T h e D a il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The Univer ^ ^ iS & a $ £ Other Action In Legislature, Page IO Vol. 66 Price Five Cents AU STIN , TEXAS, W E D N E S D A Y , FEBr Ten Pages Today No. 108 Texas Climbs to Third, Beats Rice, 81-73 Page 4 Assembly Proposes Delegate Change For Efficiency Move Bicameral Legislature Faces Roster Slash From 40 Down to 25 By GARY BULLOCK ami LORETTA FLOTON Acting as a committee of the whole, th® Student Assembly Tuesday night approved three proposals dealing with membership in the Student Assembly half of the pro­ posed bicameral legislature. to In a straw vote, the Assembly approved sending the Assembly five m em bers from the proposed House of Delegates, the president or a representative from the council of each college, and representative from each college elected by the student body of that college. At present, the Assembly is composed of students from the various schools and col­ leges alone. If the proposals pass, the As­ sembly would be reduced in size from 40 to about 25 members. H ie sm aller size, it was argued, would allow it to be a more workable and flexible organization. Clif Drummond, president of the Stu­ dents’ Association, emphasized that the ap­ proval cam e from only a straw vote and that the proposals would have to be passed by the Students’ Association before they went into effect. DRUMMOND NOTED that the five stu­ dents sent from the proposed House of Delegates would sit in both the House and the Student Assembly. The Assembly, a t an earlier meeting, had decided to reject a portion of the proposed constitution that would allow all Assembly m em bers also to sit as ex-officio m em bers of the House of Delegates. The Student Assembly, acting as a com­ m ittee of the whole, had decided at a Jan. 4 meeeting to base representation to the proposed House of Delegates on the num­ bers of individual organizations. As stated in the tentative constitution, registered stu­ dents’ organizations with 15 or more m em­ bers would be entitled to one representa­ tive. Organizations with 151 or more mem­ bers would get an additional representa­ tive. THE ASSEMBLY had also decided to Include delegates in the House from schools and colleges within the University, one delegate per 1,000 students. This was to provide representation for those students not participating in one of the organiza­ tions represented. In other business Drummond said that a Tuition Study Group has been established to discuss the proposed tuition hike. In general the student body has taken a nega­ tive attitude the proposal, said Drummond. He said is aw are of this attitude and that not many that the State Legislature toward (See ASSEMBLY, Page 3.) A specialist in demography, the statisti­ cal and analytical study of population, will be the third speaker in Challenge ’67: “ Tile Problem is People,” the weekend of Feb. 17-18. Lincoln H. Day, associated professor in the Departm ents of Sociology and Public Health at Yale University, will speak on “ Specific Problems Associated with Popu­ lations.” teaching courses Dr. Day has been a m em ber of the Yale faculty since 1965, in population control and methods of demo­ graphic research for undergraduate and in sociology, and stu­ graduate students the medical dents school. in public health at BORN JAN 7, 1928, in Ames, Iowa, he received his bachelor of arts degree from Lincoln Day Yale Demography Expert Third 'Challenge' Speaker Books, books, books! A s students filed in and piles of textbooks diminished, Hemphill cashier Rick Phel kept his sense of humor, though the night wore on. The campus book- store remained open past its usual hours until 8 p.m. both Yes Sir! There Are Plenty Right Over There M o n d ay and Tuesday nights in order influx of customers brought on by first-day textbook assign- ments. to accommodate the 1*1 K>lo by Sieve Ut lh Fact-Finding Mission for President Goldberg Announces Trip By The Associated Press WASHINGTON Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg outlined for an around-the-world plans Tuesday “ fact-finding trip’’ for President Lyndon B. Johnson, in South Viet Nam. including a stop “I am not going on a peace mission,” Weather: Colder Freezing weather headed for Aus­ tin again Tuesday night with a low forecast of 29 degrees. Tile daytime tem perature reached 50 degrees about 5 p.m. Wednesday is to be cloudy and cold­ er with the high to be 44 degrees and a IO per cent chance of precipitation, the Weather Bureau predicted. Yale in 1946, and doctor of philosophy de­ gree from Columbia University in 1957. He has taught at Mt. Holyoke College and Princeton University. In addition to his many articles on popu­ lation, Dr. Day has co-authored two books: “Too Many Americans,” written with his wife, a sociologist also; and “Disabled Workers in the Labor M arket,” with A. J. Jaffe and Walter Adams. Current research projects include “ Eval­ uation of Fam ily Health,” supported by funds from the Office of Economic Oppor­ tunity; “The Social and Cultural Context of Low Natality in European Population,” and “Cut-Migration and Population Stability Among the Hispanos of New Mexico.” HE HAS DONE RESEARCH on popula­ tion in Australia in studies supported by funds from the Australian National Uni­ versity, where Dr. Day was a visiting fel­ low in demography in 1964. He is a m em ber of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Popula­ tion. the Population Association of Ameri­ ca, American Sociological Association, and the American Statistical Association. Dr. Day and four other speakers, Father John O’Brien, Dr. Alan Guttmacher, Kings­ ley Davis, and Sen. Ernest Gruening, will discuss the population crisis in the two- day colloquium sponsored by the Students’ Association. REGISTRATION for Challenge, scheduled to end Friday, will be extended through Tuesday. Registration hours are 2 to 5 p.m . for the Feb. 17-18 colloquium on over­ population. The $2 fee provides delegates with re­ the official Challenge search m aterial, packet, and a ticket for a banquet at 5:30 p.m . Feb. 17 in the Commons. The Presbyterian Campus Ministry is sponsoring a panel discussion on the Chal­ lenge topic, “ The Problem is People,” at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Union Building 300. the US envoy to the United Nations cau­ tioned newsmen af*er seeing Johnson. Nonetheless, Goldberg presumably will have his antenna out for any peace feelers during his journey, starting late this month, to Europe as well as Southeast Asia. In a separate development, the State De­ partm ent left open the possibility that the Viet Nam lunar new year cease-fire now getting under way might continue longer than the four-day period proposed by the allies the Communists do not reopen the fighting. if THE VIET CONG have proposed a seven- day truce, and departm ent press officer Robert J. McCloskey was asked what the US-South Vietnamese and allied forces would do if the Red guns were still silent after the allied cease-fire period expires Feb. 12. McCloskey declined to answer what he term ed “ a speculative question” on “ a rath er im portant m atter at this point. “ We’ll see what happens,” he said. “ I’m not making any categoric statem ents up or down on any possibilities.” Again, McCloskey affirmed US backing of the Saigon government’s offer to dis­ cuss a cease-fire extension with North Viet Nam. Hanoi has spurned this idea so far. MEANTIME, in a speech Tuesday night, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey de­ scribed the lunar new year truce as “ an extremely delicate and sensitive tim e” for Viet Nam com batants their thinking. to reassess But in his speech prepared for the Inter­ national Development Conference, Hum­ phrey gave no hint that there is in the making any imminent change in American policy. In fact, he said, “ I believe the cause of peace can be served if w’e patiently and perseveringly continue the course we have set for ourselves in Viet N am .” Clean-up Crack-down; A & M Has Now Ruled Its Bearded Lot Out Despite the current rage on many other college campuses, beards and shaggy hair are “out” and socks are “ in” at Texas A&M University. The Battalion, student newspaper, an­ nounced Tuesday that bearded, shaggy- haired, and sockless students must shave- or ship-out. off, clip-off, and sock-up The regulation, aimed prim arily at civilian students, was part of A&M’s semesterly re-emphasis on appropriate dress. Students can no longer clip-clop to class In shower shoes or parade their muscles in “ T” shirts and practice jerseys—unless they’re participating in athletic activities. The faculty and staff was even urged to dismiss from class any student inappro­ priately dressed. Girls at A&M have little to fear, how­ ever; the rules m ake no mention of dress standards for them. As Battalion editor, Winston Green, said, “ Girls can still wear their hair long.” Humphrey said he doesn’t believe peace will be served by public speculation on possible negotiations. But Senate Republican leader E verett M. Dirksen told a news conference: “ I do believe there is a little more than rum or to the effort to find some common ground for some negotiations.” DIRKSEN, who is kept closely In touch with Viet Nam developments by Johnson, said he is “ under solemn obligation” not to say any more. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., who Just returned from talks with European leaders, will give some concrete recom ­ mendations on Southeast Asian policy, touching on Viet Nam, in a Chicago speech Wednesday night, his aides said. But they added that he will avoid any fresh report on his European trip. Ken­ nedy, who has opposed any escalation in the war, denied Monday the reports that he had brought home peace feelers from Hanoi relayed by French officials in Paris. Dirksen, at his news conference, cam e up with some the speculation about peace talks that grew out of Kennedy’s journey. indirect criticism of “I HOPE we don’t develop 101 secre­ taries of sta te ,” he said in obvious refer­ ence the IOO senators and Secretary Dean Rusk. to Dirksen said touring senators often ap­ pear to regard themselves as potential sec­ retaries, adding: “This is an easy way to throw some of the procedures in the diplo­ m atic ash can.” Goldberg is one of Johnson’s special peace emissaries. During the 37-day bombing pause which grew out of the 1965 Christ­ m as year-end cease fire, he took the US 14-point peace plan to the Pope, and to Italian, French, and British leaders. BUT THE AMBASSADOR stressed Tues­ day that his forthcoming travels will be of a different sort. He had intended to under­ take tile trip late last year, but it was put off with the press of UN business and the eleventh-hour delays final agreem ent on the peace-in-space treaty. reaching in He told reporters at the White House that this tim e he will be going abroad on “ a fact-finding trip for the President — all political and economic developments.” All told, Goldberg is likely to stop at a dozen or more capitals, he said. He figured he would be gone three or four weeks. The exact itinerary is still being worked out. Round-Up Interviews Extended Until Friday Round-Up Committee interviews will be held Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday from 9 a.m . to noon and from 2 to 5 p.m. in Union Building 321. Interviewing will be extended through Friday because of Monday’s snow. Committee chairmen will select members for the tickets, program, fronts, and parade, western store publicity committees. Race Betting Wins Support By MARILYN KU EHI,ER C a p ito l S ta ff W r ite r in the Senate cham ber as The starting bell clanged at 9:53 p m . Tuesday the Counties, Cities, and Towns Committee voted 6-5 to clear for floor action a bill to legalize pari-mutuel horse race betting in Texas. Introduced by Sen. Jam es S. Bates of Edinburg the proposal m akes provision for taxing of tile regulation, horse racing and pari-mutuel wagering in tile state. licensing, and lf enacted into law. Senate Bill IO would create a three-man Texas Horse Racing Commission appointed by the governor with approval of the Senate to control the “who, what, when, and where” of Texas horse racing. STATE REVENUE would be based on the scale of 4 per cent of pari-mutuel pool money under $10 million; 5 per cent of total wagers made under $20 million; and 6 per cent of bets in excess of $20 million. In addition, county and incorporated cities In which a track is located would be al­ lowed to tax $100 per racing day and IO per cent on admission tickets. The bill would limit the number of racing days to 75 in counties with population more than 300,000, or when adjoining counties each have m ore than 150,000 population. track License for a race in any one county would be issued only after the pro­ position w as approved local option election called by 5 per cent of the number of voters who cast ballots for governor in that county in the preceding general elec­ tion, in a If the first petition In a county for a race track failed, under term s of the Bates proposal, the petition could be resubmitted after one year. THE BILL ALSO STATES that all em ­ ployes connected with the race track would be required to obtain annual licenses, and various offenses would be punished by fines and prison terms. In support of pari-mutuel betting. Rev. Jam es Episcopal W alter Campbell, St. to interfere with government, Church, Conroe, said “ If we, the church, expect it won’t be long before the government in­ terferes with the church.” He said he did not believe religion was a factor in the Issue and the decision should rest in a statewide referendum. “ The only thing that can prevent this hill’s passage is ignorance itself,” he said, describing the issue as basically economic, involving a $2 million industry. Judge Herman Jones, Austin district judge, presented strongest opposition to the bill. Citing Texas’ experience with horse racing during the 1930 s, Judge Jones said, “ Must we drag our people again through the m ire and filth of 30 years ago . . . par! mutuel betting is not a sport and will never be a sport.” ALFREDO VASQUEZ, accounting execu­ tive for D itm ar and Co. In San Antonio, opposed the bill on grounds that gambling had never been referred to as a lasting and creative source of revenue by econo­ mists, and would not bring solvency to Tex­ as. A telegram was read by the opposition from Dr. W. R. White, president em eritus of Baylor University, who commented “the average citizens will lose far beyond their ability to lose.” Tile Rev. Leonard Gallegos, pastor of Trinity Baptist Church a t El Paso, said that city would be a better place to live “ if there was no horse racing.” E l Paso draws trade from tourists en route to race tracks at Juarez, Mexico, and Ruidoso, N.M. Gallegos claimed people w ere “en­ slaved by horse racing, trying to make several dollars out of $1.” He cited case* of neglected families and people with poor credit ratings because of tim e spent it race tracks. Sen. Bates replied, “ A sorry husband is going to be a sorry husband whether there’s a race track or not.” COUNTERING OPPOSITION voiced about influence of horse racing on children, Sen. V. E . “ Red” B erry of San Antonio stated (See LEGISLATURE, Page IO.) Oh Yeah? . . . spectator remains firm as senators send betting bill out of committee. —Photo by St CUir Newbern 25,300 Expected Total For Spring Attendance Registration for courses at the University reached 24,346 on Monday, W. F. Wallace, assistant registrar and registration super­ visor, announced Tuesday. Wallace said that he expects 25,300 to have registered by the end of the late registration period a t 3:50 p.m. Thursday. Most of those registering late are grad­ uate students. Late registration m aterials can be obtained in the stairwell on the ground floor of the Main Building between 9:00 and 11:50 a.m. and 1:00 and 3:50 p.m. The last date for adding courses and changing sections is Thursday. Courses ran be added only with the aprpoval of the student’s adviser and the chairm an of the departm ent concerned. Sections can be changed with the approval of the depart­ ment chairman only. A student m ay drop a course without receiving a grade for the course any tim e before March 4, with the approval of his adviser, the dean, and the chairman of the department. A student may drop a course after March 4 if he has a C average and the approval of his adviser, the dean, and the chairm an of the department. A graduate student may drop a course at any time with the ap­ proval of his instructor, the graduate ad­ viser, and tbs Dean of the Graduate School. Needed: Professor O n Board of Regents Three vacancies were created on the University Board of Regents last month when the term s of W alter P. Bro nan, Dr. H F. Connallv Jr., and F ran k N. Ikard expired. ★ ★ ★ If it could be arranged, a member of the University faculty might not be a bad choice to fill one of these vacan­ cies. Such a person could be chosen by the Faculty Council or the General Faculty, and then be appointed to the post by the governor, who now makes all board appointments. ★ ★ ★ A faculty regent most certainly would be closely in touch with University problems. Since he probably would be little involved in the macro-political realm, it could be hoped th a t a faculty regent would bring to the position an insight and an outlook in dealing with University m at­ ters which would prove helpful to the whole Board. University Police Should Have Guns Shortly after Charles Joseph W hitm an started his killing spree at the University, two campus police were dispatched to the Tower. They were helpless in their ef­ forts to stop W hitman a t th a t time because they were not armed. ★ ★ ★ The “ if” element certainly looms large in this case. If these two guards had been armed, the Tower sniper may have been stopped sooner than he was. The reason these guards and other members of the University police were not armed was because the Texas Legislature did not provide them the authority to have guns, although the guards a t the State Capitol have th at right. ★ ★ ★ Tragedy can occur swiftly in the midst of such a large community. The campus reportedly is one of the few schools of this size th a t does not have armed guards. The U niversity is a community of 27,000, and another violent tragedy is not beyond possibility here. The Texan believes it would be in the best interests of the school for the Legislature to allow campus police to be armed. Growing Industry Texas gained 309 new industrial plants during 1966. This report by the Texas Industrial Commission shows th a t 18 fewer plants w ere added last y ear than in 1965, but It was more than th e 232 in 1964 and 296 in 1963. ★ ★ ★ Expansions of established plants totaled 437 in 1966, also below th e 1965 figure of 485 but well above the 404 In 1964 and 280 in 1963. TIC points out, also, th a t m anu­ facturing jobs created by new plants and by expansions In 1966 w ere a record high of 34,000, com pared with 25,400 In 1965. H oariest m anufacturing expansion continued in tile Big T hree— Houston, Dallas, and F o rt W orth metropoli­ ta n areas—which reported 112 new and 198 expanded plants. Dallas recorded 50 new plants and 46 expansions In its four-county area. ★ ★ ★ Texas continues to ran k among the top states in indus­ trial development, so greatly needed as job opportunities on farm s are reduced by mechanization and population grows a t the rate of 188,678 yearly. This industrial prog­ ress stem s from m any factors favorable tow ard industry, including a businesslike state adm inistration, low taxes, few work stoppages, expanding m arkets, geographic ad­ vantages. Able, aggressive work by Texas Industrial Com­ mission, in coordination with cham bers of commerce, has been invaluable. ★ ★ ★ Preservation of this favorable climate for business and for those industry' employes is essential to the continued grow th of Texas. In legislation at Austin, as in city and county adm inistration, such an atm osphere should be a forem ost consideration. —The Dallas News P E A N U T S . f : h e a r \ i AS An ' A2M ■ W&LWQMf-l — V v IT MAY INTEREST YOU TO k>40u3 That Ae pianists have VERY HIRONS FINGERS... DE Pia n is t s have t o uA t c h o u r F in g e r s Elsewhere: On Other Campuses The Southern Methodist University Student Senate has voted the controversial National Students' Asso­ ciation (NSA). lo join In a 15-6 vote last week, the SMU group decided to affiliate with NSA on a one-year trial basis. Entry into the organization had drawn opposition from the local chapter of Young Americans for Freedom. Tho controversy over the organization centered around its pro­ fessed opinions on such issues as Viet Nam and civil rights. In 1931, NSA strongly favored the civ ii rights bill and sympathized with the integration movement. In 1965, it adopt­ ed a critical but cautious policy tow’ards Viet Nam. In the spring of 1965, University of Texas students rejected entry into NSA, Heading the drive against joining was the Committee for Responsible Govern­ m e n t CORESGO), an ad hoc commit­ tee of UT Young Republicans, who re­ in a pub­ portedly spent over $1,500 licity campaign which resulted the in two-to-one rejection of NSA m em ber­ ship. * * * Coeds at Colorado S t a t e University have created a WAR committee. WAR stands for Women Are Respon­ sible. The new campus movement was organized to provide the upper-class col­ legiate woman with equal rights and responsibilities. Plans for attack are now being de­ veloped. ★ ★ ★ Believe it or not, a court battle Is being waged to keep a course at the University of Washington in Seattle. The course is English 390, "The Bible as L iterature." The biggest porn* of dispute in the differing case m ay be tions of the landmark School District of Abington v. Schempp case of 1963, which outlawed Bible reading an open school ceremony. in the interpreta­ Churches are authorized to sue and be sued by Washington law so the Rev. Thomas VV. Miller has filed suit with the Washington State Supreme Court. ★ ★ ★ The Interfraternity Council at the Un­ iversity of Tennessee in Knoxville re­ cently repealed a regulation which lim ­ ited the participation of fraternities in campus politics. The motion had barred fraternity men from organizing political parties to cam ­ paign for student government posts. Letters . . . To the Editor Readers are invited to write letters to the editor. Letters may be edited and spelling and gram m atical errors correct­ ed. Contributors should: • Triple space lines and type. • Limit letters to 125 words. • Include name, address, and phone number. • Avoid direct personal attacks. I«eave letters in Journalism Budding 103 with the editor, managing editor, or the editorial page editor, or mail them to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan. Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Texas 78712. Job Opportunities The following achoo!* will be n our office* to In­ lh# com ing school ie*ch e s for terview pro*D«ct;\e y ea r H olston Ind. Bch l i s t : McClure, M cN eeie, W ails Houston, Feb 13, 14 15 San Anton o Ind. 8 a . L est. Morgan C. IVhee.er, San Antonio. Feb IV T h o-e these achoo',*, p ea ^ e con tact our offices for appointm ents Interview ing with interested In W esley O Bov net. d irector of personnel for the in Glenbrook High School*, G lenview , 111., will be our offices W ednesday to tnterv aw prospective tea ti­ er* te a r . Those nterested should c o n ta c t our offices for appointment* t i e com ing school f rector a . c . Murphy, T each er Flar-ement Sutton Hall ZOU OK 1-3552. GR I SSM serv ice lib e r a l Arts Arm * Air Force e x c h a n g e S e n .c e : Feb. IO; frta’iagem en t Good, retail, personae A a c c t >, ar­ chitectural engineering, data p rocessin g, any m a ­ jor *6 000, US in adm inistration, Central Intel!,gene# A gen cy; Feb. 13-16 ea -eer tr* nee program in telligence, and list * .en' fie and of a a d ec e m ajor* po ted on the graduate piace- m<---1 der* a d u a te t who have serv e Sn,000-$1I .OGG Wa shi ng ton A abroad. technical d evelopm ents: refer to ,n graduate program A un­ board; students their m ilitary com p leted research research analyst* & cryptography; Na ona S ecu rity A g en cy . Feb 14*15: program m ing, and d evelopm ents guage studies arts m ajors woo have passed Q ualifying Test. Qualifying exam not required met", degree* > i W ashington, B f technical com m une a io n s . lan­ translation, m anagem ent liberal the P rofessional for i for BA eng nee ng m ajors area pi,050 end Mea th, ed u cation , A W elfare Feb 14-15; pro­ Jour­ Ii - sto ry , m ath , biology, public adm nisfra- re p re s e n ta tiv e V. c o n tro l; Engiisn e< roomies, zoology, speech, humant- gram nal ism i on, t e x , health. ll,0 3 4 ; Lf- U tters! Arts Career Placem ent H est Mail Office Building to t Git I 5WSI Drugs on Campus B y John Economidy Texan Editor Tile use of drugs, from m any indica­ tions, appears to be increasing in the University community. Tlie Texan learned Monday that the il­ legal use of drugs on several college campuses in the state is being investi­ gated by undercover agents of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Agent requested the Texan, Last fall, a local informed law enforcement official has the FDA was asked to send an undercover agent to Austin to attem pt to knock out illegal drug traffic in the University area. The federal agency was said to have declined the request because it felt the problem did not require such action at that time. It that is known these undercover agents could come into a college com­ m unity quite easily. Said one official in Austin: " T h e s e boy's they’ve got can J i t in perfectly with those characters (toe users of drugs).” At this time, it can cnly be speculated w hether FDA has an undercover agent in this area. Some University students undeniably use drugs, but not on the scale suggested by Dr. Timothy Leary, the Harvard Uni­ versity professor who was dismissed from his experiments with hallucinatory drugs. Leary had told a Senate hearing that one out of three college students is experimenting with USD and other drugs. LSO (lysergic acid diethylamide) does not appear to be the most popular drug on campus, although some sparse use of it is suspected. Tile most popular drug being used illegally in the community is am phetam ines, which students use m ain­ ly to stay awake in order to study. They are relatively easy to obtain. Risk involved M arijuana and peyote are much more popular than LSD, mainly because more risks are apparent with the latter drug. The illegal use of drugs is not con­ fined to the so-called beat crowd. All campus social groups use am pheta­ mines. The use of "heavier” drugs, how­ ever, reportedly has now extended to some law students, fraternity dwellers, and students who can afford living in some of the better apartm ent houses. The drug traffic in the campus com­ munity seemingly is not the work of a central organization, rather drugs are illegally distributed through tightly-knit groups on a cooperative-type basis. Under this system, one person receives money from friends to buy drugs, main- Iv m arijuana and LSD from such places as Mexico, herder towns, and Houston. The drugs are distributed to the parti­ cipants in the "pool” after the pickup m an returns to Austin. taken LED c aland Taking of Illegal drugs reportedly is not an everyday affair. Persons who have ‘ acid­ heads’’ usually do not take "trip s" more frequently than once a month. Similarly, use of m arijuana and peyote is confined to weekends by most student users. for There pie several reasons that this limited use: © Tile price of prohibits usage by students. immodest the drugs frequent • T h e physical and mental s t a t e produced on users by some drugs can interfere with aca­ demic and other ac­ tivities. iV C O iluiiU UV Reports of going prices for drugs vary, but the most prevalent price seems to be $5 per small matchbox of m arijuana and $5 for LSD on each sugar cube, as it is taken. Position of I T Tile m ere fact that drugs are being illegally used has not g ne without no­ tice. The standard position of University officials is that th re is not a drug prob­ lem as such on campus. Indeed, it prob­ ably would be difficult to prove just how widespread drugs are being used illegal­ ly in the University community. Local law enforcement authorities can be assumed to be aw are c f the situation. Drug traffic, including addictatory drugs, however, is reportedly m ore concentrat­ ed in E ast Austin than in the University community. This does not mean that users in the University community are beyond su r­ veillance. Stakeouts on living units are known to have been used, although with m arginal success. Illegal use of drugs has been much more a controversy a t campuses other than the University's. However, this ses­ sion of the Texas Legislature may ex­ amine a proposed m easure to outlaw USD. Political action Tlie widespread publicity involved in this controversial topic might well pro­ vide a political push for law enforcement officials throughout the state to intensify their activities against those college stu­ dents who illegally use drugs. • r t Seminar Views U l t y J7" r • B y C lif Drummond Students’ Association President Students across the United States have become increasingly concerned with the problems and choices that confront their colleges and universities. Many students question the purpose and methods to which some of these institutions subscribe. Alternatives are being presented, often vociferously, dur­ ing conferences, demonstrations, and late night bull sessions. But until now, the s t u d e n t has too often been no more than a passive m e­ chanical f a c t o r which is ground into for the statistics classroom figuring seating space and required parking fa­ cilities. Drumnioiul Many persons, of course, argue that the student cannot be an active, con­ tributing participant in the policy m ak­ ing process. It is said that students do not sufficiently understand the problems they wish to help solve, and that stu­ dents’ suggestions and demands stem from a lack of knowledge and informa­ tion concerning the modern university. Clear idea The enthusiasm and interest of stu­ dents is not lacking. Students may have a d e a r idea of what they wish done, but in a firm er and more extensive conception of what has been done in the past. to be grounded this needs A hotter grasp is often needed of the practicalities of a situation and of the steps which m ust be taken to achieve desired ends. One method of providing students with such information is through a sem inar surveying the problems of today’s uni­ versity, Such a seminar-type group is, in fact, now beginning its second se­ mester. The sem inar is jointly sponsored by the Students’ Association, the Hogg Foundation, and the University adm in­ istration. It includes participants from a wide range of academ ic disciplines. It first began meeting last sem ester and has since considered such topics as the evaluation of teaching and of aca­ demic courses, tho factors relating to the Berkeley crisis, scholastic probation regulations, functions of the proper deans of student life, altitude toward th® Health Center, the University Co-Op, and many more. Spring topics This s e m e s t e r , dis ■ fissions are ex­ into enrollment pected recent decisions policies, of the Board of Regents, housing prob­ lems, and other sim ilar topics. to dig further registration, It is hoped that this sem inar can be the forerunner of a continuing series of exchanges between the students and the decision-making machinery on this cam ­ pus. Its progress is being c l o s e l y watched by student groups and admin­ istrators around tile state and across requests have the nation. Numerous been received for further information about the sem inar. But this effort can only be successful if enough students are willing to take part in it. Tile seminar will meet from 2:30 to 5 p m. each Tuesday. Hie co­ ordinator of the seminar is Dr. Thomas of Friedm an, educational .students might psychology, show up at West Mall Office Building 202 this Tuesday, and discover more of what is happening. professor Interested ». . . K«*p the faith, Bobby T” Opinion* exp ressed by th# eartoorilet are not n ecessarily those of th# Texan. War Alternatives By Dr. David V. Edwards Assistant Professor of Government (Second of Two Collun na) At present, the United States is for all practical purposes at war with the regime in North Viet Nam, and it would be foolish for us to deceive ourselves on this point. But this war has devel­ oped largely out of our own policies, and might be least deescalated largely by our own initia­ tives. term inated or at NLF analyzed North Viet Nam has increasingly as­ sisted the guerrilla activities of the na­ increasingly Communist tionalist and political and m ilitary opposition in South Viet Nam (the N a t i o n a l Liberation Front Viet Cong). Such aid has re­ sembled that which the United States and other countries have long given in­ surgents whom they supported. North Viet Nam has also provided f'T ' ^ 1 regular troops to fight in the South prim arily after the United States began steadily bombing N o r t h Viet Nam first on the pretext for of r e p r i s a l guerrilla bombing of our air base at Pleiku. in a then abortive generally effort the flow of supplies to the South, and now as a way of hurting the North enough to force it to the con­ ference table as the purported control­ ler of the rebels in the South—a role which reputable students of the Viet Cong and of Viet Nam do not believe North Viet Nam actually plays or ever has played. Dr. Edwards to slow While no one would dispute that our bombing hurts the North, no one can dispute that it has not achieved any of three successively purported pur­ its poses. And it hurts, it does, because decrease the ability of North Viet Nam resist domination by Communist to China—something much long- range interests, I have argued. in our In any event, our bombing of the North does not appear to be contribu­ ting Indeed, victory in the South looks as far away —as impossible—as ever. the South. to victory in Such victory would entail coping with three groups of adversaries: the North Vietnamese, who m ust be expelled; the Viet Cong, who must be enticed to cease opposition and return to civil society; and the citizens (mainly peasants), who must be encouraged to offer their al­ legiance to the central regime in Sai­ gon rather than to the rebels. The loyalty of the citizenry is the fore­ most problem—and the problem with which we are least successfully coping. Our program is one of ‘‘pacification’’ —of increasing the peasantry’s security and of giving it good reason to appre­ ciate the Saigon regime. Our only hope But we are still unable to secure much of the countryside, and we have not succeeded in bringing about the land reform w'hich must be achieved to offer any hope of interesting the peasantry in the Saigon government. And few of those on the scene believe that we shall succeed—at least as long as we must simultaneously fight a guerrilla war the Viet Cong and a conven­ against tional w ar against the North Vietnamese regular forces. The only hope—and we would likely be deceiving ourselves if we anticipated much from it—is political reform with­ in the South which would both for ’he time allow dissent within and first around the Saigon government and hence r e f o r m perhaps encourage greater through greater representation of peas­ ant the National Liberation Front back into politics in­ stead of war. interests and entice But because General Ky’s regim e has (understandably) shown no interest in allowing such reform, it would require the continued American meddling present constitutional convention and then in the elections to follow it. in And that meddling would have to be directed toward establishing a virtual coalition government including the NLF in Saigon. This must be a distasteful prospect—if only because our experience with such coalitions is uniformly bad. But the alternative is, I submit, worse. The worst consequence of coalition in Saigon would be eventual amalgamation of North and South into a unified—but at least anti-Chinese — Communist na­ tion. N a t u r e o f w a r is repugnant not only Hie alternative appears to everyone from the President on down to be a continuing war like the present—but a w ar gradually escalating and lasting into the 1970s. Tliis wrar to most of our allies—who notably refuse to participate in it—and almost all of the "third w'orld," but also to increas­ ing segments of the American people. It already costs us considerable life and term ed most of the “W ar on Poverty,” and its cost can only increase day by day. the social legislation It is quite true and clear that the poli­ cies I suggest — deescalation of the bombing in the North, a m ilitary hold­ ing operation in the South coupled with efforts to achieve m ajor land reforms, and a coalition government in Saigon— would be costly. But they seem to offer some hope of eventual extrication for tho United States and of stability for the area. And the costs of indefinite con­ tinuation of our present policy seem much greater. Crucial problem*! For while we are so engaged in Viet Nam, we will be unable to meet satis­ factorily possible m ilitary engagements in Europe or elsewhere in Asia. And equally important our attention, our en­ ergies, our wealth, and our human con­ cern are being diverted from the m ajor crucial problems of peace in the world and welfare in the nation. One who loves his country can only grieve at the costs of the prognosis for its venture in Viet Nam. And for one who loves Viet Nam neither our grief nor our war could be enough. | Point of V iew ” does not n ecessarily represent Texan editorial policy. Contributions a te w elcom e but m ust be typed on a 60-cha racier t r pie- spaced. HF 93 lines only in order to fit In the space available > lire. Official N ot i ce s (rom Notirpx the U niversity lib r a r y or anv of It* branches are official U niversity com m unications requiring im m ediate attention. Students who fall to resiiond to Library notices wi I be referred lo the Office of the Dean of Student Life A Moffit. L ib e r ia n T i spr i g enrollm ent sessions the R eading ll. I eh 13 and Im provem ent Progisrn w,;l be held is required for Attendance at one of these session* enrollm ent, which is determ ined on a “ first com e. first-served’’ basis. Additional Information about our c o u p e s is available in West Mall O ffice Building 409 for T h e Da il y T e x a n T h e D aily T e x an , a stu d e n t n e w sp a p e r a t T h# U aiv er- •sty of T e x a s 1s p u b lish ed d a lly ex cep t M onday and S a tu r ­ th ro u g h May an d d a y an d h o lid ay period* S e p tem b er M o n th ly Inc.. D ra w e r D. U n iv e rsity S ta tio n . A u stin . T e x a s 78712. Sec* o n d -cias* p o sta g e paid a t A u stin . T ex as .S tudent P u b lic a tio n s. lo A u g u st by T e x a s (sew * c o n trib u tio n s w ill be acce p te d by telep h o n e ((JR 1-9244) or a t th * ed itorial o ffice J,B 103 o r a t th e new s la b o r a t o r y , J B 102 In q u irie s c o n c e rn in g d e liv ery sh o u ld be m ade ta J E 107 (G R 1-5244) an d a d v e rtis in g J B 111 (G II 1-3227 J A S S O C IA T E D ^RESS W IK * SERVICE T he A ssociated P ress the to use tor rep u b ln ation of a1! news dispatches c re d ite d It or not otherw ise credited this newspaper and local item * of spontaneous origin published herein R igh t! of publication o f ail other m atter herein also reserved. is ex clu siv ely entitled to In N A T I O N A L I DI < A D O N AI. A ll V K R T I S I N G S K K V I C H * represented Batlon*lls Ut the field et a*. rh * P alls T e s u * erasing hr the M AH. is O n e Sem ester (fall or spring) T a * S em esters (fa ll and spring) D elivered by carrier iw itb ia Austin area from lit h to 38th and Jefferson t o Interregional H ighway J b r ------- w ithin T ravis County D e li v e r e d by m ail outside Travis County bot w ithin I S 83.54 4 3* I M 86 18 8.48 6.58 The opinions expressed In the editorial colum n arn those of the editor. Ail ed itorials u n less signed are w ritten b y t h e e d i t o r Guest editorial view s are not n ecessarily the editor's. Any opinions expressed In The D aily Texan a re not those o f The U niversity of T exas ad m in is­ necessarily tration or Board of R egents P ER M A N E N T STAFF EDITOR ................................ J O H N E C O N O M ID Y M A N A G IN G EDITOR ............ C A R O L Y N N IC H O L S ASST. M A N A G IN G E D IT O R LELA A B E R N A T H Y N E W S E D IT O R ..................................... ED B A R R ER A SPORTS EDITOR ................... LA RR Y U P S H A W A M U S E M E N T S EDITOR ............... RENEE F E N D R IC H M A R Y M O R P H IS FEATURE EDITOR STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Issue News Editor Make-Up Editor Nancy Peterson Pam Baqgett C opy Editors ................ Anne Maria Veritegen, James Hollas, J o a n Ubico Issue Sports Editor . l a i t y Mayo Issue Amusements Editor ........ Peggy MatchHta Editorial Page Assistant ............................................... Bill Kidd Page 2 Wednesday, February 8, 1967 THE D A ILY TEXAN « Foreign Students Speak on Education » * > ''* ■ New Year Truce Foreign students attending th# University spoke on “ Interna­ tional Education’’ at a meeting of the Student Education Asso­ ciation Tuesday night in th e In ion Building Junior Ballroom. Each student discussed educa­ tion in his own country. David Holdsworth, classics major from Canada, compared Hie educational system in his country with that in the United States and Britain. He said that universities in Canada are simi­ lar to the University except for use of the British style seminar system. Holdsworth stated that the “ Grade 13,’’ a pre-college, post-high school transition year, is being replaced by a communi­ ty college system on the order of the University of California. GERM AN STUDEN T Gunther Schulz emphasized that his coun­ try has only in the last few years begun to realize the need for im­ proving its educational system. More than half of the students leave school after eight years, Schulz noted. He stated that the biggest prob­ lem facing German education is the series of exams that are re­ quired to pass to the next phase of education. Th:s, he said, “ keeps the number of college graduates below the level needed in our society.” MUSALLAM SCHUMAN, un­ dergraduate in engineering from Saudi Arabia, told of the growth of public education in his coun­ try. Saudi Arabia, a country devoid of an educational system in 1926, has grown into a guaranteed sys­ tem of free public education. The state pays all expenses for edu­ cation even at die university level, providing books, tuition, a liberal living allowance, and a free trip home every summer for its students studying in foreign lands. Rostam Kavdussi from Iran saw improved roads as the key to better education in his coun­ try. While education in the cities is progressing well, inhabitants of villages often get no educa­ tion. He told of a newly es1 ab­ ashed “ Literacy Corps” which drafts college graduates to teach in outlying districts. GUATEM ALAN STUDENT Al­ fredo Rego Ramirez stated that the university system in his country places great emphasis on applied learning rather than pure science courses. A student interested in learning mathemati­ cal theory must take a full course in engineering to get his degree, or study, as many do, in a for­ eign country. Student Education Association members will also take part in a book drive to provide books for the Montopolis Community Cen­ ter and the Carver Branch L i­ brary. They will have collection boxes up during the week of Feb. 13-18 for donations. US Forces Suffer Light Casualties By The Associated Pre## Tile Viet Cong opened SAIGON fire twice Wednesday on US para­ trooper patrols within two hours after the lunar new year truce went into effect, a US spokesman reported. Tile spokesman said one Viet Cong was wounded and captured incident and the In the first American unit took light casual­ ties in the second. There were no other reports of shooting during the first five hours of the four-day truce, pro­ claimed by the South Vietnamese government, which took effect at 7 a.m. Saigon time—6 p.m. EST Tuesday. Tile Viet Cong pro­ claimed a seven-day cease-fire for the new year holiday known as Tet. H ie spokesman said both US units that were fired on were from the First Brigade of the 101st Airborne Division and both wore on “ defensive patrol.” The start of the truce, which Included suspension of US bomb­ ing of North Viet Nam, brought speculation that it might lead to an extension and positive steps toward ending the war. A query on whether hostilities might remain abated beyond Sunday morning drew from a State Department spokesman in Washington, Robert J. McClosk- ey, the remark: “ We w ill see what happens.” The United man is coming! The United man is coming! Ar# you ready? He’ll want to know all a b o u t y o u ...to se# lf y o u ’ll qualify f o r a job w ith U n ite d A ir L in e s (world's largest!) He’s got lots of p o sitio n s—from en gin eerin g to stew ard essin g. See him! C all your Placem ent Office for an appointm ent UNITED AIR LINES AH IO U A l O P P O R T U N i r r ^ ^ H C M P lO Y Ift M A I1 S H B I Campus Interviews— Mon., Tues., W ed. February 13, 14, 15 en* Pharmacy Fraternity Plans Symposium on Drug Abuse “ Drug Abuse on Campus” will be the theme of a symposium lo be beld at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Main Ballroom of the Un­ ion Building. Robert Patterson, president cf the sponsoring University chap­ ter of Phi Delta Chi, a national professional pharmacy fraternity, said, “ The purpose of the semi­ nar Is to put the problem in perspective for student#, so that they can confront it with facts if the need arises. It is not our intention to preach to the stu­ dent.” Experts In the fields of drug use and abuse will participate in a panel moderated by Dr. William J . Sheffield, associate professor of pharmacy at the University. Panel members will be Robert N. Hinds, director of the Bureau of Drug Abuse Control; Dr. Rob­ ert G. Brown, associate profes­ sor of pharmacology at the Uni­ versity; Dr. Paul White, director of the University Health Center; Dr. Delbert D. Th lessen, assis­ tant professor of psychology at the University; and Dr. William R. Arnold, assistant professor of sociology. Ash Wednesday Rites To Be Observed Today will be held at 10:30 a.m. and! 7:30 p.m. Tile First Methodist Church will I have a Lenten service from 12:05 to 12:30 after which a meal will I be served. First Presbyterian j Church and Windsor Park Pres­ byterian Church will hold a joint service at Windsor Park Church at 7:,*H) p.m., which includes Com­ munion and meditation. Tile Lutheran Campus Ministry w ill hold an Ash Wednesday Com­ munion Service from 5:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. A question and answer period will follow the planned presen­ tation. The symposium will be discussion of which drugs can abuse the central nervous system and their clinical use. AJ B S b E B S H m, STUDY IN SOUTHERN FRANCE A Unlvarsity yeer in Aix-w-Provcnc# under th* auspice* of the University of Aix-Mee H illt (founded 1409). EUROPEAN AREA STUDIES FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE HONORS PROGRAM fcourtet in French University exctuelveM ART AND ART HISTORY SOCIAL SCIENCES MEDITERRANEAN AREA STUDIES Clame In English ami French satisfying curriculum and credit requirement* of over 280 American Collages and Univtrsities. Students live in French homes. Total costa •quivalent to those at private universities and colleges In the United States. “SEMESTER PROGRAM IN AVIGNON** “SUMMER PROGRAM IN AIX-EN-PROVENCE” W rit*: INSTITUTE PON AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES (founded 1957) t bit, rue d u Bon P a a te u r AIX EN PROVINCE. FRANCE T elephone: F rence (Code 91) 27.82.28 or (Code 91) 27.69 01 I Ash Wednesday, the first day of the Lenten season, has long been observed by Catholic and Protestant Churches. The ceremonies of Ash Wednes­ day originated in the early church from descriptions in the Old Tes­ tament of sinners wearing peni­ tential garbs of sackcloth and be­ ing sprinkled with ashes as a sign of humility. From this, the Catholic Church began the cere­ mony of placing palm leaf ashes on the forehead in the form of a cross. The ashes are worn throughout the day as a reminder that men are made of dust and shall re­ turn to dust. Tins ceremony was derived from the custom of pub­ lic penance sanctioned in 1191 by Pope Celestine III. EN G LISH R EFO R M ceremon­ ies no longer used ashes, but designated Ash Wednesday as the first day of 40 days of fasting. Later, women of the Queen E li­ zabeth I reign began the custom of wearing mourning clothes dur­ ing the Lenten season. Modem trends Include the use of ashes in the Catholic Church services, but most Protestant churches observe the day with communion. Various University area church­ es will hold Ash Wednesday serv­ ices Wednesday. At the Catholic Student Center, Lenten masses will be said at noon, 4:05 p.m., and 5:05 p.m. All Saints Episco­ pal Church w ill have Imposition of Ashes and Communion at 7 a m. Also, Communion services riHrimrlv.r,T^ Suit Up For P.E. Classes at the C o -O p ... ORANGE $1.29 G ym Trunks $1.79 white Sweatshirts $1.99 Hanes " T " Shirts 3 f o r $2.95 I ii Athletic Socks Supporters Swim Caps Hand Ball Gloves Tennis Rackets Tennis Balls G olf Balls and Clubs Badminton Rackets Shuttlecocks Arrows And Save Your Receipts For Cash Dividends. u N E R 8 I i H I H rn Ii i ii 'It's Like This' . . . C lit Drummond presents new proposal to Assembly. Photo by St. Clair Newbern Assembly . . . 790. New security procedures have been to ease budget problems arising from pil­ fering in the Union complex. instituted Although the problem Is not of large proportion, seven levels of master key assignments and new locks have been installed to cor­ rect this present problem and prevent further difficulty. (Continued from page I.) legislators are willing to present the bill. According to Drum­ mond, the legislature will prob­ ably try every other means pos­ sible to raise revenue before re­ sorting to a tuition hike. It was further reported that 15 Chileans have arrived at the Uni­ versity for a 40-day stay. Drum­ mond said that the Chileans wish to negotiate a contract whereby the international exchange pro­ gram would be a student-run project. The Chileans showed dis­ satisfaction with selection, con­ tent, and approach of the pro­ gram. DRUMMOND MADE a propos­ al that the date for the general elections be changed from the third Wednesday of March to April 26. According to Drummond this change would eliminate a lame duck session. Tile new date would not conflict with any Uni­ versity activities. The Assembly w ill vote on the proposal Feb. 16. The budget report showed an lncome-expense balance of $5,- Your Co-Op Has Everything To Supply ENGINEERS: ARCHITECTS: T-Squares Triangles Latest M odel ART STUDENTS: TODAY, WEDNESDAY, IS THE LAST DAY Y O U MAY HAVE THE CO-OP D E L I V E R ART SUPPLIES TO THE ART BUILD- ING. THERE IS NO CHARGE AND YOU GET Y O U R DIVI­ DEND. CRUMBACHER • LIQUITEX • PERMANENT PIGMENTS • SHIVA RIEFLER R8a-p DRAWING SET Durable Polished Chrome AT YOUR CO OP Reg. 24.95 $1095 I i Ij if | | ! ii ; ;; M • i|| ii I I H I I Pencils & Leads Rapidographs Architect’s Scale PLUS YOUR REGULAR CO-OP CASH DIVIDEND u N E R f i OILS TEMPERA CASEIN PASTELS WATER COLOR BRUSHES ACRYLIC NEWSPRINT PORTFOLIOS INKS ART SUPPLY STREET FLOOR THE S T U D E N T S O W N ST ORF ENGINEERING STREET FLOOR (Mam**'**# ,i,, .VWWWA* . .jfc Wednesday, February 8, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 Y lo I 0 THE S T U D E N T S O W N S TORE rn:' r—: — -r 4 * '— ** n r r r * Feathers Fly, 81-73 By LAURY UPSHAW Texan Sports Editor The Texas L o n g h o r n s killed a squad of birds with some accurate stones Tues­ the day night, whomping Rice Owls, 81-73, in Gregory Gym. Before the game, Texas coach Harold Bradley feared the Ricebird shooting prow­ ess, for they lead the con­ ference in field goal percent­ age, with a 46.7 average. And Hie Owls improved on this mean, hitting 47.3. Bl T IAIN(>HORN stone throw­ ing proved a yardstick better, as the Steers hooped a remarkable 617 per cent and thus buried Rice. The ’Horns showed no preju­ dice toward the field position of their projectiles. Guard Mike Gammon launched bomb after bomb from far outside, and hit seven of IO, while forward Charley Turnbough hit near perfection in­ side with seven of eight. Turnbough led the cattle drive with 17 points and Gammon tal­ lied 15. Billy Arnold displayed the hottest hand af the free throw line, popping eight of nine to ac­ company for 16 marker*. fielders four Leading scorer Noel Stout hit only two charities in the first half, but popped eleven points in the second stanza for 13 to­ tal. RH ERIK!) Mike Inse’mann tal­ lied 17 points hefore fouling out with 1:18 to play in the game. and post man Marty Ivey added 16 points for the Owls. “ They have some good shoot­ ers.” Bradley exclaimed, “ and if you give them daylight they will hit. “ But they ran a zone against us and we work well against it. Our boys have the patience to work and take the good shots.’’ At times, the Steers didn’t need to work for a “ good” shot. They w?ould throw it up. and sure enough, it would drop correctly. ABOLT the improving Gam­ mon, Bradley noted, “ Before, he might start off doing one thing poorly, and his entire game would be off. Its like golf, if you can t putt, you can't do any­ thing right.” Although they outshot Rice throughout the contest, the Steers didn't have the game sacked un­ til just 41 seconds remained. Leading by three points, 76-73, Turnbough got the ball out of b unds following a Rice bucket. The Owls then went into the full court press, a maneuver that Bradley anticipated and had worked against the preceding week. Everyone was covered, and Turnbough alertly called a time out In a sweat-soaked huddle, Bradley moved his big boys to­ ward the Texas basket, and put guards Larry Smith, Gammon, and Stout in position to get the ball. AND BR ADLEY exhorted to his charges, “ Don’t even take any six-foot shots. Play for the layups.” He correctly anticipated that Rice would leave the basket and g< for the ball. The nimble Smith drove the lane and shoveled the ball underneath to Turnbough, who promtply canned it for a 78-73 lead and some orange and white insurance. After leading 2-0 on a two-foot followup shot by center Bill Doty, the Owls didn't hold the edge again until Doty popped another two-footer midway in the first half to put Rice ahead, 15-14. Then shorties by Turnbough, Stout, and Gary Overbeck, plus Gammon rockets, produced an aura of sameness, and the game was tied five times in the last six minutes of the period, lire half ended tied, 39-39. TEXAS kept up the same pace in the second half, but Rice would not allow a runaway. The Owls returned on the wings of Doty and Inselmann poppers to trail by two points, 54-52, and by one, 61 60. The lead stayed between one and three markers until Rice’s press errors resulted in the Turnbough lay in. Stout added a lavup on the fast break and the first part of a one-and-one free throw opportun­ ity and the Longhorns returned t< the winner’s circle with a 4-3 conference skein. The loss dropped Rice to 3-4 in league play. Box Store T e v a s I if Kl To Blea 3 3 Stout O 'b r i k 3 4 A mold Gtmmim 7 0 It: aw n 7 T'boujth Smith 2 I s 7 M in e r 4 « 13 Iv#*' 7 linty I IR lis e lm a n n 8 15 Rule I 2 tvi i lam s I IT Stockton 3 4 Hi; tie oak 0 J 7 I 8 I f 0 Total .. st Total F t To 3 l l 4 IS 4 It 17 3 4 s Q 2 2 ii (J it 73 Billy Arnold Drives For Basket R ices M :ke Insqlmann sprawl in attempt to cut off Longhorn. Frosh Pluck Owls To Even M ark,4-4 The hot hand of Craig Rath- mann led the Texas Yearlings to an 81-70 win over tile Rice Owlets Tuesday night in Gregory Gym leaving their record at 4-4 for tile year. Rathmann hit an even 50 per cent (IO of 20) from the floor and added three free throws for his 23 points. In addi­ tion, the lanky freshman yanked l l rebounds from the boards. Game honors went, however, to Rice's Don Sturr, whose 24 points bettered his 19.4 per game aver­ age. The game was a teeter-totter affair with one team taking the lead and then losing it with cold shooting and errant passes. Guard Mike Tcnnison, who had 22 points, gave the Texas fresh­ men an early 3-0 lead with a field goal and foul shot, but Rice came storming back taking advantage of their height to score in close. After several exchanges of the lead, the Owlets went ahead 42- 30 near the end of the first half. Enter full court press and eight straight points which led to a 42 45 orange guy half time lead. THE SEC ONI) H ALF was a reasonable facsimile of the first with the “ you take it—no. you take it” theme. During a Texas cold speak, Rice squared things at 53-53 only to have Steer Wayne Doyal pop one to regain the lead. The Birds came back with a 58-57 lead which the ’Horn fresh­ men promptly took back (for good this time). With five minutes remaining. Texas went into a stall w'hile the frantic Fowls fouled. Unfortun­ ately for Rice, free throws were not a Yearling weak point as they canned 13 of 18 to increase their lead. Rice, on the other hand, missed a golden opportunity from the charity line by muffing 14 of 30 charity tosses. Tile Owlets led in field goal percentage 46.6 to 44.7 per cent and rebounds 50 to 42. The University and Texas A&M were the first primary institu­ tions of higher education in Tex­ as. Each operates as a “ system” which includes a number of units, and under a board of regents, or directors, appointed by the gov­ ernor. PSYCHO PSYCHO P S Y C H O PSYCHO PSYCHOTHERAPY: Art or Science? A probing article on the nature of psychotherapy by Shirley W ard , just one of the many exciting fea­ tures in this month's TES. Pick up your complimentary issue T O D A Y at one of the locations listed to the left. He's A Licensed Pilot W a tc h in g Ralph fly through th® pages of a book, you can't believe that he's actually reading. He SENATE LEADERS PRAISE READING DYNAMICS. must be skimming. But he's not. Ralph Frey can read the average novel in a little under 40 m in u tes. Once, while standing in a book­ store. he read three complete novels before he was asked to leave. He STUD!FS between I 500 to ? OOO words a min­ ute, and rarely dips below I OOO wpm, even on ♦he toughest material. Most s:anificant!y, however, is that he can compre­ hend end recall what he's read-• right down to the details. Ralph Frev Is not a mental freak Nor was he "bom" a fast reader. He learned this revolution­ ary technique of rapid reading at the Evelyn Wood Readir.q Dynamics Institute. He is one of more than 2*0 000 r-aduates, 2,000 of whom are from the Austin area. fxtph was one cf our better students. He started tb^ fours* at n^out 400 words a minute. He increa­ sed his ratp 8 times. Our average student benin* at about SOO words a minute and nraduates read­ ing over I 500 words a minute, with a comprehen­ sion improvement of 12%! YOU CAN DO THIS, TOO! "Reading dynamically." says Ralph, "means that I can cover beth the reauired and the suggested reading for a course during the first month of the semester. That leaves time for more extracurricular activities. On the weekend before on exam, I ve actually reread several complete texts." You may not learn te read quite as fast as Ra'ob Frey (and then again you might!), but the nation­ ally known Reading Dynamics Institute guarantees that you'll at least triple your reading efficiency. Just to show you that Ralph Frey is not unique, here are some comments of several graduates. SENATOR TALMADGE, Georgia, ". . . the greatest single step which we could take in educational pro­ gress. It would be worth a million dollar a p p e ll­ ation." SENATOR PROXMIRE, Wisconsin, . . one of the most useful educational experiences I have ever had. It certainly compares favorably with my experiences at Yale and Harvard. " TIME MAGAZINE SAYS: "Washington has seen nothing like it since the days when Teddy Roose­ velt read 3 becks a day and ran the country at the same time." W H A T AUSTIN GRADUATES SAY UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR, "Taking this course has been a remarkable experience . . . for one learns to see, and perhaps, even to think more carefully." UT EX, PRO FOOTBAll STAR, "I now have no hes­ itation in picking uo a book, no matter what the length . . . . I would recommend this to anyone." NEWSPAPER PUBLISHER, "A most valuable tool that should be added to every busy person's schedule of of techniques for gathering information." HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT, "This course Is fantastic even though I was skentical at first. Already my American Problems grade jumped from a 78 to 98 I am sure that this will be average in one term of greatest help next year in college." COMPLETE READING IMPROVEMENT COURSE Even though Reading Dynamics students do achieve extraordinary reading speeds, much emphasis is p'aced en building comprehension and retention, as well as developing highly effective study tech­ niques. ACHIEVEMENT WARRANTY: ^ I'*' W * qua.o-.tee to Incrtes# th# reading e fficie n cy a f each S T U D E N T A T L EA ST 3 T IM E S Th.* g u aran tee o n l y upon th * stud ent'* o ffending 1* cand itianed e lf c is tic * , or m o k . n g up missed sessions, o n d fol- low e g m i n i m u m c l a s s assignments. A n y stud ent w h o must w ithdraw ftc m the course, for a n y reason, m a y re-enter fu ture classes a t no a d d itio n a l cast. Attend a Free Demonstration FOR UT STUDENTS AND STAFF WEDNESDAY, FEB. 8 THURSDAY, FEB. 9 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Cambridge Tower, 19th at Lavaca TES Available in the following Buildings: BSB Benedict Biology Chemical Eng. Chemiatry Fog veering Labs Fog. Science Experi. Science G eology Journalism Ma n Bdg. Meres Petroleum Erg, Pharmacy Phyr:c s Taylor Union (near front entrance) .Evelyn Wood—^ 7 ^? Reading Dynamics institute CAMBRIDGE TO W ER— 19TH AT LAVACA G R 6 6755 i g « 4 W t d n t w U y , February 8, 1967 T H E D A IL Y T EX A N TEXAS ENGINEERING & SCIENCE MAGAZINE Surging Horned Frogs Shoot Down Baylor By The Associated Press FORT WORTH Texas Christian, coasting along with a 17-point lead midway of the second half, fought off a late fired by Darrell Baylor rally the Bears Hardy and stopped 96-89 Tuesday night. The victory ended a two-game losing streak for the Frogs, broke a second-place tie they had with Baylor, and moved them within one game of Southwest Confer­ ence leader Southern Methodist. HARDY, WHO went to the side­ lines with four fouls with about eight minutes to play, sparked a comeback that trimmed TCU’s lead to 91-87. Tile 6-7 senior, the conference’s leading scorer, finished with 24 points, the same number scored by teammate Jimmy Turner, who fouled out late in the game. Mickey McCarty’s 21 points paced the Frogs. Wayne Kreis added 17 and Jess Evans came on in reserve and got 16. Tile loss dropped Baylor Into a third-place tie with Texas. it it it Texas A&M, ahead by 13 points at halftime, staved off a strong Texas Tech rally in the second half and beat the Red Raiders 70-67 in a Southwest Conference basketball game Tuesday night. TECH, trailing 50-37 at the in­ termission, caught the Aggies at 54-54 midway through ti ie sec­ ond half. Tech led only once at 56-55 and 58-55 but the Aggies caught the Raiders at 58-58 and never trailed again although the score was tied at 60-60 and 62-62. led A&M with 22 points while Terry Trip- pet had 14, Billy Bob Barnett ll, and Sonny Benefield IO. Johnny Underwood Billy Tapp with 19 and Ver­ non Paul with IO were Tech's top scorers. THE RED RAIDERS out re­ the Aggies 46-42 with bounded Paul grabbing l l . Tile Aggies moved Into a fifth- place tie with Rice, each with 3-4 conference records. The loss. Tech's sixth in seven conference games, dropped it deeper into the cellar. High School Star Picks University The University continued to delve into the prime beef of the schoolboy football ranks as Mc- Callum High School's all-South lone defensive end, Bill Zapalac, announced his intentions Monday of playing football for the orange and white next fall. Hie announcement put an end to the waiting as Zapalac had narrowed the decision down to a choice between Texas and Ala­ bama. He had previously been contacted by Army, Nebraska, Tulane, Air Force, and several other S o u t h w e s t Conference schools In addition to the Uni­ versity. Zapalac said that his dad (as­ sistant Longhorn coach, Willie Zapalac) had left the decision up to him and was waiting with the rest of the coaches for his an­ swer. ™E NEW TWO -Y EAR, ‘Horns Still Pumping • , . puncture Rice 81-73* , , P R O G R A M I Clay s Performance ARE YOU PREPARED TO SERVE YOUR COUNTRY? Irritates Britishers punches, to slash ugly silts over and under his eyes, to reduce him to a game but impotent wreck, these things may be ugly but they come within the rules of the trade. “Less forgiveable waa the cocky, arrogant manner In which Clay sneered and snarled and taunted — and even on occasion spat at the feet of the poor wreck of a Terrell.” Other London headlines called Gav “The Champ of Sneer and Snarl.” Tile Evening Now's bannerline said: “15 rounds of hateful, sick­ ening arrogance as Cassius taunt* ‘what s mv name?’ ” By Hie Associated Press British sports writers are voic­ ing their disenchantment with the ring antics of undisputed heavy­ weight champion, Cassius Gay. The performance of Clay in de­ fense of his championship against World Boxing Association cham­ pion, Ernie Terrell, touched off a variety of British comments— moat of them censuring Clay’s behavior Monday night. “Ugly, venomous, and sicken­ ing,” said the front-page head­ line across London’s Evening Standard reporting Cassius Clay's victory. BRITISH SPORTS writers and broadcasters agreed that Gay had proved himself the world’s best but they denounced the “ar­ rogant unsportsmanlike” manner In which he taunted and humiliated hi* out-classed oppo­ nent and The BBC’s Harry Carpenter said: “I left ringside wishing Gay had been more magnani­ mous In victory.” The London Evening News re­ port regretted that “Gay s dis appointing disregard for the nice­ ties of the rules prevented his performance from being great.” BUT THE Standard’s George Whiting, after praising G ay’s fighting skill, wrote: “ In my book, Gay fell headlong down the scale of sportsmanship. To half-paralyze your opponent with The,, member, of Arm y R O T O hey. . better understanding of our W orld situation and will have the rewardtng experience of service to their country. In the opinion of . leading United State, c o r p o r a t e : - W e .ttongly ‘"P P ® * the view that the present and future security end growth of the United States, and Indeed of the entire free world, lie firmly in the hands of positive-thinking men typified by the R O T O graduate" . The United States Arm y now offer, college men the opportunity to be commissioned as Second Lieutenants after only J o year, of on-campu, R O T O training. You can take edva n t.g. of th,, ®®™- opportunity by attending a six-week basic summer camp after your M p h ® ™ ™ AJuarirorl R O T O Course in your junior and senior years. The N E W T W O - Y f c A K P R O G R A M is designed specifically to fill tb, need, of junior college graduate, end student, of W - y e . r college, who hate not taken Arm y R O T O during their first two year,. i i * iU XL- nrnnrjtm will enable you to serve your country and fulfill your military obligation ai a corn- missioned officer in the United States Army. Decide now and take that important step into th. future . . . a step that can double your chances for success in lite. JOIN THE NEW TWO-YEAR A RM Y ROTO PROGRAM. For more information consult the Arm y R O T C Office or your Faculty Advisor. (R O T O Build- mg Room HO). ART and ENGINEERING STUDENTS! H EM P H ILL'S has official lists of supplies for your courses And Personal Service On: ART 1 0 % CASH DISCOUNT (Plus your REBATE) on Grumbacher Pretested Oil Grumbacher Casein Shiva Signature Oil D ana King Size Oil Bellini King Size Oil All Artist Brushet W e will deliver your supplies directly to Art Building Room 303, Feb. 7 & 8. FREE Extra good prices on sketch pads and ne w sprin t pads, and masonite drawing boards EN G IN EE R IN G Gramercy Riefler No. R8AP Drawing Sets Regular $24.75, OUR SPECIAL PRICE $21.75 Radiograph and Mars Pens and Sets At special low prices Good low prices on Slide Rules Versalog Dietzgen All Drawing Boards and T Squares are priced below manufacturer's suggested retail price Lowest Prices Plus Your EVER-READY REBATE I [MPH I LLS 109 E. 21st 2501 Guadalupe 2244 Guadalupe 2505 San Jacinto Tuesday Hours 8:00 TO 8:00 P.M. T he C ornet Division of General Dynamics Corporation Is Ona of tho largest and most sophisticated aerospace and research firms In the country. It waa formed In 1965 through the merger of two divisions of Gensral Dynamics: the old Convalr Division end the Astronautics Division, both In San Diego. The heritage of Convalr dates back to I Clrcraft production prior to and during World War ll. In recent years the former C o n v a lr Division produced the Air Force F-102 and F-106 let Interceptors, the 880 en d 990 let transports, and the Little Joe 'so lid rocket booster. The Astronautics Division was the home of the Atlas, the first tree world ICBM, end the subsequent development of the Atlas as one ol the nation’s malor space launch vehicles; many other aerospace end research programs were undertaken by Astronautics including C e n ta u r-the tint U.S. space rocket powered by liquid hydrogen. Compony Description , C onvento primarily Involved in research, development end production connected with the aerospace Industry. Its primary efforts are In complete systems and programs. The epectrum includes space launch vehicle!, electronic* systems, maneuverable re-entry vehicles, commer­ cial and military aircraft and oceanographic research. Major programs Include the Atlas space launch vehicle; the Atlas/Centaur booster program used to put the Surveyor space­ craft on the moon; the design and installa­ tion of complete telemetering stations; conversion programs on Convalr military end commercial aircraft; satellite research; manned space systems, and oceanographic telemetaring buoys. Opportunities The variety of Convalr products require* engineering graduates at all degree levels with majors In aeronautical, electrical, electronic and mechanical engineering, engineering mechanics and engineering physics. Engineering or science graduates will be •^signed to the following arias; advanced Romo Challenges Grelle In Featured Indoor M ile B f The A*»rlated Pre*** go In the 300. FOHT WORTH Ago milers Jim Grelle and Richard Romo clash Friday night In one of the feature races of Hip • eventh Will Rogers I n d o o r Game#. The addition of New Mexico’s John Baker to the field gives the event a trio of top performers. SIX OLYMPIANS, Including Grelle, have Joined the field, the most attractive ever assembled here by the sponsoring Fort Worth Coaches Association. They include Randy Matson, John Thomas, Ralph Boston, Mel Pender, and an eleventh hour en­ try, Tom Farrell Farrell, who won back-to-back NCAA 880 championships in 1964 and 1965, sent word Tuesday that he would be able to compete. An­ other latecomer waa Robert Tob- ler, formerly of Brigham Young, who won the NCAA 440 in 1964. FARRELL WHX run the 600- yard dash here, and Tobler will Pender, who Just returned from Viet Nam, heads a 60-yard dash field that includes former Texas flash Ralph Alpaugh and two Baylor stars, Wayne Brandt and Clyde Peach. Peach, Hie heralded Indiana schoolboy, a freshman at Bay­ lor, will challenge Alspaugh and Tobler in the 300 also. MITSON, Hie T e x a s AAM fresh strongman, conn's here from a personal triumph. He avenged an earlier loss In the shotput to Neal Stoinhauer by beating tho Oregon weightman Saturday night at San Diego. He flipped the shot 66 feet 10% Inches on his final effort. Texas AAM coach Charles Thomas said Matson told him earlier ‘I need to win tills one for myself.’ “He did,” Thomas added. “ He’s still the greatest competitor I’ve ever seen.” THOMAS HAS cleared aeven feet repeatedly this season and probably will erase his own high Jump record here of 1-9. He’ll duel Gene Johnson who also has hit the seven foot mark. Boston never has been out­ standing here, although he owns the Will Rogers broad Jump rec­ ord of 24-8 j. He will also run the (50-yard high hurdles. BOSTON telephoned director Tommy Taylor recently, apolo­ gized for his mediocre perform­ ances the last two years, and •aid: “I want to ask you lf I ca* come hack there . . . and redeem myself,” Taylor was elated. Grelle, who has cracked th# four-minute mile, holds the rec­ ord here of 4:11.7, set last year. This mark surely will tumble be­ fore the Grelle-Romo duel. Romo, another ex Texas star and the only Texan to better tho magic four-minute mark, ha* run 4:10.4 and 4:09.2 Indoors this season. Fall Semester CATHOLIC INQUIRY COURSE A Discussion of the Major Teachings of the Catholic Church . . . non-Catholics interested in Catholicism . . . pre-marriage instruction for mixed . . . Catholics seeking an adult grasp of marriage religious truth W ednesday, 7:15 p.m. Beginning February 8 Catholic Student Center W . 2 l*t and University Ava. Questions Encouraged PRESENTING C0NVAIR ,..4 Great Name in Aerospace systems, systems analysts, apse* science^ life sciences, Information sciences, sci­ entific data processing, aeroballistic*, dynamics, thermodynamics, guidance, structures, mechanical design, electrical design, reliability, teat engineering and materials asearch. Speclel Features end! Attraction* Convalr offers outstanding frlnga benefit* including an Employe* Savings and Stock Investment Plan to which the Company contributes as well as a Retirement Plan and Tuition Assistance Programs. Convalf engineers can select from many company- sponsored educational assistance pro­ grams and determine for themselves which Is best suited to their particular require­ ments. These programs, held In conjunction with four highly rated local colleges and universities, Include a tuition refund plar\ an Irregular work week to permit college attendance, an advaneed-degree worr­ it tidy program, special courses and seminars, and Doctoral Fellowships, among others. One of the nice things about working at Convalr is living in San Diego... one of the country’s truly great resort centers. With only 10 degrees difference between Janu­ ary and July high*, the sunny San Diego climate Is pleasant throughout the year. Two great bays and 70 miles of ocean beaches provide all year aquatic sports and fishing. Exciting Mexico Is just a few miles away. Nearby mountains, a world- famous zoo. and a marina park add to the fu n ... plus 64 golf courses for year ’round play. San Diego is 8n Ideal family city with excellent schools. As the country’* 16th largest city, San Diego offers the best in cultural attractions, performing arts, pro­ fessional sports, and other entertainment Our rtprtttnttth/t will bs VttShtf roar ttmpve to on. ConiteI y e w Co Ut s t Pketmtnt OtHctr IS trrtng* tn Inttnrltw tppolnlmtnt, or writt to Ur. J. J. Ttnnont, Suptrvltor, Proltttlonti Pitetmtnl trip F n sonnet, Gtntrtl Dyntmioe Com tlr Division, SSCC Kttmy ViUt i Ste P its o, CtlJhuti* M U I , GENERAL DYNAMICS Convair Division San Diego, California An Equal Opportunity Employer Wednesday, February 8, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Pega I Russians Use Maoist Tactics At China s Moscow Embassy By ITie Associated I V sr MOSCOW Russians pounded on the doors of the Chinese Embassy Tuesday and shouted, "Cowards’,” at the staff inside. An embassy official tore up protest petitions offered bv the demonstrators and threw RENT A N EW O fay**#***- Precision-Built P orta ble For Only a Month $7 .•> im , v our . . , then lf you «n . .. now rpntal-purchn*** option let*, vou a p p ly r r n t to w ard * ri’ ntal-ptirchaao p ric e ; p ay lik e rent, W it h thin plan von ra n t r v before to n tra y ! W e a ls o r e n t ta p e r e c o r d e r * . T . V . , rad ios, a m p lifie rs , p laiters, adders the pieces in the faces of the Russians. The demonstration was in re­ taliation for the riotous Chinese siege of the Soviet Embassy in reking, now in its twelfth day. Tass, the Soviet news agency, charged iron gates of the Soviet New Location Set For Credit Union The University Federal Credit Union will move from its present location in the Carriage House to off-campus quarters at 108 VV. Thirtieth St. The credit union will be closed for the move Friday, but will open again for business on Mon­ day. The new location will provide increased space and parking facilities for members. Business hours will be from 9 a.m. to 3 through Friday, p.m. Monday with the office remaining open during lunch hour for the con- Embassy were smashed down Monday night and there was no letup in the Chinese demonstra­ tion Tuesday. Tass said the Chinese Foreign M inistry advised that in Peking "officials of the Soviety embassy are prohibited from leaving their territory’. Otherwise their securi­ ty is not guaranteed.” Tile Soviet Em bassy filed a vigorous pro­ test. IN Mascow, It was the second straight clay of Soviet demonstra­ tions outside the Red Chinese Embassy. But unlike the peace­ able demonstration the day be­ fore, this one grow in vehemence and at one point Russian police intervened. Anti-Chinese meetings were re­ ported being held throughout the Soviet Union. This method of whipping up sentiment has been used against the United Stales over the Viet Nam issue but it was the first time such organized hostility was directed against China. Tass said the meetings were "storm y” and quoted participants as denouncing Mao Tse-tung’s leadership in Olina. Busloads of R u s s i a n s were brought to the Chinese Embassy grounds. The 230 Russians car­ ried petitions in the form of res­ olutions adopted at meetings in factories and various institutions. A DELEGATION of young Rus­ sians from the Moscow Aviation Institute found the front gate of the embassy locked and went to the side door to present their pe­ titions. A Chinese official unlocked but did not open the side door. But the young Russians opened It. moved inside, and handed the Chinese the petitions. He ripped them up and threw the pieces in their faces, shouting: "W ork­ ers of the w’orld, unite around Mao Tse-tung!” Chicago Slum Dwellers Join in Tenant Union 1234 G u ad alu p e , venience of members. N O T IC E University Federal C redit Union will be C L O S E D FEBRUARY 10th To Move To Our New Location 108 W. 30th STREET O F F IC E H O U R S : 9 A.M.-3 P.M.(Open through lunch hour) PLENTY OF P A R K IN G SPACE i — a By The Associated Press CHICAGO More than 10.000 slum dwellers have formed the Chicago Tenant Union in an effort to force im­ provements in their run-down apartments, hoping to demon­ strate that p e o p l e will work harder to preserve property in which they can take pride. Many landlords are opposed to the union. But at least one be­ lieves the movement will indeed encourage tenants to take better care of their apartments. Some tenement apartments are fire traps, with gaping holes and in walls and ceilings. cracks Some are without hot water, lights and heat. Some are infest­ ed with rats, mice, and roaches. T H E UNION’S WEAPONS have been rent strikes, picketing, ne­ gotiations with landlords, and law suits to force compliance with the city building code. l E S i i s a f i Its principal allies are tho AFL- CIO industrial union department, some faculty members of the University of C h i c a g o Law School, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr .'s Southern Christian Leader­ ship Conference, and a Chicago law firm that is donating its services. Most leaders In the fledgling movement, which now has IO chapters, believe they are mak­ ing some progress toward their in goal of troubled neighborhoods but it Is too early to evaluate results. improving housing As the Rev. William Briggs, a leader in the movement, said: "Lik e in any union, you win some and you lose some. But we’ve found it to be an effective vehicle in changing tenant-owner relationships.” TH E R E V . MR. BR IG G S, pas­ tor of tho Warren Avenue Con­ gregational Church, was an or­ ganizer for the E a s t Garfield Park community organization in a Negro neighborhood on die West Side. He said two-thirds of the stew- i ards for the East Garfield Park Union to End Slums report some progress in negotiations w i t h owners of 45 apartment buildings. Vt hat Goes On Here t —# — Ph o to g ra P h i p ’ ans and d is p la y * of e x c a v a tio n a t A n c ie n ; Cor. nth a c c , ort d is p la y , fo u rth flo o r of A c a d e m ie C e n te r Library i -m idnight c a -to o n s from ;e ? a ! per* lod.cala, on display. Townes Ha-I 21.' K rn ,d.-.iifht - W a te r c p'.ny. F lo o r D is p la y r a s e , T o w n e s Hr, I. l o B x h ib .t on • rn L a v S 12, P r e - R a p h a e ­ t . st lites M a in Budding 400. g - 3—Kenzo Okada paint m n , on exh bit. M ain G a i e ry of U n ive rsity A rt Museum. Ja n You i tapes’ cs and p hotoarapns, M ain G a . cry and Me im- nine Ga .ery, University AM M useum Exh.b t on. a to Interview t —5—U n ive rsity Y M C A for service pro.ects end educational p ro ­ gram s. Y M C A Bu ding, 2209 Guadalupe. • 5— The L ig h t of Other Ha;, s, a cohec- lig h t,ng devices through history, tlon of exhibited on Entrance Floor, Texas Me­ morial Museum. *- Arthur Lu b’na kl. P a n A m ebean P etro l­ An En- e u m A s s o c ia tio n , g n e e n n g A p p ro a c h to P r o p a g a t io n of P la n e W a v e s and S h o c k s ," E n g in e e r in g l i b e r a t o r , e s 102. to ap eak on 7-9--CO-retre at,on, open to facility, staff. and students, W o m e n s G y m n a s iu m 7 T 5 — S tu d e n t En?.nr< -: m g f o u r . ' o m e e t E n g in e e r in g S c ie n c e B u l lin g 234 Til:- B e g in n in g of in q u ir y c la s s e s , C a th o ­ l ic Btu le n t C e n te r G e t Your Goats, Seniors and Graduates You can still get in the 1967 CACTUS Pictures W ill Be M ade For Graduating Seniors and Graduates Only at I 2330 Guadalupe (above Sommers Drug Store) K O E N ’S STUDIO Anyone can Wednesday, Feb. 8 through Friday, Feb. IO Hours: 9:00-12:00 and 1:00-4:00 Individual pictures will not be m ade after these dates. Select an d return your proofs promptly as the class section will soon be sent to the printers. Don't Forget to Com e by Room 107 in the Journalism Building to Pay the $2.00 Fee. Page 6 Wednesday, February 8, 1967 THE DAiLY TEXAN With Eaton’s Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper, you can erase that goof without a trace. Not a telltale smudge remains. A special surface per­ mits quick and easy erasing with an ordinary pencil eraser. For perfect papers every time, get Corrasable. In light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In handy 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. At Stationery Departments. [ATOM’S CORRASABLE I TYPEWRITE* P A P E *! Only Eaton makes Corrasable* CATON PAPER CORPORATION, PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUStlTS 'Sco Pro'Rules Procedures Are Up for Re-Study por Snodgrass Completed Scholarship Freshmen M a y Get C rA c h m a n M rn / Extra Semester Tile scholastic probation propos­ als adopted by the Faculty Coun­ cil in November w ill be recon­ sidered at a meeting Tuesday. The proposals state that a stu­ dent whose cumulative grade point average is below a C at the end of a long-session semes­ ter would be placed on sco pro. A student would be released from probation at the conclusion of the semester when he has achieved a cumulative grade average of C. A lower division student who has been on probation for one semester must achieve a C aver­ age during the following semes­ ter. If, at the end of two con­ secutive long-session semesters during which the student has been on sco pro, he fails to achieve a cumulative C average, he will be dismissed. An upper division student must achieve a cumulative C average in only one additional semester to remain in the University. The current rules say that no enforced scholastic withdrawal occurs if a student has an over­ all C average. These recommen­ dations would keep this regula­ tion and would revise the sco pro standards on the basis of an overall C average. Tile meaning of these regulations would be clearer than the present ones which use both hours passed and grade points. The effects of these proposals on freshmen have been criticized. Faculty members feel that fresh­ men on probation for one semes­ ter should be given more than one additional semester to achieve a C average. The proposals, although adopt­ ed by the Council, must first be approved by L e Board of Re­ gents before going into effect. The upcoming meeting will re­ consider the recommendations. Pirson Returns From Venezuela Dr. S. J. Pirson, professor of from petroleum, has returned Venezuela, where he conducted a two-week course the basic principles and practices of well log analysis for the prediction of oil and gas productivity and re­ covery. in Dr." Pirson taught the course In Maracaibo under the sponsor- ship of the University of Zulia i School of Petroleum Engineering, J jg Twenty petroleum engineers and geologists representing seven oil companies, plus the academic staff at Zulia, participated in the course. Dr. Pirson wras assisted by a University petroleum engineering graduate student, Walter H. Fertl of Vienna, Austria. While in Venezuela, Dr. Pirson | visited a large gas compressor station and drilling barge on Lake Maracaibo and a recently in­ stalled steam injection operation for the recovery of heavy oil by I cyolic injection. The professor also presented lecture to the firm s tech- j | a nical s t a f f on the use of well logs to explore and delineate frac- j | tured reservoir rocks and predict the productivity and expected re-. I covery from such rocks. The course is the second con­ ducted in recent weeks by Dr. Pirson. The other w*as held on the University campus. Trustees of the University Law School Foundation have estab­ lished procedures for awarding scholarships law students. The scholarships wore made available by West Texas friends of the late Scott Snod­ grass, San Angelo attorney and 1922 Law School graduate. to University The scholarships were made possible last November by a $30,- 000 gift to the Law School. Named to the selection com­ mittee were John F. Sutton Jr., a member of the Law School faculty and former San Angelo attorney; Associate Justice Ruel C. Walker of the Texas Supreme Court; and Austin attorney Perry Jones. A minimum of three scholar­ ships will be awarded each year, one for each long semester and the 12 week summer one term. for Page Keeton, dean of the Law School, said grants, when advis­ able, also may be awarded to one student for two consecutive semesters, based on the student s qualifications when the first a- ward is made. An applicant seek­ ing a grant for a third consecu­ tive semester, however, will be given the same consideration as any other applicant Dean Keeton said each grant will be at least $300 and not more than $1,000 a semester. The total amount of the grants awarded in anv one year will be less than $4,boo. and effort, completion of Ona semester of Law School studies, the probability of graduation, and some economic necessity’. The first grants are expected to be awarded for the 1967 summer session. "Since the principal objective is that the donor was to help those who because of need would not have the opportunity to make top grades during the first semes­ ter in Law School,” Dean Keeton said, "no one will be eligible who ranks in the top 30 per cent of the class.” The dean said others wishing to contribute to the fund in mem­ ory of Snodgrass may do so by sending their gifts to the Law School at 2300 Red River, Austin He said the Snodgrass Scholar­ ships w ill be awarded on desire 78703. Kosygin Hints at Realignment Between Soviet Union, Europe and estimate their natural re­ sources then you would under­ stand they are bigger and great­ er than the United States,” he said. “ IF YOU TAKE technological advance you will see that we are not in any way poorer than the United States and. on many oc­ casions, the knowledge of our technicians and scientists is even vaster than the United States. B y The Associated Press LONDON Soviet Prem ier Alexei N. Kosy­ gin called Tuesday for a com­ bination of the Soviet Union’s vast resources with the industrial might of Europe. His call aroused the interest of Prim e Minister Harold W il­ son, with whom the Soviet lead­ er is holding talks in London. It brought immediate speculation that Kosygin may be signaling the beginning of a radical change in East-West alignments. Kosygin followed his sugges­ tion with a renewal proposal for a conference on European secu­ rity. He had another talk with Wilson about Viet Nam. and an authoritative British source said "a ll is not exactly black” in Hie quest for a peace formula. KOSYGIN SPOKE later at a luncheon in his honor given by the Confederation of British In ­ dustry whose members control billions of dollars of British in­ vestment capital. that a Kosygin scorned any sugges­ tion technological gap exists between Europe and the United States. " If you take Europe and the Soviet Union and combine them FAST DELIVERY! C A L L Y O U R O R D ER IN GR 2-8323 Delivery 25c Within 3 Miles— 50c Over 3 Miles S P E C I A L 3 Pieces W ith French Fries & Bread 69‘ BILLY'S LITTLE C H IC K E N S H A C K 2003 A IR P O R T BLVD. G R 2-8323 WHY WAIT 4% Months?... HEM PHILL REBATES ARE CASH IN YOUR P0CKET-N0W! I I I Here’s how they work: Hem phill’s pays you 1 0 % on tho dollar— no tallying up— a straight 1 0 % . Just keep your receipt— the one from the cash register — w ait one d ay (that’s all it takes for a H em phill’s rebate to mature)— then go to an y of Hem phill’s four stores, get w h at you need and cash in the re­ bate! If s that simple and easy. Pay Cash For Your Books Today . . . Spend Your Rebates on Supplies Tomorrow! EASIER - Q U IC K E R O N E -F L O O R S H O P P IN G FOR A L I Y O U R B O O K S and SUPPLIES 4 Convenient Locations v I I 2505 San Jacinto HEMPHILLS 2244 G uadalupe 109 E. 21st 2501 G u adalu pe 2505 San Jacinto Anti - Soviet Protests Accelerated in China By The Associated P ress TOKYO Mao Tse-tung has issued new instructions the Soviet to fight brand of Com munism, Japanese rep o rts from Peking said Wednes­ day, and C hina's official n e^ s agency told of accelerated anti- Soviet activities in a dozen cities. Japanese correspondents said Red China's governm ent has cut off m eal money for Red G uards and told th e youths they will have to buy their own food in Peking. The Red G uard youngsters are Mao­ ist but som etim es uncontrollable. In ano th er report, in Tile anti-Soviet cam paign Red China appeared to be rea ch ­ ing new intensities. Tile Soviet Union has protested hotly against riotous dem onstrations around In Peking, w here its em bassy m em bers of the staff a re rep o rt­ ed v irtu e1 prisoners of the Chi­ nese. THE PEKING correspondent of the Japanese new spaper Yomi- uri said that under M ao's new instructions, a ‘’liaison station for struggling against revision­ ism ” —China’s term for Russian com m unism —has been set up in the capital. US, Canada Test Power Grid Tie-Up By The Associated P ress WATERTOWN, S D. E lectric power system s of the United S tates and C anada—about 40 per cent of the w orld’s elec­ trical energy—w ere tied together Tuesday in a test aim ed at. pre­ venting m a jo r blackouts. F irst sw itches in form ation of a vast grid circuit w ere thrown at the Bureau of R eclam ation's Yellowtail power plant in Mon­ tan a, first of four grid linking points. In succession, Ute Staged sub­ station a t G ering, Neb., and Fort P eck power plant in Montana w ere tied into the system , and then the consum er public power districts substation a t N o r t h P latte, Neb. The test linkup, m ade through the F ed eral B ureau of R eclam a­ tion's M issouri R iver Basin P roj­ ect System , is scheduled to con­ tinue until 4 p.m . Wednesday. Connected a re m ainlines of 20*1 m ajo r public and private power svsiem s, with 283.000 m iles of S M IT H C O R O N A O ffice Portable With A u t o ’ J.ic C« r r i « g # Return RENT-BUY $16 m o. T’N CONDITION AI.I.T «.t \ RA N IT ED MI lieut billie* Re— *’ CR 6 3525 transm ission lines carrying n ear­ ly 245-million kilowatts involved. F rank Lachicotte, power sys­ tem s m anager here and chairm an of the East-W est Closure Task Force said “ E verything is going fine." He said the first experi­ ment would be tran sfe r of IOO OOO kilowatts from to the eastern system . L ater Tues­ day. he added, Southern Cali­ fornia w as isolated to operate on its own generators. the w estern Braye Republican Rescues W om en 'Out of the Dark' By The Associated P ress OLYMPIA, Wash. A 45-minute power failure left a group of women visitors to the legislature sitting in the d ark in strange surroundings in the House Office Building Monday night. Rep. Paul B arden, Seattle R e­ into publican, gallantly stepped the confusion. “ Follow m e, confidently. “ Be calm . all the exits.” ladies,” he said I know They trailed afte r B arden tru st­ ingly—right into the wom en’s rest room. ' N E L S O N S Navajo and Zuni Handm ade Indian Jewelry Mexican Imports L e y B. N e lso n , P r o p . GUADALUPE 4612 Ro. C o n * . H I 4-3814 the Yomiuri said instructions indicated anti-Soviet dem o n stra­ tions outside the Soviet E m bassy and in the provinces would be­ com e m ore m enacing. New China News Agency re ­ ported anti-Soviet activities in Peking, Shanghai, Tsingtao. Nan­ ning. Kunm ing, Sining, Nan- chang, Chungking, Tsinan, Yin- chuan, Hofei and Lanchow. Jap an ese correspondents quot­ ed wall p osters as w arning Red G uards in Peking they m ust pay for their own m eals and that Rod teach ers G uards, students, and w ere ordered to stop their “ long journey on foot” to Peking and other places to exchange “ revo­ lutionary ex periences.” THE NEW O R D E R S , issued throughout C h i n a , apparently w ere aim ed a t stopping the heavy influx of ru ra l Red G uards, stu ­ dents, and teach ers into the capi­ tal. the rep o rts said. Y om iuri's correspondent said Polish and H ungarian em bassies had decided to evacuate depend­ ents of their em bassy staffs from Peking because th eir safety could not be guaranteed. The rep o rts said other E astern E uropean countries except Albania and Ro­ m an ia would follow suit. Demonstrations w ent the twelfth day o the Soviet E m bassy. The Foreign M inistry w arned the Russians it could not “ g u aran tee the safety of Soviet citizens outside the Soviet E m ­ b assy .” into ide Polish and Czechoslovak diplo­ through m a ts drove their c a rs the blockading Chinese take to food and other supplies to the So­ viet E m bassy staff, the Czecho­ slovak news agency CTR rep o rt­ ed. MOSCOW’ R A D IO , in a J a p a ­ nese said language broadcast, that “ despite Peking's anti-So­ viet cam paign, the Soviet people will not be intim idated into ta k ­ ing any rash ste p ” in relations with Red China. The b ro ad cast a d d e d , “ there has never been anything like this in the history of international re­ lations. They have gone beyond the acts of decent hum an beings.” Y omiuri said Red G u a r d s brought effigies of form er P re ­ m ier Nikita S. K hrushchev, So­ viet p arty chief Leonard I. B re­ zhnev, and P re m ie r Alexei N. Kosygin the em bassy and to kicked them around. r nTREMENDOUS! the way those D aily T e x a n CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS try 'em and see! It's th# economical easy way to reach the great University market! lf you want to BUY, SELL, RENT, HIRE or_ S W A P -T h a Daily Texan is the place! Just pick up your phone and call GR 1-5244 and Ut our classified ed-faker "fake care" o f you! S E R E Prof. Douglas M o rga n oversees (left to , Thomas Edwards, Bar- right) Buford Taylor bara Carroll, and Carl Clark as they cram for the G E College Bowl. Bowl Team Eyes Triumph LBJ For Requests Peace In Fast Approval Space Treaty say that Russia has registered all satellites. However, the United S tates is going to do about re­ porting activities of “ spy in the sk y ” satellites, one of them re­ plied: “ We have registered every satellite we have fired with the in­ United Nations, and given form ation about it.” This official said th a t “ as far the Russians are as we know doing b etter than they used to in this re sp e c t” but he w ouldn't S tates has the scientific g ear for spotting all satellites, the offi­ cial said, and “ we reg ister R u s­ sian as well as our ow n.” I April Draftees To Total 11,400 By The Associated P resa WASHINGTON Tile Defense D epartm ent an ­ nounced T uesday it will draft I F ­ IIX) men for the A rm y in April. M eanwhile, the US Senate passed without opposition a hill to g ran t the Viet Nam w ar v eteran s of benefits like those provided for , men who served in earlier con­ flicts. A sim ilar bill passed the Senate la st y ear, but died in the rush to House adjournm ent. in Tile April draftees fall 500 be­ low the M arch quota. D raft calls for the first four months of this y ear a re averaging around 12.000 per month although S ecretary of Defense Robert S. M cN am ara re­ cently told Congress an average of 17,000 youths would be induct­ ed through June, M cN am ara also said the De­ fense D epartm ent will seek about 24,000 each month over the next 12 m onths. Bv The Associated P ress WASHINGTON P resid en t Johnson called on the Senate T uesday for swift approv­ trea ty al of a to th at “ the realm s of g u aran tee rem ain space rea lm s of p eace.” th at seeks forever should The tre a ty w as negotiated with th e blessings of the United N a­ tions and alre ad y h as the signa­ tures of m ore than half the na­ tions on earth. Both Senate D em ocratic Lead­ er Mike M ansfield of Montana and Republican L eader E verett M. D irksen of Illinois predicted ratification. IN A SPECIAL m essage tra n s­ m itting the trea ty to the Senate, Johnso said, “ it c a r r i e s for­ w ard the th ru st of the p ast de­ to enlarge the perim eters cade of peace by shrinking the aren as of potential conflict.” The treaty lays down a set of that, am ong b a s i c principles d h e r things, no nations m ay: • Use outer space or heavenly bodies as a base for launching a w ar; • P ut in orbit or station In sp ace nuclear weapons or other w eapons of m a ss destruction or install them on a celestial body. the moon or to outer space or to any celestial bodies. • Claim sovereignty to TH E TREATY SAYS, fu rth er­ m ore, th at all nations have the right to conduct space activities, and these and their results a re to be reported for the benefit of all. When adm inistration officials the United asked w hat w ere W illie Brandt Arrives To Tell of N ew Policy By The Associated Press WASHINGTON West G erm an Foreign M inister Willy B randt arriv ed from Bonn Tuesday to explain, as he put it. the views of his co untry’s new coalition governm ent to top A m er­ ican officials. this policy, he said, One of the “ essential elem ents” is a of “ strong and reliable link between the United States and G erm any and between A m erica and E u ­ ro p e.” rep resen ts B ran d t's visit the first personal contact between the Johnson adm inistration and the “ grand coalition” governm ent of Chancellor K urt Georg Kiesin- ger. THE ALLIANCE between is of “ vital two countries p o rtan ce,” B randt said. the im ­ “ We also believe,” he added, the the Atlantic re ­ “ that partnership between two shores of m ains a real challenge.” B randt is scheduled to confer with the P resident, Vice P re si­ dent H ubert H. H um phrey, Sec­ re ta ry of State Dean Rusk, and S ecretary of Defense R obert S. M cN am ara. B randt, 53, was a fam iliar vis­ itor h ere when he was the m ayor of West Berlin. But he arrived this tim e as the first official rep ­ resen tativ e of the new Bunn gov- ei nm cnt. to obtain WEDNESDAY a f t e r n o o n , B ran d t will call on Johnson after a prelim inary m eeting with p res­ idential adviser Walt W. Rostow. He is due to leave for New York on Thursday. Robert J. McCloskey, State D epartm ent press officer, told newsm en the visit will “ provide the opportunity for the US gov­ ern m en t the view of the new governm ent of the fed­ eral republic . . . for that reason his visit is the m ore w elcom e.” B randt doubles as foreign m in­ ister and vice chancellor of the new G erm an governm ent, which has achieved considerable im ­ provem ent in F ranco-G erm an re ­ lations and em barked on new ap ­ proaches to E astern Europe aim ed a t norm alizing W est G er­ m a n y ’s relations with the allies of th e Soviet Union. A m erican officials expect to be the fully briefed by Brandt on visit he and K iesinger paid to F ren ch P resid en t C harles de G aulle recentlv. TLor ly o itr {Jafentlne . . . Gifu fro,, S L ftJ fs ! GE Bowl Team A Ready for TV is Victory foremost the m inds of the GE College Bowl team members. in If their predictions com e true, St. Mary’s College of Notre D am e will go down to its first defeat. “ We’re red hot!” Bill Taylor reported Tuesday will be shown during gram . the pro* Speculating on w hat will h ap ­ pen if the team wins, Bill said they will enthusiastically “ celeb rate.” But Carl said very calm ly, “ W ell go back,*’ The winning team returns for another round. th at Although a num ber of larg e gifts and hundreds of sm aller ones have come from private the U niversity derives donors, the g rea ter portion of ifs income from the State. How to (Kind tho Ideal Summer Job• a e START NOW ! See McCALL'S GUIDE TO SUMMER JOBS. 41 Rewarding Ways to Spend Your Vacation! Whether you'd like to work in an exotic foreign land, help with slum rehabilitation, join a Head Start program, or just make money, you'll find complete details on how to go about it in February McCall's GUI DB TO SUMMER JOBS Compiled by Christine Sadler, Lynda Bird Johnson and Jill Spiller “We beat them when we ■ watched them on television. They a rc very good in certain areas but not in o th e rs.” B arb ara C ar­ roll, the only fem ale m em ber of the team , said. Tom E dw ards added, “ We’re faste r than they a r e .” The team , which will appear live from New York Sunday at I 4:30 p.m . on Channel 42, will leave Austin F rid ay afternoon! and return Monday morning. cited but also a B a rb a ra said that she was ex­ little nervous, V arious activities a re planned by the team while In New York, B a rb a ra and Bill plan to see old friends as a part of their visit, j Tom plans to join Dr. Douglas M organ, the te am 's sponsor who is professor of philosophy at the U niversity, on an a rt tour. Carl j C lark, the fourth m em ber of the team , w ants to go to some book and record stores Courtesy of the television show, the team will attend a play S at­ u rd ay night. It is not known which play It will be. Before the team leaves on the trip , Dr. Morgan will pick Tom c r Carl as captain. B arb ara has been chosen to n arrate the film telling about the U niversity which IM PO RTED TREASURES From Mexico T# ®iv« • T* Waar • Ie Chm lute Skinner Import* AT ALL NEWSSTANDS NOW Eat A t Uncle Van's Restaurant (Pancake House) * Delicious Pancake! * Hamburgers and Shakes * C om plete Restaurant M enu * Newly R edecorated * Reasonable Prices * Lots of Parking Space * Pleasant Service ’■■ rfra JN IiD lE T jT C T j PANCAKE HOUSE 19th and Guadalupe FREE TICKET DRAWING STARTS TOMORROW For $18.28 Blanket Tax holders A N D Purchasers of $6.10 Spring Activity Fee Theodore E K I B A ctor— Fo'ksinger- L Raconteur- Guitarist and Judy L I L O C Balladeer S N ■Folksinger WED., FEB. 15 • M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M • 8 p . m . FREE tickets must be drawn in advance beginning T H U R S D A Y at Fine Arts Box Office • H o g g Auditorium Open Monday-Friday: 9-4 FREE on CEC Season Ticket (Replaces P.D.Q. Bach, canceled for March 23) Single Adm.: ADU LT $2.50 C H IL D $1.00 N o reserved seats No advance sale Doors open 7 p.m. C H A R T E R E D BUSES-Round Trip 25c W atch D A IL Y T E X A N for Schedule Wednesday, February I, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Pagt 7 a OMEGA A u M O M E G A W A T C H AGENCY line jewelry O N T H E D R A G at 2 26 8 Guadalupe A L L A N D A L E V I L L A G E at 5726 Burnet Road ERFE P A R K I N G at Al land ale Village World Population Panel Wednesday Tile International population problem will be discussed at 8 p m. Wednesday in Union Build* ir.g 300. to in relation A second program emphasizing the problem the I nited States will end the series sponsored by the United Campus Christian Fellowship on Feb. 15. the first discus­ sion are Prakash Shivastava and University faculty members John Burkett. Harley Browning. How­ ard M erriam, and Thomas Swing. * Panelists for Persons Karate C lub W ill Meet joining interested the Karate Ooh should meet at the University's YMCA Auditor­ ium at 5 p.m. Wednesday. in * Panel at Y D M eeting A legislative panel on the pros­ pects of the Sixtieth Legislature will highlight the first meeting of the University Young Demo­ crats to be held at 7 :30 Wednes­ day the Academic Center /uditorium . in Members of the panel will in­ clude Sen. Tom Creighton of Mineral Wells, Sen. Charles Wil­ son of Lufkin. Rep. Dewitt Halo cf Corpus Christi, and Rep. Neil Caldwell of Alvin. ★ Union Schedules Films Five films on population from the Planned Parenthood World (enter will he shown Thursday from 9 a m. to l l p.m. In the Union Auditorium. Three films have arrived from the national office. The first one. “The Costly Crowd," is a drama­ tized presentation of a business­ man's the US recognition of population problem. Five docu­ mentary episodes depict crowded cities, hospitals, highways, and schools. "The Squeeze" Is an introduc­ tory film showing hunger, crowd­ ing. and subversion of human development. “ Open End—Birth Control" Is a discussion among three experts on population and birth control. The two other films will come from the regional center and are expected Wednesday. ★ ★ Church to O bserve Lent Services will be held at 4:15 j- rn. every’ Wednesday during the United Church of Ix*nt at Christ. Senator to Sp eak Here Hank Grover, Republican state from Houston, will he senator the first guest speaker of the University Young Republicans Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Aca­ demic (enter Auditorium. Young Republicans will hold a Lincoln Hay cocktail party at the Penthouse Apartments Saturday at 8 p.m. ★ G ro u p to H ear M cK etta Dr. John J. MoKotta, dean of the College of Engineering, will speak on "F u tu re Developments in the Electric Power Industry" at the eleventh annual engineer­ ing and operations workshop of Cam pus News M n Brief g ■- -rn ~x» v the American Public Power As­ sociation in San Antonio Wednes­ day. The workshop Is the number one engineering meeting of the year for officials of the local pub­ lic power segment of the electric utilities industry. ★ Belle Pictures Are Due Bluebonnet Belle nominees must tho studio pictures mibmit Texas Student Publications office in Journalism Building 7 by Fri­ day. to Semifinalists will In* notified lw» held In about Interviews to Journalism Building 305 on Feb. 15 and IO. ★ Folk Sin ger to Speak Bob Horner, one of the New Folk singers, will speak to m em ­ bers of College Life at 9 p.m. Wednesday at the Alumni Cen­ ter. The New' Folk, presently on tour of college campuses in the United States and Canada, will present a concert at Municipal Auditorium a t 8 p.m. Thursday. ★ Physicist to C iv e Talk Dr. Robert N. Little, professor of physics, will address the I ni- versity’s chapter of the Ameri­ can Nuclear Society Thursday at 7:30 p.m. In Business Economics Building 161. The topic pf his speech will be applications of nuclear reac­ tors. M iniste r to Lead Talk "F aith, Sex, and Love" will be discussed Wednesday at the Bap­ tist Student Union, 2204 San An­ tonio. The Rev. Browning Ware, pastor of Calder Baptist Church in Beaumont, will be speaker. The Rev. Ware will lead tills *o~ond sem inar on the New Mor­ ality at 3 p.m. and lecture at 8:30 p.m. A talk-back session will be held at 9:15 p.m. ★ Hr N e w Officers Elected Newly elected officers for Phi Kappa Tau fraternity are Ray Martin, president; Dick Ewing, vice-president; D a v i d Griffin, secretary; John McDuff, treasur­ er; and (huck Blank, executive council member-at-large. ★ Engineers M eet T o d ay The Student Engineering Coun­ cil will meet at 7:15 p.m. Wednes­ day in Engineering Science Build­ ing 234. Engineering elec­ tion procedures will be discussed. ★ sweetheart A n g e l Flight Officers Spring officers for Angel Flight are Sharon Allison, com m ander; Jo Ann Rowley, executive officer; Ann Baird, operations; Cheryl Zimmerman, adm inistrative serv­ ice officer. Others Include, Roberta Rich­ ards, comptroller; Robin Thrift, information; Jan Howie, laison; Brenda Cook, pledge trainer; and M ary Andrew's, drill commander. Angel H ight m em bers will in meet at 7 p.m. W’ednesday, ROTC Building 214. Hr Draft Discussion Slated A film‘ussion on the morality of the draft, sponsored by the New­ man Club, will be held at the Catholic Student Center at 8 p.m. Wednesday. ★ Chi Phi Hosts Cronkite Nationally known newscaster W alter Cronkite took off time over the Uni­ the weekend versity's Chi Fhi fraternity of which he was once a member. to visit Cronkite, who received the Ex- Students’ Distinguished Alumnus Award in 1964 from the Univer­ sity's GU Phi chapter, was in Austin to receive the Headliners Award along with Cyd Charlsse and Jack Valenti. ★ Spooks Will Meet Today Spooks will meet Wednesday at 4 p.m. at the Delta Zeta house. Hr N o o n d a y Services Set Lenten noonday worship serv­ ices will be held every Wednes­ day during Lent at University Christian Church. The services begin Ash Wednes­ day. Dr. Blake Smith, minister of University Baptist Church, will be the speaker. Foreign Study Wolfe Discusses Funds Available Special Education The University Special Pro­ gram s Division of the College of Arts and Sciences has announced limited scholarship funds in two categories available to students of international, E ast European, Middle East, and Asian studies. Depending on eligibility, stu­ dents may apply for either or both categories. The first group includes eight tr IO awards ranging betw'een $200 and $400 available to stu­ dents w'ith 70 hours credit at the end of the fall sem ester. The the student must award Is to be used, possible projects intensive Including an language training course, partici­ pation in a conference or work­ foreign shop, or any study or travel. indicate how type of to Students apply intending under Group One should discuss their project proposals with a faculty adviser or program chair­ man. Tile group second includes about 15 awards, most of which will not exceed $50. These awards m ay be used supplement Group One expenses or for the purchase of books, reference works, or research m aterials. to Application forms are avail­ able in West Mall Office Build­ ing 101A and from the chairm en of the four program s. Applica­ tions are due no later than Fob. 24 an­ nounced about March 6. awards will be and Dr. William G. Wolfe, chair­ m an of the Department of Spe­ cial Education, told a Texas Edu­ cation Agency Institute Monday that states, colleges, and public and schools chil­ mishandled dren. have mislabeled handicapped "A mislabeled and a mishandled child is a confused and often a hurt "I wonder if we aren t doing just that." child," Wolfe said. Wolfe said that too often a Wall Street Day Cut by Blizzard By The Associated Press H ie NEW YORK stock m arket declined moderately in a session today abbreviated because of a bliz­ zard. The New York Stock Exchange delayed its opening from IO a.m . to IO: 15 a.m . and closed at 2 p.m. Tile Dow Jones average of "0 industrials declined 2.61 to 852.51. The Associated Press 60-stock average was off 1.7 at 315.9 with industrials off 1.9, rails off 1.5 and utilities off .9. Of 1,382 issues traded, 610 de­ clined and 496 advanced. New highs totaled 40. for 1966 67 There w ere two new lows. California Financial was the most active stock, off \\ at 7%. the problem child is given treatm ent without determining real cause or needs of his handicap. "No m atter w’hat the cause of the problem or the severity of the behavioral aspects, our school personnel are being asked or told to provide program s for such in­ dividuals." He said that "utter confusion" ham pers definitions, signs and symptoms of the so-called "m in­ imally brain-damaged" child. "I am of the opinion that with the minimally the advent of in our brain-injured program schools, both in Texas and else­ where, we have seen hastily con­ ceived program ming at the state level of teacher training institu­ tions," he said. to In particular, Wolfe criticized teacher training colleges for the lack of program s properly pre­ pared instruct teachers; for ill-prepared staff m em bers; and for the lack of supervised prac­ tice teaching with "warm bodies." Wolfe also chided state admin­ istrations for failure properly to identify children for special edu­ cation classes; lack of proper cer­ tification program s for the teach­ e rs; insufficient personal supervision of teachers and lack of objectives and goals. and He concluded that better prog­ ress can be achieved through closer cooperation among educa­ tors, psychologists, physicians, so­ cial workers, and other profes­ sionals. THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS CI.ASKIFTED A D V rB T IS rv O H A T H ................................. .................................................................. ra t* <10-w ord m in im u m ) on* Limn lim a ........................................ I * 1-7# -VI .26 ........................ ............................................... I I 'N) DU F a r * W ord <11 w ord m in im u m ) M in im u m C h ar* * • 'Mtident • l.a r h a d d itio n a l IU n d ay n a z i f i e d i o n e Inch on* A m a t co lu m n Farh Additional Tim* to < o n seeu tlv # I w ord* 15 w ord* W w ord* ............. Issue* ....................................................... .......................................................... O n comr d ia n e * for c o n secu tiv e issue r a te s ) At** fl-t'# U A® G R 1-5244 • N E W , L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S IO w o rd * o r I o u f o r 5 0 c t h # f i r s t tim * , 2 5 c e a c h a d d i t i o n a l sh o w A u d i t o r s ' v a n c e 8 a .m . F r id a y . r e c e i p t a n d p a y ti m # . S t u d e n t m u s t in a d ­ f r o m t h r o u g h 107 in J o u r n a li s m B ld g . t o 4 :3 0 p .m . M o n d a y C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G D E A D L I N E S T u e s d a y T e x a n W e d n e sd a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y T e x a n F r id a y T e x a n S u n d a y T e x a n .................................. M o n d a y , 3:3 0 t rn. ......................... T u e sd a y . 3:3 0 p m. ....................... W e d n e sd a y , 3:3 0 p m . ..................................... T h u r s d a y , 3 :3 0 p i n . ....................................... F r id a y . 3 30 p m . In th e e v en t o f e rr o r s m ad e In an a d v e r tis e m e n t, im m e d ia te n o tic e m u st he R iven as t h e p u b l i s h e r s a r e r e s p o n sib le fo r o n ly on e in c o r r e c t In s e rtio n . G R 1-5244 Furnished A p a rtm e n ts Furnished A p a rtm e n ts Furnished A p artm ents Duplex — Furnished Miscellaneous R oom and Board For Sale Typing C O N T IN E N T A L M an o r R o ad e t OI d r a m tw o b ed ro o m a p a rtm e n ts w ith m a open beam O n* an d b a z a a r p a r e e t wa • a n d h K* eetliXMi U tilitie s r a . d a t Si35 O R $-1262 G R 8-8670 to *160, LE FO UNTAINBLEAU Near Campus V acan cies h n m e d ate lv fo r 4 ladle* o r 4 m e r ro o m m ate s O ne ro o m m a te —4 m a e re c te a s on a n i A / " sw im m in g pool atn d v room . m a d s e rv ic e . u ” . t es pa d. G R 2-6480. 805 W est 28th. G R 8 9414. ’.au n d r: f e m a > THE C H A P A R R A L G R 6-3467 O N E BED RO OM 4310 Be!)vtie. 2 bed ro o m fu rn is h e d at SOI T e r­ fu rn ish ed duplex. rell Hill. G L 3-6857, G L 3-1395. R oom m ate W a n te d Tw o a - d so ITS. K itchen < '/.o r TV' lounge. fo u r m a n u n its ft la c ,a tle * , pool, ■ shed ITO stu d y hail, M A L E G RA D U A TE stu d e n t to s h a re m odern A /C one b ed ro o m a p a rtm e n t I ber k from c a m p u s. G R 2-0567. GR 63467 N E E D A ROOM M ATE In te rested in room an d b y ard Call G R 6-1712. 28C0 W hit I* PARKING 1932 S a n A n f o r 'o o r 2411 N u e c e s , $ 3 5 p e r t e m e s i e r . G R 6 3 7 2 0 . H O W E LL H O U SE o 'fe -s U T m en ex c elle n t fam lly -sty ’e m ea.* M odern facilit.es c o m e n e n t to ca m p u s, cen and h eat. M aid serv ic e o ff stre e t A XE P R O F E S S IO N A L c h e m is try R oom s and o r m e als. Close f r a t e m ’ty to ca m p u s. F E N D E R G U IT A R am p ., 1966 m odel, black tre rn elo an d n new condition, w .th vinyl, 703 W est 26th. cover. G R 7-1293. O NE BEDROOM A /C , gas paid. *92 00. 609 E a s t 45th. G L 2-*993 F E M A L E TO s h a re sm all h o ..se w ith one ca m p u s. girl. A /C . w alking d ista n c e of *12 50 m o n th ly plus V* u til.b e s . 476 3883. S o ciety Blood B in k n eed s a co n tin u in g 0525. sim ply of b ood donors, a g e 21-60 T a k e s m in u tes. 2908 N. In te r, eg,.on*!, G R 8-6157. lo O NLY C N E BLOCK FROM LA W S C H O O L T O R R E G IR L S s h a re lu x u ry N orth. C all G L 4-4925. looking fo r a p a rtm e n t. ro o m m a te to T an g ewood H e lp W a n te d still TH E SANTA EL A IN A : G irls p riv a te room 2 blocks. Co-ed riming. 2411 R io G ran d e. GR 2-4702. G R 2-7479. Spacious p lu sh — A /C . av a ila b le . ----- ----- ---------------------------------------------- tra l a ir *5 F O R y o u r h e p ' T ra v is County M edics! park in g Singles-doubles. G R 8-2521, G R 7- JNPR TW O boy* *89 SO to tal p ric e O re la rg e to U T. 2710 b ed ro o m , m a id serv tc* . Clo** WW ti a GR A IT H VERSAILLES APARTM ENTS A* I I A i r p o r t B v d . L u x u ry I a n d 2 b e d r o o m a p e r t - ’-# -* * A v e a b e f o r s p m g s e m e s t e r Sea M rs . S h e * '-/ S c ' - b t A p t . I I ? or c e G L 2-8365 E-ACKSTONE APARTMENTS F O R M E N AND WOMEN I b ed ro o m * I b a th a pa "tm«mt*—m a 14 se-v- te e - c o m p e te k itc h e n —a m p le o'? s tre e t p a r k ­ in g -exoe: Sent s tu d y t a d : r e v *>6 p e r m o n th p e r person. 29.0 Red R iv e r G R 6 O LD H A M H O U SE A PARTM EN T 19i4 Oldham G R 8-8911 ALL BILS PAD P o o l 2 Be d room D'spossi C a b !» TV S t u d y R o o - LA C A N A D A A P A R T M E N T FO R 2 boyg w ut b o ard . Close lo i 7 »*0 G R 6-1712 UA R O E 3 ROOMS. '■.'est 83th. G a ra g e GR 6-4435. GR. 6 5553 fu rn ish ed 1597 _____________________ Now leas r g for s p ' ng e ! r -ero o m , fenced y ard te rm L u x u rio u s one E a rn with and spa iou* d ish w a sh e r, wa k :n clo sets, pooh L a u n d ry fa c il.te s . Cen tw o bed ro o m a p a r m e n u cab :* TV. d isp o sal, A P A R T M E N T F O R m en 2 Or 3 ro o m s n ea r pa d. G R H 7 1 2 , M rs U n iv # ratty . s I tra l i i. L j e ALL BILLS PAID W ithin w alk in g ®!*tanoa fro m cam pus- G R 3-1598 urn) W est 24th pm eel UT M EN A/*“ 5 b ed -o o m s g a* p e d M aid S TU D Y A v ailab le u r U fo r m e n 3 j rates- C L 3-3235. :* -g e h em k itch en W a '* - f e e p a rk in g Q U IE T FOK ' p erso n . 2 e - b lo c k s N. C am p u s- R ea so n a b le ICS WEST 22nd I -REEK’N O ROCM • 3 B E D E ' ■ M • HUGE: LIV IN G ROOM • M EX IC A N F U R N IT U R E • p a t i o a n d b a d o n y • C L /.'SE TO CA M in is • V E R Y P l .'/A T E O L 3 3678 G R 2 1824 G R 2-2229 TA R RY TO W N G ra d u a te stu d en t# o r c a re e r fir* te r r a c e , pr .a t e e a t u n .e. O L 2 2TO0 lu x u ry p an e led s e m i-a p a rim e e t, den p la c e , One fu rn is h e d RO RTH W O O D T E R R A C E Arr av e n y ap - Urie-.' L a u n d ry fa r; Hies F re e B tiiitte* p a d N e a r c o m m u n ity c e n te r v a rie ty , on bus K 49 bedroom for r • id ren tare.*-*. Ad un. ne 907A E a s t 32nd. G R 8 co n d t on ed P .a y g - -..-td G a r a g e fo r j a i l o r C A S A DE SA L A D O s - - e r I * rd 2 b ed ro o m s — *w rpm «g pool. I' eel p ark r f ira L ux u rio u sly f a r : '.te x 2610 Sa ado GR 7 2 3 4 . M an ag er. A part- a r b b e - t fu rn ish ed L a u n d ry - o ff I m e n t No. HO. RIVER O A K S APARTMENTS I I a n d 2 fe *dro:*n - r- t A., 9 a b e fe n b e sp* - g ie*- e v e r S e e m a - a g e r o p t . 127 L A R G E LU X U R IO U S New L im ur* c a r ­ pet# parking. N ear UT. A pply 912 W est 19th. No pees. R E A L CUTE I bedroom ap artm en t 4 b e e k * G A RA G E APARTM ENT: q - e t , c o m m e r s ’ • est U n v ers;!) Cm.y *69 50. C L 3-7885. . mm I X ¥ ~ ATER..' Mul’t p e ItaUBg of T- ROOMMATE -------- fo r g ra d u a te stu d e n t <>' w .-•« Ea.st 42nd HO 8-7594, HO u-1908. s h a r e people w an t ng a p a rtm e n t to per*- s a v a ila b le . M oving u n n ec essary . 4-^alO ____ ______________________________________ A PA R T M E N T AT large 899 30. w aler paid. Love y ex STU DIO A PARTM ENT HI I ' C l - *•’ ma- et! — - 2307B R e bb R oad. Hee .e s : O L 5-1335. — . ; v07 E a s t A venue . coup e, no b ed ro w n # SISO ro o m . m o d e m , clea n , Q uiet E n field . d ren . W a te r fu-- *d a n d m eters for tight- two bed- reg.ooa G R *50. 304 T-2536 g a / *38. G R 7-092S R oom s for Rent T O W ER VIEW N e w ta ili n g a p p l i c a t i o n * f o r S p r i n g *#m e s te r UNIVERSITY H O U SE W S T D iam ond D rop an d cha.n. Call GR 1-3344. S e n t,m e n tal value. U n u e u a /y Q u iet and C lean 'C arpeted, lots of c o s e ts an d s to ra g e P len ty of p a rk in g s p ace a v a ab le. AU b a a paid. O nly 2 IOT Bab ne G R 6 0 » 3 GL 2-4888 |9 3 AT C A M P U S '■on*d, a t t r a c t i v e l y A — Y - # d c l o s e ts 1920 a p a r t m e n t . M a ' / F o r c o p e s . C a I G R 7 -6 8 1 8 . a t c«'p**ed. S p e e u n a / M ALE TO ah a-# a p a r t m e n t *33.75. B tilibes 4. Com e by p a d . 806 W est 19th, No ev en in g s, o r S atu rd a y m o m .n g a fte r IO. 1 M A L E ROOM M ATE lu x u ry m o b ile hom e. A r co nditioned Pool. *40. EV 5-4271. F E M A L E ROOM M ATE w arned. I bedroom lu x u ry a p a rtm e n t. 5 9 50 p iu s e lectricity . i O L 2-3350 o r G L 2-9866. i t XLE ST U D E N T w an ted to ah a .* lu x u ry a p a r t m e n t All a p p o in tm e n t HI 2-8727 O N E BOY to s h a re *32 00. C o m p letely fu r bam . R e frig e r­ n vhed. S nack b a r Tile a te d A /C . C o n tro lled h e a t See \p e r tin e n t C. 1906 N u* es. G R 2-3071, GR P a rk in g I 6-1534. d e s c e n t on* E U R O P E A N SU M M ER e n j o y m e n t All Job an d ta k e r C o n tin e n t. A pr ca tio n s now S u d en t T ra v el. 2226 G u ad alu p e G R 7-4340 in E n g la n d b e n g P la c e m e n t E X P E R IE N C E D STEAK cook and w a rre n se* ev en in g *h f t Good va a ry , s o u th Aus- c.n. 719 B en W hite H I 4-1315. H O LID A Y H O U SE 2009 Guadalupe P a r t tim e em p lo y m e n t t i 25 p e r h o u r M ust be ab * to work noon hour*. M onday th ro u g h a ll m e als. Be# F rid a y , 50% d isco u n t on M artin M a rtin e t a f te r 2 p m . TO W N LAKE APARTMENTS W ANTED! N-,w a c c e r ‘ - g J ; - ' - ' a n d S e - or s t u d e n t . 1 5 0 0 E a s t P v e rs d e . HI * 458 R o o m m ate# who re e d * qu e t place to s tu d y ' *35 (41 each . Alt B rl* Pf* d Beau* fut q u ie t a p a rtm e n t* Call M rs. N eeley GR 7 2534 DOES A N A V O N REPRESENTA­ TIVE CALL O N Y O U ? /. a m a y borhood. No ob catio n . C all H I 2 0578. aom eon* y o u r need In ne gh LYLE H O U SE R oo m e n d B oa rd C h o i c e of 2 m e a ls S n g a i a - d d o r e l i e 1"- lea C ose M a d 28OO W h i t i, G R 6 1 712. R o o m a n d Boa-d C h o i c e o f 2 m ea** H o m e m a d e Bread M a d Se rv ic e S n o e t a - d d c b 'e t 2710 N ie c e s , GR 6-4855 FOOD FOR TH O U G H T T h re e m eals a day. cho- e of 2 m e a ts, hom e m a d e b read , sa ad, d e s s e rt, ch o ir# of vege ta b le t. I m e a n 3 m e als D inner only is * m onth *40 OO m onth *25 m onth 2 7IO .Nueces GR 6-4855 ROOM-BOARD E xcel :ent food *53 m onthly. Single-double room s. for U n iv ersity m en Men, Upper Classmen, Graduate Students R e a s c n e k a. L a r g a a - c -> e d itio r# d l Lf? se kstcH<$n , w a \k ng 4 _ C a r p e t e d , car-nr Cf) I GR I '’I ' 6 O' GR 7 47 72 i AT I P * flr MALE R O O M M A T E <-•*-« h * o h e e ' rn i ry a r * D O R M C O U N SELO R S NEEDED L a i e . $ ' OO. a'! I T en t free. furn shed a p a rtm e n t 1th k itch en M s. ('o ffe r G R 3-5890. HI 2 7 3 9 8 • ;00 p ’ the: ties Th# c h a p a r r a l. For Sale WESTPARK W E E D E D : I -na e ro o m m a 'e to i h v r a p a -t .side ’> ilia se. *65. Ail b ills pa.rL m e • H G R JU IO'fl 2204 E n field I n c kitchen# POOii. (jH lit es. I en d 2 bedroom *: c a rp e te d P an elled . e:»c- A /C . M an ag e OR 7-7993 Manager: G R 7-7995 For Rent R E N T NEW A d m ira l m onthly. T ap e *' 2 50 *15 50 re c o rd e r! A lpha TV. GL TV 2-4057. No a n sw er, GR 2-3S9Z Call G R 6-3467 for appointment C IOO HONDA Lev* th a n 1000 m ile* per gallon. E x c e .le n t m iles 165 tspoNation. tra n sp o f " ' A O T I I ^ T F Q R A O F H O R M C ! \ t \ r \ v - C UV»/I\IV1 I U ■-> Q U A L IF IE D B IN G LE d r iv e r ------- SIU lent Phone GU 3-81)63 o r G R 1-1658 fo r , G UITA RS, M O D EL c a n . m odel # . cpl#n et, antuyues ------------------~ ~ — fo r d isab led fu rth e r In fo rm atio n . Good pay. lovely ca n d ies, m o n ste rs. U n u su a l stock. B lrden S ales, 1510 I-av aea. ca n d le holder*, ite m s ait from b an k ru p t ; EA RN *50*100 w eek ly w ith A lcoa Alum!- req u ired . M ust q u alify O o.'ege nunt C ar m en only. Call R o b ert T each . O L 3-7941. DIAMOND. beau tifu l w hit# so litaire . 53 GR 3 9232 p o.n ts AA q u a, ty. *395. G R 3-4331. • c o m p e te '-' • m a id serv ce • w a s .ie r-d ry e r c a rp e te d * b u ilt- in b-w kcascs * stu d y desk • pool *55 m o n th ly 2212 S an G ab riel GR 7 2357 *195. G R 6 2067. rT Z T T T Z — SOUSE O N CREEK JOB O P E N IN G S W I T H N A TIO N W IDE F I R M 1957 T H U N D E R B IR D a ir. 2 0344 a fte r 5. t>ow-ert a u t o m a t e c o n v * U h * . 2 tops, j U N IV ER SITY HOUSE. Singles, close _ to UT. tra n sm issio n . GR M a d s erv ic e. TIO N ueces GR 6-4853. BLOCK UNIVERSE IT hat sue 8 iP8 f "I miff? n I - I '+10 S peedw a v n s ? Y 2 bedroom * room efficiency G R 6-9444. A 'O. also G F 2 3?: 4 F U R N IS H E D A PA R TM EN T I k BLB 175 p u s k i lties. 2 E a s t 20th o r ca I GR 3 boys. S*e 102 '03 W est g is t S tree t. Call J im May fle d . r -------------- : G R 2-7715 Com f e t a b a o ld er hom e, s e m i-h im 'sh ed , tre e cdvere-l lot with punning c ree k a t b ack F o r couple* cr m a tu re stu d en t* . *70 a month. W o r t 15 20 ho u rs p e r w e s t . Ea-n $50. 00 p o u l t TON W estinghouse b o c * . u p p e r week. C h e r ie # h o r m a n ­ 6 m o n t - t . G R a n d 12:0 0 a .m ., a g e ' a! p o t h o n w ith n 6 8 2 / 5 b e t w e e n 8:0 0 W e d n e s d a y a n d T h u r sd a y . S chw inn Ix>n# s 'a r G irl*' w a t e r . boat. 2 t:e r end l a d y i and m an * ta b le GL 4 2349. alu m in u m hull a ir con d itio n er. dish­ P o rta b le sp eed ­ ro ller ahoeskate*. Printing Xeroxing-Single Copie* Multilithing Theses— Papers— Printing 3 I I East I I th GR 6-6593 AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS Lost and Found $100 REV/A RD A L D R ID G E T T P IN O S E R V IC E SOU* E a s t 30th S tree t G R 7-1696 O R 6-3367 T e ch n ica l p a p e rs a sp ecialty O v er 200 e x tra sy m b o ls >>n o u r IBM E x e cu tiv e* fo r scien ce, e n g in eerin g , m a th e m a tic * lan g u ag e. D rafting, m u ltiiith iag , b inding, a n d x e ro x .n a an d IVIp/diA T yping. M ultlUthlng. B :ndtng A co m p le te precessional ta il­ ored to th e n eed s of U n iv ersity s tu d en ts. Bpe- sci. th eses an d d is s e rta ­ , c a1 k ey b o ard eq u ip m en t I enc*, an d en g in eerin g ty p in g se rv ic e language, for tion*. 2 C h ie v e P ig s , m a!# an d fem ale, blond colored w ith b a c k face*. A nsw er lo n a m e of Tex and Agg e L a it s-mn a t A venue F nnd 49th. G R 7 .<>9.5, O L 2-5768. B rin g by 3209 E X P E R T TY PIN G . T e rm p a p e rs —rep o rt* — H am p to n R o ad . P h o n e GR 2-3210 A GR J-7677 2013 G u ad alu p e briefs. M rs. M ontgom ery. G R 2 5601, - l l W E EK old all w hite fox te rrie r. V icinity 800 b lo c k W est 28th. Lost T h u rs d a y , F eb ru a ry 2nd. R e w a rd Call GR 8-5474. LOST L A D IE S silva- B u lo v e w rist w atch. S e n tim e n ta l valu e R e w a rd G R 6-603.3. W a n te d t r . X IS o u t ask It a t G am er-C m ith B ookstore o r m ay be found on d rag R ead for e rs -c o n tn b u to rs w anted. Furnished R oom s DIFrriNCTTVE B R A D F IE L D House* U niver- s tv g r!v Room m e a ls, 21(*1 N ueces. OR 2103 N u eces, GR 81790. W ithout m e an s, 7-7744-G R 6-3607. stu d en t O' P R IV A T E ROOM, b ath for fem ale g ra d u a te in p riv a te facilities r e a s o n a b le p ric e. T ra n sp o rta tio n tea -ling assistant fu rn ish ed hom e b e a u t,tu ’ly av a a b > n eeded. HI 4-2378. F u I : M EN You re on y o u r own her*. Right# a re re s p e c te d ! R ea so n a b le rates, k itch en s, te le­ vision, p a rk ng. G R 6 1114. G R 2-4702. VACANCY KOR m a '* to m a rria g e M odern A /C . 3 b lo ck s ca m p u s. No d e ­ due p o s it Call G R 6-1837. tinned. ditions. D aily 1904 rates. All m a id serv ic e. San A nlonio, M EN : W est ta k e Ave. o v er c o n t r a c t No. 20. --------------------- room # a t re- room s air-condi- Id eal study eon- G R 7-7342. See Louie. 1808 L Y L E UT. HOU:- M aid E N ee, qu iet to serv ice. 2800 W h im . GR 6-1712. ro o m s clo -e P A SO H O U SE 180S W est Ave. T H E S E S , d isserta tio n s, report*. B obbye De afield HI 2-7181 25c page. Virg'nia Calhoun Typing Service P r o f e s s o r i a l T y p i - g M ultilithing an d binding on s e n a t o r s HOI Edgew ood S y m b o .i X erox L a m in a tin g th e se s and dl*- GR 8 2636 N o tary T Y P IN G on ex e c u te a e le c tric b** fo rm e r le­ in s e c re ta ria l studies. gal s e c re ta ry BBA H r s F ow ler GL 3-8650. TH E M E S . R EPO R TS, lawnote#. 25c. N o tary . M rs. E ra er. G R 6-1317 VV(X)DS T Y P IN G S E R V IC E E x p e -ien red . D isse rtatio n s, M an u scrip ts C om plete d u p ­ for m u a u t h , m im eo g rap h . licatin g ditto. Rea sons b e . HO 5-1078, serv ic e COMPETENT B E ''R E T A R Y -TY F IST w ith m a n y y ea r# of e x p e rien ce in all field * | win give c o n s e r t i o n * and m c cu iju s c a re to a c u ra c y . c o rre c t form an d c nm po ii- a* 'Ion p ap e rs, re p o rt!, the5P, an(1 dlMertatlon, r a w w o r k SFEC- lA LIST B riefs # #m m nr r # |e s. .aw review notes. IBM E le c tro m a tic , M u’tilith in g X erox­ ing an d bm d.ng ae r vices on te ch n ica l r e q u e s t typing In G R 8-5894 T H E S E S , DISSERTA7ION-V!, b r cf*, IBM . Mr#. A nthony. O L 4-3979. report#, M A R G A R E T RITCHIE P ro fessio n al, O bse cant Typing Since 1951 D IS S E R T A T IO N S , T H E S E S , R E P O R T S A ccu rately bol*. M ultillihed an d bound upon e le c tric with typed on r e q u e s t is m - 1404 K ent La e toff E nfield R oad) G R 6-7079 T Y P IN G , IBM , 5.30 p .rn weekdays,). sym bol#. HO 5 7883 t a p e r m p M ko . y m M , 0 * Typ in g M ultilithing. B inding A co m p le te p ro fessio n al ta il­ ored to th e n eed s of U n iv ersity student* Spe­ lan g u ag e, sci­ cial k ey b o a rd e q u ip m en t en ce, an d en g in eerin g th e se s an d d is s e rta ­ tions. typing serv ic e for P hone GR 2-321® A G R 2-7677 2013 G u ad alu p e Tutoring W A N TED : p a rt-tim e b a rte n d e r to w ork 20 h o u rs p e r w eek, 21 y ea r* of age. A pply in person, w eek-daya a fte r 8 p m . T h e T a v e rn . E P IP H O N E 5 -stn n g 12th a n d I-a m a r. condition *125. EV 5-4271. long neck b anjo. New 1961 BUICK S k y lark . A u to m atic, 2 do o r, ra- dto. h e a te r. *750 o r m a k e an offer. GR LARGE, S IN G L E and double 4400 afternoon*. sp rin g d u ced Qu ct L ux u ry L iv in g T H E L O R R A I N HOI S a fi* i R oad I a n d 2 BR a p a rtm e n ts .............. A U . B ILLS PA ID Pool — C ab le TV — L a u n d ry © topping C en ter — d a t e r . GR 7-2536 —— 2 BLOCKS OFF CAMPUS I B edroom , w alk :n Closet, c e n tra l c l r and ‘.pat, new fu rr.J u rfc w a te r a n d g a s paid HIO p e r m o n th . 2806 H em Phil! P s i G R 2-4881 *'<9.50 8 6 5 S P A M SH BY e x p e rie n c e d te a c h e r. MA V irginia B u tler G R 8-5178. G R 7-7154 TU T O R IN G IN Zoology o r E n g lish tu to -m g for i C all H<> 5-9597 a fte r 3 30. c h a n g e :n beg in n in g P e r s ia n In ex* FOLK G UITAR lessons D av e M ah ler, Fo.k C en ter. 2405 N ueces. G R 8 14IL PART TIME or FULLTIME B u y * ' tra n e e .............. sh o e ss es E x p e rie n c e p re fe rre d - sto re b en e fits A pply 3rd floor G O O D F R IE N D S 9131 C o n g ress B E A U T IF U L Dodge c h a rg e r ; filly eq u ip p ed . Se I o r tr a d e for o ld e r ca r. 4 m onth* old, sacrifice. G R 2-1640. U N F IN ISH E D DESKS an d bookcase* o r will to stu to o d e r. V ery reaso n ab le m a k e den ts. GR 3 8813. F E N D E R BASSMAN a m p lifie r and p re c is ,on b a s s g u ita r. < all G R 6-8273 8-12 a m . or 10-12 p rn. B est offer. 1928 F O R D : 2 door sed an , 9 0 r 4 r e s ’o red , run# p e r f e c t B e d offer o v e r *400. Cali G R 8- Room s for Rent 0870. Ca G R I -5244 --------------------------- — T H R E E BINGLE j MU STT S E U . u n iq u e 1951 C ad illa c h e a rse . e a tor. hom e. trouble :«10 C ongress. G R 8-2755. ro o m s In co tta g e . R efrlg- ; M any posilblllL es. G L 3-4042, O L 2-9829. ...... — -------- — 1959 O LD SM O BILE, P a rk in g . room *50 in v e ry H e ater, a i r ro n d ;t,o n in g . good condition radio. G R 6 1593. L A R G E S IN G L E ic e b o x , p riv a te b ath 3303 D uval. M rs. Lillian B ru ­ c a rp e te d room , n e tte G R 2-6017. THE DIPLOMAT To Place a Texan Classified Ad Furnished H ouses SUITABLE, fu - In r e t o r four stu d en ts o r ta m - « -i llsh D ept. o r O L 3-3190. ny. 1006 We** 22nd *85. Dr. P r a tt , E n g - I I : ^ by 4 5 , two bedroom*. 841 A irport * n e e i , H o m a , $ 1 9 9 5 . i n t o o A I __ I » - 8 R i,...a rc h o n , A lterations Blvd, No. 25. G R 6 8513. LADIES, M EN, rn .m a ry . Mr*. Sim s. 5308 Wood.-ow, OL 2 1196. NEED A QUIET PLACE TO STUDY? re ­ E x c ellen t * - d seriation., po rts. and books. M ultilithing and bind na upon requcst- th eses, term Th# W a rre n H ouse, 1908 S an Antonio, h as I.A R O E air-eonditicm e.i ro o m s. Singles arid doubles ra le s red u ce d for sp rin g s e m e ste r. Tw o blocks fro m c a m p u s. GR 7 7312 o r G R 7-5416. In clu d es d ally m a id serv ice. All | (,R 8-8113 Mr* Rod o u r tar? W est 27!4 (F o u l Blocks W est) _ Accur* ate. R easo n ab le, n e a r A Uandsl# H o 5-5813, j E X P E R IE N C E D i I' PIN G gKRVK — K easonabie R ates l a r g e ro o m s • re frig e ra to r • Q uiet • N ew ly C arp e ted • New _ __» seclu d ed e n v iro n m en t T Y P IN G . NEA T a c c u ra te , (ast serv ic e M r# T ullos O L 3-5121, _ < > n iia i a ir and h e a l • ( 'a b o TV lounge Now a c c e p tin g app: a u o n s (or fall s e m e ste r. GR 8-3917 T H E M E S . T H E S E S , d isserta tio n s, N o tary 18 y ea rn ex p e l cnee M ar j o i e D elafield HI 2-7008. law b e e fs . J c t pet page. P ro fe s s io n a l T y p i n g Students-Faculty g t u d r re s id e n c e to o u tsta n d in g u p p e r re* dei e C a rp e te d s tu d y of p rfv a to G r a d e po in t av e -a g e t i 40 sp rin g k e n o * te r C ali R e t d ent M an ag er, G R 6 863a for m e n WUU U n 'e r * ty A venue R a te of *31 p er m o.-th. c a te rin g o p e ra te d e x t ujjv# N o rth std a a tm o sp h e re . fall #em *#ter c ta s a m a n O pened hep tem b er. 1S<64- a new p riv a te > lounge*, c a d e TV , c a m p u s I 3 o r b e tte r, F o r fre s h m e n . SAT of 11541 atr-c o o d .t ooed, E m p r e s s on stu d y t i 5 c a m p u s close to p a r k r .g P M . d i p / s a c a c e TV S e e a l t e r 5 p .m . 1911 T a n G a b r ai G R 6 -2 5 1 1 , F U R N IS H E D I b+d-oom a p a rtm e n t n e a r ra m pus. W ale! g a s paid. 2403 L o n g v ew . G R 6- 27Sa. C L 807 40. Page 8 Wednesday, February 8, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Irn Exhibit to Display Horn Musician Various Greek Arts To Give Recital ww WW W W rn Ua* w l i rn U K rn WW w ^ Greece, Guerin concentrated the relationship between site and landscape, into account the subject of Greek light which has been "a determining factor for all Greek art.” taking referred "IT WAS A DETERMINING factor for me, too,” he said, " I am convinced that drawings in black and white can imply color through tonal relationships and perhaps subtly come closer to that m ystery to as Greek light.” Displays from archaeological “ digs” at the site of Ancient Corinth the U niversity’s interest in Greece. Under supervision of Dr. Jam es R . Wiseman, associate professor of classics, faculty members and students in art, classics and arch­ itecture conducted excavations in Greece in the summers of 1965 and 1966. represent further » A recital to he held Thursday at 4 p.m. in Recital Hall at the U niversity w ill present Samuel Thiel, a student who plays horn. Thiel, whose studies center in the Department of Music, has performed for the past two years with both the University Sym ­ phony and the Austin Symphony Orchestra. Ile has also performed on several occasions with the San Antonio Symphony. Mozart s "Quintet in E flat for Horn and Strings, K. 407” will open the recital. Thiel w ill he as­ sisted by Fred Nelson, violin; Jo Don Peacock, viola; M ary Jo Ahlborn, viola, and lin d a F ry ­ man, cello. Following w ill be the Brahm s "T rio in E flat for Horn, Violin, Piano, Op. 40” with assist­ ing student artists Nelson and Evelyno Flauw, piano. The recital is admission free and Is a presentation of the De­ partment of Music Student Re­ cital Series. Snow Grounds Foss The lecture on “ Aspects of M u­ sic Today” scheduled to bo held at IO a.m. Wednesday in the Mu­ sic Building Recital Hall has been cancelled University officials said Tuesday. The lecturer, Lukas Foss, who Is the conductor of the Buffalo Philharm onic Orchestra, was un­ able to leave Buffalo by airplane because of heavy snowfall. Uni. versify officials said that rom w ill be rescheduled to lecture al a later date. The Institute of M arine Science Is a research division of the University and is located at Port Aransas, near Corpus Christi. INTERSTATE n i l ! ti n* ic DOWNTOWN TG CONCH* 1:164:661 UHLS :M PARAMOUNT LAST DAY: GEORGE Am C f n i E i l A i l l MAHARIS V a l l N a w l ■ W W I T H D E A T H STARTS T O M O R R O W ! IN HK OWN WAY HE IS, PERHAPS, THE MOST DANGEROUS MAN WHO EVER LIVED! A Spoof on Officialdom (left Players lo right) Bart M cCarthy, Robert Burns, Mark Blankfield, and Timothy C ase y ara members of G o g o ls comedy "The Government Inspector." Produced by the Department of Drama, the play will be presented Tuesday through Feb. 18 in H o g g Auditorium. —Photo by Vlr*H Johnson News Study Scheduled RLRN -TV w ill present "N ew s in Perspective” at 9:00 p.m. Wed­ nesday. Reporters of the New York Times w ill present their an­ alyses of m ajor news develop­ ments. U niversity involvement In a number of projects relating to Greece is apparent in a new ex­ hibit which opened Monday on the fourth floor of the Academic Center. Tile exhibition features water­ color paintings, drawing, archae­ ological excavation d i s p l a y s and other m aterials on ancient and modem Greece. It is open to the public and w ill remain on view through Fob. 26. A R R A N G E M E N T S the the show, A rt and Classics Department and the School of Architecture, have been made by the U niver­ sity A rt Museum under the super­ vision of D r. M arian B . Davis, art professor and acting director of the museum. in cooperation with for Two A rt Department teachers —K e lly Fearing, professor, and John Guerin, associate professor —w ill have on exhibit numerous works which were inspired by Grecian travels made possible by U niversity Research Institute grants. In Fearing is exhibiting a collec­ tion of IOO small abstract water­ "T ile color paintings entitled Aegean Series.” it he has captured impressions of the Ae­ gean Sea and the "w hite light” of Greece that produces color changes in sea and sky. Some of his paintings were started the Aegean while cruising on Sea and visiting the islands of Hydra, C r e t e , Rhodes, Santo­ rini, Delos, and Mykonos. The from others were developed memory. F E A R IN G recalls that his first Impression of the "deep blue cf the Aegean Sea left me with the notion that if I dived into these waters I would come out dyed ultram arine.” He added, how­ ever, that "when the sky grew cloudy, the deep waters turned grape, and I could understand the visual implications of the Greek poets’ reference to wine- hued sea.” to Guerin's contribution the is a series of 32 new exhibit drawings which are called "A n ­ cient Greek Sites.” They were developed on visits to Attica, the • Peloponnese, Aegean Islands and Thessaly. The autumn, 1967, is­ sue of the Texas Quarterly w ill reproduce a number of these drawings. In his drawings of classical of architectural monuments ’New Rock' Show Set at Coliseum The Ele ctric Grandmother, a local production outfit, swings in­ to action again at 8 p.m. Friday night at City Coliseum—for tile second in a dance — light show series featuring top rock ’n’ roll bands in the area as well as side­ bar attractions of the "new thing” entertainment. One of Austin’s newest contri­ butions to the new rock — the Thirteenth Floor Elevator — w ill headline the show along with The Conqueroo, another local group. At least two other local bands i are scheduled to perform in the Frid ay concert as well. One of the features of the Ja n ­ uary show which w ill be con-1 tinued is the last hour "jam ses-1 aion.” This is where musicians from the various groups have a chance to get together and play whatever comes into their heads thereby producing sounds which have been tagged "psychedelic.” J Tickets for the show are priced at $2 at the door or $1.75 advance. Presale locations include Travis Book Store. The Record Shop, and KAZZ-FM studios. FRIDAY— FEB. IO 8 p.m. The Electric Grandmother presents 13th Floor Elevators ★ Conqueroo ★ Jomo Disaster Light Show D A N CE CO N C ER T CITY C O LISEU M Presale Tickets $1.7 5 Hemphill s No. 2 KAZZ-FM Travis Bookstore The Record Shop $2.00 at the door AT 2:00 4:05 6:05 8:10 10:10 TODAY! ^ * ' 5 0 * , : : SMOKING -£ PUSMBAUkrC LOGE t SEATS ARI JO GIANT . £ ACRES of FREE ll GAI E ERY t SCREEN X I IGHTl D WLRKiNu RANS ★ / E X A S M O L IK K S T ! . u n i v M I N T O I IK A .N T L. K U T il K A T H L a S p in a l P ric e * F o r ' Matinee* A ll Heat* I KAO ’til A p m. So m e thin g fo r Leery one ! J f raj IC A N A T H I A T R I C L 3-6641 TTOO H an co ck D r lv * Open I IS F e a t I T I (WHO A MW Van rrmak| Pnxlncttaa ZERDAVOSIfeL, PHIL SILVERS JACK GILFORD BUSTER KEATON COLOR by OaLsxe •HHH. ti* UNITED ARTISTS rn FUN MV THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TOTHE F O R U M * EXAS T H I A T R I G R 7-1964 'O n t h * D r a g ' O PKN 1:U F t: VTI It KA i 2-4-6-8-U HELD OVER! 2nd Creal Week! . stinging " A L J F IE ' . . truths! . . . film is a hi­ larious, depressing com­ edy! Rene Covington American-Statesman ★ ★ ★ ★ (High att Hating) Peopl e are g o i n g to stop talking about 4Virginia Woolf’ and start talking about ‘Alfie’T* - Wanda Hah. N. Y. DAILY NEWS “ Y o u m ay hate y o u rse lf in th e m o r n i n g , b u t y o u a r e g o in g to e njo y ‘A lf ie ’ v e r y m u c h . 4A l f i e ' u s e s p e o p le — m a in ly w o m e n — a n d t h r o w s t h e m a w a y l i k e t i s s u e s . 99 - LIFE Magazine PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents (RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES) MICHAEL CAINE is ALF1E MILLICENT MJUHUWUUA FBSItR*lAN£ M R S I M ANNI FED »VMEII MERCHANT' rn SHELLA W T O IS Rif f M M T ■OW* ll aim MMI | Special Jury hzmi * It At C*WjFtai Festival A PAfttWXNT PICTURE A D C I.T S I .On D IM . C A R D S SO < H Il.lt F R KH — HIEF D R IV E* T H EA T R E 15601 N L A M A R H O 5 - 1 7 1 0 O P EN I P M . F IR S T SHOW LNG | (30 BURT LANCASTER IEE MARVIN ROBERT RYAN JACK BALANCE RALPH BELLAMY [ ^.CLAUDU CARDINJ^£; th e M O I E S S i O N M S jrasi Between them the? held the straitest gut in the west! AN EVE FOR AN ESTE DOLLARS It s the Ant motion picture of Its kind. It won't be the last! U M I ilS IW O Q B .fl H S U D L S DOLLARS „ tichmcoum7 «.»— « . u rn s A tren - MARIANNE KOCH FREE PARKING “T.YAi INTERSTATE LAST DAY! S T A T E DOWNTOWN T K CONC*!** THEATRE KF. AITH FR: I t : * 1:564 :N 8: (NMI: 35-8: K M M ) WOODY ALLEN I STRIKES BACKS THEW,LDFST co m e d y o f the y e a r ! WOODY ALLEN S m W|^ P t'ger lily? SEE— HEAR!® I IMH— 6*—M - - "P O W STARTS T O M O R R O W ! SPECIAL SELECTIVE ENGAGEMENT N O S E A T S R E S E R V E D ■ vary T lc k * th o M * r 6 u * r* n t* * 4 • ■ ** > t2o RODGERS •* HAMMERSTEIN* ROBERT WISE kmnvction^h KINNER OF 5 i ? ACADEMY MllllfflS Including jU N m ’ P i i * J: fejj -"if i ii RICHARD HAYDN * UU OUM'! M I , ROBERT WISE Lyaan 6y [ELEANOR PARKERi I Jpaartupluy By RICHARD RODGERS I OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN II I ERNEST LEHMAN ( r«* — Mb* k, WA.rf Ih+m .NANI! » POM* UTIW ■ MON .-KIU. S OO A 8 OO ** VT. A S I N. I IKM 56-8:1.1 AOM. MON H U . MATIN EK (KSA EVENINGS A NIX DAT SIT . A SUK. «tW I HIU) (ANY TIME) l l HO PASS I JST SI SF KND KO INTERSTATE FREE PARKING Tty 4 LAV At A yr* VARSITY THEATRE M O I G U A O A I U F I A O I LT S L M MDC. .TS No (TilId Ticket* F E A T I H E S : S.IKM:06-6 04 T W -1 JU "O N E OF THE YEAR'S BEST PICTURES” " 'G E O R G Y GIRL' IS SUPERIOR! W O NDERFUL PELL-MELL ENJOYMENT, IMMENSELY O R IG IN AL! ■ m x Botley CT’JWtber, N.Y. lime* “ DeiUned for Academy Award Domination." D O N ’T M IS S I T ! K j s y j Ja m e s m a s o n • alan bates • Lynn REDGRAVE *•-*• chmujtte rampum FREE PARKING ADMCfNT m o n ton TO TM, AT®, THEATRE FE ITI'RES: (h a te 8:15 Professional* 8:45 CtXUMCtA PCTuae* d MARLON BRANDO .S A M SPIEGEL'S I ooociuctoo a* | r£ » s r ' - 39^ A NMB fete mmm na13KTK PROFESSIONALS Si arn uj( B I R T L A M A S T E * I -FE MARVIN ROBEST RYAN and CLAUDIA C ARDINAL* COLOR M B W M ™ FREE PARKING AT ALL TIMES Wednesday, February 8, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Pago BEA U TIFU L YOUNG M O O NLIGHTING' W IV ES Movies fmmMMor etwvtm. . /dr yr * w r RO CK AND SH O C K A C IT Y W IT H U N PRIN TA BLE SCAN D AL Sorry... We QtD Not Show You Scenes From This Movie Ijn Our Ads. We Do Not Want To Offend Shy Or Prudish People. Feature Times 6:45 and 10:30 A Raw... And Jarring Motion Picture About Shame ;C ss Women. FILM ED IN COLOR...AS IT REALLY HAPPENED! m o o n lightin g w iv es ■ M O 0.U.HT.N. * IV t r IS " ° T - - £ W W . . . . . . . ° « PRUDISH PEOPLEt PAUL ■ HEWMANK® JOANNE IP niniii amman n**# NEW K I N D O F L O V E R EM K8U T EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN SHOWING! OPEN 6:15 N O O N E UNDER 18 YRS. ADMITTED ADULTS A 1.50 STARTS TODAY! WD0 U W U w | iin n n a bush* . MAIM MAUERkiwi FEATURE TIME 8:30 U R N E T = 6400 Burndt Rd. HO 5-6933 School Officials Label Bill $3 Million Short By TIm1 Associated Press The Legislative Budget Board's general appropriation bill leaves the University of Texas Galves­ ton Medical Branch short of the money it needs to pay its faculty and run the John Sealy Hospital, school officials said today. Dr. Truman Blocker, the dean, and Frank Erwin, chairm an of the University regents, asked the House Appropriations Commit­ tee to add $3,126,549 to the Budg­ et Board bill. The amount includes $1,970,559 added for faculty salaries and $1,155,990 for the hospital. “THIS BILL ENABLE US to convert to a full time faculty,” Blocker said. “ We only have 30 full-time—we should have BO.” There was no mention of the re­ cent resignation of several facul­ ty m em bers in protest of school policy at the medical branch. “ With a fulltime faculty goes complete dedication to teaching medicine,” Blocker said, adding that salaries at the school “ are below our other biomedical un­ its.” ERWIN and Medical Branch officials said costs are climbing so rapidly that p arts of the hos­ pital may have to be closed if additional funds are not appro­ priated. ‘‘I apologize for having to ask this kind of money for the hos­ pital in Galveston, but either we are going to have to close the in part or have hospital down the money we are asking for,” Erwin said. Galveston County Judge Ray Holbrook said the county under­ stands “we have a responsibility for providing medical care for our indigents.” GALVESTON COUNTY v e t is will decide March 18, he said, on a road and flood control tax that would release funds “so v c responsibility full can assum e Professional C a r e e r s in C a r t o g r a p h y C IV IL IA N E M PL O Y M E N T w ith th e U .S . A IR F O R C E C R E A T IN G A E R O S P A C E PRODUCTS M inim u m 120 semester hours college credit including 5 hours college level math. Th# required math must include at least 2 of th# follow ing: college algebra, trigonom etry, analytic geom etry, differential calculus, integral calculus, or any course for which any of these is a prerequisite. Equivalent experience acceptable. Training program . O p e n in g s for men and women. A p p lica tio n and further inform ation forw arded on request. W R IT E : C o lle g e Relations ( A C P C R ) H q A e ro nau tical C h a rt 4 Inform ation Center, 8900 S. Broadway, St. Louis, M issouri 63125 An equal opi>ortunlt.v em ployer FREE on I I 8.28 Blanket Tax M I M M Draw Free RESERVED SEAT Tickets How Fine Arts Box Office • Hogg Auditorium _______ /ft ISUT% Q All-orchestral concert Feb. 13 M o n d a y PROGRAM: W olf: italian Serenade Schumann: Symphony No. 3, "Rhenish" Ravel; Mother Goose Suite R ms* . Korsakov: Snow Maiden Suite for indigents.” He said the coun­ ty would take full responsibility in 1969 and partial responsibility in 1968. Tile University Regents said last year that the county should bear m ore of the cost for indi­ gents treated at Sealy Hospital. The Budget Board bill would provided the Medical Branch with $10.4 million in general revenue in thf’ fiscal year beginning Sept. I and $11.7 million the following year. federal ERWIN SAID that to comply with standards under Title 19 of the Social Security Art, some wards at the hospital would have to be broken up into two-bed units at a cost of about $1 million. The cost probably would come from Sealy-Smith Foundation money, he said. Title 19 provides m edical care receiving welfare for persons payments for the blind, aged, de­ pendent children, and disabled. “ We are in a situation where we can’t live with federal regu­ lations and can’t live without fed­ eral money,” Erw in said. School Appoints Acting Dean By The Associated Press GALVESTON An acting dean of nursing has been appointed at the University of Texas School of Nursing where 12 of 21 faculty m embers sub­ m itted resignations in protest of school policies. The new acting dean is Miss Chloe Floyd, who was associate professor of the medical-surgical nursing departm ent. Dr. Trum an Blocker, executive director and dean of the medical branch, m ade the appointment. He did not immediately replace M arie C. Prim m , assistant dean, who resigned. Resignations of nine other fac­ ulty mem bers are effective Aug. 31—end of the present school year. The resignation of another faculty m em ber, Miss G r a c e Schexnayder, chairm an of child nursing, was undated. Miss Floyd replaced Dr. Betty Rudnick, crian of the school of nursing, as acting head of the departm ent. Last Thursday, Dr. Rudnick asked a faculty meeting to get Blocker recom ­ to clarify six mendations on nursing education m ade by the University of Texas Board. This apparently triggered a conflict m teaching policies. long-simmering Dr. Rudnick called another faculty meeting to announce her resignation. Horserace Hearing . . . the Rev. Walter Campbell advocates Texas racing. —Photo by St. Clair Newbern Legislature .. ^Continued from Page I.) that during a model legislature held in December, 1966 composed of young people, both houses unanimously approved pari-mutuel betting. the senators Following lead of Sen. Bates and Sen. Barry, the four other casting “aye” votes for approval of the bill were Joe Christie, El Paso; Chet Brooks, Pasadena; Wa vile Con- nally, Floresville; and James Wade, Dallas. Voting “ no” were Sen. Ralph Hall, com m ittee chairm an, Rock­ wall, and Sons. Tom Creighton, Mineral Wells; David Ratliff, Stam ford; Jack Hightower, Vern­ on, and J. P. Word, Meridian. The betting bill now awaits placem ent on the Senate calendar for debate. Commenting on the bill’s outlook on the floor, Sen. Henry Grover of Houston said, "I don’t think it will pass . . . I will vote against it.” SEN. JO E BERN AL of San An­ tonio, said, ‘‘I think most of the metropolitan area senators will be for it . . . a large metropoli­ tan presentation wall give it a better chance. I think it has an excellent chance.” Sen Hightower said he did not think the bill would pass. "I don’t think it has the support of the people and of the Senate.” HANK BROWN, president of the Texas AFL-CIO, said, “I think i f s good that the issue be pres­ ented to the Senate and the peo­ ple.” He said that labor had not taken an official stand on the is­ sue, but ‘‘the board of directors were 2-1 in favor for local option of pari-mutel betting.” “ We have to make up In our minds whether we want to come to the Twentieth Century or not,” he said. “ It would be tightly sup­ ervised, and bring in additional revenue—there would be many more wages, and job opportuni­ ties at a decent wage. Make it legal, strict, tough, and m ake sure the state gets a proper share of the revenue.” Despite the four-hour length of the committee hearing, the gal­ leries and the Senate floor re­ mained packed with horse racing enthusiasts and opponents. Back­ ers of the proposal wore badges showing a race horse and a big- lettered “ for,” and sent up a cheer when the final vote was announced. u . J-:- / t', j*K iM C - — SSS I DON'T GIVE UP! HEMPHILL'S HAS USED TEXTS mg Big Savings On New & Used B O O K S GOODYEAR NYLON AS LOW AS... tubers* $126.50 x 13 Goodyear All-W eather Tires • E x tra m ile a g e T u fsy n ru b b e r • T r ip le -te m p e re d n y lo n c o rd • T r a c k -te s te d fo r IOO m ile s at s p e e d * plus i i 55 Fed h Tax and old tire u p to IOO rn p .h . T u b e lm S ix *f Blackwall Rn ca Whitewall Price 6 5 0 x 13 7.75 x 14 (7 .5 0 x 141 8 25 x 14 (8.00 x 14; 7.75 x 15 (6 7 0 x 15) $12 $1 3 $16 $13 $ 1 4 $ 15 $18 $15 f S i i a shown also replaces s>re in parenthesis Plus Fed I i Tai and old tire $1.55 $1 88 $2 05 $1.89 • NO MONEY DOWN ON OUR EASY PAY PLAN • FREE EXPERT MOUNTING GOODYEAR G O O D Y E A R SERVICE STORE 907 East 41st (Across from Hancock Center) Oltorf at South Congress HO 5-6559 Hi 4'4737 mumm SAVE 30% ON USED BOOKS PLUS: Your Ever-Ready Rebate ... ■ .... - ti i ■■■■■: ......... . . . . . . . . . . PeQt IO Wednesday* February 8* 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Senate Approves Pay Raise, Solons Talk Money, Liquor Compiled From AP Reports Texas senators put the pres­ sure back on the House Tuesday immediate by approving, 28-2, state employe pay raises, a po­ litical hot potato that the gover­ nor and representatives do not want to handle now. SPEAKER BEN BARNES im­ mediately served notice he would follow House rules and not give the so-called emergency measure any high priority until after a general appropriations bill is passed. “Nobody is going to help state employes if we don’t” argued Sen. Charles Herring, Austin, who with the backing of Lt. Gov. Preston Smith, finally won Sen­ ate approval after the third at­ tempt in two weeks. HERRING STRESSED that his bill was intended merely to pro­ vide a raise, estimated to cost about $5.2 million from general revenue, beginning March I in­ stead of Sept. I, the start of the next fiscal period. ★ ★ ★ After a hectic two-hour session, the Senate Finance Committee approved the House-passed emer­ gency appropriation bill would provide $145,583 for the Co­ ordinating Board, Texas College and University System. that ] The S e n a t e ’ s emergency money bill would provide enough money to finish the Institute of Texas Cultures at the Hemis- Fair, scheduled to open in 1968 in San Antonio. An effort to re­ move the $5.5 million appropria­ tion failed 3-16. ★ ★ ★ The House appropriations bill will be at least as big as the $971.5 million general revenue recommendation of Gov. John Connally, the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee said Tuesday. “THE APPROPRIATIONS bill will be comparable in size to the governor’s bill,” said Rep. VV. S. Heady of Paducah. Speaker Ben Barnes said Mon­ day he hopes the House can hold spending within the governor’s recommendations. Connally has recommended $144.2 million in revenue measures to balance his 1968-69 budget. There has been some specula­ tion that the Senate—guided by economy-minded Lt. Gov. Pres­ ton Smith—will pass the $835.3 million L e g i s l a t i v e Budget Board bill, which would require no new taxes. Because of differences in Sen­ ate and House versions of the spending bill, the final act is written by a 10-man Senate- H o u s e conference committee. Barnes’ new House rules forbid the House conferees to add any­ thing to the b i l l that was in neither chamber’s version. ★ ★ ★ A Senate committee quickly sent to a subcommittee a pro­ that business hours for posal liquor stores be changed from 9 a.rn.-IO p.m. to l l a.m .-7 p.m. Proponents said the c h a n g e would reduce holdups. Opponents said it would encourage bootleg­ ging. to A House com m ittee- sent subcommittee a proposal aimed at clarifying the property rights of a married woman. The key provision would allow wives to control such community property as their personal earnings which they would have if they were single. John Dos Passos’ book, “The Big Money,” was dropped from the r e q u i r e d reading list of sophomore English in January 1943 after the Board of Regents voted it “obscene.” Ken. 303 S e c t I. ( hem. 305 Sect. I, Psych. 301 Sect. t, K eo. 303 S e c t. t C h em . 305 S e c t. 3 G o r ’t 51 0A S e c t. S A-PLUS LECTURE NOTES $«.93 Per Sem ester 1009 W . 26th St. Austin, Texas Breakfast Specials 6-11 A.M. MONDAY-FRIDAY No I No. 3 Choice of Fruit Juice One Egg, Toast and Coffee Choice of Bacon, Sausage, or Ham, 2 Eggs, 2 Pancakes or Toast Q jL » T tfle and Coffee “ 7 v PANCAKE HOUSE COMPLETE M ENU 19th A N D G U A D ALU PE I CURRENTLY ON TOUR OF CAMPUSES IN CANADA & THE U.S.. THE "NEW FOLK" ARE A LIVELY NEW SOUND & SPIRIT IN FOLK MUSIC...COMING HERE: THURSDAY-8 p.m. FEBRUARY 9th MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM G EN ERA L A D M IS S IO N ... *2 .50 BLANKET T A X ..................*1.00 TICKETS AVAILABLE: University Co-Op, Municipal Auditorium Box Office end Bloomquist-Clark SRT A NEW M CE! E S H SPONSORED BY COLLEGE LIFE Chartered buses will provide transportation to the Auditorium, leaving 6:45, 7:00, 7:15, end 7:30 following customary C.E.C. route. Fare: 25c. School Officials Label Bill $3 Million Short By The Associated Press The Legislative Budget Board's general appropriation bill leaves the University of Texas Galves­ ton Medical Branch short of the money it needs to pay its faculty and run the John Sealy Hospital, •chool officials said today. Dr. Truman Blocker, the dean, and Frank Erw in, chairman of the University regents, asked the House Appropriations Commit­ tee to add $3,126,549 to the Budg­ et Board bill. The amount includes $1,970,559 added for faculty salaries and $1,155,990 for the hospital. “ TH IS W IL L K N A B LE I S to convert to a full time faculty,” Blocker said. “ We only have 30 full-time—we should have 80.” There was no mention of the re­ cent resignation of several facul­ ty members in protest of school policy at the medical branch. “ With a fulltime faculty goes complete dedication to teaching medicine,” Blocker said, adding that salaries at the school “are below our other biomedical un­ its.” ER W IN and Medical Branch officials said costs are climbing so rapidly that parts of the hos­ pital may have to be closed if additional funds are not appro­ priated. “ I apologize for having to ask this kind of money for the hos­ pital in Galveston, but either we are going to have to close the hospital down in part or have the money we are asking for,” Erw in said. Galveston County Judge Ray Holbrook said the county under­ stands “ we have a responsibility for providing medical care for our indigents.” GALVESTON CX)UNTY va cs will decide March 18, he said, on a road and flood control tax that would release funds “ so we can assume full responsibility P rofessional C a r e e r s in C a r t o g r a p h y C V iL 'A N I EM PLO YM ENT with th* U.S. A IR FO RC E C R E A T IN G A ER O S P A C E PRODUCTS M in im u m 120 se m e ite r hour* co lleg e cred it Including 5 hours colleg e le ve l m ath. The req u ired m ath must include at least 2 of the follow ing: co lle g e alg e b ra , trigo n om etry, a n a lytic geom etry, d iffe re n tia ! calculus, in te g ra l calculus, or any course for which any of these is a p re re q u isite . E q u iva le n t exp erien ce a c ce p ta b le . Training program . O p e n in g s for men and wom en. A p p lic a tio n and fu rth er inform ation fo rw a rd e d on req u est. W R IT E : C o lle g e Relations ( A C P C R ) H q A e ro n a u tic a l C h a rt 4 Inform ation C e n te r, 8900 S. Bro ad w ay, St. Louis, Missouri 63125 An eguat opportunity em ployer FREE on $18.28 Blanket Tax •a Draw Free RESERVED SEAT Tickets Now fjne Arts Box Office • Hogg Auditorium _ _ _____________________ V i > ' M All-orchestral concert Feb. 13 M o n d a y j PROGRAM: W r : Italian Serenade S c u mann: Symphony No. 3, 'Rhenish” Rave : Mother Goose Suite R rrsk /-Korsakov: Snow Maiden Suite for indigents.” He said the coun­ ty would take full responsibility in 1969 and partial responsibility in 1968. Tile University Regents said last year that the county should bear more of the cost for indi­ gents treated at Sealy Hospital. Tile Budget Board bill would provided the Medical Branch with $10.4 million in general revenue in the fiscal year beginning Sept. I and $11.7 million the following year. ERWIN SAID that to comply with federal standards under Title 19 of the Social Security Act, some wards at the hospital would have to be broken up into two-bed units at a cost of about $1 million. The cost probably would come from Sealy-Smith Foundation money, he said. Title 19 provides medical care receiving welfare for persons payments for the blind, aged, de­ pendent children, and disabled. “ We are in a situation where we can’t live with federal regu­ lations and can’t live without fed­ eral money,” Erw in said. School Appoints Acting Dean Bv Tile Associated Press GALVESTON An acting dean of nursing has been appointed at the University of Texas School of Nursing where 12 of 21 faculty members sub­ mitted resignations in protest of school policies. The new acting dean is Miss Chloe Floyd, who was associate professor of the medical-surgical nursing department. Dr. Truman Blocker, executive director and dean of the medical branch, made the appointment. He did not immediately replace Marie C. Primm, assistant dean, who resigned. Resignations of nine other fac­ ulty members are effective Aug. 31—end of the present school year. The resignation of another faculty member, Miss G r a c e Schexnayder, chairman of child nursing, was undated. Miss Floyd replaced Dr. Betty Rudnick, dean of the school of nursing, as acting head of the department. Last Thursday, Dr. Rudnick asked a faculty meeting to get Blocker to clarify six recom­ mendations on nursing education made by the University of Texas Board. This apparently triggered a in long-simmering conflict teaching policies. Dr. Rudnick called another faculty meeting to announce her resignation. GOODYEAR NYLON CORD TIRES A S LOW A S . . . 126 SO x 13 tubeless bleck wet! p:us $1.55 fee E* Tax and cid tire Goodyear All-Weather Tires • Extra mileage Tufsyn rubber • Triple-tempered nylon cord • Track-tested for IOO m iles at s p e e d * up to IOO rn p.h. I I j T u b e le ss S i t s * B la c k w a ll Pf ic* W h ite w a ll P rie s 6.50x13 ii 7.75*14 (7 50x 14) ll 8 25 x 14 (S OO x 14) [j 7 75 x 15 (6,70x 15) $ 1 2 $13 $16 $13 $14 $15 $18 $15 P lu s Fed Cr T a i and eld tire $1.55 $1.88 $2.05 $1.89 I S us iho*n alto replace* kite In parenthesis • NO M O N E Y DOWN ON OUR EASY PAY PLAN • FREE EXPERT M O U N T IN G e s ® G O O D Y E A R GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 907 East 41st (Across from Hancock Center) H O 5-6559 Oltorf at South Congress HI 4-4737 P ig i IO Wednesday, February 8, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN -Photo by St. C ia ir Newbern Horserace Hearing . , . the Rev. Walter Campbell advocates Texas racing. Legislature . . .(Continued from Page I.) that during a model legislature held in December, 1966 composed of young people, both houses unanimously approved pari-mutuel betting. the Following lead of Sen. Bates and Sen. Barry, the four “ aye” other senators casting votes for approval of the bill were Joe Christie, E l Paso; Chet Brooks, Pasadena; Wayne Con- nally, Floresville; and Jam es Wade, Dallas. Voting “ no” were Sen. Ralph Hall, committee chairman, Rock­ wall, and Sens. Tom Creighton, Mineral W ells; David Ratliff, Stamford; Jack Hightower, Vern­ on, and J. P. Word, Meridian. The betting bill now awaits placement on the Senate calendar for debate. Commenting on the bill’s outlook on the floor, Sen. Henry Grover of Houston said, “ I don’t think it will pass . . . I will vote against it.” SEN . JO E B ER N AL of San An­ tonio. said, “ I think most of the metropolitan area senators w ill be for it . . . a large metropoli­ tan presentation^ w ill give it a better chance. I think it has an excellent chance.” Sen Hightower said he did not think the bill would pass. “ I don’t think it has the support of the people and of the Senate.” HANK BROWN, president of the Texas AFL-CIO, said, “ I think it’s good that the issue be pres­ ented to the Senate and the peo­ ple.” He said that labor had not taken an official stand on the is­ sue, but “ the board of directors were 2-1 In favor for local option of pari-mutel betting.” “ We have to make up In our minds whether we want to come to the Twentieth Century or not,” he said. “ It would be tightly sup­ ervised, and bring in additional revenue—there would be many more wages, and job opportuni­ ties at a decent wage. Make it legal, strict, tough, and make sure the state gets a proper share of the revenue.” Despite the four-hour length of the committee hearing, the gal­ leries and the Senate floor re­ mained packed with horse racing enthusiasts and opponents. Back­ ers of the proposal w'ore badges showing a race horse and a big- lettered “ for,” and sent up a cheer when the final vote was announced. DON'T GIVE UP! HEMPHILL'S HAS USED TEXTS Big Savings On New & Used B O O K S t i rn M w k Wk SAVE 30% ON USED BOOKS PLUS: Your Ever-Ready Rebate Wk a Senate Approves Pay Raise, Solons Talk Money, Liquor Compiled From AP Reports Texas senators put the pres­ sure back on the House Tuesday immediate by approving, 28-2, state employe pay raises, a po­ litical hot potato that the gover­ nor and representatives do not want to handle now SPEAKER BEN BARNES im­ mediately served notice he would follow House rules and not give the so-called emergency measure any high priority until after a general appropriations bill is passed. “ Nobody is going to help state employes if we don’t” argued Sen. Charles Herring, Austin, who with the backing of Lt. Gov. Preston Smith, finally won Sen­ ate approval after the third at­ tempt in two weeks. HERRING STRESSED that his bill was intended merely to pro­ vide a raise, estimated to cost about $5.2 million from general revenue, beginning March I in­ stead of Sept. I, the start of the next fiscal period. ★ ★ ★ After a hectic two-hour session, the Senate Finance Committee approved the House-passed emer­ gency appropriation bill would provide $145,583 for the Co­ ordinating Board, Texas College and University System. that j The S e n a t e ’ s emergency money bill would provide enough money to finish the Institute of Texas Cultures at the Hemis- Fa ir, scheduled to open in 1968 in San Antonio. An effort to re­ move the $5.5 million appropria­ tion failed 3-16. ★ ★ A The House appropriations bill w ill be at least as big as the $971.5 million general revenue recommendation of Gov. John Connally, the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee said Tuesday. “THE APPROPRIATIONS bill will be comparable in size to the governor’s bill,” said Rep. W. S. Heatly of Paducah. Speaker Ben Barnes said Mon­ day he hopes the House can hold spending within the governor’s recommendations. Connally has recommended $144.2 million in revenue measures to balance his 1968-69 budget. There has been some specula­ tion that the Senate—guided by economy-minded Lt. Gov. Pres­ ton Smith—will pass the $835.3 million L e g i s l a t i v e Budget Board bill, which would require no new taxes. Because of differences in Sen­ ate and House versions of the John Dos Passos’ book, “ The Big Money,” was dropped from the r e q u i r e d reading list of January sophomore English 1943 after the Board of Regents voted it “ obscene.” in spending bill, the final act Is written by a 10-man Senate- H o u s e conference committee. Barnes’ new House rules forbid the House conferees to add any­ thing to the b i l l that was in neither chamber’s version. ★ ★ ★ A Senate committee quickly sent to a subcommittee a pro­ posal that business hours for liquor stores be changed from 9 a.rn.-IO p.m. to l l a.m.-7 p.m. Proponents said the c h a n g e would reduce holdups. Opponents said it would encourage bootleg­ ging. A House committee-sent to subcommittee a proposal aimed at clarifying the property rights of a married woman. The key provision would allow wives to control such community property as their personal earnings which they would have if they were single. I. Boo. 303 S « “t. (hem . 301 I, Psych. 301 Sect. I, Boo. 303 Sect. t Chem. 305 Se ct J Gov't SIDA Sect. I A - PLUS LECTURE NO TES |oo9 w . 26th St. Austin, Texas is m Semester r i p s ) a m a l PANCAKE HOUSE C O M P L E T E M E N U 19th A N D G U A D A L U P E Breakfast Specials M O NDAY-FRIDAY 4-11 A .M . Choice of Fruit Juice No J One Egg, Toast and Coffee Choice of Bacon, |JA Q Choice of Bacon, Sausage, or Ham, 2 M w * v Sausage, or Ham, 2 Eggs, 2 Pancakes or Toast and Coffee 49c t 95c J asSfSSoe CURRENTLY ON TOUR OF CAM PUSES IN CANADA & THE U.S.. THE "N EW FOLK" ARE A LIVELY NEW SOUNO & SPIRIT IN FOLK M USIC...COMING HERE: THURSDAY-8 p.m. FEBRUARY 9th MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM G E N E R A L A D M IS S IO N $0 PA Z . O U BLANKET T A X ...... *1.00 TICKETS A V A ILA BLE : University Co-O p, Municipal Auditorium Box Office and Bloomquist-Clark SRT A NEW MCE! SPO N SO RED BY C O L L E G E LIFE Chartered buses will provide transportation to the Auditorium, leaving 6:45, 7:00, 7:15, and 7:30 following customary CiE.C. route. Fare: 25c.