Weather: Humid, W arm Low 66, H igh 86 Vol. 65 T h e D a i l y ^ e x a n Editorial: To Know . . . Page Two Student N ew spaper at Th A U ST IN , T E X / ' v s J 1966 Eight Pages Today No. 163 Government To Discontinue Departmental P o l i c y C h a n g e D ue To Take Effect In Fall Sem ester G overnm ent 610a and 610b d e­ partmental tests a re being d is­ continued. testing The decision to change the poli­ cy for d ep artm en tal in the course, which is required for the T exas L e g i s ­ graduation by lature, cam e from the D ep art­ m ent of G overnm ent this week. The policy change, how ever, will not take effect until the fall sem ester because the s p r i n g final schedule a lread y has been se t up. The reason for the change can ­ not be narrow ed to any one point, Dr. Howard A. Calkins, associate professor of governm ent, said. He said th at the D ep artm en t ot G overnm ent felt the end result® and accom plishm ents of the de- th® p artm en tals did not equal am ount of work and tim® re ­ quired in prep arin g and adm inis­ tering the tests. larg e lectu re The system for next y e a r pro­ vides section®. These will be divided into sm all in which a discussion groups, teaching a ssistan t will be in ch arg e auld ad m in ister tests. This policy provides a mov® aw ay from the cut-and-dried m a­ te ria l of the texts upon w h Le h the d e p a rtm e n ta l w ere based. The professors will conduct th eir classes in a m ore flexible atm os­ phere. The change will enabl® them to em phasize a re a s of th® course in which they a re inter­ ested. One problem with the old sys­ tem h as been with the man-hour® req u ired to so rt out the b e s t questions m ade up by vanoil® m em bers of the departm en t. Also, It w as difficult to keep th® co n ­ tents of th® tests secret. Eco .omidy Elected Editor by 314 Votes students who voted, 560 m arked th eir ballots for Econom idy and 162 for M iss Brown. CBA tu rn ­ out was higher Wednesday than it was the general spring election, when 18.2 per cont voted. for The School of Com m unication had the highest p ercentage of voters. Of 463 students, 3< .2 poi cent voted. 56 for Econom idy and 116 for Miss Brown. Econom idy took 322 votes in E n ­ gineering, against Miss Brown s 91. They polled 19.5 p e r cent of the 2,120 E ngineering students. Turnout in Fine Arts was 11.6 cent of per Miss Brown pilled 71 votes Economidy*s 26. the 838 students. to In the G raduate School. 12 5 the 3,850 students for Econom idy and per rent of voted. 144 3.37 for Miss Brown. Economidy won 32.3 votes to tile Law Miss Brown’s 148 School, where 34.6 p e r cent of tho 1.395 students voted. in In Pharm acy, 14.5 per cent of 518 students cast ballots; Econo­ m idy won 46 to Miss Brown s 29. * Economidy said M onday, " I just want to thank all my su p porters and the sm all nucleus of cam paign w orkers who worked like dogs " He added, "I feel very' hon­ ored about the students’ choice today. I hope to be able to live up to this vote of confidence." Miss Brown to all “ thanks worked on the cam p aig n .’ also expressed the people who L arry M uenster, Election Com­ mission chairman, said he was su rprised at the high p ercentage the of voters. student body on in­ te re st in this election," he said. "I co ngratulate its revived U S Raid Climaxes Latest Air Attacks in his its in Gilm ore said. “ I observed my tail­ m issile go directly pipe and explode tail. T here w as so m uch debris th a t I had to m aneuver down to avoid It. The MIG pitched over and w ent into a dive." From the radio c h a tte r of other Am erican filers, Gilm ore p re­ sum ed the MIGs had taken off from H anoi’s Phuch Yen m ilitary airfield, w here such delta-wing­ ed, Soviet-designed fighters a re known to be based. An Air Force P re ss officer p re­ vented Gilm ore from answ ering when newsm en asked if the MIG s m ark in g s indicated w hether It was a North V ietnam ese or a Red Chinese plane. The officer said pilots could not discuss such things publicly until all informa­ tion has been evaluated. No A m ericans w ere hit, al­ though the blast tore through the first floor of a n earby house in which four US Air F o rc e men a re quartered . The first A m erican pilot to shoot down a MIG21 w as a n ­ nounced at a Saigon news con­ ference lo r c e Maj. P au l J . G ilm ore, 33, of Alamo­ gordo, N.M. to be Air He flew with L t. William T. Sm ith, 27, of W ayne, P a., as his ra d a r officer, and paired up with top cover another Phantom for a group of F-105 fighter- bom bers. in the G ilm ore said th at until he w as first heat- seeking Sidewinder m issile he fired scored a hit, and the MIG pilot bailed out, but he did not told realize la te r by his w ingm an In the ac­ com panying Phantom . He there­ fore m aneuvered for two more passes. The second shot m isse d . “ Then I got m y gunsights on tim e ," him and fired a third SAIGON—(ft—A new B 52 raid W ednesday chi the Mu Gia P a ss capped wide-ranging A m erican a ir a ttack s on North Viet Nam . Field action picked up slightly in the South. United States and V ietnam ese reportedly forces killed 167 Viet Cong. Briefing officers disclosed US Air F orce and N avy pilots flew 72 m issions north of the border Tuesday in ra id s th at stirred up Com m unist MIG fighters for the third tim e in four days. from Til ere w as no word of fu rth er the Soviet-des­ opposition igned w arplanes since the de­ struction Tuesday of one of two delta-winged MIG21’s encounter­ ed by two Air Force F4C P h a n ­ tom s 35 m iles from Red C hina’s frontier. While a su rg e of te rro rist ac­ tivity claim ed attention in Sai­ gon. officials seem ed m ore con­ cerned by Viet Cong efforts to decim ate local leadership and to p aralyze adm inistration the countryside. in “ special announced A uthorities t h a t Comm unist activities cells" have killed or kidnaped 4,- 338 governm ent officials, ra n g ­ ing from h am let headm en to dis­ the s ta rt of trict chiefs, since 1964. Police still w ere checking on casualties from a m ine th a t ex­ ploded in a group of w orkers on a Saigon stre e t as they w ailed for a truck to take them to th eir jobs with RMK. a big A m erican construction com bine handling m ost of the US Defense D ep art­ m ent's building projects in South Viet N am . Eleven persons w ere reported killed and m ore than 40 injured. Tlie com pany said a check show­ ed seven of its South K orean em ­ ployes w ere am ong the dead. By SI SAX POWELL Texan Staff Writer John Economydy won the editorship of The Daily Tex­ an W ednesday by defeating Gloria Brown 2,656 to 2,312. More than 20 per cent of the 24,778 students voted in the second runoff election for editor. The first runoff, in which 14.8 per cent of the stu ­ dents voted, w as ruled invalid by student and appellate courts for inadequate provisions against voter fraud. the The Election Commission p ro ­ vided polling lists and specific polling stations for each school and college W ednesday, as they in the general spring elec­ did tion. led in A rchitecture, In W ednesday’s runoff, Econo- m idy the College of Business A dm inistra­ tion, E ngineering, Law School, and P harm acy . Miss Brown won m ajorities kl A&S, Com m unication, Fine A rts, and G raduate School. In Education, w here 11.3 per cent of the 2,506 students voted, Econom idy and Miss Brown tied, 142 to 142. About 22.4 per cent of the 374 A rchitecture students voted, giv­ ing 45 votes to Economidy and 39 to M iss Brown. Econom idy polled 992 votes in A&S to Miss B row n’s 1.207. Vot­ ing in A&S w as 23.7 per cent of the 9,276 students. 400 had votes m ore th an Miss Brown in CB A. Of the 21 per cent of CBA Econom idy alm ost Assembly Sets 8 P.M. Meeting The new Student Assembly will m eet T hursday night at 8 p.m ., following a T exas Union recog­ nition dinner. The m eeting will be held in Union Building 321. approve T hursday’s agenda will include sw earing-in of new assem blym en not present at la st w eek’s inaug­ uration, election of two new TSP Board m em bers, two students as m em bers of the Co-op B oard of D irectors, and election of Assembly standing com m it­ tees. Tile com m ittees are Aca­ dem ic A ffairs; State, National, and International C om m ittee; and Rules and Appropriations Com m ittee. for passing out In addition, a bill resolving to designate a "fre e a re a " on c a m ­ pus literatu re without prior reading will be dis­ cussed. The a re a proposed is the Student Union side of the side­ walk from the circular flower bed to the D rag. $9 . . . voters ignored th . beet end turned out 4,998 strong for th . editor run-off W e d n e s d a y --------- Voters Crow d the Polls —Photo by Lehr Mexican Student Riot Surprises Professors By LYNNE LL JACKSON Texan Staff Writer Several U n iv ersity authorities on Latin A m e n t'a expressed su r­ prise a t the Rod -led student take­ over of the Na tional University of Mexico. “ I w as su rp i ised to h e a r of this m uch v io len ce." Dr. Carl Hereford, a sso c ia te professor of educational psychology w h o taught at the N ational Uni v er­ i t y in 1961 and 1962, said. issue, they dem onstrated When students) w ere upset over in an the cen tral p la its of the city in th e m orning rind cam e the U niversity th eir afternoon for classes, he saidL to IN THE TWO- y ears he taught. D r. Hereford sd id he never lost a class hour d u o to strikes. This w as in sh arp d o n tra st to m any Latin A m erican universities. ‘‘There is a hmrd core of politi­ re p re ­ cal-m inded stu* tents—not sentative of th e student body. They m ake up f o r w hat they lack in num ber with agitation,’ Dr. Clark Gill, associate professor of cirriculum and instruction who has studied the M exican educa­ tional system , said. It is a m istake to think It is a m ajority, he said. The m ajo r­ ity are as nonpolitical as Am eri­ can students are. “TROUBLE THERE usually does sta rt In the law school," Dr. Hereford said. When they struck law students during his stay, See Related Story, Page 8. the dean asked locked the doors to all buildings. There was a m ass m eeting at which if other students wanted classes. They did, the doors w ere unlocked, and classes resum ed. Econom ic and philosophy stu ­ dents often m atch the law stu ­ dents, Dr. Sergio Elizondo, assist­ ant professor of R om ance lang­ uages, said. M any of the stu ­ dents a re socialists or national- Daily Texan Praised By Harpers Article to torial stands. E ditor Kaye North- cott and h er staff held their own, and th eir antagonist’s em ­ b a rrassm en t the Texas new spa­ perm en m ade it abundantly clear they would have no sym pathy with any attem p t to censor one of A m erica’s cam pus dailies." b est ists as well as Communists. The nationalists m ay seem like Com­ m unists to A m ericans, but they a re n 't. However, they could be involved in the strike, he said. “THE SITUATION Is unfortun­ a te ," Dr. Elizondo said. “ Be­ cause it is the nation’s largest university, Mexico puts all its hopes in it, and a h ard core of agitato rs can paralyze it.” san ctu ary and The university has been con­ sidered a the sam e can be expected now, Dr. Elizondo said. This often causes trouble because m any hide un­ d er this protection — anarchists, for exam ple. R ectors are highly qualified people Elizondo said. They job as a patriotic gesture. T here's a lot to w orry about—m ore than we have here, he said. of universities tak e the Ignacio Chavez, who w as recto r when H ereford taught, was good, he said. He w as not universally popular, but he did much for the university. “THE BIG trouble w as about I was en tran ce exam s when th e re ," Hereford said. Chavez handled it in a way sym pathetic to students, although he did not give in. He has tried to put m ore cen­ tra l adm inistration in a univer­ sity where there is typically a lot of autonom y in the faculty, he said. “ I'm convinced they’ll get the university opened. I ’ve seen m any Latin Am erican universities clos­ ed because of strikes, and they’ve alw ays opened ag ain ," H ereford said. By DIAM NE DAVIS by ‘blasted Frequently the Board of R e g e n ts and m em bers of the Texas L e g isla tu re for its outspokenness, ’The Daily Texan can be c re d ite d with having ene­ m ies, if nothing else. Yet, in the May, 1966, is* ;ue of H arpers m agazine, the T e x a n receives its portion of p ra is e . G reenfield a ontrasted In his article, “ College News­ papers in Seam h of Their Own Voice," Jeff CGreenfield s a y s th at m ost of I he 2.000 student publications in A m e ric a a re “ tri­ tim id ." G reenfield, a vial and 23-year-old YaJ e student, law adds that th e re a re som e ‘nota­ to this situation ble exceptions" —the Texan M in g one of them . run-of- the passive the-mill sto ries of those u hieh keep “ the press, alum ni president calm , tranquil, and the s ta te le g isla to rs content" with "T he U n iv ersity in C risis" series which tha Texan ran last year. “ Such sto rie s a re rarely seen in the maj< >rity of mediocre student publican ons," Greenfield says. Charm ayii e M arsh, 1964-65 Texan editor, M as awarded $300 by the Hearst P oundation for the series. the h ap j >y, the a d v e rtise rs The Texan “ has preserved independence," a measure oil Greenfield points out, “despite the periodic efforts of the Uni­ versity of Tex! is Board of Re­ gents to clam ji down. Various clashes betwedn Texan editors and Regents h a v e been classic cases in the history of college journalism.” Greenfield sa j's “ the latest con­ troversy occurs ed this s c h o o l year, when a R egent becam e an­ gered over the paper's editorial policy and inviited a committee of Texas news papers to p a s s judgment on lib® Texan’s edi­ Twenty-Six C harged for 'Religious Persecutions " By LINDA WISNER With a victory over prayer and an uncertainly on church taxation, Mrs. Madalyn Murray O’Hair undertook a third contest Tuesday. The internationally famous atheist filed a $9-million damage suit with the United States Federal Court in Austin against 26 people involved in her Maryland religious pro­ testations which culminated in her fleeing the state for fear of her life.” She included all the members of a grand jury which indicted her on seven charges of assault on Baltimore policemen. THE SUIT named the Associated Press, United Press International, The Baltimore Sun, and The Baltimore News- Post as instruments by which the public received an infa­ mous impression of her. She is requesting $2 million each from the two news services and $1 million each from the newspapers. Mrs. O’Hair, now an Austin resident, charged that the various people conspired to deprive her of her civil rights, some using the opportunity to further their Poeti­ cal opportunities by catering to a biased community, others f S nalimmic n r a . ... to express personal animo judices. f S T 1 ____i . a . Mrs. O’Hair stated she has received severe emotional / - i i n I I A C O I I V * A T _________ f ^ and physical distress and great financial loss from hoi tieat- ment and virtual banishment from Maryland where she has business interests. She cannot return to Maryland be­ cause she is facing a one-year prison term there, she said. MRS. O’HAIR became internationally known several years ago when she filed suit against the State of Mary­ land to remove the practice of prayer in public schools. She filed on grounds that it violated the religious freedom of her son. The suit resulted in the removal of prayers from the nation’s public schools when she carried the case to the Supreme Court. Mrs. O’Hair is at present involved in a Maryland suit to force churches to pay taxes on their es­ tate holdings, as individuals and private businesses must. Mrs. O’Hair filed the Tuesday petition in her own be­ half, stating that she “has approached a number of at­ torneys in respect to the filing of this case and they have scoffed at any hope that justice can come to her in any court in America — so serious has been the presentation of this extradition and arrest account to the people of America through the defendant news services and news­ papers.” Mrs. O’Hair asked the court’s permission to amend or alter the ‘petition a , she was fen** to draw it up J t h counsel. She also requested the court's aid in .. the suit. Pope Paul Sees Soviet Leader At Vatican City VATICAN CITY — UPI — Pope Paul VI received Soviet Foreign Minister Andre! A. Gromyko on Wednesday In an historic m eet­ the dialogue ing between Roman Catholicism and the world of atheistic communism a major step forward. that carried Gromyko said afterward that he and the Pope agreed “on the need to work together for peace independently of ideologies.” VATICAN SOURCES said the pontiff undoubtedly had urged that the Soviet Union use its in­ fluence to ease tensions endan­ gering the world. It was the first time any head of the Church had received a Communist government minister. The meeting lasted 45 minutes — almost twice the length of an a v erag e private audience. Vati­ can sources said that even al­ lowing for the need for transla­ tion, the length of the audience indicated the two had much to say. Although the Vatican had de­ scribed the audience as "pri­ vate," the presence of the Vati­ can secretary of state, Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, and the So­ viet ambassador to Rome, Sem­ yon Kozyrez, demonstrated that it was a diplomatic meeting. For this reason Gromyko did not take his wife. LATER GROMYKO declined to say whether the Pope would be invited to visit the Soviet Union or whether they had discussed diplomatic ties between Moscow and the Vatican. At a news conference before he ended his week-long visit to Italy, Gromyko said that though the audience was “a private en­ counter,” both sides “had the chance to express their views on fundamental problems linked es­ pecially with for peace." th® struggle Driving While Drinking One lime when the ability lo drink and drfv® at th® sam® lime will pay off is at the first "Campus D a /' to start ®t 2 p.m. Saturday, May 7. Ron David, Lambda Chi Alpha en- try, practices tor th® root beer bicyclo rac®. Deadline for entries in "Campus Day" Is Tuesday at I pun. To Know or to Be - o r Both W ith hundirds of thousands of students pouring into graduate schools, we wonder about the products of such mass scholarizatiorL A great many students, cf course, a .e interested in graduate school for other than academic rea­ sons — men seeking escape from the draft, women seek­ ing men. Still, among the 800,OO'1 graduate students pre­ dicted for 1970 will be many students hoping to prepare for fulfilling careers as scholars and teachers. W hat kind of education will these students receive? W hat kind of research will they be expected to de fear it may be more "bibliolatry." more scholastic nitpick­ ing, more departmentalization and fractionalizatior. The quality of education in the graduate schools is dis­ tressing and so is the quality of scholars that they produce. In the April Harpers Magazine, William Arrowsmith, dean of the Department of Classics, discusses the inade­ quacies be sees in the graduate humanities. Few graduate students could be indifferent to his condemnation of the moribund existence of the modem scholar: "The most remarkable and agonizing feature of grad­ uate education is, I think, the gulf between one’s studies and one’s life, between what we read and how we ,.ve Our studies are alienated from our lives — such is our professionalism — we are usually required to side with our studies against ourselves, against our lives.*’ Arrowsmith laments that the graduate student must choose to know rather than to be. ”. . . I am convinced th at the decay of the humanist’s function, and the terrible overproduction of unhappy and incompetent scholars, is the fatal weakness of the modem university. His rather generalized attack on the academic system has produced response from many schools, some of which are printed in the May Harpers. One w r ite r concurs with Arrowsm ith^ thesis by quoting a disaffected student who said. "I thought literature was about life, but in gradu­ ate school I found it was about theme. plot, structure, and symbol.” The only disagreement voiced by W. Gordon Whaley, dean of the University’s graduate school, was that “he has both oversimplified and understated the situation . . . the increasingly fragmented structure of the graduate school encourages the desire of many scholars for security which, unfortunately, they consider more important than a full imaginative life. The question is how’ one alters a rigidly structured, unimaginatively staffed Establishment. I do not think one does. I think one nurtures small groups of coura­ geous thinkers and hopes they will fire up the minds of a few’ in coming venerations.” But Arrowsmith has more idealistic plans for the grad­ uate school: “Let the scholars and the artists compete on equal terms. The academic world Is uncongenial to the artist because it is dominated by men, who for the most part, have no stake in the present and dislike or even demise the imagination. "The university as now constituted is no place for an artist, unless he happens to be, in at least a part of him­ self, a scholar. Awards for artistic activity are not enough; any university which wants to recover the turbulence of the humanities must have the courage to choose men who are committed to the present as well as the p a st And it m ust have the courage to choose these men in sufficient numbers that the traditional balance is destroyed.” He envisions: ", . . an Emersonian university where past and present can and do compete; where the great teacher has equal honor with the great scholar; where creative emulation, even at the graduate level, might mean either great scho;- arship or creative w’ork that competed with the classic; and where human greatness would again be In real repu*e with hum anists.” The chairman of one English department replied to Harpers th at; "It may well be that we are not ready for Mr. Arrowsm ith’s idealized graduate school . . . In that ev en t we may only watch his spectacular I ca nan flight but not regret over much that we cannot participate in it. "Idealized,” yes. but it Is better to set ones hopes on a goal far on the horizon rather than be constricted by too timid a view. Certainly *he graduate schools need many more such visions ^On'7 U2RRV ABOTT It... VOO UA'* TD B C ... HAVE A : : DON T I r.AvE TO w£AR \ ) l& i FOCAL TEETH I TEETH X wOv MEAN 5 tx ? i M ! Vi T Sc (XT AjRtA V., M E M O L I b ^ S S Under the Ochil Tree... In the Stew and Out of the Picture .■■"ii"mu am wr - --a-"" "-"1 —-«4 W'S* HP I#** ‘ tit r saw * *Sr' m m M + w M s m e r MjgMi - 3SHMB8I SHR Within the last several years there has been a ren aissan ce of leftist politi­ cal groups in this country. A rm ed vri h •ut h Issues as r a r e . poverty, and an insane land w ar sn As.a, th eta grout* louies! voice probably constitute of leftist political opinion ainee the Kav- day of Eugene D e b and N orm an Thomas earlier in this century. the This political voice, which now goea has under the title cf the “ New Left it nothing c reated quite a stir r.>e. I j m ost A m en -an s the New Leftist is an irre sp nsibit Beatnik, product and producer of cie d e u c e , to be taken se ri­ ously only in term s of the th reat, real c r the im a g in e rs. which he poses s Kuetv s post! n of sta*us quo. to T ie New L eftist is also unpopular in circles of the E nlightened S tatus Quoites. who are found in the D em ocratic P a rty . on the left wing of the Republican P a r ­ ty and in Young D em ocrats C l u b s . (They are easily identified by their re ­ plies to the New L eft: “ Well. you've pot but .“ I The there. a good point 'he New Left for being BSQ s de; , re irresponsible, and. m ore too ex trem e, Im portant, unpopular with the v ling public. The New- Left does. however, succeed in tweaking the conscience cf liberals by doggedly the drug sto re buzzing around their e ars .»Ke a swarm of obstreperous flies pointing cut every m istake, in­ terest. inconsistency, and vested th ere a re OF COl RNE, those who welcom e the New' Left as a return to sanity and who hope its zealous leadership will produce far reaching and m uch needed changes in the American social stru ctu re. that It is m y belief. h< w ever, that all of these fears and hopes, spawned by Lie radical m ovem ent, a re unfounded and th at the New Left has absolutely no hope of realizing its goals. this ra th e r to substantiate br*>ad assertion. I call first upon Arneri- In order Little M an on the Campus by Bibler IWIF.riKillliraW -mumm. ra n history. This country does not have tradition of effective rad! a1 m ove­ a m ents. T i s th at there is not to say have never been rad ical groups in tho country’s politics, because there most certainly have b een: Jacksonian Demo­ crats. R adical Republicans, Populists, the trade union m ovem ent, A m erican socialist*, the Com m unist Party. These m ovem ents w ere radical enough, but eventually they w ere absorbed into the m ain stream of A m erican conservatism. What has happened, for instance, to the three m ost recent exam ples men- tioned above? The union m ovem ent is television and drinking n a’ watching beer in the suburbs of A m erican cities. A m erican socialism is going blind with its last ch arism atic leader, th at grand cid w arhorse, N orm an Them as. And th e A m erican Communist concerning P a rty , historian Paul F . Boller put it aptiv the Southwest Review 'A utum n. 1960): “There are only two groups in the United States today who take the party seriously: die-hard Foster lies (followers of William Z. Fos­ ter* and die-hard witch-hlinters." in an article in in like the D em ocratic Party and THERE IS NO P U C E in the Ameri­ can political spectrum for a radical can­ didate or his p arty. The prohibitive costs of a cam paign m ake a viable third party a virtu al im possibility, and so where is a radical, with hopes of being to go? The differences be­ effective, the tween Republican P a rty are the differ­ ed, is between a skunk and a pclecat, this case, n either skunk nor and, pclecat has any desire to raise a stink. And w hat, you m ay ask, about the radical who tries to be effective outside the system ? The answ er is simple and can be four..! in that unw ritten American postulate, “ He who is out of the system is out to lunch ’ The radical message Ls not taken seriously. If the New Left is publicallv announces im m ediately good. then apple p suspect. th at apple pie is Am erica is so system oriented, so com m itted to a policy of non-con trover- sy, that a rad ical is seen, not simply as one who espouses a different set of is an exponent of heresy id^as He and an oracle of social c e la tio n , lf fp .$ outside the system , he is a kook. a social deviationnik, and a v o u n g neurotic: and it naturally follows that he will bring the entire system dov n upon his mad hat lf given the slightest opportunity. And while on the subject of systems (I apologize for having to use such a it should be mentioned tired word), that ours is not an economic system which encourages radicals or radical the whole concept of thought. Take credit buying as an example. If Joe owes SIO,OOO on a house, golf c l u h s , television set, etc., it isn t likely that his political opinions will wander too far away from those of his employer, and it is even less likely that the em ­ ployer will have any sympathy for poli­ tical ideologists to the left of the En­ lightened Status Quoites. AS IF THIS were not e n o u g h , there is yet another factor to be reck­ oned with bv the new generation of radi­ is a group of men known cals T i s as the Reality Police or Guardians of Internal Security, depending on whose ox is being gored. As Professor Boller for several in his article, points out the American government has years been the largest single contributor to the American Communist Party, half of whose m em bership is m ade up of dues-payir.g FBI agents, who always vote the hard line. E ver been to an SDS rally ? Notice the two or three men with curdled faces? like Eliot Ness look The ones who without a double-breasted suit and a tommy gun? Believe me, they are not m em bers of SDS. And they are n ’t from the Dean s office, either. T e n . . . who could they be? In case the suspense is telling on you. federal agents, who h a v e thev are . ...by John R. Erickson than an ideological in- something m ore It is th e ir job to tine "torest in SDS. herd on the U niversity’* social dev:a- ttm niks. to gather inform ation and com- pile dossiers on all tile cam pus m ale m- fents and. I suppose, to s t inconspicu- ouriv in tile audience, waiting for som e­ one to burn a draft card or to u tte r scurrilous and abusive remarks about so one in federal authorities, thNowV!T the CP. USA and SDS are popular with could assume that so m eo n e has an in­ terest this these groups and interest is negative. One might a l s o think that this interest wou*d not be confined to these two groups aione and that include other radical groups as well. Another) safe assump­ tion would be that somewhere this in­ formation is being stored, for future ref­ it would that erence. is that it "hiis inexpedient THE FINAL and, I thbpk, inescapable, conclusion tile whole radical movement, whose body is infested with these leeches, is being avowed to exist, primarily because little or no effect on and poses no threat to toe society's status quo position. If there ever comes a time, ho*vever, when it th® govern­ becomes function as ment them to allow critics of the society’, if t h e r e should be a sudden escalation of the in “American peace-keepiq g mission Viet Nam, a radical aould become a very rare comodity indeed. And if this sounds like paranoia, out should remem­ ber the Palmer Raids. oi the 1920 s, the deposition of Japanese-Amr ricans in con­ centration camps on thp West C o a s t during the Second Work! War, and the hysteria of the M cC arr y era. for to i.e., Although the New lief: and the enure radical movement in ibis country may have some short run effects on the so­ ciety, such as provoking discussion on im portant the movement, in die system or out of the system , will continue ti) be in the stew and out of the picture.. it appears that issues, u HOF? * p s s t W . U S W - O U * VVJKJE* A T r-S ri JN^PffCTlOH WHEN WE CC CC 'N- Eisewnere . . . ---------- By Linda Pendiey ------ Sour Grapes ^ W U. A group of disappointed voters at toe University of W ashington. Seat’ * show­ ed "sour crap ' s" following last week « thousand election! by stealing copies of the Daily. the cam pus new spaper, five T e Daily pressm en at the p r i n t shop in tile Communications*Building dis- { vered the theft about 5 a rn. and ran off additional copies. the learned of Clyde Robinson, publications business m an ag er, theft w ren he received calls from people com p’a.n- mg that copies of the Daily w ere blow­ lo­ ing around." Robinson, unable cate the Daily delivery m an, went to the scene himself. to four Two caches of the papers were found There in an alley. Robinson said, were m illions of them sc a tte re d every­ where " Unable to get any help. Robin- thousand son picked up into his car. copier and lea led students at Radcliff Only m a rrie d College can to get around the regulation one Radcliffe girl placed an advertisem ent In the H ar­ vard C rim son: live off cam p u s, to five them so j . rn “ One-Y ear M arriag e? Seem s to be the >nly w ay for a Cliffe to get out of uie LL sh are expenses, am a gf>«d ccx k C ’her details** We can w’ork b It < J N Y. t prest f G reat Nock You sound m- e r?n w rk some- hard Appleby. J rep!: • p OU ? Ie said he : hance to I st her th acc I es is .•rat exper Another *wered the * I d be* m yself for can cook ar benefits . wait un “J he had cr before deciding ic offer. He added: th America:; rn ar­ dor, t have enough . M aybe this , * w we what we need. E ric Tomb 3Tb an- I en’ I and co m m en ted : planning to put in an a i fem ale room m ate. A girl *. ere m ight be other fringe Uke washing m y socks.” Wayne J ne. 21 said he answ ered the ad because he w anted to m eet a girl with “ that kind of sense of hum or." The Radcliffe student said, “ I didn t expect this great harvest. She said sh* placed the ad as a kind of joke” to prates* Radcliffe regulations. * The M eridian, cam pus newspaper for Hunter College. New’ York. N Y., re ­ last week after to publication turned a s.iX-week suspension. th at Dean of Students Glen T. Ny green had the student paper cease ordered publication following a series of inci­ dents which ended in the suspension of the paper s editor-in-chief. Proberta Kan- tor. and the copy editor. M arsha Mag- zam en. The editor had been denied the right to run for a second term because she did not have the required grade average of 2.5. Her average was 2.44. T e paper was suspended when it ap ­ peared with signed editorials from The a lito r and the editorial board pledging to continue publishing with the s a m e leadership. T e editorial pointed out that the edi­ tor s grade point average was only 2.25 when she first ran for editor, but a t ’hat tim e sne was granted an pxempuon by the sam e beard that was refusing to I -t her run for a second term . th at incident, F dowing the editor and the copy editor were suspended from classes by the dean for one weeK. He charged them with breaking into the M eridian offices a fte r he had insta led a new lock on the door. A fo rm er news editor of the M eridian. Larry Budner. was appointed editor cf In his first statem en t Bud­ ’hp paper ner said “ I don’t believe the pap^- exists only for the staff " and he said re “ in 'e m a l plans changes." to m ake some Dean Ny green refused to speculate on the c h a ra c ter of th e new paper but hp caid he hoped ’^ r e would b f “ a d e a r d.sri nation betw een reporting and ed itorial corr, m er t. ’ So vie ts Strad d le Viet W a r By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP >pe< ial Correspondent that A challenge to United States airpow er over North M et Nam raises the pros­ pect the Southeast Asia conf.ict m a y be entering a m ore dangerous phase; one which cou.d speL g ra d u a l) increased Soviet involvement. th a t it w o u ld im pression Up to now. the Soviet Union has given to the see some sort of settlem ent of th e M u N am w a r . B u t tile K rem lin is un lik ely to initiative w h ic h m i g h t dam age its claim to lea d th e world Com­ m unist m ovem ent. take any lik e If. in contesting Peking accusations that Moscow has turned its back on revo­ lution. the Krem lin should feel impelled to m atch its words of support for North M et Nam with m ore deeds. Southeast A-.a conceivably c -old becam e a te st­ ing ground for World ar III, as Spain was for W orld W ar IL THERE ARE some t 'u g v im pondera­ bles about the sue ession of air battle*; over N orth M et Nam since last week. l a it Is this developm ent an outgrowth of the Com m unist contest? V.as it con­ nected with the recen t 2Grd Soviet Com­ If the com m it­ m unist p arty congress’ to a ir battles over m ent of MIG 21s North M et Nam provokes Am erican sp ik e s a t m ilitary airfields in the North, what will be the Soviet reaction? Will it lead to m ore involvem ent, and m ore escalation of the w ar ? Red China sulkily boycotted the Soviet party congress. But North Met Nam, which th ree years ago supported Peking in the ideological w arfare, sent Le Du an. In Moscow . its party s first secretary . he pointedly praised Soviet help to the North Vietnamese and, by implication, ranked it ahead of that extended by Red China. Because of recent political turbulence in South Viet N am ’s cities, it is likely the Com m unist world now believes the V ietnam ese w rig g le js nearing a de­ cisive stage. IN SI H I A ( ASE, M •scow m i g h t Job Opportunities Ri mead M'A Corps Training < May 4 to inter. I* mr T*: ■s^ntativ* fo r .loo i br ,n our office? *-r v. -irespective i**cherf *nd in te rested • - p.p. em ent T> *e ~.uns T* , t.V u .d rom e to Soc. >n Hail V'9 M ac F Brad - auperU ttender* of lh* do- o il a c * * tro rm e w u. n o u r off! • i April 2* to interview pres- jiv# t«*cber» (o r th e c o n i n s school y«ar. r.:crested sh o t I '-o n e to S u tto n H si; •se t -a v* * \ Public S' c>e a : 2*9 to m ake a p p o in tm en ts p -1-. . d C -th f ‘our office* A pril superintendent or the p av c i t e Inhere rider-. School U -'trict. w ill be to interview prosp**-- f'-r the cur ng ecboo; year . , i •“■or7-€ tfi Sutton Hail -efi hers J,** in cr*re Bpp^in*"r f t u A. C Murphy director Tee *»>r F.a err.- nt S.r ># be anxious to step up its help to the North V ietnam ese and thus enhance its influence in Hanoi at a tim e when im- por’ant decisions could be in the m ak ­ ing. T e Soviet Union wants an au- in whatever happens th o ri'ativ e voice in Southeast Asia. the MIG 21 s D ie challenge from in com bat th\i> could be a token of things to come. North Viet Nam is believed late-model to have about 15 of MIGs and about 50 of the earlier m odels. and chances are that the Soviet Lnion these supplied all of them. These are now what North Met Maai calls Its “Peo­ ple's air force.” It is assumed tile pilots are North Vietnamese trained rn the U.S.S R., but it is not altogether impossible that So­ viet pilot* are on timid in North Met Nam, along with Soviet advnaers who might be in a position lo give the signal for the challenge. Hhe air war over Viet Nam would offer an opportunity for testing the performanne of the MIG 21 rn combat. The Firing Line Same Production? To the Editor: to Did your Miss Speights see the sam e I the day after her review that, for o n c e , production of Julius Caesar I did? went it appeared, and found I disagreed with a critic — or, more accurately here, a reviewer — because I liked the work in question more, not less, than she. A great deal more — in fact. I thought it as handsomely staged and costumed a Caesar as I ve seen, also that the blocking — I think the term is — anyway the arranging of the actors and the movements of the crowd* and soldiers — and the directorial pace was excellent. Miss Speights complains that the sec­ ond half is slower, m ore confused, and m ore m elodram atic than tile first; also that Cassius death scene lasts too long: also that a lot of soldiers run in and out. True. But blam e the author, not Mr. Payne. She is condescending about the chief actor*, even faulting Mr. H am ­ ilton's Cassius because he isn't l e a n and hungry enough (one of m any cap­ tious quibbles that seem ed stuck in for display rath er than enlightenm ent) but I thought him excellent -— spirited, good diction, gave sense of part — as I did a except for an inade­ all the princ-i] quate and campy Octavius. D on't know what she m eans by “ the usual dynam ics" — nor does she. I sus­ pect — but Mr. P ayne's production was plenty lively for me. In the column next to Miss Speights' review*, there is a headline: “ Cultural Leg Exists On Texan, Says Macdonald Instant confirm ation, At Sym posium .” you might say. Dwight M&cdonaid Radio-Television Building PTA Not Birdlife To the Editor: I am a graduate student at the Uni­ versity, the father o f five children, e Coldwater supporter^ -end a long tim# member of various FTA *. I do not to the John Birch Society or belong it* pofcri(>«. Having filed approve of the necessary disclaim ers of extremism required in the d im a se of liberal free­ dom of this institution, I would lik e to comment on the T r e a te n Schools". inquiry, wtuoh exists at “Bluchers editorial, Mrs. Moorhead is * rather extreme person herself. The Maiional PTA pre­ sumes to make value judgments on a wide range of issues in the area of poli­ tics, civil rights, ndiFotion. and w el­ fare. These policies, pee not approved or even d.scussed %r\ih tile local FTA groups. Local meeting? are lr) variably reserved for condescending tett ures on c h i l d hygiene or the latest Deweyite lunacy teachers college. from the local state |n local meetings, Parents who object, to these national pntii ii** are e i t h e r called down by the chi ur or are subject to nervous reminders? such as, “Now lots not get controversial It is very convening for Mrs. Moor­ head to brand all Of thiu objection Bireiiitp and thus l a i d advantage of the current hysteria aln ut; that rather silly organization. Lastly, if the JBSj Is threatening the schools by taking ovri* the PTA’s it is interesting to note (ha t they are doing it by a:tending m eetings, participating and voting. This was 'once known, prior to Mrs. Moorhead, at? the democratic process. I recommend it to the editors of the Texan when they achieve that wonder­ ful responsibility for guiding a small human being into uiaturity, and be­ come eligible to be IT A members. R etort J. Macdonald 70S Park Place T h e Da ily T ex a n Th* D*uy Tex*.-.. * stud*®! «*•-»!*J** *’ Th* l r *■+ int holiday period* S*pt«mb«r tUrolith May tr- P ts Wire’ —ne *r* t m ^ ,. of m u I* pablum* A* lr **'«:* Monday t* Monthly tai Awgwt by Tex** Draw** D Unleeraity islat. . ' Aua'.r Tex** cr A - aaa portage pend at Au*Ua. Texaa. accept^ -*• 1-5244* or at th* editorial attic*. J E WB or at ta* r.e* laboratory J.B IQS lac nines esmeernia* lathery * b* mad* ’n J E IOT -GP. 1-5144 and •4b«r?i*ia* - ■ -- (GR 1-327! / News contr*, cut .cfs* will telephone ASSOC ATED PRESS W * t SER' Cc - . - n u it - ii* ■ »• n of * -* ’ * a*«i Pre** -a *• 6 paten#* ar* r. *n: j * " rec.ted -+A ! . - : • * ‘ • - •• I a.a •KMR of a . O’.-irf ma*ter '-re . OBf *- m inter e<5 TO * s;.*ap-e- * "4- terelr P. r ‘ i reicrv ed *» »pnc | T w o Semester* fail and • pri*f Ii «♦ -»f ?er*d b» aaa I Ll. ar it* is I r ai.* ( ooatf (<- r e d b*. r-. a. C e u t f ta t » this • *■ «>at**4e T ra * U l l J* * TS rn *• s f»* TfeurotfUu, April 28, THfc DAILY TEXAN Peg# 2 — ^ ff—t lit the editorial coSumn are ti- -we of til#"editor A., editorial* ur.es* »l*ned are written exj>r 0> gums** editonaJ v ‘ -a * are ne? iieeessarliy th# ed cor * ; ^xbti s.r? T 't ad ..... •- i ne I-Lsi.v ^ caser t; Loos# cif TP*- Univ e m tv of ^eifitrtrg it p n ! f or Boart! p- r '•’**’ PERM ANENT STAFF EOiTCR ................................ KAY E N O R T H C O T T M A N A G I N G EDITOR ....................... SA M KEA CH ASSISTAN T M A N A G I N G E D I T O R LARRY IKELS N E W S EDITOR .......................... N A N C Y KOW ERT EDITORIAL PAGE E D I T O R C A R O L Y N N IC H O L S A M U S E M E N T S EDITOR ............... S A R A SPEIGHTS SPORTS EDITOR ........................ DAVID W ESSLER STAFF FOR THIS fSSUE Issue News Editor ................... Lei* A b e r n a t h y Make-Up Ed t o r .................................. Larry J a c k so n Copy Eddor .................................... L inda L e o n a r d Ec tor a P a g e ............................... Joh n R. Ericijscn S p o r s ................................................. Bill H a k t f 'a d A rn use men t$ ...................................... j : m G v e ^ lo n N g h t R e p o r te r s .......................... Sid Boat?i#r, Vickie C a rte r, Ju an ita C o b u r n , Fred D u 8 c se, M a r s h a Fiowers, Lyn^ell Jackson, C a r o le J q h n - L a u r a Sewell, K a t h y Step h en so n , L j d a W isn e r, Union Committees, Clubs to Hold Awards Banquet Tonight I Campus News in Brief— I ^ ____ ^ ,__________________________th* Joarnfllhm Batwing bach of the Journalism Building at 7 p m. Thursday before going to Moorhe n home, 665 W. 29' * St, « leaders will — Miss Coward is a m ember of Alpha Phi sorority and Alpha Lamba Delta, freshman women's honor society She is on the Stu­ dent Faculty C o m m ittee and works on the sports section of the Cactus. Leslie Johnson sophomore edu Cation major and member of Al­ pha Phi, was selected runner up. A C A X to Hear M o e r k e Gamma Alpha Chi, women’s professional advertising fratern­ ity, will meet Thursday night In th*' home of Randolph M >orko, h»cal calligrapher ami hand Illum­ inator, to hear Moerke speak on “ The Beginning of the Alphabet.” for 1966-67 will he elected, and pledges will take their pledge quizzes at this meet­ ing. Officers Members are aahed to meet In Exhibit Displays Children's W o r k Exhibits of Austin school chil­ dren’s art work is now on display at Laguna Gloria. The art show Is sponsored by the Wellesley Club of Austin. Holmuth Na urn or, director of Fi rt Worth Children's Museum, will speak at Laguna Gloria at 8 p m . Friday in connection with the show. Tile exhibition m ay be seen through Friday 9 a m. to 5 p.m.. .Saturday IO a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Baptists Pick K a y Cud© A University coed in one of 50 students ch;>sen by the Baptist General Convention of Texas stu­ dent work division to serve as a missionary in the United States and foreign countries. Sophomore Kay Ellen Cude will in Chihuahua, a pend IO weeks M exico, this summer. A PE W o r k s h o p to B e g i n for A workshop on physical educa­ the mentally retarded tion conducted bv University facnlty members will l»egln at 7:96 p m. Thursday ami continue throngh noon Saturday at the Stephen F. Austin Hotel. Procedures and techniques In teaching physical recreation for children with retarded mental de­ velopment will he demonstrated. Approximately 366 people are the workshop participating in which toward both school ami community programs. supported by hinds from the Joseph P. Ken­ nedy Jr., Foundation, Is directed by Dr. Lynn W. McGraw. Physi­ cal and Health Education Depart­ ment chairman. The workshop, is aimed A Monterrey Next Stop The University chapter of the American Marketing Association will take a field trip to Monter­ rey, Mexico, Thursday and F ri­ day. D eparture will he at 4 a.rn, D eparture will be at 4 TI. irsdav In front of the Business- E Morales Building, where th# students W a board a chartered I is. Students will stay at the Rio Hotel in Monterrey. A H o l t z m a n to C i v e Talk Dr. Wayne H. Holtzman, pro­ fessor of education and psychol ogy, will discuss “ New Trends in Education” at a graduate lunch­ eon at ll 15 a m. Thursday in th# I mon Building Junior Ballroom. \l! graduate student*, faculty, and staff are invited. Each tndU \ ideal may bring hi* lunch nr go through the fine In the Faculty- Staff Dining Room. The event is sponsored by tho Texas Union. Hew Ad Rates Begin Monday The Dally Texan ha* new lower special ra fe* on classified ads for students. time the ad The new rate is 50 cents for the first rime and 25 cents for each additional is run. Ads, which have a IO word maximum, m ay be brought to Journalism Building 107 between 8 a.m . and 4:30 p.m. weekdays, and must be paid for in advance. Students purchasing ads must show an auditor's receipt. home economics banquet In the Union Faculty Dining Room. Of­ ficers nill Im Installed, and new members will ho initiated into the American Home Economics Asso­ ciation. Tickets for the banquet may be purchased from officers of the University Chapter of MILA for $2.50 each. A Clark to Discuss Law s Dr. Alexander L. Clark, asso­ ciate professor of sociology, will speak on “Laws and the Mores ’ at 7 p.m. Thursday in Blanton Dormitory living room. The speech is sponsored bv SCOPE, honorary fraternity for Blanton residents. A C h i n a Is Speech Topic Dr. James Sonkup, associate professor of government, will speak on “ Peking and Taiwan: International Relations,” af 8 p.m. Thursday In Union Building 202. The sneech. sponsored br the International Hour. Is open to the public. A- Lions Honor C o w a rd B arbara Coward, freshman in arts and science, was selected Queen of the West Austin Lions Gub Monday. Some 150 members of Union Committee* and Clubs, along with faculty and staff member's will congregate at the Union Awards Banquet Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Main Ballroom- New committee chairmen, the leadership board, the outstanding freshmen award, and the out­ standing committee award will be announced at the banquet. * Pre -L aw yer s to Meet The Jaw School's eighth annual for high Prelaw Convocation school seniors and college prelaw students will he held Thursday from 4 to 5 p.m. In Townes Hall Auditorium. Prof. Millard IT. Ruud will dis­ cuss “I^egal Education Today,” followed by a discussion of “A Typical Pay in a l-awyer’s Of­ fice*’ by Austin attorney Tom Gee. Student topics as talk on such strengths and weaknesses of prelaw education and ‘cocurricular’ netix itios, pro­ grams. and courses which arc not part of regular classwork hot con­ sidered instrumental In legal edu­ cation. Italians to Hold Dinner Sixty* students will devour a number of unique dishes, notah’.v "jum p in the mouth," at the first annual Italian dinner in the Ich- thus Coffee House at 7 p.m. Thursday. La Piccola Italia, tho University Italian Club, will sponsor the event. “ Jump In the mouth”—Saltim- boca alia Romana—is rolls of stuffed meat, a meal served in ancient rome. Tile food supposed­ ly is so tempting it leaps from the plate. Club members will be enter­ ' tained by Conrad Tmmel. assist­ ant director of the longhorn Sing­ ers and recent winner of a Metro­ politan Opera Award. Immel will sing a selection of Italian alias. * S e a g l e W i n s Art A w a r d Jerry Seagle. a University grad­ uate student, has won $1 ,0 0 0 In an art exhibition. Seagle's was the best of 91 en­ tries in the first annual Juried Gulf (o a st Exhibit at Mobile, Ala. The winning picture is ‘ Pad­ re Beach,” an impressionistic oil painting. * Involvem ent Plans Set Week of Involvement activities for Thursday include the Austin City Council meeting at IO a.m., a meeting of the City Planning Commission at 3 p.m., and an urban renewal program at 4 p.m. The group will leave for the »:v3& Officers mg?. Phi K a p p a S ig m a Charles Zubarik is the newly elected president of Phi Kappa Sigma. Other officers include John Garner, vice-president; Fred Brown, secretary; C h e t Wheless, treasurer and summer rush chairm an; Donnie Herr­ mann, pledge trainer; Kim Whe­ less, scholastic chairm an; Ken Olivier, house m anager; Claud Matnev, public relations chair­ m an; Rodney Senterfitt, fall ru^h chairm an and intramural chair­ man'. and Tommy Tonkin, ser­ geant-at-arms. ★ S ig m a Phi Epsilon Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity has elected officers for the fall semester. They are Dan Blanks, presi­ dent; Thomas Hicks, vice-presi­ dent; Jam es Hury, recording sec­ retary ; Th ad Dorsey, correspond­ ing secretary; and Terry Taylor, chaplain. Committee chairmen appointed include Thomas Hicks, summer r u s h captain: Toby Summers, fall rush captain; Noel D o l c e , social chairm an; Richard Ben- intram ural chairm an; and activities dor. Richard Wadsworth, chairman. Other appointees are Rodney Burton, public relations chair­ m an; Jam es Edwards, house and yard m anager; Richard Vermil­ lion, pledge trainer; Jam es Hury, golden hearts chairm an; Byron Cox, senior m ember-at-large; and John Floeter, junior mem­ ber-at-large. Longhorn Singers The Longhorn Singers' new of­ ficers are David Gary Evans, president; Sherman Smock, vice­ president ; Mary Katherine Smith, secretary; and Mary Ann Weiss, treasurer. The officers-elect will begin their term of office on May 2. * ★ A lp h a Epsilon Pi Alpha Epsilon Pi officers for the next year include Johnny Perel, president; Russell Silver- stein, first vice-president; Chuck Franklin, second vice-president; Ken Baron, rush captain; Ronr.y Wiesenthal, secretary; M a r k Klein, treasurer; Joe Rosenfield, VS? . f i n a n c i a l secretary; Myron Bloom, house m anager; Buddy Polloi!, secretary of arm s; and Ronnie Stark, social chairman, ★ Theta S ig m a Phi Judith Croom is the new presi­ dent of Theta Sigma Phi, wom­ en's professional journalism fra­ ternity. Other new officers are Nancy Kowert, program s vice­ president; Mary Alice Zrubek. vice-president the Ten Most Beautiful contest: Su­ san Powell, secretary; and Susan Metcalf, treasurer. in charge of * Pre-Law Association Officers of the FTe-Law Asso­ ciation for 1966 are C h a r l e s Hooks, president; Jeff Gregory, vice-president; Allan B a k e r , secretary-treasurer; Tom Good­ m an, A&S representative; and Jim Bell, business adm inistra­ tion representative. Wayne Weber is Law School co-ordinator, and Dr. Howard A. Calkins is faculty adviser, w International Club Tile International Club officers for 1966-67 are Pavlos Roussos from Cyprus, president; Gordon I Rayless from Pam pa, vice-presi­ dent: Jane Haun from Kingsville, secretary ; and Teresa Wang from Taiwan, treasurer. council meeting at 9:45 a.rn from the University' “ V. Participants will leave for the Planning Com­ mission from the Methodist Stu­ dent Center at 2 45 p.m. They will leave for the urban renewal program from the MSC at 3:45 p.m. * L e h m a n W m n e r N a m e d Melvin R. Pate has l»een named recipient of a Herbert ll. lehm an graduate from New fellowship York State University. The $4,000 awards are for stu­ dents working toward graduate science, d e g r e e s public or international affairs at an approved college or university In New York state. social in a Children's Party Set Alpha XI Delta sorority will give a costume party' for children at the Pan American Recreation Center at 4 p rn. Thursday. The party will have a fairyland theme and a maypole has been planned for the children. ★ + TSP to Certify Editor The new Texan editor nill he certified at the Texas Student Publications Board meeting at 2:30 p.m. Thursday in Journalism Building 305. Also on the agenda will l»e the appointment of associate editor of the IV,7 Ca ct os and approval of awards for publications staff members. ★ Fam ous Lecture T o d ay Dr. Max Westbrook, assistant professor of English, will discuss “ Linear Tim e: The American Heritage of Today’s Undorgrad Hate” at 4 p.m. Thursday in Un Ion Building 202. The speech is part of the Fa moas Lecture Series sponsored by the Texas Union Student-Faculty Committee. H o m e Ec D in n e r Tonight “Today I* Already Tomorrow” will he the topic of a talk by Dr. Bernice Moore, assistant to the director of community programs, Hogg Foundation for Mental Health at 6:30 p m. Thursday. She will speak at the annual SAVE 50% ON YOUTH FARES ''■'■J' SU'.5 ' ★ Half fare for young adults between the age of 12 and 22. ★ Fly any day— any flight ★ Advance reservations will not be made for passengers paying Youth Fares. How­ ever, once travel has com­ menced, passengers paying Youth Fares will 'tot be removed at points v 4er* mediate to their fin* on line destination. ★ A Youth Fare Identification Card, y X costing only $5.00 " ^ p e r m its unlimited travel ragH p ■ **lon FTA system. Good for i I year from date of Issuance. Apply today! For Information call your TTA College Sales Manager, What Goes on Here Thursday 8 m id n ig h t — A m e ric a n a n d B r itis h f i r s t m a n u s c r ip ts : w e s t e r n flo o r o f A cad e m ic C e n te r a r t . 8-8 — B o o k s b y g r o u n d B u ild in g f lo o r f a c u ltv an d c o r r i d o r s ta f f , o f M ain 8-5— N a v v f lig h t t r a i n i n g I n fo r m a tio n , s o u th lo b b y , U n io n B u ild in g 8-5 — A m e ric a n f u r n i t u r e in w a te r ­ c o lo rs. U n io n B u ild in g 102. g 35-11 p m — K LRN-t V programs. C h a n n e l 8 9 5 — A p p lic a tio n s f o r M odel I. n it od N a tio n s p o s itio n s . U n io n B u ild in g 342. 9. 5 —A p p lic a tio n s fo r fo r m e m b e r s h ip o n C u ltu r a l E n t e r t a i n ­ m e n t C o m m itte e , U n io n B u ild in g 342. In te rv ie w s 9-3- D is p la y o f s to n e r u b b in g s fro m T h a ila n d A r c h ite c tu r e L ib r a r y 9 .5— P e r u v ia n J u n i o r A r t e m b r o id e r ie s . XX ell os­ L a g u n a S h o w . i e r G lo ria 9. 5— T e a c h e r -c o u r s e s u rv e y fo rm s m a r in U n io n b e d ro p p e d B u ild in g a n d o n th e p o rc h o f A ca­ d e m ic C e n te r . b o x e s 9 - i l — S n a c k sa le . H o m e E co n o m ic * in B u ild in g 129. 9-.V --R e g is tra tio n m a t e r i a l s f o r s u m ­ t e r m m a y b e p ic k e d u p a t m e r M a in B u ild in g I 9 . 5— R e s e r v a tio n s f o r c a p s a n d (tow ns, U n iv e r s ity C o-O p g i5 —U rb a n In v o lv e m e n t p a r tic ip a n t* w ill leav e “ Y ” to v is it A u s tin C ity C o u n c il. 1 9 6 — T e x a s -Y a le e x h ib it o f L a t in m w * A m e ric a n a r t . A r t M u seu m . in p > 4 —Y o u n g D e m o c r a ts to m an b o o th * th e M a y 7 f o r a b s e n te e v o tin g p r lm a r v , W e s t M all. 11 45 __ O r W a y n e H H o ltz m a n to s p e a k 'N e w to G r a d u a te C lu b on T r e n d s In E d u c a t i o n ." U n io n B u ild ­ in g J u n i o r B a llro o m . 12-12—K I 'T -F M . 90 7 m c. 12 30— I ta lia n T a b le . C o m m o n s 1 -5 —In te rv ie w a p p o in tm e n ts m a y b e m a d e th e n ew f o r p o s itio n s w ith S t u d e n t A s s o c ia tio n . U n io n B u tld - 2 30K ^ T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n * J o u r n a l i s m B u ild ­ b o a r d m e e tin g . in g 105 2 15 U rb a n I n v o lv e m e n t p a r tic ip a n t* to le a v e U n iv e r s ity M e th o d is t r e n ­ t e r th e A u s tin C ity P la n ­ to v isit n in g C o m m is sio n . 2 15— U r b a n In v o lv e m e n t g r o u p leav e* M e th o d is t S t u d e n t C e n te r th e W a y n e G o ld e n U rb a n R e n e w a l p r o j­ ect. f o r 4 - D r . M a x W e s tb ro o k to s p e a k o n ' L in e a r T im e ; T h e A m e ric a n H e r i­ ta g e o f T o d a y 's U n d e r g ra d u a te s ,'* U n io n B u ild in g 202. 4 B ru ce B r e v c r te n o r, M u sic B u ild ­ in g R e c ita l H a ll 4 - P r e - L a w C o n v o c a tio n : S p e a k e r* w ill b e A tto r n e v T o m G ee. D ean T J . G ib so n , a n d P ro f. M illa rd R u u d . T o w n e s H all A u d ito r iu m . 4 - A l p h a XI D e lta c o s tu m e p a r t y fo r c h ild r e n a t P a n A m e ric a n C e n te r. 4— R e lig io u s C o n v e rs a tio n s . A— A m e ric a n M a r k e tin g A s so c ia tio n to fro m S p e e d w a y e n t r a n c e of fo r le a v e B u s in e s s -K e o n o m irs B u ild in g t r i p to M o n te rr e y . 4 15 — A sh b e l L it e r a r y S o c ie ty te a . ‘‘X' A c a d e m ic C e n te r 21, 9 — U n io n a w a r d s b a n q u e t, U n io n B u ild in g J u n i o r B a llro o m . 6 :3 0 —H o m e E c o n o m ic s C lu b to h e a r ‘T o ­ D r B e rn ic e M o o re s p e a k o n d a y Us A lre a d y T o m o r r o w ,” F a c u l- ty - S ta f f D in in g R o o m , U n io n B u ild ­ in g T — C h r is tia n S elen e* O r g a n iz a tio n . U n io n B u ild in g 300 7 — D r A lex L C la rk to S C O P E o n “ L aw * a n d t h e M o re * ,” B la n to n D o r m ito r y liv in g ro o m . to s p e a k 7 L a P ic c o la I t a l ia n d in n e r . Ie h th u * C o ffee H o u s e 7 15—G a m m a Aljpha Chi to m e e t w ith M r. a n d M rs R a n d o lp h M o e rk e . 605 W e s t 2914 S tr e e t. 7 30—F r e e U n iv e r s ity “ T h * M o v e­ m e n t ,” M e th o d is t S tu d e n t C e n te r: ‘ B o b D y la n 's P o e t r y ,” H ille l F o u n ­ d a tio n ; a n d ' ‘G u i t a r ,” U n io n B u ild ­ in g lis te n in g ro o m . 7 30 - W o r k s h o p o p e n s f o r P h y s ic a l th e M e n ta lly R e ta r d ­ E d u c a tio n or ed. A u s tin H o te l. 8 D r J a m e s S o u k u p to a d d r e s s In ‘ P e k tn ^ -T a l- i n t e r n a t io n a l R e la tio n s ,' U n ­ t e r n a t l o n a l C lu b on w a n ion B u ild in g 325. 8 S tu d e n t A s se m b ly . U n io n B u ild in g 32U iu m 8 - J u l i u s C a e s a r / ' H o g g A u d ito r ­ 8 15—C a rlo * M o n to y a , g u i t a r is t . M u­ n ic ip a l A u d ito r iu m . 8 15—H a r p E n s e m b le G a y le H o rn E b e r t a n d stu d e n t* . M u sic B u ild in g R e c ita l H a ll. Keat Ayer, at GR 2-5558 C LIP COUPON and mail with membership fee to* Sales Department, Trans-Texas Airways, P. 0. Box 60188, Houston, Texas 77060 ✓ Application For Youth Fare Identification Card (PLEASE PROTT) innllrant** Ham* ------------------------------- * * * — Height Weight Color Eye* Color Hair Address City Date of Birth Card No. Issued Issued By Card Holder's Signature State Date of 22«d Birthday Oat* At Exp. Data / I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I \ Application M utt Be Accompanied by 45 00 W W O R L D Serving the Great Southwest Region B E S T A S a i r w a y * * THU WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY O w eUod, Ohio 44JUU VVLBSW?* X ^ WORLD ’H IK D IC T IO N ^ \ j h ’ mU ^ . J)'\\ I f I j aaason ttnr&M j ;V ti »; u- ] ~ iducators endorse it. Professor Jacqoes Barron, Columbia University: "In­ variably instructive,full, and extremely easy to use. The definitions are not only terse and clear but also elegant.^ a pleasure to read." Professor acanth Brooks, Yale University: "An able and expertly edited volume.'* Professor Harry R. Warfd, University of Florida:*4// ie Incomparably the best desk dictionary now in existence.'* Professor George E. Grauel, John Carroll University: mIts superior quality has proven a stimulus to the en­ tire field o f American lexi­ cographyr $6 9 5 Without thumb index $5,95 The Toggery’s Ensemble is sure to pep-up any wardrobe. Your prescription for spring is ready and waiting in the Ensemble section of The Toggery. Take advantage of our pre-matched odd jackets and slacks, and be assisted in choosing ties, handkerchiefs, belts, shirts, and socks. For example, the ensemble shown above consists of a Michaels-Stern two-button odd jacket, Seco shirt, Hubbard slacks, belt, tie, and handker* chief for around $80.00 complete. rn Distinctive Store For Men GR 8-6636 2246 Guadalupe St. 30-60-90 Day Accounts SN I A ti « • I A AA T U E I t A N V T H M A l l t i ____ Celt Supporters I n n a h o m r\ In Ticket Vigil _ I T racksters Olympic Com m ittee C uts O ff Air Supply For Athletes Com peting in 1968 G am e s ROME — iP — The Interns- ftjoal Olympic Committee ruled Wednesday that no athlete who will compete in the 1968 Games In Mexico Qty can have more I n f ait weeks •' aper.a1, high- Eliirude training in the last throe months bef me the opening cere- mony. IOC president Avery Brandade of Chicago said any violation of the rule would be a “gross breach of sqx>rtsmanship” and that the committee had approved the re­ striction so that no athlete or country could ’‘take an unfair ad­ vantage over other competitors ‘ THE R IT E , Brandade said. d wh not apply to those “who normally live or train at such heights” as that of Mexico City. This clear!v meant that athletes from high areas would still have an advantage, but Brundage had acknowledged this all along. Bnmdage said the IOC would watch developments in the last three months and any violation of the rule could possibly Involve disqualification. Then he empha­ sized that it was up tt the na­ tional Olympic committees anil the sports federate -na to enforce the rule so that no one “takes an unfair advantage over other com­ p e tito r s.’* THERE HAS BEEN much cri­ ticism of the choice of the Mexico City site because it is 7,300 feet above sea level Many critics contend this would endanger the health cf athletes. BOSTON — W — Basketball fans began lining up at Boston Garden early Wednesday, wait­ ing for tickets to go on sale for the final game of the National Basketball Association playoff between the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers Thurs­ day night. Tickets for all 13.909 seats were sold within two hours after the box office opened at 9 a m. - I OLASSTFTKO APVTKTTSTXO RA T ES * • • l l ” « ....................... jje 2X $ so 23 . , ^ -rd ow n x or# inch on# tim# ........................... * - ^ Each W ort < 15-word minimum.' Msnimu n Chars# • ............. ,.............. • studs*)* rate tlO-srord M ax im u m or# tim# • Es ort add tional tim# Class ■ od D isplay I FA h Milt local Tira# .......................... ............ 2 0 Cl'"secutiv# Issues _ _ * wor£? ..............................“ ’*****’’!’!!!!” »on j- tv-rd# '’***'’*******’*............................ ll '30 s \ o eery "charge for consecutive issue rates.) • ................................... G R 1 - 5 2 4 4 The Daily Texan C L A S S IF IE D A D S C LA SSITTED A D V E R T IS IN G D E A D L IN E S ............... Tuesday Texan ............................... Monday, 3 30 r rn. W ednesday T exan 3 30 p to. ..................... W ednesday, 3 30 p m. Thursday Texan ............................... Thursday, 3 30 p m Friday te x a n Sunday Texan ................................... Friday J 30 p m . In th« event of errors made in an advertisem ent, im m ediate notir# must be e'von «« the publisher* are responsible for only one incorrect insertion. Tuesday • XTW, l o w ST TP EWT KXTF4 I# word# or I#*# tor 50# til# flr»t tim e, 35# e.vh add ition al Urn#. Stndent m ast show A n d e r s* r#c#lp» nod pay ta advene# in Journalism Bld* 107 from 8 % rn. to 4:Si p m. Monday through Friday G R 1 - 5 2 4 4 Furnished Apartm ents Furnished A partm ents Furnished Apartm ents To Try Drake By RIT L H ALSTEAD Deposed Sport* Editor Texas takes a crack at the last of the relay carnivals on the col­ lege track circuit Friday and Sat­ urday. Coach Jack Patterson Is hopeful his performers can come up with a few new tricks for the Southwest Conference meet May 5-7. The place la Des Moines, Iowa and the open-air “tent” will be the site of the famed Drake Re­ lays. Trying desperately to put together competitive relay teams from a hospital ward of wounded harriers, Texas will enter at least three relay events. THE TWO-MILE RELAY will receive most of Texas’ attention. It will be the showdown race be­ tween the Steers and world rec­ ord holder Oklahoma State. Texas stunned the Cowboys with a win at the Texas Relays, but OSU came back last week to best the ’Horns at the Kansas Relays. Biggest problem has been find­ ing a fourth man to go with top 880 men Bob 0 Bryan. Richard Romo, and Preston Davis. David Webb w*on a run-off this week in 1:52.0. and could provide the necessary speed. With fingers crossed. Patter­ son, will send Steve Langham, onlv now recovered from a Tex­ injury, and Tommy as Relay! Keene, just over a muscle pull suffered at the SMU Relays, into the one-mile relay. BOTH MEN were starters in Patterson’s original plans, and he hopes to have the pair ready for the SWC meet. Teaming with them at Drake will be O Bryan and Davis. Keene is ordinarily the ’Horns anchor man, but Da­ vis will take the final leg at Drake to spare him any undue stress on his Injured leg. O’Brvan and Davis will tie for Relays sprint medley. Davis the title of busiest runners when they tackle their third relay race is —the slated to close out the 880 leg. after taking 440 man 0 Bry­ an s handoff. in James Means and Don Park hurst will sprint the opening 220 yard legs for Texas. INDIVIDUALS competing for include Steve San­ Texas will th« som and Mike Sowers javelin. Sansom in the hurdles races. Brian Woolsey in the one- mile run, Ken Sunderland in the three-mile, and Mark King in the pole vault. in King, along with several other vaulters, is a good bet to knock off the Drake mark of 15 feet, 9L inches. King has done 16 feet, t i inch this spring. The biggest news is that mile ace Richard Romo, showing no ill effects from the ankle spiking which sidelined him all last year, will get a long-awaited chance to run with the “big boys.” ROMO WILL ENTER a special the features open mile which in the coun­ best four-lap men try, including Kansas freshman Jim PvVun, w*ho holds the Ameri­ can mark of 3:55.3 and who did 3:55.8 last week at the Kansas Relays. Rom.) has a best lime this sea­ son of 4:06.2, but indications are that he can lower that reading. Two of the six University Di­ vision relay records at Drake belong to Texas — and both ara In jeopardy. Texas' 1959 880- yard relay crew ran a 1:23.8, but several entries this year are capable of besting that time. The 1959 unit s one-mile relay tim e of 3:11.3 is sure to fall. Texas' first-string mile unit, en­ tered this year, has run a 3 :10 9 this spring. Several ether schools boast equally foursomes with good times. The remainder of the Texas track team will go to Arling­ ton Friday and Saturday for a dual meet with Arlington State. Purpose of the second meet is to keep fhe entire squad in com­ petitive shape for the upcoming conference m e e t Women's Track Goes to ZTA Women don’t lust wa*ch track th ^ e days — not Texas women. Competing in the second annual Women s In tram uraIs track and field meet recently, University girls notched three records as Zeta Tau Alpha carted off team honors. Newman Hall was second, Del­ ta Zeta third, and Kappa Alpha Theta fourih. The standing broad jump rec­ ord was 7 feet, IO inches until Phyllis Merrill of Zeta Tau Alpha stepped to the line. She soared 8 feet, 3’ 4 inches to establish a new mark. In a new event on this year’* slate, Peggy Lanius of Delta Zeta sped to a 13.4 reading in the 100-yard dash to put up a record for next year g runners to shoot at. Delta Zeta also bested all en­ tries in the initial running of the 440-yard relay. Running on the grass track of the women's In­ tramurals field, the DZ's teamed to win in 1:40.2. T e x a s 4 4 0 M a n T o m m y K e e n e . . . back in ac+ion at Drake Relays. Rams Get New Look LOS ANGELES - « - The Los Armeies Ram s’ new head coach, George Alien, continues to break down old team traditions. He wants proven talents and not the promise of a future draft choice. from THE LATEST established vet­ eran acquired is halfback Tom Moore, who the Rams obtained Tuesday the Green Bay Packers. Los Angeles gave up an improved P. o n Smith, who has been on the taxi squad for the past two years, and two future draft selectees. quarterback, Rival National Football League team s for years have won titles with Ram expendables — Frank Ryan, Bill Wade. Del Shofner, Jon Arnett, Larry Morris. The list is t<"*o long to recount fully. All at these players figured as key men on championship teams, while draft choices haven't lifted the Rams our of th* depths of the Western Conference. “WE’RE AIMING for 1966, not 1967 or later,” said Allen In com­ menting on the Moore trade. “Moore gives us what we need at halfback. Ron Smith is a fine young quarterback, but we al­ ready have enough quarterbacks. this trade since the league meeting in Miami in January.” Allen said. “I’ve been working on Moore, from Vanderbilt Uni­ versity. Is 2”, 6-feet-2, 215 pounds and a strong runner. Allen de­ scribes him also as an excellent pass receiver Allen said Moore flew from his Nashville, Tenn., home a n d signed with the Rams Tuesday. ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF ANOTHER M anager John M ayer (UT EX) STOP'GO M A R K E T G R 7-0294 Open: 7 a.m. 'til 11 p.m. 808 M anor Rd. at Interregional Charcoal Briquets IO Lbs. Borden’s Ice Cream l/j Gallon Rath Racorn Bacon I Lb. Grade " A " Large Eggs Chef Boy ArDee Cheese Pizza 12'/, Ox. SPECIALS Your Choice ^ 59’ ^ King Size Cigarettes "2" Pack* King Size Pepsi-Cola (Plus Bot+le Deposit) 2-6 Pales Aqua Net Ha ir Spray Mortons Chips 39c Size 2 Bags Rath Bologna I Lb. These Specials G o o d From April 27th thru M a y 4th OCTET LUXURY LIVING Briarcliff M a n o r l l i- . < (O ff W est 12th St S Hilts C xp col St UT I A 2 BR* — SHS to SUS Class — Private P atio — Cable TV Laundry — Bus — Shopping Centers QU 8-3939 Mgr Apt. 108 CL 4-3889 Dm <3 Ap*t for T ny Budgets $59.::0 TO $69.50 Cool — Clean — Quiet — Modern Com r 'telv F u rn ish ed — •od,es C losets Good Ap; ’tances Most A-C W alk to Class Mgr. 2015-A Red River GR 8-M22 WA 6-2564 a t c a m p u s efficiency. Many eJoeets: T manroom In: ne rat r carpeted, air conditioned: f - couple. Cal: 1920 Speedw ay. GR 7- 8818. f VTA RITA Dorm itory. New mod- •hcreties Special rates ava.ll- Rlo Grande. GR 2-7239 •rn. kl LA FIESTA 4 K E ast 30th Just Off Campus HAW THORNE APA R T M E N T ! ISIS Leon GR 7-9104 9 -bedro rn luxu ry apartment*. T ow n­ h ou se design. A C. Carpeted B uilt-in kitchen, p riva te patio, maid service, $55-$ 45 Cable T v m onth ly. Sum m er rates available June through August, available Pool ALL BILLS PAID_________ E t S A B I N O A P A R T M E N T S KOC Sabine GR T-T179 Sum m er R ates AL E llis Paid F urnish#d one or tw o bedroom. A/C. laundry, study roam law school. Available xd. cab*# TV. ne Mock firma un* L IJ. C A V A L ER APTS. 107 E ast H it GR 3-7811 S T U D Y N C O M R D RT O O >L#Q! 'LET-w ALX TO CLAES 2 br -A C-Cable TV- Maid L a jm iry. St Iv Room, Sw im m ing Pool Su m m er Rate* 5 -JA brr perron, bills paid R eserve N ow For Sum m er A Fall SINGLE stu d en t—sri thin w alkin g dis­ tance U T Private A C . park-like .TSst GR 7-7Y19 —■ setting JAS I "9 VV TANGLEWOOD NORTH dlshw ash -s, Luxurious on# and two bedroom apar* ments now ava'.able for sum m er end fail Music. Cable TV w* k- a closet*. 6 .' t>'o; sou la- room and oar wash. Re- tuoed sum m er rates Come bv ^ ar I ne pleasant v surprised at how little it o st# to I iv# in one of our beauti­ ful spur." e n s disposals. F M GL 9-0000 1030 East 48th VILLA FONTANA 1961 Sabine (Off Interregional near l a w School) SUMMER RAT tis B eautiful’^- furnished I bedroom arts A/C laundry. Available June L 4*' pool. cable T V carpeting M anager GR 2-1774 O N E BLOCK FROM LA W Furnished Room s Lost and Found BOYS 2024 Speedw ay. Girls Nueces A/C. kitchen, maid. $27 50- 21.9P $15 REW ARD — billfold lost, I Gym 11-12 a.rn. Monday Tliti Sum m er-tail reservations GR ham Gregory >ur- GR 2-3907. NO 3 0 5 w 20th. QUESTIONS ASKED 132 50 6 - M90 NEAR CAMPUS — women. Lare# cor- LOST — Briefcase, W aggener IGL. Re- tu m — U nion 200. No questions asked !v*r room kitchenette window fan patio. 2618 Speedw ay. GR 8-1039. BOY — private room. Near Law rival# entrance. Call GR 7- School. Pr W H Y NOT SPEND YOUR V A C A T ON Ii Quiet Lux ry Living a* EDEN ROC Corner W est 12th A Dim (M nfield) Mgr 1204-H Kim. GR 7-7<54 GL 4-.’653 I a I BR Apts f l I 5 to $1-49 50 or The LORRAIN 1401 Infield Reed GR 7-2538 j I i I BR A p h $120 to $170 A ID BILLS PAID FOOL Laundry — Bu# — Shopping Center CABLE TV ALSO NO W LEAS N S FOR FALL ACACIA FRATERNITY E xcellent Rooms tor Men SUMMER SESSION e 15 sem ester e Air Conditioned • Fully carpeted • Porter service 261-4 Rio Grand# GR 3-5118 GR 3-7295 Miscellaneous I GUITAR Instructions — for profession­ al. classical Flam enco Instructions m il Ron Hudson, an understudy of i Juan Serrano. GR 2-6407. 2 BLOCKS cam pus Clean com for­ table apartm ent Boys $62 month. U tilities paid. 2512 San A n to n y , STUDENT STA R rER PLAN R oom s for Rent BOYS—reserve your room now for the sess’on. A C , all bills paid long 3620 W ichita Typing THESES, dissertations briefs, ret sports. thony. IBM. Mrs Anthony m anuscripts, OL 4-3079 A m M R S . T yping. Mu I till thing. Binding typing serv­ A com plete professional ice tailored to the needs of Univer­ sity students Special keyboard equip­ ment of science, and engi­ neer ng theses and dissertations language Phone GR 2-321 o * GR 2-7677 2013 Guadalupe S C H O O L I CAROUSEL A CARTMENTS Large clean, q u ie t P erfect foe some- ! Luxurious on* d e sirin g q u iet place Inquire 3407 Sabina Inqul , _ GR 6-0655 • for women only Call todav fo r rn n a tio n or r- solvation for ta u or s u n - mer sem esters living at m oderate prices J f* r- $15.65 N igh ts — GL 2-4ASS Mrs. L ucille McClellan GR 6-1419 Special reus L a n r v apartm ents. 40* pool, 2 bedroom. 2 bath. cable TV', dally maid ferric*. sum m er for GR 7-4253 OC GR 8-1891 paid EFFICIENCY apartm ents. W ater gas air oondltloned — coup!# pre- .......— _____— ----------------------- {erred rib VV 24 V $65 GR 8-7966. GR LUXURY apartm ents Quiet. air. car- 2-0853 609 Patterson — A" C. 4 rooms. p*t pool $105 all bill* paid. 1910 GR 7 . 1 0 4 San Gabriel. Apt. IOU. U T MEN H ouses— Unfurnished (03 W H ITIS Su mnaer-Fal I Re* 'walk to carr,po#) LfMBfsrte'fli til onj§ Mr cond st Toned N icely furnished tm Its for 3 >r 4 men, upperclass meru M ad service, paxking Summer Rotas GL 3-3233 SOUTH ER-N E S S I bedroom luxury soartm en t I vacancy now *$99 50) Mao leasin g for sum m er i$S5) and fall say so i ^ • Southern plantation exterior • Japan#*# interior • M ountain lake port • Air conditioned • Amp1# storage A parking • W ater, gas. garbage paid 1)07 W 36th M anager A p l 104 GR 6-8305 or HO 5-9147 UNTVERSITY a m t 6 Couple o r 'y N o pets room house. 31 <3 VV IN­ | - « ur,rtTe Tutoring TUTORING In B iology Chem istry and math. Call G L 3-56 - Duplex — Furnished ATTRACTIVE brick spacious 2 ted- room-den. Central alr-heat. bullt-lns, brick specious storage, waisher furr.: shed. GR 7-8414. Room and Board A/C ROOM c lo sT T T ca m p u a for m.ale In tro d u c in g th# all new Student Start­ er Plan — ages 16 to 34 Inclusive — You m ay be eligib le for a $10 OO pol­ ler foe on’v $30 Annually. Semiannual P rem ium Increases at ages 2 EXCELLENT typ in g (four blocks west theses, re- Mrs. Bodour. 9(7 . ________________________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 21'* For further Inform ation con" J THEMES, REPORTS. Law No*es. 25c I page. Envelopes addressed. 99-1.000. 1 Notary Public. Mrs. Fraser. GR 6-1317 DIS! Reasonable ports. VV. 2 2 4 GR 8-8113 5 of cam pus' r ssertatlons 2 7 St 2 tact or call Reserv# L ift Insurance Co. 1939 Burnet Road Austin, Texas EXPERIENCED TYPING SERVICE. Accurate. R ^ so n a b le. near A', lan­ d a u HO 5-5813. Phon# GL 2-6474 ..N E W .. H ow to Cr rn pl et# Your Just Published king High College Education W hile M atin, Score* on Objective Tests. Send $1 to rest* R esearch Company. 1710 Deerfield, Austin. Texas THE IRONING BOARD 309 B W North Loop, vt*e ll do your Ironing for you. HO 5-7209 SOUTHERN MOVING St Storage Co SRADE-PO INT C O N S C IO U S ? bo are we S H E R R Y S T y p ^ g S e c v ’c a 1504 Oldham e P apers e Theses • B riefs • D issertations • R ash Service on Request GR 843573 GR 3-356S REASONABLE, fifteen years experi­ ence, Bobby# D elafield. H I 2-7184 Careful m oving is our business^ Free C A M p u s p r i n t i n g tbnat#a_ B usiness number GL S-4526. 20154 Gua(ialup« GR 8-1768 M ultlllthlng. Guadalupe >,««-— h re- p o r t? 'r e s u m e ‘ Reproductions o f charts ____________ and photographs. B ookbinding.__________ law briefs service airer a p m. *** ____ _________T T , F ° r m e T d& ^ ^ " $ w a s ^ t fe f *$M5 RENT A T.V. ho iii. Few va-an a availab le—falL : 1910 Rio Grande. GR 8-5043. 2-4067 If no answer GR 2-^692. PJT » o n th 7 CL TYPING on executive Centric by for- legal secretary. B B A, Secre­ tarial Studies Mrs. Fowler. GL 3-8650. mer W a n te d FUIbL .S n .L l1 4 bedroom house a * from Enfield Park ard sw im m ing REFORMS pool June-Sept, 1300 month. GR 2-2830 THESES. D issertations. GR 2-4T5. Mrs. Brady. 2507 Brid e Path. ROOMMATE LOCATORS. M ultiple I is t- $ 'jt pe-.'p# needing to share >n - :* > ne e x t-u s e s available. M oving a. unneceesary. H I 4 -^ 30. jR 3 .............. JI IO GR 6-00*3 you. COLONIAL MANOR 1211 W est 13th Two bedroom s acted carport, st raga. ,T « wa en-ca* na Id air conditioned laundry fartil- ST U D E N T S to adv - sa In th e Class!- W irt "hee;* « fled Ads u n ‘cr * » N ew se In th e C a ssl- Student *- * • J B 107 by 3 30 p m . ________ <969 MGB Red w ith black Wire wheels. Foccellent EJtceiieni $2195 firm . Call GR 6-3438 z n ------ TC. WAN T ED — room A *c furnished P r’.vH'e bath. gatm^a. near campus. GR 3-8713 after 6 p " ________ For Sale interior condition. GR 7-1696 ALDRIDGE TYPING SERVICE 304Ve East 3^th Street GR 6-936" Rat--# Come Rates Come and let us sell J _______________ GIRL this 8-8802 w. T e c h n i c s ! papers a specialty, Over 200 -la or car for 1966 CHEVROLET Impala 2-door hard- ex, ra tvxr.bol» on our IBM Executives gclence. engineering, rn a them, et Los language. Drafting, multllitthing, v -8 ^ automatic, air ^ P^vvp^ * ladles w t 1- ~ ,°P karat lo share apartment in Da' as diamond ring Appraised $36£ 0* ^ b summer. Marsha M au t, GR $225 Schatxman GR 8- 1.-a. OR 8-966, steering—$3,295. Also and binding, and sercxmg. -LE FONT* SUMMER AVAILABLE JUNE I Near stadium — 3073-14 Oldham H elp W a n te d Open tor men and wor~.ee A&tds $43 35 per person Lsur-xv Apart.ments1 Air conditioned 2 bed r>om*-2 baths, living room kttch- area u t.Aile* paid; maid service. Fort. land 2 bedroom A *C furttlabed apert m enu Specious rvra* a n i closets. Am­ ple off street parking. $1 0 } month, ga* and water furnished GR 8-4356 MATURE students who plan to return to hometown for summer are being considered for po# "••ns in their home­ town areas 3 months w ck can con­ tinue ai* or you r- turn to classes In September. ’59 PORSHE Convertible D Fair condition 1212 W 6th GR 7-2308 LONQ SESSION Supervisal for COEDS only N> w leaning SIS W 28th GR 3-6480 AIR cond! f in For 3-031" ------------------—— --------------------- - -a-.moderr very private two t ipartment is the thing for jatchenett# -#r lr form ation, call GR STRONG NATION AL CORI RATION q qOD CLJEAN car. cheap __________________________I Foe Appointm ent Call CL 3-8433 54 Pontiac w ith every thing 8325 Call GR 7-7960. CONTEMPORARY EFFICIENCY par studio beds cen t n t air wails glass wall itio, beamed ceiling, , p G ys." - - two- $*•’ f t one. 2511 Pearl GR 2-6238 after 5 p. rn GR 3-2294 Mg- Apt. 6 Build a business ti eeptlonaliy high ear: when you return to Organizational 'ir rr enc# helpful. F ease D raw er University _________________ ________________ 1963 MONZA CONVERTIBLE. Red 'A ire wheels interior. Radio. H eater. Great condition. Call ST U D E N T S ST U D E N T COUPLES w ith w hite : GR 9-9379 summer. Ex- , :s C ontinuing SEW ING m achine -tool this fall -------- -- ilk# new $25. 300 )'* . 34th. porn: Electric, portable GL 22-0049 WOODS TYPING and Duplicating Experienced. Reasonable Service. HO 5-1078. V * Typing, Mal till thing. Binding A complete professional typing serv­ ice tailored to the needs of Univer­ s e students Special keyboard equip­ ment for language, science and engi­ neering theses and dissertations Phcn* GR 2-3210 A GR 2--76T7 2,.'T3 Guadalupe N«w im ed ceiling hang; T e rra s ) floors paneled w alls, itcher.. large double closets reel parking Room for 3 or It Air cond H oned with yard inner ra fe $80 per month on fa and spring 34*8 AAP. W a J I show. C all or ; A. C son. 2009 Frost Natl S e n Antonio, Texas CA *ase NJ lo a th Ie ________ ii. urea Code 512. - PLAYMATES” i rtet.ng -# b«-dro<.-n: very private, mod- rtm ent E fficien cy kitchen air paneled wa: s. w aii-to- large c lo sets o ff-street drapen.es a1: til# bath. N ear Apartm ent. Gas. w ater raid - s t et $70 per m onth on 3 • ease Spring fa .I rates ISM per a j m onth lease 612 AAB A C i# # ten a n ts w ill sh ew To if w rite G A O lton 1009 diurnal Bank Bldg . S&n Anton- s CA 7-2231. Are* Code 512. r 'Qk* - VER RATES Hous# Ap*s rtrn*i n H bedrooms is paid *‘-»'r#et psrkirx .sundry facilities •tudy room GR 8-89: rial experi- r# early. after 6 p TYPING — sui kind* — carbon rib­ bon electric Legal experience neat. 1961 HEALEY 3 tot Mechanically^per- ac^ rat# cloM « rn peri Barbara Per­ __ fect Sliver blue R-H. wire wnee*#. asking $9150. Cali HI 4-21 S or Pax sen&lre. HO 5-7395. T ELE F UNK EN sten o console, $350 r ^ e f u n k e n m o n a u r a l consol, $125 Both v\u h AM, FM SW -turnM bie L R -f —OCMSO MARJORIE DELAFIELD T yping Ser­ vice 25c a pa ae. F ifteen year* ex­ re- dissertations, theses perience ; f c * * , R o ta ry H I 3-7008 **•______ ____________ Send C L A SS IFIE D A I S a t dent Ran s th# New. Stu- 61 STUDE after 6 p AKER- d P rofessional work in ail fields, includ- condition, mg m u ltlllth ln g and binding on theses w eekday* GR 3*7088. and dissertations. Virginia Calhoun Typing S erve* 14' K W A K I AXS Newfield. hrs Travis GR 1-7251 GR 6-985.2- S' e at 1301 Edgewood Sym bols Xeroa GR 8-3636 Nota 17.' tm estrr.ent s Life sharing «-.ber A ustin 21 yea) ,rv p e r ’ s c f sr 8 s e l l s r to plan Guarantee* ■ nv*»sime«t CI AL Nat risk 2134. Dov Box E veryone l a t e n PART-TIME ba a se to work SC A pply in pets. pm The Taver ITAFFCRD HOUSE Sum ner Rate# ’ Bedroom f m ooed carpeted through­ out »•# cond 'inned. $8 ? NJ Wat er­ go* pa:i GR 8-0964. CN EXPECTED VACANCY ■. nile hie r # 'T May 1st fnr *' ud: 'u s V ' or couple. $"5 per m onth—w ater 'ROOMY — QUIET — BLKB UT 7 € W est TO­ OP. 7-9333 .... -ept Wednesday St. 4-7 p*n luxury >rk‘r.g w om an w in share 2 with em -loved wom an $75 each t:' ■ ,-s paid. June I. GL - 5 30 p.m. apartm ent LOO KINO FOR INTERESTING SU M M ER E M PLO Y M EN T For cur booklet or what * available (N ational Parks NASA, e tc .! how to apply a n i ad- lo dress and cc liege a io n . w ith $1 • T he Oro lee C om pany, T h ree P a rk w a y Center, P itts b u rg h . P e n n sy lv a n ia 15221 to whom m ail name ;M IT COR.' John A standard typew riter rravis GR 6-9852. GR 53 OLDS. brake- radio Cheap GR 7-7964. Power steering power heater. R uns wail. 3 P l KUE cha - vin* roc..~n set. Sofa bed. fram e. •: to man. Cast Iron Good condition HO 5-8274 TELEFUIflKEN tape recorder with aU 6-3* t- ct* -n new condition $120. TYPING: IBM E x e c u t iv e ^ per J ' rn H e lp W a n te d M A T U R E U N IV E R S IT Y S T I * : E N I S ,-v ta w ork afternoons and w eekends whu# la school Posi- *«ior w ith erne t tonally disturbed ch-'.dren. Involves planning • out activity programs with sm all group*. Requires respon- re lability Beginning salary $ l.X per hour. Continues through lf desired. THE BROWN SCHOOL Mr. S ag#* GR 8-66o2 APPLY NOV, tin. Texas, for sum mer J GL 3-8492 a's in Aus- N SUMMER s Work am;.". ! 52 OOO pius a s tat 21. ’AA 6-2674. UCO dictating m achine com plete Ilk). transcribing equipment. w ith Cai! Pv- Schneider at GR 1-5151 • Ex salient condition, -15 - \ "j ;at o. -rhauiSd $425. GR 8-1 <56 YU PIA portable tvpewriter—mint— : l e u — faculty, graduates. GR 8-:.'.®l JUNIOR or Seni part-t.m e work pa1.' departm ent. Jew elers. 196 Eri or n:aie stu dent for ta electric shaver re- nigh w i960 Start now. Leu Hwy! er . it 7th, A pply la per- S8* ’ rr* HAJUD w o r k i n g *1 r ‘september April 29 3 p rn Save $900 bv SUMMER ’ LARGE national com iege man to work men! during summer sary Call Mr Pears* n at GR 6 -U ' tit y needs t order depa nub. v'ar neces- really be® ut lf u S u n b e a m Alpine convertible. . p 5 rn engine overturn te? "-'prior Reduced to $600 P*rs. X erox copies GR iv 24th Apt. B GR 64TT95 - ° re#- " " 8-5894 DUCATI SEBRING 5 p.m. ACCURATE typing. R easonable rates Call GR 8-2S39 or GL 3-1-75 after 1366 35C cs Ducat! Sebring bought hi ' E X PER T ti Februarj* Excellent condition. A yping Theses, dissertations. elite. Call Mrs. >fs. law briefs. IBM on e Must • over $525. Call BUL GR 8-2387 Come see th is beau- fast mot >rcyc e B e a t! B ryan t ______________ __________ _ r r > o CA _L S R 1 -5 2 4 4 H J R A CLASSIFIED AD _ _ ful machine. A J Ua s s ? a TYPING crsative writing public R a ­ tion*. GR 7-2531 or Cfi 5-3715 after 4 p m TYPING. Low rate*. Electric w riter Mrs Tullos. GL 3-5124. type­ EXPERT ports, briefs typing lefs M T^rm papers. Te­ rn. M ontgom ery. GR 2-5601. Legal briefs GR 6-5532 or if no answ er call CR 7-4933. PROFICIENT AND VERY EXPERIENCED TYPING SERVICE POR ALL FIELDS IBM E ectro m a tic — distin ctive accur at# typing and personalized service bi conscientious secretary. LEGAL BR IEFS Sem inar papers a specialty ;•? h trese« d isse rta tio n s, te rm p a­ ThurW ay, A p ril 28, 1966 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g * 4 S te e rs’ M itch ell and Adkins To Vie for G o lf M ed al H onors sep arated the next four t e a m places Arkansas finished sec­ ond with a 24*4*1712 record, with Texas, 24 18. and Rice, 23*4-18^ finishing third and fourth, TCL AND SM I’ tied for fifth with records of 19V 2212, while T exas Tech. 17*4*24*4. and Texas A&M. 14*4-27*4, occupied the last two slots. Tile individual champion will this weekend at be determ ined the 6,600-yard, 72 (36-36) par M orris Williams Course. F o u r rounds, two each day, will be played on a m edal basis, with the crown determ ined by scores. The 1965 winner, Randy Geisel- m an of Texas, is gone. but Steve LeCrone of Tech and Lee M o Dovve of Texas A&M, who tied for second in '65 with 289 totals— one stroke off G eiselm an’s 288 winning score — return as the favorites. However, if the final team standings are any indica­ tion, the 1966 m eet should be a “ down-to-the-last-stroke” contest. a THE LONGHORNS, with advantage, w i l l hom e-course junior Mason Adkins and send senior Eugene Mitchell the links to represent the Orange and to White. Adkins, who finished fifth last year, had a 4 1-2 singles m ark this spring and a 10-2-2 c a rc e r total. M itchell enters his third championship tourney, hav­ ing finished seventh In '64 and fourth last year. Champion Baylor enters f o u r linksters. Their only tourney vet eran is Bob Ricks, who finished seventh last y e a r .Jim G r a n t , 4-1-2, wrho helped lead the B ears to their second title In history, Rick Rogers, and David Smith the first tourney for the en ter tim e this spring. The second-place Razorbacks will send senior Mike H astings, and Junior Mike McCucheon. sophom ore David McCauley to the tourney. AU three a re new­ com ers to the individual cham ­ pionships. LE CRONE OF TECH and Mc­ the single Dowell of A&M a re entries respective their from schools. LeCrone is 3-4 for the Conference while McDowell fin­ ished with a 4-3 record. T hursday’s first round and F ri­ d ay 's third round tee-offs are at 8 a m. There Is no admission fee for spectators. F ifteen of the Southwest Con­ feren ce’s finest golfers will con v erge on Austin Thursday and F rid ay for I- dividual the SWC Golf C h am p io n sh ip at th'* Mer ids W illiam s course. The num ber of entries was at­ term ined by the finishes in the team ra c e . Baw »r w n ti ■■ SWC title with a TTI? rn .1 r k. team Only one-half point, however, Falcons to Open NFL Exhibitions NEW YORK — ■? — Tile new Atlanta Falcons will open the National Football League exhi­ bition schedule against Philadelphia In A tlanta Stadium Aug. I. season P e te Roselle, NFL commission­ er, said W ednesday five of the 37 pre-season gam es would be televised. Tile televised contest will pit the champion G reen B ay Pack ers against the College All-Stars Aug. 5 at Sol­ dier Field In Chicago. first nationally The other four televised gam es will be Chicago and Green Bay a t M ilwaukee, Aug. 12; Baltim ore at St. Louis, Aug. 19; Baltim ore at Cleveland, Aug. 26; and Min­ nesota a t D allas, Sept. 2. The re g u la r N FL season opens fh<» w eekend of S e p t IO U. The Greeks and the independ­ ents have been at it for a long tim e. The showdown between the two should m ake history—on the track at 4 p.m . at M emorial Stadium. factions Thursday The event Is the all-University tra c k meet which pits the win­ ners of four In tram u ral divisions against each other. Several divi­ sional all-year trophies will bp riding on the outcome of races, so close are the team battles. But the p rem ier fight looms between perennial kingpins Phi G am m a Delta of the F ratern ity Division and the Recruits of the Independent Division. IN WINNING the 440-yard re­ lay in division finals Tuesday, the Fijis reeled off a 44.1. The W A N T E D AC,(IIF J O K E S F O B E A R L Y F I ' H L I C A T l O J f donor will receive » free copy of completed publication. send to: „ . _ _ Adam* Ethridg* Fob. Os. P. t). Boo 434 Galveston. Tex*# — e y r - — e y n t r *«!•* M eet Dsv* Davidson, Senior H itory major from San Antonio. He is your For stu d en t Blomquiit-Ciark. W ith 3 y«o-» • potion ca, ho >* ready to i e r*o you. Com o by ond 1st D«vo help you is ls e t a p o rio n a ':ie d wardrobo. rsp rs is n ta n v * B10M QUISTCLARK S to p Shovin', Bu dd y Earl G a e r t n e r of C am pus G u i l d f e n d s o f f t a g o f Prather s C h a r l e s V e r h e y d e n in H o u s i n g s o f t b a ll f in a ls w o n b y P r f l t l i e r ; I M T r a c k B a t t le P o s s ib le Fijis, Recruits to Chase Records Thursday ★ R ecruits, easy victors, w ere clocked in 43.9 in their race. The IM record in 1965 by the Recruits. is 43.8, set Tile 880-yard relay m ark w as the Fiji in 1963 by 1:31.8, set entry. The 1966 version of the F ijis combined to tie that tim e in Tuesday action. But the R ecruits, running sm oothly with 40 to 50-yard leads over their opponents, flashed to a new record of 1:30.6. The only o ther record set In Tuesday divisional com petition w as turned in by R andy M ayer of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. M ayer ra n a steady ra c e and finished the 880-vard run in 2:04,6 The old m ark w as set in 1965 at 2 :05.3 by Delta Tau D elta’s H arvey H erd—who this y e a r’s top-flight field. third took in CHALLENGING MAYER in the finals will be another R ecruit, Guy Sawyer, who dipped under the previous low' with a 2:05.2 tim e, and N avy’* E d Polasek, who ran a 2:05.6. in All-University w inners w ere two field events determ ined Tuesday. Jam es AIsup of the R e­ cruits leaped 20 feet. 6’2 inches to top all contestants in the broad jum p. Bob Ibsen of Kappa Sigm a and Royal Co-Op s Mike Collins tied for second a t 20 feet, 6*4 inches. Ja m e s Whitlow of B eta T heta Pi w as fourth a t 20 feet, 5* i inches. In the softball throw. H arvey Sa ikon of Sigm a Alpha Mu heav ­ ed the ball 317 feet, 2 Inches to win the title. He w as follow'ed by E dw ard Esquivel of Phi G am m a 1912 Trackster Says New Methods Better NEW YORK — GB — R alph C raig, 1912 Olympic cham pion, isn ’t about to get hooked Into a futile arg u m en t over which a th ­ letes are best — m odem day or thase of his tim e. He takes both sides. “ T here’s no doubt, these kids a re bigger, stro n g er and tough­ e r ,’’ Craig said In an Interview. “COMPARE Jim T horpe's re c ­ ords with those of today and you say, heck, he w asn’t m uch.” But then, th e re ’s the other side. If Jim Thorpe or any of the 1912 athletes had the advantage of to­ d a y 's scientific knowhow in tra in ­ ing and diet, they could com pete successfully against the presen t Graustark Up For Stern Test LEXINGTON, Kv. — IF — The g re a t G rau stark , heavy favorite to win the K entucky D erby, gets his stern est te st in weight and distance T hursday in the $25,000 added Blue G rass Stakes a t Keeneland. G rau stark will c a rry D erby w eight of 126 pounds over a I 1/ 8- m ile — a furlong sh o rter th an the M ay 7 classic — against two oth­ e r Derby eligibles. generation. Craig said. “ I would venture to say Thorpe would be just as g re a t now as he w as th en ,” Craig said. “ Once In a while an athlete ap p ears th a t com bines everything." GRAIG, a U niversity of Michi­ gan tra c k sta r, thought he could have profited lf he had known 11'en w hat tra in e rs now know. In 1912 — T horpe’s y e a r a t the Olympics — Craig won the 100- and 200-m eter dashes with tim es of 10.8 and 21.7, respectively. Today’s sp rin ters have shaved the records to IO seconds flat and 20.3. “ ACTUALLY, the only way you can judge an ath lete is to com ­ p a re him with the com petition of hi* tim e,” C raig said. Now, 76 and re tire d from his Job as an ad m in istrato r in the New York S tate U nem ploym ent Insurance B ureau, C raig 's life­ tim e interest in sports has taken a new tw ist — photography and from photoprinting. He works his homes in Hague, N Y., and W aynesboro, Va. He is exhibiting 26 of his sports p rints at Olympic House in New York now. They are priced from $35-$100 with proceeds going to tile Olympic Committee. “ They gave m e a cam era at my retirement party'. It was what I w anted and certainly better than a gold-plated necktie,” Craig said. Long Distance and Transfer M O V IN G D S D M n m g ? H i l l ! Delta at 304 feet, l l inches. R ich­ ie Osborn of B rack en rid g e dorm w as third with a toss of 30! feet I inch, and Alpha Tau O m ega’s Dalton Walton took fourth a t 298 feet, 4 inches. m w Statistics rn l l f t - y o r d F r a t e r n i t y D i v i s i o n I. S t o v e lo w h u r d le * — HacK*‘rm an . SX, 14.0. 2 K en Rob­ e rts o n , A cacia, L on G riffith , 3. PIH A ; 4 Sam W att*. L am b d a Chi A lpha. 440-yard relay — I P hi Gamma D elta, 44 I: 2 D elta T a u D e lta ; 3. B ota T h e ta P i. 4. K a p p a Alpha. 880-vard run — I R a n d y M ayer. SAK, 2:04.6 (N ew re c o rd ; old re co rd 2:05.3 bv H arvey H eed. P e lla T au D elta 1965); 2. Andy W hite, Phi G am m a D e lta : 3 H a rv ey H erd, D elta T a u D e lta ; 4. J o h n H ow ell. T h e ta XI. 100-yard dash — I. Robert Paddock. P h i G am m a D elta, 9 9 Ju liu s B e l f i e l d , P h i G am m a D e lta ; 3. D. S tu a r t G odw in. K S; 4. C a rro ll Bar* bour, D e lta T a u D elta. 2 RSO-yard relay — I. P h i Gamma D oha. 1:31.8: 2. D elta T a u D e lta ; 3. SA E ; 4. L am b d a Chi Alpha. Broad Jump — I B ob Ibsen. KS, 20-6,4; 2. Jam es W h itlo w B e ta T h e ta P l. 2 0 -54; 3 G eorge B oyd KS. 20-5; 4. Dennis S tbery. SAE. 20-21 Softball throw — I. H arvey Sal ken, SAM. 317-2: 2. Edward Esquivel, Phi Gamma Delta. 304-10 : 3. D alton W al­ ton ATO. 298-4; 4. Mark Hart, KS, 295 l l. Independent D ivision 120-yard low hardies — I. John F isher, R e cru its 14 0: 2 D oug H u d ­ dle, In d ep en d en t u n a tta c h e d . 3. Tom Well*. W. K H a ll: 4 R obert Jo h n ­ son. In d e p en d e n t u n a tta c h e d 440 yard rrlnv — I Rt>cruits 43 9; 2 W olverines: 3 V ik in g s: 4. T ro ja n s. 380-yard m n - - J G uy S aw yer. Re­ c ru its 2 05 2 - 2 D avid AngMl Re­ c ru its ; 3 W illia m H odge W olver* ln es: 4 L a rry R odgers. R. E. Lee. 100-yard dash — I D a n K ubln. Re­ c ru its, 10 1: 2. B illy K a rrh . R e c ru its: 3. K en R o b erts, V ik in g s; 4 K evin S m ith , T ro ja n s old 880-yard re la y — I R e c ru its 1 30 8 I 31 8 by (N ew reco rd Phi G am m a D e lta In 1963) 2. W ol­ v e rin e s; 3. C actus T e rra c e : 4 Tro­ jan s. re co rd Broad inmp — I .Tames A lsup Re­ c ru its. 20-61 a; 2 P a u l M ille tt, Re­ c ru its, 19-3N : 3. T im Ja h n k e . Brun­ e tte 1R-5N; 4. J o h n W ells, W . K. H all. 17-7% Club D ivision 120-yard low hun! lea -— I. W alter G ilm ore, N avy. R o b e rt S hanks N av y ; 3 F re d E dney. M ots; 4. Jop H ooten Meta 13.9; 2. 440-yard relay — I. Army, 46 1 J. 880 yard K a w ; 3 M eta; 4 A ir F o rce run I. E d P olasek. K a w . 2:05 6: 2 P re s to n H u n t Army; 3 R o b ert N eves, A P O ; 4 G reg Cho- ban. Arm y. 100-yard dash — I. John P eschler. Met*, 10 6 2. O rville Harris. Army; 3 Ken Davis, N avy; 4. Larry W of­ ford Army. 880-yard relay — I Meta, 1:38 5; 2 N a v y 3 Army; 4, APO. Broad Jump - I. Robert Shanks. N avy. 2 0 -4 : 2 Robert R attan, Navy, 19-1%; 3. Steve Jackson. Armv. 17- 5 4 ; 4 Tom m e Atchlnson, APO, no distance given, Softball throw — I Richard Reass. N avv 280-3 ; 2. Alan Werb. Navy. 278 5: 3 Fred lecheries. D elta Sigm a Pl. 275-9; 4. Greg Lungstrum , no dis­ tance given H ousing D ivision 120-yard low hurdle-* — 1 Leslla Se aer, Prather, 14 1; 2 Paul D oug­ lass Campus Guild; 3. Mark Swope. R oyal; 4. Charles V erheyden. Pra­ ther 440-vard relay — I. Moore H ill, 46 8 2. Campus G uild; 3. R oyal; 4. Prather. 88o-vard run — I. Norm an Kone- man, B rackenridge 2:11.7: 2 Michael Ragsdale, Prather; 3. B ill H alstead, Campus Guild; 4. Richard Grimmer Campus Guild 100-yard dank — I. Nick Holzschuh, Campus Guild, l l 0; 2. Greg Murray. B rackenridge; Richard W®**- Moor* H ill; 4. K evin Conners. P ra­ ther, 880-yard relay — I Moore H ill. I 39.1; 2. Campus G uild; 3. Prather; 4. Brackenridge. 3. _ Broad 2 0 -6 4 ; lam p — I. Mike Collins Royal. 2. Richie Osborn. Brackenridge, 20-%: 3. Sam M illsap. Brackenridge. 19-5: 4. W illiam Buch- holtz Ramshorn. 18-64 Softball throw — I. Richie Osborn, Brackenridge. 304-1; 2. Jerry Dike. Moore H ill. 266-11; 3. Robert Penska Roval 266-8: 4 B ill H alstead, Cam­ pus Guild. 263-3. OPEN THURSDAY NIGHT UNTIL P.M. A new rugged Surfer® Trunk and Parka from C a ta lin a in 100% co tto n corduroy. A u th e n ­ tic Surfer stripes and laces on trunk and top. “ W a v e Lacer" Trunk, $6.00, "Wave" Parka, $9.00. "Pions*!? In N stjon -W ids Moving Ssrvic*- CRATING— PACKING— SHIPPING— STORAGE Fireproof Bonded Warehouse— Household G ood s and / THINK I'M READY TO CUT A TAPE WITH.. Merchandise Storage s t o r a g e c o . TRANSFER AND phone EV 5-0470 foe your car custom tapes for your stereo TTI U T R - A S T A T E D IS ! Kl Bl TING CO 0 I ( l l I D - 28D RIO G R A N D E , RM 106 AUSTIN, T E X . G R 6 -2 2 5 7 617 CONGRESS AVE. Arthur R. (A rt) Tlsmann— O w n .r N ight Phono* 813 Airport ' H O 5-6916 - W A 6-1511 UT Hosts 5 Entries In SWC Tennis Finals p;'M a 5-1 ref' to A&M s R J as ■>rd, lnsm;: only and B a rk e r 6-1, The Aggies look like ti e strong­ est pair. R Ja s and B ark er had a 3-1 record this season, but as the SWC fhev won sophom ores doubles 1964. Rojas in team ed with Dear. D yer to fin­ ish as runnerup In 1965. title Both of R ice's team s will also in contention. Turville and be Pickens ended with a 2 I m ark the th eir only I^aHorde, hands of Gorski and Pickens played on the ch am ­ pionship doubles team with P ark ­ e r in 1965. loss coming at Seewagen and Travis the other team , finished 3-0, playing Owl n um ber two doubles. RH E, \&M. and possibly Tex­ as wu I dom inate this y e a r's h B a y lo rs Ja c k Griffin, mate 3 Dub M 'liaise, and TCI’ s Tech v Roach m a y provide som e Kent »T’ f isn t round upsets, but IU JI likely, although G riffin did too i t Nelson during th e season. defe < * v ir s m eet saw Gorski I ^ ingles and G ot-kl and La­ in s ie in d ables win th e ir first Bort n unds But both w ere defeated on it the second day. peaking about the p ast sea­ son Allison said. “ We did very th ere would be well. I third and Pm glad a fig! * vv.- won it We ll be in the thick of the fight next y e a r.” thought for 6-0, 6-3 Over SMU Owls Cop Make-Up To Take Net Title Tile Rice Owl netter* captured the 1966 Southwest Conference tennis title W ednesday by win­ ning s m ake-up doubles m atch over hapless Southern M ethodist at Penick Courts. It w as rn* re of a “ just for the fo rm ality” affair as R ice scored an easy victory. The m atch was part of a la st week tilt at Dal­ las. which saw the Owls win the singles and one of the double* the rain s m atches. Then cam e w’hieh forced cancellation of the final doubles m atch, with Rice leading 5-0. Since the Aggies w ere looming in second place with a 30-6 re c ­ ord and the Owls w ere in first with a 30 5 , the lone point rid ­ on W ednesday m ake-up ing to d eterm in e m atch was the cham pion. An upset victory by the Ponies would have given the Aggies a c h in k of the title, and allotted them an e x tra en try in tourney, slated die SWC for at P enick C ourts. tennis this w eekend Tile upset nev er m aterialized , how ever, as was expected, since the Ponies have only scored one In Conference point all season play and finished with a 1-35 m ark . Tile Owl team of Butch See­ w agen and Ed T urville downed M ustangs Dave F e a rfu lle r and H arvey Davis. 6-0. 6-3. The cham pionship cam e on a volley slam by T urville which w as the Ponies to handle. too hot for y — awn 'J u * 1— *“ "if n “ 1 * 1 “ *■ * 1 * 11 * M i n i G A N I 8 H IR T M A K E R S Bv D WI D WI ESSLER Texan Sjvorts l 4liUir After finishing a sir ng third In the Southwest Conference race, T exas sends two singles players nm! a doubles tra m to the SWC tennis meet to lie held at Penh k Courts from Thursday to S atu r­ day. Juniors David Nelson and LM the Longhorns G orski will he individual tile for com peting crown, and Gorski and Loo 1-a- Horde will represent the 1 "niver- sity in the doubles. WILMER \IU S O N , T e x a s coach and m eet directo r said, “ Gorski, Nelson, and Hie doubles all have a rh a n re for the ch am ­ pionship. think anyone can be ra tM a fav o rite.” I don't for the S teers during Gorski, who played num ber one the season, finished with a 5 I record for the SWC season. Nelson af numl>er two endM with a 4 2 m ark. The Longhorns’ toughest com ­ petition will com e from the co n ­ tingents sent by cham pion R ice and runner-up Texas A&M The Owls defeated A&M 5-1 Monday to take tile title. its two doubles RICE by virtue of first place finish, sends four singles and team s. All of them , with the exception of Chip T ravis, have a good chance to win. T ravis finished with a p e r­ fect 6-0 record, but he generally played num ber four against the w eaker opponents. R ice's top two players. B utch Seewagen and John Pickens, had 4-2 and 5-1 records. Of the com ­ bined three losses, two cam e at the hands of T exas — Seewagen to Gorski and Pickens 7-5, 6-4 6-3. 6-4 to Nelson. To show how tough Rice really Is, Its third m an, E d Turville. w as 1965 singles runner-up to his te a m m a te Jim P a rk e r, who has grad u ated . T urville w as 5-1 this y ear. TH E AGGIE THREATS a re R ichard B arker, 5-1 a t nu m b er one. and Luis R ojas. 6 0 at num ­ ber the only person to d efeat G orski this s e a ­ son. two. B ark er w as R ojas Is the only netm an b e ­ sides T rav is who went undefeated in SWC play. Four first-round singles will b e played a t 9 a.m . T hursday, and four more will s ta rt a t l l a.m . Pairings for the first d ay will not be announced until T h u rs­ day morning. QUARTER-FINALS In singles will begin a t 2 p.m . T hursday. Semi-finals will be held F rid a y morning and the cham pionships on Saturday morning. E ight doubles team s will play the first-round at 4 p.m . T h u rs­ final day. Semi-finals and will be played F rid ay and S a tu r­ d ay afternoon. the The Longhorns a re in about the sam e position in doubles. Gorski and L aBorde are one of the few team s th at have played together in all conference m eets. in the league THE STEER PAIR has com- ■ ■ - : : Gant with Paisley Y ou are assured of a fine fit from the largest selection of G ant solids and stripes in Texas. N ow here can you choose from a finer stock of traditionally correct Paisley tics. G ant shirts from 6.50 Paisley lie s 4.00 Standings B t THE ASSOCIATED FR KSS Cleveland B altim ore Chicago D etroit California M innesota Boston W ashington K ansas City N ew York P ittsburgh xA tlanta San F rancisco xL os A ngeles P hiladelphia xSt Louis xH ouston N ew York Cincinnati Chicago a n < W I. Pet 0 9 I 9 3 8 4 9 5 6 6 4 9 3 9 3 8 2 l l 2 1.000 .900 .750 .692 .545 .400 .25*1 .250 .201 .154 H 4 2 4 J # < 4 7 4 9 VV I. P ct. 4 9 9 5 6 9 6 8 5 6 6 6 8 6 6 4 8 3 9 3 GB .692 — .643 .OX) .571 .545 .500 .429 .400 273 250 4 I 1 4 2 2 4 3 4 5 5 4 x—Late game not included Cr— . 1 N ational League G f q c k . C o / m j if r d U . tHntoeriSttp £i>f)op (rant* are exclusively ours on the Drag. Who is your Ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speed computer for a live, llesh-and-blood answer to this question. Your ideal date - such a person exists, of course. But how to get acquainted? Our Central Control computer processes 10,000 names an hour. How long would it take you to meet and form an opinion of that many people? You will be matched with five ideally suited persons of the opposite sex, right in your own locale (or la any area of the U.S. you specify). Simply, send $3.00 to Central Control for your questionnaire. Each of the five wilt bs as perfectly matched with you in interests, outlook and background as computer science makes possible. Central Control is nationwide, but its programs ars completely localized. Hundreds of thousands of vigorous and alert subscribers, ail sharing the desire to moot their ideal dates, have found computer dating to bo exciting md highly acceptable. All five of your ideal dates will be doligjitfttL Ss tory and send yoor $3 DQ for your questionnaire. CENTRAL CONTROL, Inc 22 Park Avenue • Oklahoma City, ttfah— l Thursday, April 28, 1946 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag* I Documentary Movie Plays This Weekend “ China,” the only m ajo r film by an A m erican or B ritish pro­ d u cer since the Com m unist revo­ lution, will re tu rn to the cam pus F rid a y through Sunday. The docum entary, photographed by Sir Felix G reene, w as film ed u n d er the auspices of the B ritish B roadcasting C om pany and the in China, C om m unist w hile traveled th e throughout China. reg im e author T raveling over 15.000 m iles by plane, jeep, and e v e n cam el, G reene toured the coun- tra in , Houston Symphony W ill Play on KLRN and The Houston Symphony w i l l play S chum an's “ The Song of O rpheus" Tchaikovsky!! “ V ariations on a Rococo T hem e," 8 p.m . F rid ay , on Channel 9, KLRN-TV. With the Houston Sym phony will be guest artist cellist Leonard Rose. his com piling try , film ing Its people and th# story of their day to day lives. In itinerary’, G reene lived with peasant fam i­ lies. visited factory w orkers, and stay ed in the over-crowded dor­ m itories of C h in a s universities, form ing an intim ate relationship with the country’. A fter four m onths, G reene re­ tu rn ed with 12 hours of uncen­ sored film. The historically im ­ p o rtan t film represents the most com plete coverage of life in China th a t is available anyw here in the w e s t “ C hina" received the coveted aw ard of m erit a t the 1965 Edin­ burgh International Film F esti­ val. Brought back to the U niversity by the "A m ericans for R eapprai­ sal of F a r E astern Policy," the film will be shown In B atts Audi­ torium at 4, 6, and 8 p.m . There will be an adm ission charge of 50 cents. TODAY ONLY! Presents O N THE STAGE (j f e N e w t o n a n d ' ON TH E SC R EEN j Ho . Ac Trowel -"4 “ ♦* to 4 . . J, P o s se ss I*! W"*** A Texan Review Texas Barrelhouse Piano By TARY OWENS The roadhouses of the sporting districts in Houston, Galveston, and Richmond, and Fort B e n d County are Hosed. The b a rre ls of bootleg, the dice, and the wom ­ en a re gone. But we still have the piano and the voice of Rob­ e rt Shaw-. R obert Shaw owns a b arbecue and grocery business in Austin. The President has been one of In 1962 he w as his custom ers. selected as T exas' Most O utstand­ ing Negro Businessm an. But betw een the early Twen­ ties and 1937 he w as a b a rre l­ house pianist. Shaw w’as born in 1908 in Stafford, Texas, south of Houston. While in his teens he began to play the piano. MACK MC CORMICK, In his to S h a w s first excellent notes album , “ T e x a s B arrelhouse P ian o ." on A lm anac label, w rote, “ He restlessly joined the itin e r­ an t group th at played hot piano in the wide open Brazos B ottom s towns of Sugarland and R ich­ mond, along W est D allas S treet In H ouston's Fourth W ard, and In the whore houses of G alves­ ton’* P o st Office S treet d istrict . . . and grad u ally rose to full m em bership in a pack of pianists who cam e to be known loosely as The Santa F e G roup." Shaw la te r left Houston, fol­ lowed the oil boom s through E a st Texas, and then went to K ansas City. By 1932 he had a radio p rogram in O klahom a City. He cam e to Austin in 1937 and “ a fte r ten years of playing piano for a living, he decided barbecuing would provide a sim pler life. He opened an in E a s t ice house Austin, held dances, and played the piano to en tertain the cus­ tom ers. After a few y ears he graduated to a sm all grocery sto re with a piano and a domino gam e set up in the back room. Then he built his p resent store, Auction Preview Set for Tuesday M ore than 400 pieces of sculp­ tu re, paintings, and prints will be from preview ed T uesday IO a.m . to 4 p.m . in the Texas Union Main Ballroom , rep resen t­ ing the best w ork of U niversity art students. This a rt w’ork will be featured at the annual U niversity a rt auc­ tion May 6 on the front te rra c e of the Main Building. It is spon­ sored by the Art Students’ As­ sociation. R obert L. Levers, J r., assist­ an t professor of a rt and faculty adviser of the ASA, said the stu ­ dent production represents “ the highest quality of work w e’ve ev er had for sa le ." but with It, the piano moved Into his house w here he continued playing, but now only for his own pleasure. “ AS A RESULT of this unusual re tire m e n t,” McCormick w rites, “ he’s been under no pressure to learn or ad ap t him self to more m odern m usic, and by staying in practice, Shaw has preserved in­ tact the b arrelhouse repertoire, as it w as 30 or 40 y ears ago when these pieces w ere the common p roperty of hundreds of pianists who grew up in Houston and ad ­ joining Galveston and F o r t Bend Counties.” The m usic Shaw and his con­ tem p o raries made was a hard, fast, and often bawdy version of the blues known to its admirers as “ Fast Western.” Years later Pinetop Smith popularized this Texas style and gave it a new nam e with his famous “Pinetop Boogie-woogie Boogie-Woogie." spread the country and had a la rg e Influence on jazz, rhythm and blues, and later rock and roll. throughout R obert Shaw Is the last living exponent of the old Texas b a rre l­ house style and for this reason perhaps the g re a te st significance is as a historic of his album docum ent recreatin g a lost e ra that w as the de­ im portant velopm ent of America's o n l y home-grown a rt form . to Start* TODAY! Door* O pen 1:30 P.M. New Harp Ensemble To Play Tonight The newly-formed University H arp Ensem ble will perform at 8:15 p.m . Thursday in Recital Hall. The concert program will in­ clude the “ French Suite No. 6 by B ach, followed by “ Melody" by R obert Schumann. Two selec­ tions by Carlos Salzedo, “ Night B reeze" and “ Florentine Music B ox," will be perform ed by the ensem ble. Also included in the program a re M aurice R avel’s "Prelude and Salzedo’s “ Quietude," fol­ lowed by the ensem ble s perform ­ ance of Salzedo's “ Behind the B arrack s" and “ Triptic Dance “ Menuet bv P ierre Beauchant. A - i f k . . d ’ A m ore" by M assenet and "Se- guidilla" bv Salzedo will be fol­ lowed by tho concluding piece, three dances bv Salzedo: Chan­ son Dan La N uit," “ T a n g o , * and “ R um ba." The H arp Ensem ble Is under the ensem ble the direction of Gayle Horn E bert, Instructor in harp in the D epartm ent of Music. M em bers of include Sail.a M. B aker, Gail A. B ayler, C laire D. Brooks, Carolyn A. Caruth, Susan Ericson. Kaylvnn E l o y d, Alaire H. LowTy, and Judith O. Taylor. The recital is p a rt of the De­ partm ent of Music Student Re­ cital Series. BUT TO MEW Shaw’s record as only an historical curiosity Is to slight its quality. Shaw is one of the best in the blues idiom both as a singer and a m usician. His playing is at once mournful and exuberant with a subtle touch of hum or and his singing has (he sam e qualities. His version of Joe Pullum 's “ Black G al" is a m asterpiece of the moaning blues usually asso­ ciated with fem ale singers while “ H ere I Come With My D irty, D irty, Duckins On" is a rom p­ ing, jum p piece. M cCorm ick’s well researched notes a re presented with an orig­ inality which brings a w elcom e I change to the usual unim agina- 1 tive b lath er th a t takes up space on most record jackets. The best w ay to listen to this record is to follow R obert Shaw’s advice, “ When you listen to w hat I ’m playing, you got to see in them gals cut your m ind all th e re swinging their butts and getting the m en excited. O ther­ this m usic w ise you a in 't got I could sit rightly understood. th ere and throw m y hands down and m ake them gals do anything. I told them when to shake it end when It back. T h at's w hat this m usic Is fo r.” to hold • • • • • • • • • • • Bryan's Blokes • TONIGHT! J 8 P.M.-MIDNIGHT « PIRATES C O V E # © 1605 East Ave. A .K .A . Prod & S .W , Concert* Present— I Performance 0 nff_ T H E IN C R E D IB L E C A R L O S M O N T O Y A THURS., APRIL 28— 1 11 PM . Municipal Auditorium T I C K RTS NOW ON SA LE 83 75. 82.75. 82 25 SOC Dlteount to Student* on (ll Tick#*#. Mall & Phan# Ordwt Acetated: IGNACE MEN S WEAR 2270 GntdtluM • GR 7 0062 Ma!.* Chock* Ptyab!# to Southwest Concert*, loc. Record Shop 610 Brazos CAS Sot Goods 2120 Guadalupe BLOMQUIST CLARK 617 Contra* S tu d e n t U n io n — I nly , r f T o m TONIGHT! Doc Watson IN PERSON The lith Door lith and Red River G R 7-0602 Of th o fllm e F e llin i h a . m n d o o v e r th o Isn t d e c a d o . th lo new on* lo p ro b a b le bi# m o st I n t r i g u i n g ’. ' 1 J o h n D u stin . A u stin A m eriran -* !ta< esm an F E L L I N I ’S UUET ■OF THE MIRUS . B E S T 3rd A N D FIN AL W EEK! TEOVBCOLM*' D o n * Vt Im i t : FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR! AWARD: Open 2 19 F o n t.: 2-35-4 56 7:15-9:40 Hi eh It R e c o m m e n d e d F o r M a tu re A ud ien ce* ■Ira*:" THERE S NOTHING ACCIDENTAL ABOUT QUALITY.' SW INGERS CLUB 831 Houston St. H O 5-8070 PRESENTS T U E .-W E D .-THURS. The Fabulous CHEVELLES F R I.-SA T . 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D a ily A C A D E M Y A W A R D S BEST PH T I RF e t th e T F AB J U LIE S D O N E IT A G A IN ! . . . Captured the Hearts of Al! Austinites! H E L D O V E R 19th A N D F IN A L W EEK ! r n ’ M v S iC ^-**335-HAM* JULIE ANDREWS lOHSSTOWLR PLUMMER i rjr^-A \ -J - r COLOR DELUXE ■■ EXCL1 SIV * ROAD SHOW e n g a g e m e n t PASS LIST SI U P E N D E D M A TIN EES! W ed.. Sat. and Sunday Only — 2:00 P M . th ru EV I S IN G S : M onday S a tu rd a y 8.15 P.M . S unday Evening 7:30 P M , EVI NINOS R E SE R V E D M A TIN EES I N R E SE R V E D i n f e r r e d Seat* Now on Sale Buy T ickets in A dvance PR IC E S TODAY l o w e r 7 00 I L i V n n r I T S FREE PARKING A D J A C E N T T O T H E A T R E AUSTIN . 5 0 .3 I OO I J. VI I K ES I 6 :15-8 : OO 9 45 ADI I I n M I M C H I L D HELD OVER! 2nd BiG WEEK! ACADEMY AWARD VI WINNER LEE MARVIN Best Actor of the Year THAT WHOOP-IT-UP FUNNY WESTERN! FU N FOR ALL! O .i B A L L I l 0 | .................................... M i FREE PARKING AT ALL TIMES Thursday, April 28, 1966 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 rn W o r t h a co o l Utile gown with beautiful Swiss e m b ro id e ry on yoke and the bell shaped sleeves and iace tatting on the neckline, hemline and sleeves. O t Zantre! rayon and cotton, in white, buttercup and paie blue. S m a u m edium a pd large. Critics Reiterate U S Blame' SA Interviews Still in Progress For I9 6 5 Dominican Crisis Friday Deadline By KATHY STEPHENSON The revolt in the Dominican in April of 196r; was Republic robbed of a bloodless victory b e­ cause the United States mistaken­ ly assum ed the revolution was Communist-led, Theodore Dra­ per, a critic of US policy in the Dominican Republic, said Wed­ nesday night. changed Draper, who studied the an’e- cedents of the revolution f r o m Dominican soil, said the revolu­ tion was nearly completed with little bloodshed. He said very revolutionists their minds and attacked the National Palace at 4:30 p.m. on April 23 due to actions by Unite! .Hates personnel in Santo Domingo. A cable from the ach;, acad of the US Em bassy in the Dom­ inican Republic, Draper s a i d , stated that the revolt was anti- American and had “Communist advocacy.” ••In Santo Domingo, US of­ ficials were concerned,” Draper said. “They urged the Domini­ can Republic m ilitary to get in there and fight, then ordered the in United States forces to get there and do the job the Domini­ can military was unable to do.” Draper said the Communist role in the revolution was in fact negligent. The American people have been prejudiced by the i d e a t h a t Americans troops in the Domini­ can Republic stopped a Red up­ the other rising, hp said. On t h a t hand, Dominicans claim Arrowsmith Reads Part of 'The Birds’ Dr William Arrowsmith, pro­ fessor of arts and letters, told one of the largest gatherings for a sandwich seminar Wednesday noon in the Junior Ballroom that he “would rather read than talk.” t e a c h e s T ie professor, who classics, gave a dram atic read­ ing from his translation of the second half of “ The Birds,” a play by Aristophanes. The greek comedy is the story of the “attempts of two men to life of peace and quiet find a in the countryside.” The play tells of the birds building a new city and taking the place of the Creek gods. American intervention only kept tile Constitutional Party f r o m succeeding the uprising, he said. in “ Many think anything g o e s against Communists. They are wrong. It can only turn a n t i- communism into a mockery." Draper, a member of an ob­ servation team sent to the Do­ minican Republic in 1965 by the Commission on Free Elections in the Dominican Republic, spoke over public address systems to 40 US campuses via telephone hookup from New York. Another Commission member, Allard Lowenstein, lawyer, said the United States should s e n d observers to the Dominican Re­ public to stay until after the free elections June I to indicate this country’s support of the outcome. Richard Shull, professor of Christian social ethics at Prince­ ton Theological Seminary, s a i d US officials are optimistic re­ the coming elections, garding while the people of the Domini­ can Republic are not. Domini­ cans blame the United States for stopping a revolution that would have succeeded, Shull said, and must be convinced of our good intentions regarding the coming election. s a i d Bayard Rustin, director of th® A. Philip Randolph Institute and organizer of the 1963 m arch on Washington, observers should be sent to the Dominican Republic during the election “ as symbols of the fact that it's not all Americans who will p u s h people around because we have bigger clubs and guns than they do.” Rustin said there should be college students there, urging ail Spanish-speaking college students to go. Any student interested in going to the Dominican Republic should contact Dr. Warren Dean, assistant professor of history at the University, in Garrison Hall 410. Set by D ru m m o n d Interviews will continue through . for chairmanships and Friday places on various Student Assent- j Ply, Texas Union, and Model j United Nations committees. Approximately one hundred stu­ interviewed for the dents have 20 chairmanships and cochair-1 manshlps of Student Association committees for next year. Clif Drummond, Students’ Association president, will conduct interviews for the places from 1-5 p.m. In Union Building 322 through F ri­ day. Included are fellows, public the Round-Up. rela­ Visiting tions, Challenge, Cultural E nter­ tainm ent, re ­ treat, human relations, and Cam­ pus Chest committees. interdisciplinary Other positions that are open Include a solicitor general, a School of Communication assem blv seat, places on the student1 living and accommodations com­ m ittee, Health Center advisory Committee, and the parking and! safety committee. Students selected In these inter­ views must be approved by the Student Assembly in one of the two remaining Assembly m eet­ ings. Cultural Entertainm ent Com­ m ittee interviews for 1966-67 can be scheduled at the second floor information desk in the Union. Qualification for membership Is Interest in and general knowledge of the performing arts. Applications for nine positions ( on next y ear’s Model United Na­ tions are being accepted In Un- I ion 342. These openings are Interna- , tional Program Chairman, Legal Advisor, Credentials and Com- j munications Director, President of the Security Council, Under­ secretary General, Treasurer, , Publicity Chairman, and Housing Director. Europeans A p p re c ia te Texas Tourists M o re “ There is another breed of tourist in Europe now — otiier j Europeans — and the American is lost in the crowd. “ American tourists were once criticized severely, but they are beginning to look better to Euro­ peans now. They are a lot more willing to be exploited financially than European tourists.” Europe is becoming more and m ore like America. Fletcher said. The only significant difference is that Europe is much more for­ mal. MEN IN EUROPE take their hats off when speaking to a lady, and it is considered rude to go to a person s home without an invi­ tation. “ It would be wrong to knock on some European’s door and say ‘John Doe told me to look you up while I wTas here,’ ” Fletcher said. In Paris, he said. if one arrives late at the opera, he will not be seated until the first act is over. Also, in Italy, in such churches as the Basilica of St. Mark, men wearing shorts will not be ad­ mitted, nor will ladies wearing shorts or sleeveless or short - sleeved blouses or dresses. Fletcher pointed oat that, tn western Europe, the traveler will be able to get along lf he speaks only English, and In other sec­ tions, he can communicate with sign language. Public Relations Group Will Hear Covington George Covington, president of the Student Public Relations So­ ciety, will speak at the Texas Public Relations Society’s semi­ annual state convention at Lake­ way Inn Friday. About 15 Uni­ versity public relations student? will attend. "aeTTee. t h a w iCN/AcKwvs-er «. S A u e n x f c * u t / '1 Being a Texan is an asset to touring Europe, _;e American ti Willard Fletcher, associate pro­ fessor of history, said Wednesday night. In an orientation session for the University students who will tra ­ vel to Europe this summer, Flet­ that Texas probably cher said than attracts Europeans more any other American state. “ EVERYBODY IN E u r o p e knows something about Texas. Texas means something of adven­ ture and vastness — tile frontier of the West.” When an architect from Austin went to Norway, he decided to hunt a polar bear. The Norwe­ gians were alarm ed about this, Fletcher said, until the hunter told them he was a Texan. The American does not have to worry anymore about being an am bassador of good will when he is traveling in Europe, F let­ cher noted. 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