W Bather: Fair, Cool • Low 39 • High 52 T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The University of Texas Texas Legislature Reviewed See Panorama • Vol. 66 Price Rve Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JANUAP Twenty-six Page* In Two Section* No. IOO Board to Consider Four Land Projects By LUPE ZAMARRIPA The Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System, Monday will con­ sider a request from the University for endorsement of free acquisition of a tract of land from the federal government. In a proposal to the Coordinating Board, the University listed four projects for which the land can be used, James H. Colvin, University business manager, said. According to the proposal, a geomagnetic micropulsation recording station and an astronomical observatory will be establish­ ed. The tract can also be used for research In millimeter wave sciences and for re­ search in antennas and propagation. The latter, submitted by the Electrical Engineering Research Laboratory, will con­ cern itself with the effects of the atmos­ phere on transmission of radio waves, Col­ vin said. The tract of land is located 18 miles west of Austin at the site of a former Nike missile base. As far as the land is concerned, “all four projects can go on it,” Colvin said. The regular quarterly meeting, which Students Unite In Tuition Protest Student* protesting the proposed tuition hike met In the Union Building Friday to discuss possible methods for making their protestations heard by the Texas Legisla­ tors (his session. "We got better than 250 signatures In ■M boar," said James Damon, a gradu­ ate student, who called the meeting. He toad th* petition directed to Gov. John formally to the group and asked for volun­ teers to man a petition booth outside the ttatoo Building. When John Lefeber of the Young Demo­ crat* arrived at the meeting, It was learned (hat th* United Front Against the Tuition Hike, a coalition of Young Democrats, Young Republicans, Student Religious Lib­ erals, Students for a Democratic Society, end other interested groups, will be active Mort semester In campaigns to block the tuition hike. “The Students' Association has been doing ground work on this thing for two months,” Lefeber said. A meeting of the United Front Against th# Tuition Hike is planned for Tuesday. The group will reportedly concentrate on contacting students during registration for their parents, next semester, contacting end encouraging the movement at other state-supported campuses throughout Texas. will be held at 9:30 a.m. at the Barcelona Room of the Crest Motor Inn, will also con­ sider : • financing of previously approved de­ gree programs; jects ; • proposals for educational research pro­ • approval of priority lists of schools to receive federal funds for undergraduate Instructional equipment; • recommendations on nursing educa­ tion; fiscal year; tricts. • a revised operating budget for the 1967 • the dissolution of junior college dis­ A request from Southwest Texas State College for endorsement of the purchase of land adjacent to the college-owned prop­ erty will also be considered. Included in the priority list to receive federal funds for laboratory and other specialized equipment are Angelo State, South Texas. San Antonio, and Stephen F. Austin colleges. Dr Jack Williams, commissioner of the Coordinating Board, did not comment on the tuition hike proposal which was sub­ mitted at the last quarterly meeting. The tuition hike will be considered by the Six­ tieth Legislature. Williams did note that arguments pre­ sented by The Daily Texan were “a poor defense,” against the tuition increase. LAST YEAR’S FIGURES indicate that 76.2 per cent of state-supported colleges and universities charged higher tuition and re­ quired fees to in-state students than did Texas. Dr. Williams said. Out-of-state tui­ tion and fees were higher in 68.3 per cent of the other state-supported schools. Dr. Williams estimated that 88 per cent of state-supported schools now charge high­ er tuition and fees to ln-state students than does Texas and 80 per cent now charge higher tuition and fees to out-of-state stu­ dents. The University, among major state-sup­ ported universities, has the lowest in-state tuition and required fee charges in the na­ tion, Williams said. The charge is $144 per academic year. ACCORDING TO A REPORT from the Coordinating Board, the median tuition and required fees for ln-state students at Texas colleges and universities is now $164 per academic year. The median at the 97 mem­ ber institutions of the land-grant and Stat* University Association Is now $333; and the median at the 206 schools of the Stat* College Association is $250. Dr. Williams also pointed out that In the the private colleges and universities in State, tuition and fees ranged from $300 to $1,600. The amount of money Texas spends for education cannot be compared with other states, Williams said. “You can’t have a low tax structure and a low tuition and ex­ pect to have top-flight schools,” he said. Students doing last-minute research and assignments line up in the reserve book tuition In the Undergraduate Library. The Line-Up 1968 Seen Victory by GOP Republican Executive Committee Hears Call for 'Party Solidarity1 By GEORGE KUEMPEL Texas Republican leaders, elated by the national and state gains In the November general elections, predicted here Saturday a GOP presidential victory In 1968, that Sparking the optimism was the State's Number I Republican, Sen. John Tower, who said if “ the political climate stays as it Ls," tile Republicans can win. THE PREDICTIONS came In the closing session of a two-day meeting here of the Republican State Executive Committee. Tower called for party solidarity and told officials that the GGP had proved it­ self in his November victory over toen- Atty. Gen. Waggoner Carr. “We were opposed by one of the most powerful political organizations this state has ever seen,” the senator said. THE REPUBLICANS also used the ses­ sion to snipe at the Johnson Administra­ tion. “The Democrats promised peace but gave us war. The Democrats promised pros­ perity—and will have given us three tax increases In two years plus the cruelest tax of all—Inflation,” said Peter O’Don­ nell Jr., Republican State chairman. O’Donnell listed two “weaknesses” which he said have sprung up In the Democratic ranks—inter-party conflicts and a “credi­ bility crisis.” "THE DEMOCRATS are divided by philosophy, personality, and pursuit of power. The conflict between President John­ son and Sen. (Robert) Kennedy at the na­ tional level and between Gov. Connally and Sen. Yarborough in Texas is bitter and runs deep with little chance of reconcilia* tion.” The “credibility crisis” was created by President Johnson, O'Donnell said, and "casts a shadow over all the statement* end acts of his administration.” "Looking ahead, we have an excellent chance to elect a Republican president in Carbon Monoxide Gas May Cause Accidents By the Associated Pres* Detroit Concentrations of poisonous carbon mon­ oxide may be the cause of auto accidents on Detroit's freeways during traffic jams. That was indicated Saturday In the re­ sults of a study completed recently by the US Public Health Service. Morton Sterling, chief of Detroit’s Air Pollution Control Agency, said the study of Detroit and six other major cities was unique and its implications could not be dismissed. Ninety-eight per cent of the carbon mon­ oxide in the community comes from auto­ mobiles, Sterling said, adding, “If it is causing safety problems, we have to get rid of the tiling that causes it, the auto engine, or modify it. 1968 and to make further gains in Texas,* O'Donnell said. TOWER WARNED, however, that th* their Democrats had a way of solving “differences” at election time, but said: “If the political climate stays aa It la, I predict we will elect a Republican presi­ dent in 1968. . . .” Tower said that the party must not slow Its efforts but added, “ I believe that now the two-party system is a reality in Tex­ as.” Fulfilling a campaign promise. Tower told the committeemen that he will return to Vietnam Jan. 28 for a three-week inspec­ tion tour. “The situation there is changing and I want to keep abreast of it,” he said. Tower, who twice visited Southeast Asia as a member of the Senate Armed Service* Committee, promised during his campaign to return to Vietnam “as soon as possible” alter his election. STOPS SCHEDULED on toe tour will in- dude Hong Kong, Thailand, Nationalist China (Formosa), and South Korea, the senator said. He will return Feb. 15. Tower, who campaigned for a strong and firm stand against Communist aggression In Vietnam, said tost he will "give tit* President anything he asks for in prosecu­ tion of the war in Southeast Asia.” In a resolution, the 62-member commie tee also urged the Congress to pass a plan for “sharing federal Income tax receipts with the state and local government* . . .* ANOTHER RESOLUTION called for the US to use the necessary military and di­ plomatic pressures to stop the war In Viet­ nam “without toe prolonged and unneces­ sary sacrifice of American lives.” In analyzing the results of toe November elections, O’Donnell said (hat the Repub­ lican support from Latin Americans had grown from 7 per cent in 1964 to approxi­ mately 25 per cent. He said that 25,000 persons had contrib­ uted to the state party fund and to the Tower campaign fund. It was also pointed out that Tower had carried more counties than Eisenhower, picked up 19 of 23 congressional district* and captured a 200,000 vote margin ever Carr. WE HAVE INCREASED numbers oi of­ ficeholders in more strategic positions gib­ ing a stronger political base backed by a record number of volunteers, the broadest financial base in history, and on issues th* tide has turned and is now running strong­ ly in our favor,” O’Donnell said. Committeemen were also addressed by state Senator Henry Grover, the first Re­ publican s t a t e senator since 1923, and Representative Malouf Abraham, Frank Cahoon, and Chuck Scoggins. County R e­ publican officials were also Introduced. On the state level, Republican National Committeeman Albert B. Fay the group that the effort on the election of e governor had been passed over last year in order to concentrate on the re-election of Tower. told Senator John Tower . . . speaks to members of Republican executive committee. Photo by Steve P e ts US Marine Casualties Moderate in Attack irregulars clashed late Saturday night, and a Vietnamese government spokesman said 26 Communist soldiers w en killed. HE DESCRIBED Vietnamese casualties as light The civilian irregulars are a militia or­ ganization of the South Vietnamese armed forces. US Special Forces—Green Beret— advisers usually are stationed at their camps. Earlier reports said the Viet Cong had attacked a Green Beret camp at Loc Ninh, 70 miles north of Saigon, but toe official Vietnamese account Sunday placed toe ao- don at toe civilian irregulars’ camp of Bo Due IO miles farther north. The Vietna­ mese report did not Indicate if any Amer­ icans were involved in toe fighting. ELSEWHERE, US B52s rained explosives a mile below the border demilitarized zone Saturday, raising speculation that the air attack was against fresh battalions moved in by Hanoi for another attempt to over­ run South Vietnamese northern provinces. Tons of bombs from the eight-engine US Stratofortresses churned up that sector of jungled Quang Tri Province, where US Marines and South Vietnamese troops turned back two heavy incursions of th* enemy regulars last year. By the Associated Pres* Saigon A US Marin* company battled fear six and a half hours against Viet Cong defend­ ing a hamlet IS miles south of Da Nang and killed 61 of the enemy, a US spokes­ man announced Sunday. He described casualties among the 235 Marine* taking part in the fierce fight Saturday as moderate. Under reporting ground rules, casualties are t e r m e d as "light, moderate, or heavy.” THE SPOKESMAN SAID the helicopter- borne company of Marines came under mortar and small arms fir* while ap­ proaching the helicopter landing zone out­ side the hamlet The company then deployed In the ham­ let, US headquarters said, and “met sus­ tained resistance from a large number of enemy.” The Marine raid was supported by mor­ tar and artillery fire. US headquarters said the Marine raiding party was helicopter- lifted out of the battle zone before night­ fall, six hours and 35 minutes after they launched the raid. In other ground operations, US forces pushing through jungles of the Iron Tri­ angle north of Saigon reported Sunday that Communist losses rose beyond 526 men In the week-old drive, the war’s big­ gest US HEADQUARTERS reported scattered fights in the campaign 20 to 30 miles north of Saigon. Headquarters also reported the number of villagers and peasants who have been evacuated from the Iron Triangle had risen to 5,500. Near the Cambodian border, Viet Cong guerrillas and South Vietnamese civilian Nationalist Fliers Attacked by Reds By the Associated Press Taipei, Formosa Four Chinese Nationalist planes on patrol over Formosa Strait tangled with a dozen Communist Chinese MiG-19s Friday at a height of 40,000 feet and shot down two of them, air force officers said. Informed sources said the Nationalists were flying missile-equipped F-104 S ta rfin t­ ers, supplied by the United States, when they came under Communist attack. The brief encounter took place northeast of the Nationalist island fortress of Quemoy. Ail four Nationalist planes returned safety to their base, the Defense Ministry said. Without mentioning the air battle, Radio Peking said Communist Chinese planes shot down a Nationalist F-104 jet fighter over the southeast mainland. This could be in the Formosa Strait area although Peking did not say so. The battle with the Communist jets was the first in almost seven years reported by Chinese Nationalists. Loyal Mao Tse-tung Forces Strike Enemies With Military, Social Blows By the Associated Press to in According Tokyo Peking radio said Saturday forces loyal to Mao Tse-tung dealt new blows to their foes both in army and civilian life. But Japanese reports from the Chinese capital declared that supporters of President Liu Shao-chi fought back the continuing power struggle gripping Communist China. the broadcast, Marshall Yeh Chien-yang, a member of the Polit­ buro, said the Mao forces had launched “an all-out total offensive against bour­ geois reactionaries” and that they have begun “to score a great victory.” He con­ ceded that a handful of “ those within the party who are in authority and a small number of diehards” are offering resist­ ance, but claimed they “have begun to fall on all fronts.” A J AI* AN ESE REPORTER in Peking said that Red army troops stormed a hide­ out of pro-Liu army officers in the west­ ern China city of Lanchow and captured scores of dissidents. The correspondent quoted a wall poster as saying the raid occurred last Tuesday in the Yellow River city 700 miles west of Peking. Peking radio said the pro-Mao force* had gained the upper hand in Shanghai, where earlier in the month there were reports of labor unrest and clashes be­ tween workers and the Red Guards. Japanese correspondents for Yomirul, Sansei, end the Japanese Broadcasting Co. all filed reports from Peking saying Presi­ dent Liu was demanding a retraction of Ins alleged “self-criticism” given wide publi­ cation last month. They quoted the wall posters which were being used apparently by both factions as a major propaganda device. Peking radio has spoken previously cf a struggle involving a small but influen­ tial group of anti-Mao military leaders, and among the latest purge victims was Gen. Liu Chih-chien, the Number 2 man In charge of ideology for the army. raid identified THE WALL POSTER reporting the Lan­ chow the dissidents as “ black military elements” loyal to Gen. Liu. They said all the documents of the dissidents were seized by the 750th Lant- zu Regiment in Lanchow. Peking radio said that revolutionaries in factories, agricultural areas, party organi­ zations, and schools have, “joined hands in forming a pro-Mao grand alliance.” It quoted a correspondent of Wen Jul Pao, a Shanghai newspaper, saying the al­ liance has generated “a red storm of the great proletarian cultural revolution of the city.” By proletarian cultural revolution the radio means the current purge of anti- Mao elements. THE BROADCAST added that the pro- Mao forces in the League of Communist Youths had seized a handful of revision­ in the ists described as taking cover league’s City Committee, but did not say when. Die correspondent of the Kyodo new* service in Peking reported that pro-Mao Red Guards and workers seized and took control of Peking's central radio broad­ casting station, thus giving Mao’s support­ ers a vital outlet to broadcast rallying calls. The report had some puzzling aspects, since there had been no indication in Pe­ king broadcast the pro-Mao forces were not in control of all broadcasting services. that MOSCOW RADIO claimed that an eco­ nomic crisis threatened Peking with paraly­ sis of factories and rail communications by strikes. Workers were said to be stag­ ing walkouts in Shanghai, Nanking, and Urunchi. Japanese Foreign Ministry sources in Tokyo said the recall to Peking of diplo­ mats, bankers, and newspaper correspond­ ents from Asia, Africa, and Europe her­ alded a drop in Peking's hitherto strong diplomatic offensive. Tangjug, the Yugoslav news agency, re­ ported to Belgrade from Peking that the Central Committee of the Chinese Com­ munist party had ordered the army to be­ gin a countrywide program of military- political training for the Red Guard. It said the aim was to introduce more disci­ pline in the ranks of the Red Guard, es­ pecially in relation to the army. Donations Also Help UT Never Have So Many Known So Little About So Much Finals Can ( ), Cannot ( ) Be Fun The University does not operate on government funds and student fees alone. Private donations also have helped to m ake the University one of the foremost centers of higher education in the nation, and certainly the best in the Southwest. Gifts and donations come in many forms and sizes; all of them are helpful. All are appreciated. One type of gift which helps the University become an outstanding educational center is the endowed professorship. It enables the U n iv e r s ity to augm ent the regular salary' of an out­ standing scholar or professional. This allows the Univer­ sity to gain and m aintain some of the best brains available. Last week, the Jesse II. Jones Professorship in the G raduate School of Business was presented to the Univer­ sity by the Houston Endowment Foundation to honor the memory' of the late Houston publisher and financier. The Jones professorship is somewhat special in th at it is the first endowed professorship in business adm inistration a t the University. Tile professorship in business certainly will be helpful to the University and to society. Education is no longer provincial as it used to be. This is becoming the age of the com puter and the specialist. Information gathers so rapidly in so many fields that it is difficult to keep pace with it. Thus, there is considerable competition for quality I 4lent. W ith the aid of this professorship and others, the University will be able to help supply that superior talent. UT Receives Sportsmanship Award The University received the Southwest Conference Sportsmanship Award Saturday during half-time activi­ ties of the Texas Tech-Texas basketball game. This marks the first time that this school has received the award since the inception of the prize. The award U based on the good sportsmanship exhib­ ited by team players and the student body at the sports activities. Furthermore, the award committee considers not only football, but all competing sports. The University can be proud to receive the award. We only can regret that the award was so late in coming to the school To retain the Sportsmanship Award next year and the years to follow, the University will have to be worthy of i t We hope that the school will be true to that task. Fuzzy Thinking When Rep. Adam Clayton Powell had his seat taken away from him recently, some of his avid supporters sport­ ed signs of “Powell No, Johnson No.” This inferred that if Powell was denied his seat permanently, the Negroes of America for at least Powell’s supporters) would not vote for President Johnson in 1968. Such statements represent shallow and fuzzy thinking since it has been President Johnson who has accomplished more for the Negro than any other president since Lincoln. Carl T. Rowan, the distinguished Negro columnist, has put the entire mood rather succinctly: ” . . . despite the fact that he (Johnson) has proposed and passed more civil rights legislation than any other President, it’s the so-called liberals who keep abusing and Insulting the President Well, to hell with ’em. "With the white backlash so potent last fall, and the Republicans spreading the word that the Great Society is finished, the President can just pull in his horns and coast on his laurels. Let the damned phony liberals see what they can get without him!” Grassroots Philosophy A university is an institution that has room for 2,000 in its classrooms and 50,000 in its stadium. —The Shamokin (Pa.) Citizen PEANUTS / a m . r e d b a r o n N I AT LAST (JE I M E E ' FACE ’0 F A C E ! T H E R E I S R E E R E C T IN W R E ¥ £ £ , N O ? V E 5 , I A M T R E FA N O U S R I O T uJiTH THE A L L IE S P E R H A P S TH ERE 1$ A L S O A U TH E FEAR IN M R EVE?, NC; By FLUFFY GEORGE Editorial Page Assistant A s m any decisions as you are forced to make during finals, one more deci­ sion couldn’t hurt anything. Chances are, a decision to use good study tech­ niques could make finals a little less painful this sem ester. With finals hovering, most students anticipate one or more of the following: • Loss of sleep. • No sleep. • Jittery nerves. • Nervous breakdown • Large coffee bill. • Bad grades. • Vietnam. The most often purported rem edy for this situation is study as you go along. “ ARE YOU KIDDING?” said one stu­ dent. “ Let’s be real about this.” Being real, the average student feels less than prepared for finals. “ How do you study for finals? Well, first of all, you get a bunch of pills,” replied one coed. “ Then you get a fifth of Chevis, a good M ammas and Pappas album, and a carton of cigarettes.” chimed in her roommate. "Then, you completely blow your test, and you can't understand why,” she added. THOUGH SAID flippantly, taking pills during finals does not necessarily m ean taking No-Doz. “ Who wants to stay up?” asked a confident graduating sen­ ior. In a random survey, 16 out of 20 stu­ dents feel that it is not a m atter of choice, and freely adm itted taking dex- amyl, dexedrine, or benzedrine to aid study-endurance. None of these students feel alone. “ You have to,” said a tie and coat- clad scholarship recipient. “ It’s not that you’re too lazy to study during the se­ m ester. There are so many other things which take up your tim e.” “ IT’S THE UNIVERSITY’S fault,” said his friend. “If you have two cr three finals right in a row, you can't possibly have enough time to adequate- ly review without pills.” Illegal or not, "just ask around, every­ body has got pills or knows how to get them ,” replied one boy. "Black m ar­ ket sellers are making a profit in every dorm .” "Not necessarily pure dope,” said an­ other. "But diet pills—everybody’s got diet pills." " I know a pharm acy student who has a two-gallon ja r of dex. He sells it to his friends,” said one coed. DRUGS ARE FREELY sold in Mex­ ico, just a four-hour drive from Austin. “Sometimes, it’s a complicated pro­ cedure,” said one boy. "The Mexican authorities and sellers have a pact. You have to be discreet. If they can identify you or your car, they call the border guards. The sellers get their dex back plus part of the fine.” Not all of the students who use the pills advocate them for others. "D ur­ ing my freshman year, I got in a bind,” confessed a junior coed. "I had so much felt I just had to have to study that I a pill to do it all. It worked so well that I the next quiz. I needed one for thought "If you take them for a while, you begin to lose self-confidence. They can m ake you v e r y alert and interested in the m aterial. You m ay feel that you can’t do without them. I wouldn’t say they're addictive, but they can be hab­ it-forming,” "I hate to study, but they m ake me want to,” said one boy. "They give you confidence at the time, but if they w ear off . . . well, I blew a final one tim e.” that pills can help you retain facts but not concepts. " I got 48 out of 50 multiple choice on an economics quiz. I completely blew the essay p art.” One student suggests Some students end up in the Student Health Center. "During most exam ina­ tion periods, we see one or two students so pepped up that they have to post­ pone all of their exam s,” said Dr. Paul White, director of the Student Health Center. "PILLS OFTEN GIVE one a false continued. sense of well-being. ” he "They may help for a while, hut the let-down—a return of fatigue and pos­ sible depression—is dangerous." But there is more than one way—and for probably a better one—to study finals. Rosemary Meister, a junior Eng­ lish m ajor barricades herself the dingiest room and wears her oldest clothes for a m artyr effect. Then, sh* studies for hours and hours so as not to break her train of thought. in David Geaslin, a senior business ma­ jor, said after he read a chapter, he goes from heading to heading, writing everything that he can rem em ber about a topic. He checks these notes against the text, adds m aterial, and m akes a topic outline in the margin of the book. He then studies his notes, until he can look at the outline and rem em ber the m aterial. NOT ALL STUDENTS study alike "I had a friend who got drunk every other night and still made a 3.0 CPA,” said Geaslin. He always studies in a class­ room from 6 to IO p.m. each night. "Chances of recall are better when you study in the atm osphere in which you plan to take a quiz." Another student said he studied for finals during Christmas vacation. Op­ to stim ulants, he recommended posed juice and orange drinking grapefruit tablets—only taking yeast juice, and $1.25 for 1,000—for energy. One who ought to know, Barbara Keith, a Phi Beta Kappa, said she made a rule to study in advance and relax the night before a final. She studies a couple of hours each day a week be­ fore an exam. WHILE TESTS HAVE SHOWN that libraries are most conducive for study, Miss Keith prefers in bed or an easy chair. to study Tips which have helped her include: • Make an outline of the m aterial, and learn it well. • Never leave a large body of ma- npnsBB' rn i m •* — f * u. & M ' 1 v v*- A I ■ - Barbara Keith Studies for Finals . , . Phi Beta K a p p a studies well in a d v a n c e to relax b efore a test. by WW vc u«lk terial unstudied. • Second guess a professor by noting the amount of tim e or verbal emphasis he places on a point. • Talk with classm ates who might bring out points you’ve missed. • Rest when you get tired. • Don’t study or take an exam on a full stomach. WHILE BETTER LATE than never m ay be a m atter of opinion, Dr. Lan Hewlett, intercollegiate athletics coun­ selor, feels that a positive attitude to­ ward finals is essential. In his IO years of experience, two points have come through loudest. First, review is dull. "We have to trick our­ selves through it.” Secondly, "students don’t get enough ‘do’s’ or production when studying.” he said. "Professors usually give a cohesive, often clever presentation of their sub­ ject. The student says, ‘Gee, I ’m excited. I ’m going to do a few things toward nailing this subject down.’ ” BUT THE BIZARRE, most captivat­ ing points which hang in the student’s consciousness, are not always the ones to depend on in an exam. A student looks through his cold notes, nods, and says, "Yeah, I know this and this . . .” "But it s just like the guy who veils a funny story and cannot rem em ber the punch line. There must be production. Demonstrate to yourself that you re ­ m em ber these things before the final,” Dr. Hewlett suggested. Dr. Hewlett is impatient with persons who tell a poor student, "Ju st study harder.” “ Behavior is caused,” he said. “With an analytical, organized approach, a student can do better.” SOME OF HIS time-proven sugges­ tions include: • Analyze your tests. Decide why you get some answers right and other* wrong. Should you concentrate on your notes lectures, or outside readings? • Set up a less than Spartan sched­ ule for study, and stick to it. • Study with someone who know* m ore than you and can help. • Get plenty of sleep. An exam Is * chance to be creative. If you expend all of your energy on acquiring th* knowledge, you will be too tired to pro­ duce. • Don’t plead with yourself on mul­ tiple choice tests. Mark the ones you know, then try others. An answer may have come to you by then. • On essay tests, a grader looks for points specified by the professor. Re­ read your exam, looking for the point* he would look for. • Act as if you could not fail. You m ay think you are a victim of impos­ sible circumstances. This may be true, but it is not a good fram e of mind for taking an exam. ANOTHER PROFESSOR suggests la­ beling questions with A, B, C, D, .F, the grade you anticipate making on the question. Then answer accordingly. Dr. John Rogers, associate dean of the College of Education, suggests an­ ticipating questions by studying your professors as well as your course. Richard Connelly, social science re­ search associate in the College of Ed­ ucation. jokingly suggests that students’ the exam-taking strained pressured situation which Adam Clayton Powell is in. is a n a l a g o u s to And what is Powell’s advice?: “ Keep the faith, baby, and spread it gently.” And good luck. wjtmim ielvSKet t o b y c l e v e l >c i k Students O fte n Use Pills to Stay Aw ake . . . som e say that d ru g s are ne ce ssary to stu d y for finals in so little time. The Firing Line Deadly W eapon To the Editor: In all the recent discussion about the danger of guns in The Daily Texan, a much more dangerous and Insidious sit­ uation has been overlooked. I refer, of course, to the ease with which a bicycle can be obtained in our society. Accord­ ing to the National Safety Counciy, bi­ cycles caused m ore accidental deaths In children aged five to 15 during the year than did firearm s. While fatal ac­ cidents ha%fe decreased 15 per cent in the last ten years, fatal bicycle acci­ dents have risen 66 per cent. The solution is obvious. We must m ake it very hard to obtain a bicycle. Ownership of bicycles must be rigidly restricted. Certainly no person under 21 years of age should be allowed to own a bicycle. Let s get those bicycles registered. That will, of course, help to cut down on the slaughter of our youths with dangerous bicycles. Bicycles do not offer healthy to Americans, as some nuts and extrem ­ ists have asserted, rather they kill our youth. Is tliis some kind of plot to de­ stroy our children? Let us ban together this crim inal slaying of our to halt youth! The ownership of bicycles should recreation be outlawed! Severe penalties should be imposed on these weapons of death! those caught with Frederick A. Stiles P. O. Box 8442 Austin Outwit a Buck? T o the Editor: As an avid small game hunter and tho son of an avid hunter, I should like to defend the case against firearm s regis­ tration with regard to the letter in Tues­ day’s Firing Line. As everyone who is fam iliar with the Constitution should to is a constitutional know, bear arm s; to promulgate and enforce some registration would be to infringe upon personal free­ dom. type of firearm s right it While registration might m ake ap­ prehension of criminals easier, this is probably about all it would accomplish. Those w'ho are set upon killing will kill with or without a gun. And has there been any thought of the black m arket in firearm s that might em erge? Furtherm ore, who shall be responsi­ ble for the registration standard and enforcement procedures? The respon­ sibility will fall to the states’ govern­ m ents, and the resulting hodge-podge of legislation would be a handicap to fire­ arm s owners and purchasers. lf hunting is neither sporting nor nec­ essary for food, I should like to know for what purpose people do hunt. Have the proponents of gun-control legisla­ tion ever experienced the thrill of out­ witting an old mossback buck and en­ joying a meal of backstrap m eat, or acquire enough skill to shoot the limit on duck and enjoy roast duck with wild rice? Certainly, the critics do not think to vent their that most persons hunt crim inal tendencies. to m e Firearm s registration? I think not. It would seem that more effort should be directed toward the learning of the nature of crim inal types and what can be done to eliminate crim inalistic tendencies. creases would have the sam e effect, I.e., a decline in enrollment plus added revenues and savings. One or two such Increases, moreover, w'ould have ancil­ lary effects — computing foreign influ­ ences would be depressed through a rapid depletion in the non-Texan stu­ dents’ ranks. As parking needs declined, those inefficient lots which surround the University could be m ade to provide the housing required for the influx of anthropologists specializing in the study of dying cultures. And think of the Joy when we finally reach that number of students most efficient for the speedy inculcation of the Truth. Michael Anderson 704B E. 23rd St. Bob Pope 307 E. 31st St. To the Editor: Cinema Zero version caused by mechanically moving the wood paneling during key scenes in the movie. This movement was repeat­ times, each forming both ed several visual and audible distractions. Wheth­ er the movie shown w arranted ridicule, I will not say; but it seem s grossly im­ pudent of someone to forcibly inject his in what should be * or her opinion strictly individual experience between the viewer and the work of art. How dare this “ wit-would” presum e to ex­ pand this function to such limits! And how dare those in charge of Cinema 40 allow their paying patrons to be sub­ jected to such unprincipled behavior. One has so many chances these days to display righteous indignation over so few really good reasons. As you can see, like Diogenes, I have to search for l r " * . Jack L. Dodson 23ISA Oldham Dying Cultures To tho Editor: if w'e Dr. Robertson's idea has great merit, m ore so include a few points that he neglected. The decrease in 5,000 students which he supposed, would also allow for a decrease in expenses—an­ in­ other pecuniary benefit. Further I feel compelled to comment on an occurrence during the 9:30 p.m. show­ ing of "Rebel Without a Cause” en Tuesday, Jan. IO. Hopefully, this letter will protect those who go to Cinema 40 productions in the future from re­ occurrences of this nature, though the damage caused on that Tuesday night showing cannot be altered. I am referring to the deliberate di­ Job Opportunities Dr. Carol Ludwig, Dardenne! Recruiter lor Sacra­ m ento State Collette, Sacram ento. Calif., win ba in our offices Jan. 19 A 30 to Interview prospective teachers intereated should contact our offices. the comm* year. Thosa for A. C. Murphy. Director Teacher Placement Service Sutton Hall 309 OR I-3552-0 R 13384 T h e Da il y T e x a n T h e D aily T exan. a atudent new spaper at Ti a Un! ver­ i t y of T exas Is published dally excep t Monday and Satur­ day and holiday periods Septem ber snd .Student Publications, Inc.. M onthly In A ugust by T exas D raw er D. U niversity S tation , A ustin. T exas 78712. Sec­ on d -class p ostage paid a t Austin. Texas. through May N e w s con trib u tion s wlU be a c c e p te d by telephone (GR 1-52441 or at the ed ito ria l office, J B 103 or at the new s la?,, ca lo ry , J.B . 102. In q u iries c o n c e r n i n g delivery should be m ade In J B. 107 (GR 1-5244) and ad vertisin g, J B. I l l (GR 1-3227 ) A SSO C IA T ED PRESS W IRE SERVICE T h e A s s o c ia te d P r e ss th e to use fo r r ep u b lic a tio n o f a ll n e w s d is p a tc h e s c re d ite d it or n o t o th e r w is e c re d ite d th ia n e w sp a p e r a n d lo c a l ite m s o f s p o n ta n e o u s o r ig in p u b lish e d h e r ein . R is h is o f p u b lic a tio n o f rn] o th e r m a tte r herein a lso reserv ed . la e x c lu s iv e ly e n title d to In RATIONAL Kill CATION AI. AOV'KRTWdO SEB VICE* Is r e p r e se n te d a ut! e a s ily ta (h a fie ld ad ad- A s Oaiiy T e x a s rertislut by Ute SKAS. On# He m eater (fa il or a p r ia g ) T w o S e m e s te r s (fa ll and a p r ia g > D eliv ered b r e a r n e r ‘ w ith in A u s t i n area from n t h to 38th and J e ffe r so n to I n te r r e g io n a l H ig h w a y D e liv e re d by m a il w ith in l r a v ia C om ity D eliv ered bv m al! o n ts id e T r a it* C ou n ty b o t w i t h i n 1’ R 13.50 4 .70 s SO ffi.71 0 .M 4.78 Th* opinion* expressed the editorial colum n ar* those of the editor. AU ed itorials unless sinned are w ritten by the editor. in Guest ed itorial view s are not necessarily the editor s. Any op in ions expressed In The D a i l y T exan are not those of T h e U niversity of T exas ad m in is­ n ecessarily tration or Board of R egents PERMANENT STAFF EDITOR ................................ J O H N E C O N O M ID Y M A N A G IN G EDITOR ........................ BILL CRYER ASST. M A N A G IN G EDITOR .... C A R O L Y N N IC H O L S N EW S E D IT O R ........................... LELA ABERNATHY SPORTS E D IT O R ............................. J O H N ANDERS A M U SEM ENTS EDITOR ............... RENEE FENDRICH FEATURE EDITOR .................... SU ZAN N E SHELTON STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Issue News Editor ........................ Lucy Horton Assistant Issue News E d ito r Lends Kennedy Make-Up Editor ........... Mary Alice Zrubek Copy E d ito r Anne Pashkoff Issue Sports E d ito r ......................... John Anders Issue Amusements E d ito r.............. Sharon Shelton Ed ito ria l P a g e A ssista n t Fluffy G e o r g e Page 2 Sunday, January IS, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Chairman Lists 1967 Financing 2 Weekend Dances Will Cost $8,000 The Central Round-Up Commit­ tee has allocated $11,800 of the es­ timated $21,000 funds available for 1967 Round-Up activities. The largest single allocation made to date is $8,000 for the Western Dance and Round-Up Re­ vue Dance. Other activities which received funds are the Sweet­ heart presentation, art exhibi­ tion, Law Day program, Ex-Stu­ dents’ Association activities, and Sweetheart travel expenses. This year, the Students’ Asso­ ciation voted to allot the Round- Up committee 62 cents on each blanket tax sold. Dean Ed Price, committee chairman and coordinator of stu­ dent activities, estimated these blanket tax funds will provide between $15,000 and $16,000 of total expenses. Additional ex­ penses, estimated at $5,000, will be met by income from nonstu­ dent ticket sales. Price said these figure* are in keeping with th# 1966 expenditures. Tile committee asked that the Official Trips Advisory Commit­ tee for the University Sweetheart screen proposed official Sweet­ heart trips when reimbursement of expenses is expected from Round-Up funds. The committee also voted that total reimburse­ ment should not exceed $300 dur­ ing the official tenure of a Sweet­ heart The committee expects to In­ vestigate Sweetheart nomination and election procedure. Personnel to Have Half-Day Holiday University personnel will have Tuesday afternoon off if they chootw to attend the inauguration of Gov. John Co nnally and LL Gov. Preston Smith. "It really isn’t an afternoon off, although those who are Interested in going to the inauguration are urged to go," Joseph C. Kennedy, Director, University Personnel Of­ fice, said. “Although some person­ nel will be going to the Inaugura­ tion, there will be enough person­ nel on hand so that the offices, laboratories, and other University facilities will function as usual," ha added. All State employes will get off at 11:30 a.m. for the lnaugura- ti on activities. [ I S R P # UnWersityGiven Students View Powell Ouster Swenson Papers A collection of approximately 6.000 papers of Svante Magnus Swenson, the first Swedish immi­ grant to Texas, Is now available in the University Archives. R. Henderson Shuffler, director of the University’s Texan# pro­ gram, described the collection of correspondence and documents as a “rich mine of research ma­ terial’’ for a biography of Swen­ son, and new sidelights on Sam Houston, as well. The collection, donated by Richard C. Lincoln Jr. of Hart­ ford, Conn., consists of letters and documents from the files of William S. Pearson, Swenson’s lawyer, and his partner In many business enterprises. for Swenson is considered respon­ sible the development of Swedish immigration into Texas, assisting and encouraging hun­ dreds of his countrymen in com­ ing to Texas. Swenson died in Brooklyn, N. Y., bequeathing his collection of rare coins and some papers con­ cerning his ranches near Throck­ morton, Stamford, Tongue River, and Flattop to the University. Lani Bird Satellite In Orbit Saturday By the Associated Presa Washington The Communications Satellite Corp. said Saturday night it had put its new Lani Bird satellite In a synchronous orbit around the earth. is designed Tile satellite to serve as a new communications link between North America and the Far East. By DONNA LOVELACE Adam Clayton Powell’s removal as committee chairman in toe House of Representatives and Air Force ROIC Increases Grants An increase in the number of ROTO scholarships for 1967 68 has been announced by toe US Air Force. Next year's program win of­ fer 3,000 scholarships: 600 to sophomores, 1,400 to juniors, and 1,000 to senior cadets. The two- year grants will cover the cost of tuition, fees, lab expenses, and books, as well as a nontaxable stipend of $50 per month. AU applicants are selected on the basis of th# Air Force Quali­ fying Test score#, a grade aver­ age of at least 2.5 on a 4.0 sys­ tem, and a rating from an inter­ view board. Seventeen cadets at to# Uni­ versity have qualified for Air Force scholarships. They are David Abramowitz, Robert S. Bickerstaff, Lonnie Bra uner, Warren S. Bollmeier, James T. Brown, Kenneth E. Eickmann, Darryl P. Greenwood, and Ste­ phen H. Holliday. Also, Richard C. Null, Michael A. Pandolfo, Manuel G. Rosales, Robert W. Smith, Robert N. Trap- ' nell, Henry J. VanDewalle, and j James R. Williams. Waggener Hall, completed In 1931, was named In honor of the first president of the University, Leslie Waggener. —Photo lay SUTO Del* Clocks Undergo Repair W orkm e n are repairing the clock faces on the Tower I battle between which were d a m a g e d during the A u g . police and the sniper, C h a rle s W h itm a n . Perched on the O b se rva tio n Deck o f the Tower, W h itm a n killed 13 persons and w ounded 34. Paredes W ill Initiate Course at Berkeley that will help me when I return to the University sometime in July. I hope that I will be able to help them by Initiating the Latin-American folklore area b s they wish it to be." Dr. Americo Paredes, Univer­ sity professor of folklore, Eng­ lish, and anthropology, will be leaving at the end of this semes­ ter to act as a visiting professor at Berkeley. Paredes’ c o u r s e s in Latin-! American folklore, the first of its kind offered at the Univer­ sity, had to do, in part, with his going to Berkeley. “It was while I was teaching this course," he noted, “that Berkeley decided to add a similar course to their De­ partment of Folklore. They got in touch with me and asked if I would initiate this new area tor them." Paredes accepted the oppor­ tunity to work at Berkeley’s de­ is partment partly because “much more advanced’’ than the University’s is. it “We all learn from each oth­ er," he said. “I’ll be able to learn from their highly devel­ things oped department many Let's TALKabout housing! THE NUECES COLLEGE HOUSE J* interviewing for the spring semester* I O f t O o n D i i 7:30-7:oil r .M . N O W T H R O U G H ja n u a r y i6 . . . co e d u ca tio n a l In te lle ctual com m unity. R o o m and one m eal a d ay. 714 W est 22 V i Phone G R 8-6757 ma i... :-si the temporary denial of hi# House seat by Congress have caused strong opinions throughout toe United States. Many American Negroes feel that Powell was the victim of racial prejudice, an Associated Press survey indicated Friday. Veteran civil rights leader A. Philip Randolph announced he hopes to call a Negro summit conference within two weeks to explore various proposals. UNIVERSITY student* either have very strong opinions on Powell and the congressional ac­ tion. or they feel they have not thought about the events long enough to have a concrete opin­ ion. Some do not even know who Powell is. “It Is unfair to to# people in Harlem to be without a repre­ sentative, and I don't think they will stand for It, said Gus Lyons, a former physics major. “But I do feel their action will be politi­ cal rather than like the violent Watt* incident,” Lyons said. Mike Glaspie, junior math ma­ jor, said “I do not think PoweU should have been removed be­ cause now his district doesn’t have a representative." Barbara Gail Seely, senior psy­ chology major from New York, said she is for PoweU's removal because he has simply gone too far. “but then again—-toe peo­ ple elected him knowing what he was doing." SOME S T U D E N T S feel Powell'* punishment was Just, al­ though harsh. “ First, removal the committee chairman­ from ship was a just, but fairly harsh punishment It wasn’t a good move to bar his seat, however. It, in effect-suspended the demo­ cratic process," Jerry Yankee, a government major, said. Gloria W a l k e r , sophomore Spanish major, said ‘I don't think toe affair should be turned into a racial issue on either side. His punishment though harsh, was Just. His behavior w a s not at all representative." Vernon Obelgonner, a graduate assistant In government, said “I feel sorry for him like I do few King Farouk. He’s been in on graft for 30 years. I don’t feel that because of his race he is being investigated.” Martha Downing, senior gov­ ernment major, said sh# com­ pletely agrees with what Cong­ ress has done. “I think he should have been removed from his chairmanship and also his seat in the House, but I also think they should be very careful to make the Investigation known to to# public further to avoid any troubles. Powell has been spend­ ing government money flagrant- BEVERLEY BRALEY TOURS •TRAVEL O ffer* to alt *tud«nt* and mamber* of the Faculty and Staff the following Travel Services: •c a s s* jfg jm 1. Airline reservation* and ticketing. 2. Stu den t R a te . . . A ir Tickets. 3. Stu den t Tours to Europe— from $680.00. 4. C a r Purchase—U.S. Financing Available. 5. Steam sh ip Sp a c e A va ila b le — Student G ro u p s. 6. G r o u p A ir Fares— Lowest in H istory. 7. Beverley Braley’* Fine Stu den t Tours to Europe. 8. Student J o b Interview*— A ir Ticket* can be C h a n g e d . W e also offer a 30-60 day open C harge Account to all member* of tha Faculty and Staff, and will deliver your tickets. A C A P U L C O .............. *86Round T«4p Spring Vacation, Special Direct F light— D e p a rt San Antonio, Mar 31, Return April 9 HMM Spring V a c a t i o n Group Youth Flight, j... Washington and New York. Depart Austin March 31 . . . Return April 9. Plus Tex OO Forty Acres Club Lobby GR 8-8888 GR 8-5601 2500 Guadalupe TOGGERY SEMI-ANNUAL REDUCTIONS! TO C O N ST E R N A T E ! SWEATERS 25% T O 50% OFF RAINCOATS ALL-WEATHER (Zip-out liners) or ALLIGATOR 25% OFF COLD WEATHER JACKETS 20% T O 33% OFF SHIRTS SPORT SHIRTS: Long sleeve button-down or regular collar. 25% T O 33% OFF DRESS A N D SPORT SHIRTS: Special se­ lection of long sleeve, button-down or regu­ lar collar. W ere $5 to $7 Similar reductions on SHOES, VESTS, TIES and BELTS. MONEY CAN WAIT! OPEN YOUK OWN 30-60-90 DAY ACCOUNT N O W $2.99 EACH or 3 FOR $8.50 SUITS 20% to 40% Off SPORT COATS 20% to 40% Off DRESS SLACKS 25% Off CASUAL SLACKS 25% Off All Prices Plus Your Dividend Distinctive Store for Men I In The Co-Op 7 GR 8-663^~ Sunday, January IS, J947 THE DAILY. TEXAN f o p I Last Second Victory Bevo Raids Tech Pantry, 70 - 68 Texas Stalls • • • By JORN ANDERS Texan Sport* Fxiitor With only two seconds rem a in ­ ing. G ary O verbeck connected on a short popper to give Texas a narrow 70-68 victor)’ over Texas Tech here S aturday afternoon. The Longhorns worked coolly without a tim e-out, for the con­ the te st’s final ITW setting up g am e’s last shot. Unable to find room for a driving lay-up, Dale Dotson motioned O verbeck into the lane, fed sharply, and Texas wa* suddenly sitting on a 3-1 conference record and its ninth victory in 14 attem pts. LONGHORN CX) ACH Harold B radley said in his victory q u a r­ ters. “ we w ere fortunate to get bv them . They didn’t look like a 2-10 ball clu b .” The T exas coach BIG DADDY PIZZA STUDENTS: TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN. LET BIG DADDY SELL YOU A PIZZA. FAST and FREE DELIVERY! Notice! Our New Year's Special for You: I f WITH THE PURCHASE OF A PIZZA : Between 5-9 p.m. you can buy for .50 a pass that ; ! Is good for one admission at any i I TRANS-TEXAS THEATRE I JwWWWWf* * » » » » * * » • • • rn mm rn mm rn rn mm rn mm w rn rn* m mw rn WW » vw erw » WW WW » - WW* O p en Sunday thru Thursday 5 p.m . to l l p m . Friday and Saturday 5 p.m . to 1:30 a.m . tim eout added, “I thought we had tom e TV I wouldn’t have thrown out our final tim eouts.” left, otherw ise TTie affair w as televised on a regional hook-up. R aider guard, Billy Tapp, kept Tech in the gam e with two c ru ­ cial buckets and a p air of free throw s in the final m om ents, but te am m ate Vernon it w as 6 7 ” Paul, who hooked from IO feet out to sta le m ate the g am e at 68- 68. The final Longhorn stall was executed with precision by v et­ era n ball-handlers Noel Stout, D ale Dotson, and Mike G am m on. STOTT, who entered th e gam e w ith a 15.7 scoring av erag e, add­ ed 22 to im prove his m a rk and lead all scorers. E ighteen of his total cam e the second half the 6 3” senior appeared when the only Longhorn who to be could find shooting ran g e. in T exas had difficulty even in getting off a shot in the second half. But Stout hustled and drove furiously, keeping the Raiders s t a stand-off when the occasion arose. D uring one period, Stout hit 9 straig h t points for Texas. SI CH STREAKS were common in the hot-and-cold running b all­ gam e. M inutes before Stout’s heroics. Tech had monopolized 3:41 of the clock by ram paging past T exas 13-3. The spurt had put the T echsans ahead 55-52 for a brief while. Although T exas led for m ost of the actu al playing tim e, the gam e w as the closest conference duel to d ate for th e S teers. Sixteen lead changes and eight ties found the G regory Gym crowd of a p ­ proxim ately 4.000 on its feet m any tim es during the critical m om ­ ents. THE GAME’S first half w as im m inently forgettable basketball. Both clubs worked aw kw ardly and shot w ith cool hands, if not heads, and suffered the ignominy of having shots blocked. T ex as connected for 43 per cent of its shots to out-dazzle T ech’s enem ic 33 per cent clip. five Tech took sev eral inane pot­ shots, while T exas ran into p ass­ ing difficulties. On defense, the ’H orns appeared a mite sluggish, allowing D ave Olson, 6’4” for­ w ard, to deal lay-up damage on Texas Athletic Club Bennie M. Hall 605 W e s t 13th GR 7-0561 W e ig h ts— S*eam Room— Sun Lamps— Swimming Pool Routines and Instruction G iven M assages Beginning February I, 1967 H ealth Foods C a rrie d Daily or M onthly R ates— M en O n ly N o C o n tra ct to Sign or Joining Fee 2102 Guadalupe GR 6-6795 O p e n Seven Days a W eek 'Vi i mmmwm HEIGHT of WINTER REDUCTION Sport Coats Slacks 3 0 - 5 0 % 3 0 - 5 0 % OFF OFF Sport Shirts Dress Shirts 1 for 5.50 2 for 10.50 3 for 15.00 Sweaters 3 0 % o f f 1 for 4.00 2 for 7.50 3 for 11.00 O thers: 25% O ff i t a D C 0 0 GIFT ITEMS AND REMAINING MERCHANDISE 25% off easy slip-under connections. Coach B radley adm itted. "W e w eren't as high as we w’ere T ues­ day against SMU. It s h ard for the boys to get up for every ball gam e.” T ex as’ 35-34 halftim e lead was due. prim arily, to the rebounding efforts of G ary Overbeck, who pulled down l l for the half, and one sizzling hot-streak when Tex­ as outscored their flat-footed foes 15-2. Yet, soon after. Tech awoke and m anaged a streak of its own. skunking the Steers 9-6 during the spurt. the period's Billy Arnold m ercifully ended the first half for T exas by sink­ final bucket. ing Arnold trailed Stout of the T exas sco rers w ith 12 points. Scotty Brown, who did not m iss in five field goal attem p ts against SMU. continued his hot-handed pace by connecting on 3 of 4 shooting a t­ tem pts ag ain st the Raiders. TEXAS TECH worked m ore de­ liberately in the second half and soon found shooting range, finish­ ing with a respectable 44.1 field goal p ercen tag e to T exas' final 45. Stout connected on 6 of 8 at­ tem pts from short range, 2 from the 20-foot range in the second half, and scored m ore than half of his team ’s points during the period. Longhorn tall-m en, G ar)’ O ver­ beck and Charley Turnbough were defensed tightly and could m u ster only 6 points between them for the final stanza. | the rebounding TEXAS TOOK edge, 43-35, but the T echsans stayed close on all other aspects of the gam e. Both team s hit 16 of 22 free throw attem pts. From the field. T exas w as successful on 27 of 60 to T ech's total of 26- 59. The one e x tra shot Tech al­ lowed O verbeck w as the killer, leaving the R aiders 1-3 in SWC play. An elab o rate halftime show was presented by the m arching Long­ horn Band and featu red the pre­ sentation of the Southwest Con­ ference Sportsm anship Trophy to Texas. Athletic D irector Darrell Royal and re p re se n ta ­ student tive, Ja m e s DuBois received the aw ard from Bob Higley, execu­ tive se creta ry of the SWC Sports­ m anship Com m ittee. TEX VS TECH Olsen Ne! top etui Tapp FII reno* Dobbs Bonner Hazard Total* Percent TEX** Turn bough S 'out Brown Dotson A m o il Over be rh Lake Gam m on Total* Percent ★ f t 5 2 6 4 4 • 3 2 as 44 I ft I * > 3 5 4 I I V 45 0 Ii (ta 44 4-6 2-3 3-3 1-2 ftfl 3-4 (Kl 16-22 ft ft* 2-3 4-5 12 3-4 2-4 l l 1-1 2 2 16-23 Pf 5 2 2 3 I fl 4 I I* Pf 6 I 3 1 2 1 n 2 17 Gilbert Honored ★ Wins 'Most Valuable' Award ★ Chris Gilbert, Texas’ hard-running tailback, Friday was named the Longhorns’ most valuable football player for 3966. By vote of his teammates, the sophomore received the George McCullough Trophy at the annual grid banquet sponsored by the UT Ex-Students’ Association. Gilbert who gained 1,080 yards rushing during the past fall, was only the third athlete in Southwest Confer­ ence history to have gained more than 1,000 yards in a single season. He also set three UT rusting records. Gil­ bert is a business administration student from Houston Spring Branch High School. Other awards, also determined by vote of the players, included: • Tile Longhorn Band’s D. Harold Byrd Leadership Award to tri-captain and defensive end Barney Giles of Marshall, senior physical education and history’ student. • The D. X. Bible Team Spirit Award to offensive tackle Gene Bledsoe of Waco, senior mathematics stu­ dent • Longhorn Club’s Sportsmanship Award to defensive halfback Les Derrick of Houston, senior finance student. • Howard Goad, senior offensive tackle from Cleburne who is studying finance, was selected by the Longhorn Dub to receive its Recognition Award, which goes to a player who has performed well without having had special com­ mendation. • A reserve defensive lineman, Wesley Barnes of Cor­ pus Christi, received the Travis County Texas-Exes’ Schol­ arship Award as the football squadman with the highest scholastic average. He is a senior mechanical engineering student. ANNOUNCING N A N B O W E R S has returned to t h e U-T B A R B E R S H O P after advanced study in men's hairstyling Specializing in R A Z O R S H A P IN G , S T Y L IN G , etc. ' NAN BOWERS U-T BARBER SHOP "ON THE DRAG" 3013 Guadalupe GR 8-0150 JI . . . Dale D otson (14) works for Texas' final shot. . , . Until . . . G ary O verbeck (40) takes, turns, connects, with 2 seconds left. Green Bay Favored In 'Super' Showdown By the A ssociated Presa I ais Angeles B a ri S ta rr's passing and a ball- haw king defense m ake the experi­ enced G reen B ay P ack ers the solid favorites over the explosive K ansas City Chiefs Sunday in the first clash of cham pions of the N ational and A m erican football leagues in the Super Bowl. B roadcasting System th e N ational B roadcasting Co. who a re paying a total of $2 million for the rights. and Tile P ack e rs and Chiefs wtB be shooting for the biggest pay* off in the history of team com ­ petition with $15,000 gu aran teed for each m em ber of the winning team and $7,500 for each loser. E v er since the two pro leagues decided to m erge last June, this test of strength has been aw aited with g reat interest. However, it appeared th at there would be no sellout of the v ast M em orial Coliseum. A crowd of about 70.000 is expected the 93,000-seat aren a. in to the R esistance television blackout in the Los Angeles a re a the the prices of som e of and less desirable the tickets, plus fact that there is no hom e team involved, w ere given as som e of the to sell out. reasons for the failure Tile gam e will s ta rt at 4:05 It will be beam ed p.m ., EST. acro ss television and radio by both the Columbia the nation on Savings From 20% to 40% STORE HOURS DAILY 9 to 5:30 Steer S w i m m e r s W i n T exas wron 10 of 12 sw im m ing events F rid ay its first m eet of the season, 60-44, over E astern New Mexico U niversity at Portales. to win The Longhorns established two pool reco rd s on the w aves of D ana C urtis’ winning 200-yard individual m edley m ark of 2:10.4 and G ary Langendoen’s 2:01.8 in the 200-yard butterfly. M EET SI IIM MUK* I Gnu freestyle i, RN MTT 406 y a rd m ed ley relay (VTad ­ m an S h ip p e r Kelnlen P u rv is); 2 T eva* s u la­ '-et-ord •. % ma no, Tev«>. (Pool lack Ake. Teed* 3, Joel GitelMw. EN MU. freestyle I. Steve K -- Tex* 3, ' iglenvan. UN MU. I Hi chard SOO-yard l l : a i l e», I .Vi 3. John J a 'n e . Crane, FN.UU free .tile M-yani T e.es, 23 2 perry Royers. Texas.. t, Chuck wv>rr«4L 2 Twin Morse E.VMU: 2, I. Diving JDO-va rd individual medley 1. Dan* (Dip. ti* loses. 2:104 1 Pool -eon rd*; 2. !K«a K en.'ti, KNISH I 3. Bill Woodman, EN MU. sault Duncan, Texas, US TO: 2, Dave Wbftlew. JBN MU. 330 TS. *. Ler­ n a Culver, KE mu 300-y#! ti 2 (it 8 1 Poo! Record' b i t t e r I, Oar7 Lamrendoea, Texas 2. Dou# Lyons. BKMU; 3. Michael Dale, EN MIL p a eg ty le I. Curtis. T exas, 4ft 8; 2. Rick Purvis, KL MU; 3 Steve Boss, Ten. as. 2:U 8; 2, Bill Wudmaa, BKMU; Wesi, Texas Mb yard I. Worrell, T e x t* I Jo* tr e e e t y l * I , Santam arta. T• » la th es Crane. XlNMU; 4 backstroke ISKI-yard 3)KVyd t i . 5:11 4: 2. B ruce Lan*un, Texas. 26ftyard b reaststrok e—I D ennis S h ip p e r BKM U, 2:28.3; I Jim Butut, B KM U; A Kenney Karolin. Texan 40ftyard freestyle relay 4 . Texas (1mm gendoen, Worrell, Bose, Ourttat 1 3 7; a BN KIU. XEROX COPIES 8 A .M . T O M ID N IG H T 7 DAYS A WEEK ALDRIDGE TYPING SERVICE u“ ’ \Zt m m rnrnm m m m m m iim m Big Savings In Every Dept. M e n ry NOW IN FULL PROGRESS 2 T 7 7 Tb$ Com** i f 28tb and Rio Gr&tdt GR 2-2231 « today. January ii, I W THS DAILY TEXAN Custom Tailoring and Hand-Stitched Monogramming N o ch a rg e to r aflaraffo m an any purch a se d Ham M EN ’S WEAR 2222 Guadalupe— Next to Texas Theatre THURS. ’till 8 P.M. Former Dallas Mayor Cabell Attacks Manchester's Book A spokesman for Look maga­ zine in New York declined com­ ment on Cabell’s charges. Manchester was ta New York, but could not bs reached for comment reported he said, and, in any event, tbs casket was brought to the hos­ pital in a funeral coach, which remained there and transported It to the airport “Not one minute (rf delay was encountered in this transaction,” he said, and added “It is incon- ceivsble to m s that each irrespon­ sible statements would bs made unless the Intent was not to ac­ curately record history, but rath­ er was to deliberately calum­ niate the people of Dallas and particularly those who wert In any way connected with the tragic events of that day.” S I N G E R Best Quality — Bast Values — • Vacuum Cleaner* • Color TV 1 Sewing Machine* (New end Used) Gary Baudoin GR 8-6649 The Singer Co. 918 Congress exquisite 6utmon6s at low OiRect-impoRt prices Our diamond buyers have m ad* rn fortunate purchase of lino diamonds In Antwerp. Som e ar# loose, some are mounted In exquisite 14K and 18K gold settings. VV® offer them to you at very favorable prices. The selection Ie very limited so do come in soon. JOE KOEN & SON Since 1888 . . . J eWCleVS 105 E. 6th Conveniently Located Ju»t OH the Avenue DONT MISS OUR GREA T SALE! FURTHER REDUCTIONS NEW REDUCTIONS TTP TO I / 2 OFF AND MORE • DRESSES • COCKTAIL DRESSES • SUITS • KNITS • RAINCOATS •SUEDE COATS • FUN FURS • WARM SLEEFWEAB • ROBES • SWEATERS • SKIRTS • BLOUSES • POOR BOYS • PANTS Hackerman Selects Special Committee Vice-Chancellor Norman Hack­ erman has appointed a special committee to advise his office regarding the 1966-67 Excellence Fund budget. Members are Dr. J. A. Burdine, committee chair­ man and dean of the College of Arts and Sciences; Dr. Robert A. Divine, professor of history; Dr. Wayne Holtzman, dean of the College of Education; Dr. George Kozmetsky, dean of the College of Business Administration; Dr. IM PO RTED TREASURES From Mexico To Give • To W ear • To Own Bula Skinner Imports 1705 N u s c e i John J. McKetta, dean of the Col­ lege of Engineering; and Dr. William Shive, professor (rf chem­ istry. No application win be consid­ ered after Feb. 15. Any proposal originated by an individual or group should be endorsed by the chairman or chairmen of the de­ the partments concerned and dean(s). Applications (original and six copies) should be sent to Dean Burdine in West Mall Of­ fice Building 201. A portion of the fund will be used for Graduate School pro­ grams, and applications for indi­ vidual research projects should be sent to Dr. W. G. Whaley, dean of the Graduate School. Have You Changed Your Plans? Then Why Not Try SPECIALIZED Training? Call or Visit Durham's Today to See How They Can Help You New Day Night Classes Begin Jan. 30-Feb. I SEC RET AR IAL IB M D ATA P R O C E S S IN G Lagal, Medical, Executive* at*. (Choice of Gregg or Speedwrlt- C O M P U T E R O P E R A T IO N A N D big Shorthand) P R O G R A M M IN G Tabulating Machina Operator* O m C ! M A C H IN B S BU SINESS A D M IN IS T R A T IO N A N D S E N IO R A C C O U N T IN G * D R A F T IN G E L E C T R O N IC T E C H N O L O G Y Elactronla Mechanic* C o u n t* Architectural,* Machanlcal,* Cartographic,* ate. IB M C A R D P U N C H A B C S H O R T H A N D -—C A N B l LEARN ED IN 4 W EE K S Free job placement while attending school, and alter gradua­ tion. Affiliated with over 500 busine** »chool* nationally, of­ fering free nation-wide job placement. • Course* itate approved for Veteran* training. DURHAM'S BUSINESS COLLEGE 600 Lavaca Austin* Texas Call, Write or Visit GR 8-3446 DON’T BE­ UKE ME T/ND OUT THE TACTS BETONE YOU BUY A DIAMOND SEE THE F A C T S And Save Dollars Wise Buyers Shop THE DIAMOND ROOM Divided Payments 106 East 7th GR 8-8897 S S S - V »**© s t ® V e e *** FREE ESTIMATES M AYFLO W ER M O V IN G AND STORAGE 6100 AIRPORT BLVD. GL 2-2591 •yllowcr I Mayflc■flower By tike Associated Proas Washington The forma* mayor of Dallas Saturday accused author William Manchester and “his advisers” of “a deliberate attempt to dis­ tort history” in parts of Man­ chester’s book on the assassina­ tion of President John F. Ken­ nedy. Rep. Earle Cabell, D-Tex., who was mayor at the time (rf the slaying on Nov. 22, 1963, called a news conference Saturday to dispute an account of the re­ moval of Kennedy’s body from a Dallas hospital, which he said would appear In Look magazine’* second installment of the Man­ chester book, “Death of a Presi­ dent.” CABELL SAID the book is criti­ cal of Dallas officials who in­ sisted that laws dealing with the removal of bodies from the hos­ pital and the State be complied with. The book tells of bitter­ ness in the Kennedy party at til# ensuing delay. •Those delays referred to,” said Cabell, “were criticized only by those who would have super­ imposed their own will and selfish desires over duly constituted laws enacted for the protection of the people ss a whole.” Cabell would not say who criti­ cized the delay but said they in Manchester's named book. Asked whom bt blamed tar what he called the distortions in the account, Cabell said, “I blame the writer and whoever were his adviser*.” Manchester was selected by Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy to write the book. Cabell said “another complete ly false allegation” In the book states that a Dallas city ordi­ nance prohibited transportation of a casket in an ambulance and that further delay was caused while a hearse was summoned to take the casket to the airport. NO SUCH ORDINANCE existed, Fort Worth Ruling Upheld by Court By the Associated Prose The State Supreme Court has upheld the Fort Worth Qty Coun­ cil’s refusal to permit a mothers’ march for dimes to combat birth defects. The court's two-part decision Friday dissolved a restraining order issued by Dist Judge Har­ old Craik against the city and forbade the judge to grant “any further Injunctive relief’ to the National Foundation. The foundation sponsors the March of Dimes. proclaimed Gov. John Connelly, Ironical ly, as “March af Dimes Month” the same day as the Supreme Court’s decision. January What Goes On Here t:1 4 —DV. U T XL gommarteM ta fpeafe, WL Martin'a Lutheran Church. IO SO Zollia ate* kiev. Juatioe, gut# Suprama Coart to apa** at Icac­ tal worship aerrica. Uni v a n ity OwlaUan Church. n e o n a te I Sa- Newmaa Club Honor'* Day A w art* Banquet Catholic Student Cantar audi­ torium. T : » Dr. Hobart Rook. to S w r Midas and diacuaa wort: ha did ta AXrtoa, Can­ terbury Lounf*. G ra ft Houaa, 2® W- T a en tr aev arith St Mensas *~ Faculty Cormel) to meat. Onion Budd­ ing AXL 1ZL 4 Astronomy ooBoqwlw*. Fhyelea S ta d ia * T- Audition* Auatin Civic Coroa episcopal G ra ff Houaa. 70S W. Twenty-seventh Bt Exam Tensions Released . . . a* *tudent» take "final fling.’ —« i o t o b r S tave Del* Martin Criticizes Marine Casualties B y the A e e o d a to d P r o s e Atty. Gen. Crawford Martin said Friday the decision by Dist Judge Herman Jones of Austin to void the Nov. 8 votes on an amendment to repeal the poll tax was “clearly erroneous.” Martin said the State will ap­ peal, and that “We fully expect a reversal.” Jones ruled Thursday, la a suit brought by the Texas AFL-CIO, that the voters were told on the ballot only that they were repeal­ ing the poll tax and that they were not told they also were making an annual registration system a part of the Constitution. The issue has been called a liberal-conservative fight Liberals want a permanent registration system, saying it makes voting easier and favors greater use of the franchise. Conservatives fa­ vor an annual system, saying it would be easier to polios and make voting frauds more diffi­ cult TILE LEGISLATURE enacted an annual registration system last year after federal courts de­ clared the poll tax unconstitu­ tional. The Nov. 8 amendment would have made the annual system part of the Constitution and therefore not susceptible to change by some future Legislature pos­ sibly controlled by liberals. Martin said that if Jones’ de­ cision is upheld, it will mean the Legislature will bs required to place on the ballot “almost the full text of any proposed amend- University Senior First in Contest Robert Scouter, senior engi­ neering major, won first place in the second annual Paper Con­ test of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers Saturday. His topic was “Anodizing for Greater Strength.** Larry Feast was awarded sec­ ond place and Horace Spinks third. Two other contests will be held: Hie quadrangular, competi­ tion between other colleges and universities, and the regional con­ test. The first and second place the winners will compete quadrangular. One of the winners will compete in the regional. in merit, lengthening beyond all rea­ sonable limits the time required for each voter to vote. “Furthermore, no voting ma­ chine that I know of could ac­ commodate such lengthy texts. “IT IS VERY II ARD for me to see how anyone could not have understood Hie meaning or the effect of the amendment The State (rf Texas, over the last two years has spent nearly $1 million in publishing these amend­ ments in newspapers throughout the State, and numerous editor­ ials and news articles were writ­ ten, fully discussing all aspects of this particular amendment “The prior attempts by Mr. Roy Evans, secretary-treasurer of the Texas AFL-CIO, to keep this amendment off the ballot alone generated sufficient notice of the content and effect of the amend­ ment.” Martin told The Associated Press “Tilere is a very serious question” about another provi­ sion that “Brother Jones in his haste ig­ nored completely.” the amendment in This provision made registra­ tion mandatory tor all sections of the State including persons In communities with populations under 10,000. Tie Constitution now says the legislature “may” provide registration In commu­ nities of 10,000 or more. THE REGISTRATION act pass­ ed last year provides for regis­ tration in all communities. “For­ tunately, no one challenged this last year,” Martin said. “But It won’t go unchallenged forever.” The challenge would be to the constitutionality of requiring vot- tars in rural areas and small communities to register. Poll lists for elections before Feb, I must be made up from the last poll tax list plus the list of those who have registered under the system approved by the special session, Martin said. Tile AFL-CIO issued a state­ ment saying it was happy with Jones' decision and saying It hoped “the secretary of state and the attorney general will have the good judgment to not spend any more of the State’s money on an appeal” Major George W. Littlefield do­ nated $3,000 in 1901 for the con­ struction of a walk that would surround the original Forty Acres. He named it Peripatus, from the Greek word meaning “to walk around” SUNDAY SPECIAL! Smothered Turkey and Cornbread Dressing Served with cranberry sauce* choice of 2 vegetables* hot rolls, cornbread stick and coffee or tea. THE PLANTATION R E S T A U R A N T 503 WEST 19th 2-404 qua.dlaEu.pe/ European Group Flights University of Texas Students, Faculty & Immediate Families Only $265.00 Confirmed Reservations The Hewest and lowest Group Fares In History Via Air France New York — London ..... June 6 Sept. 5 Paris — New York ( Nofat $24400 aflow* fan fa fly Naw York-London, London-Amtterdem, Far!a-New York. $244.00 aflow* ymm ta O f Naw York-London, London-New York O N LY . Coe finned mend M g Tai ai aannacttoni to Naw Y ort available aa law aa 11 OC OO. Fly th* world’* fine*t airline— Air France, pure jet plane* on regular scheduled flight* to Europe on a grouD basis (50 person*). The lowest group fare* in history ........................... $265.00 Compare with charter rate*!!! Our group flight* are confirmed. Group meeting* Monday (]6th| and Tuesday (17th)) et 4 p.m. in the Ransom Room, Forty Acre* Club, 2500 Guadalupe. Mail Deposit ($50.00) . . Balance due April 15 to Group Director— P. O. Box 4341— Austin, Texas 78751 Sunday, January IS, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN tabs S IHE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS 6* ..................................................................J 1 30 .5# (ID word m a rt rn nm ) on* tim * .................................. I ..................................................... -7* ra t* Uteri) W o rd CU w ord w twl m — > M inim um C harg e • Student • E ach ad ditio nal Urn* <3a««dflrd D isplay I colum n * m w K erb Add! n ae a1 T im * laaeaa 98 C M M c a d n IM I * M tim * .................................. I H . M ^ U w ord* ■ w ord* ............................... ID * .............. ................ - ............................................... t l « (N o co pr t*iawda M g mmmm&r* IW M ra te s .) GR 1-5244 • N E W . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S IO w o rd s o r Iom fo r SO e th * fir s t tim * , 2 S« s a c k a d d itio n * ! tim * . S tu d e n t m u st show A u d ito rs ' r e c e ip t a n d p a y la a d * r a n * * ta J a wm a ll t> l id 9. IO T fro m I u s . t a 4 t )0 p ja . M o n d a y th ro u g h F rid a y . ( W A U T T IO T A D V K E T W l l f 0 D K A D I. IN E S T u e s d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y T e x a n .................... M o n d a y . 3 :3 0 t m . ....................... T u e s d a y . 3 .S ) p .m . ................................ T h u r s d a y T e x a n ...................... W 4 £ n e s^ i£ ’ \ '-rn n m ■ v m Z J' I 30 o n * F r id a y t e x a n S u n d a y Texan ........................ F r id a y . 1 .3 0 p .m . la th* e v e n t of errors mad* ta an a d v e rtis e m e n t. Im m e d ia te n o tic e in u it be x lr e n a ii t h e p u b lls h e m a r e re s p o n s ib le f o r o n ly oat In c o r r e c t In s e rtio n . GR 1-5244 Furnished Apartment* Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartm ent! CONTINENTAL u .« e r a w a •« Oldham Ow* and tw * bedroom ap artm ent* w ith rn * b o ta n y paneled w alls and HUT* open beam c e ilin g * U tilitie s paid a t 1125 O R 6-1363 G R 8-8670 to *160 LA FIESTA APARTMENTS G R 7-1800 too E a s t *Ptb LE FOUNTAINBLEAU A partm ent* tor M en and W om en Accom m odates 3 to 4 N ear Cam pus L a rg e apartm ents cons I* tin s of 3 bedroom * |W ,th prtv#te b a tt.*' L iv in g room w ith bu ilt „ I ui bookcase* breakfast room and kitchen I bedrooms. 3 bath* V acancy A / ming pool recreation and Inundry. room, m aid service, utilities paid. O R 2-0480 803 W est 28th sw im ­ study O R 8M14 Tanglewood West la re s M « m * t ma a y ce n tra l a ir and b e et T V extra*. D is h w a te r. cab * lu x u ry apartm ent*, w tth d isp o sal fin * J bedroom. J bath 32D0 I bedroom from JH S to *156 C en tral a ir and h e a t Sw im m ing pool, fu r­ nished patio Convenient to cam pus and city bos Una Off s u re s t parking C sb le T V . M aid resident m anager and Jan ito r service. C a i! for fun d e ta il* ISM JS o rw sk lin e O R 3 6614 A V A IL A B L E F E B R U A R Y le t Manor Villa J mr nr w apartm ents w tth built-in bookcase*, ce n tra l a ir and beek L e r f * pool. content fu m iahlnga ] Bedroom —H I* *0 *1** I Bedroom —3103 50 M anor R eed O R T-2259 TW O BEDROOM DELUXE room s, iarg s closets, A /C . L a rg s heat. s e c tile kitchen, 3 biocka dium . wUl accom m odate A. et T V 8 30 to » p m . cable. C a ll M r. V a u g h t HO ce n tra l from sta­ ISS each. *-5488, Tanglewood East LA CANADA •ow leasing s ir and heat T V iB iu n 3 bedroom ap artm en t Cen­ cable, bookcase* *165, pool W estinghouse kitchen. t . f tra l L a rg e sr* ta r/ fa s paid. W M M anor Road O R 71064 tra l sty. Now leasing tov spring term . Lu xu rio u s one E a c h w ith and two bedroom a p a rtm e n t* dishw asher, disposal, cab le T V , spacious w alk-in c lo se t* po et Lau n d ry fu cU lU e * Cen­ MOW U B A E N O French Colony T O W N H O U 8 E A P T B ­ X X * G R O V E R from M cC allu ra High I BR- studio apts. b eau tifu lly d eco I A carpeted ro o m * I * ted. ex tra e .o ctric A draped. W alk in U ta h a n * ru m : shed a r unfurnished. A s low up C IS un* B R ; H IO tw e B R S o rry , no • a tte student*. R to n e O R 86010 closets, uh eoroas large fu lly ((B A R U N T V E JU ffrr I bedroom , A / C du­ plex. panelled, ti # be th-kl tehee. A lso larg e A / C duplex. O R 64444. A P A R T M E N T F O R m ax. I a r I room s near B d s paid. O R U T U , M r* U n iv e rs ity U I S I FSR m *4 a M ss* ta study try EDEN ROC t m W H heap rem find room m ate** C W *a r V a il 12R> and D u (E n fie ld ) G R 7-2586 I M i I bedroom ap artm en ts H H k* H65 A U L B IL L S P A ID H S M W M ( W I lu x u ry livin g , plenty parking Lau n d ry, B u * Shopping • A R A O S A P A R T M E N T N ear U n iva rsity pa ra g * O B 6-44*. G R 4-5533. n ice ly furnished. *70 B E A R U N T V ER R T T T . Poof, s ir I b e l ro o m * 1115-up. B d s p a id IH A Baa G a b rie l I O R M M I UT MEN A / 0 I kadrontTH. ta rp s bath. kitchen. W ater. M i p a * MaML fro# p a rk in g Q U IE T F O R ■ r u in . A ra ta b le am t* ta r I person, I ar I ■MW R R M eek* It. eam p u * Reasonable w *M . o c . M m N M * —CKH reservatio n s k in a m, B a a l M ad K r a a l rig h t freew ay F IL L A • C O P R IC H . Z H I Ooodrtofe A a fl hearth L a m a r ▼ IL L A A N IT A . A M U D rive. I sad I be dr porn s a lt* W ith in w a lk in g distance from cam p o * ALL BILLS PAID G R 1-1598 IW O W est 34th Stre et C A SA DE SALADO I and I bedroom s — sw im m ing poof cen Ira ! a ir and heat — off street parking IxuruD ousiy fa c u la # * 3610 8a La do. O R 7 2564. M anager. A p art­ furnished. L a u n d ry m ent N a l i d APARTMENTS CAVALIER 807 E a s t S ift Stre et ap a rtm en t* I bedroom * D e sirable room . kitchen, dining area. oondlbcm ns-heat fa c llitla * T V ca lv e parking, m aid 2-7 C li. Bvlr.g in d ivid u al a ir laundry study h a ll O ff street se rrie s , u tlliU aa paid. G R sw im m ing po ol V acan cy ta r ana bo* to sham wtth I other*. U n u su ally a tiro c liv * R efrig era ted A /a , coo tro lled b e a t T il# bath. C om pletely furnished except lin e n * P a rk in g . *37 s a 3 blocks cam pts* 130* N u eca* G R 2207L BLACKSTONE APARTMENTS F O R M E N A N D W O M E N J bedroom#- - 2 bath apartm ent*--m aid ser- v lc a —-com plete kitchen— am p le off street p ark­ ing—*x ce,.en t study fa cilities- *56 per m onth. » 0 Rad R iva# U R 6-5631 3 B E D R O O M apartm ent o r houe* Com plete­ furnished. T I N ta ll earneste a f earn pus. p riv a te parking eioee • rad # p e tri a vera g e L * o r b atter. Foe freshmen 11*0—s p rin t sem ester Can R esid ent M an ager. G R 88*530. cam po * E m phasis on ?A T of H IO airconditioned, cab le T V . lounges, to LUXURY APARTMENTS FOR MEN O range and W h ite Apartments 2707 Rio Grande Located 3 block, from campus, Orang* and White provide* an e'fictanf at­ mosphere for living, learning and socializing. It features: 3 bedroom suttas w *h 2 ba*hs. dining a-•a. fully ©quipped kitchen, beds, chests cf drawers, arr,p!e closets, ire we'l-to-watl carpet, central air end heat, da'iy ma d seneca, garbage pctc-up, proof construction, elevator, assigned covered park ng, living room with a hug© ttone fireplace, ttudy room, family room, game room with regulation size billiard! and ping-pong tables, laundry room with coin-cpera4ed washer* and dryer*, room with color TV, and canteen. For more information contact: MRS. RUTH LEWIS O ran g e and W h ite Apartments 2707 Rio Grande GR 6-4648 P l y 4 Sunday. Jan u ary 15, !967 TH E D A ILY T E X A N I bedroom , w all to w all carpeting, A V A IL A B L E JA N U A R Y 20: b rick , spacious. io u of closets A ttra c tiv e ly draped, furnished Cou­ ples no pets- W a te r gas p a id *84 50 O R 7-7219. G O U JC G B G IR L : w ill pro vide larg e p riva te fo r b abysitting la exchange room , bath O R 60333. R O O M S F O R rent, one black tooth a f ca m ­ p y * 125 double, *35 single. Bo ard a va li­ ab le T h * Bow en House. 20(71 W h it!* MODERN SPANISH SM I Speedw ay New, m odern spanish furnishing* fly * color schem es, one bedroom 2 double bed*, panel­ ed carpeted, dishw asher and dispoual, cen­ laundry tra l a ir, balconies. p«v>] and patio, *135. room. W a ter, gas. T V cab le paid. Leasin g fo r F e b ru a ry L G R 6 ®17. e rtie s : N o w U a t'n g for F e b ru a ry — d e s ira b le a n d s e le c t w ill b * s c a re * t f is ! . D o n ’t w a it re n ta l p ro p a rty s e m e ste r. sp rin g H a '’* a r* • fe w re a s o n a b ly p ric e d p ro p ­ MEN ONLY E ffic ie n c y ap a rtm en t 4 furnished ro am * W est side Cur needed. C lean, co lorfu l, a ir­ conditioned G as paid. Reed. O R 7 1991 O R 8 2 2 » unfurnished *129 50 2321 Oldham , STB B a rk P la ce , 4 bedroom s (coopt* o n ly) *95, 3401 Speedw ay, 3 bedroom * furnished. pool, tw o 3 bed­ room ap a rtm en t* HUD *140. 2309 O ldham , 2 bedroom furnished hon#*, *60. 3103 IVW tis, 2 bedrow n furnished a p a rt­ fire p lace, H 8B M OI Du­ m ent, b ills paid, va l, I bedroom furnished apartm ent, pool, b ills paid. *130. C a ll G R 2-6201 in fo rm atio n fu rth er fo r HARRI SON-WILSON-PEARSON 65 C O M E T . Cheap A ir, transm ission. U rg en t to • and IL G R 2-9669 autom atic W U B L IT H E R E le c tric piano, b lack, 68 k e y * recen tly overhauled. *300. O R 3-3696. 19Q5 P O N T IA C OTO. Gold. v in y l hardtop. pow er ste elin g brake*. A M -FM radio, stereo tape, au to m atic transm ission. A / C . G L 2 9906 a fte r 5. S E L L REMINGTON portable typ e w rite r O d desk. *40. GR 7-2722 after 5:3 a The Contessa E x q u isite liv in g fo r y o u n g w o m an . F o o l— C o - e d L o u n g e — P a rk in g . B e st F o o d on Campus. 2706 N u e c e s GR 7-9766 M U S T S E L L 1964 V W m tcro b u * excellent condition, sunroof. O L 3-6827. UNIVERSITY HOUSE ’66 C O R V E T T E Fastb a ck , M ossport green. SSO h p 4-speed, ca st alum inum knock-off radio. 15.000 rim a. m iles. H I 2-7943 a fte r air-condition, A M -FM J p m . 1963 L E M A N S ; sport coupe, a ir, auto m atic, 4-eyllnder. *500. G R 8-675*. 1954 C H E V R O L E T . New tires, radio, heater. M e ch an ica lly e x ce 'ie n f *125. G R 2-4941. 2701 Nueces A ir conditioned D a ily m aid service t m eals *87 50 m onth Room and board clo#* A void end af the month scrim ping. ta lh# U n iversity S IN G L E A N D double room s 3 blocks cam ­ pus. M aid service 2800 W h it!* G R 6-1712. R O Y A L P O R T A B L E typ ew riter, Uke M rs. L yle . *75. O R 7-0856 H O N D A 4oO. Assum e paym ent# or *695 O R 3 000 n ig h t* C R 5-4238 day* Stork force* E X C E IJL E N T M E A L S . Spring T IX )K C O O P . G R 24331. sem ester F O U R m /X T K S cam p u * *55 B ills Included O ff street parking. A va ila b le 2nd earnest*?. HO 5-9476. C H O IC E L O C A T IO N : couple, *75. 2203 Nueces G R 7-1051. single. A /CL H I 4-2607 IN C ■ala. 305 W e s t 6 * S t r * * t T W O F O R one 1966 B e n * I l l 250ec, 600 m ile s *560 buys 1964 Su zuki: 50ec. 4 000 m iles SPRING VACANCIES both. peparateiy Bement: *450. susuki; *150 $50-$55/mosth, Room and Board , MA A N 8 2470 a fte r 5 30 Weekends anytim e v w w [ ▼ ▼ > S P A N IS H B Y experienced^ teacher. M A . V irg in ia B u tle r. G R 8-3178. Miscellaneous So ciety Blood Bank need* a *5 F O R yo ur help! T ra v is County M ed ical continuing supply of blood donors, age 21 60 T akes IS m inutes. 2908 N. In te rre g io n a l G R 8-6157 G U IT A R IN S T R U C T IO N AU kin d s; sp ecialty, c la s s ic a l la w re n c e M altck, G R 7-0978. MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATURE *900 ta d e b t have had sch olarship*. three ye a r* of fu ll rn * Plea se don t ra ise tu itio n ! lo a n * Jobs— Plans# help tim # J. A. Baker 2004 Romer'a E V E R W IS H E D foe eve ry book"’ M aybe there ie. Fin d o u t O L there w as an outline 2-3991 R esearch and typing a v aila b le T E R M P A P E R d u e ' Ie it a m ess? H a ve I B M , w ill e d it C a ll O L 2-3994. P h . G R 6 40SS O R 6-3720. P A R K IN G N E A R eam p u* *35 per sem ester M O U S E H O U S E •VEAR L A W school: I bedroom . *90, bins For Rent paid- A /C , m aid eervice ] a r I m ea. ear- R E N T N E W pated and m any e x tra * C a ll P a id , O R 2 2-0358 TIS P a rk P in e * m onthly. Tape -4057. No answ er, G R 2-2692. A d m iral H150-H 5 SO recorder*. A lpha T V . G L T V . C L A R K S T R A IL E R P a rk . H i w a y IS * N orth. from Space a vaila b le. Sign. three m iles c ity a m it* O O T A C L A S S IC A L guitar, F in e condition. *150 OO. HO 5-9892. D R A F T E D . M U S T eell ’66 T riu m p h co n- v e rtib l* F a c to ry A /C , radio, heater. 6.800 m iles. A -I condition. H O 5-1716 E S P E Y T U N E R A M F M radio, *35 00 S II W est 7th. TLOK CO-OP HOUSE Alterations GR 2 4331 1903 Rio Grande L A D IE S . M E N . m ilita ry . M r*. B im * SSM Woodrow G L 2-1196. Roommate W anted P a rk in g , sw im m ing peel. 7-1871 XJQ&T: P I B e ta P IX arro w pin. Rew ard. O R NUECES HALL Room and Bo ard tor second sem ester Lost and Found O V E R !jOOK IN O C IT Y , lake. Secluded, d if­ fe re n t Ort# room e fficie n cy R e frig era ted A /C , u tn it’e* paid. *97 50, G R 3-1639 even­ ing# O N E B E D R O O M carpeted, larg e w alk in closet. T ak e o ver lease, save on deposit G L 2 8550. A /C, Furnished Rooms M A T U R E M A L E room m ate to share a p a rt­ m ent w ith graduate stud ent I blocks cam room board pus B ills paid, m aid service, G R a r n i M rs L y le . E a t a t the Contessa M aid service 7TO0 Nueces O R T I Typing *27 50-149. A /C . kitchen, m aid. L a d le *—J i l l H em phill P a rk , 2213 P e a r t G entlem en— 2024 Speedw ay G R 6-9490. take o ver this next sem ester s co n tracts ‘ T R A N S F E R R IN G . N E E D 3 m a ’.# students to SP R LN O V A C A N C IE S : A /C room s Room- board 165 per m onth. Stag Co-Op. 1910 Rte T H E S E S , dissertations law b rie f* re p o rt* m anuscripts. IB M . G L 4-3339. G R 8-3821. G rands G R 55041 N E E D F E M A L E room m ate to share I bed- M A L E S T U D E N T to assum e co n tract room a p a rtm e n t *37 50 each. 912B W est 22u». Com e by a fte r 5 p ro. spring sem ester Room /board. *82 50 m onth­ ly L y le H ouse 2800 W b ttl* B ru e t C u rry O R 6-1712. WANTED! Room m aSae alas need a quiet p iece to stud y! *35 00 each. AU B ills P a id B e a u tifu l quiet apartm ents C a ll M r* N eeley G R 7 2536 THE NUECES COLLEGE HOUSE C O M P E T E N T 0 E C R E T A R Y - T Y F M T in w ith m an y ye a r* of sxperier.ee ta a ll fie ld * w ill g ive conscientloua and m eticuloua car# as to a ccu racy, co rrect form and compost* Hon technical p a p e r* theses and dissertations. L A W W O R K 8P E (V L A L IF T —B rie fs , sem inar papers, law 'r r l s e no te* IB M E le ctro m a tlc. M ultlUtfelng. Xeroo- tag and binding services ob report*, request. typing O R 6-5994 MARGARET RITCHIE Pro fessio n al. O b servant T yping Bine* 1961 G IR L N E E D E D to share 3 bedroom a p a rt­ ment p re fera b ly senior o r graduate stu­ d e n t G R 2-5537 a fte r 5 G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S to share beau tifu l house. P riv a te bedroom * near cam pus. *50 00 month. G R 2-1706 a fte r­ noons. evenings. 'g irls ) wanted Ii interviewing for the spring semester: D IS S E R T A T IO N S , T H E S E S . R E P O R T S A ccu ra tely s b o l* M uitltlthed and bound apoa (o ff E n fie ld 1404 Kent Lan e el s e in e typed en R o ad ) O R 6-7079 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. T H E S E S , d’xsertationa. b rie f* r eports. m * » ascrip t*, IB M . M r* A nthony. O L *-3071. $9^.50. Small one-bedroom, eleefy fur­ nished, e x c e lle n t lo c a tio n to U T o r C a p ­ itol o r downtown. Mgr. Apt. 203 or c a ll S R 2 - 9 3 6 7 . L a P e tit Apt*, 1606 Sa n Ja c in t o , TEXAN DORM 1905 1907 F a e ce s C en tral A tr and H a st M en a dorm —Sp rin g V acan cies *36 M onthly M aid S e rvice — P a rk in g Jim T a po. J r „ M g r. O R K F 43 V A C A N C IE S A T Jo n as House. 1804H I * v e e * 3 blocks cam pus. A /C , porter, garage, (a lso sm all ap artm en t). In q u ire 1802 L a v a ca . G R 8410L reduced re n t P A R T IC U L A R upperclassm en. Su b stan tially room * R efrig era to r, phone, p riva te entrance. W alkin g distance. Q u iet M ove now. G R 3-3548. la r g e T A R R Y T O W N — Gen le m a n . P riv a te , c a r­ peted bedroom bath Su itab le for one per- ; eon HO 1901 Diurnals. G R 7-5168. Y O U R PRIVA TE P E N T H O U S E • I large bedroom* • 3 and Vt bath* • AU e le c tric kitchen • Wood burning fire p lace • P riv a te roof garden • C overed parking • Quiet and secluded • Fu rn ish ed or unfurnished • 7 blo cks to U T F o r fa cu lty o r g-aduate students P ric e *235 p er m onth. AU M ils paid ■SAN PED R O S Q U A R E APTS. CACTUS TERRACE Ph. G R 8-2708 DORM ■se U S B a ta ra T ao Loop O R 6-9251 O R T I *211 K a G a b rie l O. HENRY Slept Here V A C A N C Y F O R M ALE-- due to m arriag e. M odem A /C , 3 biocka cam pus No d a pos t Can G R 6-1837 portation. G IR L N E E D S room m ate for T ow s L a k e V il­ lage Bren d a. K I 43041. Needs ow * tran s­ Through Jan . 16 N E E D T W O m ale room m ates ta r Tow n la k e A p artm en t* 643 73. G R 7-2820. M A X E U P P E R C L A S S M A N , quiet, stud lou* N ice, no b ill* c os# rounpu* O R 8-7337. . . . coeducational inte!,ec- Oaks A p a rtm en t* One bedroom , pool, b ills | m a ie g r a d u a t e cw u w s tu ie r t R iv e r fUa! community. pe’d Sh ort w alk L a w School and Campti* *7* m onthly. Phone G R 6-1990. Room and on® mea! a day. G R 2-4666 G R 2-2229 In A ustin, bum oo th# h isto ric spot w here O H en ry this Spanking brand new rented lived apartm ent com plex to its first occupant* la ready to be O L D H A M H O U S E APARTMENT Fum. — I B.R. Start at $ ll 5 A /C and Heat Paid by Owner A* well a* water and ga* ALL BILLS PAID P o o l I B e d ro o m C a b !* T f D isp o sa l S tv ^ Y 505 t 11 th toe h isto rical Y o u 'll enjoy corporated toto this building, and w a know rem w in ba th* e a rly A m erican fu rn ish in g * M an ager on prem ises ervatio n or c a ll G R 89473. im pressed xxi th tbs q u ality a f to receive yo w res­ BARRISTER MANOR 3501 Rad R iv e r Ttx# G R i m O * W ® * LArf* one bagroom I biodfc* lo L a w •chow. P riv a te b alco n !# * desks, bookcase* pool carpeted to ahopplng center. E le c t- c kitchens, disposals cab,# T V . A djacent ' a ir and h e a t P le n ty of parking. A ll b illa paid. 3135. O . H E N R Y H O U S E APTS. 505 EL I Iff) Q U IE T N E IG H B O R H O O D . M en. single room . A /C ., bathroom , refrig e ra to r, m aid service, i u tilitie s, *42 706 W est 21st dent O E T T IN G M A R R IE D B a d ly need m ale stu co n tra ct M odern, three blocks west of Union, 2300 R io G rande OaU G R 83C183. take next se m e tie r's to O A R A G E . P R IV A T E bath. en tran ce leo**ted. O n a *35. 3307 Ham pton. O R 86180 T R A N S F E R R IN G . N E E D m ale student to assum e co n tra ct *45 m onthly. O R 8-4461 G IR L S : O N E block o ff eam p u * WOO W h it!* Sing e-double room s, kitchen. O R 85944. FE M A T JE T O share two bedroom ap artm en t *53 00. N e ar cam p us G R 8123L M A L E —C H O I CTE single room opening * R ea­ sonable. 1709 Cong re * * G R 87007. R O O M S F O R m en. Evap o ra ted cooler, bri­ chen. din e rt* bath, UTHities paid. W alkin g distance to eam pu* G R 7-1218. PASO HOUSE 1806 W est A v * Now accept tag »poll cations toe Spring sem ester room s • N ew ly Carpeted • New • la rg e refrig era to r • Q uiet, se cl a le d environm ent • C en tral a ir and heat • C able T V lounge G R 8 SKT S. A- ARMS 83662 Study fleet dean* tor U n iv e rsity men. C en tral a ir and b ra t M aid aervice, cab le T V . L a rg e ro om * O R 7-0617 D E S P E R A T E . N E E D fem ale E x ce lle n t m e a l* c o n tra ct pleasant m a m m a l* B lo ck 85250 to take o ver room . targe to ca ra p o * O R N E E D F E M A L E room m ate to ahar* apartm ent near eam p u* O R 6-3050 larg e G IR L N E E D S room m ate to share one bed lu x ury a p a rtm en t N e ar cam pus, or two bedroom room m ates room several ap a rtm en t G R 6-3900 to sh are 3 M A I,® room m ates. 7 blocks from cam pus *36 60 BIM * O R 88335 N e ar cam p o * A /C 330 OO O R 88431 N E E D O N E a r room m a toe to lux ury a pa rtm ent 0 *8 a fte r T. O R tw o tarnal# ■ tar* I O R I g irls to V ie ra I bedroom . I bath a p a rtm en t M aid Barrico , poo* cab le T V . G R 85953 a fte r 0 m en t N E E D G IR L room m ate F u lly carpeted, ta r lu x u ry a p a rt­ cen tral heat and a ir, M n* p a id O n* block att cam p u s G R 86081 M A IJB R O O M M A T E needed fa r m odem owe- bedroom ap a rtm en t C en tral a ir. pool. etc to eam pu* 35150. OaU Bob a t O R Clote 85540 M A U S T O V a r a on# bedroom ap a rtm en t Contact m anager. Tanglew ood North. O L 00060. About Dan K uttn eria a p a rtm en t *62 50. N E E D G IR L to take o ver co n tra ct M I** T ex ** A p artm en t* O R 7-0096 ONE BLOCK LA W SCHO OL U au araU y quiet, clea n air-cand! tinned, ear VR 86473 p *t*0 B a rk in g ava B a b l* ta * at 2407 K b in * G R 80690 N igh ta OL 84880 714 West Phone: G R 8-6757 H elp W anted DORMITORY MANAGERS U T m en'* dorm need* retired o r atudect couple to m anage an ti! Ju n e 1968 o r longer W ife lim ited to p a rt tim # school o r em ploy­ m ent A partm ent furnished w ith stim ie s pin* •alary W rite 34n. OL 2-8279. %pAtU A i n EARN FREE TRIP TO EUROPE On# a f th# la rg e st and oldeat firm a dealing in Europ ean c a r tra v e l seek* cam tm* rep re­ sentative. M ust be *«rioua, en terp risin g ; pre fe rab ly m arrie d grad uate student. European IN C tra velled C A R T O U R S 553 F ifth A v * , N Y . N Y 10017. (212) O X 7-5800 IN E U R O P E , Typing. M u ltlllth ln g . Bind ing A com plete professional typing se rvice ta f8 ored to the needs of U n iv e rsity student*. Sp#* language, sci­ etal keyboard equipm ent ence. and eng.Deering these* and d isserta ­ tio n * for P h o n e G R 8 3 2 1 0 a G R 87679 2013 G uadalupe Apartm ents— Unfurnished R O LLIN G W O O D - - F E M A L E o r m ature m al# P riv a te bedroom , bath entrance, u tilities, garage a p se * *40- G R 82730 C H O IC E 3 bedroom upper, cen tra! b a a l A /C , targe R efin ed adults. Q u iet 180 14ffl Hart- DINTTN O TTYX B R A D F IE L D House* Univer­ sity girt* Room --m eal* 2HR Nose** OR fo rt G R 7-9390 7-7744—O R 83607. Your Private Penthouse • t large bedroom# • 3 and V4 baths • AH e le c tric lr!trite * • Wz-od burning firepiaw e • P riv ate roof garden • C o vered parking • Quiet and secluded • Fu rn ish ed o r unfurnished • 7 b ocka to UT San Pedro Square Apt. Ph. G R 82708 Printing fa cu lty o r graduate stud ent* P ric e 130 month. AH Mila paid. 3 B L O C K S from eam pu* Room with kitchen prlvelagea A /C , N ew ly decorated. J3S plus u tilitie s O R 7-4170 Iffl-O WENT 26th: Bora amati roam. g o re bath. aB btlia paid. J20 OR 84880 AN 82120. F U R N IS H E D to N O L E roam ta la rg e bourn occupied by 5 b o y* Chi let neighborhood, dead-end a tre e t W alkin g distance U n lve ra lty Responsible ad u lt* only. 335. O R 7-7915. V A C A N C IE S F O R m al# stud ent* 3003 fla t va rsity. M r* J . H . M itc h e ll O R 74750 P R IV A T * R A T H . en tran ce, re frig e ra to r 886 tX B N u ece* O R 7-HRL H I 4-3007 E N G L E O A R A G E room. U n u su ally alo* P riv a te bath. antra no*. Un) vers! tv m ea. *8250. 1913 Robbins P ie r* . G R 85261 LO O KING FOR a (Pdet. fum ier a in weedier# bouse fo r m en? ta • student In vestig a te 2800 W id d le H B lo ck North at Cam po* tingle and Double Room s Available O R 7 2400 HELP WANTED HAVE DAILY TEXAN ROUTE OPEN. EARLY MORNING HOURS. GOOD PAY. MUST HAVE PHONE AND AUTO. PREFER VOLKSWAGEN. CALL BRONSON SCHULTE GR I 5244 GR 2 8385 1-5244 for a Classified Ad Call GR 1-5244 To Place a Texan E X P E R T T Y P IN G , T erm pa pere- re po rt*— briefs. M rs. M ontgom ery. G R 2-561)1. Virginia Calhoun Typing Service Profeisiorel Typing M u ltlllth ln g and binding seriation * 1.101 Edgewood Symbol* X ero x la m in a tin g aa these# amt db* O R 3-2630 N o ta ry THERES, dissertations, report* Bobby# Delafield. HI 87K4. T Y P IN G on execu tive e le c tric by form er la In se cre ta ria l studies, g al secretary, BBA Mrs. Fo w ler, O L 3-6650. PROFESSIONAL TYPING since thesis, ley, off Burnet Road. GL 8 8848. seriatio n * IM S . Oita report* Fra n ce s Brad­ T H E M E R , R E P O R T S , lawnote* 25c Notal-*, Mr*. F raser. GR 6-1317. WOODS TYPING SERVICE Ex p erien ced , Dissertations. M anuscripts. Complete duje for muitiliih. m im eograph Henting service ditto. Reasonable. HO 5-1078. 1 - Xeroxing-Single Copist MuliUi thing Thebes— Papers— Printing 311 East I I th GR 6-6593 AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS O LD W O R L D C H A R M 3 B lo ck s from Cam pos Panelled wail* - Fren ch Doom Ba loony P riv a te B a ta C o vered P a rk in g Mi OR 8 ISM OK 34888 In The Daily Texan Classified Ad O L 4-3230 T Y P IN G W A N T E D . R easonable ra ta * F a il servt-e A ccu ral# and n e a t F re e d e liv e ry , Rooms for Rent 1914 Oldham GR 8 8911 W e In vite ye a to Inspect the prem ises sf M A L E . T W O bedroom boats# Fnm tahed a g * education, qualificatio n# and experience Furnished A p a rtm e n t! M anager A g * SBI UT Team Holds Scrimmage Before College Bowl Game Bv MADELINE TOCKER Texan Feature Writer listened Huddled nervously on the first floor of the University YMCA, a small group of intermittent competitors thud of a K arate class practicing on the floor above and waited expectantly for the coach to snap them into vigorous mental action. the to The whistle blew, and each man knew that this was his last chance to score. It was fourth down and only inches to the goal line for each semi-finalist of The Uni­ versity of Texas College Bowl to prove that his brain-power was indispensible to the team. COLLEGE BOWL Ls a Sunday afternoon television program presented by General Electric where colleges and universities throughout the country compete in answer­ ing questions to win scholarship grants for their schools. Tile University team scrim m age began, and each player tensed his muscles in a p ­ prehension as toss-up question the first was called, “What Russian Czar was aa- The Line-Up of contestants am entrants in UT College Bowl. Photo by S te \e I>eUs Psychology Class Divides Info Groups In Attem pt to Reduce Impersonality By NANCY GENT Texan Feature Writer Large, impersonal classes have been a fact of life at the University for many years, but Dr. Ira Iscoe, professor of psy­ chology, is experimenting with a way to reduce this impersonality. Three hundred students in Psychology 852. a course in abnormal behavior, have been participating this sem ester in an ex­ p erim en t Dr. Iscoe randomly divided his lecture c l a s s , which almost fills Batts Auditorium, into 25 groups the first day of class. Each group, ranging in size from l l to 16, was then told to choose a name end elect a secretary and a group leader. This was the “ icebreaker,” Dr. Iscoe said. THE “NARCOTIC REACTION,” “ Iscoe s Idiots,” the "N arcissistic Society,” and the ••Freudian Slips” were just a few of the Original names. Each group was encouraged to hold * pe­ d a l study sessions for exam s, but on a voluntary basis. To stim ulate participation, th*. Iscoe offered bonus points to mem­ bers of the five groups with the highest exam averages. He related the bowling concept of the highest team score. Because each person got extra points, group participation didn’t detract from in­ dividual performance, Dr. Iscoe said. this to Group projects on any topic were also (ncouraged. One group visited the Camp Gary Job Corps, while another chose films od a discussion topic and invited the entire class to a special evening session. The "Sly-Chologists” began such an extensive study of the attitudes toward authority of different groups, among them mothers and prostitutes, that it is still in progress. in THIS IDEA originated from Dr. Iscoe’s teaching psychology, long experience when he assigned projects and let the stu­ dents work in groups. It is derived from the “concepts of group support, group co­ hesion, and Intergroup competition,” he said. Usually, junior and senior students are “ really products of a system where grades are more im portant than learning,” said Dr. Iscoe. He wants to reduce this tend­ ency. “ I am not concerned with the ancient art of teaching,” he said. "WITH THE COMMITMENT to m ass edu­ cation. it is im perative that we develop procedures and techniques to teach large groups and still make them feel worth- w h i l e as individuals,” he said. “ Tile opinions of students do count.” Tile group method has “brought up par­ imper­ ticipation and helped sonality,” Dr. Iscoe said. Also, the morale is a little higher than in the usual class. to reduce He grouped the students at random be­ cause the “p art and parcel of universal education should be dealing with different people,” with “views and stylos of life radi­ cally different from yours,” he said. H ie experiment to is reduce alienation from the course and ali­ enation from the University. attem pt “ an “The University of Texas is making a teaching,” he serious effort improve said. “ Through research, feedback, and candid evaluation we can improve.” to Candid evaluation is what he got Thurs­ day, the final day of class, when he dis­ four-page questionnaire w rit­ tributed a ten by Isabel Navar, his research assist­ ant, and paid for by a $500 grant from the Arts and Sciences Foundation. THIS EVALUATION sheet asked about the activity and success of each student’* group and called for comments and sug­ gestions on the experiment. One question asked the number of peo­ ple the student knew in the class at first and then the number at the end of the course. A quick appraisal of the results showed several people met at least seven or eight new students during the semester. The experiment “has worked partially; in some cases very well, in some cases, not at all,” Dr. Iscoe told his students Thurs­ day. IT WILL BE interesting to evaluate the correlation between the student’s glade in the course and his evaluation of it, he said. Full results of the experiment will be available early next sem ester, but Dr Is­ coe said that even without this information, he would probably try this method again. Family Group Atmosphere Simulated As Coeds Reside in Home Ec House their time effectively, the girls become “one happy family.” “ The first week was hectic,” Kenny said. “ At the first meal, nobody said a looked at each word. We other. Everyone was too worried about do­ ing something wrong.” just sat and HEADING THIS "fam ily” were Pat and Dewitt Reed, graduate students. Mrs. Reed, who taught public school for six years, is studying nutrition. Her husband is studying pharm aceutical chemistry. Reed described his experiences as “very unusual hut pleasurable.” His wife added that many of his friends are a hit en­ vious. “ He has been awfully handy,” she con­ tinued. "He acts as host. for example, when we have English-style service, and often carve* the meat ” MUCH OF THE GIRLS* WORK la done to the tune of a flamenco guitar, played by Reed, who has taken lessons in Spain. The music of this guitar has a Spanish- gypsy quality. Mrs. Reed, more of an adviser than an overseer, said that is surprising what an excellent the girls did under such pressure. job She remem bers one supper which was Interrupted by the hot water heater in the kitchen. The group continued eating barbecue as the plumber labored. the bursting of By FLUFFY GEORGE Texan Foetor© Writer time for bridge, Even though automation gives women more teas, and PTA meetings, 12 University coeds learned in seven short weeks that there la more to managing a home than skill in pushing buttons. Six single coeds ran the home m anage­ m ent house at 2510 Whitis, while six m ar­ ried women took charge of the house at 2500 W i c h i t a , as students in Home Economics 321. a requirement for teacher education and home demonstration in this field. ‘THE GIRLS have a chance to put into practice what they have learned in courses in food, nutrition, and family finances.” said Mrs. Fern Staggs, assistant professor of home economics and director of the m anagement houses. The two Victorian designed houses, archi­ tecturally out of place on the modern campus, appear formidable to passersby. “ Even the course st ares a lot of people,” said Kenny Griffith, senior. “ People who don’t know anything about the experience must be awful,” she continued. the girls agreed that making tile course worthwhile and enjoyable is 90 per cent attitude. Most of think it that to add ONE GIRL confessed lf you are overly grade-conscious, “ you would go that she has crazy,” hastening always disliked grade-orientation anyway. Each girl assumes a role for a week and fulfills certain duties. The rotated roles Include hostess, cook, assistant cook, house­ keeper, assistant housekeeper, and laun­ dress. The cook and assistant cook, who do the marketing, planning, and preparation for three m eals a day, have the most time­ consuming jobs. They work on a budget of $1.05 to $1.10 per person per day. THE GROUP’S MAIN OBJECTIVE is to learn and demonstrate a wise use of their resources—time, energy, skills, knowledge, and money. While to m anage and utilize learning Home Economics House • . , acron from Women’s Gym, it on# of two housing coedit. ■ f e n hr e m M i gasslnated in 1881?” No time to think, only to react. Instant­ ly a light flashed, a name was called and the answer—Alexander IT. THE ANSWER CAME, and quickly, hut it cam e where nobody knows. Possibly from the depths of the subconscious or was a forgotten memory that just popped up. Probably It was recalled from a book, a history course taken, or a movie seen. The important thing is that it came at a vital point in a game that requires each player to think and act spontaneously. Coach Douglas Morgan, known as Dr. Morgan in the D epartment of Philosophy, emphasizes the importance of a team ef­ fort in College Bowl participation. Individ­ ual answers are important, but the com­ bined score determines the victor. in production Time for another play, tins time a Bonus Question: “ Name seven makes of cars no longer that were named after Presidents of the United S tates.'1 Stop and think! Could you do it in 30 seconds? PHYSICAL FITNESS is a necessity for any successful team. Coach Morgan has set down stoma training rules for his play­ ers to follow to keep them In peak physi­ cal and mental condition. Coach Morgan has warned his t e a m against studying too much. Eyestrain at this crtical point could result in an acute case of “bowl-opia.” A special room in the Academic Center is available to all Col­ lege Bowl contestants who wish to study. Tills room is packed with a vast amount of m aterial and in short question-answer form. This is good the players may for scrimmaging and drill each other on various plays of the game. Information set up requested a u m MORGAN has that people turn in practice questions to Room 301, Waggener Hall. Current events ques­ tions are needed most. The following are examples of questions which may ba asked in a College Bowl gam e: • “ What are elements of the same atom ?” do?” • “ What was Coxey's Arm y?” • “ What is the largest living tree?” • “ What does Charlie Brown’s father • “ Who wrote Zorba the G reek?” FACES ARE TENSE, tem pers are short! Each trigger-finger is ready to punch that button as soon as the question is fired. Players have only 15 seconds to answer the toss-ups, and it is risky to take chances on half-right answers. The buttons are punched fast, but not too fast. Answers m ust be right or the opponents get a free try at the question. A wrong answer re ­ sults in a five point penalty. too fast and Coach Morgan again warned his team that punching buttons too furiously without right answers may result In a serious case of “digititus.” He also stressed that if a player give a wrang answer, he must wash his mind clean and forget It till the final whistle blows. Thera is no time for post mortem in this game. PRACTICE WAS OVER. Each player had put forth his best effort. The next few IN ADDITION to fulfilling their roles, the girls complete such projects as mak­ refinishing old furniture, ing placental, making artificial arrangem ents, and covering chairs. flower They also learn how to properly care for and utilize equipment. “We have great equipment,” said Carol Hubbard, junior. Some of it is consigned to the houses by manufacturers. Carol's favorite piece of equipment is the electric floor washer. “ You push one . another button and soap comes out button, and it scrubs the floor . . still another, and it vacuums . the dirt. . MOST OF THE GIHIS say. “ I couldn’t possibly be m arried and do all of this.” “ It’s not easy,” said Mrs. Pat Grove, mother of 8- and 10-year old boys and a 4-year-old girl. “ I could never have done it without my mother-in-law.” Under the direction of Mrs. Staggs, the house at 2510 Wichita was managed by six married students. They had the sam e duties as the unmarried students, but they did not spend the night- "MY OWN HOME was sort of slighted,” confessed Mrs. Linda Baker. “My husband ate out a good deal also.” Mrs. Grove recalls one friend whose husband "hogged the conversation” every night as they rode home. One day he apologized, but explained, “Do you realize I haven’t talked to anyone since nine this morning?” Although (he married students had more experience, they agreed that in planning ahead and saving resources were invaluable. lessons MRS. GROVE HAD an extra reward. •Vow Blat I am home, I think my chil- Iren appreciate me more.** Back in her apartment, Kenny said that she has become much more aware of time and the value of planning ahead. “Oh, also the value of nutritional m eals,” she said, finishing the last-mioula preparation of a ‘To think,” Ana said, "someone does Hfn ait (Kl pip*,11 weeks of grueling workouts are still ahead. The eight players chosen as finalists for the University include Norman team Bonner, junior in government and philoso­ phy; B arbara Carroll, in Plan ll; and Carl Clark, sophomore English m ajor. Also chosen were Dixie Cobb, soph­ omore in education; Tom Edwards, sopho­ rn more sociology; Howard Kreisner, junior in communication; Kris Morrison, freshman in physics; and Buford Taylor, junior in government. senior Four of these finalists and one alternat* will fly to New York to represent the Uni­ versity on the program Fob. 12. IT IS UNKNOWN at this time who Texas will face in the Bowl. Possible opponents are St. M ary's of Notre Dame, New York State University at Albany, and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. One student's comment on participating in the College Bowl workouts was, “You have to have a mind that’s a cross between a garbage can and an IBM com puter.” Another said. “ It just shows you how much you don't know.” Still another mused. “I wonder lf they’ll light the Tower for us if we win.” ONE MORE DEJECTED player merely gazed into the distance and said, “ Duh!” All in ail, the students feel is Intellectual and personal respect In an air of healthy and friendly competition and teamwork. there Incidentally, the seven m akes of ears no longer in production named after pres­ idents of the US are Lincoln, Roosevelt, Washington, Harding, G rant, Trum an, and McKinley. Dr. Douglas Morgan . . . coaches College bowl team . Art Professor Stresses Existence in the Present By SUZANNE WINCKLER Texan Feature Writer l i f e is not good. L ife is not h id . Li f e n other, beyond all d i f f e r ­ ences A n d d ivid in g . Prano viral! “Li f e is im m ense! - Michael Adam Life is now and now arid now. The past Is dead and the future doesn’t exist; This is reality. At this time, prior to finals, and this place, the University, inserter! in the rug­ ged Texas hill country, a student should stop to appreciate this “ nowness.” Now is the time to focus one’s eyes on life in pro­ cess, to disengage from the past and pro­ ject not into the future. KIM TAYLOR, assistant professor of art, that every day when he does precisely leaves his University work for a 45-minute drive through the hill country to his home —a brown stone cottage on the Hutto Ranch near Lake Travis. Here is his wife, R ya; two blonde and tanned children. Noah and Shane; two la r g e black dogs, Sheba and Pope; a silent rusty-colored cat; and tliree ponies. Although Rim does not have set theories and methods, his whole approach to life and his calm attitude toward students offers one many ideas to consider. He has col­ lected and retained throughout his life a storehouse of ideas from which a student can draw. Kim is more than a teacher. He is also a writer, an artist, a husband, and a fa­ ther, actively engaged in living a rich life. HE IS 47, was born bi Jabalpur, India, of English parents, educated in England, and has taught in Australia and England. When Kim was IO. his father died. From the age of 5, he has a tte n d s hoarding schools, has lived alone, and has wandered the world on his own. He cam e to Austin six years ago to de­ sign and help edit “ The Texas Q uarterly” and joined the teaching staff in 1963 with­ out intentions of staying permanently. Tex­ as and Siberia, he said, were two places his family never would have considered for homes. But they will stay now. Why? Because “ I’ve lived out my life in different places and according to its season. I ve been fool­ ish as a youth as I think one should be, and have wandered and made mistakes and the like, and now I feel very ready to stay put,” he said. KIM IS NOT worried about today's youth as most adults are. Those students who don't seem to have a straight, strict, and uninterrupted direction are the live ones. In the preface of his book, “Man Is a Lit­ tle World,” he writes, “ The youth are ev­ erywhere accused of seasonal follies, while adults will allow themselves ever im agin­ able madness, even the making of bombs.” to Foolishness and Impatience, so often con­ sidered vices of the student, are a part of youth. “ For young people to be too wise is most unwise.’* he arid. “The thing is to be what you are, if you ar* impatient, to let yourself be Impatient, but be aware ai what your impatience is.” Impatience, doubt, and questioning a re things that have to bo lived out. They can’t be controlled. To tell yourself yow m ust do something la to build up frustration, to “split” your ideal “ oneness ’ or, “ whole- ness” of self. “I AM VERY skeptical about change or conversion in the light of something exter­ ior to oneself. All that m atters, any chang* brought about are natural ones, not brought about by your will a t all, hiut naturally and inevitably/' he said. Thus, what m atters must be lived and the only “philosophy” is one that comes na­ turally from looking at oneself and seeing hie things that are wrong. It is this natural and calm realization and acceptance of o n es follies, impatience, and doubts that can counterbalance the pressures that build up In the University environment. Rim has a British accent, d e a r and con­ fident—and his blue eyes, electric and pene­ trating. convey his tiiouglus. One does not rem em ber how he looks so much as how he sounds. His hair is completely whit* and moro or less tends to. itself, He ta alive and as natural as the environment in which he lives. EDUCATION, m orality, and religion have put a great burden on youth. This “Where am I Going?”—tins progress to be som e­ thing has made tile student overlook hie rich present Rim said, “ Tile future Is ab­ solutely unreal. To live in term s of the fu­ ture is the most crass folly, just as living in term s of the past.” ALONENESS, a chance for calm, is an important part of Kim’s life So im portant that he is presently building a home on a remote and wooded section of the* Hutto ranch. Getting to it requires a journey on a chalky, rock road through uncleared pas­ tures. His new home stands on a summit over­ looking Lake Travis. It lives harmoniously with its surroundings. Tile windows slant northward to allow the breezes to circulate, the white brick walls reflect the gold rays pf the sun. the raw cedar doors release a pungent earth-odor, and a pool catches ail the moods of the sky. Trees, somewhat less than majestic, yet sturdy and patient, stand around tile home. It is a nature- house. From this vantage point. Kim and his family can, as he wrote in The Labour of Love,” watch “ the earth as it is, in sun and rain and cairn and storm, all the wreck and wonder of it. just as it is.” This paradoxical “ wreck and wonder ' of the world is to be found on this cam pus— in one s personal doubts and impatience, and in one’s countless relationships. Of course, it is impossible and unnatural to assume all of Kim Taylor's attitudes to­ ward life, however, a student might re­ increase hi! lease a few pressures and awareness of life—as it is now—if he w Channel 9 beginning Wednes­ day. Entitled “College Bound," the programs will be televised each Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. through Feb. 15 on KLUN-TV, community- owned educational television sta­ tion serving the Austin-San Anto­ nio area. Th# initial program In the ae­ rie*, produced for the National Educational Television network by Boston station WGBH-TV, Is Intended primarily for parents. The program illustrate* th* tran­ sition role of parents when their UT Choral Groups To Perform Today The sixth annual mid-winter concert of the Choral Organiza­ tions Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. lr. Hogg Auditorium will offer a break the pre-exam cram at the Univer­ sity. the weather and in The free concert, which will cater to all musical tastes, will present five group*. Dr. Morris J. Beachy, director of choral organizations, will di­ rect the Madrigal Singers and the A Cappella Choir In a pro­ gram of Sixteenth Century and later classical selections. The Longhorn Singer*, directed by leonard McCormick, and the Southern Singer* under Bes* Hieronymous will sing rn group of popular •elections — many from film and Broadway scores. J. G. Martin will direct the Men's Glee Club in several tra­ ditional songs Including a rendi­ tion of “ Good Old Mountain Dew" to be performed by the Sundownera, a folk group of six Glee Club member* assisted by two guitar* and a string bas*. Counseling and clinical psy­ chologists ar# available at the Testing and Counseling Center to work with students. Individually or In group*, wrhen they seek help with educational, vocational, or personal problems and plan­ ning. Dr. M. J, Beachy Woodcuts on Display Through Friday in Union Thirty woodcuts by one of America’s leading printmakers ar* on view and sale through Friday In Union Building 101 The exhibit is open each day except Sunday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. The artist is Irving Amen ef New York Qty, represented In the collections of the Metropoli­ tan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, Corcoran Gallery of Art. and the National Library ta Paris. Purchase arrangement* may be mad* with Mrs. Lucille Baer Bowman In Texas Union 342. R A N S ★ I E X A S THEATRES • “ MOVIE ENTE UTA IXMEXT GUARANTEED PREVIEW I U!NIL?nI Al 8:uu gaged In auch activities as re­ viving Restoration drama, or vis­ iting with each other while In the bathtub. Despite the group’s often out­ rageous behavior, “ there was a streak of Puritanism them which damned anyone who made any compromise to achieve world­ ly success.’’ in Northrop Frye and Clive Bell caused “a roar of Indignation” in 1910 when they held a post impressionist art show including works by Picasso, Gaugin, and Van Gogh. The public waa shocked, but after a second ahow tha next year, there were calla for reproductions. Indeed, ail of them—Garnett Included—were pacifists in WWI and registered a* conscientious objectors to resist conscription. Most of them were not pacifists on principle, he said, but believed the w'ar could have been pre­ vented by going another way and avoiding Britain’! Russian alliance. One of their famous number, Henry James, did live in Ivory tower—and I wouldn't have had him any different,” Garnett add­ ed. VIRGINIA, however, wa* never able to find her tower, he be­ suicide lieves, and committed when she “felt madness creep­ ing up in her.” Her novels reflect this Inner feeling, Garnett said, analyzing the theme of “Mrs. Dalloway,” as “ the death of the soul—or I should say, the withering.” “She shows in one day of the woman’s life her failure through being afraid to take social risks which Virginia had already tak­ en in her stride.” Garnett considers the book “ one of the great novels of the English language — no one else’s la sn full of p o etry as p r o se Virginia s, and it Is completely successful." Student Artist To Give Recital Mrs. Margaret Mulvey will be presented In a senior organ reci­ tal Monday at 4 p.m. In Recital Hall in the Music Building. A native of Houston, Mrs. Mul­ vey won the Houston Youth Sym­ phony student audition* and made her first concert appearance with the Youth Symphony at the age of 9. She made two subsequent appearance* with th* orchestra and later won the Houston Sym­ phony Orchestra student audi­ tions which permitted her to appear as soloist with the orches­ tra on Its student concert series. During that time, Mrs. Mulvey also appeared the twice with Houston Summer Symphony. The pianist was chosen as one of 12 regional winners the Merriweather Poet Contest con­ ducted in Washington, D C., arith the National Symphony Orches­ tra. in A recipient of a music scholar- ship, she began her study in the | Department of Music at the Uni­ versity with late Dalles the Frantz and won a first rating In the 1961 Biennial Plano Record­ ing Festival. The same year, she began a study of the organ, and upon concluding her piano studies with her most recent teacher, faculty member Emmett Vokes, she became an organ student of Dr. E. W. Doty, professor of music and dean of the College of Fine Arts. Plus! Regular Feature At 2— 4— 6— 9:45 SH IRLEY MICHAEL MacLAINE CAINE “GAM BIT" TECHNICOLOR. . W HAT THEY DO TOGETHER IS A CRIME! att "The Shot9 Place of Auf th " 2200 Hancock Drive GL 3-6641 “ H O W L I N G L Y F U N N Y -BRILLIANT” -B r m d ok CnS. TM* Sn* W X* Morgan.' N O W ! OPEN 1:45 S T A T ! I I M OO 1 4 5 1 1 5 1 9 ON D U D R A G ” G R M S M STARTS WEDNESDAY A U 6 c G u i o o e s s . G i N A ( a U A b r i £ i d a m z m ts r n .panawsiwr* WTracaifi* BURNET SSI ft I Q 3Q 2E 6601 N. K IM A K • HO 5 1710 ExneD eot F a m ily M ( r r t r . • AR C o lo r MOO M UN CT RD • HO 5 6033 SEVEN again... MAGNIFICENT again! r r " !' jap: .... The Plot is...to take over the world... and Rio is where it's happening, baby! mumammsm M u m m n e w p w * . A OMO O* tA LM O rnn PXOOUCHOW .-.M C H A E l CONNORS-DOROTHY P R O W -RAF VALLONE MARGARET LEE ■ m ourn hkhkvou bevewy IMUS rn TERRYTHOMAS TIBS TNE SBL! MD NWI TRMK” M i x M a n N B ta OmM * tm l f • TRCI IWK: OC ow.* Start* W EDNESDAY STATE H U R R Y EHD! WED _ « 1 r n m u Mjstamqfm I theSeveir ii rcotw Vv DsLmTl pawnrisar ^UNITED ARTISTS ■ Also tho CNO Woo* Artk m of “KID RODELO" i * 4 Juno* D on M « r r a » I K l S Adult* C h ild r e n I OO • Hts*. Carri* t r e e .60 • O p e n 6:0 0 p i n i m iu ou imer « « O NE WEEK Starting Thurs.I BY POPULAR DEM ANDi^H I - j . I BURT LANCASTER ■LEE MARVIN • ROBERT RYAN • JACK PALANGE ^CLAUDIA CARDINALE] ■RALPH BELLAMY the PROFESSION! JUS---- H «— —- —— — - m M *rU J - — Pgjjg * ~ r »■ By JULIA BOWELL Am t Amassment* Editor ▼irgtols Woolf scered a lot of people, or at least that la tho Impression one feta from David Garnett, an Englishman of let­ ter*, who knew Virginia well. Speaking on “Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group” Fri­ day afternoon in English Building 203, Garnett told of hi* experi­ ences with Virginia and other fa­ mous artistic rebels against Vic­ torian mores in England who in­ habited Bloomsbury House from the early 1900's until World War ‘ ll. THEIR GROUP included such literary personages as c r i t i c Northrop Frye, E. M. Forster, Lytton Strachey, biographer of prominent Victorian! who “ex­ posed the ahama and hypocrldea of Victorians, and later dissect­ ed, with loving accuracy, Queen Victoria herself,” and British t c o n o rn i * t George Maynard Keynes, “whose ideas on full em­ ployment later kept off a slump in England after World War IT.” Along with Virginia and her mild-mannered husband, Leonard Woolf lean—would usually be telling his spaniel how the Bloomsbury to behave” ), Group formed a rebel reactionary camp against the prevailing Vic­ torian atmosphere. (“quiet and There existed a contra diction In Virginia, thinks Garnett. “ She was so beautiful and aristocratic, but had a relish for life most often found in old market wom­ en." Delwood, DRIVE-IN THEATRE 3991 Ult in. Spinout Idris fr a ilty and s e ll e r Tabaret I M a y a Clint Wnlk.tr and Jar Sort* I M Football Higbftqbts of 1966 6 45 and 10:10 DRIYI* IN IHF ATRE 13900 Si CWI A Return of the Seven I I I B r j n n r r a n d H o b a r t F o l ia r r.w Arabesque S o p h ia I o r * * a n d G r o o o r y T e r k I U Football Hiqbftgbti of 1966 6:45 and (OOO to Albee'* “A GREAT MANY of aa went afraid of Virginia,” he quipped in answer famous question, because “she bad a great capacity for mischief” and could be as cruel to her enemies to ber as she wa* delightful friends, cajoling through thorn flattery to admissions which she would then tear apart. Virginia and her brother, Adri­ an Stephen, earned notoriety for their practical jokes designed to make those In authority appear ridiculous whenever possible. Garnett described one escapade where Virginia and Adrian, dis­ guised as visiting foreign digni­ taries, sent a note to a British admiral requesting permission to tour his ship. The admiral was playing golf at the time and, not stopping to check with the For­ eign Office, rushed back to jump into his full dress uniform and conduct their tour. “VICTORIANS s h o o k their heads over them,” Garnett said of the Bloomsburies, as they en­ PREVIEW! TONIGHT STATE 7:30 Ii. PARAMOUNT 8 P. M . AD CT .TS TM MMC TS .M , CHEM! P A R A M O U N T HELD OVER! LAST 4 DAYS! WEA TTH F* I I «M:WA W IO O* FINTAK SOM ■ ANN* MARGRET DEAN MARTIN t MATT HELM KARL MALDEN S O B E R E R * R A W nf^OUJM&A PICTURES SQIXSf B m m n c u ^ FREE PARKING g * LAVACA STS STATE .W CEA TT H ED I I a s » 6 « I ll*. (SNEAK 1:3*1 SJO C M S 14 i MDC TONY CURTIS ROSANNA SCHIAFFINO. *AlUUVEDBia,MBVr YOU JUST HULME! OH Co-AUrrttm Co-Stomni Lionel JeHrioi- I s m Aol1 - 1 , 1111 - w —<>***»■**>» h p * r a ^ i n m . / SUITS Chalk Stripes, Sharkskins, Hopsacks Navy, Charcoal, Black, O live Many with Vest Regular 65.00 75.00 85.00 SALE 47.00 57.00 67.00 Sizes Include Shorts and Extra Longs. Regulars and Longs. LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS Checks, Solids, Hopsacks, Plaids Regular 7.00 to 9.00 SALE 497 ; ; :i i ’ 1 SUITS SPECIAL Special Group of Suits. Both Fall and Summer W eights . . . Great Opportunity for tremen­ dous savings. Regular 70.00-75.00 SALE 3700 JACKETS Dacron-Cotton Windbreakers Waterproof Ski Jackets Regular 15.00 20.00 SALE 9.97 SPORT COATS Big Year for Big Plaids W ool Shetland and W ool-Orlan Plenty of time for lots of wear Regular 45.00 50.00 65.00 SALE 33.00 37.00 47.00 LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS Stripes, Herringbones, Solid Color, Basket-Weaves. W e have added some more -- all there is. Com e quickly, they won't last. Regular 7.00 to 8.50 SALE 4 9 7 Size 14-32 thru 17-35 A L S O M O N O G R A M S P E C IA L O N SO L ID O X F O R D 7.50 Shirts--1.50 Monogram 9.00 Value 69 7 CXurfjL, GampWl ttttiiwrattg fifing 2350 Guadalupe p ig i JO Sunday, January 15, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN