weather: fair, warm low 62, high 92 J HP W W W S I I H E 1 J A IL Y m r n ^ w k J m m k w m m mk mm mmmm mmm i i V V " I E X A M mm mmm dm m k db A A rn A A T I f TP page 2: rush rehash Student Newspaper at The Un Vol. 63 Price Rvo Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, *°° *«r. Six Pages Today No. 40 JOO Needed Just ^ To Flip TV Dial to OU By ROY A. JONES II The official word that the Texas-Oklahoma g a m e will be telecast in Austin was less t h a n $2,000 short of being said at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday as donations continued to pile into the Austin Jaycees Lift the Ban headquarters. “We are very, v e r y con­ fident that we are going to make the deadline now,” Ver­ non Looper, chairman of the Lift the Ban committee, re­ ported. “We are o v e r the $7,000 mark right now and haven’t even heard from four or five groups who said they would make us o f f e r s Wednesday.” D a l l a s fans who planned to I watch the big gam e on television received their reprieve Tuesday when Howard Grubbs, secretary of the Southwest Conference, a n -1 nounced the game would be tele-; vised in the Dallas area despite a conflict with a small college game ! which had been overlooked. The television subcommittee of t h e National Collegiate Athletic I Association agreed to the telecast because it had been publicly an­ nounced tilrce weeks ago and all station-sponsor relations had been completed. The committee said cancelling the telecast would be a major in­ convenience “ to the thousands of f a n s unable to purchase tickers who have arranged their weekend plans on the basis of the telecast.” Uniparty Picks 11 Candidates Permission had been g i v e n three weeks KRLD-TV Dallas ago to telecast the game because all of the 75.501 seats In the Cot ton Bowl w’ere s o l d out and Grubbs had certified that there were no conflicting gam es with­ in 120 miles of Dallas. SURPRISE FACTOR Trouble It was arose when learned that Austin College was scheduled to play Sewanee Sat­ urday afternoon at Sherman, 55 miles north of Dallas. The Austin College stadium seats only 2.800, Grubbs said he had not known about the Austin CoUege-Sew- anee game when he certified the Dallas game for telecasting. Floyd Gass, athletic director of Austin College, which had joined the NCAA only last spring, said he did not want to interfere with the telecasting of the Dallas game. He said that if the decision were up to him, he would say go ahead with the telecast. “The committee and the South­ west Conference strongly regret the Austin College-Sewanee game inadvertently over­ conflict was looked when permission was origi­ nally granted to televise,” Grubbs said. “We would like also to thank Austin College officials for their understanding he concluded. cooperation,” -—Texan Photo—Draddy Anything But Bicycles M a ry C om p ton and Chuck N aiser pose for a Texan photographer to help bring attention to tho new sign posted along tho walk to H arry's Place. ’ Bicycles on tho sidewalks create a dangerous situa­ tion," says A. R. Hamilton, chief traffic and security officer. C hief Ham ilton explained that tho no-bicycle ruling was a safety measure of tho city as well as the school. 7/4 O U Seats Remain Today ever drawn for OU before year's rush. this Tickets remaining are tor seats outside the student section and are primarily located In the end •one, Lundstedt said. Student sellouts are r a r e and have occurred only three times in the last 12 years, even though the game Itself has been a sellout for 18 years, said Ed Olle, assistant athletic director. Prediction was made last July of the number of students who would attend this y ear's football classic. Lundstedt said that the increase in enrollment was considered as w’ell as the student attendance for the last nine years. In predicting attendance f o r the next year, we have no way of knowing lf the game will be lf Oklahoma and televised or Texas will be rated first and sec­ ond In the nation,” he said. Last year, after students had drawn their OU tickets, there were about 400 tickets left which went on sale to the general public. If any tickets r e m a i n at 4 p.m. Wednesday, they will be sold as general admission seats. OU is predicted to be a com­ plete sellout Wednesday when the remaining 714 tickets are drawn at Gregory Gym beginning at 9 am . Student, date, and student-wife tickets totaling 10,073 have passed from toe ticket window since fixe drawing began at 8 a m. Monday, Al Lundstedt, football ticket man­ ager, said. This tops last season s total stu­ dent ticket sale of 9,900, the most OBA Filing Today Through Oct. 23 Filing begias Wednesday in Busi- ness-Economics Office Building 200 for College of Business Administra­ tion Council elections and will con­ tinue through 4 p.m. Oct. 23. Candidates may file from IO a m. to noon and 2 to 4 p.m. Positions to be filed are president, vice-pres­ ident. and secretary of all four classes. Candidates must pay a 33 filing tee and a 35 sign deposit. Before elections Nov. 9, each candidate must sell five lockers in the Busi- nesa-Economics B u i l d i n g base­ ment, or he will not be perm itted to run. Newly-organized U n i v e r s i t y Party selected l l candidates for fall Assembly elections and named Jim Fowler party chairm an dur­ ing a two-hour meeting Tuesday night. Five of the candidates for the Assembly were elected by accla- two of ^ u to give Each group is holding out the to last dollar, he try said, but confidently added, “We are going to make it on our own.” RADIO CLUB HELPING Members of the Austin Citizens Band Radio Club were assisting the Jaycees by tions that w e r e telephoned into committee headquarters, while on the University cam pus.' members *he nominating committee. of the Cowboys and Silver Spurs were picking up donations. up dona- mation and all ^ picking Also were presented to the party by Deadline for raising the 39,091 necessary to m a k e the Trinity Uni versity-New’Mexico State game in San A n t o n i o a sell-out is Wednesday noon. If the fund falls short of the goal, the money will be donated by the Jaycees to the United Fund. Looper said that he had received calls from officials in Lampasas, Georgetown, Elgin, Taylor, a n d Lockhart, and groups have raised, together with the morning mail, will likely put the fund over its goal. the money If the ban Is lifted In Austin, fans wll rejoice along with Dallas arm chair sports fans, who had their possible blackout of the telecast removed Tuesday. elected by acclamation wer the five members of the Steer­ ing Committee: John Hughes, Ron­ nie Cohen, Steve Ranger, Helena Frenkil, and Don Richard Smith, formerly a National Students As­ sociation vice-president. Candidates from AAS are Ann Connor Brown, Glee Ingram , Jim Fowler, Joe Bill Watkins, and An- itha Mitchell: from the College of Pharm acy, B u d d y Boudloche; School ai Law, Sammy Coates; these College of Business Administration, Doug Simmons; College of Fine Arts, Mickey Sandgarten; and Graduate School, Dean Hester and Alex Duggan. Doug Simmons withdrew from consideration Tuesday night but said he might resubm it his name later. Flora Eye Leaves Cuba, Almost Drowns Castro MIAMI, Fla. 'Pl — Hurricane Flora, leaving a trail of death and destruction in the Caribbean, bore down Tuesday on sparsely-popu­ lated islands in the southern Ba­ hamas. into the Atlantic where The eye of the hurricane moved out of battered and flooded Cuba and it could be expected again to pick up in intensity. High winds and torrential rains continued in Cuba. The northeast course Flora took eased the threat to Florida and the rest of the US mainland. Prim e Minister Fidel Castro narrowly escaped drowning in an Oriente Province river flooded the rains of Flora, Radio by Hav ana said Tuesday. The Tass correspondent in Ha­ vana reported to Moscow that “the toll of human casualties is con­ tinuing to grow” but gave no fig­ ure. The bearded prime m inister was on an inspection tour of the hur­ ricane-ravaged eastern provinces. He and his party were travel­ ing by automobile along the Is­ land’s central highway when they found high w ater had knocked out a bridge over La Rioja River, between Victoria de tea Tunas aad Holguin. Coates approached the Steering Committee after the meeting and withdrew his nomination but indi­ the cated he would I party’s endorsement rather than direct nomination. later seek The name of Ali Mahdi was re- j ferred to the Steering Committee for consideration as a possible party candidate in the College of I Engineering. The committee may also select a nominee from the Col­ lege of of Education. About IOO persons attended the party’s second meeting of the se­ m ester. ■ I B-Tax Violations Build Up for Big D By DIANE COHEN Illegal usage of the Blanket Tax is as much of a temptation to some students during Texas-OU festivi­ ties as liquor and a good time are to others at the FYiday night party in the Big D coliseum. Since the majority of events concerning the game require a Blanket Tax for entrance and a limited number of date tickets are sold, Individuals will go to extremes to obtain one of the coveted pieces of paper. Various methods have been de­ to vised sneak UT dates inside the gates of the Cotton Bowl stadium. The a simplest plan is borrowing Blanket Tax and attempting to pass as that individual. the years throughout “ Why not switch pictures on the card?” asked one coed. is passing One student from another Texas college admitted getting into a University game last year on his own school's activity card. An­ other method, and probably the most profitable, the Blanket tax through the fence. In this way, any number of students might be admitted on one card. Although thew* procedures are not unusual on the UT campus, their serious penalties combat usuage. t h e of Suspension Blanket Taxes and probation for 1 the remainder of the year are possible results. “ When a student purchases a Blanket Tax, It is then that indi­ vidual’s property,” said a senior concerning rules governing Blanket Tax holders. “If he does not wish to attend an event and wishes to give his place to someone else, he should be able to do so without danger of being punished. After all, he is paying for the space whether it is occupied or not.” The majority of students Inter­ viewed, however, are leary of loaning their Blanket Taxes. B-Tax Tickets To CEC All Sold Pauline Camp, director of publics programs in the College of Fine Arts, told the Texan Tuesday night is absolutely no possiblity there of obtaining more tickets for the New’ Christy Minstrels perform­ ance Wednesday night. The only ones remaining for the performance are single admission tickets which are to be sold at the door Wednesday night. Blanket Tax holders will not have to pay regular admission prices to obtain these if they present their Blanket Taxes. few remaining tickets, Madame Nhu: Really Boss? By MART JANE GORHAM Texan Stair Writer Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu’s husband is the power behind South Viet Nam’s President Ngo Dinh D i e m . but she Stands behind him. Anna Dunning, former Univer­ sity student, saki ’I t Is a ’behlnd- every - man - is - a - woman’ t y p e thing.’* LIVED UT VIET NAM Having lived in Saigon during the summer of 1962 when her fath­ er was stationed there in the Air Force, she states that Madame Nhu la a great moralist, “or st least claim s to be.” “When the Americans came ever, Mw decided that the most immoral thing American* coaid do ama to daaee. So she forbid It w n la homes, unless the peo­ ple were married, and then they had to pall tho bttads down,” Miss Dunning continued. “She closed down sidewalk cates because die American GI’s would alt in them and watch the Vietna­ m ese girls. When ar* left, it was rumored she wa* trying to close No Campus Bowl Until Next Week Numerous m eetings conflicting with the scheduled Campus Bowl tilt this week have caused It to be postponed. Richard VanSteenkiste, cochairman of Campus Bowl, said Tu sad ay night. The fact that many students will be leaving for Dellas Thursday night was given as another resunn for toe postponement A playoff wfD be beld next a u k batteau toe YR's and Delta Tau D a l I a, VanSteenkiste said. The pos tponement w ill also give organ!, asthma which recently accepted a place In the Campus Bowl compe­ tition a e h a n c a to read y their H u m . down toe bars, which would leave toe Gl’t next to nothing to do.” Approximately 8,000-12,000 Amer­ icans arere in South Viet Nam then, and most of them were in toe field fighting. Yet, while In Saigon, she observed hundreds of young Viet­ namese men sitting in cates all day. “I don’t know where they get their soldiers,” she said. Hoe Nguyen Van, student from South Viet Nam, Is looking for­ ward to bearing Madame Nim speak here Ooh 24. He thinks American papers and m agadnes tend to amplify toe Vietnamese situation and perhaps he too criti­ cal of her. “Ste is not actually feared by the people, rather thought of as a ‘pretty congressman' and has tome a lot of good social work,” he says. “I have heard many people talk about the power she has, but I don't have any proof of it.” CATHOLICS VS. BUDDHISTS Discussing the conflict between the Catholic - headed government and the predominantly Buddhist population, he noted the protests against toe government by the sui­ cides of the Buddhist monks. said. “But “This Is toe first tim e monks have burned themselves to death In Viet Nam or any place la toe world. Even la toe Buddhist re­ ligion, death by suicide hi pro­ t h e hibited,” he Oommuatete profited from tote.” He expressed the belief that the Communists forced some of the monks to kill them selves, “In some of the backward regions, the peo­ ple don’t have any security. They are susceptible to Communist-talk that toe monks should fight for their religion, 'not Just stay in the pagoda.’ " Hong Lan Oei, Indonesian stu­ dent, said her discriminating treat­ ment of the Buddhists endangers operations against the Communists there. “It is toe people who de­ termine toe fete of the country. Opposing communism is good, but by Isolating herself from the peo­ ple, abe may find It difficult to fight Communist infiltration.” All fn oatlonad agreed am q u o thing—they will all go to e t a l ake baa lo say. News in Brief . . . Chin piled From AF Reports US WHEAT MAY GO TO RUSSIA. High administration sources said I Tuesday to t United States is on the verge of selling more than 1300. million worth of wheat to Russia and E ast European Communist coun­ tries. P resident John F. Kennedy is expected to announce a grain sale arrangement shortly, perhaps st his news conference W ednesday. afternoon. The news conference will be delayed for two hours—stre n g th -! tming speculation that he might announce at that time his decision on asia of toe wheat. ON WAY OUT? Prime Minister Harold Macmtllaa entered rn hospital Tuesday eight for a prostate operation aad can­ celled plans to tell a Oemarvattvo party rally Saturday his plans for toe future. Reports say ho will be away from duties for several weeks. The Prime Mtatetcr’s Hines* revived speculation that too m . year-eld Macmtllaa’* days la office may ho numbered. TWO KILLED IN ALGIERS. President Ahmed Ben Bella, already battling an Algerian Berber revolt, charged that Moroccan irregulars attacked Algerian troops Tuesday and IO persona were killed. “ If necessary,” Ben Bella declared, “we will arm hundreds oi thousands of Algerians” to put an end to the rebellion of the revolting Algerian Berber tribesmen In toe Ka by lie Mountains. W X « t • AIa*ifldar g o t * foe • la w n photogrephac in t a r t of a falsa "Athletic Councei" seed. A clever counterfeiter adds finishing touches with pen and ink. But, alas, the ubiquitous Kampus K e g triumphs again along with ju*tica and th# Administration, An Object Lesson for A ll Would-Be Counterfeiters, or The Wages of Sin —Texan Photo—Dead#? Texan Photo—Genet* W ilson W orking On Rights Little Man on die Campus By Bibler Shoe on Other Foot, Rushees View Actives By SHARON SHELTON Editorial Assistant Fall rush had every outward appearance of being l i k e any rush In the p a st D rat store win­ dows w e r e teeming with the latest in (nil fashions, while on campus, Panhellenic members worked in the usual flurry of preparing for convocations and enforcing rules. Strains of soror­ ity chants could be heard late at night as the Greeks prepared themselves for the annual influx of eager rushees. However, rush week brought a new kind of rushee. Gone was the starry