W EATHER: Cloudy, Colder Low 30, High 50 WW MFM HE DAILY I EX AN Jk Ai JL rn—rn JL JL JL Mmd JL f c r i n w v ja m f M v v V V I t rn ma rn V I l l * . • « . I T PAGE 2: 'W alled-ln’ Government Vol. 62 Price five AUSTIN, TEXAS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1963 Eight Pages Today No. 114 Eg *kj H * J? M. fi* Senate Action Gets Protest UT-Aggie Melee Sets Off Probe At Both Schools In v estig atio n s a re co ntinuing by both schools as a re s u lt of th e 10- m in u te braw l w h ich c lim ax ed the T cxas-T exas A&M b a sk e tb a ll g a m e T u esd ay night in G re g o ry G ym . D r. G lenn B a rn e tt, d ean of stu ­ den ts a t th e U n iv ersity , said, “ O ur In v estig atio n In d icates be­ h av io r w as good d u rin g the g am e, but a fte rw a rd s ab o u t 300 A&M boys m a rc h e d o u t to th e floor In­ ste a d of filing o ut. They' w ere jo in ­ ed by U n iv e rsity of T exas stu ­ d e n ts .” “ NOTHING LIKE THAT H E R E ” In a telep h o n e Interview w ith th e T exan T u e sd a y night, J . E a rl R udder, p re s id e n t of A&M, said th a t he had b een given a full re ­ p o rt on the in cid en t by A&M offi­ cials a t th e g a m e . R u d d e r did not a tte n d th e g a m e . He com m ented, “ We h av e n e v e r h ad an incident like I a m su re D r. Sm iley will h a n d le his situation th e re (a t the U n iv e rsity ) and we w ill h an d le it h e r e .” th a t h e re . When asked lf he had read any newspaper accounts on the m at­ ter, Rudder replied, “ All I ’ve read Is that you all up there want to cut off our appropria­ tions from tho state because we are such barbarians.” Both R u d d e r and U n iv ersity P re s id e n t Jo se p h Sm iley ex p re ss­ ed th e ir “ deep re g r e t th a t a fine sp o rts ev en t should have been m a r r e d .” F O l R JNJ! RED F o u r stu d e n ts w e re in ju red In th e m a ss fight. T re a te d and re ­ leased w ithout ad m issio n a t local h o sp itals w e re : J a m e s T ra m m e l an d K a rl C aillo u t of A&M, and Mike T h ra sh a n d C h arles B ueka- lew of th e U n iv e rsity . T h rash , an o u tfield er fro m D en v er and key figure in T e x a s ’ bid for n atio n al b a se b a ll honors, su ffered a fra c ­ tu red rig h t h an d . The o th e r th re e re ceiv ed m in o r fa c ia l la c e ra tio n s. traditional The m elee w a s touched off by “ Poor A ggie” the chant from U niversity students following T ex a s’ 83 73 triumph. About 2,000 students crowded on­ to the basket ital I court. The free- for-all was halted by city and cam pus police, efforts of athletic directors of both schools, and a few stanzas of the national an the I>ong- them contributed by hom Band. UT Groups Oppose Garwood Reiection By DAVE MCNEELY Texan Legislative Reporter University students and faculty voiced, picketed, chant­ ed, and signed their protests Wednesday of the Senate re ­ jection of W. St. John Garwood as a University Regent. The rejection Tuesday came in a 15-minute Senate executive session. The two highlights of the dismay over the rejection were a semi-silent protest on the South Mall of the Main Building and a picket line in front of the Capitol. Students and some faculty members used the inscription of the Tower as a script and chanted, “Ye shall know the tru th and the t r u t h shall* ................ make you free.” About 400 attended the I a t e-moming registration of protest. STI DENTS PICKET T he afte rn o o n d e m o n stra tio n in­ volved ab o u t 30 stu d en ts who c a r­ ried sig n s on th e C apitol grounds a d m o n ish in g th e S en ate and lau d ­ ing G arw ood. More than I.OOO students and faculty m em bers signed petitions Form ation of a new stu to plan dem on­ dent group strations and supervise the signing of petitions In sup­ port of Garwood was a n ­ nounced W ednesday night a s a result of picketing of the State Capitol. Called “ Students for Ara dem le F reedom ,” the organi­ zation Is being tem porarily sponsored by the UT Young D em ocrats. denouncing t h e Senate action and asking Connally to reap|K>int Garwood. In to g e t the Senate th e Senate W ednesday Sen. A. R. S ch w artz of Galveston a t­ te m p te d into e x ec u tiv e reco n sid er th e decision. H e did not obtain th e re q u ire d u n an im o u s consent, bu t h a s scheduled a se c re t ses­ sion fo r 12.15 p.m . Thursday'. session to S ch w artz, w ho is v ic e -c h a irm an of th e N om inations C o m m ittee, is holding off on speak in g on p e r­ so n al p riv ile g e until M onday He sa id he did so a t th e req u est of Sen. C h a rles H e rrin g of A ustin, c h a irm a n of th e N om inations Com­ m ittee. H e rrin g re­ c u p e ra tin g fro m an ap p en d ecto m y . HERRING “ SHOCKED” is a t hom e H e rrin g said he w as “ shocked a n d d isa p p o in te d ” by th e rejectio n of G arw ood. A p p aren tly m o st of tile S en ate b ack er? of G arw ood w ere also Gov. John CoiuiaJiy, who ap- (See SENATE, p.S > NSA Purpose Kicked Around By B EN N IE GUNTON and EMILY LAMON Texan Staff Writer* The p u rp o se of the N atio n al Stu­ d en t A ssociation and its re p re s e n ­ tation of U n iv e rsity stu d en ts w as d eb ate d T u e sd a y n ig h t by D en n is Shaul, p re s id e n t of NSA, an d D ick H ew itt, fo rm e r ed ito r of th e SMU “ C a m p u s.” “ A lthough so m e s a y It Is politi­ th e 80 to IOO stu d e n t union* cal, in the w'orld look to NSA fo r con­ cern fo r th e ir a sp ira tio n s an d d e m ­ o c ra tic v a lu e s ,” said Shaul in open­ “ To do away with ing re m a rk s NSA would be to do away with an th a t h a s ch an n eled o rg an izatio n m illions of d o lla rs fo r build in g d e m o c ra tic stu d e n t unions in I^atin A m e ric a .” S h au l also pointed out th a t NSA wall hold a co n fe re n c e on the D o m estic P e a c e C o rp s, rn se m in a r on th e influence of sc ie n c e c u rric u lu m , a n d has a rr a n g e d a sc h o la rsh ip fo r B u lg a ria n stu d en ts to stu d y in W estern u n i­ versities. fund (See NSA, p 8> Dilly Editor Adkins Gives Clarion Call to w o rk on “ T h ere will be a m e e tin g o f all th e persons w ish in g I Illy T ex an n e, a n n u a l R a n g e r p a r ­ ody of th e D a ily T ex an , in J o u r­ n alism Bldg. 203, T h u rsd a y a t 7:30 p m s a i d D illy T ex an n e ed ito r Lieuen A dkins in s n e x clu siv e in­ terview'. “ A ctually, w e c a n ’t possibly h ope to put o u t a n y th in g a s fu n n y a s the re a l T ex an , but w e h a v e a p each y tim e try in g . I d a re y o u to p rin t th is ,” s a id A dkins. 1 favors to ask. A lthough he n e v e r him self, atten d ed P ark h o u se em p lo y s se v e ra l U ni­ v ersity stu d en ts as aides. u n iv e rsity a COLORFUL SPEEC H in fo rm al co n v ersatio n , P a rk h o u se ’s sp e ech es a re effec­ tive and short. H is ta lk , p a rtic u la r­ ly his is colorful. “ Call a co m m ittee m e e t­ ing at 5:30 a n d d o n ’t them chili an d ta m a le s g o .” Or, about a fellow -Senator w ho ju st lo st a let b et, “ Now h e 's trv in ’ o u t of i t ! ” to craw fish b a d policies of th e n atio n al a d m in ­ is tra tio n .” there,” “ I'm about a? co n se rv a tiv e as an y b o d y out is P a rk h o u se 's d escrip tio n of him self, issues often but his stands on surprise those who trv to pre­ dict his actions. H e Is, for ex am p le, in favor of federal court actio n lo force redistricting of sta te leg isla tu re s. the “ The la b o rs little m a n ” is a p h ra s e th a t a p p e a rs often in h is sp eech es, a n d P a rk h o u se to p ro te c t w h a t he considers th e b est in te r­ in d iv id u al citizen. In e sts of a c o m m itte e h e a rin g M onday, he b la ste d s ta te ta x a ss e sso rs a s “ a bunch of g ree d y people whose greedy p u rp o se s a re in not giving ta x p a y e rs an ev en b re a k .” the H e su p p o rts re d istric tin g b ecau se ho feels the p re se n t a rra n g e m e n t re b s c ity v o te rs of m u c h of the effe c tiv en e ss of th e ir fran ch ise. the R ep u b lican “ If w e conservatives ca n ’t sell our w ares to the city voter*.” he says, “ then w e haven't got much to sell.” About in rise T ex as, p a rtic u la rly n o ticeab le in h is h o m e a r e a aro u n d D allas, P a rk h o u se sax s. “ I don’t think tiiat im p o rta n t. It was m o stly re ac tio n — th e R epublican v ote — a lot of people w ere vot­ ing against what they thought were it 's v ery P a rk h o u se h a s n e v e r fa c e d a R ep u b lican o p p o n en t in an e le c ­ tion. B u t he sa y s th a t he e x p e cts th em to p re s e n t a th r e a t, alth o u g h it m a y be o nly short-lived. Currently he Is supporting a b ill to rewrite* the state s a l e s tax. O t h e r (vending bill* would radically revam p the state prop­ erty “ Everyone sy stem . should be taxed equally ami uni­ form ly,” he Kays, and claim * that this is not now being done. tax th e poll “ We should keep tax —" sa y s P a rk h o u se , who th in k s ev e ry o n e should co n trib u te to the su p p o rt of the v oting sy stem , “ I in te re s t think if they h av e to p a y .” th e y ’ll h av e m o re BI I,US HIT LABOR line on tak en a h a rd He h a s issue. P a rk h o u se bills the labor the anti­ put la b o r unions u n d e r law s. p ro h ib ited picketing tru st a g a in st both employers and em ­ ployes — and e a rn e d him the en­ m ity of o rg an ized labor. He co n sid e rs his main task to be th e S ta te 's w a te r program. He w as long ago n o m in a te d to head th e W a te r R e so u rc e s Committee, is proud of the an d P a rk h o u s e role he has played in developing the state's waterways. On the South Mall in Front of the University Main Building . , . aver 400 students and faculty protest the Senate rejection of W . St. John Garwood as a Regent. To van Photo Vt nne Exile Leader Names Bases W ASHINGTON (JU — A C uban exile le a d e r said W ednesday th ere d efinitely a re m o re th a n 17,000 So­ viet tro o p s In Cuba an d p erh a p s up to 30.000. H e called for a US- led invasion “ to re s to re p ea c e to the h e m isp h e re .” D r M anuel deV anona. w ho w as t h e C u b an Senate p resid en t of from 1950 to 1952 u n d e r ousted P re s id e n t F ulgencio B a tista , also sa id : “ W ell-inform ed so u rces In V ien­ n a ’” re p o rt the Soviets h av e esfab- Ushed tw o se c re t m ilita ry b ases In L atin A m erica, one in th e ju n ­ gles of northw ’est B razil, th e o th e r in the m o u n tain s of P a ra g u a y . C uba h i s set up n u m e r o u s schools of sab o teu rs a n d g u e rrilla w a rfa re throughout L a tin A m er­ ica, d ire c te d by a council of high C o m m u n ist officials In H av a n a. D eV arona, speaking th ro u g h an in te rp re te r, D r. N e ste r C arb o n ed , m ad e h is sta te m e n ts In testim o n y before th e H ouse In te r-A m e rica n A ffairs su b co m m ittee, w hich is in in v estig atin g C uban su b v ersio n in I^atin A m erica. Carboncll r e a d a DeVarona statem ent saying, “ () n I \ joint military action from abroad, un­ der the leadership of the United States, ran liberate C u b a and restore p e a c e to the h em is­ phere.” In a su p p lem en t re a d la te r, how­ ev er, he called first fo r a naval th en ad eq u ate and a ir blockade, m ilita ry a ssista n c e freedom fig h ters in C u b a’s m o u n tain s and “ collective ab ro ad , finally and fo r a rm e d a c tio n ” a g ain st C u b a needed. lf Such actio n should be t a k e n th rough th e Organization of A m er­ ican S tates, I>eVaom a said, b u t by the U njt^d S tates alone, if n ec e s­ sa ry , u n d e r its in h e re n t rig h t of u n ila te ra l self-defense. DeVarona disp u ted a d m in is tra ­ th a t only 17,000 tiv e con ten tio n s Soviet tro o p s re m a in In C uba of those s e n t th e re before the U nited S tates fo rced out Soviet offensive m issiles an d b o m b ers last O ctober At firs t D eV arona said he had ev id en c e and re p o rts of 30,000 to 35,000 Soviet troops rem ain in g . But under questioning by Rep. Leonard Farbstein, ( D W . ) , D e­ Varona changed this. saving he would m ake the definite sta te­ ment there are more than 17, - OOO a n d as many as SO,OOO. 25-Cent Shaves Offered Enfrants S tu d en ts In e n terin g in terested th e a n n u a l R ound-U p B eard G row ­ ing C o n test m a y b ecom e eligible for co m p etitio n T h u rsd ay and F r i­ day. A nyone who plans to n eglect the u se of b la d e ag a in st cheek until April 5 m ay com e to the T exas Union lobby ac ro ss from th e M u­ sic L isten in g R oom betw een I and 5 p m . Thursday o r F rid a y , pay a 25-eent entry' fee, a n d be shaved by ca m p u s coeds in front of w it­ nesses. (E ditor’* N ote: This is another in a D aily Texan series of fea ­ tures concerning state le g isla ­ tors.) By I .ARRY' JOLLY' Texan Staff Writer is p ro b ab ly T he maul w ho the m ost pow erful co n se rv a tiv e in the T ex as S en ate, G eorge P a rk h o u se , to sa y a b o u t Hie h as h ad S en a te's re fu sa l to c o n firm Ju d g e W. St. Jo h n G arw ood a s a reg en t of th e U n iv ersity . little “ I d o n ’t h av e any c o m m e n t—” an d th en , a fte r a m o m e n t of hest- ! iation, “ —ex cep t th a t a n y th in g the Senate does in its w isdom m u st be ! rig h t.” K nown as th e S e n a te 's “ M r. Con­ s e rv a tiv e ,” P ark h o u se is g e n e ra l­ ly re sp e c te d by o th e r se n a to rs, even those w ho do n o t sh a re his view s. T he re sp e c t is p la n te d by P a rk h o u s e ’s own m a n n e r of con­ ducting his a ffa irs ; it bloom s be­ cause of his efficiency a n d his often-deadly aim w ith co m m en ts. OPPONENTS GRANT ABILITY T he D a lla s D e m o c ra t h a s been In the L e g isla tu re on a n d off since the la te 1920's, and h a s b een in the S e n a te sin ce 1950. His oppon­ ents do not deny that th ey fe a r legislative cap ab ility . Allies his proclaim him a sincere a n d hard­ working conservative. ja b s the S en ate is sp e ak in g In actio n on floor, P a rk h o u se his co n tin u ally good a rm a t th e p erso n to w hom he to e m p h a size a point. H e lost one a r m a n d one leg in a C h ristm as D ay gaso lin e d ru m explosion w hen he w a s 12 y e a rs old. Tile g re y -an d -b la ck -h a ired “ Big seldom now 63, D ” le g islato r, shuns co n tro v e rsy . “ I ’m not in favor of the two- party sy s te m ,” Parkhouse de­ ciare* flatly. “ I ’m in favor of the D em ocrat* keeping control of the state. . . . The Republicans are telling us now' to vote for a Republican even if h e’s a yellow dog—and that’* exactly what they accused the D em ocrats of doing. “ T ex as an d m ost of Hie South w ere n o -p arty s ta te s ra th e r th an o n e-p arty s ta te s, ju st like th e ir op­ posites, stro n g ­ the R ep u b lican in N ew E n g la n d ,” he con­ holds tinues. “ C an d id ates w e re a b le to ru n in th e p rim a ry on th e ir own ideas, a n d d id n ’t h av e to be tied to w h at the n atio n al o r sta te p a rty said . . M inorities can b a rg a in fo r p o w er in m a s t of th e tw 'o-party sta te s . . . an d th a t’s w h ere m ost tak e s of the c o r r u p t politics . | p la c e .” And in Front of the State Capitol Building . . . 30 students express their disfavor by picketing. Goodman to Address ChallengeColloquium The U n iv e rsity 's C hallenge Collo­ Its second q uium snow ball* Into y e a r T h u rsd ay w ith a keynote ad­ d re s s by P a u l G oodm an. T he three- d a y session will focus a tte n tio n on “ In d iv id u alism In T w en tieth Cen­ tu ry A m erica ” In itia te d w ith th e p u rpose of giving stu d e n ts an o p p o rtu n ity to b ro a d e n th e ir know ledge of cu r­ re n t issues an d le ttin g th em ex­ p re ss th em selv es on th ese issues, th e 1163 C hallenge C olloquium will h o st a p p ro x im a te ly 250 U niv ersity stu d e n ts and 50 d e le g a te s from o th e r T ex as schools, acco rd in g to K sy M artin , co -ch airm an of the re g istra tio n co m m ittee. G oodm an, noted au th o r, social c ritic , le c tu rer, and p ro fesso r, will d e liv er th e keynote a d d re ss T h u rs­ d ay a t 7 p.m . in the T ex as Union M ain B allroom Follow ing his talk and a question and a n sw e r period all ro u n d tab le sessions w ill m eet fo r th e ir discussions. S p e a k e rs for F rid a y vs ill Ic R us­ le c tu re r an d a u th o r of sell K irk , Challenge Schedule HEADQUARTERS: MAIN LOBBY OF TEXAS UNION THURSDAY 10:00-12:00 Coffee: Union S t a r Room. Informal 3:00- 5:00 Registration and assignment of living quarters of out-of-town delegates: Main Union Coffee in the Texas Union Star Room. 5:30- 6:30 Barbeque: Junior Ball Room. ($1.35) 7:00- 8:30 F irst Plenary S e s s i o n : Union Ball Room Welcome Keynote Address: Paul Goodman Question and Answer Period. Coffee 8:45-10:30 Roundtable Sessions meet FRIDAY 10:00-12:00 Coffee: Union S t a r Room. Informal discussion: delegates, discussion lead­ ers, and keynote speakers. 12:00- 1:15 Lunch: Union Commons (paid for in­ dividually) 1:30- 2:45 Roundtable Sessions meet 3:00- 4:30 Second Plenary Session: Union B a l l Room Keynote A ddress: Russell Kirk Question and Answer Period. Coffee 4:30- 6:00 Roundtable Sessions meet 7:00- 8:00 Third Plenary Session: U n i o n Ball Room Keynote Address: Upton Sinclair Question and Answer Period Coffee 8:00- 9:00 Discussion Session: Junior Ball Room 9:00-10:45 Roundtable Sessions meet “ The C o n serv ativ e M i n d ”; and U pton S inclair, au th o r of “ The J u n g le ” th e final a d d re s s a t E rie Jonsson, c h a irm a n of the b o ard of T ex as In stru m e n ts, will d e liv er the fourth p le n a ry session S a tu rd a y at 9 a rn. A pan el discussion of the keynote sp ea k e rs will follow with R o g er S h attu ck serv in g as m od­ e ra to r. th e ir “ Participants of the Colloquium should pick up inform ation p a c k e ts a t C hallenge h e a d q u a rte rs on th e Union T h u rsd a y afte rn o o n ,” said Sandy P a rk e r, C h allenge co -ch airm an . th e m ain floor of S tu d en ts should also re m e m b e r to w e a r th e ir n a m e ta g s to all of the plenary' sessio n s so they will not be c h a rg e d an ad m issio n fee for being a n o n -p artic ip a n t, she said. F o r those stu d en ts ta k in g p a r t in C hallenge C olloquium w ho have class conflicts, a list of C hallenge p a rtic ip a n ts h as been sen t to a c a ­ dem ic d ean s, a sk in g fo r excused ab sen ces. Student* m u st, how ever, check w ith th e ir in s tru c to rs fo r ap ­ p ro v al. S tu d en ts who a r e not p a rtic ip a t­ ing in C hallenge but w ould like to a tte n d th e p le n a ry sessio n s and h e a r tire sp e a k e rs m a y do so fo r a slig h t ad m issio n fee. Allocations Made For Campus Chest T he R ules an d A p p ro p riatio n s C o m m ittee of the S tu d en t A ssem ­ bly allo c a te d funds fo r the 1963- 64 C am p u s C hest d riv e W ednesday aftern o o n following h e a rin g s with th e g ro u p s concerned. Allocations include Cerebral Palsy Fou n d atio n , $2000; Austin fo r Retarded C hildren, C ouncil $1500 to apply specifically to a station wagon; Sponsored Students, $1200; Cystic Fibrosis, $1500; World University Students, $1000: a n d the Blind Student Reading Program of the University “Y ,” $240. The fall drive, for which the allocations were made, has been set up in the Student Assembly bill as a drive for wily charitable I institutions His o ffice is co n stan tly occu p ied by people with messages or with —Texan Photo—Venne SEN . P A R K H O U S E Pa M ouse Enlivens Senate Thursday, February 21, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 * little Min on the Campus By Bibler '^AY, ISNT TWAT THE SAAte* 6 B O J P O P ECM* THE PEAN OF MEN HAPeOMUCH'nZDU&LZ WITH LA&T FALL?* Give My Regards... Walled-ln' Government Judge St. John Garwood, a former Texas Supreme Court justice, was rejected as a University Regent behind the closed doors of the State Senate. Dr. Rupert C. Koeninger. a prominent Texas sociology professor at Sam Houston State College, was fired behind the closed doors of the SHSC Board of Regents. (See first of a two-part series on Koeninger and academic freedom in Texas, written by Jim Howler, elsewhere on this page.) These two cases have little in common except that each decision was arrived at during closed session and in each ease no reason had to be given. The Senate rules prohibit disclosing arguments a b o u t ap­ pointees: the SHSC Board of Directors mere­ ly refused to give reasons. ir ★ Each of these decisions has its inherent lesson in point. Judge Garwood’s disapproval by the Senate showed to the disgust of many citizens that the Senate is capable "in its wisdom,” as Sen. George Backhouse said, of making unwise nublie decisions in private. Dr. Koeninger’s f i r i n g at Sam Houston proved that no college teacher, no m atter what his stature in the academie world, may exercise his political and intellectual rights with impunity. But perhaps more Important than the individual lesson learned in each case was an intangible but nevertheless valuable one —t h a t government in America should be based on the historical axiom of "open cov­ enants openly arrived at.” ★ ★ Why should public business be conducted behind closed doors? Why should projects involving expenditures of public money be decided in secret sessions? Why should pub­ lic employes and servants be hired and fired without giving reasons or explaining de­ cisions? In short, should the private enterprise tradition of "executive sessions” be extend­ ed to the public domain? Answer? It should not. Dr. Albert Burke, when he spoke at the University last fall, talked about the danger of the "walled-in” mind—the mind unable to think past its own small context. The Legislature could put an end to Texas’ "walled-in” government by outlaw­ ing executive or secret sessions of all units, branches, or agencies of the State of Texas. A Vote to Reconsider Ordinarily students react to the word "R egent” like fraternity pledges do to bouil­ lon cubes—they are repulsed. For that reason, if for no other, it is quite out of the ordinary for students to be in the position of favoring the appointment of a Regent. Of course, w h e n the Senate rejected Judge W. St. John Garwood, students re­ acted naturally to the secret session of the Senate at which he was not confirmed. But they also reacted favorably to ’he man him­ self and to the type of Regent they thought he would be. ★ ★ Probably 99 per cent of the students who demonstrated and signed petitions Wednes­ day do not know Judge Garwood personally. They know’ only of his reputation as a jurist and as a thinking man. They know' of him as a man respected by his colleagues and as a man of broad background and knowledge. Well over a thousand students h a v e signed petitions asking t h e governor to nominate Judge Garwood a second time. About 400 students (from all geographical areas of the state) and a few professors silently stood in front of the Main Building for IO minutes Wednesday morning to pro­ test the rejection of Judge Garwood by the Senate. ★ ★ This Is by no means a unanimous ver­ dict on the part of University students; but at this university when 3,400 students ex­ press an opinion simultaneously, It is worth noting. The Daily Texan, with no coercion afore­ thought, encourages the State Senate to reconsider its action on the appointment of Judge St. John Garwood as a University Re­ gent. Faculty Pay: Texas Lagging (Editor’* Note: With r e g a r d to the following editorial from The H o u s t o n Chronicle, the University in 1961-62 paid an average salary of $11,441 to 347 full professors, or almost $1,000 over the na­ tional average for full professors at public four-year institutions. I T paid $11,777 to full professors this year. Considering all four ranks of professorship, the Univer­ sity paid an average of $8,256 in 1961-62, compared with national averages of $7,910 in public schools and $7,290 at private institutions.) In 1961, therefore, there will be a bump- crop of babies. In 1964, therefore .there will be a bump­ er crop of 18-year-olds entering college. Will Texas’ colleges be ready? Will we be able to offer the quality of higher edu­ cation our sons and daughters deserve—to all the numbers who will seek it? This is the biggest budget problem be­ fore the Texas Legislature. It would be easi­ it gradually er to face if we had f a c e d earlier. We retorted that more than half the National Merit Scholars now doing post­ graduate work are in I I colleges and uni­ versities, located eight in the East, four in the Midwest, two in the F ar West and none in the South. Most of the best brains of the South and Southwest en elsewhere to get the best in education. Today, the Southern Regional Education Board of Atlanta m a k e s available some startling figures as to what we have to do to catch up. Fact No. I: All Southern states fall be­ low the United States average in salaries pin-’ to full professors. Here are the figures: T h e Da i l y T e x a n O p m , a m cxpiesicU rn I he T ex an are th o se of the E dito rs or o f th e u n ite r o f the at t i d e and n o t n e e e ctardy tho-e rd the I ’m e r u t ) a d m i n s ­ tration . T h e D atly T exan a stu d e r new spaper of T h e U ni­ daily Sop th ro u g h May and m o n th iv in A ugust bv T exas v e rsity of T ex as is pub! shed ex cep t Nlondav end S a tu rd a y and holiday p eriods ta m b u r S tu d e n t P ud!sta tio n s A ustin. T exas Inc S eco n d -el*** postage paid a t ’n A ustin. T e x a s STAFF FOR THIS ISSEL MIO HT E D I T O R .................................TOMMY FOSTER LOI ANN WALKER ISSU E NEWS E D IT O R DESK EDITOR .................................. MARTHA TIPPS COPY DESK C H I E F ................... JE A N N IN E CAPPS D a te M eN eely, H elen Y enne, N ig h t R e p o r t e r s E v e re tt H uilum , E m ily L am on, B ennie G in to n . Bill L ittle, E ric k R a n te r C o p y r e a d e r s ...................S a ra D a g g e tt, C aro l G ra h a m N ig h t S p o rts E d ito r ............................. C arlto n S tow ers A s s is ta n t ................................................................ B ill L ittle N ig h t A m u se m e n ts E d i t o r .................H ayden F re e m a n A s s is ta n ts ...................... J e f f M illa r, L ynne M cD onald N ig h t F e a tu r e s E d i t o r ................................. J o a n J a m e s Editorial Assistant...................................Carolyn Co# AVERAGE PROFESSORS’ SALARIES: The US average: ..................$10,650 1. Delaware ...................... 9,790 .......................... 9,610 2. Florida 3. Virginia ........................ 9,130 4. Oklahoma ...................... 9,120 5. Maryland ...................... 9,040 ...................... 8,870 6. Arkansas 7. North C arolina............ 8,840 .......................... 8,630 8. TEXAS ............ 8,530 9. South Carolina ...................... 8,410 ...................8,160 .......................... 8,080 ...................... 8,070 .................... 7,910 ...................... 7,750 ........................ 7,500 10. Kentucky 11. West Virginia 12. Georgia 13. Louisiana 14. Mississippi 15. Tennessee 16. Alabama Fact No. 2: The South is NOT improving its position as against the remainder of the nation. Four years ago the salary' of a full professor in the South was 14 per cent be­ low the national average. Today it is 15 per cent below. Fact No. S.: Texas is not improving pro­ fessors’ salaries as rapidly as the national average. Between 1957 and 1961, salaries of full professors at public four-year institu­ tions rose 24.9 per cent in the United States. In Texas, these salaries improved 21.4 per cent. This is how Texas ranked with the other Southern states: AVERAGE RATE OF INCREASE: I S average ............................... 24.9' 1. Oklahoma ......................... 32.9 ............... 31.8 2. South Carolina 3. Mississippi ....................... 28.4 4. West Virginia ................. 26.9 5. Florida ............................. 25.6 6. TEXAS ............................. 21.4 20.7 .......... 7. Delaware 8. Georgia ............................. 20.2 9. Kentucky ......................... 18.8 10. Virginia ........................... 18.6 ......................... 15.2 11. Arkansas 12. Alabama .............. 14.2 10.2 13. Tennessee .......... 8.2 14. North Carolina . .v 15. Mary land 8.1 16. Louisiana 5.1 At a time when the b u m p e r crop of babies creates the greatest demand for full professors in the h i s t o r y of the United States, Texas can not afford to pay less than enough to get the best. ......................... ......................... And when you have been paying less than the national average, and increasing pay more slowly than the national average, Texas is losing rather than gaining ground in the battle for brains. —HOUSTON CHRONICLE By BILL HAMPTON Frankly, Virginia Woolf scares hell out of me. And Edw-ard Albee hasn’t exact­ ly helped matters any. In the first place, V i r g i n i a Woolf writes stream of con­ scious novels. Now think of any' woman you know and Imagine what it would bo like to hear her stream of consciousness suddenly be­ come audible to the human ear. To tho c a t c h y back g ro u n d m usic of “ W ho's A fraid of V ir­ ginia Woolf, V irginia Woolf, so e a rly in th e m orning, ' Albee has w ritte n th re e and a h alf h o u ri of dialogue about the p roblem of d istin g u ish in g illusion from r e a l­ ity. Tins college p ro fe sso r and to k n o w his w ife d o n t seem w h e th er th ey re ally have a full­ grow n son aw ay a t school o r not. Now to m e, to he p re tty m uch a n o n-academ ic p roblem w ith w hich one sh o u ld n 't o rd in a rily h av e m uch tro u b le this seem s Of course, nobody d o e * good th e a te r an y m o re. T ake “ Alice in th e re s W o n d erlan d .'' Boy, now re a l th e a te r. B aylor T h e a te r h as scheduled a production of “ A lice in W o n d erlan d 1’ this Spring. Rut lu st b e c au se a thing is scheduled a t B ay lo r d o esn 't n e c e ssa rily m ean th at it will com e off. I can se e the headlines n o w : “ Abb Mack Call Call* Aile** In ' P u r e P ornogra­ Wonderland phy,’ C loses Show.” Now this might seem ridiculous to \ou . hut let's exam ine the text. in H ave you n e v er w ondered ju s t th at bottle A l i c e right before th a t m ouse sw im m ing te a rs, anti the m o u s e w h at w as drank"* You know, she saw around talked to it. And talk ed back. in a pool of T hen, if you rem e m b e r. Alice goes to W. R a b b it's house. I ’n- ch ap ero n ed . T h a t h as F re u d ia n o v erto n es I had ra th e r not even think about. And, of course, w hile she s a t W. R a b b it’s place look­ she d rin k s ing o v e r etchings, som e m o re of the sa m e stu ff A re g u la r little sot, she is. And is anyth in g M ack Call if th e re won t h av e on his u n h e r s ity 's stag e, alcohol. sex E sp e cia lly a com bination of both a n d it Is shocking I suppose one of lite r a tu r e ’s m o s t tre a tm e n ts of c a n n ib a lis m ,^ found in th e sy m ­ bolic in cident of the W alrus and the C a rp en te r, and how th e y d e ­ the O y sters. A dvocation v o ured of such b estia lity c a n n o t he to le ra ted on th e sta g e F irs t ihing you know, little C annibal Social Clubs will sp rin g up aro u n d c a m ­ pus. th ere’* And. of course, the omnipresent problem of dirty language. Take t h e obscene verse, “ ‘Twas brlllig and the sllthy loves did gyre and glm- hla in the w abe; All m in n y were the borogroves, and the m om e rath* outgrabe." I once quoted to a eoed on a date. “ I never d is­ cuss politics or religion," she said. those very lines T h a t v e rse m ay not seem lewd a t first, but you m u st re m e m ­ b e r th a t an y th in g you c a n ’t un ­ d e rs ta n d is p o rn o g rap h ic filth. T he play, too, is full of political in stan ce, h av e p ro p a g a n d a . F o r I’l W I i s Koeninger Testifies... Legislature Reviews Teacher Infringement (Editor’s Note: This is the first segment of a two* part article on academic freedom in Texas. Tomor­ row's article will deal with the events leading to and the consequences of Dr. Rupert Koeninger’* db- missal from the faculty of Sam H o u s t o n State Teachers College.) By JIM FOWLER Texan Staff Writer A short, mild-m annered man in his m id-fifties, w earing glass­ es and a conservative brown suit, stood before the T exas H ouse of R epresentatives C om m ittee on State Affairs at 11:30 p.m . Wed­ nesd ay night. “ My nam e is Rupert Koeninger and I would like to take this op­ portunity to tell you gentlem en w hat I know about the infringe­ m ent of teach ers’ rights as citi­ ze n s.’’ in You could have heard a pin drop cham ber, the House w here the com m ittee w as huddled around the press table. Only a scattering of reporters, w itness­ es, and o b se rv e rs w ere p re se n t. It w’as quiet, in an alm o st re lig ­ ious way. K oen in g er continued his te s ti­ m ony. his voice sta rtin g to quiv­ er with emotion, but still c le a rly audible. “ I am a native Texan and a graduate of T exas Tech­ nological College. When I first went to Sam Houston State. I w’as the only man in the Sociol­ ogy D epartm ent and when I left, there were five of us We had one of the largest departm ents in the state, if not the whole south­ ern part of the country Our graduates are stationed all over the United S tates the cause of h u m a n ita ria n ism in ev­ ery capacity from field workers in juvenile delinquency to prison rehabilitation p ro g ra m s We w>ere very proud of our stu d en ts and our p ro g ra m . serv in g KOENINGER D ISM ISSED “ M y satisfactio n w as sh o rtliv ­ ed. how ever, for one day, like a n ig h tm are , I w as told th at I wa* fired. T hey told m e th at I w as fired and g av e no reason for th** I h av e this action. U ntil riav it you noticed is a RED that King and Queen? Instead of, say, red, white, and blue. The enem y within. N aturally, Mack Call wouldn’t let a play on stage that preached atheism . Everyone knows “ Alice in W o n d erlan d ’' is an atheistic work. R em em ber how Tweedle- dee and Tweedledum told Alice she w a sn ’t real. That she only ex isted in the Red K ing’s dream , and if the R ed King e \ e r woke up, poof she d be nothing Now, I'm a if my little rusty, b u t memory- serve* correct, that isn’t in stric t h a rm o n y w ith the ver­ sion in G enesis. Students are im ­ p ressio n ab le people. As a m atter of fact, they will believe any­ thing you tell them. E specially if it s on a stage. Suppose all th e se college students b e g a n th e ir child ren that the teac h in g w orld o n l y ex ists in the Red K in g s d re a m s. Well, you can see M ack Call s p roblem . There are all aorta of evils In “ Alice In Wonder­ hidden land,-' and Mack Call la per- froth within his rights to clote the show. I could Hat more, but these are sufficient. You jaat have to learn to read between the line*. Oh w ell, the milk tra in d<*esn t stop h ere an y m o re. The Firing Line LIBERAL VIEW DIM To the Editor: May all our Kennedy’s he enlight­ ened The “ L ib era l View" o f indi­ v id u alism as expressed by John­ ny W eeks rn th* Feb. IO Texan Dennis Dick 499 W. SA ti) * O BEST OF SOLUTIONS sta te s that “ collectivism " is in­ To the Editor: ev ita b le b e c au se the society “ c o m p le x " His argum ent is is based on widely accepted cliche* which are false. For instance, he a ssum es that a large many-powered govern­ ment would w-ork only for the good of the citizens. The truth is that if the governm ent w ere to control the w ages, price*, and production of the now sem i-pri­ vate industries (e g , steel, auto*, telephones*, the lives and jobs of the w o rk ers would be in great­ er jeopardy than now. (Suppose the city cam e and shut off my gas arbitrarily.) It is actually dangerous to assum e that the g o v e rn m e n t would be a “ good monopoly" because power cor­ ru p ts. F in ally , and contrary’ to Mr. W eeks' view s, new industries and new p riv a te industries are com ­ ing into being and thriving today. He points out that he could not s ta rt a new auto factory. N either for that m atter, could Henry' F o rd , who started in a garage. Many com panies m a d e good in the US. May I sug­ g est th a t the harrier to private in itiativ e here is high taxes that penalize su ccess? Or unrealistic labor costs? foreign auto “ C ollectivism " in governm ent inefficiency, and breeds w aste, the citizen’s expense grows at beyond the citizen's control. In Mr. Weeks' pseudo-historical lin­ go, this century m ay be called the "Age of the N ew D esp o tism .” Im plicit in Mr. Cottle s ha­ rangue against the peace m oi e- ment are two basic assum ptions: that the peacem ongers are (I) willing to accept peace at any price and, (2i that peace is equiv­ alent to surrender. Mr. Cottle, of coulee, would rather be “ dead than red ’ Proceeding from these assu m p ­ tions, then, the ideal solution for all concerned would be for the peacem ongers to surrender to the Soviet Union, whilst Mr. Cottle and his like-minded friends com ­ mitted m ass suicide. Russell G. Tay lor 1902 Vt hills Ax e . ★ PEACETIM E DRAFT To the Editor: I signed the petition opposing t h e p ea c e tim e the renewal of the for an y of draft but not eight reasons suggested the in leaflet distributed by those cir­ culating the petition. The burden of the stated rea­ sons are designed to appeal to the liberal or pacifist, and by no stretch of the im agination am I either. My fellow conservatives should rem em ber t h a t the peacetim e draft gives nearly every b o y fresh out of high school and in­ capable of attending college 2 to 4 years to acclim ate him self to the com forts of w elfare statism . At a tim e when his more able fellows are supposedly learning to use their minds independently, he is being taught how conform ­ ity to cradle to g r a v e security. leads Hayden F reem an 710 W. 24| i »L never been told or have never found out the reason for m y dis­ m issal. B ecause of this grave in­ justice to m e, I beg of you to take som e action to protect the teachers in this state from any further their rights as citizens." infringem ent of Upon finishing his testim ony, Dr. K oeninger said he w as open for questions. There w ere no questions, only silence, from the i s they watched the com m ittee . man return to hi* chair. D r. K oeninger’s I e a 1 1 mony wa* given In support of House BOI 77 sponsored by Reps. Bob Eckhardt of Houston, D Ie k Cherry of Waco, Ronald Rob­ erts of Abbott, et a1. The bill Is written so a* “ to protect the right of public em ploye* to exercise all rights and prtvUeg. es of citizenship." U n d er the bill, th e b o ard s of school b o ard s a re re g e n ts and “ pro h ib ited from affecting, d i­ re c tly or in d irectly , ten u re of e m ­ p lo y m en t of any public em ploye ex cep t th e a d m in istra tiv e head of a school sy ste m , college or u n iv e rsity .’’ Also a re provisions fo r civil rem ed y and im position of fines for crim in a l conviction included A lthough the em p h asis seem * to be on the teac h in g profession. the first w itness E c k h a rd t p re ­ sented w as H o race Shaw, v .- ier. la te r n a m e d c h a irm a n of the to stu d y the hill. su b co m m ittee asked D r. Hill if he b e liev e! in “ p u re a c a d e m ic freedom " Dr. Hill a sk e d J a r v is to qualify hi* question J a r v is replied, “ Well, do you think th a t a m an h a s the iv»ht to c ra m anvili ng down th e th ro a ts o f stu d e n ts b ecause they a re in his c la s sro o m ? " H ill ie- piied, “ I believe th a t a m an can teach as he p le a se s, so long as it does not in te rfe re w ith his com - l>etonce an d efficiency as an in­ s tru c to r." This entire hearing was ju»t another link In the long chain on the question of academ ic f r e e d o m . The constitutional rights of college in T exas have been i n f r i n g e d U|>on for year* with little or no le e ­ way granted for any type of equitable rem edy. teachers One of the m ost fla g ra n t v io la­ took tions of a c a d e m ic freedom place a t the U n iv ersity d u rin g the sp rin g a n d su m m e r of 1942. An a c co u n t of is in a p u b licatio n en title d given th is episode “ The Controversy a t the U n iv e r ­ sity of T exas, 1939-1946, A Docu­ m entary History" by Henry N ash Smith, H orace Busby and R ex D. Hopper, published by the Stu­ dent C om m ittee for A cadem ic Freedom of the U niversity Stu­ dents’ Association. According to this document, in M arch, of 1942. four m em bers of Ihe U n iv ersity * econom ics de­ partm ent attended a m ass m eet­ ing held in D allas. The m eeting was advertised in Tho D allas M orning N ew s for the purpose of explaining the F air Labor Stand- ards Act. There w as a m iscon­ ception at the tim e concerning the 40-hour work week. P eople thought the governm ent forbade anyone to work over the lim it. the m eeting The men. Dr. V. Carlson, Mr. F agg F oster, Dr. W. C. Gor­ don, and Dr. VV. N. P each, w ent to D allas to attend Ute m eeting. Before th* m#n naked for perm ission lo speak in correction of th* erroneou* Interpretations of th* law. Such permission w as refused, but th# men decided to stay and ob­ serve. M EETING CRITICIZED Follow .ng th e m eeting, the men m ad e a sta te m e n t to The D allas M orning News th at ihe m eetin g “ u n d em o cratic, unspontan- w as and un ­ eous, u n r;'p re en ta tiv e fairly * :it.i a l." Such sta te m e n ts w ere also la te r given to The Aus­ tin S tate sm a n and Th* D a.ly Texan A few days after th* m ass m eeting, Federal D istrict Judge T. VV Davidson of D allas wrota letters to the R egents urging “ that change* be mad* In th* econom ies faculty." As a result Ihe board requested the faculty of the econom ics departm ent ta make a careful study of tho facts in the rase Such a stu d y w as mad* and the eco n o m ics d e p a rtm e n t sta te d th* P reaid en t an a ssu ra n c e to and th e ir th a t In opinion “ ihe four in stru c to rs have conducted th em se lv e s in co m |.)fte h a rm o n y With aca d e m ic decorum and h av e m no w ay gone ew v teary to the ru le s and regulation* of the I'-sa rd of R egents " the B oard to of the opinion Follow (ng It* m eeting on Jon* J*. IM?, the Hoard was unanl- rnouslv that M essrs. I ,»gg F o ste r, Wendell Gordon, and W V. I'rach (Dr. V < arisen had since left for another assignm en t), by their conduct Incident to the {wxtriotla m ass meeting had violated th* th* rules and regulations of Board of Regents for the gov. em in en t of the University. Th* men were not re em pioved. renew ed by la irin g the su m m e r of 1957, th# c o n tra c ts of I t F.vron R A ber­ nathy and D r Hortiert M Green­ b e rg vv e re no* the governing h o ard at T exas T ech­ nological College An account Hf this action w a s given in an A*w> e lated P re s s sto ry w+tich a p p e a r­ ed in The S u m m er T exan on Ju ly 17, 1957 C HARGES U N E X PL A IN E D A ccording to the sto ry , the Tex­ a s T ech B o ard of D irecto rs voted u n anim ously not to renew th '' two m en s c o n tra c ts d u rin g a closed session N e ith e r of th e m en w as It given re a so n s fo r th e action w as g e n e ra lly known th* p ro fesso rs h eld lib eral political and social view s, th at a calling reso lu tio n 'Flu* g e n e ra l fac u lty of the col­ lege rallied to the m en 'n su p p o rt w ith th# B o ard of D ire c to rs’ actio n “ m an i­ festly unjust It fu rth e r said d iet “ d ism issal w ith o u t c h a rg e s and w ith o u t h e a rin g ten d s to disco u r­ age freed o m r f to c re a te in the m in d s of every staff m e m lie r h feeling of Insecu rity w hich will d e stro y faculty m o ra le ." thought and is th a t “ it In su m m a tio n tile resolution ad d ­ 'd tile belief of lh# faculty th at w hen the>>e facts a r# called to th? atte n tio n of the T ech B oard of D ire c to rs it will w ish to re c o n sid e r its actio n a t the e a r . b e st m o m en t in an open m eet­ ing." According to an editorial ap­ pearing In The Sum m er Texan, Aug. 2, 1837. entitled “ The Tech Serial: L a ted E pisode," th# T exas Tech Board of D lreeto ra called the ca se closed and de­ creed a policy of “ no hearing" despite, pleas from the faculty, the students, and tile college president. Job Opportunities A representative of the United S ta te s P u b lic H ealth Service w ill interview ' on fo r a e s rn pus T h u rsd ay . Feb. re p re se n ta tiv e position a* p ro g ra m trainee. L o catio n and sa la ry ar* open. art* m ajor* lib eral ill . . . WUIia« J .J U U Liberal Aria P lace***! (Hflcat , . Thursday, February 21, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e * Clohessy to Face Kidd In Garden's Three-Mile By CARLTON STOWERS Texan Sp o rts Staff Pat Clohessy, Texas University’s adopted distance runner, will clash with Toronto University’s sensa­ tional sophomore, Bruce Kidd, in the National AAU Indoor three- mile run next Saturday night on toe boards in New York’s Madi­ son Square Garden. Kidd, the nineteen-year-old who has already shown the best dis­ tance runners of the world that he is capable of running right with them, will be shooting at the in­ door standard of 13:26.0. The burr­ headed Canadian won the event last year in 13:48.8. Clohessy, who was second to Kidd in the AAU meet last winter while attending the University of Hous­ ton, is currently attending Texas University on a history fellowship and is competing under the ban­ ner of the Texas Olympic Club. The native-born Australian was NCAA three-mile champ in 1961 and ’62, posting a 13:47.2 in win­ ning the ’61 affair. Clohessy’s best time for the event is 13:36.2. Also in the talent loaded field will be France's Olympic silver medalist in the 1.500 meters, M ar­ cel Bernard, England’s Brian Criag, and little Max Truex, who will be running the U nited; States Air Force. for Bruce Tulloh, European distance champ, is entered but as yet has not contacted meet officials. Little Jim Beatty', u'ho set a new Indoor mile standard last week when he raced to a blazing 3 :58 6 will again face Loyola sophomore Tom O'Hara. OM ara c l o c k e d 3 :59 2 behind Beatty last Friday | night. Detroit’s Hayes Jones will de­ fend his 60-vard high hurdle title and aim at his 42nd straight in­ door win. Jones’ wan last week in Louisville's Mason-Dixon Games broke the old record of most con­ secutive wins, held by the great Harrison Dillard. The sprint field Is impressive, boasting Florida AAM whiz, Rob­ ert Hayes, who get a new 70-yard standard of 6 9 In the Louisville meet, and Herb Carper of Santa Barbara, world record holder for 60-yards. Russia’ jumping bean, Valery Brummel, who cleared 7-5 for a new Indoor world record In New York’s Athletic Club meet, will be after revenge in his specialty. He faces Boston University’s John Thomas. Thomas won over Brum­ mel for the first time In their eight meetings in the Los Angeles Times Indoor Meet, clearing 7-0. Former ACC Wildcat, E a r l Young, who raced to a 55.5 In the louisville 500, breaking Villanova's Charles Jenkins’ world record by nine-tenths of a second, will be the favorite over Jamaican George Kerr, Jack Yearman and former University of Texas star, Eddie Southern, In the 600-yard run. Sports Briefs From the Wire A U ST IN i/PV—T he U n iv e r sity of T e x a s ( l a s s sa id W ednesd ay AA AA all sta te qu arterb ack R a ­ gan G en n u sa of P ort Arthur will enter th e U n iv e r sity in S e p te m ­ ber. G e n n u i a, 5-foot-ll and 165 pounds, averaged 6.2 yards per carry last year and completed IT of 33 passes, seven for touchdowns intent were F.d Small, 190-pound quar­ terback from Austin McCallum; Stanley Bonewitz, 215-pound end from San Antonio St. Gerard's and Earl Hudson, 180-pound end from La Feria, the brother of Texas sophomore wingback Jim Hudson. Also signing letters of ★ * WACO UU— Baylor opens spring football training Saturday with more than 70 candidates, including 21 lettermen, reporting to Coach John Bridgers. Raymond Berry, star end of the Baltimore Colts, will join the Bay­ lor staff for the fourth straight spring training session. He will work with the receivers. Chief depth problem will be at guard where the Bears lost five lettermen. Only Don Boozer, a junior, will return. Jam es Ingram Ken Hodge Mike Broyles, Jam es Rust and Bob Wolf return at end; Bobby Crenshaw, Johnny Jessup, Lewis Sessums and Arturo Delgado at tackle; Ernest Erickson and Weldon Price at cen­ ter; Don Trull, Bobby Maples and Robert Christian at quarterback; Kelly Roberts, Lawrence Elkins and Joe Gerald at halfbacks and Dalton Hoffman, Tom Davies and Gwinn Corley at fullback. ★ ★ P F L U G E R V IL L E (Pi—Q uarter­ b a ck J o e W eiss, th e guiding hand in P flu g e r v ille ’* national record 55 -g a m e w inn ing s t r e a k , a n ­ n ounced W ed n esd a y he will e n ­ roll at T exan AAM. Weiss, 6-foot-4 and 200 pounds, scored 234 of his team s 452 points last year and passed for l l touch­ downs. He signed a pre-enrollment ap­ plication with the Aggies, but can­ not sign a letter of intent until he finishes his high school eligibility. He is a center of th* basketball team and also runs track. ★ ★ WACO IP Baylor University re­ ceived signed letters of Intent Wed­ nesday star Texas two schoolboy football players, making the total signed 35. from Tile new signers were Larry Wilson, S-foot-3 inch, 225-pound all district tackle from Edison High School of San Antonio, and Ar­ nold Holloway, 6-foot, 180-pound Class A first team all state end from Wink. HOUSTON IP—T h e U n tre n d ty of H ouston a n n o u n ced W ed n es­ d ay the sig n in g of tw o m o r e top high sch ool fo o tb a ll p la y er* . Coach Bill Yeoman said Texas Qty fullback Robbie Williams, leading scorer and ground gainer last fall in District 12-AAAA, had signed a letter of intent. E arlier freshman coach Carroll Schultz signed Victoria’* center, David Childed. ★ ★ LAS VEGAS. Nev. GB—Middle­ weight champion Dick Tiger ot Nigeria almost certainly will be the favorite to retain hi* world title when he steps Into the ring here Saturday night. But a distinct t r e n d aet In Wednesday on behalf ct the ex­ champion, Gene Fullmer, In his bid to regain the crown. Sports Notice W O M E N S MURALS BASKETBALL CAPTAINS — Thor* will ba a basketball clinic In Gym 136 on Wed ne*day, Feb 20 a t S n m Captain* and players will benefit from bein? present BADMINTON Single* ant rte* ara re­ tournam ent a t the 19. Default* Pen th e m inded to be a t 7 p m Tuesday will ba called match IO m inutes a fte r ta scheduled MANAGERS — Thank you for being to prom pt In settin g vour M ember­ ship List* turned In. Tnt* it a g re at help In keeping our record* straight- ATTENTION FACULTY Moore's Annual Sale • CAPS • GOWNS • HOODS Today, Thursday the 21st Sporting Goods Downstairs PAT CLOHESSY Mays, SF Giants Come to Terms te rm in a tin g a B y The AvKK'latod Pre-** W illie M ay* and World str ip e atar Ralph T erry c a m e to c o n ­ term * W ed n esd a y , M ays tra ct b eco m in g one of the h ig h est paid p layer* In b a ae bal I history and T erry two-hour holdout. Mays, or,re the “ Say-Hey” kid of the old New York Giants and now the super-star centerfielder of San Francisco, signed for an estimated JKX) OOO, tops among ac­ tive players, and an increase of about $10,000 over last season Only such stars as Joe DiMag- gio, Ted Williams and Stan Musial have reached that salary plateau. Official figures on salaries are n o t announced, but Giant officials in San Fran- .-co agreed Mays’ salary is in the $100.OOO bracket. ’’That s a good guess,” a Giant official said of the $100,000 esti­ mate. Terry, 27 year-old right-hander for the New York Yankees, was two hours before a holdout for agreeing to a contract believed to call for ahou’ $33 OOO He signed at the Yankee training camp in Fort I.audor'dalc, Fla ‘ I ’m well-pleased With the con­ tract I feel I ’m over the hump,” the lanky pitcher said He wras the last of the Yankee bfttterymen to come to term s. Pitt her Roger Craig of the New York Meta agreed to terms. (Yaig whose 10-21 record topped the Met* last season, agreed to an estimated $27,000 Other signings in- bided pitchers Ray Herbert and Gai-y Peters with the Chicago White Sox, pitchers Ernie Broglio and Bobby Shantz with the St. louis Cardinals; In­ fielder Dick Schofield and rookie outfielder L arry Elliot with the Pittsburgh Pirates; pitcher Carl Willey with Milwaukee; pitchers Bob Allen and Wilfred Sonny Sie- bert with the Cleveland Indians, and pitcher Steve Dalknowski with Baltimore. Little by Little By BILL LITTLE Texan Sports Editor "It Never Happens Here . . Rumors are sometimes vicious, true, and hilarious. Fight rumors are the greatest of these, because, here for one brief moment, fish stories can exist that grow to be giant whales. Across two campuses Wednesday stories of who cold- cocked who swept like the very fight they sing of. All Texas heroes, we’re sure, were wiped out according to the Aggies, and Texas mauled several Aggie names. Aggie from his home town told him at the half of the freshman game that the Ags would start a fight either dur­ ing or after the game. But it was a little more than we could stand when Aggies located at the southeast corner of the gym went en­ masse after the game, not out the exit which was right by them, but down the court, where the rest of the Aggies stood waiting. The group then moved across the court, where Texas students at first backed up, and then finally came out swinging. The fight was going to happen. There was no way to But growing with the imagination of who hit who Is stop it. the story of what they were hit with. A hospitalized Aggie was certain he was knocked cold by a set of brass knuckles, but attendants said it was only a hard fist. Texas stories have it th a t the Farm ers put in mouth­ pieces before crossing the court, and then there was the story of knives and chains concealed in a suitcase on the Texas side. A&M was maddened by “Poor Aggies” (which generally does madden Aggies), and they were spoiling for a fight. Texas didn’t aid m atters a bit during the game, by motions of “come on over,” each time the Aggies griped. Remember Frog Fight? The Aggies’ last big fight came off at Fort W orth In Aggies are screaming th a t nothing like th a t ever hap­ 1957, when TCU’s campus became a battle ground. pens down there. Okay, we’ll tell you why. First of all, A&M has reserved seats for almost all but the corps. In ’56, A&M beat the Frogs in College Station, though films later showed Jim Swink had scored twice on touch­ downs never called. The Cadets fill one side of the gym to the top, but any Frog bandsmen’s hats were swiped in ’56, and TCH Texas people who go to the game aren’t massed into one was angered even more when the Aggies’ president asked group. TCI’ boys not to get dates with TCU girls, so the Farm ers could have dates. F urther, Aggie officers and local police completely fill the place. Also, until this year, Texas and the Aggies have really had nothing to fight about, since AAM had won there since 1955. Also, the blameless Ags might like to remember that AA M’s athletic section used to be behind the visiting team— untill 1958 when the Farm ers bombarded TCU’s champions w ith ice and o n e Aggie reached out of the stands and hit ll. K. Kirchner on the head. W ar Inevitable The Aggies won here last in ’59, and every year since. there has been trouble increasing. Ijist year’s fight occurred when two players squared off —this could and has happened in all tight athletic contests. Tempers flare through close contact, and sometimes they break. Tuesday night’s littIe party, however, was a little dif­ ferent. We ignored an anonymous call to tile Texan Monday night, in which the caller said “a bunch of Aggies are com­ ing down and are gonna try to start a fight after the game.” We ignored the coed who said that an Aggie friend had told her they were shaving their heads a little more than usual, so as to tell each other apart. We even looked askance when a close friend said an A fter A&M won, 7-0, a Frog freshman football player was walking across campus when a carload of Aggies shout­ ed a t him. Tile freshman threw the orange he was eating at the oar, and the Ags piled out. The fight swept ail over the campus, and finally ended when the Aggies were marched all the way off the premises. T hat time, six Aggies and one TCU student were hos­ pitalized. It is also of note that last year, when Texas beat the Farm ers in College Station, a mass of Aggies the length of a football field charged for the Texas cannon before their officers and a quick group of vigilantes from Texas held them off. But then, nothing like this has even happened in College Station . . . As to how to stop this nonsense, we have a suggestion we believe will solve the problem. Since it’s only the Aggies’ wish to see the basketball game, we suggest that the Cadets put on their uniforms for this game. After ail, Texas people don’t play soldier when they trek to Aggieland —why go civilian here, unless you wanted not to be easily recognized. We think the Ags are far more willing to fight when they can be swallowed by a jillion Teasippers and not bo marked men. Cadets in uniform should have enough respect for the nation they serve so as not to act like big babies playing away from mama . . . Get Ready for the Western Affairs! Western Blouses Start a t ................3 98 Matching Western Shirts a t .............498and up Squaw Boots a t .................... 498and up Ladies1 Stretch L e v is ................... 8 95 pr- Men's Levis in Various Colors and Corduroy ! Mural Scores ' oil*) ball f >••* A D elta T'p»! Inn over P h i K app* This default L am bd a Chi Alpha awar T au Delta Phi HW! IR-ai 7-3 Delta T au D e r * over Phi Slum * D el­ 8-4 Delta Kap[»a E psilon over SlRma Alpha IVA U I S ta E p silo n 15-7 15-13 Pi Hap;.a Alpha over K a l p a Alpha 15-12 13-15 8 6 P hi Delta 'I hots over T a u K a p p a E p­ s ilo n 1 5 4 Alpha T au O m ex a m e r 0 )1 P h i 15 2 15-1! 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Available in: White, Green and Black 4M A 49 8 Austin Army and Navy Store 201 W est 6th St. ACROSS FROM THE POST OFFICE Mr. H. D. Harris w ill he interviewing on February 28th from 9:0() A.M. until 4:00 P.M. Contact Mrs. Jerry Moore, Placement Director, for an appointment. B.E.O.B. 203 GR 1-1449 R ead our brochures a t you r placem ent office S ig n up N O W fo r your interview The one lotion that’s cool, exciting - b r i s k a s an ocean breeze I Th* one-and-oniy Old Spic# exhilarates...gives you that great-to-be- alive feeling...refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance... and wins feminine approval every time. Old Sp ce After Shave Loton, f ) 1 2 5 and 2.00 plus tax. 5 H U L T O N c m o p i c e — the shave lotion men recommend to other men / T W i s y , Marbury 21. 1763 THE DAILY TEXAN f r y 4 Social Fraternities W ill Hold Workshop The eightieth anniversary of the D ean uI Student Life, A m o N o - 1 Conduct, Social Affair* and Cam- PU* A ctivities Workshop, w ill m eet F riday at 3 p m . the Alumni Re- at 3 p.m. Saturday in Lnion 213 •eta b lish m en t of coUege social fra- vvotny. tern it ie* in T exas w ill be cele- Crated at the University' Friday lation* Workshop w ill m eet In Tex- j and Auditorium respectively. and S a tu rd a y . a* Union 317. R e p re se n ta tiv e s from l l colleges Also m eetin g at 3 p.m . la the In T exas h av e been invited to at- F in a n c e an d H ouse M an a g e m e n t fraternity E ach workshop w ill consist of a local, social panel including a national, and active m em ber of a The workshop w ill be concluded Saturday w ith a banquet at the V illa Capri Motor Hotel at 6:30 p m at w hich W alter Cronkite will be the main speaker. T ick ets w ill be a v ailab le through the U n iversity fraternities and the o ffice of Don M ighell, supervisor of fraternities. tend. This y e a r w ill m a rk the first W orkshop In U nion 213. At 7:30 Statewide c o o p erativ e effo rt to ex- p rn. a coffee for the v isiting w o rk ­ shop d eleg ates w ill be at the Sig- ahange ideas. W alter Cronkite U niversity-ex, m a Alpha E psilon house. w ill speak at the banquet Satur­ d ay. Cronkite one* said that m any people believe that the fraternity’s prim ary purpose Is to have fun. Although they do have som e fun, S a tu rd a y at 9 a rn , th e In te rfra ­ te m ity and Public R elatio n s W ork­ shop will m eet in the U nion A udi­ to riu m . T he le a d e r s h ip W orkshop w ill m eet in Union 213 at the sa m e t i m e / •a id Cronkite, they serve a “ fine long friendship.’’ purpose in cem enting bonds of life­ T h e R egional In te rfr a te m ity Con­ ference W orkshop wall be held for n atio n al fra te rn ity d e le g a tes and delegate* from T e x a s colleges and u n iv e rsitie s B t l l a rn. in the U n ­ ion A uditorium . P a n e l mem ber* w ill be C yril F la d , I^ambda Q ii be g reeted by th e A lpha; Jo h n Murray. Charles Gold- The Interfratem ity Council w ill begin its schedule with a luncheon F rid ay at the Kappa Sigm a house. V isiting delegates and fraternity m em ber* will — berg, Tau D elta Phi. M c C a r t h y to Lecture “ C om puter P ro g r a m s w i t h C om m on Sense ’ vs ill be the topic • f a public lectu re by D r. John M cC arthy of Stanford U n iv e r sity T h u rsd a y at 4 p.m . In B u sin ess- E c o n o m ic s B uilding JOI. T h o Inform ation P ro c essin g C o m m ittee , an In terd ep a rtm en ­ tal group, Is sp onsoring the l e c ­ tu re. D r. M cCarthy w ill a lso ad d ress a C om putation C enter sem in a r F r id a y a t 8 p.m . room *. H o w ill d isc u ss “ A n a ly tica l Cai d ila tio n s ." In T h e R ush W orkshop w ill be h eld in th e Union A uditorium a t I p m. th e S cholarship W orkshop w h i l e w ill be h eld in U nion 213. la s t T he the P led g e P ro g ra m W orkshop and the two w orkshops, Dance Planners to Meet T h e firs t m eetin g of th e R ound­ u p D an ce C o m m ittee w ill be h eld a t 4 p m . T h u rsd a y in T e x a s Union 325. “ M em b ers for both th e w este rn d a n c e an d the b a ll a re urged to a tte n d ," J a n C ostilow , c h a irm a n , said. All-Campus Advisers Selected Spring sem ester officer* of the All-Campus Advisers are Cynthia Brantley, president; Tyro Cox, vice-president and secretary; and Barbara Gresham, reporter. The executive committee la plan­ ning for the 1963-64 council elec­ tions. U te councils in each of the l l w om en’s dorm s are sponsored by the D ean of Women, A cam pus-w ide m eetin g w ill be held M arch 7. Dr. R obert Ledbet­ ter Jr., a social scien ce research associate, w ill speak. ★ Hall to Lecture to D A R Dr. Michael Hall, assista n t pro­ fessor of history, will speak a t tho D aughters of tho A m erican Revolution annual George W ash­ ington b lr t h d a y celebration luncheon T hursday at Westwood Country Club. R e se r v a tio n s f o r th e 13;M The sym posium featured p a­ p ers read by 60 scientists from rn dozen nations on cu rren t r e ­ search toward understanding the role of viruses in the m alignant disease. This is Ute seventeenth annual meeting sponsored by the hospital. ★ Sculptors to Soo Films D an H aw kins, graduate student in Fine A rts, w ill con d u ct the se c ­ ond in a series of sc u lp tu re c lasses a t 7 p.m . Thursday in the Art* and C ra fts C en ter of the T ex as Union. T he group w ill see film s on the stu d y of basic s tru c tu re and pro- C eo lo gist to Offer Talk Ing. la u ro Y zagulrre of Rey* nosa, Mexico, division geologist for Pctroleos Mexlcanos, will a d ­ d ress the U niversity Geological Society T hursday a t I p.m. in Geology B u ild in g ll. Ing. Y zagulrre, lecturer In a program sponsored by the A m er­ ican Association of Petroleum Geologists, will speak on Petro- in the P°rtK)ns leos Mexlcanos’ exploration pro­ gram la Northport Mexico. After receiving ii bachelor's degree in geology from the Uni­ versity In IMS, Ing. Ysngmirre began his work with Frtroleon Mexlcanos. He assumed Ms cur­ rent position In 1948 and now di­ rects n staff of 17 subsurface geologists working with 90 drill­ ing rigs. “Ing.” Is on abbreviation for the title engineer and equivalent ta Spanish to “Dr,” Delta Chi Plans Regional Meeting R epresentative* from four chap­ ters of Delta Chi social fraternity w ill convene in Austin F rid a y through Sunday for a regional con­ ference. R epresentative chapters Include th e U n iv ersity of Houston, Okla­ h o m a S tate U n iv ersity , Southern M ethodist U niversity, and the Uni­ versity. which I* acting a* host. The conference Is being held In conjunction w ith the Interfratem ity C ouncil W orkshop. Aside from a tte n d in g Workshop m eeting*, mem ber* and pledges will participate In howling and brid e tournam ent*, a conference trad itio n . ^ | a t e m m ,jsf0'tjr ! Goodfriend S M luncheon can be made with Mrs. Sterling R. Fillmore, GR 6 9014, ontil noon. ★ All States Represented E very state in the Union w as represented by at least one Uni­ v ersity student during the 1961-62 school year. The tw o in ou to f-sta te enrollm ent w ere Louisiana with 83 students and California with 80 States supplying the few est w ere V erm ont and A laska, with one each. leaders Three T exas counties other than T ravis had more than 1,000 stu­ dents at the U niversity during the year. T hese w ere Harris County (Houston area* with 2,811 long session; D allas, with 1,612; and B exar (San Antonio areal with 1,416 students. AU but eight T exas counties w ere represented at the U niversity dur­ ing the 1961-62 academ ic year. ★ Editorship Applications Application form s for 196.164 editorship of Tho Daily Texan a re available In the business of­ fice of Texas Student P ublica­ tions, Inc., In Journalism Build­ ing 107. Several form s have been picked up, according to Mrs. F ran k ie Mae Lindsey, TSP busi­ ness m anager. ♦ Medical Prof to Speak Dr. Robert S. N elson, asso c iate professor of m ed icin e a t the Uni­ v ersity ’s H ouston b ra n c h , and a l­ so s t the B aylor U n iv ersity Col­ lege of M edicine, w ill sp e a k on “ E v a lu a tio n of H e p atic D isc a se " at 8 p m. T uesd ay . He will address the Travis Coun­ ty M edical Society in the T exas M edical Association Library Build­ ing. * Leiden Supports Tough Policy For Friends and Foes Alike “In trying to determ ine a for­ eign policy, we m ust think first for the U nited S ta te s," D r. C arl I>eiden, visiting p ro fesso r of gov­ ernm ent, told m em b ers of the Air F o rc e ROTO T u esd ay afternoon. T h e sp eech v. is th e second of a ed Dr. Leiden, there is no real In­ ' of w ars, he said that it Is no long­ ternational love. “ M any countries accept mon­ ey but they don’t love us for our help. Me should stop trying to he so n ic e ,” he said. In o u r re la tio n s w ith th e o th er er necessary to declare war. With the weapons that are now avail­ able to the United States and R ussia, instead of giving a nation a form al statem ent, the US can ju s t sa y , “ W e’re going to knock s e rie s of Jo h n Ii. P a y n e M em orial m a jo r pow ers, sa id D r. I-eiden, the vodka out of y o u !’’ L e c tu re s sponsored by th e Arnold A m e ric a n s alw ays se e m to h a \e D r. I/clden gave hie version Air Society. the id e a th a t the o th e r lead e rs of war* of the fu tu re: D r. I^ id e n explained th e th e U nited States th a t in te re sts of a re e ith e r co m p letely stupid or c o m p letely b rillia n t. R u ssia falls should be th e m ost im p o rta n t con­ sid e ra tio n fo r the people who fo r­ m ulate our foreign policies. “ If w’e w o u ld n 't l>e so worried about the w elfare of o th e r coun­ trie s , we pro b ab ly would not m ake so m an y blu n d ers in o u r dealings with these countries " he said. in th e la tte r c a te g m y . A m erican s never think t h a t K h ru sh ch ev m a k e s m istak es in his dealings w ith o th e r nation*. T h is is not true, said D r. I,eid- en. “ We m ust fo rm u la te o u r pol­ icy w ith th e realizatio n th a t o th er g o v e rn m e n ts will not a lw a y s act in a rational m a n n e r." NO I /OVE TO LOSE Contrary to popular opinion, not­ U N D EC LA R ED WARS C o m m en tin g on th e develo p m en t K hrushchev and Kennedy have ju*t contacted each other on the special t ran* Atlantic wire th at I* described In “ Fall Safe." Khurwhrhev I* slightly upset be­ ju st been cause Smolensk has com pletely dextro J rd by A m eri­ can a t o m i c weapons. “ W hich city can we offer you in On Campos w ith M o t S h o k a n (Author rtf " I IP a* * T tm -a g t Throrf", “ The M any ljeen done by now about roommate* But no. The roommate picture ha.* n o t brightened one bit since Ethan Goodpimple founded the first American college. (C ontrary to popular H arvard was not the first. Mr. Goodpimple started his institution some 75 years earlier. And quite an institution it was, let me tell you! Mr. Goodpimple built schools of liberal arts, fine a rts dentistry, and tanning. He built a lacrosse stadium th a t seated 102,000 Everyw here on cam pus was em blasoned the s t i r r i n g la tin m otto CA V E M U S S I —“ W atch o u t for moose.” T he student union contained a bowling alley, a clock, and a ifi-chair bari-cr shop. f i t was th is la s t fe a tu re —th e b a rb e r s h o p - th a t , ala*. brought Mr. Goodpimple s cs-llege to an eariv end. The student body, being draw n from th e nearby countryside, was componed chiefly of re q u o ta and Iroquois who, ala.*, had no need of a barrier shop. T hev braid th eir hair instead of cutting it, and as for shaving, they d o n ’t. T he barber. T rem b latt Follicle bv name, grew so depressed staring all the tim e at 16 em pty chairs th a t one day his mind finally gave way. Seizing his vibrator, he ran outside and shook th e entire cam pus till it crumbled to d u s t This later became known a* Pickett's Charge,) But I digress. We were discussing ways for you and your room mate to stop hating each other. This is adm ittedly diffi­ cult but n o t impossible if you will b oth bend a bit, give a little. I rememl>er, for example, m y own college days (Berlitz, 08 . M y room m ate was, I think you will allow, even less agreeable than most. He wa* a T ibetan named Ringading whose native customs, while indisputably colorful, were not entirely endear­ ing Mark you, I d id n ’t m ind so much the gong he struck on the hour or the string of firecrackers he set off on the half-hour. I d id n ’t even mind In* singeing chicken feather* every dusk and daybreak. W hat I did mind was th a t he singed them in mv hat. To be fair, he was not totally taken with Rome of rnft habits e ith e r—especially my hobby of collecting water. I had no jar* a t the time and ju s t had to stack th e water any-old-where. Well sir, things grew steadily cooler between Ringading and me, and they might have gotten actually ugly had we not each happened to receive a package from home one day. Ringading opened his package, paused, smiled shyly a t me, and offered me a gift. “ T hank you,” I said. “ W hat is i t ”” “ Tpk b u tte r,” he said. “ You put it in your hair. In T ibetan we call it grre see kid ttu ff.” “ Well n o w ,t h a t s m ighty friendly,” I said and offered him s gift from my package. “ Now you m ust have one of m ine.” “ T hank y o u ; he said. “ What. is this called?” “ M arlboro < ’igarettes,” I said and held a match for him. He puffed. “ Wow 1 he said. "This sure iieat* chicken feathers!” “ Or anything els* you could nam e,” I said, lighting my own M arlboro. And as we sat together and enjoyed th a t fine flavorful M a rlb o ro tobacco, th a t pure white M arlboro filter, a glow of good fellowship came (n p r u s - a serene conviction that no quarrels exist between men th a t will not yield to the w arm th of h onest good will. I am proud to say th a t Ringading and I re­ m ain friends to this day , and we exchange cards each C hristm as • i*« *•« *»*«■ an d each F o u rth of July, firecrackers. W h e r e r e r y o u o r y o u r n x r m m a t e m a y be— on a n y c o m p t i e y o u i n a n y c it y , f a u n, or h a m l e t in a n y s t a t e o f th e I a i o n u i l l fin d M arlboro* a t y o u r t a v o n l e to b a c c o c o u n t e r — e o ft p a c k or d ip t o p box. » 2 9 to IN 10k YELLOW, * 4 5 TO $ 3 4 TO IN 10 k WHITE G O L D . MUCH PLUS TAX * 5 0 ^ l / U A A FULL YEAR TO PAY! 2236 G u a d a lu p e Z A L E S -• -..J EE: W E C I .EF 1=? 5=3 O n The D rag A D D A N E W C H A R M . . . to the life you lead. D o it with "Basque", a hand braided flat. a s se e n in SEVENTEEN, C L A M O U R an d MADEMOISELLE return?" asks Kennedy. “ You say Cancer M eeting O p ens t h r e e day symposium on you don’t w ant to w ipe out Hous- fundam ental c a n c e r research ton b e cau se you a lw a y s have liked opened Wednesday at the M. D. Mrs. H obby. W hy do >ou think I offered it to you, I n e v e r have Anderson HonpltaJ and Tumor liked h e r ! " In Houston. j Institute A New Girls1 Housing To Be Constructed d ie O w ners d o rm ito ry - Ive com pleted by I and will be re a d y for oc­ said a p a rtm e n t will Aug cupancy by the fail sem ester. C. C. Nolen and Ja< k Steele lk>ard U n iv ersity D evelopm ent m em ber*, w ill serv e as m a n a g e rs for the dorm itory-apartm ent. A new' d o rm ito ry -a p a rtm e n t for girls u ic h ed u led to 1>e c o n stru c t­ ed in the U n iv ersity a re a It will he located a t 2609 U n iv ersity Ave. and wall house 150 student*. u n its w ith T he building w in h av e som e 25 Individual s e p a ra te k itchens and living - dining room facilities In each unit. T he a p a r t­ th re e bed­ m ent units will have room* and e ach u n it w ill a c c o m ­ m o d ate six atudentx. EDUCATIONAL BROADCASTS k i t n u T h u r sd a y no First Edition 15—A lm anac 55 Sp ort* S p o tlig h t OO—- T r a n s it io n 30—Washington Report 45- F’venlnit E d itio n OO— D e b r ie fin g w ith 8 T Doe- $<-v counselor of embassy. K h artou m . S u d an 25—Com mentary IO—Netherlands C om poser* no—University C oncert OO—Music of th# Ballet OO— N o c tu r n e 45—F in a l E d ition XI.BN-TV T h u r sd a y SO— S p a n ish 45—Film ne— A m erican H e r ita g e <6— S c ie n c e 6 OO—N igh Noon OO— W riter* o f T o d a y IO—Origam i OO—Spanish 15— H orizons of Science VV Primary Science OO— T im e to D a n e # 3 0 —Jazz C asu al OO— ( O ology 30— F ilm 40—Teacher in Service OO Davey and Goliath 15— Playmate 30—W h at s N e w OO—Science 5 25—P a tro n s .30— Around the World OO—Physical Anthropology OO—Colloquy 30—Computers and the Mind OO Pendulum Sw ing* In of Man Education ■Vt The HOU** We Live la OO—Strictly Business 30 American Econom y mmmmmmm- ISH CHARTERED EXCURSION BUSES • Parties • Field Trips • Retreats Butat available with rest rooms aboard, turn around teals and card tablas for your enjoyment while traveling. A ll buses air conditioned. Kerrville Bus Co. G R 8-9361 S P E C I A L O C C A S O N D R E S S E S C earning of a spa a! d ett for im po ’ant d a tes on your calendar! TI en you should sea th s co ac hon, both roman- : a rd sop' J* 'a*ed n lonq or s'-ori sty 'es by *F i fam ed de.. gner *o Ina M is A m erica pa g ea n t. A ’! ava‘lab a lo order in your c o o t a - d fabric p r e V a ' - e e . p -id from 39.98 S p a /a t O ccasion Shoo G O O D F R I E N D S F L O O R S E C O N D Platinum a n d Raw W o o l Combination 9.95 S C IE N T IF IC WATCH REPAIRS california C O B B R F i S L z r - n a v > a m fiu A _ S H O E I S T O R E 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag Specializing in Collegiate Fashions 8 ^ 3 a # W A T C H REPAIR # JEW ELRY RESTORATION # SO LD ERIN G # C U ST O M DESIG NS Estimates FREE ANY W A Y YOU LOOK AT IT ........ YOUR PLUME COIF IS A BEAUTIFUL BUY! Last week to taka advantage of these special Permanents including Cut! Regular 27.00 12.50 R e g u la r 2 2 .0 0 9.90 Regular 17.00 7.70 Goodfnends Beauty Salon G R 2-2491 R u e Jew elry Anthemed Omega Agency 2241 eUADALURS While rn the Salon, try a W ig, N O W 129.00. Have a Revlon manicure by Miss Jo Ann Rsstor conditioner is our answer ta your hair problems. Miss Clairol Hair Color loth adds foshionablo color. UT Ex Originates Eyes' Bill (■ attar's aet# t TM* ta tit* m «. i i I i a w>rlfi of eoecermlng state leg»l«- people have been made aware that The Eyes of Texas has be­ come an unoffical state song. Thursday, February 21, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page S tvTb y ' Collen Writes Magazine Story h a s contr mu*ed Johnny C c ” er track s*ar a* the U niversity *o Christianity' Today's special issue dealing with Chr.s*iar.;ty or, the entitled Campus His a r t i c ! * is con­ **Cor.servati?m Today ’ cerned with bis coir. -- -r wha! Christianity Tod.av as a magazine does. Gotten ob aer m that the mag- azina is sent free to 14' £5T P r o testant churchmen a r 4, only 38.208 rubscnber* actual.;, pa for it. He * 5 's that rn ■«* of *".e readers on tie f"ee •.v*>.Id Drr-bablv be for the magazine will.r.g to pay if they had -* He -O’-rends * It is a rn a g a a ! r. a of e argel:cal Chris ti ar., tv th; traditional Protestant t clear and In rn res* mg -a_ i nearly always succeeds bvprcid-ct Christian, rn- Today Is highly eor.- I* ser.-at ? according to Cotter *he on ♦■mar. i a job done on th# U S Protestant chare tes bv B illy Graham who frequer.* -.- cor.*: .b- .tea to Christian­ ity Today ard % I** cofounder Graham a 'tr g with D r L Nelson Bell a Presbyterian layman, o r­ gan red * comm -*-~e of c '* --*'. •pons rs and choate B-aptist f'«*■•# Ca* Henry ■*►? F a lle r Theo- Pasadena -- -s. Semi.-*ary editor. Co ten fyvlds ’hat Henrx- s «*..'. ke^ci-g Christ- ar tv Todav or. the mo * - -. :r * O «a < hie po - r.f r v .* c*. : ar *v Ted a-. • * ‘o s i p ! v th# Bm. cal rev el a ti m s vi e ?rmas. v to the crn'em porarv soc a1 - risi * I- Christian *y Today h# says * I cm sav *nat 'he exci*e—erst and tr e Chr.stiar t h a n wanror.g a en rn re of the i g-ca-#- Mix.*3rid *3 “#* fe - dvor H enry en - .rages t w * - -- _ r.g of C h r stiaraty Toda ' -M. -*>.r. cd p ro a'* r.g t He en • - Mages "Bib- ard « * thirtkmg in the -r ne of "le ftist N ab-anal dour.cii of Ch arches the * . • '""en i t } ! He T y claim s that theology cd Ka-'. Barth is tied by its internal cor rn a-Lr- ■ (Th ct* sr *■ '"•4 cs t yr - ’ f P*; rr'n s rf1 rr. irk 7 a d I v %~ h i r1®-' »' Chr is t : aa!ty Y f 5 * i*rd \ y. t h# is ri't d th 3 * r r Baranoff Will Discuss ‘Religion and the Artist' M rn Sa ra n " a vt stars? pm>i- sor of art, w- 1 area Ic or. Rel.g- •r and the A r tis '" at ; V p — c cd a v a* t e H >1 Foundation An- -I 0 S' The Sunday e- eror.g m#al s i 'e se n - \ a* e pm A D V O C A T O R O F E Y E S A S S T A T E S O N S . . . W « !lre c i Fired of T e ia s , 0 - ” T e * a s Research Funds S o To Medical School Res#ar~h Investigating • pc»a- .e cause of the serious birth defect knc **n an hyxteoeephalus, or * atcr-jr.-the-brsuB. will be condue e i a*. -. e U r . vers-.'} a Southwes*- em Wed. - a1 School lr. La'. *s un­ der a new gran t r f J I ? lh,- 'rom The Nan, D im es. The pro ect s u i be d.re ■ cd by Dr W ill;ann Kem p d a rk , associ­ ate profesaor of s a tte ry and ch air­ man of the m edical achoo! » ne .- . enable D r. f The National Found •aas rn.a i# r>> D r A. J . G.-l. dear and B as.I O Cart nor. Sent Th# grant w to ndu t a x-t .#< of expert * th arim a.s based on pre!, rn w rk ,vr. rue »ame prober a m e d out two years tg c a National Foundati*:ei grant. P l \ -T it < V P -l L E At that time D r. C lark de- s gr.c-i a.-.* deve sped sn u n g u a l piss' c capsule which pol d be ..T.r * ted n brain of an a-.j- - cd v ar *i f a sp«p .a1 t.ss .# •*•- ' ie - *he cav • es of the br.r r - > I piexuT that hee a- #-* 5** ne .# * * * • • ♦ # ccrebnM t - a. In w * u - r n the b ra ia , •* m #- th mg line * ' # ' * * w -th the n o r m al re re b rw e p n n l p m - « v flu el I* f >rrr#d. in w h irh tkroaagh fl« nr t* r#»b- the brain •Actied. Th# pressure of fluid ac-n.mi.Litmg within the *ku!! r# •ult* In an # n U riced h#ad and. evefttunily, bnain daniAge. Tho'# scter.•.-ta who bc. e . e the Chiro. I plexus S involved in pro- ductng c r a -s >r rg the fluid or both, think that it p..v,a a -rev r # ..n tee gen# *,s cf hydrocephalus Dr. Car-: dem onstrated that it » is p-s# * e to seal the pits* c cap- - a st that it would retain a ry f ,.d w-hicb t.-e che ro. I plex­ us r rh ! # nto it N ■ '■ ar it a h.s pl r to put th.s dc ce *o w rk to he p ac urr. -- e d.i'A aoo.t *ne activities o' me choroid r esrus He w ill ana -re fluids . .ate! .r "he car < r e and com pare the— w th fu d s p^ =• o r through an 'n * ’ *.m. ar brain cav­ ity wtuch c o r’a rs *w caps.. ». *.-i. 5 pe cis. iniected R k D I O t C T n r T R A C T RS c tie rn -ii * hst a r * es % me of them r» t. e ma -#r chem cals l-*o I re the blood stream and their sp- in Lie caps . e ooted. pearanee •-*. In a cm *pa- in # or-- #-d ire * .! he reversed *h» s bs tar.'e s he r.g into introduced the ' spa-ie a ' I .•ii-* anomie* M y Erst reaction to tr y f rat Involvement n the House was that I had a lot to learn and that I should respect the views of the other representatives They have to represent the people in their areas o p p o s itio n . i* r.\ < y Tlve simples? campaign * a neg­ ative one W alker says It s easy to he against something but it s very difficult to ie for something and to defend lh I th nk that moat politicians plan their campaigns with this in mind. In my #am- p,tigris I o w c r s ic t th# H' t v T i# date has be i r.portant o r ♦he ca m p i* a« **•# eecogritiofi date ■V Tea ss Independence for man} In I-*" deft ng P r e i i dent years to grant a V ■ Winston'* ref dav- rw bf arch I ‘he »#r -*■ law el.xss arranged ar .-r-xrce*'r-tu T*,"r- g ra ^ 1r<*' iding a cannon firing **Every snider* or --■# e a r"ms* ■.-ss on hand f *r the * # c ■> - d •» -y# " * report rf th .• peng-a — s'Stes I i i \ Judge Y * iv # t I#**is In ISAS r#gard#s1 I »n#rsit\ * «« th# mmt fluent orator •peaking nm I od# need " T h e T ru e *r'lr1t * r *.xld, * B t r e I# b rat. # « re inc th is ilav « # prove that • * •re not to * H##> V ln%en*lble rhapter In banian klsSnrs * Judge l/'-v s described the I - vera ’y a* *'.-oraecr»-f~i ’n •-* #-i cation r>f si! whether pows rfu w*v> asp re *■> -# free rf the shackles of ig orm r # *• or# In 1916 a plan Kv •* *- *b e\ *s would meet rn this date wa* in­ troduced by CEa- »t K for­ m er student W ‘hut a few sears the practical effect of the plan wa* ev .dent in ? e lorn cion r f *'ore* of new ex • lier.tx' clubs through­ out the s*a’e. ! o# ) B y ii v n k r z r . u . To van R u ff W riter B ill W alker, father of th** ‘ Eye* t i T m m " bitt, received a bache­ lor a t arts decree in zoology from Bm University about taking a law degree in 1956, thought then antired th# Texna Legislature In 19€1 aa a representative of L ib ­ e rty County. One of B a lk e r'* billa prnpna- •a tho* “ T he I if** o( Te\aa'‘ he mode the official stale tong, " I get fed up with It ("T e\»». Our T e x * *") at state rom en InnuguArtlon*," he ho®* aod BJS Ta. because few people knew IL Ev e n if "he bi! Is defeated he ural have accomplished his mia- aion W alker mvs Pointing to his tourism bul, w hich would estab­ lish a c -mmiss >n to create an accu r*!# im press »r of Texas out- a.de the SM!#, W i.ker says that Local Club Gives Coed Fellowship The S. :■ ; t - st C u b of Austin h is announced a $1 r»00 felkwvshtp to >*? aw i ’tied lo a w im an student ir< the spring of 1%4, This award vs id I** given every two years for advanced study in a dis notae arid 4 on i jai f eld for w Marten. It provides an opportunity h *r leader -b p o d one year of grauu Ile s' nix* in a g r a d u a t e s h * i of an accredited college or un a or - ty of the aw anlet1 s choice The fellow -hip. financed equally . is w thin the S nth I . a ii the t ( ' d E r g n of the I n ; ' f d States ope** • • petition to all vv -men re»iden*s of this reg on. M .r n '.rn requirements for the a •- »rd >.me a I helor s degree or its equivalent ax accepted t v an a red*ted erin ataxia! insulation fhe fe - v the basis 1 f ;p will be awarded or the a pp;.cant s • - w rastle record and her capacity f i-r lf a d#rsh, p App •a, .--»r !<*ad..n* ? r the cur­ rent a v ani * Ja n . IS 1964 Inter- " a y eon'act M rs #»• I’d w o n en Jo h n B 1910 T r a v i s or M o Gertrude He ghts B -d I rn 1306 B f B lv d , both of A ustin for ap->. a,’ ,n blank* l/ o .ck The cand late se ’ ec t #d w ll be r tified by 5!av I, 1964 Campus Bowl Bows To 'Challenge' Talk The Meekly Campus IV «*>I com­ petition at the University Y ' is be.:.*- car. r i I- » week rf .e *o a i the nr P a . G o dm ai s *;<#< n ,n the Chs. erg# C o nqu rn The same na- h. w th Che Bronze Bude?* ar I "ie Ranger sr. the w m e r* t is it#1-, w ’.ii '<*• held I arr d x Ch; next Th* .rads y r got Alpha freterr a- I Kappa A prs T h e ‘a v to r r v w .. co- pele in the ncrv e bra set. Civil Engineers Select Maxfield Sweetheart 'T h e Univ err.tv chapter of the Texas *> .*•?> of C ivil Engineer* hee «eiec?ed J a r # Ma af,#-id a* it* awee'peart f it I * * I R ' inner*- p w ere Lin da H a rv e y, P m v y H e ste r and K«> r*l>. M iss Maxfield wa* selected a* th* ASO- m eeting Wednesday, included an iii vats - O ther busine** tra>d talk on U h building tun- • tractio n . bv F re d A dam * of the ln stit ie of Steel C a - A m e ric a n • t r v tion Blind Poodle Wanders Into Professor's Care A blind white {###1/' wa* found wander r.g ,n n ,t Uh - - I L idiru by D a rre ll S Hughe* professor of physics The poodle, a male, is tie­ ing kept at Dr Hug ha*' home. B JI P ark Bl d until the owner can ie P c .nd, M n Hughes said ti/* dog it large We re anxious to the owner sin'#- he keep* "ra th e r find burr.p.n;t against furniture - and j w e already have two dog*," Designed ONLY For COLLEGE SENIORS A M I C A S L L ' B COLLEGE CAREER LAN FO* COMP; ETI INFORMATION CAU. GR 2-6*1* ) 0130 R E N E ' R A M I R E Z KM C A S K LU I INSUP A N C I LO c o t t o n i u d f U k rn bioca 4 wlitfh arty S t r e i i r e ) # T hursday, February J I, 1963 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P age 6 Peter, Paul, and Mary Merry By EVERETT HULLUM Texas Staff W riter Low ligh ts, heavy spotlight re­ flectin g off polished guitars and shining on th* golden flax of a blonde, and P eter, P aul, and Mary —w hether w ith a rousing folk song or lyric m elody — ha v e cap tu re d an audience. The folks inging trio provided Austinite* with two hours of "fun entertainm ent" and som e excel­ lent singing to boot W ednesday night. I Surprising a crowd of 2,500 with J a constant spicing of off-beat hu- ■ m or, d ie th reeso m e r a n down th e ir re p e rto ire of th e b e st from th e ir singles and alb u m s. But an unknow n St. E d w a rd 's U n iv ersity stu d en t, who clim b ed on th e sta g e to an u n invited re n ­ dition of "D an n y B oy" slig h tly off key, w as the re a l su rp rise . At th e beginning of in term issio n , before th e au d ien c e could re a c t, the stu d e n t, who w as d escrib ed bv a as " a lw a y s doing friend 'Angel' Makes Smooth Landing Flying Partially on Instruments By KAYDEN FREEMAN Texan Amusement* Editor logorrhea to fam iliar la English 377K students, Miss Flings manas- T h . o n ly real difference betw een ' ^ to capture ^ the physical theater of today and that of Sophocles, a professor of the history of dram a w ill tell you, j 0114 is the electric light. But even the perverse m achinations of the child of Menlo Park during last night's perform ance of “ Look Hom eward, the ag eless could dim Angel," fascination of w ell constructed drama. ^ pomopsity, the valuable with- . , . . ... . volum e. B ringing die hom ey horror* of the autobiographical D ixieland Boarding House to life is a prob­ lem of the m anagem ent of a num ber of characters at one tim e, shifting centers of interest—Imper­ ceptibly but definitely. F o r in d eed , K e tti F lin g s ’ P u litz ­ e r prize w inning a d a p ta tio n of the T h o m as Wolfe novel is th a t. S tem m in g th e tid e of th e W olfian D ire c to r Jam es Moll has played down as much as possible the in a m o u n t of busy-ness h av in g as many as eight im portant involved character* on stage at one* and managed through a highly Integ­ rated preparation to have his cast ready to give a cohesive perform­ ance under the highly adverse con­ ditions. Unfortunately, Jim McQueen has finally hit the cartridge in what has, up until now, been a highly successful gam e o f role roulette this season. His versatility has seem ed unlimited, but it does not extend to the believable portrayal of a confused 17-year-old. F re s h from three starring roles in Dra­ m a D epartm ent offerings, he ap- ANGEL BLACKOUT BOFFO BOXOFFICE I something Ilk* that,** jumped on ' stag* and began to m urder poor "Danny B oy.” F in ally he w as ushered off. “ You’v e had enough fun a t our e x p en se,” the m anagem ent Inform­ ed him. R e tu rn in g "But they enjoyed it ,” was the reply. The student had planned 'p e rfo r m ,” the friend said, but to I "everybody he would thought chicken out" when the tim* cam e. interm ission, from Paul — who's the tall one with the g o a te e — beg an his m ono­ logue w ith "Danny B oy" and broke up the audience. P e te r, P a u l, sang tw en ty -tw o songs, in cluding sev er­ al s a tire s and a b rief co m ed y rou­ tin e by P a u l. The firs t h alf w as a sounding b o ard fo r the e n tire g roup, b u t a t the b eginning of the second p a rt e a c h tu rn a t soloing. and M ary took his P e te r , w ho's th e sh o rt one with th e g o a te e , h as a soft, easy voice th a t b lends n a tu ra lly w ith the T ra in ," w hich ran g es from gentle o th e r tw o o r sta n d s alo n e nicely. He opened w ith " M o r n i n g Train,” which range* from gentle to violent In volum e and which h e handled sm oothly. P eter fol­ lowed w ith a solo stint and Mary concluded the single perform ances with a m oving “ Single G irl.” The three carry a m agical com ­ bination of vo ice that create* real beauty and feeling in a straight folk number. Their com edy Is fin* as a re­ lief m easure, but the heart of the act rests on the m e rits of the trio singing—re g a rd le ss of the selection or the rh y th m . In a d d i t i o n . P a u l h a s his “ th r o a t” w hich e m i t s enough sounds to m ak e Jo n a th a n W in te rs’ la ry n x envious. His m onologue and in dividual n u m b ers w e r e th re e vehicles for his im itations. “ W here H ave All th e F lo w ers G o n e ? ", “ L e m o n T re e ," “ 500 M iles," and “ T iny S p a rro w " w ere beautifully-done, s i m p l e , quiet m elodies. To change th e p a c e , Woodie G u th rie ’s "T h is L a n d Is Y our L an d ,” “ S e t t l e D ow n," "T h is T ra in ,” and “ If I H ad a H am ­ m e r" w e re sandw iched in. DARK INTERLUDE IN HOGG to go on. B y LYNNE Mc D O N A IS A ssistant Am usem ents Editor T he lights w ere out but the show had to coin a p h ra s e A p p ro x im a te ly the la s t five m in ­ u tes of the second a c t of "Look H o m e w a rd A ngel" w e re produced w ith o u t benefit of the lig h tin g fa­ cilities of Hogg A uditorium . R eso u rcefu ln ess solved the p ro b ­ le m : th e a c t w as com pleted w ith the aid c>f u sh e rette s holding flash ­ lights on the acto rs. T his g av e an eerie a n d d ra m a tic effect to the scene. Bobbie K ern s, u sh e rette , said the pean too used to dominating to* situation, and hi* voice, especially in a third act love scene, wa* en­ tirely too rich and projecting. R ay Pond cam e very close on to com pletely several occasions stealing the show. H e recognized brilliantly the very fine line be- tw een playing th e part (rf a ham w ith skill, an d sim p ly stan d in g on the sta g e an d being a h am . His " d e a th b e d " (i.e., h a n g o v er) seen* is a high point and th e look he gives his second w ife evoking th* fictitious v irtu e s of his d ead first w ife is sh ee r joy to behold. B a rrie T eag u e p lay s th e grasp* ing m a tria rc h of th e D ixieland w ith a depth of u n d erstan d in g ra re in so young an a c tre s s and can b ring from the audience in a few m in u tes th e sam e m ix tu re of love and h a te it h a s tak en y e a rs to get from h e r fam ily. A too sh o rt cam e o of M adam * Ju d y K liznbeth w as etched by S haffer and W illiam F ow ler c re a t­ ed a n o th e r of his in v ariab ly suc­ cessful c h a ra c te r roles a* Will P ent land M ike W heeler g av e a stra n g e ly uneven p e rfo rm a n c e in the im p o r­ tan t role of lien. In som e scen es q uite effective, in other* p allid, he re p e a te d n e a rly identical speeches u rg in g h s b ro th e r to leav e hom e d eliv erin g one m ovingly an d the next, a scen e later, ab y sm ally . Suzanne M artin gave a c h a rm ­ ing, if slightly shallow , re a d in g to tho p a rt (rf I -aura Ja m e s A lthough th e m o re m inor p lay­ ers w e re v irtu ally flaw less, d e se rv ­ ing of sp ecial note a re Ka re t, Of­ fer, R o b ert T hom pson, and H elen P erry . I Jo sh , b ab y , listen to th,is. I w a n ­ the d ire c to r th ere on sta g e to s ta rt n a tell you, I ’v* ju st te e n th e th* actio n a g ain a n d yell c u rta in g re a te s t exhibition of ahow-biz w hen the a c t w-as over. I'm down h ere sin c e M a ry M artin. S w eeth eart, in A ustin, an d I thought I 'd drop in and c a tc h U T 's p ro d u ctio n of T om m y W olf* p lay, uh, "Ijx>k H om ew ard A n g el." I th in k it is And Josh, b ab y , rig h t in first a c t. ail th e lights w ent out I . . . No. sw e e th e a rt, it w as a pow- ! e r failu re , not a b lack o u t . , . T h a t m a y he, but 45 m in u tes . . .? O ffered to refund th e ir m oney, b u t they sta y e d around h alf the house—w hile the ele c tric ia n s w ere fixing e v e ry th in g up. T hen they s ta rte d up a g ain , and w ent on like te a l show biz folks. Josh baby, all g a v e boffo p e rfo rm a n ce s . . . And then, a t th e end. a fte r th e c u rta in call, the d ire c to r got on sta g e an I m entioned th a t K aty C ornell bit r e m e m b e r , sw e eth e a rt, w here those people up in S eattle w aited until one in the m orn in g for them to g et " B a rr e ts of W im pole S tre e t" s e t’ and led the ca st in a p p lau se ju st like th e Bol- th a t, Josh 'bout , W hat d id they do? W ell, we got a bunch of pros down h e re , sw’oet- h e a rt. You know w hat they say w hen som ething like this h a p p e n s : th a t's w hat . . . Y eah, T h e show th e y say A nyway, h an d le it like re a l tro u p ers. Got all shoi Die g irls on a im sta g e , an d th a t w ay. Socko stuff! th e ir flashlights u p on th e house crew finished the . . th e se people for th e au dience, . How . to b ab y ? . , . th e first act W atts had No, h a v e n ’t seen w hat K e rr and it. Jo sh to say about . H ad baby, hut F re e m a n loved it . . . Grand o p e n in g sp e c ia l s THE REST O F FEBRUARY Three pieces of Country Cousin crispy fried chicken, with skillet cream gravy, butterflake biscuits and French fries. Regular 98c — G ran d opening p r i c e ....... Delicious hamburger, French-fried potatoes and milk shake — Just ....................................... Sack of 6 H am burgers — A "ste a l" at ^ 7 , op» ll ut fried CHICKEN 3301 Interregional Hwy.— Take Concordia College cut off, north or south " '• mm [} = = = = Chartered Buses W ill Be Available for Transportation to and from r/'/» sm *'' Municipal Auditorium lilt ■ for tonight's 8:00 p.m performance of The Houston Symphony Orchestra Conducted by Sir John Barbirolli j i *4.»rr.»n t i i i , J J i - Kl* *•>... Mto B U S E S D E P A R T A T 7 :0 0 7 :3 0 M A K IN G STOPS AT 1. M oore-H ill Hall 2. Simkins Hall 3. Scottish-Rite Dorm 4. Kinsolving Dorm 5. Carothers Dorm 6. Univervity C o -o p Buses will leave the A u ditor­ ium immediately and 20 min­ utes the perform­ ance. following R o u n d -T r ip F a ro 2 5 c Fro# to $ 1 7 . 5 7 B la n k # ! T a x H o ld e r s ! Ticket drawing continues today at the Music Building Box Office--Open 9-4 Single Admission Ticket* M a y Ba Purchased at th* Door Children Thru Jr. High: $1.00 Adults: $2.50 (Ed. Note: Follow ing Is JHI M illar's Im pression of a phone call from a traveling “ V ariety" reporter to a Broadw ay producer hack In New York. It should He read after securing the coop era­ tion of a friend who will hum “ T here’s No B usiness Like Show B usiness" the hark ground.) softly In first thing she did w hen the lig h ts w ent out w as ru n for h e r fla sh ­ light. T he u sh e re tte s h ad never- been giv en any in stru c tio n for this ty p e of e m e rg e n c y b u t they p e r­ form ed b eau tifu lly . D ire c to r J a m e s Moll explained to the a u d ien ce th a t a p o w er fail­ u re had o c c u rre d and it wa* un­ ce rta in if the p la y could he co m ­ pleted W ednesday evening Moll suggested th a t p e rh a p s a S atu rd ay m atin ee o r a Sunday show could he a rra n g e d for the audion* e as the o th e r p e rfo rm a n c e s w ere sold out He invited the a u d ien c e to w alt because a U n iv ersity ele c tricia n wa* on the w ay b u t a ss u re d th em th a t th e ir m oney would he refu n d ­ e d o r o th e r a rra n g e m e n ts m ad e if th ey chose to leave. to say The m a jo rity elec ted to stay O ne w om an in th e au d ien c e wa* the only h eard tim e she and h e r husb an d could atten d to g e th e r b e cau se of bah) s itte r pro b lem s th is w as Student S an d ra Boothe said "I w as a fra id som ething m ight really ixt w rong and T would ve been ! g re a tly d isap p o in ted b e c a m e c o u ld n 't com e b a c k a* a late r tim e " Rem H ayti'rn F re e m a n h ypothe­ sized th a t it w as an a ir raid and c o m m en ted on how fo rtu n ate it 1 Hogg Aud to n urn is a fall* ut sh el­ te r. an n o u n cem en t the stage Moll a g ain m ounted bv to m ak e an flash lig h t As he wa* fin:**, i n - than k in g th e au d ien c e fo r w aiting the lights car- e on. The only re n ’ the p o w er failu re conseq u en ce of w as a d a rk 45-minute in term ission and about one-fnurth of th e oririn n ! au d ien c e m issed a th ird a f. G irls in U n iv ersity housing w ere given late p erm issio n to see the end of the play. A fter th e final c u rta in the c o m ­ p an y took two bows Moll stopped th e au d ie n c e a p p lau se and thanked them for w a i t i n g , c o m m en tin g w h at a fine trib u te it w as to the com pany. With th at, in th e R ussian trad itio n , the c a st gave the a u d i­ ence a hand. Going to a Movie? E A T A T hank's Grill 2 5 3 2 G u a d a l u p e and SAVE $ Oelhuood D R I V E I N THEATRE MOI b i t Am. BOX O F F I C E O P K N * 6 OO A D M I S S I O N 7Or K I D S U N D E R 12 F R E E IT ’S O N L Y M O N E Y Jerry Lewie— Zachary Scott S t a r t s 7:00 — p l e a — S P R E A D E A G L E J o h n P a y ne— R h o n d a F i r m i n g S t a r t * 8:40 BOX O F F I C B O P E N S 6:00 A D M I S S I O N 70r K I D S U N D E R I t P H E E T H E W A R L O V E R S Kteve M cQ ueen— R o b e rt W a rn e r S t a r t s 7:00 — plu*— G u n s o f N a v a r o n e A n th o n y Q u in n — G re g o ry P e rk S ta rt* 9 OO N O W S H O W I N G ! Features: 1 2 - 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - IO 1s t Austin Show ing— In C o lo r— N O T E — Positively N o O ne Under 18 Yrs. Adm itted— N o Child Tickets Sold t h ! o n l y m a n e v e r a w a r d i d t h e i r o n CRO SS BY THE ENEMY ANO WHAT A DOUBLE-CROSS IT W A S /// K e I s™ J 5 k B 0 G A R D E P a s s i o n is C o u p s I f s a M a d C o m e d y Riot N o w Showing! O pen 1:15 I se 5:35 5 4IT7 WTS M F E A T : rn J m * O P E N ll 45 MOVIE ENTERTAINMENT QI'A BA NTE KH! n i i n i i ! O P F N « no m F I R ' - T S H O W * 45 A D I I T S 7Or I H H I) i'*"r' c F r a n c e ____ .ta m * j a m e s . g e o r g e Chakiris N Colin** Pictures i m A Je u* ^ noouctioa Diamond HEAD PlUUWtSIQfl* uima Colob A D I I T S I NI H I H SS C H I I l l 75 Phi*! *4*c*>nd feature*! S T A R T S T O D A Y ! Features: 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - I O A TRULY U N U S U A L FILM ADVENTURE! I H O H “ B L O O D I I K H I I N G A N T O ! M M M . B E G I N N I N G T O E M ) : " — J u s t i n G i l b e r t , N > » V o r L D a i D M i r r o r “ O N E . O I T H E B E S T . A RE M A H h A B I F. E E A r :*• — P a u l B e r k l e y , N e w • T A N HK P R O I ll O F I T * Mi s t A R ” ' — Rove Pelawirk, N e w A m r r t r a n I n r L H e r a l d T r i b u n e F o r k J o u r n a l JOSEPH [.LEVINE presents th* ACADEMY- AMARO winning s& a b O V E JUNE WILKINSON - P l u s - - Oktetad Ny Plerr*-Dommiqii« G a t e a u • Assisted by « < Sa ii rd Dslloys Produced by Arthur Cohn and Ren^ LaFufts *r [co lor] and W'daacrean - An Embassy p chiru Pe'eas* R e c o B i m r n d e d A a A d u l t E n t e r t a i n m e n t N o C h i l d r e n T i c k e t * ! Su l c i H I PIERANGELI EDMUND PURDOM I white Slave Ship ftlMMM* rn AMIDIC** lN?(D«*rtOft*t ft , COLORSCOPE £xtra rMT 0 l ° a '“ '. I I H , . , , H p i P f l , 'lr, st SEC O N D F E A T I R E Field Challenging You m ay ba an authority in ten year* lf your vocation lies in the butine** paper press, nceordinc: to Bl. E. Lemer, vice-president of the Palmerton Publishing Company of New York. Turner and Hazen II. Morea Jr. spoke to a magazine editing class Wednesday on the opportunities for new talent in the field of business publications. In T h e re a r e S.MS business p u b ­ lica tio n s th e U nited sta te* , ■ald M orse, w hich em ploy IKL- OM people. Ten thousand of th ese a r e ed ito rs. “ The field is e x c it­ in g , ch allen g in g , and r a w a r fl­ ing," h e Mid. This sentiment was upheld by Lemer, w ho said his business was fun—-if trips around the country and several jaunts to TI imp* are any examples The prod u ctio n of a business pub­ lication is sim ilar to that of a newspaper with one major excep­ tion, said Lemer. The business publication specializes in a given area. Writing is only one facet of talent in the business publications, said I^rrter. An editor must deal with every phase of his publica­ tion, whether it be in the field of industry, merchandising, profes­ sional fields, or institutions. Ber aune he h a n d l e s every phase and deals with expert* from every area of his chosen field, the editor become* an ex­ pert In a reasonably short time, and according to Lemer, be­ comes an authority In a mere IO year*. Entering the business publication field enables the editor to watch the growth of his field. Lemer said. lin ie r , publisher of Rubber Age. — M . E . L a m e r saw the discovery of synthetic rub­ ber during World War ET. As a spokesm an for the indus­ try'. L em er said it w as hungry for new talent. T h e potential is good. he said, with m any starting sal­ aries as high as $5,200. He stress­ ed the fact that no other industry draw s its top talent from within its own area as much as business publications. M c C a r t hy to Lecture O n C o m p u t e r Pr o gra ms “ Computer P rogram s With Com­ mem S en se'’ w ill be the topic of a public lecture by Dr. John M c­ Carthy nf Stanford U niversity at 4 p m. Thursday in BER 101. Dr. M ctiarthy w ill also address a Computation Center sem inar Friday at 3 p m . in Room 8 . He will discuss ‘'A nalytical Calcula­ tions.” A.S3 IN FAM ILI AB COTT PAC* I — 7 ) A t-L > 5 31 * W M W 1 = 9 " Smoke sh 7 titer brands end you'll agre*: . . others teste too tom# taste too st-ong tight But V iceroy testes the way you d l h* e titter cigarette to taste) Q HSJ. **ow" * W •"'•en Tobacco Ce»eor(M»o* not too strong... not too light... Viceroy’s got-the taste that’s right! Listen to The Brothers Four . K N O W R a d io . M o n d a y thru Friday . 10:05 P.M. Seniors and Graduates7 a Wondering How to Get in the 1963 Cactus? • Here's Your LAST C H A N C E F P ? to have an individual picture in the 1963 C A C T U S ! The C a d u s Studio will be open THURSDAY, FEB. 21 FRIDAY, FEB. 22 Com# by Journalism Building 107— -3:30-12:30; 1:30-4:30 to fill in cards and pay $2.50 f##. N O APPOINTMENTS NECESSARY No individual picture* will ba mad* after that* dates. Select and return your proofs promptly at th* class section wilt b* tent to th* printer soon. Thursday, february 2U 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# T Forum Features 6 Famous Trial Flicks "The N urem berg Trial ’ first In the School of L aw 's Film Forum series, will be reshown Friday a* noon in Townes Hall Auditorium The film w as shown last Friday to a full audience. Th* M-r-m.u*? him is a d . • en- tary on the fam ous trials he’d in Nurembo'-g, G erm any, after World War TI War atroc.t;ns are shown precented from captured film s as evidence in the t r ia l proceedings Mr. Justice Jackson the A m eri­ can prose cutor appears in The trial scenes. Film s in Hie ser.es will be -howr, every Friday afternoon in Townes Hall and will range ft .pi 40 rn 8 minute* viewing time Like “Tho N urem berg Trial ' the film s havo not on’y particular legal signifi­ cance bu* a!$o w ide general inter­ n s "About ha'? tile crowd at last F riday’s showing were from ‘over c*n the said Larry M iller, film program coordinator. ’ O' f !n;s I- th® series include •'Genera! Court-M artial,’* "John the Defense, '* ' -r A dam s. E s q . "Thunder on the H ill,” "The Hoax- ters * (Hitler, Mussolini, and T o ''The Mumow-M cCarthy o : and I '“b v fn»m E dward R . Mur* '' o h s tv guial television program about the Wis­ consin S en a to r the activities of L A W S C H O O L M A S C O T -T exan Photo—Venn* Law Students Honor Battle-Scarred Saint Braswell's Humble Sta. 24TH ST. & RIO G R A N D E Phone GR 8-5813 It “ Peregrinus s an am bivalent word describing various objects. is the nam e for an ancient Roman judge. “The Peregrinus ' is the School of Law s yearbook “ Peregrinus Jr." is the first-year law s'uderrs' organization. But to U niversity law students just pia.n “peregrinus” • pronounc­ ed per-a—gnn-QO.'E by students can m ean only e r e thing—their revered, pro'r •>-! and ha’tJe-scar- Illustrated by a red patron sa rn wooden statue in a show case or, the first floor o' Townes Ha'' he has hhe h^ad of a stork the eve** of an rag c ‘he ar-'h*d \ "rk o' a cat. the b isby ‘a ’ o' a fox. and w ears a cowboy boot on one jutt rig front font B iologists might have a hard tim e putting “ P erry ” ’he proper phylum and species, but then he's a sa nt and they aren’t cla ss i/.cat:an into usually chams. into p it BKSIS IV LXU D eapite hi* s tm n g c s p j w i r i n f ', a law student would h esitate to laugh at P rr rv b e ca u se e v e ry ­ thing alwHjt him p e rta in s to law , o rd e r, la t in , ju stice . “ p e re g rin u s” m e a n s J u s t i c e P ra e to r P e re g rtn u a wa* a Judge who *ettled dispute* on tho p rin ­ ciple nt n a tu ra l rig h ts “ w ritten the finger of God on and th e In sym bolizes h eart* of men ” E very part of P erry % unique s sym N ic . The sharr> anatom y beak th* power of equity to p eretra’e th e m yster.es of the law The bushy ta ' repre­ sents the ability of equity to sweep aw ay the complex!*;*** of the law The arched ta c k shows readmes* to spring, as the is always ready to pro're» right and prevent wrong law FROM CI TR VNR Perry' w as a c -:1cm o y crea'ed In an equity class by a law student It happened w hen the in­ In 1901 Sim ians, structor. Judge W. F asked a drowsy student what “ per­ egrin u s” meant. Sta riled, the stu­ dent answered w ith the first thing tilt* popped into his head: “ I don't know Judge unlet* it > som e kind of anim al.” The Judge asked another equally drowsy student, R ussell Savage SE A to Plan Convention “ State Convention—1963 ' s the topic of the Student Education As­ sociation m eeting to be held at 7 p m . Thursday in the Union Audi­ torium. for University chapter of SFA and the St. Edward s U niversity chap­ ter are oo-hos‘s the annual T exas convention which will be through held in Austin F eb. 2S M arch 2 Over 16 000 student* from T exas colleges and universi­ ties will attend the convention. Convention plans vvill be discuss­ ed at the local chapter meeting. •v*C)boo . ' •» rn ; • • ’■i i BURGER CHEF I r* Hamburger*, Fries or Sh ake s............................. I O O 3303 N. L A M A R KELLY SMITH CLEANERS F t a f jr i r g DRY C L E A N IN G # I Hr. Service ( N o E ilre C h a r g e ) # C o n ve n ie n t C h a r g e Acct. # Delivery Service SII W. 19th GR 2-3131 ‘he sam e question, and he jokingly drew a creature on the blackboard w hich looked to him as a por- egrinus” should look :? it were ar. animal. The in cident would h a v e heen lost In the crow d of d a y r o o m a n tic s lf Ju d g e S unking had not th e c reatio n his blessing g iv e n then aacribpd ap t equlLabh- Ile m ea n in g s to each fe a tu re of the d raw ing. With the passing of years Per- egrinu* has gained in sta hire and esteem . Still in his prim e a’ the age of 62, Perry can look back on a none too quiet life There is no question of his sainthood; in nu­ m erous incidents he has proved to he lndescruo'ible The students engineering his m ost notable enem .es. h ave h aras­ sed him since childhood. They have kidnapped him, ambushed him , chopped him into pieces, sat on him , and bu nod him. Perry has existed in chalk, in em broid­ ered Hags. im ­ ages, and in his present condition, i wood carving m ade in 1934 in papier-m ache DINING OUT?... BIG FOUR TRY A N Y O N E OF A U S T IN 'S For that serene atmosphere a n d super b authentic Me x ic an Food. EL M AT "H o m e of the Crispy Tacos" EL TORRO ‘ Austin's Or i gi na l M e x i c a n Restaurant" 504 E. Ave. G R 7-7023 16th & G u ad alu p e GR 8-4321 EL CHARRO " B i g Steaks— M e x i c a n Style" MONROES “Me x ic an Food to G o ’’ 912 Red River G R 6-7735 500 E. Ave. G R 7-8747 O P E N EVERY D A Y THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADVFETISIXG R A T F ' ........ ri-V ^ord . *e r n r i m um , *. 'h irsr^ ...................... ,*piay fir*, p 1 ■- ** Ct ** • * “*"■ rn ona! Ti rn#, ,v e Issues Minim < ' IS#1 or«t*.. «-.rd*.. ......................... J- nq .............................6 >1 ,8 On ..................... ...........................I i OO chang* f r r is e .-ut ive Issue ra-es C L J iJ j i l / ("LASKI FIT D ADM T iesdav T e x ? - .............. '^VdKjnwid.a v T f^ a n . h u r s d a v ' T e x a n ............ F rid a y D exan.................. S u n d a y T ex an .............. 'n th e ev en t cf e n - " * im m e d ia te n o t i e m ust fo r c r ar* r a p o n s i t .* 'ade e g vt on* CALL G R 1-5244 Furnished A p a r t m e n t s H o u s e s — Unfurnished AT CAMPUS a * • - - 11 ve I y • p.- — rnt for - nerator atr-eond........... nee Ii*J'J Speed*'ay. OR 7 ASIS rn «>-ed Carpeted (.a.; a t E RY K E3IWOODS—CONV EN I E N T UT bed re - -rn ■ srice ’ •* room d o u b le a tta c h e d g arage ' n : ' 6’'- v Beautify., redone. an i CL 3 6*66 fo rm al d i r r t lr.*-.de fenced Duplex— Unfurnished three piece 6 a - c r La Co-op •f? a T h u rs d a y p m one I » b ru a rj adio W h i t s N e ii in v ited to a tte n d • 2 !*; ' a uct -a *'• ar For Sale A U CTION T y p in g T H E S E S RE PO R T S. REASONABLE. Elect.- ma* - Mr* B rad y 2317 O ld­ ham. GF. 2-4~:5 . RAVIN B TERRACE- Q U IET . *pa- ..a, clean F irep lace A tr-roadi: on- * 1 A 'com m odate* 2-3 W ater-g as fu r- n abed GR 8-5528 r i 2 PAT,MA PLAZA (E n fie ld I la rg e tw - bedroom a p a rtm e n t, sle ep ­ ing tv n h Show er. I - - " i,R 7-52C ie or T h# BEV ERLY -ANN O ldham a t 2t*t S tre e t N ear M em orial S tad iu m O re bedroom — rro d e -e T.xrc? I.vin* ip ace — n icely tu rn - laired. trerv You a the It » be su rp rise d best e t HOC Vt to sir.* sh a re LORRAIN A P A R T M E N T S 1401 E nfield One and tw o bed ro o m * ; a .so I or - E x tr a larg e plenty of c lo s e 's cen ­ c a rp e te d , g a r ­ tra b ag e d e p o s a l p ark in g . covered \M A D I rad oa h e a te d Or * $48.75 earn M anager, V partm ent 198. i i i 7-2644 2536 or pool a il billa paid i^ ^ a ld h e a t an d a , r an a p e r t m e r ' M EN STU D EN TS. SPA C IO U S p riv a te bodrov'm P riv a te bath. P riv a te en- tr ip - .- K itchen privilege*. Q uiet. Dou- b e $30 00. R enting now fo r S ep tem b er. I>46 San G abriel a f te r 5 p rn.._____ EX TP. A LA RG E tw o bedroom c a r p e t­ ed duplex B uilt-In k itch en c a rp o rt. w ash mom cen tra n :r and heat Close ITI - a E nfield SHS OO to La».e A ul! r. or vx' * GR 6-1606. Ow ner for S II lease 60 O LDS 9s tw o d o o r h ard -~ p $1595,00 P r u itt M otor* Sa es B u rn e t Road. For Rent 603 FAST JO , t san 19b R e d eco ra te d S ingle vs: O' two *OUb M r n and see 5c I pie $**' X). Open a f te r 3 9> A lte ra tio n s ALT ERAT IONS VV EA VINO on M onogram rn ng m as nabie rate*. ~T36 DRI-SSM AK ING RE- m th c ig a re tte hole* gents At 'st 2 2 ',. GR 2- L adies 9 I V Printing M ult tith in g M "r.ocgra; v - g X ero x in g T «*e* Paper* P: rd o f AUS-TEX D U P L IC A T O R S -» • E a st l i t h P h o n e GR 6-6533 H e lp W a n t e d B A R TE N D E R O V E R 21 P a rt-tim e . M ust be ava. a. e vveekends See Mr. O verton a f te r 3 p rn daily T h e T a v ­ ern . 12th a n d L am ar ( fe m a le ■ G E N ER A L L E D G E R B O O K K E E P E R to w ork u n d e r s . p c r v s u n of CPA. N o rth w e st ne githorr.ood of­ fice. Five d a y w eek. S a la ry co m m en ­ su ra te vvjth n lo to $4>>o F ree p a rk in g a t ply In p erso n on ly 5025 B u rn et R oad tv R ange $300 less t m e I 1 an cr E q u ip m en t h o u r TA N BERG -serte* th re e sp e e d —fo u r I ra * r 1 pe *•- IAI RA RIX—ty p e A t a r n i s h • • Chang vx 'n base ste re o c a r t r I s e $5 ■ ■ tw o m Kes . . $lo * GR $-1266 D RA G ST E R K-R8 L E S S engine Nev q u ic k change m ag w heels ford r full p re ss u re g I^ine GL 2-6644 s.- cheap K 1961 T R -3 TRIUM PH top RAH Soft ire s p " * e x cel c r - cond • n 25 6 V - 3-2331 S1450. OO. GR L ane SIG N A T U R E W A SH IN G MACHIN T u o vr-ar* e l Ex e lle n t ond t r. $60.00. GL 2-6559 1961 MOTOROLA ('LOCK-radio S " • s e e o r ca ! F e tx G arza at 6 : \ W est I Dth GR 7-0810. 8 I* ER HO-ADMI R A L C 'N SD LI a n y Six sp e a k e rs. L ess . s ’ o g th a n v eer old. $125.00. Ca . GR 7-8943 after 5 p.m . YOU JU S T CAN O' b e a t t a bu; to n n e a u T R-3 red sp e cial s p o r t coupe. Mar : ex tras top. so ftto p , low m ileage, raced . fcr never w reck ed SHOU every th I ne. No tr a d e P hone GR 1-321. A fter 5 OO, HO S-I50I. excel e n t sh*; • N r \e - r a r -, CH S A C R IF IC E EQUITY'. T h re e bedroom s, closets, sto rero o m of tre e s. F en ced 5350. 4 . *> tw o b aths c e n tra l heat. iran huge i^ j's l a r d O w ner. C L 2- A H S P R IT E 196u N ew r es b a tte r G et re a d y fo r s p rin g M ust sa r ' o —or.. v $795 OO GR 7-4538 W o r k W a n t e d W a n t e d D E SK . STU R D Y S O L ID oak L c r j 54 2 w id th 30” . h c .g h t 29 Ca.. 6522 G L 2-8473 a f te r 5 OO p m I I HLX’ Q ’ ALIF I ED , A E T I T IN G SERV ICI a R r : -ria T erm pa* ’ BK S P E C IA L IS T vCC I'RA T E TY P- - e ■ "'r a ti- Z eros conaclen- . g e n ic * . E n field ’ .s M 1 ?. \M PDS Thee aa — 5 P rofpsnicna - SM R easonable. (IR R-fi 11 3 N . R E A SO N A B LE ‘■'r* G eorge R ob- \ TIC NS T E R M • N ear C arr.put. A p e 'o u r pa- ■ REASONABLY, -s D a , d ’.sser- M.m t ro m a tic, CL 3- A CALHOUN I N SI RY ICE a il '.E d * n o ta ry . Off rig t vnes H all. . 8-.a>36 en d dei* very a r bon. N e * IF vt I FU ; — M RA TES, s a tis f a c tio n M rs, Tui a* MAR MIA D V ZIY’LEY' M B A. v me "'N! r fen?:o ra l e t vcrsi: t > - M e n u ( . u p: ■ f o r t ping th e needs c t S pecial key- lan g u ag e. • ■ •. -e a r ; cr.g.r.eer.r.g t h e s is an d I s s e rta tic n s : & GR 2-“(577 Pc. r . 2 >13 3 GI AD AL I. P E S I4 TY IVN • 'P an d m one* * M s,* G r a n 'rn. GL 3-5725 IM.: A l I E L I .ar. *. c " PDN J 20c PAGE. r.g v o rrac tio n . H I 3- PR O F E S S IO N A L T Y PIN G . LEG A L , IBM L e .a K insey. H I 4- - nor* TH M (ON! K ll PERS -- IBM Multi* th in g A fter 6 CG and w eekends C R 2-1535, 3^27 i Ste M arg je rite H a m p to n Road E X P E R IE N C E D BABY S I T T E R . n i- m a _ _Cail_ _ ES a m c GR _ 2-4576 _ Lost and Found W A N T ED TO R E N T . S ep tem b er 1963 th ro u g h M ay 1964. P re fe ra b ly th re e tw o bedroom s u n fu rn is h e d . M inim um bedroom - W ill fu rn ish ed . Call Sociology- D e p a rtm e n t. GR 1-1122 c o n sid e r U N B E L IE V A B L E BARGAINS! M uf­ f i n * . steeipai ks, g tassp ack s dual-x- fio o r-sh .ft conversion.^ lake- nub ans accessories T ex as A uto. 1114 sc av en g ers. '" a r n au sta, folds. - k i n s E ast 1st. B U S IN E SS LIB RA RY —e x c h a n g e tan ra in c o a t. Som eone s g lasses In pock­ W IL L DO IR O N IN G in m y hom e (.xii a f te r I 30. M rs. Jo n e s GR 2-7634 et. GR 8-3595. Special Services T Y P I N G R ’ ASON A B L E RA TES. B radley. GL 3-8848 or H u n te r. C L 3-3546 L O S T : W ATCH B E T W E E N S u tto n H ail-B E B T uesday F e b ru a ry 20th. In sc rip tio n on back R ew ard Cali GR 1-5620, L O ST : O N E MALE w h ite to v poodle. A round U niversity Bu* ness Bldg F e b ru a ry 14th. R e w a rd - $25 OO offered leading to h is recovery. C ali GF 8-8181. 1616 W est 6th. Apt. 319. I fo r his re tu rn o r know ledge LOST re p la c e a b le papers, BLACK B IL L F O L D and Ir­ k it w ith d ra w in g in stru m e n ts R ew ard, no q u e s­ tio n s asked. HI 2-3476 tool F O U N D : L A D IES BROW N P a rk in g glasses rim m ed In te rn a tio n a l lot. O ffice, GR 1-5763. M isc ellane ou s H and m assage SIN G LETO N S MASSAGE C L IN IC rev ta llie r. L icensed m asseu se 1410 C lit Avenue Call G R 8-3056 electro For Sale 57 T -B IR D E X C E L L E N T co n d itio n WSYV RAH . pow-er ste erin g . B lu e an d w hite GL 3-6473. “ f r e e w a k e u p“ and Time SERVICE 24 hours d a y or righ t H O 5-8748 R E N T - PU R C H A SE T V * T elevision R en tal GR 2-2692 Alpha tire*—new- 1953 C H E V R O L E T 5.">416. F o u r new excellent if desired . (R e a r) a f te r 3:00. tran sm issio n , r u n n m - con d itio n . T erm s 4^6 W est 33rd St, F re d K line, RE TO U C H E D JO B P H O T O S . . . P a ss p o rt . . 24 h o u rs fo r proofs o r p rin ts I GR 2-4184 I x w prices . . S tu d io G ilm ore d e n ts T Y PIN G . S P E C IA L R A T E S fo r stu - IBM neat w ork by prnfe*- sionai ty p ist R u th W iiiiam aon. GL 3- 7838. T H E S E S -R E P ' RT T Y PIN G G u a ra n ­ teed P lck-up-delivery. C L 3-4907. PO RTS. T H E S E S D IS SE R T A T IO N S . HFD IBM S a ia d rle . S y m bols f o r nciences e n g in e e rin g , m ath em atics, la n g u ag e accents G reek. C all GR 2> 961 (S y m b o ls' E X P E R IE N C E D F leet rn m a tic" Typing." d issert* " re p o rts M rs. (.Enfield a r e a ) , G R i ons R itch ie, close n. S-7ffT9 n n o r e d itin g the*es books Council to Consider Sheepskin Petitions I. February 21,1463 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa«a l Hickey Foresees Improved Riata David Hickey, a fraduate stu­ dent In English, has been named by th# Riata Advisory Committee and the Texas Student Publica­ tion* Board as the spring semester Riata editor. Hickey, who graduated from TCU, has some old but practical Ideas about how to run the stu­ dent literary magazine on the Uni­ versity campus. "We will probably produce an Issue May ll,” said Hickey. ''There will be no radical changes in style, except for differences in taste ex­ pressed by the last editor. David Armstrong ” Armstrong will act as poetry the semester. Hickey editor for will be managing said. Larry I editor. The posts of fiction ami nonfiction editors are open. Hick­ ey served as associate editor for the last issue of the magazine. "I think we will Increase the s iz e of the magazine to 80 or 90 pages to accommodate more m a­ terial. I stress that we will look only at manuscripts that are clean­ ly typed on white paper on one side only, double-spaced, and with the contributor’s name on every page," he said. "We will try' to offer some sort of rates this Issue for submitted material. We will look at criti­ cisms, f *tion, poetry’, nonfiction. end even art.'* Manuscripts may he submitted for consideration to Riata editors at the TSP business office, Jour­ nalism Building 107. By HANK EZELL Petitions for an Investigation into the possibility of optional sheep­ skin diplomas have been presented to the Students* Association, und will next be submitted to the Fac- ulfy-Student Council. The Council will consider the petitions at its next meeting March I, said Dr. Leonardt F. Kreisle, chairman. But the petitions have not yet reached the Commencement Com­ mittee. which makes up specifica­ tions for diplomas. Diploma specifications for the next two years will probably be dealt with by the Commencement Committee Thursday, Dr. H. Mal­ colm Macdonald, chairman, said Monday. STUDENT PETITIONS The petitions were written by Peter Williams, chairman of the Student Engineering Council, and Gail Gabriel, past president of Panhellenic Council. They were circulated among campus organi­ zations and submitted to the Stu­ dent Assembly last Thursday. The Com m encem ent C om m ittee specification* review s diploma every two years, then sends rec­ om m endations to the State Board THE UNIVERSITY’S O N LY EXCLUSIVE R A D IO A N D HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway GR 8-6609 S e r v i n g t he Uni ver si ty A r e a for 12 Years B E D W A Y “ H IG H FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES" V O L K S W A G E N S ! New & Used Sales & Service Bank Financing All Guaranteed at G U A R A N T E E !) M O T O R S 1607 S. LAMAR HI 4-2212 of Control. H ie Board opens bid­ ding, with the contract going to tho lowest bidder. The Univer­ sity comes back into the picture when the registrar receives the printed diplomas and the bill. "Diplomas are contracted for like everything the State buys,” Dr. Macdonald said, "through the State Board of Control. With few the University can’t exceptions, buy anything without public bids.” Sheepskin diplomas "would be a good advertisement for the Univer­ sity,” Williams said, adding that they are more durable and look better. On the other hand, he add­ ed that a sheepskin may become brittle after a period of years. ADMINISTRATION VIEW On the administration side, Rog­ er C. Williams, assistant director of admissions, says that few col­ leges use sheepkin diploma. "They always shrink and crinkle up with age.” "It’s difficult to get good sheepskin because It comes from Australia. Sheepskins would be ex­ pensive,” he said, and their sole advantage Is tradition. Macdonald agreed that sheep­ skin diplomas would be expen­ sive. Williams’ petition suggests that the sheepskin diploma be made optional. He estimates a fee of from $5 to $10. J. C. Blair, head of an Austin Engraving firm, estimated that the cost the diploma contract would quadruple lf the University specified sheepskin or imitation sheepskin diplomas. for Police Continue Probe O f 3 Bomb Incidents Austin police are continuing their investigation concerning the ex­ plosive found at the Delta Zeta sorority house Monday night. The incident was the third of its kind this month. The first bomb was found In the Tarrytown area Saturday. Sunday, a powerful homemade bomb exploded in the 900 block of West Twenty-first, spraying a University residential area with metal-piercing frag­ ments, shattering windows, and severing an overhead telephone line. No connection had been made among the three by Wednesday afternoon, but a laboratory' investi­ gation ensued to determine any possible connection. Two Stoning Brothers Elected to YD Offices Keith Sterling, University grad­ uate, was elected secretary of the Young Democrats at a meeting last week in the Austin Public Li­ brary. His brother, Philip, University ex-student and former participant in Young Democrats on campus, was named president. Students interested in joining the organization should contact David i Bradshaw at GR 6-5307, Austin police patrolled the area Monday night. The girls at the house are all quite calm, Hay Mor­ row, DZ president, said. Texas Exes Eye 4 R U Seminars Texas exes will have a chance to flex their mental muscles in four alumni seminars which will be held during Round-Up. The Ex-Students’ Association will sponsor the seminars to be conduc­ ted by University faculty mem­ bers Die four will be held almul- taneously from 2 to 4 30 p m. April 5. Seminar topics are "The Later Hemingway: A Novelist’* Concern for Mankind"; "UT Research and Its Effect on Your Health, Wealth, and F u tu re "; "Our Texas Heri­ tage: Is It Today s Heirloom or Tomorrow's Challenge?” ; and "The Spare Age: Are We Mental­ ly, Physically, and Socially Ready for It? " Ex-students who wish to enroll for a seminar will receive a read­ ing list in advance. Seminars will lie free to dues-paying members of the Ex-Students’ Association. Senate Action (Continued from Pac* One) WU g, On T lw l iy 8-8—"Autobiography ©« the Wert." book exhibit In corridor of Main B uilding lower floor. $-4—Civil War photography. Texaa Un­ ion Gallery 102. 8-5—Student* m ay sign for participa­ tion In Model UN. "Y" or Texas Union M2. 8-11—Snack Building. salt, Homa Economics 9-5—Student* may apply fo r special exam ination* R egistrar'* office. 10-9:30— Art Shoppe. Tex** Union 333. IO—Coffee Hour. Hlllel Foundation. IO—Coffee Hour. "Y .” 10-12 and 5-5—Texas Fine Art* Ae- aoclatlon exhibit. E llsabet Ney Mu­ seum. I —Ing Lauro Y iagulerre to «peak to University Geological Society, Ge­ ology Building 14 3—Regl*tration begins for Challenge Colloquium. Texas Union lobby; cof­ fee will be served In the S tar Room. 3-11—KUT-FM. 90.7 mc. 3 —Study Group* Decision* of College Student*. Modem L ite ratu re: The Common M arket and the Pow er Blocs. **Y.” 4—Hiram Vlvanco and A lberto Men­ the Study Group to the Democratic to speatc dez on Challenge* Ideal. **Y.” to 4—Study Group on Juvenll# Delin­ quency, “ Y.” 4—Dr John M. McCarthy to apeak on “ Com puter Program * W’lth Com­ mon S<'nse ’ Business - Economic* Building IOO. 4—M E. L erner and Hazen H Morse Jr. to speaa to Journalism *tudenta. Journalism Building 5 30—Challenge Colloquium barbecue with address by Paul Goodman. Tex­ as Union Main Ballroom 7-9—Class In *culpture. Tex** Union 7—Duplicate Bridge. Texas Union 304- 3 3 3 306 7—International Club Council busine** ''H o u r" a t 8. Texas m eeting and Union 202. 7-10—Study room* open In Busine**- Eeonomlra Building 7—Paul Goodman to speak at Chal­ lenge Colloquium. Texas Union Main Ballroom. 7:30—Volunteer w orkers •ta ff m eeting Journalism Building 203. to for Dilly Texanne, Invited 8—“ The F lounder.’* ACT Playhouse. F ifth and Lavaca 8—“ Look Homeward, Angel,” Hogg A uditorium 8—Houston Sym phony O rchestra. Mu­ nicipal Auditorium, pointed Garwood en Jan. M, baa net je t Indicated what he Intends Ie de abow! the Senate n a b . He Ie In the hospital reeeperatleg from a hernia operation. Dr. Harry Ransom, chancellor of the University, said he had no comment. He pointed out that all policy statements of the Univer­ sity must be made by the chair­ man of the Board of Regents, W. W. Heath. Heath Indicated Tuesday that the Senate had acted within its rights and that he would offer fullest co­ operation to new and holdover members of the Board, as w’ell as whoever might fill the now vacant ninth position. COMMITTEE VOTE Th# Senate vote required for confirmation is a two-thirds major­ ity. The reported vote pn Gar­ wood’s appointment was 16-12 for confirmation. Voting on Garwood’* appoint­ ment, despite Senate rules pro­ hibiting release of such Informa­ tion, was disclosed Wednesday by two long-time capitol cor­ respondents. Bo Byers of the Houston Chronicle and Stuart I .orig of Long News Service list­ ed the the voting aa follows: For confirmation of Garwood — A. M. Alkin Jr., of Paris, Jim Bates of Edinburg, Criss Cole of Houston, Nevellle Colson of Nav­ asota, Tom Creighton of Mineral Wells, Martin Dies Jr., of Lufkin, D. Roy Harrington of Port Arthur, Abraham Hazen Jr., of Laredo, Don Kennard of Ft. Worth, Culp Krueger of El Campo, William T. Moore of Bryan, William N. Pat- N S A . . . (Continued from Peg* One) man of Ganado, Walter H. Rich­ ter of Gonzales, A. R. Schwartz of Galveston, Franklin Spear* of San Antonio, and Jack Strong of Longview. Against — H. J. ‘P o e ” Blan­ chard of Lubbock, Louis Crump of San Saba, Ralph M. Hall of Rockwall, Dorsey B. Hardeman (rf San Angelo, Grady Hazlewood of Amarillo, Frank Owen III of El Paso, George Parkhouse of Dal­ las, David Ratliff of Stamford, Bruce A. Reagan of Corpus Christi, Andy Rogers of Childress, Murray Watson of Mart, and J. P. Word of Meridian. Absent were Galloway Calhoun Jr. of Tyler, George Moffett of Chillicothe, and Herring. • P A S T REJECTIONS The Senate in 1947 rejected four Regental appointees, according to Jim Sanders of the Legislative Reference library’. Two were for the University, and two for Texas AAM. They were interim appoint­ ments made by then Gov. Coke Stveneson. Schwartz has indicated that he plans to disclose how Senators vote on future nominations. 'T o Improve student govern­ ment should be die purpose of NSA, but the membership la too w eak,” said H ew itt The appeal m utt be to sister schools In the area. "I believe The University (rf Texas should withdraw because NSA should promote The Univer­ sity of Texas government, but it j Is nothing but a giant propaganda I mill,” he stated. Shaul pointed out that NSA is more than merely helping student government. He feels students are : concerned about issues of the day; and the Codification, the resolu- , tions of the Assembly, reflects the replied thinking. Hewitt ; student there is a split opinion among stu­ dents NSA doesn't show. "Most students have not taken any sort of a stand.” he remarked. Hewitt doesn t believe NSA rep­ resents the students. "They take stands on issues University dele­ gates do not convey to students .” He also commented that schools are continually being misrepre- linked with their name | sented; I something they may be against. PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES EXPERT CAMERA REPAIR Hallmark Cards and Plans - A - Party Shop Studtman Photo Service 222 WEST I9TH GR 6-4326 “THE OBJECTIVE OF ENJOYABLE EATING IS TO BE— NOT HUNGRY” Bier Stube Steak House u Gartens 1025 Barton Springs Road "SERVING— YOUR HARD-TO-FIND FAVORITES" Austin, Texas G E R M A N S E A S O N E D A ll you can * * t for $1.00 Foods TH E Y ARE: M O N D A Y : H a m H o c k* and Lim * Baant T U E S D A Y : Fre*h Pork H o c k* and Sour K raut W E D N E S D A Y : C hicken and D um pling* T H U R S D A Y : G o rm an Baked W e in e r* and N a v y Beans F R ID A Y : Shrimp G u m b o or C re o la on Rice All th * m u*- 9 r • • n i, ♦ •rd lpm •c h or tur- mp green* you • at with c«o (LO O order. SERVED EVERY DAY S C H M O R E N BRATEN (STEA K STEW . . 4 G erm an Recipe* C h a n g e d D aily) G E R M A N S E A S O N E D C H IL I A lt the thick b u ttere d to e *t you cen e at. All the Crisp Salad you can eat with Steaks G rille d w-th Lemon end B utter Sauce STEAKS: C h a rc o *! Broiled R egular. Bar-8 Q u a d W e t t e r * Sty!* C hoice o f Serving* R eg ular—C h o ice of Baked Potato or French Fria* W e tte rn — H o m e m ade Potato Salad end Beent C H O IC E OF SALAD DRESSINGS BIER STUBE SPE C IA L T H O U S A N D IS L A N D R O Q U E F O R T C H E E S E L E M O N A N D O L IV E F R E N C H W O P S A L A D SALADS H e e d of Lettuce w ith BIER STUBE S A L A D D R E S S IN G C ritp y G reen Salad with Your C hoice D ra ttin g C h e f * Special S ala d — Your C hoice D ra ttin g .................................... 25 ................................. .10 ....................................................... 75 All tt»a Limas, Navy or Brown Beent You Can Eat with Steaks Or the Hard-to-Find Favorites "A LL THE CRISP SALAD YOU C AN EAT" ................................................................... 24 O Z . S IR L O IN FO R T W O 12 O Z . TO P S IR L O IN L A R G E S IR L O IN M E D IU M S IR L O IN ........................................................................................................... S M A L L S IR L O IN L A R G E T. B O N E ........................................................................................................... ...................... ................................................................................ M E D IU M T. B O N E .............................................................................................. S M A L L T. B ONE 6 O Z C H O IC E FILET M I G N O N ..................................................................... 12 O Z . C H O IC E FILET M I G N O N ..................................................................... ............................. W H O L E C ENTER C U T FRESH POR K R O U N D STEAK 12 O Z . C O W B O Y S P E C IA L TO P C H O P P E D — Baked Potato ond U M ............................................................................................. I 2 IO .............................................................................................. ................................................................... - ................................. U S « 45 IJ S > 45 I SO 1.45 3 00 1.45 G roon Salad Extra— C o v e re d with a S p *n ith Onion S a u c e 1.00 F R E N C H FRIED J U M B O SIZE with R e m o v e d # Se-co, H o a d Lettuce Salad, French Fria* ......................... ......................... I SO O N E H A L F B A R B Q U I C H I C K E N ..................................................................... .......................................................................................... E L G IN H O T S A U S A G E G E R M A N BAR B Q U E PLATE Served with Potato Se!#d a>-d B e e n t.. I 25 I I C I >0 SHRIMP BARBEQUE SIDE ORDERS O N E Q U A R T E R B A R O Q U E C H IC K E N E L G IN H O T S A U S A G E . G re e n P epper* end Pickle* C H I L I ......................... F R E N C H FRIED P O T A T O E S BAKED P O T A T O P O T A T O S A LA D BEAN S. EDDIE S M IT H S P E C IA L JO ............................... 45 40 75 .....................................................................................................................35 .................................................................................................................. 20 ................................................................. IS .......................................................... .................................................................................... lf you have an advanced degree, let’s talk some more. You'll be part of a 3500-person facility responsible for R&D on America's lunar, planetary, and interplanetary j, explorations, lf you come to Caltech’s :5s? Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, you'll find the finest technical facilities in the world- lik e the library with 125,000 technical documents, the most sophisticated computers, space simulators, acres of laboratory ■ space, and about three support people for every one of you. And you'll be working with the finest scientific minds in the country, lf you want to think hard for a living, you should think hard about coming to JPL. ® JET PROPULSION LABORATORY 4800 Oak Grove Drive. Pasadena, Californio "Ati equal opportunity f.mpfoyer”. Operate'! b, Cal forma Immure of Terhu©l0BY for the No'iOnal Aaroraul.rs 4 Spots Admiplitratioe Do you need me at JPL ?■ On Campus Interviews: February 28, 1963 Contact University Placement O ffice for Appointment jew n n i p * "Ta ray ton’s Dual Filter in duos partes divisa est!" says L ucius (Poppa) M ariu s, he-man historian and author of Inside Caesar. “Homo sapiens today sure appre­ ciates fine flavor,” quoth Poppa. “Nota bene the popularity of Dual Filter Threyton. Reason: fiavor-de gustibu* you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette* Dual Filter makes the difference D U AL F IL T E R Mlureyton l*»kwaiUr«*MMMr