IN V H S T M EN T 3 R O O M he, se and garage ap? A p praised for $15 750. ve il­ ing fo r $12 uuO. H y d e D ark. $1?** down ap rico t P O O D L E P U P P I E S — C H A M P A G N E , registered, ad o r­ able 2702 M o o n lig h t Bond -oft R iv e r _ _ _ _ _ ____________ Road. line, fine F O R S A L E O R R E N T , 45 x IO' T r a il­ priced Fu rn ish ed . Reasonable er H I 2-7821. E x t 215 N E E D U P P E R C L A S S M A N O R g ra d u ­ ate to share 2 bedroom lu x u ry a p a rt­ ment. $40—m onth. H I 2-5249. room M A L E R O O M M A T E — M O D E R N 2 bed- livin g room C en tra l a .r/h cat. N e a r campus. $35 2100 O ldham . No. 3. G R 7-8390. apartm ent. K itc h e n , 1965 C H E V R O L E T S . B U IC K S , O ld s ­ m o b ile Cost pius J100.00. G R 7-5539. P. J . H atheox. C L E A N 61 F A L C O N . D elu x In te rio r - B u c k e t seats - R A H . 6895 R a y or t m L e * G R 6-2*28 O R D E R Y O U R V O L K S W A G E N d i­ re c tly from G erm a n y at a su b stan tial s a v i n g . U n iv e rs ity M otors, 2715 G uadalupe. G R 2-7152. T W O 6600 OO down N o loan expense. A lso Duplex, B E D R O O M H O U S E . G R 2 84(2 U N B E L I E V A B L E B A R G A I N S ’ F L O O R sh ifts - S H 95; S m ith y m u f f l e r s hubcaps m agnesium, Dun Ex-ha UM * . skirt accessories. T e x a s Auto. 1114 E a s t Is tachom eters w heel w ire board 18' H IG G IN S D E L U X E m ohagony in I ® H P In te rc e p te r m otor n cent sport model. Ex c e lle n t condition O w n ers m o vin g m ust ism by 'o v e n ber 5th Reduced fo r quick sa e fm rr S2.200.00 to S I 800 OO. H I 4-5541, ext IRQ autom obiles N O W B U Y I N G A N D T R A D I N G — T y p e ­ w rite rs , go lf riu b s radios guns. fire ­ tra d in g stamps, plugs. books, boats, fa rm equipm ent, Scu b a gear, antique* binocu­ razors, electric In strum ents lars. m agazines, m u sica l a rt supplies fu rn itu re appliances and household goods watches, stereo e* q u 'p m e n ?. televisions, m otor scooters, en g ineerin g supplies, cam eras, tape-re­ corders, diam onds, b aby fu rn itu re bi­ cycles m e n s good clothes h u n tin g phonograph equipm ent and records, coin* stam p collections, m ilk cows tools VV# also re n t televisions $8 99 a month And sneak re frig e ra ­ tors $6 dO a m onth. Aaron. P a w n bro­ kers. m erchandise, 803 Red R iv e r N o ­ ta ry P u b lic . Open S a tu rd a y t il 7 p.m. fishin g I A L E R O O M M A T E S W A N T E D F o r one bedroom o r tw o bedroom lu x u ry p artm ent Y o u r sh are aro u nd $50 OO. J R 7-1064 Help W a n te d H O U S E XV TVE S Houses— Unfurnished E a rn ro o m y for C"hrist max F u ll or N E A R U N I V E R S I T Y U N F U R N I S H E D 2 bedroom house 509 W est 37th D L 3-4985. |75 p^r m onth or w ill lease. part -tim*. HT 2-1514 Houses for Sale tre * covered F O U R B E D R O O M S 3 b a 'h s and situ ated on suburban this ^i>lit acre C e n tra l bps* level A/C x 16 p a rty deck high in times P ric e d w e ll . rd cr 120 OOO no w ith good f nan' net r a i l J i m W a lls , G R 6-6847 or G R 7-5253 redw ood home F ire p la c e . Built-In*. 32 lot is K I N S E R A R H A 'T v L E F O R D C A S H I E R H O L I D A Y H i ) I S FI N o I KXM B A R T O N S P R I N G S R O A D N o experience necessary fo r a wom an between the ages of 18 and 35 to inside cash re g iste r dur op erate o u r ing If >ou a re interested h our a w eek job please ra il G R 7-114) and a k fo r M r C a ld w e ll so that w e m a 3 a rra n g e an in tervie w . the evenings is a 35-4' 1 T h is A U S T IN -3 N O R T H I N C e n tra l heat. O w n e r w ould baths consider tra d in g for sm all hom e $4)0 dov\n. a p p ro x im a te ly $98 per m onth. bedroom, 69)5 T W I N C E K S ! 3 bedroom . I * hath, built-in range 69x175 lot C e n ­ tra l heat SNO down. assum e p a y ­ ments of $1/0 per month 5 B L O C K S T O U a iv e rs ty 4 bedroom 2 bath home F lo o r furnace doub e garage. $13 950 sto rv and he f S T A R R E A L T Y CO. G I. 2-6837 Lot For Sale F O R S A L K Sp aO ou * Ha f acre plus ex tra w ide e x tra deep: 1005/7 W« st 19th P re s tig e status, convenience for fa cu lty m em ber or fa m ily w th m em ­ bers a tten d in g U n iv e rs ity . Le ga, Ow r»- e r H Q 5-9110 Sewing C O - E D S E a s v fron E a rn m oney in spare tim e resi dent s dorm or apartm ent boul line T e r r if y Ii G R 7-4485 or An exclu sive cosm etics rep eat busine rite B o x 8478, A u s tin 12- Business O pp ortunity T H E F A C U L T Y of the G u ild of L a y Theo lo gian s an- nouiu es eleven openings fo r students in a m atu re co m m u n ity of int.-restHi in? el 11 gent int* rp re ta t ion. In q u ire a? T h e M ethodist Stu d e n t C en ter 2 JIM G u ad alup e G R 8-5693 W A N T E D — W O R K IN G M an o r w o m an w ith 62 000 to P A R T N E R in ­ P r o f it vest m p u b lishin g business p o le r tau $18.boo firs t y e a r. See M a r­ e n , 803 Rod R n cr Furnished Apartm ents SSO OO G a ra g e a p a rtm fn ? C leap . ''on- verdant p riva te quiet 304 F. 42nd H O 5-75©4 M A L E R O O M M A T E W A N T E D . F o r larg e c o m fo rta b le a p artm en t. L a rg e s ir * kitchen and liv in g room O wn p r i­ va te bedroom STT SO m c p s * u tili­ tie s en W e st nth OR 2 77ns lin e C A S T L E H IU , Effldstirv—$60 One Bedroom (O r * bl ooh from T h e T a v e rn ) W ater-G a s P a id D a y s- G R 3 1666 N ig h ts — G R 2-2**? F U R N I S H E D O N E B E D R O O M a p a rt­ lo­ ment On bus Un# C o n ven ie n t cation . 16500—b ills paid. Also ga-ape L a k e A u s tin B lv d . ap artm en t. 2201 2-8136 T H * W I N S T E D A P A R T M E N T S 2401 W in s te d L a n e room fu rn ish ed ap artm en t Un ex p ected vacan cy . I j y g a tw o bed­ S u ita b e f o r 3 or 4 people y o u * i e n jo y the decor o ff-«treat p a rk in c , end cen tral a r-he*» w n h w a te r - gas paid fo r- F iv e m inute* fo rm ve*uanti▼ U T M anager. Apt 6 G R 8-1440 o r eau G R 7 -fcio a fte r 5 located p.m. to U n iv e r it t j 2711 - 2721 H E M P H I L L P A R K . W a lk a e c arp e tin g paneling pool, storage wa ter-gfcs paid. G R 2-5146- GR. 2-4838-AN S-2130 One bedroom grid W e s t 22nd S t One bedroom, !!v .ng room kitchen bath N ic e ly L-r - B3$h«d SAO. A :I bi) s paid G L 3-3863 a tte r 3 V M A N W A N T E D S H A R E efficien cy ap artm en t n ear Stad n U f< v- I • cle an in g »■ nu rn- - 05-R Sa fries paid b n* G R 2-1043 913 W E S T 2 2 'i V. a k ng d istan ce U T A ttra c t ive. q u iet one bedroom a p a r t­ m ent. G R 8-0752 R O O T O R E S T A P A R T M F N T S 700 W e s t 26th. a p a r ln - f t E ffic ie n c y from ■ <« cam pus W a il- ln - w e ;; ing. "ra te d m in g poo* W a sh ers and r'r r,r p io r ’ h Ju n e alr-cocc firm ng nth $"5 fo r !®*.ae *• -•.-** ca rp e t­ m— v-1 * un! L O N G V I E W A P A R T M E N T S 24.18 Lo n g ) eve F u r n .stied one bedroom trad host -coo ng p ark in g Sw im m in g po -arpeted een- • el location < ,R 8-1769. A P A R T M E N T ! 3C7 E I ’ ne* pe<- ted va vsn b eau tifu ii tu rn * In d ivid u a l h chen. o f ' street p arkin g se rvice. C ab le T v . U n i) **rs 11 y *55 06 P e r Mr r t n G R 3-7611 A L I E R me A ll m aid end ja n ito r S w im m in g poo;, approved A U B d ls TD id G R 8-3336 B I / X ' K F R O M C A M P U S F o r women So u th roam and bath Co o kin g f&<*i- lilta s 2618 Spe©dw*>, G R $-1039 C A R P E T E D P R I V A T E B A T H K it c h ­ en A il buts paid 2 bio*As can y)u s G l 2-5065 o r a fte r 5 Kl J rn G R 8-r 2 lT U N U S U A L L Y Q U IE T ID J A L for st den’ U rin ate room and bath Ktteh* en and den p rivileg es. N e n< gnbor I a fte r hood Lad >«s preferred < a t between S a m and 4 Sn r rn C a ll G R 6-1467 N o vem b er V g ra n t B E D R O O M W I T H K I T C H E N PT 'Hem m to stu d en t fo r 62** a m o n th H . 3M152 Drafting C A P I T A L D R A F T I N G S E R V I C E , 1405 T h e * !* d ra ftin g graphs I JU ac* G R 2-8901 le tte rin g , ch a rts nu* hun ita l and maps E V E N I N G , C O C K T A IL * '. C O A l l 5 2 class dresses. W e d ­ piece dresser dings a sp e cialty. G R 8-3069 Duplex— Furnished Furnished Rooms 6 1795. A ft er 6 pm. able fo r 2 o r 3 G R 7-8414. D R E S S M A K I N G A N D A L T E R A T I O N S P h o n e G R Pick-up and d e liv e ry . Q U I E T . S P A C IO U S tw o b e d r o o m ap artm en t T w o blocks to U T . Su it* Furnished Apartm ent’s Furnished Apartm ents N O B H I L L 2 V ^ c a ’-'cies I two bedroom I one bedroom S u n d a y , N o v a m U r I , 1964 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g * 4 Knox Nunnally Races SMU, Clock . . . big No. 88 romps goalward in vain with pass theft against Ponies. 1914 Champions O ld Steers Like Play O f Bygone Grid Years Bv JO H N H O ES ER Texan Sports Staff f cessor* beat SMU 7-0 Saturday. An(* th*y had plenty to say about The 1914 squad of the Texas the gam r’ Longhorns watched their 1964 suc-j J ’7 * * do?.’* haver mu,'h vf le‘ty these days, Gus Dittmar, Long­ horn Hall of Honor center, said. Dittmar compared the two teams by saying, “ We used several dif­ ferent types of offense from the “ T ” formation to the single or double wing. Today they only use one.” “ T H E B O Y S A R E R IG G E R now and more powerful but they can’t last as long,’’ Dittmar con­ tinued. “ In our game with OU, we played the whole game without a substitution. We played both ways hack then, offense and defense. When we camp to play a game, we came to play the whole game,” In 1914, Texas beat OU 32-7. “ They get a lot more rest than we did. Now the referee holds the game up.” Dittmar said. G yde Littlefield, U T quarter­ back who threw three touchdown passes in one game, said that the game played today has a lot more finess than the game played 50 years ago. He added that teams lose a lot by having so many dif­ ferent plays. T H E 1914 T E A M HAD SOM E finless, though. They tallied 358 points in eight games to 21 points of their opponents. Their highest score was 70-0 over Southwestern and their lowest was 23-7 over Haskell. Besides Littlefield’s record of three TD passes in one game, f>en Barren holds the record number in one season of points scored (eight games) with 121 points; the most touchdowns in one season with 14 TD ’s; end the most extra points with 34. Ten lettermen of the 1914 squad were at the game Saturday. They are Clyde Littlefield, K. L. Ber­ ry, Gus (Pig ! Dittmar, Len Har­ rell, Alva Carlton. J . H. Goodman. H, H. Neilson, Bort Walker. Coke Wimmer and Manager Robert Knight, T H E 1911 T EA M IS T H E MOST richly-honored of all the Univer­ sity of Texas football learns. Five of its members have been named to the Longhorn Hall of Honor— Littlefield, Berry, Dittmar, the late Pete Edmond and the late I Louis Jordan. , JOE- M _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ' UC ■ .... - ^ CHARTERED EXC U RSIO N BUSES • Parties • Field Trips • Retreats Buses available with rest rooms aboard, turn around seats and card tables for your enjoyment conditioned. T Y P I N G LOW R A T E S Sa tisfa ctio n G u aran teed G L 3-5124. M rs. Tu llo s V I R G I N I A C A L H O U N T Y P I N G S E R V I C E S Y M B O L S — A L L F I E L D S N o ta ry and photocopy. N o ex tra charge fo r one d ay service. 1301 Edgew ood. G R 8 2636. T IO N S . R E P O R T S T H E S E S D I S S E R T A ­ re a ­ sonable d is tin c tiv e ty p in g M rs. C ol­ lins, 3405 Tom Green, G R 2-4907. term papers. A ccu rate T H E M E S . R E P O R T S , L A W notes. S c page. M rs F ra s e r G R 6-1317. P O R T S . T H E S E S . D I S S E R T A T IO N S . R E ­ IB M Belee trie. Sy m b o ls for science engineering, m athem atics. language accent* G reek. Ca i G R 2- 9617 D E L A F I E L D G ra m m ar, T Y P I N G sp e llin g 20c P M * correction. H I 2-6522 S H O R T O N T Y P I N G G rah am . G L 3-5725 T I M E ? M iss C O M P E T E N T and H IG H L Y E X P E R I E N C: E D S EC I It E T A R LA L anti T Y P I N G S E P . I V C F ty p in g on IB M D is tin c tiv e a ccu ra te E le c tro m a tlc . B rie fs sem inar papers a tern, ssertatfons. reports sp ecialty m ali zed. console ntious ser papers Pert conies C lose Vice. X e ro x GR 8-5894 In. R E P O R T S T H E S E S . D I S S E R T A ­ IR M M rs. B ra d y . 2317 O ld­ T IO N S ham . G R 2-4715. T Y P I N G N O T E S . T H E M E S , general. Reasonable. M rs. W oods. H O 51078, | M A T H E M A T I C A L / E N G I N E E R I N G P A P E R S N ew special purpose IB M equipm ent com plete w ith sym bols, D r a ftin g and d u p lica tin g services. O pen u n til IO OO p. rn A L D R I D G E T Y P I N G S E R V I C E 304V* E a s t 30th Street G R 7-1696 G R 6-9367 a page M in o r co rrectio n s A R T I S T IC . A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G . 25c IB M ty pe­ w rite r M rs A nth o ny. N o rth e a st U n i­ ve rsity . G R 2-8402. M A R T H A A N N S I V L E Y M B A A com plete professional ty p in g k t v t* e tailored to the needs of U n i vers- It v students Sp ecia l keyboard equip­ m ent for language, science, and en gi­ neering thebes and dissertation'; Ph on e G R 2-3210 & G R 2 7677 2013 G U A D A L U P E E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G S E R V I C E reasonable, near Allan- A ccu ra te dale. H O 5-5813. M R S . A L B R I G H T vt I pers R E A S O N A B L Y " I type vo u r pa- A C C U R A T E L Y , G R 7-0094 Theses, E X P E R T T Y P I N G F A S T S E R V I C E . legal briefs. C a ll da- or n ig h t M rs M o n tgo m ery G R 2-5601 term papers, A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G - A L L form s. M rs. M cD o nald H I 2-0103. D I S S E R ! A T IO N S T H E S E S R E P O R T S T h o u g h tfu lly corrected s k illf u lly typed full-tim e o p era to r of .alme 1951 by sym bol-equipped electro m a tic M R S M A R G A R E T R I T C H I E 1404 K en t L a n e C R 6-7079 ioft E n fie ld R o a d ) T Y P I N G N O T E S , T H E M E S , general. A rtis tic a ccu ra te t j ping. M in o r co r­ rections I B M ty p e w rite r, 15c a page M adge H orto n . 2616 R io G rande. G R 6- 3768 A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G B Y F O R M E R .(-gal se cre tary w ith B B A In se cre ta r­ E x e c u tiv e e le c tric IB M ial studies. C L 3 8650 C A L L G R !*5?*4 TO P L A C E Y O U R C L A S S IF IE D AD Defense Does Job... (Continued From Page One) running and led the Longhorns to a first down and goal-to-go situa­ tion on the SMU 3-yard line be­ fore the Mustangs provided any sort of barrier. With third dowm and 6 points a mere 2-vards away, Ernie Roy tucked the ball under his arm, and with a legion of Longhorns in front, swept around his right side to score standing up. DAVID CONWAY K IC K E D the point after touchdown, and Texas was ahead, 7-0. (The rest of the afternoon was spent admiring the flashy MUS- j tang offense, and the omnipresent Texas defense. On the first offensive down of the game, SM U set the tone of its play. Quarterback Danny Thomas ( hit his end, Jim m y Taylor, with a lateral pass. T H E N E X T P L A Y was also a lateral pass, but in the opposite direction. The Texas secondary began digging in for a long after­ noon of pass defense. Despite the accurate throwing of Thomas, who hit on 13 out of 22 passes, and the hard running of Taylor and Richard Stark, SMU could never evade the hard-hitting and viciously pursuing Texas de­ fense. in Late the second quarter SMU headed toward the Texas end of the field behind the aerial gun­ nery of Thomas. B I T A PASS IN T ER C EP T IO N by Pete Lammons, crushed that threat. Jim Hudson, the Texas quarter­ back who has been sidelined w ith injury since fhe Texas a knee Tech game, replaced Marvin Kristynik at quarterback. A weak Hudson pass was picked off by an alert SM U defender and j the Mustangs were in business on their owrn 12-yard line with 36 seconds left In the half. P IT T IN G the INTO ACTION the tw’o-minute offense, usual Ponies moved their 30-yard to line before Knox Nunnally made the third interception of the half. He returned the ball 33 yards before being driven out of bounds, but time caught up with the ‘Horns and the half ended before they could score. Tile second half consisted main- Statistics SM I First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized 14 90 133 13-24 I 7-42 2 40 Texas l l 161 9 1-8 4 8-34 2 26 Iv of punting and passing, with Texas doing most of the punting and SMU most of the passing. SM U M U S T E R E D its only real scoring threat late in the third quarter and early in the fourth. Following a Philipp fumble on the SMU 27, Thomas passed his team to the Texas 15-yard line before a fine, diving interception I by Nunnally broke the Mustang'* hopes of a score. It was a game of defense and j the team with the better defense came out on top. G r id ir o n S c e n e D o t t e d B y B ig - G a m e Thrillers IOWA CITY, Iowa - Cfi - E x ­ plosive Iow'a scored with two sec­ onds left but failed on a try for a tw'o-point conversion Saturday to let top-ranked Ohio State salvage a 21-19 victory and remain in a tie for the Big Ten football lead. T H E B U C K E Y E S , who turned two Iow'a error? into touchdowns and electrified fhe crowd with a touchdown in three plays in the third quarter, s t o p p e d Gary Snook's extra point run eight inch­ es short of the goal for their sixth straight triumph. Ohio S ta te ...................7 7 7 0— 21 Iowa ............................. 7 6 0 6— 19 in BATON R O U G E, La.- if i—Loui­ siana State gambled for a two- point conversion the closing minutes Saturday night and made it on Doug Moreau’s sensational catch of a Billy Ezell pass, beat­ ing Mississippi IM O in a heart- stopping Southeastern Conference game. The ninth-ranked Bayou Tigers. who looked helplessly beaten and trailing 10 3, recovered a fumble on the Ole Miss 47 with about five minutes to go and scored two minutes later when Ezell hit end Bill Masters on a 19-yard touch­ down pass. This made it 10-9 with just 3:36 to go and brought the 68.000 fans up screaming; “ We want two, we want two.” Ezell dropped back to pass for for two points. He was rushed hard but got the ball away. An Ole Miss defender deflected the ball right into the hands of Mo­ reau. who would have been out of bounds when he caught it had he been one step deeper into the end zone. to P H IL A D E L P H IA — ass TCU—Howard 5 run Alford kick R O O 7 3 0 7—17 all run failed 6—14 Bay—Hodge l l pass from South- TCU—Ball 6 pass from Nix Al-' Attendance 22,119. By BILL HALSTEAD Associate Sports Editor Texas football coach D arrell Royal Is known as a conservative in football circles. He rarely gambles. B ut Saturday afternoon he vowed, “I said it before the game and I ’ll say it now. If I were a wagering man, I ’d come nearer to botling both sides (SMU and Texas) won’t score 17 points.” ROYAL WAS REFERRING to the oddsmakers who placed the Longhorns in the favorite’s role by 17 points before gametime. And Royal won his hypothetical bet. SMU’s stingy defense allowed Texas but 7 points, and the Ponies of­ fense kept the ball a good portion of the contest. Knox Nunnally, who intercepted two SMU aerials from his defensive end post, took note of his time spent on defense. “Boy, I've never been so tired in my life.” COMMENTING ON NUNN ALLY’S FIRST THEFT, with seconds to go in the first half, Royal said, “ I hol­ lered at Knox to step out of bounds, but I guess he couldn’t hear me.” Nunnally had swiped a Danny Thomas pass and lumbered to SMU’s 9-yard line before the clock ran out. the Nunnally caught another Pony pass in third quarter, and it was his second interception th a t saved the day for Texas. The Mustangs had driven to the ’H orns’ lo when Thomas pitched one to the 5-yard line. Rolling off a blocker’s back, Nunnally snared the ball and killed the touchdown drive. “I don’t know why I caught It, really. I just fell back, saw the hall, and re­ acted to it.” NUNNALLY SAW THE GAME as a hard, clean contest. “It was a team effort. Everybody was hustling all afternoon.” One player who was kept hustling was Joe Dixon. A defensive halfback, Dixon was constantly on the move as Pony QB Danny Thom as lofted 22 passes and com­ pleted 13. “ We felt they would throw about th at much, since we have what you could call a ‘rushing’ defense and their rushing offense is not too good,” said Dixon. "But I didn’t think they would complete so many. SMU employed a swing pass to Jimmy Taylor with effectiveness all afternoon. Taylor would take the quick toss from Thomas wide and behind the scrimmage line, then turn on his 9.7 speed to gain good yardage. Hix Green spent the second half running around and through the Mustangs from a new position, and he was like a little kid with a new toy. “ Yeah, I guess I like wingback pretty well. There is more room to get up speed, and I get. to be a pass re­ ceiver more.” GREEN HAD RFN behind E m ir Koy at tailback until an injury' to Phil H arris forced his switch. And Green had ra th e r switch than fight. “N either position is easy, and I still have a lot to learn about blocking out there at wingback.” Coach Royal smiled a little easier this week—he had Just passed another tough game. “Oh, yes, I ’m pleased. We play for wins, and I'm always happy to win. ‘T h e game was tight right from the start. Nunnal- Iv’s interceptions were big plays, SMI s fumbled punt re­ turn was a big play, . . . shoot, our score was a big play.” PASSES FILLED THE MEMORIAL STADII M AIR Saturday afternoon, but Royal had praises for Texas’ pass defense. “I was real pleased with the pass defense. How many did we intercept? Four? You can’t beat th a t.” And neither could SMU beat Texas—a most common In Memorial to a Saturday football game outcome Stadium. Monday Eye Opener REPEAT OFFER BY CUSTOMER REQUEST rn a J L WATER REPELLENT ALL WEATHER COATS Regulars & Longs N A T U R A L W H E A T C O L O R HANDSOMELY LINED M O N D A Y ONLY 2332 Guadalupe By DON COX Texan Sports Staff As the sharp crack of the final gun rang through Memorial Stadium, the Southern Methodist Mustangs be­ gan trotting off the field, heads hanging low and lips silent. night. AFTER THE TEAM FINALLY MADE ITS WAY to the dressing quarters, coach Hayden Fry walked to the south end of the room, twisting a large white towel in his hands. He was a completely exhausted man. His tie was undone and his shirt soaked with sweat. “I’ve never been as happy after losing a game as I am after this one,” said the M ustang head mentor, and I don’t guess I ever will. “T h at was about as hard a hitting game as you ll ever see. I ’ve never been more proud of my boys. I thought they did a tremendous job just by playing Texas this close.” “This was definitely our best game of the season,” said strongside end Jimmy Taylor, who caught just about everything in the stadium except mononucleosis. “We were real high for this gam e.” “OFFENSIVELY, TEXAS WAS THE BEST we’ve played yet,” voiced tackle Robert Oyler. “They opened up from the start. They’re not as quick as Ohio State, but they've got more steam. They hit a lot like Florida did.” SMU quarterback Danny Thomas wras not as im­ pressed by the I>onghoms as his team m ates. “Texas didn’t rush like I thought they would,” ex­ plained the M ustang signal caller. “Course, our line prob­ ably had something to do with th at. But it seemed that Texas only rushed about four men on defense.” “We had planned to do quite a bit of passing against Texas. We m ay be dumb.” said F ry , “but we’re not so dumb as to think th at we could gain anything against Texas on the ground.” F ry was asked to explain the penalty suffered by SMU late in the game for having an ineligible receiver downfield. “I’M REALLY NOT TOO CLEAR on that, myself,” said the dark-headed coach. “On that down, we ran a tackle eligible play. Before the game, I had given the officials a list of the players involve. Now, I don’t know th at such a play would w hether the penalty was called against the eligible tackle or not. Some other lineman may have been downfield. I didn’t see one. “A t any rate, I tried to get the officials’ attention to find out which player had gone downfield. But apparently they didn’t h ear me. I ’m not blaming the officials for the loss. I thought they did a heckuva job. But I still don t know which player the penalty was called against.” T E X A S DID NOTHING t h a t su rp rise d the Mustang*. Jim m y Taylor gave perhaps the best summary of the Longhorns when he said, “Everybody usually knows w ha’ Texas is going to do. But knowing w hat they’re going to do and then trying to stop them are two completely dif­ ferent m atters.” ■ ■ M M M H And the Arkansas defense did not give the Aggies a chance as the Razorback.* stayed atop the con­ ference with a 4-0 record and a d ­ vanced another step the Cotton Bowl. toward M arshall, the A rkansas q u a rte r­ back, ran and passed for 73 yards in an 82-yard drive for the first Razorback touchdown in the open­ ing period. Jack Brasuell carried over from the first the two for of two touchdowns of the night for the halfback. A rkansas Texas AAM IO 7 0 0—17 O O O 0— 0 run McKnelly Ark—Brasuell 5 kick I kick Ark—FC McKneely 33 Ark—FG McKnelly 33 A ttendance—24,000. ★ HOUSTON — (R — T exas Tech turned a fumble recovery into a 36-yard field goal by Kenneth Gill j with 4 m inutes and 46 seconds to play Saturday as the Red R aiders cam e from behind for a 6-6 South­ touchdown an 81-yard Until th** late fumble, the Rice defense had given evidence of m ak­ ing run by Gene Flem ing on the game's j first scrim m age play stand as sufficient offense to m aintain the Owls’ hope for a t least a share the conference cham pionship. of 0 0 3 3 - 6 Texas Tech Rice 6 0 0 0—6 Rice — Flem ing 81 run kick fail- I ed. I Tech - FG 33 Gill Tech _ FG 36 Gill A ttendance 25,000. ★ FORT WORTH — Iff — Texas Christian combined a sm all show of aerial w itchcraft with the power running of Jim F auver and L a r­ ry Bulaich and brewed a 17-14 up­ set over Baylor this sunsw ept Hal­ loween afternoon. I i buried The trium ph extended TCU's winning streak to three and thus the Southwest Conference title aspirations of Baylor’s Gol­ den Bruins. The Frogs took the opening kick­ off and sm ashed 80 yards for a H O M E OF W O R L D R EN O W N E D P A N C A K E S ^ PANCAKE HOUSE Also Offering A Complete Luncheon And Dinner Menu Open 24 Hours a Day 19th and GUADALUPE H A I R C U T S 25 REG. LAni; P l 25 REG. BARBER SHOP 607 TU 29th OPEN ’TIL 6 P.M. M O N D A Y THRU SA T U R D A Y FLAT TOPS $1.50 Free Parking Free Parking Sooner or later you’ll seek the rings expressive of your love . . . with clean crisp line* that taper to majestic heights, capturing the scintillating beauty of each diamond. And suddenly you discover Scandia . . . the rings with the romantic touch you’ve wished for all your life. Exclusively ours, in 18 karat gold, $ 170, S I 5 0 , S \H 5 Prices include federal tax, H A N C O C K C E N T S * Open Evening! Mon., Thurs., Fri. 'Til 9 p.m. Items Enlarged to Show Detail NATURAL CAMPUS LEADERS COME FROM t ( M l a r NATURAL SHOULDER SUITS H a n d s o m e All W ool W orsted, T h r e e Piece, w ith vest. Co lors: Black, O x ­ ford, Grav, Clay ,Blue*()live, Black- Olive. HERRINGBONE SPORTCOATS Smart, C o m f o r t a b le H e r r i n g b o n e s are “ IN ’ T his Y e ar for C a m p u s W e a r . In Fall Field Tones. from ZIP-OLT RAIN COATS F o r W a r m W e a t h e r Rain or Cold W eather W inds It Keeps Y o u W arm a nd D r y a n d Y o u r Clothes Looking Smart, Black, Clay, Bone. NATURAL TAPER SLACKS All w ool slacks, slim a nd trimly tai­ lored in he ath er tones to m a tc h vour coat. DACRON & CO TTON SCHOOL PANTS $6.95 ALAN PAINE SWEATERS $13-95 up D O W N THE RED STAIRWAY Featured Abo ve: G A N T B. D. O x f o r d Shirts $6.50 R ep o r Challis N e c k w e a r $2.50 Q e r r itl j^ c h a e fe r Sc rown Congress at Sixth Downtown Austin SiuidAv NiavAmhftr I. 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Peoo 5 Exes' W ork to Be Exhibited Latest trends in commercia! art mill be represented in the seventh annual exhibition of Southwestern Advertising Art to be shown Sun­ day at th# University Art Mu­ seum. courtyard gallery. The ex­ hibit runs through November 21 The exhibit will have works by 74 advertising artists, including several former students—Al Bar- ! nes. Jackie Evans, James Led­ better, Tom Lovelace, and Charles Schorre. Exhibition hours in the courtyard gallery in the corridor Just off the main museum are from IO a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. 9 a.m. to I p.m. Saturday, and 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free. • TWO GREAT FUN & ACTION FILMS • I \"*T » N I G H T S — • C I S O M V M r HO BBS "fa KES a V A C A TIO N I fiji r L r s —tNi> JOH* WAYNE STEWART BRANGER F T ? ERWE KOVACS FABIAN i t 1 O K E C O M P L E T E SHOW INO ONI Y • a h i i . T * i i . * • t>is< c a r d s $ " 5 r L j l J j - p n F r e e v.n iia re n rree AW (HI R I B S E T R O A D BURNET DRIVE IN fZoCU £ O P T N P L A \ ( . R O I N U 6 P M . Sneak Preview tonite 8:00 P.M. Film Fails A ll Areas Except in Bad Taste “Diary o f a Bachelor," ai the Varsity Theater: starring William Traylor, Joe Sitter, Dom DeLune, and Arlene C olonia: directed h\ Sandy Houard, an American In­ ternational Picture. By ELDON B A L L Texan Amusements Staff wouldn't embarrass a S u n d a y school class of 12 year-olds, The movie is a poor combina­ tion of stale traveling salesman jokes, cheap sight gags, and clum­ sily contrived situation comedy, all rolled together into a hackneyed plot. “ Diary of a Bachelor,” billed as ‘'blushingly adult entertainment. ’ W ILLIA M TRAYLOR, as Skip O'Hara, the bachelor, smirks oili- Soprano Schedules Concert Saturday Eileen Farrell will appear with the San Antonio Symphony Satur­ day in Municipal Auditorium. The soprano made her first ex­ tended concert tour during the 1947-48 season, and has toured the United States and Canada since then on an average of 60 concerts a year. The program will Include Bee­ thoven's “ Ah! Perfido,” Puccini’s Vissi d’arts from “ Tosca,” and Verdi’s Pace. Pace, mio Dio! from “ La Forza del Destino.” Tchai­ kovsky’s Theme and Variations from Suite No. 3 is also on the program. Tickets are on sale at the Muni­ cipal Auditorium. Concert time is 8:30. ly through supposedly ri s q u t scenes with some of Hollywood’s least attractive starlets. Although “ skin flicks” art be­ coming a drag on the market, they must compete with since s o m e of Hollywood's teenage quickies, there are a few which are tastefully done with truly at­ tractive women. “ Diary of a Bachelor” is not one of these. It is comparatively mild, yet still manages to be crude, due largely to the efforts of Traylor and the high-school-play cast. IN SHORT, the farce is a farce. For those who are planning to set' “ Diary of a Bachelor,” ex­ pecting enough exposed meat to stock a butcher shop, bring a deck of cards, a good book, or some­ thing to break the boredom. Bet­ ter still, stay home and read “ Playboy.” •ss 0T0 k l r % • i llfl. ,o . * ' s p x . ■ -JI '' FIRST AUSTIN S H O W IN G AT 2 THEATRES AML KICAK INTt*fHATlOHAl BCWWIS |ww«» CDG SIR. ALL3 N P O PS t h e J V I S IS Q J J E o f t h e r e d D EaT H PBTH ECO LOR, PLUS Th* most gruosomo day In tfta calendar! BORIS KARLOFF starring in Black Sabbath fePATHECOLOR CHIEF DRIVEIN 5fit* I N. L A H A R AUSTIN THEATRE 713# S. CONGRESS BO X O F F IC E O PE N S « P M- F IR S T SHOW 6 45 PLA Y G R O U N D FOR T U P K ID S DOORS O PEN I* M M ASQ UE: 1:15-4 SO H or, I BLA C K SA B BA T H 3:00-6 25 3 5# A Page From His Diary William Traylor and Susan Dean nuzzle in a scene from " A Diary of a Bachelor," currently at the Varsity. Traylor plays "Skip O 'H a ra ," a playboy caught by his fiancee playing around, She stumbles across his diary a calendar o amour unparalled since Don Ju an s heyday. Program and Book Will Honor Dobie S t Chico SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNERS Ijj Tile late J. Frank Dobie will be honored in two coming events. The program entitled “ A Pro­ trait of Pancho,” which was shown in KLRN-TV’s “ Nigh Noon” documentary on Mr. Dobie will be repeated on Channel 9, Mon­ day at 5:30 p.m. The study gives a significant pic­ ture of Mr. Dobie and his works through the first-hand comments of those who knew him well. Mr. Dobie is portrayed as a man who spoke in the accents of the Texas brush country, but whose intellect ranged far beyond the Southwest. Winston Bode is the writer and narrator.♦ The historical art hook of Texia- na entitled “ Heroes of Texas” will be dedicated to the writer- philosopher. The book features the first color reproductions of the Summerfield G. Roberts collection of portraits of Texas heroes locat­ ed in the State Library and Ar­ chives Building, 1201 Brazos. I Dobie is author of a chapter on James Bowie in the book. Movie Classic Showing “ The Tiling.” a classic horror film, is showing in the Texas Un­ ion Auditorium Sunday at 4 and 7 p.m. a ® RiSSr- CAT” COMING SOON C R E A M OF C ELER Y SO U P FR EN C H O N IO N SO U P C H O IC E O F; or TOSSED G R EEN SALAD ENTREES $1.50 $1.75 Honey 4 Pineapple Glaied Ham with Lemon 4 Orang* Site*! Old Southern Style Pan Fried Chicken with Country Gravy Pork Tipi, Sautaad, Rad Chil# Sauea (Carn# da Puerco Chile 'colorado) Roast Turkey 4 Dresiing with Giblet Gravy, Cranberry Sauce Broiled Chopped Manhattan Steak with Muihroom Sauce Blue Ribbon Roast Prim# Rib of Beef with Nature' Gravy Fried Jumbo Louisiana Shrimp with C o1# Slaw C H O IC E O F T W O VEG ETA BLES BRUSSELS SPROUTS. H ERB B U H E R CUT G R EEN BEANS. C R E O L E C A N D IE D C A R R O T STRIPS W H IP P E D PO TATO ES H O T RO LLS AND B U H E R C O FFEE O R ICED TEA DESSERT — M IXED FRUIT U PSID E D O W N C A K E IC E C R E A M OR SHERBET "FO R THE LITTLE C H IC O S" 75c CH ILD REN SIZE PORTIONS W IT H DRINK AND DESSERT Featuring th# Fabulou* George et the organ Lunch and Dinner 81 C H IC O RESTAURANT H AN C O C K CENT IR A T P S T P U T I R E W I T H W A R R E N B L A T T * & J I A N S E B E R G "Shockingly told! Strictly for Adults!" "ONE POW I P i n t B e g u t * * F e atu r e W i t h B a r b a r a B a r r i o O P E N t i l l Feature I 30 . 4 5# J IO . 10-00 F 35 Film ed w here it h app end ...as it hap­ pened,..in the wonder city of the work BO X O F F IC E ( I B F * St I# ADM. 75e R ID S CNDF.B l l F R E E THE HAUNTED PALACE Vincent Price A Debra Page! 7 09 THE COMEDY OF TERRORS Bori# Karloff A Toter L otto 8:35 m DRIVE* IN THEATRE MM ta N m '.TO! BOX O F F U K O PEN «:30 Adm. 75« Kid* I nder J2 Free THE PATSY J erry L e w ie A Kennan W ran im G I. BLUES Elfin Presley A Ju liet Trowao 8:5# ADULTS LOO MDC .50 THAT JAMES BOND t H IU U K R O M SBW CONNERY Ralph richardson I f s (30 EASY 1b SET Fire ID A CASTMANCOLOB - s r UNI TED ARD STS “ ... . mm S t* < h i Id T i r l FREE PARKING A™A FT IR 6 P M ON LOTS v 7 * I LAVACA STS. Adults M D C . 1.00 50« , I :.■»#-1:52 .-.n : 3 ut 5 56 7:58 IO OO CONNORS • HEATHERTON • xmvSm *tmwwm • jwZE V* K a . O n z O e b e O C a tBlRJLL M B K ) T E C H W C O i . O B * ' T E C H N t S C O P f * . Keenrn mended P s f Adult* — >’o Chilli Ticket* Sold AD ULTS LOO M D C .SO FREE PARKING A 7H» ^ L A V A C A STS. VARSITY I' K A T I It KS • 2: 19-4 OS 5:59 7:4» 9:39 -Sap , AMfPkCAN tirrrRHATlOfWjmww A D f f iT e iO p Rrrunm rndHI Fo r Adult* — No Child Tickets S ..Id FREE PARKING ADJACENT TO THEATRE Sunday, November i« 1964 _ THE DAILY TEXAN . Page 6 Thursday Mn? 5 thru •Saturday I m . 7 Aundar Not, 8 thru j f L iv in g D e s e r t Fab u lou sly Be a u tifu l! Exciting ly D ifferen t! k y a t . g ^ 9 * Wit! “t£A* COUNTRY" and “ BEX ANO MT W es! ne*d*y f Not. l l Ja U \V# *32-1. u WHITE W ILDERNESS L e g e n d a ry C re a tu re s in the Land of Unending S n o w sl with •■PtOWUK or nil EYER6UMS tad TAUL euNVMT Thursday Nor. I? thru Sat u rd sr Nor. 14 y jv j ip H F R IC A N L IO N THE O u t of the H e a rt of A fric a C o m e s N a tu re 's G r e a te s t Dram a! t TW w j B ? | Wit# ‘'NATURE'S HALE ACRE” and “WlNDWAGON SMITIT JB J W ^ X ■1^* P # J I » yj Sunday Nor. 15 thru W ed reade r No?. 18 IM* STO,T °* ew f e m A Tree-top W o rld of Action, D ra m a and Ex citam e n tl w e "WATE* URDS’’ and “ GOLIATH ll- V «| X Thu rad# v Nor. 19 thru Saturday Nor. 21 Jungle Cat The S to ry of the Ja g u a r... R u le r of the A m azo n ! " V ie "REAVER VALLET and “NOAH'S ARK- Sunday N ut. 22 thru Tuesday N ot. 24 . U Au jkpME J J ^VANBHIIK PRAIRIE Thundering D ram a of the G re a t A m e ric a n Plains* # V K I “ MYSTERIES Of THE DEEP" and “ PECOS BILL- 6 E X C I T I N G P R O G R A M S ! A L L IN C O L O R ! Don’t Miss W a lt Disney's Best — Cut This A d Out To Use As Tour Schedule — SEE THEM « the VARSITY REMEMBER... Monday is the Last Day FOR ALL ORGANIZATIONS TO RESERVE RAGES IN THE 1965 CACTUS Organizations who wish to He represented in the 1065 CACTUS must come by Journalism Building, Room 3, to reserve their pages before the above deadline date. This notice is published early to give all groups ample time to make the necessary arrangements for the photographing of their group pictures. Pages must be paid for before the group picture can he made. All pages must be paid for by Monday, November 2, 1964 A Guide to GOOD E A T IN G in and Around Austin IT'S N E W TO et Chico EAT OUT OFTEN "c h ic k e n ] SHACK OPEN FOR BREAKFAST And Until 12 p.m. Daily OPEN FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS 'TIL 2 2606 GUADALUPE LAM AR AT NORTH LOOP 2 LO CATIO NS A T ouch of the West . . . Real Old Fashioned Pit Bar-B-Q BAR-B-Q SLIC ED BEEF ........................................................ I-25 BAR-B-Q H O T S A U S A G E .................................................... 1-25 BAR-B-Q C H IC K E N ................................................................ 1-25 BAR-B-Q SPA R E RIBS ............................................................ 1-25 BAR-B-Q H A M ............................................................... 1.25 All orders sen cd with plenty of our own hot potato salad, pinto beans, pickler, onions, cole slaw, sweet relish and homemade bread. IRA'S Buckboard Restaurant 5420 Airport Blvd. G L 2-7733 A L A M O Restaurant and Coffee Room IN T E R N A T IO N A L L Y K N O W N Serving The Finest Families In Central Texas Over 19 Years A L L D AY SATURDAY & SU N DAY W E FEA TU RE Deluxe Southern Fried CH I C K E N D IN N E R S 95c Optional Small Shrimp Cocktail e~d Bated Potato at No Extra Cost Varied Deluxe Dinner M o n d a y thru Friday Serving — • BREA K FA ST • L U N C H • DELUXE DINNER 6:30 A .M — 9 P.M. D A ILY GR 6-5455 • TA KE • H O M E • O R D ER S 604 Guadalupe D I N E T H I S WEEKEND at CHRISTIE'S SEA FOOD RESTAURANT O V E R L O O K IN G BEA U TIFU L LAKE A U STIN PLENTY O F FREE P A R K IN G A N D A T M O S P H E R E O N T O W N LAKE G R 8-1625 The D aily Texan recommends one of the follow ing for Good Food I — Moderate Prices! FERRARI PIZZA Sen mg: pre h Pizza ALSO Sausage and Meatball Sanduichet Orders to Take Out Weekdays I I a.m. til I I p.m. Fri. 4 Sat. I I a.m. 'til I a.m. I G L 2-3771 34th & LamarJ m m m m m m m sm m m a m , % I O'- I % “Italian Food is O u r O n l y Business” L U N C H F R O M ll TILL 1:45 D IN N ER FR O M 5 TILL 9:45 FRI & SAT. D IN N ER 5 TILL 10:45 Closed on M onday ITALIAN RESTAURANT Don't Cook Tonight Call ■ m ig h t o C H IC K E N • SH RIM PS# c ! > I FREE DELIVERY CALL - GR 6-6216 • I }UE RIBS • FISH • PIZZA \ ijLm.-l p.m.; 5-11 p m. Workday* (I ll • .rn.-11 p.m. Sat.. Sun. 8 Holiday* 1608 LAVACA HITCHIN’ POST 6 Oz. Filet $1.19 PIZZA KITCHEN W ith PIZ ZA S To-Go or Delivered G R 8-8827 G R 6-4301 Owned and Operated by Buzzy Buck IO U N. L A M A R 1201 N. L A M A R Only a Few Minutes From Anywhere And W e ll W o rth It If YOUR Nanus Here You Win $2.50 In “Eating Out” Fun! E A T O U T O F T E N highlights the best in places to eat in and around Austin. I oday's issue features a story and photograph of one of these outstand­ ing firms — selected in alphabetical order. The names of five students selected at random from the 1964-65 Student Directory are listed below and each is entitled to $2.50 rn eating privileges at this featured eating place. If your name is printed here come by J B. IO*7 and receive an authorization slip which entitles you to the $2.50 in eating privileges at the featured spot. Margaret Elizabeth Bailey Sandra Lou Burnett Carol Eugenia Earl Nancy Lynne Jostes Edgar Leon Raub Featured Today Serving families in central Texts for over 19 sears, the Alamo Restaurant and Coffee Room offers good eating for virtually any size pocketbook, large or small. From the spei laity of the house, the Hot Seafood Platter with jumbo fried shrimp, deep sea scal­ lops, stuffed devil crab, fried tenderloin of white fish and red snapper, to the Special Chicken Dinner offered on Saturdays and Sundays and featuring an optional small shrimp cocktail and baked potato, fine food is truly a habit at the Alamo. M r. and Mrs. V. Davis, the gracious hosts ol the Alamo, tell us that a certain English counterpart to our own traveling gourmet, Duncan Hines, was so pleased with the fine cuisine that he made a point to mention The Alamo Restaurant and Coffee Room in a chronicle of his visit to the I nitrd States which was recently published. For enjoyable dining , . . ESPECIALLY FOR LONGHORNS! The Longhorn Room DINE IN L U X U R Y AN D E N JO Y THE BEST M E X IC A N FO O D A R O U N D EL C H IC O H A N C O C K C EN T ER 3303 N. LAMAR Ph. CL 2-2317 H A M B U R G E R S Hom e of the Worlds Greatest 15? Ham burger I Op#n ll a.m. Clos* ll p.m. Highest Quality Fair Prices Liberal Portions IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN AUSTIN ill 801 C O N G R E S S ICCADILLY ^ c z ^ k t & x ia Daily 6:30 A .M . 8:30 P.M . ■mumT RESTAURANT 3501 LA M A R num'll s el ax Lr in a b ir lie d d in in * * J r u c in a L a m i n a i lm o S t f le r e O.Sf) Victor has an ideal location. A distinctive atmosphere with a variety of g o o d food. A m p l e free parking in the front or rear of the restaurant. VISIT TH E SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS OF ITALIAN FOOD, STEAKS, AND FRIED CHICKEN S A V A R I N RESTAURANT in the beautiful Municipal Airport STEAKS • SEA FO O D • M E X IC A N FO O D Hours: 6:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. 2910 G u adalup e GR 6-1600 U ic lo r J ^ it a l ia n I ^ acje FOR PERFECT EATING I Country Cousin Open 7 Days a w eek 11:00 to 2:is and 4:30 to 8:00 One Block West of Burnet Rd. and 53rd St. S P E C IA L IZ IN G IN Cousin Burgers Fried Chicken Bar-B-Q Ribs 2 L O C A T IO N S DELIVERY SER V IC E A V A IL A B L E 3301 IN TER­ R E G IO N A L H W Y . G R 8-3383 1204 K O E N IG H O 5-6317 2233 North Loop Blvd. W H E N IT C O M E S TO PIZZA r o m e i n n Come to the ■ ’ ’ ’ ____________ G R M I I I STO P BY O U R U N IQ U E SADDLE TAP BAR GROTTO For Mexican Food At It s Very Best anae 2607 Guadalupe (On the Drag) ' BsHind th* Waterfall” ★ Party room for groups ★ Large parking area across from Kinsolving ★ Quick Ready-to-Serve luncheons “Get back to class on time1’ ★ This week's special: Chopped Sirloin Steak— $1.19 cole slaw, french fries and drink It S Austin's Newest Mexican Restaurant Jia(L a !a n a Featuring Mexican Dishes ct A - >yp6S and Our Own Specialty, STEA K A ' LA M E X IC A N A SU N D A Y SPECIAL [FU LL O R D ER O F I BEEFTACO^^^^*t7CJ A Q ~ \ — Private Parties Invited — 3701 A IR P O R T BLVD. S T R A IG H T O U T M A N O R RD. TO A IR P O R T BLVD. BREADED VEAL CUTLET with -- M A SH E D PO T A TO ES C R E A M G R A V Y • — or — F R E N C H FRIES • C O L E S L A W • O N IO N R IN G S BUTTERED BUN • C O F F E E O R IC ED TEA W hile You're There, G o Upstairs and Visit W ith Your Friends at the Orange Bull Lounge 27 th 6 Guadalupe Plenty of free Fat king Sunday« November I, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# 7 * Sing-Song Registration Scheduled M onday to Friday Campus News in Brief The event is one of the Program in Criticism series. Hillel to Brunch at 11 Walcott has written competition singing Eleven parachutists are expected to participate in the event from noon to 5 p.m. It is sponsored by the Austin dub. G. Bellamy, Joseph F. Kojpasok, Robert G. Gilbert III, Elirk N. Maledon Jr., and Michael Aaa Stone. Power Conference Due rn wmmmmm mmmmmmmmmmm m r xx? m rn "Out of the Ordinary . . The second H i l l e l Graduate Group Brunch will be held at l l a.m. Sunday at the Hillel Foun­ dation. Reservations may be made by calling the Hillel office, GR 6- 0125. * ★ ‘Anthem’ Discussion Set “ Anthem,” a novel by Ayn Rand, will be discussed by the Literature Workshop of the Uni­ versity “ Y” at 4:30 p.m. Tues­ day. Sandra workshop Dykes, chairman, announced that stu­ dents should obtain and read the book before the discussion session. it Skydivers Jump Today Austin Skydivers will participate in a parachuting exhibition at San Marcos Municipal Airport Sunday, Tim Jones, president, said. ★ Biota Deadline Nov. 9 November 9 is the deadline for submitting manuscripts for the De­ cember Riata, literary magazine student Literature, art, and music of the Orient and the Southwest will be featured in the “ East Meets West” issue. Richard Bond, associate editor* emphasized that layout plans are submissions b e i n g made and should be in as soon as possible. “We are pleased with the orien­ tal theme, but want to assure stu­ dents that all subject areas have been and are definitely being con­ sidered,” he said. .Submissions are being accepted iii Journalism Building 107. FOOTBALL TEXAS STYLE List Price $14.95 OUR PRICE $11.25 GARNER SMITH 2116 G u a d a lu p e • Open E ve n in gs T il 8:30 • G R 7-0925 IN N R IV E R V IE W for *om#pIac« different to go. T^e Looking in new i* your an*wer. Early American Georgetow n furni*hingt lend an air of quiet elegance to food* . . • complement deliciously prepared reasonably priced. R E S T A U R A N T ------------ OFFERING; Reservations for groups and private parties during hours other than regular Menu Service. Fraternities, Sororities and University groups invited to phone for information. — D A ILY M E N U SERVICE: 11 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. 5 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. “D IN IN G IN ELEGANCE . . . if i V E U m u s l i m U N 3-5003 — JUST A C R O S S THE RIVER IN G E O R G E T O W N ^ S C A R B R O U G H S Congress Avenue and Sixth Street • Order by ma* • Free delivery • Order by phone ★ Faculty Meets M ond ay The first regular meeting of the General Faculty will be held at 4 p.m. Monday in Business-Econom- ics Building IOO. Chancellor Harry Ransom will, report on significant recent and pending developments at the Uni­ versity. Afterwards, the Chancel­ lor and Vice-Chancellor Norman Hackerman will answer questions from the faculty. ★ ‘A d m e n ’ Select Pledges Gamma Alpha Chi, women’s advertising fraternity, has an­ nounced fall pledges. They are Laura Jane Bass, Mavis Belisle, Shelia (heaney, Toni Lynn Coon­ ey, Kaye Cosby, and Josephine Ann DiBella. Also Penny Hight, Darlene j Mohr, Aura Nell Ranzau, Carol Seaman, Dianne Thorp, and Kel­ ly Wiley. it ★ Chicago Prof to Speak Colin Hines, professor at the Uni­ versity of Chicago, will speak on “Gravity Waves” at 2 p.m. Mon­ day in Business-Economics Build­ ing 16. Engineers Given Relics Replicas of early telephones, transistors, a vacuum tube, and a traveling wave tube used in space communications are among the collection of historic electronic de­ vices that has been presented to the College of Engineering. The collection was presented by J. Barto Arnold of the J. Barto Arnold Company, San Antonio, and Noble Armstrong of Western Elec­ tric Company, New York City. Dr. William H. Hartwig, pro­ fessor of electrical engineering, irreplace­ called able” they will said be added “to a growing collection of historic technological exhibits at the University.” the materials and The electronic devices are on exhibit in the Engineering Science Building. ★ Annual Open House Set Dr. Royal Embree, professor of educational psychology, and Dr. Oliver H. Bown, assistant pro­ fessor of educational psychology, will speak at the annual open house of AU Saints Episcopal Day in School at 7:30 p.m. Monday Kinsolving Hall. Embree will speak on “Tile Role of the Church in Pre-School Edu­ topic will be cation;” Bown’s “Child-Parent Relationships.” Parents and pre-school educators wiU visit the classrooms to review pupil’s works. ★ Math A w a rd Conferred James I .airy Hubka has re­ ceived first place award of $45 in the Albert A. Bennett Mathe­ matics Prize Examination. Named in honor of a former mathematics faculty member, the annual examination is open fresh­ to beginning University men who have not previously had a c o l l e g e mathematics course. the $30 William Eugene Kaufman re­ ceived second place award and Claude Vernon King won the third place award of $15. it Reward for Lost Ring A reward is being offered for the return of a diamond ring left on the lavatory in the women’s restroom of Weldon’s Cafeteria in Houston. Mrs. Gladys Palmer, owner of the ring, said the ring was lost between 6 and 7 p.m. Saturday, the night of the Texas-Rice game in Houston. Anyone with information con­ cerning the ring should write or contact Mr. Weldon or Weldon's Cafeteria or Mrs. Gladys Palmer. 1600 Holcombe Blvd, Houston 25. Cardwell, Edwin Dom, Mike En­ riquez, Richard E. Flint, Charles R. Garrett II, Michael L. Harlan. Also, Joseph W. Haydel, Charles G. Johnson, Richard Long, Alfred I C. Loya, Pat McGovern, Tim O’Connor. Also, Floyd Oliver Jr., Dennis A. Pupa, James H. Stewart Jr., Phil Vassar, Roger S. Vaughan, I James B. Walker, and Frederick W. Wicgand Jr. Baylor Bus Chartered Students’ Association is spon­ soring a charter bus trip to the Baylor game. The cost is $2.25. round-trip j The bus leaves at 10:30 a.m. Saturday and returns at 7 p.m. j Departure and arrival point will be the crosswalk between the Union and the Co-Op. Tickets may be purchased at Harwood Travel Service, 2428 Guadalupe. J ★ * Drag Shops Re-open Two Drag shops destroyed by fire last week are back in opera­ tion. The University Typewriter Shop reopened Thursday at 603 W. 29th St. Faulkner's Drug Store opened its check-cashing business at the rear of the burned store. C. E. Faulkner said Thursday that he plans to reopen his drug store as soon as a new structure can be built. ★ Poetry Next in Series Derek Walcott, a West Indian poet and playwright, will read from his new hook, “Selected Poems,” at 4 p.m. Monday in the Academie Center Auditorium. the Caribbean three plays which have been perform­ ed in London and New York and throughout Is­ lands. He received the Jam acia Drama Festival Prise in 1958, the Government Award for Con­ tribution Indian Theater In 1961, and the Guin­ ness Poetry Special Award in 1962. the West to Author Robert Graves has said, “ Derek Walcott handles English with a closer under­ standing of its inner magic than most of hts English-born con­ temporaries.” ★ FORTRAN Course Set A course in FORTRAN program­ ming for the IBM 1620-D Data Processing System will be offered for a two-week period beginning Monday. Eight lectures will be given in the non-credit course; previous knowledge of FORTRAN is not necessary. Each lecture will be presented twice, Mondays through Thurs­ days, 3 to 4:30 p.m. and 7 to 8:30 p.m. in Taylor Hall 137. Lecturer is Mrs. Darlene Meyers of the Bu­ reau of Engineering staff. Applications are due in Taylor Hall 104 by noon Monday and may be made by calling GR1-1064. ★ The seventeenth annual Power Distribution Conference will be held Monday through Wednes­ day, at the University. Dean John J. MeKetta of the sponsoring Department of En­ gineering, will welcome repre­ sentatives from industrial firms, public utility companies, and edu­ cational institutions attending the conference at IO a.m. in the Un­ ion Auditorium. W U C y o d O n O J c i 'i Sunday IO—D r. C h arles G alvin Praetorians Are Pledged Kau semester pledges of Prae- t o N ew m a n C lub on " C ivil R ig h ts and C ivil D iso b e d ie n c e .” C a th o lic S tu - teImJ o( young torian Guard, honorary military ; R ep u b lican s an d Y o u n g D em o cra ts. are John W. fraternity for ROTO, ............................................. - ............................... I 12—L u n ch eon fo r v is it in g p aren ts, L n- ive tm ty C h ristia n Church. , . f ” 6rowr sp ea k to *r L O O K — Y O U R — BEST C A P IT O L BEAUTY College Hairstyling O P E N 8 A M Ti! IO PM Phon* G R 2-9292 16th & G uada. — P A R K FREE Hi-Performance Engineering THE PIT STOP Foreign Car Service A u s t i n MG. L o t u s A s t « n M a rten C o b r a J a g u a r F e r r a r i M a s a r a t i A lfa R o m e o T r i u m p h C o o p e r D a t s u n A. ( '. B r i s t o l I9 fh & G uadalupe (Behind The Pizza Hut) 1 .3 0 — D ed ica tio n o f n ew S ig m a A lpha Mu h ou se, 2501 L eo n St. 2-5— T e x a s M em orial M u seum o p en ; 9-5 o n M on d ay. 2 —L e g is la tiv e C ou n cil In te r s c h o ­ la stic L ea g u e, T r a \i* R oom , D rls- K ill H otel. o f 2-10—K U T -F M , 90.7 m c: and M on d ay. 2 -6 — L a s t d ay fo r e x h ib itio n o f g ra d u - ate t h e s e s : o th e r c o n tin u in g e x h ib its In clu d e S ou th ern A d v ertisin g Art and p ictu res b y J a c k Tw orkoY and 1 j j Carl E m b ry, A rt M useum , i 3-5— E ll sa bet N e y M u seum op en . 304 East F o u r ty -fo u r th S tr e e t; a n d M on­ d a y . I 3:30— S h rin e C ircus. C ity C oliseum . 4— M ovie, ‘‘T h e T h in g ,” T e x a n U n ion j A u d itoriu m . 4- P ia n o p rogram b y Joh n O w in gs. I M usic B u ild in g R ecita l H a ll. ; 4 .6 — K a ra te C lub, " Y .” 1 6 : 3 0 — A m erican F o lk j 7— E cum en ical AU S a in ts E p iscop al Church, on ‘‘Can C h ristia n s U n ite ? ” a t C ath olic S tu ­ d en t C en ter. d isc u ssio n 8 D isc u ssio n G roup. B a p tist S tu d en t la ter a t 4509 fe llo w sh ip B u ild in g : S m a ll Dr. I ! I Monday 8-5- P ic tu r e s by R o b ert E aton , stu d en t lo u n g e o f A rt B u ild in g . 8 30— K L R N -T V p rogram s, C h an n el 9. 9-12 and 2-4—D r a w in g of B a y lo r g a m e tic k e ts , G regory G ym . 9 4 —T ic k e ts fo r M an tovani and R u g ­ g ie r o R icci p erfo rm a n ces, H o g g A u ­ d ito r iu m box o ffice. 9 -5 — F ilin g for O B A C o u n c i l electio n . B u sin e ss-E co n o m ies O ffice B u ild in g 200. 9 —O p en in g of P o w er D istr ib u tio n Con­ feren ce. T e x a s U n io n A u d itoriu m 9-5— E n try b lan k s fo r A g g ie S ig n C on­ te st. S p eech B u ild in g 101. 10—C o ffe e H ou r w ith d iscu ssio n . H ille l Koundat ion. 2 -C olin H in es to sp ea k on ‘‘G ravity W a v e s.” B u sin e ss-E co n o m ic* B u ild ­ in g 16 3— E d u ca tio n a l film s on ‘‘T een A gers W ill R ea d ” and “ H ow t o C o n d u it a m e e t in g ,” A cad em ic C en ter A u d i­ toriu m . 3— S p o tlig h t, ._ 3— R e lig io u s , . y .. and T h e o lo g ic a l Issu es . to be d iscu ssed . *‘Y ” i 13 A d v ertisin g A ece p U b llity C o m m it - I te e , T e x a s U n ion 323. 4—G en eral F a c u lty to m eet. B u sin e ss- j E con om ics B u ild in g A u d itoriu m , ; I— D erek W a lco tt to read h is p oem s, j I A cad em ic C en ter A u d itoriu m . I—S tu d y G roup on P o litic a l Id eals and A ction . Y .” tor. 7.3f> i U n ion 317. In ter-C oop erative C ou n cil, T e x a s 7 :3 0 A lpha E p silon D e lta to h ear i ta iles b y D ea n R ob ert L a c k e y and Dr. Ivan R an h of, E x p er im en ta l S ci- en ce B u ild in g ITS. S on g M a ss,” I— In q u iry c la ss, C a th o lic S tu d e n t Cen- Wholesale Spanish G U IT A RS Gibton — Alva-ra* Cam pus R«pra*en+a+iva for M in sky* D U tributon Cai! M .F AFTER 5 Weekend Anytime G R 8-4102 VISIT THE W IG SHOP W ig s and H airpieces Custom Designed by M A N U E L H A L L is® In Beautiful o u i r o o g k c t wrm Across from W y a tt s Cafeteria TEL. G L 2-4716 A u stin ’s O ldest H om e-O w ned Jeulers Same Family O u nership Since 1S88 A■ jmm mil'' i i IIH— Mfiinwn— iii im , Al • I l f rn -v.— v. - EUXIKA sn e n g a g e m e n t R ing $375.00 I r i d e 't C irc le t $27.SO lo »how EXCLUSIVE Offered O nly to C olle ge Senior* A nd G raduate Student* N O P R E M IU M D E P O SIT S W H IL E IN S C H O O L FIDELITY UNION LIFE 701 W . I STH G R 7-6784 Registration for tho annual Sing­ song, for Greek social organizations, begins at 8 a.m. Monday and continues through 5 p m . Friday. Contest divisions and dues are sorority, $30; fraternity, $30; and mixed group, $60. Dues may be paid in Speech Building 102. Copies of contest rules, agreed upon by Interfraternitv Council and Panhellenic Council, have been mailed to social chairmen and song leaders of sororities and fraternities. Co-chairmen of Sing Song are Fin Crady and Mike Sutherland. Further information may bo ob­ tained by calling Clyde Oldham, publicity chairman, GR6-583L ♦ 25 Given Scholarships Twenty-five University students majoring in pharmacy are recipi­ ents of scholarships for 1964-65. The honorees include Sam Neal Blackstone Jr., Karen Ann Satsky. John Albert Alvermann, Travis Lynn Warthan. Philip Carol Abel. Larry Glenn Farrow. Trenton Ce­ cil Cole ITI, and Travis David Tichenor Jr. Also named were Jean Sheridyn Shelby, Donald Leon London. An­ thony Charles Jung, Gloria Elma Garcia, Mrs. Sharon Leigh Nel­ son, Douglas Wayne Richnow, Al­ fred Bennie Klaus, Robert John Samuelson, and William Clyde Brownlow. Others are Jesse Clyde De Leo, Dallas Charles Dill, Dale Dwayne Matless, Sharyn Jeanne Delorio, Maria Josefa Perez, Leslie H. Muenzler, Loyd Douglas Rowe Jr., and Edward Smith Walker. Dean Lee F. Worrell of the Col­ lege of Pharmacy announced the awards. The ★ Co-ops to Meet M onday Inter Co-op Council will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Union Building 317. Cooperatives will vote on separate constitutions, ; for women’s co-ops and the men’s j co-ops. •# 9 Certificates A w ard e d ness Nine University law and bnsi* students administration | have been awarded certificates for participating in the fall trust seminar of the Republic Na­ tional Bank of Dallas. law students are Arthur H. Bayern, Bryant T. Manning, Robert McKenzie, and Paul Y. Youngdale; students from busi­ ness administration are Ronald Students Association O F F IC IA L T O U R SKI A S P E N 8 D A Y S From Dada* T R A IN A H O T E L IN C L U D E D $ Q Q 0 0 / I Call: G R 2-4052 hanvood travel service SW ITCHING TO A PIPE? SA VE UP TO 2 5 % O N PIPES • T O B A C C O S • PIPE R A C K S • P O U C H E S • L IG H T E R S • EBB • Loewe • Dun hill • Import* • M edico # Yeiiobole • Kaywoodie Ladies’ Pipes S P A R T A N DISCOUNT SM O K E SHOP 5501 Airport Blvd. THE UNIVERSITY’S O NLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO A N D HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 Serving the University Area for 14 Years P A R K IN G IN REAR E E D W A Y 'H IG H FIDELITY AT R E A SO N A B L E P R IC ES" ar a n g e BJI Xo u n a e 27th & Guadalupe J No Cover Charge 12 p.m. W eekdays— 3 p.m.- • I a.m. Saturdays— 3 p.m.- (U psteirs) For Those 21 and O v e r W ith Discrim inating Taste r J ^ n n f ic a t c I d r i e l eye — Lessons and Supervised Play — S IX D U P L IC A T E B R ID G E G A M E S PER W E E K Regular Bridge Classes for Intermediate and Advanced Students Special rates for University Students in our Saturday duplicate game. Cal! H O 5-1546 or G L 2-7796 for full infor­ mation on duplicate games and teaching schedules. t i c l cie ^ S tu d io o f In s i in James C . Tucker, Director 1500 W est 34th Street Telephone H O 5-1546 cr G L 2-7796 AUSTIN'S BIG 4 IN AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FO OD EL M A T ------------ "Hom e of the Crispy Tacos" 504 E. Ave. G R 7-7023 PHO TO G RAPHIC SUPPLIES EXPERT C A M E R A REPAIR r t c a r v e d D I A M O N D R I N G S Hallmark Cards and Tape Recorders Beloved by brides for over IOO years Studtman Photo Service 222 W EST I9TH G R 6-4326 AutForirtJ A r t c a r v e d Jew eler EL TORO "Austin's Original Mexican Restaurant" G R 8-4321 16th & Guadalupe EL CHARRO "Big Steaks, Mexican Style" 91 Red River G R 8-7735 M O N R O E S "Mexican Food to G o " 500 E. Ave. G R 7-8744 Liittn to Our Commercial* on KAZZ-FM Radio. Faculty! Students! Pay Only 10% Over Our Cost ZENITH electronics NORGE appliances S T E V E S E x ten de d T erm s Available JOE KOEN & SON Jewelers Since 1888 “ W here A u stin ites Shop W ith Confidence" O P E N EVERY D A Y 4225 G U A D A L U P E H O 5-0222 ‘'A ustin's O ldest T V sales & se rin e dealer' U 118 B * <— • IM H 105 E. 6th Conveniently Located Just Off the Avenue H O U R S : 9:30-5:30, T H U R S D A Y ‘TIL 9:00, G R 6 8331 Jrn § Vc I I I P ; BEAUTIFUL BRYANS L A C Y W A Y You don't have a fashion leg lo stand on until you own af least one pair of these sophisticated new stockings. Sheer alluring nylon lace is ultra feminine and appropriate for "after five" and casual wear. Black mink, honey bee, 8!/2-l I, regular lengths. Hosiery, Scarbroughs' Street floor Sunday* Novtmber I, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 8 <