’ • *••*/? ;»*u Mexican Marijuana, Hand-Rolled into Cigarettes C a lled "Joints," Becomes the Problem of C a p t. Harvey E. Gann, o f the Austin Police Department ' ’* ’’ ■— " i T h e Da il y T e x a n S t u d e n t N ew spaper a t The U n i v e r s i t y of Texas a t Aus ti n Vol. 67 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, S UNDA Y, M A R C H 31, 1968 Twelve Pages Today No. 145 Graduate Program Subject at Hearing By JIM RIDDLE ami DW ID JAY Texan Staff Writers A call for more and better applied fed­ eral aid to graduate schools was echoed by the witnesses heard before a US Senate subcommittee hearing on education Friday at the Academic Conter. The subcommittee, headed by Sen. Ralph Yarbrough, D-Texns, was considering re ­ visions to the Higher Education Act of 1963. Chancellor H arry Ransom welcomed the Senator and presented a brief statem ent on the overall problems of higher education with respect to the Higher Education Act of 1965. “ G raduate facilities and measured assist­ ance to those who participate in graduate program s are desperately ntHd'd. The need in die developing graduate is as clear school as it is in well-established centers of research,” the Chancellor said. “ We must initiate further program s of cooperation among institutions . joint program s, shared facilities, and exchange of both ideas and personnel.” . . Hearing Witnesses Other witnesses Included Dr. William Ar­ rowsmith, University professor of classics; Dr. John T. King, president of Huston-Til- lotson College; Dr. L. H. McCloney, pres­ ident of Paul Quinn College, Waco; Dr. Marvin Baker, president of .South Plains College, Levelland: Dr. Mack C. Adams, coordinator of student financial aid, SMU; Dr. John Sillier, dean of the College of A rts and Sciences; and Lloyd Doggett, president of the Students’ Association. Peter Muirhead, associate US commissioner of education, also appeared. indicted Dr. Arrowsmith the graduate training program s of the nation's univer­ sities and warned that unless federal as­ sistance, now under consideration, is not judiciously applied In the area of assistance to developing educational Institutions then these second-rank schools will become du­ plicates of the m ajor universities and will suffer from the sam e ills. Haphazard Policies “ For years graduate education has grown accustomed to policies that seem to have originated only in random and haphazard pressures — constantly increasing enroll­ m ents; constant internal crises created by crash programs and priorities coming out­ side the university; and the general head­ long process of professionalization. The re­ sult of these pressures is incoherence in graduate educational program s, a disturb­ ing trend toward conformity of curriculum and an almost total neglect of the educa- W eather: • C lo u d y • H ig h : N e a r 80 • Low: M id 60's tional needs and aspirations of the graduate students themselves,” Dr. Arrowsmith said. In his statem ent on the legislation pre­ sently being considered, Dr. Arrowsmith stated, “ it is disturbingly professional in character and appears to be based on the dubious faith that quality' is a function of quantity.” This legislation will enlarge graduate fat iii ties, expand programs, and add new skills “ . . . but these are all quan­ titative improvements, and nothing in them guarantees any corresponding qualitative improvement.” Second Rank Institutions in full Dr. Arrowsmith, reading part of his statem ent which was included in the subcommittee records, continued “ . . . It is generally true, I think, that second- rank institutions tend to be less adventur­ ous, loss inclined to risk than the leading schools simply because their lack of con­ fidence often leads them to follow policies of hyper-respectabiiity. Unless stress is laid upon positive innovation, upon aggressive boldness, the^o institutions m ay be tempter! to improve th eir standing without also im­ proving their performance, Dr. John Silber testified “What the second-rank schools should be encouraged to do is not what the front- ranked graduate schools are already doing better, but doing what is not tieing done, what badly needs doing, and what the m a­ jor schools arc doing badly or not at all.” to the inade­ quacies of present student financial aid programs. “ We have not vet reached the point that every' student qualified to re­ ceive and to be advantaged by a college education is able to receive that educa­ tion. Many students drop out of college and go to wmrk because they do not have the financial backing to pay for a college edu­ cation. “ Tile loss to the country' Is Incalculably high. We must estim ate the cost not only in term of direct e* cnemic loss by the dimin­ ished earning power of the Individuals in­ volved; we m ust also consider the loss due to resentment, frustration, and ultim ate tense of failure that stifles the ambition the performance of a very and reduces large percentage of those w'ho cannot com­ plete their college education. E dueabona I I >i sad van (ages “ Admittedly the frustrations and disap­ pointments largely that culminate result from educa tional disadvantages suffered by children and young adults prior to college age. Operation Head Start, the Job Corps, and other projects of the Office of Eco­ nomic Opportunity are perhaps far more important in the alleviation of those pro­ gram s than any programs designed to help students on the college level. “We spend the greatest amount of money p r student at the graduate level and the least at the pre-school level. We spend the least where the need is greatest, and we spend the most where the recd is least. legislation di­ r e c t s towards the provision of aid for all needy college students, but I would sug- (See SUBCOMMITTEE, Page 8) “ I enthusiastically favor Phi Kappa Psi Wins Top In Store Front Contest Winners in the Round-Up Western store front competition were announced at the Western Dance Friday night. The “ 40 Acres Club” entry’ of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity won first place. What's Inside • Legislator nips Caroline Page 2 • Texas tied in SWU ran e ........... Page 5 • K hyber drill team featured . . . Page 7 • Round-l'p in pictures .................Page % Second, third and fourth places went to “ Clyde Crumbles” by Chi Phi fraternity, "Reynolds Pen!.-md” by Alpha Rho Chi fraternity, and the “Campus Tonsorial P a r­ lor” by Sigma Delta Tau sorority. Honorable mentions went to the entries by Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and the Inter­ cooperative Council. The store fronts were constructed to represent the way Drag businesses might have looked the year the Uni­ versity was founded. in 1883, Trophies were presented first lour places. The two honorable mentions received plaques, the for Raiders Reap Biggest Haul' By RICK HSII Texan Staff Urit4*r due to get basted, or had been busted pre­ viously.” A sunrise series of raids on the Uni­ versity residential area Friday resulted in the arrest by late Friday of a reported 21 persons, on various charges of drug abuse and vagrancy. According to Capt. Harvey Cann of the Austin Police D epartm ent's Special Services division, approximately seven of those a r­ the University. rested were students at in­ Exact volved are being withheld until their sit dent status is verified totals and names of students According to Cann, two and a half pounds, a “disappointing amount,” of hulk m ari­ juana was seized in the action. Small Number of Student* Most of the sources felt that 3 statem ent by Hinds saving th,.it drug abuse centered around the campus involved only "an In­ finite-amaliv small nun ber of students/* was incorrect. “ I’d estim ate " one m ari­ juana “ wholesaler” said, "that out of .10,- .students on this campus, 10.000 now 000 smoke or haw* at "ne time tried grass (m arijuana I.” Although m arijuana oc< atonally is re- ported to he growing wild in such unlikely pl ires us Austin's bilker Hark. almost ail 'I here comes of the m arijuana used md across the border from Mexico. Much lim ning Involved ISI Pound* In \ti*Un The raids, planner! for six to eight weeks, Involved the coordinated efforts of the Fed­ eral Bureau of Drug Abuse, federal nar­ cotics agents, Customs agents, the Depart­ ment of Public .Safety, Travis County Sher­ if f Department, Austin Police Department Investigators, and campus security officers, Cann said. Robert Hinds, director of the Dallas Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Drug Abuse Control, called it "our biggest haul ev e r” five state Southwestern area supervised by his office. in a Hinds said the raids were directed at sellers of LSD and mar; ma rut, and ca Bed Austin the “distribution center” for m ari­ juana and I SD in the Southwest. He said the University of Texas area w as “the hot­ te s t spot” of his district.. W arrant* Issued Secretly According to Cann, four or five federal undercover agents had worked on gather­ ing evidence for the raids, conducted under the federal w arrants grand in Austin Wednesday. Three State w arrants were also issu'd. issued secretly by jury In connertJon with the A ast in action, two m en Were arrested in I r e d o under f»d- eral grand jury indictments for conspiracy to import and smuggle m arijuana a< rosa the border, and possession and sale of m arijuana and mescaline. Although Hinds said the University has a than most m .uijuana problem "heavier schools,” Cann estimated that it was “ not out of proportion for a college nr < itv of this population.” “ Hippie Element” Blamed Cann said he thought m ent” was responsible Cr crease in drug asage over the past year. the "hippie ele­ in­ the large "Many of these people are transient/* Cann said. “TItoy moved the heat got to lie too painful in other areas, and when it heats up again, they’ll move along.” err* when Sources among the drug users disagreed with Gann’s statem ent, “ Only a few of the heads have left town perm anently,” one said. "Most of these thought they were still Marijuana in quantity Is delivered eight or Kl miles nm Texas for $80 $100 per kilo (2 2 pounds* of the plant Several of the large quantity m arijuana dealers report that an estim ated 130 pounds of m arijuana is distributed tho Austin area each week. Using Federal Narcotics Bureau va­ luation, approximately $130,000 worth, although dealers estim ate such a quantity to ta* worth only about $16,230, this in Is Marijuana usually goes four steps before It reaches the hands of In­ dividual Austin smokers. through Growers In Mexico cultivate the plant, which is brought to Austin by runners for distribution by two varieties of dealers, the wholesalers and the retailers. Wholesalers deal directly with Mexican soup > s and deal in amounts of kilos aud tens of kilns. Retailers usually buy from large quantity dealers In amounts m easur­ able in panels. Retailers break the pounds of grass down Into “lids” — equal to approxim ately one ounce, and “ matchboxes ' — equal to about a quarter of an ounce A “ lid * .sells in A as tin for approximately $15 and a matchbox for $”> A few whole* tiers in Austin, according to local sources, deal in amounts of blin­ d e d k and ,* .sj - nervous stimulant that p e d I ;■ es ' • ’ t i n ugh sleep deprivation / arid adrenaline stimulation. Hinds 1 od in a st dem ent that die raid lief I ‘ *d about 25 per cent of those dealing in LSD and marijuana in Austin. •or es in ti e lr de agr *ed that this was an accurate estim ate because “ they got dealers who w re q.j mg or ler dealers.** Sweetheart W inner Smiles Proudly f o r Audience P eg gy Jarvo Brzoszkiewicx o f Dallas was nam ed 1968 U n iv e rs ity S w e e th e a rt at the S w eetheart Ball h ig h lig h tin g R o u n d -U p . Miss Brieskiewicz, a ju nio r m a jo rin g in p sych o lo g y, was chosen fro m five fina lists. She is a m em ber o f A lp h a C h i O m e g a , tre a s u re r o f O ra n g e Jackets, m e m b e r o f th e H ouse o f Delegates, re g is tra tio n c h a ir­ fin a lis t. m an o f C h a lle n g e c o ilo q u im , O rien tatio n adviser, and a B luebonnet Belle ~>U> by ate vt Deik Rumors Arrests Foretold Bust', H it Marketers By JOHN BRA ANT Texan Staff Writer A hand-written note was tacked on the bulletin board outside the Chuek Wagon in the Union Builidng. It read: "I was here but you were in jail, Viv.” At dawn Friday, team s of federal, State, and local narcotics agents moved in and busted a number of residences in the Uni­ versity area. What led up to the raid? What was the impact of the raids on the users? Raid Expected Every indication is that the bust was ex­ pected. “ I heard rumors four weeks ago,” a 20-year-old art m ajor said in the Chuck Wagon. “ The rumor said to clean up and I did. Anyone that had any sense went out and buried their stuff. Or eLse ate it.” Where do the rumors come from? One of the organizers of “Flipped-Out Week” said Lt. Bort Cording of tile Austin vice squad spreads the word. “ He starts a bust rum or about once a week. You can tell when it's real and when if s not. This weekend a guy tol l Gelding he was leaving town. Cording said that would be a good idea.” Leak in Confidence Other interviews suggested that there was a in Cording’* confidents. “It had leak something to do with his showmanship,” a non-student said. “He notified the wire ser- viees ahead of time. There was a lot of in­ formation given to us from people that he wouldn't su sp ect There are a lot of straight people that don't ase dope who know that heads t narcotics users) are real people and sympathize with us,” he said. "Rumors do get out," a n th e r non-stu­ dent said, “ You can’t keep this sort of thing a secret. They'll tell people there's gonna be a bust when there isn't one at all. these kids They say shaped-up*. I t’ll just get all the kids to flush their stash,” he said. just ‘to keep it’s Why did the bast happen? What led up to the bust? How did the bust succeed? Many interviewed thought there were politiral im­ plications in the timing of the crackdown. This is an election year, and certain people in higher offices are being pressured from above to eliminate the “hippie” element, they claim . In any case, tit* bust coincided with “ Flipped-Out: Week.” Some students felt this was intentional while others did not. “ A lot of people thought there was a Con­ nerton.” said an organizer of "Flipper! Out Week." Another student was more defiant, “ Of course they waited for ‘Flipped-Out Week*. It was very dram atic/* Otic reason the bust sue ceded that the agents had been preparing the cases (See NARCOTICS, Pag< 8) is Dr. Otis Singletary, former University faculty m em ber and presently vice presi­ de rd of the Amen.' an Council on Education, will become the University System's Exe­ cutive Vice-Chancellor for Academic Af­ fairs on Sept. I, Chancellor H arry Ransom announ. ed Saturday. As a m em ber of the central adm inistra­ tion, Dr. Singletary will have general responsibility for the University's institu­ tions at Austin, Arlington, and El Paso. Dr. Singletary was the unanimous choice of the Chancellor, administration, faculty adviser, and of the Board of Regents. “ Dr. Singletary’s distinguished record in teaching and research , his wide experience as an adm in istrato r in the U niversity at Austin, as Chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, as director of the Job Corps, and as vice-president of the Council speaks for itself. That record is also assurance that he will fill his new and vital position in Texas education with distinction,” Chancellor Ransom’s announce­ ment said. Chairman Frank C, Erwin, Jr. of the University System Board of Regents and Logan Wilson, president of the American Dr. Singletary Unanimously Vice-Chancellor of Academic Chosen A ffairs Council, said the appointment marked a major step in the University*® administra­ tive organization. Wilson is a former Uni­ versity president and chancellor. Dr. Singletary was graduated from Mill­ sap*; College and received both m aster s i d I D iversity, v d e g re e * L u a m a Stat® ( n m 1954 A member of the Department of History fa c u lty at Tex,!® to 1961. he s e r .e d as Ass** late D an of th e C ollege of Arts and Smences tv rn 1958-1960, and as A ssista n t to the President of the University d u rm g Ran'-or: - **•: rn In th a t office, 1960- 61. U S* :• • “ . >*d rho igh and the Studen ts’ Association * w ards for excel­ lence in teaching at Texas Dr. Singletary a va lies been i < ognized for ms historical research by the Moncado Award. He is aud r ch two Dx ks, “ The N**gro M lit la and ‘"Die Mexican War as well a> numerous articles on history and education. the Keo estrum h in He served on state, reg -naI. and national committees and commissions in ->uch pro­ gram s as the Woodrow Wilson Foundation and the Rhodes Scholarship Trust, In his most recent assignment as vice- president of the American Council. Dr. 8 cg let ary has w rked with Wilson in na- t. awide program s of education. The Coun- ch represents interests of tile entire edu­ cational community of th® United Staten* A Singletary Envoys to Go To Meet in Peru Exchange Program To Be Discussed State Representative Urges Regents to Dismiss Caroline Drive for Delegate Strategy Outlined those persons who work sidize for its total destruction. citizen Rep Scoggins adm itted th at a private have broader rights to express opinions on such m atters, and that ideas alone w ere not the issue here. would is,*’ he said, “ that “ The fact is a S tate em ployee.” Caroline Rep. Scoggins “ P rivate citizens have rights, in keeping with the tenets of a free society, to express them selves.” said, F ra n k E rw in, chairm an of the Board of Regents, said S aturday m orning he had received the tele­ gram , but he declined to com ­ m ent. He said only that the Re­ gents w ere considering a faculty report on the subject received at their last meeting. S tate officials of the M cCarthy for president cam paign m et at the Villa C apri S aturday to dis­ cuss ways to coordinate a drive to secure Texas delegates to he sent to the national D em ocratic convention. News Capsules _______ By The Associated Press______ F i l l Jet Crashes in Th ailand SAIGON Tile A ir F orce rep o rted Sunday the crash of a second of th e six A m erican F I U A jets th a t entered the Vietnam w a r less th a n a w eek ago. The tw o crew m en w ere resated . M ilitary sources said th e plane w as lost in T hailand S a tu rd a y because of an operational failure. The sources ruled out th e possibility th a t the fighter-bom ber had been downed by enem y ground fire o r MIG interceptors. Poll Reveals Czech Polity BFLGKADK T he Y ugoslav daily new spaper B eata rep orted from P ra g u e th a t th e present “dem ocratizing" of the Czechos­ lovak Com m unist w ay of life and politics is approved by 7o per cent of the Czechoslovak people, according to a public opinion poll- One p e r cent was against tin* present course and o th ers were undecided, vague 01 convinced nothing is changing, the poll indicated. Siberia Seeks N e w W orkers M O S C O W Siberia is suffering from a critical labor shortage. This sprawling, rich expanse of the Soviet Union once had plenty of w orkers, men sent during the Stalin y ears to forced labor camps. W ith the partial relaxation of police state controls since Stalin’s death in 1953, m any forced laborers and ethnic groups, which had been deported to Siberia, have been allowed to re tu rn home. T he Soviet sla te lins trie d to encourage o th er w orkers to move to Siberia to fill th e gap. Blacks Declare Independence DETROIT D elegates to a black nationalist convention S atu rd ay d rafted a declaration of independence from the United S tates, which, am ong o th er things, called for “ blacks who go into th e street, fight fo r freedom and fall into A m eri­ can hands" to be tre a te d as prisoners of w ar. 'rile proposed declaration of independence w as combined wn:h a draft of a constitution for a se p ara te N eg ro n a­ tion to lie set up in five states in th e South. T he leaders of th e convention said 50 N egroes k i d achieved “delegate” sta tu s a t the convention by indicating th ey intended to renounce th e ir A m erican citizenship and become citizens of the new' country. M c C a r th y S p e a k s for Equality M I L W A U K E E Sen. Eugene .T. M cC arthy urged union m em bers S a t­ u rd ay “ to tak e some chances, really, on our fellow A m eri­ c a n s’’ by striving to gu aran tee N egro equality in em ploy­ m ent and housing. And as for V ietnam , th e M innesota sen ato r said this is th e m essage of his cam paign to w rest from P resident Lyndon B. Johnson the D em ocratic nom ination for the W hite H ouse: “ H ere is the issue. H ere it is under circum ­ stances In w hich you can say yes or no as to w hat you w ant done." C o n n e lly Talks of Treason Texas Gov. John C arnally I N D I A N A P O L I S told Indiana D em ocrats S a tu rd a y night some presidential candidates “ have come dangerously close to treason" during th e cam paign. C cnnaSy did not link a candidate directly to the sta te ­ m ent. L a ter in his prepared Jefferson-Jaekson Day din­ n e r address he criticized Sen. R obert Kennedy. T he G overnor said, “never in these U nited S tates has such an a rro g a n t dem and been throw n upon the desk of a President" as when K ennedy offered to “ deal” w ith P resident Lyndon B. Johnson on th e V iet­ nam W ar. the h isto ry of W a ll Street S lu m p s in Q uarter NEW YORK Tho stock m ark et has ended the first q u a rte r of 1968 w ith a fairly sh arp loss but w ith every evidence th at, given a chance, it would ra th e r rise th an fall. | T his was borne out in the latest week when th e Dow J o n e s industrial average adva nced 11.62 to 840.67. F o r the first industrials slum ped 64.44 points. In the sam e period The Associated P ress average dropped 19.6 points. th re e m onths of Pie year, th e Dow Police Force Looks for Job I T H S I U KCI! The IO m em bers of the Robinson Tow nship police force read placed a new spaper advertisem ent “ Police d ep artm en t for hire . . have gun will travel." Tilt v said the tow n offered them a $25-a-m onth raise' to present salarit s of $4,800 to $5,700 a \ e a r but they w anted a t least $100 a m onth. in part th at . Street Sw e ep e r ‘Eats’ M a n A Chicago m an knocked N E W O R L E A N S in a scuffle early S atu rd ay w as sucked up by a street-sw eep­ ing m achine an d carried fo r th re e blocks before th e de­ vice ejected him. into B ourbon S treet Police said Joseph N a th a n P eters, 29, w as tak e n to a hospital in undeterm ined condition. P e te rs w as repo rted to h a v e suffered a broken leg. Copter C ra sh e s in C a m p a i g n ORANGE A helicopter c a rry in g an ABC television drew filming th e cam paign of D em o crat Wa; coner C a rr crash ed into a c o n c re te loading ram p S aturday, killing one m an. T h e victim w as B ruce II. Powell, 50, of A rlington H e ig h ts, Iii., a C hicago suburb. Powell w as a cam eram an fo r N B O in C hicago. T h e pilot and a n o th e r NBG em- p lo y f w alked a w a y fro m the crash. Page 2 Sunday, March 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN to further Working the con­ tinuing Peruvian Exchange Pro­ gram between the U niversity and the U niversity of Cuzco in Peru will be one of the aim s of the Texas delegation to the third an­ nual Inter-A m erican Conference of the P artn ers of Alliance. 30-m em ber delegation which left F riday for a two-week m eeting in Lima, P eru, is led by E dw ard M arcus of D allas and has the largest US representation a t the conference. Tile be D elegates will officially welcomed by Peruvian P resident a F ernando Bel a unde T erry, 1935 g rad u ate of the U niversity. Local delegates indue.- R obert Sehenkkan, director of the Uni­ v ersity ’s Com munication Center, and his wife, M rs. Ju lia Sorrel), Jim Egan, and Banks Miller, exe­ cutive d irector of the Alliance. From US and !>alin A m erica They will join 300 other dele­ gates from 33 state and 15 L atin Arnct icon countries. Them e of the conference is “ The Com muni­ ty in A ction." w hich will study education, agriculture, m edicine, and basiness-industry. P artn ers of the A lliance Is a non-profit, privately supported or- g mi/.ation form ed in 1964 by the* Staff' D epartm ent’s Agency for International Developm ent, Pent Texas P a rtn e r Va re us states arf1 In p artn e r­ ship with South A m erican coun­ tries in the program . The Texas p artn e r is P eru, and individual Texas < vt irs and civic groups, com panies, and p rivate citizens into partn ersh ip have entered with P eruvian cities and states in a variety of projects. T ie U niversity’s P eruvian E x­ change Program w as initiated this International E x­ year by change Board of the Students’ Association and the P rtners of the Alliance. the S tate Rep. Charles Scoggins of Corpus Christi F riday urged the U niversity Regents to fire Dr. Law; once Caroline, assistan t pro­ fessor of philosophy who re­ portedly called for revolution at last an anti-w ar dem onstration October. In a telegram to the Regents, Rep. Scoggins said they had con­ sidered the m a tte r long enough. “ if is tune for action,” he said. "A ssistant Professor Caroline's open advocacy of violent revolu­ tion and the total abolition of pri­ v ate property in A m erica renders his continued em ploym ent at a State-supported educational insti­ tution Intolerable." to as th at Dr. Caroline com m ented F ri­ da v. “ If we re a c h enough Ameri­ cans arid convince them that the kinds of (hanger we advocate a re necessary, and if people a re p rep a re d those insist changes occur peacefully, then if tic* governm ent attem pts to vio- Jently repress the leaders of such that m ovem ent a m ovem ent, would be justified in defending itself in any w ay necessary ." Rep. Scoggins said he telephoned Dr. Caroline and asked for an elaboration on Dr. C aroline’s po­ sition a speech at an anti-w ar rally held on th e S tate Capitol grounds. Rep. Scoggins had read a report on I )r. C aroline’s talk in a Cor­ pus Christi new spaper. Dr. Caro­ line said he did not realize Rep. Scoggins called for the purpose of la te r recom m ending that the R egents dism iss him. Rep. Scoggins expressed during the US Suprem e Court has ruled the con-1 stitutional free g uarantee speech “ is very extensive but it is not without lim its.” Rep. Scoggins said he believes Dr. Caroline tho^e lim its and no society ra n reason­ ably be asked to pay taxes to sub- exceeded said has of Tourist Pane! H ead Sees Austin Packed As the largest city nearest San Antonio, Austin m ay bt* overflow** ing with H em isFair visitors from April 6 to O rt. 6, plus the usual num ber of out-of-towners attend­ ing graduation cerem onies, foot­ ball gam es, artel meetings. “ I think Austin will be excep tonally full from June I through Lal>or Day on Sept. 2,” Don E p­ person, executive director of th** Texas Tourist Council, stated. visitors m ay As a result, football fans and University find lim ited accom m odations for week­ end sta y s in Austin. Many hotels rep o rt th at they are now sold out for som e football gam es, p articu ­ larly for the first one on Sept. 21. The g reatest num ber of re se r­ vations in m otels recorded In te rs'a te 33. along 7JNS,OOO H em isFair Tourists is During H em isFair, San Antonio will face the problem of 7,200,000 tourists and a num ber of room s estim ated a t approxim ately 8,000, Epperson said. It is thought that aceom m odalions “ will be com ­ pletely filled on several dates up to UXI miles from tile city of San Antonio ” One Austin motel m an ag er a l­ ready reports a 35 per cent in­ in the num ber of April crease rf ervatioaa and believes that this trend will stretch out through the sum m er. B ecause of H em is­ F air s opening and the sum m er traveling season, visitors here for graduation June I m ay find a shortage of accommodations. Several m otor hotels and larg er hotels have blocks of room s ro- servod football for graduation, gam es, and School of I.aw* Con­ room s are ferences, but lim ited Some m otels near the I I iversify a re sold out for the m ajo r football gam es or for th*' season. Accommodation* Won’t Suffice these When the tourist boom hits San Antonio, “ we a re expecting quite a lot of people here because hous­ ing accom m odations won’t hold th e re ,” Vie M athias, everyone rn master of the Austin Cham ber of Commerc e, said. His organize! lion to advertise Austin through brochures, tours, encourage* to billboards and tourists to com e here. is continuing An approxim ate 50 per cent in cre ase in brochures will bp used during H em isF air to publicize Austin. L ocal hotels a re prom ot­ ing shuttle bus- service to H em is­ F air to enourage tourists to Jind room s in Austin. Students For A Patriotic A m e r ic a presents F A G A N D I C K S O N Candidate for Congress and Dr. C lifton G ru b b Professor of Economics Speaking M O N D A Y - APRIL I 7:30 P.M. BEB 150 General Public Invited to Attend S p o ns o r ed b y — Students for a Patriotic A m erica Joh n M arm ad uke, President Don Allford, sta te cam paign chairm an, said the cam paign will be ca rrie d on at the precinct level. In a statem ent about re­ ports received during the m eet­ ing, he said, “ There a re three tim es as m any M cCarthy sup­ porters in each precinct as will be needed to c a rry the precinct for M cC arthy.” “ By Identifying these voters and explaining to them the im ­ p e d a n c e of attending th eir pre­ cinct conventions on the night of May 4, w*e a re confident that at least one out of three will be persuaded to atten d .” he said. to Texas and Allford said M cCarthy w ants to com e th at Mc­ C arthy’s national h ea d q u arte rs is pleased with the cam paign of sup­ p orters here to bring him to Aus­ tin. Vietnam, Venezuela, India Visitors Journey to Texas the Venezuelan A form er deputy prim e m inister of South Vietnam, three m em bers of education m inistry, and an educator from India will arriv e here Sunday for visits to the Univer ity. TTie V ietn am e se visitor is T ran Van Tuyen, a Saigon law yer, and Eau Dai, leader who in 1965 w as prim e his m inister he w as In 1919-50, m inister of inform ation. country’s deputy Tuyen, who the United States a t the invitation of Is visiting C o m m itte e to S p o n so r 'R e g e n t-fo r-a -D a y 1 Talks T hree professors and two stu ­ dent leaders will drop som e hints for the Regents Monday—April Fool’s Day. Dr. David E dw ards, assistan t professor of governm ent; Dr. Irw in S pear, associate professor of botany; Dr. Roderick Bell, assistant professor of govern­ m ent; IJoyd Doggett, president of the S tudents’ Association, and R ostam K avoussi, president-elect of the Students’ Association, will “ Chip-In” at be featured a sponsored by the Union Student* F acu lty C om m ittee. E ach is scheduled to speak for IO to 15 m inutes on “ If I Were a Regent for a D ay. the Union P atio beginning a t 1:45 p.m. .’’on . said Ben Rodriquez, chairm an of the inform al com m ittee, gathering is “ an effort to prom ote student-faculty relations. . . . with the intent of exchanging ideas.” the F re e punch and potato chips wall be served. the S tate D epartm ent, w as de­ scribed by the W ashington Post recently as “ a leading South Viet­ nam ese intellectual w'ho w ants to negotiate a cease-fire w ith the Com m unists hut who opposes a coalition regim e with th e m .” T he Venezuelans, all with the M inistry of Education, a re Jose Salomon Liendo, television pro­ g ram s director in the audiovisual center in C a ra ca s; Elpidio Jose Saldeno, chief of the education m aterial production workshop in M a ra ca y ; and Ju an E vangelista T orres, sub-director of the audio­ visual ce n te r in C aracas. The Indian visitor in principal is R am lal D ahyalal P arikh, chairm an of the Inten- Indian E xperim ent national Living, of M ahadeo Desai College of Social Service, and head of the d ep a rt­ m ent of history and political science and reg istra r at G ju arat Vidapith. MOWN IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO BE A BEAUTY FOR EASTER W hy do so many people prefer their clothes martialled? Try It and See! PRF FA STER S A L E $ e !e c t your Ee i t e r Bonnet at TREVA'S .pa 32.00 F R O S T I N G ; haircut, shampoo, s e t .................... 15.00 A M E R I C A N P E R M .......................................... 10.00 W I G C L E A N ” ' G and set ................................ I A25 I V 770 I A 95 U All Your EasUr Accessories Available • Hah .............................. $2 up • Cloves • Bags ..................... $4 up • Jewelry $2 $ I -$2 Students: Register for free g ift each day Treva Brewington Mickey Beardsley Beauty Salon G R 2-249 901 C O N G R E S S G R 2-3535 LOOKS AHEAD with these distinctive fea tures asure in ap n ryers, H Boards • H O U R LY BUS SERVICE INCLUDED — N O EXTRA C H A R G E ! Ill us these a d d e d features upstairs for residents private use • S O U N D - P R O O F S T U D Y A R E A • S O U N D - P R O O F TV a n d G A M E R O O M N o w Accepting Applications for the Fall V, E A L S O V, ... EE O PEN FOR THE S U M M E R S E S S IO N S Mayfair House 2000 Pearl St. Information Desk G R 2-5437 C a m p u s News In Brief A L E C H E E ON SEMANTICS will be given Monday at 4 p m. In Geology Building IOO. H ie lecture is one of a series being given each M mday, Wednes­ day, and Friday by Prof. John the University rf Lyons, of Edinburgh, E d nburgh, Scot­ land. coffee-hour <1 B N AI B RITH HIT I FT. EOI \ - D MION will have their week­ ly at 4:30 p m Monday a* 2105 San Antonio The choir will moor at " p m . Monday and Israeli Folk Dancing at 8 p.m. The public is invited. ii don COMMITTEE O F RETU R N ED m.-H't a ’ 8 V O L!’N T EER S p.m. Sunday in T exas Union 317 for a panel discussion. Four University students who have served with VISTA and tile Peace Corps will discuss “ The Continuing Role of Ex-Volun­ teers as Involved Citizens.” DELTA SIGMA P I, pi >fesM mal business fraternity, will m eet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Union Room 202 to d iscu :.- preliminary plans for CBA week. K EN N ED Y MEMORIAL LEO­ T I R ES will pre mr Dr. Candi- do Mondos, pr< fessor at the Rio de Janeiro Faculty of Poli­ tical and Economic Sciences, at 7:30 p m. Monday at the New­ man Club, 2010 University Ave. UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE TO EN D TH E \\ VR IN VIETNAM will meet at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at 2200 Guadalupe -St to dis­ cuss plans for an April 27 Mc­ Carthy rally. Eiserlo h Stubblefield H o l c o m b Fleckman Duval UT's Oldest Society Initiates Five New Members F iv e students will be initiated into the Friars Society Sunday morning at the Driskill Hotel. oldest society H ie new' m em bers of the Uni­ versity's are Shelley Duval. Philip L. Eiserloh, Philip Howard Fleckm an, Kevin Holcomb, and Jo e Lee Stubble­ field. juniors, sem ester Initiates, who m ust be at least second are chosen on the b a sis of ch aracter, integrity, and evi­ leadership, dence of love of the University. Duval, a student assem blym an, is chairm an of the Students’ As­ sociation Housing Committee and co-coordinator of Freshm an Coun­ cil. The president of Tau Kappa Epsilon, social fraternity, Is a m em ber of President Hacker- m an's Advisory Board. a Navy ROTC Eiserloh battallion a m ember cf Scabbard and Blade. is com mander and He Is on the T exas Union Leader ship Board, Union Council, and Union Student Faculty Commit­ tee. Eiserloh is a m ember of the Student Council; Engineering Om ega Chi Epsilon. Tau Beta Pi, Phi E ta Sigm a, and the Order of Alcalde. H eckm an Is an adviser and m em ber of the executive com m it­ tee of Freshm an Orientation A m ember of the Executive Council of the T exas Cowboys, he is a v arsity track m anager and a m em ber of the “ T ” Association. H ie recipient of the M erck In­ !>hi E t t dex Award belongs to Sigm a, Phi la m b d a Upsilon, Phi B eta K appa, and Phi Sigm a Delta, so d ii fraternity, An Outstanding Student in 1907, Holcomb is foreman of th*' T exas Cowboys and works on the T xas Union Interdisciplinary Retreat. He Is a member of Pi Sigm a Alpha; Sigm a Phi Epsilon, social fraternity; and the Interfratem ity Council judiciary committee. Stubblefield. ArrhiUx’ture a s ­ sem blyman. is vice-president of Sphinx. He is president of Tau Sigm a Delta, and a m ember of the Architecture Council, the Stu­ the dent Faculty Committee of Sch ool of Architecture, and Alpha Rho has worked on T exas Today and To­ Stubblefield Chi. morrow. A Good follow, he is a m ember of the Order of in * I T O fficers of the F riars arc Mike Pettit, abbott ('irane .or scrivener; and Funs:.; Cmvan, Blamer. Jet • Cactus Discloses 1968 Belles Brenda Joyce Cook, Carolyn Je a n DuBose, Nancy Katherine Gent, Nancy Lynn Haralson, and Bettie Townsend Will erson were announced as Bluebonnet Relies ar the Sweetheart Ball Saturday night by L afe HIU, Cactus Editor. A junior Home economics ed­ ucation major, Miss Oxik has been a m em ber of Panhelleme Council and Executive Commit­ tee. president of the Orange Jackets, chairm an of Texas, To­ day and Tomorrow, A n g e l Flight, Operation Brainpower, Ten Most Beautiful, Cill Omega Executive Committee, and Southern Belles. President of Delta G am m a, Miss DuBose w as her sorority's nominee for the honor. She has been a freshm an orientation ad- viser for tile past three years, as well as serving in the Order of UT. A senior advertising m ajor from Austin M iss Gent was nom- Easter, Sav It With V Momento I Express s o u r thoughts with a card. Sometimes words arc not enough. W e carry cards for v a t t ­ ing temperaments, from light humor to more p ro ­ found sentiments. ( andy is another w ay o f sav­ ing w hat w ords cannot. Choose from individual or boxed assortments. N am es such as K i n g ’s, R u s­ sell Stover, and \ \ hitman's bring years o f e x p e r ­ ience in pleasing sou and so u r loved ones. W hen w ords fail, let us help so u find the way. Special Display Street Moor n 1 1 v i n p i s r n , ltin g O ui F o r Ila h o u r ‘Hie finest name in ( LASS R I N G S . A M O rd er N o w ! • N o Deposit • T im e Payments • (.ash Dividend • A Texas Product RING COUNTER SECOND FLOOR TNI i f U P M I c o * * wont I ria b d by Alpha Delta Sigm a ad fraternity. Vice-presi vertising dent of Delta Ib?lta fJelta, and secretary of Gamm a Alpha Chi, M iss Gent is a past recipient of the Je s s e Jo m s scholarship. is a Nominated by Cordettcs, Miss H aralson junior art m ajor from Houston, She Is a m ember of Orange a Freshm an Council adviser. Show­ case co-chairman, and Sweetheart of the Cowboys. Jac k e ts, Posse, senior M iss Willer son, a Ills tory m ajor fr>m San Antonio w as nominated by hor sorority. Kappa Kapp a < lam ina (of which gho is president). She Is a mem ber of Cordettes, A-libel Liter ary Society, Mortar Board, and was a Cowboy Sweetheart nominee. Professor Plans To Remain 'Til '69 Roland L. Sutherland, sociology professor who is director of the for Mental Hogg health, will not retire this fall as scheduled, but will remain until Septem ber, 190. Foundation Hie University Regents re quested that he not retire foi an other year, Sutherland told the first T exas melding for Com Triunity Mental Health Mental R e­ tardation triste*-s in Austin. C o o k DuBose G e n t H a ra lso n W ill erson lit* A Un un l i n s F a s h i o n L o a d e r W i l l s A N e w A l t K O W S h i n M o n o g r a m m e d 'm g B n m n Mil* I IHM1! rn For a limited time before Spring V a c a ­ tion, w e will m onogram free, each and every A R R O W ’ shirt purchased at TF IK T O G G K R Y # O ffer good n o w through Saturday, April 6. Just fill out coupon and bring it to the store. B uy any A R R O W shirt and re- ccivc Initial* limited to any three. free m o n o gra m m in g. 4 4 4 The Natural Shoulder, Ph.D . T h e traditional one goes natural natural shoulders, that is. It’s new this spring, just right for Easter. New also this sear, is a full range o f distinctive patterns includ­ ing stripes, plaids, and the ever popular solids. T h e P h .I). comes in handsome dacron ployester and wool blends, perfect for the seasons activities. Sizes 37 to 4 i regular and long. C o m e in and try the traditional one on, it’s natural. $65 & $75 N a m e ............................... A d d r e s s .......................................................................................... j P h o n e ............................. TO BE FILLED IN BY STORE: Store N a m e ............ Number of A R R O W Shirts S o l d * # . . D a t e ..................... 1 t I * I J i I« I I Distinctive Store For M en / In The C o -O p / G R 8-6636 Sunday, March 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# 3 !“ I’ve Developer! A R eal P uritan S p ir it ------- Have The Money In N ice Clean Bills' L e t ’ i The Firing Line Government, Press Should Be Separate A press th a t is p a rt of the government cannot he free. This Is true on the U niversity campus as well as in na­ tional and state government. Because man is not a divine, all-knowing being, those Interested in tru th m ust carefully question attem pts by government officials to suppress news and editorial opinion. Texas Student Publications, Inc., publishers of not only Tilt' Daily Texan, but also of all other student magazine! and the yearbook, is constituted with a student m ajority. The students are selected by the Student Assembly and include the president himself as traditional chairman. The common argum ent is that these students are repre­ senting the student body which pays part of the blanket tax money to help finance TSP. This is a poor argum ent. Do the students honestly think th eir interests in publications can be guarded by political leaders who usually know absolutely nothing about tile subject? Instead, the tax money should be considered as a rea­ son to keep the government from getting so involved in the press that students can’t find out what the government is doing. Students who have professional interest in pub­ lications are usually at the helm of the newspapers and magazines. These are trained editors —trained either in classes and professional service or in working their way up in the publication. The days of Willie Morris and the really free Texan were the days when the student government was not a p art of TSP. Instead, the editors had a vote. Judging from the alarm expressed by delegates to the Associated Collegiate Press Association meeting during the fall in Chicago, the TSP student government set-up is an unusual one and not one th a t the m ajority of colleges care to duplicate. This year, the impending dangers in the government- controlled “free” press h a v e been soundly demonstrated. Not only did Lloyd Doggett, Student Assembly presi­ dent and TSP chairman, threaten to censor an editorial before it came out but earlier in the fall, he said the stu­ dent delegates could completely set Texan policy if they wanted to. It is past time that the government was completely separated from the press at the University. Action is needed now. Logical Lam Needed In Student Salaries o Tile withholding of “fringe benefits” from students’ salaries is sort of like forcing a 90-year*old man to save his money for his old age. Students, graduates or undergraduates, mainly work to have enough money to continue their education. Many students need nil the money possible to stay in college. But Texas law, unlike th a t in many states, forces with­ holding of both Social Security and, in some cases, Teach­ ers' Retirement. The national .Social Security law does not require th a t Social S m irity be withheld from students’ wages. But the 3955 Texas legislature passed the law that it must be taken at the norm al rate, which is currently *11 per cent of Hie first $7,800. The teachers' retirem ent Is taken out at 0 per cent of the first $8,100 of earnings in the September to August fiscal year. K. J. Caskey, supervisor of the payroll off in', •aid the law covers all those who work a t least half-time and for four-and-one-half months. On top of this 6 per cent, a required $5 membership fee Is charged. Tills is required of both graduates and un­ dergraduates. The money can be returned if the w orker ends his em ­ ployment and (lot**? not plan to work again in the University system and files for the refund. Refunds usually take from 60 to 90 days. All the time the money is in the retirem ent fund it is drawing two-and-one-half per cent interest. One student paid into the fund and then received a notice th a t his interest was $2.23 but the membership fee was $3 (befo n ' it was raised) so they would deduct the 77 cents from his account. The Legislature needs to look again at this illogical law*. Both Social Security and Teachers’ R etirem ent are necessary and good but laws should he applied in a more — Bv Jam es Hollas logical way. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student N e w sp a p e r at UT, Austin Opinion» **>; ess- d in T # Da ■-• Texan a r t those of the editor o r of the w riter t t nee* sanly those of the U niversity a d m .n itra tio n or the ar ot are of the Board of Ke*ent* t a The I - . ■ : a ; I* published by Austin Texas ■■ and holiday . * oft ae, J R ai did Vie V lie rh # '!i sr. • ’ \a s Student Dab! teat ions. a stir tent new spaper at Th* I’n v e rtity of Texas a t Austin, Inc . D raw er D. U niversity Station, i’he Texan is published dally except Monday and Saturday is September thro. .. n May Second cia** postage paid at A ustin s mil be accepted by telephone HJR i-62441, a t the e-iitortal o r at •• e news laboratory. J R 102 Inquiries concerning delivery -I J B IOT (OR I ' . i n and advertising J n. I l l (OR 1-32271. to The Ais • co I P ress ami % a m em ber of Th* Ae- $m Conference, and the Texas the So it J.- eon st#.: < S a lly hew s tm pat Association ! •. cc ■C’* a* ‘ preservative of Tee Dr y Texan ta National Education­ al Advertising i-r v . * • V ■ Mt.n Ave. Now Y«rs NVY. PERMANENT STAFF EDITOR .............................. MARY MORPHIS MOODY MANAGING E D IT O R ..........................DAVID DcVOSS ASST. MANAGING EDITOR . . . . WILLIAM OPPEL News E d i t o r ...............................................M ark Morrison Editorial Page Asst....................................... Chris Davis Amusements E d ito r .................................. Leslie Donovan Sports Editor ...................................................J a y Cooke .................................. Jenna Bell F eatures E d i t o r ISSUE STAFF A ssociate News Editor ................................................... Bruce Hicks N ew s A ssistants ......................... B a rb a ra B arnard. Glen Johnson E d ito rial P ag e W riter ................................................................... Randy B aker A ssistant A m usem ents E ditor ............................ Olivia H artm an A ssistant S ports E ditor M ake-Up E d ito r ........................... K aron Houghton Copy E d ito rs ......................................... P aul SoRclle Mike Watson, Ja n Teague, Jim M orris, Lenda Deik P h o to g ra p h e r ........................................................................... Steve Delk ............................................. G ary Taylor Page 4 Sunday, March 3 1 , 1968 THE DAJLY TEXAN By CHRIS DAVIS E ditorial P ag e A ssistant Break t h e existing system, save wear-and-tear on ticket buyers’ physical a n d mental conditions, make tickets easier to get— sounds great but Impossible? Not so. H ist w-eek, two new com panies w ere battling for rights to install a com puter let people buy netw ork Im portant tickets event at any one of thousands of loca­ tions. to practically any that would Both m ethods—Ticket R eservations System s of New York and Com puticket of Los Angeles—involve setting up re ­ m ote com puter keyboards and ticket prin ters in retail outlets such as super­ m arkets, d epartm ent stores, and banks throughout a m etropolitan region. in to telephone w ires Tile rem ote stations a re connected bv leased two central com puters, the second of w hirh provides the first one the event Insurance b reaks down. Tile system works thus: perform ance Seating dates, and other such data of each theater, m ovie house, concert hall, or stadium in the region which subscribes to the system are fed into the com puters. arran g em en ts, Pushing Huttons . . . By pushing a button, the com puter will report, by teleprinter or displ iv panel, the best se ats available for an y event is a t any p rice level. A nother button pushed if the custom er chooses to buy. Tile com puter delivers a printed ticket by the tim e the custom er can sn a p his the com puters will finger. Linking ail ticket s des. m ake possible out-of-town this service, The purchasers, for all supj*osod!y will pay 25 cents in addition to the ticket. E n te rta in e r prom oters will pay a fee based on the size of their establishm ents—an average 1 500-seat th e a te r would pay $1 000 a m onth for the service. All and all, it still puts the establishm ent ahead. the cost of Pow er Fight Begun The only obstacle seen, how ever, Is the power fight. Both firm s adm it th ere’s room for only one com puter in the busi­ ness. Tim e m agazine reports th at splitting the entertainm ent m a rk e t would “ raise eoxts, force duplication of facilities, and m ake the whole concept b's* attraetiv e to ticket b u y ers.” And thus, tho battle continues. IU'th com panies claim ed last week they bad of or interest from m any of the sa m e enter­ e x p u ls io n s agreem ents O f f ic ia l N o t ic e s AN flu ii'-ut# w’ -*1 expect r .' i»r sem ester of next s e a r fa r eUutent tem - rn1 L r thou)ti pick up pre*reg st rat ion enrollment application* In Sutton Ha t HOL Al! completed applications tor stu­ dent to that oiL .e b r May V 1168. teaching m ost be returned to e n -^0 The G raduate Exam ination t e Committee on 'n English admin!*- te ie d bx to tire I asta Studies, serve a* a final exam ination for MA candidate* and as a qua fxmg exam ination for adm ission to in English ean-IMaey for Building 203, on Friday, Slay 3, 3 * 5 and 7 -9 p rn . and Saturday, May 4, 9 - l l a rn. o ne blue bool * 'I be brought for each I >ur the Ch lr . w e he held Dr cr to the exam ination, candidates m ust Wais­ in English lift. Students not p ie eg:stared wig not te r with Building be adm itted to Ute exam ination the departm ental sec clary Reading is* a -1 * let men t estloni m ay be ob* talned from the G raduate Adviser, Dr. O scar Mau­ rer, Calhoun Hall 2:0. or from Knit!.sh Bu ’.ding HO, Applicants for admission to Dh.P. candidacy who have satisfied one or both of the foreign language this effect requirem ent* should with registering tor the exam ination. to the depart - e r tai secretary when leave e t hence To qualify a s a candidate for the P h D . appd* ra n ts m a t also make a satisfactory score In th# G radual# Record Exam ination A ptitude Test. In the test m ay b t taken the present academ ic year eo h er on Saturday, Ap- 27. o r on Saturday. Ju,y IS All applications and fee* m ust reach the Prince­ ton Office or Educat Ona! Testing Berri not l e e r than ll? day* before the date of the test, App 'a n o n blanks are available n E n g lish Of* '.Le Test tig a-,ii Counseling Center, fie# HO and In West Mall Office Build ng .-us Junior and s e n o r women students should report Im m ediately they to W omen's G ym nasium a re registered for RDK because they did not have proof of RO or m ore bo..-* Students should take proof of their #0 hours and their A uditor's R ecept. A perm anent exem pt.on card from R P S will be s- sued at tim e and R e student will receive a refund order for th* I t fee. that I U ti Ari students p u n n in g to graduate In Ju n e IWS. the School of Oonrmusi cation who have not a in ready done so m ust I t a Piptorr.a Nam e C ard ta ire Off ce of the Direct >: J our issuant B eld in g X.Z, tty May X, 1968. iv-1 of conin Why? To the Editor: The article bv from Columbia U niversity (Texan. M arch 26) raised som e questions In m y mind. student the The editor seem s to bf' elated to have found a northerner who approves of T ex is. Why is it that Texans criticize n ortherners and yet beg for their a p ­ proval? New Y orkers don’t ask for any­ one's approval: w hy should T exans? Do the people of Texas really w ant to duplicate a culture which, in m y m ind, lacks m any good features which Texas culture h a s? T here a re geed points and bad pointe in both cultures. We should work to incorporate the cood features of theirs and elim inate the bad features of our own. I suggest that Texas work to becom e the first state in the Union to m ake the “ A m erican D ream ” a for all ethnic groups. reality Richard F errary ( V Connecticut Yankee) atop the student from destroying SDS property. Though he had plenty of tim e in which to a sse rt him self and request that the its owners, Dean to flag be returned P ric e m anaged only to inquire about the stu d en t’s nam e after the flag was burned. As I understand it, the United States Is not officially at w ar yet, and so the SDS still retains to express th eir sym pathy tow ards w hom ever they a re so inclined. However, w hether one sides with the Viet Cong or not is really irrelevant. the right I, for one, am tired of the closed­ m indedness which exists in the ranks of both the I^eft and the Right at this U niversity. N arrow ness of ideologies can tolerated, but actions som etim es be stem m ing from such beliefs cannot. Ours is an academ ic com m unity, and what I w itnessed by these two patriots should have no place in such an environm ent. Bill Sim m ons Box 7371 I T Station B r a i n w a s h e d To the Editor: In the F iring Line, M arch 14. a “ Mr. Clean” fra t ra t stated a general un­ truth . . . that all the gentle hip types rid discourse who h Id c the holy Union wi re dirty . . and unclean of . mind and body (sham e) and should be banished from the sight of all “ m oral, d e a n , open-mir.ded, C hristian folk,” to live in the forest . . . in I've c ^en a lot of hair, bells, beads, and flowers, am ong other “ stra n g e ” things, adorn ng ti e bod: s of the gentle people, but very little d irt. A bt lutiful b dy doesn’t m ean thoro Is a beautiful soul and mind inside. The frat ra t did speak an ultim ate truth . . . “ th a t people who have w rll-scrubbed bodies, have well-scrubbed a better te rm for it would m inds” . be brainw ashed. usually . . Cherry Rains Stiffer Demands Foreseen If LBJ Statement Sincere fitif - H e r b l o c k Texan Report ‘Computicket’ Key To Faster Service Alienation To the Editor: To quote David H askins, New York Review of Books, Feb. 29, 1968: to celebrate, which “ Dewev knew about ‘alienation.’ but regarded it as a phase of som ething he the preferred is courage to grow. Dewey knew of the tensions and conflicts of the industrial society, but be preferred to seek out its potentialities ra th e r than to dw ell upon its dangers. Thus, although he w'as an activist and not an a rm c h air philisopher, the and although he knew m any of in m iseries and our society, he w as in a certain sense utopian. Tit at is not a bad word, except to the disillusioned.” frustrations endem ic Wisdom is a byproduct of pain, and m atu rity com es onlv upon transcending difficulties. T here a re som e dangers, yes, but alienation is m uch m ore than Sharon Zion’s description as “ psycholo­ gically sic k .” Richard Ulrich 711 W. 22 4 St. No Place Here To the Editor: I would like to protest the im m atu re actions of an elderly gentlem an and a younger student in reg ard to the incident which occured F rid ay afternoon on the W ast Mall in front of the Union. Having taken It upon him self to defend “ A m ericanism ,” the older m an stole a Viet Cong flag from the SDS inform ation table in the Union. When he w as finally caught and the flag retrieved, the student patriot again confiscated the controver­ sial property in the nam e of his brother who is evidently stationed in Vietnam , and proceeded to bum it on the Mall. It seem s to m e th at these actions by two m em bers of the U niversity com ­ m unity w ere in evident contrast to any freedom s in which our citizen professes to believe, But besides this r a th e r n a r­ row', childish, and affective m anner of displaying disagreem ent with the right of SDS the Union, I would Also like to focus atten ­ tion upon D ean P ric e, who refused to to fly “ an enem y flag” In tainm ent centers. And mudslinging h as begun. fraction of Com puticket officials a re arguing th at TRS ‘‘doesn't h ave a the capability of their system .” And TRS, m eanw hile, is claim ing “ the only differ­ ence between th eir system and ours Ss th a t theirs doesn’t w ork.” TRS Said ‘I^oauHng’ TRS, which is said to have risked SIS million on their venture, bas been pre­ dicted the leader so far. Actual on-line com puter ticket sales via com puter w ere begun rem ote term inals in Y ankee Stadium and one in G rand C entral Station distributed Y ankee baseball tickets. this week when t h r e e As for as TRS reta il outlets go, It runs the gam ut from Trans-W orld Airline*, on a world-wide basis, to Chase M an­ h attan Rank and G im hels in New York. invested only C om puticket, which has $6 million the system , w as con­ in centrating locally in Los Angeles. T he key which m ay determ ine the com puter w inner is said to he in signing the Broadw ay B leaters and big-tim e sporting events TRS alread y h a s the the Chicago W hite Sox. Y ankees and M ost en tertainm ent re n te rs, how ever, a re waiting for th e best deal. And no . . . ano th er footnote to history and technology. C om puters a re proving them selves, once again, in all hinds of operations. But i f s to be expected with living, C om puters a re such fast-paced the only things th a t can keep up. In My Opinion . . . It m ust again rep eat its strong recom ­ m endation th at a wide-open, congres­ sional debate on the w ar in V ietnam be held. We believe that such a d ebate could the salient facts for and help clarify against A m erica’s policies presen t tow ard Southeast Asia. Such a discussion could help mold a national consensus on w hat should be done about the conflict there. T here is need for a thorough app raisal in depth of the im plications of the present policy and the altern ativ es to it. Once such a discussion has been held, such a study m ade, it would be easier to determ ine how m uch au sterity is required and for w hat purpose. then PEANUTS "THIS 16 LEAP VEAR.. Reprint, Christian Science Monitor President Lyndon B . Johnson’s demand for “austerity” and a “ total national effort” to achieve American goals in Vietnam means th a t a new’ and im portant tu rn ­ ing point in the w ar has come. It is not yet certain just w hat the W hite House has in m ind when it m akes this plea. But lf the P re sid en t's words a r e m ore than m ere rhetoric, tho conclu­ sion the A dm inistration feels it m ust move in the direction of the A m erican people. stiffer dem ands on unavoidable ap p ears th a t th a t Quite obviously, if the w ar continues and its cost rises, fiscal responsibility dem ands th at steps be taken to pay for this effort. The dollar and gold crisis is proof the outd*-ain on A m erican finances cannot be allowed to continue w ithout rectifying steps. One of such steps is clearly to lessen the w a r’s ef­ fect upon A m erica's financial position through at home. strengthening the dollar Is G overnm ent R eady? ready Yet the question Inevitably a rise s: Is A dm inistration to do actually all that m ust be done to strengthen the d o llar? Tt has dem anded a IO per cent su rch a rg e on persona! and business in­ com e taxes. This is right. This new spaper has long supported such a tax increase and believes that it is m ore needful than ev e r before. But such a tax su rch a rg e Is v ery fa r from being enough. T here also m ust be thoroughgoing econom ics within the fed­ e ra l governm ent. T here m ust he strong and even-handed governm ent leadership in holding down prices and in seeing th a t labor neither asks for nor receives w age increases which a re inflationary. This Is the only kind of austerity that will work in this case. This is a reason­ able exam ple of “ total national effo rt.” Empty Words If the adm inistration is not read y to m ake such dem ands on the A m erican people (and w*e realize how' politicians shy aw ay from m ik in g such dem ands in an election y ea r), talk about au sterity is m erely em pty words. then, At the sam e tim e, this new spaper feels Similarity of Terminology TD J J Overshadows Israeli Action JAMAL \BV-ABDUV of UN envoy Ja rrin g .) Freshm an, Mechanical Engineering Major American press coverage of the Vietnam situation and tho Middle E ast situation reveals a curious sim ilarity of terminology. T he ph rase news m edia “ anti-A m erican’* and “ anti-Sem itic” frequently used in A m eri­ can com m on function. Both a rc used prim arily as labels to d iscred it any criticism , how­ ever valid, of governm ent policy. have a D em onstrations in V ietnam are against A m erican policy labeled “ anti- A m erican” ; opponents of Israeli policy a re “ anti-Sem itic,” Such labels a re ef­ fective, one m ust adm it, but for sh eer to presum ptuoutnoss bear. However, V ietnam is not m y sub­ ject. are h ard they (lives Defensive Stance Tile A m erican p ress also gives Isra el a defensive stance, no m a tte r how m uch the actual situation m ay belie such a view. “ B rave little Isra e l” . . . such is tile phrase printed In A m erican news­ papers. The recen t a tta c k against a refugee cam p in Jo rd a n w as “ defensive and punitive.” If A m erica takes on any m ore “ brave little countries,” it m ight better give up international affairs for a wattle and tak e a good hard look in a m irror. However, the A m erican press should not get all the discredit. Israeli censor­ ship plays a role, too, In describing die attac k of last week, the N ew York Tim es disclosed th a t: “ The attack seem ed to have been planned a t least a week ago. Israeli m ilita ry and political officials began last M onday to prep are dom estic and world opinion for the action against th e te r­ ro ris ts.” (One w eek ago, you will recall, the Israeli governm ent w as busy accus­ ing the A rabs of destroying the m ission in crease to describe “ The w arnings w ere followed by a visible in m ilitary activity. Tank convoys w ere arriving in Je ru s a ­ lem y esterday then proceeding and through the city stree ts to the w est bank of Jordan. R eports of this activity w ere banned by m ilitary censors. Newsmen w ere allowed feeling th at a d a s h w as Im m inent without sa y ­ ing why they thought so .” Truth B a a Hidden Now they tell us Israeli censors saw to It that the tru th was hidden while they tim e “ to p rep are world opinion.” had large the A rab countries, are a s of Syria. E gypt, and Jordan a re occupied, and Israel doesn’t w ant to ex­ pect any resistance. A reas of the The New York T im es also said th at Isra el as.-ured the people in K aram eh th a t the Israelis would never hurt them. Then, and a t the end of the battle, the Israelis burned largest m arkets. two of the I w ant to know- whose a re these m a rk ets. A ren’t they to those people? Little Applause Heard A few months ago an “ A m erican lead e r .” speaking in New Y ork to a Jew ish audience, said, “ What A m erica is do­ ing in V ietnam Is the sa m e that you a re doing in the Middle E a s t.” Tile audience, of course, applauded and supported th at leader. But let it be said that little applause can be heard in the rest of the world. Job Intervi t e a c h e r p l a c e m e n t A pr! I - Roswell, N M Apn! J. Un,varsity of Hew*.; D epartm ent of Bcf* llsh: Central Tex*.* Co! ewe, K:,>en April 3. (Vile*# of Ute Mainland, Texas City April 4 Lee Oat! ewe Baytown; Abl,en* and b a l lax Independent School District A pr'1, 5 Pai.aa Independent School D istrict; Gil­ roy, Calif LIBERAL ARTS DLA CEMENT April J- V eteran • A d m inistrate* AU> 6— Veuuraa • A n n u L s m t u * I GVE56 MAvBE V O O ’R E R I G H T CROSSWORD P U Z Z L E ^ Answer to Yesterday'* P u n t * H T * l S r f i ! l g M M j A l P l P l t ] [RSH! I A C R O S S 1 Priest'* vestment 4 Soaks 8 H e av e n ly body 1 2 M a la y gibbon 3 3 -M on ster 1 4 P a t n i s S u t t a : toltow#r of 26 land m asses that project above surrounding* I S At that piaca 20 Arabian seaport 2 ! Not# of teals 2 2 A b s tr a c t being 23 A t h le t e group 27 Possesses 29-Flying mammal 30 Kind of cloth S I Symbol for silver 3 2 Intellect 33 Brkk-carrytnf d e vice 34 Prepositloa 3 5 - H a n d Ie 37-Take unlawfully 3 8 E d ib le f is h 39 Sinks in middls 40-Place 41 Note of teals 42-Decorate 44 P la n e t 47-Tract of land 5 1 E x ist 52 Arrow po it OJI 63 Great lake 54 Evergreen trot 6 5 Skin of fru it 56 Weaken* 67-Dawn goddess DOW N I -landed 2 Strip of wood 3 Propagates 4 E u r o p e a n 4 European capital 5-The self 6 One who shirk* hi* duty 7-Dis pate has 8 Inclined 9 Siamese nathrt IO Girt’* name 11-Thing*, in laws 17-Symbol tor te llu r iu m 19 Artificial language 22 Dine 2 4 -Teutonic deity 25 E tch in g* premium 26-Repair 27-Chapeaux 28 Sit of Taj Mahal 29 Small amount 4 13 r n VV4*! a l i t K I? S 16 21 Iv.: LLL, S S 28 27 29 B s s s U S U v W . - l l : 49 48 47 I I 2 Ii 18 ii 35 39 52 55 SO Cry 32 Prof life ta 33-Torrid 36 For exempla (abbr,) 37-Hmdrance 38-Water b a ttle 4 0 -tacet tons 41 Note of acale 43 A state (abbr.) 4 4 Organ* of s ig h t 45 Group of thres 4 6 P o s s e s s v a pronoun 47 Gratuity 48 Compass point 49 F*mai* ruff 50 Tear 2 3 J 6 7 t o □ n o & 9 IO ll 14 p7 30 Jo I SSS 22 W a 23 ( • '- T 40 P i 43 42 5 3 56 i i S SN Y i Ut V ii M o 44 50 IT W 13 41 T O TO 51 54 I t i? ’ SS ; i\V b C V 24 ^5 26 T T O 34 ■VV 43 46 ★ Steers Drop SM U, Sweep Weekend Series ★ Baseballer^ Gain Tie in S W C By Kit SPA! I MNT* Assistant Sport* Fabler A pair of clutch hits by Pat Brown and Larry Horton’s air­ tight relief pitching Us} Texas to a two-game sweep of Southern Methodist this weekend and a spot atop the Southwest Confer­ ence baseball standings. Brown's homerun coupled with strong mound work by James Street and Horton brought in a 7 2 win Friday Brown's two run single decided the Saturday eon- test. hut it took a pi! koff play by Horton to cinch the 6 5 mar* gm. Tile double w in came in spite of loose fielding and the bugaboo of leav ing baseman* ss stranded It raised Texas’ SWC slate to k 3, the six wins coming in a row, SMU Is now 3-5. Street Gets Friday Win The Ponies drew' first blood Friday, using a pair of walks by Street, and Billy Jenkins’ double to take a TO lead in the second inning. But Street settled down, and the next hit wasn’t until the sixth, By then, Texas had built a 6 I lead, and the outcome was fairly certain. A single by Jack Miller was folowed by Brown's hommui in the third. It was the Horn left- fielder’s first homer of the year, and he ended a prolonged hatting slump with the drive, hit ever the fence in right conter in into trouble Mustang starter Chuck Fifield the got hack fourth, when Street slapped a single to left, and took an extra base when Mike Richardson kicked the hall Leu Bagwell's to third, and hit moved him brought in Joe Mack Terrell to pitch. Terrell then walked Miller to fill the bases, and presented Brown with four wide ones to force in Street. A ground out by Bob Snoddy ended the threat In tho next inning, Terrells control again cost him. Walks to Dave Hall and Pat Amos. Street's second hit and a two-base error by SMU centcrfielder Din Wil­ liamson produced two runs, and Terrell's wild pitch upped the count to 6-1, A perfectly executed suicide squeeze added another marker in the seventh. George Nauert and Hall singled, and Doug Fell, run­ ning for Nauert, moved to third on an infield out, Amos then laid a bunt down, and Fell heading for the plate, was across easily Street, who had used quite a few pitches over the first seven innings, finally tired in the eighth A walk issued to Richardson, anil a pitch which hit Wally Hoyle. ended Street's outing for the day Horton Saves Win Horton retired David Ivy on a fly ball, but an error fey Amos and a walk to Jenkins forced in the second run. Ken Carter struck out to end the rally Singles by Chuck Mercer and Richardson gave SMU a chance in the ninth, hut Hoyle’s deep fly to Miller ended the game Poor fielding and the strong pitching of Bob Flint kept Texas at bay for four innings Saturday, but a sixth inning eruption over­ came a I I lead. Hoyle singled, and a walk to I va p u t two Ponies o n b a s e in the sci-ond inning. Bobby Um e’s sac­ Jenkins broke the rifice fly by scoring ice. SM t <4 Flint Hold* ’Horn* Au error and a walk put two Steers on base with none out in the thin!, but Flint toughened up, and retired three in a mw to get out of trouble. Texas loaded the bases In the fourth on a hit batsman and hits bv Nauert and Tommy Harmon. A brilliant diving catch by Mike Gillett in * enter robbed Amos of a hit, and Texas of two runs. SMU exploded in the fifth in­ ning to take a 4-0 advantage. Amos made his second error of ♦ he game, and third of the series, to allow Carter to reach base. Flint bunted into a force play, hut Gillett’* single and another error by Amos filled the bases. Football Recruiting To Seek Restraints By The Xssoriatcd Press School people cf Texas are talking about a plan to control the recruiting situation It seems th*- colleges are mak­ ing too many visits and d srupt- Ing school wark. The Texas High School Coaches Association board of directors passed a resolution that 1? would like* a plan of limiting the visits to two before signing and those only after the boy has finished his high school football eligibility And since the Southwest Con* fereni e already is meeting such a rule it is quite obvious that college outside of the confer­ ence are the target I Atnm SWX But ii has been quite painful to the Southwest Conference to see Texas boys taken from under their noses by colleges that can contact the athlete any time dur­ ing hts senior year. And it seems the high schools themselves are feeling pain from the legal raids, too TTie Texas Interscholastic league, the st bool admmi; trators and the high sc bool principals are talking with the coaches as sedation on wha? steps can be taken to limit the visits to ath­ letes of not only the Southwest Conference but a1! colleges Rhea Williams, athletic dire< ’or league, Interscholastic the of says such a rule would be hard to enforce if adopted by his or­ ganization. Realistically, he points out that the colleges that want to contact the tioys can do it off the campus. And die athletes themselves are not likely to tell about if since they like to be sought, after That is, unless they should flunk their courses as a re­ sult. Williams thinks an NCAA rule would tike care of the situation hut isn't sure that body would want to go into it. If there was a chance of the NCAA taking away some of a boy’s eligibility in college unless the rule was met, the colleges just wouldn’t take a chance and make the contacts, Gentlemen'* Pact should deride It seems that the matter could be handler! by the league if its members they wanted such a rule, which, while difficult to enforce, would build sentiment against the criticism of colleges that didn’t meet its provisions. If some school should run in to the situation of a boy failing his courses as a result of the pressure put on by the colleges with unlimited it would he extremely doubtful that the outside colleges would brave public criticism by going against it. visitations, Dormy Horne took over hurling duties b>r Texas and promptly walked Richardson to force in a run. Ivy slapped a safety to left, and wT.en Rrown failed to come up with the ball, Gillett and Mer­ cer also tallied. Foderlifi Record* Win Dennis Enderlin finally put out the fire by whiffing Jenkins. The Horns broke the scoring drought in the fifth, on a w alk to Bagwell and Miller s triple just inside the left field lira*. But the sixth was a disaster for the visitors from Dallas Hint walked Na urnf and Hall beat out an infield hit to short Two deep flyouts to tenter by Harmon and pinch hitter Dennis K a s p e r dimmed Longhorn hopes Going to his bench again, how­ ever. Cliff Gustafson selected Gene Salmon to bat for Enderlin. The 6-5 basketballer dribbed a one-base blow up the middle plat­ ing Nauert, and on the throw in. Hall moved to third and Salmon to second. Walk* Help I I Cause Lefthander Randy Moseley en­ tered, and Texas was glad to watcli his offerings Bagwell and Miller each watched four sn.tight balls, and B d l was forced in to make the score I 3. fell behind Brown then two to right strikes, before going with the hit which put Texas ahead for good. A moment later. Brown stole second, and when the into center, Miller ball sailed scored the sixth run. 5 I 4 ft ft I 0 I J I*. i f ) SAI ( ti ft a l ft Ceti. frr f f I I (I s o t , Sh I Km I ft 0 ft Mn min c IVV. I /IWC. 2b !nkn* 3b W’jtmvn. cf caner, rf 2 ft ft ft Amo*, i i 9 I I t •t t (I I 4 ft ! 4 I I J h 5 ft ft ft ’ ' 4 it ft I ft <1 (I I I I ft ii I 0 » 0 a i r * * * , I ft O p I ft ft 0 Horton, 9 J 2 I ft 0 ft I ft ti !• lot,ii* M I S ! r f * - ! T erril. Mo, Ward, r * r * I ch p t> po I i» 0 ft H ft I 0 ii ft * 5 I l l ..................... ... .............. U>’ S M I ! T r i a* 4 2 S I MA ’,11 I IOX t * H#*W*!1, V Cfv- fir**# Mn * a'd'Mt w '-i-fnr-•- 4mm t/)B -xnj ll, I! Fifield, f t * f t n o n I n e A w >* l o HH s w e l l t o N o o d l e ft R Amo* zn tm h n* H R Brow n I * h ii* o n Fifield Tor rtf it . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SVUrft . . . . . . s 2 13 I .. .......... 2 i x t J I F t r w e t i W , M I I M J Horton .................. I 2 1 2 <» HIU* Bv W I’ Fill# (I, T o r* !! 5 I Street (H oi ** I Mo K»n*u» V .on T 2 r r r bb »* .t \ 1 s t * ft S I ! I ll I 4 *> EXPERT ALTERATIONS Over 30 Year's Experience r Natl Salazar became Texas* fourth pitcher, and t h o u g h touched for a hit in the seventh, trouble when Hoyle es* *ped rapped into a double play. The Mu t if gs used Ivy s * ingle, Lowe’s double, and an error by Jimmy Hunt, now at shortstop, to move within one run of Texas. It was the fourth error by a Texas shortstop in the game. (Time Finds on Piekoff Tile • -rth w.n t wild -me Mer­ cer flied out. but Richardson sing’,-.! insni* first before Hoyle hit info a force play. With Horton now on the mound, Ivy b< it oi.' i h f to d. op short puffing runners on first and soc- oik! Horton went to a 3 2 count on [.owe Then with the runners ready to r « with the pit. h. Horton turned and picked Ivy off first to end the game The irate Ivy charged the umpire an*I bad to he re­ strained by teammates. Enderlin gained his first win of the year, while Moseley was charged with the Joes in Tho win v is Texas' fifth succession, raising their season re*-ord to ll 6 The Horns t a k e on co loader Baylor in a Wednesday doubleheader, and the Bears agron on Thursday. tackle S M I W uh r h 'N I I I !#t» • ' I .... «, X ! I ft R o r dun. If 4 I I ft ' 4 1 1 O '* ’ *h r ti rh! Th 3 I 8 ft cf if lh r f », e I I 4 I 4 ft I 3 I ft ft ft ft J J I t I J ii 4 ft t ft Juke* > 'n rtf Kl int VI Hi* Tomb WIW# D*vt* ti to cb vt* p I M > u ll I ii ii ii p n e ll f t H u n t . ! ti •» ft ii 0 ft K*»pr, ptt I a ft !* !> ft ft ft ft nettly, p I « ft ft ft Horn* p I ft ft ft 0 ft I) ii ft ii ll End On p I ft ft I 1 ! I i> J) I 0 ft ft 9 ft ft ft T I H o rto n . P ft ll T o t a l* I ft J *' 11 ft mi) m OUI 5 t S M U . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . tv*t* ........... non dis ftiH " T x Hunt L O R - # I I C * Two*# 'I K • ixtwe Amo* I H rm rn, <; v t . Ho rift, IR Bro w a. .LH—* Jnnko1* 2JI ! . I Low# ll-’ Ha aw WI lo Hunt to ttmxl'ly. M He F nt . I • * , n I t V l y . . Horn* ¥ cderlin K*I*r ir Horton HBP lf-' T ................... S J i»1> . . .. it I I ............................. I tp h r »r hti et « I 2 I *■ I 1 2 1 2 f t I ft ft I ft ft S I ft ft ft ................................. 4 1 ' 2 4 I I ft .......... I I ft* .... I I I I M H I ft ft J I 3 4 I ft ft 0 I it I snoddy •. V W e was. . . . ............ Punt 2 1 I I 4 ft I ft A tt. Volkswagen O w ners Outstanding Complain Automotive Service FACTO RY TRAINED Volkswagen Sp ecialists The Only Independent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs A rich s A u t o m o t i v e Service 7951 BURNET RO AD Across from Gulf MaO G L 2-0205 C'oitd Saturday ANDY'S CUSTOM TA ILO R IN G 2330 Guadalupe GR 8 0609 Super W i d e Track R etread s Premium Rubber applied by retread experts gives you fires that • Feature road gripping tread design with silent tread rubber • A re continually best for non-skid road holding & longer wear Bill Hamlett Tire Shop S N C I 1948 • MEMBER T 9 TEXAS SIZE PICTURES Made in Texas by MASTER Photo Murals GIANT 24 x 36-inch PICTURE %m«f you? 'n b *••* ani w! a ti x 4 n tor t ft* t m po***** fin*. Si and you : r * attar*, award mill BIGG."..' QI l r * .rf pf** *** si E X P A N Ba!'* pa?* at. ‘a bi a to Poifpa J ta ai tai ma- ad rn sat*. cr-iik - proof t ,oa. Mail Your Order Today . . . don't de!ay! i : MASTER PHOTO MURALS I Please tend m * ----------- MASTER PHOTO POSTER(S) j I at $4,95 each ($8.95 for two from lame picture). [IJT'r™™ • I enclose check or money order for-- (Add 2 % Texas J ; Sales Tax. No COD). i ! Name * I Address * i ............................................................................. ; • I ............. ; City, Stat** Zip ................................................ * Sunday, March 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag® 5 'H orn Baserunner Beats Throw to Plate George Natter* scores on Gene Salmon s pir>ch hit in Saturday's 6-5 win over SM U . — Stuff Photo Longhorn Netters Stop Ponies, 4 - 2 Texas’ tennis team shot past SMU, 4 2 Saturday at Penirk Courts. Included in the triumph were three singles victories and one doubles win. plus a heart­ breaking doubles loss. In singles for the 'Horns, John Mazola posted a win over Craig Parsons. 6-3. I 6, 6-2. Mike Piddle dropped Steve Brown. 6-4, 6-4, and N O W O P E N ! ! ! H L m a n o a r a i n S7s h o f) Personalize Y ut P region? Expert Monogramming for All Your Clothing, Towels, & Linens Also: 3 Day Service — O P E N IN G S P E C IA L — 3 Letter Monogram of Your Choice on Sweaters — Only $2.25 1701 West Ave. - Suite 104 G R 2-7867 Rick Murray took Tim Smith, 2 6. 6 I, 6 2. Ian Russell defeated Larry Eichenbaum of Texas, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4, for the Mustangs only singles victory. Russell is from Australia and the brother of l>on Russell, SM I' s coach. Hie Steers doubles win was turned in by Biddie and Kichnn- baum, as they coasted by Par­ sons and Smith, 6-2, 6-3. — SEM I— R A Z O R C U T S S2.00 O ra n g e - W h ite BARBER SHO P To W HI* Koc-jreX" ISH San Jacinto — CH t-0345 Paved Parkin* — Rear Entrance I/inghnrns Mazola and Bobby Connell were beaten by Russell arui Brown in the other doubles match 9-7, 7-5. In the first set Texas jumped to quirk 4-2 lead, and then expanded it to 5 3. SMI* stormed back though to tie it at 5-5. From there the teams swapped games to 7 7 before the Mustangs captured the last two rounds and the match. The second set was just as pressure-filled, however SMT' won it also 7 5. Tile ’Horns have four matches this week as they host Arizona Monday, Till ane Thursday, Na varro Junior College Friday, and Rice Saturday'. C H O TE'S SIN C LA IR SERVICE IMH and "an Aatnaia Sr. J*. y# ar« t a r « In * t h * I T. a r * * OK ft ’.tnt nr oil ft JJM . . . For the BIGGEST BARGAIN IN ADVERTISING TODAY! You Get 15 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Words for One LOW PRICE! Runs IO Times for only $ A 0 0 W T O T A L Runs 20 Times for only sir)00 I \ J T O T A L T h e D a il y T e x a n CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING U U GR 1-5244 FOR QUICK SERVICE! Don't let the low price scare you off. $ i 302.00 That s the price of our new Volkswagen. lr license and local tax. (WI, tewalls and leather­ ette upholstery optional at extra cost.) includes ever/ti ng except But some people are afraid to buy one: they don t see how we can turn out a cheap car without having it turn out cheap. This is how: Since the factory doesn’t change the bug’s shape every yea'', we don’t haze to change the factory every year. What we don t spend on looks, we improvements to make more spend on people buy the car. When you buy a VW , you get what you pay for. What you don t get is fells. And you don't pay for what you don t get. 'CB" SMITH VOLKSWAGEN r i f t \[j/ Sind C O RN ER 5th & LAM AR Your Authorized Downtown VV/ Deader Aggies Edge TCU, Tech Crushes Rice Besides Texas' 6-5 win over S M U Saturday, other baseball ac­ tion in the Southwest Conference saw Texas A&M and Texas Tech win, and Baylor lose in a non­ conference battle. A three-way deadlock now tops the SWC chart featuring Texas, Texas AAM, and Baylor. The Aggies forced into a de with a 2-0 victory over Tex­ as Christian. Freshman Butch Ghutzmann doubled in AA-M s runs in the sixth on a pinch-hit YOUK B K T T W H VALUf! TEXAS UNION Student Tour to EUROPE Escorted by Pro f V in ce n t lon g ho rn R. Dinino, Dir. Bund on Q ueen Eliia b a th 62-67 Day* — $1,495.00 up. Sailing For Inform s* on Se# U N IO N T R A V E L O F F IC E Union Bldg 342-D G R 1-3616 appearance at the plate. Texas Tech took its first South­ west Conference* baseball victory the Saturday by crushing, 8-1, Rice Owls, who were held to four hits bv a trio of Red Raider pitchers. This Week Monday—'Tennis: Texas vs. Ari­ zona at Aum in, Penick Courts, 2 p.m. \\ e d n e s d a y — B a s e b a l l : T e x a s vs. Baylor at Austin, Clark Field, 3 p.m. Thursday—Baseball: Texas vs. Baylor at Austin, Clark Field, 3 pm. Tenn.s: Texas vs T u l a r e at Austin, Penick Courts, 2 p.m. Baseball: Texas b team vs. Baylor b-team at Waco. Friday—Golf: Texas vs. Texas Tech at Austin, Municipal Golf Course. Track: Texas Relays at Me­ morial Stadium. Saturday: Track: Texas Relays at Memorial Stadium. Tennis: Texas vs. Rice at Aus­ tin, Penick Courts. Sp rah en Vietnam, Student Opinion In Europe, and Sweden’* Responsi biiities as a Non-Aligned Nation. TUESDAY — 8:00 P.M. IOO CALHOUN HALL Sponsored by U C .E.W .V . ENGRAVING PRINTING SPECIAL STATIONERY SALE Open Stock Albums and Beautiful Bargain Box es elbe Croton Shop 2900 G U A D A LU PE G R 2-5733 AUSTIN, TEXAS ling Pitcher Saturd Dennis Enderlin hurl* ag ainst S M U . Sprint M edley Relay Teams Top Competition in UT Event Another crack sprint medley field has been lined up for the Texas Relays this week accord­ ing to director Jack Patterson. T ic University and College Di­ vision sprint medley races arc bv invitation only with eight of the best teams available selected for each elms. They will hp held at 8 p r n . Friday. The College Di­ vision field will be announced later. Patterson said the University class would include co-favorites Processing THE BOTTLE SHOP Notre Dame and Oklahoma with such classy contenders as hast Texas, Drake, SMU, Baylor, Lamar Tech and Oklahoma State. AU eight teams are capable of running 3:20 or bettor. Kantian Holds World Record This relay features two opening 220 legs followed by a 440-yard lap and topped off with a half-mile anchor carry. This is the rare in which Kansas, with Jim Ryun producing a I 46.1 anchor, posted a new world record of 3 15.2 here last year. In that one, KU ran away from the field. Kansas is not defending its title this time. KU coach Bob Timmons announced Jay- hawkers instead would go in the distance medley earlier Friday evening and Ryun, if his injured the Tobacco* S P A R T A N S SMM Airport rn rd All-Out Hoosier Effort Cops Swimming Title JMoot-9, Burton, a laS-pound “ Mighty Mite" from Sacramento, Calif., electrified the crowd which jammed 'he Dartmouth College pool for the windup of the three- day meet, surging to a 15:59 t clocking in winning his specialty for the second year in a row. Pulling steadily away from his five rivals, he plowed on to his record feat — comparable to the sub-four minute mile in track — behind the thunderous encourage­ ment of a standing, roaring crowd. The time erased his own American and NCAA record of 16:08 set a year ago, Hickcox, who broke American records in the 200-yard individual medley and the 100-yard back­ stroke earlier, won his third event when he lowered the NCAA rec­ ord with a 1:55 3 time in the 20A yard backstroke. He became only the e’phth swimmer in history to win th rec NCAA individual titles in one year. ''This ! is to be my biggest thrill." said Coach Dock Counsil- man, whose Indiana mams had won just about every honor ex­ cept the NCAA in the past IO years. The Hoosiers finished second three years in a row from 1964- 66 and third in 1967. Indiana piled up 346 points In easily outdistancing Yale, which finished with 253. .Southern Cali­ fornia was third with 231, while defending champion Stanford was fourth with 205. Dallas Invitational Gets Upset Victor DALLAS (A P) — Kansas State's unheralded Wildcats upset South­ leaders west Conference track Baylor, Texas AAM, and South­ ern Methodist Saturday night to win the Dallas Invitational Track and Field Meet going away. Pated by its brilliant sprinters, Mack Herron and Charles Collins, first Kansas State won places, and made points in all other events except the high hurdles, high jump and pole vault, five Kansas State rolled up 72 points to 564 for second plain Baylor. Herron the 106 in 9 7 with Collins an eyelash second to heat the top SWC sprinters, Jimmy Jasper of Baylor and Charles Thornton of Texas Christian. Then, in the 220, Collins bested the field with a 21.7 performance. A slow track, caused by exces­ sive watering and a light rain in tho afternoon, made most times comparatively slow. I ’ hold Jerry l'techt. Southern Methodist's great hurdler, to 14 6 in the high hurdles and 52.4 in the 440. He still was high point man of the meet with 12. Tile high school meet among Dallas schools was held at the furnishing Sammy same time, Walker, massive Samuell High star, the opportunity to better the national scholastic record in the shot put. He threw the 12 pound ball TI fret, one-and a-half-fcet farther than the record of 69.6 held by Kerl Salb of Crosett, Ark. The meet was being held for the first time in five years, r**- p!acing in­ door meet. the annual Dallas Three records were set Lam* Curts of Oklahoma State vaulted 15 feo* 6 inches to better the rec- ord of 15-4 set bv Dexter Elkins in 1962. of Southern Methodist There were two automatic rec­ ords since they came in new events. Utecfat’s time in the 440 hurdles and 14 117 in three-mile by Van Rose of Kansas State be­ came records because of that. Bula Skinner, Imports From Mexico Indigenous A rt, Je w e lry , C loth in g D e c o ra te # Accessories 1705 Nueces Street ACAPULCO SPRING VACATION Include* I Night* I/nlftnt and R T * l r fa r e fro m A n atta C o n fa c t: S T U D E N T T R A V E L , Int. JJC S (ilia (alii!-* ok '-own arc nj 4?i*kt tarots J'yv U SE The DAILY TEXAN HANOVER. N.H. IAP* - Mike Burton of UCLA became the firs* swimmer in history rn break me 16-minute barrier for the 1,650 yard freestyle Saturday night w’hile Indiana's fired-up Hoosiers — led by triple winner Charlie Hickcox —- ended long years of frustration by winning their firs? NCAA team championship. CORP! S (U R IS H ( ( P l _ lim former Texas Southern Hines, •tar, ran a special I OO-va rd dash In 9.2 in highlight th** sixth an­ nual Corpus ( hristi Invitational Track ami field Meet Saturday night while Texas was remaining unbeaten by winning th** uni­ versity division championship. Hines said “ I coasted" al­ though it was only a tenth of a second over the world’s record and he didn't have a favoring wind. Texas, led by freshman sensa­ tion liave Morton, am assed 781 * points while Bice was finishing a distant second with TI1, and Abilene Christian, the defending champion, managed only 37. DALLAS (A P) - Arnold Pelm er, golfs all-time leading money winner, and Tom Weiskopf, the 1%8 leader, head the sparkling field for the $100,000 Byron N e ! son Golf Classic April 25-28. Ninety-two players have en­ tered, 87 of whom committed themselves at the Jacksonville, Fla., Open. Frank tournament chairman, ‘'aid it would he the finest, field in the history of the tournament, previously known as the Dallas Open. Anglin*, National PCA champion Don January, Gay Brewer, the Mas­ ters king, four former National Open winners, and three former British Open champions are in­ cluded. There also o a strong possibili­ ty that Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player, who with Palmer com­ prise the celebrated Big Three of golf. will he here. Pl av cr says- he will compete In Dallas unless he should win the Masters, in which event he will return home for a vacation and celebration. Nicklaus said his present plans are to play In Dallas but hr is not yet ready to give a definite answer. MEN S H O U SIN G A SSO C IA T IO N Offer* N O W a co-*-r'pf* ava ab a itwdent homing ti**. O N T H E D R A G ommiri Customer Convenience From Bob Miller Volkswagen p a r t s a s e r v i c e o p e n M O N -FRI. 7 A M . , ta M O N >HT S A T . 7 A M .1 2 N O O N S A L E S 8 A M , - 7 P M SAT. 8 A.M. - 6 P.M. O U R V N IG H T A, LIGH TS I) A T T R A C T leg is OK, is slated for anchor duty on the distance medley baton event. Notre Dame draws the favor­ ite's role because of the Irish's great half-miler, Pete Farrell, who ow ns a 1:47.8 best in the 880. Sorrier** Rate High The Sooners rank near the top with sprinters Wayne and Glen Long, quarter miler Tom Melton and Chne Johnson on the anchor. Host Texas has to be considered a top contender because of the recent showings of frosh Davp Morton, who owns a 46.8 quarter off the blocks, and David Marina, Who ran a I 50.8 open half recenf- ly. The I/inkhorns won this event two years ago and are anxious to put erne Orange and Whim back in the Relays. SMU was second last year and returns its fine anchorman. Ia>- roy Storbeck, one of the top mid­ dle distance runners in the South­ west Conference. The Ponies have Merlin Eek and Bruce Cameron doing the opening 220s and Jim Hatfield on the 440. Lamar Tech Ihixzles Lamar Tech can dazzle the baton with Waverly Thomas on I IO handing off to Randy the Clewis. The^o two runners are on the Tech mile relay team that owns c e state s best of 3:07 5 at the Border. indoors Drake, with a torrid 3:26 sprint medley recently, may t ike all the marbles if Brent Slay (880) have MIO' or Ray Dunn any say in the matter That in­ door clocking converts to far be­ low 3:20 outdoors. Billy Mills, the Olympic hero of 'he 1964 Tokyo Games, has ac­ cepted an Invitation to run in the Texas at Memorial Stadium Thursday. Relays Mills, American record holder n the six-mile and 10,000 meters, will mn the special six-mile race Thursday afternoon. The part Sioux Indian from Haskell Institute and the Univer­ sity of Kansas became America's greatest Tokyo hero when he up­ set the world's best to streak a. toss the finish line of 10,000 in Olympic and world meters record time. Now in the insurance business In San Diego while preparing for t! o • 468 Olympics a' Mexico City, Mills still owns the American record of 27:11.6 for the six-mile and also the ID.OOO meters. . . . fun in the great outdoors for the young in heart! lf you v# never r'dden on# of th# new Schw -in bike* with gear* . . . IO tre at speeds, you ha*# a in stora. "in . ’ Schwinn it new and C yc ng the e ffo rt out. end put has tenon more U n in. Stop in tom orrow and see wha* you r * misting. Try a test join the other* who r de end ha* e foun d the thrill e f th# open t’t A m e ric a ’* fastest g ro w ­ road . ing sport. y o , , i . . UNIVERSITY BICYCLE SHOP 3202 Guadalupe Austin, Tex., 453-1049 looking for POEMS STORIES ESSAYS photographs drawings etcs. by APRIL I Urawer University Journalism B Page 6 Sunday, March 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN THE STUDENT LITERARY MAGAZINE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TFX AS •rn rs m sr north iii ss fH O IS E Khyber Rifles Parade W ith Pride ROTC D r i l l Team Employs British M a n u a l of Arms two, three, or four. Leal explained that many Intricate execute as can be per formed from this type of tight formation. For a minimum of four hours per week, the team pram >e* •* hi * i> 1 ce f r *v drill and rifle drill. Th® organization of the team squad* into give* the freshman a n d sophomore members the oppoi receive to tunity leadership training w h i c h ordii inly is not possible until their lUnior year of ROTC. Thp dress uniform consists of Army green trousers, Tri ! khaki poplin shirts, pa t a trooper b o o t s with white laces, w h i t e g l o v e s , jf: •v'n scarves, and green h e l m e t the Fo u rth I S A r m y A re a , when I e vis md liner* (pots). Drill foam member* carry the c a m p u * M a rc h I t M I rifle*, the model used by infantrymen Ixw'jii Thrill Rivalry In World War II which are anchored with O n e o f *he rn - ; it . 4 whim slings. Tim commander direct* the in the Round Hp parade Frida’ Now they team with a West Poi at dre^s sword. Scholarship Mflffihfl* To illustrate the proficiency of his group, Leal pointed on' that at least one fourth of the drill members are studying under ROTC scholarships. Faculty sponsor for the group I* Ma J. John Sullivan. The group also ha* two Cordeftp sponsor*, active Karen S.rug 4 ; and pledge Pavan Cray, To cite one example of their activities, the Khyber R Aes served as Honor Guard for LL Gen. L. J. Lincoln, commander cd are proparing for fVm Univer*it in' m« tionaI drill meet April 20, TI ev will be com­ I., chef p tin g against drill teams fr* school*, including the Buccaneers, the I nJr v e r s ify ’* Navy ROTC drill team. Winner of the n pet • h mr • od I . th* highest os erall genre I r ?1rec events — in­ spection, regulation drill and fan cy drill* The Khyber Rif!*'* a *> plan to enter Ti ".WXS I riv e " fy’g d: ll meet in San An- t nio during Fiesta \\ ••••■k Fifteen et hor I h o v y i n g for t o p vs !’ W G* d r i l l he marching in ‘ho Fiesta ? ■ hoau pa rad# the night of A p ril 27, a n i lit e r attending H e m is F a ir . f o a m c's- Photos by Doug Brightweil Br J E N N A BF.!.!. Texan Feature Fditor CHT rhu rhu-ohu, CHU-chu-chu-chu, CHDu-chu chn rhu. CHU-chu-chu-chu Tim st ••'arr engine cadence of tm Khyber P fps dr ll team make* a pounding im­ pression which is not easily forgotten “ Our marching manual is based en a British manual of arm* that is rarely seen In the United State*,” said Ray leal com­ mander of the Army ROTC s p e c ia l unit. this "The most outstanding feature of manual is that it has TSO steps {'cr minute." Tin nu March The locomotion effect of the cadence I* accomplished by an emphasized stomp fel­ lowed with three shuffling steps. Repetition of the four count cycle at a dynamically rapid pace is extremely strenuous and re­ quires a rigid physical training program, Leal said. Tea! added that no other c o lle g e team in United States employs the Khyber c a d e n c e of $20 steps or RO atnmps per minute. Team commander T-eal, who graduated from Peacock Military Academy In San learned the manual from high A n to n io , school training in the Zouave Fast Cadence, Wall-Scaling Drill Team. When the Army Rf iT(? drill team was reorganized this year under bls leadership, be decided to teach his ur.u the British technique. The original Army ROTC drill team, called the Rangers, was disbanded in !%2, and the new ly formed one w as organized in December, 1907. It s Bloody British Named for a British regiment stationed at the fain »us Khyber Pass in India, the Khyber Rifles provide the Army ROTC with a detachment of cadets trained to aet as a dei a I for honor guards, flag details, and ("her special purposes. Rather than being spaced at arm'* length, the drill members execute all move­ ments shoulder-fo-shoulder. The 16-man team marches in a solid block with four cadet*: in each of four rows Maneuvers are performed in a square, and each mem­ ber la designated as being either a one, Visiting Dignitary W elcom ed . . . It. Gen. Unco1” greeted by Ray Leal. Spin Those Guns Around . . . Cadets practice rifle drill*. Shoulder-to-Shoulder Turns . . , Pivot man checks alignment. Carnival Candor Still Hooks Suckers By M ADELINE TOCKER To van Feature W riter one'* last oent he confiscated** He is simply beating others at his own game. You are now entering I/Yoney Villa, pop­ G a m ic C h a tt e r ulation unknown. During the j ast two weeks. Austin had it* own Looney V la, taking up approxi­ mately three square city blocks on the banks of Town Lake. uni lain >ni ” on" can:.*- s. id. “ For us there are 25 hours in a day,” And carnies do t a k e full advantage of etch of these hours. They work diligently and practice unceasingly to develop fully their arcompl -hod art of conversation. At times a carn;e I cs bern known to ta'k the most miserly individu J out of his last cent. But Is this unfair? Should the carnie be condemned merely because it was some­ “ Hey fella.'' the carnie said, “ Come win your girl a giant teddy bear. AH you have to do is put thp little hall in the little bar­ rel, rome on—givo it a try. “ Wait a minute fell!, look I'll show soil how ifs done. You give me a dollar a throw', put the little bail in the little bar­ rel. and TU give sou hick your money AND a prize, ( ’an't beat that, can you “ What’s wrong fella, having trouble with your pitching arm tomghi? Still have .socne money left, give it another tis Put the little ball In the little barrel and you get all your money back, PLL S one of these giant teddy bears. . . Why fella, are you fir anoia I Iv em­ barrassed? Well, I guess I ’m lurks ; I get a steak for breakfast now. But <1 n i wor­ ry son, Ifs just a game." same Old Story Except for the pure entertainment It of­ fers, the majority of people seem to go to a carnival for one tea-on—to get some­ thing for nettling. They throw balls, pull string-, shoot guns, toss nickels, dimes, quarters, tokens, as well as an assortment of other 1 diculous objects to try to win one of the multi­ colored, overstuffed animals as a symbol of their skill. Contrary to common premise, carnival people do not travel in packs. When their stay in one town is up, they load their paraphernalia into a large van and head to wherever the smell of money comes on strongest. A magazine called “ Amusement World'' helps guide those professionals through their wandering* bv publishing route* of ail carnivals in the United States on a yearly basis. This way one Philllstine ran join his brothers at a previously designated loca­ tion. Darwinism Dominate* Here at Looney Villa a distinc t carnival philosophy reins. Was Darwin really right? Did man come from ape? Step right up and see the While Jungle Goddess; she change* from beauty to beast right before your eyes. In the world of the carnival, the mis­ shapen. malformed, overgrown freak of humanity is given acceptance and hostage. He capitalizes on his misfortune* and out- * md y appears quite content Stop at the Cattleman’s Tavern; visit Doc's [ ’ imp; welcome to Outer Galaxies; see Fanny Brown—largest go-go £,rl in town, plus that famous attraction, the two- headed baby, bom alive . . . Carnival philosophy, in many way’s, cor­ responds to society * unwritten rules of life. Winner Tai*-* VII ' The only way to win at this racket i* t > keep your money in your pocket. A coin on top of any dish wins . . but no lean­ ing . . Hurry and eat that randy apple hr ire tile worm falls out. Sorry fella, no second chances . . . . But as far back as anyone’s great great grandfather can remember there have been carnivals And as long a* people con­ tinue to bp people we will. Step right up, knock down the bottle, break the ballon, pull the string, test your skill, and win a near “ everytime. But remember, rebounds don't count, now .. • or ever. Present Arms! . . . C o m m a n d e r Le a l shouts o rd e rt. Flying Through the Air ...R iflers hurl weapons in exchange. Have Gun, W ill Tra vel ...L e a d e rs sword serve-, *s gu.de. Sunday, March 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Page Subcommittee Hearing . . . Narcotics Crackdown .. . ( Continued from Page I . 1) gust that the top priorities should remain with Operation Head- Start and aid to elementary and sfH'ondarv education.” On the subject of National de­ fense Student Loans and Econo- min Opportunity Grants, Dr. Sil* ber said that the loans should be extended to students from cul­ turally advantaged backgrounds and the grants i*e given to those from culturally disadvantaged backgrounds. B y restricting loans to economically advantage stu­ dents the likelihood of a person becoming burdened with a large debt would be avoided. Likewise grants would be to those who are least likely to be able to repay a loan. restricted Afternoon Session The afternixni session of the re-opened subcommittee, which at 1:30 p m. after a luncheon in the Academic Center, I tea rd testi­ mony on higher education ad- mendments concerned with co­ operative education programs, community services, and the ex­ tension of federal grants to non­ technical fields of study. Before hearing afternoon wit­ nesses, Sen Yarborough made a final remark on the morning dis russians He said it was "definite­ ly within the realm of possibility and feasibility" for lite federal government to pay the tuition of every college student the United States. in There are six million college students in the country and the average tuition in public and pri vat'1 schools is approximlately $1,000, he said. He noted the cost would be only a small fraction of the price of the Vietnam war. Cooperative education First to give testimony In the afternoon session was a seven- man Cooperative Education Panel, headed by Brute C, .Stoughton, dii fetor of cooperative education at the University of Houston. Tile panel defended the concept of cooperative education and urged the subcommittee to give "favorable consideration” to a proposed amendment granting to cooperative matching programs, funds "Cooperative education is a method of higher education which Involves alternation of periods cf fulltim e academic study with full-time educational related work experience assignments of stu­ dents in industry, business and government," Stoughton said. Federal Fund** Needed Panel member H arry Taylor of I (m>» t;if* OM &■ P.elm n" Po said federal funds are most needed to e rn science and engineering in pre­ dominantly Negro I-atin American colleges. co-op programs and . .. i Also testifying before the sub­ committee was a panel of Texas educators who urged passage of an amendment granting federal funds to college public service programs, Tile three man panel empha­ sized the need for more and hef­ ter cooperation between local government and educational insti­ tutions in adult education, traps portation, communications, and other fields. One panel member criticized the proposed amendment for granting only matching funds to local pro­ jects limbed Institutions have funds, he said, and they ran raise more only by increasing stu­ dent tuition and fees. This would defeat the purpose of the new edu­ cation proposals, he said. A third witness at the hearings was Kiaran L. Dooley, director of state and Federal relations in the North Dakota Department of Pub­ lic Instructor, He commended the Sen. Y a r­ subcommittee and borough rn particular for in*-hid­ ing all education in the new pro­ posals. Concepts Changing Dooley said changing concepts about the federal role in educa­ tion h a v e destroyed the idea that federal support should be limited to education directly related to national defense .Sen. Yarborough the government should support “ edu­ cation for education’s sake said In closing the hearings. Sen. Yarborough said ’moving these hearings to the rarified air of Austin the bureaucracy in Washington” was a good idea. The hoar togs will re­ sume in Washington Tuesday, and away from (Continued from Page I.) for two to three months. Those served with warrants were charged with selling or dealing with drugs. Those who were sub­ sequently charged with possession were picked up in the process of bringing in those whom the offi­ cers had warrants for, Austin police reported. and organizer Drug users interviewed felt a reason for the bust was to spilt spread the community paranoia,’* An of “ Gentle Thursday” cited the De­ partment of Public Safety photo- grnpher who snapped pictures of individuals participating in the nativities as an example. The i>olice succeeded in this as- po- t: they have aroused suspicion among the drug users as to who is a undercover agent “ narc” and who isn t. While a student was being interviewed in the Chuck Wagon, a longhaired boy came up to him and asked if he had ever worked the government. "Someone Moat looks like you just busted a friend of mine this morn­ ing.” he said. for Where police may have faller! C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R A T ES .............................. $ ..................................... .04 .............................. ....................... $ 1-20 .50 .21 ta c k W o r d ( I S word minimum ) M inim um C h a rg e •Stu d e n t rate (10-word manimum) on* tim e . . . . I •Each a d d itio n al tim e $ 20 C o n t e x t i v e Issues IO w o r d s ........................ ................................................... 5 8 00 15 w o r d s ....................... $10.00 $13.00 20 words C la ssifie d D isplay I column * one inch one tim e ........................ Each A d d itio n a l Time $ 1.20 .................................................. $ 1.10 .............. ( N o co p y change (o r consecutive issue rates.) • N E W L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S IO words or less for 50c the first time 25c each ad d ition al tim e Student must show A u d ito r s re ce ip t end pay in a d ­ from vance 3 e m . to 3 30 p m . M o n d a y through Friday. Jo u rnalism Bldg. 107 in C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G D E A D L IN E S Tuesday Ta,an ......................................... M o n d ay. 3 30 p rn. W e d n e s d a y Te.an .................................. Tuesday, 3:30 p.m. Th rsday te «*n ................................... W e d n e s d a y . 3 30 p m. Fr fa y Texan ..............................................Thursday, 3:30 p.m. Sunday Te.an ............................................. M d a y , 3 30 p.m. In the event of errors m ade in an a d ve rt.sement, im ­ m ediate not ce must be given as the publishers ere responsible for only one incorrect insertion. G R 1-5244 The Daily Texan Classified Ads Fu rn ish ed A p a r t m e n ts Furnished Houses For Sale Lost and Found Typing tho in gaining a sidp rffpot of In alienating community of u v t-s . A non studorit said, “ No. man. it doesn t work that way. It causes tho community to come together. We have to stick to­ gether.” that Ho said the paranoia fluctuates "In tho main people aren’t smoking much tonight. By Friday morning (the morning of in the the raids) half the fish Colorado River were swimming sideways." He predicted! things would soon get back to normal. "After the heat is of f , people will be sitting on their front porches getting stoned again.” (cops) Robert Hinds, director of the Dallas Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Drug Abusp Control. said to measure the long-range effect of this. l ave some de­ It should terrent on the ki(N.” " I t ’s hard Friday, An ex student said. "As far as the bust being a deterrent, they re not gonna stop the drug scene. People will just cool it. People are not gonna get all freaked out and stop smoking.” "cooled Indeed, the drug users inter­ viewed have it." But they have cooled it in the sense that they will he more careful about who they smoke with, and not how much or w’hen they smoke. Many of the law' officers who took part in the raids were State federal undercover agents and who pose as "hippies." Indica­ tions are that regardless of the agents’ success in the past, their value in the future will be limited. Friday night in the Rag office, a fat man about 25 wras hanging around tile Rag staff asking ques­ tions. He was barefoot and w'ore an untucked Ivy League shirt. He claimed to be the author of a play appearing In Europe and said he w-as currently writing a book. Everyone on the Rmg staff knew he was a narc. H ie trend has become "when in doubt— sutler:. ” What to do about the problem? "'j ,i is the .V>4 question,” said one student. "W e ’ve been think­ ing about that ever since there have been narcs," He said that even if the names and photographs of all the agents were published, they would just m o w to another place. A non-student said, " If noth­ ing is done, there will be a few informers waking up in the gut­ ter very sore. People are genoa loam thai u I1 > play Jam es Bond games. They don t realize that by doing a small thing (informing), they are ruining peoples lives.” is not health: l u l u s S a i d O u t d a t e d A student agreed, saying the marijuana laws were outdated and they were hurting people. "The answer has to come from in the system." he higher up said. " I t ’s just a matter of time before the antiquated laws are taken off the books. Communica­ tion to the cops Will have to from higher up. They come won’t listen to us.” Are continued police arrests the answer? One student mid, " l f the time is right, and it is, people will continue to smoke marijuana whether there's a law' against it or not." He added, "A s long as there s pressure from the cops, there s gonna he equal pres­ sure from the other side.” Violence Hinted As frightening as It sounds, some of the drug users say they are contemplating violent mea­ sures against the police. "There lot of folks that smoke are a MPACX available for untie rn • enc women students. Biark*tr*n# Apartments. OR 6- m u P L K to (hare home and cere for home end yard. Hiv karwood area AU 3-3045, Mrs I.via Barnett Mtl. H elp W a n te d m a n a g e r t r a i n f f Men aged 7" 28 to tram for Management p n v 'm s « h N a tio n s ta ste *! g r im cg h e a lth cu b chan Excellent opportunity » th rapid advancement I ’r ' t . a education background heii>?:ii. bid not necessary, App.* in person TRIM & S W IM H EA LT H SPA 4 C a f (lust off MOO block Burnet Rd) descriptions E U R O P E A N Summer employment a :; P'acement Job In England and Continent Applications now being taken Stu­ dent Travel. 2236 Guadalupe G R 7-4 to P A R T t me work w th full tune summer op portin',tv, Nat ems! compar" Apply 1303 IHT?. 8 30 p rn. Monday Qua da upe Office thru Thursday, A T T R A C T IV E G IR L. to meet pi)MJC In I vn .I'ti w ork retestin g Afternoon* I- an Corpora' on Tv pa 40 w p m fib e r)' l l .fill pc- hour, Its East 8th Falcon Fi nis Intel national, Inc. r-i* -m s s -g Talented ye ,n« pee * me t ng > » » i - M ~ - P • re? * - ■ * * oft ca BA R G A IN S and Everything. Hie Ad Kx change, 2036 South t amer. We take Items on con . gometil. H I 4 5089. N E !.SOM's G IF T S handmade Indian Jewelry Mexican Imports- le y B. Nelson. Prop. 4812 S. Congress. ITI 4 W 4 , USED B O O K S THE BO O K STALL 5533 Burnet Rd (opium ie First Federal) ess huge se eel mn paper back*, fiction, c d noveti. classics, encyclopedias, National Geo­ graphic* Texans, textbooks. Harvard < '.astir* except i ‘pen 9 0 — t‘> IO Pa. Ig>w pisces Thurs. A Sun. G S 4 (664 SU IN G ER U A N P Drums Bass TomTom, Hi Ha', < ' tuba s. snare GU .15071 IM S MUH JKI*I 478-0835 8 IT V K .-«■ New 478-1! hi tat*# 'leek. tapes, Speake!*- G R A N N Y B U Y S ft S E L L S J HT"' pav $30 $50 UDO for I.aa?t Clept i i Sophisticate*. M -> B ooh* Bullock > Mr Morts. Je r k Feta, early#*, etc. when you can buy them for fraction of original inst ‘$3 look N EW ! Come look It * The- at 4311 Duval I .'ti every dav lf you wish to sell clothes call 452 P S 6032 afte noons or come by shop [ BAND equipment, l ender donee t Amp, G b sort Falcon Amp, 3 Electro voice 664 mir 'OO watt IU 'gen f ’ A Amp Priced t 'huck Greenwood 452 !7fi? rop hone* to sell fast 1957 MGA, sound motor, •d tire* bod' need,; Work 478 UM*! 478-1 175 WR HONDA KW with helmet After 3.IO call 452-7341 r > e ant eondit un $21 I G W F RVI T W A P A R T M E N T S JSM rwdham (Directly behind Medical Arts Aquare One bi ret to ?■.■*«* 'ta rre d or scholar: • etude#!* # * ' ad ' ’ne bedroom. gas and water Bsf onnd tinned, carpeted ped. TV ca n e pa l Most reasonable rates in Austin atte:tment living to G R 2 4566 pm im J A paid One tied room A C 9'2)6 Helms No A Vacant Apr!. I. Mr* Freund Ho s RIM Roommate W a n te d F C V A U S nerts *49 R e: os** Apart » * paid 0»U 47* '<..**4 M at F Roommate rive r oaks Apartment! OB Cfi TOP For Rent R E N T black/Wh t* TV, *.2 50 - l!.V5fl month Iv. Color portable. $12 50 - $15 50 w>>#k,v IG', O L 2 4057; no Tap* recorderv Alpha a-,war. GR 2 2fi«. ’OO FRENCH Pl FUR' ■ p I >>ad *>vrr. 7v batt-, ne- ch ,e-» d apes per.# e l a se dishwetheu washer-dryef corr- Ira! air ga: ha se .ms Ct ii »;«>** ’t to t eat t> B a * c - a 6 p A * * a f A r ■> SR 7-6; . f? c ( £ I A K E A U ST IN T r^ i'er H o u s e an d B o a t D ock 9 a.rn. - I I a.rn, O nly Mon Fri O n !y W A N T ED 25 students to work 25 hours a rn-.nth to make I •- a week Phone 258-lit* a':e- n p in Tutoring Duplex— Unfurnished a t : R A F. 2-bedronrr., bi!', in k ti en Wkcet em ne at.bo (hood Fenced yard Gas I e ne ( J o 2109 Newt .- d 4 6i«)6 tad wa** GR fi tire i 'n a : sub.)*- t* I t T O R IN O bv qualified graduate student* Spt- tai group rates A P L CS CN I 5 ERK ITT S E R V IC E S 504 W. 34th cireet. U R 7-5651 (KNM \ n bv graduate excheng# student I per hour • 'all 476-2212. Furnished Apartm ents LORT Black wa..et Keen rn -nr return identification Bid ** or fit: : 4714 -,»j *! •. g o* isw br af*, fret# *, d ;s#rfa- repo rt!, end * Miscellaneous C A PIT O L Beauty » biles# Hatr styling awat i winners. Duads up# at lfth. Open 8 a rn ll) p m. OR 2-9291 PO E T R Y Wanted stamiied envelope for Anthology. Idlewild Publishers Include 4 Frederick, nan Franc.x«*o Cr f< mla 94117. ... ter - — sr rn beta and • arhon ribbons) M * : " I rn -ne - 1'•aph ng, proofreading ft D ' l A f - . : 'i r N G S E R V IC E H! 2-7184 ! t Ni-th of 27th & Guadalupe PERSONA'.!TY POSTS RT. PSYCH AD ELiC POSTER3 SKI POSTERS A ’ . D BUTTONS then y I don t war' If we don't hove them them i c 5:,, ism Butter!" * O ft Shop, 4609 E. Cc fax, Des* yen I mr samples ar-d j ver. Colorado 86220 Keel*) Kales SA (LIM O F U N ! Rentals < Dolphin Sr * ta t asses atxiard Eft' *n Marsh Varina. OO 6-l l WL Bv Mansfield Dam . -ed> KaiHm (new M n a " J ping, Mali th ng. R'nd.r.g The Complete Professional FI LL-TIM c Typing Service tall'! rd to the need* of University students. keyboard equipment s r a language. and engine# ng these* and d.tser - -'n for e u r o p e ” STUD ENT T R A V EL IN C . Charter and Group Fligh t* from $245 Round Trip EXCLUSIVELY F O R UT STUDENTS AN D FACULTY C intact - - • in-V-c*. STUDENT TRAVEL on • ■ a c » ] '' INC. * • s pa Phone: G R 7-4340 Ill's is the on v charier !’ gilt program for IFT students end {acuity that ha* been op prated in the past 1968 will mark our fifth successive year of operation of these pro grama. In past : es■ s similar p ograms have hern announced by local tra w l agent* or \ I to be cancelled late ut the 'e a r after on programs were In v enfpiied < lur a r m s # men ta ar# made through authorized, bunt;-' navel wholesale.« who spec .* ze in e r a :’* {light operations tor large corporations ant JO B S IN EUROPE Applications still being a< Apt U m # r. f C o . i ng St D ip wa : 1 -.e . N i t Delicious Dinners D ELIVERED TO Y O U R D O O R O N A M O N T H L Y BASIS Place Your Order Now $30.00 Mo. g o u r m e t C a t e r n g s e r v i c e GR 6 949Q PU on I OR 2-7 210 and G R 2-7177 '2707 Hemphill Park typing n mv home North Blta'ks Campus. Theses Dissertation* rt> tv ped at home. Reasonable M is Bodour. G R 8 8113 Proles,;**nay A N N E S T Y P IN G SE R V IC E (M ar;--' e Anne e a fie ld ) HI 2-7008 Professional Typing For Too Ka t. Accurate Dependable 0 • • 0 m • "I* c s s •jong 0 • Bus ness mm- f un cai on# • statistical RepoitS "en 8 » i. • IO r da / I i- frontal us. Special tvmbois. Multi- '•M A g Xerox. D-tto. Mimeographing. I IF MI addressed •••.- lawn-lei. 30-' Knve ope* Ic Mr*. Fraser. G R 6-1317. •IK: >Y. ai . u ra l* typing of any work. 35c. 'HD pts! Term pa;>et« the'e* •• t .-ir.g bv reque,! Reference* I H I tv i Mr- Ham I don. 444 3291. ; N ' " h ? 7 ’ n & G u a d a l u p e Typing. MuitiiUting, Binding Ir e Complete Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Service ta p« a1 ket hoard equipment rd to the needs of University students. language, a - I engineer,ng theses and d.tser- for Typing re. r ' - q a i » SscVcss Lr .v e ♦ p ric e ! en *'■ » 4 A ' N V I RS ' * 04 W e s t 24 S tre e t G R 7-565 A C R O S S STREET FROM C A M PU S FAST. A C C U R A T E R E A S O N A B L E 303 W e s t 21 it. 472-0446 I'HF.fiE?. dissertat enc# and iangiuu "Ie page. Mrs .2 briefs, s reports i b m M nun vmbols ay G L 4-3079 SEC R ETARY-T Y PI ST with i t any yeara cf expel enc# in a ' field* w _ give eonsctenuoua and metict ous care av to accuracy, correct form aud compo, s non reports, technical patters. theses and d.ssertat.ons. LA W W O R K SPEC* ,-w law IA I.I ST Br.e's. sen roles. IB M Electromat M ..ti tthing. Zeros mg and binding sen t » on request in L r mg .- pf. cr* G R 8-5894 Typms Graham. G L 1-5725. in a cateye IRM . M a r et ROY W . HO LLEY G R 6 3018 T Y P IN G P R IN T IN G B IN I ING \.V- T* P IN G IBM Tv pe anyth.ng GR * 40» 'n :' -ear campus. *35c E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . Accu- e. Reasonable, near A anda #. HO 5- Mu;: Yh'ng, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX D U P L IC A T O R S 4 7 6 - 7 5 8 ! 311 E. l i t h V R C N IA C A L H O U N P i O N G S E R V I C E Professional Typing AU Fields M . :;ng and Binding rn Th* -es and Dissertation* Eaaewcod 4'8-2&36 C A "R 1-5744 T O P L A C E ’tCUK. C l a s s i f i e d a d MOH tit W e vv 1 rf Jane Hardin. 442-9176 heat#' git OOO rn es I.''n CHK', R O U ST 4 door Inipala Ail power. a C Automatic. *250 C a i TW 2-0092 1(167 h o n d a T ra :; up E w e ant cond tion. I > Phone 478 .’c l anytime 62 T R IU M P H ->«(,• - - I o-ndit'on. Vt th A! TOM ATU ha list s v * t. cai hut at mn ex on ny! top for Corvette, -Til Nights . ’ d «tr auinmatic. running ex. e lent inspected condition, •woe- lur, OR 7-0007 SKIN DIVERS • r »*# 5. re P q Ss es j n N e w Req ai r, **c. 476-5623 .462 T R ) Recent valv rubber *TvO 476-0119 Job White Good I has HON D A C B 160. Vs ne condition. Pere mb r Hand ehars sponge grips, tiiroire front fender (’all O L 3-3548 P M O H EY K O LK T hauled J U ) Engine recently over Lloyd weathers, 2212 Pen Gabriel, Rm. 119 Thotie 477-927: S * BC L T “ BEST I U Y S S " Scorpio’'* * simitar to Sunfish $4 j ie re# *4*( 95 F A M IL Y RA TUSO AT Cion# ce'de-boerd alo>.> ba.>.bg, outboard we. $1495 "Wlndjanimer* 5r« (hid iv cab r, self vely. Safe, stable, R FA Ti CA R F U U U A ' ‘ Yen ture 21 ’ fiber iia-s SU Chm.sec. 4 berths. aelf-baIJte*. self righting, non-skid de. ks retractable Lee Ka* •• fa iio r a b ie ' Ga: ev head, epmnake- ge»K>H. ether option# avails', e 12250 won sh v th ‘ 'M IN G ' ' Yen*-aft 17." same ss abort but si na der. $1744 « th sa % Uv'R. IM NOW ARD S in .B k ) AT* 465 9215 453-1 TSS LU D W IC K Drum ii 4 drurr*, Mixes: 2 cy rn bela, oases H sh Hat. stool. Pract unity new *550. O L 3 I JIL. HONDA s e w Sv-rar: h e- (xm I it kit. 472-6386. feet lit*1 rrt es, I* r IC MONTH T* Sue en R sw 66-1 HT evening* A Sw m membership Ca 11 to 5:00; G R 7 1143. 8 OB Room and Board N U E C E S C O L L E G E H O U S E (Coed Living) Graduate*, undergraduates artists intellect- ut s, a so ‘ dirty noeiin s ’ Rea$onab e Rcom Board Ca : G R 6*0179 cr G R I 7609 or coma by 714 VY. 22 » LAW' Student needs ride to Washi-g'on, D during Easter G R I >47" Phone G R 2 32;» and G R 3-7S77 2707 Hemphill Park 964 C H K ) E L L E , 4-door, a automatic *9t*5 442 1158 radio. Y I . Furnished Rooms G IR L * ; 71 (kl Nueces *10 2213 res-’ ($35 A r . k tehen. a.mdrama' maid Summr Fall reservations GR 6 9490 i I HNT; 'i rs T Y PIST for thexes, brief*, Ex*- -- elect", Mrs. Fowler. O L 3-8650. legal secretary » th B H V Y P IN G Tullos. G L 3-5124. IB M Theses. Briefs. Reports. Mrs BELL AIRE APARTMENTS FOR Girls 717 W . 22nd St. Reduced rates for Simmer School Large patio and per 2 Blocks to the Draa. GR 7-5052 G R 8-9160 Typing A COMPLETE TYPING AND PRINTING SERVICE Theses Dissert«t'or s Protea one! Rey •> B.C. Reports ~erm Pa pert Law Brie’s Resea re- Papers Manuscript* 0 * * Typ na, stet, or exe Verity ping Proofing Otf~Set .pf^t.no OU cC l Binding Machine Photo co r ♦ « " 6 • * E R L E N E H 4 4 1 | A ‘'pcU . Apt. G R 6 4511 GL Page 8 Sunday, March 31, 1968 IH E DAILY TEXAN dope and don f believe In this non-violent stuff,” one student said. "There s so much to react to, how can there not be a re­ action” And some of it is net gonna be v J goody-goody Lf. Herding is fairly popular with tile smokers. He sometimes makes social calls in his I ni- versity beat One Hag staff mem­ ber said, "A t least he comes on friendly.” lf communication is to be es­ t a t e .NM and violence to be a- voided, a solution may lie in Lf. Cording and those who can per­ il ive lawful and peaceful means of surmounting the dilemma. Faculty Group To Tour Mexico Tile weeklong spring vacation period at the University will be more titan a vacation for a group of 25 students, faculty members, and their wives. The group will be in Yucatan, Mexico, April 6-13 as participants in the Architecture School's tour of that area. Hugh L. Mc M a th, professor of architecture, and tour director, explained the trip includes mem­ bers of the I diversity community from several disciplines—archi­ tecture, art, English, home econ­ omics, Latin-American studies, and law. McMath said visits will be made to the pre Hispanic arch­ aeological sites at Chichen Ifza, U xmas I, Kabah, and Dizibilchal- tun, as well as the 16th century colonial city of Merida. Tours for all members of the University community interested in the architecture, .sculpture, and painting of Mexico are being planer! for future spring vaca­ tion periods, he said, Longhorns Debate Harvard Tuesday Two University debaters win face a tram from Harvard In a th# debate at 7 p.m. April 2 in Academic center auditorium. The cross-examination debate will be on the topic, "Resolved that a Republican should be re­ turned to the White House.” University students Jeff Se­ ward, junior government major, and Ronald Williams, senior eco­ nomics major, will the take negative side of the debate. FREE T U T O R IN G TO ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS SPANISH 406 & 407, M. & W . BIOLOGY 607 M. & W. BEB 253 BEB 266 CHEMISTRY 302 & 204 M. & W. BEB 265 CHEMISTRY 301 Tues. FRENCH 406 & 407 T.T. BEB 265 BEB 266 7 to 9 p.m. Sponsored By I.F.C. & PANHELLENIC COUNCIL WHY TAKE YOUR WINTER WOOLENS HOME {Everything the Garment Storage Box W ill Hold W ill Be Stored UNTIL FALL FOR 511 W est 19th GR 2-3131 H ig h and Pi. VV. a-d 45*7 & Lam ar Maggie Hie Go-Go dancer (I) perform* af Silver Spurs Rally Held at Gregory Gym Thursday night as part of annual Round-Up; Students relax at Cowboy barbecue Friday at In a n i around the University For a Texas-Sized . . . Flavor Packed Mea Treat Yourself Today, and Eat The Chuck Wagon Way SI .OO 51.55 51.65 Lunch - l l A.M.-2 P.M. Dinner - 4:30-8:30 P.M. Sundays - l l A.M.-8 P.M. *7lo’Tt/l‘L CnZCK WiSOR VICTORS tan vt Closed Tuesday The B^it ITALIAN FOOD in Austin! Served with 26 Years of EXPERIENCE HOME MADE RAVIOLI PIZZA LASAGNA SPAGHETTI SERVING HOURS) 11:30 ii.ro. —- 2:30 pro A 5*10 p ro. M e n ., W e d ., T h ,- I, A Frt. 11:30 a.m. —* IO p ro. Sat. A Sun. In ami around the City o Austin CASA TAMALES 303 East I i f Street ^ A u s t i n i ( I n fifA t e f I - A n u a ' I t) ■ " l l .. r o o d s _ t r i e M e a n A cross From 9 0 & { RANCHO R E S T A U R A N T | 1st and San Jacinto St. MATT MARTINEZ - jfc arr * r n . t ' ' " l l s . TC $I Owner -iv -WMefSt ' .*>:. :. J-' •*. ■ ' ll ' ..-jfef i V. v i i ■itsimfi'ipm&jx. ' S p . * * ? J , 'BIG DADDY* PIZZA. we# P ? Daddy pizza, centrally located on the drag at 2102 Guada­ lupe, has been a mainstay for sustaining the “ midnight hunger’’ of many a University student since its inception several years ago. Student owned and operated, by Dale Bulloch, the Big Daddy Pizza features fast free delivery sendee to all areas around the campus. Students can select from a lengthy and varied list of pizzas. Rig Daddy Pizza also feature* a convenient earring service for fraternity, sorority and club parties, whether it be IO or IOO. Drop by Big Daddy Pizza when you are in the area or simply calI GR 6-6795 and Just place your order—they’ll bring It to you I 2102 GUADALUPE PH O N E G R 6-6795 BIG DADDY PIZZA Friday and Saturday 5 p.m. to DIO am Italian Food is Our Only Business' 1 Tuesday thru Sunday 5 p.m. 'til 10:30 p.m. Closed on M o n d a y M o n , T h u n ., En. 4 00 to H OO p m T v«« Diannr I- ' Murphy*» Dr- kdOttt 8«*f Ta.-'< R**fr:»a B eant. Soar th Rica. MMV B I Jt :*-• J !>*rv>a Join Murphy’s A-A Steak Club! ONE FREE DINNER W h e n you pureed*# IO A - A D n n t r t froro M urphy y Evening A • A Steak Manu. M U RPH Y'S IS OPEN M on.-Fri. till EAT ALL YOU W A N T " Noon— Buffet— Dinner Served Every Day 11:30 a.rn tnrtode* br* v prat* M H I G. C. MURPHY CO H AN C O CK CENTER F t N E S T A U S T I N ' S IT A L IA N r e s t a u r a n t W M S FIHEST HOMEMADE & IMPORTED l l W A H SPECIALTIES' VILLA CAPRI R E S T A U R A N T Students Sunday Night Specia Complete Dinner for $2.25 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak Just present your blanket tax or Auditor * receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional Highway ONLY 2 BLOCKS FROM MEMORIAL STADtUM D O N 7 C O O K T O N IC H T C A U RESTAURANT FOLKS WITH BIG APPETITES REALLY GO FOR THE MOUTH-WATERING VITTLES AT BONANZA! COME BY AND SAMPLE SOME FOR YOURSELF. Your Neighborhood Steak House with Nation-wide Low Prices! C H IC K EN • SH RIM P • FISH • BAR-B-Q RIBS • PIZZA FREE DELIVERY GR 6-6216 W IT H IN THREE MILES I6C3 LA V A C A 2315 G U A D A LU PE A "44# ft ■ ■.WM. Closed Monday OUORF FOR BANQUETS OR DANCES SPECIAL CATERING ARRANGEMENTS 811 West Live Oak —- HI 2-2343 Sunday, March 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 9 * J I rn Concert to Feature Latins 5,ufI?art®roup Tho University Symphony Or­ chestra will give a program of contemporary L a t i n American music at S IS pm. Monday in Music Building Recital Hall. Composers of five I**!in-Amer­ ican countries will be represented in the concert: Alberto Ginnstera of Argentina. Heitor Villa I> b s of Brazil. Si!vestige Revue!ta.* and Jose Pablo Mancnyo of Mex­ ico. Domingo Santa Cruz of Chile, and Aureiio de la Vega of Cuba. Andor Toth, Symphony conduc­ tor, ha* ap|*>inied student con­ d u c to rs for two pieces: Phillip Moll for Cen asters *s ‘ Overture to a Creole Faust” and Mary for Villa - Lobos’ Jo Ahlbom “ Bachianas Brasileiras." Moi! as < (inductor Moll, a graduate student in pi­ ano. has conducted several Uni­ versity Workshop productions. This season he is opera coach for the San Antonio Symphony Opera Festival. the Midland-Odessa Miss Ah!fx>m won first prize last year in the strings division of Sym- phony's National Young Artist Competition. She is a teacher in the Junior String Project. Tile Villa-Lobos piece will fea­ ture a soloist, Valerie McIntosh, a graduate student in voice. The soprano received a bachelor of music degree last spring a* ihe Oberlin Conservatory, where she sang in “ Marriage of Figaro,” * La Boheme.” and other operas. Versatile Vega I to la Vega w as a cultural at­ tache for the Cuban Consulate in white studying composition California. He has written songs, piano pieces, chamber works, and works for orchestra. The program two Works by Mexican composers. Revue!las, who once wrote: “ I find my best teachers among the Mexican people.” was inspired by the assassination of onp of to WTite Spain’* great poets “ Hotnenaje a Federico Garcia Includes Lorca ” Manrayo’s “ Huapango” closes the concert. Tile “ Huapango” is a popular dance along the coast of Vera Cruz. The program will include Over­ ture to a Creole Faust, Ginas- tera; Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5 for Soprano and Violoncello Villa-Lobos; Overture to a Seri­ ous Farce, Vega; Homennje a Federico Garcia l/irca, Revue!- las; Sinfonia No, 2, Op. 25, Santa Cruz; and Huapango, Mamayo. The concert is a presentation of die Mask- Nova Series of the Department of Music. Admission Is free. “ Is it realistic for a husband to stand by while his wife rolls on the couch with another sneak preview To Play Here Musicians' Choices Include Rarities The Niggr>mann Chamber En­ semble from Stuttgart, Germany, will give a Concert at the Uni­ v e r s i t y at 8 :1 5 pm. Tuesday. Their performance, a present- a * ion M- PAN Y will present ‘ Die Horne- HELD OVi i i TODAY A T ____ ? - « <».10 coming” at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Methodist Student Center. Admission is $1.50. W E E K E N D FILM S present Rio Concho*" 5, 7, and 9 p.m. Sun­ day in the Texas Union Audl- torium. Admission is 25 rems for students, 50 cents for non- students. TOI NG SOCIALISTS will present “ Lenin in October” and “ Black Natchez” at 7:15 p.m. Wednes­ day in die Experimental Sci­ ence Building Room 115. Ad­ mission is free. H NATOMA! GINI RAI CORPORATION B FOX Theatre I 5/57 AIRPORT BlVO • 454-2711 ft _ HELD OVER — 5th W E E K LAST IO D AYS Feature 2 - 4:35 - 7:10 - 9:45 A C A D E M Y A WW ARD N O M IN A T IO N S ■a BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAti* Truman Capotes I N C O L D B L O O D N O M IN A T E D FOR 4 A C A D E M Y A W A R D S f W'.MMI (tx ill* KM" on) Offend bt Richard Brooks Pov!.»*l» no o<*« u W I » ITO a s . S IG H T S Kl In 70mm. wide screen and full stereophonic sound! int Un* «.rpalest pi* mr* of xii Un ( I.M tKf.AltlE MVIEX IIJI ill I A AC AD EM Y IU a w a r d s i I t x a i i i l u / n . v m ; u i j u v u c i l w u u u i u ..JI IN W C T eO C O tO * An MOM «*<»•••• ft i i i i n i ii n i m - , n o w I S I I t o o l * . R F V N O U ) * I M M A N I), im i \ m i ii i l i l t i i tilt I M i n M i n o n % r -o u t * I It I n - l l X I - I H I U K C PREFERRED RESERVATIONS N O W BEING TAKEN j IS a **• app it ma .............. . Hrl.M* f»i data........................ . | at ............................. < ) ............................................... i N iitr ......... ........................... ................ ................ .............. I RTRKICT ......................... .................. ............... .................... I emf................................ fitrr,..................... fir conc........... ) Mattnwi ( paeh p H IE F | V g S6OI N. LAMAR H05-T 710 A IM y r s f t IM TMW inMX wa skac.k rah orrj*i» A T a i t (Tom * (Mots S u itttllM and A T a lk t» O n m l r , RIM l l ! Hi* . , . B u t lad A l i t * Inutile THmitf (VB ha# haaa burled nim,et Ut Mi»«h*' Ant.icraiJiatl l*b(*f*** of (Imnrtrjr Rill A r a A i M U M # at h i* R a n a l K ila Baa (ha U f a and Oejift* fttmrr of tha Moat VttMrhnn h l l l w I i i w l * af 'li«l<*™ Tim*-* n o - ■ r * mo c o r io a c a d f m y a w a r d s W A i r i K B E A T T Y B A Y E B I I E l A W A Y B E I M N X E * S ^ € 2 M o 3 f lO E ) ------------------ P L U S ------------ ---------------- ‘A N Y W E D N E S D A Y " . « B u r n e t ■Bv *#O0 lw»i M. M i | TMI AT ti M.NOHW A D I I J S » l Kl • D I-iO . I IH 1 IS 7S« III ! \ « 39 LAST 3 N IG H TS . U V i 9Y THE g o o d : THE BAD THE UGLY i i tc» UMI * i ii I hi O h A A- v*^* v * -,X ** G53 . v* J >t [fCHkitcoqf k Tk ■ ‘i It ONK* N I i H a* X tfOmw-rH.. W Atm**IS • H i m THV l i l l l l K U K I M I M I M I • I I KAI I T I I l» A M I J. H O K IN G OPEN — 1:50 FEATURE TIMES: . 7.1- „ 9;55 V afley ^ or m e oils "The Silent Screamer” The Exciting Story of Andy Grandfalls % Turbo-Racer of the 1967 "Indianapolis 500 ' at IO P.M. Runaway, yes. Heiress, no. W irt r n The Ranger's a magazine. Perhaps the most humorous humor mag ever to tickle the fancies of this fine campus. You may remember such previous successes as November, Decem­ ber, etc. At any rate, March Ranger, featuring insights on Hemis- IT HAD TO BE M A D E! Uninhibited passions ^ IT MUST BE S E E N ! W e.., j^ay & Ihuij^ey •MIT •lYUBtC INTCBNATIONAL FILMS fsLQUE ROBOTS Fair, Grok, PAM, et. al., is now to be found at numerous Menu Price Special Price U friendly locations around the Capital City. s f a iio m M B i m i W B f i f ;* l a ;:.;a i susyiniw m . ' j K MliKr: M kHB(Sni :f a * BOR K «*«« B S 0 U M D B I« 3 P * ^ !IIIB ^ B » B i s = - “ Page IO Sunday, March 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN modestly priced at only 29* plus . . . A runaway to remember. AASOIUTKIK MO UM* UNO** I* M.Mil'fpi s o w ith a f u l l m e n u j y O f DCL'CfOUS genuine M tV lC A M DifHES! CHSCKEN SHACK 2606 Go'ABUUPE TRI5C50HiNnelli and Hutchison performed in “ Madams Butter- fly" pxrurptg for the Houston Opera Guild in Houston March 24. The part of B F. Pinkerton will be sung by William Neill, the tenor who appeared March 22 as soloist with the University .Symphony Orchestjf* in excerpts from “ Don Carlos.” Neill starrM as Captain Macheath in “ Tile Beggar's Opera” and has won nu­ merous awards, including second place in the national ' Singer of the Year” contest last fall. Two Pinkertons Rate Pinkerton w ill be sung al­ ternately by Mary' Ellen Haynes and Sharon Johnson; Ryan Allen and Michael Eisenstein will sing the roles of Sharpless and Prince YamadorL Forbes Woods will be Gore, the marriage broker. TTie stage director for “ Mada­ mn Butterfly” is Jess Walters; musical director is Frank White. Pianist for both productions is Volker Banfield. Chris May is in chargp of costumes and scenery. Ransom Says Grades Not Final Estimates “ No truo honor student over becomes senile to mere course said m arks C hancellor Harry Ransom Satur­ day in his address at the Honors D ay convocation. averages," or Dr. Ransom spoke to the Uni­ versity's highest ranked students and their parents on "Gaps and Overlaps in Education." Emphasizing that grades can­ not be final estimates of educa­ tion, Dr. Ransom said, “ An F, properly assessed and wisely used in a student’s experience, can be more educative than a Is acquired high grade which lazily, without learning, and with­ out intelligent relation to a stu­ dent’s knowledge and experi­ ence," Grades W ill Remain “ Until we get a better system of evaluation, grades will be part of our educational record," he added. “ Most of the honor students I have known in the past third of a taken century at Texas have grades are— for what they temporary indicators of a parti­ cular performance at a particular time and place." The Chancellor’s speech con­ centrated on overlaps In educa­ tion and the separations usually gap," "the generation called "the knowledge gap," and "the communication gap." "The younger generation’s at­ tack on old fogyism contrasts with the elder generation’s alarm about youthful Americans going, lf not to perdition, at least to undefined and doubtful fates," he said. ‘B etter U nderstanding’ “ A phenomenon which should have given social psychologists comfort is the well-known fact that there Is frequently better understanding between grand­ parents and grandchildren than between children and parents." As for overlap, Dr. Ransom said that three generations ago college populations ranged "not much more than five or six years,” whereas, today "they ex­ tend from 17 to 27 in the majority, with many active university stu­ dents beyond 30." “ Since 1938, the typical under­ graduate student Is more mature in mind and in perspective," he added. "H e has traveled more widely; his experiences are more varied; he Is a readier to acknow­ ledge dismaying fact and to ex­ periment with uncertainty ” Dr. Ransom suggested that to reconcile the generation gap-and- overlap contradiction, "W e need only keep reminding ourselves that education in the true sense begins at birth and is not con­ cluded until the human being be­ comes a vegetable or a cadaver." "The Knowledge Gap, he pointed out that "the world is in a breathless game of catch-up—less a game, really, than a hard business of gather­ ing, sorting, selecting, and using new knowledge." Turning to "Tile problem Is not only effi­ cient management of information by the ton but also rigorous and Intelligent selection of what Is true and what Is truly relevant," Dr. Ransom explained. "W ith the help of machines, we can gather, analyze, and disseminate, Our final resort, however, is still the human mind engaged in judg­ ment.’’ Danger Cited Dr. Ransom acknowledged that "university communities are filii of random and expedient gaps between bodies of knowledge and organized disciplines. Specialize- “ close-minded, tion has the inherent danger of pro­ breeding prietary and expedient special!* zers who are comforted by nar­ row intellectual security," he added. Among overlaps which are closing the disciplinary gaps, he cited combinations between juris­ prudence and the social sciences, physics, the biological •deuces, and programs capable of combining technological pro­ gress with teaching methods. and "The communication gap," Dr. Ransom said, has received even more attention than "the genera­ tion gap and "the knowledge gap." In his remarks on that sub­ ject ha emphasized "a kind of communication which does pot appear in curriculum, budget, or joint committee studies," the stu­ dent’s communication with him­ self. you “ In a world replete with com­ learn, munication, may amidst all modern stuttering and static, the highly educative lesson of talking to yourselves," Dr. Ransom said, “ That one accom­ plishment will dose the fatal gap between aimless self-doubt and true self-realization." Bromberg Honored Winners Saturday Bv NANTY M O RRIS Texan Staff Writer John Howard Burkett, instruc­ tor of philosophy, and Dr. Jos­ eph E. Knippa, assistant profes­ sor of English, Saturday received Bromberg Awards for teaching excellence. The awards were presented dur­ ing the twentieth annual Honors Day Convocation. Dr. Harry H. Ransom, chancellor of the Uni­ versity system, made the main address. "Tile list of past Bromberg A- ward winners is a distinguished one, but in my opinion we have never had more deserving reci­ pients than the present ones," Dr. John R. Silber, dean of the Col­ lege of Arts and Sciences, said. "Professors Burkett and Kruppa exemplify the finest undergradu­ ate teaching at the University. Sunday Afternoon Jam at ni L fa b S a r a c e n v 2:00 P.M. Featuring: CHESSMEN, GEO RGE, FELICITY, FUGITIVES, C O U N T D O W N V, JA C K A L S, LYNX & Many More 1418 L a v a c a 477-032 M U N IC IPA L AUDITORIUM SATURDAY — APRIL 20 — 8:00 P.M. O n e Perform ance O n ly! Burkett, who directs the Junior Fellows program, also serves on a special Arts and Sciences com­ mittee investigating experimental college programs, including resi­ dential colleges. individual Dr. Kruppa, who has worked Junior Fellows with on independent projects, is plan­ ning a new course which he wall teach next fall on relationships between 'Twentieth Century liter­ ature and electronic media. Bromberg Awards are made possible bv a gift from a Dallas fam ily: Alfred L. Bromberg, Miss Mina Bromberg, and Mrs. Maurice Bromberg Joseph, all Texas exes. I lr. William H. GoetamanB, pro­ fess ody, G ry Ch - : be* k ,, Jan Patterson, Mike Pettit, Don Soilheimer, Kiki Sk.mdabs, Jo*' Iacx? Stubble*mid, it herr Thomp­ son, Jam es Turner, and Liz Wool­ dridge. Telephone Connections Restored After Failure Telephones were out of order Thursday from 11:30 a in. to 5 p.m. at the Telephone Counseling and Ref oral Service, Any calls going Into the Center during this time may not have been answered because of the failure of the failure of the phones to ring. Tile Service's telephone number Is G R *1-7073. Perhaps the most beautiful movie in history.’ - Brendan Gill, I he New forker. Exquisite is the only word that surges in my mind as an appropriate description of this exeeplional film, lls color is absolutely gorgeous. The use of music and, equally elo­ quent, of silences and sounds is beyond verbal description* The performers are perfect-lhat is the only word.” -Rosier ( row tiler, New York Times.* May well be the most beautiful movie ever made.-Newsweek. ’Speaks lyrically to the 20th century and beyond.” -] ime Magazine. "Acclaimed by L o o k Magazine" in April 16 issue now at newstand. BRING LYNDON HOME JOIN Y O U N G CITIZENS FOR D IC K SO N Work for Fagan Dickson N o w The Only W a y to Be Effective Week Days Come By Dickson for Congress HQ. 1610 Lavaca or Call G R 6-7759 Nights, Weekends Call for Information H O 5-7077 G L 2-4650 ’A VOTE FOR FAGAN DICKSON IS A MESSAGE TO THE PRESIDENT” Elvira an sometimes truth is more exciting mr ark, Written and directed by Bo Widerberg. With Thommy B e rg e n and ria Winner, Best Actress, 1967 Cannes Festival. A BoWiderberg-Europa Film Lr* luetic a. T E X A S | THE ATRI GR 7-M OPEN 1:45 Feature Times: 2 - 4- 6- 8- IO Recommended for tho M a tu re In Color B U R T L a m [ U T E R " t h e S u u p h u n t e r s SHIREY TEI-: V OSSIE Winters S aunas Davis NMMSINr COLOR fty Wilt* Starts THURS. PARAMOUNT He’s tho only cop who can con the IMbfS out Of $3.000000 v m h e ro in ! t i „ - 1 Bin ll ft t'fe 14 i, SIE- H M R B K AMD U H m w i r a ' i I M l n A i m STARTS T H U R SD A Y a r o ’s o n w c i * i M S T A I £ ll— iii IPnwmI B I ■ mm e— -PREVIEW TONIGHT 8:00 P. M. 7:30 P. M. PARAMOUNT STATE PETER SEILERS . . . IF YOU'VE EVER BEEN TO A WU DER PARTY—YOU RE UNDER ARREST! INTERSTATE HELD OVER! THEATRE r n t i l l I •># • a *** - # is ''r n , * on A tta r y o u 'v . had your w add ing COLUMBIA PtU'JRfu calin— do you na od a lift !, cook- DEAN MARTIN M R P b H I STELLA STEVENS ELI WALLACH ANNE JACKSON mm&Qif* ftfphvn com# ^ i INTERSTATE NOW! STATE aOWNTOWH TI* CONCH** THEATRE i nu hM SH I 34 » PriSUi3 OILIER, D id yo u hear the o n e a b o u t The T rave lin g S a le s la d y ? J A U N I V E R S A L P I C T U R E T E C H N I C O L O R * a z m s B E IN K 8STATE f m w w n I THEATRE *•*" ital -I MHU* l l Iii ll*. 1-4 * - » - ta W 'U C ! (.M in s (ii JBK YW Villi • BJ VT HtTl RE • S.INDY DENNIS- KEIR O U I J A ANNE HEYWOOD.f ** e n linac* curd yid cqav'^, 4%*a£L-* I) IL LWVRl Xt I S 'I* * I KL IA L W i ; ' JONH iA R U H b on t i * CPStitaMISJF - c£ Jtir-JL nmuajZt- III l f) OY I K JRO FKOVOl ATH E WIIK: FREE PARKING INTERSTATE NOW! AUSTIN • *»* so, c o m . a i t s THEATRE 7:30 I ta I 2nd BIG WEEK Acclaimed All Over The World. o— Nominated for BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAP I and IO other Academy Awards REE PARKINCKAT ALL TIMES Sunday, M a r c h 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g . l l Protests, Cuts, Cars Mildly Stir 1918 Class • Blanket Tax Issue catch them! the sounds of fashion E L I I O I* I E X C L U S IV E L Y F O R U N IV E R S IT Y S T U D E N T S A N D F A C U L T Y ALITALIA 707 JET NEW YORK— LONDON, Round Trip JUNE 4 — SEPT. 2 GROUP FARE . . . GUARANTEED s2 I .V ’° Limited Reservations Available LUFTHANSA 707 JET NEW YORK— FRANKFURT, Round Trip JUNE 6 — AUG. 28 GROUP FARE . . . GUARANTEED s t • toonm Limited Reservations Available SPECIAL GROUP FLIGHT NEW YORK— LONDON, Round Trip ♦JULY 18 — SEPTEMBER 4 GROUP FARE BASED ON 50 PERSONS -roo s‘i I . ^July 18 Group Price not Guaranteed, SO Reservations required. C O N N EC T IN G DOM ESTIC FLIGHTS B ra n le Youth G ro u p Braniff G ro u p Flight v a San Antonio, A u itin , D a l l a s ........................... Flig ht $100.00 $126.00 G ro u p of IO, A N Y A G E A d d Domestic Fares to A b o ve G ro u p Flight Fares Example: A litalia, N ew York London, R T ............... Branifl, Dal as-New York, R T .......................... $245.00 $100.00 T O T A L $345.00 Th# above group fares are g uaranteed on Ri julnrly Sch ed uled IA T A A ir ­ lines . . . A ll air arrangem ents with a re I able and fin a n cially re sp o n sive Trave! A g e n c y . . . a m em ber of tho Am ar an S o c ie ty of Travel A gencies and the W o r ld A ssociation of Travel A g en cie s! Summer Jobs in Germany A p p licatio n * still being a c ce p te d . . . Jo b s are G u a ra n te e d . . . lorn* G e rm an required. V W Bul Tour! Small Student Groups $695.00 UP D ire ctad b y European Stud en H and organised b y Tho N eth erland s Student A ssociation. C h a rta r & G ro u p s DG-ctor. G e n e Bates, P .O . Bos 8395 U n ive rsity Station Austin, 78712 M e e tin g s: 4 p.m. W e d n e s d a y r a n s o m r o o m 40 A cre * C lu b Phone! 476 0894 . . . tours . . . travel * 6 8 T R A V E L — < a i j <:.\i m : ss EUROPE ORIENT UNIVERSITY TOURS C e ll or write for ®uf Deluxe St .dent Tour U n iversity Brochure. Easter in Acapulco . . . April 5-12 • Price includes . . . 7 Days • Round Trip, Air . . . Sen Antonlo-Acapulco .. $95.00 • 7 Days Lodging, 3 Meals, Hotel M ia m i................................ $8.80-$ 10.00-$ 12.00 • Transfers ....................................................... J 4 00 DEPOSIT $75.00 TOTAL COST $160.60 (Subject to Room Price) AIRLINE TICKETS AT N O EXTRA COST TO YOU PLUS A 30-DAY C H A R G E PLUS FREE TICKET DELIVERY "A Complete World-Wide Travel Sen Ice" ••••ll to, ' JISTX - B l ANDUHA JOHNSON' Texan Staff Writer There was no parking problem, students didn't cur classes, and no one protests! the war. This was the University 50 years ago, as ret ’ailed this weekend by mem­ bers of the class of 1918. At a reception given for the class Friday by the Senior Cab­ inet, former students talkfxi of the similarities and differences of University life then and now. Political disputes for student government posts were mild com­ pared to contests for other offi­ ces. • Social Rivalry High “ There was tremendous rivalry In the election for president of the Final Ball,” said O. B. Hund­ ley of Houston. This ball, held in June, was the big social event of the year, and much prestige was attached to the o f f i c e o f presi­ dent. “ One year a student g'*f so furious about the ridiculous extent of this rivalry', that when he was elected to the State Legislature after he was graduated, he tried to pass a hill which would abolish the hall,” he added. • National Affairs Overlooked Although students were uncon­ cerned with national affairs, some Interest was shown In State gov­ ernment Hundley, a Gulf Publishing Co. executive, recalled, “ One year there was a saying going around that the junior class had Tip more sense than the State Legislature. Tt only took us a few years to realize we had beets wrong ” Student power was unheard of in the early part of the century. “ We had a different philosophy. We had great respect for our elders and of offices, even if we didn’t resjKvt the jxvip!.' holding them,” said Mrs. Marion Kerns Taylor of Austin. • Engineer First March Once, however, the class of 1918 shocked Austin, and perhaps themselves, when they organized what may have been the first protest march in the history of the University, The governor at that time Was .Tames Ferguson, who was later impeached. The story ’gne of the issues brought up by the Students’ Association in 1918 was the blanket tax. “ If had some oppo­ sition, costing1 $6,” said Virgil Lee, president of the Students’ As­ sociation in 1918. Prohibition was In effect In Aus­ tin in 1918, and when fraternity houses began to realize the diffi­ culty of obtaining liquor, “ home­ brew” was secretly made in house kits hens. Midi-blouses aud bobbed hair were styles of the day, aud Rags­ dale oven came out in a Texan editorial pleading with the wom­ en, “ Please don’t hob your hair.’ On weekends students went to the Hancock Opera House, or the nickel movie shows—“ and that’s all they were worth, too,” Hund­ ley said. • Behavior Better “ We were better behaved com­ pared to today’* students, hut that Impression may he just the glamour of the past. And of course, it was during the time of serious war years,” Ragsdale said. T ile major difference between students in 1918 and 1968? “ Fifty years,” said Lee. Runyon Cancer Fund Renews Research zinging whit# stripes Dr David Bloch, professor of botany, has received a $17,000 renewal grant from the Damon Runyon Cancer Fund to continue his research on the replication of chromosomes, Dr. Bloch said his research hopefully will aid in explaining runaway cellular growth and ab­ normal gene functions Which are related to cancer and malforma­ tions. On a more fundamental level Dr. Bloch said he seeks to un­ derstand the mechanism by which t!se same chromosomes permit a single cell to divide after con­ ception to produce all kinds of different colls such as liver cells, muscle cells, and skin cells. Each of these has its own hered­ ity. Muscle cells produce mus­ cle cells, liver cells produce liver cells, and so on. He pointed out that these dif­ ferent cells have the same type of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), tho substance that controls an organism’s heredity, so the de­ velopment of different cell types cannot be attributed to DNA alone. Other cell substances, such as lipides, proteins, and salts, must work in conjunction with DNA to give rise to the difference, Dr. Bloch said. Using tumor cells grown in mice, Dr. Bloch is attempting to discover whether histones, a type of chromosomal protein, partici­ pate in chromosome replication, and by doing so provide a mech­ anism for cellular heredity. N E W RATES ON THESES & DISSERTATIONS Winking , • . nickle gray — the belted over- b'ouse with pleated s k ir t (rayon 100%), dear, sparking (cotton) dusted buckle — big, wh*e reek scarf with tiny gray doh. 5-11, $44. across navy or black (rayon), deep pockets on full d'rrdl skirt, china white buttons big beautiful collar reminiscent of a giant butterfly 5-13, $70 Group Provides G rant For W om an Graduate 85e Page PLUS 2c PER C O PY A $1,500 fellowship for the 1968- 69 long term is available to a woman graduate student from the Austin Branch of the American Association of University Women. Applications mast be submitted no later than Monday. Candidate's for the award must have been officially admitted to Cal Tech Chemist Lectures Monday Dr. George S. Hammond, chem­ istry professor at California In ­ stitute of Technology, will pre­ sent the 1968 Robert A. Welch Foundation lecture in chemistry Monday at the University. The lecture, “ Chemical and Non-Chomical Decay of Excited States,” is scheduled at 8 p.m. in Chemistry Building la. Prof. Hammond’s research in- tort's ts cover a broad spectrum of theoretical organic chemistry. In 1961, he won the American Chemical Society Award in j»e- troleum chemistry. He is a mein-I her of the National Academy of Sciences and tile American Acad­ emy of Arts and Sciences. the Graduate School and must enroll as a full-time graduate stu­ dent for the 1968-69 long session. To be eligible for consideration, a candidate mast have main­ tained a high scholastic average in college-level work and provide at least two letters of reference from professors. Financial need will be considered. Applications and letters of ref­ erence must he submitted to the D im tor of Student Financial Aids. Applications are available in West M all Office Building 20.1. The winner of the award w ill he announced in May. Includes: T Y P IN G b y axpariencod typists Litho g raph reprod uctio n 1 0 0 % rag bond p ap er typ in g Responsible, reliable work b y an es­ tablished service. C o m p a re our prices with those of the other services. established Austin Then call typing A-PLUS UNIVERSITY SERVICES, INC. 504 W . 24th St. (one block from campus) / - . r i V 7 K T C / - J O j I i d O P K JI U S D A U T IO I t NATI R D A Y CiltoaCuHL B E A U T Y S A L O N OPEN MONDAY N O A P P O IN T M E N T N E C E S S A R Y • 1910 GUADALUPE • 476-3237 O n the D rag near Texas S tate Bank ORDER YOUR RING NOW! M A R K OF T H E W O R L D S F IN E S T S C H O O L R IN G S t h e m o s t respect ed s y mb o l o f y o u r e d u c a t i o n a l a c h i e v e m e n t . . . . tours / . . . travel / GR 8-5601 GR 8-9681 'Ok til orn 2236 Guadalupe GR 6-4542 Forty Acres Club Lobby LAW SCHOOL RING N O W AVAILABLE n t o w n t l l » T r n g • ’J a ll a .n c i a l© c ^ T -jarucock. c e n t e r Page 12 Sunday, March 31, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN