Weather: Windy, Cooler Low 40, High 54 T h e Da il y T e / P n Student Newspaper at The University of Texas Page 5: Jets' Coach Says 'N o Pact' Vol. 6 4 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JA N U A R Y 29, 1965 Q Ten Pages Today No. 104 & ' > r - *VQ> J P £ f t ID e b e n Estar L o co s! 'Detroit or Bust' and $27 Left By PAT SHARPE IV xii n Staff Writer They began th eir trip with $200 in South America sev­ en m onths ago and arrived in Austin Thursday with $27 left to tour the U n i t e d States. Three students (one an ex-stu­ dent) traveling from the Univer­ sity of Montevideo hi Uruguay in a 1929 vintage car, which som etim es creeps up to 35 m iles an hour, ate their first American lunch—fried chicken—in Austin Thursday. REINALDO STRATA, 21; Hec­ tor Perez, 23; and Jose Eduardo Leal, 23, were stranded in an au­ tomobile repair shop—with a bro­ ken water pum p—when they were discovered by two Americans, Al Edwards Sr. and Jr., who bought the boys their first US breakfast and brought them to the Univer­ sity. car, and Driving som etim es for f o u r in days consecutively, sleeping eating their drafty somewhat less than subsistence amounts of food, the “Charruas,” they call them selves, have seen 13 countries and put 10,500 m iles behind them. Armed with a 45- day US tourist permit, they are heading for Detroit. future For four months the Charruas lived on a steady diet of rice and beans, but the only time that the looked really bleak was in Nuevo Laredo. There a $50 per person fee to maintain their status as visitors threatened to obliterate their m eager funds. Finally, the fees were paid by the Uruguayan ambassador and they left, greatly relieved, at 5:30 a.m. EDUARDO, the public rela­ tions man, because he speaks English, explained that the word the “Charruas” c o m e s name of an Indian tribe which lived near the Rio de la Plata and was distinguished for valor in the face of the Spanish con­ quistadors. from Their car, named “Tabare,” is a veteran of many m iles of high­ way. Piled high with clothes, it is both home and transportation, although it has no windows on the right side, the door on the driver’s side hangs on one hinge, and strong gasoline fumes seep continuously into the breezy in­ terior. Now replete with a Texas de­ cal, almost invisible amid a hun­ dred other signs and stickers, Ta- bare is their ticket home. At home in Uruguay, howev­ er, life is harly less hectic, at least for Eduardo, who flies a crop duster. He is presently stud­ ying to become a doctor. Hector is a law student and Reinaldo has already obtained his bachelor s degree. ALL THREE BOYS are en­ gaged, and explained th a t in L at­ in A m erica, both the m an and woman w e a r an engagem ent ring—a plain gold band on the left hand. At the wedding c e re ­ mony, the rings a re changed to the rig h t hand and the woman receives a ring with a precious stone. In U ruguay, the education sys­ tem differs som ew hat from that of the United States. In U ruguay the sta te supports education, in­ cluding t e x t b o o k purchases, through the university. Six years a re required for the bachelor's degree—two in high school, two in pre-university, two in the uni­ versity. The U niversity of Monte­ video has an enrollm ent of 15,000. The general illiteracy ra te in U r­ uguay is the lowest in the world —three per cent. School atte n d ­ ance is com pulsory through p ri­ m a ry school, until age 12. UNLIKE AMERICAN colleges, the U niversity of Montevideo has no dorm itories. The students live w ith p rivate fam ilies or in their own hom es. Both m en and wom ­ en attend the university, but only m en work. H ector explains that 'IS* he intends both to work and at­ tend a full load of classes at night. The Charruas, who carefully ask each American if he knows w hat and where Uruguay is (the sm allest country in South Amer­ ica, on the ea st coast), are eager to talk about the country’s gov­ ernment. They emphasize that it is vir­ tually the only stable government in Latin America and also the m ost democratic. A general coun­ cil of nine governs, with four counselors and five ministers. Government posts are divided betw een the two major parties according to the number of votes received in the general election. EDUARDO, who served on the student General Assembly at the U niversity of Montevideo, says th ere a re many Communist agi­ ta to rs a t the university. They of­ ten call for student strikes ( “hu- e lg as” ). However, Eduardo says he is usually unfavorable toward these strikes ‘because they never help the stu d en ts.” The C h arru as left for Dallas— which they thought was the capi­ tal of Texas until they reached Austin—T hursday on Route 66. They plan to retu rn via Austin in sev eral weeks. We hope their $27 lasts that long. Proposed Bill Allows Out-of-State Regents r« \an Photo—Smith It's A Lonq Day's Journey to Detroit Driving 35 M H P in a '29 Chevrolet . . . and Reinaldo Strata, holding Texas pennant, H e c to r Perez (standing), and Eduardo Leal just stop to rest in Austin. Atty. General Named President Retains Katzenbach E arly Senate reaction was fa­ vorable. Sens. Paul H. Douglas, D-Ill., and Jacob Jav its. R N. Y., com m ended P resident’s t h e choice. Ja v its especially noted K atzenbach’* w o r k civil rights. in K atzenbach, a form er law pro­ fessor and World W ar II flier who spent two years as a p ris­ oner of the G erm ans, cam e to national attention when he con­ fronted Gov. George C. W allace during the U niversity of A labam a integration crisis of June 1963. The nominee said Johnson w as In bed when he and his wife, Lyndis, arrived Thursday night. B ut the President, who has been from a cold, arose, suffering joined donned a bathrobe, and the K atzenbachs and M rs. John­ son for dinner in the fam ily liv­ ing quarters. The K atzenbachs have four children, two teen-age sons and two younger daughters. The White House also announc­ ed the appointm ent of M arvin Watson, Texas steel executive and Dem ocratic sta te chairm an, aa a special assistant to the P resident. Watson, whose appointm ent had for rum ored and denied been several months, will be assigned to various adm inistrative duties and special projects and also will be concerned with fed eral-stats relations. President Improving Regents' Meet Begins Friday Governor Delays New Appointments The B oard of R egents will In m eet F rid a y and S aturday Austin despite Gov. John Con­ nally’s delay in appointing four new regents. George C hristian, the gover­ no r’s secretary , told the Texan “ an announcem ent would pro­ bably be in the near future. . . through our office.” Until the an­ nouncem ent, the present R egents will continue to serve. The term s of W. W. H eath, Wales M adden, A. G. McNeese J r . expired Ja n u a ry , 1965, John S. R edditt resigned claim ­ ing from “ political p re ssu re ” the G overnor.” in According to the released agen­ da, num erous appointm ents and rep o rts aw ait the B oard’s de­ cision and approval. Students af­ fairs pending regential discus­ sion include the Texan editorship and two reports dealing with stu­ dent housing. Texas Student Pub­ lications had subm itted its pro­ posal for an elected editor be­ fore the D ecem ber m eeting. C hancellor H arry R ansom and C hairm an W. W. Heath w ere un­ available the published tentative agenda. for com m ent on Days Left to Pay Poll Tax WASHINGTON - (IP — Nicho­ las K atzenbach, who has been acting head of the Justice De­ last Septem ber, p artm en t since general w as nam ed attorney T hursday. along with His nom ination w as sent to the Senate P resident Johnson's selection of R am sey Clark to succeed K atzenbach as deputy attorney general. C lark, 37, is a son of Suprem e Court Ju stice Tom C lark of Texas, and a 1951 UT law graduate. Johnson's action ended months of speculation about who would replace R obert F. Kennedy as attorney general. Kennedy re ­ signed to c a m ­ paign for the New York Senate se a t he won the N ovem ber in election. last Septem ber K atzenbach, tall and balding at 43, took over as acting attorney general when Kennedy left. The first public indication th at John­ son had about m ade up his mind cam e a t one of inaugural balls last week when the P re si­ dent om itted the “ a c tin g ’' in r e ­ ferring to K atzenbach as “ the a t­ torney gen eral.” the the K atzenbachs W ednesday night the Johnsons had in for a cozy White House supper and broke the news. “ He w as very gracious about told newsmen it,” K atzenbach Thursday. “ I am very honored to be ask­ ed by the P resident to be a m em ­ ber of his Cabinet and to head the D epartm ent of Justice. I ii do the best job I c a n .” adm inistration legisla­ piece of subm itted was Connally’s tion teach er pay graduated 10-year ra ise bill, sponsored by Sen. J a c k Strong of Longview and eight other senators. The bill is opposed by the Tex­ as State T eachers Association, which alread y h as strong sup­ port in both houses for a straig h t $400 annual raise for teachers. The graduated p ay ra ise w as one of the su rprise req u ests Con­ nally m ade in his legislative ad ­ dress W ednesday. Connally also asked for consti­ to allow for governors tutional four-year and other sta te officials. am endm ents te rm s OTHER CONNALLY proposals Introduced include: An om nibus em ergency $1.5 million appropriations bill. A bill to tran sfer tuberculosis program s from the h o s p i t a l board to the health departm ent. The first bill of wide interest, aim ed a t requiring im ported beef to be labeled, w as passed by the Senate. Violators could be jailed for up to 90 days or fined up to $500. THE MEAT IMPORT labeling bill, sponsored by Sen. Dorsey H ardem an of San Angelo, r e ­ quires grocers selling m e a t im ­ ported from other nations to dis­ play n e a r m eat counters a sign at ieast 6x12 inches reading “ im ­ ported m e a t sold h e re ” and to label packaged m e a t to show its nation of origin. House m em bers adjourned un­ til l l a.m . M onday, and senators until 10:30 a.m . Monday. WASHINGTON — HPI — P re si­ dent Johnson’s cold kept him abed late T hursday but he went to his office during the a fte r­ noon and did som e work. press Presidential se cretary George E . Reedy said Johnson still has an occasional slight cough, but he said, “ There has been no relap se.” spending THE PRESIDENT returned to the White House on Tuesday in a fte r B ethesda N aval Hospital for tre a tm e n t of a feverish cold and sore throat. four days R eedy said Johnson walked to his office in the west wing of the executive m ansion shortly after 3 p.m . and signed a num ber of docum ents and conferred with m em bers of his staff. Because of his illness, John­ son, acting on the advice of his doctors, decided against going to London Winston Churchill. for the func»ral of Sir HIS ACTION rn om itting Vice President H ubert H. H um phrey the from the US delegation to funeral caused surprise and speculation in politically sen­ sitive W ashington. som e Reedy, however, Insisted th a t this did not involve any “ down­ grading” of the vice president. He m ade this answ er when re­ minded that Johnson had said he would use the vice president as his stand-in on num erous cere­ m onial occasions. Viet Nam Upheaval Eyed Warily by U S SAIGON, South Viet Nam - iii — Business a s usual was the offi­ cial word in dealings Thursday betw een the United States and South Viet N am ’s new govern­ m ent, despite angor voiced pri­ vately by A m erican officials a t the latest upheaval. longing prom otes a desire for re ­ sponsibility and honesty. ALTHOUGH LUST se m ester m arked a new low in the num ber of scholastic dishonesty cases, the situation has not alw ays lo o ted encouraging. In 1947, the U niver­ sity w’as involved in a national cheating expose when R anger E di­ tor Johnny Bryson w rote “ ftie C heat C om pleat,” which w as re ­ printed in Life M agazine, The R anger a rtic le estim ated th a t 67 per cent of students cheated on exam inations. Bryson revealed favorite cribbing m eth­ ods through posed photographs, also used in Life. Cheating Haired again in 1951 in one course con­ the when boys cealed stuffed bluebooks boots they wore on exam day. in from TWENTY-ONE students w ere the University suspended in 1959 for selling and buying copies of a G overnm ent 610a de- final. An em ploye p arem en tal (See CHEATING, p age IO) legal exam ination “ Working conditions rem ain as they w ere,” a US spokesm an spokesm an said. And, “ subject to if req u ir­ e d,” the United States recognizes the regim e of Nguyen Xuan Canli, newly chosen by Gen. Nguyen Khanh as acting pre­ m ier. P ersonal friction rem ained evi­ dent between US A m bassador M axwell D. Taylor and Khanh, the strong m an who deposed P re m ie r T ran Van Huong s ad­ m inistration W ednesday. They pointedly stayed ap art, and Khanh fed the feud with a news conference re m a rk : "I rn su re the United States will ac­ cept any of our actions in the interests of the Vietnam ese peo­ ple. net putting the interests of any single individual above those in terests.” The I S spokesm an said, how­ ever, the two m en—a t odds for about V ietnam ese five weeks in Saigon m ilitary governm ental ex­ affairs—a re pected to m eet again soon. intervention though W hatever their personal feel­ ings. protocol virtually dem ands it. For Taylor is W ashington’s representative h e r e and top Khanh, technically only com m ander of the arm ed forces, rem ains the re a l leader of this w ar-torn civilian nation, No governm ent a t this point could function independently of bis close contwU. On UT Campus, Cheat Sheets on Way Out th at only five students cheated during the fall se m e ste r,” Thom as points out. “ T here a re som e stu ­ dents who a re never caught, and still others whose cases a re han­ dled by their professors and never reported to u s.” P rofessors convinced of a stu­ d en t’s scholastic dishonesty a re required to subm it the student's nam e and offense to the Discipline Com m ittee for penalties to be set, but Thom as believes cedure is not alw ays observed. this pro­ MARGARET PECK, Dean of Women, agrees that faculty m em ­ bers take things into their own hands occasionally. “ I have a feeling that teachers a re interested enough in their stu ­ things over with dents them if the dishonesty is a coun­ they situation, because seling talk to w ant to help students understand everyone’s obligation.’’ Thom as attributes the decrease in scholastic dishonesty cases to see editorial page we two m a jo r factors. “ F irst, a re getting sm a rte r students in the freshm an class, due to a high­ e r cut-off score on entrance ex­ the freshm an am inations. Also, orientation people have done a m agnificent job teaching prospec­ tive students th at we don't have m uch cheating at the U niversity.” F resh m an orientation brings out the m ajo r goals and opportunities here, according to Dean Peck, “ so students will begin to think of this as their own U niversity,” She believes this feeling of be- Cheat Scandal Investigation Pending this fall, according ONLY FIVE “ c h e a te rs” w ere brought before the discipline com ­ m ittee to D avid H. Thom as, student group ad viser on the student life staff. This rep resen ts a significant de­ c re a se a s com pared to an av e r­ age of 35 cases of scholastic dis­ honesty handled by the com m ittee each sem ester last year. “CM! course, this does not mean AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo, intensified —til—The Air F orce T hursday its investigation of the cheating scandal a t the school for flying cadets a s em bittered p a re n ts criticized the academ y’s honor code and threatened to go to Congress about it. Air Force Secretary Eugene M. Z uckert announced appoint­ ment of a special five-man com­ m ittee to study p rogram s a t the academ y, rocked by an exam s- for-sale controversy th at has led to the resignations of 65 cadets. It will be headed by Gen. Tho­ m as D. White, form er Air Force chief of staff. Sources a t the academ y said the num ber of resignations might reach 300 before the investigation ends, expected around Feb. IO. lashed a t P aren ts have the honor code as “ im p ractical” and “ sad istic.” Some said they m ay ask Congress into r e a ­ sons behind tho scandal. to look A big m ajority of the students apparently them selves tainted not by actually cheating but by failing to notify superior's when they found cheating existed. ■Die controversial honor code stipulates drat a cadet m ust not “ lie, steal, or cheat, and m ust not tolerate anyone who does.” In the cu rren t scandal a cadet stole exam ination papers and lined up IO classm ates to help to other students. sell copies C adets who did not sell or buy the papers, but who knew of the schem e a re regarded as guilty under this code. By the Associated Press A constitutional amendment to allow appointment of out-of-state residents to state regents boards, a proposal supported by Gov. John Connally, was introduced Into the Legislature Thursday. Along with administration bills, legislators introduced more bills to revise liquor laws, a m eas­ ure to impose a 5-cent per gallon tax on fuel used for non-com­ m ercial boats, and a proposal to prevent secret sessions by ths Legislature. THE MOST I M P O R T A N T Only Dallas Cars Privileged To Bear KKK License Plates The supply is stric tly lim ited, but if they h u rry , Dallas County residents can still g et in on one of the m ost popular offers of the y ear. M ore than half of the batch of 1965 license plates with the p re ­ fix “ KKK” have a lread y been re serv ed by early-bidding auto­ m obile owners in D allas County. have nothing to do with the Ku Klux K lan, the organization often as- prefixes “ KKK” The sociated with the letters. s a y s Ben Gentle, D allas County tax assessor-collector t h e “ KKK” plates a re popular be­ cause they are the only ones in D allas County bearing three iden­ tical first license plates have y e a r T exas letters ra th e r had than two. letters. This three prefix the is D allas County is the only coun­ ty In the sta te issued the “ KKK ’ prefix. S K M ss rn Republicans O ffer Own Health Plan health needs. T here would be an over-all $40,000 lim itation for each person and som e provisions for deductibles for various services. As with the adm inistration plan, incom e or there would be no property test for eligibility. By JUDY BURTON Texan Feature Editor Tile boy in the r e a r of the class­ room who pulls bluebooks from his boot top and the coed who dis­ creetly pushes her short sk irt up to read crib notes on hor hose a re m em bers of a constantly-di­ m inishing m inority group on c a m ­ pus. Although cheating has caused e m b a rra ssm e n t a t the U niversity several tim es, cam pus authorities th at s t u d e n t attitudes ag re e tow ard scholastic dishonesty a re im proving and m aturing. WASHINGTON - IP — R epub­ licans proposed T hursday a sub­ stitu te for P resident Johnson s health plan for the aged — a sw eeping m edical insurance pro­ g ra m w ith th ^ general T reasury paying about the cost. two-thirds of Rep. John W. B yrnes, RAV is., estim ated the federal contribu­ tion could run a s high as $2 bil­ lion to $2.4 billion, with the re ­ cipients paying another billion in prem ium s. He said, dollars however, th at since participation would be voluntary, probably not all eligibles would sign up. By contrast, the adm inistration program , confined to hospital, nursing hom e and som e out-pa­ tient benefits, would cost a total estim ated a t slightly m ore than this money $2 billion. Most of would com e from a new addition to the payroll tax, but the T re a s­ u ry ’s general fund would contri­ bute to pay for benefits to the aged not under Social Security— possibly $300 million first y e a r. the In addition to this m ajo r dif­ ference in financing—the Repub< bean plan shifting m ost of the cost to general governm ent rev e­ nues — the plans a re fa r a p a rt in benefits. The plan B yrnes advanced on behalf of m ost R epublican m em ­ bers of the tax-w riting Ways and M eans Com m ittee would provide not only hospitalization, but phy­ sic ia n s’ service, drugs and other Honor Code D idn’t Fail I he scandal arose, not because the Air Force Academy’s w ell- J jxdiced volunteer code failed, hut because of man's inability to live bv words. (E d ito r’s note: The w riter of the fol­ lowing article attended the United States Air Force Academy for a year.) By JOHN De I a GARZA Texan Staff W riter Ve I. n J Iii, cheat or Ste..'., nor : ■’et., t tmang us tho st mho do. —Honor Code, I'm ted States Air Force ira- ae^.y Codes are means of conduct through which society guides its actions. If one breaks a code, some kind of punishment usually befalls the violator. At latest count, more than 60 future officers have resigned as cadets at the United States Air Force Academy for violating an honor code they voluntarily agreed to uphold. RESIGNATION w as .heir punishment. Perhaps some will go on to careers in the Air Force, but most will not. All will al­ ways bear the self-shame th a t must follow from intentionally violating the code, and from living as a fraud am ong cadets who guide their lives by such a code. Under the code, all is black and white. A cadet either violates the code or he does not. Conviction of a violation m eans dis­ missal, regardless of the m agnitude of the offense. The present Investigation a t the Acad­ emy centers on a second classman who stole copies of an exam ination and solicit­ ed o ther cadets to sell th e questions for him. R eports say as m any as IOO or more cadets are involved in the affair. THIS VIOLATION is flagrant and an extrem e one. More trivial incidents have caused the downfall of even the best ca­ dets—such as a cadet saying his shoes have been shined when, in fact, they have not. Even this constitutes a violation when committed with act and intent. Act and intent form the basis on which honor violations are tried. A fter violating the code, a cadet is duty-bound to turn himself in to his honor representative. If he does not do so, and another cadet knows of the violation, the second cadet, is bound by the code to turn in the first. THE CADET THEN appears before the honor board and pleads his case. The board must decide if the cadet acted and intended to act. Act w ithout intent, or vice versa, does not constitute an honor violation. If he is found guilty, he Is asked to re­ sign from the Academy and all contact w ith the rest of the cadets is immediately severed from th a t point. If found innocent of the charge, he retu rn s to the Wing of Cadets under an oath of secrecy never to reveal w hat has happened. In most case, most cadets, o th er than those connected with the incident, never know of the case. IT HAS BEEN NOTED in some news stories th a t the ringleaders of the Acad­ em y scandal m ay not be allowed to resign and m ay face form al m ilitary charges by courts-m artial. The possible penalties resulting from such action cannot be regarded as exces­ sive. the Constitution of These young men swore to uphold and the United defend States when they entered active duty a t the Academy and in doing so th e y entered the realm of the honor code. Any cadet who flagrantly violates th a t oath and th a t code is responsible to the nation, at largo, th a t gave him the oppor­ tunity of an Academy education. AND ABOVE ALL, those who violate the code must leave the Wing of Cadets. It is understood by the cadet and his com­ rades and by the fellow cadet who, by duty, was forced to tu rn him in for the violation, if such action was necessary. It is a way of life designed to build men—not the ordinary man on the street, but men who in the future m ust take o r­ ders unquestioningly and give them, who m ust set examples for subordinates, who m ust lead. The fault, then, lies with the cadets, themselves. The hor or code has not failed — words c a n n o t fail. Only those who strive to live by words can accept the blame. Some Action Please We hope the Board of Regents finds time to consider and approve a retu rn to the elected Texan editorship during its meetings Friday and S aturday. Traditionally, th e Texan editor has been elected by the student body We believe such an election serves th e students better than the present appointive system. U nfortunately, the Board of Regents probably will not act upon the editorship or on many other pressing m atters. Although the term s of Regents W. W. Heath, Wales ll. Madden Jr.. and A. G. McXeese Jr., ex­ pired Jan. I, Gov. Connally has yet to ap­ point their replacements. The Board proba­ bly will defer m a n y decisions until the new men are appointed. We regret th a t the Gov­ ernor has dallied in making these appoint­ ments which are so vital to our University. —KAYE NORTHCOTT Monkeys Beget Monkeys O ur generation is sick again. Disclosure of Honor Code violations at the A ir Force Academy led to a plethora of denunciations of today’s university students. N um erous national surveys have siree indi­ cated th a t as m any as 50 per cent of the ‘ ch?afe d ’ undergraduate population have during th eir scholastic tenures of duty. And then condemnation: the usual exhor­ tation to be honorable, the usual warning th a t cheating only hu rts the cheater, the usual lament th at old values are spum ed by our m orally bankrupt generation. Cheating, of course, ought never be con­ doned. But in must no* be dismissed as m or­ al bankruptcy by a society that incorporates dishonesty into its very essence, Society asks students to bind themselves by an honor code. W here is the honor code of business'* of politics I* of love’ How can a society predicated on collu­ sion condemn cheating on examinations as one generation’s m utation in the evolution­ a ry process? We live not in our worl I but in a world created for us. We seek to change it, but it cannot be changed from without, And In o r­ der to get inside, we must play by society's rules. Society demands not honor but success. It gives us influential jobs if we have good grades: it denies us these places if we do not. It asks not what we have learned or how we can think, but how well we can play the exam ination game. Under such pressure university life can no longer remain an entity. We reserve one sphere for the pursuit of knowledge and still another for the pursuit of success. We do this not through choice, but because this to the system, and we are powerless is change it. It is artificial and we know it is artifi­ cial, and yet in term s of the m aterial world, it is the only meaningful test of our ability. Small wonder, then, th a t cheating no longer becomes a question of m orality, for it is an act th a t has relevance only to a system th a t is itself immoral, perverting every ideal of a university. If we are to refrain from cheating as a m aU rr of honor, w here shall we look for an example? —P A IL BERKA Variations on a Theme by Connally Educational system s are inevitably faced w ith an inherent conflict of philosophies. on its faculty, n o r on state legislators, but on the quality of its students. The dem ands of leadership— excellence th ro u g h knowledge — cannot easily be re­ solved with the demands of society—knowl­ edge through osmosis. is F o r mass education the American Ideal of th e post-w ar period: a diploma for all who seek one. But mass education is not compatible with excellence, and cannot be, for th e two are as opposite in -method as they are in result. The U niversity cannot escape this dilem­ m a: as a state institution, it has an obliga­ tion to the m a sse s as a university, it has an obligation to itself. Somehow all levels of learning m ust be rationalized into a workable system so th at both ideals m ay tx* com pensated and not compromised. Foul' of five T e x a s high school graduates with outstanding ability do not attend a col­ lege o r university in this state. The future of Texas education is dependent upon a ttra c t­ ing these minds. And while those with le s s - than-outstanding potential m ust also be edu­ cated, equal concern must be directed to ­ w ard those who a r e currently escaping. Few vs ho leave e v e r come b a c k . Somewhere In the state system there m ust be a university which not only a ttra c ts but in fact caters to the advanced student. As long as the m ass education sickness per­ m eates the system, th a t university will not exist. It is tru e th a t society has advanced to the stage w here a college diploma is vir­ tually essential. The state should guarantee higher education to anyone seeking it with integrity, and this the Governor’s plan will accomplish. Gov'. John Connally, in his message to the Fifty-N inth Legislature, recognized both the duty of the state to educate its popula­ tion and the necessity for th a t education to be excellent. But he did not recognize th at the two philosophies are not institutionally harm onious: complete excellence and mass education are m utually exclusive. The G overnor’s plan, although a step in the rig h t direction, is fa r from sufficient. Dividing higher education into th ree sys­ tems, each under a separate co-ordinating board, has certain stru ctu ral advantages. B ut organizational efficiency m ust not be confused with academic excellence. This is the essential differentiation the G overnor has failed to make. Limiting the num ber of governing boards and grouping colleges with common abilities can of itself accomplish nothing m o r e than efficient me­ diocrity. F o r in the final analysis, a univer­ sity depends not on its adm inistration, nor B ut there Is no b irth rig h t for excellence. This m ust be earned. If the University is ever to attain the mystical “first class” s ta ­ tus it seeks, it m ust a ttra c t first class s tu ­ dents, and it cannot do this by continuing to offer mass education. The G overnor should have provided for academic as well as organizational excellence in his program by isolating the University instead of combining it with such other large institutions as N orth Texas State, Texas W oman’s University, and the Univer­ sity of Houston. academic I he U niversity’s standards could then be raised to a highly competitive the more level. Students unable to meet rigid requirem ents would still be able to a t­ tain an education very' much on a level with th a t the U niversity currently m aintains. The G overnor’s system will only insure a broader-based mediocrity. — PAI L BL RHA Collegiate P re ss S o n ic * in NEW YORK—C heating the nation’s colleges and universities than is a lot m ore w ide-spread to we a recent survey of deans and students conducted by Columbia University’. to adm it, according like The survey, which was m ade public in the wake of a cheating the US Air Force scandal at Academ y which apparently in­ volved m ore than IOO cadets r e ­ vealed th a t: • The academ ic am ount of dishonesty in college is "grossly u n d erestim ated" by students, s tu ­ dent body presidents, and deans. • Only a sm all proportion of those who cheat a re caught and punished. Schools with honor system s a re less apt to have a high level of cheating those with other than a rran g em en ts for control. • E lem ents of school quality a re associated with low levels of cheating. The survey w as conducted by William J. Bowers of Columbia U niversity’s B ureau of Applied Social R esearch, under a g rant from the C ooperative R esearch P rogram of the US Office of E du­ cation. Its conclusions a re based on (I) answ ers by m ore than 600 college deans and m ore than 500 student body presidents to a 61 (2) an- item questionnaire and The Honorable W ay to Pass . . s t u d y i n g at t h e A i r F o r c e A c a d e m y j Underesti mated’ role of student as evidenced by poor study habits and low grades, a re indeed m ore likely to cheat but th at the good students . . "w hen we control for other fac­ tors associated with cheating in college, has only a m inor effect. academ ic perform ance "THOSE MHO VALUE the so­ life a re cial aspects of college more apt to cheat than those who interests intellectual em phasize J ‘r n • 7 he Firing Line j r • • T he Cheating Evil To the Editor: the Wed., It w as indeed encouraging and stim ulating to read the editorial Ja n . 27 Daily in Texan, regarding the necessary evil of "specialization" the neglect of a "g e n e ra l education" for U niversity students. to O rtega y G asset in m ore than just one instance has spelled the im pelling diaster. The specializ­ ed b a rb arian , how ever, is not the to say direct result, I venture (with the anticipated danger of being condem ned by som e pro­ fessors and fellow stu d en ts), of society’s pressure for m ore spe­ cialized knowledge, but of those who reside and m ake their lives in w hat Conant has called the Citadel of Knowledge, to Not only a re professors obses­ sed by their own specialized field of endeavor the neglect of others, but in m ore than just a few” instances, they hold an u t­ the integ ra­ m ost contem pt for tion of knowledge. This is som e­ w hat obvious in th eir dem eanor precisely at the the liberal a rts faculties. In m y hum ble and honest opinion, the solution does not re­ side in adopting a general plan, call it P lan I, ll, or III. It is in­ deed deeper than ju st adopting an illusory solution. T here m ust be an honest, unbiased, intel­ lectual com m itm ent on the p a rt level of to cf professors and students this respect. One can dress a donkey as a surgeon, but one c a n ’t m ake him operate. In case any of the read ers m ay obtain a distorted im pression, I am not advocating aristo crary nor ddetantism . R afael Aphrite Hernandez 1902 U niversity Ave. NY Students Force Prices Of Milk Down Associated Collegiate Press A cam pus com m ittee at State University of New York, Buffalo, achieved a decrease in the price of m ilk products furnshed by the school’s food service. The food supply firm conceded the m ilk produce prices w ere un­ doubtedly out of line a fte r the com m ittee com piled facts and figures related to wholesale and re ta il food costs a t UB and other s ta te institutions, says the c a m ­ pus new spaper, Spectrum . Tile student com m ittee now is check­ ing prices of juices, pastries and salads. and activities, even when we take their academ ic perform ance into account," it said. factor It caid college students "who a re m ore deeply involved in the adolescent society not only ch eat­ ed in high school but also tend to continue cheating in college." Tile report said the m ost Im­ portant in determ ining changes in cheating behavior be­ tween high school and college "is the level of disapproval of ch e a t­ ing am ong the student’s college peers. Students who cheated in high school but attend colleges with strong clim ates of disap­ proval of cheating a re likely to give it up. and conversely, stu ­ dents who did not cheat in high school but go to colleges with w eak clim ates of disapproval a re apt to begin cheating in college,” it said. It said the im portant thing w as th at one’s "fellow' students disap­ prove of cheating," and said nor­ m ative constraints from peers" have a m uch g re a te r effect on cheating than do "personal-value- tov. arc! college ad ­ or irritations justm ent to academ ic dem ands.” Tile rep o rt said, however, th at cheating w as less likely to occur a t sm aller college's with a low faculty-student ratio and high a c ­ adem ic standards than a t a big school. Highly selective schools also a p p e a r to h a \e less cheating than others. in It said that "th e level of cheat­ ing is m uch lower a t schools th at place p rim a ry responsibility for dealing with cases of academ ic dishonesty the hands of the students and their elected rep re­ sentatives. as under the honor system , than a t schools that rely control or on have a form of m ixed control, in which faculty and students joint­ ly p a rtic ip a te ." faculty-centered noo in 90 sw ers by 5,422 students colleges and universities across the country’ to a 72 item question­ naire. THE REPORT said that p er­ haps the "m ost alarm in g find­ ing" concerned "th e prevalence of academ ic dishonesty on A m er­ ican college cam p u ses." It said th a t " a t least half the students in the sam ple have engaged in som e form of academ ic dishon­ esty since com ing to college," and term ed this a conservative estim ate. grossly underestim ated "T he m agnitude of the problem Is by m em bers of the cam pus com m u­ n ity ," the report said. ‘Two and a half tim es as m any students have cheated as student body presidents estim ate, and m ore than three tim es as m any have cheated as deans estim ate. E ven u n d eresti­ them selves students m ate the proportion of student? who have cheated at som e tim e; they that only to believe half as m any have cheated as their self-reports Indicate." tend The report said that only a relatively sm all percentage of the cheaters a re caught and punish­ ed. and in m ost cases, only leni­ ent punishm ents a re given out. SELDOM ARE students sus­ pended or dism issed for violating norm s of academ ic integrity, d e ­ spite the fact that authorities con­ sider this a serious disciplinary violation," it said. It added although students vary "in the extent to which they d is­ approve of cheating," m ost agree "on m oral th at is wrong grounds, not sim ply because it m ay have unfortunate p ractical consequences." it The report said that "those who the have difficulty adjusting to P L A T T S 9 IN DOUIN TD THE SKATING R ink THE uJOfctD 5 HE 6CN6? he 60c s oouiN There every NI6HT TC SKATE (JtTH A BERTAIN 6iRL SEA&EKt $ MET WATCH YOURSELF, SNOOPY! THESE TKN-A66 MARRIA6ES RARELY WORK O U T! T h e Da il y T e x a n Th* D aily Te^an. a stu d en t newspaper at 'lh* Univ*** is published des In except Monde*;, and Satu r­ • f ■■ cf T exas day *nd holiday period*. Septem ber through May and M onthly in August by T exas Student P ublication*. Inc., D raw er D U niversity Station, A ustin, T exas 78712. Second­ class postage paid at A ustin. T exas New* contribution* w ill be accepted by telephone (GR 1-524*) or at the editorial office, J.E. 103 or at the news laboratory, J.B 302 Inquiries concerning d elivery should t i l (GR 1-3227 ) be m ade in J.B IOT and advertising. J E t h e As s e d a t e d P r e s s is e x c l u s i v e l y e n t i c e d to the use for r ep u b lica tio n of ail n e w s d i sp a t ch es c r ed it ed to it or not o t h e r w i s e cred ited in t his newspaper, and iocs! item s of sp o n t a n e o u s orig in p u b lish ed herein. R i g h ts of publi­ ca tion o f BU other m a tt e r herein also r e s e e d . On a Kemeatrr (f all or s p r i n g / T w o Semesters ( f a l l a n d s p r i n g i Deliv e re d b y Tarrier < w i t h i n A u s t i n a r e a f r ont l i t h t o 38t h a n d J e f f e r s o n t o I n t e r r e g i o n a l H i g h w a y D e l i v e r e d bv m a i l w i t h i n T r a v i s C o u n t y D e i h e r e d bt m a i l o u t s i d e T r a v i s C o u n t y b u t w i t h i n J . 8 *3. 50 A 74 3.59 *6. 75 lf OO 6. 75 The opinions expressed In the editorial colum n are those of the editor. All e d ito r ia l unites signed are w rit­ ten by the editor A n y o p i n i o n * , expressed Guest editorial view* are net necrxsarih' the editor's ' n The D a i l v Texan are not necessarily those of The University of T exas adm im stra- t.on or Board of Regents. EDITOR ..................................... CHARMAYNE MARSH MANAGING EDITOR......................... JAMES VOWELL ACTING EDITOR ..........................KAYE NORTHCOTT N E W S E D I T O R ...............................DO TTIE L IL L A R D E D IT O R IA L P A G E E D I T O R .................J E R R Y G R E E R A M U S E M E N T S ED IT O R ....................J IM S E Y M O U R S PO R T S EDITO R ........................ M E R V IN B E N S O N K A Y E N O R T H C O T T INTERPRETIVES E D I T O R P A U L B U R K A C H I E F O F THE C A P I T O L Si A F P STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Issue. News E d it o r ........................ Dolt e Lf' ;VHI Make-Up E d i t o r ........................ Gloria Brown C o p y E d it o r s Night Sports E d i t o r ....................... Mervtn B e n s o n Night Amusements E d it o r ....................Eldon Ball A n r 'e Brown, Steve Israel Copyreader ................ Peggy Burnett R e p o r t e r ............. M a r y Al i ce E v a n s , P a t Sh a r p # Friday, January 29, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa^e 2 Britons Honor Sir W inston m m LONDON IB—D ro ssy in black, Queen Elizabeth II visited West­ minster Hall on Thursday night for a unique royal tribute to Sir Wins­ ton Churchill. She arrived in mid evening as the mass of Britons passing by tile bier—charwomen, crippled vet erans of World War II and the high and low of this and other nations—reached the 131,000 mark. Shortly before the queen’s visit a plane reached London with the US delegation to Churchill’s fu­ neral Saturday. The official US representatives. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Chief Justice E arl Warren, were accompanied by two men invited as family friends and war-time colleagues of Churchill— Dwight D. Eisenhower and W. Av- erell Harrim an, US undersecretary of state. the plane, ALSO ABOARD in­ vited as guests of the Churchill family, were Mrs. I^w is Douglas, wife of a former US Ambassador to London, and her daughter Shar- man. Tile queen with her husband, Prince Phillip, and ber sister, Prin­ cess M argaret and her husband, L>rd Snowdon, arrived at the hall sh o rty before 8 p.m. and remained for five minutes. Monarchs do not often honor commoners in this fashion. THE QUEEN’S decision to order a state funeral and a lying-in-state for Churchill was itself a gesture unprecedented in this century. No other commoner has been so hon­ ored since William Ew art Glad­ stone's funeral 67 years ago. Westminster Hall Is where Eng­ land has honored her kings for centuries. Bearded men and youths with Boatie haircuts were in the throng waiting patiently in a queue nearly two miles long that reached out to Lambeth Bridge and beyond. RIB WINSTON’S actress daugh­ ter, Sarah, visited the hall late in the day and with a friend moved •lowly past tall catafalque, flanked by Its guard of four offi­ cers. the McNeely Resigns From Assembly D are McNeely, graduate as from his resigned pem birm a n. poet Wednesday to comply with the Students’ Association constitu­ tion. A clause in the constitution requires assemblymen to carry at least six hours, McNeely is regis­ tered for less than six hours. McNeely Initiated an amend­ ment before fall elections to make “ student status” a qualification for holding office. Because of a secretarial error, the wrong por­ tion of the constitution was pre­ sented to the student body for a vote. Consequently the students approved an amendment not ac­ tually Intended by the Assembly. By early evening, more than 100,- 000 persons had moved through the great hall since the doors swung open for the public Wednesday. them, moved by the short brush with the splendid sol­ emnity, whispered as they reached the sidewalk outside. Many of in THERE WERE father* with chil­ dren their arms, a group of nuns, a straggle of schoolboys, a pert air hostess. All moved past the solemn scene—the flag-draped coffin, the guarding officers with heads bowred, hands on swords, the huge candles— and turned to look again as they moved toward the exit. Occasionally, a veteran would turn back at the door and throw a stiff hand salute to the coffin. Snow had sifted down early in it was the day hut by nightfall cold, clear and dry. Change Sought In Disability Rule WASHINGTON — (B — President Johnson asked Congress on Thurs­ day to approve at once two con­ stitutional amendments on presi­ dential disability and vice-presi­ dential succession and on abolition of the Electoral College. In a special message, Johnson endorsed a pending amendment to permit the president to fill a vice­ presidential vacancy and to estab­ lish procedures to enable the vice president to take over when the president is incapacitated. In addition, he submitted a sug­ gested amendment to abolish the presidential Electoral College as it now stands hut retain the present system of state electoral votes. Voters would vote directly for pres­ ident and vice president instead of for electors. The m ajor proposals: • The Constitution would he changed so as to provide specific authority for the vice president to take over the duties and powers of an incapacitated president, without becoming president himself. He w-ould become only an acting presi­ dent, and the president could re­ sume his powers when his disabil­ ity ended. If president and vice president disagreed over the form er’s ca­ pacity to act, the vice president take over only on a two- could thirds vote of Congress. • The Constitution would he changed to permit the filling of the vice presidency when a vacancy the president occurs, by nominate a man subject to the ap­ proval by a m ajority of each house of Congress. letting There would be no change In the present line of presidential succes­ sion behind the vice president, which makes the speaker of the House next in line, then the presi- j dent pro tempore of the .Senate. “can I solve problems for IBM?" A variety of technologies — any of which you may have studied— can be used to build com­ puters. You can solve problems in Research, Development, Manufacturing, Marketing or Programming. Wherever you start in IBM, your abilities can grow along with the computer field. Some of the disciplines we put to work are Chemistry, Physics, Metallurgy, Engineering, Mathemat­ ics, Statistics, Economics and Business Ad­ ministration. lf you want growing room for your ideas, see IBM. Your placement office can make an appointment with. our Interviewers. Or write directly to Manager of College Relations, IBM Corporate Headquarters, Armonk, New York 10504. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Interviews Feb. 16,17 Applied Mathematics, Applied Mechanics, Data Com munica­ tions, Digital Computers, Guidance Systems. Human Factors, In d u s tria l E n g in e e rin g , In fo rm a tio n R etrieval, M arketing, M anufacturing Research, Microwaves, Optics, RehaPit^y En giHerring. Servomechanisms, Solid State Devices, Systems Sim ulation and related areas. IBM Art & Engineering Supplies are Less A t The Co-Op • Low Prices Cash Dividends Free Delivery -■ 'J ".......' " a .— * - rn 'm m m m mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmam OPEN MONDAY AND TUESDAY, FEB. I AND 2 - 8:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M. nu Nil E R 8 IH E S T U D E N T S OWN ST ORF 0 The Co-Op Returns Its Profits to You In Cash Dividends Spend them where and how you like. 1. Always shop the C o -O p and Toggery first. 2. Save your cash register receipts. 3. Turn In your slips to The C o -O p and Toggery May 7-13. 4. Receive your C A S H DIVIDEND in a few days. 5. C o -O p C A S H DIVIDENDS are worth waiting for! The Co-Op Dividend Has N o t Been Less Than 13% For O ve r 23 Y e a rs !! - SP H i WKKBSt 3 ’PJS33S8818 £:r ! sewer*———n" wa ■nMMMMMMNMRMMNMMI Select Group Sale Suits Sport Coats Dress Slacks Casual Slacks Car C oats-Jackets A ll-W e a th e r Coats Sweaters Sport Shirts Sport Shirts Vests Shoes r » n g S W v p Button Down I^ong S W v p Regular Collar Dress Shirts Dress Shirts r*>ng Sleeve B utton D ow n, Stripe* f-ong Sleeve Regular Collar, Stripes Vl off net 1/2 off net 1/3 off net 1/3 off net Vi off net 1/3 off net Vi off net 1/3 off net Vs off net V2 off net 1/3 off net Va off net 1/4 off net Room Accessories Desk Lamps Irons Skillets Towels Glasses Pots Sheets Throw Pillows Bed Pillows Blankets Toasters Knives Alarm Clocks Blenders A ll W ith Your Cash Dividend Downstairs GR 8-6636 distinctive store A ll Sale Items N et or men WEE® I In The C o-O p Friday, January 29, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 3 2 Mile Relay, Sfio/, Po/eVou// Longhorn Thinclads to Run At Lubbock Indoor M eet the annual Lubbock Texas w ill sf'nd six to com pet® rn indoor meet Saturday night in the Lub­ bock Coliseum. Coach Jack Patterson w ill take John Pern*. David Webb. Chuck Fraw lev, Richard Romo. Mark King, and Toby Belt to the invi- tanonal meet. F e m . Webb. Frawley, and Rnmo mill carry the ba ten in the two-mile relay. KIN ft, DESCRIBED by coach “ dedicated “ will Patterson as be In the pole vault competition. Belt will throw the shot. He broke the freshman record last year with a heave of 52 feet, but was O', ershadowed by Aggie fresh­ man Randy Matson. P e r r y Is a quarter miler from DURHAM'S BUSINESS COLLEGE The School of Specialized Business and Technical Courses REG IST ER N O W MID-TERM C L A SS ES B EG IN EEB. 1-2 • * K C * K T A E 1 A I dele* *1 Gt**i rn Pr^a^rlttn* Sh orth • T Y P I N G M a n e * ! , F.snrntitro JE W trte, d • J I A N C T T A T I- O B C H I R M •»roa»«mle*t!ona, t o m p u l e r • ORA PT (Nit In d n ftrin l F n g in e e rin r O rn w ln f Bn «ir. I n te r m e d i a te A d r a n r ^ d ' • it! S I N E S S A D M IN IS T R A T I O N F«yeholom . Statute*, I ave, M s B i j f m f t i t , eta. Learn SHORTHAND In 6 weeks H ak Ac 120 I 'tu/g+mo^^ co Peru FREE JO B P L A C E M E N T W hile attending school and after graduation AFFILIA T ED W IT H S C H O O L S IN O V ER 400 C ITIES O F F E R IN G FREE N A TIO N W ID E TRAN SFER, REFRESH ER. J O B P L A C E M E N T D U R H A M ' S B U S I N E S S C O L L E G E 600 L A V A C A Call, W rite or Visit Today! G R 8-3446 ■ ■ ■ M H S a H I iHHRinaRnHRifniiBais LATE FOR BREAKFAST? NO TIME FOR LUNCH? NEED A STUDY SNACK? H ave 5 (bt. of fresh fruit delivered to you weekly (or every other week; for $1.65 pm week. End of the month bills may be sent to you or your parents. C on your room­ mate Into going halves; It's cheaper * • . and 5 lbs. is a lot of fruit. CAMPUS FRUIT SERVICE P. O. Box 4592, Austin 51 G R 2-0627 or G R 7-7230 ■WWWW ■^SBfeSsgj SMU Tilt Texas 'Must' By BILL HALSTEAD Assistant Sports Editor H u s 1 1 s. . . E ffort , . Good TCU, then three days later play­ ed exceptionally well against Baylor." Saturday In an attempt to con­ vert a stubborn herd of Mus­ tangs to the UT line of thinking. Sophomores ar® hard to con­ vince, though, and Texas’ task will not be easy. TEXAS WILL give away the I height advantage to SMU, a team which will atart 6'-7” Carroll Hooser, 6’-7" Jim Smith. 6 -5" B ill Ward, and sophs Charles Beasley and Denny Holman 6 -4“ and 6’ -2 j" , respectively. Soph Bob Begert, 6'-6", is the Mus­ tangs’ No. I back-up man. Ti e Longhorns w ill probably be without the services of senior guard Tommy Nelm*. Nelms in­ jured an ankle in practice, and although his condition is Improv­ ed, It is doubtful he will see ac­ tion Saturday night. Talented junior Paul Olivier turned an ankle in the game with Trinity, but Bradley says he doubts it will affect Olivier's play. BRADLEY HAD praise for Texas' team effort against Trini­ ty. as well as kudos for several Individuals. Minton White play­ ed his first game for Texas at guard, and the 6 -4" San Angelo product fared well. “ Ranucci, Trinity's gunner, hit 19 points In the first half," Bradley recalled. “ We put Min­ ton on him in the second half, and he didn't score a field goal." (White canned IO points for the night.) LARRY FRANKS did well, too," Bradley said. “ He had his eye." Franks hit IO of 13 from the field, and wound up with 24 points, his season high. “ If the boys put forth their best hustle and effort." Bradley reitera'ed, fairly well, they can beat SMU. I be­ lieve that, and I think they do, too." shoot “ And Texas will Journey to Dallas BARBER A N E W S H O P Howard County Junior College. Webb as a freshman ran clo*# to a I 52 minute half-mile last year. Both Frawlev and Romo were members of last years relay team and are consistent 1:50 runners in the half. •ROMO CVV BF. a fine run­ ner * Patterson said. “ I don t think he has reached hts peak by any means.'* Oklahoma State and Abilene Christian College will be part of the rugged competition schedule for the opening Indoor meet ACC is a perennial powerhouse In track and this year Is no ex­ ception. Roger Orrell will be toss­ ing the shot for them. Last year he managed 57* outdoors. MATSON* W H X not be allowed to compete because be was not in school the first semester this year. Oklahoma State has the same relay team now that they had in a good season last year. Russell T^verty, Tom Von Ru- den, Dave and John Perry will represent State. Von Ruden will probably be featured in the mile run where he raced to a 4:06.7 tune last year. B R I CK JOHNSON of the ACC Wildcats was clocked in a 4:13.2 performance last year. He is a sophomore. Lynn Saunders of the Wildcats will compete in the 600 yard run. He has times of 46 9 in the 440 dash and has run a 46.3 on a mile relay leg. Rice has withdrawn from the meet because of conflicts, but the University of Houston is ex­ pected to be in Lubbock along with outstanding athletes from other schools in the Southwest Conference. SCORES Arkansas 84, Mins. St. *9 Arizona 71, San Francisco i i Hon*ton 80, Baylor 78 M cM n rry 87, Pan American TI Oklahoma St. 3®, Colorado 55 New Mexico 69, Texas West- rn 58 Shooting. They're little words, but hard to come by all at once. Texas basketball coach Harold Bradley thinks his Longhorn quintet has ill of these qualities. AND BRADLEY also feels his charges will need them Satur­ day night in Dallas when they take the court against a hot- shooting bunch of SMU Ponies. The game will be Texas' first 1965 encounter with die Mus­ in tangs. who currently rest second place in the topsv-turvey SWC race with a 2-1 mark. Texas owns a 1-2 conference record, but the “ I " was a con­ vincing 95-74 win over a good Baylor team. TEXAS STEPPED on Trinity 82-68 Wednesday night In San An­ tonio, but appeared sluggish in winning. Bradley isn t fazed by that fact, since the ‘Horns were idle for 15 days prior to the con­ test. “ Also," Bradley noted. “ It was partly our (the coaches’) fault We had spent the majority of our practices going over things we planned to use against SMU. We just hadn’t given Trinity much thought.” SOUTHERN Methodist Univer­ sity is a sophomore laden ball club, a fact which usually means the team as a whole lacks a little poise. Assistant UT coach Leon Black doesn't see the Mustangs that way. “ They have a group of unusual sophomores. They were unusual freshmen, and now think they’re about as seasoned a sophomore group as you could find,” Black said. I “ In fact," Black added. I think Doc (Doc Hayes, SMU coach) feels they are the best recruits he has had since he got Krebs (all-American J i n Krebs) and that bunch." B R A D LEY E Y E S the Hilltop pers warily, too. “ They have real personnel, and a real good shooting team," he said. “ With the game already sold out, they’ll play real well in Dallas." SMU dropped bs first SWC tilt 107-89 against Texas Tech in Lubbock Tuesday. Bradley thinks It may have cost the Ponies tome of their momentum, but little else. “ Kids bounce back.” Bradley explained. “ They can snap back In 24 hours. Look at our boys. They dropped a bad game to VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Austin's Largest & Finest 2300 Interregional H igh w a y Only 2 blocks from Memorla Stadium PANCAKE HOUSE O PEN 24 H O U R S A DAY 19th AN D G U A D A L U P E Breakfast Specials M O N D A Y -FR ID A Y 5-11 A .M . Choice of Fruit Juice One Egg Toast and Coffee T r 7 v Q U r i v e v « Sausage, or Ham, 2 Eggs, Choice of Bacon, 2 Pancakes or Toast and Coffee 0 # V THE L O N G H O R N F L Y I N G CLUB OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS CONGRATULATES • For Soloing: Ja # W h ittin g to n David Smith M S • For Completing the Private Pilot s License: Luther Jackion Lark— Dac. 22, C om m ercial W o o d y W e ir — Dac. 22. Cem m ere a* M ich ael M . Philip!— Dec. 21, Private M rt, Pattie K. Thompton— Dec. IS, Private RENTS TYPEWRITERS Semester s19 STA N D A RD O R PO R TA BLE Add ing machines or calculators I. — $24 for semester, to June Electric A d d e r or Calculator for semester, to June I. — $50 Portable Electric Typewriters, $10 mo. N A U S C EN T ER 2408 San Gabriel Mon.-Fri., 8:00—-6:00 W e Service — W e Deliver 2234 Guadalupe GR6-3525 E X A S - TAILORED ESPECIALLY UNIVERSITY FOR THE MAN OR WOMAN AS TO ANSWER COLLEGE BANKING •yf No Minimum Balance -y No Service Charge -y/ 25 Checks Only S2.00 T E X A S S T A T E B A N K O p e n : 9:00 to 2:00 M o n d a y Thru Friday Drive-In Hours 7:30 to 6:00 O F A U S T I N 19th and Guadalupe THIS IS PAUL BURKA a I* * ifwdU'fif arni a member af fh r D *Jy T«?i. Novak was educated at _______ was dents was established last year in honor of Prof. M cCorm h* The “ S F S T zzsT tZSi I law students up to IO times the = £ d * * . S sn x r- ™ c h « J “ need, high scholastic attainment. Looney and Edward Clark in 1936. P. ' and promise of professional sue- Looney was admitted to the oar ' cess. » | | ^ * « £ * * * n ,„Hejr.T - pr : dn* Z°C ° °Va J ' ' cen prs‘ u During McCormick’s nine-year In 1922 after graduating from th* He has written articles for medi- is co-author of a School of Law. journals, cal the law faculty grew I He served as city attorney dur- logbook on medical biochemistry deanship, ing 1923-30 in his native Ennis an^ helped write an encyclopedia from approximately a dozen to 20 members, the law library was sub- and except for a brief period in j f °r practicing physicians. Dr. stan ti ally enlarged, plans for a : Houston, Looney practiced in Aus- Novak, has also done research on new* law building were formulated, tin from 1931 until 1958. He died caneer and biochemistry, and the Legal Aid Clinic was es- j in 1962, Looney was assistant attorney also a He and his wife Ann. who is in physician specializing Twm special counseling and g u t- ___ dance institutes will be conducted j tablished. by the University beginning Ju ly and September. in j * * For W ig s and Hairpieces Custom Designed by M A N U E L H A L L In Beautiful general of Texas under James All-: internal medicine, have two chil- J red and w’as also chairman of the dren. Texas Industrial Commission fo ri r ,-— three years. ------------ ~ — ► Across from W yatt's Cafeteria TEL. G L 2-4716 A summer institute for higher j in education personnel engaged counseling will begin June 7 and end Ju ly . Lectureship _____ Dr. Richard J. Gonzalez, a di- of the Hujnb]G cm and Re­ Company and an alumnus. run has endowed a lectureship In busi- ___ j . , to „ , , „ , ? ? L ■ an? , • 1 The lecmres- A second program, through the academic year will ness economics. . _ ; NSF Grants The National Science Foundation * has given the University over $200,- ► fflven each OOO. The grants are among those { 1966. It is designed for secondary spring by an outstanding business t0 be distributed from $15 miUion * school personnel and junior col- J economist, are to create closer ties it lege and technical institute per- between the business community The University received $144,984 I and the University, particularly sonnet. for new traineeships and $H064:{ College of Business Ad- for continuation traineeships. train better counselors for pub-j ministration and the Department lie and tecondary schools, and for Marti* ^ Gainsbrugh, vice-pres- colleges, universities, junior col- s^ent ^ cNef economist of the $2,600 for study at the intermediate £ leges, and technical institutes. The N a t i o n s i Industrial Conference • level, and $2,800 for the terminal J program will also train teachers Roar(T *^11 be the first speaker in year—plus an additional allowance ► preparing to become counselors. N SF graduate traineeships pro J vide basic stipends (for 12 months) j J of $2,400 for first-year student. Gonzalez Lecture Series. He for dependents. The aim of the sessions Is to to schools in all 50 states. elementary Economics. private and _ The tw’o sessions at the Univer­ sity are among 58 to be held throughout the country. Supported ,. ... - FdiirTtinn Inn ’ a *»f' . , w ill speak March 29 on the prob­ lems involved in reducing unem­ ployment. GE Grants ’ The University has been select- J '06 receive two graduate re- summer economics and then as an assistant search and study grants from the .. Dr. Gonzalez, who taught at the i University first as an instructor of ed to programs and 24 full year pro- | professor * now nn ^ advisory Q m end ^ t r i c Foundation. ?rams' Each Grants aw’arded were a $5,000 is planned for Administration Foundation. He re-1 grant in accounting and finance 30 participants. Persons enrolled ceived three degrees in economics from the Edwin W. Rice Jr . Fund are paid $75 weekly plus $15 a from the University and was grad- and a $5,000 grant in engineering week for each dependent council of the College of Business uated Phi Beta Kappa. from the Gerard Swop)© Fund. Institute SEE EUROPE FOR LESS . 4| j Trave! In a small group with other students of your same age \ ALL STUDENT TRIPS 4 * and interests. All-expense low cost trips by ship or plane:.* A D V EN T U R ER : 47 days— IO countries— $1072 B U C C A N E E R : 62 days— IO countries (inc. Greece) $1296 V O Y A G E U R : 69 days— 14 countries (inc. Scandinavia) $1440 V A G A B O N D : 46 days— 14 countries (inc. Russia) $1198 4 j 4 W rite for FREE itineraries and details: AMERICAN YOUTH ABROAD, 44 University Station, < Minneapolis, Minnesota 55414. < ► VALENTINE SPECIAL IO Beautiful Portraits Mr. Rice was president of Gen­ eral Electric Company from 1913 to 1922 and honorary chairman of the board of directors from 1922 to 1935. Mr. Swope wax president of In­ ternational General Electric Com­ pany from 1919 to 1922 and presi­ dent of General Electric Company from 1922 to 1939 and from 1932 to 1944. The research and study grants may be used for fellowships for one 8 x IO one 5 x 7 Eight Billfolds Only % ’ S i COO Good Only Through Feb. 13th A LL SIT T IN G S BY A P P O IN T M EN T O N L Y GLASS STUDIO Ph. G L 2-1723 505 W . 38th St. S A L E Trim-Line YOUNG MEN’S Traditional S U IT S Regular to $55. 36.88 Buy a wardrobe cf these smart traditional suits at this sensa­ tional saving. Tweeds, herring­ bones, muted plaids and solid colon. Regency, Dillard's first Level a . u S . . . Americus fin eft steak value! The TOP C H O P 'T STEAK is served with cole slaw, French fried potatoes and our own hot rolls with butter................................. only Top Chop’t STEAK ETTE . . . served open-faced on a toasted buttered bun with spiced peach and French fried potatoes ............... only 95 c ‘J T h e fncompai able F R IS C O I H A M B U R G E R I (All beef . . . I corn - fed a n d • choice!) so fa- J mous . so • p o p Ja rl . . a h ' o h t Hawk ’ It t /*- . '*** I F you forgot in the Fall... Don't in the Spring, it's easy to order your 1965 CACTUS Now when you REGISTER RESERVE it CACTUS--7 plus 14* tax Cif you have already registered, then come by Journalism Building 107 and order it.) Friday, January 29, 1965 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a 9e 6 THE UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6^09 Serving the University Area for 14 Year* PARKING IN REAR BEDWAY 'H IG H FIDELITY AT R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S ” DINING GUIDE Hers is a variety of delicious menu* to satisfy your family and guests FRIED C H IC K E N PLATTER Vs C k i c b i . F r n n e k F r ie s . S a l s * feasor aI tile University of Caf! fornia ai Berkeley. Tin* firat lecture, rn anrvey at UM general level, will be at 4 p.m. Wednesday and speciaHwd lectures will follow Thursday and Friday in Physics Building HS. ★ NY Times Available Now The New York Times I* avail­ able by subscription to the campus. The papers m ay be obtained at two locations: the U niversity “ Y ” at 2200 Guadalupe, and the School of Law Library. The Times w ill be delivered Mon­ day through Saturday. The Sunday issue w ill not he delivered until Tuesday because of the expense of air mail rates and because there tx no delivery to residence*. The Monday through Saturday subscription costs $5 per month; the Monday through Sunday sub­ scription is $7 per month. Persons can contact Frances Spiry at G R 6-1974 for subscriptions. SHERWOOD MANOR AHanHon Graduate And Law Students two Baa,.*-fully decorated ana and bedroom apar+ma*H. Features: d»h- wajfen'i. d is p o r t, C a b le TV, Laun­ dry facilities, swimming pool. All Bills Paid 7 IO ,E. Oltorf Phone HI 2-2441 W H O L E FRIED C KOKEN W ith French Fries to Go .. $125 EL CHARRO 912 Red River Delivery Service Available G R 8-7735 First English Lutheran Church at Whit is Invites I ’niversitv Students & Faculty to its services and activities Sunday worship 8:00 & 10:30 a.m. I ’diversity Sunday Forum 9:1 > 4 J Meric G. Franke, Pastor Located Just North of K irb y Hall Across 30th St. forefoot I This Is the moc that’* so soft it beats going bare­ foot. Squashy KIDSKIN out­ side, SO FT F O A M L IN IN G l h vamp details are inside, hand-sown, and in spring s zingiest color combi­ nations. it comes Cactus Needs Editor „ Chilean Seminar Ernest Haden, linguist and pro­ fessor of Romance Languages, par­ the ticipated teaching of English at Santiago, Chile, in a seminar on Ja n . 11-21. Haden, invited by the '‘Am eri­ can Abroad” division of the State Department, attended with Chilean college and secondary school tea­ chers of English. Haden gave a series of lectures linguistics as ap­ on structural plied to teaching of English. Also participating in the seminar was Dr. Theodore Andersson, De­ partment of Romance Languages chairman, who is in Chile as a program specialist the Ford Foundation's Latin American pro­ gram. Andersson spoke on teach­ ing methods. in Research in Plastic S e ts $21,000 Grant The American Chemical Society has granted $21,000 to Dr. Eugene H. Wissler, associate professor of Chemical engineering and assist­ ants John Wheeler, graduate stu­ dent, and Jim M iller, undergradu­ ate student. The grant w ill be used to solve a problem in plastic research. Dr. W issler explains that at high flow rates molten chains of plastic mole­ cule* are straightened and slip past one another easily, but a low flow rate causes the molecules to become entangled and resist flowing. In trying to understand this prob­ lem, Wheeler and M iller, with the help of W . C. Duesterhoeft, pro­ fessor, and R. P . Gribble, assistant professor, in the Department of Electrical Engineering, have de­ veloped a new electronic instru­ ment that measures the flow of tiny particles suspended in a fluid. NEW CLASSES B E IN G FO R M ED FEBRUARY 1st and FEBRUARY 8th COMPLETE BUSINESS COURSES I. R x a w n tiv * . S e c r e t a r ia l, G e n e ra ! B n a ln e # * A d m in is t r a t io n and O ffic e M a c h in e SPEC IA LIZ ED C O U R S E S D r a f t in g , I B M . R e y P u n c h , D a ta P r o c e a s ln f , A u t o m a t in g , B a s ic C h m I r a n Im , B a d in and T V an d In d u s t r ia l E le c t r o n ic s A SK FO R FREE C A T A L O G U E NIXON-CLAY COLLEGE •th and C o lo ra d a P .O . B o x RS3 GR 7-9453 Austin's Old eft, l^trge't *nd A1*.tt Modern Bu duett School “I buy books at the Co-Op. It s so much faster” iRkS:- I v« -J Clifford Gann Jr. Industrial Relation! . . . and no wonder w hat w ith self-service shopping. Irs smart to shop tile store that returns it’s profits to you! Haney Scott, associate editor* of resigned j the Cactus yearbook, Thursday. Applications fear the position will he accepted in the Texas Student Publications business office, Jo u r­ nalism Building 107, until noon Wednesday. The TSP Board • exe­ cutive committee will meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday to appoint a new associate editor, subject to ap­ proval by the whole board. ★ Honors Given April 3 University Honors Day 1965 has been planned for April S upon the recommendation of the the Administrative President, Council, and student leader*. Honors will he conferred or recognised at a general convo­ cation to he held at IO a.m. Students to he honored include those selected for special aca­ demie awards and scholarships, member* of national honor so­ cieties which require a mini­ mum “B” average for member­ ship, and n ador graduate* who have distinguished themselves during the two previous semes­ ters by being in the npper three per cent of their class. ★ The Delta Zeta Therapist Awards Given Educational Foundation has awarded scholar­ ships to two seniors who are pre­ paring to become speech and hear­ ing therapists. Recipients are Mrs. L ila B. Coughan, Austin, and Sandra Ann Marek, Waco. education Both are majoring in elemen­ tary and working toward certification in speech and hearing therapy. They are mem­ bers of Sigma Alpha Eta, national honorary speech and hearing thera­ py society. The scholarships are contributed annually to the Speech Depart­ m ent by the local a lu m n a e ch a p ter of D elta Zeta social sorority. ★ Hillel Services Tonight Regular weekly services will he held at the Hillel Foundation at 7:30 p m, Friday. ★ Panel to Talk on Movie “ The Fountainhead” w ill be the subject of a panel discussion at CARNIVAL O N STAG! AT THI A u s t i n C i v i c T h e a t r e Tri. end Sat. 8:30 P.M. G R 6-0541 fo r R#**rvctior* C o b a lt Seating Ticket* J 2 the first baptist church tenth and colorado invites you to discover New Dimensions in University Living ENCOUNTERING CHRIST IN WORSHIP « n.w dimen.ion in living SUNDAY 8:30 a m. 11:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m. In th# worship of Almighty God led by Dr. William E. Denham, Jr. combining dignity and warmth through congregational participation SEEKING TRUTH THROUGH STUDY a new dimension In living SUNDAY 9,30 a.m. through progressiva opportunities for j f ^ y anc| discovery International Sunday School Lesson using convention materia! The Gospel According to Paul • study of the theology of Paul Gospel Parallels e comparative study of the Synoptic Gospels The Mind of Jesus e study of the life of Christ Pacemakers of Christian Thought a study of contemporary theology REVOLVING GROW TH THROUGH RELATIONSHIP SUNDAY * naw r- graduat* L ib r a r y and A cadem ic Cen­ ser 9-5—D raw ing of ' ’Cale­ d o n ia !" st box office sn Hogg A u d i­ torium : fend 9-12 on Saturday tickets for j 9-5--Texaa Memorial Museum <-r*en to vtgitort, Twenty-fourth and San Ja- rinton: and Saturday •vt— Laguna •;; r.ria open to vUtfnra Thirty-fifth Street near Laka Austin 1(V5 on Saturday, ’ ’ Y . ' 9-5—C o ffee 10—Coffee Hour. H illel Foundation 10-6— Exhibit of German "Kxpreaaion- !sm .” and exhibit of sculpture bv Klyoshl T a k a h a sh l and R o b e rt Cree- mean. A rt Museum 9-1 on Saturday 10-12 and 3 5— Elisa bet N e y Museum Sot East Forty- open fourth: and on Saturday to visitors 3-10— K U T - F M programs, do. 7 mc; and on Saturday 4. T, and 9 JO Movie. ' ’The Fountain­ head Texas Units* Auditorium 8- T rln ltv U niversity Chorus In con cert. F irs t Presbyterian Church 8 -Internatio n al Folk Dance Group In­ Ju n io r lnterceb d persons. vites all Ballroom Texas Union. 8 SO- ■Carnival." Austin Civic The­ ater s P la t hot..ta W ast F ifth and Lavaoa; and Saturday 8-12— Phi Gamma D elta casual. F IJI 8 12 -Pl I Kappa Psi casual, Chap'ar I jake n u b . house. Saturday 9 Sabbath •HFSiees, HtUe! Foundation 2—Registration for spring rush. Batts Auditorium I Freshman V arsity Intersquad swim­ ming. Gregors' Gvm pool 7 and 9 30---Movie "T h e Fountaln- >■.,>*•1 " Texas Union Auditor urn PREPOSTEROUS PERSONALS §25 F O R F VCH P R E P O S ­ T T E R O U S P E R S O N V t, used in our advertising. Must he based on tr y of 91 u Study*M i*ter t tic* Open to students and faculty. Sorry, can’t return unused entries. Send r entries to Stud** Master Publication*. 148 La­ fayette St., N. Y. C. 100P. N I E D E D : Sharp edged scis­ sors, by I rglishmsn too tied up by many knotty prob;ems to get one himself. Send as swiftly as possible to Box 202 (.>1, Lilliput!!, Hicham Franks!, Maist™ Csliaga T I T A N T E D : I x p e n e n ce d l l >w igeon for difficult ear* l f Ji ov ive tar opera’ on Con­ tact Mr. Shylock, Box, 275 3 M OV, Venice, Italy. Michael R. Ziceard, Univ. af Finn. K n i t t i n g i i s i g n s * I earn from sn expert. You'll lose jour head over our revolutionary new lech* tuques. Write Mm*. Deface, Box 225 TOTO, T am . Susan a. Msovtr, San Francises Stat* S T I D EN T S find Study* Master Cr Meal Commen­ taries, Chapter Note*. Po­ etry Reviews am^Drama Anal­ ysts valuable study aids for comprehension, speed, refer­ ence, and improved grades. M C om p lete se le c tio n *t vour College Book Store. '/nam Sold In the University Area only at U J l - STO R K 2348 Guadalupe — On th* Drag SDecialiimg in Collegiate Fashion* Friday, January 29, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag* 7 Houses— Unfurnished Duplex — Furnished ------------------------------------------------------------ M ODERN A /C—ON E bedroom L arg e , closets, B e a u tifu l ih a d e tree* Boat- ions L A R R A IN —Sm all C o tta s* T w o C lose n. No pet*. Accept j U1®* dishing, $,0. H I 2-8884. A pply 1400 R iverside •o-ed ITS. GL-3-6808. a ir - c o n d l- 5301 AV EN UE G Tw o bedroom s, large H oned, m ah o g an y paneled, slid in g glass den. fenced yard, g arag e 569 50. UR 2- doors C a rp o rt. One bedroom 240T W. ■18.18. AN 3-2120, GR 6 5601 9th. $75 w a ter-g a s paid FU R N ISH E D , (IL 2-0229 P R I V A T E , SPECIAL! Union to Show 'Fountainhead' "Th# Fountainhead,’* arr eon who refuses to compromise hi* b#- adaptlon of Avn Rand s novel by Vets even In the face of powerful I the game name, will he shown Sn Texa* Union Auditorium this weekend. Showings will he at 4, 7, and 9:30 p.m. Friday; 7 and 9:30 p m . Saturday; and 4 and 7 p.m. Sun- AdmLesion is 15 centi for atli- day. dents and 35 centi for non-stu- dents. There will be a panel dlscus- slon of “ The Fountainhead'’ and the philosophy of Avn Rand at tricia Neal, and Raymond Mas- 4:30 Monday in Union Junior Ball- tev in the story of an architect j room. Tl>e film *tars Gary Cooper. Pa LAST WEEKEND IN TOWN! ^ J G H T N I N ' J “ J 0 P K I N S T he Id 407 W. 24th . . . OPFN 8 P.M. S R 2-5944 University Symphony Conductor Dr. Henry Swoboda Goes Through Contortions at Rehearsal U T S y m p h o n y S t i l l N e e d s M o r e S t r i n g s "D ra m atic lightning! A s t r o n g , incisive film . . . it plays like a house on fire! An n e B a n c r o f t stretches her talents to astonish­ ing breadth!" Th# University Symphony Or­ the baton of Dr. chestra under is an organiza­ Henry Swoboda, tion of the University of Texas that belongs to every student and faculty* and staff m em ber on the campus. It represents the Univer­ sity the people of Texas. the community and to At the present tim e your orches­ tra is in need of additional string players—especially violin and v in - j la. Auditions Fill be Jan. 28, 29 from noon u p TI I and Feb. : o’clock in Music Building 203A. Auditions are open to anyone on the campus and their families. I scheduled The symphony orchestra has al­ three concerts ready for the spring semester. In ad d i-1 don to these concerts the group will accompany the Opera VVork- shop spring performance and par­ ticipate in the Annual Inter-Ameri­ can Symposium of Contemporary Music. Each year the Svmposium brings to the campus some of the greatest living musicians and com­ posers. Tile next appearance of the Symphony Orchestra will be Feb. 28 In the Texas Union. Th# Or­ play Beethoven’s chestra will “Symphony No. I in C Op 21’ (first movem ent); Hindemith’s “ Metamorphosis on a Theme by W eb er'; “ Sym­ and Dvorak's phony No. 4 in G Major, Op. 88.” THE "MY FAIR LADY” OF THE SCREEN H A M B U R G E R S ] HOT FISH SANDWICH F R I D A Y J A N . 29 F illet to w e d wWi Burger C h e fs i w i tartar sauce en toasted bun. No benes, just pure eating pleasure. Treat the whole fam ily 3303 N. LAMAR GL 2-2317 C A L L G R 1-5244 FOR A CLASSIFIED AD Home of the Worlds Greatest 150 Hamburger! — T T M * M A G A ! P m O ne o f th e F in e * ! M ovie* o f th e X e w fln -—J ok n B u s ti# A m er S ta te * R M o m m ro d rd A dult K n tr rta ln m rn l k IJA M E S Mason J h e rump * Mn toter QAN NE B a n c r o f t - r i N O H p P o t P OPT N I 45 P R A T U R E S I 2 . 4 ( . I . I I CHIEF DRIVE-IN T H E A T R E M O I H L A M A * W O S U M O A D U .T S I.OO DISC. < ARD .76 C hildren U nder 1J FMFE Bow Office A S n ark B ar Open a t 6:00— F irst F e a tu re 6:46 “Exclusive'' First Austin Showing )jb0b rf * A U DREY HEPBURN nf-rtj Invite# You To Share Th# Happy Rom antic Adventure That W on Mar Tha A cadem y Award! S p i t a l L im ited E n g ag em en t MONDAY A TU ESD A Y ONLY AUSTIN Theatre HI. 2-5719 Adult* I ft# a# Sr. M IK FFI ATi 12:14 2:37 S M 7:23 - 9:16 It happened in Climax, Nevada.. A S Pofiv the Pistd- sne stayed tor breakfast.-. Beethoven- he cooked up the whole mess.- Dtno- h€cam# to dinner.-, R ecom m ended F o r A dult* N o C h i l d r e n " # or J r M D( Y t r k e t # Sold THS ncruHt © roo A D ULT* OM IT MAISCH CORPORATION (**%*«» DEAN KIM MARTIN NOVAK RAY WALSTON a H iHUif o .... “ ^ D a a ^ « J S C A R N E E D A C H E C K U P ? PTIX IS AT T H E P I T S T O P NEW LOCATION! 604 VV6th GR 8-3529 S P I r m G i t f i o j s uSffliw* I and th iii n> -701 F E J X U F A R R CUFF O SM O N D b illy w £ d e r b illy w i l d e r - Ta l d ia m o n o a lT x a n d ^ r * 'tr a u n e r u w t wen*© oo*po»A7ic» GPOHUflN ANOft PHfV#* ^ ‘P H I N K F I N K ’ A F in k Fan thor 4 ai t«»on F R E E P A R K I N G A 7 H i & L A V A C A s r Adult* MDC . . . ........ .75 50 F o ttiir* * 2, 4, «, 6. !• VARSITY He loved as if his life depended on it. . . and it did! T H E D I A M O N D S is back by popular This famous quartet demand with your favorite songs such as “Little Darlin’.” _____________ The D i a m o n d s will be at C lub C a r a v a n M O N . 25th thru SAT. 30th. ' Don 't M iss 'E m " For. Reservations .Ca ll.GR 7-6339 Cfi C C^lub C a r a v a n In the Villa C a p r i A T 6 45 A N O 16 06 W • m d : - \ s RAY PRICE CHET ATKINS J0RDANAIRE2 GOLDIE HILL „ JUNE CARTER WORLD FAMOUS > T BENNY MARTIN CAROLINA CLOG CERS RITA FAYE P I.V S SE I DND F E A T U R E AT A 76 O M V MR 7k# tu m o rs Tor MARTY R O B B I N S ^ ^ H WtS’ ERH REC08DISC STAR B allad DEA GUNFIGHTER COLOR I VT* , HIH BW® OF OUTDOOR mmM&n A D D I T I O N A L C L A S S I F I E D A D S Wanted a rt golf clubs, radio*, w rite rs . NOW B l"YING AND T R A D IN G —T y p e ­ gun* binoculars, m agazines, m usical hooks In stru m en ts, household su p p lies goods, w atches, ste re o e q u ip m e n t, te le ­ visions, m o to r e n g in e erin g su p p lies cam eras, tap e -rec o rd ers m en’s fishing h u n tin g good e q u ip m e n t, phonograph rd-Ord I coins, sta m p collections. A aron. 803 Red River. scooters, clothes, and IR O N IN G IN MY hom e, bab y Bitting! d o rm ito ry clean in g fo r b o \s, O ffice cleaning. HO 5-5905. M A TU RE B U SIN E SS LADY o r g ra d u ­ a te stu d e n t to sh are aiw irtm ont Be­ tw een U niversity a n d C apitol. GR 2- 3027.________ Nurseries E X C E L L E N T C H IL D CARE. St. An­ drew'* P re sb y te ria n D ay School 7 30- 5 30 M onday-F rid a y . Age* 2-6. 2011 K oenig I-ane GL 3-4383. Alterations m e n s E X P E R T A L T E R A T IO N S DONE on clo th in g R easo n ab ly priced a t H e n ry Jacobson » Men * W ear. 2332 G uad alu p e Ironing A T T E N T IO N S T U D E N T S IRON ING needed Mr*. W agner. 512 H e arn St. L ocation east of D eep E d d y Apt* Lost and Found L O S T - L adies o v ern ig h t ease a t 504 VV. 34th. S entim ental value ow ner Re­ w ard. Call B ennv Davis GR 2-3148 o r m all to ow ner a d d ress on case Typing T Y P IN G — LOW R A T E S S a tisfac tio n Guaranteed OL 3-5124. Mr*. Tullos. R E P O R T S. T H E SE S, D ISSE R T A ­ IBM Mrs. B rady. 2317 O ld­ TIONS ham , GR 2-4715 T h o u g h tfu lly full D ISSE R TA TIO N S. T H E S E S . R E P O R T S sk illfu lly tim * since 1951. Sym bol* electric M a rg a re t R itchie. ty p ed equlpped n e ar E nfield Road. GR 6-7079 co rre c te d MARTHA ANN ST Y L E ? M B A ty p in g sera* A com plete professional Ice ta ilo re d the needs of U n lv e r^ sty stu d e n ts Special k eyboard eq u ip ­ m en t for language, science, and e n g i­ n e erin g th e se s and d isse rta tio n s to P h o n e GR 2-3210 A GR 2-7677 2013 GU ADA LU PE E X P E R IE N C E D T Y PIN G SER V IC E. n e ar A nan­ reasonable, A ccurate da ie HO 5-5813 VIRG INIA CALHOUN TY PIN G SE R V IC E an d photocopy SYMBOLS — ALL FIE L D S. N c l a i r chare* for one day B ervie* 1301 E dgew ood. GR 8 2636. N e e x tra W IL L T Y P E R E PO R T S. D isserta tio n s. T heses 25c per page S ta tistic a l ti p- ing a t 35c a page T ype 70 wpm . 8-5 a t HO 5-6521, E x t 221 a fte r 5 a t HO 5-5538 L E T M E DO YOUR TV PING E le c tr a E xperienced Mrs. Homey*!*, IBM 1309 R idgernont. GL 2-7719 E X P E R T TY PIN G . F A S T SE R VIGE "These#. T erm P apers legal brief* C all das o r n i g h t Mr*. M ontgom ery. GR 2- 5601, THEM ES R E PO R T S. LAW noted. 25« page Mrs F ra se r GR 6-1317. a page. M inor co rre c tio n s AR TISTIC . ACCURATE TY PIN G . 25c IBM ty p e ­ w rite r. Mrs A nthony. N o rth e a st U n i­ versity. GR 2-1202. T Y P IN G —N otes, GL 3-3062. them es. R easonable. PORTS. T ll E S E S. D ISSE R TA TIO N S. RE­ IBM Selective. Sym bol* for acle nee e n g in e erin g , m ath e m a tic s. lan g u a g e accents Greek. Gail GR 2- 9617 COURTEOUS.. COMPETENT TYPING rep eats. S ta tistic a l IBM executive. Mr* service T heses w ork Spe* laity M orrison GL 2-1 CIO. T Y P IN G ; M IM E O G R A P H ; D IT T O ; . o, M rs W oods, HO 5- P h o t ropy 1.178. MARTHA ANN SIV LEY M B A. t a l o r t d ty p in g se rv ­ A com plete professional ice the needs of U niver­ sity stu d e n ts Special keyboard eq u ip ­ m ent fo r language, science, and en g i­ n eerin g theses and d isse rta tio n s to P h o n e GR 2-3210 A GR 2-767T 2013 GU ADA LU PE SH O R T ON T Y PIN G G rah am G L 3-5725 T IM E ? Mise D E L A F IE L D G ra m m a r, T Y PIN G sp ellin g 20r page. c o rre c tio n H I 2-6522 r n n J A N E F O N D A A L A I N D E L O N L O L A A L B R I G H T ADI L TS mid C H I L D R E N F R E E P A R K I N G ADJACENT TO THEATRE AUSTIN •**> .se .3$ STARTS TODAY] 3 DAYS O N LY FUN FOR EVERYONE 2 no s o r m ( O M , R E S S HI 2 5719 nu FRACTURE k YOUR TUNNY- BONE! LEWIS : The A t 8 OO O nly P W S h o w 6 P.M. At 6 IS A 9:30 F R E E P A R K I N G A T A L L T I M E S J ORI Y E - I N r J S M = . Ko* O ffirr Op** 6.06 SO DEAR TO M Y HEART B u rl It**, H arry < a reg 2:6# HE RIDES TALL D an B a ry e* 8 45 H i D R I V ? - I R T H E A T R E B e SW n .rm 390C Ss tm B o * O ffic # O p en 6 ft# ROUSTABOUT H.lrls P re*)*}, B a r b a r a S t a n w y c k 7:00 W H O ’S BEEN SLEEPING IN M Y BED? D ean M a rtin , Carol B u rn * t 9:60 WILLIAM * CASTLE H f The w rite r-d ire ctorL of ‘ Straitjacke t” IT MAY DRIVE. YOU TO DREAM OF SECRET DESIRES YOU’RE ASHAMED TO ADMIT!!! ll AMINS ROBERT TAYLO R S JUDITH MEREDITH N O W SH O W IN G FEATURES AT: 12:22— 2:14 4:06— 5:58— 7:50— 9:42 -PRICES- ADULTS 1.00 M D C .50 C H ILD .35 PARAMOUNT ALKER 3s ain ; BARBARA STANWYCK S P E C I A L ! — T<\ KEEP AMERIN BARBER SHOP QUARTETS AND CHORUSES O E I TOGETHER FOR A HARMONIOUS LISTENING TREAT Friday, January 29, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 8 A The Daily Texan Classified Ads Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Furnished Rooms For Rent For Sale one- two— three $37.50 $38.50- $40.00 G I R L S A P A R T M E N T T O share w ith D O U B L E R O O M S $23 W a lk - in closet* la v a to ry in rooms, a ttic fan R e frlg N e a r everyth in g . U tilitie s paid. G R 8- erator. S i n g l e room s $25 and $35. 1012 5528 W e st 23rd G R 8-8456 Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments P R I V A T E P A T IO O ne Bedroom , F u rn ish e d , new. modern ap artm en t, cen tral heat A /c, paneled carpet, d rap eries, covered carp o rt, *to: atte space, tenants w ill shoe aas. S i v . s tre e t T en a n ts w ill «hnu- r a i l w r it e <» A ( S S S ; * r a f c t B i n k Ride San A ntonin T » v e t e i n i i n i ~ R id s ., S a n A ntonio. Texas U A p lto l 7- 2231, A v a ila b le w a te r c a rd paid, SUO mo. 612 W e st I Feb.. 1965 T H E T O W E R V I E W U n iv e rs ity '* N ew est, finest. I 1* blocks east L a w School. I I u ro one bedroom. F e a tu rin g M odern fe a t u r in g M odern !rilSh f u r n it u r e , Frost-free refriijera- e fficie n cie s ) i'ii'c»encie*> (no! ,not L turs> pantries. garbage disposals. quiet " >•«•» loc*ic OU ti like 5100 VV ater-gBS paid 2501 O L D H A M G R 2-8772 C R 6-0227 F U R N I S H E D — M odern —- A ttra c tiv e apartm en t. IO B lo ck s U n iv e rs ity R e v at fro n t house 2834 B . Salado. H I 2- B L O C K U N I V E R S I T Y . A/C. T w o bed room garage ap artm en t. A k u tw o A V A I L A B L E efficien cy im m e d iately, apartment, m in im u m housekeeping. A /C and c en tral heat. U tilitie s , washer. Couple $90. 1015 Ea s t d ry e r furnished. 52nd. G R 6-6589. G R 2-8740. — - — — — --------- L I V E O N L A K E A U S T IN . T w o b ed ­ room -Two B o th V illa C en tra l heat- a ir F ire p la ce. F a n ta s tic V iew . $200 a m onth. G R 7-7830. K O 5-5200. L O R R A I N E A P A R T M E N T S U n d er new o w n ership E x tra large one and two bedrooms C o m p letely redec­ orated. A il b ills paid. L a rg e pool. 1401 E n fie ld Rd R e sid e n t M a n a g e r Apt 213. GR 7-2536. P *• 4 ,9° .9*1 bedroom ap artm en t tw o blocks off U T. Cam pus. G R 7-8414 A P P R O V E D H O U S IN G 8. A. A R M S 1930 S a n A nto n io bedroom d u p lex — tw o room efficien cy. T A R R Y T O W N G a ra g e A p artm en t F o r p riva te kitchen, bath Red ; ■ d. G R 6- two men A ir conditioned. B ills paid M44 9 $75 G R 7-7123 a fte r 5 week days. O pening sp rin g semester. A ir cond i­ tioned. $35, H as vacancies fo r S p rin g Term . A ir ­ conditioned. P o r t e r S e n ice. G R 6- PASO H O U S E 199$ W E S T A V E , U n iv e rs ity Approved D orm fo r men Vacancies for S p rin g Sem ester. Q uiet, good studv atm osphere w ith room s a r­ ranged by suites D a ily m aid service Reduced rates for S p rin g . C a ll G R 8 3917 or G R 2-0910. Furnished Apartments SU M M IT APA RTM EN TS University A p p ro ved for Freshmen & Sophomore Men N O W T A K IN G R E S E R V A T IO N S F O R FEB. IST.* • W alking Distance to Campus • Dishwasher and Disposals Private Balconies Large Living Rooms Individual Desks Swimming Pool Porter Service All Bills Paid 1008 V/est 251/2 St. G R 8-5592 M anag er A p t. No. 207 Furnished Apartments Ma*a reservations now for Spring Semester, T 11E S T E l ’ J I E N S P L A C E 708 W . 23rd. G R 6-3752 P a rk s P la c e G R 1-0558 1)617. H A L F - B L O C K U n iv e rs ity , 3 rooms, bath. 603 Elm w o o d $65 400 stairs, j Ea s t 34th. $55. G L 2-4516 evenings M O R G A N M A N O R 1910 San G a b rie l Unexpected vacancy ap artm en t A/C. A ll bins paid. F o r phone G R 8-1264 or see M an ag e r No 206. In one bedroom to appreciate. Pool. inform ation in See blocks U n iv e rs ity N I C E L Y F U R N I S H E D C O T T A G E 2 L iv in g room ; tiie-tub- show or bath. L a rg e closets. Couple - $95. 2 single p ersons— $100. Gas-water furnished. 2014 O ldh am . C R 84356. bedroom ; stadium . k itc h e n ; C O N V E N I E N T TO U n iv e rs ity . L a r g e 3 rooms N e w ly decorated. N ic e ly f u r­ nished. garage. $70. G R 6 1435, G R 6- 5553. W A L K T O U N I V E R S I T Y . F u rn ish ed , one bedroom A ll bdls paid. $63. 710- B W e st 22’ s. H I 2 3897 Q U A R T E R D E C K A P A R T M E N T S S O U T H E R N E S E A P T S . Stu d e n ts W e lco m e 2308 E n f ie ld Rd . U T M E N O L D H A M H O U S E Come by o r c a ll G R 6-1292 N ew apartm ents. U n iv e rs ity approved. 1914 O ldham . Fresh m an through grad u ­ $79.50— D A R L I N G A /C ap artm en t. F e b ­ ate level B e a u tifu lly furnish ed a p a rt­ ru a ry 1st M o d ern . Clean. Good ap- ments. P le n ty p a rk in g space. M aid and p o rter service, sw im m in g pool. R eserve pliances. P le n ty closets. W a lk to class. now Ea to n . G R 8-8911, fo r S p rin g semester. C all M rs W A 6-2564. G R 2-0952. ---------------------------------------- D E L U X E 2 larg e bedroom ap artm en t. A /C . C /H . W i l l accom odate 4 bo>s. $35.00 each. 2 blocks stad iu m Ph o n e M r. V a u g h t H O 5-5186. C L 3-5352. One bedroom, lu x u ry ap artm en ts So u th ern p lan tatio n ex terior. Ja p a n e se Interiors M o u n tain lake pool. Exposed beam ceilings. L a rg e closets w ith chest storage. I OOT W e s t 26th. M a n a g e r 103 or 102 G R 8-9192 or H O 5-9147 U N U S U A L L Y Q U I L T . N I C E neigr.bor- hood, K itc h e n and den p rivileg es G arage. M a le stu dent o r businessman G R 0-1407. L A R G E R O O M T O S H A R E — one bow p rivate $25,00 Upperclassm an. room entrance. U p p erclassm en. $35 OO. HO 5-9075 Also T E X A N D O R M A ir conditioned dorm fo r men 1905-07 Nueces H as a few vacancies $30 M O N T H — S P R I N G S E M E S T E R M r. A M rs H u h S. P a rk s , M gr. G R 6-1813 N E W . P r iv a te 2 bedroom . IM H W e s t 22nd 5 blocks to campus Quirt, neighborhood E n t ir e ly d ifferen t P riv a te Pa tio s B I kitchen w ith bar C en tral a ir and heat A ll b ills paid F u rn ish ed w ith lamps and f .rn fare bought from M exico. D a y s — G R 2-4666 N ights, week-ends — G R -2888 3402 P E R R Y L A N K 2 bedrooms baths, cen tral hcnt-air $225 HO 5-9778 2 livfng-dsnlng com bination, den Nursing Care i W l \ L S I A L o w m ileage A lm ost new Located -H en ry Adam s' G arage, 1901, R io G rande, V-8, stick shift. 1965 MUSTANG 2 Dr. hardtop 200 h p, ICH. W S w , tinted class, silver-blue. $2600— Im m ediate de­ livery. GE 2-6621. T - B I R D Y E l J. v O W / W H IT e / i W • ports hardtop. A/C, power brakes, steering. fu lly loaded. C all G E --7478 a fte r 6 p m . 52 F O R D 2-Dr hard-top. 8-eviinder stick shift, flood tires leather apl hoist* r v V e r y clean R and H F ir s t o ffe r o ver *200. H O 5-9502. G E 2-T242. tires 58 C O R V E T T E . R A D IO , heater, good tonneau cover soft .up, tra n s la to r ignition. G R 8-6687! Steve, n ew brakes, O L D S ’ M E N D E Z C O R N E T Used on* take*. 'c a r . M u st sen B e st o ffe r C a ll Le e M a y — G R 8-1712 1957 C U S T O M B U I L T 1 0 x 4 6 | b edroom s f u lly carpeted W ith " asher W it h av ning H I 4-3409. house. t ra ile r Room and Board T H E B R I D G E W A Y U n iv e rs ity approved dorm firs t of Feb ru a ry ' Yrs a r y $30 OO per month F o eto r S e rv ic e d a lly C e n :ra lly heated and air-conditioned. 2616 W ic h ita G R 7-0427 or G R 2-0683 T H E R R O N C O N U R S E R Y 5006 Crestm ont R O O M A N D B O A R D Reasonable. 21 meals w e e k ly 2'.. blocks off campus N e w ly decorated. C o lo r T V . telephone and m aid 612 W e s t 22nd O pening* Ages 2-8 years. E m lent heir- tra in in g , con food, pleasant good ve n ie n tly located. G E 2-1912. Houses— Furnished LO O KIN G FOR A PLACE TO STAY? B U N N I E S ? M E N ? R O O M S F O R T W O I C a ll. G R 7-7342 A T C A M P U S A ttra c tiv e ly furn, 6 room cottage a C arpeted garage A dult fa m ily C a ll at MOO Sp eed w ay. G R ,'-6818 $90. n j I! g e 4, 5 r » — deal from th* S o m e * H c l u 9- U s only ! i block from campu: u ! 3 \V ... -a, and meals are s tweet a day long. You I N e it Suns* - t j c e ; you V I L L A • 52*'. 1307-1311 E . 52nd. S p a ­ cious air-conditioned 2 -bedroom unit. W -G paid A ccom m odate 2-4. $89.50 up. Reservatio ns accepted. H I 2-0995. L A R G E U P S T A I R S 3 Room s. P r iv a te entrance, m odern kitchen and b ath ; adults $75. 613 W e s t 32nd, G E 2-9131 G R 2-3858 F O R E S T T R A I L A P A R T M E N T S 1514 F o re s t T r a i l™ (W e s t o ff E n fie ld R d .) V e ry a ttra c tive , v e ry quiet 2 bedroom. lu x u ry apartm ents, Sw im m in g 2 bath pool, E M music, la u n d ry Cable T V . M gr. Apt IGI G R 6-3058. facilitie s, R E D E C O R A T E D —C arp eted — n icely f u r­ nished cen tral h e a t- a ir conditioned I I I 4- 209 A cadem y. Open. G R 2-4998. 1057 a fte r 5. A T C A M P U S A ttra c tiv e ly furnished e fficie n cy a p a rt­ ineonerator m ent fo r couple, A /C : C a ll at 1920 Sp eed w ay. G R 7-6818. NO B HILL A D J A C E N T L A W B U IL D IN G . P riv a te room . kitchenette, bath. $25 double or $37.59 - single occupancy. C L 2-1763 C L 8-1255 M E N O N L Y C o lo rfu l efficien cy, furnished, nir-con- $60 W a lk in g distance. G R 7-1991. G R 8-225$ Lias paid ditioncd G arage Nov/ has a vacancy starting Feb. 1st 2520 Longview GR 7-8741 Manager Apt. No. 213 O N E W E E K I N F E B R U A R Y F R E E : Apartments for Rent T w o bedroom tw o bath. A ll b ills paid Suiet. modern, and y seniors and above need luxurious. $210 inquire. E L S A B EN O A P A R T M E N T S 2400 Sa b in e G R 7-7179 50 *A n ? nt/ Telephone. T V . M al a ll In.is paid w o n kitchen. 4 B lo c k s <;p 6 9490 G R 8-6833 from (a m p u l G R 6-5739. U N I V E R S I T Y , $10 A /C . K itc h e n . dining, linens, P R I V A T E B E D R O O M livin g. lamps. M aid, Rooms for Rent / N E A R U N I V E R S I T Y P R I V A T E tra n ce P r iv a te bath. Quiet N ic e ly 6691. G R 2-65.9 . . . „ furnished $3'• OO. G R 6-4435 G R 6-5553. L A K E A U S T I N C L O S E - IN V aulted celling^ F ire p la c e . D ish w a sh er S p a ­ cious bedroom. B o a t dock. $155. G R 8- can bet cc. i G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S O R couple J Ui $75 plus bib* Unu und y n e e B r id le P a th . G R 2-6497 room w ith re frig e ra to r, p rivate bath. GR8-3087 I O N E V A C A N C Y IN large double room. Air-condltloned. P riv a te bath Stubbs House. 704 W e s t 21st. G R 6-4182. I R E F I N E D W O M A N Stu d en t -Business. E x t r a nice larg e fro n t room A d o r n ­ I Di­ ing bath. Bus Sh o pp ing center. v e rs ity . P rivile g e s. O L 2-7867. room. 2710 W h lt is tow er. M odern. Clean G R 8-2864. G R 2-0952, W A 6-2564 T h ree blocks dinette. $140.00. D E L I G H T F U L A / C home. 2 bedroom 2 baths, L R . D R kitrhen- fu rn itu re R e frig e ra to r King-size bed. W a s h e r double garage w orkshop, patio. 3105 Breeze T e rra ce Open. G R 2-0952, W A 6-2564 E a r l y A m erican 940.00 M odern Q U I E T P R I V A T E bedroom. (H o t p late lf desired i. 1210 C astle H ill, G R 2-0952. W A 6-2564. Clean. R e frig e ra to r M E N — S in g le $35 Of) B L O C K South rumpus. A ir ­ conditioned. R e frig e ra to r. P a rk in g . 2003 W h itis . Double- $25 00 pool. V E R Y L A R G E 3 bedrooms S w im m in g firep lace, $45 each. a ll bills paid, fo r .3 or m ore RXW W 26th. M e r A p t 103. G R 8-9192, H O 3-9147 U N I V E R S I T Y — A ttra c tiv e One bedroom G a r a g e . $90. C S S P a rk P la c e Also ID I F ra n k lin . G R 7- furnish ed house 2480. N I C E R O O M N E A R U n iv e rs ity , town. L a w . P r iv a te entrance, double closet, m aid service. S h are bath w ith one. K itc h e n n riv iie e e * d m if P rivile g e s lf required. G R 8- a c W a lk in g distance cam pus. G R 8- " V - n " e ’ m om . P riv a te home P riv a te entrance B O Y S — S H A R E U N U S U A L L Y larg e 4228. For Sale room Q uiet. N e a r cam pus. Desk and re frig e ra to r n ills paid. $25 G R 2-2696 Duplex— Unfurnished _ - pet cd. Open fire p la c e S tu d y. 2 rooms- bedrooms. W a lk -in closet - W a sh e r con­ nection*. G a ra g e n ea r U n iv e rs ity . G R 6-0555. tg > W A N T Q U I E T S E C L U S I O N ? R esp onsib le adults, in f a n t ; no pets 2-bedroom un furnisher! cut* tone d u ­ plex 7 closets stove, re frig e ra to r, cen­ tra! heating. 4 coolers, share w asher. Y a rd kept $75. W i ll a ir condition for $90. 2204 W . IO. C a ll B o lt G R 2-6201. bed: R E D U C E D Ph on e R E N T room. en- trance. O n ly tw o oth er students. M ousy quiet. G R 2-5518 R e frig e ra to r. L A R G E P riv a te O R D E R Y O U R V O L K S W A G E N d i­ re ctly fro m G e rm a n y at a sub stan tial U n iv e rs ity M otors. 2715 s a v i n g . G uadalupe, G R 2-7152 cation. close F O R M E N — sin gle o r double, good lo­ in q u ie t and com fort­ able and reasonab ly priced. G R 8-2691. \Iso tak in g reservatio ns fa ll se­ mester. fo r A T T R A C T I V E R O O M A N D n eig h b o r­ hood. P r iv a te entrance, hath, garage. students o r business women. Q uiet T a rry to w n . G R 7-2934 B L O C K F R O M C A M P U S larg e corner room -for wom en C o o k in g fa cilitie s Q uiet and convenient G R 8-1039, 46x10 T W O B E D R O O M m o b il* home. W a s h e r plus kitchen appliances I cated five m inutes from cam pus G R 2- 0793 1958 P L Y M O U T H 4-door S a vo y j P o w e r brakes steering a/c Clean, econom­ ical. $525. 4710 F ro n tie r T r a il. H I 2- 5833. 37' H ouse T ra ile r, M ust te ll at once C an be seen 4021 E a s t A venue 1964 M G lin o Sport Sedan. IO 500 m ile* Air-conditioned. L ik e new, 30 m pg A P P R O V E D H O U S IN G . L A R G E room*. G R 8-2354. Help Wanted P A R T T I M E W O R K tn/er. ow app VV. ' IO to 20 hours a va ila b le M u st he neat. C a r essential. O ver $2.50 per h o ur sta rtin g : salary. P u ller Bru sh Co A p p ly Stu d e n t F in a n c ia l A id s — V. M .O .B . room 205. a n ti w ith F E M A L E S T U D E N T N E E D E D to help girl student in w h e e lc h a ir on campus. Ro o m and board or sa lary . G L 2-8547. C O U P L E O V E R 21. N ot a fra id of work. A p p ly own M o rris, 320 3. Con- class operation J.' T . M H ig h h a n d w ritin g gross. W A N T B E S T T V servicem an lo Texav U tilin g to pax- top w a g ers fo r h ard w o rke r. W a rre n S m ith T V Service. 1500 VV. 35th. — O P P O R T U N I T Y — Stud ent*' w ives over 21 " a r n up to $35 00 w e e k ly 2-4 hrs, d a lly . C a ll D O W N S T A IR S L a rg e liv in ^ a rg c n v ln g room c arp o rt. C onven ien t l ~ J 550- IFT 2-888-1. A p p ly I IOO River- G R 2-4843 side ,',n T W O B E D R O O M S ' z r Apartments— Unfurnished IW B P L Y M O U T H . S T A N D A R D R a d io ho* tf,r -ood t lr ,,v *39500 C a rl Jo h n 30.7 son G R 7-8293. 3106 D u val. Apt now. H I 2-1514. Furnished Apartments L A C A S A A P A R T M E N T S A N D C O N T I N E N T A L A P A R T M E N T S I and 2 Bed ro o m A p artm e n ts A va ila b le $125 to $160 G R 6-1262 G R $8670 T W O A D U L T S . N e a r la w school. On line N ea r co m m u n ity center. bus $65.00, G R 7-8598 a fte r 5:00 p.m. E D E N R O C C lose to I nix -Qty. I and 2 bedrooms R esid en t M a n a g e r 1201 E lm Apt. D v»R 7-7154 W A N T Q U I E T F O R S T U D Y * A spa­ cious, com forts hie a p artm en t at rea­ sonable prices 3205 H E L M S . No. 1 $75. N o 2-170 AZC. 1510 P A R K W A Y one bedroom, v e ry nice— $95, w a ter S o d i& °9 8 .ln f0 n n a ti0 n ° * U M n ' FreU n d T W O A P A R T M E N T S U P S T A I R S . Show ers, couples, no pets or c h il­ dren, 19t»0 Sab in e. 3 rooms, w /p o rch East-south exposure — $45.00. 2 rooms w ith south-west exposure— $40.OO. F ir s t re n ter gets garage. INR 2-8572. Q U I E T D I G N IT Y at Sa n P e d ro S q u are Apts. * W o o d b u rn in g firep la ce * S tu d y and tw o bedrooms * P r iv a t e b alcony w ith f o r geo tai view * Seven blocks to U T * C en tra l heat and A /C * B ills paid F o r f a r u lty and couplet $195 to $235 a m onth. W i l l F u rn ish P h o n e G R 8-2708 re f r/ 'm a t or** $25* P e a id n to n th ly. 1805 I earl. L A R G E C L E A N R O O M S and bath for l ' s blocks campus P riv a te entrance. men students D a lly m aid service 2800 W hltis. G R 6 1712. Special Notices E U R O P E — U nregim ented tours are more exciting, bree booklet. W r it e E n r o p •; 255-0 S e q u o ia ; Pasadena. C a lifo rn ia : 91106. Drafting C A P I T A L D R A F T I N G S E R V I C E . 1405 Lava ca . G R 2-8901. Th esis d ra ftin g charts, graphs lette rin g , m echanical and maps. Se wing 2405 Leon 1905 Rio Grande R A V I N E T E R R A C E R E D E C O R A T E D fo r 2-3. F irep lace. W a te r- * * * paid. 2053 Sa b in . G R 8 5528. a p artm en t. Idea! A / C R E D E C O R A T E D O N E bedroom. show close to cam pus, L a w School, tow n. 2107 Sab in e, O R 6-2208. Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments D R E S S M A K IN G A N D A L T E R A T I O N S P h o n e G R Pick-up and d e liv e ry . 6-1795. A fte r 6 pm. I 108 W 22nd. ca-ca. All bills paid except A-C. Newly and excellently furnished. 3 UNIVERSITY APPROVED APARTMENTS FOR MEN (Freshmen through G rad uate Leve?) • THE CA V A LIER 307 E. 31st, G R 2-761! Mrs. Shirley H t#, Resident M d' iger C om plete A p artm ent A vailable Now • THE H A W T H O R N E 2413 Leon. G R 7-9324 Mrs. k a tv e e n Sctnudies, Resident Mer/, w • LA FIESTA 400 EL 30th. G R 7-4253 M 's. Eve H debrand, Re: dent M en acer Located just off carnous, each apartment A luxuriously furr'shed, individually air conditioned, f / ;y ca-oe^ed end has an excep­ A ll b ills paid. tion a ! amount of c c e t space, large b ed rooms, persona! desks, bookcases, dining room "vin g room and built-in kitchen applian­ ces. A ll utilities are prer a d and bee maid and j a n i t o r services are provided. Make reservations now for Spring Semester. STOP! SEE OUR FURNISHED APARTMENTS BEST IN • C O LLEG E COURT APARTMENTS $ 1 1 7 . 5 0 3 1st & Duval New, beautifully furnished I bedroom; All bills pa' i; C entral heat and air; Fire-proof; close to University. (Less for I year lease!. Swimming Pool. M ar. A p t. 102 North Bide. • BRAEBURN APARTMENTS $109.50 & $124.50 3401-1! Speedw ay • BRIARCLIFF APARTMENTS I 101 Shoal Creek $145.00 EXECUTIVE HOUSE $167.50 & $201.75 Select garden apartments; Downtown— Close to every­ thing! Central heat fwd air; A ll bills paid; 2 bedroom $ 145.00. Mgr. Apt. !0!. 17th 8c Lavaca W . 17th Sc Lavaca N ew h:ghrise; Downtown— Convenient to C ap itol and University; Younq marrieds and graduates; AL b :lls paid: Swimming pool; I bedroom, unfurnished apts, at $147.50 and 2 bedroom, unfurnished apts, at $175.00. M gr. A p t. 103. W IN D SO R O AKS $155.00 & $225.00 1210 W in d so r Rd. I a rqe I %. 2 Bedroom; C entral H eat & A ir; a'| Ut I ties pd. — Swimming Pool — (Less on I yr. lease). M gr. 124, Young M arrieds & G raduates. Sp a c’ous 2 bedroom apartments; Austin's Address of Distinction; H eating and Airconditioning; ' The best in Apartm ent Living” ; Swimming pool. M gr. A p t. B-7. W A S N E R * PROBLEM SOLUTION Are your grades poor because of: • Inadequate study area • Noise • Lack of privacy • Clutter and cramped living Are you /red of: • Gang baths • H.gh cost of eating out Move to the Blackstone University Approved Apartments for Men Two Bedroom, Two Bath Units with Living Room and Complete Mod­ ern Kitchens Five feet of Built-in Desks and shelves for each man Outside Private Entrances, Sound p r o o f in g , Thermostatically Con­ trolled Air Conditioning Daily Maid and Porter Service Ample, off-street parking 950 sq. ft. In each apartment 305 W e s t 6th R E A L T O R S - ^ ^ Q R R i s o n m i L s o n - P E Q B s o n . G R 2-620 PLACE YOUR RESERVATION N O W FOR THE SPRING SEMESTER R E A L E S T A T E . R E N T A L S . I N S U R A N C E ^ S T If U T C X n S IN S U R O R S 2910 Red River J B. Morgan, Manager G R 6-563 FURNISHED HOUSES AND APARTMENTS WITHIN W A LK IN G DISTANCE OF CAMPUS 7-2 $100 2 - ! $ 1 0 0 $160 $130 $75 $60 $45 $35 1902-D Nueces 2-2 A-C, bills paid. 2511 (lower) Nueces: Ideal for 3 students. 708 W . 22nd. No. 3 I-! 807 W . 30th (rear) efficiency, bills paid. 1902 Nueces. Garage rooms No. 2 or No. 3. All bills paid, A-C. Furnished Apartments Me^, live af the new O ra n g e X d iv e rs ity of Texas* newest and finest dorm.fory. It s worth looking into, oven 8 other Housing arrangements, becau e r e C re. ' c e as more to c " * r you. For xampie; a spec \ V 7 ■ ccm yU’h a huge stone f’’ «* J p ace, library room, ga ie r w it’' r : p u g and b ” dge tables, television room, laundry room, canteen and sun deck, Six-man suites w th complete kitchen a r'd furnishings; indi­ vidual beds, desks, chest-of-draweri a - d doest. Free r a d service end garbage r ’ L u r ce**ma! a'- co rd i*:oning, wa to-wa ii carpeting* draperies, I: tercom system and free off-street covered parking. $60.00 re- month, id ; des included. ?:or more Information p'e- •. n iA w i. x\u w a vsvu* n vJ, ^ ^ r tr,Vfir; Carter Browning. Robert Randolph ham H utkey. Bary Ben H uU ell, David cartdel. kenneth"R andolph Castlemnn. W ilson Johnson, Carlton Roy Jones ! Thom as Stephen Collins. W illiam R lo h - (5ene Arthur Cox. Mohamed In w ard K nlpllng Noarnan Dahman. Carroll Thom as I)aw- son Edwin w . Dittrtch, Donald Rob- ‘V alter E lliott. Robert }.'uepnp Gardner R Ruben Richard Comer. Franklin Creswell Harris. Darrell Lee Helms. N ell Brent Knrlsklnd, Edward Eugene Kirkham. John Raym ond Leatherburv Jr., Samuel Jam es Levine. Ix>cheod Jr., Travis Edward W ilson Mohsen A lharthy. Nasser Dean M c P h e r s o n Phi hp Boles Matocha. Al Rashid. Don Howard Bu- ! Douglas Ernest M lerl II. Joseph Paul Howard Ernest Collier. Richard M olesevkh. Henry H arvey Moon Jr . •Id C urt la D uvall, and Thom as June ’ Brenton Daniel. Jim m ie L ee Farmer. Jam es Bertram viorris Jr , Russell H. Floyd Arthur H askett, J r . Jam es Fred D ^cey. Jr., Otto H ennas J^hroeder n . J Hor&ndam, Michael D avid Hugh. Glenn Terrence Johnson. N abll Juno!, Abdel bell, J e f f I n land Stanford. Donald Ra> Keith Tayfe*. ^mvi* Gordon W hI.e. George Rahman Ahdeldaim K atam i Mien K eller, Clarence Le* L ittlefield, g a z e t t e W I A n lablW ttW , Arthur c le v e Yenawm e. and Larry N u el Mack Lu MT Gerald Marsh JRnqutat. Jr.. David Krirh Meyer. Gary D ennis Ragan. H awkins. C’aude Earl H ildebrand Jr., Michael N y* S'hw endrm an. and Jerry Maurice Robert Kuhn Jr . Jim m y Allen Turner. *ohn L indsey W hitesides Jr., and Gary' Vt “ ‘ ’ade W oehrm ann. ARC HI TF. CT UR AL ENGINEERING Richard Fred Arnold. R oger How*; B w niow , W alter Johns D erb y Jr.. Melton Jr. B A C H E L O R O F S C IF NCR IN C IV IL E N G I N E C R IN O zen. ™ » » m m htov v w m , m u m m Graves K ennedv, W oodrow J Joe Taub. - —- -. o n t h — - ‘ • • ■ . n y J | -'raid T reyblg and Lloyd Victor Urban. l.vn n Roberta. H arvey Lean Robert Iv a I lace _ you n g BAI H E L O R O F E N G IN E E R IN G SC IE N C E UP THIS COUPON ^ i i T H IS IS A FREE C O U P O N N o t G o o d fo r A n y th in g It * Juit FREE Garland i Flat Top Shop 7 B a r b e r s £ f *81 E , 19th F r e e P a r k in * 13* | S C H O T E ’S S IN C L A IR SE R V IC E Sinclair t “ 30 T e a m R e r r ln * F T A r e a ” ^ C o m p le t e C a r a * * S e r v ic e W . J 9th a t S a n A n to n !* G B 8-3?*2 CHARTERED EXCURSION BUSES • Parties • Field Trips • Retreats Buie* available with rest rooms aboard, turn around seats and card tables for your enjoyment while traveling. A II buses air C o m p le t e R e p a ir * C o m p le t e S e r v ic e conditioned. Kerrville Bus Co. G R 8-9361 2006 E A ST 4TH W a f t e r ' * MUSIC • G u ita r s AH M usical Accessor!** • A m p lifie r s • Phonographs • Records • R adio* • sh eet Music G R 1-2978 613 W . 29th S t r e e t / fp to d a te s — f o r d a y t i m e a n d d a ld im * Jim Langdon . . . railroad commissioner Geologists Hold Meeting Today Railroad Commissioner Jim C. Langdon will keynote the seventh annual geologists’ convention at an address on c . . . Edgar Daniel B ailey, Ronald Carol B errv. James A r t h u r Bur r oughs. Con-I w ay Stone M agee Jr., David Arnold Pullen, Gary York Robinson. Jim m y ! Don Runnels, and Gordon Lee Thorn ’ Jr. B A C H E L O R O F S C I E N C E IN M E C H A N IC A L E N G I N E E R I N G H enry Howard Baade Jr.. Bobby Laster Ram. Thom as H ale Canfield. 9 a.m. Friday with W ayne Clyde Curlngton. Beaufort Clay- ; ton D aughtry Jr . Marion Bernard Resources and the State (xO\ern- Gardner Jr . Jam es Arthur GI f dew ell III. Gorman D avid G uerrero-Jim inez. Robert Neil H am bright. Mark H arrell Harris, Stan ley Don H olzaepfel, John Alfred Hopkins. Charles Henry' Kelm Arnold Arthur LaRauve, Jr.. M anuel Arturo Leal-R odrigues. Robin B oyce Federation of Geological Socie- . lA*Bleu. M anley D o y le McCright. VVI I llam Henry Mayer Jr., Cnccinrw w ill Jack Childers lh e se s sio n s Will tieS- T oPic Oates J r . John Alton !Posey J r . WU- Ham Richard Stockwell j r . James Ed- be “Oil and Water — Resource » r Turcotte M,yn«r<. L r . « l » n , l p n |lt e lB and L ow r ii Clark Wood. Sponsored by the University, the convention has attracted over 600 the Southwestern of Southwest.'; m nm hor*; ment.” for of „ BAC H E L O R O F S C IE N C E IN P E T ROLF. I M E N G I N E E R I N G Sabri Zeltor Al Main!, W illiam Rob- This afternoon speakers will be the Texas ert Granberry. Richard Wesley Mon- ....__^ triiii-iTrt P tiv- crlef. R obert Jam es Nas-s. Edward Nash Wat® Commission, William uuj Patton Jr., and St. Clair Peyton Yates ton, consulting ground water hy- drologist; J. Chrys Dougherty, Austin attorney; and Dr. Stanley Arbingast, UT resources professor. _____________________ , John Vandertulip of Junior Colleges Plan Conference ’Lucy' Coming As Headliner Guest Presidents adm inistrators and of Texas junior colleges will meet Lucille Ball, comedienne and star at the University Feb. 8 and 9 for the annual Texas Junior Col- of television's “ I Love Lucy,’ will l>o the special honor guest for the lege Association conference. lith annual Headliners Club awards in junior col- party Feb. 6 in Municipal Auditor­ Dr. James W. Reynolds, Un!- versify consultant i a education, will “Current Challenges to the Curri- culum.” Other feature the presentation of awards to the out- include Dr. standing Texas newswTiters of the James M. Godard of Washington, year. Cash awards will be made D. C. president of the Council of in what has come to be regarded Prostestant Colleges and Univer- as one of the country’s top jour- sities. nalism competitions. The program will speak on speakers ium. ; W- Illu stra tio n rnlarjted to *how d eta il 'y' TW-:, ffyg only ct A FULL YEAR TO P A Y For Your Senior Ring I Priced From Choice of W h ite or Yellow G old $ O C 0 0 O Z a j l e Ts * 2236 G U A D A L U P E m m FREE TICKET D R A WI N G * Begins T O M O R R O W Jan. 29 Fine Arts Box Office— H ogg Auditorium Free to $17.99 Blanket Tax Holders A s Long A s Tickets Last Advanced Sales of Single Admissions at $2.50 for “Spouse” Ticket Holders C A L E D O N I A ! V ;-V mm ■ ' w s . Cheating Not Big Thing'... continued from Page One) “Penalties for cheating are hard; tions, and they are required to re- to set, because it depends so much port any cheating they see,” he the cases, examinations t0pjc 0f >jORK Jack Holland, director of student was on the individual and his attitude,” explains, printing bribed into selling a copy to some ^owotiiy explains.* Holland esti- ‘‘But students here wouldn’t feel students who made about $2,OW mates that the penalty assessed is obligated to report scholastic dis­ i fa jr and correct in 99 lier cont of before they were caught. honesty, because classes are so large, a sort of ‘laissez faire’ at- for scho- titude develops among students,” personnel services, t h i n k s less w hether the nenaltie«? cheating of this kind goes on now because of a change in student yalues. for the cheater who got by wi but he no longer demands respect,” Holland said, basing his comment on a recent discussion with stu- I dents at a leadership conference ! at Wimberly. “There used to be prestige dcbat(? for several yoarS) but No- sion js another possible way to cut i . wotny piays down the importance d0wn cheating. Faculty members of the severity of the punishment. J have various methods of super- “ It is the certainty of penalty — j vision, most of which are based on not the severity—that stops cheat- suggestions from in g ” dishonesty are t00 strict or | he points out. tQ0 ]pnj ent ^as been a INTENSIFIED stipervi- Dr. Robert J. Lawrence, assist- fo r, an^ professor of economics walks cheating, a student seldom repeats up and down the aisles throughout say most scholastic ells-1 his offense> Nowotny believes this the examination period—“ to ob- an L prooj that penalties are strict serve what’s going on first hand.” Professors of English seat stu- j HAVING BEEN punished Reasons for cheating are as var- , . - I. , led as methods, but camp thermos j honesty is spontaneous, rather planned. Holland believes fear and 1 anxiety atiout getting out of school are the chief causes for cheating. . Nowotny says, an honor program dents with one seat between them, 0 has been discussed as a solution and sometimes make up alternate of the cheating problem, but he quizzes. Since most English tests does not think such a system could are not .objective, cheating is dif- the administra- : , 1 don. , . . . h . , . ARNO NOWOTNY, consultant on development and former dean of student life, believes cheating is large university. “ In ficult on “in-class” projects, °Pcratf* n a small schools, students sign pledges that they have neither given nor, PLAGUE®*, h o w e v e r , la a assign- exam inn- problem on o u t c l a s s " he is recelved helP on meats in both English and govern­ ment. “The tendency to plagiarism on term papers is often the re­ sult of naive ignorance, but some­ times is deliberate,” Dr. H. M. MacDonald, chairman cf the Department of Government, says. it Dr. Jim Pearson, associate pro­ fessor of history and assistant dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, uses two proctors to help police his classroom during examinations. MATHEMATICS professors insist on staying in the room during the entire examination, and usually seat their students in rows of diag­ onals, Occasionally, they have stu­ dents bring bluebooks a day early; then redistributes them on exam day — sometimes marking tile books for identifica­ tion. instructor the Despite protests concerning the leniency of professional supervis­ ion, Holland believes that ‘With the present student attitude, our supervision is adequate, for tighter policing would show lack of re­ spect for our students.” the scho pro.” he says . . under pressure and teacher I conducts the examination sloppily, making it easy for him to cheat, he will naturally take a short-cut. “But those teachers who conduct tests efficiently and expect honesty usually get it,” he declares. is skeptical about Crowded classrooms are an often- cited c a u s e for cheating but , Thomas this point. “ I believe students could sit on each other's they wouldn’t cheat if they didn’t w’ant to,” he says. “ But on the other i hand, they can sit twro seats apart and still devise a cheating method if they are really determ ined,” laps and FN T H E F IV E cases brought be­ fore the committee this fall, three students cheated because t h e y needed a good grade to pass the course, and tw'o cheated because . they wanted to rush through a lab experiment to go play an intra- | m ural ball game. All five of the students w’ere pen­ alized by getting “ F ’s ” the course in which they cheated, and , varying amounts of disciplinary I probation. in Penalties for scholastic dishon­ esty range from “ D. P .” to sus­ pension, and may be applied as the Faculty Committee on Discipline deems necessary. Regulations do not provide for freshmen to be suspended; however, it is recom­ mended that they be put on disci­ plinary probation with an auto­ m atic “ F ” in the course. PARENTS OF the dishonest stu­ dents receive letters notifying them of the circum stances. “ These let­ ters are sometimes more effective than the probation,” Thomas says. UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS K l T FM, 90.7 in c Friday :00—K aleidoscope OO—Serenade : OO—Am erlean* Abroad 30—N ew s ;00—M usic of D istinction: “ The Chorus” :45—O p in ion O m nibua Saturday OO—M etropolitan Opera OO—Serenada OO—Concert In K haki \ 311—K ew s 45— W eekend M agazine .00—Ju st Jazz KLRN-TV, Channel 9 Friday 30—-TV K indergarten OO—Art, M ufti : 27—Spanish I ■15—Spanish 2 ;02—Geography 25—C om m unity Calendar 32—S cience 3 .02—Science 8 30— French Chef 07—H istory. Governm ent 30—C om m unity Calendar 35—Geography : 05—Science 6 35— Science 8 OO—Spanish I 18—^Spanish 2 37—Geography STUDY IN SOUTHERN FRANCE A n undergraduate liberal-arts year in Aix-en-Provence F R E N C H L A N G U A G E & LIT ER AT U R E E U R O P E A N ST U D IES A R T 4 ART H IS T O R Y M E D IT E R R A N E A N ST U D IES Classes in English and French satisfying American curriculum requirements Institute students enrolled at the University of Aix-Marseille, founded in 1409 Students live in French homes Tuition, trans-Atlantic f a r e s , room and board, about $1,950. I N S T A T E F O R A M E R IC A N U N IV E R SIT IE S 2 bis, rue du Bon-Pasteur Aix-en-Provence, France Subscribe to the TEXAS DURING REGISTRATION and get the FO U R BIG SPRING ISSUES S“j OO p|us 2c Tax H E M P H I L L S Books Books Books BUY EARLY! G O O D USED BOOKS GO FAST! NOW BUY YOUR Text Books Paper Backs Used Books Hard Backs New Books Best Sellers All Your Book Needs Priced Right With Ready Rebates HEMPHILLS J I FREE CUSTOMER PARKING AT ALL 109 E. 21st 2505 San Jacinto FOUR STORES 2244 Guadalupe 2501 Guadalupe wearing quality — always right, fit right, feel rig h t C 7 SUPER ^ jfa r e x * b y FARAH A new high in slacksmanship, only $ 6 9 8 \ AR AH MANU* ACTUHING CO INC ti PASO HAAS w -mm- THE SINGERS AND DANCERS OF SCOTLAND Thursday, Feb. 4 at 8 p.m. MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM friday* January 29, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page IO