W eath er: • Cool, Showers • High: Low 60's • Low: M id 40's Vol. 67 Committee Probe In Caroline Case To Act Promptly ‘Appropriate Restraint’ Questioned by Regents After AnSi-War Rally The question of whether a University professor, in canine for a “ revolution,” vio­ lated University rules pertaining to public conduct has boon referred by University President Norman Ha, herman to the Coun­ cil on Academic Un < lorn and Responsi­ bility. Haekerman t *>k ti s a< non in response to a request by tim Un.,-,! of Regents to lnvestig. te tho - ndu t and remarks of Dr. Larry Car«!l:no, a ss is ta tit professor of philosophy, at a r illy after a parade for “ peace in Vietnam" Oct. Id. 'as gromptlv Tile Council, an elective faculty com- mitf(H\ has b<*en rid-: d t • render its opin­ possible, consistent ion with good, thor? ugh treatment.” said Hark- erman. Caroline Comments Dr. Caroline, in remarks to the peace rally, was nu m d a maying, “ You can't change An erican sex iety by d ang it one thing at a time—the whole bloody mess has to go. What America needs Is a revo­ lution " He added “ US forces in Vietnam are fighting to main? n wh * we have been taught to believe is the American way of life. and that way of life has to go.” The rules proviso n under wha h Dr. Caroline's words have G*en questioned calls on each Uni%’orsit> teacher to “ ex­ ercise appropriate restraint’’ at all times, since 4 the public may judge his profes­ 'n s utterances*** sion and his institution I" After tile S turdav meeting of tile Re­ gents, Dr. Ca ml inn I ’ame I nrwsjiaper ac­ counts of the rally f r starting the con­ troversy. Distortions C h im ed These acc< unt “ severe distort imp,..-* over-all tort-d. I esp' • ' that showed I . revolution." , he asserted, contained is of wh it I said. Tile of my speech was dis- ' said in r v speech things Idn’t have meant a bl - iv By “ the whop Dr. Caroline ch the problems < criminal!' n w 1 the lit'."- they h Frank D. Fin Board of Regen u rd ay that pion coneen cd, about an pro said.” Erwin said “ to — and will — hers comply wit put lie cond id . bh-.dy me-'s has to go,” mod that he “ meant all sol iety — poverty dis­ exploitation, all down ve to go.” in Jr., chairman of the re id • statement Sat­ ed the Board as “ deeply some of the things that ■s >or is purported to have * Re'gents have “ a right insist” th it far ulty mom- ; i ’' . i v e ? previsions on Classics Professor Found Dead Monday Kenneth Frank Campbell Ruse. 29, as­ sistant professor of classics was found dead Mondo; at Us home, 301 W. Thirty- fifth st. Investigating officers said that Rose had been dead several days. There was no evidence of f a1 play ,however, officers reported. An autopsy was ordered. Rose, who was bom in London, England, came to the University from the Univer­ ses- of Rochester, NVY, He had also taught a* Kent School in Connecticut. He attended Exeter College at Oxford, and received his master's degree there in 1962, He was the author of several articles published in classical journals. T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin M ay the G re a t Pumpkin Make Your H allow een A H ap py O ne! AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1967 Ten Pages T o d a y No. 55 Ballot to Pose Viet Question University studor tun tty to vt >ir<' an conflict in the cd nesdav. C-irdidan-. In the newly f amt and lour amendm also will be \ ?“d The polls will he 5 p.m. Wedr.osda.v. J)resent orange idc dent may only vol ? ■ d: «ol or • <(liege it and at sp*, if ic vet; To V iew \ jot Issue up The referendum concerning Vietnam. appear oat the bark of each LUN; e r r [, p. sed amendmt‘Hts, r*-.ads “ Are y s in ver of sn immediate cease fire and wi drawal of : : t**d States forces from Vc r eel so the Vietnamese people can set their ow n pi blems? Yes. No. Uncertair Forty-six candidates have filed for 25 the available 31 positions in the House Delegatee No one applied for candidacy six positions, Arehiteeture Candidate* Architecture Plaep I candidates are I Von Rosenberg, Doug Strange, and L r Moriarty’. Arts and Sciences Place I, Tom M G rej and Jim Arnold; P l a c e 2 Dong Benni Walt Wilder, and Rudy B o ’htel; Place B ill I .ori rn or and R ay D. Truitt. P la n Charles M Kinney and Karolvr. K a rr; Pl; >. Holder. Ur; (I. Bai Includes Vmentlments y the FII n the balli on 3 2, An win all “ A T be barred cu] ar activ h ice shall be one 3 'ction 3.9. Amendn I “ At no time she Student Assembly b n or be barred fr •actin rular a * vitit ie of disciplinary p he Inst tut onal Sup* ■»et ion 4.2. A mend nr I, “ At the time rd ti c probation or be I n ; Pla«a ibbit lead and • i M; •r; I M ■( Si r- read, •ut lh amend to ; any member of on scholastic pro m participation rt Els the final out­ er e* dings de ta led III amend to and while hold- ;hali not be >n schol- h arr od from partici- tar activities ss till* ip I mary proceedir gs tonaI SuDoiemen *■ »nt TV amend to read, a graduate student Ims$©d a min im u m sours at Thf* I *nivf*r«* lh or rBOPivtsd a cig* ii tv of Tpxas at A us-* if) President's Family Has Orange Blood . . . says Mrs. Norm an Haekerman, with daughters K atie (i) and Sally. UniversiiyTheir Lire For Norman Hackermans The By D EIX )R K S L IZ A R IF Mrs. Norman Haekerman, wife of the University’s newly-ele, ted President, has been having a love affair Or many years. Ever since Jan. I. 19-15, when the Hacker­ mans arrived in Austin, Gene Haekerman has been “ in love with the University of Texas.” “ When we left Virginia, our daughter, Pat, wac wearing a snowsuit,” Mr«, Haekerman axplains. “ Arriving in Austin where the sun was shining and due leave* were on the trees, we took cfi our winter chithe and knew this was it—our home Tile Hackermans have truly made Austin their home and the University their life. Mrs. Haekerman says, “When we first came to Austin, we had no place t live. We took an apartment on Guadalupe that I Hi one room and a shower. Did > ut ever try »o wash clothes in a shower?" she laughs. Attended John Hopkins Both Dr. and Mrs. Haekerman arn ori­ ginally from Maryland. Mrs. Ha Kerman graduated from high school during the De­ pression and her father, who was superin­ tendent of schools in Baltim- re. insist* ! that she take typing and shorthand t 1 earn a living, With this sercret.trial training, Mrs. Haekerman worked and look night courses at J bn Hopkins I'niver-itv. “ There* were 2,fHK) boys and no girls iii Hopkins then and it was delightful for me being 19 and single." Mrs. Haekerman laughs Her single days were nu nherod, however, for on the tennis courts at Hop- kins. she* met Norman Haekerman, who had already earned his doctorate. Married in Ital tin Mire Tile couple was married in 1940 in Balti­ more. and Dr. Haekerman continued work­ ing in private industry and teaching right courses at Hopkins. Moving rn New York City for a year, Dr. Haekerman became research chemist for the Coast Guard. His wife worked for the vice-president of Teachers* College at C ‘lumina University and did I - k reviews f r the Educational Forum a pr Dssional journal. Drew ( artooas following year, ti;.- Hackermans Tile spent Institute, Virginia Polytechnic v tore Mrs. Haekerman drew cartoons i r a b'K)k on leaching engineering She re­ calls, ‘Tha* vvas my first drawing expo: - cnee. I'm not too proud of it, but the book v b I: it.” W Mi d ep tim Business < andid&tefl Y irk Andrea R idd and e *• A rd; and Pat Anselin; Pl and Thomas Purcell; ins and Joe Hyde; I and Melinda Brooks Strep. Jan Pat terser Place I L Rick Wats and Dave Carpenter. B i si ness Place I, Steve Carse; and i Susan Hassloohor am 4. Mike Davidoff Ct >mmunication Pla M R S II \i K l U M \N, P Two Link, Russian Satellites Separate in Space Bv I he \hmm lated Press M()S( OW mined Polling Sites • Arts and • Graduate • Architect • Law Soh • Fine Art • Engineer • Pharmar • Comm:. • Ho • Business announcer: f int 3:50 p rn. M< s< ( ’ vs mr >s I Hi orbit that md: it was the Soy carried a So\ last April T H ned testing n i ike.I in sn; what f two »r the nan next spa. Si iet von tu putting cosh ik up in spat arated he tu - "I* U M H M T iv S P I m I rn f & The Rangercos- Blindem an, Tips, Loving, Stalmach, Burns, Patrick, Hilly, Hoyne, and Sunday a fte r­ noon in the Littlefield C a rria g e House parking lot. The top six (1-r)— ate pie Irwin It's a Fling and a Miss; a H it and a Mess— M y Compliments to the C hef ig ers in the boys and girls division were aw arded "prizes? ' e u ' f se pa- Jones— both Bonnie and Tom,' and slightly used lamp respectively. B o tu won an all expense paid a slightly used m-o trip to Rmmd Rock Ha o * e e r night to visit the grave cs the notorious Sam Bas'. Bob Burns, Ranger editor, estim ated lOOQ flingers ... ...» First place winners, Lydia Turpin and freshmen— won an engraved plaque of sr ich vely. Both w e” an a Jam es W . - spectators attended th a event, while o ffic ia l sources noted al- mo'* n r - , m0s» went a wa y with a t imp ess sn: W h y do n’t we do this m ore o f t e n ? ” least one I -SS ©f the- -HPtaU Fho'-a News Capsules ________ By The Associated Press________ Captain Killed by Terrorist VDKV Terrorists shot and killed a Danish ship captain Monday, 13 hours after seriously wounding a senior British civil servant. Authorities said Capt. J. S. Theisen of the chemical tanker Stain­ less Carrier was shot in the Steamer Point section of Aden. British Marine commandos sealed off roads leading to the area and began a hunt for the attackers, The British civil servant Allan MacDonald. 60. was shot in the face, thigh and stomach Sunday night outside the Crescent Hotel by a National Liberation Front terrorist, Jet Shot Down O ver Syria i> \m w i s An army spokesman announced an Israeli jet fighter was shot d tun Monday in the first aerial clash between Syria and Israel since the June Middle East war. In a brief communique the spokesman said four Israeli planes penetrated Syrian air space and Syrian jet fighters shot down one cf them in an aerial battle which lasted a few minutes. The Syrian planes returned safetlv to base, it said. Huks Plan Reign of Terror M ANILA The Philippine News Service reports that Huk guerrillas are planning a “ reign of terror in Pampanga Province to coincide with the Nov. 14 national elections. The agency, quoting, police officials. said the liuks plan to ambush police and army units and political candidates. Guitarist G uilty of Charges LONDON Brian Jones, 25. guitarist of the Rolling Stones jwp group, pleaded guilty Monday to drug charges and was sentenced by a London court to nine months imprisonment, He was denied bai; pending an appeal. Jones was the third member of the group to get into trouble over drugs. Mick Jagger, group leader, and Keith Rieherd, lead guitarist, were convicted June 29 of possessing marijuana and pep pills but vs ere freed a month later by the appeals court. Ex-SS Officers Sentenced (O M X fN E. B e n i Two former SS elite corps officers were given terms of life uty int­ prisonment and 15 years hard labor respectively here Monday. el i- The court found Carl Schulze. 65, former SS lieutenant and dor rector cf the camp’s political department, guilty of aiding in mux ant in nine cases and Anton Streitwieser 51, former SS second lieu’cr. • rn and chief of the Vienna subcamp, guilty of participation in murdei three cases and of inflicting bodily harm leading to subsequent death In two cases. W ild ca t Strikes Subside LONDON Britain's wave of wildcat strikes subsided Monday with the re­ turn to work cf 10,000 longshoremen and 9.000 auto workers. In Liverpool, 9 OOO dockers brought the great port to life again after a six-week stoppage In a wage dispute which tied up IOO ship' More than LOM London longshoremen streamed back to work after a three-week '-mike although 6.000 other d o c k e r s were still holding out. King Arrested for Contempt BIRM INGHAM Dr. Martin Lu ti er King J r and three of his aides were arrested as they stepped from an airplane Monday and were taken to jail to spend five days behind bars for cor.terr.pt of court In a surprise move, sheriff's deputies foiled demonstrators gath­ ered in front of the Birmingham jail and took K.ng and his col­ leagues to the county's jail in Bessemer. Sheriff Mel Bailey said this step was token because of the pickets. He said it was safer to take the four men into the Besse­ mer jail, but they might be moved later. UK on tic US Gold Supply Increases VS ASHING TON The US gold supply increased during September for the fire* time in five rn r.ths despite continued heavy domestic use of the precious metal. ’lino Federal Reserve Board said Monday the total gold supply >nth to $13.OS billion, the first in­ yse by SI m during ’he crease since a $50 million advance last April. Since that time gold has been drained from the US stockpile mainly because of the Middle East crisic and sales to domestic ;sers. Negro Rape Charges Dropped TDW MIN, Md. ,'w > Negro brothers convicted six years ago of raping a white wide attention were freed Monday charges ag erst them as their second lr! in a case that drew na /hen the state dropped a rial began. State's Attorney Williai udge W. Albert Menchine ‘stimony taken from two sod in the retrial. Lim hmm announc'd his decision after f Baltimore County Circuit Court ruled Unease* in tho first trial could not be U A W Strike Threatened DETROIT Tile threat of simultaneous strike by the United Auto Workers against Chrysler Corporation's Canadian and US operations was raised Monday as union and company negotiators bargained for new contracts on both sides of the bordar. The key issue would be equal pay for American and Canadian workers, which I*AW President W alter P. Reuther says “ was the only major” demand tho union did not win from Ford Motor Ce. Dean Receives Decoration SAN ANTONIO Dr. Jefferson D. Bragg, retired dean of die Baylor University Graduate School, received the distinguished civilian service decora­ tion in a ceremony at Fort Sam Houston Monday, The award, one of the highest US Army civilian awards, cited Dr. Bragg for his work in an advisory capacity to the federal government and particularly for his contributions to the graduate program in hospital administration conducted jointly by Baylor and the Medical Field Service School at Fort Sam Houston. Fam ily Feud Turns Shootout GALVESTON A family feud that turned into a aboding Saturday in Texas City claimed its second victim Monday, Mrs. A. E. Stover, 64, wife of a Texas City policeman. Mrs. Stover was wounded in a gun battle that pitted her son- in law, Ted McWhorter, against her husband and another T<>xas City officer. W. C. Simmons. Mrs. Stover died Munday in a G al­ veston hospital. W orker Hurt at Hem isFair SAN ANTONIO A construction worker was listed in undetermined condition but “ not in danger of death" at a San Antonio hospital after he was trapped for three and one-half hours Monday in a ditch cavein at the HemisFair ‘68 site. The man was identified as Gregorio Olivares, 33. Hospital offi­ cials said he suffered a broken arm and other injuries. Olivares was trapped in a 15-foot utility ditch when one side caved in. ’’age 2 Tuesday, October 31, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN House Powers Change Poverty Bill Enlrance Exams Claimed Boost To Segregation B j III NHY D EZ IT T ER Chicago Daily News Service CHIC \GO A college entrance report says “ prestige’ colleges are getting more selective—and whiter—and “ •■pen door’ institutions are get­ ting the bulk of Negro college students S. A. Kendrick, executive as- sociate of the College Entrance E: sminatkn Board, predicted that racial segregation in Ameri­ can higher education will grow unless different norms are used by the elite collages in selection of new students. He spoke af the annual meet­ ing of tee college board, tine na- t en s largo.-! college admissions testing service. ‘Bombshell’ R ep o rt Admissions officers gathered at th.f convention sc I Hendricks repqrt was a “ real bombshell." Many rf rho college hoard mem­ ber in.toiuhons:—tie “ selective" colleges lie was talking about— are experimenting with ways to attract more Negro students. for reason The major tihs “ corning segregation of selec tive Colleges." Kendrick said is their heavy iclim e'-' on vorbal-abilitv tests, in which Negroes score muc \ erbal Requirements til a ii whites. Kendrick’s survey shows that “ n it more than 15 p*-r cent and perhaps as few as IO per cen? of Negro high school seniors 400 or m ore” and w mid I DOI mt would be score of 500 I bn to" If anything is biased, Kendrick sud, it is the colleges’ own era cl- mg Stannards, ■h rely heavily on verbal ability. V erb al Ability H it to lh said J was just as biased Dr colleges to mark students on the ba .-Is of verbal al ilitv as it is test companies for Yrrbai ability I axis. arced rite college ad­ oors i guard against recruiting war ' for ti*. • \ to'/. Negroes of ability. “Such a war ran by rn ore than a ins, and victories like t be gfxxi for any* cor k urged colleges r therwisc desirable low compar a lively ty and to design in­ to..!. ti ie needs, ability these sta ­ ound of ■WW Evans and N ovak By RDW LAND I \ ANS and R O B E R T NOA AK ( hi ca. go Dally News .Service W ASH IN UTO V A foretaste of change in the in line with poverty program, the new power reality in the House, came a few' weeks ago when Rep. Wilbur Mills of Ark­ from his ansas strolled over Democratic side of the aisle to chat with some Republicans. “ The way to pass a poverty bill this year." Mills drawled to his Republican audience, “ is to put central in the hands of the elective officials." Mills, chairman of (he Houra Ways and Means Committee and Confession Bi Given Firs} OK Bv The Associated Tress W ASHINGTON A Senate Judiciary subcommit­ tee approved Monday a broad articrime bill that goes far be­ yond what President Lyndon B. Johnson asked and would elimi­ nate some Supreme Court re­ strictions on the1 admissibility of t ■ >n fess ions. Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Ark., the subcommittee chairman, told new-men he hopes Congress will act on the bill this year. Ti e measure was sent to the full Judi­ ciary Committee. fe Tim subcommittee measure is entitled the Omnibus Crime Con­ trol and Safe Streets A t. of 1967. first year it would a n ­ orn I grants of $85 r il- 0 assist in improving local 1 forces. Lf this amount, $15 n would be ca no,'irked Dr ontrol and an equal am milt mbat organized crime. FO! I hun, Ii rn p din miilif riot ( to cf Tin bill also would permit wiretapping and other electronic eavesdropping by law enforce, m ent officers acting under court order, but otherwise such eaves­ dropping would be prohibited. to provide McClellan said this part of the bill is designed the constitutional safeguard set forth by the Supreme Court in a de­ eds! n earlier invali­ dating New York state's w ire­ tap law. this year test the only The bill would m ake voluntari­ for deter­ ness mining the admissability of con­ fessions in crim inal cases. And the Supreme Court vc uld be barred from reviewing cases in which the highest court in a state had ruled that a confession was voluntarily given. THE GENTLEMAN'S SHI BT sta n d s C o lla r and sh o u ld ers a b o ve the cro w d an increasingly dominant figure in the House, was tipping Demo­ cratic strategy on the bill. And, as happens so often these days, what Mills said came to pass last week. The House Labor Com­ mittee (with only two Democrats dissenting) amended tins year’s poverty authorization bill to put community action programs clear­ ly in the hands of elected city hall officials and not the poor (which usually turns out to be the Negro poor). Liberal Backing The action in the Labor Com­ mittee was fully backed by such Democratic liberals as Rep. James O'Hara of Michigan, one of the real comers in the House. M re over, the committee's vote was fully acquiesced in by a si­ lent White House, which long ago the became disenchanted with participation--of-the-poor t h e o r y proclaimed when President Lyn­ den B. Johnson unveiled his an­ ti poverty w ar in 1964. But the basic impulse for this fundamental change in the pov­ erty bill came neither from the liberals nor the White House, hut from Mills and his fellow South­ ern Democrat. Rep. Phil Lan­ drum of Georgia. Attempting to. woo Southern votes, the bill was rewritten to Mills-Landrum sped-! fications. What makes this particularly important is the fact that the L a b o r Committee Democrats (with White House concurrence! chose to appease the Southern­ ers rather than compromise with Republican moderates on the pov­ erty bill. C o l umn O f C o m m e n t O’Hara and Trap. Sam Gibbons of Florida, representing the Dem- rxxat.s, actually met weeks ago in bargaining sessions with Re­ publican Reps. Albert Quie of Minnesota and Charles Goodell of New York to hammer out a compromise. Quie and Goodell met secretly over dinner in a downtown Washington restaurant with officials of the chief pov­ erty agency, the Office of Eco- n >mic Opportunity (OKO). These efforts at compromise collapsed with each side blam­ ing the other. However, friends of the poverty program believe the failure can be traced to in­ transigence by the Democrats and the administration. Unwill-1 ing to coalesce with moderate Re­ publicans, they turned instead to Mills-Landrum Southerners. The implications of that change are profound. Whatever may now be soul about the wisdom of par­ Billa Skinner, Imports From Mexico Ind 3«no .» Art, Jewelry, Clothing Decorates Acceiioriat 1705 N ueces Street ticipation -by-the-poor, the f a c t that it has become holy writ for Negro slum militants makes its eliminate n at this late date ch oi­ ly dangerous business. Neighbor­ hood militants claim that the President and Congress have sold them out. May Not Pass Bill E v en this high price may not be high enough to pass the bill. Quie and Goodell, champions of participation-by-the-pH>r. led the Labor Committee's Republicans in voting against Into \v. <>k‘s amendment. Now, they will I ad their party against the \ ill em­ erging from tile committee—or any bill putting the program un­ der control of normally Demo­ cratic city halls. N >r is it cer­ tain that Southern Denu-ci Ck to the right of Mills and Laird will vote even for the amended ver­ sion. Indeed, the strange truth in the is leaderless House anarchic, that no bill could pass if brought to the floor today. When the measure actually comes up for debate around Nov. 7, nobody can predict what will happen. F a ilu re on Floor Same Republicans are so bit­ ter about what transpired inside the Tabor Committee that they predict the bill will fail on the House floor, bringing a peremp­ tory end to the poverty program. Cooler heads, however, talk about a simple continuing resolution to keep the program going until Congress reconvenes next Janu­ ary. Standing aside from the pov­ erty bill shambles is the Presi­ dent himself, just as he now dis­ dains personal conflict over the tax bill. House Democrats who once grumbled about arm twist­ ing from the other end of Pennsyl­ vania Avenue are quite content with the new Presidential alo*to­ nes®, New Non-Slop Bus Service To Houston Effective October 29, 1967 Depart I 1:55 A .M . and 4:00 P.M. SILVER EA G LE EQUIPM ENT Kerrville Bus Co., Inc. 401 Congress Phone G R 6-7451 That is w hat you will do at Eastex. You wi!! advance because Eastex w Ii advance. W e have grown of paper and paperboard prod­ ucts. To keep this operation grow- 300' in the past 12 years, while ing, we need engineers (Ch.E., the paper industry has grown 6 0 % . C E . , E.E., M .E.) and chemists. lf you want to k'tow more about advancem ent at Eastex, vls:t your placem ent office now and make an appointm ent. W e will be on C u r continuing progress offers H ere you will find a fertile ground campus: M onday, N ovem ber 6, you unlimited opportunities. for new ideas and for new ways 1967. W e provide industry with a variety to use old ideas. See us on campus or get the new Eastex opportunities brochure. W r ite : Personnel Director, Eastex Inc., P.O . Box 816, Silsbee, Texas 77656. EasTex (form erly East Texas Pu p and Paper C om pany) S H M E N D E A D L IN E -rrr-ntitiiriWlI i suit Cs ill' .visSS&i*; for making your PICTURE A P P O IN T M E N T for the 1968 CACTUS I S WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER I The Fee is q.00 T H E P U R I S T * b u tto n - d o w n by Sera is keyed to the trim tapered look of today's astute tra­ d itio n a l dresser. Clean-cut body lines . . . the ext lusive Boro full-flared, soft-rolled collar , a seven-button front . . . classic shirtman- . ship at its finest. Exclusive colours and dis­ tinctive stripings — on a host of handsome fabric s, AiAiLASLC A» 23-/to Cruadalupe 811 Congress Appointments are made in the Business O ffice in the Journalism Building, Room 107 ® Jlktons A l 8:00 a.r n . -4:30 p.m. Weekdays N AP Seeks Class n Negro History Ry KAR KA BERNDT in v e stig a te stu d e n t in ter­ told to est . T he N eg ro A sso c ia tio n for P r o g ­ r e ss is c o lle c tin g n a m e s to sh ow stu d en t in terest in a d d in g a c o u r se to th e U n iv e r ­ in N egro h isto ry s ity cu rricu lu m . C laren ce H a w k in s, c h a irm a n of the N egro H isto ry C o m m ittee of N A P. said M onday that p etition s rn support of a d d in g a N egro h is­ tory co u r se c o u ld he s i g n e d throughout th is w e e k . Recognise Negro Scholars T his c o u r se could sh ow h ow N e g r o e s h a v e h e lp e d ’n bu ild in g A m erica and stu d y the v a r io u s N egro sc h o la r s w h o ar*' n e v e r m en tio n ed in an o v e r -a ll h isto r y c o u r se H aw kin s sa id . " I t would tic a s m a l l s t e p to­ w a rd a b a s ic u n d e rsta n d in g of the N egro ," he add ed . N A P , form ed la st F eb r u a r y , a p ­ p roached the U n iv e r sity a d m in is ­ tr a tio n la st sp r in g about add ing sui h a c o u r se to th e D e p a r tm en t of H isto ry 's c u r ricu lu m and w a s Gun Spree Fata n Celebration Bv T he A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s O O H MBI A, ( alif. f A gold c o u n t r y c e l e b r a t i o n t h e Old W e s t —w h o o p i n g , d r i n k i n g a n d shooting-—r e s u l t e d in a m a n g e t t i n g s h o t to d e a t h . to ‘‘E v e r y b o d y w a s s u p p o s e d h a v e b l a n k s in his gun, ' S h e r i f f M i l le r S a r d e l l a s a i d M o n d a y . ■ S o m e h o w liv e a m m u n i t i o n got in o n e g un. But e v e r y b o d y w a s d r i n k i n g so m u c h w e a r e h a v i n g a n a w f u l t i m e f i n d in g out h o w it h a p p e n e d . " C e a r e i n t e r r o g a t i n g 75 to SO p eo p le so fa r. " W e ’v e go t t h e g u n t h a t d id th e sh o o t i n g . W e ’v e c h a r g e d t h e m a n in it w i t h s u sp e c te d of d o in g v o l u n t a r y m a n s l a u g h t e r B ut - > f a r a c c o u n t s a x e fuzzy " T h e v i c t i m , Ai vin P o c c h e n i n e d i e d 54, of A n g e ls C a m p , C a lif S u n d a y a t a S o n o r a h o sp ita l F r e d G r a n t , 60, of T u o l u m n e C o u n t y , w a s a r r e s t e d by r e l e a s e d on h is o w n r e c o g n i z a n c e . P e c c h e n i n e vva s s h o t w ith a n o ld 45 c a l i b e r s i n g l e a c t i o n p i s ­ tol. T h e d i n n e r , s p o n s o r e d b y art so c i e t y , w a s a l l - m a l e h i s t o r i c a l It w a s a t t e n d e d b y a b o u t 200 h e l d hist -rural m a r k e r —t h e nozzle of a hig h - p r e s s u r e b o c e u s e d in h y d r a u l i c ni d o d i< a t e r e ­ to a D r. R o b e r t A. D i v i n e , c h a i r ­ tire D e p a r t m e n t of H i s ­ m a n of th a t s t u d e n t t o r y , s a i d , h o w e v e r , i n t e r e s t m a c o u s e d id not m e a n t h e c o u r s e w o u ld b e e s t a b l i s h e d . D r. D i v i n e s a i d p o s s ib l e o b j e c ­ t io n s a m o n g h i s t o r y i n s t r u c t o r s c o u ld b e in c l u d e " t a i l o r i n g a h i s ­ t o r y c o n t e m p o r a r y to n e e d s ' ' a n d " a r t i f i c a l l y s e p a r a t ­ ing a g r o u p . " c o u r s e H a w k i n s s a i d N A P d o e s n o t fe el it is b e i n g r a c i s t o r s e p a r a ­ tist in w a n t i n g s u c h a c o u r s e . H e th a t n o t e d t a u g h t a b o u t the A m e r i c a n P r o fe sso r s In terested c o u r s e s a r e I n d i a n . in t h e i r S e v e r a l p r o f e s s o r s h a v e in d i­ c a t e d tea* bing i n t e r e s t a c o u r s e m N e g r o h i s t o r y H a w ­ kin s sa id . N A P a ls o k n o w s of p r o f e s s o r s a t o t h e r u n i v e r s i t i e s w ho w o u ld bo q u a li f i e d to ti a c h tile c o u r s e p r e s i d e n t D w a i n H a r r i s , of N A P , s a i d t h e next s t o p p r o b a b ­ ly w o u ld b e to p r e s e n t t h e p e t s lion m t'ne a d m i n i s t r a t i o n a n d t h e D e p a r t m e n t of H i s t o r y . Demands Separate < nurse N A P d e f in i t e l y w a n t s a s e p a r a t e in c lu sio n of c o u r s e , n o t m o r e N e g r o h isto ry in a n o t h e r c o u r s e , H a w k i n s s a i d , b e c a u s e “ p e o p le feel N e g r o e s a n e x c l u d e d f r o m t h e m a i n s t r e a m of A m e r i c a n b i s ­ ie! V." s a i d H a w k i n s t h e N A P a ls o ,i c o u r s e i n s t i ­ w o u ld like to get t! ■ t u te d m A fr i c a n s t u d i e s a t T h e r e a l ­ u n d e r g r a d u a t e r e a d y is o n e in G r a d u a t e School. leve l •gA * 5 V . -. I I g j j * P e titio n U rges N e w C o u rse L ind a C r a w f o r d s i g n s p e t i t i o n as G l o d i n e P r o p p s m d C l a r e n c e H o l m e s s u p e r v i s e b o o t h . ThieuSworn In P re cautions Tight Bv The \ SMM lated Press SAK JON (Ten N g u y e n V a n T h id ! Ut. to o k ' h e o a t h of o ffice T u e s d a y a s t h e t lei ’"<1 pr* sir lent o f .South V i e t n a m a n d im: m d ii tely o f f e r e d d i r e c t {m ace t a l k s w i t h H a n o i S e c u r i t y p r e c a u t i o n s t i g h t e r fur e in S a ig o n . T r o o p s s n o p t o u t s k i r t s of m e w e r e t h a n a n y t h i n g s e e n b e ­ tho to g u a r d r e v a g a i n s t a n y C o m m u n i s t e f fo r t to d i s r u p t the ceremonies. T h io u , l a r g e l y run f l a n k e d b y V ic e P r e s i ­ d e n t- e le c t N g u y e n C a o K y, w ho th e c o u n t r y for h a s the the p a st c e r e m o n ie s a l m o s t im m e d ia te ly u p o n h is a r r i v a l t w o y e a rs, b eg a n .salute r lil i e d w in d o w s Ii.- s t o o d af a tt e n t i o n a s a 21- g rn in t h e n b e ­ d o w n t o w n S a ig o n , a n d g a n t h e i n a u g u r a l a d d r e s s w h i c h h e h a s p o l is h e d fo r m o r e t h a n two w e e k s . U w a s b r o a d c a s t n a t i o n w i d e a n d c a r r i e d on th e s t a t e t e l e \ i- sion n e t w o r k — t h e f i r s t l iv e p o l it i ­ c a l c o v e r a g e o n t e l e v is io n s i n c e Thieu'.s ele ctio n b y an SOO.000- vo te p l u r a l i t y las? S e p t e m b e r . t h a t th e 13 leu p l e d g e d to e r a d n . c c r a m p a n t h a s c o r r u p t s n w e a k e n e d s u c c e s s i v e S o u th V i e t ­ a n d o u t­ n a m e s e g o v e r n m e n ts, lin ed broad p r o g r a m s of so c ia l r e f o r m , e c o n o m i c a u s t e r i t y a n d t h e s t r e n g t h e n i n g of d e m o c r a t i c i n s t it u t io n s Hp d e v o te d m ost r f the b r ief sp e e c h , h o w e v e r re a d isc u ssio n of p e a c e , And w h ile h e sa id he w ould “ open th e door w id e ly to i t o p e n , ” he p e a c e a n d “ A p e a c e e q u a l l y e m p h a s i z e d : the w e a k e r party* is f< reed that I am to a c c e p t is a su rr e n d e r d e t e r m i n e d n o t s u r ­ r e n d e r to a c c e p t l e a v e Cong Launches Attack As Ploy Against Saigon Bv T he A ssociated P r e s s d r p p e d I y a n a ir - t o a n n issile. Vier C o ng 5 AIM IN l a u n c h e d a troo jis s e c o n d m a j o r a s s a u l t rn 48 h o u r s T u e s d a y r n a f wen TO m i l e s n o r t h of S a ig o n a r ! a L'S F i r s t I n f a n t r y D iv ision ' If s p o k e n a n lo ok s like t h e y a r e d e t e r m i n e d to • i k e th e i n a u g u r a t i o n to c o u n t e r t h is p l a c e s a i d , I AS w a r p i r e s c a r r i - d t h e i r a i r assault, o n t h e H a n o i H a i p h o n g a r e a s in to t h e s e v e n t h s u c c e s s i v e d a y M tnday a n I N a v y j e t s sh- t i n t e r ­ d ow n a C o m m u n i s t M I G c e p t o r n e a r H a no i. T h e ! S C o m ­ m a n d s a i d N avy pilo ts f o u g h t a d >gfigl ’ w th P u r Soviet bul • in t h e M U ! w a s t e r c e r i t o r s a n d T h e US r a i d s i n c l u d e d s t r i k e s on ft ir of N r i b V i e t n a m ' s a i r ­ fie ld s In t h e a t t a c k a p p a r e n t l y t i m e d to c o in c i d e w d h S o u t h V i e t n a m ’s p r e s i d e n t i a l i n a u g u r a t i o n , u n i t s of t h e 273rd Viet C o n g R e g i m e n t l a u n c h '- d m o r t a r a n d g r o u n d a s ­ the D m- N in h d i s ­ s a u l t s a g a i n s t t r i c t n e a r b y a S p e c i a l F o r c e s c a m p a n d a n a r ­ tiller . f r e b a s e of t h e F i r s t I n ­ f a n t r y D ivision. h e a d q l a r t e r s , i n ­ T h e fig h ti n g b r o k e off. b u t t e l l i g e n c e i n d i c a t e I • ie \ int Cong in r e i n f o r c e m e n t s w e r e b r i n g i n g a n d a ls o t h e p u s h e d F i r s t D i v is io n in m o r e m e n . " I ' v e d i s c o v e r e d w h a t m a k e s p e o p l e w a n t to s t a y ut ii ■« I D iv e r ­ s i t y , ’1 Mi s . I la* k< • m a n s a y s . ‘ It in f a s c i n a t i n g a n d e v e r - c h a n g i n g in all a r e a s f r o m tile s< ion- e s to th e fine a r t s ( o i l e d x R o s t e r s t for t h e M r s . Ila c k i i m a n h a s eon e v cl y p r o d u c t i o n of t tie D e p a r t m e n t of ---s D r a m a < v e ep ! ‘I w h e n her c h i l d t o n w e r e b o rn . to colic* t play bill p oste r - u s e d by t a k i n g ti e m off li e a v o s a n d t h e n f r -m ing t h e m to r my h o m e , " M r s T : - a d o ti s a n d a■ ' >rs foun d * ut a b o u t h a v e s i n c e s u p p l i e d her w ith a {siste r f r e a c h prndw* -if ti. H • i e • th o . p e a k i n g * if I la* k e r m a I •• ay s, I n i v e r s i l y , ' I c a i f Mi s. m e a s u r e th e l o v e w e f e d fo r t h a t so m a n y institution.'' " I t h a s pa: f -—d r a m ?, r n icer: : • m u s o u m s . b a s e b a l l , f oot bal l , I t ' s f a c e t s to it " Girl S c o u t L e a d e r t r a c k . t r e a s u r e w ith m a n y lik e a i l a c k e r m in A s id e tie s on Mi p a r t i c i p a n t ai w t -- A Ie H e r fo r 13 y I f r o m h e r m an y a c t i v i ­ t h e F n i v e r s i t y c a m p u s , vc ty ti - ii in A u s ti n < m in 1 !u I Si out is a; M r s - I a t g r o u p of gi t h e s e c o n d gi a d e t h r o n g hig h s* ho !. S he w a s sn* f l u c n c e in tin ir live s, fbi o n e of t h e gi r !s e n ro lle e I 'r n v e rs ify . M r s Hack* Tr n a n a ls o the A u - t m Sy f , I QJ-, [fig o r g a n i z e L e a g u e a n I so dire- • .re, .Nile a 1 *n set v cr f *h e T r a v i s c e s s i o n s g r a n d j u r y int:c r e s t e d hi A l w a y s H u k e r m an a d u l t s , M n t h e W hite H o u s e cm on a n d You! I f o r C h i ld re n P r e s i d e n t Dwi g h t D. Els* Astronomers, salesmen, designers, programmers,chemists, psychologists,writers, sociologists, eel mc musts, metallurgists, artists, accountants, physicists, mathema tieians, etc, etc, etc. That s \ vl sat General Electric is made of. G e n e r a l E le c t r ic is m a d e u p o f a lot m o r e th a n ju s t b e c a u s e it ta k e s a lo t m o r e th a n e n g i ­ e n g in e e r s n e e r s to ta c k le th e p r o b le m s w e d e a l w it h . l ik e h e lp in g to u n sn a r l traffic ja m s in o u r c it i e s , f ig h t ­ in g a ir p o llu t io n or fin d in g n e w w a y s t o p r o v id e p o w e r for u n d e r d e v e lo p e d n a tio n s It t a k e s s o d o l in a g i s t s , m e t e o r o l o g i s t s , a s t r o n o m e r s , w r i t e r s fa c t, it ta k e s p e o p le w ith ju st a b o u t e \ e r v k in d o f tr a in in g . B u t, m o r e th a n a n y o f th is , it ta k e s p e o p le w i t h n e r v e , g u m p t i o n , i n t e l l e c t u a l c u r i o s i t y — p e o p le w h o c a r e a b o u t w h a t h a p p e n s to th e w o r ld . S o i t ’s n o t o n l y y o u r m a jo r w e ’re in t e r e s t e d in . I t s y o u AA by n o t s e e o u r i n t e r v i e w e r w h e n h e c o m e s to c a m p u s a n d find o u t w h e th e r y o u ’re th e k in d o f p e r s o n G e n e r a l E l e c t r i c is m a d e of. G E N E R A L E L E C T R I C A n eq u a l o p p o r t u n i t y e m p l o y e r Mrs. Hackerman ... H sj Important Personalities T h e H a c k e r m a n s h a v e ho ( C o n t inur'd f r o m J" -ye “ T h e I rh v e r s i f y F so w ' ) u l>< ‘ rn.m y ful anil ! g o i n g on t h a t it is r e a d y n o w , ’’ Mr- Ha- km o at; a d - i i ! lins n o - m m .*••. of n “ N o o n e c a m p u s I do. NM' like p e o p l e have' t h e i r bit tin v e r s i t y b a n d . Aft r h a v i n g led m o s t of ’n - P i n d s n v a in G i r l S c o u t o r B o y Scout a c t i v i ­ I i. is. tie s w h e n 11 iey v.r-ir you: g . 11 w a s t h e i r t r i b u t e Jo M . Ii i k o r - m a n w h e n they w * r e a I cpi 1 a fe w y e a r s a g o a n d rai m o r e t h a n $21 OOO in t h r e e d ■Also, e a c h y e a r t h e Ha* I m a n s op* n t h e i r h o m e to nu t o w n ju n k r h ig h si h o d I ox in a r e J u n n r C h a m b e r of C o n m c : - - \ it I tic n a! 7 s n n a n T e n n i s M: •. Ha* H - n m m P „ v in A u s ti n to p l a y ‘ M till •ro u g h ly wh en I wa I Ihon gist told tm h g f u n i m p r e s s e d . t h e m B u t l i a r rot! R o y a l s t e a k s r,no n ig lit, they w o u ld nor m r g e t - x e s. t d i v e r s i t y ti;.:*’ b lood ,' rho H a t k e r m a ii 51 *ir e b 2, M r s H a c k e r m a ii fa m if y h a s si c tv*’!> w u h a “ OI CHI in Ic,w . s o n , a n d claught c r w h o E v e r y te lls is - I t a d d y ’s c i g e t h a t thai a y . c h is a ls o T e x a s Ii ld e p e n - .' i v e I tax se* m s to m a k e no d i f * t h e ‘ To w c r it T h e c o in c i d e n t ie . h i ld r e n I>e<. •. -c th at is Be a »v-.Vv‘d:V; kL.--.* SELECT ONE OR A BOX FULL • * * A P r a n e n t y P r e s s e d 3 for S H J OviD,#/ eacn C A C I u s Y c u r C a s h D i v i d e n d c o n of o n g s l e e v e s d . . . I -»-*-+■ r- f S a ! , 7 OQ^n i n s t i n c t i v e " >r< f T h e t I l - O P GIL - a . I v C (J fv (j Ii fie mtanmbtt* w f 4i sfatffi.* ■&* AMA*#- iffy*.. - ,V+ -rn K I ♦-•■# ikh.i: . j t , + . ■- . pjfcf t a >1*1 f l i t . . a * 4 rn . - f -« .... irmrr Tar: - - iv.**. i f t l f - rn .y - i t — ^ j ! ’ ■ 4 L p f . r f ' A / S * Jw-jie m r n r i m .-^if V. A u ' j * * :* * » & * - it Mm- ^ Afcw. w. is, , *<# • - -l*i VAfN ' i t U* f i f e '$■ - < »- ti-- : Hjjg&i ■'r! r- .. ... / - ’**?•■ • - tX .*se^" ^ ■ V . -» v .:«> *>,.*' V . : t t 0 m r **-'■ -•?-4 -itrt'.-- 4 W f k - 4 -I ■■’I't''-N v c * ^ 7 - N * --- : v — -:V- - A * * - t - ..........: - v , * ' - ' - / j * : r n ' " > £ • ■ A” *jj ♦ **■*■*t ■ *■ - ■■ K . ■Si- ■ ■ A t t e * ^ ! -*» J -fe’MHM -»3ts- t o m ■*- 4ffca, W d&JL- , . . . . 1*4-j#' 'Yk - ’ • - a*** ■Ai-sc^ TW’JplMi liljfe n y w rn-****** ' Ai?' I ^ dSirfe-' + -S. jg.KWK ->dd*‘ 44*% 4>’ ,:4 x ^ , «^W.. -|yj k fi* . -futile*' “ 3^' H K . .* .? -i *,♦ •4 * *5**, A * -#l^ !>A# -A • vS&fc** % I*. ■ -■ . *i '•Alii "TY Cit s ■ W U Si'*-" ' i f ' - 4 -m n * *' *? . m t i l 'l i . W l l i ' i u n i . 4 * ' n - .. - *.4 .-4 .-,'.* - ,.~*r « , , — %*:/ .- ■***■,, 4 /,M 4 .... I i b f .* '»*W: . i f 4*4*4..'-*.^.% ’•**' kJ® . - : sp -.7 ,*i- .x A Aj* lh ----- .v4.^- -A.-- ■ * i,-,., . - ,- 4 - . *irj»i’|f ,v.J- I*- <«<■ »?' J - '. 4 & . ".j . .. . ^ ■ | - <** ’ V -. ,. „■ - ■ Nfc- ’fey /-■ kejfe*4* - "4 A.4 — -NC - ■ / t i m . jptA-iiJ'. rife A ' *,S - - 4 fe> -Al.-* **" 4 rtMM" ■«’ fe M* . h i •. •-.* •«.M'-iA!b*>yMpN^***r -d* **■ ' fie . ’ . * * ' n . v *- —. . ’- t/ *-v « A fe *- •» 4. tfm-f'. w * , •* . - . M f . i f r:, t --*V. .a ... .,*»•■; . .»> ... .feiM* ■ M i vT...... m,. , «rt , rn* iiwe***1 MMif .<* 4mp ■■ •* at t i l tTM fe . *i-* .(fcf.ii # » « i . . .;,r '.Ut - *,ii , • « f-C --S.N-WV . 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' 4 . » v iJM ewj/urftdfa \ S S S S X lf Matthew Thornton had signed his name w itll the Scripto Reading I 'en, he'd be remembered today, N* w fitxtr t i p from S v rip to ’s new R e a d in g Pci icr to r e a d I h a t ’s « h Sci > I t s a * w i iber ! ip pen N o t a f o u n t a i n pen n :*t a T • CMO: : ; , 57 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 State Ties Increase Possible Censorship It just goes to show what kind of censorship being a "state entity” could bring on: The New York Times recently reported that the stu­ dent literary magazine a* the University of Arkansas could not be printed because four poems in it offended the State Auditor and the head of the university's printing shop. After the chief printer of the university refused to print the magazine because of some words he considered in bad taste — terms referring to excretory functions of the body — the university submitted a voucher to the Auditor to have the magazine printed under state con­ tracts. The Auditor said he was not sure he had a legal right to stop bio printing bid he was a ting on moral grounds. The poems had teen approved by faculty advisers. Any lone at the university level censorship should have been —and not a’ the government level. Claims are being made ’hat the Texan is a ‘ state en­ tity.” May Che day never come when this is accomplished. In the above instance, the censorship was bv Cie state Auditor, but there would be nothing to keep a dozen from taking similar steps other “official" Freedom of the press is too precious for a publication to give up its Fight and become a stat - organ. US's Electronic Fence but Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara's proposed electronic barrier stretch ii g across tim Dem.. • -nzed Zone of North and South Vietnam is a fine example of use­ less spending in an already expensive war Funds for building this ineffectual fence should iv ceased immediate­ ly. The electronic Mag mot Line, McNamara's most re­ cent war proposal, will employ a system of electronic sensing devices sown about the rugged, mountainous jun­ gle of the DMZ. Running from the South China Sea to the Laotian border, tim barrier will co't -American taxpayers an estimated SI billon m er a tw o-war period No effort can halt completely North V ietnamese infil­ tration into South Vietnam along the Ho Chi Mini Trail, no more than the French Marmot Line stopped the Ger­ mans in World War II. North Vietnamese, like the Ger­ mans, need only go around it. Even McNamara realizes the electronic barrier, a ‘ best, can only re-demilitarize the DMZ and discourage attacks on Marine outposts. McNamara's plan also has drawn little enthusiasm from military men serving in the war zone. Some oppose re­ stricting personnel to static positions, while the enemy roams free. Other military critic's say the barrier would draw on US forces needed elsewhere in the field. To the dismay of many proponents, the barrier's electronic sensing devices have been found to activate with even the slightest movements. Rats, dogs, or even rainfall can cause a false alarm. At Con Thien in the DMZ, IS inches of rain was reported last week. And this was just the first week of the rainy reason! Reappraisal of McNamara’s plan is certainly in order. One finds it hard to support any further tax increases asked by the President to help finance the war while Mc­ Namara's financial fence is still being built. — B O B IN D E R M A N PJMPlCM PiC45 - •? I TIME PIIMPKiN PTO AS IME MOST SfNC8£ I (JE I t 6ETT3 SSE MIM .'NOJI... I WHAT!? THAT? tfriUE !T* 'y~- to* to," (CVS / Y * . J SHOULD nAiE»£; ~ p ( Cf NE PUMPKIN ’~~£X'6~ V WTati J Mig a w . n n w f v v 1 I - < IHI T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r at UT, Austin Opia'oo* expressed in Tho Delly Texan ar* thoae of the editor or of th# writer of the article a n i are not necessarily thoae of the University a d rn in ii ire t.on or of ir e Board of Regent* The Daily Texan, a student new apa oar at The tin; m a lty of Texaa at Austin, la published by Texaa Student Publication*, in c , Drawer r>. University Station Austin, Texas78712. The Texaa ta published daisy except Monday and (Saturday and holiday periods September titrout;n May Second-,?:*vs pottage pa d at Aust.n S e w s contribution* will be accepted by telephone (Oft 1-5244>, at the editorial office, SM, MS, or at the new* laboratory. I B , HXL Inquiries concern tar de i very sh--lid be made in J B. IOT 'GR 1-5344', and advertising J.S. I l l (GR I S2J" . Tha Texan s u b s e r ie s to The Associated Pres* end is a member of The As­ sociated Colies sate Pres*, the Southwest Journalism Conference, and the Tex#* Da y ffew*peper Association. The national advertlelng representative of The Da ly T tx n n Is Ka:.one I Ed . w.ob* al Advertising Cervical 18 East 50th A va,. New York. S t . PERM ANENT STAFF ......... Bob M e rm a n .......... Les.ie Donovan ........................... MARY L. MORPHIS E D IT O R MANAGING EDITOR ....................... JAM ES HOLLAS ASST. MANAGING EDITOR . . . . RICHARD H ILL News E ditor .................................. David De Voss Editorial Page AnsL A m usem ents E d i t o r Sports; E d ito r ........................................ L arry Upshaw F eatu res E ditor ............................................. Jenna Bell ISSUE STAFF L ucy Horton Associate News Editor ........................... News Assistant ....... Alexis Hacker Editorial Page Writer .............................................Jane Purcell Assistant Amusements Editor ........................... Paula Bullard Assistant Sports Editor ............................... .— John Anders Make-Up Editor ........................................... Annette Bingham Karen Elliott, Copy Editors ....... K av W hitaker, B ruce Hicks Photographers ............ ................ Steve Ddk, Steve Gamboa Page 4 Tuesday, October 31, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN “ I ll Ju-t l a ke Vway That Other D og’s Bone, And Then i ll Have Both Of Them ” The Firing Line Disgusted To th#’ Editor: item concerned I view with a m ixture of am usem ent and disgust som e of the recent stands of the Students' Association. A front page headline in the Texan read , “ A ssem bly U rges F ree E xpression." The following news the A ssem bly's reaction to possible sanctions against a ‘ a controversial speech professor for concerning the need for revolution in this country." The Assembly adop’ed a reso­ lution which urged that personal opinions revolution is needed") should not (e. g. bo a basis for sanctions, and in g eneral, a professor ‘-hould no* be forced to conform to the ‘ individual opinions" of his superiors. that, Leaving aside considerator, cf th® pros and cons of this argum ent rn it­ self, one should contrast this stand w rh another of the A ssem bly’s positions. On the sam e p age of the sa m e Texan, the the Students' Association P resident of is quoted as favor’ng toe lim iting of th® freedom of expression both of * ie Te>an to a use HF its ad ernzei-' a thinks “ it to prom ote is a good desegregation in the first place." idea ’’ I Furth erm ore, it also seem s that Wien the “ policies of the national govern- men*" are rn ag reem ent with the A ssem ­ b ly ';, then the U niversity is to be viewed as “ an organ of the s ta te ” which sh'-old use its pow er to m ake anyone it r a n influence conform . In this case, punish advertizer* and the Texan. If, how ever, national policies run counter to the whim of a m ajo rity of the Assembly, the Uni­ v ersity is to be viewed as a collection of inviolate individuals free to be bigots or they darn well please. In this ease, save poor Dr. So and so. revolutionaries if The whole affair seem s t< ens* Urn S tudents' As*."elation in toe role played re r e m Iv by F ree Speech Baez, w ee d e ­ cided to sue Al L app because he dared to tu rn his acid pen on her typ e: i. e. he exercised his rig h t of fret' expression. Baez seem ed to think she had all the rig h ts, and that is exactly how the As­ sem bly has been a -ting Tile whole b.t is am using and di-gusting C urtis \\. Bagiev HO AV 34th Double S ta n d a rd To the U rine Line: Staughton Lynd *;poke In Townes Hall several rig h ts ago, He encouraged civil disobedience as a m eans to coerce our governm ent to end the w ar in Vietnam . It I; all right for hon and his f< bow ers to disobey the law, but it 1= not. all right to block for students in ( ‘berlin. Ohio, the c a r of a N avy re c ru ite r and prevent him it 'could have been wrong for the U niver­ sity to ban Lynd from his speaking en ­ gagem ent. It is right and jus? to burn < ne to draft card, yr* it would he wrong f- r the authorities to Din lot e the actions (? th use who I timed C K U V. I ii rattire a t Southw est Texas S tate College. Isn 't there a double standard h ere? from com ing on cam pus, yet I h e courts of ti is lap I ha\ r recognized I! e righto < f dem onstrating and pu Tot­ ing; however, I do not foci that these rights are superior to the righto that I hold. I do not fee! that I should be pre­ from m aking my one o clock vented th e bearded and be­ c la ss because speckled ones h a le placed them selves horizontally across the road to show the rest of the motorists and rnvsclf tho* they have a belief Staughton Lend bas his rights, and I have m ine—e n d diso­ bedience belongs to neither of us. and way F rid ay nigh’. Mr. Lynd talked a lot about our nation it w as founded B it he failed in one im portant are a. One cf the reasons our rD m ocraf v w as founded w as to provide a peaceful m e ans for change if the citizens found existing policies leaders u n satis­ cr factory to them. Thus the minority would not have to leave the country cr fight tho w ay our founding the governm ent fathers did. T ie rc f ore, it is inconsistent to talk about our revolutionary rights to overthrow the governm ent. By pie use cf ballots, y e s ' By the use of violence or civil disobedience, no! Mr. Lynd says that his civil hisn- bodier, .■ is justified because the w ar is m orally wrong, and fu rth e r feels that ton a re com m itting clim e s against hum anity. An unjust w ar it is, yet Lynd claim s that the A nteri- < an Revolution and Civil W ar w ere jus*. By what special power can M r. L ind label some w ars just and others unjust? the killing and m aim ing at Was all Shiloh, ChanceUorsville, and G ettysburg justified? Did Sherm an have som e kind of a m oral w rit justifying his m arch through G eorgia? W asn’t there a possi­ bility of a peaceful solution to the eco­ nom ic and of slavery? Who can suggest that because the South attacked the N orth, there w a ' no possibility or negotiation? What about the possibility of attack pauses during which tim e negotiations m ight have been explored? the Nazis, problem s tim e like the is just, I do not know w hether w ar, be It the I would Civil or V ietnam ese, like to know how Mr. Lynd arriv es a? the conclusion that he is right about to v w ar. and everyone that disagrees web f rn is w rong P erhaps I have no* been endowed with such a clear power 1 f judgm ent Mr. Lynd to charg e th at this nation Is com m itting crim es against hum anity in V ietnam is unfounded. I have read w hat the tribunals a' N urem berg have said about w ar crim es and crim es a ga ms: hum anity, and af*er spending nearly a y e a r in V ietnam as an infantrym an in a crim es against position of com m and, I can honestly say that I do not believe that I either com ­ m itted, or com m anded anyone else to com m it hum anity. Throughout my sta y there, I don t be­ lieve that I saw any crim es against hu­ m anity as defined at N uremberg. We are not em barked on a policy of geno­ cide! I do not believe that war and kill­ ing a r e good, and I resent being called an E ichm ann. in to lie did the au d ,’ mi urn of The distinguished speaker also claimed to have beer. sn Vietnam, North Vietnam to be specific. I would like to know if he appealed to the peep!'' and r i m e r s of th o s ' like North V ietnam gathered I -woes H all? Did he Use his powers of p er­ suasion and reason with Ho Chi Min to these convince him crim es against humanity, needless kill­ ings, assassin s ti ms, and use of te rro r? And even if he did, did they fail on deaf e a rs? Wily there picketing and demon tr.itsons against North Vietnam? Why don't the appeals travel across the ocean as wed as to Washington0 to discontinue isn't Ah, bu? n I. sn't it much easier and m ore psychologically satisfying to beat our own chests to tor tune of ' mea cul­ pa, mea culpa m ea m axim a culpa Gerard P. Nugent 2H9 Harris Blvd. Woman's Place To Hie e ditor: Three cheers tor the hard-working, at­ tentive, and const ientious Regent you pictured on the front of Sunday's Daily T exan—knitting during a Board meeting. It w arm s my tv-art to know that some­ one with an open and alert mind is in there pitching for n <* and my U niversi­ ty. Maybe a won < - j lace is in the M ile b l e d NIO Rio Grande Blunder To tho Editor: Gratifyingly, m y article in the Texan 20 has provided a for < •• change cf letter?. Some misunderstand­ ing, tr y characterization of our Vietnam policy as a “ blunder.' however, lively ex attaches still to In describing our Vietnam involvement thus, I in no way mean? to d< ny tha? ii is part of a deliberate ai.-I systematic policy. This j .obey, as Secretary’ Rusk and Son. Dil l en have cb]lei: gly con­ in surround!! g an ' a g ­ firmed, con* ;>t gressive" CLna unit a US .;< f e l i n e perim eter extending from South K roa to Thailand, and if Vietnam falls, so they reason, so will Southeast Asia: and soon the one billion Chinese, having assim ilated Australia and Hawaii, will sw arm onto Santa Monica beach, brandishing nuclear u c a ­ in pons me fists. Moral con­ sid e ra tkms asic mon view' our \ ' I to f lur N cion (;.f Vietnam ar including Vietnam, tai Set ur tv. little .* in v, st as the South, In it, “ materially T i e blunder lies not the concep­ tion, bu? in the execution of th s policy. Our mill ta rv cf I is, has failed bm I In to rm and in South V et nam. to rn? it g the N »rth merely hardens resistance, witO ■ as Secretary McNa­ m a ra would put im ­ peding the flow of men and ma tone!” the S mn, I ropowcr to which has caused the deaths to ton,OOO civilians has failed to prevent nocturnal VC raids rn the regi n of Suig *n itself. The w ar a p p e a ls urn*.urmable short of I South Vietnam, die ' * ti obi i tora ti n ; casco, so slowly per- tor the simple r e p a i r . that ti ilitary, teived by our phosphor' is, and fragmentation bombs do tv * “ win the minds and hearts of the pc pie.” Again** ad expectation, for I agroe these weapons with John Goetz ne that sue .id pi duce too desired results, toe people a r e not pacified. Despite appal­ ling expense and slaughter, Vietnam is not firmly integrated into o u r defensive perim eter. Every time W estm oreland shouts for m ore troops, every tim e m v ta rg e ts the North a re bon,bed. a blunder of staggering proportions is ac ­ know lodged. in On the bombing cf children: over half the population of Vietnam is under 13. As realize all too well, killing a child and killing a VC guerrilla is often orm and the sam e thing. This us tile true logic of our policy. John to. Morhy I n s t r u c t o r , History Garrison Hall 408 Chilean Exchange To Hie DI Hor I I understand '.to U n iv e r s e '’ rf Texas Board rf Regent'; has derided against continuation of the Texas-Chile an Leadership Evhcange P rogram . tha? it m eans Recognizing that m anagem ent of this complicated successful program was this year by certain political facts o* life in the Chilean universities, I none the!ess sc il believe that the Exchange rn ne wa I. merits tha? this is so. n-1 neces I contend sarily because that yourn: Chileans a re enabled thereby to learn first hand about o ir country while v ise ­ ing the I niversify. This is. to be sum, a genuinely valuable benefit of ti e pro- gram . But, more importantly, ti e Texan students who have par* in • us program since 1959 almost without e x ­ ception have had their eyes opened to the in thoughts and needs of people aru'thor .society. Tic- cense - quent broadening of the Texas Student* intellects and consciousness of world af­ fairs constitutes such a vital resource tor the University and ’ne Slate toe program should be encouraged and r e ­ tained — even if doing so rn av be some what difficult and involve complex or costly arrangem ents. kind of ipatod tha* I, for one, as part of tile first year Exchange group, was so happily i m ­ pressed by my Exchange visit lo Chile that my whole ca reer h ea rs the stam p of ’ha? experience. I hope that the sam- good fortune will br available as well to to d a y s Texas students ( ar! D. Howard !>nilv Texan Editor ?!WW Washington, D.< . f o b ( u t e ri ic u s O f f i c i a l S o t ic es Ti f 'N'! * errata * M Uh on TA O MJF F em ti toro? at Sutton Hail :m i .iv! --tori —e i Hon CROSSWORD P U Z Z L E m j * ' I C A C R O SS I -Walk* fc Clue* l l Spoor* 13 -L o * est p art 14-Sun god 15-8- ve s oneself With trifles 17 Note of seal* 18 Total 20 Moan 21 Dying man-mat 22 Period of tim* 24-Consuf*'* 25-Washing 26-Cre.ited disturbance 2 8 C o u rag eo u s p erso n 29 Chimney carbon 30 St p of le a th e r S lM e tro p o li* 32 Weirder 3 4 War god 35 Lggs 36 Mans name 3 8 O ile d 39 A cid 41 Na ho o f s h e e p 4 2 Indtfm Ie article 41 Dr ayed beyond erne of arrival 4 5 Set u p (abbr.) 46 Schoolbook 4 8-Traps 50 Chemical compound 51 Get up DOWN 1 Hinder 2 Merchant 3 Babylonian deity 4 Fruit seed 5 Plod through rn .re 6 M usical in stru m e n t 7 Possessive pronoun 8 - S r m b o l for m?on 9-Fruit IO W orker in m e tals 12 Thoroughfare 13 Whip 16-F rog 13 Field flowers 2 1 -T ra d es 2 3 U o d # rg ro u n d p arts of plant 25 C a ' u m - . a t e 2 7 P l a y th i n g 2 8 Pronoun 3 0 W hiskers 31 Lifting d ev ices 32 Without end 3 3 W ashes lightly 3 4 A pprised of 3 5 Above 3 1 R eason 39 Dec are 4 0 fo o d tis ’* 4 1 Poem 4 4 O rgan of h ea rin g 4 7 N ear 49 A state (ab b r.) P I 3 4 I 5 n 6 12 24 ■ii V 19 IS r n ;23 20 27 2 6 31 29 3 0 T K 32 iy to »*4 V 3 3 39 6 17 ' 8 jo | | j I; •: 13 I j • ' t o r 21 • to ': 25 S S 28 .... 33 to to 37 40 3 6 A v 44 4? 49 4 5 > Sc 4 3 4 7 y y . 48 V > : r n 31 l l t a 18 TI xLsL JA 38 42 46 38 wTr+** czgSU-o - led '_--.se Herblock In M y O p inion US lo t d a n Policy Needs amination By THOMAS \. BOGEL Senior in Civil Engineering Tile time h a s come t o reexam ­ ine the foundations of A m erica’s foreign policy. H ie spectacle of Administration spokesmen trying to justify th e w ar in Vietnam is a symptom of som ething funda­ mentally wrong. I* has b ^ n «,r.r* the United S?at#'s has had even the se m ­ blance of a con.' sten t, coherent policy tow ard Africa or L atin A m erica. We should exanv.no the prem ises upon which A m erican foreign policy is based and see which ar* st i’d valid. ''-.ary Our foreign policy rests largely upon two p ila r* The first is an opposition to communism, and to any m ovem ent whu-h calls itself Com m unist. The second is presum ption in favor of “social change,'* “ Social ch ange” is th a t change which is brought about by increased govern!! ent contr'-.'! of the economic affairs cf a country and by the adoption of Keyne­ sian and Socialist econom ic m easu res. Conflicting Problems tak'-s som etim es som etim es one, precedence. The When these two principles a re in con­ f i n e the t a c it o tte r United States support given to Fidel Cas­ tro in his struggle against B atista w as a case w here a belief m social change w as to the guiding principle. US aid Bolivia to fig! t the guerrillas there w as a case in which a n d -com m unism w as the deciding fa tor. That these principles havp proven in­ adequate in rondo* ting the foreign af­ fa,rs of a m odem industrial nation cs self-evident. It is nearly im possible to predict the A m erican reaction to any chang'' in the w orld's political m ake-up. E ach decision ap p ears to be m ade on an ad hoc basis with no thought of con­ sistency from case ?o case, It is becom ­ ing increasingly difficult for governm ent apologists to explain away the co n tra­ dictions to which these policies have led. The n atu ra l question which arise s is, would any policy be better than the p re­ sent o n e 0 This leads us to consider just what the foreign policy of a free coun­ try should be. The role of a free govern­ m ent in foreign affairs is to m axim ize the freedom of its citizens. H istorically the A m erican governm ent has done this by protecting this country against a g ­ gressive foreign nations. In all situations other than a d irect physical free governm ent a should m aintain an attitu d e of stric t neu- threat, *r;t *y is f --a aid other countries. most distinctly not a function of govern­ m ent to enfom o a p articu la r political, economic, or social stru c tu re on any other country. It for role Tho proper th e A m erican governm ent us to get along with other countries as long as they do not p resent a direct th rea t to our national security, 7"vs policy requires severe self-restrain t en ti use who would use A m erica's m ilitary and econom ic pow er to obey their to force other countries con. options of right and w rong. 'h e p art f Aid Policy In line w ith ifs com m itm ent to p e r­ freedom , an A m erican govern­ sonal m ent tru*’ to its heritage would p erm :’ to aid any governm ent cr c s citizens faction with whirh th e US is not a w ar. This m e an s prem itting aid to the G uata ­ xi'.alean rebels as w ell as to the Rhode­ sian governm ent. A step in this direction was the Supreme Court when it ruled th at an A m erican does not lose his citizenship when he fights in the arm y of another country. recently bv taken to he reexam ined One of the consequences of such a re- evaluarion would b e a rea p p ra isal of A m eric a's foreign policy com m itm ents. The basic assum pt ions of the Cold War would have in m e Light of the past 20 y ear- and in term.* of A m erica s needs. T ie stra te g ic A m erican presence in W estern Europe would be the first casualty of this re a p ­ praisal. T here is no reason why the US should draf? ifs young m en to go defend countries th a t are capable of defending them selves, .particularly when they do not want our help any way. in new The w ar in Vietnam would have to ho considered te rm s—free of old cliches. It m ight have to be adanbened or d rastically char.god under these new conditions. Friendly Relations It w ill be claim ed that such a foreign policy would constitute a re tu rn to isola­ tionism . This is not so. The m aintaining of friendly relations with other countries would resu lt in an increase in trad e and travel, and a fre er exchange of ideas. The only w ay true, peaceful in tern a­ tionalism can develop is by eat h coun­ try striving to do no m om than defend Itself. the A m erican governm ent to adopt a policy of non intervention internal a f­ fairs of other countries that we ran r e ­ turn to a foreign policy consistent with A m e ric a s ideals of free'], im and self- determ ination. is only by encouraging the in It J Baylor D orm itory Residents Boycott D ining Hall Meal J Baylor ( n n e rsity vide .some of the likes of the m inority, too. Food is a problem of m ajo r concern a* Baylor U n.versify. I no ersity of Arizona The B aylor L ariat last week only 49 of the 231 residents sn one reports that of the dorm itories, Allen Hall, showed up for tile m eal afte r handw ritten notes w ere placed in the resid e n ts' m ail box­ es. The m essage read , ‘ Boycott Dining Hall T uesday su p p er.” The director of food services blam ed the m ajo rity of the problem s on ab­ sence of c a fe te ria -style serving Most the of the com plaints centered around lack of choice when served fam ily style. the m eals a re A ca fete ria system has been ordered. Meanwhile this is the method of d e rid ­ ing w hat the official: T ry to find out w hat the m a jo rity like and satisfy them first. Then try to pro­ to serve, says S.x Sigm a Nu hospitalized fratern ity m e m b ers w’ere estim ated and $3 OOO dam age done to their fratern ity I Dusp recently a- 1 o { -versify of A ri­ zona, says the Arizona Daily W ildcat. an The report says m ore than 40 m en— lie m em bers of Delta Chi believed to fra te rn ity —storm ed the fra tern ity house at ii nom I 45 a r n . one Sunday. said Tile dlsturbam e us to have stem m ed from an incident at a foot­ ball gam e in which m em bers of Sigma Nu saved se ats for fra tein ity brothers. A fight broke out when a m em ber of D elta Chi tried to sn in th at section. The m en storm ed into the house dam ­ aging furniture, breaking windows, and pulling m en from their beds. Tarai* Carlos B a aeron me*=~ o* * - Goaf' m Texas $ 2 w n over r * M ary •■day, occer to Me, Baby , Don't Bug Him, He's a Specially Bs Th** Vswviatcd Press S I B M LSI Mf) FREE! A PAIR OF HOPSACK SLACKS! AH $8.95 VALUE WITH THE PURCHASE OF OUR SPECIALLY PRICED SPORT COATS SPORT COATS S f 1 Un nowad ay? T m ng area < staffs ! est 1 The at! and r ■ > for th P r ic e d a * 4 5 .00 and 49.95 N O vV PR IC E D a I s 3 5 . 0 0 6 c $39 95 A T E N D O L L A R S A V I N G S P L U S A P A IR O F C O O R D I N A T I N G S L A C K S THIS SPECIAL OFFER ENDS SATURDAY PAUL THOMPSOM REDS BARBER SHOP Aside Lines By LARRY UPSH A W Texan Sports Editor i i D / Shell Game . ive Line-Up Changes JNoof that tho 'I'exas L o n g h o r n s a r e a Coot! t e a m is in the pu t ti ng fast b e c o mi n g the p l a c i n g s ui t -hum, a n d j u g g l i n g of personnel w h e n ne ce s s ar y , r esu l ti ng in s u p e n o r p r od u c t . .1 placs But Las! year, injuries and res; emit ions ct >st Me Steers no fewer than 13 starters. Mid did it I iii, be' 'a use behind the start mc; else rested a green undercoat of inexperience, cave n (M' 'h Royal The I h rn dept!] chan this season is a1 as nine jrositmn changes I’,ave taken placr s with Southern Cal. But coach Barrel! Roy the way to the in firm an, because the tram by looking stronger each cine a regular .'all? In te rio r Lin ery coft whoie<.a!<■» swifch<->r>> ha« lines, consider^'! tim nemesis rases Tim th-• iglu was true enoug humiliated the Steer defenders tiveh interior •mas winning in pre.fall fore- : een the in • nsively. as I ’SC and Tex — Tech lining 238 and 310 cards, respe< * with an nip Corby JU To and 1 i k * Result Rice passer yards agron TI e on!' a ga lr.-t I >C Arkansas ’ • two passee. to cover tw U yd Vt replaced '*;r, Tech Huge - [ ? before McKinm y there for vt M K rn t pa rn .e* a g ■ going to do Perpetual Perrin nu rv w sen Bra nm recovered? His M in d ’s Eye Sup er W i d e Track R etread s Premium R ibber applied by retread experts gives you tires that • Feature road gripping tread design with silent tread ru b ber * A ’-e continually best tor non-skid road holding & longer wear B ill H a m l e H Tire S h o p r c. v IE 1948 • MEMS? » T 5 IO 1 Congress G R 7-4776 Special Showing of S O U T H W I C K S . . . exclusively at Clydes . . . For top rna'-* that ha* de* f* to dec le o to be the LEADER. his Le d. so Th? British six-ply hopsack ‘ ire on your ba c ic o r trying it on can you appreciaf it. Herringbones, p'a:d* stripes and solids a rr each in a class i t themselves. r ■ '/-.< &■* Us *1 v c ’r ' f- ■ ■ I.'f%U :m Sii m W R P l i p • r n , M # - jLS.: : - <* ’ £ S o u t h w i c k t a i l o r s c r e a t r 'rn-all rn redes with needle and ♦hread i \ that enhance the fit and the . v I - U t WPWi ■- m i. • kLF.tm-, ' > r--*e enjoyment every tim*- y wear the suit. See lor yourself « « . From $ I I 5 OO ant e." Royal said. “'Both sides were most effe> five with ’heir of­ fenses. What's Rice. Number 2 in the nation in total offense'* (The Owls were, but dropped to Num hor 6 after the SM U game which they won. IBIO ). three tough Shrugging off the suggestion that Texas might have a letdown after opponents (Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Rice), IB> al ‘ Letdown'' No, we’ve got a fourth tough opponent in SMU. Not Pushing Fate replied, \ : I duCf think we've had enough success 'his ’-ear no* to be running soared Ming aside his fears momen- Loyal otiose to cite ~f"- era! for efforts against f . :K 1.*. Kl CFN ; )n offense, I'd haw to single .* Randy Peschel (six pass re • ■option* for 126 sards) and Ra . ( Jennu > i four for 13 sards g • ■ : O ' Ragan t uehdown). • • ig it tho ball abmut as well as it ran be caught. " i i >ward Fest (lop ’a- U n and Bill IBradley (12 of l l passes < wls. It * good for tim morale of the team." he -aid. mas practice belter the next week 'And Practice had better n ake poi fem—Texas, in a two-wav second pin e tie in tee Southwest Confer once a* 2-1, must beat SMT’ to slav in th*'- ra rn Specialists Convene Good * ooh mica tit n between coa Ues, scam physicians, school ' f f • • i a Us. paropTv nod players is I ne of the major fa tom in ire pr •• ng medical supervision of sport* TI-at is the opinion of p f Fred Menan Jr., president-elect of ti •’ Vtnerr an college of Sports Medic ne, who s;«'ke Monday to a group of physicians md train­ ers attending a Uni vers 'y pos!- grad late conf nonce *n tho medi- b a no. rn of sfxirts, Toe conference is administered l’.y ’ ie F.xtension Teat hng ar I ]•' r-ld Si tv co B u eau and Infer* collegiate Athletics. I ti Alin in, an <>rt.h i**; c con­ sult mf to the University of Geor­ t v *he \tlanta public gia and * VMS, said "although much progress has been made recently in medical supervision of .'.ports. v,rm manv athletes who - ire not go ig tho right kind ■*? CHTP - *' ! >r Allman reminded confer- en e delegates that there must be vitno means t * finance medical .invm*\ sion programs before an is Ii jurod For that roa- af! sun. m sui* 1. s.- * ool adm ■ «tra- tors must b0 closeh inc ob rxl in the pmgi arr I * HPi f Vt“0 ’7% biti —one by a family doctor, who . rd 1 vidua’ and his knows health record and one by the team physician. 1 he Confusion, Si At Mexico City By T he \sso«uaUvi Pre^s M FA K O < ITA Confusi in at the language har­ lo the v v*. of afb visitors and re the Pre - Oiymp c rier added lotos, officials }* : tors a; Games Although the Mexican Organiz tug Comm it to’ has been hiring t a let: ’ ed pre’.-1< through Still ' ti a na I a rn rs i n t er work for months I "*«• Games, there are f1' A a nd to ■ hat d d he say’’ and W hat does that m ean?” repeated in a variety of tongues were- common questions among the p c Bo! ga- therings of 57 nationalities Exaggerated sn* les and s gr lang .age w re 11 e altern.U n es to it’s pair in some con versa tions;. Th) re head- shaking, nod ling an ! bows. s Some resuIts w ptp anno meed in Spanish , un at events 0 VV dene »U by t lilly a few* ot I Hp Furop-'an and As an When the no cr twi) official )\vm pie I. a n git a g (s- Fee rn h and Eng vis f I rn f *K differed in *he translation ti nm shou *1 tie a ettei to parents of nlavnrs ti ding them what k nd y>f mfvtir treatment their s ns ii tv * f they should be in mrc*A ’ m Allman said. "Ideal- Iv. o w n pl i.i r should have "•■*■> bsh—were ii I :*• > 0 ism 1thvsieal examinati ns I exas A thletic Club 605 W est 13th GR 7-0561 Hours — M - W - F — 7 - 1 0 T - T - 1 2 - 9 Sat. 10-6 M E N O N L Y — O p e n 6 Days a W e e k W e O t t e r ★ S a u n a Roo m ★ Swimming Pool ★ Sun U |m p ★ H ealth Bar ★ Red u cing A Toning up the Body Equipment ★ Bod y Building Equ ip m en t ★ W e i g h t Lifting t q proem Special Routines For Losing Excess W e ig h t & Firm ing up the Muscles Special Routines for G a in in g W e ig h t Pack on 20 Solid Pounds in 3 M onths No Contract to Sign — No Jo in in g Fee Instructions & Routines G iv e n Free Stin g This Ad In for Free W o rk o u t Southwick At C l y d e ’s 2350 G u a d a lu p 1 • C C S M IT H V O L K S W A G E N 405 N o U r Lamar • 476 9; BOB M I L E R V O L K S W A G E N , INC. 6 l l I U. S . 290 at N orth |H 35 lueddy, October 31, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Page Protein Study Success at UT The localization of muscle pro­ teins could provide a significant breakthrough in curing certain heart and muscle diseases result­ ing from protein imbalance, ac­ cording to John E . Rash, grad­ uate zoology student. Rash and Je rry Shay are work­ ing on their doctorates in zoo­ logy under Dr. John Bicsele, pro­ fessor of zoology. "Our object is to simplify the task of discovering how mu?* '.es work by trying to establish the structure and chemical compo­ sition of cardiac' muscle,” Snav said, thicken Muscles Represent*#*e Although the students are work­ ing with chicken^, their research can be applied to must Ms of aa animal-, since all muse ies are A tt. Volkswagen O w ners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service FAC TO RY TRAINED Volkswagen S p ecialists The Only Independent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs A d d i s A u to m o t iv e Service 7951 BURNET ROAD Across "rom Gulf Mart G L 2-0205 Closed Saturday composed of the same three m a­ jor proteins: actin, myosin, and tropomyosin. Thus far there are two domi­ nant, theories of how muscles op­ erate, Some scientists suggest that the dark bands that hold muscles together, called Z bands, contain only actin and no tropo- m eosin. Disproving Evidence However, Shay and Ro sh have secured evidence that Z bands are not made of actin but of fropomyosm. Through their re­ search. performed under an elec­ tron microscope, they have ex­ tra, ted Z bands from the mus­ in­ leaving thin filaments cles, tact. This demonstrates that the Z bands are made of tropomyo­ sin and not of the same chemical as the thin filaments. Tile .students will present their findings a1 a Cytology Seminar at 8 a.rn, Wednesday in Experi­ mental Science Building 507. R esearch ers N ev! Stop: l i e n o r They will attend the Associa­ tion of Cell Biologists in Denver, at which time Colo,, .hey will present their rescan h before the convention. — SEM I— R A Z O R C U T S S2.00 O ra n g e - W h ite BARBER SH O P Elector* signs flew and this tree in the courtyard between the women’s co-ops top­ ped Sunday r cdf as a norther blew across an Central Tetive exit. A preliminary investigation by officer- at the scene of the acci­ dent show ixl tim' Dwyei was southb und on the higinv. y when he attempted to ex:' at Riverside. I hey T appan fitly l o t r tntrol a 196*1 srvInn. an i it I Ie attern plod to kid rn to the expressway o the guard rail, of- giils at railway stations, in parks, and in other public places Ti ie arrivals say Communist authorities forbid people to take pa tores of the hippie-like Red Guards. One Chinese seaman who , but before vou check a) or b) -pencils up’ There have been some change'- Drastic changes in the business scene. But changes in the vox p o p u li attitude regarding business . especially on campus . , . just haven't kept pace. T ake the belabored point that business turns you into a jellyfish. The men who run most of the nation's successful firms didnt arrive by nepotism, by trusting an Ouija board, or bv agreeing w ith their bosses Along the way. a well-modulated “ N o " was said. And backed up with the savvy and guts to­ day s business demands. In short, individuality is highly prized in much of the business world—the successful much. Even when the business is big Like Western Electric, the manufacturing and sup- ply unit of the Bell Svstcrn We provide communications equipment for our Be Sv stem to un,.Pos, A e Bell telephone companies I his rakes a lot of thought, deci­ sion-. strong stands for our convictions, (and sometimes some mistakes. . . we’re human, every I 6( GKK tot us). Individuality pays off Not only in raises, but in pci son.! I toward as well. lik e an engi­ neer who knew deep down that there was a better way to make a certain wire connector - and did Or a W I gal who streamlined time- consuming office procedures, and saved us some $63,000 a year. Rew ards and accolades. I or saying “ No ’* For thinking creatively and individually. For doing. Not every hour is Fun Hour, but if you’ve got imagination and individuality—you Ve got ii made With a business like Western Electric, W e ll even help you answer b) with our T u i­ tion Refund program Conto on in and go tor President! Western Electric M">. A, J- NG & iuPPU ■ k Of IHI BEU SYSTM “ Nor will the situation in Si­ nai, the Gulf of Elath and f,n the Suez Canal be restored to what if was," he declared. Bo. ansi' of the Arabs' refusal to negotiate peace, he said, " Is ­ rael will continue to maintain in full the situation as it was es­ tablished in the cease-fire agree­ ments and will consolidate her position in keeping with tho vital needs of her scour tty and develop­ ment.'’ the Eshkol said there is ample le­ gal and political justification for Israel’s demand that national boundaries be determined "w ith­ in framework of peace treaties'' with the Arabs. He said the United Nations sh* u!d re­ frain from any step that would make negotiations with the Arabs more difficult. Negro Elected In Homecoming IC the \—undated Press JO SE, Calif. SVN Valerie Dickerson a Negro gal, will bf the hon.c m mg queen next Saturday for the San Jose Stare Spartans—a football team which had to cancel a game last moth ii during racial troubles. Miss Dickerson, who is 2d and whose figure statistics are 35-20- .55. is one of about IOO Negroes among the nearlv 22.000 students at Sari Jose State. After hot weekend • rmpus wide vote— never to announce ti I aimed. “ I She will preside at the home coming game with the Universi­ ty cd Wyoming Miss Dickerson Is outspoken on racial matters and once ad­ dressed a joint session of the Montana Legislature on the sub­ ject while a student at Carroll College, Helena, Mont, Continental Cars $'595 64 M G B ........... *63 M G MOO Sedan ......... $1100 '58 Austin Healey . $1 195 62 Jaguar XKE . . $2995 '66 Austin Healey Sprite . . . . . . . $1795 67 Mercedes 200 List 5,345 $4500 '51 Jaguar XK 120 ................ $1395 '66 Triumph S p itfir e ......... $1795 65 Triumph S p itfire .......... $1595 '64 Triumph S p itfire ......... $1395 '55 Jaguar Sedan . $ 550 '64 Triumph TR-4 . $1795 '61 Mercedes 220 , $1395 '65 Mercedes 190 . $2495 66 Datsun Fairlady 1600 .......... $1695 63 Austin Healy . $1795 '65 Volkswagen , . $1295 '58 Morgan . . . . . $ 695 501 W*0 6th St. GR 6 5321 Y A U C O M E Ex-Suitor Shooks C a p tiv e N ew lyw ed || gisirafion Booth Sponsored by YD's in mass to the tax asst ssor, “ I think this is a definite at tempt on the part of the Attar nev General to try to limit the electorate in Texas as much as possible,” McCoy, a University law student, said. “His opinion lies in the same vein as the intent h tad the old poll tax and is clearly unconstitutional cf Supreme Court decisions.** in light Oswald's W id o w Sues US for Seizing Items Pres# DALLAS Id Porter. By The Associated Mrs Marina N Os wa » va I av of the rn in ti rn mission named as -sin of President J mer t f >r $51)0,000 as e* rn pens a- tion for the government *; seizure of Lee Harvey Oswald s twrson- al effects. Mrs. P o r te r listed more than 30H items, ranging fr -nj bu::’cig knives to a bdl! Id to shirts and sweaters, as having belong* I ti Oswald at the time of his d< nth. “ The value of these items then and now is $500 900.” she said in a action filed Friday in US dis­ tr! * court in Dallas “ The US av rney general has taken all • • -:e and r teres* in these r* ■:iis,'* the document read, hi ■■ said in the suit that she is the owner and community ad­ ministratrix of all the property Us cd. I ce q vommonf confiscated virtually all of Oswald s person­ al effects after he was killed. They were to be stored in the Narc mal Archives, according to a special law pass'd to that ef­ fect. By The Associated Press CLEVELAND, Ohio A rejected suitor wounded his newly-wed former air! friend and killed himself Monday after hold­ ing her captive fire- punrtuated weekend in his apart­ ment. for a Robert Ratch, 2.3, shot himself In the heart a* ti r« end of a lengthy police siege rf 1 ■ -o third- floor flat where Iv lived. Lida Caldwell. 19. his captive, was shot near Hie heart D c- tors said she was expected to re­ cover. The weekend of terror began after Miss Caldwell, a buxom red­ head, went home with Charles Caldwell, H, after their marriage Saturday in Detroit. A Former Mental Patient P dire said Rat :h, a former mental patient, confronted the couple at their apartment, shot Caldwell in the f me an i took Lida to his own home in subui ban I Diversity Heights The shooting climax came after Batch had Ignored pleas from the police, a pri - ; i i his mother to set the girl fme and surrender. Batch said he would kill 'Mrs. Caldwell and himself if police tried to interfere. Police Surround House Poll • - u i!. ounde I the house, turned off tho electricity ar I (lost I off the n ighborh ■ >d in the fashionable rn' mb. The lor stand off began. L i t h’s mother, Mrs. Martini Johnstown, Fa., ar- Smith of Tourneys Draw UT Debaters Members of the University de­ bate club participat'd in t im* tournaments over the weekend. with f ir teams advancing into eliminations. topic was Tile debate ''Re solved: That the federal govern­ ment should gu ranfee an annual cash inc me for all citizens.” IV hat ms Jerry B rn! erg an i David Nesenholtz, who partici- p i cd in a debate in Houston s it. Ila in* High School, won four debates and lost two. J e team went t ’ oc tm fin als. Ken M 'Ham and David R >bin- son also won four and lost two, At Texas Tech, I vivid Andrews ar, i Rick Closen won five debates, and lost one1 Thov proceeded to quarter finals. Charles Watkins and Ronald Williams, debating at Kansas Sta .' Teacher , College in Pe ri r rived by plane and talked to her son before police heard two shots. “ We rushed in,” said Univer­ sity Heights Police Clapt. Chris Srhoupt. Batch was lying en the Boor, the gun in his hand. Mrs. Caid well was still standing, al­ though w mn cled. Batell once used Mrs. Cald- v dl as a shield, pointing the pistol at her neck, to force police out of his k n hen and down a stairway. Batch fired throe shots in the predawn darkness. < irried Out on Stretcher Batch was carried out of th" I. m c on a strcvhc r and was dead on a rival at b d e b- If ispital. Lida'c father. Herbert Ponder- graft of Cleveland, said. “ She v,. I bo nil rig it. The I nile ’ wont throng i her and out tho back.” Pendcrgraf said B it Ii , ml isis th lob’ • bn I a f bt in his ap !rt- rnent three or four weeks ago, and that Bat h I it her and tried t i choke her. ! g l IV * Af Bv Ti e Associated Press M O N TEV ID EO k l I I JH • • ■ Hobe! Recipient Physics Prize G iven For Celestial Study By The Associated Prens STO< KHOLM flans A. Bettie, Cornell Univer­ sity professor, who helped de­ velop the atomic bomb, won the in physics 1967 Nobel Prize Monday. He was cited for helping un­ lock the secret of where the sun and other stars get their enor­ mous energy. For the second straight year and the eighteenth time since 19' I, no Nobel Peace Prize w ll be awarded this year The prize committee was unable to agree i } I person or institution in ti.-' v, lid that be*d prom ted disar­ mament an i “ the fraternity of nations.” The N -be] chemistry prize « is shared by three men, He rge P rter and Ronald George Wrey- f -rd N arish of Britain, and Manfred !• igen of W. -st Germany, for their '-todies of extremely fast chemical reactions taking place at speeds approaching enc one-thousandth of a millionth of a second. The academy noted that Be the sh -wed how the sun ai I s? irs 'aerate energy by c o u l d changing hydrogen atoms into helium. Similar energy-produc­ ing reactions in other types of stars in vt Ive atoms of carbon. The Young Democrats are put­ ting up a voter registration box.th on the West Mall Wednesday for s’ jdent.s who are 21 or older. Students must register before Jan. 31 to vote rn the next presi­ dential election, Barney McCoy, t i airman of the voter registra­ tion drive said. He added that any student who will be 21 within a year from Mar. I should reg­ ister by January. A person must register every year. Each student must register In the county and precinct in which his re- donee (defined as heme and fixed place of habitation) exists The booth will provide ap­ pl M i as of registration for resi­ de ’its of Travis Cf un*;. TD ap I non must be filled out ani p.! mailed by each student. Stamps will be sold a* the bm th F r udofils who are re.* resi­ dents cf Travis County, but are residents of Texas, the bo th pro­ vides a form letter to be sent to the tax assessor-collect or rn the s'udent’s home town requesting an applies ti n Ka h tax asse* ■ r determines the make-up of I s own forms, so applications vary. ? The Attorney * Jenera I of Tex­ as delivered an opinion recently; that delivering applications f >r registration in groups or by bulk mail is illegal. This means \ tor registration workers cannot gath­ er applications ar ! deliver ti em in this Si Oil 6 of *-.6 million • i ■quires the • his office be. a challenge to University student classes now being formed Learn the latest dances at group rates Ca!I today and enjoy yourself more . . have fun - . a * 9,rn by learning to dance ^ S r l T l i • S ut. ha it Swing • Rosa Nova w h y - LlU'UU y l rf,ii a r ^ 11 a rris# —W M s*i»aahwiWWWWaag',Mirt: #T;n v <■■■ mummJmmammtm.-KOMMM I m p o r t s . t -Unsf ohs-.'-s. A,-ii P offlpt sh pmtfit i i i sf*:fiw. Guaranteed T H E M O P P C O . P. 0 Bot 1882,1 Urn* & aer* Station Discerning people who want to know w ia t they are buying shop J I h !/'Jiamau/,Jxoctn Th# most complete d amond facility in th # S o u t h w e s t . Dix id J /br. mr*FI ICOO SAN ANTONIO GR 2 5261 CONVENIENT PARKING 106 Eat* 7th GR 8 - 8*97 RE you ready for electric dresses that* 11 turn you on? O r fluorescent skirts that glow in subdued light? O r a transparent vinyl ca g e 7 Com e to our Fashion Fun-ln at ) 2323 San Antonio St. Novem ber I at 8:30 p.m. You’ll also hear the great sounds of The Feather Merchant. Paraphernalia 9:30 to 5:30 Thursdays til 9:00 2404 San G abriel Tuesday. October 31. 1967 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g . 7 Halloween Gifts Treat Underprivileged , , , Ken Sparks and Pam Shropshire make UN IC EF boxes. Students UNICEF lo Lead Drive Approximately COO University students w 'I “ trick i r treat f r U N IC E F ” T iesd v - collecting money f-.>r I NKT F and helping i t .Vkc Halloween a holiday {• n.il rlren's Km erg- en y F md — w a the D o N !-l Vrzc h r Peace Speaking of tee work rn Ie dane en TP, Bowet n by o' Texans an i poof ■> tim United Stales, ti is “ it G anally said kn w” that tile po , Ie Areas cf collection coneen‘rn* 'ion for University stub rn Ls will I • t; <■ Highlands, Hyde Park, p., I go 7 p. P se la Ie ai I Broad- a< res sections of Austin. Money collected will Ive used t- supply children in more than IOO countries with f od and i icdi- cine. Instrueti nal programs en child care and h t s -' nal hygiene are also sponsored by K N I­ CK F. Tuesday s schedule is as fol­ low s : 6:300 55 pm . — “ Fire-Up” Junior Ball­ assembly; Union room . 6:45-7 pm. — Distribution of boxes and UNICK F i lentificati n 7-9:30 p.m. — Collection from assigned area. 9:30-10 pm. — Checking in of boxes. Pontiff Begins Rest A f ter Sudden Relapse Bv Tile XssoriaM Press VAI I P W ( ITV fore undergoing a prostate of-'ra­ tion. A Vatican announcement said the Pope's fever was going down after be suffered a sud fen re­ lapse F in lay ti at prevent'^ him fr^m rn dobra ting a s >lemn cere mony in St. Peter's I ’■ silica. prostate The announcement was the fire official announcement that tho Pope would undergo surgery for the that caused his illness last Sept. 4 at his summer residence of Caste] Gnndolfo. Other announcements Ii cl only hinted at the possibility of si lr yen condition “ Aft t days of Intense w rk, His Holiness this morning has begun a peri xl of rest in prepar­ ation for “ ie fores e'en surgical operation, the date of which has not been set,” tile Vatican state­ ment said. Previous reports Indicated the operation might be performed between the end of this week and Nov IO. But the relapse made the date m -re uncertain. Tile Pope’s d xtors wanted time to rebuild his strength through rest ami antibiotics before the operation took place. Tile Pope was bedridden In his private apartment on the third floor of the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City. All private and public audiencer were cancelled. Onlv the Rt. Rev. Giuseppe Benelh, deputy Vatican secretary of state, was allowed to speak to the Pope. Papal doctors also conducted tests to prepare for the opera­ tion, expect id to t uke place in the Pope’s private apartment. An operating room has boon pre-! pare!. ’Ii’*— ■" ••:•••• Ok CnstiQian BEAUTY SALON THE ULTIMATE IN BEAUTY SA LO N C O N V E N IEN C E Street le v e l of Th# C eitilian Inn Free Customer Parting OM$tm taw b it -" ® • ,[i Campus News in Brief ALL-CAMPUS FEIXOWSHfP will bold half-hour worship services for all denominations at 12:05 and 5:05 p.m. Wednesday at the Christian Church. Baptist Student Union will lead the serv­ ices . CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION will sponsor a hay ride and bonfire at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Cost is $1 a person, which will include refreshments. Interested persons m ay call GR 7-6839 for further information. COLLEGE BUSINESS AIV MINTS TR MION COUNCIL will m eet at 7:30 p.m. in BEB 251. IDEAS AND ISSUES will spon­ sor Madame Hippie In a talk on ’’Halloween” at noon Tues­ day in the Union Junior Ball­ room. Sandwiches will be avail­ able. MINORITY STI DENT AFFAIRS COMMITTEE of the Students* Association will hold a meeting at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Union 336. All in­ interested persons are vited to attend. 4 * % Mini Skirt C ontest Tuesday, O ctober 31 8:00-12:00 P.M I Prizes Aw arded E N D Z O N E 4412 N. L A M A R FOR 21 AND OVER Phone 453-9520 STI DENT FACULTY COMMIT­ TEE is recruiting faculty m em ­ bers to host international stu­ dents in their homes during the Thanksgiving holiday. For more information, contact Liz Wool­ dridge, chairman of the com m it­ tee. STI MP SPEAKING, to be held at noon Tuesday on the west steps of Main Building, will fea­ ture candidates in the coming House of D elegates election. Bob Thompson. Student Assembly vice president and chairman of the House, will moderate. Thompson will throw out hypo­ situations, and each thetical candidate will tell how he would react to them if elected to the House. TEXAS UNION win hold a free showing of the Texas-Rice gam e at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Union Auditorium. The public in­ vited. is TRINITY RIRI E STT DY will present Bill McMillen, graduate of D allas Theological Seminary, In a series of basics of Bible doctrine. He will speak from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday on ‘‘How We Got the Bible.” UNIVERSITY L U T H E R \ N CHURCH will conduct a festi­ val service with Holy Commun­ ion at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in ob­ servance of the 450th anniver­ sary of the Lutheran Reforma­ tion. Dr. Walter C. Rubke. pres­ ident of Concordia Lutheran Col­ lege sn Austin, will be guest speaker at the service. Cotton M aid Hopefuls C h a rlo tte Delde. N a tio n a l C o tto n C o u n c il re p re se n ta tiv e , advises K a th y H a rris and C a t h y C a s o n (l-r) on a p p lic a tio n in fo rm atio n f o r t h e M a i d of C o tto n contest. The selectio n least fiv e fe e t fiv e 23, a t inches ta 1 who w ere born in a c o tto n -p ro d u cin g stat, . Form s m ay be o b ta in e d from tho N a t i c k C o tto n C o u n cil, 1918 N . P ark w ay, M em p h is, Tenn, is o p en to unm arried girls b etw een 19 and D e ad lin e fo r entries is m idnight, D c I. - Sta ff Photo Journalism Students Receive Total of $18,000 in Av/ards Students receiving $18 OOO in scholarship, fellowships, grants, and other awards U r the fall semester were honored Monday at Journalism Honors Day. Six of the awards were an­ nounced at the event by Dr. Nor­ ris G. Davis, professor and chair­ man of the Department of Jo u r­ nalism, and Dr. Dewitt C. Red- diok, dean of the School of Com­ munication. T ile Gail Borden Scholarship, made possible through a grant I The Daily Texan Classified Ads C LASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES ............................. ............... ..................... J &4 .....................* ...................... . 5 1-20 Pack Word (15 word m inim um ) M nlm .ffl Charge • Student rata (10-word r-aximum) en# tim* . . . . • Each ad dition al L m e 20 C o n s e c u te # h u e * IO word* 15 word* 20 word* Classified Display I column * one inch one t i m e Each Additional Time ................................................. ...................... ......................................................................... $10.00 $ 3.00 $ I 20 ........ 5 FIO ............................................... .. .......................... ■ ........... .. .25 J I I .53 (N o co p y change tor consecutive Issue rates.) • N E W , L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S IO word* or le i* for 50e th# first tim e 25e each add tional tim e. S tud en t must re ce ip t and p ay in a d ­ *how A u d ito r* van ce from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y through Friday. Jou rnalism Bldg . 107 in C LASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINES .............. T u esd ay T«»an W e d n e s d a y T e x a n Thursday Texan ....................... F rid a y Texan S u n d ay Texan .......... ................................ M o n d a y , 3:30 p.m. . Tuesday, 3:30 p.m. W e d n e s d a y , 3:30 p.m. Thursday, 3:30 p.m. Frid ay, 3:30 p.m. In the event o f errors m ade *n an advertisem ent im ­ m e d ia te n o tic e m ..it be g iv e n es th e p u b lis h e r* are responsible fo r on!y one in c o rrec t insertion. G R 1-5244 Help Wanted Tutoring Miscellaneous This newspaper fully supports University policy on nondiscrim­ ination of housing. Therefore, advertising of housing, is avail­ able only to those who do not the basis of discriminate on race, color, or national origin. Individuals with a valid com­ plaint concerning discrimination are asked to report the matter to Texas T1nion 323. All housing advertisers in th - Texan are aware of this policy. Furnished Apartments H O U R L Y bus service to and from cam pus Contact U n iv ersity T ran sit Co., 2226 Cued- a ie G R 7-47la V A C A N C Y Room tor one m an to complete 4 man unit. Blackstone Apt*. G R 6-3631 TRINITY TERRACE 1300 Trinity description* E U R O P E A N Su m m er em ploym erit Ail lob Placem ent Hi England end Con neat Applications now bema taker. Stu dent T rave l 2226 Guaralupe. G R 7-1340. 833.09, 20 hours. Must have car. <78 7207 after * 3 0 p m . HOLIDAY HOUSE #1 (003 6 * "ton S p ' *gs Reed H a t a part tim e opening lor one mea and me g!ri during th# noon hours C a i!: Man ager G R 7-1110 for appete: m erit S P O S IT IO N S , part-time em ploym ent w * 23 Must rave ''rosoland, G R 8-9611, 9 - 1 2 noon, ava able Po l age rom car. M r October 30 • 31 only S T U D E N T S T E A R N E X T R A M O N E Y P a rt tim e Salea Po* t on* P-ev o u i related expe - re required Student with pr or extra c u rricu la r Store ‘•c-r* ’j. nciud.ng store d * counts Apply 3rd responsibility considered One bedroom M ahogany pane na from G a p tai. fur- shed apartm ents A 'C throughout. Ona b -ck GOODFRIENDS G D 2 C807 ‘HE W A Y iS PAVED FOR Y O 1. Lost and Found M a n y e arn in g $6 to $ i0 d a 'iy L O S T S m s .I g ray cat, vicinity 22nd and San Ga br *L O R 5-8132. C a ll GR 7-826! Self TV A d v e r s e d A v o n For Rent ly. C olor portable. R E N T b la ck /w hite T V . 1.2 SO * SU VO mo* t i J I * SO - 115,50 weekly T ap e recorders A lpha T V , O L 2-1027, n answer. G R 2-3882. _____________ Furnished Rooms 4-GIR U S could m ove In today, steven bleck* D ra m a and A rt B ld g A ir cond: Honed /floor ftim a ‘.ie W ashing snactone, k toh"r. piano a n i saw ng m achina privileges M rs. White, G R 2 * STI Wanted F E M A L E T rave lin g corr. rum Ion to F o rt Polk. Novet-iber 341. H I 2-8361, HOL DAY HOUSE 2425 Exposition V I hire atudent* who desire to work niu'-’i per week hou < 12-1. 6 >• ex* » and ho da s '2652. IS to IO accom modate r a il hie Ib a rra G R 8- Schedule IO: or 6 f ex b ty t, Duplex — Furnished -ix»m C O N V E N IE N T U niversity, downtown room, kttflhen, bath. Bed- spa clous closet, carport. $75. G R 641819. G R 2-3163 liv og 5400. Help Wanted In a , subjects T U T O R IN G br Qualified graduate student* ra-es A P U P S I 'N I V K Its IT T S E R V IC E S . 304 W 24 th Street. G R 7-5651. Special group ' D A m g I ' T U T O R IN G : M A . stst# cert.fled tor Eng- lith. L a i n . French, .-nam sh. 5 blocks from -ampul G R 2-4MI CALL GR 1-5244 FOR A CLASSFIED AD For Sale ITEMS to Excitant B a r g a i n .I and K v - y u iin j. The Ad E x Europe change .V36 south L a m a r. W e take items G race on consignm ent H I I 3989. lane, 70118. N E ILSO N '9 G IF T S — handmade Indian iewe i t l e y B. Ne son. Um p. 4622 Mexican Imports G U IT A R L E R ? a Congress H I 4 IM1, 4. 4 T R A C K ” me- t o Tapes. Cu'totn recnrde d for car pie ye -a Only $150. Satisfaction Ja m es tin th-rn, 3312 M erna guaranteed ijm n G R 7 ?»;6. H O N D A 5fve F t# left, ti: new demo#. F * ipw cost transportation. $195. Cal re le n t G R 6-2067. Appointment. USL i- book* paperbacks Re a tm a h r priced I at T H E B 'O K S T A L L and P a pei ha a Ex ‘by Ka ravel I change 5"*33 Bu rnet Road, : O L 2 5721 E X C E L L F , N T L Y maintained 65 Im iw a BS Conrertib Ie. 1809 Rogge Lane. O L 4-4498 8-TRACK Oar tapes, custom made. Lowest prices. Quality. 44 1 3796. LAND-Locked Sa:,or ha* I* Ha Nett Fiber kiss* boat. 477 Ford eng ne and t a ar HO §-~j69, 7 SO a rn . 9 30 im or af*er $ 60 M E T R O P O L IT A N battery Own pl ately overha, i e l enfin# HO $-5266 ti-et new G R 7-4311. 1968 HONDA SOO Good oonditlon |3 % After 5 p m O L 44956 Desk* new and used Appliers-** new and used \ beds box springx and m attresses room sets, spot L y in g chair* '-hest*. 'om picture tram .cg We del ver, rot,rn eel* dining coffee t--,b;es heate-s .. CARBER & KEY ENTERER SES 2415 tu rn e r 836-1272 1356 B U K H Reupholstered. Palm ed. Power steeling brakes Good m echar '-ally 4” U N F IN IS H E D desks, typew riter desks, book case*, will make to order, Special pf eta to students. O L $-88131. ’.''A’ rn le t 196-1. Good cond t ‘to I S G G R 7 564i, le s s than 37 bk! M O T O R ( 'Y U L E . Harle>- Davidson Sprint 1966, 3Hec eng ne Helm et, a tire* New heavy duty sri ring, batler}-, dnve-cham Reasonable G R $SB20 * ea■ her R A R E chocmae point Siam ese kitten for sale Fem a le G R 6-3381 tar. info T H E G Open 3- If we don't have th for se them. bend But ie-fir t o n sib Typing TYPING MULTiLiTHiN MRS. BODOUR 907 V Z. 22 5 bocks we. Fa T Y P IN G warned. Neat, accurate S P E E D Expe 40c Pi rig Of with m ane years » ti f iv e - intr i to accuracy, as s t on typing In theses and NTGQM K R Y typing service. Theses, legal br c's, reports. Fa st aer* ce, G R 2-5601 Grail OL 9419th •s. l l AL lia r- .e ll ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SENIORS & GRADUATE STUDENTS Part-Time Employment At A s f in C i r c u i t D e i g n a - d T e .ts o f S o d - S ta ta , A u d i o A m p F a r * a - d P e a c e d KAM AN INSTRUMENTS to Eq u ip m e n t M inim um T im e: 20 hours p e r week Phone Personnel D re cto r at 926-1530 fo r In terview A n Equal O p p o rtu n ity Em p lo y e r Page 8 Tuesday, O ctober 31, 1967 TH E D A ILY T EX A N WpAxkct ... , / Typing. ItuHUth.ng Bind ng f t THESIS. DISSERTATIONS tmultilithed, six Copies, Met, t-.'.K*. report* multilith r n , mimeographing, 25c peg* Bobb;-e Delafield HI 2-7184. Roommate Wanted F E M A L E : any rare rotor re1, 8 on share luxury spartm en* $60 477-7639 F E M A L E Room m ate J .5 month!} from carri pus 478-37® A Comp’ete Professional F U LL-11M E Typi r,g Service ared to lh* reed* of Hoi vers 'y student# keyboard equipment int language and engineering theses and disser- ta Special a si enc* tat son* I ULU? U n i’ ersitf Service* PrtsHessional tvp v a vv 24th S’.:rf.. G R 7 >6 I. One '-nm Campus. in * Bio ¥. W e Have Movedl J u#t North of 2 & Guadalupe Miscellaneous P hone G R 7 3 2707 He C O N V E N IE N T T O campus and downtown outstanding K indergarten and licensed das •are program. Reasonable rat#* First Bap- I tn t Church u » ,I G R 62625 838-1437. -------------- I E U R O P E bound' ( c in ta c t us Flights Discounts, sum m er for C h a rier lobe, budger .Student T rave l, inc., 227U travel iaSorm ation j Guadalupe G R 7-4310. I M E N S S H IR T S laundered and Ironed Neat S T U D E N T theme typ-ng in rn: Austin, H O 5 -UM T Y P I S T » h 4 • • i -t st — ----- j desires typing In my hi t i , # * • ter w th • • •►■ n Db I B M e e t G I. 3-6763. I A R T IS T IC f briefs, report ly [>;n2 dtssertaoons, j v. IB M . M is Ant.’!ony. O L 4- j Theses, $079. T K F ML.-', sad ie- sept h i s , I. law not * ak K rive'ope j It ■ M r* F ra s e r G R 6 I 17, TApAiJuX, MBA. T ping, M a aahing, landing A Complefe Professional FULL-TIME Typ:ng S«rvlc« tailored to the needs of U n iv e rsity student* language cpeclfti kl*} board eimipnsent -Hence, and engineering theses and d,.s»et Ult IO! ! - for I H O U R L Y bos service to and t.oro ‘ am pul ! Contact U n iversity T ransit Co., 2226 Goad slupe G R 7-4540 ! T Y P I N G d me Im m ed iately 3Vc a pat- More J in fo rm a l­on, ■ra il 454-4264 Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7t77 2707 Hem phill Ca * Shipp Rejects Growth Limits Tlie prediction-shattering en­ rollment increase at the U niver­ sity this fall has led many to ask, “ How much higher can we go?” Does this year's increase of 2,!9f> students, 1,696 over the ex peeled increase of SOO, represent a trend for the future? W. B vt:in Shipp, registrar and dean of ad­ missions, is reluctant to guess. Shipp points to several unpre­ involved—a dictable for rapidly in higher education, junior Vietnam, the growth of colleges—and admits his crystal ball is too cloudy for looking into the future. Shipp Rejects Limitations f a c t o r s growing demand the war lie takes pride in the Univer­ sity's growth and sees no need for setting any numerical limit on enrollment. Requirements for admission may be raised, but, at present, there is little likelihood of severely curtailing expansion. Shipp cites the new facilities being erected on campus as evi­ dence of the University’s capa­ bility for further expansion. From a 1960-61 enrollment of 19,391, the student body has risen steadily to this fall's rigure of 29.811—a 53.8 per cent increase in seven years. And the future growth pattern could exceed this rate. Many educators have spoken In favor of a plan to o]*en more junior colleges in Texas and limit enrollment in senior colleges to junior, senior, and graduate stu­ dents. Tile Daily Texan advocates studying the possibility of im ­ plementing such a plan at tile I University. Retjistraj bist* Reason* insrea.se Shipp, for several reasons, Is not in favor of limiting four-year colleges rn this way. He does not concur In the oft-stated assertion that the quantity in means decrease in the quality of education, In Shipp's opinion, larger classes do not necessarily impart less knowledge to the stu­ dent. In addition, Shipp points out that a major factor in graduate school enlargement is the avail­ ability of teaching assistant and instructor jobs for lower-division courses. Tills year's big increase in graduate students (from 4.307 to 4 921) would have been unlike­ if such positions were non­ ly existent. Shipp says, ‘ If you’re going to have an active alumni, you need a four-year program.” Two years at one school, then two years at another, would split a graduate's loyalty, and Shipp believes active alumni support is essential to a progressive university. •How Much Higher?’ an Unknown To the question “ How much higher can we go?,” Shipp has no answer because of the many the present imponderables of situation. The necessity of a col- loog degree for advancement in a growing number of fields and the tendency of American youth to shun blue collar jobs will result in more and more high school graduates going on to college. Another potential stimulant to enrollment is the possible end of the Vietnam war. If it ended to­ morrow, a large portion of the servicemen t h e r e b y released would, in all probability, enroll in college under the G I Bill. Shipp, with wholehearted faith in the University's expansn n capabilities, sees no reason to h Id the line at 30,000 students. The possibility of a student body of 50,000 within IO years is net remote and, though this figure may alarm others, the Dean cf Admissions is not running scared. Little to Assume ORAU Position Dr. R N. Little, physics p r^ fessor, has been elected vice- chairman of the Council for Oak Ridge Associated Universities is com­ (O R A U ). Tile Council posed of from > ach of the 41 member Institu­ ter;* of ORAU. representatives Going to Dallas for the game? You are invited to SMU's HOMECOMING HAPPENING '67 S ta rrin g Rufus (“ W a lk in ' the Dog ’) Thom as an d The Bar-K ays Saturday, November 4th — 8:30 p.m. to I a.rn. Automobile Building — Fair Park Tickets: $5.50 per couple at the door TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INTERVIEW ING ON C A M P U S NOV. I & 2 W EEKD AY SPECIAL These popu lar item s from our reg ular menu on ip e c ia l M o n ­ d ays thru Thursdays from i 1:00 a.m . to 9.00 p.m . Menu Price t i Special Price $1 .1 0 Spaghetti and Meat S a u c e .... 89c $ 1 .3 5 ............... Chopped Steak .................. $1.09 $1.25................Chicken Fried S te a k ..................99c $ .8 5 ........................................Enchiladas.......................... 69c s i PANCAKE HOUSE 19th and Guadalupe ( ii fron Kuu: Oily awa tho Ti dation in I Ann Wats: ti is given r student ? point ave •n Company went to Bev* if Hurst. Tile :nu:dly to the h the highest O for the first ,fTo studios ufmnril Gr.inf in J Hima -in, received by the journalism student of the opposite sox from the Gail Borden win­ ner with tup high t grade point average, was presented to Tros- cott K. Smith cf Nocona. Vm grant was established by tho Ca­ bot Carbon Co. of Pampa. Lynnell Jackson of Carthage received ti •* Mnrj >rie Darilek Memorial Scholarship given by tho PaMnc Professional Chapter of Theta Sigma Phi. It is given to the senior woman s’ a lent “ who has shown, tho highest profession­ al aptitude and has established a creditable sci Warship record in journalism and in academic Tim John E I ’ t Scholar hip f r a rW.nt m n in n 'n c T in - em or! ii tie slu­ ing was presented to Jack M. Bethune of A Lstin. I .cia Lane Abernathy cf IN G Pint I : vt iced t ie Charles Rob­ ert Dev all Awa rd for journalism excel I on e, given I v Mr. and Mrs. Charles ii. Devall of K il­ gore in mem ry < f Devall’s father, a long time Texas news- : per editor and publisher. The Texas Public I: Cations As­ sociation Award went to Lafe Hid Hemes Ablaze n Fierce Fire OR WG EL Calif. * generating The­ rms charred I in Southern y, burning d causing $2 ‘'Devil winds” mile anda ur fire nearly IOO OOO ar Calif it i j a M r scores of homes million damage. Latest reports placed the num ber of houses burned at more than 60, with perhaps an equal number of garages, barns, and outbuildings. The fierce IOO degree desert winds swept through mountain canyons in five counties, setting off tornado-like explosions that lifted roofs off houses, blew down trees and spread the fiery holo- cau t beyond control of 2,000 fire­ fighters rushed from as far north as Oregon, into expensive Worst damage was in a 30. 000-acre blaze in Orange Coun­ ty's Santa Ana Mountains that ate residential tracts rimming the city of < mange on an eight-mile U shaped front. An even larger fire, 80 miles east near the Riverside County community of Banning, raged unchecked across 35,000 acres of mountain anti canyon brushland. including Sixteen structures, five homes and Rover a I large barns, went up in smoke as fire­ storms swirled out of the hills into agricultural flatlands. Circu­ lar wind, velocity in the center of the firestorms was estimated at IOO miles an hour. CASTILIAN BARBER SH O P FREE CUSTOMER PARKING CONVENIENT TO CAMPUS Sir’ Warm, Human Poifier Achievement tions to break from Hoilywo< I with any earthy emotions r t clou led bv soc. Shocking ‘Penthouse* To Be Used for Study “ Die Penthouse,” which will be shown in Austin as one of four American testing cities, is being used by two University School of ( immun ication classes as a study project Die controversial film will start Nov. 7 at the Varsity Theater. A U , " f V T " 50c •TU. 2-.SU PM ( AMERICANA lp m THI ATB! GI 3-6641 Hancock Oriv* HELD OVER! 2nd WEEK* Js k ie s C o b u r n . 4 ^ tPrsr I no I , I TI K t S: I S S I A 4 6.05 - 1:3S on WaleRHOlS # 3 1c—a—it legmntcopb* “To Sir, W ith I. o t e," J tarring Siam . Poitnr, Lulu, J HU v Ct coon, C It rift t a n Roberts, Su y Rend ah’: u > - te n , p r o J t h e J , a n J a .o w te d b v C la t t i l : a C ■'•lit rn ' a ] a n le t P ic tu r e H O U ' th o u m g a t h ie I x Tin it re ) By P A U L A B l U L A K I) \sst, \musemor)tjs Editor The bint e anbiiiation (b d HollywefKj has been able to <■■ > a up with to make a great moue is that of Sidney Poi)tor and an emotion packed, heart-warming ‘‘The Defiant story. As with Ones” arui “ In the Heat of the Night,” it has accomplished tins with “ To Sir. With hove.’’ linos of Along the “ Up tile Down Staircase,” “ To Sir, With Love" is the story' of a new teach­ er confronting all tho problems of wild, ruthless adolescents who do not have the common sense to know right from wrong. A l­ though Sandy Dennis in “ Up the Down Staircase” faced essential­ ly the same problems in New York as Pottier does in london, he not only has the inexperience of teaching and handling rough, problem youngsters as she did, but he also has the most con­ troversial problem of the d ay- being a Negro. O v e r c o m e s P r e ju d i c e Tile London teenagers hate Pokier on sight for two reason.1 - la* is a tea-'her arni he is black. When he shows the intelligence that he has acquired while at­ taining his engineering degree, they are bewildered as to how la* could possibly have overcome be­ ing from a low-da.>s African family. a chance to show his acting abili­ ty through every type of emotion v. Inch tie can assimilate, and he captures the audience with his unmistakably original h e a r t y laugh. The actors and actresses, led bv Lulu, Judy Geeson. and Christian Roberts, portray the de­ linquent English young set and combine to produce a most in­ teresting conflict. Their story is one which reaches into every­ one's heart and creates a desire to see them better themselves and overcome their- social posi­ tion, As ti ley begin to change, one S's ms to feel that humanity is not all bad bringing a warm­ ing feeling. Amazes Teachers Bolter's is mostly influence with his students, but lie also has a startling effect on the teachers at the si dH- ii who have lost incen­ tive an i have given in to the fact that thor*' is nothing any­ one < an d > for Hie “ poor devils.” They warn him against the mali­ cious acts that tho “ devils'’ will pull on him, and they gloat over their insight when it happens. Unlike the students* the educa­ tors are reluctant to give them­ selves entirely to this headstrong Negro, but in due time they also are astonished with his amazing aehiev > merits. lf any movie during the year deserves rn be seen by f! *• entire public, it Is “ To Sir, With Love” as it is one of Hie best produc­ list Mite I • \ Hilts SI rf) • ii:-.I-, < ;nt|s "rf*t* I WW Hith r,in ms if! (.I re I'rw "1111111 ii In showing them that social po­ sition ated lack of monev does not mean a person cannot attain "Makes'OEAR JOHN’look like a fairy tale!” -* T * d-« .ma I sin* what ho desires, he gains their confidence. He then throws out all “ book learning'’ and proceeds to teach them the I asic facts of life that they will be facing when they graduate from high school af the end of the term. From Sweden... A totally new concept us artistic motion pictures for adults! lia r Opens Pf litter, who seems to thrive on movies which challenge his color, c im es out of this one smelling like a rose. He now bias convinced a foreign group that prejudice is only that of ignorant uninformed people. His presen­ tation of the title role gives him I , a w o m a i v RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE ADULTS! PIA — VT 8:-JU "CIRCLE OF LOYE" •tans i wiia Swing It, Teach Ju d y G eeson talks Sidney Poster into dancing with her a t the senior dance after the class has given a token of their love to S 'n The film, which also stars Suzy Kendall and Christian Roberts, is now showing at the Fox Theatre. TOP IO Sinqles T h is W e e k I To Sir, W ith (Lulu) .................................. I! Soul Man (Sam & Dave) ............................ 3 Ii Must Be Him (Yikki ( ’arr) .............. I Expressway to Your Heart (Soul Survivors) 5 Your Precious Love (Marvin Claye & Tammy Terrell) ..................................... . F» N e v e r M y la n e (A sso ciatio n ) 7 License ar I Pepjvrmint (S tr a w b e r r y A la rm Clock) ...................... ........................ . . . . s A Natural Woman (Aretha Franklin) 9 The Bain, Tire Park Si Other Things (Cowsiiis) .............................................. I ne Me Forever (Bobby Vinton) .. IO Pl is Albums I Diana Boss A The Supremest Greatest Hits ( I nan > R >ss & The Supremos) . . . Set. Popper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band ...................................... (B e a n o s ) a .............................. 'The Doors (la >ors) \ Ode to Billie Joe (Bobby Gentry) ....... .7 Aretha Arrives t A re th a F ra n k lin ) . . . . 0 Four 'Paps Greatest Hits (Four 7 Vanilla Fudge (Vanilla Fudge) S Byrds Greatest i Ins (Byrds) 9 Groovin’ (Young Rascals) ....... ......... IO I lea I emoters t Monkees) I .ast W e e k I 7 ti 5 8 a IO 9 19 1.7 s 6 9 IO j . , B ■ boar oft Scott bv the Music Papa- ~ — - m n F R E E AT Blanket Tax Tickets FREE Drawing Begins Tomorrow ? Nov. I Fine Arts Box Office • Hogg Auditorium Open: Monday • Friday — 9-4 Drawing for reserved seats continues as long as supply lasts presents In Celebration of The 26th Annual Fine Arts Festival Bn * O f f ! * Open*: $ IO HURRY SUNDOWN I Midi Mi i .ii nu .faut* i >i> .la) HIRED KILLER (K o br rf Webber - .leaaae V alerie) DRIVEIN THEATRE i300 So t>J B ot Office i>i>e*i* 96 THE GREATEST STORY EYER TOLD ii *mrl!o*i He%i.*n Jiiirothjr V ici.titre) Benjamin Britten s THD HSV c a m u s HALLOW EEN BALL TONIGHT featuring: The Thingies (Great Rock n Roll Band) Cover Charge $1.50 Open 8:30 P .M . W ear Mask —— 12th and Rr -J River GR 7-4337 a n O N A ' ! 1 K C ''. Fox D O O RS OPEN 6:45 P.M. S H O W S AT 7:15 and 9:15 WITH IM81A PICTURES REUASl A, ■ TKF MIESCH CORPORiT DM ill h. IHE JOHN STURGES PRODUCT ON »i ^ " H D w u x s a i i r ----- - - l r - W I OK ii th! art PAMViiMM ' . O ' INTERSTATE THEATRE m * HVT DVY! At ■ I’M Si A r lf wt “ -A- -A dr dr’’ - Vew York On1/ News BINI “ FASCINATING!" — Li f t -# Ii* I Int busjwadcd Starts TOMORROW! Sieve McQueen • Candice Bergen In Color -- M f The truth about w o r n e n w h o g o all c u t.,.when they go for jm a man! j| ^ N IG H T G A M ES P js C r R( n jlar c - Mi.re: •I i "ACCIDENT1 In Color Starr.-g D RK BO G A RD E Starts TOMORROW AN EXTREMELY EROTIC MOVIE!” it — Playboy Magazine EA C H S C E N E A W O R K OF A R T .” — C -£• M a g a l - e -rf-, * ^ - a rn 0 ■ H I VV mvi, rn m j I I i aa. » Ai ml Wr A I X B I T I N l l N i . S tm f ?*, *% IS !'T H I EXTRA SPECIAL H A L L O W E E N 4 (he happiest n ra y ie entertainment is to “enter laughing " rn r\i O .50 S H E ’L L B E H E G E featuring Members of THE LITTIE ORCHESTRA SOCIETY of NEW YORK Thomas Scherman Music Director TUES. • NOV. 7 MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM 8:00 P.M. FREE to UT Blanket Tax Holders who draw tickets in advance FREE on Season Ticket Any reserved seat tickets remaining after drawings on sale at door: Adults $2.50 - Child $1 Doors Open 7 P.M. Chartered Bus at 25c round trip to Municipal Auditorium Watch Daily Texan for Schedule THURS! 2 BJG HITS! col LM6M1 PICTURE 3 M IN D IN G T III* M I M ? ” V M I "GEORGY GIRL" J mm® crim I KHTHRRIDE ROSS ■ •- * i l i i a a u ' . m i H O t s . -. . s t s a l rn * * * IN TERSTATE NOW! - A p p w * i gf A L S O THE W RO NG BOX C S t a r t s 1 ~ O t V i O R R O :^ 0 "R O U G H N G H I IN JE R IC H O And "RELU C TA N T ASTRO NAUT * r > i. , , ' . HMH) IN IHI SWAMI1 fOUfsIRY WHI H U I HAPPENED! A GIRL IN TROUBLE'* Tuesday, October 31, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 9 Officials Stop 14 D e a t h s C a u s e d B y Q u ic k C o l d S n a o Demonstrations Is Your Hi-Fi Stereo, Television or Tape Recorder CALL G R 8-6609 In Need of Repair Sales and Service on al! Brands, Foreign and Domestic Solid State Transistor Specialists High G rad e Diamond Needle? ai Demount Prices Musical Instruments and Accessories Auto Stereo Tapes and Players Next Door to 19th St. Toddle House Speedw ay Radio & Hi-Fi Imports 307 W . 19th St. ■ The other tornadoes were re­ ported near the Red River Armv Depot near Texarkana and at the Sea Isle section of Galveston re­ Island. Property damage sulted at both places. Mustang Tickets Available Today for Tickets the Texas-SMU game to be played at 2 p rn. Saturday in the Cotton Bowl in Dallas may be drawn at Greg ry Gym until 4 p.m. Wednesday. Blanket tax holders may obtain tickets for SI. Tile price for* stu­ dent. spouse tickets and date ti- kets is So. The ticket office announced Monday that date tickets are available for all students who applied if date tickets are not picked up by noon Tuesday, they w ill go bark into the student drawing. for them. However, Students demonstrated outside a room in Taylor Hall where a representative of Dow Badische, division of Dow Chemical Com­ pany, was interviewing prospec­ tive employes Monday morning. Students, not identified as an or- _ ganized group, were asked to I leave by University officials. Dean Lawrence Franks and Associate Dean Udwin Price said the IO to 15 students had not obtained permission to de­ monstrate as required by Univer­ sity regulations. Regulations also pp hibit dem­ onstrations within University buildings. I The demonstrators, who had leaflets protesting y e of napalm in Vietnam, left aft T the rogu lotions on demonstrate ns were explained. Dow Chemical Company, wine) is a producer of war material, is often the target of college cam­ py* demonstrations. The Dow Badische division of the company, however, makes only acrylic fi­ bers and yarns f r sportswear I I and bases for house paints. W F H A Y E M O V E D T O .707 H E M P H IL L P A R K m p A c fiA / r n y / • T y p i n g G R 2-3210 o r G R 2-7677 A complete professional F I L L TIMS. typing service tailored to tho specific needs of t niversifv students and fa ulty. Reasonable rates. Ju s t n orth of ‘27th A G uad alup e I COLLEGE MEkU N E V E R F E A R . . . K I N G S I S H E R E I W o rld's B est Ham burger I Onion Rings French Fries I Soups Salad s I Desserts v V ? > l y in g s |FA r K South 1st & Riverside Dr. (Aero** frem Municipal A uditorium ] TRW is success by association Skateboard: Quick to Class By MAL LUSKY Texan Feature Writer Bobby Lendhardt, a 20-year-old freshman, rides to and from his classes almost every day—on a skateboard. “ Sometimes I am ti the mood for walking,” he Un. ts, "but n t very often. " Lendhardt uses a skate! ; I which he built hints'- ut a w k, “ including the Yarn ■ >.” It was once a really A rp looking board, he says, ut lately it has gone through a 1 ! of k; ic­ ing around. Lendhardt says that skating with bis shoes 'n and sw­ ing over the rough sidewalks has not helped it any. He usually skates from his apartment on Le ti Street all the way down Tv mb f ar i Sr re- t to the engineer ing I a b r u -s. Police Stare '.on I -A; “ The police in the ‘doghouse* give me dirty locks * by them.’* ‘Doghouse’ refers to the patrol station at the University us entrance. “ Some of the pi also give mc strange Ii ck ■.'’ he adds. Although he has been a skate­ board fan for tin - vt irs L 1 hardt began using if as a mode of transportation when he zhlpp d a bone in his knee in a snow skiing accident two y< rs ago. “ That’s what led me to skate­ boarding, because n y knee bur ts sometimes when [ w Ik." Faster Than Walking Lendhardt finds >kately-.-ar-.ag u e a lot faster ti an v liking I made it from ray apartment Counseling Service A 24-hour a d y em erg • y counseling and referral service is available to University students by railing 476 7073. to the University post office and mailed a package—all in three minutes,” he boasts. He also claims to do a number of tricks including 180, 270, and 360 degree tunis. For another of his tricks, he places pennies on the sidewalk and zig-zags among them. This gives his practice for avoiding people when he skates on campus. Prefers v a w>(h Pavement I and1 sr ifs i aly complaint a bout the University is, “ I wish they would get rid of those peb­ ble finished sidewalks and get back to the good old smooth pavement.” Besides skateboarding, Lend- is also interested in the idl ? field of aero-space engineering. J 1 has bult a liquid-fuel rocket vvhi h has won him numerous awards, Tri is year's honors for the rocket are the Army Award, the National Arm Space Admin- istration Award, die A ir Force Award, and the Army Aviation Award. He received the same awards two years ago for the design of the rocket. (Continued from Page 1.1 —Cosmos 186 and Cosmos 188— then kicked them into new sep­ arate orbit5;. Tin* announcement said all maneuvers were executed successfully and television cam­ eras also on board sent pictures to earth of tho docking and sep­ aration. Other unspecified equipment aboard the Sputniks was continu­ ing the experiment, it added with­ out elaborating. There was no in­ dication whether some further L I F E I N S U R A N C E B E N E F I T S A V A I L A B L E O N L Y TO C O L L E G E S E N I O R S and Graduate Students The College Special is a unique plan designed on’y for the college senior or graduate student. . . the preferred policyholder because of your high earn­ ing potential, discriminating taste and need for more extensive coverage. n a w P A Y I N G Spacecraft . . . -.staff Photo Freewheeling Ii , . . Bobby Lendhart shows how. space feat was planned. The Soviet Union ha* yet to achieve the rendezvous and deck­ ing of orbiting satellites with men aboard. This was first achieved by the United States in December, 1965 with the Gemini 6 and 7 spaceships. One of the Sputniks docking, Cosmos Un, was launched Friday into an orbit sim ilar to that of a soyuz-union-spacecraft that crash­ ed last April during a test of the new type of craft and killed a cosmonaut. The other. Cosmos 188 w s launched Monday into a sim ilar initial orbit, Hie announcement disci rsod. Cosmos 186 orbited 130 to 146 miles above the en rh ar I Cosmos 188 at from 124 to 171 allies. Tho announcement si id both Sputniks then maneuvered into a linkup but d l! not say at what height this Hocussed. I I By The Associated Press Unseasonably wintry weather— damaging, deadly and nearly two months early—struck Texas hard Mows Monday with turbulence, heavy rains and race October snow. At least 14 deaths resulted, from lightning and traffic acci­ dents and fires blam rd on the weather, Wichita Falls. North Texas' Red River Valley city, had three hours of light snow', its first October snowfall since 1913. Beneficial rains accompanied the Ret! River Valley snow. Three Burned to Heath Three small children were I urned to death and a fourth seriously injured when an over- 1 stove caused a fire that destroyed a small frame home in Northeast ne. r Daingerfield Texas. Late Monday night, light rain an ! snow covered TO per cent of the area from the northeastern Panhandle to near Lubbock rn the Smith Plains. Rains, that measured up to seven inches ear­ lier Monday, continued in dimin-' idled fashion over most of the state. - Forces Produce Tornadoes Tile Fives that produced snow and freezing temperatures in the northern part of the state set off tornadoes, oilier damaging winds and heavy rainfall elsewhere. General rains of two to seven Inches brought on flood condi­ tions on the Sabine and* Sulphur rivers in Northeast Texas and and Richland on Chambers creeks, in eastern and central sections. Although the start of the win­ ter season w as nearly two months off, light snow fell in the Pan­ handle, w h e r e temperatures dropped bel )\v freezing. Snow be­ gan falling about noon Monday in Electra, near Wichita Falls. At least three t o r n a d o e s erupted out of the clash of cold northern and warm, moist Gulf air over the state. The latest or j curred at dawn Monday at Kirby- j Vill e in Southeast Texas. No in­ juries were reported. Tim Kirbyville tornado de ; st roved five buildings at the M il-1 ton Ifoxsey place a? the south-j w-'-r od go id town It then dam-; aged or demolished buildings at I the Jim m y Hoxsev place and the; J a s'f vr-Newton Electric Cooper- j at ive. 2 Dead, I Wounded In Armed Robbery Two mon were dead and oho wounded as a result of an at­ tempted robbery ah nit 9 p.r . Monday at Berry's Grocery, 5201 if. I .amar Blvd. Dead were: Will rd Ray Ber­ ry, 68, owner of tho grocery, and Charles Powell, 22, of Phoe­ nix, An/, Wounded by gunshot in the f me was David Briggs, 21, of Pl adda. l ie was fair c< ndition at in Brackenridge i I<^spital. Charged in Justice of the Peace B h Kuhn’s court with murder and armed robbery in the shoot­ ing were Briggs: Terry Trowel, I- of Las Vegas. New; David Bdvu.rd Becked. 19, of Las Ve­ gas; and Harry L. Smith III, 17, cf Gary', Ind. Police said two men entered the store and attempted to rob Berri The owner grabbed a .32 Cabber pistol and opened fire. Funeral services will be an- n un red bv Cock Funeral Home foi Berry and by Hyltin Manor fin' Powell. EVERYTHING FOR A WILD • i • ■’ - CHECK THESE BENEFITS: oOooV A to $25,000 of perm anent I »e nsi •area at lo-v q a an teed prs rn'. im V* A dd itio n a1 • tai d o O~ -> V h o to $25 OOO in case of accid en. v G u a r a n i eed preen *.rn d-sab’ed 6 months or Son 3er pa ym ents thou Id you be in the t a O p tio n to buy (up to $70 000 add Irion a Surance . . . you r ch o ice of P!ans Guaranteed cask va! aes at any emergen ties , r tgardless of tim e life i fl­ ins j r a b uty in m eet Pre-finance d first ann .at prem i im a ifom at ca ly b y your po icy in 4 yr-ar % . paid off L V * / if %/ W . Ray Cogburn, Supervisor GR 8-3979 910 N. 19th Mustaches Goatees Skin Heads H O M E O F F I C E / G R E E N S B O R O , N, C • Kake Snake* O PEN TIL 9 P M "• r ~ Page IO Tuesday, O ctober 31, 1967 TH E D A ILY T EX A N In the fast m oving Com puter S c ie n c e s, from L o s A n g e le s to H o u st o n to W ash ington , y o u n g p e o p le are m a k in g things happen at TRW. lf you look around at ary T R W location, you'll see far more young faces than ©IU. This is particularly true in the puter scien ces. W h y ? Becau se wa depend on ne// ideas and fresh vie