WEATHER: Cloudy, Warmer Low 33, High 45 I HE DAILY I EXAN Student Newspaper at The University of Texas PAGE 2: Purpose of University Vol. 62 Price Rve Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, J A N U A R Y 29, 1963 Sixteen Pages in Two Sections No. 97 •rfl Austin Council Gives Contract To Capital Cable Master Antenna W ill Be Installed On Mount Larson By CAROL GUSTINE Texan Staff Writer Capital Cable Company, an Aus Trial Date Feb. 18 In Dormitory Suit take any action on integration of U niversity dormitories. No US District Judge Ben H. Rice has set Feb. 18 as hear- Regental rules or policies regarding integration have been ing date for the dormitory desegregation suit filed by three changed since the suit was filed. ! must be settled or dismissed before the Board can legally By RODNEY DAVIS Issue News Editor tin subsidiary of Midwest Video. Negro University students in November, 1961. received a contract from the City of Austin Monday authorizing it to set up and maintain a cable television s i g n a l distribution in Austin. The contract was granted after a two-hour meeting of the City Council. Judge Rice called the civil case a t docket call Monday. The suit seeks complete integration of all U n i v e r s i t y dormitories. Some men’s dormitories are integrated at pre­ sent, but all women’s dormitories are segregated. Chancellor H arry H. Ransom, President J o s e p h R. Smiley, F. U. McConnell, director of the Division of Housing The integration action brought to a halt desegregation and Food Serv ice, and Miss Jane Greer, m anager of women’s INTEGRATION HALTED a t the University. The Board of Regents has said the suit residence halls, are named as defendants. ♦ 1 4 T H 1 S B A S I g Plaintiffs a r e Leroy Sanders, Sherryl Griffin, and Maudie Ates, and the fathers of the two girls, but th© petition states the suit is a class action o n behalf of other students similarly situated. A master receiving antenna, I.037 feet tall, will be erected on top of 2.049 foot Mount I-arson. subscribers w i l l be charged II.95 a month with no installa­ tion charges. All networks will be represented in the cable service as well as KTBC-TV and K LRN-TV in Aus­ tin The system will also transmit color programs. The granting of t h e contract climaxed a five-year struggle by Capital Cable Company to gain the right to bring cable telev ision to Austin. Preliminary' work was be­ gun in 1957 and an application for the contract was filed then. City Councilmen m e t in a called meeting Monday after noon at the request of Indrjven- dent Cable Company, another applicant for the contract. The company requested that the City h o i grant any contracts for cable television service until the S ou th western B e l l Telephone I om- pany had made a statement that they were able t o p r o v i d e eq u a l space on their poles for at least five companies and they would permit the use of their facilities bv at least five com ponies under "equal and non In discriminatory agreem ents’* every part of Austin. Two other companies-, Vumore and Mlco, were also represented at the meeting. T h e y joined the Independent C a b l e Company in protesting some of the 21 points adopted by the Council at a meet­ ing on Jan. 3. that Ransom Praises 3 New Regents Bv DAVE MCNEELY Texan Staff Writer Giancellor Harry Ransom says he is well pleased with the people chosen by Governor John Connal- ly Thursday to fill the three re­ cently vacated posts on the Uni­ versity Board of Regents. The three Judge W. St. John Garwood of Austin, Mrs. R u t h Carter Johnson of Fort Worth, and Rabbi Levi Olar of Dallas re­ place outgoing regents F r e n c h Robertson of Abilene, Thornton Bardie of Iii P a s o, and J. P Bryan of Freeport. T h e latter three retired from the Board Jan IO. "From every point of view, pub­ lic and institutional, these appoint­ ments confirm the Governor s in­ in higher education.'’ Dr. terest Ransom said. "They will cncour-; age each University p l a n for | academic progress and service to \ the state.'’ TTie three all have connections vs itll the University, though none of them received degrees here. Judge Garwood attended the Uni­ versity for a time in 1919, and his father was a regent, Mrs. Johnson is the wife of a former regent J. Lee Johnson IIL Her brother, Anion Carter Jr.. is a graduate of the University. Rabbi d a n is a member of the Committee of 75 for the University. N SA Petition Is Circulating A group of approximately 13 stu­ dents, headed by D o n a l d Lee Jones, is circulating copies of a petition during registartion wrek, concerning the University's mem­ bership in t h e National Student Association. The petition reads, "We, the un- ; d esig n ed students of The Univer- Sam Houston Clinton Jr., an Austin attorney and coun­ sel for the plaintiffs, asked the federal court to take ju r­ isdiction under au th o rity of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution, the s a m e authority used in t h e 1954 public school desegregation case. Th** petition allege* that tha plaintiff* and o t h e r atudents "a r e being deprived of their right*, privilege*, and Immuni­ ties a* secured by the Constitu­ tion and laws of the U n i t e d State* In that they, a* m em bers o* the Negro race, have been and are being denied b y re**on of their color the right to use and enjoy all housing facilities . . . on the sam e basis as white students.” Also mentioned in the petition are regulations assertedly Issued by the University administration Or*. 31, 1961, in a "residence halls bulletin.” Whitis Dormitory was named in die bulletin a* the only dormitory open to Negro women students, and San Jacinto Dormitories D and F and Brackenridge D orm ito­ ry section D, a* the only dormi­ tories open to both white and Ne­ gro students RI LES SHOW BIAS? The petition said that the posted rules "show on their face that In the matter of housing at the Uni­ versity . Negro students are subjected to discrimination solely on account of race.” . . Attorneys representing the Uni­ versity received permission Mon­ day to h a v e Attorney General Waggoner Carr assist them in the A fight dev eloped l a s t year, however, between University Re­ gents and Attorney General Will Wilson, over who would represent tile University. The US District Court decided the argument, giving the Regents the right to select their own law­ yers. T h e Regents’ decision to contest the case came three days after the suit was filed in District Court. sity of Texas, by statutory initia­ tive and referendum request that the following question be submit­ ted to the student body in a spec­ ial election on Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1963: ‘Should The University of Texa*, or any body thereof, be affiliated with the United States National S t u d e n t Association"” Yes, No, or No opinion.” Members who began circulating the petition Monday, stated their intentions to pass a r o u n d the copies at Gregory Gym the re­ mainder of the week. The student constitution states in Article IX, Section 8, "The rignts of statutory initiative and refer­ endum may be exercised by the student body upon petition of a number of students equal to 13 per cent of Hie total number of ballots cast last General in the Election.” The group must there­ fore o b t a i n approximately 750 signatures, since about 5,000 Uni- case. versity students voted in the last General Election. "In 1952 the students in a refer­ endum election voted not to par­ ticipate in NSA. Two years later the Student Assembly again sent delegates to the NSA Congress. We are asking only that the stu­ dents be given the right to decide for themselves a question that is rightfully theirs,” B u r k e Mus- grcve, m e m b e r cf the group Stated. Humanities Research Center Gets Williams Manuscripts den, Humanities Research Cetner Librarian, said The papers in the Humanities Research Center are usually re­ for use of graduate re­ served search students. The scholar can analyze Williams' works by read­ ing the original with the changed version written over. MORE TO COME The Librarian said that addi­ tional Williams papers are expect­ ed any day and that others w ill be sent as the author finishes them. Among the major items now in the Research Cetner are: # The original typescript of the 1948 London production of Tho Glass Menagerie; • A typescript of A Streetcar Named I >esire with inserts and re- v ision in the author's handwrit­ ing; % Original first reading version of Summer and Smoke; • Original second draft of The Rose Tattoo; Reali; • Revised version of Camino % Original typescript of Cat on a Tin Roof (later changed to Cat on a Hot Tin R oof); • First draft of Sweet Bud of Youth; • And, the 1960 Broadway pro­ duction script of Night of the Igu­ ana. D ie preceding is only a part of Williams’ papers. Eventually, the collection will comprise 28 plays and screenplays, 19 stones, 4 es­ says, and 26 poems with additions when written. Touchy Explosive Found Near Dorm An explosive so sensitive it would go off at the slightest touch was discovered by University police of­ ficers Monday near the entrance to Robert E, Lee Hall. Police Lt. Marion Lee surmised the cold air dried the substance enough to where it would explode at the slightest disturbance. Garwood Inherits Regency cil, National Conference of Judi­ International cature Councils, Bar Association, American Bar Association, State Bar of Texas, and American Society of Inter­ national Law. He is married to the former Ellen Burdine of Houston and they have two sons, Wilmer Garwood Jr. and William L. Garwood, bo til lawyers, and a daughter Louise. By CHARMAINE MARSH Texan Feature Editor "Any errors I make as a Uni­ versity Regent will be on tile side of integration and academ ­ ic freedom,” Judge W. St. John Garwood commented Monday. FATHER WAS REGENT The 67-year-old Austin Judge is a son of a former University regent and served as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Texas from 1948 until retire­ ment in 1958. "I believe in the maximum of the cia**- in free expression for profes­ room, particularly sors," Judge Garwood said, "but of course whereever a human subject Is concerned, a twilight xone prevail* and one often ha* to follow the clear and present danger ruling." Judge Garwood attended the University in 1919 before he en­ tered Harvard where he was awarded an LUI degree. He was a professor of International Law at the University in 1960 and has lectured at Southern Methodist University on Amer­ ican Judicial Organization and Administration. COMMENTS ON STUDENTS The trim gentleman spoke about today’s college student. they seem things "Students show a deficiency in like spelling, geog­ raphy, a knowledge of the Eng­ lish language, and foreign lan gu&ges, while to have an increased knowledge of science and technical subjects. "The more intelligent students should be trained to the m axi­ mum as they will occupy the leadership positions in this in­ creasingly complex and danger­ ous world. Paraphrasing Winston Church­ ill, Judge Garwood pointed out that while democracy the best form of government, it is also the most complicated. is Gesturing around the room the Judge pointed to pictures of friends, relatives, and degrees covering his o ffic e s walls. "This is ray career.” INVOLVED IN EDUCATION Born in Bastrop, Garwood re­ ceived a bachelor of arts degree from Georgetown University. He is a founder of St. John s School of Houston, past trustee of St. Stephen s School of Aus­ tin, and a founder of the Uni­ versity Law School Foundation. The new Regent is a fellow of the American Bar Founda­ tion, member of Phi Delta Phi and Order of the Coif, legal fra­ ternities, and Phi Delta Theta »ocial fraternity. Judge Garwood’s father, a University regent, was a county judge, state senator from Bas­ trop County, and president of the State Bar of Texas. An American delegate to the Atlantic Congress in 1939, R e­ gent Garwood is a member of the Texas Civil Judicial Coun­ W. St. John Garwood . . . N e w University Regent. —Texan Photo—Venn# Second Station Comes Frank Deniut hands c o n tra ct to M a y o r Lester P alm er. Texan P h otos—Owen* Chileans to Come Here After Tour soil Friday Sixteen Chilean students will in reach American Miami and kick off the fifth Chile- an-Student Leader Seminar at the University, Their trip Is part of a recipnv-al educational ex- Three Speakers Set to Challenge "Individualism in Ute Twentieth Century’’ will be the topic of the second annual Challenge Collo­ quium at the University. Featured as speakers at the col­ loquium, to ha held Feb. 21-23, will ba Paul Goodman, nationally known author of such books aa "Growing Up Absurd," and "Cbm- m un tty of Scholars;” Fria Jona- •on, chairman of the Board of Di­ rector* of Texas Instruments In­ corporated: and Russell Kirk, well­ known lecturer and author of "The Conservative Mind." Challenge Is a program Initiated last year at the University to give students an opportunity to broad­ en their knowledge of Issues, change between the University and the the Institute P ed a g o g ic of University of Chile. Dr. Joe W Neal, D irec'tor of the University's International Office, will meet the studenta in Miami, which will be the first stop in their six week visit to the United States Before reaching Austin Sunday, Feb. IO, the group will visit Puerto Rico, New York, and Washington In Puerto Rico they will be guests of the Commonwealth's state department, and will spend time sightseeing and talking with student leader* at the University of Puerto Rico. In New York the Chileans will see a Broadway mu­ sical comedy. Their activities in Washington In­ clude an Informal talk in Spanish by the Chilean Desk Officer at the US Department of State. They will meet other State Department of­ ficials who work with the Foreign Student Service Council of Greater Washington, which planned their Washington program. The group was selected from over 200 applications. Cedomil Cole, professor of modern Span­ ish literature and faculty sponsor of the literary circle at the Imti tuto Pedagogic©, will accompany ihe group. U n i v e r s i t y students a a n participate for the entire three day period from Friday night through Saturday afternoon. For the stu­ dent wishing to participate for the entire colloquium, it is necessary to register and to lie interv iewed by a professor Feb. 4-8 from I to 5 p.m. in room 329 of the Texas Union. Those participating in the two-day period need only register, In Union 320. Participants are Valadimir Aguil­ era. Antonio Arbea, Miguel Can­ ales, Auguste Carmona, Renato Ernesto E spines a, Maria Soledad Ferreiro, Heman Gonzalez, Ro­ berto Hernandez, Willy Herrera, Patricio I-ynch, Eliana Marabou. information booth Also Alberto Mendez, Monica Os- will be open on the ground floor lobby of the Texas Union through- orio, Raul Alfonso Sanchez. Hiram out registration week. A Challenge I Vivanco. News in Brief. . . Compoed From AP Reports IPOIX TAX. In night session, the House Elections Committee heard and sent to subcommittees requests to repeal the 91.75 poll tux and replace It with a permanent registration system , and to move the date of the first primary election from May to August. stockpiling program during STOCKPILING. Arthur S. Flemming testified Monday that netiher political pressure nor friendship induced him to extend a costly de­ the Elsenhower administration. fense Hem m ing told a special Senate armed services investigating sub­ committee he was unaware of such pressures as had been described last month by former Assistant Secretary of the Interior Felix Wormser. NEWSPAPER STRIKE. Mayor Robert F. Wagner convened an­ other of bb City Hall negotiating sessions Monday In the 52-day New York newspaper blackout. This was the first meeting to In­ clude publishers and leaders of the striking printers union at the sam e time. There was no report of progress. DOCK STRIKE. Work has resumed in New York ports and elsewhere to recoup from the long, costly East and Gulf Coast dock strike. Em­ ployes are working overtime to take care of the cargo which had ac­ cumulated during the 34 strike-bound days. NORTH BORNEO. Talks opened Monday between Britain and the Philippines on Southeast Asia defense problems were complicated by the Philippines claim to North Borneo and opposition to Ute plan for a Southeast Aslan federation to be called Malaysia. A military spokesman In Singapore said a British parachute unit had been sent Into the protectorate of Brunel In North Borneo where an uprising was put down last month. Another 2,000 British troops on alert. COMMON MARKET. The French government clamped an unyield­ ing veto Monday night cm Britain’s bid to join the European Com­ mon Market and seemed prepared to try for vast changes in the west­ ern alliance. Pleas of five of France s continental allies who sought to keep Britain's membership bid alive were ignored. 4,768 Students W alk Through Registration sm ooth S urprisingly rr g is tra lion p ro c e d u re s g ree te d m ost of the I , TAS stu d e n ts who enrolled M onday in th e first day of the five d ay sp rin g re g istra tio n p e ­ riod. A total of 19.Woo registrants are expected for spring. Monday's enrollment figures were below then* of the first day last spring, when 5,1 It students registered. A total of ZI.SSO were enrolled In the fall aeinestrr. Registration officials attributed the generally fast proceedings to the longer enrollment period, which has led to leas registrants per day. Bv JAMES \ OH LIX Texan Staff Writer A large portion of Tennessee Wil­ liams* manuscripts are now in the University’s Humanities Research Center. A N N O l VC L D L V S ! W E E K They arrived Jan. 2, In accord­ ance with an agreement signed in December, but not announced un­ til Jan. 20. The collection of plays anil movies, stories, essays, and |»oet- ry will probably Im*, when com* the most complete ar­ pleted, chive of a living dramatist ever assembled. Major articles in tile collection are Williams' plays. The scripts are typewritten but profusely al­ tered in the author's handwriting. There are cuts, revisions, notes, and insertions. The scripts are typed cm four or five different typewriters a n d changed in green, blue and black inks and in pencil. "With so many changes Wil­ liams' papers are especially valu­ able because so much more can be observed about what the au­ thor was thinking," Mrs. Ann Bow­ Negro Gains Entry To Clemson College CLEMSON, S. C. if) South Caro­ lina, the last state with unbroken public school segregation lowered its barriers under court orders Monday to a smiling, reserv od Ne­ gro who emphasized, ’’My main purpose is to get an education.” Harvey B. Gantt, 20, an archi­ tectural student, said he was sur­ prised by his friendly reception on the Clemson College campus where he enrolled as a transfer student from Iowa State University. Civilian-clad state police and uniformed highway patrolmen were on hand to keep order. "I would hope to be considered as any other student,’’ Gantt said. Tuesday, January 29.1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# 2 Little Man on the Campos B y B ib le t To Encourage Thought Is Intent of University By CYNTHIA WILSON When a g rad u ate student who has been m aking good g rad es drops out pf college th ree w eeks before the end of the sem ester, t h e r e la obviously som ething wrong som ew here. What m akes a student tak e such a d rastic step ? In this case, the last straw w as a rem ark m ade to the student by his research instructor, who said that his principal purpose a t the U niversity was re se arch ; teaching and students w e rt sec­ ondary. The student, contending th a t the purpose of a university is its students, w ith­ drew in disgust. teach to These conflicting opinions on the purpose of a university w ere partly responsible f o r a g rea t change the student's educa­ in tional plans, p e r h a p s in nis whole life. But the im plications of such a disagreem ent extend beyond his p articu lar case. More students attend universities now than ev er before, and the larg er the universities grow the g re a te r becomes their true purpose. the dispute over In this age of rocketry. mi«- siiery, and the co»d-war struggle the argum ent be­ with Russia, the hu­ tween the sciences and the p a ra ­ m anities has become m ount academ ic issue. The hu- m anities h a \e been pushed aside to m ake room for expanded pro­ gram s in science, creating a lop­ sided curriculum . But this is ue is only one p art of the debate over the purposes of a univer­ sity. L o ts dism iss contention purpose hunting g r o u n d the right now t h a t a university'* to provide a happy for prowling 666 Boys and Education Gov. John Connally has shown his sin­ cerity about his program for higher educa­ tion in Texas, even if his motivation is still not entirely clear. His three appointments to th e U niversity Board of Regents are a welcome addition; his proposals to th e Legislature (in regard to a study of h ig h er education) are w orth­ while; and th e governor's general attitu d e to w a rd higher education is encouraging. Still open to suspicion is th e m otivation behind all th e e m p h a s i s on education. W h e th e r the governor is one of the “brains b rin g s bucks’' boys is not clear. Hopefully he is not, fo r nothing could be m ore inimical to th e interests of higher education. ★ ★ “ B rains brings bucks” philosophies have X>ut m any legislators in positions of support for m ore m oney to be poured into Texas’ state-supported colleges and universities. But these philosophies, despite th eir inherent fi­ nancial backing, do not necessarily support the tru e goals of higher education. T he BBB clique, m ostly legislators who are education-conscious because a 5 sign is equated with “education,” p l a c e s Its money on Texas schools to win in the race for attracting industries. “Brains b r i n g s bucks,” translated, means that if T e x a s spends m o r e on education—thereby, its seems, autom atically achieving quality—it will receive a big return on the investment in form of more business in the state. ★ ★ Thus one must keep a wary eye on the m otivation of those who speak loudly for m ore m oney for higher education. Those who do support greater appropriations for state-supported colleges and universities are not necessarily a g a i n s t the purposes of academ ic pursu it; b u t they m ay be confus­ ing the goals of education w ith the goals of governm ent. Gov. Connally thus fa r h a s not shown his m em bership c a r d in the BBB clique. We hope he does not, because on the basis of his first tw o weeks in office he has dem on­ s tra te d a sincere interest in Texas higher education. He c a n contribute g reatly to T ex as’ colleges and universities— if he does not sell them to the goal of a ttra c tin g in­ dustries. TO Riff CM TR' M M Y OKS*. 'You 9 J or Adv j o e AT TH COLl&iB UNTIL Wfc KCW’ YOU W W f a t 1 —-I tJfcUUN T Free World Has Threats W ithin reconsolidation Or that it should hand either of the m ajor con­ tending factions in th at com p a free gift of hope its own world success. for Yet is could happen, it may be happening because of a sly So­ viet attem p t *o dissolve the am al­ gam of fear which has had so much to do with holding the West together, and :t m ay continue to happen. lf it is not stopped, the tim e will alm ost surely come when free nations xviii have to defend their liberties with arm s, even if that fight be conducted the horrible shadows of m an-m ade clouds, shaped like mushrooms. in Guest Editorial Study in Myopic Economy The proposal to deny state-supported col­ leges state funds for a ttra c tin g private and federal support is short-sighted and false economy. The Legislative Budget B oard has re ­ commended th a t no appropriated sta te funds be provided for “ developm ental’’ activities of th e state colleges and universities. This, says Dr. H arry’ Ransom , chancellor of The U niversity of Texas, “w o u l d bury hig h er education in T exas.” He said it would keep state schools from using “one cent to a ttra c t NASA or Rockefeller Foundation m oney.” ★ ★ T h a t college developm ent board activities are good business is dem onstrated rig h t here in th e experience of the U niversity of H ous­ ton. D r. P a t Nicholson told the H arris Coun­ ty legislative delegation last week th a t one y e a r the U. of H. spent $106,000 on develop­ m ent activities and got back S2 million. Com petition betw een institutions of high­ e r education for g ran ts from the big founda­ tions and from various agencies of the fed­ eral governm ent is intense. Texas h a sn ’t been getting its share of those funds. F o r ju st one exam ple, G overnor Connally recen t­ ly pointed out to the Legislature th a t Calif­ ornia received 41.31 per cent of the Defense D epartm ent budget f o r experim ental and developm ental test and research work and T exas only 1.05 per cent. ★ ★ letters outlining A university can’t get such g ran ts by its qualifications. w riting Personal contact is required and since both W ashington and the h ead q u arters of most of the big foundations are far aw ay, travel costs alone are a big item. If the budget board can tell the colleges w here else to get the m oney required for developm ent activities, well and good. If it can ’t, such funds should be included in the sta te appropriation. —HOUSTON CHRONICLE Americanism' Distorted Som eone Is try in g to m ake good, loyal, p atrio tic A m ericans a p p e a r to be H itler sym pathizers. T he local “Im peach Earl W a rre n ” sign, sponsored by th e Freedom Action Com m it­ tee, recently w as defaced—the word “ F ree­ dom ” was replaced by “ F ascist.” It was a skillful job, so neat t h a t th e patchw ork could h ard ly be noticed. ★ ★ “This indicates some k i n d of an o r­ ganized effort to discourage anyone with in­ tentions of doing anything about th e Com­ m unist conspiracy,” said J a c k Peyton, chairm an of the Freedom Action Com m it­ tee. H e said sim ila r o ccu ren ces in o t h e r a r e a s support th is co n ten tio n . P e y to n said th a t s u c h d efa cem en t is m ade by p erson s ignorant o f th e prim ary purpose o f th e sig n — th a t is, “ to g e t people to read litera tu re a b o u t th e C om m unist m en a ce,” w h ich litera tu re is available at the A m erican F reed om B ook S t o r e on W est S ix th S treet. “ Im p ea ch m en t is th e legal w a y to deal in w ith a reca lcitra n t ju r ist,” P e y to n said co rrectin g an ea rlier T ex a n editorial. Stamps & Apples T t i r *■ A * * -* r > A I I V T F Y A N rn, I V A A Ari R J A R L j m . In ju stice o ften can o n ly be dealt w i t h through direct, so m e tim e s v io len t action. - ~ /T- j T i . r t e x a n are th o le o f <)pinion expressed in t h e the Editors or o f th e t i n t e r o f the article and not necessarily tho' U n iv e r sity stu d e n ts by on e of th e o ld est m ea n s o f p r o te st— b o y co tt. , £ C ase N o . I; A pples sold in th e T e x a s 1 Th. Daily TOU. • .tud.r,; M w w oI Th. urn- i i ® - J Z H . intl n t -.’ In Se- ond-clasi postage paid at n August tv Texas rnuch ,UUL" l:n io n (C o m m o n s and C huck W a so n l c o st ,h p ridiculous sum o f l a can ts. T h is is to o to nav for annlps____ nn m a tter how m a lle i HOW lu I**J 1UI _________________________cold, clean, and d eliciou s th e y are. T h is apple terrier tfin -ti May Student P o a* r.s Austin. Texas. Ne'Ax contributions " (GR I-52441 or the editorial off ice .?ournall«”) Building i os or at the Nr .s Laboratory. J lion off e is J p. P T (GR NUV. office la J. B. in urn 1-3227). B and the adverti ng i b? accepted bv telephone price is not flex ib le— apples j is Tie • ireuin- are I.) c e n ts th e v ca r around. * , in th e U nion associatkh phkss wiki skk\ icr use ’for rep'"‘T'-a1 i°. -,r r" ........ a.;” nevi ^ :"1 I hrs cm! *ed 'S'-’T S tn S S L A ...,,.,, C..Ii-ti...'1 Vr’" I K I diversity Pres# 'Sen ire South'* astern Journalism Congress PHIM a n e n t STAFF e d it o r m a n a g in g e d it o r ....................... d a v e HELTON a s s is t a n t m a n a g in g e d it o r ............................. BARBARA TOMM NEWS EDITOR ........................ MIU ANN WALKER AMUSEMENTS EDITOR . . . . HAYDEN FREEMAN FEATURE EDITOR............ CHARMAINE MARSH SPORTS EDITOR................................ BILL LITTLE WIRE EDITOR .............................. CAROL GUSTINE e d it o r ia l p a g e e d i t o r .................... ....................... ...... ...... KAYK NORTHCOTT Q C ase N o. 2: .Students p urchasing post- a g e sta m p s a t m a ch in es on th e D ra g m ust p a y IO ce n ts fo r one 5 cen t sta m p and th r e e I ce n t stam p s. T h is m e a n s that a person \n-Am.ri«,n w a n tin g to m ail tw o CPlltS ’ * O bvious solution to th e se tw o in ju stices sa m h im H JR. m a Y be ^o u n ^ 5n tbe eco n o m ic b o y co tt— b p - p'es are ch ea p er at g ro cery sto res and the post o ffice sells p o sta g e sta m p s at fa ce valu e. letters m ust p a y 20 ~ | E J ^ J E J * | rn n J b J t i a J K l Y l / l £ ) Q C l / I O l f ] f l l l C H U I M M W B Y l l # I I s W R ep y g “ R ed” B erry o f San A n to n io com e Up w ith a n o th er h ea d lin e-m a k er— By J. M ROBERTS Associated P resa News Analyst the first half of A whirling, dizzying storm of International deferences has sud­ denly confronted the world with very grave la rg ers. D uring this century' the storm has been per­ ceptibly gathering, and at any tim e in previous history such a row exists would condition as sent out a have wave of w ar fear. im m ediately Only the “ xittence of terrible new weapons, making any belief in incredible. tends to w ard off those shivers new’. the value of w ar President Kennedy 'n expressed belief in the need for a new and more forceful American leader­ ship in the world is under direct challenge within this nation s own alliances, The belief cf the hierarchy in the Soviet Union in the necessity of its own centralist leadership in tile expansion of com munism is under challenge from w hat the world has grown to consider M oscow s own sphere. and It appears now that F ran ce is to bar the not only detcim ined influence of Britain the United States from both the m ili­ tary and political councils of Eu­ rope, but to th at she dom inate Europe herself, a con­ cept which w as believed to have died 150 years ago. intends A frican nationalism and racial­ the term s ism could shift from of the to ideological movement term * of flam e at any tim e. is trying the claim s of B ritain to com pro­ the mise w ith Philippines, a peculiarly A m er­ ican associate in Southeast Asia, in order to present a solid from against w hat ap p ears to be Indo­ in nesian m ilitary North Borneo aspirations The c h a racter of India is chang­ ing regardless of the continued efforts of P rim e M inister Nehru in world con­ for nonalignm ent flicts despite the aggression of Red China. Nobody can forsee the consequences of his death aft­ er a m ilitary buildup aided by the United end both Britain States. Italy and Britain a re n ea r a complete parting of the w ays with F ran ce over Common M ar­ the a sp ira ­ ket differences and tions of P resident C harles de Gaulle. West G erm any and all the other W estern European countries are extrem ely nervous despite the n«w and highsound- ing Franco-G erm an protocols. F ran ce is deliberately bidding for the economic, and therefore the political, allegiance of D enm ark and Portugal, always close asso­ ciates of B ritain, and of Spain, a non-North Atlantic T reaty O r­ ganization abv of the United States. The Alliance for P rogress be­ tween and the United S tates I a x in-America, beginning to take on a bare sem blance of o rder after an extrem ely disorderly and non-progress ive first y ear, is per­ haps the only are a in the world where even sm all ray s of hope pierce the clouds of danger. It is alm ost Incredible that the non-Communist ivorld, h a v i n g worked to sta rt reaction within com m unism , should now true enem y tim e for allow the a decomposing for years so hard s t a f f f o r t h is is s u e a bill to divide T e x a s in to tw o sta tes. n ig h t e d i t o r ....................................... jim d a v is a m ore lik ely ap p roach — and one m ore I ’I W I i s ................ a lo n g th e lines o f B e r r y ’s a i m s - w o u l d be , . DESK EDITOR IAI RA Mf NEIL copy d e s k c h i e f .......................b i l l y s t r o n g Night R eporters Juan Vasquez, Carol (Justin# Copyreader...........................Bob Hinkle, Fred Bums Night Sports E d ito r .......................... Everett Kalium As^istants . . . . Bill Little, Kinchen Pier, Bob Braun 4 Night Amusements Editor .....................I Jeff Millar 0 i y ' “ nd mUch m 0rc '•C a l.stic -w ith J oh n Feature Editor .............................Charmayne Marsh C on n ally a s g o v ern o r in th e n o r t h and Editorial Assistant , 0 divide T e x a s into fifth s, as is provided in th e tr e a ty under w hich T ex a s wra s an- Mary Jane Gorham G eo rg e Pan* in th e S o u th . B u t a h a lv ed T e x a s m ig h t be sa tiafac- . . . . T , n ex ed . , , m, • « ,, ^ , , . A t i l — —~ — — — The Firing Line ENGLISH WOE* To the E ditor: Tile D epartm ent of English can take gas. I e n u re d I arrived on cam pus bright and early Monday morning, congratu­ lating m yself for having the good luck to reg ister on the first day. But as the English Building to be a d v i s e d , w hat should greet tm eyes but a large, offensive sign proclaim ing th at English m ajors who had not been pre-ad vised would not be allowed to see their advisers until Wed­ nesday. In rop y to my astounded inquiry, the m an outside the a d ­ vising room assured m e that it was indeed true “ But I register today,” I protested in D ecem ber, “ No you don t,” he wittily re­ plied, “ you reg ister Wednesday ” F u rth e r investigation, pleading, etc. proved *o no avail. Now', when the signs urging English m ajors to pre-register appeared they m ade back no mention of any penalty for failure lo do so. Nor was there any such penalty last y ea r when I also did not pre-register <1 registered on the first day then, too). Thus I can only assum e th at the penalty wa* a last-m in­ ute whim of the English D epart­ ment, a sort of ex post facto law. Now. it seem ed to m e that if the R eg istrar said I could reg ister on Monday, that should settle it, I didn t vault out of bed at the crack of dawn Monday just to take a stroll through the brisk Ja n u ary air But, as they say, you can t fight Q ty Hall. It isn’t my first encounter with petty bureaucracy at this University of the F arce Class, and I am sure it will not be my last. Somehow, though, I never seem to be able to get used to it. As a final note, I urge ALL English m ajors not to pre-register next tim e. That ought to foul up their little hu­ m an assem bly line. Take gas, D epartm ent of E ng­ lish. Lleucn Adkins MIO Lakeland it A LAKESIDE UT? To Ute E ditor: The U niversity of Texas cam ­ pus has becom e a com posite m ess—an anthill of unplanned jungle confusion—an unpleasant I have, of crowded m asonry. the fresh ­ last since attending the “ Old Main ” in m an class o b s e r v e d continuance this towards m ediocrity. It is princi­ pally tire fault of th e Board of Regents ca< h succeeding group tieing ae! f-a ppo rn ted e\jw*r* un­ coordinated bv any long-range planning and building progres­ sively tow ard today s disability. to and freshm an So be it nothing ran rem edy there the present situation. But are several hundred acres of beautiful ground on Lake Austin belonging the University of Texas which should im m ediately be a new cam pus development sophomore for classes w ith the * old 40 ’ acre* being confined to a senior ca m ­ pus with expended graduate em ­ phasis. H ere note that the Uni­ is building versity of California two new cam puses, one al San Diego and one at San F rancisco <2 000 ac res), each expected to have 40.000 students by 1970. When the “ new '' cam pus is p ro jected - let us resolve for our U niversity of T exas: com petitive I That the faculty of the arch i­ tectural school l>e the selector of renowned architect for each a stru ctu re by sub­ mission*. and 2. That landscaping from inception to avoid the past tragic failure. space planning i e projected 3. That each generation be al­ lowed its own arch itectu re as at H arvard cain put. rath er than the idiocy of an expediently modified period p attern such as Italian renaissance. 4. That no automobiles be a l­ lowed within the perim eter—nor any sophomore or freshm an stu ­ dent be perm itted to own one. ''co lleg es” 5. That students be grouped in living to their p articu la r faculty in every­ day association. according Again th ere can be in Austin a cam pus w here considerate peo­ ple will feel there is a proper environm ent for beginning stu ­ dents—one which can becom e aesthetically a gratification and academ ically an efficient learn ­ ing place. d ia r ie s A. Spears P resid en t Grayson County S tate Bank Sherman, Texas I A W U N KNAKE! A I S V E E N . ■SNAKE! I THATS NOT A QUEEN SNAKE ...I THATS JUST ANODTREE BOUCH WELL, I LL m EQ IT 15' coeds in search of husbands. I dismiss the belief of that grand old alum nus of Touchdown Uni­ versity, A. Birdbrain, who is of the considered opinion that the main purpose of a university is t u r n out winning football to teams. TWO CONCEPTS Serious consideration of the various o p i n i o n s expressed about undergraduate education reveals two major schools of thought. The specialists, as I shall call them, Include those professors who believe that a university should he a profes­ sional training school to teach specialised skills. I shall con­ sider humanists to be those professors who defend Rte li­ beral arts and the more In­ tangible objectives ef a univer­ sity, Including t h e effort to teach students to t h i n k for themselves. Although the Ideo­ logical differences between the two groups are related to the science-humanities I a S a e, rn specialist Is not necessarily a scientist any more than a hu­ manist Is necessarily not a sci­ entist. Humanist* defend of the liberal art* and the general background of knowledge th at they provide Cardinal Newman, o n e of the g reatest liberal advocate* art*, said that from such an edu­ the *tudent "apprehend* cation the great outlines of knowledge, the principles on which it rents, tho srale of its parts, it* lights and it* g rea t parts little, a* he otherw ise and e a r not apprehend them. Hence i* is that an education is called 'L ib e ra l'.” it* shades, it* The specialists reply that the sa st body of knowledge that ha* snowballed to unm anageable pro­ portions in recent y e a r s had technological specializa­ r i a d e tion so essential that a broad the hum anise* must study of give way to concentration In a narrow field, T h e bewildering com plexity of science doc* m ak e the existence of a Twentieth Cen­ impos­ le o n ard o da Vinol tu ry sible. hut the increase of knowl­ edge is no excuse for training a technicians who can society of com m unicate only with men in their own limited area and ha%e no t h e i r own specialty. interest beyond the blending of Dr John O Rodgers associate dean of the College of Educa­ touched the U niversity, tion at upon the problem of integrating new* discoveries with our culture in his definition of the purpose* of a university These purposes are “ the perpetuation of culture. the discovery of new knowledge and this new knowledge with our cu ltu re.” Hi* third potnt could not be accom ­ for how plished by specialists, could they relate their discover­ ies. valuable a* they ma y be. to if they the wisdom of the pa*t ar# unaw are of this mas* of knowledge and tradition that ex- ista beyond their p articu lar dis­ the *peciall*ts cipline? And if cannot com m unicate with those who do have th n background, their di*eo\erie« rem ain isolated fact* of little usefulness to our culture. PAST AS G U D E Now does a study of the lib­ eral a rts accom plish the goals mentioned by Dr. Rodgers? Although some specialists con­ tend th at the classics are so rem ote from m odern life as to he of little contem porary value, the literatu re of the pant ran and does help students ie un­ the Twentieth Cen­ derstand tury. If we believe to im parted that a common ground of knowledge exists and can be students through the study of the liberal art*, how does it prepare the stu­ dent for life? A liberal arts edu­ cation should first train the mind. To stock it, a* Gladstone said, is secondary. Learning an array of is a m echanical process fact* which discourage* original think­ ing; but when a student m ust g rasp concepts and apply them •he is forced to think for himself. He cannot find the answ er to his problem s in a table at the back of th# book; he must struggle w ith him self until he reaches a satisfactory conclusion. W hat should not be taught in a university is the subject of hot dispute academ ician* and vocationaliBt*. By vocatiotial- ists I m ean persons who believe that a university training between is a for secretaries, place farm er*, and anyone who w ants to e a rn m ore money by virtue of poises*- ing a scrap of parchm ent. Voca­ tion* lists are often specialist* with lower standards. VOCATION ALS NEW Inclusion of vocational team­ ing In universities la peculiar to and relatively new lo Arnee* lean education. Despite our na­ tion's prosperity, m any student* feel that they m ust s ta rt earn­ ing as soon as possible and so reg a rd college as tittle m om than a higher technical ac bool. instance* academ ie In m any stan d ard s have been lowered by the inclusion of such courses, A thesis In business *d- m a ste r's m inistratlon was subm itted at one university on the ludicrous topie* “ A Time and Motion Study of F o u r Methods of Dishwashing ” Such a thesis would be funny lf it w ere not typical of m a ry of tho dissertation* accepted by Ameri­ can universities today. Ruling the tide of vocational education is the “ gut” o r “ snap” course, otherw ise known to stu­ dents as “ mickey mou.se ’* Ona university offered a course in atom ic physics, which, despite it* little im pressive effort on the student's part. No lab o rato ry work was required, and, if you could memorize, you could easily obtain a “ B.” required title, rtf a Specialization in g r a d u 1 1 # school based on a liberal a rts bac kground would seem In be the best m eans of preventing our ao- ciety fn»m degenerating to th* stat*. technocratic level G raduate Mudy extend* and In­ tensifies the purposes of under­ graduate training Yet, despite the increasing need for graduate education many universities p re­ fer to attract under*n»<1uatei, spending extravagant sums em dorm itories aryl football stadium* in order to do so, to original QUESTION F A f m “ The objective of rn univer­ sity education la t* train the mind to think about facta," ac­ l e i Hughes, cording 11 Dr. associate dean of the G raduate the University. “ la School a t the first the stu ­ four year* learn to question dent should accuracy, uadi t h e validity, value of Information ho the acquire*. In graduate acheat a thorough search should m ore thought move on t h e un­ and investigation of known. Although tile com plex­ ity of modem life preclude* • universal man, th# wall round­ ed specialist I* ae attainable Ideal." The efforts of universities to prom ote an atm osphere of stim u­ li ting freedom a re often ham per­ ed by adm inistrators, who ar* first and educator# executives second. The of purse-strlng* state universities are m anipulat­ ed by taxpayers whose ignorance and prejudices frequently hinder the advancem ent of education. U niversities with religious affilia­ tions are often ham pered by well- m eaning hut trustee#. The recent banning of Eugene O Neill's play, “ I /m g Day s Jour­ ney Into Night,” at o re Texas u n h e rslty is an exam ple of what can happen. ignorant INCENTIVE DULLED sud The excitem ent chal­ lenge of learning can he alined, a s much by inept and dull pro­ fessors, oxercrowded classes, and watered-down courses aa R can he by lack of freedom. Th* habit of using graduate stu ­ dent* to teach freshm an cours­ es Is one of the most unfor­ tunate practices of all. Not all tea ch in g a ssista n ts are Incap­ able, of cou rse, hut few of them h a le the ability to Inspire their captive audiences. The num ber of promising student* who lose their d esire to learn tinder such conditions la, I fear, higher limn we realise or can afford. Instead of arousing th* student's Intellectual curiosity, the university m ay put him I* sleep, physically and Intellec­ tually. The realization of our owti lim­ itations titles not come aa d ram a­ tically to most of us as it should. Recognizing that the world has become too complex for a man to boast, as F rancis Bacon did, of taking all knowledge for his province. should not discoura** anyone who wants to learn. Nei­ th er should it encourage educa­ tors to lower their standards, for­ sake their ideals, and lose sight of the purpose* of a university. W hat are these purposes? U iey are not foe teaching of student* to p arro t facts, to earn a m in i­ m um salary, to m ake o u r lives m ore com fortable, or to create bom bs m ore powerful th an Rus- sia ’s. The purposes of a univer­ sity a re to teach the student to think and to give him foe back­ ground of cultural knowledge th at he must have to lead A fruitful life. TRIG A AUSTIN. Texas (Spl.)—A nu­ clear reactor has been installed at the University for the College of Engineering and will be put into operation when its uranium fuel arrives, probably in March. The r e a c t o r , known as the TAIGA Mark I, was acquired primarily for teaching theoretical and practical aspects of nuclear energy to engineering students. It will also be used in conjunction with various other graduate and undergraduate the sciences. courses in Fire Destroys Rudder House COLLEGE STATION «Spl.)- The presidential manse at Texas AAM College burned beyond repair early Saturday afternoon, the last day or fall sem ester final exams. J. Earl Rudder, current presi­ the College, stood with dent of members of his family and watch­ ed firemen, students and onlook- | ers fight the blaze. The fire was fanned by a n e w blue norther which struck about the time the fire broke out. The fire, according to campus police, was apparently caused by the 71-year-old in faulty wiring walls. All the first-floor furnishings the were s a v e d and many of UT Due New Faces Tuesday, January 29, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag# J Freshmen 'Brighter Higher academic standards seem to at­ tract brighter freshmen to The University of Texas. Dean of Students Glenn E, Barnett re­ ports that almost 86 per cent of the pre­ sent freshman class ranked in the upper half of their high school graduating classes, with 57.5 per cent in the top quarter. The University enrolled 2,945 secondary school graduates in the Fall Semester. Of that total, only 11.2 per cent ranked in the third quarter and 2.9 per cent in the lowest. HOW HEMPHILLS EVER-READY REBATE WORKS FOR YOU An Australian poet who is also an engineer will be a visiting lec­ turer in The University of Texas English Department during the Spring Semester. Robert D. FitzGerald of Sydney | will teach an advanced course in modem English and American 1 poetry, to meeting the departm ent's ' sophomores I new "Introduction to L iterature" sequence. He also will give one or S more public lectures. in addition in in FitzGerald was represented In the recent "Im age of Australia" issue of the Texas Quarterly by a lyric five stanzas, "Tocsin." Several years ago his long philo­ sophical poem "E ssay on Mem­ ory" won the all-Australian Com­ monwealth Competition Prize. He has received numerous other hon­ including the Commonwealth ors lectureship and, Literary' Fund from the British Crown, the Order of the British Empire for services to literature. Dept. of Philosophy ami "Scien ce the M odem World" and "Philosophy o f Sci­ ence" w ill be taught In the U ni­ versity D epartm ent of P h ilos­ ophy during the spring sem e ste r by V isiting Prof. Mario B unge of B uenos A ires, Argentina. Prof. F erruccio Rosei-Landt of Milan, Italy, will also be a visiting professor In the D ep art­ m ent of Philosophy, teaching courses hi "Contemporary Con­ tinental Philosophy" and "Se­ m antics." ★ ★ Classical Languages Dr. Guy E. F. Chilver of Oxford University will be a visiting fac­ ulty m em ber in The University of Texas Classical Languages a n d History Departments during the Spring Semester. He will teach a graduate course in classical Latin literature, "An­ nals of Tacitus," and a junior course in imperial Roman history. He replaces two University fac­ ulty m embers w h o will he on leave during the spring semester. Profs. II. J. Leon and George G. clothes and some furniture were from second-floor handed down windows. Mrs. Rudder said she had no­ ticed traces of smoke coming from the walls as early as IO a.m ., but thought the smoke probably came from the fireplace. Shortly affpr noon, the fire broke out on the second floor and college firemen were called. The roof of the aged wood house, built In 3891, burned out almost before firemen had their hoses in place. They poured tremendous quantities of water into the house, and were able to save a large part of the actual frame. The fire was under control by 3 p m. that is, however, Speculation the saved they m erely wreckers. The two-and-a-half story structure was considered by many to be an eyesore. for it Rudder seemed to take the fire in good stride. As he watched stu­ dents throwing bricks through the windows to give firemen a c c e s s to the flames, his fixed smile dim­ med and he commented, “ I hope no one get* hurt,'' Some of the several hundred on­ lookers jokingly pointed out that Rudder should have experted the fire after it had been recommend­ that his ed earlier in the week salary he raised and student tui­ tion doubled. Braswell's Humble Sta, 24TH ST. & R IO G R A N D E Phone GR 8-5813 All Wool BLAZERS 19.95 Regular $29.50 Value! A va ilab le in blue, olive, & black. N e v e r * problem o f finding your liie from a selection o f 75 blazers. Assignment: put more pep per pound into font-bu Ut engines Buy books, suppliies, and all your c o l l e g e needs where personal service Is rendered to each customer. The friendly clerk at Hem p­ hill’s hands you the Ever- Ready Rebate (Cash regis­ ter receipt). Look around, do you need s o m e t h i n g frivolous or something serious? Do you need stationery, p e n or pencil, perfume, book, or l o v e l y slide-rule? This young coed decides to pur­ chase a classic roommate, “B E V O ” R v v v I any d ay follow ing y o u r rebates, now 1 0 % of their face all semester long. N o w she uses her EVER- READY Rebate as campus cash to pay for BEVO. See how easy it is! Result New family of lightweight powerplants.. . Including a new V-8 that weighs 110 pounds loss than tho comparable V-8 it replaces In our search to provide good performance with lighter pow erplants, Ford M otor C o m p a n y e n gin e ers and foundrym en have pioneered new te ch n iq u e s that n ow let us cast ou r en gine blocks with su c h precision that m uch lighter e n gin e s are m ade possible. New materials u sed to make co re s and m olds and n e w casting m ethods enable u s to m ake engine parts with w alls as thick as n e ce ssa ry— but no thicker. T h is eliminates w eight of extra material which must be used to provide adequate strength with less precise castin g methods. R e d u cin g engine weight through precision castin g m e a n s m o re p e rfo rm a n c e pe r p o u n d — a n d s in c e lighter e n gin e s mean overall car w eight can be reduced, better fuel econom y results. A n o th e r assign m ent com pleted— another Ford First— and one m ore example of how Ford M otor C o m p a n y c o n tin u e s to provide e n gin e e rin g leadership for the ^Am erican Road. MOTOR CO M P A NY Th# American Road, Dearborn, Michigan W H I R S ■ M O IN ■ ■ (•IM O L I A D l R t N I P ■ •W IN O S Y O U ■ A T T A R -B U IL T C A N S THIS SIMPLE PROCESS IN V O LV ES O N LY 2 STEPS 1. Buy at Hemphills and Get Your EVER-READY Rebate— 2. Use it as campus cash on your next purchase! Use your Rebates promptly — as you need them, G o o d A ll Semester Long! HEMPHILLS 'BhT Sbte*. A JR B f 109 E. 21st 2244 G uadalupe 2501 G u ad alu pe 2505 San Jaciinto FREE PURCHASE P A R K IN G AT ALL FOUR Amakis. Dr. Leon will be working WI an edition of Catullus. Dr. Ar- nakis will be doing research in Greece. Dr. Chilver w a s educated at Trinity College, Oxford, and has been a fellow and tutor in ancient history at Queen’s College, Oxford, since 1935. He has been an active adm inistrator at O x f o r d and Q u e e n 1! College, in addition to teaching. * Scoff af Law School Prof. Austin W. Scott Jr. of the University of Colorado will be visiting professor of law the University Law School during the spring semester. in Scott is a specialist In criminal law and torts, the segment of law which deals with suits filed by one for individual damages. another against A Colorado faculty member since 1946, Scott was a visiting professor at Vanderbilt University, 1954-55. He was previously asso­ ciated with a Boston law firm. He is a member of the Amer­ ican lziw Institute and the Amer­ ican Boulder, and Colorado Bar Associations. * Dept. of Curriculum Dr. E dgar B. Wesley, an author­ social secondary school ity on studies, will be a visiting profes­ sor in the Department of Curri­ culum and Instruction during the spring semester Dr Wesley, who recently retired from the University of Minnesota , faculty, will teach a junior course in secondary school organization and teaching and a senior course in secondary school social studies methods and will participate in graduate seminars. He comes to 'he University from Stanford, where he has been a visiting professor. Since his retire­ ment from Minnesota, he also has taught at Southern Illinois Univer­ sity and the University of Califor­ nia at In s Angeles. Dr. Wesley was director of the Minneapolis Star’s program of in­ formation on world affairs from 1946 to 1949. * Dept. of Education The College of Education will offer a new course for freshmen and sophomores in the spring se­ mester. framework The course, "Democratic Ideals in American Education," will be taught by Dr. Jam es L. Rhodes, a new part-tim e faculty member, who will attem pt to give prospec­ teachers a tive for the,r later professional roles by presenting "a blending of demo­ cratic political thought, philosoph­ ical thought as related to educa­ tion, and professional education " The new offering represents "an attempt to acquaint the prospec­ the vital con­ tive teacher with tribution of public education to our way of life. said Dr, W. J- Drake, History and Philosophy of E d u c a t i o n Department chairman. The class will meet at 8 a.m. MWE in Sutton Hall 227. ON TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26 YOU CAN TAKE A BIG STEP CLOSER TO YOUR FUTURE That's when the Linde Company rep­ resentative will he on campus. He will be interviewing qualified engi­ neering students who feel their fu­ ture lies in research or applied engi­ neering. The L IN D E Laboratories, for ex- ample-atTonawanda (Buffalo), N.Y., Speedway (Indianapolis), Ind., and Newark, N .J.-provide an unusually stimulating environment for the sci­ entific-minded to grow and develop. The many achievements of L IN D E people in research and applied engi­ neering have borne a rich harvest of progress. Over h a lf of L i n d e 's cur­ rent sales volume comes from prod­ ucts and facilities that did not even exist 15 years ago. Plan now to save this date for the LINDE representative . . . and get one step closer to your future. Contact your engineering placement office for an appointment LINDE COMPANY Linda Company. Chiltern of Union Cartes Corporation AN EQUAL-QPPQRTUNITY EMPLOYER EVERY SUNDAY IN THE POST Texas Stirs Tonight After Final Exams By BILL LITTLE Texan Sport* Editor I with Texas leading, 6-1. Last year it was Texas 95, Trinity 89, but the first meeting found the Steers Twrfir, Jwutry Wt IYH THE DAILY TEXAN >n» 4 Shaking off dust accumulated j during finals, the Texas Longhorns battle Trinity University In San to crack Antonio Tuesday night season back open stretch. tell-tale the Leading the Southwest Confer­ ence with an unbeaten m ark of 4-0, and sporting an 8-5 season rec­ ord, tangle with a Tiger five that has managed only two wins in 15 starts. the Steers will This is the final non-conference game for the Orange before they resume loop play Saturday night against TCU in Gregory Gym. Texas, a pre-season favorite, looked poor on a West Coast swing and everybody counted them out— until the circuit started turning. The Longhorns opened with a 54-49 win over Rice, and then took a relatively easy 69-63 counter over Arkansas in Fayetteville. Baylor, after dropping another favorite, SMU, was shoved out of Gregory Gym *o the not-so-pretty strains of 76-38, and Tech sank to their worst conference defeat ever at home, 78-58. Thus the Texas boys turned the the race, com er unbeaten atop with the Texas Aggies trailing by a game, with a 3-1 record. is scheduled A showdown for College Station next Tuesday night, when Texas goes in to try the Aggies’ long home win streak. The meeting in San Antonio will be the eighth of the two clubs, •10,025 IN CASH PRIZES JU ST SIXTY P U Z Z LES T O SO LV E, T H R E E E A C H S U N D A Y F R O M J A N . 27 F O R 20 C O N S E C U T I V E S U N D A Y S . F O R C O M P L E T E D ETA ILS, SEE T H IS S U N ­ D A Y 'S E D IT IO N O F T H E . . . T he Ho u s t o n Po s t 2 4 IO P O L K H O U S T O N , T E X A S I in front, by the narrow margin of ' 63-58. i Coaches Harold Bradley and Jim m y Viramontes will probably go with a starting lineup of either Larry Franks or Mutt Heller at one forward, and Joe Fisher or John Paul Fultz at the other. Mike Humphrey will jum p cen­ ter, and Jim m y Puryear will team with Jim m y Gilbert or Ronny Weaks at guards. Gilbert, the usu­ al starter, jam m ed a thumb in a recent practice and could be side­ lined. I t’ll ba Jerry Mattingly (6-4) and Stacey Guynn (6-7) a t for­ wards; Bill Jessen (6-6) a t center; Baylan Stroth (6-1) and Jim Lar- aia (6-1) at guards for the Tigers. Stroth is Trinity's top point man, averaging 17.8. He’s followed by J e s s e n , who’s averaging 11.7 points per game and l l 6 rebounds a game. the Steers In conference play have held opponents to 28 5 re­ bounds a game, while ripping a smooth .492 field goal percentage. the season, Gilbert and identical 10.4 Over Humphrey have ■ game averages. Rice beat Trinity 104-75 Saturday night, racking up the highest SWC ; point total in several years. • H O R N BA SK ET BA LLE R S gather a ro u rd coe H H a r e d Bradley durirq tim# out as head mentor p !o*s Texas strat­ egy. —Texan P h o t o Drsdd? "mc/KxmouA... ‘WHITE LEVI’S!’ L O N G H O R N C E N T E R Mike two H u m p h r e y g o e s up points a g a in st O k la h o m a S^ a 'e in on# or Texas' early contests. fo r SW C Schools Hurt by Mid-Term Rest By KINCHEN PIER Texan Sports Staff the SWC. ! team was the only face-saver for Exams were costly for Southwest Conference schools in ways other than the obvious one. Conference basketball teams lost four of the five games in which they participated in the opening week after finals. Rice's victory over a weak Trinity University D e s i g n e d ONLY F o r COLLEGE SENIORS A M I C A B L E ^ COLLEGE CAREER PLAN FOR C O M P LET E IN F O R M A T IO N C A L L GR 2-8916 GL 3-0830 R E N E ' R A M I R E Z A M IC A B L E LIFE IN S U R A N C E CO. One of the West Coast's finest teams, UCLA, scored two victories over hapless Texas Tech 83-63 and 103-80. The latter was the Raid­ ers’ twelfth loss in 13 starts this season after sharing the Confer­ ence crown with SMU last year. Saturday night in Dallas, SMU turned in one of its finest perform­ ances of the year -but it was in the “ Sky” Chiefs from vain as Oklahoma City University took a 94-00 overtime win. The Chiefs, averaging 6 ft. 7 in , were hard pressed to stop the red- hot Ponies as SMU took a 50-49 halftime lead on the strength of a 20-point first half by guard Jam es ’•Tommy” Thompson and a pheno­ menal 75 per cent field goal accur­ acy by the Hilltoppers in the initial half. But the OCU squad same back, thanks mostly sensational to a scoring spree by 6-5 guard Bud Koper. Roper set a new Coliseum scoring record as he netted 41 points for the night. The same Chiefs handed Bay­ lor's outmanned Beam a 78-55 loss in Waro on Thursday night. The loss was Baylor’s ninth against five victories. Meanwhile, in Houston, die Ru e led by 6-9 junior Kendall Owls, Rhine, thrashed Trinity 104-75. the conference in both scoring and in scoring aver­ age. Rhine leads All other SWC quintets resume the dribble derby this week. Texas, the Conference leader, travels to San Antonio Tuesday night to battle Trinity and returns to Gregory Gym Saturday night to host the TCU Homed Frogs as the SWC race gets back into full swing. TCI' will travel to Houston Tues­ day to meet the highly regarded Houston Cougar* and then to Aus­ tin Saturday for their game with the ’Horns. action Other Conference this week finds ALM at Houston Wed­ nesday night to play Houston and in Fayetteville on Saturday against Arkansas. The Razorback* will take on Tulsa in tile lone Conference acti­ vity Thursday. ARMY ROTC ENROLLMENTS F R E S H M E N ST U D E N T S who qualify ere still eligible to enroll in Spring Semester for Military Science I. Information available in Room I IO ROTC Bldg. I F you failed to subscribe in the Fall, it's easy to get your 1963 CACTUS and Ranger RESERVE them when you REGISTER RANGERS--75c plus 2c tax C A C T U S-$ 7 plus 14c tax "Tareyton’s Dual Filter in duos partes divisa ast I” says Quintas (The Eye) Tacitus, well-known hunter and man about town. "My modus vivendi calla for the very best. And-when it comes to flavor in a cigarette-Threyton is nulli secundus. Indeed, here's de gustibue you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette/ (lf you already have registered, come by the Dual Filter malt#* the difference Journalism Building 107 and order them.) D U A L F IL T E R ^ ^ g f f l a r m o n “ JtAmm k mr m itt mm earn ie erne middle mm t a r a w f e t a 4 jdm ttm m It's young America's new status symbol— the long lean LEVI’S look— tailored in America's top sportswear fabrics! Double- stitched pockets, seams and yoke, copper rivets at all strain points, your choice of popular sportswear colors! Come in and try on a pair-you’ll (ova ’em! JUST RECEIVED LEVI SLIM FITS IN CORDUROY 5’« pr. THE BEST PLACE TO BUY YOUR P.T. NEEDS TENNIS SHOES 198 pr. I up 6YH SHORTS 1.N pr. I up Austin Army & Navy Store Comer of 6th It Colorado tempts over the Texas Tech zone at Lubbock In U T ’a latest S W C win and Is hitting a neat 53 8 per cent of his field goal attempts in the Longhorns’ four loop wins to date In addition to his shooting, P u r­ is equally valuable as the “ quarterback'’ and year ball-handling on defense. “ H e's a real fine passer and ball- handier.” B rad le y says of his out­ side leader. “ He's taller than our other guards and can see over the defense better. His main job is to feed the pivot and shoot. And to perfec­ he’s been doing this tion.” P u ry e a r also is considered the best defensive man among the team's little men. He alw ays draws th# enem y’s best little man. W hile P u ry e a r had trouble shoot­ ing his first two and a half sea­ son at Texas, he didn t always have the problem. As a senior at Santo high school. Jim m y averaged 24 points a game and earned a spot in the all-state all-star game at D a lla v After weighing a1! offers P u r­ year decided to follow in the foot­ steps of his brother. Bobby, who payed in the for the Longhorns late I960 * Bobby now coaches in the Fo rt W orth school system. Jim m y w-ants to coach and teach. Here. too. he would he following fam ily tm 11 Hi s father is superin­ tendent of schools and his mother teaches E n g ild at Loop, Texas. G O L F Massingill Trophy Trials Announced M assingill Trophy competition to determine places on the U niver­ sity of Texas' 1363 golf team, will begin “ probably the second week in F e b ru ra y .” Coach H a n e y Pen- ick has announced. In a]l likelihood, IDS holes will he played a* both the Austin Country Club and A istin Municipal course* Those rounds, plus the score* the Longhorns card in the Border Olympics Golf T o’;~a- men?. M arch probably will de­ term, ne the final ranking-. T e rry D ill, '62 Massingill the winner was Texas' only senior golfer last year. B i.I Munn. who finished up the 1962 reason a* Tex**' No I play­ er, recent!:, underwent a knee op­ eration. Although he likely w ill be back in time for the B o r ic ; Olym pics m e e t, Munn likely will miss the Massing:!! qualifying rounds. Other returner* from the 1962 team include Pat Thompson, L a r ­ ry Roden. Ronn.e Thomas, and T erry Kahn, all of w hom w .ii be junior* this spring. Other top con­ tender* for varsity positions in­ clude incoming sophomores Rand> Geiselman of Houston and Oscar Good? of A ;-tin Texas finished lls* >car's Southwest Conference team standings. fourth :n Aithought additional * warm up ’ matches rem ain to be scheduled, followinf are the m ajor matches on Texas’ 1963 \arsity golf sched­ ule M arch 7-8 Border Olympics a' April 2 B a y lo r at Wa* o (SWC* April 16 Rice at Houston SWC Apr I 2f> Texas AA M a* Coliege S t a t i o n SWC . Ap ril 22 Arka.nsa* at Austin Tuesday, January 29, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 Puryear 'Shoofs fo Top Five / 2234 Guadalupe ffitflh n a W r- I \ GR 6-3525 H U N T TAPE RECORDERS ADDERS TYPEWRITERS Dictation Machines FM -A M RADIOS PHONOGRAPHS TUNERS CALCULATORS AMPLIFIERS standard. # W t r i* and portable T V - 90 Days Rent Applies on Its Purchase Jimmy Puryear b u literally shot him sell into th# Texas Longhorn lineup. The 6-1 junior from Santo wasn't even on the traveling squad in early December, but now he's a starter for Coach Harold Bradley’s Southwest Conference leaders. It all started o ver P u ry e a r's lack of shooting. A good shot who hit over half of his attem pts last year, the physical education m a j o r wouldn t shoot enough to suit B ra d le y and found him self riding the bench. B ra d le y credits P u ry e a r with a big reason why Texas is 4*0 in league play with wins over Rice J and Baylor at home and Arkansas and Texas Tech on the road. “ Jim m y alw ays has had more basketball sa vvy and know-how than a lot of our p layers.” B rad le y says, “ but we couldn’t get him to shoot. Now that he's beginning to : shoot his one-handed set shot from outside he’s a real valuable man to us.” W hat P u ry e a r has done to zone defenses recent Conference gam es comes under the heading of fantastic. He hit se\ en of l l at- in DAILY TEXAN Classified Ads GR 1-5244 Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Rooms for Rent Typing to L O R R A IN A P A R T M E N T S MOI E n lififl One and two bedrooms; a »<■> 1 or 2 girt* an apartment. E x tra large plenty of closets, cen­ ra rrw tM gar­ tral hrat a n i a ir bage disposal covered park mg. X M A F M rad os heated pen-,. all btu* paid. O n ly S is 75 facr. M anager. Apartment 108 G R .* 2536 or H I 2 -64? H E M P H I L L A R M S Three blocks directly north of campus at 2T1I H em phill P a rk Living room bedroom w ith twin bed* bath dressing hail w ith two double closets kitchen w.th b u d In electric appliance*. F o rm ica bar and study tah r A ir conditioned swim m ing po- ed with Danish modern two students or $100 60 month o w n er pay* wat#r A gas See manager at Apartm ent H or cai! C L §7973 rtf C R 6-Mt Ideal Tor Rent last eft iv furnish roup f F U R N IS H E D 1X>W E ft K LO O R living Kitchen and room and dining large room three ama ll bedrooms W a king distance of ir e u niversity three or four I I V I 66 per month - G R 2-3213 I JC<5 ft tiaras B E T T Y S M E D L E Y R E A L E S T A T E P re fe r grad .at* student Sp are for TOW F R V I ENV A P A R T M E N T S 38rtl Oidbam T w * una*peeled vaosncles in U ni­ versity • finest apartm ents On# block east of l a w School One bed rrmm w ith D s n 'ih modem fu rn i­ ture S e psrate kitchen w th gar­ bage disposal Not efficiency. A ir eondltloned A T T r r A P A R T M E N T S Pearl Ona or two men student* Fffirten coa*Lumat e beat A ISH rn D A R L IN G O N E bed roof* aper* c. rte na ■Ira v fu rn .shed w alk U T Re* cute jinj- A Ped P ie- GL. 24119 t 'R » W I COLLEGE COURT O F F C A M P U S APARTMENTS * A 'r Cond.* c-ed ★ Ut lit:®* Fur- shed ★ D ac'sh M o d e rn F t m i tut# ♦ Married Coup!to * G ra d - a ‘e Stud#*** $1 I T SO M o. B s Pa d 30C1-07 D .v a l Harriion-V/ soc-Paarson 305 W . 6fh Sfrea* G R 2 620 I SPACIOUS COTTAGE O NE bedroom. closets galore Garage, Quiet Single- W e st SOth. H I eouple $6'. «. a a s s 095.’ E N F I E L D G E N T L E M E N . la r g e bedroom Q U IE T . Bath. Sun deck En trance room Tub-shower Central heat. 2105 Enfield G R 8-5528 AT 1016 Speedway Rooms for b o 's. A ir conditioned. G R 8-1666 tra! heat not F IE L D C R E S T . B E D R O O M , cen­ carpeted. Maid service $25 00 Bing1* $*0 00 douh.c. H I 4- 7 401 after 4 Oft. N IC E Q U I! r B E D R O O M student $ 3 ’ OO. G R 2-8739 for man N IC E ROOM K O R quiet Student bus­ ine** man P riv a te entrance tprage share bath w th one student. 2644 San (labr.e! G R §-3368 BO Y S— T W O ROOMS with bath in private home A r conditioned at#* in heated $15 1301 W eal 29th. G R 2- 2696 vate entrance W r a Z F t R N ISH F-D B E D R O O M . Prl- private bath, N ear in ­ w e t ca.: i pul. M a.* student or structor G R 2 SSS! M A L I S T U D E N T S -WANT a Gear com fortable room n a ‘'' use where for Sc horn House. 1709 Congress. v ou v an stu d' ? W e have one ’.e>u G R 8-7007 2211 ert* P R I V A T E RO O M FO R c en. $27 V) I>>ubie— $25 00 2710 VS n u ... G R 2- C L E A N O C T E T RO O M t ranee central pent P riva te en- a ir condition­ I tench P a c e . G R ing $43 OO 7-<368 JR73 T M O B E D ROO M S conditioning ha#', fum-shed. W *lk - ing distance I r u e rs ity . O a n . q . et sh etllttise paid centrsl a r Couple* *120 3ft 3 Students •Msid S e n . et I i i TO C L §7423 T H R E E LOCATIONS P IO Vt set 26 l*rg» fu r r led on* bed-mom apart rot. A l h pa. 1 $119 00 or ie*. * th ieoae 1213 W eet 13 \*rv m e furnished one bedroom apartm ent A ir cen­ ti Hosting and thermn#*atic heat. w a ter g*« pa d ic 5501 A v e n a C st Vied Street, T w o bed room end den house STO • end t*ree room sport." e n . SSO OO V *- tee pa Id on both and both urv- furn.ahed t a i l G R 7-0“9: E R 7- 7964 G E H L X or L R 2 46.7# T H E M O O N L IG H T E R S — I B M Multi- tithing A fter 6 OO and weekends M arguerite Costello G R 2-1535 3217 Ham pton Road E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E reasonable. Near Ailan- Accurate dale HO 5 3813 E X P E R I E N C E D Electrnm atlc Typing. (S 'm b o ls minor editing, disserta­ reports Mrs cloae-ln < Enfield area) G R theses book* tion* Ritc hie, 6-7079 T H E S E S D IS S E R T A T IO N S Papers Eieetrom atic Near Campua T E R M G R 2-8402 T I P T O P T Y P IN G S E R V IC E — e fficie n t accurate reasonable G L I 5889 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G R E P O R T S Electric Mrs Hunter There* ate G L 3-35*6 C O R R E * H O N — IN S E R T N E W AD P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G IB N ' L E G A L Lo a K n.sev. H I 4- General. W A N T E D — T Y P IN G . R E A S O N A B L E rate* G L 34925, Mrs. v.eorge Rob­ P O R T S T H E S E S . D IS S E R T A T IO N S R E ­ S ' ii t-ols ' r sciences mathematics engineering lan­ guage armenia, Greek C all G it 4-9617 IB M S t r . T H E S E S R E P O R T S R E A S O N A B L E Electromativ Mrs B ra d y 2317 Old­ ham G R 2-4715 V IR G IN IA C A L H O l N L E G A L T Y P IN G S E R V IC E P-r>t»i«(nna: S> rrtbols photo • opv P a rk Flac# at Town? t ’>p!"g * field* notar> Off i Half. 2914 G R Boa"ca §.636 T Y P IN G N E A T W O R K Reasonable rates HO 5-? 299 or G L 3-7838 T Y P IN G P IC K - U P and delivery I Turn I .h paper and ar bon. N ew IE M Neat work G L 3-3081 B H O R T ON T Y P I N G tim * and money ’ MIS* Graham G L 3-5725 T Y P I N G LO W ’ R A T E S Satisfaction guaranteed G L 3 5124 Mr* Tulia* M A R T H A A N N Z I V L T Y >! B A complete prof* .steno! t pir# ta,, red to students the needs or Sp# na) kev- equipment language for and eng.neer.ng theses and A »*-r\, e Uatver* r benrd * icm dlmertaUon* Phone G R 2 TIO A (.P. 2-7677 2013 * G I A D A H PF. S Y M B O L E Q U IP P E D IB M Experienc­ H is s e r a- ed Reasonable. These* Report* — ai! fields Close-.a De Bu tt* G R 8-3298. ! on* M r. T H E S E S . D IS S E R T A T IO N S Report* bv experienced e le c tro n s !ic typist ’"’ BA s'ad u ate M r. Goodwin. G R 2 2099 Close to campus P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G S E R V IC E reports De* T h e e * dissertation* trio mach.ne*. T a rryto w n area G R I 2614 A C C U R A T E B E A U T I F U L T Y P I N G — IB M e e-'tromauc LA W r W O R K S P E C I A L IS T Photo - Copies Xerox Courteous. conacienUous servica. G R 8 7079 D E L A F I E L D T Y P IN G Gram m ar spelling 20r P A G E correction H I C O L L E G E H O U S E . R o Grands Opec..net fo r men * .ng • or three bleu k. Free off .•••e t doubt* mama Q u irt from Un ve rs'’ - park ng p- .ate entrance (bower* I nfnt optional. F o r ca.I Information t,R 7-4471. M r. W ilkinson. garage po 2416 SA N A N T O N IO N icely furnished i t'll- • ie* pa.! 1 3 OO for one $50 •) few two G R §-37>3 or G R SHOUT * for q u a t rn n D O U B L E R O O M S F O R men. A ir con­ ditioned Ma.d ferric# Lin en . Free p ark,rig. G R 7-0501. 306 Fast JOlh. W e ll furnished. Breakfast privileg es Sh* Cf- bath one atudsnt. $*5.00. * I R 2-4021 Q U IE T , U L !'A N ROOM prefer post graduate students a ir conditioned pr.vate bath and entrance. N ear L a w Sm gie §50.00 double $33 0. S-ft-:- Room and Board RO O M A N D B O A R D t w bionic.* fn>m rouTjpu* Uruipproved. mr condition­ ed r-iunth A i*" \ * attry at the Bowen Hmiir Apply M r* B o w ­ en. 2506 San Anton n. In ) JO per RO O M A N !) B O A R D - Hudson Housdt ( . i i §765 A ir conditioned ed A P P L K A T I O M I A R 1 B E IN G recelv- residents. tpc.ng semester $5) K) per i 'in tr The.erne i . , ;> 61$ W est 27nd G R 8-12S0 for T H R E E V A C A N C IE S IN The Cheevss HOU." 2ftc>! W~ -■ • > GR f- 4 - ~ Board B O A R D - $15 00 pee Month thro* rn**!, per d*v $40 fO per mnn'h, Thelem# Co-op. two m «s.< per ds ■ f t i J v. est 21*nd G R A i 230. Apartments— Unfurnished H O N H Y M 1 x )N C O T T A G E P R IV A T E . One bedroom Tiled kitchen, bath. W est 3lst, $55 00, Amps# Leigh G R 2 6143 c»*et* 2 6522 4211 Houses— Furnished 24' * SA N A N T O N IO A ir conditioned ’ * hlock t smpus Livin g room din­ three bedroom. ing and bath. $110.00. G R 6-3720 or GR $■*187 kucnen room For Sale T a r r y t o w n T R A C T IV E co rag e barbel or o r eondiUoned a d - I "5 *1 ' I (,?' f u r n i s h e d . AT- P riva te M ature life* pe'd a IS* T H R E E O R F O U R student, to i two bedroom sir oitdit >n*d h W a lk in g diitanc# $** --si m A u . . l i e Feb ru a ry Sth < ,R §-21 I ' >nth ■y R A V IN E Panel T F F . RA C K F I R E P L A C E beet A ir cond Honing furnished vt atef gat r« cl cm eta Huge 261 Serer * t.P. $-552* ed on# b e lr iom N IC E L Y F U R N IS H E D a r condition­ ..id na g.ass doors mahogany panelling carpor1 at rage 21 * W e st kin SA DO G R 64169 G R N E E D M A L K FO- R T H in River Oak. a per? mer la Stereo pool. m r pated G R M U I • lr " m a pa d G R 2 ant Koat i t s Apt I ’ 8 rg.ef Sift Y> N - e tw o ro o m . and b ath o p e n # \* F o r appointm ent ca * H O 3 E N F i n -D I .AR G E Q I'H T . P e e n Two bedroom apartment Fireplace jcr*»f f .m ace F iv e clot* ta, 7ub-ehow- er tiers se G R $-552* I r. rem itv L A R G E D O W N R T A IR S two bed room furnished apartm ent Three h orse from bioek Beton Hospital On h r Ens o ff­ al reel perking Pr.vate Wa ' k i n g distance ac boo I ct .f'-h ahoppmg renter, Si'lft 7ft month Call G R 7-4471. T O W E R V I E W A P A R T M E N T S Iem Oldham Tw o unexpected vara nice* la University • finest apartments. One block east of La w School. One bedroom with Danish modern furniture Separate kitchen a Ilk garbage deposal. Not efficiency. A ir conditioned G R 2 8772, I I 1 § B SA N A N T O N IO No* 3 A 4 low­ er Llving-bedroom dinette kitchen, ■Titrate batVsnower Hollvwood bed. A r conditioned W ater-**, paid $#»i* ftft for 2 $50 00 for one G R §-3720 or G R M M R B L O C K U M V E R S m room brick a part men; Pf ate x ■ ben- hs'h A * > love. two bedro->-r duplex Refrigerated * r Single $3* a) apart rrenta t.P. A W M T H R U S H A L C R E E K A P A R I M E N T ! 2802-04 lo o n One bedroom patio centra heating University rarpe'ed private A C, Near all G R * $t>Vt 2422 S A N A N T O N IO L ivin g room dmette-kitchen. two bedrid im two b ain . A ir eondlt oned t *r;--*ed W ater-*** paid. $105 (» G R 6-3T. ■ or GR $ A st ’ pper F E B R U A R Y 1st L A R GF efficiency Separate kltcnen. BM.* paid P a r k ­ 21st 913 We«t ins WM V>Mt V g r » - 9 ia M O D E R N T W O B E D R O O M Ne* Iv furnished. Near campus 2*>W P. * Grande Accomodates threa G E 2-1339 or G R §-3711 S T A F F M E M B E R W I L L share T a r n - town home with woman *r*?f or or student. (W*47 G R eradicate G R §-4291 * N K W U L T R A M O D E R N C O N T IN HN- T A L A P A R T M E N T S On* and tao bedroom unite Centrsl s r cond 'H ir ­ in g Po o ’. U I S 0DS165 OO M anor Road at Oldham <2 blocks to Memor.ai Stad iu m . G R §-1262 G R § § 6 "' A M I S T on the w ay to the summit D r .f t* nod Apartments. 2202 Enfield Road G R 8-7708 S M A L L C O T T A G E V E R Y p r'v.t# P a rt utilities. SOI P a rk Blvd. §55 OO. O L V4481 P R O F E S S I O N A L IB M . fu n e ral. T Y P IN G L E G A !, Lo la K r.se- , H I 2 I redo. Special Notices THIS COUPON WORTH $1.00 (SW C*. bock ( SW C i. Oft a ft y roo'-'’ a* T H E A U S T I N M O T E L 1220 South Congress. H i 2 6 '44. ^ c e p t Ou' ~g convert- April 30 S M U at Austin fSW C ). M a y 3—T C I' at Austin M a y 10-11 Southwest Confer­ SW C ). ence Meet at Fa>rtte\U,e Ark. ( S W C i denotes Southwest Con­ ference match. F IR G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S Single working glrl»--slng# w ork­ ing men. Did >ou knew that two or n v r e p e n o n . can pool their J i b c a j s ,f lcations and cacur* s Joint loan on a home* F o r example. I have a well kept, two bedroom hnm* centra v heated and a ir conditioned w nlch could be bought F H A for S U 20ft. Total pa-.menu per month sp lit two wa » would ba §4^30 apiece Down payment spilt two w a y . would be SITS X) apiece Thla plan Is workable on any site horns. So call the man who knowg tha most about It — H a m B a iley, H I 4-2444 or nights 1961 C O R V E T T E L o w nu.es cc C O N V E R T IB L E . L ik e new W onder- R * r radio. Positraction. 287 engine. Four-speed transmission Pnone owner at G R 8-5306 or are at 1713 Palm a Plaza M O D E R N C O U N T R Y E S T A T E , fleld- .tone, five acre*, near Austin, mag­ nificent Mew. c ity water telephone, central heat. fireplace, two baths six room*, many closets utility, storage. patio. Owner leaving alate. C L 2- 2020. G R 8-6221 P L Y M O U T H 9 - P A S S E N G E R Station W agon 196u Golden Commando ex­ power everything, radio. cellent condition alr-eondltloned luggage rack. Si.795 Call G le n d a le 2-4171. M u illllth ln g Mimeographing Xeroxins Theses — Papers — Printing A U S - T E X D U P L IC A T O R S 400 Hast lit h Phone GR 6-6593 Tfn j e-p -es 1 v fb i. Bookbinding These* Dissertation. Report* Jo u rn a ls - custom Bindings UNIVERSITY B O C K B ’N D E R S 203 Fast ’ 9tn Street South of Intram ural F ie id G R 2-9803 Spacial Services R E N T . P U R C H A S E T V 'S Television Rental G R 2-2692 Alpha R E T O U C H E D ra&sport . . . 34 hours for proofs JO B P H O T O S . . or print* Lo w prices . G R 2-448 i Studio G ilm ore Miscellaneous B A L L R O O M D A N C IN G C L A S S E S now being formed Lim it ten couples per class Call Don Hashem C L 3-7938 E A R N A T R I P TO Europe by representing U n iversity Tour* for college students W’rit# to Dr. J . B A dair. S a v io r Un iversity. W a ­ co. Texas. Help Wanted G I R L TO H E L P w ith ghw and two small children 5-8 p m Monda\* thru Thursdays. 909 West 29th Street. R ing after 5 00 p m G R 6-2048. infants. Loving care for infants— tw o week* L U L L A B Y N U R S E R Y KO R to two years. License. G L 2-6293. Nurseries Alterations MOVING? C A L L MAYFLOWER FOR SAFE EAS Y PROMPT SERVI CE! For Free Estimate and Information Call GR 2-5471 ^ J l t e ( J 3 r a e b t t u r n Austin's address of distinction H I 4-1263. 3401-11 speedway • Beauti^"/ furnished • Air conditioned • Swimming pool • I and 2 bedrooms • $115 and $135 The Braeburn caters to young marrieds and adults 25 years and older. Printing For an experience In gracious apartment living se e BAKER C H O O S E S UT UT Sportsmanship Judged K e lly B a k e r, all-state per­ A t a ll the U n ive rsity * basket­ according to the following criteria form er in both football and ball game* this season, the Long­ by allotting four points, excellent; basketball, h a s announced horn quintet w ill be evaluated on three points, good; two points, fa ir; his intention to enroll at the its sportsmanship. and one point, poor. U n ive rsity next fall. Texas, as well as the other The 6-5 D um as star led his schools of the Southwest Confer­ high school to Interscholas­ ence, ii a member of the SW C tic League football and bas­ Sportsmanship Committee. ketball titles in Class A .VA The winner of the Sportsmanship in the 1961-62 school year. trophy, awarded to Ba ylo r U niver­ Texas, by be.ng a member of the Southwest Conference, through the Sportsmanship Committee sub­ scribes to the following “ Code of Good Sportsmanship” and there­ fore pledges to try to live up to its B a k e r w as twice an all- sity at the Cotton Bow l, was de­ principles a t all times. state selection at end, and earned all-tournament hon­ or1; during tile state school­ boy basketball playoffs. termined by these evaluations on basketball and football. The school with the most points from the 1963 football and basket­ F iv e representatives from each ball seasons w ill bo presented the Southwest Conference school rate the opposing team* sportsmanship trophy next New Y e a r's at the Cot­ ton Bowl, SALE Sport Shirts Slacks Sweaters Jackets Buy One at the Regular Price And G et Another One for Only Ic University Men': Shop 2310 Guadalupe GR 6-8287 WHEN do YOU need S i lf you’re like most student*, you need money today— to­ morrow and every day throughout the semester. April 26 Texas Tech at Lub­ HEMPHILL'S— the students' friendly bookstore— realizes that students need money now— not just at the end of the semester. For this reason we give you “CAM PU S CASH — that’s the word for HEMPHILL'S Every-Ready Rebate. For example: lf you spent $30.00 on your books yester­ day, today you have $3.00 in “Campus C ash " to spend at HEMPHILL’S. (Just bring in your cash register receipts.) Use your “Campus C ash " at any of HEMPHILL'S convenient loca­ tions — there’s free parking at all four. Buy at Hemphill's for M ore "C am p us C ash" GET IT - USE IT - SOON! t. HEMPHILLS ? « / Sbu< y * 4 • f l m iM H 'Siuon-HMHD- BAB U L I * Ai O S M . ( S T A T S . ( I N T A L * . IN S U M A N C I ■WTW. T U M Ironing IR O N IN G ironing service 2502 La k e Austin Blvd. Mrs K IR S T C L A S S Herm an G R 7-1774. A L T E R A T IO N S D R E S S M A K IN G . R E ­ W E A V IN G on moth cigarette holes At Monogramming reasonable rates 903 West 22V* G R 2- 7736 Ladies gents MAYFLOWER WAREHOUSES 109 E. 21st 2244 Guadalup* 2501 Guadalupe 2505 San Jaciinto Tuesdey, January 24, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pig* 6 KLRN Debuts Drama M a rg a re t Leighton, L aurenM H arvey, E m ly n William*, Doro­ thy Tutin, Basil Sidney. Mile* M aileron, Sean Connery, and Francoiee Rosay a re som e of the actor* and actresses who tile widely-ac­ will ap p ear in television aeries, NET claim ed D ram a F estival. The series of tw elve full-length d ram as, selected from both foreign and dom estic productions, begins its season on Channel 9—KLRN, F riday, Feb. I at 8 p.m. F riday s premier program will be the British B roadcasting Corp­ oration's production of Je an An­ ouilh's “ Antigone.” D orothy Tutin plays title role, w ith Basil the Sidney as Creon. the The other production# range from Shakespeare and Jonson through Ibsen and Wilde. “ NET D ram a F estiv al” is “ b ro ad cast” nationally through the National E ducational Television nework of m ore than sixty affiliated non­ com m ercial stations. O ther plays television in series will be “ A M idsum m er Night s D re a m ” and ‘H am let” by W illiam S hak esp eare; “ A Doll’s House” and “ The Wild D uck” by H enrik Ibsen; “ The Insect P la y ” by K arel and Josef C apek; “ A Wo­ man of No Im p o rtan c e” by Os­ c a r W ilde; “ The Killing of the K ing” by Hugh Ross W illiamson; “ A Month in the C ountry” by Ivan T urgenev; “ The F irs t Gentle­ m an ” by N orm an G insbury; and “ The A lchem ist” by Ben Jonson. Hayes, Evans Team In Shakespeare Show B etes Hayes mad Maurice Evaas, making their Aret ap­ pearance together in 20 years, com e to Municipal Auditorium at • p.m. Friday, Feb. I, for one performance—presented by The University of Texas Cultural En­ tertainment C o m m i t t e e . The event is free to $17.57 blanket tax holders. Drawing for tickets is under way now at the Music Building box-office from • a.m. to 4 p.m. The H ayes-Evans attractio n , “ A P ro g ram for Two P la y e rs,” was the success of the su m m er season at the A m erican Shakespeare F e s­ tival In S tratford, C o n n , and is now in the m idst of a 19-week tour I th a t takes it all o ver the country’ ; They ap p ear in a p rogram es- pecially arran g ed them by j Jero m e Alden n which only Miss H ayes and Evans ap p ear on stage. is E v an s’ One of tour-de-force in which he plays all of the clowns from “ A M idsum­ m er N ight's D re am .” Miss Hayes the highlights for received special acclaim for her Rosalind in “ As You Like It.” L ast y ear, Miss H ayes headed the S tate D ep artm en t’s tour of the A m erican R epertory Com­ pany, which played all over E u ­ rope and South A m erica with “ The C lass M enagerie,” “ The Skin of O ur T eeth” and “ The M iracle W orker.” Evans, who acted in the Broad­ way production of “ The Aspern P a p e rs” last season, will be m ak­ ing his first tour in seven year*. “ A P ro g ram For Two P lay e rs’" will m ark the first tim e th at Mis* Hayes and Evans have toured to- getner since 1942, when they ap ­ peared in “ Twelfth N ight.” for T here is no ad vance sale of the Helen Hayes- tickets M a u r i c e Evans perform ance. The event Is free to Cultural E n­ tertain m en t Com m ittee season ticket holders and to $17.57 blan­ tax holders. Single adm is­ ket sions go on sale a t M unicipal Auditorium a t 7 p.m . F rid ay . Tickets a re i t JKI for adults—l l for children through Ju n io r High School. THIS IS NOT the com e-on f c r a c 'e v e r c a p ­ tion c o n t e s 4, fo r a change, nor a spot-^ew s picture d e p i c 4 c g ro a d co nd itio n s a io n g N in e ­ teenth Street, but a scene from ‘ The G r e a t C h a s e ," a collection o f % lent film m elodram a o p e n in g W e d n e s d a y a t the Texas Theater. E x h ib it S e t f o r R e g e n t s ' R o o m . . . Prompt Pick - Up & Delivery in all kinds o f w eather . . . Shirts On Hangars no extra ch arg e . . . Every Garment Personally Inspected c a l l CR 2-3166 Anderson to Return to Austin M arian Anderson will appear In concert a t Municipal Auditor­ ium Feb. 25, returning to Aus­ tin afte r fifteen y ears. Tickets for the event wtll be on sale a t the 1'nH ersity Co-Op and J . R. Reed Music Co. Miss Anderson, a contralto, Is known world wide for her con­ certs lit­ eratu re and for her singing of spirituals. the operatic in both ATTENTION FACULTY: The C LU B C A R A V A N is Now Serving Lunches from Noon, FULL RESTAURANT SELECTION AT RESTAURANT PRICES I Dine Leisurely or Speedily in the Plush Atmosphere of the n l ^ l u b I l ^ a r a v a n C Au stin 's “Exclusive Dinner C lu b A t the Villa C a p ri H otel “ U N I Q U E ' l l II D I It F I I M I M A G I N A T I O N ’ — N. 3 . S T l l t s T H E D a l l y N e w # f u t * r i a l n m r u t G u a r a n t e e d T E X A n s t i n ' a F i n e A r t * T h e a t r e ,31 TONIGHT AT 8 :0 0 !__ D O O R S O P E N 5 45. H E O . F F A T ll I 9 IS P R S N E A K V I E W ► t h * h i I a n o u s l a f f a Aero rid A I H M !I o f “ P * \ c h o ” T n u ' i l H o w l ! A R O A R IN G C A V A L C A D E of the Screen’s Mightiest Thrills! From 60 Years of Great Movie C h a s e s ... Here are the Most Action- Packed of Them All! Paul Killen! and Saul J Til Ah pr»'en' v CORT S production of TBS GREAT CHASE S T A K I N G D O U G H S F A IR B A N K S , Sr I f j k - _ - i W ll AN r j G I S H J I # WM, . **s I H A R T i a e ausiH K E A T O N A D L E R j SSSl STARTS T O M O RRO W L A S T D A Y ! TEXAS ^ H K ‘/ed>Va/ G irls | S l i t I T O / E N 11:45 I N ( A R I I I A T I . I t s • F I N E F O O D S • P L A YI , R O I N I I A l S T I V S F I N F S T I S T I H T A I N M F N I I I R I X F I N T I I I A T K I N 1.1 A R A N T I. F I I B N At K MAR O F F N S F A L L C O L O R P R O G R A M “M O T H R A ” ( F E A R S O M E M O S S I E R ) “PIRATES OF BLOOD RIVER” K e r w i n M a t h e w . • G l e n n C o r b e t t F I R S T S H O W fi 39 W a l t D i s n e y D o u b l e 1 - e a t u r * I V C O L O R “LEGEND OF LOBO” r n s ! “LITTLEST OUTLAW ” Starts TOMORROW ! 2 of Your Favorites! IM BLUSHING EASTMAN COLOR! F N F a n d T H U Eve HANDYMA I A N T H O N Y - J A M I S R Y A N S T A R R I N G h/ H i l a r , o il s N e w E s c a p a d e I r o m P r o d lier-rs o f " M B . T E A S ” Tm ^ R o T T C O N L Y A D U L T T I C K E T S S O L D N o O n e IR y r * . A d m i t t e d I n d e r ii APITO 6 T H 4 S A N J A C I N T O BARGAIN DAY Adults til 7 p.m 50c CtV O irflYA T INTERSTATE iPPl* P O I A M O V I f y > t I C O U N t C A I D I T & za m m n t N O W SH O W IN G ! FEATURES: I* :29-2 : 15-4 : 19-S OS 8 0 0 - 9: 5 5 ■ f f l q j j ) - - " * * • ■ * ■ * osirs scWskoair TECRMH0K A D U L T S I M M D C M C H I L D 25 NOW...ADO A MOTION PICTURE TO THE WONDERS OF THE WORLD! MJUtnN • HJRNER \ IHE M IM - ' limning N O W S H O W I N G ! F E A T U R E S : I ! 9 5 - 2 : 2 0 - 4 : 5 * : oo-9 is TODS I D I CORTIS I S H M R * ta HAROLD HECHT I P A S H I M lUfflPN EASTMANC010R *SM « M i LAST DAY! F e a I n r e* M O 1 3 5 7 10-9:45 W W E l ® A D H . T S 1 OO M D C 50 C H I L D 35 s r ■mom Bette Davis ad Joan Crawford ■ TOMORROW ONLY! From the G o ld e n Y e a rs of M o v ie s . . . M G M Presents “NAUGHTY MARIETTA” N elson E d d y * Jeanette M a c D o n a ld L L A S T D/AY! O p e n 5:45 I m i W E M i m Kit y r t o J ^ 6- §■ A TSARS UPI RfUASt — 1 iTT/f HEAD! It Just mm't ta* Horn* M d al from “ A Century of M aster*, 1550- 1650,” painting* the col­ lection of W alter P. Chrysler Jr., w ill be on exhibit in the Re­ gent* Room Feb. 4- M arch Si. The collection will he brought here in a guarded van from Tul­ it was shown Dec. 4- sa, w here Jan . 23. rem ain under It will guard throughout its stay a t the U niversity. The exhibition will be open from 9 a m. to 5 p m . Monday through F rid ay , from IO a rn. to 2 p m. on S aturdays and from 2 to 5 p.m. on Sundays in Main Building 212. Prof. Donald Woodall. Art De­ p artm en t chairm an, said the ex­ hibition “ provide* a ra re occas­ ion the to see a t close range g rea t styles of Italian, Spanish, Flem ish and Dutch [tainting of the Im portant M annerist and Ra- French Troupe to Visit Two m odern French plays will be presented by the P arisian the­ a ter com pany, I e T reteau de P arts, F eb. 6 at Hogg Auditor­ ium. “ L ’Apollon de B ellac” by Je an G iraudoux, a comedy, and “ Or- phee” by Jean Cocteau a tragedy. will be perform ed in French. The D ram a and Rom ance Languages D epartm ents are joint sponsors. IN P E R S O N A c Teton rJaul and d K a r y W E D . PE B . 2 0 M U N I C I P A L A U D I T O R I U M - 2 9 0 - 3 ) 5 l a l f a d d r a s s e d $ 1 . 7 5 c l o t * w it h c h e c k o r m o n e y o r d e r to : 801 4 2 0 M a i l O r d a r : En- s t a m p a a e n v e l o p * P # f * r , Pa ul A M a r y ’ P O A u s t i n , Te«.; T c k e f i on ta a a * H e m p h i l l ! B o o k S t o r e N o . 2, 250 1 G u a d a l u p e ; B l o o m - q u i l f - C l a r k , 61 7 C o n g r e u A v e . Going to a Movie? EAT AT Hank’s Grill 2532 Guadalupe and SAVE $ I Oelivood D R I V E - I N THEATRE ROI lest Ar B O X O F F I C E O P E N S S S S A D M I S S I O N 79c R I D S U N D E R 12 F R E E SA Y O N A R A M a r l « a B r a n d o — M i k a T a k a S t a r t s 7 : 0 9 —pisa— DALLAS G a r y C o o p e r — R u t h R o m i i S t a r t s » 4o IU DRIVE THEATRE tJJJL IMO Sa C»| B O X O F F I C E O P E N S S OO A D M I S S I O N 70. R I D S U N D E R 12 F R E E LEGEND OF LOBO W a l t D i s n e y ’s T r u e T. i fe A d v e n t u r e S t a r t s 7 : 0 0 — p lu s — The Littlest Outlaw W a l t D i s n e y ’! C o l o r S t a r t s 8 : 3 9 rogue periods.” He pointed out th a t 1550-1650 w as “ one of the moat fecund periods of a rt In w estern cu ltu re.” The collection is notable for its Biblical scenes, including Guerci- no's “ Lot and His D au g h ters,” and R em brandt s “ Samson T hreaten­ ing His F ather-in-L aw ,” and por­ traits, “ P or­ including R ubens’ tra it of Archduchess Isabella Clara F u g en ia ,” and T in to retto ’s “ P o r­ tra it of Giovanni Soranzo.” O ther artist* rep resen ted are C arracci. Cavallino, Giodano, F.l Greco. Heem skerck. I ji Hire, De LaTour, Le Sour, Poussin. P rim a- ticcio, Regnier. R rni, T erbrug- ghen, Titian, Tito, Van Dyck. V er­ onese, Vouet, Z urbaran and Pietro de M arischalchi. The collection wee shown e t the F o rt Worth A rt C enter kept. 7 Nov. 4. It retu rn s to New York City a t the close of the U niver­ sity exhibition. THE UNIVERSITY'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO A N D HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway GR 8-6609 Serving the University Area for 12 Years B E D W A Y H IG H FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES” BUY Y O U R B O O K S EARLY SAVE 40% pius Wuk [vat m m RE Bm HEMPHILL’S l h DINING OUT?... TRY A N Y O NE OF AUSTIN’S BIG FOUR For that serene atmosphere and superb authentic Mexican Food. EL M AT "H om e of the Crispy Tacos” EL TORRO “Austin's Original Mexican Restaurant" 504 E. Ava. GR 7-7023 16th & Guadalupe GR 8-4321 EL CHARRO "B ig Steaks— Mexican Style” MONROE'S “Mexican Food to G o ” 912 Tied River GR 6-7735 500 E. Ava. GR 7-8747 OPEN EVERY DAY 'U ' ' f i n n * Friday Evening At 8:00 p.m. Municipal Auditorium Drawing Continues For This O utstanding Event! Music Building Box Office Open 9-4 Daily. “Great words tad great cotabinatiofl.” FREE TO $17.57 BLANKET TAX HOLDERS Single Admission tickets may be purchased at tho door Adults . . . $2.50, Children thru Jr. High . . . $1.00 Chartered Buses will be available to this event— for transportation to and from the campus Students More Studious Librarian Reports The scene was the Humanities Room of the University Library. Almost all the seats were oc­ cupied, but the only sounds were the rustle of turning pages and T im i d l y , J * n u e r y 20, 1963 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e 7 Dimes Foundation Grant to Aid In Medical School's Research I H O W A R D i g TOURS »m| original .IUD* *bu« IN IHI »’ ac IF IC HAWAII TOUR S IX U N IV E R S IT Y C R E D IT S 56 DAYS . . *589 ti*?.. j*t Inc Iydt i i t.m m er Attern! Un »*r»'ty ©F roundlnp bt- session tw«*n W elt C e * i' *n4 Hj*»» ran- ©arc* accommodations #n*»*, and spe cia* owentsi p>wt an asea rn ie' tour cendre*. th* l o w murmur of librarians’ voices, answering questions at the reference desk. I Suddenly Ute studious quiet was shattered by the voice of a profes­ sor who had failed to turn down his volume after leaving the lec­ ture hall. H e a d s were raised. necks were craned and, after a few minutes, a youth pushed back his chair, rose a n d approached the hi-fi speaker. "S ir,” he said respectfully, "w e are studying for final examina­ tions in here." Kathleen Blow, chief reference librarian, reports that University students are studying more seri­ ously than ever before. Readers discipline themselves, each other, and if necessary-faculty mem­ bers. A library' staff member since 1941 a n d reference department head since 1953, Miss Rios*, has observed the increasing ca me si­ nes- of students as the University has raised it; scholastic standards. At the same time, she has wel­ comed the wealth of excellent new reference books published in re­ cent years. Helping th*>sc earnest students to find information they need in t h o s e excellent reference hooka are Miss Blow and her staff of Public Affairs Booklet Is Union Employe Study The Institute of Public Affair*, one of the University's research, training and service units, has re­ cently published a booklet. ‘‘Pub- . c Km ploy e Unionization in Tex­ as,” by Dr Chester A, Newland, associate professor of government at North Texas D a ‘e University. A study on public emploxc un­ ions in Texas it focuses on case studies of kval organ,.rations and leadership their history structure, and relationship to Tex­ as legal pros Isl ors goal. Two University professors I>r Carey C. Thorn pion, professor of economics, and J tire S. Williams, professor of law', were responsible for reading the manuscript of the book One of the m ain functi* ms of the is to Institute of Publir Affairs emduct '-monarch in problems r f » gnifiranee to governmental unit* and agencies especially tm the sta'e and k^ai lese A COMPLETE LINE OF CAMERAS. PROJECTORS, AND ACCESSORIES. Hallmark Card and Piani-A-Party Shop Studtman Photo Service 222 W EST I 9TH GR M 326 *29 IO *45 IN IOU Y U IO W , ‘34 «• *30 IN l o . W H IY I ooio M 'C II I I V I TAI ■po* A FULL YEAR TO FAY! 2234 Guadalupe ■ Z A L E S I K - —On Tha Drag five other professional librarians. Two clerk-typist* a n d 38 part­ time student "pages’’ annist with the clerical duties a n d routine charging, discharging and shelving of books and periodicals. help students use the catalog and various indexes, reference books and other Bounces. Many students want to do their part of the work, to learn how’ to find information they may need later. In her search for elusive facts in the labyrinth of man’s printed store of knowledge, a reference librarian exhibits many qualities of a Sherlock Holmes: tenacity, intelli­ skilled knowledge, native gence, imagination-- ingenuity, and luck. While the detective's success is splashed across the front pages, the reference librarian's triumph is buried in a footnote, often in .in unpublished manuscript. Still Miss Blow and her staff have achieved through a "acknowledgments'’ in book pre­ faces. Uncounted authors h a v e looked to her and her assistants for help in tracking down words, quotations, literary* allusions, book titles and even picture*. immortality certain But the principal responsibility of Miss Blow and her staff is lo Geology Foundation M i s s Blow's bailiwick on the second floor of the Main Building includes the Humanities Reference Room, the Social Science Refcr- erce Room, and a connecting inb- bv which houses the information desk, the catalog to the University 1,500.000 library volumes! and printed indexes of various kinds. ( m o r e than Board Visualizes Greater Support The University Development Board has adopted a goal of $7,- 000.000 in private support for the fiscal year 1962*63. This represents an increase of about 40 per cent over 1961-62 gift totals of So 121,091, but, a spokes­ man for the board said. "it is well within the roach of a greatly ex­ Votes Aid Increase panded program of gift procure­ ment." ' This is a step in Hie direction of our 10-year goal of $70,OOO.OOO by 1970." said Dan C. Williams of Dallas, board chairman. "A ll of us feel that with an expanding p r o g r a m of alumni support through C LASP, a recently e-tab- -hod National Corporations (lorn- rn Hee and a trebling < f volunteer leadership and broadened under­ standing and support, we should cnch this goal ” The board seeks $7,000,000 n lifts from the following sources alumni, $430,000; non-alumnl, $,>m‘i - 000; business and industry, $87i* - foundations, $3,900,000; be­ OBTi. q u e s t * $2*0,000; a SSO ations, IWK),OOO; and other sources $100.- 000 BUY Y O U R B O O K S EARLY SAVE 40% p l u s yo u k t m m u r m m VHEMPHILL’S The University Geology Founda­ tion recently voted to increase its program of geology’ scholarships i and fellowship* In a move design­ ed to raise the quality and quan­ tity of geology students, Dr, Step­ hen E. Gabaugh. chairman of the Department of Geology, announc­ ed. With tb s increase the Founda­ is attempting to correct a tion rapidly developing national short­ age of geologist* Geology enroll­ ment declined in 1958 after a re­ cension in the m ineral Industrie* and enrollment ha* remained Uw for several year* Scholarship* being made avail­ able to the Foundation Include the It H Cuyler *Scholarship which is f mans red by an endowed fund created by gifts in memory of Dr. Robert lf Cuyler, a member of the University geology faculty who died in 3943 in a plane crash A graduate geology fellowship, to be available for the first time In February, has linen endow rd to the University bv M r and Mr* G Moses Knebel of Scarsdale N Y. The $.1'xxi Miouxhip will ho awarded annually to a student specialising lh the geology n* hy­ drocarbons. Knebc’ a 1922 graduate of the is a member of the University, Foundation a advisory council, He recently retired as u »rld-wide p: >- duction coordinator for Standard Oil of New Jersey. W L/ (Joc> On M.'ere * Registration S-4- -Consultation* Health Center S i . and '.n g n r r G> c Kxhtb't of m iniature Hum anities Research ten te r. I M a in B u il d i n g 4zf) l h -coffee f?*r International Stud en ii. V # 4 - Ft* hi bit of artifact* from M <- • ion San la Santa Cruz Real o m it l r . Texas Mem,or a1 Mu- le a rn tz>ren»o >,v E x h i b i t of nm m ail em th e i Hi im '(on Resent* R o o '" lin g 212 a l t o photographs fro m i l ’ r ' O ' r Main Bu h% Jo h n C srm int! d F o r e ig n la R avia ge c la s s f!c*ti©n te * i« Batts for re\s atudent* Auditorium French Batta H all lls German Batta H a ll IOT L-atin, VV eat M a ll o f f i c e B u il d i n g V h . Spanish 9 V Application* for abort cowrie Fo rtran C omputation Center 1fi 7 Moxie The Fu g itive ' Y. In no admission 0 IVO JEX R L R N - T V program* IO- C o ff e e H our H Mel T cand a t -on 10-12 and 3-5— Ex h ib it bv South Plain# a r t i s t * V .ia a b e t N e v M u s e u m l l T h e m e w r i t i n g te s t f o r n e w a tu ­ 1 3 T. dent* B a t t * A u d it o r iu m i i A d v a n c e d p la c e m e n t e x a m In a l ­ g e b ra B a t t * A u d it o r iu m . Ferguson E a rl to speak on Hugtran A Soares lan g u ag e D e­ b ugging S ' stem,’ Computation Cen­ ter R. 3-11 K U T - F M RO 7 mr 'Go' Magazine Changes Hands GO, the monthly Texas maga­ zine originated by Mr. and Mrs. Henry Faulk 19 months ago, has been purchased by a group of Aus­ tinites. Jr., The incorporated group includes Frank McBee president; Charles Pantaze, vice-president; Richard D. Hardin, vice-president; and Sue Brandt McBee, seeretary- treasurer. faculty member, McBee, UT graduate in e n g i­ neering and former mechanical en­ gineering is treasurer of an Austin-based sci­ entific research firm. Tracor, Inc. Pantaze, formerly of Houston, is publisher of Austin in Action, of­ ficial publication of the Austin Chamber of Commerce, and sever­ al other state-w’ide magazines. Hardin, CT graduate in 1952, is a Central Texas real estate invest­ or and regional director of the national cystic fibrosis research organization. Ttie January issue or GG, de­ in owner­ layed by the change ship, comes out this week. Sue McBee will continue to edit GO. A UT graduate, she was Daily Texan amusements editor; editor of The Matrix, national Theta Sig­ ma Phi magazine; on the execu­ tive training squad of Nieman- Marcus; and on the staffs of The Austin American-Statesman and The Wichita Falls Record News Lynne and John Henry Faulk, previous owners of GO. have re­ turned to New' York City. He was recently awarded $31 a million in a widely publicized libel suit in New’ York. Research investigating a possi­ ble cause of the serious birth de­ fect known as hydrocephalus, or water-on-tne-brain, will be conduct­ ed at the University Southwestern Medical School in Dallas under a new grant of $19,190 from Die Na­ tional Foundation-March of Dimes The project will he directed by Dr. William Kemp G ark asso­ ciate professor of surgery and chairman of the medical school s neurosurgery division. Joint announcement of the award was made by Dr. A J . Gill, SMS dean, and Basil O ’Connor, presi­ dent of The National Foundation. The grant will enable Dr. Clark to conduct a series of experiments with animals based on preliminary work on the same problem he car­ ried out two years ago under a National Foundation grant. NDEA Provisions Offer Special Training Set Up Under provisions of the National Defense Education Act, the U ni­ versity will offer a second year of special training next year to 25 potential leaders in the field of S' hool counseling. Most of the counselors expected to take the course will he from Texas. Okla­ homa. Louisiana, and Arkansas. These potential advisers will get supervised counseling experience in Austin high schools and in the immediate area. S T U D E N T S Bank the Convenient Texas State Bank W ay! Drive-In Bank and W a lk - U p W in d o w O p e n 7:30 a.m.-6:00 p.rn* C o n ve n ie n tly lo cated one-block south of the campus. ^ J U ’ At that time Dr. Clark designed 1 and developed an unusual plastic capsule which could lie implanted in the brain of an animal around a special tissue, railed the choroid plexus, that lie* within the cavities of the brain. Many scientists be­ lieve that the choroid plexus sec­ retes and produces the body's cerebrospinal fluid. flu. I In water-on-the-brain something interferes with 'he norma] pro< ess in which cerebrospinal is formed, flows through the in ain reabsorbed. The cavities or pressure of fluid accumulating within the skull results in ar. en­ larged head and eventually, brain damage. is Those scientist* who believe the choroid plexu* is involved in pro­ ducing or absorbing the thud or both, are inclined to cons.der- that it plays a key role in 'lie t-ene-is of hydrocephalus Dr. G ark demur,-■ ated tim ii was possible to seal the plastic capsule so that it w >uld ret? ary fluid which tile choroid ple.x . - might intr'xiui r into it. Now it is his plan to put ’ins device to work to he;p a' umulate 'he data about the activities of choroid plexus. He will analyse fluids isolated in the capsule and compare them with fluids passing through another, similar brain cav­ ity which contains no capsule. S p e c i a l chemical substances, some of them radioactive tracer '•hermcall. will be injected Into the blood stream and thnr appearance in the casule noted. In a com­ panion experiment the procedure will l>e reversed, the tubstaneee being introduced into the capsule and looked for in the blood. What is thus revealed about func­ tion of tim choroid plexus may shed light on the formation of cerebix>- spinal fluid. Knowledge of Die normal woik- ings of the body is a help to mT- entists ^peking to understand what causes diseases or malformations. In this case the experiments may repeal whether 'he function of the ( hornid plexus may go awry and ( ause hydrocephalus As one of the more commem ami serious birth defects, water-on-the- biain is the subject of several m- vesugat.oTis supported by The Na­ tional Foundatiofi-March of Dimes rn its nation* ;de campaign against congenital deb1' is. January Specials I Hi- FACE OI T EXA S. B\ (Teen Peyton. The grandeur of the Lone Star State in v.ords and picture^ E v e r y section and ma]t>r city is covered in this handsome volume w iii] more than 200 ex­ ceptional photographs. Pub. at i 10.00 On Iv $2.98 T H E N E W JO Y OF C O G R IN C . Bv Irma S. Rom- bauer & Marion Rombauer Becker. I e ti cd hon conta ning of this famous a1! purpose cookboi 4,000 reupcs. 150 draw ings Pub. at $ • 5 Onh 3.49. DOGS, DOGS, DOGS, DOGS. Over : o : Lustra- tins, 32 pages in full color. A handsome picture survey of more than I ; 0 breeds, their history, folk­ lore, rearing, training and show ing. Pub, at $ lr 00. Only $2.98. GARNER & SMITH College Discount Bk Store 2116 Guadalupe Phone GR '-0925 PER GIRL FOR Where discriminating young women may live luxuriously and dine sumptously for LESS THAN $80.00 PER MONTH! H0UR? :-''r o fn f RTia^s M U e C e S A T I9 T H Welcome, New StudentsI W e Want to Serve You! Housemother Mrs. Walters GR 2-4480 LATEST ALL LUXURIOUS oCe F o n ta in e b le a u ^Wrnartnten Is UNIVERSITY APPROVED 13 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 803 W . 28th Mid-Term Applications Now! Information FOR YOUN© LADIES I le d r m . l i v . M i J 8* tk 4 Nook Guttl Leung* ., . Ulililioi t S Swimming Pool W*H-in Clowti Mild $#fv. 4 Sb rift. Laundry Facilities Prevldtf. Frivata ©ff-itraat park­ ing. 4 or Fewer Per Apt. Rates: Per Person S P E C IA L RATE REDUCTION For Spring Semester 4 per Apt. o omc OO •• 3 per Apt. . . $62 OO OO 2 per Apt. . . 7 5 ‘5000 DEPOSIT Call Resident Manager Mrs. Mahlon Walters GR 2-6480 Tuwifay, January 29. 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 8 Spring Rush Informal No formal sorority rush will be held this spring, Mrs. Evelyne Ben­ nett, executive secretary of the Panhellenic Council, said Monday. Open rush will begin at 8 a.m. Monday, Feb. 4, and continue until the last day of Dead Week. Sorori­ ties carrying vacancies In their pledge classes from the previous sem ester may begin rushing Feb. 4. Sororities having a vacancy in th e ir pledge classes which occur­ red between sem esters m ay begin rushing at IO a.m . Sunday, Feb. 17. Invitations m ay be oral or w rit­ ten and the num ber of contacts by a sorority w ith a rushee will be left to the sorority’s discretion. Women students w anting m ore inform ation m ay contact M rs. Bennett in the Dean of W omen’s Office ★ Phi Delta Chi Selects New officers of Phi Delta Chi, professional fraternity of phar- m ary, are a follows: Jim Teniplin, president; Nor­ man Gound, vice president; Mal­ colm Berry, treasurer; Kearney Edmiston, pledge trainer; J o e Whitfield, c h a p t e r correspon­ dent; Jess West, recording sec­ retary; Frank Daleo, prelate; B U Y Y O U R B O O K S E A R L Y S A V E 4 0 % PLUS YOUR REBATE VHEMPHILL'S a a a Campus News Round-Up I Jam es Yeates, communicator re­ porter ; B. E. S w e e t , Inner guard; and Bob Simpson, house manager. ★ Evening Registration Set R egistration w i l l be conducted I for I W ednesday a n d T hursday evening courses to be offered at U niversity Junior High School d u r - : ing the Spring S em ester by t h e 1 U niversity Extension Teaching and F ield Service Bureau. Students m ay re g iste r from 7 to Ex-UT President Dies After Illness D r. W. M. W. Splavvn, U n iv e r-, sity president from 1924 to 1927, died Jan. 17 in W ashington, D. C., afte r a long illness. He w as 79. A m em ber of the In te rsta te Com­ m erce Com mission for 29 years. ! he served tw ice as chairm an of i the I CC, In 1938 and in 1951. He also served on the T exas R ailroad Com mission a t one tim e. B om in Arlington, he began his ca re e r as a social science profes­ sor a t Baylor, coming to the Uni­ versity' as an econom ics professor ! in 1919. He w as president of the U niver­ sity during those y ears of the be­ ginning of oil developm ent of Uni­ versity lands. It w as during his presidency th a t the U niversity be­ gan to have visions of Its w ider developm ents which w ere going to be m ade possible by funds accru­ ing from oil. Dr. Splawn encouraged the de­ velopm ent of the grad u ate school a t Texas. 9 p.m. cm both days, Dr. L. E. Mc­ Donald, Bureau assistant director s t u d y , an­ for correspondence nounced. F ees are 512.50 per sem ­ ester hour, or 537.50 for a three- hour course. ★ YD’s Selling Poll Taxes UT students will be able to get their poll taxes at the Young Dem ocrats’ registration booth outside the back door of Gregory Gym, David Perry, YD execu­ tive committeeman, said. The group will sell poll taxes through Jan. SI, deadline for the state­ wide drive. Members of the YD’s are also selling poll taxes In the indus­ trial sections of Austin. ★ Cadets to Visit N A SA About 30 m em bers of the stu­ dent post of the Society of A m er­ ican M ilitary Engineers will leave Austin W ednesday for a three day trip to Houston w here they will visit the NASA site. is m ade up of ROTO SAME cadets and the is sponsored by A rm y ROTO unit at the U niver­ sity. Ja m es R D arnell, SAME president, said money for the trip w as given to the U niversity post by the Corps of Engineers D istrict H eadquarters in F o rt Worth. Former Congressman, UT Graduate, Dies F o rm e r Congressm an John J. Bell, U niversity grad u ate and for­ m er president of the Students' As­ sociation, died of a h e a rt attack Thursday in his Cuero home. A Phi B eta K appa a t tile Uni­ versity, Bell w as la ter a sta te sen­ ator and rep resentative from the 14th D istrict. The law yer, rancher, and com pany executive w as defeated in the 1956 Congressional election by John Young of Corpus Christi. com press cotton V O L K S W A G E N S ! New & Used Sales & Service Bank Financing All Guaranteed at (i(A K A ^ T E F J ) MOTORS HI 4-2212 1607 S. LAMAR iY' Schedules [Coffee. Movie / Registration week activities the University “Y” will begin Tuesday with a coffee for inter­ national students in the morning and a full-length movie at 7 p.m. The m ovie, “The Fugitive” with Henry Fonda, is taken from the novel “ The Power and the Glory” by Graham Greene. All students are invited, and there will be no admission charge. International students are espe­ cially invited to a coffee and dis­ cussion of “ Y ” program at IO a rn. Tuesday in the redecorated lobby of the “ Y .” Wednesday, the faculty will take its turn at being honored with a coffee at IO a.m. In the afternoon, a short film about suppression of academ ic freedom in Hitler’s Ger­ m any w ill be shown. Entitled "First Seize His Books,” it stars Jam es Stewart. A discussion will follow the film. A “ get-together” w ith refre sh ­ m ents and possibly folk singing will tak e place at 7 p m . W ednes­ day. All students interested in par- ! ticipating in the “ Y” this sem es­ te r are invited to come. Individuals and groups desiring to represen t nations in the Model at United Nation* to be held this spring may file forms now at the “ Y” or at the UN registration booth. Mrs. Will Mayes Buried at Oakwood Mrs. Will H. Mayes, widow of the former Texas Lieutenant Gov­ ernor and founder of the Univer­ sity School of Journalism, d i e d Wednesday in a local hospital at the age of 87. Burial was in Oakwood Cem­ etery. KELLY SMITH CLEANERS ORY C L E A N IN G % t H r. Service ( N o Extre C h a r g e ) e C o n v e n ie n t C h a r g e A cct. # De live ry Service 511 W. 19th GR 2-3131 MID-TERM B E G IN N IN G FEBRUARY 4TH & 5TH r DON’T LOOK FOK A JO B ... HORTHAND LEARN IN ..AND THE JOB WILL LOOK FOR YOUI Speedwritirig R O SIN S NO SYMBOLS USES ABO S Let Durham * train you in one of their SPECIALIZED courses and place you in a top-notch position. • A c c o u n tin g % Bu*ine»i A d m in s t ra tio n O Se cre tarial • O f f ic e M a c h in a l • Sho rthan d ( G r e g g ) % T y p in g O S te n o gra p h ic # IB M C o m p lo t# A u to m atio n C o m p u te r* O D ra ftin g D ra w in g ) (E n gin e e rin g # N a n c y Tey'or C h a r m end P o lio JO BS A V A ILA B LE W H IL E Y O U LEARN DURHAM’S BUSINESS COLLES WRITE, C A L L O R VISIT T O D A Y 600 A L A V A C A P H O N E G R 8-3446 BLOCK SMITH Former T Exec Dies in Chapel Hill W. A. “ Block” Smith, U niver­ sity g rad u a te and executive sec­ retary of the U niversity YMCA for 35 years, died Friday, Ja n . 18, in Chapel Hill, N. C., a t the ag e of 73. Smith, who won his degree In civil engineering In 1913, wa* president of the “Y” his senior year. After graduation he Joined the s t a f f as associate to Dr. Thomas W. Curie, general sec­ retary. the signing of When the United States entered the wra r in 1917, Smith put aside his w'ork long enough to he a rna- j chine gun instructor a t the avia- | tion ground school then a t Little 1 Campus. With the A rm ­ istice he left the U niversity to or­ ganize a YMCA at the U niversity of Tomsk in Siberia. The R ussian Revolution stopped th at attem pt, but he w ent on to set up a YMCA relief center for stranded Allied in Vladivostok. Til is work troops won him the Czech W ar Cross in 1920. Bark In Austin In 1921, Smith continued his work at the “ Y ” until 1956. During his time there, the organization’s program ex­ panded to Include both men and women. “ This w as a good thing,” he once said, “ because when our boys went off to w ar, we had the girls to c a rry on the leadership.” His policy was academ ic free­ dom. “ L et the ‘Y.’ This is the students' organiza­ tion. I ju st w atch,” the students run For n e a r l y half a century, Smith w as an officer in the Uni­ versity P resbyterian Church, first as a deacon and then as an elder. Buy Early SAVE 40% of publisher's list price on G O O D used Textbooks, and you get Hemphill's Ever-Ready Rebate ALV/AYS W O RTH 10% OF FACE VALUE A N Y DAY FO LLO W ING PURCHASE— ALL SEMESTER Bring us your list of courses. W e know the * * * * * * right books! 4 CONVENIENT LO CATIO NS HEMPHILL'S 'Ifs*,i ‘p i t h i l y t Get Results With a DAILY TEXAN Classified Ad V NOW OPEN! PIZZA HUT.. . Where quality reigns supreme. .. pizza with your favorite beverage Just Across 19th St. 1809 Guadalupe OTHER LOCATIONS K A N SA S W ichita T opeka Kansas City Lawrence Emporia Liberal D o d g e City Sabina Great Bend H utchinson Manhattan Pratt Pittsburgh O K L A H O M A Tulsa Norman B a te sv ille T E X A S Ft. 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