T h e D a il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas at Austin W inedale Inn Recreates Past Page IO • Vol. 68 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRID/ Y , M A R C H 7, 1969 Fourteen Pages Today No. 127 -embly to Rewrite Office Measure v bo Le Weather: • Cloudy • Low: Upper 30's • High: M id 60's Legislators Battle Over Campus Bill Committee Report House Approves Version O f School Disorder Ban; Senate Veto Predicted By The Associated Press A House-Senate battle shaped up Thurs­ day over a bill outlawing violent campus disruptions as Sen. Oscar Mauzy of Dallas accused Hep. Joe Shannon of Fort Worth, the sponsor, of “ trying to demagogue it.” Shannon got quick approval, 136-7, of a conference committee report on his bill m aking it a misdemeanor to take part in violent disorders at private or public (Text of Bill, Page 4 )_________ schools or colleges. But Mauzy. one of two Senate conferees who refused to sign the report, predicted the Senate w'ould re­ ject it and call for a new conference com­ m ittee. Mauzy said die three senators who sign­ ed “withdrew their signatures last night” and both Shannon and Speaker Gus Mut- scher knew it. ‘Just Playing Games* “ He's Just playing games. He Is Just try­ ing to demagogue it,” Mauzy said. to conference because The bill went to an amendment by Shannon objected Mauzy that replaced a House provision guaranteeing students the right to protest peacefully. incorporated Mauzy’a amendment lan­ guage from a US Supreme Court decision issued last month In the case of a Des Moines, Iowa, school girl who was disci­ plined for wearing a black arm band as a protest against the Vietnam war. Staten Bill’s Application The Mauzy statem ent said: “This act does not apply to any person who express­ es his opinion without m aterially and sub- frtantially interfering with appropriate dis­ cipline in Hie operation of any private or public school or Institution of higher learn­ ing. This act does apply to any person who m aterially disrupts or involves sub­ stantial disorder or invasion of the rights of others.” The conference committee changed this lo: “Nothing here-ln shall be construed to infringe upon any right of free speech or expression guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States or the State of Tex­ a s .” All H ouse conferees and Sens. William Moore of B ryan; David Ratliff of Stam­ ford; and H. J. Blanchard of Lubbock signed the report. Constitutionality Considered Mauzy said the three signers had come around to his point of view that the only way to guarantee the bill's constitutionali­ ty Was to retain the Mauzy amendment. lit. Gov. Ben. Barnes said he would talk to the Senate conferees Monday. None of the three could be reached for comment. Shannon’s bill would m ake It a misde­ m eanor to participate in a violent cam ­ pi1,: disruption, including occupying build­ ings. breaking up classes, blocking cam ­ pus gateways and preventing passage th: ugh corridors. Penalties include fines of $1 to $200 and/or jail sentences of IO davs to six months. By RON DAMS News Assistant The Student Assembly Thursday night paved the way for the establishm ent of an office of student legal advice, headed by an attorney who would be a full-time em ­ ploye of the Students’ Association. The lawyer would “assist a student in any m atter which shall affect him in his status as a student, or arising out of his status as a student.” A motion to establish the office, spon­ sored by Association president Rostam Ka- voussi and law school Assemblyman Bob Simpson, was referred, after lengthy dis­ cussion, to a five-man committee for final drafting, and will be voted upon at a special meeting of the Assembly Thursday night. If it passes at that time, Hie bill would authorize a selection com m ittee composed of the Students’ Association president, two Advocates Lawyer for Students . Sch ool o f Law A ssem b lym an Bob Sim p son is sponsor of bill. . ii .-iv, .vXvvvXvNvi-*. ■ , 3 Photo by Wallace Opening Conference Topic On 'Innovative Individual' By DEBBY HOLMES Tile characteristics of a leader and an “ innovative individual" were described in the opening talk of the International Stu­ dents’ Conference Thursday night. Dr. Robert F. Peck, director of the Uni­ versity Personality Research Center, told the Union Main about 500 delegates Ballroom that a leader must develop per­ idealism, sistence, a degree of unselfish intelligence, and an ability to persuade other men. in His speech on the individual was the first of the conference's three lectures probing “ Retarding Factors the Development of Nations.” in can Dr, Peck said an Innovator must be a “ m arginal m an” who up against hard-core social conventions. “ He m ay or m ay not be a rebel,” he stated, “ but he m ust be able to withstand unpop­ ularity and perhaps even physical danger.” After his speech, Dr. Pock cited as in­ stand rights movement, novators Dr. M artin Luther King In the civil the Rockefeller brothers in philanthropy, and John G ard­ ner, form er secretary of Health, E duca­ tion, and Welfare. Engineered prim arily by University stu­ dents Bob January, Sally Matheny, and conference coordinator M arc Brewster, the International Students’ Conference has been in the planning stages since September, when Brewster was appointed. Delegates representing approximately 50 foreign countries a re attending, as we a as about 60 out-of-town delegates who are be­ ing housed in sorority and fraternity hous­ es and the homes of ISC committee members. in Co-ordinator Brewster expressed pleasure at the response to the conference, which shows an increase of 300 over last year's meeting. Registration fee for the entire confer- Hackerman Undecided On ll AABL Proposals University President Norman Hacker- mann said Thursday he had not decided on a course of action on demands made be m em bers of Afro-Americans for Black Liberation. He said he did not wish to make any talking statem ents because he was still to interested parties about the demands. Board of Regents Chairman Frank C. Erwin Jr. said he had not studied the pro­ posals. He also said the demands were not on the agenda for the next Board meeting, which is set for March 14. However, any m em ber can bring up to­ pics and this could be one, he said. AABL president Stanley Jackson was un­ available for comment. enc© was $2, but students may be admitted for 50 cents to each of the rem aining speech­ es. At 9 a.m . Friday, the conference will spon­ sor an address on “ Stratification of Soci­ ety” by Dr. Edward T. Hall of Northwestern University. “ Conflict in National and Inter­ national Policy’’ is the topic of a talk by Dr. Samuel P. Huntington of H arvard Uni­ versity at I p.m. Friday. Both will be held In the Union Main Ball­ room. A special presentation on the war in Ni­ geria and Biafra is beinly offered by the Austin Citizens for Nigeria-Biafra Relief at 4:30 p.m. Friday in the Union Main Ball­ room. At 7 p.m., a “ folk happening” will be held on the Union Patio. In case of rain, the “ happening" will be in the Junior Ball­ room. Dr. Walt Rostow of the University, for­ m er aide to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B, Johnson, will address dele­ gates on “ Foreign Involvement” at 9 a.m. Saturday. Dr. Manfred Halpem of Prince­ ton University, will m ake the closing ad­ dress a t 2 p.m. Saturday, on “Search for an Ideology.” A speaker's banquet at 6:30 p.m. Sat­ urday will end the conference. It will be held in the Junior Ballroom. students, and two facility m em bers to sub­ mit the nomination of “an attorney adm it­ ted to the Bar of the Supreme Court of Texas” to the Student Assembly for ap­ proval by a simple majority. Association Counsel Tile attorney, and “such staff as may be obtained from among law' students" would “ act to counsel and protect the Students' Association whenever if, or any official group thereof, is in jeopardy of suppressed rights and privileges as extended to indi­ viduals and groups by the law' of the land.” Tile services of the office would also be available to students free of charge in civil or crim inal m atters, and would be ex­ tended to them “ according to priorities of time, locality, and severity, as determined by the attorney and without looking toward the student's financial ability to retain other counsel.” However, the bill as It now stands would not authorize the attorney to pursue the case to the extrem ities of court proceed­ ings" and in criminal cases involving stu­ dents, his efforts would “ prim arily consist of getting the individuals out of jail, assist­ ing students in obtaining other counsel, and making suggestions for their further pro­ tection." He could only pursue a particular case into court if allowed to by a two- thirrls vote of the Student Assembly. Blanket Tax Funds The attorney’s salary would come from blanket tax funds, and would range from $9,000 to $14,000 yearly as decided bv the selection committee, according to “ exper­ ience, ability, m arket price, and other per­ tinent factors." Other duties of the attorney as outlined in the bill would be to aid in drafting legis­ lation of the Assembly and House of Dele­ gates. advise the Association attorney gen­ the Association concerning eral, advise State to students, and “ act on its behalf when re­ quested by the Assembly.” legislation applying specifically Vincent A. Blash assistant professor of law', answered questions of Assemblymen concerning the bill, and stated three advan­ tages he believed would rom e from its pas­ sage. Group Representation The first was in the area of representa­ tion of the students as a group. “ One thing that bothers m e greatly is the way that we discrim inate against out-of- sfate residents,” he said, offering an exam ­ ple of a possible area in which the legal advice office could act in students’ behalf. A second advantage Blasl cited was in ^ « 1 P I T W ' * T Space Walk a Surprise Schweickart Enjoys View SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)—-Apollo 9 astronaut Russell L. Schweickart plunged alone into the void 140 miles above earth Thursday, floated to a spacecraft platform and told the world, “Boy, oh boy, what a view.” Tile astronaut, recovered from attacks of nausea, stood for 38 minutes on the “front porch" of the moonship, exclaiming again and again at the panoram a of curving blue earth below and moon and stars in the black sky above. Tile space walk cam e as a surprise af­ ter Schweickart and Air Force Col. Jam es A. McDivitt transferred for a second time to the lunar module. They rejoined Air F Tee Col. David R. Scott in the command module ? fter six and a half hours in the moon s' Prepare for Friday The throe were anxious to get some sleep before the separation and rendezvous F ri­ day. Space officials regard Apollo 9’s fifth day in orbit, Friday, as the most critical of the 10-day flight. During the early morn­ ing hours Friday, McDivitt and Schw'oiok- art will again transfer to the lunar mo­ they’ll un­ dule. After checking system s, dock from the command module and for the first tim e Am erica’s moon machine will fly men through space alone. McDivitt and Schweickart will fly the lunar module m ore than IOO miles away from the command modula and then re ­ turn, firing rockets to sim ulate the rendez­ vous maneuvers planned for astronauts flying from the surface of the moon. The two moonship astronauts will be bet­ true spacecraft and ting their lives on the ability of the two spacecraft to rendezvous and dock. The lu­ nar module is a is too flimsy to fly in earth 's atmosphere. McDivitt and Schweickart m ust return to the command module to make a safe earth landing. If they are unable to do so, the pair W'ould perish aboard the moonship. However, before the astronauts could set­ tle down, ground controllers discovered there w’ere some switches out of place in the lunar module. When they told the crew, it triggered the first sharp exchange of the flight between the ground. the astronauts and “ How long would it take you to go back up there into the lunar module and pull the circuit breakers,” a ground controller asked. ‘Going Like Mad’ “ It'll take about 30 minutes to clear the tunnel, go back up there and pull the cir­ cuit breakers out and get back to the CM and th at’s really going like m ad,” McDivitt said. The ground controller went into a lengthy explanation, but McDivitt cut him off. “ I ’m telling you, if we’re gonna do it we ought to get going on it and not keep talking about it all night,” said McDivitt. A few minutes later the crew told the ground the circuits were off. It had taken l l minutes. The spacemen then Startex! their sleep period. Most of the time McDivitt and Schweick­ a rt spent in the lunar modulo Thursday was taken up with the space walk, but the pair found time to make plans to turn the moonship into the first orbiting garbage truck. McDivitt said he and Schweickart planned to leave accum ulated refuse in the lunar module when the craft was abandoned in orbit on Friday. “ We just haven't had much tim e for plain old housekeeping and it’s just sort of build­ ing up,” McDivitt explained. McDivitt m ade the decision, also, for Schweickart to try an abbreviated space walk. Officials canceled plans Wednesday for a m ore ambitious walk after Schweick­ a rt suffered nausea. They feared a recur­ rence while he was outside the spacecraft. But McDivitt decided to allow the short walk, and Schweickart, wearing the por­ table life support system astronauts will wear on the moon and connected to the spacecraft by only a thin ribbon of nylon, briefly becam e a third self-contained sa t­ ellite in orbit. Like a Tourist He Obviously enjoyed himself, joking with his fellow astronauts and snapping pictures like an eager tourist. "Dave, comp on out,” he said, as if in­ viting him for a swim. “Dave, come on out wherever you a re .” Scott stood in the open hatch with a cam ­ era and moved around at the directions of McDivitt, who was photographing the scene from his work station aboard the lunar module. “M an,” said Scott, “ We’re all pictures of everybody taking pictures.” taking One orbit later, the crew turned on a television cam era and shared their space lunch break with earth. 'When You G e t Up to Bat' R obin M o rse explains to East S id e A ustin boys How to play baseball. H e is a coach from one o f the 14 fraternities participating in a Little L eagu e baseball clinic. There are 14 teams, each co ach ed by a fraternity. G a m e s and practices are sched­ uled three tim es a week and will continue until spring break. From 80 to IOO boys ar* in th* program. (Related story, Page i I.) —Photo by Brightwell Run-off candidates for president will ba given 30 minutes broadcast tim e for de­ bate. A re-broadcast (rf a debate between M ark Morrison and Karen Elliott, candi­ dates for Daily Texan editor will be aired at IO a.m. Sunday oo KNOW. regard to the needs of individual students. He warned, however, that in this area the office of advice would, by necessity of the large number of students on campus, be limited to screening applicants for aid and referring them to other aid services or at­ torneys rather than actually counseling each individual student. Useful Law Students “ Thirdly, the office would give law stu­ dents a chance to do something useful.” he said. He explained that most law students are eager to use their knowledge practi­ cally, and that working in the office of legal advice would give them that opportunity. Speaking as an observer, House of Dele­ the gates representative J. J. Hill cited possibility of a conflict of interest by the Association lawyer in certain cases. “ If you had two students opposing each the attorney ethically other, how could serve both of them ?” he asked. Rare Occurrence Blasi replied that an occasion such as Hill referred to would rarely occur in his estimation, but that lf it did arise, “ the a t­ torney should abstain.” The committee appointed to review the bill included sponsors Kavoussi and Simp­ son, law school Assemblyman Paul Ray, law student Steve Ezon, a co-author of the bill, and Association Attorney General Joe Wicker. Simpson was appointed chairm an. In Its only other action of the night, the Assembly, acting as a “com m ittee of the whole” because attendance had dwindled below the required num ber for a voting quorum, voted to report favorably out of committee a resolution supporting the low­ ering of the State voting age to 19. Considered March 20 The resolution will be considered at th# next regularly scheduled Assembly m eet­ ing March 20. Because of the likelihood of State Senata committee hearings being held on the sub­ ject of lowering the voting age before th# next Assembly meeting, Communication As­ semblyman Je rry Rudes unsuccessfully ad­ vocated the passage of the resolution a t Thursday night’s meeting. He felt that the Assembly’s support of the proposal would have a bearing on the action the Senate took on the m easure. “ If we table it tonight, it won’t come up for two weeks, and th a t’s a serious m is­ take,” he warned. KUT lo Broadcast 'Election '69' Talks By PENNIE FREELAND News Assistant Campaign speeches by candidates for Students’ Association president and Daily Texan editor will be broadcast next Mon­ day through Saturday on KUT-FM (90.7), The program!, “ Election ’69", will give each candidate 15 m inutes of broadcast tim e to discuss campaign issues. Five of the six presidential candidates have asked for tim e on the program . Broadcast times for the speeches will be: Monday, March IO 11:30 p.m. Bill Green 11:45 p.rn Joe Krier Tuesday, March l l 11:30 p.m. O.J. Wednesday, March 12 l l :30 p.m. Bob Thursday, March 13 l l :30 p.m. Ken Friday, March 14 l l :30 p.m. O. J. Saturday. March 15 l l :45 p.m. Ken Striegler Sparks Higley 11:45 p.m. Joe K rier Sparks l l :45 p.m. Bill Green 11:45 p.m. Bob Striegler Higley 11:30 a.m. Karen Elliott 11:45 a.m . Mark l l :30 p.m. Mark Morrison Morrison l l :45 p.m. Karen Elliott Defense Secretary Denounces Attacks | Plane Flight Family Affair For Tibergj NKW YORK (A P . - Clapt. Al It. Tiberg wa* a proud ’ man Thursday as he piloted las huge jetliner southward. The cop.lot v as his son, and .’as daughter, the first class stew a rd ess. “ We h a \e been looking f o r w a r d to th;- d a y all our ves and kept preparing for it ” Titterg, 52, told the 28 passengers in Eastern Au Lines Flight 69, a Boeing 727, headed toward New Or leg of a first the leans, round trip. “ I'm prom darned happy,” Tiberg said as he took his se a t in the cockpit. The rest of the flying Tibergs were d First Officer Rot**rf. 25, and j stewardess Susan, 22. 'n “ Ladies and gentlemen,' the passengers were fold a=- the plane left Kennedy Air- is ("apt. Tiberg is a very T ins special occasion because fly­ is my son ing beside me Robert, while my daughter Susan is serving as a stew- % port, “ this I speaking J artless on the flight.” U It was the first time their ; crew assignm ents brought them together. „ ti V : V'Slsjj- .-.-r’tf v V . • • i » . v «i- ■ -............................• '.a t . >r a orth any nan v-se citjes — Explosions of enem y rockets in Saigon echoed in Paris 'n ursday and brought an abrupt end of what a US spokesm n called a “short and the Vietnam grim ” sr- peace talks. The atmosphere was charged with bitterness. a mark of its energetic protests against the shelling of Saigon, South Vietnam’s delega­ tion suddenly moved adjourn­ ment of the seventh session im ­ m ediately after completion of formal statements, because “an atmosphere favorable to useful discussion does not yet ex ist.” The South Vietnamese quickly stressed they had not walked out and were not boycotting the talks. Shortest Session The seventh session ended aft cr only four hours, shorter by 90 New Debt Ceiling Request Rejected (AP) WASHINGTON - The House Ways and Means Com­ turned down President m ittee Richard M. Nixon's request for a ceiling Thursday and voted to keep the Treasury on a continuing bor­ billion restriction rowing tighter than asked. new national debt $5 The debt is approaching the present $363-billion ceiling, and the Treasury said it w ill need relief within the next few weeks. for a increase, The com m ittee voted $12-billion temporary expiring June 30, 1970. minutes ceeding six. than any of the pre­ “appropriate” The United States and South Vietnam angrily presented their protests against the shellings in Vietnam. The National Libera­ tion Front and North Vietnam rejected a US warning, voiced by President Richard M. Nixon. of In Vietnam if the shellings continue. short and grim the meeting, overshadowed by terrible events of in Saigon, when women and chil- in­ den were killed attack,” discriminate rocket said Harold Kaplan, the chief US spokesman. “ It was a in another last night response Kv Impatient Customarily. South Vietnamese Ambassador Pham Dang Lam sneaks af the sessions before US Ambassador Henry' Cabot, Lodge. The order was reversed to permit Thursday, evidently Lam for to underscore his adjournment statement protests. His deaR only with the shellings. to m a k e his demand formal ■j >cke TI s- SAK ••■'N’ Bors s.V! nigt *, pr< “ m ortar ca US D efenst I^aird said ‘ an apr from tho Ba* the Ka -o n aft! • nark aga; day wounded rr % ti at ong pea< -d 1 so V Iks in p iday on h<< od F th, lf fUTivai mat Communist’ forcoc c o n ti n u attacks on South Sties ' they m u d Vietnamese ( Lr* pro ] ■ • to accept tho con- aeq u en cos ” Laird, arriving in Saigon about 38 hours after Thursday's rocket barrage on Saigon, said; “We *"11 not tolerate any enemy es ca la lion f>? the war “ TS Bases Bit Moist of tile targets shelled bv the enem y overnight were US m ilitary bases. They Included Ha Kang, biggest has« north of Sai­ gon; Done T im headquarters of the US Ninth Infantry Division 35 m iles southwest of Saigon; and !>a! Khe, US First Infantry Division headquarters, 30 m iles northwest of Saigon. “Over all casualties and dam ­ age w ere reported as light,” the US Command said In Its Friday morning report. la ir d ’s report m av deoide any retaliatory action that President Richard M. Nixon orders. Saying that he had studied dis­ patches about the rocket attack while he flew across the Pacific, Laird declared: “Such indiscri­ m inate assaults against the civil­ ian population are in m y view as Secretary of Defense an ominous violation of the understanding between us and North Vietnam .” He referred to what the Unit­ ed States regards as an under­ that North Vietnam standing NKHT EVERY NIGHT listening ear IS O PEN A Friendly Place Where, in the Late N ight Hours, People W ho Care W ill Listen, Over a Cup or Coffee, to Whatever is Troubl­ ing You. A n Occasion for Face-to-Face Conversation, respectful of Your Privacy, with Community, Student and Clergy Volunteers. IO p.m.-6 a.m. M ETHO DIST STUDENT CENTER 2434 Guadalupe Street S p o n s o re d b y: A u s b n -T r a v is C o u n t y M e n ia l H e a lt h A ss o c ia t io n an d R e lig io u s W o r k e r s A s s o c ia t io n a l U.T (lf You Wish to Participate as Volunteer Staff, Please Call 478-5693 For Information and Interview) MAYA 1616 Lavaca IPT’1*' officials returned to the owner. “The author of these acta has been put under arrest in Cuba by competent authorities,” Granma said. Granma’s announcement cam e after the 50th hijacking of an air­ liner to Cuba since 1961. There have been Increasing signs that Cuban authorities in­ tended to crack down on hijack­ ers. P -‘o by B rton W ion F r in ge d Sue d e leather purses $6.00 Le ath e r C lo t h in g W a t e r Pipes M o c c a s i n s L ots o f new dresses A n unusual and c o n ge n ial a tm o sp h e r e 0:30-6 i B W i m a r a i % m s rn M o n . - S a t . Stability of the French cur­ rency was rocked by a break­ in government-labor-man- down agement talks after the gold m ar­ ket, closed and the calling of a 24-hour strike for next Tuesday by three major unions. Tile Gaullist newspaper Paris- P resse said President Charles de Gaulle remained firm against de­ valuation at his weekly Cabinet m eeting Wednesday. But French exchange dealers believe devalua­ inevitable with French tion trade unions demanding sharp boosts in wages. Is Gold hit a record $47.92 an ounce Thursday in heavy trading on the Paris Bourse and reached new peaks elsewhere for the third straight day. Tile main source of French in­ labor- security is the state of management relations. As a result of last year's May- June strike wave, government- superv ised talks began this week on promises of additional raises. They hit an im mediate deadlock. The government opened the se s­ sions by the economy could stand only a 4 per cent raise in 1969. One minister said that any more than 4 per cent would bring a danger of devalua­ tion. saying Labor, represented by the un­ ions, said it needed a 6 per cent raise just to make up for infla­ it asked for another tion, and 6 per cent; or a total of 12 per cent. HAVANA (A P)—In an apparent m ove to stem the tide of air pi­ racy, Cuba announced for the first time Thursday the arrest of a hijacker and identified him by name. The Communist party newspa­ per Granma announced that the National Airlines jetliner which had been diverted the United States to Cuba Wednesday was hijacked by a man it identi­ fied as Anthony Garnet Bryant. from Tile paper said Bryant was a US citizen and had been arrested in the United States for robbery and drug traffic. It added that he robbed one of the passengers of the jetliner of $1,700 which Cuban Round Up Specials S25 FROSTING . ..... $12.50 S20 PERMANENT . .. SIO W . . . . . . . . . . $5.00 $10 TINT $ 3 HAIRCUT ...... $ 1.50 A-Abdol Beauty Salon 3006 Gu ad alu p e 478-5174 a m p l e Pa r k i n g S O C IA L IS M A N D B L A C K N A T IO N A L IS M Is Black Nationalism progressive or reactionary? W h a t Is the relation between Socialism and Black Nationalism ? These ques­ tions will be discussed in a speech by Dan Styron of the Young Socialist Alliance Friday, M arch 7, 8 P.M., Y M C A Auditorium. T H E P U B L IC IS W E L C O M E . SWIMSUITS - - - fo r Girls BELL BOTTOMS - - - fo r M en 1415 L A V A C A 2 N O O N - 5 P.M. 8 P .M .-I I P.M. News Capsules _______ By The Associated P re ss______ Explosion W o u n d s 28 Students J E R U S A L E M A plastic bomb exploded Thursday In the crowded cafe­ teria of Hebrew University, wounding 28 Israeli students. N ineteen of the injured were released a fte r treatm ent. Police rounded up scores of A rabs for questioning. The guerrilla organization, the Popular F ront for the Liberation of Palestine, announced in Amman, Jordan, th a t its mem ­ bers set off the b la st The bomb, a two-pound plastic charge, was placed In a flower pot on a wall of the cafeteria. There were about 250 students there when the explosion blew out windows and overturned tables. H ebrew U niversity has 12,000 students, among them 3,000 Americans. A uthorities said no A mericans w ere in­ jured. Tile explosion came less than two weeks after A rab te rro rists set off a bomb in a superm arket in Jerusalem , killing two persons and wounding nine others. The Pales­ tine front also said it touched off this explosion. N o Survivors in Plane Crash S A N J I A N Searchers found wreckage and mangled bodies T hurs­ day in the m ountain rain forest where a Puerto Rican In tern atio n al Airlines plane crashed Wednesday night with 19 persons aboard. A uthorities reported at least 12 bodies in the debris on a rugged slope near El Yunque peak in eastern Puerto Rico. N o survivors were found. Most of the 17 passengers were tourists returning to San Ju a n from a day of shopping a t St. Thom as in the n earb y US Virgin Islands. “T hey never knew w hat hit them ,” said Jaim e Carrion, th e airline owner. He said the four-engine De H aviland H eron hit the m ountain at 2,000 feet above sea level and plowed upw ard through dense foliage for about 50 yards. The exact cause of the crash was not known. M ountie D o g Teams W ill Retire W H IT E H O R S E , Y . T. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police are modernizing, and nex t w inter th e yelping of th eir dog team s will not be h eard in th e Yukon wastes. Two constables and their hus­ kies leave Old Crow in the fa r north Monday on a last lonely patrol, a m onth and 800 miles. A fter that, the approaching Mountie will be announced only by the a ir­ plane’s drone or the snarl of the m otor sled. A & M Freshman Collapses, Dies COLLEGE STATIO N An 38-year-old freshm an in Texas A&M U niversity’s Corps of C adets collapsed and died T hursday while under­ going physical training with his unit. The youth was identified by college authorities as Lyle Thom as Stein, son of Mr. and Mrs. H arvey A. Stein, Route 3, Hondo. A ir Force Col. Vernon L. Head said Stein collapsed about 5:25 p.m. just as he and several o th er cadets com­ pleted a one-mile run. The run was p art of a prescribed train in g program , Col. Head said. Fellow students said Stein just stopped breathing. He was rushed to the university hospital before being tra n sfe rre d to a Bryan hospital where he was pronounced dead. Peace Justice Jess McGee ruled death as a result of natu ral causes but did not list a specific cause. Page 2 Friday, March 7, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN ( f a il u r e J You'll never get anywhere without it. N o th in g h elps a you n g en gin eer's career lik e being giv en a ch a llen g e. Which is another way of saying a chance to f a i l now and then. To make his own mistakes. At Western Electric we give our newly recruited engineers responsibility almost immediately. They make their own de­ cisions. Learn from their own errors. D o n 't get us w rong. W e keep our demands rea so n a b le en ou gh so that our recruits can make their decisions at their own pace. But our thinking is, a man feels awfully good about even a small decision when it's his. If you're the type who'd like the chance to make your own moves, see our recruiter or write College Relations, 222 Broad­ way, N ew York, N. Y. 10038. A lot of hard work never hurt anyone. Western Electric MANU?ACTUR NG & SUPP; V UNIT OF THE BELL StjTLM Ah EQUAL OPPORTUNITY [MPlOttft Student Hurt Planting Bomb During San Francisco Unrest SAN FRANCISCO (A P )-F ires And bombings havj caused heavy damage at five major California colleges beset bv student unrest. Now officials are worrying that lives may be lost if the incidents continue. San Underscoring their concern was Wednesday night's blast at em­ battled Francisco State, where police said a freshman lest his sight and three fingers while trying to plant a home­ made explosive in a locker room. So far, no one bas been killed, authorities not«, in the series of arson and explosions at schools where students have been in con­ flict with administrator*. But “it s only a matter of tim# life,** loses his until someone said Thomas Cahill, San Francis­ co police chief. AP News Special “ D ie shocking thing Is that these bombs are left In areas where an innocent person or group could be killed,” he said. “ No consideration is given to life.” At San Francisco State, be­ sieged bv student militants for four months, *even bombings. there have been the Police identified injured freshman as Tim Peebles. They said he was found lying in the blasted area. Two unexploded, more powerful bombs were found nearby. In addition to losing b’s fingers and sight, physicians sa;d, Peebles was seriously burned. Behind Fountain Another time bomb — w h i c h didn't go off — was found at San Francisco State several days ago behind a drinking fountain. It was set to explode at the lunch hour wrhen students would be crowding past. $5 Hike Considered Bill Would Increase Union Fee The incidents have officials worried that some militants are turning from disruption to po­ tentially more lethal tactics. Ominous incidents have also occurred at the volatile campus­ es of Stanford University, San Jose State College, Valley State College and the University of California at Berkeley. Damage and Arson Stanford has had more than $200,000 in damage from arson: San Jose State had more than 30 smoke bombings and fires in one month; Valley State's employ­ ment office was bombed last spring, and Berkeley, scene of bombings and fires, reported th** largest single fire loss in the dis­ turbances — a mysterious $400,- 000 blaze to an auditorium. “ W e’re seeing things today that were unheard of two or three >ears ago,” said State Attorney General Thomas C Lynch. Professional Bombs “ Tile bombs, for instance, that were used at San Francisco State were professionally made and be­ yond the capability of someone just playing around with fire­ crackers or black pow’der. “ You know' the old gasoline and rag things, the Molotov cocktail? They're now getting around to using a kind of napalm,” L y n c h said. Radicals of both the left and right are suspected In the trou­ ble, said Lynch with an obvious reference to a recent arrest south of San Francisco. In that crack­ down. nine American Nazis were picked up as suspects in explosive terrorist tactics against groups on the left. chairman of the subcommittee, was asked about the possibility that some students might com­ plain that they would graduate before getting to use the build­ ing they paid for. “ That's like not wanting to pay school taxes because you're al­ ready out of high school," he re­ plied. If it becomes law, the bill's section for raising the fee would take effect Sept. I. A pomologist is a scientist who studies fruit and fruit growing. Izmir, the Turkish seaport sit­ uated on the Aegean Sea, was formerly known as Smyrna. Mary Quant Cosmetics are coming The University C o O p I U N I V E R S I t i y I c o l o j p House Committee on Higher E d ­ ucation Wednesday by Rep Bob Armstrong of Austin. A law now states that students must be polled to approve an in­ crease in the Texas Union fee in excess of $1 per student for a long session semester and 50 cents per student for a summer session. Tile new bill would sup­ plant this law. Tile Increase has been okayed by the Board of Regents, but the students have not voted on the idea. Ja ck Steele, director of the Texas Union, said that students were polled several years ago when the new' wing was added to the present building. The poll was so time consuming, he said, that a rider was tacked onto the bill stating that no poll would be necessary. Tile money raised from the ex­ tra Union fee would go into a special bond program. The bonds would be paid for, in approxi­ mately 30 years. Steele said. The present Union, Rep. A rm ­ strong said, is not sufficient to handle heavy student traffic. its location Moreover, he said, on the west boundary of the cam ­ pus makes it Inaccessible to law students. Present plaas call for the con­ struction of several new buildings on the east side of the campus. Within a few years, a greater percentage of students will be meeting in classes in that area. Rep. Ace Pickens of Odessa, The Casual Ones For Those W h o Live Life Totally A bill which would raise the present Union fee of $5 per stu­ dent to $10 is boing studied by a House subcommittee. Tile money would go toward the construction of a new Union building to be located on the cast side of the campus. The bill was presented to the Speech Planned By Ex-Emissary James W. Riddleberger. former U S ambassador to Austria, will speak Monday at the University. Riddleberger, now a consul­ tant to the State Department, will speak at 4 pm . in Business- Lconomics Building 151, spon­ sored by the Committee on In­ ternational Studies. He will talk shout the role of an ambassador In American for­ eign policy. The guest, who w’as a member of the Foreign Sendee from 1929 until his retirement In 1968, has held ambassadorships to Austria. 1962-68; to G re e c e . 1958 61, and to Yugoslavia, 1953-58. E a rly In his career, he had dip­ lomatic assignments in Geneva, Berlin, and London. From 1917 to 1950, he w’as Counselor of Mis­ sion (with the personal rank of Minister) in Berlin and director of political affairs in the Office of Political Affairs at Frankfurt. Riddleberger also bas sened In the State Department as chief of the Division of Central Euro­ pean Affairs, director of the Bu ­ reau of German Affairs, and dir­ ector of the International Cooper­ ation Administration. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Randolph-Macon College and a master's from Georgetown University, where he taught in­ ternational three relations years before joining the Foreign Sendee. for Honors Ceremony Speaker Selected Dr. Otis Singletary, vice-chan­ cellor for academic affairs of the University System, will give the Honors Day address April 12 at the University. Dr. Douglas Morgan, philoso­ phy professor and Honors Day committee chairman, announced tile selection of the speaker. of Names individuals and groups to be listed in the Honors Day program should be sent to Waggoner Hall 301 before noon, March 21. Lists should he sub­ mitted in duplicate, Prof. Mor­ gan said. The lowing : list will Include the fol­ • Students selected for special academic awards and scholar­ (who have at least a B ships average). • Members of national honor societies which require at least a B average for membership. in • Undergraduates a l l schools and college of the Uni­ versity who have distinguished themselves during the two pre­ vious semesters by being in the upi>or 3 per cent of their class. 48 HOUR nmmimY KODACOLOR PRINTS Bring U* Your Expoted Film by 4: PM Prints Ready 48 Hrs. Later at 4: PM STUDTMAN PHOTO • C a n tio n Village 19th it La.i m Life is a ba!!. W h y not five it totally and iet it reflect in your clothes. Try this versatile sport coat. It is designed to go anywhere you can. O ther sport coats ranging from plaids to solids make life fun. Try one on. from $35 Distinctive Store For Men/In The CO-OP/GR 8-66M meet me american primitives A great influence In the detail and color of two great pants and tunic looks. On the figure on the right, In burnt orange with berry red and grape designs on the sleeve and a double strand of beads. On the left, in pernod green with stitched tucks and bright embroidery. The which can also be worn as a pants are 11.00, the tunic, J i mini-dress, 20.00. ■ Sizes 5 to 13. Friday, March 7, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN Fig# I Students Protest ‘E very th iUSSZ) th#5 I»an i m ia r S tu d e n ts -ari a m y rin d o f N I C f s o r u t their particular re n a rr protesti O'" at 'o o v e r questions of academic 'C r ntific research, and lie re i)ad freedom, black dc maw food and eating cond it t h e I n io n B ui Id inst. T h e fo l­ lowing Associated Press aith Ie indicates th at even over the least “ moral and philosophic’’ questions, students are forced to protest physically because th eir adm inistrators refuse to respond to complaints Protesting i*x>r condi­ tions is now a well-established part of the college student's life. “ROCHESTER, Minn. About 200 students staged an “anti-pot" demon st ration a t Rochester State Junior College Tuesday to protest n its and potholes on the main campus road. “ School authorities called in Rochester police, but they said they lacked jurisdiction and just stood around. “Some students accused the college adm inistration of being in collusion with Rochester “garages and front-end specialists in allowing pot holes to ‘grow-up’ on campus. “Chanting slogans, Including ‘rot holes must go,’ the students and their cars blocked access to and from the college for nearly 45 minutes. “Soon after the police arrived, a man started taking d o w n license num bers of the cars blocking the road. With th a t the students cram m ed intr) the autos, and they were last se e n bouncing off into the sunset." S tudents on this campus could quite justifiably hold a “P ark -In ” on campus. T hat Is, early some Sunday m orn­ ing students could drive cars into all the entrances to the cam pus and leave them there blocking the driveways, in protest, of the ‘parking problem’ here. P arking Is an area extrem ely critical and about which absolutely nothing has been done by this University. The U niversity has offered no support for a student bus sys­ tem , lnter-cam pus tram , and more parking lots. Simply silence. The U niversity could have Indicated to the City Council th a t a shuttle bus Is needed around the campus. W ith a little support, the City Council might not have voted the it ^id. The City Council has approved the elimination of l l per cent of the on-street parking between I^amar Boule­ vard and Guadalupe and N ineteenth and Twenty-ninth streets. B ut the U niversity has not responded in any way to m ake provision for Its students. Why not? Is it not a U niversity responsibility? Editors Footnote The following article from the Chronicle of Higher Education m ay br an indication of future court trends in disruptions on campus. It may not look promising for stu­ dents. A L B A N V, V Y . - A New York court has upheld tJie rig h t of colleges to discipline students who disrupt e cam ­ pus. In a unanimous decision, the appellate division of the New York supreme court said, “The adm inistrators of a college or university possess an inherent authority to main­ tain order on its cam pus and freedom of movement there­ on for Invited guests, students, and members of the school staff." Tile ease, Schuyler v. State University of New York, grew out of a dem onstration protesting the presence of a recru iter from the Dow Chemical Company on the campus of the S tate University of New York a t Albany. When university officials announced plans to hold h ear­ ings that could result in the disciplining of some students, a group of students challenged the institution's right to do so. A ttorneys for the students argued that the university had not filed its rules on student behavior w ith the New York secretary of state’s office, as required by the state constitution. The first court refused to issue an order restraining the university from holding the hearings, and the students appealed. The appellate court said that rules for student disci­ pline do not affect the general public and therefore do not have to be filed with the secretary of state. It then upheld the right of the university to “discipline, suspend, and expel students whose conduct is disruptive." T h e Da il y T e x a n Student New spaper at UT, Austin O p i n i o n s e x p r e s s e d In T h * D a l l y T e x a n ar * th o s e o f th* e d ito r or of th e w rite ? o f t h e a r tic le a nd ar e n o t n e c e s s a r i l y th ose of the U niv e r ­ s i t y a d m i n i s t r a t i o n or o f t h e B oard o f R e g e n t s T h e D a l l y T e x a n a s t u d e n t new s p a r e r a ’ T h e U n iv e r s it y of T e x a s at A u s t i n Inc D r a w e r D, is pu blis he d d aily University. S t a tio n . A u s tin T e x a s 78~12 T h e T e x a n e x c e p t M o n d a y and S a t u r d a y and I ollriav pe riod* S e p t e m b e r t h r o u g h M a y S e c o n d - c l a s s p o s t a g e paid a t Auctir. is p u b li s h e d bv T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b lic a tio n * N e w s c o n t r i b u t i o n s w ill be a c c e p t e d bv J B t h e e d i t o r i a l o f f i c e 103 I n q u i r ie s c o n c e r n i n g th e d e l i v e r y s h o u ld he m ad e In J B 52441 and a d v e r t i s i n g . J B te le p h o n e m McKinney .......................................... Gary Taylor Assistant Sports Editor Make-Up Editor ....................................................... Paul SoRelle Copy Editors ............................... Janelle Dupont, Summer Milton .................................................................. Sara Bums Wire E ditor Photographers ........................... Paul Wallace, Dong Brightweli Page 4 Friday, March 7, 1969 THE D A IL Y T EXA N Disruptive Activities Bill ] Professor Considers "ISF"' "mumm Economist's AN ACT proh ruptive a ct i-> WI th the put st tut; pf esn clarin os r bing an RF, fT FN U T KB BV I T T ! KF OF T i l t T FX Xs*: J B N ortam i ronnee I lls and IIH IT,(.IS S T M E OF Section I. No person or group of persons acting in concert m a y will­ fully engage in disruptive a v .ity en the campus or property of arn public school or fax-supported institution of higher education. Soc. 2. (a) For the purposes of this Arf, “disruptive activity" m eans: (I) obstructing or restraining the passage of persons in an exit, en­ trance. or hallway of any building w th out the authorization of the ad­ min vfration of the school; i i ) se;z,ng f in tr " of any building or port on of a building for the pur­ p l e of interfering wit* any admin. istr.it ve, educational, research, er other auth r zed activity; (3) preventing or attem pting to pre - orb bv force or violence or the threat of force or violence arm law­ the a isembly authorized by ful school a dm .n itr a tio n : or lr ft) disrupting for e or vin- of f r<*o or v o- in prog­ lawful arvembly Jon•"'ii or tho t* lonec a ress. (b) For tho purposes of this Act. an assembly is disrupted when any person in attendance is rendered in­ capable of fully participating in the assembly due to the use of force or riomnep or due to * reasonable fear likely to that occur. force or violence Is 3. A pere./,n who violate* any provision of this Act is guilty of a m isdem ran *r and upon conviction is punishable by a fine of not Jess than $23 nor m are than $200 or by confine­ ment in jail for not less than IO days nor rn re than 6 mcntJis, or both. See. 4. The importance of this legis­ lation and the crowded condition of t o calendars in both houses create an emergency and an i m p e r a t i v e pub­ lic necessity that the Constitutional Rule requiring hills to hp read on three several days in each house be this Rule is hereby suspended, and suspended, and take this Act that effect and be in force from and after its passage, and it is so enacted. Senate amendments to the bill In­ clude one* by Sen. Oscar Mauzy of Dallas considered highly objectionable by Rep. Joe Shannon of Fort Worth, hie bill's House author. TI'.is am end­ ment reads: “This act does not apply to any person who expresses his opin­ ion without m aterially and substan­ tially interfering with appropriate dis­ cipline in the operation of any private institution of or public school or higher learning. This act does apply to any perron who m aterially disrupts classwork or involves substantial dis­ order or the rights of others." invasion of Sen. M auzy said his amendment merely would incorporate in the hill restrictions on student dissent spelled out in a US Supreme Court pinion about a week ago. The court ruled that a school could not prohibit stu­ dents from wearing black arm bands in pr< test. Tile Senate adopted an amendment by Son. Mike McKool of Dallas chang­ ing the minimum penalty for viola­ tion from the $25 fine approved by tile House to as little as $1. Another amendment by Sen. M ur­ ray Watson of Mart would insure that the hill would cover vocational and technical schools. Several “ corrective" amendments were added by the Senate which sen­ ators said were needed to carry out the intent House m em bers had ex­ pressed in rushing the bill through. College Generation Lacking Confidence in ‘Rule Makers’ By DANA FRIEDEL Editorial Page Assistant As Texan w riter Ben Sargent predicted In an editorial page article Sunday, the “disruptive activities" bill was not im ­ peded by the Senate. In fact, it. passed 31-0 with a few amendments. Tile bill. as reported out of a confer­ ence committee, received tile approval of the House Thursday. Voting against the report were Reps. Rex Braun, Curtis Graves, R. C. Nichols and Arthur Vance of Houston: Mrs. Frances Farenthold of Corpus Christi; Ed Harris of Galveston and Paul Moreno of El Paso. Senate ac­ tion is expected next week. Repressive Nature Sargent referred to the bill as a “ back­ lash against violent student protest be­ fore it ever happened." He also noted the haste in which ihe hill was produced, its vagueness, and its repressive nature. To light of these factors and other de­ velopments such as the resolution intro­ duced into the House (E ditor’s column, Feb. 28) and the lefter from Houston to the Editor (Editor's column. March 5), the seriousness of House Bill 141 should be recognized. Actions like the above indicate that in the 1960’.* legislators and other citizens the confusion on college cam ­ believe puses has been brought upon them by tile deep dark forces of communism, much as Salemites of the 1690's attrib u ­ ted social disorder to witches. What these concerned citizens are not able to see is that student activists are involved in efforts to organize their so­ cial live* with less repressions and more individual the student generation has lost faith in many of those whose role it is to strike the balance between freedom and order. largely because liberty, McCrocklin It is. whether Texas educators realize it or not. an enigma to many students that educators have so long delayed ac­ tion on the McCrocklin case. A student who has read the results o: analyses of the dissertation, the thesis m d the Hart Report or actually had access to them documents and has heard tile decrees of blamelessness issued by tile State Col­ lege Board of Regents ran feel nothing less than disgust with m any adm inistra­ tors. Tt is also difficult for m any students to understand why some legislators can call info qu^-stinn publicly the capability’ of an adm inistrator, and, out of fear that they will be the only ne* opposing reappointment with a vetr. vote to rein­ state the adm inistrator in question. There are, admittedly, valid political reason* for such action. Such a vote could be quite a disadvantage to a legis­ lator’s constituency if under the influ­ e n t of such an adm inistrator. But most students are not politicians and are not cognizant of such a rationale. And p er­ haps the shoe fits both feet. Students do not comprise a large number of state votes. Dissatisfaction Perhaps views such as the ones ex­ pressed above are naive and “overly idealistic." Maybe one day this w riter will look back at them and feel foolish. At any r a 'e they are reflective to sortie e x t e n t of the reasons for the dissatisfac­ tion of today's youth. When legislators are ready to fight the problems and not the symptoms, there is a gord chance stud en* s will support them and the symptoms will begin to disappear. 'Same Fe cli u p s’ Si rh an Sir’ .an, alleged assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy told his defense to lawyer, "Zionism me than communism is to you. I have the sam e feelings about Zionism as you do about communism ’’ is more inimical Co-Op Inadequate Bv KRlbHVN G. SAINI Assistant Professor of Economies o rc of the principal objectives of th* policies of tile Co-Op Board. (Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of articles analyzing the Uni­ versity Co-Op. The next article will discuss “ How Not to Run the Co-Op.” ) is shifting This is not tile only manner in which the debt the Co-Op Board burden from future students to the p re­ sent group of students at the Univer­ sity. The Co-Op Board also has engaged in a policy of pre-paying its debt ob­ ligations from the current operations of the Co-Op. Obviously, the present group of stu- dents at the University not only receives lower dividends as a result but also makes it possible for some future stu­ dents of the University to get higher divi­ dends. This follows from the fact that if debt is p repaid, the present generation of students have in effect borne proportion­ ately greater debt burdon and. conse­ quently, future generations of .students lower total debt which would have a otherwise w uld have to be serviced through a reduction in the potential size of their dividends. Higher Dividends the During tho financial year July I. 1967, to June 30. 1968, the Co-Op Board pre­ paid $23,339 from long-term debt. lf this pre-payment had not been made, the amount could have been distributed as dividends. Thus, the amount of money distributed as dividends would have been higher by 6 per cent in 1957-68. The decision to redistribute economic burden among different generations of students involves e p ic a l judgements. I see no evidence that these considerations a re understood by tile present Board of the Co-Op. Nor is there any Indication that the present generation cf students who have been made to suffer an increased debt burden were ever consulted or even made aw are of this fact. It is quite likely that if tile present generation of students were to be consulted ab u: the redistri­ bution of the debt burdon in their direc­ tion that they would decline this dubious honor. Bigness TI e Co-Op has been expanded in re­ cent years at a feverish rate. But no­ where have I found any explanation for this maddening drive for bigness. T ie Co-Op may have any number of objec­ tives that it is trying to achieve through its operations and expansion, although I am at a lo** to understand just what tho*o objectives are. But T am quite certain of nno thing: an increase in the welfare of the Univer­ sity community in general, and that of students in particular, is certainly not Tex!book Bargain “ But the simple truth is that In term s of what it costs the Co-Op, the biggest bargains in the store are the textbooks,*' was a statem ent made by the student mem bers of the Co-Op Board In their recent article in The Daily Texan. This is an absurd statem ent. When people talk about bargains, they mean lower prices in a particular store com ­ pared with the prices in other stores In tile area. If one were to follow the Co- Op’s definition of bargains, one w’ould have to conclude that the purchase of socks is a great bargain at Neiman- Marcus stores. Such s ’atoments from the student m em bers of the Co-Op Board In­ dicate a lack of, not only business sense, but also common sense. student m em bers of Even if the statem ent about textbook bargain were true, it must be taken in conjunction with another statem ent of the Co-Op tile Board: “ We would like to m ake it clear that on some items, such as appliances, room furnishings, food, and certain other things, tile Co-Op (loos not and cannot local offer stores." lower prices than other Result Two points must be m ade about this statem ent. First, it is an incorrect sta te ­ ment because it assumes that other local stoles Charge list prices as does the Co- Op, which they do not. Second, if the Co-Op policies were designed to enhance the welfare of the University community, then such pricing policies on non-text­ book items are unjustifiable. Tile result of the present policies of the Co-Op is that it is able to generate dividends by charging prices on tex t­ books which are at or above publishers' list prices and list prices en other m er­ chandise while such m erchandise could He purchased at considerable discounts at various stores throughout Austin. A Net lo s s Such Driving policies can be justified only if it is shown that the University community purchases prim arily text­ books from the Co-Op, and non-textbook m erchandise of flip Co-Op is so!d pri­ m arily to non-students. If, as I think is the case, the University community buy* both textbooks and other merchandise from the Co-Op. the pricing policies of the Co-Op mean the redistribution of the realized mark-up among the sam e group of consumem. As a consequence, ne net benefit is derived by the University community from the existence cf the Co Dp. In fart, there Is a reason to believe that the Uni­ versity community suffers a net less in welfare due as a result of the existence and pricing policies of tho Co-Op. Hie Tiring Line i i t o n a l i z i n g To the Editor: Recently, my biology’ class was sub­ jected to a full-hour barrage of bigotry, rourtesy of our professor. Imbued with a zealous spirit, immediately af tor the tardy bell, he whipped out an editorial taken from the Texas, which sum m ar­ ized the demands of tile Afro-American students to the administration. He pro­ ceeded to tear it and them apart . This professor did not limb his h a r­ angue to rational statem ents hut inject­ ed his own opinions about how Negroes to the white m an’s do not contribute culture and should either adapt to its demands or get out. When the class protested, he attem pt­ ed to discredit tile opinions expressed on the basis that we were merely "im- m a’ure teenagers, devoid of experience and wisdom" whose opinions were therefore meaningless because we "did­ n't even know what is going on" in the world. The point is, to editorialize, Faculty' Fireside. if the professor wants let him sign up for a Name Withheld Violence Concern? To the Editor: reaction In his article in the March 2 issue of the Texan, Ben Sargent seems to show' to the nation-wide alarm at campus violence. He seems e*peciallv appalled at the Texas House of Repre­ sentatives' passage of a “ disruptive acti­ vities" bill, since there have been only very few campus disruptions in Texas. Maybe Sargent thinks ti at the Legis­ lature should wait until there is wide­ spread violence en Texas campuses, and then pass such a bill. its alleged “am biguity” Although Sargent condemns the bill because of it is doubtful that he, or others who use the sam e argument, would he favorable to the bill. regardless of its degree of clarity. In Sargent's article, we are also told, that, w'hile the overall public reaction to the above mentioned bill is favorable the reaction of students is "understand abti d iffe re n t" Tt would be interesting to know the exact number of people Sargent polled to reach this conclusion, for thoro are still many students who are in college to get in education, and who rh) not wish their education to be disrupted by small bands of trouble m akers whose sincerity in desiring ed­ ucational reform and academic freedom Is questionable, at best. While playing down left-wing campus disorders, Sargent cite* incidents of re­ action by police, one student incident at Queens College, and the attem pts to re- niavo SDS from two college cam puses as evidence of “ a violent new force that threatens the university's from the right as much as the campus-wreckers on the left." If is gratifying to know that the au­ thor of the artic’e Is concerned about tile possible over roach as from campus violence; however, it is too bad that he does not seem to show die sam e concern for the violent disorders that have caused such a reaction, Harlan D. Hays G ratitude, Dr. Ayres To the Editor: I think we aJl owe a debt of gratitude to Dr. Jam es B. Ayres, assistant pro­ fessor of English and form er dean of students resigna­ (until his November tion). A* is evidenced by recent Texas a r­ ticle*. he has been quietly developing program s that will be of real benefit to students: program s for underprivi­ interdisciplinary for leged studies, for additional scholarships for students, relations w'ith increased Huston-Tillotson College, etc. students, for " 'h a t a contrast Dr. Ayres makes the “ Vice-President Tor Student with Affairs," Dr. Bryce Jordan! Dr. Jor dan—to judge from his recent perfor­ mances—seems more interested in keep­ ing students in line than in initiating con­ structive programs which would utilize and direct student energies, interests, and capabilities. It is a pity that Dr. Ayres did not the administration find his position in for making suitable contributions viously is interested in making. the constructiv'e to the University he ob­ C~>uld it be that the present Univer­ sity administration is so overladen with attitudes like Vice-President Jordan's that participation in it precludes work­ ing for the students? Or perhaps Dr. Ayres simply conceives of a larger role for the teacher than do the ex-teachers in our administration. David Earnest IHcaa! Ritual To the Editor: Would it not seem that the “patriotic" ritual which took place at 11:40 a.m. Monday would be considered “a violent demonstration with a result of causing the interruption of classes" and there­ fore he against the law recently passed by the Texas Legislature? Aimer Applry T h ird Degree To Hip Editor: I vv iuli like to comment on the view­ point expressed by Cliff Wilkie in Thurs­ day’s Texan in connection with the Mc­ Crocklin case. The question whether or not the dis­ sertation satisfies the requirem ents is in­ deed the question and the only one. be­ fore the University. We may privately Official N o t i c e N O T I C E TO S T U D E N T S A dva nc ed S t a n d i n g E x a m i n a t i o n s e r n m e n t 6 l 9 i and G o v e r n m e n t 610b. In Gov­ I In and etna fr om 9 1969 fr om ( i f neeess ar> > -oust m a k e a g r a d e of C th e c o u r s e T h e p r e r e q u is i t e s t a n d i n g e x a m i n a t i o n s i m l GlOb w il l he held in Gov­ A dvanc e d in BU B ern m e n t 6 Um to 12 ISO S a t -j rd a* March 8 to 4 p m a rn or The s tu d e n t in o r d e r to rec e iv e hpt’ er In t h e e x a m i n a t i o n for credi t is c o m p l e t i o n of E n g lis h G o v e r n m e n t SOI or c o m p l e t i o n o f E n g lis h 60ln w it h a r ta d e of a or R T he p r e r e q u is i te for Gov- • r n m e n t 610b Is c o m p le t i o n o f G o v e r n m e n t 6]Oa for S t u d e n t s ma*- no t r e c e iv e credit doth 619a and 610b by a d v a n c e d s t a n d i n g e x a m i n a t i o n th e S t u d e n t s e x a m i n a t i o n s th e D e p a r t ­ s h o u ld a p p l y at m ent of G o v e r n m e n t off ic e . W a g e n e r Hall b e fo r e T h u r s d a y M arch 6 O n l v s t u ­ 123 th e u n i v e r s i t y d e n ts rurre nM v e n r o ll e d ar e e n a b l e Copia*, o f th e 610a and Blob s y ll a b i and ' a m p l e I st qty- ’ inns ar e a v a i l ­ able in the d e p a r t m e n t a l o ff ic e . t a k i n g o n e of in t e r e s t e d In In the man'* doubt such doubts may be more or lcsx well found­ ed. integrity, and But we must face the fact that there for private is no public enforcement suspicions. And there is no due process that would afford access to the ulterior of a person’s conscience. An institution, such as tho University (or even a court of law), cannot pass upon this point. There is only one way for the University to pass judgement on McCrocklin's work, and that is by eva­ luating his adherence to a pre estab­ lished set of requirements. If it is found that tho dissertation 's after all acceptable this will not neces­ sarily have resulted from a rationaliza­ tion. And, of course, if ii is so found, there will rem ain the p ssibility ■ f con­ testing the finding in one way or a n o t h e r , lnr-ies between the re ­ based on dis iv quirements and Mi Cr cklin’s perfor­ m ance and nothing else. The point is that in public disputes ac ­ cusations of di*hone*ty are out of place because there is no public yardstick by which a m a n s integrity can justly be measured Besides * a IO per cent state tax rebate he will propose. Nobody really attacks he leader of his own party able for reelection. if he seems unbeat­ T ie potential triggering device for a Republican explos: n is he US Senate seat held by Republi­ can George Murphy, now in good health but unable to spr lk above a whisper because of 1966 throat surgery. If Murphy reluctantly hows out rather than face his probable Democratic John V. Tunney, the foe. Rep. Finch and Reagan forces might collide—perhaps with Finch him­ self running against Reinecke for the Senate nomination. Bu it the edifice of the angr> upon words of this past month, su a contest could go far toward returning the Republican Party to internal chaos. (o) 1960 Publlshers-Hall Svndi If You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will IJsten Telephone 176-7078 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service n calling for a cabi- Department of Youth ho introduced in Con- ess i on. :urc. - P sponsored by (D -Fla ), per asfer the Pea rn C cps. ii the National Teacher > such a department. also calls for an Of* )Uth Participation wiih- partment. urb an Aff gre R ; VV OI VIS Cor T lice in irs wi s this rn ie Cia I t r r lid TA a li­ ps intr he hill - of Y< tho do “ seek fir'' would, according to Pepper's office, to direct young Americans to paid and volunteer v. rk in their local communities.'’ P ne addressed Congress last v. ■ ?k regarding “ a troubled and troubling period in our history" and y uth who have “ gone so far as to take to the .streets in protea and virtually lay seige ti c 'loge and university cam­ puses." Use Texan Classifieds 41 I — IM \ A + \ University l l S ir v )« i U A PLUS LECTURE NOTES BEING OFFERED CURRENTLY IN THE FOLLOWING: C h em . 301.1 C h em . 302.1 Chpm . 302.3 Chpm , 302.4 C h ?m . 302.6 302.5 Bio. 303 9 Bio. Eco. 302.17 Eco. 302.20 Eco. 303.13 Eco. 303.16 Eco. 303.22 Phil. 310. 2 Zoo 303. 9 G o v . 610 a.3 G o v . 6t0e.4 G o v . 6<0a.9 G o v . 610#.21 .2 P jy 301 Ply 351 .1 A subscription is $7.95 plus tax and induces all notes from the beginning of the semester. C om e b y A-Plus. A - PLU S U N IV E R S IT Y S E R V IC E S IN C . is located at 504 W e s t 24th Street across from the Castilian)— or call 477-5651. hy rough By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK SA C RA M EN TO , C alif.- In a rare one-hour audience with Gov. Ronald Reagan here re­ cently, Assemblyman W illiam Bagley put into words the un­ spoken fears of thoughtful Re­ publicans over Reagan’s escalat­ ing feud with Robert Finch. Bagley, a key figure in the Finch wing of tile party, sug­ gested that Reagan and his al­ lies might be triggering a rever­ sion to the fratricide of the mid- 1950’s when colliding ambitions ox W illiam F . Knowland. Good­ win Knight, and Richard M. Nix­ on very nearly destroyed the Ca­ lifornia Republican Party. Ac­ cordingly, Bagiev asked Reagan to consider the danger of the bad old days returning. The Governor, supremely con­ fident in his popular adulation, was non-committal in reply. But Bagley correctly perceived the seeds of Republican disaster in the Reaganite onslaught on Finch pven though decripitude and in­ cessant personal haggling pre­ vents California Democrats from capitalizing on this potential for the foreseeable future. Building Tensions Actually, the left-vs.-right schi­ sm in this state's Republican P a rty never disappeared and was m erely dormant since the Reagan landslide of 1966. During two frustrated years as Lieute­ nant Governor, Finch managed to maintain a facade of harmony with Reagan. But the tensions were building. Finch's liberal Republican sup­ porters in the Legislature, less circum spect in maintaining cor­ the conservative d iality with Governor, were restrained from open assault m ainly by Finch s presence. On the other hand, Reagan's inner circle never for­ gave Finch for backing his old political patron. Nixon, against the Governor for the presiden­ tial nomination. What broke the facade of har­ mony was Fin ch ’s decision, first. to b e c o m e Nixon's Secretary of Health, Education and W el­ fare (H E W ) and. second, name Assemblyman John Venom an Ca sharp critic of Reagan) as his Under Secretary. Two years of pent-up emotion broke during the Inaugural B a ll at Washington's 20 Sheraton-Park Hotel when, in a white-ti e-and-tails confrontation. Reagan unburden­ ed himself to Finch's face of multiple grievances against his former Lieutenant Governor. Jan . Chief Hatchetwielder That wasn’t all. Edw in Reinec- ke, a two-term conservative con­ gressman plucked from obscuri­ ty by Reagan to succeed Finch (much as Lieutenant Governor to Fin ch ’s friends), suddenly burst upon Sacram ento as chief hatchet­ wielder for the Reagan wing. outrage the of Publicized most was Reinoc- ke’s charge of disloyalty to thp Republican P a rty by Veneman for sacrificing his Assembly seat from a Dem ocratic district. But what bothered Fin ch ’s friends most was Reinocke’s unprece­ dented disclosure that Assembly Speaker Robert Monagan, a Finch ally, had cast the deciding in secret vote against Reagan session of the university Re­ g en t to (xinfirm Dr. Philip I>ee (a former Assistant Secretary of H E W ) as chancellor of the Uni­ versity °t California Medical School. Moreover, the fact that L*e (labelled an advocate of "socia­ lized medicine" bv Reineckc) was the university job by Finch aga n suggests Rea­ gan harassment of Finch. tabbed for Simultaneously, President Nix on was bombarded with opposi­ tion to Veneman from Reagan- ites (including a personal tele­ gram from San Francisco busi­ nessman Leland Kaiser, one of Reagan’s chief money raisers). Loss bombastically, Reaganite politicians have been spreading the word in California Republi­ can circle's that Finch showed his disregard for the party by pulling Veneman from the I le­ gislature. Finch’s allies here re­ gard all of this as nothing less than a Reagan campaign to de­ stroy Finch’s political viability in California. the Governor. Fey Relations Thus, with Fin HH in Washing­ ton, relations between his friends in Sacramento and Reagan are icy. Speaker Monagan seldom sees Finch's friends complain privately that Reagan is more concerned with his t e l e v i s i o n image than this state’s proliferating pro­ are blems; in shrugged off by the Reagan camp as phony Republicans. they, turn, Tile main reason why this has not yet escalated into open fac­ tional w ar is Reagan’s populari­ ty, bolstered by the campus re- This Ad Is Worth $5 Discount O n i i o u r S e n io r l^ in a . . . . jo h n l\o!>crt.i ORDER YOUR RING NOW! M A R K OF T H E W O R L D S F I N E S T S C H O O L R I N G S the m o s t respected sy mbo l o f y o u r e d u c a t i o n a l a c h i e v e m e n t . nghorn ’Oh UU 2236 Guadalupe GR 6-4542 LAW SCHOOL RING NOW AVAILABLE SYLVANIA W IL L B E IN T E R V IE W IN G ) MARCH 10-11 F O R T H E F O L L O W IN G G R A D U A T E S BS/MS/PhD EE MS/PhD Statistics/Math BS/MS ME BS/MS IE see your placement office for our brochure A Conservative « MM ’ W et Blankets Dampen Critics By JAMES J. KILPATRICK W ASH INGTO N — Tile Foreign Relations Committee has finished its perfunctory hearings on the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. A report will he filed this week. Within the next few days, M ajor­ ity Leader Mike Mansfield will schedule vote. Meanwhile, critics of the treaty are being softened up by the “ virtually certain" treatment. ratification a This is the line of propaganda which says that ratification is virtually certain, so why make the effort? No more than ‘‘token opposition" is expected. Hie treaty should “ easily" command the necessary two-thirds vote. A f­ ter all. President Nixon has asked for ratification, and who would rebuff the President? responsibilities of The ratification of a treaty— especially a trea'y as portentous as this one—is among the most solemn the Senate. Under the Constitution, a treaty' made “ under the au­ thority of the United States" be­ comes a part of the supreme law of the land. Yet one senses on the Hill a dismayingly bland approach to the non-proliferation pact. It would be surprising lf half of the Senators have even read the treaty' or thought deeply about it. The threshold question has to Chapman College O range, California "W orld Campus Afloat” D i v i s i o n o f I n t e r n a t i o n a l E d u c a t i o n 8. W . M U S G R A V E S Admissions Counselor W ill visit Austin students on Friday, M a rch 7, 1969, to interview students interested in ap p lyin g for admission for a to 'F lo a tin g C am p us" S E M E S T E R AT S E A . H e will be lo ­ ca ted in Letterm an s Room, 40 A cres C lu b from 2:00 p.rn.-6:00 p.m. the A ll courses o ffered are a ccre d ite d in­ and will transfer back to home to ap p ly on d eg ree plan. stitution Students earn credit, 15* j hours visit IS to 20 countries, and do study in as many ports of research and call each semester. Fall semester 69 will d e p a rt N ew IO, 1969, and te r­ York on O c to b e r m inate Ja n u a ry in Los A n g eles on 29, 1970. Spring semester 7 0 will d e ­ p art Los A ng eles Feb ruary 3, 1970 and term inate in N e w York on M a y 27, ab o ard the s. s. R Y N D A M , Hol- land-A m erica Lines. be asked: Why ra tify ? W hy should the United States, which takes its treaty obligations seri­ ously, agree to ne bound by the l l articles the N P T ? that make up truth, j The best of all answers, of course, would be that ratification w ill make our own nation more secure. If this is true, that would put an end to it. But the evi- j dence on this point is weak and unimpressive. The blunt which proponents of the treaty' insist on glossing over, is that the very powers most likely to develop nuclear weapons are the same powers that have refused to agree to this treaty: Red Chi­ na, West Germ any. France, Is ­ rael, Japan, South Africa, and India. As to them—and they are the ones that count—the treaty is meaningless. But the treaty, once ratified, would not be meaningless to the United States. We could not thereafter ‘‘transfer to any re ci­ pient whatsoever" — no m atter how friendly— "nuclear weapon^ or other nuclear explosive de vices or contral over such weap­ ons or explosive devices direct­ ly, or in directly." We would be lim iting ourselves where It does not count (Denm ark, Cameroon. Ireland and N igeria), hut gain­ ing nothing of substantive value where it might count. Set aside the question of na­ tional security: What other rea­ sons are advanced in support of ratification? We must get along with the Soviet Union, it is said. W e must join with the Commun­ ists in creating a better and more peaceful world. This treaty is a gesture in that agreeable direc­ tion. If there had been one single significant counter-gesture toward rapprochement by the Russians, such an argument might he per­ suasive. Of course we must seek to get along with the Soviet U n­ ion. But one looks in vain for that m utuality of peaceful inten­ tions so vital to a true “ cooling off.” What have the Russians been doing la te ly? They have ; raped Czechoslovakia, b u l l i e d ! Berlin, and continued to arm ! the North Vietnamese. Diplom acy I is in part the art of quid pro quo? W here’s the quo? ( C l 1969 T h e W a s h in g to n S t a r Syndicate. In c.) U N ITY i lie Pioneer of Positive Thinking SPECIAL LECTURE: JE PTH A ’S FO RM U LA FOR D E L IV E R A N C E International lecturer. Author of 8 books on prosperity, healing, love and prayer. Catherine Ponder, Minister UNITY OF AUSTIN Colonnade Ballroom — Commodore Perry Hotel SUN D AY E V E N IN G , 8:00 P.M. A F FILIA TED WITH I M T V SCHOOL OF CHRISTIANITY LEE'S SCHMIT, MISSOURI SYLVANIA A SUISIOIAIV Of GENERAL TELEPHONE & ELECTRONICS an equal o p p o r tu n ity e m p l o y e r TIie aUh, jumpsuit with th® seethrough loolc for shyer Hoes • • . a -hee'1 vr'f# bod ic® and Tun puffy sleeves w rh ruffled cuffs abo.® rn® extra wide pan" ar® drought together at an emp re waistline accentuated by a hot pink grogram ribbon, Styed In the wildest of prints with highlights of pink and white on the lower sleeve and wide flair of the pant leg. In navy with pink and white in sizes 3 to 13. 20. Hancock Center Friday, March 7, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN Pact 5 Baseballer Host O U Friday Hooton, Sheet Slated to Start B t E P S P A U L D IN G Sports Editor An unusual double-doublchearier VV COK scores f»f ~ 3 and 12-0. who works in relief in the first ins r season this wwk- three.'' says Gustafson. necessary, “ and if we re in a ball game, we want Tommy in there,’’ sa vs Gustafson. 6-4. both ends of a double-dip, 4-1 and I ’ >uld keep baseball fans happy ( " . i f f (in lafson plans to start tr ‘ weekend, as Texan and Okla­ righthander ? the f i r s t thre^ homa clash in four game*-' Friday a n d Saturday at Clark Field Tho I/inghornn ar** 2 A after trouncing Sam Houston State last use “ whoever is left” games and in the fourth. Burt Hooton and .James Street are the nominees for Friday, with L a rry Hardy certain for Saturday. The other i>o N atl Salazar, pitcher may Larry Horton. Donnie H rue or Jim in y Crouch, “ depending on Continental Caw '64 Mercedes 220SE Cpe. $4,795 '61 Mercedes 220S ........... .$1,295 '67 Toyota Wagon ....... .$2,195 '67 Toyota 4-dr. . .$1,895 '66 A H Sprite . . .$1,595 65 M G Midget . .$1,195 64 A H Sprite . . .$1,295 '66 V W Sq. Bk. . .$1,695 65 V W ............. .$ 995 ‘67 M G B ........... $2,395 ......... .$1,695 '65 M G B ’63 M G HOO '64 Alpha '62 Mercedes $1,195 ......... .$1,495 190 SL ....... $2,595 '68 Rat 124 Cpe. $2,795 '65 Spitfire ....... $1,295 Phone 454-6821 200 W. HUNTLAND DR. OFF AIRPORT NEXT TO SAGE OPEN TIL 7:00 P.M. rn Get the bug in t i r o j i c J Ai / ■ t V / / p . f t • ave - zed OI y. Dar - rg. Yr j e n ' d on our sad VWi. W e va re _di' oned t i a bod.el, t -nad up tr a engines, fic^tenad up the ws • end n ara''(>ed e »- n IOCr„ for t! a repa.r or rep'anement '■ j ,r mer! anice parts* for of a 30 days or 1 j OO n~ >s. So tbey'II d r . r* . a- . /-• * ' * fc ♦ t ;g g y . . •prnnetransmisjlon • rear a vie • front axle assembl!**; • brake .'ii system '6* F i r e b i r d J d r II T. SOI. • * ■ -'it s h if t a n d radio ................. 12105 '67 V VV U re a S e d a n , w h it e w a ll ............................................. SI 595 S1295 S 805 '66 V . W . H a d in A H e a t e r . . . '6* V.W. Radio A H e a t e r . . . OPEN EVENINGS 4 4 ’ The starters in Friday's opener (which begins at I p m ) will be the s a m e as those who played the first game last week, though the batting order will vary some. Yeoman Duty for Tom Ivou Bagwell will play second base, followed by Ja c k M iller in comer, Tommy Harmon (catch- er), Pat Brown (left field), David Hall (third base), Gene Salmon John Langerhans (right field), (first base). D e n n i s Kasper (shortstop) and Hooton. When the Sooners counter with a lefty (Ron Hall) in the second game, Poindy Peschel will be in right, Doug Fell In center and Pa t Amos at short Gustafson says he would like to get as many players as possi­ ble into the weekend series, “ es­ pecially i f we win two of the first three.’’ T h e roach thinks sophomore backstop H ar­ mon could go all four games if longhorn .344 Scott Harrington hit for the Sooners in 1968, with outfield­ er Doug Folger a? .301, and out­ fielder Hon Rowell at .292. In ari­ el tion. Folger had four triples and frmr homers while third baseman G ary Harper had six round trip­ pers, one a gain.st Texas. in Friday's Dennis Ranzau (3-3 won-loss record a year ago) will pitch for the Sooners first game, then Coach Enos Semore will call on Hall (5-3). Pitchers for the second day figure to to David W eaver and Boh Masteller, a pair of freshmen. T e x a s T ook 2 of 3 OU was 13-14 in ’68, including a 10-8 mark (third place) In the tough Big Plight. Only one starter (outfielder Dick Turner) has graduated. Texas and Oklahoma opened last year with a three-game se­ ries, tile Sooners beating Hardy 2-1 in a single game, then Texas behind Street and Horton, taking Gustafson was pleased by his team’s .showing against Sam Houston, but said: “ Sam Houston didn’t play well, so it’s hard to tell how good we might have been, We played three of four in­ nings of good bai! each day, then I was satisfied with eased off. the fielding (only one error), and the lack of mental erros, which hurt us last year.’’ Hall Hitting .Til Harmon has the only home mn for Texas thus far. with Hall the leading hitter at .711 on five-for- s< von, including two doubles and a triple. Tliis week's bad weather has limited tile ’Horns to only one full day of workouts, which does n't figure to help. Gustafson says OU has facilities ’n work indoors, so they won’t have missed as much work. There is no provision for making up the games if the weather interferes. AS A PART OF C O -O P W EEK 3 en quarter as both were clocked in 47.1. They came hack on the anchor legs of their re­ s p e c t s mile relay units to finish in a near dead heat 3:11.3. This time Morton was awarded the victory by a nose. As freshman last year the same pair placed one-two in the con­ ference 440 with Morton winning in 45.5 and Mills clocking 46.1 as runnor-up. Their times placed them in the nation’s top IO quar- tormiiers for the year, and Mor­ ton’s effort gave him the Number 4 all-time ranking. Tile mile relay quartet will he seeking to improve in two cate­ gories. They finished second in this meet last year and with three of the same four members hack hope to improve that posi­ tion by exactly one. Also, their, only outdoor time of the season, 3:11.3, is almost two full seconds slower than they ran at Laredo last year. A marked improvement in this area probably will be nec­ essary for victory. Tile ’Horns will furnish three individual defending champs in pole vaulter Jim Mallard, who went l l ’ 8” , miler Fred Cooper, who blazed a 4:09.7 in the last meet, and Captain David Marina who ripped off a 1:51.6 half mile. M allard’s best for this year is al­ ready up to 15’ 6” and this will make him one of the favorites in Hie vaulting event. Captain Eddie Canada is slated to be Texas’ only triple competi­ tor with entries in both the sprint and mile relays and the open quarter. Tile 440-yard relay learn e' Canada, Tommy Colgin, Byrd Baggett, and Carl Johnson will not be considered a serious threat but they could surprise as they did with a victory against Abilene Christian College in the season’s first dual meet. E llio t Not a Flop ether Longhorn entries who will be among the favorites in their include halfmilers Mike events Mosley and John Robertson; hur­ dlers David Childress and Glenn Archer in the intermediates; and high jumper B ill “ Fosbury” E l ­ liot. After the Border Olympic's the ’Horns’ next competition will be a triangular against Baylor and Texas Tech at Waco March 15. $1595 M a r a I p » J 5 ORIGINAL DESERTS BOOTS ARE UNNECESSARILY HANDSOME. BUT WITH PROPER LOVING NEGLECT YOU C AN M A K E \ THEM LOOK LIKE THIS IN THREE OR FOUR YEARS. Cooper . mile defender. DAN 1500 L A V A C A 5353 BU RN ET RD. 1327 SO . C O N G R E S S G R 8-5423 H O 5-868? HI 4-1089 SPECIALS G O O D FRIDAY AND SATURDAY N E W STORE H O U R S IO A M.-9 P.M. 86 Proof— Stra.ght Bourbon Whiskey 86 Proof— Straight Bourbon Whiskey JIH BEAM TOM MOORE WALKER’S DELUXE WILD TURKEY 36 Proof— Straight Bourbon Whiskey IQI Proof- -Straight Bourbon Whiskey 5th 5th 5th 5th 5th 5th 5th 5th 86 Proof— Scotch Whiskey 80 Proof— Scotch Whiskey J & B SCOTCH GLEN MAVIS LEJON CHAMPAGNE DURO FATHERS ROSE California Champagne Portugese Rose W in e S H O E 2348 GUADALUPE ON THE DRAG Mustangs, W Sabine Grab Class A Wins ! 6 { I By Gary Taylor Asriwtant Sport* FVI i tor S'ate Boys’ Two first-year mams in the Basketball UTL Tournament learned the facts of life f r o m experienced hands Thursday morning, as Friends­ wood and West .Sabine moved in­ to the finals of Class A with im­ pressive wins. Opening the ! % 9 carnival at S'ifflWiimiiniiHiiiiiKmiiaii t t in I • • « | Sports I This Week I Ir ii t a r T e x a s Ran** bal I: (d o u b le h e ad e r vs C lark F ie ld r >klahnrrx I p m Track- T ex as a t B o rd e r O ly m p ic s T ex as at Bo rd er Otytnples at. Laredo (io lf a* I^ r e d o B asketb all: I 'U . B o y s' Basketball T ournam ent. O reg o n1 Gym Rase bal I: Saturday Texas vs (d o u b le h e a d e ri. C la r k F 'e ld Track Texas at Bo rd er 1 Oklahoma I P rn. triples (•elf: Texas at Rorder Ohmples at Laredo at Lared o. Tennis. T e x a s C o rn u s C h rist p rn U n iversity of Pentrk P o ur's, 2 U r e s t l i n c : Texas vs North Texas S '^ t e at Denton Basketball: C I L B o Basketball Tournam ent, G regory Gam. NIT Field Adds 4; Wyoming, Tulsa In teams, N EW YO RK (AF1! — Four more including high sporing Wyoming, were added Thursday to the lineup for the National Invitation Basketball Tournament in Madison Square Garden, March 13-22. In addition to the Cowboys, who averaged 83 joints a game this season, th#1 latest entries Include Tulsa, Ohio University, and St. Peters of Jersey City, N. J. Wyoming has a 19.8 record. Tulsa is 19 7, Ohio University 16-8 and St. Peters, 20-6. The leading snorers for each team are Bobby ‘'Bingo” Smith, aver­ aging 25 points a game for Tul­ sa; Elnardo Webster, 23 points f»»r St. Peters; Carl .\shley, 21 for Wyoming and Gerry McKee, 19 for Ohio. Webster scored 51 points in an NTT game against Marshall last year. 9:45 a rn, a” Gregory Gym, the Friendswood Mustangs pulled to an early lead, then held on to drop the Clarendon Bronchos, 70- 51. Tile second tilt followed a sim ilar format as West Sabine (Pineland) overcame late surge bv the Eagles from De­ troit, winning 72-54. a The winners now take a day off, meeting for the State Con­ ference A championship at 8:20 a.m. .Saturday. Clarendon and Detroit will battle for third place honors at 2 p.m, Friday In Tra­ vis High School Gym. Second-Period Surge West Sabine and Friendswood hope to improve on 1968 tourna­ ment finishes. This is tho fifth trip in eight years for West Sa­ ltine. having won the title in 1963 ’65 over the same team, and Woodsboro, Last rach year, the Tigers placed third iii the A class. time. The Mustangs from Friends­ wood finished second in Confe­ rence B returning last year, their starting team for this run at the A title. Loading Friends­ wood Thursday was senior Wyatt Thompkins, who hit for 27. The Mustang offense (60.4 per cent shooting from the field and 1-3-1 zone defense was captained on the floor bv sophomore guard Kent Ballard. Adead only 10-8 after a slow first quarter, Friendswood put on a second-period surge, tally­ ing 19 points to Clarendon’s five. Tile Bronchos could never make up the gap. although the Mus­ lead was just 53-45 with tang 3:50 remaining in the game. Pres* Ruins Detroit High scorer for the losers was 6-3 postman Charles I»u is (17 points and ll rebounds.) Senior guard B illy Horn led his West Sabine Tigers to the win in the second A contest. The senior hit for 26 points, while Connie jumping-jack six-foot Hunter cleaned the glass for 15 caroms. Again the second quar­ ter was the loser's downfall, as to 12 Detroit fell from points behind before half time. three Detroit out rebounded the Ti­ gers who don’t list a man on the squad over 6-2, but a full- oourt man-toman press made the difference, causing 27 Detroit turnovers. UL REB 29th & Rio G rande "WE CASH STUDENT CHECKS!" Open 'til 12 p.m. Plenty of Parking Space K A R A T E C LA SSES START M A R C H 8th J H O O N RHEE KARATE INSTITUTE 3409 G U A D A L U P E FW Kirkpatrick, Klein Excite A A Fans With Cardiac Wins By FT) S P U J D IM , Sport* Fid Hor For tho basketball fan who likes excitement, the AA semi­ finals played Thursday afternoon in Grog t v Gym had everything and a little m^re to offer. Til#* record shows Klein a 53- 52 winner over Hearne, and Fort V >rth Kirkpatrick t have beaten Crane 78-77. Also present was a record tying; 51 points by Crane s Tommy Jones, and a near-mira- culous comeback by Klein. Trailing 35-26 at the half, Klein battled back behind Harold Brid ges’ scoring and rebounding, an i finally pulled in t) & 50-50 dead­ lock with 3:30 to go when Brid­ ges hit a shot t jumper. Jones, Out of sight Robert White, Hearne s 6-8 postman, rimpf>ed in a in footer to put the Eagles on top "2 -50 Bridges then made a free throw, but his second shot came back out. Hearne ran the clock down to less than a minute, lost the ball and Klein took a timeout. H ie Bearkats then worked calm ly for a shot, and the bo ll was fed to Bridges. Hp pivoted, then hit teammate I/mnie Perry, wide open under the hoop, for the winning layup. TT;e 6-8 White trussed a final shot moments be­ fore the buzzer. Hardly had the tension lifted When Jones began his one-man effort to keep the Golden Cranes from Crane in the AA title chase A six-footer a\eraging 42 pom's a game enter-g the 1 >uriiey, Jones promptly threw in a 17- foot twisting jump shot, and a wild-scoring game was underway. Jones Not Enough Both reams shot freely and by half time the count was knotted at 43-43 Four points by Jones af tho >*nd of tho half were matt bed by Kirkpatrick, to establish the tie Tile game was knotted again a* 69-69 whon Jeffery for Jackie Crane dribble,! downcourt, pushed up a shot which misled and fouled the Wildcats’ Michael Burleson. After a technical had also been railed on Jrffet \. Burleson found only net for three free toshes. to {>ut the ’Cats on top 72-B9. Thev never trailed again, though A tt. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service F A C T O R Y TR A IN ED Volkswagen Specialists The Only Independent V W G arage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs A rld t’s Automotive Service 7951 BU RN ET R O A D Across from G ulf M art G L 2-0205 Closed Saturday a couple of buckets in the final minutes cut 'be edge to 78-75 A misled free throw with night seconds to play gave the bail tr Crane, and Jones pushed up a shot as he was fouled. He missed, but then with the to rhfl crowd silent, he went foul line after tho buzzer and sunk two shots. The bonus tosses gave him 71, tying the all time I IL record set in 1957 by Buna"! Don Stanley • • • • • • • M f Register No w! Low Cost • Top Value I V s i i s I m o n STUDENT TOUR K l R O P E Mediterranean Cruise! Faculty Etcort : Sinclair 8:ack SB fucking Day* Vialing LONDON STRATFORD W IN D S O R ETON OXFORD COVENTRY W A R W I C K BRUSSELS AMSTERDAM BREMEN COPEN- H A G E N H E L S IG N O R EAST BERLIN FR ANKFURT C O L O G N E H EIDELBERG G A R M IS C H M U N IC H SALZBURG INTERLAKEN LAKE C O M O MILAN RAPALLO VEN IC E R i m i n i f l o r e n c e R OM E ATHENS O L Y M P 'A C O R F U HYDRA C H IO S SA NTOKIN ! DELOS M Y K O N O S R HODES CRETE y u g o s l a v i a DU BR O VN IK TURKEY i s t a n b u l r i v i e r a s N IC E m o n t e C A R L O VERSAILLES I n f o r m a t i o n a l COFF F.E I M p m T h u r . M arc h IS S tar Ri b , f u t o n B i d i , Registration Deadline Naar for Folder A Information Call Union Travel Offic* GR 6-0222 or GR 8-9343 • • • • • • • • • • Don’t limit your Engineering Degree. You won't with us. We'll make you more than just another face behind a drawing hoard. W e’ll start you in a tough j o b . . . right out of college. You’ll move into a position where you supers ise people, run a job. A job that turns you loose to see the business as a whole. No training sessions, no waiting your turn. We want to channel your earlv, creative years into jobs that will build you . . . and us. This is all part of our program where college graduates start in decision-making jobs. Experienced people will help you, but they won’t lead you. Sure, we need all types of engineers. But more importantly, we need you. Talk to recruiters from AT&T, Sandia, Western Electric, Bell Laboratories and Southwestern Bell when they visit your campus March 10-11, 1969. Bell System An Equal Opportunity Employer Friday, M«reh 7, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN P*q» 7 Top Tivy Rebounder . . . 6-2 senior Harold Hardee led A A A Antlers over Corsicana, —P hoto by VV atar* KTBC 93.7 • AUSTIN '69 Relays A d d Event; Mile Run for Oldsters Tlie storied Texas Relays series has seen many sensational races against time, but the most popu­ lar fan event this year may be the slowest race of the forty- second annual carnival which will be held April 11-12. Tile new event is the Masters Mile, am event limited to parti­ cipants more than 40 years old. The idea for the old-timers' milp is in line with the recent physical fitness campaigns, spur­ red on by a book called “ Aero­ bics,” by Dr. Ken Cooper, an Air Force medical doctor sta­ tioned in San Antonio. Officials at the Astrodome Fed­ eration National Relays installed the event and found it to be one of the most popular in the entire meet. In fact, the greatest applause of the Astrodome meet came for a 65-year-old doctor who finished , last in a time of rune minutes, 58 seconds. The event Is limited to first 40 entries, and w ill be held as the climax of the first night of the ; Relays. Two prizes will be giv-1 en, one to the man who crosses , the finish line first, and another : to the man who runs closest to ■ the time he predicts he'll run it in. The Astrodome prize, for in­ stance, was won by W ally Simp­ son, a coach at Galena Park High School, who said he would run ! the mile in 6:30, and was clocked in 6:29.8. • America's Fastest Selling Malt Liquor T/Vy, Perryton Move Into Finals of AAA Bv E l ) SP A E L D IN G Sports Editor Kerrville Tivy used its height. Perryton used hot shooting, but thp results were the same, as those for thp AAA finals Saturday by tak­ ing semi-final victories Thursday night at Gregory Gym. toams qualified two Tivy, with two 6-7 postmen, dominated the backboards and scored almost at will on cold- shooting Corsicana to tako the opener. 68-50, in a game marked by 52 fouls. Antlers Don't Rattle Perrvton went quickly to work on Aldine-Carver. building a 35- 23 half-time lead, then holding off the Panthers for a 68-61 win. T iv v ’s twin towers, Ja c k Vest and Jim m y Locke, combined for 25 points hut had plenty' of help from Bonny Scharnberg, who was high with 15. Working with a three-guard setup, the Antlers worked patiently to isolate one of the big men on a shorter Cor­ sicana player, then took the sim­ ple layup or short jumper. When that failed, Scharnberg would dribble inside for a layup himself. Elven fouls failed to rat­ the Antlers. When Locke tle picked up his fourth foul before thp half, Harold Hardee entered and scored nine points and picked off 11 caroms in slightly more than 16 minutes of fl(X>r time. A Pressing Situation What depth and height didn’t do to Corsicana's Tigers, T iv y ’s fullcourt press did. The Tigers consistently failed to get the ball upcourt, and when they did, they were confronted by a zone which closed their offense down to v ir­ tually nil. The game was low scoring as a result of Tivy's tight defense, the final quarter, when until many of the fouls occurred as Corsicana pressed trying to get back in the game. Locke and reserve center E a rl Brown of Corsicana, both gangly at 6-7. engaged in too much pushing, and were ejected with a minute to play. Faced with a zone which would not cra.ck and a mounting score, the Tigers forced up numerous bad shots and finished the game with only 13 of 51 from the field, a 25.5 per cent clip. When The fouls made the game last long enough to force a 30-min- ute delay in the start of the Per- ryton-Aldirve Carver game. it did start. Carver probably wished it hadn’t. With Bob Gobin and Bill Nowlin able to beat the Carver press and feed the ball inside, size again became a factor. Scott Doores and Bill Brittain (both 6-5) held a considerable height advant on Carver, and easy bas! again resulted. Tlie Panthers’ only hope through the basket in the game was staying shooting of Willard Ester. E s who shoots from so far a\ from that wind must be gauged, kept his tc three quart < alive though Carver still trailed 54 In the first four minutes of last quarter, though. Car ripped off l l points to Perrytc to 55-53 v one, and closed four minutes left. A press ' responsible for some easy {xiii hut a timeout righted the R ger's situation, and they qua moved hack to 61-53. Ester a n i Gobin tied for ga honors with 24 markers oa while Doores connected on Id 16 from the floor for 23 for F rvton. The Apaches shot 52.2 cent for the game. 'B' Semis Start Friday Reduced from six teams to four this year, the Conference B semi-final games get under­ way Friday when Huckabav of Stephenville and Brookeland meet at 9:20 a.m. A second game will pit perennial tourna­ ment participant Snook a g a in s t Meadowy with time set for 10:40 a.m. tipoff B crown The Bluejays of Snook took the back-to-back Class in 1965 and 1966 and were third in the '67 tourney. They are led by 6-1 forward Frankie See and 5-6 Daniel Junek, both of whom played for Snook two years ago in Austin. Snook stands 43-3 for the year, though no player en the team stands taller than 6-2. Opposing Snook will be M dow (26-5). P'o-ward Loyd J dan paces Meadow scorers w a 24-point average, followed Mike Beasley (19) and 6-4 ( rata Caswell (18). Brookeland (the scorer’s nig m are) starts four Hunts, and ( the ben fifth off bring a Clark K. and Carroll W. ta identical 16.5 scoring norms. I team leader is tiny (5-7) gin Donald R. Hunt, averaging Ti Other Hunts ate George J. (I points and reserve L a rry C. Huckabav has the best rec* in C ass B. a brilliant 40 I. a comes to Austin with a 24-gm win streak. La rry Ledbetter (! and Kenneth Guest (IS) pace dian scorers. after Tivy (Kerrville) A A A win Thursday leaves only Perryton now blocking the state crown road. Post-Game C elebration Begins i'iioto by W a lla ce Wheatley's to Battle 0 6 7 It s Wheatley - Wheatley and The Lions from San Antonio Memorial-Odessa in the 1969 enjoy the run-and-shoot style, as AAAA State Tournament; and evidenced by their bloated scor­ the action should be fast and ing norms. Reese Stovall, who furious, especially when the all- doubles in football, stands 6-5 Negro Wheatley high schools from San Antonio and Houston hook up Friday afternoon. Lions Averaging 85.1 Tipoff time is 2:30 p.m., but interested fans are advised to buy tickets early in the day (a l­ so true for the Memorial-Odessa game, set for 7:15 p.m.) if thes­ pian to attend. San Antonio Wheatley is a per feet 30-0 entering the tourney, while defending state titllst Hous­ ton Wheatley is 24-2. the last 20 coming in succession. and has worked under the boards for a 26.5 per game average. Help comes from G ary I/>e (19.5), Aubrey Finery William s (17.4), Kenneth Hall (11.4) and G arry McVea (10.2). The Lions bombed Austin Anderson in a regional game last week, 108-79, have scored as many as 153 in a game this year, and are aver­ aging an almost unreal 85.1 a ball game. Jones, Stovall Battle Houston Wheatley (the W ild­ cats) was the undefeated AAAA state champ in 1968. Returning that team Jones, who is 6-8 center from lh', ght is scoring 24.9 a game. He will battle the ma-sivp Stovall in a battle that CHU decide the game. Mustangs, Old Hands Six-six forward Laurence John­ son adds l l 9 points and consi­ derable s zn to tile Wildcat front (12.1) and line. Gary Tatman Allen Batre (9.7) also will start. t i o-; pits fi-7 center for Odessa, Tho night half of the AAAA ac­ undefeated anothei > -inxi!. Memorial (41 0). against John W il­ the Odessa Bronchos. s o n . is scoring 27.7 a game, to pace his team. Memorial returns to the for the third state tournament t • in four years. They won in 1966 and were runnerup a year later. UIL Schoolboy Basketball Box Score K I R K P A T R I C K C R A N E C T I V T <68> C O R S IC C H IK M D S W O O D C L A R K N O O N CO* fc f< pf tp 12 3 a 27 7 4 a IR 6 2 I l l 4 2 3 IO D I I ll I O O I 73 12 I ? 70 <51 > fir ft pf tp .. 5 7 2 17 6 2 a a 2 0 2 0 I I Louts Monroi < 'n rto r Adams xi oo re Rooso T o ta ls 13 13 l l 51 W E S I S A B I N E - 72) f 8 ft pf t p 0 2 26 a i ir» 2 a 11 4 I IO a o a o a 2 0 0 2 OO 0 0 0 o ft ft n H o rn • H u n te r, 6 F o rd .. 6 Pate . . a D r iv e r . <> V spoon I Woods. I Bevies. 0 D u rb in, o .. o R odd T o ta ls D E T R O I T VI tx ft pf tp :> 4 a 11 r> a a la a a a o 4 o a 8 2 3 5 7 l l 0 .1 T o t a Iv 20 It 17 VI Moor e I rf* rn pa rd M itchell .Jones .. W ash'ton .. A ''e n KLEIN B rid g e s fir ft pf to 6 a 3 iv . 7 0 3 14 . 5 2 I 32 a -I 0 4 ) n T o t.tis II o l l H E A R N E <52> fir ft pf t p 7 a I 17 V riders'n White .. 6 2 a 11 S t a t e n . 51111 2 2 0 6 M 11 h ‘ \vs o a 2 o a 4 Jennings 0 0 W il s o n . . 8 8 I o la ls Sm ith B ig g in s B u r l's 'n Nixies . R b ns'n ii a rris . S -npson . T o ta ls fir ft pf IO 0 I 7 3 4 I IO 0 I 5 5 5 0 5 I O 0 I 0 1 32 14 16 Jo n e s . G u r le y . W i l s o n . Je ffe ry Ow en .. A n d rg g .. Neal I o t a l s fir ft pf I S 15 2 5 0 4 4 c a 2 2 I I 0 2 0 0 2 O 0 0 30 l l 17 fK ft Soh berg 3 9 5 4 .a 5 4 I 2 4 I 5 I 0 I O 0 0 0 0 II 0 Lo c k e . i I a r dee . < tu lk ln s Stare .. L o o p e r . M T ms E B ra d e n K n ife r • W I ms S T otals IO 78 p f t p 5 15 5 I t 5 11 a 9 2 8 4 7 1 2 2 2 O 0 0 0 0 O 27 6* A N A <5(l> fg ft pf tp 6 12 4 24 O 5 IO 6 3 6 v a 5 0 a 2 0 2 2 1 <1 I O S O 13 24 25 5# Y o rk .. S m it h .. Bro w n. P a r k s .. lo b e . . B r i e t / . . Mort7... M c K 'n y T otals .. P E R R Y T O N f* ft 8 8 G o b in Doores lo a N o w lin 4 2 B r i t a i n . . 2 4 McWh'tr o a I’e v is .. of L ’ra oh* Boc ■•bon VZ) re / ........... C A N A D IA N C LU B 86 proof p A-'-jrr-j Canadian W h srev . . . SILAS H O W E IO YR. OLD SO UR M A SH w n TURKEY 8 yr. WEEKEND ** , SPECIALS -J 98 ....... J 5th Q 09 ............ O 5th A77 ............H 5th 0 74 J 5th A 75 .......... O 5th S EA G R A M 'S 7 C R O W N 86 proof 65% G T L S . Blended Whiskey M ARTIN S V.V.O. 8 yr. old P6 p,nof gip>.,rjp j S ^ o tA W f '4 v . . . ............ O 5th a s s ............O ’ 5th B & L S C O T C H r proof R er ded Scotth W I sky ................ ............ *J 5th BALLANTINE S 0 26 Sr proof Blended Scotch W h is k y ............... TA A K A VODKA 80 proof IOO0 RO N R IC O RUM tar proof P C A N A D A DRY G IN 90 r 'ocf I ( '0 G ■ L S ................ ................ i R a* ................................. ( r.N.S. Char* v f tared l o r I r .................................. BEEFEATER G IN 94 proof : R O S'EG A LA N T W IN E Fiance Gravid Vir Pc e a A -’o . j ................ ANDRE DE M O N TC O RT C H A M P A G N E C H R IST IA N BROS. BRANDY 80 proof ...................................................... M ILLER'S H IG H LIFE BEER IP oz. 6 pk. Cans ................... ................. . SC H LITZ BEER 24- — 12 oz. G ass Ca^s ............. ................. OLD M IL W A U K E E BEER 24— I ? Or. (Lass C v s ............................... FALSTAFF BEER 24— 12 Oz. Glass C o n s ............................... M IC H EL O B BEER 12 oz. 6 pk. Glass Cans ............................. C 2 7 ........... D 5th 9 7 7 ...........L 5th 927 0 98 ........... L 5th ............ 4 35 I 5th O n O n~3T e 149 0 7 7 105 I 6 pk. 0 99 ____ O Case 015 ........O Case 038 ........ O Case ..... I 6 pk. I39 Theres Still m m m •Time... You st’" have time to arrange an interview with Computer "iechno'oqy, !nc. W e 're creating one of the finest professional environments you''! ever have the chance to W e ’re the new company that cares about the computer user — about the va’ .es re should be fit d. And we're located in many areas of the country. gaining from his data-processing investment, but probably Isn't. si are, with opportunities in virtually every technical and management area of the computer W e ne:p our clients turn their EDP systems from mere book-keepers into profit generators. W e ’re we' capitalized, profitab'e and growing at an incredib'e rate. W ith that pattern, we're searching for more bright, young, aggressive, enterprising men who want to step in on the "ground floor" of a new company . . . grow with it . . . and share a ' piece of the W e offer the client a complete computer product, from setting corporate objectives to action." implementing the computer-oriented business plan. And we take on the entire responsibility for design, installation, programming and operation of his computer system. There's no better time to join us than right now. A n d speaking o f tim e . . . our e m p lo y m e n t re p re s e n ta tiv e will be on your campus, M A R C H 10 & 11. M ake an appointment to see him th rou g h yo ur Placem ent O f f i c e . O r w rite to Don M a rc o n te ll, P lacem ent Representative, Com puter Technology, Inc., 1507 Paci­ f i c Avenue, Suife 5 OO,Dallas, Texas— 15201. computer technology inc. an equal opportunity employer rn mgmapmm 'Mi sr age 8 Friday, March 7. 1969 THE D AILY TEXA N UT Students Say Computers jjrad“a,e Cops Helpful, Effective Instructors In Competition Premier Aw^rn B y MELODY ATKINSON Two U niversity students p arti­ cip atin g in experim ental instruc­ tion p ro g ram s said on a radio show T hursday that com puters a r e helpful teachers. The U niversity’s com puter as­ sisted instruction (CAI) program w as discussed on K U T -F M ’s “ In­ sig h t.” P resid en t N orm an H ackerm an, whose chem istry class has used th e com puter as a supplem ent to laboratory* work, Dean Wayne H oltzm an of the College of E du­ cation, who is experim enting with th e effectiveness cf CAI in v ari­ ous fields, and two students who have participated in CAI talked about the program . D ebbie French, a freshm an m a th em atics m ajor, w as a m em ­ b e r of an experim ental group. She used the com puters in con­ junction with laboratory work in the com ­ ch em istry . “ I p u te r helped m e with m y lab tests—m any of the study prob­ lem s w ere sim ilar to those on my te sts,” she said. found Dennis Chastain, a chem ical en­ is p articip at­ gineering student, ing in a CAI test program . “ The com puter work Is directly co rre­ lated with the lectures. It is do­ ing m e a g rea t deal of good,” he said. More and m ore CAI is being used, m ainly in m ath and ch em ­ istry courses. “ It is a m a tte r of startin g with those a re a s w here you a re likely to have the g re a t­ est success. We a re concerned with how the com puters can be used to advance educational tech ­ niques in o rder to revolutionize as a whole,” D ean education Holtzman said. The U niversity has two m edi­ um-sized com puters which in ter­ ac t with student lo­ cated in Houston. San Angelo, San Antonio and Bryan. term in als Tile CAI p ro g ram a t the Uni­ versity it about th ree y ea rs old. About a y ea r ago, student te r­ m inals of the m ain system w ere equipped with tubes, film projectors and color slides, and special light pens, allowing the student to add or e ra se item s from the television tube. television A new type of audio unit will be installed on student term in als P R IN T IN G E N G R A V IN G lA Jeddina in v ita tio n s anc I J urns O ccasion greeting. Chards S ta tio n e r y a n d IdoteS elbe Groton Sh o p 2900 G U A D A L U P E G R 2-5733 A U S T IN , T E X A S next m onth. D ean H oltzm an said this will “ allow access to seg ­ m ents of audio m a teria l. The com ­ p u ter will be able to select out certain things. The sequence will not lock step in the sa m e w ay it does now—th ere will be an in­ dividual p attern for each stu ­ d e n t,” he said. The cu rren t cost of CAI Is a- bout S5 an hour per student. P re s ­ ident H ackerm an said, “ No one Institution will be likely to su p ­ port b pjad p ro g ram s alone — it will have to be generalized with to­ sev eral universities w orking gether. Our p ro g ram here has helped larg e n um ­ b er of individuals to the use of the co m p u ter.” introduce a Astronomers G et Pulsar Study Grant The D ep artm en t of A stronom y has received a $10,000 g ran t from the R esearch Corporation in New Y ork to help finance re se arch on th e optical detection and b eh a­ vior of pulsars, which m ay be a form of neutron sta rs. The first and only p u lsar to be sighted optically to d a te w as first seen by astro n o m ers a t the Uni­ versity of Arizona January* 15, and its existence w as im m ed iate­ ly confirm ed by R. E. N a th e r and D r. B rian V a rn e r a t the U niversity’s M cDonald O bserva­ to ry on Mount Locke in W est Texas. Dr. H arlan J. Sm ith, ch airm an of the D ep artm en t of A stronom y, and d irecto r of M cDonald O bser­ vatory*, said the g ran t, which su p ­ plem ents a special re se a rc h g ra n t from the U niversity G rad u ate School, will finance the acq u isi­ tion of sp ecial equipm ent to be used in spotting m o re pu lsars. “ The new equipm ent will m ak e it possible to search for m any m ore optical p u lsars besides the one now known and to stu d y in g ro at detail the w ay light ch an g ­ es over only a few m illionths of a second at a tim e during the visible flash es,” he said. RADIO THEO SO PHY Each Sunday— 10:00 a.m. Radio Station KVET-1300 k.c. Mar. 9— ’’The W a y o f Reincarnation.^M Mar. 16— "Unseen Forces in a W o rk ad ay W o rld ." Ed L eM aster, g rad u a te student in physics, has won first place the in a con'e st sponsored by D epartm ent of Physics to pro­ duce exhibits for display cases in the building. L eM aster m ade a m agnetohv- d rod\t i a rn ic pum p which runs a cu rren t through a sam ple. T here la a m agnetic field perpendicu­ la r to this, and it causes liquid m etal to pump. L eM aster said that although hi* Instrum ent can th at win c a rry pum p anything an electric cu rren t, liquid m etal is the handiest. M ercury o r a sodium potassium m ix tu re a re usually used. The finished Instrum ent lf used to pum p m etals through nu­ clea r rea cto rs as a m ethod of h eat exchange. L eM aster won $50 in prize m oney for his project which will be on display in the case outside Physics Building 203. Dr. Law ­ In rence Shepley, who w as ch arg e of the contest, said the display will begin in a week. Once he got the Idea, it w as just a m a tte r of getting the glassblow er to m ak e the Instru­ m ent and of p rep arin g th e m e­ tal, L eM aster said. He now is and working on m odifications trying to get it to run continual­ ly. Dr. Shepley and L eM aster a re the in attem pting m agnetohydrodvnam ic pum p in co rp o rate to .sophomore physics labs. A Job W ell Done . . . Ed LeMaster studies prize-winning machine. P h o to b y B r lg h tw e U CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES tach W o rd (15 word minimum) ...................... % M inim um C h a ra * ....... ...................... . •Student rata (10-word m aiimum ) on# tim# . . . . $ •Each additional tim# ............ ........................ % 20 Com aeutiva l»iua» -04 $ 1.20 .50 -25 IO w o r d * ........................................................... f i n no 15 w o r d * ........................................................... { J OO 20 w o r d * ............ ................................ C la tiifia d Display I column i on# inch ona tlma $ 1.20 Each Additional Tima* ..................................... $ I J® ( N a copy changa for ean»a«utiva i*»ua rata*.) ............... $13.00 The Daily Texan CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING • L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S — IO words or less 50c the first time, 25c each additional time. Student must show Auditor's receipt and pay in advance in Journalism Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d ay through Friday. See Classified Advertising deadline schedule, next column. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINES M on d ay, 11:00 a.m. Tuesday Texan W e d n e sd ay Taxan .................... Tuesday, 11:00 a m. Thursday T e x a n ......................... W ad nasday, 11:00 a m. Friday T e x a n .......................... Sunday Taxan Friday, 3:00 p.m. .................... Thursday. 11:00 a.m. In tha event of errors m ade In an advartisement, im­ mediate notice must ba given as tha publishers ara responsible for only ona incorrect insertion. Coll GR 1-5244 For Sale W anted Typing Typing Q U IE T S T U D E N T n e e d s g a r a g e a p a r t­ m ent o r sim ila r by M arch 15. C all 451-2670 m o r n in g s, e v e n in g s. Just North of 27th & Guadalupe Furnished Rooms For Rent Roommate W anted For Sale S T U D E N T S . B d o u b le rn. C en tra l a /c . r efrig er a to r , block u j 305 W 20th Or ahara house, k lM l. GR 8-7097 L a rg e L E o r d o u b le T r ia n g le H. TIS a t 22V4. 477-3863. 478-7411. L E ROOM w ith or w ith o u t hoard a. Taw) N O T V S E T ? C all th a A lp h a M an! B/VV St th e N e w C o lo r p o r ta b le s a t R e a so n a b le R en t L ea se R en t by S e m e s te r or R e n t-P u r c h a s# A L P H A T V R E N T A L S C all GR 2-2692 fo r m o re In fo rm a tio n N E E D F E M A L E , sh a r e lu x u r y a p a r t­ m e n t w ith 3 $52.50 p lu s e le c tr ic ity . L in d a A .. 465-9949 a fte r 5 30. room . Q U IE T M A L E b ed ­ to tw o bath a p a r tm e n t 15 m in ­ u tes w a lk to m a in b u ild in g b ills paid. m aid ser v ic e . $61.50. GR 2-6480. s h a r e tw o F E M A L E : O w n b ed ro o m A /c b ills paid $15 2211 L eon 476-7892. U S E D B O O K S D ea r B o o k -lo v e r s: F or th e c o n v e n ie n c e o f o u r c u sto m e r s. T he B o o k S ta ll h a s m o v ed to 6103 B u r ­ n et R oad V E H A V E M O R E S P A C E . L O I S O F O F F - A N D M ORE S T R E E T B OOKS O pen d a ilv 9 30-9:00; S u n d a y 1 6 . C L O S E D T H U R S D A Y C om e and b ro w se. (N o r th w e s t C e n te r ) P A R K IN G CO M E LIVE WITH US 1-2-3 Bedroom Apts. Furn. or Unfurn. — From $130 Proceed on Interregional South — Take W oodw ard S c #xit — Turn left on W oodw ard and go M/2 blocks Only 5 minutes from campus. W O O D W ARD STREET APARTMENTS 444-7555 Help Wanted REGISTERED NURSES F E M A L E r o o m m a te w a n te d la r g e o n e b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t. C all a fte r fo r 5 473-7422. Lost and Found $50.00 REW ARD! S in c e r e ly . B e t ty O vers S tic k , 1962 M ONZA 900 C h e v r o let h a rd to p . r /h . G ood w /w . P r a c tic a lly new e n g in e . A sk in g $395. W e ek en d s o r a ft e r 5 30, G R 6-8614. b u ck ets, 1965 S H I N Y R E D H O N D A 90. 4500 m ile s $200, GR 8-2728. S C H W IN N p r o b le m s, s o lv e * p a r k in g e ffo r tle s s!''. M eta llic g r ee n w ith a c c e s so r ie s. $100, sp eed ta k e s h ills IO I te r m s 477-7293 a fte r 5. Eight week cid , light b r o w n 68 C O R V E T T E 427. HODO $3966 A fte r 6 P M . 472-2561. m iles. German sheppard p u p p y lost A IR P L A N E E rc o u p e w ith ra d io and o m n l. P e r fe c t c o n d itio n . 52750. 465- in Pease Park. G R 6-4598 or 508 Marshall Lane I L O ST In E n g in e e r in g L a b B u ild in g . R e w a r d : S ilv e r B en ru s w r is tw a tc h I 477-3958. IN T E N S IV E C A R E — MED C A L— S U R G IC A L — P E D IA T R IC U N IT S ng. for four registered nurses to work full time. 3-11 shift. O n a in pediatrics, Furnished Apartments surgical and IC U nurses. Shift differential approximately $90. O p e n in g* for f ilt e r e d nurse* to work on the medical, surgical end IC U units. 11-7 shift, nt personnel policies including cumulative vacation and sick 'eave. retint­ e d general hospitalization and life insurance program*. North C antral afficiancies. New, car­ peted, draped, complete kitchen; range, oven, qarbaqe disposal, refrigerator. Fu1! bath, am p'e storage and parking. A- 1 D E S P E R A T E M ust s e ll 1968 C antaro. 4 sp e ed 6.000 m ile s 477-3892 5 :3 0 N E W s p o r tc o a ts W h o le s a le p rices. 300 o n han d. 477- b la z e r s. S U IT S . ply: Personnel Office, Breckenridge H ospital; 15th and East Avance. partment m anager 454-0280: 454-6811. Austin, Texas N ig h t s 453-0740, 454-3331. 1967 T R IU M P H S p itfir e E x c e lle n t a p ­ g o o d r u n n in g o rd er N ew ta p e deck M ust s e ll. 476-1327. p ea ra n ce tir e s, 1836 S an G a b riel. 1967 T R IU M P H "200' E x c e lle n t s h a p e 451-4238. :50cc M O TO R CY C LE. fen d ers, $250 A llo y 61 Z undnpp sp ro ck et. tr a il 1 16-5 • 26. 61 CH S P O R T S T E R — M an v r e fin e ­ m e n ts. e x tr a s G ood c o n d itio n . S e ll­ in g b e lo w m a r k e t, c r e d ito r s p r e ssin g 476-8910 a fte r 6 A M E R I C A N M O B I L E H O M E IO’. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , 51 ’ b v fu r ­ n ish e d , c a rp eted liv in g room S e e a fte r 6 p m w e e k d a y * and all d a y w e e k ­ en d s. 452-5262 o r GR 6-0846. Call G R 1-5244 To Place a Texan Classified Ad Help W anted Professional typing o f tions, books, sta tistic a l m ateria!. th ese s, d isser ta ­ law briefs, reports, end (E le c tr ic ty p e w r ite r s — gvm b o la c a rb o n r ib b o n s) Multilitntnq, mimeograph ing, proofreading BO BB YE D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G S E R V IC E H I 2 7184 tn d A N N E S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E (M a r jo r ie A n n e D e la fie ld ! H I 2-7008 P r o fe s s io n a l T y p in g F o r You F a st. A ccu ra te. D e p e n d a b le T h e m e s R e p o r ts L aw B riefs M a n u sc rip ts T h e se s D is s e r ta tio n s B u s in e ss co m . m u n lo a tio n * S ta tis tic a l R ep o rts O p e n 8 a.m. - IO p.m . daily IBM K le r tr o m a tlc s. S p ec ia l sy m b o ls . M ulti! lth in g . X e ro x . D itto . M im eo ­ g r a p h in g V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N T Y P IN G SERVICE P r o fe s s io n a l T y p in g A ll F ie ld s M u ltllith ln g a nd B in d in g ob T h e s e s a n d D is s e r ta tio n s I622N B A R T O N S P R I N G S R D .; S U M M E R J O B S IN E U R O P E 9817 A N T IQ U E S sofa tables, w a ln u t d r e sse r , 1167. V ic to r ia n tr u n k , p ic tu r e g o ld b ro ca d e fr a m e s b o o k sh e lv e s. G R 2- 1966 D O D G E D A R T . 4 d o o r sed a n . 6 c y lin d e r , s ta n d a r d . R a d io and h e a t­ er, G ood c o n d itio n . $1060. 836-9902 or G R 8-1211. 1966 V W . E X C E L L E N T r u n n in g c o n ­ $1050 P h o n e 472-3906 a fte r ­ d it io n n o o n s. e v e n in g s . S E V E R A L S IZ E S , m is s e s and w o m en . w o rn In c lu d in g fo r m a ls. V e ry r e a so n a b le . c lo th in g s lig h t ly sh o es a n d GR 2-1467. 1964 4 S P E E D C O R V A IR M onza S n y ­ der. R a d io , g o o d tir e s. T e r r ib le pain t Job. $300 J im o r G lenn, 1904 N u e c ee - 478-4504 S a tu r d a y or S u n d a y . A In E n g la n d P la c e m e n t S w itz e r la n d , an d G e r m a n y g u a r a n te e d fo r e a r ly ap­ lo b d e s c r ip tio n s de­ p lic a n ts V a r io u s in te r e s ts a nd o u a - p e n d in g u p o n yo u r J o b s a r e a s s ig n e d on a lific a tio n s . fir s t co m e, fir s t se r v e d b a sis. A p p ly n o w ! S T U D E N T T R A V E L 2228 G u a d a lu p e GR 7-4340 M A L E O R F E M A L E tw o davg a week. T r a n sp o r ta tio n d e liv e r in g c ir c u la r s n eed ed Cal! OL 2-6968 o n e bed ro o m , U N IV E R S IT Y A R E A : 12 n e a r ly new . a p a r tm en t b u ild in g , p lu s o ld e r d u p le x . C h a rles B u rn s R e a lty . GR 7-5468 fu r n ish e d '65 H O N D A S U P E R HA W K . 8500 m iles T w o h e lm e ts , s a d d le b a g s GR 1-7482 1962 B U IC K po w er. (e v e n in g s ) S ta tio n W a g o n . R /h 477-3971 $385. a u to m a tic . 7435. e v e n i n g s M O N A U R A L p h o n o g r a p h : R u n s we ll C a th e y a t GR 1-3227 d a y s. 444-7062 T W O P IE C E e a r lv A m erica n p e r fe ct c o n d itio n . $5o 452-4171. so fa . SA IL B O A T : 12' w o o d e n A lu m in u m m a st. D a c ro n sa ilb o a rd s a il. GR V W . 63 E x c e lle n t, n ew m o to r. 1800 o r b e s t o ff e r 472-8589 H E A D M A N fo u r tu b e c h a s s is h e a d ­ ers. 1967-69. B ig M op ars. 472-8791. '64 C U T L A S S c o n v e r tib le . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . GR 8-5984. I^eave m e s sa g e O F F E N H A U S E R 360» m a n ifo ld . H o l­ f i t 289 F o r d . $75 fo u r -b a r r e l le y 442-3003 N E W S T E R E O c o m p o n en t i'- s ie m , top q u a lity . C all 444-6448. M ark. Duplex — Furnished W E S T A U S T IN A lr . sp a c io u s, new la rg e, c le a n , q u iet. $95 GR 6-8959 475-2822. c o n d itio n . W e ll fu r n ish e d . 1309 E a st 52nd. lo v e ly b rick C entral a / h . $105. G as. w a te r p aid . P le n ty p a rk in g . C o u p les GR 8-8859. Business Opportunity S U M M E R J O B S IN E U R O P E In E n g la n d , P la c e m e n t S w itz e r la n d , an d G erm a n y g u a r a n te e d fo r e a r ly a p ­ p lica n t* . V a r io u s lo b d e s c r ip tio n s d e­ p e n d in g u p o n y o u r In te r e s ts and q u a ­ J o b s a re a s s ig n e d on a lific a tio n s fir s t c o m e , fir s t ser v e d b a sis. A pply no w ! S T U D E N T T R A V E L 2226 G u a d a lu p e G R 7-4349 N E L S O N S G IF T S — h a n d m a d e Indian J e w elr y . M ex ica n Im p o r ts — 4612 S to H ill s C a fe ) 444- ( N e x t C o n g r e ss 3814. M A N A G E R TRAINEE T Y P IN G D O N E im m e d ia te ly . C all Mrs S o u th a fte r 5 P.M . 454-4264. L E C T U R E n o tes, r e p o r ts, th em es. 30c d o u b le spaced . M rs. F r a ser . GR fi­ n n . Excellent opportunity for right per­ son with National Organization Health Club: A G E 21-40: • Guaranteed s t a r r i n g sa a r y • O ppo rtunity to advance • M a n y com pany benefits • Immediate employment L A M A R PRESS C U S T O M P R IN T E R S 6618 N. Lamar B v d . Phone G L 3-8051/59 O F F S E T • L E T T E R P R E S S T Y P I N G R E P O R T S • T H E S E S D I S S E R T A T I O N S C O M P L E T E B O O K B I N D E R Y P U B L I C A T I O N S Typ st: V irginia S c h ra der N q n t N u m b e r— H O 5-7205 Apply in person: TRIM A N D S W IM lit y p r o fe s sio n a l IM M E D IA T E S E R V IC E . H ig h e s t q u a ­ r ea so n a b le d is s e r ta tio n s : P h o n e W inn ra te s m u ltillt h 'n g 476-1200. 24 h o u rs a day. b in d in g P a p er s, t y p in g , th e se s, L E A R N TO PLAY GUITAR H E A LT H SPA 5407 G a y U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C Y O n * be dro om apartment, o r e b ock off 1-5754 Enf e d Road. O ff street parking. $115 per month. 1714 Summitt V ew. 478-0647. BO X S P R IN G S a nd m a ttr e s s set. $25 o r ig in a lly $130 C all 452-4171. Miscellaneous REGISTERED PH YSICAL THERAPIST lf physical therapist for a s p i r i n g genera! hospital facility: 255 bed hospital irgad to 390 bads after construction. Excellent variety of patients, five day k with weekends off, two weak* paid vacation annually, twelve days sick leave year, paid hospitalization and lit* insurance, also other benefits. Probe- ary and merritt increases. Salary range. $545-$660 commensurate with ex •nce. Excellent working conditions. Must bo a graduate of an approved school. A p p ly : Personnel Office, Brackenridge H ospital; 15th and East Avenue, Austin, Texas. Furnished Apartments L U X U R IO U S C A SA R O SA . 4312 D u ­ va l. F iv e m in u te s U n iv e r sity . O ne tw o b e d r o o m s s ta r tin g $140. 345-1322. 153-2178 a fter n o o n * . SO U T H E R N E SE A P A R T M E N T S O ne bedroom apartment. W o o d laundry facilities, pane ing, pool, parking. $109.50 per month. 1007 W e st 26th, 478-0647. '62 V’O L K S. E x c e lle n t th ro v ig h o u t. N e w p a in t, c o n d itio n tir e s. $600 112-3003. BEG INN ER & A D V A N C E D 478-7331 L IK E N E W . W ilso n G olf c lu b s 3 5 7. 9 Irons p u tte r b a g $59 454-8238 AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE O C C U P A N C Y SP A C IO U S EFFICIENCY livinq room, bedroom Bree. Full size kitchen with refrigerator disposal, end dishwasher. U r g e walk-in closet end separated cm area with cabinet space, tub. end shower. CALL: 478-6776 V O Y A G E U R S APARTMENTS 311 E. 31 st L A R G E, C L E A N e ffic ie n c y . S e p a r a te s ix b lo c k s U n iv e r sity . k itch en a /c . 177.50 per m o n th . 478-9494 a fte r *ix. 1966 D O D G E 449. 4 d o o r Al non m iles. n e w tir e s o n e d river. 452-4996 w e e k ­ e n d s o r a ft e r 5 30. C U ST O M STEREO O N E B E D R O O M , u n iq u e s tu d io a p a r t­ I. $125 p lu s e le c t r ic ity . 900 E a st 51st. 454-7949. m en t. A /c . A v a ila b le A p ril M AN O R C O U P L E — T w o ro o m s, c u r ­ ta in ed p o r c h , bath. U tilitie s paid. $55. 502 VV. 30th . 477-9121. O L 3-1567. T W O BED R O O M g a r a g e a /c . $125. C lea n 1708 R o b in H o o d T ra il. For Sale M O N K E Y S BO A S, sq u ir r e ls 4318 N o r th L am ar. 453 flv ln g chipm unks 3027. SO N Y ST -8 0 W tu n e r T re m e n d o u s $80 C all T o n y . 478-2000. A F G H A N h o u n d p u p p ie s sh o w q u a l­ ity . 12 w e e k s old T e r m s a v a ila b le. S tu d s e r v ic e . 926-3165 S T E R E O p r ic e s e q u ip m e n t: N e w , fa c to r y brand s G R 8-7776. d isc o u n t w a r r a n te e , m o st 1960 C O R V E T T E r e m o v a b le hardtop. $1200. r u n n in g V e tte . c le a n R ea l 472-5834 64 O L D S S ta r flr e S te r e o tap e c o n d itio n , acc. p o w e r 476-0742. good TAPES 4-Track 8-Track $4.50 $5.50 Call 478-2207 B A S S d ru m m er n e e d e d fo r n e w rock group. 477-3064. G U IT A R IS T a nd S A L E SM A N , w o rk o w n hou rs Car n e c e s s a r y A v e ra g e $2 2 5 /h o u r. 476- 9660 fe m a le W A N T E D , to w o rk a fte r n o o n T u e sd a y . T h u r s d a y and S a tu r d a y . F le x ib le hour* A p p ly : U n iv e r sity D is ­ c o u n t S to r e s 2900 D u v a l. F E M A L E , part tim e se c r e ta r y . W ork a fte r n o o n s 5-7:30. Q u a lific a tio n s ; A c­ c u r a te a t­ tr a c tiv e . s in g le 454-7674 a fte r 5 30 o r a ll d a y S u n d a y . p e r so n a lity , ty p is t, g o o d M A L E : P a r t tim e s e r v ic e s ta tio n a t ­ te n d a n t, 2803 S a n J a c in to . Typing RO Y W. HOLLEY G R 6-3018 T Y P I N G P R IN T IN G . B I N D I N G d is s e r ta tio n s T H E S E S p o rts re­ s y m ­ b o ls. IBM M in im u m 40c p a g e Mrs. A n th o n y GL 4-3079 b riefs la n g u a g e S c ie n c e a n d C O M P E T E N T S E C R E T A R Y -T Y P IS T w ith m a n y y e a r s o f e x p e r ie n c e In a ll fie ld s, w ill g iv e c o n s c ie n tio u s and m e­ lo a c cu ra c y , c o rr e c t tic u lo u s c a re as fo r m and c o m p o s itio n re- ty p in g , In p o rts, te c h n ic a l pap ers th e s e s a nd d is ­ s e r ta t io n s LAW VVORK S P E C IA L IS T la w r ev iew Ext n o tes N E W IBM E x e c u tiv e M u ltillth - ln g X e r o x in g a nd b in d in g s e r v ic e s on r eq u est. G R 8-5894 se m in a r p a p ers -B r ie fs T y p in g B in d lm The C o m p 'e '9 Professional F U L L -T IM E T y p :.'g Sarv ce to ta llo r e d stu d e n ts. m e n t fo r g in e e r in g th e n eed s o f U n iv e r s ity e q u ip ­ k eyb oard and e n ­ scie n c e S p e c ia l la n g u a g e th e s e s and d is s e r ta tio n s . P h o n e GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P ark ; Lecture i Note* Typing and i Multlufhinq Tutoring 4+ * t r t f y SWM*** cha -,«» N O R T H W E S T n ea r A U andaie ty p in g e x p e r ie n c e to h e lp you. Y ears HO 5- ' 5813. T Y P IS T . C O N S C IE N T IO U S , n ea t, e x ­ IBM pica T er m p ap ers, ty p in g M a rily n la s ’ m in u te p e rien ced th ese s H a m ilto n . 444-2831. Lowest p r i e s on ’k«$ns A-PLUS UN VERS!TY SERVICE 504 W est 24 *tr**t 4 ' -5651 Friday, March 7, 196? THE D A IL Y T E X A N Pag* 9 T y p in g . M u ltU lth ln g . B in d in g Th© C o m p lete Professional F U L L - T I M E Typing Service to ta ilo re d th e n e e d s o f U n iv er s tu d e n ts S p ec ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip n fo r sc ie n c e , an d e n g in Ing th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s la n g u a g e , P h o n e G R 2-3210 and G R 3-76T 270T H e m p h ill P a r k P r in te d C o p ies 5c E ach — B u t Y ou Can G et A S T U D E N T D I S C O U N T ! (J u s t s h o w y o u r ID C ard) •C lea n a n a C lea r •P r in te r s P r e s s — P r in te r s In k •N o D ir ty F e e l— N o M elted P ow d D O N E W H IL E Y O U W A IT ! A C C U R A T E P R I N T I N G 917 W . 12th fo r m o re ln fo r m a tlo C a ll 476-5247 E X P E R IE N C E D a ccu r* !* ty p is t b t ( fa s t serv ice. M rs. h u llo s . r a te s, " \ mzAa. Aufif w tttC • M B A T y p in g . M u ltllith ln g . B in d in g 0 The C omplete Professional F U L L - T I M E Typing Service to ta ilo r e d th e n e e d s o f U n iv e r sity s tu d e n ts S p ec ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip m e n t fo r a n d e n g .n e er * s c ie n c e in g la n g u a g e, th e s e s and d ^ seria tio n * P h o n e GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k E X P E R T ty p is t w ith ien>-e L eg a l lur C L 3-S650. I fie v a r i e d exp< s o c ,-'a list. M rs Kb IBM E x e c u tiv e E h W O O D S T Y P IN G S E R V IC E T her th eses, d is s e r ta tio n s . M u ltilith . 1 lit v w ork a t r e a s o n a b le ra tes. J W oods HO 5-1078 I 1* BLOCKS from Campus. E xp m eed and con scien tiou s a n d university (R e a s o n a b le .) 478-8113 stu d en ts tv p is ’ profess! ( N orth of 2 7rh & G u a d r u p e 1301 E dgew ood 478-2636 1-5124. W IL L T Y P E IBM s e le c tr ic . C lo se c a m p u s l o l l W e st 3 1st. GL 3-3624 Jusf North of 2 7 t h & G u a d a lu p e Winedale Inn Exemplifies Early Texas History, Buildings Ry Ik ) \ M c K i n n e y A muscment* Associate Tim e seems fo have forgotten the fertile valley that lies between the Colorado and B : izos rivers in the wake of the large me- tro-centers and sprawling highways. Them is a noticeable qu:<*t when leaving U S H ghway 290. and a slower pane takes hold, as if someone were pooling aw ay the pages cd Texas history. than a Ti c road to the W inedale Coach Tnn like a path into tho w ilder­ seems m o re ness farm to m arket road. The houses are aged but seem to fit in with tho surrounding is no exception to this trend. Tho frontier style house look like a page out of Texana, its restoration took md well three years of painstakingly slow work to make it look authentic. landscape. W inedale it should; T ile property i>eiong:ng to the U niversity was donated by Miss fma Hogg in Juno of 1965 as a center for historical and ethnic study. Miss Hogg had the old. decaying building restored and furnished with an­ tiques from her own collection, to fit with tho Inn’s time period and German-Texa* background. The looks sprawling 130 acre estate little different from the other homes and farm s in the area. It holds tho Inn, two bam s, a curator’s cottage, and a dormi­ tory cottage for students doing research work on the area. The Inn lies about five miles outside Round Rock, itself a good representation of historical Texas archi­ tecture. looks a A new gravel road connects W inedale with PM 1457, hut if one ventures off onto the older road, the isolation of the area becomes even more im pressive. It takes the driver winding through sm all Germ an farm s and ranches across a wooden low- w ater bridge that little shakey, but proves sound. A sm all wooden placard points the w ay to the Inn. though at times one wonders if he hasn't discovered a lost Model T road forgotten through the years. Coming out of the undergrowth of Ja c k ’s Creek Winedale like a sprawling looks English country estate. Tile fields are well cleared and 'p o rt a g r e e n coat of grass outlined by row’s of trees and cedar-post fences. To the hillj Belong the gentle th mgf Bespeaking isolation From the world Changing gently 11 at all. The Inn is divided Into two section' In a building style called a “ dog tro t'’ house, that Is, having a large open breezeway between the two sections. The first half was constructed in 1834 by W illiam S. Townsend, a migrant from South Carolina. This portion, constructed of lumber cut and milled from the area, consists of a spa­ cious downstairs living room with sleeping quarter's in the loft. The second portion of the house waited until about 1848 or later to be built by Samuel Lewis. le w is purchased the pro­ perty from John Townsend, W illiam ’s bro­ ther, in 1818. After the Inn was complete, as in guests from the stagecoach runs, and it soon became known as “ Sam le w is ’ Inn.” le w is began is today, taking it The sun glistening cedar Dotting zig raggedly Aero'I the landscape Midst the sounds Of gurgling streams In a sn ft quietness Where ? bit nee Passed at et in some Forgotten age Recorded in tv ell-th unit’cd History texts On!) to he forgotten. These additions the house nearly to doubled its size, creating a dining room and another set of bedrooms in the new upstairs section. During this period a log kitchen and smokehouse were built behind the house. M iss Hogg has replaced these structures with exact replicas from other areas; the original structures had been tom down some years before. On Lew is’ death, the property was sold to a Silesian emigrant. Joseph George Wagner, Sr., and passed on to his son Wagner, Jr ., in 1899. When Wagner, Jr ., Th* shallow well for the house still holds watei The W inedale I nn, sitting like a watch tower on the estate. AUSTit died in 1961, M rs. Hazel Ledbetter of Hous­ ton bought the property and in turn sold It to M iss Hogg in 1963. Cen tie folk Sit complacently On ricer hanks Dropping cork and line And wonder When the next rain IX’ill raise the oater And clean the scars Inflicted by city folk. feet five-to-six The kitchen houses such things as skil­ lets with long handles; rolling pins once used to cut home-made noodles; wine presses; and brass (used) spittoons. The locally made table is sur­ rounded by six raw hide .seated chairs, and a flour sifter hanging on the w all that would make any modem housewife gri­ mace with pain. Somewhere grandfather Cypress creeks a knee And a dusty sheep Bleats at the sun Bast being hid Behind balded hills Where darkness Seer an end to activity And no streetlights Shout defiance. the running Inside the Inn, the walls and ceilings of the newer section display designs painted by hand to dress them up, during the time Inn. Lighting, Lew is was during the period, was supplied by wick lamps burning anim al fats and oils, m any having reflectors to increase the dim light. line the shelves of Hand-painted dishes china closets made in Germ any and Round Rock. One can detect very little difference between the original from Germ any and the copy made locally. Moving up to the bedrooms, the rope- •pring, corn shuck beds don’t resemble the box springs and cotton mattresses of today but look comfortable enough, con­ sidering they w’ere generally made from m aterial on thp land. The beds in W ine­ dale were constructed on the scene from designs of the period. And clean the seats A place u here the old die And the young Mot e to cities In a migration Started iears before When time stopped In the gentle, Rolling hills. The Inn is open even ’ Thursday through Sunday except holidays, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. November through M ay; and from IO a.m. to 6 p.m. June through October. Admission is $1 for adults and 25 cents for ftudents. In the Theatre Barn, located on the pro­ perty, the Department of Germ anic la n ­ guages w ill present a Germ an play some­ time in A p ril; the exact date has not been ■et. The grounds are also open free to any arganized educational group to prior a r­ rangements. There are experienced guides on hand to explain the use and history of all arti­ cles on the estate, or visitors can wander across the spacious properties unbothered. By Deron Bissett Ph otos Layout By Don McKinney "Time Stopped H e re ".. By Sean China closet, itself an antique, houses antique dishes. ige IO Friday, March 7, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN Ba rnyard theater will be used by the University in April. G athering the rains, the cistern was another source of water. Clinic Coached By Fraternities B t GAIT. BRADEN Naw§ Assistant University fraternities harp d a . pun a project which they hop® will soon hp under the Intcrfra- ternitv Council. This is a Little League baseball clinic for East Austin boys in which 14 fraterni­ ties are participating. Each fraternity is sponsoring a team of boys from 9 to 12-years- old. The teams, coached bv throe or four men from each fraternity, practice twice a week at Givens or Metz Park. Equipment is sup­ plied by the fraternities and the city. The idea for this project began Involvement in the Community Committee, a Students’ Associa­ tion committee, and was taken to the Presidents’ Council, a group ( ' fraternity presidents, by Grog I ” ,;a and Bob Glover. is ' ’''its ’ Council and The project was adopted by the in- Mv headed by Rick Watson i Tcis Fraternity, The pro- I will continue until March p 29 with the first game Saturday. Fraternities involved are Aca­ cia. Alpha Epsilon Pi. Beta Theta Pi, Delta Kappa Epsilon. Kappa Alpha. Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Kappa Psi, Sig­ ma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Aloha Mu, Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi E p ­ silon, Sigma Pi, and Zeta Beta Tau. “ D R A M A T I C W IN N E R * * S. F. I v ani intr few Bam* Stavi* T h* e n th ra llin g story of GALILEO GALILEI A nU«*ii«JimJ Pi rim Hang Campana ti JJ ■tarring MORRIS CARNOVSKY Spwm toady aUfnL autumn! md tiptoed Dtoarted K* Sir T vro n * G uthrie exclusive pre-Broadway engagem ent M O N D A Y , M A R C H IO I N C A R N A T E W O R D C O L L E G E A U D IT O R I U M Sen A ntonio 3 J O p.m. S T U D E N T M A T IN E E $2 1.15 pm. Examine performance 54, W. It 0 bond for­ feited. Tile five fined were University undergraduaies Chester Wilson. 1801 Rio Grande St.; Carlos As near. HOO W, Twenty-fifth S* ; Charles Edward Sherman III. 11001 N Lam ar Blvd.; Dick R e v vis, HOO W Twenty-fifth St . a first-year law student; and How­ ard Hertz, 1107 \\ Twenty-fifth St , University teaching assist­ ant. The meeting Feb 7 was held in .support of thp Curtain Thea­ ter and in protest of the closing of its play, “ N nv the Revolu­ tion.” University administrators closed the play on grounds it dis­ played nudity. Todays Events F R ID A Y & S A T U R D A Y A L L E N D A M R O N PRESEN TS 3 FACES WEST F R O M N E W M E X I C O S U N D A Y : K A R E N BERKE F R E E A D M I S S I O N T o T e x * . S p e e d Mu*ou m c o l l e c t i o n of c o m p e t i t i o n h i s t o r i c c ar *. • H u n t B e e f S a n d • S e t - 1 p» • B e e r A f t e r H o u r * I OO F ri - LOO S at. 1411 L A V A C A C h c y u e r e d f la t / — ' 5 / 478-022 F R A U D ! lf k * i come to our attention that a certain p rivate c lu b ” it jailin g mam- b e rih ip t to student!, claim ing to have " b o u g h t" or Is buyinq tho A C T IO N C L U B . Let it be known that we have never, nor will we ne g o tia te with anyone concerning the sal* of our m o lt *ucces»ful A C T IO N C L U B . lf you have bought a m em berih ip to th ii "p r iv a te c lu b ’’ through th ii b la ta n tly f a t e inform ation — wa su gg ett you dem and a refund a n d en the m atter to our attentio n. Thanking you for your continued Pa tro n ag e and Favor The M a n a g e m e n t o f the A C T IO N C L U B — S tu d en t owned and o p e ra te d — 2 p.m.—B. W. Musgraves, admis­ sions counselor of the Chapman “ World Campus A- College float,” Interviews students un­ til 6 p.m. in the Letterman Room of the Forty Acres Club. SUMMER JOBS FOR M E N TIRED o f N o t being given enough respon­ sibility, or p aid enough m onay, on summer Jobs. See how you can make $1800 this summer. Interview et Y M C A on G u a d a lu p e , (nest to Texe* T h e atre ) a t 4 p.m. Frid ay, Fab. 21, in room 26. lf unable lo attend, Call: CHRIS PAPPAS 478-4158 3 p.m.—Texas Union Weekend film, “ Sundays arx! Cybele.” to be shown; admission 40 cents for students and 75 cents for non-students, with continu­ ous showings in Union Auditor­ ium. 4 p.m.—Computer Sciences Col­ loquium presents Dr. Eugene L. Wachspress of General Electric in Computation Cen­ ter 8. I p.m .—F A W S meets at East­ In case of wood Playground; inclement weather, meeting to be at 101 E . Thirty-third St., No. 208. 4:30 p.m.—Austin Citizens for Ni- geria/Biafra Relief present a mixed-media program and pa­ nel discussion on the war in Nigeria and Biafra the Union Main Ballroom. in 8:30 p.m.— Ichthus Coffee House “ Genuine Leather,” presents a folk trio, at 2434 Guadalupe. Campus News in Brief COMMUNITY sponsor INVOLVEMENT COMMITTEE of the Students* Association will a clean-up and rat extermination at 7:45 a.m. Saturday in the East Austin College Heights area. Volunteers m a '’ call Norman Manor at 478-8765 or meet front of Littlefield Fountain. Free lunch will he served at noon at the conclu­ sion of the project. in EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY will meet at 4 p.m. Monday to present Dr. Wilson Judd from the Learning, Research, and Development Center of the Uni­ versity of Pittsburg. INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at fi pm . Saturday in the Catholic Student Center for a spaghetti supper and talent show. ORGANIZATION OF ARAR STU­ DENTS will meet at 1 pm Saturday in City’ Park for a pionic. PERUVIAN EXCHANGE will student Interviews hold for representatives to Peru from 9 a.m. to I p.m. Saturday in Union Building 319. UNIVERSITY KARATE CLUB will begin classes Monday af­ ter Sunday registration at 3409 Guadalupe. KENS SOUND SHOP Tapes and Records Current Popular Album s f ------------------------- ■ — — I Special tra c k ta 4nnnd FA M B T feature rn S t e n n e a W a i f ( " M a t t e R i d e " ) Carpet end the B v rd a . $3.00 Mon., F r i IO am.-6 pm. Sat., IO a.m.-6 pm 3004 Guadalupe Phone 477-2126 A PPLIC A T IO N 'S ARE B E IN G A C C E P T E D NO W 1969 HOWARD S U M M E R S E S S IO N TOURS T H E O R IG IN A L ST U D Y TOUR IN T H E P A C IF IC All Tours Offer 4 to 8 College Credits U N IV E R S IT Y O F H A W A I I S U M M E R S E S S IO N 4S D AYS FO R O N LY 5598. P L U S 114 T A X Jet rnur>dtrip from W r*t Const, W a k ik i epartment-hotel aneomodatloruj dinners par^ee show* cruises alghtsf'e!na bearh activities, cultural events, tit*, etc Include* O R IE N T — C IR C L E W O R L D — SO . A M E R I C A — E U R O P E W IT H S A N F R A N C IS C O STATE C O L L E G E A p p ly M n. M. K. Hillman HOWARD TOURS, Inc. (Opp. SM U). Dallas M i l HIHcreat Are Tel. LA 8-24T0 FRI. & SA T. N IT E S * N ew Atlantis FR I, A SA T . * The Untouchables Fit. \] ii ★ The Texas Rangers SAT. A V / S i * ' 9 ,fil 2 lib Congress t - * Lights by Q uasar A D V A N C E T IC K ET S $1.50 A T PH ILS R E C O R D S A N D O A T W IL L IE S HAPPY HOUR 2—7 P.M. THE POINT AFTER 11212 North Interregional PITCHERS OF BEER Lone Star . . . 75* Budweiser . . . $1.00 B. J. Will Be There 1-7 P.M. Friday, March 7 836-9931 11212 North Interregional M O R T Y “K in g of Pizza” Presents Serving P IZ Z A and “H E R O " Sandw iches M EAT-A-BALL Sandw iches ROAST-A-BEEF Sandw iches O pen Daily from 11 a.m. 'fill midnight Fri. St Sat. 'till 2 a.m. Sunday*— 5 p.m. 'till midnight 12th St. & Rio Grande 477-0232 • SHORT STORIES • POETRY • ART WORKS • PHOTOGRAPHS . . . or anything else Chemical Engineers Challenge U 0 P to Challenge You U O P is what professional people have made it...a leader In: • petroleum process developm ent • p roce ss plant construction • air and water m anagem ent • specialty organic chem icals • plastic lam inates • fragrances, flavors and food products • aircraft seating and galleys • truck and tractor seating • control instrumentation • metals and alloys • fabricated metal products W e have room for you to grow In all these areas. With UOP, you can apply professional talent in research, development, engineering, design, manufacturing, market­ ing and technical service. Be sure to talk with a Universal OII Products C om pan y representative at your Placem ent Office on M arch 12. C h alle n ge him to challenge you. better ideas from i II P THE STUDENT LITERARY MAGAZINE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS D R A W E R D — UT S T A T IO N Austin, Texas 78712 or bring to Room I IO, Journalism Building DEADLINE: for inclusion in the SPRING ISSUE! TUESDAY - AAARCH 25th! Friday, March 7, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN Page l l Group to Play Avant-Garde Actors Instill 'Order in Eliot By DEBO * BISSETT Th* natuiou* tprm "order* prcnldod th* fond point in th* prcvocattv* production of T. S. EHof* "Murder in the Cathedral" produced by th* Department of Corr, rn unioa Lino Thursday night the Cafhc^ic Student Center, r e «tAf(d reading, utilizing the modi* of human expro^sim a-id voice, portrayed th* conflict of human judgment in th* quc*- t in of human morals ti - r .lintenance of order in society. in IT)* centra! ch r; -ter, ‘Hinmaj Becket, e f f e t e t v portrayed by John LAng<-, n, us caught up in t h * per% »nal quest if n of th* vaiu* of his own Judgment and his du­ ty to th* state. As the Archbishop of Canterbury, ha pose in the common man. his pur­ Becket is challenged for his refusal to use I is power in serv­ ice to King Henry ll in settling relations between stat*. church and mon man who helplessly era’.'** B ecket’* guidance, and tire pro­ vocations of the tpmptor* clarify Becket * purpose to him self and to his God. He faces death at the hands of the King s knights with composure that conveys the certa.nty of his value Judgment. Four tempter* try to persuade B ^ k et to diverge from his own judgment of truth with offers of material pleasure and power. But Becket sees that he holds th* power that otl era Mi k to manl- pulate h r their own advantage .n stabilizing the society and en­ h aloing their own gains. Ti!* fourth tempter com es ominously close to Becket’* apprehension of his own ambition In his resolu­ tion to the ideal , f martyrdom. The combined effect r>! the com­ The poetic drama was enhan­ ced ! v Imaginative attention to 'emen* of the readers and the p tile alm ost subtle shift* In po­ sition a* the play progresses. Th* offsetting of light* in highlight­ ing the facial ''xpres^ions of th* ra.st wns Instrumental in balanc­ ing the emotions conveyed in the tens! ti v* t h * group. vocalization of m ax of the performance, as they attempt to excuse their violent in stabilizing act as necessary •oc.ety. The murderers use the people's submission to the pattern of fa’e to their own "disinterest" and Justify Becket s death. The effort of the "conscience" of the audience pro- vides a realization of the prob­ lem s of m an's rationalization in contemporary society. confrontation with this The resolved Indifference of the m asses as conveyed in this pre­ in a sentation passage from "Tile Great Man­ d e la is best reflected "We're not guilty; He wa* cra­ it’s been going on for The audience is confronted by th* cli­ B e c k e ts murderers at zy: and 10,000 years.” ( < T \ A ^ 7 N D M io W io w n I . s . v. • /. i I1 i ;v in Theap’n *■ r .-n mr. *■. ’ bl I 9 ■* • -wit \t ' | / H \ f * T O D A Y A T 2 30 5: IO 8 OO A L L SEATS $1.00 'T IL 2 45 B O X O F F IC E O P E N S 2:15 C O N T IN U O U S P E R F O R M A N C E S ^ ^ W ^ 2JOO Hii»«k Onn N O M IN A T E D A FOR • BEST P IC T U R E ' • BEST D IR E C T O R • BEST C IN E M A T O G R A P H Y • BEST C O S T U M E D E S IG N 4 A C A D E M Y A W A R D S PARAMOUNT n C T l llE S r r * r « . *BH* nu* Franco Ze f f ir e l l i FVedwtieaer H U R R Y ! Q t h & F IN A L O W EEK! C R O SSW O R D P U Z Z L E ACROSS I Time gone L f 4 P a-an t Te#*4o*^ 6 C ‘oi*tar 11 Whip 13 Swerved 1 5 I nd ef in ite article 16 F m f erie*# glove* 18 Cooled lava 19 Prepo*iUo# 2 ! Dan 2 2 P pped 2 4 Word Of tOTTOW 2 6 Nerve r e w o r k 2 8 C om pel* point 2 ° Trial* 31 W ithered 3 3 S team sh ip (a b b rJ 3 4 Small childre# 3 6 111 boding 3 8 P ronoun 4 0 f ondu** 4 2 Downy duck 4 5 Anglo Saxon 4 7 AI low anoa far m oney w asta 4 9 Roman ty ran t 5 0 T a p * 5 2 D anish Island B4 N egative 5 5 Bona 5 6 One first In rank 5 9 Note of seal# 61 Stay 6 3 Piece af burnt coal 6 5 G rates 6 6 Plural ending 6 7 S u f f i « : ad h e re n t of DOWN 1 -Girl'* name 2 Docile 3 P reposition 4 B ucket 6 Avoided 7 Man s mr t a m e • C h o ic e s t 9 Teutonic deity IO Long* for 12 P rin te r'! m e asu re 14 Europeans 17-C ra.aL s 20 Kiln 2 3 Faroe Itlan d a whirlwind } 4 N ear 2 5 C ease 2 7 G reat Lake 3 0 - le t it stan d 3 2 Ireland 3 5 Exerts to th* u tm o st 3 7 P arad is# 3 8 Engine HOU a s m L2DLJU HHH u s o s c l i Lf g y a n c i o f jr k j Qeaara saran gas san □ss ana htjouu O S B U D 0 0 * 3 H E i i E u a f i o n v a a m a a n n a n s u f j o b o u a r c a n a a a B B a a B ^ H ’ ana U B 3 Q u a n i i a s s □ □ s s a n a n a n a I O 39 R ubber on p e n d 41 Appear 4 3 W ears away 4 4 Artificial language 4 6 Hebrew m onth 4 8 D elineate 51 R esorts 53 G reat b u s ta rd 57 Tear 58 P rin te r's m e asu re 60 Worthies# leaving 62 Parent (colloq.) 64 Roman gods i 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 n r 14 <8 t r • 43 4 4 11 15 24 29 45 5 0 55 61 19 2 0 V V 21 A*1*1 i'7 23 12 16 VtiV U 17 25 26 30 31 'X U ~ y 34 35 36 37 38 39 T T T .',V V V 46 40 r-rr~ ::::: : 41 48 49 47 ■■V- E x - ; 57 52 51 5 6 M W 58 U 6 0 64 62 6 5 63 6 6 47 Distr, by United fea tu re Syndicate, Inc. b IO 27 42 53 ^ J U L I E T Refer, Paul, anc[ Mar^ Avant-garde m usic will be the subject of the U niversity's New Music Ensemble Friday night in Music Building Recital Hail. Th* ensem ble, organized last fall by doctoral candidate Thom­ as Wells, has not been reluctant, in two previous concerts this se a ­ son, to utilize a . variety of elec­ tronic sounds and colored lights. The concert will begin at 7 :j0 p.m. with electronic music and “musique idea concrete,’’ that all aural sensations can be used as raw material. the The works to be presented ar* Tntimae" "Voces "12.18.68,” (voice, ring modulators, electron­ ic sounds), and "De-evaluations." all composed by Wells. Also in the first portion of the concert will be "Steinway and Sons" (musique concrete and film ) and "Electronic Piece" by Gary' S. Kendall, a composition major. The second portion of the con­ cert, to begin at 8 :lf> p.m., will be devoted to instrumental music. The opening work will be Ignr Stravinsky’s "Duo Connectant,’’ written in 1912, which will he per­ formed by Thomas J. Gibson, vi- Poems Show Trio's Thoughts Tile public Peter, Paul and Mary are different as private in­ dividuals. For example, these poems taken from "L ate Again," the group's latest album reflect their personal views: tim e w h e n d ea th r e q u ir e s s a in t­ ' C a ssa n d ra la'** th e p r o p h ets m e a g e r w a r m a r e s tr e w n a b o u t a w e a r y w o rld \ hood u n d e se r v e d . W e a re a w o rld o f m o r ta l m e n and M a n s h o p e " c r e a t et aa* n e ss is h is — M a ry T ra v ers " c a v o r t th tck sci nt o f n o se a s o n s c h a n * * 'n C a lifo r n ia N e w Y o r k : g r in d in g rook taut s i,ip o f p u rp o se no o n e w h is p e r s her# no e x c u se * C o n c e r t: a d ro p o f w a te r d o e s n o t e x is t be­ fo r e or a fte r (p e r h a p s col le c t p a il - m o te y g r e e n ) th em In a lea d en W h e r e d o es it w ill pass" it le a d ? -P eter Y arro w had lik e y e a r s se v e n see m e d to g e th e r fo r an hou r • W e d been It p a ssed And w e had b a r e ly su r fa c e o f w h a t to m a tte r And lig h t a s a ir W e k n ew w h a t w e w e r e h o ld in g th e w a y w e u sed And w a n t fo r a m o m en t, sm ile d to s c r a tc h e d it w a s th e n ." th # th a t u sed to — N o el P a u l S to o k e y feelings about the public trio as she says, “There is a vision we share with you in our music. If it has proved successful, is not, I believe, because it is our vision, but because it has been everybody’s all along.’’ it Peter, Paul and Mary will ap­ pear at Municipal Auditorium March 21. Tickets for the 8 p.rn concert are on sale at Raymond's Drugs, Tile Record Shop, and Montgom­ ery Ward in Capital Plaza. Admission prices are $5, $1, Mary Travers sums up the and $3. O pen 2:15 • Features 2:30— 5.00— 7:30— 10:00 E X A S '.va THEATRE GR 7-1964 ° O n th e D r a g ’ 75c ’til 2:45 P.M. S U N D A Y — T H U R S D A Y FEATURES 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30 T H E G R E A T E S T A D V E N T U R E J* # / O F T H E M A L L ' ^ “THE LOVE MERCHANT” S lT J D IO flV -’ SSLS olinist, and Richard Becker, pi­ anist. Tlie program will continue with "Galdstaub,” bv Karlheinz Stock­ hausen, and "Excursions" (com ­ physical poser latest drama techniques of isorhythmic poin’- illLsm, metric modulation, and tim e notation. unknown), incorporating th* a David Genova, a pianist work­ ing toward a doctor of musical arts degree, and Wells will pnr- form Christian Wolff's "Duo for Pianists." Emory C. Whipple, Jam es D. Bryan, and Wells will be conductors in "For 3 Ensem ­ bles." the loggia, and the east hau­ II," unusual its performance occurs Closing the concert will be "En­ in in locations of the the foyer, sem ble Music that three different Music Building. Each of three ensem bles—in the ls provided with microphones, am plifiers, m ixers, loud­ speakers. Technicians of one en­ sem ble can select sounds from the other two ensem bles and combine them with his own. Sig­ nals from the three are mixed in a listening area in Recital Hall. The concert, part of the Stu­ dent Organizations’ Concert Ser­ ies of the Department of Music, is free. and sneak preview EXH IBIT OF WATER COLORS by Miss Constance Forsyth, art professor at the University, is on display at Incarnate Word College, San Antonio, through the month of March. Tile ex­ hibit, sponsored by Incarnate in­ Word's art department, in the first floor gal­ stalled the Dougherty Fine lery of is Arts Center. Teenage N o o rd in ary love story..- FOR THE MATURE Y O U N G A U D IE N C E Z E S S ! * / im r a f /ia iM iM iiK , is o t m w t w i « r n ? . s t a r t s WED "AFRICAN SAFARI" Brought Back In Response to 100's of Requests. ARLENE SUE FARBER-Frederick Riccio- Julie Ange E 5 . V * NICHOIS DEMETROUlfS • rSST" 7 " ' ' * KR? GROSS • COLOR br Oelux* * ff RRY OROSS ARROW t» hwkxwm • A CINEMATICS INDUSTRIES RELEASE This is "The Fixer" . . . who didn't know he had courage until courage was all he had left y • -eves* I ewe; 9N I She isn’ t the girl you thought you knew! -SOUTH SCREEN— — WEST SCREEN— It's time to speak of unspoken things... ELIZABETH TAYLOR M IA FARROW more Counted tCian m “Rosemary s Baby" tn a „r> -rj nr WIAN FwaoucmaN JOBE • * ti LOST V >5 “ SECRET CEREMONY” • ar Kl Bt* ROBERT M ITCHUM PEGGY ASHCROFT PAMELA BROWN IN TECHNICOLOR* Wfttiitf ti >o- *K»Ji*rra/»o«UMi.«s«v n i l i m TAYLOR BURTON (•Wetted for I ■atar* l uc ence* TECHNICOLOR* I PANAVISKM* U RN ET™ 6 4 0 0 b u rn et Rd. HO 5 -6 9 3 3 A C A D E M Y A W A R D N O M IN E E A LA N A M C N “BEST ACTOR" *(5ie cH eart is acLonehj cH u n te r . . . and from this m an who could not speak or hear, the girl heard m any things. TIMES: 7:00 P.M. 4 12:30 •fcchnlcolorV ------------------------- PLUS TW.& AUDREY HEPBURN ALAN ARKIN W AIT UNTIL DARK OPEN 6:15 • CHILDREN 2 & Under) FREE - TECHNICOLOR’* M od e rn C o n c e s s io n B u ild in g • E x c e l l e n t C o n c e ss io n F o o d s • • L a r g e Clean D i n i n g B o o m • • F e s t F r i e n d l y S e r v ic e • L a r g a S a f e P l a v g r o u n d Welt L ig h te d & S u p e r v is e d S li d e • S w i n g s M er r y L o B o u n d s E N C L O S E D P A T I O S E A T I N G • E M O N S O I N U A P R O J E C T I O N Bulldozer Replaces Brush and Canvas “Sculpture Is what it is, and it is my only expression of crea­ stated Dale Eldred, tivity,” chairman of the Kaasas City Art Institute Sculpture Department, in speaking the “Creativity and Human Spirit” series in the Art Building auditorium Wednes­ day afternoon. in “ I work as a designer in all areas of sculpture.” said Eldred, the outdoors as his who uses studio and portable construction equipment such as cranes and bulldozers to lift large sections of steel and other heavy objects used in his sculpture. Eldred uses blueprints for each sculpture and recently de­ in Kansas City signed a park consisting of earth, trees, and large rocks. Another project was modeling a steel sculpture for a town in a Minnesota community. square When asked why he created these steel structures, he said, “ I am not interested in justifica­ tions, as th e re is no answer . . . the fundamental idea of sculp­ tu rin g Is discovery. “Every time you start, some­ body is going to tell you why it’s impossible. That’s where you take off and start.” He empha­ sized aspect” of sculpture and said. “ You pro- due . you hope you are part of your century, you hope you make a contribution.” the “giving Eldred holds a master cf S cience and design degree from the University of Michigan and has been rt'cipient of awards from the National Council on the Arts and the Ford Foundation. He is the past recipient of an award for environmental design from American Institute of Ar­ chitects. Guest Cellist Plays Monday A German-born cellist who ha* won several awards in music competitions In Europe and the United States will perform as a the University guest artist at Monday. Kai Moser, from Potsdam, Ger­ many. is this year’s winner of the Holfzschue String Award of the Oklahoma City Symphony. He took tile first prize at the compo tition of the Kulture*band der Deutsche Industrie in 1968 and the year before, a medal at the Geneva International Competition in Switzerland. For his first Austin appearance. Moser will present J. S. Bach's “Suite No. 3 in C Major.” Brah­ in E Minor.” m s’s “Sonata Tchaikovsky's “ Rokoko Varia­ tions, Op. 33," and Martini’s “ Variations on a Theme by Rossi­ ni.” The recital will be at 8:15 p.m. in Recital Hall of the Music Build­ ing. Admission is free. 'Lamp at Midnight' Galileo Trial Subject of Play Rosenkavalier Cast Finished Tne University Opera Theatre has announced the cast for its March 18. 22. and 25 produ b n of Strauss* “ Der Rosenkavalier.” Appearing as the Ma •*< I ; n will be Jane Glaser, who as nag leading roles wit t ti <» Ii i im: g- ham Civic Opera. Her youthful lover. Octavian, will be p< rh ived alternately by Kathleen M tt, formerly with the Indiana Uni­ versity Opera Theatre, and Emi­ ly Tracy, who starred in ' Die Beggar’s Opera” at tile Univer­ sity last spring. Peter Glaser, a former winner of the Metropolitan Opera Audi­ tions in Alabama, will have the role of the rustic Baron Orbs. The intriguers, Valzacrhi and Annina, will be played by Rod- eric Keating and Jennifer Chase. In the role of Sophie will be Carol Moody; her father. Herr von Fan- inal, Is Larry Kalb. Jess Valters, faculty artist who v,v ; web England’s Royal Opera Con my. Covent Garden, for 12 \ mrs. and with the Netherlands Opera f r six years, will appear as a hairdresser. Orville White. a: “ mr rn.'" v cr f tho voice fac* im;. v. I: * - a y wi‘h the Houston . nd Sa-i Pm,; > Operas last year, will be Leopold. M r< ia Ti :c-y will portray the Lei in i et z or in; James Bort Neely, the p lice commissioner; and Don Jones, the Italian singer. The opera, which is being staged and conducted by Dr. Wal­ ter Ducloux. wall have each of Its three productions ai 7:30 pm , in Hogg Auditorium. Tickets are $2.50 for adults; $1 >0 for faculty and staff; and $1 for students. Seat reservations may be made beginning Monday by the University Box Office at Hogg Auditorium, GR 1-1444. telephoning WEEKDAY SPECIAL These popular Items from our regular menu on special Mon­ days thru Thursdays from 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. M e n u Price Special Price $ 1 .1 0 Spaghetti and Meat S a u c e 89c $ 1 .3 5 ............... Chopped S t e a k ................. $ 1.09 $ 1 .2 5 ..............Chicken Fried S t e a k ............. 99c i PANCAKE H O U S E 19th and Guadalupe THEATRE K F AT I R l > 12:20 2:10 4 .05 5:55 7 45 9:35 JHTERSTATE D O W N T O W N T i t C O N C H S * NOW! I STATE A COMBO OF SCUBA DUPES ROCK UP A STORM IN A MAD PAD UNDER THE SURF! Mail orders are being accepted for Sir Tyrone Guthrie’s new pro­ duction of Barrie Stavis’ dama, “Lamp at Midnight,” which will make its only area appearance Monday at the Incarnate Word College Auditorium in San An­ tonio. “Lamp at Midnight” Is the tale of Galileo Galilei, the man who nearly 400 years ago charted the course recently followed by A- LA FINESSE California Champagne if only $ 1.49 a fifth you fell us you saw this in The Daily Texan. Centennial Liquors 2932 Guadalupe DELIVERY of K 0 D A C 0 L 0 R PRINTS Bring us your expos#d Film by 4 P M Prints ready 48 hours later at 4 PM . STUDTMAN PHOTO IBtli st Lavaca • Cameron Villita m eriea's astronauts In t h e i r moon-circling feat aboard Apollo 8. Starring in the role of Galileo will be Morris Camovsky, who has performed as King Lear, Shylock, and Cyrano de Berg­ erac in the American theatre. Tile play brings to life In terms of compassion and understanding the conflict between Galileo and the Roman Catholic Church in the Seventeenth Century. Galileo, the aid of his telescope, with found that the earth was not the center of the universe and that the sun did not revolve around our globe. This was opposed to the theories of the Greek philo- taught by gopher, Aristotle, which were ex­ pounded and the Church, so Galileo was handed over to the Inquisition. During his long and arduous trial, Gali­ leo finally recanted, not because he feared punishment, but for love of his Church. There will be a 3:30 p.m. mati­ nee for area high school and col­ lege students at $2 general ad­ mission, and an 8:15 p.m. per­ formance, all seats reserved at $4, $3, and $2. Mail and phone orders will be accepted at the IWC Public Re­ lations Office, 4301 Broadway, TA 6-3292, ext 57. Friday "Y O U '1 Rock Music af lh Best Saturday The Sweet Tarts Austin's No. I Band I B E ER— M A LTTTQ UST? W I N 6 - C H a M P a 6 N E I TBS HSV 0S&B&R3 r O '— 7 Goon 8:30 P.M. 2th & R»d "■ W rn rn There's A C T IO N this Weekend ....,tth.ACTION Club Friday Only! The Fabulous Sin Sity Soul Show # O P E N 8:30 # Student owned & operated # Austin's largest & grooviest c lu b Saturday Only! the soul sounds of the Brothers 7 • 454-7873 for retardation* • 831 Houston St. (Just off 5500 N . Lamar) IF YOU LIKED " C A T BALLOU" YOU'LL REALLY ENJOY . . . S A S V X W H I S K E Y 1 invades the U. S. mint to return a million dollars RETURN a n million dollars* Environmental Theater Shown is a scene from the costroversial drama, ' The Black a nd White Checkerboard is an adaptation of Society, Inc.," which Broadway's "In White America." The "envi­ ronmental" play will be presented at 8:30 p.m. Friday at St. Edward's University. Use Texan Classifieds WINNER! ACADEMY AWARD N O M IN A T IO N I T O D A Y AT „ The L A . scene -h e's 1-A-. dropped out ...splitting from his girl .-floating down the freeway in a borrow ed MG. From Jacques Demy maker of •The Umbrellas of Cherbourg ■ipE; ...starring the woman from •A Man and jspvff |p§ A Woman” end the man from "2001" l&b ■ E g * * H H i b i COLUMBIA PICTURES Presen ts Anouk Aimee Gary Lockwood JACQUES DEMY’S M o d e l S h o p C o starring ALEXANDRA I LAY Songs Composed and rwfamrwtl by SitR rr Written. Produced a n d Directed b y JACQUES DEMY COLL! MBIACO LOR l i d f—l£uB8«ttd tw MATUTE tuMncw) I WPI I (pytntol taction adwwd) th r u FHI MON. rm a M e ’TU 2:15 P .M . d o o r s orr.N i ts • F E A T I ’RKS - 4: 00 - 5:50 2:10 • 7:40 - 0:30 I § I n t e r s t a t e s Va r s i t y 2400 GUADALUPE N O W S H O W IN G IEVY-6ARDNER LAVIN presents "SAM WHISKEY" s ta rrin g BURT REYNOLDS • CLINT WALKER • OSSIE DAVIS and ANG E D CK NSON as Laura COLOR by D el JX I Directed by ARNOLD LAVEN • Produced by JULES LEVY-ARTHUR GARONER-ARNOLD LAVEN I n t e r s t a t e ’* P a r a m o u n t 713 C O N G R E S S AVE. Mi M I M rm i i v i v m i frX0rtnvnfH horn Trm**nmic§ Covpo'tf'o* mm ■ DO O RS OPEN 12:15 FEATURES: 12:40-2:30-4:20 N O W S H O W IN G ! PREMIERE Starring Co-starring TONY RANDALL JANET LEIGH JIM BACKUS KEN BERRY RODDY MCDOWALL Sdto* G S UtMERV GRIFFIN SaNTWK By JOHN MCGREEVEY m FRANK TELFORD • IVAN TORS r t ART ARTHUR tiortucNluy 6E0RGE SHERM AN • JACK ARNOLD • JEFF BARRY • COLOR Music Scored by Story Sy 0" re ted fry ll Suwtsiedtor BBS eudWKw^p? kA PARAMOUNT PICTURE W f B t a t e DOORS OPEN 5:45 AUSTIN H I O S O C O N G I I * * c 5 \ l a i i ^ \ r k i i \ . t3fe6Heart is a » WET A U D R E Y ! HEPBURN ALAN! A R K I N R I C H A R D .CRENNA * H I M I U 7:59 ' ‘D A U K " 6:00 . JO 02 W I UNTIL DA N O T IC E ! T O D A Y & EVERY F R ID A Y N O C H IL D R E N U N D ER 16 Y E A R S O F A G E WILL BE A DM IT TED UN LESS A C C O M P A N IE D BY A N ADULT. FREE P A R K IN G \ A T ALL TIMES Friday, March 7, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* IX “ Charge Greek Hazing M ethods Persist Despite Ruling By JOHN POFF Fraternity hazing continuos de­ vote University rules prohibiting it. A former fraternity pledge said that actives in his fraternity be­ littled pledges constantly and em­ ployed both physical and psycho­ logical methods of hazing. “ I didn’t feel a sense of bro­ therhood,’’ he said. “ I felt a sense of slavery.’’ However. Joe Bob Kinsel, In terfratem ity Council (IF C ) pres­ ident, said, “ Fraternities have realized that they are soliciting a different caliber of men than in the past. Freshmen or sopho mores of today take college more seriously, and physical servitude doesn’t fit into their idea of col- lege.” Lewis Hoffer, IFC Code of Con­ duct Committee chairman, said his committee has checked out every’ rumor of hazing, but it has found no evidence of the prac­ tice. But a former active said haz­ ing was extensive in the hell week period before initiation. “ We stayed up for 48 hours straight. It was supposed to break down our resistance and make us appreciate fraternity,’’ he said. the Another former pledge said, “ lf the fraternity system is going to be able to withstand the chang­ es of time and attitudes, it’s going to have to revise the standards of pledgeship.” 3 Persons Fined In Weedon Case Three more participants in the Weedon demonstration pleaded guilty Wednesday to preventing pursuit of labor and were fined by Judge Je rry Dellana in Coun­ ty Court at Law Number I. Tile three are Jonnabeth L. Ward, 2501 Rio Grande St.; Bet­ ty Poindexter, 2506 Whitis; and Baiinetfa Scott, 100 Laurel Lane. In the cases of Misses Scott and Ward, Judge Dellana assessed a SKK) fine plus $44 in court costs. Miss Poindexter was fined $-300 and $14 in court costs, but $200 of the fine wfas probated for six months. Eleven of the 45 demonstrators arrested during incidents at Don Weedon’s service station last May have yet to enter pleas or been tried. tho Army. January and February state quota* w ert respectively 1,363 and 1,564. Since the first of the year, phy­ sical examination quotas have risen for .steadily. The quota April is 7,293, whde for January it was 2.706. The calla for Feb­ ruary and March were 3,371 and 4,585 respectively. 18 Doctors Needed During the period Ju ly, 1969, through January, 1970, the Texas .Selective Service Board has been directed to furnish 18 doctors of medicine. The national quota for doctors is 437. Two optometrists and one doc­ tor of osteopathy also are re­ quested during thus same period. Tile osteopath is for the Army and the optometrists are for tho Air Force. Nationally, the Army is requesting 23 osteopaths, an I the Air Force is asking for 25 optometrists. Tile 1969 national draft quotas and their distribution to the Army and the Marines arc: January — 26,800, all for the Arm y; February — 33.700. with 32.200 for the Army and 1,500 for the Marines; March — 33,100, with 31.600 for the Army and 1,« 500 for the Marines; April—33,000, with 30,500 for the Army and 2,« 500 for the Marines. Professor Plans Speech in England A visiting professor of manage­ ment in the College of Business Administration w ill be one of the principal speakers at a confer­ ence on the Management of Tech­ nological Innovation to be held Wednesday and Thursday in Har­ rogate, England. Prof. James R. Bright, who Is on leave from the Harvard Grad­ uate School of Business Adminis­ “ What tration. will speak on Re­ Technological search for Management.’’ Innovation Findings Suggest Tile British conference Is spon­ sored by the Ministry of Techno­ logy’, the University of Bradford Management Center, and Man­ agement Today. While In England Bright also will lecture in a science semi­ nar af the US Embassy in Ten­ don March 14. For the last 19 years, Bright has been studying technological innovation, the process by which scientific and technical know­ ledge is translated into an eco­ nomic reality with wide impact. Texas Quota Raised; ^ National Call Lower r n a - i i . • i i Th# Tempts drnf? quota for April I* 1,7.77, up from I 772 f >r Man , Boyd Sinclair, chief of the n i- ministrative division of tho State I iv . Selective Service, said T it “ The increase will no* affret students any differently ’ Sin- lair said. Tile Texas draft cal] f >r April went up even though the national quota for April :s Ie ; ti hi that of March. “ Credits are given each ital* a '••• rf]iag to the number of enlist- mer *s in earh state. Since there were less volunteers in Texas, t e draft quota went up. T ie T f re quota av 'rapes 4:2 to 5 per cent of the national quota,’* Sinclair said. Some of the inductees for Feb­ ruary March, and April are to ho sH>- t<‘d for the Marines, but the maj >ritv are .scheduler! for Medical School at Houston Badly Needed, Report Says By ANN FORTSON News \ssistant Urgently rewind medical teach­ ing facilities would be provided at relatively low cost by a Uni­ versity medical school in Hous­ ton. according to a report being studied by a House State Affairs sub-committee. Tile report includes a state­ ment from the Texas Medical Association recommending that a “ new four-year medical school be approved this year, and that consideration bp given to the need for a second new school.’’ Texas averages one physician to 981 people statewide and one per 1.250 in West Texas. The na­ tional average is one doctor to 660 population. the state; Studies completed in 1968 show that 52 per cent of beginning physicians in Texas were trained that Texas outside the ranks states for freshman medical students; and that Tex­ as medical schools turn away more than enough qualified ap­ plicants to man a new medical school annually. forty-second among in places Under plans for the Houston medical school, submitted to the House by the Coordinating Board of the Texas College and Univer­ sity System, teaching facilities than $60 million worth more w’ould be available without cost through affiliations with Her­ mann Hospital, St. Joseph’s Hos­ pital, and Memorial Baptist Hos­ pital in Houston. In addition, the Texas Medical and Hermann Hospital land for the Center have volunteered school. Library facilities of the Hous­ ton Academy of Medicine and the Texas Medical Center w’ould be available to the students and faculty of the school under exist­ ing affiliations making construc­ tion of a library unnecessary. Institute, Tlie staff members of M. D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute, the Dental Branch and Dental Science the School of Public Health, and the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences in the Texas Medical Censor would assure the pro­ posed school of a qualified teach­ ing staff. Tile House State Affairs Com- mitt'x?, which is considering pro­ posals for the Houston medical school, has already approved a bill creating a Texas Tech med­ ical branch in Lubbock. 1/^oar* + 3 n to ^S/?/ i p n n a O U R N E W M A N A G E R H A S C H E C K E D T H E L IQ U O R P R IC E S A T A L L 3 of Austin’s Discount Houses- A N D H E ’S S E E N TO IT T H A T O U R E V E R Y D A Y P R IC E S O N L I Q U O R A R E A S L O W O R L O W E R — PLU S — W E H A V E C O L D BEER & W IN E S A N D A M U C H L A R G E R S E L E C T IO N & W E E K - E N D S P E C IA L S ! G O R D O N 'S O range & W h ite Label VODKA GORDON 80 proof Distilled from grain 5th Vodka * T ' S C O T C H CUTTY SARK 5 79 W H IS K Y 86 pr. 100% Imported 5th Straight Bourbon Whiskey WINDSOR CANADIAN PISCO BRANDY from PERU 80 pr JIM BEAM 86 proof . 5th 6.95 0 6 9 5th J ^ 7 9 5th J 5fh J BACARDI 1 2 7 80 proof 80 pr. 100% Imported RON RICO RUM Puerto Rican V2 G allons Puerto Rican Rum 80 pr. LEGACY V i G A LL O N ocoTcn whisky OU pr. Vl gallon Your Choice A88 SOUTHERN COMFORT IOO pr. Bourbon Liqueur 5th Booth's High & Dry Gin 1 0 8 90 pr. Distilled from grain 5th Our best selling I " wines on sale p r n IV C L / BEAUJOLAIS PAVILION Estate Bottled Vintage 1967 W h ite V0UV*dL!,s“ m-* \ A / L ; i a Marmot LIEBFRAUMILCH V V i i IT © Spatlese Naturrein 1966 Polka dot voi!e Safari Shirt in Canary, watermelon, Wedge­ wood blue, parsley green, navy or solid white. 5-13 $12.00 Polka dot dacron cuffed pants in same colors. 5-13 $18.00 P R E S T O C H A R G E ■ l re H A N C O C K C EN T ER LAST DAY to NOMINATE Outstanding Students .JBT ' tx / / J ? Encounter Groups Focus on Growth ii for the A program of individual devel­ opment t h r o u g h Encounter Groups, under the sponsorship of thp Texas Union, began Monday. Focusing on personal growth and development, students will be divided into groups of about 12 in which they will discuss their experiences, feelings, roar- tions> and the behavior of them­ selves and others. Tile program started with a In succeeding in general session. weeks, students w ill meet small groups under tile leader­ ship of Encounter Group leaders. Tile leaders are students in ad­ vanced doctoral prograrps in psy­ chology and educational psychol-1 ogy, who have had experience in working with groups. Sessions are twice a wreek for two hours, and the program w ill conclude with a barbecue and party in April. Dr. E a rl A. Koile, professor of is con­ educational psychology, sultant for the project. CACTUS Check These Qualifications andj^ yr' f > TAKE HOME IN KEGS Have Your Group Nominate One I yr , x i or More Students for This Honor I X JL OUTSTANDING STUDENT NO M INATION QUALIFICATIONS 1. Any organization may nominate. 3. Outstanding Students from previous years may not be nominated 2. Selection by the committee will be on the basil of: e. Outstanding contribution to the University. b. Scholarship. c. Leadership. d. Awards and honors received. a. Participation in campus organizations. I. Activities and campus committee work. again. nation. 4. A former Goodfellow is ELIGIBLE for Outstanding Student nomi­ I. Nomination DEADLINE is Friday, March 7, 1969. 6. Pick up nomination blanks in Journalism Building Room 107. ★ S E L E C T IO N O F O U T S T A N D IN G STUDENTS. The selection of those students who are to be designated as "Outstanding Students" and who are to be so honored in the yearbook shall be decided by a majority vote of the Outstanding Student Committe. The Committee shall be appointed by th eCactus Editor and shall be composed of representatives of the Students' Association, the office of the Dean of Students, and other staff or faculty members who are considered by the Editor to be qualified to help in the selection. The Editor shall necessarily decide the total vote required to qualify the student for such honor. Furthermore, it shall be the responsibility of the Cactus Editor and Associate Editor to provide a list of names with qualifica­ tions and other pertinent information to the committe for initial dis­ cussion. The final selection and compiling of names shall be made by the Committee in meeting and given to the Cactus Editor. It is to be understood that all discussion and selections made in meeting are to be strictly confidential within members of the Committee itself. Public announcement of the Outstanding Students shall be made by the Cactus Editor. N o student shall be eligible to be selected as an Outstanding Student more than once. * Texas Student Publications, Inc. Handbook, Page 53. FALSTAFF BEER 6 glass cans MICHELOB 1 3 9 6 cans I All with the Silver Label L O N E ST A R BEER C O M P A N Y O F A U S T IN Airport Blvd. end Hwy, 290 G I 4-3551 KEMlimi l l f / fM Page 14 Friday, March 7, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN