T e x a n “First C o lle g e D aily In the S o u t h ” Price Five C e n t s A U S T I N , T E X A S , W E D N E S D A Y , O C T O B E R 18, 1961 Six P a g e s T o d a y N o . 4 5 Soviet Union Relents Texan Requests n T reaty Deadline MOSCOW lift Nikita Khrushchev t on condition t h e , W estern powers held out just tile tip of an olive "display settle the branch to the West on Berlin Tues G erm an problem .’’ He did not re- lent in tile least in his term s * 5 to day. the Soviet Union how that problem should be solved, v auld Po longer insist that a Gen- In a s|>eerh to the 2 2 nd Soviet man peace treaty he signed by the Communist Party C o n g r e s s , that end of this year but said this was K hrushchev also announced He declared readiness to ★ ■* Russians Plan Huge A-Blast MOSCOW i f -P rem ier Khrush­ chev announced Tuesday die So- v;et Union is coing to explode a 50-megaton nuclear bomb at the end of tb s month. A 50-megaton blast .'<0 million tons of TNT and about 2,500 tim es m ore powerful than the first US a < rn ic bomb exploded at Hiro­ shima is c!j avalent to He told the opening cession of the 22nd S o v ie t Comm unist P a r t y C o n g re e the weapon will he trig ­ gered on O rt. SO or St and would test he series, which began Sept, I. The aerie* has Included a score of ex ­ plosions, the largest previous one about IO m egatons. the c u rre n t last el the The announcem ent closed out tile 100-megaton po** bilify that a 41 S tu d e n ts N e e d e d to Fill Chartered At least i t students must make reservation* by noon Wednesday in order that a bu* m aj b e c h a r­ tered to Fayetteville for the A r­ kansas • Texas gam e Saturday, M ary Gayle W eber, head c h eer­ leader, said Tuesday. T h e b u s w ill l e a v e F r i d a y n ig h t, probably a t 8 p.m. from Gregory G ym nasium , It will return to Ans th e g a m e . t in I m m e d i a t e l y a f t e r ta k e n a ll d a y a t a booth on t h e W est M a ll In f r o n t o f t h e T e x a s U n io n . R eservations are b e in g S ilv e r A t o r c h lig h t (w*p r a l l y is s r b e d c le d f o r 7 p .m . T h u r s d a y , a n d th e Ix>nghorn Band, S p u r s , Cowboys, a n d c h e e r l e a d e r s w ill team off a t M emorial see the the Austin M u n ic i­ S t a d iu m a n d p a l A irport a t 10:30 a .i n , F r i d a y . D e a d lin e f o r d r a w i n g $1.03 tic k e l s o n a B la n k e t T a x Is 4 p .m . W e d n e s d a y . I n so ld t ic k e t s w ill be r e t u r n e d a t t h a t t im e . m mm m :mmm. m tm m m m m m m m "W e bomb would be tested at this tim e. 100-million-ton a bomb, but we do not Intend to ex­ plode it," he said. have " If we happen to explode it in the w rong place, we m ight break our own windows,’' he explained to the nearly 5,000 d e l e g a t i at the p arty congress in the K rem ­ lin'* huge new auditorium . H * a d d e d , in a r e f e r e n c e to th e d e ity In W hom h e s a y s h e h a s no t h a t w e b e l i e f : “ M a y G o d g r a n t n e v e r h a v e a s u c h e x p lo d e bom b." to K hrushchev thus backed off from the test of the superbom b a t which he hinted on Aug. 31 when he an­ nounced the Soviet Union was breaking the atom ic pow ers’ m ora­ torium on nuclear testing. He said at th at tim e Soviet scientists had "worked out" projects for the con­ struction of a 300-megaton bomb. * W IS H 1 N G T O N m — T h e W h ite th e S o v ie t U n ­ H o u s e c a l l e d u p o n ion T u e s d a y n ig h t r e c o n s i d e r It* d e c is io n to e x p lo d e a 50 m e g a ton nuclear weapon, to Tile White House said in n sta te ­ m ent: "W e know about high-yield weapons. Since 1957 the United States has had the technical know­ how and the m aterials to produce bombs in the 50-100 m egaton range and higher. "B ut we also know that such weapons are not essential to our military' needs. F urtherm ore full­ to scale develop 50-megaton bombs. Such an explosion could only serve some unconfessed poll leal purpose. tests ar# not necessary "W e call upon the Soviet Union if in J o reconsider this decision, fact it has been m ade." " W e b e lie v e th e w o r ld w ill Th«* W h ite H o u s e s t a t e m e n t a d d t h e p e o p l e s e d : jo in »** th r o u g h o u t th e S o v ie t I n lo n n o t to In a s k i n g c a n p r o c e e d w ith a s e r v e n o l e g i t i m a t e p u r p o s e e n d w h ic h a d d s a m a s s o f a d d itio n a l t h a t w h ic h r a d i o a c t i v e r e c e n t In h a s w e e k s ." fa llo u t to u n l e a s h e d te s t w h ic h b e e n S o v iet s c ie n tis ts w ould to u c h off a 5 0 -m e g ato n n u c le a r b o m b , e q u iv a ­ le n t to 50-m illio n to n s of T N T , at th e cm l of October. He also said the Soviet Union has a bomb twice that s u e , hut would not explode it because 41 we m ight break our own windows " lim it for On Berlin and G erm any, K hrush­ chev said, "If the W estern powers displav readiness to settle the G er­ m an problem , the question of the tim e the signing of a G erm an peace tre a ty will not be so m aterial: we shall not insist that the peace treaty be signed by all m eans before Dec. 33, 3961," the date he had previously set. B u t h e w e n t o n : “ T h e G e r m a n peace treaty m ust he and will he s i g n e d , w ith th e W e s te r n p o w e r s o r without them ." He said such a treaty would end W estern occupation rights in West Berlin and convert West Berlin to a "fre e and dem ilitarized city." These term s are just what Britain, the Ur;Ord States and France have refused to consider. K h r u s h c h e v ' g a v e th e I m p r e s s io n he e x p e c te d th e W e s t to g iv e In In the end. In a m ention of Soviet Foreign M inister Andrei A Gromyko’s re­ cent talk* with President Kennedy. U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and B ritish P rim e M inister Harold M acm illan, Khrushchev said, "We had the im pression that the West­ ern powers display a •'ordain un­ derstanding of the situation and are inclined to seek a solution for the G erm an problem and the West Berlin issue on a m utually aecep*- able b a sis." Stumpin' Slated By Student Party two "stu m p " speeches Student P a rty R epresentatives I D ebates scheduled for the par- will hold ties will begin W ednesday in Texas W ednesday before noon and I p.m . ! Union 300 before the Orange Jack- classes on the West Mali to clar- et* and Spooks at 4 p m. Other the platform of debates will be held Sunday at ify and explain th e ir candidates the coming 5:30 p.m . in the Wesley Founda- for student election W ednesday, Oct. ?;on Building; Monday at 3 p m . j in the YMCA Building; and Tues- 25. P a rty m em ber* organized cam- daY a * "* ^ p m, in the Texas Un­ ion Auditorium The last debate, known to the three parties a* "The G reat D ebate," will be held before the F reshm an Council. p a ign strategy in a meeting Tues- iay at 7 30 p.m. Led by Dick Simpson, chairman, the nine m em ­ bers present formed plans to tele­ phone students Sunday afternoon, rallies d iring class hold changes, and enter in debates with m em bers of the two other active campus parties. short Simpson and Larry* Martin. Stu- dent P a rty candidate for Graduate Assemblyman, will speak Wednes­ day at the two rallies, and other speakers will continue the rallies periodically until the election. Other candidates supported by the Student P arty are Jim N'ey- land. Fine Arts Assemblyman; < oven Jordan, Tommie Sims, San­ dy Sandford, and Johnny Weeks. and Boyce A&S Assemblymen Hom burg independent candidate endorsed by the Student Party. Arn Mallet?, Student Party* sec­ the retary. said short copies of party platform will he distributed on cam pus W ednesday, and party* will also sponsor a "G et Out th* Vot«” campaign, International Club Sets Latin A ffairs Program L a t i n American political and economic .affair* will he discussed t h e International W ednesday a* Club m eets at 8 p.m . in Texas Union 304-305 Dr. D, D Brand professor of geography will speak and conduct an open discussion. Coffee will be served afterw ard*. Candidate Data C andidates tor Student Assembly positions are requested to subm it I a picture, list of qualifications, and statem ent of purposes to the Daily icxan, ..ournalism Building 103-B, by 5 p m, F riday. The picture should be a head shot, two inches by three inches. E ach candidate m ay subm it up to fixe qualifications. The statem ent of purpose, w hich m ay be in the form of platform planks, political ! philosophy, o r specific legislative j proposals,* will have an 80-word limit. Co-ops to Hear 'Unity' Platform Candidate* and m em ber* of the Texas Unity* P a rty will visit co­ operative housing units during the W ednesday and T hursday evening m eals to acquaint residents with Student Assembly candidates, their qualifications, and the party plat­ form. in Procedures for the co-op speech­ es w ere announced at a m eeting o' com m unication and the p a r t y speech com m ittees the Texas Union T uesday night. Art* and Sci­ ences candidates H a rry H. Walsh HI. Jerry' A. Gibson, and Joie P. Jones will be assisted by p a r1 v m em bers B a rb a ra Coates, J . C. Kelly J r ., Russell Moore, and Ei­ leen Rodgers in the speeches. One candidate* assisted by one party m em ber will speak to each co-op F o rrest F a rm e r, com m unication com m ittee chairm an, a l s o an­ nounced a new m ethod of m em ber contact at the m eeting The nearly 400 p arty m em bers w ill be listed num erically In a roster to be dis­ tr! Outed in the n e a r future Num­ bers w ill he used by the com­ m unication com m ittee to simplify that Don Y arbrough, p a rty vice-chair­ m an. announced in addition to a review of p arty platform and candidates, the slogan " y o u ’ll get m ore with 2, 3, and 4" will be used In the cam paign. The slogan three Texas Unity refers listed Party* candidates who are second, the Arts and Sciences section of the Student Assem bly ballot. third, and fourth on the to The com m ittee also announced plans for a telephdhe drive to con­ tact p a rty m em ber* on election eve. the contacting m em bers, By DAVE ( R O S S L E Y T e x a n S ta f f W r it e r JACKSON Miss. - Monday a large group of Negroes dem on­ strated here against M ississippi's policy of reserving the first six days of the State F air for whites three day s, beginning and the Monday, for Negroes, rides, such as the The fair was closed for white* Sunday, Workmen began te a r­ ing down the exhibits. Leaving the ferris wheel, the workmen began mov­ ing out the sideshows. When the few Negroes who entered the fair against the hoycott arrived, they were greeted by the rides, 4-H shows, and "velvet-skinned sweet potatoes, pretty enough to eat ra w ." B e r n a r d l a f a y e t t e , fie ld s e c r e ­ t a r y f o r S t u d e n t N o n -v io le n t C o ­ o r d i n a t i n g C o m m itte e ! (SN OCK, t h a t c l a i m e d w a s le ft fo r N e g r o e s wa* t h e p a r t t h a t w a s “ to h e p a c k e d a w a y l a s t . " th e sh o w t h a t a ll Jackson police captain J R. R ay said the Negroes who dem ­ onstrated w*ere hurting the fair which "w a* produced just for them ." Seven person* W’er# arrested during the dem onstration, one of whom w as a minor and m ay bring charges of "cont! lbuting to the delinquency of a m inor" up­ on the sectional leaders of CORE (Congress On Racial Equality >, SNUG and the NA.-'up (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People , AH w ere booked no a charge of breach o f the prat e before the d istrict attorney m ade formal charges. The penalty for breach of the peace Is six months ta jail. The boycott of the fair was considered 90 p er cent effective in Jackson, leaders by SN CC A pproxim ately 200 persons en­ tered the fair on the opening day for N egroes. Last year, over 2,000 attended on the* first day. C ape R ay predicted, "M ore will com e la te r. The first day alw ay* is slow . . H e said, "We expected this trouble and were re a d y ." (A police a rre st wagon Fa lr Protested b y N egroes A f t e r Six Years After ilx long year* , , , « welcome and tear*. Chinese Family United fey BILL HAMILTON ie van Staff W rite r When Eta cg Zoo-Chang left his h rn** in t atoner Fnrmrt*a tn rnmm * boma in Lolling, M tnoM ta c o m a fa r e . a t th . foot of the * an * w ay | ^ to school in Lie Unitea States, he left behind a sacrificing wife and three children, son scarcely a year old. Including a - * .u * rece„ e hls p ,lD F o r M r s . Z e e -C h a n g I The two boys, Chi Sung, age nine ' This year he is ba < in the Unt­ arKj Chi Feng, now seven, found ' ers.ty c h e rn I s t r y departm ent, their fa th e r among the searching worklnS tor *> Roberts and doing ' research for his dissertation, He Ju n f . a and scam pered down to em brace him . Their sister, Chi Liu, II, stood smiling. Mrs. Zee-Chang back, in wiped away te a rs and bowed greeting to D r. and M rs. Royston Roberts, who accom paei xi her h .s- band to m eet the plane, and Mrs, lives next th e n e x t fe w m o n th s w ill h e a p e r io d o f a d ­ j u s t m e n t . Sh© s p e a k s l it t le E n g li s h a n d a c c o r d in g to h e r h u s b a n d , t h e c o n t r a s t b e tw e e n F o r m o s a a n d th e l r. J S t a t e s m a k e * » n e c e s s a r y to t a k e t h in g s slo w ly a t f i r s t . _______ ________ _______ ____ Ch: Liu, Chi Sung, and Chi Feng to the Zee-O iangs’ Enfield wail ’attend Matthew ^ E le m e n ta r y | School. "T hey speak some Eng- d im eras Hashed and other pa** b sh ," their father s a d . "but thev pnger» stared briefly wondering m ay have some trouble in the bo­ il am o u , th .m . T e a r, c u m aealn there had been a celebrity g in n in g " F red eric Kruse, who r f , , m d no, a rum bling Continental Allport Viscount v iTUd the field, down and taxied to a stop near the | Road apartm ent. term inal building, j touched door That was in 1956, and he h asn 't been home since. Tuesday n ght at Robert Mueiler afer a thin Oriental Yu-Lan Zee-Chang, pushing along two m d short pants and j rh The six-year sop- i becaUM ee-Q iang Ie ; w hrt„ g thpm h - country eat a a U * T " " - with rn bouquet of roar*. provide for th . fam ily, ha « « a h ! . h„ ^ t h Midwest R esearch. He is ^ com. iighiands Lniversi > ; p^ny .n d will retu rn to w ork in student Visa to the United S ta te , M ]MV, o( „ bsenre ^ to study at rn New Mexico. The pass did not entitle to accom pany him . so Mrs. Zee-Chang and the I children, five, rem ained in Form osa. . , Ir! order to rem ain in M s « " » • then aged from one to ^ the tomOjr had to apply tor {perm anent residence There is a In 1958 Zee-Chang received his waitm « Iist* and Ze* C han* ex' p e c t s it w ill t a k e at least a year.* the fam ily , ’ , was inside the fa ir grounds be­ fore the opening for the Negroes. The trained dogs which chased awa> the 300 dem onstrators were on location before the opening ) A bystan to r was bitten by one of the cloes and hospitalized for minor treatm ent. Capt. R ay said a policeman also was attacked by the police dogs. m aster of science degree in chem ­ istry a t H ighlands and cam e to the U niversity to study under Dr Roberts. He attended school for a Year, then took a Job with Mid­ west R eseareh Institute in Kansas City doing can cer research on a governm ent-sponsored N a t i 0 n a1 Health Institute p ro je c t Weather; Fair, Partly C loudy Low 52, H igh 82 { I i i M U J Policeman O r d e rs Dispersion A police o fficer orders iw o m em bers o f a pro- test against the Mississippi Stat* Fair to move o n ." A b o u t 15 persons started the first demc Stratton which had no sponsor. " W e Shall O v e r c o m e . . . " Some of the Negroes began to sinq ' W e Shall Ove-r-'m e," while others tried to convince the crowds *o boycott the fair. Trained doos were or* th? ?t*ne to c h a w away the demonstrators who oiocited the gate*. After O 'l H a n d the dcq* were turned en the protester*, or# . - policeman and a bystander were attacked. —-JPfeetoe by trawl* \ % W *d n *»d ay , O r t . J S , l mouth again Tuesday and something came out of every side. On one hand he wa* waving before the world the threat of a nuclear bomb* announcing that Russia will set off the moat awesome blast seen by man on Oct. 31. On the other hand he appeared to be casing up in hi* push for signing an East German peace treaty. Scene of Khrushchev’?; remarks was the opening session of the 22nd Soviet Communist Congress. This is the Con* gross from which Khrushchev is to get official approval of his new 20*year program, to build the ideal Communist state of tomorrow. The Congress has opened with the now-familiar pattern. He Issues ultimatums or threats, bu* at the same time talks of treaties and conferences. This same strategy has been used before—at the 21st Soviet Congress (1958), after the U2 spy plane incident (1960), and after President Kennedy's strong speech on Berlin last August. And there were other familiar noises at the Congress, The Premier was assailing former party bigwigs, as well as the international imperialists He has to Keep the people fupplied with targets for denouncement. It is traditional. It well may be* that Khrushchev has become obsessed with the Idea of actually realizing ideal communism, or at least his interpretation of It. In Russia. And this would be through economic competition with the US, and creating a lite so attractive that the world would turn to Russia. But whether thin Is his chief aim or not. he goes on playing the game. The finger, poking for a weakness, goes down on a territory and it becomes a hot spot. Hr then may decide to ease the pressure a little, but as in Tues­ day's case he wants everyone to know that he’s still carrying a big stick in reserve. In Berlin th* West has >f vol semi-firm and. playing his part, Mr. K. has let up a bit. We obviously must con­ tinue to stand firm, although we cannot promise what will happen if we do. But if we do not the world will be turning to Mr. K. and he won't even need his big stick, his double talk, and his 20-year plan. Guest Editorial Militant pacifism seems a contradiction rn terms but we re seeing evidence of it as the war threat hovers. A group of American peace-lovers vowed to walk from San Francisco to Moscow*—and actually reached the Soviet can.tai by one means and another, not all by foot power. Sir Bertrand Russell and assorted philosophers and play­ wrights went to jail in Britain for “ sit-down” demonstra­ tion* against nuclear weapons. We have our own sporadic outbreaks of “ ban-the-bomb” expressions. There aren’t many in our society who would quarrel with the pure principle that incites these people. Their argument that they speak for mankind s conscience and that violence—nuclear or what we have come to call “ con­ ventional” warfare— is foreign to the best in human spirit can’t be assailed. Unrealistic, yes, but not wrong. And yet it must be contended that the purity of principle is divorced from the harshest truths of today's world. Rome of the active pacifists have adopted such ridicu­ lous slogans as “ Better Red Than Dead.” In other words, capitulate now to international communism and save ourselves to live out our lives In slavery. We can’t buy that! Maybe these hard-working pacifists represent to themselves some sort of emotional nobility when they declare that those who construct nuclear bombs, build defenses and poison the atmosphere are betrayers of humankind. But they do not seem able to distinguish greater from lesser evils. They also achime that all who build and test nuclear weapons are intent upon using them. The United States Is n ot Britain is not. Russia would much sooner gain her ends by using ber own arsenal of nuclear destroyers as a threat—to blackmail us into submission—than actually to court nuclear retaliation. The consideration of a nuclear stalemate tha* will avert annihilation seems not even to occur to the ban-the-bomb zealots. The pacifists, finder whatever label— and we’re not even talking about those groups which th* Reds have Infiltrated for their own purposes— would have the W ext­ ern nations yield their nuclear deterrent because they falsely conceive the only alternative to surrender as world holocaust. They grossly oversimplify their case, so they believe they are the only ones of pure purpose. They miss completely the main point of the argument by those who would keep free men as well armed as their enemies: That the best hope for preserving freedom is alw the best hope for preserving peace— to make sure, by our counters trike strength, that those who threaten nuclear war will never dare start it. U ke most reasonable Americans, we lov e peace as much as any pacifist; but our difference with these one-track zea'ots is that there is something most of th**1 rest of us love just a little more than peace: Freedom. —Buffalo Evening News T h e D a® T e x a n Opinions expressed sn J re Texp»s to rem ak e in his own im ag e the p arty He i taking a lead in g part in th# cam paign rn elect h.s long­ tim e S ecretary of L abor, Ja m e s P. Mitchell governor of New J e r ­ sey, This rac e h as taken added im p ortan ce b ecau se fop lead ers cf both s i r s has e gotten into the picture. Involved h a \ « 'Peers R e­ publicans Nelson R ockefeller and H er ry Ca br t I xvi ce. pius IV rn > e r a -' like L ab o r Secretary Arthur G oldberg, E d w ard Kennedy, and Ad jai Stevenson. O F C O U R SE E V E R T O N E is fam ilia r with R ich ard N ixon'* do- c k ion to r m for governor o' C ali­ forn ia and the sc ra p that it to ensue there R epublican strength in south- ern states has mounted Tennes­ se e and F lo rid a a r *1 notable ex ­ am p les. and even in South Caro- 1 na toe R epublicans, heartened by Kennedy s narrow in they are 1960 have announced g ng to put up can d id ates for the f a t e * key offices, F~orida is a p articu larly bright spot. with R e­ registration mounting, publican they'll and p ick off a * m an y a s s ix H ouse s e t t s in 1962. lead ers predicting lead Little Man on the Campus Bv B ibler WHG LffT Tk” wrzx KUNN*Mi 'N TtfSfcCiMgN THE FIFTH COLUMN By LI EU ES ADK USS * Save your C onfederate money, b o y s; th# South sh all rise a g a in !'* It is c e rta in that the South will eventually Hee. The question I*. once on it* feet, which way will la a trem endous ti g o ? There stru g gle th * South today, and a great le a ! de­ pend* on the outcome. going on within At pre*en*. the rec. hi :s still the control of backw ardness in and ignorance. If not equal op­ portune;. today would be a real­ ity. Som e of its people are still cap ab le of acting like sa v a g e s, as shown by L ittle Rock a few y e a rs ego and. m ore recently, by New O r c - rn and Georg a Uni­ v ersity. . At this very m om ent there :s a crisis in McComb, M.s- sissip p i, Not only in the rac e question, hut rn num erous other asp e c ts, is the South backw ard. Indeed, the I it read s like a m anual tell­ ing 101 W ays to Figh t P ro g ress And back o' the entire m ess is a m yth called States R ights. Som a of the defenders of ti s doctrine go incredible extrem es one e w e g o n g no far a s to advocate stat# control of S trategic Air Com m and Most supporters o t a‘ates* to stat inequality righ ts a re concerned, however, with less in portent things, such In m any southern a s education s nooks the three R',« have been rep laced with Die three I 's —ig­ Isola- norance, * don't ti n u m . Southern want no dam yan kees to tell us w hat to do and ft din’ our leads id eas w hat kids to th erefor* s t a t * * The trouble fight for their right to rem ain ignorant. A s and . trying long ae the South trial st# ’ sovereignty'' ft will bo on difficult to nmk“ any It is rather like hating a football Pmi’o with eleven quarterbacks. fu a it* is tide Th.# though. turning, M ire a**I m ore prop e the in South — most]- college students an d recent col.cee g r a d u a te s— are fighting the bigotry in inc - hom eland, And. s s it becom es in­ c re asin g ly diff cult to gain en­ tran ce to th© college, it will be individuals im elligent the m ore who will get the r ©refit of higher education, who rise to the posi­ tions o' influence in their states H i- old order which ha* bul * a w all around itself will hind that if has hut m ade som ething to h ave it * back to. n p t T - l • • The Firing Line T • C h r i s t i a n i t y To the E d ito r: to Mr, In an answ er J a m e s H ale x letter of Ort. 3. I would like to say som ething which m ay be of help to him. He stared in his letter, “ I am anxious to read an;, thing which will give sound reaso n s for continued accep tan ce of the Chn Mian religion " in If Mr. Hate finds tm # J mig g©M that he read the G ospel a r cording to M. M ark. This was the first Gospel to be written and I* found in the New T estam en t from which we a s C hristians get our theology, It m ight be of in­ terest to Mr, H ale that when the Dead S e a Scrolls were found auld tran slated they varied from our English tran slatio n s of today only about seventeen tim es. There are IMI books tbe Holy Bible so you can see our tran slations a re pretty accu rate. Christianity is the affirm ation o' God s victory over evil and m a n '* conquering of rn s e n . Mr H ale ir d ic a 'e s sensitivity to evil and suffering Christianity deals perplexities E v il, these w th C hristianity sep arated a sse rts, m an and God This estran gem en t w as overcom e for all time in Je- v is Christ whose p erfect obedi­ ence to God * if'iced ' r the d is­ obedience of a j of us. Thn ugh H is death we have been m ade accep table before God, our c re a ­ tor that faith I would like to way to you, Mr. in our Blessed H ale, I a'rd carmot be taught. VY # were created by the to either accept or de ch«‘icf. non nee our Lord and H i* saving grac e . rind given t.od In clewing T would like to re­ ly nd you of the words of our l o r d Je su s which are inscribed on the M ain Building of our I ‘r i ­ know th# v e rs i ty. “ You m i n and the truth shall m ak e you free sh all ’ C. Michael Robin his #06 Ka th en tew P lace * I o u n g R e p s A c t To the E d itor: I couldn t help noticing in the Im partial D aily Texan that the Young R epu blicans of The Uni­ v ersity of T ex a s, who arc inci­ dentally the m ost active ch apter cf the m ost inactive m ajo r party rn the United S tates, held their the T ex as r n liar m eeting a t Union Get 4 The Dally Texan seem s to have considered it n history m aking convocation th# in second the paper. Hnwev er, upon close I exam ination of for It cave iruvu a e for “ w et” cities, you m ust na blinded by your own “ p le a su re ” (or should it he a d ­ diction or stupidity) of drinking. I had the experien ce of living rn a city o n -e t h e n • wet ’ “ dry ’* In that c ’> m isd em ean ors w e-e common and fv © g r e a t*** v ogle cau se w as drinking. Sev­ e ral deatihs vee re the resu lts of the effects of alcohol on a d river. In fa r* on# of the “ Instrum ent* a n i of death w a* a young relativ e of mine That s <-ad, you s a y — y es, but all the grief in the world can t bring ba* k what t h o s e ounces of alcohol took aw ay, sh o u ld h a v e Here you m ay counter, “ He shouldn't have drunk so m uch; tole: a n t e “ I he grant is so that, but foresight much better hindsight. Anyway, that relative offers t o d a y th * tragic plea of «r> many -“ If I only hadn't first drink ’’ t a k e n tha* I .et me grant, also, that there in this World, a very are a few few. who can control their d rin k ­ ing If the' enjoy It « d h a c le a r conscience, well and good. B ack to the “ wet ’ city. L a te r town becam e “ d r y ’’ by a this free and I h ardly fair e > Hon think you ran call young a “ legal loophole.’* Y es, the m ajority did rule. Mr. Adkins, do ye- j belie e in order or ch ao s? Ju s t WHO should decree our n ile * and reg ­ ulation* providing gen eral w el­ fare lf not the m ajo rity ? Since the city c I o s e d fatal accidents cau sed Its tax e r r v and b a r* wo have had no from beer or liquor and not a * m any c a se s of drunkeness a * I h ave fingers lyes, I have tile conven­ tional num ber). T ie city now h as t h a t wonderful rural Christian air. which m akes living so much m ore pleasant. T ip city* h as been ‘ d ry ’* alm ost four y e ars. What Is so in portent Is that the city doesn t provide ax rig an opportunity for an individual to take that d ecisive first drink* •lack A. Max cr Moore Hill Hall S afegu ard s To the Editor: Th*.* institution being * Uni v e rs R of the F irst C lass, should finish what it has s 'ir t e d in sa fe ­ guardin g the girl* of K insolving. It seem s logical that ti Negr -es w ill c o n t a m i n a t e w a t e r f o u n t a i n * and re sir > *s of Kinsolving, they will do n all over this u niversity of the first c la ss. f ‘ eel that Therefore larg e sign s m arked “ w hite'’ or “ un­ c lean ’’ be put over w ater foun­ t a i n and in restroom s all o v er wive re “ Ye shall learn the Truth, ti a Truth shall m a e v *> j and free * taught, if this is done, the girl* of Kinsolving will ha- © the feeling of security* and p ro­ te Hon a s they eat the r h am ­ b u rgers, m ade c l’ G eorge, in the Chuck Wagon, good by Holland Man ck© 1902 Whirl* I Parties S tr iv e to R e p r e s e n t A l l S t u d e n t s Representative Party Student Party I exas U nity Party Th# R ep resen tative P a m a f. fcctionately dubbed R ep P a rty , th# oldest student party on is c am p u s. is organizational Party* m e m b e r s h i p , which la rg e ly Include* fraternities and soro rities a t opposed to being based on md - v idual m em bership “ This stru c­ ture “ Lowell Le h erm an, party ch airm an , laid . “ giv es a contin­ uity that political parti©* ’-•#*#1 on individual m em bership aion# can never achieve “ U nder this ss «-em . the party h as reach ed 33 y e a rs of ag# P a r ty o b jectiv es a re Leberm an state d , “ the involvem ent of stu­ dents In a ffa irs which directly affect them ac ad e m ic ally and in term s of their total activities In the student com m u n iy.” in C onstitutional o b jectiv e* of the p arty prom ote “ stim ulation of an in terest s t u d e n t polities through an active participation in student governm ent, nomination and support of the m ost qualified c an d id ates for the elective posi­ tions of the Students' A ssociation, and prom otion of a sp irit of dem ­ ocratic citizenship and resp on si­ bilities which it c a r r ie s .'' ‘ We «cck to e x p r e ** student view * a s they are and a s they are changing to the ad m in istra­ tion and to the s*a te le g isla tu re ," the party' hoes continued. ‘ We join with other college* in student federation* Uke the Unit­ ed Skates National Student A sso­ ciation and the T e x a s Intercol­ in leg iate Students' A ssociation n-der to represen t effectively the North A m erican com ­ m unity to North A m erican s and to international student g r o u p s," L eb erm an said . student ★ * TO P G O V ER N IN G AUTHOR­ in the Steering ITY is vested C om m ittee, which is com posed of IO m em b ers chosen by the to­ tal m em bersh ip. task s Steering C om m ittee in­ clude a s * sting the p arty ch air­ m an in selecting p arty personnel, deciding questions which arise HOYT P E R M S b e t w e e n convention m eeting* su g gestin g new activ ities and as- * *ting rn the description of the function of standing com m ittees, and m eeting to d;s- three the eus*. th# p arty w *h lead ers of organizations applying for m em ­ bership E a c h m em ber grou p —club, co­ op professional society* or social organization - clee’ * a delegate to represent them . “ For students who do not belong either to an organization or belong to a gro ip which doe* not halons? to the party, the U niversity D u b of th© R ep resen tative P arty provides an opportunity to be heard through the old#** and it oat electorsbv- su ccessfu l political parti* en th# U n iversity c a m p u s,” L eberm an said. T H E D E L E G A T E S conduct party bu sin ess at a monthly con­ vention, P ro p o sals requiring ap­ proval by the total m em bership of each m em b er organization are referred b ark to m em ber groups by* their d elegates. At the following convention, the delegates c a s t a num ber of votes d e’ erm ined by the official m em - ber-roeter of the group they rep­ resent. The d elegate divides his total num ber of votes a s he has been individ­ uals he represents instructed by the Leberm an explained the delegate system w as used only to facilitate work. that The party* has established three standing com m ittees to deal with student serv ice*, public relation*, and m em bership expansion The chairm en are appointed by the party chairm an and approved by the Steering Com m ittee C andidates seeking assem b ly POS’ S or executive positions in th* Student A ssem bly seek party en­ dorsem ent by placing their n am es in nomination The convention d elegates then return to their organizations, d is­ cu ss each candidate, their record and qualifications and are then instructed as to the preferences of individual m em bers, The d elegate* reassem b le in convention and on the basis of th# exp ressed preferences of their organizations, they select the can­ didates to run. ★ * “ S IN C E T H E R ep resen tative P a rty enjoys such a wide diverg­ ence of political attitudes and positions, the exp ressed position of the p arty on cam pu s issu es is m ost often a com posite of the variety of id ea* which are unin­ hibitedly articu lated by spokes­ men from the positions described directionally and a * rig h t," L eberm an com m ented. left the “ A lm ost without exception top­ ics treated in cam paign platform s Have ultim ately resulted sn legis­ lative action by th# Assembly." Two politicaliy-conscions pee­ v e s decided the University need­ ed a second student party and did som eth ng about it. I-a sr N ovem ber Vivien Franklin and Janr#1*. Ney land w ent to work to set up pl new cam pu s political group to ti© christened the Stu­ dent Pa ti'. A third politically-m inded per­ son, D ick Sim pson, “ got in on rh# plan * for the new p arry .” ©rd now is ch airm an of th© party. “ I w as a tran sfer from AAM end Vivien end Jim ju st ie* rn# h an g around while they d iscu ssed c am p u s p olitics,*’ com m ented the p arty chief, Student from P a rty the YMCA larg ely Th# evolved and YWCA and a num ber of the party le a d e r s h ave been active in the “ V T Sr * THE GOY EN ANT of he new group, which earn m em ber sign­ ed upon joining s ta t e d : . , we be' eve the' rh# stu­ dent body of The Un: # r*ify of T e x a s is not properly represented by* a one-party system . . . there is no organ through which indi­ v id u als m ay aet a * individuals in student politics. . . Tile world situation today that intelligent voices d em an d s throughout the world be raised and m ake th em selves heard in the life of nation s; . . . students over th© p ast 'e a r have in creas­ ingly shown a d esire to answ er this dem and, to work “ We pledge . tow ard . . providing can d id a '# * who will rep resen t student needs: we pledge to select and support our can d id ates na the b a sis of indi­ vidual of ab ilities grou p affiliation, re g a rd le ss “ We pledge to involve ourselv es actively In those c am p u s, com ­ interna­ m unity, national, tional a ffa ir s which concern stu­ dents a s m em b ers of a student com m unity.” ♦ and it Ka< the md v insure that the PARTY’ ST R U C T U R E is based or. person i if is asked to sign a party support pledge upon join mg. “ T h .* pledge is to individual know** what he is joining and for w hat the group stan d s. Although m ost m em b ers sign the pledge, there are m em bers who did not and are still bona fide m e m b e rs," Sim pson explained. The p arty , Sim pson said , w as not only form ed to win election s; it has g o a ls within another set of p rin ciple' the It student Student A ssem bly and government should be dealing feels that J the* need to S# w th problem s is solved A * winning elections not its m ain purpose, it runs only c an d id ates it fee:* ©re truly qu al­ ified is not con­ cerned with having a full slate of can d id ates for each election, for office a n i We m ay not c # f N e proposals set up in our platform but the students " i l l know what we b© lieve and w h y." The club, which had 65 m em ­ bers its first year, supports total integration o ' th# University' by peacefu l m eans, * a a group spokesm en D EC ISIO N M AKING Is placed In the hands of the Steerin g Com ­ com posed of m ittee, elected representing groups of 20 individuals each. The com m ittee p resen ts proposals, co­ ord in ates com m ittees, and han­ d les other execu tive m atters. A fter the Steerin g C om m ittee h as draw n up p latform *, selected candidates, or w ritten p rop osals, the m atters are presented to total m em bership for ap p roval. Indivi­ dual votes are c a s t and totaled a s such. E m ergen cy policy decisions are m ad e by the E xecu tive O m m st- tee, com posed of the ch airm an , vice - ch airm an , and ch airm an em eritu s. “ The only tim e the 'E xecu tiv e C om m ittee would m ake policy de- cisions would be when the entire m em bersh ip could not m ew in tim e to decide the question. R eg ­ is decided by u lar party policy the total m em bersh ip voting a s in dividuals M em bers the E xecu tive C om m ittee a re D ick Sim pson, c h airm an ; Vivien F ran klin , vice- c h a irm a n ; and J a m e s N eylan d, c h airm an em eritu s. ’ Sim pson said. of The E x e c u t i v e C om m ittee se rv e s a s p art of the Steerin g in d ealin g with rou­ C om m ittee tine party a ffa ir s. Sim pson problem s “ P a rty m em bers are in gen eral ag reem en t a s to p arty philoso­ phy, The party is m ade up of a group of people trying to think o',** said. “ We a r t not in the business of being the Student P a rty a s such, and if there were another alter­ native to get the things done that need doing we would d isso lv e ." “ Student P a r t y ," Sim pson said , it to change “ is a political p arty becau se h a s real d esire things that need c h an g in g ." a The party, which h as been called b asically a liberal p arty, supports m ore student p articip a­ tion in student governm ent in the governm ent student hope will becom e m ore m eaningful. that < L a b e ls a r e n t everything id eas are m ore im portant. This w as the attitude of th© 35 students who joined to form th# newest student political party, together sprin g last The party, which elected B u rke M usgrove a * tem porary ch air­ m an, had 65 m em b ers before It had a nam e. One day over coffee, Dr F ir ­ m an Havnie director of A m eri­ can Legion B o y s’ State, su g g e st­ ed the nam e eventually adopted, th© T ex as Unity P arty. is The newest cam pu s party headed by a young m an who w as a relative political novice when he entered the student election for head ch eerlead er la st spring. A fter the organizational m eet­ ing, M utgrove stated, “ Our ulti­ m ate aim is for our organization to becom e the second m a jo r poli­ tical party on the c a m p u s." to give the trying whme cam pu s a voice rn student gov ern m en t.'’ the tem porary ch airm an said. “ We are to “ Our only ob jectives are gain respect for student govern­ m ent and to attem pt to represen t a m ajority rath er than an exclu ­ sive controlling m inority c f the stu d e n ts," said M usgrove earlier this sem ester. “ The unique thing about our organization is that we politicians, have no long-time only a group of students inter­ ested rn cam pu s a ff a ir s ," ★ Sr WITH TH E TW O FO LD aim s of establish in g a second cam pu s party, and of exp ressin g student view s, set. to work this su m m er to draw up a constitution and to adopt an organszation al stru ctu re. the p arty m em b ers l e t t e r s w ere sent to the Ivy L eag u e schools and personal con­ tac ts w ere m ad e with neighbor­ ing colleges for su ggestio n s a s to stru ctu re, m ethods of cam p a ig n ­ ing, and p arty serv ices offered by student p arties op eratin g on those cam pu ses. the various A fter studying the su ggestion s, p arty m em b ers adopted the pre­ cinct sy stem . A precinct is com ­ posed of a m inim um of IO per­ son* and m ay be either a frate r­ sorority, organization, or nity, Official Notices Th© Albert A, Bennett Mathematic# Friz,-. Examination for freshman *fu- cents will he held on Saturday Oc­ tober 21, at J p rn, in Benedict Hall 310. D e p a rtm e n t e l M a th em a tic# it m ay he com posed of ted!vi j in with other I rd USL* who pendents to form a precinct. FT .ndependen r : r " * com posed of a**© designated by num bers i p recin ct N um ber 22 O rgan I z form pre Intis ai Lions which nam ed a tier the organization, i the TLO K Co-op precinct, * h FO R a P R E C IN C T o f IO m er rh© precinct chairm an h ers au tom atically th *• grou p ’s repr se re st,* © to the party * FN eel tin-© Council. If the precinct h* more than the minimum numb* of m em bers, or© rep resen t#tis is elected by the group for e a t additional IO m em bers, T ie E xecu tive Council then ' com posed of the precinct chai: men and the elected represent* liv es of the p a rty ’s precincts. Thus body decides such m atter a s party strategic, platform eof tents and drafting, and cand d a te * to be supported. total m em bersh ip votes E xecu tive Council actions an proposals are then presented t total m em bership. Direr the in th© d em o cracy is exercised f th# approve platform s, candidate* and in accept or reject other pre pedals initiated by the E xeeu th Council, in this m anner the tots m em bersh ip serv e* a s a check o th© Executive Council. individual The precinct sy stem stru ctu r w as chosen, M usgrove said. he cau se the fratern ities, sororities c o o p *, and other organization link of perpetuation provide a The ani in em b ers lead er* ar© in the party' only dur ing their college c a re e r and un d er other stru ctu res, th# indiv id uai feels no responsibility to per petuate the party. U nder the pre cinct system , M usgrove explain the organize ©d, the b asic units t,ons Rre relatively perm anan and thus form a stab le p arty. * ★ it this "W E WANT to function a s at organization as well a * a politics he continued. Otic wav p arty , to accom plish through study com m ittees, hr explained and vs© have sc? qp m, o large co m m ittee* which will continua w ork after the fall election. lr this w ay we hope to keep the p arty from dem obilizing after the excitem en t of the election .” Ruben Brown h ead s the study com m ittee w orking to propose a perm anent ad v iso ry system and D ick Jo n e s serv es a s ch airm an of the com m ittee studying adn[>- tion of the pre-registration s y s ­ tem used by the U niversity of California, STA FF FOR TH IS ISSI E DAVID T. I.OPEZ N IG H T E D IT O R .................. D ESK E D IT O R ..................................................... CINDY PEN D ERGRA SS ISSI »: NI MS E D IT O R ................................... N ight R eporter* Nathan Fain, L au ra McNeil, Billy Pumphrey, Bill Hamilton, P at Rusch Copyreader ................................. ........................................... Ja m e s Vowel! IS ight S p o ils E d it o r ................................................. A ssistants ..................... Night Cam pus L ife Editor Editorial A ssistants Bill L ittle, Harvey .................... ........................... Cam Spurlock Pat McClure Arn Ape!, JR.c o a i d V ajax.teen *tit# ......... L ittle Rodney D avis Ja m e s Terry* MARTHA TIPPS have p arties ( ED ITO R 3 N O T E : Th© three sto ries concerning the cam p u s political been gath ered and w ritten by Ann Ape!, E ditorial A ssistan t, who Is In ch arge of the current se rte* dealing with cam p u s elections.) -oming the Wednesday. Oct. 18, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 By BILL LITTLE Texan Sports Staff I m a a a a a a a m m w u w w v m m ^ m m a m w m a / m i , H a n d b a ll Tilts ;I For Squad Slots Set This Week The h ami haft ladder fat it challenge t o u r n a m e n t am ong the top handball p la y ­ e r* at the U n iv e rs ity . E v e r y week e a r Ii m em ber ha* to challenge the person above him . If the m em b er on the lowest rung of tile ladder beet* the one above him. the form er m oves up. The top four m ake up the U n iv e rs ity Interscholastic H a n d b a l l team . The ladder thin week In­ cludes* I. Bori* O rlln; ?. ii ary Ile rn hard : 3. I A rry H ollim an ; I. tv ayne G raham ; 5. Ives Pennington; S. Etonel ( ra v e r; 7. I>cl Turner. Service * P « S Center A u to and Sports Cars v w • Austin H ealy • M G Triumph • Renault Complete Mechanical Servicing & Race Tuning Phone HO-55533 4207 Alice Avenue Must have car, be free 3 to 4 hours in the evenings Earn $50 to $80 per week average. Interviews Thursday, Oct. 19, 8 p.rn 2412 EAST A V EN U E jwssffiiMMWttHW Mr Mh ,»s ■■ im w . last Minute Loss Revenge Sought There wa* only one thing on the the Texas Longhorns their minds of Tuesday afternoon during short workout - get a Hog. It seems the Steers still remem­ ber last year s one point loss suf­ fered at the hands of the Arkan­ sas Razorbacks of Coach Fra n k Broyles, M em orial Stadium was the scene last year, when M ickey Cissell booted a field goal in the final seconds of the game to edge past the 'Horns. 24-23. The defeat a1! but eliminated the Longhorn* from the conference championship pic­ ture. In their brief hour and a half prat hee session, the Steers concen­ trated on polishing their defense and then ran through some condi­ tioning drills. It was plainly visible that the ’Horns are going all out to get the Razorback* and sweet revenge. Coach D arrell Royal alternated his first three units on offense dur­ ing the course of the afternoon. There were no changes in the first two units following last week’s rus­ tle with Oklahoma. Bob Moses and Tom m y Lucas were still a* end Don Talbert and E d Padgett re­ m ained at tackle, M arvin Kuhin Johnny Treadwell were at and guard, while D avid Kristynik held down the renter spot. In the backfield, speedster Jam es Saxton was at tailback while Jack Collins ran from wingback. Ray Poage was ar fullback, and Mike Gotten dir et ted the team at quar* terback. t , My A.# Ifr »$■.*** .is JSM . i‘ i 'I i if f l i J I PO A G E A N D C O T T E N TAUGHT OU TO KNEEL ~ the star-studded Texas sre underrated cr * r$*» av\Vbot of The C a lle t in \ F R A N N Y l and Z O O E Y Now at your college bookstore $4.00 I I T T II, B R O W N 'Mural Schedule x f c a n EL MAT 504 East Ave. GR 7-7023 EL TORO 160! 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Army Deals Packers Jolt % G R E E N B A Y , Wis. i/fi — The CL Arm y dealt the Green B a y Pack- © e m ’ National Football League ti- q tie hopes a join g blow Tuesday q bv calling up scoring champion • line- Paul Hornung and middle b cker R y Nitschke © THIS WEEK a ir p o r t RESTAURANT S LUTU GOURMET DINNER MENU INCLUDES: OYSTERS PO’ BOY Tender!* « Espanola feasted (t#nd*r ? n with h* ki­ te a toned brown ri ca). Served with p vaapp a and figs. A PE&ffCT MENU AND AT- M O S P H IR E SATURDAY FOR OR SUNDAY N IG H T DINNER DATES. THE U N IVERSITY'S O N LY EXCLU SIVE RADIO A N D HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER 20(0 Speedway G R 8*6609 Serving the University area for J I years H IG H FID EL IT Y A T R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S JU ST IO SECONDS That’s right, the famous Polaroid Land Camera gives you a finished picture in IO second . Crisp, sparkling prints just incredibly sharp detail, the best with Po!a ro d I and Pictures ever. Now you can t a b pictures indoors without flashbulbs. The Polaroid v.inklight (not a flashgun) erases shadows. Pictures indoors without flash, 'pie- iur cs finished in just IO seconds. A we need Is just IO seconds convince you. «pU *• C am era Shop — Second Floor ll. 2246 G u a d a lu p e Stre e t q © 2246 Guadalupe Street -g O P e C 0 « Q P e C 0 * 0 P * C 0 « 0 P » C 0 » 0 P * C 0 * 0 P e C 0 » 0 P e , t C O B O P iC O tO P # C O tO P tC O * O P # C O tO P # C O # O P fC O t C li jilt. Gam pbdL ©ntoerffttp ftfiop UGO G U A D A L U P E WHITE OXFORD CLOTH In Our Olin OCLS .Wit ural Model This is a bite butto n dov\n c ollar dress shirt that compares favor- ablv with our regular 3.95 shirt, W e were amazed these could be sold at this price and still meet our specifications—The collar has the correct flair with button in back, and the center box pleat. The body is tapered— pima oxford cloth is tailored in such a way as to give you a neat appearance with each laundering. S A T U R D A Y W I L L B E T H E L A S T D A Y O F T H IS S P E C IA L . Fir** Show I p.m. A D O TS Mc “ i f f . PLAYGROUND ta FINE TOOD! CHILD F B E I 0ffir,> °I***n * *• PLUS! IN C O L O R ROBERT TAYLOR, R IC H A R D W ID M A R K "THE LAW AND JA K E W AD E” T . T . * — T R A N S - T E X A S S A T I S F I E S M O T I E F . N T E R T AI S X F V T G U A R A N T E E . BF . t i It G U E S T I I T O I D O N T A G R E E VARSITY INN P R O U D L Y PRESENTS Joe Monte and his Airliners In Thair F “i t Auitln Appearanca BIG DANCE Wednesday, Thursday, Friday I N orth Lamar S L 3-S brother in an ancient G reek palace, tries in sain to com fort him . T h e ir m other has been m ur­ dered. and the solemn assem bly of Argos is deciding their fate. Will Menelaus. who has just a r­ in the harbor, save h ii rived imprisoned nephew and n ie ce? T he answ er to this dilem m a in the dram a "Orestes** w a* first thought out by E uripides, last of the great G reek p layw rig h ts of the Fifth Century B. C W ednesday through S a tu rd a y nights in Hogg Au dito rium the Curtain to Rise on Orestes And 1961-62 Drama Season E le c tra , locked with her mad words of this ancient dialogue w ill leap from th e ir dusty text, don the g arb of a m elodram a in E n g lish , and spring to new life on the stage. F r o m s t a r t to finish, the p la y will be the pro­ duct of persons at the U n iv e rs ity W h e re w as the s ta rt? W ith the G re e k text itself, translated by D r. W illia m A rro w sm ith of the D e p a rtm en t of C la ss ic a l Lan­ guages. J . C. M oll, associate professor of d ra m a and director of the playg said of the tra n sla ­ tio n: "T h e m eaning of the lan­ guage is c le a r and v iv id . . . Dr. Arrow sm ith is anxious to fake the G ree k w orks out of the realm of the textbook and m o d em th e a te r," into the less M o ll, interested in arch apological reproduction than in good theater, said "O re s te s " is being presented as a m elodram a and should be appreciated as such The chorus, M o l l com­ mented, w ill have "m u c h m ore freedom and a p p e a l than is usually se e n ," M a n y persons at the U n iv e rs ity w ill v ie w their w o rk when the curtain rises at 8 p.m. W ednes­ d ay on this first Department of D ra m a offering for the season. Am ong these people w ill be Paul R einhard t, who designed the cos­ tumes. T his is the firs t produc­ tion for R ein h ard t as costume de­ signer since filling the v a c a n c y left by the re tirem e n t of M iss L u c y Barto n last spring. F rederick Glenn is cast in th# title role of O restes, and h i 9 sis­ ter E lectra is played by E lle n Moses. The beautiful Helen, for whom the T r o j a n W a r w as fought, is portrayed b y Susan Rae Worn stock, M enelaus, who cam e, but not to rescue is played b v Robert P a lm e r: T yndareus by William F o w l e r ; and P ly a d e s by P a t R ucker. Enap plaud ed ind ivid uals Im ­ to the p la y a re portant Jo h n Rothgeb, w ho designed the set­ tin gs; H . N e il W hiting, w ho set up the lighting effects; J o h n S w a n a y, who composed the m u­ sical sco re; the U n iv e rs ity S y m ­ phonic Ba n d , who played the score for re co rd in g ; and A yn n M ille r, who provided the choreo­ graphy. Tim e has not altered or ta r­ nished the basic problem s of soc­ iety, d irecto r M o ll feels. G re e k plays, he said, present the uni­ v e rs a l conflicts of life. "E u r ip id e s w as w ritin g du r­ ing a tim e of slow? m oral d e c a y ," " W e a rc experi­ M o ll reflected encing m uch the sam e thing to­ day, and I b elieve the p la y can point this out to us." taxes and $1 Tickets, 75 cents for students w ith blanket for adults, can be purchased at the M u sic B u ild in g box office from 9 a m. to 4 p.m . daily. C urtain tim e is 8 p.m . T he D aily T exan Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 C O H U N G T O T H E F A R A M O U N T T H E A T R E T I I I Y E A R ' S M O S T E X C I T I N G PIC T U R K ' THE DEVIL AT 4 O 'C L O C K " • F R A N K S I N A T R A S P F : N I F R T R A C Y T O D A Y a t i n t e r s t a t e N O W S H O W IN G ! F E A T U R E S ; ________ - 2: Oft - I OO *. (Mi - X (Kl - IO.OO FANNIE ADULTS LOO M D C .50 C H IL D .25 COLOR* STARTS TODAY! Due to the abnormal subject m atter of this m otion picture, absolutely no children will be allow ed with or w ith o u t their parents . . , uniform ed sp ecial p o lice will super­ vise admissions. T T S. — T R A N $ T E X A S s a t i s f i e s : M OS IF F S T E L T A I N MT. N T G T A R A S T E E B F O U R GT F S T I F Y O ! D O N ’ T A C , R F F Starring PETER GRAVES LITA MILAN DOUGLAS FOWLEY TIM CAREY t i PASS LIST SUSPENDED OPEN DRIVE I N OPEN 6:00 A D U LTS SENIOR M D C «• . . . . . . . LOO .50 mmm\tom I , sh- ■ Natal ie Wood r ■■ r [\\ alreh Beath * | M m iNGC.au KAZAN - TECHNICOLOR* I m W ARNER BRO S I I — - ■ M IV; *”J* J rV I-l mj mr III ■ , IU. ... . O' V A R S ITY L H m I i -P E R F O R M A N C E S - 1:30 . 5:00 - 8:30 — P R K ES — M A I F e e . , Sa I A C A D E M Y * A W A I ? G V ~ ~ r ~ l ADULTS “ohE? L « tH M D C YEAR'S BEST? C HI1_D LOO .75 .50 a u s t i n Rock Ju d so n ;''Gina Lollobrigida Sandra Dee • Bo bby Darin • Walter Slezak "Go, m September ----- from CHOICE $ I ** ^ corn fed hoary beef . , . served with French fried potato** and cole slaw, r* %R ES TA U R A N TS 4 Convenient Location* in Au*t!n WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18 MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM, 7:30 P.M. G E N . A D M . . . . S2.20 S T U D E N T S . . . SI.65 •• fax included also Jackie Kent-- "Miss Houston 1961" and Jo e Di Stefano — Sonora Recording Artist Meet "the Cajun," Miss Kent, and Mr. Di Stefano in TEXAS UNION 202 from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, October 18. Public invited. Justin's new album, "I Gawr-on-tee" will be on sale at party. Autograph party will be broadcast "live" on KAZZ-FM. LUCKY TICKET HOLDER AND 3 GUESTS TO DINE AT VILLA CAPRI WITH WILSON AND OTHER STARS Tickets Available at 0 0 The Record Shop - Union Main Desk -- J. R. Reed Music Co. • • 2 # £ ^ Pretend* tor the Pin t Time in Aditio CARL BUTLER Current Star et tt»e G rin d Ole Opry Saturday, October J! BIG DANCE & SHOW G I 3-9466 6208 N. Lamer Doug'i GALAXIE Club 6200 N Lamar Itvd. Bands 5 Nites Weekly A N TI S P E C I A L A T T R A C T IO N S 2 D A N C E FLOORS THE G A LA X IE R O O M THE STA R LIG H T R O O M S P E C I A L P R I C E S F O R P A R T I E S A G R O U P S B Y A D V A N C E R E S . S p e c i e ! P r i v i l e g e M e m b e r * e h i p e n o w b e i n * I w o r t ! n p n t personal raqoait ie Unirer- • ity atodenta t i pre, et ere »F nter. F O B I N F O B R E S . P H O N ! G L 1-3124 DELWOOD B O X O F F I C E O P E N S 6 . 0« A D M I S S I O N 00r THE G U N S OF N A V A R O N E G re g o ry Peek. B a r id N it r e S ta rt* 7rIN — P in s —- FORBIDDEN DESERT P ro filr of the M iddle Ea u ! S ta rt* 10,07 STARTS TODAY STARTS TODAY • • ® t m S O U T H C O N G R E S S B O X OF F IC K O P E N S 6:0« A D M IS S IO N nots V O Y A G E TO THE BOTTOM O F THE SEA W a l l e r P i r i r e o n J o a n F o n t a i n e S t a r t * 7 1 5 THE SEC RET'PARTNER S te w a rt G ra n g e r S ta rt* 9:16 A Fall Film Festival Presentation M o v i e E n t e r t a i n m e n t G u a r a n t e e d ! B e O u r Gue»t If Io u D o n ’t A g re e ! OPEN AT 2:00 Features: Introd uc ing... Sill o -ette The only pre-electric shave lotion made especially for w o m e n — • C a n Ba U i a d W i t h A n y E l e c t r i c R a z o r • Absorbs A ll Perspiration • G e n tly Lubricates Skin Pores • Sets ta c h H air for C loser Shaving • C om pletely Eliminate* Harsh R a x o r D rag SOLD O N L Y AT STORE N O , 4 O N T H E D R A G No Cosmetic Tax! 2 oz, B ottle 4 oz. B ottle 59< 9 8 i Carolyn Porter Claims Twirler Needs O n ly Basic Skills and Self-Confidence S h e s o c ie t y ; b a n d y w o m e n s s c h o la s t ic a . e r a g e n iv a l Queen last spring by D elta Sigm a Phi fraternity, A s e n io r hcym e e c o n o m ic * m a jo r a f th e U n iv e r s it y , sh e m a in ta in s a 2.1 is a m e m b e r o f T a u B eta S ig m a , n a ­ a tio n a l m e m b e r o f th e H o m e E c o n o m ic s C lub and a n a d v is e r a t S c o ttish R ite D o r m ito r y , At the U n iv e r s ity o f H o u sto n , sh e n a * into D e lta G a m in a . bu t is n o t a ffilia te d w ith the c h a p te r h e r e N O T B E IN G A B L E to sit w ith h e r d a te at. a fo o tb a ll g a m e d o c s not b o th er herr slip sa id “ I'v e o n ly been to one fo o tb a ll g a m e at w h ic h i w a s n 't w ith lik e to sit th e r e , b e c a u s e o f th e c o lo r and e x c it e m e n t . Y ou c a n a lw a y s be th** g a m e w ith y o u r d a te a f ir e B e s i d e s .” “ m o st of sm ile d th# S e x « I ’v e gnn# w ith h a v e been in th e b a n d , t o o .” 'h e h a n d . I in itia te d s h e “ The actual a m o u n t of tim e I p rac tice tw irling is about IO min- uies a week, though I ’m a t band reh e arsal about p w eek,” said Carolyn P o r te r a s she leaned back reflectively on a blue throw pillow which m a tc h e d h e r e y e s . five h o u r s M i s s P o r t e r is o n e o f tw irle rs in t w o t h e the Longhorn feature B a n d . “ T w irling I* like ty p in g .” ah*' ex p la in ed . “ Once y o u 'v e got the basic akin* you don’t need lot*- of p ra ctice, ju st brushing up from tim e to t im e .” B a s i c s k i l l s a b e g i n n i n g t w i r l e r to m a s te r, s h e s a id , a r e not h a * b e in g a f r a i d t h e b a t o n w h e n throw in g it u p a n d n o t d r o p ­ p in g th e b a to n . T h e s e a r e *he m a in things to get over. Self- confidence h a s a lo? t o d o w it h it . t o c a t c h is S E L F - C O N F I D E N C E s o m e ­ t h in g C a r o ly n P o r t e r h a s . E x c e p t 'or- d u e t n u m b e r s w h i c h p e r ­ t h e o t h e r fo r m * w it h I r e n e P .e e d . f e a t u r e t w i r l e r , s h e m a k e s u p h e r r o u t in e s w h i l e on th # f i e l d d u r in g a p e r f o r m a n c e . I a r g o c r o w d s d o not m a k e h o - n e r v o u s e i t h e r . “ I in*? th in k o f t h e m a s w a l l p a p e r ” s h e l a u g h e d . She w a s rather u nnerved ber f r e s h m a n .t e a r , h o w e v e r , w h e n sh e w a * a I n lv e r sity o f Houston tw irler p erform in g o n a sta g e at a p e p r a J ly , the m a saS t which is a live cougar I didn t finish m y ro u tin e ,” she s a id . join MISS P O R T E R began tw irling a* "kind of an a c c id e n t.” “ My bes? friend played th# flu’*' in the band in the seventh g rad e so I w anted to the band. The g id who ta ug ht flute w a s the d r u m major in the high school band and also taught twirling, so m y n other said that I m ig h t as well take lessons in both. the flute,” she com m ented. to play still like I She b e c a m e , successively a m a ­ twirler, and d r u m the Dickinson High jorette. head rn a s o r cf School band. lr it w a s t h e r e S h e w a s a T e x a s S ta r w h e n sh e e n t e r e d t h e l ith c r a f t y a s a s o p h ­ o m o r e 1959 V in c e n t D lN tn o , I x in g h o r n B a n d d i r e c t o r a*ke h a \ e tw irlin g schools in th e surm ne n e r and contests d u r i n g the v truer to to k een in t e r e s t u p , ” sai i M iss P r?< fo u r I n c h e s t a ll Illinois. At t h e s e F i v e f e e t “ I t h r e w m y b a to n u p a ir a n d it la n d e d in in th e th e c a g e o f w e i g h i n g 110 p o u n d * . M i*- P o r te r w a s nom inated \ a r a b y C ar fo r IJO *— 4 C P C D CT) O h C\> c o C gen co en C o CNI c\a CS* h - o FEATURE TWIRLER Car t h e L e " a n e n B a r d F o r c e r '■•vs t h e rrr - e a v e " . 5 b a 'd c T e * a s a a m e C r , I he ie* / / — f K e n O , a /-Jeull!ll A n / t o u n c c J II L i j o i l a ( c s M t. Lee Miss Phyliys 2422 Guadalup© GR 2 9266 Wednesday, O c t. 18, 1961 THE D AILY TEXAN Page 5 t a i O n » ^ J f e n M edne.Mlay S .45 and 2- Clay M n era ls Confer­ ence, T ex a s Union, 9-12 a n d I - 4 - D r a w i n g for Ari ansa* g a m e tickets, O r e g o n Gym. 9-5 —Student d irec tories on sale. D ra g book Meres a n d Jo u rn a lism UNIFORM ~ CENTER PROFESSIONAL W EAR • D O C IO R S • D E N T IS T S • NURSES • HOSPITA LS • R E C E P T IO N IS T S • B E A U T IC IA N S # r e s t a u r a n t s • I N S T I T U T I O N S 121 W . 5th S t r e e t G R 2-6891 D ISS E R T A T IO N S . T H E S E S . BOOKS. rep orts N e w sym b ol eq u ip ped elec­ in R itch ie, clo s# tron™ tic. M rs GR 6-7079 M ARTHA ANN Z IM .F T .Al B A A co m p lete p ro fessio n a l ty p in g sen-- I--* tailored to Lie needs of L tm er- sitv stu d en ts S p e c i a l k r \ hoard eq u ip m en t soler. e, la n g u a g e a - d en g in e e r in g th e se s and d s sa n a tio n * fo r P h on e GR 2*32;0 More I o n v ea ien tlv Located Ar Our x I* W Addr. «s 30131* G UADALt P E M rh til th in e M tm eographlr.g X e r o x in g Th eses-1*-i p eri-P rin t! t t At S -T E X D U P L IC A T O R S ion East l i t h P h o n e GR 6-6593 in c . e c o n o m ic s , E d P . fin a n c e in su r a n c e , a n d tio n a l tr a d e . G a r r iso n Ii ti] J. 3 T S P B o a r d m e e tin g , J o u r n a l sm i ng ish . in te r n a ­ B u ild in g . I D r R . F . B un n to r e v ie w “ R ise th e T h ird R e ic h ,” a n d F a ll o f J u n io r B a llr o o m , T e x a s I m on. I A p p le p o lish in g p a r ty f >r P la n II st ’d e n ts and th e ir p r o fe sso r s. S ta r Room, T e x a s U n io n . I 13 a n d 7 15 - In q u ir y c o u r se , N ew m an Classroom,; 2016 G u a d ­ alupe. i 15 B u s in e s s m e e t in g o f C o m ­ m e r c ia I A rt S tu d e n ts , E D H a ll. s lid e ru le S c ie n c e 7 -8 '3ft T a u B e ta P i's E x p e r im e n t a l c o u r se , 7 —C o m m u n ity S e r v ic e C o m m itte e , U n iv e r s ity “ Y .” 7 A ll-F r e s h m a n C o u n c il m e e t in g , B a t ts H a ll. 7;30- Y o u n g R e p u b lic a n s C lu b Jo show film , “ C o m m u n ism on tile M a p .* J u n io r B a llr o o m , T e x a s I ’ n io n . 8 “ O r e s t e s ” D e p a r tm e n t A u d ito r tm . to I e p r e s e n te d bv cd D r a m a , H o g g Da l l a s H o l t on. ! O P T I C I A N " 0 6 YU. l o t h ar W e s t A e. AI M I X , T I X AS (rd.: " e s • S u n plat es * C i t acts NOTI CE! ! • S T U D E N T S • 6 Shirts Laundered and Folded for 99c W ith an O rde r cf Dry Cleaning C A P IT O L LAU ND R Y AND DRY C L E A N IN G C O . s u b s t a t i o n s AT 30th J Du-*! 24th i San A a le e ie RECORDERS SB M O , VS ilh 7 Reel* |1 ? 8 # Me. *10 a f f J I AL ll Month Rate* V irgin si C alhoun Ce rn j pro T Y P IN G S e n tee 2914 B e a n o s (Cor 3Gt'n * (J u st N orth of T ow n#* H a il) (. R 8 .’636 Call or corr® bv GR 6-8526 *•234 < > st a J a-1 ur>< W ould lik e to ty p e m an u scrip ts edit or ta d isserta tio n s, research papers. P refer­ work for p ro fesso rs and Saw stu ­ ably dent*. Had th e sis exp erien ce at C olum bia U n iv ersity , s o rn e M rs M .'Clyman GR 7-1259 \ n ORIGINAL r W I L IM PO RTS SCIF .’N TI F i r MA N I SCR IP V T Y P IN (I ta b u la tio n s E x p erien ced , Rea and satiab le M rs Moor* HI 2-2984, T H E S E S A N D 511 JLT ILI TH IN G A N D P R IN T IN G D1SSI it I A I IONS sp e c ia lty A z t e c P r in tin g C om pany 1706 San J a cin to GR 2-5820 T H E M E S, LAW N O T E S, o u tlin es. 25c d ou b le sp ace GR 6-4717 ACCURATE B E A U T IF U L T Y P IN G — IBM electro m a tio LAW W O RK S P E ­ C IA L IST R eason ab le. C ou rteou s, con- sclen elo u s. co n sid e r s t« s e n ice. C a l ) GR 8-7079 DISSER PA! fo.VS r H E S ! sC RE legal pap ers, m an u scrip ts PO R TS E lectric GR 2-8402 D w ( F R 0 M T M s MEXICO To give . , * fo wear . . . to own . , . H a n d picked objects from the fo ur corners o f M e x ­ ico. B UL A S K I N N E R ' S STUDIO NUECES 1705 Nueces GR 7-5418 I I r r I IIH Ii r 1 1 1 * 2 9 t o »N I OK YfUO W , * 4 5 * 3 4 * 5 0 t o IN • OX "•*. Hi l f GCH D f t iClt flu * n j AMAZING V AIU f IA MONO SENICH UNGS OK GOLD, STADING Af JUST *78 OO t i t INCU'DID A Y E A R T O P A Y ! p l * * A FULL YEAR TO PAY! I E Z A L E S rn v J m W e s I . EE KV 5E5 The Daily Texan C L A SSIFIE D A D I F H I ISING r a t e s ................. I Encl* W o rd i 15-w ord m in im u m J ( I F; inch on* fir** C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G D E A D L IN E S ................................. M ondav, 3 30 f rn T esdav P u n tte d n e s d a T ex a n . T u esd ay. 3 30 p rr,. W ed n esd ay. 3 .3 0 p.m . T h ’J.* »ds» T ex a n T h u rsd ay 3:30 p m . F rid ay T exan 3 .30 p m . S u n d ay T e x a i in th e even t 1 f errnr* tra d e in a - a d j ertls- -cent im m ed iate n o tic e m ust be a .«>n as th e pub) sh crs a r e resp o n sib le fo r o n ly o r e .......... ..................... .......... ......................... . F rid a y , in correct In sertion. Call GR 2-2473 Rooms f or Rent W a n t e d T y p i n g C A M P U S GNK H A LF rf mr sr r- large t i lt *ho C lean A ttractive, •VS W est 26, t.R 6-.T,?J3 Furnished A p a r t m e n t s R A V IN E TE R R A C E TU RF ECT b ground fo r m odern I i ny A r d tinned F i r e p a n * v com mod tw o -th ree-fou r 2053 Sabine Git 8-3 tiv e e ft h enry, or room U N IV E R SIT Y AREA LATHES Att sr Ii In- Wir* 7 furnisl to room . U tilities share apartm en t ru m pu s GR 8-5528 N E A R LAW SCHOOL B o y s’ lo’ tw o bedrt* furnished d u p le , frlgernte d GR A 344 I J ii 3 l f 3 a : r. "■ at* I n.wr* CON TEMPI >RARY O N E BEDRt IGM ex poxed beam ct P riv a te pat io trigs. D a n ish m odern tin n ed etc. St rn. KU shoot to I Si IO-JI25 w a ter furnish ed S ee a f 1807 W ood law n , then can L ock ­ hart,. GR f- 26 bt GS-; 8- >575 air ronai A T C A M E L S — A I TRACT IV ELY fur- nighed e ffic ie n c y ap artm en t , w a ll to w a ll c a r p e t F u rn a ce heat. 1920 Speed w a v , CIR. 7-6818 cy. Amp l e s t or e sm N E A R UNIVERSITY'. Q U IT ! e ffic ie n ­ F r e e park in g B ill* paid, 869,110 sin g le JTP.OO doub l e . GR 8-WW4 Special Services R E N T — FURCH ASE T V a Alpha T e le v is io n Rental GR 2-2692 T -V .'S KOR R E N T by w eek or m onth. R ental p u rch ase plan. J o h n n ie ’s rI V R en ta l 26C1 S outh First HI 2*1105 NO W O F I EK ING KR! K d eliv ery Sn th e U n iv ersity a rea . J u s t call R om e Inn a fte r 5 p m GR 6-6111, Miscellaneous YOU CAN G I T ea rly m orn in g dr liv e n -our in o f D a lla s M orning N ew s h o m e or dorm itory w h ile A u stin GR 6-5822 to i n u r e C O N SE R V A T IV E S: N A T IO N A L RF VIEW m a gazin e sc h o o l-'e a r stu d en t rate $3.89 130 Ka T i * 5 New-_York 16 Lost and Found $15 R E W A R D FO R w a llet lost in I nl­ v e r s ity a rea J oh n W in ter, GR 8-8991. F O U N D : T H R E E D R E S S E S In m y car. GR 8-8430 W IL L T H E P E R SO N w h o accid en tally picked up the p h y sics hook in P h y s­ p lease ics B u ild in g 203 O ctober 16 p h on e Leg M uenzler < ,R 7-0516 needed for u sa g e BLOOD D O N O R S— Ail ty p e s o f h o o d in Austin P r o fe s­ sion al donors now accep ted . T ra\ s C ounty Blood Bank, 290* B Red River SEN IO R OR G R A D U A T E stu d en t to four bedroom h om e sh a re sp a cio u s Your share. *37,5” Call GR 8-2136 H elp W a n te d C H RISTM AS H E L P N E E D E D . H ave o p en in g s tim e hite Above a v er a g e ea rn in g s Ap p l . fou r m en. Dart for 1211 W t 34 T H \t rsd & t 7 ;30 cum For Sale ’.960 R E N A U L T D A U P H IN E , H eater 17 uOO m iles. 35 m p g 8895 E x c elle n t con d itio n . A fter 5:00 p m ,, GR 6-5181 BARG I INl U N B E L IE V A B L E KEF RS ■ -NS 95; (I uals- -$11 95. $6.95: hub* Hps G aKes phigS, ej # sk rf* s o l v ­ accessor! es. T e x a s h d r m anifold s, g r ille > Auto. 1114 East ’ n' 1952 GAR AV AN MOBIL i iiim *. One ca rp etin g bedroom w all - in • w all $? 200 Alex W ell . GR 8-9327 33 i HEV RI 'L E I ■ KOUR domr sedan . $395. Call HI 2-468” a 'i.T 5 3? > p un SK LL AT i . pri*pt. * an article published Vale Classical Studies H a will l>e assurant director of the Vergilian School in Italy next summer. Hold­ I mvcrsitv ing degrees from the I niversity, of Toronto and Yale Dr, F vans wa* a Thomas Day Sey­ mour Fellow the American at School of Classical Studies rn Ath­ ena Dr. Harry C Avery, also an as­ sis* int professor, former';;- taught at Bryn M awr College His re­ search Interests include Fifth den­ ier ion politics. He tun* I B .C .) the University I t grees has the I niversity of ria of Perris; r- r Princeton University, 111 inc s and .Albright scholar, and was a F D r Sarah new instruct pa pyi Cho h sge and Colui >gy Berm an P -rges. a in >r, is a specialist rid Greek literature, •es from Barnard Col- a U niversity. Campus News in Brief United Fund to Begin Annual Drive at UT •e chief Thursday »* B a d s A iditorium • at the ii being held in This banquet conjunction with the University Homecoming Activities Ar alumni b irbecue and breakfast f >r Life a Members of The Ex-Students Also- n I cia*’on w ill a h i v>e held. R A S A N J A C IN T O C A FE S P E C IA L IZ IN G IN D EL IC IO U S M EX C a n a n d A M E R IC A N FO O D S R E G U L A R L U N C H E S EVERY D A Y AT r e a s o n a b l e p r i c e s Visit Our Rainbow Dining Poem O PEN 7 DAYS a W E EK I6TH A N D S A N JA C IN T O G R 8-3984 Morgan's / ( j n y ? ! Service Free Pick-up and Delivery • • W ash and Grease— 2,50 • Discount on Gasoline, Tires, and Batteries San Ja c in to 4 Duval Phone G R 2-4555 S A V E C O I > - 0 I * DO-IT-YOURSELF D RYCLEAN ALL THESE FOR O N LY 51 S O • 12 sweaters or • 4 m edium -weight men s suits or • 2 topcoats or • 8 pairs slacks or • 12 dresses 29TH STREET CLEANING VILLAGE 604 W est 29th Street O U G uadalupe on 29*h “ ( i i i e thoughtfully and not habi­ tually,” is the 1962 Unite I Fund theme The University campaign which i the U P drive conducted by rep­ resentatives in the various depart­ ments of the University, ii direct­ ed at the 5,000 faculty -staff mem­ bers. “ W e are v e ry hopeful that the University w ill dout e the amount it gave lax’ year/* said D r, L, D, Haskew, vice-chancellor who is in charge of ram- pa en “ That would muse the g- aI $55 OOO. the University ‘'D iet i i not our quota ass gned but is a fair share of the total in Austin. Dr, Haskew anticipates t h e “ whirlwind " drive to be concluded by Nov, I. * * Scholars Choose Europe Tile Fulbright Committee is sending notices no is for personal interviews to be held Wednesdays. Thursdays and Fridays, from 2 to 5 p.m. Interviews w ill be held at the International (..’enter, IOO West Twenty-sixth Street. M ire than 75 per cont of the 32 applicants for the Fulbright Lec- Adv meed Re • ch t (•rants ha e chol en Europe as mc place for their studies. ring and Local TV Permit Asked - a sr-- *nd Austin Application foi i has been television stat lo filed with the Fedora I Communications Commission. If the application is accepted, the r.rw company, the { apitol Telecasting Company, will operate on ultra high frequency Channel 24. Dalton Homer Cobb, an indepen­ dent od operater and owner of 90 per cent of K l KTN TV in Midland, filed the application. He intends to build a 416-ft transmitting tow­ e r on Mount Bonne!] Road with an C"T mated ms! alia non cost of $168 TSO Dr. Bunn to R eview Book Dr. Ronald F *B mn, assistant professor of government, will re- iew “ Tile R se and F a ll of the fin - d R eich ” by W illiam L. Shirer • n the J tm-nr Ballroom cf the Tex­ as Union at I p.m. Wednesday. shiner w ill he ai the University Thursday, Of r. 26 as the f i r s t lecturer in the Texas Union set es A A Beauty Hints Talk Set representative of the Ben Sha>c Modeling Agency' of San An­ tonio w ill tpeak to members of the the Texas charm committee of their weekly meeting Union at Wednesday at 4 p rn. in Texas Union 304-305, D ie talk w ill concern beauty hugs and style trends. Conference Set For Attorneys Taxation Trends To Be Discussed U N S The School of L a w will its ninth annual Taxation t r u s t hold Confer citee for attorneys, of fi-c® i insurance under­ writers arid certified public ac­ countants Oct. 26-28. e trends A im of analyze currant a re a s of taxation, V h •> t h o eonferencp U to In m ajor special areas of oil and ga--, partnership**, farming and estates and trust**, ran ch in g , and life insurance trans term w ill bo review ed, W. Page Keeton, de; La w School, ani] Judge Brown of t e United St. of Appeals, Fifth Circuit side d iring the conte re of the R w ill pre­ i- ice. David W, n, D C . the Past int Worth, k e n vx ii i ond of AV, S u rn rn a ; Ben W . K mt Oil ai So c B ic h ir “ Tax Y e a r " “ C orr ments las, era! W illard G Bowen of Denver. Colo ‘•Tax Problem s of Farm ing and Ranching” ; and Do nm Ingram o’ Austin, “ Transfers cf Life In st it anre.'' “ Partnerships the Den Bract tinner of the Expert “ for Panel dlscusdort m em bers will b e ■ \ ester T, Hughe*, J r . , R ob ert D illa rd , M an Brom berg , and Jo e < Stephens J r . of D a lla s ; Harv ie Bran se o m b and Hubert B, W vllace of I orpus < b r is t!: xf n rv in K Co! lie R. P Bushm an J r . , F ra n k T. R e.i and M J s s M argaret Scar brough of Houston; H over I I -entr .if D e n v e r; George t raven of Ph il adelphla. R upert V . («re*-ham of Nm Antonio; a nu K eith H arrison and W illia m f Frit/ of the School of I.aw facult v . Belton s Day Nursery Noon Mss! c A g e t In f a n t * 6 ye ar* SSI i Colorado GR 8 9 63 Squs-' Boots and Moccasin* Expert Shoe Repair University Boot Shop tis VV "(th St. ".iv e 8 % on Product# V C»*h r*’h:, lf tnt %'”r lf £ I s f- n ft ihf »>nd of (tip sr me* tor on evrrv* I NR I I ft I NOW. thing pi -rh*-* <1 19th A ( V M I’ I - G I L F Sari J a c in t o O B f-ft390 CHARTER BUSES A r O r m i t lo m d ~ *- S u s p e n s io n KERRVILLE BUS CO., INC G R 8 9361 RENT < VI ( t ( V TORS . T Y D VV R U E H S VIJ IMN*. M U H IM X CjK ft 100J S TU D E NT R A T E S iota SOS vt C A D E R A S PMto’sSmiES PLUS COMPLETE SEP VICE A N D C A M E R A REPAIR^ STUOTMAN Photo Service Telephone 6 ? 6 4326 222 W est 19th 1961-62 OFFICIAL STUDENT DIRECTORY I 75c (74c plus Ic Shi ic Hemphill's r n The Co-O p University News Foyt's Stand • Stenographic Bureau • J. B. 107 p H P s odds-on favorite fo r which we predict unprecedented sweater s u cc e ss this Fall, tile I G O U imported Kiama Cape ILr.mbs wool cardigan. Blue, s m o g , snow', fawn or cy press. Sizes 36 to 46, I U G r Important new styling, the zipper cardigan, here in striped all wool with broad striped front and pocket trim. Blue or sage. Sizes S, M, L, 19.95. Ii The much-in-demand bulky look in Texas weight 100*5 virgin woo! given a brawny cable weave that is deceptively light in weight. Two-tone solid trim Tm blue, smog, snow, or log Sizes 38 to 46. 19.95, d The solid color zipper cardigan in J GOG virgin w ool with shaker knit applique sleeves, Alphine marl, sky blue or snow white. Sizes S, M, U 18.95, I i i S s Pu blished by J cx.is Student Publications, Inc Reynolds-Fenland / ; T h e D A ijpr T e x a n "First C o lle g e D aily In the S o u t h " Vol. 61 Price Five Cents A U ST IN , TEXAS, W E D N E S D A Y , O C T O B E R 18, 1961 Six Pages Today No. 45 Soviet Union Relen s n Treaty Deadline MOSCOW (.ft -Nikita Khrushchev held nut just the tip of an olive branch to the West on Berlin Tues­ d a y , tie declared the Soviet Union would no longer insist, that a Ger­ man peace treaty he signed by the end of this year but said this was on condition the , Western powers “ display settle the readiness to German problem.’’ He did not re­ lent in tho least in his terms as to how that problem should be solved. In a s|»oeeh to the 22nd 8 o \ let C om m unist P a r ty C o n g r e s s , that K hrushchev a lso announced Russians Plan Huge A-Blast MOSCOW rn -Prem ier K hrush-I c h e v announced Tuesday the So­ v ie t Union is going to explode a 50-megaton nuclear bomb at the end of this month. A 50-megaton blast is equivalent to 50 million i tons of TNT and about 2,500 times , more powerful than the first US asemic bomb exploded at Hiro­ shima. He told the op en in g sessio n of tile 22nd S o v iet C om m u n ist P a r ty C on gress the w ea p o n w ill be trig gored on O ct. 30 or SI and w ould be test eerie#, w hich began Sept, I. T he •e r ie # has inclu ded a sc o re of e x ­ la r g e s t previou s on e plosion s, the about IO m eg a to n s. th e cu rren t last of the The announcement closed out the 100-megaton -f possibility 7t*r that a 41 Students N e e d e d to Fill C h a rte re d B US “ We bomb would he tested at this time. a bomb, but we do not intend to ex­ plode it,” he said. 100-million-ton j have “ If we happen to explode It In the wrong place, wa might break our own windows,*’ he explained to the nearly 5,000 delegates at the party congress in the Krem­ lin's huge new auditorium. Hr added, In a referen re to the deity In w hom he sa y s he h as no b elief: “ M ay God grant that w e such a newer h a v e bom b/* to ex p lo d e Khrushchev thus backed off from the test of the superbomb at which he hinted on Aug. 31 when he an­ the Soviet Union was nounced breaking the atomic powers’ m ora­ torium on nuclear testing. He said at that time Soviet scientists had “ worked out” projects for the con­ struction of a 100-megaton bomb. ★ W ASHINGTON MT — The W hite House c a lled upon the Soviet Un- ion T uesday n igh t to recon sid er lls decision to e x p lo d e a 50 m eg a ton n uclear w eap on . At lea st 41 stu d en ts m ust m ake r e serv a tio n s by noon W ednesday In order that a bus m ay be c h a r ­ tered to F a y e tte v ille for the A r­ k a n sa s * T e x a s g a m e S atu rd ay, M ary G a y le W eber, head ch eer- leiader, sa id T u esd a y . The White House said in a state­ ment: “ We know about high-yield weapons, Since 1957 the United States has had the technical know­ how and the m aterials to produce bombs in the 50-100 megaton range and higher. R e se rv a tio n s a re being The Inis w ill le a v e F rid ay night, probably at 3 p .m . from G regory G y m n a siu m . It w ill return to A us­ tin Im m ed iately a fter the g a m e . taken all day a t a booth on the W est M all In front of the T e x a s U nion. A torch ligh t pep rally is s c h e d ­ uled for 7 p .m . T h u rsd ay, and the Longhorn B and, Silver Spurs, C ow boys, and c h e e r le a d e r s w ill tea m off at M em orial the s e e Stad ium and the Austin M u n ici­ pal A irport a t 10:30 a.m . F r id a y . H eadline for d raw ing $1.03 tic k ­ e ts on a B lan k et Tax is 4 p .m . W ed nesday. U nsold tick ets will be returned a t th at tim e . wmmmmsm*'' iiwiiwi w"I— nm “ But we also know that such , weapons are not essential to our military' needs. Furthermore full­ scale tests are not necessary' to develop 50-megaton bombs. Such an explosion could only serve some unconfessed poltical purpose. “ We call upon the Soviet Union Jo reconsider this decision, if In fart it has been made.'* The W hite H ouse statem en t add the p e o p l e s e d : “ We b e lie v e throughout the w orld w ill join us In asking the S oviet Union not to teat w hich can proceed w ith a se r v e no le g itim a te purpose and w hich adds a m a ss of additional to that w hich r a d io a o th e has been recen t w eeks.'* fallout u n leash ed In I w Texan Requests C a n d id a t e Data Candidate* for Student Assembly positions are requested to submit a picture, list of qualifications, and j statem ent of purposes to the Daily j Texan, ..ournahsm Building 103-B, j by 5 p.m. Friday. Tile picture should be a head shot, two inches by three inches. Each candidate m ay submit up to five qualifications. The statement of purpose, which may be In the form of platform planks, political philosophy, or specific legislative proposals,* will have an 80-word limit. Co-ops to Hear 'Unity' Platform Soviet sc ie n tis ts would touch off a 50-m egaton nuclear bom b, e q u iv a ­ lent to 50-m illion tons of T N T , at the end of O ctober. He also said the So: let Union has a bomb twice that size, but would not explode it. because “ we might break our own windows.” On Berlin and Germany, Khrush­ chev said, “ lf the Western powers display readiness to settle the G er­ man problem, the question of the time limit for the signing of a German peace treaty will not be so m aterial: we shall not insist that the peace treaty be signed by- all means before Dee. 33, 1961,’’ the date he had previously set. Western occupation rights in West Berlin and convert West Berlin to * a “ free and demilitarized city.” These term s are just what Britain. ; the United States and France have refused to consider. K h rushchev g a v e the Im pression he e x p e c te d the B e s t to giv e in In the end. In a mention of Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko's re­ cent talks with President Kennedy, U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, Khrushchev said, “We had the impression that ihe West­ ern powers display a certain un­ derstanding of the situation and are inclined to seek a solution for the German problem and the West Berlin Issue on a mutually accept- j able basis.” I f a | I rv\ I I I He said such a treaty would end But he w en t on: “T h e G erm an p eace tr e a ty m ust be and w ill be signed , w ith the W estern p ow ers or w ithout th e m ,” • I in' Slated 3 c i t P o I pi I VA I V*e I I I By Student Party Candidates and m em b er* of the Texas Unity P arty will visit co­ operative housing units during the Wednesday and Thursday evening meals to acquaint residents with Student Assembly candidates, their qualifications, and the party plat- form Procedures for the co-op speech- ■ 1 es were announced at a meeting of the p a r t y communication a n d ; speech committees in the Texas Union Tuesday night. Art* and Sci-j ences candidates H arry H. Walsh Student Party Representatives j Debates scheduled for the par- III. Jerry A. Gibson, and Joie P. j will hold two “ stump” speeches j ties will begin Wednesday in Texas Jones will be assisted by party j Wednesday before noon and I p m. j Union 300 before the Orange Jack- members B arbara Coates. J. C. J classes on the West Mall to ify and explain the platform of debates will be held Sunday at their candidates for student election Wednesday, Oct. 25. clar- et* and Spooks at 4 p m. Other Kelly J r., Russell Moore, and Ei- leen Rodgers in the speeches. One the coming 5:30 p m . in the Wesley Founda-! candidates assisted by one party: tion Building; Monday at 3 p.m. member will speak to each co-op.5 in the YMCA Building; and TYies-j Forrest F arm er, communication j cam- P arty member* organized a* 7:30 p m . In the Texas Un- committee chairm an, a l s o an- paign strategy in a meeting Tues- ’on Auditorium, The last debate, nounced a new method of member known to the three parties ss “The j contact at the meeting. The nearly day at 7:30 p.m. Led by Dick, Simpson, chairman, the nine m em -1 Great Debate, will be held before ! 400 party m em bers will be listed i numerically In a roster to be dis- bprs present formed plans to tele­ tributed in the near future. Num- phone students Sunday afternoon, hers will be used by the com­ hold rallies during class munication commit tee to simplify changes, and enter in debates with contacting m embers. member* of the two other active campus parties. Ann Mallett, Student Party sec- retary, said short copies of the party platform will he distributed on campus Wednesday, and the partj' will also sponsor a “ Get Out the Vote” campaign. the Freshm an Council, short Simpson and Larry Martin. Stu­ dent P arty candidate for Graduate Assemblyman, will speak Wednes- day at the two rallies, and other .speakers will continue the rallies periodically until the election. Other candidates supported by the Student P arty are Jim Ney- land. Fine Arts Assemblyman; Gwen Jordan, Tommie Sims, San­ dy Sandford. and Johnny Weeks, A&S Assemblymen: and Boyce Homburg, independent candidate endorsed bv the Student Parlv. '--------------------------— " In tern ation al C lu b Sets Latin A ffa ir s P ro gra m L a t i n American political and economic affairs will he discussed t h e International Wednesday as Club meets at 8 p.m. in Texas Union 304-305. Don Yarbrough, p a r ty vlce-chalr- man, announced that. in addition to a review of party platform and candidates, the slogan “ You'll get more with 2, 3, and 4“ will be used in the campaign. The slogan refers to the three Texas Unity P arty candidates who are listed second, third, and fourth on the Arts and Sciences section of the Student Assembly ballot. Dr. D, D. Brand, professor of The committee also announced geography, will speak and conduct plans for a telephdhe drive to rem­ an open discussion. Coffee will be party members on election served afterwards. tact 5 eve. By DAVE CROSSLEY Texan Staff Writer JACKSON, Miss. — Monday a large group of Negroes demon­ strated here against Mississippi's policy of reserving the first six days of Ute State Fair for whites three days, beginning and the Monday, for Negroes. rides, such as the The fair was closed for white* Sunday. Workmen began tear­ ing down the exhibits. Leaving fem * the wheel, the workmen began mov­ ing out the sideshow's. When the few Negroes who entered the fair against the boycott arrived, they were greeted by the rides, 4-H shows, and “ velvet-skinned sweet potatoes, pretty enough to eat raw .” Bernard Lafayette, field s e c r e ­ tary for Student Non violen t C o­ ( HMX ) , ordinating C o m m ittee c la im ed that all th** show that w as left for Negro*# w’fie the p ert that w a s “ to he packed a w ay la s t.” Jackson police captain J. R. Ray said the Negroes who dem­ onstrated w*ere hurting the fair which “ wa* produced just for them.” Seven person* were arrested during the demonstration, one of whom was a minor and may bring charges of “ contributing to the delinquency of a minor” up­ on the sectional leaders of CORE (Congress On Racial Equality), SNCC, and the NAACP »National Association for the Advancement of Colored People). A ll w ere hooked on a charge of b reach of Hie p e a c e before the d istr ic t a ttorn ey m ad e form al c h a rg e* . T he pen alty for broach of the peace Is six month* to jail. The boycott of the fair was considered 90 per cent effective by SNCC In Jackson. leaders Approximately 200 persons en­ tered the fair on the opening day for Negroes. Last year, over 2,000 attended on the first day. Capt. Ray predicted, “ More will come later. The first day alway* is slow . . He said, “ We expected this trouble and were ready.” (A police arrest wagon Fair Protested b y N e g ro e s After Six Years A fter six long year* • • . e welcome and tea'*. -P h o to by Avant Chinese Family United including a son back, fey BILL H AMILTON Texan Staff Writer When Kiang Zee-Oiang left his I The two boy*, Chi Sung, age nine, J This y ear he Is back in the Uni- and chi Fang, now seven, found ■ versify c h e m i s t r y department. . itoterts^and doing their father among the searching research for his dissertation. Ha home in Lotung, Formosa, to come fac€8 at the foot of the gangway hopes to receive his PhD in June. to school In tine United State*, he and scampered down to embrace the n ext left behind a sacrificing wife and him. Their sister, Chi Liu, II, stood few m onths w ill h e a period of a d ­ smiling, Mrs, Zee-Chang threear, then took a job with Mid­ west Research Institute in Kansas City doing cancer research on a government-sponsored N 1 1 1 o n a1 j Health Institute pro ject Although Zee-Chang’s visa did not provide for the family, he vvas abl# to bring them in because of hts work with Midwest Research. He is on leave of absence from the com­ pany and will return to work la June. In order to remain in this coun­ try the family had to apply for permanent residence There is a waiting list, and Zee-Chang ex­ pects it will take “ at least a year.” W eather: Fair, Partly C lo u d y Low 52, H ig h 82 was inside tile fair grounds be­ fore the opening for the Negroes. The trained dogs which chased away the 300 demonstrators were on location before the opening.) A bystander was bitten by one of the dogs and hospitalized for minor treatment. Capt, Ray said a policeman also was attacked by the police dogs. Policeman Orders Dispersion " W e Shall O v e r c o m e .. ." Dog s on Hand - UOiHu* by ir o ttl A police officer order* two member* of a pro* t#if against the Mississippi S tat# Fair to mov# on. About IS persons started th# first demon- Stratton which had no sponsor. Some of th# Negroes began to sing 'W e Shall Overcam e,' while others tried to convince the crowds to boycott the fair. T vr#rd and Hts sa v in g g r a c e . In c lo s in g I would lik e t o r e ­ tho w o rd s of o u r m i n d y o u of i n s c r i b e d Ix)rd J e s u s w hic h a r e on th e M a i n B uilding of o u r U n i ­ shall v e r s ity th e t r u t h a n d tr u th s h a l l m a k e yo u f r e e / ' “ You th e k n o w C. M ichael R obin his 006 Ratherv lew P la c e a Y o u n g Reps Act To the E d ito r: I c o u l d n t h elp n o ticin g in t h a t the i m p a r t i a l D a ily T e x a n th e Y o u n g R e p u b l i c a n s of T h e U n i­ v e r s i t y of T e x a s , w ho a r e inci­ d e n t a l l y th e m o s t a c t i v e c h a p t e r of th e m o s t in a c tiv e m a j o r p a r t y t h e i r in r e g u l a r m e e t i n g a t th e T e x a s U n io n O r t 4. the U n ite d S tates, h eld The D a lly Texan se e m s to h a v e c o n sid ered It a history m a k in g the c o n v o ca tio n , secon d mo<«t prom inent spot In the p a p er. H ow ever, upon c lo s e I ex a m in a tio n for It g a v e It the a r tic le , of found th at I w as unable to d is ­ c o v er a n y revolutionary r e so lu ­ tion, and In fact, I learned that the m ost a c tiv e c o lleg e c h a p ter of Y oung R ep u b lican s is just now In the p r o c e ss of resolvin g that the I nlted S tates should stand firm on th e Berlin i s s u e . If th is Is the e x a m p le of an a c tiv e o r ­ gan ization . then I m isu n d erstan d the con n otation of the word “ a c ­ tiv e .” it H o w e v e r , is hearten in g to know th at a fte r six m onths the Young R ep u b lica n s have follow ­ ed th eir u su a lly am biguous R ich ­ ard N ixon and reaction ary C o ld ­ w ater (b e­ into a d efiant stand hind P r e sid e n t K ennedy! a g a in st E ast G erm a n encroach m ent of U nited S ta te s rights at B erlin . som eone N e v e r th e le s s, should warn th em of the possible c o n ­ se q u e n c e s of their taking this d e ­ c isiv e ste p . It p laces them on a d efin ite spot a s having taken a c le a r cut stand on a m ajor issu e , and this in turn p laces them on stra n g e new footing. A co n sta n t repetition of actio n s such ae th ese could c a u se a loss of the b a sic R ep ublican Identity. The p u b lic m igh t begin to e x ­ p ect the R ep u b lican party to tak e im ­ a m ore c o n c ise position on portant m a tte r s of state, r a th er than th e ir u su al a n ti-d em ocratic or j u s t plain “ an ti” p osition “ ac ro ss th e board ” I! th ese fe a r s prove w e ll founded the R ep u b li­ can p a rty w ill be its neck. in up to S teve W r ie r B row nlee D orm * 'W e t ’ vs. ’D ry’ To the E d ito r: Your a r tic le in Fifth C olum n 1961, w a s W ed n esd ay, O ct. 4 quite b razen . I w onder if it. w ** for em otional pro­ not w ritten vo ca tio n ra th e r than the e x p r e s ­ sion of y o u r ow n belief. It w a s brazen to m e in that you o p e n ly align ed y o u r se lf with the F o r c e s of E v il and a g a in st the F o r c e s of Good, w h en you ridicu led the “ d ry ” c ity . Mr. A akm s. w hen you In sinu ate that you a r e for “w e t” c itie s, you m ust be blinded bv your ow n it be a d ­ “ p lea su re ’ ?or should diction or stu p id ity) of d rin k in g. I had the e x p e r ie n c e of liv in g in a c ity o n c e “ w e t” t h e n “ d r y .” In th at city m isd em e a n o r s w ere co m m o n , and the g r e a te s t single c a u se w as drinking. S e v ­ eral d e a th s w ere the r e su lts of the e ffe c ts o f alcohol on a d r iv e r . In fa ct o n e of the “ In stru m en ts and of d e a th w a s a y o u ng r e l a t i v e of m ine T h a t s sad, you s a y — yes, hut all th e g r i e f in the w o r ld t h o s e c a n t b rin g b a c k w h a t o u n c e s of alco h o l took a w a y . th a t , b u t to l e r a n c e ” H e re you m a y co u n te r, “ H e shouldn't h a v e o ru n k so m u c h ; he should h a v e I is so g r a n t m u ch b e tt e r h in d s ig h t, A n y w a y , t h e t h a t r e l a ti v e o ff e rs tr a g ic plea of so m a n y - " I f I only h ad n t f i r s t d r i n k ,” foresight, t a k e n t o d a y th a t U t m c gran t, also, that th ere are a few in this world, a v ery few, who can control their d r in k ­ ing. lf th e y enjoy It, with a c l e a r con scien ce, vs oil and good. R ack to the “ w e t ” city. L a t e r this town b e c a m e “ dry’” b y a free and f a i r ele c tio n . I h a r d l y think you c a n cal) v oting a “ leg al loophole.” Y es. the m a j o r i t y d id rule. Mr. A dk ins, do you b e lie v e in o r d e r o r Chaos'* J u s t WHO should d e c r e e o u r ru le s a n d r e g ­ ulations p r o v i d i n g g e n e r a l w e l ­ fa r e if not th e m a j o r i t y ? Since the c ity c l o s e d its t a v e r n s a n d b a r s w e h a v e h a d no fatal a c c i d e n t s c a u s e d fr o m b e e r or liq u o r a n d not a s m a n y c a se s of d r u n k e n e s s a s I h a v e fingers (yes, I h a v e the c o n v e n ­ tional n u m b e r ) . T h e city now h a s t h a t w o n d e rfu l r u r a l C h r is ti a n a ir. which m a k e s living so m u c h m o r e p le a s a n t. T h e city h a s b e e n “ d r y ” a l m o s t fo u r y e a r s . im p o r t a n t t h a t th e city d o e s n t p ro v id e as big a n o p p o rtu n ity for a n in d iv id u a l to take th a t d e c is iv e first d ri n k . .lack A. M a y er M oore Hill H all Is so What is * Safeguards To the E ditor: This in s titu tio n b ein g a U n i ­ v e r s ity of th e F m s t C lass, sh o u ld finish w h a t it h a s s t i n t e d in s a f e ­ g u a rd in g the g ir ls of K inso lving . I t se e m s lo g ical th at if N e g r o e s will c o n t a m i n a t e w a t e r fo u n t a in s and r e s tr o o m s of R e s o l v i n g , t h e y will do so all o v e r th is u n i v e r s i t y of the first c l a s s . T h e re fo r e , I l a r g e signs m a r k e d “ w h ite ” o r “ u n ­ c l e a n ” be p u t o v e r w a t e r fo u n ­ ta in s and In r e s t r o o m s all o v e r w h e re “ Ye s h a l l le a r n the T r u t h , the T r u t h sh a ll m a k e vent and f r e e ” lf this is d o n e , the girls of R e s o l v i n g will h a v e the feeling of s e c u r i t y and p r o ­ th e i r h a m ­ t h e y e a t tection a s b u r g e r s m a d e c l ’ by G e o rg e , in th e C h uck W agon, is t a u g h t , good th a t feel Holland M an x * a 1901 W hitts UT Parties Striv e to Represent All Students Representative Party Student Party Texas Unity Pat tv T h e R ep rese n ta tiv e P a r ty , af­ fe c tio n a te ly dubbed R ep P a rty , is tile o ld est stu d en t p arty on c a m p u s . P a r ty m e m b e r s h i p , which la r g e ly Includes fra te rn itie s and is o r gan ization al as so r o r itie s o p p o se d to being b a sed on indi­ v id u a l m em b ersh ip . “ T h is stru c­ tu r e ,” L ow ell L eberroan , party c h a ir m a n , said, “ give* * contin­ u ity the* political p arties based on Ind ivid u al m em b ersh ip alone can n e v e r ach ieve U n d e r this ss stem , the party h a s re a c h e d 33 y e a r s of a g e . P a r ty o b je c tiv e s are. L eb erm an sta red , “ the in v o lv em en t of stu­ d en ts in affairs w hich d irectly a ffe c t th em a c a d e m ic a lly and In te r m s o f th eir total a c tiv itie s in th e stu d en t eo m m u n iy .” in C o n stitu tio n a l o b je c tiv e s of the p a r ty p ro m o te “ stim u la tio n of an In te r est s t u d e n t p olitics th rou gh an a ctiv e p a rticip a tio n in stu d e n t g o v ern m en t, nom in ation and sup port of the m o st qualified c a n d id a te s for the e le c tiv e posi­ tion s of the S tu d en ts’ A ssociatio n , and prom otion of a sp irit of d em ­ o c r a tic citizen sh ip and resp o n si­ b ilitie s w h ich it c a r r ie s .” e x p r e ss “ W e se e k to student v ie w s as they are and a s they a r e ch a n g in g to the a d m in istra ­ tion and to the sta te le g is la tu r e ,” the p a rty boss con tin u ed . “ W e join w ith oth er c o lle g e s in stu d e n t fed eration s like the U nit­ ed S ta tes N ational Studen t A sso­ cia tio n and the T e x a s In tercol­ le g ia te S tu d en ts’ A sso c ia tio n In ord er to rep resen t e ffe c tiv e ly the N orth A m erican com ­ m u n ity to North A m erican a and to .n te m a tio n a l stu d en t g r o u p s,” L e b e r m a n said . stu d en t a * i* v ested T O P G O V E R N IN G At T H O R in the S teerin g IT T C o m m itte e , w hich is co m p osed o f IO m e m b e r s ch osen by the to­ tal m e m b e r sh ip . ta sk s S te e r in g C om m ittee in­ c lu d e a ss istin g the p a rty c h a ir­ m an in se le c tin g p a rty p erson n el, d e c id in g q u estion s w h ich a n sa h t t w M n con ven tion m ee tin g s su g g e s tin g new a c tiv itie s and a s­ s istin g m th* d escrip tio n of the fu n ction of standing c o m m itte e s , and m e e tin g to d.s- th r e e the hat e p arties us j a fii Crisp, harp Pictures e P o la r o id Ned plot sparkling th rlofe t a l Land tire in prints e best /ou can hbulbs, rflf 4k, Now IJ f f ! * ht (not a flashgui ign without Pas us* IO t IO seconds p m . seconds. C a m e r a S h o p — S e c o n d F lo o r (Du O • O u • c5 • o o• a. © © o 0. © • o a • a. © • o o • CL © © O CL $119.95 fork T*ncj*r!ei* I O o TI © o o o © t9«»t*d park {lend*' ♦•'"dan© i wth k.fb- b'cwm f >*.•]. Served •* rn p,ne*pp • a-ad l<9$, 1.75 A P E R F E C T MENU AND AT­ MOSPHERE SATURDAY FOR OR SUNDAY NIGHT DINNER DATES. 5 p . C O . O P * C O » O r . C O . O P . C O . O P . C O . O P . C O . O P * 2246 Guadalupe Street THE STUDENT S OWN STORE 2246 Guadalupe Street .CO.OP.CO.OP.CO.OP.CO.OP.CO.OP.CO.OP.CO. WHITE OXFORD CLOTH DRESS SHIRTS In Our O w n CCUS Natural Model This is a white button down collar dress shirt that compares favor­ ably with our regular $.9$ shirt. W e were amazed these could be sold at this price and still meet our specifications— T he collar lias the correct flair with button in back, and the center box pleat. The body is tapered— pima oxford cloth is labored in such a way as to give you a neat appearance with each laundering. S A T U R D A Y W I L L BH T H E L A S T D A Y O F T H IS S P E C IA L . $5.00 3 for s1 2 .5 0 C ly d e Cw m pbdJL 2350 G U A D A LU PE Firm* Show I P m. A D t X T S Ode C H I L D F R E E Snack B m A B o * Office Open ll:** P L A T G RO VNO ti F IN K FO O D * HoNKW McQHEN*BAZl£N HUTTON PRENTISS -MR w « iFM __ PLUS! IN COLOR ROBERT TAYLOR, RICHARD WIDMARK “ THE LAW AND JA K E W A D E ” T . T. S — T R A X S - T R X A S S A T I S F I E S . M O V IE E N T E R T A I N M E N T Cf F A R A N T EF.. B l O I B t i l I S T I F T O I D O M A O R F I VARSITY INN Joe Monte and his Airliners PROUDLY PRESENTS In Their First Austin Appearance BIG DANCE W ednesday, Thursday, Friday 6208 North Lamar . . ^ GL 3-9466 .. . .■ 8 lh. -vT'TLf* >' Va*,. > J-.WS IMI, , sw J 'i ! J* i ( IP?? , ‘ STARTS rn T O D A Y 1 wm&r mr -rn rn 0 A N F P R E S E N T S 6 * P O O R W H I T S Y S m S H * ’ -V.\ Stmt* 5 ' '. : V * J P P * - * ■ *• *• *• * rn* •I V ’ I , A Due to the abnormal - - , -• : £» * I matter of this motion acture, absolutely Starring PETER GRAVES LITA MILAN DOUGLAS FOWLEY T T 8 — T R A N S - T F X A S S A T I S F I E S : M O V IE E N T E R . T AI N M T NT G T A R A N T E C . B E O C R C F F S T I F T O F P O N T A C .R F F CAPITOL OPEN 11:45 CHIEF DRIVE IN OPEN 6:00 \ O restes T he Daily Texan A 'A I > i i n ’• • * . i ,■ - Y Season Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa C O M IN G T O T H E T A R A M O I N T T H E A T R E : . T M K Y E A R 'S M O ST E X C I T I N G F i t T I RF. ’ THE DEVIL AT 4 O ’CLOCK" • F R A N K S I N A T R A S P E N C E R T R A C Y Curtain to Rise And 1961-62 on Drama Electra, locked with her mad in an ancient Greek brother palace, tries in vain to comfort him. Their mother has been m ur­ dered, and the solemn assembly of Argos is deciding their fate. W ill Menelaus, who has just ar­ in the harbor, save hi* rived imprisoned nephew and niece? The answer to this dilemma in the drama "O restes" wag first thought out by Euripides, last of the great Greek playwrights of the Fifth Century B. C. Wednesday through Saturday nights in Hogg Auditorium the words of this ancient dialogue w ill leap from their dusty text, don the garb of a melodrama in English, and spring to new life on the stage. F ro m s t a r t to finish, the play w ill be the pro­ duct of persons at the University Where was the start? With the G reek text itself, translated by D r. W illiam Arrowsm ith of the Department of Classical La n ­ guages. J , C. Moll, associate professor of dram a and director of the playf said of the transla­ tion: "T h e meaning of the lan­ guage is clear and vivid . . . Dr. Arrowsm ith is anxious to take the Greek works out of the realm of the the textbook and modem theater.” into Moll, less interested in arch­ aeological reproduction than in good theater, said "Orestes ’ is being presented as a melodrama and should be appreciated as such. The chorus. M o l l com­ mented. will have "m uch more freedom and a p p e a l than I* usually seen.” M any persons at the U niversity w ill view their work when the curtain rises at 8 p.m. Wednes­ day on this first Departm ent of D ram a offering for the season. Among these people w ill be Paul Reinhardt, who designed the cos­ tumes. This is the first produc­ tion for Reinhardt as costume de­ signer since filling the vacancy left by the retirem ent of Miss Lu cy Barton last spring. Frederick Glenn is cast in th# title role of Orestes, and his sis­ ter Electra is played by Ellen Moses. The beautiful Helen, for whom the T r o j a n W a r was fought, is portrayed by Susan Rae Weinstock. Menelaus, who came, but not to rescue, is played by Robert Palm er; Tyndareus by W illiam F o w l e r ; and Plyades by' Pat Rucker. Unapplauded Individuals Im­ to the play are portant John Rothgeb. who designed the set­ tings; H. Neil Whiting, who set J o h n up the lighting effects; Swanay, who composed the mu­ sical score; the U niversity Sym ­ phonic Band, who played the score for recording; and Aynn M iller, who provided the choreo­ graphy, Tim e has not altered or ta r­ nished the basic problems of soc­ iety, director Moll feels, Greek plays, he said, present the uni­ versal conflicts of life. "E u rip id e s was w riting dur­ ing a time of slow moral decay,” M oll reflected "W e are experi­ encing much the same thing to­ day, and I believe the play can point this out to us.” Tickets, 75 cents for students with blanket taxes and $1 for adults, can be purchased at the M usic Building box office from 9 a rn. to 4 p.m. daily. Curtain time is 8 p.m. T O D A Y at in t er st a t e Amt CO# A MO VII d i s c o u n t c a i d PARAMOUNT John Gavin ADULTS LOO MDC .50 N O W SH O W ING! F E A T I R E S ; 12 OO - I OO 4 OO « ftO - 8 0# - IO:DO f a n n i e h u n s t $ 'g o a t m £*.«*» COLOR* t i S to e & t' CHILD ■ V. STATE N O W SH O W IN G ! F F A T I R I S. I I ;09 - 2 :3« - 4 ft] 7:12 - 9:3* HELD OVER! 2 ND BIG WEEK W hether you Ii vie in a smal town the w ay they do, in a city, maybe this i happening to you right now .. .maybe (if you’re older)yoiij remember when sud denly the kissin a kid’s game ar more, suddenly it's wide-eyed scary and dangerous w t/ ADULTS ....... SENIOR MDC LOO .50 Ne emt uniter I t n it! he arf- % -f fcirfti accortparutd by on adult ELIA KAZAN’S PRODUCTION OF ■ Hs n TThE WM INGE ...»»■ w . Natalie Wood ars; [Wiifeh Beath WI IS*"* *1* WILIAM mi• aw KAZAN-T E C H N IC O L O R * Fem W A R N E R B R O S 1 I1 V A R S IT Y W in Der of Al I D I ' I V A W A B o ­ OHI OF THE y tM >s b e s t : -PERFORMANCES- 1:30 - 5:00 . 8:30 T R K RS ~~ E t #. M AT Sat a* ADULTS MDC CHILD LOO .75 .50 MMM A U S T IN L A S T D A Y I 6:00 - 8:00 . 10:00 Ro c k Hu d s o n Gin a Lo llo b r ig id a S a n d r a Dee • Bo b b y Da r in • Walter S l e z a k C o m e S e p te m b e r9 TfCHMCOlOR* THS Barbirolli C onducts Houston Sym phony H O USTO N—S ir John Barbirolii j mounted the podium and dutifully ; got the “ Star-Spangled Banner” behind him. Then, as though shak­ ing a hand on a business deal, he conducted the Houston Symphony in “ God Save the Queen ” Thus did the Houston Symphony its 1961-62 season Monday its new director in open evening with the Music Hall, Tem porarily l e a v i n g his own in his home of H alle orchestra Manchester. Sir John is the prin­ cipal conductor for the 15-concert series. Sir John first came to Houston last year. as a guest conductor And it has been a short matter of time since he stood ort the podium in Manchester and said to the as­ sembly there. “ I shall stay with the Halle until I die.” But something happened in Hous­ ton, and now S ir John is at least parting with his beloved Halle for considerable stretches. He will stay with Houston until Nov. 20. then re­ turn to Hall# until Feb. 12. return­ ing at that time to Houston. W hatever wrought the change in S ir John's heart, he is now in a trans-Atlantic commuting arrange­ ment and Houston is the better for it. Recalling the mysterious com­ municative f o r e # of Sir John’s guest concerts last year. one could hardly expect less than inspired music. Although the usual f i r s t-night tenseness was omnipresent during the first three numbers, the final number, Brahm s Symphony No. 2 in D Major, with its melodious airs, sang listeners’ hearts. i n t o itself the The first numbers w ere: Berlioz’ “ Roman Carnival O verture,” De­ lius’ "Interm ezzo” front the opera "Fennim ore and G e r d a ,” and K o daly’s "V ariations of the Pea­ cock.” Although these were not done m agically, they w ere very w’ e 11 played by a recognizable Houston Symphony, which in­ deed a worthy instrument. is Ticket Drawing Begins W e d n e s d a y For Dick Schory Tickets for the Dick Schory P e r­ cussion Pops show', which w ill play next Tuesday and Wednesday in M unicipal Auditorium, m ay he drawm beginning today in the box office of the Music Building from 9 a.m. through 4 p.m. The orchestra is the second off­ ering on the 1961-62 Cultural E n ­ tertainment Committee S e r i es. Nineteen musicians play on 119 in­ struments throughout the evening, which is spent in performance of some of the most popular songs on strictly percussion instruments. Schory was one time first percus­ sionist for the Chicago Symphony, but has spent some years in work­ ing on an orchestra solely com­ posed of percussion instruments, developing them into new melodic sounds with harmonic and tonal sounds of rare quality. The show is free to Blanket Tax holders Single admission is 52 and children through junior high school ar# admitted for JI. There are no reserved seats and no advanced sale. Co-Op to Sponsor Walter Lord Visit " A T i m e W alter Lord, author of the newly ; to published novel, Stand,” an epic of the Alamo, will be guest of honor at an autograph party sponsored by the University Co-Op, Wednesday, Oct. 25. Lord w ill be on the first floor of Ute Co-Op from 2 to 4 p.m. to autograph copies of his new novel. A graduate of Princeton U niver­ sity and Y ale U n iversity Law School, Lord has been interested in Am erican history since his college da j s. In addition to " A Tim e to Stand.” he has written " A Night to Rem em ber,” the story of the sink­ ing of the Titanic: " D a y of In­ fam y,” describing the bombing of P e a rl H arbor; and "T h e Good Y ears.” kom CHOICE com fed heavy beef . . . **rred with French fried potato#* and cole slaw. IGM N ' RESTAURANTS 4 C onvaniant locatio n * in Auitin TAL-TEX ENTERPRISES PRESENT JUSTIN ll Cajun" WILSON I G A W R - O N - T E E rr W ED N ESD A Y, O CTO BER 18 M U N IC IPA L AUDITORIUM, 7:30 P.M. GEN.ADM.. . . S2.20 - STUDENTS...SI.65 tax included also J a c k i e K e n t - " M i s s H o u s t o n 1961" a n d J o e Di S t e f a n o -- S o n o r a R e c o r d i n g A rtist ^ l i i t o c j r c i p l l \ t r f Meet "the Cajun," Miss Kent, and Mr. Di Stefano In TEXAS UN IO N 202 from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, October 18. Public invited. Justin's new album, "I Gawr-on-tee" will be on sale at party. Autograph party will be broadcast "live" on KAZZ-FM. LUCKY TICKET HOLDER A N D 3 GUESTS TO DINE AT VILLA CAPRI WITH W ILSO N AND OTHER STARS Ticket* Available at The Record Shop -- Union Main Desk -- J. R. Reed Music Co. V . I. Pre***!* For iKn Fir*! Tim* in Au*tin CARL BUTLER Curran! Star pf th# Grind O U ' O p ry Saturday, O c to b e r 21 BIG DANCE & SH O W G I 3-9466 6201 N. Lamar Doug'i G A L A X IE Club \ 4 j Bands 5 Nites Weekly 6200 N. Lamar Blvd. A X D S P E C I A L A T T R A C T I O N S 2 DANCE FLOORS THE GALAXIE ROOM THE STARLIGHT ROOM J ............................ < I < S P E C I A L P R I C E S P O R P A R T I E S A G R O T T S RY A D V A N C E R E S Privilege Member- Special • hip* bow bein* tanned apes personal rep neat Ut F aire r- • ity • Bi den t * ZI r r a a f a g a a e a r a r . P O R I N T OR R E S P H O M C L I J I H « « t J 4 J ^ 4 4 DELWOOD 3931 ta il A*cnu< B O X O F F I C E O P E N S t o# A D M IS S IO N 60e THE GUNS OF NAVARONE G re g o ry Peek, B a r id N tvea S ta rt* 7:16 FORBIDDEN DESERT P re b le of the M idd le F a i t S ta rt* IO 07 SOUTH AUSTIN 4000 SOI T H CONGRESS B O X O I I I C I O P E NS 6 OO A D M I S S I O N 6 0 e VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA W a l l e r P i d g e o n J o a n F o n t a i n e S t a r t * 7 IA P l u * THE SECRET PARTNER S t e w a r t G r a n g e r S t a r t * 9 : IS A tremendously affecting, powerful, heartbreaking and unforgettable drama, m agnificently realistic in its stark and tender photography, in the superb quality of its writing and p e r f o r m a n c e . , . A n -^0g*^^extraordinary motion picture i e com parable to that/ ago, AU Quiet on the s 4^ kj) W/estern Front.' " of a generation l a s STARTS TODAY STARTS TODAY A Fell Film Festival Presentation Movie Entertainment G u a r a n t e e d I He O u r G u e s t It I o u lion I A g r e e ! Carolyn Porter Claims Twirler Needs Only Basic Skills and Self-Confidence "T h e actual amount of tim** I the mascot, which is a live cougar nlvat Queen la it apHng by Delta practice twirling is about IO min* I dido t finish my routine,'' she Sigma Phi fraternity, utes a week, though I'm at band said. rehearsal about five h o u r s a week,” said Carolyn Po rter as she “ kind 0f an accident. ” " M y best 2.1 scholastic average. She leaned back reflectively on a blue r r o w pillow which matched her eye*. A senior hqjne economics major M IS S P O R T E R began twirling as at the University, she maintains a is a friend plaved the flute in the band member of Tau Beta Sigma, na­ in thc seventh grade, so I wanted t tonal bands women's society; a to .join the band. Tine girl who member of the Home Economics is one of the two taught flute was the drum m a jo r' Club, and an adviser at Scottish dorm itory. At the University Houston, she was initiated into "T w irlin g Is Uke typing,** she that I might as well take lessons ^ ,f ta Gamm a, but is not affiliated in the high school band and also taught twirling, so my mother said feature twirlers in the Longhorn Band. M iss Porter ™ P l e r. ^ r5_ NOT B E IN G A B L E to sit with her date at a football game does not bother her, she said. " I'v e only been to one football game at which I wasn't with the band. I like to sit there, because of the color and excitement. You can always be with your dau» after the game. Besides,” she smiled, “ most of the boys I ’ve gone with have been in the band, too.” explained. “ Once you've got the basic skills you don’t need lots flute, of practice, just brushing up from tim# to time.’* a ma- J jorette, head twirler, and drum B a s ic skills a beginning twirler m a j o r of the Dickinson High She became, successive! like to play the she commented in both. I still S E L F - C O N F ID E N C E It w a s th ere that she gave has to master, she said, are not School hand. being afraid to catch the baton when throwing it up and not drop­ ping the baton. These are the main things to get over. Self- confidence has a lot to do with it. S h e w a s a T e x a s S t a r w h en she e n te re d th e U n iv e r s ity as a soph­ o m o re in 1959, V in c e n t D IN ln o , I long horn B a n d d ire c to r, asked h e r tn he a fea tu re t w ir le r he- > fo re the 1959 Cotton B o w ! g a m e , I is some­ and thing Carolyn Porter has. Except h er firs t “ s ta r p e rfo rm a n c e ,” for duet numbers w hich she per­ This summer Miss Porter was forms with Irene Reed, the other twirling feature twirler, she makes up her .schools in F o r t Worth, Corpus routines while on the field during Chr jstj Huntsville, a n d Odessa. a performance, Larg e crowds do Next summer, she will teach baton not make her nervous either. " I twirling .inst think of them as w a llp a p e r, : Scnools, held on college campuses, ( m ajorettes converge to learn new -he laughed, techniques and routines. “ We have S h e w a s ra th e r u n n e rv e d her twirling schools in the summer and fre s h m a n y e a r, h o w e v e r, when she w a s a I Diversity of Houston contests during the Winter to keep t w ir le r p e rfo rm in g on a stage at a pep r a lly . interest up,” said Miss Porter. a b a t o n instructor at „ , in Illinois. At . . . . . . . t h e s e " I threw my baton tip in the air and it landed in the cage of F i v e feet fo u r Inches ta ll, and w e ig h in g 110 p o u n d s , M i s s P o r te r w a s n o m in ated for \ a r s lt y C a r & ^cr> GD CO r—J CNI <0 CM f—. Qj O o I— C5 k 3 i*iw siM t S e 3 er goe for th through her TOU pert or ma hog is lea i next at the R tin© with see. Miss ■ring th© ice* ©sr ne WI baton b th* ba FEA TU RE T W IR LER C a r t o n P o ­ th© Longhorn Band in preparation Porter says the most difficult par+ basic maneuvers. She w ll perform Texas game O c t, 28. r % » ► ► / InnounceS I L s h sol talcs IV!r * Lee Miss Phyllys 2422 Guadalupe G R 2-9266 only at J Z c c & e J A FULL YEAR TO PAY 1 v f e r v o r V SENIOR RING! T.v’v. % *. ■ * i > > i ► ► ► ► » ► ► ► > ► > ► > ► ► ► ► ► t I > ► ► ► I Ik. 5 « 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ' 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 i r r *29 IN KMC YELLOW, t o *50 *34 IN tOK WHITE GOID. e»!Cii flu* tax AMAZING VALUE DIAMOND SENIOR RINGS 10K GOLD, STARTING AT JUST $ 7 0 0 0 TAY • © INCLUDED Y E A R t o P A T I • p l t iA A FU U YEAR TO PAY! Z A L E ’S rn v J y ^ ’W E ' I a E l F e S Wednesday, O ct. 18, TH E D A ILY TEXA N Page ta I (joes Ot ti Wednesday 5 45 and 2- Clay M inerals Confer­ IO Coffee I- ere Dr. ence, Texas Union. 9-12 and 1*4 Drawing for Arkansas game tickets. G regory Gym. 9-5—Student directories on sale. Drag bookstores and Journalism Building IOT. UNIFORM CENTER P R O F E S S IO N A L W E A R • DOCTORS • DENTISTS • NURSES • HOSPITALS • RECEPTIONISTS • BEAUTICIANS • RESTAURANTS • INSTITUTIONS 121 W . 5th Street G R 2-6891 Collection, the ex; Economic*, E d .P , English, 'a, insurance, and interna- trade. Garrison H all I. Board meeting, Journalism fin an tiona Bu ild I Dr. R. F . Bunn to review “ R is e and F a il of the Third Reich,” ; Ju n io r Ballroom, Texas Union. 4—Apple polishing party for Plan I I students and their professors, Star Poem. Texas Union. 4 15 and 7:15 — Inq uiry course, Newm an Classroom, 2016 Guad­ alupe. 4; 45— Business meeting of Com­ mercial Art Students, E D Hall. T S 30- Tau Beta Pt s slide rule Science Experim ental course. * —Com rn un 11 v Serv University “ Y . ” 7—All-Freshmen Cc Batts Hall. 7:30- Young Repub show film, “ Coml M a p ,” Junior Bf Union. 8 “ Orest De pa rte Auditor; to be cif I •e Committee, moil meeting, to H< Dallas Halford O P T IC IA N 706 WL 10th at V A U S T IN . T I r n N O T I C E ! ! • STUDENTS • 6 Shirts L a u n d e re d a n d Folded for 99c W ith an Order of Dry Cleaning C A P IT O L LA U N D R Y A N D DRY C L E A N IN G C O . SUB STATIONS AT I0tk 4 Duval 24th & $*■* Antonie R E N T T A P E R E C O R D E R S $8 M O . W ith 7 Bee I* J SIO 117 SO Mn. © PEC ! A L 3 Month Hate* ORIGINAL IMPORTS e FROM MEXICO To give . . . to wear . , , to own , . . Hand picked object* from th© four corner* of Mex­ ico. BULA SKINNER S STUDIO NUECES 1705 Nuece* G R 7-5418 The Daily Texan CL J-, J JIM CLASSIF IED A D VERTISING D E A D L IN E S C L A S S IF IE D A D I F R r I S IN O R A T E S .......... Ruch Word 115-word minimum) Clan* if ted Display J column v err Inch on* tim* .................... Each Additional Tim* .......... JO 'en*' cut;vt Tim*)* 8 woi dx 15 words .. Sn words .......................... . ................................*........................... ......................................... ..................... INO copy chang* for ecnsecutlv* issu* rate* ........ 4c SI OO 90 86 f)Q 8 on l l OO Mon dav 3 30 P rn. T i es day Texan ......... . Tues day 3 30 P rn. Wedn esdav Tex an . . . . . 4 A Tex* n . . . . . . . 3 30 pm . Th >xan ....... ..... E r I fill p rn. Su n<\* V T exat F t day 3 30 P rn. . . . . . . . . It) Tienf, rnnu#dis e not cs m utt br- ft, , en as the PL b sh era til e evrnt of error* made in sn adv ert Wednesday . I bur* dav 3 I* for on! 3rr*ct Insert.on. Call GR 2-2473 Rooms for Rent .LF of Jars CAMPUS ONI Clean aurae ans u Mkt 26. (i Furnished Apartments BLOOD DONORS—A! needed for usage i atonal donor* i County Blood Bs tvpe* of blood Austin Protes­ ted. Travis Red River art HR OR re spar I IR A DU A T E student lf * four bedroom home W an ted Typing 8 5528 Help W anted A R I [RUSTMAN For Sal© D IS S E R T A T IO N S . T H E S E S , BO O KS report* New sym bo! equipped eieo R i te­ r n . Mr* Uremia He G R 6*,079 M A RTH A ANN E IV L E Y M B A . A complete professional typing •arr­ ie* tailored to lh* need* of tn iv e r­ i t y students. S p e c i a l keyboard equipment *< a n d engineering theses an seriation.*. language w e for Phone GR 2-3210 Mere I onrenientty I.orated At Our New Addrest IU! 3013 a GI ADA! MuJtilithlng Mim eograp Xeroxing Theses rapers P r Intln A U S T E X D I P L IC ATC 400 East li t h Phone G R (L6593 IE P rt 1 ( A tv it . Heater Excellent IR 6-5193 SI MLF* 45; skirt* .ga, apl It­ 's, Texa* -ar paling P R O J I. AL E R U R sedan, p rn GR 8-8’. AV AN -x W ell ■ G R li­ ;r d i R A V I N E T E ground for d,Honed F I two-three-Iou ITM IV E R S IT I tive efflcie apartment ti rumpus roc G R 8-5529 N E A R L A W two bed rot frlgerated i G R 6-9444. G Private pa trigs Dan Honed etc, *110-5125 - 1507 Woof1 hart. GR 6 .638 A T GR ft E A R A m p l e Virginia Calhoun Com r'eta T Y P IN G S w i r l 2914 Reanna (C o r 30th) (Ju s t North of Tow ne* H ail GR 8 2636 Call or coma bv kin Special Services — P U R C H A S E T V * Ilion Rental G R 2-2692 Aint Alterations E R A T IO N S A 5 W elt 25th D R R IA I Ten T V / S Hen Rents O FF KR] Im p rn Miscellaneous CAN G E T early mormn I VOL of home A ustin R 6 C O N S E R V A T IV E S ; N A T V IE W ma Karim* *< hool- rate 13.89 150 East 35 b Lost and Found SIS R E W A R D K O R wallet lost in U n i­ Jo h n W in te r. CIR 8-8991. versity are.! F O U N D : T H R E E D R E S S E S in m y car. G R 8-843*) W I L L T H E P E R S O N who accidentally picked up the ph; si cs book in I ‘iv * it* Bu ild in g 203 October 16 please phone Le* Muenster G R 7-0518 He ho : At Typing IU R A T E 'I Iwtromattf Y P IN G Near 3-291; R E A S O N A B L ! University. Mn D E L A F I E L pet lent rd lith H I 2-< T H E MOO tUithing Marguerite I Hampton VG S E R V IC E Reasonable, r US L., Mul egeods 15 3217 NG S E R V IC E . I alt HO 5-5813, Dad 'ED ' reason. 'E D IHM ll I A T O N A B L E I :p e r i i I reports. Ail kind* in miser I p’ , law work Format a Mrs D eButts GR 8*3391 T H I , RF! P O R T S , RFI ASON A BLE imatic M rs Brad\ 2317 Old* t 2-4718. W ould like to t> pe manuscript*, editorial dissertation*, work Prefer­ research paper* a b ly for professors and law stu­ d e n t Had tho.;* experlen.-e at Columbia University. s o m e Mr* M cClam©© G R 7-1259 SCIF: N TIK tab Minable M and / M A N U SC R I P latlons E x peru s. Moore. H I 2- T Y T IN G ■d. Rea M U L T IL IT H IN G A ft1 D P R IN T IN G T H E S E S A N D D IS S E R T A T IO N S specialty A r t e c P rim in g Company 1706 Sar, Jacinto G R 2-5820 T H E M E S . L A W N O T E S , outlines. 25c double spat e G R b-4717 A C C U R A T E Bi A U T H I L T Y P IN G - IB M electromatlc L A W W O R K S P E ­ C IA L I S T Reasonable Courteous con­ scientious considerate service. C a l l G R 8-7079 ON T I P I N G 7 Miss Graham. G L 3-5725. time and D IS S E R T AT RUNS. T H E S I S R E ­ legal papers, manuscripts HOR IS E lectric GR 2-8402 ■ T h a t ’s rig h t, d e a d ­ O N L Y ‘'C H A R T E R D A Y S ’* L E F T ! S S A G E , A ustin’s n e w line fo r L ife tim e C h a rte r M e m b e rs h ip s in m em b ersh ip d e p a rtm e n t store, is O c to b e r 2 1 . l f yo u h a v e n o t joined b e fo re th a t d a te , your m e m b ers h ip will h a v e to be re n ew ed annually a t a cost o f S I , but if you join now , to d a y , your first c o s t — $ 2 m em b ersh ip fe e — is your last! If you’re eligible, S A G E will pro­ vide you a w hole n e w w orld of shopping conven ien ce and real savings on e v e ry needed pu rch ase fo r fa m ily , hom e and c a r. C om e by S A G E s pre-opening o ffic e a t 3 1 1 0 -B M a n o r R oad or phone GR 2 -3 0 3 7 fo r c o m p le te in form atio n— today! Uni 'QTS stud! cwance its. on rn © rn ce- hip tees tor C h a c k o u r bu dd in g p r o g r e s s s t 6 5 0 0 A irport B lv d .I • 3 days only a ll an d al e village on the drag th. a u t i v e n t u y cocoa suede leather the P I E R L A K E A U S T I N S F IN E S T F U N S P O T F U N S • D A N C I N G . . . D a n e * under th# stars on o ur b eautiful patio o va H o o k in g le k # Austin, C o r n ­ bo Fri, & Sat. s r e l L D • D I N I N G , . . D e licio u s char- coal steaks, seafood , h a m b u r­ S V S ge rs in an atm o sp here of eom- plot# relaxation. • P I C N I C T A B L E S . . . Relax un- der b ig C y p r e s s trees and have a picnic. For Reservations C a ll G R 7-0348 Football Victory D A N C E E V E R T S A T U R D A Y N I G H T B Y B O A T : A c r o s s from C it y Park. BY C A R 8 m iles out Bee C a v # Rd. to River R d .— Turn R igh t — Follow the signs. STUDENTS Welcome to H O B B Y T O W N W e carry a large selection of hobbies and crafts — m o­ saic tile, pebble craft, foam craft, craflsticks, Grum backer oil paints, paint by number, scroll art, plastic cars and planes, radio control planes and boats, H. O . trains, M a n y Ite ms N o w on Sp e c i a l L A Y - A W A Y P L A N O p e n Thursdays till 8 p.m. 5933 Burnet Rd. G L 2-4433 T V Plan W in s $ 2 5 0 A w a r d Dr. J a m e s V, Mitchell J r , as social* p ro fe sso r of educational psychology, received an a w a r d Tuesday in N ew York for a tele­ vision r e s e a r c h plan he su b m itte d in n atio n al competition. His p la n is titled “ The Design and A ss e s s m e n t of an E x p e r im e n ­ to Maximize Active tal P r o g r a m in a n d F e e d b a c k P a r tic ip a tio n Television Instruction T hrough bio Utilization of P r o g r a m m e d L e a r n ­ ing T e c h n iq u e s .” Dr. M itchell a $250 a w a rd, a n d his plan will be pub­ lished. T h e competition w a s un­ d erw ritte n by the Television Bu­ reau of Advertising, a non-pro­ fit organ iz atio n supported by the industry'. television received in 1959, Dr. M itchell, who joined the fa c ­ ulty taught ed ucatio nal psychology o v er closed-circuit tele­ vision a t M iam i U niversity, w here from he w a s a 1954 to 1957. He w as on the P u rd u e faculty m e m b e r the is a from 1957 faculty U niversity 1959. His in te rests re s e a r c h clude new educational m e d ia. He h as th r e e d eg re es from to in­ U n iversity of Chicago and m e m b e r of the A m erican P s y c h o - 1 logical Association, A m e ric a n E d u ­ cational R e se a rc h Association, and S igm a Xi, g r a d u a te scientific r e ­ se arch society. His scho larly a r-; ti d e s h a v e ap p e ared in the J o u r ­ nal of Educational Psychology and other professional m a g az in es, Three Study Hall Ro o ms said O p e n in English B u i ld in g E. B. P rice, director of student activities, th r e e m ore that room s on the first and third floor of the English Building h ave been m a d e ava ila b le for study halls. M orris Massey, g r a d u a te stu ­ dent, is the supervisor of the study hall which is open 7-10 p rn. Mon­ day through T hursday, R-P advises: dress sharp for campus and career in C a r d ig a n s styled by Towne & K in g Wednesday, Oct. IS. 1061 THE D A IL Y T E X A N Pag* 4 Four New Professors Language Staff Increased UNS- Th* Classic*! L an g u a g es D e p a r t m e n t has four new faculty m e m b e r s , Including a visiting pro­ fe sso r from O xford U niv ersity, Dr, H J. Leon, c h a ir m a n , announced. UT Exes to Honor Navy's Connally T he U niversity N a v a l ROTO unit will provide the honor guard for th e a r r iv a l of Joh n B. Connally, se c r e ta r y of the N avy, in Austin Nov. 9. The se c r e ta ry will be the honored a t The E x-S tu d e n ts’ As­ guest sociation D istinguished Alumnus A w ard Banquet, N o r , IO, at the Dr!skill Hotel. to receiv e Connally, c h a ir m a n of the m e m ­ b e rs h ip com m ittee of The Ex-Stu­ den ts Association, will become the sixth g ra d u a te this a w a rd . O ther r ec ip ien ts a re Sam R a y b u rn , s p e ak e r of the House; D r. W alter P re sc o tt Webb, histor­ ian ; Dr. R am on B eteta of Mex­ ico. diplo m at; R obe rt B. Anderson, f o r m e r se c re ta ry of tile T re a s u ry ; a n d Dr. Logan Wilson, president of the A m erican Council on E d u ­ cation. Is being held in This banquet conjunction with the University H o m ec om in g Activities An alum ni b a rb e c u e and b r e a k fa s t for Life M e m b e r s of The E x -S tu d e n ts’ Asso­ ciation will also be held. classicist, is Professor John Patrick Sullivan. is a dis­ lite visitor from Oxford, and poet tinguished the au th o r of tr a n s l a to r . He ‘'The H edonism ‘P r o ta ­ g o r a s ', ” “ The Poet as T ra n s la ­ t o r . ' ’ and “ Tile Classics an d Their Critics ” He is editor of “ Critical E s s a y s on R om an L ite r a tu r e , '' to !>e published next spring. His " E z ­ ra P o u n d and Sextus P ro p e rtiu s 1 will be published next s u m m e r . the of P ro f e s s o r Sullivan h as degrees from both Oxford and C a m b rid g e He had a re se a rc h fellowship at Q u een 's College, Oxford, and a te ac hing fellowship at Lincoln Col­ lege. Oxford. Dr. J a m e s A. S. E v a n s revs' a s­ sistant professor was born in Can­ a da and has taught a t V ictoria Col­ lege, Toronto, and W aterloo Col­ lege, U niversity of W estern On­ tario. He is the au th o r of ‘ Social an d Econom ic H istory of an E g y p ­ in G reco - R o m an tian T em pi* E g y p t.” an article published in Vale Classical Studies He will be asv.s la n t director of the Vergiiian School in Italy next s u m m e r . Hold­ the University ing degree'; of T oronto ftnd Yale I nj versify, Dr. E v a n s w a s a T h om as Day Sey­ the A m erican at m ou r F e l l o w School of Classical Studies in Ath­ ens. from Dr. H a r r y C Avery, also an a s­ sistant professor, fo rm e rly taught at B ry n M a w r College. His r e ­ se arch inte rests include F ifth Cen­ tury 4-305. a t Tile talk will c o n c e r n beauty hints a n d style trends. Conference Set For Attorneys T a x a t i o n Tronds To Be Discussed its UNS The School of L a w will hold ninth annual T axation C onference for attorneys, t r u s t insurant e u n d e r ­ l i f e officers, w rite rs a n d certified public a c ­ co un tan ts O ct. 26-28, A im of c o n f e r e n c e U to t h e in m a jo r t r e n d s a n a l y z e c u r r e n t a r e a s o f s p e c i a l t a x a t i o n . T h e a r e a s of oil and g a s , p a r t n e r s h i p s , e s t a t e s a n d f a r m i n g and tr u st s , r a n c h i n g , a n d life I n s u r a n c e l r a n s fe r s w i l l b e r e v i e w e d , W, P a g e Keeton, d ea n of the L aw School, and Ju d g e J o h n R Brow n of the United S tate s Court of A ppeals. Fifth Circuit, will p r e ­ side d u r in g the conference. m e n t s ” ; ; "T a x S u m m a r y S p e a k e rs will include: D avid W, R ichm o nd of Washington, D C . for t h e P ast Y ea r ’ ; Ben W. Bird of F o r t Worth. I “ C u rre n t Oil and G as Develop­ Jo se p h Driscoll of D al­ the Den- for li e s I oral P r a c ti tio n e r of the E x p e r t ; Willard G. Bowen of D enver, Colo “ T ax P r o b le m s of F a r m i n g and R a n c h in g ” ; and Denny I n g r a m of I Austin, " T r a n s f e r s of Life lr,stir “ P a r tn e r s h ip s a n r e . ” P a n e ! d i s c u s s i o n m e m b e r s will bo; N e s t e r T, H u g h es J r . , R obert D i l la r d . A lan B r o m b e r g , and J o e C. S t e p h e n s J r . of D a l l a s ; l i a r s ie B m n s c o m b and R ob ert B. W a l la c e of C o r p u s C h risti; M a r v in K Col He, R. P . B u s h m a n -lr.. F r a n k T. R e a a n d M i s s M a r g a r e t Sc a r b r o u g h o f H o u s t o n ; H ov er I Lentz of D e n v e r ; t«c o r g e C r a v e n of Phil a d e l p h i a . R u p e r t V G r e s h a m of San A n t o n i o ; anti Keith M orrison an d W i l l i a m I Fritz of th e School of L a w fa c u l t v . Bolton s Day Nursery E * c e l i e n l C a r # — H o t N o e s M e a ! A g a * I n f a n t s — 6 y e a r * 1511 Colorado GR 8 9163 H A N D M A D E B O O T S Squaw B o o h and M o c c asin * Expert S h o e R e p a i r University Boot S h o p 113 W lith S a v e 8% e n f i l i i ? P r o d u r t* r a s h A t h * onrl t h i n * p u re h a s r ti rrbsl#* o f H o ­ o f l f s; I Yon a l i f l t i f M r r o n r v r r > - 1N Q I I R K N O W . t h e C A M P I S C l L F J a c i n t o b a n I. K 2 - 0 3 9 0 19t h .« C H A R T E R B U S E S Air KERRVILLE BUS CO., IH C G R 8 9361 R E N T C A H I I . A T O R * - T I F F . W R I T T R S A I U l l M i M A C H I A I s S T U D E N T R A T E S O K * TOO J SOS VV 19t h CAMERAS n w ou m iES P L U S C O M P L E T E S E R V I C E , A N D C A M E R A R E P A IR . STUDTMAN Photo Service Telephone G R 6-4326 222 W e st 19th 1961-62 OFFICIAL STUDENT DIRECTORY AW On Sale 75c (74c plus Ic Slate Hemphill’s The C o - O p • University Mews F o y t s Stand • Ste nograp h ic Bureau • J. B. 107 □uus-ofi favorite for which u c predict unprecedented sw eater su ccess this Fall, the lOOG im ported K iam a Cape Lam bs wool cardigan. Hiiic, smog, snow, fawn or evprex*, S u e s 36 to 16, 14.95 c Important new styling, the zipper cardigan, here in striped ail wool w ith hroad striped front and pocket trim , Blue or sage Sizes S, M, I,, 19,95. look b. The m uch-In-demand hulky in T exas w eight IO OD virgin wool given a brawny cable weave that is deceptively light in weight. T w o-tone snow, or solid trim "on blur. ms* fog .Sizes 38 to 46. 19,93. d ’Hie solid color zipper cardigan in I OGA virgin wool with shaker knit applique sleeves. Alphin© marl, sk y blue or snow' w hite. Sizes S, M, L, 18.93. PrbHsbezl by I ex.is Student Publications, inc. R eynolds-Penland Gentry Shop3