Weather:
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T h e D a il y T e x a n
Student New spaper at The University of Texas
Page 7:
23rd Annual
Fine Arts Festival
Vol. 64
Price Five Cents
AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1964
Eight Pages Today
No. TI
Wirtz Outlines
Job-Giving Plan
In Ranch Talks
Celebrezze Sees
Medicare Passage;
LBJ Leaves Today
Upcoming administration
proposals in health care for
the aged and vocational op
portunities
the young
for
were discussed at the LBJ
Ranch Saturday.
T a l k i n g over the new
programs were W. Willard
Wirtz, secretary of
labor,
and Anthony J. Celebrezze,
secretary of health, educa
tion, and welfare.
WIRTZ PROPaSED an “Oper
ation Birthright”
in talks with
the
President Johnson. Under
program, the 3.5 million youths
who reach age 18 in 1965 will
have a better chance for educa
tional advancement and for bet
ter occupations.
Wirtz did not outline any spe
cific details of the program, but
in explaining its purpose, he said,
“ Unless we do more about this
situation, one out of every seven
of those three and one-half mil
lion boys and girls is going to
have a door slammed in his or
her face, and it is going to be
either a job door or it is going
to be a college door.”
HE SAID
two hundred
that
thousand would be turned down
by colleges and
three hundred
thousand would have a job door
slammed in their faces.
In describing his talks with the
President, Celebrezze said, “In
Hie area of health, his primary
concern was hospital insurance
for the aged. That will be high on
the aged. That will be high on
the agenda going into the next
session of Congress.”
Celebrezze predicted that Con
gress would pass a medicare bill,
the Administration
a n d s a i d
hopes It will be included within
the framework of the Social Se
curity program, but would work
for a separate health care pro
gram if necessary.
B O T H M E N STATED that
President Johnson had been very
concerned about getting the ut
from each dollar
most value
spent by their respective depart
ments.
Wirtz said he does not think
the threatened national railroad
strike will be carried
through.
He said mediations are already
underway.
they would remain
When the inevitable question of
in
whether
the Cabinet came up. Celebrezze
simply stated, “Yes,” and Wirtz
said he enjoyed his job and ex
pects to continue enjoying it.
tile
appointment
THE WHITE HOI SE also an
nounced
of
Gardner Ackley as chairman of
the Council of Economic Advis
ers. Ackley is already a member
of the Council.
He replaces Walter Holler who
will return to his former post at
the University of Minnesota.
Johnson will end his two-week
stay at his ranch Sunday. He is
scheduled to depart from Berg
strom Air Force Base after 2
p.m. for a flight to Washington
aboard Air Force One.
Longhorns, Aggies
Warned of Pranks
Disciplinary measures will be
enforced by the University and
Texas A&M on any student caught
in pre-game mischief.
The statement came from the
Boards of Regents of both
schools. They ruled that at least
one semester suspension will be
assessed to any student who goes
to the other’s campus with the
intent to paint or otherwise de
face statues, buildings, or other
property, or to commit any other
violation.
ACCENT
on the world
Israel, Syria Continue
Quarrel as Jets Clash
DAMASCUS, Syria—(JP)— Syrian and Israeli planes
fought an air battle Saturday in the second straight day
of frontier engagem ent and both sides claimed a victory.
A Syrian army spokesman said one Israeli fighter
w as shot down, and that all Syria’s planes got back to
base safely.
In Tel Aviv, however, an Israeli military spokesman
said the air battle was fought over Israel’s territory and
one Syrian plane w as hit.
“All our planes returned safely to base,” he added.
The air battles were reported the day after Israeli
planes struck Syrian border positions with napalm bombs
and gunfire after the heaviest ground fighting between the
two foes in several years. That air strike w as unopposed.
Syria’s air force is m ostly made up of Soviet MIGS.
The Israelis have sw ift French Mirage jets.
Goldwater Plans G O P Survey
KINGSTON. Jamaica—M — Sen. Barry Goldwater said Saturday
he would make a nation-wide survey of the Republican party to
discover weak spots because so many Republicans had voted for
the Democratic candidate, President Johnson.
He said he wants to know why people who traditionally voted
Republican acted as they did.
He also said he is still opposed to the civil rights bill because
he believes it is unconstitutional.
Asked about his present position in the party, he said the
leadership is now in other hands and he intended to work with the
leaders in both houses.
Goldwater told a news conference at a Jamaica golf club there
Ls no titular leader of the party'.
Asked whether he would desire nomination as party candidate
in the 1968 presidential campaign, he said he would not be looking
for nomination and he doesn’t think he would be nominated.
Defeated vice-presidential candidate William Miller and Dean
Burch, chairman of the Republican party, sat in on the conference.
Goldwater leaves for Washington Sunday after a post-election
holiday.
C " h * to Fire on U-2 Planes
HAVANA—Cfi—A Cuban government official, speaking privately,
said Saturday the Western world is not placing enough importance
on Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s threat to order US reconnaissance
planes shot down unless peaceful means are achieved to halt their
flights over Cuba.
The Western press and Western opinion, the official added, “do
not realize that American-Cuban relations are headed for a crisis
worse even than October 1962.” This is a reference to the US-Cuban
confrontation over Soviet missiles on Cuban soil.
Castro said in an interview with a correspondent of the New
York Times a week ago that Cuban forces now control Soviet-made
surface-to-air missiles and that he would order them used if all
legal means are unsuccessful in getting the United States to call
off U2 reconnaissance flights over Cuba.
Last Monday, US officials in Washington said Castro’s regime
has the antiaircraft missiles but is restrained by the Soviet Union
from using them.
The Cuban official, who has close contact with Castro, said,
“This is no bluff. It is a decision that will be carried out if
however:
necessary.”
Republican Summit Proposed
WASHINGTON—ITV—Sen. Karl Mundt, R-S.D., proposed Saturday
an all-faction Republican summit conference, presided over by
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, to hammer out agreement on future
policies.
Mundt said he thinks Burch “is not long for his job.” He said
he has heard the name of Wayne Hood, Wisconsin businessman who
Served as field director for the national committee in the Cold
water campaign, mentioned as a passible successor.
He said Coldwater should be included in a group which could
act on policy and possibly recommend a successor to Republican
National Chairman Dean Burch.
In addition to Eisenhower and Goldwater. he proposed this
group include Richard M. Nixon, the 1960 COP presidential nominee,
Govs. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania and George Romney
of Michigan and the two congressional minority leaders Sen.
Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois and Rep. Charles A. Halleck of Indiana.
For other members he suggested the names of Sen.-elect George
Murphy of California and Drake Eden, state chairman of South
Carolina which wrent for Goldwater.
Pope's Trip to India Criticized
LISBON, Portugal—(^—Angered by Pope Paul Vi's coming
visit to India, Portuguese authorities have shut down a Roman
Catholic magazine carrying a story about the Eucharistic Congress
in Bombay.
Catholic Portugal considers India an enemy because in 1961
the Indians seized Goa and two other Portuguese enclaves. Officials
have banned all mention of the Eucharistic Congress the Pope will
attend.
Even though the Vatican confirmed Saturday what had been
indicated before, that the Pope will visit only Bombay and will go
neither to Goa nor the Indian capital of New Delhi, Portuguese
authorities are not appeased.
Tower of Pisa Leaning Too Far
FLORENCE, Italy—IB—An Italian research scientist warned the
government Saturday the Leaning Tower of Pisa may fall down
at any moment.
Prof. Gustav Colonnette president-emeritus of the National
Research Council, said even a violent windstorm might blow down
the 184-foot white marble tower.
The Italian Ministry of Public Works said Prof. Colonnetti's
warning and report on the condition of the tilting tower had been
received and would be examined by Public Works Minister
Giacome Mancini as soon as he returns from a trip.
The Tower of Pisa now slants almost l l feet off true perpendi
cular.
My, Oh, Miami:
Horns to Play
In Orange Bowl
was officially extended, the Long
horns shouted their approval by
a voice vote.
WHILE THE FOOTBALL ar
rangements were being complet
ed, athletic business department
officials r e I e a sod preliminary
rules for ticket acquisition. There
will be no reduced rates for stu
dent tickets, assistant sports in
formation director Orland Sims
told the Texan, but some pro
vision will be made for students
wishing to draw tickets.
Tickets will be $6.50 each, and
applications will be accepted im
mediately. Priority ticket holders
will be given first consideration
through Nov. 23, Sims said, with
a maximum of four tickets in
force for all orders.
THE EX-STI’DENTS Associa
tion announced Saturday night
that a DC-6 commercial airliner
had been chartered for the Miami
trip, with the plane scheduled to
depart Austin Dec. 30. It will re
turn immediately after the game.
Dobies Spirit
Here-Ransom
The Texas Longhorns voted Sat
urday afternoon to accept an in
vitation to M i a m i ’ s lucrative
Orange Bowl to meet an opponent
yet to be named, but almost cer
tain to be Alabama, the nation's
number two team.
University a t h l e t i c director
Darrell Royal announced h I s
squad’s decision minutes after the
Longhorns had defeated TCU,
28-13 in Fort Worth.
The New Year’s game is per
haps the prime attraction among
the major bowls, for it is a night
game and thus does not compete
for viewing audiences with the
(See TCL Game Story, Page 4)
other major bowls. A rich tele
vision contract will benefit the
University athletic department by
more than $300,000.
ALTHOUGH ALABAMA is the
probable opponent, Royal would
neither confirm nor deny
that
the ’Horns would play the Crim
son Tide. “We have no under
standing,” he said Saturday night
after returning to Austin.
Alabama cannot accept a bowl
bid until It has completed its sea
son. under Southeast Conference
rules. Like Texas, the Tide finish
es on Thanksgiving Day.
The Longhorns were told before
the game that an invitation would
be extended by “one of the ma
jor bowls,” but Royal said he did
not mention the Orange Bowl spe
cifically.
The Sugar Bowl was scouting
the Fort Worth contest, and Hous
ton’s Bluebonnet Bowl expressed
interest in the longhorns, as did
the Gator Bowl. But there was no
doubt about player sentiment.
When the Associated Press said
Friday that Texas would receive
an invitation to the Orange Bowl
if Texas defeated TCU, Texas
players were quoted as saying
that they preferred
the Miami
game. And when the invitation
“ Frank is here tonight. Indeed,
among present and future Texas
writers, he is bound to be vitally
present always,” said Chancellor
Harry Ransom, officially dedicat
ing the 16th a n n u a l Writers
Roundup to J. Frank Dobie Sat
urday night.
More than 200 guests attended
the Theta Sigma Phi-sponsored
event in the Driskill Hotel, which
featured 14 books and their au
thors chosen from a field of IOO
volumes produced by Texans in
the year ending August 31.
In his dedicatory address, Ran
som said, “For two reason, the
Theta Sigma Phi dedication
is
especially appropriate. The first
is that, with less envy than any
author I have even known, Dobie
could rejoice in the accomplish
ment of other writers. The second
is that although he was a man’s
man, Frank had a rare sense
of courtesy toward women, es
little girls and aged
pecially
ladies and
those chronological
extremes are the real tests of a
male’s altruistic chivalry.”
REMEMBERING h i s f i r s t
meetings with Dobie, Ransom re-
called, “All of us theme-graders
were assigned within a week or
so to submit a batch of graded
papers to a full professor. E. M.
Clark thrust me on Dobie. He
(Dobie) had looked at all
the
themes and noted my pious re
spect for Woolley and Scott”*
handbook of composition.
“One attempt at a description
of Texas, though, got his special
attention. Dobie’s comment on
the paper (which I had graded
by subtracting p e n a l t i e s for
comma splices and dangling par
ticiples) was pure Dobie: ‘Give
him A for illiteracy and F for
ignorance; if he can raise the
second grade, the first will take
care of itself’.”
“ If somewhere along the line,
the demons of education had per
suaded Frank to ‘fall into ad
ministration’ — his phrase, not
mine — I think he would have
made
the greatest university
president in the history of the
State because he was profoundly
wise about the difference between
great issues and pipsqueak diver
sions. From the time I ‘fell’ into
administration, he kept urging
me to get larger waste baskets
(‘the most useful piece of furni
ture a Chancellor can have,’ he
said).”
MRS. J. FRANK DOBIE spoke
briefly,
thanking Theta Sigma
Phi for the program. Something
of an unofficial reunion between
L. F. Sheffy of Canyon, Harry
Benge Crosier and Mrs. Dobie
took place following the roundup.
The three were classmates with
Dobie at Southwestern University
in Georgetown.
In honoring Dobie,
roundup
guests chose to “r e m e m b e r
Frank’s humanity — the warmth
of his friendship and his genius
for forgiving his friends
their
faults. He made all of us a little
more human. That means he
made each of us a little better.
No writers and few saints could
do more,” as Chancellor Ransom
said.
iiflH *
Ed C. Rather
. . . to ste p dow n.
Charles Walker
. . . to ste p up.
Rather to Retire From Co-Op
Ed C. Rather, general man
ager of the University Co-Op for
more than 40 years, will retire
to modified service at tho end
of
fall.
Charles Walker, present assistant
to
manager, will be promoted
the general manager spot.
fiscal year next
the
These actions, approved by the
Co-Op Board of Directors, were
announced Saturday by Dewitt
Reddick, chairman.
Rather will step down on Sept.
25, 1965, exactly 48 years since
he began working at the Co-Op
as bookkeeper at $75 a month.
His service* were loaned to the
University Stenographic Bureau
for a year, but in 1919 he re
turned to the Co-Op as general
manager.
time when
“ED RATHER became general
manager at a
the
University was a relatively small,
regional
institution,” Dr. Red
dick said. “The Co-Op was only
a small book store. Under his
management, the volume of busi
ness at the Co-Op has increased
from $62,000 in 1919 to approxi
mately $3 million during the 1964-
65 fiscal year.”
The Co-Op returned approxi
mately $214,000 in dividends and
sales discounts to students and
faculty in the fiscal year ending
June 30, 1964.
DR. REDDICK praised Rattl
e r s consistent policy of part
time employment
for students
working their way through school,
continuing to make the Co-Op a
useful part of
the University
community*
Dr. Emmette Redford, presi
dent of the Co-Op and professor
of government, has worked with
Rather since 1946. “The Univer
sity Co-Op is one of 17 coopera
tive college book stores left in
the country,” Dr. Redford said.
“Wherever you find a co-op grow
ing and paying dividends, you’ll
find good management.
“FORTUNATELY, he
is not
retiring completely but going on
part-time service. His good judg
ment will still be relied upon.”
Dr. Redford also complimented
the Board on their choice of
Charles Walker as the new man
ager. He said Walker is knowledg-
able, efficient, and dedicated to
the Co-Op.
Dr. Reddick explained that Co-
Op employes with managerial re
sponsibilities retire at
the age
of 65. According to the policy of
the Board of Directors, retire
ment may be extended by an
nual resolutions of
the Board
until the age of 68, as in Rather s
case.
RATHER HAS seen University
enrollment grow' from 1.200
to
more than 24,000. He engineered
the expansion of the Co-Op from
the small book and stationery
store to the large college depart
ment store of today, with mer
that ranges from art
chandise
supplies to FNI radio, from Ivy
League suits
to stuffed Long
horns.
time,
In Rather’s
the Co-Op
staff has grown from only seven
employes — three full - time and
four part-time — to the present
staff of 141 — 49 full-time and 92
part-time.
Rather was recognized as 1962
Manager of the Year by the Na
the Association,
tional College Book Store Asso
ciation. He is a past president
the Austin
of
Chamber of Commerce, the Aus
tin Retail Merchants, and
the
Texas All-State Shrine Associa
tion.
WALKER, BBA '45, came to
the Co-Op in 1941 as a part-time
sales clerk. He started full-time
work two years later and worked
his way
through positions as
buyer, floor supervisor, and mer
chandise manager to his present
past as assistant general man
ager and personnel manager.
An avid supporter of young
people, particularly crippled chil
dren, Walker has served as presi
dent of the Austin Cerebral Palsy
Center, president and member of
the Board of Directors of
the
Travis County Society for Crip
pled Children and Adults, and is
currently a member of the ex
ecutive committees of both these
organizations. He is a past vice
president of the University YMCA
and vice-president and member
of the Board of the Rotary Club
of North Austin
New C ow b oy Sweetheart
—Texan Photo—Smith
D re w C a u th o rn , fo re m a n o f the C o w b o y s , p ro cla im s B etty V an
W a g o n e r , a freshm an, the new sw e e th e a rt o f the m en s o rg a n iz a
tion. The e ve n t o c cu rre d a t the C o w b o y M in stre ls held F rid a y
n ig h t in G r e g o r y G y m . D e sp ite pickets earlier in the week b y the
S tu d e n ts fo r a D e m o c ra tic S o c ie ty a g a in s t the use o f blackface s
in the show, there w ere no d e m o n stra tio n s there. (See M in stre l
review, p a g e 6.)
Templeton Says
More Funds Needed
In Higher Education
to
the affluent
drew attention
lives many students lead. Coupled
with the tuition increase, Tem
pleton said, would be “a state
system of scholarships based on
need and the ability to pay.”
The Committee’s report is “fac
ulty-oriented,” he added. “More
emphasis is placed on increased
salaries than on new buildings.”
Templeton said it was hearten
ing
that “when hard
headed businessmen see the facts,
they are willing to pay the ad
ditional taxes needed.”
to note
Tile Committee recommended
that special attention be given
to Texas’ junior colleges. An $8
increase in state funds
million
was suggested for the first year.
“There is a great need for junior
college professors with doctoral
degrees,” Templeton emphasized.
“Junior colleges are vital for
technical and vocational
train
ing" he said. “We should stop
training people for nonexisting
jobs.
to
Templeton said one partial so
the overall problem
lution
might bo the use of television-
beaming outstanding lectures into
living rooms throughout Texas.
Texas spends less money for
higher education than 36 other
states and “is getting about what
it pays for,” a prominent educa
tor said Friday night.
Dr. Arleigh B. Templeton, pres
ident of Sam Houston State
Teachers College, said he came
to tliis conclusion while serving
as executive director of the Gov
ernor's Committee on Education
Beyond the High School.
Committees through the years
have analyzed the problem, Tem
pleton noted, and
they usually
decide that Texas higher educa
tion needs more funds and “im
prover!
between
coordination”
junior, and four-year
technical,
colleges and universities.
Explaining
the Committee’ s
suggested doubling of tuitions, he
SDS Challenges
Cowboys to Debate
The Cowboys have been chal
lenged to a debate on whether or
not the blackface should be elim
inated from future Cowboy bene
fits.
Tile challenge came in a letter
mailed Saturday by Linda Tol
bert, secretary of the Students
for a Democratic Society. She
wrote. “We believe that both sides
should be heard and that a de
bate between the tw'o positions
should be held as soon as pos
sible. The student body should be
allowed a forum from which they
may express their opinion now
that the production has been pre
sented.”
Drew Cauthorn, foreman of the
Cowboys, had not yet received
the letter, but he said, “ I would
like to evaluate the Minstrel our
selves before a debate, but I
wouldn't be adverse to a debate.”
headquarters here.
G l's Shots Halt Red Colonel
HEIDELBERG, Germany—I fl-
An American soldier fired a shot
at a Soviet army sedan to halt
its approach
into a restricted
US military area near Nuernberg
in West Germany last Wednes
day, the US Army reported Sat
urday. A Soviet colonel and his
enlisted driver wrere detained
seven hours.
A US spokesman said the Soviet
sedan entered the restricted area
despite signs in English, Russian,
and German warning against
trespassing. The American sen
try shouted orders for the car to
halt when it approached his post.
The car kept on going.
The Army announcement said
that the US guard then fired a
warning shot into the air and the
Soviet vehicle
to
leave the scene.”
“attempted
Fears for the future of the tower have been expressed for
decades, but most exports have predicted that even at the present
increasing rate of tilt the tower should stand for at least another
century.
The US Army’s European Head
quarters here said the car be
longed
the Soviet military
liaison mission attached to US
to
Little Man on the Campus
Bv Bib,ef Politeness GOP Committee Split
Why Not Change?
The Cowboy Minstrel Show' deserves criticism for more
than ju st its offensiveness to Negroes.
The Cowboys can never put on a good minstrel show
because the things on which such a show is largely built are
no longer acceptable to society. The N egro dialect and the
jokes depicting his ignorance should be a s painful for the
Cowboys to tell as for the audience to hear.
The show’s people use the blackface a s a crutch. Any
idea that because a joke is told by a white person with black
on his face m akes it funnier is absurd. Since 1936, the Cow
boys have had racial complaints about the show.
In 1960, they agreed to w ater down the show's content.
Now it is a Minstrel Show in name only.
Although the image associated with the Cowboy Min
strel show is that of a R astus or Jim Crow type humor the
group does not play on this. They use ch aracters much more
fam iliar to the community as a whole and with no particular
reference to a minority group.
The Cowboys could put on a good show and continue
helping their charity if they would try. Their Minstrel Show
is a tradition of the group and we respect this, but it is w eak
lo resist change simply because of the past.
F riday night’s perform ance looked more and more like
the Cowboys were not wiping the black off their faces sim
ply because it would mean they were giving in to su gges
tions from outside.
There are many alternatives to the m instrel show. A
new tradition could be started. It would be a suprem e credit
to the Cowboys if they dem onstrated their ability to keep
in step with the times.
Guest Editorial
Teacher Fights Back
Teachers, who used to be considered mild anim als gratefully taking
any crumbs thrown their way, are beginning to actively participate in
attem pts to change their situations.
In Louisville, Kentucky, teachers today planned to participate in a
demonstration to protest the voting down last Tuesday of high school
taxes, which would have Increased their pay and lessened the over
crowding of the city’s schools. The pay m axim um is currently $6,600
annually. Louisville authorities say teachers m ust return to class T ues
day. The teachers say they won’t until their dem ands are met.
In New’ Orleans, teachers have voted to close schools and picket
the capitol Nov. 16 as part of their demand for a $1,000 a year pay
increase.
Many people continue to think It a disgraceful action for a teacher
to strike or protest. They think that for the teacher to leave the c la ss
room is the worst of all popular actions—because it stops the educa
tional process.
Yet the walkout is the only weapon the teacher has. Too often tho
public accepts its school system as just a station aery building which is
alw ays around for use a s a receptacle for any children which m ay
happen to be in the neighborhood. The teacher, too, is often accepted
as a piece of the municipal furniture, a person whose voice is never
heard outside the classroom .
In such situations, a teacher walkout is an effective weapon which
shocks a community back to the reality that education is never static,
that w ages and construction m ust meet the dem ands of changing
conditions.
In a teacher walkout, students m ay lose a few days of education
in the classroom , but that is better than the alternative of continued
overcrowding and of a lack of quality teaching because of starvation
w ages.
The teacher has begun to throw off his role of inactivity. Education
can onlv be the better for it.
COLORADO DAILY
Shorter Campaigns
If it tailed to do anything else, the 64 election cam paign should
m ake it clear to party leaders that the standard IO weeks has become
too long for any presidential cam paign.
The practice of making nominations in the sum m er and of having
th*1 cam paign begin with Labor Day is a tradition which no longer has
any value.
The lengthy cam paign was intended for the days of sitting on the
front porch or whistlestopping at every little village.
But these are the days of television and the
jet. As Hubert
Humphrey said, one television broadcast will reach “ more people by
accident than you can by premeditation going around the country all
y ear long.’ ’ The jet, too, enables politicians to skip the sm aller are a s
of population concentration and hop around the country to the m ajor
cities.
The ‘64 cam paign shows what happens when candidates have both
an extended period of time and thorough news coverage. Too often the
absurd and the insignificant is interjected to keep a cam paign alive.
It would be better for everyone concerned if the national conven
tions were scheduled for September and the cam paigns limited to
four weeks.
COLORADO DAILY
On Other Campuses
Campaign
Given Up
X T
•
JOHANNESBURG, South Afri
c a —(JB—The adage that “ courte
sy costs nothing”
is doubtless
still true, but M argaret Malherbe
has found it takes money to pro
m ote the idea.
LACK O F PUBLIC support has
forced M rs. Malherbe and 14
to abandon a courtesy
helpers
cru sade aimed at reducing fric
tion between the segregated r a
cial groups of South Africa. She
spent two years at it, and about
$1,400.
a
M rs. Malherbe,
Johannes
burg housewife, say s, “ We are
sorry to see the cam paign aban
doned, but our operation lasted
only as long a s funds were forth
coming. Now we have nothing
left in the bank.”
The courtesy cam paigners d is
leaflets,
thousands of
tributed
posters, and booklets u r g i n g
shopkeepers, householders, busi
ness organizations and schools to
encourage and promote interra
cial politeness.
T h e
cam paigners'
courtesy
that black and
code suggested
whites should:
Speak out
w herever found;
again st
rudeness
Refuse to accept service if oth
regardless of color, have
ers,
been waiting longer;
Refrain from calling a black
servan t or other employe by the
nam e of Jim , Boy or K affir—
A frican ;
CH A LLEN G E
con
demnation of any particular r a
cial group;
I N FAIR
N ever ask a m ale African serv
ant to wash or iron women's un
dergarm ents—it offends his dig
nity;
T reat Africans and other races
with human dignity;
Teach children to be polite.
“ Children are often the worst
offenders,” say s Mrs. Malherbe.
“ The social structure of South
A frica allows white children to
be waited on hand and foot, not
only by African servants, but a l
so by their parents. This way of
life breeds thoughtlessness which
leads to rudeness and, as they
grow older, it becomes an estab
lished way of life which
leads
to friction between the ra c e s.”
found promo
tion of racial good will no easy
task.
M rs. M alherbe
SOETH AFRICA’S rigid ap art
heid laws are enforced by thou-
hands of “ whites only”
signs.
People are channeled into se p a
rate buses, trains, theaters, and
post office counters. There are
thus few opportunities for contact
by whites
intent on promoting
courtesy and good will among
the racial groups.
* '? Y THE WAV, B p
Of TH' T O P 5 AffOfJNP H E R E A S E
PEAL £TP!CT APOUTCLA££ ATTENDANCE.''
SEX: Natural, Good, Fun
Reverend Believes
ist and a believer.
R easonably reliable methods of
birth control exist, Wood said,
but the control of fertility does
not appear to be the final issue.
“ Heterosexual union is alw ays at
lea st potentially creative of an
other person—a person, not just
little baby who m ay be
som e
viewed a s a nuisance or an un
fortunate inconvenience, but an
other person, for whom his c re a
tors are deeply and
intim ately
responsible.” To disregard this
potential creativity is to deprive
sex of much that m akes it m ean
ingful, he said.
Wood said m arriage is a sym
bol for this type of relationship,
but the content ran exist with
out the symbol, just a s the sym
bol does not necessitate the con
tent. The individual is free to de
termine his own actions, but he
loses the security and relaxation
provided by an established p at
tern.
All sexual activity is Interper
sonal, “ whether that activity is
heterosexual, hom osexual, or au-
tosexual
(for such relationships
alm ost inevitably involve the fan
tasy of or the desire for a rela
tionship with another person ),”
he said.
T H E BIBLIC A L understanding
Is that for an interpersonal re la
tionship to be full, it m ust be re
sponsible, Wood
said. Rather
than use one another a s things,
we should relate to one another
a s persons.
“ From
the Biblical point of
view ,” he said, “ to relate to an
other person is to assum e som e
that person.
for
responsibility
And the magnitude of the respon
sibility is directly proportionate
to the depth of the relationship.”
BALTIM ORE - (CPS) - Hu
man sexuality should be consid
ered a s inherently good and as
a result sex is fun, funny, and
natural, the Reverend Frederick
G. Wood J r . of Goucher College
told his congregation recently.
tend
far
to
to
tako
seriously and that they should
quit doing so.
is separated
from the rest of one’s activities
and ‘ assum ed to be fraught with
all kinds of special meaning and
m ystical significance,” he said.
sexual expression
students
Wood
said
It
“ Sexuality itself is good,” he
said, “ from the structure of the
human organism a s m ale and fe
male
to every conceivable act
of sexual self-expression. There
is nothing bad or dirty or per
verted about it.”
THE R E V E R E N D
s a i d he
hadn't told the students “ whether
you should or you shouldn’t, or
even how far you should,” be
cause to do so would be to v io
late irresponsibly individual free
dom.
He said the prim ary Im plica
tions of the concept that sexuality
is good arc that sex is fun and
natural.
“ B ecause sex is fun, it is not
to be understood as something
which we owe to anyone, whether
that obligation is understood in
term s of a debt to be paid after
a certain number of dates, or as
conformity to the generalized ex
pectations of a group.”
By “ funny” Wood said he was
referring not only to the humor
attached to sex, but to its play
ful, creative aspects. “ And this
m eans that there are no laws at
tached to se x ,” he said. “ I re
peat, absolutely no laws. Anyone
who tells you there are m ay be
guilty of m istaking social and cul
tural custom for divine sanction.”
TH E FACT that sex is natural
does not relegate it to the posi
tion of being m erely a natural
function which has one specific
purpose and no other, Wood said.
“ Eating, for exam ple, Is also n at
ural, and has the natural function
of the nourishment and p reserva
tion of the organism . But most
of m y gourm et friends would be
rather abashed
if I told them
that they should engage in e at
ing only for these purposes.”
Wood said
that according to
the Bible sexuality is more than
good; it is creative, and from this
concept com es the possibility of
distinguishing between a hedon
MUSINGS
The Folks Back H o n e
I think of t h e n that are so far a w a y
y e t that what I d o is they.
I f s m ostly for their sake th a i I stick to the fray,
since th e y 're t i c k e d pink when I n a k e an A .
O n T.V. I’m s u r e m o m 's w a tc hing the D o d g e r s play.
S h e rarely leaves the house, but then th at's her way.
Even now I can hear d a d say:
car heaters just ain't here tuh stay.
But on this particular d a y
I must know i f s the g a d g e t s w :h last, not they.
*— D a v e O lip h a n t
Iowa Prof Describes Stereotype Link
told
P R E JU D IC E S ARE carried by
latents, an
the
instructor
Student Committee on R acial
equality (SCO RE) at Iowa State
Jdiversity recently.
Comic strips and
the “ Amos
md Andy Show” are said to bf
i stereotype which a m ajority
end to identify with the Negro
Tie leacher said the Negro was
(resented a s somewhat of a aim*
deton or a buffoon in these.
lot
to
ielp rid this stereotype,” he add-
d. “ Negroes used to be shown
J m aids, chauffeurs, and bums,
ut in the last few years Negro
“ Movies have 6as little “ living it down.**
The TCL7
team was som ew hat
disheartened at losing, but m ost
players felt they had given good
effort against a fine team .
Over
R A N D Y HOW ARD, startin g
q u arterb ack , noted, “ T exas had
as good a defense as we thought
they would have. We played them
on fairly even term s, hut w hat
hurt us w ere Just som e good ol*
m ental m istakes.
"W e would gpt rolling pretty
good, then someone would jum p
off sides or som ething, and kill
our d riv e.”
.Something els# killed a TCH
m arch early In the third q u a r
te r—F red E dw ards. E dw ards in
tercepted a Howard pass, and
four m inutes later Texas scored.
a
.S)?/n n er
. 9m110rh
Native C rafts
— furniture—
—-—accessories-—-
Personally Selected
From All O ver Mexico
HOWARD SAID, “That was th#
turning point of the gam e, I think.
If we had kept the score 14-7 into
the fourth period, we would hav#
had a chance.”
Jim F au v er, TCH'* swift ru n
ning back, was the ta rg e t of nu
m erous Texas tackles. He carried
14 tim es for 37 y a rd s—his lowest
output of the season.
He thought he knew why, too.
"B oy, they (Texas) had a real
good hard-hittin’ team . I couldn’t
single out a single p layer as the
best. I did notice Nobis on top
of m e a lot, though,” he grinned.
"IT REEMS TO ME Tp.xas
m ight be a b etter team than the
one w p saw last y e a r,' F auver
continued. "A rkansas is quicker
but T exas hits a whole lot h ard
e r .”
Am iable Abe M artin, TCI* head
roach, w as philosophical about
th# contest His hat pushed hack
on his forehead, M artin puffed on
a cig ar as he expounded his view*
In his slow draw l.
"W ell, I think we w ere playing
a re a l fine football
team . Our
big problem w as defense; we Just
couldn’t *top 'em at alL
"TEX AS JI ST HAS a b etter
te a m ,” M artin judged. “ I don’t
think they tried any h a rd e r than
we did—they just did b e tte r.”
M artin
several
singled 0 u t
Longhorns for p raise, "G ee, th a t
Philipp (H arold) is a hard ru n
ner. How m uch did he gain? (106
y ard s on 16 attem p ts) and E rn ie
Roy is a fine ru n n er—so is Phil
Harris.
“T h a t little M arvin (K ristynik)
is com ing into his own now too.”
M artin chuckled. “ Hp ran right
well
today. P assed p retty good,
too.”
in
Back
the Texas dressing
room, "L ittle M arvin” w as a very
big m an with the p ress. He had
picked up 107 y ard s on 9 totes,
passed for 87 y ard s on 6 of l l
tries, and he w as grinning wide
ly.
How did he break loose from
their seventh victory of th# #ee
son.
in
San d er's score cam e
the
first period on a five-yard plunge
ending a 38-yard 11-play drive,
and F u n k ’* three-pointer cam # In
th# second session. The final half
wa* the m ost sensational of the
gam e, but produced no scoring.
★
ATLANTA (^ -A la b a m a struck
for two touchdowns In the final
1 :45 of the first half and
then
played Georgia T erh off its foot
the re st of the way to whip the
Yellow Jack ets 24-7 Saturday and
keep alive its chances for a n a
tional football cham pionship.
The victory was
the T ide's
ninth straig h t without a loss this
it cam e *0 easily
season and
th at a record crowd of 53,505
Tech p artisan s sa t in dead silence
moat of the tim e.
The victory cam e on th# arm
of q u arterb ack Joe Na ma th and
offensive direction of altern ate
signal caller Steve Sloan. Na
m ath, who played only when
Alabam a needed th# big yardage,
threw
touchdown and
set up another on a 49 yard pass
for one
KODAK
Inatomdtic 150 Outfit
M o t o r i z e d c a m e r a !
FiUed carry-due!
D rop in Ut* Kodapak C orlrtdg*.
W ind th# m otor. And ©tort A oot-
teg . No focusing or oA e r odjwaS-
a*«*»t. F te advowee* ovtomoH-
cad y . TH* Kodak bystamatK I SO
C a m e ra take* coior o r biock-
tm d whit# soaps, or to te r slides.
KoH im flash holder pop* wp tor
flash shots. Outfit co ates la aaw
fitted cony catel £ O r t 50
‘ 29
Floor
second
dona! championship sine# 1949.
Eddy sm ashed five yard* for
a
touchdown and ace
q u arterb ack J o h n H u a r t #
figured in
th# other two, a 13-
yard pass to Jo# F a rre ll and a
21-yard dash into th# end ion#
after a fake handoff.
The fifth score cam e hi th#
fading minute# 00 a
two-yard
plunge by P e te Andreotti a fte r
an intercepted pass.
N otre D am e’s blitzing defense.
the best in die country against
rushing, allowed one Michigan
State score — a 51 yard pas*
from Steve Juday to Gene Wash
ington in the third period — and
th ree tim es threw back Spartan
drives inside their 20.
Twice in the first half Michigan
State, winner of l l of its 12 gam es
and eight stra ig h t against N otre
D am e, m oved to the 15 only to
be stopped. In the fourth period
the S partans sm ashed 57 yard*
to th e N otre Dam e six but could
go no farth er.
It rem ained
for a uniform ed
s h e riffs deputy to m ake the best
defensive play of the gam e.
Tn the fourth period of th# na
tionally televised gam #, two ex
uberan t spectato rs
jum ped onto I
the field and began playing their
own private gam # of run and tag
before a capacity crowd of 59.265.
*
COLUMBUS, Ohio CB—O h I 0
State took a giant strid e toward
the W estern Conference cham
pionship and a Ro*# Bow! Md
Saturday as
fifth
straig h t in th# conference by 10-0
victory over N orthw estern.
tt won
it*
as
the
The gam e was a d ie e p la y e r* ’
dream
seventh-ranked
Ohioan* parlayed Willard San
d e r’s seventh touchdown and Bob
into
Funk s seventh
field goal
Orange Tower,
Orange Bowl
#0 m any tack lers on his 21-yard
TD rom p in the third q u a rte r?
" I think som eone thought I was
tackled, but I Just kept bouncing
off people until I was suddenly In
the open.”
K ristynik had a sim ple expla
nation of T ex as’ success on of
fense. “We found we could get
outside th eir ends, *0 we d id .”
HAROLD PHILIPP was full of
praises, both for his blockers and
TOU. “ I had trem endous block
ing . . . of course, our line al
way* blocks terrific. I thought lf
we got way ahead, TCI’ m ight let
down. But they never did—they
had a good te a m .”
D arrell Royal was liberal with
com plim ent* for his I/>nghoms,
also. “ Harold Philipp really picks
those holes doesn t b e ? " Royal
noted. “ And I thought I.#* Der-
rick did a fine job. He h as been
looking good in p ractice, and he
looked good today.” (D errick c a r
ried 2 tim es for 20 y ards and re
turned a punt 21 y ard s.)
Royal also said he and his staff
planned to give th# team acm e
tim # off sine# next Saturday is
an open date, but th at his plans
ar# not definit# y e t
OVE THING is definite, though
—subject to Athletic Council ap
is Miami-bound,
proval. T exas
and a d ressing
full of
whooping Steer* w as not un-mute
testim ony to th at fact Saturday.
room
STUDENTS FROM EUROPE, NORTH AFRICA,
LATIN AMERICA, MIDDLE EASTI
PROCTER A GAMBLE IN T ERN A TIO N A L
W ILL BE ON THIS C A M P U S TO INTERVIEW MEN
INTERESTED IN BEGINNING T E C H N IC A L AND
BUSINESS CAREERS IN THEIR HOMELAND ON
November 17-18
we w ill interview :
B S and MS degree* In C h i, Iii,, IE, and EE for tech
nical positions
MB A's and BS or MS In any aon-tedualcai Bald tee
beginning positions in Marketing, Advertising, S a le s,
Finance, and Buying.
PROCTER A GAMBLE IN T E R N A T IO N A L is mad#
up of subsidiaries of the Procter A Gamble Company,
a U. S. organization which manufactures and sells
soaps, detergents, food, toilet goods, and other con
sumer products in over 140 countries of the free world.
The history of Procter A Gamble’ s development has
been one of substantia! growth. In each ten year* of
the Company’s history since 1900, sales have approxi
mately doubled.
T hese openings represent unusual opportunities for
men of ability. You will be given early responsibility
and personalized on-the-job training. We promote
only from within, and only on the basis of merit, and
young men beginning a career with us have the op
portunity to advance into top executive positions in a
Subsidiary, replacing U. S. Managers temporarily as
signed. We do not know of any other organization
where there is greater opportunity to advance on Ute
basis of merit alonel
SIGN AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR AN INTERVIEW
Ii {or any reason you c&nnol Interview now, write directly toe
Mr. J o h n A . H a n d le y ,
P e r s o n n e l Manager
International D iv isio n * , D e p t. 1111
T h # P rocter A G am ble C om p a n y
P .O . B o x 201, C incinnati, Ohio 45224
V n , for broader horizons there's nothing Bm
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lf you are tired of ordinary pipe
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Also see The Co-Op's complete
selection o f im ported cigarettes, fine
pipes, pipe racks, cigarette
lighters,
and cigarette* by the carton.
Street Floor 1 nitm-min Rear of Store
Th * - . ’ J © ! * ? S 0 * b
SuftcUy, November IS, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Pb9# I
Lost UT Offense Is Found: 28-13
B t DOX COX
Texan Sport* Staff
With *n offensive power only slightly loss appalling
than that of an unbathed garbage collector, the Orange
Bow!-bound Texas Longhorn* rambled over the Texas
Christian Homed Frogs. 28-13, Saturday in Fort Worth's
Amon Carter Stadium.
A DAMPENED CROWD of 34,529 looked on as the
Longhorns ran up a total net yardage of 445, far surpass
ing their best previous output this year, which came against
Tulane
Relying on the bruising running of fullback Harold
Philipp, and the running and passing of quarterback Mar
vin Kristynik, the 'Horns moved the ball over IOO yards
In each of the first three quarters and 80 yards In the la't.
Meanwhile, the TCC Froggier weren’t exactly sitting
on their hands, themselves Texas Christian scrambled for
304 yards offensively. 195 of them airborne, to mn the
game s ground-gaining statistic to a monstrous 7 4 9 .
THE FROGS’ defensive line, never appearing too
Impressive, looked as though it had just finished a dinner
date with Dracula by the time the third quarter roiled
around.
Philipp s two-yard touchdown m n in that q u a rte r was one of the
m m t Illustrative, as the Longhorn line pushed the entire TCC team
b ark into the end zone
Scoring got underway early in the gam e Driving 94 yards in only
•Ight playa, the 'Horns jum ped to a quick 74) lead with 8:28 re m a in
ing in the first q u arter The key play of the m arch w as a 41-vard
m iracle run by Kristynik. a lad who m ade several runs of a like
n am re throughout the gam e
WITH A VTB8T ta d tm a t Ch* UT X , Krtstynflk ran to his left,
disappeared in a huge blob of hum anity then suddenly reap p eared
and scam pered to the Frog*' 32 before being grabbed by the ankles
Philipp and K ristynik then took turns carry in g the pigskin, and the
hall rested on the two. Philipp carried ever right guard for the score.
David Conway booted his first of four ex tra points, and Texas led. 7-0.
The Longhorn* couldn't get rolling again until the showers cam e.
So after the hum idity increased, they sta rte d once m ore. The 83-yard
drive got underw ay late in the first period and then reached a grand
finale with 10:02 left in the half. Using a total of 13 p la y s the m arch
soon got monotonous to FYoggie fans.
HARRIS FOR SIX . . . K ristynik for nine . . . Kov for two . . .
Philipp for four . . . etc. K ristynik rolled around right end from five
yard s out to increase the Longhorns' m argin. Conway again split the
uprights and the scoreboard re a d : T C C O . Visitors-14.
Texas Christian bounced back 1:56 short of halftim e, utilizing 12
plays to trav el 80 yards. The H om ed Frogs m ad e the m ost of two
im portant downs. After just entering Longhorn te rrito ry for the first
tim e in the hall gam e, the Froggies connected with a 28-yard pax*
from q u arterb ack Randy How'ard to w ingback Bobby Batton.
RATTON MADE probably the h ard est catch of the gam e. AS he
was hit sim ultaneously by Tom m y Nobis. Joe Dixon, and Anthony
King as soon as the ball touched his hands.
The sensational -arch put the pigskin on the Texas 20, and from
’h e rr it w as only a m a tte r of tim e and an infraction of the rules.
With a third down and five situation facing the Cow Tow ners, line
b ack er F red E dw ards suddenly felt an im pulse and jum ped into the
TCC backfield.
T ie five-yard penalty resulted
ten for Texas
C hristian and three plays la te r Howard raced eight y ard s around
right end to the co m er of paydirt.
in a first and
Bruce A’ford’s kick was sufficient and TCI was pressing the
THI S EN D ED the scoring until T pxss began pouring it on in the
’Horns. 14-7.
third stanza.
Highlighted by a 27-yard dash up the middle by Philipp end
following a 25-yard aerial from Kristynik to Pete Larnmons. a 68-yard
Longhorn drive resulted in another addition to the scoreboard with
5:03 left in the third.
Philipp scored from two yards out. Conway exercised his toes
again, and the Orange and White held a com m anding 21-7 lead.
Thwarted by the rugged Texas defense and unable to stop the
ram bling Texas offense, the Froggies fell further behind only two
m inutes later. After forcing Jim F auver to pun? from his own end
zone, the 'Horns took the ball at the enemy s 39. From there it took
only two plays to score again.
A FTER KRISTYNIK hit La mm ens with an 18-yard spiral, he
pulled a q uarterback keeper over right guard for
the rem aining
distance . . . 21 yards. It appeared that K ristynik had alread y been
stopped when he broke loose from a Frog convention and scam pered
to glory land standing up.
A pparently wishing to end the fourth period
like they did th#
second, the Froggies once again scored in the waning m om ents of
the gamp.
After passing for 26 yards of the 48 yard drive. Howard ran over
left tackle for the tilt s final tally , His pass for two points fell incom
plete and the final score read : Texas 28, TCI -13.
THE S4XIRE could have easily been higher, however. Twice th#
Longhorns fumbled within spitting distance of the goal line, and once
the 'Horns suffered an interception from only 13 yards out.
H arris fumbled at the TCI
third q u arter. Charles
Buckalew lost control of the ball in the last q u a rte r at the Froggie 7,
and defensive back Dan Jones stole one of K ristynik s passes earlier
in the gam e.
the
in
14
Not enough can he said of several of
the ’Horns. End Dan
Mauldin caused TCL signal caller H ward to break out in a sw eat
every tim e he lined up.
Mauldin set the Froggie field genera! ca Ms hlndside m ore than
Howard probably cares to rem em ber, and it usually happened in a
crucial situation.
THE DAILY TEXAN
Classified jld s
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Ar
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ar word*
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AHO
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11 OO
(No copy chan*# for consecutive Issue rales )
CLASSIFIED ADVS HT ISI WG DEADLINES
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In
airest cif «**Tor, -r-*d* n an advertise it •Ute,
I rn mad la’* not ire Trust b# * * en s s th® pub? fib ers
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Lovely pets *35 Of- GL *-8507
COMPLETE SET Great Book* of the
Western World.'’ Like ne* Book'ase
ne hided Gail GR 1-5763
miscellaneous
HAVE LOTS OF I SED BOOKS and
Mrs. Clean
(Wa do
laundry mat ISM West Lynn
laundry too )
to
se
32-FOOT
pow-cr
SLOOP WITH
auxiliary
two * it* of sails a im Inurn
ID I Brazos
mast SAD or- See Dave
after 5 pm
FORMER PROFESSOR S HOME
bedrooms. 3 baths
combination
Very desirable clote-rn inca Lob Three
living
family
dtnm*
room
throughout
Drub:# garage with attached mon
suitable for stud* or office c a I Mar
Show a lier for appointment toda' GR
8-5621 Even ng* GE 5-2541
spacious
lukrge
condition
Perfect
SANDI.IN A Cn
MERCEDES BENZ IWSI. Hardtop and
in
Soft-top
F.ngiish
ieerher
red
terior. GR 5 6 7 »
IBM ELECT P. If' TYPEWRITER Serial
number 194972 16-inch ."arriage R*-
cond'tior.ed. lugged pulling gear. *225.
GR 2-6650
1960 RO Y AL ELECTRIC
EIR# type
ce! en* condition
(’andard I#
fin s Ai. 5-36: ~
tvpewmiter
eau- age F.>
ALL ANDALE NORTH - 4 bedrooms
forms:
2’t baths, built-in kitchen
bv na room
d o u b le garage Comer
tarp® den *n»h fir e p la c e
lo t. $22 <50 Of
x*
9 t'
4 4 lh 3 b ed room b o u se refin
ish ed N o q u a lify in g o w n er w ill f i
nan ce USO d ow n J" i no a m on*n for
IS yr*, Total cost I" MO.
E X C E L L E N T B ! Y - N o r t h
on e RVT
and assume payments 2 bedrooms
t-®-'* ga rag®
la rg e fruit
bree mwa v
Total price $8 90'
PLEASE REM EMBER W E -carga on .'
3 percent <-r,Tn mission
you
morev wrafhar bu- ng or
lenin*
Sav»>*
STAR REALTY CO -OL 2-6*77
W a n te d
NOW BUYING AND TRADING—Tvpe
writer*, golf cu b s, radio*, gun*, fire
plug*. books boats,
trading stamps
?v:uoa gear, antique*, farm equipment.
electric razor*, automobile*
binocu
lar* magazine* musical Instruments
art supplies, furniture appliance*, and
stereo e-
ho isehoid goods watch#*,
televblatta, motor scooter*
qulpment
engineer ng supplies, cameras
tape-re-
corders, diamonds, baby furniture,
huntlrv
cycles, m eg’s good c othes
equipment, phonograph
and
stamp collections milk
records, coins
too!* W# also rent televisions
cow*
48 99 * month And sneak refrigera
tors *6.00 a month Aaron Pa*n bro
kers merchandise, 803 Red River No
tary P ubic. Open Saturday til 7 pm
fishing
i
ENGINEERS — CLASS O r 65 Hughes
loo: Company. Oil Tool Division
Interview on
Houston Tex** Will
campus Thumda® November IP See
nfore anon in placement office
Business O p p o rtu n ity
WANTED—WORKING
Man or woman with 32 000 to
lr publishing busine**
PARTNER
in
vest
Profit
potential 4-18 OOO f rat vear. Sea Mar-
tin. 808 Red River
MATHEMATICAL -ENGINEERING
PAPERS
New.
sp®-.* -purpose
’BM eqi-.pmert
co m p le te wi t h sym b ol* D raft-ng and
duplicating serv ice* Open until IO OO
p. rn
ALDRIDGE TYPING SERVICE
BMW East 30th Street
GR 7-1 #96
GR 6-9367
ARTISTIC. ACCURATE TYPING. 25c
a page Minor correction* IBM tvpe-
writer Mr* Anthony. Northeast uni-
veraitv. GR 2-: .UU
MARTHA ANN ZIVLET
M B A
A eomplet# professional
typin* serv
ice tailored to the need* of I mvera-
itv students Spec,al keyboard equip
ment for language- science and engi
neering these* and dissertation*
Phone GR 2-3210 A GR 2-7677
3013 GUADALUPE
EXPERIENCED TYPING SERVICE
reasonable, near Anan
Accurate,
da! e. HO 5-5813
ACCURATE TYPING-ALL forms. Mrs
McDonald HI 34)103
ACCURATE TYPING BY FORMER
legal secretarv with BBA In secretar
IBM Executive electric
studies
ial
GL 3-8651).
_____ _________
PORTS.
DISSERTATION!, T H E S E S . RF
corrected
Thoughtfully
skillful!'- tvped by cxper-enced
full
time operator of *ym bol-equipped eiec
tromati® Mr* Ritchie
c!o
fapanas* »*yff campus. 3108 Spe#dw-ay.
GR 8-521J after «
__________
H ouses— Unfurnished
Furnished
R oom s
CAPRI TERRACE A rn a
aoli Whitis
I bedroom a yr Just vacated Nev* arc
car
-
modern W'ood pan# cg
a ’i fleet rte kitrh#’'
to campus All bill*
peted
G.oa*
duced '-a»e« for lees*
Manager — GR 7-4513 a"**'
3 FURNISHED APARTMENTS
I x#
*-ag® 2 boy* or m an and wife zfL
G ua d alu p e
C/h a/C TR EM EN DO! ? LAK F HONE Fire
full baths 15
ll
paid P.®
29 minutes to
ff »est * de of
GF, 8-6691, GR
minutes to dou mow r
3 no po- Uni v e rs ? MOS Rockr
i^k# Dr SIS®
pis'-® 3 bedroom* 2 full baths
w ®*t
2-6579
EXTRA NXC* E l’RNIS HED
room
\f-Hr t r.'xersttv Male grttd;.a»e stu
dent No drinking smoking GR 7-
685S
MALE STUDENT. QI I ET, nicely f r
nighed K'tcnen p r ' ieges UU tie*
paid Ne«r campus. *25 a month GR
2.3896
M iscellaneous
DELAFIELD
Grammar,
TYPING
20c
spelling cotractloii.
2-6522.
SHORT ON TYPING
Graham GL 3-5725
TIME? Miss
?rs REASONABLY. A
MRS ALBRIGHT will type vmur pa
RATEI.Y.
rrs REASONABLY. A C C U " ------
7-0094.
COMPETENT and HIGHLY
EXPERIENCED SECRETARIAL
and TYPING SERA CF.
Distinct,va accurate
IBM
Eieo-rnmaU® Brief* <®m’n»r paper* a
« «o *
to
it O ff State* R *4mg
ca"-p .»
$ 5 5 .0 0
m o o 'h — All B lls
P aid
G R 2-7611
Su m U y , N o v « a b « r IS , 1964 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g * 4
D raftin g
CAPH AL DRAFTING SERVICE. 1405
Lavaca NR 2-89/1 Thesis draft mc
ie*ter ng. chart*, graphs
m*< oanlrai
and map*
Lost and Found
CNY SET O' KEYS- for Volkswagen
end nous# Call Mike et, GR *-
6130 a. f t> r 5________________________
A lterations
R E P O R T S
riONS IBM
nam GR 2-473 3
THESES DISSERT A*
Mrs Brady. 2317 Old-
TYPING LOW RATES
Guaranteed, GL 3-5124 Mrs, TuRo*
Sa’Uf&rtlon
Thr*® peers
THE NIGHT OWLS
student typing d otation, deliver* Rea
son* b> 2811 Rio Grande GR 2-60S3
WA 6-.*74
EXPERIENCED SECRETARY ELEC-
T ROMATIC University area. Helen
Pfaefflin GR 8-5446
Sewing
DRESSMAKING AND ALTERATIONS
Phone GR
Pick-up and deliver?
61795 After 6 pm.
G R 8 3336
EXPERT ALTERATIONS DONE on
men s clothing Reasonably priced
at Henry Jacobsen’s Men's Wear. 2332
Guadalupe
H arold Philipp Scores
. . . UT fullback goes in standing up.
-Taxan Photo Gosratt
Joy Supreme in Ozarks
McReynolds Leads
Hogs Find Cotton:
Decimate S M U , 44-0
Owls Past Aggies
F A Y E T T E V I L L E . A r k . — < . - F ^ T h i r d - r a n k e d A r k a n s a s
v a u l t e d i n t o a C o t t o n B o u l b e r t h a n d a s s u r e d I t s e l f o f a
tie for the Southwest Conference title by pulverizing South
ern M e t h o d i s t University 44-0
homecoming Saturday.
T h e R a z o r b a c k * , w i t h a 9 - 0 r e c o r d , c a n w in t h e c o n
f e r e n c e
t i t l e o u t r i g h t a n d f i n i s h a n u n b e a t e n s e a s o n b y
b e a t i n g T e x a s T e c h in L u b b o c k n e x t S a t u r d a y .
A r k a n s a s p o w e r e d 6 5 , 5 0 , a n d 5 0 y a r d s w i t h s t e a m
HOUSTON —
js it ic r c
CHICKEN • SHRIMP • BAR-B-QUE RIBS • RISH • PIZZA
Victor has an ideal location. A distinctive
FREE DELIVERY
C A L I
G R 6-6216
ll a.m.-1 p.m.; S II p.m. W eekday?
It a.rn.-11 p.m. Set., Sun. I Holiday?
1608 LA V A C A
atmosphere with a variety of good food.
Ample free parking in the front or rear of
c h r i s t i e '/
O N T O W N L A K E
IDS BARTON SPRINGS ROAD
GR 8-1625
W H EN IT COMES TO
PIZZA
Coma to th#
__
Fast DeLv©ry ROME INN
',rVK'“
GR 6-All I
STOP BY OUR UNIQUE
SADDLE TAP BAR
FERRARI PIZZA
Sen mg:
frt’h Pitta - AUO — Sausage and
Meatball Sandwiches
Orders to
Take Out
GL 2-3771
Workday*
Fri. 4 Sat.
I I a.m, til I I p.m.
I a.m.
I I a m. til
34th & Lamar
WfW MPMMi
the restaurant.
SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS OF
ITALIAN FOOD, STEAKS, AND FRIED CHICKEN
Vidor'., Alation V IL
t a n V i l l a g e
2910 Guadalupe
GR 6-1600
The G R O T T O
2607 Guadalupe (On the Drag)
"Behind th# W en dell
★ Party room for groups
★ Large parking area
across from Kinsolving
★ Quick Ready-to-Serve luncheons
“ Get back to class on time”
ic This week's special:
Chopped Sirloin Steak— $1.19
cole slaw , french fries and drink
For Mexican Food
A t Its Very Best
It S c J c i ( K a l o n a
Austin s Newest Mexican Restaurant
Featuring Mexican D slits of A
I y p ti * nd Our Own Sptcia ry,
STEAK A ’ LA M E X I C A N A
SUNDAY SPECIAL
IFULL ORDER OF
BEEF TACOS
49c
Private Parties Invited
3701 AIRPORT BLVD.
STRAIGHT OUT MANOR RD. TO AIRPORT BLVD.
BREADED VEAL CUTLET
— with —
•
— or —
MASHED POTATOES
CREAM GRAVY
FRENCH FRIES • COLE S L A W
ONION RINGS
— PLUS—
BUTTERED BUN • COFFEE OR ICED TEA
While You're There, Go Upstairs and Visit With
Your Friends at the Orange Bull Lounge
2?th & C u.uialu?*
Fem ) of free Parking
Sunday, Novtmber IS, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page E
Rosseris 'Lilith' Flourishes Emotions
*Lfirth.** S th* Tex&s Tbitter,
ti arr m % Jean 5*h**r and IT arren
Beatty: directed by Robert Rnssen;
Colombia Picturer.
By JIM SfflTW Om
AmiMtwrwml# Editor
"Lfllth” I* a atrange, disturb
ing, and exciting motion picture
It i* a satisfying. unique combina
tion of toro fin# performers, a sen
attire director, and a strong script.
Director Robert R osser uses his
cam era like a fine quill pen, ex
ecuting visual flourishes that some
times nearly obscure the heart of
his story. But there a the point—
he nearly, not quite, does so, and
th# story Itself is a long flowery'
flourish of sensations and other
worldly detachment.
world upsid# down wh#n sh# was
18. He w restles with th# im possi
bility of th# a ffa ir; sh# vacillates
between lovelust for him and a f
fection for another patient, whom
she sees as her brother,
Lilith
Is a patient at Poplar
institu
Lodge, a private mental
tion Warren Beatty, fresh out of
the Army, comes looking for a Job
where he “ can help people di
in
re ctly /’ He falls
love with Lilith, a patient since the
death of her brother turned her
irretrievably
their
to he
little m ore
j Both Beatty and Seberg
(a s
role# well.
Lilith) handle
Beatty, who has henceforth ap
peared
than
another Troy Donahue—for what
ever distinction that m ay he —
show’s considerable acting skill. He
is soft-spoken, gentle, persuasive.
M iss Seberg is an Ideal Lilith.
Her wispy hair and her waspish
manner, plus R ossen’s soft-focus
technique in many of her close-ups.
evoke a m isty, m ysterious mood
around her.
| At tim es R ossen’s visual poetry
j is m agical. He use# excruciating,
j painfully long dissolves, hand held
cam era, quick cutting, and blurs
with good
taste. One especially
m em orable scene Is on the bank of
a m ist - enshrouded river. Lilith,
skirt up and wading in the Ava ter,
then disappears be-
m aterializes
j fore Beatty through the fog. Her
sylph-like figure seem s bound to
nothing more substantial than a
soft breeze.
This
“ David
and Lilith’*
Is
a n o t h e r stepping-stone, albeit
sm all, for the film Industry along
towards maturity'. Not
the path
only is insanity candidly presented,
but we see an attendant “ involved’’
with a beautiful young p a tie n t-
frank! y and without apology.
Rossen
is a m ajor artist, and
this is a m ajor film.
Changing Scene
To Be Discussed
“ The Changing College Scene as
Depicted in Current M ovies” will
be discussed at 9:45 p.m. Sunday
J in the mezanine of the Paramount
Theater.
Boh B ren h am , director of the
Methodist Student Center, will lead
; the discussion of college m orals.
to all
The discussion
la open
students. Coffee will he served.
C o w b o y M in s t r e ls E n to m b
’B la c k F a c e ’ in P o o r S h o w
By B IL L VANDIVER
Amusements Staff
A minstrel show is supposed to
he bitingly funny. It is supposed
to be spicy, wicked, and timely.
This concept of
the minstrel
show w as completely destroyed by
the Cowboys Friday night in G reg
ory Gymnasium .
TH E E F F E C T of the whole show
was wrongly predicted by the in
first stepped
terlocutor when he
onto
stage and apologized:
“ We do not want to offend any
one.”
the
The Cow’bovs'
tame, warmed
over, and often-forgotten lines suc
ceeded only in offending.
In a true satirical minstrel show,
the end men would have humor
ously and effectively
the
pickets, Assem bly, and Texan to
task.
taken
But the*# wert mentioned only
in passing.
TH E FI^NNT or funniest — de
pending on your sense of humor —
joke of the evening w as told by
end men Hattie Lou Hottime and
0 . Reginald Cutter.
SW ITCHING
TO A PIPE?
SAVE UP TO 25% ON
PIPES
• T O B A C C O S
• PIPE R A C K S
• P O U C H E S
• LIGHTERS
• BBB
• Lotwe
# Ounhill
# Im port*
• M e d ic o
• Yallobole
• Kayw oodia
Ladies' Pipes
SPARTAN DISCOUNT
SM O K E SHOP
5501 Airport Blvd.
“ Have you heard they were go
ing to have a sorority virgin pa
rade down Guadalupe but had to
cancel it ? ”
“ No. Why?”
“ Because one got sick and the
other didn’t want to walk alone.”
THE LOW POINT of the eve
ning was a nine-song intermission
by the Baytown Singers Of g oal
joketeliing and bad and
and had
the Disneyland
good
folksinging,
group combined
the worst parts
of both.
Sheb Wooley added two elements
the show
lacked badly—he was
very loud and very enthusiastic.
Unfortunately, he didn’t stick to
singing. He relied on patter and
half-baked
jokes to carry across
to the audience. Somehow, though,
the idea of a man in a tuxedo and
cowboy boots, pretending to be
drunk on
seem s enormously pathetic.
stage,
and
singing,
DURING THE WHOLE SHOW,
when the Cowboys told jokes, they
looked around as if they expected
a picket to stand up. None ever
did.
You cannot have a half-hearted
minstrel show.
The Cowboys had black faces,
but they did not use accents. Such
is regrettable, because one with
out the other looks ridiculous. Til#
idea of black face, and the a c
companying accent, is to set th#
tone for a person poking fun at
what he sees around him.
While one cannot expect a pro
fessional performance from a m a
teurs. It would be only reasonable
to expect at least a college-level
production from these college stu
dents—a s opposed to th# Friday
night fiasco.
ENGLISH’S
A u stin ’s M ost
U n iq u e T a v e rn
Specializing In
The "T exas Style”
J
Corned Beef
Sandwich
Lunch-Dinner-E veilings
Carry-Out Service
3008
OX THE
DRAG
W t i v c H
■
THEATRE
I H a w I n t l
(RI
RE I
I Aw. j
B O X O F F I C E O P E N
A D M . 7 5 * K I D S U N D E R
* 80
l l F R E E
THE LIVELY SET
J a n i e * D a r r e n A P a m e la T if f in
T H
CHARADE
G a ry G r a a l A A n d r e * H e a b a T a
1 :3 5
mm D U K - I *
E
THEATRE
JSM Sa tent
B O X O F F I C E O P E N
« : » •
A d m . 7 5 *
K i d * C o d e r l l E r a *
THE NEW INTERNS
M ic h ae l C a lla n A B a r b a r a Edom
I N
OPERATION BIKINI
T a b H u n te r A F r a a k l # A r a i n *
C M
SENIORS
and
D O I U T H E R E K R E
r n , ....
^ (j © r r i i t
n _____
Bg—
JA
B o w n t o w n *
H a n c o c k t o o l
Hi-Performanc# Engineering
THE PIT STOP
Foreign Car Service
Anatto
W ti.
I .o tu a
A l t o s M a r tin
C o b r a
J a i n a r F o r r a .it M n i a r a t t l
A lf a R o m o *
T r iu m p h
C o o p e r
D a t s u n
A. C . B r i s t o l
19th A Guadalupe
(Behind The Pizza Hut)
C R A S S ’ S
P la y Tickets A v a ila b le
for
from
Reservations
the LDiver
sity dram a production of “ The
the S e a ” may be
lindy
m ade starting Monday at
the
Fine Arts Box Office bi Hogg
Auditorium.
^-N EA K PREVIEW
— p ion —
" S T R A I G H T
J A C K E T ”
w ith
J n an
C r a w f o r d
IIN T E R N S t
...and their n e w loves I
URN ET DRIVE-IN
THEATRE
Guadalupe
i C om a Sea a Raal Live O r a n g * Bult—
I Today , the Lait Day!
No Cover Chary#
Weekday!— 3 p.m.— 12 p.m.
~ ,
Saturdays— 3 p.m.— I a.m.
«.
,
.
I
For Those 21 and O ver W ith Discriminating Taste
"irtlll'jgllHilllRIIRIMfL^lWIBIWiaiWllflWIIWIFIIlWll'IRiRiMRTIWWilMBBWBBMHWWRRIRHWRRIIlllBIWRIWRBIIRWHBWRRRIHRRRiRIRHIBIHRRIIWIHIRIBRRReRBh^
C a p i t a l PlftJ-a O L i 7 6 4 *
W a n t M y Lover Killed!
Fonda HuM ny Adams Wallet
STARTS THURSDAY
PARAM O UNT
“One of the mort imaginative
American cinema creations of
the year,'*
— J O H N B T S T T N
A m a r . - S t a t e s
Pullback Seals • Free PS T I • Art Collery * largest Screen id fie Southwest
J B l -O O I!— C U R D L I N G ITB A T U B E #
EXCLUSIVE FIRST AUSTIN SHOWING
HERCULES
tSHAUHTW
WORLD
T E C H N IC O L O R
TOTAL SCOPE
CHIEF Dr
Stitt I N ,
I .A M A K
KULM
LimOF MOOD
# # # i w W M #
AUSTIN Theatre
S I S #
S. C O N G R E S S
H,»ft O f f i c e A
'■•nark
l i a r
H r r r u l e *
Often fi P .M .
ti 45 10:CM* < n a t l * 8 3#
I r»»»* Kidcft o n “ I , ii T o o t ”
F I R S T
” < CS I |,F .”
’ II I fit I I K S ”
SH O W
1:45
I 50-5 OO X I *
.7 30-6 tit 9 M
*• im*«I i’ Gonraiea I ' a r i a l
W r O F F A L L S T I ’D E N T S
IN P E R SO N TMI W O R ' D v a m o t ’$
Bn--n m m e n d e d
A a A d u lt
F . n t e r t a i n m e n t
Ope*
I . 45
F e a t u r e #
2-4 6 8-10
€ R A N i> O LE
★ O P R Y *
IN PERSON
r n
H A N K SN O W
PLUS . . . " M R . NO. V
BUCK O W EN S
JO S E M O L I N A SPAN ISH B A L L E T
e n t e r t a i n i n g
Now York Tira**
m t n n m
Ronton Re* ord American S' I KKR
e x p e r t
PltUbtUKh P<>«t GaMtt*
Ann Arbor New*
New York Herald Tribune cpi fvtiity
*&. a A..' I A.*
Cleveland Pr*a* _
. _
.
Washlnrton Evattln* Star
Spr*n(tnpld. M a**. Union
n *T '*"• ^ * D ia ry
F L A W L E S S
TJIOKENDOUS
H onolulu Sta r Bu lletin
Ann Rarz*l, D an e * M a *.
D A Z Z L I N G
KXPLOSIYK
ES El TY I T tC*91
FT .E G A N T
BRAVO
I N A N I MOUSILY ACCLAIM ED
M UNICIPA L AUDITORIUM
T i c k e t * a n d M a ll O r d e r * : Blomqulat-Clark,
R e c o r d S h o p , I n iv e r a it v C o o p
in., boy, JO, 8:15 PM.
I L , I L , Si., and S i
w ith . . .
M ISS S K E IT H DAVIS
Ll TTH JIMMY D IC K E N !
WILLIE NELSON
M ISS C O N N IE SMITH
BA T FRUSHAY
JO H N N Y REXX
A lto tho Honk Snow an d
Buck O w e n * B a n d *.
|
Austin M unicipal
A U D IT O R IU M
M O N., NOV. 16th,
7 :3 0 P.M.
Tickets N ow On Sal#
6enenl Admission
Adult* S I.7 5 (child andor 12) $1 OO
Alf IS U TOTE M Store* Roco'd Shop.
RI nor Conoco, Garland's Fiat To*
!*•*■
Roaorvod Soot B a tel $2.75 al
Monteoo*er
S. CHECO RESTAURANT
H A N C O C K CENTER
?*Thtameunt
^PREVIEW■to d a y;
C O M E BE I WEEN
6:00 A N D 8:00 AND
SEE SNEAK PLUS
“P A JA M A PARTY"
3:45 P.M.
SEE THIS MATINEE
S H O W IN G A N D A VO ID
THE N IG H T C R O W D S!
A n n . T # 1
mix
sa
c h m n
PARAMOUNT
F T A T m F 51
I 4ft-S: 2* -5 (Hi
a 4o.« ■■
UMER* MUM MAXIMUM SCHEI
A
HUTH) ARTISTS
FREE PARKING 7th & L A V A C A S T S
VARSITY
The most honored series en motion acture history I
STARTS
TODAY!
S e * ‘ • P I R R I ” a t
tmi s t o a t Of
P e r n
A T r * * - t o p W o r ld of Action
D r a m a a n d E x c it e m e n t!
Vith -HAIM BIRDS" and "GOLIATH U"
STARTS T H U R S D A Y !
3
D A YS
O NLYI
Jungle Cat
T h * S t o r y o f t h # J a g u a r . ^
R u l# r o f t h # A m a z o n !
BHI "KAVE! VAHEY" and “MOAR! AUK"
I
FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P M O N LOTS
Sunday, November J 5, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6
A D JA C EN T TO THEATRE
UT Orchestra, Cellist
To A p p e ar in C oncert
The University Symphony Or
chestra with Dr. Henry Swoboda
conducting and Leslie Parnas,
cellist, will present the Friday
evening concert of the 23rd An
nual Fine Arts Festival. The con
cert will be in Hogg Auditorium
at 8:15 and there will be an ad
mission charge of 75 cents. Tick
ets may he purchased
in a d
vance or at the box office the
evening of performance.
Dr. Henry Swoboda joined the
University music faculty this fall
the orchestra.
as conductor of
Prior to coming to Texas he was
conductor of
the Harvard-Rad-
cliffc Orchestra. What Dr. Swo
boda took to Harvard and now
brings to Texas is a musical c a
reer that spans more
than 40
years and three continents. He
is known in this country primal
iiy through his numerous record-
UT Woodwinds
To Play Nov. 22
final concert of
The University Woodwind Quin
tet, Emmett Yokes, piano and
Li ta Guerra, piano, will present
the
the 23rd
Annual Fine Arts Festival. The
c o n c e r t will be
in Recital
Hall at 4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 22,
and is a special presentation of
the Department of Music.
Members of the Quintet are
John Hicks, f l u t e ; Raymond
Schroeder, clarinet; George Yae-
gor, French horn; Jam es Dickie,
bassoon; and Richard D. Blair,
oboe. Each member, in addition
to being on the faculty of the
Department of Music, is a per
forming artist with various sym
phony groups.
Faculty artist Em m ett Yokes,
piano, will appear with the Quin-
tet in a performance of Mozart's
Quintet in E-flat for Piano and
Winds. K.452. Yokes has per
formed extensively as a concert
artist.
Faculty a r t i s t Lita Guerra,
flutist
in Sonata for Flute and
piano, will accompany
Hicks
Piano by Francis Poulenc.
Hicks has been first flutist of
the San Antonio Symphony for
more titan ten years. He was also
first flutist with the Boston Pops
Orchestra during its 1%G season
the
Quintet, has been a member of
the Cincinnati Orchestra, and
Cincinnati Wind Quintet and the
Cincinnati Little Symphony Or
chestra.
Schroeder, clarinetist of
Y aeger is associate conductor
of the San Antonio Symphony as
well as first homist and has also
been first homist with the Okla
hom a Symphony Orchestra,
Dickie was for five years first
bassoonist with the Houston Sym
phony Orchestra prior to joining
the Music faculty at UT.
Blair is oboe principal of the
Austin Symphony Orchestra and
performs with other principal
symphonies over the state.
ings, mostly with
the Vienna
Symphony Orchestra and guest
appearances have
taken him
around the world many times,
performing with such orchestras
as the Berlin and London Phil
harmonic.
Parnas studied on a scholar
ship at Curtis Institute of Music
with Gregor Piatigorsky, making
bis debut when he was 14 with
the St. Louis Symphony. He be
came tho principal cellist of the
St. Louis Symphony, and has
since been principal cellist with
the Aspen Festival, the Chautau
qua Symphony, and performed at
the Marlboro Festival of Music.
He was chosen by the New
Yolk Violoncello Society as the
outstanding cellist in the United
States
to represent our country
a t die Casals International Con
cours
in Paris w here he won
first prize. He w as also the re
cipient of the Trnfeo Prtmavera
Italian Radio Network
of
the Harriett
Competition, and
international
Cohen Medal, an
award for m usical superiority.
the
Although Parnas was already
knou'n to the musical world, his
.success in the 1962 Tchaikowsky
in Moscow brought
Competition
him into the headlines.
In 1963, he appeared at Carne
gie Hall with Boris Gutnikov, So
viet Violinist, and Izler Solomon
with the Symphony of the Air.
During the sam e season. Pamas
performed again at Carnegie
Hall with the Marlboro Festival
group with Rudolph Sorkin and
Jaim e Laredo in ne Beethoven
Triple Concerto. Mr. Pam as has
made three concert tours in Eur
through
ope and appears here
the Leventritt auspices.
T ie
symphony program
for
Friday evening includes Mozart's
“ Masonic Funeral Music,” K.V.
“Epitaph
477; Lothar Klein's
III” ; Barbar’# “Concerto for Vi
oloncello and Orchestra,” Op. 22;
and K o d a1 y ’ s “ Harv Janoe
Suite.”
Sunday Concert
To Begin Week
The 23rd Annua! Fine Arts
Festival o f f i c i a l l y opens at
4 p.m. Sunday with a band-
choral concert sponsored by the
Department of Music. The Uni
versity Symphonic Band and the
A Cappella Choir, accompanied
by a brass ensemble, will present
the concert in Hogg Auditorium.
The art exhibits and som e pro
grams of the Conference on Fine
Arts Criticism ar e free. A charge
of 75 cents is made for the even
ing conc eras on Monday through
Wednesday. Friday, and Satur
day. The concert Thursday, Geza
Anda, pianist, is free to season
ticket holders and $17.99 Blanket
Tax holders who have drawn
tickets.
Concert tickets are on sale ut
the Fine Arts Box Office in Hogg
Auditorium.
Fine Arts Festival Opens
For Week of
Art
The drumfire of cultural events
at the University mounts to a
barrage each November during
the annual Fine Arts Festival.
The 1964 festival, sponsored by
the College of Fine Arts and it s
Departments of Art, Music and
Drama, will be held Sunday
through Nov. 22 with a full range
of art exhibits, concerts, drama
and dance demonstrations,
lec
tures, and panel discussions.
The School of Journalism this
year joins the festival as co-spon
sor of a Conference on the Press
and
the Fine Arts, Thursday
through Saturday. Fine arts crit
ics from across Texas will par
ticipate with faculty and visiting
artists in discussions and panels.
A featured speaker will be Al
fred Frankenstein, San Francisco
Chronicle critic, who will lecture
on “The Newspaper’s Role in the
Community’s Fine Arts Develop
m ent,” at 1:30 p.m. Friday
in
the Art Building Auditorium.
For
conference visitors
the
Drama Department will demon
strate some of
the production
processes involved in its recent
staging of Ben Johnson’s “Bar
tholomew Fair.”
The School of Architecture par
ticipates for the second year in
the f e s t i v a l with a Monday
through Saturday photographic
exhibit of “The New Philhar
monic In New Berlin,” concern
ing the work of German archi
tect Hans Scharoun. The exhibit
will be in Architecture Building
118 and in the corridor adjacent
to Room 105.
The School of Architecture also
will sponsor a public lecture by
Prof. Henry Kamphoefner, dean
of the North Carolina State Col
lege School of Design. He will
speak at 4 p.m. Thursday in Arch
itecture Building 105 on “ Two
South American Designers.”
athleticism
The collaboration b e t w e e n
Hawkins and Miss Dlugoszewski
Is unique in that the dances are
first completely composed in si
lence and the music is composed
as an equal theater to exist side
by side with the dance. The m u
sic for “Early Floating”
is for
“ timbre” piano performed by
Miss Dlugoszewski. For “Geog
raphy of Noon,” the music is for
a little orchestra of invented per
instruments performed
cussion
by Miss Dlugoszewski on stage.
“Clown Is Everyone’s Ending,”
a solo by Hawkins, and “Love
Itself Transparent,”
S h o u t s
danced by Nancy Meehan and
Hawkins, will also be performed.
Doors of Hogg Auditorium open
at 7:30 p.m. the night of the con
cert.
G U S T A V L E O N H A R D T
Several exhibits will be fea
tured in the Art Museum during
the festival. In the main gallery
Is a retrospective showing of
more than 60 paintings by Jack
Tw’orkov, a
leading American
abstract artist. The mezzanine
gallery yields “ IOO American
Master Drawings” from the col
lection of Paul Magriel, New
York art collector. The Magriel
in
collection show-s how styles
drawing have changed and de
veloped in the last 150 years.
In
the
the Music
loggia of
Building is an exhibit of prints,
drawings, paintings, and crafts
by Art Department students.
A concert each day will he
among the festival's attractions,
in
beginning at 4 p.m. Sunday
Hogg Auditorium with a concert
by
the University Symphonic
Band, directed by Dr. J. Frank
Elsass. Appearing with the band
will be the A Capella Choir under
the direction of Dr. M o r r i s
Beachy.
The Gallmir String Quartet
from New York, an American
ensemble, presents concerts at
8:15 p.m. Monday and Wednes
day
in the Music Building Re
cital Hall.
Two Dutch musicians, Frans
Bruggen and Gustav Leonhardt,
will give an unusual recorder-
harpsichord recital at 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday in the R ecital Hall.
Renowned Hungarian pianist.
Geza Anda, will appear at 8:15
in Hogg Audi
p.m. Thursday
torium as the second guest
in
the Music Department’s Solo
Artist Series. His performance
w'as arranged to coincide with
the Fine Arts Festival.
The 70-piece University Symph
ony Orchestra, under the baton
of its new conductor, Dr. Henry
Swoboda, performs a program of
Mozart and contemporary music
at 8:15 p.m. Friday in Hogg Au
ditorium. Guest soloist will he
cellist Leslie P am as, a prize
winner from the 1962 Tschaikov-
sky International Competition in
Moscow'.
The Department of Drama and
Music will sponsor a program of
contemporary choreography per
formed by Erick Hawkins and
Dance Company, at 8:15 p.m.
Saturday in Hogg Auditorium.
Closing the 23rd annual Fine
Arts Festival Sunday, Nov. 22,
will be a 4 p.m. concert by the
University Woodwind Quintet
in
the Recital Hall. The quintet,
composed of Music Department
includes Rav-
faculty members,
mon Schroeder, clarinet; Jam es
L. Dickie, bassoon; John Hicks,
flute: Richard D. Blair, oboe,
and George Yaeger, French horn.
Third Concert
Features Duo
The third concert of the Fine
Arts Festival Tuesday evening
features F r a n s Bruggen, re
corder, and Gustav Leonhardt,
harpsichord. Sponsored by
the
Department of Music, the concert
will be in Recital Hall at 8:15
p.m. Tickets may be purchased
in advance at the Bine Arts Box
Office in Hogg Auditorium or at
Recital Hall, the evening of per
formance. Admission price is 75
cents.
Bruggen w’as born In 1934 in
Amsterdam. After f i n i s h i n g
grammar school, he studied the
long flute at the Amsterdam Con
servatory. For three years be
ginning in 1952, he studied the
Science of Music at the Amster
dam University, and as a secon
dary subject took lectures on the
German flute which he now plays
with Quadro Amsterdam.
Leonhardt, bom in 1928 In Hol
in Holland
land. studied music
and Switzerland. Having finished
his harpsichord and organ studies
cum laude at the Basle Schola
Cantorium, he was appointed pro
fessor of musicology and harpsi
chord at the Vienna State Aca
demy of Music in 1952 and tho
following year received a similar
appointment at the Amsterdam
Conservatory.
Leslie Parnas, A cclaim ed Cellist
. . , will appear with University orchestra In concert.
This a ft e r n o o n a joint concert b y the U n i
versity's S y m p h o n i c B a n d a n d A C a p p e l l a
C h o i r o p e n s the C o l l e g e of Fine A r t s T T w e n t y -
third A n n u a l Fine Arts Festival.
The e xi ste nc e of suc h a festival is, in itself,
a salute to the C o l l e g e . But a festival d i s p l a y
i n g suc h a br e a d th of artistic e n d e a v o r s is a
s t a n d i n g , irrefutable c o m p l i m e n t to the stat
ure of o ur fine arts p r o g r a m .
The p ast t w o yea rs h a v e seen the a d d i
tion of t w o fine n e w b u i l d i n g s to the C o l l e g e ' s
p h y s i c a l facilities. A n d this year, for the first
time, the C o l l e g e is o ff e r i n g a Doctorate
in
M u s i c a l Arts.
W e a p p l a u d the ma turi ty w h i c h the C o l
l e g e of Fine Arts se e m s n o w to h a v e r e a c he d;
w e e n c o u r a g e t h e m to c o nti nue , t h r o u g h v e
hicles suc h as this fine arts festival, to g r o w
t o w a r d s their i de a l of e xc el le nc e.
J i m S e y m o u r
A m u s e m e n ts Editor
illlllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIWIIIIIIIlllllllimillllllllllWIII—IIIIIIIHWIIIIIIMIIII
C o n c e rt S chedule
All concerts are at 8:15 p.m. unless noted otherwise.
Sunday, a t 4 p.m. the University Symphonic Band, J .
F ran k Elsass, conductor, with the A Cappella Choir in
H ogs Auditorium.
Monday, the Galimir String Q uartet first concert in
the Music Building Recital Hall.
Tuesday, F rans Bruggen and Gustav Leonhardt, re
corder harpsichord in Recital Hall.
Wednesday, the Galimir String Q uartet second con
cert in Recital Hall.
Hogg Auditorium.
Thursday, Geza Anda, piano, the Solo A rtist Series in
Friday, the University Symphony Orchestra, Henry'
Swoboda, conductor, soloist I^eslie P am as, cello, in Hogg
Auditorium.
Saturday, Erick Hawkins and Dance Company in Hogg
Auditorium.
Sunday, Nov. 22 a t 4 p m. the University Woodwind
Hiwm mw**1'’ w y e
Quintet in Recital Hall.
Society to Meet
I
The Texas Chapter of
the
American Musicological Society j
m eets in Music Building 105 Sat- j
urday In conjunction with the 23rd
Annual Fine Arts Festival.
The morning session gets un
derway at 10:30 with a study en
titled “The Trompette Marine in
Eighteenth Century France” pre
sented by Cecil Adkins of North
Texas State University. Follow
ing will be papers by Ronald
Booth of Mississippi State College
for W’omen with “Stephen Heller:
A Transitional Composer” and
Hans-Heinz Draeger’s presenta
tion “ From the Salzburg Con
gress: Musical Analysis on tho
Basis of the Information Theory.”
The 2 p.m. session will include
“ Some Remarks Concerning the
Relation between Dynamics and
Form in Works of the Viennese
Classics,”
by Harms - Bertold
Dietz; “ The Fifteenth Century
Meaning of
the Term Faux-
bourbon” by Ernest L. Trumble
of the University of Oklahoma;
and
“ Reconstructed Rhythms;
Apropos of A m e r i c a n Folk
Hymns” by Professor Emeritus
Henry PL Meyer of Southwestern
University.
Erick Hawkins Demonstrates Dance
. . . choreographer will appear in Saturday performance.
Drama Department to Reveal
New Choreography Technique
The Department of Drama will
present Erick H a w k i n s and
Dance Company at 8:15 p.m. Sat
urday in Hogg Auditorium. The
program continues a w'cek of
concerts and activities of
the
23rd annual Fine Arts Festival.
Advanced tickets may be ob
tained at Hogg Auditorium Fine
Arts Box Office for 75 cents or
m ay be purchased the night of
the performance.
Erick Hawkins
choreographs
with the idea of the human body
in mind. He says, “ When chore
ographers say their work is for
movement for its owm sake like
colors and shapes and sounds, I
know this is not possible, because
choreographers are dealing with
flesh and blood. No matter how
you move Victorian
furniture
around in a room, it will always
end up looking Victorian unless
you change the furniture, if you
give men and w'omen dehuman
ized. ‘cool,’ blase movements to
do, no matter how you rearrange
them, they still will look like tile
'cool,’ precise technicians of ab
stract, modern, and ballet dance
of recent tim es.”
If you give them cruel, neurot
ic movements such as so much
modern dance vocabulary uses,
you could be choreographing a
dance about flowers, but the au
dience will know there are men
and women hating each other on
sta g e.”
In an effort to break this de
personalized or neurotic relation
between men and women, Haw
kins was challenged into invent
ing a new technique and vocabu
lary that emphasized a kind of
“sensuous humanism” with a
new degree of subjective
inti
m acy.
H a w k i n s was soloist with
George Balanchine of the New
York City Ballet and was with
Martha Graham. In finding the
real creation of his art form, he
has teamed with Lucia Dlugos-
zewksi, composer, pianist, poet,
and pupil of Ben Weber and
Crete Sultan.
Miss Dlugoszewski and Haw
kins have taken portions of the
world and a new “ vision
of
sound and movement to create a
“holy, c o m i c , and graceful”
study of being. They have ob
served a pine tree, rain, a cloud.
a summer fly, a squash, pared
them down and by observing
them anew with minds that take
nothing for granted, have point
ed out a certain shape of the
world.
Three of the dances to be per
formed by Hawkins and m em
bers of the company are “Early
Floating,” “Geography of Noon,”
and “Cantilever.” They continue
to express the concrete, pure fact
that has always
of movement
been Hawkins’ particular direc
tion. Unlike many avant-garde
experiments
in shock, violence,
and chaos, these dances investi
gate, instead, new possibilities of
beauty and sensitivity and a sen
suous rather than an aggressive
F O R G I R L S W H O A R E . . .
recommends
our Sanitone
drycleaning
W e , too, like girls w ho are. A n d
like P a n tin o , w e ’re d e d ic a te d to
keeping them looking that w ay—*
w i t h o u r f a s t i d i o u s S a n i t o n e
d r y c l e a n i n g t h a t k e e p s t h a t
f a s h i o n a b l e l ook in all f e mi n i n e
sportsw ear.
J O B O P P O R T U N IT IE S
In The
European Com m unity
S U M M E R — Y E A R ' R O U N D
a lecture by
Mr. Frank X. Gordon, Executive Director
I N T E R N A T I O N A L S T U D E N T T R A VEL C EN T E R
In the
S T U D E N T U N I O N BLDG., 4, 8 P.M.
M O N D A Y , N O V . 16
T U E S D A Y , N O V . 17
J U N IO R B A L L R O O M
R O O M S 304 & 305
GR 2-3131
1STC o f t e n you th® o p p o r tu n it y to r*rn amt t r a m yo u r w a y in I ump*,
and a t te m p ts to m atch the- s t u d e n t to tho job. P ersonal
in te rview* ran
b o a r r a n g e d with Mr. Gord on , if d esired , o r a e ad $3 f o r a n n u al m e m b e r
ship to (STC. 30 Cortlandt S t.. .N Y. 7. N.Y.
OPEN A CO NVENIENT
CHARGE ACCOUNT
Sunday, November IS, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7
The most precious rings in 3 .-
wonfan’s life are her diam ond
engagem ent ring and wedding
band M atched m asterpieces
\
of ( ontem porary design are here
presented in brilliant array, from
the top $ 2 7 5 . $350, $500; $575.
$700; $1000. federal tax included
Term s if desired. Illustrations
enlarged Order by mail or phone
SW CONGRESS, Down town • GR 8-S496
• CAPITAL PLAZA SHOPPING CTR#
Two UT Rhodes Scholarship Representatives Selected
e Visitor Here
.al/iima
nt
the Computation Center Refer'
CHCO ROOHI.
Ex-Student Heads Corps
The director of a new Peace
Corps department la a University
ex-student.
Dr. Bascom Story, who received
a doctor of education degree from
the University in 1948, is now di
rector of university relations and
training.
Sigma Chi’s Give Crown
Judy Gable, a freshman, was
crowned Saturday as Miss Derby
Day by the Sigma Chi’s at the
Austin Country Club. Miss Gable
was selected from candidates of
various sororities.
Scientists Visit UT
To View Research
C L u r
Alain Robbe-Grillet, French nov
elist, will lecture in French a t 4
p.m. Monday in the Academic Cen
ter Auditorium. His topic will be
“ Noveau Roman et Nouveau Cin
em a.”
Robbe-Grillet will also have an
informal meeting with mem bers
the Romance Languages de
of
partm ent at IO a.m. in Batts Hall
201.
figure on
A controversial
the
French literary scene, Robbe-Gril
let is said to be one of the best
known w riters
the recent lit
in
erary school of the ‘‘Noveau Rom
an.” Tile group of w riters has
the past
come to prominence in
decade principally as
the result
of Robbe-Grillet's writings.
His novels have been published
in English under the titles “ The
E ra sers,” “ The Voyeur,” “ Jeal
ousy” and “ In the Labyrinth.” He
has also written two film scenarios,
“ LTm m ortelle” and “ Last Year
a t M arienbad.”
Serman subjects for Sunday ser
vices at University Baptist Church
are “ Reflections on Death’’ by Dr.
Blake Smith at l l a.m. and “ No
Mansion—Just a House” by Lee
Freem an at 7 p.m. A student dis
cussion will be held in the Student
Building r e c r e a t i o n room on
“ Hope.” and student fellowship is
scheduled at 9 p.m. at 3807 Mill
brook.
“ Interpreting the Modem Novel
in Theological Perspective” will be
given by the Rev. Keith Gerberd-
ing, teacher of Bible Chair, at a
Gamm a Delta meeting at 5 p.m.
at University Lutheran Church.
English m ass will be held at the
Catholic Student Center at 11:15
a.m. Newman Club will have Dr.
Irwin C. Lieb, professor of philoso
phy, speak on “ Job” at IO a.m. in
the Catholic Student Center.
“ The Revolution
in Reading:
From the Cradle to G rave” will
Nelson's G ifts
IN D IA N JEWELRY
M E X IC A N IMPORTS
4612 S. Congress
H I 4-3814
L O O K — Y O U R — BEST
C A P IT O L BEAUTY
College Hairstyling
OPEN 8 A M Til
IO PM
Phone GR 2-9292
16th A G uada. — PARK FREE
Law School Gets Fund
i A $50,000
trust fund has been
I
given the University School of Law
Foundation by George H. Coates.
in
honor of his brother, Houston a t
torney Francis G. Coates.
• a San Antonio oil operator,
The fund will be used to pro
mote completion and publication
of selected results of legal research
and study by students and faculty.
N e w Exch ange Pe nd in g
Volunteer room and board for
IO Colombian students is holding
up a student exchange with
the
University of Andes in Colombia,
Greg Lipscomb, Students’ Associa
tion president, said Saturday.
Tile program will send IO Uni
to study for a
versity students
the
year at
Andes, which in turn will send an
the University of
The University Faculty Council
will consider the report and rec
ommendation of the Committee on
Orientation, a report on the 1965-
to
66 Calendar, and a proposal
change University aptitude
test
score requirem ents, a t 2 p.m. Mon
day in English Building 201.
Dr. Lorrin Kennamer, associate
dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences, will present the report
on Orientation.
Tile Schedule Committee’s
re
port on the 1965-66 Calendar will
be presented by Dr. Charles T.
Zlatkovich, professor of account
ing.
W. Byron Shipp, registrar and
director of admissions, will pre
sent a proposal to change the test
score
for entering
freshmen.
requirem ents
The proposal will be to raise the
minimum cutting-off scores for en
tering
the second,
third, and fourth quarters of their
high school class.
freshmen
in
W ife of M inister Dies
Mrs. Edwina Heacock died Sat
urday of multiple sclerosis in J u
neau, Alas.
She was the wife of the Rev.
Richard K. Heacock J r., pastor of
the F irst Methodist Church in Ju
neau and the daughter of the Rev.
and Mrs. Edmund Heinsohn of
Austin. Mr. Heinsohn was for 25
years the m inister of University
Methodist Church.
“ N o u v ea u R om an et N o u v ea u Cin
e m a .” A ca d em ic C en ter a u d ito riu m .
4— In q u iry cia**, C a th o lic S tu d e n t Cen
te r
4 and 8 —F ra n k X. G ordon to sp eak
in th e E u ro
T e x a s U n ion
on “ J o b O p p o rtu n ities
p ea n C o m m u n ity ,”
J u n io r B a llro o m .
7 C ern in g lesso n . “ Y .”
7:.F>— G rand O le O pry F e stiv a l, M u n ici
pal A u d ito riu m ,
8 -A rch a eo lo g ica l S o c ie ty to h ear Mrs.
' A n
D o r o th v T h o m p so n
cien t B arks an d G ardens,*’ P h y sic s
B u ild in g 121.
s ix a k on
8 :1 5 — F in e
G ah m ir
S tr in g Q u a rtet, M u sic B u ild in g R e
c ita l H a ll.
F e s tiv a l:
A rts
p u r p l e
j •» c h i l d r e n nf m m ! T h e
a n i m a t i n g
f u n
“ O
th e
d a m e n t a l
I a ith o f G o d a n d Hi*
is
to s a f e g u a r d t h e I n t e r e s t s a n d pr o
m o t e t h e u n i t y o f t h e h u m a n r a r e .
a n d t o f o s t e r t h e s p i r i t o f l o v e and
f e l l o w s h i p a m o n g s t m e n . ”
I t c l i g i o n
R a h a ’ uT la h
OPEN M EETIN G
Sunday, Nov. 15th, 8 p.rn
Foreign Jobs A v a i l a b l e
Frank X. Cordon, executive
director of the International Stu
dent Travel Center, will speak on
“doh Opportunities in the Euro*
pean Community” at I and 8
p.m. Monday and Tuesday In
the Texas Union. On .Monday the
in the Junior
lectures will he
Ballroom, and Tuesday, in rooms
SOI and SO.!. Cordon will also
interview interested students.
For further Information, stu
dents may contact John II. Dod
son, director of Student Finan
cial Aids.
Gordon will discuss job oppor
tunities in Europe that are avail
able vear-round and summer.
Engineer W ill Lecture
Dr. Randal IL Wood, civil engi
neer with the British government’s
scientific and industrial research
departm ent, will visit the Univer
sity Monday
to
give two lectures and confer with
engineering faculty m em bers.
through Friday
He will dicsuss “ British Struc
tural D e s i g n and Construction
the
Practices’’ at a meeting of
student chapter of the American
Society’ of Civil Engineers at 7:30
O r i e n t a l Supper Su nd ay
A Japanese supper will he held
at 6 p.m. Sunday In Texas Union
Junior Ballroom by the Interna
tional Club.
Tickets are available in Texas
Union 350 and 312B.
Berlin Photos on Display
the
A photographic exhibit of
architectural design of
the new
Philharmonic Hall in West Berlin
will be on view in Architecture
Building 118 and in the corridor
adjacent
room 105 Monday
through Saturday.
to
The exhibit is p art of the Fine
Arts Festival. Berlin’s Philharm on
ic Hall was designed by German
architect Hans Scharoun, presi
dent of the Berlin Academy of Arts
and Letters and form er city plan
ning director for g reater Berlin.
Several of the photographs were
taken by Hugo Leipziger-Pearce of
the architecture faculty in Berlin
last sum m er.
UNlVmiTY BROADCASTS
Parks-Gardens Talk Set
Mrs. Dorothy B. Thompson of
the Institute for Advanced! Study
In Princeton. N. J., will lecture
on “Ancient Parks and Gardens”
at 8 p.m. Monday
in Physics
Banding 121.
Design Topic S cheduled
Henry L. Kamphoefner, dean of
the School of Design at North Car
olina State University, will speak
at 4 p.m. Thursday in Architecture
Building 105.
Dean Kamphoefner’s topic will
K l T F M . 90.7 mc
Sunday
2 . r o _ M u sic o f D is tin c tio n
4:00— U n iv e r sity C on cert
5 :0 0 —S eren a d e
6 :0 0 —G u ilty P a r ty
6 30— W eek en d N ew * R o u n d -U p
6 :45— T h is W eek at th e U N
T OO— T h e C rea tiv e M eth od
7 :30— S h a k e sp e a r e 400
8 30— BBG D ram a
9:30— S clen ce-B ctio n T h e a te r
Monday
2 o o _ K a le id o s c o p e
5:00—Serenade
6:00— S p e c ia l o f th e W eek
'CAUSE WE
CHARGE SO LITTIE
rent a car from
K G O N O - CJM
Wa f o e t o r * V» bant* 4 o*t»er
CHRYSLER built car*. Ga *—
oil—in su ra n ce—an in c lu d e d
MO EAST 7th
(Aero#* F ro m D ri«kllJ H o te l)
GR 8-7826
A pts.
2202, 2204
Enfield Rd.
MIDNIGHTER
vacancy
Come G e t It!
Breakfast Specials
M O N D A Y -F R ID A Y
5-11 A M
J *
W a
I Choice of Fruit Juice
I# One Egg
Toast and Coffee
AQ
■ / '
6 3 0 —S i m u l c a s t : P u b l i c Affairs
7 :0 0 — M usic
o f D is tin c tio n ;
" T h e
K e y b o a r d ’’
9 .4 5 —O m n ib u s O p in ion
Closed Circuit*
Monday
(C losed c ir c u it p ro g ra m s m a y be
t he
fo llo w in g b u ild in g s
v iew ed
la
B e n e d ict, M ezes,
B u sin e ss-
J o u rn a lism . E x p er im en
E co n o m ic* .
ta l S cien ce, G eo lo g y , S p eech , C h em
istr y . T e x a s U n ion , a n d A ca d em ic
C en ter A u d ito riu m , t
B a tts.
Closed Circuit, Channel 2
9 05— S c ie n c e fo r E lem en t& rv T e a ch
ers: R. T, Gary speaking on
“ External Combustion En
g in e s *
10 OI— A m erican H is to r y : D r. D a v id
B. T rim b le d isc u s sin g “ J e ffe r
so n ia n D e m o c r a c y ”
11 OO— A m erican C iv iliz a tio n :
R a y
Billington to speak on “ T h e
Trans-Appalachian F r o n tie r In
1820“
2 : 0 0 —C o lleg e C h e m istr y : D r L. O.
M organ to le c tu r e on “ M o lecu
la r W eig h ts"
RLRN-TV, Channel 9
Monday
§ 30—TV Kindergarten
9:00—History, Government
9:27 -Spanisn I
9 45— S p a n ish 3
10:07—Art, Music
10 3 0 —C o m m u n ity C a len d a r
10:35— S cien ce 8
11:03—Science 4
11 :25—N ew s
11 ;30— N igh N o o n
12 3->—C o m m u n ity C alen d ar
12:35— S p a n ish 3
1 :05— 11:sto r y . G o v ern m en t
1 :28—N ew *
1:35—Science 5
2:00—Spanish I
2 IS—S p a n ish 2
2 :3 7 —S c ie n c e 6
3 :0 0 — T r ia l bv J u ry
3 : 3 0 —B ig P ic tu r e
4:OO— T v K i n ! ergart< n
4 :3 0 — F u n W ith F u z zy
5 : 0 0 — W h a t’s New : “ In d ian D a n c e s”
5:30—Nigh Noon Highlights
6 30— E v e n in g N e w s
7 :0 0 -< n
“ T h e N e w L o o k
- - it n
in China"
7 30— S i r • 11>• B u s in e ss : With guest
th e College
p r o fesso rs
fr o m
o f B u sin e ss A d m in istra tio n
9 OO— A m e r e -a’s C rises: “ P a r e n ts ”
9 :0 0 — Now S y m p h o n y S e r ie s : T h e
H o u sto n Svmphony
OPEN 24 H O U R S
A D A Y
19th A N D
G U A D A LU PE
Choice of Bacon,
Sausage, or Ham, 2 Eggs
2 Pancakes or Toast Q Q
0 7 ^
and C offee
Register Now For
Students' Association O fficial
CHARTER FLIGHTS
Faculty!
Students!
Pay Only 10% Over Our Cost
-
ZENITH
NORGE
electronics
appliances
S T E V E S
4725 G U A D A LU PE
EUROPE
Next Summer
u U I
^ ounc^ ^ r'P
(Approx.)
Austin— L O N D O N — Austin
( L a it yaar’i ch a rte r wa* an early
flig h t* are el-
sell-out and 1965
reedy o n e-third
fu ll. Book early
to
imure your*e!f a place.)
For
Inform ation C a !l GR 2-4052
PHOTOG RAPHIC SUPPLIES
EXPERT C A M E R A REPAIR
Hallmark Cards and Tape Recorders
Studtman Photo Service
222 WEST I9 T H
GR 6-43
H A I R C U T S
OVERW EIGHT?
RING ROLLER
REDUCER
Feel relaxed, feel
young Again! The
King Roller Reducer,
exercises and
massages away
most unwanted
"bumps'1 and
' bulges'1 in a safe,
pleasant manner.
McBride’s
911 WEST 30+h ST.
GR 2-5194
Student
Ticket D ra w in g M o n d a y
the Texas-
tickets for
Texas A&M football gam e will be
available from 9 a.m . to noon and
from I to 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday at the Gregory Gym Ticket
Office. Tickets will riot be issued
the three days preceding the game.
GE to S h o w C om pu te r
A computer system designed
to save
time will be demon
strated by technical representa
tives of General Electric in the
Computation Center from 9 a.m.
to 4:45 p.m. Monday and Tues
day.
Manuals describing the com
in
puter system are available
Another College of Business Ad
m inistration officer runoff will be
held from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m. Wednes
day between sophomore president
nominees Wally Tingley and H arry
Smith. Each candidate received
59 votes in F rid ay ’s run-off.
Friday’s w i n n e r s were John
Goodman, receiving 113 votes to
Ron B ow yers 107 for freshm an
president, and Phil Ladin 120 to
Jerry Skibell’s 108 for freshman
vice-president.
Mac Dunwoody received 61 votes
to defeat Joe Shull, who got 57, In
the sophomore vice - presidential
race.
Winners in Wednesday’s election
were P erry Rushing, senior class
president; Tommy Cossey, vice-
president, and Betsy Schwarz, sec
retary.
Clyde Aldham was elected sopho
m ore secretary, and Mary Ellen
While freshman secretary’.
Sunday
—D r. Ir w in C. B le b to sp e a k to N e w
m a n C lub o n “ J o b ,” C a th o lic S tu
dent
t e n t e r .
,
.
art, M usic
.
1- 5
e x h ib it
o f
s tu d e n t
B u ild in g lo g g ia
2-5— R en tal e x h ib it: L a c u n a G loria.
2-6 E x h ib its: S o u th w e s te r n A d v e r tis
in g A rt: d r a w in g s b y J o h n G uerin
p a in tin g s b v Ja<’k Tv.ork.ov: and IOO
M a ster D r a w in g s from th e C o llectio n
! a u l M a g riel, A rt M u seu m ; 10-6
o f
S u n d a y
2-10 K IJT-FM 9 ° 7 w e ; and M onday.
2 -5—T e x a s M e m o ria l M u s e u m h o u rs .
3 - 5 - -E lisa b et N e v M useum hours
2 30—R e g is tr a tio n
S ocial
W e lfa r e C o n feren ce, S te p h en F , A u s
t in H otel
fo r T e x a s
1— U n iv e r s ity S y m p h o n ic Band co n cert
w it h Dr. J. F ra n k E lsa ss co n d u ct
in g H o g g A u d ito riu m .
4-6 K a ra te C lub, “ Y
6 U n ited
Student,
W est. T w e n tv -th ir d S t.
F e llo w sh ip .
4n *
7 45 Dr W illia m H ess to a d d ress Can-
te r b u r v A sso c ia tio n on “ T h e G reek
H e r ita g e
in J u d eo -G h ristia n T r a d i
t io n .” G reg g H o u se.
8— D isc u ssio n o n “ H o p e .” B a p tist S tu
d en t B u ild in g ,
la te r a t
t h e hom e o f M r. and M rs. N ed
M artin
fe llo w sh ip
8 D r E. E r n e st G o ld stein
to give
Puhi ie lectu re on “ E x trem ism - W ha!
N o w ? W h ith e r ? ” a t H ille l F o u n d a
tio n .
Monday
8 -in p m — P h o to g r a p h ic e x h ib it o f the
P h ilh a rm o n ic In N e w B e rlin , A rch i
te c tu r e B u ild in g 118
f-1 0 p.m . E x h ib it
o f
M u sic B u ild in g lo g g ia
stu d e n t
a rt.
8-5 - “ T en Lari a se o p e s .” T e x a s U nion
102
9-4 -D r a w in g o f tic k e ts
for th e Grza
A n d a p erfo rm a n ce, and reserv a tio n s
for “ J-adv From
t h e S e a ,” H o g g
A u d ito riu m b ox o ffic e
9 -^—o l d e x a m in a tio n p a p ers a v a ila b le
fo r In sp ectio n , T e x a s U n ion 105.
Sh5— R e g istr a tio n fo r P ersu a siv e S p e a k
in g C o n test. .Speech B u ild in g 209.
C o ffe e ” Y.
9—5— E n tries
fo r A g g ie S ig n C o n test,
S p eech B u ild in g IOU
1 0 —C o ffee H ou r a n d d iscu ssio n . H ille l
F o u n d a tio n .
11—In fo rm a tio n
j o b s in E u rop e. T e x a s U n io n 301.
2— F a e u ltv C ou n cil m e e tin g . E n g lish
c o n c e r n in g
stu d e n t
B u ild in g 201
3 S p o tlig h t. • y ”
4 A la in R ob b e G n U et
BARBER SHOP
607 W . '29th
OPEN 'TIL 6 P.M.
M O N D A Y THRU SA TU R DA Y
THE UNIVERSITY’S O N LY EXCLUSIVE RADIO
A N D HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER
2010 Speedway
GR 8-660*5
Serving the University A r e a for J4 Years
P A R K IN G IN REAR
FLAT TOPS $1.50
Free Parking
H IG H FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES
Sendee November 15, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg© 8
CHARTERED
EXCURSION BUSES
to Kuwait on
• Parties
Hitch Up Your Wagon For Pioneer Town
-— College Life Weekend in Wimberly, Texas —
N ov. 21st-22nd., Saturday noon thru Sunday noon
• Field Trips
• Retreats
i Buses available with rest rooms
aboard, turn around seats and
card tables for your enjoyment
while traveling. All buses air
conditioned.
I Kerrville Bus Co.
2006 EAST 4TH
GR 8-9361;
I
ii
8 Meals at the Silver Spoon Cafe
Entertainment at the Ole Opera House
Speakers and a Film . . . All for $6 per person
W A G O N TRA IN LEAVES LITTLEFIELD F O U N T A IN N O O N SAT.
Call GR 6-3095 or GR 2-0935 for reservations . . . Or reserve your place
by sending $3 to apartment 409, 606 West 17th—Pay the balance later.
Sponsored by the Campus Crusade F o r Christ
— Lessons and Supervised Play -
SIX DUPLICATE BRIDGE G A M ES PER WEEK
Regular Bridge Classes for
Intermediate
and Advanced Students
Special rates for University Students In our
Saturday duplicate game.
Call H O 5-1546 or GL 2-7796 for full infor
teaching
mation on duplicate games and
schedules.
1500 West 34th Street
James C. Tucker, Director
4
Telephone HO 5-1546 o r GL 2-7796 J