iiiiiniiiiiiiiitiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipj llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 14 PAGES ! : THIS WEEK I NUMBER ONE?! An All'Student Newspaper For 47 Years

Volume 51—Number 7 HOUSTON, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963

Football, Fun, And Tight' Take In The Thresher Senators Stay In IMS A, § Rice AAUP chapter elects new officers, Page 4. Rice To Austin For Owl-UT Game § Rice's secret weapon in the Ask Song Compromise The nostalgic strains of Rice's avid curiosity all true intellectu- Washington turtle race is By a vote of eleven to six, the tering one of the Honorees in Honor will fill the air along uals feel in unfamiliar social mo- special brand of turtle food, Student Senate last night decid- the contest. Highway 290 this weekend as res. Certainly campus life in Aus- all our own, Page 8. ed to maintain Rice's current The Senate action came as a the Owls press onward to the tin has a few characteristics for- § Complete coverage of David membership in the National Stu- result of an incident of racial dis- land of the eign to existence on South Main. Riesman's visit to Rice dent Association. The Senate ac- crimination which occurred at and the home of the L.C.B Perhaps an attitude of "When in edited by the Thresher Ries- tion. The Senate action approved thi?year's festival. A Negro stu- Rome . . ." will be adopted and man Editor, Page 9. Leaving the Marsh to the gnomes a recommendation made last week dent, a member of an honor or- highminded Owls will dive into § Complete sports coverage, they will rush to a weekend of by Ray Needham who has been ganization known as the Califor- the depraved spirit of things, all including a special scouting football and frolic, victory and studying Rice's membership in nians who had been selected to in the cause of knowledge or report from the Thresher's vice. the controversial organization. escort one of the queen candi- something like that. "Austin Bureau," Page 10- Preceeding the flight across dates from Pennsylvania, w a s 11. Moving from its old quarters the parched prairies of South In order to insure protection asked to withdraw from the cere- ) "Recruiting Season'' begins in the Biology Building, the Sen- Central Texas is a "warming up" for jubilant Owls, who will have monies by an adult chaperone. at Rice as the Placement Of- ate met in the Baker College period including the traditional to beware of ambush by embitter- The woman chaperone was a fice announces a crowded Comons, and the change of scen- "spontaneous" and unscheduled ed Steers, the Student Associa- representative of the contest's interview schedule for the ery was accompanied by a con- pep rallies every night, the tion has planned an all-school sponsors, and her action drew first half of November, sideration of several major poli- eagerly awaited Slime Parade, party after the game. From 10 heated protests from the Berk- Page 12. cy questions. and a scheduled Thursday night until 1:00, the pleasure of the ley student body an dthe student pep rally. Villa Capri's Polynesian Room IN ADDITION TO the NSA newspaper. will be available for a mere $2.50 THIS BIENNIAL exodus is Architects Request question, the Senate took action IN OTHER ACTION, the Sen- per couple. Tickets are on sale on Dead Week, the Alma Mater ate decided to ask Josh White's occasioned, at least in theory, by in the Student Center. Council- a 7:30 pm football game in and the Berkley Football Festi- agent if the folk singer could ap- man-at-Large Bill Randol is con- Long-Range Plans val. pear at Rice January 26, the Austin's Memorial Stadium and fident as was last year's council- The Senate delegated Larry Sunday before resumption of by on all-school holiday generous- man, that this time there will be Yeatman to approach the Facul- clas.se for the second semester. ly granted by Lovett Hall. At the plenty of room, in contrast to For Rice Growth other end of the line, it is the ty Council for a discussion aimed Since the senate counts on Uni- the previous year's party. The Rice Architectural So- cue for fanatical Texas: support- at rearranging the present elev- versity support for the concert, ciety this week sent a letter to ers to defend that oh-so-anta- ONE CHARTER bus is among en-day reading period and finals the plans are contingent, on that University President K. S. Pit- gonizing-and-familiar position in the many modes of t ranspor- schedule. school's finals schedule. zer asking for more long-range the national ratings and to wave tation that will be used in One change in end-of-the-se- The senate again agreed to planning in the development of those o h-s o-antagonizing-and this weekend. Apparently Rice- mester schedule would precede support the performance, pend- the university facilities. familiar index and little fingers. ites are all set to mange this seven days of finals with a four- ing satisfactory arrangements Copies of the letter were sent During these last days, Rice stu- under their own power, or may- day reading period. The finals with the performer. to George R. Brown, Chairman dents may be found before their be turtle power. Prospective bus would be spaced so that no stu- Senators also heard the forum of the Board of Governors, Carey mirrors practicing the sentence riders were not numerous enough dent would have more than two schedule for the semester and Croneis, University Chancellor, so dear "to the heart, "Who's to fill up even one of these exams in any four-day period. were asked to submit the titles and W. H. Masterson, Dean of Number 1, Teasips?" vehicles manned by the smiling of short, controversial books for Humanities. OTHER PROPOSALS include The willingness with which driver and his dog. a reorganized Book of the eS- THE LETTER WAS written a two-three-four-day arrange- Rice students are abandoning UT apartment and dormitory- mester program. as a number of major campus ment with reading days and fin- textbooks and sliderules for this dwellers will have the pleasure building, including two high-rise als alternating and an addition of jaunt is undoubtedly due to the of welcoming many of their academic-minded friends into colleges, a space science build- class days to the reading period. their abodes. Even should loyal ing, and the Ryon labs', are on the The latter proposal was support- Red Receives Nod Wadsworth Traces Owls wish to avoid this contact drawing boards at various stages ed by some senators who consid- with the enemy, they would find of planning. ered the present Dead Week UN's Early Growth, it impossible. All hotel rooms in Both the President and the "meaningless." As New Executive Austin have been sold out for this Chancellor are out of the city and Yeatman was also delegated to Present Maturity weekend since the early sum- unavailable for comment. draw up a compromise proposal Of RMC And Store By JIM CHAMPION mer. In the interest of sleep, THE COMPLETE TEXT of concerning the School Song and James J. Wadsworth, former Alma Mater. The proposal, to By LYN MARTIN Rice students might be smart to the Architectural Society's letter Deputy United States Represen- be submitted to the administra- temper their natural antipathy is as follows: William S. Rod, 111 will be tative to the United Nations, tion, is in answer to the decision for the Teasips with a little con- "The recent establishment of new manager of the ('ampus spoke i n Hamman Auditorium which requires that Rice's Honor cilatory hypocrisy during their committees and councils to ques- Store and Director of the Rice Tuesday night on "The United be played at every football game. stay. Memorial Center. Dr. Pilzer an- Nations Today" as part of Hous- tion various phases: of the uni- The strains of Rice's Honor Yeatman's proposal will sug- nounced. The appointment, wil; ton's observance of U. N. Week. versity firmly indicates the re- will still be heard sometime late gest that the songs be played at be effective November 1. Mr. Wadsworth, in comparing cognition of problems and short- Sunday, but in a hoarser key, as the beginning of alternate games, "I understand there have been the U. N. to a child of the same comings and the desire to effect the valiant defenders of the Blue putting the "Finlandia" theme at problems with the Memorial Cen- age, spoke of their similar as- expedient, yet long-range solu- and Gray anl alumni loyalty say the Texas game, "Rice's Honor" ter, both from the faculty and pects: spurting growth, changing tions to these problems. The de- farewell for another two years at Homecoming. the student points of view," said voice, and a growing sense of sire to 'establish, for internal use, to the hospitality of Austin. The Mr. Red in an interview with maturity. a ten-year plan for the develop- THE SENATE ALSO voted to weekenders will straggle back the Thresher. The word Wadsworth uses to ment of the university,^ and to withdraw its support from the to South Main, replete, exhausted, HE EXPLAINED further that illustrate the immature frame of engage in a 'critical self-study' National College Queen contest, hopefully happy and already a he would prefer not to make any mind prevalent in the U. N.'s slearly defines actions that must held each fall at the Berkley little nostalgic about "The game definite plans until he can be early days is hyper-sovereignty extend to the physical develop- Football Festival. In the past, of '63." (Continued on Page 8) Rice has made a practice of en- at Rice and become more familiar He felt that one could not ex- with the situation. "I I eel it pect a powerful U. N. without would be premature to make a giving up some sovereignty to statement at the present time," achieve it. flNEW VORK ClT_Y:n 35] said Red. Tn a strikingly objective tone, N'ewa rk Mr. Red received a B.B.A. and Wadsworth went on to examine « turnpj KE Jl B.A. in Spanish and Economics reasons for distrust of America's from thg University of Texas in MCYT LEFT _ I word by other nations. First, we 1951. In 1952 he received an M.A. are not spotless, having denied in Economics from the Institute treaties, guided by national in- of Latin American Studies of the terests alone, including one only a University of Texas. few years ago. HE HAS BEEN assistant to In our own way, we are just the President of a veterinary as dedicated as the Communists, pharmaceutical company in Mex- but with opposing aims. But ico and was one of the partners much of the world does not have who organized a soil testing com- full confidence in our beliefs be- pany in Houston which special- cause we have not acted in the izes in studies of Mexican con- manner necessary to insure such struction and agricultural sites. confidence at times. Red has been associated with Wadsworth feels that men are Rice previously as a Research quarrelsome by nature, but that •// /.. / Assistant in Chemical Engineer- we can adjust and get along; rjgm*. ing from October, 1962, until basically, this is what the U. N. last August. His present position is trying to achieve. But first ev- is Programing Officer at the In- eryone must be convinced that stitute of International Educa- (Continued on Page 8) tion. <2*

-THE THRESHER EDITORIAL PAGE *76e Sdafie *7^ 0?cttune

The work of the Academic Planning Com- gether with the increasing passivity of its students mittee and its sub-committees affords the Rice forces upon the university the necessity of shaping community a unique opportunity to observe an and directing the student's education to a greater extensive analysis and reformation of a University's degree than ever before. programs. Rarely is such planning ever undertaken * # * anywhere: rarer still are the circumstances in To educate is to deal with an individual human which our planning is taking place. Few uni- being: as has been said on the campus, people versities have undertaken a task as formidable as are ends in themselves. Yet the University is that set forth by the President, yet never has the found concerned with the part the student is to need been greater, both nationally and at Rice, play in society more often than with the student for such a searching analysis. The future of himself. It was well said last year by Professor undergraduate education is at stake. We must Blanshard that "the most searching question that choose either to intensify a program of liberal can be asked of a university is, what sort of education for the undergraduate, or we must person does it produce? Range and expertness of succumb completely to the increasing pressures of product are not the crucial test. The question University of Wiltenburg—1517 enrollment, the growing demands of professional- of overriding importance for any university is, ism, and the easy values of the expedient. what sort of man does it produce?" PERSPECTIVE Heedless of Blanshard, the recurrent tendency I he forces currently active in the formation of of critics of Rice is to rely on superficial and university organization and curriculum are both relative judgments in their estimation both of the Money Can't Think potent and diverse. As Brand Blanshard said last university's role and its success. Again and again, year, the university "must pay due regard to the The local phenomenon of an active and critical interest we find ourselves set against the universities of practical needs of its society and students. States- on the part of the undergraduates in the basic and important east and west, and doubtless much is to be gained issues of their university is an unusual state of affairs. For men have reminded us of late that we are short from such studies. To find our student-faculty the undergraduate, as far as his school itself is concerned, is of scientists and engineers, and that our uni- ratio different from that of the prestige universities historically interested in little more than having a good versities must try to restore the balance. Students place to park and a comfortable mattress, plus the venerable is surely symptomatic in some sense; yet, in a who propose to spend four years and some "issues" associated with bad food and beauty-queen elections. greater sense, keen is our disappointment that thousands of their father's savings in a university So accustomed are some to this situation, that when Rice has reference to no other values than the expect, not unreasonably, that it will contribute confronted with something different, they react with almost relative. Too often, we find ourselves evaluated shocked surprise. Their first thought is that the important to their success in the economic battle, that, in public relations parlance; too often we find issues of the university are not for the undergraduates to whether their lot in life is building bridges or trouble themselves over, that the students should stick to our success evaluated in words which reveal no pulling teeth or teaching a language, the univer- their books and the current status of the football team. And coherent set of values. sity training should give them some claim to the if their collective voice, whether expressed through the stu- It must be the task of the President's com- title of experts." 1 he evidence of these forces dent press or elsewhere, is a dissenting one, then the more mittees to shake themselves free of the superficial ossified members of the community begin fashioning ques- are clear at Rice, and, while of immediate con- 1 and relative evaluation and return to fundamental tions which usually begin, "Well, if you don'Mike it here ..." cern, these forces are not new to the academic The progressive Mr. Rayzor probably felt this way when human values. 1 he nature of man, rather than community. he listened to last year's "Myth" forum. For the past decade his function, seems a proper concern for those his college had improved^ rapidly, and plans were on the However, the vital interest we have in Rice's structuring institutional education. Circumstances boards for further improvement; yet here were all these efforts to fashion a comprehensive plan is multi- provacative of a deliberate pursuit by the student students asserting that his university was not what it should plied and intensified by an awarness of the of his education must be their objective. We must be, that its programs were unsatisfactory and all the rest. Ironically, it was the same progress in which the Trustee changing role of the student. As enrollment in educate men rather than train functionaries. The expressed such pride that engendered the increasingly severe universities has increased in recent years, both easy assumption that all students are, and that all criticism of the University. A mere ten or fifteen years ago, the expectations and interests of the college-bound students want the same thing must be forgotten in Rice was a distinctly benighted, provincial and narrowly . -indent have changed. Often, the student finds a concern for the individual man. specialized technical college. There was little reason then, the route to college a certainty rather than a We look forward to an ambitious affirmation aside from the really impressive wealth of the institution, to suspect that things would ever be much better. And a glance matter of choice. Increasingly, the requirements by the committees of President Pitzer's desire for ol professional proiiciency have made the decision at the student publications of the time will reveal that there the "provision of a rich intellectual climate where was not nearly as much serious criticism of the Institute as to continue to graduate school equally as casual. the student can develop in more freedom." Such there is now of the University. A> a result, the student is more oiten iound sub- alone can save the undergraduate from submission In the interim, the traditionally moribund liberal arts mitting to his education than seeking it. to the humdrum, yet incessant pressures of semi- departments were upgraded and new divisions added or Certainly the university must be sensitive to its professionalism in his four years at Rice; such planned. A library, an organ not deemed vital at the Institute for the first forty years of its life, was at last constructed. alone can free him to seek an understanding of added responsibility under these changing con- The dormitories were transformed into an idealistic system ditions. I he vitality ot the impinging forces to- himself and his world. 1 G of colleges. Three major building programs since the war added elbow room for more and more comprehensive activi- ties. Although the engineers of progress may take pride and "%eve% Sa satisfaction in their work, thqjr achievements add hope and rising expectations to those whose lot has been bettered, a As much as we admired David Riesman the profound, always intimate, and never, for all the hope and expectation that far outstrips immediate possibili- -eliolar, even more did we admire the man. He speaker's quiet manner and dry humor, dull or ties for further change; and the progress made throws into never seemed to tire of the many who wanted to unimportant. bold relief the still extant institutions and traditions of the • slowly expiring past. In the past Rice was measured in the lalk to him, from the students he met on the Hanszen college is to be commended both context of other small private colleges of the South and first evening of his visit to the 1 hresher reporter for its initiative in bringing Riesman to Rice and was judged satisfactory. Now Rice is being examined ac- who dogged his steps to the plane, scribbling for the freedom and accessability it provided for cording to the standards of the company she has chosen to furiously; indeed, he seemed to welcome them, him, since the wide range of his interests and his keep: the finest universities of the nation. And on this scale lie was almost as anxious to hear about Rice personal contact with the students were the Har- undergraduate and other critics have found the school sadly deficient. as he was to talk about Harvard, but the ex- vard educator's most valuable contributions to the But the untapped potential of this university is great. Rice community. change was more than fair since we learned so Financially, there are but a handful of private universities much about ourselves in the process. David Riesman is a humanist in an age when in the nation with larger endowments. Though Rice cannot f or two and a half hours last Wednesday humanism is out of fashion, an individualist in at present reach the sources of income used by many colleges night, the soft-spoken, scholarly sociologist from a corporate academia. to flesh out and often surpass endowment income, the Uni- versity has a suit in Court to change this. Ha rvard worked something of a miracle in the There were never so few of these men as But that Rice has the financial muscle and the avowed Hans/en commons. It wasn't so much the coats there are now; in a world grown vast and im- ambition of advancement is insufficient. There is an essential and ties that transformed the bare brick walls personal, there were never so many who have element which Rice has in the past notably lacked. Rice into a college, as it was the communication be- need of them. lacks the direction, imagination and ideals which, could keep tween speaker and audience that was frequently EJK the forward thrust of the university from falling into tSie well-worn rut established by the bureaucratized and com- partmentalized big-name "multiversities" of the country or break out of the inane pattern of the vast majority of Ameri- can institutions of higher learning, and create for herself a true university whose existence might be of unique worth The Thresher to the nation and world. Rice has the will, the money and the chance for achiev- ing greatness; the committees are in session and the goals EDITOR EUGENE KEILIN '64 of the University are being discussed. Those who would put BUSINESS MANAGER DAN TOMPKINS '63 an end to discussion and criticism, whether it comes from the Associate Editor Hugh Rice Kelly '65 Contributing Editors Lyn Martin '66, j students or elsewhere, are those who would see the Rice of Managing Editor Richard Darilek '66 Tom Giesen '64, Gary Hanovich '64 f| the future as shallow and directionless as it has been in the News Editor Bill Broyles '66 Asst. Bus. Mgr Mike Derkacz '65 II past. —HRK WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963 THE THRESHER Three THRESHING-IT-OUT- Hickey Attacks Editorial Policy, An Open Letter REED EXTRA MONEY? TO THE DEAN Earn $50 a week in your spare time. OF STUDENTS: Call Jack Lowe 5-7 pm Says Thresher Foments Unrest Your memorandum of Octo- JA 4-6803 To the Editor: ber 18 informs college presi- "Once More to the Trenches" is the title of the dents that a report detailing Thresher's current declaration of war on "The Univer- the number of guests regis- tered must be submitted to sity," an editorial that contains several dubious generaliza- your office after each open ATTENTION tions. Come now, Mr. Keilin, how many young pro- house. fessors take "permanent leaves of absence" each year? It further requires that a Really, did they all dislike record of the names of all I Rice? Do you mean to say guests be kept "open to in- BRIDGE PLAYERS f that the Language, Philos- spection" in the permanent Howard Deplores PLASTIC COATED I ophy, English, and History De- files of each college. This ad- partments are all plagued by this Student Apathy On dition to the already stringent BRIDGE CARDS ( annual mass exodus? It seems to regulations completes the \ WITH THE ACADEMIC me that the statements and im- elimination of any value in \ plications of the editorial tend to Racial Integration open house at Rice. SEAL IN BLUE AND COLD AT PRESENT, we have only \ create problems not there as much Last year in a student opinion as they portray real ones. a token open house. The rules ARE NOW AVAILABLE AT THE poll 83 percent of us said as given in your statement of i WHAT IS MOST distressing is that we were for the integration November 2(3, 1962, limit open i the editor's failure to assume re- of Rice. Those of us who so in- house to "special occasions," i sponsibility for much of the sit- dicated hoped that this was to require the registration of all RICE CAMPUS STORE uation he decries. Last spring, be the first of many moves re- guests, and insist that at least The Thresher had to retract a quisite of an active student body three people be present when *41 year-old editorial panning Eng- to inform an administration out women visit men's quarters. lish 100, an editorial it had re- of touch with student feelings These limitations completely printed without even checking to that a wrong needed to be right- destroy any social value that see ,if conditions had improved ed. But we hoped in vain. Apathy open house might have. The during the year. It's not at all again is dominant at Rice! restrictions and required reg- surprising that "students express Thus far I have not pointed istration create a formal at- open disatisfaction (sic) with it to any new or startling facts, mosphere which stifles any so- (the university) as an educational we all know of the situation, but cial activity. institution," considering that the it is easier to ignore it. After IX ALL THE memorandums student paper structures, factors, all, we are at Rice, we are mem- concerning open house issued expresses and encourages this at- bers'. of an elite community which by your office there has never titude even where it is not justi- consisitutes its own compact, been a statement of the phi- fied. happy, blase world. losophy behind Rice's open If the central problem is fac- EVER SO OFTEN, however, house policy. ulty-student communication, the the world intrudes itself upon us What are the reasons for the solution is the students' taking and we are disconcerted; we have continuation of a policy stem- AL MARTINO the trouble to confer with pro- never learned to understand its ming from violations which fessors outside of class. If the cold realities. Typical is the in- were committed under an ir-. Caresses the title tune " central problem is lack of con- dignant attitude which prevailed responsible system? Arc all and eleven other great cern for others, the solution is after the LCB raid on a Rice future generations of Rice stu- MAGIC new romantic ballads in the encouragement of that con- party. No one knew just what to dents to be punished for the cern, not editorialized self-pity. make of the intrusion. isolated infractions of two If the central problem is lack Another such intrusion took years ago ? of creativity, the solution is join- place early this year, though it Since the academic honor PAINTED, ing the Rice Chorale, Band, only directly effected one Rice system has been so successful, Thresher staff, or Players. If the student. For those of you who could not an analogous social TAINTED central problem is student apathy, have lost touch, it seems that the honor system also be success- the solution is the promotion of U.S. is in the throes of a racial ful ? the students' interest in their problem, there are those of our STUDENT AD HOC ROSE courses. Bad politicians are elect- citizenry who cannot accept the COMMITTEE (S)T-1.975 ed by those who don't vote, and fact that "All men are created ON OPEN HOUSE student apathy is promoted by equal . . ." those who don't go to class. THIS INTRUSION occurred Incidentally, I've never met a in Berkeley, Calif, at a Football college student who wasn't "over- Festival. I first read of it in an Here's the soul-stirring voice of A! Martino worked." A student can find time article in the U. of Calif, news- Two Barber Shops to do just about what he wants paper entitled, "Bigotry and the Serving Rice romancing its wonderful way through to do, and I'll show my schedule Beauties" "Jaycees Snub UC these great tunes and others to anyone who doesn't believe it. Negro to 'Protect' College DAMON D. HICKEY Queens." It seems: that at the SOUTH MAIN PAINTED, TAINTED ROSE Hanszett '64 Festival the "Queens" were to be How ijiany? For example, in the escorted onto the field by eight 4 BARBERS I LOVE YOU TRULY English Department, of the men hired members of the Californians, an SPECIAL MOND'AY PRICES between 1958 and 1961, not one remains. honorary society at U. of Calif. HARBOR LIGHTS • RAMONA These included one highly-respected full COLLEGE STUDENTS ONLY professor and one winner of the Senior But one of these men was a 6626 S. Main JA 8-8118 TILL THEN Class Award. With a little research you Negro and was not allowed on can easily find the same to be true in the field by the JC Program Come in today and ask to hear this delightfu! greater or lesser extent in the other Chairman who said, "We had to . TIMES new album from Capitol. departments you have named. protect the mental and physical We appreciate your imputation of mass ''In the Village" power to Thresher editorials. Presumably well-being of the girls no matter FLAT TOP SPECIALTY if we reverted to bland complacency on what." page two all would be well and everyone Rice's "Queen" claimed that 2434 Times JA 8-9440 much happier. And presumably the course loads this wag all a minor incident would seem more reasonable, the busy- which "was over in five minutes." work less tedious, the classes smaller But even in Rice's blase world and the grades less biting; maybe the this can't be forgotten. Once library would seem larger and the course system less rigid. again the world has intruded- in- to Rice's domain, and it is time LEARN the LANGUAGE Perhaps all the things which keep Rice from fulfilling her promise would that we students accept the 1 disappear if the Thresher stopped world without qualm and acted noticing them. But wc doubt it. — Ed. accordingly. Simply because we of expressed on paper that we felt that Negroes were our equals Litton Looks With does; not mean that this is an SAVINGS Glowing Adoration accomplished fact, nor will it be so until we act on this assump- CASHIER'S CHECK: A check signed by a cashier or other authorized On Killing Blows tion. officer of bank, drawn b ythe bank on itself. To the Editor: AT THE U. OF CALIF, the The editorial page of last students did act as is indicated week's Thresher was a stroke of by the next six day's newspaper genius. In one fell swoop "rtie which contain features: such as, Thresher panned the University, "Apology from Jaycees 'No More the Student Senate and the RMC Racial Bias'," or "Californians 6135 KIRBY DRIVE 5225 8ELLAIRE BLVD. HOUSTON, TEXAS ... oh, to be able to see the Cut Ties with Jaycees," or "City Truth and march forward as un- Council 'Reaffirms' Nondiscri- hesitatingly as does the Thresher. mination Policy." "No one has ever lost a penny in an insured savings account" ^j'jjjj'jjf —Ted Litton What happened at Rice? We s*v> Wiess College '65 (Continued on Page 6) Four THE THRESHER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963

BREAK THE STUDY HABIT LENGTH CRITICIZED WITH A SNACK AT A.A.U.P. Election Last Thursday, October 17, DUTCH KETTLE Freshmen's Reactions Mixed the Rice Chapter of the Amei'ican Association of Uni- HERMANN PROFESSIONAL RLDG. versity Professors elected BREAKFAST — LUNCH — DINNER After First Round Of Tests new officers for the coming CHARCOAL BROILER year. Ry SANDY COYNER test required no thinking, but a STEAKS — HAMBURGERS — HOME MADE PIES THE RICE Chapter of the Rice freshmen remain opti- "memorized outline." The ques- A. A. U. P. mainly concern- OPEN 24 HOURS mistic and undaunted after their tion was the "obvious"one, "log- ed with policy on a national SHORT ORDERS TO GO JA 8-9121 first round of tests. Comments ical, excellent." level, elected Dr. Dwight ranged from "rough" or "sneaky" THE QUESTION was general- Brothers to succeed Dr. Mar- to "soporific," but in general the ly considered, however, too large tin Graham as President. Dr. tests were "not unreasonable" or to cover completely; hitting the Gerald O'Grady was the "not as hard as expected." Al- proper points required organiza- choice to follow Mr. James though most expect bad grades, tion. (There was also some con- Heath in the position of Sec- freshmen blame their own study cern that the lectures were not retary-Treasurer. habits rather than impossible as organized as they seemed.) tests. Comment varied, but many stu- Attention of the A.A.U.P. is focused on such subjects A SO M E W H A T facetious dents recognize that the test as salary levels for college comment of one freshman girl: "was not a regurge; it demanded professors and academic "Since I failed both, I do not organization." Although no think- freedom. CROMWELL'S think they were accurate tests of ing could be done during the my knowledge." test (no time), it required much CREW NECKS General criticisms of tests con- thought beforehand in trying to First Janus Should cerned primarily length. Courses figure out the question. and exams are both comprehen- Physics and Math 100 were con- sive. The tests are thought to be sidered by many students "Mic- Appear Sometime MW*$mmM FROM 14.95 too long, requiring more time key Mouse." Some SE's consid- than allotted. Another criticism ered physics a trivial test and a In Early November is that on some tests no thinking trivial course. Criticism alternat- The first issue of Janus, the is required, only the necessity to ed between a "fair" test, and one "scope out the prof." Freshmen where "you could get a good erratically-published Rice literary Hi! Cromwell's crew neck sweaters, of traditional decry the ridiculous amounts of grade without a real grasp of the magazine, will appear "sometime §§ cut and color, are styled for daily campus living. "studying" that are cutting out material." The test required stu- in early November," according to sleep. dents to think through processes. <5^r = Our collection includes a range of handsome its new editor, Doug Harlan. m THE BIOLOGY exam received THE MATH 100 was not as >S fall colors. This year's Janus will be fi- §<=> most vicious criticisms. In this hard as expected. It was "snea- test "you can't think or you'll ky," because the type of question nanced largely through a Uni- fail." "You march in, regurgitate asked had naver been discussed versity grant plus $125.00 from facts memorized from jock sheets, in class; consequently, students fiWffcur^ Square pa 3-4ess the Student Senate (no adver- and turn in the test unfinished." with a background in calculus tising). Editor Harlan said the The test is too long; "you have to were distinctly favored. Most stu- 'El vMi'r newstand price of the magazine study the old tests to understand dents had been looking toward the questions."' Because the test math with terror, grounded in has not yet been determined. JttuwU requires no original thought, it spotty understanding of epsilon Harlan hinted that the new has been termed asinine It is too and delta. magazine will have some "ex- long, not hard, but "tough for History 100 was a "good tes% perimental" layout in the first good students who write slowly." that required thinking." It was issue, plus a collection of prose History 110 is another test that hard and creative. "The fairest and poetry written mostly by requii'ed fast writing. The ab- I've had." It was a broad ques- Rice students and faculty. sence of "problems" to solve by tion; "I could answer it;" it al- u^ing more knowledge caused lowed latitude. The test was "not The Janus Editor invited all A Houston's Great Store some comment about "better his- as demanding as the review." Rice students to submit "short tory tests in high school." The BOTH HUMANITIES tests stories, reviews, topical articles, were "fair, good," though not creative photography, cartoons, simple. Math 200 was "good, I artwork, critical essays and even liked it." scientific (non-technical) ar- «!• * DEAN'S Some freshmen were unnerved ticles," in person or through the by the fact that the tests all mail to the Janus office on the GROCERETTE came within a short period of RMC cloister. oieys time; some, however, thought the L There are several issues plan- timing* was good. "I liked having Southgate & Travis ned for this year, so potential it before the Texas game—it contributors need not fear hav- ^1* for a career that offers BEER leaves the weekend free." Many ing missed the deadline for the appreciated tests soon after the ICE first issue, said Harlan. TRAINING — Planned programs provide know-how and lead beginning of classes. It helped quickly to management experience in positions of real responsi- bility. SOFT DRINKS "slap us into line"; "now we The second Janus is planned RECOGNITION — Promotion is based on performance and know how to study." for "around midterm." capacity for growth rather than an inflexible timetable for advancement. "COCA-COLA" AND "COK£" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS WHICH IDENTIFY ONLY THE PRODUCT OF THE COCA»COLA COMPANY* EARNING POWER—-Department store managerial salaries rank with the best in U. S. industry and business, and often are more quickly reached. OPPORTUNITY — Foley's is growing more rapidly than the general economy, providing unusual opportunities for personal ....gym. ...tumble.... growth. with opportunities in flip...flop...lug...tug MERCHANDISING — Merchandising executives are responsible tor planning, buying, presentation, selling, personal leadership, sales promotion and the generation of profits. CONTROL AND FINANCE—Here executives develop and analyze operating and financial reports to improve management push...jump...leap... effectiveness; direct auditing and accounting procedures for the control of funds; and develop and administer credit plans. S I ORE OPERATIONS—Operations executives direct the flow of merchandise from the resource through the store to the cus- tomer. They are responsible for developing and administering ...chin...lift...pull... customer services; for maintaining and operating the physical plant; for analyzing, planning and purchasing supplies and materials. AND MANY OTHER AREAS—There are challenging manage- ment careers in research, method analysis, advertising, per- ...run...puff puff... sonnel, and other fields requiring diversified skills and talents. things gO Foley's better,! will be on your campus pause OCTOBER 31 ST .with

FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION, CONTACT YOUR Coke PLACEMENT OFFICE Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: HOUSTON COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963 THE THRESHER Five RMC Chapel To Feature Seminary Head Next By RICHARD BEST Drew, a Paulist Father from Dal- The Rev. James Iley McCord, las for a discussion of Catholic President of the Princeton Theo- and Protestant reaction to the logical Seminary, will address Conference. TENNECO the University in the Memorial Center Chapel Thursday evening A native Texan and formal' at 7:15. Dean of the Austin Presbyterian Seminary, the Rev. James Iley The Princeton divine will speak McCord is the Chairman of the on the Faith and Order Confer- Consultation on Church Union, ence of the World Council of the official group exploring the Churches, held in Montreal dur- possibilities for the reunion of Tenneco Oil Company, a major component of ing this past summer. four major American denomina- JAMES I. McCORD FOLLOWING THE service, tions. Tennessee Ga sTransmission Company engaged in all To Speak Thursday McCord will join the Rev. Joseph DR. McCORD HAS been active phases of oil and gas exploration, production, refining, in the administrative work of the and marketing, has career opportunities available for: SLIME PARADE United Presbyterian Church, serv- ing as head of numerous official committees. He has lectured throughout the world and is pres- Freshman Enthusiasm Mounts ently working on a translation of Calvin's "Institutes" into Por- CHEMICAL ENGINEERS tuguese. As 'Barbaric' BVD Bash Nears ACCOUNTANTS By EDWARD BLOCHER evolved, the Frosh woud snake- One of the essential ingredi- dance down Main Street in va- SALES PERSONNEL ents of freshman guidance has rious forms of undress; at their Shepherd School come at last, the indomitable appointed goal, usually the Rice COMPUTER PROGRAMMERS Slime Parade, alias "BVD Pa- Hotel, they would pause and ut- Chooses Perkins rade," alias "wholesale butch- ter a number of loud remarks ery. . . " It is the climatic chap- about their coming opponents on ter of that unwriten treatise on the gridiron. For First Concert "How to Adjust to Your First OF COURSE, there were Marion Perkins, described as Senior students are invited to discuss these oppor- Year at Rice." many upperclassmen who felt "one of today's uniquely daring The 1963 installment of this that the Frosh needed some in- pianistic gifts" will open the Rice beloved event will begin at Her- ducement along the way. Leath- University concert season at 8:15 tunities with company representatives on October 28. man Hall tonight at 7:00 when er belts, wooden padles and p.m., Thursday, October 24, in the pajama-clad boys gather for brooms did this nicely. Recently Hamman Auditorium. Contact Placement Office for location and time. some entertainment by their fe- these methods have been more male compatriots. After this fluid, consisting mostly of water The piano concert will be the brief exposition, the ball will bombs and foamy shaving first of seven performances to really get rolling, so to speak, cream. At any rate, the partici- be offered by the Shepherd TENNECO OIL COMPANY all the way down Main Street to pants were usually treated with School of Music during the 1963- the Shamrock Hilton. a bus ride back from the ordeal. 64 academic year. All performan- TENNESSEE BUILDING . HOUSTON,TEXAS One of the more off-and-on ces are open to the general pub- AT THIS POINT there will be aspects of the annual event has lic without charge. Miss Perkins a tremendous Pep Rally in honor been the participation of fresh- will play works by Bach, Beeth- of Sammy and in dishonor of man girls. It has bfeen character- oven, Mendelssohn, Brahms, Nor- most everyone else. A bus trip ized by periods of over-indul- man Dello Jois, and Chopin. She GET YOUR ARROW back to the school will complete gence followed by periods of will introduce works of a new the night's exercises. CLOTHING AT strict prohibition. The policy of composer, Charles Garland. To ease any freshman appre- recent years will hold tonight. Dr. Perkins will go from Hous- Open Thursday 'Til 9 hension, let's look back to the ton to Mexico City where she is AFTER ENTERTAINING the Charge Accounts invited Parade's earlier days. From male participants with a skit in scheduled to play a concert Oc- mysterious beginning in the Hamman Hall, they will be tober 29. Now a member of the school's younger days, it devel- .charged with the duty of "be- music facutly at Colorado Wom- oped rapidly to "heights of bar- smearing" them with various en's College in Denver, she re- barity" in the 1920's. As things colored liquids. They will then ceived her Ph.D. in musicology BELLAIRE follow this ragged group along from the University of Southern Main Street in convertibles. California. THch & The enthusiasm of the whole Rice Alum Goyen, affair should be overwhelming. SHOP ,Be on hand at the Shamrock BERNARD GOLD Dispensing Optician about 8:30 and see the soggy, Praised By Camus, "Contact Lenses" • shaving cream-covered (the col- 2525 Rice Blvd. lege courts will prosecute any To Speak Tuesday JA 4-3676 Stm BELLAIRE 3UCD. AT RICE MO user of inducements other than William Goyen, noted writer water and shaving cream; the and alumnus of Rice, will speak Band and the girls are t o b e in the Fxmdren Lecture lounge spared any such "baptism" at J*V' f ;/ / this coming Tuesday at four- all) Frosh come tromping in. -ARROW— thirty. The tentative subject for his talk is "The Art or Craft ... We Pick Up & Deliver . . . buttons-down of Writing." Village Cleaners Hailed by Albert Camus as & Laundromat a student "One of the finest writers in the Discount to Rice Students English Language," Mr. Goyen JA 8-9113 2528 Rice Blvd. of Oxford brings with him an impressive number of credits, including the From prof to frosh knowledge authorship of "House of Breath" LEARN TO BOX! ! gets around... and the latest and "In A Farther Country." BE A MASTER INNTHE ART OF SELF-DEFENSE. EXPERT TRAIN- is the new Decton oxford by More recently, he has published ERS' SECRETS CA$ BE YOURS! ARROW. Take Decton, "The Fair Sister," and has been NO EQUIPMENT REEDED. FORM ^appointed to a Fellowship at the A CAMPUS BOXINckcLUB AMONG ARROW'S name for a shirt Lincoln Center in New York. YOUR FRIENDS FOB FUN^ELF- blended of 65% Dacron* CONFIDFNCR AND KEAL PHY- Mr. Goyen is in Houston under polyester and 35% cotton, SICAL FITNESS. COMPLETE the auspices of the Houston Post BROCHURE AND LESSONS ONE give it an educated new oxford Second Annual Book and Author DOLLAR. SEND TO: weave and you have the equa- Luncheon, and is sponsored at PHYSICAL ARTS GYM, tion for America's most popular Rice by Baker College. A display 363 Clinton Street, Hempstead, Long Island., New York. wash-and-wear shirt. of his; books will be in the library. Authentic University Fashion from the famous button-down WHEN MONEY MATTERS collar to the button and pleat in the back, it's tapered to trim body lines. White, colors and SEE TNB stripes to choose from. In long sleeves as illustrated Texas National $6.95 Bank. OP HOUSTON +DuPont TM. for it$ polyetter fiber Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Six THE THRESHER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963

the world. Fourthly, we should facts in a given number of fields with all due respect and sadness. THRESHING- talk less and act more. for four years. Or even eight. Glade Observes: However, when they are consider- - —Dick Howard Ample illustration is given by (Continued fx*om Page 3) Alma Mater Must ed inferior by those who uphold Hanszen '65 the degrees of preparation of never heard of the issue. Now, them, they must be replaced like students entering Rice. After the any other piece of academic however we have, and I have Now Be Replaced first two months in Math 100, equipment. several proposals, First I think To the Editor: one rarely can tell the student that Rice should cut all ties with Last year, by vote of the stu- No amount of tradition will Sachs Calls For who had only algebra and trig- make "Rice's: Honor" any better. an event such as: the one at dents, the Alma Mater was onometry for the one who had changed. And now we find that No lack of tradition will de- Berkeley which would tolerate Review Of Rice an introduction to calculus. student judgment has been over- tract from what I and other the policy of racial inequality. turned by that of the alumni. students call our "Alma Mater." We should disconnect the name Similarly, beyond the essential —Roger Glade of completely Grade Emphasis core of knowledge, a desire to It seems as if the Alma Mater Hanszen '67 from such a farce and should It is possible that Rice "lacks leam, an ability to evaluate, a has: ceased to be a student ex- make our position known. force of purpose and a self con- capacity for reasoning, and a pression of loyalty and has be- scious concern with its own des- mature acceptance of responsi- come, rather, an alumnus ex- Secondly, though we affirmed tiny." (EJK, "Once More to the bility are more the marks of an pression of nostaligia. on paper that we wanted this Trenches," October 16, 1963). As educated man than encyclopedic AS IF TO justify the situation, school integrated, we should act an undergraduate, I am more knowledge or even nimbleness of Kirkpatrick Asks we are told that the National on this affirmation; we must interested in what appears to be technique. Anthem is also a "." actively inform the administra- Rice's: educational philosophy. ONE OF Rice's major faults Why Rooms Are It is impossible to equate the tion of our feelings. Thirdly, we CONTRARY TO popular is simply the preoccupation with "Star Spangled Banner" with any must do our part outside our opinion on this campus, Educa- the fact at the expense of the Kept Like Icebox little world to end all vestiges process: of reasoning, and with school Alma Mater, for one is tion is not merely amassing a To the Editor: of prejudice in this country and making grades instead of learn- designed to evoke willingness to somewhat organized aggregate of As the Sunday Post pointed ing. fight and die for Country, out, Rice is to be commended on —Harvey M. Sachs Democracy, and God, while the its remarkable facilities for low Hanszen '66 other is merely and simply a 'ONE'S A MEAL' hymn of thankful loyalty to an temperature physics. But re- educational institution. search should be confined to the SA President Mike Jaffe an- But be that as it may, it laboratory, rather than extended Brooks System Sandwich Shops nounced that blanket taxes of appears that, at least at Rice, a to isolated cold spots scattered Rice students would be care- song may be chosen by those who over the campus. Fine Food For Everyone fully checked at the Texas would sing it. Instead we must WALKING INTO the Chem- 2520 Amherst 9307 Stella Link game. honor a "traditional" war cry to istry Lecture Hall for their first The penalty for loaning IN THE VILLAGE IN STELLA LINK CENTER satisfy the emotional attach- exam, English 250 students wei'e a blanket tax is cancellation 2128 Portsmouth 5422 Richmond Rd. ment of the alumni. greeted by a refrigerated blast of all privileges connected with of air for which their only de- ACADEMIC traditions are fine, 9047 So. Main it. fense was to ignite the gas jets and their passing should be noted on the demonstration table. Per- haps someone is trying to com- pensate for all the past discom- forts of the "Black Hole of Calcutta" in one year. French 330 was forced to hold class in the radiating warmth of Willie Marsh's statue when their usual meeting place in Rayzor became "trop froid." While the boys sweat out their homework in their rooms or seek the moderate coolness of the library, the Jones girls huddle in blankets to keep warm. Who is the super-gnome who controls the tempeiature around here? Won't somebody please tell him to stop wasting fuel and let lis be comfortable ? —Martha Kirkpatrick Creative Jones '66

Will Rice Junior Says Anniversary are needed Publications Flop To the Editor: NO W! I have just finished reading the first two volumes of the Rice University Semicentennial Pub- lications, which cover the events of the academic celebration of last year. I was rather dis- appointed in them. After reading and admiring the "Book of the Opening," I was expecting something of equal stature to be published for the Semicentennial. While I realize that the celebration cost a great deal, and probably accounted for two-thirds of the University's deficit last year, I think it a pity jthat what could have become GD/FW is currently engaged in many outstanding projects involving traditionally one of the Univer- sity's most important publications atmospheric and space vehicles and systems. EnergeticL creative turned out to be such a flop. —Phil Lawless engineers and scientists are needed now, to help solve the iritriguing Will Rice '65 problems involved in our many ambitious programs. • To take advan- •VWSAAAWVWWWWVWWVWWSA^ COMPLETE tage of the opportunities offered, contact your Placement Director, to RIB-EYE DINNER determine when a General Dynamics/Fort Worth representative will be 980 on campus, or write Mr. J. B. Ellis, Industrial Relations Administrator- Orders To Go Engineering, General Dynamics/Fort Worth, P. O. Box 748, Fort Worth, QUALITY Texas. An equal opportunity employer. Steak House 3506 Bissonnet MO 7-2582 11114 S. Post Oak PA 3-6234 6224 Westheimer SU 2-4002 GENERAL DYNAMICS FORT WORTH GIIIIIIIID 12448 Memorial Drive WEDNESDAY, OCT, 23, 1963 THE THRESHER Seven NOVEMBER 1, 2, 3 ROTES- Parent Orientation One Day Service Invitations will be sent out Complete Cleaning and NOTICES this week for the annual Jun- Laundry Service 1963 Campanile—If you are in- Student Directors ior-Class-sponsored Parent Or- In by 9 Out by 5 j terested in picking yours up, the ientation Day, for parents of staff will be in the Campanile freshman students, November Lipp's Cleaners! Office, RMC, from 10 to 11 am Present One-Acts 10. MWF and 11 to 12 am and 1 to The program will include 2 pm TTS. A trio of contemporary plays be directed by Lawson Taite and sample class lectures given by & Laundry i # * * Dr. Joseph I. Davies and Dr. will be 'presented on November will star Bob Lowenstein, Bill 1706 Sunset JA 4-7648 ! Francophiles—The Rice French R. L. Sass. A campus tour will 1, 2, and 3 by the Rice Players. Seward, and Kent Morrison. As Club, "Les Hiboux" will present be conducted by members of j Checks Cashed : implied by the title, the play is the French film, "Porte des Li- Curtain time for the one-acts in the Junior Class. Dr. and Mrs. las," in Hamman Hall tonight. Hamman Hall is 8:15 pm. set in the dark palace of the Kenneth Pitzer will give a re- The film is of the down-and-out in Two foreign and one American King of Spain, and involves a ception in the Grand Ballroom. Paris variety, dealing with the drama comprise the list of pro- conflict between the King and life of the lower classes in the duction which feature all-student a jester over the dying queen. old quarter around the ancient directing and acting. Minit Man gate of Li las in Paris. "A CYNICAL SATIRE on DENNIS KEAR will direct * * * contemporary American life 'Ingmar Bergman's "Wood Paint- which pulls no punches" is the Yearbook Pictures—Pictures will ing," a morality play set in Car Wash be taken Thursday of the EBLS description director Fred Roberts fourteenth-century Sweden. The gives to Edward Albee's "The and PALS. Wiess pictures will be play, upon which the prize-win- America's Finest taken next Monday, Tuesday and American Dream," the third one- ning "Seventh Seal" was based, act to be presented. Nothing is Wednesday. Unphotographed concerns a group of travelers Car Washing Jones girls can get makeups from sacred to Albee, author of last who are being pursued by the year's Broadway hit "Who's 8 pm on, Thursday. 'Plague. Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" LiSA * * * AN UNUSUAL 5001 S. MAIN Starring are Doug Peel, Faith Ecumenicism — The Rev. Earl Kai O'Halloran, Thom Scrut- Einerson, Osa Harris, Erika LOVE STORY Mulley will preach at the Colle- chin, Jane Rulfs, Gretchen Vik, 6900 HARRiSBURG Stephens, Dan Hazelton, Kathy Now Thru October 28 giate Chapel of St. Bete this and Harry Guffee star in the Watson, Mike Rassbach, Marge This Ad Admits One Rice Sunday at 10 am. Mr. Mulley is comedy. Student FREE With One Paid Hyer, and Jenny Baird. Admission. $J with Rice ID The Collegiate Chapel is Episco- Tickets to the performance are (Friday, October 25 Only) palian. This will be the first in a "Escorial" by French play- on sale in the Student Center or series of interdenominational ser- wright Michel de Gheldarode will may be purchased at the door. mons to be offered there. • • • Doctor Hopefuls—There will be THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES an organizational meeting of the Rice Pre-Med Club tonight in Bi- ology 120. All biology and pre- SALUTE: MORRIS JOHNSTON meds are invited, "in spite of all commercial operations. Now. as Data Sales Manager the physiology test Thursday "Pioneering in the space age," is the way Morris Johnston morning." (B.A., 1957) describes his job as Data Sales Manager of in , Texas, he is helping to pioneer the development * * * Southwestern Bell. of this new business method —a communications system for computers. To be a part of this development in the pioneer- Beautiful Rice Girls—If you are Morris's job is a new one with the Telephone Company, ing stage is both challenging and rewarding. one of these, are at least five feet brought about by the mushrooming growth of computer- five and a half and want a trip processed business data, and the need to distribute this Morris Johnston, like many young men, is impatient around the world, write the Na- data quickly to widespread locations. to make tilings happen for his company and himself. There tional Cotton Council, 1918 N. Morris came to his present position from the manager's are few places where such restlessness is more welcomed Parkway, Memphis, Tenn., before or rewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business. December 1. You might be se- job at Waxahachie, Texas, where he was responsible for lected the 1964 Maid of Cotton. t. * * BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES Ultimate Destiny—Dr. W. Boyd Hunt will discuss "The Christian View of Ultimate Destiny," next Monday at 7 pm at the Baptist TELEPHONE MAN-OF-THE-M0NTH Student Center. Dr. Hunt is head of the department of Theology at Southwestern Seminary, Fort Worth. * * Movie Makers—There will be a meeting of persons interested in the production of motion pictures tomorrow night at 7 pm in An- derson Hall, room 108. The idea is to form a grou p to study and ex- periment with short films and possibly produce a longer picture.

Get Acquainted — An organiza- tional meeting for anyone inter- ested in joining a Behavioral Sciences Club will be held to- morrow night at 7 pm in Rayzor llilpfll Hall 325. Psychology, Anthropol- ogy and Sociology majors, plus interested freshmen and sopho- mores, are especially invited. The club.plans to review and discuss topics of cui-rent interest and in- vestigate career opportunities. * * * Stanford University—Dr. Daniel Feldman of the Stanford Medical School will be on campus Tues- day, October 29. He will be avail- able for consultation on anything Stanford (not necessarily Med- ical School only). Call the Reg- istrar's office for an appointment. HarohTs I Garage j JA 8-5323 *Paint & Body Shop * Automatic Transmissions * Air Conditioning * Foreign Cars * Wrecker Service 2431 DUNSTAN Eight THE THRESHER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, IMS ARCHITECTS- SIOHTS- Blakely On Turtles (The following letter, after being (Continued from Page 1) WIN A WARDROBE and SOUNDS read to the Senate Wednesday night, was found in the Thresher office. ment of the university. By CHARLES DEMITZ THIS WEEK We thank Mr. Blakely for passing "ANNOUNCEMENT OF faci- 1. Natural Shoulder SUIT Each fall the archetypal stu- on the letter from the perhaps- lities to be constructed in the 2. University Row BLAZER VALUE dent executes the classic maneu- mythical Miss Kennedy: we are near future bring to mind 3. Box of 3 Bold Cup Soxs ver known as the "Pfui Studies" happy to offer it as an addition to usual Wednesday night chaff recom- the environmental considerations oo or "I could Care" ploy. This in- 4. I Pr. JARMAN SHOES mended for lethargic turtles.—Ed.) which pervade every addition or volves the goliard's manful ig- alteration of the campus. The and noring- of all scholasticism for a Dear Mr. Blakely, deposit your entry personally in university's building programs period of six weeks and, with UNIVERSITY SHOP—and if you win Thank you for your inquiry of the past two decades have the advent of the first wave of Receive CASH BONUS — £§q into the fine art of condition- largely failed to deal compre- inquisitions, a subsequent awe- ing turtles for participation in hensively with the creation of an some sprint to the books. The the national turtle races. As environment conducive to total sporties term this dilatory cover- you know, we of TRA take education. Alterations and addi- up the Library LeMans; the lit- considerable pride in the breed- tions to the university in the errati, the Parchment Blitzkreig. ing and raising of fine turtles. form of new buildings, new and Musically it is "Gaudeamus Igi- Our turtles have always placed our exclusive revised walkways, revised vehi- tur" with "Dies Irae" as coun- high in the races, and we have cular circulation, and landscaping terpoint. To the psychologists it taken first place in ten of the University have been carried out with a is known as the phoenix delusion. last eleven years. (The one disturbing lack of professional Classic To the faculty it is Fun. exception was a turtle from sensitivity and foresight and, in IN THIS SPIRIT and apro- the University of Texas. Tex- New Lighter Weight general, have failed to grasp the pos of precious little, we counsel as is entering a turtle again Shadow Weave importance of relating each new the throngs of redoubtable this year, and their trainers Heather Tones Thresher readers about to jour- are feeding it a special diet addition to a long-range master ORLONA ney into the land of the infidel of Rice. Our research has re- plan. This is an imminently critical to fight the good fight; take vealed, however, that this will time in the development of the SUIT your prayer wheels with you. backfire. Rice has proven to university when solution by parts, Tailored of fine blend Meanwhile, behind the lines, be an especially poor food for unrelated to the whole, will not of ORLON-WOOL the Alley Theatre, silent for lo turtles trying to be ranked suffice. A master plan must be TRADITIONAL these several months, will open its nationally.) established now. natural shoulder coat !!)(.;3 season Wednesday. Playing "The vast problems involved in and slim tapered will, be "The Queen and the Reb- We are sending you what this university plan should be we believe is the highest qual- trouser els," an adult "Prisoner of Zen- solved by an architect chosen Smart heather shades da" with dramatic conflict to ity turtle food available any- wholly on demonstrated excel- where. It consists largely of of BLUE - OLIVE - boot. lence in the field of university BLACK ALSO NEW this week is the various and sandry types of planning. This choice should be chaff, all of which has been Sizes 36-46 Reg. Long Hamlet Cabaret's "Slices of made by a group of individuals Xtra Long Life," a satirical revue running thoroughly threshed. If you aware of and concerned with the run out, just send for more. Compare at $ m tm 00 the usual gamut from men to diverse problems of a university. $59.50 4!) women to Cosa Nostra. First We receive weekly shipments We desire the opportunity to of- time Thursday—see the skits of it, on Wednesday nights. fer any assistance in the forma- that won't be in Friday night. Your program sounds like a tion of this committee." Kill the pig, spill his blood. fine one, and we are wishing o authentic — nationally advertised Conch shells a n d sharpened you the very best of luck this .sticks abound in "Lord of the year. I can offer only one more WADSWORTH- University Row Flies," Thursday at the Alabama. bit of advice: remember that Allegory is flung down and dan- the frame of mind in which (Continued from Page 1) BLAZERS ced upon; next we look for Walt your turtle enters the race is it is to his own selfish interests Disney's production of "Catcher highly important. The psychol- for CASUAL—SPORT or that he and his nation get along in the Rye." ogy of the turtle is just begin- DRESS wear—a must with others, and to' be willing to ning to be understood, but on the campus, "THE PROUD and the Beau- act on the convictions by giving there is one thing we have dis- featuring fine light weight tiful" presents a blend of the up some self-determination to the covered which always seems to ALL WOOL FLANNEL < ompleat beachcomber and Jean compromise. 3 PATCH POCKETS— Paul. Sartre, who wrote the help. Your turtle will certainly The giving-up of a measure of quality tailoring by script. Friday night only, at the be happy (a necessary require- self - determination Wadsworth America's LARGEST Prudential Auditorium. Sand, pop ment for winning) if you see characterized as one facet of BLAZER HOUSE— music, phony American newsman, that the whole thing gets "from the cave to the ideal," part Colors ... "was-he-or-wasn't-he," excellent plenty of newspaper publicity. of his increasing maturity. The acting, more sand. Where else Edith Joan Kennedy Black - Navy United Nations is only part of 95 but "Lawrence of Arabia," start- Associate Director Olive - Red $ am man's striving for the ideal, an Burgundy - / / ing at the Metropolitan Friday. Turtle Ranches of America attempt to create a peaceful Grey - Camel Watch the motorcycle manufac- world. turers squirm. Second chance time is the Al- ray's run of "David and Lisa." Hackneyed psychological drama WIN A WARDROBE pulled off through a skeptical script and competent character- NOTHING TO BUY! 00 ization. SHOES FOR MEN BEHTHOY EN STILL reigns in • Just Pick the Winner (or tie) 150 the Music Hall as Barbirolli's • Mail or Deposit Entries in our Store Genuine flying squad battles the barbari- Before 5 P.M. Friday, October 25th CORD-O an silence. Lowenheim white shirt • No Scores Necessary Except Feature Game SHELL section Thursday night. On the domestic front, well-traveled pi- • You Must Pick All Games Correct tq Win anist Marion Perkins will offer this week's PRIZE—WARDROBE at right $100.00 SADDLE a recital of diverse compositions OXFORD O Thursday at Hamman Hall. A Deposit Entry Personally at University Shop and if you win—CASH BONUS $50.00 vote of confidence for the Estab- PLAIN-TOE lishment, if you will. In the Event of a Tie—Entrant Picking Most Accurate SCORE OXFORD Among the galleries, the Lou- of FEATURE GAME Will Be the Winner—Only One Winner. isiana is showing a cultural HAND-SEWN cross-section of Central Ameri- University Shop Fooball Contest MOCCASIN cana. New on the scene is the Burch-Wademan Gallery, featui'- Games of October 26 Black or ing an imposing array of (faith, Cordovan faith) Texan works. And the RMC film: "Goliath NAME CLASS and the Barbarians," or "One COLLEGE Night in Austin." Please Print Plainly GOLD CUP SOX This contest open ONLY to FEATURE GAME 31 COLORS | Gifts To Wear STUDENTS and FACULTY PICK SCORE | Easily Mailed Anywhere! RICE UNIVERSITY. LIMIT — 3 ENTRIES RICE ^ ^ TEXAS^ ^ ED NIRKEN'S for each contestant.

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Problems In Education TWO Discussed At Hanszen THE THRESHER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963 By HARVEY POLLARD major in what 'he wants to do never go anywhere just to in later life," said Riesman. "But talk . . but to discuss problems the assumption of control of ed- Riesman In The Commons — October, 1963 of mutual interest," said David ucation by the faculty has "forced Riesman at Hanszen College's the student to specialize early." Fall Symposium, Wednesday, Oc- RIESMAN TIED THIS to the tober 16, 1963. fact that universities were hav- The "end of the great-man era ing their values set by national, in American education," Harv- professional associations or guilds. ard's answer to "largeness" in its "There guilds," suggested Ries- undergraduate school, and the man, "are not primarily interest- Freshman Seminar Program, ed in education on the under- were the subjects of Riesman's graduate levels." prepared text. Riesman quoted a sociologist "BUILDERS AND SHAPERS friend as saying, "I don't want like Woodrow Wilson and Hutch- to teach them (students) in ins of Chicago seem to have van- graduate school ... I want to ished, said Riesman. "The faculty put them to work on my pro- is the new leader in the academ- jects." ic commnity." Riesman stressed RIESMAN distinguished be- that "faculty government . . . tween the approaches of Rice was not ... a highroad to inno- and Harvard to problems of un- vation and imagination." dergraduate education, especial- "The University is the cathed- ly in the freshman year. ral of our secular life," concluded Both Rice and Harvard were Riesman. He suggested that the able to form "college systems," faculty suffered from a "peda- or "house systems," because of gogical entrenchment" similar to adequate finances. "Because of the clergy in the medieval ca- affluence," said Reisman, "the thedrals of Chartres and Ami- chemists don't notice how much ens. the library costs." •AN ANALYSIS AS A RESULT the task of A FRESHMAN Seminar Pro- American educators is a "re-cre- gram, rather than "sophomore Rice And Riesman: The Whip And The Carrot ation of what already exists." platoon leader," is the system The older academians were "cru- that Harvard has found works David Riesman, unlike most campus speakers, This early concentration leads to or is a result saders, but the current academ- best. spent several days, rather than several hours, at of what Riesman terms the "Rickover syndrome," ians are entrenched and fossilized The program is operated on a Rice. His time was taken up in a dialogue, an al the emphasis on vocational training and career types," "The real excitement," non-graded basis, and it takes the most continual exchange between himself and the preparation. This stigma of training rather than said Riesman, "is in the border place of one of the four courses Rice academic community, particularly its students. education applies not only to scientific and techni- areas, like biophysics and psy- of a Harvard freshman. It al- His prolific vocal output touched widely varying cal fields but to the liberal arts as well. The grad- cholinguistics, which demand the lows a professor to teach a pet subjects and was marked invariably by candor and ing system and the course load, which Riesman most creativity." subject that would not be offered sincerity. Much of what he said pertained to educa- called "much too big," are in part a manifestation "The undergraduate should not otherwise. About 350 freshmen tion, and no small amount was specifically applic- of the same attitude. are admitted into the program. able to Rice. ALL OF THESE factors tend to discourage devi- ACCORDING TO Riesman the big problems solved by the semi- HIS ARGUMENTS were directed at all universi- ation from the university culture, a diligent, obedi- Peace Corps Fits nar program are large lecture ties including Rice, which emphasize "vocational ent pattern of specialized scholasticism, and to training" over intellectual development, which bur- compel conformity to established forms of behavior. classes, graduate teaching assist- den and thwart students with heavy class hours The potential enthusiasms and talents of the stu- American Youth's ants, and a frightening Harvard and work loads, which develop graduate studies dents, if realized at all, are channelled into existing "coldness" that becomes appar- at the expense of the undergraduate, which depart- activities rather than into a search for new ones. Search For Values ent to every Harvard Freshman. mentalize rather than synthesize knowledge; and "In a busy institution where everyone is driven, "Young people today from well- Riesman's discussion of the which sacrifice the student's best interest to a it is hard to initiate action." The air is dry, and to-do-families are not searching program was based on his expe- vague university tradition. even sterile in such a context. for the traditional values.'They riences with his own seminar. RIESMAN DESCRIBED two In Riesman's view, a college education should be Given Rice's particular student body and the want to be of direct, relevant help syndromes that afflict students. measured in terms of its "value-added," the dis- above problems, Riesman concludes that particular to people." This is the evaluation One is the "Rickover syndrome," covery of "one's own interest, and one's wide range remedies should be taken in Rice's progress to- of American youth which David ward becoming a greater university. "Rice should in which students came to school of powers and abilities." Riesman drew in his lecture "The seek its own road, using what is good or viable Peace Corps in Historical Pers- "embued with the urge to work COLLEGE SHOULD be a place of intellectual elsewhere as a model." pective," Friday night in Plam- all the time . . . doing nothing search and experience. It is a conversation. An at- man Hall. that might distract them from mosphere. As an educational institution, a college IN REGARD to the student body, Riesman feels Mr. Riesman traced the histor- the transcript or national de- must be judged by its total effect on the student— that a vigorous recruiting campaign would bring in ical background of private for- fense." what is gained, and what is lost. a more cosmopolitan out-of-state element, increas- ing the possibilities for deviation and expansion. eign development projects among The other is the "Exeter-An- In the case of the Rice student, the given talent Rice as an atmosphere is ripe for experimenta- American young people, such as dover" syndrome. These people is unusually high. Because of the exceptional abili- tion, and Riesman feels that it should be at the Project Accion in Venezuela or had the feeling that, "they were ties of its students, Rice has exceptional demands undergraduate level. "The graduate school, en- Crossroads Africa, as well as the mature, had had it all . . . and made upon it as an instrument of education. larged in selective areas in which Rice is strong, United States Peace Corps. wanted to get out of the general THE HARVARD social scientist found the Rice would be constructed to feed into the undergraduate HE CONTRASTED the spirit educational drivel of freshman student "hungry, eager, and surprisingly open." program. N^,w methods and new ideas in education of the early American missionary, year." These people usually came Around Riesman conversation flowed, with anima- would be A significant achievement here." who in truth came from an un- in as sophomores. tion and intensity. He touched on the latent en- QUITE OBVIOUSLY, little can be done about derdeveloped nation, with that of IN THE RICKOVER PEOPLE, thusiasm of the Rice student, an enthusiasm seldom Rice's location. In the South" it is and will remain the .present day Peace Corps vol- Riesman saw a group of students evidenced in his routine life at the university. and with the educational advantages and problems unteer. These early missionaries (Continued on Page 13) These are the enthusiasms which create "sub- of the South it must cope. also carried technical aid (teach- 1 cultures" at some universities—literary, political, But it will not lose its isolation by standing still. ers, doctors ,' blacksmiths, etc.) to intellectual sub-cultures which lend vigor^nd life It will not develop an intellectual hardness rather the underpriviliged. to the full-scale culture of the University itself. than genteel acquiescence in its students by con- Mr. Riesman emphasized that, BUT RIESMAN doubts that such sub-cultures centrating on technical preparation and by shield- unlike the modern peace corps might appear at Rice. The Southern location of ing its students from dialectic and inquiry. The volunteer, the missionary often Rice, with its comparative isolation from the main- problem must be faced. considered it his obligation to re- streams of scholarship and world affairs, plus the RIESMAN IS GONE; yet Rice remains, changed make the world in his own image. Southern tradition of Hospitality which so often little, if at all. The voice perhaps has fallen upon In the nineteenth century "we leads to politeness rather than polemic, lessen the deaf ears. The discussion and arguments raised exported to the rest of the world chances that such subcultures might appear here. have already begun to die in the colleges, in the types who were considered ex- Rice's small size and preponderantly Texas popula- faculty, and in the administration, just as the Rice treme at home and felt more 'at tion lend further force to provincial tendencies. myth furor of last semester died, laid to rest with home' abroad. . . These Ameri- But more serious than these, in Riesman's view, little changed or accomplished. cans who were frustrated by the are some of the specific attributes of Rice Univer- David Riesman is a student of education. His pluralistic consensus of America sity. He is a great believer in and perhaps the view of Rice was brief but intense, and he could sometimes went abroad to find an greatest example of non-compartmentalized educa- not presume to make absolute evaluations or rec- audience." tion. Viewing this University's formal departments, ommendations. This is a task for Rice itself. There WITH THIS missionary zeal Riesman concludes that the students are compelled is much to praise at Rice, and Riesman took note Riesman contrasted modern to narrow their intellectual experience, this nar- of these favorable points. America's human exports. "People rowing in addition to the similar effects of the HIS EMPHASIS, however, was on potential un- pie who go abroad today have a Southern environment. realized, on what was lost in the student that different view. They want to help IN THE HIGkLY competitive Rice atmosphere should have been retained and on what was added from abundance rather than take he delineates forces which drive the student to that in fact should have remained lost. from thirst." American young "play from his strength, or rather his career-ori- David Riesman's eminent voice lent weight to people today, he believes are dis- ented field, rather than to experiment, to use constructive criticism of Rice and of other Ameri- illusioned by politics, and they abilities he heretofore classified as poor." The Rice can institutions; for the problem he sees is not tend to reject business values and student is forced to consider where his talent lies with Rice alone, but with education in an increas- look for service professions. They and then to center his college career around this ingly technical society. seek visible results in their acts DAVID RIESMAN focal point. —BILL BROYLES (Continued on Page 13) With Students At Hanszen Ten THE THRESHER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963 OWLOOK Jones Grid Stars TENNIS MATCHES SLOW Comeback Drive Unifies Owls? Try To Disprove Kate, SEX In Lead:

t S It Weaker-Sex Law We were delighted to come out on top." In his characteristic Tension is mounting at Jones Tigett Runs Up TD's understatement, Coach Neely summed up the Owls' comeback College as the Freshman-Sopho- By JOHN DURHAM took a big lead as it had in last 13-7 win over a scrapping SMU eleven. It was the impression more Powders and the Junior- year's Thresher poll. They are here that, but for a few ill-timed errors, Rice had soundly whipped Senior Puffs enter their final Even the intramural football now 2-0, winning by forfeit over a highly rated foe. weeks of practice before the teams, those paragons of non- the Pigskinners. The Baker Fak- In three years of tight ball games, never have our Owls Chamiponship Powder Puff violent athletics, have recognized ers prevailed over the Begonias shown so much poise and determination as in that dramatic last- game. The kickoff is scheduled the urgency of this weekend's ditch drive. in the only other league game. for 4:30 p.m. Thursday, October activity in Austin. THE SAVAGE blocking of our superior line, Hale and Piper 31, at Jones field. GOING INTO THIS week The Last week the teams in the slashing for extra yardage, Kelly's vital battle for the big first The underclass Powders are Rillas and the Will Rice Jocks Friday League played games on down—at last the Owls had regained the promise of that first out for blood after last year's were tied for the lead in the both 'Friday and Saturday so quarter against LSU. heart-breaking loss in a 12-6 Monday League. The leaders in that team members might leave- Texas mentor described it: "Rice is tough thriller that left them knocking the Tuesday Freshman League early for the Texas game this fj om this time on; they stop trying to fool people and pound them at the door in the fourth quar- were the Alley Cats. week. The Katz retained their with flawless execution." (Royal's own success secret.) ter. They are sure to be up for lead, running their record to 3-0 FOR NEELY THE drive took an important aspect. He felt the game. Tennis play has been sporadic that the eleven players molded in the face of sudden adversity with a 57-0 victory over the Van- so far, with only a fraction of into a unit—the suspicion here is that he is right. THE UPPERCLASS Puffs, dals and a 20-13 win over the the scheduled matches being As the still elated student body filed to the exits, the question however, have a reputation to Cretins. Joel Tigett caught 9 completed. Mr. J. R. Barker, in- of the moment arose the question which cannot be answered protect and are eager to add touchdown passes in the two tramurals chairman, said that before Saturday night in Austin. one more victory to their unde- games, most of them thrown by there will be mass forfeitures in 1EXAS, NUMBER ONE in the eyes of the experts, became feated, untied record. Puff coach Mike Evans. In other league ac- the very near future if scheduled number one on the minds of the Rice faithful. Jim Peden said, "If we can stay tion the Dirty Legs defeated the matches are not completed. in good shape, I think it will be an Cretins 6-0 and the Playboys 7- Everyone is still rather awed by the demolition of highly The leaders in singles are interesting . . . game." 6. touted Oklahoma. Doubtless Arkansas felt this same awe as the Richard Foster and Stuart Long Royal machine smashed to a 17-0 lead in the first half. But the On the other side, the Pow- IN THE SATURDAY Fresh- with records of 3-0. Johnny SWC found the ray of hope as the struggling Hogs fought back ders' veteran coach Bart Huem- man League, the No Names and Glover, Jim Wakely, Bob Hayes, to fall four points short of an upset. mer commented, "We've got a the Wiess Weanies lead. The and Tommy Daniels are all 2-0. JOE DAVIS, RICE line coach, has thoroughly scouted the team with lots of experience and Studes were victimized by both Teasips for over 20 years. His accumulated feelings speak well lots of green—but surprising— of these teams during the week for the peculiar surge of spirit which sweeps through our student kids." He scratched the fast- —losing to the No Names 38-6 body for one week each season. greying hairs on his forehead. and to the Weanies 13-0. Badminton Club Davis himself once gave Malcolm Walker a new shirt to re- "Heads, she's a guard. Tails . . ." In the Thursday League, SEX place the bright one worn by the Owl center. The team's A Badminton Sports Club is attitude reflects the significance of this encounter. being formed by the Health and I HE HOPE I HAT Texas will suffer a lapse after two weeks Physical Education Department. of crucial football can be discounted. We are not the only stu- THE FIRST meeting will be dents that remember last year's upset. "Poor Teasips" will be Rice Soccer Club Beats Old Timers; Monday, October 28, from 7 ready to revenge their smashed hopes for a national title. till 8:30 pm on the small gym- Last week, after a two hour pep rally for the Arkansas game, nasium floor. It will include a a Texas cheerleader could only tell us, "Boy, do we want you Jim Wakely Scores Winning Goal demonstration clinic and prac- guys." tice session. TEXAS IS A power team. They run from a flip-flop offense By JOHN BEHRMAN tini, Rodriguez and Lorette kept The club will be "co-recrea- the score tied until the last three tional" and is open to all stu- which features strength, speed, and perfect execution. They The Rice Soccer Club won its seldow throw—as yet it's not been necessary. minutes of play. dents and faculty. Mr. Dale first game of the season Satur- Spence will be the faculty ad- The success of quarterback Duke Carlisle has given the day afternoon against the Old RICE SOCCER CLUB coach Longhorns the leader they had lacked. Now they seem a complete visor. Timers of the Houston Soccer and fast moving center halfback, football team. League. Jim"Wakely broke a 3-3 Klaus Neundorf plans a rematch THE CONCESSION here is that Texas has earned its role with the Old Timers on No- as favorite. But this football game will be won on the field by tie in the closing minutes of play to win the game, with a quick vember 2 and an expanded sched- Owl Cagers Show the team that, errs least. The Horns have made few mistakes; ule in the coming months. Mean- oblique shot from the right after Rice has hurt itself with critical errors. while, the task of integrating a adroitly dribbling through the Depth, Experience Despite accusations to the contrary, this team has not let team of graduates, undergradu- defensive sci-een. Center forward down in the face of a discouraging bounce of the pigskin. It is ates, faculty, experienced and in- difficult to write off an explosive team which has a history of Wakely who also scored the first experienced players continues. As Season Nears getting to great heights for such occasions. point is doing a fine job of re- While some of the Rice footbal- By PAUL BREWER NOT SINCE 1953 have the Owls won in Austin. But this placing fellow countryman Len lers, such as Jim Wakely, have team is not prepared to accept defeat easily. Masterman who returned to been playing "since I was three," While the fotball team and the Although John Minis is a doubtful participant, soph Ilarlon England this year. others like fullback Freddie student body were preparing Dearing has given new depth at tackle. The strength of line- White '65 have been playing themselves for the conference backers Wayt and Walker is going to hinder badly the Texas JANOS LAVAR and Art Wil- only since coming to Rice. Still, opener with SMU, the basketball power game. Like last year, Coach Neely can be expected to turn son, both veterans of last year's players like White and wingman team began their formal work- up the unexpected to puzzle Royal's forces. team, each scored for Rice. Bodo Chris Curran ai*e excellent ex- outs. Tuesday, the 15th„ marked WE LOOK FOR a strong, diversified Rice offense and a hard Karl Gotzkowski played a spec- amples of how Americans with the first time head basketball hitting defense to match the Steers blow for blow. If those critical tacular game at goalkeep and comparatively little experience coach George Carlisle officially mistakes can be eliminated .... was largely responsible for keep- v can become proficient in this, the met with the boys. See you at the victory dance in Austin? ing down the Old Timers' score. most international of sports —CORDELL II ATM ON Old Timer scores by Konstan- Prior to the 15th the boys had been working out on their own by concentrating on isomatric drills and various types of run- Out On A Horn ning. Brewer Urbach Durham Haymon CROSS-COUNTRY runs were alternated with sprints and 14-20 16-20 Last week 15-20 14-20 four-forties. Laps up and down 21-28 23-28 Season 24-38 22-28 the stadium steps and backward quarter miles were also part of Alabama-UH Ala. Ala. Ala. Ala. their training program. As a re- Arkansas-Tulsa Ark. Ark. Ark. Ark. sult Coach Carlisle welcomed a Army-Wash. St. Army Army Army Army well - conditioned team when practice opened. LSU-Florida LSU Fla. LSU LSU Baylor-Texas A&M Baylor Baylor Baylor Baylor The squad will have more California-USC use use use „USC depth this year than Rice has seen in many seasons. Eight let- Dartmouth-Harvard Dart. Dart. Dart. Dart. termen return along with sev- Duke N. C. St. Duke-No. Carolina St. Duke Duke eral squadmen and a host of Pcnn St.-West Va. Penn St. Penn St. Penn St. Penn St. boys up from the freshman team. Illinois-UCLA 111. 111. 111. 111. Kendall Rhine, Larry Phillips, Iowa-Purdue Purdue Purdue Purdue Iowa and Herb Steinkamp are expec- Memphis St.-Miss. St. Miss. St. Miss. St. Miss. St. Miss. St. ted to lead the attack as they Mich. St.-NorthwesternN'west. N'west. N'west. N'west. have in the past two years as Navy-Pittsburgh Navy Navy Pitt. Pitt. starters. Michigan-Minnesota Minn. Minn. Minn. Minn. Barry Rodrigue, also a starter Notre Dame-Stanford N D N D N D N D from last year, will return as Ohio St.-Wisconsin Wis. Wis. Ohio St. Wis. will ,$ick Cramer and Larry Ti- ner. Oregon St.-Syracuse Ore. St. Syr. ' Ore. St. Syr. ,• HOW DOES IT LOOK?—Head Coach Neely confers with press- Oregon-Washington Ore. Ore. Ore. Ore. The top prospects up from the box from sidelines as assistant Nick Lanza keeps track of the game. SMU-Texas SMU SMU SMU SMU freshman team are Doug Mc- The Owls defeated SMU 13-7. Kendrick and Leonard White. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963 THE THRESHER Eleven

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIWIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII For The Record First-Ranked 'Horns Series Standing: 29-19-1, Texas ... In Houston: 12-10-1, Rice ... In Austin: 19-7-0, Texas Face Owl Comback 1962 Result: Rice 14, Texas 14 Rice's renaissance of hope just ran overtime. And when SMU 1963 Location: Memorial Sta-, meets its biggest challenge Sat- went ahead Saturday, the same dium urday night when the Owls jour- old questions were asked. ... Capacity: 62,000 ney to bloodthirsty Austin seek- But this time the answers were . .. Expected Crowd: 66,000 ing their first road win in 23 different. Kickoff Time: 7:30 pm months. It was the first come-from-be- Special Events: Texas Home- Oh, yes. They play the Texas hind, last-minute victory for the coming Longhorns, who can be found Owls since 1953. And that brings this week atop any list of the us to our second story, for then 21 LSU 12 best football teams in the nation. the place was Memorial Stadium, 7 Penn State 28 But that's another story. the teams were Rice and Texas, 23 Stanford 13 THE FIRST TALE began the stakes were the Southwest 13 SMU 7 sometime in 1961 and ended, Conference championship and the LIGHTNING STRIKE TWICE?—The Owls toppled the Long- hopefully, last Saturday. It be- . horns from their top position in the national polls last season with 64 60 gan when a potentially great In the decade that separated a 14-14 tie. Rice fans are looking for an upset again this year, but TEXAS LONGHORNS team fizzled out into nothingness those two last-minute thrillers, think that a tie won't be enough against the again first-ranked 21 Tulane 0 in 1961. The next year was no Rice failed to win in Memorial Stadium. Texans. 49 Texas Tech 7 different; this year began in much 34 Oklahoma St. 7 the same way. AND NOW, facing an unbeaten Rice's Owls go into Saturday night's game a twelve-point 28 Oklahoma 7 When SMU scored with 6:04 Texas team for the fifth time in underdog. This seems to have but slightly dampened the hopes of 17 Arkansas 13 remaining in the game Saturday six years, the Owls must try to the students, hundreds of whom plan to make the trip. Saturday night, it appeared that the Owls break the ten-year hex and con- tinue their 1963 comeback against is an all-school holiday in honor of the game. 145 34 were facing the same old season. In reality there was no '62; '61 what may be the best Texas team ever. Blessed with 28 lettermcn, plus a talented collection of soph- Conference Defies -SCOUTING REPORT- omores, the 'Horns are the na- Tradition, Three tion's second-highest scoring The High And The Mighty: Texas Is Number One team. Favorites Victors The only chinks in the Long- By PAUL BURKA meaningless here. Undoubtedly it is very real in horn armor are a leaky pass de- By JOHN DURHAM Thresher Austin Bureau Houston, where beating Texas can change a bad fense and the lack of a top- season into a good one, but there is no such threat back. But while there are Fate . . . Irony . . . Destiny. Three words de- A most unusual thing happen- feeling here. After the destruction of Oklahoma no greats, good ones are plenti- ed in Never-Never Land (better scribe Rice's mission Saturday night in Memorial and the early success against Arkansas, the Texas ful: Carlisle, Harris, Ford. Phi'- known as the Southwest Con- Stadium, but on the campus of the Number One faithful are confident. ipp • • • ference) over the weekend. Team in the Nation, there is only one thought: The offense cannot compare Three of the four favorites won revenge. AFTER ALL, as the student said, "nobody with the Cotten-Collins-Saxton- their games. beats this team two years in a row." The general Mighty Texas, undefeated, untied, King of the Poage quartet of 1961—not one feeling: "here's a little dirty work to accomplish of the- current foursome can Not only that, but Rice, a 6- Mountain among college football teams, finds before we get back to serious business." match his predecessor. But the '63 point favorite over SMU, actual- itself standing face-to-face with history—and Longhorns make fewer mistakes ly finished the game six points loving every moment of it. Nevertheless, when Saturday night rolls around, 66,000 will be on hand to watch the na- and are more tenacious on de- ahead, 13-7. Revenge. The very sound of the word typifies tion's Number One team go about that dirty fense. the bitterness which has surrounded the Rice- ELSEWHERE around the work. The morbidly curious always turn out in THE OWLS cannot hope to Texas rivalry in the last decade. Swapping home- league things were fairly typi- force. match their rivals in depth or in cal. Arkansas almost took the and-home victories, the Owls and Longhorns have offensive quickness. But Rice is steam out of Texas in the second alternately atoned for the sins of their predeces- For the third straight year, they are convinced not without a few aces of its half, but almost's don't count. sors, Texas capturing four straight in Austin in that they're watching the best football team in own: if the McReynoIds-Hollings- Points do and the Longhorns had odd-numbered years and the Owls retaliating five the nation. Once they may have been right. Once , worth duo is clicking, the Owls times in Houston. more. they were definitely wrong. This year, again, could pick the Longhorn second- <» they may be right. ary apart. Texas is still number one and BUT TEXAS HAS more to avenge than a 14-14 tie in Houston. The score may have been even, Unlike last year, when it was written, "Texas, Texs has plenty of raw power, the Hogs, pi-e-season co-favor- but Rice's well-drilled ends should ites for the conference champ- but there was no mistake about its meaning: the mighty Texas, will die before the month is out," University Tower, which glows Orange after the Longhorns are not an over-rated, stumbling- turn it inside. In '<>1 Texas got; ionship, have been virtually outside and killed the Owls. If eliminated from competition. Longhorn victories, was dark. If Rice tied, then giant. They are good, very good. Texas lost. they should do it again this year, IN LUBBOCK, Don Trull FOUR WORDS typify this Texas team: it's over. dangled hope in front of the Red For the 'Horns had entered that game unbeaten quickness, depth, pursuit, pride. It is not a great Rice is not without power of its Raiders for more than three and untied, and yes, ranked first in the nation. team, and it can be beaten—but it is a well- own, and the Owls can counter quarters before he took Baylor Rice was winless, but as so often is the case in coached, well-drilled ball club. strength-for-strength defensive- Rice-Texas games, past performances were mean- ly: linebackers Malcolm Walker across for the winning score What Texas does, it does very well. What it ingless. Texas couldn't recover the fumbles Rice and Russell Wayt can match Tom- with less than two minutes left. cannot do it does not- try. There are more passes made against SMU. my Nobis and Tommy Doerr. Final sc'ore: 21-17. at a bridge table than at a Texas football game, THE 'HORNS, out to avenge And now, with a perfect setting for a back- and for a very good reason: the 'Horns don't have Meanwhile TCU and the Ag- the tie that knocked them out of ground, the World Series of Highway 290 reaches a good thrower. But their short pass game is a gies were producing a familiar Number One, will be sky-high by its Golden Anniversary year. Rice has won 20 threat because the receivers always execute their tally in Fort Worth. The fav- games—19 wins and the one tie—and Texas has patterns perfectly. Saturday, but the Owls, too, have ored Horned Frogs wound up on taken 29. But again, last year's touchdowns don't momentum behind them. It should the middle end of a 14-14 tie. count this time around. And that is one of the secrets of the Number be typical Rice-Texas^ a sellout One Team in the Nation. Its offense, which is crowd and a close game. SO MUCH FOR mayhem un- THEY COUNT in the memories of Longhorn basically unexciting, clicks because the plays It's no place for the timid. der the bridge. This weekend, fans, however, who know only too well that the are executed to perfection. Even a quarterback —— _o— — promises more of the same. Any- Owls were all that stood between Texas and that sneak "can be exciting when it gains eight yards. one who doesn't know that Rice cherished Number One last year. Band's McNeely plays Texas in Austin Saturday THE 'HORN offense has produced 145 points night gets the "Out to Lunch" Darrell Royal remembers. Coach of the Year in five games—second highest total in the nation Subject Of Music award for the week. in 1961, he led Texas in '62 to its first unbeaten —and all this despite the absence of a break- season in 39 years—but it wasn't perfect. "Of away runner and the loss of the number one Journal Feature That leaves six other confer- course I want to be Number One," he said. "I owe fullback. But what .makes up for it is the block- Leading the band this week in ence teams, Texas Tech, after it to the boys. But there's always a team like ing in the line and the quickness of the backs— Austin will be the long-time di- coming closer than a Gillette Rice and the plays themselves. Texas plays are very rector of the Owl Band, Holmes shave to the Baptists, travels to quick-developing. McNeely, who was recently the Dallas to try Southern Metho- Bill Little remembers. Sports Editor of the subject of a feature article in a dist. Daily Texan, he feasted on a diet of words last Only rates as a "great" football October its he wrote, "and so, as the lights of player—and he rates it totally. The phrase was state-wide journal. THOSE SAME Baptists from this big city wink disgustingly in your face, coined for him. But a combination of magnificent The article in the Journal of Waco go to College Station in you leave the stadium wearing the ribbon that depth and tremendous pursuit make up for a the Texas Music Educator's As- an attempt to make believers out says 'Texas Number One'—because we believe lack of outstanding talent. sociation discussed the fact that of the Aggies. McNeely i s probably the only they still are." And the large, block "14-14" But most of all, it is Longhorn pride which has Arkansas, beaten for two person in the state who is a full- started appearing in the Texan Tuesday. made this team into a winner. It borders on straight weeks gets a breather time director of two bflnds at cockiness. When Appleton says, "There's not a against Tulsa. TCU is idle. THE 23,000 football-mad residents of the cam- once. man in this conference big enough to come over pus of the Number One Team ii), the Nation re- On tap from the band on Sat- ' us," that's an indication. If he'd said, "big enough member. "I feel sorry for Rice," said the seci'e- urday, students can expect a CONFERENCE STANDING to come over me," that would have been cocki- tary of the student body. "Nobody beats this "Halftime with the Owl Band" ness. This way, it's pride. Baylor 2 0 0 team, two years in a row," said another. as a theme for the between-half Texas 2 0 0 AND THERE'S Royal, who says, "You never But the attitude' on the Forty Acres is a strange intermission. McNeely noted that Rice 10 0 hear a player say why he went to another school. one. Apathy, confidence, and vengeance all play the un-named "school song" will TCU Ill He always says why he didn't go to Texas." a rol ein shaping the background for Saturday's be played whenever practical, Arkansas 12 0 Big One. Saturday night, 33 players who didn't go to but that pre-game ceremonies Texas A&M 0 11 Texas will be called upon to show why. will not permit the playing of Texas Tech 13 0 While the memory of '62 is obviously all too two Rice songs as well as "The History has a way of repeating itself. SMU 0 10 clear in Austin, the Rice-Texas rivalry itself is Eyes of Texas." Twelve THE THRESHER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963

SPECIAL RATE TO RICE STUDENTS Before Noon Daily & All Day Sunday 'Recruiting Season' Opens Here; Enjoy Pocket Billards, Snooker, Regular Billiards, Your Favorite Food, and Refreshments, and The Best In Stereo Music At . . . Month's Interview Schedule Set By BOB EASTON The Rice Placement Office, di- Nov. 1 Monsanto Chemical rected by John B. Evans, is a American Oil service of the Association of Rice Edgerton, Germes- Alumni located in the Alumni hausen & Grier Office on the second floor of the SylvaniaElectronic Memorial Center. 4 Diamond Alkali cv Standard Oil Com- Through this office any Rice student can obtain interviews pany of Califor- "AMERICA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL BILLIARD CLUB" with a number of different in- nia Membership to Rice Students and Faculty—only $1.00 dustrial and marketing firms U. S. Navy Elec- OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK TO 2:00 A.M. (172 in all last year) that come tronics Labora- 2138 RICE BLVD. IN THE VILLAGE PHONE JA 4-9253 to Rice seeking employees. tory Applications for graduate U. S. Civil Engi- study at other schools and jobs neering Labora- as teachers are also handled tory through this office. Summer po- 4 & 5 Phillips Petroleum sitions can also be secured in Los Alamos Scien- SOUTH MAIN BOOK STORE many cases. tific Laboratory The "recruiting" seasons, as 5 The Prudential In- 6624 Main (I Blk. Tidelands - Shamrock) JA 4-5517 they are called, when the great- surance C o m- est number of interviews are pany of America scheduled, come in the fall, from Universal Oil Pro- ducts Company Open 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. mid October to mid-December, and in the spring from February M a r at h o n Oil 3 to some time in April or May. 6 Cities Service Re- Within this period as many as search and De- 225 separate company interviews velopment may be arranged. NASA, Ames Re- 10% Discount to Rice Students To obtain an interview, any search Center student may sign the ledger in Linde Division of On Books & Caedmon Records in our Regular Stock the Placement Office. A list of Union Carbide the various companies whose rep- Allied Chemical resentatives will be interviewing 6 & 7 DuPont Chemical on campus during each bimonth- Chemical Division ly period is posted in the place- of Union Car- bide Corripany Books of all kinds for Adults and Children ment office. Once*fna while this list also makes it into the col- 7 Dow Chemical O leges. - 3 Mason & Hanger— Silas Mason Co., Although these companies are 8 Ernst & Ernst mostly tecnological firms seeking FINE PAPERBACKS Rhom & Haas engineers, chemists, math majors, Bell Helicopter etc., ten accounting firms are " Schlumberger" represented, and many others are Surenco, S. A. Art Prints • Caedmon Records of Poetry & Drama looking for economics, B.A., and Kaiser Aluminum commerce students, and other ac- & Chemical adems who are interested in sales 11 National Security or marketing. Agency Mrs. Leatherwood of the Place- 11-12 Texaco, Inc. ment Office has compiled a note- 13 Farb, Miller & book which contains standard Beerman forms, questionnaires, and other Schlumberger information pertaining to this of- - Goodrich- Gulf fice. • Chemicals, Inc. Along with this she has placed The California in each college a copy of the Company College Placement Annual 1964, Texas Eastman a very informative catalogue con- 13-14 Proctor & Gamble only taining- articles of interest to Social Security 14 jobseekers, and a list of major Geophysical Serv- companies, grouped by geograph- ice Inc. ical area and employment oppor- 14-15 Ethyl Corporation tunities. R. C. A. your hair knows Mrs. Leatherwood urges every- 15 01 in one to look over this catalogue Sheffield Steel Eff* and notebook, and to make full vision Armco use of the facilities of the Place- Steel ment Office. it's there! THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY It's invisible, man! You can't see it. She can't feel it. Only your hair OF AMERICA knows it's there ! It's CODE 10 for men, the new invisible hairdressing THE JACK E. ADAMS from Colgate-Palmolive. Non-greasy CODE 10 disappears in your hair, & ASSOCIATES AGENCY gives it the clean, manly look that inflames women, infuriates in- Suite 205—2244 West Holcombe Houston 25, Texas ferior men ! Be in. Let new CODE 10 groom your hair all day, invisibly. Telephone: MOhawk 7-3315 Leland Ross JACK E. ADAMS, Manager "The original and only Company selling exclusively to college-trained people. Buy where you benefit most. We will be pleased to show you. The College Life Insurance Company of America."

The trend to the solid-color dress shirt has reversed itself and the new look has become the stripes. The most popular shirt in the today seems to be the button-down oxford pin stripe in lighter shades of blue-white, olive-white, red- white, burgandy-white and brown-white. Today the well-dressed university student has a stripe shirt wardrobe of six to eight shirts which he wears for sport with casual dacron and cotton traditional slacks for semi-dress with casual dacron and cotton traditional slacks for semi-dress with a solid color blazer. It is entirely proper to wear a stripe shirt with a suit until six pm—after this hour a white shirt is proper. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1963 TH|3 THRESHER Thirteen

Harvard's House Orientations Use Bissonnet Cleaners "Your Neighborhood Seminars In Place Of 'Platoons' Cleaners" (Continued from Page 9) traditions following his speech, 1922 Bissonnet JA 3-8087 who could "eat, but not taste Riesman stated that, "The ques- their food." "Society abstracts tions of how a girl should be ed- from our own tastes and likes," ucated and at the same time have DROMGOOLE'S said Riesman, "leaving us to just her reputation protected seem go through the motions. They are mutually exclusive." This was in so concerned with doing well that conjunction with the revelation TYPEWRITER they can never see where they that Harvard Houses have a per- want to go." petual open house. SHOP INC. To a questioner who protested "Competition and pressure . . . | In the Village that educational institutions were were removed from the group. | Typewriters . Calculators becoming commercialized, Ries- The result was that the students I Adding Machines . Repairs man stated that "G. E. does more were introduced to a style— or ' Rentals . Sales for the humanistic education of psychological approach — that i JA 2-4333 2182 Bolsover . its executives than do leading would characterize their life f Two doors from Post Office f universities for their undergrad- work. » i THE TWENTIETH CENTURY—CBS photographers were on uates . . hand at last week's SMU-Rice game getting footage for a program "THE STYLE THAT these stu- on Houston, Rice and NASA to be presented on the network show dents were introduced to," said in January or February. Rieman, "was both cosmopolitan and committed." His own seminar was oriented Tkz PEACE CORPS- towards making students play U /.'/ \.r. ( V nu ,-\ I ,! ft I,, I aujr: flj from their weaknesses, said Ries- • [ 'RESS[ 5 • SPORTSWEAR X\ | Incidental (Continued from Page 9) man. He made them take diffi- • LINGERIE • ACCESSORIES cult courses completely out of 2240 W. Holcombe MA 3-3949 which they don't see in their their fields. The results illustrat- Intelligence academic work. ed that most people pay little re- Mr. Riesman discussed the A THE ®OMi3t££4lgkt. c^u^e/tAa^^n, ^ gard to the "cold undeside of the By GARY HANOYICH strange American trait of using intellectual iceberg," most not hypocrisy to hide our virtues ra- 1 JkDtau4€ t/cadiXum,.. . The acquisition of the Nadler even realizing that it existed. ther than our vices in order to /*IID pa&uAA collection brought the Fondren "Frustrated sophomores and avoid being "phony" or "do-goocl- uUl 7 PM ' TIL MIDNIGHT TUES THRU SAT Library headlines last week. The ish." professors without any time following conversation, however, were by-products of the experi- 1522 WESTHEIMEt • 5 HOCKS WEST Of TOWE* THEATER was overheard on the elevator. "PEACE CORPS volunteers ment," said Riesman, "but the "Say, I found that there is a try carefully to pretend that no result was an education-oriented book on the subject with a com- element of dedication enters their undergraduate program." plete set of introductory notes. minds." These same Americans IN A CONCLUDING answer Fondren doesn't have it though." may have serious ethical prob- to a question on "open house" lems when "desirable aims be- CAMPUS INTERVIEWS * * « come contaminated by being taken * 3 C A Rice Student who went to the up by one country for the Cold Petroleum Club Saturday night War." reports that one of the songs November II, 1963 played for the dancing pleasure Riesman felt that the Peace here is a book of the audience was the trio from Corps and similar volunteer or- Our Director March (to new stu- ganizations have a double value. that is dents that is better known as The American volunteer abroad Rice's Honor). Well . . . someone "can bring to the world a point ENGINEERING found a good use for it. of view—a belief that if one can teaching us name a problem it can be solved, * :fc sjc a hopefulness and a type of un- The sex life of selected students heirarchical social relationship." how to reach Out in each college is being investi- And he believes that America also gated this week by girls from a has much to gain from these for intelligent Bellaire High School class. The young people. "When these people ALL DEGREE LEVELS poll has the approval of Dean of come back they will have a great Students S. W. Higginbotham. deal to contribute, for they will . Electronics * * * have a far better-picture of what Wiess, Hanszen and Baker car- America is." ideas . Mechanical ried the tradition of owl-bowing in the third quarter of Satur- . Industrial day's game when Will Rice exer- . Engineering Physics cised its option of individuality JERRY CANDLER 'and chose not to participate. The . Mathematics University Representative boys who put in extra turn . Statistics did so voluntarily without co- for ercion by upperclassmen. Amicable Life Kev Insurance Co. Senptu * :}: Specializing in RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT The Thresher reprint service Life & Health Ins. found this item in the Will Rice 401 Century BIdg. . Computer Technology College Newsletter. The letter is Office: CA 2-2206 put out by JA <14393 (the infor- Home: OV 6-5728 —Hardware Design mation given in the publication). The heading of the passage de- Like most of us, you prtfbably —Software Research voted to the Slime Parade is "At- feel pressured at times with the . Communications Systems tention all freshmen." demands made on you for original . . one final thing on this thinking, - for fresh ideas that —Propagation Research subject. Your president, Dick O'BANION'S will lift your work above the - —Complex Design (Richard) Blakey, recommends commonplace. Through the study * * +. * * * * * * that you do not take part in the LAUNDRY of this book, Science and Health pai'ade, since he feels it has, at with Key to the Scriptures by the moment, has gotten out of Engineers, Mathematicians, and CLEANING Mary Baker Eddy, we are learn- hand in intention and practice." ing how to turn to God for the Physicists should contact their To this, J A 44393' adds "I , COIN OP intelligent ideas we need. You think it is being mishandled." COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICER for can do this, too. % • * * 5215 KIRBY an appointment with an NSA representative. We invite you to come to our Upperclassmen might remem- meetings and to hear how we No test required. ber the catalogue situation two are working out our problems years ago. The Semicentennial catalogue of the University was through applying the truths of reserved for organizations and Christian Science. special personages (i.e., each col- I.D. PHOTOS NATIONAL SECURITY lege got one). Students were not CHRISTIAN SCIENCE important enough to rate the Portrait Quality ORGANIZATION book which, erroneous as it some- RICE UNIVERSITY AGENCY times is, has the only complete Houston course descriptions available. Special Student Price Meeting time: 5:00 p.m. Sunday A student last week accidental- Meeting place: Autry House * WASHINGTON, D. C. area 6265 Main Street ly wandered by a storage area in MO 5-5351 Scicnce and Health is available at all An Equal Opportunity Employer Lovett Hall and found over 1500 Christian Seiencc Reading Rooms and at many of the books in boxes—unused 2246 W. Holcombe follegc bookstores. Paperback Edition $1.95. and now obsolete. O Fourteen THE THRESHER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 19*3

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