Ranger 8 Takes Sharper Pictures PASADENA, Calif.—(B—Range r 8 sent earth w ard Saturday a sci­ than entific bonanza of m ore 7,500 close-up pictures of the moon. them selves E ven as the spacecraft hurtled tow ard its 1:57 a.m . crash on a dusty lunar plain, scientists ap ­ plied to processing and analyzing the batch of shots —alm ost twice as num erous and perhaps twice as sharp as those retu rn ed by R anger 7 last year. The J e t Propulsion Laboratory, w here R angers a re m ade and guided, was a scene of jubilation when word w as announced that R a n g e r 8’s six cam eras had started clicking 23 minutes before transm itting im pact and w ere perfectly. EX PER TS GAVE these reasons the difference between pic­ for tures from R angers 7 and 8: • Achievement of a low tra ­ jectory th at allowed 23 m inutes of photographing, 13 m ore than originally expected and IO minutes m ore than accom plished by R an­ ger 7. • Two m ore sensitive cam eras and a brighter, apparently “ clean­ e r” landing field than R anger 7 had. • An im pact a re a close to the moon’s shadow line, where moun­ tains, c ra te rs and rocks—caught by a “ setting” sun—threw long, sharply etched shadows before passing under the earth , thus yielding photos with strong contrast. the d ark of in its RANGER 7, final 13 m inutes, took 4,316 pictures n ear M are Nubium l a t e r renam ed the “ Sea T hat M are Cognitum, Has Become Known.” This a re a is som e 1,000 m iles w est of the shadow line. R an g er 7’s pictures w ere 2,(KX) tim es b etter than any­ thing taken with earth telescopes —showing an a re a broken by m any c ra te rs, som e as sm all as 18 Inches in diameter. R anger 8’s 65-hour, 248,900-mile voyage from Cape Kennedy, Fla., to the moon ended a t 1:57 a.m . It crashed into the Sea of T ran ­ quillity, just 15 m iles from the original target, a t 5,942 m iles per hour. As experts w^ere analyzing the R an g er 8 photos at th e Je t P ro ­ pulsion L aboratory in California, full speed plans w ere moving ahead here for three m a j o r launchings in th e next five wreeks which a re to advance the nation n e a re r the objective. They a re R anger 9; the first launching of a dynam ic model of lunar expedition th e Surveyor spacecraft, and the Initial Gem­ ini orbital flight by astronauts Virgil I. Grissom and John W, Young. EVEN BEFORE R anger 8 reached its targ et, the Atlas boost­ e r rocket for R anger 9 was erect­ ed on Cape Kennedy launching pad. favorable period This last of the R anger series Is scheduled to set sail in a seven- day startin g M arch 19. Its lunar photographic targ et has not been selected, but it m ay be aim ed a t a m ountain­ ous region. Tile R anger program will be followed by P ro ject Surveyor, is which to gently set seven spacecraft on the moon to take on-the-surface color photos, dig up and analyze m ineral sam ples and scout possible astronaut land­ ing sites. The first Surveyor m etal dy­ nam ic model, winch sim ulates the weight — 2,200 pounds — and shape of the real thing, Is to be hurled into space on March 2 by an Atlas-Centaur rocket, a m ore powerful vehicle than R anger's Atlas-Agena. The craft is to be in space fired where the moon will be next Oc­ tober when the first operational Surveyor is to be launched. tow ard a spot two-year drought ON MIRCH 22, according to the present schedule, astronauts Grissom and Young a re to end nearly a in American m anned space flights. They a re to circle the globe three tim es to give the two-seat Gemini c r a f t a thorough engineering checkout. If there a re no hitches, the Gemini flight program will a c ­ celerate. with m anned launchings planned every 9-to-10 weeks. The crews alread y have been picked for rides No. 2 and 3, which will be for four and seven days, re ­ spectively. Ten two-man shots a re sched­ uled. The crews will stay up aj long as two weeks, link up with other orbiting satellites and step outside their whizzing space c h a r­ iots. The flights will perfect tech­ niques for Project Apollo moon landings. As the Gemini program pro­ gresses, flight testing of Apollo the hardw are—the capsule and giant Saturn 5 rocket—will begin. Three-m an Apollo team s will be hoisted into earth orbits startin g in 1967 to begin rehearsals w'hich hopefully will clim ax with the blastoff to the grand adventure in 1969. W eather: Colder, W in d y Low 46, H ig h 62 Vol. 64 Price Five Cents G eneral Khanh Fails In Confidence Vote SAIGON. South Viet N am —Cfi— M ilitary leaders who rescued Lf. Gen. Nguyen Khanh from South Viet N am ’s latest coup turned on him Saturday with a vote of no confidence and derided to strip him of power, informed sources reported. Moving into K hanh's spot as the national strong m an ap peared to be Brig. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi, 39. who rose quickly in the arm ed forces after Khanh took power 13 m onths ago. Khanh vanished frrm Saigon and tho sources said he was on long voyage.” E a rlie r Thi “ a said vaguely of Khanh’s w'here- l J Chilean Plans Y (siting Chilean students will continue a questlon-and-answrr conference with Dr. C. P. Blair, professor of resources and Inter­ national business at 9:30 a.m . Monday In the International Cen­ ter. They will discuss L a t i n American economies and busi­ ness. A George Washington's Birth­ day open house will be held for the Chileans Monday, 3-5 p.m., In Canterbury lounge, 209 W. Twenty-seventh Street. The Chileans are scheduled to return late Sunday from Hous­ ton. They will leave Austin Tues­ day morning for San Francisco. — ITM1 mm abouts: “ He Is on an inspection tour in the 2nd Corps a r e a .” KH ANH was la st seen leaving Saigon a t n o o n Saturday and wfas believed then to have been leaving for Cap St. Jacques, the coastal re so rt southeast of here where m ilitary m en hold their councils. The new developm ents did not im m ediate ap p ear to have any effect on the nation's new civil­ ian governm ent, headed by P re ­ installed m ier Phan Huy Quat, Tuesday. T hi's m ilitary group expressed confidence in him. The inform ants said 15 young generals m et with Quat Satur­ day afternoon a t Bien Hoa Air Base, 12 m iles north of Saigon, and turned thum bs down there on Khanh. T n i, form erly com m ander of the 4th Corps in upper South Viet N am , becam e com m ander of the arm ed forces in Saigon. He gave 15 leaders of F rid a y ’s coup, 24 hours to su rre n d e r or face m ili­ ta ry include Lam Van P h a t and Col. P h am Ngoc to the Thao, form erly assigned in South V ietnam ese E m bassy W ashington. trials. They into hiding and Thi said the coup leaders had gone th at a search for them had been s ta rt­ ed. Inform ants said the rush of the Thi group to save Khanh was not so m uch to keep Khanh in power but to prevent the Thao group from taking over. V e nezuelan Police Kill US P e a c e Corpsman CARACAS, Venezuela — IB — A US P eace Corps m em ber was shot to death and a com rade seriously wounded by police who t h e m for Comm unist m istook te rro rists F rid a y night. Shot through the h eart when he stepped from his Jeep with his hands up w as Joseph R. Rupley, 24, Orinda, Calif., the driv er who w as on the P eace Corps staff in Venezuela. P eace Corps volunteer David lie, Mich., Glover, 25, Grosse also stopped from the auto with his hands raised and was shot in the stom ach. He underw ent s u r­ gery in a C aracas hospital and his condition was reported sa tis­ factory. their TWO OTHER P eace Corps vol­ u nteers in the back se a t of the identi­ vehicle established ties and police took the victim s to a hospital. Tile other two w ere Ronald B e a n , F airfield, Maine, and Donald Carluccio, Hoboken, N .J. Students had been rioting in connection with a taxi strik e th at the governm ent says is Com m u­ nist insDired. Police in a patrol c a r. who said they assum ed the J e e p was carry in g terro rists, pursued and shot out the re a r tires. Then R u­ pley and G lover w ere shot as they stepped from the vehicle. POLICE SAID the incident oc- cured in a location that had been under a tta c k e a rlie r in the eve­ ning by teiTorists firing m achine guns from an automobile. “ It was senseless/* said Ru- pley’s father, Joseph W. Rupley, in Orinda. “ When they got out of the Jeep they had their hands u p ” Rupley joined the P eace Corps In 1962 a fte r graduation from the U niversity of California a t Berke­ ley. He served twro y ears in P eru before going to Venezuela last Septem ber. As assistant director in charge of establishing farm co­ operatives, ho had been working recently n ear M ereida in w est­ ern Venezuela. Tunnel Prowler Prompts Study Security m easures on under­ cam pus tunnels a re being re-ex­ am ined as a resu lt of the appre­ hension F rid ay of a 20-year-old non-student. The student for two years r e ­ portedly m ade a p ractice of ex­ ploring the tunnels which connect steam pipes the central from plant with m ost buildings on cam ­ pus. He was picked up and question­ ed about an above-ground prowl­ ing case and mentioned the ease w ith which one could get inside locked buildings on the cam pus at night. The tunnel exploring began about three years ago when the Austin youth learned of a ground level entry to the tunnel system through a ventilation shaft. He found it easy to pry open locks and en ter tunnels not actively used. The locks have now been re ­ placed. Among the buildings the youth was able to enter from the tun­ nels was the highly restricted De­ fense R esearch Laboratory. Police do not associate the tun­ nel prow ler with a series of b u rg ­ laries from University buildings. AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2 Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas T h e Da il y T e x a n u /© I Fixes Rule; Sectarians Back Page 2: Challenge: Poverty W a r s Today 1965 I * Cb © A* A) j o * & a. ft & No. 120 By NANCY KOY\ E R I Texan Staff Writer Religious and sectarian organi­ zations will be allowed to m eet regularly the Texas Union, the Union Board of D irectors decided F rid ay . in The Board modified a section in the Union Rules and R egula­ tions which prohibited such m eet­ ings. According to the old rule, “ No religious or sectarian organiza­ tion groups m ay hold perm anent m eetings or h a v e perm anent h ead q u arters in the Union Build­ ing.” THE NEW RULE, a shortened version of the form er regulation, reads, “ No religious or sectarian organization m ay have p erm a­ nent headquarters in the Union Building.” The rule w as brought to the attention of the Board in Novem­ ber when Ja c k Steele, director of the Union, disclosed the Campus Crusade for Christ was holding weekly m eetings in the building. that At that tim e, the Board took asvay perm ission for the organi­ zation to m eet and appointed a com m ittee to consult the U niver­ sity Adm inistration and consider the problem. A RECOMMENDATION from the Administration th at the re ­ ligious groups be able to m eet in relayed by the building was Sharon Rountree, a m em ber of the B oard’s Religious O rganiza­ tions Committee. The recom m endation c a m e from Chancellor H arry Ransom , Vice Chancellor Norm an H acker- m an, and University Attorney Burnell Waldrep. The Board bogged down on the question of whether to delete the old rule and add a new one or to modify the existing regulation. GREG LIPSCOMB, Students’ Association president and one of the eight students on the 15- m em ber Board, moved to discard the old rule. “ I think we first ought to get rid of the old ruling and then decide how we want to handle the allowing of religious groups to m eet in the Union,” Lipscomb said. “ Our deleting Rule Five (the religious group regulation) does not delete our responsibility to fulfill the sta te 's responsibility,” Jim F letcher, president of the Board, said. FLETCHER refered to the con­ stitutionality of allowing a re ­ ligious organization to m eet on state-owmed property. “Actually, no religious group ought to m eet over h e re ,” F let­ cher said. “ My understanding was because they were students and paid Union fees, they could set up a room .’’ Jack Holland, dean of students, told the Board it wTas the Admin­ istration's interpretation that stu ­ dent religious groups would be able to m eet on state property. THE BOARD decided against a suggestion by Holland th at one room be set aside exclusively for use of ail religious or sec- tarian groups. Based on information from the attorney is per­ (W aldrep), m issible to set aside a place for a it rell- student group and for all but gious or sectarian groups not to the exclusive use of one p articu lar partisan group, Hol­ land explained. New Committee Objects to NSA The newly formed Com m ittee on Responsible Student G overn­ m ent will oppose the University rejoining the National Student Association. to The com m ittee’s chairm an, L arry Am erine, said Saturday the group objected to NSA be­ the benefits offered by cause NSA the U niversity student available, body w ere without the cost involved by join­ they claim ed ing KSA, which would benefit only the student politicians who attended the NSA congresses. already Other objections raised were th a t NSA took stands on national political issues and tried to speak for the entire student com m unity, and the m ain reform —de­ em phasizing political issues—had not been accomplished. that Amerine said the group would not object to University m em ­ bership in the Association of Stu­ dent Governm ents, a non-political student organization representing 62 schools and formed in 1964. I-’ o u r new m em bers of the steel mg J e rry Chiles. Biff Egan, David Pom ­ eroy, and Bill Moll. com m ittee a re Pickets Protest Extending W a r , . . S D S marches in defiance of Viet N am attacks. —-Tf xan Photo by Law S D S Peace March Picketed by Y A F 's China as interested parties, with the objective of placing Viet Nam and the re st of Southeast Asia eventually outside of direct power the US, m anipulations between than USSR, and China, ra th e r a t the center of th em .” The reaction of citizens down­ town during the picketing, was varied, some taking the leaflets and reading them and others re ­ fusing to accept them . Students for a D em ocratic So­ ciety picketed on Congress Ave­ nue n ear the Capitol Saturday ag ain st the w ar in Viet Nam and Young A m ericans for Freedom picketed against the SDS group. The SDS picket was p a rt of a coordinated national d em onstra­ tion, G ary Thiher, chairm an of the U niversity group, said, “ We in Viet a re protesting N am and th at the United States is fighting against the popular will of the people.” the w ar D em onstrations w ere held at about 20 cities around the coun­ try , including New York City, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, and a t the U niversity of Califor­ nia at Berkeley. ABOLT 50 PERSONS carried signs in the SDS dem onstration, som e of which read , “ We join U Thant, Pope Paul, S e n a t o r s M orse, Gruening, and Gore. in asking for negotiations,” “ The Congress Shall Have the Pow er . . . To D eclare W ar . . US Con­ stitution, Article I, Section I ,” and “ In N ovem ber w e called G oldw ater’s Policy in Viet N am T rigger H appy.” Picketing with th e SDS was Roger Shattuck, pro­ fessor of Rom ance languages. joined About 20 person the YAF pickets, carry in g signs that called for staying in the w ar in Viet Nam . Don King, m em ber of this group, said, “ They are pre­ senting the leftwing side of the problem . We w anted to show the o ther side of the sto ry .” THE YAF’S carried signs re a d ­ ing, “ B rinkm anship is B etter than Chickenship,” “ W ithdraw Hell, A ttack!” a n d Students picketing for cease fire in Viet Nam handed out about 2,000 leaflets entitled, “The U ndeclared W ar in Viet N am .” In one p aragraph, their policy statem en t read, “ In view of the lack of public consent for the w ar by the people here and m ass op­ position to our place in the w ar by people there should tie an im m ediate cease­ fire and negotiations should be begun. in Viet Nam, “THESE negotiations should include North Viet Nam and Czech Archbishop's Return Lends Drama to Consistory VATICAN CITY—CT)—An em o­ tional m eeting of Pope Paul VI and once-imprisoned Czech A rch­ last- bishop m inute d ra m a Saturday to prepa­ rations for M onday’s consistory elevating 27 p relates to the Col­ lege of Cardinals. Josef B eran lent The new cardinals will bring the College of C ardinals to a re c ­ ord m em bership of 103. less The 77-year-old archbishop of P rag u e, one of those nam ed c a r ­ dinal by the pontiff, went to the p a p a l a p a rtm e n t than 24 hours a fte r arriving from Com­ m unist Czechoslovakia, free for the first tim e in 16 years. At the doorway of the papal p riv ate library the short, round- faced Czech prelate fell to his knees and kissed the' white-robed pontiff’s ring. Pope Paul reached out and helped him to his feet, em bracing him w arm ly. Then they went inside and talked for 30 m inutes. F o r 16 y ears the archbishop h a s been confined o r kept from full church duties by his coun­ tr y ’s regim e. The Vatican was not certain until October, 1963, w hether he w as alive or dead. His unexpected dep artu re from Czechoslovakia F rid ay , coupled with a church-state agreem ent between the Vatican and P rag u e included an apostolic adm inistra­ take his p l a c e , over­ to r shadow ed other aspects of prep­ arations in this bustling city as consistory eve approached. to Vatican sources said the Pope personally is taking c a re of get­ ting Archbishop B eran outfitted w ith the scarlet garm ents he will need as cardinal. The last tim e the two m et, in 1948, the Czech was a bishop of two years and the Pope a mon­ signor assigned a t the Vatican. Challenge Attendance Doubles 1 9 6 4 Total Attendance at the Challenge Colloquium increased m ore than 50 per cent over last y e a r’s session. Approxim ately 425 delegates registered for the two-day m eeting. Last y e a r’s total was a p ­ proxim ately 265. Ninety delegates from out of town attended Challenge this year, com pared with 45 last year. Schools represented included Southwestern U niversity. Austin College, P ra irie View A&M, Southern Methodist University, Rice University, Texas A&M, Texas Christian U niversity, Sui Ross, Texas W oman’s University, Arlington State U niversity and Sam Houston S tate U niversity. Others were E ast Texas State, L am ar Tech and Our Lady of the Lake College. Speakers for the week-end program were Sen. Albert Gore, Sen. John Tower, William Stringfellow and Otis Singletary. The program included speeches, inform al discussion groups and a panel. (For Challenge round-up, see Page 2.) NSA Petitions Presate Cushing To End Monday Improving Fast BOSTON - lf! - R ichard C ard­ inal Cushing, 69, spiritual lead­ er of som e 1.7 million Roman Catholics in the Boston archdio­ cese, w as pronounced in good con­ dition follow'ing m ajor surgery Saturday. Right Rev. Francis J . Sexton, the archdiocese, chancellor of said the cardinal was operated on for rem oval of a portion of the intestine. The cardinal was taken to the recovery room be­ fore being returned to his fifth floor room in St. E lizabeth’s hos­ pital. Monsignor Sexton told newsmen the operation went “ norm ally, smoothly, there were no diffi­ culties or com plications.” A table will be set up all day the Main Mall for Monday on persons w ishing to sign the peti­ tion requesting the Student As­ sem bly to order a referendum to consider reaffiliation w i t h the National Students’ Association. This is the last day the table will be set up on cam pus. to them All persons having petitions are requested in by turn Monday afternoon to m em bers of the Com m ittee for a Voice in Na­ tional Students’ Affairs, or at 2508 Seton. Signing About 800 signatures have been collected, Don Richard Smith, m em ber of the com m ittee, said. the petition does not com m it tho person for or against the person the NSA, but says thinks th ere should be a referen­ dum to consider the m atter. George Is a Turncoat It is hard complexion Ten years on the University cam pus have changed George W ashington’s from shiny bronze to dull green. to say when the nine-foot statu e lost its original bronze cast, because the patina film has been gathering g rad u al­ ly ever since the statu e w as ex­ posed to the m oisture in the air. When the world-famous sculp­ tor, Pompon Coppitt!, created the Washington likeness for the Uni- in 1955, m a ry students \e rs ity that w ere surprised learn to statues a re not green when they a re erected. Another surp rise at the sta tu e ’s unveiling was that the F a th e r of Our Country had been destined the re st of his to they days. Students com plained n ev er got to see W ashington’s front side. face South the statue “ I’ve been is told quite im pressive from the front. the And certainly cape is well done. But that s all I get to se e ,” Shirley Strum , tile back of form er Texan editor, wrote. lives She pointed out that “ for some- I the Kappa \ in the I in one who house and has classes Main Building, the statu e is wrell placed,” but she believed for the average student a billboard of a cape would do just as well. Despite editorial protests that the first President had turned his back on the people, George W ashington has rem ained firm ly planted in his southw ard stance. H ie only thing that changes is his color. —Photo by Ort About-Face • • . G e o r g e built backwards. + *zn&mLi a .;;. Gore Expresses Need For Better Program By GLORIA BROWN Texan Staff Writer Sen. Albert Gore (D., Tenn.) is not happy so far with the results of the anti-poverty program , but it a chance. is willing to give “ President Johnson approached the problem practically in decid­ ing to undertake a regional pro­ g ra m ," he told students Saturday m orning at the University Chal­ lenge Colloquium. “ But poverty is personal, social, and som etim es racial as well as regional." HE H O P E S A THOROUGH study of poverty will yield a new approach. The Senator suggested that a m ajor im provem ent might bf' the developm ent of access roads. “ I t’s true the roads would serve the people who live there, but they would provide m eans for our urban population the beauty of ru ral a reas which are now alm ost inaccessible.'' to enjoy HE CITED THE DECLINE of ru ra l a re a s and the shift of the Am erican population from agr i- cultural areas to industrial ones. “ About 2 million fewer persons a re employed in mining, today m anufacturing, agriculture, tra n s­ portation, and utilities—five of the m ajo r segm ents of our economy tl\e —than w ere employed sam e a reas five years ago,” he pointed out. in “ We have greater volume and variety in all five segm ents.” He defined the problem w hich increased autom a­ results from tion. "TH E AGE FACTOR IN em ­ the great is om* of ployment stum bling blocks to the success of a retraining program . Take a coal m iner in his 40's or 5Q's, out of work. No m atter how you train him. he’s faced with m any difficulties before he can find a new job." Agility of hand and mind, the Dem ocrat said, is associated with youth. “ I am most concerned about the young who can be trained easily in a rapidly changing, in­ dustrial nation," he said. This m eans a g reater em phasis services, education and upon Gore continued. In a q u e s t i o n and answ er period following his talk, the Sen­ ator defined “ services” as laun­ dries, hotels, resorts, health cen­ ters, and cultural institutions. Til esc are the source of clues to elim inating poverty, he bo- is where we can lieves. “ This look for increased em ployment in the future," he said. Senator Gore, who sponsored the m edicare bill of 1964, believes the Appalachian Bill is promising. “The bill was successful in the Senate, and I hope1 it will pass the House im m ediately," he said. “OUR TIME IS characterized by rapidity of change," Gore said. “ We cannot let a pressing p r o b l e m go while deciding w hether or not to have a federal system . We should sta rt with the system we have to meet the prob­ lem ." He said this is an unrealistic approach to the problem , and that A m erica should consider the pro­ posal of dispersing and relocating its vast population to elim inate m inority ghettos. think Tower does not that people should be moved, and Gore said the choice of locality left and em ploym ent should be to the individual. The society can provide a choice, he said, but m ovem ent for individuals Is diffi­ cult. STRINGFELLOW Interrupted, “ I ’ve lived there in H arlem for eight years, and I ve yet to m eet anyone who lives there by choice except m yself." He attributed the N egroes’ and Puerto R icans’ re ­ luctance to move to possible fear of rejection by others. Gore said the middle class in Am erica should be m ade as large as possible. Tower rem inded the group that A m erica is not a so­ ciety of the extrem ely rich and th** extrem ely poor. “ The present w ar on poverty is a se ' to the prosperous—railing attention to soothe to the poor tile conscience of the rest of so- countered. < iety,” Stringfeilow NATI RALLY, there will be some distinction in class even in Soviet R ussia," Tower said, “ but Am erican class is based on the individual’s economy, w hereas the Russian class is based on the in­ tellect of the individual." Gore replied, “ It seem s to m e we've gone to seed on the idea of m aterialism " as a criteria of value. Stimulation for the poverty pro­ gram , the Tennessee senator said, should be a stress on education, training, health care, recreation, highways urban redevelopm ent, and full employment. TOWER SMH some Im pover­ ished people have am bition, but not all, and th at while some c a n 't help them selves, some won’t help them selves. He said only a few states cannot afford to rem edy the problem. Am erica can survive as a n a­ tion w'hile excluding a sm all group of people such as the Am erican Indian, Stringfeilow said, but we a re trying to exclude 22 million citizens—the Negroes. We c a n ’t survive as a nation while doing this, he concluded. rn » Business Gives Impetus To Fight on Poverty Sen. John Tower By SAM SKACH T exan S taff Writer The United States has m ade large galas against poverty in recent years a s a result of p ri­ vate enterprise, not because the federal governm ent issued a “ de- cree against it," Republican Sen. John G. Tower said Saturday. Speaking during the Challenge Colloquium. Sen. Tower said to­ d a y s poverty plans are “ not new and a re in some cases not re a ­ listic." W £ SHOULD NOT ( REATE a new tax-consum ing bureaucracy, the Senator said. He explained he felt only private concerns, not the federal governm ent, could c re a te jobs. in The Senator said he wanted to m ake it clear th at although he w as not favor of poverty, “ any hum an system th at allows to clim b to the top som e mon will necessarily require som e to be a t the bottom ." Attacking the 1964 Economic Opportunity Act, the Senator de­ clared. “ We have witnessed the creation of a poverty Czar for what a re som etim es political re a ­ sons.” THE POVERTY “CZAR." Tow­ is Sargent e r explained later, Shriver. Shriver is the Adminis­ tratio n 's head of the w ar on pov­ e rty program . In connection with the political aspects of the program , the Sen­ a to r said that he had introduced an am endm ent the program from boing used in a r ­ eas such as voter registration. to prevent “ Poverty is hard to define. The Council of Econom ic Advisers has defined it as fam ilies with incom e of under $3,000," Tower said. “ Figures show that m any of their own hom e, cars, televisions, and oth­ e r item s." these people own ONE OF THE MAJOR a reas of atta c k by the Senator wfas the Job Corps. He said that some of the legal aspects of the program will actually harm young people. the children, he said, I t tr e a 's as “ w ards of the federal govern­ m e n t." ra n J o i n Young people the from Corps without perm ission their fam ilies and pay is m ade directly to them , Tower said. “ I need not point ou t." the Senator said, “ which world ide­ ology em braces these ideas." Tow'er called on all A m ericans to Insist th at Congress keep con­ trol over such a system as the w ar on poverty and not delegate faceless bureauc­ power ra c y ." to “ a Sen. Albert Gore aji'er the speech was a e r . Speakers Argue Differing Views on Panel Challenge highlighted its topic “ Poverty in the Midst of P lenty" with a panel discussion Saturday afternoon. M oderated by B ernard C. K is­ sel, assistant professor of speech, the panel included Senators Al­ bert Gore and John Tower (R-Texas) and Wil­ liam Stringfeilow, New York City law yer who has lived in H arlem . (D-Tennessee) KISSEL OPENED the discus sion by asking w hat has caused the sudden governm ental interest in poverty'. Tower said the interest is not sudden, but just that the new slogan, “ w ar on pov­ e rty .” there is Gore agreed interest is not new', but said the newness is the “ fix­ ing of higher goals and broader pro g ram s." Instead of being con­ cerned with individual problem s of poverty, he en id, the new goal is to learn the overall condition of poverty and m eans for its elim ­ ination. TOWER SAID this goal should be approached on the local level, and the f e d e r a l governm ent should not assum e all responsi­ bility. this Stringfeilow said is not looking realistically at a program which cannot fulfill the need on a local level. “We a re spending a nickel where five dollars is needed,” the H arlem law yer said. In Am erica, he continued, is a m ass urban society, and a m erging “ city-state” which m ake old boun- dries of local and federal gov­ ernm ent obsolete. there (ob Corps Hedcl Calls Education Best W eapon Against Poverty JE J Action Program next sum m er, he said. The Job Corps program “ is re s­ idential and integrated," Single­ tary said. The governor in any sta te m ay veto a proposal for a training site there. He sa iii m i­ nority groups would be assigned to an a re a only if discrim ination w ere absent in spirit as well as law, and that for this reason few centers have been planned thus far in the South. .van Ph bv :.«.v Sen. John Tow er to 1 thank the Arrangem ents Commit e f r Shat tuck, String fella))' Sermonize On Poverty in the M idst of Plenty BJ CAROLYN J K V M VS T ex a n s t a ff W riter There w ere no hym ns rung. no pray ers chanted, and no service read. But there w ere serm ons— serm ons of a sort not generally heard by students on or off this U niversity cam pus The teachers—not p reachers— w ere R oger Shattuck and Wil­ liam Stringfeilow. The pulpy was provided by Challenge, and the congregation composed of visit­ ing delegates from Texas colleg­ es and universities to the fourth annual colloquium, and students interested from in the subject. “ Poverty in the Midst of Plenty.** this U niversity SHATTUCK * TEXT w as the “ second hand of the flipside of the gospel1' according to a group of folk prophets known as P eter, Paul, and M a ry ; Stringfeilow’a, basically time-honored but a p p arently unheeded gospel a c ­ cording to S t Paul. the “ If religion w ere a thing that m oney could buy, the rich would live, the poor would die.” These a re the words of the folk song chosen by Shattuck to illustrate the mythology of a world divided into two parts—the rich and the poor—one w ith spiritual values, the other with m aterial values. and never the twain .shall m eet. “ it is a mythology that distorts equally,” Shattuck said. It is a m yth that say s “ the poor shall never d e p a rt la n d ,” and that “ our econom y is free, so free them is equal opportu­ nity for all.** In actuality, he continued, “ our society provides from this suitable re ­ incentive and ward to the deserving individual, or one who has ’m ade it’ in the business world.' just STRINGFELLOW S TVI.K cen­ tered on a like delusion—that there is poverty in this country the poor really haven’t tried. The poor a re characterized by a lack of diligence, initiative, and en te r­ prise sn this society, and “ this is regarded as a sin or m oral deca­ dence." While those who own, m anage, or control property, re­ gardless of how they attained their “ success," a re justified as m orally virtuous. Both Shattuck. U niversity pro­ fessor of Rom ance Languages, and Stringfeilow, New York law ­ theo­ yer and Episcopalian logian, point toward society as being responsible for the poor. lay “ When will the day come that we look at a society that pro­ duces 20 per cent in poverty and sop a society which m ay not be rig h t? " Shattuck asked. Stringfeilow called the ideology burdening th** w hop of A m erican history the conflict over what should be the basis of our so­ ciety, property rights or hum an rights. “ THE MEW OF PROPERTY rights cannot be rationalized in C hristian te rm s," he sa id , callin g this view a n “ unbiblical doctrine of justification by works the m ost un p ro te sta n t doctrin e of a ll.” instead Stringfeilow advocates the “Christian attitude the to fKior, which is the sam e in 1965 as in Biblical tim es”—“ Scil what you have and give to the poor and com e and follow M e." The laym an's views on helping the poor a re exem plified by his work in H arlem , where he chose to live for seven years, giving legal to under­ privileged Negroes. representation “THE HEALTH OF THE le g a l system depends on w hether those on the extrem ities of society are Is one of represented. H arlem these places.” the young H ar­ vard-educated law yer said. His observations of poverty in H arlem a re recorded in his book, “ My People Is the E nem y.” Stringfeilow blam es politicians, including Nelson Rockefeller and M ayor R obert W agner, and “ too for past m any trouble lack of in H arlem and advancem ent in the current New York social project. ‘Uncle T om s’ " “ We live in a sen iety w here it is technically possible to abolish poverty," lawyer-author-lec- tu re r said. the the poor but “ WHAT IS REALLY WRONG In this nation is not the indolence of the apathy of the prosperous. This is the real issue of m o r a l decadence in Am erican society, and it’s an is­ sue that hasn’t even ’ cen m en­ tioned in the W ar on P overty." .Shattuck, offering his partial solution suggested to poverty, the possibility of a national se rv ­ ice for young people. “ This would either replace the d raft or allow young men to substitute a year of construction for two of destru c­ tion." Bv JEAN UTSINGER Texan Staff l l riter U niversal education has been the greatest single weapon since th e w ar on poverty began, the di­ re* tor of the Office of Econom ic O pportunity's Job Corps said in ta lk at the C h a lle n g e Collo­ h is quium F riday night. Otis Singletary, form er U niver­ sity faculty m em ber, described existing poverty problem s, and gave specific inform ation about t h e Office of Econom ic Opportun­ ity and the Job Corps. •’POVERTY IN AMERICA,” he said, “ is pervasive, but highly concentrated am ong persons of certain basic c h aracteristics in­ cluding lack of education and ra c e ." Various agencies have been fighting poverty for som e tim e, but under the Econom ic Oppor­ tunity Act of 1964, the need and m eans for a diverse and com pre­ hensive attack on the problem has been recognized, he said. M any A m ericans a re unaw are of existing situations of poverty, and for good reason, Singletary said. Society has an all-tim e high incom e the average child knows he can go through high school and college in m ost cases — and can expect at least these advantages for his children. level, and I NDER THE DIRECTION of Sargent Shriver, he said, the GEO has delegated certain services to existing agencies such as the De­ pa rtm e n t of Labor. It has also created new' agencies for new services, including the Commun­ ity’ Action P rogram , Volunteers In Service to Am erica ftho “ do­ m estic peace corps” ), and the Job Corps. Singletary said the specific pur­ poses of the la tte r a g e n c y is to prep are youths 16-21 y ears of ag e who a re unemployed, and often unem ployable, school drop­ outs for responsible jobs and roles as citizens. The program will concentrate on basic education first and then vocational training, he said. “ I t’s foolish improving som ebody's employability when h e ’s functionally illiterate.” to talk about JOB CORPS FACILITIES will include conservation cam p cen­ ters, w here young men will work on public lands while in training; m e n ’s vocational skill centers, such as Camp G ary in San M ar­ cos; and w om en's vocational and dom estic skill centers. R esearch and evaluation will also be c a r ­ ried out under the program . is going “ This a g e group.” Singletary tim e when said, “ rep resents a som ething ra n be done . . . If this to be successful, w’e ’re going to have to cap tu re the im agination and the support of the A m erican people on a broad base." the corps program DI RING A QI ESTRIN period following his talk, the Job Corps head said no provisions now exist within for training of people under 16, a l­ though m any school drop-outs oc­ c u r before that age. “ Operation H e a d sta ll,” an experim ental p ro j­ e c t for preschool children, will be conducted under the Comm unity !Firesides' Offer P erh ap s the m ost vital con­ frontation and com m unication of Challenge occurred within the “ firesides" a t the end of collo­ quium activities on F riday and Saturday. Within the casual atm osphere of the T exas U n i o n F aculty Lounge, Challenge delegates en­ gaged in dialogue with the collo­ quium speakers, frequently a rg u ­ ing their owti cases as well a s directing questions to the nation­ ally prom inent guests. Ill RING THIS DIALOGl E the speakers frequently revealed fac­ their personalities and ets of their convictions not depths of the lec- easily discernible from tu m the Main Ballroom be­ fore 600-800 persons. in F riday night Otis Singletary, William Stringfeilow, R o g e r Shattuck, and VISTA re p resen ta­ tive Nancy Sinkin talked with clusters of students W'ho wanted to probe inter­ ests m ore deeply. their p articular C learly the dom inant focus w as on Stringfeilow. About a hundred colloquium participants engaged with him in conversation dealing with poverty, economy, educa­ tion, and theology. including his views on public ed­ ucation. in 1930, and THE HARLEM LAWYER said he had spent several hours F ri­ day on “ a cursory visit of the m iserable slum s of Austin. I was here the s l u m s haven’t changed a dam ned bit.’’ He also spoke of the involve­ lives of deprived m ent persons that he cam e to realize through a college scholarship he was aw arded. the in that thing “ This I won . . . was not so good for “ x " num ber of other guys who w ere in Tem­ that pe* ition witli m c . . . and the corporation which provided scholarship gets its rn u < h of from plantation profit m argin holdings in Latin A m erica w here feudalism still exists. So my life is therefore tangled up with all those m iserable people ” ON SA H BDAY he was again surrounded by students, but the other fireside guest, Sen. John Tower, drew an even larg er au­ dience. Tile Texas senator discussed his conservative philosophy and touched on various other topic's. “ I don't think social problem s a re m ore than pre­ im portant serving the clim ate of individual freedom ," he said. And “ free­ dom of the individual from gov­ e rn m en t" m ight be from oppres­ sion under state and local, as well as federal governm ent, he said. TOW ER AD YOC ATED a changa in the academ ic requirem ents for school as “ l e s s pedagogy and m ethods training, and m ore in subject m a tte r fields." teachers, described In the other discussion group, Stringfeilow said that integration a t the U niversity is only token, not because of a lack of quali­ fied Negro high school gradu­ ates, hut because the cost of the higher education realm of m any Negro fam ilies’ incomes. is beyond Asked about his concept of jus­ tification, the H arlem law yer re ­ plied, “Mum you be a C hristian to be I doubt that. It is not the C hristian faith which justifies us. It is God." justified? W ei’, T h e D a il y T e x a n of Texas The Daily Texan, a student new spaper at The D river- la pub! shed daily except Monday and S atur­ ■ day and holiday period*. Septem ber through May and M onthly In A ugust by Texas S tudent Publications. Inc., D raw er D U niversity Station. Austin. Texas TST 12 Second­ class postage paid a t Austin, Texas News contributions will be accepted by telephone (Oft 1*5244) or at th e editorial office. J.B . 103 or at th e nev-s laboratory, J.B . 102. Inquiries concerning delis cry should be made in J B 107 and a d .ertistng. J.B 111 (GR 1-3227.) a s s o c ia t e d press w ire service The A o- a b d P ress Is e x c l u s iv e ly e n titled to the t;>« for rep u b lica tion of all new.-- disp atch er cred ited t o t or ro t oth e rw ise cred ited in this n ew spa p er and local item s o f s p o n t a n e o u s origin p u b li sh ed h erein Right* of pub li­ ra* .on of all other m atter herein also reserved. O n e S e m e s t e r ( f ai l u t spring) Two Semester* ( f ai l a n d s p r i n g ) D e l i v e r e d by f a r r i e r ( w i t h i n A u s t i n a r e a frt.m l ith t o 3 8 l h a n d Jefb*r*0 I 75 '750 Sd.75 J* OO 6.75 The opinions expressed the editorial eolumn are in those of the editor. Ail editorials unless signed are w rit­ ten bv th e editor Any opinions expressed G uest editorial views are not neeessarilv the e d ito rs 'n The Daily T exan are not pe. es "ari)v those of The University of Texas ad m in istra­ tion or Board of Regents. EDITOR ............................. C H A R M A Y N E M A R S H M A N A G I N G E D I T O R J A M E S V O W ELL DOTTIE LILLARD NEW S E D IT O R EDITORIAL PAGE E D IT O R ...............JERRY GREER AM USEM ENTS EDITOR ..................JIM SEYMOUR SPORTS E D IT O R ....................... MERVIN BENSON INTERPRETIVES E D IT O R .......... KAYE NORTHCOTT PAUL BURKA CHIEF OF THE CAPITOL S T A F F FEATURE E D IT O R .........................JUDY BURTON STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Lsue Ne ws E d i t o r .......... Gloria Browd M ake-Up Ed or ......................... Carolyn N h ; Amusements E d it o r John Seawall S p o rts Ed.tor ...............................M e n ,in B r i Assistant Sports h o ,to r ................. Will O Mara C o p y E d i t o r s .............A n n ie Brown, Benni# Buford C o p y r e a d e r ................... ............Biff Va" liver R e p o rte r................................................... I ; rn Rc bb s Sunday, February 21, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 A fter Latest Coup Vietnamese Students Agree CommunismStill MainThreat By CAROLYN BARKLEY Texan Feature Staff Three South Vietnamese Univer­ sity students are indifferent about the coups in South Viet Nam be­ cause “ we are more roneerned about fighting the Communists.” Lam Van Loi, graduate civil en­ gineering student, said, “ Thurs­ day’s coup was not surprising be­ cause one more coup doesn't mat­ ter since there have been so many.” plained. “ The religious feud between the Catholics and Buddhists developed under the Diem regime,” he said. “ The Buddhists and Catholics are fighting because they want their religion developed as much as pos­ sible.” Although the three South Viet­ namese exchange students have been absent from their country for one and one-half years, they have opinions on the Viet Nam war. though T H E L E A D E R S in Thursday’s coup were in the former coup, and even they were closely g u a r d e d , they overthrew the Khanh government. Nguyen Van Hue. a graduate civil engineering student, said. Eight coups have occurred in the last 16 months because the Buddhists and Catholics “ want to teach their beliefs and operate the government their way,” Hue ex­ “ THE RETALIATORY strikes on North Viet Nam are natural acts of war by the Americans and South Vietnamese,” Hue said. “ It ’s an ‘eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth’ situation.” “ The Viet Cong are directed from Hanoi,” Tran Quang Thief, senior engineering student, said. “ I don’t know why the United States and the South Vietnamese did not attack before now.” intervention I The three agreed that “ Ameri­ can is right because the United States is trying to help South Viet Nam de­ fend its freedom.” the war in “ T H E AMERIC ANS did right by j into Viet Nam after the going French left in 1954,” Lol said. The student believe the United States will not “ bark out” of the war in South Viet Nam. “ The phi­ losophy of the American govern­ ment is to help people to defend their freedom,” Thief said. “ The cause is not only for the Vietnam­ ese, but for the whole world.” They also agreed that the Viet-1 namese fear the threat of commu­ nism because “ we have been dom­ inated several times in the past by foreign powers. But, our his­ tory has shown that the Vietnam­ ese people have always succeeded in liberating their country and pro- I tenting their freedom.” Two Receive Awards Dr. Thomas Whitbread, assistant professor of English, and Kim Tay­ lor, assistant professor of a rt were presented awards Saturday by the Texas Institute of Letters. The dinner address at the awards banquet was made by Chancellor Harry' Ransom. D R . W H ITBR EA D was awarded the institute’s $100 poetry award for his book, “ Four Infinitives.” Tay­ for the second consecutive lor, year, won the $50 award for best for book design. His d e s i g n “ Dream tigers.” by Jorge Luis Borges won the Dallas Museum of F in e Arts Award. The afternoon session of rho in­ stitute’s annual meeting was dedi­ cated to the late J . Frank Dobie, former president of the Institute and University professor. AUSTIN AQUARIUMS ^~Jor (C onvenience o j ' V S n (Ien Is ( )p e n % 1 n ti( 8 : 0 0 p .m . 7 I bel* t i a y s Austin's Largest Stock Tropical Fish!! C O M PLET E IO G A L . A Q U A R IU M $23.34 February ‘ G et Acquainted Sale C O M PLET E 15 G A L . A Q U A R IU M $30.30 C O M PLETE 25 G A L . A Q U A R IU M $50.23 A BO VE PR IC ES IN C LU D E A Q U A R IU M , BOTTOM FILTER. G L A S S W O O L ,' C H A R C O A L , SAND |W R O U G H T IR O N A Q U A R IU M STAND, AND A IP PUM P. IN C A N D ES C EN T REFLECTOR, BACK CO VER PLUS FREE F IS H !! IO Ga!. Aq uarium $2.33 Fr«a Fish. IS Gal, Aquarium $3 03 Frat F lh 25 Gal. Aquarium $5.02 Free Fish (Y O U M A Y SELEC T FREE FISH O F YO U R C H O IC E ) A B O V E PRIC ES G O O D A N Y D AY THRU FEB. 28, 1965 BIG D R A W IN G !! i PHJ in coupon be!ow and bring to our *tora bafor# Sun., Fab. 28 1965 *6:00 P M . to win frea— one 5 gal. aquarium— aquarium ttand— incandescent, [reflector— back co/er— sand— bottom filter. D R A W IN G 6:00 P M . SH A R P FEB 28 1965 It W as Almost Springtime Photo by Orr Students moved outdoors to study, relax, and sun in Saturday s 70-degree perfection. But it was the warming before a cold front and high temperatures will be in the low 60 s Sunday. Assembly Will Add Entire Village Buried More Gripe Boxes By Landslide in Chile * •rn Three more Gripe Boxes will be ____ f " ' . — Ti P U E R T O MONTT. C hile LB —- installed ti.is week to facilitate ^ police patrol reached tiny Ca­ covered by water when the slide I^ake Cabrera and tumbled into . . . . sheen? suggestions and complaints 5rera on Saturdav and reported raised the water k v e l 36 fpf>t’ about the present policy or function on the I mversity campus, accord­ ing to Paul Quinton, administrator of the Grievance Committee. l^eie befile a tinge slide of rock, I ice, and earth crashed down before . n o sign of the 26 inhabitants living . . , N A M E ADDRESS P H O N E H O T BREAD AT THE B O W E N H O U S E AT EVERY M EA L 2001 W H IT IS DO YO U KEEP T R O PIC A L F I S H ? . . . .Y E S ( ) . . . . N O ( DO NOT NEED TO BE PRESENT TO W IN AUSTIN AQUARIUMS U N U S U A L — RARE — EXO TIC — T R O PIC A L FISH 1907 W H E L E S S LA N E (A C R O S S FRO M W IN D S O R V IL LA G E S H O P P IN G CENTER. NEA R IN TERSEC TIO N B R IA R C L IFF & W H ELESS LANE) P H O N E G L 2-9936 N E W H O U R S : Weak D#yi 2 00 P.M. to 8 00 P M . Sat. 10 00 A.M. to 6:00 P M. Sun. 2 OO P M. To 6 OO P.M. C IomH W ed. “ THE V IE T N A M E SE don t need any people to conquer them,” Ix)i said. “ The Communists want to con­ quer the world, and Viet Nam is a small country which can be conquered easily,” Thief pointed out. “ But, South Viet Nam is try­ ing to resist this threat.” United States installations are attacked because “ the Viet Cong want to embarrass both the Amer­ icans in Viet Nam and here,” Thi­ ef said. “ And the Viet Cong will continue to bomb United States installations in order to make a noise for propaganda.” LOI SA ID the Viet Cong are at­ tacking because “ they are trying to break down the morale of the United States advisers and the American people. Their strategy is to atttack by terrorizing.” “ There must be a willingness among the two parties (Commu­ nists and United States-supported South Vietnamese) in the war be­ fore it can end,” Loi said. ‘The North Vietnamese wore the first to start the war, and they should be the first to end it.” The war has hindered the ad­ vancement of South Vietnamese in­ dustry', agriculture, and education. “ T H E COMMUNISTS are con tinually stirring up trouble which has caused the schools to close.” “ The Communists T h i e f said. draft peasants and prevent them from growing rice and destroy roads and bridges.” The Vietnamese students said they want the w-ar to end. but they do n o t want communism. “ The country can either be free or communistic, ard we want it free.” Art Opens Co-Op Week A display of student art work this week in the Texas Union E x ­ hibit Room heralds Co-op Week, Fob. 28-March 6. The display is a cd)action of members of cooperative houses. Artists whose work is on display include Helen Hicks. Gladney Flatt, Karen Kumar, Marsha Phillips, Marilyn Perry, Tommy Lay, John McRae, Mary Lynn Poston, and Annette Miner. Is Chairman of the art show Donnie Brown. Committee mem­ bers are Katie McCoy, Randy Mc- NTatt, Marsha Phillips, and Torn Watson. Competition Still Open Students may s t i l l enter tho Round-Up Beard Growing Contest by calling Biron Talbert or Mat* Berry at G R 7-7232 or G R 2-0866. Late entries will be on their honor to shave themselves on tho day they enter. Getting a late start will bo a disadvantage in the full- growth division, Berry said, but one may still enter the most unique division. Those who entered last Wednes­ day were shaved by coeds on tho Main Mall. Forty-two students have entered to date. WE GOT SO BIG CAUSE WE CHARGE SO LITTLE rent a car from ^ e C O N O - C A R - T 9 U »» J * . all* f e a t u ' * V.t! i n t * & o t h e r tsi HO EAST 7th ! ' n . rn H r l s M I I H o t e l ) G R 8-7826 The boxes, plus the six already M avvn Friday, installed, w i l l be cheeked once Lt. Rene San Martin of the na- every two weeks or depending on tional police said the patrol re- the interest students show and the ported finding one body and seeing number of suggestions received, no sign of life. The patrol forced Suggestions will be considered by its way through thick, rain-swept the Grievance Committee, the ex- forests, mud, and mountainous ecutive committee of the Student terrain from the village of Rio Assembly'. Negro, six miles aw'ay. San Martin s a i d Gripe Boxes are located at the information main desk in the Academic Center, radioed to this southern port city on the first floor of the Texas indicated that most of the victims Union, in the main foyer of the were buried beneath thousands of the dressing tons of ice, mud, and rock that Main Building, room at Gregory Gym, in the foyer roared dowm the slope of 6,300-foot of the Women’s Gym, and on the Mf. Yates about I a.m. Friday. Cabrera is 40 miles southeast of first floor of the Chemistry Build­ Puerto Montt. ing. in Boxes also will be Installed In Col. Bruno Anzlana, chief of the the main foyer of the Business- Puerto Montt division of the na- Eeonomics Building, in the foyer lion police, who made a helicopter of Moore-Hill Halt, and on the flight to the scene earlier, said all that was left of the village wfas second floor in Batts Hall. S i rn only at A FULL YEAR TO PAY For Your Senior Ring! Choice of W hite or Yellow Gold Priced From $ 2 5 ° o ZALES* 2236 G U A D A L U P E n i u <> t r a t i o n ^ n l a r R e d t o s h o w d e t a i l 1 0 % ^ S T U D E N T D ISC O U N T ^ r f e on ^ Radios, Tape Recorders and Phonographs Leading Imports and Domestic Brands HI-FI IM PO RTS B A F ™ c u r a m G L 3-8797 THE UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 Serving the University Area for 14 Years P A R K IN G IN REAR JO B OPPORTUNITY Openings for summer work will be filled from single college men inter­ viewed this week. Several can work EVERY SU N D A Y and T H U R SD A Y FREE DRY CLEANING TO A UT STUDENT " M i Today W e Salute <(((. .c & ■IN" I —" j Donald Batey 2507 E. Side Drive with 2.50 worth of free Dry ♦Cleaning o ) TH IS O F FER IS G O O D AT EITHER L O C A T IO N 510 W . 19th 704 W . 29th MONDAY-THURSDAY 7:00 a.m.— 8:00 p.m. FRIDAY & SATURDAY 7:00 a.m.— 6:00 p.m. F i l l ] T D \ V ^ A V " H IG H FIDELITY AT R E A S O N A B L E P R IC ES ” DR. N O L A N ESTES. S u re — - I - BEN j I f bene WILLIN! dx eg •om a M ' P f Deter! -ead rapid taught my firs' public class lasso' that the story acce The Christian Sc e~ Mon it Moore, i ve G o t a TH EIR SPEED FR O M 3 TO IO TIM ES . . . W IT H A G A IN IN UNDERSTA L '.v. oo positive were oa5^ In T.me, Newsweek, Business v»ee> a d mv graduates ap Geared on fhe Tonight Sh: O N Si STENT LY, M Y STUDENTS LEARNED t O IN * 'N ; O' S IN C E 1959, OVER 100,000 PEOPLE H A V E TAKEN M Y C O U R S E . . . O VER 250 UNIVERSITY O F TEXAS STUDENTS H E R E S W H A T A F E W O F THEM SA Y : r. rv \/ *evy Gardens Set the improve mer vt n: i as tr Genes e >e si G U A R A N T E E This Sty- error REV. DAVID s’ori increased IR,— ’J increased rn / ra '? a :most 2 t.mes and rn y com p fener t M f J rs ’* _ f > r tveiyn W o o l Keen •na Dynamics c. dent at least 3 times, or will refund student’s hewing attended a ’: ct t a" i prac red d e required rjm be course for any reason may r e c ti alfiona! cost. a ran tees to *" 'ease G a reao cg att c ency cf ea .1 sou­ ths entire tud'on, Th ; refund; is conditioned upon *-e n a require d c V . - e c** having made UG missed lesions, ‘ ©f hours. Any s'udenf who must withdraw from the • r & j s..o eg went co y es a* any fu'u-e ' me at no ad- ATTEND FREE D EM O N S T R A T IO N U N IV E R S E “ Y ” — SECOND FLOOR — MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22 ^ 'Z lN o E a N I N q now. lf you are interested in one of 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. these top paying jobs, for an inter­ view call Mr. Ingram at HI 4-3611 be­ tween 9-12 a.m. and 4-6:30 p.m. FREE SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED AT EACH DEMONSTRATION EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS 304 International Life Bldg. G R 6-6755 * National Average Increase — Its 6.4 Times Faster in Austin Sunday, February 21, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3r Ponies Bounce Horns 73-70 Mickey White Steals Ball at :58, Makes Layup to Put Texas Ahead By MERVIN BENSON Texan Sports Editor Texas found th e road of defeat again S atu rd ay as th e SM I’ M ustangs bounced by the Ijonghom s like a sports c a r cutting o u t but w inning on th e ir w ay to a second place finish in th e Southw est Conference, 73-70. The L onghorns found th e four-m inute d ry spell too sh o rt in th e first half against Tech and did not m ake a shot until they w ere five m inutes and IO seconds deep in th e gam e.. FRANKS HIT th e first shot for the ’H orns on a one-shot foul situation. F ran k s the also scored ’H orns 6:19 deep in th e game. the first field goal for D uring th e ’H orn dry' spell th e Mus­ tan g s am assed a lead of nine points, th e ir high for th e first half. Texas cam e back to tie th e gam e twice during th e first pe­ riod but each tim e fell behind th e SMU team . W ith 6:52 rem aining in the first half th e L onghorns tied the score 18-18 when T om ­ m y Nelm s took one of his long jum p shots th a t kept th e ’H o rn s in the gam e th ro u g h ­ out. M I K E G A M M O N w as th e ’H orn th a t tied it up th e second and last tim e w ith 2:55 left in th e first half, m aking th e score 27-27. B ut SMU led 36-29 a t interm ission. T ex ­ as hit only 32.3 p e r cen t of th eir shots the first half, m aking only IO field goals. The ’H orns got 9 out of 11 a t th e free th ro w line in th e first period. SMU h it 53.1 per cent the first half. T hey m ade only two free throw s before interm ission, though. AFTER HALFTIME Texas got th e tip and th e first two points when F r a n k s threw' th e hall up and an SMU play er was tagged w ith goal tending. Texas pulled w ithin a few' points of the M ustangs several tim es in the second half hut wa* also behind l l . N E L M S H I T six shots in th e second half to keep the gam e out of the runaw ay stage, and Mickey W hite shot free shots in th e closing m inutes to cut th e Ponies’ lead. M ickey W hite hit l l of 12 free th ro w s in th e game. Nine of them w ere in th e last seven m inutes of play. T he ’H orns cam e up w ith an 18-point burst in th e last 7:35 of play and a t one tim e had the lead. Mickey W hite hit a free shot to m ake It 53-61. F ultz then shot from th e side a fte r an SMU player had netted one to m ake th e score 55-63. F ran k s w-as called on for a free shot next and m ade the score 56-63. It w as then Mickey W hite’s tu rn at th e foul line and he hit two m ore to m ake th e score 58-63. N E L M S T H E N S H O T one of his long jum p shots from o u t fro n t th e ’H orns to w ithin th re e points of the visi­ tors. to put SMU got an o th er basket but M ickey W hite shot a set shot from the side of the basket to m ake the score 62-65. Nelms then shot an o th er long one from th e top of the circle to bring the ’M oms to w ithin a point of the visitors. M I C K E Y W H I T E had to co u n teract tw’O SMU freeshots w ith two of his own. The ball bounced several tim es on th e rim before going in. T he T yler tra n sfe r then got two m ore free th ro w s a fte r an SMU layup. The Mus­ tan g s then w ent into a stall. Texas w atched the dribbling exhibition for a while, then the 6-6 M ickey W hite stole th e ball and ra n all of the w ay fo r th e layup th a t put the ’H orns in th e lead. But th a t WBS the le st L onghorn s c a le of the night a s W ard of the P onies hit two fm othrnw s in a one and one situ atio n and T ex as w as beaten. B EA SLEY O F T H E MUSTANGS hit tw o free- throw s a fte r he w as fouled w hile try in g to sta ll the haji. With th e sc o re 73 70 and th re e seconds to go Texas called tim e out h u t the stra te g y session did M ik e G a m m o n h Halted by Beasley (23), H oosier (25) and W ard. — Photo by Ort Bo Rothchild grabs rebound from Begari (I I) and Ward (33). Photo by orc I; it help SS the M ustangs w atched N elm s shoot a long ju m pshot that he had had such success with. “ Who o ver gets a point a h e ad in th at kind of g am e usually gets it,” Coach H arold B radley said. “ If we had had the ball w hen we w ere ahead we would h ave been in good sh a p e .” Hess saying BRADLEY EXPLAINED that the first half frigid the ’H orns w ere not balanced. He also pointed out th a t T om m y N elm s, who h ad one of his b est nights h ad been hurt in one w ay or a n o th er for som e tim e an d w as not up to his potential before. Mi* key W hite w as high point m an again for th e ’H orns w ith a total of 19, N elm s pum ped in eight field goals and two freesh o ts for his 18 points. The only shot he mussed the en tire night W’as the la st one of the gam e. FRANKS GOT It POINTS for the 'Hems. Texas m issed only th ro '’ out of 23 freesh ots In the gam e. W ard and n o o se r w ere high point m en for hie M ustangs w ith 15 each. Sm ith hit 12 and B easley ll for the w inners. The a tte n d a n c e for the g a m e w as e stim a ted at 6.000. This is the la rg e st fig u re of the ‘65 season at G reg o ry G ym . N ext g am e scheduled for the ’H orns will be on the road. T exas plays the R azorback* from A rkan­ sa s in a tilt in L ittle Rock T uesday. . . . . I* (Sr . . 3 T I VA S Ol i v i e r f r a n k s W h i t e . MIC . . 4 .......... . . I C l a r k f l u s h F u l t z N e l m s G a m m o n i n n e r m u hehiM To t a l F T 0-1 2 - 'J 11-12 1-1 o-n I -1 . . ,, O 3-4 ........ .. 0 0-0 . .. n fMt -tv 2S ............ . . . . . . . 3 IT , . . . 4 . . . 6 . . . . . 4 . . . . . 4 . . . 4 . . . . I . . . T I* r . . . . . . . . . , . ti S m i t h 11 W a r d l h H o r n e r 3 H o l m a n 0 B e a s l e y — 1W< 18 W s n d o r f I J o n e s n M a r s h n 70 T o t a l s . . . . ... I T *1-6 5-5 3-3 0*3 3-3 A I 0-0 (Kl (VO T P 13 I S 15 3 11 3 J J I 59 I V !l> 71 SHIRTS Long sleeve butt on down m d regular collar sport shirts —■ values to $6.95, red uced to $2 .97. Button down and re g ­ e a r c o ' a r long sleeve dress shirts in stripes and colors' W e r e $6.95. now $2.97. SUITS & DRESS PANTS Suits t h a t were priced +o $65.00 now $29.97. DRESS PANTS— buy one at regular price, g e t the second pair for $ 1.97. DRAWING! Register In The T o g g e r y for a $5 Dress Shirt for 50c. There W i l l Be IO Winners! Draw ing February 22 SPORT COATS & C ASU AL PANTS Sport C o a t s valued at $39.95 now priced $19.97. C a ' .a l slacks — w e r e $6.95, n o w $2.97. d istin ctive store or men ALL SALE ITEMS NET Charge Accounts Invited SW EATERS & JACKETS B-y a rw ea te r at the regular price, ge+ the second one for 97c JACKETS — values to $27.95, r e d uc e d to $8.97. Sunday, february 21, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Gillette Foamy Reg. & Menthol Shaving Cream 54c 79c Value Sup p ly Department Book Department Tip Top HAIR CURLERS 79c $ 1.00 Size Drawing I Mars. No. 700 Set of 7 D raw ing Pen* Reg. $14.95 Set $ 199 Register! THROW PILLOWS Pen Counter Drawing I Attache Case reg. $8.95— 89c I Billfold reg. $5.00— 69c I Intimate 4 oz. Cologne reg. $4.75— 49c Register! Drawing 4 Eleanor Roosevelt's Book of Etiquette s5,s for 5 0 ' I Webster’s Dictionary sfe,s for 70‘ 5 Winners Register! Mosaic PLAQUE KITS >/2 off Net Reg. $2.19 N O W $1.09 Reg. $2.29 N O W $1.19 Reg. $2.79 N O W $1.49 Room Accessories Downstairs Room Accessories Downstairs Men's & W om en's Revlon Professional Ronson & Remington SHAVERS 2 0 % off N e t G ift Shop Drawing Tensor Light reg. $12.95 for $1.30 T O B A C C O C O U N T E R GBD Pipe reg. $12.50— $1 25 Butane Lighter reg. $10.95— $1.00 Register! FREE R E P L A C E M E N T Roll of Film for each roll of film brought in to be developed. (One Day Only) Cam era Shop Second Floor LAMP SPECIAL NOW $1.98 N e t HAIR SPRAY 79 C plus taxes $1.50 Value Special G ro u p Three-Ring BINDERS 99c M a n y O ther Su pply Specials C am e ra Shop Drawing Agfa Camera Optena I A Kit . , . Camera, Case, Film, Flash Gun, $79.95 for 995 Drawing W a ln u t Reg. $25.95 M — & .O * * ooL O W e re $2.95 BOOK CASE Room A cce sso ry Special G ro u p of M o n o & Stereo Regu lar Stock R E C O R D S Co-O p Price Suggested Price — 3 98 4*8 B’ s B’ s 319 3 ” 589 SALE PRICE NET 2 * 0 309 37 7 431 Record Shop Drawing A Channel M aster A M - F M Transistor Radio Was s79” for s9” Also T V ’* and Transistors at Greatly Reduced Prices Register! M A N Y M O R E U N A D V E R T I S E D S P E C I A L S SALE ONE DAY ONLY ALL SALE ITEMS NET [TFTFTIf I H E S T U D E N T S O W N t r n bs I O R F . £ 3 2246 Guadalupe GR 2-114! Sunday, February 21, 1965 THE D A ILY TEXAN Page 5 Tech Squeezes By Rite 77-67 Dub Hot A gain ; 3 O w l* Fowl Out HOUSTON — W — Texas Tech pulled out of * long, tantalizing sweat in the last four minutes Saturday night, and turned hack upset-conscious Rice, 77-67. Tech, the $-1 leaders of the Southwest Conference basketball race, seldom held the advantage and never led the spunky Owls by more than two points until Dub M alaise hit two free throws at 2:14. This made ft 69 65. and Norm Reurher popped in six points and M alaise added two to R ice’s lone fielder the rest of the way in. Tech. which is a shoo-in for t h e conference championship, found itself trailing for all but nine minutes. The Owls, who were still deep in the conference wilderness on­ ly a week ago. saw their chances reduced to a nub when B ill Doty, Lease and L a rry Tiner were ban­ ished on fouls in the last 16 min­ utes. Attempt Fails Brumel Tries for New Mark N E W Y O R K —UPV—Russia’s Val­ ier}’ Brum el failed in his an­ nounced quest of the indoor high Jump record Saturday, settling for a winning 7-2. while a quartet the of Californians dominated wind-up of the two-dav national and indoor track championships. Brum m el. the Olympic gold medalist and holder of both the indoor and outdoor marks, had announced a determined try at his indoor 7-4 standard. He missed only once enroute to 7-3. then failed badly on each try at that height. Otherwise, it was strongmen John McGrath in the shot and Mal Connolly in the weight, along Bear Leap Frogs 97-88 at Waco WACO—(^—Sophomore Darrell Hardy had his best game as a varsity player Saturday when he hit 30 points in leading Baylor to a 97-88 victory over Texas Chris­ tian. Hardy had 13 points in the first half and IT in the second and also led the Bears with 17 rebounds. with middle distance men Jim Ja ck Yerman who Grelle and dominated the men’s events on this last day of the combined men’s and women’s champion­ ships. McGrath, from Pasadena, won the shot at 62-101i, while Con­ nolly, a school teacher at Santa Monica, came out of semi-retire­ ment and won the weight throw at 70-4, second best the world has ever seen. His own record is 71-24. Grebe, a lean veteran from Los the slow mile found Angeles, Intramural Volleyball d m A Winner—Loser Moore-HUl—San Ja r F, G. H A ir Force—Navy Trojans--Mule* Tht'i a X I— Phi Delta Theta Ph i Sigm a Kappa— 1Tau Alpha Flu Ira n — Newman Sigma Nu— Sigma Alpha Mu P h i Gamma Delta -Kappa Alpha S I rnk ms-—Brackenridge Sigm a Ph i Epsilon— Tau Kappa Epigon Beta Theta P i—Phi Kappa Sigma Campus Guild—Price A-pha X I Sigma— A IM E Van- Sty— Ramshorn Acacia—P i Kappa Alpha Alpha Tau Omega—Alpha Feta Pt . , . IT 15-11 I''• • 10-1V 15-9 1-0 9 15 1 5-1 0 . 7-5 IM O 15-4 15-12 A l5 7 0 EVP 15-2 15-4, 15-0 15-1 15-5 15-11. ST S 7-5 15-2 15-4 14-16 15-8 i-o 15-12. 15-9 7-15 18-14, 7-4 ’ l5-ll. 15-5 3 5 5 5512 35-4.15-9 Cl aa* B Delta X I Alpha— Sigma Alpha Mn Sigma Nu— Kappa Alpha Delta Kappa E t a —Sip ma Alpha Epsilon Kappa Sigm a—Acacia Alpha Tau Omega—Delta Upsilon Tau Delta P h i —Ch! P l Tau Kappa Epsilon—Ph i K a rp a Theta M allet Newman— Met* Sammies—Goodall Wooten Ph i Gamma Delta Ph i Sigm a Kappa A IM E —Arm y M o s s e s — Cicero** Playm ate* T L O K — Roberts Big Red Pm val— V arsity T h e t a X U - P h i S ig m a D e lt a Mukcns Rebel* Ia m b Chop* 13-X IM 159 15-4 1511. 1535 155 1511 1.50 154 17-15. 515. 7-0 default 515 1515. 7-4 1510, 157 1511. 1515. 7-1 1511 151.1 1511, 155 11-15. 1511, 7-1 1513 10-15, 7-1 14-16, 1512 7-5 1510, 9-15 7-3 default pace just to his liking, lurked back in the pack for IO laps, then out-kicked Poland's Witold Baran for a 4:07.4 victory. Beasley Hits 30; Aggies Win 91-77 C O LL E G E STATTON—(J*—John Beasley’s 30 points and 16 re­ bounds led Texas A&M to a 91-77 victory over Arkansas Saturday night. It was the third straight game for Beasley to score 30 or more. He had 43 against Baylor and 37 against Rice. Ken Norman backed him up Ricky Sugg led Arkansas with with 21. 16. Hoosiers Clobber Wisconsin 100-87 BLO O M INGTON, Ind.-4fU-in- diana checked a late drive by Wisconsin and beat the Badgers 100-87 in a Big Ten basketbaU game Saturday afternoon. T H E D A IL Y T E X A N CLuiLd -Ads l e c i m r n A n t ITOTTCfV/l W A T V A C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G RA T E S * ................... Each W ord <15-word m inimum ) M inim um Charge ............................. Classified Display I column x one inch on* time ..................... i i OO p.,rh A d dition al T im * ....................................90 20 Consecutive Issue* 8 w rd* ............................................... 15 word* ........ 20 words Jh OO ss OO $1100 4« *1.20 ^ ................. INO copy change for consecutive Issue rates) C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S IN G D E A D L I N E S .................. Monday 3:30 p m. Tuesday Texan W ednesday Texan .................. Tuesday 3:30 p m. T hursday T e x a n .................. Wednesday 3:30 p rn F rid a y Texan Sunday Texan In the event of errors made in an advertisement, immediate notice must be given as the publisher* are responsible for only one incorrect insertion. Thursday 3:30 p m F U d a y 3 30 p m ................ ............. G R 1 - 5 2 4 Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments N E A R U N IV E R S IT Y . L A R G E T H E TO W E H V I E W School. Huge one bedroom room garage apartment. T w in beds **■ GR * o-ixxxa._________________________ efficiency). Featuring modern. FREE RENT TIL March I. Sm all 3 room apartm ent A/C. 2 blocks Uni- e n t i t y . n m * . fir,* . JH bk**, B g « W e t e „ " lc* •ast Law --- (not Danish turn.lure. C ^ n ^ ^ d • SENESI*- ££*£?£:'«»«>■. w o . month, c r t - « * . If you ll look you'll Ilk*. $100. I rates. Wat«r-ga* paid. Duplex Furnished Room and Board three 690O-B~6904-B Recs* Lane. One bed­ room. central air — heat, paneled walls, beamed ceilings, washer connec­ tions. carport, large storage $70 50. G R 2-4838. G R 6-5601, AN 52120 V E R N A YO U N G S T U D E N T H O U S E Open first 6 weeks summer session. D R E S S M A K IN G A N D A L T E R A T IO N S Pick-up and delivery. Phone G R 51795 After 6 pm Sewing Drafting Duplex Unfurnished Two meals per day; A/C, pool, park­ C L E A N 3 B E D R O O M S Downstair* Carport. $50. H I 2-S8S4. Apply 1400 ing lot. G R 6-9621. 2610 R io Grande C A P IT A L D R A F T IN G S E R V IC E . 1405 Lavaca. G R 2-8901- Thesis drafting, lettering, charts, graphs mechanical and maps. G R 2-8773 2501 O L D H A M G R 3-5058 J U S T O N E A V A IL A B L E Riverside. L A R G E L U X U R Y 3 bedroom apt. Ail desirable extras, only_$l35 You must see it to believe it. 6 R 7-1064. Jun e I for studious pair or couple, Roomy quiet, air conditioned 3ta blocks to University. $70 per month. R O O M M A T E S W A N T E D : Y O U R share ->R 7 -93.v> .. ..e .n ens. ! C H A R M IN G U N F U R N IS H E D D U P L E X New 2 bedroom, close to campus. HO 55200. C L 3-3386. Miscellaneous For Rent R E N T A TV, Altha T V Rental. G R 2-2692 can be as little a* $50 for a large, lu xu ry apartment with swimming p o o l; and all the extras. G R 7-1064. SA N P A U L O A P A R T M E N T S 1218 Eaylo r Baylor at Enfield One bedroom luxury apartments Luxurious kitchens: Swim m ing pool Private balcony. Cable TV*: Lau n dry facilities, M anager * A p t 107 W IN S T E A D A P T S.. Lane 2 bedroom 2401 Winsted studio, carports, central heat-air. water-gas M id . C L 3900® weekdays or call G R 8-1440. G R 7-8240 after 5 and weekends. V E L L A "52 * 1307-1311 E 52nd. Two large bedrooms. A C carpeted. W-G paid. Reservation* taken. H I 2-0995 S T O R E S IN N E W shopping center U niversity area 29th and t.uadalupe available now. G L 3-5314 G L 2-1339. $125 G A S - W A T E R paid D elightful A/C 2 bedroom Quiet, modern, clean. Fireplace Glass Private patio. 32f'5A Grooms. Open G R 2-0952. W A 6-2564 Board M O D E R N O N E B E D R O O M apartment. A ir conditioned, quiet and private. 2 block-;, Texas 1'nherslty, G R 7-8414. M EIN—B O A R D by the month. Serv­ ing three mea s daily. Seven days week Reasonable. 612 W . 22nd. L I V E ON L A K E A U S T IN Two bedroom— two bath v illa Central fantastic view. heat—a ir Fireplace $200 a month. G R 7-7830, H O 55200. Special Notices NON - D R IN K E R S . NO N - S M O K E R S . Correspondence elub--~Information — $1 OO Sunday Seeds, Box 31. Round Rock. Texas. W anted W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E — BE. A I ' L. pm.ks binoculars .................... . . I I T , 'J" (N O W B U Y IN G A N D T R A D IN G — 1Type- radios, guns im,.* writers, golf clubs, rr.au'mnc M E N O N L Y Furnished alliciency. A /C privet*. Gas paid. $45 studio-type efficiency. A/C: household i I heat. Carport- Ample closets, cabinets, goods, watches, stereo equipment tele- . V:»:on< motor scooters, engineering , - I - - ____________ _ G R 7-1991. G R L A R G E A P A R T M E N T N E A R U T ^ ^ ^ i o T h e s ^ ^ h J r . t m ? 'a n d ' * fisifin* 175 R ear 3010 Frut.lt. G R 6-8575 art supplies .nstruments Repainted furnace . Com munity center, bus J only. 302 E . 264 St.. H I 2-3651 Students equipment, phonograph records, coms stamp collections. Aaron. 803 Red R iver 8 2258. F R E E R E N T — U N T IL March side V illag e Luxury- Apartments. One and two bedrooms, all bills paid One after block stadium G R &-5-J35. 2011 Sabine j I p rn I Hill- W A N T E D : U N IV E R S IT Y fiS waitress. Call w ork to G IR L G R 7-063! A U S T IN A C Q U A R IU M S Tropical Fish Unusual -Rare— Exotic 1907 W he;ess Lane (across from W in d ­ sor Village Shopping Center, near in­ tersection Berkman Dr. and Wireless I,anel. Phone C L 2-9938 W eekdays 2-8 pm .. Saturday 10-6 p rn.. Sunday 2-6 p.m. W I L L DO IR O N IN G In my home Of­ fice and apartment cleaning morn­ ings. Baby-sitting. H O 55905___________I JO H N H E N R Y C A R D IN A L Newman 1 was a dynamic personality in his Is known the world time. His fame cm r. Roman Catholic students st secu- ; la? universities have an opportunity to i continue in his great apostolic work j F o r information about membership and ; activities please contact Ju lio Aguilar. G R 7-6911. M A D A M E T E L S T A R R E A D ! IR-A D V IS O R Advises you on all affairs. A ll readings . nrp private and strictly confidential. £ No appointment necessary. Open 8-9 p.m. Cameron Rd. near 5007 51st St, F R E N C H T U T O R E X P E R IE N C E D , Let nm help you. $2.50 hour. Call G R 5 3368 Barcla y For Sal© Nurseries I O R D E R Y O U R V O L K S W A G E N di­ rectly from Germany at a substant.al s a v i n g. University Motors, 2715 Guadalupe, G R 2-7152. E X C E L L E N T C H IL D C A R E S t An­ drews Presbyterian D ay School. 7 30- 5 30 Monday-Kriday Ages 2-6. 2011 Keen!e Lane G L 3-4383 Help W anted W A N T B E S T T V serviceman in Texas W illin g to pa' top wagers for hard worker. W arren Sm ith T V Service, 15(X) VV*. 35th. A U S T IN A T H L E T IC C L I B (division of Parka and Recreation Dept ) needs teacher Mon. and Wed Bettcher. G R 55662 tram poline afternoons Rill for appointment* Briefs A R T IS T IC . A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G reports, theses dissertations typewriter. Mr* manuscripts Anthony. Northeast L n h e rsity. G R 2- 1202. IB M CONTINENTAL APARTMENTS Manor Road at Oidham F u rs one and two bedroom apartment* Central A C Swim m ing pool. B ill* paid. $110 and $150. G R 51262, G R 8- 8670. Furnished Rooms U N IV E R S IT Y $40 A /C. Kitchen Telephone T V. maid, G R 6-9490, G R 8-6833. P R IV A T E B E D R O O M living dining, lamps linens, BO Y S —S IN G L E and double rooms. N ew ly redecorated. Study. Color TV D a‘!v maid service. Reasonable. GR 8-6566 G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T - M A L E , Nicely mileage, 1963 V O L K S W A G E N , R E D sedan, low E a rl Howard. 4411 A irp o rt A p t 241. C L 2- ________________ 7591. terms on request. , 1965 "M U S T A N G i Air conditioned and all other accesso­ ries Call G R 2-1605 nights, G R 7- 1551 daytime. S t Tc k ~~shift 1959 T - B IR D C O N V E R T IB L E . A'C Electric steering - brakes Pow er window* tnp-carpets. $1,250 C L 8-1533 after 6 30 p m - weekends. New R /H 1960 V O I.K S V V A G EN $750 Two band In­ heater, new transistor radio terior, muffler G R 8-9182. furnished room, Near U T . A ir con- © N E M G T D (1952 vintage). Complete dltioned N o drinking, no smoking G R 7-6859. ______________ in restorable condition, see at 694 W . 6th. G E N T L E M E N : S T U D E N T S E R work Ing men, 2 nice large rooms, private bu5 -OR' M m 8 p.m. ’59 M O A top condition, In and out G R 2-1447 before 2 p m or after $59 SO B E L L S P A ID . N e a t clean, small apartment 908-B V est 22nd. Open. G R 2-0952, W A 6-2564 ____ N E A R U N IV E R S IT Y . 3408 R io Grande A/C 2 bedrooms. W ill accomodate 3 ©r 4 Reasonably priced. C L 2-1339. G R 53711 909 W 22nd. One bedroom, living room, kitchen bath Com fortaoly furnished. W a lk to class. $55 bills paid. G R 8-4105. 803 W . 25TH Sheffield. Spacious. U T across block. Quiet Cleean A/C. carpets. N o parties. G R 2-7688. $79 80. D A R L IN G A/C apartment Spa­ cious, modern, clean, oodles closets. : (down). Open W A 804 East 20v* St 6-2564 GR 50962 F O R E S T T R A I L A P A R T M E N T S 1514 Forest T r a il— (W est off Enfield Rd ) V «ry attractive, very quiet 3 bedroom 3 bath luxury apartments Swim m ing pool, facilities. E M music. Cable T V . M gr Apt. IOU G R 6-3 C>8. laundry L A R G E ROOM K IT C H E N bath W alk 5. - S ^ j S f i j u W a w e H,-»p. to classes $5 ____ h ill P a rk G L 3-3863 T H E D IP L O M A T lu xu ry on* bedroom, carpets New central air, disposal, cabl* T V , FM music. 1911 San Gabriel Manager, Apt. 102, 1-8 p rn. T A N G L E W O O D W E S T 1408 N orw alk L an * I B r luxury apt* , $104 J© to $142 Centrad air, carpets dishwesher dis pos*,*. F M T V cab e, walk-in closet* G R 2-9614 Houses— Furnished AT CAMPUS furnished six Attractively room cot tag* A ir conditioned carpeted garage Adult fam ily $90. Call at 1920 Speed­ way. G R 7-6818. L A K E A U S T IN C LO S E - IN Vaulted fireplace dishwasher boar ceilings dock $155 G R 8-6691. G R 2-6579 C A L L G R 1-5244 TO PLA C E Y O U R CLASSIFIED AD FU R N ISH ED A P A R T M E N T S HEAVEN DESCENDS TO EARTH I V E R Y S P R IN G during M arch and April at Eton-A r rn* In elite Enfield where ow ner m aintains for the tenant* delight an A ra b a Garden that attract* hund­ In th!* prestigious area a one-bedroom apartment red* to drive by and see whose In terio r matches th# Azaleas In beauty, Is available. R has large living room bedroom, kltrhen-dlnette. tile bath (tub & shower >. 2 king-size closets and covered, enclosed carport. Private entrance ground floor, building has on ly 4 unit* on spacious, tree-studded lot, insuring quietude needed fo r graduate student or honeymoon couple, washing privacy'- Per**** of good character, ll vins alone settle here for long terms of tenancy. Luxury-type, artistic fur­ nishing* include K roeh ler divan, coffee and fide table*, with huge Aztec Iambs desk 4 occaslon-chairs, gold draper wool rug*. Art-Craft m irror, ex­ tensive picture*. N ew B e a u ty - R e * mattress and springs Frig ld alre w ith large freezer com partm ent. T W O C arrie r refrigerated-air unit* for cooling. Panelray IL , Adult* only. N O D O G S O nly $79 50 pl us ut 1 lea Less for letoe or to *m gi* person. R ent free to M arch I. Dial G R 2-865: or H I 2-3326. Sunday, February 21, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 Lost and Found $50 R E W A R D . Lost—Black, medium s I zed. male poodle. One year old. G R 8-3529 or Beige collar. Northwest Austin, H an­ cock D r area Name "Deedon " Re­ ward. G L 2-9766 or G R 8-3678 after 5 L O S T U N D IE S B E I G E dressy knit suit Jacket D ark gold butron? Last F rid ay Hemphill « or Co-Op. Return either store cashier. Reward. Business Opportunities U N F IN IS H E D B O O K C A S E S L E S S than wholesale Made to order H igh­ land Hardware. IOU E, North Loop G L 2-2820 1955 P O R S C H E S P E E L ST K R New battery, mlehelin X tire 2 tonneau covers shop ma nun $190 work en transmission e in vers good condition. Joe G L 3-2776 ■ $100, Radio I, Need* then* ise Jordan tra S E N IO R M E N 'S R IN G B A 3965. " E x ­ large " Hyeingh stone, white gold Sever been worn. Must sc:; Call John Green at G R 2-7720 R E A V IC T O R P O R T A B L E Itereo Has three detachable speakers. Good con­ dition GR 6-1391 I960 V O L K S W A G E N Sew engine.. L IG H T blue Interior Must scil im­ mediately. Best offer G R 8-1285 IN C O M E P R O P E R T Y re a r Texas Uni­ versity with five and six hundred dollars per month incomes This win pay expenses for a couple while attend­ ing college plus a profit when you are finished, or a sound Investment Call G R 7-8414. Printing EXCLUSIVE FRANCHISE A Hazing m r liquid plastic coating a 1 > , • - nates waxing when applied on Asphalt Tile Vinyl, L in o ­ leum Vin;.: Asbestos, Hard Wood, and Furn ture < omp etc y e,.ruinate* paint­ ing :<->n appl »d to Wood, Metal or Concrete £ .rfa ex T i n finish Is also rec/ rn mended for boat* and automo­ biles. Mn COMPETITION d As these are exclusive formulas In and bv a'! businesses, industry and * f-.nchis# fee Minimum ln- vr •• ent $300. Maximum Investment— $7 ■rt\ in­ ventory Factory trained personnel w ill help set up your business. is secured by Investment AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS F o r complete details and descriptive literature w rite: WE'VE MOVED! To S I I East lith- diagonally across i the street from our cid location M U L T I L I T I L N G , M I M I IO C i I A I ‘H I N G CH EM -PLA ST IC S A P A IN T C O RP. ham G R 2-4715 .8. - L O C U S T ST. IX )U IS 3. MO, Xeroxing Theses Papers- Printing GR 6-6593 . Our IB M Executive typewriter* (Mod- tvpe i are equipped exclusively crn IB M char.ge- Ybm 5121 ribbons type* of a .rface*. Interior able typebars offer over IOO symbol# dtssertions and Illustrating D rafting .. .. f for technical thebes. manuscr! pts. m ultilithing. and binding services. M A R T H A A N N Z IV L E Y M B A . Typing, M ultilithing. Binding A complete professional typing serv Ice tailored to the needs of Lnlver- sltv students. Special keyboard equip­ ment for language, science, and engl neerlng theses and dissertations Phone G R 2-3210 A G R 2-7677 3013 G U A D A L U P E Theses D E I .A F I E L D T Y P I N G S E R V IC E 15 years experience U T graduate. 30c page— up. H I 2-6522. dissertations, reports. T Y P IN G — L O W R A T E S Satisfaction Guaranteed. G L 3*5124. Mrs. Tullos E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IS T . M rs Mo­ meyer. 1309 Ridgemont, G L 2-7719. CHARTERED E X C U R S IO N BUSES • Parties • Field Trips • Retreats Buses available with rest rooms aboard, turn around seats and card tables tor your enjoyment while traveling. All buses air R E P O R T S . T H E S E S . D IS S E R T A ­ IB M Mr*. Brady. 2317 Old- T IO N S conditioned. C A L L G R 1-5244 FO R A C L A SS IFIE D AD Kerrville Bus Co. 2006 EAST 4TH G R 8-9361 Alterations E X P E R T A L T E R A T IO N S D O N E on men s clothing Reasonably priced at Jacobson s Men s W ear, 2332 H enry Guadalupe. Typing E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . reasonable, near A ’lan- Accurate dale. HO 55813 T H E M E S . R E P O R T S . L A W notes. 25c page. Mrs. Fraser. G R 6-1317. T H E M E S . R E P O R T S . L A W notes. 25c page Mrs Fraser. G R 51317. W I L L T Y P E R E P O R T S dissertations. theses 25c per page. Statistical typ­ ing at 35c a page Type 70 wpm 8-5 at HO 5-6521. E x t 221 after 5 at HO 5 5538. V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N T Y P IN G S E R V IC E and photocopy S Y M B O L S — A L L F I E L D S botan No extra chargi for one day service. 1301 Edgewood G R 8-2636. Theses E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . term papers, manuscripts, IB M electric 5 blocks from campus. Mrs, Bodour. G R 8-8113. E X P E R T T Y P IN G F A S T S E R V IC E Theses. Term Papers, legal briefs Call day or night Mrs Montgomery-. G R 2- 5601. M A R T H A A N N Z IV L E Y M S A Typing. M ultilithing, Binding A complete professional typing serv- tcs tailored to the needs of Univers­ ity students. Special keyboard equip­ ment for language, science and engi­ neering theses and dissertations. Phone G R 2-3210 A G R 2 7677 2013 G U A D A L U P E T Y P IN G —Note*. G L 3-3062. theme*. Reasonable PO R T S . T H E S E S . D IS S E R T A T IO N S . R E ­ IB M Selectee. Symbol* for science engineering mathematics language accent* Greek Call G R * 9617 C O U R T E O U S . C O M P E T E N T T Y P IN G reports. Statistical IB M executive. Mrs service Theses work Specialty Morrison. G L 2-1630 T Y P IN G : M IM E O G R A P H ; D IT T O . Photocopy 20c; M rs Woods. HO 5 i 1078 ________________ — .... , - I S H O R T ON T Y P IN G T IM E ? Mia* Graham. G L 3-5725 A L D R ID G E T Y P IN G S E R V IC E ,104’* East 30th Street G R 7-1696 G R 6-9367 SMU Dominates AAU Swimming Texas* Boss Wins With Record Time D A LLA S—-Four records fell Saturday as the Southwestern AAU Swimming Meet, dominated by Southern Methodist University, closed with the final seven events. Seven records were hung up in the three-day meet. David Quirk of Southern Meth­ odist did the 100-yard freestyle in 48.8 to hetter his own record of 49.5 set last year. Steve Boss, the University of Texas freshman, swam the 500- yard freestyle in 5:02.1 to crack the record of 5:10.1 set by B ill AIsup of Texas in 1963. Alsup finished fifth Saturday. the 200-yard butterfly Vernon Slovin, Southern Metho­ dist freshman from South Africa, sped in 1:56.9 to set a new record. The old mark of 2:01.3 was by Rich­ ard Quick of Southern Methodist in 1964. Quick was third Satur­ day in 2:01.0, which was faster than his record. Southern Methodist bettered its own record in the 400-yard med­ ley relay with a time of 3:43.2. SM U set the record of 3:44.1 in 1962. Tim Bim ie of Southern Metho­ dist was high point man of the meet with 22^4- He swam on the SM U record-setting relay Satur­ day. Richard Quick of Southern Methodist was second high man with 1914 Baseball Schedule March 1-2—Sam TIouston State at Austin March 5-6—University of Oklahoma at Austin March 9—Texas Lutheran College at Austin March IS—Texas A&M at Austin (SW C ) March 16—TCI at Fort Worth (SW C ) March 2 S - S M I at Austin (SW C) March 22-23—Minnesota at Austin March 24— Baylor at Austin (SW C ) March 27—Rice at Houston (SW C ) April 2-3—SM T at Dallas (SW C ) April 8-9—Rice at Austin (SW C ) April 13—St. M ary's at Austin April 15—Parsons Collage at Austin April 23-24— Baylor at Waco (SW C ) April 30-May I —TCH at Austin (SW C) M ay 7-8—Texas A&M at College Station (SW C) (SW C ) denotes Southwest Conference game Karnes Selected As Relays Referee Bob Karnes, veteran track and field coach of Drake University, has been named referee of the 38th annual Texas Relays slated for April 2-3 at Memorial Stadi­ um. Kam es, a former distance star for the University of Kansas, has been Drake coach the past IO years. His Bulldogs are an an­ nual highlight of the Texas Re­ lays. Jack Patterson, director of the Texas Relays, announced a 44- event schedule for the annual re­ lays carnival which celebrates its 40th anniversary this spring. The meet has been held annually since 1925 except for three de­ pression years in the mid-1930's. Regular features of the Relays w ill be the seven baton events in the university division, six relays in the college division, and l l in­ dividual special events th« combined university-college class There w ill be four junior col- lege-freshman class relays and five high school division baton races. In the Rounding out Individual events will be five in the J C- frosh class, four high school events and two special girls’ ra­ ces—100-yard dash and 440-yard relay. are Prelim inaries scheduled Friday morning and afternoon of April 2 with finals set for Friday night and Saturday afternoon. Donna de Varona Wins in Germany B R E M E N . Germ any—(ft—Don­ na de Varona of Santa Clara, Calif., 17-year-old w i n n e r of three Olympic gold medals at Tokyo alst year, won two races Saturday in the first half of a two-day international swimming meet. Three other US Olympians also won t h e i r specialties but two took unexpected setbacks. Miss de Varona w o n the 200-meter freestyle in 2:15.9 and the 200- meter in 2:30.1. individual m e d l e y The other American winners were Cathy Ferguson of Bur­ bank. Calif., in the Women s 200- meter backstroke, Jeed Graef of Verona, N .J., In the men’s 100- meter backstroke; and Phil Rik- er of Paterson. N .J., in the mon’s 200-meter butterfly. Miss Fergu- son and Graef are O l y m p i c champions. S h a r o n Stouder, 16 year-old Olympic butterfly champion from Glendora, Calif., and Claudia Kolb of Santa Clara, Calif., sil­ ver medalist in the breaststroke, had to settle for second places. Ada Kox of Holland won the in women’s 100-meter butterfly 1:06.5 while Miss Stouder was second in 1:07.9 The 200-rn e t e r breaststroke went to Klenie Bimolt of Holland in 2:45.7. Miss Kolb was timed in 2:50.0 for second place. C o m p le te R e p a ir * C o m p le te S e r r ie s W a f t e r ’* MUSIC A ll M u s ic a l A ccesso ries • Collars • Amplifiers • Radio* • Phonograph# • Record# • S h e e t M u sic G R 2-297* 613 VV, 29th S t r e e t Alabama Defeats Tennessee 63-58 j TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — U* - Ala­ bama’s Crimson Tide won a 63- 58 victory over Tennessee Satur­ day in a major upset of the bas­ ketball season. Front-running Tennessee went Into the game ranked eighth in the nation and in a tie with Van­ derbilt for the Southeastern Con­ ference lead. A 20-foot jump shot by H arry Hammonds seven sec­ onds before intermission gave Alabama a 33-31 halftime lead. From a 52-52 tie with 5:31 to go, Bobby Andrews pushed the Tide ahead by one point with a free shot and Tennessee never recovered the lead. The defeat leaves Tennessee with a 17-3 record for the sea­ son and a 9-2 SEC record. Ala­ bama stands at 16 6 over-all and 8 4 in the conference. rn From M e x ic o Large Collection of regional crafts an d decorative accessories BULA SKINNER IMPORTS 1705 Nueces RENT A N E W Precision-Built Portable For Only $7 a Month Interest Is In Negro Shown Athlete about scholarships until he has completed his eligibility. . . . th e n tf y o u u e c.u to l*u>. o a r new re n ta l- p u rch a * e o p tio n le ts yon a p p ly re n t to w a rd # re n ta l- p a rch a a e p r ic e ; p ay E k e re n t, VV Uh th is p lan > on ca n t r v b e fo re y o n b u y I W e also re n t tap e recorders. T V .. ra d io s, a m p lifie r s , p la y e rs , a d d e r* B E R K M A N 'S G R 53525 2 23 4 G u a d a l u p e Five of the eight Southwest Conferenre schools have taken an interest in Jam es Cash, a 6-6 Negro from I. M. Terrell High School in Fort Worth. The Dallas Times-Herald said that all SWC schools but Southern Methodist, Rice and Arkansas had shown some interest in the scoring star. Cash is supposed to be averag­ ing 20 points a game for his Terrell team. Along with that he is supposed to have high grades, mostly A’s and B ’s. His coach, Robert Hughes, told the Times-Herald that ail but the above three had talked to him. “ In fact. I know he has offers because either the head coach or an assistant coach from the other (SW C ) schools has talked to m e,” Hughes said. Coaches can not talk to Cash six I PANCAKE HOUSE N E M " r n Breakfast Specials 5-11 A .M . M O N D A Y-FR ID A Y No. I Choice of Fruit Juice One Egg Toast and Coffee AQ -, i l l * O PEN 24 H O U R S A DAY 19th AN D G U A D A L U P E No. 3. Choice of Bacon, Sausage, or Ham, 2 Egg*. 2 Pancakes or Toast Q Q . O f C and Coffee A A A * . * * * , * A j&iHdlhi! S nil ‘HH!• ( I i !1?HmitllllfllIt!?IM»ISilllllIlII?tKmi*imilHH6«b6nntlHllDtM?!fBI?Rtffl1!W!itTim«!!H1H!flliirJjnHiimtWllinflf!tl8!!Hi»!lilWBB»^ DINING GUIDE Here is a variety of delicious menus to satisfy your family and guests FRIED C H IC K E N PLATTER I * C h ic k e n . F r e n c h F r i c * . b a i* 4 C H IC K E N FRIED STEAK B a ta d , S t e a k . F r e n c h F r i a * . G ra t# 98c W H O L E FRIED C H IC K E N W ith French Fries to G o .. $ 125 912 Red River G R 8-7735 EL CHARRO Delivery Service Available S C A R B R O U G H S Contrist Avenue and SixU S t r u t , A ustii ( @ m i d e You are cordial^ invited! to attend the Annual Guide to Bride S ty e Show presented by Scarbroughs and Alpha Delta Pl, Tuesday, February the 23rd, at 8:15 P.M. in the Municloal Audited'. 4 Tickets are 1.25, available at Scarbroughs' UT to H ave C e n t e r Austin Firemen In M ental Research One of the first regional rehabi-' ment, and Sociology Departments litation centers in the United States and the College of Education. Per- for mental retardation research in sonnet from the Texas Education partmrn. again was summoned to the socio-behavorial sciences w ill Agency and the Austin State School * Texas I. mon Friday to extln- buckwagon s second be established at the University. w ill also serve on the board. A « Austin I-ire lie- ^ 8 j A A “ 4 8311s” rs , . , rehabilitation and special educa- Chuckwagon manager, said. lion at TEA , is field director for the training center. The training center will incor- Charles S. Eskridge, former as- research programs and sistant commissioner for vocational as porate training in vocational rehabilita­ tion related to mental retardation. The center is supported by a giant from the Vocational Rehabil­ It will be itation Administration. a core center for research -and training in mental retardation for 13 states. Peace Corpsmen Begin Training The threefold program will in­ training work­ field personnel clude short-term for VRA shops fire* in three weeks "This fire was not nearly so bad one," Norman Taylor. “ It out as excessive smoke, an(j somc grease on the deep-fat fryer ignited, but there was no damage." The Chuckwagon fire on Jan . 26 p also started in the deep fat fryer rn and resulted the cooking dollars damage area and to food that had been in several hundred >fS| to Peace Corps trainees for India prepared, working with mental retardation, long-term graduate programs for day morning at Seton H all. Ik e vol- cleared by fans and food service * n d V re ^ e a ^ i/n - w m i w h I , unteers u ’i H undergo a battery of was resumed within minutes after -Iii tesjs guncjay p r o j e c t s began checking in Saturn Smoke from Frid ay’s fire was the blaze bogan. A new Reserve Officer Training p i industrial manage- Corps program is being offered to | | iClence. an(l ment. The trainees must also learn male University sophomores, Col. > fM John D. Townsend, professor of J | ; m ilitary science, announced Fri- g India—Marathi The training classes are conduct- day. I in the Austin area cd on a university level. Volunteers The traditional ROTO program ■* field trips, and requires four years, but the ROTC j and a research program in the so- cio-behavoria! sciences related to mental retardation. _ Tilr> 130 tram00s .. , ^ Heading * « « < » f 5510? •* 9 ® m- « on' the center'* research ^Auditor.® !. Two program w ill be Dr Charlo, C O rland, associate professor of edu- Corf s fcprcsentattvc.s w ill rational psychology. Dr. Orland is ass,st m the °P « un* ccromomcs' a specialist in m e n tal deficiency Th* volunteers will be divided in* and has conducted research on at- !o STOUP® f °r training to teach Ec.g- as a second language, math, titudec. anxiety, and administrative practices as they relate to mental retardation. ln _ “ The center is fortunate to he two languages of able to draw upon the facilities and Hindi. and personnel of a vast complex of institutions concerned with mental retardation, have classes, labs, for thet'o are two major state demonstrations, schools for retardates and five pri­ vately maintained facilities in Aus­ tin ." Dr. Cleland said. An 11-member advisory board w ill be formed to include Univer­ sity faculty members from the Psychology, Anthropology, Manage- Shivers to Speak To Pi Sigma Alpha Sorority Leader To Visit Campus The Grand President of Alpha G a m m a Delta sorority, Mrs. Thomas J. Ehrhart, will arrive on campus Sunday to help the chap­ ter prepare for its twenty-fifth an- niversarv celebration which will be ... . , . ' , New ROIC Plan Being Offered Vitalization Act of 1964 makes it |g i | possible for the college student to meet requirements for a second two lieutenant's commission years. rn in UNDER THE TWO YEAR pro­ gram, the student attends a six- weeks summer r a m p at Fort Knox, Ky., after completing his sophomore year at the University. Upon completion of the camp, the student may sign a contract for the advanced ROTC course . ( 1 un lor and senior years) or dis- continue the program. .. , . . Form er Governor Allan .Shivers held May 8. SOPHOMORES MAY OBTAIN w ill address the initiation banque* Monday she w ill visit the Austin further information about the new of P i .Sigma Alpha, a national po- Cerebral Palsy Center in conner program by contacting Col. Town- litieal science honor society. Tile Hon with Alpha Gamma Delta’s sen{} jn the ROTC Building. Each speech. Present and Future, w ill be giv- en Monday at a dinner at ti! cen Pastures. c^e w ill be entertained at a qualifying mental and physical luncheon Thursday with the I ns examinations and an interview to versify Panhellenic executive board assess his potential as an officer 0f Worn- in order to be eligible to begin the program this summer. i v* Texas Governor: national altruistic project. in tho honor society an(| Membership en’s office. applicant must complete by M ay 15 jps Is based on academic record in g o v e rn m e n t and over-all grade point a v e r a g e . J David Palm er, president of P i Sigma Alpha, will preside at the Initiation. Initiates w ill include Alex Ama- kis. Lawrence Bell, D onald W al­ lace. Brown, Harold Neil Brown, John Stanley Brown, Jam es D. Clark, Louise Adelle Davis, Sam J Dealev Pam ela Fensch, John tor M Garner, Rrxrne Ann Hanes. C le ve n ge r to Discuss Semantic Differentia Dr. Theodore Clevenger Jr., edi- is sponsored by the Department of j*o Communtca- Speech and is in honor of its for- | I J ° urna^ tion a n d associate professor of mer chairman. Also Della M. Henderson. Her- speech at the University of Pitts- A member of the Pittsburgh fac- f|| ry I .co Jones Edwin W. Knaak. burgh, w ill lecture on ‘ The Use ulty for four years. Dr. Clevenger Phillip Lacy, Susan Elizabeth Mat- Semantic Differential in Com- has directed the school’s Comma- thews, Helen Murchison, Eleanor munication Research’’ at 8 p m. nication Research Laboratory. He Beyea Pomeroy, Jam es Benton Ry Monday in the Academic Center has taught at the Universities of Illinois, Florida lander, M ary W . Walker, M ary Dr. Clevenger's speech will he state University, and Henderson Jan e Walton, Donna Weintraub, Ja y L . Westbrook, Shelton W il­ liams, and M ary Ann Waveoff. another in the T. A. Routs* Me- State College of Arkansas, morial Lecture Series. The series Dr. Clevenger is the author of Wisconsin and Auditorium. ."Audience Analysis" and the co­ . Savannah T apastra Tara Silver Sculpture La rk WSM W e h a v e y o u r f a v o r i t e s t c r l i n a p a t t e r n . . . a s f e a t u r e d in R e e d & B a r t o n ' s 9 S I L V E R O P IN IO N COM PE T IT IO N See the complete Reed & Barton line now as well as those of other fam ed silversmiths at • 309 CONGRESS, Downtown • CAPITAL PLAZA SH OPP!!# C T R .. Roc* T V Diamond franca f Clastic Rosa Hampton Court rn author of “ The Oral Communica­ tion Process." Both books were published this year. Dr. Clevenger received his BA and MA degrees from Baylor Uni- I versify a n d his doctorate from ; Florida State University. He is a member of the Speech Associa­ tion of America, the Linguistic Society of America, and the N a­ tional Society for the Study of I Communication. SSS? arn Publisher Donates Civil War Letters A collection of Civil W ar letters has been donated to the University by Robert S. Weddle, novelist and publisher of The Menard News. D ie collection, called the Mon- tee Nelms Weddle Collection, pre­ sents an excellent picture of a little known phase of the war, said R. Henderson Shuffler, director of the University Texana Programs in the Humanities Research Cen­ ter. The hulk of the letters vrere written by Weddle's grandfather, Americus Leonidas Nelms, who served with Confederate forces stationed in Indian territory. The letters, written to Nelms'. I wife, give an eyewitness account « of the Indian fighting. VISIT THE WIG SHOP For W ig s and Hairpieces Custom Designed by M A N U E L H A L L in Beautiful C U M E R Across from W yatt'* C afeteria T E L G L 2-4716 Exquisite Imported etched rose lace gives its name to this superb lingerie i by Henson Klckernick. The nylon sheer gown its hemmed deep'y in lace. The decollete peignoir has love'y 'ace sleeves. Bridal white, 35.00 Not sketched etched rose slip I 3.00 brief, 4.00 pettisk’rt 7.00 lingerie, Scarbroughs’ Second Floor A S C A R B R O U G H EX C LU SIV E I Faience by Gustavsberg of Sweden A sophisticated new young faience pattern, "Prunus," designed by Stig Lindberg for Gusta.sberg of Sweden, has a border of blue plum* and bTght green 'ea.es on a whTe base. Five-piece place setting, including dinner pla^e, sa’id p’a*e bread-and-butter p'Ve, c».p and saucer, 12.00 The bright young furniture Tor terrace or indoor dining a de^x," 3 pieces, '75.00 A ccent the Home Shop, Third F.oor S C A R B R O U G H S ’ H O U R S 9;3G TO 5:30. T H U R SD A Y S ‘TIL 9 P.M. P H O N E G R 6-8331 Sunday February 21. 1965 THE D A ILY T E X A N Pad® 7 Jack Lemmon, Virna Lisi Sparkle, Shine In Hilarious 'How to Murder Your Wife English, mistakes his discourse as love and another declaration of rattles off her own counter-declara­ tion at a mile a minute. Shocked, Lemmon loosens himself from her embrace, looks at her as lf she has the plague, and stutters, “ My God! you're Italian!” She cer­ tainly is. M R N A L IS I, in case you have missed her build-up in the slick- paper magazines, is the blonde Italian import who looks like a luscious Melina Mercorui. In the film, she eventually manages to learn English. She doesn't need to. Lls! communicates just as well with Curtain Club Plans Readings Monday The University Curtain Club will hold readings for its forthcoming production of Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire” Mon­ day, Wednesday and Thursday in the Texas Union Auditorium. The Curtain d u b 's production of ‘‘Streetcar” will be precented April 8 through the the Methodist Student Center under the direction of Curtain d u b Presi­ dent Gary Chason. l l in The play contains parts for six women and six men. The production of “ Streetcar” will be the final play of the Curtain Club's 57th season. a stunning pair of eyes, and ex- 1 presses with her body what would take pages to describe. it Eventually Lemmon succumbs to Virna Lisi’s bedroom charms, and on her meals of pasta and vino becomes hopelessly out of shape A few laps around the track at the gym become an agony. An ex­ tended swim in the pool Is such a torture that he rolls over like a poisoned perch — hoary, bloated belly up. In the comic strip his j hero suffers a similar degeneration. Having had enough, Lemmon be- j gins plotting to do away with his wife. George Axelrod Is to be com­ mended for the sprightly, original screen play from which most of the laughs emerge. In one irrelevant scene, yet typical of the madness in "M urder.” Jack Lemmon at­ tempts unsuccessfully to replace a light bulb, lamenting all the while that when he was 22 he still thought “all outlets in the room had to be 1 covered to prevent electricity from leaking out.” ALL OTHER HANDS responsible for "M urder” deserve a well done also. The supporting cast, inolud-; ing Terry Thomas, Eddie Maye- hoff, and Claire Trevor is magnifi­ cent. And Richard Quine (who also directed “ The W o r l d of Suzy Wong") turns in a movie that is choreographed m a d n e s s . Neal half choreographed madness. Neal Hefti provides some lively jazz in the background. MARGARET RUTHERFORD Mete SokVf Ibvtr pre** ACADEMY AMARO WIWEk ' ^ Y is c h e fa m id s t!)* m'«en-mask/ ' — - M O R d e r , a h o y STARTS WEDNESDAY f E X l W A LT D IS N E Y oresert', WB ~ 'Fringe' Tickets Hay Be Drawn CEC Performance Set for Thursday Free tickets for “ Beyond the Fringe,” the next CEC offering. may now be drawn by Blanket I Tax holders at the Fine Arts Box Office in Hogg Auditorium. The event will be held at 8 p.m. Thurs­ day in Municipal Auditorium. “ Beyond the Fringe,” a sharp and outrageously funny set of sa­ tirical sketches, is written by four intellectual Englishmen, not long from Oxford and Cambridge. Wan­ dering through a sot made of col­ umns, arches, and platforms, the four actors are impudent to every­ body and everything. Their sketch of a bland, ineffectual MacMillan is devastating and their picture of the vicar of the parish of St. Jack in the lifeboat trying to be folksy with God to lure young people into his church should give any arch­ bishop shudders. A civil defense lecturer advises his listeners “ to got out of the danger area — that s where the bomb drops, you know," and tells a questioner that public services “ will be resumed shortly after the holocaust, but at first it may only be a skeleton of service." Dis­ cussing fellow complains of its violence and its degeneracy today. " I don't go to the theater just to see rape. lust, violence, and depravity. I can get all that at home.” theater, one the Met Touring Company To Perform Here in ’66 Tile Metropolitan Opera's new national company will visit Austin next season as part of its first cross-country tour. Four opera productions. Bizet’s "Carmen," Rossini's "Cinderella,” Puccini’s Butterfly,” “ Madame and Carlisle Floyd's “ Susannah,” will be the touring repertoire of the troupe. Rise Stevens, one of the Metro­ politan's mezzo-soprano stars, and Michael Manuel are general man­ agers for the company. 'S O M E T H IN ? TO S E E ! " foil “ H o w th o B u r n e t D r i f t -In t o M u ' J e t Y o u r W i f e ' ’ sta rr in g e t l a r k Lorn m e n . V i m a. L is t, T e r ry I i d i e M a y e h o f f , a n d T h o m o -t. C larre J m w r ; p ro d u c e d by Ct Ord n C a rro ll a n d arrect r d b y R h trd t h r o u g h U n i t e d Q u i n t ; r e l e a s e d A r t i s t s . By CH VELES GITTILL Assistant AmojM'mrntn Editor **How to Murder Your Wife” Is an hilariously funny picture. When Hollywood chooses to do so. it ran turn out the slickest comedies in it filmdom, and with "M urder” has pulled out all the stops. With slight gags, one-line belly laughs, a sparkling script, and Jack Lemmon, the movie spoofs news­ paper cartoons and cartoonists, court-room dramas, the modes and mores of the American institution of marriage, and even the film "Divorce— Italian Style.” J WK LEMMON, who hasn t been headed since he first won an Oscar as Ensign Pulver in "M r. Roberts.1* has such a wealth of material to work from that, for once, he isn’t pushed to milk the utmost from every line, | As the rich author of a comic strip starring a secret agent. Jack Lemmon insists on live personal rehearsals of everything his hero is to do in the strip. Startling passers by, he conducts chases and creates mayhem with child-like abandon in the New York streets. in an effort to capture action shots on film which he can later transfer to the drawing boards. But all this conies to an end when at a drunken brawl he mar­ ries the girl who comes out of the cake. Upon awakening the next morning, he tries to set everything straight by offering her a divorce in Reno. Tile girl, who speaks no BRING THE LITTIE WOMAN. . . MAYBE SHE U DIE LAUQHIHG! JACK LEMMON VINA LISI HOWTO MURDER^ YOUR WIFE' TECHNICOLOR *i *«« '*« UNITED ARTISTS - Worn* ii S t e I t B * f« rn Y o u r Ii Holland l i m o Exclusive Showing — Comedy Hit of the Year Al he S F K O T Ii KH A U S O P K N I :i« "PREVIEW TONIGHT Thaameunt C O M E BETWEEN 6:00 AND 8:00 AND SEE SNEAK PLUS “ T W O O N A G U ILLO T IN E” C O M E BETWEEN 2:10 AND 4:00 SEE SNEAK PLUS "36 H O U R S’ PARAMOUNT F e a t u r e * : 2:51 4 .'I I M.ll :>* \ k ti I" >1 S M IYF. A N JONES Two on a GuiUOTiiiA -or 7 nights in a A house of terror -or the unkindest cut of all. A D I I T S 1.00 M B C M e C H I L D SA* STATE J e a t u r e a : 11:40 2 10-5:3? 7 :54-IO:OO S M YK 4 OO JA M E S G A R N ER AS JE FF PIKE, U.S. INTELLIGENCE . . . TO UGH , C O O L, C U N N IN G , AND W A L K IN G RIGHT INTO THE WILDEST SPY ADVENTURE AM AN EVER ^ LIVED S I // WERNER I R t i f f ! V IS fttSifRS .. . JAMES EVA MABIE GARNER SAINI TAYLOR ROD Two on a Guillotiner Unkindest Cut of All “ T u n o n a G u i l l o t i n e . " at th e P a r a m o u n t T h e a t e r : starrin g C o n n i e S te t e n ' . D e a n [ o n e s a n d C e sa r R n - m e r e ; d i r e c t e d b y W i l l i a m C o n r a d ; et W a r n e r B r o s , p i c t u r e . switches from Dean and Connie in a clinch to Connie screaming at some headless corpse. Then we, get to the real meat of the matter. The Great Duquesne isn’t dead. By ELDON BA LL Associate Amusements Editor “ Two on a Guillotine” is just what you’d expect from the billing —trash. But it’s amusing trash. Connie Stevens plays the daugh­ ter of The Great Duquesne, (Cesar Romero) an illusionist who sticks swords through his wife. When her mother dies, she is sent away to live with an aunt, and knows nothing of her father until she reads of his death and attends the funeral. There she learns that she will if she can spend s e v e n nights in an old haunted house that Daddy lived in. inherit $300 OOO THAT’S ENOUGH of a plot for a horror show, but just to spice things up a little, Connie falls in love with a reporter. Val Hender­ son (Dean Jones) who is hanging around looking for a Story. Naturally, the house is loaded with trick s k e l e t o n s , hideous rattling chains, and all that scary stuff. For half an hour the scene S LY OLD DADDY, he pulled off that whole trick funeral just to lure Cassie back to the haunted castle, because he t h i n k s that Cassie is really his late wife. When Duquesne bursts out of the walls, scaring Cassie into heart palpita­ tions, she learns the reason for her mother’s death. See, Daddy had this idea for an illusion where he chops off Mom- mie’s head with a guillotine, only it isn’t really Mammie, it’s a wax dummy. But the first time he tries the trick . . . oops, that isn’t the dummy — that’s Mommie. How clumsy you are. There are just a few bugs to work out here, and Duquesne wants to try it again. So he grabs Cassie, who screams, and carries her up the stairs to that secret room* that wras always locked where he keeps the guillotine. Luckily. Cassie had the foresight to call Val, the re­ porter, before all this started, and he is on the way. VAL RUSHES IN Just as Du quesne is about to trip the lever. They wrestle around the room, Duquesne making frantic grabs at the lever, but Val finally wins. But just as Val is getting up from battle, covered with heroism, he trips and falls against the lever. These are the clumsiest people. Val is upset by all this, and you can understand that he fee’s pretty foolish. But it all works out rig! t in the end. Daddy has finally put his finger on the trouble, and this time the trick worked just fine. That head was a w ax dummy, and here’s Gussie s head hero. under this little trick board. See. See here. Cassie s . . . Hummmm. CONNIE S T EV EN S hasnt im­ proved much on straight lines, but she’s pretty good on the screams. Cesar Romero was the only really articulate member of the cast, with the possible exception of the rabbit in the hat. This reviewer can’t say much for the younger generation viewing the movie. All that screaming and carrying on. What cowards. The only scary thing during the whole movie was when this old lady sit­ ting in die next seat said, “ It s all right now’, Sonny. Get back in your own s e a t . You’re crushing my popcorn.” Schulz-Behrends English Version O f German Simplicius Published Dr. George Sehulz-Behrend, pro­ fessor of Germanic languages, has completed translation of one of the masterpieces of world literature. Simplicissimus” by “ Simplicius Johann J a k o b Christoffor von Grimmelshausen. The Library of Liberal Arts, New York City, has published the translation in hard­ bound and paperback editions. The lusty, Seventeenth Century novel, a perennial best seller in Germany .deals with the period of Bertolt Brecht's "Mother Courage.” Dr. Sehulz-Behrend has included a summary of the Thirty Years' War, an introduction which illumi­ nates the life of Grimmelshausen, In person! World Famous Robert Harvey "Plays your favorite piano classics” plashed once and Sehulz-Behrend said. for all,” Dr. “ An original has the dubious ad­ vantage of bc.ng unchangeable,” he added. “ Translations must be done every few generations.” A prim Victorian translation ap­ peared in 1912. It ommitted many passages which Dr. Sehulz-Behrend i lias restored in his modern version. Dr. Sehulz-Behrend. ft specialist I in German literature of the .Seven­ teenth Century, has taught at the University since 1946. He is co-author of two German textbooks and author of a defini­ tive critical edition of the works of Martin Opitz, a Seventeenth Cen­ tury German poet. ROY'S LOUNGE "O N THE D R A G ” Open Daily 2 p.rn.-midnight W E MAKE OUR O W N PIZZA ' Best In Town A T a n l H a til I M M F n te rp rix e T h e S il k i e r Y o u R e ad A b o u t In P la y b o y M a in li n e K ik e S u m m e r It SWEET ECSTACY” —Alitv—* B rig itte B a rd o t P ik e “ LOVE ON THE RIVERA” and S u m m e r on S a m e P r o g r a m ! the GHM: the background of “ Simplicius Simplicissimus,” and an essay on the art of translation. “ Translation, like so many hu­ man endeavors, isn't ever accom- Peter Hurd Biography To Be Published Monday The biography of Peter Hurd, Southwestern artist, will be pub­ lished Monday by the University of Texas Press. “ Peter Hurd: A Portrait Sketch from Life,” was written by Paul Horgan and contains six full-color and 16 black-and-white reproduc­ tions of the artist’s w?ork. The book reveals Hurd's evolu- rit n as an artist and as an indi It tells of his departure vidual. from his native New Mexico in 1925 to attend West Point and to study later at the Pennsylvanian Academy of Fine Arts. Horgan, known as a novelist and historian of the Southwest, won the Harper Prize the Pulitzer Prize in history In 1954 for “ Great River: The Rio Grande in North American History.” in 1933 and ORIVE IN THEATRE I R 3911 L h ! k* iliix Off ire Open 6 DO OF HUMAN BONDAGE R im Jfovak JI law ren ce H arvey 7 H ROBINSON CRUSOE ON MARS P a u l M antee JI YI# L u l l ! 3.45 J I 3900 St Conf Box O ffice Open 6:00 THE HUSTLER Tau ! Newman JI d a rkie ( l lc u o a 7 :0 0 MOVE OVER DARLING Do ria Hat A .lam ia G arn er 9 15 The Department of Drama Presents R A S H O M O N O Together they laughed, loved and fough t for a dream as big as the sky! , \ Ymnr,t BRIAN • VERA BRANDON WALTER ED • .-frsrrwmmmm KEITH■ MI LES • de WILDE • BRENNAN - WYNN Starts THURSDAY PARAMOUNT TOMORROW and TUESDAY only at the AUSTIN THEATER— the PULITZER and NOBEL PRIZE-WINNING STORY TRACY MAN vs. NATURE in E r n e s t H e m i n g w a y '* m o s t SUSPENSEFUL MASTERPI ECE! to v ;: a SIMPLE man” OIAHf Start trig H*epv u M O CORBET! I (torn S pm, U A T I K I S : 2 : 75 4 : 15 ti: OO 7 :50-9 :33 j i M WYATT EARP BB m iuiiunI WILD BILL HICKOK BELLE STARR ■ Murrain Kl JOHNNY ROKOS ROB DAITON t u t T in ts B H I and FIEST Al NI I V S H O W IN G R ltfl too! H f § n m e f rn IM E STOOGES Plus! 2nd FEATURE “ Cavalry Command” JO H N A G A R • R IC 1141(1) A K I I N M J H ! ! A T ! T H KATHI-. SI C H IE F “T iS § l V O P U S fi t*) I* YI I A M A H O I T I A W 0:45 A IO 15 CAY A F K l K HY Municipal Auditorium Tuesday, March 9, 8:15 p.m. Adme-ion: Halcnnv SIDO L o w e r flo o r «?.00-13.0 A U S T IN \ hreea 2150 8. C O N G R E S S O P E N I : SO CAY A l KY : I 45 4 55 ft 05 O I TI.AYY S : 3: OI 6: <0 9 IO A U S T I N ^ Vt* I AH For Information ■ /fiT* Call GR 2-351 I P A L A U t i rn Hogg Auditorium February 24-27, 8 p.m. Tickets Now on Sale Fine Arts Box Office— GR 1-1444 Candidate Selections Engage Attention of Campus Parties are from among the 12.000 fami­ lies in Austin who carn less than the $3,000 annual income that is the ‘poverty’ level,” Wright said. Interviews will Im* held at the “Y ” from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon­ day and Tuesday. Eighty-four University students have already signed up for the program. ★ Brazilians Visit C am p u s Eight Brazilian social scientists who have completed a weekend visit to the University after a five- week sem inar on social change in Washington. D.C., will leave Aus- , tin a t I p.m. Sunday. The Brazilians a re E uro Alves, Raymundo N. de Albuquerque. I Em m anuel M alta, Roberto Mattos, Francisco de B arros, Virgilio Da Silva, Lincoln P ra te s Dos Santos, and Luiz De Campos Goncalves. While on cam pus, the group toured the International Office and the Latin Am erican Collection and held inform al discussions with f a c - ; ulty m em bers and students. F ri­ day, the classes of Ralu Branco, visiting associate professor of economics. they visited Hosts for the visit, sponsored by I the US State D epartm ent in col­ laboration with George Washing­ ton University, have been the In ­ ternational Office and Dr. Anthony Leeds, associate professor of a n ­ thropology. A l b e e ' s I m a g e r y Topic A study of Edward Albee’s use of Christian Imagery’, par­ ticularly in “ The Zoo Story,” has been scheduled at I p.m. Tuesday by the Drama Discus­ I n i versify sion Group of “ Y." the Campus News in Brief Lloyd Birdweil, chairman of the group, has announced that the meeting will be held at the “Y .” ★ Petroleum Unit to Meet “ New and Novel Oil Recovery M ethods” will he the topic of D r . ! J Paul B. Crawford in a speech to I be given to the Balcones Section of the Society of Petroleum E ngi­ neers a t 7:30 p.m . Tuesday a t the T errace Motel. Dr. Crawford, who received his m aster of science degree and doc­ torate at the U niversity, is cu r­ rently a m em ber of the graduate faculty at T exas A&M. J He is author of m ore than 90 publications on petroleum produc­ tion. His talk will deal with l l new i methods recovery, in petroleum including fireflooding, steam , and therm al recovcrv. C o l l e g e Invites Physicist Dr. Jam es C. Thompson, asso­ ciate professor of physics, will be a visiting lecturer at Arling­ ton Stale College in Arlington March I and 2. His visit is sponsored by the American Association of Physics Teachers and Ihe American In­ stitute of Physics as part of a nation-wide program to inrrea*e interest in physics. The program, now in its eighth is supported by the Na­ year, tional Science Foundation. Dr. Tompson will lecture, talk informally with students, and as­ sist faculty members with cur­ riculum and research problems. Wednesday. Delegates m ay regis­ te r a t that tim e. The sta te convention will be held a t the Driskill Hotel. it M e x i c a n D i n n e r O p e n The International Club is spon­ soring a Mexican dinner at 6 p.m. Sunday in the Junior Ball­ room. Admission is $1 for mem­ bers arni $1.25 for non-members, The public is invited. State YD M eeting Set University Young D em ocrats are expecting approxim ately 1.000 del­ egates to attend the Young Dem- D Derat state convention March 6 and 7. in Austin Businessman to Speak . , The YD’s announced The Am erican M arketing Assod- that any- ation will m eet at 7:30 p.m. Mon- one who wants to be a delegate day in Business-Eeonomics Build- should place his nam e with any ing 116. officer of the organization before Wednesday. E . A. Adamson. Austin business- m an. will talk on “ C hrysler’s 30,- Convention plans will be dis- OOO Mile W arranty—How Good?” cussed a t the next m eeting of the to be held at 7:30 p.m. YD’s. lie. The meeting is open to the pub- liW!im'iiWIil8t«®l«tlti8W 'I 1 MSIRBHKMMffiltn ’ SM > 'JU! 41JUU1!ijIj " SUSI'1 ‘ti!! i‘ lilt «, , WMW in Nominations for Represen ta ti ve S tates,” will speak on “ The Endur- the spring ing Problem of Poverty” at 8 p.m. in E dw ard’s' University P a rty candidates election wil be m ade a t a m eeting Monday a t 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Delta dining hall. Zeta sorority house. Miss Day, editor and publisher M em bers of the platform com- of The Catholic Worker, has writ- m ittee, under the chairm anship of ten num erous m agazine articles Teddy Griffith, will report on re- ancj several books, including her autobiography—“ The Long Loneli- visions of the party platform . Llectinn of p arty candidates will ness.” be held at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday! She operates a mission home for a t Alpha Phi sorority house. the poor in New York City. U n i p a r t y Ch a rts P l a n s The steering committee of I nl- partv will meet at 9 p.m. .Sunday at the Tejas Club, 3600 Rio Grande. The committee will consider I b i p a r t y candidates for the spring election. A slate will he announced Wednesday night at the I niparty convention. Interested students are invited to call Paul Quinton, Iniparty member, at GR G-M19. * ★ Professor at M eeting Dr. W. 0 . S. Sutherland, asso­ c iate professor of English, will a t­ tend a conference on junior college English program s Sunday through Tuesday in Tem pe, Ariz. A faculty-staff reception will be held for Miss Day at 7 p.m . Mon­ day in the faculty lounge of St. E dw ard's U niversity dining hall. * Six F l a gs Sets A u d i t i o n Representatives from Six H ags Over Texas will tour southwest­ ern state univ ersities to Interview talented students to appear in their 1965 Campus Revue. They will audition at the I ni- versify beginning at IO a.m. March 6 in Texas I mon Auditor­ ium. The revue is an annual show presented from mid-June until Labor Day at the amusement park s ampitbeatre in Arlington. it Orators N a m e Officers Newly elected officers of Dr. Sutherland was in Washing- the ton, D. C , F rid a y and Saturday O ratorical Association a re Edwin for a US Office of Education con- Knaak, vice-president; U n a Wat- ference on a sum m er institute for ^ ns* secretary and Ja c k Love, E nglish teach ers to be held at the publicity chairm an. U niversity under the provisions of j K naak and Mike Phillips won th e National Defense Education place in debate at a speech tournam ent at Abilene Christian Act. College Feb. 12-14. Phillips also placed first in oratory, while T er­ ry Faulk won second place in that competition. ★ 1,000 S u p p l e m e n t s So l d An estimated 1,200 spring sup­ plementary directories were sold on campus and in bookstores Fri­ day, said L. L. Edmonds, gen­ eral manager of Texas Student Publications, Inc. figure Edmonds said that 800 of the books were sold in booths on campus, and an estimated 400 were sold in bookstores and new s- stands. This contrasts sharply with the 7,000 directories sold on the first day last fall. The spring supplement was be­ gun as an experimeent by TSP last year, and the TSP board will decide whether it will be con­ tinued next year, Edmonds said. The supplements are !>eing soh! In the Journalism Building ami in bookstores and newsstands for 29 cents plus tax. College Costs Discussed How much does it cost to go to college, and how do m ost students finance their education? These questions and m any oth­ e rs w ere discussed on this week s “ Introspect,” radio program pro­ duced bv The U niversity of Texas R adio Television. Local stations carry in g the series a re KNOW, KUT-FM, and KHFI-FM. KHFI- FM and KNOW broadcast the se­ rie s at 6 a rn. and 6:30, respec­ tively on Sundays. Topics discussed this week are th e availability of loans and schol- j arships, part-tim e and sum m er work, relativ e costs for graduate students and undergraduates, resi­ d ent and dependency allowances for m arried students with children an d other dollar-m ark aspects of “ higher education.” Panel m em bers for this w eek’s discussion are John ll. Dodson, di­ re c to r of student financial aids at th e U niversity! Dr. Leo Hughes, associate dean of the G raduate .School; and D r. Stephen E. Cla- ba ugh. professor of geology. Dr. Wayne IL Holtzman. College of Education dean, is m oderator for the entire series. Catholic Editor Due Dorothy Day, often described as the Roman the United the “conscience of in Catholic Church G u i d e t o G O O D E A T I N G ★ C a n d i d a t e s M u s t File Students filing for office in the Student Assembly must bo reg­ istered at the Students’ Associa­ tion office, Texas Union 323, by 5 p.m. Thursday. Positions for all schools will be open for the elections March 17. For further information, students should contact the Students* As­ sociation office or call GRI-3721. ★ Four Tested for Corps Four applicants responded to the test F ri­ Peace Corps placem ent day, according to Mrs. Jo Ann Slover, psychom etrist at the T est­ ing and Counseling Center. Mrs. Slover did not know when the results would be known, as the tests a re sent to W ashington, D. c ., to be graded and evaluated, Student-tuto rs S o u g h t Deadline for interviews for the University “Y’s ” tutoring pro­ to 5 gram has been extended p.m. Tuesday, Frank Wright, ex­ ecutive director of the “ V,” has announced. interested “Students in utiliz­ ing the ideas they heard in the Challenge p o v e r t y program would he especially interested in tutoring," Wright said. Eighteen positions are availa­ ble for tutors on grade school, junior high, and high school lev­ els. “The children who need help HUTCHIN’ POST P IZ Z A KITCHEN Full Pound Barbecue W ith P IZ Z A S To-Go or Delivered Ribs $1.19 G R 8-8827 G R 6-430! / A t m O w ned and Operated by Buzzy Buck IOU N. LAMAR 1201 N. L A M A R h a m b u r g e r s ] <>{wn Close * rn. l l p.m. 3303 N LAMAR Ph. GL 2-2317 1 5 0 H a m b u r g e r ! IT'S N E W T O S i Clue© ESPECIALLY FOR L O N G H O R N S ! The Longhorn Room D IN E IN L U X U R Y A N D E N J O Y T H E BEST M E X I C A N F O O D A R O U N D i i i a n cl c i r O l i n cl AUSTIN The Daily Texan Recommends One of the Following for Good Food! Moderate Prices! £ A L A M O Restaurant and ('offee R tm I N T E R N A T I O N A L L Y K N O W N S e r v i n g Th* Finest Fami lies in C e n t r a l Texas O v e r 19 Y e a r s A L L D A Y S A T U R D A Y & S U N D A Y W e F ea tu re D elu x e S ou th ern F ried C H I C K E N D I N N E R S • Sh id • ' r S n ’ mp O ’- kt* 1 vo V egetab les or On* V egetab le end Raked P otato • D rink and D essert vmmmm % mm im .mm. GR 6-5455 Varied Dinner M onday thru Friday as > 90 rn 604 G u ad alu p e t Ml'!!' 2233 N O . L O O P BLVD.. Just off Burnet M o n -S a t. 11:00-2:13; 4 30-8 OO S u n d a e s 11.00-2:30 ; 4:30-8.OO C A F E T E R I A “Ita li an F o o d is O u r O n l y B u s i n e s s ” L U N C H F R O M l l TILL 1:45 D I N N E R F R O M 5 TILL 9:45 FRI. & S A T . D I N N E R 5 TILL 10:45 Closed on M o n d a y D A IR Y Q U E E N 19 4 0 (2 5 Y R S . ) 1965 Pl a i n G o o d Fo o d H A M B U R G E R S — T A C O S S H R I M P — C H I C K E N S U N D A E S — B A N A N A SPLITS Inside or to G o 2 9 12 Guadalupe Phone GR 6-9662 EL C H I C O H A N C O C K C E N T E R ^ r e s t a u r a n t s : AUSTINS ITALIAN RESTA FINE T i t i i l u W M • HIGHEST Q U A L IT Y • FAIR PRICES • LIBERAL P O R T IO N S IN T H E H E A R T O F D O W N T O W N A U S T I N N 'P i ICCADILLY 801 CONGRESS L - f i e t e a Daily 6:30 A . M . 8:30 P.M. Btl! Iri s get it at E N G L I S H ’S Austin's M ost U n iq u Delicatessen ‘W e d o n t really serve dogs but even they know a good G R 6-6111 thing when they see it. 0 0 8 O N T H E D R A G W H E N IT C O M E S T O 0 PIZ Z A ROME INN C om e to the 2900 RIO GRANDE STOP BY OUR UNIQUE SA D D LE TAP BAR sale. H om e E conom ics P i o n I v F r o o P a r k i n * * O P E N 7 A M CLOSE IO P M Just G o o d Food A t Reasonable Prices C a t erin cf lo I /iii verdi tif In d e n ts a n d d d a c u f ly Mon. Thru Fri. 1:00 lo 2:30 — 4:30 to 8:30 Sdt. & Sun, — Continuous Service Wyatt’s C A F E T E R I A IN B E A U T IF U L HANCOCK CENTER Best Sea Food In Town “B Roasted" Chicken Steaks Complete Dinner Menu for Every Evening 3501 N. Lamar to Newman Center 1-0 -French Hast S even th and Son M arcos. le g a t io n open in visitors, 2-5—T ex** M em orial M useum .>pon to v isito rs. T w e n ty -fo u rth and S an J a ­ cin to 2 Alpha P hi O m ega, T e x a s Union .Junior B allroom 2-5 T w e n tie th C entury. la g u n a G loria. 2 6 L atin A m erican and A rg en tin a e x ­ p h otograp h s by Roy R osen. h ib its Art M useum . 2-D -K U T -F M p rogram s, 90 7 m r; and M onday. 3— Inform al co llo q u y on L atin A m eri­ can b it . Art M useum . 3-5—-K xhtbit of art by A m erican p ain t­ ers, N e y M useum : and M on d a\ I R ecital by P h \l!!s Y ou n g, cello, M u-ic B u d d in g R ecital Hail 4 and 7- Movie “ W'ild R iv e r ,” T exas U nion A uditorium 4 6 K arate Club * Y " 7 30 R e p r e s e n t a t i v e P a r t y , D e l t a il rl a h o u se 8 P an el on “ T h e N a tu re of Man w ith P rof. G rover F oley. Rabbi Judah F ish anti A ttorn ey Jack Dar- o f T exas rm i/rt, M ain B allroom U nion. 9 U n iv ersity r a t t y T< jas Club. Monday 8:30-4 30—S a le of S tu d en t D irecto ry su p p lem en t Jo u rn a lism B u ild in g lOf, and D rag b ook stores - R L R N - TV program s, R tm ii p.m . C hannel 9. 5-5— F ilin g for stu d en t sp r in g election , 9 .V N om in al Ions for B u sin e ss A dm in­ .Sw eetheart. CRA C ouncil in b asem en t o f B u s:n ess-E co- istra tio n room n om ics B u ild in g 9-12 and 1 - 5 - E x h ib it : ‘ A D ecad e of fou rth C o lle c t in g ’’ Stark L ib rary, floor of Main B u ild in g. 9-4 -D ra w in g of tic k e ts fo r “ B eyon d for th e F r in g e .’' and reserv a tio n s * R ash om on ,” H o g g A u d itoriu m box o ffice 9-5—C offee “ Y .” 9-11 S n ark B u ild in g 129. 9-5 P e titio n in g for p ostp on ed ex a m i­ n ation s and r e-ex a m in a tio n s, R eg is- j trar's O ffice. 3-5 R ecep tion G regg H ou se for C h ilean s tu d e n ts ,! J—F a c u lty F iresid e* C om m ittee. “ Y .“ to speak on 4 Dr D avid R. and N u clea r R eaction s.' In g les ’ O p tics P h y s ic s B u ild in g 313. I T exas A ssociation o f C o lleg e ' l e a c h ­ ers to hold panel on ‘’Im p lica tio n s in j C u rren t P rop osals C on cern in g T exas P u b lic H igh er E d u ca tio n ,” B u sin ess- ! E con om ics B u ild in g 103. 7 - P h o to g r a p h y class. T e x a s U n ion 333. ; 7 - -T a u B eta P l slid e ru le c o u r se be-1 g in s. E x p er im en ta l S c ie n c e B u ild in g 333. 5 Dr T h eod ore C leven ger to present T. A R ou ssc M em orial L ecture, Ara d e m it C enter A u d itoriu m . T e x a s I nlon 323 9-1 T ic k e ts for S h ow , W est M all, Co-Op. “ T h e th e J o h n n y M athis and U n iv ersity UNIVfRSITY BROADCASTS K l T FM , 90.7 mc Sunday -Ordeal o f N ew F ran ce 2 nn N ew Y ork P h ilh arm on ic 4 OO— U n iv ersity C oncert 5 OO—S eren ad e 5 HO A :30—New s r> T>-W e e k e n d M agazin e 7 OO—J effe rso n ia n H erita g e 8 Jo BRU D ram a 9 1 XI—G oo n S h ow 1 0 .0 0 —Music for a Su n day N ig h t M onday 2 rxi -K a le ld r scope IS no S eren ad e 6 OO- S p ecia l o f th e \ \ < ck «: 30— New n 7 :0 0 — M usic o f D is t in c t io n : K eyboard ‘ in OO—O p in ion O m nibus 10 :1 5 —J azz N o ctu rn e KLEN-TV Monday 8 :.70—TV Kindergarten 9 :0 0 —*H isto ry , G overnm ent 9 97—S p an ish , L evel I 9:45— Spanish. level 2 10:07— A rt. M usic 10 JO—C o m m u n ity C alendar I o .,v>—S cien ce, G rade 8 11:02—S cien ce. G rade 4 11 .30—N ig h N o o n 1 2 :8 0 — C o m m u n ity C a le n d a r I .! TV—s p a n is h . L evel 3 1 :05— H is t o r y . G o v e r n m e n t 1:35- S cien ce, Grade 5 2:00- S p a n is h , L e v e l I 2 18 S p an ish , Level 2 2 37 S c ie n c e G ra d e 6 3 . OO- H erita g e 3 'ire--Rig P ic tu re 4 :(X W I V K in d e r g a r te n 4 :3 0 — F u n W ith F u z z y 5 :0 0 — W h at * N e w 5 30— T h e M u sic R o o m 6 : 3< >— K v en l n g N e w s 7 :0 0 —C o n v e r s a tio n : W CAT 7 .3 0 — A m e r ic a n M e m o ir s s .OO— in te rn a tio n a l M agazine 9 : 0 0 Congress of S t r in g s IO OO The B ig P ic t u r e 1 0 . 3 0 S ig n OII V i c t o r i a n C A F E T E R I A D I N I N G E X C E L L E N C E You are cordially invited to acq u ain t yourself w ith the elegant surrou n d in g s of the new V ictorian C afeteria. Won’t you come by soon and enjoy a super!; dining e x ­ perience? FREE COFFEE W ILL BE SERVED W ITH ANY FOOD PURCHASE DURING THE HOURS OF 6:30 AM — 9:00 AM AND 5:00 PM — 8:30 PM EACH DAY THRU Feb. 14 800 CONGRESS A V E N U E .. t „ .... . . ... ^ < . V I L L A C A P R I R E S T A U R A N T A u s tin 's I.at vest & Finest Sunday Night Special C o mplete Dinner for $1.75 C h o ice of Fried Chicken or 7-Or. C lub Steak Just present your Blanket Tex or Registration receipt to C ash er 2300 Interregional H ighw ay O n ly 2 blocks from Mem orial Stadium Sunday, February 21, 1965 THE D A ILY T E X A N Pag# 9 I Religious Council to Discuss Theologians' Concepts of M an Significant concepts of the “ Na­ ture of Man” will be examined In an interfaith program at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Union Building Main Ballroom. The event represents the major program contribution of the year of the University Religious Council. The viewpoints will be those of theologians of great influence in this century and for the future: Dr. K arl Barth, protestant; Dr. Martin Buber, Jewish; and Father Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Roman Cath­ olic. Their philosophies, not neces­ sarily representative of their par­ ticular religious traditions, w ill be delivered by local speakers. Dr. Barth has been widely ac­ cepted as the most significant fig ure of the century in the field of theology. His first revolutionary book, “ Commentary on Romans,’’ ferment caused great religious when it was published in 1918. Lec­ tures which he delivered in the United States form the major part of his recent book, “ Evangelical Theology.” He is working on future volumes of his “ Church Dogmatics.” Dr. Barth has defined theology as evan­ gelical because it stresses God s instead of encounter with man man’s discovery of God. Dr. Buber’s concept of man’s relationship with his fellow man and with God has influenced Chris­ tian, as w’ell as Jewish thought. religious This writer conceives faith as a dialogue between man and God. He has had deep effect on the Zionist ideology, especially on youth movements. Father de Chardin, n French First Week Sales Brisk For Mathis Song Event Approximately 3 000 tickets re­ main for the Johnny Mathis con­ cert. Three thousand two hundred and fifty tickets had been sold by Friday morning, according to Don Griffon, Co-Op employe. Tickets may be purchased on campus, at the University Co-Op, and at Blomquist-Ciark downtown. The Co-Op had between 125 and 150 tickets remaining Friday. Jesuit priest and paleontologist, was little known when he died in New York City IO years ago. He has been acclaimed as the St. Thomas Aquinas of this age and denounced as the “ Trojan horse of Catholicism,” Although his books had been banned from Catholic bookstores, the Teilhard Influence was discernible in the polemics of the Ecumenical Council called by Pope John in 1962. Presenting the viewpoints of the theologians for the council pro­ gram will be Prof. Grover Foley, faculty member at Austin Presby­ terian Theological Seminary; Rabbi Judah Fish, Congregation Agudas Achlm; and J. P. Darrouzet, Aus­ tin attorney. The speakers, wrho have done extensive research on the theologians, will concentrate on points of agreement in these con­ cepts and on contrasts. A question period will be held after the dis­ cussion. Willa Pinto, Barbara Williams, and Sam Bufford, students repre­ senting the three religious tradi­ tions and members of the inter­ faith committee, will introduce the *speakers. Wayne Walther Is chairman of the council. Panel to Study Meaning In Proposed Legislation in “ Implications to the State Current Proposals Concerning Tex­ as Public Higher Education” will be the topic of a panel discussion by University professors Monday. Hie program, scheduled for 4 p.m. in Business-Economics Build­ ing 103, is sponsored by the Uni­ versity chapters of the Texas As­ sociation of College Teachers and the American Association of Uni­ versity Professors. Taking part in the panel, which will be moderated by Prof. Millard Ruud, vice president of TACT, will be Dr. Wayne Holtzman, dean of the College of Education; Dr, Archie Straiten, Ashbel Smith pro­ fessor in electral engineering; and Dr. Forest H i l l , research co­ ordinator for TACT. Each panelist will give a 10-minute address. Dr. Holtzman will outline the various proposals now' before the legisla­ ture on administration, including the realignment of Texas collages and universities into three groups. The new proposals dealing with research in higher education will be Dr. Stratton’s topic. Dr. Hill will conclude the opening remarks when he discusses the proposals which relate to faculty economics. Included in this area are proposals for faculty pay raises and fringe benefits. A f t e r the opening comments, there will be a 20-minute period for discussion and questions from the floor. All faculty members arc invited to attend. Fewer Volunteers Result of Rumors i able effect on ! Rumors that the draft may be terminated has produced a notice- the number of young men volunteering for mili- i tary service, the Associated Press ; reported Saturday. Defense officials, however, cited Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara’s discussion of the cur rent draft study to support their opinion that the d r a f t will be around for some time to come. McNamara reported the possi­ bility of meeting m ilitary require­ ments voluntarily “ sometime in the n e x t decade.” The current Selective Service Act comes up for renewal in Congress in 1967. The diminishing number of vol­ unteers has resulted in a sharp ' increase of draft quotas, the story said. [ Z D F = ? L _ J < 3 2807 San Jacinto M c * ,1 o f o ur Customers a r* w arm and fr ie n d ly folks w h ich m a l# ! it a p leasure to be in business. But w e do e n c o u n te r a few “ jerks —- co m e in and p ic k you r own c a te g o ry . A VALUE BUY AUTHENTIC HAND WOVEN INDIA MADRAS SHIRTS Traditional Ivy Style • BACK LOOP • TAPERED • BUTTO N-DOWN • SHORT SLEEVE COLLAR YOURS NOW ’ FOR TH E LOW’ PRICE OE ONLY 3.99 EA. S p e a k ™ o f C h u r ili l u r c h e s . • . ticipants in the Presbyterian Cam­ pus Ministry’s evening fellowship starting at 6 p.m. Sunday. A fellowship hour at 6 p.m. will be followed by a “ Universal Day of Prayer for Students” sendee at 7 p.m. Students will go to the University Religious Council’s program at the Texas Union at 8 p.m. The campus ministry’s activi­ ties for next week include a noon­ day discussion Tuesday at the Lu­ theran Student Center with Bill Buckner speaking on “ The Legal Mission in East Austin. ’ Tuesday evening from 8:30 to 9:30 Dr. Bob Davidson will lec­ ture on “ Barth” in a Contemporary Theologians Seminar at the Luth­ eran center. * ★ ★ Tile Rev. William T. Gibble, min­ ister of the University Christian Church, will speak on “ What Is It to Worship?” at the 10:50 a.m. service Sunday. The Disciples Student Fellow­ ship w ill participate in the Re­ ligious Council Program to be held Sunday night in the Texas Union Main Ballroom. ★ ★ “ Tots, Tempests, and Technol­ ogy” will be the sermon topic at the l l a.m. sendee Sunday at the Austin Unitarian Church. The Rev. Brandoch Lovely is minister. ★ I Student Religious Liberals will meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday for sup­ per. Cost is 50c per person. Hooke Lectures To Present Wald George Wald, professor of bi­ ology at Harvard University, will discuss biological subjects in the Hooke Lecture Scries at the Uni­ versity Monday-Thursday, Wald will speak on “ The Origin of Death” at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Academic Center Auditorium. Three other talks will be given at 4 p.m. each day in the Aca­ demic Center Auditorium. Wald will l e c t u r e on “ The Problem of Visual Excitation,” Monday; “ Single and Visual Systems in Anthropoids,’’ Tuesday; and “ The Retinal Basis of Human Vision,” Thursday. Berry Asks Voting Age Rep. Red Berry of San Antonio has proposed in the Texas House of Representatives a bill to lower the voting age to 18, University students can speak during committee hearings which begin at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. The Representative said he does not expect his bill to pass, but hopes it w ill be amended to 19. Inter-Co-op to Meet The Inter - Co-operative Council wall meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Felecia Co-op. Final plans for Co-op Week, Fob. 28-March 6, will be discussed. C H O T E 'S S IN C L A IR SER V IC E Sinclair, *‘30 Yew ** S e m in * I T A r e a ” C o m p le te H a r a R * Service W . 19th at S a n A n to n io i n ; 8-3382 TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 1708 SAN JACINTO EXPERT REPAIRS & CLEANING also HARD TO FIND RIBBONS (offered in choice of colors] J. C. LANGFORD GR 2-3232 Dr. L. D. Haskew, vice-chancel­ lor of the University*, will receive a special citation during the twelfth general assembly of the Texas Council of Churches March 8-10. Sessions will be held in First Meth­ odist Church. Others to receive special awards arc Theodore Freedman, executive director of the southern area of the Anti-Defamation League, and the Lockhart Ministers Alliance: for exceptional community leader­ ship in the desegregation of schools and other services. Program headliners will be Gov. John Connally and Dr. R. H. Ed­ win Espy, general secretary of the National Council of Churches. A number of administrators of state government are to be program leaders in the state affairs sem inar of the assembly. These in­ clude : John Winters, executive director of the Texas Department of Wel­ fare; Dr. James A. Turman wrho administers the Texas Youth Coun-! cli; Ray Williams, chief of the state parole system; Terrell Biod- j gett, coordinator of the Governor’s office for the War on Poverty;* Macon W. Freeman, executive of: the Texas Commission on Alcohol ism; Inspector G. C. Connor, De- i part men t of Public Safety; and R. C. Jones, director of rehabilitation services, Texas Department of Cor­ rections. The Rev. Robert D. Matheny of Richardson is president of the coun­ cil, and the Rev. Eugene Wood of Corsicana is assembly program chairman. Host church pastor is* Dr. Robert S. Tate. ★ ★ ★ Chancellor Harry IL Ransom will be a participant in formal dedi­ cation events at the new Catholic Student Center on the University' campus Sunday, Feb. 28. Dr. Ransom will be principal speaker at tho evening banquet. | A featured speaker wil be the Very Rev. John F. Fitzgerald, C .S.P .,! superior general of the Paulist Fa­ thers. Members of the Paulists op­ erate the Student Center and the nearby parish of St. Austin. The renter, located across the! street from Littlefield Memorial Fountain at Twenty-first Street and j University Avenue, was opened to Catholic students in September, 1964. The structure of pink Texas gran-j Ste with black Minnesota granite includes a multipurpose auditor- j ium, library, recreation area, chap- j Iain’s offices, and chapel. St. Luke Methodist Church w ill begin a four-night seminar at 7 :30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 28, seeking to explore means by which God; speaks to man today and through the centuries. The series, “ May We Speak to You,” will be introduced with a dramatic production, “ The Last Words.” Subsequent programs will deal with God’s word in the daily i newspaper and through the fine i arts, including art and music. “ We hope to learn again the means by which God speaks to man in the faith and fear, love and hate, and laughter and tragedy of everyday the Rev. life,” says Jam es Carter, pastor. “We do not hold that God does or does not speak to man today in a specta­ cular fashion. We only seek the re­ minder that God sometimes, and perhaps more frequently, speaks to us today in the still, small voice, and we hope this series w ill help us to recognize that voice wher­ ever it may be.” ★ ★ Dr. Arnold Ashburn. University of Corpus Christi professor, will lead a monthly seminar at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Baptist Student Cen­ ter. “ The Committed Student and Hise Intellectual Pursuit” will be his subject. A period will be provided for informal discussion. The center calendar includes an all-church student banquet on F ri­ day, March 12. ★ ★ ★ The Oxford Club from Huston- Tillotson College will be guest par- N E L S O N 'S Navajo and Zuni Handmade Indian Jewelry Mexican Imports 4612 So. Comr. H I 4-3811 AIM O R IG IN A L W EST CO AST " U C " T O U R 58 DAYS... only *599 Roundtnp from Dallas SU University Credits Available includes roundtrip deluxe bus Price travel from Dallas and six weeks Sum­ mer Session residence at the Un-ver­ sify of California at Berkeley, where member live at Howard Hall. This is a brand new university-approved, fully furnished, deluxe apartment building rn the heart of Greek Row. Departs Dallas June 12 for sightseeing va Amarillo, Albuquerque, Flagstaff, Grand Canyon, and Los Angeles. Return is via Yosemite, Los Angeles, Disney land, Phoenix, El Paso, and Carlsbad Caverns, Arrive rn Dallas August 9. Weekends of two or more nights are spent at San francisco, Carmel-San Simeon, and Lane Tahoe. Weekend visits to wine. redwood, and gold coun­ tries. ‘Aany local sightseeing tours and special activities. Open only to college women, including high school June graduates, a ;1 applicants are subject to review and acceptance by the house­ mother of a southern university who will escort, live with, and supervise members throughout the program. A P P L Y ; M R S . V E R A U S S E R Y A lp h a C h i O m e g a H o u se 2420 N u e ce s, A u stin , Texas G R 2-9539 HOWARD TOURS Spectacular Planned For Bridal Fashions “ Guide for Brides” —-the sixth an­ nual spectacular of wedding fash­ ions, displays, ideas, and prizes— will be staged in Municipal Audi­ torium at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday. The public is invited, and the $1.25 tickets will be available at the door. Sponsored by Alpha Delta P i sor­ ority and Scarbrough’s, the show' will feature models from every sor­ ority on campus. Appearing as the “ bridegroom” in tho final wedding s e q u e n c e will be Tommy Nobis, All-American football star of the Longhorns. TH E MOST B EA U T IFU L wed ding gowms of the season w ill be modeled for every type of wed­ ding. Also to be featured are fa­ shions for every member of the wedding party. A colorful C a m e l o t theme Is planned for the show'. There will be prizes, too, In­ cluding several “ honeymoons.” All- oxpense-paid trips for tw’o to Mex­ ico City, Six Flags Over Texas, Lakeway, and the Driskill Hotel will be given away. M ODELING IN TH E SHOW will be these Alpha Delta P i’s: April Beall. Ruthann Bray, M a r i l y n Daugherty, Sue Dodgem FCav Is­ bell, Susan Jungmichel, Lee Lank- j ford, Sherry Martin, Kasey Oat- man, Jane Shuford. Bunny Starnes, Ann Varnado, Clarene Walker, and Gail Watson. Models from the other sororities arc Francis Waghalter of Alpha Xi Delta, Andy Shupee of Alpha Chi Omega, Karen Golding of Alpha Epsilon Phi. Shirley Harris of Al­ pha Gamma Delta. Sky Benson of STUDENTS Summer Employment Guides: I, Overseas, 2. Resort areas 3. Firms with summer training p ro ­ grams. Certain employer s names, addresses, etc. NOT AN EMPLOYMENT AG EN CY (no fees). $1 per guide or $2.50 per set of three. job descriptions, Order from NATIONAL EMPLOY­ MENT SERVICES INSTITUTE. 1750 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washing­ ton, D.C.— Enclose remittance and type of guide desired. specify Guide* will be sent by return mail — Order Now! (A d v e r t is e m e n t ) Alpha Omicron Pi, Linda Mavro-' poulis of Alpha Phi, and Cynthia Leggett of Chi Omega. Also, Carol Clewis of Delta Delta Delta, Gaudia Middleton of Delta Gamma, Judy London of Delta Phi Epsilon, Sandra Lambert of Delta Zeta, Cheryl Lee of Gamma Phi Beta, and Stephanie Millard of Kappa Alpha Theta. ALSO, MARGERY KEN GLA of Kappa Kappa Gamma, Susan Li- pinsky of Sigma Delta Tau, De- Yette Flower of Phi Mu, Linda Emerson of Pi Beta Phi and Sa­ rah Burcham of Zeta Tau Alpha.! Men modeling in the show will* be Trey Garrison, Sigma Alpha Ep­ silon; Tom Harper, Phi Delta The­ ta ; Charles Avery, Sigma Chi; Rob­ ert Baldwin, Delta Tau Delta; and George Marsh, Sigma Cill. Also, Brian Newberry, Pi Kappa Alpha; Bob Bodoin, Sigma Nu; Ma­ lone Hill, Sigma Chi; Jim m y Hill, Sigma Chi; John Emerson, Delta Tau Delta; and Ed Small, Phi Del­ ta Theta. OTHER MODELS include Secre­ tary of State and Mrs. Crawford Martin, FTesident Protein of the Senate and Mrs. Tom Creighton, Speaker of the House and Mrs. Ben Barnes. Austin's Oldest Home Ou ned Jeu elers Same Family Own et ship Since 1888 ta /A p t C f a vi O ru O ■ P ! nj .G' S ’ J. \ L A -• 5 ■ • yr -vt . * g S S * * & & D I A N A • P R I C E S F R O M $ 1 2 5 T O $ 1 5 0 0 E x t ended Teem* A va ila b le " I TTT" /3k TTri UT C l Since 1888 . . . -Jewelers “Where Austinites Shop With Confidence'" 105 E. 6th Conveniently Located Just O ff the Avenue imm; I vt ■ma UT STUDENTS READ 4-10 TIMES FASTER & COMPREHEND MORE THRU NEW METHOD W ouldn’t you like to accom­ reading assignments plish your v ou could then read this assign­ ment in 25 minutes flat! A sav­ I Georgia, has said, “ It is my opir ion that it these techniques wer from 4 to IO times faster than you ings of over two hours. do now?— Sure you would, and there’s no reason why you can t. The F-velyn Wood Reading D y­ n a m i c s course guarantee r a mini­ Evelyn Wood can’t guarantee that you w ill become a “ curse breaker” in all your classes but you ll sure be off with a head mum of a 300 per cent increase start. To prose this fact just look in your reading speed, with equal or better comprehension. Reading at the results of student classes. last semester’s instituted in the public and pr vale schools of our country, would be the greatest single Ste which we could take in educator think the pubh a1 progress. I schools of Georgia could conside putting in the technique. Ic woul be worth a hundred-million doila a year appropriation.” sound methods. This is no magic 200 University of Texas students From the records of the approx. Fantastic isn t it? If you want t see how it works, and have an of Dynamics uses no mechanical de­ vices--only proven principles and pill, it takes both concentration and effort. Through Reading D y­ namics you break old reading habits and learn new reading skills. W ith this method you learn to read directly down the page in­ stead of across the lines, absorb­ ing whole ideas at a time. As a student you are your own product! W hat you invest in study now yields its benefits tomorrow.— W h y not get the most out of your crucial college investment with an Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course, and professors who took the portunity to enrol! in the last cia; course last semester, the following that will be taught this semestc statistics were tabulated: Average speed 240 reading beginning attend the free public dcmonstr; tion at the I Diversity “ Y ” Moi wpm. average beginning compre­ hension— l l per cent. Average the speed upon completion of course— 1541 wpm, average com­ day February 22 at 3 P M an 7 PM . You w ill see; an cxcitm \ documented film showing U . Congressmen taking the course an prehension upon completion of the course— 84 per cent. This repre­ talking about its great advantage sec Bob Darling, one of the world sents an average increase in read­ fastest readers, perform on the A ing speed of 642 per cent and an Linklcttcr Show; and have all yen increase in comprehension of 12 questions answered. A free schola per cent. ship wall be awarded at each den onstration. Since 1959, the Evelyn Wood Take a lk at this exam­ Reading Dynamics course has If you cannot attend the fr< ple and you ll see how much trained over a quarter of a m il­ public demonstration at the “ Y, jeu can benefit from this dyna­ mic new reading method. Let’s lion people in the United States, Europe. Graduates Canada and further information may lac d tamed by calling Austin Read in say the average textbook page has range from United States Senators, Dynamics Institute at G R 6-675 392 words and you have an ave­ Congressmen and presidents of Considering these facts, can ye rage reading assignment of pages IOO (or 39,000 words) per corporations large students, housewives and even youngsters. to afford not to investigate wh Reading Dynamics can do for yoii week. The average college graduate reads 250 words per minute mean­ ing that it would take him over 2 1 /2 hours to read this assignment. In fact, Reading Dynamics has been taught to top executives in many of our nation’s leading cor­ porations and government agen­ N ow let s suppose that you were cies including I.B M. DuPont and an average Evelyn Wood graduate and could read 6.4 times faster— N A S A . One graduate of Reading Dynamics, Senator Talmadge of This article it 675 words long. l f you had been an livelyn W ood student last semester you could bal e finished in approximately 25 seconds. it MADRAS-LOOK Short Sleeve Ivy Shirts L O W PR IC E O F O N L Y 2.99 ha. LEVI STA-PREST SLACKS • M ANY COLORS • M ANY STLY ES • PLR LECT LOR CASUAL V I AR O N L Y 6.98 FR. \ IN ALL KINDS OF WEATHER . . . AUSTIN ARMY ■■ NAVY STORE ACROSS FROM THE POST OFFICE 201 WEST SIXTH FREE PARKING AT THE AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK C A L L O B 2-3 Hi« GEORGE WILL DELIVER YOUR LAUN DRY & CLEANING S A N J A I IN TO L A I N U B Y Hit it A S A N JAI I N T U Sunday, February 21, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Page IO