Weather: H igh 80, Low 50 Cloudy, C o o le r T h e Daily T f x a n Student New spaper at The University of T e x r .. c s 1v* •ft fo - c f I m ibrary Location o f S c h o o l L a w by Chancellor Ransom earlier this month. The Regents have not the League’s request answered for reinstatem ent on campus. Friday the B u i l d i n g and Grounds Committee discussed the the possibility of Regents’ Room on the second floor of the Main Building. P re­ liminary es ti mates for improve­ refurbishing ments such as carpeting, draper­ ies, replastering the ceiling, and redecorating the walls came to $27,000. Possible additional expen­ ditures for lighting and a public address system are being con­ sidered. The m atter will be discussed further during the Regents’ next meeting here April 22-23. Presented W ith M ike Flynn A w ard the Top student leaders at the Uni­ versity Friday were recognized third annual Round-Up at Leadership Awards Convocation. Francis Patrick (Frank) Had­ lock of Marshall, senior pre med the Mike Flynn major, won Award as the outstanding m ale student. Hadlock Is member of Phi Beta Kappa, and has been president of the Texas Cowboys and Phi Delta Theta. MARGARET KOY of Bellville, senior physical education major, won the Marjorie Darilek Award as an outstanding coed not affil­ iated with a social sorority. She is a former education as­ semblyman. a m em ber of Spooks, and the Texas Union Board of Directors. Jan e Cornick of Austin, a sen­ ior home e/'onomics m ajor, won the Silver Spur Award as the University’s outstanding woman student. She is chairm an of the Texas Union Speakers Commit­ tee. past president of Orange Jackets, and a m em ber of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Anthony Michael (Tony) la v ­ ender. a graduate radio-television student of England, was named the most outstanding internation­ al student. He has been International Club president and a graduate assem ­ blyman. TWENTY - FIVE STUDENTS were named Outstanding Stu­ dents to be featured in the 1966 Cactus. Selected for leadership and scholarship, the students are: April Beall, Mrs. Carol Hagg Bush, Tom Brightman, Wilda Campbell. Pete Coneway, Jane Cornick, Susan Davis, Bob Den­ ham , Sandra Dykes, Betty Egel- hoff, Frank Hadlock, Marilyn Friedm an, Mary E sther Garner, Anthony Jung, Jim Key, Nancy Kowert, Bill Luttrell Jr., M ary Ann Mellenbruch, Kaye North- cott, Gary O’Connor, John Odell, Bruce Schnitzer, E dgar Smith, Polly Travis, and Carol Ann Wal­ ters. LBJ Indicates Tax Uncertain WASHINGTON—IR - President Johnson is telling legislative lead­ ers privately that there is no cer­ tainty he will ask for a tax in­ crease inflationary fires. to dampen An influential senator who con­ ferred with him at length de­ picted Johnson as adopting a wait-and-see attitude on steps th at m ay be taken if his present campaign to slack off private capital expenditures and govern­ m ent spending does not bring de­ sired results. By KAYE NORTHCOTT Texan Editor The LBJ Library will be located on a 20-acre tract “ adjacent to and east of the University Law School and tho football stadium ,” W. W. Heath, chairm an of the Board of Regents announced Sat­ urday. the Although the exact location of the library has not been chosen. Heath said he personally hope's “ that library will be built facing the Main Building at the head of the new East Mall to he the Main constructed between Building and Red River Street.’’ THE LIBRARY building will contain 150,000 square feet. Ap­ proximately 100.000 square feet wall be used for the Johnson li­ brary and rem ainder will house collections owned by the University. the Architects studies of the loca­ tion should be completed in May, Heath said. Also announced this weekend was the Regents’ decision to in­ crease the size of the new' co­ educational dormitory complex to be constructed south of Twenty- first Street. Originally planned to accommodate 2,400 students, the complex wall now take care of 3.000 students, 1,700 women and 1.300 men. “ Increase in construction costs Coldwater Raps Senate Hearing China Talks Called P ro p a ga n d a Show NASHVILLE, Tenn. — (JI — B arry C o l d w a t e r Saturday term ed the Senate Foreign Re­ lations Committee hearings on China as “ naked and unabashed propaganda shows.” The 1964 Republican presiden­ tial candidate said Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., seeks to align through the hearings against “selected propaganda” main adm inistration figures and then rebut them with adminis­ tration officials whose informa­ tion sometimes is classified. Tile result, he told an ‘ Im ­ p act” symposium at Vanderbilt University, is to convince North Viet Nam that the nation is di­ vided and to soften our resistance to Communist China. The senator form er Arizona got his biggest hand from the crowd of several thousand when he criticized “ lunatic crowds of appeasers, pacifists, and pro­ com m unists and just plain Com­ m unists.” Coldwater said there is a grow­ ing need for victory over the cri­ tics of our policy in Viet Nam. Coldwater told nev/smen ea r­ lier that the United States m ust deny North Viet Nam supplies if it expects to m ake much prog­ ress in the Vietnamese war. But he said we are making progress. and In interest rates on revenue the Regents’ bonds," prompted decision, Heath said. He instruct­ ed architects Brooks, Barr. Grae- ber. and White to “ retain to the highest degree possible the ori­ ginal concept of the dormitory complex so carefully arid labor­ e d ly planned by faeulty- student committee.’' the TWO ADDITIONAL floors will be added each to the women’s high rise dorm, making it 13 stor­ to the m en’s low rise ies and building, making it six stories. The altered plans wall do aw'ay with a proposed student snack bar and a commercial mall. Some low' rise units also may be eli­ minated. Members of the committee that planned the dormitory expressed regret over last minute the changes. “ We are disappointed, of course, but I don’t know any alternatives,” student member John McRae said. In other action during meetings Thursday through Saturday, the Regents appointed Coleman and Rolfe as a.ssociate architects for proposed additions to the Student Health Center. They also appro­ priated $50,000 to replace roofs on Andrews. Carothers, Littlefield, Prather, Brackenridge, and Rob­ erts dormitories. Jessen, Jessen, M l l l h o u s e , Greeven, and Crume were named associate architects for the Main University’s $5 million Humani­ ties Research Center. SATURDAY MORNING a citi­ advisory committee en­ zens’ dorsed the University’s surface leasing policies on 2.1 million acres of West Texas land. After a six-month study of the University’s Perm anent F u n d lands, former Regent Wales Mad­ the den Jr., of Amarillo said “ committee was of the firm opin­ ion that in order for the Univer­ sity to receive a reasonable re ­ turn from the West Texas land operation and, at the sam e time, protect land from unreasonable wear and tear, it would be in­ cumbent upon the University to follow the (present) policy of ne­ gotiated leases.” University land Is leased for five years with an option for re ­ newal at the end of that time. Heath issued a statem ent F ri­ t h e Board’s in Chan­ day expressing “ complete confidence” cellor Harry Ransom. “ Chancellor Ransom is patient and he is fair, but anyone who is dissatisfied with his decisions m ay appeal to this Board just as they may appeal from decisions s t a f f administrative of his through appropriate channel to him .” Heath's comments were inter­ preted by many to be in reaction to an appeal by the League For Responsible S e x u a l Freedom which was thrown off the cam pus m m . ■ ^ rn A ? '■ -V® i /> ' * * * mm Photo by St, C lair Newbern Almost a W orld Mark . . Southern's Theron Lewis finishes anchor le g of 3:04.7 mile relay. Secretary of Interior On Campus Monday academic affairs, will deliver the welcoming address at 8:45 a.m., followed by the opening speaker. Session two, on biological waste treatm ent, will run both Tuesday and Wednesday. The final session will be Thursday, and will cover waste stabilization pond prac­ tices. Master of ceremonies will be John J. M cKetta Jr., dean of the College of Engineering. W. W. Heath, chairm an of the Board of Regents, will introduce Udall. A social hour beginning at 6:15 p.m. will precede the dinner. There will be a press confer­ ence for Udall from 5:30 to 6 p.m. Monday in the Barcelona Room at the Crest Hotel. THE CENTER for Research in Water Resources is sponsoring the special lectures to focus at­ tention on the most recent ad­ vances in waste water renovation and management. These contribu­ tions will be included in the first of a series of volumes on w ater resources to be published by the University Press. Cooperating in the lectures will be the College of Engineering, the Department of Civil Engineer­ ing, Environmental Health Engin­ eering Division, and the Advanc­ ed Studies Group in Water Pol­ lution Control. THE FIRST SESSION on Mon­ day, will deal with stream pollu­ tion. Registration will begin at 8 a.m. a t the Terrace. Norman for Hackerman, vice-chancellor Stewart Udall Six Honored With Friar Membership Six students have been named to Friars, oldest and highest of men’s honor organizations on campus. They are Frank P. Hadlock, Gary Richard O’Connor, Aubrey Lee (Mike) Pettit Jr., Richard Romo, Robert Fleming See Jr., and Richard John VanSteenkiste. The new F riars and their in­ dividual activities include: • FRANK HADLOCK — senior Plan II m ajor; foreman, Texas president, historian, Cowboys; and pledge trainer of Phi Delta Theta fraternity; Interfratem ity Council; vice-president of Alpha Epsilon Delta; Phi E ta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Omicron Delta Kappa. • GARY O’CONNOR — senior botany m ajor; president, Inter- Co-op Council; co-chairman of Round-Up Showcase Committee; Phi E ta Sigma; various scholar­ ships; president, Theleme Co-op; O rder of th* Alcalde; Cactus Goodfellow. g n u I IW W l l iMjy v y W W W -W W — • ■.Ty i ' - r r - T— — n K ^ A . . • I • MIKE PETTIT — senior; president, YMCA; co-chairman of “ Y” cabinet; “Y” Board of Di­ rectors; secretary-treasurer, Tex­ a s Union Council; Union Leader­ ship aw ard; co-chairman Round­ u p ; Cactus Goodfellow. • RICHARD ROMO — senior; Texas Cowboys; 1965 Texas-Chile Student Leader Sem inar; presi­ dent, “T ” Men’s Association; Cross Country captain; tri-cap­ tain of Texas track team , 1966. Texas-Chile Student Leader E x ­ change Program; Texas Today and Tomorrow; Student Union Advisory Board (rf Directors; and co-chairman, Operation Brain­ power. • ROB SEE — associate editor, Texas Law Review; president, Silver Spurs; Kappa Alpha fra­ ternity; clerk, Phi Delta Phi le­ gal fraternity; Cactus Goodfellow; associate justice, Student Court, New University Sweetheart . . . Jeanne W shm eysr reigns a t 1966 Round-Up Raw*. —Photo by Virgil Joboio* Beauty Titles Wehmeyer New Sweetheart A clear-eyed Jeanne Wehmey­ er — University Sweetheart for 1966 — began her reign as the Round-Up Revue audience sang “ The Eyes of Texas are Upon You” Saturday night. Miss Wehmeyer, a junior m a­ joring in home economics and education, won the crown in the cam pus election. Other Sweet­ heart finalists were Ginger Bern­ education m ajor; ard, junior Charlotte Chapman, junior his­ tory m ajor; Kathy Hobbs, junior and Mary business m a j o r ; Koeppe, junior microbiology m a­ jor. Also presented at Round-Up Re­ vue were the Bluebonnet Belle finalists. Five Belles were chosen from 18 finalists: Ginger Bern­ ard, junior history and govern­ m ent m ajor; Mike Jam es, junior in Plan II; Mary Ann Mellen­ bruch, junior in Latin American Studies; Anne Oaks, senior Span­ ish and Portuguese m ajor; and M arty Purcell, senior government m ajor. Other Bluebonnet belle finalist* were April Beall, Betsy Clark, Marilyn Friedm an, Janet Goren, Nancy Kowert, Dorothy Nelson, Carol Reeb, Emily Tracy, Caro­ lyn Kay Walls, Lana Mae Wat­ kins, Teresa Wang, Jeanne Weh­ m eyer, and Dana Rose Woltham. Mrs. Yvonne Slovak, Mrs. Uni­ versity, and Roxanna Garcia, P ortia of the Law School, were also presented at Revue. L arry Smith’s medley accompanied th* the Southwest presentation of Conference Sweethearts. Revue featured the music at the Mens Glee Club, directed by J. G. Martin, and the Sundown­ ers. Sing Song winners Alpha Delta Pi and Theta Xi sang “Do Re Mi.” The J a lan Brothers and Da va Evans presented popular and folk selections. The 19-piece UT Lab Band provided background for the beauty presentations. • RICHARD VAN Steenkiste— graduate student in geography; president, Tejas Club; staff, Daily Texan; president, Sigma D elta Chi; vice-president, G am m a T he­ ta Upsilon; graduate assem bly­ man; Texas-Chile Student Leader Exchange Program; Cactus Out­ standing Student, various scholar­ ships. Active members of Friars in­ clude Lloyd Birdwell, Clarence Bray, David Carlock, Drew Caup thorn, Pete Coneway, John Cope, Bob Denham, Cliff Drummond, Dan Fleckman, Jim Fletcher, Julius Glickman, Anthony Jung, Bruce Kowert, Greg Lipscomb, John McRae, Bob Odic, John Orr, Pat Patterson, Keith Reeves, and Don Richard Smith. Officers are Carlock, abbot} JIM. MriMMii and GEnaawa. By BILL HALSTEAD Texan Sports Editor It was the best Texas Relays the It may have been track meet ever ever. best college held in the United States. For sheer excitement, fantas­ tic individual performances, and new records, the two-day affair at Memorial Stadium may never be matched. It’s that simple. There were a total of 15 rec­ ords broken. Southern Univer­ sity of Louisiana was a regular hog, gathered five of them— all in relav events. HOST TEXAS started back down the glory road it traveled in the old days by putting on two courageous performances in winning a pair of University Division Relay races—including a stunning upset of world rec­ ord holder Oklahoma State in the two mile relay. Such heroics netted Southern and Texas trophies as the out­ standing team s in their respec­ tive divisions. To the sweeps, Southern’s T Ii e r o n Lewis and Texas’ Preston Davis hauled in awards as outstand­ ing performers. cap For record-shattering. South­ ern has to rate as the most de­ structive bunch on the books. The school’s 440-vard relay en­ try clocked a 39 9—tying the existing world record. THE 880-YARD unit flashed to a 1:22.9 in Friday’s prelims —but .3 seconds from the world low. And the mile crew zoomed .2 to a 3:04.7 reading, only seconds off the world rn ark— (See RECORDS, Page 4) Highlight of the University’s special lecture series, Advances In Water Quality Improvement, April 4-7, will be a speech by Sec­ retary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall Monday night. His comments on “ Conserva­ tion and Man’s Environment” will be delivered at a 7 p.m. din­ ner in the ballroom of the Ter­ race Motor Hotel. This will close the first session of the program on water reclamation. Fireman Fined $25,000 Daily WASHINGTON—CB — A federal judge ordered the railroad fire­ m en's union Saturday to pay $25,- 000 in daily fines and its presi­ dent to pay $2,500 daily unless a strike against eight railroads is ended by noon Sunday. US District Judge Alexander Holtzoff assessed the fines after finding the AFL-CIO Brotherhood of Locomotive Firem en and En- ginemen and its president, H. E. Gilbert, guilty of contempt of court in defying his Thursday or­ der to halt the walkout that sta rt­ ed unexpectedly that day. UNION ATTORNEY J o s e p h Rauh told newsmen he would take the case immediately to the Circuit Court of Appeals. E arlier he had said he would go to the Supreme Court if necessary. On advice of counsel, Gilbert refused any comment. Railroad attorneys had asked penalties of $500,000 a day against the union and $10,000 d a i l y against Gilbert. Holtzoff said such fines would be excessive in view of the union’s total annual dues income of $612,000 and Gil­ b ert’s salary of $29,300. But the judge said that if the fines he levied are not effective in ending the strike he would consider increasing them. HOLTZOFF noted also that he could have sent Gilbert to jail— as a federal judge in Birming­ ham did earlier Saturday with three local union officials — but the railroads’ lawyers had not asked such a penalty. in its third day, has left about 200,000 workers idle or on reduced hours, closed plants which rely on day-to-day rail service, delayed the mails and left food cargoes standing in yards and on sidings. The strike, Yan Steenkist® Pettit O'Connor Romo Hadlock Everybody's Business In the past few years the Board of Regents has cocked a listening ear to all those who have a legitimate interest in welfare of Tile University of Texas system. In December, 1964, W. \V. Heath, chairman of the Board, opened the meetings to the public. His action affirmed the Regents’ belief that the University is the concern of all of the people of Texas, not just the governing few. Before Heath stated the open door policy, only a short final meeting of Hie full Board each month was held in pub­ lic. At this meeting, the Regents passed on final action, often leaving the public vith no idea of what discussions and information prompted their decisions. Heath agreed to open meetings except for discussions of < I) “personal” matters such as hiring and firing and setting of salaries, and (2) inquiries concerning grants and gifts. Tile Texan had campaigned for such an open door policy, and, realizing that in special cases the press and the public should be barred from meetings, we were satis­ fied with Heath’s decision. From time to time, however, the open door has slammed shut. Thursday and Friday the Regents held a regular monthly meeting. All sessions Thursday were closed. Friday morning committee meetings were open with the exception of a short private session of the Medical Affairs Committee. Reporters were again barred from meetings Friday afternoon, except for a final hour and a half meet­ ing of the full Board. During this two-dav session, approximately three and one-half hours of meetings were open. We doubt that all of the remaining meeting time was devoted to personal items and bequests. For one thing, the Regents decided to expand the size of the coeducational dormitory'. The dormitory complex is of interest to many University students, yet the public was allowed to hear only the final, formal decision on the dorm. University students have shown an increasing interest in Regents’ policy decisions. An unprecedented number have kibitzed open meetings during the past year as students came to realize that they were allowed to attend meetings of the Board. To our knowledge no member of the Board of Regents, the University administration, or state government has challenged the public’s right to know of the workings of Texas’ largest institution for higher education. Yet, we are being denied access to the meetings of the policy- making body. The Texan urges the Regents to question the necessity of each executive session. They should adhere to Chairman Heath’s statement concerning the (sometimes) open door policy7: “The public’s business should he known to the public.” Signs of the Times The signs they are a’changing. According to a report from Ohio State University, only 40 stolen traffic signs were discovered during spring clean­ ing of dormitory rooms on tine Columbus campus. “The problem was much worse IO years ago,” remin­ isced a local traffic engineer. “They seem to be more inter­ ested in carrying signs these days than in stealing them.” Guest Editorial The No. I Problem There is only one nation on earth which has military7 bases on every inhabited continent and a fleet in every open sea. Its nuclear armed submarines and surface warships patrol the Atlantic, the Pacific, the Caribbean, the Mediter­ ra n ea n , and the Indian Ocean. It is the only nation which keeps nuclear armed bombers flying on alert thousands of m i l e s from its o w t i skies, as the bombs accidentally dropped on Spain revealed. Such a nation, its guns cocked to visit instant death on any other country of which it disapproves, presents a world problem. Were its destructive power to fall into ir- respcrisible hands, it could render much of the earth un­ inhabitable. We can imagine no nation to which the doc­ trine of containment more aptly applier The No. I problem of humanity is to contain the United States. But we are against its isolation. America’s vast power makes it difficult for the United Nations to operate as it should, but we would strongly oppose its ex­ clusion from the UN. The only hope of mellowing its ethnocentric views and rm habits is to bring it more fully into the council ations. Containment but not isolation—that seems i to us the perfect formula. — I. F . S t o n e ’s W e e k ly The Texan Firing Line GAVEL John Orr's sions that are inconsistent with and d etri­ m ental to the conservation of M amm oth Cave National P ark , but our space is l mited. Let m e add that I speak only for m yself as an individual who is con­ the preservation and ap­ cerned about pro nation of the M ammoth Cave area and its National P ark . Ja m e s F. Quinlan, J r . Box 8198 University Station subsidy, and m ere “ planning.” In the end, the State alw ays has a go at the fa r m ore exciting gam e of thought con­ trol. And such is the present phase of Am erican “ liberalism ” — i.e., an u t­ terly anti liberal stance, m ore accurately described as proto-fascist. Cole Patterson TOI Sparks Ave, Question for Udall To tho E ditor: In T h u rsd ay ’s Texan th e re is a brief announcem ent about S ecretary Udall’s speech on “ C onservation and M en’s E n ­ vironm ent " to be presented h ere on Mon­ day as p a rt of a conference on Advances in W ater Q uality Im provem ent. P erh ap s at his stay in Austin Mr. Udall would c a rr to com m ent about wl y he has allowed our N ational P ark s to be raped by the Job Corps. Let me d escribe one exam ple with which I am quite fam iliar. from in which featu res a re irrep laceab le, As m ost visitors to our N ational P ark s realize, the n a tu ra l featu res of the P ark s w ere set aside by C ongress for all to enjoy and ap p reciate. B ecause m any of these the visitor is not allowed to pick a flower o r collect a rtifa c ts, fossils, or rocks. He is constantly rem inded of this reg u la­ tion and it is a wise one. Yet at M am ­ m oth Cave in Kentucky, one of several N ational P a rk s Job Corps Cam ps have been established, youths a re learn in g to operate bulldozers and o th er ea rth m oving equipm ent. How? By plowing up and excavating a gravel de­ posit within the P a rk th at is less than threo m iles the C ave! The Job Corps tra in e e s have b ren allowed to ir ­ revocably strip , despoil, and destroy an a rc a alm ost the size of a football field. This p a rtic u la r gravel deposit is geo­ the vicinity of the logically unique Cave and before its origin and history it will have is com pletely understood been depleted by q u arry in g and lost forever. Tile gravel, by the way, is being the used P ark , but gravel for such could easily be obtained from any of m any sources outside of th e P a rk boundaries. Let m e also com m ent the P ark Service is quite passionately opposed to the operation of m ining and other com ­ m ercial e n terp rises on privately-ow ned lands within P a rk boundaries, a t M am ­ moth Cave the Job Corps (and the P a rk Service before it) has been m ining this gravel deposit. I cannot reconcile such m ining activ ity by the P a rk S e n ice with its publicly avowed beliefs and respon­ sibilities for conservation of our natural resources within N ational P a rk boun­ daries. to build roads and that w hereas trails in in I could cite other ad m in istrativ e deci­ O pen Channels To the E ditor: L ast Thursday, several d raft card burners in Boston w ere attacked by on­ lookers and suffered beatings. R eg ard ­ less of the obvious futility of card-burn­ ing, and reg ard less of the m erits of US this kind of sup­ action in Viet Nam, pression of dissent is not at all a healthy sign. lf enough channels w ere open for in­ telligent dissent on the w ar issue, there would be fewer such dem onstrations and m uch less violence. But the governm ent, and agencies closely dependent upon governm ent subsidy and regulation, such international as press services, etc., have largely closed off the free flow of argum ent and infor­ m ation on this subject. television, and radio, Tlie irony of the situation is that the protesters who w ere attacked, both in Boston and at a Texas college, probably think of them selves as “ lib erals” and do not realize th a t th eir dom estic program of governm ent planning and regulation of the econom y (i.e., all hum an action) is the very institution which is stifling their dissent on the w ar issue. It is a turning against F rankenstein m onster, its creator. But a penchant for m a rty r­ dom will likely prevent their ever seeing this elem en tary fact. This is a sham e, because the an g ry mob is largely a re ­ sult of a non-rational, red-white-and-blue treatm en t of the Viet Nam issue by the governm ent and the com m unications in­ dustry, and a total avoidance of debate and serious dialogue. This is not to say th at a rational analysis of the situation would necessarily call for a change in our policy — it m ight in fact provide the best defense for our present policy, who knows? But perhaps a few will learn the les­ son. and realize that no S tate a p p aratu s its activities to w elfare, ev er confines Too Few Working in S A In the recent cam pus elections, one of th e candidates for president was asked w hat the Students’ Association “ did.” Speaking with g reat eloquence, he de­ clared “ nothing.” He was further quiz­ zed on w hat he thought the Students’ A s­ sociation should do. Again he replied “ nothing.” By this person’s standards and judgem ent we a re a success; we are doing exactly what he wishes. in I can easily understand a person choos­ ing to do nothing in student governm ent. I am not one who believes IOO per cent participation is necessary to insure our success. One has the right to be apathic if one so desires. However, the assum ption of the ap a­ thetic th at those who a re active in the Students’ Association a re doing nothing is false. In fact the tru th is somewhat reversed, we have too m uch to do. OUR 30 or so com m ittees are con­ stan tly perform ing services for students. Round-Up, Cam pus Chest, CEC, all a re student governm ent program s. Certainly the activities connected with and bud­ gets provided for these commi tees can h ardly be considered “ nothing.” Therefore the question is not w hether student governm ent is doing anything or not but w hether w hat it is doing is what it should be doing. While I am in favor of Round-Up— Bevo strik e m e dead if I ’m not—it still rem ain s th at such activities require a disproportionate am ount of tim e and en­ ergy. Because of our lim ited money and m an - power, especially full - tim e, the problem s which governm ent should be confronting often suffer from student our com m ittm ents to other long estab ­ lished program s. it F or im ­ instance we have found possible to concentrate on integrating off- cam pus student housing simply because no one has volunteered to assist those of us who began the Off-Campus Housing comm ission fallen on only a THE RESPONSIBILITY for curriculum evaluation has few shoulders. Repeated requests for assist­ ance have only resulted in explanations of how everyone is too busy cam paign­ ing for a student governm ent that does som ething. So far our investigation of discipline policies and procedures has been con­ ducted by only one assem blym an. T here­ for our recom m endations for change in discipline policy a re nonexistent. A recent request for students to he!p us study alternative grading system s to th at we now use has been com pletely ignored. The Students' Association Poverty Corps needs about twice the people that now participate. During two weeks three different articles have a p ­ peared this pro­ the Texan about g ra m ’s work. Not one student has re ­ sponded to their calls for workers. last the in THESE ARE two answ ers to our rid ­ dle of too much for too few. F irst we could delegate some of our “ program ing” to others m ore equipped to handle it. This should be seriously considered. Second, some of those who dem and “ action” could display a little up our way. Like, how about this m orning? On second thought, let’s wait 'till Mon­ day. Civilized People To the E ditor: the Korean W ar and R e Mr. Milton E. Je z ’ le tte r of M arch 27: Certainly, O riental societies have been known to be horribly vicious. The atrocities of the B ataan M arch of WW l l a re exem plary of the m altreatm en t to which the A m er­ ican soldier was subjected. But this does not m ean th at the children of these two generations a re “ honor bound” to re ­ venge their deceased uncles by m u r­ dering Viet Cong prisoners. A m ericans a re assum ed to be civilized people. As such, th ere is no justification for our soldiers to kill th eir prisoners. When an enem y su rren d ers, he not only forfeits his weapons — but he literally e n tru sts his to has captor. For a US soldier to kill Ins prisoners for no other reason than th at “ intelligence can get as m uch out of two as out of ten ” is m urder and subject to court m arshall. This type cf “ w a rfa re ,” Mr. Jez, is very m uch different from actu al com bat. life Since idealistic and hum an itarian ap­ peals do not seem to affect you, Mr. Je z .consider the p rag m atic. Ju st how m uch tru st and loyalty can an A m eri­ can soldier instill in the V ietnam ese peo­ ple when he pushes prisoners from heli­ copters? Virginia E. Leonard HOS West 24th St. AH I HE HIT IT RIGHT TG M V 6HORT$T0P!THIS'tl &£ r— rr AN EASY OUT... HERE'S THE UJORIDUARI FLYING ACE ZOOMING THROUGH THE AIR IN HIS SOPUITH CAMEL.. ----------- . . . O '' Faculty Revolt at Berkeley In Bv ROGER EB ER T The Collegiate P re ss Service the afterm ath of the 1964 student uprising at Berkeley, a faculty com m it­ tee w as appointed to undertak e a se a rc h ­ ing exam ination of education at the n a ­ tion’s la rg e st cam pus. Its 200-page re ­ port, issued this week, m u st be read as a revolutionary docum ent. in la rg e r scale, The rep o rt g; ins in im portance because it has em erged from the experience of the prototype A m erican m ultiversity. the B erkeley m irro rs, problem s and growing pains of all the big universities, which have monopolized g ra d u a te study, research funds and the style of higher education during the past two decades. Its solutions, like its prob­ lem s, m ust be on a g rand scale. The genesis of the p resent report w as in the dem onstrations which “ stopped the m ach in e" a t B erkeley in the fall of 1964, according to C harles M uscatine, the professor of English who chaired the faculty com m ittee. BUT MUSCATINE said that the report itself is addressed, not to specific causes of student u n rest, but to the “ m ore pro­ found ch an g es” in higher education which seem to be inspiring u nrest. In evalu­ ating recen t alienating tren d s at the m ul­ tiversities, the M uscatine com m ittee has draw n a blueprint for reform which will c a rry g re a t w eight, one m ust assum e, a t the oth er g re a t universities which un­ easily aw ait a B erkeley Revolt of their own. M any of these big schools — m i ­ n d s . M ichigan, Texas, Colorado — have taken ten tativ e steps in the direction of the reform during b readth and depth of tho Berkeley report now sets a m uch higher standard for education refo rm at all tho troubled m ul­ tiversities. the past year, but In ail, the report released this week m ade 42 specific suggestions. Almost all of these suggestions involve a re a s of con­ troversy which a r r c u rre n t on most big cam puses. Taken together, the com m it­ te e ’s recom m endations involve a sweep­ ing reform of the m ultiversity toward a student-oriem ed cam pus with m ore em ­ phasis on th e teaching process, indepen­ dent study, and cu rren t problem s of so­ ciety. H ere a re some of the m ore im ­ p o rtan t refo rm s suggested by the Berke- !v faculty com m ittee: • An ex perim ental, campus-w'ide pro­ g ram of F resh m an sem in ars, consisting of groups of 12 students and one faculty m em b er who would work without re- ? fiction “ so long as the orientation is one of dialogue and the sp irit of free inquiry." of • G radual lecture deem phasis courses, w'hich would be replaced by dis­ cussion sections, sm all classes, tutorial groups, and cooperative student self- instruction. in • Perm ission for students to und er­ take supervised independent study a t any point their academ ic c a re e r. Such study could involve “ any proportion of their tim e justified by sound educational reaso n s.” for • Provision “ ad hoc co u rses” w’hich could be organized on short no­ the relev an t scholarly tice “ to supply and Intellectual background to subjects of concern .” Sam ple courses given in the rep o rt w ere “ Tile Idea and Uses of the U niversity” and “ Viet N am .” student active • A new degree, D octor of A rts, which would include all req u irem en ts for the PhD except a dissertation and would be intended for students p rim arily interested in teaching ra th e r than research . • A general revision of u n d erg rad u ate g rad e policies, including perm ission for students in good standing to take one pass fail course each te rm . The course would give cred it tow ard a degree, but would not be in the stu d en t's m ajo r field. The policy would encourage students to pursue a liberal education m ore widely by not penalizing study in an u nfam iliar a re a . for students • Opportunity take courses in sequence over two o r three term s, with one grad e given at com ple­ tion . to listed should give an T here a re m any m ore recom m enda­ tions in this fascinating rep o rt, but the suggestions idea of its scope and daring, H ere is a blue print for a cam pus which would place m ore em phasis on the prim ary’ university function of teaching, and less em phasis on the peripheral, but d istractin g , busy­ work of g rades, required sequences, high­ ly technical grad e av erag e requ irem en ts, and restrictio n s on independent study. It would release students, to som e ex­ tent, from the obligation of negotiating a highly com plex m aze of regulations, req u irem en ts and grades, and place them on th eir ow’n. One of th e m ost discouraging tenden­ the m ultiversities recen tly has cies in been a tendency to rem ove the student from contact with his teach ers and the actu al learning process. Classroom tele­ vision and enorm ous lecture groups have m ad e necessary an ev er m ore complex teach ers system of grading, because ra re ly have personal contact with the un d erg rad u ates they instruct. The beauty of the B erkeley proposals Is th at they would require no m ore m on­ ey, no m ore room , and no m ore faculty m em b ers than the present unsatisfactory arran g em en t. As this w riter has pointed out often in the past, educational reform does not involve g reat sum s of m oney and rad ical changes in the physical c a m ­ pus. One elem entary proposal to sim ­ plify the freshm an year, for exam ple, sim ply involves requiring half as m any courses each sem ester — for twice as m any hours. too m uch WHETHER the vision of the Berkeley report, coupled with its sim plicity, will the bureau cratic prove for m inds so often in ultim ate control of higher education rem ains to be seen. We have had so m any incredibly com plex surveys, studies, statistical evaluations, and other altern ativ e a ttem p ts to cope with an essentially sim ple problem in the p ast few years th at it is no longer possible on m any cam puses for educa­ tional reform its w ay through sh eer common sense. But the pre-1964 ex p erts w ere wrong a t Berkeley, and to win there Is evidence to indicate they h av e been wrong in their em pire-building all over the country. Now comes a report to print the way to decentralization of the educational process, beginning with a renewed in­ terest in the individual teacher and stu­ dent. The future of higher education In the United States literally does depend the educational establish­ on w hether m ent has the energy and courage to guide the m ultiversities into these excit­ ing new channels. If this is not the case, then perhaps the students would be best advised to take their education into their own hands and disregard altogether the game-playing of their mentor*. Communist Cuba Lively By ISAAC M. FLORES HAVANA — LP> — The Cuban capital Isn t the wide-open tourist spot it used to be but m any Cubans still enjoy th em ­ selves despite Com munist control over virtually every facet of daily living. Night clubs, high-class restaurants and b a rs do a thriving business. Movies are as popular as ever and increasing num­ b ers of concerts, cu ltu ral events, and sports activities draw big crowds. There a re also a number of low-life d u b s — places w here girls are liberal in their attentions to the m ale customer —and w aterfront dives. Gambling, pros­ titution, and abortion have been officially outlawed. HAVANA’S fam ous outdoor Troplcana Is the strong favorite am ong the b e tte r c ab a re ts, particu larly on weekends. Oth­ e r clubs doing big business a re those at the big hotels, the H abana Libre (for­ m erly Havana Hilton), H abana R iviera (form erly Hilton R iviera), the C apri, and the Nacional. They offer m usical review s with a lot of girls, risque jokes, dining, and dan c­ ing. Til ere Is no cover ch arg e as such, b ut the first drink (usually rum because no W estern whiskey is im ported) usually costs about three pesos (officialy $3), w ith succeeding ones costing from 60 cen ts to a dollar. H av an a’s annual carnival, spread out larg e o ver five weekends, asso rtm en t of elaborate, brightly lighted floats, Afro-Cuban bands, scantily clad included a girls, dancing rhy th m ic dane# and groups. There w ere huge turnouts In the old p a rt of the city for the Saturday and Sunday p a rad es and the alm ost nightly stre e t dances. BALLET, both classical and modern, h as alw ays been popular among the theater-going crowd. O ther attractio n s a re m usical concerts, plays, exhibitions of everything from paintings to ag ricu l­ tu ra l m achinery, sports, w riting, and poetry ccm tests and cerem onies com ­ m em orating b irthdays or d eath days of revolutionary heroes. The Soviet Union has a continuous shutup of show business talen t in here, including Moscow’s Bolshoi Ballet. The Soviet Union also sends a larg e num ber of athletic to com pete against the Cubans. team s T he bulk of the films a re from Com­ m unist countries — with Spanish sub­ titles. Cuba has been trying to reach som e so rt of ag reem en t with Mexico to resu m e its supply of M exican movies, v e ry popular here. Several old ones a re still around. Television h as a m ish-m ash of pro­ g ram s, with a m a te u r hours, docum en­ ta rie s, educational shows, ancient A m er­ ican and M exican m ovies, filmed news pro g ram s, and C astro speeches taking up m ost of the viewing tim e. There a re two channels. AMERICAN-MADE anim ated cartoons, acquired before the Cuban-US break, a re favorites of both children and adults. Crowds of enraptured adults gather be­ fore television screens in hotel lobbies every afternoon to follow the adventure# of Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, and Felix The C at The diplomatic colony keeps busy at­ tending its own functions, but there has been a decrease in the number of gov­ ernment people attending these parties of late. This la due to a sweeping purge investigation of high-living, heavy and drinking “false revolutionaries.” Official Notices IT T h e Graduate Record E x a m in a tio n A p ­ titu d e Teat will be given st a r t in g at § 45 a rn.. S atu rd ay, April 23 All application* and fee* m ust reach the P rinceto n Office or E d u ­ cational T e st in g Service not than 15 da>s bef ore the d a te of the teat A p p lica tion t h e E n g lish Office in blank* are available HO and in the T e s t i n g and C ou n selin g C en ­ ter. Went Mall O ffice B u ild in g 303 later N o s tu d en t w h o has passed the Q u a l i fy i n g E x a m i n a ti o n will be a d m it t ed to c a n d i d a s for the Ph D. in En glish until h e has pasted at least one fo reign l a n g u a g e e x a m and h a s m ade a the G radual# sa t isf a c t o r y sc ore Record E x a m in a tio n A p tit u d e Test. in AU s t u d e n t s " h o e x p e c t t o enroll fo r s t u ­ dent tea ch in g d u rin g e i th er s e m e s te r of th# n ex t acad em ic y e a r should su b m it an a p p l i ­ for s tu d en t t e a c h i n g In S u tt o n H all ca tion t h a t 110. A p plications m ay be room and m ust be return ed by May I f o r c o n sid er atio n for n ext y e a r 's s t u d e n t t e a c h ­ ing se cured in N o t ic e s from the U n iv e r s ity L ib rary o r a n y its branches are o fficial U n iversity co m ­ of im m ed ia te a t te n t i o n . m u n ica tio n s r eq u irin g S tu d e n t s w h o fail to respond to L i b r a r y n o­ tices will be referred to the O ffice o f D e a n o f S t u d e n t Life. A. Mofflt, L i b r a r i a n T h e D a i l y T e x a n ‘-s p u t Th* I i * :> 72 e x a r a s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r a t T h e U niver- t r .ed d a i l y e x c e p t M o n d e -/ e r d S atu r- of T c x a s t h r o u g h M a y a - d e- d h o . d a y p- -.od* S e p t e m b e r , S t a t i o n , A u s ti n . T e x a s 78T12. Sec- s c v I a w e t D. U m y ersit c n d - t la s s p o s t a g e p a .d a t A u st in , T e x as. in A u g u s t by T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s . . t h i y lr.' * w s c o r . t r . n u * o p s w ill be a c c e p t e d by te l e p h o n e ( G R i i o r a t ‘ he e d ito ria l office. J . B 103 o r a t t h e n e w s J . B 102. I n q u i r i e s c o n c e r n i n g d e l i v e r y s h o u ld a tor,- J B. I l l d c n J ii 2/7 < u R 1-5244; a n d a d v e r t i s i n g 1- 3227. ) 1-52 l a b ' (GR A S S O C I A T E D P R E S S W I R E S E R V I C E T n t As- a ' t d P r e s s r e p u b l i c a t i o n of all n e w s d i s p a t c h e s c r e d i t e d lh * l o a n d -(-■« of s p o n t a n e o u s o r i g i n p u b l i s h e d h e r e i n . R g h t s use for It o r r 8 C f I i M K a n o n cf ail o t h e r m a s t e r h e r e i n al s o r e s e r v e d . is e x c l u s i v e l y e n t i t l e d r o t o t h e r w i s e n e w s p a p e r c r e d i t e d t h i s t o in O n e S e m e s t e r ( f a l l or s p r i n g ) T w o S e m e s t e r * ( f a l l a n d s p r i n g i D e l i v e r e d b y c a r r i e r ( w i t h i n A u s t i n a r e a f r o m 12t h t o 38 t h a n d J e f f e r s o n I n t e r r e g i o n a l H i g h w a y t o D e l i v e r e d b v m a i l w i t h i n T r a v i s C o u n t v D e l i v e r e d b v m a l l o u t s i d e T r a v i * i ount . v b u t w i t h i n t . S. IS. MI 4 78 s sa 16 71 • tm I . T I Th e op in ions ex p res sed In the ed ito rial c o lu m n are t h o s e of t h e ed itor. Ail ed ito rials un less s ig n ed are w r i t te n b y the editor. G uest e d itorial view * are not n e c e s s a r ily th e ed ito r s. in Th e D a i l y T e x a n are not A n y o p in io n s e x p res sed t h o s e of Th e U n iv e r s ity of T e x a s a d m i n i s ­ n e ces sa rily t r a t i o n o r Boar d o f R eg en ts PERMANENT STAFF EDITOR .................................. KAYE N O RT H CO TT M A N A G IN G EDITOR ....................... S A M K E A C H U R R Y IKELS ASSISTANT M A N A G IN G E D IT O R N E W S E D IT O R ............................ N A N C Y KO W ERT EDITORIAL PAGE E D IT O R C A R O L Y N N IC H O L S AM U SEM E N T S EDITOR ............... SA R A SPEIGHTS SPORTS EDITOR ........................... BILL HALSTEAD STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Issue News Editor ........................ Susan Powell Copy Editors................. Don Pennon, Dan Rice Editorial P age .............................. C aro ly n N ichols Sports .......................................... W ill O'Hara Amusements ............................................. s ara Spe igh ts Sunday, April 3, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg. 2 Leadership Capacity Important, Rose Says universities are seeking to m a k e the student a well rounded, sen­ sitive man and to re! ite him ef­ fectively to all othei n -n in the common life process.’’ Rose said. A I M Y E R M T V . he f \p iii, I. finds its strength in the froed< im to discover truth and re! 'n it to society. It p r e p a r e s students for their chosen careers in such a way as to meet the dem ands of the time with com p eten ce Students often l a c k moral values. Rose said, because they are taught poorly by people with­ out a genuine commitment to the responsibilities of good teaching. Rose said that some recent stu­ dent demonstrations disturb him, Winners Named For Signs, Parade Zeta Tau Alpha won the trophv for the hest entry in the Round­ up Parade Contest and Acacia took first place in the Sign Con­ test The presentations were made at the Round-Up Revue Saturday night. In the Parade Contest. Acacia won the runner-up trophy and Alpha Epsilon P i, the Most Hu­ morous trophy. Tile Best Texas Spirit award went to Chi Omega, while the Most Original Idea tro­ phy was awarded to Alpha (’hi Omega. Alpha X i Delta won second place in the Sign Contest. Third place went to Kappa Alpha The­ ta and Alpha Tau Omega, who combined efforts on a sign of a cowpoke on a horse There were 19 entries in the sign contest. The 1966 Cactus, Ramshorn Coop, and Whitehall won honor­ able mention awards in the Pa­ rade Contest. Q uality “ If tile demonstrations represent the insistence on student rights without responsibility and rea­ son. then T am against the move is responsible men? Bu?, if I? effort to humanize the academic pr cestos and to increase the dialogue between faculty and stu­ dent. then I am their advocate," he said. Adviser Deadline Set for Thursday Deadline for signing up for Freshman Council adviser inter­ Interested views students should apply from 3 to 5 p.m. in Union Building 322. is Thursday. Interviews w ill he held April 12-20. The Freshman Council Ad­ visory Board w ill choose about 60 advisers. Je rry Cram m er, co­ ordinator. said. For more infor­ mation, students may call G R 2-5956, 19 Honored at Law Day Consulships recognized at Law Day included Andy B arr, Rick Bela, Bo BrowTi, Dub Burke, Ted Chilcote, Gene Clements, John Compere, Delbert Cos, Bob De­ witt, John Fisher, and Roxanna Garcia. Also, Jim Sidney Hale, Bob Mc- Kissick, Joe Stanley Rosen, Royce, Richard Stilw ell. Gene Jameson, Ron FTuitt, and John McCamish graduated in January. During D arrell Royal’s eight years as Texas coach, his teams have won 69 games, lost 15, and tied three, and have brought the University four conference titles, seven howl games, and its first national championship. 2013 Guadalupe T yping G R 2-3210 or GR 2-7677 A complete professional typing service tailored to the specific needs of University students and faculty. Reasonable rates. Paperback Book W orld This W eek Universities should develop in the most promising students the capacity to lend future technolo­ gies, Hr. Frank Rose said in tho Honors Da> address Saturday. Rose, president of the U niver­ sity of Alabama, said colleges and universities should give the world a human product that is capable of soring the "whole.” “ The scientific and technolo­ gical advances of more recent years make im perative that our colleges and universities re­ evaluate their educational philo­ sophies and practices—to moot the responsibilities of these days,” he said. it ROSE SMI) that the quest for a basic educational philosophy has led many colleges to develop general education courses that transm it the cultural heritage of Western civilization. A second philosophy insists that student needs must he the basis of tho modem curriculum . Rose "A third philosophy explained. that of of higher education is educating the Christian citizen," he said. “ With these three fundamen­ tal philosophies in mind, many Robert B . Dorrell and Michael Guthrie were named the mid-law im ­ students who have most proved their scholastic averages during the year. W illiam Carl M eier got a cer­ tificate for the Phi Alpha Delta Outstanding Senior Award. The Phi Delta Phi Outstanding G rad­ uate Award went to Linton B a r­ bee. THE PRAETOR Outstanding Senior Award went to Don Hig­ ginbotham. Jam es R. Bertrand got a plaque from the Interna­ Insurance tional Association of Counsel for study in the areas of j insurance law. Tile Law W ives Presentation Awards went to Thomas M. Thur­ mond and Ramon Ramos. Jam es Vaughter was presented the In ­ ternational Law Forum Award. Dexter Peacock was honored for contributing the hest work to the Texas Law Review. L. Proc­ tor Thomas won a $100 award from Law yer Title Insurance Cor­ poration for his paper on the law of real property- Legal Research Board awards totaling $275 went to Samuel Rodehaver; Thomas E a rl Bent­ Jam es A. Boorm an; W ill ley; Paxton E llis ; F a rris Allen John­ son; George M cW illiam s; W ar­ ren E . W hite; and Glenn E. Heatherly. Tile Law School presented nine letters for participation in the Moot Court program. Honored were Joseph Eugene Clements; Jam es Maedgen; H arry Bryan L. Tindall; David R. Noteware; Richard C. Mudge; Robert P. Park er; Robert A. Peavy; Vin­ cent W. P e rin i; and Cornelius G. Sullivan. that priceless ingredient 12:05 to 12:30 p.m. April 4, 5, 6, 7 Dr. Frank A. Rose . . . addresses the University's Honors Day Convention. ny V i r g i l J ohn sol Teaching Jobs Open jobs teaching University students can apply for summer in archaelogv, astronomy, biology, geoloy, physical sciences, out­ door education, or w ildlife at the Austin Natural .Science Center, 401 D eep Eddy Ave. The classes, which start June for elementary school ll , are children and hobby groups. To qualify, a student must he 19 y e a rs old and have a college m ajo r <>r hobby background in one of these fields. Salaries ran g e from $1.10 to SI.50 an hour. Interested students should contact Mr East Texas State in 1965. old col­ record of 3 17 0 by Ra.'.ior ies# 2 Texas So u th ern , 3 18 3: 3. 1965) P r a ir ie V ie w 3 22 3 4 N E L o u is i­ ana 3 24.7 5 N E M issouri, 3 21.9, 6 N’W Lo u is ia n a 3 26 3 L e w is 880-> arri reins (C ly d e Duncan I Texas S o u th ­ B o b b y ern. 1.23.4 Ev a n s R e v H ick s Ja m e s H in e s ): 2 So u th ern 1:23.4 (S o u th e rn set record of I 22.9 In p relim s old record I 23 3 b v G ra m b lin g in 1964); 3. G ram b lin g . 1 23.8; 4. P r a ir ie V ie w . I 25.6 5. N E Lo u is ia n a , 1.26 7 ; 6. S W Lo u isia n a , I 27 .2 Tw o-m ile re la y — I. So u th ern Unl- vo rsitv (H e n r y B ro w n . Robert Jo h n ­ son T h ero n L e w is . H a rro w Dodson) 7 27 I 2. Texas So u th ern 7 32 9 . 3. C a lifo rn ia State. 7:33 1: 4 Lin co ln , 7 40 4 5, O klah o m a C h ristia n . 7 41 9 6 N o rth e a st M isso u ri. 7 47 I ( N E W R E C O R D — old record of 7 30 6 T e x ­ as So u th ern (H obson. H u n t, Sa d le r. A d a m s) 1962.1 - H o w a rd re la y - I So u th ern T’nl* v e r s itv (H a rve \ N a irn G ru n d y H a r ­ ms W e b s te r Jo h n so n , George A n d e r­ son) 39 9 , 2 Texas So u th ern , 40 1; 3. P r a ir ie V iew . 40 7; 4. U m a r Tech. 41 6 5. N o rth e a st lo u is ia n a 41 9 . 6 So u th eastern Lo u is ia n a 42,0. ( N E W T E X A S R E L A Y S R E C O R D , M em o ria l S ta d iu m , and A m erican C o lleg ia te R PCf,rd — o ld Texas R c ia \ s record In F r id a y pre­ of 40.0 b v So u th ern lim s T h is breaks all three records set by So u th ern in F r id a y prelim s ) So u th ern Jo h n so n , A n th o n y Gates, (W e b s te r R o b e rt L e w is ), T h ero n 3 04 7 ( N E W T E X A S R E L A Y S R E C ­ O R D — old record 3:07 8 b y Texas in S o u th e rn O klahom a 1965': 2 C h ris tia n 3 P r a ir ie V iew ; 4. L i n ­ co ln : 5. B e s t T e x as State. re la y — One-mile Jo h n so n . I Monday Eye Opener chor on a winning mile relay squaw. Rice brokr> its first record with the two-mile relay. The Owlets time of 7:41.9 — run by Jim Metzger. Steve Montoya. Brown. and Tommy Maupin — improved on (he existing record of 7:46.5 set by the Texas freshman in 1961. Houston’s team of Scott Clark, Bob Gardner, Mike Wilson, and John Lengers pushed Rice right to the wire and placed second in 7:42.1, well under the old record. Abilene Christian, who finished third in 7:45.6, also beat the ex­ isting mark. The Owlets second record came later that night in the 440- vard relay. Doug Belzung, Mike Casey, Mike McKee, and Dale Bernauer ran off a 41.4 quarter mile break Baylor's 1964 standard by tw’o-tenths of a sec­ ond. to Rice was again pushed to the record, this time by Victoria. Victoria placed second with the same the winners. Schreiner, third with a 41.5. was also below the old record. Texas finished fifth in 41.8. time as T h e Owlets had to wait until Saturday to topple its third rec­ ord. Maupin, Casey, Bernauer, and BrowTi ran a 3:11.1 mile re­ lay to low’er Abilene Christian's record of 3:12.6 set in 1962. USU in second was a full three seconds behind the Owlets. Texas placed fifth with 3:16.4. speeding The only other Junior College- Freshman record to fall came in the pole vault on Friday night. Pinto Beene, Abilene Christian freshman, went over the bar at J C - F R E S H M A N R E S U L T S Sh o t put — I. C h a r lfs G rre n e , N T S U . 53-3 2. To m H o llid a y . W ic h i­ ta State. 52-5, 2 : 3 R o h m Stru p p io k , L e y L e B o w , T e x a s L S V , 5 !-7s? ; 4 R o n n ie U rb a n tk e , Tech. 51-21! : 5 (t ie ) Ja m e s Bag- B a y lo r. T-xt-IO1. : 6. by. P r a ir ie \ evv, and J e r r y P e t t y . A rk ansas. 50-9. Tw o-m ile ( J i m C o n ley Steve M o n to y a , M etzger. B ro w n , 7 41 9 T o m m v M a u p in ), ( N E W R E C O R D — old reco rd 7.46 5 b v Texas in 1961); 2 H ouston. 7 42 I ; 3. ACC, T e x as A A M . 7 46.s . 5. L S V . 7.53.2. 6. B a y lo r , 8:01 8 re la y — 7 7 15 6; R IC * 4 I . R ip * 4 40-9 a rd re la y -— (D o u g Belzung. M ik e Casev M ik e M c K e e . D a le B e rn a u e r). 41.4 ( N E W R E C O R D — old record 42 6 bv B a y lo r In 1964); 2 V ic to ria , 41 4 3 Sc n re ln e r. 41 5; 4 L S C . 41 6: 5 Texas. 41 8; 6. H o w ­ a rd C o u n ty. 41.9 H ig h ju m p — I P a r r r N o b le T e x ­ I as 2 M a k e M a r t in S W T exas. 1 6-5’.; 3 B i l l E llio t t . Texas. W H ; 4 | A lb e rt C ra ft. A rlin g to n State. 6-H2 ; 5. H a r r y W itherspoon, Odessa. 6-21? : (Seco n d 6 T :m H a y n e * . S M C . 6-2! 2 thro u g h few est misses > fo u rth on basis of P o le \ atilt — I P in t o B e e n e A CC . I 15 feet i N E W R E C O R D — old record 14-6 b y W a r r e n B r a tt lo f , Puce 1962, and T e r r v Se g u ra , Sou. Lo u is ia n a . 1965); 2 E rn e s t P a rk e r. B lin n 14-6; Joe W o m a c k L S E 14-6 4 A r t h u r 3 W a ld e n N T S C . 14-6- 5 Jo e T ig h . Ii a afd C o u n ty , 14-0, 6 M ik e H a r ­ p er (Seco n d J C . th ro u g h fo u rth on basis o f few e st m isses.) T e m p le 13-6. l?0-9 a n i high h u rd le * —- I B e rn a rd C age Texas S o u th e rn 14 4 2. C a r l i W h ite . T e x a s A A I, 116: 3 ('ash m an , H ou sto n 14 6; 4 bott, B lin n 14 6 5 D e w a rd Stro n g , T e x a s A AM 14 8 6 H a r le y B ' ru m , ; H o w a rd C o u n tv. 14 8 IrtO-xard dash — C a rl H ig h t, J a r k Ab- | T o n y I R ice . i 2 D o u g B elz u n g C S U , 9 6 9 7 3 R o n n ie B u t le r . S c h re in e r, e s ; 4 M onte S tra tto n A C C , 9 8, 5 Ross M o n tg o m e ry, T C C 10.0; 6 Lin w o o d W r ig h t H o w a rd C o u n ty , IC O. I T e x as i L o n n ie S c h ille r C ra ig Z u rk e y , L J . Cohen D a vid M a tin a ) 3 26 6; 2 Tu- lane. 3.26.R 3 P r a ir ie V ie w , 3:28 I ; 4 L S V . 3:28.8: 6 H ou sto n. 3:29.4; 6 T e x a s Tech, 3:34.1, S p rin t m ed ley re la y One-mile relax — I R ic e (T o m m v M a u p in . M ik e C asey. D a le B e rn a u e r. ; c Onley B r o w n ) 3 111 ( N E W R E C ­ O R D — o ld record 3 1 2 6 b v A b ilen e C h ris tia n in 1962); 2 U S U , 3 14.1: 3. V ic to ria 3 J I 3; 4 A b ilen e C h ris tia n 3 15 0 5 Texas, 3 16 4. 6. H o w a rd C o un tv. 3:17.4, * JARMANS * WEYENBERG * MASSAGIC 12.95 to 22.95 It's Here! S )«)• 'n tp eciio n J t a d iic # I* A pril 15th. Don’t d#!ay. C om a by and gel your car tnip ectad . C o m p iata Front ENTIRE ST O C K IN C LU D ED End and Brake Service. BURKHALTER SPRING CO. G R 6-2117 310 Colorado % Stat# Im p actio n Station . . . Texas Southern's John Hartfield leaps toward new high jump mark of 7 feet. Up and O ver H e Goes — Photo b y Virgil Jo h n so n ■ ■ft?- # * * <5** SPLIT SECOND TINING AND SPEED . . . WINS AT THE TEXAS RELAYS . . . WINS FOR YOU AT ONE HOUR MARTINIZING! 4 L O C A T IO N S : 510 WEST 19+ti 907 WEST 24th 704 WEST 29th W IN D SO R VILLA&E \d^° Q* EXTR A C O N V E N I E N T H O U R S I Open 't il 8 p.m. Mon. thru Thurs. 7 a.m. til 6 p.m. all other days 2332 Guadalupe OPEN THURSDAYS TILL 8 P.M Specializing in Collegiate Fashions 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag Sunday, April 3, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Texas’ Victory Smiles . . . Richard Romo (f), Preston Davis, Bob O 'Bryan, David W e b b after two-mile Relay win, — P h o to by E d In 'h r SA's Johnson High Jumps 6-9; Anderson Races to HS Record The flying feet were pushed out of the picture by a oaring body Friday in the High School Division of the Texts Relays. Clarence Johnson, high jumping for San Antonio St. Peter Claver, leaped a remarkable 6 fcot-9 inch­ es. Johnson's spring s k y w a r d eclipsed a 20-year-old Relays- standard of 6 feet-5 inches, set by Houston Lamar's Vem Mc­ Graw in 1916. The only relay mark to bite the dust in prep competition fell to a local group, Austin Anderson. Relying on good handoffs and a speedy closing sprint, bv Rex- M c­ Kinney, the Ye! low jacket s od god Baytown in 42.0. Baytown’s time of 42.2 tied the previous best es­ tablished by Corpus Christi M il­ ler in 1965. UT SHOT PITTER Toby Belt law his record of 60 foot-91.;, inches wiped out when Ronnie Lightfoot of Copperas Cove turned loose a heave of 61 feet. Belt set his record as a Houston Westbury entry in 1963. Those were the only high school records broken, but the trio of ousted marks is hardly indicative of the competition. The 100-yard dash, of all races, had three different leaders. Ja y Gentry of Houston Lamar opened an early lead only to have CC Miller’s Rufus Odem surge in front at the halfpoint. Odem was (-ut down in the last 20 yards by Bill Askey of Baytown. T H E S P R IN T M E D L E Y was all Corpus Christi Miller for three laps. Robert Pena and Ja ck E s ­ parza had put their team in front with two good 220-yard efforts, and Johnny Olixer stretched tho gap with a 49-flat 410 lap. Little Ray Alaniz then took off in the half-mile portion. Alani? ran well, but his short legs xvere no match for tile chunky strides of John Carrey. Running H K . I I S ( H O O L R P M L T S Tw o-m ile re la y I Corpus C h ris ti R a y ( J a c k Esp arza, C h arle s B a s k in Jo h n n y O live r, R a y A la n iz ). 7:56.9 2 M id la n d 7:58.0: 3. H ouston L a ­ mar. 7:58.2: 4 A usin Austin. 8:05.4 5 G alena P o lk , 8 05 8 ; 6 . H ou sto n A ustin . 8,09.3 i L e s lie S m ith . 410-yard relax- - 3 A ustin A n d e r­ son Jo e H utch inson . C a rl H a rv e y . R o y M c K in n e y ), 42 it ( N E W R E C O R D — eld record 42 2 by Corpus C h ris ti M ille r In 1965): 2 B a y tow ti. 42.2: 3. S a n M arcos. 42 J; 4 ('o r pit- C h ris ti M ille r, 42.4; 5. A u s­ tin M 'C M lu m , 42 5; 6 . H ouston L a ­ m ar. 42.8. H ic h ju m p 1 Cl rence Jo h n so n, S A St. P e t pc C lav er. 6-3 (N E W 7 R E C ­ O R D — d d record 6-5 by \> rn M c ­ L a m a r. 1946»: G ra w , H ouston D o y le La w thorn, C arthage, 6-2; .1. for Houston Sam Houlton. Carrey took the lead on the backstretch of the last lap, held off Alaniz in a fine 1:53T. and ga\’o Sam Hous­ ton a four yard win in 3:29.8. The one-mile relay was no con­ test from the second lap on. San Marcos’ b u r ! v Cary Young stormed off the last turn of tho second leg and turned things over to Dwight Harris six yards ahead of Baytown. Harris upped the gap to 15 big steps and gave to all-stater Charles Calahan. C ALLIH AN , running effortless­ ly, skimmed home far in front for a 3 18.7 victory. So easy was his stride that his relay leg time of 47.2 sent a buzz through the crowd. Jim m y Hull Pasad en a S-0 4 (tie * Stet K en n ed y. A u stin M. C a llu m ; D avid D a rn e ll H ouston L a m a r : J i m ­ and R a n d y B a y to w n ; m y F itz g e ra ld , M id lan d , a ll 5-10. Sax ell, I 14 6 tit) ' a n i high h n rd C s B o b 2. W a lte rs . A n ilin Met c le m M ike Vinson H ee 'o n V, a ltrip . 14 S 3. Lorenzo H ernandez. C orpus C h ris ti I. R ick S m ith . M idland . M ille r 14.8: ; • o 5 yin, Littlefield ’ aytown, 15.0: 6 E d w a rd P re je a n , B ea u m o n t So u th P a r k . 35 I. in*)-' arri dash B i'' As!uth P a rk . 56-5: 4. Ja m e s W h ite n e r, P leasan to n , 5.5-7 5. C h a r­ les H en d rick s. B a y to w n , 55-5"4 : 6 . M ik e M itclu im o re. B a y to w n . 53-3 . record of (N EXS' R E C O R D 6 1-91 - sc;, bv T o b y B e lt, H ouston W est bur: 1963) old S p rin t medic,'. rr'a \ I H ouston ( W i l b u r Jo h n so n . L a ­ Jo h n Sam H o u sto n mont. R o b in Sa u e r. C a re x ) .1 29.8 2 Corpus C h ris ti R a w .1 30 4 3 M idland , 3 31 I 4 H o u lto n L a m a r. 3:36 6 5 Au st n A nderson. 3 .19.7 6 A u s tin Reagan L o w e , I relax One-mile Sa n M arcos (T o m m y C olgin. G a ry Voung. D w ig h t 2 H a rris . C h arle s C a n th a ri) 3 18.8 B a y to w n . 3:20 8 , 3. H ou sto n Sam Houston. 3 21.0 4 H o u sto n L a m a r, 3 21.3‘ 5 Houston B e lla ire , 3 21 6. 6. H ouston M adison. 3:25.3 row 30 y arris out of tho 'ad— O’Bryan cut nut for home He slashed IO yards off that margin with a 40.6 time for the 140. Now it was up to Preston Da­ vis, He was 20 yards b 'hind Ok­ lahoma's James Shields. He had that back plus 20 more in one- half a lap. People w e r e mutter­ ing about the pluc ky half miler dx mg on the last lap. Davis, battling all the way, staved off Shields’ rally, won the race, and was clocked in an un­ believable 1:48.0. The most spectacular fact is this: g iv e n the times Keene, O’­ Bryan, and Davis ran, had l^ang- ham not been injured and had run his best of 21.0. Texas would have recorded a 3:15.7. That time is .2 seconds off th# world record. The 'Horns set no record in the two-mile relay, either, but fans could have cared less Saturday. Texas put down the mighty Ok­ lahoma State Cowboys, world r e c ­ ord holders off PATTERSO N pulled a coaching gem in the race. Seeing the possibilities, he pulled Rioh- ard Romo from the open mile and subbed him, David Webb, O’Bryan, and Davis for a second string bunch he had originally planned to enter. The payoff was like Las Vegas has never seen. Webb, shaking off a year of injuries, powered home in first, surprising every­ one. O'Bryan ignored OSP s man on the second leg, letting him take the lead, then snatching it back in the home stretch. Romo did likewise, letting t e Cowboy foe mo\e ahead, then pulling even just as he handed to Davis. Davis took off a step behind veteran Tom Yon Rude a And thai was all she wrote Laying just off Yon Ruden s shoulder, Davis waited until the last turn to sprint in first rn a time of 1:27.2. And that wasn't all. With Long­ hand out, Texas used sprinter Don Parkhurst in the mile relax', along with Keene, O'Bryan and Davis, and still finished second behind Rice rn 3:10.9. Ru-e had a 3:09.5. The University records, when they came, were rather spectacu­ lar. Kansas employed four crack milers to snap its own mark of fbur-mile relay. 16:55,3 in the The fax hawkers took an cany load and anchor man John Law ­ son stretcher! it to 80 yards at the finish. Kansas was clocked at an impressive 16:40 2. XRU f a t : ( WRIST! \N - a impressive Friday nigh' in tile distance medley as mauling standard of 9:42.2. ACC, running without quarter mile ace Riley Dunn, who wms ill, was practically counted out at the start. But that was before Christmas came in April for the joyous Wildcats. Tile big package was a long time in coming. First, half miler Bruce Johnson opened with a good I 50 7. Then unheralded Ken Knapp reeled off a 17.2 440 This loft it to Albert Von Troba. who fastest promptly turned in the D i s t a n c e m e d l e x - r e l a x J o t ’I t (NT- (B ru c e C h ris tia n K n ap p . Albert V on C hristm as I 9 16 5 old record 9 1964), 2 K ansa State, 9 44 3 4 O klahom a State, 9 SI I r e l a x " p r i n t m e d l e y ! or 6. KC! ,1 25 I . 5. S M C . 3 29 6 Prest An Davis-. 3 'JOT. ’I ( \ ( tit B*>b .9 33 8. rid a \ SMP \ aril t j (P h il A ld tid g e I Jo h n n y S m ith , J I 26 5 4 K a n ­ I .27.0. 5 Texas Tech, 1:27.5, 6. I B ill ( alhoun Rice, I 25 4 3 S M I sas T i xas A AM 1 28 1 f (kl i 'm m a Ja c k > rn > Ja m e s h ' R h Texas i : o ~ > n r d B ris to l, h u r d l e * — So u th ern . Texas R o e 4 13.7. 2. H ic k s Southern. A rn aid o 13 8 Northeast Roper M ann 3 L o u isian a 13.9 4. B u tc h M ille r. Cast T c x a* Stall- 13 9 5 H aro ld W ooten . K tr . MS State. 14. J 6 W a ll-ice Young l l I P itts b u rg S ta le , (W in d was 6 M F C aid ing so It c a n t count as a record.> I (WU rn rd d a « h I ( C d r H ’osson 9 1, 2. Conn . T rim : F o u n tain , N o rth e a stern Lo u is ia n a M 6; 3 D o u g­ lass Broadus, P r a ir ie V ie w , 9 6. 4. r- H ilb ert Sm ith . Texas A & M 9,8: M alco lm Gott. lo u is ia n a S ta le 9 7 Xrd T h le ! * a r ■ 9 ‘ Hi* ' a r r i h urdle* 2 So u th ea*to rn Lo u isl- X .ih I ' a* 7 M P H t id in g i Sam , I Dennis T a Pue. S o u th - rr P i-1shin a ( K in > 52 I I H a l B a llo u O klah o m a C h ris tia n , 52 3 4 G ilb e rt XX I tech! S M C . 54 2 -terr 5 *3.6 6. G a ll Rend So u th ern 5.1 8 S M I 51 5 ti s FU K T w o mile re la y I Texas (D a v id Xx ebb Bob O 'B r y a n R ich a rd Rom o Br- st<*n D avis t 7 27 2. 2 O klah o m a State. 7:27 3: I A rk ansas 7 38 o. 4 Ne lira k i 7 . »(.. 5 M isso u ri 7 it 8. (T e x a s spins W e b b . 6 D rak e, 7 4. I 5! i R o m o . I 50 5 Da\ is ' I 52 I > o Rrx an I 50 2. Vilen IT 2 8 R u sse ll. I K a n s a s in 1 7 Hi 7 16 5>.l ^ I o u r m i l e r e l a y I lad le t 1D65 * ,1 H o u s t o n ( T o m L o w e ll Jo h n I-av son ' 16 10.2 2 A b i l - K a n s a s I ms! 17 1 2 2 ; l f in ne- eld (P a u l. Y erp o vich P m e ne S t a t e 5 O klahom a S la te 17 15.5 6 sn'.I (N C XX R E C O R D record of 16 55.3 bx K a n sas D o n n er La ■ ■ >> n, l i l t >artl relax (C h u ck K\«nx Steve C ia \ ton J i m Rarikhead M arsh all K d w a r c i o 40 6 2. N e b ra s­ -ll 2 ka 4 Houston I e' h, 418. 6 Kansas. 41 9 One-mile Bo b ( J o h n M oss 8'red Cloud. J imrnv E llin g to n ) 3:09.6; 2. Texas (D o n P a r k h u r s t . B o b O ’B r y a n P re s ­ roavls. T o m m y K e e n e ), 3 10.9. ton 3 A C C ; 4 Oklahoma 5. Baxter. retne I hompson ll 5 5 Texas " - xas A A M I . R i c e I C I ; 3 S M C I still be­ in to the Charles sas’ na­ an. John ame Kan or rn Not content with a .short lead, Christmas rn ox cd awray by 30, IO yards, all on the first then lap, Sheer foolishness. Surely h*5 in the face of would collapse La xx son s finish. He collapsed, alright. Right af’ep he breasted the tape f »r an ACC' reading of 9:36, which the was but two seconds off world record. ( H RISTM VVS casual 4:01 I mile. rime? Just * Th-- Cornhuskepi got back about six yards when NCAA 100- yard dash champ C h a r l e s Greene anchored, but he muldn’t catch the SMI runner. Marshall Ed ­ wards, who brought the Mustangs home in IO.6. RIC K , getting aid from un­ known Fred Brow’n. captured the mile relay in 3:09.5. Brown with­ stood Texas pressure on his lap to keep Rice ahead, and anchor man Jim m y Ellington maintained a safe margin for the Owl’s vic­ tory. In the distance medley, sec­ ond-place Kansas crossed the fin­ ish line in 9:42 5—2.7 seconds un­ der the old mark, and third-place Kansas State also bettered the previous low by doing 9:44.3. Likewise, runner-up Abilene Christian did 16:50.1 in the four mile relay, which was 5.2 seconds below the old record. INTRODUCING PERMANENT DRESS SLACKS Dacron - Cotton Poplin Oven-Cured with Kora+ron No Ironing Necessary POPLIN PANTS THAT ARE CONSTRUCTED WITH METICULOUS TROUSER FIT. NO-BAG SEAT... TAPERED LEGS... BUILT TO LAST. WASH ’EM-DRY ’EM WEAR ’EM. GET ACQUAINTED WITH KORATRON® AND SAVE. Regular 10.95 SALE 8 NO WAITING PRE-CUFFED Navy, Tan, Yellow, Stone Olive Size 28 thru 38 BURMIL FABRIC QUALITY CONTROLLED LEAN ON PERMANENT PRESSED SLACKS Regular 10.95 SALE 897 ta ROCK WEI wood S l»«d 4 dows HO %r *4 DOUBLE gum** <-.5 fc.reb I'jfl. fur »»<■'.* I JfAllFSTO’V:?; diwr ITSm.Afc.jdT 4 room apt, privet* ♦ntf*cc*.S or unf*r*u*fc«"l»4,, : ‘ fc*i*«mst, cavort. 24 Fix:*- honta* Si. Lower duplex, 3 bedrooms. Close nptowt PF DR i m or DR S-3W3 % . 7 h V » . S S IRS mon Ut I U Reid Av* ___________ u»rlfrafo»-2%>. „ gjflP-Y w A K T E^ V a i . m e pflSPtr y - rot)* * * el*a»«|FTn fiffOa ^ S t e I S i ^ t e » .Y m % < ^ C Z - j r z a J / l l V I M LAPE want* i ^ S T S S f t J ! ^*1** work S72-I36?. ( I wo-^ty •? OI "<■■■"- WANT to keep pra-v.;Ui-i>1 lur* \ child la my home. 8<2-*l*4. ■■• MAV ara, at* odd Jo ha, U fh l haul- j me, d r a-?rn at** ion Fvida. s —«*»w I AVAILABLE J*35 H i t , 3 room*, basement ■|7S per month. ■ » * fit V K WWWW J HR i with DAILY TEXAN I You ll get the Results you want CLASSIFIED ADS ♦ n u SAVE ON PURCHASE PRICE SAVE LAUNDRY EXPENSE SAVE ALL AROUND GXxySjl C a m p W l mtttwraUg sffiip 2350 Guadalupe Sunday, April I. im THE DAILY TEXAN f w I Amie Favored Again In Masters Tourney course AUGUSTA, Ga.-—lf'—I t s Arnold P a lm e r's and Arnold P a lm e r's y ear. so the jet-flying fairw ay m illionaire is favored to m ak e it No. 5 next week in the 30th M asters Golf T ournam ent. B ookm akers a re quoting 1he 36-year-old L atrobe. P a., c h a rg ­ in tern a­ e r a 4-1 choice tional field of 104 which begins four-dav scram b le Thursday a n\ or Bob Jo nes' floral a c re s — the Augusta National course. the in PA LM ER HAS WON this eov- rte d prize every even year since 1958 and he goes into this to u rn a­ m ent with a reactiv ated putting touch and booming confidence. Bounding out of a 16-months slum p, he is off to his best sta rt in years. “ Pm putting b e tte r." s a i d P a lm e r, who w arm ed up with a reco rd 63 at G reensboro, N.C.. la st W ednesday. “ Putting always h as been the big thing with m e at Augusta. I hope I can fit all th e pieces to g eth er." to a fifth Mas­ threats Chief te rs title for Am ie a re the other two m em bers of the Big Three, Ja c k N icklaus and G ary P la y e i; B ruce Devlin, the reed-thin ex­ plum ber from A ustralia; putting whiz Bill C asper; form er British Open king Tony I^ m a , and the two hottest articles on the c u r­ ren t tour, Doug Sanders and Gay B rew er. J r. NICKLAUS, the b r u te -strong Golden Bear who set a tourna­ ment record of 271 in winning by nine shots over P alm er and P lay er last year, and Player, the little South African In basic black who dom inated the world pro golf scene in 1965, are se c ­ ond choices at 6-1. threshold of the greatness, and C asper, back from a cam paign in the F a r F a st, am 8-1, followed by Sanders, Brewer and Loma at 10-1. Devlin, on Augusta alw ays has been re ­ garded as a slugger s course but history' show's that the men who have .subdued her have done it largely on the greens. Robinson Sets 3-Mi!e Record; Hartfield Clears Bar ai 7’-0 But H artfield elim inated him wiih a perfect leap at seven feet and substituted a new higli for R elays’ com petition in the pro­ cess. THE OLDEST MARK to fall, although unofficially, cam e in the 120-yard high hurdles. There, Tex­ as Southern’s Roy Hicks, with a breeze a t his back, held off te a m ­ m ate Armando Bristol to hit the tape in 13.7. Summaries l*o!<* v a u lt I. Bill Nelson. C o lo ­ r a d o S t a t e , 15-6 2. M a r k K i n g . T e x ­ as. 15-6; 3. F r e d B u r t o n , W i c h i t a S l a t e , .13-6; 4. B ill F a r r e l l . O k l a h o m a S t a t e . 15-6 5 B a r r y B e a rd e n . A r k a n ­ sa s, 13-0: 6 . J i m B r a d s h a w . C o l o r a d o S t a t e 15-0. ( P l a c e s a w a r d e d o n f e w ­ est m i s s e s . ) f e e t Disc us — I R a n d ) M a t r o n , T e x a s A&M. 169 in c h e s : 2 G a r y IO S c h w a r t z , K a n s a s . 168-10: 3. T o m m y J a m e s o n S o u t h w e s t L o u is i a n a . 165-4; 4 R u s s P o l h e m u s E a s t T e x a s 164- 10' j 5. C a rl P e t l e a r n i , O k l a h o m a . 164-7’, ; 6 . N i l e s L is te r , O k l a h o m a S t a t e , 163-0 7. S t a n l e y M c D o n a ld . L in c o ln . 159-3 4 in ch es J a v e l i n I. J a e k D y e r . L S I ’, 235 feet 2. Galvin B o w s e r . N o r t h T e x a s S t a t e . 232-5 ; 3. G l e n n E r m a n t l n g e r , N o r t h w e s t L o u i s i a n a . 230-4; 4 T o m P u r m a K a n s a s . 226- 3 *3 : 5. M ik e S o w e r s ^ T ex as. 221-5’ •. : 6 T o m m y S k l a e k . N o r t h e a s t L o u i s i ­ a n a . 214-6; 7. R lck l J a c o b s , Rice . 214-2 L a . S o u t h w e s t e r n T h r e e - m i l e r u n — I . M a lcolm R o b ­ inson . 13:27.3: ( N E W R E C O R D — old r e c o r d 13:50.9 bv M i l e s E i s e n m a n . O k l a h o m a S t a t e . 1959): 2. O s c a r M o o r e. S o u t h e r n I l l i n ­ ois J o s e Nor!. M e x ico . 13:57.9: 4 T o m H e i n o n a n , M in n e s o t a . 5. D o n I .a k in . F o r t H a y s 33 58.3; ( K a n . ) , 14 08 8 : 6 W a y n e B a g le y . A b i l e n e C h r i s t i a n , 14:19 9. 13 39.7, 3. I e n g j o h n R h o d e s. N o r t h e a s t L a j u m p — I R a i n e r S t e n h i s . 2. D i c k i e 25-3',. 2 4 - l \ . 24- 4 A r t C o r t e z . K a n s a s , 23-7*4: fi R o n C a l i f o r n i a S t a t e , G r a y . O k l a h o m a C h r i s t i a n . 3 1 A 5 R i c k y S m i t h , B a v lo r . 23-5 H e s t e r , O k l a h o m a S t a t e . 23-4’ J e r r y T h o m p s o n o ne-m ile r u n 2 J i m R \ u n , u n a t t a c h e d . 4:03.9 I J o h n Ca mien* u n a t t a c h e d . 4 05.1, 3 K ” n G o u l d . O m a h a . 4:09.2. 3. S h o t r u t — I. R a n d y M a tso n. T e x - A&M, 65-4’ 2 : 3 G e o r g e VV nods. S o u ­ t h e r n I l lin o is 62- ’2 ( lene Crew*. M is so u r i. 60-’-. ; A J o e I>ane M i n n e ­ sota. 56-1’ a: 5 R o s s P o l h e m u s East, J i m B e lt z e r 55-19; 6 T e x a s S t a t e N e b r a s k a H ig h J o h n H a r t f i e l d I 7-0: 2 J i m J o h n s o n o k l a h o m a 6-11 (v in 4 3 E m a n u e l R o lla n d L in e n ln R on T u ll O k l a h o m a 6-10: 5 S t e v e H e r n d o n M i s s o u r i 6-10: 6 T o m A s h ­ m a n . S o u t h e r n I llino is, 6-6 . l u m p 55-8’ The old record was 13.9, set in 19-9 by R ic e s F red Wolcott. tim e will not en ter H ick's the though, since tile aiding books, the 4.4I3 than wind was m ore m .p.h. allowable. Tile heralded assault on the rec­ ord in tile J e rry Thompson Mile Run never cam e elf. Kansan Wes Santee ra n a 4:00.5 in 1955. and R elay fans w ere anticipating a sub-four rn nu e race by Olym­ pian Jim Ryu.u Ryun, though, chose to bog down the pace. Running well within him self, he led the pack at tho three-q u arters m ark in a dism al 3:09.6. But he exhibited fam ed kick—which brought his him record of 3:55.3 last su m m er—by clocking 56-flat for the last lap and win­ ning in 4 :03.9. the A m erican “ SUPER-AGGIE,” R andy Mat­ son, w’as under par, too. However, is “ recovering" from a Matson stint of college basketball. The big weight m an, as off form as he is. still m anaged easy firsts in the shot put and discus. He whirled the discus into an angry cross-wind Friday to win at 169 feet-10 inches. Saturday, he let his prelim best—and 1966 best—of 65 feet-45/2 inches stand up for victory in the shot put. Rainar Stenius successfully de­ fended his broad jump title with a leap of 25 feet-34 inches. But world record holder Ralph Bos­ in exhibition, did ton, jumping a nifty 26 feet-214 inches and drew a swarm of admiring young­ sters around him between jumps as he dispensed advice and au­ tographs. Tile Medical Branch of the Uni­ versity was opened with the School of Medicine in 1891 in Gal­ veston. and the Dental Branch was established in 1943. in Houston Normal people lower track rec­ ords by scant seconds, or frac­ tions thereof. Nobody told that to Malcolm Robinson of South­ western Louisiana. Running as fresh at the finish as he did at the start, the lanky Louisianan roared away from a good three-mile held Friday night and sheared a m assive 23.6 sec­ onds off the R elays’ record. a ROBINSON, ran 13:27.3, in knocking of the 13:50.9 set 1959 by Miles Eisenman of Okla­ homa State. So far ahead was Robinson that his nearest chal­ lenger was 11.4 seconds back at 13:39.7. Even that time dipped 11.6 seconds under the previous low. But then, so did a lot of read­ liars ings and distances make out of the record book in the University College special events at the Texas Relays. Two other records were in among som e admirable perform­ ances. sandwiched Youngest mark to go w'as last year's six foot, lOVj-ineh high jump by John Hartfield of Texas Southern. Oozing confidence, that sam e Hartfield polished off one foe after another until four were left at six feet-10 inches. OU’s Jim Johnson w-as the only other sur­ vivor at six feet-11 inches. Ponies, K State Swap Victories DALLAS—lift—Southern Metho­ dist University and Kansas State swapped home runs Saturday and split a non-conference baseball doubleheader. The Mustangs took the opener 6-2 and Kansas State the nightcap 4-3. left inning after A three-run home run by cen­ ter fielder Ernie Recob In the fifth fielder Keith Cramer and third baseman Ron Scholl walked proved to be the difference in the final game. The Wildcats added the final and winning run in the seventh shortstop Gary Holland when singled home second baseman Jim Scheffer from second. Davidson, Frogs Smash Baylor WACO — (IP — Texas Christian shortstop Parke Davidson scored three runs, batted in three more and went four for five at the plate while helping his team de­ feat Baylor 7-1 in a Southwest Conference baseball gam e Satur­ day. Davidson's powerful hitting was supplemented by the strong pitch­ ing of Tom Brandy. Of the last twenty-five hatters Gramly faced Saturday, only two got on base, one by an error and one walk. Two of the Frog runs cam e on homers in the sixth with no one on base and second base­ man Jim Duffy made the sec­ ond home run of the afternoon also with no runners on base. TCII’S first two runs cam e in the second and third innings. Da­ vidson doubled in the second and scored on a single by left fielder Eddie Driggers. third, the third baseman Richard Hooper singled, and went fielder to Mickey Yates walked. Davidson blasted out a second double to score Hooper. second when right In The Frogs scored three runs In the eighth first baseman Pat Peebles scored the first run of the inning after getting to first on an error and to second on a hit by Yates. He scored on a hit by Davidson, Catcher John Olsen came to bat, singled and scored Tommy Richardson who had replaced Yates as a pinch runner. Drig­ gers followed and hit a sacrifice fly to right field, scoring Da­ vidson. Baylor scored its only run in the second. Pitcher Rod Robin­ son singled, went to second on a hit by right fielder Don Rut­ ledge. Second baseman Richey Head attempted to sacrifice and loaded the bases when TCU pitch­ er Tom Bramly threw the ball away at first. Robinson scored on a sacrifice fly by shortstop Don Looper. X E R O X C O P IE S 8 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT 7 DAYS A WEEK Come On - Come On! — P h o t o b y V i r g i l J o h n s o n R e l a y s p e c t a t o r s u r g e T h e r o n L e w is as h e a n d S o u t h e r n t h r e a t e n m ile r e l a y w o r l d m a r k . C T .ASSTFIFD A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S ........................................ * 1 ........................ 4e ( 1 5-w ord m i n i m u m ) E a c h W o r d M i n i m u m C h a r g e C l as s i f i e d D i s p l a y I c o l u m n \ o n e in* h o n e l i m a E a c h A d d i t i o n a l T i m e 20 C o n s e c u t i v e Issues 8 w o r d s 35 w o r d s 20 w o r d s .............................................. * ............................... ................................................................... ^ ................................................................... 11.00 (N o co p y c h a n g e t o r c o n s e c u t e iss ue r a t e s ) ............................... * "d ........................................................ THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS CALL GR 1-5244 C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S IN G D E A D L I N E S T u e s d a y T e x a n . . W e d n e s d a y T e x a n . T h u r s d a y T e x a n . . . . F r i d a y T e x a n S u n d a y T e x a n In I m m e d i a t e n o t i c e m u s t be giv* n as a r e r e s p o n s i b l e f o r o n l y o n e i n c o r r e c t i n s e r t i o n . . . . M o n d a y , 3:30 p m . . . T u e s d a y , 3 .30 p.m . W e d n e s d a y , 3:30 p m . . T h u r s d a y , 3:3 0 p.m . F r i d a y . 3 30 p rn. in a n a d v e r t i s e m e n t . t h e p u b l i s h e r s t h e event o f e r r o r s m a d e Furnished Apartments Furnished A partm ents Printing Furnished Rooms T ypin g Q U I E T L U X U R Y L I V I N G 2400 S a b i n e G R 7-7179 EL SABIN O APARTMENTS B riarcliff Manor UTT S h o e 11 m eek ( O f f W e s t 12th St.) 8 E l k s C a p i t o l & I T 1 & 2 FRS - SI 15 to SI45 G l a s s — P r i v a t e P a t i o — ( ab:'- T V L a u n d r y - B u s S h o p p i n g < e n t e r * Q U I E T S T U D E N T S W F L O O M ! G R 8-8935 M e r A p t . 105 C L 3-0440 Q u i e t Luxury L i v i n g EDEN R O C C o r n e r W e s t 12 th A- E l m ( E n f i e l d ) I A 2 B R Apts. SI2 5 t o $149.50 A L L B I L L S P A I D P O O L C A B L E T V L a u n d r y — B us - S h o p p i n g C e n t e r Q U I E T S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E M g r 1204-H E lm . C R 7 715) C L 3-0440 D a r ng A p * j to r I my Budgets $59.SO T O $69.50 Cool — C l e a n — Q u ie t — M o d e r n C o m p l e t e l y F u r n i s h e d — O o d le s C lo s e ts Good A p p l i a n c e s Most A C W a l k t o Class M e r 2015-A R e d R i v e r G R 8-<*422 W A 6 - 3 6 4 C A V A L I E R A P A R T M E N T S 307 E a s t 31st S U M M E R R A T E S t w o f u r n i s h e d b e d r o o m S e a u t l f u l l y l aun - ip t s . A / C ! r v m a i d - J a n : t e r s t r e e t p a r k i n g . A v a i l a b l e J u n e 1st. O p en b o t h lu m r n e r se s s io n s . l a r g e p>ool c a b l e TV, se rv ice, o ff $37 50-$60 m o n t h l y p e r p e r s o n A L L B I L L S P A I D SH 3-7611 __ _ G R 7-7213 I U M M E R R A T E S b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t * d u p l e x A ir c o n d i t i o n e d . M ’ n, p a n e l e d 1102 W e s t 22nd. D R 8- ri25 o n e - t w o A T C A M P U S e f f i e i e n r v . M a r y F o u r - r o o m I n c i n e r a t o r , c a r p e red f o r c o u p l e closet* * ;r c o n d i t i o n e d ( a l l 1920 S p e e d w a y , G R 7- •818. S u m m e r R a te # All Bills P a id F u r n i s h e d o n e o r t w o b e d r o o m A/C, l a u n d r y . Mud* pool. ca b le TV. ro o m . One block f r o m law scho o l. A g i t a b l e J u n e I. Q U I E T C O U P L E no pets. W a t e r f u r n i s h e d a n d d e p o s it* F r e d e r i c k . m a d e on G a r a g e bu s 1807 E Ave G R 7-0923. c h i l d r e n , u t i l i t i e s o t h e r N o B L O C K U n i v e r s i t y , A /C , r o o m bri< k a p a r t m e n t , T ile b a t h - k l t c h e n U t i l i t ie s p aid. $55. 1910 S p e e d w a y . GR 6-9444 t h r e e e t ' e P R I V A T E r o o m w i t h h a t h . K l t r h e n - a i r c o n d i t i o n e d . T w o b l o c k s of c a m p u s C a r p e t e d a n d all bills paid. Call GR 8-5213 or G R 2-5085 N E A R U n i v e r s i t y — I b e d r o o m , Se- n u d e d q u i e t D o w n s t a i r s w a t e r paid 2810 P e a r l . C R 2-3993. GE 3-6857. *70 Gas livin g 1900 SAN G A B R I E L . M e n f u r n i s h e d r o o m - b e d r o o m . A /C . p r i v a t e b a t h , w a l k i n g d i s t a n c e U T . G R 2-5643 a f t e r 5 p rn o u t of t h e c i t y m o st o f T M O M E N to live In m y h o m e t h e I am t i m e k i t c h e n , p r i ­ Everv t h i n g c o m p l e t e v a t e r o o m s te lev ision , w a l l - t o -w a l l c a r ­ p e t i n g $35 m o n t h l y p e r m a n All bills paid. 60S O a k l a n d . GFI 8-1840. ings R O O M M A T E L O C A T O R S . M u l t i p l e l i s t ­ s h a r e s p a r t m e m e x p e n s e s a v i l l a bl*. M ov in g un n e o e s sa i v H I A 392*' n e e d i n g people of to A U S - T E X D U P L I C A T O R S W e ' v e Moved T o 311 E a s t l i t h — D i a g o n a l l y A c r o ss t h e S t r e e t F r o m O u r O ld L o c a t i o n M U L T I L I T H I N G M I M E O G R A P H I N G X e r o x i n g T h e s e s P a p e r s P r i n t i n g C R 6-6593 Miscellaneous al. c las sical G U I T A R i n s t r u c t i o n s — f o r p r o f e s s i o n ­ i n s t r u c t i o n s call R o n H u d s o n , a n u n d e r s t u d y o f J u a n S e r r a n o . G R 2-6407. F l a m e n c o C H A N C E O F A L I F E T I M E . L e a r n b a l l r o o m d a n c i n g a t b u d g e t r a ’ es — d o n t w a it. W i n t e r S t u d i o , H O 5-9941. E X P E R I E N C E ! ) d r u m m e r w e e k e n d s , Fla*.* e v e r y t h i n g rock in g f xx i s t . s h o w s G R 8-7045 l a 77. s o c i e t y a \ ai la hie i n c l u d ­ a n d B L U E G R A S S B A N J O An e i g h t w e e k w o r k s h o p w i l l b e g i n t h e w eek of April 3rd on B l u e g r a s s s o l e ban.io A ny box o r g irl i n t e r e s t e d cal! T o n y Ullrich. G R 2-5726 o r G R 2-4125 M I N I A T U R E ( S h e t l a n d S h e e p Dogs» A K C R e g i s t e r e d B la c k a n d w h i t e 6 m o n t h s old p u p p ie s G R 7-7227. collie Room and Board FALL V A C A N C IE S Room a^d Board U P S T A I R S $ sh o w e r, g a r a g e r o o m s a o u t h e x p o s u r e h l d e - a w a v bed $49. Also 3 r o o m * n o r t h e a s t , s o u t h expos- ures s h o w e r g a r a g e p o r c h $45 OnD co u p les no p e t s n o c h i l d r e n . 1909 Sa bine. G R 2-8572. NUECES COLLEG E HOUSE 2798 N u e c e s A <’ 3 m eal* $87 50-590. OO C A R O U S E L A P A R T M E N T S RHEA HOUSE M A L E — q u i e t e s t p l a n e in A u s tin . C lea n A d j o i n s b a t h - k i t c b e n - t o s t u d y e tte . N e a r U n i v e r s i t y , t o w n . C L 3-5968 U N I V E R S I T Y ROO MS. G i r l s : 2100 2024 S p e e d w a y . R e f r i ­ t e l e v i s i o n m a i d N u e c e s M en g e r a t e d A /C . k i t c h e n , G R 6-9490 For Sale 1949 M G se ri e s Y. I '*4 salo o n C l a s s i c d e s i g n l i t r e s p o r t s S ^ a t s 5. A c o l l e c t o r s i te m . H I 2-0576. 511 A A c a ­ d e m y . I 1937 D O D G E T U D O R H T . V-8 . P S . F a c t o r y a i r . AT, a n d r a d i o . E x c e l l e n t co n d i t i o n . Call G L 3-6508 o r G R 1-5887. I S320 Oil '65 C O R V E T T E . 327 e n g i n e . 1-4 Holl> top. f o u r sp e e d . AM /F 'M r a d i o , so ft E x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n G R 8-8163 37 V O L K S W A G E N . Go od M e c h a n i c a l c o n d i t i o n . T i r e s b e l o w a v e r a g e . $350. 19t)9 R o b b i n s PI 64 O L D S F-85 C u t l a s s to p. A t p o w e r c on so le, c o n v e r t i b l e p e r ­ r a d i o fe ct c o n d i t i o n . G R 7-0775 a f t e r 6 p m 1960 t h i s v 'oak I M P A L A C o n v e r t i b l e m u s t P r i c e d sci! to sc!!. $fl99 o r o f f e r G R 6-2785 a f t e r 7 p rn hest W e e k e n d s b e f o r e 5 p rn. 1966 IBM E x e c u t i v e 2 ’ ? m o n t h s old C o s t *706 w i l l sell f o r t y p e w r i t e r . $600 H I 2-7182. A L P H A R o m e o - G lu lia 1600 S p i d e r . 5 f o r w a r d s p e e d s Red n e w w h i t e t o p P i r e ll i t i r e s G R 8-4933 a f t e r 6 p rn B A R G A I N : S p o r t s t e r 1963 R e n a u l t C a r a v e l l e l i k e new Call I o w n e r E m m a G R 8-6646, a f t e r 6 OO p rn. H O 5-5328 L A B R A D O R S ail b lack , five w e e k s M-K $25 6-12 p m l a r g e b o n e d an d w e e k e n d s . G R 2-9995. C a r r e l l , 512 L i ­ b r a r y . M U S T S E L L 1964 C h e v r o l e t M o n z a to p r e d w i t h w h i t e M a k e o f f e r G R 6-6321. C L 4-2471. c o n v e r t i b l e 61 w’l t h b l a c k R A M B L E R c o n v e r t i b l e . Y ellow r a ­ dio. b e a t e r H O 5-8871 d a y t i m e . H O 5- 9064 e v e n i n g s t o p w h i t e s i d e w a l l s 1966 H O N D A C B 160 o n l y 1700 m i l e s license t i r e s . H a s 1966 H e a v y d u t y p l a t e s C L 3-0334 H O N D A 50 A u t o m a t i c c l u t c h M a c k r e c o r d . $165. 10 m o n t h s ol d. se rv ic e 1621 Bo I,a m a r HT 4-1345. H I 2-7475 O W N E R TRANSFERRED N O R T H E A S T b ath , d e n . t h r e e b e d r o o m t w o l a r g e a r e a b u i l t - i n b o o k sh e lv e s - o ff ir * W i t h i n w a l k i n g d i v a n r o 12 v e a r s s c h o o l - s h o p p i n g c e n t e r . O w n e r O L 2-2135 H O N D A S-65 n i n e m o n t h s old. v e r v c lean , r u n s like new. $225 1621 S o u t h L a m a r . H I 4-1345. HI 2-7475. P a t h . o f c a m p u s ) . D i s s e r t a t i o n s E X C E L L E N T D o i n g ( f o u r b lo c k s w e s t th e s e s, re- p o r t s R e a s o n a b l e M r s . B o d o u r . 907 W . 2 2 ’ o. G R 8-8113 T H E S E S , law- b r i e f s e x p e r t l y t v p e d — E x e c u t i v e e le c t r i c . G L 3-8650. ‘ T H E M E S R E P O R T S L a w Notes. 25c S9-1 OOO, p a g e . E n v e lo p e s a d d r e s s e d N o t a r y P u b l i c M rs F r a s e r G R 6-1317 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . n e a r Allan- R e a s o n a b l e , A c c u r a t e d a i e H O 5-5813 20c P A G E , f i f t e e n y e a r s e x p e r i e n c e , R o b i n e D e l a f i e l d . H I 2-7184. ig M u l t i l i t h i n g , B i n d i n g t a i l o r e d s e r v ­ A c o m p l e t e p r o f e s s i o n a l i l e t h e n e e d s of U n i v e r ­ s i t y s t u d e n t s . S p e c ia l kev b o a r d e q u i p ­ m e n t f o r l a n g u a g e , sc ien ce a n d e n g i ­ n e e r i n g t h e s e s a n d d i s s e r t a t i o n s . t y p i n g t o P h o n e G R 2-3210 & G R 2-7677 2013 G u a d a l u p e C A M P U S P R I N T I N G 2015 U G u a d a l u p e , < JR 8-1768. M u l t i l i t h i n c r e ­ r e s u m e . R e p r o d u c t i o n s of c h a r t s t h e s e s , d i s s e r t a t i o n s , p o r t s a n d p h o t o g r a p h s B o o k b i n d i n g . l a w b riefs, s e rv i c e R E P O R T S D i s s e r t a t i o n s . G R 2-4715 Mrs. B r a d v , 2507 B r i d l e T H E S E S , A L D R I D G E T A P I N G S E R V I C E 3041* E a s t 3 0 th S t r e e t G R 7-1696 G R 6-9.367 T e c h n i c a l p a p e r * a s p e c i a l t y O v e r 200 e x t r a sv m b o l* o n o u r IB M E x e c u t i v e s f o r sc ience, e n g i n e e r i n g , m a ’ hpmattir-s a n d l a n g u a g e . D r a f t i n g , m u l t i l i t t h i n g , b i n d i n g , a n d zero.xmg. SHERRY'S TYPING SERVICE 2 nd F l o o r . 501 E. l i t h a t N e c h e s F R E E P A R K I N G • R E P O R T S • D I S S E R T A T I O N S • P A P E R S • UAM' B R IE F 'S • T H E S E S GR ? 0555 GR 2-3569 E X P E R I E N C E D s e c r e t a r y B A d e g r e e t h e s e s , d i s ­ t y p e y o u r p a p e r s wi ll s e r t a t i o n s l e g a l h r i e f* G R 6-0905. 1 W O O D S S e r v i c e H O 5-1078. T Y P I N G E x p e r i e n c e d . a n d D u p l i c a t i n g R e a s o n a b l e . M A R J O R I E D E L A F I E L D T y p i n g S e r ­ vice 25c a p a g e . F i f t e e n y e a r * e x ­ r e ­ d i s s e r t a t i o n s , p e r i e n c e p o r t s . N o t a r y . H I 2-7008. t h e s e s , A L L K I N D S O F t v p l n g . Mr*. A n n S t a n f o r d . H O 5-5538. V i r g i n i a C a l h o u n T y p i n g S e r v i c e P r o f e s s i o n a l w o r k In a l l f i e l d s . I n c l u d ­ i n g m u l t i ! I t h i n g a n d b i n d i n g on t h e s e s a n d d i s s e r t a t i o n s . 1301 E d g e w o o d G R 8-2636 S y m b o l s X e r o x N o t a r y T Y P I N G . L o w r a t e s . E l e c t e e w r i t e r . M r s . T u ll o s . O L 3-5124 t y p e ­ TY P I N G : L e g a l b r i e f s G R 6-5532 o r IR M E x e c u t i v e I c p e r line. lf n o a n s w e r call G R 7-4933. P R O F I C I E N T A N D V E R Y E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G S E R V I C E F O R A L L F I E L D S I B M E l e e t r o m a t i c —• d i s t i n c t i v e a c c u r ­ a t e t y p i n g a n d p e r s o n a l i z e d s e r v i c e b> c o n s c i e n t i o u s s e c r e t a r y . L E G A L B R I E F 'S S e m i n a r p a p e r s a s p e c i a l t y R e p o r t s pe r s. X e r o x c o p i e s t h e s e s d i s s e r t a t i o n s , t e r m p a ­ G R 8-5894 LA FIESTA 400 E a s t 301 h J u s t O ff Campit* r a t e s Sp,-, a1 2 b e d r o o m , a p a r t m e n t s b a 't i . c a b l e T V . da iv m a i d *ervlc*. g u m m e r p oo f o r lo L I GR 7-4253 o r G R 8 1891 R A N T A R I T A D o r m l t o r Now m o d ­ e r n , k i t c h e n e f e s . St-* < .a! r a te * a v a i l ­ a b l e . 2819 R G r a n .- G R 2 ‘ 239 $75 B I L L S P A I D H e l m ? No. 3 W a l k 1 -bedro om . 3205 I n h e r s l t y . to S h o w n bv a p p o i n t m e n t H O 5-8198 >N A BUI GETT treev a i d gtrr.osphf-n ? Private home pl* m y o f L i k e co-nt* 5 m i n u t e s f r o m U.T Has - kitchen m e n t b e d r o o m v a l k - l n s furnished, 3 la r g e a p a r t ­ l a r g e -.r • • 'c c sp, a A.Vt T WA 6-2556 6 p liv in g L u x u r i o u s at m o d e r a t e p rices f o r w o m e n o n lv , Cal! t o d a y f o r i n f o r ­ m a t i o n o r r e s e r v a t i o n f o r f a l l o r s u m m e r s e m e s t e r * M r* L u c i l l e M c C lellan GR 6-1419 Help W anted P A R T - T I M E w Uh f i r s t c las s e x p e r i e n c e d a n n o u n c e r t ic k e t C o n t a c t Rev G r e e r K V E T , 113 W es t 8th W A I T E R S W A N T E D . W a l t 'n e x c h a n g e f o r y o u r m e a ls . A p p l v P m K a p p a T a u F r a t e r n i t y . C a ll G R 6-8777 for a p p o i n t m e n t tab le* F U L L T I M E C a m p u s M i n i s t r y office M o n d a v - F r i d a y S e c r e t a r y , w o r k 8 :30- 5 p r n . o n e m o n t h s p a i d v a c a t i o n U 'm v e s rity c a l e n d e r s h o r t h a n d 80 U p ng 60. Call M r D a v i d s o n . GR 8-4677 fo r a p p o i n t m e n t . H A W I RN E A P A R T M EN T S 2413 L e o n 2*§>eAroorn ' Mau- r i n e R u e G R 6-3351 o r call D e l t a Z e t a H o u s e m o t h e r M rs R. J . C a l d w e l l G R 6-2810. L i m i t 36 g i r ls S w i m m i n g K i t c h e n p r i v i l e g e s M AN - W O M AN Q u i c k r o u t e U n i v e r s i t y . p a r k i n g 1507 M u r n . v E n . G R 2-2565 a f t e r 5 w e e k e n d s l i n e n s S I N G L E o r D o u b l e f o r m e n S p acio u s . A / C p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e pri- r e f n g e r a t o r v a ’e b a t h d o u b l e C l o v i s m a id S t u b b s H o u s e. 704 VV r o o m s 2 D ’ S O U T H E A S T ro o m P r i v a t e b a t h , r e f r i g e r a t o r b lo c k s U n i v e r s i t y . G R 2-9665 C o o led . e n t r a n c e T h r e e For Rent Typing V R A T y p i n g , M u ll k i t h i n g , B i n d i n g \ c o m p l e t e p r o f e s s i o n a l typing s e r v ­ ice t h e n e e d s of U n i v e r ­ s i t y s t u d e n t . ' . S p e c i a l k e y b o a r d e q u i p ­ sc ie n c e , and e n g i ­ m e n t of n e e r i n g t h e s e s a n d d i s s e r t a t i o n s . l a n g u a g e , t a i l o r e d to P h o n e G R 2-3210 & G R 2-7677 2013 G u a d a l u p e C A L L GR 1-5244 FOR A CLASSIFIED A D R E N T A T V $10-515 p e r m o n t h G L 2-4057. If n o a n s w e r G R 2-2692 er> G R 2-5601. P a t h E X P E R T T Y P I N G — r e p o r t s , b riefs t e r m p a p e r s . Mrs. M o n t g o m - l eg al R E P O R T S D i s s e r t a t i o n s . G R 2-4715. Mrs. B r a d y , 2507 B r i d l e T H E S E S . Sunday April * 1966 THE D A ILY T f X A N Pag* 6 Preston Davis . begins winning leg in Texas' Sprint Medley Relay win. - P h o t o b y V i r g i l J o h n s o n The Tops In Dry Cleaning! • Open: Mon.-Thur. 7 a.m.-8 p.m. Fri. and Sat. 7 a.rn.-6 p.m. • One Day Service on Laundry • One Hr. Service on Dry Cleaning ('til 4 p.m.) ACME CLEANERS Manor Road at Swisher Fight Gnawing Hunger 2 Ways - # I D IN N E R (TD GO O N L Y ) I * $ 1 4 8 ee eu L A R L Y $ | .4-5 3 b is pieces o f c u ic k c n B A K E D P O T A T O , T O £ 6 g P S A U D , 2 P O L I S , H O N E V 4 L L THE CHICKEN YOO C A N E A T ! I 2* $145 M A X /M U M PER P E R 6 ON INCLUDES TGA o * COFFEE PAY ONLY POR WHAT YOU EAT orz * 1.4?, WUtCHEVER. IS L E S S ------- chicken’ , SHACK ~ J ^ ALDRIDGE TYPING F 30th 304’/% C E D V i r C G R 7-1696 j C n V l l C G R 6-6-9367 SOTH C H I C K E N S H A C K S # I - N . LAMAR. A T N. LOOP -*2 - 2 eoe> ©UA A l ope UT Gels $ 4 0 , 0 0 0 in G ranis J0!ickeJ ^ UT Defeats Stanford, S M U Begins Monday |n M o o t C o u r t C o m p e titio n L—Campus News in Brief— I / Grants totaling $40,000 for 150 University students have been ap­ proved by the US Office of Edu­ cation, Sen. John Tower said Friday. The grants are part of the work-study program under which federal funds provide 90 per cent of payrolls for student jobs, with local colleges and agencies pro­ viding IO per cent A total of $2,746,728 to assist 9,244 Texas college students at TO Institutions was approved by the I Office of Education. I * Student Role Is Topic John Orr, president of the Stu­ dents* Association, will speak about “Student Participation” at 1:30 p .rn. Sunday. Members of the Newman Chih and the public are invited to hear Orr at the Catholic Student Center, 2010 Uni- ▼endty. 1 * junior Fellows N am ed Twenty Junior Fellows of the College of Arts and Sciences were named at the Honors Day convocation Saturday. Appointees included Henry' Al­ ton Allen, Carol Jeanne Claypool, Judith Ellen Fruchter, Jean Mvra John Floyd Hager, Greenfield, Ronald Jackson Herring, Forrest Frank Hopkins, and Rollen Ed­ ward Houser. Also named were Sabra Jane Knape, M artha E. Kuhl, Betty Sue Marable, Steve Allan M o Keon, Keith Denver Moore, Mar­ tha Kathryn Post. Judy Fayrene Pugh, Estela Salazar, Robert Ru­ ben Schmidt III, Diana Ray S izi­ ness, Christopher Jam es Viscar- di, and John Wayne Wendel Jr. ★ Semper Fidelis to Meet Tile Semper Fidelis Society will see a film about the Marine Corps in Viet Nam at 7 p.m. Monday in Union Bnildlng 325. There will also be an important business meeting. * *„■ Passover Services Set Jewish students at the Univer­ sity will observe the Passover, festival of freedom, beginning Monday with special services at tile Hillel Foundation, 2105 San Antonio St. The observance will begin with a Passover Seder Monday at 6 p.m. and continue with a prayer service at IO a.m. Tuesday. Meals will be served at noon Participating will be Dr. S. Thomas Friedm an, assistant prof­ essor of educational psychology; Dr. Alan Scott, associate profes­ sor of journalism ; and Dr Stan­ ley N, Werbow, professor of Germanic languages. Free Slide Rule Course Tan Beta Pi will continue it* annual slide nile course Tuesday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Ex­ perimental Science Building S33. The free connie will teach use of the trigonometric scales, ★ w School P sych o logy Talk Dr. M ary Alice While, visiting professor from Columbia Univer­ sity, will speak on “School Psy­ chology and the Education Rev­ olution” Monday at 3:30 p m. in Union Building 304-305. The lecture is part of a series in School Psy­ on “Colloquium chology.” * Taborsky Will Lecture Dr. Edward Taborsky, prof ca­ ner of government, will discuss “Cultural Development In Oaech- osiovakla” Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Batta Hall 201. Taborsky, formerly secretary to the Czechoslovakian Minister for Foreign Affairs, will be the guest of the Slavic Club. ★ Pre-Lew Association The University Pre-Law Assoc­ iation will m eet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Fireside Lounge of Townes Hall. The speaker will be T. J. Gib­ son, assistant dean of the Law School. All predaw students are invited for the speech and ques­ tion session afterward. and 6 p.m. Tuesday and Wednes­ day. The holiday observance will conclude with a noon luncheon Thursday. Reservations can be made for all meals by calling the Hillel Foundation. Hr A S C E to Hear Badillo The American Society of Civil Engineer* will hear visiting pro­ fessor E. Jim re* Badillo speak on “Soils and Foundation Problems In Mexico City.” Tile meeting is at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the En­ gineering la b Building 102. ★ Editor Applications Due At noon Saturday, no applica­ tions had been filed for editor­ ship of the Texas Engineering- Sdence Magazine, Cactus. Rang­ er, or R iata. Loyd Edmonds Jr., general m anager of the Texas Student Publications, Inc., report­ ed. The deadline for applications is Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. Application forms m ay be obtained in Journ­ alism Building 107. ★ Ob/ectivist to Sp ea k Reggie Smyth, chairman of the University Object!vist Organiza­ tion, will speak about “The Ethi­ cal Philosophy of Objectivism” at 7:45 p.m. Sunday in Canterbury Lounge, 209 W. Twenty-Seven th S t ★ Panel Discussion Today “ The American Jew : Identity and Assimilation” is the topic of a panel at 8 p.m. Sunday at Hillel Foundation, 2105 San Antonio. Faculty, Students Win Honors D a y Awards records on all work completed at the University. Recipients were Charles K. Bowman of Austin, a senior majoring in sociology, and Judith Irene Kutac of Seguin, a senior majoring in English and Spanish. Three students shared the Roy Crane Award in the arts, receiv­ ing $75 each. Crane, a well-known cartoonist and form er University student, established th© award last year to recognize creativity in any of the arts. Winners were Ray Ezra Cox of Austin, for a painting in acrylic; James Clin­ ton Jackson Jr. of Arlington, for a three-dimensional painting in acrylic; and Arthur Ramirez of Houston, for a short story, “Num­ ber One.” Two faculty mem bers and five students received special awards during the annual Honors Day convocation Saturday. Bromberg Awards of $1,000 each went to Dr. Harry' C. Avery, as­ sistant professor of classics, and Dr. Christopher Middleton, visit­ ing professor of Germ anic lan­ guages. The Bromberg awards were established several years ago by a Dallas family as a means of recognizing outstanding teachers, Dr. J. Alton Buntine, dean of the College of Arts and Science*, made the presentations. The University chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, leading honorary s o doty in art* and sciences, pre­ sented awards of $50 each to two members who have straight-A A student who gives the Uni­ versity a bad check, the fault not being that of the bank, and who does not make it good with­ in five days after official notifi­ cation by the Auditor’s office will be dropped from the University. Varsity Carnival win I ive a lav e a Varsity Carnival will record 40 entries, Ginny Grille and P a t Anderson, publicity chair­ men, announced recently. The show put on bv campus Greek organizations will be April I t under Memorial Stadium VC tickets will be on sale start­ ing at 2 p rn. Monday in Union Building 340 Groups can check nut between IOO and 500 tickets at a time When money for tickets Is turned In, more can be checked out. P resale tickets are $1. Hours for picking up tickets and turn­ ing in money will be 2 5 p m MWF and 4-5 p m, TT from Mon­ day to April 22. No money, only VC Bucks, will be used inside the carnival gates There will be no presale of VC Bucks. Deadline for entries in the Var­ iety Carnival Queen contest is Monday, Each group that enters a division in VC is eligible to nominate a contestant the queen contest in Pressure Placed On Viet Officials WASHINGTON — CB — Ameri­ can officials are prodding South Viet Nam’s m ilitary to move more quickly toward consti­ tutional government, hoping tills m ight quiet street dem onstra­ tions that threaten to topple tile regim e. junta Publicly, officials here are say­ ing nothing about the disorders which took on a m ore menacing tone Saturday as dissidents moved through downtown Saigon beating up Westerners shouting, “ American* go hom e!” and Privately, administration policy makers expressed dism ay thai the government of P rim e Minis ter Nguyen Cao Ky did not move quickly enough — after his Febru­ ary conference in Honolulu with President Johnson — to lay the groundwork tot constitutional gov­ ernm ent, an avowed goal of the demonstrators. Acting on from Washington, Ambassador Henry Cabot Ix)dgo has been urging per­ sistently that Ky and his asso­ ciates name promptly a broadly representative group of citizens to prepare for a constitutional convention. instructions However, the word here Is that Ky has shown no immediate dis­ position to act on I/>dge’8 ad­ vice, a situation which US offi­ cial* argue is proof that the Sai­ gon government is not an Ameri­ can puppet What Goes on Here Sunday 6:30-—In terfaith sunrise Palm Sunday service. Mount Bonnell. 8—Friars breakfast, L r isklll Hotel, 8:30—^Orange Jacket* breakfast. Villa CaprL Nu house. 9 30 — Sweetheart* breakfast, Sigma 10-7 — Barton Spring* open. ZU keg Park: and Monday. 19-12- KUT-FM pro grama. SO T mat and Monday. 12;30 -— Banquet for Cowboy* and Sweetheart*. Villa Capri 1-8 — W fstem art from the C. R. Smith collection, first floor of Aca­ demia Center: and 8-raldnlght Mon­ day, 2-5—Texas Memorial Museum openi and Monday. 8-5—Showing of Cfteenth Century votive JU na Gloria. 2-6—Jazz Festival W o rk sh o p Dwell large collection of tablet*! Field. 4-6—Karate Club, **Y." 6—Jazz Festival, Dlsch Field, 0:30—John Orr to speak on Campo* Participation” at Newman Club meeting. Catholic Student Center. "The Passion of 7:80 — Cantata mrch, Sh r i l l ” Uni v a n ity Methodist 7:45-- Reggie Smyth to speak to Chiv terburv Association on “The Fpi*j copal Philosophy of Objectivism,'* Gregg House. 8—Toscanini Omnibus to present Mo­ z a rt's Magic id u te ,” KUT-FM, 90.7 mc. Monday 8-midntght—Exhibit: ‘‘The Trial cd Jesus. Townee Hall Library 8-8—-Exhibit of books by faculty and staff, ground floor corridor of Main Building, 8—Registration of Conference on Ad­ vance* in Water Quality Improve­ ment, Terrace Motor Hotel; wel­ coming address at 8:48 arn. by Vice-Chancellor Norman Hacker- man. 8-5—Items from th* John HersehM Science Collection, fourth floor of Academic Center 8 30-4:30—Applications open for edi­ to rs of Cactus, R anger. Rlata, and T exas Englneerlng-Science Maga­ zine, Jou rn alism B uilding 107. 8 35-11 p.m. — KLRN-TV programs, Channel 9. 8-8—Art work by Karmeln Carney, Ichthus Coffee House. 8-5—East day to nominate for Varsity Carnival Queen, Speech Building IOT Building 129. 8-11 — Snack sale. Home Economics 8-12 and FO—Exhibit*! “Tex** Yes­ terday" and work* by w illiam Blake, Stark Library, fourth floor _ * of Main Building. 8-3 — YMCArYWCA election* contin­ SO-4—Drawing and reservation* ue^ “7." tor tickets to Ole Lee Luvtsl piano re­ cital. Fine Art* Bo* Office, Hogg . Auditorium. 10-6—Student art on display In hall* of Art Building. 1:30-- Water improvement conference continue*. Motts’ Terrace Hotel. ; 1:30—‘‘The Glory Road.” KUT-FM. I f-^Texas-Tulan* tennis maid!, Penick Court*. * — Texaa-Randolph Field baseball Cue. Clark Field, Intendeds for Freshman Connell advisers Union Building 322. 1:30—School Psychology Colloquium! Dr, Mary Alice White to speak on “ School Psychology and the Edu­ cation Revolution, union Building 4 and 8 — Demonstrutlo* of small c r a f t safety tactic*, Women * G y m . K % - conference for Stewart I* Udall. U s Seeretarv of the Interior, Barcelona Room. Crest Hotel. ‘'Cultural Developments 8 30— Dr Edward Taborsky to speak In on Czeehoslavakla.” Batts Hall 201. 6—Passover Seder, H illel Foundation. T —* Secretary Stewart L. Udall to speak on the Environment,” Terrace Motor Ho­ tel. ''Conservation and T—Semper Fidelis Society to see film on the Marine Corp*, Union Build­ ing 825. ?:80 — Free Unfvundtjn "Persian Language. Mehtodlst Student Cen­ ter; ‘‘Scientology.” Methodist Stu­ "Nietzsche,” dent Center and Hillel Foundation, f 30 — Lother Klein’* “Trio Con­ certante” to have world premier* at ail-orehe*tral program by Austin Symphony Orchestra. Municipal Auditorium. The Unlversftv won th* r e g in ­ al round of the Philip C Jessup International Moot Court Compe­ tition against Stanford Univer­ sity and Southern Methodist Uni­ versity Saturday at the Supreme Court Building. Winning team members Rob­ ert P. Parker, Cornelius G Sulli­ van J r , and Harry Tindall win the national represent Texas lr competition In A pH! in Washington and from the University Teams the 1965 Stat** Bar have won the National Competition Moot Coml Competition spon­ sored by the New York Cliv Bar Association If they win in Wash lngton, they will have made a clean sweep of all national level Interscholastic moot court com­ petitions. Texas won the 1964 national competition hut lost to Columbia University in 1965, J,250,OOO Autom obiles Still N e ed Safety Tags Deadline for obtaining motor vehicle Is April 15, the Texas Department of Public Safety warns. inspection stickers More than 1,250,000 vehicles still have not safety received checks, Col. Homer Garrison J r., the departm ent's director, said. Tills means that the 5,350 inspec­ tion stations will have to check an average of 12 cars each per day. The battle cry of “Hook ’Em Horns” was first heard in 1955 at the pep rally before that year's TOU game. i Schools participating in the re­ gional meet Saturday *>re Tex aa, SMT', the University of C ratio, Washington University, an i Stanton! University. Each team argued both petitioner, the United Nations, and respondent, country of Afranla, in a problem p a r a * Helling the Rhodesian crisis. In the case, Acrania, a colony of Europa, has declared its Inde­ pendence to install a white min­ ority government. United Nations forces sent to keep peace are r e ­ illegal arrest the sponsible for and killing of the Afranian pre­ m ier When the UN tomes with­ drew, th* Blark National govern­ ment seized UN equipment worth $500,000 as compensation tor th* death of their premier. Judges for the regional moot competition were St John G ar­ wood. John D Gofer, Shannon Ratliff, Harry Wright, David SL Browning, Gaynor Kendall, w. Paul Germ ley, and Donald F, At the Hildebrand Moot Court C repetition beginning Law Day Friday the Supreme Court of I •*as judged, petitioners Vincent Benni and Julius GI rn km an won the decision over respondents Al Deaton and Jim Doyle. T ie moot question was “Can a city waive its immunity from ba­ li iii ti. ?” No Finished Products, Law Speaker Says Professor Geoffrey C. Hazard J r of the University of Chicago School of Law delivered the an­ nual Law Day address Saturday, saying that law schools and the bar should abandon the idea that any professional curriculum can be a finishing process. “ There is no appropriate legal education Just as there is no ap­ propriate law practice,” he said. He also pointed out some m is­ conceptions of the idealized law­ yer image which one beholds upon graduation. “ The ingredients of the image are becoming more tenuous,” he said. Clients now are organizations instead of peo­ functions are ple. A widely dissimilar, ranging from lawyer'* police court pleaders to political troubleshooter*. The number of very large firms are increasing as solo practices shrink. Obsolescence was also evident to Hazard in subject m atter and technique. He maintained first- the year studies and taxation, constitutional coqioration, and law course® during the second year are of significance. is supposed “ Beyond this point there Is no to what every agreem ent es lawyer to know.” Hazard rem arked. As a solution to this type of obsolescence, Ha­ zard proposed a reduction of law school attendance to two year* lupplem ented by a concentrated apprenticeship of the graduate's own choosing. SUNDAY, APRIL 3 Dr. John C Steven* Speaks On " A l l Things to A ll M e n ” 9:30 A.M . Biblical SRicflts Canter 108 East 19th A ll Students Welcome Specializing In Collegiate Fashions 2348 G u a d a lu p e — O n the Drag VILLAGER CHEESECAKE W hti* or Boot H fe WM T IT T IE 'R ocketing- ffflioH for t tiny $141 'VILLAGER RAMPAGE in Red, W hite, Bone, Black Patent VILLAGER RODEO in Bone or Red * i K D E I l « f c Sunday, April J, 1966 THI DAILY TSXAN W arm h e r h ea rt — or h is — w ith a 14K g o ld g a r n e t-stu d d e d b a n d . . . d istillin g th e e s s e n c e o f O ld W o rld r o m a n c e . F rom a b o v e : N e w ly -w id e 4 -g a rn e t ring fo r her, $75. A sy m m e tr ic a l b a n d , ga rn et la v ish e d , $50. N a r r o w 8 -g a rn et c ir c le t, $35. H e r 7 -g a rn e t rin g , $60. H is $80. HANCOCK CCNTCft Open Mon., Thor., Friday Until 9:00 MAYFAIR HOUSE Open Both Summer Terms WITH THESE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES FOR COEDS' PLEASURE • O nly Four Blocks From Cam pus • A ir Conditioned • Breakfast and Noon Dinner 5 Days a W e e k • M a id and Porter Service • Swimming Pool • Private Parking • Flair Dryers and Ironing Facilities Furnished • Quiet Study Area • Bath W ith Both Tubs and Showers O J u $ 1 3 5 p er 6 lA Jeehi S T erne5 ter PRIVATE ROOMS AVAILABLE AT ADDITIONAL COST MRS. FAY HUSTON GR 6-1862 Information Dade GR 2-5437 UNIVERSITY HOURS CALL 2000 PEARL O rson W elles: Story o f Genius In the Film-Making Industry Dr. Lothar Klein: Italian Art on KUT-FM A review series of Thirteenth Century Italian paintings will be* pin Monday at I p.m. on KUT FM radio station. With University emphasis on the personalities of the artists and their ideas, the series also will include a descrip­ tive narration and critical ap­ praisal of the masterpiece*. The program s were produeed in Italy by RAI, the Italian R adio TV System. Dcfutood DRIV!-IN THEATRE 3901 East Ays ROX OFT'ICB O FF NS * 00 A D U L T S l l 'Kl TI I N t ARD fiOr O ld Yeller D o r o t h y M cG u ir e A 1> m T a r k io Sturt** 7:15 -pl no- -— Country Music Holiday I’ e r lln l l n *k ry S t a r t s 9 OO ROX O F F I CB O P E N S 6 OO A D U L T S l l OO T F EN C A R D bde Tiko And The Shark AU T a h itia n C ast 7:15 Son O f A Gunfighter R n s« T s m b ly n 1:45 (Edit r's note: T h e f o l l o w i n g article it ufitten rn connection with Cm cola 40's presentation of an "Orson ll ell et Quartet” o f films M o n d a y through W'ednet- day. The schedule of films fol­ ios* s the article ) By GREGG BARRIOS Genius is a quality that was bestowed upon Orson Welles early In life. Publicized as a child pro­ digy at the age of five, lecturing his classmates on art at ten, au­ thor of an analysis of Nietzcht at eleven, A Dublin gate-crash­ ing actor at sixteen, young Orson showed a promise rarely possess­ ed by anyone. His talents did not burn out for your car custom tapes for your stereo Al STAI E INS HU BITTING CO J Q . 2811 Rio GRAN DE, R M 106 J AUSTIN,TFX. G R 6 -2 2 5 7 - 'PREVIEW! ■TONIGHT i * * * *• / THINK I'M R E ADY+ ( 2 TO C U T A TAPE DRIVE-IN THEATRE 3900 So Cong WITH. COME B E T H E E N 4:42 A 7 :S0 (Un* S n eak and "T h e G rou p ’’ 7 : 3 0 COME B E T W E E N 6:11 A I OO Sneak and ••Lord L o t* a D u ck ” T W O T F F N - A G I! “ A N G E L S " W TIO K N O W A U . T H E A N G L E S T A N G L E W IT H A H IP H E A D M I S T R E S S W H O IS A U . H E A R T . a d u l t s R D I i t s .75 No C hild T i c k e t * Sold PARAMOUNT HELD OVER! 2 N D B IG W E E K ! F E A T U R E S ! 2:05-4 12-9:20 (S n rak 7:30) I Door* O p en 1:45 A M. T h is IIlH E GROUP" Introducing E lisa b eth Hartm:- ii A cad em e Award Nominee aa B eet A d r e n a l ADULTS f D f s ("fng Ptcnjwf s we comm! sped row adults") ^ It* .75 FREE PARKING “ STATE THE OFFENSE THAT HAS SOMETHING THAT PICTURES E V E R Y B O D Y GEORGE AXELROD'S i v i Amra S T A B B IN G R O D D ) MCDOWALL AN ACT OF PURE AGGRESSION • T U E S D A Y W E L D REC O M M ENDED FOR M A T U R E A U D IEN C E S FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P.M. O N LOTS 7tH & LA V A C A STS ONTY 4 MORR D A Y S Tw o F erfo rm a n cea Joday I ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS HURRYI ONLY 4 MORE DAYS! EVENING 7:30 L M I I S IU . HOAD SHOW L M . )•««, (Or.,.11 h M t 1:1-J4M > •M w f JlhUt • . Starts W E D . S T A T E AFTER 6 P.M. ON LOTS 7H» & L A V A C A STS. V F E A T U R E S! 2:05-4 :09 G IS ti 50 ( S n e a k 8 : 0 0 ) o d I Worknotes on a Symphony o p p o r t u n it y ( E ditor's N o t e : R arely d o e s th e T e x a n h ave an to p r i n t an article u n t t e n b y an a r t­ ist ab ou t b n o w n w o rk . D r. l^>- th ar K lein , assistant p ro f e s s o r o f music, has u n t t e n th e f o l l o w i n g article ab ou t his s e co n d s y m p h o n y a n d the th o u g h ts w h ich came to h im its creation. H e e n ti tl e d th e article, " W o r k n o t es on a Sec­ o n d S y m p h o n y : A n In trosp ectio n a n d S u m m a ry .’* in T h e A u stin S y m p h o n y O r c h e s ­ tra u ill p e r f o r m K l e i n ' t "S y m ­ p h o n y S o . 2" M o n d a y at 8 : 3 0 p m in M u n ic ip a l A u d it o r iu m u n d e r th e baton o f Ezra R achhn. tax holders m a y o btain B lan ket fr ee tickets at th e Fine A rts b o x o f f i c e . ) By LOTHAR KLEIN lie. Music A musician writing on music, particularly his own. is In m or­ tal danger for he may believe w-hat he writes. Words about is a music usually symbolic form expressive of It­ if Mozart would self. have made such a statem ent— or if he would have had to. He lived in an age of musical con­ ventions and nobody minded — until Beethoven. I doubt Tills brings up the m atter of music history. Can one be moved by history? Today many com­ posers think they must do b at­ tle with history each time they drop an eighth note. These com ­ posers are very much concerned with Art Strange. As individuals they must always destroy con­ ventions of expression, even their own; thus the free modern really become a Romantic puppet. Io­ nesco may be rig h t In this lig h t history becomes a series of aber­ rations; truth. Cannot truth become that which criticizes history, past and pres­ ent? Is It not the failure of mod­ the opposite of em historically conditioned art which has driven us the arm s of Batm an? He’s little com­ fort. someone will write a dissertation on that. Let’s not make that mistake.) (Someday into DOWN TO WORK. The thing in itself. F irst movement: a sonata for orchestra. (How musically re­ actionary can you get?) Mozart liked the idea of casting ideas In this mold, so did Debussy a hun­ dred years later. State an idea, examine it from many angles, then bring it back so one can hear w'hat happened (A to have some composer ought sym pathy for to ideas develop listen.) Musical continually. those willing i t to Then, to contrast, a slow ex­ pressive movement should fol­ low. No. Deadpan music. T hat’s hard. (Nine revisions.) Art seems a process of selection. Beethoven believed that. Look at his second symphony. What u n c o m m o n things happen to the most com­ mon ideas. How inevitably every­ thing flows. He knew what he was doing. Is continuity still possible? P ainters used to like straight and curved lines, then they discovered the dot. in After the world w ar (no. 2). music was so shocked it could .single notes. So only speak much art today moves by nervous tics. By now we should have ac­ cepted the glossy human rem ote­ ness of Kafka so that it need not m ake our music stutter. A FEW YEARS ago the ques­ tion of how art had to continue, the avant versus the derriere gardists, was vital. Pure snob­ bism. Music faces other problems in a society publishing biogra­ phies of Candy Mossier. The winds of idiocy are blowing strong. Yet, there is always the redeeming chance that our popped culture may discover that Mickey Mouse and Pluto are the Don Quixote and Sancho Panza for our times. This work then, like any other, Is a product of its intellectual melieu. Compared to my previous work, it Is conservative. This ap­ proach is. however, not the result of a stylistic end game. Musical fashions always change, but never have musical styles changed more rapidly than dur­ ing the past dozen years. Many composers and critics feel musi­ cal worth is determined by new­ ness. This I think is a grave er­ ror. Ideological theories hold lit­ tle interest for me. Music must be judged on its own term s (is Stravinsky's Rite of Spring bet­ ter than Bach's St. Matthew Passion?) and not on a vintage basis. RECENT MI SIC, Inspired by scientism, has become a highly specialized affair, much of it writ­ ten by experts for other experts. Computer music, i.e., music a r­ rived at by correlating set and probability theories with the aid of computers, is a case in point. Science grows out of art. the re­ verse is not true. Music today faces a great many stylistic, so­ cial and philosophical problems, and its existence as a communi­ cative art may be in jeopardy. Tile symphony’s conservativism results from annoyance with both esoteric trends and their obvious popular counterparts. Everyone seeks the modern — but what is modern? The w'ork pays homage to m as­ terpieces of our Western musical experimental heritage. Highly • T h u n d e r J h M d ix ie . music Is proving that to be at all comprehensible, music must ex­ press itself in ways akin to lan­ guage. Specific techniques were chosen because of their proven traditional patterns value, and wrere used to see if it is still pos­ sible to convey that sense of ex­ citement which only cumulative continuity can achieve. AL f H O F G H I DO wonder if fa­ m iliarity has not worn out our response. I bear strong love for some music of the past. The musi­ cal gestures are classical and the compositional disciplines involved are severe. Expressivity was not always sought for, and deadpan music, a music without expres­ sion, is a difficult attitude to cap­ ture. Economy of ideas and m eaas were at a premium, while the ideal of orchestral sound was that of a Beethoven symphony. Manners of scoring were handled with classical etiquette. If the work Is consciously old­ fashioned, it is so only in an ef­ fort to discover what is truly mod­ ern. Tile work is dedicated to the musicologist Dr. Fritz Oberdoerf- fer who retires from tile Univer­ sity this year. Toscanini P ! a y s S u n d a y Tho third series in a Toscanini Omnibus will begin Sunday at 8 a.m. on KUT-FM with Mozart's Die Zauberflote (The Magic Flute). The original recording w-as m ade In Queen’s Hall, London* on June 2, 1938. NOW SHOW ING! C IN EM A THEATRE The M agnetism i f the Butt rin g mn rn The m is e i f Spot* • • • The L ir e mn4 th e Passions wmw A BrilHmnt N ew Motion in B ezzlin g Color • • • wrr muft vatic wtutu* SfiKa/ JMP att nm CHRISTIA* Starts W ED. T E X A S “ on the drag” ‘The R o und -U p Prem iere” ‘Tlw BIGGEST, NOISIEST IU OO LO B NAUGHTIEST O F TH E M A U L !" — T im e M a ra tln e ’IT OM* AWI* l f a s M A T T H E L M ..DEAN MARTIN .Die S il e n c e r s ARWjRacowfLt robert WEBBER CHARISSE “I he Show Place of Austin* I Free P a r k in * Color T V Lounge Real* R ock in g C hair __________ ______________ * * - T H E A T R E Scat* SELA STEVENS OAUAHIAV1 voofi ™ m a t i n e e s D A IL Y O P E N 1:44 F R A T U R K S I 1 4 6-8 14 v a e 1290 H a n c o c k D r. • I B lo c k W est of B arn e t Rd. * G L 3-6641 o n iN T c n n e o i u N A i . a t c a p i t a l p l a z a C O M IN G Y O U R W A Y FOR EASTER! . . . O P E N S THURS., APRIL 7 th A a p p U te66 Is Ce Ce Inmrwl by Ow •eng "Dommiav* by 4641 I JQtR BECK PRODUCT® AGNES HOOR£I€AD- CHM) EVERETT KAMINE ROSS • FO S U M CU u puumior rn mtmcoim EXCLUSIVE AUSTIN SHOWING! SM O K IN G yf PU S H B ACK * / ART. 1 / G IA N T U . SEA T S *4*G A LLER Y*T* S C R E E N o f LOGE HARRY MUXARD • JUDY LEWIS — Plus in Color— K ir k fry S p ill* * * I* l l am m e* la M ik e " T H E G I R L H U N T E R S •tarrlnf S h ir le y K a to * Exclusive V trst R un S h o w in g A dult* f t .60 • D IM . C ard* .VI Open 6:80 C h ild re * Free Recommended M ature Audient H O 5-6938 • 6400 Burnet Bond BURNET 'n w d e f t e W g h U ff lW M l w o r l d i f t o d a y s y o u t h . | rnm w m M m m Feat ut i a : W eekday* — J, «. 8:80 Bat. A TU*. - I I , I, t, I Rotary* Tldt*t» Now By Cafting G R 8-4913 or G I 2-7641 Road Show Engagement SNFAK PREVIEW A Sensitive M ovie about Youny Poople T n i n y to ( ope with Their Sexual D rives and Fears! AT 3:00 P.M. Open 1:45 I Vatu rex: 2-4-6-9:25 Recommended t ’>nee« Prow, te>* oT 'fluor* At Tt-« To** "Life ft AtThe J P T i ” L O P V L U K l .( H H A U ) L Y Snark B a r Open* 6:30 A dults 1.0ft Dis. l ards .75 C hild (6 Ut 12) J25 X j«l l I ' l .a i U l U t L A l ) jr iiU K H ID E S O N “ U L T O O T ’* j e t I YOUNG ISLANDER WHO TAMED m=.k MAN-KILLER SHARK! I ROPIC ROMANCE! DARING RESCUE! I IN E A S T M A N COLOR] TIM I S 7:37 11:00 PLUS: SECOND FEATURE AT 9:30 SON a GUNFIGHTER In CINEMASCOPE & METROCOLOR ^ Life Beat of Jazz Rumbles at Disch Bv M i K CHAVI N when everything m er**, notion* Disch Field wailed. The sounds nf jazz, em otion. Its intensity, and its d r h e blew out from se* - ond base into the stands. Tile Longhorn Jazz Festival opened up with Austin’s Blue C r e w , solid blues-orientr-d group which featured Fred Sm ith playing both tenor sax and flute. a Then, L i g h t n l n ’ (Hopkins) struck, but it w asn ’t a solid hit. NEXT I P w ere the N ewport All Stars. The group played c a s ­ ually and with a polite sense cf hum or. E specially good w ere G erry M ulligan, Bud F reem an , and Ruby B raff, but they a p p e a r­ too constrained and lim ited. ed Teddy Wilson on the piano dem ­ o n strated sounds th at all new a re n 't n ecessarily all th at's good in jazz. He led the group in a Count Basie rendition of “ Stom p­ ing at the Savoy” that was rem iniscent of the golder, years of “ Big B and” jazz. into When the D avr Brubeck Quar tnt swung the second half of the festival, the m ore exciting sounds broke loose on the stage. The group seem ed to break from its m ore reserved and mellowed perform ance in Austin earlier in the year. B rubeck s piano soloes w ere ex­ cellent and free from his usually rigid form. When Joe Morello took over the solo spot on the drum s, everything moved — and c*n ^ wrong. The Im provised rr.ixturaa of sound reached their peak whee; Mulligan played with Desm ond and B rubeck* q u a r te t The two horn men proceeded to play a gam* of m usical tag (me horn expounding a tine. and the o ther repeating and expending I t For tim e M ulligan's b arrl- the first tnne sax broke riffs and oafrhy m elodic phrases. The new­ ly created quintet swung out with an extended blues piece that moved with the genius of inven­ tion and the precision of ta le n t into SONNY STITT on the tenor sax led a hard driving em otional piece of “ bop” jazz that radiated the type of pure sound c h arac­ teristic of good m usic anyw here. With Howard McGhee and Austin- bom Kenny Dorham blowing riffs on the trum pet, the group went into an im provised delirium th at parried the audience and pro­ vided the needed contrast to the texture of predom inately blue Brubeck and Mulligan. The first night was m ore titan a success. Somewhere in the ex ­ citem ent or talent and spontan- aity , one has to pause and m a r­ vel at the fact th at these m en as­ sem bled hastily-built th a t stag e rep resen t a world of lead­ in a single a rt form, and e rs from their m inds and m ovem ents have com e the g reatest sounds in contem porary jazz. on rn* tnt?•k.safef \DueVI V ows Rules Of Cinema of the Sick which, Alan says, faith in suicide. resto res his THE PLOT thickens and tow ard the tile movie d rag s badly the final sequence, a last, but clever parody on the grade-c h orror m ovies with the giant ants the and grasshoppers, dissolves alw ays shaky hold on reality and and m ain releases both plot ch aracter, Alan, in­ sanity'. total into F or B arb ara Ann, stardom beckons, her first lead being the title role in a beach e x tra v a g a n ­ za fittingly entitled “ Bikini Wid­ ow.” there m ay be in Of course, it’s all quite funny. The acting is adequate, and Tues­ day Weld, a visual feast, handles h er p a rt excellently, w hatever tru th the ob­ servation th a t she s possibly just playing a heroine som ew hat like herself. McDowall often seem s thin, but then his role is not the juciest. Altogether, a ra th e r rich dish, som ething like blood pudding, and not suited to all tastes. Still, if you like that sort of thing and have any sym pathy a t all with to, as these c u rre n t attem p ts Alan phrases the total vulgarity of our tim e ,” don’t m iss this one. Tile duck’s im pos­ sible to love, but it m ay well be th at beneath all his squaw king he has som e little som ething to saw it, “ express a m ( “Lord L o ie a D u c k ” 'tarring R o d d y M cD ouall, Tuesday U eld, Loin A lbright and Martin U e t. Produced by Georgt Axelrod, At the State Theater,) By RICH AHI) BOND Texan Arts Reviewer F or fairly obvious reasons, cinem a of the sick does a thriv­ ing business these days. Theoreti­ cally, the attem pt is to clarify the issues of social criticism . In the process, vulgarity and ef- tossed generously frontry about, and when the they hit fan, the results are indeed un­ lovely to w atch. are Still, w hatever one says about the m eans of such movies as “ W hat’s New P u ssy cat” and “ The Loved One,” the ends are, after th eir own fashion, vaguely m oral­ ly im proving, and the films gen­ erally m anage to be perversely entertaining. Artist Writes In New Magazine Dr. Weismann Tells Story of His Work F eatu red in the first edition of a new m agazine “ Southwestern A rt,” is an article entitled “ The Collage as Model” by Dr. Donald L. W eismann, professor of a rt at the U niversity. The new journal is devoted to the recognition of the a rts in the West and Southwest. W eismann states in the article that “ what has been found valu­ able—o r real and tru e — in the creative processes of a rt is what others w ant to know about.” Lay­ m en som etim es find “ in the op­ erations of the artist clues to so­ lutions of their own problem s.” One w ay of conveying the a rtist's views, W eissmann w rites, is by reporting on the a rtist's current work. The article deals with his pres­ ent process of making a collage, from the gathering of objects, its visualization, to the finish. In par­ ticular, the author works with photonegacollage and photograph­ ing of ozjects and the overlap­ ping of their images. In summarizing his article, Weismann concludes that, “the •operations’ I experience in m ak­ ing these collages have proved to be the models for what I do and for much of what I have done with just about all the bits and pieces and stuff and things and events and occasions of the entire life I live.” The magazine, published in Austin, also includes articles bv Peter Hurd on “Countdown at Canaveral,” Dr. Terence Grieder on “The Beginning of Southwest­ ern Painting,” and on “ Melvin Warren’s Old West.” John H. Jenkins. “ Lord Love a Duck ’ continues the tradition, and no one whose hilarity^ is excited by incest, sui­ cide, m urder, and sex literally everywhere, would w’ant to m iss it. THE STIMULATION is ra th e r picayunish and sporadic, but the m essage — George Axelrod s a n ­ sw er to Tony R ichardson—will be of some interest to students of the Am erican psyche at a p a rti­ cularly confused period its development. M oreover, it is wit- tiiv and pointedly conveyed. in Roddy McDowall and Tuesday Weld are cast as the a n tity p e s of the New Eden. H e’s a genius; she gorgeous; is unbeliev­ ably fun. life Southern Cal has instant ac­ tion, w hatever the mood. High school’s a huge country' club, and the golden beaches are grand for orgies. Even the straight and to narrow is a super-highway spiritual fulfillm ent: a drive-in church where the devout a re a s­ sured that “ Our p ray ers tru ly a re answ ered — W hatever happens, t h a t s the an sw er.” EVEN EDEN h as its problem s, however, B a rb a ra Ann (Miss Weld) has to work furiously for the status she requires. T ran s­ ferring to a new school, she re ­ m em bers lost days of glory, and aim s to get them back. Her goal; love m e — “ Everybody m ust E verybody!” To be accepted by the new boys and girls, blank-faced beauties whose sole interest is perserving their deadly cool, B a rb a ra Ann sim ply m ust have twelve c ash ­ m ere sw eaters. The solution, n a t­ urally, is to tease and titillate the money out of Daddy, a le e r­ ing buffoon who, incidentally, is divorced from M other, a trollopy bunny, or som e such anim al, presum ably a “cocktail hostess. BARBARA ANN’S enterprises are abetted by Alan, the duck (McDowall). Tile strength of hts am oral fiber com es from his love for the girl, whose every wish he grants with warlock-like ex­ pediency. When she w ants a hus­ the band (not him ), he allows the c o n - ; m arriag e but re ta rd s sum m ation by perching on tile bedstead. The husband, played perfectly by M artin West, is Hie ebmodi- rnent of the fratty im age, a m ind­ less but am iable burgher who tries to seduce his future wife at a beach p arty he is supposed­ ly chaperoning. As it turns out, h e 's a m om m a’s is “ In boy, and m om ’s motto our fam ily, we don’t divorce our m en—We bury th em .” Taking the hint, B arb ara Ann and Alan c a rry through. Meanwhile, her own m other (Lola Albright) has decided that having reached the ancient age of forty, and being no longer able to com pete with h er daughter, the best thing to do is to get out of it all, an act Sunday KIIT-FM, 90.7 mr 12 —S u n d a y C oncert 2: OU— D i*-C overv 3 :3 0 —C o llecto rs’ C orner 4 OO— U n iv ersity C oncert .VOO— S eren ad e 6 OO— S p ecia l o f th e W eek fi 3D— W eek cn d N e w s 6 45— E u rop ean R eview 7 no — T h e P ro sp ect for Asia * OO—T h* T o sca n in i P ro g ra m 9 30— B ritish Men of L etters 1 0 .0 0 — C arousel C lassical* S o u th ea st Monday 12 OO—N o o n d a y Concert 12 55—C am pus C alendar I do— ll a1 lr n P a in tin g . O rig in s and P rin c ip le C oncepts I 15 — T h e G lory Road B en ia m in B a n n ek cr 1 :3 0 — R ea d in g Aloud 2 :0 0 —M a tin ee M u sicales 3 :5 5 — L ectu res in M in iatu re 4 OO— BBC W orld Report 4 15— M usic of T h ea ter and r u m 4 45— P r o f i t B elg iu m 5:00— S eren a d e 6 00 M asterw ork s F rom P ra n ce. 6 3:* r'K LRN-TV and K U T -F M N ew * S im u lca st 6 :5 5 —C am p us C o m m e n ta ry 7 od- T he C reative M ind; Man tn e C reator'' _ . . . . 7 30— P anoram a o f th e L iv ely A rts in the N ew s 7 . 5 5 — L aw 8:00— H am m er. T ra ck er, an d Q u ill: S e le c tio n s F ro m Bach IO OO—T h ea ter 5; ‘"She F ir st W eek - 10°25—-C hem ical E n g in e e r in g T u to ria l 10 35— R ea d in g Aloud 11 05— J a zz N o ctu rn e Monday KLRN-TV, Channel 9 8 35— History'. G overn m en t 0 02—S cien ce H o rizo n s £:02 9 35—P rim a ry S p a n ish 9 55— A ctiv e S p a n ish 10:15—S p ea k in g S p an ish 1 0:35—A rt. M usic l l DA—C h a n g in g E arth 11 30— D isc o v erin g S cien ce 12 OO— S cien ce E n rich m en t 12 37— H isto ry . G overn m en t 1 04— S cien ce H o rizo n s I 31— P rim a ry S p a n ish 1 50—A ctive S p an ish 2:09— S p ea k in g S p an ish 2 .2 3 —Art. M usic 2 55—S cien ce E n rich m en t 3 30—T h e M usic H our 4 :3 0 —T h e B ig P ic tu re 5 :0 0 —TV K in d erg a rten 5:30— W ho K n ow s th e A n sw er? 6 : 00- 6 :30 E ven in g r 7:00—School Talk: 7 :30 — T h e L ife W h a t's New ? E v en in g N ew s J e su s •'Not b v C hance and T e a ch in g s o f g OO—M artin L u th er: A d ra m a tiza ­ tion o f h is life 9 45— T h e S u ccesso r P o p e Joh n sh o w in g th e p ro ced u res Involved In th e e le c tio n o f a P o p e THERES NOTHING ACCIDENTAL AIOUT QUALITY IfyCtyit Steak $J35 , . fam o u s for " th a t S IR L O IN F L A V O R ! ” It's A m e ric a 's top steak value! GUADALUPE At 20th N " M r / A h a r n AUSriN • SAN ANTONIO UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS It s NEW From the School of C o o l Jazz Trumpeter M ile s D avis will blow along with three other of the w orld’s gre ate st horn stylist at the 6 p.m. Sun d ay Jazz Festival program at Disch Field. Ensembles on the program include the Stan G e tz Q uartet, O b i e Jones Trio, the Pete Fountain Sextet, and the M ile s Davis Quintet. Fountain will be s u p ­ ported by guest cornetist B o b b y H ackett and vocalist Chris C o n n e r. Tickets are still available at the entrance ga te to Disch Field. Guide to GOOD E A T I N G in and I around Z AUSTIN T-BONE STEAK DINNER F E A T U R I N G O U R “ E A T A L L Y O U W A N T ” B U F F E T S A L A D B A R W I T H B A K E D P O T A T O 99 Served MONDAY-THUR SD AY-FRIDAY EVENINGS 4:00 P.M. to 8 P.M. G . C. M U R P H Y C O . H A N C O C K CENTER— 41st and RED RIVER E W T O SI Chico ESPECIALLY FOR LONGHORNS! I ALAMO Restaurant AND COFFEE ROOM Serving the finest families in Centre! Te«*i over 20 year* Dine In Candlelight Atmosphere ALAMO SPECIAL DINNER AI U D AT S A T U R D A Y A S U N D A Y Sou th ern F ried Chicken Choice of T w o Veg etable* Cholee of Deeeert on Din n er Tea or Cof fee (H ot or Geld) 95c V A R IE D D I N N E R A F T E R 5 T M MON. T H R U F R I, 604 G uadalupe GR 6-5455 6:30 a.m. 'til 9 p.m. The Longhorn Room DINE IN LUXURY AND ENJOY THE BEST M EXICAN FOOD AROU ND EL C H IC O H A N C O C K CENTER we vt iota st “Italian Food is Our Only Busine ss” Optnt Tuasday thru Sunday I p.m. 'hi 10:30 p.m. Closed on Monday SHOP DO W N TO W N Highest Quality • Fair Prices • Liberal Portions IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN AUSTIN X I c d u D I L L Y Dally 6:30 AM. 8:30 P.M. W H E R E E L S E C A N YOU G E T SUCH A B A R G A I N ! EAT TILL YOU'RE FULL of the FINEST MEXICAN FOOD in AUSTIN And Pay Only 2 5 I or Actual A m ou nt — W h i c h ­ ever is Less SAT. & SUN. 1.45 Ma,. EL MATAMOROS • EL CHARRO • EL TORO 504 E. A V E N U E 10th A B E D B I V E R 16th A G I A D A H . PR Newberry’s Cafeteria Capital Plaza Shopping Center ALL YOU CAN EAT! Each Plat* 99 Desserts And Drinks Extra For Only . from our wide selections of deli­ Serve yourself . cious foods. Mon.-Sat. l l A.M.-2 P.M. — 4:30 P.M.- 7:30 P.M. Sun. l l A.M.-2 P.M. . A U S T I N ’S F I N E S T IT A U A N R E S T A U R A N T IN* 801 CO NGRES S E T O P I Z Z A P A R L O R an6 Public Rouse A JD I S ( iii.: J.11 ti J '<■ _ ( j R 6- i y> i ► ► ► ► ► ► A ► Serving the Best Fried Chicken In Town • FAST SERVICE • MODERATE PRICES # PHONE IN YOUR ORDER TO GO! ► 404 S. LAMAR L A A . AA. A. A. A. A A A A. A. A A A. A. A AA. A. A. A A A A A A A A A A A A A * + AA* GR 7-2245 Sunday. April 3, 1966 THE D A ILY TEXAN Pa** 9 Dial System Business Will Select Sweetheart Nearly Ready O'Brien to Lecture In Atlantic Series Election of the College of Busi­ ness Administration Sweetheart will be beld from 8:45 a m . to 3:15 p.m. Monday on the west side of the Business-Economics Build­ ing as part of CEA Week. The nine nominees are Lana Ball, nominated by Kappa Alpha Theta sorority; Anne Elizabeth Blankenship, Alpha Delta Pi; Kar­ en Kay Corse, Alpha Gamma Del­ ta ; Kathy Hobbs, Chi Omega sorority and Alpha Kappa Psi, business society; S’.erry Kay Jones, Alpha Phi; and Mary Leu Ray, Kappa Kappa Gamma. insurance Others are: Sherri Sledge, nom­ inated by Delta Delta Delta soro­ rity and Delta Sigma Pi, business and society; Beth Ward, Delta Gamma; Iuorraine Wilson, Alpha XI Delta sorority and the Society for the Advance­ ment of Management. to Austin’s New equipment to facilitate Di­ rect Distance Dialing is RO per cent com plete in Austin telephone offices, Tom G. Brown, division m anager for Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., has announced. The $1.9 million service im­ provement operation will be made available 125.000 metropolitan aren telephone cus­ tomers by mid summer. the easy-to-use service goes into operation, cus­ tomers will be able to dial di­ re c tly to any of 76 million phones In m ore than 6,500 cities through­ out the United States and Canada a s easilv as they now dial local c a lls.” Brown noted. "When fa s t DDD calls, however, will be m ad e on a station-to-station basis. O ther long distance calls, includ­ ing person-to-person, collect and credit card calls, and calls from coin telephones, will continue to be handled by operators. local tim e, in an "Since installation and The com plex DDD equipm ent required for this operation has installation process been for six m onths. th a t about 60 W estern E lectric engineers and technicians have been in Austin telephone people to help with testing on the m assive p ro ject.” Brown said. U nder the Direct D istance Dial­ ing system , the United States and Canada a re divided into 119 a reas each designated by a three-figure a re a code num ber. To place a call within a certain a re a , a cus­ tom er needs only dial I. then the code num ber for the area and the telephone num ber in the dis­ tan t city'. If a custom er reaches a wrong num ber, he should call "O ” for tile operator, who will take the n am e of the city or the incorrect num ber and strike it from his bill. Telephone Service Aids UT Engineers U niversity chem ical engineer­ ing students now m ay dial a tele­ phone num ber to reach a group of g rad u ate teaching assistants who will a ssist them with engin­ eering problem s. Monday through F rid a y from 3 p m. until 4 p.m .. students m ay call the Chemical E ngineering Building to discuss th eir studies with Wes Boynton and John Hud­ son. both PhD candidates, and E d M ahler and John Tauten. Boynton and Hudson la te r p re­ p a re a 10-minute KUT-FM radio broadcast analyzing the problem s. The program , entitled "C hem i­ cal Engineering T u to rial,” is b ro ad cast Monday through F ri­ d ay a t 10:25 p.m . Howard F. Rase, chairm an of the Chemical Engineering De­ p artm en t, urges students to visit th e tutors in person, if possible, in addition to utilizing the elec­ tronic study aids. The U niversity has the biggest cen ter of com putational linguis­ t i c in the country. Word scien­ tists a re trying to refine the pro­ cess of com puter translation cf foreign languages. M iss Ball M iss Blankenship M iss C o rso M iss H o b b s M iss Jones M iss Ray M iss Sled ge M iss W a r d M iss W ilson 1916 Class Impressed by UT Growth The They could have called it "T he 1916 C a s s Reunion — Plus O ne.” “one” w as Conrad M. B lucher who graduated in 1906, ten y ears e a rlie r than the oth er ex-students at the class reunion S aturday. He w as am ong m ore than 75- ex-students from the 1916 class, which num bered 300, who a tte n d ­ ed the reunion Saturday. They cam e from places as fa r aw ay as Scarsdale, N .Y .; A tlanta, G a.; Salisbury’, N .C .; San Luis Obispo, C alif.; W ashington, D .C .; Tucson, Ariz. and THE GROUP was m ost im ­ pressed by the size of the Uni­ the U niversity versity. In 1916, had an enrollm ent of 3,000 on a 40-acre cam pus. Orville Wood, a 1916 staff m em ­ b er of the Texan, com m ented th at the U niversity today is a " m a g ­ nificent institution. In 1916, T exas w as covered with wooden shacks. To see it covered with beautiful buildings is a real sig h t.” " It is very difficult to believe that I went to a school th a t is Uniform Rules Asked For Absence Leaves Uniform rules a re needed for both research and study leaves of absence for college teachers, Dr. M ark H. In g rah am , a for­ m e r president of the American Association of U niversity P ro fes­ sors, said here Saturday. Speaking at a m eeting of the of College T exas Association T eachers. In g rah am , who has been on the faculty’ of the Uni­ v ersity of Wisconsin since 1919, also urged m ore for te a c h e rs to take leaves from the classroom . freedom " T H E R E IS no g re a te r bond betw een a m an and the institu- tion than complete freedom ,” he said. Tile author of the book, "T he O ther F rin g e — F acu lty B ene­ fits O ther Than Annuities and In su ra n c e ,” said leaves of ab ­ sence should be uniform in th at they should be given to profes­ sors who need to catch up on developm ents in th eir fields, as well as to those doing re se a rc h or g ra d u a te work. He said he expects a re p o rt in a few m onths from the AAUP and th e Association of A m erican Colleges on leaves of absence. DONALD S. WILLARD, vice­ presid en t of the T eachers In su r­ ance and Annuity Association and th e College R etirem ent E quities Fund, briefed the educators on the operation of teach er re tire ­ m ent plans. th a t The T exas Association of Col­ lege T each ers recom m ended la st the sta te adopt D ecem ber benefit p ro g ram s offered by the non-profit TIAA and C R E F. M ore than 1.400 institutions in 48 sta te s have accepted the p ro g ram s. Geologists Sell Rock Specimens Selling rocks Instead of study­ ing them has turned into a big business for Sigm a G am m a E psi­ lon, honorary e a rth science so­ ciety. Tuesday the group began sell­ ing kits containing 14 different fossil sp e c im e n s—13 stone and one plastic, P e te r Andrews, a m em b er of the society’, said th at the reproduction, a is ra th e r ra re in actu al fossile form . Andrews said the kits m ainly w ere m eant to be a study aid for freshm an geology students, and th at coincided specim ens closely with the second sem ester geology course. trilobite, the that Andrews said In other schools w here sim ilar kits had been sold the reaction had been very good. "W e have feelers out,” he said, "to see if we m ight sell them the T exas M em orial in M useum .” The kits a re on sale for 98 cents plus 2 cen ts tax through the week of April IO. They a re being sold in the basem ent of the Geo­ logy Building outside room 14 from 6 to 10:45 a.m . T uesdays and T hursdays. E ach kit includes the illu stra­ tions and nam es of the specim en. N E L S O N 'S Navajo and Zuni Handm ade Indian Jewelry Mexican Imports L ey B . N e ls o n , P rop. 4612 S o. Cong;. HI 4-3814 now this big,” said Dr. J. Udden, whose father found oil on U niver­ sity land. S. M. P urcell of Austin, who the U niversity's has w atched grow th during the p ast 50 y ears, said, "T he U niversity then w as strictly 40 acres and now it is m any acres. Most of the old build­ ings a re now gone. The E ugene B a rk e r C enter w as our m ain li­ b ra ry , and of course it’s still here. Football w as a big tiling then. too. but it w as not a s com m ercialized as it Is today.” THE 1916 alum ni w ere honored at a the reception F rid a y by Senior Cabinet and w ere p resen t­ ed Golden A nniversary Diplom as by Chancellor H arry R ansom . E ach m em b er also received a yearbook, "R e-cap and Gown,” the activities of which class m em bers since they left the re la te s University. The 1916 alum ni, who av erag e about 73 y ears of age, also w ere shown slides of early Austin and U niversity scenes. Law Booklet Published "The obligations of the p ra c ­ tice of law a re great, and the lim itations it places upon free­ dom of action and en terprise a re severe. If you a re unwilling to abide by . you will be happier choosing som e other vocation.” these strictu res . . This advice to prospective law students is in a booklet entitled "On Becoming a L aw yer,” pub­ lished recently by the U niversity Law School Foundation. Tile booklet explores in depth such topics as how to p re p a re for the study of law and choos­ ing a law school. Schiller s Aesthetics Advocate W hole Man — Wilkinson be a sacrifice of the individual for the com m on good. Modern m an has a tendency tow ard this specialization, he added. Should education provide a fully rounded individual or ju st a spec­ ialized person who can perform exactly w hat is needed and little else? The question of "W hole m an o r citizen? and how it is reflected in the aesth etic educational phili- sophy of Johann von Schiller, G erm an d ra m a tist of the E igh­ teen th Century, w as discussed by Dr. E lizabeth M, Wilkinson, schol­ a r on th e w orks of Schiller. The speech by the lectu rer from th e U niversity of London and Cor­ nell U niversity w as sponsored by the G erm anic L anguages D ep art­ m ent. Dr. Wilkinson said it is m ainly a question of w hether th ere should Schiller offered a theory of ed­ the needs of to ucation equal m odern society, Dr. Wilkinson said. He provided a program for all m en, not just a culture for the intellectuals. Dr. Wilkinson describes the sta te of aesthetic wholeness as a sta te of fruitful indifference. Tile aesthetic sta te is a dynam ic bal­ ance in which there is both con­ tem plation and action which a re fruitful to each other. Schiller spoke of aesthetics as n ecessary m eans of im provem ent in political societies, Dr. Wilkin­ son said. He offered an individ­ ual cultu re which w as necessary for, or a com plem ent to, political philosophies. Schiller’s idea was for culture to interact with the po­ litical sta te , not provide a refuge from it, she explained. Schiller’s originality was not in his ideas, but in his analysis of the essentials of the program of culture, and the ^ a ssa ila b ility of the theory he evolved to solve the cultural problem. ”B 6 T rG ft T H A N is where you drop ott your laundry at and y o u r roommate picks it up at 5:00 Conor Cruise O’Brien, Regents Professor and Albert Schweitzer Professor of the Humanities at New York University, will be the fifth speaker in the University's lecture series on the United States Sex League Votes To Appeal in Court Members of the Student League for Responsible Sexual Freedom voted Friday to "take their case all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary.” Voting almost unanimously to follow the "legal route” to on- campus acceptance, the League m embers decided to appeal their case to the Board of Regents and if that fails, to take it to court. Gary Chason, League co-chair­ man, said court action probably would be necessary, because, "I don’t think there’s any way in the world we can get back on campus otherwise.” Members were cautioned to avoid on-campus activities and all "extra legal” activities that may prejudice their case. A law stu­ dent at the meeting noted that "when you're legal route, you have to stay on the straight and narrow and avoid trouble.” taking the The group was ousted campus for distributing which had been banned. from leaflets The League has sent a letter to the Board of Regents, request­ ing reinstatement on campus, and another letter to the American Civil Liberties Union, asking for help. They have not yet received a reply to either letter. Chason pointed out that a sim i­ lar group in California began badly but now has almost suc­ ceeded. Commenting on the state­ ments of Sen. Grady Hazelwood. he said the Senator’s "threats were just words, that’s all,” oc­ casioned by approaching elec­ tions. The members said they doubted that the University would ever lose any money because of the League. The members noted that one of their main problems was that few people had a very clear idea what they were trying to do. They plan to educate the public, m em ­ bers said. Their include tentative plans pamphlets, leaflets, and a speak­ er on the problem of abortion. PIG STAND No. 14 2801 G U A D A L U P E GOOD MORNING GOOD AFTERNOON GOOD EVENING GOOD FOOD ANYTIME Pig Stand No. 14 and the Atlantic Com m unity. Dr. O’Brien will rep lace Pab rick Gordon W alker, long-time B ritish Labor P a rty m em ber. W alker cancelled the engagem ent because of the suddenly-called British p arliam en tary elections. He is a Labor candidate for the H>use of Commons. Dr. O’Brien will speak April 12. Dr. O’Brien was a United N a­ tions representative in K atanga during the UN intervention in the Congo conflict. As a senior m em ­ b er of the Irish delegation to the UN. he was borrowed by Dag H am m arskjold tem porary duty as political advisor on the S ecretary-G eneral’s staff. for He resigned from the UN In 1961, and puhlishod a book pre­ senting his side of the Congo storv. “ To K atanga and B ack,” in 1962. Fo r three years, he w as vice­ the U niversity of chancellor of Ghana, during which tim e he sought to protect the university against pressure from the Nkru- m ah governm ent. Tile fourth sp eak er in the At­ lantic Comm unity lecture series, Fritz F rie r of the W est G erm an Social D em ocratic P arty , will give a lecture on "W estern E u ­ rope, E astern Europe, and the Soviet Union.” Tuesday at 8 p.m . in Business - Economics Building IOO. Teachers to A id Lady Landlubbers W ith Boating Tips F our sm all-craft safety demon­ strations v ill be presented by instructors of the W omen’s Phy­ sical Education D epartm ent. W o ­ m en freshm en and tra n sfe r stu ­ dents a re required to attend th# dem onstration Monday or Tues­ day a t 4 or 5 p.m. The program is given each spring to provide students with boating safety inform ation. The Texas M emorial Museum, and T rinity a t Twenty-fourth Streets, serves as a center for the exhibit, conservation, and study of T exas’ civic and natural history. Sophisticated Solitaire The enchantment of a love destined to last a lifetime is traditionally expressed in fine diamonds and precious metals such as this sophisticated solitaire, designed by master * * craftsmen. > 2 . 5 0 CONVENIENT TERMS Joe Koen And Son Since 1888 105 E. 6th Tours . . . Travel SOUTHERN FESTIVAL OF SONG Rev. Pearly Brown, ten Chandler, M a b la Hillary, Bernice Reason, Pete Seegar, G il Turner, Eleenor W eldon, end H e d y W est. Concert — C ity Coliseum 8 p.m.. Tuesday, April 19 Workshops —- l i t h & l f th Tickets: $1,50 Advanced $1.75 A t door Availeblo at: Univorsity C o -O p , lit h Door, University ”Y " By M a il at P.O. 8279 Enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope (checks on Austin banks only) Located in the Lobby of the Forty Acres Club, on the Drag, offers to all members of the Faculty, Staff, and Students the following Travel Services: 1. Airline reservation* and ticketing. 2. World-wide hotel reservations. 3. Car rental and purchase, domestic and international. 4. Independent and group travel. 5. Steamship and cruise reservations. W e offer a 30-day open Charge Account and will deliver your Airline tickets. 60 CLASSIFIED TEXAN STYLE GR 1-5244 Sunday, April 3, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Page IO S A N J A C IN T O C L E A N E R S & L A U N D R Y O N C A M P U S WITH PER SO N A L SERVICE Forty Acres Club Lobby Please Call: G R 8-8888 FUME KISSED HAMBURGERS ttOllDAV MOUSE