U T Football Signs First N e g ro Page 5 • Vol. 67 Price Rve Centi .C . n S D A Y F E B R U A R y | 5 | 9 6 8 T h e I F ily T e x a n Student at The University of Texas at Austin C h a lle n g e '68 Registration Ends T od ay Page 7 • o g ' ^ o r * > (A & Ten Pages Today N a I U US Pledges Support To Seoul Government IO TS* 4«w--Ut*<1 Pr*M SEOUL Tile I S government promised President it would Chung Hee Park Thursday that consult im m ediately with his government whenever Forth Korean actions threaten the security of South Korea. Winding up four days of marathon m eet­ ings and tough bargaining, US presidential envoy Gyrus Vance and the South Korean joint com m unique con­ President demned the “ increasingly aggressive and violent actions of the North Korean Commu­ nists over the past 14 months in violation of the arm istice agreem ent.” in a to act their govern­ Vance and Park pledged m ents to determ ine im m ediately what actions should be taken under their mutual defense treaty should acts of Com­ munist aggression continue. Annual Meeting Set The two governm ents also agreed their defense m inisters would m eet annually to discuss common defense and security prob­ lem s. Vance had his second m eeting with P resi­ three-and-one-half hour* dent Park only after em erging from a 10-hour, all night m eeting with South Korea’* foreign m inis­ ter. Park and his m inisters had demanded itself to that the United States com m it “ im m ediate retaliatory m easures jointly with the Republic of Korea" in the event of a major Communist attack. But the pledge to consult im m ediately was as far as th# United States would go. N o in c riw io d M ilita r y A id The comm unique indicated rejected re p u ted South Vance had Korean request# increased m ilitary m uscle, for including m ore and better naval and air equipment. The overnight m eeting with Foreign Minister Chol Kyu-hah was Vance's fourth session since arriving Sunday to reassure the South Koreans, who claim ed the Com­ munist throat to their security was being overlooked by a US governm ent prim arily concerned with securing the freedom of the captured I SS Pueblo and its ( row Vance originally had been scheduled to ret in n to Washington Tuesdaj Vance wa# reported to have encountered third m eeting with difficulty during his Prem ier Chung II kwon on Wednesday. Coping W i t h C r i s i s After the m eeting, he extended his stay another day to try to iron out differences over coping with the crisic touched off by the assassination attempt and the seizure of the Pueblo. Tile overnight secret session also was at­ I S Ambassador William J, tended by Porter and Vice-Foreign Minister Chin Pill shik. to the Pueblo Hie South Korean* have complained that the I nited States is paying too much at­ incident and not tention enough to South Korea’s security. They also dislike being excluded from the talks at Panmunjom by which the United States is trying 3 3 Pueblo crew m en. to win release ()f tf]P War Threatened North Korea told American negotiator# W ednesday that there would be war unlcs# “ you take your bloody hands off K orn and withdraw from South Korea.” Maj Gen. Pak Chung Kook of Nortl Korea wa# replying to a US ( barge at ar A rm istice Commission m eeting that th# com m andos ( om m unists had into sent Seoul to fry to murder President Chung Hee Kirk Jan. 21 and had com m itted 73 other serious violations o. the truce in th# past 44 days. Hie decision whether there is peace or hostility depend# upon the whim of an ap- irresponsible North Korea," de­ potently s i r e d R ear Adm. John V Smith, senior I N A rm istice Commission rejresentat.lv*. 'Armed Murderers’ 1 our side can have peace m erely by unilaterally stopping acts of aggression. You must stop dispatching arm ed murder­ er*. into the Republic of Korea." Glaring at Smith, Pak replied: "We don’t want war, but we are not afraid of it.” He Mid North Korea would m atch build­ up for build up and blow for blow and, lf It cam e to that, “all-out war with all out w a r.” dins was an opqn m eeting of the com ­ mission The subject of the intelligence ship Pueblo, seized by the North Koreans Jan. 23, carne up only incidentally. The Pueblo has been discussed at secret m eetings be­ tween the United States and North Korea. ^ Pak brought up the Pueblo, s a y in g th* United States was taking a d v a n ta g e of th* Incident for w ar.” to m ake “ full preparations Married C o u n c il's 'H e a rt's Desire' Judy Ruth W illiam son was chosen M rs. University W e d n e sd a y night. fu n Ft*** Mrs. University Named . . . . I_________ TXT IT 1 1 . ------- Judy Ruth Williamson becam e Mrs. Uni­ versity 1968 W ednesday night in the Texas I n ion Main Ballroom. The second grade school teacher is the wife of Walton Wil­ liam son, an engineering student at the Uni­ versity. . Assembly to Discuss Union Control Issue Continued negotiations for control of the Student Union will dom inate the Student A ssem b ly m eeting Thursday night, accord­ ing to Lloyd D oggett, Students’ A ssocia­ tion president. The m eeting will he held In Union Build­ ing 321 at 7 p.m . A tentative agenda issued W ednesday by D o g g e r s office includes a Cultural E nter­ tainm ent C om m ittee report, approval of Su­ san H asslocher for C ollege o f B usiness Ad­ ministration assem blym an Campus Chest report, Round-Uu report, and corrections In election codes. ♦ Tile contest is sponsored by the Married Students Council with each entrant rep­ resenting one of the nine w ives clubs in tile council. Mrs. Claire Young of the I W ives w as first runner-up for the title. I.aw The contestants were Interviewed in the Star Room and then Introduced to tire au­ dience. They w ere evaluated on the basis of “personality, poise, and resource m an­ agem en t.” Judges w ere Jeanne Boone, wom an's edi­ tor for KTBC-TV; Frankie Peterson, A m eri­ can Statesm an Society editor; and Cactus Pryor, program director of KTBC-TV. A fashion show conferred. D ressed in a rrd roat-sidt, th e new Mrs. U niversity term ed the experience a “big honor and a big thrill.’’ She received red roses and a silver chafing dish along with her title. Mrs. Williamson will be presented during Round-Up and will judge the MSC’s baby contest in April. T w enty-five girls from the T ex as S ta te School for the D eaf w ere special guests of the MSC at the contest. One of them , Sharon Dugan, drew for the 13 door prizes that were given aw ay. Two U S Pianos Stray N ear Reds; O ne Downed B* T h * 4 < * r x i n l * a | ‘ r f « Two u n a rm e d A m erican planes \\ VSH I N G TO N .strayed n e a r C om m unist H ain an Island T u esd ay night, < me w as shot dow n, th e o ilie r fled to Da N ang, South V ietnam . The Pentagon, in an announcement Wed­ nesd ay, said the two US N avy propeller- driven A l Skyraiders inadvertently strayed into Hainan s airspace because of naviga­ tional difficulties. Peking Radio, in a broadcast monitored In Tokyo, charged the United States with carrying out “ war provocations.” N avy pilots of the P eople’# Liberation Army im m ediately dealt n heavy blow and s! >f down ( fie of them and dam aged th# other,” Peking said. At the Pentagon, Assistant Secretary of Defense Phil G. Goulding said he did not know whether the second plane which (**• caped had been d a m a g e or whether it* pilot was Injured. Several hours later, however, the Penta­ gon said f ie plane w as not dam aged and the pilot was unharmed. Pilots I nidentified N either of the pilots was Identified. Goulding said this pilot “ reports he lsst saw the other plane in a vertical dive and sm oking.” Tile Pentagon's chief spokesman m ade a point of sayin g two or three tim es he would not discuss the fate of die lost man. Some took this as a suggestion that search and- resrue operation# might he under way off Hainan’s coast, 12-Mile Claim Red O lina claim s territorial w aters out to 12 m iles from Its coastline. The sam e lim it applies to its airspace F e slow-flying Skyraiders — no match for the supersonic MIG — w ere on a ferry flight from Cuhj Point in the Philippines to the aircraft carrier Coral Sea, in the Tonkin Gulf. Tile carrier launcher fighfer-bombers on raids against North Vietnam. F ive Miles Away ( moulding said the planes reached a pf/int Is­ five miles off Hainan approxim ately land's east coast. What ha pf *»n ed to cause their naviga­ tional difficulties was not explained. Gould­ ing said he did not know what the w eather conditions w ere. Only a few days ago another A l Skyraider cam e within a few mile* of overflying Hainan but turned bac k apparently without incident. Incident Number Nine Tuesday night’s incident was the ninth Involving US planes penetrating Chinese air­ space sin ce Septem ber, 1965. Last Aug. 21 two Navy A6 A bom bers which w ere being pursued by MIG'# after a raid on Hanoi, North Vietnam, flew into China w here they presum ably w ere shot down. They w ere storm conditions at that tim e, and the pentagon said the pilots had navigation problem s. Tunnels Underlie University Campus B y KAY LYONS T exan Staff Writer The U niversity has its own underground. An entrance to the underground w as dis­ covered in 1962 by an 18-year-old man who did not attend the U niversity. He considered It challenging to follow the tunnel just to it went. For three years he Bee where finding out tunnels at night the visited where they all led. When the police appre­ hended him in 1965 he told them how he had got into the tunnels and through the locked doors. “It w as fantastic following him through that m aze of tunnels that criss-cross the cam pus. He would reach out and flip a light sw itch here and turn another off with­ out m issing a showing you through his h om e,” D etective B ert Bowman said. step, like The U niversity cam pus is surrounded by * series of tunnel- that en case pipes carry­ ing steam , chilled water, and com pressed atr utilities to every building on cam pus. The tunnels w ere added to the power plant system in 1932, They now spiral out of the Power P lant Building and cross the cam pus with loops In a clover leaf effect. The tunnels which are generally six and half feet by six feet house five pipes; a steam pipe, ste a m return pipe, chilled w ater pipe, chilled water return, and a com ­ pressed air pipe. The pipe steam 12-inch an average of 60,000 pounds of steam per hour under 165 pounds per square inch pressure *t a speed cf two m iles per m inute with a tem perature of 500 degrees. carries W illiam M. Wilcox, Sr., refrigerating and heating engineer, said this sy stem is the best for supplying utilities to a com plex as la rg e as the U niversity because of the ea se w ith which it can be m aintained, lf it w ere not for the tunnels, any tim e there were a m alfunction, the repairm an would have to dig up the cam pus to reach the pipes, ba said. Flowers from a Fella s u n Photo Wert abundanf W e d n esd a y as Kinsolving dorm residents received rem 9 Z b rS n C V : Lynn R e t r Richardson es other girls await their turn. fu c k * r h u nfi for a rra n g e m e n t sent to J a c k !* G round H o g 'Told Us S o ' R f T fte l i m d a f M l A burgeoning late winter storm (ha* m ade streets and highways deadly over a large section of Texas continued to besiege the state W ednesday R ight Rural schools closed, traffic crept on icn- slick thoroughfares and at least seven per­ sons died in w eather-related accidents An auto and a school bus slam m ed together at G reenville, Injuring three. T raffic stacked up for blocks In the D al­ las-!'ort Worth arca as rain mixed with in­ te rm itte n t sleet continued i :,<> m etro p o lita n arca. N early e v ery populi* •> com plex in the state reported a rash of accidents as residents attem pted their daily chores. to h a r a s s Traveler*’ warnings again were posted— this urn* to last through Thursday. Motor- vpro cautioned In a sp e c ial sr*rem et from the Weather Bureau that roads waul remain hazardous for m ost of the Pecc R iver country of Southwest T exas an much of Northwest Texas. Late m the day, freezing ra in and drizzl fell northwest of a Wichita F ills - A bilene in s r a tte r e Midland line while snow fell fashion over the Panhandle-PJatos cour try. Rain feQ from Matagorda to the Ho us ton G alveston section and offshore in th« Gulf of M exico for about 30 m iles. said The W eather Bureau condition; should im prove in the w estern sections 0 the state W ednesday night and a cro ss Texas by late T h u rsd a y night. A warning treni should ‘ co m m en ce from the W est T h u rs day, ’ forecaster# said. Pipes Rush Steam, Refrigerated W a te r • • . W . A . W orsham inspects underground tunnel system . '■-af* Photo I W h a t 's Inside T he developing nations and th e ir p ro b lem s ............................. P a g e 4 In c a g e play, hom e squad ra te s a d v a n ta g e ....................... P a g e 5 The A n n iv e rs a ry ” term ed b lack com edy ............... CDE strives to ser v e p a g e 8 Pag# IO i Commission Studies Riot Force Creation B r T h # A M o c l m N t P t m i WASHINGTON The President's Commission on Civil Disorders is considering rec­ ommending creation of a special­ ly trained federal force to deal with urban riots. Sources close to the commis­ sion said tile proposal reflects dissatisfaction with the perform­ ance of National Guard units In trying to quell riots last summer. Lindsay Dissatisfied Further evidence of this dis­ satisfaction was expressed in a speech Tuesday night by Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York City, vice-chairman of the com­ mission. Lindsay told the New York State Publishers Association in Buffalo, “ In its studies, the com­ mission found that the National Guard won no medals in those cities where it was called into burning ghettos." “ The guardsmen were under­ trained and perhaps over-equip­ ped. By and large they were un­ sympathetic to the Negroes of the cities. The record is filled with charges that the guardsmen trigger-happy, were unreliable, and Ineffective in dealing with mobs in the streets," he said. Reports Pue Soon President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed the 11-member panel last Ju ly 29 to investigate the causes of riots that erupted in Detroit, Newark, and other cities and to recommend preventative action. The commission and its staff held extensive closed hearings and now is working in secret on its report, scheduled to go to the President March I. There was no immediate offi­ cial National Guard reaction to the development, but one officer said he doubts the Guard "would object strenuously" to formation of a special riot control force be­ cause it “ is a very unpleasant job and nobody likes it." But he added the Guard likely would protest any move to elimi­ nate guardsmen from civil dis­ turbance duty. “ If our state mis­ sion is downgraded, we’re in trou­ ble," he said. Question Raised Sources told The Associated Press that In discussing crea­ tion of a federal force to sup­ plant or supplement the Nation­ al Guard for not duty, several questions have been raised with­ in the commission, including: Would it amount to a national quasi-military police force? Would it be a regular Army unit or would it have a uniform of its own? At what pE.it would such a force step in to quell a disorder? “ Procedures wou1! have to be to determine who established would come in and when," said a commission source, mention­ ing the dispute last summer be­ tween Johnson and Gov. George Romney of Michigan over wheth­ er there was any delay in getting federal troops to Detroit to deal with the riot there. Guard's Control lim ited The National Guard's effective­ ness in riot control is limited, a commission source said, not only by lack of proper training, but by “ the fact most of the Guard is lily-white." Also because of the role the Guard played in disorders in the Deep South in the mid 1950’s and early I960 s. it Is often regarded by Negroes as a symbol of re­ pression. WIDELY ACCLAIMED C R A l l * 2 1 2 TAPE ll ECOII DE ll BACK IN STOCK LA FA Y ETTE ASSOCIATE STORE R A D I O E L E C T R O N I C S 4101 N . Interregional G L 2-0203 Freshman G irl W in s C a r G a il A n n Bunce, U n iversity freshm an, is presented with a sports car as first prize in a national magazine s college sweepstakes. She also won a 15-day tour of S c a n d in a v ia as part of her win. Bombs Defending Beseiged Khe Sanh M N y o r k By Th# Aiwlaifn! Seniors Named Best Prospects In Teaching Job Ten University seniors were designated Wednesday as among f*be !>.--■* future college teacher prospects in the United States and Canada. The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation listed 1.124 seniors at 309 colleges and uni­ versities as “ worthy of financial support In graduate sr bool." Names were .sent to graduate deans. Those named at Texas were Joan E. M. Becker, Gaial Leroy, Patricia Yvonne Bateman, Ellen Joseph Hal Michele Grarey, Roquemore, Margaret Lynn Mul- vaney, Henry L. Pritchett IIL Bettye Lou Wallace, Susan Sae- gcrt MacQuigg, and David Gene Grofe. The announcement marked change in the foundation’s pro­ gram. In the past IO years, with Ford Foundation funds, the foun­ dation made direct grants, “ Now <>ur major role Is to identify for graduate departments those students who in our view have tho best potential for college teaching," said Sir Hugh Taylor, foundation president a 1T22T DA NANG History's most concentrated aerial bombing campaign is un­ der way around the US Marine base af Khe Sanh in an effort to break the Communist siege ring, a qualified ES Air Force source said Wednesday. Although large numbers of North Vietnamese troops and sup­ ply and ammunition dumps have presumably been destroyed, Com­ munist pressure on the base l l miles south of the remilitarized Zone builds steadily. Some Marine officers believe that without the mighty bomb­ ing campaign. Khe Sanh already Would be untenable. Only 5,000 Marines face a force of perhaps 20,000 North Vietnamese regulars. In the past month, Air Force, Navy and Marine fighter bomb­ ers have flown more than 7,000 sorties against the Communist positions around Khe Sanh, More than 85 B52 missions of up to nine planes each have rained bombs into tile surrounding mourn i tains. An indication that the North Vietnamese are escaping some of the wrath of the fighter bomb­ ers came from thp Chinese Com­ munist newspaper Ta Kung Pao published in Hong Kong. Die newspaper said the North Vietnamese have dug an elabor­ ate tunnel system. North Vietna­ mese artillery shells Khe Sanh for only three minutes because it takes only four minutes for US bombers to reach them from nearby bases. The Kung Pao said after each three-rhinute barrage, the artil­ lery is dragged down through the tunnels to new positions to re­ sume the shelling. This would be no defense a gainst the B52s, however. Diey fly so high that the first intima­ tion that they are overhead comes when their bombs strike. Some of the B-52 loads Include deep penetration, delayed action bombs that play havoc with tunnel sys­ tems. Planes have dropped so far more than 120 million pounds of bombs and napalm, plus contri­ buting rocket and < nnnon fire. An unofficial count shows die total expI isive et e< t to bo nifbe than the combined power of the two atomic bombs dropped on Japan In World War II. A high Air Force source said: "W e are attempting to smash his (the Communist) supply line all th© way to Hanoi and Hai- phong. POLK Tues., Feb. 27, 8 p.m. M unicipal Auditorium COLLEGIATE SPECIALS 4 Door, V 8, A u t o p t i c , Radio 4 Heater. A G o o d T raiuporfaM o* C ar. ’55 DODGE •64 CH EVY ’64 PONTIAC ’65 CHEVY ’64 OLDS ’65 LEM ANS '66 IM PA LA '67 CORVAIR Nova SS, Beige, 6 cy t, Pow arglida, Radio 4 H e a t.- W M # S da W a tt Tirai. F o r TKa S p o r t ' t i 9 0 S .......... Lamont C o u p ., W h i t . 4 B la d . 6 eyb , M „ Radio 4 H eate r, W h i t . S id . $1295 W a Tirat. TH,** C a r ha* th* ,'ooki and econom y t o o Im pala Spo rt C o u p ., W h it . , V * Stick akfft, Rad a 4 H . p f . r , 4 W h i t . $1895 S d# W a ' 1 I r i l . Sa# Th j F a it Back now ................................ C u tia ji Coup#, B .a, V-8, A utom atic, R ad 'o and H a t t e r , W h i t . S 'd . W a !l Tir“ ......................................................................................... $ 1 4 9 5 Coup#, Torque!*., V-8. A utom atic, P o * # r Steering F a cto ry A ir Radio ,- d H « , 1 a r, W h i t , S U . W a tt T i , . , ................. 5 1 9 9 5 C o u p # , M a r o o n , V S P o w .r g 'd # , Po-#r S w i n g Fa cto ry A ’- * ,W ; 0 and W k *» S .de W a ll T i r # i ........................................ $ 2 3 9 5 SOO C o u p ., C raam . 3 , p .# d .tick tkjft, R a d io and H e a te r W h i t . S id . W # # T :r ,‘ ........................................................................................ $ 1 4 9 5 News Capsules ___________By The Associated Press________ Red Chinese Scientists Criticized TOK VO Communist China's scientists, long: considered Immune to tho cultural revolution purse, have been official^ criticized for “ a cold and indifferent attitude'' toward revolution and research. Whether a specific failure touched off tho criticism I Issue of the Shanghai Wen Hut Pan was t; t revealed. in tho Fob. ' S scientists said the Chine-<• detonated an atomic bomb last Christmas Eve, but Peking's failure to acknowledge the blast has led to speculation that an accident may have cecum!. Noting that for the past year the “ revisionist” line in science and technology had been "repudiated " the article said: “ How­ ever, units In the field of science and technology have not done enough cither in revolution or in scientific research." Mexican-US Relations Reviewed MEXICO ( ITV The fl- w of money and people across the US-Mexieo border was outlined for directors of various ES newspapers Wednesday by Henry Dearborn, minister counselor of the E S Embassy here. Dearborn said Mexican-US relations had never been better. Dearborn said estimates are that 1.5 million tourists — 1.3 mil­ lion of them from the Eriifed States — will visit Mexico this year. "Consider, if nothing else, the Importance of this influx on the Mexican economy," Dearborn said ‘ha r year, for example, Ameri­ can citizens visiting Mexico spent here an estimated $925 million. Tills represents hefter than 15 per cent of Mexico’s foreign ex­ change earnings. “ Looking at the reverse side of < a we find that approx­ imately 420 COO Mexicans traveler! to the ES during 1967," He said these persons — tourists who stayed more than three days — spent $475 million. Protester Asks Pope s Intervention o n \\\\ A 39 year-old mother and child psychologist, Mrs. Harbahajan Singh, sa id Wednesday she has sent a cablegram to Pope Paul VI beggmg him to become a hostage in Hanoi to stop “ barbarous American bombardment." Mrs. Singh Is a Roman Catholic and one of a group of parsons who regularly protest the war In Vietnam by standing silently near the National War Memorial here. Market Gains Despite B a d News Tile tight spring of the stock market Wednesday mapped back to a Sizeable technical rally despite some doleful news. Trading was heavy. After three straight sessions cf sharp decline, the market staged a pretty good recovery — hut n »t as* wide as any one of the losses on three preceding days. Of 1,4114 issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange, 788 rose and 480 fell. Standby Airmen to Move Troops N ASIIINGTON Air National Guard Mid Air Force Reserve units will help tra n s­ port the 10,500 fresh combat troops being rushed to duty in Viet­ nam. Sen, John StonnLs, D Miss., said Wednesday. He told tile Senate the standby airman had responded to a call from the Defense Department for sufficient volunteers to fly 115 round trips. US Agrees to Part of Treaty W VSH ING TON The United States announced Wednesday It will sign one sec­ tion of a treaty aimed at barring nuclear weapons from Latin America, but It also will spell out this country’s interpretation of any restraints on US nuclear power. A White House announcement said the United States will sign Protocol II of the treaty signed exactly a year ago at Tlatelolco, Mexico, aimed at making Latin America a nuclear-free zone. The United States will not sign Protocol I, because it is un­ willing to give up the deployment of nuclear weapons on any ES territory covered by the treaty. This includes Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Mexico was a prime mover in initiating the treaty. Communist Cuba was asked to sign it but declined. Die only other Latin na­ tions which have not signed are Barbados and Guyana. Official Backs Tax Boost W ISH IN G IO N Chairman William M. C. Martin Jr., of the Federal Reserve Board brushed off an accusation that he was guilty of nonfeasance and malfeasance of office and spoke up again Wednesday for a tax boos: at least as big as President I yndon IL Johnson recommended. The accusation was fired by M utinV jm • conia I antagonist, Chair­ man Wright I 'atman, I 1 IYx., of the I i ’Use Banking Committee, I I 'atman based it on his interpret a ti -n of a 1966 law: that the law is a mandate to the Federal Reserve Board to keep the home mortgage market supplied with funils by buying paper of agencies concerned. lpm Martin said there is no mandate and that the Board was exercis­ ing its discretion. Smiling, Martin said of Batman, “ I haw had many pleaisant exchanges with him. I don't believe he is serious about malfeasance in office." Gonzalez Pulls Out of ADA \\ ANH IN LTON Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, San Antonio Democrat, said Wednes­ day he has quit die Americans for Democratic Action because it endorsed Sen. Eugene McCarthy, I) Minn., for president. McCarthy's candidacy, Gonzalez said, could split the Demo­ cratic party. The ADA has. consciously or not, n ade President Lyndon B. Johnson appear as a sinister, mistrust -worthy man undeserving of the support of thinking Democrats," Gonzalez told a reporter. Dean Refuses to Resign BROM NS VILLE W. I. I ’oui os, dean if Texas Southmost College, told a news conference Wednesday that college trustees fold him Monday that he must resign Immediately or be fired, Po ufos said he will nut quit. He said the trustees at a Monday night meeting told him he laced no jiersonai or professional charge. Poulos said the disput occurred at an inopportune time. An intensive investigation of n irijuana smoking is taking place in Brownsville after a college student was slain. But the trustees made no mention of the invoke tk ;. or the slaying. Die killing has not peen solved. Hilt being asked to resign berat has already selected a no the bharti unsubstantiated reports that he was ng president of the college Police Plan Exodus to Houston Poulos Antonio policemen, uuhapp to Houston by the busloads, a S Patrolman Gilbert Reyna, one of 90 San Anti.-,Mio policemen aboard I for Houston Friday, lie said most decided they will leave San Anti raise the police salaries at the Colin A few, he said, has t already do Department if they are accepted. SAN .ANTONIO t their pay scale are going officer said Wednesday, nizem, said Wednesday toted buses w ill leave •.se liking the trip have City Council doesn't •c ng Thursday. - to J in the Houston Police Page 2 Thursday, February 15, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN ADVERTISING? W H O NEEDS IT? lf you w e re o n ly a ph ysical b e'ng , you woo a n 't re e d much m ore than minimum am ounts o f c o ffl­ es, food, and shelter. B u M o d a y you r lite is m ore than m ere existence. Self-esteem is( n ecessary fo r yo u r p sych o lo g ical w e -being. A d v e rtis in g helps you actualize yo u r self-concept, It lets you know which products and services will m ake y e a the w a y you w ant to be. I h a t s w h y y o u 'v e m a d e a dvertising exist. rAPiT 6 th a n d R tv , P h o n e G FEBRUARY IS ADVERTISING RECOGNITION MONTH nsored b y ALPHA DELTA SIGMA and GAMMA ALPHA CHI Professional Advertising Fraternities at th© University of Texas AND THE AUSTIN ADVERTISING CLUB C a m p u s News In Brief ASSOCIATION FO R Bl SI M ISS A P P U I ATKINS OF COMPU­ T E R S will ra w t at 7.30 p.m. in Business-Econo­ Thursday m ic* Building 155. C. J . Young­ blood of T exaco will d o r us* utilization of com puters in his firm . CH A LLEN G E will ct nelude reg is­ r I v tration for the v i qui urn from 9 a .m . to i i n n in the second floor Thursday Union lobby. . o ID EAS VNO ISSUES COMMIT­ cl t i ted T E E will spans r a * coffee • from 3 to 5 p rn. Thurs­ day in Union S tar P.- rn Thor e "Student Detcrmlmt- will be io n ." M ID D LE EAST C EN T I U will pre­ sent a specs h by Tawfig Sayigh, sch o lar-ed ito r-p -et, at 4 p m . Thursday In Business Econo­ m ies Building 266. He will lec­ ‘ ‘Arabic P oetry and tu re on P o lities: 1917 67." ORGANIZATION F O R S T V - D ENTS O F O BJECTIV ISM will m eet from 7 30 to 9 p rn. Thurs­ - Econ amies d ay In Business Building 261. Tliose attending r e c >rding of a will hear a speech by Nathaniel Brandon on "A n Introduction to Objectiv­ is m ." H ie public Is invited. ORGANIZATION O F VR VB STI - DEN TS will m eet at 8 p.m. Thursday In Bus! ness-Econo­ m ics Building 150. Alfred Lil- "Is la m 1 withal will speak on Its Sister Monotheistic and F a ith s ." Tile meeting is oj>en to th* public. Graduate Binds Reference Data On UT Students A bibliography of re f e r e n c e about students at the U niversity compiled by Terry has been in Peterson, gradu ate assistant the Student Life Office. Working with Dr. M arg aret B e rry , assoc cite dean of women, Peterson gathered referen ce data on students from 1883 to the pre­ sen r. The bib: ography's 241 entries are sufficiently diverse to aid a b r.>ad range of re s e a rch e rs in­ terested in students from educa­ tional. psychological, sociological, historical anthropological, views. or theses, dissertations, Books, ai tic des, rep orts, official publi­ cations, and student publications the bibliography were in listed in many places. Most found the Richard T. notable w ere Flem ing U niversity Writings Col­ the Library s News­ lections, paper Collection, and the Eugene C. B ak er T exas History Center, In a sum m ary report on his re­ recom m ended search . Peterson a single location for references and studies on students. He also hopes that the bibliography will continually be updated as addi­ tions a re made. Tile 1967 Ja n u a ry graduate of the U niversity is now studying educational psychology. Peterson spent three months gathering m a­ terial. Copies of the bibliography mav the Dean of be obtained from W omen's Office. Jon es spoke before a m eeting In B a tts Auditorium sponsored by the Nueces College House. He charged the CIA, the F B I , and the Dallas police w ith Intentional suppression of inf inflation in the ca se . A number of people, lr lading authorities in the F B I and Secret Service, had been told there would he an attem pt on President John F Kennedy s life in Dallas Ignored but Jones charged the information, He said that Kennedy had been shot at least four tim e s and that the bullet which was I und had been planted. that Stating tile only way to believe the W arren report is "not to read It," Join's chai ged the law yers involved with changing testim ony, failure t < call im port­ ant witnesses and to ask obvious the questions. He also blamed for what he A m erican press those who called bias against question the b a r r e n r port. Jo n es read p art of a list of 36 PH YSICS CO LIJXJU IU M w i l l in m eet at 4 p m . Thursday P h y sics Building 121. Dr. J . HL Gibbons of N uclear P hysics Di­ vision of Oak Ridge National L ab orato ry will speak on "Syn­ in thesis of Heavy Elem ents S tars by Neutron Capture The m eeting will he preceded by a coffee at 3 15 p rn. P R E -M E D AND P R E LAW STU­ DENTS a re invited to a speech on "M edicine and the L a w " by Dr. Allen Smith at 7:30 p.m. Thursday In the Union Junior Ballroom . P R E S B Y T E R IA N CXM PI S MIN­ IST R Y will meet from 4 to 5 30 p.m . Thursday at the ! niversi- ty P resbyterian Church, 2203 San Antonio. P SI CHI, psychology honor so­ ciety, will have an executive board meeting at 7 p.m. Thurs­ day at the Theta Xi house, 2410 San G abriel. All m em bers a re Invited. T E X A S AUDUBON SOC IE T Y will m eet at 7:30 p m Thursday in the Austin National Bank audi­ torium , fifth and Brazos streets. Teachers' Institute Planned for Summer Thursday Is application dead­ will be given to applicants who e line for the thirteenth sum m er institute in scien ce and m ath em a­ tics for secondary school teach­ ers, scheduled June 4-Aug. 6 at the U niversity. background training in science and m ath em atics Is "reason ably ad eq u ate" but a "quired several years ago, teach ers who seed train jig in their tea* bing field on Tho program , supported by a an advanced level, and teachers S126.400 grant from the National with three o r m ore > e a rs of Science Foundation, will offer BO teaching experience. participants up-to date knowledge of science and m ath to Improve their teach.ag potential. Credit also can be gained toward grad ­ uate degrees. Dr. Addison E . L e e , director of the Science Education Center and also director of the Institute, said the participants will be chosen from among teach ers who have at least a b ach elor'! degree and who teach at least one full course in science or m ath em atics in a Junior or senior high achool at the tim e of their application. A Stipends will b e aw arded up to 175 per week, with an allow ance of $15 weekly for each dependent (up to four) whose income does not exceed $600 yearly. Curriculum includes study in biology, chem istry, geology, and physics, as well as a sem inar on recen t ad van ces in science and m ath em atics. T eachers interested In the im ti-. tute m ay apply by writing to Dr. Addison E . L e e , Science E d u c a ­ tion Center, The University of T exas, Austin, T exas 78712. The Student Health C e n te rs phone number for appointm ents is GR 1-3082 from 8 to 5 Monday through F rid a y . Tile em erg en cy num ber Is GR 1-1824. UNION STI DENT F A C I T T Y CO M M ITTEE will m eet at 4 p m. Thursday In Union 202. limbed num ber of scien ce super­ visors also will be considered. Dr. Iuee explained that priority WHY SHOULD £TNA HELP MINORITY GROUP MEMBERS GET GOOD JOBS? Because we think this Is the way a responsible corporate citizen should a c t office and social skills to en­ able them to obtain full-time, perm anent jobs. /Etna Life A C a s u a lty h as trained yo un g people from b ligh te d a re a s of G re ate r Hartford since 1965 via two pioneering program s. " O p e r a t io n S T A R T ," Inst!- tuted three years ago, is an eight-week course that pro­ vides girls with the needed For men, "CO -O Pportunrty" opens doors in the com puter operations field through a six- m onth program of classroom study com bined with on-the- job com puter training. Both program s were the first of their kind to be conducted by a business organization in Its own facilities. And there are no strings attached. G radu­ ates can go to work anywhere. Our business m ay be selling insurance. But our concern Is people, M H H uatC A iuw r Our coneen: is people W a r re n Report Decision Attacked L ee H arvey Oswald was mere­ ly a "p a ts y " In the Investigation of the Kennedy assassinate n, a critic of the W arren Commission report said here Tuesday. Penn Jones, author of " F o r ­ give My G rief." and editor of a persons whose deaths he believes are connected with the assassina­ tion. and alleged that "thev are still killing," to keep the crime the suspects he quiet. Among named was one of the S ecret the Service agents present at Midlothian newspaper, alleged assassination. Truck Posters Cause Friction O fficia l! O p p o se A n ti-S m o k in g S ig n s Bf I ,((#,! Pr#*« H ASHINGTON A nasty little b ack stag e W ash­ ington vv rang Ie went into those anti smoking poster* soon to a* that the W arren Commission en­ gaged in a "now mg. activ e con­ s p ira cy " to conceal the truth Jo n es called for a new con­ dom the sides of US m ail trucks. gressional investigation of the By all accounts of reliable gov­ assassination and for g reater ernm ent sources W ednesday: from the A m erican public. public concern. Marxist Doctrines Discussed by SDS and himself religion, nature, When two men engage in com bat and one n atu rally becom es sub­ servient to the oth er, the winner has alienated himself from nature, Dr. Caroline said. M a r x w r o t e t h a t s o c i a l i s m c o u l d n e v e r s u c c e e d u n l e s s h u m a n n a ­ t u r e c o u l d lie s i g n i f i c a n t l y c h a n g e d b e c a u s e t h e h u m a n a n i ­ m o is c h a r a * - f e r l s t i r a U y s e l f i s h "M a rx wanted society a n d w o u ld o n l y w o r k b r a m o t i v e . to pro­ gress tow lrds the revolution and socialism because it would be im ­ possible to change human nature so cie ty ," Dr. in a Caroline said. cap italistic R ev ult M o r a lly I m p o r t a n t the M arx believed revolution wax Important m o rally because only after capitalism was de­ ss r< wed could changes In human n ature take p lace. He wrote that in both capitalism and socialism , the state la the in­ strum ent of the ruling class, Dr C a r ’line - ud But M arx also said that in - 'cialism tim ruling c la ss ’ he proletariat. Manx believed is that in a socialistic state the hu m an could be m otivated by other factors than by profit aion*. Dr. Caroline said, "H e thought that through education one could produce a new generation o f peo­ p le ," M arxist Contribution* Dr Caroline sum m arized. " I f s sbiy to be totally M a rx ist, and it is equally silly to be not just a lit­ tle M arxist. We cannot afford to overlook som e of his basic contri­ butions to our society T h e y a re extrem ely relev a n t to our e v e ry ­ day life." John Hill Backers To Meet Tonight Young T exans for Joh n H / will hold an organ fzatir mal rn log at 7 p m . T h u rs/lay h j the Ar- hiteoture Building, auditorium Purpose of the na 'eaj-ng ta to Inf irm students and i aou lty about John Hill’s ca n d id a cy for G o v er­ nor. Rep. B o b A rm stro n g of T ra v ­ is County will speak on "Student P articip ation In P o litica l C a m ­ p aign s," Join the Young Texans r for Hill K ick off rally and o rg an iza­ tional m eetin g 7 p.m. T h u ra- lf), A rc h ite ctu re riiy , F eb , IO,). S ta te R ep re se n ta ­ B M g . tive B ob A rm stro n g will speak on stu d en t p articip atio n In sta te politics. — j Experience: the many moods of the mystic By JE R R A RI DES T exan Staff W lite r Many of K arl M arx n basic views on economics and hum anity are relevant to everyday ufo, Dr. I,.irrv Caroline, assistant prides sor of philosophy, said, Tuesday night at the fii-st in a series of lectu re - discussions on M arxism sponsored by the Student* fur a D em ocratic Society. Speaking to m ore ti in 30 stu­ (Acuity, Dr. C aroline dents and •aid M arx was a rn*’nil pin I so pher and humanist He explained that within that M arx believed a capitalistic society, the lab e rr the fruits of is separated from his labor. Such a situation denies hum ane treatm ent, Dr. C aroline said. Ax the labor force grows the worker Is forced to choose a p a r­ ticu lar occupation th i t he may not necessarily desire, term ed by M arx ax spec os being, the speak e r explained. M arx condemned capitalism be­ cau se tho worker is cheated, Dr. Caroline sa ti M arx theorized that it would be historically c a p ­ inevitable italism to degrade Into a classless society by way of a revolution. for Expansion B rings R ev o lt Dr Caroline said the revolution as des n illed bv M arx would com e ax a result of cap italistic expan Into slon, forcing m ore wealth fewer hands. T ie dom estic m ar kef, which supports these capital Istle endeavors, would c o lla p s e ami the jobless p'ople would re ­ volt. M arx also explained that man continues to alien ate himself from A P IU S LECTURE N O T E S C U R R E N T C O U R S E S (UTI a I Honing f WTI h I ttm m n m m i mn* I f, pm mon! XlAb.lt Marketing SJI innate* Mil* l‘*» riming T WI I nininrr *ci> I hi >u>*j *rai. ia Biology limb I) (WrniUtry Sit I < lwml»try SC * F 'xoooiii'H sn t (.OOlogy (Ola I $7 9 5 i n c l u d e ! b « c k n o t * ) , n o t a * g- gt l- • b • 4 8 h ou r * g f t g r c!«»« , grid g r o - p t u t o r i n g b e f o r e m m i PAST LECTURES $4 95 ninlngjr STI. 7 I ■-(mimic* J o ; J | in.nr* „V4 4 orating) MHN! A PLUS U N IV ER SIT Y SER V IC ES 504 W . 24th Street «One block from minimal f.K 7 SMI P ieces of glass we're found in smoking mad. Glass Observed In Dorm Lunch sandwiches s e rv e ! for lunch Mon­ day In Kinsolving dorm. the T exan learned Wednesday. D ie Incident was reported to Food Service Superintendent Mrs. Gladys Hilda;* ll. "T h e glass was traced to the b reed ." Mrs. Hud- nad said. She believed none of the girls swallowed the glass. One girl said si e bit into a piece of glass about a half Inch "S ix or seven other girls long. found glass in their sandwiches though not a1! the girls jpjiorted it ," she said. C. F . Gent. assistant director of the Division of Housing and Food Service, said the bread com ­ par,y was called and the bread w'as picked up within the h ou r." "a ll A spokesman for the com pany said the plant wras searched thor­ oughly and no g! ess was found. "It w as an industrial type glass not used In this part of tin' ct un- the spokesman said. tr y ." "T ile p articles Were large, and not likely to ho m issed ," he said Grant Received By Dr. Weinstock Dr. Joi n Weinstock, assistant professor of G erm anic languages, scholarship has enabling him to sjiend a y e a r in Norway. received a Dr. W einstock and his fam ily will leave in Septem ber for Oslo, w here he will do rose Arch on two novels bv Johan Falk b erg e', a Norwegian author. Dr. Weirust .ck. who received his doctorate from the Universi­ ty of Wisconsin, teaches N or­ wegian and the history of Scan­ dinavian languages at the Uni­ versity. The President was Irked. Ti a S ecretary of A griculture w as unhappy, T ie P ostm aster General was h arassed and nearly sued. Ti e Surgeon G eneral was stub­ born. Tobacco land congressm en were Winner Undetermined to And even as the posters pre­ pare to go up, Ifs virtually im ­ tell who won. D ie possible dispute already has rest tho r v - partm ent of Health, Education, and W elfare half of F eb ru ary — the month It had reserved to use to tell A m eri­ tile mail can s : tru< k* "IOO OOO quit doctor* smoking cigarettes M aybe they know something you d on 't." have As a result of the skirm ish, the pokers also will c a rry a new»- ly-printed st!* ker Informing post- er*w atchers that the ion OOO doc­ tors a re an "e stim a te based on surveys by National Opinion R e ­ search Center and US Public Health S e rv ice ." Official Harried " I thought I d been exposed to lobbies bn this town b efore." one harried Administration official Mid. "B u t this tobacco outfit is something else a g a in ," | Nob xiv f o r e s a w controversy last autumn, when S e cre ta ry of W elfare John VV. G ardner wrote P ostm aster G eneral Law rence F. O ’Brien to re serv e one side of 53.000 mail truck* for this month. J All went serenely until the end of Jan u ary , when T ie Associated two paragraph P re ss carried a Item about the m ail truck c a m ­ paign. M uch Opposition to sue T ie consensus a cco u n tI Lawyer* for the tobacco lobby the Past Of­ threatened fice D epartm ent to keep the pos t e x off the trucks Post office referred all question* to Health, Education, and W elfare. M em bers of Congress from to b accog row in g s t a t e s " m a d e strong personal rep resen tations" to Post Office and W elfare in pro­ test of the poster Ir a crashing s J c t in s e 'a n a NIGHTTIDE, t h e r a i n s w e p t aftermath of A STORMY NIGHT d r * • otic accen t! more than music' Tho a ire the MYSTIC M O O D S o r r a t , ' c . . I i ------mr— *t HEMISFAIR 68 WORLD S FAIR-SAN ANTONIO.TEXAS N I # , i i - \i N L i B B O f MYMJC MCX ID S™ *O K C Mf S | R .\> Buy Your Tickets N O W A d m i s s i o n C e t e * ; $ 1 . 8 5 B o o l s $ 3 , $ 5 , $ 7 , $11 CUSTOMER SERVA E SECOND FLOOR Venta Oficial de Boletos Official Ticket Headquarters t h e S T U D E N T S O W N S T O R E P M rn* J I a v a i l a b l e IN STEREO $ 3.99 e a . RECORD SHOP SECOND FLOOR Nigftttide S ? N C R S I I H E S T U D E N T S O W N S T O R E Thursday, February IS, 1968 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page ***We,Il Let The Overcoat Out All The Way, Aud The Robe Will Hardly Show At A ll” Guest O pinion Negro Football Player Faces Honor Challengeo A 6-2, 195-pound young man from Killeen will begin his University career with an extra glory attached to his name and an extra burden on his shoulders, lie ii Leon H. O’Neal II, who sipied a pre-enrollment letter Tuesday to become tile first Negro football player at tile University in Austin. O'Neal, a three-sport letterman, is a linebacker and end. The signing of a Negro to play football marks an im­ portant step at the University. It is a stop toward a really Integrated Institution, in­ stead of a half-heartedly integrated one. For although the University signed a Negro trackman-basketball player (Sam Bradley) last spring and bas had a few other Negroes to participate in track and frt shman football, the failure to sign a Negro football player bas been a sore spot on campus for many years. O’Neal is faced with a challenge now. He’s got to ba good or he’ll let down a great number of people. Unfortun­ ately, we must realize that he will bf* judged as a Negro athlete first and as a person second. In athletics, he’s got to prow1 good before he has a cha nee to become just a person. This is one of the sadnesses of tile times, but per­ haps the trial period will soon give away. Then we can accept a Negro or a Lafin-Ameriran or an O r ie n t s person as an individual rather than as a mem­ ber of a certain race. Then we can like him — or dislke him — for what he is doing rather than for his race. The Negro Association for Progress undoubtedly fe e ls pride in the achievements of O’Neal. They have been work­ ing hard to get a Negro recruited into football The athletic staff has said, however, that the majority of the outstanding Negro athletes in Texas high schools could not meet the scholastic requirements at th!1 Univers­ ity — a pitiful insight into the inadequacies and inequali­ ties among the Texas high schools. O'Neal Is a first at the University, though surely not a last. A step has been taken and the step Is in the right direction. May this man be ab!*' to bo the first of many "stars” in a new day when ability means more than race. Outside Contributions Because Texan policy calls for a forum of opinion on the editorial jxige, signed articles are not necessarily those of the Texan or the editor. Persons wishing to submit an opinion article should contact the editor several days in advance. Rebuttals and replies to other articles should he sub­ mitted in the form of letters to "Tile hiring Urie.” Letters should Iv? Sigurd, should be no longer than 250 words, and should be written using good taste, no personal attacks, or libelous material. Because of the number of letters and limited space, exceedingly long letters will be edited at the discretion of the editorial staff. PEANUTS AVP I SOT one FROM ZELMA ANZ JANELL, AND 00071? AND PAI AVD SVDNtV. ANO IANNI!? AND JEAN AND ftttcMAxV And c a AND FfcrtN AND MERDITH... ’ - H e r b l o c k In M y O p i n i o n Mixed Economy - Sol u don For Developing Countries By ( I CA MI) UA KANT DESAI Graduate Student in Civil Engineering The public enterprise system has features th a t a re disturbing and the private enterprise system has features th at are unpleasant. A mixed economy system m ay offer a viable compromise. It keeps the free com petitive m arkets of the private enterprise and retains the sphere of public ownership as under the socialistic system . In a mixed economy, the public and private sectors share the economic ac ti­ vities as constructive partners. Social, cultural and economic circum stances of the a country concerned will decide in which a m anner and proportions mixed system will combine two the sectors for economic developm ent A developing country needs th# basic Industrial system to initiate the auxiliary and additional economic potential. This is necessary in anticipation of its fu­ ture demand. Since large am ounts of Investm ent a re needed and involve a longer tim e per­ the public sector has to bear spective the burden and enter Into the activi­ ties. or the necessary Investm ent would not take place at all. Thus one dot"; not have to be a doc­ im­ to trinaire Socialist portance of public entei prise to acceler­ ate the growth of a developing economy. realize the Tile above analysis Indicates that the the d ^ public sector participation velopmontnl activities is a pragm a?,c necessity to prom ote economic growth and ideological stimulus. to provide in It is necessary to b reak through the b arriers of stagnation in a backward com m unity and to Ignite the imagination of men. placing their energies in the service of development. Indeed, the recognition of public en­ terprise should not attach any exag- porn ted reverence to it. Total govern­ m ent control the m anner of in som e Communist countries m ay hold som e prom ises of rap id development. But the m ental, m oral, and indeed the m aterial sacrifices that such a system dem and create a sustained doubt about the real benefits of such system. What the developing people need is a path of development* which m ay p er­ haps b e longer but which is consistent with their values of human dignity and their soc;,ii and cultural heritages. toe concept of W ry active participation of the pri­ vate Is. therefore, a m ust—not onlv fry free­ retain dom but also to instill the vital require m ent of effimoney and effectiveness for a rapid and potent w ay to overall de­ velopment. individual A com prom ise could be provided by a harm oni us combination of both tho p ri­ vate and public sector wheroin both act to com plem ent each other for tho a v e r­ ah good of a com munity. Such con­ structive fusion of both sectors would create a lasting "m ixed economy.** strong, viable and Education in Underdeveloped Areas Both Investment, Consumer Good By TAVE O’BRIEN G raduate Student in Educational Psychology Defining tho role of education in economic development has al­ ways been problem atic. Economic development Is commonly defined a s the Investm ent of present re­ sources for Increased fu ture pro­ duction. And here In tho definition is the prob­ lem ; for education is both a form of consumption and an investm ent: it is a commodify tho country consumes, but it is also something we invest in to pro­ duce m ore in the future. This difference leads to very different attitudes toward the function of education in developing countries. Gn one hand, education of the mind is as important as nourishm ent of the body. Who would say th at people should he removed from Ignorance only to m ake them m ore productive1? But there is another view. Studies have shown that expenditures for education m ay bring large increases In production. Money Invested in intellectual improve­ m ent often bi ngs a g rea ter increase in national income than money invested in tangible capital goods. It is a highly pro­ ductive form of investm ent. Conw jm er-!n\est ment Good In fact, education is of high Impor­ tance as an object of im m ediate con­ sumption and also as a form of invest­ m ent. It is neither one alone but both. In the a re a of education, it suggests if considered a con­ th at the student, sum er. bas the rig h t to study or not to study. But if the student is the privileged object of the investm ent of scare# re- sources, the m a tte r is not so clear. So­ ciety has given him som e of his sa v ­ in :s. lie has a cif ar obligation to return io s< iffy s me of the Investm ent. E xam ination Helpful An ex u rination of the present educa­ tional situation In several underdeveloped countries will bo helpful In bringing to focus som e additional problem . At the bottom of tho Iadd- r a re the Level I coun­ tr y - . These a re agrarian and dependent on foreign m anpow er to fill m any high level positions. Included in this group a re Saudi A rabia, Ethiopia, Liberia, Yemen, Nepal, the Dingo, Kenya, and Haiti and several others. In these countries, edut alien is under­ developed at every level and reaches only pi small part of the people. Its qual­ ity is low and a gre it num ber of those Who do learn to read or write drop into Illiteracy s on aft* r leaving school. There is a very sm all num ber of technical or vocational schools and til esc are usually available only to tile richer classes. a Higher real education presents dilem m a. It J* cheaper to send the stu ­ dent* abroad, and the quality of educa­ tion and benefits derived from this de­ cision arc great But there are obvious draw backs. So mo students never return if they are attracted by better positions abroad, and a university’s staff is neces­ sarily largely composed of foreigners. I J iii cringe Lorn panto* One of the m ost efflu en t solutions could he the utilization of the private com panies in each country to provide in- training for native personnel. service Level TI countries include Colombia, China, Brazil, Turkey, Indonesia, Libya, and Peru. These a re still dependent on the m ore advanced roun’rses for their scientific m anpower, but a re able to pro­ duce much of their own non technical m anpow er such aa teachers, m anagers, and supervisors. Education Is Goal A common goal of all Level IT coun­ tries is universal p rim ary education. It is available to children in larger towns and to a small portion of th o se 'available in Use rural areas. However, the quality is poor and the facilities sparse. And in attem pting to improve these schools, the condition of the secondary schools has been overlooked. They are staffed by unqualified teachers since the technicians cannot be spared expert from the factories, g raduates seek em ­ ploym ent outside their field for higher salaries, and lastly, the cost of vocation­ al education Is three to five tim es that of academ ic education. Among The Situation in the academ ic schools and universities Is as bad, however. T here a re not enough places, and a large proportion of the schools a re private institutions with narrow ’ fee-charging liberal a rts curricula which exclude basic m ath and science courses. tile Level India, Iii countries a re . Texico, Thailand. Uruguay, Czechoslovakia. Norway, South Korea j and Egypt. Industrialization is far ad­ vanced in these countries and most of them a re no longer agricultural. They a re largely self-sufficient, (with excep­ their provision of in tions, of course) high-level manpower needs. Most of the countries have com pul­ sory education for at least six years af thp prim ary level. The unavailability of schools in rural areas, however, m eans that the a: rual fact is less than univer­ sal enrollment. Secondary schools are generally too academ ically oriented and university-geared with low salaries for teachers. The situation is better a t the univer­ sity level, however. There Is an Imbal­ ance in th# proportion of students en­ rolled in various fields of study relative to the needs of the country. What is ahead for all these countries? With the m ajor em phasis on rapid in­ dustrialization they have to develop their own research and technical capacities. For some, this goal is close; for some, It is very long range. Increased needs and trained for highly scientists are difficult to satisfy. technicians should And the pressure leads to still another dilem na: enrollm ents be ex­ pended in general at low cost, or should the selective expansion technical and science facilities which are m ore costly hut will produce the needed m anpow er? How Is this to be resolved ? take place in to be provided; m ore Higher education needs re ­ oriented to em phasize these areas, with a'tention to the quality of the education being responsibility needs to be placed on employing Institu­ tions to train the manpower they need; Schools need to be improved and ex ­ panded a t the prim ary levels; research institutes are needed and so on. The list seem s endless. But perhaps the fact that we are able to list the countries in levels of development g i v e s reason for hope and food for thought. Q u i p - S a n d Couldnt PR Handle All Their Problems? By MERRY CLARK E ditorial Rage W riter The problems discussed by the two graduate students on this page are just two of the multitude that developing nations have to face. In Am erica, since we really don’t have to f a r e them, few people seriously think about these except perhaps Negro people wanting belter education. And die problem of the public sci tor of “ govern­ m ent" is hotly argued only by George W allace with his eoncem for the over­ throw of A labam a by W ashington under the direction of the “ psuedo-intellec­ tu a ls” and the “ HEW crowd.** But the problem s of this nature In the United States are minute in com parison with those of the small burgeoning r a ­ tio:!* of Africa, Latin A m erica and the Middle E ast. Put yourself In the place of a leader of a sm all country. How would you “ de­ velop your country?" Hypothetically it doesn’t sound too difficult, but pragm a­ tically readily the answ ers a re n 't as available. But since the diversity between tbs rich and poor nations seem s to be grow­ ing larger, and almost impossible, per­ haps the United States could offer soma practical, typically A m erican help. Suggestions for some new solution could include sending over the top grad­ uates in our business schools to get busi­ ness going, or sending a m averick over try som ething different— who would final one. such as I/os Angeles M ayor Sam Yorty and a sending an entre prrn eu r like H. L, Hunt or Roy Hofeinz, But m aybe the real solution lies with that public relations fin n from Califor­ nia race, and m aybe they could “ never lose a coun­ try ." that has never lost a The firm could run a high level inten­ sity cam paign planned for the next 30 years. Bum per sti. kens, buttons and the whole shebam could sell the country to the world. Of course, slight modification m ight be necessary since most of these count:ies d o n t have too m any c a rs; perhaps they could stick to bicycles or huts. Of course, the firm would have < am paign buttons and slogans for the sm all country of G o n d ia-lik e “ Gondl* G row s," or “Win with Gondia In '38 ” could give the people the illusion that their country really is doing something. to consider that since most pm ple | n these nations can 't read, m aybe the buttons would have to be in bright colors or feature local gods. the Im­ portant in all cam paigns in trying to dis­ cover which medium* would be best to use might need modification, perhaps drum s, or Tarzan or cam els. ' ‘advertising m ix" go And But I think this would be the real test nf the public relations firm s todav. If they can enter politics and take over cam paigns, why can’t they handle a country? Let s hope, however, the coun­ try has some funds stashed aw ay in a Swiss bank. Why Public Sector? Why Should there be a public sector af all? Or rath e r why should there be a p art of the economy directed by the pub­ lic sector? No modern economy can pos­ sibly exist without a set planning. If is evident that any private body. other than the governm ent, coaid not assum e the responsibility of planning the econo­ m y of an entire com m unity leads to the participation of it is this concept of planned economy the that governm ent in the m anagem ent of cer­ tain economic activities. Titus any coun­ try wanting to adopt the concept of a planned economy has to tend to public sector participation in the direction of certain develop cental undertakings. In the widely differing social, cul­ tural and political set ups, th ere Is a cer­ tain inevitability of either explicit or im- p cd necessity of a planned economy which leads to the participation of the governm ent into the m anagem ent of the industries and other services necessary for the com m unity as a whole. Government Necessary For a country' in the stage of Initial development, governm ent participation is a necessity. This is needed particularly because enterprise system by Its the p rivate nature tends to calculate risks, w anting its returns in short term . It also m av r e ­ je ct taking into account the total " needs of tho com munity, which are necessary. The participation by the public sector in the economic activities in this century is a consequence of the changed cir­ cum stances. However, too much em phasis on public sector and its involvement in all phases of economic activity m ay lead to ineffi­ ciency and waste. The recent trends In the Communist countries w here all economic activity is under governm ent control are tow ards the gradual giving up of that philosophy In practice. For exam ple, about 50 years of experience has convinced the Soviet that governm ent ownership leadership and adm inistration of all economic acti­ vity' destroys individual initiative and in­ centive, which a re vital for greater and accelerated production. A uthoritative studies of the Soviet eco­ nomy have com e to the conclusion that at least 25 per cent of all economic acti­ vity in private hands and moves through non official channels. is T h e Firing& Line It Is Sad To the E ditor! Start of school has rom e to be a sad tim e for those of us who earnestly seek an education. In my search for ways to m ake the most of my meek life, I find the University tries to m ake the least of it. that After three sojourn!# years and two charism atic the teachers, I find real education lies not a t the hands < f the University but outside the roach of its heels, It is sad to see so m any come, to be unthinking, blindly accepting, shuttled along through an assem bly line system proficient in attaching its metal weapons to one s greatly unim portant outside* It is easy to see why they come. It is sim ply a very easy and a very safe thing to do. Who has to do danger­ ous self-evaluation when it is being done for him ? The school gives him every hollow shell into he needs. the University-inspired Flore Is even fraternity house where friendly faces aw ait to tell you how to become the com plete person in your sp a re time. to craw l is E verything tightly dictated and com fortably safe—a wonderful artificial and womblike existence. What is there to cope with in a womb? But then there is that drastically sm all minority’ who long ago realized that we h a v e ‘ fallen to which our gaze- from our wombs, worn navels can testify. V' e come with a driving need to learn, to find ourselves to gain independence, to find happiness. But Big Brother & Co. have a way of arr mgly thw arting us. It is sad. Doug Hawkins ‘Not a Pill' To the E ditor: Jeff tailow ’s series on non-registered trid e n ts m ade some excellent points rea- concerning the positive services their dered by this group. His tendency to idealize criticism , ; ioalism , youthful exuberance, political w hity, and honesty" ignores, however, one m ajor consideration. “ thoughtful G ranted that mu h of what goes on inside the classroom is irrelevant to the im m ediate lives of young people today, ::» educator ever claim ed that all learn ­ ing has to h ive direct and obvious appli­ cability. but of developing More import rn* still is the frequently Ignored fat.! that the process of educa­ t o r is, above all eire, a process not of in- fact-learning tedectual discipline and integrity. Study­ ing only those selected aspects that in­ terest one a t the m om ent does not lead to the creation of a truly "educated In­ dividual.” In faut, it is very likely that m any things relevant to a m ore honest and r e a l- * ic understanding of precise­ ly those “ interest*” w i l l be m issed by such a hlt-arul-miss procedure. “ Honesty” and ‘'openness" a re fine virtues, but withe ut the kind of balanced knowledge provided, in­ stance, by the classroom system a t its best, they a re often sadly misplaced. first the in R elated to tins Is another m isconcep­ tion held by m any students today. It is not tee function cf the teacher to spoon­ feed his pupils. Is it asking too much to expect the student to relate classroom inform ation to contem porary problem s on his own? I think not. What will he do when he leaves the U niversity and new problem s a ris e ” L ’t our classes be m ore hum anly relevant and intellectually exciting, but don t ask th a t they all be arenas for the airing of con temporary personal, social, and political problems. Learning is not a sw eet pink pill designed con­ stantly to ti til, me the individual’s ego, Ja n et E. Sa I tim an G raduate Student D epartm ent of Sociology And ama, and j ,u , And betty AND MARSE AND KA’ AVD'ACM AND ANNABELLE, AND f i t AND EVA, AND DUDA, ANDRC'a... <3 And barbara , And oi' he en and Ann, and jane And D osers And margaret, and. ^ C X Z c 1 -4" ARAJ . / i i , A : L l J l f - U T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r at UT, Austin Opinion* M p r e * - » ! ta Tho i n . : --. .. , ar : Of UMI art 0# Urn Board Of Re., ; s H i# !.(<;,> l'eaur, la puhii'' f t bv Tex*# A ustin and holiday peri iV s >> - TS^i- H i# a ut riant I r t ' rv if l •. v.l-e • > be a New* eootributi.m* «. J B KtS or at th# e»« *hou;J IV i v ! 74 I !& f f c ® U G 26 y r I [22 » 27 b s J i f ® •NNTJ3Y— h r 37 e l ----- <~ b O D L v V * f r o 43 - — : 46 47 i i S i s r i I J d i o ' ’ ~ 57 LJCA. 58 i i 36 S B I AO * OD 44 U A 4 i i i i 49 41 i i >0 — .... s3 X) N X aka - v . NDN'i TT--* — I w D ,, P ia J*, b t U n . I i I y ! v j < I T T S W C C a g e A ctio n Despite Loss, Bears Hold 2-Sam e Lead By ED SPAT LDFNG Assistant S[x»rts Editor T uesday’* Southwest Ginfer- to •ne* basketball action failed clear up the title picture any fur­ ther, but It did prove again the advantage of playing at home. All four home team s won, and only on* could have expected to going Into play Tuesday, T exas’ 79-65 win over Baylor was the biggest but Southern M ethodist’s rival Texas conquest of arch Christian was also a shocker. Texas T ech's win over Arkan­ sas was equally unexpected. Only a week ago, the B e a n ran T exas off the court at Waco, en route to a 16-point win. But things w ere a bit different with the scene shifted to Austin The B ear shooting was off, while Texas played strong defense and ruled the boards. first Th* M ustangs, losers of 15 of their IT games, pressed TOU Into second half m ls’akes, and rode the hot hands of Bill Volght and Lynn Phillips to a 70-63 win. B arnburner At Lubbock But the most exciting gam* w as at Lubbock. The R aiders, down by eight points with only four m inutes to go, caught /Arkan­ sas at 72-72 on Lee Tyne*’ long Bill Little A p p o i n t e d N e w Sports A ssistant F orm er Dally Texan sports edi­ tor Bill Little, who decried “ hom ers but was never asham ed for Texas of his enthusiasm assistant team s, will become sports publicity director of the University M arch L 25, Little, replace* Orland Sims, who resigned recently to accept a position with the Hous­ ton A stros’ organization. D irector Jones R am sey anounced Little's •election Wednesday. Currently employed as Asso­ for ciated P re ss sports editor Oklahoma, Little had previously worked In the Texas sports pub­ licity office as well as for the A u s t i n A m erican - Statesm an •ports staff. A 1963 grad u ate of the Unlver- is m arried, and he two *ity, Little and his wife, M ary, have sons. i■RSHmaiuems u m m oiMMRMMi Jumper, tipped •hot at the buzzer. then won when Tyne* in Jim Nelson’s missed In the other gam e, Texas AAM thrashed Rice 78 58 a t College Station. It was the Aggies’ third straight SWC w:n, and moved them Into the title picture. to Back the home court a d ­ vantage. Two team s, A rkansas and Baylor, are undefeated b e­ fore the home folks, each s a n d ­ ing 4-0. But A rkansas has won only one of five road contests, that a last second decision over SMU. Bears Face Rough Sked With five gam es rem aining, the Baptists have a two-game spread over th* rest of the lea­ gue, but m ust play an Improved Raider outfit in Lubbock, and the Razorbacks in A rkansas. The B ears also play TCU and AAM In Waco. is a Seixmd place four-way deadlock between Texas, Arkan­ sas, Texas AAM and TCU. If any of five straight, and Baylor loses twice, Hie race would end In a tie. can win these four But since each team has a t least two road gam es ahead, five straight is a tall order. Besides the outstanding per­ form ance by Tyne*, the R aiders used the hot shooting of Vernon Paul in the second half to over­ come a 14-point half tim e d efir't. M istakes Cost P orkers Tile Hogs had control of the gam e until Jam es Eldridge and G ary Stephens fouled out In tie final five minutes. P orker cen­ ter Bobby Vint could I ave Iced the gam e for A rkansas, but both tim es he m issed the free throws. twice In Tile Mustangs held Cash, TCU post man, eight points fense. Volght and Phillips 23 as avenged an earlier loss Frogs. Jam es to only tight de­ tallied 24 points, the Ponies the to their The Owls shot only 25 per cent the second half, and AAM's in balanced scoring m ade their win easy. Billy Bob Barnett led the Aggies with 17. while Rice s L arry Miller had 14. The standings: An f.amn W L ll Htylor ........ Tun AAM . ..... . TOU T»*»* ......... Arkan«a« ...... Texas Tall ... Rio* ........... SMU ........... awe w L ? • • I . I . I • I Prep Stars Sign: Steers Frogs Bears Ink Football Hopeful: In Still hard pushing th* second day of th* signing sea­ son, Texas recruiters Wednesday reported nine new high school football players who agreed to at­ tend the University. The second day group brings to 29 the num ber of prep stand­ outs who have cast their lot with the I/wighomx Most significant catch was end- linebackcr I .eon O'Neal of Kil­ leen, who becam e the first Negro to receive a football scholarship to Texas. Another noteworthy nam e on the list was Ricky M artin, a 6 2, 19u pound from an linebacker Odessa P erm ian team that lost only to stat* AAAA finalist Abi­ lene Cooper last year. In Linebackers, fact, domi­ nated the nine man group, with 'backer L arry Webb <61, 195) of Angleton, Belton’s T erry Joe, and guard linebacker Milt* Speer of Longhorns Recruit First N egro Player Sr IV* 8 Mortatavi IVkm I-eon O’Neal, a lanky' lineback­ er who caught Texas coaches’ eyes with his ja rrin g tackles, is the first Negro to sign a Longhorn football scholarship. The signing of the Killeen sen­ ior m eans that only Texas AAM and Arkansas In the eight-team Southwest Conference have not aw arded football s c h o la rsh ip to Negroes. O’N eal's decision w as p articu ­ larly significant since Texas, on Nov. 18, 1963, was the first hool In the SWC to announce com plete athletic Integration. But, for one reason or another, Negroes had m issed out on football scholar­ ship* since then, som e bc<’au«;p of the stric t academ ic adm ission re qutrem ents. “You’d better believe that's been a problem, with everybody, just Negro athletes,” said not assistant coach BUI Ellington, j who coordinate* Longhorn foot bail recruiting. The U niversity requires th at lf a high school pupil finishes In die low'er half of his graduating class, he needs a s<-ore of 1,000 on a scholastic aptitude test, and if he finishes In the upper half he m ust score 800. IjLst year, .Sam Bradley of San Angelo signed a trac k d m k etb all scholarship and becam e the first Negro out of high school to win a scholarship with Texas. A f**w Negroes have run track and played freshm an football, and last y ear E. A. C urry of M id-j land, a non-scholarship tailback, becam e the first Negro to scoff a touchdown for Texas when he caught a pa-« A tmnt'i > >*.1 tr*m * * FORT WORTH Texas Christi a a announced a flurry of additional schoolboy football sign ngs W ednesday, in­ cluding two Now Mexico all state player*. It brought th* two day TCU total to 25. included The latest to sign letters of in­ tent tic k le Craig Fife and center tackle Kelly Bostick, both of Hobbs, N. M,, High School, Back Ricky Pride of Carthag* and Bill fullback linebacker Montgomery of W hitewright were among the top Tex is prospects announced by TCU Wednesday. Others included hack Nelson Campbell and guard Ed Bevins of Gordon, end Robert Swain of Cf ti ir:;, end R >cky French of I I Pork, I • k David T oliver of Breckenridge and quarterback Johnny G race of Wichita Falls. * * * W H O Baylor University brought ifs football recruiting to 22 players l l Wednesday when more prospects. It sig n et E lkhart all stat* The latest to sign letters of in­ tent a t Bayl r are Ni ke Cole, San Antonio M acArthur b ack; Glenn Chmelar, end from Rockdale; l a r r y BuegDr, tackle; R< un I* Stead­ Denison m an, fullback; Don Stephenson®, Palestine imeback- er; Charles Angelo, Vidor full# back; M artin Mathes, Houston Austin end; Barry Morgan, Bos­ sier City, La., linebacker; MIK* Conradt, Goldthwaite end; Mike Morgan, Shreveport Woodlawn end, and Sammy Reese, Venus tailback. A h o o k t o r e v e r y n t u d e n t t o s t u d y ! h o w r o Ult * rf r n M V H a K J K S K R I W V H I * I B Y C O K R A I ) J . L Y N N C onrad Lynn u one o f I he m o lt experienced draft lancer* in the I ailed Stales, Ile has spe< valued Pi draft cases sin* * F or Li lf ar ll. Bt* book U La*r4 O lym pic 500- m e tc r •{W'od sk a tin g cham pion, but given little c h an ce to p lace this > ear, o v ercam e a th re e y e a r re tire m e n t and poor Ice to win a silv er m ed al In D espite his the event. fo rty eighth an o th er In on in and the g ritty last sta rtin g position, Ti y e ar o' I M cD erm ott apod through pools of w ater in m any acct ion* and tier! M agna Thom as- •en of N orw ay for second place in 40.5 seconds. E rh a rd K eller of West Cor- m any, a 23 year-old d en tal stu ­ dent who has the {tending world m a rk of 39.2, won the gold m edal in 40.3. to " I d id n 't com# back th# O lym pics Ju st to s k a te ,’ said Mc­ D e rm itt, a sales re p re se n ta tiv e , who w as a b a rb e r b efore the 1964 O lym pics. " I w anted to win a m e d a l.” W od, th# US m an’s figure sk a tin g cham pion from Bloom­ field Hills, M i c h , sen t A m erican DO YOU K N O W . . . That owning our C o lle g e C a r e e r P e n will h e lp you to establis h • n o u ts ta n d in g CREDIT RAT- IN G I 'merman n m ic a b h } UU INSUHANtn COMPANY 1*1 rn Waco ' r » »* * o ' • 9 0 6 W . 1 9 t h A u s t i n , T e x a s G R 2 - 4 1 0 8 Jum ping hopes eoaring anew s f#»vr hours la te r by second place with the com pletion of the five com pulsory A ustrian {’ary*# S k a ters figures. info a fte r Wood trailed only W olfgang S chw arz of A u stria, who b e c a m e the heav y the fa v o rite shocking collapse of his co u n try ­ m an , E m m e ric h D anzer. H ie w orld cham pion who figured for a c e rta in gold m ed al, p lu m m eted from first a fte r T u esd a y ’s first two fig u res to fourth, w ith v ir­ tu ally no c h a n c e of w inning a gold o r silv e r m edal. the U nited S ta te s' Wood looked a solid bet to pick up sev en th m ed al, all won by th e s k a te rs — P eg g y F le m in g 's gold, th re e sil­ v ers and a bronze by the women Speed sk a te rs and M cD erm o tt's. “ T h ese fig u res a re the b est he e v er has done In a m a jo r in te r­ s a i d n ational Wood s fath er, D r. K ennedy A . Wood. “ We a re re a l excited be­ cause we feel Tim ra n m ak e It to th e to p ," co m p etitio n ,” Schw arz h a s 1,006.6 points to W o o d 's 992.4. Skating Fair Sixth However,, tile US p a irs figure and te a m of C ynthia sk atin g of S eattle. R onald K au ffm an W ash., finished a disapp o in tin g sixth as R u ssian s won the gold ansi silv e r m edals. lis te r Th* b ro th e r and team , US cham pions, w ere fifth a fte r th e com pulsory fig u res Sunday and began well In the free sk a t­ ing W ednesday b u t fa lte re d . L u dm ila B eloussova an d Cleg P rotopopov, R u ssia 's husband and w ife te am , su ccessfu lly d e­ fended th e ir 1964 gold m ed al with a v irtu ally flaw less p e rfo rm ­ a n ce th e crow d r o a r ­ ing. th a t had S k ie rs Hit By Bad laick Tile US Alpine tea m , h it by in ju ries, w axing e rro rs , d isq u al­ ifications and falls, h a s been b lanked going Info th e final events this w eekend, the m e n 's sp ecial the w om an s giant slalo m and slalom . Je a n ( tide Killy of F ra n c e , w ith the dow nhill and g ia n t sla ­ lom gold m ed als a lre a d y in his took aim a t an Alpine pocket, sw eep W ednesday as he led q u a­ lifiers slalom fo r with a run of 49.89. tw o-heat th e A m eric a n s Billy Kidd of S e a t­ tle, J im H eu g a of Squaw Valley, C alif., S pider Sabieh of K yburz, Calif., and R ick C h affee of R u t­ land, Vt., also qualified. 'Die US m e n 's 4 by IO kilom e­ te am te r c ro ss co u n try finished as expel ted, in th e field of 13, In a n o th e r final Wednesday, tw elfth re la y NEW TORK Jo e P epitone—long b lack h air, •id e b u m s, •trip e , d o u b leb reasted pin t o d a ll—signed la w yer a n o th er $.38 OOO c o n tra c t W ednes­ d ay and prom ised the New York Y ankees he would b e a r down all th e w ay. “ I.ast y e a r w as a disappoint­ ing season for m e and the Y an­ k e e s ,” la id Pepitone, who hit took th e field only .251 and 13 h o m ers for a nlnth-plae# club. “ I things late too easy , got on and d id n ’t loosen up enough be­ fore I w ent hom e to v isit m y m o th er, sh e d id n t like m e. the gam es. E v en w'hen “ T he big thing is to try not to I w as h u rt last season. If I d o n ’t givp it I w on’t be fellow's get h u rt flus y e ar. the la st m onth of L e t's face It m y best around next w in ter.” this y e a r to you talk to P epitone w as one of five sign­ ings announced by the Y ankees a t a new s con feren ce, No figures w ere re lea se d but it w as learn ed P ep ,to n e got the s a m e s a la ry as last y e a r, $38,000. P ep ito n e n ev er h a s lived up to his g re a t p ro m ise. In fact, he has been m oving b a ck w ard in rec e n t y e a rs , coincid ag with the Y an k s’ slu m p into the second division. “ I rn not d isappointed w ith m y “ only with said , c a n c e r,” he la st seaso n . I av e ra g e d abo u t 25 h o m ers a seaso n . T he big thing is b e a rin g down an d being in top condition.** By E D SPAULDING Assistant Sports Editor K entucky, which shunned T en­ nessee M onday night, now sta n d s ato p the S o u th east C onference, and Adolph R upp, w inningest coach of all tim e,, ha* hopes of a n o th e r n atio n al title. to go p ast The W ildcats, cru sh ed e a rlie r by T en n essee, held on for a GO- th e Vols by 59 win, one-half g a m e . Only a w'eck ago, T ennessee had a tw'o-game lead, and seem ed on the w ay to a sec- ond co n secu tiv e SEC cham pion­ ship. B ut the loss to K entucky, plus a 61-43 d ru b b in g at the hands of G eorgia S a t u r d a y night has sc ra m b le d th e race. Also involved a re V anderbilt and F lo rid a, each a four-tim e loser, b u t w ith fu rth e r ch an ces to p lay lead ers. tw'o th e M&ravich-Led T igers And the DSU T ig ers, featu rin g n atio n al sco rin g le a d e r P ete Mar* avich, plus G eo rg ia and A uburn, a r e all c a p a b le of giving one of the first four a rough night. DSU topped F lo rid a 93 92 S a t­ u rd ay , and A uburn h a s p reviously knocked off K entucky. In the P acific Eight C onference, The Daily Texan Classified Ads Each W ord (I S word m i n i m . rn) M inim um C h a r g e . -Ant ra ta C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G RATES ........................... ........................................................ .. . ( IO w ord maxim.im) on* tim* * £ a c h a d d i t i o n a l tim* Issues 20 C o n t # :utiv# IO w ord* ............... w o r d i ............................................................................. I 8 00 ........................................................................................... JIO OO ............................................................. $13.00 ?0 C la ssifie d Display I c olu m n ■ on# Inch a n * tim# Each A d d i t i o n a l Tima ....................... ) I 70 ............................................................ J | , i o ( N o c opy c h a n g * for e o nt* c utl v* (n u * r a t « t . ) M 1.70 .50 .21 • N F W L O W STUDENT RATES ^0 w o rd i or la it for 50c th* first tim#, 25c e a c h a d d itio n a l tim#. S t u d e n t m u tt •how A u d ito r * ra c o i p t a n d p a y in a d ­ in vanc e from Jo urn a li sm Bldg. 8 a.m. t h r o u g h to 3 30 p m . M o n d a y Friday. 107 CLASSIFIED ADVER TISING DEADLINES W a d n e t d a y T a ,an Thursday a , a n ..................................................M o n d a y , 3:30 p.m. .............................. T ua .day. 3:30 p.m. ........................................ W e d n e s d a y , 3:30 p.m. : f d * y T* ” ,n S u n d a y T a , a n ................................................. Thursday, 3:30 p m. .................................................... Fr iday 3;30 pm> In th# e v e n t of error* rn a d s In an a d v a n c e m e n t , im- m o d i s t e n o tic e m u t t b a g iv e n a . r e s p o m b a for only on* in c o rre c t in»*rtion. t h . p u b l i . h . r , a r a 1 - 5 2 4 4 NEED AUTOMOBILE RFPA'RS? Nothin* Dow* Mot,lilly Payment# •tm na na analyt!B f equipment < ■ r.plete rail# t (Ina lab a *er»ir» Kau von a bi* Au tarnal)! • trar.*rni*s;onik Brake*, Overhaul* Tun* up*, ate, vt* aaa rani** Our Wert CAT JA L CITY REB I LD! RS ITW IE it BN' 8 (MSJ EUROPE STUDENT TR AVT, IN C . C h a d o r a n d G ^ o u d F jh t* from $245 R ound T rp OPERATIVE NURSERY SC H O O L Offers J day * week morning clame* • a r oil!#, « :«<»*. tor 4 yaar oil* ll ,1 t a n i 5(1#y • wa** morning in addition aa aft#: noon *'.nile rf a ■ t»n will ba offer** In fie pl arn ber Tor In,'- mat « re I OI, J MXC lor I R S NIGHT we-lier Wit! per O#* Ana. Beal* rid# 444 RVR IN’XJMK Tax He retro ''am t ...to, « 2 MAL P. Reason# h a rate, w INO ‘MB Tax Btu lei t 4 1 ■( ;.*) up tor ttuden'a By law P"K". KT Wanted •tam ped envelope 5*r A nth Jnrlud# Idieu id Du busher*. HS P i - ‘e ck. s#n J" rune xix) ( ’# ito rn a WMT Now buy tog and trading Pl#:, boy megartnea boo** of any kind hardback or peper h* *• car farw o tape*, guitar* cow* birr typewriter* cl**, m agaiine* murders ye!#*, ■nan* I- .-ie* goat* * if eluig, ta ,* ie ,| r* 'e # ' • ■ na, stamp* and collections dto*. r a m t r ii r e o il p a ar*, pt nog-aph record# binocular* watch** ootna auf.lino bile*. boat* art supp :#*, engineering sum . »*. furniture and house)* I good* •cuba gear, t • • luna, hunting and Aahing equipment, 803 f replug* AARON, B lu er and Tra ter Rad River BARGAINS *nd Ever* thing changr JO* Mouth la nar Wa rh# Ad Fit ink* item* >n consignm ent HI 4 NP- t NFJ.s o n 9 O irrs handmade Indian Jaw* ry '.*v a Nelson, prop *612 Max lean Imtx>rt* I Corgr#**, HI 4 TNI A FREE I R.P I O S C rN iC M EX ICO a March to IO April F eld aaritan* mu iii red for raven rh pro** t in mountain# of n o r t e a and central Maxim fond, a coom rood* 11 nos provided T ran, m il spat ah and cam ping gear would b* a.aet* ' ■ininn I” Rftiert Onl.uwai Geology Budd :-g II I moat iii I t >-'n ' ~ U SED *BOO KS TNI BOO K STALL SSI! Burnet RA (Optvw I ta rtrft Fadaralt v* hug* se act ion paper back*, fif th * old i * * *« a •volopedta* Nan •« c e . taxibook*. Harvard Classics nmatk praphic* Texan# •OW pi e t JC , PJP des*. I J, For Sale 1968 CORVETTE Roommate W a n te d ant t. B: « pa I Y a1 rn eon va • bi# Ona of * kind 4-»paa,| SJT pu tan top brown fetter In.. IVO own! ti Ion I nit AM CM 15,00/ a* F* rf act IX). J in n It p radio. S. OOO or bast off* GI RUS- No J I: I®. 47 MAUE to ahara one bi iv 4 - • P I V - >m a par',-nan! IAU « r e * SHJ w 2$ rd, Simpson. G R ft* 31 o r G R 2 4 2 2 3 FKMAlJG to * apartm ent; WO piu* alae S K I N COMPLETE New regulator D I V E R S 5. DIVERS R s apa* g:m » ate. p r -.s . G u # r# n t« # 476 5623 MAI.® t o pill! aha . new or# bedroom .partm ant. 45-1 ^62. Furnished Apartm ents I SPACK av#; ahi* e id an ta Black* JAIL ■ - ng a man and women ■na A pa:-m en u OR A ; WTT Af AI ■cr m e r at MU MAV Fk.-e ant mn ! non • Bar 6 ’URY (Yntgar. Interregional — IJIfvl .ann Cap ta! Pi**# OL J t an b* FA U * Rurnpean hair <) < na ck ba;, lid A?ad cai Art* to A * achoo Married ''n* bedrown, «nd water r . cab-# na d M'.*t re#ton#b * rata* J', ’ *' ■'*" '* '6. * L / : , L paid 1 A as’in a ;># ; ant ii w ag G R 2 4566 I X C L U S I V t Y FC R UT STUD F M S A N D F A C U L T Y Contact for f n formal tm IN C . S T U D E N T T R A V E L on G a d r a g 7 P h o n e: GR .'n G - » .p a ’ 4 3 4 0 l f ® rn lh# pa>< of operation of Th * la th* ou r charter flight prog am t I T students and ti .'it ha* b**n op faou’-y rn, « our f f •r a te ! n iu c ie .* a y*# • e«* p o •ra m * In p an >»a * ilm iia r program# have *cal trava agent* on ,) bee- »rcv»ut a ' by to ba ran*-*, e I after our in proa ar it we * J . » en manta a * ant.*# through Hi thor iv cd. bonded trava! whole, i e * who * pac:*! it* n ch arier I '.int • ,* « !• ',* for let sa eof*-• si; .in* #"1 co Saga group*. e.' Our arrange t. a y*at tat* JO BS IN EUROPE App cations st"! being accepted. NEA G S F a *S| ' ER Open ‘ lim a at r ■ lr c ir - anew Ic *»nU — 16 y»*r* Raaacruib* mon! y, wrr> • tvvurly rata* Inara • e Wa I F Cc. . "ta ADVT N IT R E AN •Tee lnl''rm#:;-:x IO p RI THE CONC W a ; , an and prac* a n d a ) - a i lr ten ta P O. S m as a i no it 1 * T. OI"" IC fo r ye 5, 8382 ti R 11 en • e-qei . I O' Room and Board GOVERNOR'S D.ST 'N G U ISH fO New M en's Dorm R ■ ,ri ai T Board "O N TNE DRAG ” 2612 G UADALUPE InformaMt* Call G R 6 5658 G 4 I • *)4 D L '-A ll motor cycle W e* just overt*i. ad Run* wa i J) so 472 Sifij 0!6® t“v!- -KC c -ana la 5404 <>ldham. No. ii* l l - I monthly, t-au 478-3083. ’■f,3 U * 1r' tire* 4 . . 1 ire • an cg* ha#tar New ISH# PLY Mi K T H Barraccuda, 18.000 mile* A C, autom atic, V-8. Cafe li t s YAMAHA, J 7351. At* for Jim* ! -'k* new J440 GR J For Rent RENT bla ct/W I > TV. JJS J i-v Color tvortal) a, JU 5*0 rai>a answer, n it r *» • recoidarx Alpha TV, 115 -0 month 115 50 weekly GL 2-4037; no 8 3 6 1 2 7 1 I EX' ’ f AUE !-m de cam hs Sticks, pedestal tablet ary • *Ans. how s trays tw o tab-* top* custom s turning*. GR 7*3® ENI I!.f TH Bpt nge- Spaniel puppte* AKC Im ll in ahs pe s abow. Champion 1 re tVorfertd «hota GR J a r purled (tam THESES dis**rial ons an.« and language *y we page Mr* Anthor <*f» #«■ report* • IBM Minimum IL 4 3079 Typing and SUTO app Un,-aa W*r*,nghoui<« r\'« Ftnuhad and unflruihed New *t* * * i and rock na chair*, chaii* bar alani*, and st 'lent desk* Reel n*r», dav bad*, ilacpar*. C A R ’ : R S KEY t V R - S i s 124 5 N. Lamar fO RD . A rciinder ba*! offer OR 8 1433 Wtsndard T*50 or HA VINO trouble getting « brand new COR ! IT R airn g t ' ft-.rn the f a cto n ’’ Ma * a I Ca l 47845721. I9(« VOLVO. Rordor speaker a <’ wnd '.ion, OR 8-8’89 i e U n low m ess# rad o aa- #*>•# an1 ‘.96h XK INO Jaguar. New •Ie: > ('ail 476 i. S2 top t-ek . up ho; TW ELV 8 airing Harmony Or,'tar Ex>e!lent (N>nd tk«rv J 0 478-6068 ahar 5 00 .hXRh a n nix f ft SAR Y Edition. Encyrtopedta BnttanJoa, gpecia) ttudent offer. Paymentx starting a | lew a* 16 per month OI, 3 after J tit. K U I tfl’i RISO turn tab # , ;K d’.o M ’Pe. II $axi •penke , J 4X3 PM Ra '67 TRIUMPH cs Call GR 7 271,1 new Wlncheater Carbine Ne*« RCS JOO 'HO 'A r I dis, OI >125 47 HI Jo 1943 GRAND Prix. or tra Ie tor *j\> ta Help W an te d El r o t e a n (* •ttm m er em ploym ent AU jch in England and nam Appl', anon* now beth a taken 8tu- i rave Ouadal ii « GR 7-4*40 l “ »ce-nant "•* - d .’AR NECE SARY. is fee Phone 4'4 '.’207 after I ire. JI "5 per bour i I’lX'FTl NITT with U U ah 'or m ale or fem# a students in- :> Flexible hour*, g «xl tr,r jss >.«! coms no O’,iota a no territories, appomtment FEM ALE typi* C*>n*‘-lerat:*»n tot gradual* student KMP. 454 5605 Much BIANO t vat# st tor >,>■ Hi J TIK st# >senna in • wrl- r n N SF.D men 18 ■ A Inn* Apply in pfrsoii, 7 Day work. JO * rn S p rn Bu rn Hi R aid. OL 2 3821 faff Airport 'n Mason Manor! t - o r I m n cr vt Rv • bi if th e# rre of Bv ope *w»r< • -a. le v * * sr arx •is ’in* *'r-eor,,t:!K>n#d, ■ » 4 ; two in if*-*Ai! carpet1-1 g •'Nor r. otmgea, rec Coop Call o r J UKW »E HOUSE 1952 M O -T D eta * . paint Job an i up} Int#rv •« ig for Raj d intel e C 0 la :st a-a C eve rn an fy 714 W est 221/0 4Rj O r***. T>O C GR 6 0379 Miscellaneous EU R O PE GROUP and CHARTER FLIGHTS Typing KUCH Blocks I'ampu*. That#* Disserts! rn at hon c 'IHM) E«ra*onabl* Mr* Bcxlour GR 8-8113 !*rofa»ssr«nally Report* ty p a l EX PE R IE N C E D ; T h tt e t disiartat'nn* m m bo:* Working at home. ».;»>; ig® u • (M arjorie a . ANNE S TYPING SERVICE • Inc# 1930 HI 2-7008 ipect# ira* ta prob am* con lip afield) Our personnel (roo I in# *t uden t i I l i a r find us io u will grad ua it or under g ad- a n d fast, a c c u r a t e dependable, and our door* are open from 8 * rn. until IO p rn . plus weekend* and hoi!* theme# day* resume* report*, •ta ti sties) chart* Im plicating process the*#*, m d dissertation* as include Mimeographing Ditto, Xerox and Multilith Tutor1 ng proof reading, and no­ tary services available Service* offered Typing of law beef*, m anuscript# organisational report*, VIRG IN IA C A L H O U N TYPING SERVICE B rofe.iion al Typing a: Fhe'ds XEROX l f til With! na and Bind’ng tm These* and D .ssan ation s 31 Edgewood 478-2636 W RITERS AID SERVICE E xpert typing eervl.-w from 25c per peg* TY PIN G , ED ITING , R E SE A R C H p h o n e 454 - " W P O Box Mf Austin. Tava* 78"87 FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY W . nevtr ct,a# TYP1NO done irnmed!#-# e S5c * page M->-e Information eau 434 4264 CONSCIENTIOUS IT P IST for these*y brief* e »» secretary w th B H a a o rm e- .aga Cutiv# * ectrtc. Mr*. Few ar, q l J TK £ ? g™ sGt****- Bn#,‘ Rppom- Mr* W e Have Moved! Just North of 27'h I O fldalupe T H E T Y P I N G Aero** th# S' E q u ip ’tod O N L Y S E R V I C E ^ ramp,.» 14"g ag# fo r fo r Fo 303 VV. 7 U t ♦ ’ 2 0+46 P ng ■ a-, to C O M P E T E N T SE C R f 1ARY-TYPIST with m a r , va# , - es e en - in all field* it care -• . * ’ * “ to tD lh rtrt , , , L n i A LL-1 Br f f s «c •• ;iar vmver$t '• ' met 4 u ' *’ "■ ft" ! ‘ ’ lr-. ■ iv.’*; paper* !-* VV " '‘TRK SPEC- law n r lew \ ! ‘ •' UM*sri tone Ta • hi and bind it *e ■ .-es ,a request !" n*’ * • « » GR 8-3894 IL J cateror ••* jjbsl Harriett tion», b< sta* st co mater;# *>: "J c' • -set d Ste*# re p o rt* , # - ^ 6 •*», (Electee tv.-ew- •#-, _ e^.-bot* p q * SERVICE HI 2-7184 THEMES, report* hk^ed. lawnnte*. Mc BReetoftoe ,(*. Mr* Fr#*er. OR « IMT. ■a i # Have Moved! Just North cf 27th & Guadalupe tV ip A x flA j4 n + v Ts p-Bf Malt th. ag. Bladlag A C : rn pie ie Professional FULL-TIME I y ■ 5g Serv es tailored to the nee ta of I’n varsity student* language w !i; k?>bv.,v"! aq ipn.ent t "-es and ditser sr ' "..'#, and eng.r. e tor . Pbor* GR 2 3270 and GR ; 7*77 r ’OT Herr prill Park / • a * Tj-ping. Mu tilth ng. H.nding A Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing ServUe ‘ eqy;»m ent M Vn v*r*!IT Mudents iT'i-iT'1 ? T * language tor Srec.a: keyboard Science, and engineer ng th esei and d.ase Utions. »*hona OR 2 3210 and GR 3*577 2707 Hemphill Park e x p e r ie n c e d typing s e r v i c e , acvu oemr A ii and*. • HO V •WI?* Multilith ng, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS 476-7581 311 E. lith F a it Re a b a TypAq and Muff th ng i + I Ivmmwm C (HS to ca — p„s no h'doe e ra *qes no ’ d d e n cha* je t A PLUS UN VERS!TY SERV GES 504 W a i t 24 S tr e e t q j j 7.5651 Tutoring TUTORING by quaiif eu graduate student* subject* Spat.'I* I group rates a rN„n A K;slTY SERVICER 504 IV 24th In a street. GR * GUITAR In tl ruction *10 a month CI# tai- ca: K’ ameneo, B.K.* Nov#, Folk, ■ I Cal! Geo g# GR 8-424> NEW YORK-UONG ON, Round Tr DALLAS LONDON PAR S DA! I AS I Ti EXCLUSIVELY FOR IN VER Si TY STUDENTS & FACULTY $319.00 " * * ' “ ' t n l ' y 15th a OU# ta ".ne hi - re., -a. t-xti >e low. fa:r*y tong fur Regard 4T« : ISS. ot Trave Age1 ■ e ft stranded. made w is and HA sse not# For Cr a P.O Univ A u ii Bo* i art ty Tar'on, Bi# A .. a 9 St* ass 'ad c • a si re ■ a Ba'et W e Have Cos ’n Regard na Page 6 Thursday, February 15, 1968 THE D A ILY TEXA N i 4 pm, HH R A N S O M ROC ad"sscay 4 0 A c re ! C . Phone.* 4 ,’t> US Jobs in Eu fo ?4 p o C a ’! G R I-5244 I o Place Texan Classified Ad felling stay ed u n b eaten , I OLA O regon. The B ruins, w hose only loss of top- the seaso n w as ra n k e d Houston, need only to de­ fe a t riv a l CSC to clinch a n o th er title, P a c ific f/ouisville In V alley L ouisville, w ith a fa v o ra b le sched- to Conference Standings SOI THE.VSI CONFER! N( F Kentucky . ,, Ten ne .s e # . . . ........ Florida Vanderbilt . . Qeo * * L-sU Auburn M .ta S t Alabama MiSS.M.ppl . . . . . . ........ .. Lou: svU la B a hey D in# O n e anatl Tulsa S t Ix>ui» WI hts# S t Memphis S t North T exas .............. . . . . . W 3 3 2 ......... .............. ................ .............. Ll ................ 8 8 6 I, I I 4 4 • 7 7 . . . . .............. 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . IO . . .............. 12 M isd o I RI 1 VIJ.1 t L 3 I 4 5 5 5 3 9 IO ........ ............ . . . . . . . . . . ............ ............ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............ 9 7 6 5 5 5 1 0 Mf BIG TI N Ohio S t low# W isconsin Mf . . . . ........ ............ 0 ............ 5 L 2 3 3 3 3 J 4 • I 7 T K IFK ; I it HT . . . . . . . J ........... ............ 4 . . . . . . . . ............ 4 ............ I . . . . . . . ............ I unse , era Purdue Illinois M i tugan S t Indiana ........ Michigan M lnaesoia . . . . W L 14 4 4 IS T 14 18 4 7 U 9 l l IO IO 1I 7 u LO 13 I L W 15 16 16 13 l l LO 8 * 4 W Id Ll l l ll) 9 I I • T 4 9 IO LL 13 I. 5 7 7 I I IO LL ll I I I I IO 9 i i .......... a W in 13 13 IL 9 V LO I w .............. .......... 7 .............. ........ ........ . . . .......... . . . ............ UCLJk u se Wash. S t O*lifom .a Oregon a t Stanford Washington Oregon L. 0 I I I 4 4 I « IMI KPKN DENT'S Houston s t Bonaventure . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... ca. .17—0 Army . . . . 1 7 - 3 ...... . . . . 1 6 - 3 Marq aet ie New Me- 1 on S t . . . . . . . . . . . . 18—4 oklahom a Q ty florid a s t — see# ae a a ae a a T exas El P aso ...................... C hicago IAU a . ...1 6 —S ....Id —:. . . . . 1 2 —5 S t John s NY ...................... ...... ...,1 4 6 aa •• ae a a es ae a. . . . . . . ........ a . , . , ........ . .......... . ............ Hansen Traded To Washington By Th# Associated Press Tile Chicago White CHICAGO Sox's veteran of six seasons, shortstop Ron Hansen, and the Washing­ ton Senators’ second basem an, Tim Cullen, are the key men in an even-up six-player trade be­ tween the two A m erican League clubs. In addition to Hansen, who will be 30 in April, the Sox gave up pitchers Dennis Higgins and S tev e Jones and received pitch­ ers Bob Priddy and Buster Narum Tuesday. .236 Cullen, 25, batted Hansen, who apparently in his first full season with the Senators last year and drove in 31 runs. lost his shortstop job when the Sox brought back Luis Aparieio In a deal with Baltim ore several w eeks ago, hit .233 and knocked in 51 runs. PITTSBURGH Tile Pittsburgh P irates reported W ednesday that Maury W ills’ troublesom e right knee has com ­ pletely recovered from two p r e vious injuries. Tile Pirate# said Wills w as ex ­ am ined Monday by Los A ngeles team physician Robert Dodger found “ no evd- K. Kerlen who donee of any lingering abnor­ m ality in his right k nee.” to b# In th# u lt ah ead , seem s M issouri V alley d riv e r's se a t. Ti a C ard in als had a s c a r e S a tu rd a y , but edged W ichita S ta te in o ver­ tim e, 93-91. The C a rd in als had to shoot 69 p e r c en t to w in. O th er n arro w w ins, over D rak e, then o ver N orth T ex as 67-66, S tate, tile C a rd in a l's re ­ raided cord to IO 2. B rad ley topped T ulsa last w’eek, the D rak e then gunned down B ulldogs 96-88 T u esd ay , to stay in second place. Jo e .Mien. B ra d ­ ley c e n te r n eited 40 points in the D ra k e gam e. Ohio Stat# to W isconsin fell in B ig Ten actio n M onday, but re ta in e d a slim lead over Iowa. B ut th e ra c e is still wide open, w ith W isconsin, B lin d s , P u rd u e and N o rth w este rn all still in con­ tention. H o u s to n T a k e s 21s$ th e A m ong independents, the U n iv ersity of H ouston C ougars won thorn 21st g a m e of the s e a ­ son withi ut a loss, bom bing C en­ te n a ry 107 56 S a tu rd a y . AU - Am erican Elvin H ayes to ssed in 50 points, and s e t a C o u g ar re co rd w ith 37 rebounds. St. B on av en tu re, p aced by G II c e n te r B lh L a n ie r, also kept th e ir re c o rd p erfe ct, w hipping P ro ­ vidence. A rm y, a im in g for a b e rth in In v itatio n T o u rn a­ th e N atio n al m en t, ra n Its w inning s tre a k to 12, by d e fe a tin g St. Jo h n ’s an d C olgate. T he c a d e ts now s ta n d 18-3. C a n y o u t h i n k o f a b e t t e r p l a c e t o g e t a u s e d V W ? + « long at you're looking for a i.jed Vc *s*ogen, why not get It from an authorized Volktwogee dealer Uke ut We give them our 16 po if Safety and Performance Inspec­ tion. When they pass, we com­ pletely ^condition them ard guarantee 100% to# repo r or replacement of a'l ma.or me- chenica) parts* for 30 days or 1000 rn let Can you Pnd e better used VW guoron'ee than theft ••na-"* • trani-i it an • rear a t • • Ho-. s> . • beck* sytteie • • ec" co iys’m 1963 G H IA COUPE . . $1095 1964 VW Sunroof Sedan $1095 1963 V W S e d a n $795 1965 V W S e d a n $1195 1967 V W S e d a n $1595 1967 V W Air-Radio . . . $1895 1967 VW Deluxe Ste W agon ..................................... $2095 "CB" SMITH VOLKSW AGEN Your A ufhoriied Downtown V W Dealer Corner 5th and Lamar your ca- to la -cry Ip#c >';cat:0-, 4-d - a .-, ct) ... »»* cas'e- ca * a- I'ee- -g whee To. get aa-ar, ,afe. .. i ae g a• d lets t r# --ar. A re COMPUTE BRAKE OVERHAUL H*avy d-ty p-#~ ,m g-ai# Overhaul a tot t , . rn d- p -# c i on fit drum *, cack f «g ^ a# cv " e n , ’». a-c ningi ta if whee! baa* ng*, re-r grease se* 1. 30,DCO r » rsta warranty. Reg. $48 35 cb. 3 4 A M E R IC A N M ADE C A R S O N LY BURKHALTER SPRIN G C O M PAN Y, INC. 310 C O LO R A D O ■KRVINO At NTCT S I M E 1933 GR 6-2117 Lecturer Supports Foreign Aid Program "United States foreign aid pro­ grams are used only to protect th# nation's self interest,” Dr. Richard Adams, professor of an­ thropology, said at Wednesday'* sandwich seminar In the Union Junior Ballroom. "Raising the standard of living In th# underdeveloped country could open a new consumer mar­ ket for the United States,” Dr. Adams said. "In this ease what is good for th# self-interest of the United States also is good for the other country,” h# said. "Th# underdevelopment of countries is relative only In terms of th# advanced countries. It Is not to the advantage of advanced power* to aid underdeveloped countries into advanced, competi­ tive nations,” he said. Underdeveloped countries can become advanced by being in­ corporated Into a developed coun­ try aa through colonization, he pointed out. iSie country also can become advanced through a long, complex evolution which proceeds, he noted, from an agricultural state to Industrial to sub-nuclear. Two nations to Jump into tim ad­ vanced category by speeding up the evolution process have been Russia and Japan, Dr. Adams said. "The political system Used in a country is not a problem. Al­ most any system can adapt to this evolution,” he said. "Advanced countries must con­ tinue to develop new technology to carrv out future advancement In order to survive the competi­ tion, he said. “ Ti e advanced nations become more advanced while the under- deve! pod nations tend to stay In the same relative position to the advanced country," he concluded LULAC Receives US Recognition Tie US Senate has approved a re- button providing recognition of the league of United Latin American Citizens with LULAC Weak, ending Sunday. Sen. Ralph Yarborough, D- Texas, the bill's sponsor, has asked President Lyndon B. John­ son for recognition of the group because of It* help with educa­ tion,-.! opportunities, citizenship ti v- r, and preservation of the heritage of Americans with Latin American backgrounds. Ll I A C is celebrating its thirty ninth birthday. The resolution has been forwarded to the Pre­ sident for his signature. Counseling Telephone T * Emergency Counseling and Referral Service can be reached at GR6-7073. D i n J rd Pl] m t n ‘< — V y /', ;rj ( F.rr^t B E N o ] J T S -------------------— J E W E L E R S Quality It Our Fir t (> a u d italian 5228 Burnet Road in North Loop Plaia • G L 2-6491 Open Thursday 'til 9:00 p.m. Authorized Keepsake Jeweler m m m E l i z a b e t h J ^ e w e f r u “Your Keepsake Diamond Dealer" T W IN OAKS SHOPPING CENTER Austin H I 2-3146 I | I I _ ■■■MMRB O H M m f ' " r* • i iI I I I I I I I I Urban Planners To Hold Seminar Urban and regional planning officials will meet Thursday through Saturday at the Uni%er- city. The seminar is being conducted by the University through its in­ terdepartmental graduate pro­ gram in planning and the Divi­ sion of the Extension. Cosponsors are the Austin* Travis County Regional Planning Commission and the Austin-San Antonio Section of the Gulf- Southwest Chapter of the Ameri­ can Institute of Planners. The program director, Hugo Leipziger-Pearce of the School of Architecture, said the seminar offers an opportunity to study the most advanced urban and region­ al planning methodology, "with the objective of substantially in­ creasing the effectiveness* of planning officials.” Subjects to be discussed, in this first half of the seminar, will be methods of systems analysis, demographic analysis, and plan­ ning, programming and budgeting systems. Andre! Rogers from University of California at Berkeley will con­ duct the program. He is with the Department of City and Regional Planning in the College of En­ vironmental Design at Berkeley. All sessions will be held in Room 200 of the Academic Cen­ ter. The schedule is from 2 to 4:30 p.m. Thursday, from 9 to 11:30 am . and 2 to 4:30 pm. Friday, and from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday. The second half of the seminar will be conducted by Dr. Rogers on March 7-9. The seminar U part of a con­ tinuing program authorized by the Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System, and supported by funds* from Title I, Higher Education Act of 1966. Hogg Advisers To Host Meeting A semi-annual meeting of the national advisory council to the Hogg Foundation for Mental Health will take place Thursday and Friday. National advisers from across the nation will hear reports from Hogg advisers on national de­ velopments and progressive state programs in the field of mental health. Tile session win be attended by Miss Ima Hogg of Houston, a major benefactor of the Founda­ tion, and consultants from the University faculty. Rudimental Drumming Clinic Franic Arsenault, vice president of the National Associa­ tion of Rudimental Drummers, conducts a clinic Wednesday under sponsorship of the Department of Music. UT Student in Race For House Position A University law student has assumed what shape* up as a formidable task in his race for the Legislature from the Fifty- first District. John Hall, 26, a senior In the .School of Law, has filed as a Republican candidate and will be unopposed In the primary. He'll run into competition, however, in the November general election. Incumbent Rep. Tom Holmes, 33, has filed for the Deraocraic nomination and faces challenges from two in the Fifty first Dis­ trict, which comprises Wise, Parker, Erath, and Hood Coun­ ties in a vertical strip west of Fort Hood. Holme# was in the grocer} busi­ ness before making his first rare. Opposing Holmes in the Demo­ cratic primary are Floyd Brad­ shaw, former Slate Represent.* tive and Senator who left the legislature when he lost a Senate race to Sen. Tom Creighton of Mineral Well*, who still holds the post, and J. Louis Evans 47, a former Mayor of Stephenville and publisher of the Stephenville Tribune. Hall graduated from the Uni­ versity with degrees In business and mechanical engineering be­ fore going to work for Humble Oil in Houston as an engineer. Hall plans to graduate from the School of Law in May. Drug Sterility To Be Discussed "Problems In Drug Sterility” will be discussed by several pharmacist! during the seventh annua! Industrial Pharmacy Semi­ nar Feb. 21-22 at the University. Parttoipants from the United State* and Mexico are expected to attend the seminar which is the College of sponsored by Pharmacy in cooperation with the Pharmacy Extension Service. Speakers and their topic* in­ clude: I I • Dr. Ken Avis, professor of pharmaceutics at the University of Tennessee "Recent Advances in Thermal Sterilization.” • A. D. Knickerbocker, head of materials research, Abbott “ Ethylene Oxide Laboratories, Sterilization an(j Technique* Problems ” • Dr A’an Tallentire senior lecturer in pharmacy, the Uni­ versity of Manchester. England. "Radiation Sterilization ” • Dr. Joseph Gallelll, chief of pharmaeeutiral development sen i vtoe for the National Institute# of Health, "Sterility Problems Involved with Freeze Drying Drug Products.” • Dr. Edward Garrett, grad- ! uaie research professor at the University of Florida, "Maintain-1 tog Stability of Sterilized Soto tlona.” • Benito Curial, president of the Mexican Pharmaceutical As­ soc iaHon, "Sterilization of Drug Products in Mexico.” Challenge Registration To End at Noon Today The last opportunity to register for Challenge *68 la from 9 a rn. to noon Thursday in the aecond floor lobby of the Union Build- i tog. Students may attend free se* sions Friday and Saturday with a blanket tax. Non students will be charged 50 cents. All You Need Is Love After oil, It's what makes the world go 'round In that wonderful, once-in-a-!ifetime way. The en­ gagem ent ring you choose says so much about your love . . . and should it be a Keepsake, the word is "perfect." A brilliant diamond of fine color and modem cut guaranteed perfect (or replacement assured). Just look for the name Keepsake, in the ring and on the tag at your Keepsake Jeweler's store. He's in the yellow pages under "Jewelers." ORDER YOUR RING NOW! M A R K OF TH E W O R L D S F IN E S T SC H O O L R IN G S the most respected symbol of your educational ach ievem en t. T r e g i s t e r e d _ ■ K f i e n s a t l e e D I A M O N D R I N G S flower power!! ■ f u n * « t » . * i» o m o . t o t*oo v r o w * * im # too. r i ! c i i ream »too. to *«oco. * **« u u m i o to m o * m u r r * T « A c i- *A » c m «. n. re n o o © t i» A *r , r*.c , n u n i . a m , Drr/ut. HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND W ED D IN G *] I Please send new 20-page booklet, “ How To Plan Your Engage- ment and Wedding” and new 12-page full color folder, both for I only 25c. Also, sand special offer of beautiful 44-paga Bride 8 Book. 2. A ■ ■ de on sry bi40 or ye low* S .:es 5-11, $22. jst budding I- :es 5-13. $ 16. I. Evades of sa o wv - a profusion ct w' fe sun Towers a^d w de sand belt, nghorn ■Ck t i t th e r f 2236 Guadalupe GR 6-4542 Name. Address- City. L A W S C H O O L R IN G N O W A V A IL A B L E KEEPSAKE DIAMOND Riff GS, BOX BO, SYRACUSE, N. Y. 13201 -Zip- I I 3. A glistening butterfly ighti on the reed 4— be’* of this airy as on- l creafi f n' if7 r * w~ *e Lowers and leaves fa gracefully over soft brown. The t owing skirt is pleated on each side. S zes 5 13, $22. Thursday, F.bfu.ry 15, I968 THS DAILY TEXAN P«g« 7 TONIGHT ArMM llfrt I Re# Male hr "T H E LIQ U ID M A R BLE” S I ^ Report I .O U cover* everything} 9 P.M. 'til midnit# [THS HST ORM AHS] 12 th Si Red River G R 8-0292 tike STRING IWW VOIGT or AMERICAN WRITING w r w r i c n o n try T o h , B an k , Robert Coover, Joe#p* Met troy. l(tw»rd Hoegtend. end n O e i t S t A Y l fay Mea Compte # end Milton Ktonsfcy on M a r ib e l) M c L u h e n , N e t Hentoff on Bleck Power, Steugbton Lynd on H>ato ry end the New Left. Sten­ tor Keu ffm enn on recent film *. Mery EItm ann on “Growing up Mobbltlc." POI TRV by Gunter Greet. John Logan. Richard Hugo, Frederick Said*I. David Farrell* Student Recitals To Present Lloyd Kavlynn Lloyd, harp pedagogy major, w ill five a rental at I pm . Friday In Music Buildlnj Recital Hall. The recital Is presented in par tlal fulfillment of the require­ ments for the bachelor of music degree. Miss I Joyd is on# of the ori­ ginal members of the University Harp Ensemble, founded in 1965, and has performed throughout Texas with the group, Including a dinner honoring Secretary of State Dean Rusk during his visit lo Austin last year. Cuifom er Convenience From Bob Milter Volkswagen N E W S E R V IC E H O U R S STA RTIN G F E B. 12 p a r t s a s e r v ic e o p e n MON FRI. 7 A M . . 17 M IDNIGHT SAT, 7 A M . - 12 NOON SALES a A M.- 7 P M. SAT. 8 A M. - a P M. N IG H T L I G H T S A T T R A C T B U G S ! BOB MILLER VOLKSWAGEN am M e u vohtii rn ta PMO NR IM 417ft Martial# Conc#nir#i# The BE IN BAG G e t In fo th# B F IN B A G fo r nw ri ita l Ion find soul iw . g cn crn fio n . Re y o u r ow n G a rth T h o big black B F IN It \ G [3 tho m odorn ap p ro ach to tho age-old p ra ctice of m odi ta Hon. Tho d ark n ess and seclusion you expert- ra c e In tho B F IN B A G w ill hasten y o u r m a *to ry of In n er sopanity and Int nos poo Mon. I^ot tho B F - IN B A G help yo n to K N O W T H Y S E L F ! lis t e n to R a g a In It for a profound exp erien ce. S o ft, hlaok, porous ootton. S a fe . W ill o n volo p a n v o no up to six foot. O rd e rs pro- res-**! im m e d ia te ly and cont b y firs t class m all. Bleck B E IN B A G $5 RI ppd. — -Twe bleck BE IN B A G S * 10 OO t BE I N B A G fo r tw o $10 p p J . Toto! encloied P c t p . d. N e C O D '.. S e n d ch eck or m o n e y o rd e r to , MARY KELLEY, INC Dept R, Bot I S H VVeithempton Beech, N Y . 11 9 7 1 Ween* Mete In Days of O ld K n ig h ts a n d th e ir la d le * a w a it d e a th in W e l t e r lh,, film clastic, ' Ivanhoe:' The Te.es Theater l • t I i , • ? . . at tha Will present the movie et noon end Seturdey. from "Ivanhoe. " tehee : 0 P m t h . P S i, I T rlo u i i n o T . Z J B m Z i t u t U s ! " ^ W T F ’" T F ' T Haddox Writes on Philosopher Vasconcelos T e e . J we Vasccnceloa wore many l f ____________ < dlfforont sombreros during his lifetime — as a lawyer, politi­ cian, writer, educator, philoso­ pher, prophet, and mystic. In a now book to In* published Feb. 26 by the University of Tex­ as Press, Dr, John lf.’ Haddox of the University at Kl Paso ex­ amines Vasconcelos as a philo • • • • • • • • • a THIS WEEKEND! D A N C E c o n c e r t SAI ly iP A I M JU ro.VORIM ' SH IV A S H EA D BAND I K H I . O M V t THE C O N Q U E R O O is\r OM v> THE R U BA IYA T (FIO unit MT I FA N T A STIC LIG H T S H O W pm-2 am $1.50 per person • • • • • • • • • a •ephor and prophet "Vasconcelos of Mexico: Phi! osopher and Prophet" Is a part of the University Press’ Texas Pan American Series. The aeries is published with the assistance of a revolving publication fund es­ the Pan American tablished by Sulohur Co. and other friends of Latin America in Texas. Dr. Haddox, who La head of the Department of Philosophy at Kl Paso, explains that while Vascon- relos, who died in 1959, was one of the most influential and con­ troversial figures In the intellec­ life of Twentieth Century tual Mexico, he is little known outside I-atin America. Noting that one Mexican philo­ sopher described Vasconcelos as "the legitimate glory of the Span­ ish speaking world,” Dr. Haddox adds that "outside his orbit the scholarly world has shown little Interest in his philosophical teach­ ings.” Histories of Mexico published In English usually give passing mention to hi# role as Minister of Public Education or his un­ successful campaign for the pres­ idency, hut his aesthetic system and his socio-political ideas have been Ignored by philosophers In tile US. FOLK Tues., Feb. 27, 8 p m . M u n icip al Auditorium A ani versa ry Fai Is At Polished Black Attempt Comedy **Tht Anniversary” j tan tn t Bette Data; untten and pro- duad by Jimmy Songster; di­ luted by Roy Baker; a Twentieth Century Fox re- lease of a Set en Arts Hammer Production; at the Southwood Theater By PA T R IC K V. COSGROVE "The Anniversary” is an odd mixture. Part "Virginia Woolf,” part "Auntie Marne,” and a large dose of contempt for those who got to see It. The ad copy makes the film Vound like a followup to Miss D avis’ other horror films. It I* deeidely in another vein, but the end effect is a film of much more real horror, an ex- Arab Sayigh to Review Politics and Poetry "A rab Poetry and Politics: 1947-1967” w ill be the topic of a public lecture Thursday by Taw- f;q Sayigh, Arab poet and editor. He w ill appear at 4 p m. in Busi­ ness-Economics Building 266, un­ der sponsorship of the Middle East Center. Sayigh was bom In P a la tin e and educated in Jerusalem and "t the American University in Beirut, Lebannon. He has taught at the Universities of Cambridge, London, and Beirut. In 1962 he founded the Journal H iw ar, an Arabic magizine simi­ lar to the British American jour­ nal, Encounter. This year, Sayigh has visited lectured at a number of and American universities, Including Princeton, New York University. the University of California at Berkeley and Los Angeles, and the University of Chicago. He will return to the Middle East after his lecture here. •rdse in black comedy. Miss Davis has three sons. One has a guilt complex over having shot out her eye at the age of 12 and so he lets her rum his mar­ riage. The youngest, Christian Roberts who played the young thug in “To Sir, With Love,” has a pregnant fiancee on his hands, and the eldest son is a trans­ vestite. Miss Davis pl a.vs a cruel, foul mouthed, often funny mother who passionately kisses her youngest son, mocks his fiancee’s deformed cars, teHs her daughter-in-law that her children have been criti­ cally injured in an auto accident, and uses her other child’s per­ version as a tool. No background motivation is given for this. She is just a sadist who happened to be a mother. At one point Miss Davis’ lines are written as an indictment of the audience laughing at for points. There are men who could Lave handled this m aterial and made ft work. Miss Davis is up to the task, but Jim m y Sangster, who adapted the script from a British play and produced it, is not in Hip same league as Nabo­ kov, Polanski, Kubrick or South­ ern. An excellent "hack” writer who has turned out dozens of en- Joyable, unpretentious horror, sus­ pense and action films, he is in tricky country' here. He has set his action In TV comedy sets, thus relating the audience to a form of reality where we are in­ volved, like it or not, bt time and place. impression Based on the reactions of a full •neak-preview audience, the lines accusing the audience fall flat since they were able to dmo.se betw-'en comedy and tasteless cruelty. And it is this quality of bad taste that is the strongest lasting the film. The acting is capable and, in the case of Miss Davis and the ac tress playing her daughter- in-law, excellent. But tile con­ fused direct1 n, perhaps caused by a change of directors a f or t' e fart of production, and un­ realized script outbalance the per­ formers. left by CEC to Present Music Of Chamber Symphony Tickets can be drawn beginning Thursday for the next CEC event, a concert by th* Chamber Sym ­ phony of Philadelphia. The sym­ phony w ill appear at 8 p.m. Wed­ nesday In Municipal Auditorium. Film To Be Shown The University Film Program Committee selected classic to be shown Thursday ]s “ Merry-Go- Round,” with presentations at 4, 6:30. and 9 p.m. In Batts Hall' Auditorium. 7110 Hungarian film with English subtitles was di­ rected by Zoltan Fabri. It tells of the runnier between the old and the new social customs in Hungary In a romantic story of young country’ lovers who defy their parents. The film was de­ scribed in Variety as being a "surprisingly lyrical, moving com­ edy -drama of the best of pre w ar love stories . . . . it brightened Jaded critics and swung into fest conversation.” There w ill bo no admission charge. Baylor C o l l e g i a n s To G i v e R e a d in g Twenty six Baylor University diam a students will present a staged reading of “ Up the Down Staircase” In the Academic Cen­ ter Auditorium at 7:30 pm Feb 22 9 The reading Is based on a nov­ el bv B tl Kaufman and w ill be directed by Chloe Armstrong, pro- fossae of speech at Baylor. Tile Department of Speech is sponsoring the reading. Admis­ sion w ill he free. Texas U n io n T h e atre presents A FUNNY TH IN G HAPPENED ON THE W A Y TO THE FORUM O pen* Feb. 23rd Marin Fails to Bring 'Groov©' To Jazz-Rock 'G lory of Love1 "Cine* /> ( I n. m'* /At i # ’Glory of Late” (A&M R e c o r d s ), He r b i e Ma n n , flute. By JA N SH A N E A Page 8 Thursday, February 15, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Viewing Features On Channel 9 TV Thursday GREAT DECISIONS 1968 - Noted guest speakers will dis­ cuss Latin America and US Poli­ cy. Topics for discussion are chosen by the US Foreign Policy Association. 8 p.m. NET FEST IV A L: THE MO. ZART CONCERTO - Hungarian pianist Lili Kraus performs two complete Mozart concerti and a movement from another In this unique concert. She discusses her interpretation of the works, and her great affinity with Mozart. 9 p.m. Friday NET PLAYHOUSE: “ A Pass- AGE TO INDIA” —Dame Sybil Thorndike. V i r g i n i a (“Born Free” ) McKenna, and Cyril Cu­ sack star in a dramatization of E. M. Forster's famous novel a- bout Anglo-Indian relations in the 1920 s. Although the India of the book no longer exists, the story is a fascinating record of its per­ iod. 9 p.m. Saturday THE SEA ABOVE—Host John Cotton presents a look at the dif­ ferent types of “ outer” galaxies - galaxies outside our own. 12 noon. An example of “ Third Stream” music, an attempt to blend clas­ sical and Jazz. I* included in the program of the Faculty Wood­ wind Quintet, which will perform at 8:15 p.m. Thursday In Music Building Recital Hall. The “ Third Stream” piece Is “ Suite” by Gunther Schaller. The composer was said to be “ emerg­ ing as one of tile most vital fig­ ures In American music” in a November, 19G7, Issue of Time magazine. Schuller is in his first year as president of the New’ England Conservatory of Music, where three members of the Quintet re­ ceived music degrees. John Hicks, flute; Richard D. Blair, oboe; and Wayne Barring­ ton, French horn, studied at the Conservatory. The other two members of the sneak preview UNIVERSITY A R T DEPART- MENT will present three exhi­ bitions, all beginning Sunday. Painting as Painting will run to April I, featuring the paint­ ings of Arshile Gorky, Philip Guston, David Hare, Hans Holf- mann, Willem de Kooning, John Marin, Jackson Pollock, and many others who exemplify the continuing vitality of paint­ ing as an organic and living expression of American art. Main Gallery. The primitive arts of New Guinea will be1 shown on the Mezzanine Gal lery until March 31. These in­ clude household utensils, jewel­ ry, ornamental clothing, actos sories, toys, war shields, cere­ “ spirit monial masks, and heads.” R o b e r t Jacobsen’s welded sculpture will be shown In Room 17 of the Gallery un­ til March 17. Jacobsen won the first prize at the Venice Bienale for his welded sculpture. This exhibition includes figurative as well as abstract sculpture. RUT-FM RADIO will broadcast Giuseppe Verdi’s “ Luisa Mill­ er,” Live from the Metropolitan Opera at I p.m. Saturday Stop! I W an t to G e t O ff Thus cries Jackie Warner in his lead role in fhe roadshow engagement of Stop the World, I Want to Get Off,' which played Austin Wednesday night af the Municipal Auditorium. Anthony Ntwley and Leslie Bricusse wrote the script, music, and lyrics for the smash musical hit. Faculty Quintet to Play Third Stream' Concert music in his early years, was originally written for a sextet but has been rearranged for a woodwind quintet. The concert is a presentation of fhe Department of Music Fac­ ulty Concert Series and is admis­ sion-free. (r HAWAII S U M M E R HOWARD TOURS SCtfi year of t x c e lt t i. . . v e rsify o f K tw tij cr erf I lu g a f a b u l o u s v i t a l o rigin a l Haw aii study t _ ........ c ude5 United A ir tin e s W und t r p from v*fcHapPie$t ij billionaire r i v T e c h n ic o lo r * • — > « N M W W M J J U J J . U g l i s HUI ll I NOW! S T A T E •OWNTpWN COMOUS SHARPESTSECRETAGEN! OfTHEM,/UU MGM fltCSCNTS Italian Film 'Climax' Lacks Believability, Becomes Dull "TU- rv. r »_ _ •* "The Climax." starring Urn Tognazxi, Stiff ama Sandrtui, Gig! Ballista, Rente Ton gar mi, ana Marco Delia Giot.tnna; produced and directed by P.etra Germ:; as the Texas Treater By JA Y COOKE Texan Staff Writer Of the hundreds of foreign movies that are shown to audi­ ences in the United States, the majority lose their effectiveness in the translation. “ The Climax” is no exception. An overworked plot and strings of tired cliches overshadow well- spaced spatferings of subtle humor, successfully pulling Pro­ ducer Director Pietro Germis presentation well below the stand­ ards of an earlier import, “ Di­ vorce Italian .Style.” The general situation of tho main character, Sergio, Ugo Tog- nazzi, reflects the overall condi­ tion of the movie as a dramatic presentation—hopeless. Thrt«e Loves Sergio, a violinist In a touring orchestra, is entwined in three love affairs with two wives and a mistress, Seeing the error in his ways, and being an apparent good Roman Catholic, he pours in a deserted out his heart church, asking “ Am I a mon­ ster?” His priest, Marco Della Giovan- na, senses the feeling of despera- ■ o, ani offers to help Sergio talk out his problems. In a series of drawnout flashbacks, Sergio retells his amorous adventures to the dismay of the priest. This is Where the plot thickens, It seems that Sergio is des­ perately in love with ail three women. UnbeUev&bility Seeming comic possibilities end with the beginning of the flashbacks. His wives and lover f- fully realize Sergio's position, and their smiles and understand­ ing lead to the death note of any dramatic attempt—unbelievablli. ty- Tognazzi’s performance, al­ though mediocre in most senti­ mental scenes, is, in one respect, mast successful—completely fa­ tiguing. A continual sweat on his brow resulting from constant dashes to phone booths to pacify his Illustrate his three bedmates hopeless condition. The audience indeed grows weak after two hours of his physical exertion. Three Women Steffania Sandrell!. portraying Sergio s 20 year-old mistress, and Renee Tongarini and Gigi Ballis­ ta, wives one and two, respective­ ly, hold a faltering story to­ gether w'hne Giovanna emerges from the mediocrity with a sterling performance. Litvin off W ill Discuss Soviet Jewry on KLRN Emanuel LiMnoff of London will appear on a specially-pre­ pared broadcast Interview on KLRN-TV, Channel 9, Wednesday’, February 21, at 7 p.m., discuss­ ing the dual topics on which he is a recognized expert. Tile situation of tile Jews in Soviet Russia — most particular­ ly in light of the recent Arab- Israoli war; and the attitude of the European Jew toward his her­ itage and toward the contempor­ ary situation will be the two main topics of Mr. Litvinoff's inter­ view, conducted bv Mrs. Beulah | Hodge of the RLRN staff. Editor of the “Jews in Eastern Europe,” a quarterly journal pun­ ished in london, and Director of the Contemporary Jewish Library in London, Mr. LiMnoff has gained additional fame as poet and writer. Published frequently in the Manchester Guardian, the short stories of this writer are as well known as his novel, “ Tile Ix#st Europeans,” and two books of poems, “ A Grawn for Caln,” I and the “ Untried Soldier.” A calm, cool priest as the show opens, Giovanna's portrayal of an amazed and truly comic priest provides the relief needed to save a screen disaster Despite Giovanna’s salvage at tempt, the story continues from the sublime to the ridiculous, an I its only hope seems to rest with some connection with the title. Sergio hurries to a phone after his conversation with the priest and places calls to hLs two wive* As he waits for the connections, he realizes his hopeless condition and pray* for a moment's relief. A heart attack saves him from any mere telephone converso tions. Ruined Climax Unfortunately, a perfectly good climax is ruined, as Is the entire production, when the scene shifts to the church and Sergio’s funeral. Speaking from thp casket, he comments on how’ “ nice” it is to have so many people grieving for him, and wonders why his three lovers will not answer his final philosophical questions. His final rites signal the las? rites of another import. Save your money, “ Gone With Tile Wind” has returned. And “ Tho ( limax” will appear shortly as the .second late Jato show. THE VIKING QUEEN I Sarita h Don M urray :0Q 5 MILLION YEARS TO EARTH * 4 THE TALK OF THE TO W N STARTS TODAY!! “ONE OF THE YEAR’S IO BEST!” — Bovey Crowther New York Times • Joseph Morgensfern, Newsweek -Ju dith Crist, N SC TV Today Show • Hollis Alpert A Arthur Knight, Saturday Review • William Wolf, Cue Mage/.na — National Board of Review MIKE NICHOLS WINNER |“BEST DIRECTOR!”! \ N. Y. Film Critics Award “ANNE BANCROFT IS CLOSE TO MIRACULOUS!” — Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review “DUSTIN HOFFMAN IS NOTHING SHORT OF SUPERB!” — Bosley Crowther. N. Y. Times “KATHARINE ROSS IS BEAUTIFUL, TALENTED, SURELY THIS YEAR'S JULIE CHRISTIE!” • Liz Smith, Cosmopolitan dPJ&PHE LEVY* M IK E N IC H O L S j^WRENCE TURMAN / \ 2ND RECORD- \ A / rri/ b re a k in g W fctK TODAY AT I P vt. I# P e r fo r m ** ft n > # k lr M ATTSr r s : SVW* snt Atm l p m $ p rn. f n fp t 7 ^ A « c a n a I" ' »>ffW-« Oiwn ii oft , ni. MU>nm I „ ] It „,rf V»u«{ Bn Pl. All I Mnf« Mvm tim* I i i 7 0 m n i. a n d s t e r e o p h o n ic s o u n d ! ......... DAVID OSELZNICK'S r f ,Jnil at I** VIVIEN LEIGH I LESLIE HOWARD I CLIMA de 1LW1LI AND j MS Mf? rn, Jmmm* « t H o t o n t o * r n b r M a i l ,.r a t M oart, ( q J L ifwYiMtH IVtiUo.l, or any Tran* f#%*« T S * *M L , \7&&S i Now! Open 1:45 Feature*: 2-4-6-8-10 All Seats 50c Till 2:15 PM f\ A Funny-Sad Motion Picture! sp+r— The s!orY of a man who has a wife lr / I I im&-jx 7 0 / }'-p% i y ■ n y ■* A U ; y j P i r r R O GERMIs FILM I C . ■■The y J I n m a i L J l i m a * Hr i « hctmu eoaroMnm I C o m i n g S a t u r d a y O n l y | rf, "Fam ous O ld Flick Series" This Saturday at 12:00 A 1:50 PM Only ^ * a HL an * : ' $ and a wife. Here is a list of tho Filmi to ba shown in our ' Famous Flick Series” ! Fob. 17 “ Ivanhoe" Fab. 24 ' White Heat" Mar. 2 Key Largo" Mar. 9 Band of Anguis" Mar. 16 Grapes of Wrath** Mar. 23 Tobacco Road" Mar. 30 Big Sleep" Apr. 6 “ Virginia City” Apr. 20 Casablanca" Apr. 27 San Quentin" May 4 Angels with Dirty May 11 Treasure of Sierra Faces” Madre SIR WALHR SCOTTS _ T e c h n i c o l o r IM x **** i Nm* STALA LH XX* MA rf*’n • MS CCf'Jt f’.Wff im(l*iN«a*tiiprsMSTa-taMi,rfSUi2 -,rw»*,>.*«*UNrau tex 9) Mn* *1 ten Va Hmm hgfeejSN a,r n HNB AIM I FNI ti 00 « IIISX e u m s —oms « pvt,.. lrr« (is A ( rsiinr) ntf « i T I C H H m e o w r s C H N t c o i o n * t o v i k i r k ' VI S T I ILB TI vt KS I Ii * ID P M . p rilL S T R I ’N R o b e r t MITCHUM b la s t s th e screen! T h u n d e r R o a d R j w w l E J ,1.5b. 8 30 ONLY WEEKDAY SPECIAL These popular items from our regular menu on special Mon­ days thru Thursdays from 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. M enu Price Special Price $ 1 . 1 0 Spaghetti and M e a t S a u c e 89c j : j $ 1 . 3 5 ................C h o p p e d S t e a k ................. $1.09 $ 1 . 2 5 ..............Chicken Fried Steak 99c INTERSTATE $ . 8 5 ................... E n c h ila d a s....................... 69c PANCAKE HOUSE 19th and G u adalupe InMETROCOLOR t z m E r i m a E INTERSTATE NOW! VARSITY THEATRE I \ 'TI BKH * - i • - > - ie A U D R E Y H E P B U R N A L A N A R K I N R I C H A R D C R E N N A W M T 9th AND FINAL WEEK! THIS IS THE ONE YOUR BEST FRIEND TOLD YOU NOT TO MISS! E S S p a r k i n g N O W ! ENDS SAT. A U S T I N a t t e so. c o N s a i s s THEATRE TPI A TI H K * «<*» • g oo - lo ne M S CH A MA T IC MASTERPIECE OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S JULIUS CAESAR MAHON BRANDO • JAMES MASO* • JSM S d S N . M g Cli m w EDMO WO 5 BREN » , SH El SA N M • K M t i l IEM M FREE PARKING AT ALL TIMES I;;!-1!! ■ -a. i THE A k GRADUATE ^ N A R W BANCROFT. DUSTIN HOFFMAN KATHARINE ROSS CALDER WILLINGHAM _ BUCK HENRY PAUL SIMON ^ - G A R F U N K E L LAWRENCE TURMAN TECHNICOLOR* PANAY130N* PLUS! Interpretation of "The Days of Wilfred Owen” In Color by RICHARD BURTON ‘i m 1 : 3 0 S S S 1 , > u 2PM Mc ' lL TIL 2 PM FEATURE AT 2:00 - 4:00 - 6:00 - 8:00 - 10:00 CL 2-7646 CAPITAL PLAZA 5657 North Interregional Highway ADULTS $1.50 Per Person • Mature Audiences Only! Two SHO W IN GS: 6 45 & 10:10 K.stf THERE EXISTS NOW A PLACE THAT IS ILLEGAL IN MOST OF THE WflBI IT W H E R E YOU W IL L S E E ' THE KICK SET- n U S T * WILD SET-WEIRD SET! Plus at 8:45 — Color SEE THE W ORLd T n THE RAW! SEGRE IS Of THE E0RBI00ER RORLO REVELLE C at THE HIODER GOMERA nu u " • ■‘ A ■Ur-ml UlU fcb'tw t a t al UU* too, Ie I Thursday, February 15, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Baga 9 Folklore Center Created at UT A Center for Intercultural Stud­ ies In Folklore and Ors! History has been established at the Uni­ versity by the Austin Committee on Folklore. Charged with the renter's opera­ te on Is a staff of faculty consult­ ants headed by Dr. Ameriro Pa- r< ••••■«?, professor of English, and anthropology. Dr. Mody C. Boat- right and Dr. Roger D. Abrahams, associate professor of English, are associate directors, and Thomas Stanford, assistant professor of music, is head of the sound arch­ ives. Dr. Boatright, chairman of the I* Ik lore committee, said the cen­ ter s function is to ser\e as a focus for teaching and research In f Iklore and rolatrvj fields “ It is intended to be both interdisci­ plinary and international in char­ acter," he added. Tile center, with its main offices In the English Building, veil] make available to researchers a small, specialized library, archives of n muscripts and sound record* logs, and equipment for their use. The sound archives now avail­ ed e include field recordings made mostly in Texas and Mexico, eon- fairing such diversified subjects as Negro music (blues, work songs, gospel, and reminiscences), Anglo music diddle tunes, gos­ pel. stories and tales, and remin- Ui cnees), some American Indian and \\ erst Virginia recordings, and many Jam aican tallies. Students Instructed in Ceramics »nd Faith Baldwin teaches interested students techniques o f in vanous non-students ceram ics. A r t cesses meet regular A rts and C ra fts C e n te r, Union Bui srly ild ii In th® ing 333. —-Staff Photo South American Students Touring, Studying on Campus Student leaders fr om four Latin American count!ies have been or will be on the University campus for varying periods during tho spring somester. Tin' first of the Latin American student leaders are from Co! ,m- bia. Tho students, from Barra n- quilla and Cartagena, arrived Fob. 5 and were at the Universi­ ty through Sunday Feb. ll. Tie- Colombians are on a four of the United States — including in New York, California, stops and Florida — under the Sponsor­ ship of the State Department. Their program has been plante d by the International Student Ser­ vice of New York. Ten Brazilian law students re­ presenting several geographic areas of their country have been at the University since Monday and w ill bp h ere until Friday. They are studying student life, visiting Austin law offices, and touting rural areas in Central Texas in a program sponsored by the State Department and the e n g r a v in g PRINTING • ALL O C C A SIO N G R I ‘ T IN S CARDS • PAPER PARTY ENSEMBLES • SOCIAL s t a t i o n e r y • GITT PAPERS AND TRIMS • BRIDGE ACCESSORIES ( J b e O r O ro !? i i lorn) 2900 G U A D A L U P E G R 2-5733 A U S T IN , T E X A S Final Rush Carnival to Fund GDE Strives to Serve 2 Scholarships B y placing members in charge Two $500 scholarships for the of projects and through social events, the sorority strives to 1968 69 academic year are being offered by the Interfraternity and teach its members the meanings of leadership and friendship. Open to All Coeds Sorority membership is open to all coeds. Greeks and independ­ ents. both single and married, are welcome in the organization. However, prospective pledges rannot be on scholastic or dis­ ciplinary probation. the group leaders of this semester are Beverly Haynes, president; Patsy Kintz. adminis­ trative vice-president; Lynn Bur- son, service vice-president; Lynn Rasmussen, membership vice­ president; Vonciel Jones, treas­ urer; Jo Ann Morris, secretary; and Susan Fannin, reporter-his- torian. Tile sorority is sponsoring its final rush activity of the semes­ ter—a coffee meeting from 2 to 4 p m. Thursday in Union 202. Panhellenic Councils. D ie source of scholarship fund* Is interest drawn from an en- dowmeat created from the pro­ ceeds of Varsity Carnival, an an­ nual show' sponsored by Univer­ sity fraternities and sororities. and average The two cash awards are given on the basis of over all grade financial point need. The scholarships are avail­ able only to full-time students who have completed three semes­ ters of college work and are free of scholastic or disciplinary pro­ bation. Application forms may be ob­ tained in the Office of Student Financial Aids in West M all Office Building 203. Deadline for turning them in is March 22. The applicant must specify that he is applying for the Varsity Carni­ val Scholarship. Aa loud circus music blared out and trapeze artists swung across the arona of Municipal Auditorium for the last time on Ort. 27, 123 first graders from Oak Springs Elem entary School and their chaperones began to prepare for the bus trip hack to school. in campus elections for a total of 74 hours. And when Hurricane Beulah hit, sorority members aided the Stu­ dents’ Association in its drive to collect money, food, and clothing for the hurricane victims. Com rn unity Included Of the approximately 55 chaperones, 20 were members of Gamma Delta Epsilon, women’s on national campus. sorority service friendship, The sorority, based on princi­ ples of leadership, and service, is designed for coeds who wish to contribute to the campus, the community, and the nation. Project One of M any The circus project, on which the GDE’s worked with Coach Darrell Royal and some of his is only varsity football players, one of many completed during the past semester as a part of the sorority’s overall service pro­ gram. .Slightly more than two years old, the sorority has engaged in a variety of projects since its official founding in the spring of 1966 In one program, reading to-fhe blind, members contributed more than 147 hours last semester. They plan to continue the pro­ ject this spring. G D E also serves members of the campus. Working with APO's, and Orange Jackets, GDE’s manned the polls Spooks The community is not excluded from the sorority’s service pro­ gram. This semester a program has been set up so that mem­ bers can work with the Cerebral Palsy Drive. On the national level, the soro­ rity worked with other University groups collect money on Halloween night for the Unbed International Children’s Nations Fund. to Responding to the request of a former University student, G D E ’s also collected 304 bars of soap to be sent to Vietnam to help com­ bat skin diseases. Service is not the only ob­ jective of the sorority, however. ACAPULCO SPRING BREAK Special Budget Package A pril 6 13 Include* 7 n abt* hotel eith 2 mea s R'-uni trip air fare Reyno**-Acapuico Yacht cruise on Acapulco Ray -'Pe.al barwise Bottu* coupon $99.50 Per Person C a:l Us A b o u t O th er Specials for Spring Break Sa n b o r n s Perry-Brooks Bldg. g r 6 ?S48 716 Braios Santa Fe's Personnel Development Staff will be interviewing students at THE UNIVERSITY O F TEXAS Wednesday, February 21, 1968 National Assembly for Serial Pol­ icy and Development. A group of six Chilean stud.-nt leaders from the Universities of Sant: ago and Valparaiso are scheduled to arrive Friday for a month long v is it Tile program is sponsored by the University .Students' Association and the in-: temational Office. Six Peruvian students from the Universities of San Marcos and Cuzco also are to arrive Friday. Their visit is sponsored by the Texas Partners of the Alliance for Progress in conjunction with the Students’ Association. all cam pus, W hile on four groups attend dally sessions of the inter American Communiea tion Seminar, taught b y Dr. Joe VV, Neal, professor of speech and director of the International Of­ fice. In the seminar, they m eet with University students to discuss the problems of cross-cultural com­ munication, illustrated with exam­ ples of differing and sim ilar con­ cepts and Institutions in the c u l­ tures represented. leaders, participate Dr Neal said all University stu­ dents, faculty, and staff who wish tin American to meet with the I student in discussions, or sponsor activities are asked to contact Sam Johnson International Office or at Lloyd Doggett, president of the Students’ Association. the Professor Joins Governmenf Staff Jam es A. B ill h is joined the Department of Government facul­ ty as an assistant professor. His research interests are In international relations and com­ parative government, particularly rn the Middle East and Iranian studies. Is Currently hp in teaching a international politics course since World W ar I I and a course on the political system of Iran. Later this spring B ill w ill re­ ceive a doctor of philosophy de­ gree from Princeton University, where he received a master of arts degree in p titties in 1965. He also has a master’s degree in political science from Pennsyl­ vania State University and a bachelor's degree in foreign af fairs from Assumption College in Massachusetts. Tern Turner (above! rf San Jose, Calif., working in a castle Jobs in Europe r I uvernbourg—-American Student !n- 1 mn st- m Service is ii '•-bruting it* * ‘11h year of successful operation placing students in i bs and arrang­ es: tours. A r y stu lent may now choose frt rn thousands . f jobs such as resort, rf? o, sales, factory, ho*- J ital, et 5 i •<',!• v vs ah v age* un to $400 a month. A S IS maintain* ; a ce merit office* throughout Europe insuring you of on the spot help at all times. I or a booklet listing all ■bs with applicati 'n f sins and dis­ count tours send $2 job application, overseas handling 6c air mail reply) to: Dept. O, American .Student Informa­ tion Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte. l uxembourg C ity, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. ' j I S M X T h e D a il y T e x a n CLASSIFIED ADS When if Comes to . . . RESULTS! lf You Have Something to SELL, RENT or TRADE . . . Need to H ir e Someone . . . Looking for Something to BUY . . . CALL G R 1 -5 2 4 4 NOW and Place Your Classified AD! Page IO Thursday, February IS, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN T h e efficient distribution of raw materials and finished goods continues to open up new frontiers for American Business, and as an important transportation system, Santa Fe lives daily with the challenges of those frontiers. Santa Fe has a great potential as a diversified com­ pany. W e have substantial interest in oil, lumber, uranium, coal, real estate, and other enterprises, in­ cluding motor carriers and pipelines through our affiliate companies. Our success will continue to depend on the kind of people who work for us. We look forward to the coming decade, when our business is expected to show dra­ matic growth. And we welcome people with open minds, talent and drive, to share in that success. Santa Fe offers career opportunities in: Account­ (Mechanical, Electrical, ing, Sales, Engineering Civil, M e tallurgical, Industrial). Transportation Management, Information System s and Electronic Data-Processing. Market Research, Purchasing and Inventory Control, Cost Analysis, Personnel and Labor Relations, Public Relations, Advertising and Real Estate Management. We are looking for individuals with Bachelors and Masters degrees in: Accounting, Business Admin- /Stratton, Transportation, Engineering, M athe­ matics, Statistics, Economics and Liberal Arts. C heck with the University Placement Office for a scheduled interview and a copy of a new brochure featuring Santa Fe career opportunities