STUDENTS PAUSE, PARTICIPATE, PONDER THE M A N Y PHASES O F ENROLLMENTS - P h br j*m*» Bf. “d Weather: • Cloudy, Showers • Low: 60's • High: 70's T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r at The U niversity of Texas at Austin Last Day To Qualify As a Voter Vol. 67 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, W E D N E S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 31 1968 Auto Restrictions Remain in Effect By MARY MORPHIS MOODY Texan E ditor The "freshm an c a r b an " is still opera­ the University P resident and tive until Board of Regents take action on the sug­ gestion to rem ove the ban. Dean David H. Thomas, m em her of the Dean of M en's staff, said that some fresh­ m en w ere trying to bring c a rs on cam pus this sem ester, thinking th at the lift of the ban proposed by the F aculty Council at the suggestion of the student House of Dele­ gates w as in effect. Thomas said the recom m endation has not yet cleared P resident N orm an H ackerm an’s desk. H aekerm an m ust approve the sug­ gestion and recom m end it to the Board of R egents before they tak e action. Little ( hance This Sem ester Thorn, -; said he is extrem ely doubtful as to the chances of the ban being removed at all this sem ester. He said any freshm an having difficulties or feeling th at ho needs a c a r in Travis County should contact him a t his office. The cu rren t regulations, as outlined in the 1967-68 G eneral Inform ation catalog, s ta te : "No student who has less than 26 sem es­ te r hours cre d it a t the U niversity and whose home residence is outside Travis County will be perm itted to have in his or her poss. ssion or to m aintain an autom o­ bile in T ravis County. Exceptions to this ru le m ay be m ade by the Com m ittee on P arking and Traffic. "B " Students Excluded "A beginning student who in his first sem ester in die U niversity earn s 14 or m ore sem ester hours of course credit with a B av erag e will he entitled to exclusion from the provisions of the c a r ban upon Austin Group to Raise Money for Protesters A com m ittee has been formed to raise funds fur the defense of three Austin men who w ere arrested and charged with dis­ turbing the peace during a .speech by P re si­ dent Lyndon B. Johnson on Dec. 12 at Cen­ tral Texas College in Killeen. The co c h airm e n are the Rev. Charles A. Howe, m inister of the F irst Unitarian Church, A ustin; Grog Olds, editor of the Texas O bserver; Dr. Robert P alter, pro­ fessor of history and philosophy a t the Uni­ versity; and George Sehatzki, a University law professor and chairm an of the Central Texas chapter cf the Am erican Civil Liber­ ties Union. The defendants w ere among persons dis­ playing signs in opposition to US policy in Vietnam w ren they w ere accosted by uni- form ed s Idler from F ort Hood, some of whom shredded the group g placards. Austin attorney Sam Houston Clinton J r., who represents the three men. has filed a request for a three-judge federal panel to consider the constitutionality of T exas’ dis­ turbing the peace statu te and Its applica­ tion in this case. He alleges that the sta ­ tute and its application a t Killeen tend to have "a chilling effect" or. rights of free expression as guaranteed by the F irst Am endm ent to tire US Constitution. submission of a w ritten application to the P arking and Traffic Com mittee together With his grade report and, if he is a minor, a w ritten statem en t from his p aren ts." Thomas stressed th at the exclusion for fr shmen with a B av erag e on the first lf hours w as not autom atic, hut that the student m ast apply. Tile lifting of the freshm an ban was first proposed by the House of Delegates, under the direction of Bob Thompson. It was ap­ proved in a Jan. 15 m eeting of the Faculty Council. The suggested revision states th at any freshm an will he perm itted to m aintain a c a r in Travis County, but he will not be issued a Class C parking perm it until he has completed 21 hours sem ester credit. The freshm an c a r ban has been in ef­ fect since 1956. Clifford Approved As Defense Head In Unanimous Vote Senate Action Presages Possible M a rc h Takeover O f P e n ta g o n Top Post B> Th* ttMrtatf'd Press W ASH IN C TON Clark M. G ifford, confidant and unoffi­ cial adviser to US presidents for nearly two decades, won — without dissent — con­ firm ation of the Senate Tuesday to su c­ ceed Robert S. M cNam ara as Secretary' of Defense. The latf'st word was that ho won’t take over the troublesome top defense post until about March, when M cN am ara is scheduled to ber ome head of the World Bank. P resident Lyndon B. Johnson's choice of th e Washington law yer, long a White House adviser, to succeed Mc N am ara at the Pen­ tagon w as approve d on a voice vote. I am very happy that this m an with his widespread experience in governm ent extending back to the days of President IVuman, has been selected for this most arduous and dem anding position," Senate M ajority Leader Mike Mansfield said. But it was Republican Minority Leader E v erett M. D irksen of Illinois who delivered the m ost extended speech in praise — and defense — of Clifford. He said there have been new spaper columns implying criticism of Clifford’s past associations as a lawyer with firm s which hold vast governm ent contracts. Dirksen said anyone who knows Clifford knows the new se cretary will "bend over backw ards" to m ake sure th at no conn ac­ to r receives any unfair advantage. W h a t's Inside • USC s Ron Y ary first pro draft pick ....................................................... Page 3 P age 4 "Right-w n g ers" satirized ........ Page 4 'P resident's A nalyst" reviewed P ag e 7 • Voter-, reminded to r e g i s t e r • • U n u su a lly Large N u m b e r Register on Second D a y Another 4,SOI students registered total Tuesday bringing the two-day for the spring semester to l l , IKJ. William Wallace, registration super­ visor, said this number was higher than usual for t h e spring. I ii Septem­ ber, a, hi I students had registered on the second day even though there had been storms accompanying Hurricane Beulah. Voter Registration Ends Wednesday Year Residence in State Required of A p p lic a n ts Wednesday is the deadline for register­ ing to vote in die May prim aries and the N ovem ber general election. Any citizen of Texas who posse *ss(*s the necessary qualifications for voting n: iv reg ister during the cu rren t registration period. To vote in a statew ide election, a j-'-rsoo m ust m eet the following qualificati ms on the day of the election: • He m ust be m ore than 21 old and m ust be a citizen of the United States. in T< xas for one year im m ediately preceding the o le o Hon. • He m ust have resided • He m ust have registered for the vot­ ing year in which the election is held. To vote in local elections (county, school district, and city) he m ust also have re­ sided in the county for .six months immedi­ ately preceding the election. Residence for si.v months Is required for voting in a Hty election. Under a new law enacted in 1967 voter* who move from one Texas county to an ­ other within the period of six months pre­ ceding an election m ay vote on statew ide offices and Issues if they have lived in the sta te for one year. In iv e rsity students m ay register and vote in Austin if they m eet th e residence requirem ents, or they m ay vote by absen­ tee ballot in their home counties. Any person eligible to register m ay apply for registration by m ailing an application form to his County Tax Assessor-Collector, or by applying in person a t the County Tax Assessor-Collector's office or a registration substation. Registration certificates will be mailed before the beginning of th e voting y ear on M arch I to persons who apply by m ail. Gov. Connally to Deliver Commencement Speech Governor John B. Connally, a U niversi­ ty alu m n u s will deliver the June I com­ m encem ent address at the University** 85th graduation exercises ar 8 p.m. on the terrace south of the Main Building. The Governor is a 1941 law g raduate of in 1938-39 as the University and served president of the Students' Association. While on cam pus he also w as chairm an of the Texas Student Publications Board, a Law School assem blym an, debater, Curtain Club actor and m em ber of F riars, senior men s honorary society. Eight Pages Today No. 102 Saigon Embassy Raid Quelled b y Paratroops By Hu* \ is.« (’pf.** *S MUON A Vlr' <'vwie suicide squad seized and held par!'.- of the u s Em bassy in the heart \ hours Wednesday before ton for ■ being wiped out by American forces. Par itroopers sw arm ed cut of helicopters landing on the roof of the eight-story build- inK * ’?if’ the invaders to the end and lift the siege. • bool ’• et Cong intruders died in Ah ’ fnP * : h o m in g a series of guerrilla assaults and shellings in Saigon I woi fare deep into the bf ag: ; South Vietnamese capital. Gen. William C. W estmoreland, US com­ mando! in Vietnam, said "th e enem y’s well laid plans went afoul," and listed 19 Viet Cong bodies found on the promises. He said one US M arine was killed and five were wounded at; I th at seven US m ilitary policemen were killed or u< unded, of whom he thought four w ere dead. Diplomat hights Duel I rapped in his two .tory fram e hom e in the em bassy compound, a senior US diplo­ mat, mission coordinator George Jacobson, 56, fought a duel with one of the Viet Cong, killing him with a pistol thrown up to him from tin* outside. Jacobson Is a re­ tired US Army colonel Simultaneously with thy* strikes against Saigon, the Reds for the second straight day attacked titles up and down the coun­ try o f guerrilla warfare against u r b a n centers. in an unprecedented e x p l o s i o n Aside from their propaganda im pact, the Red attacks ap p e a rs! aim ed a t diverting allied strength from the northern provinces where a m ajor battle seem ed imminent. Construction Blueprints For Faculty Club Unveiled Bv SANDY SCHLINK Texan Staff Writer Plans for the construction of a faculty center atop the new coed dorm itory-aca- ie m ic com pte* w ere it-vealed Tuesday. Providing a "place where faculty m em ­ bers can com m unicate with each other," th e faculty cen ter will probably include two dining rooms, 12 m eeting an d /o r ea t­ ing rooms, two floors for dancing, a bar, and a library reading room. Constr a tion of the .$17 million coed dortnitory-acadtemic complex has passed the 40 per c ertt co m pleatn stag e with an extension to the April J,4, 1969 completion date anticipated Appl val by the Board of Regents at last week s meeting in San Antonio of an addi­ tional floor to house the ren ter is expected to result in the extension. Poll Pushes Plan The construction of the center, has been under consideration sir- *.* 1966. The idea was approved by the F acu lty Council and the general faculty after a poll indicated that about 6Od faculty m em bers would sup­ port sa- h an operation. Encased in glass panelling allowing a full view of th** cam pus, the cen ter will occupy the fifteenth floor of the 14-story (am plex presently under construction at Twenty- first and Speedway streets. The complex entails plans for housing 1,800 women arid 1,200 men students, class­ room and library facilities, a kitchen and dining area, arid a largo auditorium. Outside the dorm itory will be a private elevator serving only the fifteenth floor and accessible only ( ‘cst Vt $756,061 to faculty m em bers. Die designees of tho a* aden.ic c en te r, Jensen, Jensen. Minhouse, G reeven and C rim e and John Linn Scott, axe the asso­ ciate architects authorized by the Regent* to plan the center. The Regents have a p ­ propriated $750,000 for its establishm ent. The faculty center will "prove to be a valuable fringe benefit,” said Regent Chair­ man F rank C, Erw in, Jr. "As the U niver­ sity grows larger and mer** diffused, th ere is need for some facility that will bring faculty m em bers closer together Dr. Samuel P. Ellison, J r ., professor of geology and chairm an of the com m ittee in­ vestigating the establishm ent of the facul­ ty center, said that, in general, m em ber­ ship in the new cen ter would be extended to all voting m em bers of the faculty, their adm inistrative equivalents, and m em bers of the Board of Regents. Questions Arise Whether visiting professors and refire*! faculty m em bers should be extended m em ­ bership privileges and if m em bers of the old faculty club should be invited to be­ initiation long without having fee a re still questions is pondering. the com m ittee to pay an The Initiation fee Is expec ted to be $100 and due- will be assessed monthly. The faculty cent*!* will be controlled by the University faculty wbi*-b will legally incorporate itself Friday as the non-profit f acuity Center, Inc. D ire ting the c e n te r will be a board consisting of 15 m em bers, each to serve three y ears. The University will lease the floor a n ­ nually to Faculty Center, Inc. at a nominal cost and will off**r I niversify contracts for custodial, maim**m.ncc, mid utility .serv­ ices. Food service in the center will be pro­ vided under contract with the University s Division of Housing and Food S e r v i c e , the which will operate fond facilities dorm i tory-academ ic com l (lox. in r Ians call U r the faculty cen ter to serve the noon and evening m eals and to open its doors from mid-morning to midnight. Visiting the emba s y shortly after TS forces regained control, Hon. Westmoreland said the Viet Cong did not get in ide the gleaming, white, new building Itself. However , dr /ens us on ive som e r p*a yid some of the Va t < ■ were in the lower floors of the main building. The lower flo* r of th** emba sy building was a mess of tangled i r .. There wore lout gaping In Ies in the lr r.t wa ll left by rocket round I wo hours after th** US ti ops had re- * i p tu r e d c o n tr o l of t? e >rnbnssy, the borh*'* • J wert* lying only a cf two Viet Cong few yards fp.ru a h! t ‘.si hon. in the wall w here they had entered the compound. Johnson Keeps In Cmdr From Washington, President- Lyndon B. Johnson kept in close com munication with m ilitary and diplom atic leaders in Saigon throughout the Vi-t Cong ..ult on th* em ba v. ,a White House aides said the President received about 25 cabl *s from Saigon dor- ing the eight hour afte r the attack s on the em bassy and key South Vietnam**** build­ ings began. Die cables included m essages from US Ami. issc.dor Ell vorth Bunker, who was moved from his home to a safe but un- disclosed destination during the attack s, and from to*>n. W estm oreland. 'Liny Buildings shelled Among key building (Racked in S.* gen w ere Independence P alace, where P re si­ dent Nguyen Van Thieu has offi* **s. *d Al * • dr i ke*l w -1? sr; tJJ-atn s lite w ere die building of the Vietnamese joint chiefs of staff. V ietnam ese navy head­ quarters, the Philippine E m bassy and the vicinity of Tan Son Nhut Air 'Base. three u s officers’ billets, The em bassy and b s grounds were de­ clared secured a t 9:05 a m. o th er sour■ <*s said airfields had been hit •■it M arble Mountain near Da Nang, Chn Lai, Phu Bai, Bien Boa and Quang Tri ( !f>' Th,,y -■'•‘i tho US m ilitary compound at Hue also was hit by rocket fire. No de­ tails were on casualties or dam age. im m ediately available Den, U '-.trnorelat..i -aid first reports in- d ca ted two a in r.' * wa re de* Rove*! rf Blea U *.(, hut titer.. w**re some shell..- gs at Can Tho arid other a re as of tile .Vt kong D ei'a south of Saigon. A ssault S trategy Clanned W estmoreland told newsmen, "Obviously the enem y had been planning the assault on the American Embassy for som e time. I hey e tio se th e Ti • nun,-*.- r w y* i rj p e rio d .his a s s a u lt. They obv o isiy assumed for I - ., s e c u rity w ould to* ie*--ened d u rin g th is p e rio d , About two com panies of US m ilitary pole e tried to take die embassy compound at (lavbreak Wednesday ru t w ere driven *• r»'p< i ts from tho scene said, A com pany of the US 101st Air­ borne Division then was rushed in. firs* a?n*mJ ? ' •* " ' ‘ In sum m ary, f em. A estrnoreland said, "th e e n e m y s WHI laid plans went afoul. v as st rr ' ,> I pert ic d dan ige. All of the enemy who entered the compound w e rt killed. NI -teen bodies h av e been F o n d o* the prem ises." Trailer Crosses State. Promotes Engineering By CAROLYN HINCKLEY Texan Staff Writer Approximately 54,000 h i g h school students throughout Texas have been exposed to the School of Engineering and the engineer­ ing profession by viewing dis­ plays in “ The Engineer,” a 55- foot truck trailer counseling ser­ vice. The show, assembled by the engineering faculty, includes ex- 1/bits on various types of engi­ neering, the engineering prob­ lems involved in the building of the Hemisfair tower, a model of the University as it may look in 1970, and other displays. The main purpose of the ex­ hibit Is to arouse interest in a career in engineering and to pro­ vide counseling information about the field. Traveling since November in the Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth, S.rn Anb>n:o and Waco areas, “ The Engineer” has visited more than IX) high schools. Students come from tile country by bus to larger towns to go through the engineering exhibit. .M tn-Wifc In Charge Tile exhibition is driven and operated by Robert Y. Corder and his Wife. Corder has taught high school physics and math for 38 years, his wife taught the same subjects for 34 years, so both are accustomed to working with teenage students. Students view the exhibit with their math or science classes. A four-minute taped message ex­ plaining the demonstration and the field of engineering is played for stu lent.s waiting in line. Local engineer* often guide students ACAPULCO SPR IN G BREAK S p e c ia l B u d g e t P a c k a g e A p r il 6-13 a t 7 n ahi* hotel with 2 mew a rip air fare Reyno va-Acapulco rime on Acapulco Bay iurpr/e Bonus couiv n $99.50 Par Parson Cat U s A b o u t O t h e r S p e c ia l* for S p rin g Break S A N B O R N 'S Perry-Brooks Bldg. G R 6-7548 716 Brazos through the exhibit and assist in counseling. After viewing the student reac­ tion at Richfield High School in teacher Phyllis Marcs Waco, said, "We can talk for hours and can’t get the message across. Then they see something like this and the meaning becomes clear.” At Midland, it had been planned to open the trailer to school faculty members on a Saturday, but so many towns­ people came, the faculty and stu­ dents saw' it Sunday and Monday. Students Counseled After school, many students and parents come to the trailer for more information about en­ gineering. Corder counsels these students and distributes guid­ ance information. Under law, the School of En­ gineering can’t recruit students, but it is hoped that high school students will come to the Univer­ sity, after viewing the exhibit. Assistant Dean Billy Amstead, originator of “ The Engineer.” said, “ Tile principal result that we are seeing from participation with the mobile counseling unit is an awareness by teachers, counselors, parents and students that engineering is the profession that has created most of the pro­ ducts and services that we enjoy today.” Cam pus News In Brief ALL-CAM 1*1 S FELLO W SH IP will hold half hcur worship services at the Catholic Student Center at 12:05 and 5:05 p.m. Wednes­ day. Lutheran Campus Ministry will lead services. UNION FILM COMMITTEE is sp as/ring showings of the Ing­ mar Bergman film, “ All These Women,” Wednesday and Thurs­ day in tile Union Auditorium. Showings will be at 4, 5:30, 7, and 8:30 p.m. UNION IDEAS AND ISSUES .sponsor a COM M ITTEE will sandwich seminar lecture at nor n Wednesday in the Union Junior Ballroom. Dr. Douglas Morgan. University professor of phih phv, will speak on “ Edne tional Television: Eaves­ dropper or Teaching Tool?” NEW ANO USED TEXTBOOKS ART AND ENGINEERING SUPPLIES All Your School Supplies A t Hemphill’s 25th and Guadalupe (SA V E TIM E A N D $$) s News Capsules By The Associated Press. Submarine Search Continues TOI LOX, I rater Sonar echos first thought to have bren possibly from the missing French submarine Mintrve turned out to be from the hulk of a ship sunk decades ago, the navy said Tuesday, Tile verification was made by Jacques Yves Cousteau in his small research submarine. Saturday night. Hie Minerve and its 52 men should have reached Toulon on In the eastern Mediterranean, the search went on for the miss­ ing Israeli submarine Dakar, She vanished with her crew of 69 off Cyprus last Thursday, Ja p a n Blasts USSR on V ie t N am TOKYO 7 e Foreign Ministry sail] Tuesday the Soviet Colon has failed to cooperate and respond to Japan's long standing proposition for a pci ofu! settlement of the Vietnam conflict. Countering Soviet uitici.sm of Japan's Vietnam policy, the I io;rn Ministry said in a statement the Japanese government has made every possible effort to find a means of helping to settle the Vietnam war. Students Post Strike Flag K L Y N OSA, M p x . Thirty high school student* posted a red and black “ huelga” (strike) flag outside Frattclscd J. Mujica High School here Tuesday to keep union teachers from holding classes. Tim dispute flared into the open Monday night when many of •he school's 450 students demonstrated in support of the school's di­ re tor after they learned the National Syndicate of Workers of Edu­ cation plans to attempt to replace the director with a pro-union man. Pueblo C rew m an Reported Dead WASHINGTON One of the 83 crew members of tho FSS Pueblo, seized by North Korea is a spy •-hip, was reported Tuesday to have died The Defense Department said the report was uncrfflfinned, and there was no way of identifying any casualties among the captured men. The rejK rf followed a White House statement that if had been advised tile crew was being properly treated and the wounded were receiving medical care. Gas Explosion Kills Five 1’ITTSBl HGI! A gas explosion as devastating as a bomb blew apart a busy row of shops and apartments Tuesday, spewing flaming debris over a wide area and reducing the bu lid togs to rubble. Five men Were killed and two women were reported missing. Workers probed the .smoldering debris in suburban Ingram by hand and with a highlift. The bodies of three men were pulled from the ruins only hours after the blast. 7 wo other men died in hospitals. Union Drive Spreads Violence JOHNSTOWN, Pa. A United Mine Workers Union drive to organize small independ­ ent mines spread the wrorst violence in a generation through tho Pennsylvania soft coal fields Tuesday and idled 18,000 men in throe states. State police said swift bands of men used firebombs to destroy tho office of a union challenging the United Mine Workers, A F!, CIO. at the small mines. UMW officials comment on the violence. They accused the police of “ brutality” against pickets, Sfolen Plan e Forced to Land K E Y H EST A novice pilot in a stolen private plane was forced to the ground Tuesday by jet fighters scrambled after he penetrated tho US de­ fease net 50 milos north of Cuba. Tho flyer, from Albuquerque, N. M , landed safely after he was ‘‘talked down” by other fliers. He made several passes, barely missing the rooftops of nearby houses, before lauding at Key Woe International Airport Ja m e s W alco tt Trial Begins G EO RG E'l'OH V Two Georgetown police officers testified 7'uesday that tin ce .22 caliber rifles and eight shell casings were found shortly after the Maying of Dr. and Mrs. Gordon Wolcott and their daughter Eliza­ beth. 17. Patrolmen Joe Satterfield and Jesse Labit testified at the murder trial of James G. Wolcott, 16, who is charged with killing his parents and sister. Young Wolcott is being tried only for the death of his father, a1- though he was charged with the murder of all three The father, Dr Gordon Wolcott, was a biology professor at Southwestern University here. Suspect Charged in M urder SVN ANGE L O Authorities charged a short, thin soldier Tuesday with murdering a young Colorado millionaire who liked to help people particularly hitchhike!*;. ’ Charged with shooting Michael Rohinoau to death after what offi­ cers called “ a terrific struggle” was Miguel Galligas Ybarra thin and about five feet tall. \barra, accompanied by his father, surrendered in his home town of Odessa Monday about the time the body of Robineau was found by accident in a cotton patch near San Angelo. L B J Expected to N am e Ju d g e D A LLA S The Dallas Times Herald reported from Washington Tuesday that I resident Lyndon B. Johnson is expected to appoint Rep. Gra­ ham Purcell, Wichita Falls Democrat, a fedeial judge in Amarillo this w'eek. This would throw the Thirteenth Congressional District House WM scat up for grabs. State Sen. Jack Hightower of Vernon is considered a leading contender for the Democratic nomination should Purcell leave Con­ gress to succeed I S District Judge Joe Doolov, w ho retired in Octo­ ber, 1966. 16-Year-Old Held in Slayin q A 16-year-old D A U . Vs unior high school -student was held by police Tues- day in the slaying of Roy Munger Simons. 19, son of a wealthy Dallas contractor, Simons, the son of A, Pollard Simons, was shot once in the abdomen in what police described as a North Dallas street fight Monday night. W h itm a n 's Father Files Suit M 'STIN 77*0 father of University sniper diaries Whitman has filed suit against his son's estate for $8,056 for funeral expense* and money I e said he lent to his son. He also claims *00*0 of his son's we; ixias actually belonged to him. Charles A. Whitman Jr.. U k e Worth. Fla., filed the suit against Attorney Don Nobles administrator of Charles J. Whitman. The younger Whitman left no will. His estate is estimated to be worth more than $30,000, including life insurance policies and per­ sonal effects. Page 2 Wednesday, Ja n . 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Crossing Borders via R ad io Am ande Puente* takes advantage of the ? Society s ham radio set in Union 314 as he talks with h s father in Nicaragua. Meetings of the society, n ’™ open to any student or faculty member, are held the second and fourth Thursday of each month, —staff I'toto President Requests Increases In Veteran Housing Benefits Bi Tim A**.m Ir>i| f*n W ISHINGTOX President Lyndon B. Johnson asked Congress Tuesday to help make ii easier for veterans to buy bettor homos and to subsi­ dize veterans who train for pub­ lic service jobs, In a special message, Johnson noted that the present $7/4)0 ceil- Rules Announced For Spring Rush Pules for sorority and fraternity spring rush have been released with a reinforced Inter Fraternity Council (IF C ) position against hazing. Sorority spring tush begins at 5 fem. Feb. 17. Any .sorority is eligible to rash and pledge if it has a legal vacancy iii its pledge quota of 50. Any coed is eligible if she is not on scholastic or disciplinary probation and not already a mem­ ber or pledge of a national Greek letter social sorority'. Prospective rushee*? must see Mrs. Evelyn Bennett in the Fan- helienic office at 2323 San An­ tonio, even though they may have been in before during the fall semester. Fraternity rash has no formal structure. Candidates may be pledged at any time during the semester. Interested males should register with the IFC at 2226 Guadalupe, A list of those registering will he distributed to all fraternities, and invitations will be issued by the individual organizations. !}• ( has reinforced its position against hazing during pledging by expanding the powers of tho Code of Conduct Committee to include enforcing hazing rules. The com­ mittee. composed of seven mem­ bers of the IFC, may enter a fra­ ternity house at any time to check on hazing. Fie ( ouncil has also formed a Pledge Program Committee to compile different program ideas from, around the country ami to distribute them to each fraternity. log on the maximum guarantee on G I home loans is 18 years old and said it is no longer adequate. He asked for a $10,(KXI ceiling. Training Subsidy Recommended The chief executive also pro- P* d a wholly new program to help finance training of \.*t<*r- ans “ to teach the children of the poor, to help man aidersfrength police forces and fire depart­ ments, to do meaningful work in local hospitals a a l to become full-time specialists in antipov­ erty work, Johnson gave this example of low die program would work for a veteran wanting to teach in a deprived arca: “ While he is getting the!, schooling that wail qualify him for teaching, he will 'haw add! tional benefits of $50 a month i for ('w ry month I > agrees to teach — up t > throe years of such • xtra benefits. , “ While he is actually on the ii job teaching, he will draw a spe­ cial training allowance, in addi­ tion to his regular salary — $vo a month for the first school year, $60 a month for tile second. I he President also asked Con­ gress to act favorably on two proposals he pre sen ted last year: IiiNUriince Increase t rged • To ira Tea < ■ < environ inn’s group life insurance from a max­ imum of $10,000 to a range of $12,- 000 - $30,(XX), depending on individ­ ual pay — meaning rank, • To “ proton the veteran a- gainst disproportionate pension losses that could result from in­ creases in other income such as Social Security S C H O L A R CL.CS UNIV BIR CiUMlified adv* A + 'J'Nwersffy Service* .CC hoi - A A-Pl US Elf s e r v ic e : VV. 24th Sh 1TY New Grading Plan To Undergo Study Although the four point gi ding system has txhti approved by the Board of Regents, details com'ear­ ing its operation have not been set. A committee comprised of the assistant dean of each school on campus has been appointed bx Dr. Norman Hacker man, presi­ dent of the University, to study the scholastic probation system. The committee will study how the change to die four point grad tog system will affect the schools A combined package of the four point grading system and sc ho Fistic probation system with changes .stemming from the com-J mittee’s study has b e e n asked by i Dr. Haekerman by the April Fac­ ulty Council meeting. The new grade point system, effective iii September, is based on four points for A, three point* for B, two points for C. and one point for D. No points will be Issued for FA FOREIGN STUDENTS W e Are Offering English Language Courses for Speakers of Other Languages This Spring. (C LA SSES BEG IN FEB. 5) THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE INSTITUTE OF TEXAS 2405 Nueces 477-5952 S M A K E M O N E Y S WITH TRAVEL KING Student A irtours Excellent Com mission and Travel Plan W A N T E D ! ALERT STUDENT TRAVEL REPRESEN TA TIVE For Spring Easter Vacation BAHAMAS TOUR Ca1 Collect Mr. Fisher. 214 TA3-* 520 Atmosphere for Achievement lf ye are contemplating a career in lier pace, your next ten years are Cr ■ al ones. The exposure you get to fl­ jor projects, the cabber of your ates, v q quality and availab My ass i euucationa! ms! ‘uticns for advanced study, and the recognition you get for personal achievements wilt ail count I -• y ' 7ward build ng your re bv ; 1 and y, ,r rems. equipment and systems which are making headlines the world over. You v, It have access to four highly rated c ■ nos and universities for advanced study. Your assignments will be selected from more than one hundred key study and development projects. A variety cf outstanding career c r ' orfyr, ties are yours at Coma r in me following areas of concentration: a ira s WI vunteniraiion 'ouv’ «»hnd management aeronautical, electrical, electronic and Brechan cat engineering: engineering mechanics and engineering physics. * , p ballist cs, dynamics, *’ crmodynamics, guidance, structures, mechanical design, electrical design, rehab lily, test engineer mg and materials research. Feb m ary 12-13 bee y o u r p la c e m e n t c fh : e r to a r r a n g e a p e r s o n a I o n - c a m p u s in terview with o u r re p re se n ta tiv e s, c r write to Engineers wilt be assigned to I e following areas: advanced systems, systems analysis, space sciences, life sc onces, Information sciences, sc en; fie data processing, aero­ Mc J. J. Tan-one, Supervisor, Professional Placement and Person-,et c ? S o aJ r D i m i c n of G e n e r a l D y n a m ic s ' 5492' Kearny v a Hoad, Sc n L ego * California 92112, re to the importance of your ional development and you work in an atmosphere cf el eme nt side by side w . th some ten pe' \. ii £ h C? the mc st canal 0 peop’e in c: r industry—the people who developed At.48-Cer.taur and other scace age GENERAL DYNAMICS Convair Division San C Oso, Califs-n a Art Equal Opportunity Emp.^at U S C s Vary No. 7 Draff Pick; First Round Bypasses Behan BJ Th# 4»WWlat*4 r-*«« Bt rh# 4«*ni-Ut#4 pr#<, SLAV YO RK Ct \r\ Behan, honored as Heis- m.in Trophy winner and out­ standing collegian of the \ear. was bypasrcd until the thirtieth pick rues.lay in the pro draft as the American and National Foot­ ball leagues emphasized interior linemen and defensive placers. * Le a .r , i boing Number I in the pro selections went to Ron A ary, the 6 foot-5, 261-pound or­ lon ive talkie of Southern Cali­ fornia s champions, chosen by Minnesota. national Five Trojans were taken among the 27 picked in the first round. LA Grabs Bebait Behan, the running quarter­ back who directed UCLA to 23 victories against five defeats and two ties in three years, finally was taken by the Dis Angeles Rams high in the second round. the second combined draft completed, probably sometime Wednesday night, the u > hove picked 462 p l.li­ Before is ers in 17 rounds. Cincinnal!, vl ith special privi­ e s caking for first and last p ks in cath round a Ber the inst, | us specials, grabbed B ib J ! n >n, Tennessee's 225-pound All-America center in the first round. Johnson was the regular first I ck of the initial round. Linemen Dominate I clin v picked defensive end Claude Humphrey of Tennessee AAI. Atlanta; offensive tackle TI iss V .Lillington of Missouri. San Diego; linebacker Fred Carr O' Texas I Paso. Green Bay; de L" : ■ kle Dennis Byrd of North Carolina State, Baston; and defensive end Kevin Hardy of Notre Dame, New Orleans, bef.ire t ey finally got around to a bark. ive Next Foes E asy -v. The world champion Green Bov Packers took ( arr, an exception- ally quit k t >. 230-pound line­ backer from Tex cs E L P iso. i , a All Ar I Kevin ii snh of Notr Dame wa ■ picked bv Nev Orleans defei > . e < La try C’sonka of Syracuse be­ came 'lie fir t ba k p ked wb- n he w is taken by ti Al L M ann Dolphins, T ailer Second I SC pick Mike Taylor, 6 5, UA), an of fr rn tackle .• Yon sue solo* t m ,.f California, was ti the Pittsburg!! Sto-Ers of the n f l . . Quarterback Greg Landrv of Massachusetts was picked by the Detroit E:oils ..f the N F L A third S'.ut ii; C.ihf.,: nil Blaver was t - ken wye; Pl lade! phia of the N F L j pound Tim Kossovich, a defen­ sive end. 6 Cottbojx (Tot Unman Dennis Heman, who gained All-America honors by catching passes for Bear Bn.an! > Ah, bania Crimson Tide, was chosen by Dallas of the N i l . Marvin I ’pshaw. 6-4, 240-p .ut I defensive end from Trinity Col­ lege, was selected by the Cleve­ land Browns of the N FL. Kansas City made George Da ney of Texas E l Pa sn its second selection of the r und. Detroit picked world record hurdler E a r l McCullom-h of Southern California, The speedy flanker was fifth Trojan the picked. Southern California struck for the fourth time when fullback Mike Hull was taken by tin* Chi cago Bears of the NKI#. Lee White, Weber State's brads ing fullback. Was picked by the AKL New York Jets, San Diego marie its second Top-Rated Coogs Hardly in Danger Duke, unranked a week ago, rushed up to grab ninth place while Kentucky, which split two games last week, fell one place to tenth, I Houston .......................... tr*, I I < L \ ........................... * a * 3 North ( a r Olina .............. 253 4 Neu Mexico ............ 220 5 N|. Bonaventure ............. nu pp, ........... 6 I ennesse 7 Vanderbilt ................... J].; 7i 8 ( oiumhia ....................... 9 I Hike ......................f) S IO Kentucky ................... 2! pick by selecting James Hill, a defensive back from Texas Aa !. J im­ Maurice Moorman, 6-5, pound guard from Texas AAM was picked by the Kansas City Chiefs of the A F L ' ' *-n rank- R E C O R D A L B U M S A T D IS C O U N T P RIC ES A ll artists and all labels--in Stereo and M ono — only $2.99 WJtcJs M U S IC C O 613 W e s t 29th S t. GR 2-2976 S T U D E N T S ! TH# Student* A HOC I Attern in cor ,-rcttor W lh lh* Ur!#-*«;ty o f T*»#» and ” *# H o q q FoundoOon, i i ipo m o rin g « |«m in#r for ttn ip rln a i»m #*t*r on t o .UU** And prob rm i of h,qh«r «d /ca*,on. Th* co .rj* It co o rd .r« t*d by Dean M a rg a re t 8#rry, c o n rd a rtd on tht* c Ampul And throughout th* #d,.c«*.onA! world to ba ah outitanding educator. Th* Sam-nar will con- l l at facing A m ar,can higher education to da/ and in lid a r lh# im portant th# Tutor#. The c o u n t G at.,,tai g .a it d iie u iiio n le a d e n to d la'o g sa emo-rq th* member* lam inar w n fortunate to hay* C lit Dr-.mmond, form er in d e n t body Pre iid e n t; Dean Ja c k H olland, Dean or Stud en t!; M r. M D ck non, reg.onal co ordinafor for the current nation Itu dy of camp .I governance; a d Vincent Herron, d irecto r of the W,d# C.0 un taring C e n te r who spoke on vtudanf ch a ra cte riitici. Th# list of d i cu iiiofi guest L a d e r , w et headed by Dr H a rry Ransom, C h ancello r of th# University of '« « a i Sys*em, Dr Norman Hackerm aon Pret.d ent of the Uni- versify of Te.as at Austin, M r Colvin Vice ? r * , -lent for financial o ffe rs and other leading adm inistrative and fa tu ity person*-)*,. L a it tem eitar, th# The program am phat , aok- shots by 6-foot-6 center James Cash, who led all scoring Uifh 23 points. told c cf YEAR TO P FLY U A n Good Used Textbooks fast: Hurry to Hemphill s for the best ones! SAVE 30% and get your Ever-Ready Rebate j too At 3 Convenient Locations 1/3 OFF REGULAR APPLICABLE ONE-WAY FARE C O N F IR M E D R E S E R V A T IO N S any flight, any day, including H O L ID A Y S UNLIMITED TRAVEL anywhere within the TTA six state domestic system YOUTH FARE ID C A R D S - J U S T S3. TTA Youth Fare Cards are available to all young adults, 12 to 22, and are good on most ether airlines. TTA A ll o H o n o r* Youth Fa re C a rd * Fro m A ll O th e r Airlines,. C L IP T H IS C O U P O N AND M A IL TO D A Y: Accounting Department, TTA P O. Box 60183 Houston, Texas 77060 H- K 'f We ght Color Eyes Color Hair A r c '..a n t’s Name Aairp%% C r y School Atte a d ny Date O ' fi rth C ar- Vc Issu e - Issued By Card Holder’s S ^nature F L Y State Date of Birthday Date ... A« Exp. Date ... I . T “ ' I I J J I I r Application For Youth Fare Identification Card (PLEASE FR IHT I Bring us y o u r list o f Ar s courses. W e know/ the right books.' I THfcTHE AIRLINE WITH THE EXTRA TOUCH OF SERVICE 2501 Guadalupe 26th and San Jacinto 2244 Guadalupe By fill1 »!•* l, urn 0 r ©I 0c ft ic r o •■a‘or with free/cr, sr-:cl is and a corage closet, ‘ion, there0 central a -t jct cor :’-uct.c-, da;'/ orvice, garbage pi k-up, yr set. ice, as, : ■ J b wa I O' d eau 17-1 foul re-Cr cab I o f e p r a J deva covered parkirj and a la rn roc.-'n with coin operated was! ors and dryers. For your horns cf relaxation huge stone fireplace and cc'or T /, a game room v. rh r go! Kern size pool to ’ s, a canteen and a TV room. There's a separate Tad/ room f . - quiet concentration and a family room for private get-to get hers. In VO'*, that s the r ’-.rn for cur heterogenous spring happen­ ing. Vs ■ / don't you ma Va your appl canon today, end he p us mix it up, / For more information cermet /7' S. Ruth Le-vis/Oran ce & White Apartments/2707 Rio Grande/476-4648. Wednesday, Jan. 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg a 3 **Ab, It’. N ice and Warm H ere And I Might Make It Even W armer’’ To Vote This Year, Register Today N o v o ter re g is tra tio n — no vote. Th it m ay be th e situ a ­ tion of m any w ould-be v o ters unless th e y a c t W ednesday by re g isterin g in th e ir counties. P ersons residing in T rav is C o u n ty m ay re g iste r fo r voting at th e C o u n ty T ax A sse ssn ’-C ollector’s Office in A ustin. O th e rs should re g iste r in the county of th e ir re si­ dence. I crsons unable to go and fill out tile form s m ay au th o riz e a fam ily m em ber to do so for them . A n\ * itizen o{ Jex a s now possessing th*’ necessary' quali- fications (fo r th ese see IV.:e I ) , m ust re g is te r if he plans to vote this y e a r. With local cou nty , state and national elections coming up this \ ar, d o n ’t lose y o u r o p p o rtu n ity to vote. T exas voters m ust re g is te r annually. Do so now. Gardner Hangs em Up ( Editor’s Vote: The following two editorials— Inith from file Inn. iii issue o f The Fort Worth Press— are being printed for their readership interest and not necessarily because iii agreeim*nt with Texan editorial opinion.) they an* John W . G a rd n e r’s d e p a rtu re ro b s th e cabinet of som e­ thing indefinably know n as class. I ho and a half y e a rs ago, w h en he nam ed G a rd n e r sec retary of health, education an d w elfare, th e P resid en t hailed him as “an ex p lo re r in search of excellence.” J o h n ­ son knew of “ no one m ho is bi tte r suited b y tem p eram en t, exjKTif nee and com m on-sense in telle ctu alism ” to confront th e issues of o u r tim es. Now G a rd n er leaves in a h a sty ex ch an g e of le tte rs w hich St ■ rn.' laths r pallid Com} ired to th e p ra ise Jo h n so n show ered on the ('d u rn to r in 1965. I hough G ard n er denies a n y specific incident o r issue spark! a his decision to quit, it is c le a r th a t friction w ith th e I i ix^ident s b u d g etary aides played a m a jo r p art in th e d e­ cision. Even G a rd n e r ad m its th is w h en he say s h e decided he could he “ m ost useful” by leaving his post. In the past tw o and a h a lf y e a rs G a rd n e r has shaken u p m an) of HEW s agencies and h a s b ro u g h t ideas into them . new* blood an d B ut the spraw ling HEW no longer Is “ th e fa ste st g ro w ­ ing d e p a rtm e n t in th e g o v ern m en t,” as th e P resident re ­ m ark ed w hen he nam ed G ard n er. In th e fa ce of a w a rtim e budget, H E W m u st re tre n c h . (»tm bier obviously felt the re tre n c h m e n t w as too severe. T he P resid en t m ay h av e a tough tim e g ettin g som eone ta Cardo* i s class to ta k e th e HEW job. B ut it can be done — a f te r all, M ickey M antle succeeded Jo e DiM aggio. Ted cher Od tbs T h en is n o th in g unco n stitu tio n al, in th e view of th e k n ifed S ta te s Suprem o C ourt, about a law w hich re q u ire s teac h ers to sw ea r to uphold s ta te o r fed eral constitutions. rh o court reach ed th is conclusion In approving a low er court decision. T he ju stices issued no opinion, b u t the r e a ­ soning behind th is decision is obvious. ‘.More Cool’ H ie New 7 o rk Civil L ib erties U nion took th e case to ie high c o u rt in beh alf of 27 In stru c to rs a t A delphi Col­ u r e , Long Island. T hese te a c h e rs had re fu se d to tak e th e oath required by N ew Y ork law, and a com m on p ractice am ong all officials o f go v ern m en t a t all levels. I he Civil L ib erties U nion argued t h a t th e o ath violated th e F irst A m endm ent to th e C onstitution, w hich g u a ra n te e s liv e speech, because it w as “ both an ex p ressio n of d istru st of the teaching proiession and a device to re p ress d issen t.” In sh o rt, tho te a c h e rs refused lo a s s e rt th a t th ey b e ­ lo v ed in free sjv e h because, th is c o n tra d ic to ry a rg u m e n t wont, it was an in terfe ren c e w ith th e ir rig h t o f free speech, w ithout the h n g Ame alm on! to the C o n stitu tio n we m ight not h av e an y free sp eech- and teacher: first to su p p o rt it. HS ought to be th e T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT, Austin Opln.cn* express ot th* art, * and a t th * B o a r d a t k T h e D a y T> > • I* p u b lish * .! b y Ti a ii < tin Tina* tic: a n I h o lid a y p a rte d : "mu* K aw * c o n tr otto*. J.a ii should ba nu rn# Texan *«X' a la t Co. i Ca y Sew *.a T h * n a tio n # IU A d 'c l 't i v . * r® ■ ’ ’ •y those cf the U ‘ ■ of 11* a l ' r o r of th # w r ite r ;v * ,it y a d m i n i s t r a t io n o r a r a t T h # v I »t ens, In c h.e ! d a i l y ta U t bi!' : OU * I A! • p ta d bv th o r# ! try , J ] I - . s t a n d i a:.': p u t h tr e a t Join LAU s e of '7 Ti t T t M an d a ' i r s >• o f T fic a a at A ustin. t os v a rs ity s ta tio n . a '< * D, a n d S a tu rd a y ■’■a** p o t ta g e p a id a t A u stin . t i t * i ’Ona! ( U lt M J H ) , a t I ” t • i”* e ’n ‘e m m * S a liv a ry -i*. J a rn ion 1-S27?i. - a m e m b e r of T h # As- s o d th e T H M C info rn ca, i i v a n ta N a t : a n a l E d ocai:DO­ E D I T O R MA NA GIN* E D IT O R A SST . M AN A G IN * I E D IT O i I N ew s E d i t o r ................ ............... E d ito r ia l p a g e A s s t.................... A m u sem en ts E d i t o r ................ S p o rts E d i t o r ............................ F e a tu re s E d i t o r ..................... P E R M A N E N T S T A F F ......................M VHY M O R P H IS MOODY . . . D A V ID De VOSS . W IL L IA M O P P E L . Mary* A nn T eat C h ris D avis . . Leslie D onovan W illiam H alstead J e n n a Bell IS S U E S T A F F Associate News Editor .......... News Assistants ............... A ssistant A m usem ents Editor Make-Up E ditor ......... Copy E ditors ........................... P hoto g rap h er .................. .1ancile K asparek Can'lyn Hinckley, Sands Schline ................ Gary Givens Mike Avalos ............................. Salley Reynolds. Paul SoRelle _ Bandy j j m Page 4 Wednesday, Jan. 31, 1968 XHB DAILY TEXAN ensues d-i* .Herblock W illy M ig h t Sees L ig ht - A n d Goes R ight Int™ J action O. R. R a d y't Article in ir e Jeu. 14 I c m >i a ,tr an c x i c l i t u t c r i t i c i s m o f tor uhotn h ip p 'd apolitical m ovem ent ternity. "the ts mere. ) a coeducat, cal fra ­ t i e I n fortunately, he did not differen* rut- t it ) d o h - i * renp justly b a ld y th e hate hippies ' ( f r uhotn, h i e I )p c t, appearances are par.,." ty and the articulate, p eru U n e lei ti servers o f social phenomena. T h en n i l l probably h e the rn.,I will pr> criticized phonies, merely confirm the prejudices o f complacent contect a it, r. i g n o r e d b y In the interest o f equal sarcasm, per­ haps you will extend the (pace all I m y letter in order to include the fo ld us­ ing true life slur). By JOHS GIBSON Willy awoke one morning so weak he the bathroom . could barely craw l When he looked in the m irro r he saw that the Bi-delta d u c k walt whom he had been sleeping had shaved off his beard and ru t his hair to a flat top. to His blood ran patriotic. Me knew he Was straight. He joined a fraternity. He threw aw ay his m otorcycle boots. He learned to say “ nigger.” He hated poetry, since all poets, be knew, w ere queer, He joined the Young Republicans sod the Young D em ocrats. He joined Students for a D isinterested Society. Willy had m ore cool than am budy. He wore checked pants and w ent to church. His conscience was d e a r , since there was no longer any hypocrisy m his disregard for the suffering o f tin* poor. In fact, he reasoned, they vt ere poor because they deserved to be poor. They obviously did not take advantage of free enterprise. Justice dem anded that he keep them poor. He cam e to understand that the United States governm ent had access to m ore than anyone else. There­ inform ation fore it w as beyond reproach. Clearly anyone who disagreed w as a hippy or C om m unist Willy kept a sharp lookout for anyone who protested the policies of his governm ent. When he found sue ii perverts, he and some of his fratern ity brothers would drive around a t nut it filling their bellies with courage front their bearded brown bottles. Espying prey, they would leap from the c a r md beat the hell out of him. During the da\ tim e, they would yell profanities at him anti drive quickly away. He cursed and threw pennies af anti­ w ar dem onstrators. He wrote patriotic letters to his congressm an. He did everything he could to support the fight­ ing im n in V ietnam —except renounce his H S draft statu s and enlist In the M arines. Serving—Irater * My studies a re also essential to this nation, he declared. “ It is for each of us to contribute to this country as he best can. Some m u st do it by dying in in Vietnam. I ’m doing school, and when I graduate. I ’ll serv e my country as an Insurance com pany executive,*” it by staying When Willy’s speedboat overturned, he was carried ash o re urn- nseious. Two of his fra tern ity brothers drowned. The rescu er asked why they h adn’t swum ashore. Willy said, “ It was a m a tte r of com m itm ent. It was too bad th at we got into that mess, but since we wrere there, we couldn't get out.” Young Might believed that if the poor people of the cities could be taught re­ sp* f law, all of A m erica’s dom estic problem s would be solved. the tor in that people One evening he changed channels on his television too soon. T ie sports news had riot yet begun, and he heard a new s­ ca ste r sa y the black ghettoes of som e ( Pies had rioted. The Communist the com rn en ta to r eruptions to poverty. Willy hastily fired off a letter to his congressm an dem and­ ing reduction in expenditures to com bat urban poverty, and he attacked the Suprem e Court for hindering the police s w ar on the urban impoverished. linked Drinking Socially As a m islead idealist, he had had a passionate love affair with a sorority chick. Now none of las girl friends would go all the way with him —-willingly. He Had to get them drunk to senselessness. M hue sitting the fratern ity house watching the “ O rgasm ic Light Show and E lectric heel Good M achine.” he w'ould expound to his d ate the evils of hippy- d in. At these p arties he could he relatively su re that his girl would show w hat a wonderful time she was having by dr taking sociable gallon* of beer. in E ventually, he m arried a 46-year-old virgin and settled down. He furnished his home grandly with shotguns and rifles, “ E ternal vigilance is the price of lib erty ,” he said, “ and w hat with the decay of m orality.’” “ Yes. sir, ' said his wife. Qualification* in Willy cam e to love the w ar in Viet- nam b e rin s e he loved peace. He often spoke of A m erica s peace-keeping mr- sion the P a r East. He becam e a steely eyed realist and saw through the left. When someone idealism of would present him with an em otional, a b stract argum ent about bombing, kill ing, burning bodies and corpses, he cooly replied that the honor of the VS was at stake. the Peace-Loving “ We are a peace-loving people, he would say, “ We m ight have to pacify a little violently, true But since t h a ts our ultim ate goal Is peace, even if we have to use violence to get peace, we re really advocating peace, not violence.’’ He was a good Am erican, He was pre­ pared to sacrifice himself to tho last red drop of his w hite blood to stop tho \eilow Communist hordes, who wore try ­ ing to aggress from the outside to take in­ from Vietnam away digenous American inhabitants. Ho Chi Minh planned to use Vietnam as a base from which against P ad re Island. to launch attacks rightful its Willy shouted down speakers at leftist rallies. Once, he helped hold a huge ban­ net saying win lie Wai in Vietnam* U r g e investm ents in several hanks and a huge w ar-construction com pany qualified him for a position on the Board of Regents of a sta te university. During Ins service, a fierce eyed pro­ fessor m ade a speech to an anti w ar rally in which he said that the roots of the w ar, like m any other problem s, lay : ie basic inadequacies and corrup­ in tions of the governm ent and economic system . The whole system m ust be re- novated and revolutionized, said the pro­ fessor. Such heresy could not g> > unheard by the patriotic e a rs of Willy Might “Hew can we rem ain the land of the free if we perm it criticism of our free enterprise form of governm ent? ” Willy dem anded at a specially called Board meeting. "We are a country of indi­ vidual-, and therefor* we should fire this man who advocates destruction of the Stato, Doesn’t he realize that in a democrat'} me State is the corner-stone individual? These Communist of tram ple on th eir own rights of swine free speech. With freedom of speech goes the responsibility not to dissent." the At the age of 82 Willy died, and his laughed only friend. Morlnck Mallow, £Ul liU'vUgil Ilift fu n e r a l. Pueblo’s Capture Draws British Press Comment T h e seizure b y the N o rth K o­ re an s of th e A m erican naval intel­ ligence ship P ueblo is providing the m ain topic of discussion in B ritish new spapers, according to su rv e y s p re p are d in L ondon by th e B ritish B ro ad c astin g C o rp o ratio n . The Timr-s, on independent publica­ tion. sees no reason why the incident should Dad international to a m ajor crisis. But the paper notes that the af­ fair has already resulted in an increas­ ingly dangerous sequence of reactions. With the dispatch of the aircraft c a rrie r E nterprise, the United States has m ade its dem ands f ir the im m ediate irtu rn of the vessel look very like an ultim a­ tum, says Tile Times. prize which should be retained in spite of the American dem ands it back. to hand In tension the current state of in Asia. the legal aspects of the cast m ay not be exam ined very closely. And w hat­ the North legal standing, ever K oreans seem keen to preserve a pro­ vocative attitu d e,” their The Times said that in spite of the frustrations of the Vietnam war. in spite of the pressures of election year and the irritation which A m ericans m ust feel at the spectacle of a sm all Asian nation pulling feathers from the eagle’s tail it still rem ains vital for the US not to be rash counter-m ea­ provoked sures. Not Isolated Vet into any tends som e kind of invest And die fa- t that the Pueblo w as en­ intelligence gaged in incident activities with an artificial d ram a and sense of m ystery which A m erican spokesmen will be well advised to di ; el, T ie Times advises, as soon as possible. the to The “ What, Tim os wr tea: for instance, was the Pueblo doing on hor own and in a potentially hostile a re a ? Why w as no help forthcoming during the considerable tim e iii •? elapsed between the original interception of the Pueblo and h er eventual a rre s t a fte r N orth K orean reinforcem ents had arriv ed ? ‘Valuable Prize’ This lack of clarity m ay encourage the North K oreans to continue thinking they have captured a valuable th at to troops The Daily Mail, a Conservative news­ paper, considers, as several other B rit­ ish papers do. the seizure of the Pueblo as no Isolated ac t of piracy. The paper the m assive build-up of points Hanoi’s the in Vietnam near DMZ. And it n< ‘es th at guerrilla activity has recently increased in Laos, Cam ­ bodia and Thailand. ” You do not have to assum e any deep-laid Communist plot,” the Daily Mail writes, ‘‘to see th at p ressure on the A m ericans at several points would g reatly help Hanoi a often- siv e.” An ither Conservative newspaper, The Daily bolograph, thinks it w as reason- ab!o th a t P resident Lyndon B, Johnson should have asked the Soviet Union for help In getting the ship released. The paper says that North Korea has bec-) turning away recently from Peking and m ay therefore be answ erable in som e respect to Moscow. But the R ussian refusal to Intervene was not encouraging. The Telegraph w rites: “ There are those who hope that Russia will in time use her influence on the West's behalf to bring peace to Viet­ nam and to settle all outstanding ques­ tions. H er refusal does not suggest th a t the tim e suits her yet. What is going on in the E ar E ast m ay not he as displeas­ ing to her as to others.’’ So\iet Advice? T ie Scotsman-Edinburgh, independent w rites that although North Korea and N orth Vietnam today on Russia rely rath e r than China for economic and m ilitary aid, it would be surprising if their present conduct is based on Soviet advice. .so “ Russia and the US had—o r It seem ed—worked out a vague but use ful set of rules for the conduct of in ter­ national relations, so that com petition can continue without bringing the world to . Now N o rh the brink of war. Korea has broken the rules. . “ Did Kosygin (prim e m inister of the Soviet Un inn) really w ant them to be that, as broken? The basic trouble is fa r as North Korea and North Vietnam a re concerned, he does not pull all the strings. The w'ar in Vietnam is now a t a decisive stage. But so is th e Soviet Union s balancing a r t between support for aggression and co-existence with the United S tates.” The Firing Line P a t e r n a l i s m To the E ditor: it Linda C a rr s report, (Texan. Jan. 16) “ And the Poor G et Children” by D r. Lee Rainw ater, Is but another exam ple In the paternalism of Americans. of this ca.se the tow ards is directed “ working class,” “ lower class,” and the (Since the? term s a re used in­ terchangeably text we will assum e th a t they refer to the sam e thing. But w'hat is a “ w irking class p e r­ so n ’’—someone who works?) throughout she poor. Me are told that the "working el ins,” due to a lack of future orientation, is unable to plan arid control the size of its fam ilies. T iu s it Is necessary for the m iddle class, the planners and be­ lievers in the future, the class able “ to reach de­ cisions,” to induce the poor to do so. objective detached and This attitude of “ noblesse oblige” to­ w ards the working class is Justified by “ facts ‘ intended to docum ent the hap­ lessness of the “ working c lass." Ties** facts are, however, nothing m ore than value judgm ents used to reinforce the m iddle c la ss’ attitude of superiority over the “ w-orking class." Among the tr a its ch aracteristic of the “ working class” person we h av e: “ To the poor m an, the world is an unfriendly, changeable environm ent over which he has little c o n tro l” Does the poor m an have any less control over his environm ent than the middle class m an? Could it be that th e m iddle class is de­ luded it has control? Is the world really a friendly into thinking place? “ Planning anything seem s useless. P F AIM G T S TI e peer ha VP no fu tu re and they ex­ life tends to be geared p e rt little advancem ent in social status. T herefore, to interests and present pleas­ present u re s.” In the first place there is no data to support that assertion. In the second place, going on the prem ise that it Is tru e, w hat does it m ean? It m eans not th a t the poor a re innately fatalistic (and ultim ately, Innately stupid) but that th e society cs structured in such a way that the poof do not have any future in this the soruety, and m aybe “ rio ts” a re ail about. is what that “ Tile lower class woman has no s ta ­ tus ap art from wife and m other." Has no status vis-a-vis whom—The Daugh­ ters of the American Revolution? Is sta ­ tus belonging to the Ju n io r League or being selected one of A ustin’* “ Ten Best D ressed Women” ? “ Finally, working class people do not understand the bio­ logical workings of the sexual relation­ ship . , . Moreover, the lower class’s stran g e code of m orality bars learning the sexual m echanism . Sex Is an of the working class esoteric subject wh.t h is not discussed even between husband and wife.” in With the above m ass of m isinform a­ tion serving as an intellectual fram e­ the m iddle class can work by which rationalize Its actions a num ber of sug­ gestions a re m ade for dealing with the working class birth control problem. The m ost interesting one suggests “ad­ vert;-.ing through the m ass m edia." We a re told that this m ust be done with “ a g rea t deal of subtlety.” (Thank God the m iddle class has deem ed to tak e on the responsibility to control the h earts, minds, and num ber of children of th e “ working class.’’) An exam ple given of the success of m ass media is working class m em bers have that itself fit learned to take bath s.” After the p as­ sag e of san itary codes requiring (m id­ dle class) landlords to install bathroom s and showers it certainly w as much e asier to bathe. We had alw ays thought th a t to b athe regularly when they got th e facili­ ties but no— it was only after the m ass m edia told them what to do th at they m arched like lem m ings to the bathtub. types began lower class the them stop having all T u is we see A m erican paternalism in all its glory and viciousness. P ile four or five value judgm ents on top of each other, call facts, and presto— th ere Is a “sc icntific attitu d e.” A m eri­ cans, being the u ltim ate p ragm atists, < an do anything based on a scientific attitude. In this case the m iddle class knows that the lower class is ignorant about sex and feels it is its duty to c a rry out a “su b tle” (I. e. m anipula­ tive) propaganda cam paign to convince those working class slobs they Should those dirty children. Even if this “ subtle” adver­ tising twists the minds of the “ poor" and destroys th eir values without re­ them ; even if it m akes them placing about having had feel guilty thp;r children—all this does not m a tte r be­ cause it is for their owm good. This is ju st another exam ple of A m erican p a ­ ternalism —the of logical which Is the g reatest educational pro­ ject of them all—the Vietnam War. Charles O'Neil David Morocco 912 W. Thirtieth St. conclusion th at Official Notices m p o n d I l » b m r y n o n . ' * , w i l l h * of, a al iri Dean ^ gluten' jy.?), t o r e f e r , r n t o t h # Ared Colmar, HhrHrtaa O W , I ’M Rf ACV... THROW ME THE HOCKEY PALL/ CROSSWORD PUZZLE Araw e r to Y esterd ay '* Puerta HieiAjTMe a i r| :4Sj 5 TErhe1 P 5,6 SjgjN tIs ^ R 5fglS rl I j E » * n s s' [t'o N I 6 V t _ J u E i l TpMBT A T Je jJa Lit _u2iOj-MeC~ i ja il l i i i t e E L IS El H i m M c j 7 Antlered animal 8 Abstract being 9 Near IO Shallow pond 3! I orig for 13 Fewest 36-Poem* 1 9-Coina 20-Brag 22 Lasso 2 3 Board gam e of S k il l 2 5 Intended 26 Felony 28 Apprehend* 29 Bivalve mollusk* ; I ACROSS I Fru>t (pi.) 6 Perfect 11 Storage place 1 2 Pertaining to the rn ip * I ! Pm-I 15-Last?'<>s 37-E arth g o d d e ss 18-Hail! 19 Apple JU tea 20 Neekptec# 21 Brother at Odin 22 Rep;;!** 2 3 Cries like dryva 24 Weasel uke animal* 2 6 - S i n g 27-Dinea 2 8 War god 2 9 - T a l k s 3 1 Short, stiff hair 34 Girl’* name 3 5 Damages 3 6 P r e f i x : n o t 37Skt!l 38 Hindu cjoeen 3 9 french for “ friend’’ i ? 8 21 40 Parent (colloq ) 41-Evaluates 42-La nded 4 3 Part of jacket 45-CWindrical 47 Evaporates 48 Dirks DOWN 2-Share b rd 2-Aff#cticn 3 Employ 4-Pronoun 5-Bands of color 6 U-ga 'o n e* rd 30-Hart>i»- 31-Poison 32'Boundaries 33 Choice part 35 Detest* 38-Rant 3 9 Toward the tar 41-Un;* rf Portugu-v# currency 42 Exist 44 7*'Tonic deity 46-Printer’* measure I3 4 I5 i ' 6 7 3 9 IO v“» \ \9 22 I 12 r n I '•> -■ 23 T v 26 pyy* 28 A-E J r 4----- ’Ty I iv . 317 j *Tnr 20 I I I $55I VV 32 33 36 M N I I ” I | T I I i CV r I J 4 1 4'J j I T T 43 I -4 4 X vi47 I 44 Distr, bs r n 38 i TS.j ii i I 46 43 18 I J S C J §gj VVI Court Judgment Favors Workers *> Th* A «vw-f .,,*»<* (‘ITM SALINAS, CaUf. Nine farm workers have von guaranteed jobs with a probable minimum of SI.500 a year, St was reported I V The arrangement is part of an out-of court settlement that fol­ lowed a ruling by Monterey Coun­ ty Superior Judge Gordon Camp­ bell that an employer who fires a worker for union activity must not only rehire him but may also be required to pay punitive dam­ ages. The workers' case was handled Ix>gal As­ by California Rural sistance, a legal aid group funded as part of the federal government's War on Poverty. Gov. Ronald Reagan had op­ posed the group’s handling of the matter as it involved union acti­ vities, said Paul Zimmer, deputy director of the California Office of Economic Opportunity. The workers* lawyer Robert Gna7id.», contend'd ti.-* issue was the individual’s freedom of asso­ ciation — farm worker’s right to jota a union. Tile union’s rights were not in­ volved, he said. including the ’ITe men said they were fired last summer by Martin Produce Co , of Salinas, wl en it was dis­ covered they were members of the 1'nited Farm Workers Or­ ganizing Committee, AFL-CIO. By Th* Aianclalfd Pry«« Israeli and Egyptian T L L VVTV tanks and artillery p x c I anger! fir e for 90 minutes across file Suez Canal Tuesday in Hie heaviest engage­ ment along the troubled water­ way* since la st October. into four The firing began when Egypt the launches sent northern part of the canal to look for obstacles barring the way of 15 foreign ships, stranded in the waterway since the June j war. Israel had agreed to a clearing operation in only the southern part of the canal and had warned Sunday that any attempt in the north would be resisted. The launches had proceeded about a mil« north from their starting point at Ismailia, mid­ way in the canal, when Israeli troops on the east bank fired warning shots. Israp] says the Egyptians on the east bank then opened fire Tanks O p en Fire A cross Suez C anal tart Theta G e ttin g Hung Up for C h a lle n g e Posters go up for Challenge 68 es final plans for the spring colloquium reveal that five films including ' A Thou­ sand Clowns' and "81/V* will be shown during the week p-or to the conference. Bill Slaton and Sandy Wicker are hanging the signs that announce the registration date Feb. 8, in Union 346. with artillery which they re­ turned. An Egyptian communi­ que said Israeli troops were the first to open fire on Egyptian positions north of Ismailia. Tanks joined the artillery in the duel. An Israeli army spokes­ man said tw’o Egyptian tanks were knocked out. Five Israeli soldiers were wounded. Th** Eg>ptian army communi­ que made no mention of casual­ ties, but said one of the launches was damaged. This contradicted earlier Egyptian reports that the four launches returned safely to Ismailia. truce Fighting finally was stopped in response to an appeal by Lt. Gen. Odd Bull, the United Nations rhief supervisor, who happened to be visiting in Cairo Egyptian sources said he had ordered his observers on the ca­ nal to prepare a detailed report of the clash. The Toggery's F u r l l i r e ■ S e r i n < * l i o n s On Men's Clothing and Furnishings < « S > A to V3 off S P O U T ( O A T S <$> * N o w Is the time to rralce your move. W h y ? Be­ cause we have a arge sc action of sport coats in stock from which to choose at unbelievably low prices. W o o s and blends in many weaves, shades, and patterns are yours if you take the imtiat ve now. Reductions are on famous brand names a - d therefore to your advantage, lf you den t r ove fast, som e bo d y e'se will! l i l t I S S S I M K S Va off O ne o f the most versatile o f clothing items y o . own is a !so the one most often given little attention. It goes by the description o f trous­ ers, breeches: or more acce p tab ly referred to as T H E D R E S S S L A C K S . V /e realize this. A n d because of it, w« com pensate by bringing you the finest in conten^xjrary styles and cuts: in faeries that d o th© m ost for you. W h ether it is tor cam pus or 4ormai wear, you a re assured o f confidence ©verytim© you step out in slacks from the T O G G E R Y . The time to move, Is now! You m ay ge t aw ay with it. Vi P R I C E Vt P R I C E Vi P R I C E V2 P R I C E V2 P R I C E Vt. P R I C E 'I i P R I C E Vi P R I C E i-tin< Inn Story For Men GR Union Com m ittee Schedules Lectures Modern France To Be Studied Contemporary Franco will b<* the subject of an International Studies seminar to be offered dur­ ing tho spring semester af tho University. The senior L'Ourse will be taught Jointly by Roger Shattuck, pro­ fessor of Romance languages, and Dr. Francis Boor, assistant pro­ fessor of government. It ta open to seniors in any field who are in­ terested in exploring facets of contemporary French culture and politics. A reading knowledge of From Ii ta required. Shattuck is an authority in the field of contemporary French lit­ erature and culture, He will dis cuss "m ajor myths that have grown up in die course of French history, many of which still domi­ nate the contemporary scene in somewhat modified shapes Tile course will consist of lec­ tures and discussion-. Each stu­ dent will be expected to com­ plete a project that interests him —in politics, literature, one of tile arts, a facial problem or some other area of investigation and thought It is expected that the semi­ nar will prepare students for pos. Rib!© trips to Franco and will complement in their other academic fields. training Graduate Students Given Scholarships Twenty-one graduate students currently enrolled at the Univer­ sity have received scholarships totaling more than $75,000 to pur­ sue their studies cf Latin Ameri­ can affairs, principally history, during the current year. Nine of the grants arr financing a year of doctoral dissertation research in Latin America. The others are to National Defense Act, Title VT, Fellows working toward master's and doctor’* de­ gree* at the University. Students on fellowships in Latin America Include: John H, Adams, recipient of a Fulbright Hays Scholarship to study "Tile University of Antio- quia: A Case Study of a Modern Colombian University and Ifs Re­ to National Develop­ sponse ment," Romeo Ricardo Flores Cabal­ lero, employed by El Colegio de Mexico to teach, hut given a year’s leave of absence for re­ search on "The Expulsion of Spanish Merchants from Movi­ co, 1802-1829." Robert Allan White, recipient of a Latin America a teaching fellowship Fletcher School of !„r,v and Diploma *\ to teach for 15 months in the Insti­ the of tute of Philosophy and Social Sciences at Br util s Federal Uni­ versity in E o de Janeiro and to do resea rf h ( n "T I © Influence of French P o lit!-a1 Ideas on Brazil, 18224840." Robert W. Butler, recipient of a Fu hi .ght I lay« Scholarship to study “ Venezuelan Liberals from 1830 to 1818." Fulbright H. vs N J ic I >. rid O k, recipient of Scholarship a followed by a D borty Founda­ to study Sixteenth tion grant I ’.u r n : a demography, F e n :;; y first in Spain, and then in Lima. Peru. Stanley E Hilton, recipient of a Foreign Area Training Fellow­ ship to do research on "Brazil and the W rid Crisis, 193439." Ernest S. Sweeney, rot ipient of . olarship to a I* ulbr J ■ I! r. , study " rho Influence of Foreign Missions on the Catholic Church In Argentic* since 1936," Paul Joseph Van lerwood, reci­ pient of a Fuibright-Hays Schol- ocdijp t » cud) Mexico's Rural Police Force (th John Sohv. ald of a grant from Latin American I "Mexico s Anti-Pi tion.” - Bur ales)." lunes, recipient the Institute of hud ie** to study it iv;.st Revolt!- On March E C . V Narasimh.in, chief of Cabinet of the United Nations, will loci urn in conjunc­ tion with the International Stu­ dents Conference. Dr. John Gardner, recently re­ signed secretary of the Depart mon! of Health, Education, and Welfare and author of “ Excel­ lence and Seif.-Renewal.” util apeak April 24. Dr. Hana O Morgenthau of the Center for the Study of American Foreign and Military Policy, tho University of Chicago, will leo- ture April 29. Tile Inst lecture will he May 8, and will feature Judge Frank' M. Johnson Jr., chief judge of the US District Court, Montgomery, Ala, Tile Texas Union Speakers Pro­ gram Ls free to University stu­ dents, faculty, and staff present­ ing a current University identifi­ cation card; there is a $1 admis­ sion fee for all others. Additional speakers may be announced as tho semostor progresses. f or information regarding the Texas Union Speakers Program, contact the Union Program Of! Hee, telephone GRI-3816 I mon 342, or The Texas Union Speak >rs Com* mince has announced the lecture schedules for the spring - 'mrssi'r. M. Stanton Evans, editor of the Indianapolis News and a contrib­ uting editor of the National Re- view, w I s|* ik Feb. 8. Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Robert C. Weaver, will lr ?ure Feb. 20. Bird's N est Sends 6 Fire C om panies Flying to Scene A bird s nos? in a ventilator fan was listed as the apparent cause for six companies of the Austin Fire Department answer­ ing a call at the Bellaire Apart­ ments Monday night. When the fire trucks appere od at the TIT VV. Twenty-second St. address, they discovered a small amount of smoke coming from the vent in one of die apartment units. Chief S. J. Hubbard, in chargo of tho firemen at the scene, sa I that a bird's nest apparently caused a short circuit in the e l e c ­ tric fan motor. He said that no damage "other than one burned out motor" resulted from the small blaze. Miss Thompson Named RPE Head Mi--. Betty Thompson bas boon appointed director of required physical training for women. She succeeds Miss Shiela O'Gara. who died Jan 5. Miss thompson has been a member of the University facul­ ty since 1954, She was educated at the University of Wisconsin and Ohio Start' University, hare you heard the news . . . THE CO-G I is here to answer all your academic aud personal needs ART SUPPLIES Select from a com plete stock of: TEXT BOOKS The Largest Stock in Town Carnival Paper W a te r C o lo rs Brushes Temperas A crylics o;!s Pastels Construction Newsprints Drawing Board Poster Boards Portfolios Caseins Inks Charcoals Illustration Save* 30 4 o ff the publisher's price, p!us y mr re pilar C O -Q f Co o cl viclend. onoppmg is Erf* • or i nor© efficient with our self-service policy. R.*rr -v I ar, when you are through with your book and re n o lr reason, ab'y certain; th© C O - O P W IL L B U Y IT B A C K A T Remember we (-ave tho official lists o f supplies a f instructors require 5 0 % O F T H E P U B L IS H E R ’S LIST PR IC E. S T R E E T F L O O R D O W N S T A I R S ROOM ACCESSORIES COURTESY BUS Savings on utility and decorative items for dorm or Rice the C O - O P BU S free to the A rt BC Tog, lh n apartment. Everything to fit your kitchen, bath, or to the Law School, ard bark to the C O - O P i /cry i 5 min .res C r T W O W E E K S . bedroom with appliances, towel;, and lamps in many colors and styles, W e abo carry a complete stock of RUNNING DATES January February c o c k s, ra Jig s, televisions, tape recorders, stereophon 29, 30 & 31 1,2 then 5, 6, 7 3 & 9 F- payers, and many other necessary necessi­ The C O - O P Bis w be aper d o g fr m: ties to make studying a little more tolerable. 8;30 to 5:33 excluding saturdays and sun lay: D O W N S T A I R S IN F R O N T O F ST O RE SfORE HOURS FOR THE FIRST TW O W EEKS OF SC H O O L Ja n . 29, 30, 3 Feb. I - 2 mon, - fr'. 8:30 to 5:30 Feb. 3 sat. 8:30 to 5:00 Feb. 5 & 6 mon. & tues. first two day: of cesses 8:00 to 8:00 Feb. 7, 8. 9. wed. - Tri, 8:30 to 5:33 The C O O P is her© to serve you. A fte r you la v e registered, come and let us he p you fill a !l y o j ' academ ic end persona! need s. W e have * r©e floors Of savings tor your convenience. Set ye .rn directions on us and find out what the story on the C O - O P is. Remember too, a: purchases a*-© plus y o .r reg u lar v^ash Dividend. t i L N I V E ,hIsr | t ] y | C j o F o j P T H E S T U D E N T ' S O WN STOK Wednesday, Jan. J I , 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page C EC Artists Named 53 Suspended A A , ,c : _ For Spring Term For Long Hair A rtists from New York City, Philadelphia, and as far aw ay as T rance will be renting to Austin and the cam pus to perform for blanket fax holders this spring. F red Waring and the Penney I* vanians, the C ham ber Symphony the Darkness of Philadelphia, Ballet, and John G ary will appear in Municipal Auditorium on the f ultima I E ntertainm ent Commit­ tee Series. On the Solo Artist Series are violinist Henryk Szeryng and baritone G erald Souzay. who will give solo recitals in Hogg Audi­ torium. Free Event* Blanket fax or spouse fax pur chasers m ay attend all of these events free of charge by drawing tickets af the University Box Of­ fice In Hogg Auditorium. Ticket draw ings begin five da s in ad­ vance of each event and continue as long as tickets last. U « y I I heater C o m p a n y P e rfo r m e rs . . . D a v i d M c C a r v e r a n d Jon Thornberry in a d r a m a by Beckett m on ‘ < Beckett's 'G o d o t' To Be Presented The Texas Union T heatre Com present B eckett’s pa ny will “ Waiting fur Godot" Saturday through Fob. IO in the Main Ball room of the Texas Union, the passion behind Douglas Over, general director to of the company, ha.s worked expose the poetry in the play. The stacafto dialogue, groups of short fast lines, is difficult enough to learn, but to project it requires a gre.it deal of sym pathy among rho actors. “ The d irecto r's main concern in these reh earsals has been to promote an under m inding be­ tween the players as they find a meaning of the play for them selves,*' sa;, s I h e r. Situation a Paradox * " o actors, Jon T horoberrj as Gogo, and David Mot a iv e r as Didi, are on stag e during the en­ tire play. E ach finds his sihia tion a paradox of m isery and joy To pass the time, they play g i nos which can never end un­ til the sun sets. The tyi ann ira! Pozzo. pl a zed by Sylvia Verheyden, whips the bedraggled Lm ky- Terry Con­ li n- across tile stage to a carni­ val which changes lives. Only the rn; derious Codot re mains aloof. their The Texas Union T heatre Com­ is offering a special pre­ pony ticket to season bonus. A free ‘’Waiting is avail­ for Godot" able with the purchase of a sea­ son ticket for the spring season, which includes “ A Funny Thing Happened On Tire Way To Tire Forum.** “ Rou­ tines, P inter s “ The Homecom­ ing," adaption of O restes, and the sm ash musical “Guys and OoHs." The price of a season ticket is SI 50. Auditions To Ile Held Ferlinghetti s a modern Auditions for the com pany will be held Monday and Tuesday br tween ■> and T p.m. in the Main Ballroom of the Texas Union. Places in the company are av ail­ able for set designers, costum ers, technicians, public relations per Kennel, and singers. dancers, actors, By special arrangem ent of CEC, blanket tax holders m ay also draw free balcony seat tickets for Aus­ tin Symphony concerts. Among the soloists for the four rem ain ­ ing concerts of the season are saxaphonisf .John Giordano and pianist John Browning. The first event is Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians on Fob. 13. For half a century, this show­ man has brought his style of m usic the American public through radio, television, records, and concert tours. Symphonic Music to The Cham ber Symphony of Philadelphia, scheduled far Feb. Ti. appears regularly in Carnegie Hall and Philadelphia’s Academy of Music. An ensem ble of 36 m usi­ cians from the United States and Europe, the group perform s Ba­ roque, classical, rom antic • -ufo! contem porary symphonic works. Henryk Szeryng, die first per­ form er on the Solo A rtist Series this sirin g , is recognized as one of the four or five m ajo r violin. Hts of his generation. Th.' Polish- Ixirn artist has played in m ore than 16 countries and is a popu­ la r recording artist in Europe, in 19f>6 of “ Most certainly the best ballet group of the I SA and one of the best in the w orld” wrote a French critic the Darkness Ballet, The Now York company, which gave its first perform ance in the White House in 1964 will perform March 111. O pera lo Be Offered P aris opera audiences have heon stirred tim e and again bv Start sour college education with a planned approach to budgeting your allow ance, without the risk o f carrying excess cash. Open a T exas Special ( hocking A ccount. I f s not only safer, but 3011 ll know exactly whom you paid, how m uch, and you have proof o f paym ent. This T exas Special ( hocking Nc- count ei f Id xas .students, in .school colors, e a s i l y is designed I ’Diversity for recognized bv Austin m e rc h a n ts , a n d is the smart way to m anage m oney. T he only charge is a few each check you write. c n ts fo r No Minimum Balance Required' Checks are personalized with your nam e and address, FREE! No Service charge on Texas Special Accounts! Any* am ount will open your ac­ count. D eposits may be m ade by you, o r mailed to the bank from Y o u r par­ ents. White you are attending school, please consider this an open invitation for you to use the fu ll-service lac ties o f Thi Budget your money wisely with an American National Bank T r i ''P O T ? N 3 Checking Account M O T O R B A N K Between Lavaca and Guadalu pe at 5th St. O pen 7:30 A . M . . 5 P.M. M o n d a y - Friday _ 4.* _ _ / V ' U S I C O r g a n i z a t i o n s O pen for Students Registration week is the time for students interested in singing or p lajin g a musical instrum ent to join one of 14 music organiza­ tions on cam pus. M em bers of music organiza­ tions receive either one or two hours credit for the sem ester, de­ pending upon the organization. both music and non-music m a­ jors m ay qualify. The University S y m p h o n i c Band, which perform s classical and popular works for band, wall m ake a tour of Northeast Texas cities and perform at H em isFair May 5. Students m ay audition from 9 a.m . to noon during regis­ tration week in the office of Wil­ liam J. Moody, director, Music Budding 205D. The Symphonic Repertory Band, also directed by Dr. Moody, will have auditions every morning of registration week rn Music Build­ ing 205D. l onghorn Blind Tile i/>nghom Band, which gave two concerts m arching perform ances during football season under the baton of Vincent R. DuNioo, will pre­ sent in M un icip al Auditorium, a perform ance at HemisT air in April, and music for C om m encem ent Students m av audition in the Band Hail at any time during registration week and from IO a.m. to noon Feb. IO. Tile E xperim ental Jazz Ensem ­ ble, also known as the Lab Band, will perform in the annual Long­ horn Jazz F estival and tour West Texas. Dick Goodwin, director, wail audition students during reg is­ tration week and the first week of classes in Music Building 205C. The Opera Workshop will need singers, technicians, and costum e and scenery designers its March production of excerpts from “ M adam e Butterfly” and other operas. Auditions will be a t 4 p.m. Feb. 5 in Hogg Auditor­ ium. (two hours credit) V ( a pc I la ( heir for throughout The A Capella Choir, which has presented m ore than IOO con­ certs the Southwest and Mexico, will tour E a u and N ortheast Texas and perform a t Hem is! air. Die choir is directed by Dr. Morris J. Beachy. Tile longhorn Singers — who offer renditions of Broadway show tunes, current record hits, and folk songs — will go to New Orleans and to H em isFair. Tit# chorus cf mined voices is directed by Stanley Woodmansee. (one hour credit) The Varsity Singers, which has perform ed for Gov, John Con­ ns liy, presents prog! arris of light mu- ic T. e U v lice group, one of the jiewest on cam pus, will por- f>rm at H em isFair, (one hour credit) The University Chorus Tile Southern Singers (one hour credit), 46-voice woman’s group, will tour Southeast Texas and the 43-member Men's Glee Club (m e hour credit) will tour West Texas. is d e ­ signed especially for .students w ith little vocal experience. The larg e mixed ensem ble perform s light m usic and allows its m em bers to become acquainted with some of the standard choral repertoire. (one hour credit) M a y a now has a com p le te sup­ ply of earrings for left ha nded women who burn incense. 1616 L A V A C A ‘‘..‘.THE F E M A L E . . M a k e s I, A W O M A N L o o k Like M A R Y P O P P IN S . ’”oN; the portrayal of “ Don Giovanni" by G erard Souza y, who wall per­ form March 21. A favorite at in­ ternational music festivals, the Trench baritone ha.s furthered his reputation with his recordings of lieder, art songs, and operatic arias. John G ary, tile rising young S in g in g s ta r who appears fie- quenfiv on television and in night d u b s, will close the season on April 25. He has recorded more than 13 album s, each of them a b e st seller. Bf Th# Anteri at *4 Pr#»«* NORW XLK, Conn. Fourteen boss and two girls, carrying placards, picketing Tues- day at Brien McMahon High School, where 53 pupils were .suspended for w earing their hair too long. “ It s not the hair, it’s what * underneath it." read one of the children's signs. Luther Howard, principal of th* school, checked the bovs in every classroom Monday and then sus­ pended the 53 “ long-hairs.** Tam ms ‘Longhairs’ UTX’ events begin at 8 p.m. and all seats are reserved. SAS events are at 8:13 p.m. There are no re­ served seats for these perform ­ ances. Blanket tax and and free ticket must be presented at the door for adm ittance. The CEC provides chartered bus transportation to Municipal Auditorium at 25 cents per round trip for students. from cam pus Single adm issions will be sold at the door the night of the p er­ formance, CEC events are $2.50 fur adults and $1 for children. SAS events are $2.50 each. Stars Reopen Ford's Theater By Hie A s a i n / i . Guadalupe at Fourth D. rr BUTE G R 8-6426 A,M 1 ■Ts ______________ R U I KOX O I T K I. < > n N r »,< soc " • na n „ v , '"TTT- u iTTnTiT ) XKI I u n t i l M I M B I U s O M y « | „ , t , U { L c E X C E L L E N T A L L - C O 1 O R M O V i c S ELIZABETH t a y l o r M ARLON BRANDO REFLECTIONS^ 0 IIM A G O LDEY EYE '0:3° T trw iu irr * . Suggested fop mature audiences |4 7 TECH N IC O LO R* PA N A V ISiO N * FR O M W A R N E R B R O S . S E V E N A R T S Plus Greatest buIRhroller *7i of then? all I Peter Sellers Is The B o b o " 8 0 TECHKIC0LC8* RPtTTPKJjy^ AMERICAN N A T IO N A L BANK of Austin Hhvml Sixth and Colorado G R 7-658 M e m be r Federal De p o sit In su ra n ce Corporation Page 6 Wednesday, Jan. 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Analyst' Rips American Folk-Myfhs Orations. And we all felt a little pang for that lonely figure at the helm. But that was another day. Theo- dore Flick er has the temerity to suggest that today is another case. Be submits that the pressures of the modern presidency are simply too great for one man to bear them aion#; the President—who is fashioned, after all, out of the same frail stuff as the rest of us —must inevitably p ur out Ins troubles to a sympathetic ear. And by so doing, he automatically becomes only the second loneliest person on earth. It is the indivi­ dual attached to the sympathetic oar—-the “ President'* Analyst’’ of, What B y BR O O K S P E T E R S O N job on is the loneliest earth? In other, less complicated times, we were conditioned to re­ ply that the presidency of the United States mast surely be the highest pinnacle of isolation avail­ able to mortal man. It was bey md our wildest dreams to conceive of anyone bearing a heavier burden of responsibility, a more onerous load of worries, doubts and frus- ORIVE-IN theatre 2300 Sa Canf l > r IVrvm Jam ** Drury am t S|#»v Richard K*an and I ut i < A. M INTERSTATE Plus ROCK 'N ROLL MUSIC By ’THE GILT C A G E” T H E H EST O R L E A N S 12th & Red River G R 8 .0 2 9 2 toe title—to whom our hearts should truly go out. for he, by the mere fact of being privy to a i the darkest secret musings of our leader, is effectively cut off from alii meaningful contact with the remainder of the race. The President can talk to his analyst; out his analyst can f . d k to no one. ( >r s > Flick er contends. fu lfills a Function Of course, the premise is no more substantial than it really needs to be. What is significant is that it does satisfactorily fulfil! its real function: that of providing the pretext f >r a haphazard odys­ sey through the constantly shift­ ing and unchartered realm of American folk-ways. Jam es Coburn The plot line, not inappropri­ ately, is a tenuous one that pri­ m arily serves to string together a series of w ildly disparate v i­ gnettes. The real action begins finds the when stresses of presidential analysis becoming altogether intolerable. Exhausted physically and spirit­ ually, and alarmed by d ear signs of incipient paranoia in his own personality, he makes the classic break for freedom. In his political 2 COMPLETE SHOWINGS 7:30 AN D 9:00 naivete, he does not realize that ho will set off a gigantic manhunt with himself as its object. All of the secret services of the w orld- including those of friendly and Third World nations— would bo only to-' happy to drain the brain of the President A analyst. Tire Federal Bureau of Regulation (perhaps meant to bear some re­ lation to an existing agency?) de- eidos he Knows Too Much, and sets out regretfully to kill him. The Central Enquiries Agency undertakes to retrieve him. The President languishes unanalvzt 1. Coburn meanwhile leads them all a m erry chase In rapid Mir. cession he drops in and out of: the household of a “ lib eral'’ gun fanatic—“ When the right-wingers disarm, we ll disarm ” ; a caravan of hippies. Whose flower power is augmented by .stronger stuff; an opulent spy yacht plying the G reat Lakes; and a sinister tele­ phone booth. And there Is more which would I'e neither fair nor expedient to relate. It is sufficient to state that the denouement is in keeping with the rest of the picture. Deserving of Laurels On the whole. Flicker's en­ deavor is a successful one. There are several counts on which he and his company deserve laurels. First, he has avoided the sort of tastelessness into which an effort of this sort could so easily have ADULTS 1.50 No One Under 13 Adm itted H R O » — — J ; GIRLS L 4 m J SIX KITTENS A : with a PAST... bu: bo F U T U R E ! A k W ,’ aBfe-’VA GENUA: CINEMA CORPORATION MW KNOWIVO • Alce Guinness • Peter Ustinov kk kM * Jhi k timbal, m A J >-.AiiniiCTb«A»v ml W T i v,:;’ I B ® h r H I k Comedians!# . j, b E e a k Tranw'vndent I'r.im a S . h i W on't I tit Laughing! U in . H ie University A Cappella Choir began Tuesday the first of tw > tours planned for the 1967-68 h*>ol year, marking the first • Mr since tile choir began tour­ ing in 1959 iii it two trips to var­ ious Texas cities have been plan­ 'd rather than tho one annual spring tour in April. The first four-day tour w ill take the choir to West Columbia. An- I ’.OB, Pasadena, Freeport. Cor- pus Christi, Brownsville, Karlin- g< M Allen, and Kingsville. The ch ir w ill be performing lioth for bi ch school assembly programs and civic audiences. Shortly after ifs return to Aus­ tin the A Cappella members w ill get ready for their first perform­ ance of the second semester, sing­ ing for the Hate convention of the Texas Music Educator's As­ sociation Fob. IO. This w ill be tie erorid appearance of the A C pp* ! ! Choir for this conven­ tion and the fourth appearance by ti e University Choral Organ­ ize (i‘ > in conjunction with this convention in the past nine years, I HELD OVER! mm Monday thru Friday — All Seats 50c ’til 2:15 P.M 'Marvelous! Entertaining!” — William Wolf, Cue Mag- a»zme 'O N E OF THOSE RARE ENTER. TAINMENTS! FOR PEOPLE W H O REALLY LOVE FILMS, SEEING THIS ONE IS LIKE COM ING HOME AGAIN ! Forman has ar Sieved *-e real ° ^ n na ^ / / / / J I n gJL Mature Audience Film NOW PLAYING... WITH TERROR! on a TRIBAL STOMP! m m Bull Skinner, Imports From Mexico Igenoua Art, Jewelry, Cloth: D eco rative Accessories 1705 Nueces Street CALLING to remind YOU... INTERSTATE VARSITY TH EATRE I AUDREY ^HEPBURN ALAN ARKIN : RICHARD I CRENNA Don’t M iss This Picture! An Oscar Nominee For Sure! ■ EFREM ZIMBALIST JR. **— B R O M W X B H 8 B S U O S . i t v t N A N T S T t C HMI C OC Of ? * I N T E R S T A T E AUSTIN A n n • p m o n u r n AtHACIWT TO T m A t t I THEATRE Fabulous Htro! Famous Nos*I I de Bergerac to-l la rr-.n g MALA POWERS y William mnct ^ S t a r t s T O M O W R Q W O The Taminq of the Shrew K' ,Z'BK'H IEE PARKING AT ALL TIMES A M ER IC A N A TMI Ant AK 3-AA41 G O N E W IT H T H E W IN D T ti.oo i nut tat I V a t u r i» r n A M ER IC A N A 1 ^ % at ***«' Smoking l'rrmitted K orkin * C hair "ra ta Km* Carking Held O ver Positively Last Week THE GOOD * THE BAD g/ C U N T EASTWOOD CUKES* AXD E U WALLA CH rite next white man who insults me gets a one way ticket to the graveyard!” 50c Til 2 P.M. I0t HUBS* PICTURES Presents SIDNEY POITIER Open 1:45 Features: 2 v'-t -8- IO The Incident' hits home with express train impact. Full blast drama...gives it to you straight!" mimcmni. New York Daily News " “ i n c u m R T SM M ?? ■ SF J,J ST 'G B • HSJpr O ff • ROK ST A B Ii W MS.lS-T9lff W. WTT' BWC* RFfSS UM X MDKPOf llOHSt^r«EIM® M T A C C ; U • IL .-* ( M N M , . How is she in the clutch? Since you're nuzzling her on the s u t way, I figure anything can happen!” S T A T E FEATURES: 12:20-2:15-4:10 6:05 - 8:00- 9:55 RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES TECHNICO LOR* 68 CACTU when you Register! Just tell the fee-fixer you want to Ord 68 Cactus, then p a y the ch a rge afom your other fees. 1968 CACTUS $7.35 plus 22c tax ive Aready registered, come by Journa’ism Wednesday, Jan. JI, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 The Daily Texan Classified Ads C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S E a c h W o r d (15 w o rd m in im u m ) M in im u m O n a rg a • S tu d e n t ra te • E a c h a d d itio n a l tim # Issues 20 C o n s e n t i v e (10-w ord m n m u m ) o ne tim * ................ ............... .. ................................ $ .04 ....................................... .. $ 1.20 . . . . $ .50 $ .25 IO w ord s .................................................................. .. ) 8.00 15 w ord s ................................................................................ $10 00 ........................................................................... .. $13 00 20 w ord s C la s s ifie d D is p la y I co E a c h A d d itio n a l T im * .............. .......................... .. rn" t one inch one t i m * $ 1.20 $ I . I O ( N o c o p y c h a n g * fo r c o n s e c u tiv e issue rates ) • N E W L O W S T U D E N T P A T E S IO words or less fo r 50c th * first tim e 25c * a c h a d d itio n a l tim e. S tu d e n t m ust show A u d ito rs r e c e ip t and p a y in a d ­ Jo u rn a lis m 8!dg. in from to 4:30 p.m . M o n d a y thro u g h 107 v a n c e 8 a rn. F rid a y . C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G D E A D L I N E S T u esd a y Tesan ............................................ M o n d a y 3:30 p m. W e d n e s d a y Te»ao ..................................... T uesd ay, 3 30 p.m. . . . . W e d n e s d a y , 3 30 p rn. Thursday T e .a n ........................ F r id a y T a ,a n S u n d a y Te«an .............................................. T h u rsd a y ................................................ F rid a y , 3 30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. In th * e v e n t o f erro rs m a d e in an a d v e rtise m e n t, im ­ m e d ia te no t ic * m u tt b e g iva n as the p u n is h e rs a r* resp o n sib le fo r o n !y one in c o rre c t tnterfio n. G R 1 -5 2 4 4 Miscellaneous Miscellaneous Furnished Apartments Room and Board Furnished Houses 3 Al -e I ' 'A L C l for Charter lob*, budget ct urnmer - Bl .. . i ,n' • a * P A R K IN G W A IT IN G f o r o o p o T ' r a il O R 1-3611 end j w aif »:.! caturetaj’, t O D ___________. __ 3 -R O O M S, rinsed in porch. Furnished, heat ai r condite a ir conditions* Clears, quiet, rooms, N c< JIO per semester 2411 NtMWp’ neighborhood O R 2 .21 ti E R E P A IR S ? it My (dom pit to f Au 5 rake %, Overhauls, DANA BEAR NURSERY 405 E. 17th S P A C K available for two men large \ man apartment; utilities paid m a d . pool, welkins distance ft nm catnpu*. SSO mon'..- too K loth Street. 478 5334 in r di ie like atmosphere. S A 5-(MS I R 2 7 2 15 K CONTEMPORARY EFFICIENCY * i BA R G A IN S " - 'n r e m and Everything. ie s DD- to a n n , on riins:i!nm(,nt H I 4 y,-^. Hie’ Ad Fir- J02S south U m a r . W e u k e Item* change ICI I I .ASK in P a ap*}'rho|pg> Marting Fe bi ii* a ry 15th at t'lty Hail Council Room 7 p.m. F o r information fa ll O L 3-3377 N E L S O N 'S G IF T S handmade Indian Jew r y le y B. Nelson. Prop. 4‘ l l Mexu an Im p o rt' a. Cong m a , h i 4-3*14 I P AV* C A P IT O L Be au ty College. H a ir styling award j » id s (,:,(u1h up* at Kith. Open B a m jpa lf) p m OR I’ '\it* I Furnished Apartments Now buying and tradmg P ie yboy magazine, id any kind — hardback or peuer- j book! backs, car etereo tape,, guitar*, cow*, bu y. Cle*, m ag a n n e i murdercycte*. typewriter* men * clothe*, goats, golf dub*, tape record er», television*, stamp* and collection*, ra S P A C E available for aln* « men and women student*. Blackstone Apartments. G R 8 - I cam era*, record player*, phonograph E U R O P E STUDENT TRAVEL INC. Thayer and Group FI obis from $245 rani for that has brett op~ w Ii m ark our fifth it?on of tilts# pith liar program* have I ravel anent* oftty hr year after our 5531. or the i*a.-t pa sd ye; unred h relied la made t at on* f th natl* special rte cor cd, bonded rn charter at font and T A N G L E W O O D North one and two bedene... A ttn * five spacious scuba gear. apartment*. Avail* it*]** February lit. Excellent location, pool* O L I’ 0rt * ” '* onvemenre w . J n":,!!ls J>H t* ure n a u tic al Mumms. Mf! Ii) in fireplug*. A A RO N , Bu yer and Trader. 80:1 ' ma d service assures clean neat surround 'A * and ^regular m eal* elim inate the h a t* id* Red R iver. of end of the month scrimping. gun*. hunting and fishing equipment, furniture and household good* we**** lpm* ,n . . . W e ’re going USED BOOKS THE BOOK STALL 5633 Buntal Rd. P R IV A T E room and bam at rear of home Nice residential arc*. W ill f a d e room nmI. hoard for bab. bitting 27D6 Greenlee Drive i. Ft 2-5560. GOVERNOR'S DISTINGUISHED New Men s Dorm Room and Board "ON THE DRAG ‘ 2612 GUADALUPE K N O R M O U Estates B mx dock ' $160. H I 4 I- Co ot poi table. *12.50 r e n t bi(tek/||hite TV 11250 • *15-50 month I l a 50 weekly no . Tape recorder* Alpha T v , O L 2-4057 j answer, CIE 2-2602 For Rent Typing 2 S I I Pearl. Ca G R 2-6721/or Information Call G R 6 5658 inc d*> * a week Ser-. ng th re m eal* two on cub day, J men r>v>m», air-condit.oned, in­ tercom, maid service, wall-to-wau carpeting drape* in every room color T V lounge*, rec­ reation a a. r m ater service. UNIVERSITY HOUSE M EN S D O R M IT O R Y 2 ' ■ 0 N ■=•■ •»* G R 6 485S — EXC ELLEN T FO O D — SO M E S IN G L E S LEFT — PLUSH C O FO L O U N G E — A IR C O N D IT IO N E D — M A ID SER V IC E R E A SO N A B LE RATES TYPIST La text model IB M executive with preferred Documentary type Report*, brief* dissert* flan*. and thexe* Guaranteed accurate R E A D Y W H E N P R O M IS E D t i n Your!I G R 7-2772 [ » f t . r 1:00 p .m .). VZ® Hava Moved! Just North of 2 ’th & Guadalupe //{vazAa J im yjA U L M B A . V M B A . Typing. MultilithmC Binding A Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service tailored to the needs of University students. Special keyboard equipment language. rn enc*, and engineering these* and diaser- U t ions for Phone G R 2.7210 and G R 2 7677 2 !>7 Hem im i.'I Park F O U R Rirs.kv Campus Theses. DhuerUttw is. typed at home. ( I B M ) Rea* H I 2 8504 IS year* of typing for I ra N O L K room with private entrance H id 1 University of Texas student*. E le c tric type- I I I ion Iw/vs18rn TxtG P U cm a wt**« son Hou*e. 2310 R io Grande. G R 8-7150. — * * , •*ymb* , inuit u ng, mimeograph- A P rd M s io n a l assist each student: typing service d e ig n ed to ins. di IG 2-7008 J U S T I,.IK E new Km Uh Corona Stan-lard typew riter Only J I Cal! 461 Still M A T U R E female to share luxury apa Roommate W a n te d rtment * X P E R I B N U K betis:. W ork! These*, dissertations (xym a t home. 836-1586. Mrs. ! Simpson. HONDA SPORTS CAR IO mpg. Dun o lapan DOH*", 4 ch• h* .HSI imported from •vtA1 rpm, * n cr h a h gmeertng dassie In perfect condition Only a few in US. See at MOV Cherry lgine OK 2-5611 and used appliance* We«ttnghou*w New stereoe* and T \ 't Idn.'bed and unfinished rocking chair*, chest*, bar *tooi«, and *tu- dent decks. Ke< liner*, day be!« sleepers^ CARTER & KEY ENTERPRISES 174 N . L a m a r 836 127? 7 AK' - Toy white Boodle* 5 weeks <>R I i i near Campus. ISS. G R 2-81.76. MA L E R E A S O N A B L E rates, 708 East Apt A. 478-Xi'!8, 477-2432 F E M A L E Roommate: Nice apa rtm en t Im m ediately. OI i tempus. Needed to i alk 8- R< a im M A T E wanted: |6(7. month inci ti! ixxR, walking distance bdl* maid. 1341, 80.7 W, 28th, No. 103. FEM Al, mrxle tment . GRS 3(g>5 Si'. M A L E Roommate to sh .me 2 - h«..| a p a rtm tfit J-K) month Ail billa pa : Infield. No. 4. Aft*- 4 p m . M A U S . L ei ye one • 'am pul, $;m mot >m ai>,i ttment. Near M A L K University to comfortable 2 bedn-xm apartn-apt 8 m quiet Heights>'hood. R e n ,"nab!** 478-CU tit in fr it w , - r s F E M A L E roomm for sn md i m d or apartment needed 47S Aiel i a ti* ii os VIRGINIA CALHOUN TYPING SERVICE rrofe*.' .rial Ty ping All Fields XEROX M u ttllthing a n-1 Binding on Theses ta d Dissertation* 130! F iqewood 478-2636 T V P I NO done information c immed'at e ll 4 5 4 4 ; ely. 35c a page More bi. C o r o cutin# 'I U N T K ) her lege eiectnc. '4 n r P W T for these*, brief* secretary with R B A Exe- Mr*. Fow ier, O L 3-kt>,)0. T Y P IX T a! . G IH M s, UL 3 Theses. .24 Knefs. Report*. M r* We hlave Moved! Just fsfetrfk of 271H & Guadalupe 1957 C H E V Y , V H, Ste!, stick *hift, 4 1215 worth white sidewall tires, radio J41XI or best offer, .ti*15 <1 reHi speaker w hhI Road, after 5, l A V A L l & t Apt* On# or two 2 bedroom M3. MI bn a KIHM' 478-057.S .707 E a s t V IT ll Infos of F lie ce EUROPE GROUP & Cf IART FR FLIGHTS $215.00 New V o'lt-Lisbf'rt, Ro $245.00 d Trip mn I Trip $319.00 $-London Round I USI V U ' NTS AN L _ , -i e , Dallas. UT .TY d W c r d A 1 Fe e sure co-ed /his spring- That's right, We're tak'ng i applications from both men : and women for the spring J semester. ft’s c ur formula r >r a ; ( eterogenous happening, p | Come on over and heip us 31 mix it up. See our big ad in this same i paper for all the straight j poop. The Orange & W h ite 2 . ; F j - ’and** F nae: 4 '6 4648 20 Prisoners Reported She* Inmate Reveals Sadistic Tale R* The A - vHi.ited Pres* Cl M MINS PRISO N FA RM , Ark. An inmate whose lon^i memory of a graveyard for forgotten men led to the unearthing of three skeletoas claimed Tuesday that 20 other Arkansas State prison­ ers were shot to death on Labor Day of 1910. Reuben Johnson, '>9, a hefty 6-footer who first went to prison in 19.37 for killing his brother, said that years ago he helped bury IO or 12 convicts who were ' sh it with a pistol, a shotgun or just beaten to death.” Most of them were Negroes, Johns n said, adding: "But they killed some white ones on Labor Day in 1910. They killed a bunch of them — I d say about 20 . . . “ We were all scared. I thought I was going to get if. A lot of mornings I wouldn't I thought come back to the budding.” Listed as F.srapr. Edward Barren Jr.. the prison physician, said earlier; “ I feel rea- nobly certain there are more bcd'es out there . . . as many as ITO, if not more.” International Club Plans Conference Students planning to partici­ pate in or serve as hosts for the March 1-2 International Students Conference may register now in Union Building .312. Tile conference is sponsored by the International Club and is ex­ pected to attract student repre­ sentatives from more than 50 countries who are presently at­ tending colleges and universi­ ties in the United States. LAWBOOKS Engineering Books and Equipment ART SUPPLIES A ll Your School Supplies A t HEMPHILL'S 25th and San Jacinto (And N o Long Lines!) HEMPHILL ' f l r I W alk; °g D stance to Campus I I bedroom furnished aivartment*, all built-in* t v t able pa d by owner. To see Water, ga after 6 . : pin mr ‘ »R 6-9971 M A R K I V 3101 Cedar I V U K 8 A U .I KS A P A R T M K N T On# bedroom J I HI m u th. All bill* paid 452-01HK, N K W one ledtoom near ; Apt* , 280ti swisher See Manager. Oronanche F U R N IS H E D garage apartment. lYtvate, neat. one or J,).'), KH F a st 42nd. H o 5-7594 ■*u pe sons E I S A B IN O A P T S . 24001 Sabine bedrooms D S[)< trill I, 2 balli* furnished Dishwasher I uol, A *• All b ii* paid. J ITO per month G R 7-7179 L O N G H A V E N A P T S. 2 3r d & San G a b rie l M A R T IN D K Gutter $295 Rmith-Corona unused WO Call 477-7 ’ ••ti-*’ "a t condition; “ typewriter Vox C and c, th e se i 5 * a 'Hi a I Ar* inenta! Org . Fender t ' rn*-'ti ore i and priced to P. M J - L 444 1714. in 3 Ca o . I a n d 2 b * 3room a p a rtm e n ts , fu rn ish ed I I from : c o n d itio n e r!. 2 b !ock* PRT Y a I E room (or man VV board. The Bowen House. Ut G U H A R L E S S O N S Help W a n te d PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT erst a n d re c ; s.,p e n se ar A fin : r a n t ~ Furnished Rooms •:r men 14*25. Day work •Ult, 5 p 'll - l l p ll!, aet Road t il, 2-3821 Apr E X C E L L E N T aceomodat! men * residence one blo Central hest A C Ai**! ; me managers. G R 8-7(187 ns in available k from Fountain, opening* tor part VV vN T K l i . have cai Chicken 19 On! t, Rt >M F O K VI )%ate bath. mars in gar ut house » i 3407 JarrotL GR 8 78J P H Y S I* 'I a : I' list)*'*. M A L E up; without - bath. pssai >. part ti B y apl N E E D 5 M E N i Fem ale QU UTI', spacious, h**m*.v. prtwi ct A «• Mr* Pilg rim 47(7144(1. 4 upperclassman B R I D G E W A Y IH>rmi!m> fo r V bun k* Campus m aid se; vice G R 8-1947. G R 2-0239. VV .-h F U R N IS H E D room kitchen privilege* A fter t / W a M W B E D R O O M for ma quiet |30 OO G R tx th ! i I 'sat; : Hi is area ident, private home, Ai VV- Sp rin g Vacanc ’ e s G r ock N o rth c f C am p .s W E R T H ST U D EN T H O U S E F o r M e n j 2620 W ch ta G R I 2400 P L E A S A N T room A ir cond:* m*>nth. 816 VV. Kith Street tried 535 per I G R 2-1474 Want to— BUY, SELL, ? University student*, proem: language, g theses and eraser- for 2-3210 a r d G R 2 7677 Hem phill P a rk e x p e r i e n c e ;ID T Y P IN O K E R V IC K . Acct!- •ate, Feast*sable, near Allandaie HO 5- T H X R K .8 . disscelation* br :e{*. report*. Sel­ enc** anti Kiniguage gymbo ls. IH M Minimum 35*; page Mrsl Anthony vJI. 4-3879. T H E O N L Y T Y P I N G S E R V I C E A e r o J t h * S t r e e t fro m C a m p u s . I h a n g t a g # red fa* For 3Ti W 472 0446 K e y puftchinq A with m any aa to act these* ami