Second Year in a Row: 31-0 Over Green Wave Bv BILL HALSTEAD Texan Sports Editor The word is “ com e alive in ’65." T exas’ sleepy giant took 30 m inutes of lethargic football to aw aken, but when it did, Tulane incurred a giant's w rath, 31-0. The nam es and faces w ere new, but the opening gam e was alm ost an exact replay of last rom p at M em orial S ta­ y e a r’s dium when the Longhorns dried up the Green W ave 31-0. TEXAS* BIG PI SH in the sec­ ond half w as accom plished with a host of butterfingered Tulane ru n n ers and a novice UT sopho­ m ore who didn’t really seem to know w hat was going on. The ’Horns had m ethodically piled up a 10-0 halftim e edge on David Conway's 29-yard field goal and M arvin K ristynik's five- yard keeper. Until then, it was m ostly ho- hum , with only a few' ja rrin g UT tackles and Tulane fum bles to spice up the hum id evening. ENTER LINTS BAER, boy ball c a rrie r. A sophom ore who w as hurt his entire freshm an looked slightly be­ year. B aer mused as he lined up to re c e d e a Dave E ast punt with 5:31 gone in the third q u a rte r. B aer took die kick and cut out for the sidelines like he was look­ ing find for M ama. He didn't Mom, but he found a wall of blockers and a talent for swivel- hipping as he sped 52 yards to Tulane s 16. Five plays later, Linus Baer, boy wonder now, lined up behind Tom Stockton’s block and slipped home the hist five yards to give Texas a 24-0 .spread. two quarterbacks. th at UT has the Longhorns, Deftly guiding Lott used Duke C a rlisle s fam ­ ous blind pitchout on the option, ran like a w ell-arm ored ghost him self, and Texas rom ped and played at will. look last score, like THE ’HORNS FIN M LV ADD­ EO one it just so would last y ear. The insult carne on a IT y ard final pass to U n D errick. Who threw it? Linus B aer, And the sleeping giant cam e alive on offense. QB G reg Lott, another sophom ore, subbed fur K ristynik and prom ptly indicated B u t l>efor# B a e r’s heroics sparked the second half splurge, the Steers displayed a m arked absence of forceful scoring pow­ er. K ristynik was m ixing plays well enough, but hi*- ball carrier* lacked the authority of K nee Hay. And when holes did open up, secondary blocks put on Th ane defenders w ere about as crisp as last w eek’s baron. Bl T TH RO I GII IT XU th re was the Tommy N bas u I O range and White defense. His bull neck standing out bk** a tu ­ m or on a gnat, K ibis w as blan­ ket size th e first half. m akes the stop, Nobis causes the fum ble . . .” And that s the way it was T u­ lane went nowhere and when the) did, Notes went with th-mi to see that none of the travel was forw ard. the likes of Com bined with sh arp tackling bv I bren Talbert, John Elliott, ar I Pete La rum or- tile defense com pletely stifled the Greenie*, allowing only IH \ i f Is by land and 159 yard s total o f­ fense For a While, all that c ut! be heard over the PA system was tackle, Nobis “ Nobis on the 11 \ V*. MI WW IIH K. w is rum bling up and down, threaten racking up 313 ing often and ya> Is offense But the Steers ha-! little help. A m ost charitable a T r i n e crew coughed up the ball six time* on fumble* and twice on interception*. St> r<>ckY did ’Horn* get about Tulane’* unsti ky fingers. ti c instead of k. kcd re. esving in the -tee- -rid I i lf, the ;ff ti <.«>ua:‘ ( g Dave E ast drop I , minions pounced on ped th** ball on the fa s t play arri Pete it. F: rn Tulane s IT, th-* Bove peo­ ple took just five plays and 2 26 to run the count to ITO, Dc- ii Corm a y . in c id en t illy, w a s pinning on I Tbs e x t r a poin ts. in ai l wi t h T a - I t in a r *w tr> rn last - f o u r gave him 31 year, . f r e a r -’ TEX VS MIM N U J ) x drive* like it was st., :kosman said. a re preparing ” NEW D EI i l l figure* 3 30 a .rn Indian tim e Monday — 5 p rn. Sunday EST — is the deadline for F rid a y ’s Chinese ultim atum to India: dism antle <6 m ilitary ju sts n e a r the Sikkltn Tibet border in th ree days or face "g ra v e conse­ quence*.” Thus India faced the grim prus* pe< t of a two front w ar against R ed China and P akistan without s h i f t tra n sp o rt or troops rapidly from one sector to another. roads to to have is reported P rim e M inister Lai B ahadur in S hastrt form ed US A m bassador C hester Bowles he exjw-’la the C hinese to c re a te lim ited trouble on the frontier in an attem pt to divert Ind: i from the w,»r rn XX cst P ak is­ tan. on the two cdf!' ia is T here w ere th**M» developm ents international front: • H ie British governm ent o r­ to W ashing­ dered ton to consult with US officials on lifting or easing the two n a ­ tions' cutoff of m ilitary aid to the Peking India th reat. in view of • Pre (dent J Lr. n in XX’a.*-! ington, kept a close watch en the Red Chinese developm ent but the White House insisted th*' arena Indian-Pakistani the conf)let is the United Nations. fur • Par. fan's S M„ Zn tai at the United Nations expressed doubt a Security Council resolution threatening UN coercive action would end the fighting between India and Pakistan. He a l s o denied Indian charges P akistan w as conspiring with Com m unist China T here was no way of confirm ­ B r D E B B I E DRI ( K E R Texan I m titre Editor lf you are ev e r a guest o/ B d Binder’s, don’t do him any two f o o t favors by killing the boa constrictor lying in the m id­ dle of th# living room Binder, a senior accounting m ajo r, acquired h is baby bos a h ut three w«*ck.s ago in Son An­ tonio. The diam ond m arked gray, br wn, pcf I (ms a; ural the living r o o m when he i n t sleeping either in a corner or in his bt x, said his owner. burnt orange and B IN D E R BD! G U T the snake at a d im e store for $7 after aet* ing several j**t boa* and pythons in San Antonio. It is a g**>d in vestm ent, says Binder. He only to fc*-d f than and a dug or a cat 'N 33 cents a w***k is much trouble less The snake, so far nam ed Atti­ la, is a native of the Amazon and vi naturally dislikes the com forts of air conditioning. IP* l o v e s Cigarette amok** to b« blown on Urn. says Hinder, be* a us# it rn so w arm . razor ba- k h gs If Binder keeps the p*-? f> r ss long as 60 years. Att! i rr iy grow to be 20 f>**f long and sw al­ low rn# in this p ro je c ­ breath. Bu’ sin* e tion calls for only three to six Inches of grow th a year, B n der la nut worried n XTTfl V I* t i l w 1 *a ! ta - -s c ut mulls** a Week a 48 hours to dige-c th** rn- d sa t­ isfactorily, Kb** ainu I? mk w afer out of an ash tray left near her bot, Although A to ll h as the mr of the living room w! Ie Binder is af home, he hor t jai? :* t .red I x when away* in a grave tv* la he r, if he ever g o [< * m th# "but tre e s outside I w -uidn’t be abl# to find him ” I arn r landia Iv, Bmd#r I haven't had any trouble with the sa id, but th ri m ay be be* ans# she d o e s n ’t know about A" a Next do* r to Binder, a ne 'fi­ w eb ber has a parak**e* as • 2 fM) to 3 OOO ! l r *is .M ‘ A tt have a bail ov**r th* re ,” r : cd B in der , <■< a could Although a ful! gr wi * A ttila kill a human, a baby I; f* when exerts < nly enougr pres> * > feel wrapped around one s ar firm handshake, says like a I!*- w n f attar k a bu Binder. m an because he know s he a ald never get aw iy wet; ' ct f**d his owner • “ I < XN T I LL h t S k ne* i ><* he m e .” says Bi der is calm er when I arn around. Strang rs tend to m ake I rn t v to g*-’ aw iv but rf a t w a y around me , r, ■ and con pardons ip XX'h‘*n asked ab* ut the k i n d of com panionship Amla pr tid ­ ed, Binder concede*I th at friend­ liness a r e just nut snakely a t t n ' ut s. As if his room m ate could stand :t no longer he piped up ‘‘You e a u love a dog or a cat. but you just c a n 't I vc a sr -;** ” OU Reservations Being Accepted Reservations f r tm > s at the Texas OU Dance in Dallas a re now- boing accepted, J )hn Adorns, co-chairman of tile dance, said Friday Students desiring reservan os should send a postcard to John Adams, 1002 XX’ Twenty sixth, be­ fore Tuesday. The number of reservations should be included rn th# postcard. Bob Binder and Friend • i . hsppinw u *i a baby boa. TtfAd.fi ittioio Smith T h e T» \ a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s B e a r d of D i r e c t o r s is in t h e m i d s t of s e t ! itv.: a p r e c e d e n t . W h e n t h e y me et t h i s w e e k to n a m e a m a n n i n g e d i t o r of Ti le D a i l y T e x a n f o r t h e fall s e m e s t e r , t h e y al so will b e p a - s i n e j u d g m e n t on a s y s t e m w h i c h n e e ds t o bo b r o u g h t Up t o d a t e . W e h o p e the> con* s i de r not onl y t h e i m m e di at e a p p o i n t m e n t , b ut t h e w h o l e con* I in w h i c h s u c h a n a p p o i n t m e n t a t so l at e a s ch o l a s t i c date has become necessary. \ t T h e 'PSP H a n d b o o k specifies t h a t a n e d i t o r of T h e D a il y T e x a n t kc o v e r in J u n e p r e c e d i n g h i s l o n g t e r m of office. S u c h a rul e is n ot w r i t t e n r e g a r d i n g t he m a n a g i n g e d i t o r but s uch ha< been t h e t r a d i t i o n a l p r o c e d u r e . I n t h e .rd n a m e d a rn m a y i n g e d i t o r f o r t h e g u m m e r s p ri n g, P a P>< 01 >, w i t h t h e I til posi tion t o b e lilied l at er . W e b el i eve t he f -!! po si ti on >h old h a v e b e r n filled a t t h e s a m e t i me , in t a s pr in g . A n d w e f u r t h e r b lit vc t h a t t h e s t i p u l a t i o n f or s', o n e r sci n i c e s h o ul d be r e m o v e d f r o m t h e r e qu i s i t e s for e d i t o r s h i p o f Ti le D a i l y T e x a n . A y e ' if i m I ion f or t h a t his t e e t h , " to b e c o m e a e d i t o r n -sis t h r e e m o n t h s t o “ r u t o i e n t e d t o t h e U n i v e r s i t y c o m m u n i t y . W e bel ieve t h a t an e o r s h o ul d h a v e m a d e it his b u s i n e s s to h e e o m e o r i e n t e d , af least t o tilt1 t ' n i v e r s i t v s i t u a t i o n , bel o r e e ve n a p p l y i n g f or t o b e c o m e t h e job. o r i e n t e d a r e t h e s i t u a t i o n s o u t s i d e t he I duvet sit e, t h e t r e n d s , m o v e m e n t s , m e t h o d - , a n d c u s t o m s o{ o t h e r p e r s o n s a nd places. tin' s u m m e r cl au s e lias been to wh i c h a n e d i t o r n e e d s 'Die ti li ngs W e r e ’re t t h a t t h e e d i t o r s h i p of T h e Daily T e x a n h as a ain hoe a r e a n el ec t ed office. T h a t it has ca n onlv m a k e tile office less i m p o r t a n t iii tile v o w s p . t p r a s a prof es si on. So t h e T e x a n now h a s to an n o t o n l y s o m e t h i n g w o r t h g i vi ng u p a s u m ­ o f f e r su n m e r for, h u t al so s •inethine w o r t h c a m p a i g n i n g for. H o p e ­ ful y t h e Bo, r d will n o t o v e r e s t i m a t e t h e b a r g a i n i n g p o w e r of t he T e x a n in this m a t t e r . to a l n o i t e serioitslv i n t e r e s t e d R ardinj: t h e m a n a g i n g e d i t o r s h i p , tile c u r r e n t s i t u a ­ t ion si m s to be s om ‘t h i n e of a “ ti J e a s e . ” T o o u r know 1- eersoiiN. t h e a c a d e m i c y e a r w i t h a n • t o be S' ' - " t e d af I, bu. i nni ng it u nt il — (i BOHI A MHOWX NS,A: Whose Voice? T i le c o n t r o v e r s i a l N a t i o n a l S t u d e n t s A s s o c i a t i o n h a s not f a d e d a w a y i n t o o b l i v i o n s i m p l y b e c a u s e U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s stink ut* h e a t e d l y r e j e c t e d it by a ‘2-1 v o t e last s pri ng. T h e b u O - m e m b e r g r o u p just m o v e d f u r t h e r left. M a j o r p l a n k s in N S A ’s p l a t f o r m a d o p t e d t h i s m o n t h rn M a d i s o n , W i s e . , i n c l ud e t h e following: • Ore-.* oft elisiv e milit ary act ion inelvuling b o m b i n g in V i e t N a m . • P r o p o s e a d m i s s i o n o f C o m m u n i s t C h i n a to t h e Un i te d \ a - t ions. • S ee t h a t n o t h i n g like t he D o m i n i c a n i n t e r v e n t i o n h a p i x n s a g a i n . • E s t a b l i s h a f e d e r a l police f u m e t o p r o t e c t civil r i g h t s w o r k e r s a n d N e g r o e s . • Ideo :e a c t i v e s u p p o r t t o s uch t a ct i cs as last w i n t e r s civil disolved inn ce ( s i t- in s ) at t h e B e r k e l e y c a m p u s of t he U n i ­ v e r s i t y o f C a l i f o r n i a . Di e N e w Y o r k l i m e s f u r t h e r r e p o r t e d t h a t t h e m o r e r a d i c a l views w h i c h p r e v a i l e d a d d e d t o t h e g r o u p s r e p u t a ­ t h e a v e r a g e s t u d e n t b o d y t ion of b e i n g m o r e li beral t h a n e v e n on m e m b e r c a m p u s e s . i AO poi nt s m u s t be n o t e d t h e n a b o u t t h i s NUA m e e t ­ ing a* I its o f f« n on t h e U n i v e r s i t y . T h e first o b s e r v a t i o n ; roup d oes not s p e a k f or t h e h ul k of s t u d e n t s thi is th.it in t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s . L i b e r a l s a n d c o n s e r v a t i v e s a t t h e c o n v e n t i o n a g r e e d o n t h i s poi nt — t h e m a j o r i t y o f t h e i r fellow c ol l eg ia ns a r e c o n ­ t e n t t o let t h e m i n o r i t y fight t h e political w a r s . E v e n N S A is i g n o r e d b y t h e s e s t u d e n t s e x c e p t in a n e x a g g e r a t e d b a t t l e s u c h a-- t h e el ec ti on last s pr in g. At t i me , s p o k e s m a n for a n d a g a i n s t N S A m u d d i e d t h e e lec ti on w i t h c h a r g e s of r a c e - b a i t i n g , C o m m u n i s t - i n f i l t r a t i o n , a n d C r e e k bl oc -vot ing. M a n y n a t i o n a l c o un c il s f o r local f r a t e r n i t i e s a n d s o r o ­ i m p l i ­ t r a d i t i o n a l r it ies a d v i s e d m e m b e r s t o v o te " n o c a t i o n w a s t h a t N S A u n d u l y i n t e r f e r e d w i t h D r e c k d i s c r i m i n a t i o n in m e m b e r s h i p sel ec ti on. o n N S A. T h e t h a t O n t h e o t h e r h a n d , s o m e s t u d e n t s r u s h e d t o N S A's de- f e n M a f e r h in t h e U n i v e r s i t y w o u l d he c a ll e d “ p r o v i n c i a l ” if it r e f u s e d t o join I v y L e a g u e s c h oo l s a l r e a d y in th* o r g a n i z a t i o n . c o n v i n c e d t h a t I hat is \ et o n e o t h e r poi nt r e m a i n s t h a t j u s t i f i e s t he U n i v e r ­ in.: ou* of NS \ in 1963 a n d t h e w r a t h f u l vo te in s e ■ PU t o p s n ; ' p o r t e r s a n d e ve n t he imjvorted t h e s pr in g, .lobbyists f r o m N S A n a t i o n a l h e a d q u a r t e r s p r o m i s e d in t h e 1 u u p u r n t h a t m e m b e r s h i p w o u l d b en e f i t t h e c a m p u s . M a y ­ be e\ rn t h e S t u d e n t A s s e m b l y cou ld be hel ped. T h e y c l a i m e d Ive s t a n d s on n a t i o n a s e c o n d a r y . i s s u e s w o ul d i n t e r n a t i o n a l a n d D u e g l a n c e at t h i s >e a r - p l a t f o r m m a k e s t h e i r e a r l i e r ap p oa ! a m o c k e r y . T h e ideology of t h e d i f f e r e n t s t a n d s n oed not bo a r m i e d d e s p i t e s o m e n a i v e t e a n d b l a t a n t i g n o r ­ a n c e b e h i n d t h e m . N > A V* h a t m u s t he q u e s t i o n e d is w h e t h e r s u c h a b o d y a s I f is to be a p litical m o u t h p i e c e a n d n o t h i n g m o r e . the m e r i t s o f m e m b e r s h i p t h e s a m e w a y ho d o e s a f fi l i a t i o n w ith S t u d e n t s f o r a D e m o c r a t i c S o c i e t y ( S D S ) o r any o t h e r “ n e w l ef t " m o v e m e n t . t h e n a s t u d e n t m u s t view — DOTTIE LILLARD I uture Forecast: Increase in Size and Quality ideas, Imagination G row W ith Student-Teacher Interaction a ( E d ito r’s V ol* : This is the last fiv«* p a r t series exploring o f Ow p a s ) , p rese n t, arni future o f the I diversity. Us purpose is to inform students and visitors what is. what hap p e n s the I diversity tho the al I Diversify faculty and stu d e n ts a r r .) I diversity, and who By < \ Kl ll \ V Nf< HOLK Editorial P a g e tidifor Two fi itu: forecast in hic full!! o (if t*.I* I 'nix e? .ay ai e size I iopDuliy. ca< Is v\.!I and qti.Uit comp!-■men! tho oilier to deliver large qua: UU and v ar!<■ I\ t if a an d fa< ulty with students the be : availa b le tone! mg m ethods the best educational facili- arui and opportunities tn T he size of the Un! pi tv can the n u m b e r of be m e a s u r e d U- the students atte n d in g arid land and new build* am o u n t of uvm owned. With the fall r e g is ­ tration figure brr aking a1! pa d u-< tot ail f i e enrollm ent of o v er 26 000, the big ­ U niversity has beaum e is corn- ged, the s ta te and p -tiny w all other I. rye, south­ ern Universities. ids an d a pred ic ted fey in r is th a n IIIIX I N P M X ti ng m o t e the n u m b e r of s t u ­ d e n t- on c a m p u s : it is ideas, i m a ­ gination. creativity, wit, and bril- lia; -e. This f a c e t of the in c r e a s ­ ing e nrollm ent situation is w h a t th e c l a s s ­ will bring quality room . to : , • M ti ! s que! t tv w d! be instr a I a s and pi off' -ors w I o c a n bring shape to the stu d e n ts ’ i d e a s . New faculty m e m b e r s with ideas and p.im m e m b e r s raw the v til in the o t h i r field ir latest rear* information side of the U n iversity’® si cre ase . lienee, both stud ents and te ac h ers add quality to the U n i­ v e rsity 's ever-grow ing s i z e . in size and quality, An integal p a r t of this student* the U niversi­ is ie , i;er quality in­ ty gi ld u a te school. Steadily it cre a sin g r a n k s a s one of the b est in the nation. T h e g r a d u a te school a t ­ tr a c ts people from all p arts of th United St d e s and from E u ­ rope, the Middle E a st, and Asia. The U niversity law school and m e d ica l b r a n c h e s in H o y d e n and G alveston a n d to qualitx also size add tile UT sy stem . PHYSICAL GROWTH of the U niversity c o m m u n ity continues to add to si .e and quality. A 10- y e a r expansion p r o g ra m will add land an d 13 25 to 30 a c re s of new building or com plexes to the carnous. The cons'ru ctio n plans include a geology building, a biolog cal . - science building, and a p i e r building m a th e m a tic s - c h e m is try in Toe opportunities buildings such as invite students to test and explore their knowledge a n d theories. av a ilable these New classro om s, a library d e ­ pend center, living q u a r te rs , and a bend hall also ex press the growing pains. All of lins growth and ex p a n ­ sion, activity and ideas, interest and particip ation suggest quali­ ty- Xii is display of quality, size, s?rem hi, and v ealt'h fo re c a sts a U niversity on the move. The pur- to be p r e of this m ove se em s the up-grading of the University the p r e ­ and, m o re p o sitio n of stu d e n ts for a life­ tim e of learning. im portant, Free University Courses Designed I Classroom Conformitv Esca j Bs Mf IHI It V V RBROI (.ii . s; This “ Americ.iit ' e m a t i . ally universities h- ve been reduced to institutions of in­ Nuder, s tellectual se rv itu d e been have de incom petent humanized, d e e m e d . to O' ul.ite , l iv e s . ii a- t l v \ a r e the t erin I clients b u s i n e ,s, university s govei am ent, and m ilita rv bu- renui ra< ies.’ is th( (.WTI like raw fur t h r u t r ee cd p n .cesre d to he >f Ut Allen K rebs, d irec to r (.I the F re e Uni- versity of N ew York, who cen I In i v e r ­ t i nued, ‘ The Anteri* an sify has been em a sc u la te d . . w hat r e m a in s is a d ispassionate an d studied dullness, a fa ad e of scholarly activ ity c uv’ealinq an internal em p tin e ss and cynicism. “ In th e v e r y fr.ee of these c i r ­ c u m sta n c e s and in recognition of th e ev ents ef the last decad e, p r o ­ test h as once again em e rg e d on the college c a m p u s e s of A m erica W e w elcom e the p r o te st: w e feel the foundation of the F re e Uni- is p a r t of v e r ity added K rebs, f o rm e r sociology p ro fe s­ s o r fired from Adelphi U niversi­ ty for In- trio to (Alba last year. OT H E R I*” ?EU U niversities a r e tieing formed in Chicago, B e rk e­ they ley, and Austin. What o ile r th a t . . e m p t i n e s s , or c \ r a c i s m ? " Course till >s seem to indicate the basic (bflei price is not “ dullness.. it.” fin for Those scheduled this fall include “ The C a p ­ in New York the Coldwar tive University and .St “ Viet N a m , China, and the W orld," “ T he A m eric an T r a ­ “ The Cuban dition “ S e m in a r on Revolution,” the P re s s an d S a tir e .” to 1900,” and The New Y ork faculty includes Y ale professor, Staughton Lynd; J a m e s Mellen, in stru c to r of poll Heal science at D re w Universi- t\ . P a u l K rassn es, editor of the P ea Ii t, poet A B. S p e llm a n , and others, it M any a r e teaching voluntarily. they a r e P e rh a p s is because investig a­ 'constantly su bject to tion and p u r g e " and h a v e been “ rele gate d to the position of s e r ­ vant-intellectuals pro p ag a tin g points of view in h a rm o n y with the m ilita ry and industrial le ad ­ ership of o u r so ciety," as Krebs ch a rg es. it issues of P E R U VPS is bec ause they feel the futility of teaching co u rs­ es which do not r e la te to the v ery cru cial life and death that a r e v e r y real in the world. They can te ac h glittering g e n e ­ in ralities about Latin A m erica, but they cannot teach a co u rse in “ Cuba and the involves United S ta te s ," which economic investm ents, problem s, a n d foreign policy. foreign policy history, T h ere a r e no “ le ctures only” in the F r e e Universities. Small group s m e e t oncp a week. P a r ­ ticipants c a n read, write, and dis­ cuss w h at th e y wish. The e m p h a ­ sis se em s to he upon the c o m ­ plete freedom to p u rsu e the a p ­ proach which h as re le v a n c e to the individual. NO G RA D ES a r e given, with w ?.'> I.rep TS iiistnitlois 5m’| iTi-nihcr 20- ‘(-IJ (Mopping'' of Courses ! A (Knglhh Building ll" ). September (English Building I f> 9-12; ■ c d HO) Note W h»-n a course lias been I- fie] 10-12 22-2.1 dropp. l S . ' t mn Changes and Adds it mu', not be added later Sep­ tember enter For through Hast entrance of the ground 2-1, For Sopho­ floor Hours enter more and Advanced Courses through West entrance Hours 10-12 2 1 Section changes In Freshmen aud Sophomore courses will he tm de only in .'asc of valid conflict or (infer o n emergence. r T, ct!hp Cha ir man the em p h a sis on “ love of l e a r n ­ ing.” No d o gm a tism tow ard ap- plicability is intim ated but it u s ­ ually results, since most of the a p a r tic ip a n ts a r e engaged stru g g le with a lte r n a t e solutions to p ro b lem s they consider im p o r ­ tant. in T o d a y 's F r e e U niversity s t u ­ dent has been w eaned in a w a r ­ rin g w orld in which millions died, r e a r e d in the turm oil of the civil rig h ts struggle, and lives w ith the possibility of n u c le a r a n n i­ hilation. the Tn sex, religion, and politics he r e je c ts traditional m ores, cre eds, a n d policies unless they in rationality. He h a v e a basis doesn t a c ce p t the infallibility of foreign policy. HIS E N V IR O N M E N T h as been is only the M cC arthy E r a . He now fear of fully shedding his sp e ak in g out as he believes. He is only now the rea lity of d e m o c r a c y . tasting its own of Of the traditional ap p ro a c h of the U niversity they c o m p lain : “ It does not m e e t o u r interests. I t m e e ts its own e r a . E v e n the publishers now printing books oriented tow ard o u r in te r ­ ests a r e doing so only becau ;e o ur m im e o g r a p h m a c h in e s first pro d u ce d an au d ie n c e .” they As in one chorus they se e m to say, “ T he estab lish m e n t is h e a r ­ ing us and reacting. T hey se e B erk e le y , ‘tru th sq u a d s' on Viet N a m to o ur c a m ­ rig h ts puses. legislation, the burn ing of draft c a r d s heavily punishable. they even m a k e th e y pass send civil “ T hey ca n t u n d e rsta n d w h y we c a n ’t be bought off. O ur valu e s y s t e m is d iffe re n t." T hey say ir re le v e n t old U n iversity: “ You, with all your power, will not m a k e us in yo u r own to a personified im a g e ." , o Student Rebels Bewildered About Social Change By RICHARD LYNCH “You can t undo find ti. You u Quid h a t e to he horn there " W o u l d I the n?" Q u e nt i n d ’J not ant ti er. " D o you und e r s t a nd it ?" I don't knou . " Quentin (aid. “ Yes of course I understand it." They breathed the darkness, in .'ifter a m oment Quentin said: "I don't k n o u .' f r o m " A b s a l o m , A b sa l & m ” by W i l l i a m Faulkner. the The plow of social c h a n g e is co a rsin g ac ro ss the South, t u r n ­ ing up clods of dirt a n d h a t e , s tirr in g up rich, d a r k soil upon which the South for so long h a s than ever, espec ially S outherners, people, this to un d ersta n d a r e land. has introspection been going on for y ea rs. thrived. More trying T his th e ir IN 1941 W. J . Cash w rote a book which exploded w ith d e v a s ­ ta tin g finality the m y t h upon th e Southern people h ad w hich r e s te d The idvlic w orld of an teb ellum p la n ­ tation life c a m e cra sh in g down. Im plicit in this book is the idea of Southern difference, th a t the South w as unique from the r e s t of the country. heritag e. Cash d e s tro y s the m y th but fails to d es tro y th e “ d iffe re n c e ,” w hich is based, in part, upon this m y th . is felt this question Is the South diffe ren t? Tile a n ­ s w e r is difficult. But the affect of th ro u g h ­ out the m o d e rn South, especially am o n g its youth. The effect on this youth is evident, a n d we will not a s su m e th a t the South is dif­ is not different, hut ferent, or th a t m a n y m e re ly acknow ledge people h a v e said if. “ I don’t hate it. I don’t. I don't. I d o n ’t h a t e it! I don’t hate i t ! ” So speaks Quentin Compson in F a u l k n e r ’s “ Absalom, A b salo m .” Quentin m a y or m a y not be sin ­ the youth of under?! anding cere. But this is fiction; the fact today, not that is the com pletely the de­ South, seeing signs of around struction of the m yth inconsistency the Hmm, hea rin g of those they believe in, hate ii inw ard and it th e y h ate sense, unknowing, feeling, an inw ard revulsion with C a sh ’s id e a l" and, m oreo ve r “ s a v a g e an the revulsion with falseness of it all. in an just inw ard the oth ers WHEN I talked with a student who had p a rtic ip a te d in the riot which took place on the U n iv e r­ sity of Mississippi c a m p u s in S ep te m ber, 1962, I asked him why it w a s n e c e s s a r y to i r e he felt t h a t night? Why he violence in a tte m p tin g joined violently federal expel m a rsh a lls . Although, conceding th e inpropriety of the act, he a d a ­ m a n tly m a in ta in e d they w e re intruders, alien to this cou n­ tr y, and m o re o v e r they w e r e som ething which has violating " T h e co m e Southern Way of L ife.” to be known th a t the a s to fall, w as He could not explain exa ctly w h a t this w as, an d he w a s bit­ t e r about it. He w'as b itte r b e­ c a u se he could not u n d e rsta n d W'hy this w as so. All aroun d the youth of the South a r e seeing the signs of the old o rd e r fall: s e g r e ­ of gation, fountainhead th a t Southern life, that citadel which all le a d e rs h a d p rocla im e d w'ould falling, n e v e r an d falling fast, and even the d u m b e st youth could see it now*. THESE YOUTHS have b e e n cut a drift with v ery little l e f t to hold on to. Alm ost all y ea rn t h a t to he the p ast for m y th which long ago was so sh a tte re d . They a r e like youths of everyw here, se a rc h in g for th at nebulous savior of In a way, p e rh a p s their c a se is dif­ It is dif­ ferent, but I think not. identity. indeed tru e, the knife ferent only in that the forces of change, the r — which si is them adrift are much m ore in evidence, much m e re a p p a ren t. th a t cuts It is indeed trag ic when youth m u s t kill to help p r e s e rv e so m e­ thing which is non-existent, e s ­ pecially so m ethin g which h as al­ w ays been non-existent. They hold h a te because t h e y cannot co m prehend w h a t is h a p ­ pening. The South has n ev e r had a “ status-quo” longer than th re e decades. So they put their faith in a m yth which W. J . Cash d e stroye d 24 y e a r s ago. They a r e this out. just now finding for THE SOUTH is c h a n g in g ? P o s­ sibly. The South is different? Possibly. The South will cha nge com pletely, be com e com pletely d ifferent? N ever. N e v e r in a h und red y e a rs. Why? “ The experiences of evil and tr a g e d y a r e the ex p e rin ec es of p a r ts of the Southern h e rita g e . . . ” , w rites C. Vann W oodward in “ The B u rd en of Southern His­ to r y ” . " ( T h e S o u th ern er h a s ) a se nse of the p re s e n c e of the p a s t and with it and through it a personal a c ce ss to a tra g ic vision.” w rites in "W illiam Cleanth B r o o k s F a u lk n e r : The Y o k n a p a ta w p h a C ountry.” " t r a g i c vision” W hat is tra g ic In to d a y ’s con­ text will b ec om e a p a r t of to­ and m o r r o w ’s “ southern h e r ita g e .” The p a s t is a p a r t of the present. D ie youth of the South, different or It will not, is a w a r e of the past. continue to h a u n t them for m a n y years, until tim e erodes it a w a y . Tile youth of the South does not und ersta n d t h a n Quentin does. Yet they m ust live with it. a n y m o re it China Uses Viet Nam to Denounce ‘Imperialism’ IL H A N S K O M M . S U K E N I K PEKING Cd?)- China has variously been called an iceberg with only its peak showing or an ocean with only the surface visible. I have no pretentions to ha \ e fathom ed its depths. I can only present, with many r e so n a tio n s, how Chinese m en and women in the street, and in factories and offices, in a handful of the biggest cities, seem to feel about the world around them and, specifically, about Viet Nam. the war in In the realm of foreign affairs, Y i e t N am is well nigh the only topic. VV i t Ii every foreign visitor, private or official, it is an immediate touchstone of his attitudes; it is the steady five-or six-column headline on the front page of the P eople’s Daily, the official newspaper: it of government advertising. is the main subject IN TH ESE ADS, n o b l e - l i k i n g groups of people of all races, profiles tilted toward the horizon, and clutching rifles or h a n d grenades, are taking a stand against “im­ informs us so; very perialism," The text rarely do they actually show* American soldiers attacking or being attacked. But are "the people” really concerned? D the Peking government really worried, or is Vi.et Nam a godsend which they would have invented if it hadn’t been there. A s with most questions about China, the an ­ swers are “y e s and no “ The people surely are concern* d "Imperialism” is no em pty politician’s phrase here. Avoiding all the talk about class struggle, capitalism, communism, and revisionism, this meaning m ay be sum med up effectively as follows; "Imperialism is white soldiers in Asia or Africa." TO THE A V ER AG E CH INESE, now and long before Mao Tze-tung was e v e r heard of. no case can over be made for the presence of white troo{>s in his part of the world. Because of this, the vast audiences of the new "revolutionary operas” and revo­ lutionary movies, political cabarets and theater plays, which forever use t h e m e s from World War II and the Chinese civil war following it, easily accept the A m eri­ cans, advisers and helpers of the Chiang Kai-shek government, as the "bad guys,” rather than the Japanese, the great de­ spoilers of China of those years. The war with Japan was ah incident in history; the enm ity of the whites is a lasting historical truth to them. I found this concept of “imperialism” to hold, too, with other Asians, diplomats in Peking and overriding any accredited fears of communism. Because this angle of “race w ar” hits men so hard and evokes such deep and ir­ rational emotions, the Chinese people are indeed deeply involved, without the need for their government to do more than keep the issue in the news. l i l t , WAY the Chinese government is handling these feelings of the people is a complex matter. N ursery tots sing about their determ­ ination to shoot down American planes; A French student, w ithout asking, photo­ in Hanchow — graphed som ething the Chinese hate — had little boys scream at him. “Dirty American, why d on’t you go hark to F orm osa?” some children But attention should be drawn to an important element in these processes ot “thought molding” which makes the Chi­ nese child rather different from what, for instance, the Hitler youth w as put through. The striking difference seem s to be t h a t whereas Hitler was mentally preparing a generation for aggressive war, the Chinese government, as of now, seem s to provide a substitute for war. This is not necessarily a matter of mo­ rality; it is practical politics. If China were as great a power as it is in the image pro­ jected for its people by the government, it might have gone to war quite a while ago, and it would have had enough support from the population in such a venture. IT IS no such power; and its leaders are surely aware of the fact that the American air force could destroy in an hour all that has been put together so slowly and weari­ ly during the last 15 years. Thus all those demonstrations and resolutions seem not to prepare, but to substitute for war, to gloss over the govern­ ment's actual inactivity. The China of 1065 tries to be a sober. intense, and Puritanical society. Rather than saying it is Communist and contrast it with Western capitalism, a more useful juxtaposition m ay be given by saying that in China various disciplinary and ‘“steer­ ing” forces and rules have been given the regulating tasks in daily life which, in the West, are performed by economic laws and by money as a regulating agent. S u c h a moneyless, profitless society would function best in isolation. And in that sense, the political isolation which the United States has imposed on this country since 1950 — anc! the Russians since 1959— paradoxically created a favorable climate for the drastic government reforms and actions. IT IS a spiritual isolation as total as anything seen in China since Marco Polo; and, almost pathetically, not even the so warmly praised North Vietnamese seem quite on the Chinese side of the fence. When traveling from Nanking to H ang­ chow, one has to change trains in Shanghai, which involves an hour’s wait at the sta ­ tions. Recently an American reporter spent an hour in tile transit room with a group of North Vietnam ese students. As the stu ­ dents and reporter w a i t e d , stared at b y some children from the doorway, th ey all equally seemed intruders in this vast, self- centered, defiantly proud, unloved country. T h e D a i l y T e x a n As*>- Try A S S O C I A T E D PRESS VV RE SERV CE da> a n d hon da*. ; Monthly In Aukus' D r a w e r O , U n i v e r s i t y s t a s p o s t a g e p a i d a t Av: c od • N e vv* c o n t r i b u t i o n s * . *. I laboratory J E 102 In b e i a d o in J B 107 (G R c r at th e r I.to : p te m b e r e x c e p t M o n a a j a n a s s t u r * a n d t h r o u g h M ay i s St id eit t Publications, Inc , Austin. T ex a s 7S712 Second- Texas sd b 'ne De l i ve r e d by e a r n e r w i t h i n V u - t i n m e * I r . 'i t i n t h t o 38th and J e f f e r s o n I n t e r r e g i o n a l H i g h w a y to D e l iv e r e d b v m a i l w i t h i n D e l i v e r e d Ii' I i is is I o u ut \ rn u t ou t s i d e I r»i t omits but \\ (thin I > i One semester fa l l or • b r i n s 1 T yv o Semester* i fall and s p r i n j IC TI y od 6. .5 . : he ■' ■ " by the editor, s' \n> o p i n ' ■ ' ’n . s e x pressed t n e *<‘ - trial c> t. A cr * n ir s e x p r e s s e d n T h e D ail y T e x SB a r e n o t o f T e x a s a d n u n *- nix.-rs e • r c u se Ira! ’n or Board rf Resents f P E R M A N E N T STAPF EDITOR A C T I N G EDI TOR M A N A G I N G EDI TOR E D I T O RI A L P AGE EDI TOR NEVvS EDITOR SPORTS EDITOR A M U S E M E N T S EDI TOR .................................................... K A Y E N O R T H C O T T .................................... G L O R I A B R O W N ................................. R I C H A R D C O L E C A R O L Y N N I C H O L S ........................................ N A N C Y K O W E R T ........................................... BILL H A L S T E A D ........................ A L I C I A H E L T O N STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE N I G H T STAFF Issue N e * * E ditor .................................. N a n cy K o w e rt M a k e -U p E d ito r .................................. John E co n om idy C o p y E d itor .................................................. Larry ikies U ' c " : .................... B H als tead, Sa"1 Keach D o r C ox Anriuiemer^s ........................................... Bz T o w e ry Sunday, September 19, 1965 THE: D A IL Y TEXAN Page 2 N ow that you’re registered W h at’s next? Bin inc boof\ s (( !o*( )n I cd T e x tb o o k s) U sed B1* * Y *»> r • .-g.-’ V ■ ■ ecsfe mr ■' c - ‘ f . w ' - ' = ■ f , M8i*i pappPI* Before you start to study, You need supplies! Can you do all this and save? Co-Op Dividends mean more W ilson Red Converse The Students Own Store Don t forget P.T. su p p lies............... brand names )<>u know! See you at I he Co-Op . . . and around the campus 2246 Guadalupe THE ST-U OI HT-A OWN S I 0 * f ( J ) Open 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday and Tuesday September 20 and 21 F rid a y , September *9* s9&5 THE DAILY TEXA N Pefl# I Dressing Rooms: Texas T ulane By WIT Ii m iV K \ \ssN f.in i Sport* E d ito r M af a1] th e d ressin g like re* m following th e 1965 O range B-'wl defeat of Alabama or the d* 'c a t of N avy In the CV t- I ■ t el B wi. the T ex as q u a rte rs w as O' f lid H ance, for a fte r a!! th»* L -tv hi -ma had w hite-w ashed ti < G reen Wa VTI to the tu n e of U n tn th eir first outing of the E ves, he w ewer, u ere* fixed n -re or; next week’* clash with tho Reel Raiders of Texas Tf'rh * * n ; >n hulltlvrah of Saturday r t*« romp. like • We w ere m d fo rtu n a te as fa r as b re a k s g o ,” said T e x a s f i I g en e ral M arvin K risfvnlk, " I tu t th ese fumble?1 and p ass in- * Tt'opflons Ju*t Aren't going to I ippon this from now on, 'lr h ju st i s n t going to give us e s m a n y Roofing O pportunities." “VIK HAD a lot of bad break* oursehre* In the first half, m ain­ I/m g- ly h rn co captain nnn c u m throw in 1 n ] 'k s p r a t t l e # “ Vvf're g ng to co n c e n tra te a s defer se during next lot sessions,'* w coach C h arlie •tri-ssed T exas Sh 'n . B e cause a lot of T u la n e ’s passing y a rd a g e sh ould n’t have been on the books Tech has a c ai I; otter and m e re effective running gam # th a n does T ulane going to be up to our to contain nd It d efen se th e m .” th e g am e w ith * rn = • to ti •; sp rain e d his a n k le ,” this !, “ But at ‘‘I- Jury w ise we re in about Use si ipe as w e w ere going th e excep- f end F ! S m a l l who the coach It I* tim e I in ! to d e te rm in e th e ex ten t of his jj ary — he m ig h t p l a y ag o u st Tech and he m ig h t n o t.” W; o the ste a m of the dreaaing re*irn behind thorn and a 31-0 vic- tucked aw a y u n d er f i v th e ir tin* T ex as ■ I/in k h o rn s de- I th e ir m inds looking ah ead rt ? - next w eek and th e ir firs t real tf*st of the young sensor;. IM Slate I’m evtm ‘T w as re a l confident In our d efen se going Into this g a m e ,” N his f u rth e r ad d ed , “ But a fte r h iii ling T ula ne to only IS y ard s tnt na a >nfi ru sh in g d e n t th a t we can d eal defensive- ]y w ith a n y o p p o n e n t F r o m r. w on w e’re going to he facing es- su m e pc* dally n ex t w eek agam ist Tech an d finn h alfb ack Donnv th e ir A n d erso n . *• tough offenses, re a l !i>dA .5 7 0 IO ’ * . 565 l l ’, .557 .531 r v , 483 22 £ . 467 25 4 36 29L4 391 3 6 W 367 3 9 ’, M in n e s o ta 4 W a s h i n g t o n 2 C h ic a g o 8. C le v e la n d 5 D e t r o i t 4. N e w Y o r k 3 n o s ; o n 5. K a n s a n C t t v 3 b a l t i m o r e a t C a l i f o r n i a , p o s tp o n e d , IO in n in g * r a m ICATIOSAL LEAGUE S a n F r a n c i s c o L o s A n g e le s C i n c i n n a t i M ilw a u k e e P i t t s b u r g h P h i l a d e l p h i a S t C h ic a g o H o u s t o n N e w Y o r k W . . . . 88 ............ 85 ................. 84 ............... 81 ............... 81 ............. 76 ................. 73 ...................... 68 ........... . . . . 6 1 L o u i s I , P c t G B 60 64 64 67 70 TI 75 82 88 .595 - 3 U ,5 7 0 4 568 7 .547 . 536 8 ' , .517 l l ’* .493 15 . 453 21 409 2 7 ’ s .3 1 3 42 ................. 47 103 S a n F r a n c i s c o 2. M ilw a u k e e n P i t t s b u r g h 4 P h i l a d e l p h i a 3 C h ic a g o 4 N e w Y o rk 3 1/os A n g e ’e* 1 O n ly g a m e s s c h e d u le d s t . L o u is 0 M IN N E A PO L IS - ST. PA U L (A P ) — Zoilo V ersalles T racked tw o-run h o m e r an d fo u r M in­ a neso ta p itc h e rs s c a tte re d nine hits a s the Tw ins b ea t W ashing­ ton 4 2 S a tu rd a y , re d u c in g th e ir m a g ic n u m b e r for clin ch in g th e A m eric an L ea g u e to four. p en n a n t F ollow ing th e T w in s’ eighth v ic to ry in n in e g a m e s, a n y n u m ­ triu m p h s and b e r of M in n eso ta four losses B a ltim o re to ta lin g will clin ch th e th e p en n a n t fo r Tw ins. V e rsa lle s’ bow, w hich sc o red F r a n k Q uiliri a f te r he w alked, bu ilt a 4-1 le a d for th e T w ins in th e rain d elay e d p lay an h o u r a n d 24 m in u te s In th e th ird fra m e . in ning before second th e ru n s M in n eso ta h ad p ick ed up two u n e a rn e d firs t a s in E a r l B a tte y ’s sin g le d ro v e in one ru n an d a n o th e r sc o re d w hen E d B rin k m a n th re w to th e p la te w ith nobody co v e rin g . At St. L ouis, S andy K oufax o u td u eled R a y W ash b u rn S a tu r­ d a y n ig h t, p itc h in g a fo u r-h itter a n d w inning h is 23rd g a m e as th e I jOs A ngeles D o d g ers edged St. L ouis 1-0 on W es P a r k e r 's ru n -sc o rin g sin g le In the six th in­ ning. T he v ic to ry g av e th e D odgers so le p ossession of seco n d p lace, 3 4 g a m e s beh in d N atio n al L ea­ Idle g u e lead in g S an F ra n cisc o . C in cin n ati th ird p lace, fo u r g a m e s b ack . K oufax, w ho h a s d ro p p ed into lost e i g h t ! six, s tru c k out g a m e s, raisin g h is m a jo r le ag u e -le ad in g to ta l to 341, ju s t se v en a w a y from Bob F e lle r ’s a ll-tim e se aso n m a rk of 348. H e allow ed only o n e C ard in al p a s t second b a se . T h a t w’a s Leu B ro ck , who opened th e firs t in­ ning w ith a sin g le, sto le seco n d , I a n d m oved to th ird on a ground ! o u t B ut a f te r P h il G agliano 1 w alked. K oufax stru c k o ut Bill W hite, en d in g th e inning. At New’ Y o rk , N orm C ash, I the g a m e w ith a m n- w ho tied sco rin g sin g le in­ in ning. singled a c ro ss M ickey S ta n ­ th e eighth Georgia Stuns Mighty Tide ATHENS, Ga. —CB— Georgia scored on a 73-yard pass-pitch- out play and then su ccessfu lly gam bled on a two-point conver­ sion with l e f t to play to stun defending nation­ al champion A labam a 18-17 Sat­ in a sp ectacu lar South­ urday eastern Conference football open­ er. two m inutes The dramatic finish came just quarterback a f t e r Alabam a Steve Sloan hit straight p a sses and plunged for a touch­ down in a drive that sent the Crimson Tide in front 17-10. four But on the first p lay after toe kickoff, sophom ore quarterback Kirby Moore tossed a short pass to end P at Hodgson, who later­ aled to halfback Bob Taylor. TAYTOR was n ever touched as he raced into the end tone and pulled Georgia to within one point of A labam a's total. the Bulldogs a Georgia Coach Vince Dooley d isd a in e d a kick that w o u l d tie h ave given and ca lle d for a p ass play for the e x tra points. M oore th re w a the p e rfe c t end zone its firs t v icto ry o v er A lab a m a sin c e 1959. in to Hodgson to giv e G eo rg ia toss ★ COLI MBI A, Mo. — WR — A m ­ b itio u s K entucky ro d e th e g ifted a r m of q u a rte rb a c k R ick N o r­ ton and th e clu tch p la y of a gal­ la n t defen siv e u n it to a 7-0 foot­ b all v ic to ry o v er M issouri S a tu r­ d ay . d efe n d ers m ade N o rto n fired a 36-yard scoring strike to halfback Larry Sieple la te in the first half to com plete a 68-yard drive. Then the gritty it K entucky stand up In the fac e of M issouri's strong second half com eback. MISSUORI drove 88 yards in 21 plays with sophom ore Gary Kombrink at quarterback, but Kentucky halted the drive with 6:15 left in the g am e. On fourth down at the W ildcat two, John­ ny Roland banged to within one foot of the goal, w a s hit and fum bled into the end zone where Kentucky recovered for a touch­ back. ★ ANNAPOLIS, Md. — W — Quarterback Ted Holm an scored two touchdowns and the Syracuse d efen se m ade them count by in­ tercepting five p asses in the s e c ­ ond half Saturday for a 14-6 foot­ ball victory over Navy. first H olm an’s touchdown, a six-yard sprint Into the end zone after faking a pass, capped a 69- yard Syracuse drive in the s e c ­ ond quarter. HIS SECOND was a burst through the line for IO yards in the third defense which held hack a sw arm of fired-up M id­ shipm en In hot, humid weather. in the workhorse Ron Oyer, to e S y ra c u se back field , sco red th ird w h at would have been a touchdow n a f te r F a ir s in te rc e p ­ tion fourth p eriod, the But his 10-yard ru n w as nulli­ clip p in g fied p e n a lty , S y ra cu se by a la te in it the provided HOLSTON — UP — M a rc u s sp eed , R hoden th e pow er, an d H oyle G ra n g e r J a m e s Neill the kicking S a tu rd a y n ig h t a s M ississippi S tatp stru c k q u ick ly to c ru sh th e U n iv ersity of Houston 36-0. R hoden sco red on a sp e c ta c u ­ la r 89-yard p u n t re tu rn , G ra n g e r the four for pow ered o v er from a n o th e r and Neill touchdow n, kicked field goals of 36 and 39 y a rd s a s S ta te sco red on four of th e firs t six tim es it had th e ball. * CHAM PAIGN, m . - m - Sopho­ m o re h alfb a ck C layton C alhoun c a u g h t a d eflected 10-yard p ass th e end from aul B ro th e rs zone in the final th re e m in u tes to give O regon S ta te a 12-10 opening triu m p h o v er football Illinois S atu rd ay . in P rio r to th is clim ax . F re d C as­ t a n o h ad booted a 35-yard field goal an d h u rled an 11-yard sc o r­ ing p a s s rookie end L a rry J o rd a n for a 10-6 m in i h a lftim e lead. to ILLINOIS n u rsed it m a in ly w ith th e help of d efen siv e ju n io r end Bob B a tc h eld e r. u ntil th e B eav ­ e r s m a d e th e d eciding t o u c h - dow n flo atin g th e fin g ertip s p a s s bounced off of d efe n d ers B a tc h eld e r, Ron A cks an d J im G rabow sld. a fte r B ro th e rs ’ ★ B E R K E L E Y , C alif. - W — N o tre D am e q u a rte rb a c k Bill Zloch, who sa w only IO m in u te* o f v a rs ity actio n la s t y e a r, ra n fo r two touchdow ns and p assed fo r an o th e r S a tu rd a y le ad in g th e Iris h in a 48-6 ro u t of fu m b lin g C a lifo rn ia in th e ir in te rse c tio n a l football opener. estab lish ed Zloch, a ta ll 190-pound non-let- te rm a n se n io r fro m F o rt L a u ­ d e rd a le , F la ., hi* rig h t a s su c ce sso r to H eism an T ro p h y w in n er John H u a rte b u t from h alf­ h a d p len ty of help b a c k s Bill WoLski and N ick E d d y p lu s a trem en d o u s d efe n siv e p e r­ fo rm a n c e . in te rcep tio n s and SAFETY MAN N ick R a ssa * tw ice tu rn ed in long ru n b a c k s of p a s s sto p p ed C alifo rn ia a t N o tre D a m e ’s 24 w ith a n o th e r in addition to con­ touchdow n a 65-yard trib u tin g p u n t re tu rn . toe Irish Zloch ra n for sc o re s from to re# a n d l l y a rd s o u t in a first h alf in w hich led 28-6. He p a sse d 24 y a rd s to E d d y in th e th ird period a n d W olski sc o red on a six -y ard run b efo re N o tre D a m e Coach A ra P a rse g h ia n be­ g an su b stitu tin g freely . (Advertisement) NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED PROGRAM U.T. Students Read 3-10 Times Faster and Retain More Thru New Method I f you are * stu d e n t in th e tr u ­ I G eo rg ia, has said, “ It is m y o p in ­ est sense of th e w o r 4 or w ould ion th a t if these tech n iq u es w ere m um o f a 300 per cen t increase in your read in g speed. R eading like to be, then surely you w’ould instituted in th e public an d private D ynam ics uses n o m echanical d e ­ lu m p at th e chance to increase schools o f o u r country, it w ould your rea d in g speed fro m 3 to IO It th e greatest single step w hich tim es w ith eq u al or b etter co m ­ I vie could take in ed u catio n al pro- vices -only pros en principles an d so u n d m ethods T in s is no m agic pill, it takes b o th coni.e n tra tion preh en sio n . T h in k o f th e tim e you w ould save, th e ad d itio n a l course m aterial you co u ld co set, th e b et­ gress. I th in k the p u b lic schools and effo rt. T h ro u g h R eading o f G eo rg ia could co nsider p u ttin g D ynam ics vou break o ld read in g in th e technique. It w ould be habits and learn new read in g ter grades you could m ake — w ith w orth a h u n d red m illio n d o llar a free tim e to b o o t! A rev o lu tio n ary . year a p p ro p ria tio n .” new rea d in g tech n iq u e, R eading skills. W ith this m eth o d you learn to read directly d ow n th e page in ­ stead o f across th e lines, ab so rb in g D ynam ics, has been developed Ju st w hat results can vou, the w hich w ould albsw you as a stu ­ stu d en t, e x p e c t ? F rom th e w hole ideas at a tim e. den t to accom plish ju st this. records o f th e app ro x . 2 0 0 U n i­ Sine# 1959, th e E velyn W o o d Reading D ynam ics course has train ed over a o u a r e r o f a m il­ t o n p eople in th e U n ited States, Canada and Europe. G rad u ates range f rom U n ited States Senators. C ongressm en an d p resid en ts of large co rp o ratio n s to students, housew ives a n d even youngsters. In fact, Reading D ynam ics has been ta u g h t to to p executives in many o f our nation I lead in g cor- . porations and g o v ern m en t agencies ^ elu d in g D u P o n t I B M and i N A SA O n e g radu a te o f R eading D ynam ics, Senator T a im a d g e of t versity o f T exas students an d p ro ­ fessors w ho took th e course last sem ester, th e fo llo w in g statistics were ta b u lated : A cerage b eg in ­ T h e results th a t h a r e been achieved an d th e techniques th at have m ade them possible w ill h« d em o n strated and ex p lain ed at th e n in g read in g sp eed — 240 w pm , | U n iv ersity Y M onday Sept. 20 average b eg in n in g co m p reh en sio n and T u e s d a y S e p t . 21 — 72 per cent. A verage speed up­ on co m p letio n of th e course — I '4 1 w pm , acerage co m p reh en sio n upon co m pletion o f th e course — : 84 p er cent. T h is rep resen ts an average increase rn reading speed at 3 p.m . an d 7 p rn. If you cannot atten d th e free p u b lic d em o n stra­ tions at th e ' Y. fu rth e r in fo rm a ­ tion may be o b tain ed by callin g th e A ustin R eading D ynam ics In sti­ o f 642 per cent and an increase in tute at G R 6 6 ” 55. co m p reh en sio n o f 12 per cent. C o n sid erin g these facts, can vou T h e Evelyn W o o d R eading D y­ nam ics course guar ann t i a m in i­ a ffo rd not to in v estig ate w hat R ead in g D y aa m .-s can d o to r y o u ? P # ] P « t « i | Prica H # m p h i f f I Price $3.40 $2.75 $6.85 $5.70 $8.30 $7.50 4 .70 .60 .15 $4.85 $4.35 .20 r n l - t Pot Retail Price $4.50 $3.75 $2.00 Homph!" I Pf ca $3.95 $2.75 $1.85 R <19 Retail Prien $3.25 $4.95 $2.00 H e m p h i l l \ Pric e $2.95 $3.95 $1.85 ■m nm t i pgpqp Drama Students • • • We Now Have That Special Steins Make-Up Kit You Need For 307 HEMPHILLS < i mrnrnm - mmm ss rnrnm m wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ART STUDENTS: H em phill's by the Tea House, N ow Has Trained A r t Personnel on Duty to Serve You Fast & Ef­ fic ie n tly rn ism mm at mmm> — A C om plete A r t D epartm ent — save your cash at HEMPHILLS the Student's Store and Home of ENGINEERS • • • Check These HEMPHILLS BARGAINS • e • Mi ■ Now While Supply LASTS. Big Savings On N ew & Used B O O K S SAVE 30 a; ON USED BOOKS 24" T. Square (Dietzgen) 36" T. Square (Dietzgen) 42" T. Square (Dietzgen) Scum X Cleaning Pad Steel Erasing Shield 2 0 "x 2 6 " Drawing Board % m mmmwmmmmmmm I PLUS Your Ready Rebate RAPIDOGRAPHS OUR DRAWING BOARDS HAVE METAL EDMFS TO PREVENT W A R P I N G AND ASSURE ACCURACY WITH THE T. SQUARE. Mi . ..... ^ .......■ o.- III | E VER-RE ADY jlliHi abr-h REBATE. I I Here's how it works: Buy books, supplies— all your col­ lege needs at Hemphill's and save your cash register receipts (re­ bate slips). 1 2 Return any following day with your rebates— now worth 10% o f face value all semester at any o f f o u r Hemphill's stores. the Is it stationery, books, pencils, a pen, or a slide rule you need? Simply use your rebate slips as cash towards your purchase. It's as simple as that! Look at our other services: • Faculty Approved N e w and Used Textbooks, an d Supplies • Free Customer Parking a t all four locations • Personal checks cashed • G ift W ra p p in g and m ailin g services Be Sure To Get Your Free University Activities C alendar M o n d a y At H em phill's Also . . . Free Campus M aps And Book Covers W ith Your Books HEMPHILLS 4 C O NVEN IEN T LOCATIONS ICig# 10% Cash Discount CARTRIDGES P E N S P O IN TS O N EVERY SLIDE RULE . . . VERSALOGS, K&E, PICKETTS, DIETZGEN VERY N E W FAST A C T IO N REIFLER D R A W IN G SET Top Q u ality M erchandize . Faculty Approved . . A ll T h # b##t d r a w i n g I n s t r u m e n t # y o u r m o n e y r a n h u t — H e r m a n m u d# , ex e# ll# n t q u a l i t y m a t e r i a l * — b u i l t » t u n l \ arui n <•)> »< ? <>n f E v e ry P i e r # of d r a w i n g # q o J p m # n t ha* hewn c a r e f u l l y a r l e r t e d t h e e x a r t # p u r ific a tio n # of th e D r a w i n g D e p o r t m e n t d i r i d e d •caJifr-Finger l i f t t r i a n g l e — < a* t e ll d r a w i n g D a d * . to m o r t B o x w o o d I ngm #- r n » i R A P ID O G R A P H PEN SETS M ARS SETS ALS O DISC O U NTED 7 POINT $19.75 $ 15.00 m 4 POINT $13.00 $ 9.90 I 3 POINT $10.50 $ 7.95 M ars R eplacem ent C arib e! o Technical Pens R eplacem ent Points ART STUDENTS SAVE MORE ON ART SUPPLIES AT HEMPHILLS 10% Cash Discount On: Permanent Pigment Water Colors Reg. 3 5 c - Now 3 0 c at H em phill s * A ll Brushes * Grumbacher Pretested Oils and Caseins * Shiva Signature Oil * Dana & Bellini Oil Color King Size Tubes B M H e H M M M H B i -fmr jffHfP P W F* *! Extra good prices on Spiral Sketch Pads & Layout Pads . . . Reg. 24" x 36" Newsprint Pad ONLY $2.75 NOTE: HEMPHILL'S HAS FULL LINES OF PLASTIC PAINTS UQUITEX — N EW MASTER — AOUATEL vmmmmmmm* 'wmr*. ■ — j W ITH THESE BIG SAVINGS YOU GET YOUR EVEREADY REBATE TOO SAVES YOU CASH!! BUY ONE DAY — GET 10°o of w h a t you buy in free merchandise the next day — DON'T W A IT IN LINE to pay for your art supplies — shop Hemphill s Select Your Supplies— Pay The Friendly Clerk — Take Your Receipt A n d Be On Your Wayl I r nWB i f I ■ii/' ss Sp r n WM h i rn rn IpWM V i f K ■ B r nrn I '‘rni i H i «ISf* | r n p H I ' * ■ r n i l l ■VV:- '* - !*§§ P l I S rn l l r n WM rn 109 E. 21st 22 44 G u a d a lu p e 2501 G u ad alu p e 2505 San Jacinto PARKING AT ALL LOCATIONS FREE DELIVERY A ll A r t Supplies D elivered Free to A r t Bldg. 303, Sept. 21, 22, 23, and 24. Sunday, September 19, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 The College of Fine Arts: D ep artm ent of M usic in cooperation with 7 h e Cultural Entertainm ent Committee announce The Solo Artist Series 1965-66 CHARLES TREGER, American \ iMinist First place winner in famed VU hi >mpetition in 1962, (MARLES TREGER mad.* .1. J ' with N.V. Phil­ harmonic last year. “He stunned < r ! •?]« • with his playing. . . . He is one of our mo t import int violinists.” (N’.Y. Times) M A L C O !A l FR A G EK, V m eriian P ian ist O r t. 6 Winner f I • » rit Pitt and Queen Elizabeth of Bel­ gium • , ” ( D a lla s M orning N o u s ) B I R O N J A M S , American Pianist Mar. 15 $18.50 lo $ ‘ | M K T G O L D E A R R I N G S E x q u is ite m in io 'u r e s fo r pierce d ears W h a t r>cer g i t fo r any occasion! So* our new f le c t io n of f i^e q u a lity Krementz Jew elry, VV e offer \oa tk# laag­ e r* ie e c y on cd p u r e e d o a r n r a t in Tevas Pr,cee from $2 A O to $50Q Oner' the 0- - pi - n r Y iad im a r H orow itz, R Y R O N J A N I X i4 f s u r n demand” concert pian- ( * : Lent on Solo Artist Series. l our concerts hi Hogg Auditorium I it ocom e cts in Municipal Auditorium N o reserved sears SEASON T IC K E T S Students Si Faculty-Staff Sd Adults SS Available Now at Fine Arts Box Office: H ogg Auditor! SINGLE ADMISSIONS at door S2.SO I REE to Holders of S16.92 Blanket T a x by I IC K E ! DRAW INGS in advance Sunday, September 19. 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 Fine Jewelry N e tt to University C o - O p LEON’ The prettiest shoes rn Austin O P E N T H U R S D A Y S TILL 9 P.M. . . . 6 l 8 C o n q r e s j 9 $ 1 2 .0 0 • Black kid • B row n kid • R e d kid • G r e e n kid • Blue kid N o th in g s u rp a sse s the wonderful feeling of com fort you get in th is butter-soft K ID S K IN sp o rt casual with the silky-soft, cool FO A M lining. Probably the m ost beautiful little sp o rt sh oe you ever wore with cs luxu rious handsew n va m p detailing and the liveliest colors in town. N aturally f o o t b a l l sco re s Michigan 31, North Carolina 74 I 'Horns... NFL Begins Today; 7 Games Scheduled This bd? Jidkson S t 7, Prairie View 7 (tipi Tennessee 21. Army 0 Baylnr 14, Auburn 8 Notre Dame 48, California 6 Indiana 19, Kansas State 7 fhike 21, Virginia 7 Georgia 18, Alabama IT V M I 31. William and M ary 21 Colorado 0. Wisconsin 0 (tie) Michigan State 13. UCLA 3 Florida 24. Northwestern 20 'est Michigan 17, Louisville 13 Fyranise 14, Navy 8 Boston College 18, Buffalo 6 Oregon 17, Pittsburgh 15 Toledo 9, Villano va 7 Colgate 40, lafayette 0 West Virginia 50. Richmond 0 Oregon St. 12, Illinois IO Purdue 38. Miami, Ohio 0 Wyoming 31, Air Force 14 Arizona IO, Utah 9 Stanford 26, San Jose State 6 Washington 14, Idaho 9 Kentucky 7, Missouri 0 Iowa State 21, Drake 0 y North Texas State 20, Texas Western 17 Georgia Tech IO, Vanderbilt IO (del SW Texas 31, Texas Lutheran 0 Angelo State 29, Sam Houston State 12 Austin College 32, Millsap* 0 HofsTa 35, Gettysburg 14 Bowdoin 40. Worrhester Tech 8 Arkansas 28, Oklahoma State 14 Texas 31, Tula ne O DSU IO. A&M 0 Rice 14. Louisiana 0 Tennessee 21, Army 0 Indiana 19. Kansas State 7 New Mexico State 26, Arlington State 12 SM U 7, Miami 3 George Washington 21. Temple 13 Texas Tech 26, Kansas 7 West Texas State 7, Ohio U 0 Sui Ross 28. East .New Mexico 25 Trinity 12, McMurray 12 (tie) U N I V E R S I T Y O F T E X A S S A C R E D S I N G E R S First Rehearsal 5:00 P.M. Monday Methodist Student Center 2434 Guadalupe Sponsored by H yde Park Baptist Church Our AVERAGE Student Reads 4.7 Times Faster Than His Starting Speed* WITH EQUAL OR BETTER COMPREHENSION T H E IN T E R N A T IO N A L L Y F A M O U S E V E L Y N W O O D R E A D IN G D Y N A M IC S IN ST IT U T E IN V IT E S Y O U T O A T T EN D A FREE D E M O N S T R A T IO N O F T H IS U N IQ U E M E T H O D Where you will: • see a documented film that includes actual in-1 terviews with Washington Congressmen who have taken the course. • learn how we can help you to faster reading, improved comprehension, greater recall. • have an opportunity to have your questions! answered. HOW DID IT START? Eighteen years ego Mrs. W o o d made a startling discovery that led to the founding of Reading Dynamics. W h ile working to ­ ward her masters degree, she handed a term paper to a pro­ fessor and watched him read the 80 pages at 6,000 words per ( minute — with outstanding recall and comprehension. Determ ined to find the secret behind such rapid reading, she spent the next two years tracking down 50 people who could read from 1,500 to 6,000 words per minute. She studied their j techniques, taught herself to read at these faster rates. Now, after years of testing, you can benefit from this g reat discovery. IS IT SIMPLY A PROMOTION STUNT? Results have been reported In Time, N ew sw eek, Business W eek, and Esquire. Demonstrators have appeared on television with Ja c k Paar, G a ry M oore, and A rt Linkletter. Describing Reading Dynamics' im pact on some of our nation's legislators, Time said, ' W ashington has seen nothing like it since the days when Teddy Roosevelt read three books a day and ran the country at the same time.'' Senator Proxmire, W isconsin: Senator Symington, Missouri: “ I m a s t s a y t h a t th is is one o f th e m o st u s e fu l e d u c a tio n e x p e r ie n ­ ce* I h a ve e v e r had. I t c e r t a in ly I ro m p are s f a v o r a b ly w it h thp e x p e ­ I ’ve h a d a t V a le an d H a r ­ rie n c e s v a r d . ’ ' Dr. Nolan Estes, I S u p e r in t e n d e n t , R i v e r v ie w G a rd e n I S c h o o l D i 'f r i c t , S t . L o u is “ I m u st a a y th a t th is th e m o st e x c itin g d e v e lo p m e n ts th e im p r o v e m e n t of re a d m e M anx s tu d e n ts w o u ld b e n e fit a c o u rs e in c h as t h is . ” is o ne of in .UsHs. fro m ca n “ I •peed nic a l m a t e r ia l r a n g e .” read m ost m a t e r ia l at ab o ve 3(XX) VV I ' M and tech j in the 2000 V V I* 'I f Senator Talmadge, G eo rgia: if in “ I t th a t in s t it u t e d it w o n ld be I* ra y o p in io n th e se ] lech ni q ues xxcre the p a b lte an d p r iv a t e s c h o o l* of o u r tile g re a te s t c o u n try , ta k e s in g ’e ste p w h ic h w e c o u ld in e d u c a tio n a l p ro g re ss. I t h in k the p u b lic sch o o l* of G e o r g ia s h o u ld ] c o n s id e r p u t t in g I t w m ild p er y e a r a p p r o p r ia t io n . ” th e lie x>. o rth \ S I OO m illio n ] te c h n iq u e . in HO W IS IT DIFFERENT FROM OTHER COURSES?! N o machines are used. You learn, instead, to use your hand as a pacer— a tool you always have with you. Conventional rapid reading courses aspire to 450-600 words per minute. M ost Reading Dynamics graduates can read between 1,500 and 3,000 words per minute, and many go even higher. GUARANTEE Eve n W o o d Read na 0 ) mamies nu v a n t e to -ea e “ "e reaa ng efficiency of each $+uderr a t least fhree times, re*und t r e en' -e *u * on. i r :s refund is conditioned or v. upon '9 student's having amended a of c asses cr having made up rn ssed sessions, a-d practiced the required -umbe- of hours. Any student who must with- f * ro^ ins course *gt a r y reason may re-e^e^ any draw a* rn additional subsequent courses at any 'e require it r ATTEND FREE DEMONSTRATION UNIVERSITY “ Y ” 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. MONDAY, SEPT 20 — TUESDAY, SEPT 21 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS 304 International Life Bldg. G R 6-6755 ^National A v e r a g e Increase*— In A u s t in o u r a v e ra g e s tu d e n t re a d s *5 4 tim e s f a l t e r th a n b is s t a r t in g sp eed , ba^ed a a th e re - u Jt* o f a p p r o x i­ m a te ly 1.000 p eo p le who haxe ta k e n R e a d mg Dynamic* in th is a re a , in c lu d in g a b o u t 400 I T . s tu d e n ts an d p ro fe s jo rs . T K *i i% t h e m o o th ,x* It beat* rj cg r • S a .a th i K ID S K IN cut COLORS • Red e N a v y • B l a c k • 8ro*n Sold rn th(X Univentty Area eely af (Continued From Bago Orel But Phil Harris turned copycat and fumbled himself at Tulane s seven, ending the first scoring threat. Nobis and his mates swarmed like bloated bees o\er ballcar­ riers. and East had to toe the ball again. This time, Texas net­ ted a minus two yards before Conway connected on his field goal for a scant 3-0 lead. BUT THREE IS BETTER than none, and buying this idea, the ’Horns preceded to slowly build that margin. Two fumbles and two punts gave Texas four more first-half scoring opportunities. Thev man­ aged to capitalize on exactly none. In the midst of this unproduc­ tive stumbling. Marvin Kristynik did the seemingly impossible. He threw’ a spiral. In fact, he threw three or four spirals, one for 29 yards. But as fast as he was flinging passes, Kristynik was getting flags thrown at him. THE FL A G S WERE against Texas for illegal procedure, off­ sides, offensive holding, and pos­ sibly for just being on the field. Whatever the case, three pen­ alties in a row were assessed Texas, two after Mr. K had found aerial targets for good yardage. It was frustrating to say the least. Texas was so frustrated it wmund up with IO penalties for 90 giant steps. All that went by the board af­ ter the half when Texas kicked off. For Tulare fumbled as pre­ viously recorded, and Baer ram­ bled as so mentioned, and the Longhorns rather badly gored an outmanned Tulare team. liberally Much of what Texas did wpnt relatively unnoticed. Royal sub­ in the second stituted half, using sophomores by the carload and unknowns for pass catching. Someone named Rea­ gan Gennusa snagged a pair of Lott tosses for considerable yard­ age. IT WAS AUDITION NIGHT for Texas. Much was learned, no doubt — and a lot of green was drained from new gridders. Tulane is a nice team to open with. Their defense w'as not ex­ actly bad Saturday, it just got worn to a frazzle having to try to rectify the Green Wave s offen­ sive booboos. So when Harris gained 65 yards on 15 totes, Stockton 41 on 12. Lott 41 on nine, and Derrick 40 yards on eight, it couldn’t be ticked off as power-house run­ ning. It wasn’t. But it wasn't Grade School Push Time, either. Texas owtis an offense which can pene­ trate. The only trouble is, people are building better walls these days. Texas Tech rolls east with a pretty fair version of Berlin on the Plains next week. from By The AmocfaUari Pre** Cleveland and Baltimore face two would-be stem tests contenders Sunday when tho National Football League opens with a seven game program that to attract 323,000 Is expected fans. in THE DEFENDING champion Browns will tie at Washington, the and Baltimore, beaten by the 1964 champion­ Browns ship game, will open defense of its Western title at home against the charged-up Minnesota Vik­ ings. The Colts and Vikings were the only unbeaten teams in the exhibition season. Green Bay, favored by many the championship to recapture after two years in second place, will be ar Pittsburgh where Mike Nixon will make his coaching debut as successor to Buddy P a r­ ker. S T . LOUIS, regarded as the top threat to Cleveland in the Eastern Conference, will open at Philadelphia. Detroit will make its bow under new coach H a r r y Gilmer in a home game against the Los Angeles Rams. Tile Chi­ cago Bears will be at San Fra n ­ cisco and the rebuilding New York Giants at Dallas. Nixon and Gilmer are the only new head coaches in the I t club league a series of trades and a generous sprinkling of rookies give the player rasters a n ew look. An unofficial survey of line ups probable opening day shows a turnover of almost 30 per cent from last year's start­ ers. THE GIANTS, in the process of undergoing a complete overhaul .job, probably will open with 13 changes from the 22-man group that started a year ago. Two Jim Carroll linebackers, rookie and Glen Underwood and two rookie defensive backs, Henry Carr and Carl are among the new boys plus ex- Detroit Lion quarterback E a rl Morrall. Lckhart Among the big name rookies expected to see action are Jack Snow of Notre Dame with Los rn IM Slate £ i w rn. ' ■ Men’* Schedule Thursday — Fraternity A Mullet football entry dead­ Division line. Monday — Football officials' meeting, 3 p.m., Gregory Gym 34. Monday, Sept. 27 —- managers' meeting, G. G. 33. Assistant 5 pm . Tuesday, Sept. 28 — Housing. Independent, and G ra ­ Club, duate Division football entry deadline. Tuesday, Sept. 28 — Class A Bowling entry deadline. Angles, Olympic fprint r Bob Haves, Ralph NeHy of )k V ma and Je rry Rhome of T sa with Dallas. D k Hulk is of UH nots. Gale Savers of Kansas and Dick Gordon of Michigan State with Chicago. Archie Sutton of UliaGi* and Lance R en ted es Oklahoma with Minnesota. Ken Willard of North Carolina with San Francisco. Jim Snowier of Notre Dame with Was! n.gt ti and Tucker Frederickson of A a burn with New York. Jim Brown A sellout of 48 000 Is inc a' Washington t< sec t c Redskins Charley Ta\ tor due! w i,f- Cleve land's in a si tv that should give a quick ans we i to Washington’s tit’-' pr sjw r The Bn wtis are hi,: tine w uh Paul Warfield out and Clifton McNeil a doubtful starter. UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS^ KURN I \ , ( haniM‘1 9 Monday High School Sea • e k a > n' Ii 1st or v Spar lh 5 35 9 UU - Stat rn <- 11, r a ms 0 as Primal 9 55 A at Iv* Spans - :i IO : 15 SC* a k in g Sp anish I " 35 A rt. Muss l l 04 11 30—-Dl»< O r t i n g c a . lh r 12 t'h a n g in g Ka rib ment 12 37 111.x tor) Hovcrnmrnt 1 04— S H e n r r H orizo n* I HI -Prim.tr> Spanish 1 SO A ct tx t sp an .sn 2:09 -Speaking Span xii 2 Uh A r! M u sic 2 55 High Sc. "ii S- - x meat 3 25 F ilm 3 VV Scion e ft>r I- It err a ..nr: t*r* nib 4 .V) Discover ‘ S i ■■■ I F e 6 IX) What > N« xx ‘ A -I IX .. guel 5 ae ['tic seafood st< rv h OO L ’ K n fan t Prodiquar fi Hi» - ha . nlng N ex* * 7 >o -Comer**non America r » \ . 7 3o -Tho C o m p u ter and r ' ’ V’ cb Man S K) Public Affa rs 9 OO—Th** Cincinnati Symphony I " OO -Th*» P ig P ic tu re Cambridge Towers now serving Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner Ba lenient P ■ 19th And Lavaca 2348 G u a d a lu p e — On the Drag Specializing in C o lle g ia te Fashions O I ’/ !J /•’ s ( i t M i a t s f M m The Brightest New flSrV ct £ Star on tile Orca M Be O u r Guest! Register for Free G ifts! Three 12-Transistor Radios Three "8-Transistor Radios Opening Specials! Fine Dark Transitional Cottons y 2Price Beautiful A ll W o o l Skirts Regularly $10.98 ^ ^ ^ Cotton-and-Dacron Blouses Regularly $5 98 5 9 8 M m Splendid Selections Fine Imported Knits Sweaters — Suits Very Specially Priced Opening Specials! ^ OO lmoort?d Hand-Screnn^d ITALIA N SHIFTS k,$ Fine Woolen Coats Both Light and Dark Co'ors Values to 549 93 BS OO J f 3 /sa * * Luxury Woolen Coots c 7 * % o a rn rn £ J Af * Ti W 7 Q f ** ** ,., ' Natural American Mink Collars Regularly $79.98 Seasonal Dresses M an y Are Samples ^ Q Q Were Up to $26 98 ( j C p Com e in today and register for FREE PRIZES 2322 Guadaluoei On the Drag S-nday, September 19, *965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 Half the fun is choosing together Sharing the t h r ill. . . knowing her diamond w ill be doubly treasured because its selection was a moment to remember. Le* the knowledgeable help of our experts make choosing \ our diamond a perfect moment for you. Marquise S750. Pear-shaped S625. Round $350. Divided payments avell able J E W E L E R S /X H A N C O C K C E N T E R Vienna Choir Boys To Sing in Dallas cd^brMt>aO‘>n in th** Knrttx ^! f and will to Vienna mmpfiiatolv return 'P o Vienna Choir after ai arri 0 0 0 2 ? rn KA T F M I Av© hreM*4n«ert o f (fe rm a n P s H k m iw tory eWrtion? I p tri H r * Mve r^ncort o f T/mtfhom Remd at Moppg Aiwfitortnm Adrm«»icHn fro# iii jct inn to the New Testam ent." Mondbar I 7:30 pm Debut of K L R N - T V ’s i v w series, “ A n Intro-* , J Thursday jl I, p> 'VO, and 9 p m Selected Film Classic* series. Batts | In em ar Bergm an ’s “ Smiles o f t FT nil Auditorium. a Slim m er N ig h t." Admission 25 cents. Friday I >, 7. arid 9 p.m. Union Movie, “ Barabbas.” » a pm. Municipal Auditorium. Bot) Dylan concert. Sa turdav ~ 'I t .do pm Texas lech at Austin. I nion Dance immedi­ r v * ately following gam e. AA* W i t h e r s p o o n O p e n s N e w A r t G a l l e r y Francis M Witherspoon will op*‘ti his now Oxford House Gal­ lery Sunday at 211 Oxford Lane in Longview with original, pro­ fess! mal art including the work of four University of Texas facul­ ty members. The location of the gallery is In \\ 11 hoi spoon s private residence and is where many of his former Boy* Via vf l*vn Heard In Da flat provnotmlv trot alway* aa a part of a multipi# en«»*?omvr»t non corf in manx other American 'itie* four with app"*ran os THU ( H O W will arrive *3 I >a! las on Ort IT direct from Vienna in time to perform that night at the Viennese B all at tho She! atom the Dallas Hotel. The ball opening event of the Fortnight and will feature, lo addition to the Vienna Choir Boys, walt/ music performed hv the entire Dallas Symphony Orchestra. is Tile Choir Boys have bef'n a prominent group in Vienna sim e I iqs when the Hallsburg hrn- [#*ror Maximilian efitabltshed the choir fur the Austrian Court s private teligiou* services. Ha* h year approximately UK) boys are selected for admission to the ' heir school with almost as many leav­ ing annually as a result of chang­ ing voici*;. Tickets for the public convert by the Vienna Choir Boys will go on sale Monday at the Noi­ re an Marcus concierge service, af State Fair IGx Office, and af the helot agency of Preston State I ink in Dallas Tickets for the preceding night’s Viennese Boil may In* obtained at the Dallas Symphony offices in M cFju iin Auditorium. h i ( m n c r t F r i d a y , St p f. 2 i, 8 : 3 0 p . m . A u s t i n M u n i c i p a l A u d i t o r i u m T K K F T S N O W O N S A L I : ! H O O - ’ 3 . 0 0 - ' 2 . 0 0 A U STIN TICKET SERVICE Pr* i*>~ )#rj l f AN W Y NI :k n I ALM i me m u 5* 1 t,.t I ■ h l l ii V OU I ti n XX It. It OI' '-•ti NI 1 . 1 * On £ AT THE CHIEF DRIVE IN THEATRE O N LY J C Cxclt.siuofij • i f r n v t i % # A I XI rn ^ r n m m w f W m i iii 1 1 1 1 J M M IM ^ s ^ L o T L O B R I f i l D A - S O H M E R • f f i * • « I .‘■.TK. Jkn>iiUr'' frtth th>‘t ’tnd this inn vip pm hi ''k* » hat jim . , . Sharon ''belton I t ' " IN X N Jiw e ie w n e m im I ll mnnnn iinnt/r - i D •• * .* 0 $ - T 7 -T J - » \ - <- \ «* V 1 U Y H W / J J pupils have had their training. Witherspoon also has a small, "a ile d garden for showing sculp­ ture. The premier showing w ill be from 2 6 pm . IN C H D ED in the show will be works of University faculty, Loren Mozley, Mort Baranoff, Ralph White, and Robert levers. Also included in the showings are works by Em ily Gutherie Smith, Rd and Linda Blackburn, Je rry Seagle, Stephen Rascoe, Robert C Thompson, Bill Hoey, Doyle Chappe!. Ruth Tears, Betty Winn, Glann Allen Galloway, Dixon Benntt, Richard C. Coon- es, John McClanahan, and Lin- xvood Kronerk. WORK SHOWN will include a wide range of style and media. There w ill be paintings in oils and the new acrylic paints, casino, and watercolor. Also there will be ink washes, pen and pencil sketches, lithographs and wood­ indude blocks. Sculpture w ill d ay, stone, and bronze. Ceramics w ill i n c l u d e pottery in glaze and handcrafted enamelware in ori­ ginal color design. Only profes­ sional artists will be handled and exhibited. Oxford House will furnish view­ ers of the Longview area the op­ portunity for Unsurely viewing and unhurried choice in the selec­ ts"!! of art objects of museum quality for home and office. R ls irliiiii " IMtwrrfwl mmd ImKxI m IIm pktwrr... jfP br ... wit Ii iMNrtfi... far mWu! / P f ‘\UM ■/ 2200 H A N C O C K DRIVE O n * IX I o r k XX o*t o f B u r n e t R d , O I I v ! ti © I 1 u t t x I ft lo 7 IO ;» ;,o i ’ n W it Cranfills Jam esStudy terpretations of the “ apparition- ists." The governess' encounters with the ghosts of Quint and Miss Jessel are referred to as “ seiz­ ures" (Seizure I, Seizure 2, rte.) as the young woman “ believes she sees” Quint and Miss Jessel four times each, “ w'ith admirable im partiality.” DR. C R A N F IL L and Clark se­ the lines lected text a i from Jam es’ story to show the rea o tion of Mrs. Grose, the house­ keeper. and two children. the Flora and Miles, to the strange behavior of the governess. One response of these characters, aa the authors interpret it, is to at­ tempt therapy, including shock treatment. Featuring: Chopped Bar-b-que Sandwich Only 39c Orange h u l l I \ cjI, a u r a n g 27th & Guadalupe GR 8-0316 "THERE S NOTHING ACCIDENTAL ABOUT QUALITY. STARTS < 1:30 That a work of scholarship can H# both sound and witty, well is documented but unfootnoted demonstrated by “ An Anatomy ‘The Turn of the S c re w .” of published bv The University of Texas Press. Dr. Thomas M. CranfiH, pro­ fessor of English, and his nephew, Robert L. Clark Jr., have care­ fully examined the texts of both the original 3898 edition of Henry Jam es’ masterpiece and the revised edition that appeared in 1908. They have consulted literary tomes and other com­ mentaries in sources as varied as the Publications of the Modern Language Association of America and TV Guide. Yet their critical grasp of the famous “ ghost’’ story rests light­ ly on their graceful pen, and they avoid distracting footnotes by substituting a selected bibliogra­ phy at tho end of the book, where readers may pursue quotations, references or ideas that arise in the text. IN H IS INTRO DUCTION, Pro­ fessor CranfiH recalls that he be­ gan setting down views of “ Tile Turn of the Screw” 20 years ago after teaching it to three classes of freshmen. He enlisted his nephew, Clark, as a collaborator after “ my own burning interest : in the story. . . infected him so thoroughly M.A. thesis on the topic." that he u'rote his 1 Clark, who lives in New York ! City, has B A. and M.A. degrees from Columbia University and has Avriften articles of literary \ jour­ criticism for professional nals. He also is the author of a play produced off Broadway. In “ An Anatomy of ‘The Turn of the Screw’,” the authors align themselves with the “ nonappari- tionist” readers of the book and relentlessly break down the in­ ' u i c d r i v e in c r V i n i e r THEATRE 5 IVO I V OPEN 6 :3 0 AIU LTS 1.00 TDC HO 5-1710 .75 I . am ar THE TRAIN WILL CARRY YOU TO THE PEAK OF ADVENTURE! r - ^ JUL CS B * IC XTN pct sen s BURT LANCASTER THE A T TRAIN m l # r u n S t a r t s XX hen T h e y T a k e And H a c k e r s O f f ! P l I S T he T h e ir C lo a k * MASQUERADE I A VT XI X N I O I. O K AT IO 00 DRIVE *IN I ( W W W I theatre B O X O C ! I C I O C L S 6:30 A D M I S S I O N 75c BRAINSTORM J e f f H u n t e r Si A n n F r a n c is S t a r t - 7 Ho — F lu * — THE W O M A N WHO W OULDN’T DIE C a n M e r r i l l A J a n e M e r r o r S t a r t * 9 20 * M V X . GuU A U A DRIVE * IN THEATRE 3900 So Cone B O X O K U ! C O P K N 6 TO A D M I S S I O N 75n B u r t THE TRAIN Jo n n n e I a n c a a te r 4 s t a r t s 7:;?0 JM o rrea u P h i* THE TIME TRAVELERS l ’ r**1on F o s t e r A P h i l i p C a re y ' t a r t * 9 15 FREE P A R K IN G ‘{r.XHuc? VARSITY 'I XT I M I I O I I X X M A TIN EE 2 00 P.M. E V E N IN G 7:30 P M T W O P E R F O R M A N C E S TO D A Y 'I x 11M r, I O I ) x x (i3» Fi»vxtur© Timex 7 15 k rttund rU n f\'; IAI I A1 J'IV iANLl i HulLu WAi ©I on ll ur net ii..A a ( B u r n e t SvneaJe. pius: > Trlt THKfC UXtT S OF T fio n iriH itia S a n a a a a E E P g a m b i w I, i««t»mbsr 19. 1965 THG DAILY TEXAN Pie* a A • 7 .1 rt ! t ee Parking Km kine ( hair ''eat* C o lo r r \ L o a n s * •'milking Perm itted MflttrugS Y le a SoJUW O u t v ie r - & VOJ * CSC ER, - --CJ^ \ "Vy I f . VA NA U G V K J n B t K E V ' ’ Kl PIZZA HU 1809Guadalupe Austin,Texas J G R 2-7511 for Delivery Pushback Seats . Free # M i # >»rgest Screen iii'the Southwest ' •• Parking Gallery Cupid Strikes Again This F a ll We hu\e played this ad in the I ex an to let you know some­ thing about the ( imputer n Cupid date matching experi­ ment that w ill be taking plate here this tai! First of all, viho In th;* summers takes part' program the pea outages ran t'V, Sophomore - - Freshmen , . Seniors IO C - ' ; ' r . and Graduate Stu dents JOG The reason the fa-hmen had such a si nial group x\ as because in the sum­ mer there aren t many fresh­ men around since the for: let freshmen ha\e moved up. \\ iv do people part irate. xou ask W e were curious about this too. so on our evaluation Junior . question Here are some typi­ cal replies: To establish a new set of friends. ‘ Because it is a good idea tor new students on campus Nothing to lost ’ I would like to meet the r gilt girl- I date a great manx girls but get easily disinterested ' * I took part for the same re . -on as everyone else that I met- • to see what would curiosity happen. This last reason— cu­ riosity to see what would h ap- pen— was the reason given bv A . the largest number of respon enfs. H ow did it turn out his summer? W hat are the peens for the f a ll5 O of disappointment ‘ in the participants th e I the persons with whom and they were matched. W e are proud of that figure! Sixty per the participants were cent of ii dating their matches at the the time when we sent out evaluation questionnaires. Eight per cent of the participants were going steadily at the end ct those six weeks. And we expect ex en better results in the fall with a much greater par* Pupation resultinc in greater chHi, rn ideal matches. it cost? Only >0. And this fall we have a rate special stoup that lowers the cost to only $2.2 s W e are sure that you g tis n rhe dorms will appre- (o f four) Longhorn Band At Hogg Today The U niversity of Texas Long­ horn Band m akes its first concert ap p earan ce of the y e a r Sunday. The band, under the direction pf Vincent R. DiNino will per- i rm a t 4 p.m . in Hogg Auditor­ ium . Sunday’s Num bers th a t will be Included Include I n [ ‘Hollywood M oods," "The Texan M a r c h .” and "D ance M acabre." The concert is free to the public. concert Gwathmey to Head Station KUT-FM Joe N. Gwathmey of George W ashington U niversity has join­ ed The University of Texas R a­ dio/Television staff a s radio pro­ duction supervisor and station r - nager for radio station KUT- FM. * Gwathmey will he in charge of UT's radio program service to Texas stations. During the 1964- G5 academic year more than 9 000 taped programs were dis­ stations to about 70 tributed throughout the state, in addition to offerings on the Voice of America and Armed Forces Ra­ dio. and radio television For the past year Gwathmey has been assistant to the director of at George Washington University, while working toward a doctoral degree in the field of internation­ al communication. He has also done graduate work at the Uni­ versity of Denver. A native of Brownwood, he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree In speech and history from How­ ard Payne College in 1963. He was an employee of Radio Station KBWX) in Brownwood from 1956 1963. He is a member of the National of Educational Association Broadcasters. Dallas Sympho Opens Oct. 28 The Dallas Symphony Orches­ tra will enter its 66th year of operation with the opening con­ cert of the season scheduled for Sept. 28 in McFarlin Auditorium on the SMU campus. The heart of the forthcoming season, seven months of some 150 performances in and out of the city, will Ive the 15 Symphon­ in McFarlin ic Series concerts Auditorium. The series, offered in a discounted ticket package, has concerts scheduled in weekly groups with interven­ ing "free periods” and conclud­ es April season ll. Lighter, but not necessarily more entertaining, musical fare for "extra-curricu­ is reserved lar” performances, which will in­ clude the One Dollar concerts, the Promenade and Supper Pops, the Dr. Pepper Student and Series. of the Eleven Symphonic Series concerts will be conducted by Donald Johanos, young Ameri­ can-born music director of the Dallas Symphony who presided over last spring's 35-concert tour of the orchestra through metro­ politan centers of the South and East.. T ex as’ n ativ e daughter, em i­ nent folksinger Carolyn H ester, and fam ed actor-com edian God­ frey Cam bridge will lead off the U niversity of T exas C ultural E n tertain m en t Com m ittee events for the 1965-1966 season. prem iere perform ances will be Sept. 29 in M unicipal Au­ ditorium , site of all CEC presen­ tations. Tile FREE TICKETS will be avail­ able to all Blanket Tax holders beginning Sept. 23 at the Fine A rts Box Office in Hogg Audi­ torium . Season tickets for others I interested ten perform ances are available at the box office at $12.50 for adults and $6 for children through junior high school age. the series of in rep ertoire which Tile Harkrtess B allet with its new includes " F e a s t of Ashes,” "T im e out of M ind," "S erab an d e," and "The Flow er F estiv al’' will be the second attraction in an Oct. 14 perform ance. Oct. 28 is the date of the return of A rthur Fiedler and the Buffalo Philharm onic in a "p o p s” concert. The Stan Getz q u artet follows with a swinging program on Dec. the Metropolitan Opera 9 and B a l l e t , O p e r a t o P l a y A t L o c a l M o v i e H o u s e s A little m ore culture will be noticed in the Austin a re a next m onth. The State T heater has an­ nounced that it will present "An Evening with the Royal B allet." This production will sta r Ru­ dolph N ureyev and D ame M ar­ got Fonteyn. The movie will run Oct. 12-13 for four perform ances. has scheduled the L aScala's produc­ tion of ‘ La B oh em e” for f o u r perform ances Oct. 21-22. The P aram ount T h eater P r e p a r a t i o n f o r a C o n c e r t . . . Vincent R. D IN ino leads his Longhorn Band in rehearsal for their first concert appear- «nce o f the year Sunday in H o g g Auditorium . T e x a n I ’h n t o J o h n s o n Cambridge, Hester to Open CEC Season at Auditorium N ational Company will present "C arm en ” and "S u san n ah ” on Feb. 8 and 9, respectively. The fam ed New York Pro M usica, instrum ental and singing ensem ­ ble, brings a presentation devoted to m usic w ritten the cen­ turies before the birth of Johann Sebastian Bach on Feb. 17. in ONE OF EUROPE'S m ost dis­ tinguished cham ber o rchestras Sw itzerland's M asterplayers of Lugano, will present a program of m usic from the great m asters of the past in a Nov. 18 perfor­ m ance. Folksinging and hum or will be on hand in Municipal Au­ lead? Sir John Barbirolli ditorium Dec. I in the persons of Steve Addiss and Bill Crofut the Houston Symphony Orchestra to the cam pus for a program of fine sym phonic m usic on Mar. 3 Dave Brubeek and his quartet of Paul Desmond, alto sax; Gene Wright, bass; and Joe Morello, drum s clim ax the series on Mar. 17. SINGLE ADMISSION at the door is $2.50 and there are no ad vanced ticket sales or reserved seats. A bu? schedule (round rrip- 25c) will be printed in The Daily Texan before each p e rfo rm a n o Music Department Lists Open Courses The U niversity D epartm ent of Music has announced the follow ing courses th at are open to all U niversity students: • Longhorn Singers. • Men’s Glee Club. • Southern Singers. • Varsity' Singers. • U niversity A Cappella Choir. • Longhorn Band. «• V arsity Band. • Laboratory’ Band. • University O rchestra. • Music 302L. “ Introduction to M usic.’’ This course deals with inform ation and the techniques the intelligent appreciation for of m usic: its elem ents, basic form s, and m ajor style periods from the Baroque to the present. • Music 334. “ Music in A m eri­ intellectual ca ’’ The study of and sociological aspects of mu- j sic. The term paper is related to the students m ajor, if possible. • Music 3.38. M asterpieces of Music ’’ An intensive study of m usical style; selected m a ste r­ w orks by com posers from 1600 to the present; analysis of instru­ m ental and vocal literatu re NEW! COLOR BOUND SPIRAL NOTEBOOKS • Electronically Sealed Plastic Binding • A s s o rte d C olors • Eye-Ease Paper • W ill n o t catch clothing. turn easily. • M ore pages fo r your money. • A va ilable only at !L _ * W P A R T Y B A R N The C o - O p . Ideal for dancing and private parties. Rustic loft. Plenty of parking space. Located 5 miles W e s t of Ben W h it e Blvd. on U.S. H w y. 290 Reservations: Caf! HI 4-2511 90 SHEETS... 49c i i T i n t m . "I I! J i t % t J 0 * * , ., • Pages lie fla t an d DAVE BRUBECK QUARTET CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE ■■ S I I * ANNOUNCES 1965-66 SERIES FREE TO HOLDERS OF S16.92 BLAN K ET T A X CAROLYN MESTER ARTHUR FIEDLER STEVE ADDISS BILL CROFUT SIR JO H N BARBIROLLI C A R O L Y N HESTER ami G O D F R E Y CAM HRH H i E .................................... S q.t 20. A n e v e n i n g w i t h G O D F R E Y ( AM B R U X U u n i q u e a n d i n i m i t a h i « a c t o r c o m i c o f sta ge a nd sc re en, a nd T e x a s ow n folk fin ge r C A R O - L Y N H E S T E R , w h o re t ur ns h o m e fol o w i n g t r i u m p h * t h r o u g h o u t I S. a n d G r e a t Bri t a i n, i n c l u d i n g E d i n b u r g h Festi va l. THE HARKNESS B A L L E T ....................................................( V t l f T H E H A R K N E S S BA L L E I o f Nev. ' l u r k , ss itll g u e s t stars an i A I T I L K ) L AR IS, s t i r r i n g new A m e r i c a n ( n m pa ti» u n d e r A r t i s t i c D i r e c t i o n of ( »eorge Sk t b i ne In i t i a l A m e r i c a n t o u r foll ow m g W i v e H o u s e d e b u t r e p e r t o i r e i n c l u d e s “ Least o f Ashes. ‘ last fall a n d E u r o p e a n successes f o l l o w i n g . L n i q a A R T H U R FIEDLER with the BUFFALO P H I L H A R M O N I C .............................(h r 2* A R T H U R F I E D L E R in a * P o p s " c o nc e rt w i t h t h e Bt .-FFAI O P H I I . . H A R M O NTC F a m e d as t h e g r e a t e s t o f al! e x p o n e n t s of l i gh t clas­ sical m usic , A r t h u r FiccLer w i t h B u f f a l o P h i l h a r m o n i c b r i n g ! t h e k i n d of m u si c m o st l ov e d bv A m e r i c a n a u d i e n c e s. MASTERPLAYERS OF El IG A N O ..................... Nov. IR a p r e s e n t a t i o n o f M A S T E R P L A Y E R S ( H A M B E R O R ( H E S I RA t h e M a s t e r p l a s ar* Society in L u g a n o , S w i t z e r l a n d T w e n t y of E u ­ r o p e * m os t d i s t i n g u i s h e d v i rt u osi u n d e r d i r e c t i o n of d y n a m i c R i c h ­ a r d S c h u m a c h e r . STEVE ADDISS & BILL CRO FU T Dec. I . S T E V E A D I T SS a n d BILL ( R O E ! f, p o p u l a r A m e r i c a n f o l k s i n g - ers a n d i n s t r u m e n t a l i s t s w h o c h a r m a u d i e n c e s wi t h va st cepertoi r® o f A f r i c a n , Asi an, E u r o p e a n a n d A m e r i c a n f o l k s o n g s . . . . S T A N G E T Z ............................................................... D e c .0 ST A N G E I Z a n d his Qua rt e t. R e n o w n e d as t he T o p T e n o r m i n , * Si an G e t z t o u c h e d o f f Bossa N o v a m o v e m e n t in U.S. a n d has b e e n w i n n e r o f m a j o r :az/ p ol ls a l m o s t c o n si s t e n t l y . t e n o r s a x o p h o n i s t M ETR O P O LITA N OPERA N A T I O N A L C O M P A N Y "CARMEN” Feb. a ''SUSANNAH" Feb.') T h e M e t r o p o l i t a n O p e r a Asso c i a t i o n a n d t h e Jo h n F K e n n e d y C e n ­ t e r f or t he P e r f o r m i n g Ar t s p r e se nt t h e M e t r o p o l i t a n O p e r a N a ­ t ion*! C o m p a n y . E x c l u si v e m a n a g e m e n t , H u r o k A t t ra c t io n s , Inc. N E W YORK PRO MI N I C A ..................................Feb. 17 N E W V O R K P R O M O S K A p r o v i d e s a u n i q u e a n d e x c i t i n g e x ­ c u r s i o n i n t o t he g r e a t musi cal past Me Leva! Re n a i ss a n c e a n d Ba­ r o q u e m usi c p e r f o r m e d bv e l e v e n vo< ii a n u s i n g a u t h e n t i c m u si c a l i n s t r u m e n t s o f p e r i o d N o a h G r e e n b e r g . i n s t r u m e n ta l vi rt u o si - u n d e r d i r e c t i o n of H O U S T O N S Y M P H O N Y ORCHESTRA . Mar.* H O U S T O N ’ S Y M P H O N Y O R C H P S T R A w i t h SIR J O H N B A R- B I R O L L I , C o n d u c t o r . . DAV E BRUBECK Q U A R T E T ..............................Mar. 17 f a m e : a v a n t g a r d e a / z b a r d T h e D A VTI BR ' B E C K Q U A R T E T v I n c h c o n c e i v e I m a n y o f t e r i o u s m u si c i a n s a n d jazz .o ve rs a. f.c. t he c u r r e n t t r e n d s in j a h a t t r a c t i n g I M P O R T A N T : ! AII Holders o f $16.92 Blanker Tax M U S T D R A V A TTC K F T at the Fine A r t s B o x O f f i c e in H o g g Auditorium B E F O R E E A C H EV ENT D r a w i n g b e g i n s O N E VV E E K I N A D V A N C E o f each event and continues .AS L O N G AS T I C K E T S L A S T . W a t c h T H E D A I L Y T E X A N f o r announcements! ( FC E ve nt s a re N Q I included on the $15 90 s p o u s e A t h l e t i c Ac t i v i ty T h Lets purchased b v H u s b a n d s arid W ives o f S T U D E N T S , FACT T T Y a n d S T A F F M E M B E R S . Si ngle Admissions at $2.50 Each for ll Events Total $2730 Buy a Season Ticket for $12.50 Season J ickets on Sale N o w ar Fine Arts Box Office H ogg Auditorium S t r e e t Floor N O R i a E K V E D S E A T S Sun da y, S . p t . m b * 19, 1966 T H I DAILY T E XAN P a g - I Vance Colors Campus Famed Publisher Marshall Field Jr. Dies CHICAGO —CP*-— Marshall Field Jr ., 49, editor and publisher of the Chicago Sun Times and the Chicago Daily News, died Satur­ day of an apparent heart attack. Field, alan board chairman of Field Enterprise*, was f o u n d dead In bed at his North S i d e borne F IE L D W AS appointed editor in and publisher of the Nev.'* Janu ary 1959, when It was ac Quired by Field Enterprises, and continued as publisher of the Sum Time*. He is the great grandson and namesake of Chicago*! m o s t widely known 19th C e n t u r v merchant prince, founder of the M arshall Field and Co. depart­ ment store His Is one of the na­ tion's w e a lt h ie s t f a m i li e s F i e l d e a r n e d a b a c h e ! >r o f law d e g r e e from th e U n i v e r s i t y of V i r g i n i a S c h o o l, w h e r e he w a s p r e s id e n t o f h is g r a d u a l ing class r e ­ Ea rlie r, he h a d L a w ceived h li bachelor of arts de­ gree, magna cum laude, from Harvard University. F IE L D W \S BORN’ fn New York City on June 15, 1916, son of th# late Marshall F e ld Sr and the former Evelv Marshall, now Literacy Program Aids 12,732 Adults B i th e \ s s o o ta tc d B r r na in g a d u lt T i le s l a t e s p r o g r a m of t e a c h ­ i ll it e r a t e s to re n d has r e a c h e d 12.732 p e rs o n s In JO c o m ­ m u n it ie s , G o v J o h n C o n n a lly a n ­ n o u n c e d T h u r s d a y . T h e l i t e r a c y p r o g r a m w a s i n i ­ t i a t e I v th e s t a te , bu t w it h p a s ­ s a g e o f th e F < x Je ra l A n t i- p o v e r t y h e a s k e d C o n n a lly s a id t h a t in J a n u a r y fo r a f u n c ­ th e L e g is la t u r e r e a c h 10 000 to p r o g r a m t io n a l Il l it e r a t e s a y e a r . “ I am h a p p y to see w e have a lr e a d y s u r p a s s e d th a t g o a l, ” ho aid " I t h a s lo n g b e e n a m a t t e r o f d e e p corn e m to ru e t h a t o u r A c t, 90 p e r c e n t o f its c o s t is S t a t e n u m b e r s m o r e f u n c t io n a l p a id b y th e n a t io n a l g o v e r n m e n t , th e G o v e r n o r s a id . t ill fo ra t • ■'s o v e r th e a g e o f 25 th a n any o th e r s t a t e e x c e p t o n e ” M rr Diego Snare* of New York City. In June 1938 he married Jo ­ ann e Bass, daughter of Robert P Bass once governor of New Hampshire. They were divorced in 1917 In Ju ly 1964, Fo ld married .Tulia Lynne Templeton In New York City. She was a former public relations representative. In May, 1950, Fe ld married Katherine Woodruff, member of a pioneer Illinois fam ily In Jo ­ liet. He had two other children hr his first wife and three by his second. Field married for the t h i r d time Ju ly 7, 1964, in New York. His bride was 23 year-old Ju lia f o r m e r Lynne Templeton, a public relations representative. Cutter Reaches Crewless Ship H O N O LULU —OB— A C o a s t Guard cutter reached the Loudia* on .Saturday after th# crew had been rescued from lifeboats by a Nationalist Chinese vessel. The cutter sent an inspection party aboard the Loudias and found the flooding had dimin­ ished, the Coast Guard said. Nine crewmen then returned to the I^oudias and attempts were being made to start the engi­ neering plant and reduce the water in the holds with portable pumps. THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS ..................................... . c l A s s m r o a d v k b t u h j i o r a t e s F n rh W ord < IS word m in im u m ) .................... M in im u m Chary* C lassified U h pine i on* I <'olumn F a rt) A d ditio n al ®o C o n d u c t - va Issu* 6 word* i s w ord * Bn v» ords lnc$| on# tim # ....... .............. ................... ............. s o n ................................................................... a oo (W o copy chan#*- fo r conseeutlv# tssu# rat*** ) I rn# . . si <>n 90 c r A s s r r i r n a d v e r t i s i n g n K a n f . i m e s Tu esd ay T e x a n ............................ M o n day, 3 SO p rn. W edn esd ay Texan ...................... T u esd a y. 3:30 p.m. T h u rsd a y T . xan ..................... W e d n e sd ay . J 30 p m F rid a y T e x a n ............................ T h u rsd a y , 3:30 p m . ............................... F rid a y 3:30 p m . Su n d a y ’I ex an In th*- even? of errors Trade in an ad vertisem en t Im m ediate notice mu,*' bo given ax the publisher* ar# re * ponsi bl# for o n ly one in c o rre ct insertion . 11.00 C A L L G R 1 - 5 2 4 4 Furnished Apartm ents Help W a n te d Furnished Rooms Apartm ents— Unfurnished For Rent ONI-'. O F A U S T IN S nicest for In fo rm a l ..... —— liv in g T w o bedrooms 3710A E n fie ld I R E N T ( .ti) W ood B L 9-1213 or L ib e rty month Rd H ill 10<>-F2 W a s h in g m achine* $6 00 per $3.00. cleaners V a cu u m L o n g ’* 2118 So. Congress H I 2-5562 W A R R E N H O U S E R o o m in g house for men Sin g le and Double Room# • A ir conditioned • M aid service • Reasonable rent • D o s e to cantpu* 19*# San A nto n i# G R 7-7312 Houses— Unfurnished • T W O B E D R O O M , extra clean close. I |90 month a ll bills paid. 32(>7 Bro*’/.** ' Te rrace . D R 2-4418 H O 5-7297. cooled T W O M IA X ’K.S rooms F R O M C am pus a ir fo r men sin g le or double 330-135-SM . G R 6-1712 M rs I, vie F I V E R O O M S tw o I T w o bedrooms, c u u e. One block common- I bath.* tty cen ter bus. N e w ly decorated. D L 3-3573. O N E S I N G L E R O O M $3) One double K itc h e n p rivileg es 1609 Colorado, G R 2 room $20 earl) N ea r cam pus 2096. floned room*, T H R E E B L O C K S C A M P U S . Atr-rondt- fo r boc# lin ­ F rlg id a lre , d in ette tab le u tllltie# ens laundered D a lly m aid service $10.00 and $17 50. 706 W e st 21st furnished and tile baths r n * rAso n o ts * ISO* W e#* A Ten ne *A G O O D r i A C E TO S T I I I T " Duplex — Furnished J L O W E R M O D U R N -a 11 ra etlvel y furn- lshed duplex, ne.ii D elw ood C en ter y a rd kept, w a te r paid re a r. 1506 K irk w o o d tw o bedroom In q u ire upper Road. Houses— for Rent T H D C U T E S T two bedroom .on* bath room, A /C , $100 m onthly. C all T V G R 2-1887 Room and Board F O R U N I V E R S I T Y M en A / C n e w ly food. Reason decorated E x c e lle n t able 1805 Teurl G R 2-5268. A I R C R A F T R F IN T A125, N e w Cessnas reasonable rates R e serve yours : at e a rly tow n games ; A v ia tio n T ra in in g Centers In c. Ph on e i C L 1-4103. the out of for RFTN T A T V 2-2692 *10-313 per month. GR P A R K I N G S P A C E A v a ila b le In p rivate yard % biork from cam pus $25 per semester. G R 8-4139 M O T O R C Y C L E R E N T A 125 b ilk e r P a r k M o to rcycle R e n ta ls. Inc. 1707 B a rto n S p rin g s R o ad • 125 cc Ducat# • 9<>rc D u cat! • 50ec A u to m a tic Su zu ki $2 50 h o ur S i 25 half-hour sem ester G A R A G E S F O R rent with storage *25 2202-B be N u ere*. G R 6-2291 H I 2-2153 G R 1- 5553 locked. C an Miscellaneous Now re n tin g rooms for th* Mon at reduced ra les Q uiet secluded en viro n m en t; p erfect for study. Ivtrge rooms arran g ed by a u lic* Y e a r around ^ ° ° m an ’ a ir co n d itio n in g . carpeted long se* h alls. V A C A N C I E S a t House for 5 men and 5 wom en. the N ueces College In ­ in academ ic atm osphere A /C terested ^ °n t a c t D R 6-2509 F A M I L Y S T Y L E m eals stru m e n t F A A reasonab le $195 P R O F E S S I O N A L F L I G H T T R A I N I N G for p riva te and com m ercial w ith In ­ ratin g s and m ulti-engine course ride. A viatio n approved. M ulti-engine In clu d in g check H u d so n House 2510 R io G rande. G R Train in g ('e n te rs Inc. Ph o n e C L 1-4103 | ro o m s I n d iv id u a lly d e c o ra te d S e p a r a t e lm m itt a re a A m p le s to ra g e ap ace i V V 8 7650. F I V E Y O U N G M 1 'N w anted I .Ar h <* K vW v a c a n c ie s le ft. G R 8 3917. A p a r t m e n t s — U n f u r n is h e d W a n te d U N I V E H S I T Y G I R L S -- large. clean raft)rta bly f urn (shed room*. A ttn -- 2811 Hemp- hai ma non r cain p u * Pa rk G R 6-0814 tlve hill S!N< I L I ;s A N ]: > D O U i i i - E S *30-335 K l tch en p rivl leges T V livin g room F i v e blocksi cam 1010 W est riel vrhborhood accelB# Nr'VV nu# q Diet 23 rd G R :2-78987 In p $30 330 S in g le and > for bov* 172. H O 5 R O O M S F O R M K itc h e n prix lahed M a id sera $40 double $35 ’ 22% G R 2 1930 A ir P a r k 1 N olen 111 Honed I turn S in g le­ ts W est U N I V E R S I T Y kitchen Men A R F.A A ZC. 3124 Sp eed w ay maid. G irls 69490 D R G R 2100 Nueces $3''$. 2-1192 P W O B E D R O O M garage apt lean 3207 B reeze h ill* paid HO 5-7297 T e rra c e $75 al ex tra j N E E D A F E M A L E room m ate Grad- uate student o r a senior preferred T w o bedrooms, pool, U T area. G R 6- 1891. Alterations a l t e r a t i o n s , l a d i e s , m e n , m in t a n Mrs. Sim s. D L 2 1196 5308 1 W 01 m| ro w tain fe llo w students N E E D M O N E Y ? M a le o r fem ale. C on­ throe hours d a lly and carn $30 to $60 w e e k ­ ly W r i t q u a lifica tio n s to personnel d ire c to r Box 14321 D a lla s. Texas tw o to A L T E R A T I O N S Men and wom en 2905 R io Grande. G R 6-0439 M A N Y and se w Inv 61' ! P e r lr W e s t 24’ . ends T W O S I N G L E G IR L S . S h a re tw o bed­ L o rra tn A p artm en t# No. room apt , . A lteratio n * Behrens. G R 6-3681 A fte r J p m., w e ek ­ B e th Mapos. M arv 105 1401 C o field D I S H W A S H E R F O R F r a t e r n it y house Six or T T w e lv e tim es per week fo r free m eals D R 8-7677 G R A D U A T E W O M A N to sshare luxury apt Pool, disposal, carpet. C a ll now G R 8-7196 Printing A L S T E X D U P L IC A T O R S W e 'v e Moved T o 311 E a s t l i t h -D iagonally T iiM u ( « ! .|. u o » i f x I n tO R O l GHBRED M ULT IL ITH IN G MIMEOGRAPHING Across the S tre e t F ro m ° ur 0,(1 Location X ero x in g Theses Papers P rin tin g G R 66593 For Sale B O O K C A S E S A N D D E S K S made to reasonable, som e used arder, ve ry cases and desks b argain * G L 3>813 P O R T A B L E S M I T H C O R O N A w rite r excellent condition, 2 years old. C a ll D R 2-4781 E X T R E M E L Y poodle* puppies Pocket sire. AK-C register- I cd pedigree, h ea lth y , b eau tifu l. G L 3- I 2951. T I N Y T O Y : XK150 J A G U A R H A R D T O P A M -FM a c M ich e lln tire s G R 7-2239 1961 M U S T A N G m otor s. alter 12 hp 4 (IOO miles, on# ow n er *25o G L 2-6823 1965 I i A R LIS Y D A V ID S O N S p rin t H Model. $75 down. resum# p aym ent* B ra n d new C L 3-9129 1963 C O R V E T T E S T I N G R A Y W h ite w ith b u c k In te rio r 4 speed 840 hp AM -FM . N e w tin 's H I 4-3809 IB M T Y P E W R I T E R and also m anuals for sale Good con d itio n and reason- j n W a f t ic t tv ----------- 1 Ex p erien ced able A fte r five and a ll d a y weekends 1 H O 5-6157. G L 3 5124 C O M P L E T E 327 F I en gine w ith C ro w ­ er C am and sin g le A F B — Ex celle n t con d itio n D R 2-3249. 1954 P O N T I A C $169 99 V e r y d efen d able c a r you can d rive on h ig h w a y sm ooth ly, q u ietly, a ll d a v long Come bv 1301 W e st 9 :n Apt. C a fte r 5 or Ro o m 17. C o m putation Center. (P a x ; 188) and prte# Is ve ry reasonable. let m e convince you Typing T Y P I N G . Theses business E le c t r ic tv 're w rite r M rs la w #tc T u llo s B O B B Y E — H I 2-7184 These*. D isse rta ­ tions B o ok*, Repo rts M lm eo g m p h ln % M u ltlllth in g pnge-up graduates U . T M A R T H A A N N Z IV N E Y M B. A. Tv’plng M u ltlllth in g . B in d in g om plete profession*! to tailored ic# jt t v s'u d en t* ty p in g serv- the needs of Univer- S p e d a l keyboard equlp- the ment fo r language, science and rngl- n ecrin g theses and d issertatio n s P h o n e D R 2-3210 A G R 2-7677 2013 G U A D A L U P E S H O R T O N T Y P I N G G ra h am . G L 35725 T I M E ? M iss C Y C L E 964 N o rto n A 'la s. Ex- n $695,00. G R 7-4011 Reaso nab le Rate# IB M E ’eetrom atlc O R RENT? lor a lassoed Ad s - ?'*r’n’’ A I I C l his B U D D Y G O N E T O V I E T N A M B u ; A u x il '65 s 'ln g r a y con vertab le. !a ry top, 365 engine. 4 on the flo o r A M FNI rad io F a c t o r y air, pow er an- $4506 o r best offer, fade P E 5-6288 P E 5- Loaded AUSTIN 11 UA LY 3 PO drive. R A U m ust sell G R 7-5450 I960 Over­ l l y he exan Dai Call V 19 G R 6-8291 fall IN C H P 11 loo p*'rtah'.e $-79 00 In good I; n ew and on d I Hon 1 X vi V IA e \ : ras, I J J 4 143 Ii .K S W \( 'N K A R M A N N GH- ra d io all insid e $16 *5 OO VM K M v k B O O K C A S IIS . H e a te r m irro r, Thom pson ligh t, and b u lletin board G R 6-3319 1904 j- A U n iv e rs ity Avenue D R A P K S, - 5 2 4 4 Rooms for Rent 'O W E R V IE W E X C E L L E N T W O R K 4 B lo ck s from Cam pus R E A S O N A B L E R A T E S A U types of m anuscript# M r* Rodour D R 8-8113 E X P F R I E N C FT) T Y P I N G Accurate. Rea*on«h!#. S E R V I C E near Allan- d «ie H O 5-5813 M A R T H A A N N Z T V L E T M B A T y p in g M u lt lllt h t n f . B in d in g K com plete p rofessional * y p lrg »er tim needs o f univ# '# tailo red #erv- t t r - its Sp erm ' keyboard equtp- lanzuage science and eng: es'-# and d issertation* to D R 2-3210 & D R 2-7677 3013 G U A D A L U P E A R T I S T I C A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G B rie f*, report*, the«e* dissertatio n * m anuscript# ty p e w rite r. M rs A nthony. N o rth e ast U n iv e rs ity . G R 3- 1202 I B M B L O C K F R O M C A M P O S Du# to ran DLS H W 'A R o o m y apartm ent cenation wom en I fa cilitie s 26lh ..... itll** paid I *# of ter: roo* and J TIO rn*'n' w ith ct Al* G R R I039 fn IT H p m - DLS H W A S H E R D V F R 21 O N L Y r it 8 p m . Sci ( rid vhlft 8 p m t a J 2 lo * rn N o t< < j’bon# ra il* appl a fte r 3 I til, T h e 'I a u r n at 12th nm rn fir I - — — —----- ------- -------- - I Ldt F I E S T A A P A R T M E N T AX) E a s t Seth I N D I V I D ! A L L E A S E S A V P R O O M M A T E S A V A L L A B L B LersD-loti* apt# I b ed ro o m * S bath • • to * room kitchen. w a lk in clo##!#, N O * In cheat#, u tlh tle * paid. D a lly m aid i ara in*, p o rte r aervdr# < JR 7 1253 l r C R I r m z .T H E FOLIC K 36 M T L K ! A R Y r n ("nu yt ii q u ail tv ‘ M in need# M en : Imurn hr! Kht 5 i 4>irdmutn *>:<• 19 j Veteran# find men u Ith m ilita ry obi! Rnt Ion go id p «v h nu re tire m e n t bene fit*. C all M r D u nevi* n, L U 2-OOM or I 6 and b l p.rri. Sunday, Sept. j rom# bv bldg 23 C im p M ab rv ; p rn Rat 18 A 19. I EM ALE handicapped ■tudent needs Iie Ip her on cam pus Room g irl to and bo f l A v ln d a A pt* Ardency ap t. O n ly $85 IW K Sa b in e G R . sots m 2-8-138 J I I C B L Y efficien cy K l- R N IS H K l ' apnrtir.-nt. W a sh e r, d ry e r T V an mao. U tllltie # paid. Id e al fo r couple I " .5 I a s t 32) (I ( I R 6 658 • G R 2 r n U n i v e r s i t y a r f a a < kitchen Men- 2024 Sp ee d w ay *30-337 5 0 G R tu x ' Nueces G R 3 119 2 maid, G irls •-MOS S T * H E M P H I L L P A R K K e y In s p e d Cleaned fo u r room# bath A i garage connection blind*. W a * » e r Ocmr os. L A R D E F O U R XIA N ap artm en t $'. '■ m o rth ea-h H a lf b lo k f u s B U !* pa d D R 2-4920 from rani F R E T 'H P R O V I N C I A L L U X U R Y typ e apartm ent ga* paid T h re e bedrooms w a te r com plete kit ber p atio 2?u( Sa b in e A p artm en t Id ! (A t T o H a r ris a W ils o n Pearson G U 2-6201. see T W O B E D R O O M Co* led house *on.nect)r>ra p la y school C li J 9665 a p artm en t carpeted fenced b ark y a rd and washer rn ar S3DC E N F I E L D RO a It "down* furnished stair*. B o c k apt N ice ly large rg# B d rm ■ r f * Bd rn' romblna- t living-dining rn S o l .—root . _ carp o rt on bu* Sin g le person or coupl# N o 8 m inutes to U T . $80 D R 2,55 A C pet* is, O L D H A M H O U S E A P A R T M E N T ! S R I* O ldham Stre e t G R 8 89’ 1 E a * r W a lk in g D ista n c e to Campti# •J. bedroom* •Cable T Y •D Upoaal • AU M ils paid ‘ M aid Service ‘ C en tra! 4 T H eat Ixrang# and S 'u d y A rea Po o l f W 0 B E D R O O M S , tw o bath* A “C W a lk to cam pus Q u ie t $1 6 406 B a s t 32nd H I . 2153 DP. 6-3T29 O V E R L O O K IN G C in One-ro clos** u tilitie s paid. $97 Y , L A K E Quiet n e fficie n cy A/C (..ii 2-1618 even F O U R B E D R O O M n;*ar!men* A 'C . all b ill* paid A v a lla b ft now. 2700 Gund- elu p e $220. • M -......... - 1 I row ....... ............................. 406 E a s t 39th. " Y I- K IN O behind T A N C E — I )r ugstora. U n iversity B ill* pala R 68197 M E N — tw o p k • 1 en en*, W est Ave D U I vat# Od Un D arling Apan.m#nl# for Tiny Budgets O n ly a F e w I-oft V ~ % gf.s-\'. a le r paid 3011 R ed River-A pt 3 *79 30-604 E a st A - . (d o w n stairs •TS 50-gas w a te r pa d 34 ’5-C Groom * M * 4eX> B u rt.e t Ri vd 389 5(5 - U S W e st 55th M odern-i 'i e an -q u I et Open. P le a se go Lo o k L u x u r y B r la r c ilf f Apartm ent ff M anor 1107 Shoed C re tk Blvd. M anager Apt. 105 One bedroom. *125 T w o bedroom. $145 Gradcm *r-qulet-Luxurj L l v ‘ r » CP. 8-8r n The L o rr a ln 1401 E n fie ld FL'4 M anag er Ap: 213 O r# lo v e ly i bed r o m ava c l # • a ly 345 each for 4 hee * 4 glr s G R 7-2536 Ed e n R O C 1308 D E lm (Enfield) Ona lovely two bedroom A va ila b le O n ly *41 22 each fo r 4 bov-* o r 4 g irl* G R 7-7154 ' 1210 C a stle H ill L o v e ly two bedr .< rn for fo ur U p p erclass nom Only $45 each. A/C-quiet-m odern - lean O d p n GR 7-7154 C A L L G R 1-1244 TO P L A C E YO U R C L A S S IF IE D A D Lost and Found CK p laid ch eck R E D A N D B J U n iv e rs ity ( tact Hoi), r t A black S U B S T A N T I A L b ilifo l w atch lost in ’ Gym . 236 B M c U N IV E R S I TY bar rim i i fo u r br den, study, fencer 950. T e r m s : 821 I 7-1932 Houses for Sale Houses Furnished F U N T O L I V E on room vv I th flrep m age. d is h w a t e r I 1401 R o c k e U ff Road 6691: G R 2-6579 aft lake. v. A I j i r g e livin g O good stor- S e e at tx'k $145. G R 6 L A K ! A ’ 'S'. IR 2 U H R E E fpnr I vard. C ourt H I 2- F O R iak( U n iv. l f : S E , it h Sunday, September 19, 1965 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page IO Ink-Splashed UT Kooky-Cartooned In New Booklet By AXN HARDY Texan Staff Writer Color yourself laughable and you’re ready to read the Teasip Coloring Book, a new spoof of the sacred cows of the Univer­ sity. The book, now being sold for 49 cents on the Drag, was cre­ ated by G ary Vance, graduate student in special education who drew and captioned the cartoons “ just for fun.” H E B EG A N his satirical brand of cartooning when he was a so­ ciology undergraduate, and the outgrowth of his effort was a the Xerox copy caricaturizing departmental E n ­ couraged by the response to his book, Vance began thinking of other student-related situations that deserved some ribbing, and institutions. his second effort, the Teasip Col­ oring Book. “ In this book, I try to spoof the things that students like to spoof; such Institutions as blind dates, football, the Health Center — wherever students g e t some bureaucratic static. To me, car­ tooning is as playing a piano or working on a car is to others; it is a useful means of expressing yourself.” G A R Y G ET S some of his ideas while doodling. Some of the best ones have come at social gath­ erings. “ I always find that after a couple of beers, I start to re­ lax — especially around people. M y ideas come more frequently think of then. Sometimes, things the time, but are not always funny later.” funny at that are I “ I try to think of any person or event such as a humorous sit­ uation, and an idea usually starts forming. I get the idea and go from there,” said Vance. Having no formal art training, Vance shows his cartoons to his wife for criticism . “ If she thinks the idea is good, then I know it is all right; but if she falls down laughing, then I know it is really good.” G ary tries to caricature w ell­ known persons, although he fre­ quently watches the actions of the ordinary student and instruc­ tor. Tn some of his sketches, he “ gets the feel” of a particular New Course Open In Modern Arabic A course* in Modern Arabic Literature in Translation is now open to students of senior and graduate standing. Dr. Charles D. Matthews, lec­ turer in the language and culture section of the new Department of Linguistics, announced that the course w ill be offered if a sufficient number of students en- enroll. The three semester hours of credit m ay be counted as either English 374R or Linguis­ tics 374 (I). T H E C O U R SE W IL L give brief attention to the classical and sil­ ver ages of Arabic literature but w ill emphasize more contempo­ rary times. Because many of the lan best works guage havp not yet been trans­ lated Into English, students will be encouraged to read and re­ port on selections available In other languages of the western world. In the Arabic In addition to class work. poets and prose writers of Lebanese and other Arab racial descent. as well as those of Arabic cul­ tural experience, w ill be invited to read and discuss their own works evening at gatherings. informal in Arab DR. M A TTH EW S has spent 15 years lands and has served a tenure of fellowship in the H arvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies and Map Work Continental H A S A C O M P L E A T M echanical Shop Body Repair Shop Parts Departm ent And 14 Stout Men T O T A K E C A R E O F Y O U R M G - T R IU M P H M E R C E D E S - A L F A A U S T IN H E A L E Y J A G U A R - SPRITE ‘This Is th e C h u c k w a g o n .1 " A n y attem pt at humor here would be superfluous and vainglorious. Color it sick," as Vance spoofs the cam pus eatery in his "Teasip Coloring Book." O ther campus institutions in th# book are the campus cop, health center, and fraternities. expression tions. from his observa- “ I G L E S S MOST O F m y In­ spiration and style come from B ill Mauldin’s ‘Up Front’ a book of cartoons about the World W ar I I soldier.” While a medic in the A ir Force, Vance did a sim ilar spoof on a particular squadron’s loss of a missile firing compe­ tition. The commander of the squad­ ron, a colonel, came to see G ary. “ I didn't know him personally, but he made things a little excit­ ing for me for awhile, especially since I was an airman second class.” Vance said he has no m alice toward any of his cartoon subjects, and he tries constantly to stress this when talking about them. While Vance does not think he w ill have time to do another book, he plans to draw a few cartoons for the Texas Ranger. Because of his artistic endeav­ Friends Meeting Sunday Friends meetings w ill be held by the Quakers of Austin every Sunday at IO a.m. at 3014 Wash­ ington Square. Tins week’s pro gram opens with a forum and Sunday school. Silent worship w ill be observed from l l a.m. to noon. ors. he also plans to continue making charcoal figure studies on burlap for several students. for AS W ITH H IS CARTOONS, ideas these studies come from all sources. “ I was reading a book about John Paul Jones when a girl asked me to do a sketch on some burlap she had. I asked her if she would like a ship, because there was a very pretty picture of a ship In the book. She now has a ship to hang on her w all.” ’Berkeley Rebels' At MSC Sunday Tile film ‘‘Berkeley Rebels” w ill be shown at 6:15 p.n*. Sun­ day the Methodist Student Center, 2434 Guadalupe. in Tho film was shown on C BS in June as a news special. Following the film, a panel w ill discuss it. Members include Jack Holland, dean of student life; John Orr, Students’ Association president; Dr. Fred Cohen, associate pro­ fessor of law ; Wilda Campbell: and Elm er Hierholzer, Methodist clergyman, A snack supper w ill be served at 5:30 p.m. before the film. s - to last! In w a r q1 h e a d e d A professional only 25c and yourse!4 A t wash for can do ; rew equipment c a < com r se do I' job street clothes with re C o " c Derated vacuum ers e 4- you c'ean you "ter or* like it. G ; e i:4 DQ in 5 minutes you t le k : a f - you enious :hemi- w ater the mess* e a n - c a r s way you t r y — y o u ll F O R M I N U T E S SOFSPRA'S GREAT, TOO, FOR: MOTORCYCLES • TRAILERS • MOTORS • VENETIAN BLINDS • ANYTHING PORTABLE & WASHABLE • BOATS SDFSPRA ' CAR WASH C O I N O P E R A T E D OPEN 24 HOURS EVERY DAY! 2600 GUADALUPE 3 OTHER CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 'f 6 11avon Ston e $ !< S A ’ c ‘ • q semester. I SO. Se# 6 P P V irg in !# C alhoun T y p in g S e rvic e Ser'd-^be- a TO ce■ F*rofe**lona! w ork In all field*. In c lu d ­ ing m ultlllthing and binding on these* and dissertation* better. F or 1301 Edges* i -od le - e s fe r Sym bol# C R 5-3636 N otary M A R J O R I E D E L A F I E L D T>-p!rtg Ser- F ifte e n venrs ex re dissert#!i< ag \ -e 20c a pege p<" cnee these? - D u s t i n A O n f u Factory Authorized Dealer SOI w . 6th GR 6-532 P.S. W e Sell Hondas Too! V>?4 v I ( M I R • B K I Y IU '! . I F F A B E R K M A N Bv fi.e Thousands Bc * h re- * studious tru d g e d through old* the 4 long boe* a t Drag bookstore* last w eek fighting to buy texts for them cours**. A f t e r *6* w aitin g a* req titra tio n new student* thought t~e worst p a rt v, as over. Wrong. I* s no fun to tri * from ona ,r) search Stc-0 to th® o t h e r ct a text. A n d theme student* who v a t t e d to buy bocks a fte r c ass s begin shouldn t feel so smug either, D rag bookstore workers say th a t th e crow ds a r* thickest and th a t more books are p ir chased on the classes than any other. first day of Isn’t ther® an easier w a y ’ Purchasing Textbooks at G a rn er and S m ’ih . . . a student f naliy make *• \ a - n . ■%->- n I f I \ %**• * a %»■ r . I rn rn ( J 1 I * J . - r* r + I W V ! n i l Browsing Through the Book Shelves at the Co-Op . . . some of the thousands of persons who shopped for textbooks last week. Dr. Lewis Study Out Friday Curtain Club to Hold ‘Rainm aker1 Tryouts The Curtain Dub will hold readings for “ The Rainmaker,’’ the by N. Richard Nash, at Methodist Student Center at 7:30 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, David Grote, club president, announc­ ed. lf the origins of romanticism and medieval troubadours intri­ gue you, then Archibald Lewis’ new study of “ The Development of Southern French and Catalan Our Snow Jo b Is Coming! W atch for it—— 3 L O C A T I O N S 5 1 0 W . 19th 704 W . 2 9 th 9 0 7 W . 2 4 th WE'VE MOVED! Campus Costume Shop RENTING COSTUMES, TUXEDOS FORMALS, TAILS ALTERATIONS 2314 NUECES Home G L 3-2269 Ph. G R 2-8561 Don t P a y More For Your Prescriptions Shop Cash P h a rm a cy’s Discount Prices For • Complete lines of name brand cosmetics • M ens toiletries at discount prices • Greeting cards for all occasions • Complete courtesy mailing counter CASH PHARMACY ' On the Drag" a* 3025 Guada'jpe — GR 6-722r> STUDENT JOBS! Ind ividuals or Groups Sell cold drinks, hot, dogs, programs, etc. at football games for extra money for yourself or for your organization. Directed by The Ex-Students’ Association for The University of Texas em France -anging cf lo\vi> dies Provencal. their native la­ languag \ in ALTHOUGH tho N m h n French conquered their sou in n neighbors in the Eighth Century, Dr. the IjOw is points out that people of southern France still re tain cultural distinctions more akin to the Ita lia n s and C atalo n ­ ians of northern Spain. is spoken Provencal still In certain southern a r e a s of France, he says. and Cato Jan, the language of northeastern Spain, is a variety of Provencal and distinctly different f r o rn modern Spanish. Dr, Lewis’ l> ok examines the familial, social, economic, gov- ernmrtntal. military, and reli­ gious life of the area through the Eleventh Century It [resents the firs! comprehensive picture of the whole society, In contrast rn earlier books whFh h me only concentrated on specific areas or topics. LBJ Will Attend Graham's Revive W ASHINGTON -UP - A V. Kite House guest said Sa* adm. im -1- dent Johnson has promised evan­ gelist B illy Graham to attend Ins revival meeting in Houston next month. The Rev. C a l ' , i n Thiolman, .Johns n Montreat, NXT. said gave the promise when t h e y made a joint telephone call to the evangelist Friday, Graham n is in the Methodist F pit • Rochester, Minn., where he re­ cently underwent surgery. Society, 718-1050,’’ should be your cup of history. W H IL K IN FR A N C K IO years ago on a Ford Foundation fellow - slop. Dr. Lewis, a noted Univer­ sity historian, became fascinated with the underlying differences between the familial culture of medieval Southern French socie­ ty and the feudalism of Northern France. Tile results of his digging Into archival records at European universities and Harvard, Yale, and Princeton; libraries will be published Friday by the Univer­ sity Press. Dr. Lewis, professor of history, Impressed with is particularly the similarity of the Southern French and Catalan society to the old American South. Women in played a greater role the than any­ South France area where else in Europe. Ile relate* that cultural pheno­ menon to the time when trouba­ dours left ihe provinces of South- Dr. Fulda Receives European Leave Dr Carl Fulda, professor of law, has a leave of absence for the fail semester to visit Bel­ gium and Germany for a re­ search project on international trade. Various law’ firms In the two countries have agreed to give Dr Fulda access to case ma­ terials dealing with international trade He will use the informa­ tion in teaching as well as in a forthcoming hook. Dr. Fulda also has been asked lecture on American law’ at the University to give a Antitrust of Trieste, Italy. At the University, Dr. Fulda the Hugh Lam ar Stone holds Chair in Civil Law. He came to I T in 1964 from Ohio State Uni­ versity’ where he had taught since 1954. He has been a con­ th-1 Department of sultant Commerce a id the Attorney Gen­ eral's national committee to study antitrust laws. to HANK’S GRILL A pply in person at the Alumni Center 21 IO San Jacinto, across from Memorial Stadium. Texas Size Portions Hank s Special Sirloin $1.22 8 Oz. Charcoaled Ham burger Steak .98 a 2532 G U AD ALU PE G R 8-848? 2234 G u a d a l u p e Italian Food Pausing to Read in Hem phill's . . . before he makes his I.na! selection. R e co rd C o ld in W e s t ; H o t W e a th e r in East By H I K V S S O O V IE D P R E S S Record-cracking cold Sunday stung a broad Western area that had just dug out of the worst September snow in its history'. \ B K . F R E E Z E chilled sec­ tions of Wyoming, Montana, Id a ­ ho, Nevada, and Utah. Tempera­ tures plung'd down to ti above zero in Butic. Mont. — five days before the #*nd of summer. Thousands of motorists w h o had been strand'd by h o a v y snow Thursday night in Wyom­ ing resumed their travels. Ma­ jor highways reopened, but dr iv ens were warned that roads still were slick in spots. Wyoming agriculture officials estimated t. e storm may result in losses- of rrv»re than SI mil­ lion. without counting the harm Sugar beet and to corn crops were ho hardest livestock. T H E STO RM D IE D out with a Scattered light fail in the snow zone that extended from central Wyoming to northern Nebraska. ‘ now carpet Til* storm laid a than ranged from thro*1 inches In Chadron Neb , to about two foot iii Rawlins, V* vo. Snow mr! ti ti rapidly In north Western Nebraska, where fa r m ­ ers welcomed tho moisture. New low tomjxT.uturns for the date, month or season included; E ly Nev., 17, Pocatello, Idaho, 25 md Salt Lake City 27. m m tit o k im : v re-my points had heavy r a I n : Kl >ren<'(*f h.it was drewdied by j .105 inches of rain. More than an inch doused Lubbock and A b r; I* re-, T» x , ("ar’shad, N M , and Flagstaff, A ti/. i t I aft *rri' in rrnw high H r Sent. IM. loti i •• f a tin e of !*o, a £ g| Goodyear Shoe Shop • « Oft | 405 W 23rd S T R E E T B E R K M A N 5 R E N T F M P A D I O S *6 M O , T A P E R E C O R D E R S $ I 2 M O . TV $12.50 M O . STEREO SYSTEMS $10 MO. CLEANING and Repair Service A L L M A K E S T TPE W R I T E R S and A D D E R S S*A "}*'d - Electric L O A N E R S F U R N I S H E D 3 D A Y S E R V I C E 99 Day G-.amante® I M V I R S H V OI i I X AS i C L A S S R I N G T ; E F IN L ST M A D E ! Z i a I . E S 2236 G U A D A L U P E T H E L O N G H O R N CO W BO Y HEADQUARTERS ■'IF ITS WI EPM Ut HAVE I t ’ SH O E R E P A IR IN G CUSTOM MADE ' FN G O O D S IE UTL b SADDLES CAPITOL SADDLERY 1614 L A V A C A • • • • • • • • • • • a ® * * a e * * • • • • RENT Electric C alculator cr jctrlc Adder s50°° SI5°° G ood W o r l e y TYPEWRITERS As Low As s a %29so I M O . c a l l G R 6 - 3 5 2 5 Sunday, September 19, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg# I L Faculty Council Sets Meeting 601b Special Sections Created for Overflow The Faculty Council will meet at 4 p.m. Monday to consider a proposal which, its sponsor says, will give the faculty a bigger w ir e in U niversity affairs. Dr. Forest Hill, professor of economics, is sponsor of the pro­ posal to request that each stand­ the G eneral ing com m ittee of F aculty the council. to im prove com m unica­ "This will faculty,*' Dr. tions within Hill said. report the said, TOO OFTEN’, he the standing com m ittees, which num­ than a hundred, do ber m ore not report to the council or re ­ p o r t only to the U niversity ad ­ m inistration. the This council, legislative arm of the the G eneral Faculty, In the dark on m any issues af- long-range ie ting the fatmlty and the Uni­ versity, Dr. Hill pointed out. leaves The faculty is to blame for its failure to be informed on vari­ ous issues studied by standing com m ittees, he said. "The stand­ ing com m ittees have the initia­ tive to report to the council, hut few of them do so ’’ Such topics as student holts- Students who received ct edit for English 601a but were unable to take English 601b Special may be able to enroll in several new­ ly formed sections of the special class. "B IX W IS E O F shortage of staff the D epartm ent of English w as initially forced to disappoint m any students entering with cre­ dit for E.6()la by being unable to offer E fiOlb Sjx»cial for (hem in the current se m e ste r," according to an English D epartm ent an- nounccrm nt. Since registration, m ent has bt‘en able several set tie rs of I-,' Eh)Ib Special, j No sections have been added, however, for E 601b Advanced. the d ep art­ staff to to "In addition the newly created sections (of E.GOlb Spe­ c ia l), places also a re available in some of the existing sections th a t w ere previously re stric te d ,” die announcem ent stated. D epartm ent a1 represent a th c s w dl m an a special table in th« south corridor of the first fluor of the English Building from IO a.m . to noon and from 2 to 5 p m. Monday and Tuesday to enroll as m any eligible students as can Im? accom m odated restricted IN ANOTHER change, E.314K.- 8. originally to stu­ dents in the College of Engineer­ ing. now is available to other stu­ dents with credit for frt'shm an English. I— Campus News in Brief— I ing, registration, and parking a r s handled by the com m ittees. " t UH* OF com m ittees th a t are not m eeting should either be abolished or investigated,” E u­ gene W. Nelson, council secre­ tary. said. Nelson added t h a t some of the work that many of the com m ittees are doing never gets reported to the faculty. He a called Dr. Hill's m eans of dissem inating this in­ formation to the rest of the fac­ ulty. proposal era! months before we will be the council,” to able hp said. to report OTHER THAN H IM /S propo* sal, the council will consider only routine m atters. Dr N or­ m an H arkerm an, vice-chancel­ lor, said he had no m aterial to present to the council, but said he would answ er any questions asked by the faculty at the m eet­ ing. The m eeting will be held in English Building 201. "A* the University changes, our problem s change.** Nelson said that the fa n il tv m ust keep up with such changes and speci­ fically m entioned student hous­ ing as an area of concern. The housing com m ittee has m et only once since its Inception last June. Phil M. Ferguson, ch a ir­ man of the com m ittee, said th a t in Ju ly was the m eeting held attended bv only a few of the eight m em bers. "It will be sev- "The section will offer a new ap­ proach to the teaching of liters* turn in that three senior m em ­ bers of the departm ent will colla* borate in teaching the course,’* according to the announcem ent. "E ach will conduct the class for approxim ately five weeks and will teach his own specialty — one the d ram a, another poetry, and the third the novel,” it con­ tinued. * Scholarships Available Several Good Neighbor wrho- lurship* are avaiiahte lo stu­ dent* from the Western Hem is­ phere, Silvan Mo veery, Interna­ tional Office foreign student ad­ viser, ha* announced. Deadline for picking up appli­ International the cation* Office, IOO VE Twenty-six th St., is Tuesday. at ★ Editor Deadline M o n d a y Deadline for subm itting applica­ tion* for m anaging editor of Tim Daily Texan is 4:30 p.m . Mon­ day, Loyd Edm onds, Texas Stu­ dent Publications general m an a­ ger, has announced. in at Application blanks m ust be turned the TSP business office, Journalism Building 107. R ichard Cole, g raduate student in journalism , agreed to fill the position until the TSP board of directors could m eet and select a person for the fall sam ester. ★ Sunday Services Set Sunday services, dents are especially invited. to which stu­ The P resbyterian Cam pus M inistry will m eet at 7 p m . Sunday in the U niversity P resby­ terian Church at the 2205 San An­ tonio Street entrance. Dr. Ro­ bert Davidson will speak on "Orthodoxy of Involvem ent.” Oet- acquainted coffees will be held from 2 until 4:30 p.m . Monday through F riday of this week. Tile F irst U nitarian Church will begin its public forum pro­ gram s at IO a m. Sunday a t the church. 4700 G rover. 'Die Rev. Brandoch Lovely will preach at l l a m. on "E thics for an Age in Chaos.” N ursery c a re la provided from IO a m. to noon for students with children. ★ Astronomy Speech Set on "Recent tile Rem its Planets” will be the topic of a Department of Astronomy eoBo- qium at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Phy­ sic* Building 313. Dr. Harlan J. Smith, chairman of the Deportment of Astrono­ my and director of McDonald Ob­ servatory, will talk. ★ Two UT Exes in Corps Two U niversity ex-students have been nam ed P eace Corps volunteers a fte r com pleting 12 weeks of training. Phillip M ack Caldwell, who re ­ ceived his bachelor of a rts de­ g ree in m athem atics, com pleted his training a t A tlanta U niversity and is going to Ghana. Jam es Lyndon Woodall, who also received his bachelor of a rts in m athem atics, com pleted tra in ­ ing a t The U niversity of Texas and will leave for A fghanistan in la te Septem ber. 'I'he course was offered at TPS at 0 a.rn In Engineering la b o r a ­ tories Building 102. The P resb y terian Campus M inistry and the First U nitarian Church of Austin have announced What Goes on Here Ca th o lls 8 30-4 3(1 Last Sunday V l o Ma ss es, OM 15 and S I Student Center IO I In terv iew s Inter- in 11 v 111 k *t C o lleg e H ou se, stu d en ts for < >sted 2708 N u « -«s, IO F rien d s M eetin g ton S q u are 8014 W'ashlnu- 10 and l l F oru m and regu lar **r- vlofs, U n ita r ia n C hurch, 4700 d ro ­ ver. 11 Newm an Club, Ch I hoi Sc Student Conter. 2 5 T h re e A rtists. G loria on L a k s A ustin. \v IjiKuri* rx h ib lt Chirt) fifth and 2 12 Kl r-FM programs 90 7 mr 2 r> C o n tem p orary p r i n t s from Greene. Art M u seum 17. 4 L onghorn B an d C oncert, H ogg A uditorium 5 M ovie, ton;.m s A u d itoriu m . ‘'D ia m o n d h ea d .” w ith pon­ Texas Union sh o w in g s, 7 P resb y teria n Carnous M in istry to hear ta lk by Dr Robert D avid son , I mw rn tty Presbyterian Church, 22tfi S an A n tonio. Monday day t< m a n agin g e d ito r sh ip o f Da an. J o u r n a lism B u ild in g 107. 8 30 1 30 Cactus distribution, n a l l s n i B u i l d i n g 107 •ply for I e x - J< tur- Kl JGV TV p rogram s, 8 ■kl IO 30 C hannel 9. 9 5 B la n k et T n x p ictu res, U n iv ersity ( ’o-O p to A rtist S olo 9 1 S ea so n S eries to C u ltu ral E n te r ta in ­ m en t ev en ts. H ogg A u d i t o r i u m box 'iff Ire tic k e ts a n d 8 5 S tu d en ts m ay p ick up ap p lica­ tor Good N e ig h b o r Interna! lonal o f fic e . a t tion b lan k s S ch olarsh ip s l l 1 30 D in in g se r v ic e op en s Alum ni C enter. 1 3 M em b ersh ip F resh m an C ou n cil, 321 r e g istr a tio n fo r l e v i s U nion 2 F a cu lty C ou n cil, E n glish B u ild in g 201 d ents. try 2 4 3o C o ffee for n ew and old stu ­ I‘r esb y teriiiu S tu d en t M in is­ 2 2 '5 S an A n tonio. 5 IO .Student m a sses. C ath olic S tu ­ dent ('en ter 6 30 an d 8 E ven !n g C lasses spoil* sored by U n iv ersity b egin , U n iver­ sity J u n ior H ig h S ch o o l, 1910 Red River KTBC-TV to Air CCC Local directors of Campus Cru­ sade for Christ, an interdenomi­ national student Christian move­ ment, will be interviewed on "H om an’s World” at noon Mon­ day on KTBC-TV. Frank Rifer, central regional director of Campus Cru­ sade; Jon Buell, University di­ rector; and Judy M oons women’s work coordinator on campus, will discuss the local, national, and international ministry of Campus for Christ with pro­ Crusade gram moderator Jean Boone. south ★ F oreign Film Classics Show n film dom estic and classics shown In B atts Audi­ torium give language students a chance to h e a r accom plished na­ tive speakers converse in the lan­ guage they a re studying. H ie film classics project, fi­ nanced largely by a subsidy from the U niversity, is supplem ented by a 25 cent adm ission charge on a few of the film s each year. Cit,/ fjationat Bani l i e c o n i I a ffy incite you lo dee our new b a n i i i (it I es cit 9/,h ( O n y reSS (before opening y o u r b a n i ^ A c c o u n t , in cesti a a fa e o ur Reservoir Plan May Hit Snags - I D am s on 3 Rivers Proposed by Arm y By the Associated Press An Arm y board's recom m enda­ tion of an $84 million m ulti-reser* voir project to percolate w ater into a spongelike underground rock touch off form ation m ay controversy in Texas. The Arm y Board of E ngineers for R ivers and H arbors recoin m ended th a t Congress consider the E dw ards Underground R esee voir project in a report released S aturday in Washington. THE PLAN calls for reserv o irs on the headw aters of the NuecesJ Frio, and Sabinal rivers w est of the escarp m en t of the E dw ard# P lateau . The unusual project would b# the E dw ard a giant aim ed a t feeding lim estone form ation, highly porous sponge in the earth' th at supplies w ater to 17 cities, including San Antonio, San M ar Cos, New B raunfels, and U valde, San Antonio is the nation’s larges! city to get all its w’a te r under ground, said John V andertulip, chief the T exas engineer of W ater Developm ent Board. The dam s would hold back w ater flows in the rivers, allow ing them to trickle into the for m ation, which is honeycombed with hundreds of caves and sink­ holes. STILL TO BE faced before go­ ing to Congress is a hearing on the proposal by the Texas W ater Rights Commission, as well a s Gov. John Connally’s own per­ sonal scru tin y of the project. Under present law% Gov. Con­ nally will have 90 days in which to com m ent. The Texas proce­ dure includes a full-dress head­ ing before the w ater rights com ­ m ission. The A rm y’s b o a rd ’s recom ­ m endation, based on a study com pleted a y e a r ago, was quiqjg to provoke criticism . " I would call it a pipedream like th a t expense. A price a t th a t is ridiculous,” said Jo e D. C arter, ch airm an of the com ­ m ission. H arry Burleigh, chief T exas planner for the US B ureau of R eclam ation, said the project al­ re a d y has com e under criticism for som e authorities in the af­ fected w atersheds. The A rm y board said the fed­ e ra l governm ent’s sh a re of th# project cost would total $30,724,- 000 interests rep ay $53,324,000. and non-federal Who would pay the non-federal is a potential stumblifag sh a re som e officials believe, block, since w ater source a re not c le a r, ly identifiable a s they a re front a surface reservoir. BEST BET! Convenient! LA U N D R Y & CLEANERS O N E D A Y Service On Request In by 9 Out by 5 In the Campus Traffic Pattern Gov. John Connally W ill Seek Third Term to Office . . . announcement came Saturday in Amarillo. (See related story, Page One.) LBJ's Give First Contribution In UT's Drive to Buy Paisano An for fellowship advisory board the Dobie Paisano project will be ap­ pointed to help the U niversity in planning the program , including procedures to be followed in se­ lecting reeipents, W ardlaw said. Both the steering com m ittee for the project and Institute of L etters the Texas will be represented on this com ­ m ittee, although the actual opera­ tion of the program will rest with the university. MEM BERS of the steering com ­ m ittee a re Dillon Anderson, H ouston; Mody B oatright, A ustin; Glen E vans, M idland; John H enry Faulk, Austin and New Y ork; O'Neil Ford, San Antonio; George F uerm ann, H ouston; H er­ b ert G am brel!, D allas; F red Gip­ son, M ason; John G raves, F o rt W orth; Wilson Hudson, Austin; P e te r Hurd, San Patricio, New M exico; R alph Johnston, Hous­ ton; Tom Lea, E l P aso ; Holland McCombs, D allas; Allen M ax­ well, D allas; John Meaney, Aus­ tin ; J. R. P a rte n , Houston; W alker Stone, W ashington, D. C.; J a y Taylor, A m arillo; Lon Tink­ le, D allas; F ra n k E. V andiver, Houston; and W ardlaw. to A gift from P resident and M rs. Lyndon B. Johnson was the first money actually received in the J . F ra n k purchase drive D o b ies ran ch Paisano and p re ­ sent it to the U niversity which in turn will operate it as a place w here w riters and other creative people can go and work. ACTIVE solicitation of funds for the purchase of Paisano be­ gan this su m m er under the di­ rection of a steering com m ittee whose m em b ers have already a p ­ proached a num ber of individuals and foundations. A pproxim ately one third of the $76,000 needed to buy the ranch has already been given or pledged, said F ra n k H. Wart I law, d irector of the U niver­ sity P ress, speaking for the ste e r­ ing com m ittee. N am es of donors will be announced later. H ie gift from P resident and M rs. Johnson, personal friends and a d m ire rs of J. F ra n k Dobie, w as m ade through the Johnson Foundation a t Johnson City. H ie am ount was not disclosed. a close The m ovem ent to buy Paisano and m aintain it as a perm anent m em orial to Dobie began early Johnston of this year. Ralph Houston, of D obie’s, purchased the ranch to allow tim e for funds to be ra is­ ed. Johnston him self has contri­ buted IO per cent of the purchase price, $7,600, and is taking c a re of all legal fees and interim m ain ­ tenance costs. friend all that WARDLAW SAID the public solicitation phase of the drive will begin now of and Dobie’s friends and adm irers will be invited to contribute. He said the com m ittee hopes to raise a good deal m ore than the $76,000 p urchase price, since all m oney in excess of that am ount will be held in tru st by the U niversity for to and applied creativ e Donations w riters. should be m ade by cheeks pay ­ able to the Doble-Paisano P ro ­ fellowships ject, Box 7819, U niversity Sta­ tion, Austin. Gifts will be tax de­ ductible, W ardlaw said. E a rly this sum m er the U niver­ sity agreed to accept the ranch and to operate it as a m em orial to Dobie. Its p rim ary use will be to encourage creative w riting in all fields, but the U niversity m ay, the its discretion, also use a t ranch for trips — botanists, zoologists, and geolo­ gists. field for in th a t its n a tu ra l W ardlaw said SITUATED ON B arton Creek southw est of Austin, Paisano will be kept state, W ardlaw said. It will be a n atu re sa n c tu a ry with hunting prohibit­ ed. The ranch house will be kept in sim ple style very m uch as it w as when Dobie occupied it, and th e furnishings will be the sam e. the R ay­ m ond Dickson Foundation has agreed to contribute $1,000 a year tow ard m aintenance of the ranch and th at C arr P. Collins of Dal­ las has agreed to give $1,000 a y ear, through the T exas Institute tow ard a fellowship of L etters, fund for w riters. The institute also will undertake to provide a $2,000 J . F ra n k Dobie fellowship annually and has a lread y raised m ore than $1,800 of th a t am ount. Joe Bradley Gets Med-School Post D ean C a rte r Pannill announc­ ed F rid a y the appointm ent of Dr. Jo e B radley Aust as professor and ch airm an of the D epartm ent the U niversity’s of S urgery a t South T exas M edical School. He will begin his duties Ju n e I, 1966. "H iis is the first appointm ent of a scientist a t the d ep artm en ­ tal ch airm an level a t South Tex­ as M edical School and m ark s an im portant point in the develop­ m ent of a highly qualified science facu lty ,” D r. Pannill said. b f tea a l ( hechinij s J c c o u n l fit t e il to meet y o u r specific Special Student Rates ne a ls 1. NO SERVICE C H A R G E 2. PAY O NLY FOR YOUR CH EC KS ... 8c EACH 3. PERSONALIZED C H EC KS CALL GR 6-6631. m , c b a n i o f th e J J o n r 4. HANDLE IT BY MAIL! FOR FURTHER INFORM ATION BANKING HOURS: 9:00 A.M.-2:00 P.M. DRIVE-IN BANK 7:30 A.M.-6:00 P.M. MEMBER EDIC $ 6 5 ° Rent a TYPEWRITER $1950 PER * 1 2 Electric Typewriters PER M O N T H SEMESTER OO per mo. A N D UP Late M odel Royals, Underwoods, Remingtons FREE DELIVERY HEMPHILL'S iii, GR 6-6631 9fh & Congress — 2 Blocks South of Capitol Phone GR 8-8223 Sunday, September 19, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 12