W eather: Fair, C o o l H igh 80 Low 52 T h e Da ily T Student N e w s p a p e r at The University r ' - f ’ ft ,u t , ^ + s r r Qy v S ' . f ° > ! v jfCS .an Knee Injury Bows Bill B rad le y Page 4 Vo1- 66_________ Price Rve Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, O C TO BER 2, 196>. Ten Pages Todiy No 37 Regents See Orange Explanations of the University rules and procedures consolidated in one public ation w mid he avail­ able to new students, high school counselor’s, and parents. Board m em bers also approved employment of Dallas bond con­ sultant s for the University's new coeducational dorm. Tile consul­ the Board tants will report the November meeting, on at that the $14 million bond sale to will finance “ the largest project in Austin ever,” Regent Erwin said. The coch! dorm will house 3.000 students, he said. In other business, tho Regents: • Ai oepfod $100,OOO grant from the American Cancer Society. The grant will endow a profes­ sorship on radiation research at Southwestern Medical School in Dallas. • Voted to begin plans for an art history complex at Arlington State College. Students the four-year program will work as interns in Fort Worth and Dallas art museums. in • Approved tie Idea of ap­ pointing a com m itoe of faculty, Regents, and students to advise the Board educational about the national scene. changes on Committee m em bers will be ap­ pointed at a later date. By SI SAN POWELL Texan News Editor A committee to determine the official orange, a new building for student publications, and a 24- hour communication system for student services were among re­ commendations approved by the University Board of Regents Sat­ urday. Tile Board acted on a petition bearing 72 names Sept, 20 asking for the preservation of a bright orange instead of burnt orange as the official University color. FRANK ERWIN, regent, moved to accept the petition and to have Chancellor H arry Ransom ap­ point an “ orange committee” to report to Regents at the Novem­ ber meeting. Erwin commented that burnt orange probably “ori­ ginated over on the east side of cam pus,” referring to the darker shades of orange used in football jerseys. He suggested that coach Darrell Royal be included in the committee. The idea for the construction of a new student publications building on campus also was ap­ proved by the Regents. Loyd Ed­ monds Jr., general m anager of Texas Student Publications Inc., told the Texan, “ We can assum e the Board has given us the green light to work out plans, finances, and a site for the building with the adm inistration.” Presently, TSP plant suffers from lack of storage space for newsprint, outmoded and danger­ ous press housing at The Little Campus, m akeshift p i c t u r e studios and cram ped office space for The Daily Texan, and the Ranger, Riata, and Texas Engineering Science magazines, Edmonds said. the Cactus, for EDMONDS STATED TSP has accumulated the years through roughly $200,000 in a long-range fund for construction purposes. “ It Is our understanding,” he said, “ that the Regents will help us get the necessary funds for the building, possibly through a long-term loan.” Chancellor Ransom expressed hope that a 24-hour call system for campuses in the University system approved by Regents will go into effect on this campus by Nov. I. THE SYSTEM, as Chancellor Ransom explained it. would refer students wanting “problem-solv­ ing” help to the proper Univer­ sity authorities. Also, Ransom said, students could call to find out if classes were being held on snowy days, and clarify Univer­ sity Hiles and regulations. The information system would make use of an advisory publica­ tion also authorized by the Re­ gents, Ransom said. Chairm an W . W . Heath C a lls for Vote Dr. H arry Ransom was asked to form "o r a n g e com m ittee" to study the University colors. -Photo by Virgil Johnson* Academic Stretch Proposed Board of Education Makes 16 Recommendations to produce clear evidence that age six is too late for children to begin their schooling,” a staff report to the board said. By starting school at age five, the report said, “ the probability for later extended retardation, drop out, and remediation may be decreased, and the opportunity for full development m ay be in­ creased.” Assuming 50 per cent of the No Change in Policy In A & M Publications Lane Stephenson, assistant di­ rector of Texas A&M University Information and Publication, em ­ phasized Saturday night that no changes had been made in the adm inistrative structure of the Battalion, A&M student news­ paper, by the resolution passed Tuesday by the Board of direc­ tors of the Texas A&M Univer­ sity System. Tile resolution, which stated that policies for student publica­ tions were to be handled by the A&M administration, was simply a reaffirmation of a long stand­ ing board policy, Stephenson said. in relation EARL RUDDER, president of the university, laid down policy guidelines the board’s resolution a t a Wednes­ day afternoon meeting of student editors and the student publica­ tions board, composed of publi­ cations advisers. to Rudder stated, according to — Stepfrlenson former Battalion editor-in-chief Tommy DeFrank that mem bers of the publications board, in oth­ er words, the advisers, w’ould be editors of their respective publi­ cations. The Battalion’s staff box F ri­ day listed Jim Lindsey, director of A&M student publications and news and information service, as editor-in-chief. Stephenson was titled assistant editor-in-chief and DeFrank was dropped to third in command as student editor. HOWEVER, according to Ste­ phenson, student editors will con­ tinue to serve the sam e function — making assignments, covering events, and writing stories-—un­ der the supervision of Lindsey. “As a result of the board's resolution, Jim Lindsey's name wras inserted in the masthead of the Battalion,” Stephenson said. “This, however, does not m ark a change. Supervision is a part of his job.” eligible entered five-year-olds school next year, and an addition­ al IO per cent the following year, it would cost state and local sources $19,203,077 each tor the biennium. tho Tile state-supported sum m er school would consist of four-hour days for six to eight weeks on a voluntary basis by pupils and, with an estimated 300,000 enroll­ ed, would cost the state $19,669,- 600 and local sources $4,667,400 for a two-year fiscal period sta rt­ ing next September. THE PILOT programs for ten- month school years and seven- hour, instead of six-hour, days envisions a maximum of 50,000 pupils a t­ tendance. average daily in THE TEN-MONTH pilot pro­ gram would cost $1,590,000 for two years — $1,272,000 from the local state and $318,000 funds — and the seven-hour pro­ posal would cost the state $1,908,- 000 and local sources $477,000 for the sam e period. from The driver education proposal provides another teaching pro­ gram for that subject which would lower the cost. The current pro­ gram, now in use in Texas public schools, provides for 30 hours of class instruction, six hours of in- car instruction and six hours of in-car observation. The alternate plan calls for using a simulator-laboratory with 30 hours of classroom instruction including 12 hours in the sim ula­ tor, four hours behind the wheel, and six hours in-car observation. Jim Helms, Longhorn Tailback . . . barrels past fallen Hoosier. (See story, pag e 4), -Photo by VirgU Johnao* Hill Appears at Final Session O f Commercial Code Institute Secretary of State John H i l l was a surprise visitor Saturday at the closing session of the Uni­ form Commercial Code Institute at the University. Tile three-day session, spon­ sored by the School of Law, dealt exclusively with secured transactions article of the newly adopted Uniform Commercial Code. the HILL TOLD the group that his office had hired four employes to handle filings under the code, in expectation of about 5,000 fil­ ings a year. However, his office already has received 40,000 filings — j u s t three months after the code went into effect, the secretary s a i d . He predicted that annual filings could reach 100,000. Speakers at the Saturday ses­ sion included Frank R. Kennedy, University of Michigan, who spoke on “ Bankruptcy and the Uniform Commercial Code” ; Prof. Pierre R. Loiseaux of the law school, “ Filing University and Transition Problem s Under Article 69” ; and Frederick M. Hart, Boston College of Law, “Advising the Unsecured Seller in Code States.” Question and answer period fol­ lowed each session. DR. MILLARD H. RUUD, as­ sociate dean and professor at the University School of Law, said that 248 Texas lawyers and busi­ nessmen had enrolled for the in­ stitute. The opening meeting was for lawyers who wanted a basic un­ derstanding of the secured trans­ actions article, while the Friday and Saturday sessions were de­ voted to those seeking “ a fuller appreciation” of its operation. The code was adopted by the State Legislature in 1965 and went into effect July I of this year. Texas is one of 46 states utilizing the measure. PURPOSE OF the code is to facilitate tho flow of com m erce transfer through uniform s t a t e to codify form er statutes, and commercial into a single statute, according to S t e p h e n Lane, a m ember of the institute planning committee. laws The institute was the “ first in the state that I know of where in attendance have been those able to get specific answers to practical, questions everyday . . . Lane said. Walter J. Morrison, chairm an of the section on corporation banking and business law of the state bar, called the institute a success for the law school. “ WE THINK the institute was an outstanding success . . . It was well attended by attorneys from all over the state. Reports in a favorable re­ are uniform ception to the institute,” M orri­ son said. Numbers Posted For Date Tickets The numbers of blanket tax, holders entitled to purchase OU date tickets are posted on the in front at th* bulletin board Union Building. Tickets must be picked up at Gregory Gym 115 no later man noon Tuesday. Date ticket* are 15.50, aud gtudea Fourth Try to Revise Penal Code Under Way By MARK LE VB ARG (Editor’s Note: Mark Levbarg is a student at the University School of Law.) The Texas Penal Code, a collection of statutes defining die crimes and penal sanctions of the State, is being revised. The present code was adopted in 1856 and was generally recognized as one of the finest codifica­ tions of its day. But intermittent patching and the passage of HO years have left Texas with a penal code that W. Page Keeton, dean of the School of Law, has called “shabby, outmoded, and acciden­ tal.” THREE PREVIOUS formal revisions—the most recent in 1925—have been limited to rearrangement and renumbering of the basic provisions and amendments. The current revision, in contrast, is intended to be a complete overhaul of Texas’ law concerning the traditional crimes. When it is completed it will be sent to the Legislature for enactment. The proposed penal code will not deal with cer­ tain regulatory problems which have been assign­ ed to more appropriate codes in the Texas statu­ tes. For example, the new code will not cover diseased bees, liquor regulation, or the licensing of barbers, all of wdiich are in the present code. The monumental revision task is eased by two guidelines: new penal codes in several other states and the Model Penal Code, a document designed to assist states in the revision of their laws. THE MODEL CODE was completed in 1962, af­ ter IO years of labor by professors, judges, law­ yers, prison personnel, psychiatrists, and crimino­ logists. Dean Keeton calls the code “the most im­ portant study of American criminal law in this century.” Following the example of the Model Penal Code, Texas’ proposed code Is designed in seven parts: general provisions, offenses against existence or stability of the state, offenses involving danger to the person, offenses against property, offenses against the family, offenses against public admin­ istration, and offenses against public order and decency. Eight lawyer-scholars. including five University law school faculty members, have been chosen to report on the seven parts. Local reporters are Fred Cohen, F rank Maloney, Joel Finer, Alfred Alschiller, and Paul Rothstein. include EACH REPORTER has an advisory committee. judges, prosecutors, defense Advisers counsels, law enforcement officials, and state leg­ islators. Reports are made to the State B ar com­ m ittee of which Dean Keeton is chairman. A m ajor problem facing the reporters is lack of funds. New York spent $100,000 annually for four years to revise its penal code, but only $18,000 has been made available to the Texas revision committee. Estim ated cest of revision is $40,000. i^Il funds so far have come from private sources. The revision committee must face controversial areas of the criminal law that are potentially ex­ plosive. These include sex, status offenses,* sen­ tencing, the insanity defense, narcotics, and the availability of certain defenses, e.g. Intoxication. IN THE FINAL drafting of the sex laws in the new Texas Penal Code. Finer and his advisers plan to weigh the Model Penal Code, several new state codes, prevailing public morality, and the opinions of doctors, sociologists, and psychologists. The Model Penal Code takes a “ hands off” at­ titude toward consenting private adult sex (CPA). Tts editors do not believe the crim inal law to be the appropriate means of social control in this area. Enforcement of legal sanctions against CPA sex is impossible without encouraging unlawful be­ havior on the part of law enforcement officials. For example, police in California spied on public rest rooms through peepholes to seek out homo­ sexuals until the California courts ruled against their actions. ACCORDING TO the present Texas Penal Code, sexual relations are allowed only between m arried couples of the same race, and their activities are limited by the sodomy statute. Tile fornication, seduction, and criminal adultery statu te are threats to breeding grounds for blackmail and accomplish divorce and marriage. Illinois is the only state that has adopted the entire Model Penal Code view of CPA sex. Many states have used the language “open and notor­ ious” in redefining such sex crimes, a less bold step toward drafting sex statutes w*hich are law­ fully enforceable. Sex offense statutes outside the CPA area will also be re-evaluated: • How can one falsely accused of rape be better protected against the complaint of the prosecutrix? Finer said he might suggest a procedure for pre­ trial physical and mental examination of the al­ leged victim. • Should additional defenses be available to one accused of statutory rape? It has been suggested that mistake of age and/or the lack of significant age differential between the prosecutrix and the accused be considered as defenses. • Should homosexuals be treated rather than punished? Is this more properly an area of the civil, rather than the criminal, law? Cohen believes that since homosexuality is a scourge of the prison system, it does not make sense to imprison homo­ sexuals. The Texas Penal Code must be revised clearly to define status crimes, offenses involving state of being, rather than misconduct. The potential abuse of present vagrancy laws by police makes the revision necessary. Meeting minimal requirements for a constitu­ tional arrest can be evaded by using the vagrancy catchall. For example, when police lack evidence that the crime of prostitution has been committed, they may arrest a suspect as a “common prosti­ tute” under the vagrancy law. The Model Penal Code eliminates the vagrancy statute, but allows police to arrest loiterers who cannot reasonably account for their presence in suspicious circumstanes. THE INSANITY DEFENSE in m urder cases is one of the thorniest medico-legal problems. The Texas m urder trial definition of insanity is not in line with medical descriptions of insanity, but comes from an English m urder case of the 1840’s. The Cross and Whitman incidents will fuel the controversy in this area. The new Texas Penal Code will have to handle the Model Penal Code does narcotics, although not. It is that the narcotics trade upon which organized crim e thrive* is m ade possible by the harsh penal law in this area. likely The relation of narcotics use to other crim es uill be investigated and medical knowledge about the effects of various drugs will be considered. The English system, allowing physicians to prescribe for and treat addicts, will be studied. There will be some non-controversial revisions in the new code. too. Most will agree, for example, to the simplification and consolidation of the lar­ ceny laws. Under the present code, the penalty for stealing five bushels of peaches is a fine of up to $100. but one convicted of stealing five bushels of oranges m ay face IO years in prison. THE REVISION of the Texas Penal Code is wel­ come after HO years, but Cohen has pointed out the naivete of expecting the passage of laws to “beat this crim e problem .” In a recent speech before the second annual Criminal Law Institute at the University School of Law. Cohen said of the proposed code: “The danger is in a belief that a well conceived penal law is the limit of the state’s obligation. How much less expensive it is to pass a law than to provide, for example, for professional training for law enforcement personnel, to expand and professionalize correctional sendees, and to pro­ vide professional counseling and therapy in our penal institutions?” By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tile State Board of Education recommended to the Legislature Saturday that Texas children, to handle the information explosion, start school sooner and stay in longer. The m ajor proposals in a series of 16 recommendations adopted by the board provide for: • A state plan of education for fiv e-year-old children. • Operation of a state support­ ed sum m er school, grades one through 12. • Pilot program s to test the feasibility of a ten-month school year and a seven-hour school day. A lone dissent by board mem­ ber Doyle Corley, New Boston, on the plan for educating five- year-olds at state expense pre­ vented unanimous acceptance of the prim ary recommendations. “ We ought to improve what we have before starting something new,” said Corley. THE 21-MEMBER b o a r d recommended: Higher salaries for Texas teachers, an alternative school plan for driver safety education in the the schools, expanding pilot program for emotionally disturbed children and raising tile age limit from 17 to 21, lowering the age for deaf-blind children to begin education from six to five, state support for school dis­ tricts which have student teach­ er's, and complete recodification of present school laws. the adequacy Also proposed was a plan for the board to develop criteria for for determining public school districts, a school census every five years instead of each year and improved values used in computing the economic index. “ RESEARCH, experience, and technology have been combined Earthquake Jolts Los Angeles Area LOS ANGELES - lf! - A jolt­ ing earthquake shook the Los Angeles area at 10:12 p.m. Satur­ day. in shook Desks downtown offices. An apartm ent dweller said, “ the building shook all over.” Another apartm ent occupant on the Wilshire the third floor in Boulevard la Brea-Avenue area, said, “It felt like the wrhole build­ ing was going to fall. It was such a shake it seared the living day­ lights out of m o.” A resident of Inglewood, on the southwest fringe of Los Angeles, telephoned the Associated Press: “I went through the 1933 quake and it wasn’t as bad as that, but it was real strong.” The 1933 quake caused multiple deaths and widespread destruc­ tion centering in the Long Beach area south of Los Angeles. Dr. Charles Richter, California Institute of Technology seimolo- gist said: “This was very definitely an earthquake, but I cannot deter­ mine very much in detail.” Richter said the jolt knocked a quake-detection instrum ent in his home “off the scale” and he was therefore unable to obtain an accurate reading immediately. Observers estimated the tremor lasted about IO second- $ Student Service A sound student t o n i e r was approved S atu rd ay b y th e I 'diversity Board of Regents. A cting on a recom m en­ dation fro m Dr. H a r r y Ransom, chancellor, th e hoard authorized a 24-hour communication system for students who need advice o r information. The communication system will be conducted thro u g h open telephone lines, and will he installed not only at tile v dn University, but also at o th e r schools in the system: A rlington S ‘ate College and Texas W estern University. A though the system will be for referral only, it will be most valuable. It will in' m anned by well inform ed and know ledge able personnel. ★ ★ ★ Ti a people will be able to help students who have t : • -til-’os bv referring tiiem to proper problem* j pi rsons. If a student has a trag e d y in his family, vie' will l>e able to provide any needed assistance. persoi SQT t a r Tin vs!em also includes a complete information cen­ ti r. University rules, regulations, and services can he point­ ed on’ o r clarified. In ca^e of a had snow, students can <"• ’ the st n i c e to find out w h eth er or not school will be open th a t day. When the system goes into operation, hopefully around I. it will bo a groat asset to students of the U niver­ Tov sity system and one which will be well worth its expense. Needed Measures Lacking in Gun Bill h o r a while it seemed that the Senate Judiciary Com­ mittee might do its duty and report out a meaningful fire- arm s-control bill, hut in the end it capitulated to the gun lobby. T he m easure it approved is described by The W ash­ ington Post as "a fraud on its face.” Tlds is the bill subm itted by S enator H ruska, who has always stood read y to p a rro t the propaganda of the gun lobby. It would simply impose a largely meaningless cheek on the mail-order traffic in handguns. It would not touch rifles, shotgun*, and o th e r heavy weapons. T he bill does not ban the mail-order traffic in h an d ­ guns. It does forbid the in terstate .shipment of these weap­ ons into states in violation of their laws. Since very few' states have effective laws governing the purchase of fire­ arm s, th e im pact of this provision would be negligible. T h e amadavat req uirem ents set forth in the hill for mail­ o rd er guns are worthless. ★ ★ ★ S en ato r Dodd s bill would have banned outrig h t th e mail-ordc r traffic in handguns. The adm inistration w anted this bill am ended to extend the ban to shotguns and rifles, too, as well as o th e r heavy surplus m ilitary weapons. This is w h at we need. S enator Dodd says he went along with tile pitiful H ru s k a bi!! jest to get some sort of m easure on the floor, w here he could eith er substitute a stro n g er hill or toughen th e H ru sk a bill with am endm ents. T he prospects of doing this are slim. F u rth e rm o re , even if the Senate passes a respectable bill, it is unlikely th a t th e House would aet on it in the w aning d ay s of this session. Til us. Congress once again has refused to do a n y ­ th in g about th e scandalous traffic in fire a im s in this coun­ try , and the predictable slau g h ter will continue. — I h e l /o u is v i lle C o u r ie r - J o u r n a l Grassroots Philosophy rr I is gone o u ? of a m arriage '.h e n he s ta rts w hat happened to the girl he m arried and she d e r i i what happened to the man she didn’t. — The S o n o m a (Calif.) I ndex-Tri bune EEEFJS3 H, A SANK .04^ AfcWTECT'6 PLAbS INSURANCE 90UNN6 PERMITS Pluming, he at n 6 and ELECTRICAL CONTRACTS. O > A n d Mou c a n c* (An d h e r e A n d (catch T hem POUR 'T-iE CONCRETE/ ------- ' T ith H- ry_ Ta'es Liberty in Defense of Hair Is Vice Hi'ya Hairy Bv ROB RI BNS ' ' lins Editor rh:* T exas R anger I lie door to th e judge's c h a m ­ b er opened silently as the bailiff entered. "P ard o n me, Ju d g e "Oh, hello Jones. I guess I was . ” . . lost in my th o u g h ts.’' II LR KS THE packin'o you wanted m e to b rin g you f ro m the cleaner’s.” ('.'xxi I've been w aiting for it. (Opens that b e a u ti­ isn't th e p a c k a g e ) T here, f u l ? ’* ’'Y eah . . . I suppose. What is i t 9” It s one of those old fashioned Judge's wags they used in < > urf. We to w e a r don t w e a r them any m ore. but I found tilts one in an a n tiq u e sh o p .” “ h i I WHAT DO v o ti w ant it h ere fo r? ” ju st slip for court s-'ssions to begin it on and sit hero ‘‘\A ell you see. Jones, when I'm w a it­ I like for a ing to w h ile a n d d r e a m . ” " D r e a m , s i r ? ” "Y e s, it gives m e the tru e feeling of being a judge. I mean they wore these judges were really tim es when sn ju d g e s. How do I look in i t 9” tho "Uh-;. . . fine, fine. Very impressive.” " T H A N K Y O C , J o n e s . I like to fancy the the founders of m yself as one of nation, sitting im partially, m eting out justice and f ra m in g the b asic ideas of freed om that this g r e a t cou ntry sta nds on. This wig truly gives me that feeling. T he way locks hang down aroun d m y shoulders. I only wish I could w e a r it in c o u r t." long the "W hy don't you, s i r 9” "No, no, r couldn’t do that. I ’m afraid society isn't re a d y for that sort of thing. People a r e so narrow minded t h e s e d ay s Someone might got the w r o n g idea ” "It r ea lly becom es you .” “ AOI THINK SO?” "Oh definitely. Those white curls s e tt­ ling around your e a r s and dialling down y o u r c h e s t.” "Yes. Jones, I think T w as horn out of m y tim e. Why even when I w as a sm all child I begged m y m o ther not to h a v e m y golden locks cut from my head. I whiled aw ay m a n y h appy hours in front of running m y fingers through m y h a i r . ” the m ir r o r just ‘T L L BPT ATM "Well, looked nice that w a y . ” to get me I d o n ’t want you wrong. Jones. trying I m ean to look like a flit or anything. In fact som e of the most m asculine men in our h i s t o r y wore I mg hair. Ju st look af the founders of our g re a t land, Washington, I w asn't Je fferson, F ranklin. E ach of them had a fine h ea d of h a i r .” "Y es sir. E v en th a t guy in that pic­ ture you got up on your w all th e re .” "You know who that m a n is ? ” “ No s i r . ” “THAT MAN R A S the this co untry ev e r had. first great J o h n jurist M a rs h a ll.” “Oh.” "It w as ho that handed down the decisions that set the p receden t for all the court c a s e s th a t tim e o n .” " A h .” to from look to “ That's why I like to wear this. I sit here and drift hack through tim e and I becom e John M arshall, holding court and knowing that the future of America depends on m e. It is up to me to insure the I b ecom e the watchdog against prejudice and oppression. I alone can m ake the country sa fe for all ideas. Through mo. all the people can live and do as they p le a s e ! ” freedom of everyone to com e. “ TH ATS WONDERFUL, sir. (sniff) it's tim e for court to con­ though.” I ’m afraid vene now, "Just a couple of more m inutes. Then I must shear m yself, and go forth in th t best traditions of good old John.” • "E veryone rise as the Judge en ters.” "Will the court secretary pleas** read the to fam iliarize us with the record c a s e .” that “ THE THREE plaintiffs have been local h i g h into a denied entrance school because they refused to cut their the principal hair. They charge acted arbitrarily and capriciously In denying their entrance because it would legal contract that they had violate a local rock and to sign as singers in a roll band. They injunction charging that their rights have b e e n their violated. Both sides have rested c a s e s.” seek an “ Injunction denied. The conditions or term s upon which a public free educa­ tion are granted in the high schools of Texas cannot be fixed nor determ ined by the pupils them selves. Nor is a con ­ tract which is unenforceable against the minor plaintiffs in this state to be con­ sidered as determ inative of the right. Court d ism issed.” “ Everyone please rise as the Judge le a v e s.” "Damn subversive beatniks, that'll show 'em. Now I can get back to m y w ig .” SDS Defended c e rtainly say that SDS was dying — if she sought to becom e anything else. The Firing Line To the Editor: In T h u rs d a y 's T exan, you sug gested th a t SDS is dying b ec au se it has “ fail­ ed to produce a clea r-h ea d ed p r o g r a m ” for political action, b ec au se ii "still la c k s a c o h e r e n t ideology,” and such. I would like to o b je c t to your suggestion th a t SDS nee d s d o g m a s and p r o g r a m s in o r d e r to survive. F o r, a s I h a v e u n d e r ­ stood if. SDS exists p a r tly a s an a l t e r ­ n a t iv e to b u r e a u c r a ti c o rganiz atio ns; w e r e it to a s s u m e the charac ter you propose, one of its rea so n s for existing would be destroyed. To put it p lainly. SDS as I h a \e known it is a som ew hat anarchistic organiza­ tion in which ev ery participant m u st think for him self and speak for him self, and act, net because "program s” or lead ers dictate that he should, but be­ c a u s e he feels im pelled to. C oals, in SDS. are norm ally set each to his own, and not by officers, resolu­ tions. or rules. This is because SDS is D e c l a r a t o r y J u d g m e n t Dirk J. R eavis 3009 B. Froth M oral Criticism To the Editor: As long as Tile Daily T exan is taking the trouble to synopsize handouts from the Los Angeles T im e s (which was, in turn, a handout from the “ Institute on of the te ach ing profession who sign petitions, place a d v e rtise m en ts, etc., do W h a t Expert? so as intelligent, ed u c ated persons To the Editor: ch a r g e d with giving guidance to the young whose m o ral s e n se is o utraged at A m e ric a n policy in Viet N am . I think we all r e m e m b e r what happ ened when last a group of people’s right to live or die w a s decided by “ e x p e r ts ” at the ex c lu ­ the m o ra l se nse of g r e a te r sion of h u m a n ity. The editor has insinuated that foreign policy criticism is bettor left to experts. Tell us. who is an expert on our foreign policy? Is Mr, Johnson, the congression­ al strong-arm er, an expert designer and executor of foreign policy? R ussia, E a st Germ any, Red China — they leave a1! foreign policy to experts. Hitler and Mussolini w e re fam ous experts. C om m unist . . . ” , etc.), it m ight he in­ As a footnote. I would like to add, as te re ste d in passing on so m e of the a USG alum nus, that the "R e se a rc h alm ost o verw h elm in g re b u tta l to Dr. S w earingen 's article which subsequently a p p e a r e d in the T im e s ’ le tte r pages. The Viet N a m W ar is most often criticized Institute for C om m unist S tra te g y and im pressive it sounds, being a S tate D e p a rt­ in its own right. P r o p a g a n d a " th an m e n t p ropag a nda mill little less is from a basic m o r a l standpoin t (i.e. it (How would you have received a bulletin is im m o ra l to m a in ta in an A m erican stronghold in S outheast Asia at the e x ­ the people of Viet N a m - pense of 139,(XX) civilian ca su a ltie s in 1965, m o re through A m eric an bom bings kid nappings). than VC from a “ R e s e a r c h Institute on Capitalist S tra te g y and P r o p a g a n d a ” in Kiev?) Peter Flagons Instructor Art Building 111 Any hu m a n being on the fa c e of this torial cam e from a 49-inch article in ea rth , "foreign policy e x p e r t" o r no. h as The National Observer, and not from (E d ito r s Note: Research for the edi­ Since what d a te has it becom e impos­ sible for educated men, especially tho.-e in the a c a d e m ic and research fields, to locate the facts, opinions, and e x p e c ta ­ tions of US foreign policy as judged by dom estic a n d foreign cre a to rs of that policy? The editor implies that within a sm all circle of insiders at the D e p a rt­ m e n t of Slate, is knowledge, carefully guarded, which would m ake an y m a n of sufficient foresight and in­ sight a w itness for, or at least hold his tongue against, the se em in g A m erican fa rc e which is fast becoming a war of terrifying scope. th e re The editor echoes the opinion of a por­ tion of the ex p e rts when he says there is a black or white future for Vie! N am , thus engagin g in a p ra c tic e from which he cautions othe rs to restra in . Foreign policy deals with people and to a degree we are all experts. Foreign actions of the US governm ent are in desperate need of discussion and criti­ cism , by all citizens, because experts of foreign policy have proved to be noth­ ing of the sort throughout political h is­ tory, and the atom ic age is no tim e to overestim ate the expertise of politicians. Paul S. R ood 1300 Nuer«w A b surd Vote To the Editor: E very American is entitled lo vote tho w ay he chooses, but there is in voting, as iii every aspect of life, absurdity and intelligence. The recent primary' nom ina­ tion of the once ax-handle w ielding, gun-waving Lester Maddox for G eorgia governor over a m ore responsible candi­ date lacks the vital aspect of an intelli­ gent decision. It is difficult to believe that a stat* like Georgia, which has elected notable men in its past, could nominate a person who, sadly, disdains other human be­ ings. Ilopeiully, Georgia, will som eday return to the union of American states. Wylie F. Atkinson III 2802 Whit!*, Apt. f a m ovem ent, aud not a bureaucracy, as a right to o bje ct to Un* wholesale you seem to hulk. And I, for one, would s la u g h te r of his b ro th e ls. The m e m b e r s the T im es.) letters column of the Los Angeles Court Opinion on Vice-Presidoncy Vacancy (E d itor’s N ote: The Daily Texan is required to print opinions of the Stu­ dent ( (Wirt.) Iii Ute m a t t e r of v a c a n c y of the Vice- P r e s id e n t of the Students' Association. Mr. J u s tic e J e ff e r s .speaking for a u nanim ous Ceint. Following the p ro c e d u re outlined in at tn Ie X of the Rules of P r o c e d u r e of tho Student Court, tile A ttorney G eneral a p p e a r e d to request a d e c la ra to r y j u d g ­ m ent. E x p la in in g the V ice-P resi­ dent of the S tu d e n ts ’ Association had r e ­ signed his position and w as no longer a student at the U n iversity of T exas, he ask ed this ( c a n t to d e t e r m in e w hat provision th e re is in the Constitution for filling the vac an c y . that the Student A ssem bly In a sketchy brief, he su b m itte d that th e re a r e four possibilities: a) to p e r m i t to appoint a V ice-Presi­ the P resident to his a u th o rity under dent pars i int i c ) “ to m ake all article III, section 4 appointm ents n e c e s s a r y an d p r o p e r to the fulfillment of the to c o m m e n t upon the d e c la ra t' irs - judgem ent p ro ce d u re . to let MMK EE I, section 12 of tho Rules d e c l a r a n t ) ' cf P r o c e d u r e defines judg m ent a s a " ju d g m e n t winch m e r e ­ a the rights of ly e x p re sses the opinion of the Court on a question of law or which sim ply d e ­ cla r e s in te reste d parties without o rdering anything to be done.” A rticle X, section 3 sa y s th at a d e c l a r a ­ tory ju d g m e n t “ shall bp considered sole­ ly an opinion of the Court and shall not bind the Court in its fu tu re ac tio n .” The la n g u a g e em ployed by the f r a m e r s of is so m e w h a t am b ig u o u s and the Rules m u st be clarified if the S tudent Court is to r e n d e r d e c la r a to r y ju d g m e n ts and \ e t m a in ta in its judicial c h a r a c t e r . legal The m ode rn law h as recognized th** a p p r o p r ia te n e ss of a proceeding in which status, and a court d e c la re “ rights, other relations w h e th e r or not fu rth e r relief is or could be c la im e d .” (See Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. a r t. 2524- the Uni­ 1, S I (1965), T ex as adopted form D e c la r a to ry in 1943). J u d g m e n ts Act A d e c la ra to r y proceeding is unconven­ tional in th a t there is no a w a rd of e x e ­ cution. but it m a y n e v e rth e le ss se rv e to d e t e r m in e an ac tu al or a potential con­ troversy. Where, as in the instant case, p a r ti e s d e s ire a legal d e te rm in a tio n of th e ir rights u n d er a constitutional, s t a ­ tutory, or c o n tra c tu a l provision before e m b a r k in g upon a c o u r s e of action, th'5 d e c la ra to r y proceeding is alto g eth er pro- per. A CO! KT SHOl ED not decline ju ris­ diction on the ground that no one has taken the final step which might consti­ tute a breach of c o n tra c t or a violation in of te rm s of the present situation, the Stu­ this a b s tra c tio n law. To couch d ent Court should not decline jurisdic­ tion at this point and th e re b y force the S tu d e n ts’ Association to risk a cou rse of la te r be reve rse d. action which m ight In asm u c h as we have a potential con­ tr o v e rsy with potentially a d v e r s e parties an d a p r e se n t need for decision, we will in te rp re t the Constitution so as to pro­ vide the Students' Association with a c e r ta in m ethod of selecting a new Vice- P re sid en t. It m ust be em ph asized , how­ ev e r, that the opinion we r e n d e r today is It will have the effect of a final judgm ent or d e c r e e ; it will am o u n t to a definite in te r p r e ta ­ tion of the Constitution which will doubt­ less be followed litiga­ to the tion arise s following the selection of a V ice-President. (Again se e Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 2524-1, S I (1965). in no sense advisory. letter if A final p ro c e d u ra l w ord is in order. T he Court w as a t a d isa d v a n ta g e in d e­ te rm ining this m a t t e r bec au se the h e a r ­ ing lacked en tirely an a d v e r s a r y spirit. In the a b s e n c e of two an tag onistic p a r ­ tie s a rg u in g both sides of a real and p r e s e n t dispute, for us to be a w a r e of all the relevan t con­ siderations. is difficult it requesting first place, in o u r use of TH ER EFO R E, we m u s t be c i rc u m ­ the procedure. In sp e c t th e A ttorney G ene ra l the d e c la ra to r y or person judgm ent m ust explain the p rese nt need for a decision. The facts of the c a s e the should im pelling need for constitutional inter­ p retation in the instant ease. som ething akin reveal to a Further, the person or persons re­ a should judgment questing submit thorough briefs and should take a def­ inite stand on the issue. In the instant the Attorney General submitted case, four alternative interpretations without advocating any one of them. This was less than satisfactory. Finally, it is im ­ perative that notice of hearing be pub­ lished in the Texan as required by ar­ ticle X . section 2 of the Rules. We de­ mand this so that all interested parties will have an opportunity to be present. P assin g now to the substantive issue, ft should be said the Court had that no difficulty in deciding that the Student A ssem bly should elect as V ice-President one of its own m em bers by a m ajority vote of its total m em bership. indeed OI R CONCLUSION that this method of filling the vacan cy is constitutionally prescribed follows logically from a read­ ing of article III, section II. It would be strange the to say V ice-President becom es President a new V ice-President is elected by the A ssem ­ bly because section II so requires bul that when the v a ca n cy occurs by resig ­ nation or in any other w ay the post is to be filled in a different manner. that when ! urther, election of a su ccessor by (he A ssem bly is the only solution which seem s bolh practical and dem ocratic. It is highly probable that the fram ers would have intended the flexible inter­ pretation of article III, section II given today by this Court. The other alternatives can be quickly dism issed. Article III, section 4(c) gives the President authority to m ake all appointm ents necessary to the efficient functioning of the execu tive branch. This is unlikely is broad that the fram ers would have intended it to cover the problem created by the resignation of the V ice-President. language, but it W HILE THE President should have the power to appoint an Attorney General and anyone else needed for an effective cabinet, it does not follow that he should be able to appoint the second man. who is norm ally elected by the entire stu­ dent body and who, under the Consti­ tution, must be a ctiv e in both the leg is­ lative and execu tive branches. While the filling of the vacan cy by appointm ent w'ould be an efficient solution, it would clearly be less dem ocratic than election of a Successor by the Assem bly. The final alternatives — filling the vacan cy by special general election or allowing the office to rem ain vacant— are not even rem otely suggested by the Constitution. Tile form er method would im practical be dem ocratic but while in­ tolerable burden on the rem aining m em ­ bers of tho execu tive department. latter would im pose an totally the It is the unanimous opinion of the Student Court that the Constitution re­ quires the Student A ssem b ly to se le c t a qualified successor from its ranks by m ajority vote. Res Heedfully subm itted, John L. Jeffers Jr. David Chappell David Carlock Larry Amorino T h e Da i l y T e x a n I j * t ■* ti t.: a, & i UG cd* ncH fepttpf4!- st inc U iii v cr* is published daily except Monday a nd Satur* • Dil&ay periods September through May and August by Tex8.k Student Publications. lit"'-. ; diversity Station, Austin, T e x a s 78712 Sec* ■tax* na.d at Austin. Texas ; br- accepted bv telephone (G R w butler , m I th e e d ito r I o f fice J B 103 or a t the n e w s ’ B 102 Inquiries c o n c e r n in g delivery should lo? (GR I 5244> and advertising. J E. I ll J B ASSOCIATED PR ESS W I R E S E R V I C E the re ss ss e x c l u s iv e ly en titled o f a l news dispatches in d it e d to rn wa pa per and cred ited eous origin published herein. Rights t h is to in tier herein also re served I D V K R T I S I N G M j{\ ic f s national!* lo bin brid of ad- of p u b lic a tion of all o th e r rn x W I O N l l . I ti*': I ti •* t » r n \ i n * la van ( h e N T V N, ti rep! t » I I U ( V I I O N VI trd O n e !Nenif"»!ej ( f a i l o r s p r i n g ) T wo .Sr m e l t e r * ( f a i l arid • p r i n g i D e l i v e r e d b j t a r r i e r (ti; i ti A u s t i n - irc. i f r o m J U h t o 3 8 t h a n d J e f f e r s o n ll i ? h vt ..• red Ii' mail Within I r a i n ( uunt* D e l i v e r e d ti,* m ail o u ts id e I r a i i i ( o u n t y b u l w i t h i n I . S 13 50 i 75 3.50 $(i 75 9 OO 6,75 The op in ion s e x p r e s se d the editorial colu m n ara th o - e of the editor. At] e d it o r ia ls unless sign ed are w r itte n by the ed itor in Guest ed itorial view s a r e not nee' t a r t l y the e d i t o r s . in The D a l l y T e x a n are n o t Arr op in io n s e x p r e s s e d t h o s e of The University o f T e x a s a d m in is­ t ' e c s s a r i l y tration o r B o a r d o f Rpjrent* PER M A N EN T STAFF EDITOR ................................ J O H N E C O N O M ID Y M A N A G IN G EDITOR .................... BILL CRYER ASST. M A N A G IN G EDITOR . . . . C A R O L Y N N IC H O L S N E W S EDITOR ............................. S U S A N POW ELL EDITO RIAL P A G E EDITOR ................. BILL M A L A ISE SPORTS EDITOR .............................. J O H N A N D ER S A M U SE M E N T S EDITOR ............... RENEE F EN D R IC H FEATURE E D IT O R ................... S U Z A N N E SH ELTO N STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Issue News E d ito r........................ M ar;|yn KueMer / W a n t btu. New, E d ito r ...............Lucy Horton Make-Up Editor .................... Mary A lk * Zrubek Copy E d ito r,........... Lucy Horton, Rosia Banavide, Issue Sport, Edito............................... Morri, John An lice officials, Lamberth roper,cd that he was “ plated" at the con­ tinuing enthusiasm rf the office:- Officials at the meeting reported officers from ether cities had e x ­ pressed “ am azem ent" when told of the program here and how successful it had been. After pre­ liminary publicity on the project r e ­ last spring, ceived from other law chook in­ terested in starting such a pr j- ect, according to Ed D bi ski. president of the Association for Crim inal Law' Studies, sponsor of the project. inquiries were Any law student is eligible to participate. The student rides a minim um of two eight hour shifts, then m akes a w ritten rep o rt on his observations before attending the sem inar. No course credit is given, hut the belief of those stu­ B a yl o r Team to S p e a k Alp a Epsilon Delta, prem edi­ com m it­ cal p i-d e n ta l advisory tee. is sponsoring a program by represen tativ es of B aylor M edi­ cal School. Dean Schofield and asso ciates will speak on “ M odem Medical Education of P h y s i c i a n O bsolescence,” at 7 p.m . Mon lay in E x p erim en tal Sc once Building 333. Prevention and Dr. Schofield will also conduct Interview s Monday in th e Special P r >grams Office West M all O f ­ f i c e Building 101a. A the Varsity forerunner of D ebate Squad w as the Athena­ eum, the first debate and o ratori­ cal society of the University. Or­ ganized society's motto w as: “ Tile ability to speak: is the ability to lead.” in 1883, the GARNER A N D SMITH— | KSTORE 2 1 1 6 G u a d a l u p e G R 7-9725 The Random House Dictionary of the English Language it Answering a roil’inc d -?u a n r e rail on Saturday mg! t: pohr<:: an E ast Austin bai to discover a entered the b ar w om an's body on the floor a: I another woman sitting a' a table holding a gun. After disarming the suspect, police ti* the station for questioning, then to jail. took lier Unusual about the case was the fact that a law student was with the policeman who e n te n I the bar, he accompanied the oft i- c o r and suspect to tho station, and was present throughout the questioning, even until the suspect was placed in a jail cell. H ie law' student was viewing police problems firsthand as part of a cooperative arrangement be­ tween the law school and Austin police which began last spring. Tile ex tracurricular program perm its law- students to ride with assigned patrolmen on regular eight-hour shifts on either Friday or Saturday night. Tile students jot down observations on arrests, booking procedures, and other de­ tails of an officer's handling of a case. justice C H IE F OF POLICE R A. Milos noted th at the purpose is to de­ velop “ g re a te r understanding and a m ore sympathetic mutual ap­ proach to our common problem of maintaining order and the a d ­ ministration of in our presen t day society. I can think of no m ore effective m eans of accom plishing this objective than a relationship betw een the attorney and the po­ lice officer through the ap p lica­ tion of existing crim inal statu tes they are to actual problem s as encountered am ong our citizen­ r y .” person-to-person A police coordinator. Capt. th a t I Ja m e s C. F ann, explains “ w e kind of feel we have a blight­ ed view of their side and they have m isconceptions about ours. Anyone who gets In a c a r and together for eight rides around hours gets to know the other fel­ low ’s view s.” Law student Royce Lam b erth , 11 d irecto r of the project, is firm ly convinced th at both sides can gain a g re a t deal from the p ro j­ ect. “ This opening of a line of com m unications between the po­ lice and th e legal profession m ay well be one of the m ost signifi­ ca n t developm ents In crim inal law in m any y ears in this s ta te ,” L am berth m aintains. “ When one read s the latest court decisions concerned with police p ractices, : it is not difficult to see th a t both sides urgently need a b e tte r un­ d erstanding of each o th er.” T H E INVESTIGATION of events as diverse as a sm all bomb thrown into the hom e of a University professor, the a rre st of Special Prepublication Offer $19-95 Less Your Usual Discount ($25.00 after publication, Oct. 24) • 2096 pages • 260,000 entries • Thumb indexed • More than 2,OOO illustrations • Bound in buckram cloth • Spine and cover stamped in gold foil • Several hundred detail maps • An Atlas-Gazetteer with 64 pages of up-to-date color maps • l our Foreign Language Dictionaries — French, Spanish, German, Italian, w ith English equivalents • A \ \ orld History Chronology o f leaders, discoveries, events from 3200 B.C. to m odern times • A Sty Ie Manual to explain punctuation, gram m ar, usage • A guide to Signs and Symbols • Texts of the Declaration o f independence and Constitution I enjoyed it immensely! G re a t! A most useful ald to your studies *p|ie perfect gi f t B U Y n i l s DICTIONARY BEFORE OCTOBER 24th A T A 20% SAVINGS GARNER & SMITH BOOKSTORE 2116 G uadalupe Telephone G R 7-9725 O pen evenings until 8:31) COM E I N A N D BROW SE Police, Students Cooperate Patrolm an Jim m y Brown explains procedure to law student Ed Dobroskl. Ambulance Services Defray Expenses of Tower Tragedy By DAVID DeVOSS Texan Staff Writer As the sun rose slowly In the cloudless August s k y , M orris Hohmann, m anager of Hyltin- M anor F u n eral Home, left for work. two days, occupied His vacation, scheduled to s ta rt In his thoughts th at m orning. Then the phone ran g and U niversity police asked that an am bulance be sent to the Tower. By the tim e an am bulance was available Hohmann had received a second call from city police ad ­ vising him to com e to Twenty- first and Speedway for “ there had been a shooting.” Directed by police along the in­ ter-cam pus drive to G arrison Hall, Hohmann and d river T urner Bratton rushed a gunshot victim (Dr. Robert Boyer) to B racken­ ridge Hospital. they th ere It w as learned, when m ore patients began a rriv ­ ing, th at a sniper w as gunning down people from the Tower. During a to Sheftall's trip Jew elry to rem ove other victim s, a becam e him self Hohmann the casualty. On driving up to sto re ’s Guadalupe Street en­ trance. Hohmann went inside but w as advised to go to the r e a r of the store. As he ran west on Twenty-third Street a bullet tore through the thigh muscles of his right leg and ripped aw ay blood vessels above the knee. Hohmann was only one of m ore than 40 am bulance d rivers and atten d an ts who helped c arry and Premature Children Die in Septuplet Birth BOSTON —iR— A 23-year-old Boston woman gave p rem atu re birth Saturday to seven children. One was born dead and the other six died shortly a fte r delivery. The children w ere born f o u r m onths p re m a tu re to Mrs. Wil­ liam Cwikielnik a t St. M arg ar­ e t's Hospital. A hospital spokes­ m an, S ister Beatrice, s a i d the num ber of children “ if not unique Is extrem ely r a r e .” Sister B eatrice .said there w ere three boys and four girls and they weighed between nine and fifteen ounces each. She s a i d they “ w ere all perfectly formed for the five m onth-period.” Tile Cwikielniks have one child, William three. Cwikielnik, 23, could not be reached for com ­ m ent. Jr.. The co m er stone from the ori­ ginal Main Building still stands on the front steps of the Main Building. The stone was laid on Nov. 16. 1882. ALL ENGINEERS & SCIENCE MAJORS To make the most o f your skills in a rewarding career where you can pursue your own ideas, be sure to see The Dow C h e m i­ cal C o m p a n y representative at the ENGINEERING AND SCIENCE PLACEMENT OFFICE M ond ay or Tuesday, October 3 and 4 Dow has challenging new grad uate openings across the country and future opportunities in our world-wide organization. W e are big, but we operate in small grou ps where you will find identity and enjoyable assignments. W e encourage men to use their own initiative and creativity. Let's investigate your possible future with Dow. THE D O W CHEMICAL C O M P A N Y CORPORATE RECRUITING MIDLAND, MICHIGAN A n Equal O p p ortu n ity Em ployer unload the wounded that day. Of 15 am bulances, m any kept no a ccu rate record of the num ­ ber of calls m ade. “ In the rush the hospital, to get victim s to d riv ers often drove one an o th er's am b u lan ce.” Jam es Schw'onke of the Wilke-Clav Funeral Home said. “ It w as impossible for us to determ ine how m any calls our th ree th at am bulances m ade d a y .” Bud Jennings, supervisor of em ergency activities at B racken­ ridge Hospital said that it was days before all am bulance equip­ m ent was retu rn ed to its proper owners. Am bulance calls cost from <8 to $20. However, no bills w ere sent by any of the funeral homes to victim s or fam ilies affected by the tragedy. People Keep Saying The Nicest Things About Our Program: It was very interesting and a lot o f fun. O n e gets to m eet a lot o f fascinating persons through your program . M y first date and I are more com patible than ayone could have predicted. I never dream ed I would meet a man who has so m any qualities that I want in a husband. I m ust sa y I'm pleased— one fantastic m atch and at least two g o o d friends. Very pleased— the third boy that I met I’ve been d atin g constantly since M arch 31st and we are planning to be m ar­ ried in the near future. Excellent Idea. The questions were important, mature, and meaningful. I think the program was quite beneficial in helping various people becom e acquainted with one another, A ll one needs is an excuse. I tried it just for kicks— I d id n ’t think that it would work. W o u ld you believe— I'm now e n g a ge d to one o f m y ideal dates! I was very pleased. I had more social life than I had tim e for! Som etim es it reminds me o f Brave N e w W o rld , but then I see the girl I rn taking out and I d o n 't give a dam . I am pleased. I ve recom m ended it to m y friends. I am very pleased because I have m et 2 boys that I enjoy being with very much. Sw inging! It was worth $3! Can We Help Thinking That It's THE GREATEST! THE COLLEGIATE DATING GAME M a ilin g Deadline: Wednesday, O d . 5th But Lose Bradley Steers Sweep by Hoosiers B v JOHN W D F R S Texan Sport* Editor Like repentant sinners healed from their infirmities Texas ral lied its dappled forces together and rode the brilliant guidance of a subbing quarterback to de­ molish Indiana's hope* for deli­ verance 35T, here Saturday night. victory proved expensive for Texas. For the price second quarter knee the Longhorns paid may be their s pbomore signal-calling whiz. Bill Bradley. A injury sent SuperBill the sidelines where he will remain for an es Amated four weeks to perhaps the rest of the season. to COACH BARREL! RHYM did not have to look long or hard for Bradley's substitute. Sophomore Andy White took the reins from toe point of the injury and led the Horns to a near perfect se c ­ ond half. White, displaying the poise of a veteran, ignited the precision Texas offensive fire to 3 second half scores. His passing was superb. Rolling toward both sidelines and dropping straight back with sim ilar ease, White speared 'Horn receivers on 6 of 8 passing at­ tempts for 85 yards and one aerial touchdown. TEX AU SCORED with almost monotonous ease in every quarter on drive* of 85, 80, 74, 68. and SO yards. None of the touchdown drives featured spectacular indi­ vidual plays, but provided specta­ tors with an im pressive display of the varied offensive gear which the Steers possess. Defensively, the 'Horns showed sporadic brilliance. Texas line- backing duo of Freddie Edwards and Joel Brame guarded their territory with a jealous antipathy toward all who ventured Into their respective pathways. Texas newest in a long line of safeties. Pat Harkins, defended w isely and stole two enem y pass­ es of the Longhorn’s total of four. After halting Indiana's game- initiating drive with a tim ely fumble recovery by Brame on the Texas 15. the 'Horns carted a two-man show end zone bound. Bradley hit end Tom Higgins for 22 yards on the big play of the drive, but it was Jim Helm s’ bullish, whirl-a-gig maneuvers which took Texas in for the score. The San Benito flash accounted for 35 yards of the scoring dis­ tance. rambling the final 14 yards past Barry Stone’s block into the end zone. HERMS OFFENSIVE totals gave the Longhorn senior 84 yards on IT carries. Chris Gilbert and G reg I>ott also provided timely yardage with identical totals of 38 yards on 7 carries. Each contributed scores. Lott's first touchdown, a 45-yard reocp- ti n. proved the evening's cost­ liest as the play left Bill Bradley en tile ground with a knee injury. A personal foul assessed against Indiana for rapping Bradley later was injured SuperBill w-as helped to the show- ere. refused and the Indiana Frank Stavroff found time in the bali quarterback game to complete 20 of IO passes for an impressive 181 yards. The Hoosier signal-taller found re­ ceivers all over the field, save tho end zone, but his w ork was for naught as a vastly im proved, piecemeal, Texas secondary con­ the Indiana ha on crucial tained downs. By the end of the third quar­ led 21-0 ter, Texas following Lott’s second touchdown recep­ tion. H ie score cam e on a six- yard roll-out toss from the arm of Andy White. IN THE EOI RTH quarter, Tex­ as pulled even farther away with ball-hawking excellence and gut­ ty ground and air maneuvers. Displaying more passing talent than Bradley has shown t h u s far, and similar ball handling ability, White engineered Texas’ fourth in 13 plays w'hich totaled 68 yards. The cap­ per c a m e from H e l m s who cracked right guard for four and the score. Texas’ defensive line touchdown stiffened led by Diron Talbert, who showed definite signs of ful­ filling his All-America prophe­ cies Indiana ran a scant three re­ taliatory plays before defensive end Barney Giles picked off another Savroff pass to set up the ’Horns final tally at the Indiana 30. Texas moved quickly to the 15 where Chria Gilbert contribut­ ed the last scoring swipe, break­ ing off fine balanced run to paydirt. David Conway came in and added his fifth conversion and Texas, sans SuperBill. had a sur­ prisingly easy 35-0 win. tackle on a left Came at a dante CHUANA TFX AS ............ ----- IS VT ret Down* Net Y ards Ruston* . . . . 87 . . . . 181 Net Y ard* P a s s .n j P a n e l ........... Passes Trite rctpW d St> Punts A verage Punt b es Lost P e n a t e s ...................... . » of Si . . I ........... S for 35 0 4 for 40 3 ........ I tor 25 2 tor 20 S3 22* 15* IO of IS 4 Steer Speedsters, Defense Praised by Surprised Hoosiers By RICHARD HILL Assistant Sports Editor For a team which hasn’t been on the winning side of football games very often, the Indiana players acted as if they had just lost a number one national ranking Saturday night after being trounced by the Longhorns 35-0. The Hoosiers, who had moved back on the winning track last week with a 26-14 win over Northwestern, weren’t expecting to be treated so rudely by their hosts. “Things still didn’t look too bad for us even when they had us down 14-0,” In­ diana’s head coach John Port said- “We were becoming more and more conscious of their speed as the game progressed. I was worried a little about it before the game, but it was out there in full force— speed left and speed right.” “It’s going to take speed to keep up with Texas,” Font observed. “Defensively, I ’d rate them just like their offense—they are quick.” When asked what he thought of Bill Bradley, Pont replied, “In looking over the game films of the LSC and Texas Tech games, we found that Bradley had im­ proved 1 5 0 per cent in the Tech game. He has that super ossification, and tonight he earned his spurs.” Another Hoosier who had high praise for Bradley was quarterback Frank Stav­ roff. ‘I think he did a real fine job tonight I no longer have any doubts about his ‘super’ rating,” Stavroff said. to compare When asked last year's Longhorns to this year’s. Pont said it was a completely different type of team and of­ fense they had to face this year and it (Continued on page 5.) Picked Up Your '66 Cactus lf You Have ... A Linus Lurch Up the M id d le John Elliott's block springs fullback Linus Baer for key yard age . —Photo by VlrgU Johnson Ellington New Leader for Frosh A s Yearlings Begin 1966 Season A longtime Longhorn assistant moves to a new post this season and the situation he finds there m ust be a delight. Bill Ellington, long the back­ field coach of the varsity Long­ horns, moves up to the position of head freshman mentor, where he will direct the Frosh fortunes in p l a c e of the retired Bob Schulze. WITH THE first game of the season less than a week away, Ellington admits that “the time is working against us. element We started classes late — on Sept. 19 — and couldn't work out before then.’’ Ellington also added that “as a result, w e’re not in as good shape physically as we ought to be.” such standouts as Glen Halsell of Odessa Permian, Ronnie Swint of Muleshoe, Bobby Wuensch of Houston Jones, and Tommy Roh- rer of Austin MeCallum. Most of the offensive players are also being trained to go both ways in Ellington’s efforts to pre­ pare the youngsters for C o a c h Darrell Royal’s varsity. Others whose names should glow bright­ ly when the defensive plaudits are handed out should be Ron Der- rington of Abilene High, Warren Gremmel of SA McArthur, and George Cobb of Amarillo, THE FRESHMEN will soon get a chance to put their wares on display when the Baylor C u b s invade Memorial Stadium for a game next Thursday at 7 :30 p.m. Remainder of the schedule is the Rice Owlets at Houston, the SMU Colts at Dallas, the TCG Wops at Austin, and the Texas A&M Fish at College Station. All but the last two will be 7:30 p m . contests. With a roster that reads like a “Who’s Who” of high school football and a tremendous back­ log of football knowledge, Elling­ ton’s prospects are obviously very bright as far as 1966 is con­ cerned. There is no Bill Bradley, of course, but there should be enough of some other people to furnish Ellington with a f i n e campaign in his debut as head man of the Yearlings. Brittenum, Jones Put Hogs by TCH FORT WORTH —(.Pi— H a r r y Jones shredded Texas C hristian's defense for three touchdowns Sat­ urday night as A rkansas opened defense of Its Southwest Confer­ ence football cham pionship by crashing the Frogs 21-0. T he seven th -ranked Razorback.*?, for an unprecedented shooting third stra ig h t exclusive crown, rolled on unbeaten with t h e i r eighth stra ig h t trium ph over the bewildered Christians. QUARTERB W K Jan B ritte- num collaborated with Jones far ae ria l touchdowns of 48 and 72 yards and guided the Hogs into position for a five-yard scoring dash by the fleet wingback, stifle Tile swift R a z o rb a c k f o u r tim es called upon th e ir defense scoring serious TCC to th ru sts and, on each occasion, the P orkers responded m agnifi­ cently. Twice, A rkansas repelled TOU on downs, once a t the Razorback three, and used a pass intercep­ tion and a fum ble to silence two other Texas C hristian uprisings. A NEAR-RECORD crowd of 44,415 witnessed the contest on a crisp, clear autumn night Arkansas drove 82 yards for Its first touchdown with Britten- the num clicking aff most of then territory through sending Jones around end for the final five steps. the air, The senior field general hit on four of four passes, the longest a 15-yarder, contribute 52 to yards to the scoring march. Jones sped across the goal moments before the first quarter ended. THE R A ZO RBA CK swept 59 yards In four plays to reg ister their second touchdown, scoring on a 48-yard pass th at c a u g h t the hapless Frogs flatfooted. B rittenum spotted Jones d an­ cing along alone a t the TCH 25 and fired a bullet pass straig h t down the m iddle of the f i e l d . J o n ^ retrieved th*3 hall with one hand a n i scooted unchallenged across the goal. The third and final A rkansas touchdown chilled the Frogs late In the fourth period. Backed up to their awn 18. the R azorback? called upon B rittenum to p u l l them out of the hole. He un­ leashed a perfect pass to Jones on Jones streaked tea rem ain in g distance to cross the goal standing up. the A rkansas 43. BOB WHITE added his third conversion the scoring, to end although A rkansas, with a pass interception, was within a yard of th a TCI' goal when the gun sounded Nevertheless, the new head r m ay have a squad that is ca hie of overcoming all these backs. Despite injuries that h former All-State b sidelined Pat Sheehan, is enoi depth and latent talent on ELU ton’s new squad to overcome J shortcomings that might pres them selves. there R egardless of the talent t h the the Sheehan obviously adds to Yearling backfield, fora San Antonio Lee star may : be missed once freshrr start playing for keeps. The p sence of backs like Ted Roy Bellville. K^nny Ehrig of G zales, Robbie Patman of Tex kana, and Dickie Johnston C lous, N.M., should suffice fill any gap that the absence Sheehan might create. in t THE GODING force Yearlings “I ” offensive will either Joe Nonvood of Texarka or Jam es Street of Longue who even now are waging a bi tie for the quarterback positic Texas reaped a bountiful hi vest in the offensive line, signii Home-Made Mine Shocks Stadium AMES. Iowa —43V— A horn made mine exploded Saturday < line of Clyde W the 46-yard lianas Field about three h o u r before kickoff time for the N braska-Iowa State football gam Nobody was injured when ti bomb was sot off by the pre sure of a sod rolling mach!/ opera "od by a n low a S t a t m aintenance man. Iowa State Athletic Direct* Gordon Chalmers said if a pla; or had stepped on the barie mine, he might have been toilet B f lur* to fill out fh« question- flair®, like th® on® pictured here, that was Inserted Into your C A C T U S and drop it In C a m p u s M ail. Y o u ’ll be helping us to know better what you HV® and dislike about the 1966 C A C T U S . W e ’ll try even harder to please you in 1967. Glen Striped Oxford C a n t s p r e a d s s t r i p e s w id e r a p ar t and frames them with a second color. Effect; a h a n d s o m e , s u b t le e x p r e s s i o n in s t r ip e d b u tto n -d o w n s . In g o ld s t r i p e s with blue framing; green or blue stripes with p u m p ­ kin framing; all on wheat ground. Tapered H u g g e r body. Superi or cotton oxford. 7 c Be sure to drop your completed form in CAMPUS MAIL right away. THE 1966 CACTUS IS STILL AVAILABLE IN JOURNALISM BUILDING 107 © E A S T E R N U order to meet the grow ing dem and for it* services, Eastern has an Immediate opening in Its high caliber Labor Relations D ep artm en t in M iam i, Florida. A p p lic an t* must hold a law d e­ gree and be between the ages of 26 - 34 and must be willing to travel. Starting salary range is from $ 10,320 - $ 12,800 per year. lf interested, phone: M R . J. M . L E P P A R D Area C o d e 305-634-3571— Ext. 7726 O r W rite : Eastern A ir Lines, Inc. Em ploym ent O ffic e M iam i, Florida Hag* 4 Sunday, October 2, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Longhorn Emotions Mixed After Stomping Hoosiers B j L A R R Y I P S H A W A vs is t a u t S p o rts E d ito r D arrell Royal m ig h t ju st a s well scrap h is p ersonal a d a g e w hich h a n g s big as life fro m th e locker room wall — “T he will to w in is w o rthless, w ith o u t the will to p re ­ pare. ” His L o n g h o rn s a r e ru n n in g o u t of people to p re p a re . A lre a d y h a m p e re d b y an list lo n g e r th a n th e playing ro ster, th e ’H o rn s w e r e full of the joy of v icto ry S a tu rd a y , but obsessed with d e te rm in a tio n to face the n ex t few enem ies sans Bill Bradley. in ju r y “ T h e t r a i n e r said fo u r w eek s to th e seaso n ,” n oted R oyal on the f u tu r e s ta tu s of tile fallen SuperBill. “ B ut he c a n ’t be positive at th is tim e.” looks like it “W e Will get a closer look a t his in ju red k nee n e x t T u e s d a y ,” explained offensive backfield coach F r e d d y Akers, “a f t e r the swelling goes down. B u t we a re p r e t t y s u r e t h a t it isn’t a lig a m e n t.” “ I t ’s tim e for u s to h a v e some good sighed Royal. “ W e a re r u n n in g out luck, of th e bad k in d .” B ut on th e o t h e r hand, th e S te e r h ead m a n ex p re sse d g rea t satisfactio n w ith th e job ju st com pleted b y his y o u th fu l c h a rg e s a g ain st th e h e fty H oosiers. “ W e w ere m uch sm a lle r t h a n I n d ia n a ,” c o m m e n te d Royal, “ but v e ry sc ra p p y . We got the big b r e a k a t th e first (Joel B r a n l e s fum ble recovery' a t the T e x a s 15 which nixed a n I n d ia n a sco re), a n d went on in to s c o re .” “T h a t line (T e x a s offensive) w as giv­ ing us th e g r e a te s t blocking y o u ’ve e v er se e n ,” said Helms “ W ith holes like t h a t an y b o d y could have g o tte n y a r d a g e .” H elm s also p raised th e a e ria l half of th e L o n g h o rn offensive ensem ble, ju n io r w ingback G reg Lott. “ Ju st give h im a step and h e ’ll beat y o u .” T h e In d ia n a secondary' m u st h a v e e n ­ te rta in e d sim ilar th o u g h ts a f t e r L o t t c a u g h t scoring passes of 45 and 6 y a rd s. B efore th e first score, T e x a s w as sen d in g th e end on a hoo k p a tte rn a n d Ix>tt w a s h a u lin g it long. “T h e defensive b a c k w as com in g u p on th e hook m a n ,” explained L ott, “ a n d I told Bill (B rad ley ) t h a t I could get open. T h e y w e r e n ’t quite a s good as T ech a n d USG, but w e fooled th em p r e t t y good.” . . . . Hoosiers Praise Horns (C on tin u ed fro m page I) The H oo siers h ad n o th in g h u t p ra is e w as m ore difficult to contain. in Stavroff. w ho played la..-1 y e a r s game, said he th o u g h t t h a t , a lth o u g h Texan played a good game, ‘he Louviers h a d let down d u rin g th e gam e, “ I didn t th in k th e y would IX' a s to u g h a s the> w e re ,” S ta v ro f f explained. “ We w e re n 't clicking, but I can t ta k e a n y th in g a w a y from th e ir defense. T h e ir defensive line did a real good job. W hen asked w h o g av e bim the mo-t. trouble, S t i v r o f f didn't h e s ita te to a n s w e r th a t n u m b e r 61 (lin e b ac k e r Joel IJrarr.'ri and 37 (lin e b ac k e r F re d E d w a rd s ) p e stered him the most. I n d ia n a ’s big offensive c e n ter, Bob Van- Felt, d id n ’t give th e L o n g h o rn defense av m uch praise: “ We ran p r e t t y well ag ain st th e y d id n ’t h a v e a good pass th e m a n d ru sh , but we just c o u ld n ’t score.” fo r the L o n g h o rn offense N a t e C u n n in g h a m , w h o h a d th e diffi­ cult job of try in g to con tain S te e r p ass r reiv ers, said, “T h e y ’re a g r e a t b u n ch of gie.s. T h e ir p assin g g a m e m ad e tho ho , open up. W e tried to c o n tain th em , but t h e y kept going outside a n d wero h a rd to stop.” ho th o u g h t a b o u t A n d y W hite, said With a wide grin, “ B r o th e r , I d id n ’t notice a n y oft T'Tico t 'I u t en him a n d B ra d le y /* C u n n in g h a m , w h en asked w h a t With thorn b y two d e fe a ts pinned on the L o nghorns, it would seem t h a t In d ia n a w o u ld n ’t w a n t a n y th in g m o re to do w ith th e s te e r s . Coach F o n t indicated, h o w ev er, t h a t he would to play T e x a s a g ain som eday. "I th in k it'- a good series, a v e r y good se rirs. I think it is good c o m p etitio n tw o good c o n f e r ­ betw een e n c e s .” two te a m s of like Eckert N a m e s A r b i t e r s To O f f i c i a t e in Se ri es NEW YORK —(.1*1— Bill Jack- owski, Chris Pelekouda.s, and Mel Steiner of the National League and Nester Chylak, John Rice, and Cal Drummond of the Amen can will comprise the umpiring staff for the 1966 World Series It was announced Saturday by Baseball Commissioner William D. Eckert. VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT! Austin's L argest & Finest Sunday Night Special Super Sub . . A n d y W h it e s poise in re p la c in g Bill B radley w as instrum ental. P h o to by V irgil Jo h n so n Plemons H ardw are & G ifts (W est on 24th) 240 6 Ex p ositio n G R 2-3916 C o m p le te Line of H a rd w a re Kitchen & G ift Item s Sorority & Fraternity Accounts W e lc o m e d Complete Dinner for $1.75 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak Ju st present your Blanket Tax or R e g istratio n receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional H ighw ay O N L Y 2 B L O C K S F R O M M E M O R IA L S T A D IU M Quo Vadis? Fall Semester LUTHERAN INQUIRY COURSE A Discussion of the Major Teachings of the Lutheran Church . . . non-Lutherans interested in Lutheranism . . . pre-marriage instruction for mixed . . . Lutherans seeking an adult grasp of marriage religious truth Thursday, 9:00 p.m. Beginning October 6 Lutheran Student Center (A L C -L C A ) 2200 San Antonio St. Ten weeks Lecture & Discussion You know it. After graduation you’ll have many paths to follow. And the path you take could affect the rest of your entire life. Right now you’re probably looking for all the information about these paths that you can find. So heres some about IBM—and you. The basic fact is simply this: Whatever your area of study, whatever your immediate com- Hutments after graduation, chances are there’s a career for you with IBM. * J That’s it. Whether you’re interested in Com­ puter Applications, Programming, Finance and Administration, Research and Develop­ ment, Manufacturing or Marketing, there could be a career for you with IBM. Another important point to consider: IBM is T H E leader in T H E major growth industry: information handling and control. The indus­ try itself may not mean much to you, just yet. But let us tell you about it. Whatever your immediate commitments, whatever your area of study, sign up now for an on-campus interview with IB M , October 13-14 If for some reason, yon aren’t able to arrange an interview, drop na a line. Write to: Manager of College Recruiting IBA! Corporation, Room 810, 1447 Peachtree Street, NIL, Atlanta, Georgia 30309. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Sunday, October 2, 1966 THE DAILY Soccermen Top Trinity by 4-2 It m ay not have been celebrat­ ed with dancing in the streets and illumination of the Tower, but Saturday afternoon in San soccer the Longhorn Antonio team won its second game of the young season, defeating Trinity of San Antonio, four goals to two. With Its players coming from nine different nations, the team is nevertheless united under one the common banner, Steers’ the representative game of soccer. The team show­ ed this Saturday when it came from behind the Tigers. that of in to win from TUE LONGHORNS drew first blood when Julio del Rio of Peru banged home the initial goal of the gam e after 35 minutes had elapsed in the first half. It took the longhorns some time to get started on the narrow, bumpy, playing surface. The next two tricks were Trini­ ty's; the Tigers from the Alamo City tied the game with a goal late in the first half and went ahead midw’ay through the se c -1 ond period on another invasion of the Texas net. in Thus It was that the Longhorns found themselves In the position of playing catchup. But just like other Texas teams, they got bet­ ter as the going got rougher. Del Rio put the tying score 80 minutes into the second half and with captain Alfred Eider and friend leading the wray, the pack really began to put on the heat. TEXAS finally went ahead on a score late in die second half that w'as contributed by Clarence Swanson, and five minutes from the end Eugenio Barron pounced on a loose ball and popped in the last score of the gam e to put the verdict at 4-2, Texas. A th letics Rehire D a rk ; P le a se d W ith ’6 6 Finish expressed KANSAS CITY —(JR— Charles O. Finley, owner of the Kansas City Athletics, his gratification Saturday over his team clinching seventh p l a c e in the American League race and announced he was giving mana- i su b stan tial! ger A vin Dark a j raise. Tile A’s clinched seventh p la c e ! with an 8-5 victory over the Ti­ gers a t Detroit Friday. New Location G O O D Y E A R SH O E SH O P 2712 Guadalupe Ample Parking for Customers! Drive-through W indow Service S O O N ! Service Organization Invites President Plans Troop Reduction Coeds to Become Members In e z to R e o c h F l o n d o M IA M I, F la . —■ IP — K ille r Hurricane Inez, crippled but still dangerous after two excursions into Cuba, staggered toward a course that would bring sustained gale winds to the heavily populat­ ed coast of southeastern Florida Sunday. “ We expect Inez to pass near Bim ini — 30 miles east of M i­ ami — sometime tomorrow aft­ ernoon,” said Paul Moore, fore­ caster at tile National Hurricane Center. M O O RE SAID the storm proba­ bly would regain some intensity during the night and would rake Florida's southeastern coast with sustained winds up to 45 miles an hour. As Inez began her second journey into Cuba on Saturday night, the toll of death and do- s true lion continued to zoom up­ ward in the battered Caribbean Island* of H aiti, Dominica, and Guadeloupe. Hundreds were Thousands were homeless. feared dead. injured and Nationals Demand Sukarno Face Trial JA K A R T A , Indonesia - IB - Palace security officials s a i d More than 10.000 Indonesian they would submit it to Sukarno. youths, yelling “ Go to h ell!” con­ Huge portraits of six Indonesian verged Saturday on President generals slain last Oct. I were Sukarno's palace and demanded propped up facing the palace. that he be brought to trial on Students have accused Sukarno charges of leading the Commu­ of having been responsible for nist coup attempt which erupted their deaths. Just a year ago and was crushed. Tile demonstration c a m e on The demonstrators surged tile first day of the trial of for­ against a double line of I.OOO mer Foreign M inister Subandrio troops holding them back but on charges of masterminding t- e they did not enter the palace grounds. Sukarno was not inside. He already had flown to his moun­ tain palace at Bogor for the weekend, as he usually does. Cosmas Batubara, chairman of the Student Action Front, sub­ mitted a petition to m ilitary se­ curity officials demanding t h a t Sukarno account for his t i m e for Hie during the coup and Indonesia. chaotic economy of plot and diverting $1 million of government funds for his personal use. Tile course of Subandrio’s trial before a m ilitary tribunal is ex­ pected to affect any Sukarno chances for a political future. In his nine years as Indonesia’s foreign m inister, Subandrio was Sukarno’s righthand man, and he aligned the country’s foreign policy with that of Rod O lina. H I R R IC A V E- FO R T E w i n d s were expected Sunday at Bim ini and Grand Baham a island. Gale the warnings were up Florida Keys to Stuart, in the south-central section of the state, and throughout the Bahamas. from Moore said Inez was exported to leave Cuba’s northern coast about midnight, after two days on the island. "Then we expect surrounding wind currents to push the storm to the northeast on a course that would take it east of the Florida coast,” he said. AT LA ST R E P O R T the storm was centered over Cuba about 150 miles east of Havana and 210 miles south of M iam i. She was moving northward at about seven miles an hour. Inez, once claim ing awesome winds up to 175 miles an hour around the wall of her eye, dropped to 75 or just hare hurri­ cane force as she stood astride the south Cuba coast between Trinidad and Cape Cruz. Fears that H aiti had suffered a human disaster were height­ ened Saturday. L t. Bartley C o zenu of the Haitian arm y said he believed that 500 were dead. More than IOO others perished on the French island of Guada­ lu p e and in the Dominican R e­ public where Inez struck at the height of her fury. Cuba so far has reported only one victim . Besides the dead, great crop and property damage lay behind in the storm’s path and hundreds of injured were in hospitals. A N avy ship standing off Cuba with a radar fix on Inez reported that her eye wall, half o v e r land and half over the sea, was growing steadily weaker. W ASHINGTON - LB - Presi­ dent Johnson now appears to be moving decisively toward some reduction of US m ilitary force* in Europe, probably beginning next year. A study of Allied defense strate­ gy, to be made by the United States, Germany, and Britain, is expected to provide a new basis for troop-strength decisions. Informed US officials already believe, however, that one result, due especially to the recent French withdrawal of troops from the North Atlantic Treaty Organi­ zation, w ill be a finding for great­ er reliance on nuclear weapons in the defense of Europe and therefore a decline in manpower needs. Johnson is under heavy and in­ from senators sistent pressure worried about the drains of war in Viet Nam to make substantial cuts in troop strength in Europe. Tile United States now has an assigned level of 225,000 men in Germ any, a force equivalent to six divisions. The actual level at the moment is about 218,000, up Tile Student Court is composed of a chief justice elected in the spring and four associate justices appointed by the president of the Students’ Association. Tile court meets weekly to hear all cases arising under the student consti­ tution, cases involving traffic vio­ lations, and cases concerning election disputes. from a recent minimum of 210.- 000 resulting from withdrawal of specialists because of Vietnamese war demands. Mansfield Asks Force Reduction IB — B el­ W ASH IN GTO N — gium's d e c i s i o n to reduce its m ilitary obligations to NATO accents a need for a reassess­ ment of US-European defense commitments, Sen. Mike Mans­ field. D-Mont., said Saturday. Although he faces stiff admin­ istration opposition to the move, Mansfield, the Democratic lead­ er, said he w ill call up before midmonth a resolution w h i c h would put the Senate on record as favoring a “ substantial reduc­ tion” in US European g r o u n d forces. But he conceded that if critics can rally the votes to force com­ mittee hearings on the proposal, tile Senate itself is not likely to come to grips with the issue un­ til next year. Senate Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois said in a separate interview that he, for one, w ill insist upon such hearings. Republican He agreed with Mansfield, how­ ever, that the action of the Bel­ gian Cabinet in voting recently to request a cut in that nation’s yet unfulfilled commitment of ground forces to NATO Is likely to strengthen tile hand of those who advocate US troop with­ drawals. B y SU ZA N N E SH ELTO N Texan FVature Editor Newcomers to the University may be perplexed by the scores of students clad in service or­ ganization uniforms darting here and there on designated d a y s . Orange jackets, black shrouds, cow'boy hats . . . sometimes it seems as if everyone is in uni­ form. Now all University coeds are being given the opportunity to don their own uniforms as Gam­ ma Delta Epsilon, women’s serv­ its ice organization, enlarges membership. Open houses at 3 p.m. Sunday and Oct. 9 in Union Building 325 and Oct. 6 from 7 to 9 p.m. in Union Building 202 will be held by the group. During these in­ formal meetings, coeds w ill he permitted to register for mem­ bership in G D E. O R G A N IZED IN 1963 at the University of California at Ber­ keley, G D E came to The Univer­ sity of Texas campus in 1965. The group has sponsored projects ranging from participation in Op­ eration Head Start to reading to University blind students. Moffo Centers on M in d D ie motto of the University is: “ Cultivated mind is the guardian genius of democracy, while guid­ ed and controlled by virtue, the noblest attribute of man. It is the only dictator that freemen ac­ knowledge, and the only security which freemen desire.” It was selected from a speech made by President Mirabeau B. Lam ar in 1838. THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S (15-word m inimum ) .................. Each W ord 4« Minimum Charnu ............................................ S I CO $ • Student rate (10-word maximum) one time .50 • Each additional time .................................... .25 Classified Display J column x one Inch one time ......................... $ I no Each Additional T im * ............................................. go 20 Consecutive Is*ue* 8 word..................................................................... 6 no 15 word* ............................................................. 8 '<0 ............................................................ l l OO SC words (No copy chan** for consecutive Issue rates ) GR 1-5244 • N E W , L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S IO w o r d s o r lens f o r 50c t h o f i r s t t i m e , 25c e a c h a d d i t i o n a l t i m e . S t u d e n t m o a t a b o w A u d it o r s * r e c e i p t a n d p a y p .m . M o n d a y t h r o u g h F r i d a y . In a d v a n c e I n J o u r n a l i s m B l d * . IOT f r o m 8 a . m . t o 4 :3 0 C L A S S IF IE D A D V ER T ISIN G D E A D L IN E S T u e s d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y T e x a n F r i d a y T e x a n S u n d a y T e x a n .................................. M o n d a y . 3 :3 0 d rn. ......................... T u e s d a y , 3 :3 0 p m . ....................... W e d n e s d a y , 3 :3 0 p m . .................................. T h u r s d a y . 3 :3 0 n m . ...................................... F r i d a y . 3 :3 0 p m . I n t h e e v e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e i n a n a d v e r t i s e m e n t . I m m e d ia t e n o t ic e m u s t b e g iv e n a s t h e p u b l is h e r * a r e r e s p o n s ib le f o r o n l y o n e i n c o r r e c t I n s e r t io n . GR 1-5244 Furnished Apartm ents Furnished Apartments FICK LIKE PETE A T TOWN LAKE VILLAGE A g a l t ruant* B O I Sa L a t e Chore Blvd BRIDGEWAY DORMITORY 3618 W K * ! ta Bing ies - Doubles E a t * * F r a c a s picked aa a partm ent et Town H block north of U n iv e r s ity t a t e VUU#*. Why Aob I roe pie* an apart- A / C - P o r t e r se rv ice d a lly P r iv a t e bath each room Ste Peter Patten picked’ Pick ap the O R 8-1947 G R 7-0427 B E A T R I Z I I brand-new luxurious I bedroom gaspool-w ater-cable 102 W est 38th O L 3-8114 G L 2 9444 rooms. B R A N D N E W fu rn lte e d ap artm en t. 2 bed­ Air-condi­ room living tioned. sw im m in g pooL H IO m onthly. W A 6-4531 kitchen, A L T E R A T IO N S - L A D I E S , M en. M ilita ry . G L 2-U96. 5308 W oodrow A ve. For Sale Alterations I N E E D tutoring trig onom etry. G R 7-1442. two even'ng s w eek ly W an ted Tutoring Help W an te d Typing H O N D A S P O R T 160 l a t e model, low m ile age. good shape. W ill p a y cash. G L 3-8990 I S P A N I S H B Y experienced tea her. M A P O R T R A I T prin te r and film processer, full J R E P O R T S . T H E S E S . D issertations. G R o r part tim e ChrlsUanson-Lcberrr.an Btu- j 4715. M rs. B r a d y . 2507 B r id le Path. a fte r 5. Vsrg.m a B u tle r. G R 8-5178. d ia 1306 Colorado Room and Board J B E S T F O O D in town. D e licio u s m e a ls G e n ­ erous portions — m eat. vegetables. 343 OO 2401 R io G ra n d e — G R 2-7479. ! H O W E L L STUDENT H O U SE ~ FOR MEN I I single end 2 double acco m odatio ns a v a il able. D a lly m aid service, lent tra l beat and a ir. quiet. TV', la u n d ry fa c ilitie s , vending m ach in es linens furnished, ex cel­ In sp e ctio n of p re m ises invited G R 2-4466 Mrs. B e r r o ld -GR 7-0525 is in N E E D F O U R girls to form com bo: one lead g u ita r, one rh yth m g u itar, one dru m m er, ; one a nger-comedlan. Age* between 18 and 25 C a ll H I 4 2302. G L 3-9530 " W E H A V E M O V E D ” C A M P U S P R I N T I N G S E R V I C E 3204 G u ad alu p e G L 3-2582 NOTICE E E S E N I O R S T U D E N T S T yp in g — M u ltllith in g — Bin d in g of theses typing dissertations, for and printing needs No e x tra ch arg e one day d e liv e ry service. reports, and a il other se rv ice , pick-up end E le c tro n ic s teach er wanted. P a r t tim e or fu ll tim e. M orn.nsa, afternoon*, n.ghta. E E degree and p ra c tic a l ex perien ce preferred. A L D R I D G E T Y P I N G S E R V I C B M ig h t consider senior with E E m ajo r Good sa la ry . Im m e d ia te opening. Ph o n e O R 8-5194. 304 *4 E a s t 30th Stre e t G R 7-169* G R 8-9361 B U S B O Y w anted. A p p ly In person. 3804 R io G rande. ___________ old w orid M A L E S T U D E N T S to w ork In kitchen and engineering, m athem atics T e ch n ica l papers a specialty. O v e r 200 extra sym bols on our I B M E x e c u tiv e s fo r science. language and d ining room fo r m eaia. 2510 R io O ra n d e Drafting, m u ] ti ll thin*, binding, end xeroxing SAN ANTO N IO EXPRESS I Spe cia l O ffe r 4 M onths for 34 OO Sa v e 33 60 C a ll A N 3 2135 or G L 2-8655 legal, m an uscripts S ribbon 1964 V A L L I A N T V-200, 2-door sedan. 4-speed a n t i a r . M ax . 32 50 hr. G R 8-1736 a fte r 6. I _ ' ’" b o n ^ rib b o n Sansom Z716 Addison. G L 2-8279. F E M A L E A R T IF r- m o d e l wanted. P r e f e r a.im | T H E M I S , Carbon P a u la P a u la S e rvic e stencils IB M Typing ROYAL ARMS 13 iO N o r w a lk L a n e G R 7-2536 food, panelled, carpeted, m o d e m , cen- Y A M A D A P IA N O S : 73 v e a rs of re frig era to r, cratsm an sh ip . m usicians, er. 631 W est 34th, G L 2-7562. educator* T ed In te rn a tio n a lly a c c la im e d by L a B a u v a . deal- ^ 8-7650. Ute Pete did and ob” R I 4 3917 and vp aa appet,-truant to come h r and pick oat yo u r apartm ent. O b IU herald# D r iv e — H mr,a E a s t of E x p r e s r e a y across the la te from F ie s ta G a r dana B L O C K C J H V E R S m r A / C , b rick e fficie n ­ P r \ a is kitchen- bath N ice 2 bedroom A / C , duplex G L 4-3225. G R $-9444. cy. MOOT' peted pool wood pane led w a ''* , M O D E R N lu x u ry a p a rtm e n t A /C, fu lly c a r ­ la u n d ry room P i m t y of parking space 8109.50 per month. G R 8-4521 or G R 7-9217. F I V E M I N U T E S cam pus One bedroom , l i v ­ ing room k The- bath, spacious closets 369 SO G R 6-0819, G R 2-31*3. Q U A R T E R D E C K . O ne bedroom , a1 ap p li­ etc wood panelled, carpet, ance* a ir, O n ly 3135. G R 6-'.292. L A R G E , ca rp e ted , A /C . a p e " m e n t 3140 B s paid Close to c a m ­ t w o bedroom pus Couple o n ly. O R 8-8010 S P A C IO U S , C L E A N 3 room a p a rtm e n t B i l l couples. F o r m en or G R 2-9077 W a lk in g <5 stance U n v e rs ty. paid O. HENRY SLEPT HERE B u * o b the h is to ric spot w here O. H e r- } lived bi A u stin this spank ng brand new a p a rtm e n t com plex is re a d y to be rented y> its e r s t occu pant*. Fum.— I B.R. Start af $ I I 5 A C and Pleat Pa d by Owner As we!i as water & gas W e In v ite you lo a spect the p re m ises s t 505 E S p e c - o u i T w o B e d r o o m A p i s . O n l y $11 5 ( W t r . P d . ) Modern—Clean-—Quiet—AC Laundry—Bus—Shopping M a n e q e r A c t . E Beautiful Briarcliff Manor 1107 S M * c r e e k — I b o d s C a p i t e A y j ALL BILLS PAID I or 2 Br— $ i 25 to $145 G ass— Private Pe*'o— C a b le TV S p a c io u s — Q , e t — Luxury L iv in g C E N T R A ! A R P LEN TY P A R K IN G — See m a n a g e r t 4 0 l E r : e d ---- ---------------- T W O L A R G E bedroom *, ares, kitchen bath G R 6-0819. G R 2-3163. 359 50, B E L L S paid. 702 Pan Antonio. O R 8-0269. livin g room, dining ISO. spacious closets. — D a rlin g A C efficie n cy T H E SA N A N T O N IA N . p R 7-4 536 j union. Furnished Houses 3100 D U V A L . 2 bedroom , good co nditio *, w in student*. G L E x c e l.em fo r 2-4 furnish. 24516 evenings. S U I T A B L E Rag', tsh D e ; 1 3 or 4 students o r fam- 38*-, P ra tt, c a i D r ) C R 8-8134 a fte r 5 Duplex — Furnished tra n sm xsion. E x c e e d in g ly good condition. I O R 2-2819. G R 1-5658 A IR - C O N D IT IO N E D , tw o bedroom s, carpeted closets, b rick throughout, L o ts of a ll storage 390. H O 5-1523. G L 2-6702 1964 C O R V A T R Monza. 2 door. a uto m atic. | T e r r ific car. G R 2 2819. G R 1-5651 Lost and Found L O S T H e a lth C e n te r J A D E and gold w edding band ladies m om last M onday If found p.hone G R 2-9734 or retu rn to H ealth C en ter de-k R E W A R D in re w a rd F I V E D O L L A R inform atio n or retu rn of m y Sajjiso-’ iie b riefca se m issing from Co m m o ns M on day, Se p te m b e r 26th. No q u e s to r * asked. Contact L a m b e rt R o en ­ tgen G L 2-4566. fo r * ^ * 7 . ON G entian table toy friend, p le a s e 'B a k e r' retu rn to Rub b er in Com m ons 9-22 from G e rm a n ta gift lost and found For delivery cf t h o r .ouston t r a v e l Chronicle call 0 R 7 4485. s p e c i a l s t u d e n t r a t e s F O R delivery of the Fort Worth Star Telegram picas® cal! GR Roommate W anted 7-4485. G R A D U A T E to sh a re beautiful house P r iv a t e bedroom s, ne ar cam p u s 350 month. G R 2-1708 a fte r­ students w anted (g irls ) noons, evenings. 1965 T R 4 R ed w ire w h e e la m in t condi- to n M u s t " se IL S D 95 or' best " o ff e r . GF. F U R N I S H E D B E D R O O M F E M A L E G R A D U A T E student o r s e n o r lo W B 9 8 a ,te r 1 share 2 bedroom a p a rtm en t I blo ck from " D r a g ” 310. Non drinker. G R 2-9910. 961 R A M B L E R co nvertib le. 6-cylinder, — sta n d a rd s h ift 3370. G R 6-416R I G I R L S G A R R E T T H O U S E . 608 W e st 22nd. Room and board. G R 8-1956. * ' 5' T W O pre 1964 m odel 70 W in c h e s te r * c a lib e r j 128-140. G R 6 9490 Earn Free Trip To Europe a a * 7 % J On .............. dealing in European firms )n® of the largest and oldest c a r ; r e p r e s e n t s - 5 r g e s t _____________ , I i a c a m p u s s e e r s . i Typing Muitmthing Binding A complete professional typing service tall l i v e . Nu US I C e s e r i o u s , c , e r p r is i n g , ared to the needs of University students fcre science. p r e f e r a b 1/ m a r r i e d g r a d u a t e s t u - : ’ie>,T>ard * ? u!Em Ti I c I an<* S’1* 1 'M ring these* and dissertations. r d e n t , e u r o p e a n t r a v e l l e d , b e n d re- sum® and reasons for applying. Phone o r 2-3210 a g r 2-7677 2013 Guadalupe „ / b m m .b .a . a m 0 CAR-TOURS IN EUROPE, INC. 555 Fifth Ave. N.Y. 17, (212) PL 1-3550 sertation*. V irg in ia Calhoun T yp in g B e r n e * Professio nal w ork ie an field*, including m u ltllith in g and binding on theses and dis­ ------------------------------------------------ Furnished Rooms 1361 Edgew ood Sym b ols Xerox G R 8-2636 N o ta ry A T T E N T IO N U n iv e r s ity M en — Bing le room * I J S OO. M a id service . 335 OO. D ouble room * kitchen privileg e s. G R 2 9040, G L 2-8212 ~ ~ ~ ~ .reDort?; /n u U iLth m *. H I D elafield. Bobby# 7IT7I7 m im eographing. 2-7184. p riv a te bath. M a le student or N e a r w est cam pus. G R 2-8581. P r i v a t e entrance, in stru cto r 2213 P E A R L , 2100 Nueces. B o y * - 3024 Sp e ed w a y A / C , kitchen, m aid, T V T Y P I N G on ex ecu tive e le c tric by fo rm e r le­ in s e c re ta ria l studies. g al sec re ta ry, B B A M rs. F o w le r, C L 3 8650. R E P O R T S , graphing i n 2-7008. theses dissertations, mimeo- R easonable. M a r jo rie Delafield. Miscellaneous 369 >0 B a llin g A C home Clean, modern Northwest C o u p e onH. 2010 Aiguno. G L 4-2659. WA 6 2564. quiet, Open. ■or Rent Student Starter Plan C r- IC E SPA C E A V A ILA B L E O N D R A G For bu- ne-s office, research, consultation or feet, a ir­ study •ondi'tonee Including nth!- 'd rd: tinned $65 pc- month Seco tie*. V arsity Building, 2330 2 3 0 0 de po.icy for only 3 0 ' Duads up# l l ' 65, Rate changes G ut da .Pe Call University YWCA, G R 2-9246. »ew Student starter P.en Nun v t — You m ay be approx m ate >• 700 sq u are fo o r to 24 a g e t 16 ! Introducing the all I it 'elig ib le for « JIO OC Sec ann 27 J to m a > or fem ale annua > only a t a g e * ti w rite or cab A 29 Sam e rates apply i For further information In su ' t Cr. tin. Texas 3;H One new unfired, other used but condition excellent G L 2-9671. T R A N S P O R T A T I O N CAP. b u ff eng ne 3125. AT 2-1478 after 5. new 1953 Dodge R e ­ clutch, good brakes, P A R T I C U L A R L Y N IC H suits of rooms. M ate student*. 4 block* U n i v e r i t y . G R 8-3512 F O U R B L O C K S west o f c a m p u s Co nscien­ tious m a le student de sire s ro om m ate P r i ­ vate. A C, kitchen p riv ileg e s. G R 8-8113. F A M I L I A R : ch em ic al, thesis, and m an uscripts G L 2-4897 biological term s, T H E M E S . R E P O R T S lawnotes. 25c. N o ta ry M rs. F r a s e r . G R 6-1317. >53 V O L K S W A G E N . air-conditioned. W S W . scat belts, leatherette Top condinon, one T A R R Y T O W N owner 3995. Cai! GR 2-5932. carp e ted bedroom w ith p riv a te hath and | t i en tran ce. $40. 1901 D illm a n . G R 7-5468 1(VM f G e n tle m a n : I tom w ith Alr-condltloned W O O D S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . . oaring s e rv ic e ditto R easonable. H O 5-107& to- m ud Exp e rie n ce d f % th, m im eo g rap h S N I P S S A I L B O A T Winner of m a n y fiberglass regattas. 1850. C a ll G R I y e a rs old. 2-5931 S T E R E O C O M P O N E N T S P y r e P re a m p , two s xty w a tt b a sic a m p lifiers, cost 3300 1140 Jensen speakers 3-way w a ln u t cost $99 50, SKI) each G a r r a r d T y p e A turn table, w a n t 339. E x c e lle n t cond Nor.. GR 6-3840. Typing T A R R Y T O W N sa c rific e 315,000 eq u ity fo r T yp in g . M ulU llthlng , B in d in g 34,975. L o v e ly new W illia m s b u rg Colon a L i * co m p le te professional typing s e rv ice ta ll B a la n c e assum ption No a g e n ts! G L 8-8611. o req to the re e d s of U n iv e r s it y student*. Rpe --------------------- ela l keyb o ard eq uipm ent o f langu ag e s c ie n c e A F A I T H F U L 19 4 Old* w ill let h e r d riv e #n(j en gineering theses and dissertatio n*. . the O’her c a r 38th and L a m a r . G R 7-0733. j B e st o ffe r wins. P h o n e G R 2-3210 A G R 2-7677 3013 G u a d alu p e C O M P E T E N T N E C R E T AP. Y - T Y P l S T with m a n y y e a r* of experience in a ll fields, w ill give conscientious and m et.cu.ous care as to a c ip ^ jc y , c o rre c t form and com posi­ tion tech n ica l papers, reports, theses and a % ertarions. L A W W O R K S T R O ­ IA L IS T - B rie fs , review notes I B M E le c tr o p la te , M ultllithing. X e ro x ­ ing and binding service* on re q u e st sem in a r papers i.w in g law in G R 8-5894 F O U R B L O C K S west of cam p us -dissertat.ons. books. R eason ab le theses, term ra te s G R 8 8113. E x ce lle n t reports, and E N F I E L D <~U>SE IN — F o u r good ren t | E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . A c c u r T H E S E S , d issertatio ns, briefs, reports, m an ate. R ea so n a b le , n e a r A lle n d a le . H O 5-5813. uscripts, I B M M rs. Anthony. C L 4-3079 Members are required to attend O F F IC E R S FO R the University meetings at 3 p.m. each Sunday G D E chapter are Kathy Cam­ and must earn a minimum of 20 service hours each semester. Campus service projects include student work in the deans’ of­ fices and aiding in campus elec­ tions. G D E IS a unique w o m e n ’s service organization in that its membership is open to all Uni­ versity coeds who are not on scholastic or disciplinary proba­ tion. Membership is not by invi­ tation; any coed meeting Univer­ sity requirements may join. eron president; Polly Fowler, membership vice-president; Su­ san Ostrrhaus. service vice-presi­ dent: Gloria Ozarchuk, secretary; treasurer: and Jean Fletcher, Pam reporter-his- torian. Shropshire, Working with these off!col's are M is. Bruce L. Taylor, T e x a s Union administrative assistant; M :~s Ruth Smith of the Student Life office; and Mrs. Christie Sea wright of the Texas U n i o n staff. Lin's Rising Status In Red China Evident TO KYO - (JI - Lin P ia t’s pre-eminence Communist in China’s new power structure stood out more than ever Satur­ day as Peking marked the seven­ teenth anniversary of the Com­ munist takeover. It was the biggest weekend celebration of the year for Red China, and Defense Minis’or Lin, Mao Tse-tung’s “ close comrade in arm s,” was the biggest figure of the festivities, He took the is spotlight from Mao, 72. Lin 59. red walls of SH A RIN G T H I! rostrum on the high Poking’s Heavenly Peace Square with Mao, heir apparent Lin was tile key speaker. in While Mao beamed and re­ mained silent despite Red Guard the past that he requests speak. Lin spoke on his behalf. “ All our achievements and suc­ cesses,'’ Lin declared, “ have been scored under the wise leadership of Chairman Mao and represent the victory of Mao Tse-tung's thought.” MAO R ESPO N D ED the cheers, from the crowd of an es­ timated 214 to 3 million, with a smile and a wave of the hand. to About 500,000 Red Guards cheered, raising high their right hands which held red vinyl-cover­ ed books on “ Quotations From Mao.” “ Our great motherland.” Lin declared “ has never been so prosperous and so full of vigor. Our national defense has never been so strong.” T H E I? Y E A R S that have elap­ sed since the founding of Corn­ in unLst China, Lin continued, “ have been no ordinary years. They were years which have w it­ nessed earthshaking changes in China . . . earthshaking changes in the world as w ell.” Among the participants were I. GOO foreign guests from TO coun­ tries and regions, some of whom were given the privilege to ad­ dress the gatherings. So did rep­ resentatives from workers, stu­ dents, peasants, the arm y, and minority nationalities. A ll sup­ ported Mao’s thought But the accent was on Lin. H E O P EN LY ACCUSED th® Soviet Communist party leader­ ship of “ colluding and actively plotting peace talk swindles” on Viet Nam with th® United States. The purpose, ht said, Is to stamp out the “ raging flames of th® national Vietnamese revolutionary struggles against US aggression.” peoples “ They will not succeed In th® schemes,” Lin said, “ as long as the people of the whole world keep their eyes open.” L in ’s remarks against th® So­ viet Union at Oct. I festivities were the first by Chinese leaders on such an important occasion. Classics Faculty Largest In US Changes in the staff of the Department of Classics has made it the largest in the United States and necessitated a move to new quarters. Professor C. John Herington, a British scholar who joined the last year, w ill replace faculty Professor W illiam Arrowsmith as department chairman. Professor Arrowsmith returns to full-time teaching as he requested. New quarters for the depart­ ment w ill be on the ground floor of Waggoner Hall. The denart- ment had occupied the top floors of the Main Building, hut planned Main Library' expansion forced Classics to move. The W. J . Bat- a tie Lib rary moved with the de­ it w ill be ex­ partment, and panded. The department now has 25 full-time teaching and research professors and has added several new and visiting faculty mem­ bers. New members of the depart­ ment are Assistant Professors G. K arl Galinsky, who received de­ grees from Bowdoin College and Princeton U niversity; Kweku Ar- ku Garbrah, a Ghana citizen; and Kenneth Rose, who studied at Oxford and taught at the Univer­ sity of Rochester. Named instructors were Ed ­ ward V. George, who studied at the University of Wisconsin, and Mme. Catarina Kerenyi, who received her degree from the University of Budapest. Tile visiting lecturer in modem Greek for the fall semester is Gareth Morgan who attended Ox­ ford. He was later head of the Department of Classics and depu­ ty head of the Raynes P a r k Gram m ar School. Dr. Gunther Zuntz, professor of Hellenistic Greek at tile Univer­ sity of Manchester, will be a visiting professor in the spring semester. I CHOTE’S SINCLAIR SERVICE 19th & S a n A n t o n io S t r e e t * W e g iv e S A H G r e e n S ta m p * M e c h a n ic « Duty FROM M EXICO large Collection of regional crafts and decorative accessories BULA SKINNER, IMPORTS 3705 Nueces PIG STAND No. 14 2801 GUAD ALUPE G R 2-4064 GOOD MORNING GOOD AFTERNOON GOOD EVENING GOOD FOOD ANYTIME Pig Stand No. 14 Ca GR I -5244 houses plus g ara g s a p a rtm en t on a d jo in ­ a p a rt­ B R O K E R . E L O U 1 .S E E x c e lle n t B U R N S , Incom e fu ture lo** ing m ent s i r . G R 7-5468. To Place a Texan MUSTANG '66 8randarrt “6”. S m a ll equulty, assum e paym ents. H O 5-7874 ENROLL TODAY! Classified Ad M OSAIC CO M PANY S m a ll co m pany, equipm ent and m a te ria ls. do-it-yourself k ts for m ak ing b e au tifu l w a ll r>!aq..fs from p a s’ei crushed T e x a s m a rb la Main- d e 1 ans G »at r^,*en‘ la; P r i c e a t be .ow ID e r r o r F>'f) ca«n. G R 64897. GRADE-POINT C O N S C IO U S ? G R 2-8717 for T H E S E S D I S S E R T A T IO N S B C R E P O R T S Professional Typing Sfudents-Facul+y Excellent, dissertations, theses, term reports, and books. Multllithing and binding. R ea so n a b le R ate s M r*. Bo do ur G R 8-8113 F o u r B lo ck * W est o f Cam pus C A LL GR 1-5244 FOR A CLASSIFIED AD C A LL G R 1-5244 FOR A CLASSFlED AO ONE HOUR FABRI-CAIRE® T H E BETTER DRY CLEANING ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE In By 9:00 A.M. — Out By 5:00 P.M BURTON'S LAUNDRY & CLEANERS O R 8-4621 615 W . 19th St. It s Always Easy To Park at BURTONS T e n 'll e n jo y co rpo rated th# historical m em ento es in ­ 4928 Burnet Roac into the building, and w# know P ion# C L 2-6474 will be u n pressed with you the e a r ly Am erican M e - a g e r on prem ise!* furnishings. to re c e iv e y o u r the quality of P E R j r B c r TO U R acad em .c gam e Use Btmt- scientific study method Send S3 to: Human System s Anal} sis, Box . .'U Stanford Ca f egy of Study—a re s ­ .a et vat.on o r ea u G R 7-9296. O. HENRY HO USE APTS. SOS E. lith M a n a g e r A p t 132 DON'T LET IT GET BY dead^e for student hea:rh irs .-e-ce t O c to b e r 12th. G R 8 *639. Duplex— Unfurnished S P A ' I C I L a . s e a tor. S t ’ H I 7268. ige 6 Sunday, October 2, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Chairman's Pest Gees to Hayes Dr. Otto Resigns As Education Head Dr. Bascom B. Hasps, a Texas educator for 33 years, replaces Dr. Henry J. Otto th s fall as chairman of Hip Deportment of Education Administration. Hayes’ professional experiences from elem entary school range teaching to his position as Uni­ versity professor. Otto returns to full-time teaching activities after heading the departm ent for seven years. PRIOR IO I J),VT, he had spent seven years with the Texas Edu­ c tio n Agency. While with the TEA, he advanced from a spe­ cialist in school administration to director of the division cf school administration s e n ees, and be­ fore leaving, he was assistant commissioner for administration. Hayes received his bachelor’s degree in history from Trinity University in 1027, He then ac­ cepted a posit! n as principal in an elem entary and school at Burleson. Af’or two years he moved to Everman, where he was a high school prin­ cipal and teacher until 1931. teacher During the next in Edna arid two years, Haves was principal of the high then was school named superintendent of schools there, a post which he held from 1933 until 1950. He resigned to accept the position with the TEA. FOR SIX MONTHS in 1919, he served as control officer in the Minimum Foundation Program Office of the State Auditor. He assisted the new in setting up program in education fur Texas. Dr. Hayes received his m as­ te r ’s degree in educational admin­ istration in 1935 from the Univer­ sity of Missouri and his Doctor of Education from Tile Univer­ sity of Texas in 1954. Texas Association of S c h o o l Boards. Tim book, now in its third in edition, was published first 1955. Dr. Hayes specializes in school law, school finance, and school administration. He ta a member of several professional groups, in­ cluding the Texas State Teach­ e rs’ Association. Band Day Marchers — P h o to b y V irg il J o h n so n The wind w asn’t the only thing blowing Saturday morning when approxim ately 4,000 Texas high school bandsmen marched down in the annual Band D ay C on gre ss Avenue Parade. In mild sunny weather, the student* set the pace for Saturday s numerous activi­ inners of the parade were announced ties. during half-time at the Texas-lndiana gam e. Dorm A d v ise rs Hold Colloquium Tile First Annual Upper class Advisers Colloquium was h e l d Saturday in the Union Building Junior Ballroom. The purpose of the meeting, as stated on the program, was “to orient the upper-class ad­ visers to their duties in the com­ ing year; to emphasize the im­ portant as well as the respon­ sibilities of an adviser; to share among ourselves ideas beneficial to this program.” Speakers at the first pane! dis­ cussion, which was designed to givp the girls an overall picture of upper class advisers, included Miss Dorothy Gebauor, former dean of women; Miss Margaret Peck, dean of women; and Miss Jane Greer, manager of women’s residence halls. “A Theory of Advising” was the topic of the second discus­ sions. Dr. Don Larson, assistant professor of botany, and Dr. Vin­ cent Harren, psychologist III at the Testing and Counseling Cen­ ter, were the speaker!. The third panel, “Through the Year as an Adviser,” was mod­ erated by Hay Harlan. chairman Littlefield Panel members included Mary former adviser Alice Zrubek, from Kirby Hall; Laura Ozmun, adviser at Heflin Manor; Betty Schussler, former adviser from Mayfair House; Drew Matlock, former adviser from Dormitory; Marolyn Wittman, former advi­ ser from Kinsolvtng Dormitory; and Dianne Rush, adviser chair­ man at Scottish Rite Dormitory. The panel discussions w e r e followed by small group discus­ staff discussion sions and a group. Dorms participating included Andrews, Blanton, Carothers. Dexter, Heflin, Resolving, Kirby Hall, Littlefield, Madison, May­ fair, Newman, Scottish Rite, and University Arms. A University recognized organi­ zation sponsoring a social event must file this activity in the Dean of Student Activities Office at least one week ahead of said ac­ tivity. There are to be three chaperons at this activity. They are to be non-students, over 21 years old, and married. GO GO GO GO WIG SALE $100 W IGS $50 EACH Wig Styling 50% O ff CAPITOL BEAUTY COLLEGE OnaAatnpa at 1Mb—OB SMM Bring Th!* Ad With You for y o u n g m o d e r n s . D i a m o n d s u s p e n d e d fr om s wi rl ; m a t c h i n g c o n ­ t o u r e d h a n d , $350. T e x t u r e d set in circle desi gn, m a t c h i n g h a n d , $375. T h e Daisy, p e t a l l e d a n d s t e m m e d w i t h d i a m o n d s , m a t c h i n g b an d , $550. EWELEKS^HANCOCK CtNTCT B U D G E T A C C O U N T S IN V IT E D S C A R B R O U G H S FLEET FOOTED SPECTATOR Eye catcher for Fall— B A N D O by MUSKETEERS. Have yours In rage blue patent or Contessa red patent with suede saddle, b'ack patent with white leather saddle, or all-over Liberty g o l d s u e d e . A pair, I 1.00. SCARBROUGH D O W N T O W N A U S T I N , N O W O P E N M O N D A Y S A N D New Shoe Salon Hangout, Scarbroughs' Street Floor T H U R S D A Y S 'T IL 9 P.M. it' ■ > v*wwv^.v.>w»- ■ ** j ury Criticizes Code r , Eisenberg Tells Reps cr Purpose The Representative Party I vs a useful purpose now and will h avo a useful purpose lf a v constitution for fhn Students’ A sedation is adopted. Stan E -< n- berg, chairm an of the only ; pus political party, told member* Saturday at the Villa Capri the role I IL-pi purpose of R e p re se n t live * P arty and acceptance of p o t'n candidates s< ho ! elections took place at the m a y ­ ing. Discussions on fall the for Actual nominations of Rep P ar­ ty candidates will be made at an Ort. 5 m eeting; cand lares will be selected on Oct. I Much of the discussion at ti e mooting concerned the ?■ ere u of candidates. the Marilyn Friedm an, sorrel.- ry Students* Assoria?: n. of urged the P arty to select car di- dates who are interested in work­ ing for good student government. Eisenberg said that the overall feeling of the Saturday meeting w as “ non-polideal.” Many buildings on campus are constructed of fossiliferous limo- stone which is limestone contain­ ing impressions of ancient the sea animals. The cr-bd its ti day with, a a awl;** at Criminal Pre jury “ many modo rode, bu? tor sections whit uore ‘ armor changed ” Tile four s Im*, I procodurf grand jury sin g led out v e r e : • Tim confession st itv \ 7” r lf that is b m jury reported it puts a biguous” and that tile p “ greater burden on than demanded by tho Supreme Court The recom m end'd jury' that the statute conform rn fed era I practice • The jury a ’.so stated that ’ e code needed to contain a p ro vision that would allow pol! e to stop, intern gale suspects a* the scene of a crime without hav ing s is- poets and to polite headquarters. take them to anre ♦ search, and • The parole law our! ' to be changed. Tile report said the BRANIFF CHRISTMAS YOUTH GROH? FLIGHT TO NEW YORK AND WASHINGTON, DC. R o u n d Trip — $111.00 plus tax * Youth group meant a group of 14 or more passengers under 20 years of age. Leaves D ecember 16th — Returns January 2nd D e ad l ins for Reservations N ov. 1st S p a c e Limited— M a k e Reservations Early Through Your Braniff A p p o in t e d Travel A g e nt. BEVERLEY BRA LEY . . . TO U R S . Forty Acres C lub Lob by . . T R A V E L G R 8-8883 C R C A t e y o u r o w n j e w e l f R O m O U R Knit 3) ( O l l i e IH I A fortunate purchase of unset d i a m o n d s offers you an unusual opportunity to save. C h oo se from a w ide variety of stones — the size a n d cut you prefer — a n d let us m ount it in one of our m odern settings, specially priced for this event. •ONO , r ‘ A. JOE KOEN & SON Jewelers sine. 1 3 8 8 . . . _ . “ II hef t Amt'mites Shop Wit h Conj lienee” 105 E. 6th Conveniently located Just O ff the A v e n u e Your bones denounce boring sportswear— you ’re a real five q*rl with buttons and beaux and a taste for the Buckskin Beauties by Jantien. TH s cleve' collection is cut o f wlde-wale corduroy, takes its name from genuine buckskin belts. W ell. yo u ’ll throng to the thong# I shirt, pilfered from the Ponderosa, hitched to pants Inspired by Ie wild west. For skirt occasions, try this trim one! B A z e a trail to the Buckskin Beauties b y Janfzen! Klondike G o l d 1 0 0 % cotton and machine washable. The Buckskin shirt, $9. The Buckskin pant, $13. The Buckskin skirt, $ I I. T T T COIGNY 2302 Guadalupe Sunday, October 2, 1966 THE DAILY T CAR STEREO 'The Pipe House of Austin’ Will D. Miller 6 Son M a c a rin e . and dally new «pnp«ra IH tb crud * d j i n (nhnrcoa, pipe* A accoawwle* I TS W rd (lib H m m A m tln , T m h Bass Baritone Orville White to Perform With UT Symphony Orchestra Thursday Th* University Symphony Or­ chestra conducted by Henry Swo- BURNET tw.* MIW HI UN F T RD U S T THREE NIGHTS bnda will begin the season's Stu­ dent Organization Concert Series of the Department of Music at 8:15 p.m. Thursday in Hogg Audi­ torium. Highlighting the program will be the presentation of the Frank Martin work Six Monologues from for baritone solo “Jpdmnann" and orchestra. ORV'TTXE W1IITF, bass bari­ tone and Music Department facul- 0 Aff+korftvd Lear Jet Dealer WuiU From Ma'or Label # Custom Tap*! {446 track) 4« f ) HUSTATf D I S T P t H J V N O p m rn m m r i GR d-Z/57 err to* ^ C O M P A N Y 1*11 IO OI an Pl A L L Y O U C A N E A T A T THE BOWEN HOUSE 200i Whit;* SPECIAL RETURN ENGAGEMENT The Academ y Award Winners! BIA CK, omens Q«NER or (SANO PRIZER LIMES FILM FESTIVAL J 1859 V BEST F O R E I G N # F I L M OF THE YE AR EASTMANCOtGR A loper! fill**, lo*. (•loot* M e l i n a M e r c o u r i / A n t h o n y P e r k i n s ’ KST Y a l l o n e - J u l e s P a s s i n g STARTS W ED O CT. 5 V A R S I T Y p lia o d r a a violent iim t of [nottot lore ▼ / % I V s j I I I ONLY ONE KIND OF MAN NEEDS SO MANY -Cia "VIVA MARIA" BH gift* B ard o t • Creme* IT ii mf! to* 9:38 rn T efgiidrolor ion Adult* C hfldree Fro* Ittan. Card* .50 • Open « P U . SUNDAY 8-12 J A Z Z AT THE J A D E R O O M Fred Smith James Polk Dick Goodwin J o h n W h i t e h u r s t tv member, will appear as soloist In the first Austin performance of the work. Tile Six Monologues are based the passion on “Jedermann,’' play pcrforrrK'd annually before tim Cathedral at the Salzburg Festival. The Individual songs, written in medieval style, were composed at the turn of this cen­ tury by Martin, Richard Strauss' libretti writer. to Orville White returns the campus after summer appear­ ances at the annual Bach Festi­ val in Carmel. C a lif , where he sang the role of Armiger in “The Play of H eired,” the sixteenth cnnfury nativity play, and per- f >rmed tim bass solo In the Bach Cantata 11. I \ST SPR TNG White perform­ ed with the University Symphony under Swoboda's direction in the Kodalv, “Te Deum.M As musical director of the Opera Workshop, Swoboda con­ ducted the University Symphony in the Workshop’s production of “ Rigoletto,” for which White was stage director. Swoboda, since the fall of 1964, has directed the University Sym­ phony Orchestra. He previously conducted the Harvard-Radcliffe Symphony Orchestra. In addition, he has ben conductor and music director of Concert Hall and Westminster Recording compan­ ies, and has toured as guest di­ rector of most of the major sym ­ phony orchestras In Europe. THE THURSDAY concert will open with the Ben ore Overture Ko. 3, Op. 72a by Beethoven, fol­ lowed by the Six Monologues, and will conclude with Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5 In E minor, Op. 64. The public is invited to attend this first concert free of charge. 'Charade' Playing In Union Sunday “Charade," starring Audrey Hepburn arid Cary Grant, will be shown Sunday in the Union Audi­ torium at 5, I, and 9 p.m. Admission for the comedy-my*- ferv is 15 cents for students and 35 cents for non-students. W I N N E R O F 6 A C A D E M Y A W A R D S 2nd WEEK METRO-GaDWYN MAYER PRESENTS A CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION / * D A V ID L E A N 'S F IL M 0 OF BORIS PASTERNAKS D O C T O R Z l i i l A G O 11. I juOCArt A ll IIH ail I. Ai IN M i r . M i ,1 I M R e s e r v e d P erfo rm a n ce* Only C ap a c ity of T h e a tre Sold A RO XffSHOW KNO kG F M F V T • PAAT I .err f u ^ r r v n F n WETRO GMDWYN MAYER rrnnm A!.!ANN UmCE-WASSERMAM PRODUCTION P ® lUODWINE i i i iH A K Ib I HUR5.— P A K A taU U m M , I FT. VTTRFJI TODAY M A T L M R TODAY a r n . FYTTNTVfl P F R F ttR M A N C R AT 7:30 V M. S o Seat* R e.e rv e d • All Purcha*er* a G uaranteed b e a t Bo* Office Open* Al Noon For Kwnnllimi Fra* P ark in * or, shah T m H ancock O n THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING C irl Reifier A F.ra 'l a r i * Saint S te r ti 7 f»0 THE L O V E G O D D E S S E S Th* S tory of Act In T7h» Mori## B lart* 9:10 'PREVIEW! ■TONIGHT i r HELD OVER 2nd WEEK "Altogether it ti a stunning picture, a com pelling picture! A frank a n d u n in h ib ited exposition of the on ru sh o f p h y sic a l desire. One a fter another scene expands upon the brash techniques of courtship and the clamorous fulfillment of desire K'bom, ere****, m Tin*. PA R A M O U N T ONLY 7:55 P.M. PARAMOUNT m m t M i S : » • A lif • « il« I 46 1:90 - S neak nocturn OPF.N I 16 r m r h i v * /vc coo - «:*> - r oo . to ^ T E X A S HFXXX'! IC EMD ED FOK ADI CTS AND Af A TY I U T o T " 7, H h T i X B u ll. arni fTirUtiii, FO R OY KRA I, J. RV T TRT A IN H F VT SK E A MOA IE ADMISSIONS adult* m ac. C ards . . . . . . . . fi.sn f i . » S T A G E C O A C H A na M argret A Bin* f'ro*t>y S tart* 1:0* THE C A V E R N Jo i n Aaron A B rian A hem # Start* 9:00 Rand to Begin Radio Program Author, Students To Discuss Article the “Avn Rand KUT-FM, 90. 7mc will be fea- on turing Campus" program at 9:30 p.m. each Sunday. The author of “Tha Fountainhead" and “Atlas Shrug­ ged," Miss Rand advocates an objectivist philosophy. In the first program, Miss Rand discusses her article “Extrem­ ism" with a group of college stu­ dents. The series of 13 half-hour pro­ grams and a series of six one hour long programs was purchas­ ed for KUT-FM by the Organiza­ tion for Students of Objectivism which raised the money last year by means of a series of book and pamphlet sales. Beginning Oct. 9, a room will be reserved in the Student Union where .students without FM radios may hear and discuss the pro­ gram. Mad Killer Patrick O'Neal stars as the deranged assassin in "Cham­ ber of Horrors," now showing at the Paramount Theatre. THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF DRAMA PRESENTS ITS 29th SEASON A n oxcitlng *eason o f gre a t d ra m a and co m a d y from w orld literaturo aw ait* you th:* *e a*on at The U n iv a rsity of Te»a* D e p a rtm e n t o f D ra m a pro du ctio n*. Sea so n ticket* are available o nly th ro u g h O c t o b e r 29th. O rd e r yo u r ticket* now to teet TH E M IR A C L E W O R K E R William r,lh«on> vmiltl** nn<1 errltlnz drama **# Annie Hnlllran'* atnizjle Ie aa tahii.«b contact with the Mind. deaf and mote jnunz'lcr. Helen Keller. D A N C E D R A M A Arf tn movement , . . featuring the two new mater wark*: "T h e Pie*! riper** and "T he Prodigal Son - A aacare and anhfle parody of Italy'* Luigi Pirandello. life, often hailed aa **a modern Hamlet," by E N R IC O IV Season Tickets To CEC Sold Out AU season tickets have been sold for the Cultural Entertain­ ment Committee Series, which Is free to holders of the $18.28 blanket tax who draw tickets to events in advance. A limited number of season tickets are still available in the Box Office of Hogg Auditorium for the Solo Artist Series. DRIVE-IN THEATRE MOI M. LAMAR MO 6-I7IO J* U L L , l » UU) DUH. < A itfS 500 rm i .D R E N F R F K RADIO 59 NITE ■ N . r n BAR O P F N S « lf The Greatest Western Classic Of Them All! no f ? • : , - I " ■ W .*■’->> v «> • I { ' TH E G O V E R N M E N T IN S P E C T O R A TIii<*|an manterplce of faro* my N ikolai Gogol wtilnb take* tm tm* political corimiMon In 19th century Kus*)*. YvCbr-.—2 2 o k \, — Stt-w k a h w rl A N N U A L S H A K E S P E A R E A N P R O D U C T IO N A Martin Radfl Product “• * • unbroken record for providing the etfy wtth a trolr ilral-rata Rbakmpeara *tege. . ,** John Biistln. The Anstbi Amerlcaa. Stagecoach CnandScDje-ColDrbvOeLw -Plus! st 9:30- an •. , 2 a cfMtutf ta* ; DORIS HAY I i rod m um ; I i DO NOT I DISTURB j CiwmiSLsp* Cate bi OL Lt’At S E A S O N T IC K E T S N O W O N S A L E S A V E UP T O $3.50 (""ENCLOSED SELF-ADDRESSED STAM PED ENVELOPE I FINE ARTS BOX OFFICE, Bo* 7547, Phong G R 1-1444 I THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, Austin, Texa. 78712 J S E N D ma the follow ing number of D ram a Sta to n Tlciratw ................ A d u lt at $4.25 Student at $3.30 J University Faculty S ta ff at $4.00 I .................T O T A L N O . O F T IC K E T S E N C L O S E D IS J. I N a m * ................ ..................................... ] I « I j | A d d re ** ................................................... C i t y .................... Z IP . M a k e R em ittance Pa yab le to D ept, o f D ra m a Direct From Its R oadshow Engagem ent M A T H E S S 2 : 3 0 - E V E N IN G S 8 3 0 • N O SEATS R E S E R V E D • Every Ticket Holdar Quarantaad A S ta t ' I I The motion picture with the FEAR FLASHER and the HORROR HORN. Wan 5, rn im • rn rn • sass s m m ^ xxx I FR E E P A R K IN G ‘S V iiL S ’.S" X 5 rn — »» M ***** ^ >>* - • > *. Amt*** TICHMIOOLCW* FROM WMHF1 BRO! Alinit* M is s HOKEY M IS S GALORE H HAVE JAM ES BOND BACK FOR MORE! ^ 1 I FREE PARKING misSM*^ I I TTI R ES 2:10 - H W - » W Adult* l r . MDC . . . . . . 1.76 . . . . I Doors O p e n 1:30 i i \ t i iii ss 12 ta - 3:00 - 5:15 7 90 - 9 :4 f HURRY!! POSITIVELY ONLY 13 MORE DAYS! TRKM KN D O l % P l R F I IRM A Yf t S BY A U . IM P O R T A N T ! No »>i > undi i tv w it he a d m itted lad e** a r o n m p a ilM hr hi* pa . . a t T"' or rowAitc MACIA P M U M M ___ H d F R n i u O f Egg V n x c i N i n m a E u z n B n N T n v a o r r i c h r r d I f c T t t a i F ? E w 2 y t i l K T O N I M ^ I v r *! vt ! M i l ii C D C C D A D l / l f e j r a f t er 6 p.m . o n lots r A V I V I V I I N O a d j a c e n t t o t h e a t r e r K C C I 4) ADI I .Th .MIM ruiu* .66 .0 MORI J ) : 9:45 4: 6* 10 07 TA R ZA N : T OO - 5:11 - 0:59 J l M T - E i T ' T i T FRaNkENSTElN C o n q u e r s t h * W o r l d ei.MIL RHM WTLKNAlfOAA! COLORacofi a»'»'»n'n:8Bn8.inli8l, '^ S & T ALL NEW HIGH ADVENTURE!-* Ut HAH HENRY k VA K* tu t 0PATASHU J - : ">L” panavi8ion«N law m an c o l o r FREE PARKING A T ALL TIMES Page 8 Sunday, O ctob er 2, 1966 TH E D A IL Y T E X A N ■'•Ye, E h T ' X J TOMMY COLLINS p i p . * - ''lf Yow C an 't Bt*.- ' . D on't G row l0 , •“ -••• - -J ■ - J- W |Vjv'. - - C j v ^ - P I M S - ' * M IK L E H A G G A R D "S w in g in g Doors' * B O N N IE O W E N S "So u v o n irt" * D IC K CURLESS ? "H ighw ay M a n " M. C.: KOKE * M A X G A R D N E R TICKETS (Reserved) • Montgomery Ward v ’ • Elizabeth Jewelry GENERAL AOMISSON • Montgomery Ward • Elizabeth Jewelry ' # AN U'Tot'em Stores f Riney Conoco • The Record Shop • Simmons Conoco ’< ALL SEATS SOC HIGHER AT DOOR SMOKING ,-C PU^f«ACKrCCf; > by MANN RUBIN • »rsd*! by POT GIST BBS TECHNICOLORv KiJ y **** WEUM QONRAD'Bitae o t« M bi NORMAN MA.lER FROM WARNER BROS. v “Thoroughly exciting... Superb Real Award Winning Quality!” ~C him go Daily Aging “One of the finest aviation pictures ever made.”-^Bc rr THE BLUE I mmn-rn m presents UI th, sum* JEREMY KEMP- KARL MICHAEL VOGLER-ANTON DEERING bobadil CHRISTIAN FERRY imoiiw frwiu<« ELMO WI LUA MS ovuta g JOHN GUHJiRMIN EXCLUSIVE ROAD SH O W ENGAGEMENT STARTS W EDN ESDAY OCTOBER 12th AT THE V A R S I T Y Wanted: University Students Crafts, Needed Skills, Friendship by State Hospital Volunteers A ssist Mentally III Children E ach person at this U niversity is a potential teacher of retarded children. F ra te rn ity men. rom ping on the their stately houses, lawns of could tran sfer ti,(dr football gam e to the Austin Suite St bool, w here scores of eag er young boys could learn their sportsm anship. and benefit from I M V E R SH Y COEDS, sitting in dorm room s sewing or m aking pap er m acho jewelry, could dom o n strate their skills to groups of little girls d e sp e ra te ^ in need of som e diversion. Honor students could "think out loud” and inspire dozens of lag­ ging scholars. indulges In short, alm ost any activity a U niversity in student could bo tripled in value by tra n s­ the Austin State ferring School retarded t hi Id rem it for m entally to “ IM N URSUA STI DENTS are needed a t the sc hool,” says Shar­ on Frizzelle, student coordinator of School projects, to do every­ thing, to tutoring the children. Anything a student knows how to do could be shared with these children.” tying shoelaces from Students with a weekly hour to sp a re a re invited to the U niver­ sity “Y ’s ” registration and orien­ tation p.m. W ednesday. Thursday, Mrs. B eu­ lah Pace, volunteer coordinator of the State School, will interview session 6:30 af students at the “ Y ” and will ex­ plain som e of the available volun­ teer opportunities. One opportunity for student a s­ sistance at the school, the “ Spe­ cial Friend to a Lonely Child” program , has been a popular area for University volunteers. them never get “THE CHILDREN a re living in an institutional setting, and some to see their of says. p a re n ts.” Miss Frizzelle “ They need friend, .someone to help them with their particular problem s and given individual attention.” them special a Miss Frizzelle em phasizes the need for University m ales to p; >- this special guidance, e x ­ vide plaining “ The boys don t have anyone to model them selves a fte r." that for Sororities and fraternities often give holiday parties the school’s children, and Miss F riz ­ zelle is quick that to point out Halloween is com ing soon. “ We have reserved Get. 24 and 25 for parties for the children, and in ­ terested organizations should con­ ta c t us im m ediately.’’ —S. S. E very student of history has read of ignorance the abysm ,ii concerning m ental illness in our country just decades ago. Few of these young university historians, however, hove been the lessons of the prom pted by confront past to in problem s com m uni­ their ties. explore in m ental health contem porary and A handful of U niversity stu ­ dents, however, has overcom e the lack traditional excuses of of tim e and m otivation and has becom e involved in operations of the Austin State Hospital. Those Campus Coed Works For Six Flag Revue has Judy Myer com pleted a second term at G ilchrist Uni­ versity — but she didn’t receive any academ ic credit for her work. The student body at her m ythi­ cal university w as the cast cf the annual Six H a g s Over Texas staged nightly Campus Revue during the $14 the sum m er at million historical-them e am use­ ment park located m idw ay be­ tween Dallas and Fort Worth. in Judy, a U niversity coed, is one of the few entertainers who a p ­ peared the m usical comedy for the second sum m er in a row. Judy was selected for a p a rt the Revue from a group of t h a n 1,200 collegians who last talent toured college cam puses in m ore auditioned for spring when Six H a g s scouts all over the country. show the Tile junior physical education m ajo r has appeared in show busi­ ness for m ore than 12 years. TITLED “LET S DO IT.” the show ran all sum m er at an a ir­ conditioned am p hitheater In the Confederate Section of Six F lag1-. As p a rt of her rightly perfo rm ­ ance, Judy danced in a featured a ballet num ber glam orous show girl in a Gil­ ch rist U. beauty contest. and played P rio r to working at Six Flags, Judy perform ed in m usical pro­ ductions and live shows in San Antonio. Judy, who appeared in m ore than 250 perform ances be­ the end of sum m er, says fore that the real challenge is keep­ ing the show alive and fresh all sum m er. the Univer through volunteers, sity “ Y." spend an h o u r or two weekly working w ith children at the hospital. STI DENT VOL! M E E R S as si.st as in terp reters for Spanish- speaking patients, as escorts for church, recreation, and shopping trips, as n u rses’ and doctors’ aides, and as teachers In educa­ tional therapy. To m any students whose only concept of a m ental hospital is a rom anticized version —- l i k e som ething out of “ David and U sa. — the volunteer work be­ com es a profound learning ex­ perience. Gail Rice. U niversity sopho­ m ore and student coordinator for the S tate Hospital, says t h a t "This experience, like any other situation w here you are working with people so rad ically differ­ ent from yourself, is a learning experience. I t's a good opportuni­ ty to e rase false conceptions. “ It's also an opportunity to give instead of isolating the cam pus during to the city yourself on your four y ears in Austin.” EAC H YEAR, the U niversity “ Y" conducts a volunteer orien­ tation session for students inter­ ested in hospital work. “ We have som ething for every­ one.” Miss Rice says. “ We need students who can play m usical instrum ents — guitars or piano. We need persons with special talents, or with no talents a t all.” This y e a r’s orientation session, at 6:30 p.m. T uesday a t the hos­ include addresses by pital, will including Mrs. staff m em bers, P a u la W omack, coordinator of volunter sendees. A film on “ De­ pression” will be followed by a discussion session led by clinical d irector Dr. M arg aret M. Sed- berry. U niversity prospective volun­ teers will m eet at the “ Y ” at 6:15 p.m . Tuesday to attend the session together. T ransportation will he provided by the “Y .” Spooks to Celebrate 25 Years With UT By JENNA BELL Texan Fixature Writer Donning the Spooks, traditional paperbag m asks, Spooks will tap for their fiftieth pledge class this fall. “ We a re spookie, speckle, Spooks!” they chant as through women's they m arch dorm s, sorority house*. co-ops, and the their Founded in November, 19-41, the Spooks celebrate twenty- fifth anniversary next month. The fiftieth group of S pookier, as the new pledges are called, results from tapping in both the spring and fall each year. the organization’* on THIS HONORARY service and sp irit organization for freshm an and sophom ore women origi­ nated as a social club. M em ber­ interest, ship was based cam pus participation, and a sense of humor. With 21 m em bers they took in the spring of 1942. M embership now consists of three re p re se n ta ­ tives from each of 20 sororities and 23 their first 12 Spookier independents. Ronni W eksler, Spook historian who has done extensive research for the anniversary, explains that the black uniforms with white arm bands showing their symbol of the skull and crossbones did not appear on cam pus until 1957. the Officers now known by titles of president, vice­ usual president, historian, and tre a su r­ er originally served the Ghost as chief haunt, vice Cabinet and haunt, banker haunt. journalistic haunt, CASPERELLA, the Spook m as­ cot, is endeared by every m em ­ ber. The doll is attired in a black uniform , w hite arm band, and, of course, rah-rahs. S p o o k ier try each sem ester to steal Gas- perella “Mother Spook.” from the initiated As pledges, the Spooklets m eet once a week for training sessions at 6:30 a.m . They are also re ­ quired to earn a certain num ber of service hours before they can be Initation, which coincides with Spook re tre a t, is a fun-filled and m em orable event. The organization’s activities in­ clude serving at the voting polls, passing out spirit ribbons, deco­ rating the ath letes’ locker room, and participating actively in pep for rallies. They Model UN, Round-Up, and Chal­ lenge. soli the R iata and Texas Engineering and Science m ag a­ zines, and sponsor receptions for the Chilean and international stu­ dents. also usher Serving as faculty sponsor for the Spooks is Mrs. Ora Bennett. their president. Carol Rulfs The Spook office in Union Building 301. located is is U n iv e r sity S t u d e n t V o lu n t e e r . . . teaches rem edial re a d in g at A u stin State School. University' Is Also Art Museum S Hall' JS un Jau feature S tu ff Suzanne Shelton ........... Barbara Jaska .............. Feature W riters ........... Jenna Bell, D a v id DeVoss Festival Is Com ing Up Roses For University C o e d s in Tyler By MARY MORPHIS Texan Staff Writer If Lynn Cia w ater’s future seem s especially rosy, it's certainly un­ derstandable. is queen of The pretty, brown-eyed Uni­ versity coed the twenty-ninth annual T exas Rose F estival to be held Oct. 12-16 in Tyler, Rose Capital of the World. The them e of this y e a r’s pageant is “ Reverie in R oses.” LYNN WHX REIGN over the gala in­ festival events which clude two coronation p erform an­ ces, balls, a parade, a queen’s tea, and a special vesper service. Although Lynn cannot reveal the d e s i g n of h e r coronation gown, traditionally the queen is dressed in an elaborate creation. The collection of p ast queen’s annually displayed dresses — during includes the pageant — regal designs fashioned of hand sewn bead work, trains, and elab­ o ra te details. Each of the gowns cost thousands of dollars. THE DESIGNER began fitting and designing L ynn’s dress last Ja n u a ry . F itting sessions con­ tinued until July when the gown w as completed. Lynn’s court — 24 duchesses from all over the nation and 16 ladies-in-waiting from T y l e r — will also w ear original g o w n s, created for the festival. Among the duchesses a re three U niversity coeds: Ann Pittm an, duchess of the U niversity of Tex­ a s; Cile Sparenberg. duchess of A ustin; Shivers, duchess of Texas. Cissy and T hree of the ladies-in-waiting also attend the U niversity. They a re Anne Adam s, Olivia P otter, and Ja n e W althall. THE GIRLS’ prepai ’a dons in­ the gowns for clude m ore than the queen and court, however. P e te r Wolfe, a Dallas designer, has been com m issioned to design the coronation set, and a South Texas com pany is designing the colorful parade floats — m any of which will utilize re a l rose blossoms. a Lynn, five-foot, six-inch brown-haired beauty, says t h a t although the sum m er was “ really h ectic” as she prepared for the festival, quieted now. things have “I'M DOING things by long d ista n c e .” she explains. But this sum m er was a dif­ ferent story. Besides the fitting sessions with the dress design­ the court m em ­ er. Lynn and bers spent m ost of July and Aug­ ust practicing curtsies and stage w alking to obtain m axim um poise for the festival. “ I t’s a lot of responsibly aud w ork,” she recalls. “ I to cut out the play — but it’s fun a t the sam e tim e .” te d liberal a rts m ajor, who T he has a tow ard govern­ leaning m ent and political science, says that m ost of all she enjoyed m eet­ ing the other girls in her court. “ In a situation like the R o s e Festival, you really get to know each other and have a lot of fun.” I ii Bv BARBARA JANKA Asst. Feature Editor t h e U ndergraduate L ibrary of the Academ ic Center, one can view some of the finest contem ­ porary a rt in Texas with the ease in Web­ of looking up a word s te r ’s Dictionary. Hanging on various walls of the lib ra ry 's first and second floors a re 19 paintings, all by noted Tex­ as a rtists. They com prise p a rt of tho D. D. Feldm an Collection of C ontem porary Texas Art. This veritable a rt gallery in die U niversity’s principal study hall is due largely to the generosity of a businessm an who w anted to en­ courage outstanding Texas a r t­ ists and stim ulate appreciation of their work. The m an w as D. D. Feldm an, a Dallas independent oil operator and a rt patron. CONVINCED THAT TEXAS had a rtists of genuine m erit, Feld­ m an began to collect works by Texas a rtists several y e a rs ago. By holding exhibitions and offer­ ing purchase prises ranging as high a s $1,500. Feldm an has ob­ tained a sizable collection. On one occasion, he asked Tom Douglas, a designer, to select DO paintings from across the state. Douglas consulted leading direc­ tors of Texas art m useum s and schools, who in turn, recom m end­ ed a t least 1,000 works. Tile final selection w as a re ­ p resentative collection of style and subject m atter. Douglas found Texas a rtists had “ a fresh outlook, unham pered in style . . am azing vision, im agination, and sophistication, even in the work of artists who have never been outside T exas.” FELDMAN GANE 21 paintings from his collection to U niversity D epartm ent of A rt in October, 1964. Nineteen paintings were placed 'n the U ndergraduate Li­ Nancy Bernard, 1966 Maid of Cotton Totes 28 Suitcases on European Tour and By SUZANNE SHELTON Texan Feature Editor Nancy B ernard is efficient, cap ­ able, extrem ely well-or­ ganized, but som etim es she does things tho hard way. Like last D ecem ber, when she becam e Maid of Cotton ju st so that she could go to a fratern ity dance. “ I knew I ’d find a way to go,” N ancy recalls, her blue eyes sparkling, “ and I did. I was in­ vited to a dance a t T exas Tech, but M other wouldn't let m e travel 400 m iles just for that. “ I found out that the Maid of Cotton contest was on the sam e weekend and w rote M other that I had to com e home to enter. She was delighted, and I got to go to my d an ce.” NANCY’S STYLE should have been a bit cramped that week­ end. She was wearing a back brace for muscles she had sprain­ ed while doing pushups in her University PE classes. The brace hardly restrained her, however, as she “jerked” all one evening, and waltzed away the next with the title of “South­ With west Plains Maid of Cotton.” aplomb, c h a ra c teristic N ancy returned to the U niversi­ ty, m ade arra n g e m en ts with h e r jetted to M em ­ professors, and phis, Term., for the co n test’s n a ­ tional left, finals. Before she however, she m ade plans with her T exas Tech friend for New Y e a r's Eve. Nancy never kept her date, for she was crowned 1966 Maid of Cotton in M em phis and began a the United tour of six-m onths States and E urope as the re p re ­ sentative of the m am m oth cot­ ton industry. two or “ THE FIRST three weeks I was m iserab le,” Nancy adm its candidly, “ I was not put upon a pedestal, but was looked upon as a promoter. At first I resented being used, but as soon as I accepted this and rearrang­ ed m y perspective, I had a great time. I’m no quitter.” On tour, N ancy’s days began at 5:30 a.m. Packing 28 suitcases containing an assortment of cot­ ton garments, she rushed from to new hotel room to airport hotel room to sty le show. “ I be­ gan to realize then,” she says, “ that I'd been selected to do hard w ork.” Like m ost hard work, however, N ancy’* w as m itigated with a bit of play, and she taxied around Europe, m eeting scores of peo­ ple. including several young stu* dents. “IT’S A FAD in other countries for students to work their way through school being drivers for lim ousines,” N a n c y explains. “ They put me in a c a r with a young G erm an d riv er who didn’t seem to be able to speak English. conversing with him , I kept through an in terp reter, and a fte r a week of m aking com m ents about how cute I thought he w as, he turned around and said ‘Why don’t you tell me your­ se lf!’ ” finally Nancy felt the educational ef­ fects of her travels, also, as she ideas being replaced found old constantly with new ones. “ I had a preconceived notion of nationalities — what Norwe­ gians, Canadians, or G erm ans would be liM , The greatest su r­ prise was that I found everyone to be basically alike. All people experience the sam e emotions, the sam e hum an feelings.” NANCY LEFT E urope to m ake a last-m inute sweep of the US, including a tour of Am erican de­ pa rtm e n t stores, before returning for her senior y e a r at the Uni­ versity. She cam e home a “ changed person” in m any ways. F or one tiling, she w as 35 pounds thinner. She had 45 new garm ents, a new autom obile, and a 28-piece set of luggage, h er official winnings as Maid of Cotton. But there were sparks of the old Nancy, who greeted her Chi Omega sorority sisters with “Hi, I’m back. What can I do?” To well-wishers on campus the 1966 Maid of Cotton says, “Con­ test winners are soon forgotten; there s a new one every year.” But Nancy Bernard is the first to admit, “ If I had a month of rest, I'd do it again.” b ra ry ; two in tile U niversity Art M useum. the art Ten of the 21 paintings given to the U niversity w ere the works of form er and c u rre n t m em bers of faculty. Dr, Donald L. W eismann, professor of a rt and director of the G eneral Arts P ro ­ the H um anities R e­ g ram for and Seym our search C enter, the Fogel, U niversity D epartm ent of Art, a re represented by two pictures each. The paintings have received a students. look up from instantly see is a w arm “ It s pleasant m y those beautiful paintings,” typical com m ent. to textbook and form er d irector of response from SOME STUDENTS HAVE said feel “ra th e r conspicuous” they when observing the paintings closely, because everyone else is the studying. But m ost agree paintings contribute to an atm os­ phere of culture and learning. Aside from the Feldm an Col­ lection, the U n d ergraduate Li­ b ra ry displays a num ber of oth­ e r w orks, though rn t by T exas a rtists, on the second and third floors. Two a re draw ings of m ustangs lounge in die northeast co rn er floor. Both a re a on the sig n a­ draw ings b e a r O riental tures. M rs. Hudsp- th said the two works w ere purchased in an Austin a rt gallery. third that c a p tu re s “ They have a peculiar sense of m ovem ent the eye im m ediately,” she said. “ Too, they suggest a sense of kinship With the people of the F a r F a st because their a rtists w ere inter­ ested in an anim al so im portant in this a r e a .” IN THE NORTHWEST com er of the third floor a re four paint­ ings by Sam uel B. Gideon, a not­ ed a rtist who did m u J of his work in Texas. Gideon’s paintings w ere given to the U niversity by his fam ily. Students M a y Relax In A C Poetry C e n te r By DAVID De VOSS Texan Feature Writer a university In com m unity, students a re quickly acquainted with the often-lam ented dilem m a facing m odern education. This problem , which disturbs students and faculty, is the battle between learning sake and m em orizing inform ation for a grade. for knowledge’s To m ost students, the A cadem ic C enter is where the la tte r of the two previous choices is m ost fre ­ quently practiced. However, th ere is one room am id this com plex of tables and ch airs w here p e r­ sons m ay go not to m em orize, but to absorb; not to study, but to relax. THE RITH STEPHAN Poetry C enter on the third floor will be one year old this m onth. Open from IO a.m . to 5 p.m . and from to m idnight M onday 7 through F rid ay , the room con­ tains poetry from all ages and in ail languages. p.m . an independent The poetry center, under the te rm s of its $25,000 endowment, is collection, “ se p a ra te from the U niversity li­ b ra ry , w here the spirit of poetry will be m aintained and cherished, and w here there will be the re ­ alization of poetry as the a rt of poets, not of c ritic s.” to Adhering term s estab­ the lished by Dr. Stephan, the c en ter has m ore than IOO records ra n g ­ ing from John Milton to Ogden Nash to supplem ent the several hundred volum es of poetry. “ WE ARE TRYING to a ttra c t the sincere, interested student,” Miss Carol Coffee, clerical as­ sistant at the center, said. “Our is to spark a genuine purpose student in enjoying as interest well as reading poetry.” Ash trays located near padded reading chairs around the room contribute to the informal atmos­ phere. Students may read books leisure from the open at their shelves or play records u h ich are easily accessible. “ Around 50 students per day com e h e re ,” Miss Coffee added. “ We a re planning to have e a r ­ phones installed soon so students m ay listen to poetry w ithout dis­ turbing those rea d in g .” literatu re all her DR. STEPHAN, who gave the U niversity of Arizona a sim ilar poetry center, has been connect­ life. ed with She is author of two books on the life of Queen C hristina < 1626-1689) of Sweden as well as the au th o r of "The Singing M ountaineers,’’ which w as published by the Uni­ v ersity P ress in 1957. the Miss Lois Trice, newly appoint­ ed coordinator of the center, stressed that the m oney received five-year endow m ent from can only be used to purchase books and records of poetry. “ Any re p a irs o r im provem ents m ust be subsidized by the U niversity,” she said. tho “ Our hope is that students will becom e aw are of facilities offered a t the A cadem ic Center. If students would com e the P oetry Center, our next step would be to inform them of the R are Book Collection on the fifth floor. to “When I was teaching English here. I was astounded at the number of students who were ig­ norant of this magnificent library which is open to them .” In the coming year, Miss Trice plans to have a series of poets come to Austin. “The board of directors (for the center) has not been appointed yet, but if money is appropriated I would like to three exceptional see at poets brought to campus. least “The Stephan Center provides an opportunity to enjoy poetry in a different perspective. Poetry in recent years has becom e too styl­ ized and hews line. Anything that can be done to free poetry from that line is highly desirable.” to a fine Sunday, October 2, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN P - Photo by st C lair N ew bern Nancy Bernard . . . 1966 Maid of Cotton. Return-the-Favor Scholarship Winners Lauded at Dinner Twenty freshmen, recipients of the Ex-Students' Association "re­ turn - the - favor" scholarships, were honored by University of­ ficials at a dinner in the Alumni Center. The nucleus for each scholar­ ship was provided by a Texas- Ex club in a student's home town or county, and matched, dollar for dollar, by the Ex-Stu­ dents’ Association. Some of the scholarships are as much as $500. All are awarded primarily on academic m erit. Each alumni club selects its recipient. The scholarship win­ ners are encouraged to h e l p perpetuate the "return-the-favor" project by making a sim ilar con­ tribution through an alumni club after they graduate. Dr. Norman Hackerman, vice­ chancellor for academic affairs the who was guest speaker at informal dinner, said the win­ ners form "a select, elite group on this campus." Winners of the scholarships are Judith L. Billeck, Alphonce J. Brown Jr., Michael C. Caruso, Charlcie Jo Devlin: Patricia A. Dillon. Martha E. Fischer, Oscar Herrera, David C. Hollrah Mi­ chael A. Klaveness, Robert Mc- Vey. Also, Marilyn J. Neumann. Ruth E. Peden. Don VV. Priefert. Da­ vid B. Ramsey, M argaret E. Roark, Elizabeth A. Roy, Cyn­ thia A. Shelley, Terry L. Slade, Robert S. Truss, and H arriet E. Zirkle. ★ Pre-Law Meet Slated The University Pre-Law Asso­ ciation will hold its first meeting at 8 p.m. Monday in the Fire­ side Lounge of the law school. Dr. W. Page Keeton, dean of the School of Law, will bo principal speaker. ★ Archaeologist to Speak Dr. Prescott Williams, special lecturer in archaeology, will give an illustrated speech on "The Modern Rediscovery of an An­ cient Biblical City: Shoehorn" at 7 p.m. Sunday tile Presby­ terian Student Center. in This will be Dr. Williams* first public appearance since return­ this ing from his participation the Joint Ar­ in past sum m er chaeological Expedition at Shoe­ horn. During 1964 65, Dr. Williams served as tire acting annual pro­ fessor for the American School of Oriental Research in Jeru sa­ lem. As archaeological adviser to the Jordanian Departm ent of Antiquities, he participated in work at Sam aria, Jerach, P etra, and Qumran. Dr. Williams is the dean of fac­ ulty and professor of Old Testa­ ment Languages and Archaeolo­ the Austin Presbyterian gy at Theological Seminary. Students are also invited to a t­ tend the student supper at 6 p.m. in the Fellowship Hall. ★ Grad Group to Organize An organizational meeting of the Graduate Students’ Associa­ tion will be held al 4 p.m. Mon­ day in Business-Economics Build­ ing 115. Members will attempt to set op an organizational structure for the association and to discuss cer­ tain major issues affecting all University graduate students. ★ Troop W ing Needs Pilots Tho 433rd Troop C arrier Wing (Reserve) a t Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio is looking for pilots, navigators, and flight en- ingeers who have been the arm ed services. in Interested persons may contact the 43rd TOW. Director of Opera­ tions. or the Director of Person­ nel, Kelly Air Force Base, Texas. Duty includes one weekend a month plus two weeks of active duty each year. Additional duty Is available if desired. T ie 433rd flies C-199*s and C- 12I s in both tactical and global operations. ★ Speech Series Canceled Dr. Henry Bowman, professor of sociology, will be unable to inaugurate the Ilillcl Foundation's scries of .speeches on marriage Sunday. Slipper will be served at 6 p.m. HAVE MORE FUN ... Any student interested in Hillel is invited to attend. tm ★ A S M E Meets Tuesday Society The American of Mechanical Engineers will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Taylor Hall 138 for a get-acquainted meeting with m em bers of the mechanical engineering faculty. The meeting will adjourn at Pease Park where refreshm ents will be available. All mechanical engineering stu­ dents are invited. ★ Fellowships Available Competition for Woodrow Wil­ son Fellowships for 1967-1968 is open, according to the W i l s o n National Fellowship Foundation. Students who plan to become liberal college teachers arts and sciences must lie nom­ inated by Ort. 31. ★ Unity Minister to Speak Robert C. Wallet, minister at Unity Church of Christianity, the in Campus News in Brief mm vmmm mm Houston, will address mem bers of Unity of Austin at 8 p.m. Sun­ day at the Commodore P e r r y Hotel. His subject will be, “ A Dead God or a Dead F aith?" Tile public is invited. ★ Moore Nam ed President Mrs. Jerry C. Moore, director of placement in the College of Busi­ ness Administration, is the new president of ti*?* Southwest Place­ ment Association. The organization Includes rep­ resentatives of government and industry who are engaged in col­ lege recruiting, as well as college and university placement person­ nel. Representatives from Arkan­ sas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas make up the Southwest Placement Asso­ ciation. Y M C A Pays Leaders The YMCA has paid positions opening for leaders for elemen­ tary school clubs. The Clubs organized to help students grow mentally, physical­ ly, and spiritually, meet from 3:15 until 4:15 once a week at each elem entary school on Saturdays. University students may con­ tact Tom Griffith, GR 6-6705 for additional information. ★ ★ Education Club to Meet Tile Student Education Associa­ tion will m eet at 4:15 p.m. Tues­ day in Union Building 304 and 305. Club Has Social Tuesday Tile Poleved Club, coeduca­ tional service and social organi­ zation, will hold registration for Lockers Prime Target Identification Card Thefts Plague Police Department A rash of thefts involving stu­ dent identification cards has oc­ curred within the last year ac­ cording to Sgt. Roger Rountree of the Austin Police Department. Rountree, forgery division, said the departm ent has received nu­ m erous complaints from students about having their lockers pick(*d at Gregory Gym. The Item which is often taken Is the identification card. Roun­ tree said the that many cards are used to cash a forged check. times Many m erchants are now de­ manding two identification cards before they cash checks. Often the blanket tax will be u s e d since both the student’s picture and signature are on it. Rountree said that the lockers at Gregory* Gym ran be opened when properly hit by someone. Several students were arrested in connection with last year forged checks, Rountree said. This year there has been little activity, but the forgery division was alerted to several cases last week. Forgery is a felony and can lead to imprisonment from two to seven years. Rountree s a i d the m ere intention of committing the action constitutes the crime. Charles Walker, general m ana­ ger of the Co-Op, said it was too early to detect incidents t h i s year because many of the checks are still at out-of-town banks. the Co-Op was requiring the blanket tax for identification because of the pic­ ture. Walker said that Mrs. Eileen Knurl, credit m an­ ager for Jack Mortons, said they trouble with forged hadn’t had there chocks. Tile only trouble insuf­ cam e from persons with For '67 Cactus Staff 64 Students Selected ficient funds or those who left town without leaving their new' address, she reported. Mrs. Kouri said the policy for their store was to ask for driver license or a credit card. Stu­ dents also must show proof of residency. DESSERT A N D H O T BREAD AT EVERY M E A L AT T H E B O W E N H O U S E 2001 Whifit XEROX COPIES 8 A .M . T O M ID N IG H T 7 D A Y S A W E E K ALDRIDGE TYPING L i T SERVICE CR ’ 1696 new' members from 7 to 8 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday in Union Building 325, 315, and 202 respectively. Intellectual, social, and per­ sonal development through serv­ ice are the prim ary objectives of the club. ★ Ice Cream Social at 8 The University Architecture Wives Club will hold an old-fash­ ioned ice cream social at 8 p.m. the Zilker Club Tuesday House. in All architecture wives and their husbands are invited. New mem ­ bers will be special guests. Graduates to Organize At Meeting on M onday Graduate students will m e e t Monday at 4 p.m. in Business- Economics Building 155 to or­ ganize a graduate student asso­ ciation. Arch Ritter, graduate stu d en t, and teaching assistant, said the purpose of the organization would be twofold: • To better the school socially by providing a common meeting ground for the students. • To update conditions eco­ nomically such as payroll issues, and small problems concerning teaching assistantships. In addition, problems dealing with required Government 610 for the graduate students will be con­ sidered. a have YAF Will Present Film The Young Americans for Freedom will "get acquainted" meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Union Building 317. A film on the rising leftist move­ ment in the United States will be shown. Refreshments will be served. ★ Religious Meet Slated The second meeting of Religious Conversations will be held at 4 p.m. Monday at the University "Y ,” Discussion will center on "The Paradox of Success." ★ Dr. Dolley Gets Award A resolution of appreciation for "wise counsel and adm inistra­ tion" to the University w'as pre­ sented to Dr. Jam es C. Dolley Thursday. The resolution was presented by the Board of Lease of Uni­ versity Lands. Dr. Dolley served as vice-presi­ dent and vice-chancellor for fis­ FREE INSTRUCTION the Purchase W ith o f M aterials THE NEEDLE CORNER 3400 Exposition Phone HO >7713 Open * A M 3 P.M . < rew el Kit* Novelty Pillow Kit* Crewel Thread* • N eedlepoint VARNS F or K nitting and C rochet Look Through The C o - O p Newsstand Today a N U N S ? W W ? jMOK. k r n \ H n o n v s w j i V • Sunday New York Times • Al! Popular Magazines Plus Your Dividend Second Floor Genera! Books IHI STUDENT $ OWN WORT GR 2-1141 cal affaire. He recently retired from his adm inistrative p o s t and returned to the College of Business Administration as an in­ structor. enrich YO UR educational b a ck g ro u n d w ith BARNES & NOBLE COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES and EVERYDAY HANDBOOKS f a m o u s e d u c a t i o n a l p a p e r b a c k s * O ver 14 0 titles on the f o l l o w i n g subjects: ANTHROPOLOGY ART BUSINESS DRAM A ECON O M ICS EDUCATION ENGINEERING ENGLISH GOVERNMENT HANDICRAFTS HISTORY LANGUAGES MATHEMATICS MUSIC PHILOSOPHY PSYCHOLOGY RECREATIONS SCIENCE SOCIOLOGY SPEECH STUDY AIDS A v e r a g e price ST.50 On Display at Your Bookstore soK a N I I IHF STUDENT S OWN Stotlr Text Books Downstairs MtOMVMJXti At The BOWLING CENTER 34th at Guadalupe Open Bowling — Miniature Golf Pool — Pinball Games — Snack Bar Explore In Book World This Week Dianna Christner, sororities. Jam es, and Catherine I Also, Gerry Godfrey, Kathryn Zimmerman, Nora Robinson, Linda Menear, Jim m y Crook, Ticka McKee, P atricia Pillion, and M argaret Moore, student government; Diane Robinson, M argaret Glover, Sherry Smith, Sharon Fertseh, and B arbara B arnard, m ilitary. Navy / > t < • i t K *i xK.a Prepare for The W o r s t . .. But Look Your Best Sixty-four students have been chosen for the 1967 Cactus staff, according to Janis Mae Hughen, editor. These staff members are Paul Angenund, Frank Cook, Pat Con­ nolly, Sumner Schoenike. Thomas Dunn, Bob Hartong, R. Howe, Nancy Lockhart, Linda Wisner, and B arbara Coward, athletics; Diane Rush, chronology; Pam Schwake, Penny Potter, Janice Carlson, and Ronald McCraw, dorms and co-ops: Leah Ripper, Cathy Chaplin. Valerie Horn, Lynda Rogers, Louise Slade, and Candy Clifton, academ ic. Also, Jan Nelson, Leslie I Donovan, Carol Council, Judy Little, Chris Walker, David Frederick, Lynn M o r r i s , Catherine Hall, Ron Martin, and Sally Glenn, features; Duncan M clver, Jenny Robinson, Kelle Snyder, Mary Louise Queen, and Julie Norman, fraternities; Molly Jenny Haynes, Diane Greene, Rubenstein, Schaffner, Suzan Anne Nichols, Laura Hurst, Sally Bond, Pam White, P atty McLn- tire, and Loubeth Zimmerman, organizations; Ola Mae Baker, Charleen Schwemer, Joy Stapp, T H E U N IT ED ST A T ES N A V Y IN W O R L D W A R II by S. E. Smith, M o r r o w .............................. $12.50 H IR O H IT O E M P E R O R O F J A P A N by Leonard Mosley, Pren tice -H all................ $7.95 T W O U N D E R T H E IN D IA N S U N by Jon and Rumer Godden, K n o p f-V ik in g T H E E X T R E M E O C C ID E N T by Peter Dumitriv, Holt«Rhinehart®Winston . . . $6.95 $5.50 Top C o a t by A llig a to r S t u d e n t s ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A Steak 4 ou C a n t Af f or d to Miss W h e r e ? T h e SIZZLER STEA K HOUSE 7414 Burnet Road O P E N l l A .M . Va lb. Ground Round 89c D I N N E R S Top Sirloin SI.29 Baked Potato or Fries, Hot Rolls Children's Portion '/2 Pr*ce — H alf Orders for Adults too HAMBURGER STEAK SANDWICH l/„ Lb. W ith Fries 44c 89c SHRIMP S1.49 JI.09 Cold Crisp Salad ... 19c★ C h e f's Sa ad .. 69c EAT IT H E R E O R T O G O Am ple Parking— N o Tipping— Fast Service + Y O U R * H O S T S J O H N N IE A N D C A R O L L IN B E R G The SIZZLER STEAK HOUSE "- 7414 Burnet Road — _____ A C L O S E 9 P.M. A M E R I C A A N D A M E R IC A N S by John Steinbeck, Viking ......................... $12.50 New York Cut G IL E S G O A T - B O Y by John Barth, D o u b le d a y ..............................$6.95 W IT H K E N N E D Y by Pierre Salinger, D o u b le d a y ....................... $5.95 W IN D S O F C H A N G E by Harold Macmillan, H a r p e r ....................... $10.00 C H IC K E N IN S P E C T O R No. 23 by S. J. Perelman, Simon & S c h u ste r.................$4.95 Your Store To Serve Your N eeds ’ H ( i’UOlWI S OWN S ! OU f W eather any storm in style . in your all poplin top coat by Alligator. W a te r repellent finish and IOO °/ wool zip-in lining keeps you comfortable from fall to . . sP rIn9..................................... $27.50 In The Co-Op r n GR 8-6636 D istinctive Store For M en when a young man's fancy Ar? TTI Vanguard ^ \ r t C a r v e d® D I A M O N D R I N G S is an unm atched messenger or faith and . . . turns to a solemn prom ise of happiness, an A rte rin e d dia­ m ond lose. D aintily soaring settings sh*w' off superb diam onds with a radiance of timeless elegance. O ur new A rtC arsed collection awaits your in­ spection. M odels from $ 150. O ', .cled Paym ent* N o Extra Charge FTP \ X | ry.S I X > U J / tv a i J A JI J . J E W E L E R S Quality I s Out l i n t Consideration 5228 Burnet Road in N orth Loop Plaza • GL 2-6491 O P E N T H U R S D A Y 'TIL 9 P.M. Page IO Sunday, O ctober 2, 1966 THE D A I L Y T E X A N