weather: fair, warmer low 42, high 72 I HE UAILY I EXAN A J J T A A M J F JL Student Newspaper at The University of Texas T \ A W V T ■Bi A M * A w l A V T J A I page 2: mcneely on ut housing AUSTIN. TEXAS. SUNDAY. MARCH 22. 1964 28 Pages In 2 Sections No. 140 Vol. 63 Price Hve Cents Foreign Aid: A ID 's Director Bell Explains Plans to Push Fund Request By RICHARD VANSTEENKISTE Texan Staff Writer On Thursday President Lyndon B. Johnson sent Congress a re­ quest for $3.4 billion in foreign aid funds for the coming year. The request is a full $1 billion be­ low the all-time-high request for foreign aid money made last year by President Kennedy, but is still $300 million above what Congress last year after finally approved long and heated debate in both houses. Johnson emphasized the request had been cut to the bone and that funds were being solicited only for programs which were considered vital by the Administration for the conduct of foreign affairs. In Austin Friday, David E. Bell, administrator of the Agency for International Development and the man whose Job it will be to sell the program to a re­ luctant Congress, explained to The Texan h o w the p r o g r a m has A f l d l y S I S been changed. News > Texan . , ploys 7,000 US citizens and 9,500 foreign nationals at work around the world. Despite these changes In the program, Bell, a I foot, 4 inch Phi Beta Kappa product of Po­ mona College I n Claremont, Calif., with a master's degree in economics from Harvard, be- (See FOREIGN AID, Page 7) Law Group Asks Foreman to Talk Percy Foreman, new defense a t­ torney for Jack Ruby, has indi­ cated that he may speak to Uni- J versify law students in late A pril.1 John Hagerman, president of J Taney’s Inn of Court, a first-year law students* club, said Friday that he had been negotiating with Foreman by letter and that Fore­ man planned to come here in late April. Hagerman, unable to contact Foreman since he took the Ruby I Bell was' in Austin Thursday to case. did not know if his new du­ ties would affect the Houston law- yer's plans to speak here. address a meeting of the Austin Committee on Foreign Relations. "I can't really predict what Con­ gressional reaction to this fe a r’s program will be.” Bell said in an following a exclusive interview half-hour video-taping session in the studio® of KURN TV, “ but the program this year responds to sev­ eral of the criticisms brought out in the Congressional debate last year, and changes have been made to fulminate or reduce some of the more objectionable parts of last year’s program ” Plans for co-sponsorship of Fore­ m an’s speech were made by other organizations who were also Inter­ ested in bringing Foreman to the campus. Foreman indicated in his letters that he would like to speak to a large audience, Hagerman said. President of the National Asso­ ciation of Defense Lawyers, Fore­ man was hired by Ruby's family Thursday to handle the appeal of Ruby’s death sentence. there Is Foreman scheduled his First, Bell said, first meeting with his client Sunday in the Dallas County Jail, the Asso- the greatly reduced budget request it self. The $3.4 billion request, low est in several y e a n , is both a re- elated Press reported Saturday, spense to Congressional and public Phil Burleson of Dallas, one of demands for lese forelgn-akl spend- Ruby’s attorneys during the trial. in t and evident* of the determine filed a motion Friday claiming tion of President Johnson to econo- Jud«e Joe B. Brown made 36 e r­ otize in government spending w her-1 m rs In rulings. Burleson asked a ever possible. new trial. Moll M ay Press A spokesman for Bill Moll, unsuccessful candidate for Students’ I Association president, said late Saturday night it was “very likely ’ j Moll's group would press charges of alleged Election C »de violations I against Greg Lipscomb, winner over Jim Fletcher and Moil in Wed­ nesday's student elections. Oliver Heard, said, “ If the suit is pressed, we will either request a new election or that Lipscomb be disqualified and that Fletcher be certified.” Moll was unavailable for comment. Lipscomb will be certified president at 2 a.m. Monday by the Election Commission unless a delay order is issued by the .Student Court. Heard said Moll has not decided definitely whether to seek the Injunction because of “possible adverse publicity, and bec ause he hates 1 to disqualify anyone. “However.” he added, “ we feel the Code has been violated and it may not be proper to drop the charges.” Lipscomb said late Saturday, “I respect their concern for a proper election, but I also trust they will realize the student body's disgust with pointless details.” them He said he had known of none of the alleged infractions “ until I read in Thursday’s Daily Texan.” He stated that “the per­ sons who allegedly committed the violations were unaware of any rule infractions” and that his cam ­ paign “at all times adhered to the spirit of the Election Code." He added. “I feel the Election | Commission will take this into con- UT Team Wins In Moot Tribunal The University's International Law team of David Beck and Je r­ ry Long were handed the decision in a moot trial Saturday. The trial, part of the regional competition of the Student Intema- i tional Law Society, concerned a question of international law be­ tween Greece and the United States. Beck and Long were represent- i ing the United States with Robert Cook and Stephen Niaman from Stanford University. The counsel for the nation of Greece consisted of Rodney Brister and Wendell Turley from SMU. sideration in roaching an adjudi­ cated decision and I am confident they won t call for a disqualifica­ tion. “ As for a reelection. It would only result in needless work with the same outcome,’’ he continued. Baccalaureate Speaker Chosen Dr. Jam es I. McCord, president of the Princeton (N J.) Theological Seminary, and a University ex­ student, has been selected to de­ liver the baccalaureate address at the University May 30. McCord, a burly theologian often quoted by Time magazine, once said. “ W e have not yet faced up to many of the issues raised by the Nineteenth Century and posed by the new sciences. Tile result Is that theology has become largely irrelevant and o f t e n incredibly dull.” The University’s Phi B«*ta Kap­ pa chapter recently elected Mc­ Cord to honorary membership. He will speak at 6:30 p.m. at the group’s initiation banquet on May 2, in the Texas Union Jun­ ior Ballroom. McCord was named a distin­ guished alumnus of the University in 1963 by the Ex-Students’ Asso­ ciation. In a 1961 address in Austin, Mc­ Cord said, “This is not what some have chosen to call a post-Chris­ tian era. Anyone who has dared to look at the small segment of the world that could be called Chris­ tian, or at the identification of the church with American society, will know that we have been living in a pre-Christian era, that we have never been Christian.’’ McCord, a native Texan, re­ ceived his m aster of arts degree from the I niversity in 1912. He also has a doctor of theology de­ gree from the I diversity of Ge­ neva. McCord has lectured extensively in European, Indian, Canadian, and South American churches and seminaries. Fellows Agenda Open to Requests University groups wishing to meet with M urray Kempton, Visit­ the ing Fellow who will be on campus next month, may pick up applications from the Visiting Fel­ low committee until April IO. last Allen Harris, chairman of the sem ester program which brought William Buckley to cam ­ pus for a week, said the applica­ tions may be picked up before the deadline in the Students’ Associa­ tion office, Texas Union 323. Applications may be made to host Kempton for meals, housing, or speaking engagements, Harris said. Kempton, editor of the New Re­ public, liberal political journal, will be on campus April 39-25. Rehearing Monday On Choral Money A rehearing on choral organiza­ tion appropriations will be held Monday at 8 p.m. in Texas Union 323. Morris Beachy, director of choral organizations, has been invited to present the case for the choral groups, whose roquest for Blanket Tax money was sent back to the Rules and Appropriations com­ mittee by the Student Assembly a t a meeting earlier this month. The Assembly sent the proposed 21-eent appropriation back to com­ mittee for further study and inves­ tigation after confusion over the choral budget. —Texan Photo Draddy Whoop Poop De Do C a tc h in g the m ovem ent o f the 20 s are D u rw oo d Ray, Laurie Krem er, Paula C a rp e n te r, and M ic h a e l A sh as they w hoop it up at the Sp e a k e a sy ' ca b a re t sp o n so re d S a tu rd a y night by the Texas U n ion D a n ce C o m m itte e . Prohibition, the “ R o a rin g Twenties,” and tho C h arle sto n are toasted with bath tub gin. R a y s tem pted to make it a bit tastier b y a d d in g his own mixer. A s h gives a sly look to the fellows who have just w alked through the d o o r carrying violin cases. H e re cogn ize s the one with the scar across his cheek. t a h e l p Second, Bm new pragm a con­ centrates foreign ald on tboee noontide* which have Hound pro­ grams for Ha w a bi their devel­ opment and which are making efforts themselves through economic planning, en­ couragement of industry and in­ vestment. and reform* in agricul­ ture. tax tews, and social bene­ fit*. Third, Bel! explained, the pro­ gram for next year provides for the gradual phasing out of coun­ tries where foreign aid doles can reasonably be expected to end in the next few years and where large-scale foreign aid is no longer necessary for development. Venezuela. Greece, and National­ ist China are to be affected by this part of the program. Fourth, the proposed program agrees with the use of private re­ sources to aid the development of foreign lands and encourages pri­ vate investment and aid in those countries. Finally, the new foreign aid pro­ gram calls for a reduction in em ­ ployment of 1.200 for AID by June 30. 1965. The agency presently em-, to The new trial motion Is a tech­ nical preliminary the case to the Texas Court of Crim­ inal Appeals and possibly to the US Supreme Court, according to the AP. taking The names of Foreman, Bude son, and Joe Tonahill of Jasper. were on the document. Foreman said he authorized the filing of the motion. Aid/Trade in Latin America Discussed During Symposium r \ $ l i t a a a « i t *L#w i t ^ r u . r l I Two visiting economists stressed oped between Latin America and Saturday the importance of eco- the United States, but Latin Amer- l i m I ' n i l a /1 C l n I a a K i l l T A l i n A »vi n r nomie development and investm ent; lean imports exceeded exports. on the final day of a symposium on aid and trade in Latin Ameri­ can development. Opening of European markets has not upset the post-war read­ justment of import demand of Lat­ in American countries to normal peace-time conditions. The • ■ • Increase,” enough. The trade gap will prob- . ■ the Mexican ably economist said. Dr. Urquidi outlined several pro­ , , • to help posals countries. under-developed restrictions give one another special trade con­ siderations, thus creating regional markets. Robert W. Calvert. Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court, Chrys Dougherty of Austin, an interna­ tional lawyer, and W. St. John Gar­ wood of Austin, a former associate imposed on underde- justice of the Texas Supreme Court, veloped countries should be inacti- were the presiding judges of the A gradual elimination of trade Underdeveloped countries should j vated. mock international law tribunal. Round-Up Drawings To Start March 23 Round-Up tickets may be taken at the Texas Union Main Desk Monday through Friday, March 23- April 3, from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The desk is located at the south entrance of the Main Ballroom. Both the Western Dance, April 3, and the Round-Up Revue on the following day, will be Blanket Tax holders. Five hundred date tickets are also available. free General admission tickets for the dance are $1 per person, and com­ bination tickets for both events are $1.50. two were Stefan Roboek, professor and director of Interna­ tional Business Studies at Indiana University and special economic adviser to Bolivia; and Victor Ur q u a i, economic advisor to the Mex-1 lean government. The symposium, which began Friday, wa* cosponsored by the Institute of la tin American Stud­ ies and Department of Econom­ ic*. Speakers Friday were Angus director for technical cooperation of the Or­ ganization for Cooperation and De-] velopment, Paris; and Roberto Compos, professor of money and banking at the University of Bra- j xii. to Maddteon, assistant Latin America has developed a trade reserve. United States’ de­ mand for Latin American produc- booms “"'S’ und<,r 'P 001*1 ron' ai txms. Latin .America is left in a posi­ tion where the trade gap is an overall trade gap which has to be financed by loans or invest­ ments, They have been pushed into a position of “enforced bor­ rowing” from the United States. “ It appears unlikely that financ­ ing on an official scale will be United Nations' Ralph Bunche Lectures in Ballroom Tuesday An American slave’s grandson and the first Negro to hold a “desk- job” with the State Department, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas Union Main Ballroom. After the death in September, j negotiations at Rhodes and else- in January, 1948, of Count Folke Bi-rnadotte, where which began the UN mediator in Palestine, 1949, and ended in July of the same Bunche was appointed acting me- year. They resulted in the four Ar- Is- diator. mistice Agreements between In the position he directed the rael and the Arab states. Palm Sunday Talk Today on Campus Palm Sunday will be celebrated f “ -.Su^ , i W Open-Air Theater located be- . . I tween Speedway and Inner-Campus j . _ „ „ is sponsored by The lecture of Ralph Bunche, undersecretary, United Nations, is free to students and $1 for non­ students. A reception will follow the speech in the Union Star Room. the His speech Texas Union Speakers Committee. Self-supporting since the age of ay, a t J*” H S f T T 115' Bunche received a bachelor of arts degree at UCLA and m aster of arts and doctorate degrees at Harvard University. He did post­ doctoral work at Northwestern Uni­ versity, the London School of Eco­ nomics, and the University of Cape Town, South Africa. “The northeast needs to invest much more in its human resour­ ces,” said Robock in his speech, ••Aid and Trade in the Develop- i * ‘ 7 :¥ ment of Northeast Brazil. Vnethnncf n , a,n - Big Coantry In terms of population and size, A sermon will be given by the the northeast is important in its j Rev. Lee Freeman, associate pas- own right. If taken as a country by the University Baptist itself, Robock said, Brazil is sec­ ond t h i r d in area, larger than Spain, Portu­ gal, and Italy combined, in South Americas. Holy Communion will be offered, and a breakfast and discussion on Communion will the Methodist Student Center. in population and tor of Church. follow at the Robock cited reasons for growth of northeast Brazil. There has been a rise in its im portance. oration of Christ’s entry into J e ru -, in the international m arket and an salem, when the multitude strewed increase in demand and price of palm branches in his path. its prim ary commodies. Palm Sunday is celebrated on the Sunday before Easter in commem- Bunche became a member of the faculty of Howard Univer­ sity. Washington, D. C., in 1928, as head of the new Department of Political Science. By the time be resigned in 1950, he had be­ come a full professor. During 1938-40 he collaborated with Gunnar Myrdal in the Myrdal- Carnegie Corp. of New York Sur­ vey of in A m erica,: which produced the comprehensive study titled “An American Dilem­ m a.” the Negro “The development plans for the northeast show a shift from toying to improve the situation by fighting the droughts to aa af­ firmative d e v e l o p m e n t s ^ preach,” said Rebock. He said external or foreign aid is another growth cause. “Trade ami aid should be adapt­ ed to meet development’s needs,” Dr. Urquidi said. Dissatisfaction among under - developed regions about the aid practices of devel­ oped countries ii apparent. Three-Way Problem Before World War II, Latin American trade was a triangular problem. There was a surplus In Europe and a deficit in tim United States. After the war, trade devel- Gordon McLendon Will Speak Monday In 1944, he Joined the State De­ partment, where he held the posi-! Gordon McLendon, candidate for j tions of Area Specialist (expert on United States Senator, will speak Africa and dependent areas) in the in the Varsity theater Division of Territorial Studies; Monday. Acting and Associate Chief and Chief of the Division of Dependent Area Affairs, Office of Special Po­ litical Affairs. Dick Wall, spokesman for Mc­ Lendon's Austin headquarters, said McLendon will talk in broad to m s about die campaign and about his philosophy of government at l l a.m. The speech is sponsored by the Young Texans for McLendon. Cof­ fee will be served. McLendon will have a luncheon at noon in the Driskill Hotel for Austin area newsmen. While working for the State De­ partment, he began his career with the United Nations. He re­ signed ta 1047 to accept a per­ manent post ta the UN Secretar­ iat aa director of tim Trusteeship Division at (be request of Secre­ tary-General Trygve Lie. % Engineers Honored With Special Issue I By EMILY LAMON Special Page Editor The Daily Texan salutes the College of Engineering with 32,500 copies of the special en­ gineering section printed and inserted in this issue. This is 13,400 issues more than the usual 19. IOO Texans, and has the largest distribu­ tion in the history of the paper. D ud Edmonds Jr.. General Manager of Texas Student Inc., said. The issue depicts the curric­ ula and activities of the col­ lege. Ihiblications, Approximately 10,800 copies of the special will be sent to former University students who studied engineering and 2,000 to high schools across across Texas. Now in its eightieth year. the University’s engineering program has grown from a for departm ent organized the development of work in applied mathematics to a full rellege of nine departments. The curricula includes work in aero-space, architectural, chemical, civil, electrical, me­ chanical, and petroleum engi­ neering, engineering mechan­ ics and science, and drawing. “It is perfectly natural for young persons to be interested in engineering, for there is ex­ citement in engineering today —excitement and f e r m e n t , caused by new vistas unfold­ ing and new challenges evolv­ ing," said Dr. John J. Mc- Ketta, dean of the College of Engineering. The University has played its share in the developing of engineers to explore these new vistas. The department with the highest enrollment is the Department of Elec­ trical Engineering with 561, followed by the Department of Mechanical Engineering with 361. j The growth of the College of Engineering is indicative of the growth of the entire Univer­ sity. To be dedicated Oct. 2. the New Engineering 1964, Science Building on the north­ east corner of the University, will house parts of six depart- , ments of engineering and parts I of the Department of Physics. rn■W News in Brief . . . compiled from AF reports SOVIETS THREATEN UN. The Soviet Union stressed Saturday it would never help pay for the UN Congo and Middle E ast forces and hinted any challenge to its General Assembly vote on that account might break up the United Nations. The Interna­ tional Court of Justice has ruled against the Soviet Union, saying these are legitimate expenses which must be borne by all mem­ bers. WORKERS SEEK MASS HEALTH PROGRAMS. About S,«M delegates to the United Aute Workers Union International Con­ vention approved a proposal of national health programs for all, alter T. C. Douglas, leader of the New Democratic Party of Canada, spoke to them about a government-sponsored medi­ cal care program la Saskatchewan that has resulted in aa in­ crease el doctors and better care. PRESS EMPLOYEES EMPLOYED. The managing editor of the now-defunct Houston Press said Saturday it appears that all 52 news departm ent employees will be employed by other news­ papers around the country. The Scripps-Howard newspaper ceased publication Friday after announcing it had been purchased by the Houston Chronicle and the Houston Post for an estimated $4 million. NEW VACCINE ANNOUNCED. Development of rn still ex­ perimental, but possibly improved vaccine against tuberculosis was announced Saturday by a US Public Health Service acieattet. Dr. Edgar Rib!, a spokesman for the agency, said the vaccine would be tried on monkeys, then human beings. SNOWMAN’S SKULL FOUND. The Mongolian radio reports scien­ tists have found “a skull of a snowman” In the western Mongolian mountains. It said this and other evidence “clearly proves the abominable snowman being sought by many world expedition teams is still alive in Mongolia.” Dorms Must Be More JFK Ijash Questioned Then Bricks end Beds A t Illinois Our dormitories could be our best educational feature. Little Man on the Campus By Bibier M UN Slates Decisions On Canals’ Future Roles (Editor's note: This is the first in a series concerning the the M odel U nited resolutions N ations w ill debate and pass judgm ent upon A p ril 9-11 ) By SHARON SHELTON Editorial Assistant the Suez and Panama Both Canals symbols of stand as Twentieth Century nationalism’s desire to triumph over a vanish­ ing age of expansion and empire. Whether in the future the troubled waterways will symbolize inter­ national cooperation remains to be seen. However, the General Assembly of the Model United Nations, to be held April 9-11, will make a decision on a proposal aimed at the internationalization of both canals, a question that has been considered seriously since the July, 1956, nationalization of the Suez by Egypt’s Nasser. Stirred Up Controversy The recent Panamanian out­ break has renewed debate over the status of the canals in rela­ tion to the world community. One argument for internationalization points out that in view of Arab- Israeli hostilities, a world-operat­ ed canal would tend to better in­ sure free passage of all nations and. along with this, a greater possibility for world peace. The proposed resolution for the Model United Nations represents the above view: W hereas this organization is en­ trusted with the duty of acting in the interest of the nations of the world and of preserving the peace among natioai, and noting that conflicts about adm inistration and control of both the P anam a and the Suez canals have in re­ cent years been occasions for violent outbreaks, and recogniz­ ing it to be in the common in­ terest of all nations to have equal and assured access to these vital tim es. Therefore, canals a t all the G eneral Assembly resolves: • That these two canals, along with the installations and te rri­ tories essential to their operation, be placed under the adm inistra­ tion and control of the United Nations, with the guarantee of equal accessibility to ships of aU nations of the world, and, • T hat an International Canal Authority established under the United Nations to c a rry on all functions essential to the opera­ tion of these canals, subject to annual or special review of the G eneral Assembly, and, to be paid • That a study be initiated im ­ m ediately to determ ine the prop­ in e r compensation acquiring the capital assets of the canals and installations, and. • T hat negotiations be begun im m ediately to establish a fair percentage of revenue to be m ade as lease paym ents to those two nations which hold titular sover­ eignty land are as con­ cerned.” the to counter Opponents Wants Complete Control that the Suez belongs to Egypt and that attem pts a t internationalization would only increase Arab hostil­ ities instead cf promoting world peace. They go on to say that Panam anian h a s reached the point that the country will settle for no less than com ­ plete control of the canal. nationalism that Some feel when internal re­ form has reached a level of equal footing with the major powers, then • and only then will internationalization be possible. the When N asser announced national status of the Canal to the E gyptians he reflected this desire for equality with other na­ tions. In his words, “Compatriot*, since Egypt announced its free and independent policy, and the world began to consider Egypt and take it into account, those who in the past heeded us not have now begun to take us into account.” Point To World la w Others uphold the position of Egypt on the basis of internation­ al law, which recognizes the right of any country to nationalize prop­ erty within its boundaries, and therefore they say that the Canal will always belong to Egypt. Often the British and French, who cry the loudest for Israeli use of an International ( anal, tend to forget that even when they were in control, Israel waa not permitted to pass through tt. So, In respect to aeneas the status of tile Canal has not really changed. P erhaps the greatest change in the Canal has been in the realm that of Egyptian include deepening and widening and two-way traffic through the Canal. P anam a views these changes in the Suez as argum ents for nationalization of the P anam a Canal, which cu r­ rently is operated by the United States. the beginning of im provem ents Problem Many Sided There a re many aspects to the problem of w hether the Suez and P anam a Canals belong to their respective nations or to mankind. Perhaps the riddle of the Sphinx really Involves m aintaining a balance between the two. the problem At any rate, is one that should be approached with an understanding of what both the Suez and the P anam a Canal* symbolize to Egypt and Panam a, and what is necessary in most effectively bringing about world peace. Society Accepts all W ith Chuckle, Challenges Shrugged, Editor Charges By ROGER EBERT Dully IlUni (editor I niversity of Illinois Paul Goodman told one of his the en­ audiences recently that tire American school system La set up with only one purpose In m ind: to break the spirit of the students. A soft chuckle went through the crowd. Then, after a few sec­ onds, scattered applause began. That cburkle bothered me, ber-muse I had beard it some­ where before. Then I remem­ bered. It was exactly the sort of patronizing c h a c k l e tint comes from the parents ai a third grade play, after one of Ute little actors muff a line. By muffing his line in such a situation, the third grader does two things, He em barrasses the crow'd, which, being made up of parents, desperately wants the play to succeed. And he appears “ cu te” them —because, after all, w hat else can you really ex­ pect from the third graders? to in the Paul Goodman was third grader the school play here last w'eek. The audience was composed of “ p are n ts”—that is, professional educators. W h e n Goodman accused these suppos­ edly intelligent people of perm it­ lie ting a gigantic social hoax, they drew a chuckle because w ere em barrassed. A disturbing charge had just been m a d e against an over-organized socie­ ty in which m ost m em bers of the audience held vested role*. The E s t a b l i s h m e n t had been hit where it hurt, and so (be­ cause the social situation of a po­ lite luncheon m eeting did not p er­ there was a m it a chuckle, lynching) In (bird graders If Good nun was embarrass­ ing, he was also “cate,” like all school plays. There in the flesh, be­ fore their very eyes, the audi­ ence beheld a Rebel, a non­ conformist. Goodman w as a critic of the educational system who has been so bold as to suggest that stu­ dents and teachers, if they get sufficiently nauseated with the modem college system , could do worse than to pull up roots and go off somewhere and establish a community of scholars. Now, of course, it would be dangerous to our society if great num bers of people took Paul Goodman seriously. C o l l e g e s m ight eventually begin to pro­ duce people who were not will­ ing to accept a society which promises, almost a* an a fte r­ thought, to clothe and feed and keep them in return for their a c ­ quiescence. But this is ail unlikely. And so it was possible to consider Goodman “cate.” He stood up there looking just Uke a college professor (smoked a p i p e , even!) and made all those dar­ ing statements. The audience could congratu­ late itself on being clever enough, and daring enough, and "liberal- m inded” enough, to sit there and listen (although of course Good­ m an Is a hopeless visionary, a utopian, a d ream er, and not at all the sort of “ safe m an” w e’re looking for to head our d ep art­ m ents). I had an impulse to fee! sorry for Goodman. Here is a man who spends a good p art of his time going around to cam puses and making speeches. He believes the society is set up to cheat indivi­ duals out of their potential ami their freedom. He believes stu­ dents a re pawns In a con game. and children are the target of a crippling fraud. He belive* peo­ ple do not have enough fun in life, and do not have goals which are meaningful to them. In all sincerity, he is trying to m ake this society happier and m ore productive. And what he gets. most of the time, is a patronizing the parents at a chuckle from third grade play. But why pity Goodman? Pity the audience instead. Pity them, because in addition to publishing novels and books of verse and serious critic isms of education and society, Goodman has beaten the audience at its own gam e. He has all the necessary degree* and credentials for academ ic respect­ ability. He has a platform , an a u ­ dience, and a message. He be­ lieves in something, and he I* getting real satisfaction out of working to m ake something come true. real world the in leading a You have to think this about Paul Goodman. He is a contended, full challenged man life. And that is what he wants the rest of us to do. We could do worse Most of us are. or will. It is hard to cover this mess of our*; with a chuckle, any kind of chuckle, and it is getting harder. T h e D a i l y T e x a n *Fir$t College Daily in the South’ Opinionti expressed rn The Texan are those of the Editors or of the writer of the article and not necessanlj those of the Urn te r sit y administration. A lt editorials are written by the editor unless otherwise designated. T h* D a ily T ex a n , a atu dent n ew sp ap er o f The I n iverslty o f T ex**, ta p u b lish ed daily excep t M onday and Satu rd ay and holiday period* S e p tem ­ ber th rou gh May and m on th ly in A u gu st by T ex a s S tu d en t P u b lication *. Inc , D raw er D X lrm eraity S ta tio n . Auatin. T exa* TOT IJ Secon d o a t s p o s ta l* paid a t Auattn. T exas. in A ustin M alled .................... .......... M alled ou t o f tow n D eliv ered in A ustin (th r o e m on th s m inim um * ........................... l l DQ m onth “5c m onth 75c m on th Mf BSI Kl IT ION KATIS PERMAN ENT* STAFF * DAVE MCNEELY EDITOR ............................... .................................................. RICHARD COLE MANAGING EDITOR ASSISTANT MANAGING ED IT O R ..................... CHARM AYNE MARSH NEWS EDITOR ................................................................. RODNEY DAVIS FEATURE EDITOR ..................................................... CAROLYN COKER .................................................. FRANK DENTON SPORTS EDITOR AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ............................. PAT SHARPE CHIEF AMUSEMENTS CRITIC.............................HAYDEN FREEMAN EDITORIAL PAGE ED IT O R .................................. KAYE NORTHCOTT GAY NAGLE PANORAMA EDITOR ............ 1 Wfc'fcf t o EA r o u e lu n c h in t u b z t u p s n t t in in g b o o m F£OaA NOW ON - IT PCBS 4 0 AUi CH POH 0TLK7ENT HOKALB- The Firing Line Emphasis Wrong To the Editor: The impression that The Daily Texan cover article conveyed on the M arch 16 meeting of TACT- AAUP a t which Dr. Ransom wa* presented gives a very wrong em phasis on the purport of hi* rem arks. What this meeting m anaged to convey concerning salaries and fringe benefits and what seem ed to all of us present was that Dr. Ransom said fringe benefits and salaries for the future w'ould both need consideration. In the context of faculty com pen­ sation across the country this was no more than a statem ent of ob­ vious fact. Archibald R. Lewis President, Texas Chapter AAUP ★ Hands Off Vie! Nam To the Editor: failure. This The United State* adventure, w hatever we expected to accom ­ plish, in Southeast Asia has been a dism al ill-con­ ceived and sordid affair on the Asian m ainland has hopelessly bogged down. It has cost bilboas of taxpayer'* dollars. It has in­ volved the senseless sacrifice of many American lives. It has en­ gendered hatred of the US. What for? Nobody in authority seem s to know for sure. The situation is most grave. The m ilitary, the State D epart­ ment. the CIA, the Administration have created a frightful mess in Asia unprecedented in our history. L et’s not coasider enlarging the war into North Viet Nam. We’ll only aggravate the existing dan­ ger*.us crisis. L ei’s not provoke a nuclear war. De Gaulle says he can neutralize the whole re ­ gion. More power to him! If he'll take as off the hook, give him im portant a free hand. It s not that the poli­ the m ilitary and ticians save face. It’s suprem ely im portant that we avoid nuclear war and save civilization. Lord B ertrand Russell loves hu­ manity. He abhors war. He is one of our Twentieth Century’s finest minds. Here is w hat he says about the South Viet Nam ad ­ venture: "Tile US is pursuing a policy which is both wrong and disastrous in Southeast Asia. The series of dictatorships in South Viet Nam are cruel and tyranni­ cal. In order to conduct the w ar the United States has there, rounded into strategic ham lets 7.800,000 people, some 65 per cent of the population as reported in Lindon Observer (Nov. 3, 1963). These internm ent cam ps are sur­ rounded by spikes, m oats, barbed wire, and police d*'gs. “ I appeal to all Americans to consider the following facts: I. The Viet Congress of South Viet Nam has a non-communist m a­ jority as was repeatedly stated by P rem ier Tran Van Huu in P aris. 2. The policy of the Viet Congress stipulates that Viet Nam should be neutral and independ­ ent of the E ast and West in the cold w ar. 3. Despite statem ents to the United States, P rem ier Ho Chi Mink of North Viet Nam has categorically that he advocates for asserted both North and South Viet Nam independence of neutrality and the contrary in Russia, China, and United States (London Times. Nov. 5, 1963). “ These are the facts which lie behind De G aulle's effort* to bring about an end to the w ar and neutrality in Viet Nam. There is no other mean* whereby the peace of Southeast Asia m ay be preserved. American intervention would justification, no w'ould lead to intense hatred of the United States throughout Asia, and would im m ensely im ­ peril the safety of all m ankind.” Malcolm A. Green 1719 Bouklin Ave. ★ have Sanity of Bolioft To the Editor: Mr. Straw n ( “ Firing Line,” M arch 19) ha* been the victim of an Intentional fallacy, ap p aren tly ; and considering hi* multitudinous intentions and platitudes, this is not a m atter for surprise. Mr. Cook was incapable of seeing the true m eaning of the m ultifaceted Strawn, it is asserted; and from this point Mr. Strawn moves in m ajestic w ays in order to in ter­ pret himself, Jastifying his criticism of dem ­ onstrators as “ childish” by citing LORD OF THE FLIES by (H ar­ ry?) Golden, Mr. Strawn out­ lines the intelligent and careful program of w hatever group of m oderate thinkers he represents; What the Negro needs is educa­ tion; what m ast be done to safe­ guard integration is that the Ne­ gro must be enlightened, rehabil­ itated, perhaps prefabricated to white specifications, so that he will not ja r the china like sensibil­ ities of the civilized and m atured white. (I take this to be the point of Mr. Strawn s proverbial “ bull in a china closet”—although God ofily knows in what distant re­ gions such queer phenomena as bulls in closets have become pro­ verbial.) is It is apparently a sign of Mr. Strawn * com plet intentions — in Indelicately it some circles called “schizophrenia” — that ie wants to save the time-honored double-standard for white behav­ ior and black behavior, that he is concerned m ore about making explicit tho evils and childishness integrationist dem onstrations' of blocking traffic — which Mr. Strawn finds unesthetic — than about drawing any unsettling pro­ gram s for self-examination from the overt brutality of superior whites, both civilian and police. But then, it m ay always be re ­ garded as a m ark of civilization that one’s public servants are technologically educated a n d minded enough to utilize electric cattle prods. to be able No doubt one could even ex­ pound upon the uncouth and dan­ gerous behavior of pacifists who will cause the downfall of our society, and even contrast them with the civilized and sane de­ m eanor of the guardians of our security, who, a t last report, have their sights on the pacifying giga­ to n (two billion tons) bomb, cap­ able of frying six states a t one blow. A fter ail, w'e m ust defend the profound vision of our be­ liefs, the essential sanity of the ways we em phasize and criticize. Kenneth Smith 1994 San Jacinto URBANA, 111. (CPS)—The sta­ tus of P rofessor Revile Oliver af­ ter his attack on the late Presi­ dent Kennedy has again raised the question of academ ic freedom and responsibility at the U niver­ sity of Illinois. in Oliver charged the John Birch Society Magazine, “ A m er­ ican Opinion,” that Kennedy was assassinated because he had not been able to turn the US over to the K remlin by the 1963 dead­ line. Matter Reviewed While adm itting that Oliver spoke for himself and not in his university connection. P resident David D. Henry asked the F ac­ ulty Senate “ to review the m at­ ter and advise him on it.” Henry stated that “Mr. Oli­ ver’s expression raises ques­ tions as to whether he has complied with expectations for professional responsibility.” O bservance of p r o f e s sional standards is expected, but by custom this is a m atter for pro­ consider, Henry fessionals said when he referred the prob­ lem to the Faculty Senate Com­ m ittee on Academic Freedom . to Action Opposed H enry’* action was opposed by the Faculty of the College of Law in a statem ent that said in part, “ If the encouragem ent of expres­ sion of ideas and individual views is to rem ain a meaningful prin­ ciple, such expressions m ust not be subject to review and judge­ m ent by any university body nor cause for any disciplinary a c ­ tion.” The Law Faculty was in agree­ m ent with H enry's earlier posi­ tion that O liver's statem ent of his views was not the basis for action by any official organ of the university, no m atter how de­ plorable or such views were. irresponsible Citizens around the country have demanded that Oliver be removed from his official sta­ tus as a professor of rlassics, while others have strongly sup­ ported his right to say anything he wished no matter how they might disagree. There seem s little chance th^t Oliver will be fired as Professor Leo Koch was in 1961. Koch con­ doned sexual intercourse between m ature students in a letter to the student newspaper, The Daily II- lini. adm inistration by Koch was fired by Henry w ith­ in three weeks of the appearance of his letter. Officially he was dism issed because of his inade­ quacy as an instructor. The ac­ tion brought a censure of the uni­ versity the Am erican Association of Univer­ sity Professors (AAUP). Cases Not Alike U niversity adm inistrators have that Koch used his pointed out position to university students, while Oliver spoke as a private citizen and di­ rected his statem ents to national attention. to direct his views Henry addressed a memo to Koch after the letter was pub­ lished and charged him with “ grave breach of academ ic re ­ sponsibility.” He also said that Koch’s views were “offensive and repugnant to commonly accepted standards of m orality and their inter­ public espousal may be preted as encouragem ent of im­ m oral behavior.” Speaking on O liver's opinions, Henry said ‘ That his views are not shared by this academ ic com ­ munity is certain. I believe my colleagues agree that his unsup­ ported accusations, and his un­ reasoned and vitriolic attack on the c h a racter and patriotism of P resident Kennedy are beyond the bounds of good taste in public com m ent and the norm al proprie­ ties of public debate.” While Oliver’s academic re­ sponsibility has b e e n chal­ lenged, his reputation as a classroom instructor seem s per­ fect. Acting department head John J. Bateman said that Oli­ ver “has never, to my knowl­ edge, introduced his political opinions in his classes.” His students have described Oliver as “ brilliant” and “ very intelligent.” take the university off In what was perhaps an effort to the hook, the president of the alumni association recently asked Oliver to resign. So far. they’re nothing more than student hotels. The University should provide a full education for its students. The University as it is now cannot perform that task. We have made advance* toward excellence. Our greatest remains virtually un­ e d u c a t i o n a l opportunity, however, tapped. S t u d e n t s spend at least as much time with other students as they spend in active classroom pursuit of education. One University dean reports that students spend 80 per cent of their tim*' out of the classroom. ★ ★ Intellectual stimulation has never been the prim ary pur- pose of our University dormitories. They are only places to sleep, store one’s clothes and other belongings, do the re­ quired amount of homework, and have discussions about iootball and girls or clothes and boys, as the case may be. Currently they are viewed {fairly correctly) as build* i> es. som>' housing males, others females; the males go from their buildings to take the girls from their building* and they all go out somewhere else and do something. Dormitor­ ies currently are things to avoid. The University Board of Regents and administration are apparently convinced th a t this is as it should be. They are contending (in defense of maintaining segregated dorm itor­ ies) that dorms are not a part of the educational process. Dormitories, on the contrary, could be the most vital part of the educational process. We must adopt— and institute— a new concept of dormi­ tories They must become places for intellectual stimulation. They fulfill this role at several other colleges throughout the country; it could, and should, happen here. H ie use of dormitories as an integral complementary part of the educational experience could be established on a pilot basis by construction of one dormitory' where students interest od in learning other than just in the classroom could )>e brought together. We do not mean th a t only superior stu­ dents would he assembled under this system. Students from all areas and backgrounds would participate, provided they agree to take part in the planning and execution of various dorm itory programs. Professors would be invited to take part regularly. Such a dormitory would have eating facilities, possibly a library', ample space for student get-togethers. It could even be coeducational. ★ ★ Students will gain much more from their education if they are thrown together in a climate favorable to exchang­ ing ideas. Mervin Freedman, in an article in an Education Facilities Laboratories report contends that “this (student) culture is the prime educational force at work in the college, for . . . assimilation into the student society is the foremost concern of most new' students.” In other words, the student tends to fit the pre-existing mold. If that mold is aimed at aiding education, he will accept it. If it is merely a social mold, he’ll accept that. We are convinced th at many legislators and educators, and society in general, underestimate students. Many pre­ dicted th a t H arry’s Place would bomb; student’s have over­ whelmingly adopted it. We are convinced that a revised concept of dormitory life would be accepted every bit as readily. If the University leads the way, private housing will have to follow as students fight to get in, rather than out, of the University-owned dormitories. Fraternities and soror­ ities would become more intellectually alert. ★ ★ The Austin American editorialized Wednesday: T h e r e is th e b a sic q u e stio n w h e th e r r o o m in g an d lx > a rd in g f a r i l i t i r s a r e a p a rt o f th e o b lig a tio n o f a g o v ­ e r n m e n t is m u c h s e n tim e n t o n th e sid e th a t th e g o v e r n m e n t’s in ­ v e s tm e n t sh ould be in e d u c a tio n , n ot d o r m ito r ie s. to p ro v id e e d u c a tio n fo r its y o u th . T h er e We’re putting much sentiment on the other side. Dor­ mitories can—and should—be part of student education. The American continues: In r e c e n t tim e s , it h a s b eco m e e v id e n t th a t p riv a te in v e s tm e n t can am i w ill p rovid e m u c h o f th e new h o u s­ in g r e q u ir e d by th e s t u d e n t b o d y . This hits been demonstrated. But we think it is time the University sets a new example (as it is doing in the married students’ housing) for private investors. They will cater to student needs when the University does. But the University now has the ball. Stump Spreading Good ideas seem to catch on. Greg Lipscomb, recently elected Students’ Associa­ tion president, returned from Europe with the idea for stump speaking. Now' it has been instituted a t Southwest Texas State College in San Marcos. Stumping is a good way to prevent cloisterphobia. We hope they enjoy it as much as we have. Guest Editorial Publicity v. Justice W hatever the outcome of tile appeals in the Jack Ruby case, r e ­ spect for the judicial process has been injured by Judge Joe B. Brown s decision to perm it televising of the jury's verdict from inside the court­ room and by his discussion of the case in a post-trial Interview. The Canon of Judicial Ethics of the American Bar Association i ightlj declares that photographs and broadcasting in court “ detract from the dignity of the proceedings.” They also d etract from the fair­ ness of a trial that does not really end until the last appeal has been decided. The com m ents b roadcast outside the courtroom by the defense attorney and the prosecutor w ere m ore in the spirit of “ P erry M ason” or “ The D efenders” than of conventional dem eanor, but the judge’s televised evaluation of his own conduct of the trial gave a special note of ludicrousness to a proceeding in which all the chief events from the original m u rd er to the pronouncement of the death sentence happened live on television. -T H E NEW YORK TIMES Sunday, March 22, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Paga 2 IM A M I S HE CANT KEEP Pitching..his ARM HURTS! FORGET ABOUT THE PAIN, CHALLIE MOUN..KKR M u ­ lti THOSE OWES I ARW* MAYBE \ HOU) ABAT HE HAS A SHOT Cf The PAIN' a p lite J CORTISONE ?) PIEH M W 6H ycue teaks.' HE CANT PITCH IF HIS A RH, HURTS'! ‘ttXlP SETTER/1 6AY.F0R66T 60 HOME 7 AAM THE I CHARLIE/PWLEARN I I8RCMN.. J TO OVERCOME I ■■■ADVERSITY! i 60 SEE THE OU:*? CHARLIE! BROUN I HIM \ HE SHOLD ' to r n have pitched A LITTLE ( THROUGH! c o r n e l his tears! Y " s t a f f io r ~ t h e Ti s s u e GLORIA BROWN NIGHT ED IT O R .......................................... DAY ED ITO R ..................................................................... JUAN VASQUEZ DESK EDITOR .......................................................... HOWARD BARNETT COPY DESK C H IE F .............................................. Night R ep orter.................. Jane Paganini Richard Caldwell C opyreader.................................... Night Sports E d ito r .................................................................... Glenda Hunt Night Amusements E d ito r ........................................... Night Wire Editor ........................................................... Vivian Slfversteln Night Feature E d ito r ................................ Carolyn Coker Editorial A ssista n t.......................................... Mary NANCY KOWERT p*t Sharpe Jane Gorham t a a i g g g Social Calendar Set For Ruling Changes Social chairman of student or- 1 ganizations may submit sugges­ tions f o r Social Calendar rule j changes in Speech Building 102 be­ fore I p.m. Tuesday. The Social Calendar committee for this and next year will consid­ er the suggestions and set Social Calendar rules for next year at) 7 :30 p.m. Tuesday. They will meet at the home of Mrs. Dorothy Dean. I assistant dean of women, 207 W. Spring Dr. Members of the committee are Mrs. Dean, Sandy Love, Howard Dreyer, Loyce Katz, Greg Lip­ scomb, and Don Mighell, student group adviser. John Orr and Tyra Cox, newly elected vice-president and secretary of the Students' As­ sociation, respectively, will serve as chairman and secretary of next year's committee. 1 2 M A R I I NI ZI MG N O 1 AT # N I N E T E E N T H A N D N I EC Lb T H E ALL MAX’, " S H O W C A S E • MARTINIZING NO. 2 • 704 WEST 29TH $25 to $54 in log u u o w , $30 to <59 IN IO* WHITT GOlO m e l t nut tax Se® the Largest Selection of Rings on Campus! Never Such Massiveness— Detail Never Finer— America's Finest Rings! PIM A PUU YEAR TO PAY! 2236 Guadalupe S Z A L E ’S O ut bour eruct daily til 4 — On The Drag K L E N -T V p rogram s PLANNING IS FUN, TOO . . . Kay Morrow and Linda Robinson take a look at what s in store. Texan Photo—Draddy Union European Tour Gives Students Opportunity for Fun For students interested in travel­ ing to Europe this sum m er, the Texas Union offers a fun-packed tour especially designed for them. Ab informative meeting will ire in beld at 4:36 p.m. Monday Union 3?9 for those who desire to make the trip or learn de­ tails. The 70-day trip is $1,395. This in eludes a seven-day voyage on the SS Carinthia from Montreal to Liv­ erpool; first class hotels: all m eals except dinners in London, P a n s. to New return and Rome; York by je t; and m any other fea­ tures. trip Jessica Darling Tour Assistant Jessica Darling, form er sw eet­ heart of thp University, will serve as tour assistant. Miss Darling will receive her bachelor of education in June. While trameling by steamer to Europe, students will have stud) periods which will include his­ torical background of the cul­ tural monuments and artistic treasures to be visited. Special instruction will also be given in language, history', and a rt. Special Features Sptv Jal features include a play at the Shakespeare M emorial The­ a te r at S tratford; a party with foreign students the Swiss Fondue and Folk Night Out at Lucerne. G ran vin; and a Fourth of July P arty in Brussells, in B erlin; The trip begins June 5 and ends Aug 13. D o" t C oo k To nig ht C a ll T m l 'D j & v & u + - T 30 ■ „ t 1 O jn n -A ir Theater. •Sand*? ,■ - ;n r is « ifr v 9 I * D r 'i? N a t oui t a ’ne s ll 5v>ukup t o s p e a k o n ih e I n :vers i i . S tu d en t C onfronts U n iv e r s it y a W o n t M ethodise S tu d en t t e n t e r 10 D a y o f R ecoil" ! li o n r e tr e a t fr o m N ew m an C lub to Si M ar; s A c a d ­ e m y , 1-6- F r e n c h E a st Rex enth a n d San M a r co * S tr e e t* a n d M onday le g a t i o n o p e r 1-6 Kvh bit of palming* by Carnie Mc­ Intosh Sikes painting* bv 17 ( a- nadian artists ! t h o g r a p h s and fr o m t h e M e r le A r m it a s ? C o lle c ­ t io n A rt M u s e u m LMS M onda* VS H an d • s te t or r A K ip; I o f I G< .e m i n e n t * ! A r - V nance In stitu te m d a prt 4 Kara?" ( uh sc i>nd floor of "Y ” 1 t or 1 rt bv S ' r,pos u r n Sv m p h o n y ,-h w it! p la y sp ecial ( Tchc.xi • ti urn bf id n e Lo' bar K le in * ' Epitaph III ’’ a m em orial to Jo h n V K e r n e d M uni* pa. A u d ito riu m ' T h e S u n A l s o R i s e * . " 4 a n d 7 M o i w > - T exas C nion A u d itoriu m 6-~ S unday l'v • n in e S u p p e r F o r u m to b e add ressed bv D r R onald B unn on I* 7 30 F r„i - lie Hi Ie 'in undation n S a n F r a n c is c o O p e ra a ud it Ions H o e s A u d ito r iu m . R ob ert E ' n te r b u r y As m d n o s •d b e tte r to speak K -lation on ' T h e E th ic a l A sp e c ts Col 1 c e e o f s e x I .if.- , n C on tem p orary < . ’ I *:« HOUSH a D x c u s s io n G r o u p B a p t is t S tu d en t B uild ing. • M o n d a y 5 * .i bp of uork by B r u s h au o f A cadem ic flo o r first t'.o r ' C enter a 31VM p - <’hann“i 0 9-4 Ora > for tic k e t* to th e Joan >• • z perff.rm nr • s H o g g A u d ito r­ ium box o ffic e 9-12 and ' > Fvh o ils ‘T he E llis - ’ S tark L ib r a r M ain heth ans B u d d in g 3 5 N om in ation * for D a riick and F ly n n Award* S p eech B u ild in g 7<32 9-5 F n tries n B ook C ollection c o n ­ test A cadem ic C en ter 411 9 and I .W-—G ov ern m en ta l A ccou ntin g and F inance in s tit u te V illa Capri o s Corte" 9-11 Snack - V " «/■> Bu Id m g U S H om e E conom ic* 9-5 t e n e t . C arnival en tries. Sp eech 10-9 p m A rts and C r a fts C enter. T ex a s 11 Gordon M cL endon to speak, V ar- B u ild in g lo'.? U n ion 333 vJtv T h ea ter 12 H o i. W e e k d ev o tio n a l sen d ees. U nit ersit% P r e sb y te r ia n Chureb e x a m in a tio n s o ffic e a d m in istr a tio n sp eech I Special tv st o n c io lo g n or lee eets, B u sin ess-E co n o m ic* B u ild in g IOO so­ trap s statistii-s. /o o lo g y and oth er suh- In biology n a tio n 3—-Graduate assembly, Old Libra?) B u ild in g 107 3 —T exa**U n lver*ity o f M innesota base 3—Stud* bail gam e. C lark Kioiri G roups Campus Student Problem s, C o lle g e R ole In C h a n g ­ ing Sex A ttitu d e s "Y " 3 ID— M ath e m * tic s-R e iat! v 11y C olloq u ­ ium w ith E I.. S e h u c k in g and I. N . Irstcin ip e a k in g , B u sin e ss-E c o n o m ­ ic* B u ild in g 2 3 30 Francis H H e lle r to speak or in C r isis S itu a tio n s.' L ead ersh ip W aggon er Halt 116 I— W . M R idelm an to apeak at A stron L in e Id e n tifi­ o f FYculiar on ly C olloq u in i on in Sp e ira ca tio n s S tars " P h y sic s B u ild in g 448 4- Irvin H o w e to sp eak on The Idee o f the M odern. * A cadem ic C enter A uditorium 4 L aw ren ce F o u r sk e r sp eak on ' T h e L ev e l and t.rou p D e cisio n -M a k in g ," Busine*: E con om ics B u ild in g IOO to of A sp iration 4—V a r sity B and M usic B u ild in g 2*v> 4 :1 5 —C atholic G uad alupe in q u ir y C lass, 20L 7-19 -S tu d y room s first floor of B u a in e ss-E co n o m ic s B u ild in g 7— P h o to c la ss, T e x a s U nion 333 8— K arlh ein z S to ck h a u sen to speak on o f M usic Form,. " D e v elo p m e n t S in c e 1951,” M u sic B u ild in g R e ­ c ita l H all, 8—Y aacov Shirnoni to sp eak on "Israel an d th e N e w ly in d ep en d en t Coun tries o f A sia and A frica." Busine* E con om ics B u ild in g 116 6 .3 0 - A ustin Sym p h on y O rchestra con c ert, M u n icip al A u d ito r iu m . I RENT Electric Calculator CALL GR 6-3525 BERKMAN'S RENT EM RADIOS $6 M O TAPE RECORDERS $8-$ 12 M O. TV $10 MO. STEREO SYSTEMS HO M O . CLEANING and Repair Service A IL MAKES TYPEWRITERS and ADDERS Standard - Electric LOANERS FURNISHED 3 DAY SERVICE 90 Day Guarantee ggtfonMr 2234 GUADALUPE Sociology Grads To Meet at UT Annual Workshop Schtdulod April 3-4 Alumni of the University's Grad­ uate School of Social Work will conduct an annual social work workshop April 3-4 in Texas Union 317. The theme of the workshop will be “Community Leadership: A So­ cial Work Responsibility." The workshop will be in three sessions, from 9:30 a.m. to noon April 3; from 1:45 to 4:30 p.m., April 3; and from 9 to ll a.m., Ap­ ril 4. M rs. Sophia Belie May and Leal Schurman. both of Dallas, will lead the workshop. Mrs. May is social work consultant in the US Public Health Service chronic disease di­ vision. Schurm an is com munity planning director for the Council of Social Agencies. Lora Lee Pederson, f o r m e r School of Social Work director, will speak at a luncheon a t l l a.m. April 3. Anne Wilkens. acting di­ rector of the school, will speak at association business an m eeting from ll a m. to noon Ap­ ril 4 in Texas Union 317. alumni Instructor W ill Attend Summer Latin Institute Joe Park Poe. instructor of clas­ sics, will teach an intensified rea d ­ ing course in Latin literature at a University of K ansas sum m er In­ stitute for Latin teachers. About 125 high school and col­ lege teachers are expected to a t­ tend the institute, which is aimed at meeting a need for qualified Latin teachers. Poe, who will teach in the sec­ ond term of the sum m er cession, was chosen on the basis of a paper subm itted to the American Philol­ ogical Society. I r, Israeli Ambassador To Speak Monday A m bassador Y aacov Shirnoni, di­ rector of the Asian departm ent of Israeli’s m inistry for foreign af­ fairs. will speak a t 8 p.m. Monday in Business - Econom ics Building 116. 1 “ Israel and the Newly Indepen­ dent Countries of Asia and A frica" will be his topic. The Middle E ast Center is sponsor, in cooperation with the Hillel Foundation. in A m bassador Shirnoni Is the au­ thor of “ The Arabs of P alestine,” “ The Arab Minority Isra e l,” “ The Arab S tates," “Contempor­ ary Asia—a Political H istory," and “The National Movement and In­ dependence of South arid Southeast Asia." He lectures at Hebrew' Uni­ versity on the modern and con­ tem porary political history of South and Southeast Asia. r n . rn Time To Remember EASTER IARQS For ail ages . . . the ve ry young & the "y o u n g at heart." C o m e In, see our Easter d is p la y . . . to d a y . S tre e ' F:oor Special Display < ^ .... EASTER ’64 th e g reat lig h t y e a r Light In weight w ith dacron and wool fabric and light in color too. Ph.D. by M ichacl-Stem offers the traditional suit for E a ste r '64 in the all new lighter tones. Handsome blue, g ray and olive shades take on new brilliance in th e gentle­ m en’s wardrobe. Be sure to make your m ark in ‘the great light. y e a r’ in the new light traditional suit b> Ph.D. $65 I J i s t i n c t i v e s to r e UHM* OTT /.o r m e n Charge Account* for F aculty, Students and Staff Invited Sunday, March 22, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag# 3 on to win the game. The win makes the Yearlings 2-1 in South­ west Conference competition with victories over Baylor and Texas (Left) Bill Smartt slides home safe on a A 4 M and a loss to Rice —Tex»n Photo DratM*. wild A ggla pitch. (Right) Minton W hitt drivtt in two run* for tho at Nelson Field and S. F. Austin High School at 3:15 p.m. Tuesday, Ytarlings. The naut two opponents facing Tim Allan's Yearlings March 31, at House Park. Their next S W C opponent is Rice who are A. N. McCallum High School at 3:45 p.m. Tuesday, March 24, they will meet at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, April ll, at Clark Field. ms Recruit Lee's Baer Chowning to Dive Linus Baer San Antonio L e e s nouncing his choice — from the all-state halfback and considered field he had narrowed down earlier the prize recruit in the Southwest Conference T hursday signed with the Texas Longhorns. in Described as the “ perfect Texas the 5-10, IOC) pound tri-sport expert, had in- type, Baer scored 226 dieated that he would w ait until points last season in the 12 games tra c k season closed before an- before Lee was defeated by Corpus Baer wa* signer! by UT recruiter Charles Shira in San Antonio. to Texas and SMU. the week. tailback" E arlie r Christi Miller in the schoolboy state playoffs. B aer was also a guard on Lee’s basketball team , which won in its region before bowing out the state tournam ent. Baer is presently engaged in track activity. He is a sprinter with IO second ability in 100-yard dash. in NOW OPEN C O I N - O P E R A T E D C f J C C A R W A S H 2 Quarters or 50c THE DRIVER NEVER LEAVES THE W H EE L, JUST S L O W L Y DRIVES T H R U THE SY ST EM C a r Is Sparkling C l e a n in Just O n e Minute 4 4 0 2 NO. L A M A R Richard Chowning. University the the 1964 .sophomore, will com pete diving competition of Olympic Games in Tokyo. in Chowning qualified for the United States team Saturday night in the tryout* in Fort Worth. He was ninth in one-meter diving. The top ten are allowed to compete Chowning scored 412.95 points, and the winner of the event, Bernie Wrightson of Phoenix. Ari*., scored 492 10 points. Phil Kline of UT also competed hut did not m ake it past the pre­ lim inaries. Scott Duncan, Austin High School student, placed twelfth in the com ­ petition. Two of the top ten d i\e rs were making an exhibition, since they had already been accepted for the Olympics Lf Thomas Gompf of the Air Force Academy was sec­ ond. and Luis Nino De Rivera of Commerce. Calif., was fifth. Men and women s competition take in three m eter diving will p la c e in Fort Worth Sunday night 'Horn Varsity Track Team Smothers A C C at Corpus By BILL HALSTEAD Assistant Sports F/ditor swept CORPUS CHRISTI - (Spl.) - track team , using its depth Texas to advantage, team championship of the Corpus Christi Relays Saturday by downing run­ champion nerup Abilene Christian, 64-51, in point totals. and defending the Baylor finished third with 39 points, and SMU lagged with 31. E leven records were broken and one tied in the second run­ ning of the meet. and T exas claim ed h ie of the new marks. The two-milt relay quartet of Charles Fraw ley. Ken Sunderland, Richard Rome. and Loy Gunter flashed home in 7:31.5, some 85 yards ahead of seeond-piaee Bay lor. demolishing tile old standard of 7:44.2 by nearly 13 seconds. Other CT record-breakers Romo also added another record in the mile run. A swift sophomore pounded out a 4:14 flat in the new event and was backed up in third team m ate Sunderland. by Aussy in­ cluded Jam es Wommack with a tZ-l% I cep in the broad jump, Jam es Cooper with a :34 time in the newly-initiated 446-iard burdies, and Steve Sansom with a record-tying time of 11.3 in the 124-yard high*. Feminine Golfers To Qualify Tuesday are Phi Mu entrants Vicki Hunter and Ray Walton; SRD e n b .ms Velna Thurm an. P atsy R a v e n e r, and Alice Joyce; and independent* Jane P ruett and Eva Johnson. Bowling and softball practice sheets and entry’ sheets are due by 6 p.m. Tuesday. in Sansom was perhaps the most relay team never got off the pad the evening, due to an unfortunate mishap. Ba­ versatile athlete of ton fumbleitis. perhaps caused by the laos ides his vs inning stint hurdles, the team “ clown" turned the extrem ely chilly w eather, re- serious long enough to turn third suited in the Steers falling far be­ in the javelin, run a second place 440-yard relay unit. and take a fourth in the 440-yard ever, hurdles. The race mattered little, bow- in for Texas gathered points galore to rack up it* third in a meet victory and second T exas’ depth showed up most In row behind new roach Jack Pat­ leg on the hind and losing sure point*, Longhorn Depth In the teraon. tie hurdles and in the field event*, form er UT hurdler The Longhorn* pulled out the first Rex Wilson. two slots In the broad jump, be and all America b ac k ste r, put on hind Wommack and Bill Strong and a 120-high hurdles dem onstration aa the second, third, and fourth pose an added attraction, but it was hia lions javelin as C harlet opponent who stole the limelight. Jordan, Sansom . and Clifford At- Wilton n a a II I, bot Roy kinsoit all placed. In the 120-high*. Rick*, formerly of Solomon Cokes Sansom, Cooper, and Bob Sewell High school In Corpn*, and now ground out a 1-2-3 sweep for the In the armed forces, skimmed tho hurdle* for a 1S.4 clocking. This 'Horns The big talk of the meet wa* wan the fastest time ever ran in the CS, and only two-tenth* of a cen lr red around Frank M ar zn. Bailor's burly shot patter. Mas- second off the world mark of rn heaved the Iron ball U t " to HJS held jointly by Martin Inner of Germany and In e Calhoun of become the first Texas varsity the I S. collegian to break • • feet. Actually, the achievm ent wa« rath er lame, s is tew ise.M aze* hails from New Jersey. He was aw arded the m eet’s Outstanding P erform er *how in that event Trophy for hia record toss. Hicks, the younster who achoo! high set a national high lump record of 6*10 *. also put on a fine He cleared 610" easily with hia peculiar, rolling style, and barely Sprint Medley Mishap* Texas highly la te d sprint medley flipped the bar off a? 7 NVE PROUDLY INTRODUCE BO TH STO RES O PEN T H U R S D A Y N IG H T S J A C K M O R T O N S The qualifying the in round women's tourna­ intram ural golf ment will be held Tuesday at Pitch and Putt, Barton Springs Road. If a parti* ipant cannot attend at the tim e scheduled, she should call the In b am u ral Office before 3 p.m. Tuesday or a default will be de­ clared. P articipants should check In af Pitch and Putt and receive score cards and equipm ent from Miss Carolyn Hew att, associate director of intram ural aport* for women .Score cards m ust be turned in at Pitch and Putt, Women scheduled to participate at 4 p.m. include Co-op entrant* Jeannie Glasson, Gloria O verstreet. Cathy dayton, B arbara Hobb*. I^aura Rassos, I>oti Williams, Sandy Shaw. Ann Wood, and Virgie Klein; Kappa Kappa G am m a entrant* Jane Cowper. Helen Spencer, and Ellen C larke; and Kinsolving en­ trants Marsha Wilson, Ann Brown, Karen Brown, and Sandy Stoddard. On schedule to qualify at 5 p.m. D E L IC IO U S , . . F R O M C H O I C F C O R N FFD H E A V Y BFFF C h o o s e an O xford Bigler for the spring toast. A s o l i d Summer. This fabric matter how hut it gets The O xford B l a z e r y o u r dark p a n t s . Champagne is the new color that g i s t s lite to tou r wardrobe. All sizes in Shorts, R egu­ lars, Longs, and Hxtra Longs. • Y O U N G .C O K • MODERN • FASHIONABLE Dacron and Woo! Da c ro n and W o rs te d Dacron, Mohair, and Wool j< C A M PU S TOGS EXCLUSIVELY YOURS AND O N LY AT JA C K M O R IO N S IN AUSTIN • D O W N T O W N 81 I Congress • S U B U R B A N Allendale Village Sunday. March 22, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 just M y C H A R G E IT aik about our 30-40-40 day BUDGET PLAN A M T RI C A S ^ 4 M O S T U N I O U f H A M B U R G E R a , h i O R T O N S Oxford Blazer Champagne For Spring ChjdL C onjM ^ 2350 Guadalupe Aggies Bomb UT, 5 -2 "“ UT Orange Outeolors White In Intrasquad Grid Contest moving lasted four plays and ended with an Ernie Roy punt, and a White touchdown offer 66 yards and ten plays ending the third period. After the kickoff this time, the Orange managed only three play? before they fumbled, and the ref crees found a White jersey in the the hall The top layer over Orange stopped the White from ' ' ’uring. but let them make a 27* yard field goal, with Conway kick ing. The Orange again lost the bal: this time on an interception. Th* clock, however, ran out before the White could move the ball out from them own 8-yard line. Teams for the game were chosen after the captains, Hudson and Tommy Doerr. were elected last the week. Darrell Royal sat stands and spilt his assistants in two for the game. in A sec and version of the Orange- White game will be played in Me­ at 2:30 p.m. morial Stadium Wednesday for the benefit of Austin fans. JA ten r if Monday Eye Opener WASH & WEAR — SHORT SLEEVE BUTTON DOWN SPORT MASTER VALET COIN LAUNDRY 2706 GUADALUPE I n v i t es You t o "M ake Us Your One-Stop Service Center" By CALEB PIKTLE Texan Staff Writer COLLEGE STATION - (Sp!.) - Coach Bibb Falk’s “Big Two” pitching duo faltered Saturday aft­ ernoon. And Texas lost. 5*2. Texas ABM rocked ace ’Horn gorier Bob Meyer for five inn- tag*, ta Mag advantage of the right-hander's wildness, to blast acrose four ram and bury the la adopted Travis Longhorns park In Bryan. But Fast-balling Charley Hartenstein came on to wind up the eighth inn­ ing and give up the final Aggie run. in between, there was a spark of brightness. Sophomore Robert Wells, a tall, lanky, whip­ lash pitcher from Dallas, responded to Falk’s SOS in the sixth to re­ place Meyer and gun down AAM for two innings, giving up a single hit. Hard luck southpaw Steve HUI* house, snapping off his sweeping Freshman Traclcsters Win Second in M eet COLLEGE STATION— hat • M#«*#f A#*#**!* D !♦» - b..* O' Sy*!***- Oj* *'■ Dee* • Spec e Dee A iet& itU TV CABLE OF a u s t in GR 8-4613 CONG RA I U LM IONS TO MASTER V ALET 1-Hour D ry Cleaning from Orange Bull 2700 G U A D A LU P E W h i l e u a i l i n g f or y o u r l a un d r y , u h y not t r y our Char-Broiled Hamburgers and Our Famous Self-Service Relish "' ay rn Shakes — Malts — So. Drinks D O N 'T FORGET Orange Bull Lounge 402 W . 27th Around the Com er Ai Upstairs from the Orange Bull. — N O COVER CHARGE — curve balls around an 0-2 season record, hurled for the Aggies cut­ ting the ’Horns down in order for two innings. Meanwhile, Meyer had struggled through the first giving up one h i t - aided by Forrest Boyd who sprinted toward from his shortstop post second smash scoop up a through the middle and start a double play that ended with catcher Butch Thompson tagging out Bill Grochett trying to score. to to In the second, Lady Luck re the bull pen. Meyer turned bounced a hanging curve off Lance Cobb a shoulder, Cobb promptly stole second; and scored on a two- refugee out double by George Hargett. football Although the hard-throwing right­ hander hit Bill Hancock in the third, he fired a zero until Cobb led off the fourth with a towering home run over the 320 foot sign in left. Then Cobb came right back in the fifth to crack a two-run homer over that ham ­ mered the final nail into Meyer s coffin. the same fence Falk scoffed at the idea cf a cold whipping wind bothering his pitch­ er. “Bob made some bad pitches and It hurt him." t,:M Bat the «*me ley gusts thai taos •rat aa estimated ■earching for sunlight warmth in far-lined overcoats had the Longhorn attack chilled In third. Buddy Young singled and Boyd doubted. Texas didn t score A rally in the fifth ignited by Ron Bandy's double loaded the bases A double play provided one run. it slashed the heart out of the rally. the Thompson ripped a single into center to drive home Gene Rosa for the final Texas score In Tennis Meet University netter! dominated the freshman-junior college division of the Rice Invitational Tennis Toum- ament Saturday. Bill Marshall and Leo LaBorde of UT defeated David Nelson and Bill Driscoll, also Teasips. in the finals. 6-4 and 6-4 to win that event. John Picker,' of Rice downed Nelson. 6-4 and 6-4. in the finals of the single* bracket. In the semifinals of the doubles competition, Nelson and Driscoll and George beat Bobby Curry Parker from Del Mar Junior Col­ lege. 6-1 and 6-4. Marshall and the finals by- LaBorde got Into defeating Mike Ealgeston and George Avervt of Del Mar, 6-3 and 6-3. Jones Memorial Trophy Presented To '63 Longhorns San Antonio's O r a n g e-White game gave the Longhorn's some thing besides more problems to work on. Darrell Royal was pre sensed the Howard Jones Memorial trophy at ha’ftim* for his 1963 Na­ tional Championship Steers Hie award, tic gun last year, is given after all the bowl games are played. Four officials of the Howard J 0 n e a Memorial Foundation— George Leonard, Gene Bradford, Fred Alexander, and Nato Bar­ .San Antonio ragan— traveled from California :ne award to Royal. to to present Texas was a unanimous choice for the trophy after an undefeated, untied season and a sound defeat of Navy in ti a Cotton Bowl The foundation and ihe award are named for the .Southern Ca ; lfrnila football coach, who from 1925 to 1940 had a 121*36*13 won* lost tied record for a .750 percent­ age During these years, Jones' Trojans played in the Rose Bowl five times and won five games DW#.#**' Gifft M#t can 11**parti N#.# o R„qs -3 en J»w#iry F et' ti n# a Ac*? n Ok p Be * bi t n.gb'tr Lee l*mt By FRANK DENTON Texan Sports Editor SAN AN TON IO— ( Spl >—San An­ team prevailed tonio'! “home" Saturday the annual Orange- White intrasquad football game rn the Alamo City. in in Texas' White beat Texas' Orange. 23-14, the uncontrolled scrim mage, which offered a graphic view of the result of three weeks of spring training. Hix Green, Anthony King. and Tommy Nobis are the three San Antonio members of the Longhorns Phil Harris, a wingback and letter­ man of the 1963 campaign, is also from San Antonio, but missed the game the standouts on Green and Nobis, along with fullback Fred Edward?, proved to be the White squad and in the game. The tiny Green gamed 91 yards rushing to lead both teams in that category. Edwards, also on the white roster, was a shoestring behind with 90 yards Nobis, in his guard spot, the White defensive starred for corps. The Orange, captained by qnar- back Jim Hudson, cantnred it* 11 point* before the W bite could it past Its own 41-yard make line. First score for the Orange came after a White punt, which was re­ turned the White 43 by Joe Dixon. Nine plays later, the score was 6-0 with the extra point kick by Daivid Conway failing. to After the Whites took in the kick­ off, Marvin Kristynik completed a pass to Charles Buckalew of the Orange. Then came 35 yards in seven plays, an extra point pass, a 14-0 lead for the Orange and the end of the first quarter. rolled left-over 1963 With 5:02 left in the half, the up the sleeves of Whites their jerseys and rolled 51 yards in 14 plays to pro­ duce a 14-6 score on North East Stadium's scoreboard, which didn’t work. The Orange took the ball on the and marched downfield kickoff from their own 27 rn 15 plays to the end of the first half Sixty-three yards and 13 plays after the second half started, the Whites were again standing in White's end zone with the blank scoreboard implying 14-12. Then the Orange’s attempt at Squash Player Made Citizen for Tourney Texas has a new honorary’ citizen the first annual as a result of squash tournament played at the University Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. line finalist in Class A comp* 'Ted> Smith is titian, Edward T. a native of England who has re­ sided in Houston for a year as manager of Lloyds of London University student and squash enthusiast. Charles S< hnabel, who serves as secretary of the Texas Senate, saw the possibility of a non-Texan winning the "Class A tournament and took steps to avoid such an occurrence. Schnabel informed Governor John Connally of the matter and in re­ issued an sponse, the go’, ornor honorary citizenship for Smith. The Citizenship was presented to Smith by squash-playing Dr. Norman Hackerman. vie ^-chancellor for ac­ ademic affa::' who presented all awards for the tourney Desps*^ die citizenship Smith was defeated by B. J. Knott of Dallas. 3-0 In Class B Roger Buck beat Bill Brenner. 3-0. Brenner was also defeated in the Novice Class finals by Charlie Middleton. 3-1 Veterans Connie Saulson and Sam Olds, whose combined age is al­ most 130 balded five games with Saulson the victor, 3-2. The tournament was sponsored by the Austin Squash Racket Club and CTSA for men. T T ANNOUNCING 1-H0UR DRY CLEANING UNTIL 4 P M M O N .-SAT. - A L S O - I DAY SHIRT SERVICE You're Invited to Take A d van tage of Our M any Services ^ s h ift s f in is h e d WASH N F0LD7YALTERATIONS dc DRY CLEAN I MG- ^Tuxedo r en t a l dr O N THE D R A G N E X T T O TH E O R A N G E BULL 2704 GUADALUPE GR 2-3468 Relax to music by Muzak while your laundry is being cleaned or while waiting to pick up your l-hour dry cleaning from M a s ­ ter Valet Cleaners. OPEN 24 HOURS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE f Sunday. March 22. 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Pafa S Kumbaya', Kumbaya', For 2 Baez Concerts Ticket, drawing for the concerts crowd. The first will be at 7 p.m. of Joan Baez, the folksinger's folk­ and the second at 9:15 p.m. in Mu­ p.m. performance open at 6 p.m. and for the 9:15 performance at s i e r . w ill begin Monday at the nicipal Auditorium. The Baez con­ 8:30 p.m. Fine Arts Box Office in Hogg Audi cert w ill be ’he ninth event in the CEC season ticket patrons have torium. Tickets are free to Blanket Current Cultural Entertainment Tax and season ticket holders. Box Committee series. office hours are from 9 a.m. to 4 Single admission at $2.50 for p.m. Monday through Friday and adults and SI for children w ill go been notified of the two scheduled performances by mail and given the opportunity to choose the per­ formance they wish to attend. They from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday. on sale at the Municipal Auditor­ w ill receive admission tickets to Two concerts w ill be presented ium when the doors open prior to April I in anticipation of a sell-out each performance. Doors for the 7 present at the Auditorium door along with the season tickets, 4th GREAT WEEK Connally Subject KASIM ANC AILOR Feat urine Albert Finney O f K IR N Show 10 Academy Award Nominations In c lu d in g B r i t l ’iftn r** • B e s t A c t o r I I VVI B F S M V I IT 7. I .VA MS N O ( H I L D T I C K E T S S O L D E x c l i m i v c R n a d S h o w F n g a g r m c n t P A S S F I S T S I S P E E D E D . n ct BURNET! D R IV E - IN .TS • T e e n DIm < a r d • T H E A T R E M OO SUBNET RO­ MO 1 **3 1 O P E N « IS • F I R S T S H O W 7 15 P E A K . K O I NII A F I N E MM)I)S • C H I I OK- N I K E E Tdult ,5V J a c Ic e G u q s o n S ie v e M c Q y e e N J~1uesdfffW8tD M I L hN THO R a j M J i - \ t MT : M *»-4 I IM I I ll I avt C o m p l f t f > how •MV* P R a n H R o s s OHE man’s LuauTH# $*orr of WORMAN VINCENT R E A K W hat a v vMNrtsi * J I 1 f ia t tor I w e e DIR tits! AMO *o*«*O0vC’~O DIANA HYLAND multo artists A IM I T S E W M DC 50 ( I I 11 I* .15 N O W S H O W IN G ! '■ tart* 7 IO f e a t urn* I TO-1 50 I o m p lrtA S h o w A n n i . 7 :1 V ) E a * t 8:52 HELD OVER! 2nd ew r THC ASTOUNDING STORY OF AN ASTOUNDING M ILITARY PLOT TO TAKE OVER THESE UNITED STATES! Pushb.)ck Spats Free Parking Art Gallery Largest Screen rn the Southwest 1i ' W M N • M H M M IM M A D I I T S 1 my M D C 50 I a e*ee-wo*i**i "tut*ut i mve c •* ***> e < I I I I J I .U mm rn 14 J a c Ic e G U N S O N S ie v e M c Q p e e u F e a t u r e * 7:75-1 7:55-9 15 I 5-r. 05 STARTS TO D AY! ' t a r t 2 05 Hwy leave tile peace-time army mi in wees! T u e .H a v VV .-id 1 A l u . \ ^ A I U I T S 75e M IM lOe I I H I l l 75r ■N TMI l a i N STARTS TO D AY! Features: 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - IO HI "IBM ■ '■Win Sleeping in M y Bertram '..HON Or t Hr. DAY Wk LU HO Hr. f 0 MHH! TECHNICOLOR4 PANA VISION* H * .AC* (fest N m VV 1’v j N - C J Sb W W ^ M ................ ^V-p^ i9m mc* •»<**• «>o MAJrrtN B A L S A M S T .JO H N ?***» * * CAHO!___ **«,T JILL m w - A D I L T S HO M IM ; c o w n 7 m ,.:■■***-. ««M> W. 'n I* > * A * J O < I I M I I soc m{ p >- u n : ?o s t ip r e io B U R N E T T ' •* J'* H -- wfffW* 9 9 \5 Sunday, March 22, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 Draw ing fo r O n e Perform ance Begins M o n d a y, March 23 at H o g g Au d itoriu m Box O ffic e For JOAN BAEZ, fvlksinger Two Performances: 7:00 P.M. & 9:15 PM. Wednesday, April I, 1964 Municipal Auditorium Free fo $11.74 Blanket Tax Holders And C EC Season Ticket Holders V A . t* . r n "n TTn . 'N "T H E F A C E O F J E S U S " end its creator, Dr. Merrell G ag e, ere shown as they appear in a short subject film which will play Easter Sun­ day at the Delwood Drive-In theater. The him will also be shown the following M onday and Tuesday. W inner of the A cad em y of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Aw ard as the best short subject of 1955, The Face of Jesus" depicts changes in the expression of the face of Christ as He matures from the boy of l l to the risen Messiah. Dr. G age, professor emer­ itus of fine arts et the University of Southern California, is the sculptor end narrator. More Modern Music A high point in the University’* nada. Mexico, the United States. current Inter-American Sympos aud Inland. ium of Contemporary Music will be reached at 4 p.m. Sunday when the Department of M usics Syrn■ posium-Symphonv Orchestra w ill appear in concert at Municipal Au ditorium. No admission will l*e charged Under the baton of Luis Herrera de la Fuente. chief conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra of Mexico, the Symposium Orchis tra will perform a program of re­ cent works by composers from Ca Wellesley Exhibit Starts March 30 Tile Wellesley Junior Art .Show arranged through the Austin Pub­ lic Schools by the Wellesley Club of Austin will be presented March 30-April 29 at the Laguna Gloria Art Museum. The exhibition fea tures work by young artists in the Austin schools. Museum hours are from 9 a m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday through Frid ay; from IO a rn. to 5 p.m. Saturday; from 2 to 5 p.rr Sunday. No admission is charged. De la Fuente will be making his first appearance in Austin on the the current Symposium During Sunday concert he w ill conduct the prelude from his recent opera, “ Cuauhtemoc.” “ Musiqut Funebie,” by Polish composer Witold Lutoslowski, will receive its second American pre I Kennedy Tribute A musical memorial la t^e late President John F . kennedy Is among the new compositions to be p lav cd Sunday. “ Epitaph I I I " Ik . I -other Klein, assistant by professor of music, will be per­ formed by the I niversitysSym- podium Orchestra. Or. Klein composed his me­ to President Kennedy morial within the three da .vs following his assassination, scored the work bv the following Tuesday, and copied the parts Wednesday His prev imislv composed “ Epitaph I ” was a tribute to Ernest Heming­ way, and “ Epitaph I I ” was (or Elbert Camus, Nobei-prise win­ ning author. sent adon Sunday. Its premiere p e r ­ formance was given by the New York Philharmonic March IS. un­ der the baton of Leonard Bern­ stein. The Municipal Auditorium con­ cert Sunday w ill also include per­ “ Trepartita," by formances of Mexican composer Rodolfo H a f ­ ter. and “ Lyric for Ochestra ” by Harry Somers of Canada. The concert will be the next-to- last presentation of the Symposium which w ill conclude with a I ecru re­ demonstration series Monday eve­ ning and Tuesday afternoon by the young German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen. Frary Awarded $500 A large oil painting “ Facade.** by Michael Frary. associate pro­ fessor of art. has been awarded th# $r0 ) first purchase prize in an invi­ tational exhibit sponsored by the Longview Junior Servile League. F ra ry was among 40 Texas ar­ tists invited to submit entries in the competition. His painting becomes part of the permanent holdings of Longview a Art Museum Collection and will hang in the Nicholson Memorial Library. EVERYONE INVITED! C O M E M E E T GORDON M cLen d o n Democrat for U.S. Senate MONDAY MARCH 23 I I M A .M . - 12:00 N O O N VARSITY THEATER ON THE DRAG i | i P E E TH E O LO SC O T C H M A N Sponsored by Young Texans for McLendon LA R R Y LITTLETO N . O i.irm .n (PftHtiral U t . ) O n I s l a n d s , i n P a r k s • A u t e C L s t o Y l STRIKES AGAIN! with... S u m m e r J o b s O p e n Two Professors To Attend Meet Dr. Harry J. Leon and Dr. James X. Hitt, University professors of classics, will participate in the pro- c t the Classical Association of the Middle West and South to in Charlottesville, Va., be beld Thursday through Saturday. Dr. Leo* will describe the arch­ aeological and architectural fea- tures of the Emperor'* Palace in Dalmatia, one of the monuments of the ancient Roman world. Dr. Hitt will present Aristotle's concept of instilling right attitudes In youth. His paper. “Aristotle's Method for Transmitting Qualita ­ tive Values,” shows that myths, drawings, games, and music are the best means of forming positive attitudes. C of C President to Spook Edward P. Neiian, president of the United States Chamber of Commerce, will deliver the annual j. Anderson Fitzgerald Lecture at 8 p.m. Tueeday in Business Eco­ nomics Building IOO. • Businas Investment Not Gov­ ernment, Creates Jobs'* is the topic of his speech. By DIANNE HALYARD Assistant Feature Editor Summer on an island, or in New York, or at Yellowstone National Park can be a paid vacation for students — if they want to work. The Student Employment Agen­ cy and the YMCA have dozens (rf pamphlets advertising Jobs — s s waitresses, busboys, counselors, social workers — in exciting places—Yosemite National Park, in the the Colorado Rockies, Philippines. In t h e Student Employment Agency, several notebooks of al­ phabetized Jobs are kept on a desk for students to browse through. Yellowstone Jobs They list, for example, Jobs In Yellowstone hotels, lodges, cabins, and gift shops. Buddy Shelton, senior physics major, describes the summers of 61 and '62 when he worked at the park as a cook as “fair money, lots of fun. and a nine month educa­ tion crammed into three months.'' Howard Barnett, junior Journal- Jdridae S t u d i o o j 1500 W. 34th Street Duplicate Bridge Lessons SOCIAL ((G INNERS DUPLICATE TUESDAY 7:30 P.M. Hmm call HO 5* I 546 for information concerning our duplicate and teaching ichedules. lb ********* AMM . ism major has worked In Yellow­ stone, st a Colorado resort, In Idaho as a fire fighter. He will be a smokejumper in Montana this sum­ mer, and the chance his summer Jobs give him to “meet people from all over.” And to make more money than he would at home. likes Sommer Camps Girl Scouts and Camp Fire Girls organizations need help in running their summer camps. Camp Sealth for Camp Fire Girls on Vashon Island, 22 miles from Seattle, la presently hiring girls 19 and over to work as cabin counselors, on food service staff, office staff, nurses, program counselors, water­ front staff, unit directors, and camp coordinators. Similar Jobs are open in Girl Scout Camps all over the United States. Philippines ‘64 offers a program designed to create “mutual un­ derstanding among Filipinos and Americans/* Students of American and Canadian colleges and uni­ versities are employed for con­ struction and community work. YMCA-YWCA Jobs does not have to be a “Y” member to obtain employment through the n y t* The Y-sponaored Washington Citi­ zenship Seminar Is designed for students with one year of college who are interested in government. Participants hold Jobs in Washing­ ton ami attend evening lecture-dis- cussion groups with government of­ ficials from June IO to Aug. 31. Another Job offers full-time em­ social ployment supervised by workers In the Henry Street Settle­ ment of New York City. Seminars and field trips are held in the evenings and on weekends. Stu­ dents with two years of college are considered. Employment Is from mid-June to late August. A student urban and industrial seminar Is sponsored by the “Y” in Minneapolis and St. Paul. Students are employed for IO weeks, work­ ing 40 hours per week. Most jobs require unskilled and semi-skilled labor. Dates: begins June 13. Students are also employed as busboys, waiters, maids in “Y ’ camps such as those in Blue Ridge, N.C., College Camp. Wise., Estes Park. Colo., and Silver Bay N Y. Additional information can be ob­ Another job source U the YMCA- tained at th* **Y.” YWCA. Miss Anne A p p en zell, member of the "Y" staff, explains that jobs are only for those looking for edu­ cation and service opportunities. “They are not for those who have to earn their way through school, but with careful budgeting they ran come home with some money.’’ Most Job#;, she said, pay enough for room and board while working and transportation to the Job. Gov eminent Interest She pointed out that a student Application Deadline Tuesday, March 31, is the dead­ line for UT coeds to apply for 20 scholarships available through l l women's organizations. Application blanks may be ob­ tained from and returned to Mrs. I Yan res L. McMath. assistant to the dean of women, Speech Build­ ing 111. Scholarship* range from J75 to $150. Foreign... (Continued from Page I) H e m A e peepeeel will Hero It mil some rough waters es He Journey through Congress. “The foreign aid program will still be one of the most controver­ sial Issues before Congress,” he said. Congress Unhappy “The Congressional debate re­ flects a Congress unhappy with the way the world is. To a considera­ ble extent, the Congress takee out on foreign aid the frustration* it runs up against in other areas. The debate gives Congress the to express opinions on chance frustrating issues whether or not they pertain to foreign aid.” is a Tool Limited “We must realize,” Bell said, limited instru­ “foreign aid ment. There are some difficult sit- j uations for the US around the world that will stay difficult no matter what we do with foreign aid. The foreign aid program can­ not affect or solve all our prob­ lems abroad." Turning to the Alliance for Prog­ ress, the 45-year-old Bell said pri­ vate investment in Latin America has been the single biggest disap­ pointment so far in the develop­ ment of the program. “American business is not pulling out of Latin America.” he said, “but new in­ vestment is not preceding as hoped or expected at the time of the sign­ ing of the Charter of Punta del Este in 1961. “ In the vast year, $966 million was privately invested in Latin America, but this is not nearly enough to meet the goals of the Alliance program. Profits are be­ ing reinv csted, but no new capi­ tal is being brought in. We hope this will change soon." One way in which his agency is this attempting change. Bell explained, is by work­ ing with Latin American govern­ ments to build a climate which will encourage US and other foreign ; investors. to bring about Investors Timid Some countries, such as Mexico, . Colombia a n d Venezuela, have been models in this area, but busi­ nessmen are very timid about In­ vesting large sums in other coun­ tries. “To build the proper climate, we are trying to get Latin American countries investment to provide guarantees — insurance, really — against those things investors fear most—-expropriation, war, freezing of assets, and inconvertibility of 1 currency," Bell said. H H H # f/GHTRINff Sir. Z"> ? Sin Of * IMIC'I * • • Patent, n a t: 3 - 1 by Mf. Ess".? brig ■ q ow ct W r •• . . . . . - c - y - g !#JJ -hen d a n *3. A jo ave ab • Patent a* . * S n . , v ^ a m S H O E 5l . u a STORE I STC S p e c ia liz in g in C o l l e g i a t e Fashions 2348 G u ad alu p e — O n the D rag THE DAILY TEXAN A VC H S I c l a s s i f i e d a d v , r t i a i m , b v t , . , ...................... Each Word 115-word mint m um ) M .n irr..rn Charge .......... ............... l l C lass.tied D isplay I colum n JC one inch one t i m e Each Addita cai T i m e ............................................... 30 Consecutive Teem * s u o rd i '5 words 20 w o rd s .......................................................................... 9 ...................................................................... * - i ..................................................................... ........ . . S' cNo copy c h a n c e fo r co n secu tiv e Issue rat .................. CLASSIFIED A D \ EK TI SISO DEADLINES I X) : uesday 3 30 j edn- aday I hue* day Te tursday 3.30 ] r: la y Texa b r*da y 3 30 | unday Tex* I the event o f errors made In an advert.sern n med late r tic* must be given as the p u “. « are respond.tie for on.y one incorrect insertion. ‘exan van . a • . n .... w A 6 - 39*4 *63 *> BILLS PAID D arling efftrF enrv. Air - conditioned, modern, clean. T ile bath 712 San A i t onto. GR 8-3366. GR 2-0032, WA 6 -2 5 6 4 .______________ *59 V BILLS PAID Cute, m odem clean apartment A'r-eooled Walk to Gass. &17K Red R.ver Open. GR 34952 W A 6-2364. ROOMY AND QUIET A vailable I April. Summer rat*"* *65 00 m onth. 708 W. 22s* St, GR 7-9333. Rooms for Rent FOR MALE STU D E N T. Ona blo. L avv School. U nusually quiet. Carp for som eone des S e e ed ideal clean, le g q u ie t pla c e J . M. R om !< 2407 Sabine We also have one be- furnished apartm ent ava.lab! room GR 6-0655 N ig h ts—(XL 2-488R FOR RENT. PRIVATE room kitchen privileges unusually quiet Ideal for located. «tudcnu Garage conveniently GF. 6-1407. s t u d e n t s ; Graduate or advance level o n e apartm ent avellan'* Rock Crest Apartm ents YOB W. 26th B ea u tifu l hea’ed pool. Air-conditioned. W all to wall desk Low rates. Specks! deal for contract from now until the end of summer. NORTH HAST- O N E BEDROOM. Bills peid S ngie *60 On West -2-3 bed­ room. Water, gas pa.d Rem odel, dec­ orate, furnish to s u it HO 5-1064. EFFICIENCY. AIR - CONDITIONED. ADJOINING campus. *57 5 a GR A 2329 Alterations ALTFRATIONS REMODELING. AND m ak.ng formals and evening wears. R ew eaving m onogram m ing. Ladles, Gents. 903 W. 22-#. GR 2-7736 ; ALTERATIONS' M E N S. WOMEN’S Mrs. Norwood’s Unlet! Moved to 502 W. 30th. ar7-9121. 6511. W AKE I 5 EVERY DAY OR NTG.. . FREE phone CALL GR 2-4 0 G . e us t'm* * 7 .YAK SH( ON TYPING TIME * Miss jo- GL 3-5725 P RTS Com peter'!;,* DISSERTATIONS, T H E S E S RE- ty p e d by ex- P- rim >.-d operator of sym bol-equipped ■ *■<•?rot it. Enfield ’irs. Kit area.. GR 6 -7 '"J ° PORTS T H E S E S DISSERTATIONS, RE­ rd* r • ■md sic- trie Spanish sj rn bolt R e''”* r<-*sonsb.‘— page-hour. GR 2-8X32. 3* * Fairfax Walk. THEMES R E P r page. Mrs. Frs A V r 'tea 25e \ 6-1317. MRS. ALBRIGHT wli p e n REASONABLY, I type your pa- aC'C GRAT ELY. KAL PET PAMPER. Com plete groom­ ing service. al! breed?. Pet supplies for sa.e. a n bird? Poodle puppies 2 - V Loo; GI, ... 4 A con" RENT-PURCHASL T.V * Alpha Ic evasion R ental GR 2-2692. MARTHA ANN ALB A JET ie professional - ier*> to t ie needs of U(liver** board equip* _ . I ue. science and ansi- typtrg cts S; a. he cs and dissertations. t 2013 GUADALUPE .R .-'TIC A GR 2-76*7 ALL YOU CAN eat - H ouse No h ustle, no b •• s t est. eat snd eat at the B ; 3001 W hit Ii, 250* San Ar' nm trsct only. YOU Houses— Furnished *89 50 HONEYMOON COTTA conditioned Modern, c can only. 3217 Larry Lane Opm 7952. WA *-25*4, Houses for Sa e I RN ISH ED HOUSE: P - ‘ • $7,900 OO— U n iv e rs ity for VT SO. 8 1 V , Park P lace. GR 7-2 ;« ass. For Sale 5 FOOT BY 30 Inch Fr g lia re re­ frigerator. Call GR 2 -4 4 U after 5 P -'n. TYPEW RITERS PR E f > I O lym pia — * " 4 SO s *54 50 Also GE P o rta t . t TV GR 7-8909 I FOR SALE 1963 A asta te than SOO milos C a Less S 8931 after 6 p rn. or can see ai R id geh aien SCU. -------- I 50. R F N T -r: $3 30 - ..— Long's 2 vier. j J- DAY N I Age i x a group. L Order your 1964 V olksw agen d * from Germany, pick up In H o u f - and save su b stan tially. De:* ? vers tty M otors 27X5 Guadalupe, GR 2-7X52. 1958 VOLKSWAGEN SEDAN V * r ; cond;*.I n nice, good m ech a n ra l ■695 00. J. GL 2 2-5307. 963 VESPA MOTORSCOOTFR II - c c , blue. $200.00. Brock GR 1J,'.'.!1. ED 1968 IMPALA Spor*a Coupe. Ra­ dio, heater. 203-VS WTX.O't. Wi l l con- der trade. 2501 Sabine Modern, aqua aofa bed Also used television —$20.00. HO 5-5200. CL 2-1451. 1962 CORVETTE. RACING equipment — never raced. Low m ilage excellen t ■nndition—hard. so ft tops GR 6-0451, I GR 8-3255. even.ngs. weekends. 1964 HONDA “306". Dream > "s ' r trade for used boat. F irm price $575 OL 2-5170 till answer. 1953 MERCURY 2-door. .Standard trans­ m ission. E xcellent condition through­ out. Among the clean est 53 s .a ton ti. Gail GR 7-4764 .............................. .. Help Wanted LARGE NATIONAL COMPANY Needs five men part tim e. Also ac­ cepting now for sum m er work in Aus- S tin and other cities No d eliveries or income route work Above average I H ours arranged to f it schedule. Apply 1593 Guadalupe O ffice 203, M onday 7:30 p rn. BABIES W ANTED! Mothers if you must u ’ I •.cur n e t sm all baby TH E LITTLE ONES NUR M i E 39th. GL 3-755-5 — G Licensed. Your baby will receive Ic m g and efficien t care by an expe cisted nurse. 2-5366 TH E LITTLE ONES NURSERY and attract ;ve T i ne a . clean Bervie*. You ar* .nvitcd to inspect. s x r Sh are expense*, to Sa*** Fe over roister Ho la; s W ill fly or drive CaU GR 7-2413 or t ome by U niversity Motors. 2715 Guada.upe lf inter*-,-cd. Wanted gu m typewriters, WANTED*—Radios, fireplugs, books, ma gamines, rn us.eat instrum ents art supplies, turn.lur* snd household good*, watches stereo equipment, golf televisions, motor ch bs, •rooters, engineering supplies, cameras, tape recorders. <1 sr oBds baby furni­ clothes, ture bk". men s hunting and and phonograph records We also rent tel­ evisions, So 99 a month. Aarons-803 Red River. fishing equipm ent good Typing ATE TYPING. 25e potions N ew IBM. srtheast o f Unix sr* REASONABLE. Brady 23X7 0.4* ATES. $-51-A Satisfaction Mrs Tui is. THI hair TY I VIRGINIA CALHOUN LEGAL TYPING SERVICE all tv; in ; P rofessional fields Sym­ bols. Photo C t Notary. W* ars now located at our r.i w address NEW ADDRESS 13 I Edgewood GR b-2636 E.VPER1EN GR 8-5446 • VPIST — I NTVF.Ft- -U H elm PfaefM n, FACULTY-STUDEN T Prof ess:-mal Typing Service Corr, pev fit typing qua a iled by * da experieo e. Manuscripts for theses, dissertations, books snd reports. Personal and conscient .out hand- i cg of every need including mule t ithsng and photo copying MRS. LAURA BODO! R Phone GR 8-8113 907 West 22 4 ■ Four blocks west of drag> EXPERIENC ED TYPING SERVICE. reasonable, near Allan- dale.. HO 5 - 5 8 1 . 3 ___________________ A ccurate PROFESSIONAL T Y P IN G LEGAL* General IBM Lola K insey H I 4-221L Call after 5 30 p m_____________ T H Vs E S, DISSERTATIONS, RE­ PORTS. IBM Select Tic. Symbol* fog science engineering. language accents Greek. Cali GR %■ m f _____________ __________ TH E MOONLIGHT ERS— IBM. Mui- tU lth ln g After 6 OO and w e sto n d a M arguerite Costello CL 2-9130. 190*. A W est 33rd __________________ m athem atics, W ANTED. TWO MEN Students to a l­ ternate as m otel desk clerks HO 5- TYPING. THESES AND d la se r st ions. Electric typewriter. R eason able GL D E L A FIE L D Grammar, TYPING spelling te e page. correction. HI 2-4733. I Sunday, March 22, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 Every Body's Bra ^ V A N I T Y F A I R , Every Body's favorite, this light curving of lace and Lycra* gives you exactly th# fit and all the flattery you want to see in the mirror. Just bliss, the way It feels, and it launders like a wish come true. So we’d say all the popularity is truly deservedl A cup 32 to 36; B cup 32 to 38; C cup 32 to 3«, $3,95 IN FASHION COLON* TO MATCH VANITY FAIR GIRDLES ANO UNUEKC Nylon snd LyersO sperutex fiber Deadline for Darilek April I At 5 p.m. April I is the deadline for nominations for the Marjorie Darilek Award, given to the most outstanding independent University woman student. Both independent and Greek women students -will be considered for the Silver Spur outstanding woman student award. Any woman student with more than 30 semester hours credit who is not on disciplinary or scholastic probation may apply or be nomin­ ated the Marjorie Darilek Award. for Application forms may be ob­ tained and filed in Speech Build­ ing 102. The awards will be pre­ sented at the Leadership Awards Convocation at 4 p.m. April 3. Bfanton to Hear Gripes tripes from Blanton Dormitory residents will be aired bi a panel discussion at 6:30 Tuesday in the dorm living room. Mrs. Dorothy P. Martin, resi­ dent counselor, has approved the informal “experiment” which is the first such program in the women’s residence halls. Residents may direct com­ plaints and suggestions to the panel composed of Mrs. Martin, student assistants, and advisers. ★ Slate to Speak Today “ The University Student Con­ fronts Modern Literature” will be the subject of a talk Sunday by Dr. Joseph Slate, assistant profes­ sor of English. This will be the last in a series of three Sunday morning sessions on that topic at the Methodist Student Center. ment, on “The University Student Confronts a World of Nations.” ★ Flynn Deadline Thursday The deadline for submitting nominations for the annual Mike Flynn Award la noon Thursday. The trophy will be awarded to toe male student judged to be toe best all-around campos citi­ zen. The winner will be an­ at 4 p.m. on Round-Up Western Day, A p ii S. Nominations may be made by members of toe faculty and staff and by toe presidents of campos organizations. They should be submitted at Speech Building 111. ★ l6tds to Go to San Juan Dr. Anthony Leeds, visiting asso­ ciate professor of anthropology, ★ S p e a kin g of Churches Dr. Blake Smith will preach at toe l l a.m. and 7 p.m. worship services at University Baptist Church Sunday. will be sung by the chancel choir of University Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. Palm Sunday church sanctuary. in the I His sermon for the morning service will be “Christ toe King,” and he will preach In the eve- I ning on “The Finality of Christ.” Student group discussions will continue Sunday at 8 p.m. to the Recreation Room of the Rapist Student Building, 405 W. Twenty- second Street. * A “ Day of Recollection” retreat sponsored by Newman Club for Catholic students will be held Sun­ day at St. Mary’s Academy. Students will depart from St. Austin’s Church at IO a.m. and re­ turn about 3 p.m. Lunches may be purchased for 75 cents. The presentation will be directed by the Rev. H. Myron Braun, min­ ister of music. The public is invited and admis­ sion is free. An offering will be re­ ceived. * The Rev. Charles H. Born of University Lutheran Church will speak on “Am I A King?” Sun­ day ai 16:36 a.m. ai the Palm Sunday Worship Service. Holy Comntaakm will be offered ai the service. The Campus Bible Clam will meet si 9:36 a.rn. it Holy Week Devotional Services will be held at noon, Monday through Thursday, at the Univer­ sity Presbyterian Church. The pub­ lic is invited to attend. The Rev. W. M. Logan, pastor, will deliver the daily devotional, and other University area pastors the services, will participate In which will begin at 12:05 p.m. daily and end at 12:30. Following the service, women of the University Presbyterian Church will serve lunch free to all mem­ bers and visitors. ★ Dr, Ronald Bunn, assistant pro­ fessor of government, will speak on “DeGaulle and The New Europe” with a talk by Dr. Jam es R. Souk Sunday at 6:30 p.m. at Hillel koun- up, assistant professor of govern- dation, 2105 San Antonio. The meetings start at 9:40 a.m. The next series will begin April 5 The speech, fourth in a series of Sunday Evening Supper Forums, will be preceded by a supper at 6 p.m. will participate in a Society a t Ap­ plied Anthropology annual meeting through Friday in San Monday Juan, Puerto Rico. He will be chairman of a ses­ sion on “Social Structure and Pol­ icy.” Dr. Leeds will report on his an­ thropological research in Brazil, both on Indian tribes and modem industrial peoples, and will confer with colleagues on other aspects of applied anthropology. Spectra to Be Discussed “Line Identifications of Spectra of Peculiar Stars” will he the subject of the Department of A»- tronomy’s Colloquium No. IS a1 4 p.m. Monday in Physics Build­ ing 448. Dr. William Bidelmaa, profes­ sor of astronomy at the Univer­ sity of Michigan, will present the program. it ★ Assistantships Available About 65 student assistantships in residence halls, student houses, and approved apartments for women are available for the 1964-65 ses­ sion, Margaret Berry, Associate Dean of Women, said. Assistants are chosen on the basis of scholarship, maturity, ex­ perience. and health qualifications. Most positions offer room and board for approximately 15 hour* of service per week. Additional information and a p ­ plication blanks are available in the office of the dean of women, Speech Building 111. ♦ Dr. Garasa Will Speak 81 g rn rn Delta Pi. baaorary Spanish fraternity, will sponsor a terialto, ar com emotion hour, from 3-3 p.m. Tuesday in tho Teton Room to Batts Hall. A special speaker will he Dr. Dotfin Leocadio Garasa, visiting associate professor in Romance Languages. Any student, regard* less to major, may attend if ha wishes to speak Spanish. SUSAN MCGUINNESS studies negatives for the sports section. Chutists to Jump The Austin Sport Parachute Club will present a skydiving exhibition at 2 p.m. Sunday at Lakeway Inn and Marina Airstrip. Sponsored by the Austin Junior Chamber of Commerce, the show’ will demonstrate the mechanics of skydiving. Four divers will make nine jumps from altitudes ranging from 3,600 to 12,500 feet.. To reach They will use smoke trails for jumps more than 30 seconds long. the airstrip, persons may follow Highway 71 West, turn right on Rural Road 620, and follow the signs. P H O T O G R A P H IC SUPPLIES THE UNIVERSITY'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER EXPERT C A M E R A REPAIR 2010 Speedway TAPE RECORDERS and TAPES Hallmark Cards and Plans-A-Party Shop Studtman Photo Service Serving the University Area for 13 Years GR 8-6609 The passion and Easter sections of Handel’s oratorio, “ Messiah,” B E D W A Y "HIGH FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES” Dr. Louis E. Buck Veterinarian HOUSE CALL PRACTICE N o Extra Fee for House Calla (D ay or N ight) S u r g e r y b y A p p o i n t m e n t GR 2-5879 GOOD EATING Sports Lover Cactus Bound I “ I grew up loving sports, and the creativity of lay-out drawings ap­ pealed to me,” Susan explained. “I believe the purpose of the Cactus is to represent student life. I want to stress photo-jour* nalism, putting meaning into pie* turps, to present a complete and accurate record of a year at the University,” said the editor who plans to make the Cactus more than a “reference for blind dates.” Active in Challenge, Hospitality Committee, Wesley Foundation and Round-Up Review’, Susan feels that a good editor “ should be informed on student life and take a part.” the f a l l semester. A senior elementary education major, Susan will practice teach during “I will only be able to work in the afternoons, so I will stress the im­ portance of the staff and a close- knit group.” The new editor, 15 hours away ] from a degree, has postponed her January graduation to assume in June her 20-hour-a-week duties of planning the book, recruiting and supervising a staff. After graduation Susan W’ill use her public relations experience on the Cactus to “work with people.” “ I plan to teach primary school because I love the younger child­ ren, but if I go to graduate school, I will obtain a degree to teach sec­ ondary speech and sponsor a high school annual.” By JANE PATRICK A cactus plant “with a definite personality” and flowers from dor­ mitory friends and a special con­ gratulatory message from a track ooach added to the thrill that Susan experienced Monday McGinness night when Cactus editor Kav Mor­ row informed Susan of her ap­ pointment to the 1%4 editorship. The daughter of a former roach, a high school cheerleader, volleyball player, and a football and basketball enthusiast, Susan is presently co-editor of the Cac­ tus sports section, “ The coaches are all so nice and treat me like a human, not reporter,” Susan just a girl praised. Having worked on her high tchool annual and newspaper staffs and having been assistant year­ book editor at Alvin Junior Col­ lege, Susan the Cactus joined gports staff when she came to the University as a second-semester gophomore. S U M M E R S E S e i O N HAWAII 6 WEEKS FROM $585 T h lt TOI A n n u li S u m n e r P r o r » m I e ’ ! y o u * tt # n d U n iv e r s i ty c f H jw a u 196 4 S u m m e r S e s s io n in H o n o lu lu . I n c lu d e s j e t r o u n d t r i p P e n A m e ric a n A ir n e y e t u v e i f fo m w e s t C o a s t . . . 72 p la n n e d a c t i v i t i e s , S i f t i t s e e m i . d in n e r d a n c e s , b e a c h p a r t i e s , . W j'S .k i B e e c h H o te l a c c o m m o d a t io n s . t o Tho A d le r U n iv e r s i ty S tu d y T o u r p r o g r a m H aw s t o s n d t e e v e J u n e 2 5 . t e s c h e - s c a n a p p ly , r e t u r n A u g u s t I O . B u t h u r ry , s p a c e I t t o c o m e . lim t e d ! A s* y o u r s u r f i n g , c r u i s e s I s la n d s ! A ll o u ts t a n d i n g s t u d e n t s . . . t h e f r i e n d ! t o e . . Arm now X m i l y - X a a S t a f f o r d 1609 G a s t o n Ave. . Au s t i n 3. GR 7-8753 _ — ^ FREE! Hawed Summer Session Bulletin Sand to B Address f f- . - in. - Io n a — S tate - i ................ . . . . . ■ m S c h o o l , GUIDE EL PATIO MEXICAN FOOD OPEN EVERY DAY 11 a .M. — I A.M. A.M .— 2 A.M . FRI. & SAT. Food to Go 30th and Guadalupe GR 6-5955 — GR 7-0164 UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS ■ IT rn . M.7 rn* s u d o r .3 OO— New* 3 OS- Sound* of th** S> mphony 5 .OO— K*> hoard K»n?«*y 6 OO-Fourth Army Symphony 6 SO—Greet Decision* 1964 7 OO—-New* 7 IS—Th* Atom and th* n y 7 30—Choral Masterwork* 9 OO—University C oK vrt 10:00--Slxty-M tnute Theater Monday 3 OO—News 3 05-H ouiM Up 5 OO- T m iu ltto n 6 45— Transatlantic Profile 7 OO—New a 7 15— Snorts 7.JO—K UT Special of th# Week 8 no—Music of D istinction 9 30— le ge n d a ry Musts-tans 10:00— Parts Start I me IO:MF—G uars Session 10:15—News J*GRM T V , Channel I Meaday S 30— TV K in d e rg a r te n 9 OO—Active Spanish 9 IV News 30 *T7- American H aritags 30 JO—Moms N ursing 31:OO—N igh Noon 12 O n -B ig Bk-turo 13 30 -D isco very I OO- Pm mar* Spanish I 2 0 - Active Spanish 3 35—N aw* 1 42—World Geography 2 ' A —Community Calendar 2 IO- Svivnrt* 4 2 33—Great Derisions 3 —Festival of the Arts 4 15- The Children s Hour 4 OO- What * N ew ; ’ Pearl Fi*h- 5 3 0 - W K indergarten 6 OD—N ew B iology Propr I or* pl Ive and Interoceptive Mechanisms 6 45—Operation Alphabet 7 13— K vetting Nev** 7 :3 0 —Viewpoint o f Mental Health 8 OO- Public A ffairs: Internationa] Magazine 9 OO- S trictly Busine** 9 5> Best of ETV: •’W illiam W al­ for Violin and ton Sonata and Piano" STUDENTS . . . WE ACCEPT ALL MAJOR OIL CO. CREDIT CARDS! # 70 Location* to Sot*# Too 9 Friendly Export Sorvics Statics A Hon dan t i H A N C O C K SERVICE STATIONS “ A t tis* Sign to th * Rooster" SWITCHING TO A PIPE? S A V I UR TO 2S% O N PIPESI • t o b a c c o s • RI R I RACKS • ROUCHES • LIGHTERS • Btl Laaws Dun kill • Imports M e d i c o # • Yallobol* 9 Ksywoodis Ladies9 Pipes SPARTAN DISCOUNT SMOKE SHOP $501 Airport Blvd. The University Students' Link With Old Mexico in and around A U S T IN Austin’s Most Atmospheric Cafeteria Sen big Daily Except Mon. 11:00 to 2:30 and 4:30 to 8:00 (S S P 2233 North Loop Blvd. One Block West of Burnet Rd. and 53rd St. T he D aily T exan Recommends One of The Follomng for T h e jR o tja l C o a c h S o u s e Supper Club featuring C h a rc o a l - B ro ile d S T E A K S OPEN FOR LUNCH AT 11:00 A.M. 3405 GUADALUPE CARUSO'S CAFE SERVING STUDENTS FOR M O R E TH A N 30 YEARS 311 W . 6th Italian Food, Sea- ) Specializing food, Steaks, Oystan on th * H alf- ^ in shall. 4 4 4 4 ({r,aAiia9. when W. W. Hag erty, then dean of the College of Engineering, initiated a program to honor the top students in the college. According to Joe L. Bruns, assistant to the dean, the pri­ mary purpose of the group is to give members the privilege of consulting with the dean about curriculum. To help a student fol­ low the course of study he pre­ fers, the dean will waive certain requirements and prerequisites tor courses. Students in the hon­ or group ran generally take what they want. Presently, it is composed of roughly the top 3 per cent or about 60 students in the College of En­ gineering, who are chosen each sem ester on their grade point averages. I.ast sem es­ ter 32 seniors. 16 juniors, and IO sophomores were named the list. the basis of to In order to qualify for the hon­ or, students are required to have a grade point average of ap­ proximately 2.6 and to have at­ tended the I niversify for at least two semesters. Selection is made on the basis of grades made only at the I’niversity. The following students were in the Engineering Fellows last se­ m ester: Seniors were Nasser Alrashid, Howard M. Amo, Jim my M. Bil­ g e s John Boehl, Howard Collier, Joseph Cordaro, Eugene G. Dier- schke, Mario J. Gonzales, Frank­ lin C. Harris, Guy W. Haynes, Claude Hildebrand, Jam es H. Hin­ derer, Richard N. Hollenshead, David W. Johnson, Charles T. Koch, and William F. Kopeeky. Other seniors included Daniel D. hnben, Robert A. McLaugh- lan, Daniel G. Mackey, David .Ma>hall, Francis O. Nick- T. iin. David A. Pullen, Gary Y. Robinson, D a n i e l L. Schodek, Henry J. Sherrer, James Sryg- ley, Thomas P . Taylor, James R. Thompson, Thomas R. Tr­ im nek, R o b e r t A. Williams, Peyton Yates, a n d Robert W. J Young. Juniors were Saleh H. Athel, Robert F. Boggus, Walter L. Brad­ ley, Ben P. Eppright Jr., David Hawkins, Jam es B. Hicks, Ken­ neth Kirsch, Johnny A. Kopeeky, Charles I.aird Jr., Howell W. Mann, E dgar A. Miller, Edward C. Sebesta, Douglas M. Selman, Charles WT. Frederick Weigl, and John L. Whitesides. Smith, Sophomores included Paul D. Engeling, John B. Harper, Donald W. Hartm an. John C. Heidman, Richard K. Lennington, John W. Moore, W. Lee Moore, Albert F. Schkade, Thomas L. Wharton, and Ronnv V. Yates. Graduates Seek Placement First Industries that wait for science and engineering graduates are left out in the cold nowadays. There just aren’t enough of them to go around. E very semester, some 200 indus­ tries compete for prospective em­ ployes in mechanical, electrical, civil, nuclear, aero-space, and pe­ troleum engineering, as well as physicists, chemists, and mathema­ ticians. A 15-minute interview and a care­ ful look at a transcript has sent many a student soaring through the airways to ‘’have a look at our plant” — all at the company's ex­ pense. The agency which makes possible this modern phenomena is the En­ gineering Job Placement Service It arranges living accommoda­ tions and interview rooms for die industries coming to the campus, signs up all the job hunters, and advertises the interviewers by mail to professors of all the advanced courses. The director of the service is Jon L. Bruns, who describes it as a ‘‘catalyst” between students and in­ dustry. “We don’t guarantee we’ll find anybody a job,” he said. “That’n between them ami die industry.” Bruns complained of “people on the hill” who don’t like the idea of a placement service. "They think we should stick completely to education, but somebody has got to worry about having jobs avail­ able for these boys when they get their degree.** The coat of die service la very little. The thousands of long-dis­ tance phone calls Brans mattes l l over the nation are Bande collect Arna yourself w ith fact* about DuPont These booklets helped persuade some 700 new B S. graduates to join us rn 1963. It was mostly a matter of getting facts. For example, if you want to start your career in a certain section of the country, you'll find that Du Pont-w ith facilities in 28 states-w ill try to accommodate you. ff you’re interested in growth for what it can mean to you personally, you'll be interested to know that our sales have increased 750% since 1937. You’ve probably heard that RAD expenditures are a good indicator of a company's future success. We spend $90 million a year on it, $60 million of which goes straight into “pioneering research" - the discovery of new scientific truths and new materials. Our booklets will answer most of your preliminary questions, la te r-o r even now if you w sh_we can talk specifics by letter, or face to face. Why not write us or send our coupon? We’d Uke to know about you. * TECHNICAL MEN WE’U NEED FROM TNE CLASS OF *M Chemists Chemical Engineers Mechanical Engineers Industrial Engineers Civil Engineers Physicists Electrical Engineers I I t I k l Pent de Nemours A Cs. (Inc.) 2S31 Nomouri Building, Wilmington, Dataware IMM Pleas# — ne ma the literature indicated below. C DuPont and the College Graduate D **• iKatie* of th* Du Poet Company. nam#__________________________________________________ Cia**___________Ma (or________________ Degree o p e c tee!_________ _ Com age______________________________________ SumUy. Merck 22, ISM THE DAILY TEXAN Page I ff Engineering New Fields We are happy to have this opportunity to give you a glimpse of our College of Engineering at the University. On these pages you are shown our faculty, students, curricula, research projects, scholarships, professional activities, and other facets of our college. We are proud to be ranked in quality among the top 15 engineering schools in the United States. As far as quantity is concerned, the University ranks eighth in senior students enrolled (630), thirteenth in un­ dergraduate students enrolled (2,043), fifteenth in the total num ber of graduate students (423), and tenth in the num­ ber of PhD candidates (105). The quality of any college is dependent mostly on two factors, the faculty and the stu­ dents. We are fortunate in being able to retain many of our outstanding faculty members who are faced continuously with offers of new positions at other institutions, founda­ tions, and industry. Maintaining such an excellent staff Is possible only through the closest support of our Board of Regents, oar administration, oar ex-students, Texas in­ dustry, and especially our Advisory Council of the En­ gineering Foundation. The program of engineering at the University is dynamic and exciting. The whole field of engineering today shows excitement and ferment caused by new vistas opening and new opportunities challenging. Engineering has the potential of creating a world of plenty, enriching our minds, giving us more leisure time, wiping out in large measure the diseases which have plagued man, prolonging life, bringing the people of the world closer together. It is necessary for our faculty members to update ou r curriculum continuously so that our students may ac­ quire a training that will be as up to date as possible to prepare them for the Twentieth Century. Fem mc of the grant explosion of knowledge in the various fields of engineering, the curriculum from which the student graduates will bear little resemblance to the cuiikulnan which he chose as a freshman. The faculty and I pledge to our students th a t our pro­ gram wall be the most up-to-date, dynamic, and first class. Dean John J. McKettn Presenting a College Today, we are seeing a gigantic increase in talk, develop­ ments, and skill in the area of engineering. Future predic­ tions include artificial hearts, lungs, and other parts of the body; automobiles driven automatically by electric eyes. But for any of these to come about, an educated and technically skilled engineer will be required. The purpose, then, of any department or college of a university such as Texas is to prepare students for the future. Engineering students ara offered the opportunity to become educated as wefl as technically skilled. The College of Engineering offers degrees in the fields of hero-space, architecture, chemical, civil, electrical, engineer­ ing science, mechanical, meteorology, petroleum, and draw­ ing. A new Engineering Science building is being added. Other University saBegcs ara developing also. Tho fins arts sslrge has seeded two new baBdiugi, the art M U fag and the drama M kBag tocM fcg a laboratory 1 theater. The Cobego of Fdarattsn has rim aged Ms ear. The College c f Engineering is, then, a representative et the work being conducted in all Brens of University Hie. It tepceserts something beyond chibs, meetings, and sweet­ heart dances, although they ara a part of college. That Is why me sre presenting Just one example of a field Bf study here at the University. EMBLY LAMON STAFF PBR T M MUK * W N * ............................................................................... EMILY LAMON ENGINEER EDITORIAL ASSISTANT.................... PEYTON YATES AD VREE .......................................................... SARA BURROUGHS JO ANN BARDIN ENGINEER COORDINATOR ®ePc r t e B ................................................................ Kafr Oliver, Jim Gsell, Her* Jane Gorham. Eddie Miller, Jo Beth Janke, Forest Reese, David De Prang, Bonnie Bennett, Mary Middleton, Mary Mabry, Bruce Maxwell, Harrell Allen, Marvin Bk>m- quist, Ken Castleman, Dick Davenport, Tim Duffee, Bob Hambcigjht, John Hartman, Floyd Haskett, Claude Hilde- brand, James Hinderer, Coye Mac Jones, Robert Naas, (E ver Nickiin. Howard Roberts, Jerry Sacks, Mack Smith. James Stephens, James Stewart, James Tribble, and BUI Wktaar. W W * D E S K * .................. DAN ROBS March 22, 19*4 T H E D A ILY T E X A N P a y 21 Little Man on the Campus Bv Bibler “6oOPfiFAEN^l Tug PJS' P&TCI*66 o f M t H e e & T EVF£ HM? PC* MTU VZZ 55 fc& A LEVEY PAETY. * E ngineering B ureau A ids Graduate Research The T e x a s Atomic Research Foundation has granted two U ni-1 versify professors $100,000 to study plasm a dynamics. The Bureau of Engineering Research helped the two professors the grant. in securing Founded bi 1925, die Bureau's primary purpose is the encourage men! of graduate activity in the College of Engineering. The m ajor means of research en­ couragement by the Bureau is help to securing financial aid for the researchers. This aid comes from appropriation from U n i v e r s ity funds as well as contracts from industry and organizations such as the Texas Atomic Research Foun­ dation. More than $300,000 will be available to students and faculty this school year. The It ar aaa af Engineering Re­ search has aa permanent re­ search staff. The Dean of the CeBege af Engineering is the di­ et We Bureau. Actual however, is vested in Dr. Wil­ liam ( i i nuiogham, professor of chemical engineering, now bolds this post. Present research being done by faculty members under Bureau from studies sponsorship ranges in the strengths of plastic m ater­ ials by a chemical engineering pro fessor to research in the erosion of stream beds around piers by a civil engineering instructor. Abo. there is basic research such as studies of the surface characteristics of materials, of which little is known. The Engineering Data Process ing Center, with its IBM 1620 and Pace analog computers, is under tile control of the Bureau. The data processing center is open to both graduate and under­ graduate engineering students. It is in use nearly IOO hours each week. This is an average of 14 hours a day seven days a week. Other serv ices of the Bureau in­ clude assistance in compilation of technical papers on research con­ ducted and employment of a drafts­ man to do any illustrations neces sarv for these papers. College Picks 6 Graduates For Awards During the June, 1963, I 'niver* sity commencement ceremonies, the College of six graduates of Engineering were honored for their records. outstanding professional Presentation of the awards was made by Dr. W. W. Hagerfy, dean cd the College of Engineering, and R VV. Olson, chairm an of the En­ gineering Foundation Advisory Council. Only fourteen men have been named to this distinction since 1957, the year the Distinguished Graduate Awards were initialed. The 1963 honorees were Wayne F. Bowman, Chancey Vt. “Tex'* Cook, George L. MacGregor, Guy T. McBride, William J. Pow­ ell, and John L. Tullis. Wayne Bowman is a consulting geologist in Houston. He received his engineer cf mines degree in 1915. Chauccy ' ‘Tex” Cook, a 1930 graduate with a bachelor of sci­ ence in electrical engineering, is president of General Foods, Inc., and a director of Whirlpool and the Grocery Manufacturers ol America. George MacGregor aim holds a BS degree in EE. clam of 1923. He bi president of Texas Util- ities. I hulas, and a director of Texas Utilities, Texas Electric*] Service, and Texas Power and light. Guy T. McBride received a BS in chemical engineering in 1940. He holds a doctor of science de­ gree from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After serving as a professor of chemical engineering and dean of students at Rice Uni­ versity, he has become vice pre*, ident of Texas Gulf Sulphur. WHBam J. Powell, a consult­ ing enginee r with Powell and Powell, Dallas, holds a ISM de­ gree in chemical engineering. John L. Tullis. BS in E E , 1933, Inc., president of AMF Beaird, Beaird Inc., and Phoenix Corporation, is also a di- rector of the Commercial Na Im mal International, i Bank cd Shreveport. ASSISTANT DEANS GATHER. The men who bere hold die petition of a»*i*t«nt dean af the C o la g e af Engineering gather et the annuel re union this year in celebration of the 80th anniversary in the co l age. They ere (top I to r) I. H. Anwteed, present audient dean; J. A. Focht, 1950-59; C. H. Rowe. 1844-50 (b ottom % and L C . K M d , 1913-44. W riter Is to A ctor As Scientist Is to Engineer B» JOHN J MrKFTTV Dr**. < of KnKiwrrittK havp tried to explain the t h e scientist in feren ce between and the engineer in many ways, You might say that Darrell Royal Is th*- si sentisf who thinks up the pi*vs Hts players, who carry out his plays are the engineers, A looter comparison perhaps Is betw****n a biochemist and the phys lr; fact. I call the physician lcian a human engineer The biochemist Is the discoverer of new chemicals, of hath chem istry reactions, vita mins hormones, a n d medicines. But th** physician, the human en gin****r t h e s e data and these products for the benefit of mankind applies S rie a tfo l vs. Kit*; lu re r is T h e s* ientist typically the theoretician, the hypothesizer, the searcher for truth, ami the form ulatiu ol (taste ideas, the discov­ erer or c a l o r i z e r of fundamental knowledge His interest lies chief­ ly in what orvurs and why. The e n g in e e r is primarily an in nova tor or a creator of new things, new products, or methods. His in- j teresi Is in how to solve specific practical problems through h I s knowledge of science so he can prodtM*e something economical for | the benefit of mankind. The engineer never nnirrnsthn •ten the importance aI the M i The Mcieatint. na the other hand, knows that kin dtoeoverieo go for ■nngbt if they are an an they can be enjoyed by kind. Therefore, the engineer and } scientist share a clone relation­ ship and a keen appreciation for Both the scientist and engineer have and n«*ed creative thought. The surge of human intellect into th*' unknown is the basis for sci­ entific and engineering progress. as it is for virtually all of man s intellectual activities. Creativity in science and engineering, however, is unique in tile sense that no new idea, no m atter how small its im­ pact. is ever lost Creativity Prevalent Crawford Greenway, a chem ­ ical engineer anti chairm an of the b o a r d of directors of DuPont, compares creativity in science and engineering w i t h creativity in music: “Consider o n e of Beethoven’s great symphonies: A monumental accomplishment, one that will elev­ ate the spirit as long as there are ears to liear anti hearts to under­ stand. Other com [losers can only try. hoping that what they write will elevate the spirit. Other com­ posers can only try. hoping that what they write will have equal impact. Some few may succeed, but the majority will fail. And for those who fail, it is as if they had never tried at all.” The edifice af engineering, ex­ plains Green w all. pale ta nee a l eeatribattsae. large or a n a l. It Ie Mw a great cathedral; Me spire soaring ever nearer Ie the sky. never completed, always growing with added Increments of ha man ie ever loot, nothing destroyed. A l of as are artisans, our efforts de- ; thought. Nothing f voted lo some small part of the th e 1 structure. Occasionally an Einstein nill ap­ pear. or an Edison, or a Ferm i, and some portion of the edifice will groV apart and will enrich whole, said Greenwalt. We can all aspire to such great contribu tions; but e v e n though we fail, there will he something that structure that bears our name— maybe only a single brick or a bit of cement that binds the masonry together — but something remains that In is ours and ours alone. this concept lies the charm and in engineering c a ­ great appeal reers a n d reasons why so many choose it. the in To emphasize further the dif­ ference between science mad en­ gineering. remember discovery, evaluated in human dimensions, Is not aa end bul a simple be­ ginning. The w o r k of the en­ gineer is the application of a discovery to the needs of the peo­ ple so they can have It econ­ omically and enjoy it. Science for science s sake, just like art for a rt's sake, is utterly useless. The genius of Beethoven becomes meaningful only as it is shared and enjoyed by millions; the treasures of die Louvre Muse­ um of Art are shadows without substance if human appreciation is absent: the beauty crf Shake­ speare's plays becomes universal only if there are eyes to read. ears to hear, and emotions to respond. So it is with science, sterile and lusterless, until it has been brought through the hands of the engineer to the service of mankind. Then, and only then, is justice done to its creator. C O L L E G E O F ENGINEERING REUNION O C T O B E R 2-3, 1964 • Austin’s biggest week-end for Univer­ sity of Texas Engineering Ex-Students • See Texas-Army Game • Attend dedication o f new Engineer* ing-Science Building • Celebrate publication o f "Men o f In­ genuity—from beneath the Orange Tow er,” history o f the College o f Engineering, edited by Dean W . R. W oolrich* • Attend departm ental seminars • Make reservations now — (hotels and motels will be full) Reserve your copy o f history now ’ Send beneath the Orange l o n e r ' ’ t opies ot “ Vie*/ o f Ingenuity from T> name . a d d r e s s .................................................................. ............................ city . . . . . . . * i I check attached ( i I j Mail to j Ta vier I lait l l I, University cif Texas I Austin Texas I Engineering f oundation ) For information write: Dean John J. Mc Ret ta Taylor Hall 167 University of Texas Austin, Texas • P r e ;*ub li. Ilion prior- (b e fo re O rt P u b lic a tio n p rice ( a f te r G o t I. I 1964 > ia6 U SS 73 $4 SS CONSIDER A CAREER with PPG CHEMICAL DIVISION V c [Kiijit with pride to tho graduates from The University of T exas who have contributed substantially to the grow th ol our company and especially to our < hotnical Division plant in D ik e C harles, Louisiana. T hese men have spear- id "I projects and program s in D evelopm ent, D esign, Production, Plant En­ h gineering and M anagem ent. R epresentatives from our com pany visit your c t rn pus iw lei* each year and we are interested in encouraging more grad u ates to join us because of the fine educational background you receive in the Col­ lege of Engineering. As for the future, all of us at PPD look forward to it with confidence. W e are expanding now and the years ahead are even more prom ising n you would like to know m ore about YOUR C A R EE R WITH I I <« ( HEMIC AL DIV ISION, contact your Placem ent O fficer or write: College Relations PPC t Chemical Division P.O. Box 1000 Lake Charles, Louisiana 70604 Sunday. March 22, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Paqa 38 Openings Available . . . in Engineer Trainee Program for graduate petroleum engineers leading to responsible en­ gineering positions at completion of program. If Interested, Please Contact Sohio Petroleum Company 970 First National Office Building Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73102 "An Equal Opportunity Employer." America's most rapidly grow­ ing major c o rp o ra tio n c o n g ra ­ tulates Texas University on its growth. G e n e r a l T i r e a n d i t s Ti r e, Chemical-Plastics, I n d u s t r i a l Prod ucts, and International Di­ visions, plus its s u b s i d i a r i e s A e r o |e t General, R K O G e n ­ eral, and A . M. Buyers have just c o m p le te d their first b i l l i o n dollar sales year. W e hope we may continue to g ro w with Texas. For furthe r in­ fo rm a tio n a b o u t G ene ral Tire, c o n ta c t our Industrial Relations M a n a g e r at either W a c o o r Odessa, Texas. Sunday, March 22, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page I SB Wartime Site Houses Labs By MARVIN RUM>Moen carried out under various conditions. • Structural M echanics R esearch and Engineering M echanics Re­ search This laboratory, actually two labs integrated into one. baa projects plastic in progress on wave propagation, r u s h iom berger created an organization they calk'd the “ Am er­ ican Society of A rchitectural Engi­ n eers.” Objectives of these men were to promote felkiwship; to further the interests of .students of archiecturai engineering; to promote a national organisation; and to p r o m o t e , through alumni, a professional or­ ganization. In May, 1949. the name of the organization was changed to the “American Association of Archi­ tectural Engineers.” abbreviated AAAE and referred to as “Triple A E . ” The architectural engineer, while specializing in the building indus­ try, is especially versatile in this industry. He may lie found work­ ing for a steel m anufacturer de­ signing new .shapes in steel or for a fabricator finding new ways to use steel already boing m anufac­ tured. In 1954, a project known as the “ Air Conditioned V illage” was un­ dertaken by the d epartm ent in con­ junction with tim National Asso­ ciation of home builders and the National Warm Air Heating and Air-Conditioning Contractors. Sev­ eral theses were w ritten about this project. This project operas! the way for most of the air-condition­ ing done in private and speculative homes in tins area today Space Study Ousts C o m ic Book Fiction The D epartm ent of Aero Spar e E ngineering had its beginning as a m a ste r's option in aeronautics in m echanical engineering After increased interest World War II, in aviation the form ation to led of the D epartm ent of A eronautical E ngineering in 1942. With the sudden emphasis on space research that followed the launching of the first artificial sat elid e tic departm ent was changer! to Aero Space Engineering in 1959 the nam e of in 1957, The faculty of the department is composed of two professors ami Urns* associate professors. plus a number of graduate in structors, all of whom are p r e s in ently conducting research various areas connected with aero-space engineering. Those areas include: • The study of hyjiervelocity im pacts, in which a body traveling with a velocity several tim es that of sound collides with another Ixidy. • The study of the flow of ion ized gases at tem p eratu res of se\ ei * I thousand degrees and veloci­ ties nearly eight that of sound, tim es • Studies of promised shock a t ­ tenuation devices to be used to re ­ duce the landing shock of such ve­ hicles as the Apollo spacecraft. • Studies of shock w aves and boundary lavers (portions of flow in to solid boundaries adjacent w Ii i c h la rg e velocity gradients and therefore large sh e a r stre ss­ e s exist I. 'Inch of thin work is tieing the Defense Research done at laboratory ami al the Balcone* Research I enter The larg<*st of the undergraduate laboratory equipm ent is a sub­ can sonic' wind achieve speeds over 200 miles {»«>r hour. tunnel which For studies of a high velocity flow, a sm all supersonic' tunnel that ofierates at m ach two (twice is available. the speed of sound) In conjunc tion with sufier- sonic tunnel, there us a schlieren apparatus for making the shock pattern s rn the flow visible. the TI ie Dow Dhem tcaf C o m p a n y alm ost always har a p lace for b e tte r-th a n a v e r­ age college g ra d u a te s . Because o f o u r present re ad y g ro w th ra te we have o p e n ­ ings th a t represent excellent o p p o rtu n itie s fo r a num ber o f d iffe re n t d eg rees, lf you r m ajor is Tsted on f he le ft be ow, and you find *haf your interests are listed on one o f the v e rtic a l iiner you should look into the o p p o rtu n ities Dow m ay have fo r you. Dow rep resen tatives will be a t th e Engineering and Science Placem ent O f f ic e on O c to b e r 9 and 20, 1964. O r you can w r it e to tech nical E m ploym ent, The D ow C h e m ic a l o - pany, F re e p o rt, Texas. W e 'r e In te re s te d in b o th new g ra d ­ uates and exp erien c ed p eo p le . j _ & c c osa to Cu -4- c c •A 0) a> o E E > CL Q- JO _o > Q) o -4- oC OC 0 ° we SA cr we CL c C a; O o u -JC -TD o LO CL I % . _ I X O c *c c a> c A3 OC o c o o o <0 3 c o <0 > V- o LU 3 U •O o 'jo E * to •4- o CL wn c 3 o o UU J tA .5 to. 4)-4- rn c J O n •4- o _2 4> OC J Z 2 a * I I I I -JC • — if O o ~Q cr c C C O ! I I e« E .E a cr , o o c o ^ UJ X wi 0) WI e o o c o E o OC ~o o a ® ° « j . o ■JI 0 E -c Q- V) JO m a> a> 1 s o O' .E <• "t;1 * >■ E9 _ a l c ® - 2 < ? .£ -JC E . • fe ° * “ 5 - rn -Z £= ■5 • S $ Z r n a. a w w D I II X | I X X X X I I xt I I f I I !_ iX L_ i x j I I I I x X i I x I j f i j i I7TTT XI * J * J1 1 * ( X x x j x " A n Equal O p p o rtu n it y E m p lo y e r ” Biochemistry Biology Business Adm inistration C hem ical Engineering Chem istry C ivil Engineering Electrical Engineering Engineering Route BBA Industrial Engineering M echanical Engineering Q U E E N R O Y A L L Y W E L C O M E D . Miss Phillis Johnson, n e w l y elected sw eetheart of the C o llege of Engineering, is congratulated a t the Engineer's Ball by Dean John M c K e tta . — T e x a n P h o t o — D rartd y Space Design In Plan Course Architectural engineering p e r ­ tains dirts i iv to the build ini' int his try It is primarily applied engi- m m ring . The studi*fit who receives a bachelor of science degree in arehi tedural engineering will have a substantial background in siruc- tu ia l analysis arid design, mechani­ cal engined mg as applied to the building industry, and a high de gri*** of planning and coordination skills. The versatile architectural engi neer has many roads open to hun at graduation. engineering, Architectural engineering grad Uales are employed by consulting firm s s per-la ii lung in structural or con­ environmental tracting firm s, a n t i n d u s t r i e s through their building division to supervise raw hoi Wing construe thin cu- ok) building maintenance One of die bright spots in archi­ the tectural engineer mg architectural engineer always has to go an mto business for himself, whether it tie contracting or consulting, im m ediate opportunity that is The (•rowing Industry IV p a rtm e n t of Commerce lees the building busine*** as the industry nation’s fastest growing It says that three times as much building as ha* been done by man sim e the beginning of tim e w ill be done in the next 20 years These figuies, coupled a ith Ute fact that this tim e the D epartm ent of at Architectural Engineering c o u l d place more graduates than it has, point to a great shortage of archi­ tectural engineers over the next 20 years. A survey of placement statis­ tic* of J * graduates over Use bud la years shows the following dis­ tribution 31 per cent in private consulting firm s j 16 per cent with private building construction contractors 16 per cent in private industry i l l per cent in government work (city, state, and federal) 9 per le n t with p rivate architec­ tural firm s 8 per cent in graduate study, teaching, or research 4 per cent foreign graduates 5 per cent miscellaneous a n d unknown. Shitted F aculty The faculty in the Departm ent of Architectural Engineering is made up of professional men. The de j par tm cot insists that all its mem hers have extensive practical ex to graduate perience training. in addition Several teaching assistantships and funds for research work are ava liable to the graduate student Mosher Steel offers a scholarship especially for the benefit of an out­ standing architectural engineering I student. VALVE ENGINEER Challenging position as Project Manager of complete valve line. M . E. Degree preferred. Must have extensive valve design experience. O ther engineering openings for graduates with 2 to 5 years of experience. Contact Personnel Mission Manufacturing Company P. O . Box 4209 Houston, Texas 77014 H O 2-3461 Sunday, March 22,1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Pasa 171 Changing Concepts and Technology Attract Inquirers to Engineering J Take Nap O r Snack In T Room facilities Tho **T* Room is tho engi­ neering students' lounge. It was to provide built by students recreational similar to those in the Texas Union, i but much nearer at hand. It is located in the basement of like tile Taylor Hall and Hall, derives from Dean Thomas Ulvan Taylor, first dean of the College of En gineering. it, its name The construction of the **T" Room began Dec. ll, 1952, and lasted until May 13, 1957. It entailed 30.000 man hours la bor by 3,000 students and result­ ed in Hie removal of 2.300 cubic yards of earth. This herculean task was done by engineering students at an estimated saving of $20,000. the Since completion, “ T Room has paid for itself through profits made from concessions located within. It provides con ! venient lounge facilities in which the engineering students may get a snack, take a nap, shoot i the breeze, or get a ** little in- j sight” on some engineering as­ signment. Bv int B. II UMSTEAD Assistant Dean isn’t What it uw-d Engineering few yeai>- ago; to I**, even a and a few years from now it will be quite different from what it is today. Its not only because the concepts of engineering change, but also because everything an en gmeer works with changes. found In 1941, uranium was defined as “ an element of little commer­ cial value, .sometimes in pitch or tar, and often used to color tile.” Today, every engineer­ ing degree plan has been profound­ ly affected by increased technol­ ogy due to the atom. Engineer ing isn t what it used to be. Creativity Stressed Many people think that engine-! mg is simply two things: the learn­ ing of scientific facts and the ap plication of these facts in anal ysis, synthesis, and design Neither one nor both represent engineering adequately. My favorite definition of an engineer is one who is pri- marily a creator of technical things and services useful to man.” The strongest characteristic of an engineer is aa inquiring and sharpened by intuitive mind, this ami v Of an re gard , seien tific experience whet- Psi by the p leasu re crea- liv e n e ss— that is the ch a ra c te r­ engineer istic that m ak es engi­ gre a t. In neering is ju st what it used to be. In 1900, there were two PhD's in die engineering field, earned and by 1930 only 30 were grant cd per year. In 1952, there was an order of magnitude change when more than 600 PhD s were granted. In 1962, there were more than 1,200. This same story ap pliers to the m aster’s degree. Their growth was from about IO granted in 1900 to almost 9.000 m 1962 Rugged Characters The engineering profession in the 1900’s was characterized by men wig) liked the rugged life, the' out of-doors or the factory men who liked travel and adventure. To­ day, the position of an engineer is characterized by the man in die suit; the man who. creates; and the man who, with shrewd judgment, makes decisions af feet- ing protit and loss or savings oyer largest indebtedness. Of the 500 industrials, 42 per cent of the presidents have had manufactur- ing, scientific, and or engineering experience. Engineering isn t what it used to be. tests TURN RIGHT ONE QUAR­ TER. E. T. Beynar the in his re­ working ap p aratus search in the field of thermo­ dynamics. The study, taken up in chemical engineering, en­ compasses study of energy bal­ ances, nonideal gases, physical and chemical equilibria, and rates and reactor design. Iii 1900, the engineer used draw­ ings ami speech to rom mu tit­ rate will! other persons, aud with machines. It wasn’t until at»out World War II the engineer first learned machines do not umier- sland speech ami the) cannot understand drawings. It was in the mal-40’s when we realized machines do understand num­ bers. Tile 1930’s were characterized by an *m-o- increased emphasis on nornies, government, and history and the training of graduates to put complex designs on paper. In the 1940 s we saw emphasis on analysis of data, on the ability to present facts vividly, and in at­ tempts to formulate theories in­ stead of empirical relationships. In the 1950’s, we sawr ever) em­ phasis on the mathematical and scientific approach. Many new an­ alytical methods were instituted, and in a large measure communi­ cation of ideas by drawings were de-emphasized. In the 1960’s we see a slight regression, which won t last long, to an increased emphasis on anal­ ysis. synthesis and design, mathe­ matics of probability and structure of materials. In many design class­ es. the drafting board has, practi­ cally disappeared in the last IO years. Now it’s coming back but with a laboratory adjacent to it. The extensive engineering report a s a laboratory exercise is fast dis­ appearing. ) The trends in engineering edu- i cation are difficult to recognize, and only a few are definite enough that we can make sure they ait* real. A few of the trends that I believe are significant and certain enough to leave their mark on ed- 1 ucabon for a good many years to I come are: • Engineers will communicate with men and machines in a more sophisticated manner by a com­ bination of drawings and mat (lo­ rn a tics, with a greater emphasis on mathematics. • An increasing percentage of students will complete graduate work in engineering, perhaps aa high as 50 per cent of all BS grad­ uates within 20 years. • Because of a higher percent­ age of students going into graduate work, engineering degrees prob­ ably will be characterized by bi­ furcation; that is, two programs for at the bachelor’s to those who wish graduate work and one for those who expect to go into the profes­ sion at the bachelor's level. level—one to prxx'eed | • There will be a renewed in- . tercel Ie the economic and pm- femieaaJ aspects of engineering, • Laboratory experiments will be miniaturized ac opposed to those using large machines or test­ ing equipment. • There will be improved ad­ vising and tutorial programs for engineering students and earlier * attempts to motivate students in a career. • There will be a gradually dim­ inishing difference between tradi­ tional engineering disciplines at and a the undergraduate r trend toward a common 4 or 5 I year bachelor's program, partic­ ularly for those students who ex­ pect to do graduate work. level • There will be increased em­ phasis by engineering educators I an praCcaataaalinn and engineer­ ing: Itb the early yearn af a • There will be a shortage of capable engineering students due, among other things, in­ creased entrance requirements of engineering colleges and to the reputation that engined mg k a difficult field of study. to the Engineering is not going to be wha! it is today. WHERE ARE YOU GOING THIS VOCATION ? Young scientists and engineers '‘going places" investi­ gate a variety of challenging engineering avenues before selecting one best suited to their goals. And they look for a professional climate with lots of indi­ vidual recognition and advancement opportunity, lf you are charting your career along this course, let Ling Temco-Vought be your guide. As one of the nation’s most versatile contributors to the aerospace, military electronics and communica­ tions sciences, LTV can offer you a personalized route to an exciting and rewarding future in such areas as aerodynam ics • avionics and instrumentation • operations analysis • dynamics • systems design • servomechanisms • stress analysis • propulsion • communications design * reliability/maintainability engineering • reconnaissance systems • amplifier and computer systems • microwave components design • electromagnetic interference control * electronic eye* terns analysis * telemetry and tracking * trajectory analysis • manufacturing r id • industrial engineering * technical administration . • . plus many others* For a closer look et the numerous career directions available with Ling-Temco-Vought, ask your Placement Office for our brochure describing LTV projects and products. Or write College Relations Office, Ling- Temco Vought, Inc., P. 0. Box 5907, Dallas 22, Texas,’ Ling Temco Vought is an equal opportunity employer. IT® / ITV U S S lU C m O H K * KMAK* coma t itv Miumar iiieraosics / im unco msosutems / in attic / im cow mm jai luctsosiu / im un;vuuiii , I lTV ^ T a o a M / T ICS / ITV MtCJOttN / ITV M M I STSTVIH / M a m o u HAWAII ■ M O O - V O U A N f . I A* 0. SwMlqr. Mwch 22, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN P*9« 4S O il Training Undated By New World Books of h is “ m u st” petroleum courses require a working knowledge of the com puter. More than one q u a r­ tet of h*>th tin* undergraduate and enrollm ent g rad u a te is t h e United States* from outMde from G erm any, I n d i a , Saudi Arabia, the Middle E ast, and South A m erica. student The coatribtttkxi of the ail in­ dustry ta the study and research program * Hi the petroleum de- p art m e at in extrem ely important. This p u t y ear, nearly $ 2 t,M wa* spent by industry on under­ graduate and g raduate scholar­ ship*. loans, and fellowship*. A total of S it,OM has been donated by industry for research f*»r this past year. 'Hie petroleum g rad u ate research pro g ram covers alm ost all funda­ m ental phases of drilling and oil recovery pro*-esses Subjects now urvter rock m e­ chanics. heterogeneous fluid pipe logging flow, drilling fluids, well include study interpretation, fire flooding, hydro­ carbon phase behavior, and basic oil reservoir m echanics and fluid flow. The description of the Petroleum E ngineering Building as H unts­ ville’s Austin branch does refer to the breaking of rocks, but with a definite engineering approach. Four y ears ago a rock m echanics research program w as initiated by Dr. C arl G atlin. Now under the supervision of Dr. Ken G ray, the rock m echanics rese arch program invested or has nearly $33,000 planned for investm ent in a funda­ the behavior at m ental study of rocks under high p ressures and high energy im pacts, such a s found the oil well drilling process. in Dr G ray, in his second year at tim U niversity, has under his di­ rection six grad u ate students in the rock m echanics program . The is aim ed at providing research fundam ental theory for the oil well drilling process. th** lies By PAYTON YATES A* tu sk th*' str****t from Gregory G ym nasium I V t n i n n E m tativ rM H B uilding, b uilt in 1942 »n*i m o u rn in g w hat reputed to b*» th** slowest elevator on cam p­ os A journey on this elevator to th** s«*< u n i floor leads one to th** office of the ch airm an of tie* Pe troietim E ngineering D**pariniem Dr Ben H ( 'audio. is Dr Caudle, who took over th** duties as departm en t ch airm an last received his b a c h e lo rs awl fall doctoral degrees at the H alvers the m em bers of ity Typical of the petroleum faculty. Dr, Caudle has several y ears of oil industry experience tiehind him . in Ins ca se 15 years with Atlantic Refining Com pany in D allas. Inform al Friend the relationship of lh* C indie s office is inform al, retie*'ting the petroleum engineering fat atty w ith their students. With 55 undergrad Oates anti an rig h t to one under g rad u ate to teach er ratio, die at m oaphere is conducive to inform al try the “ The When (iou-uwing the duties and ( o a k of his d e t r i m e n t , D r Caudle atn w ies the im portance of turning out go*»d students, well equipped th** fundam entals necessary with technological prob to attack letns of the oil industry. To accom plish this goal, he has tire aid of six other faculty m em bers each with a doctoral degree the stu­ im portance of dent m ost especially he kept Hi wnad in all research projects. Dr. Cand!** says, “ for it in by a c t i v e l y p articipating Hi re­ search . in close association with a mem Iter of the fa**ulty. thai a student ( i n achieve som e of his m ost im portant engineering train ­ ing " A hr **f took at an undergraduate petroleum in engineer m any w-a>s a typical engineering Ile m ust grasp qutckly a Student m ultitude of facts, technological the num ber at which increase e v ­ ery day. Many of his courses do text, sim ply because, not have .i a s Dr if a teacher teaching entirely out of a textbook, it’s a possible trull cation he i> tiehind the tim es ( audio points out. is reveals < milliliter Speaks The u n derg raduate petrokm m en gin****! lives every day with a rapid Iv chan Mi: world. Nearly a fourth AIME Provides New Information Tile professional engineering so ciety associated with petroleum en lnsti gtneering tut** of Mining M etallurgical and P etroleum Engineers, known as AIM!'' the A m erican is AIM I* has served the U niversity petroleum engineering departm ent for m ore than 25 years, providing for both faculty and students a source of inform ation and fellow ship It is the m ost im portant or [ S anitation of petroleum engineers in the I titled States. P rim arily , the purpose of AIME I la to function as a m eans of gath erin g .»n*t dLstributing inform ation techniques and develop on new rn***its within the petroleum indus try Monthly m eetings a re grouped prim arily around a sp eaker from am ong tile top men in the petro hmm industry. An annual paper contest for both un dergradu ates and graduates the annual fall and spring picnics ami the C hristm as dance, plan chap tee participation the P o w Show and U niversity in tram ural*! a re considered the m ajo r projects I * af the stu dent organization. in LIFT THAT CHISEL, SMASH THAT ROCK Georgs Meyers operates the single-impact chisel —Texan Photo KC hoi* Meet Harvey Attra, one of several hundred Texas exes now at Humble, who asks "Are you interested in Really Broad- gauged Engineering?” Y ou m ay be su rp rise d to find just how broad a profes­ sion en g in eerin g really is at H u m b le. I was. Little did I guess, d u rin g m y first en g in ee rin g assig n m e n t, that I w o uld so m ed ay w in an aw a rd fo r a p a p e r o n computer analysis o f h y d ro c a rb o n p h ase b e h a v io r.1 E q u a lly su rp risin g w as the fact that the major chal­ lenge in o u r e n g in e e rin g -c o m p u te r applications is n o t how to use a computer but ra th e r u n d e rsta n d in g basic e n g in ee rin g a n d p h y sic al re la tio n sh ip s of problems. O n ce p ro b lem s have been clearly defined and pa­ ram e ters definitively sta te d , re d u c tio n to computer form beco m es se co n d a ry , w ith c o m p u tin g system s returning an sw ers w ith am azin g co n sisten cy , sp e ed a n d accuracy. ATTRA—B.S. in P e t Eng’g Univ. of Texas, *54. Now Staff Engineer, Headquarters Production D epartm ent Activities cover brood field O u r g ro u p w o rk s closely with en g in eers th ro u g h o u t H u m b le s oil a n d gas p ro d u c in g o p e ra tio n s. We a re esp ec ially activ e in fo u r are as: d etailed oil-gas rese rv o ir stu d ie s in o n e , tw o, a n d now th ree d im e n sio n s; a n a ly t* of chemical reactions, especially in oil and gat phase behavior; drilling program and equipment design; engi­ neering planning models and information systems. We now have 5 major computer installations with IBM 7000-series computers along with smaller, special-pur­ pose machines. Progress from "dai n T to “teacher" I have also found it a little surprising — but extreme­ ly gratifying — to grow from a ‘student* to a 'teach­ er.* Our annual reservoir engineering seminar is an ex am p le. In 1 9 5 6 ,1 first a tte n d e d it; now I help present it. Our g ro u p also p ro v id es advanced engineering semi­ n ars on new en g in ee rin g te ch n o lo g y and computer ap p lica tio n . All m y tra in in g p lu s our close working asso cia tio n w ith o u tsta n d in g c o n s u lta n ts has k e p t m e ab re a st o f en g in eerin g d ev e lo p m e n ts. H u m b le proves th a t it is a co m p an y vitally c o n c e rn e d a b o u t the p ro fe s­ sional d ev e lo p m e n t o f ev ery m a n on th e payroll. In a d d itio n to in d iv id u al p ro fe ssio n a l d ev e lo p m e n t, H u m b le en c o u rag es co m m u n ity leadership.* It is really a su rp risin g c o m p an y in m an y w ays. I h o p e you will lo o k in to what we c a n o ffe r y o u . ‘ 1963 Rossiter W. Raymond award for the outstand inc scien­ tific-engineering paper presented by a person under 33, ’ Mr. Attra has presented I other major papers on computer use in addition to his award winning contribution; he has been a committee chairman for the local professional engineers society, and a past director of his local Junior Chamber of ( omroerce He is alumni secretary for his college engineering class. O ne of the reasons H um ble is called A m erica’s Leading Energy* C om pany is that we recognize the im portance of exploring and using all form s o f en­ ergy Necessarily, we m ast stay on the leading edge of developm ents in every phase of our operations, occasionally helping push the edges out a little fu r­ ther W e have challenges throughout o u r e n t i r e o p e r a t i o n s s p e c t r u m — r e ­ search, developm ent, exploration, p ro ­ duction. m anufacturing, tran sp o rta­ tion. m arketing and m anagem ent O u r response to these challenges and o u r future depends upon new ideas. T h e *‘e n e r g y " of our c o m p a n y is o u r people. W ould you like to find out a little m ore about a com pany that is a little d efe re n t? Plan now to see us on cam ­ pus o r w rite: H . G . T a ylo r, Coordinator Professional Recruiting and Placement Humble Oil A Refining Company P O. B o x 2180 H ou sto n I, Texas HUMBLE O I L A R E F I N I N G C O M P A N Y An Equal Opportunity Employer Sunday, March 22. 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Raga 51 Chemicals^ Cosmetics Combine To Create Female Engineer M f KATE OUYE* I te m Staff Writer Ckefiiical engineering is her ma Jot. and last semester rile post od m IM - Joyce Ingram, a chemist en­ thusiast at IO, im one of four worn en enrolled in the College of Engi ■cering. H “And I made a B in my easiest course, engineering drawing/' the parity, dark-eyed freshman said. Brice she s taken only two baric engineering courses, Joyce says she doesn t know much about en frieering yet bid looks forward to her advanced courses. when I was in the fourth grade, aud I*ve always aahed why things happen," she remarked. **1 cm J rem ember my parents riling mr Is be fate* and step asking so Encouraged by her father, a rail load employe interested in chem j Btry. and by her high school math teachers in Buffalo, Joyce deckled chemical engineering warn th*' logi cal combination. Booboo I* rashmaa Joyce considered Michigan State University but came to the Uni­ versity after receiving a scholar ship offer. “Now I wouldn't go any where else. I was a little nervous at first because the University is so big, and my sister didn't Uke it at all. That's why I came for sum­ mer school," Joyce explained. "I wanted to make sure I wouldn't be lost this year." f r i e n d l y b u t T h e o n l y g i r l in h o r e n g i n e e r i n g m e c h a n i c s a n d t e c h n i c a l w r i t i n g r ia asem , s h e d i s c o v e r e d W e b o y s w e r e t o see ber. “ I generally don't talk much dur mg discussion unless I’m asked a question,*’ she admits. s u r p r i s e d Joyce discovered her professors generally helpful although after dis­ covering her in his class, one pro­ fessor claimed he'd have to tone down his notes. M rk rtU Friend “ And I felt like I knew Dean Mr Ivetta since we corresponded ail last June when I was getting infor­ mation about the school," Joyce continued Before leaving school, J o y c e would tike to earn a m aster's, but hasn t derided what phase of chem ical engineering she ll take ‘T il have a better idea when I take b l o c k or subject concentration courses in my junior and senior year.'' she said “ R i g h t m w my computer cwur in1 I sarins ten m e," she re ­ marked. “ It amaaea me Ike way yes CM Wick a cm d with rn bunch of boles Ie it end have the right MMwrr rome oat." Although she studies every week night, Joyce manages to leave the weekends free for dating. “ But I try to avoid mentioning majors at first.'' she said. “ When I do. the first reaction is disbelief; then we usually have a good time " CAREER POSITIONS AVAILABLE N E W C H E M I C A L C O M P L E X S L A T E D T O D O U B L E W IT H IN N E X T I S M O N T H S Cojones#'* Bay City. Toxa* plant, considered to be one of the mort highly automated rn the wand, is now being expanded to produce chemical intermediates used in the manufacture ofnytoa pmducta-Colanose’s latest venture. Bey City wit! be the locale a leo for additional product diversification in the late 1960’s. The professional opportunities created by this new expansion ere understandably rich in both immediate technical challenge and substantial groertti potential. Openings require designated degrees, with experience in petro chemical processing and manufacture; physical, analytical or instrumental laboratory techniques; project engineering, proc*** design, evaluation and economics; or production engineering. TBCMMCJUL DEPARTMENT m to c n a a H U I W I I I Junior to sen ior lava! p o sitio n s in p ro cess d esign . e xalt a t ion and e co n o m ic s o f ex istin g units and p m p o o e e fac ultie s . R equires in terest and expert- • n e t in tarted ch em ical p r o c e s s e s and equipm ent. ■ tw ig proteas ton* I com p e te n c e in chem ical ongt- n earing theory e n d p rect.ce, B S or MS in CHC. c a m p m a n a p p l i c a t i o n s c m q i m c k r Junior to interm ediate level position for engineer or m athem atician with advanced m ath training, internet and to m s exp erien ce in com puter pro­ g r a m m e * aa a direct service to p rocess e n g i n e e r . in * w ork. M ust h a v e g o o d c o m p r e h e n s io n o f ch em ica l p r o c e sse s and equipm ent. BS or MS in ChC or Math. m a n r a - a w T c h u m s t Of s tro n g profession al stature and ad­ e a d experience in sp ectroscop y. m d oth er teofcmqwes Will par­ chroma sn Mine Sa o f w td e re n g e o f a n a ly tic s! in etro - » In ph y s le a l o r a n a ly tic a l c h e m istry er ■valuating Rte appl lr. Mien af special r e , - 1— * ^ W t S Z S t ^ I d t w l - M m MS ta M u T a ^ .r r M eas. MS In p h ysica l or organic CMCmiSTS Junior and interm ediate level openin gs requiring ran ge of exp erien ce rn gen eral laboratory w ork and v a rio u s w et and dry a n aly tica l techniq ues. B S or MS in organic or p h y sica l cham istry In te rm e d ia te to s e n io r level p o sitio n s p ro v id in g e n g in e e rin g s erv ice In c o n v e rtin g p ro c e s s d e sig n s Into m a te ria ! a n d e q u ip m e n t sp ec ifica tio n s, c o st/ e s tim a tin g an d p la n t la yo ut for p ro te c ts of v a ry ­ ing m a g n itu d e BS o r MS in ChF or Mi OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT I U K A I V I t M N n M M N T S enior p o sitio n fo r e x p e rie n c e d p ro d u c tio n m a n w ith 6 IO y e a rs e x p e rie n c e in p e tro c h em ica l or o th e r c o n tin u o u s p ro c e s s in d u stry . R esp o n sib le e n d a c c o u n ta b le for full r a n g e of o p e ra tio n s of specific p ro d u c tio n u n its M ust be c a p a b le of m ov m g rapid ly into h ig h e r m a n a g e m e n t re s p o n sib ility *n O p e ra tio n s BS or MS in ChE. P ltO S U C T tO N CM aiM CBRS Junior to senior p osition s involving te c h n ic a l e s S isten ce hi operations o r full responsibility and accountability for personnel and production un its R equires experien ce in petro ch em icals or other contin uous p rocess industry and in te re s t rn super. Visory end m an agem en t position* in O perations. BS or MS in ChE. Senior position for assai Ism ad ——*--------- * _ut_ x a " " f w » and control of corrosion p rob lem , Should ?"* c*p* b<* •* ***** recommendetiona aa to motorist selection equipment construction, etc. RS or MS in ChE or M etallurgical ta g w o s ri i g BgyC*y,s*g of this rppidty craw tog chawucbl complex, is an attrpctrve community of 15,000 * * “ •ppfoximgteqf BO miles southwest of Houston, within 30 miles of fishing and water ■" ■14,1 havens <** the Gulf of Mexico. Living is fine—and its cost is low B K N * A m i , I. aK M IM K I NCI. H ill NI, CI RKKNT ANI) R X P f i'T K D P A R N I N ' . S TO MR R C. JO H N SO N a a eoo le a l In terv iew arui be srro o g e d f a r a aal I find ap p iin a a ls CHEMICAL COMPANY A DIVISION OF CELANCSE CORPORATION OF AMERICA P.O. BOX #509, BAT CITY. TEXAS 77414 An E qual O p p o rtu n ity E m ployer Sen day, M a r c h 22. 1964 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g * I6 B \ jill P h o to TAKE O N E GIRL, ADO O N E D R A W IN G BOARD I IJ ra d d y . Ike result is J o y c e Inqrem, en Honor stu d ent ie engineerinq . In C h e m ic a l E n g in e e rin g Schoch Saw Basis The Department of Chemical En gingering was founded by lh#* late Dr Y. J* Srhoch, who realized the in raw m aterials great potential resources I*-fore long anyone eLse. He set out to train Chemical engineers rafiabto of cap italizmg on these available resour­ ces in Texas Dr. Schoch was a man of strong scientific background, having de grees in both civil engineering and chemistry, arid he established a program at Texas which h a s a1 ways emphasized training in the sciences, mathematics and engi m eting. “ Although there are mi official ratings of departm ents around the country, it is significant that a ra t­ ing made by Cornell University in 1962 included the Chemical Kngi Deering Department af the I niver shy in the top 15. Also, no other chemical engineering department in til is part of the country was ranked so highly. Moreover, tho departm ent has for manv years boon accredited by the Knginecrs Council for Professional Develop nient,” said Dr. Howard Rase chairman. Tho ch e m ica l e n g in ee rin g fa ­ culty c o n sists of 12 p ro fesso rs in te re sts in m a m having b ro ad f aculty re s e a rc h p ro je c ts fields now in p ro g re ss will u ltim a te ly prod IHS- new p ro d u cts snch as Improved plastic* ami new pro­ ce sse s for ma nu far-ta ring a varie­ ty of substances ranging from plastic squeeze bottle* anil new fabric* to life-sastainiag drugs. Dr Jam es R Brock is investi­ gating theoretical areas of statistical mechanics and plasm aphysics, Dr. Eugene VV laster j is studying nuclear reactors and heat transfer in the human body, an area of vital to medical science. the h i g h l y importance Industrially oriented studies are tieing carried out by such profes­ sors as Dr. VA A Cunningham, who is studying water treatm ent ami waste disjxisa! and Dr K B. Biriioff, who is working on chem­ ical reactor di*sign. sp ace. T he d e p a rtm e n t of c h em ic a l en g in e e rin g is ho used in the fm ir- sto rv < h e rn i i a I E n g in eerin g in Building anil m e n pies s p a le t h e E n g in eerin g I .altair*tories Building. In a ll, the d e p a rtm e n t h a - 21 WW s q u a re feet of lah o ra- torv During the month of February, outstanding chemists and engineers of the DuPont Company present­ ed lo* tures on the* study and m anu­ facture of polymer's. Earlier in the the annual Schoch Lectures year provided a series of talks on cryo­ tim stud' of behavior of genics m aterials at low the extremely tem peratures of liquid oxygen and nitrogen S A F E T Y E N G I N E E R I N G C a r e e r O p p o r tu n itie s in P er g r a d u a te e n g in e e r s s p e d ?4 J5 This work I* of a non ro u tin e n a tu re a n d c o m itia m ain ly of c o n su ltin g w ith p o lic y h o ld e r c o m p a n ie s th e ir P o te n tia l a c c id e n t c a u s e s e n d c o rre c tiv e a c c id e n t p re v e n tio n p ro b le m s ■ •snot a r e d e v e lo p e d by a p p lie d e n g in e e rin g k n o w le d g e C h a lle n g e s in • * 'd * v a rie ty o f in d u s trie s e re w ithin th e s c o p e of th e jo b Som e a d v a n ­ ta g e s o f th e jo b ora* in c h a l l e n g i n g w o r k * L O C A T E D IN T E X A S * O P P O R T U N IT Y F O R A D V A N C E M E N T * VERY LITTLE T R A V E L * S C H E D U L E D S A L A R Y R E V I E W S * R E L O C A T I O N EXPENSES P A I D * University o f Texas In te r v ie w s M a rc h I 3 O c t o b e r I 5 C o n te c t th e C o lle g e P la c e m e n t O f h c e fo r a p p o in tm e n t to interv iew w rite fo r m o re p re s e n t fo r en in fo rm a tio n lf you c a n n o t b e TEXAS EMPLOYERS' INSURANCE ASSOCATION P.O. Box 2759, Dallas, Texas M a n a g e r E n g i n e e r i n g D e p a r t m e n t Liberal By MARY .JANE GORHAM and EDDIE M IU ,EK Tile University’s E ngin ed ing S< i- « nee curriculum is setting an im portant trend in engineering r Ile joined A e faculty at the I diversity in 1961. In addition to teaching here and at Syracuse I Diversity, ItarlxHirt also had teaching experience at I-SU ami at A e I nlversity of Dela­ ware. Dr. Harbourt said he cam e to the University “ prim arily because it was described to me as a place of great potential in electrical engi­ neering ” He justified Ais poten­ tial by adding that “our depart­ ment has grown almost explosively in the past A ree or four years in Ae graduate field.'* Regarding hts teaching career, lie said A al he greatly enjoys watching a student see something he had not realized before. Of his work with students he says, “ One has the opportunity to stay young in one's profession " His particular field is in linear and nonlinear network analysis, which involves the measuring of predicting of voltage of currents. At present, in addition to teach­ ing two courses, he is working with .students. He said six graduate Aat the main objective of this work program is to give these students the opportunity to work on grad­ uate degrees. THE DOWELL MAN Service symbol to the oil and gas industry, providing these outstanding services Sc products— CEMENTING experienced people /first class service ACIDIZING widest line of services in the industry FRACTURING engineered services to get maximum results CHEMICAL PRODUCTS low -cost way to solve production problems DOWELL, TULSA 14, OKLAHOMA AVISION Of THE OOW CHEMICAL COMPANY W a y . March 22. 1964 THE DAUT TEXAN Page 140 Learning, Research Tied to EE Study By KEN CASTLEMAN research on non linear system s an­ alysis, a study of devices which do not behave in a way that can be conveniently handled by conven­ tional m athem atics. The aim of the Impart men t of E le ctrica l Engineering of the Col­ lege of Engineering is twofold: t h e education of undergraduate and graduate electrical engineering students and research. In I he case of graduate students, these goals usually go hand in hand. Technical Studies T h e undergraduate curriculum Som etimes faculty m em bers take leaves of absence from the Uni­ versity and work in industry for a sum m er with some participating company such as T e x a s Instru­ m ents, Inc. A promising new field in com­ puter electronics is threshold log­ ic. This t>pc of computer control circuits can often do the same Job aa conventional logic circuits while using only about one-third as many components. Dr. C. L. Coates is doing research toward developing the theory which will lay the groundwork for threshold logic switching circuits. Dr. A. A. Dougal and Dr. W. C. Includes a b r a d l d u c a t i o n with ° u e s tor hoof t are in charge of Die several technical electives that a1- P l a s m a dynamics research lab. resoarcfl program is conduct- low specialization in a particular the uses of m asses of field. Courses from other branches in strong electric of engineering, such as mechanical *on*zpd gasses and civil engineering and en gin eer-1 311 m agnetic fields, ing m echanics, are also included. lolMjratory course's which cor­ relate the classwork with the a c ­ tual electrical and electronic de­ vices are common to undergrad­ uate students. T h e equipment used in these courses is among tile newest and best available. This year the teaching staff of the Department of E le ctrical E n ­ gineering includes 21 professors I and 22 teaching assistants. Of the 21 professors, 17 have doctoral de- j grees and 4 have m aster s degrees. ( Six are assistant professors, eight ; are associate professors, and sev- Staff Educated ,to Professor B . N. Gafford, chair - m an of the departments, re p o rts , en are ^ HafbotU't rceonth re ­ substantial grants of University I sim ilar f e*ve<^ t!l° ( onvair Excellence in funds were m atched grants from the National Science I Teaching a w a r d for outstanding Foundation to buy new undergrad-1 wor*t *n the classroom .__________ uate year. laboratory equipment processors, this by In May, the department will start moving into the new $3.5 million building. Engineering Sciences Research Sponsored A variety of government and in dustry research pro­ gram s are under way at the Uni­ versity. Among them are the fol­ lowing: sponsored • T h e Electrical Engineering Research Laboratory under the di­ rection of Dr. A. W. Straiten has a 16-foot diameter radiotelescope which is being used to measure the radiation temperature of the moon and planets and to solve such mysteries as the “ angel echos" in the atmosphere. • Dr. E . L . Hixon is in charge of microwave research sponsored in hopes of improving techniques of microwave communication w'ith satellites. • Dr. William H. Hartwig has the electronic m aterials research is concerned with project which developing new w a y s to make transistors and other semiconduc­ tor devices. • Dr. B F W o m a c k Ls In charge of control system s research and is working in the field of adap­ tive control system s or machines which can be trained to do a job correctly. • H ie biomedical research pro­ je c t under Dr. E . C. Lowenberg is at present concerned with the study the electrical of “ brain w aves,” impulses from the human brain. • Dr. C. O. Harbourt is doing Bilger Given Watch For High Average Jim m y Mack B ilger of Dallas has won the Hamilton Watch Com­ pany Award for having the high­ est scholastic average among Uni­ versity engineering students who received bachelor's d e g r e e at mid­ term . Tile award, an engraved watch, Ls presented three tim es each year —fallowing the sem esters and si rn. the sum mer aes fall and spring j Bilger received a bachelor of •deuce degree in m echanical en- j gineering. His University grade p an t average was 2 70. He is a m em ber of Tau Beta P i, national honorary engineering society, and Pl Tau Sigm a, hon­ orary mechanical engineering so­ ciety. Roy and Judy M a tn e y work card punch for I960 com puter as team for electrical engineering. C O M P U T E R N E S S R E P L A C E S T O G E T H E R N E S S — Texan Photo—Echola IN THE WIDE, WIDE WORLD OF P E T R O L E U M , ATLANTIC IS OM THE O O I Atlantic is a drill bit finding o il. . . a supertanker heavy with a cargo of c ru d e ... a towering catcracker. . . a bubbling test tube in a laboratory . . . a tank truck plowing through snow in the dead of winter. Atlantic is a fabulous family of petroleum products . . . a motor fuel. . . furnace o il. . . a wax coating. It is an array of petrochemicals . . . a storage terminal. . . a service station along the highway. Atlantic is a scientist. . . a secretary . . . a truck driver. . . an engineer . . . a salesman — a merger of the talent and experience of 12,000 employees. Atlantic is a 93-year-old pioneer in petroleum . . . today a modem practitioner in every phase of this field . . . refining from nature's complex mixture of hydro­ carbons the many products that contribute so much to the convenience and pleasure of living. THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY ATLANTIC Making petroleum do more things for more people I Sunday, March 22. 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Rag* 133 Feuds, Personalities Spice Memory Book "Men of Integrity—from beneath the’ Orange Tower," a history of tile College of Engineering at the University, will be published in the fall of 1964 by the University Press. W. R. Woolrich, dean emeritus of the College of Engineering, is the author-editor of the 80 year record. The book records the continuous e x c is io n of tile Engineering Col­ lege as it kept pace with the na tionwide growth and diversification of the engineering profession from the first course offerings in 1884 through the awarding of the first engineering degree in 1888 to the present status of the college. An excerpt from the book says, I "During the 80 years of its exist i ence, tile College of Engineering has had only four deans. These ! four men, each with a different and with different background motives, were uniquely qualified to move the college forward. The book is spiced with rem ini­ scences "beyond the historical’ in a chapter £>y that name. Re called are bits of mischief caused by the long standing feud between the law and engineering schools; : construction of the Taylor "T " { Room, built by students; and other incidents. Reynolds M etals C o m p a n y is e x p a n d in g con stantly, p r o ­ vid ing the o p p o r t u n it y for in terestin g a n d lucrative c a re e r s for g r a d u a t e s in many fields. From mine t o m etal Reynolds is a wholly i ^ e g r a t e d alum i­ num p ro d u c e r , mining ore, ex tra c tin g a l u m i n a , p ro d u c i n g metallic aluminum a n d th e n m an y aluminum p ro d u c ts . Reynolds o ffers o p p o r t u n it y to g r a d u a t e s in Engineering, Sciences, A c c o u n tin g , Finance, P ro du ction , M ar k e tin g a n d M a n ­ agement. Reynolds selects only the number of graduates needed to train for promotion to permanent positions, and then provides on-the-job and formal training to help assure success. Reynolds has plants in many states end foreign countries. Texas plants are in Corpus Christi. For additional information contact your College Placement Director, or write to Manager, College Recruiting, Executive Offices, Reynolds Metals Company, Richmond, Virginia. POWERFUL STRUCTURE SYMBOLIZES ENGINEERING . • • Robert Caddel (I), shows Dean John McKetta the pavilion for the Power Show. Projects Aid Talent, Study in Mechanics REYNOLDS METALS CO M PANY A l K O V A L O P P O R T U N IT Y E M PLO Y ER By JAMES H. HENDERER At the Engineering P o w e r Show a coed c u r i o u s l y watch­ ed a five-wheeled vehicle scooting across die floor of Taylor Hall. Mustering courage, abe tapped a nearby male student and asked. "Where did it come from? What does it want?" Without a moment’s hesitation, the student replied, "It’s a cycloid- al-drive car.*" “C y c l o i d a l ? " she queried. "Where’s its eye?" "No, no,” he corrected, “it’s E N G I N E E R S Chemical, Mechanical, Electrical SUMMER EMPLOYMENT THE PURE OIL COMPANY PttrochRm icql M anufacturing cmd P+troleum Refining Mr. C, W . Cooper, Manager af Smiths Bluff Refinery a t Nederland, Taxes, wtfl visit the campus on Friday, April 3, to interview students now finishing their junior year. Arrange for interview with the % Engineering end Science Placement Office. c-y-c-l-o-i-d-a-1, not c-y-c-l-o-p-t-i-c.’ The cycloidal-drive car was one af the principal attractions of the Pawer Show. This unusual car Is the work af a groupetodeat project of a ernior-level mech­ anical engineering design coarse. A well-conducted project such as the one that developed this vehicle yields satisfaction to the student; it gives h im an opportunity to creatively appty his education in • making a product in which he can take pride. Oldest Tests The Mechanical Engineering De partment Is representative of erne t h e oldest engineering disci- of } plines—mechanical enginee ring. Design, metallurgy a n d ma­ terial so ie im *e. beat power, fluid mechanics, ma the ma tics, com­ puter technology, a u d manage­ ment are not limited to one in­ dustry or g r o u p of industries. They are applicable in almost all engineering, from the com­ plex chemical industry to the en­ gineering studies in O c e a n o - g raptly. The departm ent leadership, pre sently under the direction of Dr. lf. L. Kent, revises the curriculum to Include new developments and to avoid obsolescence. The goner a1 trend is to phase out routine, to non-creative emphasize analytical studies. laboratories and Unfortunately, these new changes do not make the 135 hours needed for a degree any easier—a fact to which the departm ent s 259 stu­ testify. However, the dents will l a t e s t curriculum arrangem ent gives the students an opportunity to specialize on the undergraduate low! by taking block courses In one of four areas: design, m etal­ lurgy and material science, energy conversion, aud industrial engineer­ ing. The difficulty In 'mastering" this base is cased by a faculty of 21 full-time staff member* and four regular staff members on part-time administrative d u t y . Many haw and still do hold of- in national societies. All of thes* honors and achievements are only a small segment of a list of qual­ ifications. Societies Aid Several methods are available for helping the faculty remain up- to-date. Most are members of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the American Society of Engineering Educators, and oth­ er more specialized societies. Still another method for keep­ ing up Is research projects. Such projects permit the staff mem­ ber an opportunity to delve into a topic of his interest and do research to acquaint him with related information on his cho­ sen topic. Students are often employed to these projects; hence help with the projects also doable as a form of "teaching aid." This year, the type of projects has varied from studies of heat within a nu< lear reactor to research in resistance welding. One pnqect that has caught the attention of many per­ sons is a small ground effec t ma­ chine being constructed in Taylor Hall. When complete, this vehicle should be able to ac r ow ground and water tm a cushion of air. scoot Among recent additions are lh*. J. P. Iamb. who received hts doc­ tor’* degree from the University of Illinois, and Dr. A, D Thomas Jr., who earned his doctorate at Purdue. Two other new men tilers are Dr. J. F. Stark and Dr. H. A. Walls, both graduates of ( *kla- homa. Vet despite the lnereaae** in faculty, the present undergrad­ uate enrollment ha* remained about constant. This constant steady state is similar to a na­ tional trend which began in IHM. Financial help for graduate’ work comes in the form of fellowships, scholarships, and contracts Assis­ tance is available from the Uni­ versity Fellowship group, the Ford Foundation, and through the Ike ; flees and committee assignments , reau of Engineering Research. 50th YEAR Sunday, March 22, 1964 IH E DAILY TEXAN Raft SB # Graduating Ph.D’s, MS’s. BSET* Exceptional opportunities with Sylvania near SAN FRANCISCO Sylvania Mountain view, 40 minutes south of San Francisco^ offers you challenging scientific work on defense system* plus ideal living c o n d itio n . T h e work involves systems studies, design and devetopOM&t in frequency ranges from DC to daylight; it offers growth into scientific or management positions of responsibility. Openings exist in the following fields: Operations Research Systems Analysis, Design Design and Development oft Antennas, Receivers, Transmitter* Transceivers, Servos Analog Computers Mechanical Design Field Engineering Sophisticated San Francisco’* theatres, restaurants and ma jot league sports are minutes away. The Pacific Ocean is near} hunting, fishing and skiing 3 hours’ driv* Furthering your education? Sylvania encourages, sponsors graduate study at Stanford and other nearby institution*. S ee yo u r P lacem ent Officer now to talk w ith S ylva n ia 's representation Writ* to Harrison J. Sheppard, Box iSS, Bldg. *, Mountain vi«w, California S y S r s n ls *!so oflP.r* op part nn ft (ss s t K » . v m M n lw c -< !fm f ftc ilitiu s , U S. c i t i r r n s t h i p r e t i n u e d Am « |u s i >>yi*jrUu,il|r ara pkwy sfe S y l v a n i a fttcmomc w — < rodent ment S jttn n * Managrmrnt fcr GENERAL TE L f RHONE tfLfCTROMCg^' Sunday, March 22, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7« Accrediting Established I By Engineering Council ISE C Unites Societies From Lounge to Class lo leading All curricula the bachelor of science in engineering degree at the University are ac­ credited by the Engineers' Council for Professional Development. The ECPD established the sy s­ tem of accrediting engineering curricula to attain higher profes­ sional standards of engineering ed­ ucation, according to the catalog the College of Engineering of Graduation under an accredited curriculum permits the graduate to enter immediately the proper grade of membership in a proles sional society and registers him as a professional engineer. The Student Engineering Coon cil was formed to coordinate the professional and honorary organi rations of the College of Engineer­ ing at the University, (me of the ™* £ (e c tro - W e d , 1tam es C O M P A N Y BOX 802. AUSTIN. TEXAS • Research Developm ent G ro up • Radio-frequency Interference M easurem ents G roup • Production G ro up congratulates The C ollege of Engineering at The University of Texas upon its spectacular growth, its leadership in engineering education, its con­ tributions in the field of research. moat active college student govern merits at the University* it is com ­ prised of representatives e lei ted by each of the organization* that com pose the council. TI ie n urn her of groups ha* grown the through years to a present high of 16. The council cites as one of Its foremost accomplishments its or ganuational work in the construc­ tion of Taylor's *'T' Room in the basement of Taylor Hall. This lounge ami coffee shop was en Visioned' designed, and construct­ ed between ISM and 1957 by eng ineertng students. >»nre the SIX committee man­ the age* “ T" Room affairs, council is the center of much heated, but often humorous, de­ lta Ie m er changes in the archi­ tecture of the room. At one time, the SEC was ready lo pass a bill that would h a\e provided for a wall lo split the room In half. However, a large delegation af student* invaded the meeting ta Can you meet the challenge off a COMPANY ON THE M O VE? Marathon congratulates U niversity o f Texas C ollege of I ngm cenng on its accom plishm ents and growth during the past IO sears. University of T ex a s, the State of T exas and M a ra th o n Oil C om pany have enjoyed a m utually b eneficial relationship since e a ily in the century when M a ra th o n w as am ong the fir t oil co m panies to tap T exas’ vast u n d erg ro u n d reserves of crude oil. M arathon owns the first well brought in on I niversity of Texas I abcled U niversity N o. I, but better known as lands 4 0 years ago. Santa R ita N o. I , it was discovery well for Big I ake F ield . U niversity of Texas has given Marathon 86 of its almost 8 .0 0 0 em ployees, a number of whom are presently located at the com pany’* m odem Research C enter in Denver, C olo. The State of T exas is hom e for 9 6 5 M arathon em ployees. During the last decade, seven sons or d au g h ters of Marathon em ployees have attended the U niversity on com pany scholarships, and one U T professor has taken advantage of a M a ra th o n Industry Fellow ship. M arathon is on the m ove. It m arkets petroleum p ro d u cts in 17 •fates, operates 4 ,0 0 0 m ites of pipelines in IO states and four dom estic refineries (two more are beginning full-scale o p era tio n this se a r in It pro d u ces in 21 states, C a n a d a and Spain and West G erm an y ). Libya. North Africa, and explores on five continents. A cross M a ra th o n 's spectrum of exploration, production, refining, transportation, m arketing an d rese arch are grow th o p p o rtu n ities in practically every professional field — for Biose who q uality a n d who can m eet tile challenge. - Sunday, M a rc h 22, 1964 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 128 M A R A T H O N O I L C O M P A N Y demand that things remaia aa they were. \ long verbal bauta followed but the petitioners won mad left aw- room wa# th# changed. Anotlter long standing project a i the Student Engineering Council ta die annual organization of th# Power J3k>w the oldest annual ex­ hibition of student projects at th# University. The SEC arrange* for the event, allocating sp ace f*»r th# individual display* and printing program s. A program for all eng­ ineers was initiated this year tnt the m eht preceding the show P i# topic of this year s program wa# “ C reative E ngineering — iw*sign for the F u tu re ” traditional fun* turn af A nother tile SEC the Engineer'* Ball is and E ngineering Sw eetheart elec­ tion each spring. The swrx’dnvxrt election is an exciting event which m ark s the end of a week of cam ­ paigning. E ach of the professional societies selects a nominee to c a rry its (winners ami the resulting rom - p e t i t i o n is fierce. This year * Sw eetheart fat Phillis J*»hnson. Several projects have started recently or are in the planning stage. The council initiated this year a calendar of meeting date# for engineering activities in order to eliminate conftiei* that had I arisen in the past. Another first was a c o l l e g e - wide course evaluation. Tile pnx- (••ct sponsored jointly by Tau Beta lh ami tile SEC consisted of devis­ ing questions a lo u t l ours*** Umi# work. laboratories, and textbook*. ; Tlie students answ ered those qu**s- tions on co n e hi i or cards in th e ir resu lts respective the 1630 w ere then tabulated on com puter and ma I*1 available to tile individual professors to use aa a m eans of determ ining student feeling about their courses. classes. The E ach of the m e n d e r professional societies is allowed two voting rep­ resentatives while the honor so* (acnes each have one. O fficers for the present sem ester a re Rol>ert Caddel, p resident; John Orr. vice­ president: M arvin Bloomqutst. re­ cording se c re ta ry ; Ja m es Moore, j corresponding se c re ta ry ; and Oliv­ e r N irklin, trea su rer. MAA Advances Technical Study The A m erican Institute of Aero­ nautics and A stronautics, founded F *b. the I, 196’ by m erger of A m erican R < ket So* oty and th# Instiiite of the A erospace Scien­ is th*- principal I nited Stab** ces I aerospace technical society, M em bers in* lade virtually all of th<* leading scientists, engineers, md th# technic ii m anagers of country's aerospace program . The chief e je c tiv e of the Al AA is to advance aeronautics arui a stro ­ nautics by all appropriate* m eans. | It provides the foremost channel : of effective, technical com m unica­ tions am ong professionals in this field through technical publications. national m eetings, local m eetings, inform ation services. and public th# world s m ost com prehensive ae ro ­ space libraries Under contract to International NASA it aper itt*> Aer .spic e Abstr lets one of th# most com plete t ■ -hnical ah stract- its ing and MA V a1* ) ope; ates one of indexu ; services of i kind in the country. I Sirve n it every ALVA m em ber je a n attend national m eetings, local MS sefve to m eet the nee*! for in MAA personal participation aerospace technical program s As 119 one of student the branches, Tile I niversity of Texan student bran* h presently I as a m em bership of m ore hum 1-50 stw- UcaLi. Engineering Foundation Contributors Reach Across State and Years A U S T IN M c C u llo u g h , C harle s L M c D u ff, D onald P. M c Farland , M r. & M rs. C . J. Allen, I. A, A llen. R. 8. A m ste ad, 8. H . A n de rso n , C . C . Ande rson, Kim ball Askew , D avid H . • Bacon, R. A. Baker, D. E. Baker, M a rg a re t R. Barnes, J. E. Barr, G ilb e rt M . Baume!, Jack Kart IL Beckwith, H a rry A. Begem an, M . L. Berkman, John L. Bedwell. Bertie F. Bischoff, K. B. Blucher, Julius Bourbon, M rs. R. C . Breeding, Seth D. Breen, J. E. Brown, Kerm it E. Bruns, M r. and M rs. Joe L. Brush, G e o rg e H . Bryant, Frank G ra n t Buck, W illiam N . Bundy, Farland C . Burke, John C harle s Burns, N e d H . Byron, John Frank Caliicutt, C ol. A M . C am pb e ll, Jam es V. C an io n , J. R. Carter, W illiam J. C hap m a n , H e n ry H . Clark, M r. and Mrs. James E. Chance , C . W . Chenevert, M a rtin Clark, M . H . C lo p to n , G . M . C ooksey. Jam es G . C ra ig , J. P. C ro o k, Olin L. Cunningham , W illiam A . Davis, N . E. Daywood, Joseph H . Dial, Donald Bruce Dougal, A . A d albert Doughtie, V. L Dunlevy, H arold Jam as Dwyer, S. J., Ill Dyer, Kenneth A . Eckhardt, C arl J. Ely, Robert G . Engeling, M rs. G u s A. Engleman, David R. English, Berry Espey, W illiam H . Evans, Kenneth W . Fahrenthold, Philip C . Faires, Lewis Fariss, M a s A . Falter, John V. Ferguson, Phil M . Focht, John A. Foster, Charles Kenneth Friedrich Jr., O tto M . S a ffo r d , I . N . G a m b le , Ronald L Garrett, Clau de H . G e n e , Severiano A . Gaston, W illiam D. Gatlin, C a rl Gersch, G ill, Charles David Glaibrook, Nick Gloyna, E. F. G oodrich, Floyd G ra n berry, C . Read G ray, Kenneth Green, Col. & Mrs. T. C . G riffis, W illiam K. G riffity, Paul W . Guinn, R. S. Hancock, Richard L. H ardcastle, H arry A. _ Hardem an, W a rd N . ® H arkie road, H enry Harris, V. C ., Jr. H astings, Clinton B. Hawkins, M r. I M rs. J. A . Hawley, G e o rg e C . H o i r©n im us, Frank J. Henneberger, W ay n e H ill, Arthur J. Himm elblau. D. M . Hixson, Dr. Jk Mrs. L L H older, C lyd e Holm es, James IL Janet, R. L Jehn, Kenneth H . Jessen, Frank W . Johnson, M r. ft Mrs. F. ft. Johnson, H ow ard L Kahlbau, Jerry V. Keithly, C ly d e M . Keller, P a d Alfred Kent, H orry L. • Kenyan, Grover C . I . C . Kessler, H erbert W . Kitbner, R. E. Kreuse, L E. Kreisle, Leonerdt F. LaGrone, Alfred H . Lang, M r. ft M rs. W . L Lauderdale, D onald M . Ledbetter, J. O f * * Lee, Vernon A . Lenhert, Jock Lincoln, J. P. Long, Travis A. I lo o n e y , W e lte r H . Luedecke, W illiam H * M cB e e , Frank W . M cFarland , Jam es D. M cFarland , Jerry M c G u ire , N . C . M c K e e , Theodore D. M cK e tta , John J. M cN eil!, W a lte r H. M c Q u a w n , A lb e rt N. Machem ehl, C harle s A. M a co n , Jam es W . Mannix, Jo hn Francis M archak, Frank J. Martin, E. P. Matlock, H u d so n Maxwell, D ona d A. M eier, H o m e r A rthur M erchant. A rthur H e n ry Miller, John D. Miller, Orville G e o rg # M iller, Percy H . F, Miller, M r. & M rs. V ig g o M oncure, Leah M o ntgo m e ry, Julian M oore , Kurn Kenneth M o o re , W . L. Morrow , R. E. Mortiser#!, J. E. Murray, W illiam J. Nicholson, Dewey T, O sborne, H o yle M . O sb ourn#, Irvin R. Paganini, O tto Peterson, H. L. Pirson, S. J. Piass, H . J., Jr. Price, W illiam H . Pritchitt, H . C . Ramsey, W illiam Dean Randall, Louis P. Rase, H o w ard F. Raska, J. G . Reese, Lymon C . Reed, Ronald L. Reynolds, Tom D. Rigsbee, H u b R ipperger, E. A. Robinson, H . G . Rountree, Seaborn R., Jr. Rountree, J. G . Rummel, Emmet C . Salos, Reynald o T. Sechan, N. N. Sandb e rg, H a rry A., Jr. Sansom, Jam es N . Santos, Jose A . Sauer, Stanley Sawyer, G le nn D onald Scales, C harle s R. Scalan, Jack A. Schmitt, G ilb e rt E. Schneider, C harle s J. Schulx, Lawrence E. Schuster, Stanley B. Sebesta, H e n ry R, Seto, Y e b Jo Shefer, R ob e rt W . Sham blin, Jam es E. Shelby, Joe A. Short, Byron E. Silberberg, I. H . Silvus, C ly d e F . . Skappie, R od n e y D. Smith, C ly d e Smith, H a ro ld W . Smith, Sol Springstun, John B. Steinfink, H u g o Staples, Jack D. Staves, A llen R e y Storm, Lynn W . Straiton, A rc h ie W . Tapley, Dr. B. D. Teinert, W illiam C . Thom pson, J. Netts Thom pson, M , J. Tinmen, A rth u r IL Toprec, A . A . Turpin, R ob e rt D. Twichell, T rigg Venderstreten, R. Vega, M anuel G . Von Zuben, F. J. W agn er, E. J. Walker, Larry G . W att. J. R. W arrington, Sam L Waiter, J. E. W ilder, John L W illiam s, Dan M . W illiams, P. C . W illis. Leo K. W inn. Bobby R. W olf, Osw ald G . W om ack, W o o d , Thomas K. W oolrich, W . R. Wukeseh, M artin C . W u Ting, Tsuan Yency, M arcus L. Yantis, H u g h C * Yaw, C h in g H . Y oung, Farrille S., Jr. I . F. D A L L A S Acord, Thayer E. Baker, Lowell Barnett, W . O . Barthoiow, J. W . Jr. Basse, A m o Bauch. G . T. Belknap, t . A . Jr. Berkner, L V. Berman. G . Bi ar, R. T. Brice, R. J. Bond, IL S. Boyle, W . G . Brittain, P. G . Ill Browne, N. Bruce, W . T. Jr. C am pb ell, R. D. Carnell, R, E. C arr, W. P. C ase, E. M . Jr. Chew, J u -N a m Clark, M r. & M rs. C . H . C lin ge r, C . B. C linge r, R. H . Contreras, M . A. Cox, M r. & M rs. C . H. Cox, W . A. Daniel, C . D. Davis. L. F. Dixon, W . G . Downs, F. G e o rge , W . G . Gertx, M . H, G orm an. W . D. Griffin, J. W . Harriman, G lenn L Harm on. F. H arris, Net., H aw orth, M r. & M rs, R. F. H ays, Tom Hefner, G . T. Helium s, C . G. H ightow er, C . H . Hudson, J. H . Hull, S. B Hum e, John Hum phrey, L. A. Hunter, G . Hunter, H . R. Jackson, B. E. Jam eson, R. O . Jones, M . L. Keating, T. W . Kelsey, W . D. Kennedy, M r. & M rs. R. A. Kieffer, C . D. Kincheloe, W . Kirby, W . G . Koepf, E. H . Land, H . L. Lawler, W . T. Ling, J. J. Lowrance, D. T. Lutrick, M r. & M rs. R. R. M cLaurin, S. Jr. M a c G re g o r, G . L. Malik. M r. ft M rs. R. M id die b ro o ks, J. W . II M iller, L. B. M offitt, J. F. M onkhouse, G . S. M orris, G . C . Nadel, S. J., Jr. Neill, M . E. Nettileton, D. A. N ipp e r, J. T. O lson, R. W . Parish, C . W . Patterson, D. R. Perkins, T. K. Phipps, S. C . Powell, W . J. Randerson, L. W , Ransdell, R. L Reily, H . M . Rhea. G . E. Riskind, P. J. Ritcheson, W . Robertson, E. B. Robertson, G . E. Jr. Robuck, J. B. Roebuck, Rohats. S. J. Rolfe, M rs. R. L. Sr. Romero, S. Salas, G . D. Schum ann, A l Schutxe, E. J. Shannon, G . L. Shimer, C . L. Solfas, Elton, Dr. Sorrells, B. J. Straiton, J. W . VanSickle, L. J. W acker, E. J. Jr. W alker, J. L W e ave r, W . R. J r. W ig g in s , W . R. W illiam s, D. G , W indrow , R. S. I. F. Jr. C O R P U S C H R I S T I IL C . Jr. Bentham, L. H Billings, T. J. Blucher, R. A . B a m b e rg, N . J. Bond, D. G . Bratton, M . P. Brown, N . H . Dudley, C . E. Frenke, E d g e r W . Frenke. P. D. Freund, E. L. Fulton, J. R. G renberry, G uest, B. L. Jr. Jordan, J. L. Klett. W . C . Lencester, G . G . Lewis, D. D. M e h fo o d , E ddie M . M cElheney, H . M cFarland , H . R. Pruett, H . T. Ram sey, J. E. Rich, G . L Russe, J. B. Schiflett, H . L Skewis, D. L Venor, A. S. W atts. J. H . Jr. W eis#, J. W . W e te gro ve , H . J. W hetless, C . L. W ilbanks, H . Jr. W ilson, M rs. C , S. A B IL E N E Burnett, G . C am pb ell, G , F. C hoate, D. L. Diller, J. E. H e rring, S. C . Jr. Hunter, J. C . Jr. Ling, E. H . M cC linto ck. W . J. Neely, L. G . Power, D. W . Shelton, P. Sim pson, P. Smith, M . E. Jr. Vague, J. R. W hite, R. W . W ilson, W . S. A M A R I L L O C lingm an, C . L. C o vin g to n , S. C . C rain, S. H. C utbirth, C . M . Ester, W . R. Hall, M r. & M rs. F. R. H a l lw o o d , W . T. Jr. How es, W . A. Jr. Lloyd, K. E. Long, D. P. Sr. Neeley, R. C . Jr. N aubauer, W . H . Robinson, E. W . Rutter, C . G . Seewaid, L. Terrill, J. C . Jr. Tolk, M r. & M rs. R. W atts, D. H . W atts, R. P. Jr. B E A U M O N T Ashley, J. H . Jr. Ballard, J. T. Brown, R. L. C am pb e ll, M r. ft M rs. R. M . Collins, J. W . C oltharp, J. B. Crow ell, E. P. Engelking, J. C . G uinn, D. C . H ataw ay, W . ft. H o g a n , D. L. Hollingsw orth, W . E. H uebner, E. A . Kuhlmen, J. L Lockwood, C . J. M alik, F. G . N oack, M . R. Richer, P. H . W ilson, K. M . M I D L A N D A be l. M . D. Bell, G . L. Boecker, M r. ft M rs. C . W . Brack, J. R. Brown, H . L. Jr. Byerly, J. G . Jr. Edgar, A . L Fisher, E. E. G ilm ore, W . H , G ilm ore, W . H . Jr. G o u ld. B. D. H eath, W . J. H enson, G . F. H ouston, M r. ft M rs. C . A . lf H ow ard, R. E. Lancaster, D. C . Leibrock, R, M . M a yfie ld , H . H . Jr. Mickle. E. R. M iller, C . R. Jr. O Dell, M r. ft M rs. H . G . O lsen, H . Jr. Parsley, J. M . Patteson, R. W . Jr. Priddy, C . H . Rotan berry. J. IL Sims, B. O . Jr. W elm eker. R. M . W heeler, W . T. Jr. O D E S S A Forster, F. E. Jr. Greene, P. O . Hem phill. C . M . H ill. W . R. Jackson, R. I. M c B rid e , W . L M e ad o r, ft. D. P O R T A R T H U R A ndrus. H . J. Jr. Ames, J. Bos, H . P, Caldw ell. J B. C o on s. W . R. Jr. H o a g , C . C . Larson, L. C . M c G re e v y C . Jr. M a rls, T. N . M a y o . J. A . Robertson, H . J. Jr. Rodriquex, M r . ft M rs. J. J. Rowe, E. C . Taylor, H . Jr. Trow, R. F. Ulbrich, A . W illiam s, B. F. W I C H I T A F A L L S January, A . D. M o rg a n , M r. ft M r s B, S. O Nail, P. L Probst, A . E. Jr. Puckett, R. M . Stephans, T. F. •W illiam J. Powell, C . L •John G . Hollm an, C.E. 1908 •Julian H inds, C.E. 1910 •T A. H ord, E.E. W . H . M cN eil!, C.E. H . A. Beckwith, C.E. G H . Brush, E.E. •J. H . Moseiey, E.E, W a r d N. H ardem an, C.E. J. M o n tgo m e ry, C.E. 1913 *Z. A. G reen, C.E. R. E. Killmer, C.E. •T. C . Fitzhugh, E.E. Low ber D. Snow, C .E . 1905 1907 1911 191? 1914 1915 * W . F. Bowman, M in in g W ill H . Lightfoot, Ar. L Louis W . Fox, C.E. H o m e r E. G atlin, C.E. R. O . Jam eson, C.E. N e t Pace, C.E. H a rt Tem ple Sweeney, C.E. C . A . W illiam son. C.E. Thom as D. Broad R. A . Blucher, E.E. R alph Randall, E.E. F. J. G ianotti, E.E. O . S. H o ckad a y, E.E. Elgin B. Robertson, L E . 1916 •S. M . Udden, E.E. G e o rg e C . Haw ley, C.E. Arthur Seym on Martin, C.E. Julius Blucher, E.E. L. K. Del Hom m e, E.E. Elmer Smith, E.E. • W a lte r C . Blair, E.E. N o lan Brown, C.E. R. P. Brouthertin, C . L O . Scott Petty, C.E. 1917 1918 • M a rv in C . Nichols, C.E. M illa r L. Jones, Ar. E. R obert L. W irtz, C.E. J. M . C a lli cut, E.E. 1919 •E ugena E. D avis M . N. Dannenbaum , M.E. C . L O r t , M.E. 1920 •E. W . Frank#, E E. V icto r H . Clem ents, C.E. V. L. Doughtie, M .E. •Palm er M essey, C . L L. Irb y Davis, C h . E. Ralph S. W indrow , C .E . •Frank C ann on. C . L D. H . Askew. C E. Jam es P. Exum, C.E. Phil M . Ferguson. C . L G e o rg e P. Hill, M .E. 1921 1922 1923 • G e o rg e M a c G re g o r. E.E. H . D ayton W ild e , C h . L S. D. Breeding, C E. R. R. Lutrick, C E. B. N. G a ff Ord, E L 1924 • D o u g la s Nettleton, C . L O lin L C rook. C.E. C . Reed G renberry, E .L Lawrence B, Jones, C . L 1925 •J. J. K ing. M E. K. H . C lo u gh , C h. L W . W . A l sup, C.E. W ill K. Brown, C.E. C . H . Hightow er, C.E. Russell Kerbow, C.E. B. J. Sorre ls, C.E. T rigg Twichell, C . L Draw I. Allan, E.E. J. B. C olthorp. E.E. W . E. Hollingsw orth, L L Pata J. Pam pa. E.E. O sw ald G . W o lf. E E. C he rie s M . W o o d m e n , L L R. D. C am pbell, M . L C a r l J. Eckhardt. M . L H o m e r Ritcheson, M . L 1926 • W a lte r I. Preston, M .E. R. S. G uinn, C.E. H . C . Pritchett. C.E. G . L Ram sey Jr., C . L R ob e rt M . Baker, E . L A , Krikorien, E.E J. F. Quereeu, M . L Byron I. Short, M i . Rufus P. W a tts Jr., M . L Jam es D. M c Farlan d . L L 1927 • G a rd n e r S. bedress, C L W illia m A . C unn ingham , C h. L Frank W . Jesse#, C h. L John E. H o ff. C E. G ilb e rt L Rhea, C . L Sam R. Stanberry. C.E. H e n ry H . C hap m a n, L L 1921 • G e o rg e W . Lowther, M .E . C ly d e F. Silvut, Ar. L C h arle t M . C utb irth, C k . L John L. Atw ood. C . L Jo se p h L Benton, C . L Irving L Peabody, C . L B. M . Pember, C.E. L. J. Van Sickle, L L G ilb e rt L Schmitt, L E . Jo e L. Brunt, M . L H . L. Lend, M E. John H ill W a ttt Jr., M . L 1929 •Jam et N . H in yard , Ch. L H. D. M c A fe e . C h. L John B. Robuck, E.E. Archie W . Straiton, E .L Elbert W . Robinson, L L C h arle s R. Scales, E.E. R obert L. O bis, M.E. •Barnett Foglem an, C h. L W a lla ce J. H azlew ood Jr., Ar. L R. K. W alters, A r. L W . B. Franklin. C h . E. Philip C . Fahrenthold, L E . C h a u n c e y W . C ook, L L 1930 1931 • O tto G erbes, C h . E. • H . C . W e ave r, C . L Jo e A . Shelby, C . L •R. O . Lytton, E L C . W . C ook. E.E. O rb e rt K. Irvine, E E. H a r ry R. O rth, E .L C h arle t Pilgrim, E.E. •Joe M . Boyer, M.E. C h a rle t W . Stokes, M . L •A . S. Parks, P.E. • C harle t W . Kent, Ar. L •Stuart E. Buckley, C h . L •H e rm an A. O tto, C . L H . A . M eier, C . L •R obe rt M . Jolly. E.E. W o rth B. Hurt, E.E. W illiam KeUay, E . L 1933 •C h arle t M . M orton, A/. L *F. R. Jenkint, C h. L C . R. H ocott, C h. E. H e n ry G . Schutze, C h . L •A. W , Eatman, C .E, •John L. Tull;*, E .L G e o rg e Arm istead, L E . Sheriton Burr, E.E. G e o rg e M . Braun, L L Ira B. Baccus, E.E. John Thom as Deeley, E.E. A le jandro Elizandro, E .L N e t H . G a d b o ld , E . L T. C . Huckabee, E .L S. B. Hull, E.E. W a rre n Kincheloe, E .L C h a rle t J. N ovy, E . L E. A . Noter, E.E. A rn o ld Edw ard Petter, L L J. O . Pickering, E.E. H e n ry S. Schieffer, L L Frank C . L Sperry, E .L Edward M . Strieber, L L Prudencio Valdei, L L Louit Seewaid, E . L *E . J. Bayo H o p p e r, M . L Lewis Schm idt Jr. M .E. •C h arle t C . Bankhead, P i . 1934 • M o n ro e W . Kriegel, C h . L E. H . Koepf, C h. E. •C . A. R eynolds Jr., C . L J. R. C anion, C.E. B. B. B u rro u g h s C .E . • R o g e r Ledbetter, E.E. •Perry A . Perron#, M.E. Louit F. Davit, M . L G e o rg e F. Henson, M .E. Frank J. Heironim us, M.E. T. A. Pollard, M .E . • W . H . Speaker, P.E. 1935 I . Eliot, C E . •R. C . G re n b e rry Jr.. C h. L •Taylor M ilton, Ar. L Jota A . Sentoi. C h . L Sol Smith, C h . E. Frank Spottier, C h . E. •M ilto n J. N e ill Thom pson, C . L •Elm er H . Schulx, E . L Lowell Baker, E E . Eugene P. Crow ell, L L B. L G u e ss Jr., L L J. E. Ramsey, E .L •Stuart T. Penick, M . L R. C . N a a ly Jr.. M.E. •D an C . W iHiam t, P X , 1936 • A lv a h C . Learned, A r. L R. L Raasdelt, A r. L •Jo # S. Irv in e , C h. E. •M a rv in G . Beavers, C . L S ea bo rn R. Rountree, J f. C . L • A . E. H olland. L L •John A Lee, M E. Swanton H argon, M . L • W . J. M u rra y Jr.. P . L Ernest C ockrell Jr., P . L 1937 I. •J. H . Long. Ar. E. • W . J. 8 a derm en, C h , L J. K. Baume!, C h . H . K, Livingston. C h. L H o rto n T. Pruett, C h . L J. L W alker. C h. L • W . S. Barrett C . L G lo n A rnold. C .E Leo A . L o g i , C.E. W a y n e C . M o rg a n , C X . Laah M o n cure , C L C . L. Shimek, C.E. •John D. Ligon, M . L C . P. Stanley, M.E. •J. C . Hunter, P.E. S. C . C o vin g to n , P E. Lynn W . Storm, P .L 1938 Roy Tolk, Ar. E. •A. T. Raetzsch, C h. E. John E. Ketch, C h. E. H u g h C . Yantis Jr., C h. E. • A u b re y Blan Bell, C.E. Shelby T. C ro sb y. C .E. G le n Arnold, C.E. A m o Basse. C.E. •John G . Trailer, E.E. A lfre d H. La G rope, E.E. John V. Falter, M.E, W illiam Kearley G riffis, M.E. C ly d e Smith, M .E. E. J. W alke r Jr., M.E. •P. W . Pitter, P.E. J. O . G arrett, P.E. Paul R. Jones, P.E. S. C . Olyphant, P . L 1939 Jam et R. Holm es, Ar. E. •Tilford H . Bean, C h, E. N. H . Brown, C h . E. John Lewis Jordan, C h . E. Q . C . Stanberry Jr., C h. E. W illiam W a tso n Jr., C h. L • M a rv in V. Brooks. C.E. G . M . C lopton, C.E. •B. J. Nankervit, E.E. C . C . A nderson, E.E. T. E. A ccord, E.E. J. F. M annix, E.E. • C a rl W . Betterer, M.E. W . J. Carter, M .E. G . C . M orris, M .E. • R o y Berry Jr., P.E. T. M . Bertch. P.E. C . D. Daniel Sr.. P.E. Thom as W . Keating, P E. G e o rg e S. M onkhoute, P E. Paul Shelton, P.E. 1940 •Jo e Lee Todd, C h. E. Leonard C . Larson, C h. E. W illiam W . M cLe a n, C h . L W illia m J. M orris, C h . E. S. J. N ad e l Jr.. C h . E. G u y T. M c B rid e Jr., Ch. L J. H . M c C lin to ck , C h. L •Burleson G raham , C . L O . L C levenger, C.E. W a y n e H enne be rge r, C.E. •Sam H . C r lin , E .L W illiam H . Neubauer, E.E. • W . R. W o o lric h Jr., M.E. Lester L. G roce, M.E. W illiam H . Luedecke, M E. Edwin L. Pace, M.E. Jack A. Scanlan, M.E. W . T. M o o d y , M . L • G u s Athanas, P.E. Luther W . Randerson, P.E. H , W ilb an k s Jr., P E . 1941 •Edw in C . Balfanx, Ar. E. C h arle s J. Schneider Jr., Ar. E. •John R. Hudson, C h . E. M a rtin C . W ukasch, C h . E. •D o u g la s C . Seam ans, C . E. V ig g o M iller, C.E. • A . D. Payne M . L Lawrence R. Brown, M.E. B. H . Am stead, M .E. •Lake Robertson Jr., P.E. John M . Payne, P . L W . B. Phillips, P.E. Jo se p h A , Ross Jr., P.E. C he ste r L. W heless, P . L 1942 •Joe D. W alk. C h . E. C h a rle s F. M ackay, C h . E. C h a rle t W a y n e Perish, C h. E. H o w a rd F. Rate, C h . L •C h a rle s A. Lawler, C . L R. E. Janes, C.E. Jesse W . W aite , C.E. Lawrence E. Schulx, C.E. Jo e C risle r Terrill Jr.. C.E. •A , R. Teasdele, E.E. G e rto n Barman, E.E. •John F. Kunx, M .E. Fred D. G riffin, M .E. Frank G . Pugsley, M E. •J. M . C o f ie ld , P E. Jack V. A. A ldred, P L W . Plack C arr, P.E. Jo hn Ferrell, P.E. E. J. Faseler Jr.. P.E. C ly d e M . Keithy Jr. P.E. C . A. M c D o w e ll Jr., P.E, W illiam H . M c D u g a ld , P .L H. R. M c Farland , P . L W . A . M o n e rie f Jr., P . L C . J. Schefffar. Jr. P.E. 1943 •Josh Ewing, Ar. E. • W illiam A. Barton, A.S.E. • C . Schulx Faulkner C h L D a v id H . Arnett, C h . E. G e o rg e M . K »-‘h, C h. E. F. M . O r r C h. E. W illiam T. W itter, C h . I. •Dowell Allen, C . L G t . List. C L W illia m J. W a rre n Jr. C.E. •Stephen F. C rum b, E X . D on ald M . Lauderdale. E E. •W illiam H . Bruyere, M . L R, W . G re g o ry , M .E C h e rie s L H ern don, M.E. D on ald D. Lewis, M X . Jo h n M e e G u ire , M . L W e lte r Pilgram Jr., M . L •Bob Hulsey. P .L 1944 •A llen M . Poindexter, A . S . L Leonerdt F. Kreisle, A.S.E. •D ew ey C . Crow der, Ar. E. H ouston M cElhaney, Ar. E. •T. W a y n e W arren, C h . E, Ju -N am Chew, C h. E. M e lvin H . Gertx. C h. E. W illiam T. Lawler, C h. E. •Edm und O . Siedel, C.E. John A. Focht Jr., C.E. Banks M c La u rin Jr., C .E . •B ob M . Fannin, E.E. A rthur H , H ausm an, E.E. J. A. Hawkins, E.E. H aro ld W . Smith, E.E. •W illiam W . M c G in n is, M.E. Fred Downs, M .E. • H . B Bradley, P . L 1945 * D . A . Peterson, C h E. •W . C . Klett, C.E. W illiam Dean Ramey, C.E. • H a rv e y Blend, E.E. R. R. W ile y Jr., E.E. •C . R. Upham Jr., M E. C harle s F. Kalteyer, M.E. 1946 •D on R. Patterson, A .S E. •Fred I. Harm on, C h . L H e n ry G rop e , C h. E. •R oy M . M unroe, C E . H a rry A. San d b e rg Jr., C.E. D ou glas Steadm an, C . L Louis P. Randall, C.E. W . R. Ester, E.E. G ro v e r C . Kenyan Jr., E.E. H a ro ld G . Robinson, E.E. • G ilb e rt C . W att, M.E. Richard O . W elty, M E. •Kinm an Thompson. P.E. 1947 * H . E. Gardener, A.S.E. Irving C . Liggett, A.S.E. •W illiam C . C ra ig , Ar. E. • H e n ry H aley, C h . E. T. B. Hudson. C h. E. H o yle M . O sborne, C h . E. G e o rg e L. Rich, C h . E. I. H . Silberberg, C h. L •Dw ain R Butler, C .E . M a u ric e C o bu rn, C.E. Jose J. Correa, C.E. R obert G . Hindm an, C . L Travis A . Long, C.E. Rob ert G ene Keyser. C.E. H u d so n Matlock, C.E. R obert W . Shafer. C .E . •R obe rt W , Dobies, E.E. Kenneth E. Lloyd, E.E. B. W eingarte n, E.E. Elmer L. Hixson, E.E. Emmett C . Rummel, E.E. •W a lte r R. W e a v e r Jr., M .E. Ralph A. Belknap Jr., M E. H e rb e rt N. Hickok, M .E. Frank W . M cBee, M.E. M . E. Neill, M .E. Alex Thom as Jr., M .E. • W . E. Findley. P E. H e rb e rt F. Poyner Jr., P.E. V 1948 • H e n ry R. W alther, Ar. L •Peter Paul Zanowiak, C ar. L Sam uel A. Hawes, Car. L •Joe M a glio lo , C h . E. C a rte r H . H orton, C h. E. Jack Lenhert, C h. E. E. J. Schutxe, C h. E. A lvin S. Venor, C h . E. • H a ro ld Paul C o op e r, C.E. Farlend C . Bundy, C.E. F. G . Bryant, C.E. H e rre d M a ck H o o d , C E. H . M . Reitey. C.E. Frank R. W hale y, C.E. Robert D. Turpin, C.E. Thom as K. W o o d , C.E. C e c il E. Dudley, E.E. N. A . Kurio, E.E. • R e gin a ld A . Robinson, M . L V. H . A b ad ia. M.E. W . R. Aufricht, M .E. C h arle s A . D eveny Jr., M X . Rob ert A . Kennedy, M . L C a lv in E. Porcher, M . L •R. I. Ellsworth, P .L T. J. Billings, P . L 1949 •R. N Baylor. A.S.E. Tom H ays, A.S.E. F. B. Johnson, A.S.E. A l Schum ann, A.S.E. • M o rris B. Parker, Ar. I. W . O . Barnett, A r. E. A rthur R. Tiemen, A r. E. • G e o rg e S. beachman. C li. L Thom as M . Newsom, C h. E. H . E. Von Rosenberg, C h. L N athanie l M . W ilso n J rn C h . E. •E. J. Dietrich, C . L L F. G lo yn a C L J. E. Clark. C E. S. O . CriehfieSd. C L Fred K. Fox. C L H e re ld & . Kuehm. C E. Bart H , Lincoln. C E. W e lte r H . Looney. C E. Lym on C . Reese, C . L R. J. Riskind, C X . iseec L Sim m ons Jr., C E. R. Stubblefield, C X . T. D. M c K e e . C I. O . G . M iller, C . L Jack D. Staples, C E. •Perry G . Brittain, E .L M e lvin F. Brush, E.E. Thom as R. Huth, E .L H, L. Peterson. E E. •Terry W alker, M.E. W illiam D. G aston, M E, John H . Hudson, M.E. •J. R. Brack, P.E. A aron Caw ley, P.E. C h arle s F. Ellis, P.E, R. S. Hansen, P.E. R. E. Kellerman, P E. Leland H Miller, P E. W illiam R. W ig g in s, P.E. 1950 G re g o ry D. Salas, A.S.E. Louis S. Curtis, Ar. E. G e o rg e F. C am pbell, Ar. E. •D onald J. W eintritt, C e r. L •Jam es 8. Platz, C h. E, M e rvin Rosenbaum , C h . E. C linton B. Hastings. C h . E. •F. J. Von Zuben, C . L B. A. Alley, C .E . J a y W . Barnes, C.E. M . H. Clark. C.E. Jack G . Coffin. C.E. M . E. Bennett, C.E. H. J. Dunlevy, C .E . C harle s Kenneth Foster, C.E. Jam es N . Sansom, C . L R. J. W asso n, C E. D onald E. Skewis, C.E. Sam L. W arringto n , C . L Dan M . W illiam s. C .E . •Joseph Jurlina, E.E. Jam es C . Delany, E.E. Jam es H . Douglas, E E, J. W . M acon, E.E. Richard L. Hancock, E.E. F. J. M archak, E.E. J. T. N ipper, E.E. Daniel R. Schoolfield, E E. Frank K. Clark, E.E. E. A. Ripperger, E.M. •John I. Uhr, M .E. D avid E. Barker, M.E. W illiam A. Cox, M.E. H a rry A. H ardcastle Sr., M . L M a rcu s L. Yancey, M.E. •R o be rt B. Brinkerhoff, P.E. Edward M . C a se Jr.. P . L W alte r G . G e o rge , P.E. W a lla ce A. H o w es Jr., P.E. 1951 •R o b e rt S. Harris, Ar. L Richard T. Bier, A r. L R. G . Ely, Ar.E. •Stayner A . Dugan, C er. L K. A . Dyer, C er. E. •J. P. Ligon, C h . L M . L Gillis, C h . L C h arle s J. Ham m ack, C h. L W . R. Sim pson, C h , L R. C . U p de gro ve , C h. E. • O b ie L. Etheridge, C . L • W e sle y B. Henry, E X . Josep h W . Bateman, E.E. Emmett F. Barnes, E.M . •C harle s E. Davis, M . L G . G . Radtke, M.E. J. V. C am pbell, M X . W . F. Dykes. M.E. Lloyd F. How erton, M.E. R. A. Bacon, M .E. •Ben D. G o uld, P X . D a v id C . G uinn, P.E. H . R. Hunter, P X - W illiam H . Price, P.E. 1952 C la u d e D avid H inds, Ar. L John B. Russo, A r. L •Thom as R. Perry, C e r. E. • W . C . Mills, C h. E. W . R. C o o n s Jr., C h. L • H u g h W . M c M u lle n , C.E. Jam es C . Froneburger, C . L B. R. English, C . L Allen R o y Steves, C X . W illiam C . Teinert, C . L •John W . Dixon, E X . W illiam B. Sisco, E.E. A . N . M c Q u a w n Jr., E X . •N o rm a n L St. C lair, M . L Kim ball Anderson, M . L W . N. Buck. M E. Philip D. Frank#, M . L H a ro ld G . Jindrich, M . L N e t Harris, Joe L M o tt, M .E. S. J. Rohats, M . L Kenneth N. Vaughn, M L •C harle s M ilner, P.E. III, M X . 1953 •Felix W . Fenter, A.S.E. J. M . Cooksey, A .S.E. • M ic h a e l Voich, Ar. E. •R. L Eschenburg, C e r. I. D on W . Power, C e r. L •Paul D. Meek, C h. L Felix A . Daum as, C h . L D ew ey T, Nicholson, C h. E. •R. E. H o lla n d, C . L John C . Bucks, C . L M a x A . Fariss, C X . •K enneth J. C ox, E . L C . A. Borne*. M X . G ilb e rt E. R obertson Jr., M X . •I. F. R oebuck Jr., P . L R. D. C o le s Jr., P . L J. S. Eeds, P . L Edw ard I. Freund, P X . W . H . G ilm o re Jr„ P.E. G e o rg e T. Karpot, P . L Jam es R. Vague, P . L Leo K. W illis, P X . W y n a n t S. W ilson, P .L 1954 •Vernon A. Lee, A .S E. G e o rg e L. Shannon, A.S.E. •W illiam A. Harris, Ar. E. N e d H. Burns. Ar. E. G lenn Ham m an, Ar. E, •Paul D. M artino, C e r. E. * C . A . Rundell Jr., C h . E. H e n ry G . Robertson Jr., C h, L •R obe rt H . Dyer, C . L D. P. M c D u ff, C.E. H o w ard E. Johnson, C.E. R. Vanderstraten M a n u el G . Vega, C .E . •Jam es Shamblin, M.E. C . J. Milam , M.E. J. E. W eiler, M.E. •H . D. Attra. P.E. H a rry J. G aston, P.E. III, C.E. 1955 •Ernest L. Kistler, A.S.E. D. R. Engleman, Ar. E. • M u rp h y M , M c N u lty Jr., Ch. E. •Frank D. Holxmann, C X . Severiano A . Garza, C.E. John L. W ild e r Jr., C.E. •R o b e rt E. C am ail, E.E. J. F. M offitt, E.E. Josep h Bishop, M.E. N . J. Blumberg, M.E. • W . P. Aycock, P E. Bob b y F. Abernathy, P E. R obert J. Bice, P.E. 1956 *E . A. W adsw orth, A .S E. •Earl J. C alk Jr., Ar. E. Jo se p h R. Fulton, Ar. E. R eynaldo T. Salas Jr.. Ar. E. •Joseph L. Brown, C h . L D onald H . Kobe, C h, E. Jam es R. Lawley Jr., C h . E. • H a rry T. M arkel Jr., C .E . Larry G . W alker, C E. •W illiam J. Allen, M.E. M a n u e l G . Aquirre, M.E. W illiam G e o rg e Boyle, M X . Josep h Bishop, M X . Edw ard H u g o Ling, M.E. •B. A. M a c N a u g h to n , P.E. John E. Diller, P.E. 1957 •Em ory K. Damstrom, A . S . L B o b b y R. W inn, A.S.E. •C h arle s A . Robison, A r. L B. C . G e rsch Jr., Ar. E. Jack E. Burroughs, C e r. L •Jack Gualer, C h. L Rene P. Brown, C h . E. R ichard L Duncan Jr., C h. L R ob e rt L. Harvel, C h. E. Thom as K. Perkins, C h. E. Jam es W ilso n Griffin, C.E. C h arle s A. M achem ehl Jr., C . L •John E. Archer, E . L R. E. Morrow , E.E. Thom as C . Fennel!, E.E. Sam J. Dwyer III, E.E. •Lane Everett, M.E. •Jam es R. Templeton, P .L D avid L Billingsly, P.E. 1958 •V. H . M alone, A . S . L Lloyd M . Durst, A.S.E. Stanley B. Schuster, A.S.E. •Billy R. Upchurch, A r. E. D. B. Dial, Ar. E. R o d n e y D. Skappie, A r. E. R ob e rt W . W hite, A r. L •W illiam B. Hall, C ar. E. •John D. La Frentz, C h . L R. W . Smith, C h. E. Edwin E. Fisher, C h . E. G a r y D. Fisher, C h . E. Russell U. Smith, C h. E. •R o b e rt R. G uinn, C .E. K. W . Evans, C.E. C la u d e H . G arre tt III, C . L C lay to n G . Rutter, C.E. •C h arle s E. M c C u llo u g h , E . L A lb e rt Je rry Balusek, E . L J. H . Enterline, E.E. Byron R. A dam s, E X . W illia m D. G arm on, E.E. Elw ood R. Henderson, E.E. Jo h n A . Van Skyock, E.E. R ob e rt E. M uhn, E X . Luther Miller. E .L G le nn D on ald Sawyer, E.E. •D e an H . Perry. M . L J. M c Farlan d , M X . • C a rl L Reistle III, P . L G u y Burnett, P.E. B F. Bedwell, P . L W . J. M c C lin to ck , P . L L M . M e h fo o d . P . L 1959 •D . M . Phillips, A.S.E. • G e o rg e F. Foerster, A r. E. • R o b e rt L Jones, C a r. E. D a v id T. Lowrance, C e r. L •Jack B. Stout. C h. L R. L Stuart, C h . E. R oland L G am b le, C.E. •W illiam J. Fowler, L E . R ichard Thorpe, E . L W illia m G a r y Kirby, L L Fua d F. Saadah, E X . • G a r y L Hall, P.E. E. Barnard Brawer, P . L Larry A . C arr, P X . Paul M . Carraw ay, P . L Jam as G . Cooksey, P X . R. F. Haw orth, C . L Kerm it E. Brown, P.E. D onald H . W atts, C.E. •C le e L. M y e rs Jr.. A S X . W . J. Searcy, A . S . L •D av id Fowler, Ar, L G . M . Barr, Ar, E. •Benjamin E. Jackson, C h. E. J. W insto n Porter, C h. L G a ry F. Taft, C h. E. A rthur Ulbrich, C h . L •C lint M iertschin. C.E. W . H Espey, C.E. C h arle s D avid Gill, C.E. •M ic h a e l K. Robinson, M.E. R. Trent C am pbell, M X . G . T. Bauch, M.E. C la y H . Cox, M.E. •R o b e rt B, Ferguson, P.E. N orm an P. Faist Jr., P E. 1961 R oy Traylor, A S X . S e rgio Rom ero A.S.E. •R o be rt K. Burchard. C.E. •G le n n Lain, E X . R. B. Allen, E.E. O tto M . Friedrich Jr., E X . C harle s G a r y Helium s, E.E. C la y M cFarlan d , E.E. C harle s D. Kieffer, M.E. 1962 John E. Barnes, Ar. E. P.H.F. Miller. A.S.E. D. A. Maxwell, C.E. Stanley Sauer, C .E . John E. Breen, C.E. W illiam Thom as Bruce Jr., M.E, Enrique M acias, M.E. H e n ry R. Sebesta, M.E. F. S. Y o u n g Jr., P .L 1963 Floyd G o od rich, M.E. H a rry L. Kent, M.E. W illiam B. Stodd ard, P.E. IN D IV I D U A L C O N T R I B U T O R S John Frank Byram Mrs. R. C . Bourbon Jr. Lloyd H . Bentham M rs. G u s A . Engeling C . B. C lin g e r R. H . C lin g e r M a nu ela C ontre ras N elson D. G risw old A rn o ld O . A nderson W a y n e A. Burns Roland S. Bond O tto G . D o g g e tt W a lla ce G . Dixon Joseph H D ayw ood Lewis Faires John H um e J. S. H ud nall Nick G la ib ro o k C o l. ft M rs. Thomas C . G reen Paul W . G riffith W a y n e E. Lang J. P. Lincoln Dan P. Lon g F. R. H all H e n ry H arkleroad G e n e Taylor H e fne r Seaborn C . H e rrin g Jr. A rth u r Je nn ings H ill Layton A . H u m p h re y Kenneth H . Jean Jerry V. K ahlbau Paul A lfre d Keller H e rb e rt W , Kessler C h arle s L K in g m a n Jo h n J. M c K e tta Jr. John W . O lso n Jo ya H . Troell M rs. G e o rg e S. W ilso n J a y P. W a lk e r J. G . Rountree N o ye s D. Smith L. F. M c C u llo m John D. M ille r Lem on G . N e e ly Irvin F. O sb u rn * M rs. R obert L. Rolfe Sr. W illis R. W o o lric h Sr. W . W . H a g e rty L. V. Berkner John H a rp e r Jam es J. Ling John Lynch C . L. M o o re Robert H . W idener W illiam D. Blunk vtoore Frank W . D avis D avid H . M o rg a n J. C . M o th eral E. E. Krause Tsuan W u Ting N o e l C . M c G u ire M . J. Thom pson C a rl G atlin W . L. M a rg a re , R. Haler H . J. Plat, Ronald R. k^e d Edw ard J. W a g n e r C h in g H . Yew H u g o Steinfink D avid H im m elblau Tom D. R eynolds Kenneth B. Bischoff N. E. D avis C ly d e H o ld e r J. R. W a t t A . A . D o u g a l J. O . Ledbetter J. W . C rutchfield C . W . C h a n c e O tt o Paganini S. J. Pirson N a im N . Sechan Y . J. Seto A . A . T o p re c E. P. M a rtin Jo hn P. C r a ig M . L. Begem an M . E. Smith, Sr. J o se p h Z e p p a C . E. Reistle, Jr. N ail A . 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Tennessee G a s Transmission C o . Texaco, Inc. Taxer amies, Inc. Taxes Electric Service Texas H ighw ay-A ssociated G e n ­ eral Contractors Instruments Taxes Taxes Power ft Light C o . Tax-Tubo, Inc. Tractor, Inc. Union C a rb id e Chem ical C o. United G a s C o rp . United G a s Pipe Lino C o . Universal O il Products, W estern Electric W estinghouse Electric C orp . •C la ss Secretaries Inc.