Weather: M ild H igh 89; Low 68 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Stud en t N e w s p a p e r at The U nive rsity of Texas Southwest Con fe re n c e Predictions, See Page 5 AUSTIN , TEXAS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1966 Ten Pages Today No. 3$ A /A ver , f * •cr- i Vol. bb Price Five Cents Fusion Research at UT Given Boost by Grant By VIRGIL JOHNSON Texan Staff Writer Foundation The Texas Atomic Energy Re­ announced search Thursday it has agreed to furnish up to $700,000 to support a two- year program to expand thermo­ nuclear fusion research at the University. The program, which will begin May I, will be part of the founda­ tion’s long-range effort aimed at making thermonuclear fusion, the type of reaction that occurs in the hydrogen bomb, usable for the generation of electric power. in GOV. JOHN CONNALLY, accepting the grant for the state that at an Alumni Center luncheon, the University has said achieved national and interna­ tional stature in controlled therm ­ onuclear fusion research and that that stature will continue to grow in the decades to come. “ The faculty and research staff the University will continue at to make m ajor contributions to the attainm ent of the ultim ate goal of controlled thermonuclear power,” the Governor said. sufficient Such power, he continued, would be economical and enough to satisfy the increasing energy requirem ents of a rapidly growing society. to Texas as THIS GOAL would be of special value it would m ake available a power source which would render the desalinization of sea w ater eco­ fully nomically feasible, realizing re­ the quirements of the state. future water thus “The prize at the end of this research rainbow is fabulous,” the Governor said. “ Fuel could corno from ordinary w ater and answer m an's quest for a low- inexhaustible essentially cost, source of energy.” Chancellor H arry H. Ransom said that the research contract types of really concerned two Dominican Republic Hit Inez Unleashes Fury Carr Scolds Tower; Senator Returns Fire swept the French island of Gua­ deloupe. Inez also left 500 injured and 10,000 homeless in its wake. DOMINICAN government offi­ cials said the nine deaths record­ ed so far had been caused by drowning. Three persons perished on the island of Saona, off the southern coast. Three more died in a flooded eastern suburb of Santo Domingo and three others at Barahona. Authorities reported that con­ tact had been lost with Cabral and Enriquillo in the Barahona peninsula, where the dam age was reported heaviest. However, lim­ radio contact was m ain­ ited tained with the city of Barahona, which has about 20,000 inhabi­ tants. THE ARMED FORCES sent additional units toward the penin­ sula with medical and food sup­ plies. Tile churning seas in Santo Domingo ripped off a portion of the sea wall protecting the Oea- m a River harbor. This caused large and small craft to seek the swollen refuge higher up river. AS INEZ, bearing 160-mile-per- hour center winds, churned west­ ward, also threatening Cuba, two other tropical storms were brew­ ing in the Atlantaic. Reconnaissance aircraft said tropical storm Judith w’as still in a formative stage with no well-defined center and strong winds only in the eastern semi­ circle. At last report, it was lo­ cated IOO miles east of Barbados and 650 miles southeast of San Juan, P.R. Pictures received from weath­ er satellites showed an area of wind and rain that could build into a tropical storm had formed in the eastern Atlantic. SANTO DOMINGO was whipped by heavy rains and winds as Inez swrept the Caribbean. Damage, however, appeared confined, up lines to noon, and uprooted trees. to fallen power In the latest advisory, the W eather Bureau said Inez was about 45 miles south-southeast of Port au Prince, Haiti. The hurricane was about 750 miles east-southeast of Miami. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Waggoner C arr Thursday scold­ ed Sen. John Tower for visiting South Viet Nam, and Tow’er re­ sponded by promising to return there after the coming election. The exchange cam e during press conferences at Marshall druing which both men voiced general approval of President Johnson’s Viet Nam policy. BOTH CANDIDATES concen­ trated on E ast Texas Thursday. State Attorney General Carr, a Democrat, left Marshall an hour before there of Tower, the Rep”blican whom Carr is trying to unseat. arrival the “ I would rather put my confi­ in our men from West dence Point than in an associate pro­ fessor who bases his thinking on SA Committee Talks Revision In Election Code Vole on C h a n g e s W i l l Be Introduced Oct. 6 in A s s e m b ly The Student Assembly’s Camp­ recoin* us Affairs Committee in mended Thursday the Election Code of the S tu d e n t’ Association. revisions The revisions will be introduc­ ed for passage Oct. 6 to the Stu­ dent Assembly by Campus Af­ fairs committee chairm an, Betsy Clark. TO GIVE MORE time to print run-off election IBM cards, run­ off electioas are proposed to be held on the seventh day after a General Election. A College’s fall enrollment is recommended as the criteria for determining the College’s num ber of assemblymen. Separate representatives frorfi Alpha Phi Omega, Orange Jack ­ ets, and Spooks are proposed ta replace those organization’s pre­ sidents on the Election C om m is­ sion. POWERS TO ESTABLISH pro. cedures concerning m atters not specifically covered In the E lc o tion Code and to disqualify can­ to m eet filing didates that fail requirem ents are recommended for addition to the code. Other recom m endations: • Signs to be defined as “any posted m aterial larger than 8 ^ Inches by 14 inches.” • Written advertisem ents, on blackboards, sidewalks, and walla not to be perm itted in elections. • P r o c e d u r e s for thz Fall and Spring General Election to apply to all elections. • Write-in votes not to be per­ m itted in run-off elections. • Students disqualified by the Election Commission for failure to m eet filing requirem ents m ay appeal within 48 hours to the Stu­ dent C ourt • Student Identification ca rd ! to replace Auditor's receipts for student elec­ identification tions. in Gov. C on n ally A ccepts Money the Texas Atomic Research Foundation gives $700,000 for University research. - Photo by VlrRU J o h u o a Curfew Calms Disturbances O f Negroes in San Francisco SAN FRANCISCO—UR — Young Negro volunteers, wearing arm ­ bands provided by police, took over peace patrol duties Thurs­ day night in residential areas of San Francisco’s riot-shaken Hun­ ters Point district. Police, by mutual agreement, confined their augmented patrols to the district's main commercial street. NATIONAL GUARD troops, who had cleared the streets of gath­ ering crowds Wednesday night, pulled out of Hunters Point dur­ ing the afternoon and were stand­ ing by at their hastily set up encam pm ents in two of the city’s sports arenas, Candlestick Park and Kezar Stadium. As an 8 p.m. curfew went Into effect streets were cleared In both Hunters Point and the Fill- more district, the city areas with large Negro populations. Only sporadic violence m arked the third day of racial strife which exploded Tuesday after a white policeman in Hunters Point shot and killed a Negro youth running from a stolen car. THE 8 p.m. CURFEW appled to the racially troubled areas, but Thursday night Mayor John Shel­ ley. in a strongly warded state­ m ent at a seven-minute news conference, asked all residents of the city to go home by IO p.m. and stay there until dawn F ri­ day. He stressed that he was not placing a curfew’ on the entire city but asking that all streets be cleared “so that at that in­ spirational time of dawn we can start work on a creative and ex­ citing program to cure our ill­ ness.” Shelley read a statem ent in Which he blamed racial discrim­ ination. especially ment, for the riots. In employ­ HE DECLARED: “Discrimina­ tion against the Negro and other minorities still persists and this is a cancer in life. in “ I fully realize that I may be jeopardy my entire placing I public career. Nevertheless, wish to state with complete can­ dor that in my opinion the medie­ val practice of discrimination by some labor unions is just as sor­ rowful and just as unfair as the archaic attitudes expressed by some m em bers of employer or m anagem ent groups.” Shelley rose from the ranks of o rg a n iz e labor to become a re­ presentative in Congress before he was elected m ayor with strong union support. Negro unemployment drew of­ ficial attention of the White House as the chief reason for San Francisco's disorders. MAYOR SHELLEY sent a plea to President Johnson for federal funds to attack the “ critical un­ employment the Negro areas. situation” in “ I plead In the nam e of God and human decency for immedi­ ate emergency funds to assuage this situation,” Shelley declared. Johnson responded by ordering White House assistant Joseph A. Califano to work on Shelley’s re­ quest with Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz and Sargent Shriv­ er. director of the Office of Eco­ nomic Opportunity. Nine young Negro men were wounded by police shotgun fire in the fierce flare of violence Wednesday on 3rd Street near the Bayview Community Center. Most W’ere leg wounds and none was serious. The police fired shotgun blasts Maddox Seeks to Void US Racial Guidelines ATLANTA— LH —Democratic nominee Lester G. Maddox, sur­ prise choice as standard bearer against Republican opposition, said Thursday if elected he would propose legislation to void federal school desegregation guidelines. “ We are going to remove the guidelines in Georgia,” said Mad­ dox, 50, a hardline segregationist Regents to Study Campus Changes A proposed defense laboratory is one of the new items on the board of agenda. W. W. Heath, chairm an of said Thursday. the board, The Board of Regents will hold a committee meeting at I p.m. Friday. The first open session will be at 2:30 p.m. Final plans and specifications for a preliminary, north campus class and office building will be discussed. Heath said. And the Board will also review remodel­ ing and modernization of the old Geology Building. A delegation from Amarillo will appear before the Regents representing the proposal for a medical branch in that city dur­ ing the Medical Affairs Commit­ tee meeting in the afternoon, Heath said. who scored a smashing upset Wednesday over m oderate Ellis G. Amall in the Democratic gub­ ernatorial prim ary runoff. jumped Maddox immediately into the battle with Republican nominee Howard H. Callaway, Georgia’s only GOP congressman, an ex-Democrat of strong con­ servative views. At a news conference, Maddox claim ed that the national Repub­ lican leaders were putting $500,- 000 into the campaign as their num ber one project in November. Callaway will kick off his cam ­ paign Friday with a parade and rally in Atlanta. Nearly complete returns from Wednesday’s voting gave Maddox 430,421 votes, or 54.4 per cent. Arnall had 360,020. It was a startling reversal of the Sept. 14 primary in which Amall, a liberal reform governor in the mid-40s, led a six-man field and outdistanced Maddox by 45,000 votes. Maddox’s decisive victory fur­ ther confused Georgia’s disor­ ganized Democratic party setup and shattered the notion of some Republicans that Maddox would be a pushover for Callaway. Moderate and liberal Demo­ crats were left with nowhere to go, and Negro leaders voiced deep disillusioDznenL at the renter building after fire bombs were hurled from its win­ dows into the street, and snipers fired at a police car. ONE OFFICER was hit In the face by a flying bottle. He suf­ fered a fractured nose. Through the night, 135 persons were arrested by police patrols in the Hunters Point and Fill- more districts. Eighty w e r e charged with violating the tightly enforced 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew the closed-off Negro areas. in Twenty-six were charged with riot or inciting to rio t The arrest totol in two nights of disorder reached 181. ALL HIGH SCHOOL football games for the week were called off in a move to avert any d ash . Gov. Edmund G. Brown, sat­ isfied after spending the night in San Francisco that the military and police forces had achieved full control In the riot areas, flew back to election campaign­ ing in Los Angeles. Washington Orders Riot Investigation WASHINGTON — LU — The White House ordered a prompt investigation Thursday into riot- torn San Francisco’s unemploy­ ment problem, a problem classi­ fied as one of the nation’s worst. A Labor Department source es­ timated San Francisco’s jobless rate at probably as high as 5 per cent, compared with the national rate of 3.9 per cent. He said un­ employment among Negroes is at least double the ra te for whites. SAN FRANCISCO Mayor John F. Shelley blamed the “critical unemployment situation” as the chief for Wednesday s rioting among the city’s Negroes. Joseph A. Califano Jr., assist­ ant to President Johnson, joint'd Labor Department and antipov­ erty officials to study Shelley's plea that the White House sup­ ply emergency funds to ease the jobless problem. reason in The Labor Departm ent esti­ mated the jobless ra te at 4.8 per cent five-county area around San Francisco Bay, and said it is probably higher in San Francisco itself. the THE SAN FRANCISCO labor m arket includes the counties of San Francisco, Marin, Contra Costa, Alameda and San Mateo. In addition, a spokesman said, a special study last year showed the jobless rate among Negro men was triple the white rate; and among Negro women, twice as high as among white women. Oakland, across the bay from San Francisco, has long been rat­ ed an area of persistent unem­ ployment by the Labor Depart­ ment. OFFICIALS SAID it is difficult to pinpoint the causes of unem­ ployment, but said some of it stems from the sharp drop in shipbuilding in postwar years. In addition, many persons who move to the San Francisco area to work and later lose their jobs don’t want In leave because they like the climate, one official said. White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers said Califano is working with Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz and director Sargent Shriver of the Office of Economic Opportunity in investi­ gating the job situation in San Francisco. that THE LABOR DEPARTMENT said in announcing national job­ less figures for August, the latest available, unemployment among Negroes across the coun­ try is serious and growing worse. for whites in August was the sam e as in April, 3.4 per cent. The ra te for nonwhites—mostly Ne­ groes — increased from 7 per cent to 8.2 per cent during the sam e period. The unemployment ra te That boosted the national Ne­ gro rate to nearly 2% times the jobless rate for whites. Video Doubtful For OU Fracas There is little chance the Texas- OU gam e will be televised lh e in Austin Al Lundstedt, Universi­ ty business manager of intercol­ legiate athletics said Thursday. Lundstedt explained there is aa NCAA ruling prohibiting the tele­ vising of such a game in Austin if is another collegia ta game within 120 miles. there The Trinlty-Texas AAI gam® in San Antonio will prevent the possibility of a telecast unless that game is sold out and report­ ed to the NCAA 48 hours befur® the game is to be played. In 1963, the Austin Junior Chamber of Commerce sponsored a drive which raised more than $9,000 to buy tickets for the Trini­ ty-New Mexico State game, thus permitting TV coverage of thai yttria Twas-OU gam*. the fusion of fusion — not only thermonuclear fusion but indus­ trial and educational institutions for the common purposes of the state. A. R. WATSON, president of the foundation, in announcing the grant, said that the TAERF di­ rectors were pleased to be con­ nected with the University in the project. “The project should be in Tex­ as,” he said. When the foundation’s long- range fusion effort began in 1957, Watson said, th er e were no ade­ quate in Texas, and work was begun at the labora­ tories of the General Dynamics Corp. in San Diego, Calif. facilities TTie necessary facilities de­ veloped earlier in Texas t h a n expected and foundation-support­ ed research began at the Univer­ sity in 1964. By the time existing commitments expire next April, the University will have received about $500,000. THE NEW agreem ent will re­ turn all TAERF sponsored re­ search to Texas. The research contract is the first private grant of its type. The foundation is supported by IO investor-owrned electric com­ panies. Funds from the agreem ent will m ake available m ajor research equipment and instrumentation, as well as faculty and research the staff salaries, University's thermonu­ clear research. to magnify role in a three-day trip to Viet Nam,” said Carr. C arr criticized Tower for “ tak­ ing up Gen. William C. West­ m oreland’s re­ that “commanding sponse was officers and fighting the men there welcomed our visits.” tim e.” Tower’s “I VISITED Viet Nam twice,” said Tower. “And when this elec­ I ’m going back tion again. is over, “ We m ust inform ourselves as to how our boys are being sup­ plied and of the operation there,” Tower said. The senator said his rem ark should not be m isinterpreted as a complaint that members of Congress are not being supplied with sufficient information by the Pentagon. two principal TOWER SAID he favored bomb­ ing m ilitary targets in North Viet cities, N am ’s Hanoi and Haiphong, but C arr said he would judg­ ment of the m ilitary on this point. at barbecue Nacogdoches for Democratic party leaders and other officials of 16 counties was on C arr’s agenda. nighttime trust the A Tower spoke against crim e and the Johnson adm inistration’s pro­ posal to suspend the 7 per cent tax credit on capital investment during a bus tour of Northeast Texas. IN MARSHALL, Tower s a i d the causes of crime and lawless­ ness are “civil riots in the name of civil rights, court orders that thwart and hamper police ef­ forts, public attitudes of apathy and a general slackening of eth­ ics.” He said he introduced a bill that would provide this year Texas with federal matching funds for a computerized crime information center tied in with the Federal Bureau of Investiga­ tion national center. Tower said in Kilgore that the saved investment farmers several million dollars last year. credit tax “Farmers will have less incen­ tive to purchase the machinery in­ and equipment required to crease farm production. With the world food situation what it is today, and with the American farmer facing the possible need feed to expand production more and more of the world, I think it is wrong that the ad­ ministration should slow down efforts,” Tower said. to SANTO DOMINGO — CW — Kil­ ler Hurricane Inez struck the Dominican Republic and neigh­ boring Haiti with roof-lifting force Thursday and reports from the Haitian coastal town of Jacm el said there were many deaths from a flood tide whipped up by the storm. Thousands were reported home­ less in Haiti as the hurricane tore roofs off buildings in Port au Prince, the capital, including that of the Haitian-American Su­ gar Co. THE HURRICANE CENTER in Miami, Fla., said there is only a slight chance that the storm will reach the US mainland. In the Dominican Republic authorities reported a death toll of six, revising an earlier total of nine. A spokesman for the Armed Forces Ministry said the report of a drowning of three persons in Barahona turned out to be erroneous. This brought the confirmed death toll from Inez to 29 before it struck Haiti. As the storm moved westward to Haiti, rains and torrential winds up to 75 miles an hour were reported to have hit Port au Prince. The town of Jacmel, where the flood tide was report­ ed, is 24 miles southwest of the capital and in 1950 had a popula­ tion of 8,500. A LARGE NUMBER of ram ­ shackle homes were reported unroofed or destroyed in Haiti. There was no word from the southern Haitian peninsula along which Inez sped westward, pack­ ing winds up to 150 miles an hour. Twenty-three of the deaths were Inez recorded Tuesday when Law Institute Preps on Codes Lawyers and businessmen who attended the opening session of the Uniform Commercial Code Institute Thursday, received an introductory look at the Code’s Article 9. Tile first day session was planned for lawyers who wanted a basic understanding of the a r­ ticle which deals with secured transactions. Among featured speakers were University law professors Frank W. Elliott Jr., and Millard H. Ruud. Friday and Saturday sessions will be directed to attorneys who are generally familiar with Ar­ ticle 9, but desire a fuller appre­ ciation of its operation with re­ spect to certain common finan­ cial transactions, such as motor vehicles, oil and gas, and agri­ culture. The Institute will continue through Saturday under direction of the University School of Law. The purpose of the Institute is to aid lawyers in the interpretation of the new Uniform Commercial Code, passed July I by the Tex­ as Legislature. Uniform Commercial Code Discussed . . . Millard H. Ruud, associate dean of the School of Law, speaks to lawyert in Townes Hell. —Photo by St. Clair Newbern Discussions, Modern Methods Rejuvenate Government Courses A Big Step When the word “H-Bomb” is mentioned, im ages of fiery death and thermonuclear destruction are conjured up. If the energy-producing processing of the H-Bomb can be controlled, however, mankind will be provided with a virtually inexhaustible supply of power for thousands of years. A big step was ta k en T h u rsd ay towards controlling this power. The Texas Atomic E nergy Research Founda­ tion contributed up to $700,OOO to continue and enlarge a U n iversity p ro g r a m designed to convert the energy from th erm o n u clear fusion (H-bomb) reactions into usable elec­ tric power. T he project is the w orld’s first and larg est program in controlled nuclear fusion research financed by private industry w ithout use of governm ent funds. The funds are provided by IO electric u tility com panies. The F oundation should be com ­ mended for its foresight. the Foundation, which is com posed of H istory and research ma> com bine a t the U niversity. A lthough th e basic principles of fusion are not understood, th e direction in which research should be channeled is known. Y ears of research w ill be needed to control fusion and then to m ake it com m ercially productive, but the U ni­ versity can be proud that a large step was taken here. We hope th at th e U niversity will be able to provide the clue to one of n a tu re ’s most obscure secrets. Technical Library The fusion reNearch program dram atically points out the v ariety of research and training w hich occurs at th e U niversity. A scientific com m unity exists on th e cam pus. New buildings have been binit and o th ers are p ro g ram m ed to house facilities for teaching and research in en g in eer­ ing. physics, math, astronomy, and o th e r scientific fields. New buildings for this scientific com m unity will be situated on th e n o rth side of cam pus. As th e U n iversity expands in this direction. the A dm inistration and the B oard of Regents should have a scientific lib rary built in that area. The library could be sim ilar to th e present Under­ g rad u ate Library and A cadem ic C en ter In stead of having numerous scientific ard engineering libraries scattered across the cam pus. fhe fa d '.tie s could be centralized. A technical library could be m ore m odem th a n the present U n d erg rad u ate L ib rary . F o r instance, co m p u ters could be installed so stu d en ts could do th e ir hom ew ork for scientific and engineering courses. A centralized technical lib ra ry would be an o th e r g reat Hep tow ards mn .rta ir «ng a gees* school Short Circuit Lr sn in ie resting cu. danger _c - rur.i r.L TS m a r­ ried couples p u t th e ir d ata card s in one of those com p u ter­ ized m atch m ak ing operations th a t a re supposed to match up com patible men and worn*- A dc* ex was held for the couples m atched rn th e c*orrpu*cn Only two husbands w ere appointed th e ir own wives and, according to th e story, th e y w ere th e only disappointed mer. *t th e party to esco rt “ W hy did it have to happen to is? ” a^ked one of th e tw o husbands so nam ed. The electronic brains ar* w onderful devices, but we doubt w h eth er ’here is a com puter in existence th a t can tell him how * 0 get his w .rn* *q start speaking to him again a fte r th a f rem ark Grassroots Philosophy A woman does no* m ind seeing a m an m ake a fool of him self so long as some O’h er w om an isn’t helping him. —The Hartford (W ise.) Tirm*s-Pres* PEANUTS 7 $ A B(T MvCH, I5N*T X? AFTER ALL HE'S ONLY A STUPID D C G 1. $ 0 0 T ! I. r > K U g SCu; -iSRE S it'HKE ] / l LOVIE uJ€ LL BE USING THE CERAMIC TILE AN07H6 j AT TAlftUiAf (GT<£0n£I J HOUGE AS TELLING sol) APOLT J PL A NG.' \ LOOKING H\ JANK H M N E d ito ria l P a g e \s s isia n l Introductory government classes are experiencing a rejuvenation in procedure and methods. for th e stu d e n ts G o v e rn m e n t 610a h as an en ro llm en t of 3,500 fall s e m e ste r. T w en ty -six p ro fe sso rs of th e d e p a rtm e n t the a ro sc h ed u le d 610 an d in tro d u c to ry c la sse s, h u t also th e a d v a n c e d g o v e rn m e n t courses. te a c h ., not only to DESPITE THE risin g en ro llm en t, th e to g o v ern m e n t d e p a rtm e n t h as striv e d th e stu d e n t on a p erso n a l basis. m e e t la rg e se ctio n s of 300 to 450 T his y e a r, then tw ice a w eek and stu d e n ts m e e t o nce a w eek divide into sm all d isc u s­ sions groups. T ea ch in g a s s is ta n ts co n ­ d u c t th e discu ssio n sections. the Af firs t, th e D e p a rtm e n t of G o v ern ­ m e n t tho u g h t this p ro c e d u re w'ould allow a few sm a ll c la sse s, hut the risin g e n ­ ro llm e n t forced tra d itio n a l sections of 50 and 60 stu d e n ts to an en ro llm en t of 100-135 stu d e n ts. T he fre sh m a n in tro d u c to ry c o u r s e e n ro llm e n t also w as pushed out of pro­ portion by in c re a se . N e v e rth e le ss, th e fre sh m e n of one s e c ­ tion of G ovt. 301 a ro p a rtic ip a tin g in th e g a m e of in te rn a tio n a l politics. re g istra tio n th e h a s in tro d u c to ry it functioning of DR DAVID EDW ARDS, a ssista n t pro­ fre sh ­ rev italiz ed the fe sso r, co u rse g o vernm ent m a n the n a tu re tow ard a n d h a s g e a re d th re e political and s y s ­ the te m s. H e h a s focused atten tio n on A ustin city g o v ern m e n t, the A m erican n a tio n a l g o v ern m e n t, and the challenges of V iet N am in the in te rn atio n a l rea lm . T he su b ject m a tte r and m ethod of in stru c tio n d iffe r from th e n o rm al p a t­ te rn of in stru c tio n . I p re fe r to ask q u e s­ tions and e n c o u ra g e c la ss p articip atio n O ften stu d e n ts find college not m u c h d iffe re n t from high school and not rea lly a indenenHent I e n c o u ra g e a n a ly sis b y stu d e n ts of key questions an d co n cep ts u n d erly in g the study of p o litic s ." co m m en ted E d w ard s. ch a lle n g e. In th e co u rse, re a d in g re c o m m e n d a ­ tions a r e m a d e e v e ry few w eeks, which e n a b le s to en c o u n te r sig ­ n ific a n t fa c tu a l m a te ria l and an aly tical co n c ep ts. th e stu d e n t T H E F IR S T P \R T of the co u rse deals w ith th e “ ex a m in a tio n of the n a tu re of po litics and th e d evelopm ent of a n a ly ti­ ca l tools. ” A fter the Introduction, the c la ss will e x r t ne ar I a tte m p t the n a tu re of the ch allen g es posed by Yiot th e Austin the resp o n se s of N am and ( Ty C ".nr.l m c p a ra d e p erm it a ffa ir), to explain Book Review the A m erican political sy ste m , esp e c ia l­ roles of C ongress and p u b l i c ly th e the p roblem s of ex e cu tiv e d e ­ opinion, p a rtm e n t p olicym aking, and th e diffi­ cu lties of the civ il-m ilitary rela tio n s, and the in te rn atio n a l sy stem and Its com ­ ponents, E d w a rd s said. .students m a y choose S tudents w ill do independent re s e a rc h stu d y on c u rre n t issues of local g o v ern ­ to m ent. Som e a n aly ze “ the role of the A ustin C i t y Council, the n a tu re and c rite ria for p a ­ ra d e p e rm its in A ustin, and the actions of the Austin City Council on V iet N am p erm it re q u e s ts .” IN NATIONAL POLITICS, stu d e n ts will p u rsu e inform ation on the dev elo p m en t of the US V iet N am policy, policy r e la ­ the D e p a rtm e n t of S ta te tions betw een and th e D e p a rtm e n t of D efense, and the US Viet N am policy today a s it Is \ie w e d from the ex ecu tiv e b ran c h . F iv e m ain a r e a s will b e con sid ered un d er th e topic of national po litics: the ex ecu tiv e b ran ch , p o litical-m ilitary r e la ­ tions, C ongress, public opinion, and “ in­ te re s ts .” is the “ W hat th eo ry of U n d e r th ese topics, c e rta in a re a s a r e trad itio n al questioned. A m erican ’civilian c o n tro l’? W hat role does C ongress p lay in foreign policy m a k in g ? W hat is the role of con­ scription in US public opinion on V iet N a m ? W hat a re th e view s of the in tel­ le ctu a ls on V iet N am ? and W hat role do in te re sts play in a d e m o c ra tic political s y s te m ? ” “ UPON COMPLETION of th ese ca se studies, we will c o m p a re th e functioning of th ese d ifferent political sy ste m s on th ese issues and a tte m p t to explain th e ir sim ila ritie s and v a ria tio n s ,” explained E d w ard s. E ac h of the co u n tries involved in the studied situ atio n will b e V iet N am re p re se n t different T hen, stu d en ts will co u n tries involved in the situ atio n and will striv e to a rr iv e a t a solution and p ro jec t policy into the future. S tudents in te r n a ­ w ill engage in fu tu re de­ tional p o litics.” sim u latin g v elo p m en ts and observ in g th e p ossibi­ lities w hich m ig h t be sug g ested about th e n a tu re of the situ atio n and possible conflicts. th e “ g a m e of T ie fre sh m a n rea ctio n to the course se em s to be quite fa v o rab le . M any find the co u rse not only stim u la tin g , b u t an ex p e rien c e the to ta lly d iffe ren t high school classro o m . from “ I the c la s s ,” thoroughly enjoy r e ­ m a rk e d one coed. “ One n ev e r ca n tell lead. Today, w here l i g h t it b u lb s !” the discussion will from Viet N am ran g e d to P r o b l e m > o f the S t u d e n t . ’’ (, rn ha rn B Blame Jr., Charles C. M c­ ' h e m A D o u b le d a y A u ­ : :a . b Art hur. t h r B ' k . Bs GWYN SMITH (E d itor’* N ote: Gwyn Smith is a psy­ T his varied presentation states d irec tly and indirectly a case for recognition of m ental h ealth p rin ­ ciples on the un iv ersity cam pus. A quote from the firs t d isc u ssa n ts in th e book is n o tew orthy h e re : “ D uring th e p a 1*! tw enty-five y e a rs or so, we hav e co m e to le arn th a t th e em otional c lim a te of a school has profound im plications fo r the effectiv en ess of the edu catio n it o f f e r * .’ T his is a collection of a rtic le s by l l m e d ic a l d o cto rs (nine p sy c h ia tris ts and two clin ic al psychologists) a tta c h e d to the U n iv ersity H ealth S erv ice at H a r­ v a rd U niv ersity . T h eir o b se rv a tio n s on w ork w ith stu d e n ts a t H a rv a rd is thought by to w ork w ith u n iv e rsity stu d e n ts rn g en eral. to be re le v a n t th em T hough they rec o g n ize th a t som e peo­ p le h a v e a te n d en c y to see H a rv a rd s tu ­ d en ts a s being fa r from re p re se n ta tiv e , th e re w ould se e m a m p le ju stificatio n for th e p re se n ta tio n s of th o se H a rv a rd p r a c ­ titio n e rs those a t ­ to be w elcom ed by te m p tin g to ap p ro a c h serio u sly an y uni­ v e r s ity ’s resp o n sib ility the a re a of m e n ta l h ea lth a n d m e n ta l illness. E rik E rik s o n ’s thoughtful, engaging in tro d u c­ tion o ffe rs a p e rsp e c tiv e on th e philoso­ p h ic a l b a s e of p sy c h o th erap y . in T his is a m e d ic a lly orien ted look at p sy c h o th e ra p y fo r .students and co n su l­ ta tio n to u n iv e rsity p erso n n el a s can be p re su m e d fro m th e list of a u th o rs con­ trib u tin g , as w ell a s from the p le as of the tw o p sychologists for recognition of V ig o ro u s C l a s s Discussion O c c u r s in Dr. Ed w ard s’s C l a s s . . . n ew p o li t i c a l s c i e n c e cla sse s h a v e l a r g e le ctu re se c t i o n s b u t sm all er disc u ssion se ction s. —Photo bv Clair Newbern The Firing Line Poll Hit To tho Editor: T he ca m p u s Bolden Poll. ap p e arin g in T u e sd a y ’s T exan, re p o rte d A tty. Gen. W aggoner C a rr trailin g his opponent for the US Senate. I would like to com m ent on only a few things — first about the poll and its p ro ­ je c te d tre n d s, and finally about s o m e o th er polls. of Tile an y poll ab su rd ities th a t sa m p le s a t random 130 pimple out of 27.158 is obvious. P e rh a p s I should p u r­ sue th a t course, but will not, for the in­ ac c u ra c ie s a r e evident. To m ention one, only 36,2 per cen t identified them selves as co n serv ativ es. Yet anyone fam iliar Constitutional Action) Ie em erging as the progressive ca n d id a te rating. Can- w ith ca m p u s politics knows th at The A sim ila r cam p u s poll a p p e a re d In U n iv ersity of T exas has one of the m ost as co n serv ativ es. Yet anyone fam iliar 1964. showing R epublican G eorge Bush leading his D em o cratic opponent, senior Bolden also reported the “ p rese n ce of Sen. R alph Y arborough. Y et, w hen the dissent ion am ong the D e m o c ra ts,” s a y ­ ing alm o st half of the D em o c rats su r­ veyed “ d e c la re d for n eith er c a n d id a te .” T h at m a y h ave been the ca se ea rly this su m m er, before the c a m p a ig n s beg an ; but in rec en t w eeks the p a tte rn has be^n for the previously undecided liberals to to C a rr. T hey a r e again seeing sw ing ‘Coldw ater* R epublican Tow er av w ith a 99 p e r cen t ACA (A m ericans for th e voters w ere counted, S enator Y arborough had been re-elected by a la n d slid e of over 57 p er cent. As a closing note, I rem in d the Repub­ licans of an o th er Belden P oll, taken statew ide by th e senior B elden. This Ona rep o rted C a rr leading, 49 to 33 p e r cent. Joseph George 500 Elmwood PL H o m o se x u a lity ;” “ A cute P sychosis, D e­ pression and E la tio n ;” “ S u ic id e ;” “ Stu­ dent A p a th y ;” “ E m otional D istu rb an ces Among College W om en;” “ Special P ro b ­ lem s of G ra d u a te S tudents in the School of A rts and S c ie n c e s;” “ S pecial P ro b ­ lem s E n co u n tered the G ra d u a te of B usiness A d m in istra tio n ;” School “ P s y c h ia tric P ro b lem s of M edical S tu ­ d e n ts ;” and a T h e ra p y .” a t T hese d iffe re n t a rtic le s ca n se rv e as in fo rm ativ e to those w ishing to consider an y of th ese su b je cts in depth, alw ays keeping in m ind th at this is a specifi­ ca lly m e d ica l-p sy ch iatric and essen tially psyci Analytic view point. I am pleased to see ev id en ces of d y n am ic approach to sh o rt-te rm th e ra p y . E q u ally a s sig n ifican t to the u n iv e r­ sity personnel is the recognition of the the a ttitu d e s and b e­ v ita l role w hich h av io r of a d m in istra to rs and faculty m e m b e rs p la y in the grow th, develop­ m e n t and a c a d e m ic acco m p lish m en ts of the stu d e n t. THE IMPORTANCE of the au th o rities in providing guid an ce and identification is em p h asized , in addition to the a d v isa ­ bility of th e ir being sufficiently inform ed to m a k e a p p ro p ria te and to be ab le tim ely re f e r ra ls to the H ealth Service. “ C ertain ly in a c a d e m ic a re a s w here psy­ c h ia tric help is av a ila b le only to a very lim ited d e g re e , the good w hich com es intelligent use of established the from p sy c h o th erap e u tic p rin cip les by all those who com e in co n tac t w ith stu d e n ts far outweigh! is done through th e ir occasional m is in te rp re ta ­ tion or injudicious u s e .” h a rm w hich th e to the b ro a d e r com m unity Tile v alue of the p sy c h iatrist as a con­ su lta n t life of the u n iv e rsity and to the a d m in is tra ­ tion is discu ssed , along w ith th e re a liz a ­ tion th a t it is ap titu d e as w ell as tr a in ­ ing th at m u st be considered in d e te rm in ­ of The im plications ing who will function best as consultant. a d m in istra tiv e policies and th eir influence on the a tti­ tudes and behavior of stu d en ts is m uch m ore com plicated th an could lie c o v e r­ ed in this volum e, but the observ atio n s h ere could se rv e to enco u rag e evaluation In thus are a. IT IS EQL ALLY AS tru e, though not so well em phasized, th a t the p sy c h iatrist who would be of help to a stu d e n t, m ust h ave re a lity know ledge of a d m in is tra ­ tive and teaching attitu d e s and p ra c tic e s if he is to be of co n stru c tiv e help to any stu d en t within his m ilieu. The au th o rs m ake a point for com ­ m unication am ong e d u c ato rs, a d m in is­ tra to rs arid h ea le rs so th a t considerations and insights from all th ro e a r e a s m ay be coordinated and utilized to the best interest* of the educational com m unity. With broad ran g in g m a te ria l, this book is fertile ground for providing healthy, th e p a r t of philosophical thinking on univ ersity personnel. Not le ast of the these opportunities is a brief allusion to the fact that students as well as faculty m e m b e rs tend to see tho college in loco p are n tis “ d espite intelligent a tte m p ts on the p art of m any colleges to d iv e rt th e m ­ selves of this ro le.” INSTITl HO N S of higher le a rn in g m ay well ask them selves if it is possible to escape this role, and if not, w hether it m ight be m ore profitable to acknow ledge tho role as an enabling ste p tow ard m e e t­ ing it effectively. This is a valu ab le re so u rc e book for and a d m in istra tiv e officials, faculty, m edical personnel of colleges and uni­ v ersities. It should a ttr a c t w ide interes*. too, from tre a tm e n t p e rso n s re p re s e n t­ ing any asp ec t of th e h u m a n beh av io r field who a r e concerned w ith psycholo­ gical aid for the stu d e n t in h ig h er e d u c a ­ tion. Emotional Problems Afreet Students Life — The Italian New* chiatric eocial worker.) th e ir com petence and professional need to be accep ted as p sy c h o terap ists. It is to be hoped th a t Increasingly in the future, concern for providing psychoso­ cial se rv ic e in its bro ad est, in te r-rela te d sense will su p p la n t w hat h as been a jealo u sly gu ard ed and narrow ly defined m e d ica l sp ecialty. THE STRUCTURAL m a k e u p of the book inclu d es d etailed and som etim e* tech n ical discussion listed un d er the fol­ lowing title s : “ T he Role of the College P s y c h ia tr is t;" “ F a c u lty C ounseling and R e f e r r a l;” “ The R ole of the P sycholo­ g ist in a College H ealth S e rv ic e ;” “ D is­ tinguishing P a tte rn s of S tudent N eu ro s­ e s ; ” “ P ro b le m s C onnected w ith S tudy­ in g ;” “ B a sic C h a ra c te r D iso rd ers and w e G O V R I O T S . N O U ) H O U ) E L S E . . • T f ' C U A G P R S ! T h e Da i l y T e x a n - ' * - <•- 'lev i t pub i f ft c u d cc- c f w h i s p e r hr T h e L'rover* •■•Mi flu i\ r x r f p t Monday and Satur- - ' J<.va* I hr ouch May and ta ' "A . ' ' i n ’ : y n August by I n c . Du-. -ar D, tn iv e rslty Station, Austin T exas 78712. Sec­ ond-class postage pa and ad v e r t isin g J B. I l l (GB 1-3227. J ASSOCIAT ED PRE5S WIRE SERVICE The As Of sated Presa is exclusively entitled the to tis* tor republication of ail news dispatches e n d u e d u or not otherw ise credited this newspaper and lf . a 1 item* of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of publication of ah C h e r m atter herein also reserved NATION 41. Kill ! ATION 41 SDVt.RTISLNG fit.HTH FA it.* Dad' Trvan In rppt urn left nationally In the find of arf. fruiting b> Urn NEAS. to in f i ne S e m e s t e r ( f al l or spring) 13.50 Two S e m e s t e r * ( f al l a n d s p r i n g » D e l i v e r e d b y c a r r i e r ( w i t h i n A u s t i n a r e a f r o m l i t h t o 38t h a n d J e f f e r s o n I n t e r r e g i o n a l H i g h w a y t o D e l i v e r e d bv m a i l w i t h i n T r a v i s C o u n t y D e l i v e r e d bv m a i l o u t s i d e T r a i i s C o u n t y b u t w i t h i n I S 3.50 if, a St OO 6. 75 I he op in io ns e x p r e s s e d the ed itorial c olu m n nee those of the editor. AU ed itorials un less si g n ed are w ritte n by the editor. in Guest ed itorial v i e w s arc not n eces sa rily the ed itor s ' le x a n are not A n e op in io n s e x p r e s s e d tho se of T h e U n iv ers ity of T e x a s admini** 'the D a l l y in n ecessa rily tratlon or Board of R eg en ts P ER M A N EN T STAFF EDITOR .............................. J O H N E C O N O M ID Y M A N A G IN G EDITOR .......................... BILL CRYER ASST. M A N A G IN G EDITOR . . . . C A R O L Y N N IC H O L S N E W S EDITOR ............................. S U S A N PO W ELL ED ITO RIAL P A G E E D IT O R ................. BILL M A L A IS E SPORTS EDITOR ...............................J O H N A N D E R S A M U SE M E N T S EDITOR .............. RENEE F EN D R IC H FEATURE EDITOR ................... S U Z A N N E SH ELTO N STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Issue New, E d ito r ...................... Le|a Abernathy Make-Up Editor ............................ Don pannsn Peggy M atch e d, Peter Heyne Copy E d ito rs Morris Issue Sports E d ito r ............................ Sport* A ssista n t............................ Larry Upshaw Issue Amusements E d ito r ..................Jim Kunetka Editorial Page E d ito r ............................. Haun Page 2 Friday, Septem ber 30, 1966 THE D A IL Y T E X A N Grad Students Will Organize A graduate student "move­ ment’' is gaining strength on campus, Lewis Mandell, spokes­ man for the founders of a newly- conceived club for graduate stu­ dents, said Thursday. Mandell. a teacher's assistant In economics, said the idea for the organization was formulated sm ong several graduate students who think that joint-effort. not separate appeals, might bring favorable responses to their prob­ lems "We are sure the Administra­ tion will work with us, but they to must have an organization work with.’* he said. Many teacher’s assistants re­ sent the Teaching Retirement Plan, which Involves mandatory payments for teacher retirement. Mandell said Although a 6 per cent deduc­ tion may not seem large to many people, Mandell noted. It may increase economic pressures for married their families. assistants and from In addition, graduate students bemoan that no social facilities exist for them. They derive no benefits the compulsory Union fee, the teaching assistant claimed. "Our from interests diverge those of the "Swinging” set, he said. Other issues arousing the group include exclusion from the facul­ ty cafeteria and the compulsory freshman-level course In Texas Government. Though happy with most as­ pect* of the University, Mandell •aid the organization has no in­ tention of fighting with the Ad­ ministration — but of working with it The first meeting of the club will be at 4 p.m., Monday In Busine** Economic* Building 155. tug 155. Vlfhat Goes On Here nom At tai** f 904—M auka* to*T*ptxr A*** rem et* CoOp. a r n a t t a At pfro- to th* U m v.raity ta Homa • l l —CbffAA and doughnut* AOM • ♦ —OoCaa hour And EownomWto Building USS ►—Amarlcan «ori«*tr of O-rfl &yr.n*«rt raaaUnf a* tha Cornroot or# Parry HoIaL 'T h # Dy­ th# Community “ br D*. namics of Bettor* ttortdAon At U nir # ratty Dr**by­ te tia n Q rarch. 2*18 Ban Antonio Bt t-1 1 —T M M Union dane* to Union B u fid ­ in f Chnck Walton. Student Fills Prescription R a lp h B o a tm a n , se n io r p h a r m a c y stud e nt, fills a p rescrip­ tion u n d e r th e s u p e rv isio n o f re g is te re d pharm a cists in the in the p h a r m a c y H e a lt h C e n t e r p h a r m a c y . S t u d e n ts w ork to fulfill license in te rn re q u ire m e n ts o f Texas law. LBJ's Asian Visit Not Yet Scheduled WASHINGTON — (B — Presi­ dent Johnson said Thursday he doesn’t "have any hopes and plans at this tim e” to expand his Pacific trip next month. But he promised to make an announce­ ment as soon as his itinerary is complete. Johnson, holding a news con­ ference after conferring with l l governors representing both poli­ tical parties, was asked what he had told them about his hopes for the Manila conference which will bring him together in late October with leaders of six Asian countries involved in the Viet Nam Nam war. He replied that he had told the governors the sam e thing that the White House had announced Tuesday — that the conference would be held "In the area of O ct 20.” In fact, the official announce­ ment had said Johnson would go to the Philippines on or after Oct. 18. Johnson was asked lf he plan­ ned to visit other countriea on hi* trip. "I don't have any hope* and plans at this tim e,” he replied, promising announcement would be made as soon as any decisions were reached. an There has been speculation that Johnson might expand his tour include Australia. New Zea­ to land, South Korea — and possibly even South Viet Nam. Nobody has a smoother line! Than M rW ran gle r* l l PERMANENT PRESS Shirts and Slacks with F ortrel gay no m o re...M r. Wrangler has tha last word In that *t*y-n*at, wrinkl*-fr*e look. Naturally, they're Permanently Preeaed 5 0 % F o rtr e l p o ly—i f , 50% cotton. Completely guaranteed for on* yea i f normal wean Hot and Cool Winds in Chile Texans, Si; U S Foreign Policy, No By MIKE LONSFORD little response from The first contingent of I niver­ i t y students who went to Chile as part of the T exas-Chtic e x ­ change program eight Nears a g o their drew Chilean hosts Interest in die program and the students has increased year Iv, however, and has resulted in a program m utually beneficial to both Chilean students and their Texas counterparts WHEREAS THE mood of the Chileans toward the first Texans to visit there was one of intl;? ference and disinterest, the aft! hide this year was vocal and energetic. Paul Gingrich, one of the Uni- verssity students who went to Santiago in mid-August, summed up the Chilean attitude as being w a r rn the Texans as A m e r i c a n citizens, but cool govern­ toward the Am erican m ent and some of foreign policies. toward its ti e "They delineate between United States people and the Unit­ ed States government.” he said. "Their genera) toward us as Americans was w arm , but their opinion was that the I nit- ed States should not be in Vier Nam and should not interfere in Latin American a ffa irs.” reaction HE SAID the feeling of the Chileans was very hostile tow a rd in South American participation Viet Nam, and the reference about intervention in Latin Ameri­ ca was aimed specifically at United States intervention in the Dominican Republic in the spring of 1965. "T he Chilean students are vio­ lently opposed to A m er4.-'an p a r­ ticipation in South Y e t Nam. and a re very much afraid of the A m erican policy of intervene >r a I^atin A m erican m a tte r ’’ Sa a Speights, another T exas partici­ pant. said. She said the possibility that th e Chileans will elect a com­ m unist as their next president is great. This arouses tile Chil­ ean students’ hostility tow ard the they be­ United States because lieve very strongly that the Unit ed States would send 4n troops as they did In Santo Domingo "I TOI LD V T h o n e s ty tell them th at this would not be the ca se ." Miss Speights said Although the Chilean students a re antagonistic toward w h a t they call "Y ankee im perialism " Miss S leights said the Chileans a re curious about Am ericans and a re interested in them. "They are very nationalistic, and wont m id d le c la ss Am erican things,” she said. "T hey want to bo able to wake up in the m orn­ ing to the sound of their radio and whistle along with the Coca Cola com m ercials as they shave with their electric ra z o rs.” ANOTHER MEMBER of the U niversity troupe said the Chil­ eans . . accepted us much b e t­ te r as individuals than as A m eri­ can citizens.” Judy Barefield said the average toward disa friendly although he Chilean was Americans gm es with American foreign policy But it is the fanatics, she left wing the extrem e •aid , of w ho ape -k the loudest and a;'* cnnsequent.lv heard the most. She said she had no di disappoints or sionm ents with the exchange program program was as good as pro g ram w here you work w » d islik ­ en us The any th a impiously different type of p o pie ai id cultui R e CHILEANS, Mi T in w ere very sincere, but field said their unw iii.ogress to som etim e their argum ents e In com pr the dis and attitudes displayed parity between what their ideals dictate*! and w hat they actually wanted. "Tile only way really to de­ term ine the value of the program individuals is involved take advantage f it in the fu tu re .” to see how tile D iscussing the violent vocal haran g u es aim ed at the Texans lead- by Chilean leftist student BSU M e m b e r s to M e e t University Baptist Student I n- ion m em bers will attend the RS! ’ State Convention in Fort Worth, Oct. 11-16. Dr. G eorge Schweitzer, profes­ sor of chem istry at the U niver­ sity of Tennessee, will speak A three earned doctors holder of degrees — in inorganic chem is­ try, philosophy of religion, and history of science, Dr. Schw eitzer has acted as scientific consultant for the Atomic E nergy Com m is­ sion of er* R ichard the exchange to them, " , less Action, speaks louder Wright, ai students, . dial gm n the liter BRIGHT SAID is the the most ii which larges! though not constituency, is unorgai copt on one fundament.! they are united in the expectation for the com lu tion. A common enerr revolution, they believe United Stat.**. Thus. Wi­ the Texans w eren’t idei Am ericans, but wrtua cused” of being Amen "Tile basic problem th * n the (Ti ii ran exchange program is r>ne h< th of m isunderstanding sides The people of Hip United States think that basically it ri- **. it does not little good because ideas thinking, the change of the leftists,” Wright said "The m isunderstanding on the Chilean side comes from the leftists’ re fusal ideas and problem s with the Am erican students The problem is a lack is a of com m unication. Til e re tendency am ong to close their doors to com m unica­ tion.” to discuss leftists talk, the to the leftists or on The fact that the Texas group failed to m ake any effective im ­ the pact on University of Chile as a whole resulted on one hand from the leftists’ listen while on the other hand "they w e r e highly organized and quite vo­ cal." Wright said. refusal to THOI GR THE TEX\ NS w*>n» tim es fru stra te d In their cnn- the chilean students. t ■> Hi label ;ht said, he couldn’t V the program Ineffective i'm* • to <’ ango lr get h er so is r e rn*;; r people * "T he purpose of the program ideas, but to t h a t •• m com e to understand ea<-h Out of this understanding cooperation ” W right said, t h a t a cooperation tv Huoncing and r necessity come about n ’ e : c me. It is a long range g i d. Involving people S . cess depends upon the 'ie future depends fum er f , the under­ standing and cooperation am ong them .” *; p pp* ole and and A ked a tmut the future of th* pr gram . Dr Joe Neah head of the University International Cen­ to- said the program is a good on° ar I he hopes it. will continue. NEAL POINTED out that the program s contract with the State Department is on a yearly basis and must be renegotiated each year. The State Department has re> entiv pared the quota of pro­ gram students from 15 to 19. Reas -ns for the decrease were economic, attributed to the cost of the war in Viet Nam and the cost of various domestic Admin­ istration programs. The original program schedule of IO years has two years left. Dr. Neal said, . . if we m ake the full ten years I would con­ sider It a great success. I'd like 't continue on after the to original schedule e x p ires.” The U.S. Naval Oceanographic Office invites you to participate in the exploration of inner space If yoa are graduating this year with a de­ gree kl science or engineering, the U.S. Naval Oceanographic Office offers exciting and challenging assignments in labora­ tory research, world-wide experiments kl ships, submarines and aircraft, or tai man­ aging systems development contracts with private industry. At the Oceanographic Office, as a Civil Service employee, you will earn generous vacations and sick leave, inexpensive life and health Insurance, and a very liberal retirement plan. Penetrating the ocean floor with a "bottom corer." Analyses of bottom sediments contribute to under­ sea warfare as wen as providing insight into the ori­ gin and evolution of our planet. Using instructions prepared by mathematicians, th* high-speed electronic computer makes computation* In th* scientific fields of oceanography, navigation, photogramme try, hydrography and geomagnetism. College graduates who loin the Oceano­ graphic Office are provided with the ad­ vantages of a concentrated on-the-job trainin g program designed to impart knowledge, skill, and professional com­ petence with emphasis on “ learning by doing." The Office is staffed with numer­ ous senior scientists and engineers with many years of experience in their particu­ lar disciplines. Financial assistance is available for study at any of the six major universities in the Washington area. In addition, a number of courses are offered at the Oceanographic Office, For more Information about opportunities with the U.S. Naval Oceanographic Office, see the interviewer who visits your cam­ pus or write directly to The Employment Officer, U.S. Naval Oceanographic Office, Washington, D.C. 20390. ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Representatives of the U.S. Naval Oceano­ graphic Office will be available for inter­ views on FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14 Contact your College Placement Officer for an appointment. Geophysicists operating the Vector Airborne M agne­ tometer (YAM ) on • survey flight Due to the growing recognition of the Im­ portance of oceanographic research, these assignments offer excellent opportunities for professional growth now, and promise to offer even greater opportunities in the future. Qualified college graduates with major studies in Physics, Chemistry, Meteorology, Astronomy, Geophysics, Mathematics, Geodesy, and Engineering are needed for long-range research in these areas: 1. General Oceanography— the physical, biological, chemical and geological make­ up of the oceans and the ocean floor. Not only does this involve the study of waves, sea ice, tides and currents, but also the propagation of sound and sonar in the sea, the analysis of sea-bottom sediments as they apply to undersea warfare, and bio­ logical studies of marine vegetation, ani­ mal life, and organisms with special regard to fouling and boring. 2. Geophysical and Geodetic Surveys— on land and at sea. Analyses and measure­ ments of gravity and magnetic fields to provide accurate positional data for the location at missfle an ga stations and air and marine navigational aids. 3. Bathymetry — use of new electronic depth and location techniques for precise descriptions of the ocean floor. Survey ships the world over are probing the ocean depths to improve nautical charts, and enlarge scientific understanding of here­ tofore unknown environmental elements. 4. Oceanographic Instrumentation — in­ volving the latest principles of electronics, optics and nucleonics. EE’s and M E ’s ini­ tiate and carryout programs with industry, and perform hydrodynamic studies lead­ ing to the design of components for instru­ mentation. 5. Information Processing— through the use of computer systems. Programming of statistical, scientific, and technical data such as Loran navigational tables and sur­ vey coordinates, sea water densities, un­ derwater sound velocities, dynamic depth and grid transformations. 6. Cartography— Including modem por­ trayals of charts, reports, and diagrams required for navigation by the Navy and Merchant Marine and various military op­ erations. Designing charts showing depth, contours of the ocean floor, channels and shoals, and coastal topography, with the aid of aerial photography and photogram- metric equipment U.S. NAVAL OCEANOGRAPHIC OFFICE Washington, P X . (located just 7 miles southeast of the White House) A a Equal O pportunity Em ployer Reynolds-Penland Austin, Texas Gold’s Department Store Georgetown, Texas Merritt, Shaefer, & Brown Austin, Texas Or writ# Mr.Wrangler Bufo 920, S50 Fifth A venue New York, N Y. 10001 • ■. rn '"B C E L A N I S T * TOPTR1L* IS A T M . Of T I S E * TNPOSTRISf, TNC Friday, Saptambar 30, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa** S Albania Nixes Role O f UN In Visit Talks UNITED NATIONS — <* — Proposals by soma of tha smaller countries for a UN role In Viet Nam peace efforts met with a resounding no Thursday from Al­ bania, regarded as Communist the United Chinas voles Nations. to Nest! Na**, the Albanian for­ eign minister, told the 119-na­ tion General Assembly that North Viet Nam objected to any kind of tnterferenc* by th* United Nations. -THE ALBANIAN delegation wishes to stress the fact that any Scientific Meet To Talk Gains Developments is astronomy, physics, chemistry, and human genetics will be discussed at a conference at the University Oct. v s Astronomers est th* program are Dr. Harlan ISmith and Dr. William R Jeffrey* TTI of the University. Fusion and plasma physics research will be discussed .Tames L. Tuck of Los by Dr "irifle Laboratory and Alamos ii E. Drummond of the Dr. Will University. Recent developments to chem- fctry will b* discussed by Dr. F. Au Long of Cornell University, Dr. Juan Oro of the University of Houston, and Dr. Michael De­ war of the University of Texas. Two University professors. Dr. H. E. Sutton and Dr. Robert P. Wagner, and Dr. Allan Campbell of Rochester University wCn dis­ cuss research In genetics. The conference is sponsored by (ha School of Communication with support by th* National Science Foundation for the bene­ fit of newsmen to Texas and th# Southwest attempt of tills kind would fall, because it would only be a new blow at the future of the United Nations, which is already great­ ly Jeopardized,” he said. Albania is a virtual outcast among the Soviet bloc countries and does not meet with them in private conference, but to gen­ eral vc,tea with them, Na«e reflected the split be­ tween Peking and Moscow with a charge that the Viet Nam sit­ uation is growing worse because of the policy “of another great power, which strengthens with the American imperialists.” PEKING RAS accused the So­ viet Union of working behind the scenes with the United States on the Viet Nam issue. that Nase charged also the United States is seeking "an anti- Chinese holy alliance” which would be Joined by the major powers of Europe and Asian neigrbors of China to complete “ what it is convenient to call an iron ring around China ” He called for an unconditional immediate withdrawal of from South forces and American Met Nam. “THIS IS THE only Just mad to a settlement of the Viet Nam question,” he added. “There is no other.” Reflecting the views of some of the smaller nations, Foreign Minister Per Hakkerup of Den­ mark said it was conceivable that at some stage the authority of die United Nations could be used as the control machinery for a Viet Nam peace settlement. “If the United Nations is call­ ed upon to assume that role, I feel convinced that many mem­ ber states will be prepared to contribute personnel, equipment and money,” he said, “Denmark will certainly be among them.” He expressed support for the latest US peace proposals on Met Nam. Studying the Academic Center An architectural student learns his profession partly by making sketches of campus buildings. Throughout the semes­ ter these students are a common sight along the W e st M all busy at their drawing boards. Poverty Bill Passed WASHINGTON—TJA—The House passed the administration's $1.75- bflllon antipoverty bill Thursday night but tightened congressional control over the program and ad­ ded curbs on spending. The vote was 210-156. Passage earn# after Republicans, rebuffed ta their efforts to make any major changes ta the bill, tried to kill it outright and momentarily suc­ ceeded. The bill now goes to the Sen­ takes up a ate, which Friday $2.5 billion version of the meas­ ure that is $750 million over President’* Johnson’s budget re­ quest CAREER JU is or, bow to make Vie most of a herd-won EE decree . ■ y % I New Energy Sought A FUSION power plant would also be extremely safe. There would be no danger of nuclear explosions. In addition, radioac­ tive hazards would he low and the disposal of radioactive waste? would be a small problem com pared with the problem presents by fission reactors. (See related story, page I.) thermonuclear Th* new Texas Atomic Energy Research Foundation grant for continued fusion research at the University pre­ sents faculty and research staff with a giant problem and oppor­ tunity—the taming of the hydro­ gen bomb. If the project bears fruit the force which powers the universe will be put to use to provide so­ ciety with a low-cost and virtually inexhaustible supply of energy. THE FUSION PROCESS of the nuclei of light elements was rec­ ognized in the 1930's as the pro­ cess responsible for the energy generation In the stars. However, because of the high temperatures and pressures required to make it work, scientists did not even think of reproducing such reac­ tions for the purpose of energy generation on earth. The situation changed ta 1942 when the Atomic Age was born beneath the stands of a Chicago football stadium. With the inven­ tion of the atomic bomb, scien­ tists were at last able to pro­ duce temperatures great enough to start a fusion reaction. Uncontrolled, such a reaction bums most of the hydrogen in a fraction of a second, giving an explosive release of energy. This is the basis of the hydrogen bomb. TO DATE, there has been no break-through in the development of a controlled fusion reaction. | Research Is being centered in finding a Wray to hold ionized deu­ terium gas in stable confinement long enough for it to be brought j to an ignition temperature of 400 million degrees centigrate for a j self-sustaining fusion chain reac­ tion to be achieved. At General Dynamics ta Cali­ fornia, where early TAERF spon­ sored research was conducted, scientist* are experimenting with magnetic bottles — containers whose walls are formed by mag­ netic lines of force. Any contain­ er made of a solid material would be vaporized instantly at temperatures of millions of de­ grees. In such bottles, deuterium gas has been contained at ultra-high temperature* for brief periods of time and such research is still being pursued. IF THE energy-producing pro­ cess of the H-bomb can be con­ trolled, mankind will be supplied with an inexhaustible p o w e r source for thousands of years. This is because deuterium, the fuel used in fusion reactions, is found ta unlimited quantities in oceans, rivers, and lakes. The deuterium ta one gallon of sea water from the Gulf of Mex­ ico, for example, contains the equivalent energy of 250 gallons of high-octain# gasoline. YOU'VE EARNED YOUR CLASS RING! ENJOY IT FOR YEARS TO COME Your Balfour class ring is of * qualify that rejects th* worth of your achievement. Wear it proudly as a badge of recognition now and long imo the future. $5 Puts Your Ring On Order Today V isit The CO-OP Newsstand • Sunday New York Times • Alt Popular Magazines • Plus Your Dividrved General Books S econ d Floor I iTrmiimi i THI ST UP HT S.O*'N MOS! Examine each career opportunity with the same objectivity you would bring to an experiment in physics. Evaluate the creative challenge, the chances for advancement, the benefits, the educational opportunities, the company’s growth pattern and the location Relate the potential to what you want and what you like. After all, you’ve spent the past several years developing your talents and your tastes. You should recognize a worthwhile opportunity when you see one. We think you’ll find a special promise waiting for you at LTV Electrosystems. Our primary business is the design and development of highly sophisticated, major electronic systems having air, ground, sea and space applications. For the full story, talk it over with our representative when he visits your campus. Oppylur, Wes exist at our Corf and. Greenville and Dallas. Texas, facilities. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS! Osr engineering representatives will be on campus O ctober 4th and 5th \ Please contact your placement offlc* for appointment. C A R LA N D DIVISION, GREENVILLE DIVISION, CONTINENTAL ELECTRONICS COMPANIES M m fiT X S E L E C T R O S V S T E M S , / I V O , ■vpuom rr, w a AN EPU al opportunity empioyfp m/p Page 4 Friday, September 30t 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Relaxed... That’s You In A BERNHARD ALTMANN Totally relaxed . . . c o m p le te ly c o n f id e n t o f y o u r appea ance in this fine sweater m e tic u lo u s ly w o v e n fro m the choil est yarns. Select yours f o r c a su a l c a m p u s w e a r . P r ic e d ; $18 and $20. September 30 and O ctober I IN T H S O pen M on^Sat. 10-2 and 5-7 Sunday Evening 5-7 Distinctive Store for Men l l e l 1% IV May Be Decided By Wednesday By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The final judgment by state courts in the Jack Ruby murder case may be handed down as early as next Wednesday. Ruby was assessed the death sentence for slaying I zee Harvey Oswald, named by the Warren the assassin of Commission as President John F. Kennedy Nov. 22, 1963. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals reconvenes Monday aft­ er a summer recess of nearly three months. Court decisions usually are announced on Wednes­ days. The state’s highest criminal tribunal, the court heard argu­ ments in the Ruby case last June 24. two weeks before it recessed. IT HAD TAKEN MORE than two years for Ruby’s appeal of his conviction for the slaying of Oswald to reach the high court. The court previously denied a writ of habeas corpus, which was sought on the ground that the Dallas trial judge, Joe B. Brown, allegedly decided, while he still had jurisdiction of the case, to write a book about the trial. After that ruling a sanity hear­ ing was held In Dallas for Ruby. The jury ruled he was sane at the time of the hearing and sane when Oswald was shot to death. The defense and the prosecu­ tion both filed supplemental briefs with the appellate court after the June arguments. THE DEFENSE relied strong­ ly on a recent US Supreme Court decision overturning the Cleve­ land, Ohio, conviction of Dr. Samuel Sheppard for the murder of his wife. Sheppard won a new trial because, the court said, ex­ in­ cessive newspaper publicity flamed Cleveland against him. ta The state pointed out its supplemental brief that defense attorneys should have asked for a continuance—as Sheppard re­ peatedly did in vain — if they thought Dallas had been inflamed against Ruby. The state brief was written by Dallas Asst. Dist. Atty. James M. Williamson. William­ son also defended Judge Brown’s denial of a chance of venue. Such matters are in the Judge’* dis­ cretion, the brief said. “There is no showing ta this record that, to the extent such publicity might be prejudicial to Ruby in Dallas County, such identical or similar publicity in all other counties of Texas was not equally as prejudicial.” THE DEFENSE attorneys “had good grounds for believing (hat pretrial publicity considered ta its ‘totality’ was favorable to Ruby.” the state brief said, add­ ing that Ruby’s attorneys want­ ed a speedy trial to take advan­ tage of the ‘‘emotional feeling accruing in connection with Pres-' ident Kennedy’s assassination.. I The defense also contends that l l of the 12 jurors were witness­ es to the crime because they saw it on television. Witnesses to a crime cannot serve as jurors ta a case involving that crime. “The question is then posed,” attorney PhD Burleson of Dallas said ta hi* supplemental brief, television film of “that if the the shooting was not material, as the state claims, then why did the state offer into evidence the same television film during the trial tlon?” jury * considers-1 the for Senate Approves Bill To Create Department WASHINGTON — CB —- A bill to set up a Department of Trans­ portation. the 12th Cabinet-level the Senate department, passed Thursday 64 to 2. Somewhat rewritten from the form proposed by President Johnson, the measure was sent to conference with the House, which has passed a substantially J similar bill Aug. 30. Leaders ex­ pect quick agreement on the Senate-House differences. The new department would be the fourth largest in the number of its employes and the fifth in | the size of its budget FOOTBALL SPECIAL IO* O ff PO BOY SANDWICH 2610 Guadalupe IN S T A N T S E R V IC E F O R I or 20 Use This A d for 10c O ff .. lywwffM The Texan Soothsayers John Anders Larry Upshaw Jim Morris Larry Mayo The Games Texas va. Indiana Arkansas vs. T C U Tennessee vs. Rice Baylor vs. W a sh in gto n St. S M U vs. Purdue Texas Tech vs. Texas A & M Dallas vs. Atlanta Houston vs. Denver Last W eek: Effigy T exas 8-6 Arkansas 15-14 Tennessee 28-6 Baylor 18-7 S M U 12-10 Texas Tech 14-10 Dallas 28-7 Houston 24-21 6-3 Percentage 6 7 % Texas 24-21 Arkansas 24-14 Tennessee 28-14 Baylor 35-17 Purdue 27-17 Texas Tech 24-10 Dallas 30-10 H ouston 31-14 7-2 Percentage 7 8 % Texas 17-14 Arkansas 14-10 Tennessee 24-7 Baylor 21-7 Purdue 15-14 Texas Tech 14-8 D allas 31-10 H ouston 31-24 4-5 Percentage A A 0/ ^ Jo Texas 21-12 Arkansas 28-13 Tennessee 21-0 Baylor 32-14 Purdue 17-15 Dallas 35-7 Houston 21-20 5-4 Percentage 56% Texas A & M 20-17 Texas Tech 30-7 Richard Hill T axal 24-14 Arkansas 17-7 Tennessee 14-0 Baylor 28 12 Purdue 21-17 Dallas 48-20 H ouston 28-24 D id N o t Predict Injuries Hamper Progress For 'Horn-lndiana Contest That old nem esis, the Injury bit the Longhorns bug, this week, dropping two starting line­ men for an Indefinite period of time. Offensive guard Danny Ahbott and tackle T o m m y Souders joined center Ken Gidney and de­ fensive operatives Scooter Mon- zingo (safety) And halfback Ron- the ny E hrig in sick bay as ’Horns prepared night s clash with Indiana. for Saturday Abbott is in traction after suf­ ferin g what is believed to be a slipped disc. Souders suffered a knee injury during a routine kick­ off coverage drill. Gidney, Monzingo, and E hrig will definitely m iss the rem ainder of the season. It is only specula­ tion as to whether Abbott and Souders will return to play. Two other players, letterman tackle Tom Harper and reserve guard Leonard Robison, an­ nounced their decision to leave the team. This brings to four the number of those who have quit. Gary Moore, starting defensive in safety and reserve fullback 1965, gave up football to sign a professional baseball contract this sum m er. L etterm an end Bill Sul­ livan left the team last week after the Southern Cal contest. It all means th a t T exas grows thinner every day and m ust go back to deploying players both ways. This m ove, plus the shift­ ing around of som e of the a th ­ letes, will serve to shore up the holes left on the depth chart. losses have that the When we say we want people for the outer limits, this isn’t what we have in mind. Bauer Brings Flag to Orioles; Hank Inks Two-Year Contract By Broncos BALTIMORE — IP — Hank the 1966 B auer, who directed B altim ore Orioles their first to A m erican League pennant w a s given a new two year Contract T hursday on the eve of the World Series. Salary term s w ere not disclos­ ed, but estim ates placed B auer's new contract at d o se to $>0,000 per year, an Increase of SIO1 >00 to $12,000. Tile 44-year-old Bauer, a form er New Y orker, Is completing his third year as Oriole m anager. He also coached in 1963 before replacing Billy Hitch­ cock as m anager. for Baltim ore two gam es behind After the Orioles finished third in 1964, the pennant-winning New York Y an­ kees, Bauer was nam ed Ameri­ can le a g u e m anager of the year. B altim ore also finished third last year, eight gam es behind the M innesota Twins B auer’s first ‘enure as s m a n a ­ ger w as with K ansas City from June 19, 1961 until hp quit at the end of the 1%2 season, just l>e- J aster Passes Up QB, Picks Cardinals ST LOUIS - UP - Larry Tas­ te r knew w hat he was doing when he threw aw ay a possible c a rcer as a left-handed quarterback for a $60,000 baseball bonus, but the St Louis rookie is m ystified by his m astery over the Los Angelos Dodgers. “ It's to past Only 6-5 against the rest of the National le a g u e . Ja ste r shut out four hits the Dodgers 2-0 on W ednesday night, becoming tile first pitcher in m ajor league h is­ tory five consecutive shutouts against a single team in one season. a unbelievable kinda thing," the 22-year-old fastballer said. “You’ve got to be lucky to do what I did. I don’t feel I throw any different against the Dodgers than anybody else — just up and down, in and out, 90 per cent fast b alls." Willie Davis, the Dodger o ut­ fielder, didn't know why, either. “He's throwing Just one pitch — the fast ball — and he’s keep­ it around the plate,” said ing Davis. “Most guys beat you by keeping the ball low. He’s keep­ ing it up. It’s hard to believe." quarter­ back in a split T attack at Mid­ land, Mich., high school, Jaster received feelers from Michigan A LEFT-HANDED State but admits, *T decided to than play pro baseball college football because of the bonus m oney from the C ards." rath er the Cardinal And so the 6 foot 3, 195 pound farm er entered system in 1962 — and has been unable to post a winning season He was 2-4 at Tulsa earlier in the season and said that lf his look particular!v record didn’t good his earned run average “ w asn’t too hot e ith e r." New Location GOODYEAR SHOE SHOP 2712 G u a d a lu p e Am ple Parking for Customers! Drive-through W indow Service S O O N I ' i* c?»> I • for# he wr‘.5 by Kansas O b wrier Char Finley tv Bauer Signed 4 tra c t as Oriole rr and was g i\en * “•*« at the sta rt of t- .* ' r In ■ ar • seas H arry Dalton, a-. Oriole 1X4 pact president, told a new* conf'-; a B auer had deserved raise n salary received “ In term s r f salary Baa In the higher bra* Ret as f> m anagers ai v concerned aru tifiablv go. D ab tx sa i well- IPF \% u as * it sc J JU.V DENVER, Colo. •.ors w inless Am erican Football League club a c tiv e fed veteran qu arterback Tobin Rote T h u rs­ day Its hom e gam e with H us ton Sunday. for Rote 38 a form er Rice U niver­ sity s ta r vho has played in the National and C anadian footba­ ll rgues as well with San Diego in the AFL cam e from re tire ­ ment to work out with D enver s Broncos this week At ?i a s a m e tim e D enve r an no im od it was asking waivers on injured quarterb ack Mickey Slaughter. % Don't mi inner space Cavern ■ America’s newest family entertain­ m ent attraction • Open dally-— Tours scheduled only minutas apart $1.75 Adults: $1.00 Children ■ Located on 1-35, 27 miles north of A u s t in et Georgetown SPFf.lflL LIMITED TIME OFFER This coupon with your name and addrest below la good for one (I) free admission (any day except Sunday) wttti each paid admission of the same type to Inner Space Cavern. Offer limited within time period stated balow. Name. Address. City----- .Stats. The Georgetown Corporation B a 451 Georgetown, Teal OFFER EXPIRES OCTOBER 31,1966 J SPORT CO I ’ ' : FALL WEIGHT SPORT COATS HERRING BONES, SOLIDS, PLAIDS TERRIFIC SAYINGS ON TREMENDOUS VALUES - ONLY 2 DAYS LEFT! - COMPLETE SIZE RANGE--YOU C A N FIND A FIT. SIZES INCLUDE: REGULARS, LONGS, SHORTS, EXTRA LO N G J From 36 thru 46 REGULAR 39.95 to 50.00 SALE 29 97 ClqcU. Cawpittll I i ’ Forget science fiction. We’re talking about the “outer limits” of technology. And these days it can be even more exciting than science fiction. Right now IBM needs qualified men and women to help reach these outer limits. The kind of people who have made IBM the leader in today’s fastest-growing major industry: in­ formation handling and control. And the kind of people who can grow with us as far as their talents and abilities allow. The result? Greater personal responsibility and recognition; the dual satisfaction of per­ sonal achievement and continuing personal rewards. A pretty satisfying result. Job opportunities at IBM are in six major areas: Computer Applications, Programming, Finance and Administration, Research and Development, Manufacturing and Marketing. Whatever your immediate commitments, whatever your aroa of study, sign up now for an on-campus interview with IBM, October 10-11 If, for tome reason, yon aren’t able to arrange an interview, drop as a line. Write tot Manager of College Recruiting, IBM Corporation, Room 810, 1447 Peachtree Street, NIL, Adana, Georgia 30309. IBM ii aa Equal Opportunity Employee. 2350 Guadalupe F r i d a y , S e p t e m b e r 3 0 , 1 9 6 6 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N F i f e S PLA Helps Students students Undergraduate con­ sidering careers in law have a friend in the University Pre-Law Association, according to Charles Hooks, president, who said Thurs­ day that PLA's purpose "Is not to cater to law students, but to aid pre-law students.” of ‘‘Some association's the m eetings will be conducted like first law classes,” Hooks said. This Is to give the undergraduate student who is in a career in some phase of law an idea of what will be expected of him, he said. interested Tile Association, which meets monthly, hopes to establish a ba­ son between the undergraduate and the School of Law, If a stu­ dent needs advice, PLA will help him find a professor to an­ sw er his questions. Hooks said that Dr. W. Page Keeton, dean of the School of is enthusiastic about the Law, program because it will aid the student In his decision to enter law school. Faculty members of the School of Law will speak on a variety of topics as a part of this year’s program. Legal medicine, civil rights, constitutional law, jurisprudence, crimology administrative and juvenile delinquency, sex and the law', and the philosophy of law are the themes of the pro- law, Artist Poses With Work Michael Frary poses with "After Storm,M his oil painting which is displayed on the first floor of the Academic Center. Rep Party Convention Set The Rep Party will hold a con­ vention from 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturday at the Villa Capri Motel. The party will discuss its plat­ form and hold a seminar on cam ­ paigning. Students’ Speakers at the convention will be Cliff Drummond, president of Association; the assem bly­ Friedman, Marilyn woman, and Burt Massey, Imme­ diate past chairman of the Pep Party'. Lunch will be served for $2.25. Rep Party members and other groups who are not party m em ­ bers are invited to attend. Those interested may contact Stan Ei- senberg. Rep Party chairman, for reservations at GR 4-2623. TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS • N E W , L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S 19 w o r d * o x Ieee f o r ftOc t h e f i r s t t i m e , 2 5 e e a c h a d d i t i o n a l t i m e . S t u d e n t m u s t s h o w t o 4 : S 0 A u d i t o r s ’ r e c e i p t a n d p a y In a d v a n c e In J o u r n a l i s m B l d # . 107 f r o m 8 a n i . p rn . M o n d a y t h r o u g h F r i d a y . * l l OO CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINES T u es d ay T exa n W edne sda y T ex a n Thursday Texan * rlday T exa n Sunday Texan ............................... Monday. 3:30 o rn. ....................... Tuesday, 3:30 p.m. ..................... W ednesday. 3:30 p rn. ............................... T h u rsd a y . 3:30 Dm. ................................... Friday, 3:30 p m . In the event of e r r o n mad# In an advertisem ent. Immediate notice m utt be Riven as the publisher* are responsible for only on# Incorrect Insertion. G R 1 - 5 2 4 4 Governors Asked To Curb Inflation WASHINGTON — (fl — Eleven governors got a personal, presi­ dential appeal Thursday to help stem the tide of inflation, and Gov. George W. Romney of Michigan said they had asked President Johnson to put what he wanted in writing, Romney is campaigning for an­ other term as governor and is also a top possibility for the Re­ publican nomination to take on Johnson In 1968. HE USED the White House as a forum to take some jabs at the Administration. It has been far too late in recognizing the Infla­ tion problem, he told newsmen. And he said the need for action now Is partly the result of “un­ sound economic and fiscal poli­ c ies.” But he and the IO other gover­ nors—six Democrats and five Re­ publicans all told—indicated that they definitely would go along with the President in trying to trim spending wherever possible. Another Republican, John H. Reed of Maine, said in Johnson's presence that he considered the session with the President excel­ lent and helpful and added he was sure all the governors would cooperate in economizing. REED SAID Johnson was "go­ ing to give us some guidelines he hopes we can apply at the state level.” These evidently spell out how Johnson wants to hold down on federal such as construction, highway?, schools and hospitals, reduce the floating of bond is­ sues, and do some penny pinch­ ing at any point possible. He wants the governors to go along with sim ilar economizing at the state level to help "keep the economy from heating up.” as he put it. FLANKED RY Romney and Reed, Johnson sketched the prob­ lem s he reviewed for the gover­ nors. The President relayed word of to newsmen, as these matters the governors sat with him at the huge rectangular the cabinet room. table In Again, Johnson said the feder­ al goal was to slash projected federal spending by $3 billion in the present fiscal year closing June 30. 1967. Nearly a third of this w'ould come out of outlays for construction, In the form of direct spending p l u s grants and loans to the states. federal THE DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Earh W ort ClS-wort m inim um ) M i n i m u m C h iu 'g * • Student rate (10-wort maximum) one tim e S • Each additional time C l a s s i f i e d D i s p l a y I column x one inch on# tim# Each Additional Tim# 4o ................................................................... * I 20 SO 25 ......................... I I OO 90 .................................... ........................ ....................... r Consecutive Issue# words 15 w o r d s fin word# ........................................................................... .....................« » • • ..................• • • • ..................... .............................................. (No copy ehanire for eon##eutiv# issue rates ) * W G R 1 - 5 2 4 4 PICK U KE PETE AT TO W N LAKE VILLAGE A partm ent# L A RG E, TWO ca rp eted . A /C . a p a r tm e n t I14Q. B in e paid. C lose to cam ­ b e t room, p u s Couple only. G R MOUL an e m a le F U R N IS H E D P E N T H O U SE a p a r tm e n t R eed te n a n t Maid a#erie*, a * b n * ISG paid. H aw thorne A partm ents. OR T 9824. to p o o l n ear cam p u s. a cr es* living, C O M PL E TE study (a c u itie s Th# Orang# A Wh ite Men'* D orm itory A partm ent* . . , 2707 R io Grande. GR 4-4*48 recreation al, and SPACIOUS CI .E A N I room a p a r tm e n t Billa couple*. Tor m en or paid. OR 2-9077 W alking d!lla n o * U n iversity. M u p e M aa ap artm en t a t Town V illa s# . Why a w l s o # V K * aa apart- Bice P eter P #th ae pkAaedT P ick ne* the BEA TR IZ H brand new fu ro r Iou* I bedroom ga s-poo!-wa ter ^ a b ie 103 W est $8th ann p#M A d and call RI 6-8917 and OL M I K O L 29444 0 aud ■ D C m U E IV A C. j desk g a ra g e for m atu re m a le IOC ! - etu d es u tilities •'■’.rho a p artm en t with entry. P r iv a te 1508 W est : Said GR 2-3400. R rm n od e DrT*^ 44 m n* R » « et * ■ R R A Jfp ? n cw a p a r tm e n t I bed- eervM the lake from F iesta Oar- . room,* kitchen, A ir-condi­ ew tm m tn g pool. FIO m onthly. WA livin g room tioned, 6-4532 Furnished Apartment* Furnished Apartments Tutoring Help W an te d Furnished Houses W ante d G A R R E T T HOUKE. SOS W est Room and board. GR 8-1956. 22nd. rn P O R T R A IT p rin ter end full tim e U nrtstianson L eb erm an S tu ­ film p ro ce sser, or part A L T E R A T IO N S-LA D IE S, Men. M ilitary. OL 3 4196, 5508 W oodrow A va. SPA N ISH B T e x p er ien ced tea ch er. M a V irginia B utler. GR 8-5178. Roommate W an te d stu d en ts G R A D U A T E to •h a re beautiful bouge. P r iv a te bedroom *, near ca m p u s ISO m onth. GR 2-1708 a fte r ­ noon*. averring* (girl*) w anted FE M A L E room m ate need ed , 2 bed room , J livin g room, dining room , kit­ chen. pius pooL Ail bill* paid. $48. OR 7-3307. large hath, M ALE — W alk to cam p us K itchen, A /C , h e a t uu'.et R ea so n a b le rate. C ontact L a r­ ry Oox. 3106 D uvet. A partm en t *04, w e e k ­ day* a fte r 5 OO p.m . FE M A L E G R A D U A T E stud en t or sen ior to share 2 bedroom a p a r tm e n t I block from "D rag ’ AKL N on-drirker. GR 2-9910. siree MALE G R A D U A T E en 2“ nee ring stud en t d e room m ate. T ou r 3 bedroom ap art­ m en t or m ine. M y r e n t t i ® . S tev e M organ GR 3-4061 F E M A L E TD sh are 3 o th e r * E V E R Y T H IN G lu xu ry ap artm en t with furnished. W'alk I-# Canada A p artm en t* GR c a m p o * to 7-51ia For Rent R E N T A T V . - T ap e $12.50-115 per m onth. GL 24057. If no an aw er G R 2- re-ord er. $69 50 D arling A C h om e C lean. Quiet Open. m o d em . N orthw est Couple on ly 3010 A lguno. OL 4 2659 WA 82564 ROOM WITH p rivate and bath. storage. Fu rn ish ed or unfur­ en tran ce A /C , heat, n ish ed HI 4-3250 O F F IC E S P A C E A V A IL A B L E O N D R A G a p p r o x im a tely TOO For b u sin e ss office, research , stud.' •ondltior.ed ti# * G uadalupe G uadalupe G R 3-9246 $65 per m onth (Second floor, V arsity B u ild ing, C all U n iversity YWCA. 2330 2200 '-on sui ta r o e or feet, air- sq u are in clud in g u* Help Wanted ROOM with p rtva'e en tran ce w ith sm all pay lo a gen tlem an la ex c h a n g e for a few hour* work HI 2-315X FASHION ARTIST G r o w th o p p o r t u n i ty ta o u r a d v e r t i s i n g a e p a r t m e - * f o r m s e o r ta r n a l# w ith c o m '-'e r c it f a s h i o n I llu s tr a tin g e x p e r i­ Miscellaneous Student Starter Plan 3692 to 74 la t r o d a c r t the all new Student Starter Plan in clu sive — You m a y be - a g e s 16 eligib le for a $10 OOO isle p olicy for on ly $30 a n n u a ry . S em ian n u al $15.4$ R ate change* only at a g e s 25. 77. A 29 S am e -a te s apply to m a le or fem * a For fu rth er Inform ation w rit* or call R ev?-v* U f a In su ran ce Od. 4928 B urnet R oad A ustin, T ex a s P h on e OL 2*474 HOYAS D.C. TYPE S H O W — B L A C K TIE FO R IN F O R M A T IO N C A L L G R 8-8144 G R 2 8517 LA ND SC A PIN G b y Jana. OR 6-1318 DON'T L F IT GET BY d e a d "a for s t u d e n t t a e ’th inturene# * O c t o b e r 1 2 th . G R 8 2 8 3 9 . ENROLL TOD AYI B O O G !E W A H ! e n c e . la now open "the e y c .e " doy-Frtda.' m o to rcy c le or f » It y o u rself with our too:* trad e an d a d v ic e I It In on a si -y new Hod* S P O R T -901 Com# fS-10 r rn, Mon fix you I jet us -and M anus s a,, d av S a t OR se e us, 506 CV.,con. Ap p y TF I rd F’oor GOODFRIENDS 90! Congress Lost And Found Tw enty f va - c e .* for return c f b r ie r 4 (/j m o r t r j c d Lott a b o u t it -1 7 Sap- ‘e m b e r in v c Ty H 2 3 ' o Sr aet » " o Leon. B aer with w- ta ‘ 5, y, throat end | r-r'n. G ree". eye s m e a i u rn le n g th fur V e ry fr end y 'A ' answ er *o ft"1/ c e : ■ ' e r n e t h ' d a * C h r o p ’ N o q - e s i f l o e s f o r Hee * > ’t e n , * b e s t h e r-,gr t or#, Ce I G R 7 136? G L 2 1128, or I G R 2 8 9 5 8 . I BUYER TRAINEE B ic e a n t f t im e o p p o r t - r ty t o ea r n fa s h io n re** - o S e m e e > p e o n c e re q . r e d . A p p l y T hird F .o o r . GOODFRIENDS 901 C o r gross X X m n V E JtS T T T A /O , brick, efficisss- r. $40 OO P r iv a te k itch en —bath. N ice I room. A /C , d u p le x OL 4-5225, OR 6-9444. A p orter fa n deck. . ee r r ic e , laundry, stu d y, off . gam # street park a i w ell s s IndlTdu*! . - The Orang* A Whit# Rio 7707 . . n g room sit suttee D orm itory Ap# rumen ta, GR 6-4648 I lu xu ry a p a r tm e n t A /C , fully c a r ­ laundry pool. wood pane led w alls, $10.’ 50 per en ty of parking apar# IR $-452 or GR 7 9 2 7 PR E STO N A V EN U E . B eau tifu lly fur room., kitchen, sd. U s i n g -dining o s rith show er, bedroom . C arpeted. A C. • en tran ce Va w ing of beau tifu l coo- P refer Quiet r*ry t i cu lly mambo*-* or m s- lie stu d en t* crop.ared and w a-er $125, GR $-3'20. horn*. G arage pe-ror.s. G as VE M IN U T E S ca m p u s One bedroom . Br­ ag room k itch ea. bath, sp eciou s closet*. Vi GR 6-0819. GR 23163. O. HENRY SLEPT HERE th# historic ob tat a asta* spot what# O. Henry this ■pant: a f brand tment e o r a sia * 5* ready rn E rst occupant*. to be ranted P in . — I BR. S^srt a* $ N 5 A / C end H a st Pe d by O w rer As w ell es w e * e r & g a s t e n t # yew to teep eet th e p rem ise # at 505 E. lith th# b th# historical m*mmtoe# ding im p r e sse d With C enjoy j-ated Into w ll be •arty American furnishings. user on premise* not or cen GR 7-9296. to and wa know th# C rtttty of to recess# your r#a Th# O. HENRY HOUSE APTS 505 E. l i t h M a n a g er A p t ISS Q U A R T E R D ECK . One b ed room , a il ap p li­ etc. w ood pane: cd. ca r p e t, a n ce* air, O nly $135. G R 6 - 1 2 9 2 _________________ LOFT JA D E and gold w ed ding band lr. j H e a th en ter la d e * room as: M onday If found phone G R 2 >734 or return to H ealth I C enter d esk R EW AR D ' Ut . k to U n iv e r sity o f T e x a s ek m p u # . n i vid u k l a p a rtm en t * W h ite V er. s O range r- , total . You m u st see c o n v e n ie n c e * a t su ite s The I orm itory A p an - to a p rre c-a t# me 2707 R io G rand*. GR F IV E DOLLAK r e w e ld .-.formation or return o f m y S am son ite b r,P lease m issin g from C om m on s Mon da:-. 26th No q u estio n # ask ed . C ontact L am b ert Hoer, ger GL 2 KSS- S ep tem b er for . Air con d ition ed lu xu ry livin g « sr U n iversity of T e x a s ca m p u s $W> 00 m on th T h # O range A W aite He n * nstory A partm en t*. 2707 R .o G rande, GR r e w a r d FOR return of b a c k and w hite f Als*' m a :e c a t, tai! bushy P e rsia n whit# paw* and San G a b riel GR 8 5464 fu ll-grow n throai and abort hair -grown Ion* s: v er gray and o:ar ge kitten with of 26th Vk:in-ty haired and Peg* 4 Friday, September 30, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN C a ll G R 1-5244 To Place a Texan Classified Ad S H O E S A L E S M A N P a rt-tim # p o s t io n f o r stu d e n t w ith shoe se in g e x p e rie n ce . H o u r s c a n b e a r ­ ra n g e d . A p p l y Th rd Floor. G O O D FR IE N D S 901 Congress 3100 DUVAL. 3 b edroom , good condition, wiH etudenta. OL furnish. E x c e lle n t for 2-4 HONDA SPO R T 160 T ete m od el, low m ile ­ a g e , good sh a p e. W ill pay cash . OL 3-8990 2-4516 e v e n in g * a fter 5 S U IT A B L E FO R J or 4 fa m ­ 1006 W est 22nd. $85 Call Dr. P r a t t E n g lish D e p t GL 3-3190. GR 8-8134 a fter 5. student# or ily Duplex— Unfurnished SPA CIO U S D U P L E X In ch a rm in g old h om e sto v e, refrtger L a rg e lot, p o rch es, p atio, 303 A ca d em y . H I 2-7268. a tor C A L L G R 1-5244 FO R A C L A S S F IE D A D Room and Board B E S T FOOD In tow n. D elicio u s m ea ls. Gen ero u s portions — m ea t, v e g e ta b le * $4.7 OO. 2401 R io G rand e G R 2-7479 C A L L G R 1-5244 FO R A C L A S S IF IE D A D Typing dio 1308 C olorado Y OUNG UT m a rried m en w anted for d e­ liv erin g m orn in g paper route n UT area. OL 2-5830 b etw een 4 and 8, ev e n in g s N o car n ece ssa ry . Earn Free Trip To Europe 'argest and oldest 0 ~ e o* the firms dealing in European car trave! seeks campus representa­ tive. Must be serious, enterprising; preferably married graduate stu­ dent, European traveled. Send re­ sume and reasons for applying. C A R -T O U R S IN EUROPE, IN C . 555 Fifth Ave. N.Y. 17, (212) PL 1-3550 For Sale SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS S p ecia l Offer 4 M onth* for $4 0# S a v e $3 6n C all AN 3-2135 ar OL 2-8653 YAM AHA P IA N O S: 75 y e a r ! of old w orld rra tsm a n sh lp . In tern atio n ally a cc la im ed by ed u ca to rs, T ed L a B a u '* d e a l­ m u sicia n s, er. 631 W est 34th, GL 2-7561 HO ND A ’S C-100 for c e r p t con d ition , sa le. Fin# low m ile a g e sh a p e, e x ­ tra n sp o r ta ­ tion. 501 W est 24th. GR 6-1638. 1966 PO NTIAC V E N T U R A . Air. p o w e r . 10.0OO m iles. ti.3 0 0 d is c o u n t OR 2-6191 C O M PLE T E skltng rig — 18 boat, 35 H P E vln ru d a. tra iler, foot C ed u la* s k i* e x ­ tras. $365 GL 3-9756 WOODS T Y P IN G E xp erien ced D isse rta tio n s, M an u scrip ts C om plete dup­ for maltlMth, m im eograph. lica tin g ditto. R ea son a b le HO 5-1078 SER V IC E , se r v ic e THFJ6F.S. d isse rta tio n s, b rie f* reports, m an uecrtpt*. IBM . M r* Anthony. GL 4-3079 T y p in g M ultUlthlng B in d in g typ in g s e rvie# tall A eosn p lete p ro fessio n a l ared to the n eed s of U n iv ersity student* She mal keyb oard eq u ip m en t of lan gu age, scien ce, •n d e n g in ee rin g th e se s and d issertation *. P hone GR 2-3210 A GR 2-7677 2013 G u ad alu p e E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IN G SE RAT CE. A ccur am . R eason ab le, n ea r A lle n d a le HO 5-3HX3 G RADE-PO INT C O N S C IO U S ? OR 2-871T for T H E S E S DT9SE RT A T IO N t BC R E PO R T S N E E D FO UR girls to form com b o: o r e seed guitar, on e rhythm gu itar, one d ru m m er on e sin ger co m ed ia n . A ges b etw een 18 and 25 Call i n 4-2302, GL 3 9530 5658 1964 V A LIA N T V 200. 2 door. 4-speed. E x - i R E PO R T S. T H E S E S . D issertation s. G R 7 ce ed ln g ly good condition. OR 2-2819, GR 1- 4715. M r* B ra d y , 2507 Brid!# Path. Furnished Rooms . •un deck, stud y, o ff street perk in g, MAID A p orter s e r v ic e , laundry, g a m e room . livin g room a* w ell a s Individual a p a rtm en t su ite s . . . T h e O range A W hit# M en s D o rm ­ itory A partm en ts, 2707 R io G rande, GR 6-4648. . . CO M PL ET E Being, study fa cu lties. Th# O ra n gs A Whit* M en s D o rm ­ . 7707 R io G rande. recrea tion a l, and . , itory A partm ent* GR 6-4648 CLOSE to U n iv ersity of T e x a s ca m p u s . . in d ivid u al a p a rtm en t suite* e t T he Orange A W hite M en s D o rm ito ry A partm en ts. You m u st s e e . . . to a p p r ecia te the total con ver, c n e e * 7707 R io G rande, GR 8-4648 M EN . . . Air con d ition ed luxury Bving n ear U n iv ersity of T ex a s ram p a * $60.00 T>-e O range A W hite Men s 2707 R io G rande, irraltory A partm en t*. per m ontn I GR 6-4648. PA R TIC U LAR u p p erclassm a n . A ttra ctiv e room li m it e d th ree. U n u su a lly q u iet ditrri fled a tm o sp h e-e . P hone R efrig era to r W alk­ ing distant e. G R 2-5548 ATTENTION U n iv ersity Men — Sin?!# room s $35.00. D ouble room s $25 00. Ma d serv ice, k-’cnen prU le g e s GR 2-9040, G L 2-R212. E L CAM PO H O U R S — 1912 N u e c e s M en $ 3 K itchen a v a ila b le. HO P r iv a te room 5-7436. GR 7-0572 FU R N ISH E D B ED RO O M . P r iv a te en tra n ce, stud en t or Instructor. p- vase bath. M ale N ear w est ca m p u s GR 2-858L P R IV A T E PRIVATE o n e room PRIVATE bath No pets — N o pools — N o parti## DHI E n field A partm en ts 15 blocks w est on 12th at E lm all A i C jtilitieg furnished I’en tra l H ea tin g —TV GR 6 4163 G IR LS - 2212 P E A R L 2100 N u eces. B oy#— 201:4 S peed w ay, a C, kitchen, m aid . TV. $28440. GR, 6- >190 I PARTICULARLY N IC E suite of ro om s M ale 4 b lock s U n iv ersity, GR 8-3512. students 1010 W est 23rd I U N E X P E C T E D VACANCY. :-;ng1a room , $35. 5 b lock s UT C arp eted , cab e TV s.eep - ing porch O L 4-2488. GR 5-3177. R oy M orey. phone, kitchen p riv ileg e s, KOUR BLOCKB w est o f ca m p u s C o n scien ­ tious m a l# stud en t des ex rocwnmate P ri­ vate A /C , k itch en p rivileg es. G R 8-81X8 C A LL GR 1-5244 t o p l a c e y o u r CLASSIFIED AD 1964 C ORVAIR M ania T er rific ca r G R 2-2819, GR 1-5658. I door, au tom atic. 1963 D E L U X E V olk sw agen 41,000 m iles, fu lly eq u ip p ed . C all G R 7-5284 >56 HO NDA Superhaw k 306cc, 5 m on ths old $560. G a r a g e ap a rtm en t $560. Ga raga a p a rtm en t behind 16jJ w e s t , twmn'j jojj. A venue a fter 4 p m o r 6 p m . W ed n esd ay* 1 SONY B00-A p o rta b le I idee new ,>*:eo. ta p e record er, 4-tract j See a t Hi-Fide! MSF Inc 1610 L a v a c a . G R 6-5638 $ 225. "WTB H A V E M OVED" C A M PU S P R IN T IN G 8 E R V IC * S204 G u ad alu p e OL 3 2582 T yp in g — M u m m in g — B inding a t th eses. typing d isserta tio n s, #n(j printing n eed * N o extra for one d elivery u rn c % - reports, and a ll other aerv ic#, pick-up ch arge j . ■ en d For delivery of the Houston or t i** GR 69967 P k rrn lr A r*fl G R 7-4485. Chronicle call G R 7-4485. I o -J o n i c i e C O H v _ 7 i\ / ; S P E C IA L ST U D EN T RA T ES I T ec h n ic a l paper* a a p ecia ity O ver 200 extra *ym b ols on our IBM E x e c u tiv e s for scien e# . en g in eerin g , m a th e m a tic s la n g u a g e D raftin g. m ultilJthlng. b o d in g , en d xeroxin g and T H E S E S , Carbon le g a l, m a n u scrip ts, ribbon P a u la stencil*. IBM S ansom T yping S erv ice. 2716 Addison GL 2-8279. F O R d elivery of the Fort W o r t h Star Telegram please cal! G R i 7-4485. ---------------- —--------- — -— — — 65 M G B, high com p ressio n w h e e l* GR 7-7994. angin a, w ire 1965 TR4 R ed w ire w h e e l* m in t eondi- Uon M ust selL $2195 or b est offer. GR 8-0698 a fter 8 MUST SE L L C ushm an S up ereagl*. S e# #t 2414 L on gview GR 2-5468 $200. 1961 R A M BLER co n v ertib le 6-O’llnd er, stand ard s h if t $350. G R 6-4168 1962 TR4. C all G R 7-5379 b etw een I p m . and 7 p m . M .B.A . " T yping M ultUlthlng Binding a co m p le te p ro fessio n a l tail ored to the n eed s o f U n iv ersity student*. Spe etal keyb oard eq u ip m en t of la n g u a g e a cien ce anp a fter 4 00 p m . con v ertib le tir es. condition. Call O L 2-6356 New T Y P IN G on e x e c u tiv e e le c tr ic by form er le ­ In se c r e ta r ia l atudles g a l secre ta ry , BBA Mr*. Fow ler, GL 3-8650. 191,9 JA G U A R XK-150 R oadster. R eb uilt h ead b raking, co o lin g , ele c tr ic a l sy ste m s. AB o p tio n s T ra d e* co n sid ered . G R 7-1064 HI 2-7008. R E PO R T S, d isserta tio n s, m im eo grap h in g R ea so n a b le. M a rio n # D elafield th eses, j T R A N SPO R T A T IO N C A R : 1953 D odga R e­ good b ra k es, clu tch , ro w built en g in e, | JIL) A T 2-1478 a fter 5. 1963 V OLKSW A GEN : air-con dition ed , WSfW. le a th erette T op condition, on e se a t b elts, o w n er *995 C all GR 2-5932 I S N IP E SAIL BO A T , fib erg la ss. 5 year* old W inner o f m a n y reg a tta s. $850. C all GR I Lam. th eses, SPE C IA L IST . R ep orts, C O M P E T E N T S eo reta ry -T yp lst. LAW WORK d isse rta ­ to ea c h a s ­ re­ on tions. M eticu lou s c a r e given sig n m en t. M u ltilithing — b inding q uest. G R 8-5894 FA M IL IA R . c h e m ic a l, th esis, and m a n u scrip ts O L 2-4897 biological term s. THEM ER. R E PO R T S, la w n o te* 25c. N otary M r * F ra ser. G R 6-1317. posud speakers. Hooks said field that a trip series is planned to correlate with those topics discussed by faculty members. Members of the PLA will visit the Supreme Court of Texas, Travis County district at­ torney's office, the State Capitol and the attorney general's office. They will also visit headquar­ ters of the Texas State Bar and the Texas Department of Ptiblic Safety, the Austin Police Depart­ ment, ’ and the federal district, and state courts. “When the Legislature con­ venes this spring, we hope to be able to visit several committee m eetings,'’ Hooks said. He added that PLA is interested In obtain­ ing permission to sit in on legis­ lative discussions concerning the criminal code that was passed last year. "An open invitation is extended to all those students interested in the program.” Hooks said. Tile first meeting of the PLA will be held at 8 p.m. Monday in the Fireside Lounge of the law school. Dr. Page Keeton, dean of the School of Law, will speak on the law school and law prac­ tice in general. Dr. Howard Cal­ kins, the faculty sponsor, and the association’s officers will be in­ troduced. Plans for the year’s activities will he outlined. Advertising Fields O ffer Opportunity Advertising is a field that has grown immensely in the past few years and now offers a wealth of career opportunities to those interested. Dr. W. A. Mindak told the University chapter of Alpha Delta Sigma Thursday. Mindak, who joined the Univer­ sity Department of Journalism this year, has written articles and chapters in textbooks on ad­ vertising. Now a co-sponsor of ADS, national advertising frater­ nity, he spoke at their fall rush meeting Thursday. A diversity of jobs awaits to­ day's advertising students, Min­ dak commented in pointing out there are two routes for entry into the advertising field. For those interested in brand management and account execu­ tive positions, the College of Business Administration offers the best curriculum. More creative students, Mindak said, those who will write copy and handle lay­ out, usually choose to prepare themselves through the School of Communication. Committee Okays 2 Education Bills WASHINGTON — OP — The on Senate Labor Committee Thursday approved two giant federal education bills totalling $10.6 billion, about $3 billion more than President Johnson re­ quested. At a morning session the pan­ el completed its work on a $6.2- the billion measure extending grade and high school federal aid program for two additional years. This was $19 billion over the President’s recommendations. Thpn, in a brief afternoon ses sion, the committee sent to the Senate for debate a $4.46-billion higher education bill which 's the amount $1.07 billion over Johnson asked. Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., chairman of the education sub­ committee, said both would be ready for floor debate next week. the major Items which the President has asked Congress to send to him before final adjoumament. Both are among While the grade and high school aid bill was $1.9 billion over the President's recommen­ dations, it was cut almost $2 bil­ lion under the version approved in July by the com m ittee’s edu­ cation subcommittee. STEREO COM PONENTS M A R A N T Z KO SS H. H. SCO TT H A R M AN -K A R D O N ELECT RIC-V O ICE S H E R W O O D A L T E C -L A N SIN G A-R FRAZIER EMPIRE D Y N A K IT A D C STEREO FURNITURE Job-hunting graduates are no longer faced with the prejudice that existed 15 or 20 years ago against tile novice. Today many young men and women hold high jobs in the field. Mindak said. Another advantage of advertis­ ing as a career, he commented, is the choice that exists concern­ ing the typo of group to work with. Entrants into the field can choose positions working with in­ dividual clients, top media, or, and possibly the most glamorous, the agency. Dessert and HOT BREAD AT THE BOWEN HOUSE XEROX COPIES 8 A.M. TO M ID N IG H T 7 D A Y S A W EEK ALDRIDGE TYPING K. setts 304 SERVICE GB l i m GOOD MORNING GOOD AFTERNOON GOOD EVENING GOOD FOOD ANYTIME Pig Stand No. 14 RECORDERS M A G N E C O R D S O N Y R ECO RD ERS S O N Y TAPE DECKS P A N A S O N IC STEREO TAPE A N D A C C E S S O R IE S CONSOLE & COLOR TV PACKARD-BELL P H IL C O SH A R P P A N A S O N IC SET C H EL L-C A R L SO N HOURS: Mon. Thurs. 9-9 Fri. Tues. Weds. 9-6 Sat. STEREO • TELEVISION • R ECO R D ER S • C O M P O N E N T S "Specialising in Custom High Fidelity** ^ HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER * 4803 Burnet Road HO 5-0903 A L D R ID G E T Y P IN G SE R V IC E 904)# E a st 30th S treet H O M E EN TERTAINM ENT CENTER is your headquarter* for top name brands in electronic entertainment equipment. Pa//o Dance to Climax Week to Tm dane**, gponsored by Ch* Texas Union Dance Cornin itte*, will be held this weekend. Fm m there l l p.m. Friday I will be a Chuck Wagon dance In th* Chuck Wagon cafeteria Mu- *ic will be provided by Juke box, I The Chandelles will return by 1 request for a dance Saturday on the Union Patio from IO to midnight In case of rain, the dance will be held in the Main Ballroom. to play Both dances are free. lr Horn to Talk on English Dr. TlKrtnAa D, Horn, professor instruction, rd curriculum and will apeak at a conference in Gallup, NUM., on 'Teaching F.ng- Bah as a Second Language.*’ Sponsored by the Gallup pa bile schools and the New Mexico State Department of Education, the meeting will be held Friday and Saturday, + fall .M e d ical Branches G row The University Medical Branch­ es have enrolled 846 students for the Jam es R. semester, Young, assistant director of ad­ missions, reported this week. This total is eight per cent greater than registration spring the figures, Young said. The School of Medicine has the largest enrollment with 578 stu­ tnctndce dents registered. This 152 freshmen, IS) sophomores, 128 Juniors, and 130 seniors. The largest group of women ever to enroll, 16, was accepted Into this year's freshmen medical class. The School of Nursing register­ ed 124 students. ♦ A P O ’s fo Rush S u n d a y Alpha Phi Omega, men’* ser­ vice organization, will have a rush meeting at S p.m. Sunday in the Union Junior Ballroom. Men Interesied In pledging APO will hear Jack Holland, dean of speak. Dave F.vans students, the “ 7x2 Singers” will per­ of form, ami refreshments will he nerved. * YR Officers A w ard e d Jr. Henry May Jr. and Don Macs Ivor certificates received naming them Crown Republicans Tuesday at the Young Republican Club meeting. received May, YR operations director, and Maclver, executive vice-pre­ the honorary sident, titles in recognition of more than IOO hours of work on precinct canvassing. The Travis County Republican Party made the award. ★ B a r g a i n Sale Sche duled Tile Alpha Chi chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will sponsor a rum- H a lf - p r ic e to collet/e s t u d e n t s a n ti fn en ltip t h e n e w sp a p e r n e w s p a p e r p r o p ! e rentI. • • A t last count, we had more than 8,800 news­ paper editors on ou r list of subscribers to The C hristian Science Monitor. E d itors from all over the world. T here is a good reason why these “pros” re a d the M onitor: the Monitor is the world’s only daily international newspaper. Unlike local p ap ers, the Monitor focuses exclusively on w orld news — the im portant news. The Monitor selects the new s it considers m o s t significant and repo rts it, interprets it, analyzes it — in depth. I t takes you f u rth e r into the news th a n any local paper can. If this is the kind of paper you would like to i*be reading, w e will send it to you rig h t aw ay at (half-the regular price of $24.00 a year, i Clip the coupgn. 'Find out why newspaper- themselves read the Monitor — and why men th ey invariably name it as one of the five best papers in the world. T h e C h r i s t i a n S c ie n c e M o n tto i -tt.’ It* * * * -* - -....................................... - ■ I c u s m m m m I Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 I The Christian Science Monitor J I Please enter a Monitor subscription for th# name below. ! I am enclosing {----------------*»t*r * bam*-.1 boma . ta* Yta #**rr . . w iitiN ■ ■ ■t t r ppStnf ta* —ara* toe*** I taw fir ydR* •til-MSS* '• on ant! it IHT «s* nm It , . « what la r> < plan* »n th* I* **r bum** -*•«( attn* non? mr •ct ta*-ti dor - a*w '-’•ta ttaNtth* • **« -ct* ta'g* or •rn*' Hut «ttt * w< » 4*- , 1. inrn* ar* '•BMA’ *nrn* * r* rot i1S W V j l G I I 2 - 0 0 3 2 I | cx- Dunu sneak preview | Jo Q U Stompin' Grounds Ex-Band Members to Return lcthus Schedule iu Poetry, Singing iviemvcfh • u c \ / i Lop, ti-,*, continual! ( ndl loyalty, rn < ary purpose th* horn Band, fine spirit a od, The pron] a hand <<■ which sr ho cd to need horn Band Other pp Is under ta I ment of ba to band d } p re s e n tly is lr h o ! trsh ip funt -j. s h ip s will be rieservin ►moors. pc the Al o re the a w a rd s, to r Vine in Nino high echo* an Alum:; new b ard interest in Hi Nino i the Alumi high se ho eluding Robinson, Heil, anc Johnston the Alumr [ nu Ba hall t h o in Ba High High rt h i e mi a. bo gives the I ni­ the fault ll < hock, t o f the bank, and m a k e b good with- a f te r official notifi- A u d ito r 's office will -nm the University. Band. Rob Hewlett, for the Longhorn old spot fur Hie “ When they ap] field, i f s a rc tu r perform ed as co DiN'ino says, “ a real inspiration Longhorn Band. ms Coffee House, 2431 p resents a program reading and foiksin?- nekend. poem* of Allen Gins- be m ad by T horpe it bv Benny Mr Adam s in Thursday s cd an* at 9 IO, l l p.m ., ight F riday. Folkmsg* ke Allen will be featur- ■a\ night at. the sam e [he sponsorship of - Joint M inistry, J f e ta HniivP fit e the the to .rn. ■la ll Of I the Health C enter constructed and he safe hospitali­ ned patients. the oui z a til Theaters AMERICANA— Doctor Zhivago.” Julie Christie, Rod Steieer. Tom Courtenay, Ale C .inness, Sioblian M cKean*, Rita Tushingham , and Ger.ddine Chaplin. R eserved seats only. sta rrin g Or: »• SD.*riff VI STIX—“ W hat's New P u ssy cat?” wit! P eter Sellers and als* L y Did I Get A Wrong N um ber,'' with B h Hope. Kike S o m m e r and Phyllis Diller. CI.XKMA—“ O klahom a.” with Gordt.rs M; Nelson, Eddie A lbert and Rod Steigei I CI c ia C r,share Gunr* PAR AMOUNT—“C ham ber of H o rro r ” wit! :he noted C ;a re Da nova, Suzy P ark er, and P a tric k O’Neil STATE— “G oldfinger.” and "D r. N o ” starring Scan C onnery with Miss Honey and Miss Pussy Galore TEXAS—“ D ear Jo hn.” with Ja rl Kulle and Christina Schollin and directed by Lars M agnes Lindgren. VARSITY—“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf. ' including Eliza he (Ii Taylor and R ichard Burton. Drive In's Bl RNET—“ The Russians Are Cornin* The Russians A re Coming " with Johnathan W inters and Paul Ford, and “ Viva M a ria , with B rigitte Bardot, Jeanne M oreau and George H am ilton. DELWOOD— The Russians Are Coming, Tile Russians A re Coming,'* and “ The Love Goddess, Tile Storj of Sex in the M ovies. CHIEF—“Stagecoach.” starrin g Ann-M argret Red Buttons. Michael Connors, Alex Cord. Bing Crosby, and Bob Cum m ings, an d “Do Not D isturb,” with Doris Day and Rod Taylor. SOUTH AUSTIN—“Stagecoach,” and “ The C avern.” with Jo h n Saxon and B rian Aherne. Bv RICH VRD HIU Texan Staff W riter If oui of the m idst of the 50 high sh o d bands which will ap pear in M emorial Stadium Satin day, you see a group J m c d a n s who have grey hair and m iddle-age bulges, deli t think th a t the pressures of high school have got out of hand. Approxim ately IOO m em bers « f the Longhorn Alumni Band will have thm r annual reunion Satur­ day, and during half-tim e thn^e with instrum ents will journey on to the field to perform . The Alumni Band w as formed in the fall of 1963 by ex m em ­ bers of the Longhorn Band. E very year on Band Day. the baud gets together for business m eetings, dinners, and of course to remi- nesce about old tim es The band also plays for the Ex Students’ Association luncheon at Roundup in April. “ In my opinion, the Longhorn Band is one of the finest instill m ents of public relations which Tile U niversity of Texas h as,” A. M. Cory, president of the Alumni Band says, “ Always the Longhorn Band puts on a good show; always it is characterized by its good be havior and its good m usicianship “ Recognizing this, the Longhorn Alumni Band has as its prim ary New Symphoiiv Season Turns Musical Spot! ight on Youth m Oliver Buswell IV, w ill appear as guest a rtist with thp symphony reputa­ Nov. 26. Mr. B osw ell's in the past few y e a rs has tion grown phenom enally and today is regarded the young m usician as one of this co u n try s most prom ising talents. Mr. Buswell will play Tchaikov­ sky's Concerto in D m a jo r for Violin and O rchestra. ANDRE PREM X, four time Academ y Award w in n e r, jazz pianist, composer, and conductor will appear as guest conductor _ J with the orchestra Dec. 3. No. 3 for Piano and O rchestra by Bartok. ON APRIL 8. tile symphony will present associate concert­ m a ste r Leopold La Fosse, who will perform the Saint-Saens Concer- I to No. 3 in B m inor for Violin J and O rchestra. On April 29 the season con­ cludes with R ossini’s Stabat Ma­ ter, featuring the M astersingers Chorus and guest soloists Irene Jordan, Joan C aplan, Nicholas Di Virgilio, and Ara B erberian. HEXT "AN A M E R IC A N Tile 1966 67 season of the San Antonio Symphony O rchestra will the Alamo City some bring of the m usical world today. the forem ost figures to in Tn the past few year*. A m eri­ c a 's youth has m ade an im pres­ sion on the m usical scene through­ out those the world. M any of young people will be appearing as guest a rtists with M usical Di­ rector Victor Alessandro and the orchestra this season. OPENING SATURDAY night, the 15 subscription concert se­ ries will feature John Corigliano, orchestra concertm aster, on the first concert in Lalo’s Symphony Espagnole for Violin and Orches­ tra and “ Ein Heldenleben” by R ichard Strauss. in Saturday night m arks Coriglia- the first appearance with no’s orchestra this new position. F o r the past 30 years, he has been associated with the Hew York Philharm onic, and has been concertm aster of that orchestra since 1936. On Oct. 15 the renowned sopra­ no, Joan Sutherland, will appear as guest artist with her husband, Richard Bonynge, who will con­ duct the orchestra. Marie Collier, soprano, appears as guest artist Oct. 29 with Ales­ sandro and the orchestra, singing arias from Alda, Tosca, Turandot and Cecilia. ON NOV. 5 the symphony will present Jane Marsh, the 24-year- old California soprano who won the Tchaikovsky Competition in June in Moscow. Miss Marsh is the first American to receive this honor since Van Diburn’s tri­ umph there in 1958. On Nov. 12, the noted American composer-conductor, Vincent Per- sichetti, will conduct the pre­ miere of his piano concerto, played by the young Texas pian­ ist Jam es Mathis. Under the di­ rection of Alessandro, Mathis and the orchestra will play Weber’s Konzertstuck in F major for Pia­ no and Orchestra. The 19-year-old violinist, James Mr. Previn will conduct th e ; orchestra in Sym phony No. 5 by j Shostakovich, M endelssohn’s Ruv Blas O verture and w ill lead the orchestra in M ozart’s P iano Con . certo, which he will a lso play. Beginning the New Y e a r Jan. 7. the sym phony p re se n ts White- m ore and Lowe, w hose duo-piano j the in -1 technique has a ttra c te d terest of audiences throughout j the world. With A lessandro and the sym phony they wall perform Morton Gould’s D ance Variations for Two Pianos and O rchestra. j Jan . 21 brings to San Antonio j as guest a rtist with th e orchestra Edith Peinem ann, w hose rep u ta-1 rapidly outgrow n her tion has native G erm any and now extends through the United S ta te s. Miss Peinem ann will p la y with the the difficult concerto orchestra in D m ajor for Violin and Or- j chestra by Beethoven. AMERICAN PIANIST M a r y McDonald, who appears Feb. 4 with Alessandro and the orches- j tra, will perform Beethoven’s Concerto No. 3 in C Minor for Piano and Orchestra. The noted German pianist Hans Richter-Haaser returns to San Antonio as guest artist with the symphony Feb. 18 under the ba­ ton of Alessandro. He will per­ form Brahms’ Concerto No. I in D minor for Piano and Orches-; tra. On March 18 Peter Serkin, th e ; son of an illustrious father, will the difficult Concerto perform t u m u l t t ti I ti ti i i i m u m m m n i i i i i i i i i i i i h i Presents Irving Gronz Productions In Person Male Chorus Opens Austin Oktoberfest The 66-voice main ch r u t Q uar­ tet Lied Hoch. arrived Th in- Jay from G lueckftadt, West Germ air and w as greeted at ll e Mur ii ; d A irport by the A ns'rn S eng runde. Their arriv al opens i I day stay in Texas. Tile G erm an visitors w ’ the Au tin gr ■ ;p tertained by with a Texas GuoduiU Ok tub* : fest at the Municipal Auditorium Saturday night. Other participants in ' v u festival incltr r day night Mixed M assed Clr direction of Otto Seidel of N B raunfels; the W oman's Mas d - f Chorus under the direction : ti e Miss Gisela B auer of San An­ tonio; and the Austin Saenger- runde under the directorship of Herm ann Bohn. D irecting Lied Hoch the Ch i us is Heinrich Paulsen. Walt cr Meiners acts as president. T ikets for the Oktoberfest and dance are on sale at Studtm an's Photo Shop Joseph's M an's Shop, Capital National Bank, Muntz Cartridge City and the Austin N a­ tional Bank, for $1.50. Tho perform ance Saturday o’, tilt m arks the first appearance in the United States for the m ale i lls and ilie trip will be the ' I first to the states for m any m em ­ bers of the Lied Hoch. '-N W K R ill o r UN'S m u MOI N. L O U K HO 5 -m o < HILDUM N MHM VIM MT" MI*! DISC CARDS Vt Two Exce ent Shows! Both in C o lor! c "> O +l- -I ' ‘ f - I A r lf P IS ,a \ / \A/ ^ C I lit winiiUh iii la u ii nnniB iH iinniiM H inii C T M H m y n i CinemaGcooe • Color bv DeLxe ’ "* Plus! at 9:30 IN CO LO R D O R I S D A V H O D T A Y L O R I M I W I T D I S T U R B KW BURNUT ROAD BURNET % v MO VMM t h e CBAZXt i d e f> I f w e t o ld 30a . ^ ^ o u * d o n i ^ la u g h ! Curt R elnrr • F t* M arie Salnl Rrlan Keith • Jonathan Winter* ■HMH XI COLOR Plus "VIVA MARIA" • G FO R trK H VMil.TOIV BRIOITTT. n VRDOT • COLOR • l:W Adult* MOO • DI**. Card* .SO • C hildren F re e O »oe**lon Stand Open* A I’ M . I Hot lr B efora show Tim e W I N N E R O F g A C A D E M Y A W A R D S I “ B vm o a n who nee* It will surely a rr* # that Dr. Z tilra ra deserre* eyenr leaf im It* m any b ra n d le * of laurel*. John Biistln, Am usem ent* E ditor, An»erlr*n-State*m *n 2nd WEEK METRO OXDWYN-MAYER PRESENTS A tm o PONTI PRODUCTION DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS PASTERNAKS a n e w DOCTOR ZHitAGO S ju u e m s f i e m c o r w ALEC GUINNESS • SIOBHAN MCKENNA ■ RALPH RICHARSON OMAR SHARIF (As zhnagoi ROD STEIGER - R1TATUSHINGHAM DCHHN PLAT BV ROBERT BOLT-DAVID LEAN iNPANAvisio^ANOMETwcao* DtRft TtO BV — . --------------- t i l I Kl \ — MATIN I F S R R D ., SAT.. A RUN. AT I P.M. rJ iX L ™ . . . r n . a s . , , T M . A ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT PASS LIST SUSPENDED <3* P ^ S E A u P ^ G A L L E R Y c 8 S C R E E N 4 l m K S c ! ACRES of FREE "A stonishing ly f r a ti h l A n unabashed look at ) cid-Iijc sex. m a rk a h ly u n in h ib ite d and specific in its recording of the way lovers talk and to u c h aud t h i n k / ■—- R ic h a r d S chick el, Life M a g a z in e I OPEN 1:45 FEATURES 2:00 4:00 6:00 8:00 10:00 a d m i s s i o n s TO I P.M. ADULT* DISCOUNT CARDS .................................. *L« SLW ....................... a f t r n i p m . a n d a l l d a y S .A T ^ r r . A HCMDATS ADULTS DISCOUNT CARDS ..................................................... PUW ............................. PI SS starring Jarl Kulle and Christina Sch ollin RECOMMENDKI> FO H ADULTS ANO M A T U R E VOUNG F W P L L t e x a s _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ \ listin'* AU New Intimate Fine Art* Theatre—*.R I-IPM “O* The D r*!'’ Just Back From Hollywood, Direct from the D*Jnes Lounge in hlor]* olulu— Live and in Color— Singing fhe;r |sjewest Hit, REALITY. THE FIFTH ANNUAL TEXAS-O.U. BLAST THIS YEAR FEATURING FOUR GREAT BANDS Plus THE FESTIVALS and THE SILHOUETTES! Starts SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8 -8 P.M. ’TIL ? A t The Show Place O f The Southwest— Modern, Convenient MARKET HALL 2200 STEMMO NS FREEWAY AT INDUSTRIAL TICKETS: $4.00 in A D V A N C E — $4.50 AT THE D O O R E A C H TICKET IN CLU D ES FREE BEVERAGES A N D FREE PAR K IN G AD V AN C E TICKETS: M A IL ORDERS ACCEPTED UNTIL OCT. S MAKE C H E C K S PAYABLE TO: TEXAS-O.U. M A ST / MOO ROUTH PT., SUITE SH / DALLAS, T O U S Ticket* m u Ga Ob Sale, Friday, O c t I, M arket Ha*. HOB St— name Fw y. T H E PITMEN M f r W A U t l i : DOUG CLARK and Hie HOT "ONES" The Wildest C«mpus Show In the World — Straight from Chapel Hill, N.C. PLUS! Dallas’ F * vor'*e ^ ow Bandi THE FESTIVALS— & g s £ Ts r ~ THE SILHOUETTES 'Dallas Answ er to the Supreme.— B is m a r Racord. m No I I fe a ts Reserved • AU Purchasers Guaranteed a Se:*! Box Office Open** At Noon For R eservations Oho P e rfo rm an ce Tiwiav Al 8 I’ M. m oU n ! Perm itted Acres of Free P arkin! Roc U n ! Chair Sea tin ! OL 3-6841- ,M0 Hancock Dr. I THURSDAY—OCTOBER 6-8:00 P.M. MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM Tickets: 4.00, 1.S0, 3.00, 2.90 en Sole At: H e m p h ill Ne. 2 , 2301 Guadalupe; Bloamquiit-Clark, 417 Congress; Sear*, Hancock Shop­ ping Cantar and Austin Ticket Selling Service, American Net***1^ t a n k •Idg.— Phono GR 7-4SI1. A N G U S W YNNE III AND JACK CALM ES PRESENT A PRODUCTION : S H O W E D : Friday, September 30, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page Political Recoil Seen I Economic Boom I P * Cong Pounded, U S Casuaiiiies Mount, Prison Camps Seized WASHINGTON — » — Politi­ cal triumphs by segregationists who weren’t expected to win. plus continuing racial violence, stirred Interest Thursday In the possi­ bility of a white backlash in the November elections. A prom inent backer of civil rights l e g i s l a t i o n . Chairm an the E m anuel Ceiler, D N Y., of Leaflets Greet British Prince BUENOS AIRES. A rgentina — UR — Prince Philip w as showered with anti-British leaflets T hurs­ day after a shooting incident and a plane hijacking had m a rre d his visit to Argentina. The leaflets, calling for a return the disputed Falkland-M al- of lo A rgentina, ap­ vinas-Islands parently w ere thrown by w ork­ ers at a big electric plant Philip visited in the m orning. two The leaflets called on the B rit­ ish to recognize Argentine sov­ ereignty over is­ the lands in the South A tlantic, where Argentine extrem ists landed a hi­ jacked plane W ednesday in a ges­ ture of support for the anti-British Falkland.? cam paign. tiny House Judiciary Com m ittee, said the backlash m ay not be the m a ­ jor issue next Novem ber, “ but it w ill be an im portant one." AND REP. BOB WILSON, R- Calif., chairm an of the GOF Con­ gressional Cam paign C om m ittee, said of the backlash possibility: “ If it take's the form of concern for law and order, it could very well becom e the dom inant issue, even surpassing Viet N am .” Gov. Edm und G. Brown, who ordered the N ational G uard out to help handle N egro rioting in San F rancisco, said of the possi­ b ility : “ I don’t know'. I just do m y I hope it w on’t have any effect on the c a m p a ig n .’’ the best I can jo b ; do D em ocrat Brown is in a close b attle for re-election against the challenge of Republican Ronald in R eagan. Any white backlash California could be expected to h urt Brown. R E A G A N COMMENTED on B row n's situation this w ay : “ It is obvious th a t the governor h as not profited at ail from the e x ­ perience of W atts . . . and has done nothing to forestall future distu rbances trouble sp>ts. It is obvious that new lead­ ersh ip is needed.” in possible At the W hite House on Thurs- ONE HOUR FABRI-CAIRE® T H E BETTER D RY C L EA N IN G ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE In B v 9:00 A M. — O ut By 5:00 P.M . BURTON'S LAUNDRY & CLEANERS 615 W. 29th St. GR 8-4621 It’s Always Easy To Park at BU RTO N S WE DONT KNOW WHAT TO BRAG ABOUT... UU r nm • Our Pastor Isn't vary handsome • Our building Is Irfnda weatherbeaten • Our pews ere uncomfortable • And some of our people are g ro u c h y Still, They’re Knockin’ the Doors D ow n or of the University B ureau of Business R esearch says. Dr. John R. Stoc kton, professor of business statistics, said in a rep o rt th a t signs a re beginning to m ultiply th at (joint to a peak in the business expansion that be­ gan in F eb ru ary 1961. 'T here are so m any indications that a peak in the expansion m ay he approaching that every sign of a slowing down in the strategic factors in the business situation should be w atched carefully,” Stockton said. in NEW ORDERS for durable goods the United States de­ clined 4.5 per cent in August and w as the sm allest volum e of such o rders since last N ovm eber, he said. th ree of F o r T exas the four leading indicators of econom ic in change dipped substantially July, although in August just one indicator — residential construc­ tion — declined, Stockton said. Stockton said th a t Texas busi­ ness activities during August gen­ to show gains erally continued over the highs th at have been in previous m onths. reg istered “ REGARDLESS of the changes that m ay be shown by the indivi­ dual components of the economy of Texas, there appears to be no question but that the total level of activity is still moving up­ w ard ,” Stockton said. Stockton said ti e rapid expan­ in sion of business capital goods has been a critical factor in the current inflationary pressures. investm ent “THE COMBINED result of steadily increasing consum er ex­ penditures, capital expansion and m ilitary dem ands has been to bring the economy of the United States to about as n e a r full em ­ ploym ent of our resources as it is possible to achieve. Skilled personnel, m achine tools and an increasing list of r a w m aterials a re developing critical supply .situations.” Stockton said the P resid en t’s effort to suspend for 16 m onths the 7 p e r cent tax credit for in­ vestm ents in m achinery is aim ed a t slowing down this pressure on resources. “ If a recession in the future is to be avoided, it is im portant that m ore restrain ts be applied be­ fore the inflationary boom goes too fa r,” he said. Congress to Study H E W Racial Rules others, notably from the South, who have vom plained that HEW is acting illegally and trying to force integration. tion. THE HOUSE Rules Com m ittee held a hearing Thursday and it quickly resolved the question of not w hether an inves­ tigation should be held, but what com m ittee should conduct it. itself into Southern m em bers pressed for a probe by a special com m ittee. A possible alternative is an inves­ tigation by the House Judiciary Com m ittee, which has purisdic- tion in civil rights m atters. SAIGON, South Viet N am —LA­ US M arines poured m o rta r and artillery shells and fiery' napalm Thursday on a North V ietnam ese com m and post and reported kill­ ing 51 Com m unist troops in the action near the dem ilitarized 7.ono dividing North and South Viet Nam. The com m and post w as in a valley about 1 ^ miles south of the zone near w here M arines have been fighting the North Vietna­ two m ese 324B Division months. for A US SPOKESMAN said the M arines rained m o rta r and a r ­ tillery' fire on a troop concentra- 4 Profs Leave For Math Meet F o u r U niversity faculty m em ­ bers left T hursday to participate in the 1966 m eeting of the N a­ tional Council of T eachers of M athem atics in D allas. Dr. William T. Guy, chairm an , of the D epartm ent of M athem a­ tics, will conduct a session for students entitled “ The World of M athem atics and You.” He will also discuss the topic “ Num ber Theory and the Discovery Ap­ proach.” “ Today’s M athem atics in P r i­ m a ry G rades F rom a T each er’s Point of View” will be discussed j by Dr. Glenadine Gibb, associate professor of m athem atics educa­ Dr. R oger C. Osborn, associate professor of m athem atics and education, will speak on “ Com­ paring P rogram m ed M aterials With P rogram m ing.” “ M easure­ m ents Involved in Two and Three Space M odels” is the topic M rs. GeNell Beck, special instructor in m athem atics, will discuss. The m eeting will continue through Saturday. of the tion in the valley, three m i l e s ? north boulder-strew n m ountain called “Tile Rockpile.” In a ground sweep after the the M arines counted 51 attack, North V ietnam ese dead. Tlie latest enem y casualties r a ised to 93.3 the total of North V ietnam ese killed bv the M arines it in Operation P ra irie started Aug. 3. M arines listed their own casualties as m oderate. since BRIEFING OFFICERS dis­ closed T hursday th at A m erican offensive operations, while boost­ ing Com m unist losses sharply last week, swelled US casualties to a total of 970 killed, wounded or m issing. record weekly these. 5,302 fell The roll of A m erican dead in five y ears of w ar rose to 6.100. Of in com bat. The pentagon disclosed Monday that deaths from such nonhostile causes as accidents, drownings and disease totaled 1.008 through Sept. 17. For the fourth tim e this year, weekly losses of the A m ericans exceeded those of the South Viet­ nam ese. Though US units involv­ ed now have 315,000 mon, South forces still Viet N am ’s arm ed list m ore than twice that enroll­ m ent — 705,000. • A US spokesm an announced A m erican a ir squadrons flew IOO m issions over North Viet Nam W ednesday in the continuing ef­ fort to im pede the m ovem ent of Red troops and w ar supplies. • Field dispatches told of the seizure of two Viet Cong prison cam ps. US forces overran one in Phu Yen Province, about 200 m iles northeast of Saigon, which they said looked like the Nazis’ D achau “ all over again.” They freed IO V ietnam ese suffering from m alnutrition, boils, pneu­ monia and other ailm ents, left behind by guards who dragged to 60 others. Korean away 40 troops ranging Phu Cat Moun­ tain found an abandoned pen whose only inm ate was a ragged old m an too feeble to walk. They carried him to safety. Over all, 243 of the allied were killed last week, against 271 in the week of Sept. 11-17. Of these, 112 w ere A m ericans, 98 Vietna­ m ese and th ree of other nationali­ ties. The count of Viet Cong and North V ietnam ese dead was 1.165, against 722 the previous week. A Growing Concern for the welfare of yo ur com m unity can m ake g o in g concerns of our U nited Fund into agencies. Just tranH ate technique: "c o n trib u tio n ." H a n d your g ift or p le d ge to yo u r solici­ tation chairm an . . . Translation "c o n c e rn " R I G H T A W A Y ! U N IV E R S IT Y F A C U L T Y A N D S T A F F C A M P A I G N VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Austin’s Largest & Finest Sunday Night Special Plemons Hardware & G ifts (W e s t on 24th) 2 4 0 6 Exposition G R 2 -3916 Complete Line of Hardware Kitchen & Gift Items Just present yo ur Blanket Tax or R egistratio n receipt to C a sh ie r Sorority & Fraternity Accounts 2300 Interregional Highway Welcomed O N L Y 2 BLOCKS FR O M M E M O R IA L STADIU M into Such an WASHINGTON — LB —- Con­ Investigation gress planned an T hursday the question of w hether the federal governm ent is pushing too hard for desegre­ gation of schools and hospitals. investigation a p p ear­ ed assured, despite the fact that Sen. Mike M ansfield of M ontana, D em ocratic leader of the Senate, canceled out and reversed his re m a rk of W ednesday when he said the D epartm ent of H ealth, Education and W elfare— HEW — is moving “ too fa st” in the area. that T hursday, M ansfield said he m ust have m isunderstood news­ m en ’s questions; th a t he actually if anything, de­ believes that, segregation of schools is “ too slow .” to AT ISSUE ARE guidelines Is­ sued by HEW under the Civil R ights Act of 1964, which pro­ vides for the denial of federal institutions practicing funds unlawful segregation of races. In d general, the guidelines a re de- 0 signed, HEW officials say, to speed up the desegregation pro­ cess. They have aroused protests from a num ber of legislators and W IT N E SSE S NEEDED To a wreck Saturday night, Sept. lith at ll 46 P M . at North I>w»p and North Lamar. < ontart W. D. Batea, OL t-9567 between 8 a m. A < p.m. 'The Pipe House of Austin" Will D. Miller & Son Magazine* and dally new spaper* High grade rigors, tobacco*, pipe* A accc*«»r1e* 122 West 6th street A u s t i n , T e g a * The Ironing Board we will do your ironing 209B West North Loop HO 5 7209 Oo Out Guadalupe or I-am ar to North Loop, Turn Right F R O M M E X I C O I , argre C o lle c ti o n o f r e g i o n a l c r a f t s a n d d e c o r a t iv e a c c e s s o r ie s B U L A S K I N N E R , I M P O R T S 1705 Nueces C H O T E ’S SIN C L A IR SERVICE 19th it San A n to n io Street* W e g iv e S & H G re e n S ta m p * M e c h a n ic on D uty u p -t o -t h e -m iaju tr Uaybo naire* HOPSACK SLACKS. A, 9 tailo rs them SUM AND TR/M (N A NEOU JAYBLAZE* FA80O cum VACRON f o p NEATNESS THAT U PN T Q U IT .1 FALL W E IG H I’S L A C K S SH O W N : 55% D A C R O N * PO LY EST E R , 45 « W O R S T E D W GOL. About $18.00 in B ree n /b r o w n h eath er tone and o th er fall colors. _ h i I ’a n t's registered tradem ark. D u F ont m akes fibers, not fabrics or clothes. "" Better T hing* for Better Living . . . through C hem istry fin jrtfiry FREE ESTIM ATES 22S8 GT ADAH PE On The Drag AM ) IX AI XA V D A IX V1IJ.AGE Bionic]uist'C lark Rcynolds-Penland University M en’s Shop og# IO Friday, September 30, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Apollo Spaceflight. Like to know how ifs done? See page 19 in the October issue of TES. Coming soon. Thirty-five cents, tax included. J TEXAS ENGINEERING & SCIENCE MAGAZINE