T h e Su m m er T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n i v e r s i t y of Te x a s a t Austi n Johnson Library Memorabilia in Depth Page 3 • Vol. 68 Price Five Cents a u s t i n , t e x a s , t u e s d a y , j u i Eight Pages Today No. 13 W eath er • Cloudy, W arm • High: M id 90's • Low: M id 70's Last Russ Troops Leave Czech Land; Prague Talks Next M o scow Says Country's Borders Due Strengthening, Quick Solution D em an ded P R A M IK th< :r w.thri day night, bu* ct: <-r C/orh (I I (M KI I: r n t; Related Mors. Page I. many, r,o irea. Warsaw p a v e d t h e f a Czech- showdown ‘•or a I: zap >>n e place m the in •or loaders in .mer:*, gin- a w d govern t Regents to Discuss Admissions Policies „ for t) #■» coted by ti, a rd of Char <>:! r F Reverts met rh #* F 9 prep t h e School Of I* irs on fa n !’!* projects Pres lent St mended aband ultv Center Complex he*-' i A p p r o v a l o f j •nua include action on y (V r .v r r*-questa from mg, and r ut.re decis- build rig s , and related H a t K e r m a n reeom- onstruction of a Fac- A--adorn ic D o r m d o r y i shortage of funds t to extend the pr>>- gram of the S >f Nursing to include i’l rn 19*‘«S and senior courses of hi nj level in I * J also will br* considered by the Regents Consideration of the Texas Student Pub­ lications P ard of Dire-•♦ors' decision on method of sob‘citing The Daily Texan edi­ is not ex\HH ted to be a t* ; i< of the to r meeting ut.I*ms t! e minutes of ‘he T S P meeting ran be received by the Regents before Fr daw > Soviet I 'mon rn Prague that rd* 'n mu-' bo Kl go Nov Preston 12. f Batt] trial Ray Due Fall Trial, Pleads Innocence Saturn, s - By Governoi Law School Ride* £ *>c Connolly’s Vetoes Cut $1.3 M illion O f O riginal, O verthrow Clause Lives A rider limiting the School of Law's non-resident enrollment to IO per cent sur­ vived Gov. John Connally's vetoes Satur­ in the 1969 appropriations day of items bill. In signing the btl! law, Connally vetoed IO money items and five riders. whacking SI .3 million from the original measure. into Among riders vetoed was one that would have prohibited State employes from taking a leave of absence from their jobs to par­ ticipate in political campaigns. Connally did not veto a rider prohibiting paying school faculty who advocate the overthrow of the federal or state govern­ ment. The law rider will not affect entering freshman class at the School of Law be­ cause a ‘’grandfather clause" will allow previously selected law students to ent^r in fall, 1968, Page Keeton, dean of the School of Law, said earlier this month. To have a nationally recognized law school, IO per cent would be "too small a lim it" to place on out-of-state enrollment, Keeton said. But Frank Erwin, chairman of the Board of Regents, said the current number of non-re«ident law students "was not a good situation" for those Texans rejected admis­ sion info a State-supported school. The campaign rider vvas "clearly uncon­ stitutional." Connally s a i d . Among those who would have been affected vvas Don Alford, state campaign manager for Sen. Eugenp McCarthy and technician for the University’s Division of Extension. The State Constitution specifies that no ex post facto or retroactive law should be made Connally said when vetoing the mea­ sure. Opposition to the overthrow rider was expressed earlier this month by several University faculty members. floor of the Shelby County jail, adjacent to the court building. At no time did Hanes call Ray bv name. After the reading of each indictment—one charging murder and the other carrying a dangerous weapon—Hanes said: “ The de­ fendant wants to enter a plea of not guilty.” Hanes did not request a psychiatric ex­ amination for his client. After the arraignment. Hanes spent about three hours in the jail cell with R a y The lawyer told newsmen he planned to return to Birmingham later in the day. About TO persons, most of them news­ men, ran the security gauntlet to enter the courtroom. Each was searched and his voice and picture tape recorded. Nearly a dozen policemen in civilian clothes sat inside the co un roo rn, and more were outside in the hallway. The security cheeks, required also of the judge and aft mevs in the ca s e , de­ layed the Mart of the arraignment for 27 minute's. Ray, t rought from jail through a tunnel, entered the courtroom through a door be- s ie the judge's elevated bench. Ray was esc orted by Sheriff William N. Morris -Jr. and two other officers. lawyers. Ray sat between his lianes and Hanes’ son, Arthur Jr.. at the counsel sat Bist. Atty Gen. table. To their left Phi! Canale and two of his aides. The sher­ iff sat behind Ray. Canale said beth side? agreed to a Nov. 12 start of the trial, and the judge ordered it. King, who had come to Memphis to plan demonstrations by striking sanitation workers, was killed by a single shot April 4 as he stood on a motel balcony. R a y was arrested Ju ly 8 in London under the name of Sneyd, and was ordered extradited to the United States last Thursday. Threat to Post Office Seen in Personnel Cuts W ASH INGTO N ( AP) — Senators gave a to Postmaster sympathetic ear Monday Genera] W. Marvin Watson’s plea that his department be spared manpower reduc- t ns th at would force what he termed a "d iw a c e f u l” cut in mail service. Watson told the Senate Post Office Com­ mittee that it is not a matter of money but of help. "W e have the money." Watson said. "Bu t we iii) not have the pe- ple to handle the growing volume of m ail." Chairman A. S. "M ik e” Monroney, D- Okia., the told Watson he agrees that service reductions outlined by the post­ master general under a new manpower edict would be disastrous. Congress, in passing President Lyndon B Johnson's IO per cent income surtax, demanded a rollback to 1966 levels of all government agencies Watson said this would mean a Ins-.- cf 83,000 festal workers over a four-year pe­ riod during which, he said, the annual mail volume will jump from 84 billion pieces to 93 billion. ‘‘Something will have to give." Watson said. "That something is service.” Watson said that unless he gets clear indication before September that Congress will exempt the Post Office from the roll­ back he is ready to take these actions: • Eliminate Saturday residence delivery service by November and eventually re­ duce such service to four days a week; • Halt delivery service to new* homes, apartments, and office buildings; • Close 500 third-class and fourth-class post offices by the end of August and eventually close all 12,000 of them; • Leave unfilled all vacancies occurring on rural routes: • Beginning t h i s Saturday, eliminate window service at first-class and second­ class post offices on Saturdays except for a two-hour mail pickup period. Noting the cutback program would begin Saturday, Sen. Gale W. McGee. D-Wyo., asked how' it could be delayed. Watson replied he could hold off if there were signs of favorable congressional reaction soon. 1MPHIS. Tenn (AID — Jam es E a r l pale fr*>m weeks in British and Mom- jails but neatly dressed in a dark suit, s;it silently Monday as his law- •* ••■•red a pie-a of innocent to a charge R a y killrwj Dr. Martin Luther King R iv, phis blue ynr i that J r R a y ’s v.as tile bely sira Memphis appear ai e f Lrs.f •e being u n d e r a* tim e be ha flown t ig h t mk I b frc, •raignment seen pub- 1/ adon to urity, last week, Closely t wearing hand- guarded, but n the i c entered dri when l a s * Friday Ray listened »rne> Art! ur TI mcs of Bir- cuffs as he Memphis jail quietly as att mingham, Ala., entered his plea. I Immediately aper the 12 minim* proceed­ ing. Ray was returned to his steel-skinned suite of air-c >nditioned re ’Is on the third Alleged Assassin Called 'Compulsive' CT TIC AGO f A p l — 'The Chic .-.go Daily News said Monday that a psychiatric re- poi >n Jarre**- Karly Ra> showed that t hr nan accused of slaving Dr. Martin . feared two year« ago he Lu or King rn t got ir ‘ serious difficult:* e Daily ‘ws said in a copyrig! fed men’al tests were adren­ in the Miss urn tor his second escape at- in 1966 th? Pw- cr>n Ra i J r said the d undut d to a< a p r'cnia- ^,*apc ixiety Iv do awaits Apt J r. Guhi TTi** report desex died R ay as an ■strive compulsive personai.tv-' beset •ara that he would come lo harm Rav was arrested June 9 in London is returned to Memphis, Tenn trial for the slaving where f King ub- bv an ref fears confront in a typical ob feels that he r wive himself fr< For instance,” 1 lies a feeing of I if he take? i ;Tong and sets .->s it ti-ok an. a v rogue? rted tha* Ray s *‘v ard­ ito from time to time *ssive compulsive way , Ut do certain things'* n harm. • ■ report said, "he de- ear ti at can be allevi* glass of water he is it on the table a: I forth several times ’ Ray requested an ex inclination by an in­ dependent psychiatrist because hp said he ‘ was In nei*d of psychiatric help," the ro- p>rt said l>r. Guhlman reputed "no evidence of delusions, hallucinations, or paranoid ideas . . . Tins is not psychotic in nature, but severely neurotic." He expressed strong doubts that P^av should be paroled at thai time R a y ’s third escape try on April 23, 1967, was successful. Hp hid in a box on the back of a bakery truck which earned him outside the prison walls. The psychiatrist noted that Ray used such technical "solar plexus, terms as tachycardia, and intracranial" in describ­ ing his aches and pains. Ray told the psy­ chiatrist he had been reading medical literature. ’77,7'3m o . O . /Orientation 7 •h xpects 2,000 B y RON ANDERSON and GLEN JOHNSON Incoming freshmen began the transition from high school to the University Mon­ day as the Summer Orientation Program got into full swing. Prospective students from Washington. D C . to Arcadia. Calif.—247 girls and 205 boys have registered for the four-day pro­ gram which w ill culminate with a social at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Formal meetings began at 8 a.m. Mon­ day with students meeting the representa­ tives of the college in which they plan to register. Byron Shipp, registrar and director of admissions, told the group that registration ranks as the Number I question mark in the minds of new students and can still be a traumatic experience for the most sea­ soned veteran. Mrs. Dorothy Dean, coordinator of orien­ tation, stressed the im p o r ta n c e of under­ standing that the program is academically oriented. “ For years we’ve had to combat two false impressions of this program," she said. "One is that it is a chance for Greeks to get to know incoming freshman. The other is that it's a chance for these kids to have a party every night when they get here. And this is just not true.” Richard Nicholas, a geology graduate who is assisting Mrs. Dean, explained the two themes of this year's program. "W hat we’re trying to do.” said Nicholas, "is provide something for someone at all times. When some students are taking the chemistry or algebra placement tests, the others will be learning about registration, attending an open house, or taking a tour." "The second aspect of the program is successive meetings with college repres­ entatives. departmental professors, and fi­ nally. students who are majors in the vari­ ous departments." Monday night, four panel members from the University faculty offered observations and advice to those being oriented. Dr. John Silber, dean of Arts and Sci­ ences, gave his view of the changing role of modern universities. "W e are no longer going to serve in the place of your parents to any significant degree. Transition and experimentation are left to the individual, but it must be remembered that the indi­ vidual is experimenting on himself." Dr. Donald A. Larson, associate profes­ sor of botany, warned of transition clashes. "T ile University is itself in a constant state of transition, and it may not be in pace with your phasp of the adjustment process.” Dr. Lear Ashmore, associate professor of speech, stressed the rewards of posi­ tive personal involvement. "Change has a tendency to become almost a cult or a status symbol. It is important that change through carefully and deliberately selected involvement avoid such a tendency.” W hat's Inside • Cleaver draws probation ........ Page 3 • ‘Cheshire Cat’ knows ................ Page 4 • Golfers face Pro-Am ................ Page 5 • Peace Corps recruiters visit . . . . Page 8 " In the initial taste of transition, it is important that you find out. something a- bout yourself. What are you? Where do you come from? Where arp you going? Do not let others make the transition for you,” said John Burkett, instructor in phil­ osophy. A similar forum is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Business and Economics Building 150. Four University students will conduct a panel discussion of student tran­ sition from the student point of view. Approximately 500 prospective students attended Monday night’s orientation panel. In all. more than 2,000 students are ex­ pected to attend the four sessions. Support of Forfas Termed Propaganda W ASH INGTON (A P ) - A Southern sena­ tor’s demand that the Justice Department explain its endorsement of Abe F o r t a s served Monday to extend for at least an­ other day the lengthy hearings on Fortas* appointment to be chief justice. Sen. Sam J . E rv in Jr ., D-N.C., described as a propaganda effort the department's evaluation cl Fortas, currently an associate judge on the Supreme Court. President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed Fortas to succeed Chief Justice E a r l W ar­ ren and simultaneously named U S Circuit Judge Homer Thomberry to fill the court vacancy that would be created by W ar­ ren's retirement—which Johnson specified would become effective with Fortas’ con­ firmation by the Senate. Sen. Jam es O. Eastland. D-Miss., chaii'- man of the Senate Judiciary Committe# which has been holding prolonged hearings on the nominations, agreed to invite the Justice Department to send witnesses for questioning Tuesday about the department­ al brief. Prior to E rv in ’s demand, It had been planned to recess the hearings indefinitely after Monday’s questioning of Thornberry. Eastland said he doesn't know* when tha committee will meet to vote on Fortas’ nomination. But with Congress due to call a break next w'eek for national political conventions no Senate action is in prospect until after Labor Day. Ervin assailed a 27-page memorandum lawyers written by Justice Department who reviewed recent Supreme Court deci­ sions and concluded: "Justice Fortas has performed remark­ ably well in three years since his appoint­ ment, fulfilling the promise that one of the nation’s greatest lawyers should be­ come one of its greatest justices." Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., told E rvin he had asked the Justice Department to prepare the document as a reply to E rv in ’* extended criticism of Fortas’ rulings. Hart said, " I t makes the record more balanced. If that is propaganda, so be it.” The North Carolina senator said Atty. Gen. Ramsey C a rk should make the of­ ficials who wrote the memorandum avail­ able for cross-examination by the commit­ tee. If not, said Ervin, Clark should come himself. Coed Greets Celebrities On Fair-Sized Lazy Susan T cannot answer most of them,” Miss Cohen said. "One of the main problems is telling people who want to buy a cup of coffee that we serve only coxnplete dinners.” Miss Cohen said. "No one ever gripes about I % f Bv KAREN ELLIOTT News Editor Lynn Cohen is spending her summer go­ ing around in circles. Her circles are not the result of disor­ ganization but the outcome of engineering precision. Tile 20-year-old University is a hostess atop the revolving Tower of the Americas San Antonio's World’s Fair. at HemisFair, junior Crowning the 750-foot Tower, the restaur­ ant makes one revolution every 47 minutes. "This is what most people don’t under­ stand." Miss Cohen said. "They don’t know it will turn completely around and they get real upset when they can't face the place they have picked out on the way up in the glass elevator." Miss Cohen, dressed In a gold crepe floor-length dress trimmed with a white ruffle at the neck, greets and seats the guests—some of them ordinary folks, some of them celebrities. She brings each guest the foot-and-a-half long menu and smiles and talks with him while he waits for his meal. "They ask me questions about the build­ ings in the city and being fi’om Longview. the prices (which begin at 52 30 for a nor meal.) But some really got indignant b cause sandwiches aren't on the menu.” lesson in Miss Cohen’s greatest tai came when she spotted a couple bringir hamburgers into the restaurant. " I t wj so hard to get the courage to walk ow and tell them ‘I ’m sorry but you just ca not eat your hamburgers here,’ ” Miss C hen recalled. Seating the Latin American ambassade; who visited H em isFair Ju ly 4 with Fro*' dent Lyndon B. Johnson was Miss Cohen biggest thrill. "W e were the first to pre them in the Tower and so it was im per ta; that we be friendly and conversational These are two qualities in which the peti brunette abounds. Meeting people is the best part of ti job. Miss Cohen said. The rotating low level seats 312 people. The stationary u per level seats 110 guests. "One day v served 2.000 breakfasts and lunches b tween 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Miss Cohen sail Because her sister, Nan, is a waitres Miss Cohen has a special link with ti waitresses. "The waitresses tell us wh, si kind of tips the celebrities leave,” See COED, Page 2. Friendly and Conversational at 750 Feet Lynn Cohen (r) displays these qualities while serving Janet Williams (I) and Janet Bottenberg. rn . ii v. ma - Stall Photo S S S * « - Lynn Cohen H M H News Capsules _________ By The Associated P re ss------- Early Halt Hoped for in Nigerian Conflict cm K R J!. Bi a f r -.pes :s p< Biafran leader Odumegwu Ojukwu says he ; cease-fire in Nigeria’s bloody civil v ar and exjx begin at Addis Ababa in about a w ok. He expressed optimism about chances f >r between the armies of breakaway Biafr ists, to get talks started. ;••• : < \ Ojukwu also announced that the airlift of relief uppi starving war refugees would be intensified. He said the soon bo in daylight for the first time, and also hint* ! per*Tinily visit Nigerian leader Yakuba Cowen to try md a ceasefire. 1 - . Bomb Dam age in North Viet Said N early Repaired SAIGON Intelligence sources say North Vie? am. h - * -im adv: the US bombing halt north of the Nine teen ti Parallel * virtually all the damage wreaked by American atta ks n • ' y three years. r-p mr Before President Lyndon B. Johns m s de-escal 31, seven major North Vietnamese air b ises n rt boundary were out of acti< n. Today all are op*: n r formants said. i US fighter-bombers had forced ail but IO per order th , hi 75 to IOO MIG interceptors into sanctuaries lr. Pe ! C h r half of these planes have returned to the operational t of diem around Hanoi and Haiphong. * • - - The port of Haiphong, once ba kl gg‘vi • of war supplies, is now completely clear. Market Slump Blam ed on W orld Troubles X H B >ORK The stock market Monday took ins worst tumble in r a year as worries, international and national, plied many traders and investors to pull in their hems. ;p : The Dow Jones industrial average plunged 13 GO t > 90. sharpest break since the start of Arabdsraeii hostile. 1967, when the average lost 15.54. Volume contracted to 13.53 million shares In rn 14 ► f< r lune Humphrey W o n ’t Press Kennedy VP Candidacy NKW YORK ? • * > : - Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey s ..J Monday r whether he would invite Sen. Edward M. Fmn-dy to ning mate would be “ greatly dependent on Mr. Kennedy s and views.” Humphrey, appearing on the Dick Cavel? r" w n ' e ’• television network, said he didn't think Kennedy v. jld : Humphrey making selections bef re Kennedy hirr.si f h .s his mind. The vice-president, expressing bds regard for the sun z K nedy brother, said he thought he should leave th<- Mas-arni =■•?•- senator alone until after his grief over the death of Son. R bort L Kennedy had subsided. First Lawsuit Filed Under Open Housing Act \\ VSH IV CTO N The Justice Department filed the first lawsu ? under ' r federal Open Housing Act Monday, charging the builders and s - ers of three Baton Rouge, La., housing dove! pmer.ts wit: c - inating against Negroes. * The suit was filed in US District Court n Now 1 *- defendants include six Baton Rouge business firms an i - me their top officials. The government charged them with selling houses or! persons. The suit said they “ have engaged in a pa rem or pi ct of racial discrimination'’ in their sale, September Draft to be Lowest Since April, '67 \\ YSHINGTON The Pentagon called Monday for drafting of 12.-'N mon n .v :- tem ber, the lowest draft call since April 1967 The September call compares with announced draf's of > In August, 15,000 in July, and 20.00 in June. The Pentagon attributed the low September call mainly * • r duced replacement needs. Murder Charge Filed in Clarendon Slayin g < I\RENDON Clyde Gilbreath, 60, a Clarendon building contrair r, charged with murder with m aine Monday af er a hail of ga killed Dust. Atty. John R. GUJham as he em erge from I s r ff near the courthouse. v Gilbreath was denied bond by D;>t. Judge Cl.arles Roynoi .< Clarendon Chief of Police Gary Genies said G lh a rn was down by five bullets from a 30-30 rifle. Gillham had been representing Giibrea h s wife n a dr roe Childress. case. Bone Growth on Spine Grounds Astronaut SPA C E C EN T ER , Houston A bone spur growth on the spine has grounded Astronaut exriuop ■ ' Collins, one of America's “ space walker from the crew of the third manned Apollo mis said Monday. and w: Dr. Charles Berry, director of medical resear -h at the Manned Space'raft Center said Collins is sufierir, ‘‘arthritic spur” on the disc between the fifth and c ■*’ vertebra, an area near the base of th ne* k. ;•* r ‘ " '■ Collins was admitted to Wilford Hall Air Force lh -:*."■! in Antonio on Sunday and officials said the spur would be r-*r: vee surgically at 8 a.m. Tuesday. Officials refused to conjecture about Collins' future r * ’ A retired barber walked in his hospital room Mood y hours after becoming this country’s newest bean transplant rf'.: ent. Fred Everm an, 58, of Alexandria, Va., was rep. rf rd in lent” condition bv his doctors at SN Luke's Episcopal H -i x el- Everman received Saturday, the heart of Mrs. • Ive Kr a 3.3, a Houston woman who dud of a k id n ■- disease Inquiry Show s Governors Behind Gun Reforms Al m in President Lyndon B. Johnson has received replies hor; 15 o the 50 governors to an appeal for a study and strong hen.r.g c. state gun control laws, and the Texas White Houst- M a lay list d •IO as favorable. Four more were classed as noncommittal and on];, n e, from Gov. Lester Maddox of Georgia, was disapproving. ITic four states whose governor'**' replies were in erprei-d as noncommittal were Arkansas, Kentucky, Ohio, and Florida. No answers were in from the governors of Louisiana. Missis?- ppi. Montana, Nevada and North Dakota. Texas School Fund Due $1 Million-Plus Hike Al stun A Texas Supreme Court decision last week will be worth mer * than $1 million a year to the State school fund, Atty. Gen. Craw­ ford Martin said Monday. Oil Field near The court ruled that 305 acres in the Athev included in Fort St.ickton were “ vacant land” that had not been previous surveys. Therefore, the tract was ungranted Slate land, Martin said. There are no oil wells on the tract, hut wells immediately ' the east and west of it are producing about $50,000 worth of oil and gas each month,” he said. “ Under spacing regulations for the field, if should be possible to the land, so its va lur to file s v>’l ff;- i drill at least two wells on should be in excess of $l million,' hr said Pago I Tuesday July 2J. 1968 IH E SUMM ER TEXAN Workers Vole For Shutdown Steel Union Count Running Pro-Strike Governors: Alone/ No Issue For U S Ghettoes C o e d . . . (Continued from Page I I sa I “ We make 5! 75 an h but they got only 75 rents p M people tip 15 per i b F o r c e o r R e t r e a t R u s s i a n s ' C h o i c e In Czechoslovakia Tavis Acceptee By NYU Meet A p A n a ' , '\ R e l a t e d S t o r y Pag* Collision Victim Reported ’Fair' over n f i ale I, •* >. A n U rn prated Ga s a .J blunt! w *h his gar. sa.,!. Gov. V. G m w ; *"1 C inmu- V i- -,lt lak's d.oary” • e it < e * rn* ar . i TH ESES • 7v:N - © N rn I - 85c a 9 - SN STOCK E 20 C C 9 T1N A SPEEDWAY RADO A -PLUS U N IV . SER V IC ES >*( VS ?« OR * 5*',1 SANDALS A R I IN . . CUSTOM SANDALS a . you era r3 t i a~e rad® from lea' lr cf t i n c t s r~ iz- ?o as* (Xr sa^daA - ~d are a handmade. G a 4 your orig- Ina! sa^d-H. Jus? bv*-a '.ratchet cr ideas or see ou- selection THE SANDAL SHOPPE | 203 E. Is* Special Student Rates R e n t a T Y P E W R I T E R 7OO I E OO Electric Typewriters5? ! PEP MONTH OO An(j Up 3 MONTHS Der rno. ADDING MACHINES and CALCULATORS 5 0 PER MONTH 13 OO MONTHS TYPEW RITERS— A D D IN G M A C H IN ES C LEA N IN G & REPAIR SERVICE Free Delivery GR 8-8223 HEMPHILL'S 1/jBkA J i it* (tty S b te x 2501 G u ad alu p e GR 8-8223 Free p a r F g a1 all Hemphill's locations! ll >< ll i I I i II u 0 l l 11 1 I I I O ii <> a a Only Goodyear hash! P0LY0LAS' fights squirm O /vM rn Of rn mite* go h o ld s tho r o o d b o t t or to o ! P H I B I M M M M P WICE TREAD or REGULAR y I i i i Our nowent f i j i I Pot ygl / t s f i r rn ... \\ |'l*| Pm od os tow mb . ♦ 321® ».'t I MMV NO M O N EY D O W N on our Easy Pay Plan! • Fred M o u n tin g l I P i M I M M I Pirk vnur pri< «* from 3 Grpat Safety Huxs — N O MONEY D O W N on our Easj Pay Plan! H ere’s what you set... Here's what we do! • ' : ming that meets U.S.A. minimum brake lining Uanrbir !r{, e adl’is’mer.t'* af 1*500 ar. I GOCO miles, • Free • F • lace old linings on all w h e e l s , • f •; arid inspect I r: I • drrms. • grea ie r e t a i n e r s , .sp* -1 err re hydraulic s) tem an I front wheel i tar of I Ajo rn •*. MMI- st* <*» hang* o f. Qua1 iv Lin n* + I l*'«t 2 years or 20,IOO »"«** • aspect brake .shoe retorn brings for tension and ba inee, I, - --a t*d tv Sanga P’wUur* y * * ,t» r S a ; Q u a lity * ll l a i t I y e a rs Of 3C,0«3 rn -**. • Add brake fluid, adjust Brakes ft road test. P r l c a a f o r C h m r r o l o f , F o r d , P l y m o u t h , D o d g e r m o d o i l U . S . C o m p o c t a . O l h o r a a l l g h t l y h i g h e r . S3 SS 95 s s t S B O v c n t t 907 E. 41st St. (Corner Red Rivar & 41 st J HO 5-6554 5501 Burnet Rd. GL 3-7308 S E R U M B f S T O R E R I I / te s t O lto rf HI 4-4737 \ Patient ‘Excellent’ After Heart Transplant HOI STON r mmmmmmmmmmmm n iw i re c t Three Block Foundation for L B J School of Public A ffa ir s 4 . 4 c o m t r u c t on workers ' o r e g r o - n c ; im c a d stet, f r a m e s w h ich s u p p o r t the c o crete f o u n d a t i o n . Johnson Library to Overflow With Memorabilia of Family I U I VSNT \«*»<* \iMMaflt IM H KU FOREIGN STUDENTS W e Are O ff ng English Language Courses for Spea* "s o: O+hfr Languages This Summer (C LA S SE S B E G IN J U L Y 22) THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE INSTITUTE OF TEXAS P i Budge! Councils University Student Assessed Probated Jail Term by Court A I ii a * The Faculty Council has ap­ proved a w o n nmndn non to al­ low departmental budget coun­ cils to alter their pro2 J ens and to expand their membership At a Ju ly 15 meeting, the Coun­ nan or budget faculty or as* a may her de- nt svs- •S with >r a: e cil agreed that the rh,et d°an could appoint to the council men';hers of hr* with the rank of assoria; instant pre fe*-- or- appoint someone from anet partment. I 'nder t! e p - tem, on Iv faculty mer. be the rank of full profess on the counc ils. 'I Tile budget councils ; for lr iii nj* g sponsible mendations on tenure, and promotion. Their mendations are viewed dean of the coling** dent. and the Board of I ? o Grace Cleaver, University stu­ dent. v is convicted Ju ly 12 in Tra\ is <' inly Court of assaulting an officer and assessed a six- month probated j ill term. ! Miss Cleaver, 21, was onp of 30 S t u d e n ts arrested M ay 3 at a rn mon c a ', *n at Don Weedon’s Con xx* Station at Guadalupe and Twenty-fourth Streets. The demonstration was called by the A nu-Am erie ans for Black Liber atrm and the Mexiean- Ameri an Student Organization because of Wooden'^ alleged mis­ treatment of Leo Northington Jr.. a I n . entity student, in a local private right club April 27. Tile Other legi. the Faculty (' re<’ommend at ions full deans and n five officers fro the O Hindi on dom and Res po: consult the entire pa’tment in ’he the department Student housing head the agenda meeting. d organizat.it ns also accused Woo­ den of racism. igibilit; em ic Free- itv, and to thy of a de­ ni: urn eat of illations w ill the Aug. 19 Miss Hog cr denied she had in­ tentionally assaulted an officer. She said she never realized she was under arrest. M ;. Burch Biggerstaff of the A;.'tm Police Department testi- t.ed he had never placed Miss Chaver .’ der arrest but had told h-T aral two others that if they from didn't move and refrain blocking Weedon’s driveway they would be arrested. Miss Cleaver failed to move and was later taken to the patrol Je r r y Slatton, car of officer whom she was accused of assault­ ing. She left the car and returned to the demonstration where she was later taken into custody. BIG SAVINGS! final reduction of • DRESS SH O ES — W E R E TO $15.00 WOMEN'S SALE SHOES NOW $747 NOW $590 • FLATS & C A S U A L S — W E R E TO $12.00 H U RRY BEFORE SALE ENDS! 2405 Nueces 477-5952 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag S H O E I S T O R E Announcing The Toggery's F u r l h e e H e i l l i d i o n s S t i l l s S p o r t ( o i H s l i r e * * S h i r k s • j j t o .1 0 % a r f 2 . 1 l o . 1 0 % O f f 2 . 1 % O f f D r e s s S h i l l s Sll.iM spew iii group I i«*% S I . O J I S l i n g s ( a n n a l S h i r k s l i a s i t S h i r t s 2 . 1 % O f f J* I . J U ) ca. 1 0 % O f f special group special group special group special g r o u p S n i n n u T i r I *2.1 t o . 1 0 % O f f l l r a i ' h I o m t ‘ K H r r m m i a s S p o r t S h i r t s a : t % o f f 2 5 i n 5 0 ° o O f f : t : t % O f f Distinctive Store For Men /In The Co-Op/GR 8-(i(i3(» Capitol M crcun Verve If tou are look ini: for Riverside sounds. good sounds at a M ( i M sa\intis; check out our Dec ca \rchives of I Olk selection now. C o l u m b i a I ilia d Artists MU M t * 2 .0 1 1 T I . J M t A ll Spring and Summer Stock FU RTH ER M A R K D O W N S O N A LL S U M M E R ST O C K UP TO 1 \ 2 OFF AND MORE! D R ESSEL— F O R M A S- SE PA R A T E S s w IM S ‘J IT S— LIN G E R ! L H O S E — PA N T Y H O S E B A G S — JE W E L R Y am i Ila** sa le lioes on st l i m i t i i s a a. ii FLATS 1 1 m il' f y § N / a l l X t f l P J I ^ Special D isplay Second Floor N I I t l l W I I THE S T UDE NT I O W N H O H F 0 v Tuesday, July 23, J968 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page i Rush Job — Hurts Students of Some m em bers t h e T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s Board are try in g t o r u s h t h e n e w p r o p o s a l t o r t h e s e l e c ­ t h e B o a r d o f Regents. tion of the Texan e d i t o r t h r o u g h As one m e m b e r s a i d , h e d i d n ’t w a n t l o h a v e l o f o o l w i t h this in S e p t e m b e r . T here a re o th er c o n s i d e r a t i o n s t h a t s h o u l d h e m o r e im portant th an a r u s h job o n a p o o r l y c o n c e i v e d p r o p o s a l . F o r a n e w s y s t e m o f e d i t o r s e l e c t i o n , t i m e a n d e f f o r t in g e t t i n g t h e b e s t p r o p o s a l f o r t h e s t u ­ t o m a k e should Iv s p e n t dent b o d y . A n d s t u d e n t s s h o u l d h a v e their f e e l i n g s k n o w n . t h e r i g h t S i n c e t h i s n e w p r o p o s a l w a s c o n c e i v e d in s u c h h a s t e , is h o p e d t h e B o a r d o f R e g e n t s w i l l r e a l i z e it t h a t sum m ertim e is a p o o r t i m e t o m a k e s u c h a c r u c i a l a n d im portant d e c i s i o n a s t h i s w i t h o u t t h e s t u d e n t b o d y a v a i l ­ able to express o p i n i o n s o n t h i s p r o p o s a l . t h a t A r e f e r e n d u m in S e p t e m b e r c o u l d g i v e t h e R e g e n t s t h e y n e e d the i n f o r m a t i o n ra th e r than b e i n g p e r s u a d e d b y a c a m p u s p o l i t i c i a n t h a t a good-sounding p r o p o s a l is a d e q u a t e o r w h a t t h e s t u d e n t s w ant. i n f o r m e d d e c i s i o n t o m a k e a n If the Board o f R e g e n t s is g o i n g t o m a k e t h e d e c i s i o n f o r T h o D a i l y T e x a n e d i t o r , i n f o r m a t i o n m u s t b*' c o n s i d e r e d b y on tile m e t h o d o f s e l e c t i o n m ore t i m e and m o r e the B o a r d m e m b e r s . Cheshire Cat Knows All T h e cam pus is n o w s w a r m i n g w i t h f r e s h m a n o r i e n t a ­ l i k e o w l s , n a m e c a r d s , g u i d e ­ tion students. W i t h eyes books, and new “ c o l l e g e c l o t h e s , ” t h e s e y o u n g s t e r s f r e s h out of high school a re g e t t i n g t h e i r f i r s t b i g l o o k a t w h a t they have alw ays w aited f o r — t h e c o l l e g e w o r l d . W e older students w h o have b e e n a t t h e U niversity for two or m ore y ears smile knowingly, and c o n d e s c e n d ­ ingly, as we w alk by these eager, bright, fresh b u d s . Ah, w e think as we shake our heads, if only th e y really knew w hat w as lying in greedy w ait for them . A huge, im personal m ega-m ultiversitv sneering to test and to tease th eir capabilities — tau n tin g them into trying get an education. The U niversity, smiling l i k e t h e C h e s h i r e c a t , k n o w ­ ing th a t it is all here for t h e m , b u t n o t u t t e r i n g a w o r d on where o r how'. Yes, we who are now jaded know those answ ers, h u t we, too, don't u tte r a sound of encouragem ent. A fter a ll , we had to find it ourselves, and so m ust they. O ur hugh com puter-in-the-sky is leering to swallow th e ir nam es and num bers, seem ingly to them th eir o n l y identification. B ut we who a re tainted know how to b e a t th e com puter and again smile knowingly. R egardless of all the orien tatio n to the U niversity a week can give, it is but a superficial glance. And a fte r the seem ingly endless weeks and weeks of th a t first sem ester, it is obvious th a t th ere is still so m uch m ore to learn about th e “g rea t U niversity w orld.” Every new sem ester is going to bring a new s ta rt, so we a l l say. G o i n g t o d o b e t t e r t h i s t i m e a r o u n d , t r y i n g to convince a n d d e c e i v e o u r * I v e s t h a t a n o l d d o g c a n j u n i o r * a n d senior* learn new t r i c k s . H a , we c y n i c a l o l d know' that g a m e , a n d o u r s e l v e s , b e t t e r t h a n Every new- s e m e s t e r b r i n g s w i t h it s o m e new k i c k , some new i n t e r e s t , some n o w ’ p e r s o n o r a n e w g r o u p o f friends. And s u d d e n l y o n e is n o t e x a c t l y wh« r e h e w a s th e sem ester b e f o r e H i s t h i n k i n g , v a l u e - , a n d i d e a s a b o u t everything c h a n g e t h e w i n d and blow' an o th e r w 'a v . t h e d i r e c t i o n o f l i k e t h a t And p a re n ts ju>t s h a k e t h e i r heads and give up. Al­ though some say i f s ju*? p a rt of growing up. o th e r p a r­ en ts know this evil world of knowledge and learning is ruining th eir children and changing ihoir thinking to he quite different from t h e i r o n. A f t e r a l l , t o o m u c h l e a r n i n g is n o t g o o d f o r t h e i r sons a n d d a u g h t e r s . A f t e r a ,! t o w e r w i t h a l l th e “liberal i n t e l l e c t u a l s m i g h t c o r r u p t sons a n d d a u g h ­ te r s .” i v o r y t h i s But regardless of p a r e n t s , w e w h o have been h e r e a w hile know' these y o u n g b u d s w ill s o o n l e a r n — p r o b a b l y th e hard w a y , p r o b a b l y t r a u m a t i c a l l y , a s w e d i d . T heir naivete will be t a r n i s h e d a n d t r a n s f o r m e d . And the b i g g r i n n i n g U n i v e r s i t y , t h e C h e s h i r e C a t t h e a n s w e r s , w a i t i n g for these will sit s i l e n t l y h o l d i n g a l l freshm en to learn to a s k t h e r i g h t q u e s t i o n s . T h e S u m m e r T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a ^ si UT, Muslin Oplnl«w» exprrsv*! In th- I* \an ar- th- artlet* and u'r not ot the Board of Regent* tho** ut of the -bittor **r -.f lh- writer n* th- t nh entity ail m info Int lion ©i The Sommer Texan, a atiKtenf newxparer the I nirsrslo of Ir»a» at Austin. is published bv Texas Mu lent* I’ubtu atiou, Im.. Drawer It, linier • tty station. Austin Texas UCI'. The Texan rome* out on Tuesday and fri­ day mommy* dun'* the summer ex -rut for haHday* and exam period* Sub*, riptioo rate Is JI SO for the entire summer, swond tdass pottage i>ald ai Austin. ii The Texan subscribes Associated Texas t oUeylate Tress, ltall> New sp,.fo r \ssocfatari to tim Vssodated Tress are) Is a member of rhe the the Southwest Journalism t.on*re*s, and The natl al advertising representative of trivertlxinx berrier, MSO larxliigtoa Xv, , New york, N 3 the Texan Is National I uni 7. Uonal I dura PE R M A N E N T STA FF E d ito r ............................................................................. M erry C lark M anaging E d i t o r ........................................ Leslie Donovan News E d ito r .................................................. K aren Elliott ISSUE STA FF N ew s A ssista n ts Issue Amusements E d ito r Is sue S p orts E d ito r M ake-U p E d it o r Copy E d it o r P h o to g r a p h e r ................................................................ Chn.* Shively Glen Johnson ........................................ Olivia H a rtm a n .......................................................... Ed Spaulding ............................................................ Carolyn Nichols Jim Morris ........................................... .............................................................. F r a n k A rm stro ng F a g s A T u e d a y , July 2 3 , 1968 THE SU M M E R TEX A N s e v e r a l ri' n ts b u t , m r.H i'c we cl : c v lot of I ma saw a B j! J’7 tr e e tir .g s w;*h 0 m m -.mist s bu­ th ey fa cd ’ > show up. wo* * s u c c ° s s be- s mc con tact and V*.rn! . .lotions w e re s i mi l a r to Cuzco, and O u r r I ' M w a te r no ’ • . I- 4 * ne!!**d like a C a t » e re had } I the nigh' before , M- • u ,i md %2 29 fo r im- and af leas* found ?. We cd I it x in C U21 o w e re s 'err ' v*. e had c o m e w rid fart u* y ea r- • ■ • ••» . r* to Ira rn th© f oik * V e i, re d ' . v f h $ ?ua Indians from kiT * IV\^S If A- t)va! thpTP u D In* k r;e munh fin th©v In the c l a m s for a gun control law4 incom petent the mentally t > prohibit ft im b lam in g fi r e a r m s w e find T he R a g 's contribution. A rep rin te d a rticle, c o m p le te with il- Jurn ra d o n , gives detaile d instructions on !• tw to m a k e a bomb for $4, “ to c a u s e ‘hmm a th usand dollars worth of d a m ­ a g e for ev ery dollar we sp e n d ,” a p ­ p e a r e d rn its J u n e 27 edition. T o late for O sw lid R ay . Sirhan. and W hitman, p e rh a p s The R ag s story will be useful to so m e 'lier m en tal case. Harsh wa-rd* h ard ly m atch c: im in •*.! am; a m atio n in the public * hands -J putting such the nmor infer- I ' • .lur;,* o u r ;v v m i;j j {••if] ] • • u rn b re n a fire • : I y per b e tt e r a • a clean :r | ' u Dur firs! spen t a* c ut d it to Cuz run I fervently h-'pe that those who d r . ’i d to rn h e a r of a poi s n m a i m e d or killed by th e ir r a s h stupidity. th at story will never have C iz •lim O b o rw e tter 3<17 E. T h irty -f irst St, Peruvian Program ti d ito r’N im ti- in I \( ‘bange program I fits letter to the editor i*> from one of the stud ents In the IVru- \ I hi pf**.'ram i*. (db idly ended, a rn! the student# a n I ng I m the Editor: ir mid bilith Xmera t ) ;• a. ax -sa t r n p \ | I he r iring I - \ • • t inc TD Mo Representation To the E d ito r: Misleading To the Editor: As far as the U nited State* is c o n ­ cern e d , the fact that m o r e than IGO ve n ­ tr a l hanks m a y he out- de the tw 't o r Rash Stupidity To the E ditor: M a x im u m stu d en t re p re se n ta tio n the selection of the T e x a n ed itor rn to th e limit of it's res ti 14 ag in an inad ­ e q u a t e choice Should be < f p rim e im ­ p o rt a n c e in stru c tu r in g the institute n il p a tt e r n for a s cen d en cy to the office When the p a tte rn proh ib its such r e p ­ re s e n ta tio n ( d e a r ! ) tin c a s e in th e new ly ad o p ted T SP B eard p r -al> the stud en t body e le c to r a t e s t ald at Icon! be a ss u re d th a t the seloc thin pi c e d u le will b e c a r r i e d out by e lec to rs reason- ably qualified to m a k e an intelligent d e ­ cision (the c u r r e n t p ro p o sa l le ave s a s ­ s u r a n c e a m .g h t feel '• I think y o u r sta n d on tics issue in di­ c a te s y o u r c o m p e te n c e a* an e ; • r as well as y our c o u r a g e as a stile, nt I- Id­ er. Yeti a r e to he c o m m e n d e d . lf a re f e r e n d u m s e e m s too idealistic. f ru m would think a n opinion I don't shock real ip ~ d :;.;h d e af e irs R. II. .’SOI Nueces iv ll dlis A Leftist? To the E ditor: th a t We w ere sh o ck ed a n d bew ildered *o r e a d th e D e m o c ra tic n om inee for governor, the H ono ra ble P re s to n Smith, h a s the fallen p r e y r a d i c a l e le m e n t. t a c t ic s of the to A c co rd in g to a re p o r t in th e T e x .rn, h e said th a t it is t i m e “ fo r the in m ates th e a s y l u m ," a to g i \ e u p o ntrol of s ta r tl in g a dm ission t >, h< ’ is th e r a d i c a l co ncep t th a t A m e ric a ss an insan e a sy lu m . th a t he, It is profoundly dis; n c e r ng t : T* \- th a t a m a n in w hom rhe v o te r s th eir confidence h a s as h a v e p lac e d b e c o m e a d up e of the left wing e le m e n t in this country. It is indeed u n fo r tu n a te that wh ie he w a s desert! ii g th e ben efits of -• Me and h a r d w ork by s 'u d e n i s , he e m ­ b ra c e d the d o c tr in e s of the w a stre l - '- m e n t of the stu d en t populati n, f 'T ro t­ tin g i wn hard w n education, not to s p e a k of 18 ; m rs r f e x p e rio r e in s t a te go v o n m em less ns of the .his We hope that P r e s to n S m ith, bef -re h e b eco m e s gi vert r of Tex : publicly a d m ; 4 m a - he has been w a s h e d '’ by d ra ft-d o d g e rs b u rn e r s a n d will a s s u r e us philosophy will h a v e n t pl con du ct as g o v e rn o r of T e x a s. and that e w b r a i n ­ flag- t cir in his ■lames I). Clark. I T Robert G ray, I I '69 '69 rn \ o u r In hi* c o m m e n ts re p o r te r , Miss K aren Elliott. The S u m m e r T e x a n l a m e s Holley m a k e s veiled, J u 1> 19. I>: but fu' ic. a tt e m p t to r e s u r r e c t the role the m o n e t a r y sy s tem . Dr. if gold Holley o mf uses the do m estic and m- tc r n a 'io n a! a s p e c t s of geld; and he m a k e s m isle ad in g s t a te m e n ts about both those a'-poets. n T then, tizer - of Cie in 1934. Since I n ted S t i t e s left h gold s t a n d ­ too. a rd for g o,id I'n cod S ta te s a r e tho I v i e d in .aw fr rn aeq siring an d hold­ ing g Id, s \ v for je w elry and in d u strial p i: ; * - rn Sumo mo end of World W ar II. ‘ii . e l s su. ■ 1961, the U n it­ ed S tales has enjo yed u n p re c e d e n te d if pi . -co^ ■ r ; tx. F r alm o st two de- t o t h e e of pay: rents situatio n ca ■ - h as boon such tho United Stages h as ste a d ily lost gold to f feig n ers, par- t. u iriy the E u ro p e a n countries. I p c th a t ne;' No vert he ms. I see r n evid ence th a t ‘••ere mis been ar. v I ss of co nfidence b> any s . f the A m erican econ­ o m y in the viabiU'y a n d p rod uctiv en ess of this econ om y (So m u c h for Dr. Hol­ ley > s t a t e m e n t : " T h e rn re g dd y**u h a v e the g r e a t e r the confidence of the people. th rn know fheV C an g1'4 a, they a re not so anxious to a c q u ire >» ' ) If If it w e re not for the m o n eta ry d e m a n d fo r gold, the free m a r k e t price of gold w uM h a v e remained, c o n sid e ra b ly below f $35 p e r fix -d price th e officially o u n ce w hich has been m a in ta in e d since 1934. in dustrial d e m a n d T his f th nv’s fro m the fa -t th a t je w e lr y for gold would an d i m h a v e h or a n y w h e re n e a r the ann ual pro du ction of gold, i e e m ­ I tho * lr, n o ta r y d e m a n d Mr g-Md p h asis is • ’co r n a tu ra l nor n e c e s s a ry f■ r the efficient fur. tioning of a m o n e tary sy s­ te m it must xx ne J I*. 111r u u u a r, ^ 31! u'j.nu s- i? c Cgr huct i ns W! th A m e ric a n econ om y has ta grow and p ro s p e r ai; rhi< tinned n rnp t h g hi (>s t h p w d u u rive* an i the m o st efficient econ* It h a > a g r e e m e n t has little s i g n i f i e r e. is sim p ly ’ at before a T he r e a s o n th e I fr rn ce n tral hank in Es t ' n i t r d S tates, possession som e d o lla r holdings N e of these c e n tra l ba iks h a v e ar •> sig .in ­ c a n t a m o u n ts of d o lla r holdings, got g it ha* to h av e On the c o n tr a ry , th e e o n ' : a! bank* w hich do hav e sizable hvkimgs of d I- H r s a re indeed in tho two tier a r r a n g e ­ m e n t of gold p rices t h ‘'s e e p ’ral b a nk s a r e prim arily in W»<-mrn Europe '"av F in a lly e v o h r . *. • f ■ > e '.tr v th e pa- t eta: lard need the s y s te m s tow ard l )t and r • res: Ped in i ru:-.; I ' Dr D 1- econom y and a ru in ed nation le y to the c o n t r a r y n otw ithstan I ng. Dr. rn- Holley shows an a p p a ll.ng m ilia rity both with class; d ami nr . i n m o n e t a r y theories. l e k >? I? is sh e e r n o n sen s e r th s ri.w I th a 4 the ie* el of e x p e n d i­ a g e to c laim tu r e s should be d n n en d or.’ far the av v i ­ ab le stock of gold: even a Ire**-m an stu­ it d e n t in econom ics know* t otter than ' th ese days that Do r 4'He h n n r f 4 of Dr* rr .f be stated d epen den t o r th e x hi m e of rn rn > st functioning of level r f k f the rn.ii Ret ti lev* I th e ■* *■ en 4 •• r am it. V d e 'v<*om. F >r the p ric e levi I rn r* :■ : *, -■ f luna* ’Iv c •* in ♦. ' 4 ■ \ i n c r e a s e bv ex 4. * » o th e r things being m o n e y should s a n e pet ou tage vo lu m e of output, and spend;tm h id the St H'k of go! I w ff v. we h a v e I ploy m ent economy and wM-m: fluctu a­ tions ev e n ,v •.,.•• > • * , lf the levels of ou tpu t v * in • t- m J•• <%n th-at, less -j ,ri­ in , • I t It is sad when a un Ivor-- 41 pr fess r to or lint rn fa '?s d * forts *he< .r%‘ a n d S Ifjo. ■ Iwcr-pa) DO3*•• * t ft ' in l\- - V* int in F.(on<»m'vv (< ini I*r« fl avor Architecture? To th** E dito r: Ari urn ie rn a Cum rr Ar Tov xn r,.., r*- f>n If iv true D r D I lev m a ke<- rn.--'ear! ng *’a fo­ m en t* r 'g a r ding the tv, -4;er - o s 'cm of ET'dei prices. that rn re th a n IOO c e n tr a l han ks of the world m a y be tw< ':er a rr a n g e m e n t , bu! cut side it doc* net folk *v ‘hat ive ar”, th ey influence en the t w o f e r sy s te m of gold p r o tiro corr. pi lex pl no- int this arch hi!>V!inos f h-va‘or*. w mc ..ii V <1 oursi M i n e B l a n k f Of. A* I s l t e n . . . l o the I UU tor r. F r i n q • • 3 a • f i u ^ o o r words. 2 S-2 Oho ’* ’ F q I - f T h - D UT S t a ti c - ', Do A , To C ’ 'I - O' : ■ i \ 4 '■ i ' i o ’ - -*j "J k**.---- rf * J rn Bu ii mq IC}'. Irxu.n 8p*';ir Ie. fists and h let' s?s in I. rn i »rative And w* The Unimpeachable Chief o v e r toe na* W hat a r e we l4 the. e so m e b o d y r -r vou w ant to J I iv 1 0 p'- pie a e: m like E a r l W arren. W e 're stu c k with rr.djinns Im- of b u r n e r sti ker*. petc.-ons and pca'-h E a rl W a rr e n po liti a1 k i's. And then mer- * the e s s a y co ntest we used to run ev e ry ye a r a m o n g school chil­ d re n th e rr st stirrin g a n d p atriotic e v e - *s i f the school year. T housands of ch ildren u se d to com pe te, telling vv v o-r-v thought Ear! W arren st •:!,>! be thrown off th e bench, What I4 v is • ne r f ua vn< that ind u-v- W a rr e n b u s i n e s s in th e I rn build a n o t h e r s l i ^ h ^ ' Why do yr u th ir tim e ?” “ 5k> that P reside pf) i n t a n o th e r r'r.\ e new* P res id en t w as of W arren that v •» go's rn a: look hi* b e a d * T here s constitutional about a FT* *- the mg a chief justice f : Buchwald’s Column WASHINGTON1,-—I tho ;hf V - * re*:znation of Chief Ju stice Earl W arren would m a k i - H ie violent critics of t h e Sup?erne C ourt re ­ joice, but it tu rn s out th e y ’n'- a m a d a t the chief j u s t i c e for lr i r ­ ing the court, a t th is tim e, a* th- y were when hr was on it. Weldon W elcher, p r e m e Court friend I hove, w as b- va th r a g e when I s a w him day, the m ost anfi-Su- g the cfi, r “ I f s ju st like him to qui: now.'* W !- don said. “ Bur Weldon you vc been u o r k i n g for a1! y e a r * 0 ' I caid, * *n't that wha? th c-° “ N e v e r m in d w hat I ve bc^n w orking for Do you realize how m u ch m oney is r e ­ going s i g n e d 0" last b e c a u se W arre n to be “ No, I d o n ’t . ” "MilM-n.s of dollar* One of the b ig ­ gest outdoor a d v ertisin g re v e n u es in ti % country c a r a t from Im p e a c h E a rl War ren sign* which we had p las tere d a I $ -dCtff ( CAP CHA-th c V W I I ~ X \ ; ^ 7, - K- , r r Hr' (r- > U‘-0^ I I —x" X, . . ’n ■ - a' the sam< I ( UM see Wi the idea, “ T h e re v only i N.i.d » x- e • ff dog bu si­ • . lk* n w uh ! lh*!! a S d * v U Controversial Police Procedure on KUH ng o f O ff ’nile i] J ext Calls fo r Automatic Suspension of Officer (E ditor’s V ote: This is tion of the new ly revised use of force and firearm s of the 11n P olice D epartm ent.) Art. 1225 PC: R etreat Not Veees ary the com ple­ tex! on the \us- The p a rty w hose p erson o r property is so unlawfully a tt a c k e d is not bound to r e t r e a t in o rd e r to avoid the n eces­ sity of killing his assailan t. Art. 1226 P f : R equisites Of The attack The a t t a c k upon tim person of an in­ dividual ju stify homicide to m u s t lie such as produces- a re as o n ab le fear of d e a th or som e e x p ecta tion or seriou s bodily injury. Art. 1227 P( : D efense Of Property in o rd e r When u n d er Article 1224 a homicide the protection of p r o ­ the fn1- it m ust be d on e u n d e r is c o m m itte d perly, lowing c i r c u m s t a n c e s ; in 1. The possession m ust be corporeal p ro perty , an d not of a m e r e right, and the possession m u s t be a c tu a l and not m erely co nstructiv e, 2. Tlie though possession m ust id legal, the p ro p e r ty m a y the rig h t lie not be in the p o s s e s " r. 3, lf possession be once hist, i« to n gain v by such m e a n s lawful if r ' 4 a s result in homicide. in e ffo rt 4. E v e ry o th e r hi* power m u * 4 have been m a d e by the po ssessor to repel the ag g re s sio n before he will be justified in killing. Art. PRX PC: “ E xcusable H om icide” is in thai though cau sed (It should bp noted H irnicide * e x cu sab le when the death of a h um an being h ap p en s by accid en t o r misfortune, the by the p ro s e c u ­ act of ariotH r who tion of a lawful obji <4 by lawful mean*. this s ta tu te is ap plicab le to all of the other s ta tu t e s e n u m e r a te d a b o v e . ) re a s o n a b le should be m a d e to effo rt the a p prehe nsion of an offender without the use of d eadly fo rc e or u nn ece ssary risk or d a n g e r to o th e r person s. U nder no c ir c u m s t a n c e s should in in te rp re t th ese an officer such a m a nn er as to jeopardize his own pet onaI >, ,'ety* or life, hi* of ano th er. s ta tu te s E v e r y effort that REPORTING PRIM EDI KE WHEN PERSON XI ISXOI.X ED OR IY K KIES XKE I IRE ARMS XKE DIX II \K G K D procedure Net X. The forth below will Im* follow im! in ail ca sa s when one or m ore of the follow ing incidents occur during the apprehension or attem pted apprehension of a per' >n. the a r r e s t as 1. V\ hen such f o r c e is used to r e q u i re in m a k ­ ing th e th a t priso n er rec eiv e m e d ic a l attention b e ­ fore being placed in j a i l ; or 2. When the o fficer is the victim of an aggi av a te d a s s a u l t ; or 3 W henever an officer disch arg es a re a s o n . f i re a rm for any B. The p ro ced u re in such i-ases will he as follow s: involved will im m e d i­ I. The officer a tely notify his im m e d i a te su p e rv iso ry officer and also s u b m it a w ritten m e m ­ o ra n d u m fully explains the incident. Thi,' m e m o i, n d um will be forwarded through channels without d e ­ tc. him whir h lay, to the Chief of Police. 4- XX hen th e in cid en t involves th e d is ­ 2 The officer's s u p e r v iso r will im- c h a r g e of a fire a rm and th e w rin d in g m o d .ately notify ti e C aptain of Police rn tin- officer ac tin g in th a t c a p acity . That su p erv iso r will call CID betw'een the hours of 7:00 AM a n d LOO AM for an in ve stiga tor to be assig n ed b> m ak e the investigation. B etw een the h ou rs of I :Q0 AM and 7 :00 AM the initial invcrs- tigation will b e m a d e by an y s u p e r v is ­ o r y officer or CID in v es tig ato r d esig ­ nated by the C ap tain of Police 3. When the incident involves the dis­ c h a r g e of a f i re a rm , the officer respo n­ sib le will a p p e a r, a1*mg with his s u p e r­ v is o ry officers, b efore the Chief of Po- of his lice and d e sig n a te d m e m b e r s staff on the m o r n in g of the next d a y to p erso nally of his ac tions. At that tim e con sideration will be given a p ossible suspension o r r e ­ s tric te d duty, p e n d in g fu rth er inv estig a­ tion. or re f e rra l to the County A ttorney or District A tto r n e y con d eration by tile G ran d J u r y . r e n d e r an acc o u n t for or k .ilin g of an a lle g e d offen d er, o r w h en the in ju ries su sta in e d by th e o f­ fe n d e r pp VO fa ta l, th e a r r e stin g offi or w ill b e a u t o m a t a a lly su sp en d ed w ith ­ out p r e ju d ic e, w ith p a y p e n d in g a th o r­ ough in vc ' lotion < the incident by his su p e r v iso r y o f f ic e is , the C h ief of P o lic e and d e sig n a te d r u m il-e is of his sta ff on th e m o r n in g of the n e x t d a y . I pon com** the ruction of lo v e -lig a tio n , c o n sid e r a ­ tion w ill he g iv en to ;i p o s sib le in definite r e f e r r a l su sp e n sio n , r e s tr ic te d duty cir the County o r D istrict A ttorney for to c o n sid eratio n b y th e G r a n d J u r y . Con­ sid e r a tio n w ill also he g iv en to r e sto r ­ ing the officer to a c tiv e d u ty , d e p e n d in g upon the re s u lts of the investigation, C. N othing co ntain ed h erein shall b e to co n s tru e d a s r e q u i rin g w aiv e an y of the co nstitutional, s t a t u ­ tory o r p roced u ral righ ts an d privilege* to which all p e rs o n a arc entitled. a n y o fficer Deryl Conner Horns Tight End Versatile The days of nve-platoon foot­ ball are over. and in this age of specialization few players are given the chance to play both of­ fense and defer o. Texas' D e n i tight end. Comer, nom ally a showed that he last November could fit. easily into the old sys­ tem. .last before the important ganm with Texas AAM, M;k<- Perrin ra­ vened a knee injury, and foot­ ball coach Darrell Royal dendod to move Owner from offe-- • than use a sophomore rather with loss experience " I just shook his hand, told him where to Imp up and wished fine him well. And he did a job,” says R wa’. vt n (lin o o n O f f e n s e That was 1%7. when depth was a problem for 4 c Horns. The yoar T>68 dorsa t figure to neces­ sitate any fur?I or c hanges for Comer, who eat concentrate on a ", ming the a "-Southwest Con­ ference status n my fool ho ran achieve. The formor star for Highland Park High S r 4 am in Dallas broke into varsity ball last fall with a bang. In his firs* varsity contest, (' mer latched onto a Bill Brad­ ley pass for T o . as' first touch­ down against H S T A later grab final score, b u r short as Texas lost 17-13. up the 'Horn's the effort fell A similar performance one Pro-Am Ahead For UT Golfers Tw'. members f the 1968 I^ong- hom golf team R:k Masstmgalo and Chip Stewar4, arc among the favorites as the Odessa pro- is Thursday. am tournament r ; Maeser,gale will team with his b r ther Dim. as they attempt to repeat the V V they won in 1967. Stewart will be paired with his father. E a rl Stew rf Jr ., a club pro in D a d m . Although tho find prize is $8,- 000. money ss often considered secop.darv. M '.st < f the slate's top am.ateuts will participate, and many professionals will be en hand. Tile musical team of Dean M ar­ tin and Don Cherry is expected to highlight the 72-hole tourney. B th Mamn and Cherry are sing­ ers. but Cherry is also a profes­ sional golfer. Mar*rn and Cherry' were a poor last a year ago, Other favorites include pro Don r 4 h s x .r44 -r ruck 7av,uai v (proi Jenrvr.g'. E r r s V- •- mr and Buddy Brnr im famafeur) and Charles Coodv and Richard Fattens, the l f*bb winners P la y begins Tuesday, with a ta OOO pro- -.tr ev en t which has no bearing on the regular tourna­ ment. A t t . Volksw agen O w n e rs O utstanding C o m p eta A u t o m o t i v e Service F A C T O R Y T R A IN E D Volksw agen Sp e cialists Th© O nly Independent V W G a ra g e in Austin to G uarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 B U R N E T R O A D Across from G u ff M a rt G L 2-0205 Ciot«d Saturday week la'er had the same results. Comer caught a pass for eight yards, then Bradley, not wanting to abandon a winning combina­ tion, went again to the sopho­ more end. and Comer caught a 36-yard touchdown pass. Block I amI to Touchdown Later in the first half of that game with Texas Tech, Chris Gilbert broke loose for an 80-yard jaunt to the end zone Comer cleared out the corner linebacker t.o spring G ilbert Again Texas lost 19-13. And Comer must have been wonder­ ing if he might do better to miss blocks or drop passes. " I d touchdown gladly passes "Comer said, after the Tech game those two wins, trade for Comer came to Texas from a winning tradition. Highland Pa rk was 8-2 in his senior year, then Comer played in the annual Tex­ as all-star game Hor high school seniors) and the following week helped Texas trounce Pennsyl­ vania in the Big 33 game. Comer played both ways for the undefeated freshman team in 1936, then took on twro-year var­ sity starter Bd Small and beat him out of the tight end job dur­ ing spring practice in 1967. Teammates Praise Comer s ability both as a block­ er and receiver should make him a strong assot to the '68 team. With Gilbert, Ted Key and Steve W o :stir tunning, he will have plenty of opportunity to open holes Bu 4 just let a defensive back I t him get open, and that fami­ liar number 83 m ay again score with some of Bradley's aerials. Defensive coach Mike Camp­ bell thinks Comer could be an outstanding Royal says, "You can't mention people from our team without mention­ ing Comer. He’s as good as we linebacker. havp. He plays his position as well as anybody we have." That’s high praise. Don't bet Comer won t live up to it this fall. intercollegiate Texas has had only seven los­ ing football seasons in 75 years of competition. The ‘Horns’ winning percentage of .712 represents an average of better than 7-3 for every season. Highlight of football history at the University was the National Championship in 1953. DISCOUNT PIPES > -s0,f5 r Tobacco* S P A R T A N S 53ffl Airport BH it. - S E M I - R A Z O R C U T S S2.00 O ra n g e - W h ite B A R B E R S H O P “ Next To W illie K o c u rek " 1S11 san J a onto — G R 8-0345 P a v e d P a rk Mi — R ea r E n hance O u r used bugs won t drive you buggy '©cond-* YV . CG d£ p© * dl © *7 C r . 'i 6 d V W $, a e t ~ © beeves, ’ad up 7-.$ enq'nes ‘ aurened lo rar*6©d *'**■ > works f re cc ac and • ' t a.- 'Mr hi its o n* v y Oapr a I ' Pow--■ Sr A ir r4 Chevy im pala. 2 dr. H T Fu ll d o Sr A. \ T . I S CO p M G I 4 4 Continental Cars ’68 J A G XKE . . . $5495 B i '65 Mercedes 220S $2795 H o w m any ads do you see for 100% guaranteed used ca rs? M o t enough T-ese cor* ore g u a ran teed W e 'U repo r or replace l l fo r o r , r : ; i m ech an ical part 30 Pays or (OOO miles. (These p .asea the V olk sw ag en t •'n', and 7#Hormanc« VV*: vt c o - p l e t e l y ed an a reconditioned C r ■■ c . e thn-r I S o o t ie r y o u ’ve o o le d th ro u q h • » ads, com - b a c t *o . , • th i ■ -e * , ; « , • Ifonsir • i*i > • fre-i oi « ossei-c -« • b'c>« s,:‘em • e;e:” ‘CO' »ysie-> *v. 64 V W Sedan Sun Roof ................. 995.00 64 Lincoln Continental 1995.00 67 V W Sedan ............ 1495.00 63 V W Sedan Sun Roof 66 V W Sedan 65 V W Sedan ................. 895.00 ............ 1295.00 .............1095.00 Easy Terms " C S " SMITH VOLKSWAGEN Your Authorized Downtown V W Dealer C orner 5th and Lam ar '61 TR-3 ............. $1 195 '66 A H Sprite .. . $1595 '65 M G B ............ $1595 '65 V .W ............... $1 195 '60 A H 3000 . . . . $1295 ’63 Alfa ............. $1495 '65 Midget ........ $1 195 ’59 TR-3 ............. $ 895 '63 M G HOO . . . .$ 995 '61 Morris .......... $ 695 '67 Toyota Wagon $2295 '62 A H Sprite . . . $ 995 Y a ’ll Come 501 W e s t 6th St. GR 6-5321 Hunting for That One Particular Book That No One Has? TRY US! You'll Be Glad You Did. GARNER and B SMITH 71J6 GUADALUPE Open Evenings fill &rX) G R 7-9725 "W'liiwiiniwiffwiiiiiinflpiimiiiwiiiiwiifiiwiHWWllli'Wllll’iiHliii!! iii' ii •-** Sporting i '• • 'fly / JU rn 'lad** W i n ■ ■ G oods ' ' ? I I r»> K l ) S P M K H I M * The coni ors demand shorn' unless the owner? s their coven tiff b • !>r ‘ I- aoli all players threaten i ilia I at: if les Baseball play- to strike Novc pro golfers are feuding with < v, e Professional Molt A ssociation. |H.ration. < ndepeni't - * t k i l f Cours< , I a c k N ; a . I c o m p i a \ V e ,'.k ''p f n < c o m s e • j ? th e p l a y e r i ‘ ■ p mg n pf «s a • > un o f f on their own independent cor i< ornaments sponsored by ct:?! ized the Prs an Valley th e ’. *68 P? JA Championship I I ' I in i r B illy Casper and Tom Weiskopf e\ • • glitheenth hole. N irklaus and "This jrubiu links tournament. ’ Then • e • arnee, * me plover said. I • -I * ii' ■ rr v name rn strangle vou " ? e PCA controlled n m ma outnumber touring golfers two to : r.*> i av mg *• * na,od a similar threa* which was * almost complete autonomy ' •1 < p a- rs a a rid VV( < '• *vrn tis .Cg golf prizes, the pros v'dJ 'eem un- a few yr ars ago, no plav»-r ever (Casper .re v .th a* leas’ several o’het' ;r, Already I two golfers cr y it I * - in . . . fun in the great outdoors for the younp in heart1 i*i <• • •* * I » I >C UNIVERSITY BICYCLE SHOP 3 2 02 G u a d a l u p e Austin, Tex. 4 5 3 - 1 0 4 9 i.ghf si ?, I HH a use rd toe Off the fairway hr,"Wing ig1 v • I e playable VV: err d drives der TC ase and the move tip a litt'e. ke 'h' se Amen* s .;>j ie, rn w‘ biame everv- bat f o t iv \f's tor being : r< In *■ a VY) hitter S U M M E R IS FOR SPO RTS CARS '" . r i m % 1; • • *7 - m v u i (>-am S ’, V C , Ki.ffl»n ► . Mon ► J M o V »•« MOV *•*> V VV - >i* re U n I. .V \ i . t n >•' *nnO»p I trt • '* nu. vv mon I • f K < l l n ! ^ l&TV A A~ I p - *, a • K *w f im THE PIT STOP, INC. OO W 5*- 478-8756 Super W i d e T rack R etread s R , r r r ' ap p cd by r e r e a d ^ x p e rts p - r -tv q yes yo.. t ,res th a t • Fe j + ure ' 0 3 d q- pp o-g I ' e a d d e s go with s e r f trea d rubber • A rc c o r 4 maai'y b e s t ; or non-skid road " o 'd "g & o-q*' wea- B ill H a rn le t t Tire S h o p 7^ 776** v *, • ; • »*: M:: 8 * 8 Sure H ands W a i t for a Pass . . . . . . . er d Deryl Comer ready for a b g 1968 season. .•red b y o.p announcement that named to a new r , lad I ’ he be removed I' rr ar if ! II ie Pf *»A had little Ags' G ene Stalli ngs 4 i . ’> a p »•.. • v c o a r s e .lf ; 4 < our’' • one where e f.nisse, complaints are Confident for 1968 By HUN W D L R M IN Sports Writer ■xas AAM fan? begun th- bal! sp a so n on rl v t h • s \ t the sw> I hex feasted on t jene mgs, athletic fine d f »Ot ball roach t h e C a p i t a l C t " A r g e C l i t t fir*-4 annual spor4*. banquet he! C'>unfrv Club M 't. p>r day nigh4. A film erdihed "The- Big Play Age vv - - wr., rind co a 1 Stallings answered Ques ti ns a Vi-.iir c n*'f r*r^Ts nr< c >•» UC cd and I. “ C u n t it. Stallings <. Wen R ib L ?pe< *5 for Run heft team Toe Aggie coach who learned t r o u g h f r o m F - c a r B r v a n ? c > b e ,. ? his form••4 teacher in last vear « Co" n Bt wI, w as often blunt as l'o termed n,--f v oat’s o f f e r r the vv pst in modern foot­ line ball hi st on d about anv weak one football •, is as Nun I , ' r f's sa d a in Decem* I? S >rrc I h inn the Tex. team. "You can ah as having a w Stallings mentioned only the of- always had a and I have the tensive line. He said he was hap- ny with his backfield of Edd Texas.” nship tr< * lr d rosp S A X E S-1 On Front End Alignment Pickup Trucks ‘ 8 . 5 0 ^ P- o. l«w (It Kl ‘I . camb*' ' * - .*», Y0i.il I«t MSY owl I It MMI . I i " Wit *.>'"• •r1 I'1 1 *• IM •'It ll s and ri'e * I ' \ s «. A M E R IC A N MADE CARI ONLY COMPLETE BRAKE OVERHAUL Heavy duty premium grade Ii' tout whee. ing cylinders, precision turn druTnv overhaul ail linings to fit drums, pack arc front instal v.nrel bearings near g eese sea s, 30 000 m e warranty Reg 48 95 job 34” MOST A M E R IC A N CARV WHEEL BALANCE RE G S? 50 SI.OO RER WHEEL SHOCK SPECIAL lur will lu .k h ltt*r, Install » psi' p* tiMry duty, doubts srtlon shock shtoih •rs on most *m»p con msdo csrs for this on# low pile* Ho othoi costs! l r - p a i r BURKHALTER SPRING COM PANY, INC. ORIN MONDAY — PRIDAY, 7:00 A M. — 5 JO N . Serving Austin Since 19 T * i a #• i 310 Co IO TO G O j GR 6 2 1 1 7 1 1 1 1 A l l ’ \ a f f r f b r o w s e in a ir-c om Ii ti one (I com fort. Tuesday, July 23, 1968 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 5 Flutist to Give Free Rectal J u i 11 ic ird E x T o G e t M a s t e r ' s Broadway Tunes To Top Band Show "M u th.me ti lr I ri cf M iv. n Mr id\' iv ' is 'i e ti*vsar-I a rn c U«ncho:n Band's summer t in ti.fur "Festival VV, av, i n- 7 A' n the w I i i n ie H ig h lig h t Tho ban*! slso will f lYxiH.md *nit)b)» Uni;? BS•'*! Bernhardt, Owe! Richard Harm. Joe D; 11 rn rn ic Stew ait. and VV, .p NS ii! piny O’-, the ct VS erring'.ms M r Fronts the Band ” V <• V rn ! NT) Pots n Y I! Director Sees Change in Field When Richard Prtnshaw loft hi* Jackson, Miss., home to study music at Northwestern Univer­ sity, his father advised: ‘'Better do somethin’ else, boy, or y-u '.I starve to death." But Prenshaw stuck to his de­ rision to study music and. thus far af least, has managed to stay abovp the starvation level. Now working on the doctor of musical arts degree at the Uni­ is acting di­ versity ( Pren-haw rector of the Longhorn Bind rn thp summer absence of Vincent R. Di.N'ino, Tile Band will give Its third open-air concert on t e Summer Entertainment Program Wednesday. Tlie summer hand faces prob­ lems different than those of the regular hand. "Not Only are v e about one third the size. but also we have a more limited rehearsal schedule." Prenshaw said. "Too, we have to make ad­ justments for playing in the Open Air Theater, This is not qui’e the same as playing in a foothill stadium bet a ,sc v ‘ re taking a our err h m d outdoors, not * marching band." Fall Fvperience Sir.' e last fall Prenshaw ha* been the band's assistant d:lec­ tor, working with DiNino in plan- rung shows for football and ba-. NEED FURNITURE? R E N T I T! RENT TH REE R O O M G R O U P S of f'm« fashion 1 •- • ,** A LL BRA N D N E W : Comp ed* b#droom, ti - - 9 a?-##- *♦ a at $27.50 a month. for at rcc-r -q For M o ra Inform ation D^on# 454-2537 or -lilt o jr c o w r o o n . O P E N : Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 5 30 Sat. 9 to I ^ • ’' F U R N I T U R E R E N T A L S 5789 AIRPORT BLVD. I,I* ketball games and certs. indoor con­ “ With 300 bandsmen. It's hard for one man to catch a1! the mis­ takes.’* he said. "E v e n so, we still miss some." Prenshaw first pntRrthS fhe Uni­ versity rn begin his doctoral stu­ dy in I bod. After two years I e accepted a position at Mi- - ssippi S t a t e University as marching band director and assistant pro­ fessor of rn is:. He returned to the University last fall, Academic Direction is "Tho doctorate i'ccoming more and more necessary for col­ lege hand director* " he sa; !. " borause ‘ he position Is an a id- emic one.'' Although bands prov ale enter­ tainment for the school, their real purpose Is to train students f r teaching, he explained. "Profes­ sional band jobs are hard to find, so a large numb* r of college bandsmen become teachers "Too, the bind direct r has a great impact — more than he 's aware of sometimes — en bund members' performance a’titude, appreciation of music, and fu­ ture careers." ET. PATIO APTS 2*10 Rio Grande Summer Rate# 2-b#drc?o:'ns 2 bath- furnished utilities o bi *1 Com plete!' dishwasher disposal new tnt’ a - p* <- • cab!** n#»r U T Referon *« required «: GR A-tno-s —....... ...... ,g* 2-b '.F 'iA M ...... FING— ’ I *;- I* - > ■ * ,y> ■ d fash rn ... . q «• int* - - ■ ni; - : 'hr ie " re ; :r - ’ n .- , , S P E C I A L S U M M E R C A - . ; J 'O per week L iv e c o m fo rta b ly nine# to sr bool S u m m e r Men A W o m e n student* see our m odel a p a rtm e n t a n y tim e , * . J this N : Paneling. Elaborate furnishings. Larg e . ' n • > b ■ .• ' '• »«P»r > 4 )r* ng areas Sn-,a1 bal- *-3814 * NULLS '-'3 G i t " jew e lrv Mexica •• r- . :■ • p setting C a r p o r t - accepted W a ter U3F-D p ' ^ k ' spectlon. 1311 Nor- VAR JA I.' - a* • . y K vm an g . GR 7-000! H 2 •84? 9 Roommate W an te d Q u , . I ava ab p Augus* TC »d paneled La rg e cl >set. ■« h TH E BGC 5533 Bu fopped!!# K after 5 'ES vtho.;..ks rices J; r , 'pen 9 Sunda \ * 1 - 6 ird Nev F :rr • pc 2 p. dr or'a Fro m 51.35 I E W S I G R 7-7435 I ving-dintng downstairs. Closets P riv a te Apartments * th bedroom* up N E W Stereo Aibur and carpeted. A Ava ‘ .hie tot m ature single adult* or coup!—a. location Ave and central M onday-F : I s S u r e P m Mur 4Vt ■ 111 after \U Of H I 2-8438-GL 3-4383 B L A C K ar.1 oar' I nr e s s '* r* pies P O R T A B L E tap# IN D A -ond ti " T O RTN stu Tents ERV 5651 F E M ALM urv. bi Tutoring gradual* ' od Special abject* I N IV Ti R S IT V > lith Street, G R *66 M B ir t i S t 'Z U K cond ' «LR AT laded I ■» -33 \v Hd sc July 15. ti G R 8-183 4 september IR A N 2 - Bedroor '* se 5>auer 478-237 THC BLAChrC-.E V- 0 Red R ver GRhFfc- ‘ Th# Show plan# o f jaun t*y ' N o w w##k» A tall le asin g th e U r sr for rom - rind 6- C A M PU S O A K S A PA RTM EN TS I T B Safc'-e Summ.r Vac O r !y One Bedroom Furnished Pool - Cable TV' Central A ir - C a rr*' La u n d ry Roo-" W a lk in g distance Campus T S ret month Ma’taqer- Ap* #4 N E E D F i t Someone to take over or* bedroom apartm ent «* - end 6 ueeks location Summer School Convenient 1302 Vt 24"’ 477-7871 W A L K TO C A M P U S hi mw * •- s-«o C e n tra a • - aa* ara , a-re* l f IS b ' “ * pa d. . 3 ab re O, p.. - : 1 LA* t j 25 r - -a a a C a - r t I or 2 bedroom cal • - v ‘th K • ett# Caf# C r CH -r- V. mine a ria mar na w ith f shins doc* U tilt e* paid dren and pets accepted pates or s e n 'irs I ■ >r 2 or -4 per-: -■ I'ref - r era -ej » S • CL 8 I I II lea* -g l^r r ^” S O U T H ER G E S E A F I 1-bedroom apts A C wood pan* ins new carpet tog and fu rn is h in g S " Ti­ ming porn. parking, laundry facilities I OC 7 W , 26m W A N T E D — One id# ■ar# studio three bath females H Fiill- T is j GR 8 Help W an ted SUM M ’ Phon- 478-22( IB S — C ar r a lte r 9 p m. sari -nee nef i-ssa ry. 75r/h i F E M A L I identa - - L ig h t o f f i c e m o i - in irs . ■ r d Mondev n e? range for aper: L*nt spare, Cb iParral Apt*. 2408 Leon G R 6-3167 dail? PA 5 E D : A W O R K girl Frida? around du- h J r$ cl 3 < or F r H O 5-0053 Sam Bats 4 - 364’ BA F ’SM " .RS A V A I L A B L E tor fall. AZC N ea r car, Ice bo?: Double $3‘ pus Carpeted up. I#*4 Guadalupe G R 6-6,v * 465-6* CO. T O W E R V I FIW Apts. T V Cable Gas- W a te r t*aid Most reasonable rates In town. D R 2-4566 S T U D E N T Owned Apartm**nt near C l I riiqu# 3-1 edroon 6 weeks : to Ideal for 3-4 students 427-7?. * N E E D E D : Someone to take over one- bedroom apartm ent se-•o.ml 6 w< ks location Sum m er S<*hool Convenient 1302 VV 24th 477-781)1 N E W Furnished efftdaijcv. A/C, • water na'd Graduate studen* 572 50 H I 2 718 4 Furnished Apartments I'hatrs Con-■') >-e at "ic**. RS O ', KL: 8 ■ i.ran r v » 1 soils fin# designer clo t clothes ca I 4-52-6622 Rovsh S37.' P O R S C H E #ng eu m e r - f:<# $39' I un phi: gk- G R 7-1)691 K A R M A N N ' G H IA v p r"b (- * I 61 D $ I J >0 bov G R A2216 D u p le * — Furnished — d i n t r* o t>.-- * " r " v m ' ' ,v # b i n il a ' ' r , 'n I LVS* pt Reads Aug me rn L ’han 15 rn, nut es of Texas ti. Eire p ia service room w ith it dishwasher clothes was?',cr. !* brx-ksheKe* bath: drap. ■ * rn „ , , d pat carport boat: central « r-heat No pets Seas# Sm s . dei*os.t Die. 385-42"'* w rite H Higdon. 1602 D alto n L a Austin. 'I e.vns. storage; arg# int space carpet A V A I L A B L E \ Q M A T U R E M A L E Stud* ! tFILU X furnished dup'. • kitchen 22 nu ft R .*r i<# maker w a il to n a,I pietely private feni **d ba* ate telephone in comp* t. bedroom: stereo y*> B ill* paid tub 709 FL 44th - - Apt \l?T-fE H a\n >"■ "T ". R ' ‘ \ Summer Band L e a d e r . . . R chard R-'-.'-sHa'* to d.r,'ct open-air concert Rogers ar I Porter 51*mJ U* v The Summer Texan Classified Ads C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R A T ES ............................ .. $ .04 .................................................... $ 1.20 .50 .25 Each W o r d {15 word m inimum) M inim um C h a rg e • Stu d en t ra t* ( i0-word maiimum,; one t —e . . . . 5 •Each a d d itio n al tim e ................................................ J 20 C o n se c u tive Usual IO w o r d s 15 w o r d s ...........................................................................$ i 0.00 20 words C lassifie d D isplay I column i one inch one time ................................. $ Each A d d itio n a l Time ................. ........................... 5 ................................................... ............ .. ...................... .................. $ 8 20 20 I 0 J ! 3.00 { N o co p y change for con se CU ti - e I ss a rates j • N E W L O W STL DENT R * 'E $ IO words or less for 5Cc the first * me t'm e S * .d e n r — ,t* 25c each ad d • ana in a d ­ show A u d it o r * re ce ip t and pay from vance througn 3 a m . to 3:30 p.m. M :- : i , Fr day. J o . -na sm Blag , 107 in C. ASS -.ED ADVERT S N ® Dc a v -gjc T esday Teian ..................................... M o n d ay 3:30 r rn. W»-5«#s-j*y ' » m ................. ................ 7 p. T - .. - i da i Tetan ....................... F- 5 -day T», a-, ......................................... F '- .a n .................................. .. f- W e d n e ta e , j g r _ 3 32 p rn. - , 3 j v p ,m< -s. ‘he event of #"o? rn • im - an adv#-* r- sd a*e ne* ce rn st be g .en as the r b s-erj re spor s e e tor O'? y c l - : t i * icier* on. GR 1-5244 3 30 c m . Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments For Sale For R e n t T y p nq DER W IEN ER SC H N IT ZEL 4 j V V . 2 4 th Jus* O ff Co-- * cd Tho D*.sq ' Biggest Name in Hot Dogs I ti Kraut Dogs Chili Dogs Mustard Dogs 1 8 FAS ?ER /IC E 2 S H O w 3 T O D A Y * * I p * * & 8 n \ a1. S c L w m r • a a( I 4 A I * K - * » r !O w V iik lS ,L L / L > u , rr rf H f i f I ! I I » - ^ i r » l A ' l \ r it. - I I v . J J I L 1 • I JO J Ll ttCMNICSLOr MMnSiOM FROM WAffWEH BPQS S£V£MRTS v 7 H H S pr I im ;l LIU la, Lh* * *> ■’ ♦OC. FREE! NVI I TS i i " ) ■ 4 i .'-I Furnished Houses Lost Found Room and Board Furnished Rooms P A S O - G U S E *ri i f— r r~ n THESES y - - r P o c o " T A C 0 is ,yR EA f NI — TAKE O U T I. BEEP T A C O . . . . 24c 2. CHALUPA 3. F R IJO L E S No 4. 24c Zee 24c No. 5 C c - o BURR ’ O S 34c I , n J? if-t; «,th I rn,st meat No. 6. C-i'i' & BEAN S . . 34c Ne. 7. ' A E O E Y S E " . 24c THAMS SAAS yTTTi n JtliT O ', . C C Ti 6 .... No. 8. . . . 2- %m1a Aw No. 9. G U A C A M O L E TOST a DA . . . . . . 34c The Name Of The Game Is Kill*’ , : I ■ . I ' V) K I T I X K S S • V 29th at Guadalupe M o n . *-* j S n * O pc-o A.M . — M id riff Suoda/ Open I , A M, - IO P.M. ENDS TODAY I'l I ? " I It K U * I t * 7 I IJS S I L i ? M SH . DI STIO H O E M A N a ■.NI BAN C :: * T THE GRADUATE T y p in g ROY W . HOLLEY G R 6-30,8 X D 4 lf B I N D I N G ROY HOLLEY GR 6 3018 U : n 'T I Ch ' J 476-52*17 'or more : n' if ma' ■* Mi B it Golorado E X Pl■. R I EN* K I * Typist ' [>rm pa !a-rs. t he:»es M a rily n HamUt on u t 321* I T H E ' •I ES •it- addressed reports, la vvnmH ■% w * I* Mrs > r Fin- G R 6-1317 J i l l " J I J I 130G S« Cs#! ? I \ it ! I \ (, VS l l > M - I * V V I O R 0 8 I U M H n ho P ?i LUCILLE IMH HENRI FONDA l o u r s . ‘n 0 0 MMW Mine a n d - * Cb 'A.ir.ini, TOM BOSLEY COLOf by DeLuxe * * T m TAKING A REFRESHER C O U R SE? p m - odeied *1 Si V - I , N A C A L H O U N T Y PI I G S E R V W a offer a nJe4 r t f re v j place to iv e * r a ,c , **•# here during the jummsr. New epar‘ meht re ::dences only moments •im campy j, Your choice of I & 2 bedrooms *j-- >hed cr lg - H t shed — ■ itudio* with I " j baths. Love!, o " C a ’! today ‘*or yo„r summer home. 926-'147. F U h rn s'/ ’1'*m.„ si r# roJy J610 Go roors ira nd en Typing. K - DA Si d a f - re W t S r A JST d^rq9rfe^ « f V V,. I > ^ .. 3rd f < v * * . Glasser h.-ginning N u rse ry School ar tailored greed tem hers anc JB A w e l l planned xr< i a r arn Hot noon students meal. 2 snacks a d a v la Outdoor pia%* are i Corn#r VV 12th Ac g in w rin g th Kirn Phone (>F 1922 —5 'la '.s a 2 7 0 7 Also pt id ;.' car# De­ 6 a rn, Ph o n e 4 7 8 - q u li i tied u o r k i - t - Indoor- n ent. [{ours 7 a rn F U L L - T I I-ttjfc;*' T h e C c for l o ?<■* k. th# needs of U n iversity social equip k< board iguag**. s, *< ni l' and en- ?*"? and dissertations * lr.'-- -I - J XL 9 I ’ ping, VV A • ct Prs C O LL iC T O R W PRICE POR LUGER PISTOL FOR v Y L h Mwlti, fLinf HIS COLLECTION. PAY TOP Ffl!* A+ I Jwy{, 4 DONT G A R T E R 4 5 4- 672 1 A I T K R 5 P M | ” ' rn F -Man t f iUred c argel ’ "'I- of University; students, Sp*-< ial kv. board * q u lp m m t ; iv inn* **. and * ngin#er- ; ! for i mg th#,*-** and dissertations language, lhp L e ? e s t p r i c e s o n f k a s e t A-RL S ypNIVlRS TY « RViCES f i s Y : , 34 W e s t 24 S-'ee t | P h o n e G R 2 - 3 2 1 0 a n d G R 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 H e m p h i l l P a r k P I I 5* C L A M B A K E I Iv n Pre*il#V t i t i D o n t g e t c a u g h t w a s w h u t s h e H a s n 't ta u g h t. e x t o r t s T O M O R R O W ) a . WIW) ll iiiii m -1 Al wa— w ' — ii 11 ti i 1 'I DELICATE HASTERPIECf ..TT OFFERS Bt AUTT: SEMSUAUTY, AMO PE RTEC T TASTET ... LU w ■§•—(Mar<>:« ?B f iirrY * “ V. " * A etft *“ *“ MICH? • MICHI f i PIERRE1 .[VENTI* I CATHERINE DI NEU1* Benjamin Jkf Duurr at /ut km octm Yourn Bor rp#nciNi et w.i p r e v i e w ■ M I M m n * - '- J ii Ii 'A la i r "IB I* ' ; ai I i A J l f c - Uplift. " V In all candor the management makes this state­ m ent. There is nothing licentious nor obscene in this program. But it is not for the very young or impressionable. ___ SHE LOVED REBELS ON W H E E L S / PO O R WHITE T R A SH ;X " S ’V® w a y e x / s t TODA SFE HOW r u i c c drivmn THEATER l i H i C r 5 6 0 1 N . L a m a r — H O 5 -1 7 1 0 NOW AT POPULAR PRICES! UNCUT! DIRECT FROM ITS ROADSHOW ENGAGEM ENT! ACADEMY AWARD W INNER I B I ST M U SICA L SCORE) Exclusive Lim ited Engagement Ingenue C o nfro n ts J a d e d Don Juan p ’ayed by C al t h w a r t n g ut d by M che! P in T e m p t s at c /e m a m n q Para­ m ount Pictures’ E ig h te e n th C e n tu ry rom antic comedy starts Thursday a t the Texas. in a scene B e n j a m i n . from W I T H T H K A D D E D CON V E M E X T . O F R O C K I N G C H A I R S E A T S S M O K I N G P E R M I T T E D A N D Ai R I S OK F R E E P A R K I N G rryg tw whiti give STARTS TOMORROW Bs K O B I K l V Iii K \ Polanski sounds that add so much to the mood and build suspense so well. successful ar is so f coing an audience into one per- th e, In fact. that he upsets ti ‘-rn occasionally into taking ac- t:on again st the* film itself. With “ RepuP; n’’ m any view ers were s to leave, and “ R osem ary's B a b } ’’ has been deemed blasphem ous f r telling a convincing tale of witchcraft. t h a t they had tcTTifi * I / THURSDAY HITE R E T E R N A L L I F E C O R P S THE NETS’ ORLEANS production 0 < TECHNICOLOR BRUTES! THEY'RE MERCENARIES.. THEY'RE RAID TO DO A JOB! SAVAGES’ HS HOSS! FROM HAROLD ROBBINS' LUSTY NOVEL- TILE HOTTEST DOUBLE BIU EVER EUiiT! WEEKDAY SPECIAL from our rtg u ar menu on specia from I 1:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m . A GEORGE ENGLUND PRODUCTION ROD TAYLOR YVETTE MIMIEUX -A JIM BROWN m2 JOSEPH I I i i ISE A T 2 D R I V E - I N S -------- Starts Tomorrow f Todcr JO H N W a y n e BURNET DELW OOD LUCILLE BALL HENRY LONDA P A N C A K E H O U S E ' t UM «Fv» N» •T iu B u e A SlttT H QUENTIN WHITY and ADRIAN SPIES ( T W ., . un nuuttsor OlUNO MdlEROCOlOt © STARTS THURSDAY! T E C H N I C O L O R • E N D S T O N I G H T ! INTERSTATE I M J J " J THEATRE where the end of W o rld W a r ll b e g a n ! F i t z w i l l y Clambake — in t e r s t a t e w y w w w w t h e a t r e ~ M M i l l W. JAMS STEWAia SEAN MAKIN w a WELCH GEORGE K3 il)IB¥ ?01h lent . fi • * » V *- .rf- BAM BOLERO! ■ a a * * * S T A T E Steve McQueen Faye Dunaway „ \ N o r m a n J e w is o n Film ‘ TteTRewod O w n Aufait' COLOR by Dei mc it' i rvtmiendfd fur Mature Aedleeee INTERSTATE ARK1NG MTW t f M O N ton > » 4 L A V A C A sn VARSITY THEATRE PANAVEXM rn METRO O U * CINEMA D R IV E -IN 8900 S. ( o n ( t r e s s III 3-9116 D R IV E -IN • Paramour* Futures Mia Farrow i i I Wilton) Cast)* Production HELD OVER ! ! o N D SHOCKING WEEK! M M L B l John Cassavetes M A T I R E A l D U M K S en sa*>nf FREE PARKING M I W » P .M . O N L O T S A O J A C t M T T O T H t A T R f COLUMBIA PICTURES Present* A DINO OL LAURENTE PRODUCTION flHUmr« r e I Lr\ rM L r\ • C H IU nU LU IVIM IM • IVIMniN UMIVIUSV * RtNI SAN TUN! •THOMAS HUNTEI ROBERT RYAN “(5S? ANTHONY STEEL • WAYOE PRESTON. »th ARTHUR KENNEDY- f e m * tv HARRY AL CRAIG ■ tm Hi* tux* hr WWFOSD VAUGHAATHOMAS-Produced fey DNO DE LAURENTfiS • Directed t> EDWARD DMYTRYK f i g ] PANAV1S10N*- TECHNICOLOR* STARTS TOMORROW Tuesday, July 23, 1968 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 7 MATINEES DAILY Lemmon Matthau Walter The ^ t-O d d Couple rO X T h e atre VU I M T Bi FC • 4 5 4 -2 7 1 1 J A N S S E N 'E t, U H E G H I;E B e r e t s STARTS T H U R S .!! Peace Corps Recruiter Cites Quick Start by Campus Drive ing flu* week long campaign. He said his team of recruiters Mill return in the fall to recruit mole volunteers. The Peace (a a ps > OI tin* pl O- cess of <*s»ablishitig a permanent n*eruiting office ■ Cr.*' Univer­ sity campus W'i tf.d sod. The average University volun­ teer is a liberal arts student w ith a degree. VV’hltfill said. More men than women join the corps Whitfill said the question rn st often asked by University men when asking about the Corps is “ Does this defer me from me draft?" This question mm on A be answered by that person's draft board, he said Whitf ill said a Peace Ct;.-, volunteer must he at least 18, a U S citizen, and have no depend ems under 18 years f age Most University students re CTUited during this week will bt stationed Corps representative sa; ! the Pea e P> r in Africa, sons with degrees in set r I *r\ education are not needed at that location. Whitf ill said. A Peace Corps survey U as that thp University has ‘.W vol unteers now serving overseas it; the program In overall volun jeers, Tex.is ranks 20th arn alg US colleges. Whitf ill said the Univer^.ty doesn’t rank higher in volunteers bec ause. “ Although the i'm vt t sity of Texas is a racier l:be: - institution, th'* general air the State of Texas is e*nservati\ *• He a ided that r, * Negroes '• id been recruited from the I'm . * • sity, to his knowledge VVhitfll! ing at least is hopeful of recru IO volunteers Our B R I D A L Si IOPPE EVERYTHING FOR THE BRIDAL PARTY 4016 N. Lamar The Peace Corps started its search for volunteers en the Uni­ versity campus Monday. Repres­ entatives will be signing recruits the remainder of the week at a table on > i e West Mall. As of Monday afternoon, re­ cruiting was going well, Penis Whitfill, regional media repres­ entative f >r the Peace Corps, said. About 25 |*>r cent of those who sign up on the University are accepted. Whitfill described a University Corps volunteer as “ A ty;>e of person who wants to do good for mankind, md one who is looking for peace and v nits to give s e n ­ ior.’’ He said that other reas ns given by University volunteers were adventure, travel, and the learn a foreign lan- desire to guage. Campus News In Brief S W I W It II s t MIN VR w ii pre- son? Dr. R 'l’ert Divine, pro­ fessor cf history, at noon Wi*d- nesday in the Union Building Junior Ba SI Dx .rn. Dr. Divine “ An Historian will disv us.s Dicks at C rn temporary Foreign Policy.” SCHOOL o r \K( HH K TI IU will hi -Id an inf ormal re* **p?i"n f r arch.*f “are students and faculty from 3 to 4 30 pm , Wednesiiav in the Union Build i n is R. I " TU X IS K W magazine, veil have a staff rr.ee* irs at 7 ?d p m Tuesday J f t u m iiw i Building HO rn John S»aimach invites Edi*<*r a n y o n e interested in Watkins nox* year * on tho attend 'ho rn ing. Final plans f - tho Sop?*•!"?•.ber issue will bo co rn pie?-Hi. 'r Tt \ \S I M O V w a r - Bufidin ii IU D ■ "from 3 > *<• 4:3* Pi •ponies and p.m. Tuesday. fudgesic!<*s will be sold l f 5 ct *nts. I MVT. RS IT V I \ VV WIV E S ( T IP . will hold a bridie, < ,-naua, and monopoly p a re a' 7 VT pm W erin ow! v at tho L ila B E " o r Alum.ru Conter. C st ls per person. For reservations, cad Mrs. R bort Carr at GI. 3-79W cr Mm Frilly Bludw r h a* (JC 4 40VT. Recruiters Make Pitch for Help , , . Carolyn Lafayette and Larry Omo (r), Peace Corps Volunteers talk to students. — S'.att I'new ON DISPLAY IN OUR W IN D O W S A dvance Showing THE N E W NEHRU FA SH IO N S F R O M 2450 ACCESSORIES Turtle Neclc Knit Sc W o v e n Fabric Shirts Medallions Sandals O PEN T H U R SD A Y S TILL 8 P.M. r f ^ t i cu rlfJ * f ilClCQv&Qtti W M EN S W EA R 2222 G U A D A L U P E — N EXT TO TH E TEXA S T H EA T R E FALL SALE 100% Human H air Falls! MADE TO SELL FOR $55.00 NOW ONLY W H IL E TH EY LAST! • ALL CO LO RS • TERMS EASILY ARRANGED DISCOUNT CENTER 444-6249 WIG 1206 S. C O N G R E S S It s Fabulous ... lls Come See . . . «T6E A R E S ID E N C E H A L L F O R Y O U N G W O M E N O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F T E X A S I O de si "tied for the stud oil* desiring unequalled elegant living . . , # 20 Delicious Meals Per W eek # Experienced Management 0 Approved Supervision # Fully Carpeted R o o m s # A ir Conditioned Comfort # Maid Service # Swimming Pool # Color Television Lounge # Recreation & Study Areas # Parking Space # Laundry Facilities / B IS FO R BETSEY A Is for action . . . swinging skirt, ruffles. B Is for Betsey’s bold print, green or blue. C is for "come see it" . . . $29. rn H I 'D rn, MB . ■ » » » , • ■ gum # . 'Mfm ' -Hpt" * « Page 8 Tuesday, July 23, 1968 THE SUMMER TEXAN T H E C O N T E S S A W E S T 2707 R IO G R A N D E Call G R 7-9760 or G R 6-4648 Paraphernalia 2404 San Gabriel off W . 24th Street 9:30 to 5:30, Thursdays till 9:00