Weather: Partly Cloudy Warm and Windy • Low 70 • High 90 T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Bibb Falk's 50 Years in Baseball Page 4 • Vol. 66 Pries Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, M AY ’ '67 Ten Pages Today No. 161 News Capsules I D o gge tt Eler By The Associated Press Heavy Ground Action Kills 1 9 s a ig o n Marines clashed with North Vietnamese troops in heavy fighting for more than eight hours Wednesday 350 miles north of Saigon. The battle cost the Marines 19 dead and <2 wounded while 92 Communist troops were killed, the Lh Command said Thursday. In the air war, US Navy jets bombed two previously raided power plants in and near Haiphong Wednesday and staged the first attack of the war on the Kien An airfield, a MIG base 5y2 miles southeast of the North Vietnamese . port. Westmoreland Assumes Peace Role SAliivlN US Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker Thursday placed the entire American pacification effort in South Viet Nam in the hands of Gen. William C. Westmoreland. The US advisory role in pacification formerly had been a civilian function of the US mission. Bunker appointed Robert W. Homer, a special assistant to President Lyndon B. Johnson, as deputy to Westmore­ land- By placing the program under Westmoreland it was ap­ parent that the US m ilitary will take a more active role in providing the security. , , Vatican Denounces Miniskirts A Vatican City publication denounced VATICAN CITY the m iniskirt Wednesday, five days after actress Claudia Cardinale wore one to an audience with Pope Paul VI. The Rt. Rev. Ferdinando Lambruschini, a noted theolo­ gian, wrote in the. weekly magazine that the Roman Catho­ lic Church “ cannot approve the m iniskirt.” This first comment from the Vatican on miniskirts cam e after Miss Cardinale wore a black miniskirt to an audience Pope Paul held for personalities from show busi­ ness and the press. Stock Market Drops r NEW YORK The stock m arket closed low’er in active trading Wednes­ day despite a struggle to recover early losses. * The averages cut their losses substantially in mid-after­ noon but sank back toward the close. The loss was a continuation of the setback that began Tuesday after four straight sessions of advance. U Thant Asks for Bombing Halt NEW YORK UN Secretary - General U Thant made a strong new appeal Wednesday for a cessation of United States bombing of North Viet Nam in older to resolve what he called “the greatest crisis facing mankind since World War II.” He reiterated his conviction th at once the bombing was halted without conditions by the United States, North Viet Nam would agree to enter within a few weeks into meaning­ ful talks that would lead to an end to the war. Thant said it was evident that the US bombing of the north had not achieved its goal of stopping or reducing in­ filtration into South Viet Nam. Artists Protest Viet Nam War PHILADELPHIA I f s the Week of the Angry Arts in Philadelphia with some 40 poetry readings, a rt show's, folk concerts, and dis­ cussion meetings scattered across the city in a seven-day period — all of them, ostensibly, protesting the w ar in Viet Nam. “ I think we’re angry about the w ar,’* said poet Ronald Goodman, chairm an of the “week’s” sponsors. “But it is our idea that artists really can only praise.” Goodman, whose Ad Hoc Committee of Philadelphia Artists lists 300 members, emphasized that the series of events is not aimed a t swaying the Johnson administration in its conduct of the war. Eisenhower Shows Improvement WASHINGTON For the third consecutive day, form er President Dwight D. Eisenhower was reported Wednesday to be showing improvement. There were some indications he m ay even be starting to take some solid food. However, his doctors said late Tuesday he will remain hospitalized for at least the rest of the week for the gas­ trointestinal ailment that overtook him last Saturday. A midmorning medical bulletin from Walter Reed Army Hospital said: “ Gen. Eisenhower is continuing to show im­ provement. He is taking some nourishment by mouth today. Visitors are still restricted to family m em bers.” General Dynamics Gets F II I Order WASHINGTON The Air Force signed a contract Wednesday with General Dynamics Corp. of F ort Worth, to produce 493 models of the F i l l aircraft for $1.82 billion. The purchase also includes 165 Air Force and Navy air­ craft authorized by Congress through June 30, as well as 24 F i l l s ordered by Australia, and 50 models ordered by Bri­ tain. The rem ainder of the 493 planes are subject to congres­ sional appropriations for the fiscal year 1968 and 1969. LTV Plane Plunges Into Lake DALLAS One of Ling-Temco-Voughfs tilt-wing experim ental air­ planes crashed in a marshy area near Dallas Wednesday. A spokesman for LTV Aero Space Corp. said all three men aboard perished. The spokesman said the craft, one of five experimental vertical takeoff and landing ships built by LTV, was on a simulated aviator rescue mission when it crashed and ex­ ploded. Witnesses said the ramjet-powered plane which had been in the air about 29 minutes appeared to nose over and plunge into the m arshy area at Mountain Creek Lake near Dallas. Crash Kills Eight in Family GOLDTHWAITE Eight of nine m em bers of a penniless Alabama family on a cross-country trip were killed along with a trucker late Tuesday in a collision 15 miles east of here. E a rl T. Waller, his wife Pauline, and their eight children were hurled from their car when the collision occurred as the car turned onto US 84 fifteen miles east of here. Sheriff H. G. Brooks said they found several empty wallets but no money in the pockets of the Athens, Ala., family, 4.- a v rain icere feeling that the foregoing ampaign was conducted on a high level, with issues and people in contention, rather than negativism. Although many have said that this was a dirty campaign, I cannot agree. I think all of the candi­ themselves and dates conducted their campaigns on the highest plane. May I offer my apprecia­ tion to you for your efforts in that regard. I hope we will work to­ gether in the coming year, for I know full w'eil that this job is big­ ger than any one man. Thank you again for helping to keep this cam ­ paign on a high level. “ I want to thank all of those loyal supporters who have worked so hard, but m ore importantly, I W'ant to thank the record num ber of students who examined the can­ didates, their choice. I am particularly humbled by the large m ajority by which I won. expressed and “ I look forward to the continued support for the program s which I the cam ­ have proposed during paign. With a new constitution, and a new direction for student activity, the outlook for progress the coming year is exciting. in Students from the four com ers of the campus have joined m e in this campaign. I am now eager to be­ gin my administration, dedicated to making the Students’ Associa­ tion a meaningful voice for the students.” RICHARD NICHOL ASS, Election Commission chairm an, called the voter turn-out “above average for a run-off.” Wednesday, 20.6 per cent of the student body voted while 29 per cent or 7,716 students voted in the genera] election last week. Both num bers and percentages of students who voted in 1967 spring elections were higher than com­ parable 1966 figures. IN SPRING, 1966, 5,719 students, or 23 p er cent of the student body, voted. In the first run-off race for editor of The Dally Texan, 3,677, or 14 per cent, votes were c a s t When this run-off was ruled invalid by student and appellate courts for inadequate provisions against voter fraud, 4,998, or more than 20 per cent of the students, cast votes in a second run-off. In Wednesday’s run-off, write-in votes, which were thrown out, gave support to Gary Thiher, Tom Gil­ liland, LBJ, Jam es Joyce, Mao Tse Tung, L. D. Trotsky, and oth­ ers. The Election Commission will meet to certify winners after the tim e lim it for petitions for recounts or suits to be filed has elapsed. “ RECOUNTS MUST BE called for within 24 hours,” he said. “Suits m ust be filed within 72 hours sta rt­ ing a t IO p.m . Wednesday.” “Today, all the way around was as smooth as it could be,” Nicho­ las said. “Counting was without difficulty.” Counting was completed by IO p.m. The computer finished at 9:50 and the rem aining ballots were in­ hand counted. Hand counts cluded ballots rejected by the com­ puter because they were write-ins, folded, or m arked with ball point pens. Wide By LYNN ELL JACKSON Texan News Editor Lloyd Doggett defeated John Goodman in a Students’ Associa­ tion presidential race Wednesday to that attracted 5,860 students the polls. Doggett polled 3,722 votes to Goodman’s 2,007. IN OTHER RUN-OFFS, L u c y the Communication Horton won seat with 146 votes to Cherri CL. le y s 121. Paul Peters received 125 votes in Architecture, while his oppon­ ent Frank Genzer gathered 54. Issued following the Doggett statem ent: “ I HAVE JUST SENT the fol­ to John Good­ telegram lowing m an: “ I wish to express to you my Ballot Count Ends APO's Election Day For the Election Commission, the day ended at IO p.m. Wednes­ day after the tabulation of ballots. What happened between the time the polls closed and the final re­ sults? At 5 p.m. m em bers of Alpha US, Red Ships Collide at Sea By The Associated Press WASHINGTON A Soviet destroyer harassed American warships for 90 minutes in the Sea of Japan Wednesday, and a United scraped States destroyer in one of several close approaches, the Pentagon reported. finally The incident raised the specter of a serious confrontation between the two m ajor powers backing op­ posing sides in the Viet Nam wTar. The State Departm ent officially protested tile Soviet action in an oral statem ent ranking Soviet diplomat in Washington. the to and The collision involved the Soviet the destroyer Besslednyi American destroyer Walker. The United States vessel was engaged in training m aneuvers with two other Navy destroyers and an air­ craft carrier. The Pentagon said the Soviets ignored repeated warnings against coming too close to the American ships. The Besslednyi, a 425-foot Kotlin class destroyer with four 3.9-inch guns and 16 45mm antiaircraft guns, had moved the American ships apparently to ob­ serve the training. in near attem pted The collision occurred when the to Soviet destroyer overtake and pass the Walker. The vessels scraped together but, there were no injuries and only minor dam age to both ships. Phi Omega collected the ballot boxes from their stations and took them to sorter and puncher facili­ ties owned by the City of Austin. Ballots taken out of the boxes faced any of four ways. The sorter separated them according to the direction they faced and according to school and num erical order. Next the puncher punctured the cards where the voters had marked them. Some of the ballots became void because the m arkings were outside the square, and they were saved for hand counting. If a card was folded or bent in any m anner, it aLso had to be hand counted. After the ballots had been sorted and punched, they were brought to the computation center in the Busi­ ness Administration - Economics Building. Here, into a computer. The com puter tabulated the information (Mi each ballot and recorded the results. The voided ballots were counted by hand. they were fed The two totals were added to­ gether, and the job was complete. From the tim e the ballot boxes were opened until the tim e the computer printed the results, a cam pus policeman accompanied the Election Commission. 2 Juniors Apply For Texan ME Two applications for managing editor of The Daily Texan were received by Loyd Edmonds, busi­ ness m anager of Texas Student Publications, Inc., before the dead­ line Wednesday. Students applying for the posi­ tion are Carolyn A. Nichols, pres­ ent managing editor of the Texan; and Richard Hill, present associ­ ate sports editor. The TSP board will select the managing editor Tuesday. Engineering Classes To Be Given Walks Engineering students get free walks Thursday so their instruc­ tors can learn more about teach­ ing. The faculty will be attending an all-day session at the Chariot Inn Motor Hotel for the last Teaching the Effectiveness Colloquium of school year. In full assemblies and separate group meetings, the faculty will review the results of recent years of teaching improvement efforts, and will recommend future activi­ ties. J. Kent Roberts, professor of civil engineering at the University of Missouri at Rolla, will give the keynote talk on “ Dynamic Engi­ neering Teaching.” University officials, Engineering Foundation supporters, and faculty m em bers and their wives will at­ tend a noon luncheon program which Dean John J . McKetta wall emcee. Presidents of professional engi­ neering society student chapters will present awards to the faculty m em bers of each departm ent chos­ en by students as “distinguished advisers.” the presentation of Highlighting the noon program will be the General D ynam ics/Fort Worth award for excellence in engineer­ ing teaching. Dr. Robert H. Wid- m er, vice-president of General Dynamics, will present a check and certificate the recipient, to who was chosen by nominations from a student-facuity committee. this occasion, a limited edition book has been pub­ lished which contains a history of the full teaching program and m anuscripts of talks m ade to col­ loquia during 1966-67. Prepared for The Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System, will distribute the book to other colleges. See Belated Story. Pace 8. J. Kent Roberts Lloyd Doggett Meets the People . . . in drive to win Students' Association presidency. -T h eta br R o t D eft Men Urged to Apply For Class Standings All undergraduates now present­ ly classified II-S by their local draft boards are likely to be re­ classified I-A in August, unless re­ quests are made for class stand­ ings to be sent to the draft boards. William Wallace, University registration supervisor, said forms for requesting that reports be sent to local draft boards can be filled out now at the R egistrar’s office. The University will not send these class unless forms are filled out by the student requesting the information. standing reports Most University undergraduates are classified II-S. This classifica­ tion will expire in November. Un­ receive less this information, draft files may be reviewed and many students may be reclassified I-A by August. local draft boards class-standing About a third of the University undergraduates with H S classifi­ cations were put in I-A last sum ­ m er, because they did not request that their class standings be sent to the local draft boards. Class standings are not reported on graduate students or students in such professional studies as medicine, dentistry, and law. Only a satisfactory or unsatisfactory performance is reported on these students, and arrangem ents for draft be made respective g r a d u a t e through schools. should status ★ ★ ★ By The Associated Press WASHINGTON Draft Director Lewis B. Hershey said Wednesday the Selective Serv­ ice System is discontinuing its col­ lege qualification tests. These are the three-hour. 130- question examinations designed to help local draft boards determine which students should be drafted. Hershey made his statem ent at the Capitol where he gave a per­ sonal endorsement to continuation of college deferments for under­ graduate students. However, he m ade it clear to the House Armed Services Com­ m ittee that President Lyndon B. Johnson still is considering to what extent such existing deferm ents should be altered. A SPECIAL ADVISORY PANEL sot up by the committee* recom­ mended continuation of student de­ ferments. The Senate Armed Services Com­ m ittee had taken a sim ilar stand in recommending a bill to provide a four-year extension of the d raft law. The Senate committee headed by Sen. Richard B. Russell, D- Ga., recommended drafting of 19- year-olds first, instead of the pres­ ent system of taking older men in the 18 to 26-year age bracket. Russell also disclosed that hn plans to try to end the require­ ment that men drafted for two years of m ilitary service must con­ tinue active reserve training for three years afterward. Many of these men must do a©- tive and reserve duty, Russell said, while millions of youths escape both. Russell estim ated that an all- volunteer system for die nation’s arm ed services would cost an ad­ ditional $10 billion a year. This the pre-Viet would provide only Nam military manpower of some 2.7 million, he said. As the Senate debated the draft, its highest issued the Pentagon draft call of this year, 19.900 men for the Army in July. That is up from the May quota of 18,000 and the June quota of 19,800. Committee Expresses Concern Roger Shattuck, chairm an of the Faculty Council’s Committee of Counsel on Academic Freedom and Responsibility, stated Wednesday at a meeting of the local chapter of American Association of Univer­ sity Professors that the Commit­ tee is disturbed about the actions of the University concerning re ­ cent events on campus. Shattuck specifically cited Chan­ cellor H airy Ransom 's news re­ lease of April 2, the arrest of three nonstudents in the Chuck Wagon, and the restraining order issued to these three. THE PURPOSE of the elected to committee, said Shattuck, converse with the Board of Re­ gents, administration, faculty, and students, although it has no real authority. is The Committee remains deeply concerned by the Disclaimer Affi­ davit (loyalty oath) required by Texas law of all State employes, including faculty members, as is stated in its report filed May I with the secretary of the Faculty Council, Shattuck said. Actions of the Committee for the past 18 months, as stated in the report, will be considered Mon­ day by the Faculty Council. The two formal actions taken during this period were on the official approval of campus speakers and administration procedures on the hiring of faculty, according to the report. THE REPORT STATES that in January, 1966, the Committee con­ sidered the official disapproval of Roy ce McPhail, Klu Flux Elan officer invited to speak by an ap­ proved student organization. In­ stead of addressing itself to this the Committee sent case alone, the vicechancellor a three-page let­ ter denouncing the adm inistra­ tion’s policy of approving speak­ ers invited by student groups. Subsequent to this letter and a vote by the Faculty Council, the vice-chancellor decided to allow McPhail to speak. New regulations about student speakers now are be­ ing drawn up. In the second formal action, the Committee protested the adminis­ tration’s disapproval of the hiring teaching as­ of a student as a sistant in spring of 1966 because of his involvement in “ highly con­ troversial issues.” THE COMMITTEE made inquir­ ies and obtained results without taking formal action on two other questions. One concerns the pres­ ence of plain-clothes agents of the Texas Department of Public Safe­ ty, taking notes, a t open meetings of an approved student organiza­ tion, the re[K)rt said. “ The prac­ tice now appears to have been dis­ continued. It is clear to all mem­ bers of the Committee that sud! a practice seriously inhibits free inquiry and the exchange of ideas in the open community of a uni­ versity,” the report said. The other action concerned a sm all item in the March 27 num­ ber of Newsweek stating that a t the University of Texas “ deans . . . keep files on leftists." “ After can­ vassing the deans, we have state­ ments indicating the allegation is unfounded,” the committee report states. Committee members include Lot- rin G. Kennamer, Millard H. Ruud. John R. Silber, Phil Moss Ferguson, W. Page Keeton, and Dewitt C. Reddick. Texas W ater Plan Considers Needs to 2020 9 8 0 - Mile Aqueduct To Alter Rivers' Flow in supply inland w ater requirem ents. Im* effectively resolved by efficient ad­ ministrative procedure. A vital question, m oreover, the uphill pum ping th at is needed to to D esalination will be p ractical in the next two decades for certain Texas cities along th e Gulf Coast who now pay 30 cents per 1,000 gallons for th eir w ater. This is in c o n tra st to the 5 cents in the northeastern p a rt of the State and to the $1.25 per 1,000 gallons paid in th e Trans-Pecos are a. N evertheless, this would cost a Rio G rande Valley fa rm e r $100 an a c re foot for irrigation as com pared to the $10 he now' pays. Thus, the redistribution of su r­ face w ater proposed in the T exas W ater P lan will offer the only p ractical m eans of satisfying for the future. irrigation requirem ents Tile conditions of the bays and estuaries on the Texas Gulf Coast a re deplorable. Baffin Bay is dead. Corpus Christi and G alveston Bays a re becoming dead due to pollution and hypersalinity. In addition, ship channels built along the coast — Y ar­ borough Pass, Corpus Christi P ass — have been constructed w ithout regard to proper b alance design and a re now abandoned. D eterioration in b ay w ater quality re­ su lts from m etropolitan growth and ex­ panded coastal irrigation, plus tho concur­ re n t d ecrease of fresh w ater inflow from riv e rs because of upstream reservoir de­ velopm ent. Most im portantly, however, is the restriction of tho interm ingling of Gulf of Mexico w ater with bay w ater because of the coastal insland b arriers. D ue to rapid evaporation, the stagnant, polluted bay w ater becom es hypersaline and thus dead. If these conditions are not abated, Texas must be prepared to write off its bays and henceforth consider them as holding ponds for polluted waters from all sources. Revitalization of bays tidal inlets strateg ic In recognition of this deteriorating situ a­ the Texas W ater P lan proposes tion, stringent pollution control plus the cutting of to allow Gulf w ate r to adequately flush all th e bays into a healthy condition once again. In addition, designed and controlled releases of fresh w ate r from reserv o irs to selected spawn­ ing and n u rsery grounds for aquatic life will be planned as required for fish and o th er aquatic life. Thus, m axim um bene­ fits can be achieved from m inim um quan­ tities of fresh w ate r by the elim ination of the need for co n stan t riv er inflow into the bays, and the reso u rce can be used for m unicipal, industrial, and irrigation needs inland. the Around spraw ling cities, literally thousands of tons of silt run off the scraped d e a n countryside the sta te 's riv ers into and reservoirs. The costs of dredging and the erosion of usable topsoil rep resen t a la rg e financial loss. In addition, all th e best locations for the m a jo r im poundm ents of the Texas W ater P lan either a re now or will be utilized, lf these reserv o irs continue to fill up with silt, new ones will have to be built on sites which a re no longer available. To elim inate erosion conditions at their sources, the P lan proposes to provide for land treatm en t and for flood control on 18 million ac res of u p stream w atersheds. This com prehensive program will help to prevent 70 p er cent of the sedim entation and flood d am ag e which now occurs. To finance th e Texas W ater P lan, the voters in the last general election au th o r­ ized the Texas W ater D evelopment Board to issue up to $400 million in revenue bonds to buy and build reservoirs, conveyance facilities, and to assist local com m unities in sim ila r efforts. This sum is only a m odest sta rt, never­ theless, when it is estim ated th a t the pre­ lim inary cost of the Plan will be in the billions of dollars which does not include th e price tag on m oving w ater to the High P lains, a project dw arfing everything else in­ th a t has been proposed. Additional creases in bond authorization by the state v o ters plus m assiv e federal assistan ce will be needed as tim e and developom nt of the P lan proceeds. legislative approval, The Texas W ater Plan, which does not req u ire overall is now becoming a re a lity ; and growth and change throughout Texas and in technolo­ gy will req u ire its constant evaluation, re ­ study, and modification. However, the exe­ cution Of the P lan does not depend alone on engineering design and construction. Complex legal and economic considerations m ust be resolved before it will be achieved in its totality. Coordination imperative the the property of U nder T exas law, although su rface w ater Is a public resource, ground w ater is spe­ cifically individual ow ner of the land. P rim e reserv o ir sites a r e few and m u st be preserved since de­ velopm ent of these locations a re to coin­ cide chronologically with w ater-supply needs. Coordination of w ater developm ent with w ater quality protection m ust be as­ sured. The claim s by cities, counties, and the more than 500 special water districts and river authorities in the state to (‘arb one’s (air share of the available water must letting their w ate r being is whether local com m unities will o b stru ct or will ob­ taken ject hundreds of m iles aw ay to serv e the water requirem ents of other regions of Texas. The common need of th e sta te m u st be recognized and local provincialism over­ com e to allow all of Texas to benefit from the success of the Plan. T exas m ust have w ate r to live and to grow. Highways, health, and education be­ com e of im portance only to m eet the s ta te ’s increasing population and economy. The Texas W ater P lan will provide the w ater needed to determ ine and to nourish this in­ crease and expansion. Future potentialities for T here a re m any potentialities the future which m ay be an outgrow th of plan­ ned sta te w ater developm ent: The people of West Texas a re n ea rer to a solution to their problem than they w ere 18 m onths ago. Howev er, w'ater will not be m ade avail­ able to the High P lains before the irrig a ­ tax d istricts tion peak of 1985. Regional a re required to finance the difference be­ tween what the individual farm irrig ato r can economically pay for w ater delivered to him and its actual cost. As the planners proceed with their work, a vision of Tw enty-first Century Texas hopefully em erg es: East Texas will become a water won­ derland of huge lakes, parks, and other recreational developments. This part of the state will contain SO per cent of the Texas population and will enter into a golden era of economic prosperity be­ cause of the great abundance of available water for consumption purposes. Tile State will experience no uncontrolled regional floods. E very drop of available ground and su rface w aler will be controlled by central com puters which will tran sfe r this resource from one region of Texas to another bv rem ote control. tran sp o rt Regional sew er districts will w astes for ce n tral collection and tr e a t­ m ent. These system s will handle the dis­ posal of sew age by m eans of deep ocean outfalls and underground wells far below the surface. The sta te ’s riv ers and bays will becom e are as of beauty, pleasure, and econom ic activity. The fishing industry and ocean farm ing will becom e one of the m ost im ­ portant sectors of the Texas economy. Ground w ater will becom e a public r e ­ source through legislative action. Tile co­ ordination of ground w ater use with p ro ­ posed im poundm ent will justify the com m itting of statew ide financ­ ing and assistance to m e et local com m uni­ ty needs. su rface w ater furnish N uclear desalination will th* w’a te r requirem ents of all the m etropolitan are a s along the Texas coast. Gulf w ater will be desalted and then pumped a re la ­ tively short distance inland to the coastal aqueduct of the State P ro ject to be red is­ tributed to the Rio G rande Valley for th* irrig ated farm ing of th ree million ac re s there. Along the right of w ay of the conveyance .systems built for distribution of the w ate r under the Texas W ater Plan, old com m uni­ ties will grow in size and population. New towns will be developed attractin g industry and residents with w ater paid for on an annual co n tract basis. Government’s r o le The federal government will establish a system of grants-Ln-aid for state water development similar to the assistance pro­ vided for Texas highways. These pay- as-you-go programs will be financed by a cents per 1,000 gallons tax on the inter­ state movement of water. The United States will be connected by a water alli­ ance which will allow tile n a t i o n a l redis­ tribution of water the 5# states. throughout Rainm aking will be relied upon as I m ajo r and vital m eans of satisfying w’atei requirem ents. G uaranteed rainfall will bs subject to bids and then contracted for t* m eet both local and statew ide m unicipal industrial, and farm ing needs. Since w ater developm ent will determ ine the state s econom ic growth and prosper! ty, the Texas W ater Development B oard will becom e one of the larg est and m ost im portant sta te agencies. This d ep artm en t will utilize through a central planning com ­ the resources of m its * the average citizen, the Texas L egislature, the the higher federal governm ent, business and local interests, and all other sta te agencies. institutions of education, the support and Industry and tourism will becom e th* pillars of the sta te econom y. The v a st accessibility of fresh w ater will be a n a ­ tional lure for searching industry as w 'ater becom es increasingly sc a rc e and in e v e r growing dem and all over the country. Tourism will be a trem endous en terp rise because of th e new lakes, reso rts, parks, and wildlife refuges which will be d e­ veloped. This coupled with the temperate, seasonal T exas clim ate and the s ta te ’s historical p a st will draw a national and foreign to u rist invasion. dependable, and quality crop. in located farm lan d s a re Another benefit is that this farm ing tech ­ nique m ak es optim um use of land, such as found in th e P anhandle, which is less valuable w ithout irrigation. Six and one-half million ac res of these irrigated the region of Texas. However, H igh P lains irrigated farm ing there is expected to peak in 1985 and then begin to decline gradually. The basic problem is the stead y deple­ tion by uncontrolled pum ping of the O galla­ la Aquifer. O riginally holding 280 m illion acre feet of w ater below th e Panhandle, th is m assiv e underground is being pum ped in excess of w hat it can it­ its supplies self n atu rally replenish and w ill not be available by th e y ea r 2020 under p resen t conditions of developm ent. Already, the four m ajo r pum p dealersh ip s and som e farm ers have moved out of this region. The a r e a 's sand sto rm s now begin the spring, and the value of land in the High P lain s has dropped. in N ovem ber instead of reserv o ir th ree of like the downward lf nothing is done about this situation, Texas will become an agriculturally Im­ porting state. This decline could become psychological trend of the stockmarket. In addition, the loss of the crop production of millions of acres of fertile irrigated farmland will have serious repercussions on the food supply of the nation and of the world. Four means To solve this crucial problem , four m ean s of m oving 17 million acre feet of out-of sta te w ater to West Texas for irrigation a re now being considered. These proposals a re not shown on the accom panying m ap of the Texas W ater Plan. reach of One plan is to im port w ate r from th e Sioux City - K ansas City the M issouri R iver through O klahom a and into Texas. The second study would divert w ate r from th e M ississippi River, routing it w est­ w ard up th e A rkansas R iver into O kla­ hom a, then to Texas. The third proposal th e M ississippi would export w ater from w estw ard into Texas by going up the Red R iver and into the Panhandle. A fourth would d iv ert w ater from the M issis­ sippi th e Gulf Coast, then up the Colorado R iver to the H igh Plains. through Louisiana down thence These studies tow er over other Texas W ater Plan proposals; w ater lost by ev a­ poration and seepage will be an im p o rtan t facto r of cost. The rev ersal of the flow of th e R ed R iver, A rkansas River, o r th e Colorado R iv er is a possibility. to its final destination A concrete, m an-m ade riv er, will be needed to ta k e the w ater aw ay from the riv er channels in the P anhandle. N uclear energy m ight be req u ired for this project since the electric pow er needed to pum p this million a c re feet of w ater will be equal to the total pow er now consum ed in the state. The expense to deliver this m uch w ater h as been estim ated a t betw een $100 to $200 p er a c re foot as com pared to the $15 dollars now paid by the fa rm e rs in W est Texas for irrigation. W ater becom es u n ­ econom ical for the irrig ato r when its cost exceeds $25 p er ac re foot. Since th e u se r m ust pay the re ­ source to him , consideration will have to be given to providing assistan ce to m ake the p ro jec t's up expense and w hat the individual fa rm e r can econom ically pay. this difference betw'een th e cost of providing im aginative com pacts, leadership, m assive federal help, plus sta te assistan ce this needed will be m andatory w ater to the High P lains a reality. to bring local Most of all, w hether this will be done before the 1980’s or done a t all, it m ust be realized by the u rban citizen th a t the expense of providing w ater for irrigation hundreds of m iles aw ay does directly con­ cern him and his fam ily. this its w ater com m unity's m unicipal, The E dw ards Aquifer supplies th e city to of San Antonio with all of m eet in­ dustrial, and m ilitary b ase req u irem en ts. In addition, reserv o ir provides irrigation for developm ent south and w est of San Antonio and supports the spring flow for the San M arcos A quarena. this underground N evertheless, continued pum ping of the Aquifer under present u n restrain ed condi­ tions to m eet growing needs will d ecrease m unicipal industrial and irrigation supplies and stop the San M arcos springs an av erag e of one m onth a y ear. In addition, the w ater quality of the E d ­ w ard s m ay be im paired by poorer quality w ater seeping the reserv o ir. flow of into the To m eet this a r e a ’s future w ate r r e ­ quirem ents, studies underw ay as a p art of the T exas W ater P lan propose to red is­ trib u te by aqueduct 200,000 a c re feet of w ate r from the Colorado R iver a t Austin o r to San Antonio. This will assu re the continuance the rea l values de­ of rived from a firm .supply of clean w ater w ith the its m ulti-purpose benefits from E d w ard s Aquifer. from other su rface sources the aesth etic and The Low er Rio G rande Valley is noted its year-round production of citrus for fruits, cotton, and vegetables on SIO,OOO acres of irrig ated cropland. However, as a resu lt of the provision for M exican w ater rig h ts below F alcon D am , there will be a g rad u a l loss to farm ing of 25 per cent of these ac res in the next decade. to provide T he P lan proposes through m ean s of the coastal aqueduct of the S tate P ro je ct enough w ater to be able to double the p resen t 800,000 acres now irrig ated in trem endous the Valley. This will give a boost to an in this a re a 's crop production and to the total value of ag ri­ cu ltu re to the state. increase Pollution problems Although the D allas - F o rt Worth are a now treats its sew age, even with this p re­ sent method to be con­ stru cted on the T rinity R iver as p art of the S tate P ro ject will be turned into an alg ae swamp. reserv o irs the T here a re th ree effective m eans of con­ trolling this and other pollution problem s: te rtia ry trea tm e n t, dilution, and rem oval from the area. Of the three, intensive trea tm e n t seem s to offer the best solution under th e Texas W ater P lan. One benefit of this m ethod is th at th at it will enable rese rv o ir w ate r would otherw ise have been to dilute sew age in dow nstream riv e r ch an ­ nels is estim ated th at to tre a t w aste to the degree proposed will req u ire a federal, sta te , and the local cap ital outlay of $1 billion for 21 m etropolitan a re a s in T exas by 1990. to be retain ed for local use. It released Also, fresh w ate r as com pared to sea w ater has adv an tag es in th a t it is usable in its n atu ral sta te and can be distributed to its destination by gravity, In co n trast, saline w ate r m u st first be desalted for consum ption, and then any savings having resu lted from easy im poundm ent a re lost B y William H. Stoll Graduate Student In Public Administration T exas suffered l l droughts betw een 1889 and 1960. By far the w orst w as the d isa s­ tro u s seven-year drought of the Fifties which w as ended by the statew ide floods of 1957. With this recen t experience in m ind, the 1957 S tate L egislature passed the T exas W ater P lanning Act, which w as in effect a planning inventory. The federal govern­ m en t also em b ark ed on a num ber of w ater these being studies, the m ost fam ous of th e T exas B asins P ro je ct presented in 1964. req u irem en ts However, none of these steps touched on th e com prehensive needs for a statew ide integration of w ate r resources pro g ram s based on long-range projections of problem s for all purposes. and of Therefore, in August, 1964, and in response to the fed eral proposals, Gov. John Con- nally directed the T exas W ater Develop­ m ent B oard to p rep a re a plan to assu re S tate determ ination of future w ater de­ velopm ent. U nder the the B o ard ’s executive director, Jo e G. Moore J r ., the prelim in ary Texas W ater Plan w as subm itted in May, 1966. leadership of the satisfy The P lan is projected This envisions reserv o irs, to m eet state, m unicipal, industrial, and irrigation needs to the y e a r 2020. It is a flexible guide to : first, req u irem en ts local w ater within a riv e r basin, and second, to pro­ vide for tran sb asin redistribution of w ater from one region of T exas to another. the construction of 53 new the m odification of six existing ones, and the erection of two salt w ate r b arriers. M assive am ounts of d ata on ground and su rfa ce w ate r o ccurrence sedim entation, w ate r quality, and use, rain fall, an d w eath er projections w ere collected, and continuing d a ta collection p ro g ram s a r e scheduled. These d a ta will then be fed into com puters to o p erate 245 m a jo r rese rv o irs w ith th eir connecting con­ th eir v eyance sy stem s before an d a fte r com pletion. Then, altern ativ e p attern s will be ru n to see if the resu lts check. th a t T exas topographically F o r planning purposes, it should be con­ sid ered is divided Into 15 riv e r basins and eight in ter­ treeless, vening co astal basins. The flat, th e w est a re sem i-arid H igh P lain s divided by the rolling, forested, and sem i-tropical Coastal P la in s to th e east. to the Balcones F a u lt from Population boom T he population of Texas is expected to grow from 9.5 million in 1960 to 30 million by th e y e a r 2020. Of this n u m b er, 85 per cen t will live in u rb an a re as. T he P la n m e a su re s w ater by an acre- foot — one a c re covered by w ate r to a dep th of one foot or about 326.000 gallons. In the nex t 50 y ea rs, m unicipal, in d u strial, and to irrig atio n w ate r needs will triple 36 m illion acre-feet y ea rly . Today, ground w a te r reso u rces, which a re dwindling and a r e p riv a te an d not public p ro p erty , fu r­ nish 80 p er cent of the total sta te req u ire­ m ents. H ow ever, by the tu rn of this cen­ tu ry , this figure will be rev ersed , with 75 p er cent of T exas w ater needs supplied through th e use of su rface w ater developed by the P lan . An in teg ral p a r t of the T exas W ater P lan is th e S tate P ro je c t which is b asical­ ly a 980-mile conduit, m ad e up of both aqueducts and riv e r channels, which sa tis­ fies d em an d s and p erm its m ultiple use of w a te r along its route. is th e Red R iv er and The basic origin and supply for the sys­ the Sulphur te m R iv er basins in n o rth east T exas. Two and one-half m illion a c re feet of w ater will p a ss through th e Cooper R eservoir to the T rin ity R iv er with a portion of it diverted for use in th e D allas-F o rt Worth are a. The w a te r will flow down the T rinity channel fo r 70 m iles the T eh u a ca n a R eservoirs. the R ichland and to Then, it will be tran sfe rred by aqueduct to the B razos R iver in which the w ater w ill m ove 170 m iles dow nstream w here it the Colorado w ill ag ain be diverted R iv er. A fter flowing a short distance in th is channel, the rem aining w ater will be tra n s fe rre d to P alm etto Bend R eservoir an d then m oved down the 190-mile coastal to aqueduct reaching its final destination In the lower Rio G rande Valley. This system involves m oving a m assive am ount of w ater when is considered th at the total capacity of Lake Austin is only 20,000 a c re feet. it to evaporation It is estim ated that if will take two weeks for w ater from tho Texar kana R eservoir to reach the Rio G rande Valley. Loss of w ater seepage m ay due av erag e 20 p er cent. The unlined aqueducts in various portions of the S tate P ro ject will be channels as m uch as 200 feet wide and 20 feet deep. and The expense of the P lan which includes the S tate P ro je ct will be S3 billion. More­ over. the cost of the conveyance system s needed the w ater will be tw ice th at of reserv o ir construction. to distrib u te in these The redistribution of this resource from the north eastern to the eastern and south­ ern p art of Texas will satisfy the long- industry, and ran g e potentials of cities, In addition, irrigation riv e r navigation, flood control, h u rrican e protection, and riv er and b ay w ate r quality will be provided for. To solve the pressing problem of m eeting the irrig atio n req u ire­ m ents in West T exas, a n um ber of pro­ posals a re now under consideration. regions. in th e High P lains The now com pleted Canadian R iv er P ro ­ ject is a m in iatu re rep lica of th e future S tate P ro ject. L ake M eredith serv es a s the supply for this P a n ­ handle p ro ject through m ean s of a 322- m ile aqueduct system which furnishes the m unicipal and industrial req u irem en ts for l l cities in the region including Lubbock in p re p a ra ­ and Am arillo. Twenty y ears tion and construction, the conveyance sy s­ tem s am ounted to tw o-thirds of the total expense. “Safe yield approach” The Texas W ater P lan is based on “ the safe yield ap p ro ach " —a full y e a r’s supply of w ater in each reserv o ir over and above the w orst drought in the sta te 's history. According to trad itio n al riv er basins hy­ drology, in con­ rese rv o irs a re planned sideration of norm al riv er flow with flood sto rag e sp ace then added. D uring tim es of r e ­ flooding conditions, lease excess flood w ater by spillw ays into the channel below. As this process is con­ the riv er basin by each tinued on down succeeding r e ­ this potential source is eventually lost to the ocean. reserv o irs reserv o ir, filled floods, H ow ever, like droughts, affect different riv e r basin s a t different points in tim e. The P lan proposes tran sferrin g this released w ater to other regions of Texas w here ad equate then exists. reserv o ir sto rag e This m assive tran sb asm redistribution of excess flood w ater will enable a form er nuisance situation to be utilized to provide additional m eans of satisfying expanding req u irem en ts without sta te consum ption th e loss of this reso u rce to th e Gulf of Mexico. therew ith annually. The A griculture production values and associated the agribusiness are second only to those of the petroleum and n atu ra l gas industries in total value to the sta te , and these am ount to som e $8.5 bil­ food, and lion allied products industries sustain a la rg e r p a rt of th an any the T exas population oth er source. M oreover, the overall econo­ m y of the sta te seem s to be destined to rem ain ag ricu ltu rally b ased for y ears to com e. farm ing, Economic irrigation farm ing. With Half of the value of Texas ag ricu ltu ral crop production com es from eight million a c res of irrig ated farm lan d or one-fifth of the total cropland acreag e. The reason is th a t irrigation is sim ply m ore econom ically advantageous — bigger crops can be grown per ac re than on com parable d ry ­ land farm ing, drought and m oisture inadequacies become controllable. However, conditions, w eather v ariatio n s continue to be the m ost im portant uncontrollable in pro­ duction fluctuations and crop failure. Thus, irrigation provides protection of costly and capital investm ent on round, g u aran tees to consum ers a y ea r irrig ated dryland facto r under farm the Bill Stoll received his bachelor in busi­ ness ad m in istratio n in m an ag em en t at the U niversity of A rkansas in June, 1966. He is now doing g rad u a te w ork in public a d ­ m in istratio n , fellowship through the U n iv ersity ’s In stitu te of P ublic Affairs. H r also is interning with the Texes C oordinating System of Colleges and Uni­ v ersities. and he has a T h e Da il y T e x a n Th# D aisy Texan, a itu d e n t n e w jp a p e r at The U n ite rs ty it p u b lish e d d« ‘y except M o n d a y end o f Texas et A u stin S a t u r d a y and h o lid a y p e rio d s S e p te m b e r thro u gh M a y and Inc., M o n t h ly D raw er D, U n iv e rsity Sta tio n , A u stin Texas 78712. S e c o n d ­ cla ss p o sta ge p a id at Austin, Texas. In A u g u s t b y Texas S tu d e n t Pu b licatio n s N e w s co n trib u tio n s will be a c c e p te d b y telephone { G R 1-5244) or at th# e d ito ria l off lea, J.B. 103 or a t the news In q u irie s co n c e rn in g del v ery sh o u ld la b o ra to ry , J.B b e m a d e in J B. 107 { G R I-524-41 end a d v e rtisin g J. B. Ill ( G R 1-3227.) 102. S kill Interstate cooperation In addition, in terstate cooperation and A S S O C I A T E D P R E S S W I R E S E R V IC E The A s so c ia te d Press it exclusively entitled to th# use fo r re p u b lica tio n this item s o f sp on tan e o us o rig in p u blish e d herein. R ig h ts of a n e w spap e r a n d o f pu b lica tio n of all o th a r m a tfa r h a rtin alto rosarvad . it or n o t otherwise cre d ite d news d isp a tch e s c re d ite d local to in N A T I O N A L E D U C A T I O N A L A D V E R T I S I N G S E R V IC E S The D a ily Texan is re p re se n te d n a tio n a lly in the fie ld o f a d ve rtisin g b y th# D e 'iv e re d b y carrier within A u stin area from 12th to 38th In te rre g io n a l H ig h w a y a - d J efferson to D e liv e re d b y m ail within Travis C o u n t y D e live re d b y m ail o u tsid e Travis C o u n t y but within U S Sem ester (fa ll o r s p r in g ) $3.50 Sem esters {fall and s p rin g ) $6.75 4.75 3.50 9.00 6.75 The o p in io n s expressed in the e d ito ria l colum n are these of the editor. A ll e d ito ria ls unless sig n e d ere written b y the editor. G u e s t e d ito ria l view s ere not necessarily the e d ito r s. A n y o p in io n s expressed in The D a ily Texan ere not necessarily those of The U n ive rsity o f Texas ad m in istra tio n or Bo ard o f Regents. P E R M A N E N T STAFF EDITOR ......................................J O H N E C O N O M ID Y C A R O L Y N N IC H O L S M A N A G IN G E D IT O R ASST. M A N A G IN G E D IT O R LELA A B E R N A T H Y LYN NELL J A C K S O N N E W S EDITOR SPORTS EDITOR ............................ L A R R Y U P S H A W .......... P A U L A BULLARD A M U S E M E N T S EDITOR M A R Y M O R P H IS FEATURE EDITOR STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Issue News E d ito r .................................. Mary Ann Teat Asst. Issue News E d ito rs........................ Leslie Donovan, Kay Parlchurst Make-Up Editor ........................... . Kellyn Rozier C opy Editor .......................................... Jan Marston Wire E d it o r ............................ Donna Dickerson Issue Sports Editor .................................. Richard Hill Issue Amusements Editor ...................... Renee Fendrich Editorial Page A ssista n t........................... Fred DuBos® Paga 2 Thursday! M ay ll! 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN r First TV Auction Teems With Action As of 9:30 p.m. Wednesday the KLRN-TV auction had raised a sum of $11,209.74 with bids still streaming in. According to Winston Bode, as­ sistant office auction manager, Austin is experiencing “ an auc­ tion fever.** “ We have sold over 300 of the 1.000 available items, and we are getting enough now items from people to be well stocked all week.” he said. A BREAKDO W N of the total sum raised thus far shows $8,924 received bids and $2,285 raised in cash contributions. The auction, which lasts through midnight Saturday, has been sell­ ing everything from vodka mix to shares in the Capital National Bank. A unique side light has been provided through the selling of services. Austin auctioneer How­ ard Chalmers has challenged B ill Moll, production manager of KLRN-TV in San Antonio, to a personal duel. C H ALM ERS SAID the idea be­ gan when girls at the University Arms bid $10 to have him wait tables. “ Ever since then I have been calk'd on to give my serv­ ices to such jobs as hauling gar­ bage and working in kitchens.” A steak dinner will be given the winner of the duel, and right now Chalmers has an edge as he was offered $50 to be auctioneer at the Laguna Gloria Art Festi­ val. Professor Wins Parkman Award Dr William H. Goetzmann, University professor of history and 1967 Pulitzer Prize winner, received another award, the ac­ claim of his colleagues, Wednes­ day night in New York City'. He was awarded the annual Francis Parkman Prize by the Society of American Historians for his Pulitzer Prize winning book, “ Exploration and Em ­ pire; The Explorer and the Sci­ entist in the Winning of the Amer­ ican West.” Tile Francis Parkman Prize, named for a Nineteenth Century American historian, is given for the book that best combines lit­ erary and scholarly excellence. It consists of a $500 cash prize and bronze medal. Goetzmann, head of the Uni­ versity American Studies pro­ gram, considered the awrard es­ pecially meaningful since it rep­ resented the acceptance of his work by professional historians. Austin auction bidders must call G R 7-6431 with their offers. For items shown from the San An­ tonio studio, bids must be called to operators there at TA 8 1212. Democrats Hear Chairman Talk W ill Davis told the Conservative Democrats Wednesday that he welcomed disharmony within tin* ranks of the Democratic Party it brought because sometimes constructive results. The CD’s followed the State Democratic Executive Committee chairman’s advice almost to the hilt with about an hour of parlia­ mentary wrangling to decide who would run the organization’s af­ fairs this summer as well as in the fall. W HEN T H E SM O KE cleared, the following slate was accepted: B ill Green, president; Bryan Reid, first vice-president; Frank Williams, second vice-president; Toni Hartley, secretary; and Van Carter Secrest, treasurer. Davis said he had “ confidence that the trend In Austin today under die Democratic Party lead­ ership is to protect and preserve the system of enterprise and free­ dom that has made our history and our achievements unique in the world.” In an interview Tuesday after­ noon. Secrest, the newly elected treasurer, said the purpose of the organization was to follow the conservative and middle-of- the road policy observed by Democrats in Texas. Secrest said the organization was formed by Y D ’s as well as Young Republicans who were dis­ satisfied with the activities of their respective groups. Under policy guidelines adopted at the meeting, the CD’s adhere to the following: • “ To represent the student Democrats of the University as fairly and impartially as possi­ ble; • “ Political opposition to SDS and other extremist organizations on college campuses; • “ Support of Texas’ right to determine its own wage guide­ lines without outside Interfer­ ence; • “ Advocating and strengthen­ ing the existing State drug laws, and deploring the use of drugs on the campus; • “ Strong support of the Viet Nam war effort and support of reasonable escalation to end the war.” - Photo B y V .ibU Johnson Banquet Honors Band Director Scholarships and awards for Longhorn Band members were presented at a banquet at West­ wood Country Club last weekend. Vincent R. DiNino. director, received a set of six-foot wide Longhorn horas. DiNino called them a “ magnificent set" and announced he plaas to place them either in his office or the new band hall when it is built. Sh arvo Uecker and Katherine Newton received $25 scholarships for having the highest grade point averages of those members carrying a maximum number of hours. Til ose students named out­ standing members were Thomas Edwards, senior; Carolyn Owens, junior; George Greene, sopho­ more; and Ken Williams, fresh­ man. The band’s freshman advisers received and counselors also awards. 4 Emergency Phones Installed On UT Campus The Austin Fire Department has recently placed about 200 emergency boxes throughout the city. There are four now located on the campus. Inside the box is a phone di­ rectly connected to die Austin Fire Department operator. Tile phones may be used for any type of emergency. Present campus locations of th a phones are north of the Journal­ ism Building, west of the Main Building, between Garrison Hall and the Geology Building, and behind Batts Hall. Liberals Want Chancellor's Review SOS Reinstated Honors R O T C Cadets Travis County Liberal Demo­ crats have adopted a resolution urging that the Students for a Democratic Society he restored to .status as a University official student organization, In a letter to the American- Statesman, Mrs. Gus Gonzales, chairman of the liberal Demo­ cratic gn)up, said that this reso­ lution had been adopted; “ Because we believe basic prin­ ciples of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution have boon violated by The Uni­ versity of Texas administration in their ‘elimination’ of the Stu­ dents for a Democratic Society as an approved campus organiza­ tion and the punishment of six students for attending a meeting to organize a Viet Nam W ar peace demoastration, therefore, we urge Frank Erwin Jr . and Chancellor Harry Ransom to take Immediate action to rescind their official de­ cision In that matter and to guar­ antee full constitutional freedoms to the academic community.” Mrs. Gonzales said the organi­ zation has about 200 members. SALE TWO HOURS OHLY The annual Chancellor’s Re­ view was held Tuesday to honor the outstanding cadets and mid­ shipmen of all three ROTC units of the University. Tile first of the awards from the collected branches went to the fall semester Commander of the Army ROTC brigade. Austin City Councilman Travis LaRue, representing the city, presented a saber to Cadet Col. Alan K. Du- Rois. Tile second award, the General Dynamics Awrard, presented to the individual with the highest grade point average in the Naval ROTC, was presented by Chancel­ lor Harry Ransom to Midshipman Fourth Class R. B. Wellborn Tile third and final award of the afternoon was the John Ed­ win Simpson Memorial Award given to the outstanding gradu­ ating cadet of the Air Force ROTC. Cadet Col. Kenneth E. Eickmann received the award from Chancellor Ransom. Other members of the review party were Dr. H. Malcolm Mac­ Donald, University liaison officer for ROTC; Dr. Lynn W. McCraw, chairman of the Armed Services Committee; and Dr. Alfred H. LaGrone, member of the Armed Services Committee. Also in at­ tendance were Colonel Max H. LaGrone, professor of naval sci­ ence; Lt. Col. Robert L. Phillips Jr., professor of m ilitary science; and Lt. Col. K arl Y. Benson Jr., professor of Air Force science. (>K iio w how*’ . . . from 25 years of experience 2013 Guadalupe G R 2-3210 or G R 2-7677 —where typing for students is a fall-time career. Typing T H U R S D A Y F R O M 6 P.M. TO 8 P.M. P E R M A N E N T P R ESSED SLACKS $ C 7 7 U M B R E L L A S 12 Assorted Solid Colors Free Alterations ennj SE L F O P E N E R 3 88 * M E N ’S WEAR — 2222 Guadalupe NEXT TO THE TEXAS T H EA T R I F O R M O T H E R ’S D A Y : Replique R A P H A E L of P A R IS The fragrance that states her sophistication, eloquently. Vince DiNino, Band Director, Accepts G ift . . . presented to him by band president Tommy Cowan. Suffering from soring semester slump? The hero of this bestseller found an Ingenious way out aa. the »• lh „ C .IC B .' “> ’ ■ ' John author •* The ■ r s e y H gvMte Leto* i “I would have sworn that (Hersey) had been right there with I tape-recorder in the dormitories, the greasy spoons, the cars and bars.” Th$ N ew York Timts A Bantam Book7950/Where paperbacks are sold tm rrm w sm TODAY Til rou g h Sal u n la y , M A Y 13 Sports Program Begins in June The Department cf Required Health and Physical Education for Women will offer a student and adult program in varied sports, plus a children's swim­ ming program this summer. j The student and adult program will consist of a one hour class meeting Monday through Friday during the two summer sessions. Bowling, exercise, golf, and ten­ nis will be offered during the first term. A fee of $4 for students and $15 for non-students w ill be required. The second term offers bowling, fencing, and tennis at the same fees. i Registration for the terms will be at Women’s Gym IDI on June 6 and Ju ly 19. The children’s swimming pro­ gram, consisting of five classes from l l a.m. to 3:30 p.m., will be held in the Gregory Gym pool Ju ly 18 to Aug. 23. Certain re­ quirements must be met by all applicants regarding h e a l t h , height, and ability. A fee of $27.50 wall be charged for the 27 les­ sons. A child may enroll, a coom panied by parent or guardian, on May 19 at Women’s Gymnasium 101, 3-6 p.m. or May 20 at the same room at IO a.m.-I p.m. En ­ rollment for the second period w ill be on Ju ly 17 at Gregory Gym pool from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. For further information call GR 1- 1862. SPEEDWAY RADIO SALES & SERVICE NEW LOCATION 307 West 19th AUTO STEREO TAPES IN STOCK GR 8-6609 Turn 111 Y o u r Co-Op & Toggery R eceip ts Turn in Toggery and Co-Op receipts in one envelope, downstairs. I HC i t U O l N T i O W * S I O * ! 2246 Guadalupe G R 2-1141 B argain s an E v ery F lo o r 20% O F F any Timex m W A T C H in stock, Pen Counter, Street Floor. 10% O F F all H A R D B O U N D B O O K S,G en eral Books, Second Floor. y 1 1 C O M P A R A B L E S A V IN G S O N 7 O T H E R S P E C IA L S T O D A Y P lus y o u r ra sh dividend rn i i1“N I V |R s E I It Y I d c O p THE STUDENTS OWN STORE 0 2246 Guadalupe • ~7 X . . . . ~ G R 21141 'TTT'* . . V . k, - , - V FRAGRANCE PRODUCTS FROM 42.50 TO 425.00 A n elegant message that lingers for hours as an exciting whisper of her femininity. Beautiful for c ving on Mother's Day. COSMETICS STREET FLOOR Com e by for your FREE Replique perfume sample. Thursday, M ay ll, 1967 THE D A ILY T E X A N Bag. After 50 Years in Baseball Folk Ends Legendary Career By MIKE LONSFORD That gam e was the genesis of he has been here ever since. Mm m •Iii' I' I P S P Tri If e te Clarence Johnson Keeps Going Higher By The Associated Prone ford. BERKELEY, Calif How high can University Cali­ fornia freshmen G arance John­ son jump? His varsity counterpart. Willie Nutt, thinks “ maybe five more inches.’’ Coach Sam Bell declines to doesn’t answer and seem very concerned. Johnson All three the world agree record is within Johnson's range. Clarence concedes, “ Yes, it s a possibility.” Last Saturday the 19-year-old import from San Antonio cleared 7 feet, Z % inches. Only the early birds saw it, because it was in the the California varsity meet at Stan­ freshm an prelude to Johnson's m ark stands fourth highest in track and field history and second best by an American. R ussia’s Valeri Brumel holds the world record at 7-5%, China's Ni Chih Chin cleared 7-5%, and John Thomas of Boston 7-3.3. fifth Saturday saw Johnson's fourth and the once trips over magic 7-foot barrier. He did It first last year for St. Peter Claver Academy, a small Catholic High School in San Antonio. That jump, however, was m ade in a meet which had non-scho­ lastic competitors, so Johnson’s school official record remains 6-11%. national high In frosh meets he has gone over 7-% and 7-0. Now . . . Make Your Own AIRY EXOTIC LEATHER SANDALS ^Jhe ^ J 4 eia lit O f *S u m m e r ^ Jash ion CARAVAN SANDAL KITS— EASY TO ASSEMBLE. DYE THEM THE COLOR YOU WANT. ONLY $3.95 ALSO: THE CLASSIC HANDBAG KIT JUST LACE IT — $16.95 TANDY LEATHER CO. 413 W . 6 th St. rn UT's Illustrious Coach • . . retires from Longhorn scene. DO YOU K N O W ... that A m e ric a n - A m i c a b l e H o i - pitalixation m iice aneous b e n e ­ fit* are not a ll o c a te d or i c h e d - ttlad? Jm Brican / V b, I m ioable IH E INSURANCE COMPANY C X B C U T Iv e O F F I C E S , W A C O ,T E X A S 9 0 6 W . 1 9 t h A u s t i n , T e x a s G R 2 - 4 1 0 8 End of Term SPECIALS On July I, Bibb Augustus Falk, Longhorn baseball coach for a quarter of a century, will retire. No longer will the B ibber’s acid adjectives, vinegary verbs, and caustic echo over Clark Field, delighting genera­ tions of fans, players, and sports­ writers. Falk's winning skein ex­ emplifies Bibb Falk, the coach. Time has carved out the living legend of Bibb Falk the man. comments in making Like all loyal Longhorns. Falk delights the Texas Aggies look ridiculous and impo­ tent. In a baseball gam e at Col­ lege Station in 1918, he did just that. As the Longhorn hurler, “ Lefty” Falk had limited the Aggies to a few scattered hits, while at bat he already had gone two for two partisan that spectators had been raucous and malevolent throughout the game, and their they had directed vehemence directly at Falk, afternoon. The for third FALK STEPPED up the to the plate tim e and clouted a high, hard drive over the right field wall. As he trotted leisurely down to first base, the stands drew quieter. As the Bibber continued on to third, the noise from lowered to a whisper. When he reached third, Falk slowed to a walk and saun­ tered in to home plate. By this time, the stands were completely silent. the crowd Directly in front of home plate. Falk stopped and surveyed the stands with disdain. “ What's the m atter with you m ugs?” he yelled. “ Ain’t you never seen a big leaguer before?” Bibb Falk folklore. What becam e known as IN THREE years as a player for Texas, Falk batted .400 and never lost a game as a pitcher. the Black Sox scandal shook the base­ ball world after the 1919 season when eight Chicago White Sox players, in collusion with gamb­ lers, threw the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds. The subse­ quent housecleaning by the White Sox created several hard-to-fill vacancies. Though he had a year of college eligibility left. Falk signed with the White Sox and boarded a train for Chicago. He had been a pitcher at Texas, but when he reported to Chicago Falk demanded to be shifted to the outfield take fuller ad­ vantage of his batting prowess. the Sox m anager re­ At first, fused. to Then one afternoon in 1920, the m anager slipped Falk into the lineup as centerfielder. “ON MY first time at bat, I hit a home run,” Falk recalled. “ The next time up, I hit another homer. The third time I was up, I got a single. I didn’t get a hit m y last trip to the plate, though,” he snowed. “ The pitcher got clever and walked m e.” Falk from then on becam e an outfield fixture. A clipping from the Austin American of July 12. 1924. sum ­ med up another of Falk’s ac­ complishments: “ Bibb Falk has gotten 14 hits in the last seven games. He is the leading hitter of the American League with an average of is clinging to second place . . . ” .372. Babe Ruth THE COLORFUL baseballer ac­ crued m any nicknames through the years. “ Lefty,” “ Whitey,” and “ the Bibber” among some. One he earned during his years in the m ajor leagues was “Jock­ ey,” for while in his own dug­ out he constantly chided and m ade verbal fun of opposing bat­ ters. And umpires. During one particular game. Falk was at bat and the count was three and two. Just as the pitcher started his wind-up. Falk stepped out of the batters’ box. He explained to the umpire that the wind had blown dust into his eyes. “ It seems funny to m e,” said the ump. “ that you players are alw ays getting sand in your eyes and we umpires never do.” “ That’s because,” Falk replied, “ you guys always have your eyes closed.” FALK IS philosophical about his highly successful m ajor lea­ gue career, a career in which he attained many honors, but not the one he wanted most—-he nev er played in a World .Series. “ You play every day year In and year out,” he said. “Some years are better than others, but since we weren’t in any World Series, there s nothing much to single out.” Tn 1940, Falk returned to the Forty Acres, this tim e as head baseball coach, succeeding his old coach, Uncle Billy Disch. In his first year at the Longhorn helm, Falk saw his team win the South­ west Conference championship, the first in a long line of many. HE DIDN’T have to, but at the end of the 1942 season, Falk ex-1 changed his Longhorn uniform I for one of Uncle Sam’s. Stationed a t Randolph Air Force Base in San Antonio, he quickly made sergeant and was put in charge of the Randolph Ramblers base­ ball team. An event the following year was picked up by the news wire .services and brought a little laughter to an America preoc­ cupied with the gravity of war. One afternoon Falk had some of his players on a ditch-digging detail. As usual, he was goading, cussing, insulting, and driving them. “ Oh, come on. Coach,” moaned one of “ Rome the sufferers. wasn’t built in a day!” A FELLOW shoveler quickly re­ plied, “ Yeah, and Bibb Balk job wasn’t either!” foreman on that Talk returned to his coaching job at the University in 1946, and An avid Falk fan, Wilbur Evans, former University sports news director, said of the coach W'ho is a perennial pessimist and a perennial winner, “ Bibb . . . always instilled the desire to per­ form leaguers. Every­ thing Bibb ever did w’as big lea­ gue.” like big A good example was his deci­ sion to end his o w t i career in the m ajors while still on top. He had lifetime average for 12 .314 a years and is rated one of the greatest of all defensive out­ fielders. But when he began to slow down, he quit playing. “ IT WAS beneath Bibb’s dig­ nity,’’ commented an old friend, “ to be anything but a big leaguer. Bibb never had much patience with mediocrity.” This Falk's season m arks fiftieth year in baseball, and the 68-year-old coach hasn’t mel­ lowed at all. M urray Wall, two-time All- American pitcher on Falk's 19-19 and 1950 national champion team, said of the crusty Falk’s coaching techniques, “ He never had a kind word or compliment for anyone. This . . . keeps his players deter­ mined to show him he is wrong.” Never at a loss for words, Falk has a crusty comment for any occasion. In a 1953 game with TCU, for example, the Longhorn star out­ fielder hit a game-winning homer over the center field wall, only to be greeted by Falk's “You’re gonna learn to pull the ball one of these days-” When congratulated in Decem­ ber, 1961, on his selection to the Texas Hall of Fame, the Bibber rem arked, “ They ran out of those big names. Now they're down to the next level.” LAST YEAR, w-hen the South- wrest Conference baseball race ended in a four-way tie, Texas winning the right to compete In the NCAA playoffs by virtue of a coin toss. Falk commented suc­ cinctly, “It figures.” But perhaps the most notorious of Falk's irrepressible pronounce­ ments was unleashed after the last game of the 1953 season. The University of Texas had to beat the Texas Aggies in the final two games of the season to clinch the conference crown. TEXAS EASED by the Aggies in the first game but trailed in the second 2-0. There were two out in the bottom of the ninth. Somehow, two Steers managed to reach base. The next batter up wras Paul Mohr, All-American first baseman who specialized in hit­ ting the long ball. Falk called time. He told Mohr that if the pitcher tried to walk him intentionally, to step in there and take a swing at the ball anyway. The pitcher did. Mohr did. But Mohr was overanxious. Usually a line drive, home run hitter who pulled left­ handed Mohr punched a high pop fly out into left field. The ball game was all but over. the ball well, the BUT THE BALL got up Into the wind. The Aggie leftfielder and the centerfielder camped out under it. waiting for it to come down. The ball seemed to float down, and w-atching it descend, the Aggie outfielders moved back, then moved back some more. Finally they had backed up all the way to the fence and the ball barely dropped over for a three- run homer that won the game and the championship. And as Mohr rounded the b a s e s , Falk was in the dugout, shouting for all the world to hear, “He did exactly what I told him to do.” STUDENTS 18 & OVER In terv iew * now bein* a rra n g e d opportunity b y aa l e a r old firm , T o th o se who q u a n t) o a r A rm o tte rs : tin to Join o th e r stu d en ts In • p ro v en aucceM fnl sch o la rsh ip p ro g ra m h a rk e d stu d en t* seek in g n im m e r «*iptoyTne«it, to r I *112 p er week s a la ry w ith o p p ortunity 4. I o t l l t i .QOS sch o la rsh ip s. to r m o re. % K v ocative m a n a g e m e n t 3. MI ex p en se p a id trip B rach , tra in in g . post g rad u atio n . | . R ec o m m e n d ed b ack g ro u n d w o rt tm t a W aikiki I . I p to 13 w eek* co ntinuous em p lo y . m e e t g u a ra n te e d . to r rn s im ila r p ro g ra m M en ac cep te d T h ese Jobs m a y dev elo p F o r ap p o in tm en t call Mr. H iiF ree. S an Antonio CA or CA 3-31ftft. ta to p a r t tim e o r ta ct s a m m e r a v e ra g e d 1153.3ft p e r w eek. tim e positions a ttry S ep te m b er, In H ouston CA S-3M4 full GBD Pipes ‘ 5 — ‘ 3 0 T O B A C C O S Mild British Aromatic Balkan PIPES-TOBACCOS 112 E. 6th ( L it tle fie ld B ld g . ) Eat A t Uncle Van's Restaurant (Pancake House) Delicious Pancakes * Ham burgers and Shakes * Com plete Restaurant Menu * Newly Redecorated * Reasonable Prices * Lots of Parking Space * Pleasant Service WaZaPi PANCAKE HOUSE 19th and Guadalupe Summer in San Francisco ? Let the Collegiate Guide To San Francisco Show You Around A complete, up-to-date guidebook to non-tourist San Francisco. Written by students for students! Send $1.00 to: GUIDE 170 Bridge Road Hillsborough, California 94010 Suits S u m m e r p o p lin s, dacron a n d w o o l blends, lig h t­ w e ig h t h o p sack s in tr a d itio n a l th re e -b u tto n styling. Reg. 49.95 to 79-95 Reduced 20°/q Sport Coats E n tire stock o f solids, plaids a n d patterns. Also, D B. blazers, g reat to c o o rd in a te w ith sum m er slacks. Reg. 35.00 to 69-95 Reduced Dress Shirts E n tire stock of short sleeve dress shirts in solids, in w h ite an d co lor b a c k ­ ta ttersalls a n d stripes g r o u n d s . Reg. 6.00 to 9.00 Sport Shirts E n tire stock of su m m er sp o rt shirts in a w id e range o f fan tastic colors. M an y are Sta-Prest. Reg. 6.00 to 10.00 Reduced 25 % Reduced 25°Jq 1346 Guadalupe Onthe-drog Jack Alorton5 (U Raga 4 Thur*day, May ll, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Snoddy Opposite Field Hitter UT First Baseman Wins Batting Crown 1 GANT Shirts at S tttV rij 5$) Op M e r r itt ^ c h a e f e r & [Tjrow n Congress & Sixth • Hancock Center iidered to be) a fine job." ADD .392, the fielding, and a SWC championship for the Long­ horns and anything tends to be superfluous. Yet Monday Snoddy was named as first baseman on the 1967 All-Southwest Confer­ ence team. to Snoddy said he la “looking for­ the College World ward Series.” In the way of prepara­ tion for Omaha he said the I long­ horns” are going to work out TTS this week, or anytime that the weather is cool.” No doubt Important to every­ one with the college playoffs pending is the fact that this will be Coach Bibb Falk s last. The team w-ould like to see him go out a winner, and Falk probably would not mind It either. IT’S EASY to tell that this is on Snoddy’s mind. Asked what he leaving, about Falk thought Snoddy commented that “nothing against (Cliff) Gustafson - the new coach - but I ’m really sorry Coach Falk is retiring. He has helped me in a lot of ways, and I really would like to go out under him.” He also said he “is looking forward to playing tinder Gustafson.” It’s no doubt that the new skip­ per from South San Antonio would like to have more people like Snoddy come in. Bob is a junior, a transfer from Odessa Junior College, where in his freshman year, Bob relates, the team had a 25-4 record. The next year they were 21-6, The school had, in Snoddy’s humble opinion, one of the finer JC teams in the country. Prior to that Snoddy graduated from Odessa Permian, where he hit freshman and teamed with present mate Pat Brown for two seasons. .325 aa a ALTHOUGH he was not chosen in the pro draft out of high school and has not been contracted in college — the four year rule prohibits that — Snoddy is still interested in turning pro once he graduates. Displaying notable !eve!-head edness, Bob says that it “proba bly would not be to my benefit to sign now if someone con­ I ’ve always tacted me. But wanted to play pro and hope I can once I ’ve graduated.” By JIM MORRIS Texan Sports Writer Th# picture of Bob Snoddy brandishing his mace hardly re­ minds anyone of the legendary “Wee Willie” Keeler, who per­ formed in another baseball epoch with the old Baltimore Orioles. The two Just don’t match up. This is so mainly because while Keeler measured a tower­ ing 5-5 or so, Snoddy fills the at­ mosphere around home plate with his 6*2, 200-pound frame, a sight which has been no en­ couragement whatsoever this year to the pitchers in the Southwest Conference. YET T H E Y ’R E strangely similar. In 1893, serving with Largest Selection at Clyde's WHY WE CARRY C B A r s l TA w There's more thai) fabric superiority in Gent In addi­ tion, “needled-lnto tile warp and woof of every Gant shirt'* — there*s flair-fit show — three vital inher- ents that make an the difference when a man wears a Gant We chose Gant because they take shirt making seri­ ously. They're hard to please (like we are) when it comes to fit of collar, Its roll, its profile— how much it shows above the suit collar. They’re fastidious about the way the body of the shirt drapes and folds. All must integrate to achieve that viable ingredient which gives comfort and aplomb. In substance, Gant shirts are keyed to the discerning tastes of well groomed men who appreciate quality. These men are our customers. GM*- Camfi&tflL, Ibiivemhj Shop 2350 Guadalupe "W here the natural-shoulder man makes the most of his natural assets” John “Mugsy” McGraw and their other compatriots on the National League Orioles, Willie “hit them where they ain’t” (in his own picturesque words) and finished the season with a .432 batting average. This year Snoddy, playing a starring role in Texas’ march to Omaha, pounded out .392 in con­ ference to lead the SWC, while doing most of his damage in the same manner as that employed by diminutive Keeler, strangely enough. the A QUICK check at this sea­ son’s records reveals that, of 20 hits credited to Snoddy In confer­ ence play, IO went to either left or left center field. Over the course of the entire season, 18 of Snoddy’s total of 30 safeties travelled to the left of second base. He made four others directly to center. Asked about his talents at op­ posite field hitting, Snoddy ex­ plained that “I hit the ball where it is pitched. I got lots of curves away from me over the course of the season, so I just went to the opposite field.” Snoddy made good when it counted. The statistics for the full season show him leading the club in runs batted In with 21, his closest competitions being outfielders and George Nauert, with 18 each. In conference play, Nauert edged out Snoddy, 12 ribbys to IO, while Brown also attained the latter number to tie Bob for second. Brown Pat IT WAS generally believed by observers that Texas’ fielding at first base would suffer following the graduation of gangly Buddy Young, who held the ’66 infield together with his work at the bag. Snoddy responded to the chal­ lenge and posted a fielding mark over the entire season of a lofty .988, making only three errors while accepting 241 chances. His glovework in conference hum­ med a .944 tune, with only one miscue and 145 putouts. into infield Asked if he had any trouble fitting for the Texas, Snoddy said he “had an easy time of it. Til ere weren’t throw's, and that many bad everyone else did (what he con- s Karate Squad Captures Wins Tile University Karate Club, consisting of 150 students, has built a record in tournaments this year. So far the group has won 15 in major tournaments. trophies This is more trophies than any other college in the nation has won this year. Tire top victory came last week­ end when 18-year-old freshman John Wooley won second place in the black belt division at the national tournament in Washing­ ton. D.C. Wooley was beaten on a dis­ puted decision by Joe Louis of Los Angeles for the Number I ranking in the nation. In addition to Wooley’s stand­ ing at the national tournament. he has compiled a substantial record in other tournaments this year. Two weeks ago three more University k a r a t e members placed in the All-American Cham­ pionship Tournament in Oklaho­ ma City, Okla. Barry Bobbitt, Junior market­ ing major, won first place in the heavyweight green belt di­ vision. John Sweeney, senior law student, won second in the heavy­ weight brown belt division, and Harry Lundell, graduate student lr. philosophy, won second in the lightweight brown belt division. The Karate Club win have no more tournaments this year, but for students interested in learn­ ing about the sport, the group is having a rank t*?st Sunday in the Union Junior Ballroom. Anyone is welcome to attend, and no ad­ mission will be charged. The Wayfarer The colorings In this Gant sport shirt are 8S lush as a tropical garden. And its zephyr- weight cotton hopsack batiste will hold its- crisp facade in the hottest clime. Tailored with singular precision — typically Gant, Tapered Hugger body. Exuberant color selection. 9.00 Congress as Eighth M em ber of Downtown Park and Shop For lazy days... this exuberant paisley print sport shirt ... refreshingly 6ANT. The Wayfarer: in the most torrid dime, this zephyr-weight Gant cotton button-down will hold its crisp facade. And the more it’s washed, the handsomer it gets. Like all Gant shirts, The Wayfarer has elan in a gentlemanly manner. Tapered Hugger body. Exuberant array of colorings. About $9 at discerning stores. N ’T I— f | f=5* 1 “ M / N K BL. F=* 3 S o ld att CLYDE CAMPBELL / MERRITT-SCHAEFER & BROW N / REYNOLDS PENLAND Thursday, May 11, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* S Interviews Continue In Chilean Program interviews exchange Students invited to Thursday’s the Tcxas-Chile an- * nounced Wednesday by Sam Johnson of the International Of­ for program were fice. Interviews will be concluded Thursday, and Johnson hopes the selected students can be notified before the term ends. The pro­ gram awaits approval by the State Departm ent, Johnson said. The following students will be Interviewed, although other ap ­ plicants are still under considera­ tion: Patricia Blazck, sophomore, psychology; Norman Bonner, junior. American studies; Grace Cleaver, junior, English; Llovd Docgett. senior, business. Jo Giese. Alice Embree. junior, anthro­ pology; sophomore, American studies; M artha Glick- m an, junior, Spanish and History’*, Robert Higley. junior, American SIGNIFICANT EVENT First Annua! C H U G & PEDDLE R ELA Y S SATURDAY AFTERN OO N ZILKER PARK Team Entries Invited Call G R 7-4998 studies; Mike Hoffman, government; Joe Krier, government. junior, junior, Susan McCoin, senior, sociol­ ogy; Jam es Medlin, senior, Eng­ lish ; Keith Moore, junior, econom­ junior, ics; Eleanor Newton, sociology*; Martha Paftillo, junior, Plan II; Jim Pape, law. Dianne Rush, junior, special education; Marilyn Tipton, jun­ ior, m athem atics; Eliot Tucker, senior, history ; Dupe Zam arripa, junior, journalism. Honorary Names Award Recipients Kappa Delta Pi. education hon­ orary society, held its annual spring banquet and honored out­ standing m em bers a t the Driskill Hotel Saturday. Scholarships of $100 were pre­ sented to Mrs. Rebecca Ross, for her outstanding a c a d e m i c achievements, and to G. Thomas Rowland, outgoing president, for his contribution to the chapter. Chapter advisers Dr. Jam es Weston and Dr. Willie Holds- worth were aw arded honorary memberships. The University Board of Re­ gents Is composed of nine mem­ bers appointed by the governor for six-year terms. AUSTIN C IV IC THEATRE N O W O N STAG E ”1000 C L O W N S ” Special Student Price $1.75 Friday, M a y 12 8:30 P.M. Call G R 6-0541 for Reservations 204 E. 5th Street K O SH I! ST Y L I S A N D W IC H E S & D E L IC A T E S S E N P A R K P L A Z A C E N T E R 29th at Guadalupe EVERYDAY GIANT SALAMI SANDWICH ON RYE Potato Salad—Dill Pickle—Iced Tea “Take out orders filled promply” THIS MONTH I S Q | V J s C Rrrolirir HOO PICK A GIFT FOR MOTHER'S DAY Sunday, M a y 14 something unusual Choose the C o -O p G ift Shop. O r a cookbook. O r a Kooky stuffed animal. Try a favorite rec­ ord. O r cologne. O r candy. Shop around. from Say " H i ” with a colorful contemporary or traditional Mother s Day card from the C o -O p 's large selection. Let Instant G ift W rap, Downstairs, do the rest. Flu* Your C ask D ividend THE S T U D E N T 5 O W N M O R F ( J ) 2246 GUADALUPE G R 2-114 m ta m m VMW. iiSt6SSBu6tii6m». Page 6 TKurfday* May ll* 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Novelist W right Morris . . . discusses his books with gra d u a te class. 1*11010 by Hie va Dei* Author Criticizes Today's Readers Is the reader dead? Author Wright Morris thinks so. Morris, author of “Love Among the Cannibals” and “The Field of Vision,” spoke as the last guest lecturer of the graduate English series Wednesday on “Fiction As a Symbol System in the Ameri­ can Community.” MORRIS DECRIED symbolic writing, computerized analysis, and nonreaders under the topic of “The Death of the Reader. “ The read er’s death is a result of the belief that there is som e­ thing else to do with a novel be­ sides read it,” M orris explained. For instance, he said, in m ech­ anized analysis of books, “More than Paradise turns up L o s t ,” as “ a poem is deprived of its poetry.” Another harm , he said, Is what study does to reading: “ The stu ­ dent’s eye is on the stam en and the pistil instead of the flower.” HOWEVER, he cited the worst reader as one w*ho buys a book from a best sellers’ club only for I SHS?? p m BjSfWI Jittery Nerves Questions Answered Can Find Peace in Austin Area In Computer Center _ , . r , Need a place to release ten­ sions during finals? Austin is a place with many outlets. Barton Springs is the perfect spot to take chips and dips, or whatever pleases the fancy. And there is room on the rolling hills for everyone. Fun for all ages is found on the train ride at Zilker Park. The miniature train chugs down along a creek and over the crest of the river bank. Zilker in the spring holds un­ usual beauty. On the grounds is a club house with flow*er gardens. Dating to frontier times in the 1840’s log cabin which is among the best preserved in the country. It in­ cludes antique furniture and uni­ que household items. the old Swedish is For nature-lovers, Deer Creek Nature Trail off Red Bud Trail, identified offers native plants with name tags. For a touch of old Spanish at­ mosphere, is Laguna there Gloria at Lake Austin. Moss- covered trees line the peninsula. And for those who want a daz­ zling view of the city at night, there than Mount Bonne!!. finer place is no Geologist Reports Map Completions Dr. Virgil E. Barnes, associate j director of the Bureau of Eco­ nomic Geology, and his associ- ates have finished three sh eets, of the “Geologic Atlas Project.” J He and his associates are pre­ paring a series of 37 sheets of geologic map quadrangles which; cover the entire State. Dr. Barnes, director (rf the pro­ ject, said the Tyler, Texarkana, and Lubbock sheets are pub­ lished, the Sherman sheet is on the press, and six more sheets should come out this year. Com­ pletion of the project will prob­ ably take 15 years. The six sheets to come are El Paso. Plainview, Palestine, Beau­ mont, Houston, and Beeville. The Austin quadrangle may be started this summer. The McDonald Observatory w*as erected after William J. Mc­ Donald of Paris, died in 1926, and left $1 million to the Univer­ sity. “ Your problem is iron poor blood.” If one of your instructors said this after you answered a ques­ tion Incorrectly, you would prob­ ably be angry' at him. But could you get angry* at a computer? The source of the quote Is a com puter which is part of the University’s Computer - Assisted Instruction la b o rato ry Program , of which Dr. C. Victor Bunder- son is director. PERHAPS MORE interesting. Paul Smith, 12, program med the University’s 1440 to give this response when a stu­ dent answers the posed question in a certain way. computer Paul Is a sixth grader at Zil­ ker Elem entary School in Aus­ tin and son of Mrs. Anthelia Smith, who works with curricu­ lum development at the Univer­ sity. He has been interested in computers for about two years— since the CAI began here. Tile program was initiated to ofter students a resource aid. to a s s is t Instructors by giving stu­ dents individual attention, and to It aid curriculum development. in­ is designed to supplement structors by relieving them of timeconsuming drill and rem ed­ ial work, not to replace them, Col. Mark T. Muller, in charge of daily operation and training for the system, said. HE POINTED OUT an advan­ tage of Individualized computer Instruction is “each student gets a tailorm ade course.” The com­ puter makes se­ quences fit patterns of previous student performances. instructional Tile student sits at a term inal type­ consisting of an electric writer over which lesson m a­ terial can be presented and into which the student can type his responses. The University’s IBM 1440 computer has a capacity of 25 term inals which m ay be sup­ plemented bv a computer-con­ trolled image projector and audio tape. Due to be installed May 19 is the larger IBM 1800-1500 Instruc­ tional System. It has a capacity of 32 term inals and perm its stu­ dents to use electronic “ light pens” to respond to information displayed on television-like view­ ing screens. THESE STATIONS will also be able to project color photographs. as well as play pre-recorded sound messages. A computer-controlled printer m akes a report which can be used by an instructor to analyze the work and progress of stu­ dents. II” “Coursewriter To orient to CAI, students must learn lan­ guage so they can communicate with the computer. Col. Muller says most new students can pick up the language in a couple of hours or less. This is the only preparation needed for the pro gram. WIG SALE! N O W $29.95 W IG L E T ...... $59.95 W I G ........... $19.95 W IG L E T ...... ..N O W $9.95 $19.95 $39.95 W IG L E T ...... ..N O W $29.95 N O W $45.00 $90.00 W I G ........... ..N O W $69.95 N O W $119.95 $90.00 F A L L ........... N O W $69.95 $100.00 W IG-FALL . ..N O W $79.95 $ 150.00 W I G ......... F IN A N C IN G A VA ILA BLE! ALL HAIR GOODS ARE 100% HUMAN HAIR EXPERT STA LING—WIGS, W IGLETS & FALLS WIG IMPORTS GR 8-7600 603 W. 29TH ST. Campus Tests for IRS Jobs-M ay 6 and 13 Selections Being Made Now For 650 COLLEGE STUDENTS AT $1.89 TO $2.53 PER HOUR For Next Filing Season Tests Scheduled On Campus SATURDAY, M A Y 6 A N D 13 At 8:30 A.M. and 1:30 P.M. In PHYSICS BLDG, R O O M 201 THREE 4-HOUR W ORK SHIFTS WILL BE AVAILABLE: 7:30 - 11:30 A.M. 12:30 - 4:30 P.M. 6:00 - 10:00 P.M. Eight Hour Day and Evening Shifts for Spouses Some Year Round Jobs Will Also Be Filled In July From These Tests Obtain Admission Forms From Office of Student Financial Aid, W M O B the free dividend, never bothering to study or even read i t “That’s like picking up the check and not eating the m eal,” he said. Morris, discussing the growing role of the critic in American literature, said,” Critics can eith­ er m ake or break a book, pro­ mote or liquidate it. Often the literary notices goes to the THE Critic writing on THE Book, with the critic getting top billing as in 'Sontag on Salinger’ or som e­ thing.” ALSO, many tim es the reader or nonreader’s highest praise of a book is that he read a good review on it, thus, “reading is no longer necessary for litera­ tu re,” said Morris. Conceding that his theory of the reader’s death w*as not ab­ solute, Morris said, “ Perhaps the novel or the novelist or the read­ er aren ’t dead, but some of us are acting mighty peculiar.” Speaking with literary savvy sparked with wit, Morris also commented on: • Reaching the literary sum­ m it: “ What is ‘up’ from there? It means competition against one­ self. . . Norman M ailer’s antics are those of a m ountaineer on that summit. . . just so much can I trapeze, j be done on though, and is fair game for all.” the high the author • The author who wrote a book j “D iary of a R ap ist:” ! called “What does he know about it?” • Symbolism: “ When writing is good, everything Is symbolic, but symbolic writing is rarely anv good.” • When an author to toppled from the sum m it by a critic: “That means one more author the nonreader has not read is al­ ready among the ranks of those it Is too late to read.” Morris will speak again Thurs­ day on “A Museum of Happen­ ings” at 4 p.m. in English Build­ ing 203. I Officers LONGHORN BAND COUNCIL for next year includes Dick Robin­ son, president; Malcolm Nelson, first councilor; Nancy McGehee, second councilor; David Peters, third councilor; John Love, fourth councilor; and George Greene, freshman adviser. PHI SIGMA DELTA, social fra­ ternity, has announced new of­ ficers for 1967. They are Mark Lipkin, president; Ken Levy, vice-president; Gary Steinber- ger, recording secretary; Jay Finegold, chairman; alumni Pete Silverman, house manag­ er; and Randy Davis, intra- murals. SIGMA CHI fraternity has elect­ ed new officers. They are Cul­ len Looney, president; Ronnie Davis, vice-president; Richard Azar, secretary; Randy Addi­ son, junior IFC representative; David Fertitta, senior IFC rep­ resentative; and David Fertit­ ta, pledge trainer. N ELSO N ’S Navajo and Zuni Handmade Indian Jewelry Mexican Imports Ley B. Nelson. Prop. III 4612 So. C o n * . i-M H Campus News in Brief ARMY ROTT is sponsoring a mobile van display showing US Army civic and counterinsur­ gency operations around the world. Included In the display are models, artwork, push-but­ ton devices, map-reading prob­ lems, and a Simula toil counter- guerrilla raid. The van is lo­ cated at the ROTO Building. NEWMAN CLI B will sponsor a games night for international students and club members at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Cath­ olic Student Center. TEXAS STI DENT NURSES AS­ SOCIATION will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at CP Hall. May Hamlin will present a program on m igrant health and officers will be elected. TEXAS UNION AMATEUR RA­ DIO SOCIETY will meet at 6:15 p.m. Thursday in Union Build­ ing 315. The program w ill be a tour of the MARS Station at Bergstrom Air Force Base. Re­ freshments wall be served. UNION STUDENT - FACULTY COMMITTEE Sandwich Semi­ nar series will present Dr. A. licslto Willson, professor of Ger­ manic languages, speaking on “Guenter G rass: Poet With a Political Lilt," at noon Thurs­ day in Union Building 202. Spiritual Revolution Foreseen “ Arrowhead Springs will he the kickoff for the spiritual revo­ lution which will begin on uni­ versity cam puses throughout the nation next fall,*’ John Buell, di­ rector of Campus Crusade for Christ on the University campus, said Wodnosdav night at tile last College Life rally. Buell explained the spiritual revolution and the role of Ar­ rowhead Springs in the campaign. Arrowhead Springs, a 1,735-acre estate located near San B ernar­ dino, Calif., is the international headquarters for Campus Crusade for Christ. Here students attend institutes to leadership training prepare them as Christian lead­ ers for world-wide evangelism. A crowd of about 300 listened as Buell explained that the spir­ itual revolution is the answer for the times because of general dis­ satisfaction with the status quo. Buell challenged all present to attend Arrowhead Springs be­ cause “ the world has a whole let. more than a headache," and a change is needed. He said if nec­ essary one should “break ranks with the crew" and go. The entire cost is $46 plus meals. The trip will be by bus. Students should register for the trip May 31. 'Sick Society Cited By S D S Members Problems ^countered by the recent University Freedom Move­ ment were diagnosed as “ symp­ toms of a sick society” W ednes­ day night on KUT-FM by throe m em bers of Students for a Dem­ ocratic Society. Tom Adams, Tom Smith, and Gary Thiher, speaking on the Stu­ dent Association's “Student Cav­ alcade” series, w'oro questioned by Dr. David Edwards, assistant p r o f e s s o r of government. Thiher said society, made up of “yes” men and apathetic peo­ ple who routines follow daily without ever being able to s e e beyond them, is ruled by author­ itarian organizations. These or­ ganizations the US include government, AT&T, and the Uni­ versity of Texas, he asserted. THE DEMOC R \CY of these in­ stitutions is not the type the SDS wants, the speakers made clear. “ Lyndon Johnson’s brand of Dem­ ocracy is for you to vote for sen­ ators who then vote for policies that LBJ lays down out of white foreign-policy mystic clouds of white paper," one member con­ tended. The University echoes this, they charged, claiming that the proper channels are set up by the ad­ ministration to maintain those in the administration. Discussion on student freedom, they added, took place in back rooms of Regents’ offices, where they said the pres­ ervation of the status quo was planned. UFM went outside the channels to foster discussion, because the channels available to it obstructed and discouraged discussion, the panelists claimed. Thiher ski id students ought to have authority and freedom be­ cause it is a basic right, and if students aren't given that, then they will end up stamped in the sam e authoritarian mold, unable to function as democratic citizens in society. Steven S tom ach Michigan State U niversity Robert Byman University of W ino* M a rk B e t n t r k C o rne ll University (Im Hilt Harvard U niversity l^ry Warner University of Texas Tom Pehn University ai Southern California Confessions of an Organization Man 4. The organization is designed for, aimed at, and directed by flcsh-and-blood men and women. Neither the gray-flannel man nor the beatnik can have a real hand or final voice in the health or the direction of such a structure because neither ha* matured to ifs challenges. All participate to the extent of individual capabilities. lf a student has true and deeply rooted convictions as to where he wants his life to take him and where the world should be going, it behooves him to direct his talents and energies tow ard these goals. He will do this most effectively by becoming involved in one of the several major moving forces or organizat­ io n s in today's society. Business is one of these. —Robert W. Galvin Chairman, Motorola Inc. IT HAS BEEN A FINE YEAR... for discussion. These open letters between a businessman and six different students are coming to a halt for this semester year. But the thinking of businessmen about students and the thinking of students about business will not stop for the summefc lf , on any of the 29 campuses where these letter* have appeared, there are further comments or questions, Mr. Galvin can be reached throughout the year at 9401 West Grand Avenue, Franklin Park, Illinois 60131. Gentlemen: The six of you have reviewed aw ide range of business issues in these open letters with me this year. Run­ ning through al! our dialogue—sometimes stated, more often implicit—have been these two basic ques­ tions: 1. W hat turns a man on? 2. W hat is a life for? Whether we were discussing specific management training programs or the general responsibility of business for the welfare of mankind, we seldom strayed far from what it is that really gets one particu­ lar individual engrossed, what he wants his life to count for, w here he will find his greatest strengths and fullest meaning, and where he wants the world to g a We agreed at the start that students could under­ stand business better and that business could better understand students. We divided students into two groups: men who eventually would enter business, and men who would not. We hoped that the men whom business would "turn on" would not stay out of business for the wrong reasons; we hoped that men attracted to other occupations would under­ stand what had "turned on" the first group. We felt that fuller awareness of what business is and what its actual and possible social roles are would Interest both these groups—the men who would carry out the roles, and the men who w ould observe and judge from outside. Your questions and comments this year have been constantly thoughtful, often appreciative, occasion­ ally misinformed, a few times barbed. To judge by the number of businessmen who have asked for reprints, I shall not be the only one to profit from your candor and your thinking. Most of these other businessmen would agree that, given today's range and variety of businesses and businessmen, you probably could find a company or an executive somewhere to justify even the most disdainful of your comments. We would suggest, however, that the great majority of companies and businessmen do not fit your most baleful stereotype* —and you might wish to avoid the ones which do. Unless, that is, you wished to join them with "reform " consciously in mind. Which brings me to a p o in t! hope you wit! consider during this coming summer: The "organization/' as a central structuring of society, seems to be here to stay for as far into the future as we now can see. It is not a perfect structure but, especially with seven billion people expected on earth by 2000 A.D., there just does not seem any better way to operate. Like all structures, moreover, the "organization" is most readily improved from within. The organization has replaced the tribe guild, order, and economic dukedom . It is no longer rele­ vant to yearn for a W alden Pond or a family farm ty P« of economy—or for a world v\ here sons inevitably followed fathers down into the same mine. W hat Is relevant is to closely study the organiza hon wherever we find it—in business, government, teaching, law, or m edicine-to detect and correct its weaknesses, note the increased freedoms it gives, us, evaluate the powers it is acquiring, and decide what goals we want those powers direr ted toward. As we do this, we shall see with increasing clarity that it is people who direct the o r g a n i z a t i o n . Like the computer, the organization must be the servant, not the master, ot men. No organization, w hether it he Tile HaHs of Ivy or the Executive Suite, is the stultifying, suffocating, soul-destroying monster it has at limes been painted —except to the degree it falls short of its special genius. That "organization man" w hose image you find so repellent is a man who takes root where the organization is failing its mission. The special genius of the organization has several features which should appeal to men of your cal ibre and predilections. Each of the four points I mention here is a goal toward which wise leadership aims. Each can challenge youth. 1. The organization k aimed at the future, ft is formed to fill a future need; its officials are elected to guide its future progress; its most vital problems are those which affect its future. You are oriented toward the future, t e a 2. The organization model is flexible and responsible. You can see this in business when you thought­ fully read the financial news: A merger occurs when changing conditions and changing needs call for changing structures; new goals must be es­ tablished to satisfy new dem ands; new tal­ ents are required to accomplish th e se g o als; a new b u sin ess activity re la te s to new social needs. You also prize flexibility', the exercise of talent, social contri­ bution and involvement. 3. The organization does not demand total commit ment. An organization is an instrument for the accomplishing of a certain set of a man s total goals. When it begins to becom e the sum total of life, it departs from its model, wastes itstalents, and can lose its talented men. You value freedom now; you may soon come to appreciate ttaaclMftas well. Thursday, May ll, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa?* 7 Patty Taylor (I), Donna Moaney of Alpha Xi Delta . . . accept W om en's Irvtramurals trophy from Dean Jack Holland. — rnoto B y V i r g i l J o h n » o a Intramural Winners Named During Awards Ceremony Alpha Xi Delta received first place as the overall winner in the 1966-67 women's intramural program , announced it was Wednesday night at a reception given for intram ural participants. Second place winner was Delta Zeta, and Kappa Kappa Gamma received third. Honorable men­ to Littlefield Dorm, tion went second; first; Newman Hall, Kappa Alpha Theta, third; and Gamma Phi Beta, fourth. THE CO-OP C A T E G O R Y managed by Barbara Tucker re­ ceived the sportsmanship award, and the best m anager award went to Alpha Xi Delta managed by Patty Taylor and Donna Mooney. Participating award winners were Alpha Xi Delta, first; New­ m an Club, second; and Newman Hall, third. Intram ural tournament win­ ners were also announced. In archery, winners wore Delta Zeta, first; Newman Hall, second; and Delta Zeta, consola­ tion. In badminton, doubles competi­ tion was won by Gamma Phi Beta, first; Pi Beta Phi, second and Badminton singles winers were Gamma Phi consolation. Beta, first; Littlefield Dorm, second; and Kappa Kappa Gam­ ma, consolation. BASKETBALL WINNERS were Littlefield Dorm, first; and An­ drews, Blanton, and C a ro le rs Dorms, second, the orange bracket. White bracket winner was Newman Hall, and second place went to Newman Club. in In orange bracket bowling, win­ ners were Gamma Phi Beta, first; and Littlefield Dorm, second. White bracket winners were Newman Hall, first; and Delta Phi Epsilon, second. In fencing, Co-ops won first and second, and consolation went to Alpha Delta Alpha Delta Pi won first in golf. Shuffleboard singles were won by Delta Gamma. In orange bracket softball, In­ dependents won first, and An­ drews, Blanton, and Carot hers Dorms received second. White bracket winners were Littlefield Dorm, first; and Delta Gamma, second. Swimming winners were the Heflin Manor-Independent Doll- fins, first; and Kappa Kappa Gamma, second. In table tennis d ou b les, New­ man Hall won firs t; Newman S A N D A L S ! (styles sim ilar to illustrations) from 6.95 MEN’S! WOMEN'S! W ID E C H O I C E O F STYLES! Club, second; and Kirby Hall, consolation. Table tennis singles winners were Kappa Alpha Theta, first; Alpha Phi, second; and Littlefield Dorm, consola­ tion. TENNIS DOI BLES winners were Kappa Kappa Gamma, first; Independents, second; and Newman Hall, consolation. Kap­ pa Kappa Gamma won the ten­ nis singles also. In touch football, the orange bracket was won by Zeta Tau Alpha, first; and Kappa Kappa Tile white Gamma, bracket winners were Kirby Hall. first; and Heflin Manor, second. Track and field winners were first; and Alpha second. Delta Zeta, Delta Pi, second. in Volleyball winners the orange bracket were Andrews, Blanton, and C a ro le rs Dorms, first; and Kirby Hall, second. In the w'hite bracket, Delta Zeta won first, and Kappa Alpha 'Theta re ­ ceived second. Chancellor to Say lf Official Orange Burnt or Bright Do you rem ember hearing about last September’s petition to Chancellor Harry Ransom, protesting the use of burnt o r­ ange for the school color? Seventy-two signatures of alum ­ ni and students underscored a the formal complaint usage of dark orange “ by all persons and agencies within the jurisdiction of the University of Texas and its Regents." against The petitioners wanted to “re­ affirm the action of our prede­ cessors" and to pressure unani­ the bright mous acceptance of the University orange color of seal adopted in 1949. Their aim was to outlaw burnt orange for athletic commercial products, and seal reproductions. The petition was read and ac­ cepted by the Board of Regents at its Oct. I meeting. The Board asked Chancellor H arry Ransom to appoint an “orange commit­ tee" to look into the m atter and m ake a recommendation. clothing, The committee’s findings and its recommendation are due to he presented June I. Chancellor Ransom will then dispense with the m atters as he thinks best. Burnt orange has been in use since about 1910. It was discon­ tinued as the athletic color from 1940 to 1954, when war shortages cut off the supply of darker dyes. its The burnt color resumed football popularity in 1957 with the arrival of Darrell Royal as coach. It has been used sporadi-; cally ever since for athletic and band uniforms as the accepted j University color. The last committee meeting and final recommendation are ex­ pected in about tw-o weeks. v_xiiruiu Su S H O E I STORE S p ecia lizin g in C o lle giate Fashions 2348 G u a d a lu p e — O n the D ra g . & g&MBKi rn**- The University of Texas ? § £ * W ' A CAPELLA CHOIR in SPRING CONCERT Dr. Morris J. Beachy, Director FRIDAY-M AY 12 -8 P.M. in HOGG AUDITORIUM Charge) THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S lo c h W o f d X ' ' mum C H a r g # s r " ' rata ( I S word m inim um ) .04 ......................................................... $ 1.20 .50 ............................. $ ( 10-word m a x im u m ) cn a tim # . . . . $ ............................. .............. $ tu n a .25 • r e c * a d d ‘ ion# C as* ‘ a d D » p !a y t co lu m n » o n a 20 C o n t a c u t iv # I word* 5 wqed* 2 2 w o rd * t a th A d d it io n a l T im a ................................... . , $ .90 in ch Ona t im * ............................... $ 1.00 Issue* ...................... ............................ .................................................................. ................... ....................................... .................. N o c o p y c h a n g a for c o n j e c t i v e isiu a ra te s .) $ 6 0 0 $ 8.00 $ 1 1 . 0 0 • N E W , L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S IO w o ld* or less fo r 50c the first time, 25c each a d d itio n al tim e. S tu d en t m ujt re c e ip t and p ay in a d ­ ihow A u d ito r* in van ce from 8 a rn to 4 30 p m. M o n d a y through Frid ay . Jo u rn alism Bldg. 107 C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G D E A D L IN E S ......................... T u t jd a y Texan W e d n e s d a y Texan Thur*day Texan ................... F rid a y Texan .............. ..................... Sun day Texan M o n d a y , 3.30 p.m. ................................. Tue*day, 3:30 p.m. W e d n e s d a y , 3 30 p.m Thursday, 3:30 p.m. Frid ay, 3:30 p.m. In the event of error* m ade in an advertisem ent, im ­ m ed iate notice must be given a* th# publisher* ara responsible for only on# in co rrect in*ertion. GR 1-5244 Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartm ents Furnished Apartm ents Furnished Apartm ents Roommate W an te d Furnished Apartments For Sale :STONE APARTM EN TS EM 9-3691 or RI 9-8569 French C o lo n y 1 B R *89 50 2 B R *114. .'Vin East 22nd. G R 8-0964 Off Interregional, near I,a w School. Beaut: fully arpeted. 4(f pool. cable T V . lb e r f room apartments. A/C. furnished laundry. G IR LS! THE COUNCIL I S W e s t 2 U t 'e y a. ier F.**e* un * F o r Far. •f*ar 5 Tanglewood East ’ % R E D U C T O N S m m *r L e * :# THE DIPLOMAT 19 i I Se*1 G *sc■ e C ■ a b e d rc c m FM r r . t : c scots , C a r a TV. C a e ; ter 5 Summer Rales Row Renting F G R 6-2E 'all A P A R T M E N T FO R men. Un,varsity. Billa p * l 2 or 3 room* rear G R 61712, Mr* L v ie, C A S A DE SALA D O S mn-ar R a'es J bedroom* I e rt turn «hed g v rn"' ng voo Oentrat a r and heat *•’ r eet pa a Luxurious!* I v f»ri‘ : Ta 15610 S a a lo Street Manager Apt N a HO G R 7-2534 ret e ie - rig T V cube sookcase desk n: ng >x«! Mao m enu from *106. !KH Manor Rd. J v>-lroom apt* ha*# every FM music dispose large luxury cloaets .55' Kwim- I bedroom apart G R 7 1064 LeFOUNTAIN BLEAU 803 W. 28th 3 x block* to Campus Men and women for summer session. 2-bedroom*( 2 baths A c­ commodated 2 to 4 leasing summer and Fat! UUlitie* paid Maid service. A/C. pool, aundry. Large recieatitm and study room. OR 2-64«0 G R 8 9414 THE T O W E R V IE W block* fR*t l a w Reboot H ug e I bed rn Vacancy Slav I Application* for Sum­ ter A F a t !/now accepted Featuring Modem frost free refrigerators, gar­ Danish turn.rn ie bage disposals, pantries Quiet, plenty patk- ng. W et*I gas paid. Summer rates *90 S H A D O W O A K S 'K 2-8772 2501 C dham G R 2 4566 2404 Longv'ew to Inquire about leas'ng l- vte e yon for dual occupancy Large one ben Idea' room furnished, Danish mcd- ens. Beamed ceilings. Copperton# electnc ap­ fac.lilies pliance* Central A 'C. « Swimming pool. Low summer rates. V» completely laundry fat! gee Manager—No IBI w os ' G R 6-0215 arter I p m . a If no answer ca'. O L >4947. day on weekend* Boom, 2 bath for 2 people. SHO per 6 weeks each Modem, all conveniences. G R 6-5631 2910 Red River, Apf. 2i0 e N E W I BEDROOM NEAR UNIVERSITY y . •. rd Being room wall to wan carpet- t e ba'- k'fohenetie, with maid* wood abu*"era csroor? a r'd corage *5-4 June through August. **9 Ber!, through M ar on lease Tenants w'd snow at 612-A and B > natl V est SIV* Bt To leas# c a l G A O 'son AC 552. CA 7-2231. 1009 F'o st N atl Bank Bldg . Ban Antonio, Texas. O L D H A M H O U SE APTS. 1914 Oldham — G R 8 891 I N o w renting foe lum p ier e-d f a ’1. 2 b e d r e a d . A / C eerpe-ed. p o o 1, »t_dy d c e b ’e TV. C A PR I TERRACE APTS. M il Wbitl* for aum mer New modern frow Swtmm ng pox-:, cert-* C->#e to campus A *"!, I ben fully rarpe'ed and ps-r e l iv-nm-*130, 2-b«drooro—*150 All bdl* paid G R 8 3692 t m u r r a w PA ID , A C. pi-rn ta. qrn'et near Wee* Campus Bummer term 2 men stu dent*. G R 2-856U T O W N H O U S E E L E G A N C E IN T H E O L D W O R L D TR A,c H O N I and Beautifully de-rotted I bedroom studio apartment*. Fu lly carpeted and drap­ ed. extra large rooms waik-tn closet*, all electric kitchen*. Furnished or unfurnished Sorry no sing e studen t I Bedroom starting at *125. J Bedrooms starting at tl'k l M a n o r Villa 1606 Grover Managers A p l ISS iW e lt of MeOatlum High) G L 2-5455 UT STUDENTS glim m er F a n Re*# m a nee* A r Geed. 2 bedroom an t* for 5 or 4 person* P a rk ng. m aid aerrtc*. Bu m m er Rates IV* b o c k ) I t n m p u l G L 1-329 SUMMER SPECIAL! U n ’v # r s i t y H c - 9 $2' double $30 s>g ®. A C, Maid Ser« ce 2 "IO Nutct* G R 6-4855 LA C A N A D A Tie#' r f for Bum m er and Far.. I and 2 bedrooms. D i slur achor, disposal. T V Ca ole party to be co m peted before Bum m er. room $125 UP G R —5 17x96 ALL E LLS PAID 1300 W est M UI ? : r r shed N O R T H W O O D TERRACE a r conditioned I bedroom, for a i e r y apartm ent, payground tor a se r laundry la r.U t es. free janitor eery ire a i utilities pa d N ear coremumtjr cen- tr- Un vers ty L a w Fr-hooi and bus line. Mgr a p t SOT-A E a s t 32nd. .dren, f e ­ G R 8-3149— G R 2-6452 W h y Not Spend Your Vacation A t The Beautiful LORRAINE Special Bu m m er R a te * A i! B i.:* P a id 2 bedroom Pots C ab le T V . P a rk in g L au n d ry • other apts I if J I E n fie ld Road. B u * U K W ng from $99 541 to $180 G R 7-2536 GR 2-9974 M E N Graduate room* apartm ents A /C , aum m er rate* G R 8-9049 G R 7 7976 ftrodenta *56 V t W A T E R - G a s pa I U Pica lr* Oort 'T e e n Quiet 3503 Oakmont. Open. Go 00k O R 7-2536 N B W L T redecorated one and two bedroom I X a e r coo'ed apa-tments Utlitt.e* p a d fan* N ear town and Un verslty G R 3-6452 THE BR!D G EW A Y 26 6 Wichita ifld'-g S c OOI >g H o * Suroro ''U n f in A ’ * GondlHoru»d com fort nr# T"-* bo ck north of cam pus room w in p-vate batn for $30 00 per moo'h in • mod era , fireproof, cent-a ny a r roe l i t inned dorm •mr C a ll G R 6-1947 or G R 2-8667 or come by; it * not far. E n jo y A V A IL A B L E fur n »' #d apartm ent, a l b ’ s pa d. HO pe l i t On# bedroom J U N E month. 2100 W instead Lan e G L 14492 Tanglewood W e s t . R E A U C T S .m m Le- M ake you- reservation* no * for rn-* nf th# a gesi 2 Bdrm 2 Beth apar'-n#” » a Au* tin at an unheard of 17r> discount. A so luxury I bedroom ap-.*, s'# rune as low a i $97 50. • 3 Poof i • tad vidua J central air condition.ng • T V C a b * A F M M lisle HOS Norw alk Lo. G R 2 9611 L ' " . i . e ’y e +i-act'.-e 2 b e d ro o m *. 2 b lo ck* o t { c a m p . * , t e c h «* ’ n r • » s '« f •rance# co- - a c t nq t e bat'-. S n a c k b a r P a r t 'ng. H e ir g e r a Y o n A C . C o n t r o lle d ’-ear. J b ey*." $ 32 each. 1906 N e ce i A p a r t m e n t C , C R 2-2071, G R 6- 534 30CT TO CAMPUS- ........ _ ______ Shopping, p elt. 601-3 1300 Norwalk Lane *9" ‘-0 W A T E R paid Im! zMful 2-bedroorn A /C Modern Clean Qu ip !. R m al Arms, (Enfield*. G R 2-9974, Him wood ISO. ISS, 165 3100-10 Duval, I G R *90. *.56. G L 2-4514 evening* RIVER OAKS Leasi-q to- Fall o- Summer C IN C H your brand new Sept lit apartment now 3100 Duval. Efficiencies, t*9 50. 3707 I bedroom, *,'*9 50. G L 2-4516 e' en Cedar. ings. SU M M E R . Furnished I and 2 bedroom lux ury apartments, Carpeted and pane <*d Roo; 1910 Ran Gabriel Manager, Apt 101 M AUE roommate to sh*’ # Apartment. 141 Pius electric:ty. G R 2-4005. M A L E Roommate to share apartment. $53 a.I bi Ha. i Summer*. GR 2-6597, F E M A L E graduate student needs senior o: gradua'e roomma’e st, 67- 66 G R &-.W1 F E M A L E roommate. A /C apartment. Walk to campus Ctndy Cox. 477-4586 TWO la w achcoi student* desire roomma’e Im summe- 2 bedroom A /C house. Rea NOB HILLS APARTMENTS L O W SUMMER RATES STUDIO---12-bed rooms upstairs! ca-pet, A <*, sonahe G R 6 1943 after 5 00 pm. Balcone. 4.U0-A Eller* G L 3-8820 SPECIAL SUMMER RATES 1967 TR-LA wheels, mid - night blue. Driven convertible, over-drive, apoke three months *2,700. Cai! 452-3012. 4209 Speedway, Apt 206. Furnished Houses LA IC EHO USE: 2 bedroom, furnished, 4 mile* from Campus. $125 per month. Can be • seen Saturday or Sunday. G R 2-6376. I F U R N IS H E D two bedroom house near cam ­ pus T V Washer. *85, G R 7-6965 For Rent G R 2 3914 3001 R ed R ive r N o. 129 I a-d 2 bedroom ! «ury unit*. Po o ’ F M music, H o p p in g to C am p . foe. Tie*. S h o rt walk ! ftce iy T A R R Y T O W N IN Q U I E T A R E A furnished I rooms plus tub-shower tile balu 2 large walk-in closets New car pet. Covered parking A good place for ma' stud' I .'WO Norwa k Iuane Apt. D. *K5 per month. Ga* and water pa d, Avatab'e June 1st. Shown by appointment. G R 8 4356. ROOMMATE W ANTED Me « upperclassm an to H a r e e f t x ’ency re a r Stadium . A / C , u t 'A e * pa d. $39.50. 2055 B or E Sab 'n e, evening*, weekend*. G R 2-1043, G R 2-6829. T A N G L E W O O D N O RTH I and 2 bedroom attractive spacious apart ments w th every convenience for gracious living Choice of Italian, Spanish. French. Mediterranean or Contemporary decor. 2 bedroom apartment* have I. IV*, or 2 baths and a fireplace I block* Hancock Center Special Summer Rate* Teasing for Summer and Fat! '.020 E 45th G L 2-0060 UT C O LLEG E STUDENTS Austin, Texas Established *30.000 4-year old coin-op clean­ er* m Austin. Netting 15.000 yearly tip Sell *10,000. go ng to Europe Writ# or call Ben Zoilner, 5917 East University No. 116, Dallas THE NUECES C O LL EG E H O U SE Now tn’ervtewtng for gummer and fall sem- esser Academic and toe ai living unit "Where the Action Is " 714 W . 22'/2 G R 6-0379 G R 6-8466 STAFFORD HO USE Vacancy tor Jura 1st Extra nice apartments with tuneful decnr luxury extras a* TV — closets, large antenna carpeting throughout and disposals. F M music includes such and Now Renting For Summer C on .ert’eH to UT Ona and two bedroom apartm ent* Luxu r .oui furnishings. C a b a T V. Sw im m ing pool Dishwasher, a t t To see call after 5 M ark TV. 3101 Cedar, G R 6 9973 or G R 6-1309 M ark V U . SIGO Speedway, G R 6 1309 or G R 6-9973 J - f t - • Spacious on. and two bairns. | a g r S " ™ . • Huge wa!k-in doseh • Dishwasher* and Disposal • Large pool • Custom Furnishings • lr dividual climate controls • Private Balconies • Laundry Room • ALL BILLS PAID THE STEPHENS PLACE before you settle for gummer Air Conditioned Kitchen privileges Singles and Doubles Reasonable 708 W . 23rd_________ G R 6-3752 Check Room and Board 2520 Longview G R 7-8741 Mgr. Apt. 302 STAG CO-OP 1910 R o Grande two bedroom town hon*# etyie Furnished spa-tmenn two poo* available to tenants Bummer rent, $520 lier month ca ll: AM b is. maid service Hawthorne Apartments 3413 I .eon App. cation* also be ng G R 7 9324 taken for the fali SUMMIT APARTMENTS SPECIAL SUMMER RATES to Campus 0 W a lkin g distance 9 t shwasher and Disposals • P riv a te B a lc o n e * • L arg e L iv in g Rooms 0 Individual Desks • Sw im m ing Pool • P o rte r Se rvice • A L L B I L L S P A ID 1 0 0 8 W e s t 2 S ’/ 2 S t * G R 8-5992 VILLA FO N TA N A 1961 Sabine Help W an ted Unive'-t'+y S t . dents W a n t e d Em ploym ent to r both M en Si W o m e n Part or fuT time. S E L D E N S T E R E O E N T E R P R IS E S 4516 Burnet Road Call for appointment 453-0440 G R 7-4146 S T EA D Y P A R T time office female help need ed. Three evenings and Saturday. Call Mr. Lyon for appointment HO 5-5182. N E E D M O N E Y ? Can you s e t? W e reed college representatives. Q uality Sportswear, Box 1345, Lincoln. Nebraska. W A N T E D — M E N 3 w ear salesm an This I* a Job 3 evenings and ait r a il HO 5-5182 for appoint­ steady part tim e day Saturday, m ent Ask for M r. Lyon. SUM M ER W O R K Subsidiary of Alcoa needs men to work full in Austin, Houston, san tim e or pert tim e An’onio, and m a n y other town* tn Centra South or E a s t Texas. Also Arkansas and E a r n *125 a n i up w eekly N or'ft lo u is ia n a Appt'’ 1503 Guada'upe. Office JOT Tuesday or T hursday 7:30 p m., or Saturday 2 p m . Lost and Found B L A C K M IN A T U R E poodle. with board and mustache. cut la s t seen Tues­ day. M ax 2nd F O reward. M rs B ra d Smith, O R 2-2232. or G R 6-7015. P a risia n Tutoring S P A N IS H B V experienced V irg in ia B u tle r. G R 8-5178. teacher. M A H E B R E W Tutoring for final* bv Isra e li s*u dent 5'oram Palm or, G R 8-1574. Typing T H E S E S . D IS S E R T A T IO N S , briefs, IB M . M rs. Anthony. G L 4-3079. reports, Availably June 1st Summer Ra+es Nfanager, G R 21774 arter I LUXURY DELUXE 913 W est Lynn Daneerj mode;* vryallsts, Hoste*.** New agency hold ng Interview s, Saturday, M a y IS O N L Y from S 3. B rin g swim tu t. Bernard N o vy Enterprises, 402 W . 14th, G R 2-0812. md int* ■ear c o m p le te I e^d 2 bedroom apart- 1 a it h d is h w a s h e r a n d JO B O PPORTUNITY FOR R EC EIV IN G M A N A G E R G O O D FRIEN D S , ,, q e r b a q e d iposaT O ^ n e r p a y s C a b a f w I V , gas a n d w a * # '. M a n ag e r. A p t No. 3 , , lob available for a person who I* Inter est od ,n grow.ng in retailing Applicant should G R 8 2239 j have experience in supervising and mar.ag j A j » SUM M ER RATES $105 Good a a ia ry and store benefit*. Apply In Person F U R N I S H E D A P A R T M E N T J n -.ars t y m en, iurn. A / C , q et it e i p a id ; c e a 1 2055 3 G R 2 ;G43. Sabin a r e a r Stad- i h o w e r ; u t •• a f ’ icien cy, ca rp e te d ng. $39.50 e a c h man. a**a r £ 30 w e e k e n d s Students earn extra money. P a rt t me and sum m er pos.tions a 'a .la b .e those with experience. for F A S H IO N A R T IS T S H O E F A L E S B U Y E R T R A I N E E S Hon re a v a lle b e : 9:10-2:40. 11-4 30 13 5 3" 6 ? on Thursday n:£hts, 9:10-5:30, 2 or more d a is a week. A p irv 3rd Floo r G O O D F R I E N D S 901 Congress Typing. M u tih th in g Binding A complete professional typing serv # tad ored to the needs of U n iversity students. Spe­ cial keyboard equipment for language, sci­ ence, and engineering these* and dissert* turns. Fhon# G R 2-3210 A G R 27677 2013 Guadalupe S IM P S O N ’S T yping Service, IB M , symbols. H O 5-7S83. Experienced. Reasonable. T Y P I N G : NE.AT. accurate, fast service. M rs Tullos. G L 3-5124. manuscripts, IB M . O L 4-3339. E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . Accu­ rate, Reasonable, near A /andal*. H O 5- 5811 F o r th# b e s t in Th es * a n d D is e r t a t on p r in t ng a n a binding KH Congress Sid Floo r T H E S E S , dissertations, law-bnefs. reports 3 block* C am p us A / C , Room X Board, $75 for 6 week* or $140 for both forms. G R 8-5043 THE C O NTESSA L u x u ry L iv in g for Young Women M e «e y o _ r reservation for t mm#f row $140 fo r tx weeks. Two m ea'* five d a ,* a week. A > co n ditio n ed — pool — park­ ing — m aid *erv ca. 27Cb N ,.ece* — G R 7-9766. NUECES H ALL for M e a yo u r fo r ram m er reservation M a i* School now, $120 for s x week* E at a 4 Contessa, two mea s f ve day* a week. E at a t Contessa. A ir cond Honed. Pool — p aring — ma d je^vice— 2700 N ueces — G R 7-9766 or G R 7-0075. G A R R E T T House 608 W est 22nd G R 8 J 1956. Sum m er Air rtond,Honed. rates m eas. 5 d a 's * week *117 50 per sen ester G arrett House No. 2 Rooms $25 per sem es­ ter. G R 8-1956. H u rry ! M ake reservations for Bum m er School accommodations at th# new P H I K A P P A S IG M A F R A T E R N I T Y H O U S E W alking dis'a n re campus. Larg e bedrooms and closet space. Nice recreational area I>eHcious meal*. Contact Mra. M aurine Rue or G R 6-3351 G R 2-6711 Alpha Phi Sorority J I 2005 University 1st SEMESTER PH O N E G R 2-64 12 TEXAN DORM 1905 - 1907 Nueces Gen • -a A r C a rp e'in * F u rrin e r V a ca n cy Men • Dorm $30 6 Week Semester Ma d S e rvice -■ Pa-km * M r. and Mr* Tom MarUne, M a ra 4726620 BELLAIRE FURNISHED APARTMENTS for girls 3 Blocks from Campus T V C a b a A i r C o e d i o n " c g • C s - p e ’ ed S A IL B O A T S salters, catam aran*, day racl-a classes. Special fe e t pur­ chase discoun'*. W indw ard Sa; boats, H O 5- Boardboat*. ; 9215 O L 3-1768. 1968 Y A M A H A 125 E le c tric starter. B e a u ti­ ful road b ks. $360 G R 6-1765. L A T E 1%6 Honda. L ik e n e * E x ce l,tn t trans­ portation Fee to appreciate. $195. Call for demonstration. G R 6 2067. R O B E R T S “ TO Recorder. Ev^eitent condition. Se ! for * rt " « m o n e y — p a y sch o o l e x p e n se * - y o u c h o o s e y o u r ho ur*— o w n b e ss— w r e t in te r fe r e * th c asses— im m e d ia t e in c o m e — re p / P .O . Box 1107, A ltin , T e«a *. DISTRIBUTORS WANTED Opening* In ail a-ea* of Texas and other state*. Full time summe’- employment w in potential earnings $500- $1300 m onth!v . Ca G R 2-75‘t3 between 9 OO a rn. and 12 noon week da *. SAILING W an te d D A ;LEY DIVERSIFIED SERVICES 611 W . 2 9th G R 2-5820 M A R J O R I E D E I A F I E L D (F o rm e r Delafield T yp in g Servil e . 25c per page. Accurate, resumes. reasonab'e. Them es, dissertation*, H I 2-7008. HAVE VA CA N CIES For Further ^formation call: GR 2-2257 G R 8-0031 Furnished Rooms T H E S IS . D IS S E R T A T IO N S copies, W e J, book*, (m ultllithed. six report*, m ultilithlng, M E N : Y O U ’ R E ON your own here-M o xa in ted#* — k u-hen — laundry — psrk'ng mim eographing. 25c page. Bobby* Delafie.d. -$25 OO. G R 6-1114 — G R 2-4702 H I 2-7184. j --------------------- ------------------------- E X P E R T T Y P IN G . T erm paper* ------------------------------------ I W O M E N - P L A N for sum m er: spacious A ZU- television — built-ina— fully carpeted rfport*— - kitchen - aundry. $36.00. G R 2 1702 briefs. Mrs. Montgomery. G R 2-5601. National I r e of Home Products B O O K B IN D IN G Thesis drtxertafon bind ng U N I V E R S IT Y Men Women a speciality. Piss* r sp r*l binding f*u»- totn Bookbinder*. 3116 Manor Road, G R 2- 6465. *26.00 *40 00. 949(1. A c Kitchen Bum m er reservation*. G R 6- • L a - q e Pa* d e ~ i P o o l S a b o a t r e - 'a 's — b oardb oat* to 23 keai R o d e t o r y M r -« M< ng S u m m e r. d R a t# * fo r S .ro m *r— N o P e g . s:oops. Sa nq la:,n - i Y a c h t i b a s Mod- G u e st* e owed d . em M 9- a#. C a i u* et C O 6-1150. D.S. M a es t L a t e l r I. W A N T E D dead o r a liv e (p efer a liv e ' used A ir Conditioners. Austin T V A Appliances, 5607 N luim ar. O L 3 5041 Miscellaneous Now Leasing for 717 W . 22-d M ' s. I$e; G R 7-5052 1966 H O N D A , 2300 rn »= H I 2 HOI Night O L 3-5727 *'25 ca s h Day Texas 78767. E X P L O R E your potence tie* Sent for f c<- book M r G. Alexander, Box 2162, Au*' n, Typing, Multiiithmg. Binding A complete professional typing service ta'! th# needs of U n iv e rsity students ored Special keyboard equipment language, theses and dis­ s' ence sertation*. and engineering for to Pnon# G R 2-3210 * G R 2 7677 2011 Guadalupe takrn on R E S E R V A T IO N S bertroom ur •« 879 SO large A/C 12 to $150 V ie 52. 1307-11 E a s t 52nd off F re e w a y . V illa Good- rich 21 :s Goodrich A v e , off KoutJi ij»m ar. G R 2-mw 1957 C H E V Y H T New motor, clean. 1910 W ic h it a , G R 2-9497. $395 I est F A L C O N 22.000 m es F in e condition best offer. Lea- ng Austin, must $633 <* sell. G R 6-1787. LUXURIOUS EL SABINO Sum m er fun and com fort V ih eie bu>« and ii t i ve together In peacef .i coexistence 3-btdraDm>, 2 b a ":* Dishwasher, d •.*>** fu-n vhedL poo 18.500 B T U A ir Oonditioner, used $ months G L 4-2S18. R icnard Mooie. S C U B A G E A R 71 cubic foot tank, float ng regulator Almost new. $71 G R 6-9622 atter I 1966 B K N E L U , IOO!) mites. 250co steal ll for 1395. G R 8-6150 SKI a ' *r:! i,n De-Her M anor. Texas. *199 per a c e 15 minutes Aua- .a k e . Owner. P .O . Box 388 R O B E R T S S T E R E O Recorder Racrtftre IRS Pinar ■ g Optional equipment a v o ila b e E a s y w a king 3 P O O L S —B I L L S PT' *130-1160. C LO SE TO UT 2101 San Gee- a! G R 6-1262—G R 8-8670 On# bedroom, d shwaiher. d spo.a c*h :e T V . — Att paneled with Span sh decor Now Leasing for Su m m er For Sale THE TIMBERS summer Ka'es — R f e x c e p t s CACTUS TERRACE DORM Co-ed For Summer V e ry f ir e I bedroom luxury apartm ent* with th# e x tra * Choice of colorful Ita l,a n or a townish a cto r T V cable, a id swunm .ng pock. Be ato n ,o f at $97 50 1307 N o rw alk L a n e AP*. No. 202 G R 8684! G R 2-9614 G R 8-9252 G R 7-2357 2212 San G a b r el Comp ete.y A /C, ca-peted. 35‘ lac.lilies, $40 per aemebier. A a > to Campus. New large furnished effi- pooL W ashet ciency apartm ent C en tral » - heat, carpet, IC O per month, cab.e T V , a t bul* paid. Skimmer. $194 30 per month ye a r lease. T E L E V I S I O N : months ort. 12 Magna vox portal) ». Three U H F - V H K G R 6-5689. 1956 A U ST IN -H ealey. $130 or best offer G R 2-527L R E D ' Grr-trti" amp., padded two pickup e ectric guitar, case. New 6130, C rete h Now LaXL G R 8-4236. A N C IR A APARTMENTS 1905 Sab e O L 3-4985 G R 8 9 Th Furnished Apartm ents H I 2 6438 19SI C H E V R O L E T V-8, Autom atic. R / H good I ret. F re d Houghton G R 2433!. Help W an ted TEACHERS— STUDENTS w th m an y ye a r* of experience rn att he'd*, will give conscientious and m eticulous care form and compo­ !=ub*Tiptioi»s to A t.L A m erican and MO.-T «« to accu racy, correct sit,on technical papers, reports, these* and dissertations L A W W O R K S P E C ­ IA L I S T Briefs, law review note* IB M E le c t ;omatic, M ultiiithm g. X ero x ­ ing and binding services on req uest .seminar papers, typing In Fo reig n J eijod,ca,s IF T H E R E S A M A G AZ NE Y O U W A N T W E C A N GET IT!!! Subscription Bervie# 4426 Waynesboro Houston, Texas. 77035 T H E M E S . R E P O R T S , lawnotes. 23c. Notary. M r*. Fra se r. G R 6-1317, G R 8-:>«94 RIO GRANDE COLLEGE HOUSE Academic Coeducational Living Community • Fautry Ho- q Fellows • After Db er Program* Interviews for 1967-1968 May 6-12 at 2214 R o G ranee Weekday* 7-9 p.m. Weekend* 1-3 p.m. C a ’! GR 6-8233, cr come by. P a g , 8 Thursday, M a y l l , 1967 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N DO YO U W A N T TO STUDY? 0 Q ii’et a-rt s a d ufled 0 2 qed room i 234 ba” * B Wood burr.:ag fire a e 0 P r iv a te ba cor 4$ Beautifully finn shed 0 M odem kl when dishw asher. diapo**r> 0 Central A y e end heat 0 Ah bi—J part TV Ca ow. F le e W o rk* to U T —Fa cu lty , graduates, or seniors pi***#. P ric e I Coup:#, $366-» men, IT I 2704 Ban Ped ro . Phone G R 8 T W for appointm ent Shepherd Puppies. No papers door, H T . A T, R / H , V-8, ce 66 < B 160, 2900 m.ies E x tra * $450 G R 7 G E R M A N 477 796Z 36 C H * V T , G R 8-6216 2028 6 p rn. T IA KO 4-i I ack S te e o Tape Deck—$50. Bm G R 2-3406, 2414 Longview 19f>3 m iN O R A Y Convertible. 1965 motor end body New clutch, rear end, Urea. P erfect j condition $2250 G R 2-8871 9:00). N E W 7'*>7 Fen d er Basem an amp, Ber Has fla il Ma k. G R 7- not been used $300. ‘ 5022. 62 V O L K S W A G E N Top Khar* Ready for road. Call O L 3-6M6 or C L 8-1344 af.e reat’.onai Counse ors The*# pr>* • ors In rot e supervision of emotion* Ty disturbed boys in a varie ty of recreational a t:vit.e» A pplicant* should be stable and have a m ature ph>s.- The Oaks m il of the Ri- wn 8k hoots need m ature m ale co eg# s’udents to work as Rec- SUMMER EMPLOYMENT cal appearance $! f*0 per ho^r. P a r t and full tim# pos.tions w ill be availa b le for summer, 1613 Guadalupe G R 6 5658 with several pert tim e positions a v ailab le Jm m ed.uteiy. C a ll M r. Slagle, iM o n - FrL before G R 8-6662 R O O M S tor sum m er $20-$25. N ear campus, daily m aid aervice. 2800 YVhlti*. G R 6-1712 Mrs. L yle. F O R m en: E v a p o r a to r cooler, kitchen, din­ ette o re with private bath. U tilities paid. W alking distance to campus. G R 7-1218. 2395 Jason. ± lo i\ ‘ > P n va fe A / C room and kitchen privii- edge* fo r m ature m arried g rad u ate wo­ man student. Q u ie t study hour. 5 miles from campus, but near C re stvie w East End bus. References exchanged. $35. W r it e D raw er D 2, U n iversity Statio n . $4>—'B IL I. S paid. Delightful housekeeping rooms for men, P r iv a 'e entrance P r iv a te Refrigerator. San G abriel cooled. Glean Q u ie t 1906 Parkin g A bath Modern G R 7 RI.Vt, G O IN G T O S U M M E R 8UHOO LT L iv # in Cool Com fort at th# A BAR HOTEL fipe -ial Sum m er R ates Job Placement Brisk at Bureau Summer Openings Remain Plentiful University Placement Bureau officials are having little trouble referring students to summer jobs even though the Labor De­ partment has announced four million summer jobs will be need­ ed for high school and college- age youths. Placement Bureau statistics through show that August, 1966, 1,672 students were placed in jobs. from May Most of these jobs concerned semiskilled work, including tutor­ ing. yard work, fountain work, sales, office work, and counsel­ ing. Some of these were for a sal­ ary and others for room and board only. A Bureau official said there Is not much difficulty referring stu­ dents to jobs. Although it is somewhat late to start hunting for a summer job in Austin, out-of-town jobs are still plentiful. Bureau offi­ cials said they never quite get caught up filling all the avail­ able Jobs. Nuclear Board Elects McKetta Dr. John J. McKetta, dean of the College of Engineering, has the been elected chairman of Southern Nuclear (S IN B ), the administra­ Board tive body of the Southern Inter­ state Nuclear Compact. Interstate Gov. John Connally in 1964 ap­ pointed Dr. McKetta as the Tex­ as member of the board which Is an agency of the Southern Governors' Conference. Dr. Mo­ netta served on the board s ex­ ecutive committee in 1965 and was made vice-chairman in 1966. SIN B, which is concerned with non m ilitary uses of nuclear prod­ ucts and processes, Is the nation's only non federal, public-supported interstate advisory and develop­ ment agency in the field of nu­ clear energy and related tech­ nologies. Compact members assist de­ velopment agencies in attract­ ing nuclear and other industries, advancing the economic growth of the region. Also, in connection with the ^ industry. Dr- Me- Kctta addressed a national moot­ K P t t a an nrp fLFp ri a n a t io n a l m p p t- ing of the American Society for Engineering Educators at Okla­ homa State University Wednes­ day. Dr. McKetta spoke on the plan­ ning of new curricula to meet the needs of modem industry and the demands of a technology- based society. 'Good Teaching' Engineer Topic H ie CoUegp of Engineering will hold a "Teaching Effective­ ness Commencement' ’ program Thursday. During the colloquium, faculty members will review past pro­ grams and recommend teaching improvements for next year. Dr. John J. McKetta, dean of the College of Engineering, or­ iginated the teaching effective­ ness colloquia in 1964 to com­ bat what has been called the inadequate college problem of teachers. He established a con­ fidential evaluation of teachers and courses by students and de­ veloped an approach to faculty- wide teaching improvement. Advances made by previous teaching improvement programs of the College of Engineering in­ clude improvement of the quality faculty members, of present careful selection of new faculty members, and advancements in classroom teaching and faculty- student relationships. 'cifw 'tidcie, 30 Per Cent p r e d e v e l o p m e n t DISCOUNT for only lot l l . /si A lic e COV- *1050. The-* # e l tract* can ba bought on easy term*. acre *, — I /af At IS ha AO (AS — HUGI OAKS — PAVIC) STK! (TS A WATCH —RCS TWI"! IONS -—HOOCK. 6' :* For * lh tx I Oma on), lovely tm* cove,id ‘ , ti ■„ i-,|S nu* h* bought ti a tantalic wrings. Sn* lo bth-v* Or iv* oui I. rya K'.-id appro*, matoly 8 mile, and turn nH on Commons F Ord Road and Im low Oma kl Tx-mp. ,h« “ «r” hr 644)5$ tor Court.,, Call GR 6 4855 ■sk,«a ae- • if. •& Diane Cilento The blonde actress co-stars in "H om bre" with Paul New­ man, Frederic March, and Richard Boone. The film I* now showing at the C i n e m a Theater. A Cappella Hold Spring Concert C h o ir to Sing F rid a y In H o g g A u d ito riu m The University A Cappella Choir will present its tenth an­ nual spring concert, Friday in Hogg Auditorium. The choir, directed by Dr. Mor­ ris J. Beachy, associate profes­ sor of music, will perform se­ lections by Palestrina. Schutz, Bach, Brahms, Bruckner, Schu­ mann, and Persichetti, a series of light numbers, and will con­ clude with the "Cantata Miseri- cordium” by Benjamin Britten. The "Cantata Misericordium” was written to commemorate the one hundredth anniversary of the founding of the Red Cross. in the past Members of the Baroque String Ensemble will appear in this number, with soloists Frank Sto­ vall, tenor, and Mark Blanken­ ship, baritone. The choir few years has toured Mexico, and many cities throughout the South­ west and Midwest. A performance is scheduled Thursday at 4:15 p.m. in the new School of Music at SMU. A L L T H E A C T IO N 'S A T TH E A U C T IO N ! Channel 9's Talaviiio n auction — o f • thou­ sand and on* fab u to u i items, p ractica l item i, you-name-it items — d onated b y friends o f C h a n ­ nel 9 to help support community- sponsored television. W ell-known personalities will au ction eer from I p.m . to 11 p.m . BID B Y T E L E P H O N E — G R 7 -6 4 3 1 KLRN-TV, CHANNEL 9 THRILL SEEKERS! Weekends are "WILD" at the G A L V E S T O N ’S C O L O S S A L B A M B O O D I S C O T H E Q U E O N THE BEACH-SEAWALL at 8th H O M E O F THE S W IN G IN G "COUNTDOWN 5" S P E C I A L FRIDAY, MAY 12th ONLY FIRit tappid with Barter Chefs tartar sauce on feasted bm. jest pere eating pleasure. Treat Ult whale family 6912 Burnet Rd. 3303 N. Lamar 2700 S. Lamar Austin, Texas HOT FISH SANDWICH [ h a m b u r g e r s -W H o m e of the W o r ld s Greatest I M H a m b u rg er tJKl u1 BfjSy ^ '*4^ ’ ((Se*"'' S' w’ — .... % I i i H * * t> i f H I C a b a l l e W i l l S in g In N e w D C O F i g a r o Montserrat Cabalic is return­ ing to Dallas Civic Opera tins fall —the scene of her American de­ but in 19<»5—to star In a new pro­ duction of Mozart’s "Marriage of Figaro." of TTie Spanish soprano will be joined by a .stellar cast for the ensemble opera, which will be presented at 8 p.m. Nov. 17 and 2 p m. Nov. 19. Announcement "Figaro” rounds out the Dallas opera’s eleventh annual season, which will open with “ Medea" starring Magda Olivero, Nov. 4 and again Nov. IO. The other pnxluction will be a triple bill featuring “ Maestro (Ii Capella” with Sesto Bruscantini, the ballet "Faerie Queen" with Dame Margot Fon­ teyn and Att ilk) Labis, and "Suer Angelica’* with Victoria de lea Angeles. Bruscantini, who starred in the opera's "Barber of Seville" in 1962 and is now one of the lead­ ing lyric baritones of the world, will be the Figaro for this pro­ duction. Graziella Sdutti will be the Susanna, ti go Trama the Count Alm aviva. the Biancamaria Casoni the Cheruhino. Tile Eugene C. Barker History Center was built in 1911, and set the Mediterranean style of Uni­ versity archit celure, which fea­ tures broad eaves and red tile roofs. rx*5 ^ A M E R IC A N A T H I A T R I O L 3 - 6 6 4 1 I 2 3 0 0 H an co ck P r l v J . JUif ' SUMMITT V •»*«»/> M M I A I U B D ! ( I ll m f 2 of the Year's Finest— on tho Same Program! T IM . .1 no P.M. — IM M M IM “THE HAPPENING’’ A r *•31 1:14 •:3N A T 4:1 J 1:53 StarrlnC A nth on y Q uinn — M ic h a e l Parks — G e o rg e M a h e ri* R o b e rt W a lk a r BURT UNCASTER LEE MARVIN • ROBERT RYAN • JACK FAUNCE L,CLAUDIA CARDINALE] RALPH BELUMY Tnt P R O F E S S I O N A L S ____ n o w ! o p r . v i : 4a • m n i n i »— a— a— n— 19 H ic Hc>v*0 S K U * 0 '.|>o,i.. C o n U K tn y t m m h £ PE TFM BROOK s M O T IO N P IC T U R E V E R S I O N C it T H E O R I G I N A L B R O A D W A Y S T A G E P R O D U C T I O N w Pm tam w t) u jh A 'f m m m n I 9f M ASWIM IFCfWtttftiH . 1 A l V . urn THC um m 9 THC /Mtyua a. P E T E R W E I S S C O L O R «, D eLuxe UNITED A R T IS T S L im ite d K itc a c e tn e n t N o w : Ct Popular P r ic e * O P F N 7:45 A D l l , T H *1.00 D P M '. .50 K U H i K f f l F R I I B illie s O N • 'U h T O O T " 7:45-8:45 O S K C O M P I . F T K S H O W I N O O N C Y ZERO VOSHEL* PHIL SIV E R S lo A M il.V IN SH AN* P f* * * t i** ' 'A FUNKY THING ~ HAPPENED ON THE „ L? WOY TO THE FORUM sCOLO® b f Bettas* k w a w UMI TU ) A T T U T # B T A K T H A-45 f fc r l ' J N ^ W IL D L Y COMIC! YOU SH0 ULD> CERTAINLY SEE IT !" ^ tmm to thousand 3 W W W ' S H T A R T S U H S B U R N E T ■ B r 6 4 0 0 G u r n e t R d . H i — 2 T EC H N IC O LO R S H O W S “ YOU ARE GOING TO ENJOY ‘ A LFIE’ VERY What s a little bullet between friends? ] PARAMOUNT PICTURES MID JANSSEN has got to know in 'ARNING SHOT TIM ES 8:45 and 12:30 TIME ti :00 P.M. R e c o a t (H e ad e d for M a tu re A udience* (a n i- , # A ir C o nd ltluoed O a a o e * * io * "la n d and Dining U n u m • to • O pen 7 ** A d u lt* *1.00 • IM W . a o • a • • : CECIL B. DEM ILLE'* ACADEM Y AW ARD I * W IN N IN G FILM I ^ f M W f l O P EN 1:45 T H I R S O A V S F E A T ! R F T I M I X 2-5-8 H 9 IO K 1 X O p i r m i t t k d n ix H I X . ( I t V IK M .V T 8 P R I L E P A R K l.N ti ( t >i,OK r i T . I V I> IO X Thursday, May l l . 1967 THE DAILY TEXA N Pag* 9 The University A Cappella Choir . . . to sing in annual concert Friday in Hogg Auditorium. Kosinski Shows Inhumanity tion and skill he could escape from situations that threatened to curtail or end his indepen­ dence." Entire communities became the victims and the unknowing serv­ ants of an ideology of which death was a necessary part. NOW AN A D U LT in Communist controlled Poland, the small boy who was once free and self de­ pendent finds that he has become the subject of the strictest con­ trols. Again he is forced to flee to a new life and this time Ins flight to America where "the Painted Bird again became himself.” takes him Steeped in brutality and hor­ ror, "Tile Painted B ird " is not easy to read or to recommend. It does, however, serve to re­ mind one that those who suf­ fered at Auschwitz and others were not the only victims of war's misery. West, Grant Star In Comedy Classic Mac West and Cary Grant star In "She Done Him Wrong,” to be shown Thursday at 4, 6:30, and 9 p.m. in Batts Auditorium. Centered around a dance hall saloon in the 1890’s, the comedy deals with a detective, "The Hawk,” who wins the affection of a performer in a Bowery beer hall. Admission to the Select Clas­ sics presentation is 25 cents. T M F . H e a r 8 P P H K M F * Mine Tho Hw In tl na Hit Sim i • T H U B A P P K M M i " Plus “The Painted Bird” by Jerzy Kosinski: Houghton Mifflin Company; 1965; 272 pp) B y K A T H LEEN ANDERSON "The Painted B ird " by Jerzy Kosinski is a semi-autobiograph­ ical account of a small Polish boy who was abandoned by his parents during World W ar I I and forced to wander from village to village in the rural regions of Poland. During four nightmarish years, this six-year old undergoes a suc­ cession of bestialities that will shock even the most hardened of readers. IGNORANT, superstitious, and brutal, the local peasants con­ sidered this small boy a Gypsy or a Jewish stray whose place was only in the ghettos and ex­ termination camps. The German occupation of Poland had deep­ ened their brutality. Harboring a Gypsy or a Jew was reason enough for the harshest penalty at the hands of the Germans. Thus, as he wandered about, the boy was sometimes sheltered and sometimes not. More often he was treated as an outcast, victimized by the cruel actions Alley's Summer Instructors Set Mrs. Bettye Gardner and Sam in­ Havens have been named structors for the new Summer Theatre Workshop for adults at Alley Theatre in Houston. in "the Great WTaltz," , Mrs. Gardner is a singer and actress, and has had extensive experience in theatre, ranging from eastern seaboard engage­ ments "The Chocolate Soldier," and "D ie Fledermous," to television appearances on the West Coast. > Mrs. Gardner has appeared as an actress with Alley Theatre, and a singer with the Summer­ time Light Opera Company and with the Houston Grand Opera. She has also operated her own school, Studio of the Dance. Havens is a graduate of Lamar Tech College with a degree in speech and drama. He taught drama for two years at Beau­ mont Junior High, was a director and announcer with CBS Tele­ vision, and has played stock en-: gagements at the Greenville Playhouse, Greenville, N.Y. and the Point Summer Theatre in In­ gram, Tex. HAVENS served the Austin Community Theatre as artistic director, staging "Come Back Little Sheba," "Middle Of the Night,” and among others. "M ary, M ary,” Classics will begin the week of two different June 12, with offered: acting courses being and public speaking combining the principles of good acting technique as applied to the art of public address and acting and theatre appreciation placing em­ phasis on a thorough under­ standing of the theatre of today with major class time devoted to character and scene study. There w ill be two, five-week semesters, with classes limited to IO students. Tuition is $25.00. of those governed by the beliefs of generations of forebears. The horrors to which this child is subjected will seem exagger­ ated, almost too grotesque for believability. For instance, he is buried alive, stoned, throwm into a manure pit where he loses his voice, continually beaten and tortured by first one master and then another. AND KO SINSKI spares no de­ tails. However, these incidents are related with a sincerity and sureness of tone that has not been contrived merely to shock. Tile prose is simple and direct, and the account unfolds with all the honesty of a small child. As he witnesses scene after scene of sadism and perverted sex, the boy learns that lust and death have a thousand faces. With meticulous, unsparing re­ alism Kosinski’s book emphasizes the potential moral degradation inherent in all human beings and activated once they have been overcome by fear. During the course of his travel, the boy learns the lesson that war always affords. He sees that human life is cheap, that there is neither justice nor reason in war. IT IS ONLY after he has been treated kindly by a group of Com­ munist soldiers and returned to his parents that he realizes the value of a human life. In the epilogue of the novel Kosinski adds another viewpoint. The boy narrator realizes that he had been truly free wander­ ing In the forests, "that within the limits of his own determina- 11 rf PASS-OUT GAMES The m oi* hilarious Party gam e you a v e r p laye d ! T H E BOTTLE S H O P UKW Guadalupe 1309 Red R iv e r I Delwood DRIVE-IK THEATRE 3901 East Av*. A F u n n y T h in g H a p p e n e d O n Th e W a y T o Th e Fo ru m (Z e r o Hostel and P h il M ire rs) M arts 8:90 Th e Skull (P e te r Cushing and Christopher ( a e ) 10:25 Student Special Vi Price For Blanket Tax Holders (Good Tues, and Thurs.) DRIVE-IN THEATRE 3900 Bu CMI. ° G u U A U A A Fistful o f D ollars (C lin t E a s tw o o d ! S ta r t s 8:30 N a m u Th e K iller W h a le (R o b e r t la n s in g and late M e r r lw e t h e r) 10:21 ■ ■ ■ ■ H i rn INTERSTATE LAST D A Y! THEATRE restart*! I T oo 2 MIO - A MIO - A OO 8 : 0 0 - 1 0 : 0 0 "CHARO BHE W jOHnson "A V A MGH. — B lr u n o o in A • h n U D O illH u n tr ill \ l Suggested fo r MATURE AUDIENCES TECHNICOLOR® TECH NI SCOPE®®" A Universal Release 8UZAimA LEIGH (U N IV ER SA L presents IM I ti Starts TOMORROW Maroonmm S o m a A D O I often |0 | In v .-**•.7 c o o l n e s s t o m H O N G KUnsT* % I € * *■ % rn «* 16 G rn rn rn rn • rn His cabin. His PJ.s, Her move/ W RITTEN , D IR EC T ED a M U S I C by em otes CHaniN S f f i W i J W m .H 0W . J I M M ID ® J E i m i P S T E I N T E C H N IC O L O R ® F R E E P A R K I N G 7* t LAVACA STS INTERSTATE H ELD H Y F ’1 S T A T E DOWNTOWN f i t C O N C U SS THEAm K E .A T I K E S : 12.10-2:34-4:53 7:22 9:4(! CHARLES K FELDMAN'S CASINO ROYALE THE NEW JAMES BOND MOVIE IS HERE T E C H N IC O L O R F R E E P A R K I N G TS XXZr INTERSTATE M a tin e e Evening .. M IW . . C h ild V A R S I T Y Pass List Suspended THEATRE P e r f o r m a n c e * O n ly 1:30-7 : JO -8:45 I WINNER OF: „ e|d 0 ye r, 5th GREAT W EEK ; 6 AMAN ACADEMEAWARDS INCLUDING M I A T T \X m l i l l B E S ! P I C T U R E SEASONS B F I H E K E A R ! F R E E P A R K I N G ADJACtNT TO THtATtl A L S O : Paul Scofield • Best Actor of the Year ‘IIO B E K I'B O LT technicolor' HS INTERSTATE D TH )B R o r i . N 5:40 A U S T I N l i l t SO CONGIUS! THEATRE^ r n A T I K U S : 1:00 S OO - IO OO “ A D I A B O L I C A L H O R R O R F IL M !” Il« t r l C i M it N (lo u c o f t - lif t M a t a lin . DIABOLIQUE N O W S H O W IN G ! Starring Simone Signoret • Vera Clouzot Special Return Engagement FREE PARKING AT ALL TIMES CtyJA Summer SALE EARLY To Make Room For Remodeling Buy NOW at July Prices! POPLIN SUITS W A SH -W EA R : 3 B U T T O N MATI i d a i c u m unco rcki NATURAL SHOULDER, CEN- TER VENT, PLEATLESS PANTS. REGULAR 47.50-49.95 SALE $37. REGULAR 65.00-75.00 80.00-85.00 SALE 54.00 69.00 SUMMER BLAZERS SPORT COATS COOL, LIGHT W E I G H T . IDEAL FOR L O N G H O T SUMMER. S O L I D S A N D PLAIDS. SPECIAL PRICE FOR FAST SALE. REGULAR 40.00-45.00 SALE $29 SUMMER PANTS D A C R O N -W O O L D R E S S PANTS . . . THE FIT IS AS PERFECT AS THE CREASE T H E Y H O L D . S O L I D COLORS. REGULAR 15.95 TO 18.95 SALE $1197 2 (or $25. SOX SPECIAL REGULAR 1.50 ORLON SOX • 8 COLORS SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS SALE $3.97 3 for $10. REGULAR 6.00 TO 10.00 PLAIDS, SOLIDS, & STRIPES STKL, CcmpktU_ gMntoersttp g>f)op 2350 Guadalupe KNIT SPORT SHIRTS V A L O U R S -V-NECK ~ HENLEYS REGULAR 6.95 TO 9.95 SALE $2.97 SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS LOTS OF WHITE! SOLID COLORS, STRIPES, CHECKS, PLAIDS. THEY WENT SO FAST THE FIRST D A Y W E A D D E D SOME MORE. REGULAR 6.00 TO 8.00 SALE $4.97 P«M JO T W U x , Max ll, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN