W e a th e r: • C lo u d y, C h a n c e of Rain • H ig h : Low 70's • Low: M i d 50's T h e D a i l y * r > AN Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas at A ustin U T D a y P lanned for H ig h Sch o ol Stu den ts C o lu m n I • Vol. 67 Price Five Cents A U ST IN , T EX A S, F R ID A Y , M A R C H 8, 1968 Ten Pages Today N o. 130 Upshaw Quits Race, Fish W ants Approval By KAHEN ELLIOTT T e x a n S t a f f W r i t e r L arry Upshaw, candidate for Tex­ an editor, has w ithdraw n from the race. Upshaw a n n o u n c e d T hursday n i g h t t h a t h e w o u ld n o l o n g e r b e a c a n d i ­ d a t e b e c a u s e “ I a m a j o u r n a l i s t , n o t a p o litic ia n ." In a statem ent of resignation, U pshaw explained, “ I originally entenxi the rac e becau se I considered m yself the only ca n ­ d id ate who could effectively fill the posi­ tio n .” He also added th a t “ Because of this d is­ like for the glad handing politicking nec­ e ssary in a cam paign, and because of m y concern for the overall, d irect operation of the Texan, I am quitting the ra c e to ap ­ ply for m anaging editor in M ay." R ick Fish, who is still socking certifi­ cation of the B oard of D irectors of Texas Student Publications, Inc., T hursday night w as granted a new hearing with the Board. the Flection Commission asked to re ­ consider F ish ’s ca se on the grounds th at th e re was new evidence. The decision ca m e a fte r the TSP Board F ish Should Appeal "W e have decided th at the plaintiff. Rick F ish, has not exhausted all his possible channels with the TSP, therefore, we will the B oard,” to that he appeal first ask Doug C aroom , ch airm an of the Election Com mission announced Thursday night. F ish said he w ill appeal the TSP board, which will m eet a t 3 p.m . F riday in Journalism Building 305, Loyd Edm onds, T SP general m an ag er, announced Thurs­ d ay night. to Fish said. “ We took our case to the E lec­ tion Commission because Dr. (B ryce) J o r­ the place to s ta rt dan fighting. We w anted to open up a channel of appeal of TSP decisions.” told us th at w as At its M arch I m eeting, the TSP Board w aived experience req u irem en ts for M er­ ry' Clark, J e rry Rudes, U pshaw and Fish. H ow ever, it refused to waive a scholastic req u irem en t for FLsh. T here is d isag reem en t over the pow ers the Election Commis--ion. Bob Sim p­ of son, atto rn ey general of the Student Court, the Com mission doesn't th at pointed out have the wisdom to consider the power of TSP Boart! derisions. TSP Board m em b er Stan M cClelland f said, “ I feel th at since u e a re a p riv ate the Incorporation and a direct R egents, that only the Regents t an o v er­ rid e our decision.” link with M cClelland added th at the R egents could “ ask som e inlier body to consider the ca se for them if it w ere referre d to th e m .” McClelland d eclared, “ We could decide to appoint an editor and our decision would only be rev ersib le by the Regents " E lection Commission rep resen tativ e Tom Houghton, said. “ We have the right to re ­ view' decisions of the TSP and decide if they a re a rb itra rily rea ch ed .” He added th at the case could be carried to the Stu­ d en t Court and on to an A pp H ate Court if necessary. Election Code Quoted Houghton quoted Section IV A 6 of the Election Code as the source of power. The the office clau se reads, “ C andidates for of E ditor of the Daily Texan shall m eet th e requirem ents established by the Board of D irectors of the T exas Student Publi­ cations, In c.” Consequently, Houghton believes that the Com mission can review the TSP B o ard ’s decision to see lf it was arbitrary' In de­ ciding lf all applicants “ su b stan tially m et House Fire Forces Coeds from Rooms F ire forced 46 coeds out into a soupy T hursday morning fog when a w all h ea te r igniter! th ree beds in a room ing house a t 2610 Rio G ran d e St. Mrs. V erna Young, operator of the re si­ dence, said the d am ag e w as nominal and lim ited to one u p stairs bedroom . None of the women lost p ro p erty in the blaze, o th er than a few bod covers, she said. The F ire D ep artm en t said a m a ttress and box springs w ere dam aged and th ere w as som e sm oke d am ag e to the second floor. T here wore no Injuries in the 6:04 a m. fire, the F ire D epartm ent said. One of the resid en ts reported the fire sta rted when a bed w'as plac ed too close to a wall heater. Tile beds had been a r ­ ranged end to end along a wall. Most of the resid en ts fil'd the two-and- one half story' stru c tu re in their nightclothes. All conditions w ere b ark to norm al Thurs d ay afternoon, and none of the women had to move, Mrs. Young said. the req u irem en ts.” E dw ard Davenport, who w is rep rese n t­ ing Fish In the hearing asserted th at the Board had “ acted a rb itra rily in certify in g the I certifying M r. F ish.” th ree candid des md t D avenport contended g rad e point av erag e did academ ic capability. “ Mr. Fish 995 ro t reflect his is a for- th a t F ish ’s from Fish \fter a railed meeting of the Election Coin mission Thursday night to hear a pe­ tition to place his name on the ballot for It xan editor In the spring elections, the < mn- mission made the following ruling: the < om mission for “ In response to a request to an advis­ ory judgment of Richard Fish tin* Election Commission has ruled according Ir- ticle IV, Section < of the Election < ode rite-in campaigning will be allowed that for editor of the Daily texan. to “The Election Commission has ruled that campaigning other than oral solicitation for the spring eleetioa will not f*»gin prior to 7 a.rn. Wednes4lay, March IS. “The Election Commission has ruled that a classroom shall tie defined as any room where a class is scheduled to lie held for the spring sem ester as shown In the final announcement. This rilling was made in reqmsd for an advisory judgment by An­ thony Constant. “In response hi a request for an advis­ tho judgment by Anthony Constant, ory Election Commission has ruled that ac­ cording to Article V, Suction A,6 of tho election code, campaign speeches may bo allow s] in halls ami stairw ays.” m er National M erit Scholar and I feel th a t this GRA is not at all rep resen t a five b e ­ cau se he has not taken Ins finals due to illness.” HoL .Simpson, atto rn ey g en eral of the Stu­ dent C ourt, declared th a t “ The TSI’ was definitely acting w ithin its au th o rity ” w hen It refused to certify F ish. Tho “ capricious and a r b itra ry ” ch a rco brought ag a in st B oard c h a irm a n Lloyd Doggt tt is based on th e T SP B o ard 's d e­ cision to w aive req u irem en ts for those who “ substantially m et the re q u ire m e n ts.” D avenport d eclared th e B oard guilty of actin g a rb itra rily b ecau se “ it refu ses to l»»ok a t Mr. F ish 's p ast acad em ic record of g*od standing b ut It* focus to the p rese n t.” ra th e r lim its Sweetheart Voting Today U niversity stu d en ts will choose a Sweet­ h e a rt from a field of five finalists in a g en eral election F rid ay . Top contenders for the title of U niversity S w eetheart a r e P eggy Brzeszkiewicz, ju n ­ junior ior psychology m a jo r; Jo Giese, A m erican Studies m a jo r; M ary L>u G ran ­ junior h isto ry and F rench m a jo r; tham , N ancy H aralson, junior com m ercial a rts m a jo r; and Lynne Shapiro, junior elem en­ ta ry education m ajo r. Students will vote Individual schools and college's F rid a y . T heir choice will be announced during Round-Up w e e k ­ end a t the S w eeth eart Ball, M arch 30, a t M unicipal Auditor sum. th eir In Polls will he open from 8:45 a.m . to 3:15 p.m. Polling places a re A rchitecture, A rchitecture Building; Arls and Sciences, on the South M all; Business, in b ack of the Business Econom ics Building; Com m unica­ tion, Tw enty-fourth and Speedw ay s tre e ts; E ducation, n o rth ea st of Sutton H all; E ngi­ neering; T aylor H all; Fine Arts, Arr and M usic Buildings; Graduate, E a st M all; Law , Inside Townes H ail; and P h arm acy , P h arm ac y Building. Brzeszkiewicz Hit! i Grantham — r n Haralson Shapiro C r o w d s and N ew sm en Seek Views of N A A C P Lead er C h a rle s Evers • . . Mississippi field director talks with interview ers alter speech in Townes Hall. Photo by Frmnk Arm*tron* Negro Candidate Slams Militants Barrera Named To Succeed Hill G overnor’s Choice Tied to Hem isFair By The Associated Press Gov. John Connally, eyeing the needs of San Antonio's H em isF air, appointed Texas* firs t M exican-A m erican S ecretary of S tate T hursday. Roy B a rre ra , 41, a San Antonio law yer, w as nam ed to succeed John Hill, who re­ ig n e d ag S ecretary of S tate to ru n for G overnor. The S ecretary of Stat® adm inisters T exas election laws, reg isters corporations, and often stands in for the Governor a t ce re­ m onial functions. for B a rre ra to be sw orn In Tuesday. At a new s conference ea rlier, Connally said he hoped to find som eone who speaks Spanish for the job because th e se c re ta ry will have m any duties in connection with H em isF air, San A ntonio’s big six-m onth w orld’s fa ir th a t s ta rts in April. A fter receiving a law d eg ree from St. M a ry ’s U niversity School of Law, B a rre ra served from 1951 to 1957 as assista n t dis­ tric t attorney in San Antonio. He rose to chief prosecutor before to s ta rt his own law firm . leaving By J A Y C O O K E Texan S t a f f VV rifer Lashing out at m ilitant Wack power advocates, the Mississippi field the NAACP Thursday director of pledged a national campaign in the b id for Negro e q u a l i t y , C harles E v ers, candidate for a se at in Congress from M ississippi, pleaded w ith “ w hite A m erica” the N egro a chance to show the rest of the world th a t racism is “ on the w ay o u t.” to give The civil rights leader spoke to the Con­ feren ce en H um an R elations and the L aw being held a t Townes H all A uditorium through Saturday. “ I g u aran tee you,” E v ers said, “ give us a chance and we will n ev er build a h a te ag ain st you like you built ag ain st us . . . we will m ake the g rea test A m erican citi­ zens you ev er had .” E v ers is running for the seat v acated by John Bell W illiams, victor in the M ississippi G overnor’s race. C onnally’g office said ten tativ e plans a re Civil Rights L eader High School Students To Visit During UT Day A pproxim ately 800 high school .students will m eet at th e U niversity F rid a y for UT D ay. The high school juniors and seniors will le arn requirem ents, adm issions m a jo r fields of study, testing, and student life. about R egistration for UT D ay begins a t 8:15 a.m . in the M ain B allroom of the Union Building. The p ro g ram will open with a w elcom e by Dr. W illiam T. Belt, coordina­ to r of orientation. O ther talks will include an explanation of adm ission req u irem en ts by Byron Shipp, re g istra r and d irecto r of adm issions, and a talk on freshm an testing by N ancy E a rl, exam inations su p erv iso r of th e Testing Center. Students m ay m e e t w ith faculty and staff m em b ers to ask questions about colleges and p ro g ram s from 1:15 to 2:45 p m. March 17 Deadline On Platform News for filing C andidates the Student As­ sem bly and T he D aily Texan editorship m ay subm it th eir qualifications, platform s, and photographs to the Texan for publi­ cation M arch IT. If candidates have no recen t picture, they the Texan m a y m ak e appointm ents with photographer no la te r than M onday. P ic­ tu res, qualifications, and platform s m ust be subm itted by 5 p.m . W ednesday. A can d id ate's p latform , not including a list of qualifications, should not exceed 300 w ords. M aterial should be accom panied by th e can d id ate’s ad d ress and phone n um ­ b er. F o r additional inform ation, candidates should contact M ary Morphia Moody, Tex­ an editor. A cam pus tour, sponsored by the U ni­ versity ch ap ter of Alpha P hi Om ega, n a ­ tional m e n ’s se rv ic e fra tern ity , will be given from 2:45 to 3:45 p.m . UT Day is one of five orientation pro­ g ram s offered to new students. O ther pro­ g ram s a re pre-fall, pre-spririg, and pre- su m m er sessions, and a series of four-day orientations held during th e su m m er. Regents May Hear About Union Board SAN ANTONIO (Sp!.) - The T exas Union B oard controversy will be brought to the attention of the Board of R egents m eeting, student said T hursday night. assem blym an J e rr y Box The R egents a re m eeting F rid ay in El P aso, ju st prior Box m ade his statem en t to boarding a plane h ere to go to E l Paso to atten d the session. His rem a rk s w ere m ad e in answ er to U niversity P resid en t N orm an H ack erm an ’s sta te m en t W ednesday. said According to T hu rsd ay ’s Texan, H acker- the controversy will not be m an brought before the R egents because norm al procedure had not been followed. Box said A ssem bly P resid en t Lloyd Dog­ g ed and assem blym an Jo e K rier also will be attending the R egents m eeting and the th ree will initiate action to bring the Union Board situation the Regents. the attention of to W h a t's Inside • Jordan m e ets students ................. P ag e 2 • Socialist tells platform ................ P age 3 • Tourney reco rd s upsets .......... P ag e 5-6 ............ P a g e 9 • ‘FwOutinGS* review ed Although he conceded the rac e for the congressional se at would be close, E vers expressed optim ism about its outcom e and outlined a b road platform for Improved racial relations. His m ajo r proposals included: • Face to face conferences with m ilitant T o o k pow er advocates. • C oncentrate on elim inating the causes of rioting. • R aise the stan d ard s of both poor w hites and poor N egroes through a revised wel­ fare program . • E quitable application of the law. “ We m ust stop the reasons for the H. L ap Browns and tho Stokely C arm ich aels,” he said. “ I am personally going to the black power boys and explain to them th at w hat thev a re doing is the sam e thing the w hites did*.” E vers said the rioting th at tears A m erica and “ th rea ten s h er dow nfall” Is a resu lt of idleness and subversion. Bad W elfare System “ The incredibly bad w elfare system m ust be changed,” E v ers said, referrin g to job idleness. “ W elfare m ust evolve to w orkfare so th at only th o se physically unable to work would be on w elfare.” He said th ere are 485,000 people on wel­ fare in M i s s i s s i p p i and that they receive less than $50 p er month. “ On that kind of money, how can we do an y th in g ?” he asked. “ If we can spend so Related Stories, Page IO. m any m illions on a useless w ar, we can im prove our w elfare system . This country is too rich to allow' anyone to die becau se of lack of funds.” E v e rs Decries Draft Turning to tho draft, E v ers decried w hat he term ed, “ tho lily-white d raft b o ard s.” saying th at if tho Negro is good enough to fight ho is good enough to serv e on the boards. “ It is ju st as unfair for the white to send the Negro to w a r as it would be for th e N egro to send the w hite m an to w a r,” he said. To a stan d in g ovation and a cry of “ Am en.” E v e rs said the Negro and white elem ents in civil rights m ust stop singing “ we m ust overcom e” and s ta rt acting. “ The N egro doesn’t w ant to tak e over the co untry,” ho said, “ he just w ants a chance. And if things look bad, keep the faith. “ A m erica is still tho g reatest country In the world and behind the d ark est cloud the sun is shining.” Another sp e ak e r on the T hursday pro­ gram , Dr. H ector P. G arcia of Corpus Christi, US delegate to the United Nations G eneral A ssem bly, spoke of I^itin-Am eri- can relations and called for “ dem ocracy in action in T ex as,” Sell D em ocracy He said the M exican-Am erican ‘ If we a re going to sell dem ocracy, es­ pecially to L atin A m erica,” he said, “we m u st m ake it w ork in Texas . . . and it is not working fo r the M exican-A m erican.” is good enough to fight and die in V ietnam every day, “ but not good enough to serv e on the Texas Constitutional Revision Commission. “ We a re not only being left out,” he con­ tinued, “ but we are also being tram p led down.” The UN diplom at pointed to tire exclusion of M exican-A m ericans on d raft boards and cited inequities affecting them in such a re a s as education and the courts. News Capsules By The Associated Press_______ Jordan Feels Gen. Hershey March is Deadline Students Important Criticizes Spock T 0 AddIy for Aid » * / March 15 is the deadline for University women to apply for approximately 30 scholarships to the 1908-1969 for be awarded Math of the Student Life Staff in Speech Building 101. One applica­ tion will register the student for all scholarships for which she is school year. Financial need, seriousness of eligible. purpose, and satisfactory grades The Student Health Center s are the basic requirements for ph ne number for appointments eligibility. is GR 1-3082 from 8 to 5 Monday Application forms may be ob­ tained from Mrs. Frances L. Mc* through Friday. The emergency number is GR 1-1824. ENGRAVING PRINTING • A LL-O CCASIO N GREETIN G CARDS • PAPER PARTY ENSEMBLES • SO C IA L STATIONERY • GIFT PAPERS AND TRIMS • BRIDGE A CC ESSO RIES cl be Cc CHUT? Slo o p 2900 G U A D A LU PE G R 2-5733 AUSTIN, TEXAS if she doesn't give it to y o u ... — get it yourself! JADE EA5T' W ilson Condemns Rhodesian Leaders ItlM tO V Bv K W WHITAKER Texan S t a f f Writer Prime Minister Harold Wilson declared Thursday break away Rhodesia’s leaders are “ essentially evil” but he ruled out reprisals for their execution of three blacks reprieved by Queen Elizabeth. Reliable sources in Salisbury, the Rhodesian capital, said Prime Minister Jan Smith’s government is expected to follow up Wednev dav's bandogs by executing several more Africans Friday. Wilson’s statement in the House of Commons followed a Cabinet meeting that decided against any action that might break Britain’s frail link with its former colory. Thieu Denied Power Request J SAIGON A rebuff by the Senate and a petition circulating among repre­ Thursday indicated growing political trouble in the weeks sents1 A ahead for President Nguyen Van Thieu. In a 40-3 vote, the Senate turned down Thleu’s request for addi­ tional emergency pavers in finance and economy. Tho House had voted sim ilarly last week to deny Thieu’s request. The petition, though it is only a first step, calls on the House to put on its agenda a discussion of whether to bring up for a vote a motion of no confidence in Thieu’s administration. US, Russia Pledge Joint Protection GENEVA The Unite] States and the Soviet Union jointly promised Thurs­ day to prote« t a1! weaker nations from nuclear blackmail and ag- gT<*ssion. Tile pledge is designed primarily to reassure India, fear­ ful cf a nuclear attack from Red China. US Delegate William C. Foster and Russia’s Alexei S. Roshchln told the Geneva disarmament talks their governments will publish formal security guarantees for the weaker countries that sign next month the treaty to prevent; the spread of nuclear weapons. These nations would abandon their claims to atomic arms. for Direct responsibility the Student Health Center, Office of the Register. Admissions Di­ re or. Counseling Center, Office In­ of Student Financial Aid, and tl .mural Sports Office, Office of the Dean of Students. falls on the new Vice-President of Student Affairs. With all of this it is quite surprising that Dr. Bryce Jordan ran manage to remember the names of most of the students he comes into con­ tort with. However, he not only remem- bers their names, but he holds an avid interest in their activities and their idea^. Graciously receiving all the guests who attended the Texas Union Council s reception for him Thursday, Dr. Jordan and his wife met and talked with Uni­ versity students and staff mem­ bers for an hour and a half and were later able to introduce them to other people. Dr. Jordan is one of three vice­ presidents who make up Univer­ sity President Norman Hacknr- mar.’.s administrative staff. He was made chairman of the De­ partment of Music in 1965, and University Police Make 2 Arrests University police made arrests on campus Wednesday night, their first under authority given them by a law which took effect Feb. I, Chief A. R. Hamilton said Thursday. Seized were two men, 18 and 22, who w'orp taken In custody outside the Journalism Building, and charged in Corporation Court with unlawfully carrying arms, a misdemeanor. Tile men, confined in County Ja il Wednesday night, were re­ leased on a $300 cash bond Thursday afternoon. Police said one of the men Was carrying a "dagger” in his belt and the other had a knife and a motorcycle chain. They were accompanied hy an­ other man and a woman, who were released. Soviet W om en Given Holiday Friday Most ow Soviet women, who carry a huge burden In this hardworking society, get a day of rest Friday. Ifs International Women’s Day in the Communist world—one of the most festive holidays of the year. Soviet women will lay aside their picks and shovels, and climb down from their cranes and steam rollers to let their husbands pam­ per them for a tiny. Moscow gift shops and florists have been jam me I all week hy men buying presents for their wive* and daughters. Body Found N ear M arine Base QI W TICO , VA. One body was recovered and rescuers sought others Thursday at this Marine base after a grim river tragedy involving nine men rated as expert swimmers. The Marines refused to give up hope that one or more of the eight Marines and one Navy/ man may have survived the evident capsizing of a canoe late Wednesday. Tile men. physical fitness specialist* who would have gone on to train m ilitary physical Instructors, were rowing over and back across the icy Potomac River when their 25 foot canoe apparently flipped. Extradition of Ex-Commissar Asked WASHINGTON j Czechoslovakia requested Thursday die extradition of Maj. Gen. Jan SoJna, former Communist commissar of the Czechoslovak De j fease Ministry, accusing him of “ misappropriation of funds and em­ bezzlement.” US official immediately said chances for complying with such a request are slim. Tile request for return of the Czech defector was submitted by Ambassador Karel Buda, who called on Deputy Assistant Secretary Walter Stoessel late in the afternoon to offer orally what the State Department calk'd a preliminary application for Sejna’s extradition. M a y o r Urges ‘Return to S a n ity 1 DETROIT For Further Information Contact: The Secretary for Academic Affairs, Dept. E A Y E A R A T T E L A V IV U N IV E R S IT Y 1968-1969 A n accredited program open to qualified American s t u ­ d e n t s interested in exploring the various aspects of life in I rad while earning academic credit. Programs For: JU N IO R Y EA R FRESH M A N V EA R Scholarships Available The American Friends o f the Tel A viv University, Inc. 41 East 42d Street New York, N.Y. 10017 M U 7-5651 Jordan is currently chairman of that de­ partment's budget council. He holds bachelor’s and mas­ ter’* degrees in music from the University and a PhD In his­ torical musicology from the Uni­ versity of North Carolina. He has lectured in the Salzburg .Seminar in American Studies in Austria and taught at Hard in-Sim mons University, the University of Maryland, and the University of Kentucky before coming to the University. Dr. Jordan is absorbed In stu­ dent life and student activities. He believes there are many areas in which students have a legiti­ mate right to determine poli­ cies -for example, that events paid for by student fees should be controlled by students. that the main area 1 He also feels a great deal can be learned from students in all University matters. He thinks, however, faculty-domi­ which should be nated is curriculum planning. Students should be consulted, he said, but the ultimate decisions should be made by faculty mem­ bers. The new vice-president said that channels for obtaining stu­ dent opinion are being improved at a very rapid rate. He illus­ tra te the closing of this com­ munications gap with the present manner of selecting a new Penn of Students. The Advisory Council on Stu­ dent Affairs has been set up to Screen possible candidates and to draw up a slate of nominees; there are thro" .students on this board, and their opinions are carefully weighed. is the University This sort of mechanism for student opinion is important, Dr. Jordan said, because it shows that in a healthy state of student Involve­ ment and of respect of student ideas. He stressed the fact that there is, and always will be, con­ tention between faculty and stu­ dents about how much student decision-making should be al­ lowed on a campus. Dr. Jordan also realizes that It is essential that the University protect the rights of all students. Tile right of demonstrators to dissent is important, and Uni­ versity rules protect it, he said. Tt is equally important that the University protect the right of students to have complete access to classrooms and to let them hear what is going on in classes. Therefore, rules prohibit demon­ strators protesting in classroom buildings. Dr. Jordan gave as an example the right of anti-Dow Chemical Co. demonstrators to disagree with the policy of allowing Dow to recruit on campus, and the right of other students to inter­ view for Dow jobs. Each, he be­ lieves, is of equal value. In evaluating his new job, Dr. Jordan said he is concerned pri­ m arily with coordinating student academic nonacademic activities. He wants the students to realize that "the whole fabric of student life In a university is a learning experience.” and Bv The A sso r ia ^ Pres* By The Associated Pres* Lt. Gen. Lewis Hershey, Se­ lective Service director, said Thursday Americans would for­ get all about baby doctor Ben­ jamin Spoi k "if some people would stop giving time on the air to him.” Spock and four others, Includ­ ing Yale chaplain William Sloane Coffin Jr., are charged in R is ­ ton with “ conspiring to counsel, aid and abet” young men to evade service the armed forces. in Gen. Hershey told a news con- ’ ference he had not read Spook s books on child rearing but knows some have charged Spock Is a “ lousy psychologist” who Is “ re­ sponsible for the permissiveness” in America today. “ If I had a football team," Gen. Hershey said, “ I know I wouldn't w'ant more than two or three on it with his independence of mind—they might run for the other goal." Gen. Hershey called the march on the Pentagon last October, in which Spock and Coffin partici­ pated, “ a disgraceful thing.” It encouraged “ the people who are killing our kids,” he said. “ I don’t say he’s doing it pur­ posely, but I know if I were the Viet Cong I ’d certainly be for him.” Gen. Hershey was asked what effect there would be on his office I if Spock and Coffin are convicted and the convictions are later re­ versed by the Supreme Court. “ TIk* Selective Service isn’t on any shifting sands. Before that happens people will probably have forgotten who they were,” he said. "T H E H U S T L E R " second film In Lenten Film Series After Film Discussion Dr, Richard Byrne, Visiting Professor, Radio, Television, Drama, Films. 7:00 P.M. Fellowship Ha ll SUNDAY — MARCH IO UNIVERSITY CH RISTIAN CHURCH {acfuii from th# fountain) A FT E R S H A V E from *2 50 C O L O G N E from $3 OO S W A N K In c .-S o le D>«tHb«rtof Ae en eftemate fragrance, try jade Eaef C O R A L or Jade East G O L D E N I t M t ■ J-- H S R O U N D UP 6 8 IS COMING! J I Bigger Than Ever! Belter Than 4 Ever! G e t Ready N O W ! Stclfox Jewelry proudly announces the appointment of MR. GARY COHEN to the position of Campus Representative for our downtown store. This is an invitation for all students to come by and visit with Gary, His schedule is as follows WEDNESDAYS T H I RSO A VS S A T U R D A Y S 2 < 30 P. M. A 9:00 P. Af. 9 5:30 P. AL STELFOX &C0. ( /S' awee leio 2 St on J to - .S o n c I L • SCR C O NGRESS, Downtown, GR 8-6496 • C A P I T O L P L A Z A SHOPPING C E N T E R THE DAILY TEXAN RGUND-UP EDITION will be published FRIDAY MR. ADVERTISER: This is Y O U R opportunity to catch students, ex-students, faculty, moms and dads . . • ail at one time with your sales message in this BIG circulation, BIG readership RO UN D UP EDITION! Corral your share of the BIG money to be spent! Plan your promotion and advertise it In THE DAILY TEXAN ROUND-UP EDITION! MARCH 29th! Reserve Your A d Space N O W ! CALL G R l - 3 2 2 7 For C om plete Information! Assorting that "wildly Irresponsible rumors” in news pa per less Detroit have caused both whites and Negroes to arm themselves in unprecedented numbers, Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh pleaded via television Thursday for "return to sanity.” “ This am a race must be stopped.” said Cavanagh, in whose city 43 person* w*ere killed and millions of dollars in damage in­ flicted in racial rioting last Ju ly. Detroit has b< -on without its regular daily newspapers for 114 days because of a Teamsters strike at the evening News and an in­ sympathy shutdown by the morning Free Press. Students Compel S.C. Senate to Quit COLUMBIA, S C. More than 200 Negro college students from Orangeburg forced abrupt adjournment of the South Carolina Senate Thursday but failed to pressure Gov. Robert M cNair Into appearing before them outside his office. The Governor instead met with a small group of students to hear their grievances concerning tile way he has handled demonstra­ tions and rioting that claimed three lives in Orangeburg four weeks ago. A ir Force Cadet Ju d g e d ‘In san e’ COLO. Paul 1). Speasl, the first cadet at the US Air Force Academy ever called to a court-martial, was found innocent by directed ver­ dict Thursday after three psychiatrists testified he is legally insane. The 21 vear-old cadet from Tucson, Ari? , was not in court to hear the verdict that came about two hours after his trial was resumed, following a two-week postponement. The cadet is a patient in Fitzsimons General Hospital near Den­ ver He had pleaded innocent to charges of robbery, larceny and forgery when the r urt-martial opened Feb. 19. M arket Levels as Trading Subsides NKW VORK I'he stock market Thursday digested its biggest technical rally In more than three months. The pace of trading subsided. Volume was 8.63 million shares compared with 9.91 million Wed­ nesday. The Dow Jones Industrial average dropped .99 to 836.22. In the over-all list < f 1,473 Issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange, however, 648 rose and 601 fell. New lows for 1967-’68 totaled 22 and new highs six. Plastic Cornea Restores W o m a n 's Sight HENDERSON A plastic cornea has chan get! the wmrld of Mrs. Arlen "Je a n " On*, after 20 years of blindness. Mrs. O r , of Henderson was able to see Monday for the first time in two decades. She was blinded by a fountain pen device that turned out to be a tear gas h Ider. The sight-restoring surgery vs as p e ri fined at Methodist B o s ­ tal in Houston Nov. 28, and consisted of implanting a plastic cornea. Crim e Commission Denounces Bar Action DALLAS A resolution adopted recently by the American B a r Association is “ an open attempt to muzzle the press,” the Dallas Crime Com­ mission said. They said the public has a right to know ti at a crime has been committed, what the crim e was and who is charged with it. People “ have the right to know facts that might tend to protect them frow becoming tile victim s of a sim ilar of fen- " they said. fag© 2 Friday, March 8, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Presidential C a n d id a te R-U Sketches Socialist Describes Platform Due on Tuesday UT Expansion East Approved by City DISCOUNT PIPES Tob#ee## SPARTAN 'S KUTI Airport !M*<1. "Bring the troops home” and "Black control of black com­ munity” will be the campaign platform for the Socialist Work­ ers Party. Fred Halstead, the party's presidential said here Thursday night. candidate Halstead, whose speech was sponsored by the Union Speakers rn Committee, said the aims The Austin City Council Thurs­ day approved acquisition and public use of land between the University’s present east bound­ aries, one bloi k east of Red River Street, and Interstate Highway 35. City Manager Bob Ti rn sin an Said the C m,'ii "approved a plan for the I niversltj to acquire and put into public use the Lind between where tim University now stops and Interstate 35.” Tintsman said the decision was made with the provision that no significant change he made In the present street plan and traffic flow. Specifications include construe ti on of the new Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and the School of Public Service. The development is part of the Ka t Project of the University Development Plant. Tintsman Slid tile project and the MoPac highway system being planned by the City will "reflect each other.” ESP Seminar A I E C H L E R K O C U R R H l l A R U S O V N#«r#») #" d Mot* |n*#r#»B#§ L#C+:r#f on ESR M o n , & T u es. M a r c h I ! & 12 — 7:3 0 p or. r . , r , , . . , r ... a j»H# H«*#f . ; - t i A /#. • „ ■ , , - P . h c l # v »«-i GRAND OPENING Saturday Ma re Ii 9 The argument Vietnam should be re-examined. " If we don’t stop them there, we must stop them here” should be analyzed, he said. Neither Hie Vietnamese nor the Chinese are going to in­ vade the United States. Ami communism is an ideology, not a race of men. he said. "You d -n't stop an ideology’ with bullets Worry about people b u n within the United Staten, he urged. "More radicals have been created by Vietnam than I have created In 30 years. "Halstead said. That peace in Southeast Asia is to the vital interest of the United States is another defense of t e war that should be examined, Halstead said. This reason de­ fines the national interest in the interest of the maj r rot}* .ra­ in these tions with areas, he said. investment United States Trade If it is a question of needing a certain commodity', such as tin or rubber, the United States c< uld got it elsewhere or trade with these countries. "The1, cs uld: t exploit the situation over a I ng It would mke it period of time out of the sphere of capit i bsf ic investments,” Halstead said. "Permanent draft is not neces­ sary to defense of tie country and never was.” Halstead said. The bases and men all over the world are an ex per e and nega­ tive to the defense of the country, he said, terming it imperialism and defending somebody’s invest­ ment. "Support for our GI s Ss not sending them to die for some one’s profd.” Though the country Is in sci iou* trouble, it can be sapped. Hal­ flead said. "The country is freer today than since I can remem­ ber.” But the exercise of these freedoms is important, and “ we must use liberties to the hilt.” Glad to McCarthy Though Halstead Is glad to see Sen. Eugene McCarthy criticize the war to stir up the question. he believes it would be a tragedy if dissent were channeled back into the Democratic Party. An Independent movement must ie bud:, he contended. In the cities Halstead said he would like to see self-determina­ tion of the black people with black control of black commun­ ity. Police should be drawn from areas they control and have their interests in mind, he said. lf low or no interest loans wore available, tho Negro could start his own business for his own gain, he theorized. In other domestic issues. Hal­ stead called for tho nationaliza­ tion of major corporations. Vast housing programs in cities a r e needed, he said but President Lyndon B. Johnson's encouraging private enterprise to build low rent housing, he charged, is non­ sense. "They are not in business to give money away,’’ he said. "W e and the res' of tile world would be better off without for­ eign aid." Halstead said. explain­ ing his belief it encourages ex­ ploitation by American corpora­ tions, Tile Peace Corps and other al­ truistic programs give the Im­ pression in other that people parts of the world are inferior, but "They don’t require our mis­ sionaries. "he said. "Grant them loans and trade, but get off their backs.” Campus News in Brief ARM Y ROTT M ARA! D E E S will assemble for training In coun­ ter-guerrilla operations at I pm . Saturday In front of tie ROTC Building. The maneuvers will consist of a raid p a tro l culminating in a perimeter de­ fense. B M ! V I F IR E S ID E in ” I i its bimonthly gathering at 7 p m Saturday the home of Barbara and T rav is Griffith, 515 Lightsey. The B ah a’i faith is an independent world reli­ gion with followers in more than 311 countries and terri­ tories. Present af the meeting will he some B a h a’i followers from Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio. U niversity students are invited. D EPA RT M EN T OF G ER M W IG LANGUAGES w i l l sponsor a lecture by Prof. Benno von Wiese at 4 p rn. Friday in Busi­ ness Economics Building 166. in I.aurie, D IS C IP L E S C A M P IS M IN IS T R Y ‘ Tile will sponsor the film, Hustler,” which stars Paul Newman, Jackie Gleason, and Piper its Lenten Film Series at 7 p.m. Sunday in Fellowship Hall of Univer­ sity Christian Church. Dr. Rich­ ard Byrne, visiting professor of and Radio-TV-Film, Drama will lead a post-film discus­ sion. FIR ST I'NTT VRIAX CHURCH, as part of its Public Affairs Forum, will sponsor a lecture by Maj. Jim Parker at IO a m. Sunday at 4700 Grover Ave. Maj. Parker will speak on "A Year in Vietnam: A Personal View,’* P R E S B Y T E R IA N C A M P U S M IN ISTRY, 2105 San Antonio St., Will hold a rnff< c conversa­ tion hour from 4 to 5:30 pm. Friday with Tom Cards, par­ ticipant recant World Council of Chur:lies workshop In Turkey. In a PUBLIC RELATIONS STUDENT SOCIETY OF A M EBIC \ will hold a supper meeting at Al- landale Cafeteria at 6 p.m. John Knaggs of Collins Knaggs In Austin will be the guest speaker. The gn up will con­ clude details for a ti ip to Hemis. Fair in San Antonio on March 16. Anyone interested in public relations is invited to attend. Rides will be available at 5:45 pm to these meeting behind the Journalism Building. BEA D IN G VNO STI DY SK ILLS LABOR VTOBY will hold find registration for study skills or speed flexibility classes from 9 a rn. to 4 p.m. Friday in West M all Office Building 409. In- formati n concerning the non­ credit courses may be obtained from Mrs. Frances Moran at the laboratory in WMOB 409. Campus organizations wishing to enter tie annual Round-Up Western Storefronts contest may submit storefront sketches to Un­ ion Building 3i0 until noon Tues­ day, Participants will erect on tho West Mall, their reproductions of the type of storefronts found on "The Drag, 188.1,” Cont'"-: ju ring will be at 4 p m. March 27. Winners will be announced at the Round-Up West­ ern Dance March 29 Further information may be ob­ tained from Ann Henslee or Jan Weaver. Western Storefront co­ chairmen. W ork on N e w Chimes To Be Completed Soon Installation of the University s new electronic chime system be­ gan Thursday afternoon. Carl Eek! irdt professor of mechanical engineering and di­ rector of the University’s physi­ cal plant, said work in the Tower should lie finished in "one or two days." TTie Westminster Peal, uhlch Is usually rung from the Univer­ sity chimes, will the scales and various musical exer­ cises the workmen have been using during installation, Eek hardt said. replace Sula Skinner, Imports From Mexico Indigenou* Art, J#w#!ry, Clothing D#corativ# Accruer!#* 1705 Nuece* Street *4*$ rui|4 uo Tird0E:flW |w*D ® d n j# p *n 0 O O T S h 3 9 k N V H O DISCOUNT FILM & Processing \uioo Buy Sp#, .al Bu rpm# Bf-nu# coupon Par Perio# Call U* About O'^ar Spacial tor Spring Break S A N B O R N S Parry-Brook* B dg. G R 6 7548 7I& Braid A rlo Tatum Exaeutiva S e c re ta ry C e n tra l C o m m itte e for C o m cie n t oui O b #ctor* Speaking On THE DRAFT, C O N SC IEN T IO U S O BJEC TIO N , AND THE L A W Saturday, March 9 7:30 p.m. A. C. AUDITO RIUM Soc I a i is+ Presidential C a n d id a te . . . Fred Halstead wants to bring the troops bonne. iio«n i unary W h y do so many p e o p le prefer their clothes martialled? Try lf and See! N e w Shipm ent-Jusf Arrived! BRAND NEW RECORD ALBUMS AT DISCOUNT PRICES A l l Artists, A l l Labels in Stereo or Mono, onl y a l l e r J MUSIC CO. 613 W . 29th St. GEOTECH A TELEDYNE COMPANY W ill Interview • Geoscientists • Mechanical Engineers • Physicists • Electrical Engineers M A R C H l l & 12 for rewarding careers In research, design, development, and data handling related to the earth sciences. For Interview: CONTACT I M VERSITY PLACEMENT OFFICE or write Supervisor, Recruiting and Training GEOTECH, A TELEGA VE COMPANY 3401 Shiloh Road Garland, Texas Aa Hijual Opporttmsty • BAHAMA S fun and adventure PartyTour 8 EXCITING DAYS— 7 THRILLING NIGHTS INCLUDES: Jet-Powered Flight, Resort Hotel, C O N T A C T YO U R C A M PU S Ground Transportation Airport-Hotel-Alrport, Bag Handling, Music, Dancing, FUN & SUN . . . REPRESENTATIVE TODAY! for Plus Much More . . . Surprises Galore! Information, Brochure and Reservations COMPLETE TOUR LEAVE APRIL 6 RETURN APRIL 13 TRAVEL K IN G OF TEXAS Regional Offic# — Da tai Min Vicki# Howard <•** Campu* Repr#*#nk#Hv# 709 W e lt 22nd Street — P H O N E : 478 4191 W it h N o th in g b u t N o th in g B u t T H I V ILLA G ER and LADYBUG C l o t h e s Won’ t I t be p l e a s a n t t o h av e a s t o r e t h a t s e l l s o n l y t h e c l o t h e s you l o v e ? A l l w i t h t he good c r i s p s p i r i t e d I n t e l l i g e n t l o o k . A l l I n the r e l a x e d and c o u n t r y atmosphere t h e y l i k e . D r e s s e s , s u i t s , c o a t s , j ump e r s , k n i t s , s k i r t s , s h i r t s , s w e a t e r s , s l a c k s , ber mudas , b a t h i n g s u i t s , h an d b a gs , h a t s , u m b r e l l a s , s h o e s , and l i n g e r i e . E v e r y t h i n g a g i r l n e e d s . A l l i n one n i c a p l a c e . Come e a r l y and o f t e n . r mI I I L VI LL A G Ii BELLE HANCOCK CENTER . -s.t M O A T E a conversation with John Hill. I N T H I CAPI I O ! HHfk Tonight john Hill takes you ofj a > personal tour of the historic* ^ % V rooms in the nattdfi's ’w%l> largest State Capitol. WP* ■ 'The Democratic c arididatelof G overnor talks with Charles Ward r . ^ about the heritage pf the pail .jig s - E l and the prospects lur the future. I .*4® LIMITED SEATS A V A ILA B LE— $25 DEPOSIT— CALL RIGHT N O W ! OV#rnof 7:30 PM/FRIDAY, MARCH 8TH/CHANNEL 7 Friday, March 8, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# S “ D on ’t Be A Coward — Try It Again* n u n opinion ■ ' . S e — * Student Apathy Responsible For Half - Hearted Assembly LSU Students Face Different Beer Rule W hile some students at the University at Austin are al­ most belligerent when they demand the sale of beer be allowed in the Texas Union, students at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La., an' onlookers to an at­ tempt to legalize the sale of beer up to the University property. A city ordinance prohibits the sale of b e r within a ?>00- foot perimeter around tile University, One of the city councilmen has stated that the .'100-foot ordinance “was inconsistent with college student drinking habits,” according to Tile Dally Reveille* student news­ paper at LSU The o r d in a n c e was brought up in last week's Council meeting but was deferred for further discussion until this week. Louisiana S tate law says governing au th o rities of par­ ishes and m unicipalities m ay enact ordinances prohibiting the sale of alcoholic I leverages w ithin a certain distance of schools, but this prohibition m ay not exceed 300-feet. At least University of Texas students can now go "across the street” for a I* cr if they are so inclined. Role of University Reprint from Colorado State University “Collegian” “It is not a snobbish rich-man’s college, devoted to leisurely n o n s e n s e . It is the property of the people of the state, and what they want—or what they are told to want— is a mill to turn out men and women who will lead moral lives, play bridge, drive good cars, tx* enterprising in business, and occasionally mention books, though they are not expected to have time to read them. It is a Ford Motor Factory, and if its products rattle a little, they are beautifully standardized, with perfectly interchangeable parts.” —ARROWSMITH by Sinclair le w is “The proper course of action Is clear. The college and university community must retain paramount authority for the education it provides and for the research it under­ takes. Tin needs of tile industrial system mast always be secondary to the cultivation of general understanding and perception. . . . the educator is a figure of power in this context. Ile is the source of the factor of production on which industrial success depends; he must realize this and exert his powder, not on behalf of the industrial system but on behalf of the entire human personality. “. , . it means that the industrial system, acting on Its own behalf or through the agency of the federal govern­ ment, has bypassed the university administration to adapt education to its requirements. H ie Nineteenth-Century en­ trepreneur who, from his position on the university board, intervened to suppress heresy and insist on proper respect for Christian principles and acquisitive capitalism, exer­ cised only the most trivial influence as compared with the power thus deployed. It is a m easure of its subtlety, and of that of th e standard college president* that the latler, declaiming on his commitment to academic freedom, is often unaware of how' much of it. he him self has sur­ rendered.” THE NEW INDUSTRIAL STATE bv John Kenneth Galbraith 5AV ‘faJ'ffE RICHINS A LOOS*/ CAME, SB Amp COE u r n IV BET 4'ou got of there...u n i, all toe HAVE TC PO IS COME CUT TV THE MOUND ANO from OOT ‘IWR CAMPLE! T h e D a i l y T e x a n S tude nt N e w s p a p e r a t UT, A us t in O r f>. r . f d la Th* ra tty T rxan a r* O w * of th* editor or of th* w rie r ar* not necessarily those of th* University adm inistration or - b sc * • o; of the Board of Regent* a v Th* ■■ Se; ;> n exes I' >.t pet ta Puhi -rte*! by T e n s Student r u b ie s t urns, Au*- a- a student new spaper at Th* University of Texas a t austin. Inc-, D raw er D, University Station, '.’he Texan la published daily except Monday and Saturday tither through May. Second-tins* pqptas* Paid a i Austin. New, contr-bu’. * * . be accepted by tr e n to n * HJR 1-8344), a t th* editorial st the 'tews lab -atopy, J E IQS. Inquiries concerti na de! very J B to made in J B SOT (GR 1-5344) s r i a d v e rtis e s . J . a UA tO R 1-3227). .an sub* I \.e s ta te es to The Associated Pres* and ta a m em ber at Th* aa- th* Tejtas oft aa»it I The Roc it* Dally Newspaper Association. th* Southwest Journalism Conference, end - I’ i-ss © I al Advt - ag serv.ee, T n t -a- nal advertising representative ell Th* Delly Texan is R ational Education­ '.8 East 50th Av*.. New York. N.Y. PERM ANENT STAFF EDIT* » R ..................... . MARY MORPHIS MOODY MANAGING E D IT O R ..........................DAVID DeVOSS ASST. MANAGING EDITOR . . . . WILLIAM OPPEL News E d i t o r ................................................ Mark Morrison Editorial Page A sst..........................................Chris Davis Amusements E d ito r .................................. Leslie Donovan Sports E d i t o r .........................................William Halstead F eatu res E d i t o r ................................................. Jenna Bell ISSUE STA FF Associate News Editor ........................................... Linda Davis ........................................... Fanchon burin News Assistant Editorial Page Writer ...................................... Karen Elliott Associate Amusements Editor ............. Jan Shane Assistant Sports Editor ......................................... Jay Cooke Make-Up Editor ............................................. Carolyn Nichols Jeanette Hunt, Jolie Amie Kalbaugh, Copy Editors ............ Richard Fender Photographer ............................................... Page 4 Friday, March 8, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN KAREN ELLIOTT E ditorial P age W riter Student politics is a habit a t the Uni­ versity. It is one of those routines like the cam pus brushing your teeth th at sim ply takes for granted. Student* don’t o b je c t They don’t ap­ prove. They have ju st grown up with it and accept it without looking for w ays to Im prove or vitalize the system of stu­ dent governm ent. Student governm ent is no b etter than individuals who participate. Those the on cam pus who criticize the present Student A ssem bly a re just as responsi­ ble fo r its purported inactivity as those tho Union every T hursday who sit in night and approve w hatever legislation the president introduces. Out of a group of students questioned In the Chuck Wagon a t noon W ednesday, Asg!| tot > .-ere*- Herblock The T e x a n Report Computers Increase Firing Line Registration Woes c s Answerable To file E d ito r: ny HANK MOORE Texan S taff Writer I foil's h av e dimm ed consider­ ably for th e U niversity to adopt a system of com puter registration. T he com puter, a m ysterious cure- all for such problem s as re g istra ­ so m any tio n , th a t m echanical un certain ties it would c r ip p l e an y upcom ing regis- t rations. is plagued w ith A y ear ago, proponents w ere p red ict­ ing the U niversity would have to adopt tho com puter by tim e enrollm ont the passed .TO OOO. Next fall's projected fig­ ure Is 32.000, with 160.000 .sections sche­ duled. Two Types Offered Two types of com puters h av e been proposed, the first indiscrim inately as­ signing classes based on pre re g istra ­ tion without re g a n i to work obligations o r “ convenient” hours. The second type is w here th e student talks with an "o p e ra to r” over a b attery tentatively of phones. R equests a re punt bed, wit ti changes m ade in sect ions and w ith consideration given to the stu ­ d e n t’s preference fur hours. Such pro­ cess takes two m inutes, as opposed to the 49 m inute av erag e student spends in G regory G ym . the U niversity The o p era to r system , though initially Indiana U niversity, has successful a t since alive,” observed them “ oaten Can,' L. Ham m on, director of the D ata Processing Division. Computer Fails One sem ester, 15.000 students a t P u r ­ due U niversity registered by com puter. A pproxim ately 45.000 adds, drops, and section ch an g es resu lted , causing stu ­ dents to re g iste r again without com pu­ te r help. The Air F o rc e A cadem y registered tile com puter and ended students by up with 47 p er cent changes th e fol­ lowing week. I .ast sem ester, the Uni­ versity had only IO per cent changes. Ti e only schools w here com puter reg istratio n has been successful have been sm all colleges like Queens Col­ lege and th e City U niversity of New York. E ngineering and m ilitary schools have m ade the com puter successful only becau se most students have the sam e classes. Pre-registration Necessary To use the com puter, students m ust the fall the spring for p re-reg ister In O fficial Notices The United SU*.** Civil sen d e e C oram '*,ion an­ nounces an exam ination tor en rec r-ctm J tional ap- po lam ent to th* postern of APPRENTICE. F urther Information m ay to obtained from the Interagency Board at US Civil Service Exam iner* for South C entral Tex** F ederal Building. P. Ck D raw er 2709, San A ntonio Texas 78206. job Intervi WK M U X r I.A (K M E N T March 8— Alvia, Tex** Ma ret 8 Clark Courtly School*, In* Veg**, Nevada March JI—San Angelo, Tex** March l l —lx * A n g e le s, ('a lit M a rc h 12—G le n d a e. C a lif M arch 13 -I March 13—Jefferson Parish SchocSa, Louii.an* March 13~Baktr$Reid, Calif. M a r c h IS —K i/.e e n , Texa* March 14—Fullerton, Calif Marc* 14 A 15 -Connu Christi. Texas M a r c h M • y C c .fro Co. e s * . D allas; to: County School*, O de*** T exai (Vacancies: G erm an, French, social » cnees m athem atics, draft- mg, electronic*, data processing. bu*.ness courses. mu* c, dram a, techni­ cians) librarian, m edia instructor, sem ester. Admission curds, with advis­ o rs’ signatures, would need to br* coded and punched in the spring. Byron Shipp, re g istra r and d irecto r of adm issions, notes th at m ost students to decide on would he h ard pressed fall classes a t such an ea rly date. "T he com puter cannot read one's mind be­ yond the program he s ta rts out w ith.” Shipp reported billing would have to thus dragging out re g istra ­ be m ade by m ail, tuition paym ent beyond tion period. the Cost is another lim iting factor. Ap­ proxim ately $200,000 would cover reg is­ tratio n by com puter, w hereas the p res­ ent system costs 25 cents per student. Lark of Operators Finding com puter o p erato rs Is a n ­ oth er m ajo r obstacle. P ro g ram m ers m u st b e trained in the division of stu ­ d en t records, one of th e m ost difficult in eom puteral science, H am m on has for training one such o perator been six months, and his course will not he com pleted for ano th er y ear. found, two Once p ro g ram m ers a re test ad e­ to y e a rs would be required quately it could the com puter before be suitable to handle m ore than 20,000 students. Tile oth er schools failed with the com p u ter b ecause thev went into it without sufficient p reparation. is ju st a dumb m a ­ “ The com puter tak es to m a ste r — tim e chine and som ething the other schools did not realize before tho sy stem toppled down on th em ,” H amm on observed. One problem posed for the com puter on this cam pus is in such are a s as the sciences, w here students from one sec­ tion of biology m ay be sp rea d out over m an y different lab o rato ry sections. Shipp felt the com puter could give a m axim um of 85 per cent of s'u d en ts a schedule. The rest could not resolve conflicts with an o p erato r and would have to reg ister the old way. Who Registers First? to students w’ho Still another problem is in assigning reg ister by p rio rity the situ a­ com puter. T exas Tech had tion of upperclessm en taking the m a ­ jority of freshm an required courses on a “ first come, first se rv e d ” basis, and for new sections had freshm en. Shipp foresees an assigned tim e to reg ister by com puter, as in ef­ fect now. to he created The University’, suffice it to say, will stick with the presen t registration sy s­ tem until the com puter's problem s a re W’orked out. The present system of in G regory Gym will he registration to accom m o­ modified and d ate increasing enrollm ent. reports to the pull paym ent for law students out of the gym. Presently, these students reg is­ te r within their school and en ter the gym only for billing. first step improved Shipp is Lengthening D a is to lengthen N ext step will be the five days devoted to the gym operation by one hour. Shipp finds it h ard to add a S aturday registration day in view’ of overtim e pay for staffers and in giving to so rt out course d epartm ents card s and schedule to sec­ tions. teac h ers tim e Course card s a re processed by 9 p m the U niversity’s F rid ay night u nder leaving both S at­ registration process, urday and Sunday before classes be­ gin for d ep artm en tal use. “ If we can get som e of the m ish­ m ash and M ickey Mouse out of reg is­ than any tration, co m p u ter,” H am m on said. it will work b etter Shipp sum m arized cam pus concensus. “ It m ay not be everything th at is de­ sirable. but our system works I” registration Y our rep o rt of Lloyd D o g g er s an­ nouncement to replace the cu rren t Cul­ tu ral E n tertain m en t Com m ittee m em ­ bership stops sh o rt of the fun story. A b l a n k e t this year. By te x holder can ab en d 25 events tim e, next this y e a r’s season should be alm ost filled (bookings m u s t be m ad e well in advance to get popular en tertain ers into T exas and to a rra n g e a tim e when an Austin auditorium is a \ lia b le ) ; there a re now no events booked for next year. The p resen t Student Assembly execu­ tive regim e ap p aren tly feels th at refill­ ing tho CEC w ith students politically re ­ sp risible to it somehow covers or will justify the fact th a t the basic problem h last y e a r's preparation. result of the Til is y e a r’s Com m ittee is answ erable for the la ‘ m inute and very expensive second Brazil ‘66 perform ance; the As­ sociation draw ing confusion; the absence of planned pre-or-post p erform ance cof­ fees providing an opportunity to m eet the e n te rta in e rs; foregone CEC discount tickets to en tertain m en t sponsored by other Austin groups; CEC bonus events; th e la k of an accu rate student survey to use in selecting events; and the fact th a t ti e n ' is no st -son for next year. And this burden rests on th e inexperi­ enced ch airm an . W hether filling CEO with com pletely Inexper need m em bers will is a 1968-69 series new and speed obtaining doubtful. T re g re t only that the legacy and re ­ sp nsihik'y for it will not fall on this y e a r's student politicians—b u t on next y e a rs’ and on ail the blanket tax hold­ ers. E d H ip ste r F o rm er CEO M e n d e r 1511 Ave. B Once Again To the Edit r: Once again, th e chairm an of our be­ loved B oard of R egents has pointed out his opinion that the C onstitution-granted rig h t to freedom of speech does not in­ clude the fie dom of dissent, and has once again displayed the singular lack of ta c t which graces all E rw inian ac­ tions . . giving them the tru e stam p of his individuality. . David B. Neeley 565 VU Tw enty-third St. Letters To the Editor R eaders are invited to w rite letters to th e editor. L etters m ay be edited and erro rs spelling corrected. g ram m atical and aid: C ontributors s • T riple spm-o lines and type. • Lim it letters to 125 words. • Include nam e, address, and phone num ber. • Avoid d irect personal attack s. L eave le tte rs in Journalism Building 103 with the editor, m anaging editor, or the editorial page editor, or m ail them to The F irin g Line, The Daily Texan, D raw er D, UT Station, Austin, T exas 78712. ITB CRAI, ARTW PLA C EM ENT Jim Bandy M art* s Pi >> * Departm ent store. Prudential Life (J*. only one individual know’ his assem bly­ m an . ‘A F a rc e ’ One student (student said. governm ent) a farce. All they do is say som ething and send it to the Regents and they file it in a back d raw er.” “ It s A nother said, “ Students don’t take any rea l action because of F ran k Erw in. If he doesn’t like som ething, he will change it so students don't c a re .” Still another returned the student query by asking “ What power does the Assem bly h ave? L ast y ea r they sided with the six students who w ere put on disciplinary probation for participation in the U niversity Freedom Movement. Did it do any good? No. This y ear they sided with this m a tte r to the R egents? No. They are not foreeful.” the Union Board. Did T here are two basic w eaknesses in the Student Assembly. F irst, it Is possible to be elected by a sm all contingent of people who th e cam pus. M oreover, those who get elected cam paign frequently prom ises for personal advancem ent. rep resen t sacrifice th eir not do Sm all Turnout B ecause students a re apathetic, they a re not represented. C andidates filing for office know that only a very sm all Students say "student govern­ ment Is a fa rc e " However, it is an apathetic campus that promotes an unresponsive Assembly. percen tag e of the students will vote L ast y e a r in a frenzied presidential rac e that resulted in a run-off, Wily 7,616 students, or 29 p er cent, of the student body, voted. When the new constitution th at created the House of D elegates w as presented to the cam pus, only 5 per cent voted. Consequently, all candidates have to do cam paign influential thousands of to win prom ises, politicians, and pass out pieces of cam paign literatu re. few line up several is m ak e a On election day, th eir friends vote for them as do a few people who “ recognize th eir n am e.” This is one reason election turnouts a re low. Students say they can­ not vote because they do not know any of the candidates. Know Constituent* It would seem th at a conscientious can d id ate w’ould be interested in know­ ing his constituents, but som e perhaps feel the better the few er voters, th e ir chances for victory. th at Consequently, both students and politi­ cians have a responsibility that is not in­ being fulfilled. S tudents should be to th eir university in terested enough W'ant to m ake som e contribution. Politi­ cians, who claim to be interested in the U niversity, should likewise be interested in the students they represent. A ssem blym en a re p artly to blam e for cam p u s apathy. D ie m ost popular cam ­ paign platform is “ I feel th at I can do som ething for the University and som e­ thing for you as a student h ere .” Want Power Once in office they rationalize by say­ ing, “ Well, if I can do som ething for the student here, I can do even m ore if I can get m ore power and g re a te r influ­ en ce.” A student should have lofty m otives for seeking office. However, m any stu­ dents who sincerely W'ant to help the U niversity and who get elected change their m inds a lte r election. Consequently they lay aside their cam ­ paign prom ises and play politics with the system and its leaders until possibly they do g e' the higher position. This cre ate s a desire for even m ore power and finally they a re corrupted by the system . They have forgotten why they w anted to be elected in the first place. F o rtu ­ nately. th at is not always the ra s e in the A ssem bly. However, several dele­ gates cam e to the House this fall with an eye on an Assembly seat. Varied Motivations Students get in politics for m any r e a ­ sons. To som e it is an avocation, To others it is a way to build ego and com ­ pensate for inadequacies in other fields, perhaps academ ic. Bob Thompson, Students’ Association vice president, feels th at m eet a re look­ ing for a w ay to express displeasure with the statu s quo. “ They w ant som ething different. They them selves w ant to m ak e changes and 'or society so they get in politics,” Thompson slid . in R egardless of the nobility' of a candi­ d a te ’s m otives, he is aw are of the fact th at there is a certain honor associated with being on the Student Assembly. M ost women who are on the A ssem bly a re tapped for O range Jack ets. A ssem ­ blym en often becom e F ria rs, or Out­ standing Students. ’♦ital Pow er Although the Student Assembly has only the pow'rr to articu late, this is a im portant pow’cr. F aculty stu ­ vitally dent com m ittees have proved th at the faculty and p arts of the adm inistration a re interested in th e student’s feelings on issues. It was the Assembly leaders who w rote a new constitution providing for a House of D elegates and a broader base of stu ­ dent involvement. Students who had never been involved before in cam pus politics cam e to pro­ vide ideas to the House of D elegates this fall along with m any experienced politicians. Ifs very organization with 217 groups represented is a suprem e ac­ com plishm ent. Helped Students This y ea r the House and A ssem bly have m ade substantial contributions to the student. P erh ap s m ost im portantly, the House passed a bill which received approval by the adm inistration to release men from dorm contracts. Another legislative accom plishm ent of the House w as a proposal for abolition of the freshm an c a r ban. The Board of R egents is scheduled to m ake a final d e ­ cision on this bill F rid ay at its m e et­ ing in El Paso. The Assembly this y ear has initiated for law students have been calling a move for a new Union annex, which for years. Cannot Condemn Consequently, one cannot easily d is­ c r e e t the effectiveness cf the A ssem bly and House. A ssem blym en and delegates are handicapped by the fact th at th eir term s of office a re one y e a r and this provides for no ad justm ent period. D e-,D e irs accom plishm ents, the Stu­ dent A ssembly could be even m ore ef­ fective if it would institute a program of contacting irs constituents at tim es other than prior to elections. Of course students c old aid their assem b ly by th eir assem blym en as citizens w riting do th e ir congressm an. Only when the Student Assembly tru ly rep resen ts a m ajority of the stu ­ dents ran it hope to reach its m axim um effectiveness. CROSSWORD PUZZLE Answer lo Yesterday’* Pua»* ACROSS 2 L *tin J Sumptuous meal 6 Vapor 1 1 -Substance 12-Labored 14 Altarneting current (abbr.) 15-Journey 17-Unusual 18-tt is (contr.) 2 0-Artificial 2 3 Penpoint 24 Cloth measure (pl.) 2 6 Tardier 28 Symbol tor ort on 29 Chairs 3 1 -Shipworms 3 3 -Animal's coat 3 5 P ossess^* pronoun 3 6 Breathe 3 9 R ussian stockade 4 2 Man s nick na me 4 3 R ascal 4 5 Narrow opening 4 6 Joke (slang) 48 Arabian chieftain* 50 Old French coin 51 Wife of G era in t 6 3 -Tissue 55-Clericat degree (abbr.) 5 6 Corrupt 59 Figure of speech 61 Singing vote* 62-Look fixedly DOWN 1-Easy to do conjunction 3 Unit of Siamese currency 4 Slave 5 Test 6 Saint (abbr.) 7 Preposition 8 Goddess of healing 9-Wolfhound 10-Breed of sheep 11 Partners 13 Amounts owed 16 Real estate map 19-Strikea 21 Stalk 2 2 -Weird 25-Walks 27-Leases 3 0 S lim 32 Transaction* 34 British streetcar 3 6 Ranted 37-Kit* 38-Send forth 40 Breed of dog 41 -Musical study 44-tron 47-Flout 4 9 Narrow opening 52 M an's nicknam e 54-Wme cup 57-Coniunction 58-Teutonic deity 60 Prefix: not 19 20 22 23 J 2 3 4 5 V V 6 8 9 IO A v laid i t 14 18 24 29 . « . 36 37 42 40 31 30 61 13 ■Nv 25 a A V K S S 47 43 52 s48 i 57 30 31 20 34 7 . — K 'X Y O IO 12 w 21 13 17 27 28 32 35 38 r^t t I 39 X v I v v .V V 41 40 44 . V V 45 49 50 33 B i 58 H 39 X y v 62 54 J O U 55 OO r n Lake Highlands Looms Large ★ Height Pays Off in 61-50 AAA Win ★ Whatley brought the Tigers within five at 4 4 39 with a 25- foot swisher at tho tin rd quarter buzzer, but lot F rie rs countered with a pair of clutch outs de shots to keep a sex en point Wild­ cat spread at 1Q 41. PurswHl then slipped a sh t over the towering arm s of tho Wildcats’ Langdon, and Ben- Panthers Down Seguin, 89-72 Dunbar Sets Mark Melton, Phillips, and John Hol­ lins proved too much for the Matadors, and with Ho ll ins* Jumper at 4 28 to go, Dunbar was hack out to a 13-point lead. From here the Panthers coasted home breaking the high game mark on Phillips’ lay-up with eight ae*-ends to play. Jan:In Sayles popped 'n a fr » tiirow for Conroe to pull to 4844. But vvsth Conroe pres nig, little Je rry Allen boat the defense consistently, and Langdon and La fever* combined for e girt of the last ll Wildcat points. In winning. I .ake Highlands fired in field goals at a 45-.pi r cent clip. while holding Conroe to a 36,7 percentage. Lik e Highlands will play Lub­ bock Dunbar Or the AAA * •’# Saturday night <1 »*» 4 1 4 T at* 111 Xii I MMI* -*.« ft 0 I B t i ii VI T o ta l* IT—all l l lr I IS IS U A ) .8 I .............. A A Kirbyville Rallies For 54-39 Triumph Kirbyville waited a long time to get back to the s*a ■ tourna­ ment—16 years. The Wildcat* waited 24 minutes irs; lay afternoon before getting un­ tracked. I Once they did. die Wildcats ahowed why they are ti e fas red team in Class AA c ;> tit: n, in their first visit s.r. • coming from ll points demo to demolish San Ant r.io Cole, 54 ;9. 11-Point Ii«ad Fades Cole had led as much as 30-19 re early In the sot r.;i ha f ;•» disaster struck. Floorn an Jim Plllsbury fouled out with 6:02 to go in the third quarter, and the Kirbyville p r e s s full-court promptly choked the life out of the Cougars. With lanky Roy Thomas steal­ ing passe* and lait ching b. re­ line Jump shots with amazing speed, Kirbyville qt kly cl st I the gap, and Larry left in the third period to tie it all 33- all. Thomas then brought the Wild­ I cat crowd to Us for • u .' a ly 25-foot Jump r at t e th rd quarter buzzer for a 37 "> Kirby­ ville lead. Then the poise and teamwork gained from a 31-6 sea . I et rn I to pay off. C Ie. now 29 " kn f proceedings at 39-39 wi'h >:13 to go, but Bob Kaikaka’s ''et was the last of the day f r the Cougars. Thomas Pots Cats Ahead I In Kirby%dl!e went front on Thomas* tip in of his own shot, and iced things when the 6 3 'j senior hit a free throw, put In the rebound from his missed serer I try, was fouled, and hit an )th r charity toss for a 47 th spread. press cost Cole a bundle of tnrj ors, and the Widest* converted ti em for 62 shots—30 more than O le got off. Kirbyville’s tenacious Thomas led all smrers with 24 points and tied teammate L or- LIU Finishes First in Poll By The Associate Prw * The Long Island University Blackbirds, leaders in The Ass - elated Press* final small-colloge basketball poll, turned their at­ tention Thursday to the National in New Invitation Tournament York, where they hope to match the success of the Southern ISI: nols Salukis. BU Y IN G SILVER CERTIFICATES Paying 35% Over Face Limited Tim* CHy AUSTIN COIN CO 1002 C O N G R ESS G R 8-6204 man Kyle and Cole*a K aikaka with 12 rebounds. Kyle was the in double only other Wildcat figures, with 12. Kmkaka topped Cole with 14, wh le Johnny Munoz had IO, and I ’ 11.-bury nine before he fouled out. Kirbyville will meet Mexia in the AA Finals Saturday. n*w at At Oil* ta n pf 9 ta n a* ta Birt* Tin. T h o r n * * H - ’> - r K e V I - U r n * f ; wra I F 2 IO 4 3 4 4 S 0 3 0 4 34 1 * J I : S 6 2 4 M -to* M A T ! “ b u r* 2 S 4 J S IO J 0 J 4 2 S J * P 0 lf 0 -• k it 8 l l O O I 0 \! - at O O I 0 0 4 T tai. ti IO li-*» Tnt at* I* I *V- St ............... IO 9 IF IT- M * —3S ................................. U I to-v * O I * U > ' « IT T '■ 2 Mexia Drops Colorado City Mexia'* Bi a eke a ta fought off a determined Colorado City come­ back Thursday, 42 ll, to set up a meeting Saturday for the Cass AA state crown with Kirbyville. the year, forged a 24-18 halftime lead, but it t -ok a lay up by Dale Story and a clutch free throw by Benjie FN1'1 J 'n th*' last 1:19 to insure victory. The Blackest*, 27-7 on high-jumping tile adding Lyneal With Jam es finishing tou'-hes, Colorado City began slipping through Mexia*! press in the second half, and actually lr I on Jam es’ lay tip at 21 29. But the B ’n keats’ Charles Dancer, the games high-point man with 13, ,sf Ie a pass and notched a 35-33 Mexia edge with 0:51 left In the third quarter. Free throws had be ti Colorado City’s strung point—they hit 24 in winning a crucial straight regional game -hut the Wolves missed three rd four midway in the fourth period, and it took Kenneth Johnson’s two fast Jump shots to pull CC close at 40-39. There Story and Reed came through for Mexia, and after Kerry’ Campbell had hit at 0:53, he missed a corner shot in Colo­ rado’s last gasp with three seconds to go. Mexia got points from l l Story and IO from Reed in sup­ port of Dancer, while Colorado City had balance, with Johnson and James hitting 12 apiece, and Campbell ll. MMK R h o d f * Dancer I — * ! atm* f i t o r r Pomp ( I a * . A A O o to m tit (Tty 1 ta n ai tv 1 I 2 2 I 2 1 6 I 4 2 2 0 S C T O I W am* OOO O C‘m j » b « l IS J amel l a r k e r IO ’ ^ n . l e r 4 J 1 ta tt pi tat 4 J 3 l l 5 3 3 13 0 2 3 4 3 1 0 0 - .s o n 5 I l l 1 2 3 I IT * I * Al Total* Mexia Coloma* Cit* ......... 3 0 0 0 IT 3 10—41 l l A-43 Total* « S IO 15 » 41 IS TYPIN G -— i m. TYPING • T a a l • (o a a a a ta a t • H ellaM * J # R - • a n o a k l» vnht r « y *- » V a H ld .le a StrV f f | < h a rae» I f A-PLU5 UNIVERSITY SERVICES 504 W . 24th Street GR 7-5651 .Ti® iV lA Y E R W o u l d c Y o u c B e l i e i r c D i a m o i i d ii Ybtt've found the right man. You can hardly be5 eve it. But you better, be­ cause he insets you have a magnifi­ cent engagement ring. We're happy a help you make the right choice. [he diamond you choose g’ows with splendid brilliance. And you beleve the best is yet to come. 817 C O N G R E S S AVE Use Your Student Card and Save 20®/ 12 Months to Pay with No Interest or Carrying Charges By ANDY PVRSONS Assistant Sport* Editor Dunbar High School aet a new Gas* AAA record for team scor­ ing Thursday night aa they ram­ bled past Seguin S9 72 In the AAA semi-finals. The two teams also combined for a new AAA aggre­ gate total of 161 points. The new marks replaced the old highs set In 1965 when San Marcos whip­ ped Waxahachie 87 63. The two team* initially traded buckets In wholesale fashion as Dunbar held a narrow 2) 19 first quarter advantage, A definite turning punt came with the in­ sertion of Frank Milton into the Dunbar lineup with 45 seconds left in tile first quarter. Melton, subbing for James throe* quick Skeif, who drew fouls, hit IO of 12 field goal shots and was high punt man for the game with 24 points. It w’a* not until midway of the second quarter, though, that Dun­ bar got Into high its offense gear. In fact. Seguin hi Id a 32- 26 lead with 4:39 left in the first half. From this point a complete switch took place ns Dunbar out­ scored the Matadors 17-2, taking a 43-34 lend at halftime. The Panthers from Lubbock in the third got rolling again quarter, gaining a 13 point ad­ vantage on Je rry Phillips’ Jump­ er with 1:06 left in the period. Phillips finished second in scor­ ing for Use night with 23 points. Seguin did manage to cut the lead to IO at 65-55 entering tfe final stanza on W illie Calvert’* lay up and E llis Douglas’ short jumper. However, the combination of ria** A 4 % M m u N i 8 C a p p * * ip ta 4 IO 2 4 B u c k J I O « CRi l.a M w w f c D i t n h a r ft i4 0 S I 4 Rkiaf Me! ton H >filn* WI MS P hillip* William* T I 4 is IO S 3 33 I) * ..'» * By BILL HALSTEAD TexaJi Sport* Editor First they ".ere giants, then they were giant-killers. the team tallest Lake Highlands of Richardson, with In the fort}’ eighth annua! State School­ Tournament, boy utilized height Thursday night to upend classy Conroe 61-50, and earn a finals berth In Gass AAA. Basketball Its superior The Wildoats, out-rebounding Conroe, 46-27, poured It on early for a 17-7 first quarter spread, then boosted that gap to 27 16 before establishing th® same 11- point margin at the gun. Conroe Wa* Team To lb-a I undefeated Conroe, which entered Austin with a 33 2 mark and a win over G ear previously Creek In regional play, closed the Wildcats’ lead to 4844 with 4:26 left In the game, but the ball- handling of Je rry Allen killed the Tigers’ press and opened up nu­ merous I .ake Highlands lay ups at that point. The Wildcats, now 25 8, got ex­ cellent Inside shooting from * 8 Richard l*mgdon, with 20 points, and a bevy of sure shots from the key by 6-3 Robert LaFevers, with 18 points. On the boards, husky Dong Tanck, 6-5, hauled in 21 rebounds to pace Kake Highlands’ rebound­ ing domination. Conroe, seldom able to get the Inside shot, had to rely on the long pumps of guard Mike What­ ley, who ended with 12 points, and the f alba way Jumpers of Billy Furs well, who had 16. Class A A A A Title Contest Sold Out, UIL H ead Reports Tlie Gas* AAAA state champ­ ionship basketball game sched­ u le d Saturday in Gregory Gym is a sellout, Dr. Rhea Williams, athletic director of the Universi­ ty Interscholastic League, said Thursday. He advises out-of town guests who had planned to attend the game to save a trip unices they already have tickets. He said the game will he broad­ cast on radio and televised over WFAA-TV In Dallas. SPEAKERS AND DISCUSSION 9:40 a.m. Sunday’s TW* Bement** O* PnrWn roller *u4 H a m up* O llie * * O M I — FI rat M *tho- <11*1 < ti ti ret, SII lttfi and t a t a r * . C a ll Frtn K a setik a OK KUSHI f o r In F a lle r &n« Rid* I n f o a r r i d * . CHAMBERS 2230 Guadalupe Open Until 7:30 P.M. Mon. thru Sat. I C H O TT S SIN C LA IR SERVICE I M **4 t a * A n to n i* S t r«r« tar Tim ft* FT. ar** OR I SH a t OR S SWI K irbyville^ W illia m Booker . . . beats SA Cole i Tom Bolton (15) on boards. £4t«rr Dh»i* Asperm ont Slides Into C lass A Finals and advanced Into the Gas* A finals Saturday versus Louise. trailed The Hornets through most of the game, with West Sabine’s Doug Ford and Harry Hughes hitting from the inside and Joe Lout canning from out­ side the key. Tiger troubles began for real when Aspermont started hitting a few of their many free throw chances. Incurably poor at the line at the outset, the Hornets got two chanties from Ray with six minutes left In regulation play. This narrowed the West Sabine lead to 44 43, after owning the contest by aa much as nine points in the first half. Then a bit of Ray muscle under the boards gave him room for a lay-ln that put Aspermont ahead 47-46 for tile first time with 5:29 remaining in the game. Ray also hit the two-pointer that sent the game into overtime at a 55-55 count, and canned two free throw* with 59 seconds left In overtime for an insurmounta­ ble 63-60 lead. Ray led all scorers with 35 points and Ervin Jones added l l for Aspermont. Hughes collected 18, Ford got 15, and Lout hit l l for West Sabine. (1 * M A A *p*fmoat ta Zacduo* Jon** P a r k e r Wpal Sa Mn. ta n ext* Lout W a A n i o n rom H u s h * * O o r lion A ud ray Hora War** Frank* To4*|* si ll ss—A1 Tm*!* n a is- - n l l T — <12 1 4 A (53 W e s t A r m r m o n t .................... S a t n a I * I O 1 4 I S I i l l ............. Bv LA R R Y UPSHAW Texan .Sports Writer A Ray of upset hope enlight­ ened the Aspermont Hornets to an overtime 63-62 victory over West Sabine Thursday in Gregory Gym. Nathan Ray, a burly 6-3 senior, hit a fantastic 13 of 14 shots from the field for Aspermont, which upset the highly-ranked Tigers Louise leaps Italy, 70-65 A last-quarter rampage by Wal­ ton Short and a gutty overall per­ formance by Mark Brezina brought I/mis# from behind to defeat Italy Thursday, 70-65, and earned the Hornets a finals slot opposite Aspermont. Short whipped in 13 of Louise'* last 21 points to protect a slim lead after Brezina s Jumper had gained a 49-48 edge. Louise had been in front most of the game until Curtis Wilson found the range for Italy to salvage a 46- 45 advantage late in the third period. With Brezina hawking rebounds —he finished with 28— Louise dir ked with a full-court press to disrupt the Gladiators’ rally at­ tempts. When Italy** Bobby Lewis stole a pass at 65 61, the game was up for grabs—but he palmed the ball going for an easy lay-up, and Louisa capitalized by stalling effectively. Brezina added 21 and Douglas Galow IO to Short’s output, while I .owls had 20, Wilson 13, and Ron­ nie Clanton 16 for Italy. W hat Is Circle K? It Ii a club sponsored by Klwanls International. College men, come to our meeting, Sunday, March 10th, in the Union, Room 315, af 6:30 p.m. Refreshments will be dan ton I-TWI* I*** OI Tu m a r W l*«:m Johnson Y o u r n Ba m f * Wad* T otal* . Ita ly Lou ta served. T o ta l* m 14 IS—i e I* 12 an it—sr . J8 ~ 70 IS 19 13 . # - r u a s s y about our sister? Just thai she’s mad about the refreshing taste of Coca-Cola. It has the taste you never get tired of. That’s w hy things go better with Coke, after Coke, after Coke. B ottled ujv) or OM M Cb or! Ur a i Th* Coca Cot* t o m ira n j tar: Anat** C o r a -Cola C aa*> aaf ADV. DEADLINE THURSDAY, M A RCH bi Ti»t*l« » ll IS—** Total* ti ll 14 TI SO x * I*. 1 |. t i..I T — TI f . o M w k hr*ul* l i u n h . t r I T T I STI Lake Highlands* Height In A ctio n . . . John Langdon (41) uses his 6-8 frame to rebound. ran fftioi* V J i m n a b r a s iln o u s / • Lca aire o f the THE DAILY TEXAN SUNDAY-MARCH 17 T I .here vs.ll be editorial and picture c -.crape o f all the latest S pring Fashions fa cored by men and women from colleges and universities around the country. Plan your sales message N O W . . . swing into th e heart o f th:* B IG University m arket w ith an advertisem ent in T h e D id y Texan S PR IN G F A S H IO N S FE A T U R E ! CALL GR 1-3227 RESERVE YOUR A D V ERTISIN G SPACE! Friday, March 8, 1968 TH E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 5 C oaches Going Out of State 'Youth' Aids Cage Recruiting Doctors Delight:0verbec* llls N° Laughin9 Maifer For Southwest Conference Squads Tf By BH J- H ALSTEAD Texan Sport* Editor the new T exas basketball program fa n bo said to have a them e, and E n­ is Youth thusiasm . It And Cna rh I>eon Black and his assistan ts a re the prim e m overs behind an im age that is gaining rapid the country as well as in Texas. recognition across Tile assistant trio—Jim O’Ban- non, Bonnie Ix, and Charley Shannon—-has an av erage age of about 32 each, and nearly 80 y ears of coaching and playing experience. Touth P ays Off That com bination of youth and experience has paid off already for Texas -a n d Black sees divid- ends still to be collected In fu­ ture years. For the first tim e ever, for In­ stance, Texas is recruiting heav­ ily out of state, and O'Bannon and Lenox a re finding that high school basketball players are ex­ trem ely the Uni­ versity. interested in The recruiting duo has gone hunting in such basketball rich states as Indiana and Ohio, and they feel they haven’t com e away em pty-handed, either. “ Before, w hat boys we got from out of sta te w eren’t heavily recru ited .” O’Bannon said. “ But the ones we have talked to this y e a r are sought after by a g reat m any schools. »n' n-mw miif SMMU*'yWCTI Making Initial O w tnre Tournament Schedule Class Friday 9 a.m ., Friendwood v*. D arrouzett, B. 10:25 a rn., K ennard vs. Lueders-Avoca, Class B. 2:10 p m ., Italy vs. West Sabine, place, third Class A, W\ B. T ravis Gym. p.m ., W heatley 2:30 (Houston) vi. Odessa P erm ian, Class AAAA. 3:35 p m ., Colorado City vs. San Antonio Cole, third plare, H a ss AA, W, B. T ravis Gym. 7 p m , Conroe vs. Se­ guin, third place, Class AAA. W. B Travis Gym. 7:30 p m ., D allas Je ffe r­ Son Antonio son vs Breckenridge, C l a s s AAAA 8:25 p m., looser. Friend- wood vs. D arrouzett vs. Loser, vs. le c h e rs Avoca. K ennard o - --------- "W e’ve contacted 35 to 40 top prospects, and we feel we have a genox have done an excellent Job on the road. “ I get reports alm ost every day, the in state and out, on fine Impression they a re making for T ex as,” Black said. .Shannon's Job is som ew hat less p artn e rs’ his is extrem ely valuable than glam orous hut he nonetheless. 12-Year Veteran A veteran of 12 years of high the San An­ school coaching in tonio area, Shannon tutoring the freshm an squad while work­ ing toward his doctorate at Tex­ as is “Coach .Shannon works solely with the freshm en,” Black said, “ and he has done a real fine Job. He had a lot of early coaching success, and he brought us many m aterial benefits from th a t.’’ It O'Bannon, followed Black “ I’ve known Jim form er T C I’ cag* letterm an , as coach at Van High .School In IDE/), and that Is no coincidence Black brought him to Texas for a long tim e,” Black adm itted, “ I ex ported the goixl job he has done with the freshmen and with re ­ cruiting because th ere was no doubt in my mind as to his abil­ ity ." twice l^ n o x , who wa* a 11- Southwest Conference a t Texas AAM and holds the SWC scoring m ark of 53 points, is scoring points In his first y ear at Texas, too. Already, he h as a reputation as a fine recru iter and “ am b as­ sad o r” for Hie U niversity. “ Ben­ nie m eets people well w ithout ex­ ception," com m ented. “ H e's an Im portant p a rt of our total p ro g ram ." Black Fxpnmllng Operation With such capable help, Black the to build and expand hopes basketball operation at Texas. The first legal signing d ate for is April 2, high school players to it. and Black “ I definitely feel good about our he declared. “ When the tim e comes, I think we will get our sh are of the top prospects In the sta te .” looks forw ard recru itin g .” And once T exas gets them , Black can call on not one but to Improve the d e­ three aides future Longhorn velopment of cagers. By BD X HALSTED T exan Sports Editor stocks. He’s G ary O verbeck is a doctor's delight. He m ay be the sole cause for the rise of m edical company been wrapped In adhesive tape so often he qualifies as a m um m y. The whole thing has been no Joke for the senior Texas cen­ ter, though—and he hasn’t ex­ actly m ade him self a laughing m a tte r with opposing team s in the bargain. As a ph arm acy m ajor, Over- beck f r a t scheduled to learn a good deal about medicine and m edical aids. As a basket ba ll player, he has gathered first hand knowledge of injury aids at a ra te seldom seen in South­ west Conference circle*. Top Physical .Specimen Overbeck, at 6-7 and 225 pounds, is a fine physical speci­ men. But he has a history of injuries that no one envies. And yet, he has adjusted to his abundance of ailm ents well to set several school enough scoring re c ­ rebounding and ord* as well as to be nam ed the top post m an In the South­ west Conference for 1968. These accom plishm ents by the Hobbs, N.M., native give rise to sj>eculation on how aw esom e he m ight have been had he be^n completely healthy. “ With G ary h ealth y ,” su r­ mised his roach, Leon Black, “ it would not have been un­ reasonable to expect 15-16 r e ­ bounds per gam e and m ore than 20 points per g am e.” As It w as, the big center pulled down IO rebounds and averaged 16.6 points per con­ test in his final year. Terrible. Any worse and he m ight have a 11- m ade only swc. second-team Troublesom e Knee a few Tile tim es trouble with Overbeck began before his college c a reer with a chronic knee ailm ent— but he played well, anyway. It flared before tills year but never seriously. Then, in short order, he suf­ a separation, fered trouble, a severe ankle knee injury first A rkansas gam e, then m ore knee trouble to go with his ankle woes. shoulder the in A lesser com petitor would have throw'n in the towel. O ver­ beck, hobbling but hustling, continued to throw in the points despite his handieaps. y e a r," Black “ He showed great courage tills declared. “ While G ary was healthy, we had someone tie ourselves to to—we played around G ary. “ And even after his injuries, he did a fine Job. He was our leading rebounder, he scored well, and he was obviously our b est defensive post p la y er.” O verbeek’s wide grin and freckle - sprinkled cheeks w ere a front to foes. Easy-going and In civilian clothes, he jovial got dow nright possessive in a basketball gam e. His size was an asset as he m aneuvered for rebounding po­ sh eer sition m uscle and tim ing to g ath er in utilizing before Gary Overbeck . . . ha* fineit lesso n . e rra n t shots. These sam e traits aided him in working in close to the basket before m aking quick and su re m oves for Die good s h o t F a st Break Goea His gait up and down the court was no th rea t to a ballet d ancer, but his team m ates and coach could have cared less a- bout form — O verbeck put out and m ade fast th at was w hat b reak go—and counted. the Longhorn Rebounding, he set a new c a re e r high of 528 despite m iss­ ing considerable playing tim e. And as a shooter, he becam e the m ost a c cu rate in T ex as’ his­ tory. F iring in 295 of 535 field goals, O verbeck crossed off Jo e U s h e r ’* top p ercentage of 53.5 and added his m a rk of 55.3 per cent. In Conference play, the ’Horn tri-captain hit 54 9 per cent of to obscure F ish ­ his attem p ts e r ’s 50.6 percentage. U nforgettable Show And then th e re w as the sec­ ond T exas A&M gam e B arely to get from one end of able the court the other, O ver­ beck put on a scoring show the Aggies will net soon forget. to Hitting on 15 of 21 field goals and l l free throws, he pumped In 41 points In the 117-105 Texas loss. And he splashed him self all over ti e record book in the sam e night. total sm gle-gam e The output was the second- highest for a Longhorn, and only th** fourth 40-poir.f-plu.s perfo rm an ce by a Texas p lay er. Previously, R ay­ mond Downs held the team rec­ ord against the Aggies with 39 points. O v erb o o k s 41 erased that high. the Southwest Con­ in And th ere have been only ference, 20 such 40 point gam es by l l p layers. O verbeck notched num ­ b ers 21 and 12, respectively. th a t Eyeing im pressive list of deeds, as well a s the unfor­ gettable experience of playing for Texas, O verbeck just m ight adm it that th e pain was over­ com e by the pleasure. I-UIV OVERBECK** RECORDS (Old m a r ts in I s t f f t t facet In i v dual re rd* Ce!,- . : J J - «*er i *2J» C ary Oyer beck U 6 C S C of JTi3 <295 of M S ) , (-ary O rrrb ^ -k . 19*4 350 or mc-r# » n V - J ' * F i s h e r . 1 9 8 2 4 4 :x~t 6k. ice! goal pct. RWC '06 (165 of STV Joe f . 1 n e Hatton. IO, 19M4, at l l v* T e x a s AAM Downs. F eb ( I bv G a r y O verbeck, H rh. College M ulino. rtlK *4 W.t .’§ to POINT CHB Sc a to n 19 Reed Ba HA rd Huber ti I I I 8 3 8 Total# IT Friendswood Broma ...... na** * B rente n pf to I I 0 1 8 0 1 8 Ii 8 Kfc 8 1 1 2 4 4 34 Ote-w IS 2 2 3 I 7 Barb#* 8 3 I 8 1 Mast-won I 4 ti 8 0 IS McCt chn 8 I* * 4 4 8 IO Holley 0 ti n o Arrott OOO 0 Zun'r* G a l w a y Morrla ( l o o n 0 8 0 0 ti 8 0 8 Total* SI 8 8—IS IS 18—452 IS 17 8—48 H a r m a n 1 10—88 .................... ........................ 13 ll 13 Custom er Convenience From Bob Miller Volkswagen p a r t s & s e r v i c e o p e n MO N.-FRI. 7 A M . - 1 2 M I D N I G H T SAT. 7 A M . - 12 N O O N SALES I A . M . - 7 P.M. SAT. 8 A M. - 6 P.M. Roy G re e r reports high school s t a t e basketball cham pionship finals Satur­ day. 8:55 a.m. C lass 6 0:15 a.m. Class A A 2:00 p.m. C lass A A A A 6:55 p.m. C lass A A A 8:20 p.m. C lass A BOB HILLER VOLKSWAGEN SIU I 9 7#0 ST NORTH 111 3J i'HO.Nt 454 4578 KVETf: A l l Star Radio V k Dave Matina . . . w hipt fo o t injury. C H A M B E R S 2230 Guadalupe Open Until 7:30 P.M. Mon. thru Sat. BIG SALE O N C a r and Home Stereos THE PORTABLE 4 TRACK, ALL TRANSISTERIZED STEREO • WHICH WILL PLAY THE STANDARD 4 TRACK TAPES O N SPECIAL FOR ONLY $29.95 O N SALE AT REDUCED PRICES • SEVERAL TYPES OF CAR STEREO UNITS AS LOW AT $49.95 WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTION • OF 4 A ND 8 TRACK TAPES — SO COME BY Muntz Cartridge City 1601 S A N J A C IN T O (Next to Scholx Garten) G R 7-1425 Knot With Houston LAREDO, (S P D —Texas, stalk­ ing Its second straight victory over powerful Houston, managed to tie the Cougars for first place Thursday through 36 holes of the 17th annual Border Olympics Golf Tournament. Tile Horns and Houston each had 585 team scores, five strokes better than Texas Tech and eight in front of North Texas State at the halfway point of the 72-hole meet Freshman Dean Overturf spear­ headed the Texas assault on th# Laredo course with a one-over- par 143 total, good for second place individually with Houston’3 Dave Shuster. Other Texas score* were Chip Stewart 146; E l k Massengale, 347; George Tucker, 149; Buddy Hamilton, 151; and William Cromwell, 152. The low four scores count for Cie team total. NTSU's Enrique Sterling had the best individual score of the day with 69-72-141—three strokes under par. Humm Donny Horne debut yield* five-hit shutout. -S ta ff P tw to TLC Batter Horne Hooks Texas Lutheran 1-0 Southpaw Shutout in First Assignment By ED SPAULDING Assistant Sports Editor relief help Freshman Donny Horne, with from ninth-inning Larry Horton, hurled a brilliant five-hit shutout, as Texas defeated Texas Lutheran 1-0 at Clark Field Thursday. Home, a lefthander from Waco, was making his first start for the 'Horns, and was untouchable until he tired in the eighth and ninth innings. The only run of the game came in the sixth, when consecutive singles by Rib Snoddy, Randy Pe^chel and George Nauert, w.th I O H g w ei, S M M n e * i>«i a* uh r h r h ! 3 0 0 it 4 (* Amo*, f> *etv M W e il* , c f Mf K o r , lf 4 0 0 4 0 2 Itm iUA rf 'h S 0 I SnroU*. I 0 0 EP '.fir- A lira , 2b S 0 I Muter, im 0 0 0 Noety. I I I I Memo*. P i n o n m n , K chm. p ft B r a w n 0 snort v, 0 TlChl, 0 f o i l 0 Nauert, t>T Horne), w r Home I 1 . 8 O f o . . . . 8 2 T 8 0 0 5 X h r e r b b m 8 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 1 8 Um pire* Meaur M id* Texa* two out, produced the marker. threatened in several innings and had two hits in each of the first two innings. Lou Bagwell’s bunt single, and a one-base blow by Pat Brown were wasted the opening in frame. Hits by Nauert and third baseman David Hall wore equally unproductive in the second. Meanwhile, Horne had only a little control problem to bother him. Bulldog outfielder Pat Smith singled to open the second, but was erased in a double play. The next safety allowed by the curveballing Horne was not until the seventh, When Smith beat out an infield roller to short. But a cleverly executed pickoff play, the second of thp game, took Smith off the bases. Near-Mias In Eighth With two down in the eighth, Horne began to show signs of weakening, when he issued a two-out walk to TT.Cs shortstop Jack Olsen, then a line single bv Alan Wells, and a stolen base by Wells, put runners at second and third. But Horne survived a line foul by Terry McKoy, and forced the Bulldog leftfielder to pop out to Bagwell in short right. The ninth was similar. Ernie Sorels pushed a single over second base, for the fourth TLC hit of the game. With two down, Ronnie Alborn kept the ‘Dogs* chances alive, with a bn^e hit to center. Coach Cliff Gustafson had a con- forenco with Home, bu? lf-?? him in tim game. When the next pitch u as in the dirt and eluded Nauert, with both runnels advancing, Clast.if', n waited no longer. He summoned R rtor.. fLf* loser in Tuesday's TOU game, and after falling behind 3-0, Hor­ ton put three strikes past Lu By RON WHEREON Texan Staff \\ rifer With five one-run games al­ ready behind it, the Texas Long* horn baseball team Is looking for­ ward to easier times. And, with­ out a doubt. Coach Cliff Gustafson hopes the good times will begin in Dallas Saturday. That’s when the 'Horn nine meets the SMU Mustangs for the 129th time. 'Horns Lead Series Texas leads the series 107 21. Bu? .since the Longhorn's new- head coach had nothing to do with establishing that record, he would like very much to begin one of his own. Having just beaten Tex e Lu­ theran College I 0 for bls second one run victory, Gustafson was Sibling. But when asked if he an­ ticipated any lineup changes he replied, 'TTI Just have to think about it." The starter for T e x a s will be the Longview James Street, righthander who went all the wny in the 1-0 losing efb.rt to Texas AAM last Saturday Street has allowed only five runs in 21 innings and owms a respe table 1.71 earned run average. The only questionable position is third base where Gustafson has bf -I platooning David Hall and Dennis Kasper, depending on whether the opposition throw* right or left The? opposit; ti prn: ably will be Tommy Toombs, a junior right­ hander from Lubbock. But Randy Muscly, horn Waxa ai-hie. ani Bob Fief, a senior from Los Alamitos, Calif., could also .see some act n. sophomore a around f A usl in Introduce ) excitement Com e to tonight wwmi* [UM J W to** Italian Food is O u r O n l y Business'' Tuesday thru Sunday 5 p.m. ’til 10:30 p.m. F i x F S T ITALIAN RESTAURANT i Closed on M onday | W T M T IM S ! HOMEMADE i IMPORTED ITALIAN SPECIALTIES - we--ane ,t, DON'T COOK TONIGHT C A U mm. CHICKEN • SHRIMP • FISH • BAR-B-Q RIBS • PIZZA FREE DELIVERY GR 6-6216 W ITHIN THREE MILES 1608 LAVACA The Best ITALIAN FOOD in Austin! Served with 26 Years of EXPERIENCE RAVIOLI PIZZA LASAGN A SPAGHETTI VICTOR'S HOME MADE tan vine Closed Tuesday 2910 Guadalupe SER VIN G H O U RS: 11:30 a.m. — 2:30 p.m. & 5-10 p.m. Mon., W ed., Thurt., & Tri 11:30 a.m. — IO p.m. Sa*. 4 Sun. BIG DADDY P H I A Friday and Saturday 5 p.m. to 1:30 a.rn 2102 G U A D A L U P E PHONE GR 6-6795 "Don’t Cook Tonight—Ca ll Chicken Delight" is a very fami­ liar slogan to most University students and has helped to ease the "pangs of hunger" on many study nights. Chicken Delight, one of a nationally franchised chain, Is located at 1608 Lavaca just a few blocks from the main campus. Mr. Larry Van Slyke Is the owner and operator of the Austin franchise. Free Delivery within a three mile radius of the restaurant is one of Chicken Delight's biggest features, which makf^s it so pop­ ular with University students. Tile menu includes their famous Chicken plus Shrimp, Fish, Bar-B-Q Rib* rind Pizza. Chicken Delight is open Monday through Friday from 4 p rn. to ll p.m., on Friday from 4 p.m. to midnight, on Saturday from l l a.m. to midnight, and on Sunday from 11 a rn. to ll p.m. Call GR 6 6216 now and make a selection from their menu . . . you'll be real glad "you didn’t cook tonight 303 East I s l Street hi iii ti A n j , , x / f . X r , , ; . RANCHO RES M , t « m X o o J , Across From 1st a n d Sa n Jacinto St. MATT MARTINEZ - Owner W o n , T h u r s . , Ef t. 4 .0 0 to ti OO p rn. : Ara* r ,nn»r In I** jrpny * De v iou* Keel (■». Si ttti Hi 'mijntst r tar* IIT < aegrea* — Mi«nu*»mery Ward (statal Plata (.et jour Ticket* ) arty at the Wit«£| - - w v f T l x e O r n -a L o v e d LEE MARVIN ANGIE DICKINSON. PO IN T BLA N K PANAVISION ME.TR0C0L0R i ^ » r v £ t Jim » iHifiUttttHDiu aa RfifRIIT JONATHAN MORS* WINTERS MS a A\ 'N- ‘ rn mu* m u ji n m ™ Ed X fa W L leads straight w f to violenceZ .^ssrssm i Truffaut Gives Insight in Book H O LLYW O O D (A P )—Rare in­ sight into the mind of a creative film maker Is offered in a new book, “ Hitchcock,” by Francois Truffaut. familiar with every scene Hitch- cork ever directed. The pair devoted much discus­ sion to “ Tile Birds,” which failed to achieve hit status in theaters It took a Frenchman to define but created a sensation in its re­ the impressive stature of Alfred Hitchcock, who for more than 40 years has been making films In England and America. He is virtually the author of the sus­ pense genre, yet he has nev er re­ ceived an Academy Award for direction, although his “ Rebec­ ca’ was selected the best picture of 1940. F tun on* Director Truffaut, director of “ Jules and Jim " and “ The 400 Blows” and a former film critic, has lung been an admirer of the Hitchcock art. He came to Holly­ wood interv jews with his idol, and the results of their talks have been published by .Simon and Schuster in an illus­ trated $10 volume. for extensive Tile ease of their conversation Is remarkable, considering the fact that their remarks had to be interpreted-neither speaks the Other’* language with en nigh fluency. But there was a meet­ ing of that transcended any language bar­ rier. Truffaut had done his home­ to be work well; he seemed two minds their television cent appearance. Hitchcock said that he became Interested in the original story by Daphne du Maurier when it was printed in one of his mystery anthologies. He admitted that he l ist his usual cool approach dur­ ing the filming. Hlehoock’i N'ervonsnesai “ I was quite tease and this was unusual for me because as a rule I have a lot of fun during the shooting," he said. I went home to my wife at night, I was still tense and upset. “ When “ Something happened that was altogether new in my experience: I began to study the scenario as we went along, and I saw that there were weaknesses in it. This emotional siege I went through served to bring out an additional creativ® sense In me.” Hitchcock stated that he had always before memorized his s. ript before the start of filming and never referred to if. Nor did he believe in deviating from the ( completed script; he couldn’t tolerate the expenses of having the crew stand by as he made changes. But he did improvise on “ The Birds.” Furnished A p a r t m e n ts For Sale For Sale Help W anted Typing pPArXB a ra liab e for ling a m*n and women BARGAIN.-* *»>d itudent*. I' . Mum* Ajutm ent*. OR < MSL Js-verythng. O'* Art Ex chang*. 2026 South la - a r . Wa take Hem* 1 on consignment H I 4 .vr.ljv'.VS onrrs handmade Indian Jewelry " Nf ‘ ^ ^ ' , T O W E R V IE W A P A R T M E N T S r n Oldham rotrortiy behint Medical Art* A'ru*r*t one M a rl to J a w School Married nr echo *rl» Milden* da*tred On# bedroom. . . or em « J * am coeditume I, carpeted get ana water pa d TV cab a paid Moat NSacMSbtS la a ct* tis apartment living. , — — G R 2 4 5 6 6 ■------------ i / i t j t graduate *ttideeW near -------- ------- — —— . - t?nfv*r*tty .vaUabVa noir, Call evening. after IO and ««>*■. weekend* OH T 7TT8. burin* and trading PU• hor rn****aine* . . « „ t , r book* of any kind — hardback or turner .. . . . rai«» back*, car tiereo upe*. guitar*, '-lea nut ga tin**, marten-' rte*, o w * b v typewrite t 1 n*n * cS"inea gnat*, golf club*, tap# record era, teievtrona, (tamp* and collect on*, ra record player* phonograph camera*. mnumoAP.d. r ii” , mum *eu rts Army* ’ Shorty" wet *ult. rom tag Alae O'Neill * $17. Ken *534K»71. PUBLIC RELATIONS THKM K3, report* I* emotes, SOC. Envelope* a i l roved. Ic. Mr*. Fraser. G R 6* 1,317. , w ere re p 'Jt e is e .j Ie s v t hi $35 up UB(# aiudent* arith one tear retainability . _ Sharp clean cu t mature Senior* and Orad A .to : 2 p yrtab s w aihsrs and air cond ti oner*. Dinner hoist for new lake resort community currently bong developed on ink# Travis No sales. Contact OH 7*9419 for interview FO U R Bio- Hs Campus. Theses Dissertation* typed at home (IB M ) Reasonable. Mr* Botlour G R 8-8113 Professionally Retort* Ca'! G R 6 6158 GENERAL ELECTRIC CREDIT CORP. M.\UI student 14 M K > > onmercial license Jus i »DF. h C 2/ in & G .3 ; 3 up© W a H ave Moved! nei«'nary. After 8 pm. AN S-2394. N (W hiring walter* or waitresses Orate*** Dorm I'afetersa. 2702 Nuece*. 477.2730. Mr. Johnson. N EW I - B E D R O O M M e r c e d aoup a* •cly. C e n tre 1 elf Span watches coins, automo- bile*, boat* att supplies, nnftneerttv auppttee, ictiba gear, fur’ hire and househ 1 good* u n * Fu-t she I gun*, hunting and Huh inf equipment, tool*. Maid ae v. <■ I fireplug!. AARON, Buyer and Trader, tot- YD1 ADD J >V Red River Furnished Rooms I «uv>» r e m prtvata bath r . - . I block from «’ampus. Must ’ •*’ * ' keeper* p ert t me . . * ’ * -r . 1 in A p r 1 and M a y . *•-* ’ ’ * . ta r rnor e 'e r h more houri acco u n t R f, rn VV. I, 476 3245 or 267-1121. P IZ Z A INN M an re e d e d , l l to TO. F — n to 5 pm. IO a ’ . g• ta. 5 to 11 p.m. A p p y 7915 B .m a t Road (aero** from Gulf M art) in pe-i. G I 2 3821 r A BT .E ws ’er needed at B een Hre.se Work for your mea?* X B I Whit!* Roommate W anted grad a? a p-e^erab e Fee* e • it den? w a it e d ?o ii are v e ry r ce m o ld y tu r­ n s- ed 3 n e d ' ions h o - ie w*fn *em a e I A* and gift ed, b ond, weil-heh a v td 3 2 Jitreet. $45 y e a r o d ion . 804 W . 29th month, p .» ha f ut iitie i C a P A X 2354 betw een i i and 12 da y. M A L E *hare 2 tied room duplex, *Vt, A C ca: iietcil 472 3978 FK M A IJC romnmiC* wanted. Fun, sr apart I our share $42 75, pius electricity. me nt G R 6-3S9&. S H A R R cs'vt of fond living Luxury aga rf ment l l 5. Male 478-2375 M A LK to •hare 3-bedroom boun# bl La paid. $60 477 ll 43 M A LK >hire new one N- 1 SHK un apartment. *70 :»iu* electricity. 4M 751*8. For Rent HH decor, W a p a'd $135 terrag one , ’>-wa ca rp e t, i l l bi » v ro B IL K Home. rth eait, I b o c k from in living room, 3 bedroom 1967, fumiahed, carpeted, Ids'2. expandable heal. A Ct, W3 1280. 4? 2491 465*1956 y. r n *'.'HCN CT. en* bedroom. M * un* XIA 4(t> a S’.*t U M per month, a ; bul* paid GR J*2147 or G R *>'33. O N B badfpom. i »*r cnmpu*. Neat. Quiet, Fumuh- ' O L *-4308 artar A oO drag KfnCTBBCT apartment a va Pa bl a. I blorkt ta) a n*»e y R bedroom* G R 6 546' TANGI JKTVVOOD NORTH A Bra cit va. spaolena J be«* * m I t>» th. Ava Ila bi a April I O L % ®«sa iifjn f. a ik Miscellaneous USED BOOKS TH E BOCK STALL 5833 Burnet Rd. (opposite Fir*t Fed'•ran ha* hug* telet’lion pa;.er ba.*k f tim eld nova.*, dassies, encyclopedias. National Geo graphics, Texans levrttooka. Hr*rvard ciavvtc* low price* ‘ >pen S „0 — 6 34J pally except Tbura. A Bun. G I 4 j 664 and used yew appliance*. Westing’ o ate-eoe* and T V* Fin abed and unfinished rocking cha ; cheat*, bar (tool*, and (tu­ dent detk* Recliner*, day bed a. *leepera. C A R 'E R & K EY EN 7 E R P R iS F S I 74 5 N . L a m a f 836 1272 Help W anted desr nptlon*. Ptacaisent (EUROPEAN bummer employment A I Job in England and Continent Apl I'.i'ntton* u w be ng taken Btu dent Travel. T22B Guadalupe. G R 74.VK) OPPORTTTNITT for ma e or female atudant* with tale* ability. Fiexib n hours good In­ come. no quotas no terrli.ule* 258*1881 for si>t*> fumet • CAREER IN MANAGEMENT Am#r1<*a'a f**te*t growing romumer finance i- I’npany w.U take ten pernor* into a carefully planned management training program sn the Houston area. Must be able to accent Inten- 1 »* fia tnmg an*l mantel ait phb-es of opera* t »na withm 1« months. Manager or field au­ ditor next poad tin Good sn sry. pa 1 sac* I 'on* and many outstand ing employe* bene Us. LIBERTY L O A N CORPORATION I 16 E. 8th Street Au5 N E E D A l 1'- : ' c R f RA R S ? Net* -g IHrwa — M ill, - Payment* l*‘ Bus Eng na ana > tm* aquipmant ('• en pieta repair* dependabla »e:v r Rea son ab a Au tcmatlc * lran*roi*s?ota> Tun* up* etc. Brake*, overhaula, We g a. ante* Our Work 7470 C A P ' A l C TY R E B U IL D E R S SA IL B O A T SP-EH A!,! Br#-se sc-' *;>i:ir ” O n ly *399.95 Windward Rn’ boat* 46 - 3215. es. n disc-imt o* . i 1: ’* *489 »5 4ixV 176* portunity. National < Guadalupe. Office 203. I hi t Thu. xda y. t ’n* g mmer rn. iv>: ■ imny Apply S ’>0 p m. Monday P H II AX) I F ’ P o ru b * Cheap. O L 4-W6H after 8 p rn. r v cuod condition 65 YAM AHA JBOix. *.1V0 or heat offer 477 end dining room, Hu? Irs fide G R 8-7850. H ’)t.se, 2310 K l C A P rD ‘L Beauty Cc# eg* Half atyling award ' ’t 'F lG F R a Un h i w i 4X* Who Ha!* I 7 S. , » at 18th. Open a a rn After 8 p m . H36 184' E V i WM After 8 p rn . 836 1645. T A P E Recorder, *30 Petri 7* Camera. *30 JU N E GRADUATE ( M a l* or Fam a a ! nterested in permanent em; '•nrrimt ta In lerior Decorating and desiring to work part lima until graduation, apply to Mr*, Hyman at P A I L S ‘ .T ER C RS G U E S T Ranch on la k e Travl* Clerk*, w alt.i’*»e* p3 or t ill *7 LA R O K Wolienxac tap# rersorder for half prioa. Ca'! Je rry , G R 8-4181 2 FO R M ALA and *31) 21 re* 5. I-1296 IM >r 5 B A S S E T T hound*, AKC, registered. 8 wed old. Weekday* after 8, or weekend* 4 I# wanted weekend* noons, return Sunday -■•Me or char* dliving •88 RHI for mot 477-8430 •.mph Sp'’?' e. On sh la 477 3687 \ •>! .KSW A O R N Red I price G L 3 022ft. PST Y P O S T E R S , I C P O S T E R S >ST E R S . T T O N S 1965 F O R D Ka if1 a-ie clean new tires, t ’ d .■UTH Guadalupe G R ''D O I A IJ j S T A T ® M it orc chan cai cwd11. excellent rn1 anon v\i-jf,ni ■aal Harvest* .. then you don t wan! ties and 1st. Madam 4t<99 EL Co fax, Den j to do fcaindry in re* sons b e price k, \ OLK - VV Vt I HO 5-1237 i 9-0 T R IU M P H T R rea si eta b e oifcr 4 M st sell ik' w Atake e- gagemer I. *135 now star ce at Miscellaneous G R A D U A T N G SENSOR W O M E N R E N T h j -k h i Ic TV. 1:2 50 J' 5 50 month* i ii or portable, $12 0 • *1 SO « e>'sIv. alpha TV, G L 2 4057. no l\ Tape Seconb'rs anawer ti !. 2-2692. ‘ANT TO W O RK Y TO EU RO PE, A N ) WU "HE ORIE RE? ? ? W A Y Typing I'1* esc a B: rf*. Reports V-a -r sn VZ. U K S T E D T Y P IN O S E R V IC E . Aero* ilea finable, near A.ianda.a HO 5* MBA. V n ’p T ; E X P im Re sr - \* ..J A + Jhbtr^ty S*rdct8 EUROPE GROUP and CHARTER FLIGHTS N E W ) ORK DNDON, Round Trip DA! LAS LONDON-PARIS DA LAS md E X I U S IV E LY FO R U N IV ERSITY STUDENTS & F A C U L T Y ’s * » y « a-,-4 we ” I ce* ••••med revervn* i «. 'N 6 $319.00 A P 504 V- - 24 y s ;RV‘CES G R 7-565! T H E S E S en. # a 35c pa g< d is*# rt a t. id languiii* brie’ii --- reports. Bcd- • ii - n*M Mi.i.mum lo .•cr VK -1 G L 4 3019. SECRET Agy.TYPIST v ve c«’n>4■ ij*nt. i to accuracy, cor yet lion th many year* of ex eerier ,-e in all field*. .* a n i meticulous care form and compo- tcchnlcel papers I.a w W O R K SPFC- iinar papers, law re* ,rw IB M Elect rome c, Multi..thing. Zerox- U.lhT lies 4 a u l b.nd;: g sir re. es <>n request in typing, se* arid c -*. m- • repot!*. . ivr-it-f- si I jOST. G arca. T LO ST I ‘ Celeb r - I on, Hi u k-t . n leather dav, Gar Tx pi Oral es. IB M . Harnett Tutoring T ^ a ie C’ w * a v c y grranqen- - ■ o f fr J i n r lad it.-a- r e ■> a ( >n ■ sp f and v- a ti* a ■ I r .A V OU a « in: .rmuf ac wt »•: p i .rector, y-sns B a ’ es, r co m p le te f ( u t r A O ’ P .O . Box 6395, Unix art Ty S te t on, A-st - 7 3712. W e H ave Complete lr';o r“ ' r Reaardinq Jobs in Europe Page 8 Friday, March 8, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN M e a * ng»: 4 p m. V. ■ e id a y RAN SOM ROOM 40 A c re s C ult P k c n e ; 4 "* C f : 4 ty p - j c t tries**, a s se rf a rep orts, a i d n , l aw briefs, c • irs a t c r: a . in c tvoew -.ter* — cymbol* and carbon ritbcm*) M . • t- r n m im eog raph in g, YE DELA r EIO TYP NG SERVICE P ' o fre ad in g HI 2 71 84 M B . A. TVp n* Mull .th rig Blading A Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service tailored to ti e need* of University student* spc i«i keyboard e.-j-.j pmeat tot language ji-en, e, and en* neeung uie>es and diases tation* Ebon* G R 2 3210 and GR 3-767T 3707 Hemphill Park J A N * T Y P IN G fast, near camput, 15c. IB M Tv pa *nGJdng. G R 7-.509S. A N N E S TYPING SERVICE O tarJoriB Anna iv-.afield) HI 2-7008 Profeta!"»■.«! Typing For Tost F a s t Aocursse. 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Ejoewood 4 ’ 8-2636 WRITERS AID SERVICE E x pe t typing service fr!d Ie of i amini*, lu r * TUTO RING Sn b ; si P U T S C M ,>! reel G R i;f •“ ken annah • r .v«i m jose! ohaftel panavision* metrocolor ^ DOORS OPEN 1:45 P.M. — 5 0 c'TIL 2:15 P.M. mom msm* Starts Today Y F, T R, V V A INTERSTATE'S R S I T •(hen In Jouthem California visit Universal City Studio* Y U PJ! is a hundred minutes of murders, brawls, broads, and sizzling action. K Wi'p p r | : * c , ’ WJ • * _ GEORGE PEPPARD is'PJ The kind of private eye you haven t seen since Bogie. Raymond Burr as the Heavy. And Gayle Hunnicutt is the Broad who makes trouble look like something you’d like to get to. C O - S T A R R I N G GAYLE HUNNICUTT-RAYMOND BURR WILFRID HYDE-WHITE-BROCK PETERS-SUSAN SAINT JAMES MUSIC-NEAL HEFTI • Screenplay by PHILIP REISMAN. JR • Story by P H I L I P R E I S M A N , JR and EDWARD J, MONTAGNE - Directed by JOHN GUILLERMiN • Produced by EDWARD J. MONTAGNE TECHNICOLOR® A UNIVERSAL PICTURE CALL GR 1-5244 T0 Pl ACE " YOUR CLASSIFIED AD a X PARAMOUNT —. F E A T U R E S 12:00 - 2:00 - 4:00 6:00 - 8:00 - 10:00 'Our Little Trip’ Routine . . . Doyle W alters (I), Melody Atkinson, and Steve Garfinkel. - W a ft Photo Artists to Perform n ip Department of Music is planning two performances for Friday and Sunday. Pianist I^m ard Shure and vio­ linist Andor Toth, two faculty artists will perform at 8:15 p.m. Friday in Music Building Recital Hall. The program will consist of four sonatas bv Beethoven. Tile two artists made their first joint appearanee In an all-Beethoven concert last spring. The University’s 62-piere Sym­ phonic Band will appear in con­ cert Sunday. They are planning a program of both older and more recent works, Including one by a former University profes­ sor. “ The Ramparts” by Clifton Williams, who taught in the De­ partment of Music until the spring of 1966, will close the pro­ gram. TTie concert will be at 4 p.m. In Hogg Auditorium. Admission is free. Jean-Luc Godard To Review Film Jean-Luc Godard, a French film director whose past work has either started new modes of film making or met with barbed criticism, w ill speak at 8 p.m. Friday in Batts Auditorium. Godard is on a speaking tour of American universities and will show his latest film, “ I.a Chinoise,” in Austin, IN T E R S T A T E rnmmmmamsmmamm HELD OVER S T A T E d o w n t o w n t i* c o n c u s s T H E A T R E * I-'STI K t> . 11 :9 0 - 1 :5 1 -3:54 5:94 - 7 :5 8 - 10:00 NOM INATED FO R B y L E S I J E DONOVAN' Ani usemen ta Ed itor There’s an insane little produc­ tion going on over at the Union these days. The Texas Union Theatre is putting on “ Ferlinghetti's Rou­ tines.” And that’s not all they may be putting on either. But not to be too hasty. . . “ Routine happenings turned Into dramatic action adding up to Something. Hurry, hurry, hurry, the show’s about to begin to turn into Something Else . . . Routine happenings that turn out to be crises, confrontations, manifestations, moments of truth . . .pure crea­ tions of the pure creative ima­ Thus gination, true realities. . spake guru Ferlinghetti. catharses, epiphanies,. Well, maybe. Happening “ Routines” is indeed a thea­ trical happening. “ Participation'’ appears flashed on the w all in prophetic revelation of what’s to the audience mem­ come—for bers. Entering the Union Build­ ing Junior Ballroom, a painful spotlight and the sound of ap­ plause greets you from the dark­ ness. Inside, a doorman hands you a blanket and you take your place on the floor. A spotlight stands in the center of the room and the series of dis­ connected scenes begins to happen along the perimeters. Then you hear whistles and sirens, as “ machine guns” open up on the crowd and the scream- Joyce Arce W in s A w a rd | In Pianists’ Competition Joyce Arce. a University grad­ uate student in piano presently studying with Leonard Shure, has been awarded the Brewster-Alli- son SI .OOO Piano Competition Award plus an appearance with the Austin Symphony. The Brewster-Allison Compot!-1 tion occurs biennially under spon­ sorship of National Guild of Piano Teachers and the Austin Sym­ phony. Its purpose is to encourage cultural development of young people nationwide without regard to race, color, or creed. CHAM BERS 2230 Guadalupe ' Open Until 7:30 P.M. Mon. thru Sat. THE SHUTTERED RO O M (tic \ o lm * <* ( B rot I.ynipy 7 OU THE V E N G E A N C E OF FU M A N C H U [)h«r I 8 :4 5 T h e a t r e M onday & Tuesday U H E D rive-in IW M SI AT U S T ! j f THIS PIOT URI J CAN BE SEEN A IN THE U.S. SF UNCUT, AFTER 3 YEARS IN TNey Owned ber Body... J x She Iud destroyed her soul! Ferlinghetti Scenes Theatrical Happening the ing cast members drag audience bodily out of the treatre. Hush Commentary Exactly what happened while you watched the production? A tricky question. Director Terry eonian has put together an in­ teresting visual audio arrange­ ment. Colored spotlights con­ stantly changing in size scan the walls. Taped music and voices come periodically from speaker units around the room. Add to this the actions of the cast— sometimes removed sometimes right in the audience. And the pace is generally smooth and timed. Tile “ Routines” are bizarre incongruous. They make and hopeless commentary and bitterly satirize “ Life,” “ Light,” “ Time,” and “ W ar.” Whether or not they succeed depends on whether or not you groove on Ferlinghetti. Like the story about the man who asked what jazz if you have to ask, you’ll never know.” As “ ended,” one member of the audience gasped enthusiastically, “ It must have been great. I wish I had under­ stood all the symbolism.” is: “ Man, the show Well, maybe—maybe not. To each his own thing. EXPER IM EN T IN U N D ER G R O U N D THEATRE T O D A Y TIL 2 P.M. Regular Prices Saturday & Sunday IO N A L H W WINNER Best Picture Best Actress i.,i >n.r Best Supporting Actress Best Cinematography , - Best Director . BEST SCREENPLAY f ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS! Mint NICHOIS ^ e n c e turmam Th is is B en jam in. He’s a little worried about his future. — AT — 2 - 4 . 6 - 8 - IO A D U LT FILM FA R E -KAD THE GRADUATE TFCHMCaOR* PMWMSWT ANNE BANCROFT DUSTIN HOFFMAN FERLINGHETTIS ROUTINES A New Direction in Drama STAG ED FO R S O P H IS T IC A T E D ST U DE NT S! Ju n ior Ballroom - TEXA S U N IO N Tickets at the Door — $1.00 S p a c ia l Curriculum D ay M a t in * * T o d ay ! I p.m.— for Jr. 4 Sr. High School All S*afi $1.50 # Seat* Not Reserved STH G R F S T W M K T onlftit st 8 p m. Hot Open* IO a rn. A M P ? *** IO rramiiMVM ut f iji h i rn M atin ees: W ed Sat Hun. I p.m. Jt'rt. A Sat. M i l i t i 8 p rn, JLI• >ei Ttirs W ed-Thor*. M Kit Is B t 7:3(1 A ll I tumid K fse rtu d o o * M oat B e Picked f ’p J H our* Before Show T im e In 70mm. and stereophonic sound! 5 * DAVIDO SELZNICK^ — 0 MMftAfft T MITCH firs GONE WITH THE WINDT ( I AUK GABLE 'SSS VIVIEN LEIGH LESLIE HOWARD OEIMAdc HAV! LLANO I N MltTROCOLOe ION! R t 't R E K E R S r n R F LTS N O W A T B o * O F I K B O K B F H A I L O K A T S E A R S , T W IT , f l o o r , K F Y S O I. O S P ! M A N D , O K A N Y T I U VR T I X AA T H E A T R H f HIEF ^ 0 5 6 0 1 N. LAMAR' A D U L T S $1.50 ) Bo* O ffic e O p e n * 6 p.m. For Mature Adult Audiences Only " ★ ★ ★ ★ . . . A R A R E E XPERT E NC E." __________ F E A T U R E T IM E S 7:00 p.m. 4 11:00 afd "D E V IL’S W A N T O N " plus! at 8:40 Ow n* O at B e fu r en in * rn. end 5 p m . sod I left with CXM "V T R T B t u * Ad m u don 50o P e r CwrtneM. A fter 5 p.m ., regular adrnUsloa of I I M) fur Adult* A D U L T S $ 1.00 • D IS . CARD .50 O R E N 6:15---- C h ild re n (12 4 U n d e r) F R E E A C A D E M Y A W A R D N O M IN A T IO N S “ N O P E ’’ EX C ELLEN T EN T E R T A IN M EN T ** Y E P ’ ’ SOPHIA OMAK " B e * t A fir e * * ’* A cadem y A w ard “ TW O W O M EN " 'J he KxcitJmr S ta r of "DOCTOR Z H IV A G O " ■W LOREN and SHARIF make love... like itls never been made before! . ft m n ore than a miracle” T E C H N IC O L O R • ^ T IM E S: 7 P.M. & 10:45 NOTE! Because of the tremendous crowds for our 8 & IO P.M. shows may we suggest the 2-4-6 P.M. performances! •CWfllAL CfWVMA CORPORATION Held O ver 2 nd W eek! F t t S TPASl *'Oi* th* Oroti" RI I 172FJ0A$ ymmmm OPEN 1:45 Feature Times? 2 - 4 . 6 - 8 - IO | POSITIVELY ADULT ENTERTAINMENT! All Seals 75c til 2:15 P.M. This is the Film of the Year! ! Everybody is talking about this film! J • , . Even the Manager! ! UTA LEVKA C lA U O f RINGER C A R I MOHN! «• KABBARA VALEN? •* From The c o m p a n y th at ga ve you the year's most t a lk e d -a b o u t motion picture, • I, A W O M A N ." H e bought h e r ... S h e L T V a S * r his! IN C O L O 0 t BiRTotal FemaleAnlmal! SATURDAY AT 11:30 & 1:40 P.M. O NLY C l a r k G a b l e «» flit men who look tho I (ring* nam* of Ham/th Y v o n n e D e C a r l o AAI* e »**<«* S ID N E Y P O IT I E R Purchase Advance Tickets and You Can See 3 of the following films FREE! ! ’’G ra p e * o f W r a t h " "T o b a c c o R o a d * "Big S le e p ‘ "V irg in ia C i t y " " C a ia b la n e a " " S a n Q u antin'* "A n g a !* with D irty F a c e * ” "T re e * ire of Sierra M a d r e ” smmm T O D A Y ! 50c TILL 2 P.M. # F E A T U R E S: 2 - 4 . 6 . 8 . IO NOMINATED FOR F I N A L W E E K E N D HURRY) A C A D E M Y A W A K E ) : E C H M IE A M E ) © r a ft® " BEST ACTOR - BEST ACTRESS BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR (2)- BEST DIRECTOR BEST STORY & SCREENPLAY (ORIGINAL) BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY • BEST ART DIRECTION BEST COSTUMES* BEST EDITING T'— s n nrr. ACADEMY AWARDS! COL UM BIA PierV W S p w M l A Stanley Kramer ■ SpencerTRACYl Sidney POITIER! Katharine HEPBURN guess who's coming to dinner and irtt/OC jc Katharine Houghton St tie br DeVOt • HMR** br AW.UAM ROSE • Product mwS directed br STANLEY KRAM!* f5«* 'n t--------- »«i»• Ca**** wj-atatet* TECHNICOLOR* ^ - 'rata* 1 im *' F R E E P A R K I N G . to A LAVACA STS. IN TER S TA TE NOW! A U S T I N • S I O S O . C O N C U S S THEATRE l l 111 B K N 6 OO A 8:55 F C C O .M O U N D E D I O U M A T I H E A I D I H M I H BANNED OVER HALF THE W ORLD! W ednesday A Thursday Kraft Ebbing said, there is no pleasure without pain ” A Rom antte Comedy SA TU RD A Y & S U N D A Y M A T IN E E KIDS S H O W S PU SS & S C O T S — I st Show IO A .M . * * F R E fJIM tK IN d ^ A T ALL TIMES ^ MANET 9 P.M. ONLY In EASTMANCOLOR Warner 8ros.-Seven Arts Presents WARREN BEATTY- FAYE DUNAWAY in*B0NN!E AND CLYDE" Co-Starring MICHAEL J. POLLARD * G EN E HACKMAN * ESTELLE PARSONS - Written by DAVID NEWMAN 4 ROBERT BENTON Music by CHARLES STROUS: * Produced by WARREN BEATTY • Directed by ARTHUR PENN * TECHNICOLOR* l f i T Friday, M arch 8, 1968 T H E DAJLY T E X A N Pa?* 9 SPRING PUNS from You will find patterns and shades new this spring. Subtle checks of grey and black; elegant solids of smoke-blue and, cambridge; sophisticated stripes on brandy, olive, and navy. Polyester-wool will make your plans to present you continually at your very best. Seventy dollars Make your plans to come see the spring plans from Clyde's now. Showcase to Open Round-Up Week Huston Tillotson College; James H. McCrocklin, Southwest Texas State College; Walter Rubke, Concordia College; and Alvin I. Thomas, Prairie View AAM Col­ lege. Showcase, which marks the opening of Round-Up, consists of departmental showing what Is offered the student, what is in sight for the future, and what the products of that field are. exhibits Th!* year's theme is "Today’* Vision, Tomorrow's Reality.” for the Many of the 63 entries are en­ tering Showcase first time. Departments which will sponsor exhibits include anthro­ humanities, pology, music, pre med, and Intercul­ tural Studies in Folklore and Oral History. Hebrew, Other entries have been sub­ mitted by the Center for Re­ search in Water Resources, Learning Disability Center, Nu­ clear Reactor Laboratory, and the Research Center’s photo­ graphy eollection. Entries still are being accepted. "Em phasis is being placed this year on getting junior and senior high schools to send field trips to Showcase," said Mrs. B r u c e Taylor, head of Showcase. She has sponsored the project since 1960. G o t . John Connelly; Chancel­ lor Harry Ransom; Jack K. W il­ liams, commissioner of higher •duration; and six Texas college presidents are scheduled to open Round-Up Showcase March 26. College presidents who w ill open the five-day show by cut­ ting the ribbon are Brother R a y ­ mond Fleck, St. Edward’s Uni­ versity; Dr. Norman Hackerman, John T. King, the University; Applications Due For Scholarships for Application deadline two $500 Varsity Carnival scholar­ ships is March 22. The scholar­ ships, for the 196* 69 academic year, are being offered by the Interfratemity and Panhellenic Councils, Source of the awards is interest drawn from pro* <*ods of Varsity Carnival, an annual show spon­ sored by University sororities and fraternities, The scholarships are given on basis of overall grade point aver­ age and financial nerd. They are available full-time students who have completed three sem­ esters of college work, and are free of scholastic or disciplinary probation. to Application forms may l>e ob­ tained in Office of Financial Aids, West Mall Office Building 203. V I FRID A Y N IG H T THE NOONDAY CIRCUS SA T U R D A Y N IG H T THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH O P E N 8:30 P.M . Enjoy O u r N ew ly Enlcrnod D an e* F'~ or X N *w H e # t«r» THE NEW ORLEANS : 7*U and Rad G R 8-0291 C o m in g Soon! a • rn ★ BO BBIE G E N T R Y ★ G len Cam pbell 8 P.M. M ARCH I I G REG O R Y G YM rn R R Tlclcef*: $1.75 Stjd#nt», faculty, ifa ff — $7.25 G#n- I 3616 jm #.-«! Adm ijjion. For Information C all G R # TEXAS U N IO N EN T ER T A IN M EN T C O M M IT T E E Spomorad by th# r n v. - r n r n W ith Traditional Southern Courtesy A Kappa Alpha fraternity member pre- sents his date with an invitation to the annual O ld South Ball. Dressed in C o n fed erate uni- forms, the fraternity members delivered the invitations Thursday afternoon. The mounted group made their way to various sorority houses and paraded down the Drag, —Stalt I'tioto Human Focuses Relations, on Race Law Meet Problems The project began in 1959 with ll departments represented and expanded to 73 entries in 1966. Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson opened . Showcase that year. j Against Discrimination in Hous­ ing, said the mood of the ghettos Edward Rutledge, executive di­ rector of the National Committee "The role of the police officer Is to enforce the law' Impartially and try not to rob man of hu­ manity in doing it," John Mur­ ray', director of the Houston Council on Human Relations. said. H E I ! L I O X C#bar#t T heatre H o st J O H N M E A D O W S Pre left! t tm TH E G O O D G N U S \ a ixle vlilp Tri,-sat.: SCOTT rastliii* Kultur "T H E G A M B L E R ” •at: (Mu* TH E EXIT folk - b a lla d * - Muf»« 207 W est 6th 8 OO Curta il G R 8-0257 juvenile,” Father Daniel M c­ Ginn of Houston said. "W e can start by raising the education, training, pay, and status of the policemen.” "Policemen reflect the attitudes and moods of the power structure of the white establishment to the black community,” Rev. C. Wil- liam Black of the Mt. Zion F ir s t , Baptist Church in San Antonio, said. Related Jttorjr, Page I. "Negroes are more concerned about the election of a sheriff than a mayor's election. This Is because of the double standard in application of the law,” Rev. Mr. Black said. Tile police must protect all citizens with equal justice for all, said Attorney Ronald Cohn, south-1 em civil rights director of the Anti Defamation League in At­ lanta. Cohn suggested that more Ne­ groes be placed on police forces and that “ we have a total eom- mi tm ent on our part to see the law I ---- enforced equally. M Continental Cars '63 TR4 .......... $1295 '66 Mercedes 230 $3695 l - \ '67 MGB ......... $2495 '66 AH Sprite .. .$1595 ’65 M G B ........... $1595 '66 Spitfire ....... $1695 '63 M G I IOO $ 995 '62 Mercedes I90SL ......... $3295 '64 Alfa . . . . . . . . ..$1495 ’62 XKE Coupe . .$3195 '61 Morris Minor .$ 695 '65 vw ........ .$1195 Ya ll Come 501 West 6th St. GR 6-5321 is "extreme bitterness and dLs- pair.” Rutledge spoke at the Thursday afternoon session of the Confer- eme on Human Relations and | Law, Rutledge; Louis Mason Jr., Pittsburgh, Pa., city councilman and former executive director of tho Pittsburgh Human Relations John T. Commission; and Dr. King, president of Kus ton-Tillot­ son College in Austin discussed the "Existing General Conditions in Intergroup Relations” . Topics included housing, employment, and education. Rutledge said the housing prob­ lem is especially critical because It leads to actual segregation and inequality in such other areas as schools, health, and jRxToation facilities He said the progress of the middle class Negro in tile last 20 years has “ scarcely ton bed the daily lives of the black masses in the ghettos.” The primary' goal now "must be a single society," ho said, be­ cause the country is in danger of "abandoning the concept of law as a guarantee of a fret' society,” and of using it as an "instru­ ment of oppression.” Mason said the problem In em­ ployment is handicapped by the fact that commissions are viewed with suspicion. I He said there is discrimination not only at the job entry' stage hut at every single argle of a job, including testing, wages, hours, conditions, union momlTcrship, overtime, benefits, and advance­ ment. Dr. King, the c including speak­ er of the session, emphasized that “ education is our bos’t hope for a good life,” and that ii is a "process" which should bp con­ tinuous. The present rate of social change, he said, needs social re­ sponsibility w h i e h must be founded in a person before adult­ hood. ★ Tile role of law enforcement of­ ficers in society and equal treat­ ment under laws for all citizens were the general themes at the Conference on Human Relations and tho L a w s Thursday night session. "W hite racism and pervasive influences in and on law enforce­ ment officers add to the fuel which triggers riots,” Houston psychologist Dr. Melvin Sikes told the conference, sponsored by the University’s School of Law'. "W e must start training police­ men in the psychology, the so­ ciology, and the economic con­ ditions of the minorities and the '62 AH Sprite .. .$1195 I. Any organization may nominal*. 3. Outstanding Students from previous years may not be nominated OUTSTANDING STUDENT NOMINATION QUALIFICATIONS IT'S T IM E TO NOMINATE OUTSTANDING STUDENTS for the '68 CACTUS Check These Qualifications and ve Your Group Nominate One or More Students For This Honor! >) 'ti H a WA A \1 t m Ii I / a Vt) L -£ I \ \ J J V 2. Section by th# committ## will b# on th# bat!* of: a. Outstanding contribution to th# Univeriity. b. Scholarship. c. Leadership. d. Awards and honors r#c#ivad. #. Participa*ion in campus organizations, f. Activities and campus committee work. again. nation. 4. A former Goodte^ow is E L IG IB L E for Outstanding Stud ant nomi­ 5. Nomination D E A D L IN E is W ednesday, March 13, 1968 6. Pick up nomination blanks in Journalism B u il d i n g Room 107. ★ S E L E C T IO N O F O U T S T A N D IN G S T U D E N T S . 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 c f the Outstanding Student C om m ittee. The C om m ittee sha I be appointed by the C actus 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 decid e the total vote required to qualify the student for such honor. Furthermore, it shall be the responsibility of the C actus Editor and Associate Editor to provide a list of names with qualifica­ tions and other pertinent information to the com m ittee for initial dis­ cussion. The final selection and compiling of names shall be m ade by the C om m ittee in meeting and given to the C actus Editor. It is to be understood that al! discussion and selections made in meeting are to be strictly confidential within members of the C om m ittee itself. Public announcement of the O utstanding Student* shall be m ade by the C actus Editor. N o student shall be eligible to be selected as an O utstanding Student more than once. ★ Texas Student Publications, Inc. Handbook, Page 53. C o m e By Journalism Building 107 Blank! For an Application W o u ld des us Endorse Pamper Je t s ? truly t a n t a l i z i n g d i s h e s of W e doubt it c a n t o n e s e f o o d , rich in And our ushers don t have whit© cotton tails. f l a v o r a n d distinctive to the But we think Or i en t . AMERICAN FOOD ALSO SERVED p. nc s L i m - s iinc‘J S C J / ,a ii r n n t 37 OC S. C r J'•est • C ; -x -d M - a s, Page IO Friday, March 8, 1968 THE DAILY TEXAN VALUE EXISTS IN THIS W ORLD and we like to ta!k about it. Lutheran Campus Minstry 2200 San Antonio Sunday Worship I I a.m., 5 p.m.