Sooners Sink Stumbling Longhorns m _ _ _ 75,504 Watch T h e Da ily 1 EX AN 0kies Shatter Winning Streak Student New spaper at The University of Texas v _ AUSTIN. TEXAS, S U N D A Y , OCTOBER 9. 1966 Ten Pages Today No. 4 2 To Red s V ictory ^ol. 66 Price Five Cents Houston Beats Soccer Team On UT Field By F A NTH ON LUNIN It was 2:,% p.m. Saturday, and the sun shown bright orange on the Intramural Field. Seventy-five spectators jammed the bleachers to cheer their team to victory. So far the season had gone well for the University soccer team. Out of two games played, they had won both. In fact, in 21 games played during two and one-half years of competition, the team had lost only the LSI! game. their The spectators were confident but were taking no chances. A little orange-haired girl named Muffin even was requested to parade up and down the sidelines for good luck. The game was fast with the ball constantly changing sides. The Longhorns were fighting, but tile Cougars were out to win, too. A cheer rose from a section of the crowd as a Cougar made a beautiful pass. k or two h o u r s teams battled. The goalies caught pass after pass, and the players took beating upon beating. the In the last quarter the score was tied — one to one. T h e n Houston scored again. The Long­ horns never came back. As she was walking slowly away from the field, a coed who had been listening to a portable radio turned to her companion and said, “I don’t know why everyone Is so excited a b o u t some game In Dallas. Don’t they know their soccer team has just been defeated?” Field G o a ls A d d A t Cotton B o w l Bv JOHN ANDERS Texan Sp orts Editor DALLAS - (Spl.) - The Yan­ kees have finished in the cellar, Jim Brown h. s quit football, and now the final vestige of defeat- Oklahoma has beaten Texas. S n a p p i n g Texas’ monopoly string of eight straight victories, the Sooners scored on four field goals and a single touchdown to beat the Longhorns, 18-9, in th# Cotton Bowl Saturday. FOR OF it was primarily a (wo­ man show with the limelight fo­ cused on the arm of quarterback Bob Warmack and tile toe of kick­ er Mike Vachon. Warmack, only a sophomore, warmed to a sunny afternoon capacity crowd of 75.504 fans, threw for 220 yards, completed 12 passes in 21 attempts. Hard running receivers, end Ben Hart and wingback Eddie Hinton, were his primary targets. Warmack’s compatriot, Vachon, also got his kicks and broke a Texas-OU se­ ries record with four field goals in the process. Two went for mammoth yard­ age—43 and 41 yards. E ach b et­ tered the series record for field goal distance. HIK TEXAS, it was a day of receiving long-o v e r d u e come­ uppance. 'Hie ’Horns committed virtual­ ly every field error possible, but bung on, grittily, until the final gun. Texas gave the Sooners a bad fourth quarter scare before a final interception of an Andy White pass, OU’s second of the ball game, finally killed Texas’ victory hopes. WTiite’s debut as the Steer start­ ing signal-caller was marred by two lack­ interceptions, and a luster total of 125 yards passing on completing 9 of *22 attempts. THE STEERS led briefly when a game-initiating drive of 83 yards ended in a David Conway field goal from 25 yards out. important The drive’s big play came on an third down and eleven situation from the OU 24, when White hit flanking end Tom Higgins on the right sideline. Hig­ gins cut immediately, sped for I.) yards on the run, leaving Texas sitting on the OU 9 yard line. in A costly delay of game pen­ alty soon put the ’Horns in a third and eight dilemma, where­ upon White overshot Greg Lott in the end zone. BIG REI) SCORED touchdown seven minutes and never trailed from thai \ its only later .ut. (See OKLAHOMA, Page 4.) Mexico’s heartland before Weather Bureau reported the that present indications are that Inez will turn to a more northwesterly course today and tonight” and the “threat to the Texas coast increases.” The forecasting agency warned small craft along the Texas and Mexican coasts as far south as Veracruz, Mexico, to stay in port. Now Atm osphere Sought Editors Fired in By ROSALINDA BENAVIDES Texan Staff Writer Tommy DeFrank, fired Friday as editor of Texas A&M’s student newspaper, “The Battalion,” ex­ pressed little surprise at his dis­ missal and replacement by the school s publications board. “Since we had already been warned we would be fired if we continued to talk, none of us wrere surprised that this w'ould hap­ pen,” DeFrank told the Texan DeFrank, when contacted by phone in F -t Worth. “ 'with 77.;"”“ along Press wood, managing editor, and Gerald Garcia, sports editor, were dismissed Friday by the board after a week-long contro­ versy concerning the newspaper’s policies. PUBLICATIONS director Jim Lindsey who notified the t h r e e editors of their removal said that the action was taken “ to pave ' % tx ■ TH* Tommy DeFrank Photo by George Kuemp»l ho G e ttin g Their Kicks . . . Texas spellers (I and center) vie fo r loose ball. -Photo Ivt Virgil John** Hurricane Swerves From Texas C o a st Inez Again Heads for Mexico BROWNSVILLE, Tex. BROWNSVILLE, Tex. Erratic Hurricane Inez slightly •hilted her course late Saturday night and headed due westward for the Mexican coast. The new course of the giant, unpredictable storm, still packing winds of 135 miles an hour near her center, posed less of a threat to the Texas coast than its earlier charting. But the Weather Bureau warned In that any northward course would call for hurricane shift (B — warn in t r o n n warnings on the Texas coast by Sunday morning. T V . , , . , . . ______* TOE 15-DAY-OLD S T O R M , which has left 150 dead in her passage through the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico, was 300 miles south-southeast of Browns­ ville at IO p.m. (CST). The hurricane was churning due west at IO miles an hour. It had veered a bit northward earlier in the day, but then threatened out on an east-west line. The latest course would move the vi- TES Adds Section O f General Appeal By CAROLYN NICHOIS Asst. Managing Editor articles In the second anniversary issue of Texas Engineering & Science Magazine are about plans of an Apollo moon-mission, a laser radar system, and desali­ nation, the process of changing salt water to safe drinking water. In addition, several stories on University-related projects make up a new section called “TES Spotlight.” This section includes l l short reports that obviously have not been written by scientists or en- a T e x a n Review gineers, and which probably will generate more interest from non­ science readers than the detailed research articles. This section could be used to fulfill the pledge Editor Dwight Monteith made in his editorial: to publish articles of general interest to the whole academic community. In the first issue, however, this spotlight section has only a few (“Hologra­ interesting articles phy” and “Statistical Analysis of Solar Photography”) with the re­ mainder being announcements or information weeks old. TOE MEAT of the magazine consists of two articles on the conversion of salt water to fresh water, and another called ‘‘Flight of the Apollo.- Also Included is '•200,000,000 Watt Optical Radar" explanatory by accompanied drawings. This is the most tech­ nical piece and the title alone can scare a humanities major. Despite a professional look and style, TES has a fault common to most scientific journals: the "Tiling is often complicated, vague, and wordy. “The Search for Fresh Water from the Sea, ’ a 16-paragraph story, is riddled with 28 footnotes. The second article on this topic, “Desalination in Texas: A Pro­ gress Report,” names various de­ velopment boards, committees, symposiums, projects, and plans but is short on solid information about desalination in Texas. Several of the articles have re­ lated drawings which have been done well. But the pictures in the magazine, excluding some of in moon vehicles, mean relation stories. respective to Generally, most of them are too small to show any interesting or noteworthy detail. little In favor of the magazine is one important fact: this issue is bet­ ter than the one before it, and that one was better than the one before it. TES is improving, and its editors are trying to find what interests students enough for them to become readers. The magazine is on the right track by offering material about Texas and the University. National topics, such as the space pro­ gram, have not been neglected either. . cious •torm inland near Tampico Sunday morning. Some Brownsville residents be­ gan taking precautions, such as sandbagging doors and windows. Swells five to eight feet above normal hit Padre and Mustang islands. Brownsville is at the southern islands tip of Texas and both are threading hundreds of miles up the coast about IO miles offshore. thin sand spits TOE WEATHER BUREAU is­ sued a hurricane watch for the Texas coast and warned citizens to evacuate beaches and other low areas. Some businessmen in Raymond­ ville, 50 miles north of Browns­ ville, boarded up their stores and left for higher ground. The Navy ordered that 108 aircraft stationed at Corpus Chris­ ti, Kingsville, and Beeville be flown to inland bases. The Corpus Christi Naval Air Station went into hurricane evacuation con­ dition No. 3, which meant that winds of 55 miles an hour were expected within 48 hours. Tides were feet above normal at Freeport, far up the coast south of Houston. two THE HURRICANE swiped Mex­ ico’s Yucatan Peninsula Thursday and yesterday, destroying 15 boats and collapsing IOO homes in the port of Progreso. Most of the destroyed fishing boats. craft were In Merida, Mexico, the sun came out today, although several streets of the city of 175,000 were flooded and utilities disrupted. Inez was moving at about 12 miles an hour with winds near the center of 135 m.p.h. — a ma­ jor hurricane. Gales — winds of only slightly less than hurricane force of 75 m.p.h. — extended 200 miles from Inez’ center. TOE UNPREDICTABLE storm took an almost directly westerly course for three days, aiming at Weather: Fair, Mild High 86 Low 62 Lott Escapes Sooner . . . L o n g h o rn w in g b a c k evades an O k la h o m a tackler. P h o to b f i t . C la t- It em bern Life Wild in Dallas; Meanwhile in Austin... By JOHN RAMSEY Although many people believe ah life stops except in Dallas on OU Weekend, there are some who will testify that the process of living continues in Austin. For those students left behind, the thing to do is sit patiently and wait until the carbon monox­ ide is cleared from the air, then answer the question: W’hat shah I do while my classmates are running wild through the streets of “Big D?” Some students seek reliable ad­ vice to assist them in answering that question. Such was the case of one University student who sat Saturday morning beneath an oak tree discussing the problem Shuffle the way for a better atmosphere” in which the school paper could operate. that DeFrank, however, said Friday the university was night more concerned with its image than with sound journalistic con­ cepts. I don t think it w'as a personal m atter at all,” DeFrank told The Associated Press. ‘ But I do think that they dis­ missed me because they were reasonably sure I would continue to oppose their policy of censor­ ship. “THEY WERE ACTING in the university’s image. That’s the big thing right now, A&M’s image.” Earlier DeFrank said he would “never believe that the action (the student publications board) was unanimous because all seven members felt that way of their own free will. “As long as Texas A&M has policies like these I think that people will laugh at us when we try to call ourselves a first class institution.” “Mr. Rudder said that articles assured Lindsey and the board of the the unanimous support of university administration.” DeFrank said he would con­ tinue writing but not for “The Battalion.” “Mr. Rudder said that articles and letters critical of the admin­ istration should not be allowed in the paper,” he said, “and I never believed and still don’t that that’s the way you run a newspaper.” replaced by Winston Green Jr., a transfer to A&M from Tyler Junior College. John Holterd, amusements edi­ tor, recently quit iii protest DeFrank was with a friend. The friend hap­ pened to be a squirrel who was dividing his attentions between the confiding student and a near­ by acorn. Because the acorn seemed to be receiving most of the squir­ rel s attention, the advice-seeker stood up, thumbed his nose at the squirrel, and began walking away. HE TI RNED sharply after a few steps, looking as if the squir­ rel had said something. Whatever the squirrel said must have been humorous, because the student laughed loudly, then went on his way. Not all University students, however, needed advice on what to do. Many planned their week­ end in advance around the broad­ cast media. In one men’s dormitory a heat­ ed argument arose over which television program to watch. The choices were The Road Runner Cartoon Show, and the baseball World Series. The student favor­ ing the World Series based his choice on the fact that a cartoon show had no “intellectual appeal.” IN MANY CASES, the question of what to do Saturday morning W'as decided by classes. It was not difficult to determine whether a student was coming from or going to a class. The eyes of the student coming from class were one-eighth open, whereas the eyes of the student going to elaa^ wer one sixteenth. If you are among those who be lieve all activity in Austin stop sticl during UT-OU weekend, around next year. As one University student pu it, “I stayed in Austin this week end and had a great time.” And judging from the looks o; his eyes and the hot water bot tie filled with ice ort his head he did. Patrick Nugent Hired by KT6C By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Promotion of one of President Johnson’s inlaws and employ­ ment of another were announced Saturday by KTBC Radio-Televi­ sion, owned by Johnson family business interests. the General Manager J. C. Kellam said Patrick Nugent, husband of Johnson’s daughter, Luci, has been hired part time in an ad­ ministrative training program. Nugent is doing graduate w'ork in business administration at the University. O. P. Bobbitt, who is married to Johnson's sister, Rebekah, was promoted to senior vice-presi­ dent. Two Die, One Injurec In Austin Accidents Don Pannen, 20, senior psy­ chology student, was in f a i r condition a f t e r a motor- cycle-car accident Friday after­ noon. listed Pannen was on a motorcycle traveling south on Nueces Street when he .collided with a car driven by Linda Sue Clampit, 20, 1802 West Ave. headed west on Twenty-second Street. Brackenridge Hospital officials reported Pannen’s injuries as a fractured left leg and a face cut. Pannen is from Victoria and works as make-up editor for The Daily Texan. ★ * ★ Leo Foehner Jr., 18, University student from Elgin, died Friday afternoon at Brackenridge Hos­ pital from injuries received in a car crash Sept. 24. Foehner suffered extensive on Highway 290 four miles ea of Austin. Another rider in ti car, Juanita Scruggs, Suffern cuts and bruises. Survivors include the parent Mr. and Mrs. Leo Foehner Sr. * ★ ★ The death of Frank W. Nesbi Jr., 20, University student, wa pronounced accidental by Justle of the Peace Bob Kuhn. Nesbitt was found in his apar ment at 1704 Sabine by his roon mate John R. McNeil aboi 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. Police n ported that Nesbitt had a plash bag tied around his head wit a hose extending from it to ti kitchen stove. An alarm doc was found by Nesbitt’s body. Survivors include his lathe FYank W. Nesbitt Sr., Com Christi; mother, Mrs. Beatri S. Nesbitt, Kerrville, and a a to*, Mrs. Mary Neile injuries when his car overturned CtevsJ»nd, ObL ATt * Ach Austin Police Institute Program At Texas A&M I A l i A A i i O ILA A * J— To Train New Officers Better T h e coup de g race was perform ed F rid a y on The B a t­ talion, th e cam pus new spaper a t Texas A&M U niversity. th e re saw T h e ad m in istratio n th a t Tom m y D eF ran k , stu d en t editor, and two of his assistan ts w ere fired. T ins w as ju st a continuation of a long series of inci­ d en ts w hich involved censorship of th e press and m an ­ aged press. The incidents have been fostered by the A & M ad m in istratio n . to it ★ ★ ★ W hen editorials critical of the ad m in istratio n w ere w ritten , th ey were not allowed in The B attalion by its su p er­ visor, who form erly w as a public to A&M president, Gen. E arl R udder, when both w ere in th e A rm y. inform ation aide W hen a le tte r critical of the A&M A d m in istratio n w as printed in th e “ L etters to th e E d ito r” column of The B a t­ talion, th a t column w as suspended. W hen th e student editor-in-chief seem ed to get restless w ith th e re stra in ts placed on him, he w as dem oted in title to student editor and given a small raise in salary . F o r- tun ately , D eF rank protested and so did a great n u m b er of the student body— th a t is, those stu d en ts w ho had h e a rd of the situation since news of it w as not printed in T he B attalion. ★ ★ ★ A&M officials announced th a t th e dism issal of th re e editors w as n ecessary “ because continued policy d isag ree­ m ent could only result in fu rth e r h a rm to T he B a ttalio n .” In reality, continuing th e p resen t policy of T he B a t­ talion will kill any freedom th a t th e p ap er could m u ster. Not only does the T exan deplore an d sh u d d er at w h a t h as happened to The B attalion, we can n o t help b u t w onder how the rest of th e school is operated . T exas A&M h as a m ilitary trad itio n , com ing m ainly from the m any y e a rs in w hich all m ale stu d en ts w ere re ­ quired to tak e R O T O . If The B attalion could be m anhandled as it was, we w onder how academ ic d ep artm en ts fare. A re th e y cu t down w hen th e y have new th o u g h ts outside th e trad itio n al realm ? O r a re th e y cu t down as w ere th e jo u r­ n alistic critics on T he B a tta lio n ’ ★ ★ ★ Tile m ilitary trad itio n ally h as looked upon th e jo u r­ n alist as an enem y. T he D uke of M arlborough, th e v icto r a t Blenheim in 1704, w as so enraged by a journalistic critic th a t he proposed “ to find som eone th a t will b reak his and th e p rin te r’s hones, w hich I hope will be approved by all o nest E nglishm en, since I serve m y queen and co u n try w ith all m y h e a rt.” At T exas A&M, th e ad m in istratio n of ex -m ilitary p e r­ sonnel does n o t b reak th e bones of jo u rn alistic critics; th e p ress m erely h as its new s m anaged and th e critic is fired— b u t certain ly not w ith th e approval of freedom -loving people. A&M Press Code Tile headlines a re flashing. T he new im age is h ere T he days of criticism have vanished. Tile free press of old h as gone glim m ering into th e past, despite th e tru th of th in g s as th e y really are. T h e new im age is one of w ondrous b eau ty , built up by a m anaged press, and coaxed and caressed by a new s and inform ation d ep artm en t staff which will p rin t only favo rable news of th e U niversity’ in T he B attalion. W e look gleefully w ith th irsty eyes, fo r th e big long headlines and fine prom otional copy. In m y d ream s, I see th e h o rro r of a free press telling th e tru th and describing w h at actu ally is happening on cam ­ pus. But in th e evening of m y m em ory, alw ays I com e b ack to T exas A&M U niversity. A lw ays th e re echoes and re-echoes in o u r ears— D uty-C ensorship-M anaged Press. (With sincere apologies to Gen. Douglas MacArthur and his D uty-Honor-Country speech.) Grassroots Philosophy It'S no good relying on y e ste rd a y 's b reak fast to keep j o u r bodj going to d a y — n o r on .yesterday's ideas to keep y o u r m ind going either. — Seven Star Diary ( "K e e -LEAF"?!! V Bv ELLIOTT WEST Editorial Page Assistant A ustin police, like police I Ii rough- out th e country, a re su ffering the pains of adjusting to new p ro b ­ lem s. Recent Supreme Court decisions, say m any CS enforcement officials, have shackled the policeman by limiting his power of arrest and Interrogation. IN TEXAS, a new criminal procedures rode further regulates the handling of suspects. These developments have combined with the traditional troubles of age r e ­ quirem ents and low pay to produce a crisis in recruitm ent. In many c ities , new men in blue are hard to come bv. Austin lacks a basic attraction for new blood: money. “ Frankly, we rate pretty far down the line in pay," Police Chief R. A. “ Bob” Miles said this week. THE QI ALITY u e need requires men who can make more money than the biggest number of here. We officers because of this," Miles said. lose Although salaries are higher than those in Waco, most Texas cities offer more than Austin's starting pay of $400, P ay will be increased, however, under a new budget approved last week. High school graduates in most cities must wait until they are 21 before join­ ing police forces. By then, many ate settled comfortably in jobs and hesitate to begin a new. lower-paying career. PALLAS LEADERS tried to meet (hi* problem bv lowering their age require­ to 19'2 years, but some citizens ment object to adolescent protection. Austin's answer to recruitm ent is the Police Aide Program. After high sr hool, young men may work for $947 per month as civilian employes and become fledg­ ling policemen when thev reach drinking age. Once hired, new officer's enter “cadet a half-year training program the “ best in the sr hool. that Miles considers state." K tR FO! R MONTHS, trainees attend classes on law. procedure, and practical problems in law enforcement. Beginners then conduct a dry run by investigating a simulated crim e and making an a r ­ rest. After working for two weeks under a reasoned officer, the cadets return to the < I ass roo rn to discuss problems they have discovered. Two weeks later, the recruits em erge with a veteran officer for another month their own, If they before working on the roster after six more a ’e still on months of probationary service, the trainees finally become ranking officers. HOI RS OF CLASSES and simulated im portant arrests have become more In the light of the law's new look at sus­ pect's rights. The Texas Criminal Code, which went into effect in January, orders the police to take a prisoner before a m agistrate soon after his arrest to inform the sus­ pect of his legal rights. .Supreme Court opinions, notably the “Escobedo” and “ M iranda” cases also stress the suspect's right to a la w y e r- private or court-appointed. CADETS, therefore, must learn how to build a case that will survive in court. I brough conferences and briefings, Miles k e e p s veterans up to date on arrest pro­ cedures. “Nobody really knows what these n e w developments mean. They won’t for years. We just have to do what we think if the courts say we're is right; and wrong, then we’re wrong," Miles com­ mented. An arresting officer now takes his prisoner to jail, but the suspect is not questioned. After the suspect hears his from a m agistrate and sees a the police lawyer (if he wants one), then may interrogate their prisoner. rntiflp s "We’re almost completely handcuff­ ed." Miles said. 'RIOT," whispered to the police chief of any large city, usually produces a head of white hair. Miles has prepared his underlings with riot manuals, exer­ cises, and frequent refresher courses. Miles, like his counterpart in Dallas, the added worry of public has faced criticism. After the Whitman Incident Aug. I. a investigation of the to petition asking an polit e perform ance was presented Gov. John Connallv. THE PETITIONERS asked why police took one and a half hours to halt the sniper, why a citizen was deputized, why citizens were not cleared thp streets, and why a light plane was used to observe and fire at Whitman. from Miles answered that his men could not have foreseen the tragedy and were initiative forced during the crisis. He added that sound trucks had warned the unwary. to act on their own The needed on his perch. light plane. Miles added, was to find if Whitman was alone If was 15 minutes before anyone knew enough to call us there (the Uni­ versity), and another five before we had enough men to do any good. By that Banks G i v e L o w e r Interest R e c ru its Learn th ro u g h E xp e rie n c e . Cadet James M. Beckham debriefs his day with Lt. T. S. W eaver. t I iv/ i vJ u> an., va a; i Photo bv St. Clair Newborn time most of done." Miles rem arked. , the dam age had been J he petition was sent to the Austin City Council by Connally, who has neither responsibility nor power in local affairs. investigation but THE ( OI NEIL, however, did not order an instead passed a resolution commending Miles and his force. But criticism, justified or not, remains alongside mounting modern problems. While others debate what should have been done in the past and how laws and codes may work in the future, the police­ man's big g est is being effective now. Austin and the U niversity will he affec ted greatly by how the officer func­ tions in the turbulent p resen t. job Enrollment Surpasses Funds for Loans • K I N G T O N ----- ( ( P , S ) sources, m ounting W A S H I N G T O N — ( G P S ) D e D e - spite expansion of stu d en t loan p ro g ram s by C ongress and p ri­ v ate stu d en t loans have o u t­ applications fo r paced th e available supply of funds, a C ollegiate P ress Service stu d y h as revealed. The House of Representatives voted in May to grant $190 million for student loans under the National Defense Educa­ tion Act. Tile senate Appropriations Com­ m ittee recently approved this increase over last year's $179 million, but the full Senate has not voted on it yet IN THE COMMERCIAL sector, the A m e r i r a n (ABA) American Bankers Association initiated a campaign last June to per­ suade bankers to increase student loans. Financial institutions, which loaned near­ ly $1.50 million last year to students, are expected to provide up to $400 million this year. The shortage in funds is due to soaring college enrollment, not to fewer bank loans, according to the ABA's legislative counsel, Jam es Smith. College enroll­ ment for 1966 is estimated by the Office of Education at six million, a IO per cent increase over last year. To accommodate the growth, colleges m ust expand, and more than three-four­ ths of American colleges and universi­ tuition and ties have recently raised hoard, according to surveys by the Life Insurance Management Association. TI FITOX ANT) ROOM fees for at least 25 schools are $,3,000, and costs are ex­ a c te d to rise. Possible cheating In loan applications m ay account for some increases in re­ quests. Parents may he borrowing money through their children because of low interest rates granted to students. Smith said. Meanwhile, other parents have sold (heir stock to obtain money, despite a 20 per cent drop in stock m arket prices over the last months, and some students will work this year instead of joining the class of ’70, according to Smith. I NOER THE N DEA student loan act, undergraduates can burrow up to $1,000 and graduate students can receive $2,500 yearly, not to exceed $10,000 for under­ graduate and graduate study combined. Students pay no interest on loans while in school, and only three per cent after graduation. Federal allocations, divided among states on the basis of school enrollment to students and requests, are granted through financial aid offices of colleges. Schools must match government funds by providing IO per cent of every govern­ m ent loan. UNDER COMMERCIAL pro grams, students borrow' directly from banks or loan companies, instead of their colleges. Interest rates are held at six loan The Firing Line M o re O n Drugs hope that many .students read it and take it seriously. To the Editor: I would like to congratulate you on your editorial “Avoid Amphetamines ” Apparently Dexedrinr, and to a lesser extent Benzedrine, receive wide use on m any university campuses. Many stu­ dents seem it) be unaware of the poten- tian danger of these drugs. Whereas mans students would avoid opium, mor­ phine, and heroin, they feel no fear of such drugs as amphetamine sulfate and barbiturates. In some ways, the latter are more dangerous. For example, unlike opiates, the continued use of these drugs can result in mental deterioration - organic phsychoses, including visual and auditory hallucinations. Also, and iii con­ tradictions to a statem ent in your edi­ torial. it is my understanding that pri­ to amphetamines do m ary addictions exist, reach proportions as high as 1,500 mg. daily. in You that stating ( ii e r e important with­ drawal symptoms for cessation of am ­ phetamines. This Is not true in the case of cessation of barbiturates, tolerance mav correct no and are are Again, thank you for the editorial. I J. Allen Williams Jr. Assistant Professor of Sociology Garrison Hall 303 C lo se d Vote To the Editor: By a vote without dissent, the Student Assembly chose to elect the vice-presi­ the Students’ Association by dent of that voting by secret ballot. We feel secret ballot is a deplorable method of election by a representative body. On any issue, especially one this importance, voting students have the right to know the vote of their elected representatives. The votes of the individual Assembly members in last night’s election should be disclosed. Certainly, all future votes in the assembly should be by open not secret, ballot; and on m ajor issues the individual Assembly m em bers’ vw*v.B votes should be published in The Daily Texan" Polly Travis 709 Rio Grande Frank Stinger FHott P. Tacker 2216 Rio Grande lowed to reside there. We did not require The Daily Texan to speak in our behalf, but I would like to extend my thanks to the editor who did so. We think it is unfair to us and to others who feel as we do to require the w aiters to say a prayer that is personally offensive to us. Perhaps nothing will come of your editorial, hut thanks any­ way. Marsha Kalman SRI) Tower Backed To the Editor: The answers of Tower and Carr in the recent Texan editorial page article were virtually the same. On issues other than education, C arr has expressed no basic differences of opinion from Sen. Tower. C arr seems to suppose that simply by advertising that he is the Democratic nominee voters will respond by rushing to the polls to cast their vote for him. Since I differ politically with both can­ didates, I Intend to vote to keep Tower thereby m aintain in Washington and some evidence of a two-party state in Texas. Don Smith 1216 W. 22 I Official N otices I rosti*M * » • r>r»w.ng. a m o r a i c * . . ..u .v ia j jct 3o I p it J J J o W . government. E d H , ai] for- gn ansu**#* ..,,rna un m anage- i cia> Oil ii, X pre SOQDunlLdgL engineering marxating. mu,ic. pharmacy, philosophy pm sics paychologj, resource* real aetat#, p Cd ’ Monday, ra t 34, I p m •ammi st ration, transportal <»• sociology, sogtpgj biology, bisti v office satlat . « speech s Bd and other subjects A ! examinations will be given in English Build- JIM- W h o se C re d it? To the Editor: It is not “ all to the credit of Scottish Rite Dormitory to allow the five Jewish girls to . . . live there.” Apparently the author of that letter to the Texan does not realize that our fathers and grand­ the fathers are Masons, fathers and grandfathers of the other girls. We have as much right to live there as they do — and it would be to the detriment of SRI) if we were not al­ just as are Tower Hit To the Editor: I was somewhat confused by Senator Tower’s comments on education which appeared in the Get. 4 Texan, in w'hich he stated that he supported the NDEA program , the Land-Grant college sys­ tem, the “ Impact A reas” laws, and the Higher Education bills of 1965 and 1966. This seems to contradict his earlier stand on education. H p is q u o te d in th e May 21, 1961, Austin American as say­ ing: “ I oppose any form of federal con­ trol of financing of public education.” Senator Tower has a long history of op­ posing federal aids to education, from voting against scholarship gran's in 3962 to opposing aid to elem entary and secondary schools in 1965. In 1961 and 1963, the senator voted the Manpower and Retraining against acts, but on Aug. 28. 1963. he stated in San Antonio that he agreed with LI LAC on the need to educate every child in the community, and he said, “ the should aid communities in their effort to educate tho underpriviledgod.” Aaron McNeec* ( hairman. Editorial Committee I T Students for Carr federal government mxmrm ■ , % ,. , Letters to the Editor Readers ait* in.tied to write letters to the editor. Letters may be edited and spelling and gram m atical errors correct­ ed. Contributors should: • Triple space lines and type. • Limit letters to 125 words. • Include name, address, and phone number. • Avoid direct personal attacks. Leave letters in Journalism Building 303 with the editor, managing editor, or the editorial page editor, or mail them to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Texas 78712. rn i •» , per cent, although commercial rates range from six-and-one-haif to eight per cent. the While a student attends college, the federal government pays interest, then pays three per cent when studies aie completed. Thus, the cost to stii- d( n s for loans at commercial banks is equivalent to that under the government NDEA program . Since the Bankers' Association dri\e, limited reports reveal some increases in loans, Smith said. New York student state banks have increased loans by 25 per cent; Massachusetts banks have tripled their outlay; and New Jersey metropolitan areas have serviced more Joans in August than in all of last year. In areas where loans have not been granted to students before, such as Miami, Washington, D.C., and coastal areas of New Jersey, hanks arc not cooperating with the student loan pro­ gram. J o b Opportunities f c r ° 7 J ™ XAS U F E 1N URA NCB c o d e m ™ field rec, . .mg No a strictio n to ac*. insurance fn r ° r e . 12, RA* 0 \ ' R K CORPORATION’ recruit r , * in ai. attern ic N® restrict'on« ** V . field. ,ra * M- n 20 CENTRAL INTEIJJGENCB a g e n e J recruiting for men and women for their aca­ e « > lour. ang .age- and fois dem e notrycs, geography, cartography, na.ism. transportation, Eng' sh eign area programs Pro*™rn K eened .>n a* f old to pjycholoK' to biology. soc o log' ph> pi n On ll : CHEVRON CHEM* VL c o recruit m f for men for agricultural sates. Restriction tm a n - de te e • its, and buvnos* field to btoiogj. science, general libe-al OC* < R DLN A- BH \ USTR KET r€cru!tjfl# for :coo?ter* No restt lo­ mon tion as to academ ic field tor commercia! credit Oct. 19 PU B L IC H E A L T H SE R V IC E re t for program for men on academ ic fte'd math. philosophy, and botany btoiogj sociology public t n f representative’ R e d u ctio n journalism h story. econom ics t.-at >r apology speech, p ty n o'ogj to anglish, admin Get f eld to academ ie representatives and underwriter* No lh 20 AETNA INSURANCE CO r e m e t nr for men and women for fre'd representative*, e lm cal restric­ tions at 30 ARMY AND Alt: FORCE EXCHANGE Oft trainee*, ar for mana-.TTirnt r#J ' b e n U a e s and ent rm ee tm g [ to for pharmaceutical salp. liberal arts. MOGUL CORP. chem istry field a c c o u n tin g , and m a r k e tin g . recruiting restriction ' *' ' * ’ la p u b lish ed d a ily e x c e p t M o n d e v an d S a tu r- a e s of rex** th ro u g h May and dAv an d h o lid ay p erio d s S e p tem b e r M o n th ly in A ugust by T t -.aa S tu d e n t P u b lica tio n * . Inc., D ra w e r D. U n iv e rsity S ta tio n , Austin, T ex a s 78712. Sec­ o n d -class p o sta g e paid at A u stin , T exas. h e w s c o n trib u tio n s w ill be a ccep ted by tele p h o n e (GR 1-5244 o r at th e e d ito ria l office. J B 103 o r a t th e n e u s J E. JQ2. Inqui r i es c o n ce rn in g d e liv e ry sh o u ld lab o ra to ry " m a d ' 111 IGR 1-3227.) lr- J-B. 107 t GR 1-5x44j an d a d v e rtis in g , J B ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE SERVICE . . rT Associated Press s exclusively entitled to th# 1 " rh* ’n# • ertJMng by th# v t p i . S i I c van itaiiv P T S AMON AI AOVERTISrvG SERVICES is represented nationally In th# D e l i v e r e d b y carrier ( w i t h i n Vufctin a r e * f r o m I - t h t o 38th a n d J e f f e r s o n i n t e r r e g i o n a l H i g h w a y to D e l i v e r e d b v m a i l w i t h i n I ( a t i s t o t i n t s D e l i v e r e d b y m a i l o u t s i d e I ravi» C o u n t y b u t w i t h i n I S. O n e Semester ( f a l l o r s p r i n g ) 13 50 « TS 3. ah field of n m T w o S e m e s t e r * ( f a l l a n d s p r i n g > IS TI 9 Ut 6.74 t h n SJ n * f f l ll ! ‘ll? , r e th e e d u n p h \ I o t h e p d i l o n a l c o l u m n ara e d ito ria ls u nless sig n ed a re w ritte n A«S®«JuLVor!al v,ew* "re nnf necessarily the editors. rh# D a i l v n > \ i » n s r # n u t in A n s o p i n i o n s e x p r e s s e d ’£ « • « » ? ’ t r a n o n o r B oard n f R egents / Tl» Univ,r.ity of tVx.T £ » PERMANENT STAPF P IT? R ............................... J O H N E C O N O M ID Y M A N A G IN G EDITOR ........................ b il l CRYER ^ N A G i N G EDITOR . . . . C A R O L Y N N IC H O L S ............................ SU SA N POWELL EDITOR E E D IT O R ................ BILL M A LA ISE SPORTS EDITOR ............................. JO H N ANDERS tcoV|S,d’c J rP17° R ............... RENEE FENDRICH FEATURE EDITOR .................. SU ZA N N E SHELTON t STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE lnue New. E dito r....................... Mari|yn Kuch,er Make-Up Editor......................Mj)ry A ,ice Zrubc|[ Copy Editor! Issue Sport, Editor ............................ Roialin# Benavides, Lucy Horton Morr!j Sports Assistants........................... Anderti Larry Upshaw, Larry Mayo Issue Amusements E dito r.............. Sharon Shelton P ag# 2 S unday, O c to b e r 9 , 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Scholastic Honorary Lists 41 Mem bers Freshm en students elected to m em bership in Phi E ta Sigma, ratio n al honorary scholastic fra ­ ternity for freshm en a re F ran cis­ co H. Antunez, Clayton J. A r­ thurs, Richard E. Atlas, Shandon L. Bailey TI, Roy E , Bates. M ichael H. Brophy, John Walton Bunnell J r., Thom as C. Cooper, Steven G. Crowell, Dean C. Evans. Jim m y D. F reem an. Je f­ ferson lf. Fuller, and Marcelo F. Gomoz-Ganem. Also, Wesley W. Green Jr.. E l­ m er VV. Ran ak III. Robert L. Hayden, Howard A, Hunt, L arry L. Kesmodel, William J. Koros, John R. Thomas A. Kubena. john Langston, Jam es S. L ee, A. Logue, Roger P. Macon, Rob­ ert G, Manz, Robert C. M arek, Kenneth B. McCullough, Bill B. M cHarg J r.. Bruce O. Moses. John L. E. Nugent, and Kenneth A. Pulliam . Also, Russel D. Renka. Steven I. Shankm an, Michel S m i t h , David Sobev, Thomas F. Stipul- kosky, Patrick F. Timmons Jr., Ja m e s B. W arren, John A. White, Stew art A. Wilber J r ., and Ar­ nold L. Wilson. If any student has m ade a 2.5 in­ average and has not been cluded, he m ay contact Law ­ rence T. Franks, Dean of Men, a t Speech Bldg. i l l . Amstead, Miller Speak at Meet T eachers m ust arouse a stu ­ d ent's curiosity about m athem ati­ cal and scientific things if they a re to prepare him for a c a re e r in engineering, Dr. Billy A m stead, associate dean of the College of Engineering, said at the general session of the Conference for toe Advancem ent of Science Teaching Friday. If teachers do not engender this they Inquisitiveness, he added, a re not doing their duty as teach­ ers. H andicapped C h ildren H elped Education Center Progresses i i >\ si i f i o \ The Special Education Instruc­ the tional M aterials Conter of U niversity has m ade exceptional progress sinop its establishm ent in June, Dr George M. Olshin said Thursday. children Olshin, research coordinator of th e handicapped and children and youth branch in hic B ureau of R esearch, US Office is of Education attending tis second national m eeting of SEIMC. in W ashington, Dr. Claude lf M arks, associate director of the U niversity SEIMC, said one of tho most im portant results of the m eeting is that ‘‘be­ cause we have been given iden­ tity and esp sure as netw ork cen­ fields of education ters, other have become interested and We joined reached out and have h a n d s.” that M arks explained “ The real purpose of the centers is to help instruct children in a m ore productive w ay.” teal hers ONE GOAL of the m eeting is to plan coordination and retrieval of inform ation and to develop a IO centers network among loc a ­ which serv e geographical tions the United throughout States. the A com puter system has been this coordination. s#t up to aid The potential of the U niversity's $6 million Control Data 6600 com ­ p uter, largest com puter on a US cam pus, w as dem onstrated for conference m em bers T hurs­ day. the Hie centers provide local schools, teachers, counselors, and students of special education with teaching aids. guidance, and con­ sultation the ha ndicapped. for dealing with C hildren and youth served by the centers include the m entally retarded, em otionally disturbed, crippled, speech im paired, deaf, and visually handicapped. MATERIALS COLLECTED and m ade available bv the centers in­ clude aids such as Braille books, test kits, tapes, recording devices, and films. R epresentatives attending the 10 from are centers, conference each of the officials from the US Office of Education, the G eorge Peabody College for T eachers, Tile Pathw ay School, and the Council for Exceptional Children. fine representatives from Washington is Bobby Gene G reer who received hi* doctorate of philosophy in spe< i J education from die University in 1965. His doctoral work was done under a I iii ted Cereba! Palsy of Amen a fellowship. the of Dr. William G. Wolfe, c h a ir­ the departm ent of sp* m an of ria l education and director of 'he U niversity SEIMC, is one of tho conference hosts. The first SEIMC was set up at the University of Wisconsin by is Jam e« M cCarthy, who Dr. All U niversity buildings and grounds, all U niversity-operated sw im m ing pools, and other in­ stallations frequented by Univer­ sity students a re subject in­ tho spection and Health Center. to regulation by os chairm an serving the SEIMC network this y e a r and as agenda ch airm an a t the Austin m eeting. of Fitness Program May Be Expanded t in physical fitness and inc m ay he expanded for and law students. Jennings, train in g spe- aid response to the fit­ ness program was so g re a t th at another class ma;, be organized. Hie original class, which m eets at noon on Tuesday and T hurs­ 'i as 15 additional openings. day. lf en ugh students a re interested in the program , a class m eeting at I p.m. on Monday and W ednes­ day will be added. Half of each fitness class period Is devoted to isom etric and iso­ tonic exercises. The students use the rem ainder of the period w ork­ to co m bat ing with equipm ent personal fitness problem s. ''UM'1' ..... . the new' as well as Secondary school teachers m ust challenge their potential engineers "w ith tile old,” Am stead continued, “ and they m ust point out that few scientific principles are im portant to m an unless they provide him with better structures, products, or services.” THE CONFERENCE w as con- associate eluded Saturday by general chairm an of the confer­ ence, who spoke about the scien­ tific basis for m oral judgm ent. Topics in the field of .science wore secondary .science teachers throughout the three-day m eeting. stressed to tools, The conference opened with a to uses m edia session devoted and availability of various teach­ ing film s and such as slides. At a dinner session T hurs­ day, Dr. John J. Biesele, director of the U niversity’s Genetics Foundation, called on the sta te to establish several large natural a reas of land for the study of baseline ecology. Dr. Biesele, general chairm an of the conference, said that the state should set aside som e IO or 12 tra c ts of land to be used by scientists, teachers, and students for the study of the relationships of living organism s within them. The second p a rt of the confer­ ence, which will stress topics in m athem atics, will be held Nov. 10-12. UFO SIGHTED •—P h o to by V irgil Johnson C l a s s Bows to D a lla s This sign, posted Friday, might have com e as a surprise to many students as they tru d g e d from one class to another. O thers will never know what it felt like to g e t a break from* Friday classes since they had skipped out early to g e t a head start on the OU weekend traffic. SDS Prints Mag azine; Sale Begins Monday A new publication is scheduled to h it the U niversity a re a Mon­ It will cost IO cents, be day. about the size of a comic book, and have a lot of a rt work. Thorne Drover, m em ber of local chapter of Students for a Dem o­ cratic Society, said the publica­ tion will be a cross between a new spaper and a m agazine and Will be a “free-wheeling thing” in content. the T ie m agazine is patterned a fte r a sim ilar publication a t Michigan State U niversity called “ The P a ­ p e r.” D reyer said th at the m ag­ azine will not he in competition writh the R anger m agazine, but will discuss things The Daily Tex­ an ‘‘doesn t think re le v a n t” and “ doesn’t w'ant to deal w ith.” that Tile m agazine is not adopting any one style but will, D reyer says, “ do a lot of m uckraking— find out w hat's going on.” D reyer said the m agazine will hook up with an underground press syn­ dicate. is, one which has an ag reem ent with m em bers for a free exchange of inform ation. D reyer said he ufent to see Dr. N orris G. Davis, chairm an of the D epartm ent of Journalism and Ja c k Holland, dean of stu dent life, about the Hiles for dis tributing the m agazine on cam pas. Davis said he w arned D reyer I the m agazine on about selling cam pus w ithout perm ission from , the University. D reyer is not a student and the m agazine is not a student publication. N o t a flying saucer. United Fund Objective. The University com m unity’s fair share of the to tal United Fund goal. In sight but not yet in hand. Please see your solicitation chair­ man soon. Your gift or p ledge will help m eet som e DOW N-TO-EARTH NEEDS! UNIVERSITY FACULTY AND STAFF C A M PA IG N GROUP DANCING LESSONS Exclusive For UT Students FOR ONLY ABOUT $3.00 Week DON'T MISS OUT! HAVE FUN! MEET N E W FRIENDS! WHILE LEARNING H O W TO DANCE IN A FEW SH O RT WEEKS. THESE EXCLUSIVE STUDENT RATES RESTRICTED TO 17-23 YEARS O F A G E. SINGLES O R COUPLES. C all G R 6-0644 or Enroll in Person on or Before Oct. 15 DANCE STUDIOS 1004 CONGRESS - GR 6-0644 Greyhound Opens New Bus Terminal Austin’s new' Greyhound Bus T erm inal officially opened Satur­ day with a public inspection and celebration. the 12:02 a.m . bas Located on the corner of Con­ gress Avenue and E a st Fourth Street, the term inal began actual operation Sunday with the d epar­ ture of to Hoaston. ^ Greyhound, the K errville Bus Company and Ar­ tenant c a r­ row Coach Lines, rie rs, will have n early SO bas schedules arriving and departing from the term inal daily. along with The present Greyhound te r­ m inal a t 118 E a st Tenth St. had been ased by the bas com ­ pany since 1936. ArlerrtL«em«nt Dr. Cecil Mullins, Educational Psychologist READING AND GRADES SA N A N T O N IO - Educators constantly stress the fact that if a itu d en t wants good grades in achool, he must read and under­ stand what be reads. ‘ T he most frccjuent cause of high school and college dropouts is the inability to complete the re quired reading,” said D r. Cecil J M ullins, the inventor of the Opt! mat ion Speed Reading technique has T he O pti mat ion method been producing reading speeds of several thousand words per minute fo r over ten years. out like som ething 'I he accomplishments o f some o f O ptim atioris previous students sound of science fiction. O ne 13-year-old lad reads hooks to r his public school assignments in 6 to IO minutes His grades have jum ped from bare ly passing to straight A s and B’s after taking the course. to Another ex student, a 35-year old public teacher, had school made less than average grades in his undergraduate work. He went back to graduate studies after de vcloping, through O ptim ation, th ability read an average non fiction book in 10 to 13 minutes. His first semester at Texas U ni­ versity he was awarded straight A ’s and a chance for a scholarship. "I know the results sound in­ credible,” Dr. M ullins said, “ but we have a standing offer wherever O ptim ation is taught for anyone w ho is undecided to come to our first m eeting free of any obliga­ tion, to see for him self what the course will be like.” Classes arc being organized now , in Austin for this guaranteed read- ! ing course. Y ou can take your choice o f free first meetings, and come to any one of the follow ing without obliga­ tion : October ID, af 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. l l , 12, and 13 O P T I M A T I O N SPEED READING The Penthouse 1212 Guadalupe, Suite 109 Schools Coast to Coast F R A T E R N I T Y M E N . . . HERE'S YOUR 1 9 6 7 CACTUS Photographic Schedule Pictures are to be made in the Cactus Studio--Journalism Building Room 5. ST U D IO H O U R S 8:30-12:30 1:30-4:30 All Appointments Must Be Made Through the Fraternity CACTU S FRATERNITY SCHEDULE A C A C I A A L P H A FPClVoisJ Pl...................................... Tuesday, September 27 through Friday, September 30 ALPHA R H O T H I ......................................Tuesday, September 27 through Thursday, September 29 ALPHA TAH D M P f a ................................... Tuesday, September 27 through Thursday, September 29 2 p^jj b e ta ™ F" d ‘ Y' September 30 ............................................ Tuesday, September 27 through Friday, September 30 DELTA C H I ............................ * ................... Tuesday, September 27 through Friday, September 30 D P I TA KAPPA FPCii r»M ................................ Tuesday, September 27 through Thursday, September 29 ...................................Tuesday‘ Se Ptember 27 S E J U P S IL O N ............................... TU#Sday‘ SeF>tember 27 thr° U9 f’ Th- d o y . September 29 ...................................... TU#Sday‘ S#ptem ber 27 +hrou9h Friday September 30 30 throu9h 7- s d a y , October 4 September 30 through Wednesday, October 5 ............... ..........................Fr.!day‘ September KAPPA A ^ P H ? KAPPA Q i r M A ............................................ Friday, LAMBDA T H I a i PU a ....................................Friday, PHI DELTA THFTA .................................Friday, PHI G A M M A n l i T A ....................................... Monday, October 3 through September 30 th ro u gh Wednesday, October 5 September 30 through Wednesday, October 5 Thursday, October 6 ..................................... ^ ° nday‘ ° ct0ber 3 Thursday, O ctober 6 PH K A P P A S ? PHI K A PPA C ir M A ......................................... Monday, October 3 through Thursday, October 6 PHI KAPPA TAU 3 through Wednesday, October 5 PHI KAPPA THFTA......................................... uesday, October 4 through Thursday, October 6 PHI S IG M A RFI TA ...................................... Wednesday, October 5 through Monday, October IO PH S IG M A K A P P A ...................................... W ednesday. October 5 through M o n d e * October .0 .................................... Monday, O ctober Pl KAPPA ALPh I S IG M A ALPHA EPSILON............................... Thursday, October 6 through Wednesday, October 12 ...................................I hufSday‘ 0et0ber 6 thrOU9h Thursda* ° ‘ *°ber " S G M A A L P H A M U S IG M A C H I S IG M A N U ..............................S “" 2 * * ...................................... Thursday, October 6 through Tuesday. O ctober ......................................... Monday, O ctober IO through Wednesday, O ctober 12 6 through Tuesday, O ctober l l ll s i g m a p h i e p s i l o n S IG M A Pl ............... £ . 1 ? S ............. Tuesday, O ctober ? . l l t i < * * * '3 through Friday, O ctober 14 T A U D E L T A P H I L L L ! ] .......................................................W f c v T A U K A P P A EP SILO N . uesday, O ctober 11 through Thursday, O ctober 13 J ™ 9 !! ! ! I b u r $ d a y ' 0 c t ° b e r 13 TH ETA XI ....... O cto b e r 14 ............................................ Wednesday, O ctober 12 through Friday, O cto b e r 14 ...................................w Y esday’ 2 c*°u*r i2 *hrou9h Sunday, October 9, 1966 THE Oklahoma Triumphs . i P a w H r t u j k s l 1 \ (Continued from page I.) m a m a a t ■» ^ W arm ack, the passing whiz and th e g a m e ’s leading rush er with 60 y ard s, bootlegged on a first- •nd-tw o situation and scored. Va- c hon’s first placem ent attem p t, a conversion effort, w ent aw ry. THE SECOND STANZA began en a sour note for Longhorn p a r­ tisan s aa G reg Lott fum bled a fte r short joyously sw iped its first of three recover­ ies. y ard ag e. OU T exas defense stiffened and the Sooners w ere forced to punt after an unprolific se rie s of downs. On T e x a s’ second down, White hit for L ott up tim ely th e m iddle the Steer y a rd a g e , w hereupon w ingback fum bled again. F ro m th e point of recovery on (he O klahom a 24, OU m aneuvered to the 18, w here B arney G iles’ tough defense kept the Sooners from a firs t down payoff with tw o successive sm ashing tackles. its next scoring opportunity. W arm ack be­ gan to roll and ram ble. H itting H a rt en a 30-yarder, W arm ack OU DID NOT blow brought OU 67 yards to the Texas 13. The offensive m achine stalled there, and Vacbon entered to boom his first field goal attem pt, successfully, from 31 yards out. The third q u a rte r w as m ore fuel to OU’s Big Red fire. On fourto- and-13 from the Texas 26, Yachon and W arm ack team ed as kieker and holder, respectively, and OU w as ahead by three m ore, 12-3. AN EARLY fourth q u a rte r field goal by Va chon m ade it 15-3 and cheery, confident Okie's began to search for their tram pled m um s and wadded souvenir program s. for Texas sim ultaneously began ifs search the end zone. The search ended with 9:09 left in the gam e. The Steers drove 67 yards on 9 plays, capped by W hite's roll-out option right to paydirt. His scoring effort cam e on a fourth-and-one situation. crucial two The fell short as try' for W hite's pass to E d Sm all was deflected. Tilings got wild from there. SOON AFTER, W arm ack, on a third and nine, heaved a 4^-yard bomb to H art, who fell forward on the T exas 22-yard line. Two plays la te r. J e rry P ritch ard in­ terceded recover a Sooner fum ble. to B efore T exas could get its of­ fense out of first gear, however, Jim Helm s fumbled. It looked as though T exas w as finished. With 4 :27 left, W arm ack began the Sooner stall. On third down, he fum bled, however, giving Tex­ as another last-gasp scoring op­ portunity. BI T THE BALL ext hanged hands again when a White pass intended for I/itt wfas intercepted two plays later. T exas held the Sooners on three downs but on the fourth, Yachon trotted in, perform ed his chores from 41 yard s out, and put O kla­ reach. The boot hom a out of m ade is the way it 18*9 which it ended two m inutes later. D esperation passes by White on the Horns final offensive se­ ries w ere fruitless and Texas was forced to kick on fourth down. CON WAY’S KUK took an im- pish bounce and w as good only 27 yards. Working from his owr. 25, W m ack kept on four stra ig h t casto rs to kill the clock and T o hopes for a ninth stra ig h t v over the Sooners. Fighting Irish Smash Cadets in tim es the first half SOUTH BEND, Ind. - (ft Third-ranked N otre D am e scor five T erry H anratty hit Jim Seymo with eight passes for 143 yare then flooded the field with su to sm ash Arm y 35-0 Saturday. It was the C adets’ w orst lie ing by the Irish in 38 m eetin of the traditional riv alry and lf N otre Dam e with a 26-8-4 seri edge. It also helped atone for ti adm ini biggest beating ever tered the Irish—a 59-0 rrushir by Army in the Glenn Davis-Dc B lanchard e ra of 1944. The U-T BARBER SHOP Extends A Cordial W elco m e T O ALL STUDENTS O ffe r in g T exas H ospitality And E xcellin g In C om plete Barber Service with MISS N A N BOWERS our M E N ’S H A IR S T Y L IST for Razor sh ap in g and current hairstyles fo r m en o f distinction. " O n T he Dra% 2013 Guadalupe G R 8 -0 1 5 0 The trium ph w as N otre D am e's the season while out­ third of gunned Army, w’hose deepest penetration against the Irish first strin g ers was to toe 35, absorbed its first defeat in four sta rts. toe ram m ed over from early m inutes, Bob In Bleier toe three to end a 54-yard drive be­ hind the m om entum of H a n ra t­ ty s 19-yard toss to Seym our. Before the first q u a rte r was over, Notre Dame w as cruising recovered 21-0. Pete Duranko the Carl W oessner’* fum ble on the first play Cadet 33 and on rookie H anratty fired a touch­ down pass to Seymour. L ater, toe Irish went 76 yard s in six plays with H anratty round­ ing end from the seven to score. When we say we want people for the outer limits, this isn’t what we have in mind. T r a i l s End for an End Texas e n d Ed Small about to encounter some Okies. P h o 4o b y s t r i a ; r N e w b e r n Southall and Green Put Porkers Down F A Y ETTE V ILLE, Ark. - lf) - touch­ T erry Southall's 21-vard down pass lo Bobby Green with 4:48 rem aining gave Baylor a 7-0 Southwest Conference football victory' over fifth-ranked A rkan­ sas Saturday, snapping toe na­ tion’s longest reg u lar season win­ ning srreak. Southall directed his fired up B ears on a 46-yard m arch in five plays that ended a defensive struggle. B aylor used its defense, led by Dwight Hood, Greg Pipes, and David Anderson, to turn back the R azorback? at the Baylor 18, 6, 28, 15, and 36. THE BEARS GOT their big break when a high snap from c en ter sailed over punter M artine B ercher s head. B elcher re tre a t­ ed, picked up the bali hut was - sw arm ed under a w ave of Baylor defenders for a 25-yard loss a t the A rkansas 46. Southall used only one run in the scoring drive, that for a first down on short yardage. He com ­ pleted passes of 12 and nine y ards to Paul Becton, a form er high school s ta r in Little Rock. Green weaved behind the R azor­ back defense and took Southall's pass over his shoulder two yards deep in the end zone. Bob Purvis kicked the extra point. IT WAS ARKANSAS’ first regu­ lar season defeat since Nov. 16, 1963, when Southern Methodist beat the P orkers 14-6 at Dallas, Tex. A rkansas had won 24 straight reg u lar season gam es, including 16 in the Southwest Conference, a conference record. Arkansas m ad^ a stab at a com eback. last ditch a 10-yard pass QI ARTERBACK Jon Brittenum completed to B ruce Maxwell at the Baylor 37. On the next play, Tomm y Tran- thm hauled in a pass from B rit­ tenum in the end zone, but toe touchdown was nullified because the Porkers had an ineligible re ­ ceiver downfield. UNIVERSITY TRANSIT CO. In v it o * MHI to B u s S e n ire to a n d fro m c a m p u s. in q u ir e a b o u t o u r h o urly r i a i i j — “a .m .— (I p rn. F u ll s e m e st e r p a s s — *2.5.80 F o r I n f o r m a t io n »o»f r * * * n *ti<>n* Contact Student Travel Inc. TSyf (.uarlaltipe GR 7 1340 O r a*k for In fo rm a tio n af y o u r B r i n * n n it. . ■„ W , . IM M ,. ----------------- ■ — For Longhorns Locker Room Is Grim Scene By LARRY MAYO Assistant Sports E ditor D efeat, a stra n g e r to the Long­ horn's post-gam e dressing room for eight straig h t Texas-OU con­ tests, paid an unannounced visit Saturday and was given the cold shoulder by a score or m ore of dejected Texas football players. As Joel B ram e, one of T exas’ j u s t linebackers put c a n 't win when you have f o u r fum bles and intercep­ tions.-’ The junior defensive a re stood in the m iddle of the room with his hands on his hips and the blood inched down the side of his nose. two pass it, “ You “ UP UNTIL this gam e w e'd been real lucky out there. One fum ble and two interceptions.’’ Several of the 'Horns felt like the defense m ade a few m ental erro rs in the gam e. As he leaned against the dressing room wall, B arney Giles said, “ We had a sm all problem adjusting the first half. They tried to split our in tackle out and th e re .'’ run on us in From the stands it looked like the most dam age was done by the pass receiving of O klahom a’s num ber 33. Eddie Hinton. Long­ horn defensive back, Les D er­ rick, noticed toe dam age f r o m the field. “ THEIR SPLIT END was driv­ halfback (defensive) our ing b ack." this to respect the run Giles, a Longhorn defensive end, had if the flow of backs cam e to him situation, and D errick in had to cover the receiver who drifted out in the flat. This left Hinton, O klahom a's wingback. free in the Texas secondary'. Using this play a great deal of toe tim e, the Sooner q u a rte r­ back Bob W arm ack, completed 12 of 21 tosses for 220 yards. DERRICK r e f u t e d the Texas defensive backs are coached to intercept the overthrown and the underthrow n passes, but he noted t h r o w the quarterback didn't too m any bad passes. if he did, he overthrew them so far that nobody eould gel near them. O klahom a's noseguard, G ran­ ville Higgins, drew praise from several of the Longhorns. Center Gene Bledsoe said, “ I tell you that Liggins fine football player. H e’s quicker’n a c a t.” is a toe big Sooner LINT S BAER. Texas fullback, line­ said about m an: “ Liggins is the finest nose­ guard I've seen. He's q u i c k , fast and aggressive.” general the Longhorns seem ed to feel that they had been beaten by a fast and aggressive football team . In injuries Texas m anaged to keep its un­ broken string of intact as Diron T albert was helped from toe field in toe third q u arter. He was operating under his own r o o m steam though and his injury w asn 't re ­ ported as crippling. the dressing in COACH DARRELL ROYAL if the Sooners said when asked tried anything unsuspected that “ they didn t surprise m e .” He explained the m any fumbles as the result of “ just good h ard ­ hitting football.” the public Tile University' L ibrary is free to for consultation. T exas residents m ay, upon de­ posting $5 with the Auditor, se ­ cure the privilege of borrowing books not needed for reference or classwork. HAIRCUTS $15° j/ ’ $ I R E G . w f l C l l ^ J BARBER SHOP 6 0 7 I U 2 9 th O P E N ’TIL 6 P.M . M ONDAY THRU SATURDAY Just O H G u a d a lu p e -— 6 Barber* — Pltnfy o f Ft*e Parking Looks like oatmeal, ' ‘ > F o rge t science fiction. W e ’re talking about the ‘ o u ter limits" of technology. A n d these days it can be even m ore exciting than science fiction. R ig h t n o w IBM needs qualified men and w om en to help reach these o u ter limits. T h e kind of people w ho have made IBM the leader in to d a y ’s fastest-growing m ajor industry: in­ form ation handling and control. A n d the kind o f people w ho can g ro w w ith us as far as rheir talents and abilities allow. T h e result2 G reater personal responsibility* and recognition; the dual satisfaction of per­ sonal achievement and continuing personal rewards. A pretty satisfying result. Jo b opportunities at IBM are in six major areas: C om puter Applications, Programming, Finance and Administration, Research and D evelopment. M anufacturing and Marketing. W h a t e v e r your im m ediate com m itm ents, whatever your area of study, s ig n up now for an o n -cam p u s interview with IB M , O ctober 13-14 If, for some reason, you aren’t able to arrange an interview, drop us a line. W rite po- .Manager of College Recruiting, IBM Corporation, Room SIO, 1447 Peachtree Street, .V E , Atlanta, Georgia 30309, IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. P*9* « Sunday, October 9, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Read about the analysis of solar photographs in the October issue of TES. On sale Wednesday. Thirty-five cents, tax included. TEXAS ENGINEERING & SCIENCE MAGAZINE Orioles Edge LA, 1-0 and Wally Bunker, BA LTIM ORE ~ n B A L I EMORE — yp • n Paul B lair two California schoolboys who os the Los Angeles Dodgers r a p e d net, led tile B altim ore Orioles to a third straig h t W rid Series vic­ fr^blo Dodgers to ry o v er their extending S atu rd a y , scoreless drought to 24 innings. the 1-0. the only m a n to pass Blair, against Claude Os- first base the w ay wiih a teen, went all left 430-foot hom e run field ble ac hers It in w'as the last of the three Balti­ m o r e hits. the fifth. into the • into the left field c u s to m e rs with two out in the fifth. The slum ping D odgers the now have not scored since third Inning of W ednesday's opening g a m e at Los Angeles. Drabow- sky blanked them with one hit for 6 2-3 relief innings, and P a l m ­ e r shut them out T h u rsd av with four hits. Bl N K ER 'S string of nine m a d e it 24 shutout fra m es , only four short of the Series record of 28 set bv the New Y ork Giants in Philadelphia the 1905 against B U N K E R , picking up where Moe D rab o w sk y and J im P a l m ­ e r left off, m ystified the Dodg­ e r s w ith a six-hit shutout. la rg e st B a ltim o re 's baseball rroved, 54,445, enjoyed the city's first World Series g a m e in bright, w a r m sunshine a t Memorial S ta­ dium . left The d efe at the hapless D od gers stretch e d over the ropes r e a d y for the knockout blow, pos­ sibly in a fourth straig h t g am e S unday afternoon. No club in his­ tory e v e r has com e hack to win a f te r losing the first three. BLAIR, a s l i g h t 6-foot, 170- pounder who has be^n platooned In center field with Russ Snyder first pitch ham m ered Osteen s CAR STEREO # A u t h o r it y le a r J e t Dealer M u lls From M ajor Labelt (448 track) • Custom Tapes ' f l A U S T A T l D I S T R I B U T I N G A n „ “ MHM GR 6-2257 n u RIO GRANDI OM. IM R A D IO & TV REPAIR Usa the C o-O p s quick convenient repair lervice! • RA DIO S • T E L E V IS IO N S F R E W • G R 2-1141 It w’as the best since the 26 by tho Cincinnati R eds ag a in st the old Chicago White Sox tho scandalous Black Sox Series of 1919. in The successive of shutouts P a lm e r and B u n k e r belied the critics who had m a d e the D odg­ e r s the favorites a t the s ta rt of pitching on the Series strength and the poor com plete g a m e record of the Orioles staff. th e ir INSTEAD, the D odgers have not bad a com plete g a m e while ea ch the r e g u la r s t a r t e r s — Don of and Drysdale, Sandy Koufax, Osteen — has gone down the drain. this w as Ironically, the first shutout of the season for B unk­ er, a f o rm e r s t a r at Capuchino High School In San Bruno, Calif., w’ho signed an Orioles co n tra c t for a r eported $75,000 bonus in 1963. This w as his th ird y e a r in the m ajors. Walter Alston of the D odgers revised his line-up for this first g a m e at B a ltim o re the d am ag in g six-error p erfo rm a n c e in the second gam e. a fte r H ITLESS J im G illiam went to the bench and w eak hitting John K ennedy took over at third base. It didn’t do any good. The D odg­ ers didn't m a k e any e r r o rs this tim e, but they also didn t score a n y runs. th a t Hank B a u e r's Orioles thus w ere in the position to close this Se­ ries out in four s tr a ig h t Sunday. T i e last A m erican L eague te a m to do the New trick w a s Y ork Yankees of 1950 a ga inst the last Philadelphia Phillies. Tile tim e if w as done in Series play w as by the D odgers a g a in st the Y anks in 1963. Only nine Series h a v e ended in four gam es. " IU L IE D M IS, the goat of the second g a m e with his record b rea k ing th re e e r r o rs in one in­ ning, c a m e up th re e tim es with a m a n on second base. In the fourth, he followed P a r k ­ er. who doubled but flied out to Blair. After M a u ry Wills s in ­ gled for his first Series hit and took second on an infield out in the sixth, Willie moved him to third with a long fly to Blair. contributed Luis Aparicio a couple of fine fielding plays. He W'ent to his left to dig out a h ard s m a s h by K ennedy in the third IN T H E E IG H T H , he r ac ed into left field, colliding with left fielder Curt B lefarv as he clung to P a r k e r s fly ball for an i m ­ p o r ta n t out. sw ung down T he big crow d che ered each pitch in the ninth a s the 21-year- the old B unke r stretch . Wally s tr u c k out Ron F airly , got J i m L efeb v re on a to D av e Johnson, and g rounder then ended the g a m e w hen Leu Johnson bounced to Aparicio. Box Score BOT VORE I / * A N G ELES OO R S L I’EMORE Will* SR P»rk#r IT* R egan r> W' c a v i * rf-lh F a irly T ^fpbvr* 2b J. Johnson lf rf R o sfboro p K a n n H y Sh 0*ietn p A T TXI VI, l f Toia s lb Johnson ?b X p * n c i < * i i Rlpfa.-v t Snyder if F Robinson rf R Robinson .lh Powell O B lair cf Etch e b a rre n a B u rk e r p T otals a -Singled 'n * Auge es n B aln m o -e A ft ft 0 8 4 AR R R RE O A * o i n i « 1 n i o in i H o r t o n J < n n n 2 o 8 n I 0 2 f t 4 < 0 2 0 1 ft ft 0 0 4 ft 8 n n o n 2 8 ft I n ft 0 2 ft 0 0 ft I I 81 0 6 0 24 14 IAI A R IT ll RI n A 8 ft I 0 1 2 3 0 0 0 2 0 ft ft ft ft ft 0 I 0 ft ft ft 1 2 0 ft O 1 t ft I 0 9 I 3 3 ft 0 0 3 ,2 8 1 1 1 3 0 •I ft ft ft R 0 2 o n o n I * I 3 I 27 U the 8th for Osteen In non ann mn n ono (JIO 00\ 1 E - N o n e p p ~ * r * n c i « . P Johnson and Owen. Wilis. L efebvre and P a r lo r Le. febvre WitU and P a rk e r LOK Lo* An- ge 'e s N A R a'tim o ra a I P a rk e r, H R —B lair. S -W iP * Ostler L Began B u n k e r w IR H R ER 7 3 I I I ft 0 0 9 A ft 0 B unker I f F a ir ly i R O -O steen 8 CF . Robinson. Bio f a n Regan I Flunker teen, (Wills le 'e b r m Ka rly i. P a rk e r, Roseboro. O s - BB O steen 1 - R Robinson , F .tcheharrer Flunker ■ a l l - P p i p k o u d a * first base D rum m ond t —i ’m. ste rn e r (A* thl-d ( M i , p l a t e : R><«* second ( N r ba-* lackow ski base u m Zimmerman's Goal Puts U CLA by Owls HOUSTON, Tex. —. (JR — Kurt Zimm erman kicked a 17-yard field fo a l with seven secon ds left to give second ranked UCLA a 27-24 victory over fired-up, un derdog R ice U niversity Saturday n ig h t a Until Zim m erm an, senior kicking specialist, booted the field goal to break a 24-24 tie it ap­ peared the young R ice team , a three-touchdown underdog, would pull the gam e out or hold the high scoring Bruins to the dead­ lock. I ( L A MOVED into position for the winning field goal after re­ covering a R ice fum ble on t h e 1 Owl 23 with 1 :25 left in the gam e. Quarterback Gary Beban and halfback Mel Farr, UCLA’s great 1-2 punch, moved the bail to the j one w here on fourth down Z im -1 m erm an kicked the w inning field goal in the offensive stru ggle that team s m ove up and saw both down the throughout field the contest. Beban. who com pleted 17 of A3 p asses for 236 yards and added 66 m ore by rushing, scored two touchdowns for the Bruins and passed for another. His runs w ere for eight and four yards and his scoring pass covered 33 yards to Harold Busby which tied the score at 24-24. RICE SOPHOMORE quarter­ back Robby Shelton, who picked up 164 yards rushing and com p let­ ONLY AT ed seven of 14 p asses for another HO yards, scored one touchdown on a 12-yard n m and his tim ely running and passin g set up plung­ es of one yard each for touch­ downs by his older brother, Ter­ ry, and L ester Lehm an, and a 47-yard field goal by Frank Pust- ka which w as a R ice record. EXI C O AUTO INSURANCE AIRLINE TICKETS h o t e l r e s e r v a t i o n s SANBORN'S 328 Parry Brook* Bld?. CHOTE'S SINCLAIR SERVICE ti Son Antonio Stroot* 14th Wo giro SAH Gratia Stomp* Mechanic on D u ty F R O M M E X I C O I - a r * « C o l l e c t i o n o f r e g i o n a l c r a f t s a n d d e c o r a t i v e a c c e s s o r i e s B U L A S K IN N E R , IM P O R T S 1705 Mascot Tbs Ironing Board ,g we will do your iu W e s t N o r t h G o O u t G u a d a l u p t o r I , o o p H O 5 -7 2 0 0 I - a m a r t o N o rth L oop, T u r n R ig h t He Jok Txbbita In A u s tin e x c lu s iv e ly e t l a i t ' s . O n e s again a complete •election of John Robert* Fattest ring*. delivery. W ear Your Senior ring •* you pay. Only $5.00 monthly. Area Code “Hello” T hat’s all there is to dial­ ing your own Long D is­ tance calls. Just dial “ I". T hen the arca code (listed in the front pages of your telephone directory). the telephone T hen dial number in the distant city. D ialing your ow n L ong D istance calls is f a s t . . . e a s y . . . convenient. A nd you enjoy the lo w station- to-station rate. Southwestern Bell S o o n e r s M a c k e n z i e O U Celebrates A Win for Jim TV*' sun Ie B t L Mi i n I I*''ii \ \\ Sport* Editor b r i l l s hep tooth t! ‘u -arid *n pandom onious wit! 'ss ti ans room S atu rd a y aft* moot ling tho Ok'=» boma d i m .f •' ->d t o r to in Kvorvvvhoro within tho Cfd * r Bawl cubic!** ■ <>\ or den r e o f tho Sooners* though! the d a > —usf V ' " ° 8cr ta (king a rm ■od sti ‘ md rn od es f t on e ■'N E ll ST ' ad good r e pjver* exp lain ed th# ball ou t they ca u g h t a d good p a tte rn s u a im at k • -o re som ehou and 'em " I got 1 'o r line prof*** ted m e **< p e n a lly veil, but t hat T exas de- ton-e is tougher t han th** other*; Iowa S t a t e ) w e ’ve O r e g o n a n d played. "WF, IM H a couple cf p a tte rn s to Ben H art. One a post p a tte rn s tr a ig h t d o w n.” And an d one th rew . H a r t w hen W a rm a c k ca u g h t The big end pulled in only four tosses, bu t covered 116 vards. REMOLO'S of WESTGATE Appointment* A c c e p te d 303 W e s tg a te TEXAS ATHLETIC CLUB 605 West 13th GR 7-0561 Men O nly W e ig h ts — Sun Lam ps— Swim m ing Pool— Steam Show #** A ir C on d ition e d C o m p le te Instructions G iven $1.00 W o rk o u t — $10.00 M onth N o C on tract to Sign — N o Joining Fe# VISIT PAPERBACK BOOK WORLD TTI , with N o rm an B u l a k h L o rn .,In , |tM. |- |r r 1 a n 4 r * G R 6-0674 s la m m in g to the R a ile r 15 m id ­ h a i r c u t s • R A Z O R C U T S • M A N I C U R I N G Now Where Did He Come From? . . . a Sooner latches onto quarterback A n d y White. I Kl* rn Field Goals Tell Story A s Frogs Trip Tech LVtD’r ti v i n -ti r pi- F O R T WORTH. Tex. ~ , (f» B r u c e Alford won a kicking dup! with T ex a s T e c h 's Ken V m yard S a tu r d a y night and e a r n e d T exas C hristian to a 6-3 Southw est Con­ f e re n c e vic to ry ov er th e Red R aiders. Alford, a senior, connected on field goals of 55 an d 39 y a r d s as th e C hristians turned back their West T e x a s rivals and se v e re d a th r e e -g a m e losing s tr e a k . Tho th e SWC v ic to ry k e p t T a i c h a s e with a 1-1 and e r a s e d even the r e m o t e s t c h a n c e for Tech to gain a s h a r e of the crown. in rec o rd T H E LOSS w as the third in con­ feren ce pla y for Tech and their third setb ack a f te r an opening decision over Kansas. Alford's first field goal c a m e th e twelve seconds left in with first half to givp the C h r is tia n ’s an ed ge they neve r relinquished. V inyard, a f te r m issing a 54- y a r d field goal in the firs t half, connected on a wind-aided 55-yard effort that brok e the existing SWC rec o rd of 52 y a r d s set by R an d y S im s of T ex a s AAM in 1959. BOTH TEAM S m issed scoring opportunities in the final q u a r te r . Tech, with q u a r te r b a c k John Scovell w hipping off long y a r d ­ age, moved to the TCL 16 before lesing the h^ll on an interception by E, A G resham . w ay through the la st q u a r te r but gave up the ball on downs when a R ick Bridges' p a s s w a s d e ­ flected. TEXA S CHRISTIAN s p e n t most: of thp firs) half hovering aroun d T ec h 's goal, but not until A lford's 39-yard field goal could it get on the scorebo ard. Tl,e f irs t two periods w ere spiced with in te rceptions a s Tech picked off th r e e TCC p asses and the P ro g s r e ta lia te d by swiping two from Sen veil. THE BLAZEK. FOUNDATION OF THE COLLEGE MANS WARDROBE m r n i K m u Comfortable enough for a long chapter meeting. PEOPLE IN FAMILIES; S O C IO L O G Y , P S Y C H O ­ Dressy enough for the game. Quick enough for a rushed A N A L Y S IS A N D THE A M E R I C A N F A M IL Y by George Simpson, M e r id ia n ................................................. $2.95 date. I he traditionally- by Harry E. W edeeb Citade' .................. $2.25 A TREASURE O F W IT C H C R A F T styled blazer always t h e J A Z Z ST O RY lets you look your best. So look your best in. chile, navy, blue, burgundy, bluc-black, or black-olive. Sizes 36-44 reg. 37-44 long only $30.00 by Dave Dexter Jr., Prentice H a : ...............................$2.45 THE R IC H N A T IO N S A N D THE P O O R N A T IO N S by Barbara Wa-d, N o r t o n ....................... $1.25 LEVEL 7 by Moraecai Roshwa d, New Amebean Library 50c W E A R E N O T A L O N E Walter Sullivan, New American L ib ra ry 75c G R E A T STORIES O F H O L L Y W O O D 'S GOLDEN A G E New American L ib ra ry .....................60c YES I C A N By Sammy Davis Jr., Pocket Boobs ...................95c Q U E S T IO N O F GUILT by Michael Vaienti, Paperback Library . . . . . . 60c General Books— -Second Floor IN THE CO -OP CALL GR 8-6636 Distinctive Store for Men c a s h T F * 1 v # DIVIDENDS J L ± m I GR 9,1 IAI Some Say Fright/ Some De In Describing Student Teaching T h e D a i l y T e x a n Sunday Se lured siasf Jars, light they ings. Bach and Liz Tayl or Heard on Lab Tapes By CAROL >< III ETZ Texan Loa I ii re W riter espeeially the "old rogu­ es a poople-u atelier’* de- Looking for a little diversion to juggle your routine? to listening Try the B ruberk Q uartet, or Count Basie, or Jo­ hann Bat h. O r how about hearing M artha again in "W ho's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” for a change of p ace? They are all as close as the in third-floor the Academ ic Center. listening lab STI DENTS can hear poems, plays, operas, and music, depend­ ing on th eir mood or assignm ent. Those who a re in the lab for specific class assignm ents are the to spot. They follow' easy pages of textbooks while frantically taking notes. their Tlte listening lab presently sup­ plem ents the language lab by of­ fering tapes in three languages. However it is m ore than a lang­ uage lab. which is evident from glancing at the ca rd catalog. Selections ‘ My F a ir include Lady,' sam ples of African folk m usic, and a rtists such as Count Bassie. F ran k Sinatra. Al H ut, M ahalia Jackson, and D ave lim ­ beck. Works by Shakespeare, Franz Tchubert, and Johann Bach also can be found as well as readings of Hans Christian Andersen and R udyard Kipling bv Boris K ar­ loff. Observing listening lab enthu- Students take m any poses when tape reco rd ­ the listen to Recently one enthusiastic listen­ er could be seen rooking back and forth in his c h a ir hum m ing as loud as he (ould while follow­ ing notes in a book. The tune was not fam iliar, but it lacked noth­ ing in force. \ COLD sitting across from the the unintentional diligent hum m er sm iled at un ex per-ted serenade Some students a n d listened eon feet propped up Unitedly with while sta rin g into spare. lulled O thers w ere to sleep. Using arm s and books for pil­ lows. while their tapes continued to play. L isteners, dr eam ers, and music- lo v ers. all w ere designating a segm ent of their day to the listen­ ing lah. Another student could be seen m editating with his head resting on his folded hands, oblivious to everything around him . A pproxim ately 6on to 650 stu ­ dents use the lah daily. Although m any students do not know that the lab exists, most freshm en and students a r e guided tra n sfe r through during orientation. it Many m ore visit it weekly just for “ listening p leasu re.” Rom, . . Friends, Lend Me Earphones Students with n penchant for a m a te u r oration need be frus­ tra te d no m ore by the U niver­ s ity 's d earth of sym pathetic a u ­ diences. Though Stum p Speaking has died a n atu ral death and large to thw art a n y classroom s scorn a tte m p ts a t loquation, th ere is a p lace on cam pus wdiere speakers a re welcomed w ith open ears THE UNIVERSITY speech lab th e direction of oratory’, u nder in­ M rs. E va C urrie, a ssistan t s tru c to r is designed in speech, to aid stu d en ts who w ant to im ­ prove th e ir speech, diction, and elocution. In an effort to re c re ate an ad­ d ress atm osphere, the fab fur­ nishes everything — even an audience E quipm ent in th# Jab, which is located in Speech Building 202, includes microphone's, earphones, and tap e recorders. A large con­ trol booth is designed for labora­ tory instructors w-ho a re availa­ ble for assistance and instruc­ tion. O ther facilities Include a v a ­ riety of tapes of fam ous speeches and lessons and exercises in vo­ cabulary. pronunciation, stress, and intonation. BLANK TAPES a rc available so that students m ay record and criticize their own speeches. Sm aller rooms in the laboratory offer p rivate practice areas. Tile house microphones. r o o m s podiums, and recorders, tape full-length m irrors, before which speeches m ay be rehearsed. Also, critics a re available by appoint­ m ent. By BARBARA TASKA Asst. Feature Editor "F rightening, delightful, unpre­ d ictable,” sa y three U niversity coeds a fte r their first two weeks of student teaching. K athleen Colgrove of Midland. .Sa I lie Bentley of D allas, and Mrs. Rosa lea Peebles of Killeen a re three of 169 elem entary edu­ the I niversity cation m ajors at the student who have reacher] teaching phase of their senior year. EACH IS assigned a p articu­ la r class in an Austin elem entary school, whore she will teach and observe for the sem ester. “ Children a re a delight,” says K athleen. original, ‘‘T hey’re am azingly perceptive. They see things of which adults a re un­ a w a re .” g ra d e is class K athleen, who teaching a fourth of L atin A m erican children at Brooke E le­ “ N ever em phasizes. m en tary , un d erestim ate a child's ability to learn, to im agine.” SALLIE, teaching the s i x t h grad e at St. E lm o E lem entary, says, "A t first I w as scared to death. I m ade v e ry detailed lesson plans, even down to which stu ­ dent to call on and w hat kind of answ er to expect. I’m finding “ Now I can keep m ost of these questions in m y h ead .” she says. ‘ but I don't know- enough about som e of the su b ject m a tte r to answ er all their questions. I have to study right along with th e m .” that ‘T each in g has an elem ent of su rp rise ,” says R osalea, who is student teaching in the fifth grade at Casis E lem entary. “ I think, ‘This is just another spelling les­ io n .’ But i f s not. Children a re extrem ely unpredictable in what they say and do.” DURING A RECENT class period. Kathleen began writing a lesson on the blackboard. One of the children said, "M iss Col- grovp, I c a n ’t re a d your w riting.” “ Sh." another youngster nudg­ ed him. "She s a student, too.” While the children a re aw are that student teach ers are not the real thing, they generally behave just as they would toward an old­ e r teacher, Kathleen s a c s . IN ADDITION to classroom teaching, student teach ers a re ex­ posed to other facets of the pro­ fession they have chosen. This includes arriving before 8 a.m ., setting out books — even a tte n d ­ ing FTA m eetings, the first of which is scheduled soon. Education m ajors, unlike m any college students, receive the op­ to “ p ra c tic e ” before portunity graduation. We the like don t term ‘p ra c tic e ,’ ” says D r. W illiam A. student Bennie, d irector of a teaching. "A student te a c h e r is just that — a stu d en t.” tea c h e r “She learn s by observing an ex­ perienced in operation. •She is given the chance to draw on knowledge gained in previous theory courses and begin to de­ velop hor own teaching styles and techniques.” he says. them to be com petent, ” W E DON’T expect m a ste ry ,” Bennie continues. “ But we do want to encounter a m inim um of difficul­ ty in their first y e a r on the job.” Cheeking the progress of stu ­ dent leachers from tim e to tim e a re supervising teachers from the U niversity’s College of E d u ca­ tion. and tell us how says. to T h e y don’t te a c h .” Sallie “ Instead, they offer suggestions, inform us of new m ethods, keeping in m ind that we m ust ad just to a particu ­ la r classroom to an ex­ perienced teat her whose m ethods we m ay or m ay not agree with. ’ the experienced te a c h e r is just as im portant as instructing, the student teachers say. They take note of everything from m ethods of presentation to keeping the children quiet and en­ couraging participation. OBSERVING Actually, one s own person­ ality determ ines how he teach es.” Saliie says. “ E veryone has dif­ ideas, different ways of ferent conveying th e m .” In addition, a teach er m ust he flexible, Kathleen says. “ A child m ust be allowed to develop at his own ra te of speed. “ We m ust also keep in mind th at a child’s attitudes toward school in the future are form u­ lated h ere," Kathleen says. ''A l­ though m any people underrate elem entary school teachers, this the is w here a child acquires foundation for later learning.” .S u n d a y f e a t u r e S t a f f Suzanne S h e l t o n ................................................... Barbara_ J « k « D o nn a englander, G e o r g e C o v in g t o n , Eva Matula, Editor Assf Edi(or C a r o l Schuetz ....................... S ta ff Austin Negro Community Comes Alive Through Programs Conducted by Y' Bv SI ZAN N E SHELTON and IHINN \ ENGLANDER Texan F e a tu re W riters St John's com m unity a sm all, com pletely Negro a re a rn n o rth east Austin. Is Tn m any ways, it resem bles a typical A m erican slum secto r: population a little m ore than 1,000. average fam ily incom e $1,985 per year, no public facilities except an elem entary school and a sm all recreation area. HOWEVER. St. Jo h n ’s has seem ed suddenly to com e alive through the efforts of volunteers rn an exploratory program con­ ducted by the University’ “ 5'.” Youth clubs for grade school tu­ girls b a se been established; toring to ele­ is being offered m en tary school children; and su­ pervised recreation is being held twice each week. In short, U niversity students The University C o m e s to St. John's • . . Arlene B^rasch is Y volunteer in g h e tto p ro je c t. Photo b Photo h st na..- >.>v*ber# r«s>. 6 Sunday, October 9, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Kathleen C olgrove and Students . . . learning to g e th e r in fourth g r a d e classroom. Elisabet To Establish First Woman Sculptor Studio of Art in Texas By EV > MATI LA Texan F eature W rifer Sculpture was the first a rt im- plusc of note in Texas. Sparking this innovation was a tem pestuous, red-haired fem inist, a G erm an by birth, who built the first section of her art studio in Austin in 1892. ELISABET NEY was the first artist of European fam e to live and work in Texas arid the Lone Star State's first woman sculptor. Before coming to A m erica, the sculp­ internationally tress had received com m issions renowned from m any cf E urope’s fam ous persons. In 1859. she did a bust of King George V, the last king of Hanover. IN 1869, she also m ade a bust and statu e of Ludwig II, King of B avaria, known in history as the “ m ad king.” The m arble bust is In the Hohenschwangau Castle, an old fam ily castle near Neusch- w anstein. in the Austin Museum The p laster of p aris statue is lo­ now cated a t 304 E. Forty-fourth St., the Hor- and renchiem see Palace n e a r Munich the original is in on Lake Chiemsee, It ^tood for m any years in the garden of the Linderhof Palace. Miss Ney sculptured busts of fam ous persons such as Jakoh G rim m , the sto ry teller; A rthur Schopenhauer, Gorm an philoso­ pher; Otto von B ism arck, chan­ cellor of tho G erm an E m pire; and Baron von W orthorn, c a reer the diplom at, who King of P ru ssia to give Miss Ney the commission for the bust of B ism arck. influenced Born in 1833 in M uenster, West­ phalia, G erm any, Miss Ney soon dem onstrated the talent of a true a rtist. When slip was 18 voars old. she went to Munich to study at the Academ y of A rts and la te r to Berlin where she was accept­ ed as a pupil of C hristian Rauch. Though a t that tim e it was im ­ possible for a girl to invade the the sculptor’s sa c re d realm s of studio, E lisabet Ney succeeded w here other fem ales had failed. Having short hair, w earing a trouser-like garm ent about her w'ork, keeping her m aiden nam e, and invading a man s world were evidences courage, especially since these habits w ere not approved by conventional peo­ ple of that day. her of SHE WAS MARRIED to Dr Edm ond M ontgomery, a brilliant Scotch doctor and scientist, a lte r a 10-year courtship, on the island of M adeira. After com ing to Texas, Miss Ney sought to have art taught in public schools and to have an art tho d ep artm ent established at University. She was later dis­ couraged because of the lack of interest. TEXAS’ THO m ost fam ous statues, those of Sam Houston and Stephen F. Austin, which decorate the entrance of the Cap­ itol, W'ere com pleted by M i s s Ney when she was alm ost 60 years old. Hor famous reclining statu e of Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston m arks his grave in the Texas S tate Cem etery. Miss N ev’s last work was the full-length figure of Lady Mac­ beth The sculptress died in her Austin studio June 29, 1907, of a bronchial disease. After Miss Nev’s death, Mrs. Joseph Dibrell, a close the studio for preservation and stijv Hinted in her will that the build­ ing be given to the T exas Fine Arts Association, which she or­ ganized. friend, purchased to IN 1911, the Association, a fte r expanding its work into all sec­ tions of lacking the state and funds for a broader field of ac­ the City of tivity, appealed Austin to take over the E lisabet Ney Museum. Tile deed of the property and the building w ere given to the City which assum ed full responsibility of ownership. th# public Mondays through F rid ay s from IO a.m . to noon and from 3 to 5 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays from 3 to 5 p.m.* The m useum is open to KUT-FM lo Air Radio's ’Oldies’ R em em ber the good old days— the days when all that junk in F ibber McGee’s closet cascaded out onto the floor each week with anticipated regularity? T hat was back in the 1940's and early 1950’s when radio dram a ruled the a ir waves, and KUT-FM is bringing if back to Austin. Five of the series, designed for 52 weeks of half-hour episodes, a re boing aired Monday through F riday at 7 p.m. on KUT-FM. Tile series and their sta rs include: • Monday, “ The Lives of H ar­ ry L im e,” Orson Welles. ® Tuesday, “ S carlet P im per­ n el,” M arius Goring. • W ednesday, “ T heatre Roy­ a le ,” Laurence Olivier and Ralph Richardson. • T hursday, “ Horatio Horn- blow er,” M ichael Redgrave. • F riday, “ The Black Muse­ um ,” Orson Welles. Long M arb le Line . . . on display af Elisabet N e y M useum , University Cavemen Crawl, ; Hold Two Hemispheric Speleological Records , By GEORGE A. COVINGTON Texan Feature Writer lf you just happen to be craw l­ ing through a seem ingly unex­ plored cave som ew here in Texas, and you to bum p just happen heads with som ething in the dark —chances are it's a U niversity spelunker. M em bers of the* University S|>e leologieal Society have m apped and explored m any of the known caves in Texas and northern Mexico. CLUB MEMBERS hold two in caving. records hem isphere T erry R aines and Bill Bell hold freedrop the record (using a single rope for a descent;. They broke the for single length of old record by dropping into Ven- tana Ja b a li cave in San L u i s Potosi, Mexico. R aines and several o t h e r club m em bers hold tile record for feet at cave depth, with 1,488 Sot a no T Iam aya cave in San Luis Potosi. Mexico. “ I first becam e interested in caving by visiting com m ercial fam ily several caves with my y ears a g o ,” explains M eredith T urner, senior chem istry-geology ma jor. “ MY H E S T DAY on the Uni­ versity cam pus I spotted two guys putting up a sign about the c a v ­ ing club. I sta rte d talking with them and have been caving since then,” he says. T urner has caved on throe con­ tinents. Caving is not just a m an's sport —15 to 20 p er cent of the club’s m em bership a re girls. “ I VE BEEN ( W ING since I was in the fourth g ra d e ,” says B arbara H ershberger, a senior geology m ajor. “ I was in the first group to ex­ plore N atural Bridge C avern, one of largest ra v e s in T exas,” she said. longest and the ten Orion Knox, past president of larg e the club, discovered south C entral Texas cavern. the Safety and conservation a re stressed, especially to new m em ­ bers. All new m em bers undergo training sessions with experienced cavers before they a re a1! to explore with the club. “ CONSERVATION is hope to all serious cavers, says T racy, sophom ore journalism to preserve jor. We want e av es’ natural beauty for fi generations.” Tile University club is a r ber of the National Speleolo Society, an affiliate of the t a a l Science Foundation springs of the club are tho sociation of Mexican Cave J the Texas Speleoloj ies and Survey. M em bership in the is open to anyone with $2 a rooster and a yearning fo chance to explore where no nils walked before. h a te formed Intensive relation­ ships wdth the children and adults of the arca. sa y s president, ERNIE C ORTES, U niversity YMCA “ With no knowledge of w h at's going on, with no information to guide them,' the people of St. Jo h n 's have no idea of their opportunities. If we have any one purpose in our p ro j­ these people to m ake ect. aw are of their a lte rn a tiv e s.” i f s For exam ple, the “ Y ” has o r­ im prove­ ganized a com m unity in St. Jo h n 's m ent association w hereby residents plan com m u­ nity clean-up efforts, w ays to se­ cure city services, and coopera­ tive efforts in solving tra n sp o rta ­ tion problem s. Com m unity reaction to the wide the ran g e of “ Y” activities area has been varied. in THERE’S BEEN no reaction that I could call typ ical,” Cortes says. "T he people of St. John's h a \e been responsive—they send their children to our program s. We have encountered som e prob­ them lem s, naturally. Most of develop from in orientation, standards, and p e r­ spective of the w orkers and the resid en ts.” the differences Cortes adds that very little self- satisfaction has com e to the vol­ unteers involved in the project. ' It s a very fru stratin g oxper ience, You become a dom inant p a rt of som e child’s life, and your view of your own self becom es appreciably altered. You discover the great ( hasm between your cul­ ture and th e irs ; you see how severely tbe ghetto cripples kids, how dehum anizing poverty is.” DESPITE THE volunteers* p e r­ sonal frustration, the project con­ tinues, with appreciable am ount of success. St. Jo h n ’s is coming alive. an E N G L IS H IN S T R U C T IO N for Patrick W ill Conduct Marilyn Horne Starts Series Concert Singer Appears Tuesday Marilyn Horne, one of the most exciting singers of the concert stage, will open tho Solo Artist Series Tuesday night with the Kame program which brought lier a standing ovation in New York’* C arnegie Hall last April. Miss Horne's concert, at 8:15 p m. in Hogg Auditorium, re­ places that of Hermann Prey, who is ill and has Just canceled all October concerts. THE SOLO ARTIST Si KO S. a the D e ra ilm e n t presentation of af Music in cooperation vc itll tie Russell Western Art Paintings D e scrib e d in N e w Publication n ling Cultural Entertainment Comm it- tee this seas n, will offer five three of si Joists, vh -rn are appearing on Philhar­ monic Hall’s Great Performers Series this season. Miss Home sings, with equal perfection and equal ease, Hugo Wolf and Schumann, Hindemith and de Falla; Bach, Handel. Mahler, and Verdi. Winthrop Sargeant ta the New Yorker magazine has described her voice as having a “ beauti­ fully cultivated bol canto style and a range that goes from true contralto to soprano without a break.” commemorating IN NOVEMBER, Miss Home will appear as Jane Seymour In Donizetti’s “ Anna Bolena” with the American Opera Society in Now York and later in the Verdi the PequJem I ti-'th birthday of Toscanini in March, with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic. Other guest artists to appear on the Solo Artist .Series this se,i >n will be John Browming, pianist; Leonard Rose, cellist; Teresa Stratas, soprano; and Jam es Oliver Busweil IV, violin­ ist. Four concerts will be given in Hogg Memorial Auditorium — one in Muncipal—and there will be no reserved seats. Holders of the $18.28 blanket tax may draw free tickets now for Miss Home’s concert TTiese tickets are at the Fine Arts Box Office, Hogg Auditorium, open 9 a m. to 4 p.m., Monday-Frtday. j THERE IS no advance sale of single admission ticket*. Doors | open at 7:30 p.m. Season tickets for the five con-1 certs may still be purchased at the Fine Arts Box Office In Hogg Auditorium at $8 for adult, $6 for faculty and staff, and $4 for student Single admission tickets, when available, are priced at $2.50. Cole Plans Report On TAB Workshop Dr. Barry Cole, assistant pro­ fessor of the Department of Radio-Telovision-Film will report on a radio-televi&ion-film work shop for high school students at a meeting Tuesday ta Dallas of the Texas Association of Broad­ casters. The workshop, Jointly sponsor­ ed by tile Radio-Television-Film Department and the TAB, last summer attracted 47 high school students to the University for a week of intensive study in the theory and practice of broadcast­ ing. Dr. Cole will be assisted ta the presentation by Ray Herndon, general manager of KMID-TV. Midland. West Texas for many years. He was publisher of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and had many other Interests, Including those station WHAP and radio of WBAP-TV. “ He Johnson. “ Essentially It was his pioneer Kpirit — his own courage, deter­ mination, and ambition — whir h conformed with the works of Remington and Russell,” relates Mrs. felt very much at home with the charac­ ters they depicted, seeing in them the virtues he admired — hones­ ty, fortitude, and hope, as well as ‘stick-to-it-ive- ness” against difficulty and often insurmountable odds. My father could Identify himself with these people and what they stood for.” Russell, with virtually no train­ ing, would paint on anything — tobacco tins, gin bottles, and canvas when it happened to be handy. He got his start using barn paint tenacity and LIKE MOST painters, Russell gave away or received very little for much of his art. But he finally gave up cowpunching and devot­ ed more time to painting. His wife was a good influence. She helped him gain notice, and she finally got him on a work schedule — paint in the morning and go to the saloon in the after­ noon. She even was able to die- tate how many drinks he could have — or perhaps she only thought she did. The painter finally was able to command good prices for his lived a comfortable work and that any life. amount of money could buy a Russell now, except under extra­ ordinary circumstances. It Is doubtful M u sic D a y Perform ance Dr. Nelson G. Patrick, asso­ ciate professor of music education and music director of the T’ni- versity Interscholastic League, will be guest conductor Monday In Dallas at a performance of 28 outstanding high school hands c lim ax in g M ilsIc Day at the State Fair of Texas. At an 8 p.m. program In the Cotton Bowl, Dr. Patrick will di­ rect the massed bands In selec­ tions from the Broadway musi­ cal, “ West Side Story'.” The evening program also win Include performances by high school orchestras and choruses. DEPARTMENT OF DRAMA PRESENTS ITS 29th SEASON Seal Reservations for Season Ticket Holders Begin Tomorrow for THE MIRACLE WORKER ™ .k“ T J J ' 7 t,c lo ff p ro du ct,on., So a.o n O r d e r your ticket* now to YV. t , * " * com,dT ? ' Th* U n l w i H y o f T .ia i fro loot D .p .r fm .n f of D r . , . , . y . l i . b l . o n ly th ro u gh O c to b o r 29th. ,orW THE MIRACLE WORKER William Gibson'4 aenMttv* and exrldnx drama at Antu- Ut.UU, coo,.ct . I U U . Hind, Cml m„,. f*.,tit.w. , . IS —J * — to, -1*0 n o d r w d a n c e d r a m a ENRICO IV « • « * » » 1UU. UM O t a b M . THE GOVERNMENT INSPECTOR ANNUAL SHAKESPEAREAN PRODUCTION SEASON TICKETS N O W O N SALE SAVE UP TO $3.50 [^ENCLOSED SELF-ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE I FINE ARTS BOX OFFICE, Box 7547, Phono GR 1.1444 I THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, Austin, To m , 78712 I S E N D mo tho following number of D ram . S . . son Tickets! ~ ] , I I . ................. A d u l* * * H J S I OO...Univ«r*ity Faculty Staff at $4.00 Stu de n t . ♦ H J O ' I I ............... T 0 T A L N O . O F T IC K E T S I N a m * ......... E N C L O S E D IS $ ............... J I Addr,“ .......................... C i t , ................... ZIP.....I Make Remittance Payable to Dept, of Drama I ' - Charles Ai Russell! Pus tit in p /, Drawings an.: Sail: lure in the Anton G. Car'et Collection,” de. seriation! by Frederic G. Renner, Universal of Pe as Press, $17JO, tty RO BERT E . FORI) Associated Press Writer Tt seems unlikely that a man who liked to cowboy or sit around the saloon had tile time to rum out the 250 paintings and sculp­ tures that repose today in tile Amon ii Carter Museum AT Western Art in Fort Worth. But they are there, and are captured in a resplendent new book of Charles M. Russell’s work which is in the museum. And this Is only a part of the art turned out by the man many call America's greatest western artist THE MI SEUM also houses other western art, including many paintings by another great paint­ er, Frederic Remington. But this new book, in stores beginning Wednesday, is devoted exclusive­ ly to Russell. The book is large enough to give scope to the paintings, 36 of which are in full color. THE FOREWORD is by Mrs. Ruth Carter Johnson, daughter of the late Amon G. Carter who was a leading spirit In his city and in Plemons H ardw are & G ifts [W e st on 24th) • G R 2-3916 ~ 2406 Exposition Complete Line of H ardw are Kitchen & G ift Items Sorority & Fraternity Accounts W elcom ed ONE HOUR FABRI-CAIRE® T H E B E IT E R DRY C L E A N IN G ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE In By 9:00 A.M. — Out By 5:00 P .M . BURTON'S LAUNDRY & CLEANERS 615 W. 19th S t GR 8-4621 I ts Always Easy To Park at B U R T O N S F O R E IG N S T U D E N T S Register now for classes to be held each M onday, W ednesday, and Friday from 10-12 A .M . and 7-9 P.M. at the University Y M C A / Y W C A , 2200 G u a d a ­ lupe. For further Information call G R 6-8877. zsammmmamM fanciful an6 fpankly feminine r Very 1966 I* our unique collection of pierced earrin gs In arresting new design* for daytime and evening w ear. Exquisite, delicate, with the cvstom- c rafte d look. Come in and choose from our newest selections • . . Just arrived and just for you. Extended Terms Available JOE KOEN & SON Since 1888 • ♦ • * / "ll 'here Austinites Shop With Confidence» 105 E. 6th Conveniently Located Just Off the Avenue O u tsta n d in g So lo ist t . . will perform In Hogg Auditorium 0 R 0 R I Y O U R 1967 C A C T U S Photographic Schedule Pictures are to be made in the Cactus Studio— Journalism Building Room 5 Studio Hours; 8:30-12:30 1:30-4:30 All Appointments Must Be Made Through The Sorority CACTUS SORORITY SCHEDULE ! . ^ j tl rv * ‘ *? though Tuesday, Oct. 18 .............................................. u f j y,j ...... cIJj !!' I v * ' V hr°u9h .Wednesday, Oct. 19 ................................. Thursday. 2°*' 13 +^rou9^ Tuesday^ Oct. 18 ALPHA C H I O M EG A ALPHA DELTA P l ALPHA EPSILON PHI................................................ J ALPHA G A M M A DELTA ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA .......... . " ........................ M o n /™ 1J ^ 9 ^ Tuesday, Oct. 18 ................... Monday, Oct. 17 through Tuesday, Oct. 18 ALPHA O M IC R O N Pl ALPHA PHI ............. ......................................... Monday, Oct. 17 through Wedna$day, Oct. 19 ALPHA XI DELTA................................................ luesday, Oct. 18 through Friday, Oct. 21 CH I O M E G A . J; 18 *hrou9h Mdey, Oct. 21 DELTA DELTA DELTA........................................... w j j y' 2 ct‘ 19 throu9h Monday, Oct. 24 DELTA G A M M A .....’ ........................................ Wednesday, Oct 19 through Monday, Oct. 24 ‘day. Oct. 20 through Wednesday, Oct. 26 DELTA PHI EPSILON DELTA SIG M A THETA fLUgh Wednesday, Oct. 26 DELTA ZETA ...................... ............................. Monday, Oct. 24 through Tuesday. Oct. 25 ............................. Monday, 2°!' I, though Thursday, Oct. 27 G A M M A PHI B E T A ..................................... Monday, Oct. 24 through Thursday, Oct. 27 KAPPA ALPHA THETA KAPPA KAPPA G A M M A ................................... w J j A 25„,+ ,rough Friday, Oct. 28 ................................ Wednesday, Oct 26 through Monday, Oct. 31 Pl BETA P H I ................. 7 ll iLrou9S1 Mond«Y. Oct. 31 SIG M A DELTA TAU ...... ....'............................... TF J y‘ [hrouoh Monday, Oet. 31 ZETA TAU A L P H A ................. .. ......................... F 0 c t - 28 through Tuesday, Nov ............................................................... ! ................................. w l T ....................................... ^ n . Y’ I Sunday, October 9, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN KLRN Hosts Films ’Miracle Worker' Tickets On Sale Two Weekends of Drama Offered I c h i h u s S c h e d u le s N Y T rou p e BURNET «&* •C K K E T KO. _ m s - s n u f f G a m P O i W R ■ S K H a e L A T OiaBLO COUR BY DEUIX! 7 P.M. • 11 P.M. P I A’S AT I l \ M . . FRANKIE A JO H N N Y r a n s n i C T r r • ixtioR a t i m CNMU- a t c a p i ta l p . a z a THURS.!! A FANTASTIC AND SPECTACULAR VOYAGE... THROUGH THE LIVING BODY INTO THE BRAIN... a ^ ^ L 6^ fot^WekiiEdrord O Bren Donald Pleased® Artful O Com dt Wffiam Redfield f T ^ A Ja p o ta ) by David Duncan Music by Leonard Rosenman A Cinemascope’ Picture; Color by DeLura K i w i F a th e r. Screenplay by Harry (d e w r c,duce? .by Sluf P " ® arectBd ^ ■ ^ SPECIAL POPULAR PRICES SPECIAL SCHEDULED PERFORMANCES 1»KR A IKMAN (ICS — MON. t hru F R I. *:(M 1\M . A 8:IW I* >L BCATX. BDAY A SUNDAY 3:00 P M .. S .OO P .M ., 0:00 P M . f ^ O e v i l - m a y - c a r e d o g f i g h t s i n t h e s k i e s . . . SEIS S&-;' . l l : - ' P P T mm ■rn tem* l i l t .'My I *■. .■ "HST r n r n . * * ■. * . -J** : > ama 'N*’. V a r n a * . . . r f e v i l - m a y - c a r e l o v e a f f a i r s o n t h e g r o u n d .99 —A L Y . T I M E S ■ tim f S ' 0 rn cam- rn presents JE BLUE HUT a*m MKY Iff UP- KARI MICHIE VOGER • WON D1FFRWG nwjeodDi CHRISTIAN FEkRY tmcitm t'tws**' ELMO WILLIAMS dmim by JOHN GmUfRttfl BASIIiO FRANCHINA «• DAVID PURSALI a^ JAO STDOOW a^ GERAID HAfftfY m BTN BAREMAN awmZ %- aci. 0. n a m * cm m soonluwu album i o u a i rn w & w m rlcorx • CINEMASCOPE Color by DeUiXE E.X tS.1 .SIV IS K O A It-JlO M HJN ti AG KMKNX Si ARTS W E D N ES D A Y v a r s i t y Fa g u 8 S u n d a y , O c t o b e r 9 , 1 9 6 6 THE DAILY T E X A N TTie Department of Drama opens its bo* office Monday for season ticket patrons to rn a k a reservations first pro­ duction of Its twenty-ninth season, “The Miracle Worker’* by Wil­ liam Gibson. the for Drama season admission tickets and to tickets single “Miracle Worker” ara available now. Those holding season tickets can make reservations two weeks in advance of the first perform­ ance and one week prior to the general public, thus assuring the season ticket patron his choice of date and se a t In addition to reservation ad­ vantages, the patron can save up to $3.90 on the five playa, is placed on the College of F i n e Arts mailing list, and is offered free or reduced admission to any Department of Drama b o n u s attraction or special event. Further information is availa­ ble from the Fine Arts Box Of­ fice at Hogg Auditorium, GR 1- 1444. theater-goers as Two weekends of dram a will highlight October for Austin and the University Ichthus Coffee House presents director Ben Haehnel and his New York troupe In five contem­ porary one-act plays. Haehnel is a former Austinite and graduate of the University. Only 27 years old. he has studied at the London School of Econom­ ics, and acted and directed train­ the Herbert Berghof ing with Studio and law rence Komfeld. He has spent the last few years in in New York City ’working dram a, THE FIRST BUN of dram as by director Haehnel and his troupe will feature “ F ru strata” by Tom Even and “ Zoo Story” by Edward Albee, Thursday through G et 16. assets M ajor physical In science-engineering fields include a nuclear reactor, tele­ scope, computation conter, elec­ tron microscope, and particle ac­ celerator. radio ^PREVIEW * TONIGHT I ■‘Frustrata” Is a revue con­ sisting of 24 character parts but a c t e d by only six principals. Frustrata is played by Miss Ed- wina Delagl of New York C i t y who has done recent work off in “The Chalk G ar­ Broadway den” and "Jimmy P aradise.” In “Zoo Story,” an oft-repeated piece of work in theater groups, two actors convey the message of author Edward Albee. Vince Johnson and J, E. Brown play the parts of Peter and Jerry. SCHEDULED tor the second weekend, Oct 20, through Oct. 22, is a triple billing of “Not Enough Rope” by Elaine May, “These Cornfields” by Georges Courteline, and “Ludlow Fair” by Lanford Wilson. "Not Enough Rope" has a three-member c a s t of M i s s Adrienne Arts, Miss Delagl. and Brown. Miss May, author of “Rope," has achieved considera­ ble fame as the former partner of director, actor, producer, Mike Nichols. Miss May is becoming well established in writing in ad dition to her acting talents. BREVITY IS AGAIN em pha­ sized in “ Ludlow Fair.** A two- member cast. Ann Sampson and Suzanne Gilbert, situation plot. carries out the The third of the triple billings, “ These Cornfields,” is set in New York about 1900. Performances begin at 8 p m. in the Methodist Student Center auditorium, 2434 Guadalupe. Gen­ eral admission is $125; student admission, $1. IC H T H U S Coffee House presents. •. under the direction of Ben Haehnel with New York actor troupe, contem­ porary one-act plays. Thursday, O cto b e r 13 through Thursday, O cto b e r 20 through Sunday, O cto b e r 16 Saturday, O cto b e r 22 i - s n . s u * . f t * t ZOO STORY—Edward Albee THESE C 0 RN FIEID S- 6eorge$ Courteline LUDLOW FAIR— Lanford Wilson ll p.ra. J I J I 1 METHODIST STUDENT CENTER N o n - Students UNIVERSITY TOURS PRESENTS •urojje 1 7 P A R A M O U N T 7 : 3 0 p . m . S t a t e 8:00 p.m. TH* S A f f ln r o n n avv ms a r u h a ne a o a h i OCTOBER is NATIONAL MOVIE MONTH! ENJO Y THE BIG M O V IE S O N INTERSTATE THEATRES' BIG SCREENSI AAaft* MIKI a u l d ....... I S ..................... 7# ................. 4 0 PARAMOUNT FE A T U R E S t 3:00-3:56-3:50 » : » (Se*** 7:30) Ut Strangest Girl Hunt I Man lier welt ob! N-6M^mW-UWC£. (WASSERMAN PRODUCTION • -.K M M ? Bumming ta i ■ rn F R E E P A R K I N G 7»h & LAYAOU STS™ A An ft* I MDC Child . . . . . .. LM ............ .78 ......... ... 40 rEATmnii t » 0 - 6 :0 0 - 4 :0 6 • :3* CSbieah 1:00 J STATE THE UNCONQUERABLE ARE AT I T I AGAIN! ■ r n MFTRD- GnLOWVK- MAYER m m PRODUCTION* rn M f TROC 04.00 ROBERT DAVID Y M f i ! ! MCCALLUM IIP DOROTHY TORU-PROVIHE. af* > w it unum un non Tufty stow I F R E E P A R K I N G AFTER 6 P.M. ON LOTS 7th & L A V A C A STS ’ KTV ANTHONY MELINA MERCOURI PERKINS ma RAP VALLONE 0 JULES a violent drama HASHINGS of profane love PfiOUUCTION Of v PHAEDRA M r—m/rto rn n w i * cry eel w oaw w A m o d er n l e g e n d of love, p a s s i o n a n d vi ol ence! BLACK, oftPHei/s F R E E P A R K I N G A D JA C EN T TO THEATRE |_W> .....................aa so ......... h o c DWM AUSTIN L IM IT E D R E T U R N E N G A G E M E N T 2 a ----------- I r~Tf-mieerw Toter H W P J C l«<>f>a t r a ST A JULIN O KOiabedi t a y l o r Klrhartl b u r t o n ! REE PARKIN G A T ALL TIM ES • Wednesday, October 12, 1966 • Meeting, at 4 P.M. and 7 P.M. Ransom Room— Forty Acres Club All infer, tfed itud.nt, ar. cordially in.il,d fe afeard. MIMMS Forty Acres Club Lobby 2500 Guadalupe S K S * £ £ v r x ti gr r n GI 8-5601 . . . T ours... Travel S l v . 7 £ r t i c S d#nh and memberS 0 U h e FaCuity and Sfaff th< Following 1. Airline reservation* end ticketing. 2. World-wide hotel reservation*. / m m HCM t i 3. C a r rental and purchase, domestic end international 4. Independent and group tra ve l 5. Steam ship and cruise reservations. 6. Charter Airline and Bus Quotations Available. 7. Student Rate . . . Air Tickets. W » also off ar a 30-60 day open Charge Account to all members of the Faculty and Staff, and will deliver your tickets. SPECIAL CHRISTMAS TO NEW YORK AND WASHINGTON, DC Round Trip— -$111.00 plus tax Youth group, means a gro u p o f 14 or more passengers under 20 years of age. Leave* Decem ber 16th Returns January 2nd Deadline for Reservations N o v. 1st Space Limited — M ake Reservations N o w Through Your "Braniff" A p p o in te d Travel Agent. . . . T ours... Trarel •urope 1 9 6 7 W ANTED... CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVES!! Afe r n 1nfer.ff.jl i. ..ra in , . ROUND TRIP TICKET TO EUROPE f .r * . tum„ „ IO C . m p u t T r . v , l R . p r . f e n t . t i v . i ( . b . f e r . p r . . . „ t . m p l . j . d , T , I • U . d i n , f f u d . n l L u r . . . l r , . . ! I N T E R V , E W ’ Si '’* • • • *— v — a. Beverly Braley Tours. . . Travel Box 4178 — Austin, Texas A M U ........... 140 MIK) ................. M Ne CSilM TtHkete VARSITY S P E C IA L R E T U R N E N G A G E M E N T PH A ED RA 5:30, f:43 . IM.4(14 O R PH E U S 0:30 341 1:36 Forty Acres Club Lobby 2500 Guadalupe G R 8-8888 G L 8-5601 KLRN Televises Citizenship Test Because local government vital­ ly concerns every citizen. KLRN- rv. channel 9. will present ti c1 luteal Citizenship Test being con­ ducted by the San Antonio Re­ search and Planning Count Viewing time for the test p.m. Sunday. is 9 The TV audience participation test, modeled alter the Nath aal Citizenship Test presented last fall by CBS, will consist of 1.1 scoring questions and two opine n questions concerning the govern­ ments of the City of .San Antonio and Bexar County. yu x w.viju! i; ,ui. ,ii, .ww-gse** ■ ■***» THE CITY THAT BECAME A TORCH - T H E TORCH THAT FIRED THE WORLD! 4& A y n to Be A ired The “ Avn Rand on Campus’1 grogram will be broadcast by University radio station KI T PM f 9:30 pm. Sunday. Ayn Rand, controversial author "Atlas Shrugged" and other is an ultra right wing novels, conservative. Interested students without FM receivers max hear the program in Union Building 317. : j W I N N E R O F 6 A C A D E M Y A W A R O S & ^ T O G °i^ W N - M A Y E R p » ts Ems A CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION , d a v id l e a n s f i l m I OF BORIS PASTERNAKS d o c t o r / i m a g o CS M A G N I li*’M .rd I ri (ii, main p* Onl> t apacitv of Theatre x„irf -— No Seal* Reserved • XII Purchasers Guaranteed a “-e-it Bov Office Opens At Nmifl for Reserv a finns (■I, .turn Woo Hancock Dr. I ’ A H R IN G n i l K IO P E R F O R M A N C E S W K KH 1.1 'I I l l \ n s u r n sun. Through Th ut*. I venin* Performance* at 7 ut SXT X st \ i f i | \f. 3RD WEEK ■X sal. at It P M. X ROX DSHOAV IM . XI.I MI VT I’ X s > UST si ' [ ' I M H ll MATIN I- K TOMA T 2 PXI. I X I M M , PK R T O R M A N C E XT 7:30 I* M. ENDS WED.! ON «NTF«wtx.|UMAL AT CAPITAL PLAZA Bt ll VN K MOORE B t HANK M O O RE hast Wednesday evening, two of the all time greats in modem popular music entertained a capa­ city audience at the Municipal Auditorium. They were Kila Fitz­ gerald and Duke Ellington, per­ forming for tiro opening of the f is.’ut,d Entertainment Commit. tee s 19h6-ti7 season. In a I ex an interview. Miss Fitz­ gerald recounted her days as vocalist with Chick Webb's band in Harlem back in the 1930’s. She wrote a song called “ A Tisket-A- CHARLTON LAURENCE HESTON OLIVIER RICHARD JOHNSON RALPH RICHARDSON - x JU L IA N Bi AUSTEIN FRODL ( TJON [h u i(T o iiM - ULTRA PA N A V ISIO N * I TECHN ICO LO R- UNITED ARTISTS Duel At D iab lo lames namer .» stdnr> ruttier 7 IOO A Thousand C lo w n s ■InVMI Hoborrl .lr. A Bai barn H arris « 53 DRIYi - IN THI AIRE 3900 Se Conf Born Free X it* Mila McKenna A Kill 7:00 That Funny Feeling A private nightmare of sex, violence, and murder, A T ---------- 2:30-5:00-7:35-10:00 For M atu re Adults Stuart Whitman • Janet Leigh OPEN 1:30 P.M. Starts 2 P.M. J H S ® C O L O R ! ^ ^ S M O K IN G l O G f r R JS H B / V C K ,-C D vRT S L A I S G A I U P V G IA N T S C R E E N c g A C R E S of FREE YI I OHI !) PAWLING Jazz Greats Com m ent on Austin Visit And then on < -to Duke K • ■ And then on a hv , , , . . Tasked, hascvl on an old nurserv Tasked based on an old nursery rhyme, and if set her up as a outstanding singer right. ’n her nun for t oik fining lier musical success she said, I don t know what if is, T hope we keep Hie magic She had nothing hut xx a n d '" praise the current singing stars. Nowadays (hex- rome and go hut they get some pre?tx good the hits! songs of today, as xx knesset! bv hor latest record ‘‘These Boots Are Made E r r Walking.” She enjoys singing in the Miss Fitzgerald prefers per­ “ intimacy' of forming nightclubs but in fur more of the concerts for colleges these days “ Students are such attentive listeners, and they are the record buyers ’ she added. is going The reason that Ella Fitzgerald staved ahead of other singers is her true genius for music, the quality for staying power Look­ ing back oxer it all, she re­ marked, “ I d like to see some­ thing on the charts for a change!" But she reasoned. ".Sometimes I feel a little sad about it and then again I say ‘Well now xx hen you think of how manx tears you’ve boon singing and people still en joy you'—then ifs a great thrill." ton, insisting we r a name given to high school days IXC His gix’en nai Kennedy Ellington name xx as for h game of baseball, that music bt work. although the piano at af It wa came ie s‘art< J I . e ann ti skill Duke recalled e vinier •HY Austin and how changed to him, here in 19,33. play concerts and d m< tors tate Theatres most recently appt political i her. Circuit and od at a 19(3-4 Like El i T itzgcrald. the Duke Is quick t give < rod it to his staff of arrange!s for the wonderful music that they do. His musicians as a whole lune “ the highest paid payroll for a band in Hie world." he feels. He. too, likes the music of in catagorizing music. If it sound- good, ifs good mush !" He h s even recorded a couple of Boatie songs himself! “ I don't belie\-e today, Ellington, famous for his swing­ ing lug band style, also is doing religious mush' in concerts a round the country "This has been Dukf x rg e f to tr>n f t * kc at ^ I 'n I varsity of Texas tnat -AO do love thorn m adly!’* Texans to Exhibit Art in Dallas Show W ’;e A r t * ta! plans for the ! Sr - !pture Ex- * u ide com pc ti- Held rn Della* s si .nor Inc e rem­ and for I is a $500 U n i t e d re a l s o Is of $250 Her cash you ( in ll chit-* k wit! uro art Duko’s v ers inns L F , folio Miss Fitzgerald concert. if his old hits in , red bx- one with I teamed up The Duke attributes his to his band s fund his ify to update their mus times, “ (lf course, we the ladies. In 1933 it xx tic a ted Lady.” Tod ax Doll’." >wn) ahi!- ‘ with the 'tick with f A s a r in Upon leaving. Duke brought un his famou Ellington phrase. artist v dent of the stai the last xear TI Mr prospectus bo ob ta inc Alice < jxx of Fine , . Texas 7,1 is open to any err; rn cot resi- I has axed in ;x ;n nfhs of si eiiti blanks XX ! I t b mg to as Mu­ ir Park, Dal THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS f ' l A w w u r t n C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G H A J I S i m b*DTiL>fv/> * » * . .. Tach W o rd M in im u m C h a ra c * Stud ent rat. ( 15-word m in im u m ) 4<- ................................................ 5 j vj (M -w ord m a x im u m ) one tim e .$ * sn <>» ........................ ................... Ea ch addition; I lim e C la s s ifie d D isp la * I c o lu m n \ 1 ne in h o n e tim e ......................... E a c h A d d itio n a l T im e ‘JO Consecutive Issues s Vvords lo words ' o re « 20 }! ^ ■ experienced ..V-;g :n:a But!er- G R 8-5178. R o o m flnd B o a rd teacher. ■ ■ --- MX ............. ............ Tutorin g z>v Bl 1 |f ° 4 t >e tween Gregory g>m-F park retune valuable paper* lot' Please Contact CO 6-15,.’ • K.k’T FOOD In town. Dei;clou* me.,:*. rrtn. v ‘ -.etabies. *43 OO. • u n i'V ’,. ?7 - S A N A N T O N I O I T W EA K S, ! . Carbon legal. aianujcrtjHa, atenctl* ribbon p a u.:fl Btm nm VI a. 2716 A d -son. O L 2-8779 ib m T ra > u ^ EXPRESS Special Offer 4 Mont: , for S4 NI .-lase S3 60 T il! AN .7 2135 or GG 2-8653 FREE Ticket Drawing for $18.28 BLANKET TAX HOLDERS Draw Tickets at Fine Arts Box O ffic e in H o g g A u r o r i u m O p e n 9-4 M o nd ay -F rid ay B L A N K E T T A X Holders M u st D R A W Tickets W hile They Last! THE C O LLEG E O F FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT O F M USIC in cooperation with the Cultural Entertainment Committee announce the first of five concerts- 1966-67 season UT S O L O A R T I S T SERI ES m a r i l y n H o r n e G R 6-1317 G R 7 0127 ages 16 to 24 mclu^ve i Intro iu d s * the all nn,» student .-'al ter Plan ■ eligible for a 810.000 life policy for only SSO annually. only at H « S , 27, * 2ff .Semiannual S r 6.x. Rate changes musicians. ni,¥ns , _U3'<-„ians. a only Fo r further information sam,, at. - apply - ma:e or female. *=“ rducalon. Ted U B a u v e . «» ■ 631 XX est 34th. G I. 2-v362. You m ay he T A J* A H A P IA N O S V “.' v« a n of old world A ®omple»e profe,*ionai typing aervica nratsm ar-1-'" »-* In ernatlonally aecia med bv or'’'1 ,f> ’be needs of Ilniversltv strider t i •mansh'P. u ------ _ ... Lypin*. Multi!]thing, Bm dm * i * a .a-L. deal- cla ‘ keyboard equipment of language sc encT and engineering theses and d m er'a tm - 1 ROYAL ARMS 1 w n ie or ca'] 13:0 N o rw a lk Lan e G R 7-2536: 4928 Burnet Road Ai.,un Texas .. Rps®n ’e r-lfe In.su an: e m Phone G I, 7 6-174 » *W> silver-blue Mustang. V-8 •K.r A / C , autom ate transmission, power radio and heater *2198 or ste am *, consol# unit, tinted wLndsheld, padded viaor* best offer. 2215 Bridle Path. O R 2-2446. Phone G R 2-3210 a G R 2-7677 3013 Guadalupe Virginia Calhoun Typing Service Professional work including m ultiiithing and Hading on theses and die- sedations. in ad fields, 1301 Edgewood Symbols Xero* O R 8-36*1 Notary Todays Swin gin gist Music 37 MG A -com plat e;> restored excellent con­ dition **50 G R 8-67.34 after 7 pm . The Revised Ed ition Book ng A g e n t — H i 2 0434 60 V O L E S : radio, white sidewalls, low mile­ f a il HI 2-0431 age, good eonddion. *600 FASH Keo Triumph motorcycle, modified 8275 cash O L 4 '.(Til. F O R s a L E : Honda J VO. Clean, excellent condition. 6,700 miles. *330. Call G R 2 5950. 2 7 , ^ dissertotlcns, repor's. multllithtn*. hB BoM»J e Delafield. RaJ rn- ® U8.?: 8araK0 *al# « p m ,0 .-,Unday Housewares rn aax vnM i , n r ' n . f® 42, some lum iture ««tate i.n- 4015 50 cc 196.) Yamaha good condition. miles, dependable, *430, G R 7-9391. tween P a tte re r. P a rk B a s tn ? 8 u B ' <1 V _______________ __ ^ ^ R E D M G A - G R 7-891*. 5915 TT I7NO on. rxecu,lv* electric by former la. srrretary, B B A in secretarial studies. U Mrs. Fowler, G L 3-8650. Need money: 1966 Sunbeam Alpine, wire , Whe. n U « C1r tarat0 ttrcs H a "(f i()P end soft top. *_.2rrain- ^ I month a t J , V f f P * recorder. *12.50-15 50 per eia.aww.sg p e ri .... _ _ _ _ _____________ R o o m m a t e W a n t e d N E E D F E M A L E to share two bedroom. 2 bath apartment. *56 month. All bu s p ad Call G R 6-5631. 1949 Ford convertib a. E V 5-4271. Clean, nice. *300. M2jsswiss ss*.** ^equipped, new tire. G R 7-5284 Must se” before 21»t 1963 ______________________ Im pala Radio a r eonditionm*, 327 motor, posi-traet’on OR M as 4 ,peed* a*‘t offer Uke”' Fem ale graduate to share ap artm ent/Enfield. Call G R 2-5382 student large Winchester model si sl;de actlon caljbe(. ,22 Magnum Excellent condition. SBot car racing equipment. O L 2-3550. W O O D S T Y P IN G n *c*un# service ditto. Reasonable. HO 5-1078. K rp enen ceC ns> M*«w»»cripu. Complete dup- for mu! til itll, m.meograoh. S E R V IC E C O M P E T E N T S E C R ET A R Y - T Y P IS T * ‘h many sears of experience in all field!, une conscientious and meticulous car# •v as to acgatacy, co rre<’t form and composi­ technical papers. reports, tion is w w e , * '‘Cations. L A W W O R K SPEC- isst^ srsss- itzrz? note,. IB M Elactrom .tlck S l t W n l Xerox * mg and binding services on request - n r 4 K : n H ' n w w. .... __ typto* in G R 8-5894 j B L O C K S west of campus theses, Excellent term -eporta, and - -d use n a lions, books Reasonable rates. G R 8-8113 T H E S E S , dissertations, briefs, reports, m a » Uscripts, IB M . Mrs. Anthony. O L 4-3079. nouse. *4. oO utilities G R S-8154. a £££*■ 1M0 ‘ l i m . ? , , r » : x n; s , ” ‘ b^■k' , « • J3,B " d Um‘ " r.arv I I ^ f’ Suiukl Motor bike Guv F r\ « - or G R H W 8 . 2915 Guadalupe «5 M G H, high compression engine whee s. G R 7-7994, wire MBA. . Tjw ng, MultiUthing. Binding A complete professional typing service tail- ored tu the needs of Un.versity students Spe­ cial keyboard equipment of language, science, and engineering these, and dissertations. ' Phone G R 2-3210 * G R 2-7677 3013 Guadalupe T H E M E S , T H E S E S , dissertation,. la V b rte fa . J5c per page. , , Notary 18 year» cxpe-enr# ’j0, "rc$w,er C,R 2 L U D W IG d r u m s — Beautiful complete — **t including Zj!d:)an C im S , CaTeT No Ma"J° ; 6 I,elaflel(1 m - ‘ I reasonable offer refused G R o lie * I — ___ fUSed- G R 22666 ev<’nln**- E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V I C E ” ---- — • * “ « « oicn. v ii. t. Accur- atg- Reasonable, near Allandale, H o 5-5813. 19.59 F IA T *1.100 --------- .......... — 1 engine w a XQ oin8’000 m :iM on HO 5-9949 evenings. rebulR 1959 A U S T IN Healey Sprite *350. Ckwd con­ dition, economical. G R 8-1758 teacher wanted, p art Electronics m urn, Mornings. degree and practical experience preferred. 11(co Might consider senior with E E major. Good salary. Im m ediate opening. Phone G R 8 3194, time « r I „ s „.s K E c i ™ ' S S S V w , ? ? lboat- Centerboard / ' V P A X “ S . 10*8 bNkS 25c‘ P#Wfr back, 10/8 and 9. 8-o p m. 915 West 22r,d. GRADE-POINT CONSCIOUS? C R 2-8717 for T H E S E S D IS S E R T A T IO N S B C R E P O R T S H e l p W a n t e d N O T IC E E E S E N IO R S T U D E N T S *3u0a Double rooms *25 00. Maid sem ce kitchen p rivileges GR 2-9040, GL 2-8212. Men “ Sm*‘« ROOMS for rent. Newly rem odeled apart­ ments. *40 per man. GR 7-4972. D A L L A S Morning New* Motor Route Oper­ Im mediately. Short hours ators Wanted S ’* h i 4-Svu todav. r t , Um« Pa > " Call G R 2-7685 or T H R E E B L O C K S C A M P U S ; Single or double A C Room for boy*. til# bath Maid Service and utili­ Private ties E ngldaire. area for Two light food. . . . . *40 each. On# . . . . |52 50 European summer employment. All Job des orations. Placem ent m England and Con Stu­ linen! Applications now being dent Travel. 2226 Guadalupe. G R 7-4340. taken Part time. flexible hours, high hourly in­ come Can earn up to *100 weekly. Career 1 possibilities. Contact E , B Winkler. G R ) T06 West 21*t University rooms, tm en-wom en). A IC, Kit- chen. maid. T V. Private, doubles. *27 50 |naruL up, B ills paid. GR 6-9490. . . . Fu rn ish ed H o u s e s j 3100 DUVAL. 2 bedroom, good condition, will students. GL furnish. E xcellent for 2-4 2-4al6 evenings. NEF.D Q U A L IF IE D 1st grade for private school, who can also play piano. two morn! transporta­ Also need dancing for mgs weekly. Must have own tion. WA 6-1898 or G L 2-0907 teacher teacher GRADUATE student or professor Write p o Writ# P.O. Box 5181, Austin, T exas. 8u‘d* for to write students. E X P E R I E N C E D paid tm e announcer. Ap­ ply in person. KVET. 113 West 8th. f o r Stone, aith E S S ® ? H O M K , ami.-'>■ Austin cond! cond:- b a ^ m e and h M U n «- L ib rary, den playroom. level dining room basement, separate split I baths C a:pet, and drapes 3 bedrooms, throughout. and oak L < T centra! air yard. 17 elm B ig . 7 “ 2 ^ J™ ™ C a“ * atld O Henry J O R ^ SLhitois. *41.o00. F o r appointment wrlia own er P o . B o * 5180, Austin. Texas. ^ f'?-*I? ? RTS- D!.s>ertations. G B J- 4715. Mrs. Brady, 2507 Bridle Path. A L D R ID G E T Y P IN G S E R V I C I 3WX* East 30th Street G R 8-Mff Technical papers a specialty. O ver 200 extra s a b o t s on our I B M Executives for science, language. engineering, m athematics I rafting, muiUUthing. binding, and xeroxing. and So Pontiac Catalina Spe (^pe Silver Blue Bk Viny. top. spoke hubs. tilt steering S *** at Morgans Gulf “ Rh and Ouadalupe. e a u GR 2- ists) after 4 p.m. Call G R 1-5244 To Place a Texan Classified Ad Professional Typing StudentS'Faculty end books. MultUltbtn* and binding. I d ' serlaUor^ these*, term report*, Reasonable Ratee o b ' ^ S T o f Cam p m *•* Sunday, October 9, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN A m e r i c a n S o p r a n o A*- her latest, sold out con­ cert in C arnegie H all last April, ' Her phenomenal vocalism brought not only roars of approval standing ovation fro almost delirious ad (N. Y. Journal Am erican); hundreds in the cap acity throng jumped to their feet shouting a n d applauding'' (N . Y. W o rld Telegram). TUESDAY, PCT. II HOGG AUDITORIUM 8:15 P.M. i tcSTt^ FIVE SOLO ARTISTS .............. 1966-67 Season A ™er!c.an So p ran o ................... Oct. I I American Pian ist......................Oct. 20 ROSE, American C e llis t......................... J an, 1 1 Feb 24 JA M E S OLIVER BUSW ELL IV. American V M M * .7 Mar! 22 Marilyn Horne replaces Herman Prey, who is ill Season T.ckeh: Adult, $8, UT Faculty-Staff $4, Studenh $4 On bale at Fine Arts Box Office, Hogg Auditorium On Sale at FINE ARTS BO X OFFICE, H O G G AUD ITO RIUM ST^ T A S , Greelc-Canadian Soprano . G R 1-1444' G R 1-7444 s 'n9 fe admissions (availability limited) $2.50. 5 v M l l Z ^ J W J j , N ° advance sale’ FREE to folders of UT Blanket Tax by advance ticket D R A W - IN G at Fine A rts Box Office, H o g g Audi- f0rium* ° P en 9“4* Doors open 7:30 p.m. No reserved seats C A S F T O fY AND SCANT A MOVIE AS ANY AUDIENCE C W H ASK F0A!” -MR m t kfefeme " T H E W R O N G B O X is th* right movie and mn irresistibly delicious delight!'* -HBC-TV /War Shtw Sr" 1% 7>fi Urn COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents B R Y A N F O R B E S 1 PRO D U CTIO N OF T H E W B O I U B B O X •tarring J O H N M IL L S R A L P H R IC H A R D S O N IC.............................. — ---- -------------- M IC H A E L C A I N E S 581 P E T E R C O O K - D U D L E Y M O O R E N A N E T T E N E W M A N T O N Y H A N C O C K P E T E R S E L L E R S as the Detective m Dc Pratt STARTS W ED N ESD A Y! Austin's New Vine Arts Theatre “on the drag" t Union Group W ill Interview for 5 Challenae Committee group on “Intellectual Death.’* & ' 0UP on “intellectual Death.’* Interested students also are in­ vited to meet for dinner at El Toro at 5:30 p.m. Sunday. A Stanford RewordI Institute a Stanford Research Institute, a specialist in defense policy and a regular adviser to the Depart­ ment of Defense on nuclear wea­ pons policy, will speak. I The lecture conference seminar Is sponsored by the government graduate faculty and the local chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha, na­ tional political science honor ars. ★ Corps Positions Open Peter Beneville, a F o r e i g n Service officer of the Departm ent of State, will discuss the work of the US Foreign Service Wed­ nesday and Thursday at the Uni­ versity. Interested students and faculty are invited to speak with Bene­ ville at the Student Financial Aid Office at IO a.m. Wednesday, and IO a.m. through 2 p m. Thurs­ day. Thursday in the Union Building Auditorium. After the film, Beneville nill answer questions concerning c a ­ reers in the Foreign Service Of­ ficer Corps, with specific refer­ ence to his own experiences. Tile next w’ritten Foreign Sei*v- ice exam is scheduled for Dec. 3. All applications must be filed before Oct. 22. In d ia Association Elects India Association officers elect­ ed for 1966-67 arc Dr. A. B. Singh, president; Dr. B. B. Mukhcrjce, vice-president; B. K, Gupta, trea­ surer; M. B. Sarnia, secretary, ami Ulna Ravipaty, joint secre­ tary. * * “In Search of Peace,” a film featuring senior Departm ent of­ ficials and depicting the problems of bringing peace throughout the world, will be shown at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Union Build­ ing Junior Ballroom and 3 p.m. Sign Entry Deadline Set Entries for the Arkansas Sign Painting Contest m ust be sub­ mitted by Wednesday, Dianne Rush, Texas Union Campus Com­ petitions Committee chairman announced. Maximum size for the signs, which will be placed on the West Mall, is 10-by-15 feet. The signs will lie on display from Thursday to Sunday, Oct. 16. All service organizations and housing units are urged to partici­ pate, Miss Rush added. A trophy will he awarded to the winner. Students interested in entering the the contest should contact Union Program Office at GR 6 -0222. ♦ La w C ouncil A n n o u n c e d Honor Council members for the School of Law are Mike Uourticq, chairman; Don Bird, freshman representative; Tommy Ausley and Denman Moody, mid-law rep­ resentatives; and Don Griffis, Skipper Vaughn, ami William Hall, senior representatives. Senior class officers are Wayne Weber, president; Ed Dobroski, vice-president; and Linda Hay Wall, secretary. Mid-law officers are Kent V ^ f I 11 I I I I f C C j Hare©, president; Ray HUI, vice- president; and Nancy Stroup, secretary. F;reshman officers are Gamey Griggs, president; Jim George, vice-president; and John Cook, secretary. ★ Chinese Tap Leaders secretary; The new officers for the Chi­ are nese Student Association Julia Fu Shaw, president; Teresa Wang, vice-president; Jen Tai Yang, Ju-Chang Huang, treasurer; and Alice Lin, social chairman. ★ C ouncil A s k e d to P h o n e AU representatives of the Arts and Sciences Council who missed the first meeting Ort. 5, have to contact Py been requested Bateman, GR 6-2547, before Thursday. ★ Carr Officers Elected New officers of the University Students for Waggoner Carr are Chris Hanger and Jim Edwards, co-chairmen; Judy Lewis, vice- chairm an; and Mary Bardie, secretary. Appointed committee chairmen are Aaron McNeese, editorial; Sharon Ferrell and Tommy Hicks] precinct canvassing .and Ray Brassard, motorcade. ★ Linguist Will Lecture Dr. Werner Winter, former I niv ersity faculty member now at the University of Heil, Ger­ many, will give a public lecture at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Business- Economios Building 151. ..Winter’s topic will be “Indio in Iranian Loanwords and the Toeharian.” Sponsors are University Center for Asian Studies and the Linguistic Club. A specialist in Toeharian and Armenian linguistic studies, Win­ ter was the University Geniianic languages department faculty from 1957 to 1965, when he became head of the linguistics department at the University of Kiel. on ★ French Club to Sing The French Club will hold a get-acquainted in Batts Hall 201, at 7 p.m. Tuesday, All students are invited to listen and learn traditional songs and hootenanny ••WAV. . ... ... . hit tunes from France. Refresh­ ments will be served. ★ A ra b C lub to See Film The Organization of Arab Stu­ dents will present a film showing of “A Man In Our House,” at •>:30 ami 8:30 p.m. Monday in the Union Building. The film stars Omar Sharif in one of his earlier Hiles. ★ Geographers W ill Meet The Departm ent of Geography will hold a reception for students and professors at 4 p.m. Wednes­ day in the Union Building Star Room. The reception is sponsored by the Union Student-Faculty Com- mittee. All students are invited. if Gard Chosen President Newly elected officers of the University Real E state Club are Ronnie Gard, president; Dwight Dow, vice-president; John Yokie, program Richard chairm an; Tabor, treasurer; Steve Winn, publicity chairm an; and Dorothy Gregory, secretary, Tile next meeting is scheduled for Oct. 19. G u i d e t o GOOD E A T I N G The Challenge Steering Com Steeril? Com* mittee will interview students for five committees Tuesday through Thursday in Union Building 325. Interviews will he held from 2 to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednes­ day. Thursday interviews will be held from 9 a m. to noon and from 2 to 5 p.m. More than IOO students will he needed for committees on recep­ tion, research •ecretarial, registration, and con­ tact. publicity and Challenge 1967 — on the popu­ lation explosion — will be held Feb. 17-18. ★ ' Conversations' to M eet The “Religious Conversations” group will meet In the Universi­ ty “Y” library Monday at 4 p.m. Any Interested student in­ vited to attend ami discuss “ The I-Thou Relationship.” is Religious Group to Meet The Student Religious Liberals will hold a business meeting in Union Building 300, 7 p.m. Sun­ day. John Young will speak to the . N E L S O N 'S Navajo and Zuni Handm ade Indian Jewelry Mexican Import* t f j B . N e ls o n , P r o p . 4618 S o . T o u r . HI 4-3814 UNIVERSITY TRANSIT CO. Hourly Bus Service To and From Cam pus Tour Satnrrtrr P*mi Now Contact: STI D E ST TRAVEL JSC. SSM (fUiidalnp* GR 7-4340 "The Pipe House of Austin" Will D. Miller S Son UiiartnH and dally n*n«parn>r* fTada dear*, tobacco*, pipe* A accc*»orie* l a W ert M b Street A ustin, T e x a s FREE INSTRUCTION th e Purchase W ith o f M aterials THE NEEDLE CORNER 3400 Exposition am* t A .M .4 PJK . Open Crasrol R ita If a se ity Ptlko* K its era. All families win bring food for their family ami for several hLo- dents. Mr. ami Mrs. Cu* Wil­ liam* will be picnic chairmen. ★ Applications for nominees Beauties Vie for Top IO In the Ion Most Beautiful contest "ill he taken Tuesday through Thursday from 2 to 5 p.m. in Journalism Building 304. Any organization m ay enter up to four girls for a registration fee of $3 each. Judging, Oct. 18-20. will be in two elimination rounds during which 25 finalists will be selected for final judging by a m ale celebrity, Win!tors will be announced in a Decem ber issue of Tile Daily Texan. ★ Policy A d v ise r to Sp e a k Faculty members and govern­ ment graduate students only may hear a lecture on “Conflicting Views ami Strategy Concerning Nuclear Weapons” at 3 p.m. Mon­ day in Waggoner Hall 116. Dr. William Van Cleave of the Date Tickets For H o g Tilt Ready In G ym to tickets Blanket tax holders who are eligible for date the Texas-Arkansas gam e Oct. 15 m ust pick up Hie tickets at Greg­ ory Gym 115 no later than noon : Tuesday. Date tickets are $5 and blanket tax tickets are $L Date ticket winners a re t 8* 44. 55, 87. IS), 879. 394 VKI 858 *8T I * 4. 1030. W SO, lo w , n s 4 i m 32 % l e e , 1488 1439 1 * 2 . 289., S i l l . SUH. 3199, 3224 3231. 331A 2217. 3436. 34*1. 2596. 2886. 3402 S577, 3751. 3761. 39V*. 8972. 4244 4878 SMN 8227, 6894 4374. 4474. 5089. 5227, 5985, 6054 , 6282, 6145 4716, 4743 5297, 5*06 6099, KISO] 6463 6862, 4288. 4995. 5875. 6.M6, 6964 7120 TIS! 4633 55*2.' 62JR 6876 7376. 7455 ' i S ' S S 7776 8342, 8367, 8410, 8454 8735 9095 . 9675, 9 * 7 . WTT 1022fi- 1(B86- 7627, 7734. 7777, 784®. 7855, 7929, KUS 8777 l £ 3 * ;rrw 10646. 10623, 10688, 19750 » * • low. J«a, S S ; I S ; l a m . 12362, 12m s , 12057. fSL4!* 10741 12563. 12565. 12798. 13654, 13748. 14146, 14380. 14435. 14799, 14800. 14820. 15006, 15095, 1512L 1.3019 12950, 14010 1393a 14442 1 4 * 1 J*®*.' u f S t 15304, 15478* 15777 ’ 8123, 8805. 8927 lJK* 1(1610, «gj. , 12531, 13520, 14034. 14797. 14961, 15619 15658. 15769 I,19® - J ® 1 T 13648, 16347 I I W 18148. 19200, 19821. 2®89. 21300 18380, 16385. 16720, 16850, 16919. 17031 1813R* 17340, 17852, 17696. 17782, 19027. 18634, 19657, 1912s’ 19594’ 1*4637 19236. 19420. 19522 20034 . 20098, 20330 2025a 20860, 20881, 21088 21067] 19973. 20556. 21316, 21860. 21876. New Location g o o d y e a r S H O E S H O P 2712 Guadalupe A m p le Parking for Custom ers! D rive-through W in d o w Service \ e i a x in a D r I ic S t a l l a n ^ S t m o dp here a t T-BONE STEAK FEATURING OUR “EAT ALL YOU W A N T " BUFFET SALAD BAR W ITH BAKED POTATO Served M O N D A Y -T H U R S D A Y -F R ID A Y EV ENING S 4 00 P.M. to 8 P.M. H a n c o c k c e n t e r — 41 *t and r e d r i v e r fan village Specializing in all kinds of Ita lia n food. A m p le p a rk in g in f r o n t o r r e a r . 2910 flinderLpe (f/sf 6-1600 se. Chico ESPECIALLY FOR LONGHO RNS! The Longhorn Room DINE IN LUXURY A N D ENJOY THE BEST M E X IC A N FO O D A R O U N D EL C H IC O H A N C O C K CENTER "■ KU-KU DRIVE-IN Tuesday Special Hamburgers |2c Everyday special from 3:30-4:30; L A R G E 16-oz. soft drink for 10c Sun.-Thurs. 11-11 OPEN Fri. & Sat. 1 1 - 1 2 51st and North Interregional VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Austin's Iuirgest & f i n e s t Sunday Night Special THE PIT COLLEGE SPECIAL 6 Bar B-Q on Bun O nly 9 8 C No. 2— 5106 Cameron Rd. O pen Sunday No. 3— 501 E. 5th M ond ay through Saturday N ew berry’s Cafeteria Capital Plaza Shopping Center SERVE YOURSELF ALL YOU CAN EAT! Desserts And Drinks E xtra Each Plate Choose from a wide selection of delicious entrees Hours: Mon.-Sat. l l A.M.-2 P.M. — 4:30 P.M. 7:30 P.M. Sun. l l A.M.-2 P.M. Just present your blanket tax or Auditor's receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional H igh w ay O NLY 2 BLOCKS FROM M EM O RIAL STADIUM YOU'RE FULL!! M E X IC A N FOOD The Nos! You Pay Everyday | or Actual Amount W hichever is Less! EL MAT • EL TORO 16th & Guad. 504 East Ave. Engineers Host Three-Day Meet Approximately 400 engineers from 40 states, Canada, and Mexico are expected Monday for the nineteenth annual Power Dis­ tribution Conference at the Uni­ versity. the Attendance a t three-day meet is by incitation only. Ses­ sions will be in the Union Audi­ torium. The Conference will Charles K. Rieger of New York City, group vice-president of General E lectric Company, will speak at a banquet at 7:30 p.m. at the Commodore P erry Hotel. involve discussions of electric power dis­ industrial as tr bu lion from an well as a utility viewpoint, ac­ cording to Roy Krezdom, asso­ n a te professor of electrical en­ gineering and program commit-; tee i ’'.airm an. Underground dis­ tr;!1mo n system s and beautifica­ tion of power facilities will also receive attention. Hie program has been arrang- ed bv a committee whose 21 members include representatives! of manufacturing and operating and faculty mem bers of J • rn:- the I rn versify and Texas A&M. Twenty-four buildings, includ- ing the Main Building, were built I to 1937 from funds from 1925 m ade available by a 1930 consti­ tutional am endm ent which allow­ ed to borrow money. the University X E R O X C O P IE S 8 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT 7 DAYS A WEEK ALDRIDGE TYPING SERVICE GB 7 FREE ESTIMATES fi« imtrj 7766 4,1 A D A H /F E Os Th^ Dntg AND LY AIXAVDALK VILLAGE PIG STAND No. 14 2801 G U A D A L U P E G R 2-4064 ' t & J r r i h ! jBSSP W r... GOOD MORNING GOOD AFTERNOON GOOD EVENING GOOD FOOD ANYTIME Pig Stand No. 14 Page IO Sunday. October 9. 1966 THE DA ILY TEXAN