Weather: • Warmer, C lo u d y • Low: 40 • H i g h : 70 F aj , z Q O • m l 3 o a 'zp n & it ^ ^ n j/' O' rr ft L* Vol. 67 P rice Fiv U S Forces / New Red - if :s SAIGON LAP) — Fighting that stemmed from the first two punches of the Com­ munists winter-spring offensive was fading Tuesday and allied commanders, trying to anticipate a possible turned their attention to the encircled US Marine base at Khe Sanh. third blow, hnem y gunners kept up a steady shelling of the base in northwestern South Vietnam, a key to allied defenses below the De­ militarized Zone. B52 bombers hit back at tile estimated 20.000 North Vietnamese troops who have massed against the 5.000 Marines blocking their way into the vital upper-tier provinces. Ground action around Khe Sanh died d »wn after a M arine patrol killed 20 enemy In a battle over the weekend. Naval Guns On flue In Hue to the southwest US Marines and South Vietnamese troops, supported by land artillery and Navy guns, inched forward in the rubble of the walled Citadel. Com­ munists still were holding out in the an­ cient fortress, three w-eeks after the Reds’ first countrywide drive Jan . 30-31. In Phan Thiet, Viet Cong still held th# provincial hospital and a girls’ high school they seized when they reinvaded the coast­ al city Sunday during the early hours of their less powerful second-wave attacks. in the second-wave The guerrillas were reported dug in for a final stand in Phan Thiet. the city hardest hit fighting. Against them was a force of US paratroopers and Vietnam ese by armed helicopters, fighter-bombers, artil­ lery and naval gunfire. North Vietnam Raided Infantrymen supported Sporadic fighting persisted around the capital. Guerrilla units still were operat­ ing within m ortar and rocket range of the city. US bomber pilots, keeping up their pun­ itive raids on North Vietnam despite cloudy skies, hit three airfields in scattered sec­ tions Monday. Five North Vietnamese air­ fields had been raided Sunday. President Urges Negro Rights Bill WASHINGTON (A P) - On the eve of a cru cial vote in the Senate, President Lyn­ don B. Johnson appealed anew' Monday for the passage of civil rights legislation. "B oth conscience and reason insist that it be passed,” Johnson said in a lefter to Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., floor man­ ager for the measure. The Senate will vote Tuesday on whether to cut off debate on a bill designed to pro­ tect Negroes and civil rights workers a- gainst racial violence. Also at stake is an amendment to ban the sale or rental of in discrimination housing. le a d e rs of both parties. Sen. Mike Mans­ field. D-Mont., and Sen. Everett M. Dirk- son. R TIL, predicted the anti-filibuster move will fail. Dirksen told newsmen he will vote against cloture. And Mansfield said that without Dirksen’s support, the necessary two-thirds m ajority cannot be obtained. Johnson said the civil rights measure, part of a broader program he has urged, itself achieve equality for would not •very citizen, but he called it " a vital step along the way.” in In Hue, the close-quarter fighting in the Citadel was marked by confused battle re- ports from the wrecked buildings and tumb­ ling stone battlements. Possession Uncertain liegan a drive along One US Marine commander said the Leathernecks had fought down the Citadel's the east wall and south wall toward the former Imperial P al­ ace where the determined Communist de­ fenders had their command post. But an­ other report said the southeast com er of the two square-mile fortress had not been cleared of the enemy. At Saigon s Tan Son Nhut Airport, Gen. William C. Westmoreland’s headquarters said all was quiet after two days 0f ro< kof and m ortar attacks. its The fighting In Hue entered third week and was the only continuing battle from the Ja n . 30-31 lunar new year offen­ sive in which an estimated 60,000 Com­ munist troops struck at 35 South Vietna­ mese population centers. Bad Weather AP correspondent Lewis M. Simons re ­ ported from inside Hue's Citadel that Com­ munist troops w ere exacting heavy casual­ ties among the slowly advancing* US and South Vietnamese forces. He said allied commanders were painfully aware the ene­ my was determined to m ake a last-ditch stand. Bad weather ruled nut air support all day Monday for the allied ground forces fight- light cruiser ing In the Citadel. But the Providence, flagship of the Seventh Fleet com mander, Vice Adm. William F , Pringle, aimed its six-inch guns on Communist com­ mand posts in the Citadel. A total of 1,512 Communist soldiers was reported to have been killed by US and South Vietnamese troops since the battle for Hue began. South Vietnamese losses were said to have totaled 200 dead so far, and American c a s u a lt y w ere described as heavy. Even when the Citadel Is finally taken, there are prospects for other hitter fighting In parts of Hue, AP correspondent George Mc Arthur reported eneirv forces controlled an area east of the eastern wall of the Citadel. Allied guns already were pounding the positions. The Communist forces are believed re­ ceiving help fro myoung men recruited in Hue. TIiere was fighting reported late Monday at Phan Thief. 90 miles east of Saigon, where Communist forces had seized part of the coastal city. A US spokesman said an allied force was mopping up pockets of re ­ sistance. Ground Assault From the Mekong Delta city of Vinh I^ n g cam e sketchy reports of a giuiiad assault Monday that carried Into the city center. US spokesmen reported the cathedral had been “retaken” and fighting had dwindled to sporadic sm alj-arm s fire. Ju st northeast of Saigon, bitter fighting flared for the second day Monday around the Binh Loi Bridge that leads into the capital from the north. Viet Cong troops were reported holed up bi shacks of a slum *re a there, and they were hit early Monday night by helicopter gunships firing rockets and machine guns. Another clash was reported about three miles north rd Tan Son Nhut air base, where repeated fights have broken out since the Communists launched their new year of­ fensive. h e Da i l y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas at A ustin Love, War, D raff — A n Editorial , Page 4 • AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1968 Ten Pages Today No. V s ■ f Mf Faculty OKs New Voters Marines A id Fallen Com rade C m m W *. mounted during t t,, tfc r .e -w e .U ld effort n e .r t h . C l t .d .l . . l l , to lf I P I * . ' ° rce‘ 0U* of ,h " r b o ttle m .n t, in th . .n c l.n t welled city . R e p o r t, , from aloed md,t o y . p u r e , ,„y It will t a i . . t l , . , f , „ 0 th ,r weak of h o u ilto -h o u ,. fighting to crush enemy resistance. m lciephn* 46 Sem/f/ng/is/s Belles Selected Forty-six University women have been named Bluebonnet Belle sem ifinalists, ac­ cording to L afe Hill, Cactus editor. Sem ifinalists will be interview'ed Wednea- day and Thursday afternoons by a selection com mittee. final Interview dates and times may be ob­ tained Monday and Tuesday at the T exas Student Ihiblioations General Business ( >f- fice, Journalism Building 107, between 8 a.m . and 4 p.m. Ten finalists will be named March 3, The sem ifinalists are Chnrlynn Ann An­ derson, P atricia Hay Anselin, Suzan Galt B ell, Susanne Carol Bischofs, Peggy Ja n e Secretary Weaver Cancels Lecture Robert C. Weaver, secretary of the De­ partment of Housing and Urban Develop­ ment, has canceled his speec h scheduled for Tuesday. Secretary Weaver notified the Texas Un­ ion Speakers Committee Monday that "v i­ tal meetings related to housing and urban development legislation” would prevent him from coming to the campus. Texas Union Speakers Committee said Weaver would be scheduled for an appear­ ance later In the spring. Brzerakiewicx, Chervln Ann Burr, Mar­ garet Elizabeth Coleman, Carolyn Connell, Brenda Joyce Cook, Susan Elaine Cope,' R ebecca E . Dob ie, Judy K. Dobbs, Carolyn Je an Du Bose. Lynn Claudia Ferguson. Nancy Josephine Johanna Frank#, Ann Elizabeth Fleury, Fuller, Nancy Katherine Gent. Jo Ann Giese. Mary Lou Grantham, Nancy Lynn Haralson, and B arbara Ruth Higley, Also, Joyce M arie Hil.sher, Libby Har­ riet Holland, Kathy Holmes, Lynn Kohlen- I,r,r*g. Sandra Je an ne Kiddie, Sandra Kay I-<*rry, Cindy Kay W azey, Sharon Lynne Volosin, Ronrii Joy Weksler, Gail P . Weyel, Delia Weight White. Bettie Townsend Willerson, M arilyn Witt- m an, and Liz Marie Wooldridge. W h a t's Inside A Texan analysis—censorship by students? ......................................... P a g e 4 Longhorns clash with Raiders . . Page 5 "F unny Thing” to open .............. Page 9 Page IO MUN orientation S a tu rd a y Bv MA R G X R U ! ( P l I \\ \ \ Approval of three students to sit a* vot­ ing m em bers on the Educational Policies Committee was given by the Faculty Coon cii at its mooting Monday. The throe students will be selected by Dr. Norman Hackerman, president of the University, from a panel of six students submitted to him by the student Assembly. lower division Include a The Undergraduate, an upper division under­ graduate, and a graduate or law student. three will Tn other action, a statem ent to bark Graduate School Dean VV. Gordon Whaley, in Washington testifying who is currently before a House subcommittee concerning graduate student deferment, was tabled. H ie proposal was termed "non em ergency’’ and will be taken up at th« March 18 m eet­ ing of the Faculty Council. Meanwhile, Dr Hackerman will appoint a faculty com m ittee to draw up a state­ ment for approval at the next Council m eet­ ing. The com mittee va ill consult with Dean W haley concerning the most effective sug­ gestion or proposal which can he made concerning the draft situation of graduate students. Wlialev said Saturday that two thirds of the University’s "5,000 graduate students will be subject to call, but it s anybody’s guess as to how many will actually go.” He added that one fourth of the graduate students probably will be Inducted. This statement was made after Lf. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, national director of th# Selective Service System , issued the John­ son Administration's decision refuse draft deferments for graduate study except In medicine and the ministry. The directive to Ex-UT Student Drowns in Brazil Ja m e s D. McKeithan, 36. a graduate of the University and ifs .School of Law drowned at Natal, Brazil, Thursday. His father, Dr. D. M. McKeithan, pro­ fess! ir of English at the University, said McKeithan was in Brazil on a goodwill m is­ sion for the US Junior Chamber of Com­ m erce. As one of lf) "am bassadors of good w ill,” the McAllen resident was to be on a lecture tour for most of February. A Phi B eta Kappa graduate with a bach­ elor of arts In 1911, McKeithan graduated with honors from the School of r^w In 1954. He also was vice president of the student the Texas Law Review and Dicta at Aus­ tin. McKeithan was a past assistant to the attorney general of Texas, and a member of the law firm of M< Keithan and E llis rn McAllen. He represented members of the United F’arm Workers Organizing Commit­ tee, AF 1X110, who were arrested last year in connection with the S tarr County farm labor dispute. F’unerai services were held at I p m Monday, at Weed-Corley Funeral Home. Included Incoming and firs? yonr g- .-Lists students. Hie Facu y i oil -, ! also voted to a'* I H Gardner L Lindzey, vice-president for lord in, vice­ academ ic a ffa irs; Dr. Bryce president for student affairs; and Jam es H Colvin, vicepresident for business af­ fairs, as voting ex ffo-ii* rn»*:nbers of fie total Faculty Council. This brings membership to 35 clefted members and IS voting ex officio members. the The Faculty Council Committee on Com­ mittees was directed to study all commit­ tees with student faculty participation. students during ‘ Drafting of pi sportive or first year graduate the effective period ,*f the present Selective Service Act the most .*rn that makes them in a p,< available eligible men and using the pre. Kerby stipulated age s«»quenee < an rem ov# ho to fit) in training for (ais manpower pool," Whaley said in a telegram sent to President Lvndon B John­ son Monday. jmt c.-nt of the men Such reduction will seriously damage the educational system at a1! levels, limit at­ technological tempts to resolve grave social problems ’* he said. advance, retard and A graduate of Columbia University, Whaley has been on the University faculty ainee 1946. In 19.17 bf* was m ade Dean of the Graduate Sc ho ol. " I urgently request prompt reconsidera­ tion which takes full account of the poten­ tial danger to the national w elfare,” h# stated. In sending the telegram Whaley said h# was motivated less by concern for on# graduate school than by his resjjon.slblll- tics as chairm an of several m ajor national educational committees. ABA Plans Limits On Pre-trial News Revised G u id e s Presented For C rim in a l Reporting CHICAGO CAI*)— The American Bar Aw seriation adopted new guidelines Monday to limit what the p iblic u JI I #» told t j)0Ut forthcoming crim inal trials and arrests. A plea by news executives for a year • delay while new studies were made was fumed down by the association’s House of Delegates. then adopted by voice va te. The proposals will now be blended Into a revision of the ABA * Canons of I'Tofe*- s i on a1 E thics, Though they are recommendations, they are likely to cut down swiftly whaf police !,u Ui‘‘ pi ess about crim inal case* VVi^‘ and will effectively limit what law yers and judges say outside the courtroom. Ju st before the vote, Chief Judge J . Ed­ ward Lombard of the US Circuit Court in New York City told the delegates that if they accede to the pica for deferral, ti;® news media would be back next y ear talk­ ing for still further studies. S h a k in g for the report, William T. G ov self, ABA president-elect, said the guide­ least restr e th a l in e most moderate step ti i prov ide a fair trial.” 'provide the mildest P Theodore Koop, a CBS vice-president rep­ resenting various new, organizations, said he was naturally di$ we and 520 fell. New highs for 1967 68 totaled 13 and new lows 31. The Associated Dress avern go of 60 stocks ad­ vanced o to 308.0 with Industrials up 1,6. rails unchanged and utili­ ties up .6. North M ia m i Tornado Injuries 17 NORTH M IAM I BLA C H A pre dawn tornado ripped along a business lined main street and tore at homes Monday, leaving 17 persons injured and an estimated $2 5 million worth of damage In this winter resort city, The destructive winds smasher! windows, snatched store mer­ chandise from businesses, pulled down power lines, flipped cars about, overturned a trailer house, and severely battered scores of homes in a 60 block area. ’Dm US Weather Bureau said there was no sign of a tornado on its radar scope during regular cheeks, but later said the pattern of damage Indicated the swiping winds of a tornad > had boon present. P la n e Strikes St. Louis School A g.ngie engine ( pjv*. ST. LO U IS airplane hit the roof of the gymnasium at Mc( .tier High School In suburban Florissant shortly after noon Mon­ day, but none of the nearly 4 OOO students and faculty members in the school were Injured. H ie pilot, Peter M. Davidson. 35 of San Diego, was killed. H e gymnasium had been emptied only minutes before the crash. Scrawl officials said there had been three assemblies in the gym­ nasium. the last ending at l l a rn. There were 1,200 students at each assembly. First 68 M o n ey Request to House WASHINGTON The first money bill of the 1968 session w*as sent to the House floor Monday by the Appropriations Committee. Scheduled for House consideration Tuesday, it would provide $1 196 billion in new funds for use during the remaining months of the fiscal year ending June Largest allotment was $1 135 billion for grant* to states for public families with dependent Including afd payments to assistance, children The total was Si 2 million less than the President requested Stam p to Commemorite Hem isFair WASHINGTON The pos* office will Issue * six cent commemorative stamp to mark the opening cf Hen sFalr-68 in San Antonio. Sen. Ralph Yarbor­ ough, D-Trxac. said Monday, m "!X n irT! RtamP w!,l h” Held In San Antonio ■ I^ m lsFair an international trade exhibition marking San ’V of thr Antonios 2a0th anniversary, opens April 6. No details were available regarding the design of the stamp. Police Break Up Extortion Attempts D A LLA S R . lice revealed Monday that the wife of multi-billionaire H. L. Hunt, had been threatened by a telephone extortionist Sunday after­ noon Detective Cap? Will Firtz said Mrs. Hunt received a telephone cad about 3 p.m. Sunday at her White Rock Lake home. H ie caller tole IPT rn put $1 OOO in a phone bo< ti, it a street intersection south of downtown or she would be harmed T , J f h T 1H l imdi y ' " * Rpv ■’ C Hit*.,rd, pastor of thr Gospel n n v mu • similar e.'ill and " ’.is Miso ordered to PU? $t rn the same phone booth. Police arrested a 32 veal* old RU*VD a{ ’ booth and jailed him for investigation of extortion. f'fe n T 'l * Polio Strikes V a lle y Children ( hip* H i ! M I <2 fT o i/T , , hospital for what is believed to ire n.w-> m w t v t t? h h W c v , o I v - ■ '■ jn n tL \ . I i * ’ > *,*lt !nt.r u very sick, " ‘ V , ' r , ; , . ; * t M cAl l e n arui two others are in a v c o p e n s , . r, Copen!,*..- „ I M , ]ay to „s to dc-torn,in* th* a,foal cause of death arc re: r mplotod bu: I .. M |,| „.] were present in two of the cases „ 5VIr . , , Missile Gap This — M cN a m ara the United is because States currently holds a huge lead in submarino-borne missiles —656 to Russia’s 30. Sources say the US advan­ tage in sea-based missiles will swell. In addition to planned Intro­ duction of triple warhead Air Force Minuteman I I I missiles in 1970, the Pentagon Is converting 31 of the 41 Polaris submarines with 16 Poseidon missiles each with 12 warheads. H ie remain­ ing IO Polaris subs will carry triple-warhead missiles. Biggest Order Of Planes Made N E W YO RK (A P ) — Ameri­ can Airlines announced Monday commercial aviation’s biggest -single order in an $800 million purchase of a jumbo jetliner de­ signed to carry 252 passengers. American said It had placed a firm order for 25 McDonnell F>ouglas DCI Os costing more than $100 million and has purchased options to buy an additional 25 to bring the total commitment to more than $800 million. IX IO Airbus H ie three engine DClOs. railed the Airbus, are designed to fly up to 3,000 miles at a erasing •peed of 6f)0 miles per hour. Hie planes are aimed at hauling large numbers of passengers in heavy air traffic corridors. In the announcement. Ameri­ can said it has committed an un­ specified amount of money it would lose lf the options for the additional 25 airplanes u'orr* not exercised. Hattie for Orders McDonnell Douglas thus heats out Lockheed Aircraft Corp. In the hotly competitive battle for the I^K*k first Airbus orders. heed has pushed hard its Airbus concept, called the LIO U, as a trijet. H ie order calls for delivery of the first 25 DClOs In late 1971 the additional 25 during and 1973. American P ru d e n t George A. Spater said the agreement would become firm when McDonnell Douglas receives a sufficient num­ ber of orders to proceed. McDon noli declined to Specify what a suf ficient number would i>e. WASH LNT ITC )N (A P )—Secre­ tary of Defense Robert S. Mc­ Namara says the Soviet Union may have as many land-based nuclear missiles as the United States by mid 1%9. .Sources said Monday that word was passed to Congress in Mc. Namara’s annual military pos­ ture statement The point was the version not In included publicly released In late Janu­ ary after heavy censoring. I? was the first time a Cabinet Officer has be^n known to set a timeable for when the Soviets might catch up with the United States in terms of land launched iCBMs. Mf Namara’s disclosure of lat­ est intelligence projections-based largely ort reconnaissance photo­ graph*.m e a n s Russia Is ex­ pected to have more than 1,000 firing In underground ICBM s silos in about 18 months. He estimated the’ had 720 as of last Oct. I. Ile I nited States has reached its planned peak of 1.054 land- baspd missiles. But it plans to produce new ones which will carry not one but three war­ heads capable Of striking differ­ ent targets. In a statement Monday on the strategic situation, the Defense Department the Soviets said "are unlikely to possess a total ICBM of launchers equal to ours until the latter part of the 1970s, if then.” land and sea based Florida Teacher Walkout Staged T A L L A H A S S E E (A P ) - More than half a million florida pub­ lic school children were shut out of clashes Monday by the na­ teacher first statewide tion’s w'nlkout. One-third of the state’s teach­ ers — 25,077 of 60,844 — already had resigned Monday with 12 counties not yet reporting, ac­ cording to figures from the state Department of Education and county school boards. 'I ne teacher*' spokesmen here said another 13.000 would quit by Tuesday. All classes were canceled In 22 counties with combined en­ rollment of 556,155. Tile states total public school enrollment is 3,300,000. Four other counties closed part ’ teachers. Some of their schools Monday for lack that were of open Monday announced plans tn close Tuesday, a few for thr whole week. M my of the schools that re rn.lined ojxm <>{>erated as baby­ sitting facilities with movie pro grams and singalongs. The te a c h e rs , acting through their professional organization florida Education Associa­ the tion, began the walkout after re jectmg as Insufficient last F ri­ for day a increasing to public schools. legislative program financial support the There was no picketing as most teachers who resigned In 21 mass meetings of Dined around the state. 38th & G u a d a lu p e O P E N 24 H O U R S Ut Mafia's /wflW Drin-k Gnars W a n t a Sum m er J o b ? COUNSELORS WANTED FOR PRIVATE CAMP Boys Cam p G irls C a m p CAMP LONGHORN O N IN K S LAKE In the H eart of Highland Lake* Burnet, Texas For Immediate Information See a Longhorn Counselor: R Ha ‘'artel, Johnny Eli, E Grei r e e f A a *'• * " n- ? • “ •••. W e * Ba,d a . p rr>. ? s rave \ chefs Jo c k J U lo .", r e . J af Rune I, Ken Tar -0 0 5 L e * Petty, Penny Je c is c n , Car : La * Cr , Be s B a l e r , Ka- y p0 „ Mary Carter, Ca »we ttku rh ; • p I ai Keene, Chi A - n M Wa ' - se a Wood. A m La I a*a Sa* / 6 B ac*. true# A -arson, «** V’ ay, Nee M -at I rn — D i w cj M c int-. co f CK eel We a , Kan n est#*, C s Fria- • Jackson >"** L Swo­ L a r g o Kau a re'- i Ka ‘lan e* rn pion, I sa W a *9-, Two of the children arc from Pharr. Neither had the Sulk oral Uterviewi and Information and Edinburg. T *""• ■ "* *•" •*****>• ore (mn, Hidalgo H ie child who died and the “ very sick one were completely p a n tile d en both sides, he sa I All the victims are under one year THURSDAY, FEB. 28th and TUESDAY, M A R C H 5th W est Mall O ffice Building.. Room 205 c OO A M. . 12 Noon A 1:00 - 5:00 P.M. M e d ic a l Exams Set for Freed Pilot , „ n , , . , SAN ANTONIO v n f *ul1 mo,iit' ’ Pxamin ' >n Monday on Capt, Jon released Friday bv the North Vietnamese. Black is secluded rn, the W ii ford Hall Air Force Hospital at Lackland AKB. ' °ne ° 1 three Air Force P " v- Air Force o fficia l said no announcements, statements or nress conferences are planned while the captain Is confined here They ‘ said the med; a1 check up will take from thi-e Black ’s wife is staying with him at Rte h -pi’ d. sc-’,en daw' Page 2 Tuesday, February 20, 1968 THE D AILY TEXAN A M a n s Flight Through life Is Sustained by the Power of His Knowledge’ Why should you confide in a guy you've never met before? B e c au se the guy we’re talking about is a college recruiter from Alcoa. And the only way to play it is honestly. He ll be on cam pus in a couple of days. And here s what we recom­ mend you do at the interview. First way your cards on the table. Tell him what kind of work would really turn you on. Then, sit back and listen while he explains how your plans figure Into A lc o a ’s plans. (Y o u ’ll be surprised how versatile Aluminum Com pany of Am erica can be.) S o make It a point to meet A lc o a ’s recruiter. He s a confidence man you can really trust. Interview date: F e b r u a r y 26 An Equal Opportunity Employer A Plans for Progress C om p a ny C h a n ge for the belter with Alcoa ALCOA RFK Assailed For Viet Role C o n nally Anack* Senator’* Stance ATLANTA. G a. (A P) — Gov. John C onnally of T exas said M on­ d ay th a t th e p o rtio n of Sen R ob­ e rt K ennedy, D NY, on V ietnam h a s d a m a g e d the whole conduct of foreign a ffa irs by the U nited S tates. e sp ecially u n fo rtu n a te T he G o v ern o r said K enned) ’* s ta te m e n ts on V ietnam public a re In light of th e role he played In th* a d m in is tra tio n of his b ro th e r, rh* la te P re s id e n t John F. K ennedv. C onnally sa id K ennedy'* “ w ords and h is a ctio n s h av e been a so u rce of discord in Ihia co u n try ." “ T hey’v e had a d e trim e n ta l the w hole a ttitu d e of effect on th is country and an people In in­ even m o re d isa stro u s effect so fa r as Ho Chi Minh and th* C om m unist w orld a re co n ce rn e d ,” C onnally sa id . H e m a d e his re m a rk s a t a new* co n feren ce. C onnally the listed th re e m a ­ jor th in g s th a t he thinks will glv* trouble the P re s id e n t the V iet­ as civil disobedience, the stab ility n a m situ a tio n and of tile A m eric a n dollar. th e moat A lthough he acknow ledged th a t the P re s id e n t La being b lam ed for civil d iso b ed ien ce and the n a ­ tio n ’s risin g c rim e ra te , C onnally said people m u st acknow ledge th a t law e n fo rce m e n t is a m a t­ te r of lo cal responsibility. (A P) — With goner*I ROME elections th e thro® m onths off. Roman C atholic C hun b ’s im I v e - m ent In politics is c ausing d iv is­ ion among the h ie rarch y . told Ita lia n Catholics th a t it is th e ir duty to rem ain uniter! once a g ain bel ind th e C hristian D em o crats, th e country * la rg e s t {'arty. Th# V atican has Som e C atholic intellectuals and diocesan bishops a te a g ita tin g for a com plete w thdraw al by the Church from polit s. I* experted Th® dispute to com® up In a general assem b ly of Italian bishops w hich opened M i^rdav In R om e. Its is the lay m an th em e The national elections expected In late May or e a r iv Ju n e, w ill be the fifth for Italy * p o stw a r republic and the first since the end of the 1962 65 V atican E c u ­ m enical Council. The C om m unist P a rty h a s gam ed ground stead ily since th e w ar. Tt is the biggest C mmjirmst p a rty in th e W est and the set' If in Ha Iv end la rg e st p a rty polled 7.7 m illion votes the in last elections five years ago. th® th# fa r* of “ R * d Tn Ita ly 's bishops alw ay s threat," m ain ta in e d a c o m p a c t fro n t, tel! ing p a rish io n e rs to vote for tile Catholic p a rty . the la te Pope Jo h n But with the V atican Council XXIII and cam # a new mood of m odern tion In C atholic -Communist po­ lem ics. stre sse d Th® council th a t * laym an * political actions w ere b a sica lly a m a tte r of his own ‘ ’co n scien ce." Church's Political Involvement Causes Division of Hierarchy A dditionally, the c e n te r left gm*. of power to the Communists. e rn m e n t coalition of P re m ie r A I - L ast m o nth th e do M oro’a C h ristian D e m o c ra ts an d the S o cialists — though c lu m ­ sy and prone to c risis — a p p e a rs to have effectiv ely shut the do* rs o p s’ co n fe re n ce confronted Issue of elec tio n s once again. Ita l,a n bish­ th e F o r th e first tim e an a p p a r­ e n c y strong faction of prelates influence less direct called for bv the Church on voter* Th® fl- nal docum ent w as fashioned from a com prom ise. It upheld th* lay­ m en % political affiliation aa a m a tte r of his “ profound p ersonal conviction '■ But if counseled th® fa thful to vote w ith unitv. YOU CAN S T A Y ON TOP O F YO UR Cl A S S WORK with B A R N E S & NOBLE COLLEGE OU TLI NE S E R I E S . . . t h e original paperbacks Keyed to Your Texts b y 2 u n i q u e c r o s s r e f e r e n c e c h a r t s A T a b u l a t e d B i b l i o g r a p h y of S t a n d a r d T e x t b o o k s i n d ic a t e s p a g e s in th e O u t l in e th a t sum m arize a p p r o p r ia t e c h a p t e r s in each text. 2 A Q u ick Reference T abla Indicates pages in v ario us standard textbooks that cor respond to topics covered in chapters of the Outline O v e r IOO ti tl es on t h e fol l o w i ng s u b j e c t s : a n t h r o p o l o g y A R T B U S IN E S S D R A M A EC O N O M ICS E D U C A T IO N E N G IN E E R IN G E N G L IS H G O V E R N M E N T H IS T O R Y LANGUAGES L IT E R A T U R E MATHEM ATICS M U S IC P H IL O SO P H Y P SY C H O L O G Y S C IE N C E S O C IO L O G Y S P E E C H S T U D Y A ID * T E X T B O O K S D O W N S T A I R S TRW is success by association Discounts Asked For Foreigners WASHINGTON (A P W A Whit® H ouse task fore® recom m ended Monday a broad ran?** of rut rat® prior* for tourist srrviors — in­ cluding a 5f> per rent discount on dom os tic airline!* faros — to at- tract foreign visitors to the United States. on The In d us try - Govern mom Spe­ cial Task Force on Travel set u p by P re s id e n t Lyndon B. John- * n In N ovem ber recom m ended discounts transatlantic air fares of 25 per cent, a 25 per c e n t discount on dom estic rail fa re s, and IO p e r cen t discounts on c h a rte r bus ra te s on trips in­ volving 400 m iles a day. These recom m endations are now before r^ g m a to ry ag encies The re d u c­ tion would apply only to visitors fro m ab ro ad . R e c o m m e n d s In c re a se for Tn * ta sk force also recom ­ mended a substantial increase in the budget the US Travel S e n d e e , a w a iv e r for visas for foreign to u rists and businessm en an d creatio n of a N ational T o u r­ ist Office to co o rd in a te the p ro ­ m otion of foreign tra v e l to the I nlted S tates. T his office would s ’art w ith an an n u al budget of a b o u t $30 m illion in th e next fis­ cal y ear. Th® task force report is part of an effort by the Johnson Ad­ m in istra tio n to re d u ce the In ter­ n atio n al d o lla r d ra in by about $3 billion this y e a r. The b alance- o f-p ay m en ts d eficit la st y e a r w as $3.57 billion. T r a v e l T a x task Robert M. M cKinney, publish­ er of the Santa F e New Mexican and force chairm an, said the recom m ended program does not negate the need for the trav­ el tax which Johnson has pro­ posed on Am erican citizens trav­ elin g outside the W estern Hernia- phere to reduce this country’* ba I ance-of-paym ents d e fic it The House W ays and Means C o m m ittee Is holding h earings on th a t legislation. and Paraphernalia's V-neck co H o knit. - i» 1*11 J S c u l p t u r e A t t r a c t s V isito rs Ann G id d e n (!) and Jackie Farmer view sculpture by Robert Jacobsen. European sculptor in fabricated metal. The exhibit will continuo through M arch 17 in University A rt Building, Ro o m 17, Government Lecturer Probes Social Science Status Problem Speaking on the prnt 'e m s of so cia l scien ce in a tta in in g th* s ta tu s of physical a : rn e, D r, A natol R a p .>port gave the first lecture M o n d a y ir me Do; min ent of G o v ern m en t's le c - o f tun's, “Explanatory Theory P o litic al Science.” in D r. Rapoport, U niversity of M ichigan professor of m a th e m a t­ th a t one ical biologj,’, suggested re a s o n the p h y sical sciences is th a t th e pi b- le m s which a re m o re ea sily de­ te rm in e d and ex plained are* also th e m ost fu n d am en tal. the a d v a n c e of for HAWAII S UMMER HOWARD TOURS ? : t h year c f e xce llen cy, I arn v e rs if y of H a w a ii c re d its w! l e g a f a b u l o u s v a c a t i o n •rtg ln a l H aw aii stu d y t o u r . P r i c e l r - e lu d e s U n it * } * : r L in e s round u p f r c - n W a st C oast, resid e nc e, and a m o s t e x te n siv e sc h e d u le of p artie s, d in n e rs, c r i:iu s , s t f h t s e a ln g , t e a h ( v e n t s ' cu * -a! t u n e ons, etc. Apply: How ard Tours, Inc - *3 1 1 H illcre st A v e. D a llas, Te xas 75105. Tel. LA I 2470. B ut w hen the social sciences p u rsu e q u estio n s acco rd in g to this line of le a s t re sista n c e , he added, Irre le v a n t and Im p ra c tic a l the c rie s m a y re s u lt. B ecause of this, po litical s c ie n c e today is in dan gor of becom ing a “ dism al *ci- en c e ," as econom ic* wa* con sid e red to be in the ea rly N ine­ teenth C en tu ry , he said. T he le c tu re se rie s will continue T u esd ay w ith a talk by P rof W illiam R ik e r of the U niversity of R o c h e ste r on “ A T heory of the C alculus of V oting.” On W ednesday B rune R u sse ty asso c ia te p ro fe sso r a t Y ale U ni­ v ersity , w ill streak on “A M acro ­ scopic V iew of In te rn a tio n a l Polit ICS ” T he in Calhoun H all A uditorium a t 3 P rn. le ctu re s a re held ENGRAVING PRINTING • A L L - O C C A S I O N G R E E T I N G C A R ' S • P A R E R P A R T Y E N S E M B L E S • S O C I A L S T A T I O N E R Y • G I F T PAPERS A N D TR M S • B R I D G E A C C ESSO R S elbe Groan} Sloop 2900 G U A D A L U P E G R 2-5733 A U S T I N , T E X A S Gtiofmi I i f . M S M a in e * 4 Mm batonne* 4 Mntian Smiytthon • ■ a t ■Vernon,ct i y tier*, Alpen Jon,-. H$ Monotorrent srotn M i n m u . B A Sub- J/lW/n* Arogtgmnnng Awa H a G(/w»nr* S I-rn rn B u r k a j t i ' ¥>t*ion Planning t Optirn.eaflon SuO-SyMgmt Aregtg’nmmg f i t n m e a t t r * . B A ' . m r . tugwx|,|®e>.’wi - ' ■ "S* 'roofing 4 Analytic*! i, nutation ' « Mmr n D a « n < . S S ( lub Syti*’- » In the fast moving Computer Sciences, from Los Angeles to Houston to Washington, young people are making things happen at TRW. lf you look around a1 any T R W locator!, y o u 'll se c far more yo u n g fa-' es til an o ld . Th s is r irt cu! irly t r i f rn th e com ­ p u t e r s c ie n c e s . W h y ? B e c a u s e w e d e p e n d on new ideas a r I fresh view ­ p o in ts to apply fact char g in g comp .‘cr te c h n iq u e •> to a fast char •, g industry. T h a t's w h y we need people lire you. W h a t k in d of a p la c e Is T R W ? A ck a r o u n d . T a lk to you r p r o f e s s o r s sr-d faculty advisors, or to yo u r friends w ho ere a re ady wor- ng with TR // . M o s t of O ur prof- s s ’onal em ployees a p p le d to T R A ' on the recon mendation of frier ds. A t T R W S j s I e m s C o rn, ■ a * •- n a r d Da*a Re i c o lo n C c 4 r — > : der "■ /, © re o 4 th e wor ; ; • or* e l m eed com ­ p i l e r c e n te rs—-w® provide scien tific and b u s in e s s prog ra m m in g sj; port for m any technical disciplines. lf y o u ’ll be r e c e i v i n g y o u r d o g ' e e ( P h . D . , M S or B S ) in E n g i n e e r i n g , Ma*h erratics, P h y s i c s or C hem istry this year, consider joining a Troup of c o m ­ puter protector a . a .. are develop;’ ;j co mputer applicate.' c in Ii e to Sowing discip lin es: M issio n A n a ly sis / Trajectory A n a !/. s s / G u i d a n c e A n a l y s i s / R e - e n t r y A n aly sis / Control S y s t e m s A n a l y s i s / Information S y s t e m s A n a l y s i s / Civil S y s t e m s A n a l y s i s / S i g n a l A n a l y s i s / Com pu te r S y s t e m s A n a l y s i s / Interested? Check with your Placement it a d 13 k with us w hile w e’re o n L ca r po-,. I4 yr j c a n ’t m ake it th en m d would like-to be co n sid ere d for open* lo gs n V e Los Arg* ’e s area , H o u sto n or v V a " - , ‘ yn, send your resum e rot W, D. M /era, College Reiat o r s * T R W * e Purk, R edondo Beach, Cali­ Or a fornia JO2/3. A r r 77?/ O pportunity Em ployer t o rn a u wmmFn lf* J,, amit Ttnmna-.llmm Wvcrtndgtj kee/KOmph dKOimnUton*ere*®Me aer* rn*. ara affying aWercW tocAnoJaar to VK*. WW'**. Mfuafi. umX’wie* ait nartafe E N G IN E E R S A N O SC IE N T IST S TRW CAM PUS IN TER VIEW S MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1968 S E E YO UR P L A C E M E N T O F F IC E Wk T u « sd a y , F e b r u a r y 20, 1 9 6 8 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e I Paraphernalia 2 4 0 4 Sa n G a b r ie l 9 :3 0 to 5:30, T h u rsd a y s til 9 :0 0 Very Little Fairness In Love, War—or D raft Everything’s fair in love and war—or so they say. One would only wish that some tiling were fair in current US Selective Service laws. It s readied the stage where 15- and 16-vear-olds are already feeling pressures on them involved with the d ra ft “Make good grades so you can get in college,” their b r ­ ents warn. “Or you ll find yourself called up by Uncle Sam.” If the youth is able to make It to college, he must spend his next four years in constant dread. A bad semes­ ter, an unsatisfactory introduction into tile college atmos­ phere, o r financial problems making it necessary to drop out for a while can result in the end of his education at th at time and the beginning of a required term in the military. But, say the 22- or 23-year-old finally emerges from the University with a degree, lie Is of the age when m ar­ riage, family and career are uppermost considerations. Yet beginning any of these or taking on any type of finan­ cial commitments is an uncalculatable risk. The graduate may have trouble getting a job in the first place. Now— unless he has the money for and the inclina­ tions toward further education in medicine or the ministry —the graduate had just as well forget about further edu­ cation. So he wants to be an engineer? A college professor? Too bad, son. That s tile way it goes. Oh, you can take your chance and begin Graduate School if you want, but you won't be assured of even being able to get your first year’s tuition back if your D raft Board decides they need you. N ot that the college-bound or college graduate is Hie only one concerned with the d ra ft It hits equally hard at the high school graduate who wants to work on a farm instead of go to college . . . at the HLyear-oId who is already married and so goes to work as a mechanic to support his wife and baby . . . at tie1 man who took a two-year-vocational training program to get a job as an electrician or printer. American young men now are faced with being the pawns in a great big chess game played by the nation’s officials without any real rules. The o n ly ‘sure thing is uncertainty. I he draft laws were hardly made more fair by the Administration’s latest decree stopping most d raft defer­ ments for graduate students and suspending the official list of essential activities and critical occupations used as a guideline by draft boards. Die Administration should seriously consider a sys­ tem of a national lottery where the individual is eligible for only a certain amount of time and where It is com­ plete random choice. All could be made eligible directly after high school or after one degree or vocational train­ ing for some amount of time, say a month or six months. U ncertainty for a certain amount of time would beat the presto* system by a mile. Perhaps even a plan In which women would face pos­ sible drafting to do clerical or some other office work is not too unfeasible in these times of equality of the sexes. Nowadays there’s little enough fairness in war tac­ tics and small chance for love—fair or otherwise. But the greatest unfairness of all Is that of young men trapped In a cat-and-mouse game Characterized bv chance and in- equality. T h e Da i l y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r at UT, Austin I " I in rh * D auv T exan ere th o * it" ' 'n f 'u A - V 0t n*Ce“ ar' 1 th0X* °* th e o t i t o r o r of th # w n t a r University a in r m s tm t -a"or rex' , - a - ’ n*w*p*p« r « r * U n iv ersity of T e x * , s t Austin. t>» T-fv Inc Drawer D. University station. ication* ‘ •' m e *r san m o -* WU; be accepted b r telephone J 15 W ,« p u b ‘hed daily ex c ep t M onday and S atu rd a y s e c o n d e as* p ostage paul a: Austin, tO.H I 5 2 m . a t th e e mortal es concerti ,nr nearly agrees with them as their guiding source. Interviews Help revealed Moreover, interview s th a t students r e s p ad to the im portant ques­ tion of w hat influences them in a p at­ terned way, This response bias or a n ­ swering as they think they should, a l­ lows them to admi! that professors in­ fluence them but a t the sam e tim e to th at stu ­ dory or hesitantly confess dents do. to influence them — so Students feel that professors a re sup* posed they adm it it. (rn the oilier hand, m ost fool laxness it is adm itting a weakness, a in professional attitude and objectivity, to confess students exert influence. is sought by w riters. T here Ret >gnit. n, whether praise o r criti­ cism, is nothing so gratifying as a letter on “The Innng Lice ' because this indicates that someone hag read the work. is Consequently, m any students w rite what they til ink will arouse interest but not ridicule. They do not differ with prevailing libera sui on cam pus but try to sc'net subjects that will provoke feed­ back. It the balance between c a m p u s pressure, a rep o rter's individualism, and faculty re- sponsible journalist — a journalist cap - air.- of getting nut a p aper five da vs a week, appealing to his student re a d e r! and doing it alone, without organized faculty assistance. that produces a in: uence s , h irir m w -r.* TW — - ‘ *■— * * r Herblock In M y O p inion Consider Females As Real People? By MICHAEL KLEIN G raduate Student in I “n y i biology Girts are charming, lovely, and desirable. A s proof o f that, I’ve spent an inordinate amount of time in the past 20 years chasing after them. Now finally it seem s caught up with m y glands, tim e to question w hether females can be taken seriously as people. L et’s look at som e are as of Importance in evaluating g i r l s : Intellect has th,it my Take fashions. When you get to my advanced age and have lived through at least throe or four m ajor style changes, it begins to look like an absurd Joke— to current yet girls slavishly respond they go fashions. From pointed shoes to to square pressed to abort ones. toes, curly short hair long skirts long hair and F irst of all, I object that too much tim e and attention is lavished on some­ thing th at at best should be a minor as­ pect of life. Secondly, m any girls have failed to adapt styles to their individual cases—and have shown a lack of good just one sense exam ple: doesn’t a girl with 20-inch calves and 30-lneh thighs realize she looks just a bit grotesque In a m ini­ skirt, or in shocking pink hose? Apply Neatly and proportion. As The sam e objections apply to m ake­ up If you gals are going to wear this w ar paint for the next 40 to 50 years, why not spend Just a minimum of tim e finding what shades flatter you indivi­ dually, and then at least apply those neatly. Also for years now I’ve been con­ ducting a one-man Hosing) cam paign to do aw ay with silly and unnecessary rules of conduct like lighting a g irl’s cigarette, opening ca r doors, and w alk­ ing on the stree t side. These kinds of gestures (th at girls seem to insist on) a re neither personal nor im portant when com pared to m ore meaningful kinds of consideration. Still further, this typo of baloney serves to m aintain the notion of girls as delicate objects. Wouldn’t you rath e r be a person than a doll? trivia. I wonder As to intellectuality—about once every two or three years a girl says something to me that is either surprising, insight­ ful, or significant. In between those few m oments, all I hear coming from them is isn't w asted on fem ales. Subjectivity per­ m eates their every discussion, and they seem to be Incapable of sticking to any topic (outside of their im m ediate life) for m ore than five m inutes. Women's Magazines if education Their values are superficial. While til inking about this article, I decided to look into w hat girls read. So I read Helen Gurley Brown, L adies’ Home Jour­ nal, and other w omen’s m agazines. I w as astounded at the m anipulative ad­ vice dished out. Tb s kind of contrived and unnatural schem ing on how' to handle and/or ‘hook men has to destroy the last shred of spontaneity and genuine is human w'annth while going on. the process M o st of these criticism s a re based on frills’ devotion to m aterialism and an overem phasis on form ra th e r than sub­ stance. What I ’d like to see women cul­ tivate is their individual capacities in Intellectual and creative areas. It seem s strange to m e th a t here at a m ajor umverstiy, so m uch hoopla is connected with Campus Sw eetheart or Ten Most Beautiful contests. Where are com parable events for S m artest Girl on Campus, or Finest C reative Talent in Art. Music, L iterature, and Science? Surely there have to he a few girls around here w orthv of rosjiect as inde­ pendent and capable people. I'll keep looking. I lie Firing L in e 'Gratitude' To the E ditor: The Challenge '68 Colloquium was the m ost satisfying, meaningful, productive w eekend that I have experienced since entering the University. M ay I acknowledge m y gratitude and congratulations to the Challenge com m it­ tees, the faculty, the participants them ­ selves. and a special indebtdness to Dr. R ichard Farson, without whom I might never have realized w hat a genuine in ­ terpersonal relationship could be. Diane Glover 2106 Oldham M is le a d in g To the E ditor: rho Challenge ’68 Having attended program and listened to Dr. L em er’s speech, we find that the article appear- mg in Sunday s Daily Texan quoting the speech to be highly misleading. In tile List p aragraph of the article, the Texan has taken a num ber of Dr. l i n i e r I statem ents out of tile original context of the speech. He does not pro­ pose that tim idea of the “ true believer” is one which m ust be followed by to­ day s youth. In his lecture, Dr. L orner stated that the :rue believer” is one who does not have an open mind when it comes to the acceptance of ideas which do not correspond to his own belief. This attitude, he sziid, is one which should be steered away from. Contrary- to the statem ent on black power in the Texan, Dr, L erner advo ca ted shared powers and mentioned that no group needs to set itself up In a power position sim ply for the sake of attaining social acceptance. tho actual statem ents of We feel th i t the Texan in the future should m ake a determ ined effort to re p resent the speaker. This is especially true for a m an in Dr. L em er’s position, whose statem ents are widely read and where such m isrepresentation can be dam ag­ * ing. R oyal N e lm s G iles N ow ak Nan Jacinto Dorm** Responsibility To the Editor: Once again tile Texan has exposed Its shallow insight. Tile editorial. “ Negro Football P layer Faces Honor Ch Alenge.” places the bur­ the den of personal acceptance upon shoulders of Leon O'Neal, who happens to be a Negro. Tile entire University com m unity has least, setting the responsibly v of. at asi ie its b:gote i attitudes and viewing this young man as they would any other team m em bers O’Neal does not have to be a “ super h y” nor does he have to prove his worth as a “ N egro” player. His responsibi ties end at perform ing to the best of tis abilities. Here the I n:versify com m unity’s re­ sponsibilities begin. The U niversity has itself to, once and for all, a duty to realize that the tim e when a Negro must “ prove him self” , to the w hite world, has com e and g o n e -n e v e r to return. Eleanor Mayfield 2111 Rio Grande By DOTTIE BLANKS Editorial Page H niter “Men! Hmmph!” How many times have I heard th a t acclam ation of emotion on til e lips of the compatriots of my sex0 Indeed, how many times have I uttered it myself in moments of sheer exasperation (and apolo­ gized later because “We can’t live without ’em.” )? Well, by golly, I apologize no more! Why? Sitting in my sm all office in the short skirt I w ear because a m ale Person Who Shall Rem ain Nam eless has com manded if. I vias confronted by an article ex ­ pounding the general m ale philosophy th at ' .Al women are c re e p s” ' What criteria so profound a for generalization? We expect too much cf them in the way of m anners, we follow the fashions, w e’re m aterialistic, and we schem e. P oppycock! Y eah, th a t's w hat I said Men set the standards, then ridicule us and call us artificial and condemn us when we try to conform . Responsibility Demanded Take the first attack (I certainly don’t w ant it). Men don't like the responsi­ bility of opening doors, lighting cig­ arettes, walking on the stree t side, or I presum e, being superior in any way. (and that it bs) th at we are They fail to see that by relegating fe­ m ales to a lower position, they auto­ m atically have to treat us accordingly, If they a re to work on the presum p­ tion in­ ferior, they m ust, being the only other form of Homo sapiens, take c a re of us by doing the sm all chores that we are incapable of as lighting our cigarettes so that we don’t burn ourselves, opening the deairs that we a re too weak or stupid to m anipu­ late, and walking so that we don’t fall off the curb. accom plishing—such Women Follow .Men to As the second implication—that women, I believe the term was. “ slav­ ishly” follow' fashion—that s absurd- F ace it. What m an w ants to go with a dirtb ag ? If a woman wore a white blouse, blue calf sw eater, length circle skirt, locks, and oxfords. (it used to be the style, rem em ber) she would im m ediately be labelled bv the entire m ale populous as a “dum p”'. flowered Men dem and that their women be pre­ sentable. and rightly so. But the task entails knowing w hat your m an w ants you to w ear in what sea- n. No woman w ears anything her m an doesn t like. C R O S S W O R D P U Z Z L E A Yesterday's Purr!* s alg;i Norrie gffii ISTi I n! ElftlStEM ria iA a A e J F T the 'p ’s I A N I P S PLT <] ACROSS I Knocks 5 Ache 9 Protective organization I 1 -Placed in Un* 1 3 N e a r 14 G oss-ps 16 Note of scale 17-M ake lac* 19 Greek letter 20-Toll 21 Let it stand 23 Com pass pornt 24 Slender 26 Mistake 2 7 Evaluated 29-Uncooked 3 0 Confederate general 31 -Contend* 33 Room 35-Sailor* (colloq.) 3 6 Meadow 3 8 Pinochle term 4 0 Bitter vetch 41 Venom 43 River in Wales 44 Pre*!*: down 45-Grum bled 47 Brother of Odin 4 8 -Blem ishes SO W ing ‘noted 5 ? edible fish S 3 incline DOW N ISpb» 2 M a n ’s nickname 3 fruit seed 4-Com ra n d to cat 5-Entreaty 6-Three toed sloths 7-Preposrtion 8 Sea nymph 9 Strokes 10 Chemical compound 11 Cheng* 12 Think 15 Number 13-Frigbts 2 0 Despoiled 22-Snares 24 Vapor 26 Be in debt 28 High mountain * I 2 3 9 I J 17 gg14 18 21 ■mn ------ \ V J 7 5 Si*:?2V . y . n I IV auLl 22 W 73 26 a4 0 44 48 r— - r 52 ! ;N ; A ” V V . 41 45 4V | | J; . v 31 Proofreader’* marks 32 Slides 33 Finnish bath 34 Football team 35 Spreads for drying 37 Silkworm 39 Act 41-SeH 42-Trade for money 45-Inlet 4 6 r ip ire 49-Exclamation 51 Parent (colloq.) n r IO P W 32 36 15 27 1' 4- 5 I4L 8 I v ? F r 20 r I 2 4 ------- J—I-- T v «w 3 0 "T rn • W 34::, v W 2 :— — iMd’47 T v h h h 4 6 38 39 37 33 78 • ; 51 TW'v J5 0 y.p 3 •‘.'4 v v Longhorns in Second Place; Cowboys Seiling Clash With Raiders Tonight Buying Period Until Feb. 26 D A LLA S (A P ) — The Da Ha a Cowboys N a t i o n a l Football League team said Saturday fans had made commitment* to buy >9 million worth of N - As for Tex as Stadium, the new s J urban home for the team. The sale of bon As to seas ,n tick et holders was to *>• ! F : i ! -v \ u the Cowboys extended 'he buying time to Fob 26 for seas in fi holders to buy some of ti • Iv n is used to fina: •« the radium st nearby Irving. The Cowboys la id through Sat Beday Commitment* h * \ been made to pun-5 {.se 11 HU seat lo­ y cations in the 58 Of vt ..... p. stadium, Tile pur 1 asers IncludM 12,976 Cowboy season ticket Iv I ens, the announcement g Ad. Purchase of a $1,000 bond en ables a fan to buy one G wboy season ticket f ir < ne of the 9,000 best seats in the stadium. Season tickets to the remaining sideline seats, about 30,000, require the fan to plunk A u n $250 f r a I >nd. I The Cowboys w IS use the ( ’often , Bowl In 1968 and I '9 btu av thro plan to move to Texas Stadium in 1970. Club owner Clint Murchison said commitments ha I .ten t ade for more than $3 mini n w nth of "skyboxes” in a private enclosed section. SKI S K IIN G AT RED U C ED RATES w.tH Univ«rnty Stud*".kb INTERESTED? AH*nd Ski ( b F«b. 21 7 f .rn. —• 3.0 ROTO Building — S E M I— R A Z O R C U T S S200 Orange-White B A R B E R S H O P Nat! To Mar , tm arn j«.- mo I‘»v»d Parkin* - R**r 4 • .;ii , nil Customer Convenience From Bob Miller Volkswagen n e w s e r v i c e h o u r s ST A R T IN G FPB. 12 farts & s ervi ce c p n MON FRI. 7 AM. - I? m SAT. 7 A M .-12 N O O N Sales I a.m SAT. 8 a.M. . 6 P.M. t p m, O U R N IG H T L IG H T S A TTRA C T A LO T O F B U G S ! BOB HILLER VOLKSWAGEN • IU I i 7*0 4 T KORTH MI H PHO NR IM4'| Trouble for 'Horns on Boards . . . 6 7 ' Tech center Vernon Paul. U S Skaters, Skiers Enter New Meets GRENOBLE, Franc* (AP) - Am erica’* figure skaters, speed skater* and skiers moved on to new world tests Monday as French workmen nailed up the coffin of the tenth Winter Olym­ pic Game*. The United States’ lone gold medalist, dazzling Peggy Flem ­ ming of Colorado Springs, Colo., led a strong contingent to Geneva Switzerland, w’here she w ill tn for her third world championship Feb 27 M arch 3. After she wins It — regarded a certainty — she is experted to sign a pr > contract that may br - ..: her $5du,000 over the next five years. A so at Geneva, Timothy Wood of Bi >omfield H ills, Mich., beaten our of ti o ( I yin pie tide by a frac­ tion of a point, w ill attempt to rest. re An ric t’s world suprem­ a l ai: *ng men figure skaters. To do It, he w ill have to beat out Wolfgang Srhw an of Austria, winner of the gold medal here, and Em m erich Dancer, also of Au tria, world champion for tho last two years. Janet Lynn, th* 14-year-old Rockford, III., girl who Is rated a future chan.}): n, and Tina Noyes, the cute red head from Arlington, Mass., will he other laduTO contenders. Gary Visconti of Detroit and Scott Alien of Smoke Rise, N J., will Join Wood as men threats. Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service FA C T O R Y TRA IN ED Volkswagen Specialists The O nly Independent V W G arag e in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs A rld t’s Automotive Service 7951 BU RN ET RO A D Across from G u lf M a rt G L 2-0205 CIo»*d Saturday permanently hold, It', original, freshly pressed looln A great G a n t oxford cloth shirt for w arm w#ath»r. It navar needs ironing; when ifs torrid it will never wilt or go limp. Tai ored with finesse in striping on whit* background. By B IL L F E L S T E A D Texan Sports Editor Two games ago. a I the pro-v *ur* was on Texas to r a y close In Southwest Cbnfemio* basketball rare. the Now the squeeze !* on Baylor, an i the Boars are fading the p illa r mighty tlghit. A n i for a change, the I./>ngl >ms have rm # help In Chasing the league-lead­ ing Bruins. Going for Thro** Straight Coming off two straight SW C wins — inc!ud r.g a cm a1 vic­ tory over Baylo r — Texas takes on cellar Au ' i5 t,;v h at 7 7 30 p.m. Tuesday in Gregory’ Gym in the first of four “ must” contests. Texas is now 6-4 league-wisp, an i finds Itself In a three-way second-place knot with T C I’ and Texas A&M. F.v. r is a scant game in front at 7-3 — but has dropped two battles in a row. Leon Coach Block’s crew pulled into Its advantage* us posi­ tion via a 91 kl pasting of Rice Saturday night. Texas led at the half 52 12 b< r<> lining pushed In the closing moments. With four games left, and the race tight, the rertalr g SW C schedule becomes ai! rn port an t Surprisingly, none of the front- runners has an easy time of It. Besides Tech, Texas catches TCC, Arkansas, and S M I’—win­ ner of three s’: ight through Sat­ urday. Schedule* Sim ilar left, and Baylor has an identical sched­ ule the Aggies also meet the same foursome. T C I! must get by A&M , Texas, and Baylor, with Rice the only "breather” on its chart. If hot spells have anything to do with the loop otrcome. Texas may well finish atop the heap. The 'Horns are the finest shoot­ ing team in SW C play, hitting St per cent from the field. All five starters are canning better than half their shots, and only one of IO Steers to see C*lof TbrAntrmvb (lo)laxe. D m * In* or B n aM b o t Only $3 75 plus 26e Handling AB Poitarj B S W, 2 Wi»k D* Gary, Tnit Ortirlnnl Rftnmnd Inrfinti. School .Vanin PSYCHEDELIC PHOTO CO. P.O. Box 3071 St. Louis, Missouri 63130 Learn to listen to full music power! H A R M O N - K A R D O N I y I t • m Haw A c a m p i * * * •title o i component!. I* I enqir.j-.rj . -oaneHi Hot Overbeck has dumped in 135 points in his last five outings. Including 89 In his last three, and has upped his SWC average to 19 7 points per game. leads all scorers Arnold, despite falling off from a torrid 20 4 pace he set through seven non-conference and SWC tilts, still in Conference competition with TIO points a n i a 210 average. The most potent duo in the SW C I* supported adm irably by sophomore Wayne Deva! (12.4 per SW C game, Including 19 against Rice*. Hurt Papp (11.5), and I -atry Smith (9.7) as start­ ers. Texas Tech. most popular pre­ season pick for title honors, has never gotten off the ground and presently occupies Inst place with R ice at 3-7. Slow Start, Poor Record Tile Red Raiders dropped their to opening game at Lubbock I exas, 84-72, and only recently showed any promise, upsetting Arkansas at Lu b eck , 71-72, be­ fore being bombed, 73 55, Satur­ day by TCO* Tech relies heavily on the re­ bounding of 6 7 Vernon Paul, a 1967 all-SWC choice, plus the out­ side shooting of Je tty Haggard and lanky Jim Nelson. Paul la hitting 16 points a Con­ ference game, complimented by Nelson s 15.1 and Haggard’s 12 3 norms. Tech's biggest problem has been In shooting, where the Raid­ ers are averaging but 41.7 per­ cent from the field. CVjofrr-'u-f ntmuffnn W L Prt. RarV*r ........... ? T-iii ..,......,,8 ................. « TOU ... « T>*(t* AAM A rtarin* .............I ...........4 SMT’ R I C * J Tw i** T*ah ...........3 I-n.i'tln* BWX? A<-»rcri ro CU M o art}' T 3 J B:::r AmoH. Tnt** ...... ......... -* .............. 78 I^>nn P hillips Bill Volfht SVU ............ TF, Carr Ov»rt*u Twca* ..... to .........,74 IAUTX liu>r, Rio* s i Ronnf* P » n rt. AAM J*meH EMrUJge, Ark. aa Rotten MCK wiz *, Ark. ...... .'A Vernon I ’* ai, T ech ................. §7 so T i t TW ms rn rvp bf,3 753 TIS TTI 7-W TTO YOX 757 TV Zia 305 an ids rn rn Reagan Stars Sign With Tech LU BB O C K , (A P ) - Conch J. T. ; King and quarterback roaoh Tom Wilson of Texas Tech announced the signing to letters of intent Monday three stellar high school football prospects. Two of the schoolboy stars are from Class A AA A champion Aus­ tin Reagan, quarterback Dale Re­ build and halfback John Kleinert. Rebold threw 61 completions out of 124 passes and made l l touch­ downs in the process during last seas, rn. Also signed was a SJO-pound from San Antonio, linebacker Tommy M cIntyre. Crazy Legs, D onovan Join Pro H all of Fame Art Battles, N EW Y O R K (A PI- Pro fessio n ­ al football s Hall of Fame opened the gates Monday to seven new members—Cliff Donovan, Elro y Kirsch, Wayne M ilkier, Marion Motley, Charlie Tripp! and Alex Wojrlechowicx. Tile new men w ill bo induc ted form ally at ceremonies at the Hall of Fam e In Canon, Ohio, during the summer. No date has been set for die induction* which will be held as part of a gala that w ill game between National Football League teams. include an exhibition : WEEKDAY SPECIAL These popular items from our regular menu on special M on­ days thru Thursdays from 11:00 a m. to 9:00 p.m. Menu Price Special Price $1.10 Spaghetti and Meat S a u ce $1.35 ...............Chopped Steak 89c $'.09 $1.25 . . . . . . . . Chicken Fried Steak ............. ?9c $ .8 5 ....................Enchiladas.........................69c G A N T S H IR T M A K L E R 3 19th and G uad alupe If you don't agree that business destroys individuality, maybe it's because you're an individual. There’! certain campus talk that claims individuality is dead in the business world. That big business is a big brother destroy­ ing initiative. But freedom of thought and action,when backed with reason and conviction's cour­ age, will keep and nurture individuality whatever the scene: in the arts, the sciences, and in business. Scoffers to the contrary, the red corpus­ cles of individuality pay off, No mistake. Fncouraging individuality rather than suppressing it is policy in a business ike Western Electric—'where we make and pro­ vide things Bel! telephone companies need. Because communications are changing fait, these needs are great and diverse. Being involved with a system that helps keep people in touch, lets doctors send car­ diograms across country for quick analysis, helps transmit neus instantly, is demand­ ing. Demanding of individuals. If your ambition is strong and your abili­ ties commensurate, jou'll never be truly happy with the status quo. You'll seek w ays to change it and-wonderful feeling’ - Rome of them w ilt work. Could be ut Western Electric. W e s te rn E le c tric MANU! ACT- mi JNlt Of Int .li.l J Y S T E * Bold, Bright TaHeriaflt G a n t took a long hard look at th * trad itio n a l t a t t e r s ^ and decided to put new life mf0 if. J o wit: Th , new light w eight •nd-on-end in terp retatio n . Tailored with singular precision— patently G ent. is a bold bright e § s h i r W Ti c a k e r s Mm Why A Gant Shirt? Because a G ent shirt is mo-e than something to throw on. Its a stimulant to n-*ke you feel good, lock good throughout the day. Bys is whv WA carry a complete sanction of G a n t shirts. *t s also why men o ; impeccable taste come to C lyde's for cranti. Ghfdt 2350 Guadalupe Ga/n G A M I 8 H IR T M A K JE R 3 Tuesday, February 20, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 L SU 's Pistol Pete Maravich Nation's Top College G unner BATO N R O U G E, La. M F ) - “ I don't think t h e r e s anybody in th® country who can guard Fe'® M aravich one-on-on e.” said R ich Lupcho, one of his toam - on the Louisiana S tate b a s­ ketball team . And after 20 g a m e s few tea m s h a v e tried. D esp ite sp ecia l d e ­ fe n se s concocted a g a in st the LSU a iphorr.ore scorin g sen sa tio n , P is ­ tol P et# lead s the nation’s sco rers with a 44.5 a v era g e. " E v ery basket he h a s gotten has been hard e a r n e d ,’ his fa th ­ er and head coach , P re ss M ar­ a v ich said. "W e h a \e had 20 different v a r i­ a tio n s of d efen ses a g a in st P ete In th r e eq u a r te r s of the g a m e s, he has been hounded b y two and th ree gu y s co n sta n tly ." Ti e skinny, 6 foot 5 M aravich , w ho m ay crack the 1,000 point m ark In his first y e a r In v a rsity tile ball arri n, u su a lly b rin gs d<>wn the flo w for USU. Met Im ­ m ed iate!} by one or tw o d efen d ­ e rs. he dribble* around until he w o rk s free for a shot. "Til# m ost co m m o n ly used de- o is a variation of the box and one," his fattier sa id . “ W e've had tile 1 2 1, with a c h a se r d e ­ fender on P ete. W henever he 'Es­ c a p e s the c h a se r and g o e s to tile co rn er, th e o f f e r w in g m a n p ic k s him up. T here a re m a n y v a r ia ­ tions of this z o n es and other sjie cia l d efen ses. ' When he s e ts for a sh ot, an­ th ere oth er guard w ill hop and try to h a r a ss h im . A s a r e ­ su lt of that, he tries a h esita tio n sh o t and he h a s b een m issin g so m e ( lose o n e s.” In " H e’s a b le to g et the oppor­ to shoot b e c a u se of his tun ity m o v e m e n ts .*' sa id th e co a ch . P e te , or “ T w ig g y " a s his te a m ­ m ate* ca ll him , h a s b een banged the ru g g ed up con sid era b ly in D I S S E N T I N G D E M O C R A T S O F TEXAS O R G A N IZ A T IO N A l M E E T IN G Ton.ght — Unlvariify Y —• 7 IO 2700 Guadalupe M C C A R T H Y For Pr#»Id#M • Paac* C om *. Cougars Still Top Cage Power Bruins, Tarheels Hold Second, Third B y T h# A sso cia ted P ress K en tu ck y and D uke reg istered the la r g e st g a in s In T he A sso­ cia te d P r e s s ’ c o lle g e basketball poll M onday w h ile M arquette rep la ced T e n n e sse e on list of rankin g te a m s. th# T here w ere no c h a rg ee in the four Hating as Houston r e ­ top followed m a in ed a solid by UCLA, N orth Carolina and St. B o n a v en tu re. lea d er f r o m a d v a n ced K en tu ck y eig h th p la c e fifth after d e­ to fe a tin g T e n n e ss e e and M issis­ sip p i S ta te la st w eek . D uke, an e a s y w in n er o v e r W ake F o re st and T em p le, c lim b ed tw o notch­ e s to eig h th . In H ouston, un beaten in 23 g a m e s, co lle c te d 26 first p la ce votes and 332 points th e votin g by a national pan el of 34 sp o rts w rit­ ers and broad caster* based on la st Saturday. g a m e s T he C ougars b eat M iam i, Fla , 106-64 and Air F o rc e 106 82 in la st w e ek 's g a m e s. through UCLA, 2 0 1 , lone aetback th# by H ouston, drew eigh t first p lace v o te s and 314 points, The B ruins dow ned O regon 119 78 and O re­ gon S tate 88-71. State, C lem son N orth C arolina dow ned North C arolina and South C arolina for a 20 I m ark, St. B o n a v en tu re lifted Its m ark to 18 0 by ed g in g Seton Hall 81- 71 in o v e rtim e. T ile Top Ten, b a sed on g a m es ......................... through S a tu rd a y , F eb . 17, I H aviate* I ceijk S N o rth C m Olin* t et. B o n * v a n i u r * S K e n t u c k y * O ohim bl* T N e w M e x ic o V Pi.A* * Vnide rb lt t IO M arq uette gsj ............................................... r<« ................................... .. ............................... r 2 149 ........................... ........................ ....................... .. J2J 12S ................................ lei as S o u th ea stern C o n feren ce b e c a u se the of b a sk et. iii* sty le of drivin g for l ie su ffered a painful hip injury in the F lo rid a g a m e and m isse d s e v e r a l prattle e la st week. sessir as D esp ite the Injury, M aravich pou red in 51 point* a g a in st G eor­ g ia M onday night. On Saturday night Pete sco re I hi* career high in L SU 's 99 99 tr i­ o f 59 points um ph of A l a b a m a . In ZI g a m e s, M aravich h a s scored 950 points He a lso lea d s in rebounding and a s ­ tile tea m sists . G re e n B a y Hires Form er O ile r Lin ebacker C o a c h GREEN RAY, Wls. (AP) — G reen B a y Packer General M an­ a g e r V in c e D n nb ard l announced that Wayne R obinson, M onday who has been roaching lineback­ ers for the Houston Oilers, has b een hired tin* w orld to roach c h a m p io n s’ d efen se seco n d a ry . R ob in son , 38, w ill su cc e ed J e r ­ ry B u m s, who e a rlier In the d a y w a s nam ed to the M innesota Vik­ in g s ’ sta ff. ACAPULCO SPRING BREAK Spacial B ;1g#t Paflag# April A 13 Tncltld**: T night* ho'*! an ti J mn*)* trip a i r far* Jtasmo** a -ap-,; a Hound T a r h t c r u U * o n a c a p i co B a r S p e c ia l Burp:!*# R n • r n $99,50 Ber Ration Caf! Us About Ofhar Spacial* tor S p r i n g Break S A N B O R N 'S Parry B roo k* Bldg. G R 6 7548 716 B ra id j io f t e n g ® lo Jersey rX»S°° SEE US ON CAMPUS FEBRARY 27 AND 28. You racy discover a career of unlimited growth potential with Standard Oil ( Company (New Jersey) and lls worldwide affiliates in oil, chemicals plastics, cryogenics and minerals. In each of these, we're operating ' an unusual system of developing management people. It starts with decentralization of responsibility to autonomous affiliates. We re ideally structured to see that you don't "get lost in the organization." And as you grow, you'll never face the mid-career Hight that comes from choosing too small a company at the start. Your advancement can be inter­ company as well as intracompany, overseas as well as domestic. W ell give you a real growth challenge during your whole career— because this is a basic responsibility of our top management If you have superior business and analytical ability, confidence, and unusua. breadth of view, we have immediate openings in a variety of activities, Including: marketing—pricing and research; investment ava,uation and coordination; financial management; feasibility studies- business and operations analysis; supply planning; and mathematic* and systems. The Jersey story is one you should hear. Make an appointment with your placement off ic © now to hear it while we're on campus. Humble Oil & Refining Company Enjoy Chemical Company Standard Oil Company (New Jersey) and its other affiliates Equal Opportunity Employers P a g e 6 Tuesday, February 20, I96B T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Clay Seeks Draft Exemption Lawyer Cites Racial Imbalance HOUSTON (A P ) - T hree fed er­ al jud ges heard a tto rn ey s d isa g r e e M onday on w h eth er C a ssiu s Clay la sincere In a contention he should be ex em p t from m ilita ry se r v ic e is a m in ister and a b e c a u se he co n scien tio u s objector. T he sp ecia l pan el from the fifth US Circuit Court of A p peals heard 70 m in u tes of argum ent!! and then took under a d v ise m e n t the h e a v y ­ w eig h t boxing ch a m p io n 's app eal of a five y e a r prison se n te n c e for refu sa l to enter the arm ed force*. C lay, free under a $5,000 app eal bond, w a s not present. C h arles M organ Jr., an A tlanta, G a ., attorn ey for the Civil L iber­ tie s Union, asked Die court to rule C la y ’s constitutional righ ts had b een violated by a sy s te m a tic e x ­ from d raft clu sio n of N eg ro es b oards. He a lso called for a ruling that the J u stic e D epartm en t had erred in r ejectin g a reco m m en d a ­ tion Clay be cla ssified as a co n ­ objector b eca u se of scien tio u s b ein g a B lack M uslim m inister. “ G a y w a s a co n scien tio u s ob­ je cto r only at his c o n v e n ien ce ,” a n sw ered US A ttorney M orton S u sm an . A ssista n t U S A t t o r n e y Carl W alker Jr., a N eg ro , agreed w ith M orton that th ere is room for im ­ p rovem en t on the racial b a la n ce of g o v ern m en ta l panels and a g e n ­ c ie s hut argued that Clay had been tr ea te d fairly. “ I ’d be the first to s a y It is d e sir a b le and ti at w e are m ovin g in that direction but C assiu s C lay H earing w as treated fa ir ly ,” W alker said . the a rg u m en ts w ere C ircuit J u d g es J a m e s P . C olem an of A ck erm an , M is s.; R obert A. A insw orth J r ., of N e w O rlea n s; and D avid D y er of M iam i, F la . All th ree Interrupted the a tto r­ n ey s se v e r a l tim es and, n ea r the end of the p ro ceed in g s, C olem an broke to s a y "I w an t to ask you one v e ry p en e­ tratin g q u estio n ." in on M organ "W hat is in the r e ^ r d to in­ d ic a te he ( G a y ) would h a v e e s ­ ca p ed m ilita r y s e r v ic e had he been of the w h ite r a c e ? ” C olem an a sk ed . “ I c a n 't se e a n y th in g to in d ic a te the o u tco m e would h a v e been d ifferen t had he been your son or m in e .” M organ rep lied that the record sh ow s that C la y ’s L o u isv ille, K y., d raft board had receiver! n u m er ­ ous lette rs su p p ortin g the c h a m p ­ ion and a nu m b er that w ere c r it­ ica l of the boxer. “ If a N eg ro had been on the hoard I think the N eg ro w ould h a v e g iv en him a fa irer h e a r in g ,” M organ sa id . “ We h a v e a r a c ­ ia lly ex clu d ed s y s t e m .” "S om e d ay w e are go in g to h a v e to fall back on the presu m p tion that lf a m an is fair he w ill d ea l fa irly r e g a r d le s s of r a c e ,” C ole­ m a n said . M organ e a r lie r had said a K en­ tu ck y c ircu it ju d g e held a sp e c ia l h ea rin g for G a y at the r e q u e st of tho J u stic e D ep a r tm en t and r e ­ c o m m en d ed th a t G a y ’s c o n sc ie n ­ tious o b jecto r c la im b e a c ce p te d In that he had giv en Indication he w a s sin c e re . The J u stic e D ep a rtm en t r e je c t­ ed the reco m m en d a tio n and ruled that G a y s b e lie fs w ere political and r a cia l. "There Is no e v id en ce he is not a conscientious o b je c to r ,” M organ argu ed . "This m an w a s entitled to be c la s sifie d by a gov ern m en t institution that d oes not la c ia lly discriminate.” In a n sw e r to a qu estion from A insw orth, W alker sa id G a y had sta te d that he opposed C hristian in a w ar w a rs but would fight c a lle d b y E lija h M uham m ad , the B la ck M uslim lea d er. S u sm a n "To m e a w a r is a w a r ,” W alk­ er sa id . "C lay w a s in co n sisten t. H e w a s In sincere H e w as given a ll the rig h ts he w a s en titled to." said G a y nevpr did r a is e th e m in istr y or co n sc ien tio u s o b jecto r q u estio n s un til a fter he had been c la ssifie d 1 A on F eb 17. 1966. H e said the K en tucky c ir ­ c u it Judge had erred in r e c o m ­ m en d in g a c c e p ta n c e o f su ch a c la im in that C la y had testified he w a s not w illin g to go to w ar but w a s w illin g to a c ce p t sp ec ia l a s ­ sig n m e n ts at th e g o v e rn m en t’s ex- p e a se . "C lay w a s a co n scien tio u s ob­ jecto r o n ly at h is c o n v e n ien ce , but h e w as w illin g to travel about the co u n try at the g o v e rn m en t's e x ­ p e n se," S u sm an sa id . "H e is a fig h te r. H e h a s a lw a y s been a fig h te r .” B oth M organ and S u sm a n r e ­ Horn Wrestlers Post Strong Showing in Louisiana Meets T h# Longhorn w restlin g tea m tra v eled to L ouisiana la st w eek ­ end tn c o m p ete with USU and th# U n iv ersity of Southw estern I/>uis- Un*. At la f a y e t t e a g a in st S ou th w est­ ern L ouisian a on F rid a y night, ’Horn grap p lers wpre d efea ted 17-12. E ach team won four m a tch ­ es In the co n te st, but USL re­ c eiv ed five ex tra poin ts on a for­ feit sin c e T e x a s w a s sh ort one m an. In c o lle g e w restlin g , fiv e points are g iv en for pinning an opponent, th ree p o in ts for d e cisio n in g an opponent, and two points a re g iv ­ en e a c h m an for a draw . U nfor­ fiv e poin ts tu n a tely for T e x a s, a r t given for a m atch . forfeit of the This ruling hurt Texas again S atu rd ay afternoon a s they w e r e tied 18-18 by L SU at B aton R ouge. In four tills c o n te st T e x a s won m a tc h e s to th r e e for the T ig er s, but had to g iv e up fiv e poin ts aa resu lt of a forfeit. T he Ijonghorn w restlin g te a m La sp onsored by th e University of T e x a s Sports A sso cia tio n for M en, Which a lso .sponsors th e L onghorn so c c e r and g y m n a s tic s tea m s. On M arch I the team w ill h a v e a "double d u a l,” m e e iin g w ith Stephen F. A ustin at 5 p.m . and w ith S ou th w estern lo u is ia n a at 7 M p .m . in G regory G ym . Als. . T e x a s w ill be host for the S ta te H igh School W restling T ourna­ m en t th is Saturday, C om petition in the high sch o o l m e e t w ill b e­ gin at IO a .m . and fr ee of c h a r g e. is teal tost B a rry r»i»i u *>«. Jour, r a m ton o v # r n a n r n n I I m BIM b*. T ed » C r a n to st to G u y F o u c h e -iv 152 lbs n o e n tr y fo rfe it lo st to J i m W o o d w a rd I ' t i ) bs, B r i a n B a r ry . . R a y S h irley IST I k to v o v e r ----- Bar B eard 177 b i T om M e a v v w t I bt v a G o o k o v e r .. B r i a n D a m e ie r » John < 'a mdpn o v e r r n i H o d * # ! ’«%# Cook o v er Tax*. I* 1 B ' ' . fused to sp ecu la te on w hen the c ir ­ cu it court m ight rule. "But it is a p referred c a s e and w ill be m oved up," M organ sa id . "I think th ere w ill be a ruling Just a s soon a s the ju d g es ca n c o m p lete their s tu d ie s .” M organ w a s ask ed if he thought h e could h a v e the c a se before the S nnreme Court by su m m er or fa ll. "Who s a y s Til e v er h a v e to tak e It to the S u p rem e C ourt?” M organ a sk ed . "If the circu it court a c ­ cept* G a y '* m in istry c la im or co n scien tio u s ob jecto r cla im the c a s e w ill be o v e r .” that He ex p r essed hope the court w ill m a k e a v e ry broad rulin g con d em n in g the ex clu sio n of from S e le c tiv e S e r v ic e N eg ro e s boards. "T hat would help the m o st p e o ­ p le ,” h e said. Continental Cm 6 6 M e r c e d e s 2 3 0 . $ 3 6 9 5 ' 6 7 M G B . $ 2 4 9 5 6 6 A H S p r i t e . . $ 1 5 9 5 ' 6 6 M G B .............. $ 1 9 9 5 ’6 5 M G B ................. $ 1 5 9 5 ' 6 3 M G B ............... . $ 1 1 9 5 6 6 D a t s u n ............ $ 1 6 9 5 6 6 S p i t f i r e ........... $ 1 6 9 5 ' 6 3 M G B .............. . $ 1 4 9 5 ’6 3 M G H OO . . . . $ 9 9 5 ' 6 3 A H 3 0 0 0 . $ 1 6 9 5 6 4 A l f a . . , • ........... $ 1 4 9 5 ' 6 2 XKE C o u p e . . . $ 3 1 9 5 ' 6 2 A H S p r i t e . . . . $ 1 1 9 5 ’61 M o r r i s M i n o r . . $ 6 9 5 6 5 V W .................... $1 191 Y a ’ll C o m e 501 W a i t 6 t h St. s t c m D e p e n d s on th e g ia n t A c tu a lly , som e g ia n ts are Just regular kinds of g u y s. E xcep t b ig g er. And that can be an advantage. How ’ Well, take Ford Motor Company. We Ye a giant in an exciting and vital business. We tackle big problems. Needing big solutions. Better ideas. And t hat s where you come in. Because it all ad Js up to a real opportunity for young engineering graduates like yourself at Ford Motor Company. Come to work for us and you’ll be a member of a select College Graduate Program. As a member of this program, jrou won t Se just another “trainee" playing around with ‘make work" assignments. You’ll handle important projects that you'll frequently follow from concept to production. Projects vital to Ford. And you'll bear a heavy degree of responsibility for their success. You may bandle as many is 3 different assignments in your first two years. Tackle diverse problems. Like figuring bow high a lobe on a cam should be in order to yield a certain compression ratio. How to stop cab vibration in semi-trailer trucks. How to control exhaust emnussion. Soon you’ll start thinking like a giant. You’D grow bigger because you've got more going for you. A network of computers to put confusing facts and figures into perspective. Complete testing facilities to prove out better ideas. And at Ford M o to r Company, your better ideas won’t g e t axed because of a lack o f fu n d s. ( A giant doesn’t carry a m iJf: c's w a lle t, y o u k n o w .) Special programs. Diverse meaningful assignments. Full r e sp o n sib ility . 'I he opportunity to fo llo w through. The best facilities. The funds to do a job right. No wonder 87% of th# engineers who start with Ford are here IO years later. l f you’re an engineer with better ideas, and you’d like to do y o u r engineering with the top men in the field, see the man from Ford when he visits your campus. Or send your resume to Ford Motor Company, College Recruiting Do* partment. You and Ford can grow bigger together. VSS xumaAn ICAB, MAtaoa*. u n n j i AM AOHAX arrOkTVWTI tU rU TTO m Whats it like to engineer for a giant? Ratter enlarging! Clark Says US Ready for Riots HOUSTON (A P ) - U S Attorney General Ram sey Clark said Mon­ day the nation is "unquestionably better prepared to cope with riots this sum m er." Clark told a nows conference that police chiefs from 120 major cities have been thoroughly briefed on procedures ♦,-> prevent outbreaks of civil disorder. He later told the Texas Daily Niewspa per Ass- >e i a tion con cen - tion "our greatest battle and our greatest need" is a campaign to reduce the number of crimes com­ mitted by juveniles. Clark said juvenile lawlessness has increased SS per cent since 1%0. He said President Lyndon B. Johnson’s proposed anti-crime program, which would make $100 million available for police agen­ cies, offers hope in preventing youth-comrrr tied crimes. Pardon Me, Sir, But Is My Eye Hurting Your Elbow? tw e lv e of T h a t * Th e t i l l * o f a d a v a sta t r g re-* cO'iertion of s c e n a rio * >n w h ic h th e n a tio n '* h ip p est, h o n e s t w rte - * ie r o In on th# w h o le A m e rica n *ce n e — fro m s e * on te le vis io n to poli­ tic* In C en tra l Park Auth -» in- e lu d e B ru c e J a y P n e u m a v Allen fillip G m sb e rg , Arthur Kopit, Roth . T e rry So u th e rn , and other*. P ro d u ce d by G EOR GE FOSTER end B O B BO O K E R . $3 95, now e t yo u r bookstore • IB N A R O G U S A S S O C IA T E Com m unications G a p Lessens - aaa Chol* At a mid-afternoon reception in the Hoblit- zelie Room of the Academic Center, mem­ bers of the Speech Association of the Univer­ sity along with Sigma Alpha Eta members entertained faculty members and students in the speech program. Susan Henry, left, listens to Dr. Re* Wier, associate professor of sDeech as he talks with students (l r) Elisabeth daughter, Jam ie Chiles, and Gail Rauhut. Engineers Choose Sweetheart at Ball Peggy Haeszkiew ic* learned she wag the new Kngineering Sweetheart Saturday night at the annual Engineering Ball. For two days the seven entrants campaigned in the engineering students’ Tea Room. Each girl was sponsored by a professional engineering society and the w ei­ ner was chosen in a college-wide election with the results secret until Saturday. Chosen one of the Ten Most Beautiful last fall. M i * Brees- zkiewirz found that the smaller number of entrants rn this con­ test "made her more aware that she was in the com pc ti tion." Miss Brzeszkiewicz wore a wine-red crepe formal when Hip presentation of conte.-‘ants was made. Each girl was given a red rose with the new Sweetheart re­ ceiving a dozen. As Sweetheart she w ill be the official h< st ess of the School of Engineering af the Power Show. She aim will be the hos­ tess for the Institute of Electronic and Electrical Engineers, die professional society which spon­ sored her. M rs Un versify, Ju d y Ruth W il­ liamson, was also presented. Her husband, Walton E . Williamson, is a graduate student in engineer­ ing. Miss Brzeszkiewicf is the treas­ urer of Orange Jackets, a mem- be- of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, and was chairman of the Chal­ lenge registration committee Architects Speak Here Wednesday Two archftect«4ea chere, one from the East Coast and the other from tile West Coast, w ill give publ-e lectures here Wednes­ day. Stuart Silverstone of the Mass­ achusetts Institute of Technology and Charles Rusch of the Uni­ versity of California at Berkeley w ill speak during a program scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. in Architecture Building 105. Both w ill discuss topic "The Three ‘R ’s of Architectural Education: Reasoning, Represen­ tation, Non-Ref]ective Thinking." the LOB Top Man Still at Helm B v The Associated Press A Liquor Control Board mem­ ber said Monday that IX IB Ad­ ministrator Coke Stevenson -Jr. has not been fired nor asked to resign. " If in the event Mr. Stevenson does resign, it will be his deri­ sion. He has not been and will not be fired ," board member O, R. Crawford of Jasper told rn porters. Crawford acknowledged that the board and Stevenson discussed the adm inistrator's future with the agency Saturday. He praised Stevenson's record and said he knew of nothing that would reflect unfavorably on him. Crawford sat In on a nev. $ con­ ference for newly sworn LU R Assistant Administrator O. N Humphreys Jr . them. But There have been recurrent rumors the past week that Ste venson, 54, is on his way out. He denied the Dallas Morning News and the Dallas Times Herald reported Sunday that the administrator was being forced to ret re from thx* post he has held since 13 id. Crawford refused to confirm or deny that Stevenson was leav­ ing the hoard, which has been shaken the past two-ond a half months by widespread allega­ tions of irregularities in its en­ forcement of the Texas Liquor Control Act. Humphreys, 43, has been men­ tioned often as S’evenson's suc­ cessor. " I have not been approached or talked to atr'Ut M r. Steven­ son’s Job. That is between M r. Stevenson and the Board ." the former Deportment of Public Safety intelligence chief said minutes after Stevenson swore him into his new $18,500 job. Lecturer Views Revolt as Vital Today > revolt is good and is needed, Christian Science Jecfur- I or Ignore D H inks, GSB, told University students Monday night. Speaking on “ The New Morali- ‘v ' Mrs. Hanks said, however, that attempts to improve society U.J1 fail if we continue to think and to act as though our careers exist independently, and without purpose The new morality demands action instead of talking; it de­ aries hypocrisy. Yet, this is not enough, for to change, the world, we must recognize a more uni- ; versal dimension, Mrs. Hanks said. We have to know God as a 1 Intelligence, practical principle, «*a never-end­ ing source of in­ finite ability, capacity, a coom- J olishment, awareness." She said! hat by re c gnizing this a? we >ursue our careers, we will find ! ice contentment, and at the ame rime the pa^h to a better arid, Mrs. Hanks’ lecture was spon- rM by the Christian Science Organization, a student group on 1 ampus. Stu d y in Guadalajara, M e x ic o Hie Ifeuadatijert, Summer Sehoc « ' ■ 1 a c c re d ite d Ur?'/*r»Ify of A r it o n * program, conducted In cooper#* on i‘h promisors from Stanford Urn- rectify, Uni^ertity of California and S^ada'a'ara, wifi offer July I to Auf* ut# ;0, art, fc t ora, geography, hi** tory, leaf nag# and Deratjre coories. Tuition, board and room it J 290 Writ* »'of. J Jan e. Reef, P.O. Bo. '277, S‘e-ford. Ciliform# 9430S. ENGINEERS Freeport Sulphur Company, one of the nation', top p-odueen of mineral,, offer, the graduate engineer a challenging and p r o fe s s o r,I,y stimulating career with un- limited advancement potential. Freeport's five divisions spread From Georgia to N e w Mexico while growth con- tin uw at a phenomenal rate. Investments in new plant facilities in Louisiana, alone, tote- more man $75 million. In 1968, sales are expected to exceed $175 million, with less than 3,000 emp oyees. For many years Freeport has been the leader in production of sulphur. It also rank* among leaders in kaolin clay, potash, oil and gas. It will soon produce phosphoric acid upon completion of its chemical plant at Convent, La which will place Freeport among the leading suppliers to the fertilizer industry. Strong emphasis on research and process development espelcafly relating to physical chemistry, mineral* extraction and hydrornetaliurgy, has he!ped make Freeport a leader in these fields. The Engineering Department, too., has achieved prominence In project design, devel­ opment and construction supervision of new plants In virtually all of the compar', s projects. W hether your Interest lies in research and develooment design and construction or production, yo u’ll find it at Freeport - a world leader that’s com pact enough for you to achieve personal satisfaction through Individual accomplishment and recognition. M IL IT A R Y S T A T U S ? Although Freeport hires without regard to selective service status, it is considered an essential industry. You may qualify for a critical occupation (I D A ) rating. INTERVIEWS W ILL BE HELD O N CAM PU S: Wednesday, February 21, 1968 C ontact your placement office for further details. Or write or cal: T. L. Vandegrift Assistant to M anager - Industrial A Personnel Relations Freeport Sulphur Com pany P. O . Box 61520 N ew Orleans, La. 70160 Telephone: A rea C ode 504/529-4393 FREEPORT N. Koreans Say US Charts War PA N M t N JO M , K ma (A P I —• North Korea charged Monday t! -,t f n v o v Cyrus R presidential dances visit to South K >rea last "w ar week was to chart a course." The United States called the charge senseless. M aj. Gen. Pak Ch’ing Kook, the senior North Korean delegate tc I an Arm istice Commission n avi lug, "Recently Vance, with the label of Johnson's spot a1 envoy, crept Into South Korea together with war manics of the State ar,I Defense departments " Rear Adm. John V, Smith, the UN Command's senior delegate, replied that the chariot were ‘ un­ founded and senseless ‘ Pak's charge was echoed by North Korea's new spaper Rodong Shinmoon in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital. The arm istice meeting was called by North Korea to protest flights of US planes over the North Sunday. Sororities to Coeds With Aid Funds Financial aids are being offered to women students from sorority foundations. The Women's Panhelienic As­ sociation of Dallas is now receiv­ ing applications for its annual tu­ ition scholarship. Any Dallas coed having complet­ ed at least one year tn a Texas college or university and planning to attend a Texas school next year is eligible Applications should I n c l u d e reed, scholarship, the transcript of high school, leadership, and tile amount of college tuition jwr se­ mester. Applications may he malled to the chairman of the sch­ olarship committee, Mrs Albert C arver, 431T Bordeaux Ave., Dal­ las. Texas 73205. Alpha XI Delta Is offering a graduate fellowship of J I . SOO for advanced study In the field of so-, ria l sendee. Applications should be in bv March 31, and for ad­ ditional information contact Mrs. John C. Barkey, 1700 Rockbridge Terrace, Austin. All full time undergraduate wo­ men are eligible for the Delta Delta Delta scholarship com peti­ ts rn. Applicants for the Zeta Tau A l­ pha scholarship should have .rn over all D average ami recom- nit adati 'its their college deans. from Three Rehabilitation Scholar­ s h ip are offered by Kappa Kap­ pa ( bunnia sorority. Those schul- at -hips are to assist the recipient in preparation for work with the mentally retarded, the physically the socially de­ handicapped, prived, the emotionally disturbed V. iditii'na! information on the scholarships contact Mrs, fra noes McMa th in the De;in of Women s office, Room 101 In the Speech Building. 3 Speech Topics Scheduled Today Three talks will b*> given at ! Kl p m Tuesday in speech 714 for students interested in grad­ uate study in sp. ->rh. I r V. •* • •• N T r ; s r yr vi­ tiate adviser in the D»‘j uh en! of Speech, w ill speak on ' ‘Ad­ rn yton and Graduate Degree Re- q U IA Au Ko] Ak of t! Dr Us ti pie n and Job Op- *s in Spent h Pathology {trilogy " Hr. is director Sf»ee<'h ar-! Hearing Clinic, \ iiiarrea! chair­ .If "ssc J man rf the I v*pat tr. • ait f Speech w ill end the program with 1 Teach- !ng and Research Assistantship* and a O n e r a I View rf the Grad- u a ? e Prorra rn ' * The Statical Health Center’s phone number for appointments Is G R I -3082 ft rn 8 to 5 Monday through Friday. The emergency number is G R ! 1824. FREE on Blanket Tax Draw Free Reserved Seat Tickets NOW University Box Office • Hogg Auditorium Open 9-4 SHOPPE Everything For The 4016 N. Lamar / CV-.- ~ W I- ■ ,} l f i ; \ CK, rimed Bulef lo M unicipal Auditorium W ill Bo A/ai la bl© at 25c R oundl Trip V*atch D A IL Y T E X A N for Bu* Schedule will a job with LTV Aerospace make you more exciting, sought after, healthy, wealthy and wise? V\Tiy shouldn't you enjoy the good things of life when you’re out to conquer Hic universe? Sound far fetched? It’s not. □ Your first job with L T V Aerospace sets you on a p ith that can I* ni you almost anywhere you want to g a P L I \ Aerospace Corporation makes products, of course. Q I he A / — F 8 — Gama G oal — M A C Y — Lance—Sea lance--Scout -prim e subcontract struo* fur als for the 71? and the SST. Thats a few. Design, development and product ion require systems engi­ I r t ring with enormously fit versified capabilities. At L IV Aerospace those capabilities ar*- ly in g ex- am.n- (I in terms of ti.*- total environmental pit turn — sea, land, air, space and outer space - in ck can sciences — high m obility ground vehicles — mis­ sile systems — m ilitary and rummer* aal air* rait V / S T O L launch vehicles — extra v* Ii mu I ar activity research and development. The e irs today s spheres of action at L I Y Aerospace. They are the frontiers of tomorrow. C A rep­ resentative of L T V Aerospace Corporation w j!1 visit your campus soon. Talk to him. Fdjk sp'. ifi< s .tI>out programs, assignments, duties, salaries. Then, talk futurt s. Ask questions aI>out where your first job can take you. O H e ll have ansvs< rn f< yon, ano they n ri He ll show you where L I Y A. Corporat on i< ti , t },/> vague if irs. pa. 9 ung rn ti vironmentai adventure, and how D "iou could find yourself gettin excited about it. And that's a darn way to feel about your first job. I en- fit in. r* tty ax A College Relations Office, L I Y A eros pa' e Corporation, P O B o x >907, Dallas Tes ts 75222. An equal opportunity employer, C A M P U S L M U R V i t W S THURSDAY. FRIDAY h L D R L A la I J J & L A R Q I i \ / ^ ^ « O Q P > A C e G O f=> c > f=t SA r / o / v 04* *. Tm ***SO • or® awe . is** t t w a w w o a w o , o m Zm v tJT O o uwsom T u e sd ay, F e b ru e ry 20, 1968 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g e 7 Historical Guide To Be Published Volume to Provide Key to Archive* A guide to the* historian! manu- •Gript collections In the Univer­ sity Main Library will ho pub­ lished Wednesday by the Uni­ versity Press, 'The University of Tetras Archives," a volume of nlmnct 600 pages, provides a key to In­ valuable Information which has heretofore boon accessible to the scholar only through extended and time consuming searches. V. Chester Kielman, Dr, archivist In the University L i­ brary, compiled and edited the book, which contains definite de scriptlons of all manuscript hold­ ings In the Archives. "The .■ .->•! as historical manuscripts collections preserved In Tile Uni­ versity of Texas Archives have Frig t < < • f r in " the the premier sources United States for original docu- mentation of American historical studies, particularly fo r investiga­ tions of the development of the Texas and greater Southwest region of tfse nation,” Dr. Kiel­ man writes in the introduction. "Die repository was established in 1899 when I jester G. Bugbee, a member of the University’s history faculty, with the assist­ ance of George I’. Garrison, chairman of the Department of History, secured the transfer of B e x a r the Archives the Library, Dr. to Kiel man in id. "incomparable’’ Business-Economics Library Offers Tax Filing Guideposf Income tax filing time is just two months away, and this ni ght he the time to get ac. quailed with the references in the Business Administration Leo- nom irs Library. University Gets $5,000 Grant A LULO Mu a grant h is be*rn awarded to the University for the s’ud\ of the life sciences : aion. " " Atomic Lr.*-jgv < ouim v Tim grant Is part of $511,028 to be given to SI colleges nnd uni­ versities ti rough the Dix ision of Nuclear Kdur.it ion and Training. Tile grants, which are to Le matched dollar for dollar by the school* : ** ’riving them, are to provide laboratory equipment and radioactive sources for instruc­ tion in the nu lear aspects of tile life sciences. in The primary purpose of the av lids is to assist educational institutions their advanced sciem e curr 'ula. They are part of the federal government s pro­ gram to build a vital educational system. Awards are based on the recommendations of a special re view committee composed of col­ lege and university faculty mom- bet s active in nuc lear science. The Business Library in B L B 462 offers to graduate and under graduate students and faculty a wide selection of material in th© areas of management, finance, marketing, accounting, business law, economics, insurance, rn vestments, and taxes. 12.000 Volumes Presently Pip library has ap. !rv proximately 12 OOO volumes, eluding books, periodicals, maga­ zines, and Indexes, and purchas­ es between 200 and 250 items a month. Tho open shelf and re­ serve library has a circulation of approximately 450 to 500 items a day. Books are nil catalogued in the Business Library and are not duplicated In the Main lib r a r y Tile library has the only copy on campus of annual reports of approximately I 000 nf (hr. largest companies in the nation. These are especially useful to pros­ pective Investors. Copies of CPA exams are also available to students. Additional Spare Needed H ie Business Library opened In the fall of 1562 with a seating capacify of 262. "But already more space Is Heeded Tile tai id­ ly library- teaching more oriented work," said Mrs. Helen Smith, head librarian. is Library hours are 2 pm . to midnight Sunday. 8 a rn. to mid­ night Monday through Thursday, * a m. to IO p.m. Friday, and 8 a rn to 5 p m Saturday The desk closes at IO p rn. r ghtlv. Campus Crusade Supports Mission Setting a goal of $500 a month, Campus Crusade for Christ launched Us first project Satur­ day In Paraguay to support a mission About 75 students participated in a ear wash at Morgan’s Gulf Station, 2817 Guadalupe, in an at­ tempt to finance a newly formed ministry. Although expinslon funds were supplied bv the national head­ quarters of Campus Crusade for 1 hrisf, the University group Is responsible for its support, under the direction of the Student In­ vestment Program. Action groups, composed of various student Bible study and prayer groups contribute tim** and money for the support of the mission. Students May Volunteer For Work With Child ren to arf as Students wanting I e a d o r s for underprivileged ehikhwn at the Brooke School may contact Dr. Yvonne Loft- 1 ouse in Sutton Hall 422. Tile afternoon clubs will begin Feb. Guest Scholars Aid Music Staff Visiting scholars have begun teaching a graduate course in musicology, using a new ap- Mail Crowds Rich Bum From Happy Hobo Life proarh developed at the Univer­ sity. Each Thursday a guest scholar LOS A N G E L E S (A P )—Clint Wescott, the bum who likes wine and wide open spaces and dis­ presents a one-hour lecture, and each Friday he guides a one-and- dains large sums of money, was gloomy Monday. died a year ago. leaving him br tween $3,000 and $1,000, got this greeting: "Oh, no. not more money. Ko, no, no.” Fight days ago he was in­ firmed that he had $19,219 from the sale of a gas station he aban­ doned in Burnt Hills, N. Y., in 1953. Requests for more than $2 mil­ lion were contained in the let­ ter*. "They’re all the same,” said "They th* 51-year-old drifter. all want the money." " I don’t want to talk about It. I just want to keep living this life. I can’t live in the weeds with my wino friends if I take the money Thats for s u re ’’ Most of the letters were ai- dressed to "D in t VIV fort, The Man In the Weeds. Las Angeles.'’ ‘T i l get to th* pi mf ’ wrote a Detroit man. " I rn a king you for your money. Just send if to me. ’ Bu* a Tustin, Calif . wen v a said, "Please use the enclosed $1 for your few needs and CK I bless you for sticking to your convictions." Another woman’s loner said she had three brothers and a - s- ter suffering from cancer. She wrote: " I have prayed for God to show me a way to get enough money to bury them when they die. W ill vou help?" One missive gave Wescott a chuckle. If invited him to be guest of honor at a wine tasting party. He learned he has another 11.000 coming, to $19 219 he heard about a week ago. in addition The news came in on* of loo the rest of letters, nearly all which were written by people who said they'd be glad to re­ lieve him of the whole kabondie. Th* flood of mail reached his bridge abode after a newspaper revealed his way of city life. These were the first lofters he received in IO years. The one telling him his father Campus News in Brie f n half hour seminar. Musicology faculty members assist in th© discussions and grade the term papers assigned by the visiting lecturers. This new approach to teaching was developed by Dr. Bryce Jor­ dan, Department of Music chair­ man recently named Vice Pres!, dent for Student Affairs, and Prof. Hans Heinz Draeger, co­ ordinator of music history and literature. Draeger originated the course. "Current Thought in Musicolo­ gy” is taught at 4 pm. each Thursday and Friday and is open to graduate students and any in­ terested person. The meetings are held in Music Building 106. The next visiting s bolar will be Dr. Leonard Butner, Stanford University musicologist. He will discuss "Current Views in Eight­ eenth Century Style Criticism,’* on Thursday and Friday. Counseling Telephone Tile Emergency Counseling and Referral Service can be reached at GR6-7073. ARNOLD A JB SO C IE T Y of the Air Force ROTC will present the second in a series of talks in the John H. Payne Memorial L e c t u r e series. Dr. Carl Schmitt, professor of govern­ ment, and an authority in the field of Latin American studies, will present the lecture In the Union Theater at noon Tuesday. The Daily Texan Classified Ads C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R A T ES F * A W o rd ( IS word minimum) Minimum Charge ......... .................... ............. .. ii fit rat* ( IO word maximum) on# Cm# ............. *Ei#ch ad ditional i n 20 C o n ia ;ut«v» h i **» IO w o r d i .................................... IS w o r d ! 20 word* C la r if ie d D h p lay I column i ona in ck Ona tim# ta c h A dditio nal Tim# ................................ ...................................... ............ .......................................... ............. .......................... I Ho copy chang# for coruecativ# It! a rat#i 04 .20 .50 .25 J J 8 00 s i o.oo J 11.00 I 20 I I L IO •NFW LOW STUDENT RATES *0 w o' r*- * ’» th# on > ITT students sri n the ip tun sear g:am s In past been anm>uoced ta be cancelled ut bo HT Ohs JO B S IN EUROPE A p p lie r 'io n s Pe CAPITO L B l n I' rn G R 'n te a. Mvljfif ewjx-fl Open 11 a rn Wanted N T T HE f n T J l n •» • farm ant# HegTmx.g f u n *•*!»>• TOnner b ath unfurnished H %k<* w.rt.i A as! : I'm t” I «■<•■. m onth O R I .’ .’I I f#rii !.v S-b#>U ..m •-! IV* bom # in Tarrytown, Cast* f. ll'g h hi-ho»i n i i t r i . 't o: ’ * ms** (I *0 ti O per OF G R H IIN.*, Room and Board GOVERNOR'S D I S I IFxlGUISHED Now KIon's Dorm P l o r n a J B o a i IE D R A G ” UADALUPE In f on GR 6 5658 ,F I 'I R«i d#-*i "ta ai.* a1 Co £di»cat o* a 7 J 4 \', Room ■ : : 2 C-r J 3 !379 6 C Lo st an d Found S.'S R E W A R D Miscellaneous pi! Hat CA'# car F o r Sa le Roommate Wanted Typing hooka at any kind — hardback or pap# back*, ear i f no tape*, guitar*. com*, hic: typewriter* a* ma ga (inca. murder yea* f J s®f H p rtn s tr FtMru#? pu ppet A K C WAl#.IC u Phi* «,* im Hunters, pet*, shaw rh* rn pion st re i* * N-:ed dam. Wormed snot* OR — ..... —a— ___.........._______ ~ •<„ , ... le$wbrt Uh rn- riff ft*i#ytd * i * K * . . M A LK K in<4 to share on# bedroom apartnteot $80 ty, 478-897$ •ate apartment. ff»5 pius I m#B * goat*, golf club*, tap# record- I cam Damon good cond eon 477-7351 Fop© Biockt campit* Th*'»a. J»* ae rial R*po>"4 P: fc*sionaily typed a- n 'n .* i Reasoned a Mr*. B,*iour G R - ~ ,3?© r'mm 4T7*S?;ft Anvra’'' I X P Z R I I K C E D : t i f d ' s i c r i B t i f i n i .. m M;* s.mptm r"‘Rie snd chi #* lions stamps e *, t#!#y{* I ■#. cam a ” 1 ran I r n , . nh»„„ ta b ai boa** art fu n ' a*, engmecrteg tucp! a, -Cuba fa ir, f. • I; a #-,d ho .let- t g o» gun* blini ng *"1 Aahing a; pment to..* f.ICP P f. a a r o n , Hu. ar »nd T .vin, (Kl Rad Rn ar '* T » ft O I, J O-41 fin.a ii in - w< * A'"’ ?*" *"* ' » top Com#i wagon. #359. ' # lea p#-k He*- 8 To *«■# n. ar m Al t R P IN y r j . ar hr $ I OM 4 I cat# Beat offer c h * 't a r v.. J 0 3J South I^ m a r. W# taka i m «vt is,I imr* v item* t .R »ou on eomtgnment H I 4 >9^9 8pm ‘ufunr apartment near oampu* M V I.K mao: J ‘ii itll! V , K E M AOK ©ha-a nil'!'' a th '-ne v • e rn ;. ? i I bedroom apa- « I PMi 2. Iva,I -r X*i m -viv ire a ca--I bn.* paid. Lake A PO R M S .K ff>-.* a (nj Pa I t i i i 2 Al'- ' Tan Shepherd pup lated stock No p., ll 'tic ;t KL U r H CAS t. GR 1-5244 TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD V T G N !A CALHO UN TYPING SERVICE i 'j ifen onal T j ymg A iif :j| l l i ti! thing and Bin F i g ob *«d Tbaaaitat.'.v * 130! Edgewood -478 2636 WRITERS AID SERV,CE Z xii*,"t *. ping ae; >. f -rn TT’f per pa. a TYPING, ED TING, RESEARCH PHGNE in -XVI P O B x 547 A u h r , Tex#* 7N7JT F R L E PIC K I D a u d D E Ll VER Y Wf C ‘ Furnished Apartments for unit # men and women ft non# Apartment*. G R T Y P I N G d'Urt I rn-red «-a v £ * a pa ga More information rah 4 I ISM •.in o W F RVI EW APARTMENTS „ ^ r> I) to t i f be- ‘nd M<* Ileal A rt* a lo an# I ijdcnt* desired ->■ M arne J *' • i >ri,e h--.. *..■ — — -— — — ~—— ,—. — TM*'cd ga# and waler Most re* • e ral r v f u v o IHM Tui os. cr. 3 MIU a*, c r . a i N S C I E N T M C S n r P I S T for th****, brLf* E \e c o n n e r ir^ai set re 'a ry w.tb B . h M i* E » c r. O L 3 - “ r le c ti 0 _________ r!,ese* B r eft. Report*. Mr* I d hkc* Kg lh pleaK N K P t o , a otrm >■*' tm#©* i-< * n Ilex . 1(1 Im aul* f## a Sr I n p < Cong:en HI 4 .th! I USED BO O KS.. THE BOOK STALL R S .1 Bsi*-net r-M > opt- «* # I - ii Friar#!! •I* H: re ii ... I en ■ # ‘O' * I ( rt-l . a iraphlc* Texa-n t a * prices Ro:, to > , J Ii I ‘ll N s i afd C lass *» and used a s v , . a* Kl A Btl •mfd iiA'k ng chair*, cl ba' ion! deak*. Recliner*, day be!*. *: carpalirg : hi-m. rte C * RI R I 74 S N : a m * . fill IK R A , power air welded trailer hitch, a u ra *, non*;der had# for ;#-#r a u ’<> ist-' er* b a 92? 4 spaed tranx- " ’> X** ’ '•* ll na 41.14M > OI nu. . t a i.rt.ax • in .stom v « standard J .. ftmi o h St.-IO A t o ll i-. f‘iano player * tut-vt*id m usic ro ta E je c trla H Jy op- iii w I I music It) I A for ’•* ti a I t*a'i i i G R * o ,h after I p m jr*t* #n» p « i.v w. pet. !w*gnn ! K llf G .-’'n >N k m - i'h lie*. , 7 G R l i m A n 'V’11 ' . ”>0 ’ira*- New • I*!' rail 47ft4/s: t *t> tire*, ap bol KUI STK© RJIy tu-ntab;* I d .. MtxJei II ton GR «p#«k# a FV! r# 7 4.3y.T 45 A U T O M A T IC ( OL I 45 Autom atic. 67 mil 'MPH Cl <- e 7*1 f Call OR 7 CTB. aa vgl fe, p<~s C -"C" o placed. tment ng G R 2 4566 a rn . V t - r c e * - ! S O B H U X A p a rtm # ’! ’ * • anime Ore bedroom ■R1* ? "i tm •aging }l.i© two b#/i * * '‘.intact nianager. after 4 it N ' " •Mum* ape ng contract after 5 p rn. GIB HKI.M ■ > I 3 bedroom* clean, qui'** ’-f, I ! '!, water ga* [.a,! h o T y p in g V. q Ha.© M oved I Just North of 27 h & Guadalupe /j fflp /m n fiw s y m u t t H H , 0 Typini I l a Mttun©. Bind:*© A Com p eta Profess o-al FULL-TIM E Typing Sew ce lore© ’ n th# need* of t ’n >e-x ty *t k-'.rh'.i 4 •- »• ase Speeia 'A T T *a,i enginecr‘"8 theyes and daaar m erit for ” »• IHM. Harnett Phone G R J IEO and GR 5 7877 2707 Hem; 1 Pay© teat#!, cf »»«-• -s, rape t*. a- K X P K R IR n c E D t y p i n g S E R V IC E Af SSM *’ Rrai,jnsl>i** near A anda # Ho ft n ‘>* J and 5r" "i, ,5 srpv re f*' "nm • • . A + ta, u wi A* 7‘nvflopaa GR 6 J317 A r ) 4 WA 47c 5623 Furnished R o o m s H e ip W a n t e d ice Korean I A f v, Y a dr rf rn Ma rcii a i " meat ,-b 'n Kngland *nd lh- r>g take- st. a O R 7-CUO * I per hour fem* # tty ii en I el- 53ft ;681 fir t% IO a rn Koad, OL > Kl CAREER IN MANAGEMENT ' * fast#*: groin j e>r*im'#r p-#* #-«a M tw u p s n i w.ii p a lake Pe, son# tat« a cia refuel a nwnagf if! i tra n g p.-og ana sn t # , m ien- IX* Hist i a n n£ and master a phases of ,»><• vans wii.hm IS moriUi* AUnager or n u a,. *aiar> p i t v a ra , Mg »*mp!o> ce bene* un u e u a Holts and m any out. flu. LIBERTY LOAN OR PORA HON Street MKN - IVofflp • Nee r - Vie e* and d.s*er ! G R 2 .1.10 ase G R * 7677 2707 Hem pfe.1 P a rk t h e o n l y t y p i n g s e r v i c e A N N E S TV P N G S E R V IC E (Marjorie a rv.o.--*, . 446 5 l l K E T A R Y . I > p: \ T j 0 ' “ ' >«*•** * ‘ e x Pe r en ce .n a a tie 1* con.-y.cntioa* and met.ca.ous car* G RO UP and CHARTER FLIGHTS S 245.00 S 319.00 Iv., -w.-DOL*. Rojr.o r o D A I L A 5 • LO N DC N - P A R' $ • D A L LA S, lr EX C LO 3 V E . Y F O R U N V ER TY ST U D EN T S & F A C U L T Y - v t - ••••' i f - •. •• , o . : i rt d ■ at ani Vk » J * « - ai * -» * ^ # ' a a • { a o f T *. e ’ Art r> - fr t lir e - de u, t F - cample C h a r t e r 4 P . O . B o * £ U n lv a riity A . i t n. 78 ' j ' ■9 B e 'a i, S'aati- .gi 4 p m . V t « j ~ e n J g y RANSOM room 40 Ace. C b p. ..... 4-,i, W e H ave Com plete irforrratlcn Regarding Jo b s in Europe Page 8 Tuesday, February 20, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN ULT P I BLH ITV C O M M IT T E E FO R R O I M M I* will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Union Build­ ing 315. CATHOLIC P F VCF F E L L O W ­ S H IP v a ! meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Catholic Stu­ dent Center, 2010 University Ave., to discuss "The Catholic the Guatemalan Church and Guerrilla Movement." C O M M IT T E E TO E V D T H E W AR EV M E T NAM will spon­ sor a speech by Brig. Gen. Hugh B. Hester, ret., at 7:30 P rn. Wednesdty In the Main Ballroom of the Union Build­ ing. He will speak on Vietnam. IN D IA N C IV ILIZ A T IO N PR O ­ G RAM O F T H E ASIAN ( E N ­ T E R wul present film, "Tile Flute and the Arrow," in Busi­ at 3 pm . Tuesday ness-Economics Building 155. the NI HSING STU D EN TS ASSOCI­ ATION will hist senior stu­ dents from the Galveston cam­ pus to speak on the curriculum cf the junior and senwr years of nun mg school at 7 p.m. Tuesday in C P Hall. What’s it like to work for a giant? Depends on the giant. If the giant h -. pens to he Ford M otor Company, it can be a distinct advantage. See your placement director and make an appoint­ ment t ) see the m in from Ford when he is here on: February 2S, 27 IT B ld r R ELA TIO N S S I I D EN T M U IE IV O F AM E R K \ v ll meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Journalism Building 307 for the election of officers. S T R IK E ANO SP XKE, coed bowling league, will hold try­ outs at 4 pm . Wednesday in lanes. tile Union ST U D EN T S FO R A D EM O CRAT­ IC SO C IET Y will fponsor tie second In a series of Marxist lecture-diseussions at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Un! >n Building 317. The topic is "Literature arni Revolution.” T E X A S I M ON AM V T H R R X- DIO SO C IET Y Witt meet in code classes Monday through Thursday. Beginners will meet In Journalism Building .105, in­ termediates in J o u r n a l i s m Building 307_ and experienced hams in Union Building 314. T R IN IT Y B IB L E ST U D Y will present Bill McMillan in a se­ ries of basics in Bible doc­ trine from 7 IO to 8:10 p.m. Tuesday in Business-Economics Building 153. McMillan is a graduate of Dallas The* .logical Seminary. Knox to Command ROTC Fraternity William D. Knox has been elected commanding officer of the Praetorian Gun rd, honorary military fraternity for Army and Air Force ROTC cadets] f. r 1968-69. Tile Guard also p>ctnd James Smith as executive officer and Jam es Robertson as adjutant. ex-n utiva Richard Kramer, 'Knox appointed Everett Baker, S T ; S-2; Robert Smylie, S i ; dimes Tid­ John Ferguson, S-5; well, S I; Robert Clites, public informa­ tion officer; and Jam es Ruth, ex­ pansion officer. ‘ ' u,v n9 F n g ln te rln g Students, soon you w i!’ select a full tim e em ployer. You may have o ffe rs from dozens o. com pany re c ru ite rs ; but, before you make y o u r l e c t i o n con sid er CESSNA AIRCRAFT COMPANY. . neers operate w ith a m inim um of ••-nee me first fi ght In 1911 to the present day. Cessna has expanded its o perations into nearly every part of th e w o rld , and has becom e the w orld s leader in the lig h t com m ercial a rcraft. Cessna m a nufa cture o f tape, oe n .g r ng and developing a c o n c e p t- t h e n fo llo w in g r p ro d u c tio n to the consum er. Cessna bf . j v TU grow p r o f it s o n a ’ly, by o ffe rin g a colleg e tu itio n a d program , m aking it possible fo r Cessna E n a m e ls IP worK t o vv a ref graduate degrees in A eronautical Industnal E n gineering, c r t e ctrical, Meehan cal, Business. And num erous othe r frin g e benefits in c lu d i- : an inexpensive m em bersh.p in the Cessna Em ployees F lyin g Club. red ACT NOW. A r d learn the com plete Cessna story bnf orn yo u T T : a : N s r A ircra ft n " Se n a ^ u rre s u m e ,o s , « . J S essna A'>craft C om pany, C om m e-c al u .vision, 5ouG East Pawnee Road, W ich ita. Ks. 67201. I AW EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 'Funny Thing' to Open Here C h o r e o g r a p h e r S t r e s s e s F r e e M o v e m e n t HELD O VER! H».«W'1 sr.-,,bin* H ..-fc• Today At 7:30 P.M. I* ratroRMtviTA ri r w rr* Violin-.-. ti*.! Hat Mm | p m n i l M o n ,* - vr, r t M M F I * SU .H T S I » < p vt T I U RN. In 70mm. and stereophonic sound! f l ’ I not om tw ow.m i« na am. A t t . i N r » m R M r j t v * n o v s m i s t n r . r n r t o > i f i m o t m B t K O K K N H T > M T T M r DAVID QSftZNt CKI . m --nj "GONE WITH < I A K R G A R I B V S MUI NI I K ,11 , I.T.Sl.u; IIOWVRD f kxhmj I ; 01.l\l\deIL\MIJ.VND l i t ' ! I I V I I i s i u s M O W A T su j in MtT*oeoio* I i i A r M H M « l« r « a ,M ll* * V ( H I K I O K B l M A H . O K A T R F A RA, I M I O I O f , K F 1 s o l u s i i \ | . a m i , O H A W T R I V R - T T - X AR T H F A T ItU in this fast moving robust mud- cal. Miss Hamilton has studi< d dance for rn ire than 14 years at both Texas Christian Uni vers. tv in Austin under Barbar i and Carson and Stanley Hall. She has appeared with the Austin Ballot “ The Nutcracker Society Suite,” "Platero and I.” "Boti- in que Fantastique” and is prcvfit- ly rehearsing on original work by Hall. Choreography is nothing new to thU dancer who has worked w:‘h the Texas Union Theatre all year on productions such as "The E v e ," Diary of Adam and * Three Penny Opera,” and "lire U I I *e of Love.” She is also s eduled *o arrange the dance sequences in the upcoming pro do. lions of "Ferlinghetti’s Rou­ "Guys “ Orestes,” and tine',” and Dolls.” Reserved tickets for the musi­ cal ran be purchased at Hogg A' id it rium Box Office for $1.50 each. interstate HELD O VER! *lOiruqcfc£*x > ow ! Opa* s i t i n n e I! Iii . 1:60 • 4 .I* I OO - I .’.(I choreography of the show than jus’ tile dance scents Each song us staged with carefully directed n. mer ent emphasis on movi n ent is generally stressed and Hitchcock Flicks Finish Festival The two final nims in the Al­ fred Hitchcock Film Festival sponsored by the Texas Union U lm Committee • ii' be shown Tuesday and Wednesday. "Suspicion," starring C a r y l Grant and Jean Fontaine, will be shown at 4, 5:30, 7:40, and 9:30 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas Union Auditorium. "D ial M For Murder," starring Ray M illard and Grace Kelly, w ill' be shown Wednesday at the same hours. LAS I D AY! ll I U ii# i m a >: - # in THE J ISHARPEST SECRET AGENT OF THEM Alif S __ MGM J _ y TF RRY JAM ISE MIW I I V I I t u P1 < FO R THE ! AST TIME TODAY.1! Lynn Redgrave & Rita Tushingham have a Smashing Timo in this Film PIETRO i i G FR M L FILM * • C l i m a t e ’ ( S t a r t s T O I V « O R r o w " ) (full I III III HFD f I <\T I MFM K OI ll- if KIN f I I ll Alit RF A TU # HMOKIM* I ll! WITT I ll IMI I ll I I 1‘IKhlM. O P E N — 1:45 • TO D A Y 50c TIL 2 P.M. FEATURE TIM ES 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - IO I ■■ : TOKHI ^ Bins Bums’"' TMS / lA W iV M S M Y C Starts T O M O R R ^ ) COLOR SY Of Ay VTN APT HAMWI > pw M M S 3 THE Top Contender for tho Academy Award* e e / i t h ? Texas Un! n Theatre's produc­ tion of ‘A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” to be •taged this week. • J at ti •* Metho­ dist Stud- nt Center will be high­ lighted by the ch >Apography of Nancy Hamilton, graduate stu­ dent in the Department of Clas­ sics. Accustomed to working In clas­ sical ballet, M ins Hamilton found the change to modern musical comedy a challenge. The choreography of the show pre­ sented unique problems v. hich in­ clude,! rehearsing on cement floors which were both painful on the knees and diffi -ult to dance on. Problems were also to be encountered in making musical tafw-nj which the dancers could rehearse to, but these tech­ nical!':-^ were soon overcome. Miss Hamilton’s overall ap­ proach stressed smooth, flowing movement In her dances, move­ ment without thinking. She states, "Dancers need this freedom so that they might concentrate on projection In their dancing, em­ phasizing not just the mechanics of the dance but the subtlety of the interpretation as well.” into selecting In the famed courtesan scene of the musical this theory is put into practice. Each dancer must tell a different story with her body without uttering a word. The girls, one by one. try to entice a buyer them. Each courtesan portrays a dif­ ferent character from Tlntabula, an Oriental dancer followed by Panacea, a classy stripper, to Vibrata, a sensual tigress. Miss Hamilton comments that hours of preparation went into each of these separate dances which ap­ pear on stage for approximately GO seconds each. Much more goes into the total ' . l r a f imports, ort: Dance Routine Nancy Hamilton demonstrate* step to Ray Sharp. —®tAlt Photo F a c u lt y A r t i s t Plan s C o n c e r t a t U n iv e r s it y Yehudi Menuhin called him “ one of the most brilliant expon­ ents of cello playing." Bruno W al­ ter cited him "a real virtuoso of the cello." Isaac Stern's words were “ a great artist!” Tile man who received these plaudits from three of the world's leading musicians is George Nei- krug. who joined the University music faculty last fall. Ncikrug will give his first con­ cert as a faculty artist at 8:15 p m. Friday in Music Budding Recital Hall. Admission is free. In addition to performances with Walter, Menuhin, Leonard Bernstein, and others, Neikrug has appeared with Stowowskl in New York's Carnegie Hall and Sula Skinner, Imports From Mexico Decorative Aeceisoriei 1705 Nueces Street Ind igence* A rf, Je w e lry , C lothing made a State Department-spon­ sored tour of Germany. A disciple and later an assistant of the string pedagogue D. C. Dounis, Neikrug became the first American musician to be engaged as a full-time professor by a lead­ ing European conservators’. After returning to the United States, he gave a recital of un­ accompanied sonatas at New Yorks Town Hall in November, 1%6. The recital was his first in New York in 17 years. It was also the occasion for the premiere of a composition written especially for him by his son. Marc Only 19 when he composed the piece (in 19801, Marc Neikrug Is a composer and pianist living in Europe. The composition Is In-! eluded in Neikrug’s Friday pro­ gram. William Race of the University music faculty will be at the pi­ ano. T7:e concert is a presenta­ tion of the Department of Mu­ sic Faculty Concert Series. Despite fiendish torture dynamic BIG Duo writes first time, every time! bic’s rugged pair of stick pens wins again in unending war against bali-point skip, clog and smear. Despite horrible punishment by mad scientists, hic still writes first time, every time And no wonder. Bit’s “ Dyamite ’ Ball is the hardest meta! made, encased in a solid brass nose cone. W ill not skip, clog or smear no matter what devilish abuse is devised for them by sadistic students. Get the dynamic bic Duo at your campus store now. l£ Z & WAHRIMN-8IC PEK CORS, MILFORD. CONN CEC Schedules Chamber Group Two members of The Chamber Symphony of Philadelphia, per- j forming In Municipal Auditorium at 8 p.m. Wednesday on the Cul­ tural Entertainment Committee Series, once belonged to sym phony orchestras of Texas. William Stock, assistant con c^rtmaster of the Chamber Sym­ phony, performed with the San Antonio Symphony and Nathan Brusilow, clarinet, with the Hous­ ton Symphony. Among the 38 virtuoso chamber symphony players, drawn togeth­ er by founder-conductor Anshel Bruislow two years ago, are some of the world's finest musicians. Concertmaster Stuart Canln Is a 1959 winner of the Paganini International Violin Competition, and violinist Thomas Michalak won ’he International Music Com- f” petition In Moscow in 1957 and the ' Wientawski Competition In Poland in 1962. Six members of the chamber including Conductor I symphony, Brusilow, are former members of the Philadelphia Symphony Or­ chestra: Stock, Carlton Cooley, viola; Willem Stokking and Sam­ uel Belenko, celli; and Ward Foam, horn. Brusilow was con­ certmaster for seven years under Eugene Ormandv. Reserved tickets are available to blanket tax holders who may draw free tickets at the Univer­ sity' Box Office in Hogg Auditor luna, open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ta*»i I tilo*i Tboatr* r*ro«onli A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE W A / TO THE FORUM February 13, si, 19, Mar,,, I I * 9 rn. Irhthu* Htagr "431 (iawtalupe *1 JO (IX <1 V TS Ft I SFK* I Ii rickets *>n ^al# nt Hong Auditorium ( H O K F H S vivin Tlohot 1 , tiarnnt.ra s i u v t o S I J S V U . , l l rante» H 1 '-V- F O R ! ' I A T R I O O H F T T I V R O I t t v i J I T V T F R S T M K H O M ! : O O M O O OKF>Tt v O I 4 v I M I l l . l l J X I J Only ll >0 — At Hogg And. two rn wSwHb**' lcnjww Ai "Ob. rn Ma R«lUaaa. I think jm'tt Ch* mm utnrtn at amt paw#* fnmtk.' m m w a r n awm WW#*# UTMAWfiBOSS ' lx M ' rs 6 0 c THE JI vGRADUATE IO T FOLK Vw— - entiy on tour or campuies in Canada and the U.S., The are a lively new in Folic Music coming New Fo!k sound here: TUESDAY, F E B . 27th, 8:00 P .M . M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M Blanket Ta* .......... SMK General Admission .. $2.50 TICKETS A V A IL A B L E AT: University Co-Op, Reynolds- P o la n d on the d-ag. Blcmqu:,f Giarit, Dillard s. SET A N E W PA C E PEW FOLK ZorbaThe Greek- The New RICHaRD LESTER’s Cacoyannis V W k / COLUMBIA PICTURES pretenu a Stanley Kramer production Sp encer, Sidney , Katharine TRACY 1 POITIER ! HEPBURN guess w ho's com ing to d in n e r and irrtrodu- i f Katharine Houghton Mu* by De VOL • Wr Man by w ill HIM ROS f PrOAlCad and d.-e-.u a by STAN. (.yr: AME R * IECHNICC' OR* NOW! A U D R E Y H EPBU R N ALAN — ARKIN RICHARD CRENNA VARSITY F R A T I K IM : l l t I I I WAIT POSITIVELY LAST DAY! S t a r t s T O M O R R O W ) " H o W IW o U 'E s m ’’ ' I . * Star> 1 M ic » a E U J^ CRaW EuKD C V M . f ^ - T - & 4 L E N IC H ^ W 'l H I V r W l i l LAST DAY! Zbnrrurtai A U S T I N H > t S O . C O N I U M IT IV, t n-<4 » A mo If I 7 45 M H H i ToNy fRANCi8SA JflOUEl WEICH O ’ _______ it ■ ! ! « Fathom L S t a r t s T O M O R R O W ^ •IU ti V J ii p ‘TO SIR VVI Th LO ■« » -* ts mmmmmr F R fg P A R K IN G A T A L L T IM IS Film! TOM COURTENAY-SAM WANAMAKER (BUN Bluffly yid CANDICE BERGEN ma t m m I OB Rf KUS — - •* S.4M Mmkkl M.*b T"; Starts Tomorrow B C Mtd .'n Po u lit SIC Fir* Point ?5t Wednesday, February 21 THE CABINET OF DR. CALLARI Directed by ROBERT W IEN E a . E m , . c c ' : - y of i.-tl.-y, . . i n , d .lif e e c * . distortion of backdrop, s 'd h gh c o - e a s tj in lighting e*pre»»ionifHc to oli to put th# view er into H a jam a, unreal wor d of terror that the madman C a gari ii trying to escape. Plus Experimental Shorts Features at 7:30 a-d 9:30 — Admission $1.00 THE V U L C A N G A S C O M P A N Y 316 Congress They're y o u n g ... th e y ’re in love r •##and rn they hill f (' i f' *. i I m people. I f era*: r sky waul f w 4l K ARD : y . HACKMAN ESTRlf WSOfTJ ® T E C H N lC O L O F i' F R O M W A R N E R UFtOS.-E>E V t N A R T ii TOMORROW - OPEN 1:45 — 50c TIL 2 P.M. FEATURES: 2-4. 6. 8- IO [7 k I Kl T e x ts w - C H IE F >60. N . L ^ a , WO 5-1 Tipi SHUDA* rm. ^ADULTS H J O Aer Porfon • Audfencet Otllyl Ju t* y ” t*% ■” \y> I rn — wT ^ SHOWN Ar 1 « « ! Nm w ;w s k i . . . the Weird Sot! •»”’ a* 3 Ai only I t u n X x i * P~ ut*', fbw‘4 atteBrl! lf tam have a m n .in t at rrmt bmp* ,t»„C, ,, . - a * AWI I TN J rn 6 KUA ( tyto ytf OI I V IK M % f MU ll Iii FKi K trrxULt sec i vru. # » t r a c k o f THUNDER row KUK • ColA.II *:4J 6 la p rn. THUNDER ROAD ROBI n r vim hi lf —* J 6~ Starh Tomorrow! "TO SIR, W ITH LOVE1 •J ll SFV KOI Tit It Tuesday, February 20, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Page Model U N Orientation Union Group To Hold Meet Slated for Saturday A pre-confercncs orientation for delegates the Model United Nations is scheduled for 9:30 a m. Saturday in Union 317. to D elegates are asked to attend the orientation designed to brief participants on issues to be dis­ cussed at the conference, M arch 1416. Four U niversity professors. Dr. David E dw ards, Dr. F rank Beer, Dr. C. P. Blair and Dr. Robert F e m e a . will lead sem inar ses­ sions on the Issues. The orientation and the infor­ to dele­ mation p ic k e ts mailed to prepare gates are designed them to debate intelligently on issues coming up in the G eneral Assembly, Security Council, and International Court of Justice. Delegations a re still available Engineers: Meet Boeing Campus interviews Monday through Wednesday, February 26 through 28 The m a n y challenging aerospace p ro g ra m s at Boeing p ro v id e a d yn am ic ca re e r growth environment. Pick your spot in applied research, design, test, m a n u fa c ­ turing, service o r facilities engineering, o r c o m p u te r technology, lf you desire an advanced degree and qualify, Boeing will help you financially with its G r a d u a t e Study P ro g ra m at leading universities n ea r c o m p a n y facilities. Visit y o u r college placem ent office and sc h e d u le an interview with the Boeing representative. Boeing is a n eq ual o p p o rtu n ity employer. D iv isio n ! • C o m m er; ia i A lr p l S p a c e • I e n d • H ic hilt'. • A ls m e • V i . n n V an J In fo rm a tio n S y ste m s • \ H oeing S t tent ( ‘ic B e s e a r t H I a b o r a to r te s those who want to p artici­ for pate in the conference. Applica­ tions m ay be obtained in Union 302. Tile Hghth annual MUN will in­ clude students from 40 universi­ ties in the nation and the Uni­ versity of Mexico, Betty Srhues- sler, secretary-general of MUN said. Keynote speaker will be Thomas Mann, form er US Am­ bassador to Mexico. Another feature of MUN will be the International Court of Ju s­ tine. Tills is the first y ear the Court has sat as p art of top Uni­ versity MT’N. Although the United Nations Court has 15 judges, the MUN Court will have only nine, all of whom are law students. Glen Provost, a U niversity stu­ the dent will be president of and Ken D eccker of Court, Georgetown U niversity in Wash­ ington, will he vice-president. The International Court is slated to decide the question of boun­ international w aters. daries The body will set the boundary at 3, 6, 9. or 12 milos. in P e rtin e n t to this discussion will the the ru rre n t crisis over be USS Pueblo. Each year, the d e c i s i o n s reached by the U niversity MUN, one of 20 in the nation, a re sent to S ecretary G eneral U T hant the and UN A rthur Goldberg. Miss Schues- sler said that U Thant has w rit­ ten Mi 'N officials concerning their past decisions. to US Ambassador to The Texas Union Leadership Committee Is sponsoring a Group Development S em inar beginning Saturday. The sem inar is designed ac atu- dents can have an opportunity to participate in a grnup experi­ ence focused on g re a ’er self- understanding and on effective relationships with others. The groups are essentially human relations experiences. in Students participating rn the large program will m eet general sessions on two occasions and sm all d ev elo p m en tal, groups tw ice pa ch week for an hour and a half until April 27. In a rn. Tim sem inar will begin with an opening general session from 8:30 to noon Saturday, starting in the Union S tar Room and sm aller into sep aratin g groups of 12 students. Tile general sessions will be conducted by Dr. E arl A. Koile, professor of educational psycho­ logy. E ach of the small develop­ m ental groups will have as Its leader either a psychologist or an advanced doctoral candidate In counseling or psychology experi- j e rre d in different forms of group work Tn late April, a final day-long re tre a t will he led by Dr. Koile to conclude the sem inars For inform ation regarding the sem inar, a m eeting will he held at 4 p m . Tuesday, in Union 325. Inform ation also is available in Union 312. is fee A $2 registration re quested to cover food expenses during the sem inar. This m ust he subm itted along with the regis­ tration forms available in Union 3-12. N Y Teacher to Talk A t Reading Meeting A form er New York City ele­ m entary and secondary school teacher, now a professor of edu­ cation, is one of three speakers in a scheduled I d iv ersity Reading Conference Friday and Saturday. to p articipate Dr. Robert Karlin of Queens College of the City U niversity of New York Is recognized widely as an authority on how to im­ prove the reading of children. Ile will speak twice during the conference on the topics "In itiat­ ing and Strengthening Secondary Reading P ro g ram s" and "P ro ­ viding for Individual Differences in E lem entary and Secondary R eading.” Tile conference, to hp held in the re tra c e Motor Hotel Conven­ tion Center, is sponsored by the Texas Association for Im ­ In co­ provem ent of Reading the U niversity operation with the College of Education and the j Austin public schools, I Other speakers will he Dr. Constance McCullough, professor of education at San Francisco State College, an i Dr. William R. H arm er, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction and di­ rector of the I reaming Disabili­ ties Center at the University. Dr. Karlin, whose doctorate Is from New York University, has faculties of New been on York, Hofstra, and Southern Illinois universities. the is A form er F ulbright scholar to Uruguay, Dr. M artin the author of “ Teaching Reading in High School” and coauthor of “ Developmental R eading." He is a frequent contributor to profes­ sional journals and Is book re­ the Journal of view editor of Reading. the teachers specialists, th ree reading In addition to hear ing addresses im prove­ by a t­ m ent the meeting will sh are tending their experiences in reading in struction and view exhibits pre- pared by leading publishers of reading m aterials. get in shape for spring,! with a n y or m a n y of the sh in in g I array of sunglasse s from our ex­ I traordinary selection. from $3. to $10. B v * b p polyester; 5 0 ’ 'e * • * CU ' ”'e v a n cc’V , en the fun size pocked lr a c a r . - - - -. blend c f 50" ' combed cotton, French blue or lemon yellow. B^av b .‘tons tr ere . . . down the front and o r the civ. ed p e lle t s ct the short front cr me b ouse ct the s ce v e e ss dress cf this khaki and cream trave' co • rn B ass bu hid •a aw a y '* everywhere! O n the ’’D e make-be’ieve Dockets of pockets o f tm?s u p res* with briner# sn e rb e t o r Green S . es 3 t o 16, $24. * u daw n ti e * t a I S , $ 3 8 . c m o to 14, $38. lam S ^ ^ i o w x i t c a v x i G ^ Q a t h * d x e g g ^ a .1 H o n d a I m ^ ta jm a x x x ik . © a n t e * Page IO Tuesday, February 20, 1968 THE D A IL Y T E X A N