T h e Da ’ty T e x a n t f h j S t u d e n t N e w s p a i U ni ve r si t y of Texas Vol. 66 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEX/' (AY, O C T O B E R 13, 1966 Twelve Pages Today No. 45 Welcome Awaits LBJ, McNamara Sees W a r Union Turns Down New Offer by GE WELLINGTON, New Zealand -— UT) - Prime Min­ ister Keith J. Holyoake called on businessmen and schools to give workers and pupils “every chance to see the Pres- ident and Mrs. Johnson” when they visit new Zealand next Wednesday and Thursday. “No stone will be left unturned lo insure that the first visit of the United States President Ls a m em orable occa­ sion,” Holyoake said Wednesday. “ I know New Zealanders would want the m aximum opportunity to see and honor the head of such a great and friendly nation.” Opponents of US m ilitary action in Viet Nam promised to call off two demonstrations if Johnson agrees to m eet a deputation of church, university, and trade un­ ion representatives opposing the war. Tile Johnsons will arrive at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday at Ohakea to a t­ tend a formal dinner and recep­ tion at the home of the governer- general, Sir Bernard F erg u so n . Next day, Johnson will visit P arliam ent House before depart­ ing for Australia. In Australia Tuesday night, P rim e Minister Harold Holt dis­ closed that Johnson will visit four Australian cities — Canber­ ra, and Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane. Johnson will meet with Holt and other officials in Canberra, the capital. He will head motor­ cades in Melbourne and Sydney, the two largest cities. LBJ Campaigns For NY Demos NEW YORK — (J) — President Johnson appealed for racial jus­ tice Wednesday night with a re­ m inder to Italian-Americans that not long ago, they “felt the raw pain of discrimination in Ameri­ ca.” “ Other Americans now are feel­ ing the sam e weight which you and your felt,” Johnson told Americans of Ita ­ lian descent as they celebrated Columbus Day. families once His solemn rem inder climaxed a hectic, crowd-filled campaign mission to New York. Democrats said more than one million people turned out before his schedule was half completed. The President k e y n o t e d his day in Baltimore, Md., with a call for board increases in So­ cial Security benefits next year, then moved to New York to taunt Republicans as a party of fear. call Even as the President issued in Baltimore, GOP his House m em bers in Washington adopted a resolution saying Con­ gress should not adjourn before acting on the proposal. It was a gam e of political m a­ neuvering with a highly emotion­ al proposal less than a month be­ fore the congressional elections. The GOP resolution commend­ ed the President for his proposals “ belated but actions” to offset the effects of the increase in living costs. term ed them WASHINGTON - IP — The General Electric Co. made a new contract offer Wednesday night —described by W’hite House me­ diators as “a slight improvement” —but it was immediately rejected by l l unions whose 125,000 num­ bers are scheduled to strike Mon­ day. Secretary of Commerce John T. Connor, speaking for the presi­ said dential mediation panel, “ we’re at dead center” In efforts to avert the walkout which the government says would injure the Viet Nam w’ar effort. President Paul Jennings of the AFL-CIO International Union of E lectrical Workers, the biggest of the l l union combine negotiating with the giant company, called General Electric’s latest offer “ in­ significant.” Chief company negotiator Philip D. Moore declined comment after the face-to-face bargaining ses­ sion, the first joint meeting since shortly after President Johnson w’on a two-week strike postpone­ m ent and had the talks moved here from New York. CONNOR SAID union and com­ pany negotiators would be called back into session a t 9:30 a.m . Thursday. Both Connor and Jennings said the new company offer included a slight Increase in a cost-of-liv­ ing wage proposal. Jennings said the latest com­ pany proposal did no thing to­ w ard meeting other m ajor union dem ands, such a better arbitra­ tion procedure to avert strikes over grievances and a narrowing of geographical wage differen­ tials. “WHAT THE COMPANY is do­ ing is playing a kind of numbers gam e,” said David Lasser, as­ sistant to Jennings. “ I t’s a statistical now-you-see- it, now-you-don’t gam e,” Lasser added. The White House mediators took three hours Wednesday to cajole the embittered company and union officials to sit down together in the sam e room for the meeting. THE MEDIATORS had shuttled back and forth across a Labor D epartm ent corridor to talk sep­ arately with both sides in their effort to get them together. George Meany, president of the 13.5 - million - m em ber AFL-CIO, called a meeting of the l l unions F riday to draw plans for “ all- out support of the AFIr-CIO and all its unions in the event that SAIGON — UP) — Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara flew in a heavily armed helicopter Thursday along the southern end of the demilitarized zone dividing the two Viet Lams. He could see into Communist N orth Viet Nam. There was little ground action as McNamara and his official tour party of high rank American and South Vietnamese officers viewed the area from three helicopters. General Electric forces its work­ ers to strike.” Tile AFL-CIO International Un­ ion of Electrical Workers, repre­ senting some 80.000 Gener al Elec­ tric workers, heads the ll-union combine. Tile negotiations in­ volve only that union, but any contract agreem ent w'ould be­ the other com e a pattern unions. for Yell 'Sooooo-ey' A n d W in a Piggy From Daily Texan Calling all hog-callers, Tire Daily Texan will sponsor a hog-calling contest Friday. Prelim inaries are set for noon on the Main Mall. Finalists will call hogs at the Pep Rally at 7 p.m. on the Main Mall. John Economidy, editor of the Texan, will emcee the call, and Texan departm ental editors will serve as judges. Applications for the contest in Journa­ m ay be filled out lism Building 103 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday and until noon on F ri­ day. Applications will be accepted In Journalism Building 103 un­ til l l a.m. Friday. Everyone will be welcome to enter the contest, the fourth hog call at the Uni­ versity, Bill Cryer, Texan man­ aging editor, said. The prize? The pig. WEDNESDAY, M cNamara vis­ the battlefield scene of a ited Communist debacle and la te r stood on the blacked-out bridge of the carrier Oriskany as Navy planes took off to bomb North Viet Nam. The defense secretary looked on as young navy pilots were briefed for the strike against the north. SEVERAL HOURS later, one of those pilots failed to return from the mission. Officers on the ca rrier said the pilot and his A4 Skyhawk were believed downed by ground fire. The mission called for ra k ­ ing coastal shipping and bombing road and rail targets in North Viet Nam, only about IOO miles from where the Oriskany cruised. It was the last strike of the night. At the Phu Cat battlefield M o N am ara told victorious US, South Korean, and Vietnamese troops the battle “ Is a perfect illustra­ tion of independent na­ tions cooperating.” three AT SEA, IOO miles off North Viet Nam, the defense secretary told a wardroom full of officers of the battle-tried old c a rrie r: “ As secretary of defense, I am very proud of your performance. As a citizen I am very grateful to you.” In ground fighting Wednesday, US m ilitary headquarters report­ ed another instance of a captured Communist turning on his com­ rades and leading 1st Division cavalrym en to their hideout. A spokesman said a Viet Cong two companies of prisoner led cavalrym en to a house 22 m iles northwest (rf Qui Nhon, where he said about 15 Viet Cong were hiding. Johnson Plan Needs Few Tax Increases BALTIMORE, Md. — — Almost 75 per cent of President Johnson's $2.2-billion package for increased Social Security bene­ fits could be financed under pre­ sent and scheduled the commissioner of Social Security said Wednesday. taxes, Commissioner Robert M. Ball said recent actuarial cost esti­ m ates normal retirem ent bene­ fits is over financed by about three-quarters of one per cent of the taxable payroll. At a news conference after the President’s speech outlining the program, Ball said the rem ainder of the proposed increase could through a higher be financed payroll tax, raising the lim it for taxable income, or a combina­ tion of both. Increasing the current maxi­ taxable wage base from m um $6,600 to $7,800, Ball said, w’ould raise enough money to finance about one-quarter of the P resi­ dent’s basic plan. A sufficient amount also could be raised, Ball said, by changing the ultim ate employe’s tax ra ta of 4.85 per cent — due to be reached by 1987 — to 4.95 per cent. One of the P resident’s propos­ als was to guarantee workers employed under Social Security for 25 years or m ore a minimum monthly benefit of $100. further that workers would be paid a t the ra te of $4 a month for each year they were covered by Social Se­ curity. explained Bali Ball said the increased work­ load would fit into the existing organization, w’ith relatively few new positions needed to cover the expansion. Social Security officials said about 22 million names will be on the benefit rolls by the end of October, Increasing about 100,- 000 each month. Commission Looks At Qualifications The Election Commission mat Wednesday night to consider the validity of the qualifications of certain candidates in the fall stu­ dent elections. Judgment on the qualifications will be released Thursday, Chuck Marsh. Election Q m nM iK ebuknsuNti snld- A R K A N SA S W EEKEND NEARS . . . as early birds enter the sign contest . . . Market Prices Soar in Trading N ew High Reached in Despite O ld Fears By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — IP - - Stock m arket prices climbed higher Wednesday the biggest ad­ vance of the year as Wall Street responded bullishly to statem ents from official Washington that the Viet Nam war is unlikely to re­ sult in wage and price controls. This fear of controls has been an overhanging worry’ this year as the stock m arket underwent one of its w’orst declines in his­ tory. The reassuring statem ents came from Commerce Secretary John T. Connor and from Arthur Okun, a m em ber of the Council of Eco­ nomic Advisers. THE MARKET was already re­ covering from an early decline when the statem ents cam e over newswires. From leml-hollday conditions, the picture changed to that of a ram paging advance. to 778.17, The Dow Jones industrial av­ erage rose 19.54 the aharpest gain since Nov. 26, 1963, when it advanced 32.03—a record —as stocks showed their confi­ dence in President Johnson fol­ lowing the plunge on Nov. 22 when President Kennedy was as­ sassinated. The Associated P ress average of 60 stocks rose 6.5 to 280.4 with the industrials up 9.8, rails up 3.9, and utilities up 2.1. The gain In the AP average was the larg­ est since June 30, 1965, when an advance of equal size was made. THE RISE WAS the largest in the short history of the New York Stock Exchange index which ad­ vanced $1.11 to $41.35. Every one of the 15 most ac­ tive stocks advanced. The high­ flying glamor stocks—which took their worst beating in years last week — m ade multipoint gains. This continued a wildly gyrating recovery of these issues which began Monday. • . . as Tejas Club hopes to enter the sign contest . . Photo bi Puck Federiek Red Alert' on Campus Seen As Students Ready for Game Thursday. Applications p.m. at completed 5 idea gam e spirit. that orange will promote begin were Wednesday. Campus activities shifted into high gear Wednesday in prepara­ tion for the forthcoming Arkan­ sas weekend. Alpha Phi Omega’s sale of Ar­ kansas spirit candles has reach­ ed about 1,300. The red candles are part of a traditional campaign to hex the Arkansas team . They are sell­ ing for IO cents each. Tile signs will appear on the West Mall Thursday and will re­ main through Sunday for visitors and students to view. Signs also have been painted on the window’s of campus dorm i­ tories and drag stores. been Friday has declared the The Arkansas sign contest will “ Wear Orange Day” with Winner of the sign contest will be announced at the pep rally Friday night. The prize is a trophy. Judges are Dean Jack Holland, Dr. William T. Guy, and Dean Dorothy Dean. At Gregory Gym ticket office Al Lundstedt, business m anager of intercollegiate athletics, said students drew tickets for Satur­ d ay’s gam e In record numbers Wednesday. Although there are still about 1,000 general admission tickets for the end zone bleachers left, it is doubtful that there will be any leftover student tickets to be put on sale to the public, Lund­ stedt said. Hurricanes Increase Coming of Kendra Breaks Former Record HOUSTON — (W — The wan­ ing 1966 hurricane season was the the best watched and yet most frustrating so far, two hur­ ricane experts say. It’s also the most populous on record, with an eleventh tropical storm, Kendra, being spawned 900 miles west of Senegal. in storm s said Dr. Robert “ We’ve never had a ‘K’ storm since the Weather Bureau began the early naming 1940’s,” II. Simpson and his wife, Dr. Jo­ anne Simpson, both of whom spoke at a Hurricane Seminar here sponsored by the American Society Oceanography. Storms are named alphabetically. HURRICANE INEZ was the most persnickety’, cantankerous, and difficult to predict that fore­ casters can recall, the Simpsons said in an interview. for “ So many times Inez was al­ most static — and when a hurri­ cane is static, it means impor­ tant changes are taking place in­ side it, usually before a move further north or west,” said Robert Simpson, assistant direc­ tor of the Weather Bureau from Washington, D.C. Inez wiped out whole villages in Santo Domingo and Haiti, and killed many hundreds during its lengthy ram page, but the prop­ erty dam age probably won’t touch the $1.4 billion caused by Hurricane Betsy in 1965, said the Simpsons. SIMPSON SAID 1966 was note­ worthy because for the first tim e weather scientists have had as many as three satellites furnish­ ing them pictures of hurricanes. These include the first nighttime the photographs ever storms, from new cam eras on NASA’s experim ental w eather satellite, the Nimbus. taken of Dr. Joanne Simpson, director of Project Storm Fury, an ex­ perimental weather station which Weather: Fair, Light Winds High 86 Low 71 aim s to prove that cloud seeding can lessen a hurricane’s energy, said she found the 1966 season “ extrem ely frustrating.” Even with a record-breaking num ber of hurricanes, she said, the Storm Fury project saw no action. “ There are ground rules that we don’t experim ent outside a pie-shaped area 250 miles north­ east of Puerto Rico and alm ost to Bermuda, because within this area there has never been a hur­ ricane that has struck land with­ in 36 hours.” THE SAFEGUARD is a con­ cession to the sceptics who fear repercussions ever if strengthened, rather than weak­ ened, a hurricane. seeding Hurricane Beulah in 1963 was tile last storm seeded. No a t­ tem pts were m ade in 1964 and the last two years were fruitless them ­ the hurricanes because selves didn’t cooperate. cliff-hanager,’ “ Faith, in late August, w;as a real said. “Part of the eye was actually In the permitted seeding area.* she Air Force, Authors Scanning Skies for Glimpse of UFO's Someone Old, Someone New Discouraging to Teachers Poor Pay, Bleak Im age The movie “Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf” illustrates differences between the ages of professors at a college. There is the young teacher striving with am bition and lh** older teacher who never quite reached a top adm inistra­ tive position. The situation created by the age differences of the faculty is apparent at the U niversity. Too often, a depart­ ment is structured into three various levels: lop adminis­ trative staff, tile young professors, and the “seasoned1' professors caught between the first two levels. ★ ★ ★ The head of a departm ent usually is able to oversee the members of his staff and hopefully obtain some notion of the different ideas which are being discussed. The young professors are “the bright young men on the move.” They have had the opportunity to discover the discrepancies in old theories during th eir graduate school training and to enter the ground floor by also learning new theories. In many respects, the young professor m ay be intellectually ahead of the professor in the middle level of a departm ent. The “ middle-class'’ professor may have quit growing intellectually. P art of the problem is th a t set routines of classes have not allowed tim e to delve into the n e w ideas of his anti related fields. ★ ★ ★ The urgent problem is to re-educate the professors in the middle-class level who have quit growing intellectually. Time is needed to refresh minds which have become ac­ custom ed to daily routines and a set pattern of philosophy. A num ber of departm ents have tried to counteract the problem of re-educating professors by conducting regular discussions and by sponsoring seminars. Professors also are granted leaves to perform a research project and to teach at o ther schools. Some schools provide sabbaticals so professors can have free tim e to think and read, thus enriching their lives and m aking them more useful in a rapidly changing so­ ciety. If such funds were available for such a program or a sim ilar one, the University hopefully would he able to instill new spirit in old minds. Conduct of Fans An incident occurred at the Indiana-Texas game which we hope will not be repeated. At th a t time, students in the Longhorn Band who carry the flags of lite various schools in the Southwest Conference stood up during most of the game. Since per­ sons behind them could not see the field, they had to stand to see the game. This had a multiplier effect, resulting in hundreds of fans having to stand up most of the game. We hope that the flag bearers will have the common courtesy to sit down during the A rkansas game. Salary Ratings Salaries for assistant professors and for Instructors have been given good ratings by the American Associa­ tion of U niversity Professors. The University was rated AF on both assistant professor's and instructor's salaries. The AAUP also gave ratings of BF on professorial sal­ aries, B on associate professor’s salaries, and a BF on aver­ age salaries and minimum salaries. The ratings are good news in that this was a substan­ tial variation from earlier years when our scores were predom inately C’s, with some B’s. Grassroots Philosophy Those who read books are better than the ignorant; b e tte r still if they remember what they read; even better if they understand what the\ read; best of all if they act on what th ey ’ve read. —S**ven Star Diary LEAVES HAVE BEEN PA LUN 6 POR U£EK£ . WHAT MAKES THAT ONE 5 0 OFFICIAL? I HAD IT NOTARIZED* ~ T ! By Iii.I.IOTT WEST Lititoria! Katre Xssistant In Texas this fall, teachers are fewer and fa rth e r between, and their pupils are s q u e e z e d a little closer together. A re c o rd n u m b e r of stu de nt needs af le a s t 5,492 m orn qualified te ac h ers, a o f o rd in g lo a stu d y by the T exas S late T e a c h e rs Association. To k ee p schools open, officials h a v e hit cd alm o st 5,000 unqualified p ersons, r e a d s the report. than traditionally K I R A L VR Ii. VS have needed m o r e tea ('hers, but now ev e ry m a jo r m etropolitan a r e a ex cep t F ort W orth faces a dro u g h t in the classroom . But why h as this d ry spell, now m uch longer the Biblical seven y ea rs, been visited upon Texas and its pupils? frequently room and thai sa y s e x e c u tiv e s e c r e ta r y board, and, C ha rles is still not paying its te a c h e r s a dec en t living w a g e ." The TSTA a n s w e rs most fond of ll. Tennyson. te a c h e r s a r e " T e x a s a v e r a g e CS AN VR.MV of sta tistics backs him up. T he le a c h e r d ra w s $$.506 p e r y e a r , hut T e x a s , r a n k ­ ing t vv e n t v - n i n t h am o n g t h e sta te s, p n \ s o n l y $5,950. classroom and d isc o u ra g e New' Mexico's offering of $6,415 and local L o u isia n a ’s $6,039 w ag e a ttr a c t e m ig r a n ts g r a d u a te s from those states. C a lifo rn ia’s prom ised- land s a la r y of $8,150 and the c a r p e ts - and Musak world of Las V egas c l a s s ­ ro o m s woo other budding Texas te a c h ­ e rs that together te a c h e r s g r im a c e before a rile s ta te 's plight, how ever is too la rg e to bp stuffed into a p a y envelope. Polcn list of tial unpleasant im ages form a d a r k picture of life in the chalk d u st: • S choolm a rm fixation. Many would- be m a le te a c h e r s hesita te b ec au se public opinion b ' s m a d e a w o m a n ’s domain. Some consider a m a n in public schools slightly s tra n g e , while the m o th e rly emo- o th e rs believe classro o m that the ti( us b e t te r guide the em b ry o n ic scholar. • A d m in istrative p re ssu re , or, "Well, w h a t else do you w a n t to d o ? ’’ School b o ard s expect m a le to str ia e for a princ ipal post and bet cr pay, and the m a n who shows su c c e ss with pupils usually the m a h o g a n y desk level. to a d v a n c e is asked te a c h e r s to Tile* m a le who w ants only teach som e imps cannot b e co m p re h en d e d by those above him, and so m e a d m in is t r a ­ tors f e rre t talent out of the classroom for j lbs am id their ra n k s . to • FTA P aran o ia . P e r h a p s the m ost often hea rd com plaint from public school teal h ers involves lire tr ivia in th eir jobs. Hall p atrols, s tu d y halls, gu ard in g of lunchroom s, and sno-cone vending a r e only a few ta sk s faced by the a v e r a g e se co n d a ry te ac h er. this feeling "I hav e a is m ostly a shibboleth and is spoken m o r e in fan ta sy than in r e a lity ,” c o m m e n te d Dr. A. C. M urphy, d ire c to r of th e U n iv e r s ity * T e a c h e r P la c e m e n t Service. "T h e problem is c e rta in ly there, but I think i t ’s m a inly a m yth — and a v ery re a l one that keeps m a n y out of te a c h ­ ing," he added. • Old M aidism , or report-for-work- and pin-on-your-cameo. An offshoot of the sc h o o lm a rm im pression c r e a te s for m a n y a pic tu re of birch rods and tradition d o m in ating public e d u c a ­ tion. fixation, this E le c tro n ic teac h in g aids and ex p e ri­ m e n tal classro o m in m o re p ro g re ssiv e school sy ste m s a r e m ak in g h e a d w a y a g a in st this p art of the school’s im age. techniques " T h e problem h ere is one of c o m m u n i­ cation. If m o r e w'ould see these changes in the school, they might se e teaching in a d ifferent w a y ," M urp hy said. The B lac k b o ard J u n g le and "U p the Down S ta ir c a s e " views of public e d u c a ­ tion. M u rp h y c o m m en ted , both contain so m e tru th but a r e given too la rg e a p la ce in public opinion. • C ultural e n t r e p r e n e u r i a l . E d u c a to r H arold T aylor, asking for refo rm in e d u ­ cational philosophy, w rote a y e a r ago th a t " t h e te a c h e r is less an i n t e l l e c t u a l or cu ltural le ade r than an agent of social s e rv ic e ." By tradition, the I n stru cto r has been ask ed only to a c q u ire c e rta in knowledge in a given cu rric u lu m and to tr a n s f e r it into the freshly b ru sh ed heads before him. The lazy studen t and the m a r t y r e d intellectual m ight w ant such a used- facts dealership, but im a g in a tiv e th in k e r with a c u ltu ra l life of his own r a r e ly goes for it. the In the fight for new te ac h ers, so m e schools h a v e m o r e a p p e a l than others. Again, pay is a p r im e consideration, but, again, o th e r factors hav e their influence. gla m o ro u s THE MORE locations n a tu ra lly a t t r a c t m o re g r a d u a te s. All T e x a s m etropo litan a r e a s a r e popu lar, their and H aw aii a n d California toll. ta k e Isolated d istric ts In W est T ex as offer bonus s a la r ie s to lure prospective in stru c ­ tors. P o o re r r u ra l a r e a s of the Valley, how ever, cannot m a k e such c o m p e n s a ­ tions, an d conseq uently these s y s t e m s f a c e the w orst sh o rtag e s in the state. T e a c h e r in adequacy is a prob lem not only of location but also of sub je ct m a t ­ te r. While the T e a c h e r P la c e m e n t S e r ­ vice is bloated with history and English m a jo r s , T e x a s needs m a n y m o re in stru c ­ tors in m a th , science, and special e d u ­ cation. OF THE 697 persons asking the Uni­ v ersity to find th e m a te ac hin g job last to help deaf y e a r , children and in sp e ec h th r e e sought positions two w e r e th e ra p y . train ed L ate in th e ir college c a r e e r , so m e s tu ­ dents feel an u rg e to teach, but a r e d is­ c o u ra g e d by T e x a s ’ r e q u ir e m e n t of a te a c h in g certificate. Although a g r a d u a te has a ch a n ce of b e t te r em p lo y m e n t with a ce rtifica te, oth e rs m a y be hired without a g r a d e point in the College of E ducation. " W e ’r e not a t r a d e school. People can m a jo r in different a r e a s and still m a k e Bumper Student Crop • . . b u t a critically low yield from the teacher mill. Cholo by St- Cl*if Newbern te achers. J u s t as in m a th a n d be if they would good m a jo r trained by a big electronics firm, th e y can m a jo r in m a th and be tra in e d in a school," e x ­ plained M urphy. “ A LOT of people say, ‘I c a n ’t ta k e out a y e a r and get m y hours in e d u c a ­ tion." Well, they d o n ’t have to," he said. te ac h u n d er s u p e r ­ state-req uired the th e T ex a s Constitution by A g r a d u a te m a y vision ta k e and courses on co rresp o n d e n ce or extension. T ex as has acknow ledged the p roblem s of its school s y s te m s and has begun to them . The g overnor's special e x a m in e c o m m itte e on education, c r e a te d by the S ta te L egislature, c u r r e n tly is studying T e x a s public education and has been in structed to m a k e its re p o rt to the 1%9 legislature. P R E S S U R E h as been exerted for the c o m m itte e to file an interim rep o rt on the L egislature te a c h e r s a la r ie s when m e e ts in F e b r u a r y . Since the group has to stu d y education and not yet begun sta te finances, however, som e co m m itte e m e m b e r s sa y any rec o m m e n d a tio n s in 1967 would be p r e m a tu re . 'Hie U niversity is w orking with the s ta te and with public school a d m in is t r a ­ tors on at least 15 different p r o g ra m s to im prove te a c h e r training and classroom procedure. But the g arb le of suggestions, de­ m ands, and defenses ce n te rs on one fact of ag re e m e n t. Almost everyone, in­ cluding the public, thinks T e x a s ’ ed u c a ­ tion sy stem needs help. "S om ebody said som ething once that I would like to lay to r e s t , ” said Dr. M urphy, "but it has just enough truth in it to sting like the devil. ‘He who can , does. He who cannot, te a c h e s .’ " it George B e rna rd Shaw said if in “ Man an d S u p e r m a n ." but m a n y in Texas aii> r e p e a tin g today, Unless a positive p r o g ra m develops, stu d e n ts will have te a c h e r s , and to become little reason T exas will have little ch a n c e of a pro­ gressive sy ste m of education. By BILL MALAISE Unidentified F lying Objects, to ( U F O ’s) the public eye and in a sci ies of a r tic le s and the s u b ­ two new books w ritte n on h a v e r e tu r n e d im agination in ject. Even the US Air F o rc e is taking the flying s a u c e r rep o rts seriously. Its P r o ­ ject Bluebook, r e g is te r of Unidentified Flying Objects, h as noted six 508 U FO "S ightings" m onths. the official last the in I FU BELIEVER John F u lle r ’s " I n c i­ d en t a t E x e t e r ’’ has been sh a rin g s p a c e on the best-seller lists with F r a n k E d ­ w a r d ’s hook, " F ly in g S au ce rs — S erious B u s in ess ." The Air F o rc e has been chasing fly­ ing s a u c e r stories sin ce the late 1910 s. T i e issue alw a y s has s e e m e d clear-cut. One one side a r e the believers or s o m e ­ o n e with a sto ry to sell. On the o th e r side is the sober scientific e s ta b lish m e n t that exp lains alleged sightings as w e a th e r balloons, jet a irc ra ft, or oth e r " k n o w n " p h e n o m e n a . But last w eek, the Air F o r c e an n o u n c­ ed a $300,(XX) scientific to be u n d e r ta k e n of the flying s a u c e r reports. The U niversity of Colorado at Boulder h as been a w a rd e d a r e s e a r c h agreement for the project. study it IN 18 Y EARS, the Air F o rc e '-aid r e c eiv e d approximately 11,000 has r e ­ po rts of UFO sightings. It h as been able identify or o th e rw ise explain the to n a tu re of all bu? 655. a n y the ex iste n ce and in a The Air F o r c e position given recent Blue Book re p o rt, is that “ . . . our position does not deny the possibili­ ty that som e form of life m a y exist on o th e r planets in th e u nive rse . H ow ever, tho Air F o rc e has n e ith e r r e ­ to d ate, eviden ce ceived nor discovered w hich pro v es i n t r a ­ s p a c e mobility of e x t r a te r r e s t i sal life,” A U niversity of Arizona physicist c h a r g e d last w eek th a t the US C en tral Intelligenc e A gency has o rd ered the Air F o r c e to " d e b u n k " sto rie s of U F O ’s. ic a so n to believe som e of the objects m a y c a r r y p e rso n s r e c o n ­ n a i s s a n c e m issions over the ea rth . While doing r e s e a r c h at W rig ht-P attei son Air F o rc e Base, Ohio, w here the Air F o r c e files its flying s a u c e r r e p o r t s , M '- Donald ^aid he discovered the CIA o rd e r — with the notation th a t its role should not be disclosed. HL ADDED th a t fro m outer s p a c e on th e re is McDonald sa id th e re a r e hundreds of s a u c e r the g en e ral public b e c a u s e of the " d e b u n k ­ i n g " policy. that n e v e r re p o r ts re a c h The b lockad e to scientists and o th e rs investigate, said M c­ is Air F orc e Regulation 200 2. who a tte m p t Donald. to U nder giving out such im prisoned for IO years. this rule, an y Air B ase official inform ation m a y be Phillip J. Kl a s>. a senior editor, with * Aviation Week & Space Technology," h a s co n n e cted U F O ’s with free floating p la s m a s . He r e m a r k e d th a t in m o st cases w h at re p o r tin g U F O ’s a c tu a lly sa w w as planes of ionized air. s o m e of th e m con taining c h a r g e d dust p article s. persons the on FRANK EDWARDS, m e m b e r of the Board of G o v ern o rs of the N ational In- vestig a tio n s Aerial C o m m itte e P h en o m e n a, h as w ritten an a u th o rita tiv e rep o rt on this Controversial subject. In the p r e f a c e to the book, E d w a r d s w a r n s : " N e a r a p p r o a c h e s of Unidentified F l y ­ ing O bjects can be h a r m f u l to hu m a n beings. Do not sta n d u n d er a U FO th a t i s hov erin g at low altitude. Do not touch or a tte m p t to touch a U F O th a t has la n d ­ ed. "In e ith e r case, the sa fe thing to do is to get a w a y from th e re quickly and let the m ilitary ta k e over. T h e r e is a possi­ bility of r a d ia tio n d a n g e r , and th e r e a r e known r a s e s in which p erso n s h a v e boen burn ed by r a y s e m a n a tin g from U F O ’s."* EDWARDS GOES on to explain that U F O ’s, so m e tim e s tr e a te d lightly by the p re ss and r e f e r r e d to as 'flying s a u c e r s , " must be r a p id ly and a c c u r a t e ly identi­ fied a s se rio u s A ir F o r c e business. the In one of John F u lle r 's books, a s to r y of tr e a t m e n t u n d e r p sy c h o th e ra p y and hypnosis of a m a n a n d wife, B a rn e y and B e tty Hill, who b eliev e they w ere ta ken a b o a r d an U nidentified F lying Ob­ la st w e e k ’s F o it je ct, w a s p rinte d in Worth S ta r -T e le g r a m . T he sto ry d e ­ sc rib e s how, a f te r an a l a r m i n g o b s e r v a ­ tion of an U FO occupied by s tr a n g e the Hills su ffe re d a "kind of figures, daze two hours r e tu r n e d h o m e la te r than expected with v a g u e m e m o ­ ries. and N ew s d isp a tc h e s hundreds of persons sighting U nidentified F lying O bjects. AMONG THOSE who r e p o r te d last April 17 said in Ohio re p o rte d them w a s Deputy Sheriff D ale F. S p a u r and a sq u a d e a r p a rtn e r. T h ey w e r e quoted the o b je ct for as say ing r a n out of 86 miles, until th e Air F o rc e gas. A few d ay s s p e c u la te d fellow officer s a w an artificial e a r th satellite flashing throug h the sky. their c a r later, th a t S paur a n d his they chased "A s the sa tellite a p p ro a c h e d the south­ ea s t position of th e sky, it d isa p p e a re d . Sheriff S p a u r focused his eyes on the pla n et \ e n u s , " an Air F o rc e sp o k e s­ m a n said . S p au r c l a im s th a t he is still hiding from the flying sa uce r. He is no longer a deputy sheriff. His m a r r i a g e He has lost 40 pounds. He lives on one bowl of ce real and a is s h a tte re d . sandw ich e a ch day. He sa y s th a t the flying s a u c e r did it. T he account of this Ohioan's c h a se in twisting n ig h tm a r e s w as printed in the D allas M orning N ew s last week. F act or Fiction? J. Allen Hynek, the N o rth w e ste rn Uni­ v e rsity astrop hysicist and the Air F o r c e ’s own U FO consultant, believes th a t s o m e ­ thing is up. H ynek says, " I ’ve studied this for 18 y e a r s and i t s not all non­ se n s e ." IN A [.E T T E R to the jo urnal Science, H ynek calls upon re p u ta b le scientists to inve stiga te U F O ’s seriously. Hynek d is­ m issed th a t U F O ’s a r r som e s e c r e t m ilita ry device. He also ac k n o w ­ ledges that most U FO rep o rts can be explained as down-to-earth events. idea the r e c o m m e n d s A N ew sw eek r e p o r te r explains that to turn U F O ’s into IF O ’s (Identified r i v ­ ing O bjects) H ynek that re lia b le re p o rts be se a rc h e d by c o m ­ p u te r for com m o n f e a tu re s such as th " a p p e a r a n c e of the object and w here and it w as sighted. “ T h en ,” H ynek w hen said, " th e investigators could tr y to be on the scene to observe the U F O ’s . " H ynek claim s a p a tte rn has a lre ad y begun to e m e r g e from the "ha rd -da tri" ca se s. T h ey contain frequent allusions to hovering, wobbling, and rap id ta k e ­ off. O ther often reported fe a tu re s a r e o val shapes, f l a k i n g lights, or brilliant lights whose g la re is unco m fo rta b le." LOOK MAGAZINE c a r r ie d the Hills story and insisted that it is a " h u m a n d o c u m e n t" and not an a tte m p t to con­ vince th e public th a t the Hills actually boarded a flying sa u c e r. The Hills have th e ir story so f a r e a rn e d $24 000 from an d author F u lle r a n d Dr. Simon, the p sy c h iatrist, will s h a r e ea rn in g s from a p ro jec ted book and possibly a movie. spotted by U niversity U F O ’s w e r e of T exas a r c a last s u m m e r resid e n ts with a 10-power telescope. One stude nt in a r e c ta n g u la r sa w an object flying the pattern . T raveling sw iftly through sky, turns. the object m a d e 90-dogree When it m a d e a s h a rp turn, the lights flashed and b e c a m e bright, then dulled. A coed and four other students w ere sitting on the roof of an a p a r tm e n t at 9 p .m . when they saw’ the object in the north. ONE UNIVERSITY astronom er, how­ trained or profe s­ ev er, explained that sional astro n o m e rs things.’’ " n e v e r see the«i through “ Unidentified Flying O bjects can t b seen telescopes," Dr. Terenci Deeming, assista n t professor of astrono m y, pointed out. "T hey can only he seei by the naked ey e ." Tile astro n o m e r, who had n ev e r seei an Unidentified Flying Object, explain ed that "one can very easily be d e c e i v e if he is not a trained o b s e rv e r." R a m p g u a rd s, who g u ard the plane: a t B ergstrom Air F o rc e B ase 24 hour: a day, h a v e not seen unusual flying ob jocks. NINETY PER ( E N T of all report: h a v e been satisfactorily explained, am those which havp not a r e being investi gated, a B e rg stro m sp o k e sm a n said. B ecause of rep o rted d u rin g y e a r, professionals have m e r as " t h e silly se aso n ." the m a n y riving object? the su m m e r of eat:! te rm e d sum As Air F o rc e Regulation 200-2 point* these the Air F o rc e concern with out. sightings is threefold: • Is the object a threat to the defense of the US? • Does it concubine to technical nj scientific knowledge? • Responsibility th? A m eric an people through public media what is going on. to explain to I O fficial N o t ic es j I'osllHMipil nm! Ii. I ii in art, Bib'e M o n d a y , O d * cmtecture n .ra tio n s, E d A , m a th em a tic* , m ie r o b .o lo jy . botan « d \ pi u s . rig, a n t h r o p o l o g y , bu mo is commit- l i e t-vtnn lna tinn * T u e s d a y O rt. IK. I p m : b u - i n c s * d i aph a t e l e vi on film I i c . f i n a n c e , hi m e l a w , c . i e m n t r y , t a d io - e c o n o m i c s , W ed ne d a y , O I I? I p rn • E d . P . , E n g l i s h , i n s u r a n c e , T luisda.v. Get, 20, I p ii : all neology, government, Ed H , m e n t . I (raw in to m a t ii ri-in nm i, busine* ■ l a n g u a g e Jon m ill sin, m anage­ f o r e i g n !• l a ' O r t I p m a o t i u n t l n i f m a r k e t i n g Pity s i c . , p s y c h o l o g y , p h a r m a c y . r e a l e ie, 21, m u dc, e n g i n e e r i n g , P . Ell , M onday, Ort. 24. a d m i n i g t i a t i o n , t i s n s p o r t a t on I p m . t> a o c i o i o g y , B E d /.oo lo gy , a n d o t h e r su b tecta off ** f i a t . s t i e s , P h ilo - i.pnv , re;-or1 e n , . r. , h .to reh , AH e x a m i n a t i o n s a n i bf g i v e n in E n g l i s h B u ild ­ ing 203, J o b O pportunities 17, IS. r e c r u i t i n g r>H A G E N 1 Y c a r e e r d e m i c n o n c e * , n a i i s m , n g n a i e a p r o g r a m * . t r a i n i n g field g e o g r a p h y I!*. 20 C E . f T K A L for lo to p s y c h o l o g y p h y s i c * , b i o l o g y , fo r m e n a n d w o m e n a s p r o g i a m . R e s t r i c t i o n I N T E L L I O E ! t , c a r t o g r a p h y . *->< o l o g y . j t r a n s p o r t a t i o n , E n g l i s h , l a n g u a g e s , an d O ct. fo r m e n d e m . c field a r t s . a n d b u s i n e s s . for a g r i c u l t u r a l b i o lo g y , to l l : C H E V R O N C H E M I C A L CO. s a l e - R e s t r i c t i o n on g e n e r a l s c i e n c e , re crui , lib O rt I S: L U N * B R A LUSTRE E T for c o m m e r c i a ! c r e d i t l e p o r t e i s r e c r u i t in g re* N o m e n turn a s to a c a d e m i c h e l d . . . em p h more!) . atically , we do not censor . . . (quiet boy, you'll . . copy ‘for learn C a r t o o n bi EU K n k T h e Da il y T e x a n rex- * Da a student n ew sp ap er at and he iday r n >ds S ep tem b er in c I n-v* r* a I t v o f T e x t s , I* p u b l i s h e d d ally e x c e p t M onday a n d S a t u r - th ro u g h M ay and c ■■ M o n th ly Inc., D i a l e r D, U niversity a ra tio n . Aviatic. T exas 78712. Scc- OOd-clasp p o stag e p aid at A ustin. T ex a s .Student P u b licatio n * . :n A u g u st by T exas N ew s c o n trib u tio n s w ill be accepted by telephone (GR 1-5244) or at m e e d ito ria l office. J.B. 103 o r at the new* J? q u i n e g c o n c e r n i n g d e l i v e r y s h o u l d l a b o r a t o r y I l l ( G R 1 - 5 2 4 4 ) a n d a d v e r t i s i n g . J . B . J H T v b e m a d e I n J . I i . ICE (GR 1-3227.) ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE SERVICE Is e A - <■> a u d f o r r e p u b l i c a t i o n o f a i l n e w s d i s p a t c h e s c r e d i t e d t h # t o e n d t e r n s o f s p e n t a n e o s o r i g i n p u b l i s h e d h e r e i n . R i g h ' s e x c l u s i v e l y n e w s p a p e r f th e r w s e c r e d i t e d e n t i t l e d l . - , s s t i n s n o t t o i n i.y< ! c r ■ a o f p u n - ■ * ' .< n o f a l l o t t e r m a t t e r h e r e i n a l s o r e s e r v e d . SHV MUTINING SERV IC ES NATION I L M U I \ l i o \ Si f epro f- nte d nationally In the field of ad­ t h e Daily vt M u tin g by l*-»an the NEAS. I* D e l i v e r e d b y c a r r i e r w i t h i n D u s t i n a r e a f r o m 1 2 t h t o 3 8 th 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 b v m a i l w i t h i n T r a v i s ( o n n t v D e l i v e r e d b v 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 I S . f i n e Sem ester t f a l l o r s p r i n g ) T w o S e m e s t e r * (1*11 a n d s p r i n g ) 13.50 t € . ~ S 4 <6 3 50 9 OO « :6 T h e o p i n i o n * c o l u m n a r * t h o s e o f t h e e d i t o r . A l l e d i t o r i a l s u n l e s s s i g n e d a r e w r i t t e n by t h e e d i t o r e x p r e s s e d e d i t o r i a l t h e In G u e s t e d i t o r i a l v i e w s a r e n o t n e c e s s a r i l y A d v o p i n i o n s e x p r e s s e d t h e e d i t o r * . ' t h e U n iv ersity o f T e x a s ' r h o D a i l y T e x a n a r c n o t a d m i n s ­ i n n e c e s s a r i l y t r a t i o n or B o a r d o f R eg en ts t h o s e o f P E R M A N E N T STAFF E D IT O R .................................. J O H N E C O N O M ID Y M A N A G I N G E D IT O R ........................... BILL C R Y E R A SST. M A N A G I N G E D IT O R . . . . C A R O L Y N N I C H O L S N E W S E D IT O R S U S A N P O W E L L SP O R T S E D IT O R ............................... J O H N A N D E R S A M U S E M E N T S E D IT O R ............... RENEE F E N D R IC H FEA T U R E E D I T O R .....................S U Z A N N E S H E L T O N STAFF F O R T H IS ISSU E Issue News E d it o r ............... Lynnell Jackson Make-Up Editor .................... Larry Jackson C o p y Editor Anne Pashkoff Issue Sports E d it o r ........................... Richard Hill Issue Amusements E d it o r Renee Fendrich Editorial P a g e Editor ........................ Elliott W est P«g« 2 Thursday, O c to b e r 13, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN U Thant Continues Peace Plan Work UNITED NATIONS, N Y. - W — Secretary-General ti Thant was reported Wednesday to be telling the UN diplomats that his proposals have the best chance of persuading Hanoi to enter peace negotiations on Viet Nam. A UN spokesman said Thant was quietly pressing his three- point plan. including an uncon­ ditional halt to the US bombing of North Viet Nam as a first step. In the continuing General As- Remblv debate, Liu Chich, the Chinese Nationalist delegate, told the United Nations that the free­ independence of South dom of Viet Nam “cannot be bargained away rn the name of peace. “ It Is crystal clear that Peking and Hanoi want no political solu­ tion, and that the only language they understand is the language of force and violence.” Liu said. therefore, will not come to Viet Nam until the Com­ “ Peace, munist aggressors are convinced they cannot win by force and vio­ lence and that aggression does not pay." Mahmoud Riad. foreign minis­ ter for the United Arab Republic, supported Communist demands for an unconditional end to the US bomb attack on the North, withdrawal of all foreign troops, and a key role for the National the political Liberation Front, arm of the Viet Cong, at any negotiations. In addition to the halt In US bombing of the North, Thant’s plan calls for a scaling down of m ilitary action by both sides and recognition of the Viet Cong as a participant in the negotia­ tions. Diplomatic sources say increasing pressure there is in UN circles for the United States to take a first step by again halU ing bomb attacks on the North. FREE on $18.28 Blanket Ta,: T I C K E T D R A W I N G Be­ gins F R I D A Y Oct. 14 at 9 a m . F I N E A R T S B O X O F F I C E in H O G G A U D I T O R I U M O p e n 9 4 M on d a y - F rid a y B L A N K E T T A X holder* D R A W ticket*— whiia they last! Tha Un!ve:*lty of T ex*, College of Fin# Arts Department of Music lr cooperation w th the Cultural entertainm ent Committee a n n o u n c e t h e s e c o n d o f f i x e c o n c e r ts : 1 9 6 6 - 6 1 se a s o n S> ofo ^ Jr/i.s/d A e r i e s J O H N B R O W N I N G American Pianist Thursday Oct. 20 M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M 8:15 P.M. Dalies Frantz M em orial Concert JOH* BK OWNING ha* performed with moat of m ajor U 8 *ym phonies m i r e Georg* B ull **. produced."—lo * Anta e* Time* 'a it toured Hove* Union and Wadena Europe with Cleveland orchestra under . one of the m olt aenaltlv* and poetic artist* AmerK-a ha* . FP. FIR OW BOI/) ARTIST SERIES tee ion tic It et B'S ER to UT ll* 28 Blanket Tax header* by advance ticket drawing FTK® ARTS BOX GFFICB • HOGG AUDITORIUM • OPEN 9-4 STNG I JE ADMISSIONS on *ale MUNICIPAL. AUDITORIUM at 7:30 P M . S’ng'a Adm J7 SO • No advance *a!e« Doon Open 7:30 p m • No Reserved Seat* UT Salaries M ay N o t Change Despite Minimum W a g e Law it tie. V- many student em* ar*- already making at an hour, only a small yp cd students will b t af* if die law c said. fe t the I: sa . \ the cs will campus, be The bange provided for In the increase effec­ I u n t i l 1971, a t r-.me ' ne wage will be $1.60, law is a l.Vcent t s * ochner of G raham and Scotty Brown of Sherm an) plus a pro­ m ising tra n sfe r (K urt P app from Howard County Junior College). All a re 6-6 o r taller and re tu rn ­ ing letterm an G ary O verbeck is 6-7. Little Olympics Largely Chaotic into MEXICO CITY — lf) - The L ittle Olympics opened W ednes­ if things follow their day and, norm al trend, the sw im m ers will leap the canoeists, the fencers will s ta rt running around the cycling velo­ drom e and th e gym nasts will s ta rt leaping over the high-jum p bar. lake with the All Is chaos. T here a re supposed to be som e 500 athletes from 22 foreign coun­ tries here for this dress re h earsal of the 1968 Olympics but m ost of them are in a thoroughly confus­ ed sta te because of organization­ al slipups. “ How these people can put on such a m onum ental undertaking as the Olympics is beyond m e ,” one E uropean sports official com ­ plained. “ I fe a r the w orst.” The yachting com petition has been going on for two days at Acapulco, but there is confusion over results. The M exican navy is supervis­ ing the races. When asked to give the results to the yachting c h a ir­ m an, the navy balked. They h a d n 't been given such in struc­ tions, the navy said. sailing The yatchtsm en, m eanw hile, boats continued around the harbor. They said they w ere not a p a rt of the Lit­ tle Olympic G am es. their Equipped with one of the best off eases In the conference, the I/>nghom basketball team will be­ gin practice Saturday morning. “ We’ve got boys who a re dedi­ cated on offense, but who haven t the sam e level on de­ reached fense.” say s coach Harold B rad­ ley. “ We could be a pretty' good team , but we have to work on defense because of our lack of overall team height.” B radley, who begins his eighth year a t the U niversity this sea­ son, will have a team with m ore experience than last y e a r's team . Seven letterm en are returning, in­ cluding last season’s starters. three of ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF PIPES AND TOBACCO SHOP FO Yrs 112 EAST 6th STREET (Littlefield Building) GOOD MORNING GOOD AFTERNOON GOOD EVENING GOOD FOOD ANYTIME Pig Stand No. 14 ORDER YOUR Class Ring F R O M THE C O -O P • No deposit • Time payments • Cash dividend • Quick delivery Class Rings - Second Floor i mrrrnmi I Savings for You at Y O U R Store! H U R R Y O VER! G R 2-1141 C la y Prepares for Bout In H ouston A stro d o m e MT A MT, FI a — Heavy weight cham pion Cassius G a y started training W ednesday for his next title fight Ho went three rounds ws?h a sparring m ate, som ething h e ’s never done in an opening workout. “ Ile had to," said train er An grin Dundee. “ He only has a month to get I cady.” two days and Clay fights Cleveland W illiams the Astrodome at in Nov. 14 Houston. HAIRCUTS ) S I 50 / ’ S'! I I re c . S t u d y J 50 REG. BARBER SHOP 607 ill 29lh OPEN ’TIL 6 P.M. M O N D A Y T HRU S A T U R D A Y Just Off Guadalupe — 6 Barbers — Plenty of Pre* Parking OF 'IHE RIG BAD S W K ? p=r J r if T*"" Ti y I * • V •* * * 9 * »r G v a •! - V ; * ’ 3* s’v. / ", . . he can t h u r t us. T h e S o o n er s w h i p p e d h i m last w e e k Tapered Long and Lean for Casual Comfort (not much, he c a n ’t hurt ‘em. Just break the heart o f the whole state o f Arkansas!) a r t / a c lt t u r ^ \ CC IBA N EUS * LAUNDRYW 6th and San Jacinto • G R 2-31 bb Step Out in Press-free Casuals of Dacron and Cotton Maximum in looks, minimum in care. All you need to do is enjoy them. Enjoy them in olive, burgundy, loden, tan, or navy. Choose your colors today. Sizes 29*36. $4.99 or 2 for $9.90 PLUS YOUR REGULAR DIVIDEND! GR 8-6636 IN THE CO-OP Distinctive Store for Men Thursday, October 13, 1966 THE DAILY, Candidates Discuss Outsiders, Viet Nam By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Atty. Gen. Waggoner Carr com­ plained Wednesday of “ outside interference” while Sen. John Tower blasted Carr for criticiz­ ing his trips to South Viet Nam. in Fort campaigned Worth and Arlington. Carr made appearances in Temple. Killeen, and Houston in his bid to unseat Tower ak the junior Texas sena­ tor. Tower in “I HAVE NEVER SEEN, my 15 years in politics in this state, the amount of outside inter­ ference . . . the outside pressures, the outside money, and the out­ side names that are being brought into in this state,” Carr said Temple. The attorney general said Re­ publicans outside of Texas arc trying “by every way they can'' to influence the vote of Texans. Tower said in Arlington that C arr said he would support the use of atomic weapons in Viet Nam but would not go there “ to look after the welfare and morale of our sons in battle.” “WHAT SORT OF A MAN would take this attitude?” Tower sa id . ’ W hat sort of a m an would this, the use of vote to send your sons to battle, would support the ultimate weapon, and who would, despite ridicule m em bers of the Senate and House armed services committees of both p ar­ ties in the proper discharge of their duties?” Addressing the Baptist Mission­ ary and Educational Convention of Texas, Carr said the state has made “steady and sure prog­ in creating opportunities ress” for its citizens. through “ We have not done it through acts of violence, nor hate, but through leadership such as you here today have exerted in your churches and in your communities.'' he said. In Fort Worth, Tower told a Jaycee luncheon he would intro­ duce if elected, a “carefully designed anti-riot bill.” the next Congress, in The bill, he said, would impose penalties of up to $10,000 fine and five years in prison to cross state lines to incite a riot or to riot participate “ in a which disrupts normal or defense tra v el in in te r sta te c o m m e r c e .” lawless . ‘ , . — ..............- ' " • ' 111 ^''■BBBBI ORGANIZATIONS Arnold A ir Society The Arnold Air Society has chosen the fall it* pledges for semester. AAS is a professional honorary and service organiza­ tion of the AFROTC. The new pledges are David Abramowitz, Jam es F. Bates. Ronald E. Bergquist, Gerald K. Bishop. Warren S. Bollmeir. Lon­ nie Brauner Jr., and re fe r L. Coirs. Also. Chris V. Cook, Russell C. Cykoski, Michael A Frieband, Edward A. Gildmeister, Jam es T. Gribble, and Stephen H. Holli­ day. More pledges are John F. Kelly Jr., Thomas L. Krafka, Bruce G. Luna, Jr., Joe H. M rFadder Robert J. Mills Jr., and Earl M. Orbin Jr. And Manuel G. Rosales Jr., Robert W. Smith. Gregory L. Sweeney, Robert N. Trapped J r., Richard C Wiser, George F. VVroten III. and Charles B. Y ar­ ling. Education Association The new officers for the Texas Export Rules Favor More Soviet Trade WASHINGTON* — UP - In a move to promote more trade with the Soviet bloc, the government eased export restrictions Wednes­ day on a wide variety of non­ strategic goods from chemicals and machinery’ to cor­ set stays, hog troughs, bee hives, arsenic, and lace. ranging US firm s now can export to the Soviet Union and her E ast­ ern European satellites, except E ast Germany, about 400 new commodities including caps for cap pistols, logging wagons, fire­ and m en's hats, mayonnaise, popcorn. The action was in Johnson's line with announce­ President ment last Friday in a New York City talk of the adm inistration's to reduce export controls plan and promote more East-West trade. Revisions in the export control list don’t apply to the Soviet zone of E ast Germany with which the United States has no diplomatic relations. They also do not apply to Com­ munist China. Exporters of the hundreds of commodities removed from the restricted list now can ship them to Eastern Europe without a spo- li­ cial Commerce Departm ent cense. These goods can be moved under what the departm ent calls a general export license. t h e H I L A R I O U S PASS-OUT GAME ATallahie At t h e B O T T L E S H O P S 1S09 O u a ftalsr*^— ISH R ed RlTer || g » 5 f c n o w i S f e s w v U > . M s ’ e y W H O IS BRUCE L O N G ? S e e P a g e I I Student Education Association are: Mary Rentz, president; Connie Pollard, first v icepresident; Jo Anne Bell, second vice-president; P at Ogle, recording secretary; Sally Matheny, treasu rer; Sue Yow ell, corresponding secretary; and Sharon Rentz, historian. Spooks The Spooks named Ricki Bern­ stein as Outstanding Spook for service organization the Wednesday night. in Twenty-six Spooklets were tarv pod. Florence Donald, Sylvia Gray, Susie Bllllngsly, Lydia Le- quenx, Lucinda Hanks, Susie Gottlieb, Donna Boyd, Liz Law­ rence, and Merle Hoff. Also Gladys Wall, Linda Simp­ son, M argaret P arker, Charlvnn Anderson, Nancy Notlev, Sandy laddie, Dana Yarbourgh, Sarah Richardson, Hardin, Debby Harlowe, Jackie Cole, and Gayle Davis, Sandy Also, Leis Sheridan, Kathy Howell, Sherry Barnes, Ruth Franklin, and Edna Munson. Sphynx The newly elected initiates for Sphynx, honorary architectural fraternity’, a re : Ronaly V . Varbutti, David E. Bradley. David T. Connelly, Rich­ ard E. Fletcher, Rupert C. Koen- niger, Bill W. Longfellow, Jerry M. Sparks, Trenton W. Wann, and Jan D. Cartwright. G am m a Theta Upsilon New officers for G am m a Theta Upsilon, national professional geo­ graphic fraternity, have been chosen. They a re : William R. Strong, president; Richard Palm ieri, vice-president; secretary; W. Mary Kennedy, George WooLsey, trea su rer; and Celia Roberts, historian. The organization’s next m eet­ ing will be Monday in Waggoner Hall 40*. UT Cadets Hear Viet Nam Flyer freshmen Tile Mitchell Aerospace Flight. an Air Force ROTC organization for sophomore cadets, had a Viet Nam veteran fighter pilot as its guest speaker Tuesday. and Maj. John Gaudion, a F-105 pi lot, gave a description of the plane w’hich he flew’. He went or to give details of his active duty' In Viet Nam which Included 115 missions since 1964. The m ajor has received among other aw ards the Distinguished Flying Cross, Presidential Cita­ tion, and the National Service Defense Medal. Major Gaudion Is presently di­ rector of the 602nd Air Support Center at Bergstrom Air Force Base. "What Was Hiroshima Like, 3C0U0,When the Bomb Fell?” The p r a y e r of Father Malcolm Boyd are unlike any you've ever h e a rd. They're modern prayers, for modern ma^ Troubled man. Alienated man. And they speak his innermost thoughts, in his own language. They’ re prayers about sex and the bomb. Civil rights and m ankind s wrongs. Love and hate. And A usch w tz. G uitarist C h a rlie Byrd's atune ng original accompaniment he gluers st ! further the dramatic intens ty of each prayer on this unique I p And the effect is d e v a s t a t e Aa you'll hear in ' What Was H rn sh -na Uke. Jesus When the Bomb Fell’ ' Blacks and Wh tes Make Me Angry, Lord.” " l f Takes A Aigy My GuMt W ren I Blame Your M u rd e r on the Jews. J e s u s , ” "Ti- s Y oung Girl Got Pregnant, Lord. and She Isn’ t M a r r ie d ” and 18 others. equally trenchant, equally compelling. Praye-s like these don t happen often They ought to S O S ta*aw****1 The Sound of Today on C O L U M B IA R E C O R D S ^ J Page 6 Thursday, October 13, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN tT fi f l i - ' - T matt * C o lle g e L ife G a th e rs fo r M e e tin g B o b S lo c o m b , g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t in ph ysic s, ta lk s t o a W e d n e s d a y n i g h t m e e t i n g o r th e g r o u p . C o l l e g e L if e is a b r a n c h o f t h e C a m ­ p u s C r u s a d e f o r C h r i s t , an i n t e r d e n o m i n a t i o n ­ al o r g a n i z a t i o n w h ic h p re s e n t s a n d s tu d ie s th e basis o f C h r i s t i a n i t y a n d p r o v id e s an o p p o r ­ fe llo w s h ip . t u n i t y f o r C h r i s t i a n t o s tu d e n t s Hathaway has a bizarre interview with Woody Allen Ilathaway: Mr. Allen, when did you start wearing Hathaway Club shirts? Allen: Tn college. I found ibex attracted more girls than any other kind. Hathaway: Really? What accounted for that? Allen: I don't know. Maybe it was the way the tapered body showed off my manly chest. Or the way the casual flare of the collar set off my rugged face. Hathaway: Are you serious? Allen: O f course. Once, one of your Club shirts saw me through three remarkably involved affairs. A nd each of the young ladies, in the intimacy of a study hall, confessed that her initial attraction had been my Hathaway shirt. Hathaway: Mr. Allen, I have the distinct feeling that you're putting me on. Did you really wear our shirts in college? Allen: No. But when I look back on my sex life then, I certainly wish I had. Personality important, Too, For Foreign Service Officer “ Candidates the Foreign for Service are judged not only un their intelligence and knowledge, but also on their breadth of per­ sonality as individual?. A Foreign Service officer must be a suitable I n i ted of representative States abroad." the P eter Beneville, a Foreign Ser­ vice officer, described to a small audience Wednesday afternoon in the Junior Ballroom of the Union the c a r e e r of a Foreign Service officer. FOREIGN SERVICE e x a m s are given annually. Dec. 3 tins year, and, in the two weeks prior to the Oct. 29 application d ead ­ line. 38 Foreign Service officers will visit nearly 200 colleges and universities. Beneville’s tour in­ cludes eight universities in Texas Oklahoma, and Arkansas. Hr said he w asn’t recruiting, bur promot­ ing. in “ It is not recruiting the sense of a company of corpora­ tion hiring,” Beneville said, “but acquainting and explaining to in­ the Foreign students terested Service as a career After his introductory remai v Beneville showed a film producer! by the State Department called "In Search of P eace,” a series of conversations and illustrated m a ­ terial which shows how the US eondurts its foreign affa im The film concentrated on the many complex problem a and varied faced by the United States in in­ ternational relations and the way in which the Foreign Sendee deals with them. Su^h problems in range Nigeria to nuclear disarm am ent. the conclusion of tho film Beneville stated the requirements for a person wishing to join the Foreign Service. from chicken raising At " \ CANDIDATE must be lo. tween the ages of 21 and 31, r 2(1 if he has completed his junior in colJoge. He must have ' e a r been a United States citizen af least 7’ ; years by Doc. .3, 19U>.” All Foreign Service candidates must take a written examination. takes all day and The exam touches on “ just about every­ thing." The first part is English Ex pression. “ The ability to express yourself," Beneville pointed out “ is probably the greatest as' ' you ran have in getting in tim Foreign Service A clear, concise 10-cent sentence is much p re­ ferred over 50-cent syntax." include general OTHER PARTS of the written exam b ack ­ ground, social sciences, natural fine ar*?, ?r ienms. humanities, and general ability (graphs, ward problems, rte ), Out of 7 000 candidates, only about one-fifth pass the written exam. These a re eligible to lane oral examinations. the “ During interview, von don’t have to agree completely with Administi ition policies, but you m ust be able to have a (le a r vmw of your own and be able to defend it reasonably and logical­ ly*” When a person has successfully enmpleted both exams, a security' check into his bark ground. A very stringent medical examination follows. s made then summoned sue ( E S S 11 I, candidates ar e to Washington. After a six-weeks’ orientation comes a language training period of usually four months. No know­ language ledge of a foreign is the comped necessary to take tho end of live exams, but at training language fluency." A tim an ap­ pointee can usually speak French, German, Spanish, or Italian with “ professional two- or Jhree-weok c o u r s e on consular duties is the last phase of train­ ing, and then the new ly com m is­ sioned Foreign Service officer is overseas bound. Male candidate? are not exempt the draft and must nego­ their own Selective from tiate w ;th Service board. in representing “ The Foreign Service." Bene­ ville went on, “ is in need of the best people it can get to work on the problems United States abroad. H ie role of Me I S in world affairs has ( hanged dram atically in the last 20 if he has completed his junior new and complex problems. The Foreign Service must be p re p a r­ ed to deal successfully w'irh the-* problems. to Beneville is available In forested students in Room 205 of the West Mall Office Building from IO a rn. until noon Thurs- dav. At 3 p.m. Thursday he will again shew' “ In Search of P e a c e " and answer any question? about the Foreign Service. B e n e v i l l e AF Plane Down HW of Abilene ABILENE A l ugr troop ca rrie r a irc ra ft military from D ress Air Force Base crashed and burned in the rolling ranch country northuf^st of Abc lone Wednesday night, m ilitary sources reported. The Air F orce In Washington said it understood about six p e r ­ sons wore aboard the C130 H e r­ cules transport plane. King County Shot iff K W. Hol­ lar said he understood there was one survivor. Von ra n hear Woody M ien on su b­ jects other than shirts on his latest ( o l pi v a l b u m , W o o d s Mi e n V o l­ ume 2. His shiif, incid en t all y , is o n e of H a th a w a v ’s new C lub O cean Stripes — with alternating blue and green stripes on a solid W eathered Blue O xford c l o t h . A bout SS.OO. Hathaway Hallmarks (Or what we hoped Woody Allen would European Lecture Series, and will be open to all University stu­ Hi! h i * ay it t 4\ vj lien of H i e W it net Blether* Co. I , A tag for your name: Sewn on the shirt tail o f every Hathaway Club. Helps keep your Hathaway shirts out of envious hands. 2 . Traditional button-dow n collar: Hand-turned for a soft roll, fortable fit and casual flare. Result: Every Hathaway Club button-down looks equally well with or without a tie. 3 . Three-hole button: Used exclusively by Hathaway. It is much stronger than the four- hole kind. (Euclid and your Math, professor know why.) 5 . Lap scam s: All seams on a Hathaway Club Shirt are “lapped’’— much like the scams on a traditional jacket. This makes the seam* extraordinarily strong and flat and n eat 6 . The Red "H ": Found on every Hathaway Club where the tails m eet- b u t only when the shirt hi* passed 18 inspections. Where University of Texas Men buy Hathaway Club Shirts Austin: M ERRITT-SCHAEFFR-BROW N • SCARBROUGHS Dallas DR EYFUSS • JAS. K WILSON Houston: NORTON DITTO San Antonio: FRAN K BROS. • PINCUS COM PANY "Ne\ er wear a white shirt before sundown/*’ says H athaway, 4 . Tapered body: Hathaway trimly tapers each and every Hathaway Club. This means that the body Won’t bag, billow or bulge over your waistline. Ten Most Beautiful Confest Continues Cam pus Tradition m r ted bor T ip I (rn Mi Beautiful coeds year ? conte?* t of a 24 voar in this >mc pa a t the gma Phi, onI bv Theta journalism s professional tv, the competition bpgan a colorful part of an musical comedy and cam- ody, “Time Stagger? On ’ irs! few groups of beauties i participated in the .spoof? 'go life that bore such in Of Ct I tules as "Brains and trigu and “ Hippsv Boo," While Fees tile musical production was di? continued during and never the Ten Most Beautiful contest survived. the war revived, Registration for the 19*tf con­ test will be in Journalism Build­ ing 304 from 2 to 5 p m . T h u rs­ day. Any campus organization cr individual m ay sponsor up to four entrants for a fee of $3 per girl coed? had Judith Croom, Theta Sigma Phi presi­ dent, said. RY WEDNESDAY nominated, been local P relim inary judging will be Oct. 18-20. Three judges will consider poise, personality, face and figure, and over all ap­ identi­ pearance of contestants, fied to them by number onl\. 1 Pictures of 25 finalists will be sent to a Hollywood celebrity for ten winners. Per ; selection of sonalities who have picked win ners include Bob Hope. Paul New man, Tyrone Power, P eter Law ford, George M ahans, Tonv Cur I^emmon, P a t Boone, tis, Jack and Z achary Scott. for the and Proceeds from the contest have journalism been used library scholarships for Theta Sigma Plu s donated to the University a $1,000 bond earned from a musical with the stipula­ tion that interest on it be used for the departmental library. the project re ?uitod in three scholarships — a journalism excellence award to an Austin high school girl out I standing in journalism; the Miss Afton Taylor Winn scholarship honoring a University journalism j lab supervisor for 33 y e a rs; and I \ s T YEAR, Expert on USSR To Lead Talk Dr. Edw ard Taborsky. profes­ sor of government, will discuss in “ Current Developments the p.m. Thurs­ USSR’’ 201. day! sponsor­ The ed by the University Slavic Club, I? thp fir?t of the new Fantom discussion, B a t t ? 7:30 Hall at in dents. with Taborskv’s career ha? been con­ the tinually involved the USSR, Czechoslovakia, and European Communist countries. the A to form er Secretary Czechoslovakian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Taborsky escap­ ed to Britain after the Nazi do feat of Czechoslovakia and joined the Czechoslovak government-in- exile as to President Edward Benesh. the personal aide t a w ch Jo die Mrs scholarship, given rn h o n e past national executive se of Dicta Sigma Pl • '*’•? to Dr De\ i? secretary the Reddick, directoi of of Communication. The wom en’s professions was founded in 19h9 at t \ o r s if v o f Wa •.hiri.'* r ’■ versify Pen and T \ ] w Cl the nauona! orgai honed ’hap n in ves of the group include to un.en journalism working conditions, in- individual a c h ie v e I’ u ad honor distinguished i the profession. •e - ( mbership requires • md a rd?, work on a 'I' r arid intent to is • carnet In journalism. Periodic R e c e p t i o n s Increase Facul+y-SIudent Associations Faculty m em bers of pnrtmenf of Geography reception Wednesday for in geograohv Interested sponsored b\ the Far ult ( ’ommiftee. the De held a students If wa? -Student Six to IO such receptions are beld each y ear to enable faculty to “ in­ m em bers and students crease communication? by having more contact with each other, said Jay Reining, faculty student committee chairman. Students do not have to be on rn a T,ond od ■ ph; tho D epartment of Geo- the reception. - d t af often those out­ line participating d r-part- to gain the most rs have •?o people can obtain course g; buate ?(bool information h otherwise might not be ilablo to them. pining said that his commit feels that past facility-Student options have been successful ,-v they have received manv irable comments from parti­ w hi ava R tee cipants. the H I L A R I O U S PASS-OUT GAME *vatUhl» Kl ♦he BOTTLE SHO PS UKK) - 1 3 0 7 K in) R l i w W H O IS BRUCE L O N G ? See Page I I H N l k h i I IC L I P T H I S A D . . . T A K E I T TO BURGER CHEF F O R A FREE I FREE--! I I I I I I I I I I I I i F R E E One Per Customer Two 1 0 0 % pum beef Open Flame Broiled ham burger* teamed with melted cheese, topped th crisp lettuce, creamy may- o n n a s e and c h o p p e d pickle, served on • hot, toasted bun. 3303 N. Umar Austin, Texas Open ll A.M. Close l l P.M. H A M BURGERS Homo of the Worlds Greatest 150 Hamburger! Plaza 8. W hat the underground girls are w earing underneath. INTRODUCING PLAZA 8 COORDINATED L'NGERW BY BERM A-glFT,® nP£S STRIPES Bl ACS ANC Wh'TC TRICOT BRA SA ~0. COORDINATED PETTI SUP; $5.00. Foley's • / ■ * C r a ig s • Houston Oasis Village Thuridiy, Octob#r 13, 1966 T H E D A IL Y T E X A Newsman Asks Media Unity In Combatting 'Censorship' DALLAS — |JP — A broadcast for new sm an W ednesday called rastei-s convention hepp. criti­ frankly, censorship.” he said. cized judges w ho restrict the a c ­ a national alliance of journalism tivities of news galherers and interest groups to com bat authori­ police who withhold information. tie s’ interference with the flow of “We have called these restric­ information to the public. Jam es A. Byron, news director of WBAP-AM-FM-TV, Fort Worth, addressing a closing session of the Texas Association of Rtoad- tions everything but what they really are b ecau se w e wanted to save face, lf w e are honest, we will quit pussyfooting and apply the appropriate is, label, which Stewardesses to Meet Here The U university cam pus will l>e tile site of com m encem ent a c­ for 49 girls graduating tivities the American Airlines from ll for stew ard esses, at school a rn. Thursday. Gov. John Cofinal!y w ill be the the com m encem ent speaker at services in the Alumni Center. Vice-Chancellor Norm an Hacker man will extend greetings on be­ half of the U niversity. C. R. Smith of N ew York. American Airlines chairm an and an alumnus of the University has arranged for the women to have their official graduation ex­ ercises at his alma mater. Smith will personally present each grad­ uate of the Fort Worth steward­ ess school her stewardess wings. While on campus, the steward­ esses will be guests of the Ex- Students' association. After lunch, the group will tour the campus, the capitol and the Governor’s Mansion before returning to Fort Worth at 3:30 p.m. Byron proposed formation of a top-level pressure group to "gath­ er all available data on each abridgment of ihe First Amend­ ment for circulation to all me­ dia. and to generally publicize, editorialize, criticize, and eventu­ this unwelcome ally exercise spirit.” Such a group would Include the presidents of the National Association of Broadcasters, the Radio Television News Directors’ Association, the American Society of Newspaper Editors, the Amer­ ican Newspaper Publishers’ Asso­ ciation, and Sigma Delta Chi. na­ tional journalism fraternity, cam­ paigning for freedom of informa­ tion. "The cop on the beat, the dep­ uty in the record room, the medi­ cal examiner, the prosecuting at­ torney. the judges, and defense attorney* now can tell us what we can or cannot publish,” Byron said. A Little Give In your life can take up the slack in lots of others. Your United Fund gift or pledge is badly needed. W ant to give it today? GO O D ! UNIVERSITY FACULTY AND STAFF C A M P A IG N W H O IS BRUCE L O N G ? Sea Page I I the H ILA R IO U S PASS-OUT GAME Available At the BOTTLE SH O PS IM W ( .n a r ia h ip e — CST! R e d R i v e r CLEVELAND, O hio~W —Judge F ran cis J. T alty said W ednesday he w ill rule at l l a rn . Friday whether retrial of Samuel H. Sheppard on a second-degree murder charge will be moved out of Cleveland or open next courtroom in T alty’s Tuesday here. to P roceedin gs prior the an nouncem ent by the 46-year-old bachelor judge started late, la st­ ed only 14 m inutes, and produc­ er! no argum ent from either side on the d efen se's the m erits of cha nge-of-venue motion. THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS c l a s s m a n a d v e r t i s i n g r a t f s ............... E a c h W o r d n**-worff mint'-num) M ’ n im u m C h a r ;:* ...................................................... 11 * Student ran? 110-word maximum* one time .$ • Each additional time ........................................ c la s s if ie d D is p la v I c o lu m n x o n e In c h one t im e ....................... F-a^-h A d d itio n a l T im e ....................................... 20 C o n s e c u tiv e Isau ea J* w o r d s 15 w o rd s 20 word* ............................................ .......................................... .................................* .............................. 1 OO 4'’ 1.20 .50 .25 I f> 0 ,90 (N o r o p v c h a n * * fo r c o n s e c u tiv e issu e ra te s > GR 1-5244 * N F W , L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S IO w o r d * o r 2 5 c e a c h a d d i t i o n a l l e t * T o r 5 0 c d i e f i r * * t i m e , t i m e . S t u d e n t m u d * h o w A u d i t o r * ' r e c e i p t e n d p a y in a d ­ J o u r n a i i * m in t o 4 : 3 0 p m . M o n d a y B l d g . 1 07 f r o m t h r o u g h v a n c e S o v a rn. A F r i d a y . ROO C L A S S I F I E D A D V E U T I S 1 N I i D E A D L I N E S Tuesday Texan W ednesday Texan Thursday Texan K r id a v T e x a n Sunday Texan .......................... Monday, .0 30 p rn. ........... T u esd a y. .3 30 p m . .................. Wednesday, 3 3< p rn. ................................ T to u rsria v, 3 30 d rn. ............................... Friday, 3:30 p.m. in th'- event of errors made In an advertisement. Im m e d ia t e n o tic e m ust, be given as the publisher* are resoonsible fo r only one incorrect in s e rtio n . GR 1-5244 Furnished Apartments Houses -for Sale Miscellaneous T y p i n g DELUXE 2 BEDROOM I fcUvfca aft aam put atr (w antoned central c a r p e te d , h e a t. r o o m * w i l l a e c o m o A s ta 4 ma** m w o m e n a t S S * aa ch Appert) T a n f h t 8 SB ta * HO 5 *488 aes a n t o n ly . la n a* H B R M A N BR O W N A R KA NKW WILLIAM SBURG OOI Ad MIAL 3X4 bath*, den anoa assumption G U SASH. f 1 en lace *4'8*0 down Bai Furnished Houses SISO D U V A L J bedroom, good cond bon. will for 2-4 students. GU Excellent fam tih * 4 * 1 8 evening* I B L O C K S north Vnlrwrtfty, tie 1 - 2 lh ,va ' O L 2-4516 even*!*** efflrdcncy SAA. Selden'*. »' *04 Alterations VERSAILLES A PA RT M EN T S Vaenney. O'*? and m a n a g e ', 2 ? 3 R 5 . a p a rtm a n # Vied com* '»« 119. fs-j, ALTERATIONS L A P IE R Men. Military. GU 2-1196. : us Woodrow Ate Roommate W a n te d 5-7256 . E E P F E M A L E to aha’ * tw o hcd-o.cn, J bath ape-men- |56 rn m’h - bi! s pa d LT-TN'G-BEDROOM priests bath, pan# ed new thermostat air end he*' water pm yard kep* Near Untve *Uy and dining G R 3-4879 r o m vt in anothe- bo* Share kitchen |60 HgJ a!! G R 6-5631. R E A ! four h ork* cute spa Ursec* • est of University. 869 50 and f59 50 G I Fem ale c adnate student apartmenl En ! - to -.care ( L I I G R 2-5382. Student Starter Plan ase* IS to 4 Introducing the all new student Starter r a n Tou m av he inclusive nim ble for a 1 1 0 0 0 0 life policy for only 130 annually. Rate changes on v at age* 35, 77, A 29 Same ra'e* appl' to mal# or fem* e F o r further information write or call Sem iannual 815.65 Reverv# I . iff Insurance Co 1978 Burnet Road Austin. Texas Phone OU 3-6474 W A N T E D to Tex** AAM Texas football same. Not end gone <'*!l Mn t eke)* S For Sale Y A M A H A P IA N O S : 75 year* of cid world erat mansh.-n. Internationally acclaim ed bv musicians, educator* et fill W e n 34th, O L 2-7562 Ted lAiRauv*. dea F A S T 650 Tnum ph m otorcvr'e, modif-eri 8275 cash G L 4-IORI 250 cc 2965 T an tara good condition. 5915 large rn.:**, dependable 8450 GR 7-9391 T H E S E S , cl {s tria tio n s , mimeograph na. reports, m u lti:.th u g . HI Delafield. Bob!, * 3-7194. T Y P I N G on executive elect:ic by form er ie cal veer#tary. B E A sn secretarial studies Mrs I-'owe!. G U 3-8650, F A M IL IA R chem cal, thesis, and manuscript* O L 2-4897 biological term*. T H E M E S , R E P O R T S , law note* 25c. Notary. Mrs Fra *e r G R f IHT. W OODS T Y P IN G Experienced Divsettat'Ofi*. Manusc: r • Complete dup rn meograph Heating ditto Reasonab e HO 5-IOTv. S E R V I C E f> mull .sr. v e e th, C O M P E T E N T R F ' R E T A R D ' n ’ P I ST w th many -ca-* of experience in all fields. Will give conscientious and met.cuious car# a* to a ( y r soy, correct form and composi­ tion technical paper* report*, these* and ■ a*rrtattoo* UAVV W o r k S P E C ­ IA L ! ST-Bi ef- review no*e* i b m E le c trom alic. MuHilithing Xerox­ es and b.nil ng serx ce* on request. sem inar paper* rn R-pfcg law G R 8-5894 F O U R B L O C K S west of rampu* -dissertations, books. Reasonable theses, term rales G R 8-8113. Excellent reports, and T H E S E S , ti «set tations, briefs, reports, man uscripi*. IB M . M rs. Anthony. G U 4-3079. T W 1 5-788 p «*e o AT CAMPUS cv ad. a it's • . e e ? " e - ■ c , t AA fi G R A D U A T F *rr-a apartm ent r e a r . ■ we hocks campus oonverent (IM et to -owe ’ 8P2 L a va ca G R 8-410' F A C IN G Un verstr» J rooms, f epiace ■ 3 bedroom a < 5 dup ex rn ck spar. meet G R 6-9444 H ' ’G E TW O bed mom, - • g ’-octrr d • ne room, kitchen bath, close to campus, a hit;* paid GT. 3'-.47 G I '-685' B E A T R IZ TI ba-iti-ne w it!XI "KHI* I beff.-’V W £ »-POV *»)#• rf* - » 702 tv#*t D-‘ ti G U * »: I G I " 'UIS Furnished Rooms Uniters e*er • - rn* sr. a * T V BP B s pe d G R 6-9490 trrer w o m c A n KU Pm 'ate, do-a- e« 13 vt B T / ^ ’K F R O M cam pus and bein •» ► pc f o r wom er 2 raggy.* 1 ex G R 8-1079 fa - r ; v c ^ - - K S C A M P I T » b onm f . be," * r 1 ’ es ate rte ba*a Ma- te F r a id e r s area ce and ae : g' 1 ford Lv1 each bor TOR West 2 1 st For Rent R E N '! a T ■ rn up th. G U 2-4057 ta ;>e rec© '-Jet tt2.50.15,50 pe: lf no ar s e e r G R 2-2632 I BED R O O M .* LF D R Kitchen, ia-ge den 8 block* bath. 4tn bedroom or office I lr e em. achoo Worthington, G L 3-6611 I ..tx mon*' ten’, 'Vt I T H m a l e ® H a r K luxury apartment. 850, all bi * paid Cal G I. 4-231? G R 6-J859 aper 5 \ M 4 tract Stern tape recorder w rh access in excellent condition. Reasonable one* M A L E T R AN."TEER one bedroom apartment I ” 50 H I 2-0750 Buvin.es* major preferred Venus 17” portsb • T V New picture tube see at H a rre ll’s TY completely rebuilt • E M A L E . F. 8 -RI 3 e JI month, two be Loom house util lie* * Center 4729 Bi: net Road G I. 3-4274 I am ar* 303 FVI rn ** rn perfect cond finn 8600. C a ll G R b 6308. 8 to 3 F E M A L E roommate needed 3 bedroom*. 2 loom, p * pno! All br « pa d 848 G R room, dining ha*h« V • ’her a se . p f L U D W IG D R U M ? compiet# including Zddjtan cym bals, ca*#* No Beautiful, set reasonable ofter refuve.1 G R 2-7688 ex’enings Help W a n te d F .Topean summer employment. Ai! loo de* in E n s and and 1 on- Stu c r pts ob* Placem ent 1 nent. A p p h c?- or,* now being d'nt T rave! Guadalupe G R 7-4340 taken Pa rt time flex hie hours high hourly come ('an e s ” ' - p •-* b;i:tie* Contact F to 81'Iff week > in­ ''a - f 'r B W inkler. G R 2- P N K E D Q U A L I F I E D 1st grad# for ate schoo who can a *ft r>ia» n ano two mom transporta ' o r Must h a # own Avo need dancing tea char nV* week 1 n WA 6 1898 or G I, 2-007, teacher < R ADI *ATf att tent or prc,fe««or ir e hmen g de B o x 518L A atm, T o * * * SA-it* P i > 'o r s r a to s r 1* student* E X P E R IE N - 'E D pa-* 1 me announcer. Ap p • n person K Y 'E T 213 West 8 th. V- * NTH! • m en A p p ly n person J err. Rio* ae* pr eferably ma-r.eg to 12 a m , 4 l l SI I A S K IN R O B B I N ? 5 to F L A V O R S . S?09 B u rn e t p It ti, C g ! . L E G E . B O - N E E D E D lr# dow ntow n Y I K A A i »adc * at to WO k xx th g'i-ce ‘ on ta et T om artvoo! Achoo! bo’ * aft*' #fi u (J- jpe for n*e>* ex* (.f 6457115 or come bx 700 G u a P L E a s e SO A G G IE S f o r male recreational pour selor* T H ?' D RO W N SC H O O LS ha* two open'n ga t o work pa i l i m# with em otionally disturbed chil- <1 en. Mature de pan (table collops student* a-e needed. 8: Off pe” hour plu* meals wh e on c it:- Ca Mr. Stogie -8028 or P a x 1030 sa'iOoat inc!ud ng *a la a r Stone centra: separa'e split for U T Profe.sor with P E R F E CT H O M E lam iiy. Austin condi t -’cmg and heating L ib ra '* den playroom oavcment level dining room ? bedrooms, 2 baw* Carper* and drape* throughout and oak from C a c a and O H en n ce e s schools 841 SOP F ot appo-ntment wrrtta Own er P O . Box 5191, Aunt n. T m * i Rig >a-d. 7 blocks IT elm H E W G IB S O N KF VLO TT* a «ctptc g irt* ' f e n d e r band ma*x»r am plifier G R a^d 2-1860 T v u .n f MultilxtiUng Biniiing A comp ete professional typing service tail ored 1 0 the need* of U n iversity students. Spe cia kexhoard equipment of language, science and engineering these* and dissertation*. Phone G R 2-3210 * G R 2-7677 3013 Guadalupe T H E M E !* T H E S E S . d-*«P--iations law beefs Nntar"v 18 sear* experience 3 c per page M arjorie Delafield HT 2 7006 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V 'IC E Accur ale. Reasonable, r e a r Allandale. HO 545813 GRADE-POfNT C O N SC IO U S? O R L f n t for T H E S F fl M B ? E R T A T ION R PG R E P O R T ? 1965 A M BA SHA D O R loaded tx* n Poor stick. AM 'f TM Ti FIS E V 5-3182 ooflvertlble R E P O R T S . T H E S E S . Disser'at on*. GR. 2 471V Mr*. Brad y, 2SW7 P'rd le Tath. I % 7 P O N T IA C of your c h o re Any Ex ira * Nobody heat* m r dee 1 G R 6-85® Ask for ' Doc ” A U D R ID O E T Y P IN G S E R V IG E 194 Vt E a s t 30) h Street :?n4 E H NG R A Y conve-nble Red .Um hp. 4 -peed. 29 OOO rn es t 750 G R 5 J736 G R 16% G R 6 9367 B A T M O t t lL E Pa rty Most nn-mia vehl e m Texas GU 5 404: G I, 2-9829 G IB S O N peg* case G R 6-9056 R B !nn ft-strng banjo F*0 ” i:gg* Technical paper* » a p e ca ltr P i e r Niff extra mtxoi* on cu r IB N ' Executives for sc eqce, ecg m eei Drafting, mult rn a them e tic.* and thing bintfng, a-d u n ; ,9 ; r .e>ox'ng. 1966 a l f a R O M E O nim Unbelievable sa” mg* ' ‘ail L - ne Iy>ckwoo>i G R 8-35® or -ce at 604 West 6th T H E S E S , #2*1, man scripts ribbon Carbon Dauia stencils IB M Sansom T*t ng Service 2716 Addison. O L 3-8279. 1966 M U S T A N G <950 rn.ie* warranty, 82.395 G R 8 2802 Steno Tape. I a G E N U IN E LO N D O N T A X I for sa c for just for See Robert Chambers TXI) Guadalupe fraternity, orchestra 0 1 Idee fun G IB S O N G U IT A R J 43 -err, hard she rase 8135 G R 2-314A R .,t S A I L B O A T Tyightrng c I h ** 19 lux g# p i w>fh se*)* Like new cond ! >r 'r ak# board ho*) -n tra d ' G I 3 4! tyick *1 3?5 I ■ ping. M u l?ilifh ,n g B tiding A c o n 'Diete jg o fe x -ions! t.xpiog se rv ic e tall m ed to the ree d s of U n iv e r s ity student* hoe cia I ke ybo ard equipm ent of language science. and engineer -a these- and ti —a r t a lions. Phone G R 2-3210 A G R 3-767* 3113 G u a d alu p e S R F C lA l. sci 1 Pts ID Stir * peg# I 7181 typed manu- Tutoring STbRFO A L S M A M f-i* * '.*ft * • ft VU'*' »r. s,n*r rn ■*. -xt# f'fln hr urr^na^d. S P * NI 14 P T ex re r cert teach*! MA A rg.n a B u tlee. G R 3-517*. F ER I'RA INF? Lost and Found t. me f .. p e n e n c e required A pp : 3rd floor. ce - (ast ion rata . t * So m e ea- FX»U NO race senior n a g : :be. G. Bow er, 1212 Tr»n.t> Experim ental sci- LOST ai OU dance Friday. I T 1967 r.r.i ' K W K ' innldc G L 3 2418? J. EVY a R D C M A IX HI .A i "K >Mg ‘ Aline !» * t August . v c M ad son H o ile t G R 8 U SU GOODFRIENDS IOT Cot g:e*-i stereo po rtable Ho* •#«♦ lumtan.# a 1 r suspension * cease-* ies New H I t ’SKI OI OK 3-3468. IQI! w a't peak p o w e r (solid Ata'e In box A'-o color TV 3 comp e 1# arces *0 - Lonnie G # ' -ade Virginia Calhoun T ypfrg Service Professional work including raultUith rg and bmd.ng on theses and dis­ sertations. ’n ail fields, 1962 C O R Y A IR Mona*, Good condition, 8200 G R 6-5258 1301 Edgewood Symbols Xerox G R 8 2636 Notary A C LA SSFIFD AD S H O R T ON typing tim # ’ IK M pica ti; --erta’ions, The!- s, ribbon hon In rat tables B a r r e t Graham GT, 8-1725 . j i Page 8 Thursday, October 13, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Board Meeting Planned by TSP Building Possibility W ill Be Discussed Tile annual Auditor's report, nominations for replacements for two members of advisory com­ mittees. and the possibilities for a Texas Student Publications, Inc. building will be the main topics discussed at the first TSP board meeting. The meeting B ill be held at 4 Journalism in p.m. Thursday Building 305. Loyd Edmonds Jr., TSP gen­ eral manager, said a report on action by the Board of Regents concerning TSP Handbook chang­ es will be given. ‘‘We understand that the Regents accepted our handbook with a few editorial changes,” he said. Nominations will be made to Dr. Norman Hackerman, vice­ chancellor for academic affairs, for replacements for Dr. Mary Gardner on the Riata Advisory and Dr. William Committee Drummond on the Texas Engin­ eering and Science Advisory Committee. Appointments of thirty-six sal­ aried staff members working on The Daily Texan and three Ran­ ger staff members will be re­ ported at the open meeting. H H ... . v . v . . V -./.-.iv.. ... . i i p l f Handwriting on the W a ll for Arkansas Photo bv V irgil Johnson Residents of Kinsolving Dormitory have joined in the cam- pus dr ive to beat the Razorbacks. (See related pictures and story on Page One.) While a large sign across the front en- trance reads "G e t the Razors Back " girls also have decorated their individual windows, Talty to Rule in Sheppard Murder Case Trial Site to Be Set Tuesday Only two of the throe rows of benches at the back of the small courtroom were occupied. Thir­ teen newsmen sat, in assigned seats in the first row, and some additional newsmen were in the UG” rh; row. No filled second women were in the courtroom. Sheppard sat between two of his lawyers while his chief de­ fense counsel, F. Lee Bailey of Boston, entered as exhibits fivp thick green-covered scrapbooks or 12-year-oifl newspaper clip­ four copies of the pings and Cleveland Press from last Janu­ ary. Tile scrapbooks held accounts of investigation, trial, and con­ viction of Sheppard in the bludg­ eoning death of his first wife, Marilyn, on Julv 4, 1954. S O R O R I T I E S HE R E S Y O U R * A - v &„**• - » V . % -- * * -J]! Z WmL. * r *» ’ *L -'V4' *** 1967 C A C T U S Photographic Schedule Pictures are to be made in the Cactus Studio-Journalism Building Room 5 Studio Hours: 8:30-12:30 1:30-4:30 All Appointments Must Be Made Through The Sorority CACTUS SORORITY SCHEDULE ALPHA CHI O M EG A .................................................... Thursday, Oct. 13 through Tuesday, Oct. 18 A LPHA DELTA Pl ........................................................... Thursday, Oct. 13 through Tuesday, Oct. 18 ALPH A EPSILON PHI ..................................................... Friday, Oct. 14 through Wednesday, Oct. 19 A LPH A G A M M A DELTA ................................................ Friday, Oct. 14 through Tuesday, Oct. 18 A LPH A KAPPA A LPH A .................................................. Monday, Oct. 17 through Tuesday, Oct. 18 A LPH A O M IC R O N Pl .................................................... Monday, Oct. i7 through Wednesday, Oct. 19 A LPH A PHI .................................................................... Tuesday, Oct. 18 through Friday, Oct. 21 A LPH A XI DELTA .......................................................... Tuesday, Oct. 18 through Friday, Oct. 21 CHI O M E G A .................................................................. Wednesday, Oct. 19 through Monday, Oct. 24 DELTA DELTA DELTA ..................................................... Wednesday, Oct. 19 through Monday, Oct. 24 ............................................................. Thursday, Oct. 20 through Wednesday, Oct. 26 DELTA G A M M A DELTA PHI EPSILON ....................................................... Friday, Oct. 21 through Wednesday, Oct. 26 DELTA SIG M A THETA ..................................................... Monday, Oct. 24 through Tuesday, Oct. 25 DELTA ZETA ............................................ G A M M A PHI BETA ............................................ KAPPA A LPH A THETA ........................ .......................... Tuesday, Oct. 25 through Friday, Oct. 28 KAPPA KAPPA G A M M A ................................................ Wednesday, Oct. 26 through Monday, Oct. 31 Pl BETA P H I ..................................... ................................ Thursday, Oct. 27 through Monday, Oct. 31 SIG M A DELTA TAU ....................................................... Thursday, Oct. 27 through Monday, Oct. 31 I ZETA TAU A L P H A .............................................. ............ Friday, Oct. 28 through Tuesday, Nov. Monday, Oct. 24 through Thursday, Oct. 27 Monday, Oct. 24 through Thursday, Oct. 27 Recovery of Lost Proof Con Be M ade af A Phi O Office have I— Campus News in Brief— I w ill bo held 'chowed at 9 p rn. w ill he held at l l a rn. bv a course in Basic Ju lateen Tile instructor for both cia ssi's -a Rabbi Clyde T SUL in­ vited to attend the talk un “ M ar­ keting M anagem ent.” MacNaughton, c r 2-3841 John Odell, G R 8 TGT7, further information. student identification cards may very likely find them in the Alpha Persons who have lost their Tim H illei Foundation Is locate interested persons are od at 2105 San Antonio S t and All * * Home Economics College Chap­ ters Workshop w ill be announced. ii A Him about careers cal therapy will be sh dents are invited. W eiss to Speak Phi Omega office in Union Build­ ing 207. In addition, right Auditor's re­ ceipts; IO photostatic transcriots ; a Douglas MacArthur High School diploma card, belonging to Miss Cindy Hoose, and two check books, belonging to Mr. ani Mrs. Roy L. Sachtlebon and John T. Dorton, may be picked up in the APO office Botanist Talks Today l>r. Kenneth M. Smith, visiting professor of botany, will speak on “Replication of Plant and laser! Virniws” Thursday at 4 p.m. in Biological Laboratories Building 801. Coffee at 3:30 p.m. In room 211 will precede the seminar. A rab Students to M e e t Dr. Mahmoud Zayid, a visiting professor in the Department of History, w ill speak at a meeting of the Organization of Arab Stu­ dents at 3 p.m. Sunday in Union Building 202. Dr. Zayid. who hat taught at Y ale University and the Ameri­ can University of Beirut. leban­ on, w ill discuss “ The Role of Stu­ dents in the Political Life of the Arab W orld.” Ed C ouncil Meets at 4 The Student-Faeulty Council of the College of Education xxiii meet at 4 p m. Thursday in the in Pittenger Conference Room Sutton H all. M arketing Talk Today Charles W?. Goodyear, assistant secretary of Hie Humble Oil A Refining Company, w ill address members of the American Mar­ keting Association and the Society for the Advancement of Manage­ ment at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Business Economics Building 135. ♦ ★ if ★ U n ion G ro u p to Form H o m e Ec G ro u p M eets The Excellence in Curriculum and Teaching C om m ittee of the Texas Union will meet at 7:30 p rn. Thursday in U n io n B u ild in g 317. The Home Economics Chapter w ill meet at 5 p.m. Thursday in the Home Econom ics Reading Room. The new by-laws and standing Ail students may attend the organizational m e e t i n g . Anne rules will be presented for adop­ tion, and plans for Hie Texas Therapists W ill M e e t Tile University Pre-Physical Therapy Club will have its first fall meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday rn Union Building 315. 'H o rn s Fans Flock to Stadium Regardless of Team 's R e co rd By JOHN BR Y A N T Tile University may have bs wurst football season in IO years but Longhorn fans don’t show it. Austin motels and hotels report they are booked for all remain­ ing home games. A few rooms are available for the Texas A&M game but that Is because of the short distance to College Station. It would seem that a winning or losing team would be a direct influence on business. Mrs, I/da Lander, reservations manager for Holiday Inn on North Interregion­ al. said, “ I don’t think Texans care one way or another. Tile fans are saddened if they lose but thev never fail to show up.” M ISS NANCY ST EW A R T , reservation clerk for the Down­ towner Motor Inn, said the Ar­ kansas game would be the big­ gest the football weekend of year. “ If Texas lost every game, fans would still come to the Ar­ kansas game. It is a game in It­ self apart from the rest.” She said a few cancelled for the Indiana game but the vacancies were filled right away. Hotels downtown are booked to capacity five months in advance. Tile Downtowner receives appli­ cations in November for the fol­ lowing fall but they are not pro­ cessed until Jan . I, she said. E R N E S T W A R D EN , assistant manager of the Stephen F. Aus­ tin Hotel, said that a Winning team makes “ little difference” in business. He said people w ill come out “ no m atter what” fur football weekends and he could see little percentage difference. Mrs. Lucille Dickinson, assis­ tant manager at the D riskill Hotel, said she had a lot of re- peaters every year. “ People just like to see Texas play,” six said. She also said she had no cancella­ tions even though tilt' Arkansas game w ill be televised. At tile Holiday Inn there have been only three of four cancella­ tions and they Were the result of business or illness, Mrs. Lander said. M R. RO LAND GORDON, mana­ Inn Motor ger of the Chariot Interregional, Hotel on North said, “ Anytim e you're nationally ranked in the top five you’re go­ ing to attract people.” Two examples of a direct In­ fluence a winning team has are television crews and the press. Mrs. Lander said that ABC tele­ vision reserved SO rooms for tile Texas-USC game. Television net­ works like to make money and sponsors like winning teams. Regarding press coverage, B ill P la tt of the V illa Capri Motor Hotel said that after the USC loss, quite a few w riters cancelled for the Indiana game. Platt said they were assigned to cover the Arkan- sas-TCU game in Fort Worth. /As for the cancellations, he said Le was able to fill vacancies easily because of the V illa Capri's short distance from Mem orial Stadium. in­ “ There are many other fluencing circumstances than Just a winning or losing season,” said Jack Cox, owner and Mrs. manager of the Forty Acres Club. She said that weather is a factor. ‘More people w ill come out on a bright, sunny day,” she said. ALSO, C ER T A IN G A M ES w ill draw more people. Mrs. Cox not­ ed that there is more spirit over the Arkansas game and more people w ill come out. She said Arkansas would be the biggest game of the season here because conference games attract more interest. After Arkansas’ loss to Baylor, she said, more people would ( ame out because the two teams are more evenly match­ ed. Most of the club’s business is done in the liar and restaurant. “ Here is where a winning team does make a difference. A win­ ning team gathers momentum and attracts people,” M rs. Cox said. Tile club had much more business after the Indiana game because Texas had w'on the pre­ vious game against Texas Tech, and also because it was a night game, she said. Mrs. Cox said. “ A winning team w ill draw more people — how many more I can't say.” W H O IS BRUCE L O N G ? See Page I I the HILARIOUS PASS-OUT GAME Avallahita At the BOTTLE SHOPS 1809 O a d t l n * — I S R R e d K u r e r- M o tio n s rn I rnrn? i rn RUGGED R O M A N T IC Your favorite classic moc, fashioned v.ith distinction thanks to handsewn vamp details Frid a y .lessor of d iversity, Friday at it of Philo- dun te slu­ mbers He I religion. ne in the cor. A convert a Mon ii Yid Ii® ■ 1 Geophysics Speech Set w ill be conducta each Th un-day at 8 p m. Orthodox service's a; 7 p m and alterne tin - Fib-: a1 rn I a1 scrviros at 8 p m. will on Fridays. btl b b l On Saturday morning® Ortho- dox services w ill be bel I at 9 a.m. and Liberal Turah s.end res 121. f »r Pasqual Jordan of the Uni­ verse y of Hamburg will discuss “ Geophysical Consequences of D irac's Hvpotb-sis” at a rollo- quiiim Thursday at 4 p.m. I .- coli c t .u.-n w ill begin at 3 30 prt with tile serving of in the Physics Building coffee STELFOX & CO, Cote Skin-Diver CALENDAR WATCH • W I T H R O T A T I N G B E Z E L A N D T U R N I N D I C A T O R M a jo r G erry W ill Speak Pi Lambda Theta, honorary b r In education, w ill mel t women at 8 p.m. Thursday in Urn n Building 202. Ma J Robert Gerry, a computer lab technician, w ill speak on com­ puter assisted instruction. The talk Is open to past and present member's of P i Lambda Theta. ★ D e m o crats Set M e e tin g Roy Evans, secretary-treasurer of the Texas AFL-CIO, w ill speak against amendment 7 to the Tex­ as Constitution at a Young Demo­ crats meeting at 7:30 p m. Thurs­ day in the Union Auditorium. Amendment 7. concerning voter registration in Texas, w ill appear on the November ballot. A business meeting w ill follow the speech. A benefit dance, mon­ ey raising for the Rio Grande sophy of athletics, wm University he w ill meet Longhorn football squa and during the UT-Arkan Saturday. Weiss has b e n with Ile faculty since U h m erly with Radcliffe Co Bryn M aw r and has rt Guggenheim Fellowship * H illel to Hold Services The H illel Foundation’s Univer­ sity of Judaism will hold the classes each week during Hie fall semester. Tuesdays at 7 p m . Liturgy Anti-magnetic, shock-re­ sistant, waterproof up lo 200', 17 jewels. FOR MEN OF ACTION! • SPORTSM AN! • FISHERM AN! • SKIN D IV ER ! O N L Y ... I L L U a Y R A T I O N t N L » » 8 f O " C H A R G E IT STELFOX &C0. n v e te f f r / / SINCE 101O J?SZel*4 • 809 CONGRESS, Downtown, GR fl-MSt • CAPITOL PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER Ho. Bot it will be bigger. On sale O ct 17. M f . '-' ,♦**.. ' < i ££fs top smart cabrettas ai! have unique handles — soft, soft, skins luxuriously shirred from, at the bottom, tortoise type snap handles, 27.00. Center, gold chain laced thru with leather, 16.00. Or, top, shiny black chain, 18.00. In black or several tones H A , of brown rn w s A s seen In M adem oiselle C H O O S E FROM Cordovan Antiqua Brow* Navy Bras! Scotch Gra n Navy Scotch Grain Tan Scotch Grain $12.91 naturally, {M u m m S H O E J STORE 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag Specializing in Collegiate Fashioru ^ Chic jackets of the finest butter soft skins. There are several styles to choose from, some with leather trim. In black olive, light and dark chocolate, pale avocado, sand and oatmeal. W ith luxurious deep pud lip-in lining, 55.00, with this lining, 46.00 T h u rs d a y , O c t o b e r I S , 1966 T H E D A IL Y I Experimental Movie Factory Attracts Large Crowds to Student, Warhol Films From Beer Mugs to Harpsichords Union Offers Creativity By SHERRY WATSON Texan Feature Writer the proverbial If fraternity daddy should ever do more than slink through the walk way of the Student Union’s main floor, he might discover a waiting world of pledge paddles and beer mugs-in-the-making In Union Building 333, known as Arts and Crafts Center. Designed for both novice and expert, the Arts and Crafts Cen­ ter the is another service of Texas Union, and is supported by a portion of the $5.00 Texas fee which each student Union pays at registration. TRAINED EM PLOYEES are always available to students in need of advice on their projects and instructors will teach class­ es this semester in jewelry, pho­ tography, ceramics, and knitting. All classes are scheduled be­ and 9 p.m., w ith» tween 7 instruction in photography Tues­ day, cermaics Wednesday, and jewelry and knitting Thursday. Instructions are open to all stu­ dents, staff, faculty, and mem­ bers of their families, with the only charge being the price of materials. All types of arts and crafts are familiar to this generous area in Donner to Attend Dallas NAB Meet Dr. Stanley T. Donner, chair­ man of the University Depart­ ment of Radio - Television - Film, will be a program participant during a regional meeting Thurs­ day and Friday of the National Association of Broadcasters in Dallas. CHOTE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE I9th & San A n to n io Street* W e give S 4 H G re en Stam p * M e c h a n ic on Duty Oellimd DRIVE-IN THEATRE 3981 list lr* What Did You Do In The War, Daddy? Jam a# Coburn A nick Shaw* S tart! 7:00 The Amorous General Fete* Belier# A Dan* Roble Start! 8:54 Qofitfi+. ° G J U M in DRIVE - IN THI AIRE 3900 Sc. Cwt Batman Adam Wort A Burt Ward S ta r ts 7:08 Agent 8 3/4 Bogarde A Sytra Roseto# Starts 8:00 fectively in its nature and action shots. Perhaps the two most well re­ ceived movies of the evening were those of Will (ley Strieber and Gregg Barrios. Strieber’s “That Good Night” was beauti­ fully photographed in black and white on an extremely low bud­ get, even for a student film. The cam era was steady, peering oc­ casionally at a somehow signifi­ cant detail and going out of focus during a scene in the rain. HLS EMPHASIS on the human element was a welcome relief after Warhol and Kellough’s movies. Prhaps th ra in in g usage movies. Perhaps the recurring usage of an angel of death, a picture of Dylan Thomas, and a nuclear explosion were a bit ob­ vious and contrived, but the movie emerged as a fine first ef­ fort. Greg Barrios’ “The Way They Are” was a sensitive portrayal of male youth its varied phases. Candor, energy, physical prowess, love, are depicted with skill. in THE COLOR FILM Is clear, the cam era steady. Perhaps the best feature of the movie is the sound track, which was most ap­ propriate and well coordinated with the action. The best aspect of this film factory probably is that it en­ genders a creative atmosphere and opportunities for more film- making among University stu­ - S . S . , R .F . dents. 'The Pipe House of Austin’ Will D. Miller & Son M a g a z in e! anil dally a r wa papyri ii l f t i tr a d e cig a r*, to b accos, pipes A accesso ries 1S3 W ert 6tb S treet Austin. T e s a s The Ironing Board we will do your Ironing 209B Wert North Loop HO S-7309 Oo Out Guadalupe or Lam ar to North Loop. Turn Right MARDI GRAS 6208 N . Lam ar G L 3-9530 D A N C E t o th # CHAPPARLES Rhythm A Blues Rock A Roll N o Cover C t arg* e v e r y Saturday K E N M IL L E R Q U IN T E T D ixieland J a i l B U R N E T MOO Burnet Rd. • HO 5-6838 THE SCREEN ASKS THE . MOST TICKIISH QUESTION OF WORLD W ARD • IU * I B M "What did you do in the ym D a d d j f COLOR P MIMI S ta rrin g JA M B S o o h n e t ----------------- m s •‘DR. STRANGELOVE* P e te r AeDert • I U Adolta 1.00 • Dtaoomt Oarda J * O m a 8 P JA , • CtiBdrea n e * STARTS TODAY!! A FANTASTIC AND SPECTACULAR VOYAGE ...THROUGH THE LIVING BODY ...INTO THE BRAIN. the Union. Ceramics, including pre-molded pieces such as vases, beer steins, and ash trays are an extremely popular division of the center. For the more original sculptor, clay is available at a nominal fee, and can be molded on a potter’s wheel and fired in a kiln for finishing touches. lumber. Special A COMPLETELY EQUIPPED woodworking shop boasts both power and hand tooLs, and offers a complete stock of commonly- used types of lumber such as teak and ebony can be especially ordered. Ma­ terials may be brought in by stu­ dents and finished with supplies provided in the shop. A student photographer can find assistance in use of a dark room lab which includes two enlargers, film developing tanks, washers, and dryers. He must supply only his chemicals and paper. A Line- is also o-Scribe printing press N E L S O N 'S Navajo and Zuni Handm ade Indian Jewelry M exican Imports Ley B. Nelson, Prop. M E X I C O A U T O IN S U R A N C E A IR L IN E TICKETS H O T EL R E SER V A T IO N S SANBORN'S 328 Perry Brook* Bldg. available campus for making publicity poster's, personal Christ­ mas cards, and other printed mat­ ter, but must be reserved in ad­ vance. The center’s is an advertisement round, mosaic- covered table, upon which set coffee cups, newspapers, and pop in bottles, itself of the different uses of mo­ saic tile, which is available in a vast array of colors at a mini­ mum price. Plaques and covered bottles are also exhibited to show the mosaic’s versatility. PICTURE FRAMING, with a variety of molds available to the home decorator who brings his picture to be fitted, and leather working, with access to tools for the man who brings his own leather goods, are both extremely creative crafts supported by the Arts and Crafts Center. A welder can even find an oxyl-aceteylene torch available for metal sculpture and function­ UNIVERSITY TRANSIT CO. Invite* Jon to Inquire about our houri) Bu* bervie* to and from campo*. F u ll aemerter p ass—825.08 For InformatWw and reservation# Contact Student Travel Inc. 8715 G uadalupe GR -1340 Or n*k for Inform a floe et your llv Ins unit. 4612 So. Conc. HI 4 3814 D ally—7a .m .—* p m. al welding. During the history of activity In the Arts and Crafts Center, some of the more original pro­ jects completed have been harpsi­ chords, other musical instru­ ments. all types of beds, such as canopies and cribs, all types of living room furniture, enclosures for speakers, sets of candlesticks for churches, architecture pro­ jects. and sailboats. inquire, “Are THE INQUISITIVE s t u d e n t might there no rules governing this den of con­ struction?” In answer to his ques­ tion, one might glance at a wood­ en tablet displayed in the cen­ ter’s attic, high above the multi­ tudes who act according to the usual rules of campus behavior: “Thou shalt not store thy project more than 30 days without con­ sent (or shall suffer the wrath of the Hierarchy). Be ye fore­ warned: objects without name and date will be Junked.” CAR STEREO Authorized Lear Jet Dealer Mu*ic From Major Label* Cu*tom Tape* (448 track) 'T ) AUSTATl A * ~ DISTRIBUTING COMPANY U t) RIO GRANDI GR 6-2257 San Antonio Symphony Orchestra Victor Alessandro Musical Director J o a n Sutherland Soprano Hi elm rd H o l t v i l l e Guest Conductor Saturday, Oct. 15 8:30 p.m. Municipal Auditorium San Antonio Tickets Available at the Door AC 512 - CA 6-2269 TODAY TIL 2 P.M. Another sell out house — this time for two performances — marked the second film factory of the Gulf Coast Film Makers* Co-Op Wednesday night. Since underground movies seem to have lost their shook value. Austin audiences have developed a more critical and less all-em­ bracing approach. Warhol’s “Camp.” for example, was re­ ceived with less enthusiasm than were the more sincere efforts of the three University film makers. As the program notes so aptly the movie “ utilizes bad state, camera work, bad zooming, bad panning, and bad acting exten­ sively . . STARRING Paul Swan, Baby Jan e Holder, Mario Monte* (as Inez), Mar Mar, J B E A S T « Sd A 8:35 C A ST I JE : 8:15 Adult! MDC Child ...... L25 ...................... 71 .................. JBO STATE THOSE MEH FROM V.N.C.L.E. ARE BACK!! I «..* 11 KKSl IS-. I VS: 10-4:01 5 OO 7 :55-9 :S0 m m * akin bawd m ow sour «*TU*A VAUGHN MCCALLUM "T O R N wwm PROVINE F R E E P A R K IN G ADI LTS I 74 S T L D K >T S 1.31 VARSITY PASS UNT SI UPENDED * P R U S U ROMiSROW K.NGAGFMfCVT --- - « J#.-- - ...... ~ ••• ■*' X : i : ' M r/ % t * % %i> 4 \ AFTER 6 K M . O N LOTS 7»h & L A V A C A STS TOD A l P M A A ON LY P M A ROADSHOW E K O A G K M EN T P m lis t Suepended OMR E E A T I R E TO D A Y AT 7 30 PM. WINNER OF R ACADEMY AWARDS I / 4th Great Week! DAVID LEA N S FILM Of BORIS H m w s D O C T O R Z IH V A O O „ IN PANAVISiON'AND METROCOLOfl IR P E R I D R M t M i s H K K iU .l — Si S T IX K i-S ( 0 3 ) , R A T , Btu) Through I 'ru in g T e rfo rn ia n re * a t 7 :3 0 • S r i Iii a ry Ai M N . A l A I*.AL A H at a t 8 P M. Ko Beata R eferred • AII ruretiaaere Guaranteed rn B eet Box OY t v * Open* At Noon E a r Reservations til. 35541 ll un (* wk Of. m o KREK P SK K IVO “A delight! W itty , satiric, with a m arvelous a sso rtm e n t of a c to r s !" -C ut Magt im \ ^ “D evil- m ay-care dogfights in th e sk ies S dt-vil- m ay-rare love affairs on the ground -Mm. let rkmm e x c i t i n g with fighting j . biplanes! * Oft‘T v A b sorb in gr* / r y I At I " im X i - H H K ' B U IIE & *m i v i a x I M M D , err ic e wa bch© noon im difihk; chjbshai fjntiM .sM i j: n u i A K - low anilau ^ * - U M M i B * _ M AFTER 6 P M. O N LOTS A D JA C E N T TO TH EA TRE I pmtte,S M TUE BLUE MUX* F R E E P A R K IN G IO Thursday, October 13, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN J O H N M IL L S R A LP H R IC H A R D S O N M IC H A E L C A IN E COLOR P E T E R C O Q K - D U O L E Y M O O R E * N A N E T T E N E W M A N TONY HANCOCK ^PETER SE L L E R S m a * {mutton* Open 1:45 Feature# 8-4-5-8-10 **Wrn* B o t" Filter the lo bu' ( ontert Noising Presence Not Nedevsarj. i Ce On Auitlsa In tim ate Theatre lh) one G R 7 ISM Stephen Boyd. Raouef Welch. Edmond O'Brien. Donald Pleasence. Arthur O'Connell. William Redfield 50c 'TIL 2 P.M. G L 2-7646 I SCHEDULE OF SHOWTIMES P R O G R A M STARTS AT 2 P.M. --------------- FEATURE AT -------------- 2 :35— 4:56— 7:20— 9:45 KLRN to Show Church Movie ‘Time for Burning' Depicts Racial Unrest Tho strug Jo church over “ t! our lim o " — i the subject of tional Telovi N .E.T . Jo u r;i-11 Burning,' wine! \vi I l r ■ >wn on ' J K L R N , Chan I Tho docuinr‘ie. . y w filmed as it evolved — in th 1 ek Cultural Exchange pro­ gram tour of the Soviet Union and Western Europe. Browning's concert, the second in the Solo Artist Series, will be a memorial dedicated to the late Dalies Frantz, Department of Music faeulty-artist with whom frequently coached. the pianist Season tickets for the Solo A r­ tist Series may still be purchased for $8 for adults, $6 for faculty and staff and $4 for students at the Fine Arts Box O ffice in Hogg Auditorium. Single admis­ sion tickets at $2.50 each w ill be sold the evening of the perform­ ance when doors open at 7:30 p.m. There w ill be no reserved seats. UNIVERSITY TRANSIT CO. Hourly Bus Service To and From Campus Ort Your Semester Now Contact: S T C D E N T T R A V E L INC. 3TW (iiiadalupa <>R 7-4340 the H IL A R IO U S PASS-OUT GAME Available At ♦he BOTTLE S H O P S IIM Gusdafpp*—1*H KM River WMMt^ . , <*gg« New Location G O O D Y E A R S H O E S H O P 27I2 Guadalupe Ample Parking for Customers! Drive-through W indow Service The General Store 5120 Burnet Rd. S I 3-4834 Large Selection of Unusual G ift Items Representing 400 Manufacturers pillows • mugs • handbags ties • socks • furniture lamps • lamp shades accessories • willow chestnut wood Imports from all over the world Open Thursday 'til 9:00 p.m. LOWER PRICES H e Has Degrees In Engineering and Law H e Shoots G o lf In The 90's H e Reads 2000 W o rd s Per Minute! WHO IS BRUCE LONG? ________ Bruce is a recent graduate of the University of Texas Law School and learned to read and study rapidly at the local Evelyn W o od Reading Dynamics Institute. You might say that anyone can skim through books at 2000 words per minute, but Mr. Long reads and studies every word. Even in his law and engineering texts, Bruce rarely falls below I000 words a minute. His comprehension and recall are excellent. The statistics and details are not overlooked. Consequently, Bruce now not only reads and studies more, but has much more time for pleasure and relaxation. As a matter of fact he's Just one of many hundreds of U n i v e r s i t y of Texas stu­ dents who now perform similar reading and study "feats ' after completing the Reading Dynamics course. WHO HAS TAKEN THIS COURSE?______________________ O ver 200,000 people have benefited greatly. Graduates include members of President Kennedy's staff, senate and congressional leaders, businessmen, educators, staffs of many of Americans major corporations, and thou­ sands of college students . . . People who like to read . . . must read and study . , . but lack the necessary time. Evelyn W ood Reading Dynamics is a practical, easy to learn solution to your reading and study problem, also. HOW CAN READING DYNAMICS HELP YOU?__________ Reading Dynamics is much more than a speedreading course. It is an overall reading and study improvement program. The average UT student can expect to: I. Increase reading speed over 6 times 2. Improve reading comprehension 12% 3. Learn how to concentrate and improve memory 4. Learn to study much faster and more effectively ACHIEVEMENT WARRANTY Reading Dynamics guarantees to increase the reading efficiency of each student AT LEAST 3 times with good comprehension. W e will refund the entire tuition to any student who, after completing minimum class and study requirements, does not at least triple his reading efficiency as measured by beginning and ending tesrs. ATTEND FREE DEMONSTRATION AND LECTURE You will see a documented film that includes actual interviews with Washington Congressmen who have taken the course. You will learn how we can help you to read fasten with improved comprehension and greater recall. TODAY and FRIDAY 4:00 P.M. and 7:30 P.M. C A M B R ID G E T O W ER - 19th at Lavaca mnreadingwb iii dynamism 2 Blocks from the UT Campus For Further Information Call: GR 6-6755 Cambridge Tower 19th at Lavaca “ J o in Over 700 U.T. Students and Professors Now99 Thursday, October 13, 1966 THE DAILY White Levi’s Go Scrubbed Denim! They're new—and they’re a natural—White LEVI’S in Scrubbed Denim. That’s why the hip crowd is wearing soft, supple, lived-indooking, all­ cotton Scrubbed Denim White LEV FSI How about you? Get a couple of I pairs in your favorite colors -only $4.98. You can tell’em by the Tab. 4 tnt TAS tnt ll,* weld "uvr*" tit IU M itt liittn.titt. Outstanding Cadets Eligible For Army RO TC Scholarships One thousand ROTO scholar­ ships will be awarded by tho Army to outstanding high school graduates and to college students who have excelled in their first two years of ROTT work. Con­ gressm an J. J. Pickle announced. Scholarship applications for the 1967-68 school year m ust be filed between Pee. I and Jan. lo. Authorized by the ROTO Vitali­ zation Act of 1964, the scholar­ ships provide assistance to stu­ in obtaining a dents commission regular interested officer's the Army ROTC pro­ through gram . Each month the student will receive a $90 subsistence al­ lowance in addition to his com­ plete tuition, lab fees, and book expenditures. At a six-week sum ­ m er cam p session, the student will be paid $151.95 per month. Col. John D. Townsend, profes­ sor of m ilitary science, said 16 students are receiving benefits of four-vear scholarships, and three students are in the two-year pro­ gram . Hie four-year awards, Colonel Interim Order Halts Rock Island Strikers KANSAS CITY. Kan.—^ - T r a f ­ fic began returning to normal on the Rock Island Lines Wednes­ day after switchmen striking were ordered back to work. end­ ing a 12-hour disniption of opera­ tions. Members of the Switchmen's Union of North America, num ­ bering about 1.200 on the carrier, walked out Tuesday night, pro­ testing work assignm ents at E l­ don, Iowa. Only hours later in Chicago, Judge Joseph S. P erry of US Dis­ trict Court issued a tem porary restraining order against tile un­ ion for a IO day period. At midmorning L. C. Chisholm, the union’s Rock Island general chairm an, the return-to- work order. issued Pickets were hurriedly with­ drawn and mem bers of the other to unions of line returned the X E R O X C O P IE S 8 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT 7 DAYS A WEEK ALDRIDGE TYPING SERVICE GB 7-1696 IS. seth SM** work. There are about 11,000 of them. John Buffalo, general m anager of the Kansas City, Kan., yards, operating headquarters for the entire system , said all ojierations should be back to normal by Thursday. Tile strike crippled operations of the line, which serves an area from Chicago to Tucum cari,. N.M., and from Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn., to Memphis, Tenn., and Houston, Texas. in Yards the m ajor division points began piling up with freight cars. Iii some areas ex­ ecutive crews took over traffic moving cattle and perishables. All suburban passenger service on a 40-mile line from Joliet, 111., to Chicago was halted, forcing about 14,000 com m uters to find other means of getting to work Wednesday morning. ........' ......... _..... I l ' i l v’$ $ “■ **• *-’# -*TNT w the H IL A R IO U S PASS-OUT GAME A v a ila b le Al the BOTTLE SH O P S OKO O iutdalupe— 1107 R d K it e r W H O IS B R U C E L O N G ? See Page I I Townsend explained, are given to graduating high school seniors. They m ay choose any of 247 col­ leges and universities offering four-year ROTC program s. the Recipients of two-year scholarships, however, are select­ ed by the college or university they are attending after they have attained an MS-2 classifica­ tion. a Each applicant must be a male citizen of the United States and physical pass prescribed the examination. Applicants of four-year aw ards must not be 21 years old before next June 30, and they must be 17-years-old by Oct. I, 1967. T ie two-year award appli­ cants m ast be younger than 23- years-old on next June 30, and m ust be a cadet in good standing in the second year of his ROTO training. Information on the four-year scholarship program m ay be ob­ tained by writing to the Com­ manding General, Fourth United States Army, ATTN: AKAAG-R, F ort Sam Houston, Tex., Con­ gressm an Pickle said. Exes Hire Buses For Game Trips The University Ex-Students As­ sociation wall charter buses from to the Baylor and TOU Austin gam es, Roy Va ugh, field repres­ entative of the Ex-Students As­ sociation, said. Seats are only available for Texas Exes, but if tile demand is great enough, buses for stu­ dents might be chartered, he said. Cost of the round trip to Waco for the Baylor gam e Nov. 5 is $7. Til is price includes a buffet lunch to be served by the Waco Texas Exes. A sack lunch will he necessary for passengers traveling to Fort. Worth for the TCC gam e Nov. 12. The round trip will cost $9. The decision on chartering stu­ reached dent bases should be within a few days, Vaugh said Wednesday night. -ARROW* CUM LAUDE KING COTON J u s t o n e o f th e 4 4 9 d iffe r e n t Arrow button-down sport shirts designed for the Bold New Breed. T his handsome one is fashioned of 100% c o t to n ...“Sanforized” labeled, of course. W ith shoulder to waist taper and back pleat. But this is only one no . , . come see the r e st Test Dates Set Campus Hosts Legal Institute On Federal Jobs Adrian A. Spears, San Antonio. Presiding over various institute sessions will lie Wesley Dice and E rnest W. Belcher, Court of Criminal Appeals, San Antonio; and Judge John F. Onion Jr., 175th District Court. San Antonio. The institute is described as a complete course in cl iminal pro­ cedure. H IS . Corduroy Coats are a Campus Favorite. C o m e s in: clay, whiskey, bronze, loden, and burgundy a t Jack M o rto n s Ltd. 2 3 4 6 G u a da lu pe O n - th e - d r a p OK SCHOO I- ) ( j £ c l o t h e WILL MAKE An Institute on Texas and Fed­ eral Criminal Procedure will be held at the University Thursday through Saturday in Townies Hall. Five sessions are planned from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 :30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and Friday, and from 9 a.m. to noon Satur­ day. Tile sessions will cover such subjects as arrest, detention, and investigation; commencement and trial, and pre-trial proceedings; post-conviction remedies. INSTITUTE CHAIRMAN Frank Maloney, a m em ber of Maloney and Black, an Austin law firm, and a visiting faculty m em ber in the Law' School, will open the first session. Dean Page Keeton of the Law School, chairm an of the State B ar committee on revi­ sion of the penal code, will re­ port on revision of the code. Presiding Judge W. T. McDon­ ald of the Court of Criminal Ap­ peals, Aastin, will preside. Speak­ ers Thursday morning will be A. A. Semaan, San Antonio; George Gilkerson, Lubbock; and H arry Lee Hudspeth, El Paso, Speakers at subsequent sessions will be Judge W. A. Morrison, Court of Criminal Appeals; Tom Blackwell, Travis County district attorney; Jam es Berger, acting director of the Board of Pardons and Paroles; Los Procter, m em ­ ber of Procter and Jones law firm ; Leon Douglas, State's a t­ torney; Hume Cofer, m em ber of Cofer, Cofer and Hearne law firm ; and Fred Cohen, Albert Jones, E. Wayne Thode, and Charles Alan Wright of the Law School faculty. OTHER SPEAKERS will be US District Judge Sarah T. Hughes, Dallas; and US District Judge Thiph-Hi Hems To 'Lose Battle' SAN ANTONIO — (Pl — A jun­ ior high school principal who sus­ pended 71 girls for one day this week said Wednesday pupils who persist in wearing above-the-knee s k irts 'and dresses “are going to lose the battle. “I can suspend a girl until the the school year,” said end of Principal W. Dain Higdon. “ The more I see of it, the more I'm convinced they all need to dress the same. But then they’d say we were taking away their civil rights,” he said. Higdon said all 71 girls were back in classes but he declined to say their hemlines were longer. if Tuesday, Supt. Oscar Miller ex­ pressed scepticism at the wisdom of such a mass suspension. “ It seems there could have been some other way ra th e r than to send all 71 home at once . . . counseling or something,” Miller said. ONE HOUR FABRI-CAIRE® T H E BETTER DRY CLEA N IN G ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE In By 9:00 A.M. — Out By 5:00 P.M. BURTON'S LAUNDRY A CLEANERS 015 W. 19th St. GR 8-4621 It’s Always Easy T o Park at B U RTO N S Plemons Hardware & G ifts (West on 24th) 2406 Exposition G R 2-3916 Complete Line of Hardw are Kitchen & Gift Items forority & Fraternity Accounts W elcom ed O p e n in gs Offered For Summer O n ly Tile Civil Service Commission will conduct open competitive ex­ tem porary aminations for 1967 in federal sum m er employment departm ents and agencies, Cong­ ressm an Jake Pickle said Tues­ day. Five cities in the Tenth District will be tost centers, and appli­ cants may choose among three test dates to take the two-hour exam. Tile examination will m easure clerical skills, vocabulary, read­ ing comprehension, abstract reas­ oning, and in­ terpretation. table and chart The tests will be given In Aus­ tin, La Grange. San Marcos, Hemstead, and Wharton Nov. 26; Jan. 7; and Fob. 4. Filing dates are Oct. 21; Dec. 9; or Jan. 9. Application m ay be m ade by writing to the Civil Service Com­ mission. 1900 F Street NAV., Washington, D.C. 20415. Another nationwide written ex­ am ination will be announced in January, 1967, tem porary sum m er jobs with the Post Of­ fice. for The examination pertains to job grades GS-1 through GS-4, with salaries ranging from $69 to $92 a week. Applicants who pass the written test m ay apply with interagency boards of civil service examiners in areas where they wish to work, as well as with the Washington Interagency Board, if they want to be con­ sidered for jobs in Washington, D.C. Congressman Pickle said “ This is a good opportunity for students and others who are interested in sum m er work next year.’’ Historians Plan To Attend Meet Representatives of the Depart­ m ent of History and the Univer­ sity Press will attend the West­ ern History Association meeting in El Paso Thursday through Sat­ urday. H. Ren Kent, graduate student in history, will deliver a paper on “ Three Decades of Missionary E nterprise: The Episcopal Church ; in Oregon and Washington, 1851- 1 1880.” Two University P ress authors, Frederick G. Renner, and Mrs. Elm a Dill Russell Spencer, will be honored Thursday. Renner, of Washington. D.C., w r o t e “ Charles M. Russell: Paintings. Drawings and Sculp­ ture in the Amon G. C arter Col­ lection.” Mrs. Spencer, of San Antonio, authored “Green Rus­ sell and Gold.” History D epartm ent faculty7 m em bers attending the convent­ ion are Dr, Joe B. Frantz, and Dr. William IL Goetzmann, pro­ fessors of history; Dr. Robert C. Cotner and Dr. John E. Sunder, associate professors; and Tuffly Ellis, visiting assistant professor. University P ress delegates are F rank Wardlaw, director; Wil­ liam D. Wittliff, sales m anager; and Mrs. P at Cosiglia, assistant sales m anager. F R O M M E X IC O L a r g e C o lle c t io n o f r e g i o n a l c r a f t s a n d d e c o r a t iv e a c c e s s o r ie s BULA SKIN N ER , IM P O R T S 1705 N o n c e s RADIO REPAIR i r n h — * : l I Use the C o -O p 's quick convenient repair service! • R A D IO S • TELE V ISIO N S • STEREOS GR 2-1141 This is one of Arrow's newest style bntton-down sport shirts. Be choosy. It’s Arrow “ Cum Laude" King Cotton shirt of 100% cotton. Has a full button-down collar. Shoulder to waist taper and pleat. “ Sanforized", of course. $6.00. Plenty more where this came from. Plenty. Bold New Breed by - ARROW?- a i s c W ide-W ale Corduroy Sp o rt C o a ts talks ab o u t his S portloif socks [W h a t every young man should know about his athletic socks.J \ ; A ”: ct . ■ r • % y V - I. A great athletic sock is white R eal bright white, not a woolly yellowish color 2. It gets even whiter the it’s washed 3. A great athletic sock doesn’t itch cause allergy reactions 4. It doesn’t shrink, even in shing machine 5. A n d it dries pronto (W h o has time to w ait for it?) A re the socks y o u V ^’got o il guilty on any of these counts? T h en they’re not ^ p o rtio n ’— the great athletic sock from Interw O rlo n ’ acrylic and nyl sizes 9 to 14. O nly $1.00 Anothe r fine product of K a y ref-Roth Page 12 Thursday, O c to b e r 13, 1966 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N FREE ES TI MA TICS Rn lin ty TMI GI ADAM P E On The D rat AMI IN ALLAND Al JC VII .LAGE The Toggery, 2246 Guadalupe Blomquist-Clarlc, 617 Congress