T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student New spaper at The University of Texas V ol.~65 Price F iv e C e n ts ~ ~ A U S T I N , T E X A S . WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1965 Si* Pages Today No. 75 Europe's Power W eak Dean Acheson States Countries Lack Common Purpose Europe is plagued with an ab­ sence of power, according to for­ mer Secretary of State Dean Acheson, and the United States must take steps to restore a fa­ vorable balance of power. "W e must know also what to if De Gaulle orders NATO do force* out of France and ».n* all troops on French soil arc under French command.” T S should face up to this fact, Acheson said Acheson, in a speech Tuesday before an over-flow crowd in the Main Ballroom of the Union Building, traced the development of US policy in Europe and em­ phasized the importance of Amer­ ican comprehension of European problems. When the United States first embarked on its journey to world power, in Acheson’s view, little emphasis was placed on partici­ pation in foreign affairs. “ Tile Father of our Country thought that all the wars of that period — King George’s War, Queen Anne's war, the French, and Indian war — were all Euro­ pean problems, and that we were just drawn into them.” said WASHINGTON a speech, Acheson continued, that the US should stay completely out of European affairs. in During this era, the treaty of Vienna produced a European bal­ ance of power which stood for IOO years. “ All parts of the world were influenced by this European imperialistic system — it brought about a broader exchange of ideas than ever before in history and possibly since, he said. The situation has changed now, he said, and the US must take the initiative in restoring a fa­ vorable power structure. He said that all the powers that have been empires are now weak na­ tions. One of the things that has made foreign policy difficult for the US is that we are incluined to con­ fuse prosperity with power. servative demand to include an open condemnation of commu­ nism in its approved text on atheism. The text calls for a the Roman dialogue between Catholic Church and all nonbe­ lievers, and pointedly singles out neither Marxism nor communism by name. “ Prosperity is an element but it is not the only element.” he said. Power consists of a pooling of international resources, popula­ tion. technology, and the will for nations to use it for a common purpose. “ TH E US M I ST get over the idea of collective diplomacy in the world,” Acheson stated. “ We must have bilateral intercourse with our closest allies (Britain See R e la ted Sto ry and Germany). Britain in serious financial trouble and the is LBJ Will Request More Rights Work WASHINGTON — IB — Presi­ dent Johnson said Tuesday night hp will ask Congress in January for legislation “ to prevent Injus­ tice to Negroes at the hands of all-white juries.” “ We intend to make the jury box, in both state and federal courts, the sacred domain of jus­ tice under law'.” Johnson said. He spoke to delegates here to plan for a White House civil rights conference next spring. JOHNSON also said that he will ask the Civil Rights Commission Wednesday “ to turn its careful attention to problems of rare and education in all parts of the coun­ try.” “ I am asking them to develop a firm foundation of facts on which local and state govern­ ments can build a school sys­ tem that is color blind,” he said. Johnson noted that the govern­ ment has already moved to join in three suits which, he said, challenge a biased system of jury selection. These actions include one in Lowndes County, Alabama, and are based on the grounds Negroes have been deliberately excluded from jury service. H E SAID he has asked the at­ torney general “ to prepare jury legislation that Is clear In Ifs purpose and specific In ifs aim.'' Johnson .said the work of the civil rights conference ’’will af­ fect the future of over 200 mil­ lion people.” While more than 200,000 Ne­ groes have been registered to vote under the 1965 Voting Rights Act, Johnson said many hundreds of thousands have not. He added: “ This is a challenge not only to government, but to Negro lead­ ership. Tell those who have been barred from the polls that a new day has come, that at last they may have a voice In shaping their owrn destinies. That voice will be heard from the sheriff’s office to the halls of Congress— but only if it is used.” JOHNSON SAID the common goal of white arui Negro parents alike is the best possible educa­ tion for their children. “ It Is a national shame that the vast majority of N e g r o chil­ dren are schooled even worse than they are housed and fed,1' Johnson said. In federal assistance programs. Johnson said, “ wo are seeking to make racial justice a positive p u rp le rather than a distant goal.” However, European power has declined, Acheson said. Europe now i« composed of small, weak nations which have no wall to use their resources, population, and technology for a common pm pose, FROM 1914 to 1915, Acheron said, Europe w;ts engaged In a “ civil war.” “ Europe destroyed Itself in this period because all the great empires disintegrated ” Tile balance shifted, however, to Germany, and all the Euro (wean powers couldn't contain her Twice the US intervened and restored the balance. Bv the end of the ‘civil war’ in IWS, all of the European powers had de strayed their powers,” he said. Tlie “ expansion of power” in Fun J** was brought about bv such events as the formation of NATO and the Berlin Airlift. This expansion came to a “ flood tide In Western Europe a few years ago when an industrial complex second only to the US emerged ” “ AS T IM ES become more and more prosperous,” Acheson said, “ they also become more and more perilous.” This happened in Western Europe. They mi* took prosperity for power but prosperity is not power. There was no common European will, So policies the Common like Market were devised to bring about the common will. While combined they were more prosperous than ever be fore. Acheron (jointed out. bidi vt dually, without their empire*, they were weaker than ever be­ fore, he said. At about this point In time, French president Charles De Gaulle wanted to bronk down the whole system and go back to indi­ vidual states. “ DeGauUe believes in an In­ ward working Europe, lit* wants only broad treaty committment with the U S .” he said. Tins can’t work, and all Europeans are de­ termined to buck it — ail but DeGauUe!” Irritative Necessary — P h o to by V ir g il J o h n so n Former Secretary of State Dean Acheson on US Policy. China Issue Vote To Come Before UN N EW YO RK - 0 — Tile UN General Assembly headed for a vote Tuesday on the controversial Issue of seating Communist China. The United States remained con­ fident it has enough support to keep the door closed to Peking. the insure the outcome, United States and nine other foes of Peking insisted that the as­ sembly reaffirm its 1961 decision that the representation issue re­ quired a two-third majority. To IN THE closing hours of the debate that began nine days ago, pro-Peking UN members accus­ ed the United States of launching the procedural maneuver because It did not have enough votes to win by a simple majority. But US sources insisted that the anti-Peking forces could win by even a simple majority, and that the resolution proposing re­ affirmation of the two-thirds rule had been introduced in order to speed a decision. Many diplo­ mats thought the United States was being overly optimistic, but none disputed that the anti-Pek­ ing members would fail to win a two-thirds vote. AMBASSADOR Halim Budo of Albania, whose country is re­ garded as Peking’s voice in the United Nations, said the United States had lost its “ automatic majority” and thus was forced to seek application of the two- thirds rules. Huot Sambath, ambassador from Cambodia, contended the United States was seeking to bar Peking by a procedural maneu­ ver, and that only a simple ma­ jority wras needed to decide the issue. Twelve nations put in a reso­ lution Monday night calling on the assembly to admit the Chi­ nese Communists and expel the Chinese Nationalists. Diplomatic sources said the sponsors had word from Peking that a more mildly worded resolution was un­ acceptable. IN 1963 the assembly voted 57 for admitting against and 41 Peking and ousting the Nation­ alists, with 12 abstentions. In an assembly of 111 nations that rep­ resented 51 per cent voting no and 37 per cent voting yes with l l per cent abstaining. One mem­ ber was absent. In 1961, when the 104-nation as­ sembly first considered a resolu­ tion on those lines, the vote was 46 per cent against, 35 per cent for and 19 per cent abstaining. The 1962 vote in a 110-nation as­ sembly showed only scant per­ centage change from 1963. VATICAN C ITY — lf) - Key declarations on birth control, racial discrimination, and athe­ ism cleared major hurdles Tues­ day at the Vatican Ecumenical Council. In a series of votes as they rushed to wind up work on their controversial schema on mod­ ern world problems, the council fathers meeting in St. Peter's: • Approved a statement on birth control that stresses con­ jugal love in marriage as an element important not only for bringing children into the world but as a physical expression of mutual love between husband and wife. • Accepted a strong declara­ tion against racial discrimina­ tion. The declaration rules out gradual approach to the elimi­ nation of the problem and in­ sists that discrimination must be “ crushed and removed” as an offense to God. • Quashed an llth-hour con­ WM Key Opinions Given By Vatican Council US Troops Leave 3-Day Battle Area DRANG V A LLEY , Viet Nam - (A P) — Two United States bat­ talions pulled out of the la Drang Valley Wednesday after killing 869 North Vietnamese troops in three days of bloody fighting near the Cambodian border. Helicopters picked up about half of the 1st Cavalry force and the rest walked out of the jun­ gle where US forces were at a tactical disadvantage because elements of a Communist regi­ ment held the high ground. A I S SPOKESM AN said the body count of enemy dead rose to 869 after US troops turned back two fresh assaults by th*1 Communists. Senior commanders declined to speculate on what might come next. longer There were fears that if the 1st Cavalry stayed in the valley much the Communists might bring up heavy mortars to pound the American positions which had repelled repeated Red suicide attacks. The American troops suffered moderate casualties. ALTHOUGH the Americans left the field to the still-strong rem­ nants of North Vietnamese bat­ talions. the act was not con­ sidered a retreat. The valley itself had no stra­ tegic importance and the Amer­ ican troops never had any in­ tention of remaining there, an officer said. The idea was to kill as many Communist troops as possible, he added, and short of charging strongly entrenched Red posi­ tions where American casualties might be IO times these of Com­ munist troops, the only alterna­ tive was to withdraw. DOMINATING the news from other war sectors was a bom­ bardment by eight US Air Force F195 Th underchiefs of the North Vietnamese surface to air missile sites one 35 miles northwest and the other 32 mile* northeast of Hanoi Ranger Scores Again By B IL L TO W ERY Texan Managing Editor To be extremely truthful, we in The Daily Texan offices have been snickering over Ranger proofs for about two weeks. The Ranger people, in an effort to bring about a more enjoyable rapport between the two staffs, allowed us to see their parody of The Daily Texan and even went so far as to ask several of us to write for it. (Being in more trouble than usual, we declined.) Members of the staff did take part in the “ reformation” of Miss Northcott on the Main Mall. So, we have seen this Ranger before. We are a part of it. But, the finished product . . . Ho, ho, ho. The Daily Texan’s front and editorial page, printed as the Ranger thinks the Board of Re­ gents would like the Texan to be printed, is the featured insert. reformed Texan editor and Blanket Tax Articles about the burning plus impartial editorials are included in the bogus Texan. T H E M AGAZINE itself is not as funny and as biting as the there are several insert, but good, substantial articles. Parti­ cular note should be taken of Mike Tolbert’s “ Two Loners,” a fine article about the Negro at UT. Other Ranger offerings include stories about Bob Dylan on the concert tour, what it is like to be a homosexual on a college campus, and advice to women on how to catch a husband. A Texan Review The Girl of the Month is again pictured, only this time is Girls of the Month. Six women are presented in a pictorial en­ titled “ The Girls of Protest.” it Ranger has arisen. It is fast ■I iiif— ' min i n i T f i H i becoming that humor rag of long ago. But it has started becoming funny without becoming crude or obscene. Take a good look at the front cover. A finger-pointing figure, slightly resembling Uncle Sam and wearing a peace button, greets the reader by saying, “ Congratulations! You have just been reclassified 1-A!” Here is one of the more hu­ morous ones to come along in years. As a Ranger staff member was overheard to say at the meeting of their advisory board (censors, in a polite way), “ I guess if you step on everyone's toes, you can get away with most anything.” The November Ranger goes on sale Wednesday for 29 cents at the Main Mall, Journalism Build­ ing 107, and other campus loca­ tions where it is usually sold. Don’t miss a single word of the Ranger or of the insert. it home to Treasure mother. Bury it in a time capsule. it. Take Power Failure H e x . . . and aho a Max on th* Tex#* A g g ie s . This g 'a r t ra n d ia w ar ere cte d Tuesday on th# W a i t M all by m e m b e r of A lp ha Phi O m e g a . m#n‘» tervic# frate rn ity. R ed Candia* will be »old from 9 a rn. to 3 p m . w eekday* through Tues- d a y . C o it of each candle it IO cant*, and p ro ceed s will go t# C a m p y * C h e it. — bv Jimmy Mellen* Four-Year Terms Likely Topic in '68 B y D i e I WM* la te d B r e n * Gov. John Formally said the 1967 Tuesday be hope* voter* legislature will another approve chance four year terms tor Texas gover­ nor*. give to “ Tile time Is past when a governor can sit here and be a figurehead,’’ lie told h new'* con­ ference. “ If the people of Texas get real cohesive, coordinated government, we need four-year terms. . . . I probably will re­ submit tie* subject to the next Legislature.” The 1965 legislature submitted the four year term issue to vot­ ers Nov. 2 but it was rejected decisively. ConnsHy noted that Ii-ss than J") per cent of the qua- idled voter* actually cast their balli dx the It the 1967 Legislature should for another luau* approve vote In November, 1968, the pro­ posal would share the spotlight of a US pros lent \\ race pin* hot state and local rai *•* for US senator, onngr***an in, attorney general, and other off en he “ commented” Connelly said he did not intend to endorse any candidate* in the 1966 Democratic primary How­ ever, on several. He said Atty. Gen. Wag­ goner Carr, c tadidate for US Senator, had been “ a v r y abl# attorney general H»* la extreme­ ly cooperative, I have every con* fidenc* he would make an out­ standing US Senator.” He alao had for favor •!/!*» < ■ r merits Secretary of State Crawford Mar­ tin. who n a candidate for attor­ ney general. Plan Eliminates 90th Infantry The 90th Infantry Division with headquarters in Austin will I** ll, Lr. out of busine** by Dec Col Martin A peters annotine* ed Tuesday. Ttie division Is one of the 751 Army Reserve u; its through* ut the nation acheduk’d to be eli­ minat'd In a plan ann 'meed by Secretary of IVfen.se Robert S. M< Nan ira La -,t hi tm lay. The 90th consists of 88 units, L u r of wk; h are In Austin. The f jut ux ' i ha’.** KM) hers, .'pretty many of whom a students and fa L t Cob Peters, h not give an exact many students an Included in these units. Those personnel having a mili­ ffirer* Ligation— y mg tary and enlisted men—will be assign­ ed to selective reserve I roes rn the area car to a control group, Col. Will arn J Rushing, senior adviser to the 90th, said. Chilean Students Attack Kennedy CONCEPCION. On Ie — - Angry leftist students .spat on Urn ted States Sen. Rogert F. Kennedy, D-NY, and threw eggs, rocks, and money at him when the University of he visited Chile Tuesday. He had been warned by student leaders to stay away. Although tile senator apparent­ ly was not hit by the eggs or stones, spittle fell on his forehead and clothes. A group of about IOO universi­ identified as pro- ty students, C rn un van vst, were among thou­ sand* that attended th* G igglin g Gaze Greets Griper -Jpboto by Virgil J otiose* First d a y complaint* In the University G rip* W e e k ranged rrom longer lib rary hour* to stale donuts in the U nio n. A few of the more serious gripes which the G rie v a n c e C o m m it­ inc!ode the U n ive rsity tee will policy of flying the flag at half-mast, poor in vestig ate fighting in H o g g A u d ito riu m , and absence o f any personnel in U n ive rsity offices during the lunch hour. Students have until Frid ay to register the r g r ip e s and as l a m Schoepke o f the G rie v a n c e C o m m itte e shows g rip er Billy Btudwocth. it t service with a urn!* British Dilemma The eyes of black Africa are focused on Rhodesia, as are the eyes of the western world. Premier Ian Smith, speaking in tones reminiscent of a similar action some 200 years before, declared that Ins land of Rhodesia is free and independent and does not owe allegiance to Mother Britain. “Whereas in the course of human history . . he said and then went on to declare his country's freedom. Tile parallels drawn between Rhodesia and the United States fight for independence are many and often build a sound argument. Cecil Rhodes, acting under a royal charter, took the land from the native i n h a b i t a n t s , set up a semi-kingdom, protected it with his own troops, and peopled it with his hand-picked colonists. He made treaties with native kings, and when these proved fruitless, overthrew them and set­ tled the land himself. Early colonists in the Americas did much the same thing and created empires similar to that of Cecil Rhodes. But times have changed and now Britain finds herself caught In an intricate web of International responsibilities and duties. Britain has come to realize that she has an obligation to give self-rule to her colonies as soon as possible. Britain has also come to realize that she has a further obligation to prepare the native populations of her colonics for that self-rule. This is where the parallels with US independence must stop. Britain is very much concerned in granting freedom to her remaining colonies, but she has an obligation to p r e ­ pare these countries for freedom. It is no longer a question of “whether" but of “when" and “how." The London Observer in an editorial Get. 17 said that Britain had confused the “incompatible doctrines" of im­ mediate self-rule and preparation of a country for freedom. “In 1923," the Observer said, “the whites of Rhodesia were given something approaching independence. But the Africans were encouraged to look to Britain for continued protection of their interests. “lienee, therefore, t h e sense of betrayal felt bv some of the Europeans in Southern Rhodesia. Hence, too, the guilty conscience in th is country. For it is as well to ac­ knowledge t h a t Britain carries the responsibility for the present situation in Rhodesia and for the ambiguous position of the w h i t e s e t t l e r s whom she encouraged, if only tacitly, to go there." Britain, however, finds that Mio is In a position that is very perilous. She has warned Smith that she would im­ pose stiff economic sanctions on Rhodesia if that nation broke away before Britain felt she was ready for self­ government. Now Britain finds herself forced to do those things she lins loathed for so long. She may even find her­ self forced to smash the government of Inn Smith and his fellow white colonists by tile use of troops. Britain herself must act. lf she allows the United Na­ tions to stop in, she would l>e saying that she is bluffing. Britain would say that she has no intentions of protecting the hlack man in Africa. The Observer said: “Tile Rhodesian crisis — calling Into question as if does, the whole future of Southern Africa and of the relations between the Western Powers and the whole of Africa - has Implications which go far beyond that one country: It is an African crisis.' in some respects, it is a world crisis. Nothing would damage Britain’s stand­ ing more than if other countries, acting through the Gen­ eral Assembly of the United Nations, decided they had to do in ( en Ira I Africa what Britain had said she would do, but then failed to do." Britain has a rebellion on her hands do everything in her power to end. one she must |U , f TOWERY Guest Editorial Where They Belong' (E ditor s Note: lf a new football stadium is to built, the Texan favors its relocation, Ixxwise the present stadium aren, s o convenient tx* (Nit to academ ic use. T o present to tIm* main cam pus, might another view, the follow big is excerpted f r o m an editorial In the Al­ calde, the Ex-Students' Vvsociation m agazine.) If the Board of ll.■'gents of Ti intercollegiate athletic program a for the benefit of sri. ents, faeult Field and Memorial St odium wrier pus . . . . Although the Ex-St udents Asst neither Clark Field noi Memorial locations across the st reet from t ter. the A&soi la* n I s never oui ll * have for buildup r n arid better those fan!.Lev arr- !■ ated on the There are many masons wh\ accessible t j stud orcs many of writ their d o m :iti nos or b< a rd rig hou s It is hard to justify a new at hic point, No offid ! c st estimates hi but ( omparable v ,000 V O I f C f a HI» r othf>r schools have t st much & money f t r a fa ii:tv * might be cen si iored I ' some as a since a perfectly g od stadium air If we m ay presume to suggest the Board of Regents, we would now to refurbish ai I !«mdscape bo dium so that they w i i eyesores of peeling { lint and sa of repairs ar. I ret . r on would (x and would provide Tex? s with f a r iIi good — or bettor — th i n sn nip of west Conference. d offer an Best of al!, this v ould insure Field and Memorial Sr 1 l f r n ex end alumni, it will leave Clark the) belong — on the m ain cam* stadium moved from their present e new Lila B. Utter Alumni Cen- athletic facilities nm in cam pus. so long as Both facilities now are easily rn simply walk to the games from ave been released at this writing, with 30.000-car parking lots at s $’.*> million. Spending that much - used less than 15 hours a y ear n unwise use of money, especially cady exists. an immediate course of action to urge that a program be started Ut Claik Field and Memorial Sta- cti active campus view instead of acing fences. A crash program ■st m u h less t han new s t a d i u m s ties that, despite their age, are as t he newer ones around the South- I • ct r.iinued location of Clark r.pus — where they belong. -Jai I* R. M aguire, The Alcalde Napalm, Nazies, and Nuremberg Is US Going to Trial Over Viet Nam Actions? (Editor'* Note: T. V. Shield* i* a teaching a-sMK-iaU* in the Department of Chemiatry.) By T. C. SHIELDS When 48 V ietnam ese civilians were killed and dozens wounded some days ago because of artillery direction errors, they wore trrm ed “ friendly casu alties," to use m ilitary parlance. B attle operations can alm ost always* stand im provem ent and need constant attention to m inim ize accidental casual­ ties. G eneral William W estmoreland. I S com m ander in Viet Nam , recently r e ­ in m arking Viet Cong ported changes just for aerial bombing locations this purpose. Conscientious criticism con­ cerning friendly casualties is norm ally helpful and aids not only unfortunate people but also a w a r's objective of vic­ tory. for On the other hand, there are some who cite such casualties out of disagree­ m ent with the political objectives of the w ar involved. TTirir sincerity in express­ ing pangs of rem orse for war victim s can come under the sam e doubt as that of tile pacifists w'ho ceased to be against w ar after July, 1911, when Hitler a t­ tacked the Soviets. AN ANTI-NAPALM protestor sa rc a sti­ cally stated just orders! to me, “ I t s Don’t you understand? T h a t’s what Eic It­ following m ann o rd e rs!" said; he was just lie referred to the Nazi killer and said th a t som eday we m ay all fare our little N urem berg tribunals; I .suppose fur us­ ing napalm in addition to blitz bombs and p h o sp h o ru s grenades. Many other Viet Nam protestors a re suggesting IJS officials m ay face “ w ar crim es" trib u ­ nals conducted like those in G erm any after WW II. Do they see Nurem burg as a spotless m oral force cleansing the world evil or do they really know about the nature of these tria ls? I think not, so here is a brief discription of some re ­ cent history. When Hitler derided during January, 1912, to exterm inate so-called “ asocial clem ents,” the infam ous Jewish Office in Berlin was filled with men who should have faced trial after the w ar. T heir crim es were alm ost as great as Stalin’s, and it would be inconceivable for them to escape punishm ent. The British only tried people in their zone who had com m itted som e overt act of atrocity, and they used no ju ries, they did use Anglo-Saxon fairness. though THE FRENCH had few er w ar crim e trials and instead directed their energy to system atically plundering their zone. They cut down so m uch the Swiss Governm ent protested extensive soil erosion in South G erm any was caus­ ing floods in Swiss te rrito ry . tim ber letters The Soviet policy w as w ierdest of all. They would hang m ail c a rrie rs who de­ livered to concentration cam ps their but hired zone’s security police. Vincent Mueller, who issued the notorious Einsatz order thousands of R ussian civilians, killing the SS en m asse as Little Man on the Campus By Bi bier J* rte* rumo 1(4 o T r i Fan i t 16 o w e tau JtlL * r w r o A u W * \Virif & W teo vVw*e - d f A T tm p w it * I * /iu . <&r\ ra m c u t a b p o a t # h w as appointed chief of staff for all R us­ sian Zone police. In the US, plans were m ade to try “ w ar crim inals" in the A m erican Zone on vague charges like “ crim es against peace” (for dividing Czechoslovakia with later for dividing Poland Poland and with the USSR). From the intellectual creation of collective war guilt cam e its child, collective punishm ent. The trials had little to do with nor­ m al jurisprudence. Men w ere tried in absentia; atrocity stories unconnected with the accused, hearsay, and double-hearsay evidence w ere all adm issable. The worst trials, however, w ere not those of the big shots before International Tribunal at the N urem berg. ES ARMY OFFICERS w ere increas­ ingly and system atically elim inated from the staff of prosecutors and replaced by civilian political activists holding tem po­ ra ry m ilitary rank. There is a certain fairness and hum anity th at m ost com ­ b at troops tend to have when they a re assigned to occupation duty, and m any Teutonophobes w ere disappointed in pro­ secutors from the regular arm y. But hell hath no fury like a glazed- eyeball political idealogue hopped up on N azi atrocity torture and abuse in the US Zone bogan to trick ­ le back after 19-16. tales. Stories of In 1948, A rm y S ecretary Royal! re­ sponded to the ru m o rs and appointed a com m ission headed by Judge E dw ard L. van Roden of D elew are County, Pennsylvania, to investigate the tria ls; one commission m em ber was Justice Gordon Simpson of the Texas Suprem e Court. L ater for a the Senate voted general investigation. The com m ission re p o rt has never been declassified, out Jud g e van Roden revealed its contents in m any articles and lectures. In a February, 1949, article in the Pro­ gressive entitled “ A m erican A trocities in G erm any,” he told of m edical exam i­ nations he ordered for some men aw ait­ ing execution in Landsberg P rison: “ All but two of the G erm ans in the 139 cases we investigated had been kicked in the testicles beyond re p a ir.” HE COMMENTS on the credibility of evidence, “ One 18-year-old boy (who) a fte r a series of beatings w as w riting a statem en t being dictated to him. When they reached the sixteenth page, the boy w as locked up for the night.” Before m orning he com m itted suicide. Judge van Roden ends w ith: “ However, the statem en t that the G erm an lad hanged him self to escape signing was offered and received in the trial of others.” Speaking before the Chester Pike R o tary Club on Dee. 14, 1948, Judge van Roden told of one m an having burn­ ing splints forced under his fingernails and to all ch arges with his hands covered with bandages — he w as convicted. later confessing in court W hen the van Roden Commission •ta rte d out for G erm any, the hangm an the a t Dachau was very busy. As the in­ vestigation got under way, however, toe ra te of executions abruptly doubled. British correspondent F rieda Utley who covered in h er book trials w rote “ The High Cost of V engeance” th at “ the m ore victim s of the m iscarriag e of ju s­ tice who could be done aw ay with, the less evidence of injustice would rem ain ." You will ra re ly h e a r the tru th about these trials held in post-w ar G erm any. It is one of those inconvenient facts of history ignored by so m any sham hu­ m anitarians and chattering, posturing intellectuals. WHAT HAPPENED at N urem berg, D achau, M alm edy, and elsew here bears a grim resem blance to soviet-style Peo­ If we ar* ple's D em ocratic Justice. som eday purged of our sins by this brand of judgem ent, as the w ar protes­ tors im ply, your Air F orce friend will be tried for napalm ing the Viet Cong, or th* local constable for police “ bru tality ." As for our nation s leaders, one has only to recall those ominous lyrics from a “ peace" publication, The Viet Nam Songbag, reported by Newsweek (Nov. l l , 1965): “ ‘C otta kill!’ said old H id er; ‘G otta kill!’ said old Stalin; ‘G otta kill and kill!’ said old Lyndon too." One final irony: G eneral Rudenkov, chief Soviet prosecutor a t N urem berg, w as subsequently appointed com m and­ an t of the Soviet, form erly Nazi, con­ centration cam p -— Sachsenhausen. Hairy Tales Please, Buy the Ranger baby! Well, Do you wonder w hat goes on on this cam pus? I men w hat’s really going on? W h a ts happening, the R a n g e r’s happening, baby. H aven’t you been offended lately? Well if you haven’t, the R anger is your m agazine. I t s m eant to offend you! Not your m other, not your father, but little old m a d ra s sh ift­ ed, bearded, petition-signing, pin-and- button-W'earing you — average, square, insensitive, unintellectual, m ildly perv erted U niversity of Texas student. the As has often been rem arked in foot­ ball circles (or ovals) the best defense in a good offense, and I do not put the shuck on you when I say that this R ang­ e r is offensive. But offensive in a new w ay! The R ang­ er. sw eethearts, is offensively clean. No m ore sly back-handed innuendos about the m ental health and capability of the A dm inistration. No m ore coy dirty words slipped past the censors! (Look! If you find a d irty word, you win a free copy of R. Z. last book.) No m ore n asty cracks about the in­ absolute boredom tellectual the F orty Acres! No m ore scatological c ra p ! The R anger this tim e is totally blank. W rite your own bloody jokes if you think you're so funny. “ Z ack" Swizzlestien’s th at passes for stim ulation on Buy this R anger. Buy this R anger. Buy this R anger. You a re getting very sleepy! Buy this R anger! See the Daily Texan as it would be if the R egents w ere in co n tro l! See the Girls of Pro­ test Exposed! L earn how to get a hus­ band without a stom ach tum or! Read the poetic work of the g re a te st poet since Lieuen Adkins, Phyllis P hatback! (H er greasy spot can be seen on the Mall in front of the tow er.) Find out w hat raunchy home cc m ajors do on their trips to Chile! Get a true insight into the workings of the Athle­ tic D epartm ent as the Ranger-Texan exposes the South D akota State Scandal! L earn who cam e to hom ecom ing! (Let m e take a few lines here to apologize to John O rr, president of the Student Assembly. the R anger-Texan, we casually and in good spirits re fe r to his colum n, “ John O rr’s G avel," as “ John O rk’s N avel.” It has since been brought to our attention th at John O rr doesn't have a navel! John, baby, we apolo­ gize). In By the way, do you hate Bob D ylan? Do you think that R oger M iller is a hip­ pie? Do you really c a re either w ay? Well, if your answ er w as yes or no to any of the previous questions, then you will enjoy the hatchet job G ilbert Shelton does on Bob Dylan in this issue, which reveals that Bob Dylan is actually Won­ der W art Hog’s lost cousin Wimpy W art Hog, or som ething. Bob Dylan p ^ s his incom e tax. And you know who Is there too — The sw eet little old G ranny Lady M other in actuality, H arry M urphy. Who R ansom ! So if you have a problem take it to M other M urphey with the know­ ledge th at any problem you subm it will go stra ig h t to the Chancellor. is, there This final note: for those of you who a re n ’t well-adjusted students, is som ething for you, too. A rticles by two lone students, two outsiders, a Negro, and a hom osexual, all of whom have since been shot. You m ay m eet the authors a t a reception to be held a t a local Funeral Home. B ring your own form aldihyde! Seriously, these articles a re serious articles, well worth the attention of you well-adjusted finks out there in televi­ sion land, and also worth the attention of all you shut-ins who live in the steam tunnels under the Mall and wash your underw ear in the Union. the coffee m achines in P 2 5 'T n e v £ a y p e e n z e r r Y t u u &h .* Ii SI?! „ StSStS^^ j^ The Texan Firing Line History Lesson T» the Editor: M ay I offer a short history lesson for the edification of som e and the edu­ cation of others: from troops foreign During the Hundred Y ears War, F ra n c e was hard pressed to repel an invasion by her neighbor. Burgundy, to­ gether with the north, the English. These English sought im perial domination over their “ legi­ tim ate sphere of influence” in w estern E urope. There was a young F rench p a ­ triot who believed that it w as her C hris­ tian duty to repel the invaders from the north; she said that she had been com ­ m anded by God to drive them out. That she w as com m anded by God to do this is accepted as historical fact by C atho­ lics and m any other C hristians. She is known as Jean of Arc, whom Catholics call a saint. In addition, max I add that the g re a t­ est “ double think'’ of m odern tim es is not the act of sending C hristm as cards to Viet Nam in support of the A m eri­ can troops there, but ra th e r, the refusal th e re a re men of so-called “ Christian p acifists” to rec­ ognize the foolishness of w hat they ad ­ in vocate. As long as the world who would conquer it by force of arm s, it is necessary for free m en who would rem ain free to oppose them by force of a rm s anyw here and a t anytim e the would-be-conquerers a t­ tem pt their aggressions. R ecently, a high Red Chinese m ilitary official was quoted in m ost new spapers and m agazines as flatly stating that world dom ination was the aim of Red China. H ie North Viet­ nam ese, the B urgundians, would help their northern ally crush their neigh­ bor co-nationais in that ally 's m arch for em pire. like Jam es E. Embry 101 W. Twenty-first St. Another Label? To the Editor: On the front page of F rid ay s Texan, the author of “ The C onservative Mind” is quoted as saying that “ leadership in SDS has been taken over by Commun­ ists. ’’ Although Com m unist is often used, there is an aversion in our country to the use of the label fascism labeling even though this w as the ideology that consum ed millions of lives in World W ar II. W ebster’s defines Fascism as “ any pro g ram for setting up a centralized, autocratic, national regim e with severely reg i­ nationalistic policies, m entation of industry, com m erce and finance, rigid censorship, and forcible suppression of opposition.” exercising This w riter m ust pose two questions. Why has there been no labeling of those who scream “ kill” and “ w ar fo rev er" as F a sc ists? Secondly, why do the C ham ­ b ers of C om m erce and big business in for this country spearhead fu rth e r m ilitary involvem ent all over the w orld? Fred J, Cook’s “ Tile W arfare S ta te " and Ross and W isem an’s “ The Invisible G overnm ent" provide the a n ­ sw ers. the drive Benito Mussolini can be seen In con­ te m p o ra ry Am erica. In 1934 he said : “ A doctrine founded upon the harm ful postu­ late of peace is hostile to F a sc ism ” and th a t “ all the international leagues and societies can be scattered to the winds when once strong national is aroused by any m otive — sentim ental, ideal, or practical.” F ascism “ repudi­ feeling ate s any universal em b ra c e ," the dic­ ta to r continued. Mussolini also said “ there a re a thou­ sand signs that point to Fascism as the ch a ra c teristic doctrine of our tim e ." SDS has opposed the w ar in Viet Nam and the for alternative service called draft. Others have advocated escalation of the w ar, a policing of the world, and an increase in the draft. These others foreign policy dissenters have called “ tra ito rs” and is “ treasonous.” SDS called “ Com m unist,” w hat do you call the second group? to Arthur Yarbrough 1609 Rio Grande, Apt. C Long Live America To the Editor: It happened again Sunday night. Yes, once m ore UT students publicly distin­ guished them selves. The first tim e was a t the SDS rally on the steps of the Tower. There a hearty band of several to hundred drown out football cheers. After all. one m u sn ’t allow such “ un-A m erican” elem ents as these to cor­ ru p t the atm osphere with their notions. loyal sportsm en attem pted the speeches with Job Opportunities B EAHM H T / T h e Liberal Art* Career P la c e m e n t Off is# a n n o u n c e s t h e N o v 17 A field, claim , and bond r e p res en t a tiv es , u n d erw rit­ ing. f o llo w in g IS A r - na in te rv iew s Ins Co — Nov Ch u b b k Son. Inc. IS F # der* l Mogul Co u n d erw riter train* sales N'nv 19 B urroughs W eiicom t med ical sales rep resen ta tive HOliJDOtS \ Alf $0lM> I ) o IO THE DAtfV HILL PUPPS' farm .. THANK VOL! FOR INV'iTlNc ME TO TO BANZET THf£ SAUR0WNl6frr.lT U'AS NICE of v a n e ASK me I also accept t o invitation to Be the After-Dinner SPEAKER .KINAST REGARDS., Several weeks la te r UT students again stepped into the lim elight. This tim e on the steps of the m ajestic sta te capital of Texas — a fitting site for a display of real red-blooded A m ericanism . The evil and deserving victim s w ere a sm all group of frightened m en and women calling them selves the Ku Klux Elan. I was especially proud of m y fellow stu ­ dents th at day because they turned out several thousand strong — and m y fam ­ ily watched it on TV 1.500 hundred m iles aw ay ; they w ere im pressed, too. But as I said, it happened again Sun­ day night. This tim e it w asn’t a band of idealistic leftists they heckled — nor w as it twenty-odd m isguided bigots. No, Sunday night’s victim s w ere the m ost deserving of all. Sunday night’s subver­ sives w ere boring into som ething very precious to UT students — our respec­ tive religions. We are, m ost of us, quite religious here. We go to the right church­ es, we put our dollar into the collec­ tion plate, and above all, we don’t go around talking about it. One just doesn t e m b a rra ss others by m entioning God. So when those “ religious n u ts” cam e, we showed them . What rig h t had they to bring their group to the very edge of our cam pus and tell us about reli­ gion? In the first place, m any of them w eren’t even “ college people” —- some w ere the ju st kids — probably from wrong side of town. And in the second place, this just isn’t done. So we heckled them and I ’m proud. L e t’s stand up and be recognized — A m erica's hope for the future. Long live A m erica. Richard R. So Ic rn IM E. 33rd St. T h e D a i l y T e x a n » *• - ■ . * da: 'the D a i l y I t i i tv of T e x a s , la , d a \ a n d h o l i d a y M o n t h l y In Augu>- Drawer D, Universe c la s s p o s t a g e paid at \ N e w * co n t r i b u t i o n s 1-5244) or a t the ed itor l a b o r a t o r y . J . B 102. Int; b e m ade in J .B . 107 ( G R I (G R 1-3227.) *v*i>,per st Th e L’nlver* x< t pt Monday and Satur* through M a y a r d In - . n. I t’.vas 75712. Second- -dent Pu b ii cations, ber copied h ephone (GR a t t h e n ew s livery should '(ag. J B 111 A S S O C IA T E D PRESS W IR E S E R V IC E T h e Asso ciated Pre** I* e x c l u s iv e ly e n t i t l e d the use for republication o f al l n ew s d isp a tch es cred ited to it or not otherw :*# cred ited and local Items o f s p o n t a n e o u s o n g i n pub lish ed h e rein Rig h ts o f publication o f all oth e r m a tter h erein a'.so reserved. T W n S e m e s t e r * ( f a l l a n d s p r i n g > S e m e s t e r ( f a l l or s p r i n g * this n e w s p a p e r O n e to in D e h x e r e d by c a r r i e r • w i t h i n Au x t i n a r e a f r o m l i t h to 38t h a n d J e f f e r s o n I n t e r r e g i o n a l H i g h w a y t<» D e l i v e r e d bv m a i l w i t h i n T r a n s C o u n t y D e l i v e r e d bv ma i l o u U i d e Tr avi s Cou nty b u t w i t h i n I'. S. u s # 4 75 KS.TS a.74 Th# o p in io n s ex p ressed the editorial colu m n ar# in those of th e ed itor. Ail ed itorials u n less sign ed are w ritte n b y the editor. Guest e d it o r ia l v i e w s are not n e ces sa rily th e ed ito r * in T h e D a i l y t e x a n are r o t Any o p in io n s e x p res sed tho?# p l T h e U n iv ers ity of T e xa s a d m i n i s ­ neces sa rily tration or Board o f R egents P E R M A N E N T S T A F F E D IT O R ..................................... K A Y E N O R T H C O T T M A N A G I N G E D I T O R ......................... BILL T O W E R Y A S S I S T A N T M A N A G I N G E D I T O R ....... L A R R Y IK ELS N E W S E D I T O R ............................. N A N C Y K O W E R T E D I T O R I A L P A G E E D I T O R C A R O L Y N N I C H O L S S P O R T S E D I T O R .............................. BILL H A L S T E A D A M U S E M E N T S E D I T O R ............ A L I C I A H E L T O N F E A T U R E E D I T O R ............................ DEBBIE D R U K E R J STAFF FO R TH IS ISSUE Itsus New* Editor .............. Dsn Rice Make-Up Editor ....................... Sam Keach Copy E d ito r*............Morri* Shelton, George Go** W ire E d ito r . .................. Ray Montemayor N ig h t Sports Editor ............. John A r d e rs N ig h t A'r^sern8''*s E d i t o r ................ Barbara J a - a Wednesday, Nov. 17, 1965 T H E D A Y T E X A N P a g* 2 O E O R O E RT W D \ . Holist or'< intrepid passer, pH sh­ ed a miraculous feat * md a y In the 21-Al loss to Denver. Th# aging signal-caller threw more completions to Denver receivers than did Denver quarterbacks. Blanda suffered six intern phons raising his career total to 138, while Denver completed only five passes How to get to Britain next summer — a travel g u id e f o r students You’d like to go tc Britain hut your parent* b’anch st tbs cost'' Here * a way to convince them it necdn t be all that much 1. Mail the coupon. I; will bring you 8 free booklet* on Britain One of rhem ha* tip* on group travel and inei- pcn.*i\e svav* of crossing the Atlantic. 2. Decide how long you want to *tav. then Ute the book­ let* to work out living costs I sample* bcd and breakfast in college halo of residence coft between $2 and $4 SO; In Youth Hostels under SI You can get a good lunch in a pub, or dinner in a restaurant, for around $ I, J . Add costs for getting a’1* / The booklets report oh bargains like 900 mile* of rail travel for 5 K), buses that go everywhere for 2t a mile, 4. Put pUvs anil festival* on your schedule You can af­ I lek et* for the ford U' I ondon theatre scats start at 4 2r Shakespeare season tat Strath sd upon Avon from April to November) start at 70* 5. See your trave! agent for information en student tour*. T hen present your budget to your parents at *omc well­ chosen moment. (Hint; (Thnstmas is comme ) CLIP COUPON FO* F * l l STUDENTS TRAVEL HIT----- BrttKh Irate! Million ASO I iftti Avenue, New 3ork. N 3 11)0 19 TPL***• pi nit Name. College Address C ity __ 7 .p POSITIVELY Last 6 Days Special Student Rates • V illi lh* South i La* Hours: Mon. , W a d . , A Frl. 9 a.rn. — 9 p.m. T j e-day, Thjrs. 10 a.m. — IO p.m. S aturday 9 a.m. — 6 p.m. Sunday 9 a.m. 5 p.m. 9**1 and most modern health »pa, ouhtand- Ing facilities Include H o t M in e ral Hydro- iwir{ pool, authentic Fin th Sauna and year round iwimm ng. Foss Moves Back AFL Draft; Papers Report Gun-Jumping NEW YORK — V - Commis­ sioner Joe Foss moved back the American Football League s draft Tuesday from Nov. 20 to Nov. r. The A FL had been bitterly cri­ ticized by college authorities for deciding earlier to hold its an­ nual draft one week before the College football season virtually ended while the rival National Football League agreed to run Its draft on Nov. 27. SCUDERIA SIMISTER Foreign C or Repair and Restoration Personal, Competent Service Parts and Accessories G L 3-2581 6509 Shirley I ( I B lo rk Rant 6SW0 N . I.s m a rt THE MOVE came s h o r t l y after the Atlanta Journal and Dallas Times-Herald said they had been informed that the A FL had held a preliminary draft of six rounds on Nov. 2 or Nov. 9. This was promptly denied by A F L officials. The A FL in Nr*w York an­ nounced that Foss, in Kansas City, had talked on the telephone with James Corbett, who was in Baton Rouge, La., and had been assured by the college official that the National Collegiate Ath­ letic Association would condemn any flagrant cases of “ babv-sit- ting" that would deprive college draftees of their bargaining rights. CORBETT, athletic director of Louisiana State University, is the chairman of the NCAA’s pro re­ lations committee. Tile A FL accused the N FL of “ baby-sitting’’ — or guarding — player prospects so that the play- Seniors and Graduates The Picture Appointment Deadline Has Been Extended T O Friday, Nov. 19 Don't miss this extra chance. Come by Journalism Building 107 The Fee Is Only $2.00 C A C T U S e n could bs signed before A FL officials could contact and talk to the player. The AFT. released a following statement by Foes which aaid: “ Jim Corbett of LSU, chairman of the pro relations committee of the NCAA, assured me today that he is strongly opposed to the idea and the influences of the wholesale baby-sitting plan which has been the primary rea­ son that the ATX last week ad­ vanced its player draft date to Nov. 20. “WE SET THE EARLIER data to combat this questionable prats lice, which has involved the hid­ ing out of dozeas of college play­ in order to prevent A FL ers teams from negotiating with them. “ For almost a year now. we in the A FL have considered that the unreasonable influences and pressure placed — wittingly or the players unwittingly — on through the baby-sitting program amounted to the most detrimental new factor in college-pro rela­ tions. Today Jim Corbett assur­ ed me that he is strongly oppos­ ed to tile practice of mass baby­ sitting — bv any party. “GIVEN THIS assurance, and with the implicit promise that Corbett would bring his prestige to bear against any flagrant use of mass baby-sitting, I am now moving our draft date up to Nov. 27. I have »o Informed Mr. Cor­ bett.” Bud Adams, owner of the Hous­ ton Oilers, accused the N FL of planting the story alleging a secret draft. “ It s just an attempt by the NTX to discredit the A F L ,” said Adams. “ There is ab­ solutely nothing of any sort to a report of an A FL draft being held In advance of the scheduled draft next Saturday." Joe Foss, A F L commissioner, was quoted as saying in Kansas Q ty he knew nothing about tbs draft Dutchman Back After Quiting Stormy Montor Rejoin* Vikings M IN N EAPOUS-ST PA LX - Stormy Norm Van Brooklin changed his mind Tuesday and returned as head coach of th# Minnesota Vikings, saying hum­ bly he had made a mistake and was grateful for the opportunity to rectify it is “ There bo explanation," Van Brooklin said of his impetu­ ous diction Monday to quit th# Viking post. “ I just beoame depressed, but I later realized I didn t want to quit," he Mid. The announcement that Van returning came Brooklin was earlier, through Vikings officials THROUGH Jim Finks, general manager of the National Foot­ ball league club, Van Brooklin quipped: “ Th» next time I resign, I ll be within four of Buddv Parker a the record.” He several resignations of former Pittsburgh Steeler Coach Buddy Parker. referred to Finks and Viking President Max Winter both looked relieved and relaxed as they met the press W I N T E R had said Monday night that the Vikings were pre­ pared to do anything within rea­ son to retain Van Brooklin, even lf it meant tearing up his cur­ rent contract, which has 1 4 years to run and pays the 39- year-old coach about $10,000 a year. But both Van Brooklin, in an­ nouncing his derision to quit in his despair after Sunday's 41-21 loss Just to Baltimore which about knocked the Vikings out of the Western Conference race, and the Viking management insisted money and contract were no issue at all. f ilm1 i .I jmuL'z mmAnders pm Meanders By J O H N A N D E R S A srlAnt sigh of relief escaped fn>m this nook .Sunday when D A R R F J J i H O Y A L spiked h i mors that he would leave Texas on his weekly tv show Royal denied that he . . had been extended feeders from L S I.1 and Oklahoma S I I . Y E R U N IN G D E P T .; All but seven Longhorn ridders will return next year . . . W ith T O M M Y N O R IS a shoo-in for his second All-America rating, tackle D I RON T.VIB­ B E R T looms as the ’Horns most likely candidate for such honors next year . . , W I L T C H A M B E R L A IN , basketball s foremost skyscraper, has never fouled out of nn N B A game, regular season, playoff or nil-star game Research by Dallas News columnist KH W K X. T O L B E R T has failed to reveal the origin of the term “ tea sippers" in regard to I T students Some place the blame on D. \ . B I R L E hut the T/jnghom coach of the 19,10’s and ’40's emphatically denies that he served hot tea and cookies at athletic gath­ erings . . . 42 players of the UHT M I T R E D A M E National Champions went on to play professional football The Irish currently have more N F L representatives (19) than any other school . . . San Francisco kicker TO M M Y D A Y IH has not missed a pat effort since he entered the league in 1919, . . . Tech’s A ll-Everything runner, D O N N Y A N D E R S O N , lacks just 20 steps from surpassing O L L I E M A T S O N 'S career total as college history’s most prolific yardage pro­ ducer . . . A G G IE J O K E D E P T .; An aggie is the only animal we know that can take a bath in a cess pool and leave a ring , . . E x Los Angeles Ram linebacker M IK E ll E N Ii Y shed*, his shoulderpads for a leopard skin next year. The muscular grid der-turned-ac tor will star in a televised "Tarzan ' se­ ries . . . 49er captain and former Texas star M IK E D O W - , D E E has not recovered completely from a shoulder injure In 1953, D A R R E L L he sustained four games ago R O Y A L roached Edmonton of the Canadian Foot ha I! League to a 17-5 record . . . W H O P IN T H E C H O P S D E P T .; The Sun Bow! in scratching Texas from its list of possible candidates did an imprudent and unnecessary thing W e can’t speak for Ro yal but it is quite unlikely that he would choose to go there regardless of his team’s record . F o r his running talent and ability to perplex the S W C s Supermen, we suggest a new name for Steer quarterback M A R V IN K R IS T Y N IK . How about M arvin Kryptonite'’ . 'Mural Grid Season W ill Soon Conclude Phi Gamma Drlta and Brack­ enridge Hall won close victories over Kappa Sigma and Moore Hill, respectively, to take division championships In­ tramural grid action. Mike Boxwell of the F iji'* threw four touchdown passes to lead his team to a 26-22 victory , in Monday's In an even closer contest. Ed ward Mazur led Brackenridge to a 15 12 conquest, throwing two touchdown tosses. Other division winner* were Tojas, with a 29-0 win over the Epicureans, and the Recruits by virtue of their 190 whitewash­ ing of the Vikings. All four games were In class A competition. In the only cia.** B game sched uled, the Fiji's smashed Chi Phi 55-0. Rodney Sa tterwhite threw four touchdown passes for the winners The championship series begins W e d n e s d a y when Moore Hill squares off against the Recruits at 4:00, Delta Sigma Pl fares PU Gamma Delta at the same time. Both gam es are in class B division. In the class A champioaships Brackenridge opposes Phi Gam ma Delta while Tejas entertains the Recruits. BASK) I BALL CLASS A *I>x&r> Dorn! 30 Draft Dfvlg.-re IS T ow er View as. Viking* S i Misfit* Si, Bsh* 27; FtarfxH* W oiverine* 20 CLASH ll Rwrult* 41 Trojan* 25 IS IT A rm y 17 A ip r* P M P rid g m e B v Omega l5. N avy 2u AIM Kl 12, Air Fome over Kappa Pal default P ra­ ther 38 Robert* 21; Moor# HIU 29 B rack en rtd go 22 M U L L E T R eb el* ever Bleep and Bat, default LAW Shy* te n 4d. Barton* l l : Re Id era S7 P K I D elta Ph t N o 2 -ti O u tla w * 76 T aurl 31 Caveat* 53 PM P h i No Iur>i***«ux i Loser* 22 Praetor* 16, W by-N V * 4 2, Ily-Law * GRADFATS Orada #T, Photons 23, I 17 l l FOOT KAI L CLASS A B ra ck e n rid g e 15 M o o r* H ill 12 (H o u a ln g Final) Recruit* )9 V ik ­ ing* 0 P h i Kappa S ig m a 22 (lamma Delta IFratemlMf Tina. > Ta jag 29 > p;cur- eana 9 (c lu b F in a l > ( Independent F in a l? CLASS n P h i Gam m a D elta 55 CKI P h i o M I L LET Downtowner* 28 Purple Pa** I on 12; A Pack over Banca, default. LAW O u tlaw * 12. F u lc ru m * 6 WOMEN’S TOOT BAI L White bracket — Heflin Manor 8 Newman Club 2 Alpha Theta 0 Oran ae bracket — ERI) I Kappa 'u k & B e r r e t t w n Y A K 8 U T T 6 R ' SILBERT BUSINESS PAPERS You may win $25 for just t r y i n g G ilbert t y p i n g paper! • Registration must be typed on Gilbert Superase Bond. (Don't worry if you can’t type, this paper is really erasable.) • Register n o w thru Friday, Nov. 1 9 . • You may win a $25 Co-Op G ift Certificate. • Receive y o u r sample packet. The lusty life is back And it starts at the Sign of the Pub Uncork a flask of Pub Cologne. If you hear tankards clash and songs turn bawdy, if the torches flare and the innkeeper locks up his daughter for the n igh t... it’s because you’ve been into the Pub and unloosed the lusty life. E x t r a o r d in a r y F a c i li t i e s Include! • M #g,« Prod * Fee « • C ry*** C lear $* mming Mech ne # Com p.*** / A»f- C ond t>one 1 • Pf -ate O ra tin g Soothe *-d Locker* • Pr »«** Thermottet ce y C o n tro le d Shower* • H g 8 Pro** a Low C a o re H e e ** Dr rii Bar • H a t M.oerel Swirl Foot Deck • A„*h. er*.< B a n ilk S« Suite • S*e*w Poem • M ed ica ted Inhalation Pool 8 oom • Scientific lo d » M * * * * je . •-* V io e t Sue 9 * f • Room • Pf »**e O u t v je Sue • P '*» * .re Shower* 9 A u *ti«’i M ort Mod#*1** • H ea lth Club IS Patented f *c*' ct deducing M *obi«a* # 12 M e c h o ic * Body C o nto u r'* g M ach ' •» • 85 P b u b of ->p«c * t*d A p parats* I v d *^d • 4 Figure Firming M ach aa* # P en n ae ! $u per* >*io* r it iCm Pub cologne, after-shave, and cologne spray. $3 75 to $10 OO. Created for men by Revlon. I lilllilim , S jp p / D ept. S*ree* F c o ” RAM U U U HAMBURGERS t t O U D A y n o u s e Tr im r n S w im Health S pa 5407 CLAY AVE. • Just off 5400 Burnet Rd. • GL 3 7251 Wednesday, Nov. 17, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN P«g« I ’Soldier Schweik' Subtitled Satire “ The Good Soldier Schweik.** an Austrian film with English subtitles produced In 1961. will be shown free at 4, 6:30. and 9 p m. W ednesday In Batts Audi­ torium . The satire on w ar is based on a novel by Jaroslav Hasek and depicts a dog dealer who fakes pedigrees and adds m ake-up to m ake m ongrels saleable. Schweik winds up in the Army** psychiatric w ard w h e n w ar breaks out. and he is subjected te«:ts. Heinz Ruh- to a set of m ann, plays acto r who Schweik, excells at pantom im e and comic expression. the The total num ber of degree* conferred in the College of Art* and Sciences between 1884 and 1962 num ber 32,317. able talents, he will be heard of in the future. R achlin’s conducting is precise with no wasted effort or motion. The perform ance was straig h t­ forw ard with the clarinet section highlighting second m ove­ m ent with expressive playing in the second them e, and the brass providing the excitem ent to the last m ovem ent the between breathing The tem po to the lovely third m ovem ent was perhaps a little fast, or there could have been the m ore phrases. However, the m ovem ent is m arked a scherzo and R ach­ i s 's interpretation was valid as scherzando It quality instead of the m ore ly ri­ c al m eaning. emphasized the Ift«lw pgt I '•R io • • »r(A « - F«tMC» NAL AS *«~l • |U*S % STEAKS * SCA Fop D rn HUEDCHOUN * H A M B U I L & C R S G R S ’0 3 9 3 s t e a k H O T T L E 6 0 9 VV. Z 9 t W . & J%i ■ ** * n% *Ti BLASTING THRU THE HEADLINES! MANIACS iSSAUL RECO M M EN DED FOR MATURE AU DIEN CES Bacchae'Cast Named Talented Violinist Shows Refinement ‘Menagerie' Scheduled Rod Dragon Player* of Stephen F. Austin High School will p re ­ sent Tennessee W illiams' "The G lass M enagerie" N or. 18 19 In the school auditorium . Advance tickets are on sale tor 75 corita each by Red Dragon m em bers. They also will be on sale at the door before each 8 p rn. perform ance. The U niversity Departm ent of D ram a has announced the cast for Its second production of Its 28th season — "The B acchae” to lie presented Dec. 8 11 In Hogg Auditorium . The Euripidean tragedy, writ- t b u l t * DC IM -TI PARAMOUNT f t a t m r s i I t I M M OO ft Oft It Oft IO Oft C Starts TOMORROW J " NOT S IN C E B R ID G E O N THE R IV E R K W A I A PRISO NER-O F-W AR D R A M A S O P O W E R F U L A S ‘K IN G RAT'!" "Nothing, but nothing, h left to the imaginationI George Segal comes through loud and dear as the scrounging, wheeling dealing corporal Kingr •.av •■«* am "K IN G RAC ONP OF THE BEST P O W FILMS YOU HAVE EVER SEEN' DIRECTOR WRITER BRYAN FORBES HAS DONE A BANG UPJOBI* • IS t M ~ 'KING RAT blends earthy laughter with pnson camp horror! ROWDY AND WELL PLAYED!" - rn * w«se Am “ KING fW riS POWIRFUU A lacerating film of how evil and sadistic men fighting tot survival can be!" — Harm »»ft tlMftS "VIVID AHO SHOCKING! Distinguished by excellent performances!" “CHALK 'KING RAT' UPAS ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST!"...*,---------- iv g R 's t t tan In th* fifth century B C , wa* translated by Dr. William A. Ar- iw a m lth , chairm an of the UT Departm ent of Gaaaic*. J ame* Moll, prof*-«*ar at dra­ ma, will direct the Greek classic. Choreography *111 be by associ­ ate professor Shirley Dodge, with original music composed by Dr. I/Ythar Klein, assistant professor of music. Clayton Karkosh. dram a fac­ ulty m em ber, will design the se t; Paul Reinhardt, costum es; and David Nancarrr.w, lighting. In the play Dionysus, the Greek god of wine and revelry, played by Ijilrd Williamson, has angered Pentheus. king of Thebes, by leading the women of the city to dance on the mountains. Pen- theui. played by Dallas Rick Hamilton, tries to prevent Cad­ mus and Teiresias, played by Edward Cannan and I ^ r r y M ar­ tin, from Joining Dionysus. Pentheus vows he will bring down the revelers by force His mother, Agave, played by B ar­ is stricken with bara J. M opy, a m adness while on the m oun­ tain with the other women. Mes­ s e n g e r * , p l a y e d by Jack Belt, B art M cCarthy, and T . Jay Mail­ m an, witness the scene* of pas­ sion and return to Thebe* to re ­ port their observation*. The Asian Bacchae, follower* of Dtonysu*. th# Greek form chorus. Member* of th# choru* ar# Suzanne Anderson, Pam ela Bailey, Jan et Marl# Barton, Bon­ nie Cohen. Carol Ann Holloway, M aureen M cIntyre, Evelyn Nor­ ton, P atricia Pearcy, Giva Rich­ ardson, M argaret Rideout. P am e­ la Stone, Cindy Kay Veazey, N an­ cy D. W haley, I>»n Oy Wong, and B a rb a ra William*. The soldiers, played by R obert Black, Curt!* C arnes, Calvin C. C hrane, Don Coleman, Sam Mill­ ing, and R ichard Ponton, ar# fol­ lowers of Pentheus. R ay F o ster ha* been s e l e c t e d as assistan t to th# directo r, and Jim Zvanut w i l l serv e aa stag# m an ag er. A ssistant seen# design­ e r will b# R obert R. B lackm an. Linda F ish er will b# assistan t costum e designer, and Bennett Averyt will serve as assistan t lighting designer. All a re student* In the D epartm ent of D ram a. TODAY! Exclusive Engagement And Thursday At Two Theatres P ER FO R M A N C ES E\CH D A Y 2 m 4 pm 8 : 1 5 1 M A K (;oT RUDO LPH , FONTEYN NUREYEV ITCMSCTHPR f o r T H f FIRST TIMP ON TMP MOTION PICTURE S C R e C N 1 H I K E A T IT R K * J I t Oft * 00 4 00 * oft R oft lo oft THAT JAM ES BOND M A N SEAN CO NN ERY 11 THE H ILL" C Starts TOMORROWD THE THRILLER THAT IS SETTING A NEW STYLE IN SPY SUSPENSE ‘“THE IPCRESS FILE IS A THINKING MAN’S ‘GOLDFINGER'!" -NEWSWEEK A n E v e n in g W it h t h e r o y a l b a l l e t I Im fty(p*i4M It Civ**-*, U .» •« *«-on t NOTE! •IO T* DA V ID BLAIR Directed by Anthory Asoo'h •Ad Anthony Havrkxo Ajo ABH! Production A Sigma ll: Release § P P E R F O R M A N C E AT | 0 0 All M BOTH THEATRES Seats I V ARSITY O N THE D R A G CINEMA AT CAPITAL PLAZA 2 P.M. A N D 8:15 S H O W Student* LOO Children .75 Adults 1.25 M D C .75 4 P.M. S H O W All Seat* 2 P.M........... AH Seats 1.25 4 P.M........... All Seett 1.00 IOO g P M ........... A * Seat. 1.25 M a tin eei Daily — O p en 2 00 F eatu re. 2 30 5 20-8-IO An O u tf ie ld in g Road Show A ttraction at Popular Price! U n r e la t e d S eat! C on tin u er* Parformancoa Paia Lift S u ip en d ed By JAMBS BECOOM) E rick Friedm an keynoted the third subscription concert of the Austin Symphony Monday even­ ing with his perform ance of the Beethoven Violin Concerto In D M ajor before a m edium sized audience in Municipal Auditor­ ium . re stra in t the m any Fried m an , 23, is one of Am er­ ic a ’s brightest young a rtists His perform ance showed a refinem ent and far beyond his y^ars. He possesses a very facile technique which enabled him to handle technical de­ m ands of the concerto with ease. E specially noteworthy was his beautiful handling of trills p a r­ ticularly first they w ere certainly m ovem ent; not ornam ents in his concept, but a very expressive p a rt of tha m usical fabric. His polish, slickness, and control a re rem - ineecent of H eifetz’* ityle. evident the In The virtuosic handling of the cadenza* bi tha first and third m ovem ents also showed H eifetz's influence. Friedm an has the q uali­ ties to go to the top. and with m atu rity added to his consider- Erlck Friedman Spends Busy Day on UT Campus E rick Fried m an , the young con­ c e rt violinist who appeared as soloist Monday with the Austin Symphony O rchestra, had a busy d ay on cam pus Tuesday. He spoke to U niversity students from 11:30 a m. until about I p.m ., played for the o rc h e stra ’s afternoon student concert a t 3:15 p.m ., and caught a plane to New Y ork a t 3:50 p m . F ried m an had not planned to play for the stu d en t’s concert, but he w as im pressed with the stu d en t’s enthusiasm these concerts and agreed to sta y to open the la st m ovem ent of the Beethoven vio­ lin concerto he perform ed Mon­ d ay n ig h t the concert with for Varsity Shows Ballet Movie F am ed dan cers M argot F on­ teyn and Rudolph N ureyev are sta rre d in “ An Evening with the Royal B allet” in a special two- dav and showing W ednesday T hursday a t the V arsity. University students and faculty will be admitted to any of the th ree showings — at 2, 4, and the re ­ 8:15 p.m . daily — for duced ra te of one dollar. Delwood DRIVE-IN THEATRE JKH t s t t Im B O X O F F I C E O P E N S 6 : 0 « A D M I S S I O N 75« THE SONS OF KATIE ELDER D a m M artin A John W a r n s S t a r t s 7 :0 4 — P l a s — THE PATSY S o r r y U w l i * K e e n s * W f U S t a r t s 9 : 1 4 Q olJ L . ° G u U A U A DRIVE-IN THEATRE W M Sa e f t * B O X O F F I C I I O P E N * « : H A D M I S S I O N 7&s THE WORLD OF SUZIE W ONG W i l l i a m H o l d a l l # N a n c y S w a n S t a r t s 7:0ft Indifference," Pondering Alberto M oravia * "T im # starring of Rod Steiger, Claudia C a rd - hale, and Shelley W inter*, •tart* today et the Texet Theatre. UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS W ednesday K L U N - T V , C h a n n e l I 8 .15 E x p lo rin g S cien ce 9 OO— M usic for Y ou n g Poop:* w 35 H isto ry . G overn m en t 1 0 .0 3 -Science H orizon* 10 35—C h a n g .ng E arth 11:00— B ib le T elecou rao I M ) — F ren ch Chef 12 OO— M usic fo r Y ou n g P ftopls 13 3 7 —S cien ce Q uest I 04— F o cu s on S cien ce 1 37— H isto ry , G overn m en t 2 04— S cien ce H o rizo n s 2 5 5 —C h a n g in g E arth 3 30— N ew York O rch estra : H a n d e ls W a ter M usic'' 4 30— R a g tim e Era 5 30—TV K in d erg a rten 5 30—A B on e for S p o tty 5 .4 5 — L ig h t T im e 6 :0 0 — W h a t-* N ew 6 30— E v e n in g N e w s 7 .0 0 — M en and Ideas 7 30— T h e F ren ch C h ef 8 OO— B r id g e W ith Jean Co* 8 30 - E a s t e r tx W isd om and M od em 9 OO— T h e M usic H ou r 10 O O -P u b lic A ffa ir s: “ T h a U n ion L ife M an * Wed needily K L T - F M , 98.7 m e 3 OO—K a leid o sco p e 4 OO— B e lg ia n P ress R ev iew 4 15— BB* S cien ce M agazin e 4 .4 5 — P r o file A u stra lia 5 OO—S eren a d e 6 OO—O rdeal o f N ew F ra n ce: F ren ch Im p eria lism 6 30— K L R .N -K lTT N ew s S im u lca st 7 OO— T h ea tre 5 T 30—O verseas A ssig n m en t .8 OO— T h e St hell vis C en ten ary 9 OO— K L R N -K U T M u sic H ou r S im u l­ T h e U n d erstu d y*’ ca st 10:00—J oz* N o ctu rn e TEM P Closed Circuit# Channel 2 8 OO — A m erican H isto ry : W ar o f 1812 ag a in at IO a .rn 9 OO S c ie n c e for E lem en ta ry T ea ch ­ e r s, A irp lan es 11 OO— A m erican C iv iliza tio n P h ilo s­ ophy o f A merican Foreign P o lio * ; a g a in at 3 p rn 1 OO—F o cu s on G erm an 2 00 - - I .a V 'da P a n a m crlca n a D r P a b lo Y n sfran , " S o u th A m erican G eo g ra p h y ” - in tr o d u ctio n to V isu a l A rts: 4 on A rt an d N a tu re. P a rt l l Channel 4 12 OO P r in c ip le s o f G eo lo g y : Sand i D u n es a g a in at I and 7 u rn. 2 .0 3 —- A c c o u n tin g . Bank R eco n cilia ­ tio n KIRSCHNER^ Fried Chicken— 1817 I Lamer Phone HI 2-3598 t/l Fried Chicken — SO# FF A T oed Catfish (FF, Toast, Salad)— 70c PHONE ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY B e anre to w k for K.tr*«hn«r’e W a llet M e n u . i (VVVWAAAPVAAAA^r^W "TE* Shot* PUc* of Austin'* R O C K IN G C H AIR SEATS SM O K IN G PERMITTED FREE PARKING 1200 H A N C O C K DRIV? O na Block W a it Burnet Rd. DL I 6641 HELD OVER 4TH FUN-FILLED, WACKEY WEEK! BLACK "SPURS B o e r C a l l i o a a A L i n d s D a r n e l l B a rn et Bd. h o v e e s ! BURNET SS£ A d a t i s L M D i s * . C a r d . 7 1 Plut "THE BUCK TORMENT HEATHER SEARS • FEATURE TIME 8:15 “ A TING LING , N O -N O N S EN S E SUSPENSE Y A R N !" -TIME - A BLOOD ’N GUTS SPT THRILLER!” -N Y. DULY NEWS HARRY SALTZMAN present! ► is Bm i u ’ i u i brit ta* bf LEN DEIGHTON •tftmog MI I HARRY SALTZMAN • SIDNEY J. FURIE FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P .M . OH LOTS VARSITY 7H» & LAVACA STS T VY <1 J) W H O N I T I W O DAYS O N I T SEE OTHER AD THIS PAG E FEATURES: 2:00, 4:00, 8:00 A N EVENIN G W ITH THE R O Y A L BALLET4 FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P .M . O N LOTS A D J A C E N T TO TH EATRE I I AUSTIN it SKT1 Beiwrh ft Oft , t i t W o r ld 7 S t M H I a Wtdnesday, Nov. 17. 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag. 4 l e n S f f * L TIMES Hr Sure t<* F titer Our r^fjvrpt/ u n * |y *| |t»i m r .Vt.Lr. i ii IM '.-:' 0 ...I h A’iYiii i I C T C C T J C I r r V M T C C T J C I L U . a I t j I I lu'iii! i-TitAf MMP w NYV'! ii r i inn cunni ill Ari I M ' H N I I ’,, r t a b u l o u a H o l i d a y *4 C a p r i : ' ‘B a t t l e of t h e B u l s e ” I M f e l l N Q I H I M . T O B l > o M O TYO N O T H A V * T O B E P R E S F N T T O W I * t r i p f o r T w o r i a J e t t a D i l l s s . XCLUSIVE M E R IC A N R P M i P R P ! STARTS T O D A Y ! O P E N j 7 : 1 # F E A T : * 3ft 4 IU fi IO * WE 9 5ft R O O S T E I G E R a n d c o - s t a r r i n g P A U L E T T E G O D I ! A R D # C L A U D I A C A R D I N A L E # S H E L L E Y W I N T E R * # T H O M A S M I L I A N R E C O M M E N D E D F O B IA E C Team to Tour Austin An A tom ic E n e rg y C om m ission fact-finding te a m will be in A us­ tin as p a rt of its to u r of possible sites for a $348-million ato m sm a sh e r. T his w eek the te a m is in sp e ct­ in T exas. T he ing eig h t a r e a s sc ien tists sa id a t this sta g e of th e p ro je c t th e y a re not in a po­ sition to c o m p a re one site to any o th e rs. The A PX h a s not se t anv tim e for f u rth e r culling of th e 85 locations the U nited S ta te s being co n sid ered . throu g h o u t D r. R o b e rt W alker of the C ali­ fornia In stitu te of Technology, one of four m en m a k in g the e v a l­ tour. sa id h e could not uation m a k e a g e n e ra l ev alu atio n of the site s but th a t h e w as “ qu ite im ­ fo rm a ­ p resse d w ith tio n ’’ u n d erly in g m u ch of the A ustin a re a . th e ch a lk Now open to the public SWINGERS A GO GO GEORGE JONES T O N IG H T A N D T H E J O N E S B O Y S A nd Featuring ► M aggie — Cindy — Paulette — Leslie H O 5-8070 831 Houston For Reservations Just O ff N . Lamar 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 j 4 | 4 4: 4 4 I 4 4 4 I 4 4 4; 4; 4 4 ! 4 I .J I i I I t i p * T o ' t . . d o v / n o p e c i a l / I i C h ic o 's F a m o u s E N C H I L A D A D I N N E R Vl PRICE ] W E D N E S D A Y O N L Y - 1 1 A . M . 'T I L C L O S I N G ! Consist* of two enchiladas with chili, fried rice, fried b e an s, fe a ste d and p ts .................................. j No Substitutions — Reg. $1.30 V s c . C h i c o mm R E S T A U R A N T Ii Hancock Center Orders to take out at regular price S i B r o t h e r ^^)cive(pardner *■ IN PERSON the r ° f t h e c o l l r i aaA J BC3 HOP* SA* 5 ' PAV* %% ' ***€>, ^ 0 . e*r/c + th'hk/hg 2 f r*sr "v AHC*,?? < ! & ' f Monday, November 22 — 8:30 p.m. M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M Tlckeh on Sal® at B L O M Q U IS T - C L A R K 617 Congress H E M P H IL L 'S B O O K S T O R E N O . 2 2501 Guadalupe M o il o r d e r* to P .O . B o x IS M , A u s tin , T e x u 1 3 . 5 0 1 2 . 5 0 $ 4 . 0 0 I t OO »4 50 Exclusive af fhe Chief Drive-In F A M I L Y " E a r l y B i r d " N I G H T W E D N E S D A Y O N L Y C o m e to O u r M ovie Forty-Five Minutes Before Regular O pening Time and Be Admitted for O n e -H alf PA) Price! Children Free, Early Bird Time This W eek is 5:15 to 6:00 Regular Prices Prevail A fter 6:00 Plus! Snack Bar Specials! C H IC K EN t Pea. Fren ch Frle* Bread. H o n e y . SH RIM P 6 Prs. Fren ch F r ie s B read , T a rta r Sauce. P IZ Z A 12” PI,AIN OR P E P P E R O N I FOOD PRICE S P R E V A I L U N T IL IO: SO 65c 75c 75c • • • • M M H M M N H H H N t f N i H E L D O V E R M S ® !* ! JOHN I .WAYNE ■ ■ D E A N I STMARTIN E N G A G E M E N T _ HAtWAUJS____ D ie S o n s of KATIE {IDER "CWH*u» eiMsfeon plus! B O BBY D A R IN "HELL IS FOR HEROES" (troupe and individuals inter­ v iro n m e n ta l C risis p ro g ra m , N ev. cient hom eland In th e f a c e of the th e School of A rri I le ctu re 5 I- 1 proach to e v a c u a tin g th e ir a n ­ ested in gathering wood for the 21 23, Kocher to Speak Today E rie Kocher, I S Skate D e­ partm ent em ployee find diplo­ m at in residence at the U niver­ sity, will apeak at 7:30 p m. in Union Building W ednesday 301-30.). Sponsored by the Model I ril­ ed N ations, Kocher will speak the United Nations on “ Can Keep the P ea c e? ” at the dis­ cussion session. * Physicist to Lecture A colloquium on “ E x p e rim e n ts w ith P o lariz ed N eu tro n s” by D r. H. H. B a rsc h a ll of th e U n iv ersity of W isconsin D e p a rtm e n t of P h y ­ a t 4 p m . sics w ill b e held T h u rsd a y in P h y sics Building 313. •* Cavers’ Speech Today A. Richard Sm ith, graduate geology student, will discuss “ Speleogenesis: The Origin of C ase” at 7:30 p.m . W ednesday in P h ysics Building SIS. The Speleological Society is spon­ soring the speech. ★ Final Dante Talk Today A s tr u c tu re study of “ P u rg a ­ t o r y ” by D an te A lighieri Will co n stitu te d ie in a la st the poet s e rie s co m m e m o ra tin g a t 4 p .m . W ednesday in the A ca­ d em ic C enter. le c tu re D an te D ella T erza. Ita lia n scho­ la r, an d p ro fesso r of Ita lia n a t H a rv a rd U n iv ersity , w ill discuss “ The C antos of D iso rd erly L ove: R e m a rk s on the S tru c tu re and Style of 'P u r g a to r y .’ ” ★ Film Topic of Lecture Dr. Stanley T. Donner, chair­ man of the D epartm ent of Ka- dkvTelevision-Film , will speak on ‘‘Film a s Com m unication” at 4 p.m . W ednesday in Union Building 202 in conjunction with the F am ous Lecture Series. ★ W ives to See Fashions “ T he Blue Chip C ollection” is th e th e m e of a sty le show to be p re se n te d by the L aw W ives Club a t 8 p .m . W ednesday in Tow nes H all A uditorium . T his fashion m a rk e t re p o rt will fe a tu re sty les from S a ra h G ee. the an n u al All p ro ce ed s from benefit will go to G a rd n e r H ouse, the d eten tio n hom e. T ra v is C ounty T ickets m ay be p u rc h a se d to r $1 e a c h fro m an y club m e m b e r or a t the d o o r the e \e n in g of th e show'. The public m a y a tte n d . ♦ Bonfire Wood N eeded U niversity's A ggie B o n f i r e , sponsored by the Cowboys, w ill m eet In Union Building 321 at $ p.m . Thursday. The bonfire is pianne“t in v o lv e d u n le s s y o u h a v e an in te r e s t in m a t h . M;. m o t h e r d i d n t n a m e rn# Archimede# for nothing. Students Asked To Aid Speakers Assistants Needed In Crisis Program Som e 50 o r 60 stu d en ts a r# n eeded a* aid es for sp e a k e rs In D eadline for stu d e n t ap p lk a* tions Is T h u rsd a y (Nov. 18). Two stu d e n ts a r e needed for ca h sp e a k e r, one fro m the School cf A rc h ite c tu re and one who Is m a jo rin g in a field th a t Is re ­ la te d to th e s p e a k e r's profess 1 n. STUDENTS m a y apply by sig n ­ ing th e ir nam e* on a bulletin b oard on the second floor of th e A rc h ite c tu re Building and bv picking up an info rm atio n al fo rm co n cern in g the s p e a k e r at A rchi­ te ctu re Building Room 202, S tud en ts w ill furnish tra n s p o r­ ta tio n to and ft em the a irp o rt and hotel for g u e sts, keep tra c k of sch ed u les, help w ith speakers* for any slide show s p ro je c to rs o r In show ings, film g en e ral, ta k e r a r e of o th er such d etails. and, N u b i a n A d a p t a b i l i t y S u b j e c t O f A n t h r o p o l o g i c a l L e c t u r e tty WU. IJ AM C R Y ER N ubian people, w hose M ilage M i in the u | per E g y p tia n N ile took a p ra g m a tic a p ­ valley , co n stru c tio n of the A sw an D am , a cco rd in g to an an thropologist who studied the effects of this relocation. Dr R o b e rt F e r n e a , in a le c tu re T u esd ay d e sc rib in g th e w ay s in w hich th ese people a d a p te d them to a new location, spoke a c h e s the of the p ra c tic a lity In w hich N ubians a lte re d the c u sto m s and tra d itio n s of to fit new su rro u n d in g s. th e ir gro u p 4 GON EHN MEN V h u-.ng p n I e e l plan of sm a ll dw ellings ar ra n g e d In co m p ac t co m m u n ities, divided k insm en. B esides being m oved th e y be lieved to be s a c re d , th e N ubians w ere m oved clo se to neighbor* they did not tru s t. fro m an a re a to Tile anthropologist Said fhe pee th e ir new hut pie ad a p te d roundings by ch a n g in g the s t ar k p roject houses to re se m b le de signs of the old village and by simplifying their e lab o rate r e monies With the ne * cl aeneas of tn g units, t i e U v ,.m < n of r «-:■... and the numb* r of guests to e n tertain ed , cere: non w ere. In som e cases nrhanizi '•>••• T t x a s L o n g h o r n s G o t N r w R o o t i n g S e c t i o n ti* ( MUI S tudents if \ r I',!’/ ah ifr-d loge now',” C art E re a r ­ e t strid o r1 and ;• ii an a rticle p u blish^ U niversity alum ni Tile e x c i^ m e n t Gov. John B Cm Sen ate Bill kl? this log A rlington St u * f nr F re u n d fam ily * # TV , v '* a l r \iN 4 J A 4 * .v Li * 0 “ ti calls F reund sa y r me follrgr* looks bright that the c o lle g e h m ulti m illion d o lla r * gram ■'N’ w u e can font bail te a m s — cur D a r r e lls Longhorn lingam stu d e n t sal ! tfvaru Reb v r a r eniuig- rom a b ra n c h p a r t of w hat THERE KRE many question* ■ * 1 i''.answ ered, D r F e m c a s a d . the moat u rgen t a r e : v - rig - ‘ e et- rn role future of '.Hag*', can the N ubians tho n w ip. and is an et) nic gr s a w su rv iv e, mr v a lu es v illa g e wall they be tu p p ia n te d by u rb an V1' JOS * ■ > ' - and Dr. F ernea room ,od his PhD ’he if C hicago vcrsity is BA from Reed College, I M ’ I e E a ste rn u: - ai Harvard U niversity, f r ‘ne pr«vm»|g s-t y e a rs in U niver­ s e r v e d r e h e if 1 ie F r»l Founda­ t w and h e * is a t ’ ie Artier sity in as dirocf r tion on N ubian relocation. ( air* . w UNIFORM CENTER Profess! on 20 w*>rda ( N o r o p y c h a n g * for c o n a * c u U v * U s u * r n ’ *'* » n a w-xi i t » d l e x a n T u e s d a y f t \a W e d n e # d a y T h u r s d a y T irx an F rid a -, T ex * n . . S u n d a y T e a s in . c * In th e e v e n t Im m e d ab l re• J lf * a r e re pcoisihit* Ie CALL GR 1-5244 Furnished Apartm ent! Furnished Apartm ents Alteration! Typing — WA IJK T O tin fv e ro it} o n e b e d ro o m u tilitie s p a td .G R i Vei.l E v e r e tt* G R 7-0818 7: W e s t 23 * 5 B L O C K S C A M P U S A ir t u n til* in n ed room , I liv in g (.IL 6< «19. GR o n e b ed room , xtudy, $8-». kit hen, bath U63 G R 8 * k l I j (JN K BED R(K >M a p e r t n i e n t n e a r ut ver*it> I'aneSln*. < i T H E R A Z A A R R E S T Y L IN G ALTE RA I E Ive prnre**!ort*l *ean*i E liz a b e th I m ’ k e y 3 f '(I G uadalupe A r .«* f r o m P o t t y A D R E S fllf A K f N G th vs S e w in g AI (erat I to ro m De B L O C K r.N 'IV K R S IT V , iw o b e d ro o m A /C f u r n is h e d d u p le x A lto e t H elen try p r iv a te b a th — k itc h e n . B ill p n rt I paid G R 6 ‘WU I .......... -.. ....... .— •——■———■•• — | O L D H A M H O U S E A P A R T M E N T * 1314 O ldham s t r e e t E a * v W a lk in g D l* ? a n e to C a m p u * *J b ed ro o m * • f a b l e T V •D isp o s a l ‘ All bill* p a id ‘ M aid S e r v ic e ‘ O n t r a l A r IIe * t L o u n g e a n 't S tu d y A re* T o o l ' * L E C H A T E A U D E F A R IS SM) S o u th L a m a r w a n tin g F o r y o u n g m a r r ie d eo u i lh * C hat* < th e p e r fe c t p ie c e to *ta> a ll c o n v e n ie n c e # p lu s privacy o ffe rs p a r k in g a n d c o v e re d sto r >»*,•* q u ie t, t r a d i ti o n w th M ea in F r e n c h B u ilt •• • t e i r a n e a n a n d I • n tw o m in u te s to c a m p u s C om e b y a n d as) fe a tu re * of o u r a b o u t th r e e y e a r le a s e f u r n is h in g s b e d r o o m th e e x c lu s iv e a p a r tm e n t* S p a c io u s O u t b e tw e e n 11 IWS V) M o d d a y -F r id a y A /C . c e n tr a l h e a t a n d c a r p e te d T W O B E D R O O M e x t r a la: ne a n d nice I Ie b a th a n d k itc h e n . V> ii a c c o m m o d a te SYV e a c h O n e block o f s ta d iu m 4 ■ A v ailab le D e c e m b e r C ai! M r V a u g h t, H O 5-MS#! 8 3»- a rn -6 OO p rn 1st T A N G L E W O O D N O R T H L u x u rio u s o n e a n d tw o b e d ro o m a.'.-art m o n te no w a v a ila b le d s h w a s h e rs . d isp o s a l* C a b le T V , w a ik - m clo set# , UT p o o l, ro o m a i.d < ar w as! C o m e bv sot .al a n d be p le a s a n tly s u r p r is e d a ’ h o w little it p o st to live In o n e o f o u r b r* j- t i f u l a p a r t m e n t s fo r or- u p e n ­ K M M -:*. c l 2 * m G I. s ^ j r r s 1020 Kwiat 45th BTHACKSTON R A P A R T M E ? m M e# a n d W o m e n 2 h e d ro o m a 2 b ath * fS 2 p e r m o n th AB H tiia p a id M a id S e rv ic e 2910 R ed R iv e r 'I R 6-5631 Cal, R in g le o r c o u p * 4 ro o -n aff! entry V ery r e a s o n a b le , p r iv a te n o t Univ atty s e c tio n D is paid R ecd. G R I w l , G R g-2256. 2711 H E M P H I L L P A R K R o o m m a te n e e d e d o r a p a r t m e n t #v» a b ir C a rp e te d p a n e od A /C , ato rag * e-xs Pain s w im m in g r*i> GR TI­ $69 SO GR 2-4A38. 7611 po*-! Ile! 169 50 T W O D A R L IN G s p w io ’ia a p '* B o th c > a n m o d e rn A t e . W a lk I T. T t.ii G room * UH J-Av 20s-* * d o v • frp en ‘WA A-2564 D L 3-04P) DECEMBER 1st - P atio. AZC S e p e r * ‘4 b#drf»ra I'annetad walla ( A i II Ti W 22nd GR w a t# r paid. IT I SO. 3-9125 TARRYTOWN U m lqu# p r iv a te bache- .ak# g o lf emirs»■ c e n tr a l h # # t-# lr GT, 7-5468 lo r e ffic ie n c y n e a r C * rp # te d " tr # G R 7-56(J) L L v _O Rent R E N T A T V. $1 $13 p e r m o n th . G R I 2 2692 Rooms for Rent M F N t in n 1 .5 T w o liv in g r<- d ln g lcv -o o u b H bloc: ha c a m p u s K it t im, •T eviston, p a rk ■4 N u w e s *,1' ■a 2. In a Miscellaneous fe ss .'.n u G U IT A R IN S T R U t l l ' NS c - f« r p ro i n s t r * ( all R< n H u d s o n *n e n d e r s ’ id < .Ii 2 64 H o n s of J u a n v ra r f, am lo co .sn ’ W a n f e d N E E D RIDE, to l » s A n g ela* I e m n g s G R 2-7115 unfed to sn ar rn »! a d I a p a r i - T. C all RO'. P»i O N E OR T W O a ria a t lu x u r y a p a r t m e n t o f f E ri/ield Rd S e p a r a te to m a r * b a 'h a A /C , T V E tc. O U G R 2 V M I to m a n N E E D Y O U N ' te ll a r d su p p ile I fu i. R ep ly m ' Au: Bo* 455 A G G R E S S IV E t a l e s in s tr u c tio n e q u ip m e n t vi'.u* e x p e r ie n c e heit>- v n h a n d w r i t in g P O W o r k W a n te d C adi*# w o rk pu* ( 'S lu m # S ■Moved For Sale . A lf-ordo n 5') i t c e rin g F O R D V r* mo. bant. at cor; I486 < (J EX- ’E L L E N T a p a r! m an ta ii!', and s ’a !<* P R xrr r e ­ Tri »r ca. A T T E N T IO N s tu d e n t# lo n io a n d H»»uth T c a n now h a v e »h# .San o r 'h e Eve r i n g N ew s <1 a p a r t m e n t o r n o m e b for OL 6-12TJ I! 90 p e r m o n th t o r M' I 11 1951 OR P Z p A r i IH K V R O L K T E> a 2-doOf V I K IR r »NING fN MY h er n ig h t* a n d < .eo n I ok Ifr PO*'d ie Stud **rv r f Baby sittin g g ir l* /b o y s uerta LR 7-56' Male Help W anted P A R T T IM E fu i tim e e e r n f r ga f o r p a r t la eft* I/ v a ' m erchandta n g r<>r,~rrn lo g tin e n c o y m e n t a* a n in e n tiv # to prop* v M i ae# ao n a i n e e d s App! a r u r . u t b e u t good c h a r* lf a o r b F o r In te rv ie w LR. 6 1202 b e tw e e n 2 3 p m o n ! v, M r Ro a rn. a n d K I.E# T R I ab :# dis em spar# ty p e'. ie* ten I ai I A L F A R O *1>eed g e a r bo le a t h e r In fe rio r GR 2-24T1 * IL I L A !‘/ I F S I* n rn WH! m P rs I R'*- k alike, I j* P a u l B row , H I 4 4 5 * 7 Tutoring TI 'T O R IN O in ( T ie r t 'r M a th . C hi) G I. 5-561! lo g y a n i 19U I PONTIAC. All p o w e r R j p. G I. 3-46.11 Catalin Alo. H eat a f t e r fiv House* for Sale —— ____ .... W A L K U T . S h o p p in g sch o o l, m od e r r til* b a t h /sh o w - 'la roe te d . D o u b t# g - trtg e T e rra * O ilW O N ELE*'"I It 'r e d T w o b e d ro o m TRA t 2 45C N E W P O E H o u a t J | ! 6.32 S p rit# — t i I *W2 A fte r s '* w e** _ - . - . c r '.Et t 's n s GR 7-2K28. Z O N E D JIB Tow -rho), ie — lo ' A lley. W alk U T J- na sh o p p in g 7 bath Rea* - abl# GR 7-2n2A room* f^-- cl Furnished Roomi KS .330 TD I-' -a1 pl **•«.-p. c o n d itio n ELN so o r bent o 1319 a f te r *. > F O R SA LK C E R A M IC m old I ra Iro n .) & tv t r d G p lies a n d la m p s u p p lie s a r t M I HT S E L L I960 w j 'h h a rd to p ' r v e tta l l 6 TS f*- ta r H I 2-50*1 a f t e r 5 M LlN G R A D U A T I5 S T I. D D P I I P rix • 'a ro o m a n d ba UL U ( tilth i paid. gee m a r a g «r HRO W ast Ava G R 7- D E E R R I F L E U f v t r a t ag* w ith R e d fie ld rn" un ta c o n d itio n G R 7 7 HJS s < Ex'. Typing >rder !*• Rare** p r> rtable ’a p e r e GR 7 2H52 'JUS Vt K T X r. co river I f o u r sp e ed . AM I M r a n d {KW I tr a c tio n G R % « < H E VY B e l-A ir 4 MA] •:# BUI B ia r k P ro fl­ in g r »nri i m dissert** i it . u t to m B o o * - v t* n o r R o*ii, V ERY Ut.VI a te ■' ma t Ic < i* «•/ n o u s se<-retar d din* * iv* ac* .p- - • o-.j grr-. -« by I EG A L B R IE E 1 n lru jr p a p e r# a a p tc i a l t y « ■ *"■ 'air, an « * e r ‘ d o n a , WILL t e r n s pw- i y o u r p a p e r# b e a u tifu l. sr •* . * g al * d i .** e f t# 1 1 o na ' " ' a r 7 * ' r p e r KXI* T Y P IN G ■nabie, S E R V I TC n o i r A a iv f e r IM f f r p A l l j A / i vt It t A c 4 d .$% r* a t i o n * IP. M R EPO R pi **9, < ARTIST 19 * * Br*** rp m * i I 'o n t r a c t i t . GSL J-*#10. nu G e •*r> ex- ra- sa, % - 1 C L 5-SI 2-4 t, pee .lr 2-’i m . 1 ■ ’ I r.g n i.-eae# GR 8-263# Notary — HI 2-7: 44. -»•*«, Dix se eta* M im eographing* -7)o g r a d u a l# . (Trwdix /rnliditf, MBA T y p in g . M u itiU tn in g , B in d .r.g ,:*■*■ , r :• t " '> ; t a g sen#. A e- • . «* ii'.- n e e d s o f u n le t* * ’ s ity s t u d t n t a S pecial k» ■ b o a rd eq u ip * m en t fo r a n d en g V . n e e r m g t h t a t a and d is s e r ta tio n * 4 .»••-. - l a r g na; I n o n e GF. . 321 A G R 2-7877 S i 13 G U A D A L U P E R J , T I M E ? M ’sa G ra h a m , G L 3-5T25 v e rs ity . V ery M E W L U XI R Y a p a r t m e n t s n e a r u n i ­ r e o a o n a b ie . AII b. la p aid P o o l, 191-0 S a n (A ib r.el N o. IOT. G R 6-5862 B A C H E L O R S a p a r tr r .e n t . v n g - d in in g a r e a C arp- r* --.eat P a n e l ■A n l a o r K >ad. G R 2 5 ' 07 W in d s o r R o a d k urban. R o a r I b ed ro o m , A t e I S A . p i a - $4" H ILIJS P A ID D e lig h t! u t A /C bed- I ro o m . Cl# an , M o d e rn . I J bloc k* u r. ’..JIO C a stle HIU. G L 3-* .-HO C a p I to GR 8-th) .16 UNTVKRSn 2nd *32 V. *-st c r — R, 6-9490 G R r e t ti %. '-ft id b A L D R ID G E T Y PIN ''7 S E R V IC E 304Vj E a s t A /th .S treet G R 7-1696 G R 6-9VT I -'M E S r - J9« d o u b .r ap a • I Ad Ire*.*,•-a N'a- I.a w m ite s : a t a r / p u b l i c M rs. F ra s e r . G R 6-1317. T ff tiftlc a l p a p e r s a n e c i a l t y . O v.-r 2*0 A I L K IN • r in g . M rs. A n a D P • 5-57 I# sr^uags I n e e n a g , m a th e m a t s Drafting, gauitiliuiing CA LL G R 1-5244 F O R A CLASSIFIED AD Wtdnffisdiy, Nov. 17, 1965 THE D A IL Y T E X A N P a g * S C H I E F DRI VE - I N { i n c ! S h o t t i n g * 45 5 6 0 ] N . L a m e r H O 5 - 17 1 0 A d u l t * I OO I ) i * r C a r d * .75 C h i l d r e n F r e e For career opportumties at Equitable, see jour P L cim en t Officer, or write to Patrick Scollard, Manpow’et D evelopm ent D iv is i n, The Eq u it a b l e Life Assurance Society of the United States C Eqwltable 1^65 Homa Office. 1265 Av* of th*- A m n i.u , New Y -k N. T. 10019 A n E ju a i O p p o r tu n ity E -n j.l>yef Air C o n d i t e li e d s m a c k B a r O p e n * 5 IS "‘ire Con W in e No Purchase Nec essary O u r G ood L a t in s ( e a t# * * — I t # L B S S T E A K S : e E n t e r O u r * » ! u m b e r l e n d Ki n*: e P r r w m e Not Nere*#a ry to e \ A lum ni Gifts A i d University Budget By DEBBIE DRUKER Texan Feature Editor A myth of wealth surrounds the University. Students and alumni long have believed the Universi­ ty has the largest endowment in the country, second only to Har­ investments of vard. While the the University account for this myth, use of this wealth is re- itricted by state laws. the from Since income the permanent (available) fund, can be used only for building con­ struction, current operating ex­ penses, and a few other items that the Board of Regents deems necessary, a gap occurs which must be through other means. filled THE MOST recent way of fill­ ing this gap is through alumni donations. While other schools have recognized this method for decades, the University is a new­ com er in soliciting from its alun- ni. The College Loyalty Alumni (CLASP) be­ Support Program gan in 1961 as an organized ef­ fort by 27 T exas colleges and universities to encourage support from alumni. MEMBERS of Inter-Co­ the (ICC), repre­ operative Council senting the 19 cooperatives at the University, recently passed a resolution offering their sup­ port and help in the 1966 CLASP campaign. The volunteers w illJ spend the two weeks during period of Febru ary through May to Austin making phone calls alumni. They will be Informed of the need for donations and will be j asked to give to the University. | Walt Simonds, executive assis­ tant of the ICC, worked on the CLASP program last year. A lu m -1 ni were amazed, he said, that the University needed any money. Few thought that their $5 contri­ butions could help. THIS ATTITUDE shows a lack of knowledge in this area on the part of alumni, said Richard E l­ liott, executive assistant of the Development Board. Since the program has only been in exis­ tence for five years, they are not aw are of the need for their con­ tributions. In 1959, non alumni donors out­ numbered alumni donors at the University. Since the introduction of CLASP, this situation has re­ versed, said Elliott. ALTHOUGH m em ber schools pool their resources for CLASP, contributions through the CLASP alumni’s program go the to school. The money received through CLASP goes to the Uni- Too Late for Commies r n AUSTIN - To Get on Texas Ballot Under Texas election too late for the Communist P arty to, get on the Nov. 8, 1966, general I election ballot in this state. is already laws it - their “Nov. 8 was the deadline for political parties, which did not hold prim aries the past year, to to offer a intentions file slate for the 1966 general elec­ tio n ," Secretary of State Craw­ ford M artin said. “The Demo­ crats and Republicans did not have to m eet the deadline. versity division from which th* donor was graduated: for exam ­ ple, if the donor was graduated from engineering, the College of Engineering receives the dona­ tion. If a quick loan, scholarship, or special piece of equipment is needed, the dean m ay use the money collected for his school. He is subject to review only by the advisory board for his col­ lege. L ast year 25,000 alumni were contacted during the CLASP cam ­ paign, collected. This year, CLASP is being pro­ moted in 77 Texas cities — 76 m ore than participated in 1961. $210,000 was state “ We could keep our doors open but we support, with couldn’t give the sam e quality of education," said Elliott. “ CLASP helps provide for g reatn ess." the m argin Dessert and H O T BREAD A T TH E B O W E N H O U SE A T EVERY M E A L 2001 W H IT IS T heses -- D issertation s 2013 Guadalupe GR 2-3210 or GR 2-7677 Experienced typists—Meticulous attention to detail. Surprisingly reasonable rates. No delay—No excuses! T y p in g — T h eses mats — P rin ting — B in d in g Typing I WANT YOU A cheson Says: Goal in Viet Nam ’Will be Achieved1 B t B ID D Y CAM PER Form er Secretary of Sin to Pean Acheson, * mipporter of tho US Administration's Viet Nam policy, hoi loves America is heading to­ ward a favorable solution in that trouble spot. Acheron the press at a Tuesday morning conference be to expects the present situation continue but "w hat our government and the South Viet Nam government are striving for” will be achieved eventually. some time told for Is "fo r OUR GOAL, be said the people of Viet Nam to be allowed to pursue what the coun­ try needs without fear of out­ a g e pressure " Local Dam Building, To Be Considered H ie possibility of constructing a m u lti million dollar series of dams on Barton Creek in Travis and Hays counties will be ex ­ plored at a meeting sponsored the Travis Audubon Society by at 7:30 p m. Thursday the Austin National Bank. in Two area conservationists with the Soil Conservation Service will apeak at the meeting and out­ line steps for accomplishing the proposed program. RENT A CAR FROM ECONO CAR COSTS L U T U SO ECONO rf Aut+in o r a-7«:« no r. uh si SU M M ER ! O PEN APTS Ar belion calk'd for a continua­ tion of the present policy to carry out the Truman Doctrine which was Issued when he was head of the State Department This policy states that the United States will help nations struggling for lode pondenor to achieve their free­ dom. HE SAID student demonstra­ tions against US involvement are “ not having much e ffe c t" because the people understand the demonstrators are In the minor­ ity. that Tlie Russians, he commented, are in a dilemma in Viet Nam they “don’t want rela­ b e ca u se tions with us to go to pot" and they don’t want "to antagonize Rod China.” Rut Achesnn doesn’t consider a mutual difficulty with the Chi­ n ese Communists “ the beginning of a new chapter in US Soviet" cooperation. Any hope that Rus­ sia might join tile Western World against Red China is “ wishful thinking," he said. Surveying other c r i s e s on the world scene, Acheson expressed the Rhodesian con­ doubt that fighting be flict will erupt rn feels beth sides will cause he seek other ways to end the dis­ agreement. HE CONSIDERS Berlin a more the vital question “center of world im portance.” to Europe, “ I cannot believe Germany will remain divided," he said. “ And reunification must i>e brought about bofore the reconsolidation of Eastern and Western E urope." foresees a coup to eject Castro from power in the near future. In Cuba, Acheson “ Economic sanctions on Cuba a r e having considerable effect,” he pointed out, “ and the people are beginning to see that Castro is not tho answ er" to their prob­ lems. NEAR C A M P U S ALL G R A D E S R A T E S PLR C O ED UT W O M E N SU P E R V ISE D A P A R T M E N T S Inglis!) Heather Ut Cowboys Praised Danny Prescott, left, accepts a certificate of appreciation from Fred Synder, represent ing the Austin Council for Retarded Children. The men s service organisation was cited for interest and support of pro- its continued for W elfare Work grams for tho mentally retarded In Austin. The council promotes such programs as th* opportunity day school, parent counseling service, summer recreation center, and social programs for young people. —•Photo by J i m m y H o llan d Soviet Union Launches Probe than waiting another ter months for another try. VENUS I , launched Feb. 12, 1961, missed Venus by about 100,000 m iles. Its radio went dead soon after launch. Western experts have estim at­ ed that the Russians have tried least six other unannounced at 18 Venus probles which failed. A m erica’s M ariner 2 passed 21,648 m iles from Venus on Dec. 14, 1962, and radioed valuable scientific data back to earth. Among other things, M ariner 2 found tem peratures of 800 de­ grees on Venus, too hot for any form of life. Students Dig Deeper A s College Costs Rise The basic cost nationally is for students $1,480 annually in tax-supported schools. The basic costs for the 1964-65 school year ranged from $1,065 to $1,283 at the University, the report said. What Goes on Here MOSCOW — LB — D ie Soviet I aion has launched Its second unmanned satellite toward Ven­ us In five days, doubling its chances of reaching the cloud- draped planet this tim e after nearly five years of failures. A Soviet announcement Tues­ d ay said Venus 3 carried scien­ tific equipment to carry out dif­ investigations ferent from Venus 2, which was launch­ ed Friday. scientific TH E D IF F E R E N C E S were not In other respects tile spelled out satellites appeared to be about the sam e. Venus 3 at 2,116 pounds weighed only 7 pounds less than Venus 2. Both were launched by mul­ final tistaged rockets with stage the planet toward from an orbit around the earth. fired the to EACH FOLLOW ED a course “ close the proseribed one," the Soviet news agency Tass said. E ach was expected to reach Venus In 3*4 months if all goes well. One explanation for two launch­ e s could be that prospects for reaching Venus are at their best once every IN or 19 months, when the orbit of Venus around the sun brings the planet about 25 million m iles from the earth. At the other extrem e Venus is I BO million miles from the earth. The Russians could have de­ cided two attem pts now were bet­ Wednesday 8 5 - I n h i b i t Nation al and Urban find Build ing I nvmiimii nl Pro ble ms. An lilted un* I IS P otential 8 5 rex as Quarte rly e xh ibit, fourth floor of Academic Center. s s 8-5 f r e e flu shots. Health Center. E xhibit "Ann rioan Figure D raw in gs.” T exa s Union 102, 8 to midnight E x h ib it of studies from the Bra niff Collection of La- tin Atm i n an Art, first and fourth floors of Academic Center 8 I do Senior s and grad uat es may for Cactus Journa lism Build ing 107. from New Mex­ 8C> E xhibit of art make pictures. appointmen ts ico St. E d w a r d s Library , - K ER N LY programs, 8 .W II p m Channel 9 9 5 - Alpha Phi Omega candles on W est Mali to sell red 9 5 \ppli atmn for part icipa­ forms tion in M o d e l United Nations may be picked up In T e x a s Union 343 9 > E xhibit of cu riosities S t a r k I J - brary, fourth flo or of Main Build ­ ing IV va* Memorial Museum open, 9 5 9 5 Sales and R en tals E x h ib it , l a ­ guna Gloria. 9 < Coffee V ." sn ack 9 -ii Itu tiding 129. sale, Horn# Econom ics 9 I N oting in CHA electio n, In front of Business-Ec onomics Build ing 9-9 Stam p Collecting W eek exh ibit, Austin P ublic L ib ra ry 9 5 ! d r i e s for Aggie S ig n Contest, Speech Build ing iou 9 12 and 1-4 Drawing f o r tic kets to AAM game. Gregory Gym. 10 coffee H our 10-6 Ihllel Foundation. E xh ibits of M ex ican glass mosaics, Arts of F on ta in ebleau se ­ lections Intern"', mal Collec­ tion of Latin American art, and Cambodian rubb ings. Art Museum. stone from A L L tile CH ICK EN YOU C A . IST T O / KAT! University students m ay be digging deeper into their pocket- books this year than ever before, the Texas Commission on Higher Education reported recently. Freshm en attending the Univer­ spend approxim ately sity will $1,523.99 during his first year. F o r out-of-state students the esti­ m ate the report said. is $400 m ore, This b asic cost figure can be into seven areas. broken down They are $100 for registration or tuition; $44 for required addi­ tional fees for hospital, student services, and student union; $12 for miscellaneous fees for labor­ atory training; $17.99 for optional student a cti­ vities for room and board; $150 for books and sup­ plies; and $300 for personal ex ­ penses, not counting entertain- j ment. and physical f e e ; $900 19-12 and 2 5 O. H enry House open. 409 E a st Fifth S treet. 12 Dr E. N orm an Bailey to speak "T h e a t Sandwich Luncheon on Sacred Cow of City G ro w th ," Ju n ­ ior Ballroom of T e x a s Union. 12 and 7:3t> Dr C arlyle M arney to speak F irs t Southern P resb yterian Church. 200 E ast Eighth Streeet. 1 15 F ra n cis X Bostick to speak ‘ ‘H yd rom agnetic W aves In the on Upper A tm o sp h ere," Engineering- Seienee Building 602 2 12 K U T -FM p rogram s. 90 7 mc. 3 Dr H elm ut ll H orst to speak on and Therm odynam ic* "D y n am ics of S eparated F lo w s," Engineering L a b o ra to ry 102. H um an R elation* Com m ittee, S " Y . ” 4 Dr Dsuite Della T e r /a to speak on The Cantos of D isorderly Love R em arks on the S tru ctu re and P u rg a to ry ," Academ ic o f Style C enter A uditorium, 4 Strik e and Spare, T exaa Union alleys 4 T u rtle Club, W o m e n * Gym pool. 4 -C anter Club to m eet at I Diversity Co-Op to go to Hobby H orse S ta ­ bles. 4 Dr. Stanley T. D onner to speak “ F'llm As C om m un ication." on T exaa Union 202 4 . 6 30, and 9 F'llm C lassic: "D e r Brave Soldat S ch w eik ." B a tts Aud­ itorium . 4 15 R acket Club, W omen s Courts. 5-7 K a ra te Club 7 "Y In tern ational L aw Society to h ear Dr, C. P . B lair, W y a tt'* Cafeteria - Stu den t E ngineering Council, 7 T exas Union 321. 7 9 -C o-R ecreation, Women s Gym. 7 - F re e U niversity: N. A. Brook­ s h ir e s class in Shakespeare, Meth­ odist Student Center 7 :1 5 7 3 0 Speleological S ociety, Ph ysics I.aredii Club, Batts Hall 218 Building 313. 7 3 i E rie R o ch er to speak to Model the UN United N ations on K eel' the P e a c e ? " In T exas Union 304-305 'Can 7 *> Science Fiction Club to o rgan ­ ise, T e x a s Union 317. 7 kl Young A m ericans for Freedom , T e x a s Union 336 30-10 Building 3 0 - Bridge tion. O bservatory open, Physics class. Hlllel Foun da­ 7 :3 0 — G eorge D arby to Young Republicans. A cadem ic Cen­ te r Auditorium to speak 7 45— E ngineerin g W ives gam e night, T e x a s Union Ju n io r Ballroom . 8 L iw W ives style show, Tow nes H all Auditorium 8 -Course in M arriage and the F a m ­ ily, Hlllel Foundation. 8 Am erican M arketing Association, Business-Econom ic* Building 111 8 30- Dale Edw ards to lead Conver­ sations, Ichthus Coffee House 9—College Life, Kappa Alpha house. o«(C\v 'y u t t e r s h a v e ►. * n i t e r s n o r e r . g i p : A f t e r h o u r s A U - P U R P O S E M EN ’S LOTION $ 2 * 0 0 $ 3 , 5 0 $ 5 * 8 0 plus ta * CHICKEN SHACK Distinctive Store For Men 2246 Guadalupe 30-60-90 Day Accounts Wednesday! Nov. 17, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 Dear University Coeds Free Desk Do your home work while under our dryers. W e have facilities to serve 50 at once. Capitol Beauty College HAIR STYLING Guadalupe at i6tb G R 2-9292 TO BUY THE NOVEMBER mPo n cf pp FREE with every copy, the Ranger's special, souped-up, deaned-up, reformed version of The Dally Texan, guaranteed to please the Regents (or at least take the heat off the Texan and put it on the Ranger for awhile). We at booths on compos ani local book stores