Th* a i l y T e x a n . u d e n t N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas Snow White, television shown, “beach p arty ” movies, .Tames Bond. Batman, “ Sound of Music.” and various campus activities will be subjected to take-offs at Varsity Carnival Saturday night. vol. OS Price Five Cs AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 Eight Pages Today No. ! 60 , . , r r - - ■. » » » » . ............................ " ..................... 3 9 Greek Entries In Varsity Carnival Sixteen sororities and 23 fraternities will display five floor shows, eleven skits, and 23 concessions beginning at 6:30 p.m. under the bleachers of Memorial Stadium. The 39 entries set a record for participation in Varsity Car­ nival. which began in 1904 as a circus with proceeds going to the baseball team. This yPar. Carnival profits will be placed in a spe­ cial fund of the Interfraternity and Panhellenic Councils. Interest from the fund is contributed to the freshman tutorial program , scholarships, and University projects. Carnivals since 1904 have featured a three ring circus with a steam calliope, a dance hall with dime-a-dance sorority girls, a black face minstrel show', and a cow-milking contest. At the 1966 carnival, students may see a skit on “ How Cinder­ ella Got Educated,” watch a prize fight, eat a snow cone, view a dunking stool, or pause at an Arabian desert oasis. On the back of each carnival ticket is the name of one of (‘ne nine girls who is running for Varsity Carnival queen. Tile candidate whose name is on the most tickets collected at the gates will be crowded queen. Candidates nominated by sororities and fraternities are Francie Barnard, Charlotte Chapman, B arbara Echols, Beverly Enderle, Rate Flack, Mary Ann Nelson, Gem me Rousseau. Sherry' Spradley, and Linda Thomas. (See pictures of candidates on Fage 3.) At 11:30 p.m. Saturday, trophies will be awarded in the fol­ lowing divisions: sorority show, fraternity show, sorority concession, fraternity concession, floor show, fraternity’ outstanding publicity, sorority outstanding publicity, and most money earned. Carnival tickets may be purchased from participating groups for $1 each. Tickets and books of VC Bucks, carnival currency, will be sold at the gate. Allies, Viet Cong Clash In Battle Near Saigon that trail their first the B.YN Qii Minh raid on blocked in that North Viet Nam, a raid dumped nearly 700 tons of ox plosives and is estimated to have cost more than a million doll ars. Smaller planes of the US Air Force _ F105 Thunderchiefs and FIC Phantoms — sought Wednes­ traffic day through the pass. Hie spokesman said they cratered Highway la, an three points. approach revived route, curb to at WASHINGTON — ITI — Tire in number of Americans killed Ct iii h a t in the Viet. Nam war now is over 3 .000. It could reach 6.000 or more by the end of the year if the recent rate of battle Josses is maintained. Tho iah>st summary of US casualties, released Thursday. listed 3,047 servicemen as dead from hostile action since Jan. I. the date from which this 1961, country counts the human cost of its involvement in Viet Nam. THE B ATTLE death roster lengthener! by 89 names in the week ended last Saturday. Tile weekly toll has been running at around IOO. If that rate should be sustained for the rest of tins year, the present combat fatali­ ty list would be twice as long by Christmas. The new repel t showed that m ore men died in the first U? m o n t h s of 1966 than in all of last year. The 1966 total reached 1,- 427 through April 16. Combat, deaths for all of 1965 stood at I,- 365 men. Meanwhile, the Communist ene­ my is suffering much heavier battle deaths, according to offi­ cial figures. Many of these are being inflicted by South Vietnam­ ese forces. SAIGON — t.P — United States and Vietnamese Marines fought the Viet Cong so close to Saigon Friday that residents of the cap­ ital could see bombs hurtling on their targets from US bombers supporting the operation. In the the central highlands, Viet Cong made a m ortar attack before dawn on the air field at Pleiku. Aircraft light damage, a US m ilitary spokes­ man said. The Viet Cong fired about 18 m ortar rounds into the field just north of Pleiku City’, 240 miles northeast of Saigon. suffered POLICE in Cholon, the Chinese section of Saigon, described the operation on the outskirts of the capital as a big one. They said and Vietnamese US Marines m arines were engaged with the Viet Cong near the Long Vinh outpost. Thp outpost is just across the cuts Kinh Dei Canal, which through the Cholon sector. l l Men, Woman Vote to Convict Sane Bill White Jury to Reconvene To Decide Pe n a lty For S t r a n g u la t io n IU Ll PE ZAMARRIPA and JIM SITTON After two hours and 20 m inutes of deliberation, an 11-man, 1-wo­ jury Thursday found Bill m an Douglas White guilty of m u rd er with m alice aforethought in the strangulation death of K aren Hed- erstro m Dec. 12. The jury retired at 3:55 p.m. final argum ents after hearing which beg in at 2:30 p.m. in th* 147th District Court of Judge Mace B. Thurman Jr. THE J LRY will reconvene at 9 a.m. Friday to hear argum ents on the ex-University stu d en ts character and to decide punish­ ment. Thursday afternoon, White, a 29-year-old Air National Guard sergeant, was described by Rob­ ert Smith, one of his two attorn­ eys, as “polite, a gentleman, the kind of man you (the jury) and I would like. MISS HKDERSTROM, a 21- year-old Camp Mabry employe, had been dating White at the time of the incident. Her nude body was found on the floor of her Hartford Road apartm ent by police officers in the early morn­ ing hours of Dec. 12. Final arguments presented by the State centered on testimony by Mrs. Frances Taylor, now of Grand Prairie, who testified that White had said, “I choked her.” Mrs. Taylor had shared a West Thirty - Seventh S t apartment with Miss Laverne Kurten and Miss Marilyn Downing when Miss Hederstrom was killed. “It’s clear and simple,** Dis­ trict Attorney Tom Blackwell said. “Make no mistake, this Is a murder case.” SHOWING three photographs of the nude body of Miss Heder­ strom which were admitted as State’s evidence W e d n e s d a y , Blackwell said, “These pictures of the nude body of Karen Hed­ erstrom show the motive to be sexual lust. If she had consented, she would be alive today.” Smith argued, “We are involv­ ed in the third act of a tragedy —a tragedy when two people, people who you would like, came together in an exploding situa­ tion.” Earlier, both Dr. David Wade and Dr. Ira Iscoe, professor of psychology and education at the University, testified that the de­ fendant “was sane at the pres­ ent and at the time of the kill­ ing.” Miss Kurten, employe of the Department of Public Safety, to whose apartment White went that night, related their conversation: “Did you hurt her?” she had asked. “Yes,” replied White. Mrs. Taylor testified that she then asked White, “Is she dead. Bill?” “Y e s ” “What happened?” asked Miss “I choked her,” he replied. W hile Rabbi Olan Speaks . . . at G ra d u a te C lu b luncheon, J o * Sullivan, Jim Price, and Frances McBrune listen. Rabbi Olan Criticizes Specialty Emphasis By JOANNE PAHNKE and MARSHA FLOWERS “All schools have become su­ perm arkets — you get to select what you need for today’s food,’’ Rabbi Levi Olan, member of the Board of Regents, said Thursday night. He charged that professors today are teachers of trade in­ stead of teachers of wisdom. He emphasized at the Student Assembly inauguration ceremon­ ies that higher education today is in critical condition “because the technological age where we prepare the student for some­ thing— pre-med, pre-law, or pre­ something — is passing. Man is now asking, ‘Is higher education today relevant to today’s life?’ ” Olan feels that the University’s concern for specialization in a particular field is a great prob­ lem. “ Faculties are getting to the point where a person who teaches history from 1865 to 1870 can’t substitute for his counter­ p art who teaches history from 1870 to 1875.” OLAN, who also addressed the Graduate Club luncheon Thurs­ day, said that higher education is not training m an’s intellect. It is providing man with a trade, but not answering the basic ques­ tions of why he should live, who he is, or where he is going, he said. is to form an “ The purpose of higher educa­ intellectual tion basis within a person onto which a professional capacity can be built,” he said. Olan defined three historical levels of education leading to the p resen t: • Classical education for the upper classes; • Liberal education for its own sa k e ; • Technological education in preparation for doing. “ We are on level of education the brink of a fourth that deals with man himself. The tech­ nological stage is inadequate be­ cause it does not answer the ba­ sic problems of living.” EDUCATION is a time of in­ in which no tellectual ferment answers need be formed, Olan pointed out. The mental anguish, frustration, and accompanying disillusionment and philosophical pessimism are necessary to open the individual’s mind, he said. Olan commented that scholarly pursuits are outdated the day they are received. “The modern diploma states that the student has spent his time not breaking any laws, and that he has a fair recollection of what his teacher ha# told him. Th* real capacity a man needs is to learn, unlearn, and relearn. “That faculties accept the be­ lief the modern university is a trade school, which is what is happening, is the most astonish­ ing fact of all,” he said. “ The student’s time at school should be spent examining basic p rin cip les, whether it be God, motherhood, Viet Nam, or 7 per cent depletion,” he emphasized. “ When I see a graduate, I want to see an educated man. But what is the man who receives his di­ ploma frcm the store?” Weather: Cloudy, Warmer Low 58, High 75 Kurten. Celebration to Mark Israel Independence By RICH ARD COLE Texan Staff Writer In Israel, it’s all-night dancing in the streets, fireworks, a mill tary parade, and a special m es­ sage from the president. At the University, i t s special food, folk dances, exhibits, and a talk by the Rev. Milton Bendi- ner, director of education at the Temple Beth El in San Antonio. No matter how it’s celebrated, it all amounts to the eighteenth anniversary of Israel’s independ­ ence. On May 15, 1948 (on the Hebrew calendar), B r i t i s h occupation left Eretz-Israel, birth­ troops place of the Jewish people, and the People’s Council, led by Da­ vid Ben-Gurion, issued the Dec­ laration of the Establishment of the State of Israel. The actual anniversary falls on Monday (on our calendar), but the Israeli Student Organization and HUM Foundation will spon­ sor a program at 7 p.m. Sunday at 2105 San Antonio. All students and faculty are In­ vited. To emphasize that aU a n welcome, Tuvia Adar, ISO mem­ ber, said he even sent an invita­ tion to the president of the Arab student organization. Regents to Hear University Budgets The Board of Regents will con­ sider the operating budgets of the University for 1966-67 at a d osed meeting Friday. Convening at 9 a.m., the com­ mittee will discuss personnel mat­ ters including raises in salaries and promotions. The Board will meet at 9 a rn. Saturday in open aesaion to del cide on emergency matters, which must he settled before Hie next meeting rf the Rescnta- —Photo by Ed Lehr H o p p in g for V C , . . Susie Thomas, Sherry H a r d y Minority Study Set Rights Group to Probe Human Problems By DEANE SPILLER Texan Staff Writer The Austin Citywide Commit­ tee of Individuals and Organiza­ tions for Human Rights wall con­ duct an in-depth study of minor­ ity group human relations prob­ lems in Austin as its second m a­ jor project. A permanent committee has been established, and Joseph Mo­ reno, senior procurement officer in the College of Pharm acy, has been named cochairman for the study of Latin American prob­ lems. A cochairman for Negro problems also will be named, probably at the group’s meeting Tuesday. The decision has been made to present human relations prob­ lems to Austin citizens, and the project is now in the second stage of operation, Dr. Joseph Wither­ spoon, professor of law and co­ director of CCIOHR, said. This is the staffing and method-as­ sessing stage. THE MAJOR PROBLEM, With­ erspoon said, is com m unication- telling the truth about minority problems. Results of this study, to be presented in pamphlet form to the citizens of Austin, will be a statem ent of the scope of the Election Decision Commission No Write-In Says Votes The Election Commission voted Thursday to make no provision for write-in votes in the run-off election for editor of The Daily Texan. Larry Muenzler, Election Com­ mission chairm an, said the de­ cision of the Student Court con­ cerning the election pertains only to V (B) (I), the section referring to voting lists and to the precinct system. “ Their decision said nothing about V (B) section (3), which requires that write-in votes the be allowed. We feel that this is a weak point in the Election Code.” “ If write-in votes were perm it­ ted,” Muenzler said, “ a write-in candidate might receive so many votes that no candidate would receive a m ajority” , and another election would be necessary, “ lf this happens, this situation would be bordering on the ridiculous.’’ The Election Commission plans to file a petition in the Student Court Friday, asking for a decla­ ratory judgment concerning this decision, Muenzler said. problems to stimulate action by other groups. from “We feel that we’ve got the re­ sources,” Witherspoon said. Ex­ perience will come the Mexican-American Study Project conducted by UCLA's School of Graduate Business Administra­ tion with a Ford Foundation grant. MASP directors, who in­ cluded San Antonio in their study, are willing to share their find­ ings and techniques. Qualified people to coordinate the project are also available. The question, Witherspoon said, is finding able people and per­ suading them to spend the time required. THE IDEA for such a study is the result of cooperation by mi­ nority groups when a door-to-door campaign was conducted for the first project, the proposed “Aus­ tin Equal Opportunities Ordi­ nance.” “ We feel we have opened up a gold mine here,” Wither­ spoon said. “ These people want to talk.” During the study, which will last several months, families will be interviewed on a selective basis to discover the nature, fre­ quency, and duration of their hu­ man relations problems. Witherspoon hopes other city and campus groups will become interested in the study and help with it. The Human Relations Commit­ tee of the University law school and other groups regularly repre­ sented at CCIOHR meetings may support the study, which will re ­ quire great manpower and finan­ cial resources. The heavy bombing by US planes came about 7 :30 a.m. Tile bombing was among the closest ever made to Saigon and the ex­ rattled plosions of windows and the heart of the city. There was no immediate re­ port on the outcome of the oper­ ation. tableware In the bombs Battalions of US Marines and Vietnamese troops pounced from helicopters Thursday on a Com­ munist base in the Quang Ngai sector and battered the Red regu­ in a lars day-long battle. they surprised there A VIET CONG defector had pin-pointed the base. task allied The force had counted 173 enemy dead by night­ fall. Maj. Gen. Lewis W. Fields, commander of the 1st M arine Di­ vision, said the toll m ay exceed 300. Losses among both the Am­ ericans and the Vietnamese were reported light. resuming Vietnamese troops appeared to be their wheelhorse role in the field after the political diversions that limited their cam ­ paigning early in April. Vietnam­ ese marines and paratroopers in­ the American Ma­ volved with rines in the Quang Ngai sector battle were credited with 111 of the counted dead. ATTENDING the revived ac­ tivity in the ground war was a disclosure that North Vietnamese have reopened the Mu Gia Pass, tunneling through or boring over the landslides with which B52 jet bomber’s closed that supply gate­ way April 12. The pass is an outlet to the Ho Students af Crossroads—Drummond zoology; and communications — sor of engineering mechanics; Dr. M ary A. Gardner, assistant Harry L. Kent, professor of me- chanical engineering; education professor of journalism. Also, engineering — Dr. Roy — Dr. Natalie C arter Barraga, Rochester Craig, assistant profes- assistant professor of special edu­ cation; law — E rnest E. Smith III, associate professor of law; and pharm acy — Dr. Jaim e N. Delgado, associate professor of pharmaceutical chemistry. Orr several also presented achievement awards in recogni­ tion of mem bers of his staff who contributed significantly to activ­ ities in the past year. Students are at the crossroads where they can rem ain on the path they are now on or strive for higher goals in their educa­ tional pursuits, Clif Drummond, incoming president of the Stu­ dents’ Association, said Thursday inauguration cere­ night mony. in an Drummond, who replaces John Orr as president, promised to carry out the goals of the Student Assembly and work closer with the student body, administration, and faculty. Orr, outgoing president, pre­ sented awards for teaching ex­ cellence and outstanding Stu­ dents’ Association achievement at the ceremony. This year awards were pre­ sented to: business administration — Dr. Raynard M. Sommerfeld, assistant professor of accounting; and Dr. William Jackson Lord, associate professor of business communications; architecture — Carl Oscar Bergquist, assistant professor of architecture; fine arts — Dr. Hanns-Bertold Dietz, assistant professor of m usic; arts and sciences — Dr. Stanislav Zimic, assistant professor of Ro­ mance languages; Dr. Donald Al fred Larson, assistant professor of botany; Dr. William T. Guy Jr., professor of m athem atics and education; Dr. Bernard Charles Kissel, associate professor of speech; and Dr. T errell Hunter Hamilton, assistant professor of Congratulations . . . Ernest Smith rtcaivw teaching ocellenc. ewerd from John Orr. —Photos by St. Clair Newbern New President . . . Jo* Hart swears in Clif Drummond. Espionage and Academia R a m p a r ts , an iconoclastic Catholic periodical, revealed in its April issue th at Michigan State U niversity harbored CIA agents in a technical assistance program for the Diem regime in Vie! Nam. While MSU and R am parts w riters disagree on some of the fine points— w hether the assistance group) supplied arm s to Diem’s police, which university people knew about the undercover agents, or how much money w as Involved MSU officials admit th a t CIA agents were involve I in the seven-year program . “They (the CIA a g en tsi were all listed as members of the MSU project staff and were formally appointed by the university board of trustees,” according to R am parts. “Several of the CIA men were given academic rank and were paid by the university project. The CIA agents’ in­ structions were to engage in counterespionage and count( r- intelligence. Their ‘cover’ was within the police adm inistra­ tion division of the Michigan group." T h a t an American university through its adm inistra­ tors or teachers would become involved with an espionage agency is shocking. While the Central Intelligence has tra ­ d i t i o n a l ly s h o w n little respect for the individual, let alone the Institution, one would have expected Michigan State University to ha%4e shown much g reater respect f r its own academic integrity. Same Song, Second Verse Tile V arsity Carnival signs on the Mall this week may lack the western mo tiff of the Round-! p signs, but they have something in common: bad taste. Some signs, we must admit, are simply decorative, although not as appeal­ ing as the Mall in the springtime when one can get to the grass. Unlike the University adm inistration, however, we have no desire to legislate taste. If certain fraternities and sororities w ant to promote the bawdy and the gross, we think they have a right to do so. Still, there must be a b etter way to solicit funds for scholarships than by seeing which Greek group can get a w a y with the filthiest signs and the most suggestive skits. Quote of the Week “It is annoying to learn th a t it is the Viet Cong who believe in and fight for something, w hereas the South Vietnamese have few sophisticated notions of freedom and democracy. A fter being told th at guerrilla forces are ex­ trem ely difficult to defeat, it is jarring to h ear that such w ars can be won — in countries where the people them ­ selves do not shelter the enemy. “It displeases us th a t the Viet Cong grows stronger Instead of w eaker and th at the South Viet Nam govern­ m ent is a source of jokes and despair ra th e r than pride. A fter being told th at it is not a civil w ar and th at N orth Viet N am is the aggressor in open and cynical violation of the 1954 Geneva accord, it is inconvenient to be rem ind­ ed th a t the 17th parallel is an artificial boundary separat­ ing peoples who have no racial or cultural differences. “ I hope th a t we are not so committed in South Viet Nam th a t we cannot see some of these unpleasant reali­ ties. How ironic it would be if, in ‘defending liberty,* we the freedom to control our ow n policies and our lost actions became ‘irrelevant and irrational.' ” — Senator M aurin Neuberger Little Man on the Campus By Bibler 'TM SC A L A R Se P S T J D ^ nTT--*' 1At V A T a . r I ^ PKO p a t in a a r T h e D a il y T e x a n •aper a* led da..*.' e x c e p t Monday and Satur* s r d >ds S e p t e m b e r .Student P u b l i c a t i o n s , Inc.. Stat rn A u stin . T e x a s TS712 Soc­ t h r o u g h Ma V v In A u g u s t by T e x e s Ti rnSvcr ’ ks p o s t a g e p a . I at A o s t i a . Texas. vs c o n t r i b u t i o n s " i . . be a c cep ted by te l e p h o n e (GR or a* the e d it o r ia l office. J B 103 or at t h e n ev s ' 1 con' 'm i n g dc liv e rs she !d ory J . B 102 i l l ie n J B 107 (GR 1-5.14- and a civeru m n g J B 3227.> I *• Friday, April 22, 1966 THE DAILY TEXA N Pa9e 2 The Texan Firing Line goddess’s spects. tem ple to pay h er their re ­ Any perusal of the Round-Up and V. C. signs will establish the coincidence be­ yond doubt ( “ The Secret of Love and How to Get I t ” ). I have even found one m odem allusion to the connection of sex and m agic, a concept not at all alien to the ancient w r?flippers of Venus ( “ Hex Sex in M ex’ :. stand, I have bothered to share all this in- th at you m ay fo rm a’ion with you so in w hat an ancient and notable know tradition we Longhorns going back to the days of m ighty Rome—the m ore things change, the m ore they re ­ m ain the sam e. W herefore, let the classi­ cist, the antiq u arian , and all fevers of our fine, old ( “ The Roman E m p ire shall rise again! ’J. and proclaim openly w hat was long done un­ consciously ( “ Venus is not d e a d !” ). tr. divans rejoice Happy Vinalia. V a il I Owen Clayton Box l l Roliert E . I^ e Hall least tradition (at of the New Left is an honorable one and we b ear it no m alice." I—speaking only as one m em ber of SDS—cannot say toe sam e for their the last 50 years of it). I arn not interested in gaining rew ard “ in the struggle. I am not interested, for exam ple, in ti ? techniques th at “ Lyndon B. Johnson use*d . transform ation cf Am erican politics to include the poor, the old and sick, and the helpless ' 'e x ­ cept. perhaps, as an academ ic exercise rn the use and abuse of power within a so-called dem ocracy). to begin the . . join with their consciences Let those who are interested in salv­ those ing pious m em bers of the YD's. Let their billious bleeding h earts moan over the plight cf the poor, the sick—and m y old aunt Minnie. And, if they outgrow their laughable piety and w ant to try to et feet viable change, then let them join with and not condescendingly “ honor" toe New Left. Dick Howard 606 West Vt St. Insecure Obscurity To ,».e lu lito r: Tii.s is a “D ra r Jo h n ” letter—*o Jonn E n te e n . one of m y favorite Texan w rit­ ers. John, reg ard in g your quick survey c ai>e in God-is-dead theology rn Thurs- dav s Texan, mil' ii of vvi at you say is true. Rut overstating your case and making sweeping generalizations u n d er­ m ines m uch of what was good in your a: ti* ie. F r instance a r d rn,ms*-TS tionaily defend ti: c thought ’ Iv accur md lum p all theologians ars together as being “ tradi- msive and ii; s .ile to sci en* • :> an exu b eran t, but hard- ! statem en t. I didn’t even know until you t as a m em b er of the clerg> pushed into a “ little co rn er \ . ’ D arn it I Now I feel inse- v ; I I: Merle <*. I rank**, Pastor I irs! English Lutheran Church 3tth Street \ Whit is Ave. I Know H e Lives' T,» the Editors John R. E rick so n ’s M an. sw im m ing in b s d ru n k er ne-— for Self and G reed and P leasu res, is pow erless to destroy G d and the Love of God for Man. In truth, (cod, the God of all four billion hum an beings, is m ore alive today than He has ev er been in the history of the world. When Job had been stripped of his en­ tire life and w ealth, all he could say John Orr's w as. “ I know that my red eem er liv eth !” Men. having no will to sacrifice their lives, will alw ays find the excuse to deny th*'1 < xistence of God. it. the existence < f God, w as denied 3.000 y ears ago as well as today, but the sam e kind of people. But i haven’t yet seen the beginning of the decline sn the Pow er and the Glory of God. As for nm and. I know, millions of I know th a t my redeem er liv­ othr“ s, e s t !” Raymond A. Smother* ''an Jacinto Dormitory H I IT Days of Feast To the J Aik J . 4. That tim e of year is here again, when R iUnd-L'p and V arsity C arnival signs sprout forth on the W est Mall, proclaim ­ ing the annual re urn of the big. brassy, beerv, sexy spring fest,val. Students of classical inequity, such as I, sm ile v ag ­ it all and recall our ancient uely at R om an calen d ar and note, with som e su rp rise this (Holy Coincidence!) y e a r’s Round-Up p arad e occurred on F r id a y . April I. tho d ate of the Rom an V oneralia (chief festival to Venus—April is her m onth: F rid ay , as a n y Romance- language dictionary will tell you, is her day). that that, but Not only this y e a r’s V ar­ sity Carnival falls on April 23, date cf the ancient Ym aha P rio r, when Venus to prosper was the the y e a r’s grape-crop, and when R om an prostitutes flocked to their patron invoked with Ju p iter GAVEL A New Direction A university is a place w here there are no students, faculty or adm inistration — only scholars. By this definition we do not have a “ u n iv ersity ” at the U niver­ sity of T exas. But I rem ain convinced th a t a nu m b er of the faculty, som e of the adm in istratio n , and a few students want a “ u n iv ersity .” To whom does the responsibility fall for the type of comm unity' we develope0 To all of us. U nfortunately m ost of our students do not accept this responsibility. This is the responsibility' we have tried to im press upon the student body. Stu­ dents, through the leadership of their stu ­ dent governm ent, m ust atte m p t to bu.ld an academ ic com m unity which deserves the nam e “ u n iv e rsity .'’ We have prop sod a g re a te r role for stu d en ts in the policy-m aking which ef­ fects th eir university life. This proposal was not m ad e to give student govern­ to do. When we sit m ent s m ethinc around creatin g work. It's tim e to close­ up shop. Students sitting with faculty and ad­ m in is4 ration is only a m ean s to an end. The only legitim ate reason f >r student participation in an} decision is a desire for a b etter decision — a bettor univer­ sity. It is m y belief th at m any a re a s of carnous life, both academ ic and non-aca­ dem ic, can be if an active dialogue is cleve! ped and continued be­ tween these who m ake tho decisions and those who feel th eir off '-cts. im proved D > not nnsum ’eis* n l ny*, we a re not students - wildly - indignant - about - nearlv - everything. Much about this uni­ v ersity d eserves praise. After getting a first hand view of what the ad m in istra­ tion is all about. I am confident that few could m a ste r it b etter than Harry’ R an ­ som. Our adm inistration can boast some of the finest scholars in the world. But the even fine scholars don’t knew all answ ers. In fact it is the scholar who seek first-hand inform ation. it c t . ?m s life now availal Ie a ’ the U niversity, students can provide th a t first-hand inform ation. One way to do this is to sit as active p articip an ts when the decisions effecting the U niversity’s future a re m ade, t e academ ic When The opera ti n of a university is a r e ­ sponsibility that must be m et by careful study of ail that is involved. Most faculty do not doubt that we can do the neces­ sary stir !y. but they d ubt that we will. They draw such conclusions w’hen they see the re; nner we often go about our business. The present organization of our student activities — especially our stu­ dent govcrr mer.! — is not geared to the ideals we have set as our objectives. Another problem which m ust be solved is the unnecessary fragm entation of stu ­ dent activities. This is particularly true for those groups w'hich serv e the entire cam pus. We are all striving toward the sam e broad goals, yet we often find our­ selves working to each other. in opposition Any new organization we create m ust be all-cam pus. All-campus in the sem e of providing the opportunity for tnvome who desires to p articip ate, and all-cam ­ pus in linking all student activities. But we need not fool ourselves, no o r­ ganization can honestly succeed if w hat it seeks is trival. We can represent every student on the cam pus, and we can sit the university, on ever;.' com m ittee of but if we h r vp nothing m eaningful to say4, we are only a m ockery of the a c a ­ dem ic life. to T herefore we re tu rn the purpose which we claim as our stim ulus — the developm ent of a university community . We m ust be sure th at as we striv e to p ro tect and advance the academ ic com ­ m unity, we a re not in fact retarding it. From m y experiences this y ear I have draw n two conclusions: First, th at students of today can and will contribute significantly’ to the devel­ opm ent of the U niversity of Texas. I am convinced that the new’ coed d orm i­ tory will be a b e tte r place to live be­ c a u s e students helped faculty and staff in its planning. Second. I am convinced that this Uni­ versity is not unchangeable. Too m any exam ples ar e evident this year of change in policy when such policy w as showm to be unwise. G ranted their a re a re a s w here g re a te r change is badly needed — life, and student discipline, dorm itory m uch needed curriculum reform . All these problem s are not beyond the ability of students to change. T ile p ro c e s s of redefining the role of the student in his university has begun on this cam pus. It will not be developed during any one year. But the atm osphere fo r change and growth exists. Official Notices Can dida) s reg is ter ed for ’ he OR.-. A p t.U rie «< - st shou ld report at fc in p m April o r d Ing t > the f ret l etter of their last n a m e s as f o l io ' 1.» A-G B atts A u d i t o r i u m H-K Archae, lu re B ld g 105 I s - O H o m e Kconom lc s Bidi. P - 7 B u sin e ss-E co n o m ic* Bldg. IOO c o C a n d dates register ed for Advanced r e s t s $ n lid report at I 45 P rn as To..ow*. A L Batts A u d i t o r , urn M-Z Garrison H a ll I Reply to YD To the Editor: The statem en t m ade by the Young D em ocrats in the April 20 T^xan is a reflection of the lack of understanding— and probably of dialogue—between the New Left and Lyndon’s self-proclaim cd heirs. Tee Young D em ocrats stre ss their po­ sition as refo rm ers within the sy stem ; they adm it th at their position as such is not the m ost honest, the most conscien­ tious. and by implication, the m ost ef­ fective for all concerned—but hold it as the only altern ativ e, saying “ Its rew ard lies in the struggle. ' It is nice that they can derive rew ard from struggle against societies’ w eak­ nesses. However, it is fortunate th a t all of us cannot rest happy with the “ stru g ­ gle" that we b ear so m anfully as a part of our W hite M an's Burden. Some of us feel that the rew ard lies in the accom ­ plishm ent and refuse to be pacified or bought off by toke® Economic Oppor­ tunity Acts while the governm ent con­ tinues to rain bom bs on Vietnam ese (to take only one exam ple). in order It seem s to m e that what the “ New Loft” is saying is not th a t we wish no power that we m ay rem ain lily-white Utopians, but ra th e r that we w ant a society in which power is dis­ tributed in such a m an n er as to m ake it impossible for us to be corrupted by achieving power. T hat is to say. what is in question is not w hether we shou’d have la rg e r and better poverty pro­ g ram s, m edicare, or w h a te v e r; w hat is at stake is who sh all ad m in ister th r-e p rogram s. It does no good to train the poor to rem ain poor, as does the poverty p ro g ram ; w hat is needed a re program s which will enable the poor to move up to the economic and psychological level of the re st of tile na lion. When we speak of seeking power, we ought to be clear as to w hat is m eant. Do we aim to clim b to the top of a po­ litical pyram id from whose heights w e can now and then drop crum bs to those lower on it m eans to seek pow er within the system . Or. do we m ean th at we w ant to raise all Ute pc pie to the sam e heights, lo g ran t them all tile sam e opportunities, and to en ter into a situation w here pow­ er itself becom es irrelevent. lad d er? T h at’s what the term s, when In m ore p ractical the ••Ne v L eft" disavows political action, there is a m ethod to this m adness. To achieve political power is a long, slow, arduous path, paved with good inten­ tions. What Is at stake in A m erican poli­ tics is m uch m ore—and much less—than whose program is best (as is testified in W hite’s “ M aking of the P resid en t” volum es). We in the New Left feel that we can be m ore effective working w'ith direct problem s, be they in civil rights, anti-w ar activity, com m unity organizing, or w hatever. We feel that by reaching the people directly we will have a far g reaser influence than any politician can have. It is only after we have reached the people in power. (And, be it noted, when I s iy •we," I don’t mea® the “ New L eft'' per se, but the people who it has reached.) That is d e m o n ,, y. that we are interested The “ New L eft” is a m ovem ent, not a new institution to clu tte r the A m eri­ can political scene. A m ovem ent is com ­ posed of people. A m ovem ent is for {>co- ple. If a m ovem ent ever gets aw ay from people, it is no longer a m ovem ent. While the Young D em ocrats m ay con­ descendingly re m a rk th at “ the tradition .JE HAVE TU0 HALVEY,A DON'T Us ? NOU)... J ^ it THAT’S FRACTIONS'!1 YOU'RE TRYING TO, TEACH ME FRACTIONS! YOU KNOW I LL NEVER, UNDERSTAND FRACTIONS! lilHAT ARE ‘foil IRVING TO DO TO ME?lU 60 CRAZY! I'LL... v is H n n n i a s i i f t / on AN APPLE Pl N Hmlt .. i • I / " J-"-*, y / ' d ; \ , / \ if, * * I \ C sh y M . I . L i i S J L ASSOCIATED p r e s s w ir e service cV is l e d P r e ss , • • 3 I f;B ( ,f m / ■ o n of h ..r .r e d 4 ,s * c-’ her in s e x c l u s iv e ly e n titled th* ’n new s d i sp a t ch es cred ited I t h i s n ew s p a p er and ,’.n published herein. R u n t * to in ter here.n also reserxed. fin* '»ern ester 'fall or sp ring) Tw« **m*»ter* (fall and sp rin g * D eliv ered nj < a r n> r within tu'-tin ,-irea from 12th to 38th and J effe rson In terre gio n a l H i g h w a y to lte!i\ert-d bv mail w ith in T r a i ( minty D eli' e r e d bv mali o u tsid e but within I I ra ils > IS so 4 T i 3,50 16.TS 9 na f TS — j •’H I i L IJ T h e o pinions e x p res sed the ed ito ria l c o l u m n a re th os e of the editor. All ed ito ria ls u n l e -s s ig n ed are w r it te n In D> G u est I d U o r le l v i e w s are n ot n ecessa rily t h e ed itor s I he D a i l y T e x a n are not th o s e of T h e L n .-.crs ity of T e x a s a d m i n i s ­ A n v op in io ns e x p r e s se d in n e c e s s a r i l y tr a tion or Board o f R egen t P ER M A N EN T STAFF EDITOR .......................................... KAYE NO RTHCO TT M A N A G IN G EDITOR ............................ SAM K EA C H ASSISTANT M A N A G IN G EDITOR ........ LARRY IKELS N E W S EDITOR ................................ N A N C Y K O W ERT EDITORIAL PA G E E D IT O R C A R O LY N N IC H O LS .................... S A R A S P EIG H T S A M U S E M E N T S EDITOR SPO RTS EDITOR ................................ DAVID W E S S L E R analysis of large scale political or econo­ mical situations the than student. in helping I would be somewhat surprised see someone taking an project of this type benefit to the student body. to in a that would be of interest B. L. Turlington 1710 E. Woodward Greeks Defended To the Editor: articles Several concerning Sigma Chi’s “segregationist” policies have ap­ peared in the Texan recently. The con­ flict between the fraternity and various college and university administrations is emphasized. Attention to the question of fraternity segregation has focused al­ most exclusively on Sigma Chi. Many other national fraternities are segregated in practice. I believe all have deleted “whites only” clauses from their constitutions as Sigma Chi did s e \e ia l years ago. Why the emphasis on Sigma Chi? With more organized alumni than any other fraternity, the second largest current ini­ tiated membership, and over IOO years as a in the Greek system , Sigma Chi is the natural frater­ nity of w'hich to make an example in order to emphasize a point. leading fraternity The basic question involves most of the fraternities and sororities active to­ day. However, should a Greek organi­ zation have the right to practice segre­ gation? I feel that fraternities, sororities, and anv other organization of primarily soc­ ial nature not only should but does have the right, because it is a basic assump­ tion of a free society. It is c h aracteristic of hum an nature for an individual to se­ lect the group of people with whom he desires to associate socially. Tills selec­ tion is discrim ination. Fraternities and sororities are institu­ tionalized examples of this natural ten ­ dency and they are based on d iscrim i­ nation, against anyone who would be incom patable in the group. I would im ­ agine that in their rush, Negro fra te rn i­ ties and sororities exercise the sat ie kind of discriminatory selection in choos­ ing their membership. This selective pro­ cess, although is not any more nor any less discriminatory than the way an individual chooses his own friends. institutionalized, To insure unity in the organization, most fraternities provide that five per less of the membership may cent or prevent an individual’s affiliation. Re­ gardless of the merits and demerits of this, fraternities are joined voluntarily. and should have c o m p ile control over the.r internal affairs. The elimination of racial or any other kind of prejudice cannot be accomplish­ ed by law. Segregation in fraternities and sororities could be ended by: (I) forcing them to admit Negroes; and, (2) legislating them out of existence. In eith­ er case, the right of an individual in a free society to choose his friends freely (even if he calls them his fraternity bro­ thers) is negated. Sky M arshall 2113 A Kabb Rd. Excessive Rates l u tile E ditor: I have always understood that one of the p rim ary objectives of the Daily Texan was to serve and aid the student body. I have been spalled by the ex­ cessive classified ad rates charged to students. Now I don't need a sm a rt little note w ritten at the end of m y Ie.ter bv one of the Daily Texan 1 reporters telling me these ra es a re com ­ p arable to those charged by the Austin A nteri-v.n-Statesm an and that you have a circulation of 23.000. I realize this. that la te s Also, I am in full agreem ent with the for non-Univershv classified ad students (and staff) and for com m er­ cial enterprises. The paper should charge a ra te com parable with other Austin papers when serving non-University peo- ple. looking However, the ad ra te charged to I T students (and staff) is another m atter. through W ednesday’s Daily In Texan I c stunted between 20 and 30 stu ­ dents ads. Less than 30 out of 20.00*T plus a re being served. The ad section could be helpful in obtaining class to re ­ m any students quired books of which the book stores are alw ays without, selling and buying articles needed for educational purpos­ es. selling and buying desks and book­ shelves, etc. M any sm all item s cosing less than $ X) could be obtained using the ad section. The rates now are so high that one m ust be selling a c a r or at least som ething costing m o re than $30 to be able to pay the excessive ra te s charged to student-4. I would likn to propose that the 15 word ad for a blanket tax holding s tu ­ dent or staff m em ber cost a total of IO cen s per day for the com plete ad. The blanket tax holder should get a better ra te since he pays for the publishing of the paper. Tins would enable m any students to use tho ad section to benefit them in obtaining an education. Now I realize th a t this Ie’ter will .jot thing since the campus accom plish a political types and Daily Texan staff seem to be more interested in a critical Elsew here... By Linda Pendley Hawaii U. Offers Courses to Now th at summer is around the corner, students on university campuses through­ out tho United States are looking for al­ immediate confrontation ternatives u i’h problems of the world—the draft or work. To m a n y students with a C av­ erag e and a surfboard, the University of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii, may be the pleasant answer. Beatrice E. Wallerstein, assistant prof­ essor of travel industry management at the university, announced that the school is offering for the first time this year what could be a full-scale program in “ tourism.” Strange as it sounds, the program is not new. There are university programs in “ tourism" i . Switzerland, Austria, Germany, France, and Italy which con­ tribute toward doctorate degrees. But Miss Wallerstein pointed out that this program will have the advantage of being the first one in any of the states. The subject at the university will be divided into practical courses—including items such as ticket sales—and theory, she said. Miss Wallerstein has hopes drat more US schools will show an interest. She feels that a number of states will send specialists to the university to take a course or two and, perhaps later, work on a graduate degree in tourism. ★ ★ ★ Publishers of the humor magazine of the University of California, I/>s Ange­ les, C alif, regret they ever heard of a certain unlisted phone number which ap­ peared in a recent edition. The number appeared in an illustra­ tion with a story entitled “ A UCLA Prim er.” The illustration showed an ex ­ amination bluebook with a key taped to the cover. Under the key was the phone number. D ie former UCLA coed that it belong­ ed to was quick to inform the publish­ ers that the number was quite real. She also added that she wasn't at all im­ pressed with what had been happening since the m agazine cam e out. Her attorneys said she had to have her phone disconnected because “ reader* their minds" began with mischief on calling the number at all hours of the day and night. “The number was used quite inad­ vertently." the magazine's editor. Law­ rence Grobel, said. He explained that he used the last four digits of his hometown number and added a Los Angeles prefix. H ie attorneys say such “ inadvertent” use is not necessarily a legal defense, and they have a iong list of cases to substantiate their point. The former co­ ed is impressed with that. She may sue. STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Issue News E d ito r .................................... Leslie Sims Make-Up E d ito r ........................................ Larry Ikels Copy Editors Elliott West, Paula Bullard W ire Ed'ter ........................................ Linda Slavilc Editorial P a g e .......................... Sports ................................................. Bill Halstead Amusements .......................................... Dean Rind/ N g h t Reporters ...................................... J « n Alkek, John Anders, Kay Canter, Je rry Causey, Rich­ ard Hill, J a m es Moody, Joanne Pahnke, Leonard Spitzer, Leon Stump. Linda Pendley Varsity Carnival Queen Hopefuls Francis Barnard man B arbara Echols Beverly Enderie K ate Flack Economist Explains Fiscal Difficulties A ttention Graduates! these demands. A* a result, busi­ ness must force price* up In or­ der to make a profit. The result he said, Is Inflation. Dr. Paul M. Harvitz of Wash­ ington, D C ., associate director of banking and economic re­ search, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, w ill talk at 9 am . Friday in Business-Econo­ mics Building 105 on "The Viable Indus­ Monetary and Financial try.’’ Prom 2 to 4 p m, Frid ay In B L B IOO, Dr. Oscar L. Altman and Dr. Jack C. Rothwell w ill discuss "The Balance of P a y ­ ments and Reform of the Inter­ national Monetary System .” Dr. C. Canby Balderston w ill apeak at 9 a m. Sautrday in E E B 105 on "Tile Future Role of the Fed­ eral Reserve System .” ©Grace Ball SECRETARIAL COLLEGE F , V E S P E C I A L I Z E D S E C R E T A R I A L C O U R S E S .E x e c u tiv e Secretarial Course for C o lle ge W om en S a n Fra nc isc o by the G o ld e n Ga te H P I H p . • B a sic Secre tarial C o u rse S U C C E S S F U L S E C R E T A R I E S , Legal Secre tarial C o u rs e • E le ctro n ic s T e chnica l Secretarial C o u rs e * M e d ica l Secre tarial C o u rse 5 7 % o f stu d e n ts e n ro lle d have h ad o n e to fo ur y e a rs cf eoftege. N A T I O N A L P L A C E M E N T S E R V I C E ENROLLMENT DATES: JU LY 12, SEPTEM BER 27 Send for College Catalog: 525 Sutter Street, corner Powell San Francisco, C alifo rnia 94102 Second Floor Turn In Your Dividend Slipt May 7-1J TH E A D V E N T U R E S OF P A M A U S T I N C H A P T E R SIX " C or on e t saves the day L a s t time, we left Pam, in g way out on a limb . w i t h on ly one w ay to go •v • ■ ■ •• < • ?vv; ■ im • A J * * V ■ rn t i* rn m m -A " Alas' Is there n o t h i n g to save he r f ro m " B o r e d o m Fa lls Wait. C o m i n g t h r o u g h that c l o u d cl dust! T h o s e saave gooa Iook s . That strong, I ftnt demeanor. T h a t n i g h DO DGE O IV lS K iM A CHRYSLER M 010H S UORPQRAIION Prhhy, April 22, I9U THE DAILY TEXAN P)g» | G e m m e Rousseau Linda Thomas American foreign policy as it affects countries throughout the world will be the topic for the fourteenth annual social studies IT W A S “ C L I O C I . A F T R A ” 4 IN 1965, IT W A S "BO LD FIN G ER" • • NOW , IN 1966 , PHI SIGMA KAPPA present# . . . conference sponsored by the Uni­ versity Frid ay and Saturday. Twelve University professors and lecturers w ill address the more than 300 teachers expected to attend. E rie Rocher, diplomat In resi­ dence at the University, w ill open the first general session at 2 p.rn. Friday at the Villa Capri Motor Hotel with his discussion on "A n ­ alyzing Our Foreign Po licy." The keynote address, "O ur Viotnam P o licy," w ill be pres­ ented by Dr. Jam es R. Roach, professor of government and a Southeast Asia specialist, at a 7:30 p.m. banquet Friday. SA TU R D A Y at 9 a.m., the for­ eign policy discussion w ill be inio world areas broken down that are influenced by the Am eri­ can policy. The concurrent ses­ sions w ill concentrate on Latin PREMIER S H O W IN G SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 1964 et the SER BATMAN i JA M E S BONE O VERTHROW IMM ORALITY! G I R L S MAKE SCHO O L MORE FUN THIS SUMMER Check Theie Apartm ent Features • NO CURFEW HOURS • 40 Ft. Swimming Pool • Extra Large Closets & Storage Area • Within Walking Distance of Campus • Trained Resident Supervisor a ro u se Oldham at Manor A h o Taking Reservations ArtCarved settings hold a diamond so delicately, it’s almost frightening. See Dream Diamond Rings only at these Authorized ArtCarved Jewelers America. Asia. Eastern Europe, Western Europe. Afria, and the Middle E a s t Dr. Jose Honorio Rodrigues, visiting lecturer in the history department, and former director of the National Archives of B ra ­ zil, win lead the Latin American session. Asia w ill be discussed by Dr. Jam es R. Soupup, assoc­ iate professor of government; and Eastern Europe by Dr. George W. Hoffman, professor of geogra­ phy. W E S T E R N E U R O P E w ill be handled bv Dr. W illard Fletcher, associate professor of history, and Dr. Robert Holz. assistant prof­ essor of geography, w ill conduct the session on Africa and the Middle East. "O ur Foreign Policy Through the Eyes of Others," a panel dis­ cussion, w ill conclude the Con­ ference of the Texas Council for the Social Studies Saturday at 10:30 p.m. Moderator of the dis­ cussion w ill be Dr. Clark C. G ill, associate professor of curriculum and instruction. Panel members w ill be Dr. Archibald R. Lewis, professor of history, and three visiting lectur­ ers, Dr. Case E . Cannegieter, economics professor at the I ni- versity of Western Australia; Dr. Louis A. Arooena, chairman of the history department at the University of Buenos Aires; and Dr. M arcel Michel, marketing professor at the University of Laubain. Dr. Jim B . Pearson, associate professor of history is the pro­ gram chairman of the conference. Films Canceled Due to Late Plane Due to a delayed plane, the Cinema 40 presentation of Gerard Malanga was canceled Thursday night. Tile actor and assistant to Andy Warhol, however, w ill speak and present avant-garde movies at IO a.m. Frid ay in Union Build­ ing Auditorium. The showing w ill include W arhol’s "H a rlo t," M arie Menken’s "Andy W arhol," and Malanga’s "M a ry for M ary.” Instead of the 75-cent fee set for the Thursday presentation, students and faculty w ill be ad­ mitted free Friday, Greg B a r­ rios, Cinema 40 president, said. PIG STAND No. 14 2801 GUADALUPE JT) GR 2-4064 GOOD MORNING GOOD AFTERNOON GOOD EVENING GOOD FOOD ANYTIME Pig Stand No. 14 We’ve even designed a diamond g/gement ring to resemble the soft fragile I petals oj a new spring flower. So the diamond you show off to the won’t only he dazzling. But elegant too In the new ArtCarved collection, u can choose from slim, soaring, majestic designs. And without b e i n g frightened. I Because since we guarantee all the diamonds we set, we also guarantee they will stay right there. It's Back to Drawing Boards For Splintered Relays' Plans By BIL!. HALSTEAD Red-Shirt Sports Editor Ju5t about the tim e the thief escapes with ad the loot, he pulls a m uscle. The cops a re a fte r him . Will he be c a u g h t0 Stay timed for the next epi^-xio of T exas tra c k trials. The Longhorn h a rrie rs , on the brin k of cashing in on a pile of relay instead trophies, fell heir to a rash of injuries. The resu lt th e is an u ncertain prestigious Kansas Relay’s F r i­ day and S atu rd ay at L aw rence, Karts, lin e u p for Coach Ja c k P a tte rso n 's bunch, riding the crest of an upset d e ­ feat of O klahom a S ta te ’s two- m ile relay team — which holds th e world reco rd of 7 :18.4 — w as the Cow­ prim ed boy's and anyone else this week­ end. to challenge B I T JOHN PERRY, who had earn ed the fourth spot on the r e ­ lay q u a rte t with a fine 1:52.8 ra c e la st week, pulled lip lam e during p ractice T uesday. Thus. David Webb will join Rob O’B ryan, R ich ard Romo, and P resto n D avis on the foursom e. Webb led off in the T exas R elays ra c e against OSU with a 1:54.0. T he sprint m edley e n try of the •Horns, which showed m uch p ro m ­ ise with a 3:19.5 clocking at the Is also a W est T exas R elays, la rg e question m ark O’B ryan and Davis a re healthy, but sp rin t­ e rs Tom m v K eene is a doubtful atarter with a pulled muscle, and 220 man Steve Langham is still from a sim ilar ail­ recovering m e n t Which leaves Jam es M eans and Don P a rk h u rst as potential subs. Even P a rk h u rst is an untested source, having run m ostly 440 s this spring due to an Injury. THE MILE RELAY CREW, which h as done a v ery creditable 3:10.9, is another w rinkle on P a t­ te rso n ’s feverish brow. Again, O’B ryan and Davis a re available, but L angham and P e rry , both q u a rte rm ile rs, are not. Doug Fires 67 In Dallas Open DALIJVS — W - Doug Sanders* Irons c arried him to a four-under- lead p a r 67 and the first-round in the $85,000 D allas Open T hurs­ day as the Dallas pro found the 6,923-vard Oak Cliff Country Club course to hts liking. Sanders, leading m oney and tournam ent w inner of the year, w as hitting so solidly he had no problem w ith tim stiff wind. Sanders, co-favorite with G ay B rew er to win the $15,000 first m oney, finished in m idafternoon with a tw'o-stroke lead over Mil­ le r B a rb e r of San Antonio, the first p la y e r in the 145-man field to shoot under TO. is The distance m edley unit not a first-string group, but it will do b attle for the ’Horns just the sam e. P ark h u rst Is sched­ uled to m n the q u arter, Chuck Fraw ley the 880, Webb the 1,320, and Brian W oolley the mile. Individuals who will com pete for Texas against the best in the nation offer a little m ore hope. At least, th ey ’re healthier. Heading the list will be pole v aulter M ark King, who one week ago hroke his own school record inch. with a vault of 16 feet, King’s effort also b ettered the existing Southwest Conference high of 16 feet. MEANS will m n the 100-yard dash, and Steve Sansom will try both hurdles ra c e s for the third tim e this y ear after overcom ing a thigh injury'. Sansom will also hurl the Jave­ lin, where he and Mike Sowers loom as the b est two-man entry of the m eet. Sansom su rprised everybody in last week’s trian g u ­ la r m eet with T exas A&M and North T exas State by flinging the spear 228 feet, 6 inches. It was a m ere 27 feet b etter than his previous best try. Sow­ ers is close behind with a toss of 221 feet, 5*4 inches this year. TOBY B E IT , who owms a sea- son’s tops of 55 feet, 9Vi inches in the shot put, will com pete with the nation’s best w eightm en. And d istance m an Ken Sunder­ land will atte m p t a ra re ra re , the 3.000-motor steeplechase. | | | Guide t o Horns Hope to Pluck Rice Owls Feathers and undefeated Ray Hooten will hurl against the Longhorns. The Owl hitters are In a slump now, but a double header at home might break them out of it. Andy Rooker, all-SWC and sophomore- of-the-year in 1965, went 0 for 9 against TCU last weekend. But Rooker too good a is hitter to go hitless again. He and the other two outfielders. Ronnie (.344) and Ricky Reitz Waldo (.320), deadly some provide punch. THE CRUCIAL SERIES of the weekend will be played at Col­ the Aggies lege Station where host TCU. A split there and a sweep by Texas will put the Long­ horns back in first place. Since all three contenders play *ach other In the final w’eeks of the season, the SWC is building up a pennant race th at resem ­ bles the N ational League. the finish of is the 15-inning, 3-3 One other factor to be consi­ dered tie A&M and TCU played Monday. The gam e will not be replayed unless it will have an affect on the league's outcom e. AT THIS POINT, It seem s very likely th at it will have a g reat affect. If the gam e is to be re­ played, it will m ean that T ex as’ two chief opponents will have to m eet each other three m ore tim es instead of two. So Rice, w’hile a tough team to beat, will be the easiest foe T ex­ as will face for the re st of the season. If the Longhorns are to defend their SWC title, they have to take advantage of this week­ end. But Comebacks Needed Texas Title-Hunts In 2 SW C Sports By DAVID WIESSLEB Texan Sport* Editor there U is anything like a ••breather’* left in Southwest Con­ ference baseball, Texas has it this weekend. The Longhorns travel to Hous­ ton to play Rice at 2:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Texas is second in the SWC race with a 6-3 record, while the Owls are last at 2-6-1. three THE FIGHT for the league title teams. to has narrowed Texas AAM leads with a 6-2-1 record; Texas is a half game be­ hind; and TCU stands still an­ other half gam e back at 5-3-1. After this weekend, the Steers have series against the other two contenders — at TCU on April 29 and 30, and at home against A&M on May 9 and IO. Bibb Falk, Texas’ baseball coach, has his two pitching aces ready after a week’s rest. Right­ hander Robert Wells (6-1), will go against the Owls one day, and lefty Gary Moore (5-2) will start the other. But the SWC Is not known for soft touches. Rice, while resting in the cellar, has already given the Longhorns a taste of what a tough club they can be. In losing to Texas 4-3 on March 16, Owl pitcher Bill Palm er limited the Steers to only three hits. RICE could be even tougher in Houston. Palmer. 3-3 on the year, s JBSS* -• —Photo by Virgil Johnson Second-Sacker Don Johnson . . . Clutch UT hitter leads Texas against Rice. G O O D E A T I N G T-BONE STEAK DINNER FEATURING OUR "EAT ALL YOU W A N T ’ BUFFET SALAD BAR W ITH BAKED POTATO 99c Served M O NDAY-THURSDAY-FRIDAY EVENINGS 4:00 P.M. to 8 P.M. G . C. M U R P H Y C O . HANCOCK CENTER—41 it .o d RED RIVER ■ I S58S83W?! in and around AUSTIN ALAM O Restaurant AND COFFEE ROOM Serving the fin**! Familial in Central Tara* over 20 year* D in e In Candlelight A tm osphere ALAMO SPECIAL DINNER ALL D A T S A T ! B D A Y A SU N D A Y S ou th ern Fried C hicken C hoice of T w o V eg eta b les C hoice of D essert on D in n er Tea or C offee (H ot or C old) 95c V A R IED D IN N E R A E T F .* 5 P.M . H O N . T H E T F B I. 604 Guadalupe GR 6-5455 6.30 a.m. ’til 9 p.m. W HERE ELSE C A N YOU GET SU CH A BARGAINi EAT TILL YOU'RE FULL of the FINEST MEXICAN FOOD In AUSTIN And Pay Only I 2 5 **r A ctual A m ount — W h ich ­ ever la I*aa EL MATAMOROS • f t CHARRO • EL TORO E . A V E N U E 10th A B E D B IV E R 16th A G U A D A L U P E I t ’s NEW N ew berry’s Cafeteria j Capital Plaza Shopping Center ALL YOU CAN EAT! D esserts And D rinks Flxtra For Onlv Each Plat# 9 9 SAT. a SUN. 1.45 Max. IT'S N E W T O S t C h L C O ESPECIALLY FO R L O N G H O R N S ! The Longhorn Room DINE IN LUXURY A N D ENJOY THE BEST M EXIC A N FO O D A R O U N D EL C H IC O H A N C O C K CENTER - r e s t a u r a n t s : Serve yourself . . . from our wide selections of deli­ cious foods. Mon.-Sat. l l A.M.-2 P.M. — 4:30 P.M.- 7:30 P.M. Sun. l l A.M.-2 P.M. ITALIAN RESTAURANT "Italian Food Is Our O n ly Business'' O pent Tuesday thru Sunday 5 p.m. til 10:30 p.m. Closed on Monday S H O P D O W N T O W N • Highest Quality • Fair Prices • Liberal Portions IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN AUSTIN /o Daily 6:30 AM. 8:30 P.M. P . ICCADILLY [ y a ^ e te A iia 801 C O N G R ES P I Z Z A P A R L O R an6 y e Public house 2915 G u a d a l u p e G R 6- i V) i & H o e i S e r v i n g t h e B e s t h i e d C hi c k e n In T o w n • FAST SERVICE • MODERATE PRICES • PHONE IN YOUR ORDER TO GO! E V E N IF Y O U D O N 'T h a v e a B u t l e r * you will on joy a dei!, cio u e din ner ana tha d eligh tful atm osphere o f the MTH HK I m i d i • lf y o u d o h ave a but­ ler, b r in g him along. H a Witt enjo y th a Tar. r a c e S u m m e r H o u se , to o . Friday. Ap-a 22, 1965 THE DAILY TEXAN Paga 4 404 S. LAMAR GR 7-2245 H A N C O C K CENTER I A A A A * A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A e A A A A A. A A A A A A A A A A A A A A objectivity and a look at final op­ ponents gives third-place Texas the nod—even if it is only a po­ lite nod. The ’Horns, who a re 21-15, m eet Rice at A ustin's M orris W illiams course F riday. T exas m ust com e up with a 6 0 sh u t­ out of the 20l/2-l512 Owls for a clear idiot a t A rkansas the SWC crown. leads at 22-14, but plays SMU — upset w inner over Texas — at D allas F riday. If the Pigs drop tw’O points and T exas loses none, the Steers are in. BAYLOR, likewise, can afford to give aw’ay only one and one- half points to visiting TCU — if Texas skunks Rice. The B ears a re in second at 21 *4*14 *4- It sounds sim ple, but the less savory prospects offer a golf to cart-load of possible finishes the four-team race. Tennis is a bit cle a re r — at least for Texas. The TTcms re ­ side in third place at 19-11, and m ust blank T exas Tech in th eir Lubbock m atch Saturday to re ­ tain a m ath em atical chance at first place. TEXAS A&M leads a t 23-1, but h as to play u p start Baylor S at­ urday and reigning cham p Rico Tuesday. The Owls, 15-3 after a su rp rise 3-3 split with Texas, tackle SMU F riday. TCU Satu r­ day, and host A&M Tuesday in the key m atch of the season. T exas hopes, although present, a re as slim as a successful crash dieter. A&M m ust go 0-12 in its final two m atches, and Rice m ast drop nine of 18 rem aining points for T exas to slip in ahead at the finish. FROM M EXIC O L arge C ollection at reg io n a l cra fts and d eco ra tiv e a ccesso ries BULA SKINNER, IMPORTS 1705 N acres All the marbles are in the ring. is: who The big question now has the shooter agate? No one knows the answ er, but seven shooters in two Southwest Conference sporls will knuckle down Friday and next week to determine champions in golf and tennis. AT THE MOMENT, the golf title is up for grabs among Arkan­ sas, Baylor, Rice, and defending little non- champion Texas. A Ski Committee Cuts US Locale ROME — OB — Banff’s chances of getting the 1972 Winter Olym­ pics rose Thursday night as a combined United States-Canadian Ski group called on Am erican delegates to support the Canadian bid over Salt Lake City, Utah. Tile appeal cam e from the Pa­ cific Northwest Ski Areas Federa­ tion made up of 20 members from Oregon, Washington, and Idaho, plus eight from Canada. "We’ll remember this,** said Utah Gov. C abin Rampton. "We won t forget.” "Quite unpatriotic, I would sa y ,” said Gen. Maxwell E. Rich, chairman of the Salt Lake City Olympic committee. "Sounds al­ most unbelievable.” Delegates from Sapporo, Ja­ pan; Banff; and Lahti, Finland, —who also are bidding for the games—made no com m ent Standings M ajor le a g u e S ta n d in g s By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A m erican L « t |v « W I. P et. GB I OOO — C leveland B a ltim o re D etro it xC hloago x C a lifo rn la M in n esota Boat on W a ih ln r to si K a n sa s City New Y ork ^P ittsb u rg h .San F r a n c Isca Loa A n g eles x P h ila d e lp h la xA tla n ta St. L o u is N ew Y ork H o u sto n xCinclnnsM C h icago N a tio n a l 6 0 8 I 6 8 4 3 4 3 3 3 3 6 I 5 i s I 7 I.rag aa I. W I 7 7 I 8 3 4 3 3 4 3 4 3 3 3 8 5 I I 7 .857 RST 667 667 .500 .250 .167 .167 .125 4 1 4 2 3 3 5 S $ • Fe4. GB .857 — .857 — .667 .571 429 429 .400 183 167 125 included 1 4 3 Va 3 4 3 4 3 4 4 4 5 6 lA t e gam e not You mean, because I’m a student or teacher I get special rates at all Hilton Hotels in the U.S.? Hilton Hotels Corporation, National Sales Office, Palmer House, Chicago 90, III. Please send the Faculty-Student Rate Brochure that tells all. I am a Faculty Member □ Student □ -Vs NAME. HOME ADDRESS. STREET COLLEGE NAME. CITY TTaTeT TTRfPT "UTT TTaTT I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ★ d cl V UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS S w e e t h e a r t i J i n a i i s l you a carefree, com fortable w ay of life. 37.50 LINEN-LOOK SPORT C O A T S : Sum m er time and the living is—bright, brash and ■fun-tilled. The b ig 'n' bold plaid is strictly crisp and sporty. Linen and Dacron is blended to give Longhorn Band, DiNino to Present First Band-O -Pama fo r in t rifle ran ges 11 u i g — HUM*1"*"’. | S p a IT I U b M p w r I 4 C VV 3 . - #» Jn R r l p f u / i »^ I I I I ........... t ! in con- M a ry a U n iversity In con St. Mary s University nection with the Fiesta Match. nection with is a p art of F iesta San Antonio y y :t is a part of Fiesta San Arr n.o . . activities the Fiesta Mat' th# c ity 'n t ir - .s will shoot at *: ng stop.. \\ n • • >: ■ . Thirty-two team s from IT col- and In Texas. A rkansas legits O klahom a will com pete a The m atch will be shot with International ta rg e ts on six d.f H PI AAM ;itv ri gory. They won th# sam # cate- gf,J~y- They w'on th# sam - g .rv in the national com petition. gory in the national com pc The Texas O range Team vs .ll The Texas Orange Tear v.P romnoMd of John F en be componed of John P erguson, H a rry Stevenson, Phil F re e m a n , and P a u la Kluge, The White Team will include Steven Winn, Jim Lorkowski, Gregg Lung- stru m , and John Crozier. . t a l e cate­ In Ennis later this month. In Ennis later this month. Speakers and subjects wit! be The Longhorn Band, directed Speakers and subjects will b« H ie Longhorn Band, directed by Vincent R. DiNino, will present In August, she will represent In Angust, she will represent Dr. Janet Nymann, assistant pro- bv Vincent R DiNino, will present D r Jan et Nymann, assistan t pro­ 9mmm„ its first annual Band-O-Rama at its first annual Band-O-Rama at Texa# on a goodwill tour to N ash- nn1 Instnie- Texas on a goodwill tour to Wash­ fessor of curriculum and instruc­ 8 p.m . in Municipal Auditorium. ington. B.C.; New York ( Sty; and tion. elem entary education; Dr. The free, public performance Newport, IM. While In New poi t, William Bennie, associate profes­ will include five component con­ she will l>e presented at the Doric sor of curriculum and instruct­ c e rt groups and the 250-piece Ball, a debutante ball which each ion, secondary' education: Dr Al­ Longhorn Marching Band year honors a small number of ton Murphy, associate professor DiNino will conduct girls from across the country. of educational psychology, col­ lege education; Dr. Lynn Mo- Craw, professor of health and physical education, physical edu­ cation; Dr. N atalie B arrag a, as­ sistant professor of special edu­ cation. educational psychology; social and Richard Connally. science III, counselling. the Con­ c e rt Band "Ms p a n a ,” Berloiz s "M arch Hong ro ise ,” of M usic.” The I Ast year. Miss Morrison was presented at the Bachelors Club Debutante Ball in Austin and at the International Ball at the Hotel Astor In New York City, C anterbury Party Set research associate faculty m em ber; In Cli abri er s "T he Sound hand will and ★ The public Is Invited. dane# RI 6:3(1 p.m . Saturday In the Ren em'v Room of tho \ ilia (a p ii. Just ire -loo Greenhill of tho T exas Supromo Court will stpeak. + A n g e n e n d G iv e n A w a r d Paul Angenend. freshm an, was sw arded a $1,000 scholarship ax first runner up in tho Young Tex­ an of the Y ear Award given by the Texas Optim ist Club In ITV- las last weekend. The first-place w inner was Phil William Knippa of Concordia College In Austin Angenend, an A m erican studies m ajo r from Houston, was aw ard­ ed the scholarship and atrophy by Troy V. Post of the AptimiM Club. lie w as chosen from a field of 6,000. A m em ber of L am bda Chi Al­ pha fratern ity , Angenend h as been active In A'pha Phi Omega, a national service fratern ity , the C actus, and F resh m an Council. ★ S u m m e r Registration Students who previously have attended the University may ap­ ply to receive summer registra­ tion materials by mail until May IO. Applications are available In front of tile Registrar's office. Main Building 7. Registration the summer for session will he J one 7 and 8. ★ UT Coed I* ‘Duchess’ as the D uchess of Oriental Silks at the coronation of the Queen of Fiesta W ednesday night Antonio. Miss Kreisle Is a m en her of Kappa K appa G am m a s r- m y . and was a Junior helping hand debutante in 1964 and a debu tarde in 1965. H er escort was Wil­ liam Craig Holford of Austin. Historian to Lecture “ Tho Princes* lr. tho T ow er” * public lecture by S. T. Btndoff, will bo given at * p m . Monday In B lini ne**-Economic# Building r n . Bindoff U a professor of Tudor history at Queen Mary College at the University of London. ie ★ ‘Peyton P lace ’ to S h o w "P eyton P la c e .” from the novel bv G race M e to liu s, will be shown this weekend in the Union Audi tori urn. F rid a y s showing will he at 5 and 8 p.m . The moxie will he seen Saturday at 7 and 9:50 P rn. Two showings Sunday a rr at 5 and 8 p.m. Admission is 15 cents for students and 35 cents for nonstud en ta. S tarring in the film a re Lana T urner, Hope Lange, and Terry Moore. ★ Riflemen to Compete Two V arsity Rifle T eam s will com pete the F iesta Rifle Cham pionship In San Antonio Sat­ urday. The m atch, sponsored by for 1 ; . “ M*rt1n!*1nf F r*><*h m * F ln m r r .Tint o n * h o t t i l ’ , In , 9 -D r P a u l M H o r v lf i t o sp e a k on T h e V ia b le M o n e ta r y a n d F i n a n ­ I n d u s tr y ," B u s ln e s a - E r o n o m lc s Linda Kreisle, junior m ath m a ­ the U niversity represented jor, f e a t u r e ' ‘L ared o .” an original composi­ tion by J. Clifton Williams, Uni­ v ersity "La Bella R om a” bv C a ra c a s; and Gounod's “ La Reine de Saba.” The Longhorn Dance Band, di­ rected by John F. Edm unds, a s­ sistan t director, will appear in concert for the first tim e. The group will perform "The Shadow of Your Sm ile.” 1966 Academy A ward song; "Som eone.” a bal­ lad composed and arranged by E dm u n d s; and “ Ju st In T im e.” a m odem jazz arrangem ent by Gordon Goodwin. The m arching band will con­ clude the pH/gram with Bolster!- ing's "M arch of the Steel Men,” “ The E yes of T exas." and "T ex­ as Fight” by Manning and Di­ Nino. ★ * ♦ Best Bandsmen N am ed Wally Barrow Is the outstand­ ing Kappa Kappa Psi {Mind fra­ ternity pledge for the fall sem es­ ter. Arm# Fngate Is the outstanding fall pledge of Tau Beta Sigma, women’s hand fraternity. The honorees were named at rn joint fraternity banquet Friday, April 15. $100 Research Grants Undergraduates may apply for Independent research grants of up to $100 to the Undergraduate Research Project committee In Union Building 323. The projects rn av he within or outside the student's major field and do not have to he completed until one year from the grant. More than one student m ay work on a project. Co anally Crowns Queen Patricia Ann Morrison, junior art history major, was crowned Texas Bluebonnet Queen by Got. John Connally In the Capitol Re­ ception Room Wednesday after­ noon. A* Bluebonnet Queen, the Pl Beta Phi member will partici­ pate In tho Bluebonnet Festival C anterbury Club, the Episcopal student association, will give a pinata birthday party at Travis State School at 7 p.m . Friday. Participants wall meet at Gregg House, 209 W. Twenty-seventh St. ★ O r d i na nc e to Be Topic Austin’s new human relations nrdinanee will be dlseus#*ed by law students at the regular cof­ fee ami conversation hour of the Presbyterian Campus Ministry, San Antonio, at 3:30 p.m. Friday. Students and faculty are invited. Accountants Pick H ood Dr. Jam es T. Hood, assistant professor of accounting at the University, has been elected vice­ president of the Texas Association of University Instructors in Ac­ counting. He served as secretary -treaus­ e r of the group last year. Other new officers are Profes­ sor Jim F. Cook of Arlington State College, president, and Dr. Roderick Holmes of Bavlor Uni­ versity. secreto r y-treasurer. The organization Is composed of 149 teachers of accounting in Texas colleges and universities. ★ Phi Dells Plan Project Phi Delta Theta social fraterni­ ty will paint and repair the Aus­ tin Retarded Children's Day School Friday and Saturday as part of the fraternity’s annual Community Service Day project. Approximately 115 Phi Delta Theta members will work. The school Is a psychiatric renter for children from 3 to 12 years of age. 6 to Speak at TSEA Texas Student Education As­ sociation activities for Career Day Saturday will Include six speakers discussing levels and types of education in Union Build­ ing Auditorium at 9:30 a.m. PUBLIC AFFAIRS FO RU M THIS S U N D A Y 10:00 A.M. Dr. JoM>pk With*r*poo«, Mn. Jam*! Maan* and Robert Canino will diicuii: "W hy Austin N »«di an O rdinance Again** Segregation and Ditcrim ination" THE U N IT A R IA N CHURCH 4700 Grover Avenue B H I R T M A K E R S confined to tile i > - ) n La w ye rs to H ol d D a nc e Phi Delta Phi, law fraternity, will hold an Invitational dinner What Goes On Here Friday 8 5 -V V a’ o r c o lo r sk e tc h ^ * o f A m e r ic a n f u r n itu r e . U n io n B u ild in g 102: a n d S a t u r d a v g 8 - - B o o k s b y f a c u lt y a n d Starr g r o u n d c o r r id o r f lo o r B u ild in g ; a n d S a t u r d a y o f M a in 8 m id n ig h t W e s t e r n a r t. a n d A m e r i­ c a n a n d B r itis h m a n u s c r ip t* fir s t flo o r o f A c a d e m ic C e n te r ; a n d S a t- 8 M p m . — K L R N -T V p r o g r a m s C h a n n e l 9 . 9 V W e lle s le y C lu b J u n io r A rt s n o w L a g u n a G lo r ia 10-5 S a t u r d a y 9 i i S n a ck s a le , H o m e E c o n o m ic s B u ild in g 129 c ia l B m ld in g 105 9 R e ig s t r a t lo n u n io n , fo r A r c h ite c t u r e R e­ f o y e r o f A r c h ite c t u r a S t U d - a T ic k e t s f o r " f o l l i e s f a n t a s t ! - q u e ” a n d r e s e r v a t io n C a e sa r " H o g g A u d ito r iu m F in e A r u B o a O ffic e , fo r " J u liu s i 9 -5 —L a st d a v fo r e n t r ie s In A n n u a l B a b v S h o w . U n io n B u ild in g 342. 9 - 5 —R e s e r v a tio n * fo r c o m m e n c e m e n t ! c a r * a n d g o w n s U n iv e r s it y C o-O p I 9-12 a n d 1-5 - E x h ib its t e r d a y * a n d w o r k s B ’a k e S ta r k L ib r a r y , o f M a in B u ild in g " T e x a s 3 es o f VV ill tam fo u r t h flo o r . , u ■jrv-A — T e x a s - Y a le e x h ib i t o f L a tin A m e r ic a n a r t, A r t M u s e u m , a n d S a t u r d a y , 10-7 - B a r to n S p r in g s © pen d a lly . Z ilk e r P a r k . l l 30— A r c h ite c t u r e R e u n io n >uncn- e o n . U n io n B u ild in g J u n io r B a ll- ; r o o m . „ _ . 11 a n d J — W illia m P o t o f R o tte r d a m to d 's c u s s s u m m e r Jo b s a b r o a d . U n ­ io n B u ild in g 305 1 2-12— K U T - F jM, 90 7 m c ; a n d S a tu r - I P a n e l o n " C ity B u ild in g .'* A r c h i­ te c t u r e B u ild in g 105 1 30 a n d 3— T o u r s o f t h e E n g in e e r in g f r o m T a v lo r H a ll s t a r t C o m p le x m a in e n tr a n c e I — E r ie K o c h e r ic* g iv e d is c u s s io n on " A n a ly z in g O ur F o r e ig n P o lic y at s e s s io n ox S o c ia l S t u d ie s C o n fe r ­ e n c e V illa C a p r i. . 3 30— D r O s c a r I* A ltm a n a n d I>r J a c k C. R o t h w e ll t o d is c u s s T h e B a la n c e o f P a y m e n t s a n d R e fo r m o f th e I n t e r n a t io n a l M o n e ta r y S y s ­ t e m ," B u s ln e a s - E c o n o m lc s B u ild in g IOO. 4 D r C h a r le s S u s s k ln d to s p e a k o n B io e n g in e e r in g A N e w F ie ld o f E n g in e e r in g ." E n g in e e r in g L a b o r a ­ t o r y 102. 4- S ig m a P l S ig m a I n itia t io n . U n io n B u ild in g 325 4— F r id a y D is c u s s io n C r o u p . 4— D r D a v id J B o o r s tin to s p e a k on " F r o m W e a lth t o S t a n d a r d o f L iv ­ in g Is A m e r ic a a M a te r ia lis t ic N a ­ t i o n ’ " B a tts A u d ito r iu m Y g a n d 8— M o v ie ‘ P e y t o n P l a c a .” U n ­ io n B u ild in g A u d ito r iu m . tio n . 5 — K a r a te C lu b . " Y ." 7 .9 . .- C o -R e c r e a tio n W o m e n s G y m 7 O r th o d o x s e r v ic e * . H llle l F o u n d a ­ , fo r V a r s it y C a r n iv a l Q u e e n n o m in e e s . F o r t y A c r e s C lu b le a v e * fo r I _ C a n te r b u r y A s s o c ia tio n to g iv e a p a r ty 7 — B a n q u e t G r e g g H o u s e T r a v is S t a t e S c h o o l , 7 30— C in e m a 40 t o p r e s e n t A n g e r s M a g ic k L a n te r n C y c le ." A c a d e m ic C e n te r A u d ito r iu m 7 .30 — S o c ia l S t u d ie s C o n fe r e n c e to h e a r D r J a m e s R R o a c h s p e a k on " O u r V ie t N a m P o l ic y ." V illa C a- 1 3 Thanks for your business Charlotte. W e ’re proud of you! ' T h e P u r i s t 9 b u tt o n- do w n — for m en who seek perfec­ tion in a truly traditional wardrobe . • • aristocratic stripings enhance the gen­ tlem anly look o f the re­ now ned full-flared collar exclusively Sero o f N ew H aven. Proportionately ta ­ pered. H alf sleeves in fine batiste oxfords and summer- w eight madras stripings. from 7.00 2346 Guadalupe On-the-drag Friday, April 22, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN P««* S T R O U S E R E D BY C O R B IN exclusively o u r s ...on the Drag A H A N D Y L O C A T IO N S RAME KISSED MHBUKMS | h o l id a y HOUSE 510 WEST 19th • 907 WEST 24th 704 WEST 29th • Windsor Village H f m n t o e r w H H ] 2350 G u ad al mm mmmn MMM H E L D O Y E R ! 4 * ANO POSITIVELY LAST WEEK! ^ th** M « » i» th * * I t ' * J am re B o n d A m atte * F l i n t I,nob L i b * ( Mi d ft ria* : I Movie Festival Ends Cinema 40’s camp film festival ends tonight at 7 ;30 p.m. In th® continue hit work. He prepared the evening's program notes es­ Academic Center Auditorium. pecially for Cinema 40 The program ' ‘An Anger Magick Admission is 75 cents for fac­ Lantern Cycle,” will feature th# ulty and students, members free. films of Kenneth Anger, consid­ ered one of Am erica's outstand­ ing experimental directors. Anger recently was awajrded a $10,000 Ford Foundation Grant to A panel discussion w ill follow the evening's program. Littlefield Fountain was built In 1932 at a cost of $250,000. SHINES THRU Mmbm - '* ' ye sr# d e a n m a r t i n U l | , as MATT HELM S l l j s N n i s R S F o r th o G f n m l A u d ­ ie n ce , B u t th e M a t u r e W i l l E n jo y I* M o r e ! rn ie *1 - * «-♦•*%& *■ •***• ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! SHELLEY WINTERS BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS A v . * aw* r v * * #•* \ It V METRO GOLDWYN MAYER pit <.«nts 11 •’ THE PANOROS BERMAN- GUY GREEN PRODUCTION ^ n: B c t c h ° * B 1u e M A T I N E R A D A I E Y OFT, 7* 1:46 F R A T T U R A ! H 4 A U Gc>Kj l . //mnii'ana * ' T H E A T R E C ^ "T h * Shot9 Place cf Austin* F r e e r » r k l n f C o l o r TV L o u n g e lio c k in e C h a ir S e n t* S m o k in g P e r m it t e d I I M H w t t f f c I>rlre I B lk . W e * t of B u rn e t Rond t il , 8 6641 H a n * * h a * • b l* e k an d n h ln y r o n I* I* H a r p e r ’* rei-r B o at f r ie n d Be e h e w ran ch H a r p e * n e e d * b l* f r ie n d : Y o u c a n nee H a r p e r * « 'in * * in n A m ­ e r ic a n * T h e a t r e ! HELO OVER! 2nd GREAT W W NEW YORK FILM CRITICS AWARD: Simn* and SIDNEY POITIER SHELLEY WINTERS SU ELIZABETH Mi!te PANAVTSlON* PLUS ACADEMY AWARD Best Cartoon Nominee “THE POT AND THE LINE" 3rd WEEK OF ACCLAIM! Peal. 12-2-4-6-8-10 S T A T E I "5 A O I I TS M I X 75 M i (u n n F R A T I R F .S * 11 86-1:38-8:40 5 1 5 7:50 9:55 C i t ' * a * T H E A T R E FOREIGN FILM OF THE Y E A R I H Viva Fun! Viva Can-Can! Viva Adventure! Via StripTease! Via love! Viva Boom-Boomf s e a It S o w ! N ext 1 1* ar i I'r o b ab I a \ r a d i‘m y A h a rd \\ in n e r ! I ■ n p ItpJm K id s a n d T e e n s S t r u m S t r in g s A t A n n u a l U T Y o u t h R e c it a l The annual Solo Recital of the members of the Junior String Project w ill be presented in PwO- cital Hall, Frid ay at 8 p.m. The project is comprised of stu­ dents ranging in age from five to eighteen in Austin schools. The Project Is under the leader­ ship of Alexander Von Kreisler, professor of music. ADVANCED STU D EN TS in the Department of Music are teach­ ers in the project. The program w ill Include the Concerto No. 2 In E M ajor by Bach performed by M argaret Excitement clings to him like a dame! Paul Newman Frey, violin and Ann Whitworth, pii.no; Andalusia by Lacuona performed by Ja n Foeman, cello and Cappy Kennedy, piano; and Rondino by Kreisler played by Nancy Hamilton and Jean Wu- kasoh, violin, and Carol Cooper, piano. "Concerto Tile Handel In b m inor" w ill be played by B ill Richey, viola and Margaret Toeb- ko. piano. "Grave-Aliegro" by D all’Abaco w ill be played by four performers, Becky Thurmond and Margaret Frey, violin and Rebec­ ca MrTlvain. violas, and Jonell Belander, cello. "Concerto No. 4 In G M ajo r" by Goltermann w ill be played by Jonell Belander, cello, and Judy Brum ley, piano, followed by "Sonatine No. 2 in a m inor" by Schubert a n d performed by Becky Thurmond, violin and Shir­ ley Woodward, piano. Another selection by Golter­ mann, "Concerto No. I in a m i­ nor" w ill conclude the program On Sept. 15, 1883, the U niver­ sity was form ally opened In the incomplete west wing of the old Main Building. and will be performed by Don Baxter, Jonell Belander, Beverly Clark, Dale Farley, Ba Mae Hendricks, Jan Rieman, Susan Wukasch, cellos, and Rebecca Waggoner, piano. FOUNDED IN 1948, the Junior String Project is sponsored by the College of Fine Arts and Junior League of Austin. Tile concert is free to the public. The objective of the project Is to develop young talent and train teachers for string instrumental­ ists. For seven consecutive years the National Federation of Music Clubs has honored the Junior String Project for its outstanding work. H A h i q S b m u b a I H I H I 6G01 N . L A M A S H O 3-1710 A D U L T S l l OO D IS C . C A R D S .71 C H I L D R E N F R E E S N A C K B A R O P E N S L M F R E E R I D E S O N “ I L L T O O T ” F R O M 7:00 T O 8:00 — FAMILY, ALL — O COLOR MOVIES L A t 8:00 A 11:53 XH B A f t ! 'p o t t y * ige-J e. w tM , a/’H E fk J A w e M A M S T O P S P A T T I NIG h e r s e l f o n t h e B A C K A M D S H A R T S O M m e w C h i n ! Plus At 10:21 E X C L U S I V E F I R S T S H O W I N G A GERSHWIN-KASTNER Production C0 9T4RRW6 rn A4JHAAO«tCAL OROW »•< * LAUREN M I E ARTHUR BACA!!'HARRIS-Hill. TOBERT MACIA JANET SHELLEY MERS A c a d e m e A w a r d W in n e r — Best S u p p o r t in g A rtre a s Starts W EDNESDAY (cT K jl. S{& T m c*t/ c*L ) ( i f REALLY D o E S ) 7 P1Z7A VADE FBCM1 CUR OWN SECRET J?EC1P£ a ~ J L SERVED IN A *- • i f * # cg PIZZA HUTT ■ . * 1809Guadalupe -Austin, Texas J ACT to Present Satire on 1920's "The Boy Friend," a Brith h satire of the Roaring ’20’s, w ill begin April 22 at the Austin Civie Theater. Tickets may be purchased In advance at the playhouse, 204 E . Fifth St., or may be reserved by telephoning G R 6-0541. A D U L T S ll OO B O X O F F I C E O P E N S « = » A T E E N ( A R D S 80< That Darn Cat H a r l e ? M H I* A D e a n J o n * * S t a r t * 7:30 ..........plug--- —-— Git! Ja c k C h a p la in A H e a t h e r N o rth S t a r t s 9:30 B O X O F F I C E O P E N S 6:30 A D U L T S JI.O O T E E N C A R D 50r Second Fiddle To A Steel Guitar S t a r * jm r -’n ' r v AI Its SwTngTn’ NafihviHo — * v s TUofous Laffsvilie when the boys {rom the bowery - HUNTZ HALL U O GORCEY sud ARNOLD STANO crash tbs Jamboree o f BO COUNTRY MUSIC STARS I L ^ fA IC T . u n I m o i t i r X r •izxaut. * *uti«* “ LL- • uttli lOMlOI * JIMMY Mete _ M I . JQHMtY . M l»tt S llV t t • MilCMT • RU.conf POT TI* , att IT . «Tf •IIT 'n u l l M ill COM MI * 04 0 K5f - *n.l PMIC Lift IMITM • CLARR S t a r t * 7:38 -ploa- The Lost World O f Sinbad C n ln r F a n t a » r S t a r t * 9:30 A.K.A. Prod, ond Southwest Concerts PRESENTS ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY: Th* ln c r*d ib l* CARLOS MONTOYA FERRANTE & TEICHER In "Double Ploy" Municipal Auditorium $3.50 $3.00 $2.50 $2.00 | $4.00 $3.50 $3.00 $2.50 H e ro rd S h up ti IO B ra z o s B lu m * )iii* t- ( la r k 617 ( i i n z r r t i S tn d rn t* 50c Dinronnt Jo r a m M e n ’* W ra p 2270 (.u a d a lu p a P h . G R 2-0062 S t u d e n t U n io n T e x a n U n iv e r s it y C A S S p o r t in g B o n d * 2120 ti undo.! ii IM' A C A D E M Y A W A R D N O M IN EE Best Foreign Film I Joseph E Levine Sophia Marcello . Loren Mastroianm .Vittoriog Sicas ^.Puglisi M trik* Tola Ttcl* Scar ta# tv 4®4|W« • Ponti Le vin e ■ •IMI •* IM »t«* ’l7ZZr,**~r't De Filippo A Sly Tale And The P A i FEATURE TIMES 7:45 AND 11:45 -Color Plus "W ILD LY, W ICKED LY. W O N D E R F U L L Y F U N N Y " T mtia M a g a x in i EXTRA!--- PINK PANTHER CARTOON m E W ' W E MUND.IHE IM S IIM NNULg BIKE M O H LOUIS MAUE *>«*<«i»0jCAR DANJ6tRS tOUiS MAlu o*. PAHAVISION" EASTMANCOLORj • ~ " , J E £ r S £ « r " * lacuna* AWA*** wx* AFTER 6 P.M. O N LOTS L A V A C A STS. A D I I T S I OO M IM 56 C H H I) .35 AUSTIN F F A T I B K S I 6 : t 5-H : «fl 9:45 H w y Loved It In New York! And They Love It In Austin! Look At What The Local Critics Had To Say! •*F»Uinl parad* •> bi* fiim in r e m a r k a b le in c h inven tio n* In (b a t dat>lii>K array a 6(*•< tutor t* a l­ m ost o m rco irir by the visu a l *peil of I t att I ” J o h n B u o tiri, A u s t in A m o r S ta te * . O n ly 4 S h o w * D a i l y O p e n 2 :1® F e a t : I I M 50 7 15 0:40 jjjflltfiMiMiHHIlWW • l f y o u a r r m o m th o se fK-raona v bo n e but one niovio a i f a r , h o p in g th a t to find w a\ *urel> im t h r t ie n sincere e ffo r t , a e r thin a n e It >« boat jwrhar>« th o R ic h a r d B o n d , D a ily T e x a n “ on the dr**” Phone C R 7-1964 Ii ...foiilkiHAIWiffilliii H K r i l l . Y B F C D M M R M H I) F O R M A T H U S A U D I E N C E S Friday, April 22, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Pago 6 LEE M A R V IN BEST ACTOR OF THE YEAR n Funniest Picture of the Year en amu HAWI 0 PCTUtti' f l K HECHT Ftsrifc MTlTflii'l'ii|llllll li'Hm P f C / \ T ' — B A L L O U JJU! FflNQAlEE MARVIN B a u n ’ not wm m i m t h m JOSEPH f LEVINE pm** MARCELLO Mastroianni FEATURE TIME 9:45 S M I RECOMMENDED FOR THE MATURE AUDIENCES A D U L T S S I OO • O T E N 8:43 • D I S C . C A R D S .78 A L L S E W M O D E R N C O N C E S S I O N S T A N D H O 8-8931 BURNET 6400 B U R N E T R D . FREE PARKING AT, ALL TIMES Planning a Banquet or Dinner? Wyatt’s C A F E T E R I A ► Catering To Student & Faculty Groups— Seated Service, Buffet or Thru The Line— Tailored To Treasury Budgets ACCOMMODATIONS FOR GROUPS FROM 15-350 Austin’s Most Beautiful Dining Room HANCOCK CENTER PH. HO JA 112 T H E S E S - D I S S E R T A T I O N S M U L T I L I T H M A T S R U N 30c Per M a t CRAW FO R D -PEN ICK , Inc. I U C o n g re s s G R 7 9456 NELSON'S N avajo and Zuni H andm ade Indian Jew elry Mexican Imports Lp j B. Nel s on, Tr op . 4617 S.., ( o n e . HI 4-3814 M o n t o y a S c h e d u le d In L o c a l A p p e a r a n c e H O O T E N A N N Y ! This Sunday at The lith Door l i t h & Red River All Performers Welcome G R 7 -0602 • No Cover Charge The H o o t Will Be Broadcast On RAZZ O n Stage This W eekend Allen Damron • Mike Pie! "THMrS HOTHIMG ACaOCHTAl ABOUT QU AUTY." BReAKfaSt The outbreak of World War found him he rem ained. ll in New York, where Since flam enco com es from the 'here generally Spanish gypsies, has been no written m usic for it. Therefore, and d ances that Montoya presents in his con certs are his own a r­ them es with rangem ents of old his own com positions in typical gypsy rhythm . songs ’he The com bination of traditional folk th em es and personal impro visation accounts the enor mous variety of m usic that pours out of the Montoya guitar. The Montoya style is supple, grace­ ful, and delicate. for for T ickets the perform ance range from $2.00 to $3.50. Stu­ dents m ay purchase tickets at a discount of 50 cents at the Tex the Record as Student Union, Shop, Blomquist-Clark, Joraop M en’s W ear, and C&S Sporting Goods. Carlos M ontoya, internationally a<-claimed flam enco guitarist, will display his virtuosity in the Aus­ tin M unicipal Auditorium April 28. on For two generations Montoya has dom inated the world of the gypsy guitar. He was a child prodigy at the age of eight, a l­ though his im m ediate fam ily w as not a m usical one. His uncle, Ramon Montoya, how ever, w as also a fam ous flam ento guitarist. Carlos w a s horn in Madrid to a fam ily of modest m eans. His father, who sold m ules the Spanish arm y, died when the boy w as only two years old. to By the a ge of eight, Carlos had established his reputation as a guitar p layer. At 14, he led cafe cantonas in Madrid and, accom ­ panied by a singer, free-lanced in cafes in outlying villages. spending Shortly after three years in the Spanish Arm y, Car­ invited by La A rgen­ los w as fam ous Buenos Aires tina, a Spanish dancer, to accom pany her as guitarist, on her European toured tour. He Europe with the dancers V incen­ te E scudero and. later, T eresina. subsequently In 1965, the 59th Texas L egisla­ ture the officially designated pledge to the Texas flag as fol­ low s: “ Honor the T exas F lag. I pledge allegian ce to thee, T ex­ as, one and indivisible.” D O O R S O P E N H E L D O V E R ! M P u n G F u n t ^DeMkc' “t&c^uujUig CA/uw lo PANAVISION* and METR0C0L0R RICARDO MONTALBAN IG^'fS MOOREHEAD * CHAO EVERTT HAWE ROSS-EDSUTO _ GREER GARSON w r I W HEAR 'Dominique ’Brother John its A Miracle' J and other song hits. s i? 8 S e Q * PUsSe« K * c^ v * SC R E E N M f u g ktI o M R kSw w lNNEROF 5 ACADEMY AWARDS! I n c l u d i n g A C R E S o f GR 7-4253 o r GR 8-1891 V IL L A F O N T A N A 1951 S a b in e UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS Friday Kl T FM, 90 7 mr h a n g - g a r y S p a n s a \ Pr O—Re* 0 Ma 5 -~ Lex 4 on I jilte d N u t on* R e\ f 4 IS M u i r o f T h e a te r a? 4 43 P ro f ile B r ita in % ¥>- - Serenf.de 4 . N e th e r la n d s S< ii b e rg V a n Reno**** H- ’ 6 SO K L R N TV an d K S im u lc a s t A 55 •< a rn pu* C o m m en ter* 7 OO—C o n tin e n t* ! C o m m er 7 ob— i n t e r n a ’ in n s! Book 7 55— T h o S p a c e S t o r \ a OO L a Vo; s. H u m a in c H a \d n Kociotv IO XV- T h e a t e r 5 JO 25— C h e m ic a l E n g in e e r 10 Vt — R e a d in g A lo u d , t o n c u * ’ Cold m ick P a p e r s ' 11 05 - J azz N o c tu r n e S a t u r d a y 12 on P r o m R o o k *••ie to T h e F a n ta a tlc k s I OO - Opt rat I'* Od I tie " L l C le m U n a " D o lo re ' a n d 5 OO— S e r e n a d e 6 OO—O v e rle a # Ass. g n m er A SO—W eekend New* 6 45—T r a n s a t l a n t K Pr< J 7 OO- T h e A rt o f th e 'i el " T h e B a t u m en t a r y ; Bulge** 7 TO—C o n a o ie m e o f a N a SS C ity o f R ook H ii i rig P e e p * ■nns i and Modern r-.-p mal A -sard* th e A n s w e r? The P o n y * A m e ric a n a " M a n a g e m e n t S 'm p h o n v : B e e th - ann m ti ■ ii in \ ' . , • : n o , o r-u v /a by L U 'gt Friday I UMI’ ( loved C ircuits Channel 2 ,1 un at • i n v o l u t i o n A m er Su and Media — P a i n t i n g ‘tn t- duet r e B e ned ict 15. 115 Mc s ii I 104 ( hannel 4 Or tp# “ i i jr. of Ma". L iv in g P ri- i S tu d ie s B L B 301: > .n F KB 311. 316; a' a ’ • • 1 :0 8 J’. KB 311 B 311 en- diet* 12: R E B 316 a n d ’16 Guitarist at Work Flamenco Instrumentalist C arlos M o ntoy a in Austin next week. t.OO— T h e F o lk Sh< < Friday KLRV-TV, Channel 9 C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G B A T E S ............................................................5 ........................ (1 5 -w o rd m in im u m ) E a c h W o rd M in im u m C h a rg e C la s s ifie d D is p la y I c o lu m n x o n e in c h o n e lim e E a c h A d d itio n a l T im e 20 C o n s e c u tiv e Is*ue* 8 w o rd s 15 w o rd s 20 w o rd * ............................................. ................................* .......................................................... • ® ................................................................................ i w N . (N o c o p y c h a n g e fo r c o n s e c u tiv e iss u e r a l e s .) ........................................................ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D A D S C A L L G R 1-5244 Furnished A p a r tm e n ts Furnished A p a r tm e n t s Furnished A p a r tm e n t s C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G D E A D L IN E S T u e s d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y T e x a n F r i d a y T e x a n ,'y T e x a n ................................. M ....................... Jay. 2 :» T u esd ay . .> 30 p .m . ...................... V> e d n e s d a v , 3 3J p m . ............................... T h u r sd a y , 3 30 p.m. ................................... F rid a y , 3 30 p rn. in a n a d v e r tis e m e n t. • p u n i s h e r * t ‘in t h o e v e n ' o f e r r o r s r o le i ^ m e d ia te re t i r e m u st b* g iv en as a r e r e s p o n s ib le to r o n ly o n e in c o r r e c t I n s e r tio n . Q U IE T L U X U R Y L IV IN G Briarcliff M a n o r R D . B IG W K ! 1107 S h o a lc r e e k (O ff W e s t 12th S t 1 8 R lk s C a p ito l & C T I & 2 BR* — $115 to SI 45 G la ss — P r i v a te P a t i o — C a b le TV L a u n d r y — B u s - S h o p p in g C e n te rs Q U IE T S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E G R 8-8935 M g r. A pt. 105 G L 3-0440 “ LE FONT" SUMMER O p en f o r m e n a n d w o m e n R a te s $43 35 p e r p e rso n L u x u ry A p a r tm e n ts A ir c o n d itio n e d 2 bed ro o m s-2 b a t h s : liv in g ro o m k itc h ­ en a r e a , u tilitie s p a id , m a id s e rv ic e : P o o l, L O N G S E S S IO N S u p e rv ise d f o r C O L D S o n ly N o w le a s in g I 803 VV. 28th Quiet Luxury Living E D E N R O C C o r n e r W e s t 1 2 th A E lm ( E n f ie ld ) I & 2 B R A p ts. $125 to $149.50 A L L B IL L S TA ID b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t T H IS u ltr a - m o d e r n v e r y p r iv a te , L a u n d r y — B u s - S h o p p in g C e n te r Q U IL T S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E tw o th in g fo r th e y o u S la n te d b e a m e d c e llin g h a n g in g f ire p la c e , T e r r a z o flo o rs , p a n e le d w alls, b u ilt-in k itc h e n , la r g e d o u b le c lo s e ts a n d o f f- s tr e e t p a r k in g R o o m fo r 3 o r \ a r i I o r m o rt A ir c o n d itio n e d w ith M k k T 204-H " E lm . * G R W 15 4 .“ dlZ 34>440 are;;. Sum nr r r a t e vf 0fHP,e r a ^ on1.tJ r l ° J s p n m . $130 o n 9 m o n th le a s e 3408 A&B VV est te n a n t s w ill show C all o r Ave O p en . w r ite G A. O lso n 1009 F r o s t N a il. B a n k B ld g . S a n ^ A n to n io , T e x a s CA Darling Apts tor Tiny Budgets $59.50 TO $69.50 ------- 8 m o n th ____________ lease. N ex t C A B L E TV ta ll a n n P O O L — -- is Cool - C lea n — Q u ie t M o d e m C o m p le te ly F u r n is h e d — O o d les C lo se ts G ood A p p lia n c e s M o st A-C W a lk t o C lass M gr. 2015-A Rod R u e r G R 6-0422 VV A 6-2564 A T C A M P U S e ffic ie n c y . M a n y F o u r- r o o m c lo s e ts : I n c in e r a to r , c a r p e te d , a i r c o n d itio n e d : fo r c o u p le . C a ll 1920 S p e e d w a y . G R 7- 6818. 1 7-2231 A re a C o d e 512. Til r a r npt i ne r la r g e n o s e i s , • P L A Y M A T E S '* N ew . o n e b e d ro o m , v e ry p r iv a te , m o d ­ e r n a p a r tm e n t. E ff ic ie n c y k itc h e n a i r c o n d itio n e d , p a n e le d w a lls , w a ll-to - w a ll c a r p e tin g , I a r g o t c lo s e ts^ off-*trj s t . O p en , l o len se c a ll o r w r i t e G. A. O lso n . 1009 F r o s t N a tio n a l B a n k B ld g . S an A n to n - t e n a n t s w ill sh o w . : lo. T e x a s . CA 7-2231. A ren C o d e 512. SU M M E R RATES Oldham House Apartments • 2 b e d ro o m s • All b ills p a id • P o o l • O f f - s tr e e t p a r k in g • L a u n d r y fa c ilitie s S tu d y r o o m G R 8-8911 LA FIESTA 400 L a s t 3 0 th J u s t O ff C a m p u s j S p e c ia l r a te s L u x u ry a p a r t m e n t s . 40’ p o o l. 2 b e d ro o m , 4 b a th , c a b le T V . d a ily m a id se rv ic e . s u m m e r . f o r 1914 O ld h a m E F F IC IE N C Y a p a r t m e n t . A ir c o n d l- A T T R A C T IV E b ric k spat 2 bed- S E W IN G , a • c r n : io n s, m a n y y e a r s ex- p e rle n c e . G L 3-4110. ro o m -d e n , C e n tra l a ir-) ■ ut b u ilt- s to r a g e . w a s h e r fu rn is h e d CP. 7-8-414 Duplex — Furnished Alterations tin n e d $55 m o n th ly , bill* p a id . C ou 1907 W . 3 9 th e m p lo y e d la d y . p ie, G L 3-3825. M O B IL E H O M E . 1960 V ic to r IO' x 45 . n :r an d c e n tr a l h e a t 2 b ed ro o m * C a n re n am in A u s tin * N ic e s t p a rk . EV 5-3309 a f t e r 6 a n d on w e e k e n d s. Room and Board TUT* IR IN G m a th . C al G L 3-561S _• C h e m is tr y a n d A /C ROCM n o s e to can pu* no w a v a il­ a b le fo r su m m e r. R o o m /b o a r d $75 J s e m e s te r $145 b o th Few v lc a n e ie s fa T u to rin g T y p in g Houses for Sale ?!>n. *.V.n -R‘-"■ N E W H O M E lo c a te d a t J o n e s to w n G R 2-6480 T ra v is an d s w im m in g p ool. P ric e d L a r g e 2 -b ed ro o m w ith acce ss to L a k e to soil $500 d o w n . m o d e r a te p a M n e n ts. G L 2-6503 Houses— Unfurnished 804 W E S T LY N N (15 b lo ck * o u t VV I b e d ro o m . C loset*. W a s h e r c o n n ectio n * G L 3-4426. I 2 th i $50 R e d e c o ra te d V ir g in ia C a lh o u n T y p in g S e rv ic e P ro f e s s io n a l w o r k In a ll fie ld s . In c lu d ­ in g m u ltiU th in g a n d b in d in g o n th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s . 1301 E d g e w o o d GR 8-2636 Printing Rooms for Rent S y m b o ls X ero x N o ta r y Af S -T K X D U P L IC A T O R S W e ’ve M oved T o 311 L u st A cro ss l i t h D ia g o n a lly th e S tre e t F ro m O u r O ld L ie u t ion M U L T IL IT H IN G M IM E O G R A P H IN G X e ro x in g T h e s e s P a p e r s P r i n t i n g G R 6-6593 BOY S— r e s e r v e t o u r ro o m n o w fo r th e b ills p aid s e s s io n , A /C , lo n g a il I 2620 W ic h ita . R E N T A T .V . $10-815 p- r m o n th G L 2-4057. If n o a n s w e r G R 2-2692. For Rent For Sale tile b a th . N e a r R O C K ' m — ------ r p te s $70 p e r m o n th o n 3 N ew M exico, lease. S p r i n g / f a l l r a t e s $90 p e r C a ll G R 8-2534. Help W anted 1930 N A S H G ood d e p e n d a b le t r a n s p o r ­ ta tio n . O ne o w n e r. C lea n a n d n e a t. • • •. v- ■ • * 'N R O L L d r u m m e r w a n te d f o r 5130, C a ll G L 2-9985. h ig h p a y in g s u m m e r Jo b a t R u id o s o , •»««**»• s u m m e r i« h ar Ruidomn n e c e s s a r y ______________ E x p e rie n c e e x c e lle n t — - '62 V O L K S W A G E N — R e b u ilt e n g in e , h e a te r , c o n d itio n , b e s t o f fe r . G it 2-4208 a f t e r 6 p .m . r a d ," , -------- T Y P INI w rite: L o w r a t e s . E le c tr ic M rs T u llo s . C L .3-5124. ty p e - T Y P IN G IB M E x e c u tiv e Ic p e r L e g a l b r ie fs G R <3-5532 o r lin e . lf n o a n s w e r c a ll G R 7-4933. P R O F I C I E N T a n d v e r y E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E F O R A L L F IE L D S IBM E le c tr o m a tic — d istin c tiv e a ccu r­ a te u p i n g a n d p e rs o n a liz e d se r v ic e b y c o n s c ie n tio u s s e c r e ta r y L E G A L B R IE F S S e m in a r p a p e rs a s p e c ia lty R e p o rts p e rs. X e ro x co p ies. th e s e s , d s s e r ta lio n s . te r m p a ­ G R 8-5894 T H E S E S , d m a n u s c ri] G L 4-3079. s s e r ta tlo n s ts, IB M . b rief* , r e p o rt* . A n th o n y . M rs B O Y S fo r s u m m e r Job* on r a n c h re- * o rt. N e a r A u s tin . L ife g u a r d s , b ell b o y s d esk c le rk . R o o m , b o a rd , s a l a r y a n d fa c ilitie s C a ll T o m J o h n s o n AM 7-1121. 1965 M GB R e d w ith b la c k W ire w h e e ls E x c e lle n t I n te rio r . c o n d itio n . $2295 firm . C a ll G R 6 -3 4 3 8 .________ I960 S U N B E A M A lp in e 4 000 m ile s on e n g in e o v e rh a u l tir e s 901 VV. 2 4 th N o . B G R 6-0795 in te r io r . R e d u c e d to p c o n v e r tib le new to $6"" 1963’ 2 F O R D f a s t b ack , V-8 s t a n d a r d r a d io , h e a te r E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ s h ir t tio n . C a ll H I 4-2735. o r H I 2-8280 M A T U R E s tu d e n ts w h o p la n to r e t u r n to h o m e to w n fo r s u m m e r a r e b e in g c o n s id e re d f o r p o s itio n s In t h e i r h o m e ­ r a n c o n ­ to w n a re a s . 3 m o n th s w o rk tin u e a f t e r y o u In I S e p te m b e r. to c la s s e s r e t u r n S T R O N G N A T IO N A L C O R P O R A T IO N F o r A p p o in tm e n t C a ll G L 3-8433 LONG PLA Y reco rd s $1. O p eras not p o p u - t y p i n g sere- th e n e e d s a t U n iv e r- l » r Sr i £ w 6 8 ' a f t S S n * ev eM n g s PU' sity V tudVms . " SpV-dai” k e y b o a r d e q u lp - la n g u a g e , sc ie n c e , a n d e n g l- A c o m p le te p r o fe s s io n a l ice a ite rn o o n * . e v e n i n g .. m e n t o f ta ilo r e d to 'or.s r n R V A IR Cor sa in perfect condi- n e erin g th eses a d d isse rtat.o n * Cion. L ess th a n 8.000 m iles 4 speed s u p e rc h a rg e r, p o sitrac tio n $2.250. GR 6-9093. u r n Y riR U M S T I C K S ' L u d w ig D ru m * E X C E L L E N T t y p i n g ( f o u r b lo ck * w e s t P h o n e GR 2-3210 & GR 2-7677 ^ 3 G u ad alu p e M B A . T y p in g , M u lU lith in g , B in d in g S A N T A R IT A D o r m ito r y . New', m o d ­ e r n . k itc h e n e tte s S p e c ia l r a t e s a v a il­ a b le . 2819 R io G ra n d e . G R 2-7239. (O ff I n te r r e g io n a l n e a r L a w S c h o o l) SUM M L R R A T E S B e a u tif u lly f u rn is h e d I b e d ro o m a p is A /C , I v , la u n d r y . A v a ila b le J u n e 40’ p o o l, c a b le c a r p e tin g I. H A W T H O R N E A P A R T M E N T S 2413 L e o n G R 7-9324 M a n a g e r G R 2-1774 2 -b e d ro o m l u x u r y a p a r tm e n ts . T o w n ­ h o u s e d e s ig n A /C . C a rp e te d . B u ilt-in k itc h e n , p r iv a te p a tio , m a id C a b !* /" T $ r ' Vap o o lPala v a i l a b l , m o n th ly . S u m m e r r a te s a v a ila b le J u n e g k th r o u g h A u g u s t se rv ic e r u i v : C O U P L E S , b r ic k sp a c io u s o n e b ed - ro o m VVall-waH c a r p e tin g elo * T u A ttr a c tiv e ly d ra p e d a n d _ f u r - A L L B IL L S P A ID J U S T O N E A V A IL A B L E S T U D E N T S . S T U D E N T C O U P L E S B u ild a b u s in e s s th i s R um m er w ith e x ­ c e p tio n a lly h ig h e a r n in g s C o n tin u in g w h e n to sc h o o l r e t u r n tills i o u ic L ot* o f O r g a n iz a tio n a l o r m a n a g e r ia l e n c e h e lp fu l. P le a s e in q u ir e e a r ly . fall. e x p e ri- » ' 50 D r a w e r D-2 U n iv e r s ity S ta tio n ^ T » Y ' J " ' ' , , ! - ' " . ! . . . r T NN Mi nt T H E M E S. R E P O R T S . L aw Note*. 25c SA ILB O A T S O lym pic clM* page. E nvelope* a d d ressed $9-1,000. price f o r q u I ck sa I e. 1®95 A K H T A R - N o ta rv P ub lic. M rs F r a s er. G R 6-1317. F IS H — e;xcl| inK a fi0^ _ hbtoalr . r f ‘b orn' E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IN G SE R V IC E . g la ss, a im p le to s a il. L -g n e a r A lla n - , c a r to p . C.R 8-26313. R e a s o n a b le , t, .......... ^ c, u r a te d a le H O n al > 1965 YAMAHA 80 cycle In je c te d , spe- ' G R A D E-P O IN T C O N S C IO U S ? EL S A B IN O A P A R T M E N T S 2400 S a b in e S u m m e r R a te s A il BUI* P a id F u r n is h e d o n e o r twm b e d ro o m , AZC. la u n d ry ’, s tu d y ro o m . pixil, c a b le T V , O ne b lo c k f ro m la w sc h o o l. A v a ila b le J u n e I . p o 7.71 "q a n d G R 7-71 ,9 M a y I — f o r s tu d io u s g irls. R o o m v q u ie t, I n iv e r s ity . b u ic k s 9 b e d ro o m w ith w a lk -in clo set^ a n d b a th . $75 k itc h e n ro o m , ; liv in g 3 l,a p e r m o n th , w a t e r p a id . F O R S E P T E M B E R C le a n F u r n is h e d 2 b e d ro o m h o u s e o r d u p le x f o r c o u ­ p le. S te v e S h a w l. G R 1-3247; 5-7 p rn G R 7-0025. 708 W est 22V4 ________ ______ ______ _____ _______ —— . 6-8595. L N F L O W E R G A R D E N S E T T IN G IN E L I T E E N F I E L D w h e r e A z a le a s GR7-9333 I A C C O R D IO N IS T to p la y 5-8 p m S u n - G ale G R day," A p r il 24th C a ll R. “ - I IM M ACULATE 31* slo o p s a ils , a u x i l i a r y p o w e r. Ca D a c ro n , _____ J a i l G R 7-9176 b e tw e e n 6 a n d 7 p m J . C. Irw irv __ "250 Y A M A H A . 1964 m o d el. $250. C all G R 6-2711. N e e d s so m e r e p a ir . __ 1962 F O R D G a la x y c o n v e r tib le . A u to ­ tr a n s m is s io n , p o w e r s t e e r i n g m a tic ra d io . G ood c o n d itio n . G R 6-5817. S o a r e w e S H E R R Y S Typing Servia 1904 O ld h a m P a p e r s * T h e s e s • D is s e r ta tio n * B rie f* W a n t e d 4-2047. U P S T A IR S 2 ro o m s s o u th e x p o s u re , s h o w e r, g a r a g e , h id e - a w a y b ed $40. A lso 3 r o o m s n o r t h e a s t , s o u th e x p o s ­ u r e s . s h o w e r, g a r a g e , p o rc h . $45. O n ly co u p le s , n o p e ts. n o c h ild r e n . 1900 S a ­ b in e. G R 2-8572. C A V A L IE R APTS. 307 E a s t 3 1 st G R 2-7611 STUDY IN C O M F O R T COO L-Q U I E T - VV A L K T O C L A S S 2 b r.-A /C -C a b le T V - M a id L a u n d r y . S tu d y R o o m . S w im m in g P o o l S u m m e r R a te s $37.50-$6o p e r p e rs o n b ills p a id R e se rv e N o w F o r S u m m e r & F a ll R O O M M A T E L O C A T O R S M u ltip le lis t- II s h a r e I a p a r t m e n t e x p e n s e s a v a ila b le . M o v in g in g s o f n e e d in g p e o p le to u n n e c e s s a ry . H I 4-3920. B A R G A IN . 2 b e d ro o m s . 2 b a th s . A / C Q u ie t, s p a c io u s N e a r c a m p u s — 405 ,| E 32nd. $100. H I 2-2153 G R 6-3729. i s to IT in s id e a s I t h a s p an el l » « n a t t r a c t i v e f iir m a h in e s a s f u r n is h in g s a s im h e C a S f f A v a ila b le in i r e n i c a r e a o n lv 29 m o o n s i r o m \ A t - n a n T ri m s * th e S L L r K N O W N T O M E . th e ; S E L * K N O W N T O M E - uj*m I N T O T O O R H E R o n e -b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t t h a t Is a s b e a u - LY)ST ‘ F O U N D M A K E H IM O R H E R - o n e -ben ro o m a p a r t m e n t »«<, tlfu i r * v h e a t I s u r r o u n d in g s a n d T W O C a r r i e r c o o lin g | lio n u n its , n e w F r i g d a i ^ w ith f r e e z e r j c o m p a r tm e n t, oov ] e re d T U D E n o t f o u n d sc o re s o f t e n a n t s A d u lts o n ly . D O G S. O n ly $79.50 p lu s 1ut lit ie!s, f o r 12 m o n th s lo r (m a n o r w o m a n ) o r q u ie t Id eal f o r g r a d u a t e s tu d e n ts R e n t f re e t o M a y F i r s t . D ia l G R 2-86.j3. ____ j --------------------------------------------------------------- --- A /C . in p a r ty -h o u s e s w itn , W A N T E D — f u r n is h e d - J j P n v a t4 , b a th g a r a g e , n e a r c a m p u s . e n c lo s e d c a r p o r t, p lu s OU IE l l Miscellaneous L e ss { Q R 2 ^ ]2 a f t p r g p le a s e to r e fin e d oat ne- v w v y w w v v w v v w v > 2902 W e s t Ave. A u s tin . T e x a s G R 2-2237 e n tr a n c e p r iv a te R q v A ro o m .1 a u to m a tic , R O L E T I m p a la 2 -d o o r h a r d - G R 8-0573 S. j t e c r i n g $3,295 A lso d ia m o n d |2 2 5 S c h a tz m a n G — -------------- --------- 1961 F O R D F a ir la n d 500. F o rd -o -m a? IR 8-1362, G R 8-9661 p o w e r ’ ■ k a r a t r in g A p p ra ise d $360. U H - R E A S O N A B L E . la d ie s en ee. a ir . r a d i o / h e a t 'T ; n e w seat, c o v e rs, h e a d - _______ B obby e D e la f ie ld . H I 2-7184. f if te e n y e a r * e x p e rt* C A M P U S P R I N T I N G 2015V* G u a d a lu p e . G R 8-1768. M u l t i l l t h l n g , s e rv ic e . G R 2-3569 g o o d m e c h a n ic a l c o n d itio n , lin e r r e - B e st o f fe r o v e r $350. G R 8-1583 a f t e r p o r ts , r e s u m e R e p r o d u c tio n s o f c h a r t s 6 p m a n d p h o to g r a p h s . B o o k b in d in g . th e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n * , la w b r ie fs . ’56 P O N T IA C c o n v e r tib le $225. G ood T Y P IN G o n e x e c u tiv e e l e c t r i c b y f o r - s e c r e ta r y . B B A. S e c r e - t a r i a i S tu d ie s . M rs. F o w le r . C L 3-8650. c o n d ltio n . C a ll M ik e C ox G R 8-8215 s f t e r 7 p m le g a l m e r lu s t o ff W in d s o r, 2406 W I N S T E D L A N K — T a rr y to w n — r e d e c o r a te d A /L , n ic e ly f u r n is h e d , o n e b e d ro o m , d u p le x a p t L R c a r p e te d , g a r a g e y a r d k e p t. VV a t e r p a id . N o p e ts A b o u t 5 m in u te s U T . C o u p le — $65. G R 9*5502. O N E B LO C K F R O M L A W ______________________ G U IT A R i n s t r u c t i o n s — f o r p ro fe s s io n - j n e e d s tu n in g . $30: 9 x12’ g r e e n c o tto n P a th . ir o n cot w ith m a ttress. $10: piano. G R 2-1715. a1, c la s s ic a l. F la m e n c o in s tr u c tio n s . ! r u g . SIO. G L 2-ob57. I ---------------------- H ID E -A -B E D n e e d s r e u p h o ls te r y . $40: R E P O R T S . T H E S E S . D i s s e r t a t i o n * . M rs. B r a d y . 2507 B r l d l * c a ll R o n H u d s o n , a n u n d e r s tu d y o f j J u a n S e r r a n o . G R 2-6407 1957 N EW ’ M o o rn H o u s e tr a lle r 45'xS A L D R ID G E T Y P I N G S E R V IC E STUDENT STARTER PLAN j i j s a s r s s ’a g g e s t S f - p " r Ka s t 3 0 th s t r e « R ^ r e c o r d , ’ /o s* STS,, T w h n l c a l p a p e r s a s p e c ia lty . O v e r 200 la s t J u l y . T a k e $275. H I 4-1345. H I e x t r a s y m b o ls o n o u r IB M E x e c u tiv e * f o r sc ie n c e , e n g i n e e r i n g , m a t h e m a t i c * 2-7415. la n g u a g e D r a f t i n g , m u l t i l l t t h l n g , a n d i b in d in g , a n d z e r o x ln g . S C H O O L I n t r o d u c t l n g t h e a1! n e w S tu d e n t S t a r t ­ in c lu s iv e — e r P la n — a g e s 16 to 24 L a r g e c le a n , q u ie t. P e r f e c t fo r so m e - Y ou m a y b e e lig ib le fo r a $10,000 poi- le v fo r o n ly $30 A n n u a lly . S e m ia n n u a l o n e d e s ir in g q u ie t Pja^P $15.65. P r e m iu m In creases a t a ge* 25 27 & 29. F o r fu r th e r In fo rm a tio n c o n ­ ta c t o r c a ll I n q u i r e 240i S a b in e D a \ s — G R 6-0655 N ig h t* — C L 2-4888 M ATURE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS An o p p o r tu n ity to work a fte r n o o n s, and w eek en d * w h ile In sch o o l. P o si­ tion* as co u n selo r w ith e m o tio n a lly d istu rb ed ch ild ren . Involve* p la n n in g an d ca rry in g ou t a c tiv ity program* w ith sm all group*. R eq u ires r e sp o n ­ s ib ilit y and r e lia b ility . B e g in n in g sa la r y $1.00 p er hour. C on tin u e* th r o u g h th e su m m er if d esired . THE B R O W N S C H O O L Mr. S!aqe! G R 8-6662 '59 PO RSHE C o n v ertib le D F a ir co n d itio n 1212 W . 6th GR 7-2308 W O O D S T Y P IN G E x p e r ie n c e d . a n d D u p lica tin g R e a s o n a b le . S erv ice. ; HO 5-1078. R eserv e L ife In*urane* Co. 4928 B u rn et R oad A u stin . T e x a s P h o n e GL 2-6474 '65 H O N DA-50 C-100. Low’ m ile a g e . E x- j j c e lle n t c o n d itio n $175. HO 5-7744. ..N E W .. J u st P u b lish e d " H o w to C o m p lete Your C o lleg e E d u ca tio n W h ile M ak in g H igh S co res on O b je ctiv e T est*. S en d $ i to T est* R esea rch C om p any. 1710 D e e r fie ld . A ustin. T exas G ET B E T T E R grade* w ith e ffic ie n t stu d y m ethod*. S en d $3 fo r S tr a te g y o f S tu d y . H u m a n S y stem * Analyst*, p O. B o x 2330, Stanford. California, 94305 ’63 H A R L E Y 175cc f u ll siz e s c r a m b le : ty p e m a ch in e. P riced to se ll. G R 7- 7960. ___ j GOOD C L E A N c a r. c h e a p . '54 P o n tia c j w ith e v e r y th in g $325. C a ll GR 7-7960. T y p in g , M u ltillth ln g , B in d in g ta ilo r ed t y p in g sen*. A com plete p rofessio n al to th e need* o f U n iv er* ice s it y stu d e n t* . S p ecial keyboard eq u ip * m en t fo r la n g u a g e , scien ce, and a n n * n e e r in g t h e s e s and d isser ta tio n s. ’55 O L D S . brake*, P o w er p ow er ra d io , h ea ter. R un* w e ll. ste e r in g , C heap. G R 7-7964. 14’ 2 PLACE K a y a k . $80 o r m a k e o f­ fer. S e e a t 1605 N e w fie ld L a n e. J o h n T r a v is. GR 6-9852. GR 7-5251. P h on e GR 2-3210 it G R 9*7C7| 2013 G u a d a lu p e T Y p i N G ~ e n k in d * - c a r b o n r i b . b o n e le c tr ic . L e g a l e x p e r ie n c e , n e a t , S S ^ » e n a ire .C* ^ S M IT H CORONA sta n d a rd ty p e w r ite r . Ih-ice — good co n d itio n . $65 o r m ake offer. John Travis. GR 6-9652. GR l- 7251. M A R J O R IE D E L A F I E L D T y p ln g ~ g Z Z v ice. 25c a p a g e . F if t e e n y e a r * e £ p a tie n c e ; ports. N otary. H I 8-7006. th e se * . d l * a « r t n t l W i i Friday, A p r’d 22. 1966 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P / - W e d ., S a t. A n d M a tin e e* — S u n d a y O n ly Evening* M o n . T hru. S at. 2 :0 0 P.M . 8:15 P.M . S u n d a y E vening 7 :30 P M Evening* R e se rv e d — M a t. U nre se rv e d . ROBERT \' ISE prom c n o * 2 a fi It*'’!* RODGERS H AM WERSTEIN^ ) PICTURE! DIRECTOR! MUSICAL SCORING! FILM EDITING! SOUND RECORDING! I )) t o d d - a o * C O L 0 R RY DE Ll XI 0*tCi*Ai. HfCC*0tN6 (W SCA v irron r>pcoRr» A N D R EW S • CHR1PT0PHF.R P L U M M E R JI’LIE R IC H A R D H A YD N! — •.rrciawk, ROBERT WISE I RICHARD RODGERS I O m a k n' r r lj U A V I J'*',"/-*,’, p . o n n r F R S OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN II I ERNEST LEHMAN " ^ ' " ‘7 ^ j t L L A i N U i v t a i v i y hBm sunri I r.ik rrrxY Anon OAIMUnus***. I m U A A J A R P A R K E K “Tfc* 4 iie-i*N liriMu* VALL CHAPLIN Additional W orth and Muhc fey Rte N O W SH O W IN G SHOWTIME 8:15 P.M. B alcon y L ow er F lo o r TOO 1.7$ VARSITY C o m m itte e Seeks R e -C re a tio n C lh if ^ e t iv is m O f D e fu n c t U T F a c u lty C lu b r _ | | r '«-Tn n jr ? I I I By CAROLYN NICHOLS Texan Staff Writer T ~ Visiting Fellow Nathaniel Branden will be at the University Monday through Wednesday to speak on objectivism, which he calls "a philosophy of reason, self-interest, Individualism, and capitalism .'’ During his visit, Branden will speak on psychology, psycothe- rapv, the psychology of sex, ethics, and romantic art. His main lecture will he held at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Union Main Ballroom. introduced the philosophy of objectivism AYN R \N D , co-owner with Branden of "The Objectivist News- letter," in two of her earliest novels, "The Fountainhead ' and "Atlas Shrugged." Her most recent book is “ The Virtue of Selfishness," a collection of essays, some of which Branden wrote. In 1962, Branden wrote "Who Is Avn R and,?” an analysis of Miss Rand s works from the standpoint of ethics, psychology, and aesthetics. A philosophy not easily defined, objectivism is being scrutinized for what it means to American youth. Branden agreed with one political antagonist who wrote that "objectivism, unlike most other past and present right-wing movements in this country, has more of an inellectual than an emotional appeal and is consequent!; at­ tracting educated young people to its ranks. In 1 9 5 8 , Branden created the Nathaniel Branden Institute Inc. to spread the teachings of objectivism, Last year he persons in 80 cities in the United States and Canada had heard the Institute’s taped and live lectures. In the December. 1956, issue of The Objectivist Newsletter, Branden wrote of the increase in interest in objectivism. “ON CAMPUSES throughout the country, cofiege students-— acting on their own initiative . . . continue to organize Ayu Rand Studv groups. Steadily increasing numbers of term papers or theses on objectivism are being written for university courses rn philosophy, psychology, literature, and political science. The first formal college course on objectivism was offered at the University of Denver in the fall of 1956. It wan a course dealing with the fundamentals of objectivist epistemology, the theory of knowledge in the light of objectivism. Approximately 25 students take part in the Organization for Students of Objectivism, the University group following the philosophy. Reggie Smith, chairman. junior majoring in philosophy, is the Five University professors, ap- Five University professors, ap­ pointed by Vice-Chancellor Nor- pointed by Vice-Chancellor Nor­ man Hackerm an, are seeking to re-establish a Faculty Club for the University. The special five-man commit­ tee, headed by Dr. Samuel P. Ellison, professor of geology, has m ailed a questionnaire to faculty m em bers to see if there is “ ea r­ nest desire to have such a cen­ te r.” The new center, if established, will have a dining area, read­ ing area, cocktail service, over­ night rooms for visitors, meeting rooms for faculty groups, and gam e rooms for cards and bil­ liards. THE LAST Faculty Club ceased the Faculty Club. the Faculty Club. In May. 1962, the Forty Acres In May, 1962, U te F o rty Acre* Club opened. Less than a month the later, a Negro officer of Peace Corps was refused adm it­ tance to the club. Students for Direct Action pick­ eted the club during the sum m er of 1962. They protested affiliation of University faculty with the thon _ segregated club. Several m em bers of the Faculty Club re­ signed after the segregationist ac­ tion, a “ breach of faith.” terming incident the ” ^ ^ P l ^ to 1 “ In order In order to prevent further em barrassm ent to the University * and to tile Forty Acres Club, and in an effort to show once and that the University has for all no official connection with this club,” the Faculty Club with­ drew’, and soon disbanded alto­ gether. Whether a new Faculty Club will be established depends on the response the questionnaire about the project which faculty m em bers should return to Geo­ logy Building 215 before May IO. to 'V Plans Program to exist in 1961. When the 138-member club was established in 1904. m em bers m et in a large gray house with wide verandas at 2304 San Antonio also professors Street. Many rented rooms In the house. The club had been formed “ for the purpose of bringing the m em ­ bers of the University interested in arts and science into closer touch with one another by . . . establishing a social center for all interested in scholarship and educational problem s.” For 53 years, m em bers enjoyed leisurely hours of pool, billiards, chess, bridge, and a monthly bot­ tle pool tournam ent. There was also a reading room with leading periodicals and newspapers and rooms for bachelor m em bers of the club. AN ANNUAL EVENT of the club was the auctioning of the y ear's supply of magazines, the proceeds being used for the next y ear's subscriptions to the sam e magazines. The club was informed in 1961 that the old house on San An­ tonio Street was to be taken over by It was as­ sumed that the Forty Acres Club, which was being planned at that time, would eventually replace the University. State College, a Arlington branch of tho University, was founded in 1859 and w’as a pri­ vate school until 1917. On Warfare State “ Is America Becoming a War­ fare State?” will be the topic of a program Saturday at the University “Y ” The program will include several speakers, a panel discussion, and a presen­ tation by foreign students of their views on America. Dr. M. Hall, associate profess­ or of history, will speak on the “ History of the ‘W arrior’ in Amer­ ican Culture” at 9:30 a.m. At l l a.m ., P eter Soderbergh, teaching associate in the Curriculum and Instruction Department, w i l l speak on “ The Contemporary Hero and the M ilitary.” After a lunch at the “Y ,” Clive Jones, economics graduate stu­ dent, will talk on the “ Economic Aspects of the M ilitary: Does America Need the Military Eco­ nomically?” at 1:30 p.m. At 3:30 p.m., the “ Political Aspects of the M ilitary: What is the Role of the Pentagon in Decision M ark­ ing?” will be the topic of a speech by Richard Kraem er, assistant professor of government. At 7 p.m., foreign students and persons who have spent time in foreign countries will discuss “ The World’s View of America and Her Military Establishm ent.” A panel discussion on “ Alter­ natives of the F uture” will be presented by some of the speak­ ers at 8:30 p.m. They will a t­ tem pt to project the future im ­ pact of the m ilitary establish­ m ent on the United States. Anyone planning to be at the lunch at 12:30 or the dinner at 6 p.m. should call GR 2-9246 be­ fore 5 p.m. Friday. Reunion Planned By Architecture The School of Architecture in cooperation with the University Development Board and the Ex- Students’ Association will spon­ sor a combination Alumni Re­ union and student activity week­ end Friday and Saturday. The annual Beaux Arts Cos­ tume Ball will be held at 8 p.m. Friday at the J. T. Hayloft P arty Barn and the Sphinx Picnic and Bar-B-Que, at 2 p.m. Saturday will be at Pease Park. Registration a n d welcoming speeches for the reunion will be­ gin at 9 a.m. Friday in the Archi­ tecture Building foyer. A lunch­ eon will be held at 11:30 a.m . in the Texas Union Junior Ball­ room. From I p.m. to 3 p.m. a panel discussion will be held in Archi­ tecture Building 105, followed by a tour of school exhibits. is your Who computer for a live, flesh-and-blood answer to this Question. ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speed JOIN THE “GRETSCH SET'1 f For the Authentic Sound of the Times The Gretsch Folk Guitar is the hands-down favorite on campus and at folk festivals. For Gretsch gives you the rich, resonant bass and the clear singing highs that only come from the work of skilled guitar makers. At Gretsch we work with aged woods carefully chosen for mellow resonance. 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Central Control is nationwide, but its programs are completely localized. Hundreds of thousands of vigorous and alert subscribers, all sharing the desire to meet their ideal dates, have found computer dating to be exciting and r highly acceptable. So ideal dates w ill be delightful. five of your A ll hurry and send your $3.00 for your questionnaire. CENTRAL CONTROL, Inc 22 Park Avenue • Oklahoma C ity, Oklahoma Boorstin to Talk On US Culture Historian-Au th or At Batts Auditorium “ From Wealth *o Standard of Living: Is Am erica a M aterialist N ation?” will be the topic of a lecture F riday by Dr. Daniel J. Boorstin. Boorstin. professor of history and American studies at the Uni­ versity’ of Chicago, will speak at 4 p.m. in B atts Hall Auditorium under auspices of the University’* American Studies Program . As a Rhodes Scholar at Ox­ ford University’ and. more re­ cently, as visiting professor of American history at the Univer­ sity of Rome, at Kyoto Univer­ sity, at the University of Puerto Rico, a t the Sorbonne, and as P itt Professor of American His­ tory and Institutions at Cam­ bridge University. Dr. Boorstin has spent much of his life seeing how America looks from the out­ side. He is writing a four-volume in­ terpretation of American history entitled “ The Am ericans.” His first volume. “ The Americans: Tile Colonial Experience,” won the Bancroft Prize in 1959. His recently pub­ second volume, lished. Is “ The Am ericans: The National Experience.” Boorstin is editor of a 23-volume history’ series. “ Chicago History of the American Civilization.” His other books are “ The Im age: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in Amer­ ica,” “America and the Image “The Genius of of Europe.” American Politics.” “ Tile Lost World of Thomas Jefferson,” and “ The Mysterious Science of the Law .” Awards Day for Army R O I C . . . C ad et C o l. Franke receives saber from Lf. G e n . Cassidy. P h o to b y E d I.eh r Army R O I C Honors Outstanding Cadets Lf. Gen. William Cassidy from Fort Belvoir, Va., presented awards to members of tho Uni­ versity Army ROTC for achieve­ ments during the spring sem ester Thursday afternoon at Whitaker Field. A saber was presented to Cadet Col. Stephen H. Franke by the the P atrick Henry Chapter of Texas Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Franke is assistant to the professor of mili­ tary science and was Brigade Commander during the fall se­ m ester. RECIPIENTS of the Superior Cadet Award were Orville D. H arris. Robert A. Higley, Nor­ m an C. Mohn, and Richard S. Davenport. The award Ls presented to the cadet in each academ ic year who is outstanding the areas of in m ilitary and academ ic scholar­ ship and leadership. , Recipients of the Society of American M ilitary Engineers Aw’ard were Richard S. Daven­ port and William R. Loyendockor. John Davis, Corps of Engineers, received the Armed Forces Com­ munications Electronics and Aw’ard. William R. Jonson received the Sons of the American Revolution ROTC Award, which is presented for all to a sophomore cadet around excellence in ROTC pro­ grams. The Defense Supply Association Award was presented to Keith A. Maxie and Zechariah C. Dame- ron. MARK A. MUELLER received the Military Police Association Trophy distinguished his achievements during four years with the Military Police Corps. for The Association of the United States Army presented aw ards to the three cadets with highest grades in American M ilitary His­ tory during fall sem ester. the They are Jam es B. Micklethwaite, F rank P. McGovern, and Rich­ ard E. F lin t Ronald P. Freem an accepted the trophy for the Army ROTC rifle team that won the National Rifle Association Open Conven­ tional Sectional at Fort Bliss. The Meritorious Service Award was presented to Brenda Dean, Cordette Com mander; Robert A. Booker; David L Shull; Allan K. Dubois; Zechariah C. Dameron: and Stephen H. Franke. The Bost Company Award for drill competition went to the En­ gineer Company. v . / f o e t a l (L a f e n c la Friday — S ta g p a rty , P h i K ap p a T au c h a p te r house . 8-12—C asual P hi K ap p a P si c h a p te r „ , . , 8-12-—C a su a l, S igm a A lpha Mu c h a p ­ . , _ „ . house te r house g .]2—C asual, S igm a Nu c h a p te r house Saturday 2-5 — School of A rc h ite c tu re picnic P ease P a r k Two Professors Added To Law School Staff Two new full-time faculty mem­ bers and four visiting professors for the second sum m er term at the University Law School have been announced by Dean W. Page Keeton. The new faculty m em bers are David Wyatt Robertson from Leeds University’, England, and Warren F. Schwartz, an attorney law the New York City with firm , Weisman, Ceiler, Allan, Spett, and Sheinberg. Both will be associate professors. professors The visiting are Dickson Phillips, professor of law and dean of the University of North Carolina law’ school; E d­ ward H. Rabin, assistant profes­ sor of law at Rutgers University; Ralph S. Rice, Connell Professor of Law at the University of Cali­ fornia at Los Angeles; and B er­ nard Jam es Ward, professor of law at the University of Notre Dame. The Tops In Dry Cleaning! O p e n : Mon.-Thur. 7 a.m.-8 p.m. Fri. and Sat. 7 a.rn.-6 p.m. O n e Day Service on Laundry O n e H r. Service on Dry Cleaning (’til 4 p.m.) acm e c le a n e r s A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A * A A A A A A A A A A A A * M an or Road at Swisher m % V t m a i Can't Sleep Sunday Mornings ? ? Up at Six Pacing the Floor? — Looking for something to Fill Your Day? — No Hangover Problems? A ll Caught Up with Your Work? — W rong School. FIRST EN G LISH LUTHERAN C H U R C H . . . 30th & W HITIS W orship a t 8:00 & 10:30 . . . University Sunday Forum 9:15 ^ 11 t i I Mr- Long Distance and Transfer M O V IN G HUH ' Pioneers in N a t i o n - W i d e M oving S ervice C R A T IN G — P A C K IN G — S H IP P IN G — S T O R A G E Fireproof Bonded W a r e h o u s e — Household Goods and Merchandise Storage t r a n s f e r a n d S T O R A G E C O . Phone [ y 5_Q470 Arthur R. (Art) Tien.ann-Owner Night Phone. ®'3 Airport H O 5-6916 - WA 6-151 I