Weather: Warm, Clearing • High 80 • Low 58 T h e D a il y T e x a n Fire Hazards Examined, See Page 8 • Vol. 66 Price Five C ents Student Newspaper cit The & w ** o *1 >P O AUSTIN, TEXAS. WEDNESD/ M # £ t 1 to & Texas /, 1967 Eight Pages Today No. 103 Opinion Voids Loyalty Oath By ANN PASHKOFF Untie News Editor The University abolished Tuesday tho requirement that students sign the State loyalty oath. The action was taken after Atty. Gen. Crawford Martin issued his formal opinion that the statute under which tho oath had been administered does not apply to stu­ dents. Frank Erwin, chairman of the Board of Regents, and Chancellor Harry Ransom issued a joint statement saying “effective immediately, no student applying for ad­ mission to any institution in The Univer­ sity of Texas System will be required to execute the loyalty oath.” The opinion, addressed to Erwin, stated, “you are hereby advised that it Is our . students applying for opinion that . admission to state-supported colleges and universities are not required to execute the loyalty oath.” . The action leading to abandonment of the oath requirement came about after Everett Gilmore, a part-time teacher at El Centro College in Dallas, pressed a lawsuit against the oath requirement for teachers and employes. The suit was later joined by Cameron Cunningham, Univer­ sity law student. Miss Elizabeth Burba, executive director of the Texas Civil Liberties Union, which Is handling the case, said that since the oath requirement for students was with­ drawn, there was no reason to continue the law suit on the student claim. How­ ever, to litigate the suit on Gilmore’s behalf. the CLU will continue She wrent on to say that the “ACLU has felt very strongly that this is an improper requirement” and “regrets so many thou­ sands of students had to sign an oath at the taxpayer’s expense that w'as repealed in 1953.” This was a reference to the fact that the oath requirement as applied to stu­ dents was administered under a 1951 sta­ tute. Martin held in his opinion that the portion of the act pertaining to students was repealed by a subsequent law passed in 1953. Cunningham felt that the discontinuance of the oath “was a logical step for the University to take following the attorney general’s opinion.” He also said, I could, in good conscience, sign this oath, but I would not because I felt it was either re­ pealed or unconstitutional.” in formulating the Hie main problem opinion revolved about the meaning of “supersede” in the 1953 legislation. It was decided on the basis of previous court rulings that it meant “ ‘set aside,’ ‘sup­ ‘inefficaci­ plant,’ ous,^’ " meaning that the 1951 law, which included students, was no longer in effect. ‘make void,’ render Government Announces Auto Safety Guidelines By The Associated Prose The Commerce Department WASHINGTON Issued 20 auto safety standards Tuesday night, toned down from Its previous proposals. And the department gave the industry an extra four months to comply with them on 1968 model cars. Three proposed standards were withdrawn for further study. Two deal with tires and rims. And the other would have required headrests as a protection against whiplash Injury. Officials said the 20 standards issued were softened in varying degree from pro­ posals the department made Dec. 3. Dr. William Haddon Jr., administrator of the National Traffic Safety Agency, said many points made by the domestic and foreign industries were reasonable, well- documented, and accepted by the depart­ ment. But he said his experts did not go along with all industry suggestions. (See SAFETY STANDARDS, Page 5.) Energy Theory Described aomething out of nothing, but there It is. Luckily, most everything has more dis­ tance between it, more space, than the tiny measure conceived by the physicists. But if everything in the world were separ­ ated by only such puny distances, the en­ tire globe and everything on it would be th# size of the heart of an atom. ■ ■ ...... . - j , ....... (--M f— s r v - ’ '‘I House, Senate Ask Early Consideration For Pay Raise Plan Legislative Proposal Would Add $6 Million To Connelly Request By The Associated Press The Senate and House got together Tues­ day for the first time in their dispute over state employe pay raises. Senators accepted without debate a House rewrite of a resolution, originating in the Senate, asking Gov. John Connally to request emergency action on his 1968- 69 employes pay raise plan. “I hope you will adopt these House changes unanimously and bring this situa­ tion to the attention of the governor,” said Sen. Tom Creighton of Mineral Wells, au­ thor of the original resolution. Approval was by voice vote. The House adopted the resolution unanimously Mon­ day, 143-0. Final action placed the question form­ ally on Connally's desk, but there was no word from the governor as to whether he would request emergency funds to raise salaries. Speaker Ben Barnes says the House rules and the Constitution prohibit early con­ sideration of such a raise unless Connally submits it as an emergency. The two houses are expected to issue a formal invitation Wednesday asking Con­ nally to present his tax message to a joint aession Thursday. Should Connally ask for passage of his pay raise plan, effective March I as de­ sired by Sen. Charles Herring of Austin and many other senators, it could add $6 million to the $125 million in new taxes he needs to balance his budget. The governor’s plan would raise employe paychecks an average of 20 per cent at a cost of $26 million from general revenue over two years. His proposal would take effect Sept. L the next Herring said he will try to pass his $5.2 million emergency pay raise bill if the governor does not act. He failed twice last week to get enough votes to bring it up, but says he thinks he has the votes now. Lt. Gov. Preston Smith favors Herring’s bill. Pro-Mao Forces Overrun Fifth City By The Associated Press TOKYO Radio Peking said Wednesday morning that Mao Tse-tung’s forces have gained control of a fifth major city, once a US air base. The broadcast claimed pro-Mao revolutionary rebels are “taking by storm one after another the citadels” of his ene­ mies. Although claiming control of the five cities, the broadcasts admitted trouble in two of them. The latest success of Mao’s supporters In the Red China power struggle was re­ ported in Kweiyang, capital of Kweichow Province in South China and an American air base in World War II. Peking Radio said the power seizure was Jan. 25, but it was not reported whether pro-Mao forces controlled rural areas of the 69,278-square mile province. F ar from Peking’s control, such areas as Sinkiang Province, Inner Mongolia, and parts of Manchuria are still in a state of rebellion against Mao and resistance is re­ ported widespread elsewhere. The Hong Kong Star in a report uncon­ firmed elsewhere said Gen. Wang En-mao, anti-Mao boss of Sinkiang Province, had threatened to seize Red China’s nuclear base at Lop Nor in the south if Maoists try to take over the provincial government. Quoting “reports reaching the Star,” the newspaper said Wang made his statement at a meeting with Gen. Liu Chang-ching, the political commissar of Inner Mongolia who also is believed to be bucking Mao’s purge. Registration—Humbug! Heat, Disappointment Increase Frustration Always hectic, sometimes heartbreak­ ing, and for the last day of J a n u a ry - hot, spring registration has seen courses for 10,913 students processed in two days. Things aren’t expected to cool off any with weathermen forecasting the tem­ perature to be 80 degrees and the regis­ tration supervisor predicting 26,(K)0 to register by the end of the week. Tuesday’s registration totaled 4,684 stu­ dents, William F. WaUace, assistant regis­ trar and registration superviser, said. Wallace anticipates approximately 27,- 500 this spring. This estimate is close to last fall’s enrollment. He predicts that 1,200-1,400 students will enroll late. Familiar Notary Public Desk to Be Discontinued A t Registration . . . since the signing of the loyalty oath is no longer required of University students. Photo by Virgil Johnson Student Conference to Hear United States Ambassador By ED BARRERA Texan News Editor to Mexico United States Ambassador Fulton Freeman will arrive in Austin Wednesday afternoon to speak to the Texas Intercollegiate Student Association (TISA) Conference. The conference will begin registering stu­ dents Wednesday at the Commodore Perry Hotel Freeman will be arriving with US Rep. Henry B. Gonzales after spending the day in San Antonio touring the Trinity Univer­ sity campus. FREEMAN WAS APPOINTED ambassa­ dor in 1964 after having served for three years in a similar post in Colombia. He served as consul in Peiping, China, in 1946 before the Communist takeover. In 1948, he was assigned as State Depart­ ment assistant in Chinese affairs. He has served since in several posts in Belgium and Italy. An informal r e c e p t i o n will be held Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Star Room of the Texas Union Building for Freeman. Dr. L. D. Haskew, vice chancellor of the University, and Mayor Lester Palmer will welcome the delegates from Mexico and the United States. Thirty Mexican stu­ dents are expected for the three-day con­ ference. Jim Jones, President of TISA, will wel­ come the Mexican delegation and Heladio Ramirez el Lopez, youth director of the Mexican group, will respond. THE KEYNOTE ADDRESS will be given at l l a.m. Thursday by Ambassador Free­ man in the Academic Center Auditorium. Freeman will speak on “The Era of Cooperation.” Four representatives from the State De­ partment will speak at the conference. They are M. R. Bamebey, director of the Office of Ecuadorian-Peruvian Affairs; Adrian A. Basora, analyst in the Bureau of Intelli­ gence and Research; Curtis Cutter, officer in charge of Peruvian Affairs; and Frank Ortiz, student at the National War Col­ lege in Washington, D.C. They will speak on current issues in Inter-American relations dealing with the Alliance for Progress, Cuba and the Com­ munist threat, the Organization of Ameri­ can States, and the American image in Latin America. Dr. Roy R. Rubottom, vice-president of university affairs at Southern Methodist University' and former Under Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, will speak to the delegates Friday at IO a.m. A UNIVERSITY GRADUATE, Dr. Charles Bacarisse of the University of Houston his­ tory department, will speak on “Ameri­ can Imperialism, 1895-1933, and the Good Neighbor Policy.” Saturday morning, Robert Cuttner, direc­ tor of Latin American programs for the National Student Association, will speak on “The Dominican Republic and the Prob­ lem of Intervention.” The discussion sessions will take place both in the Academic Center and in the Union. Rep. Gonzales, the special guest speaker, will address the delegates at the confer­ ence banquet in the Lila B. Etter Alumni Center. Oxygen Accident Kills 2; Apollo Astronauts Buried By The Associated Press SAN ANTONIO Flames fed on pure oxygen swept through a space cabin simulator at the School of Aerospace Medicine Tuesday, killing two airmen in an accident similar to the one which killed three Apollo astronauts only four days ago. One of the airmen died within an hour after the fire and the second one died five and one-half hours later at an Army hos­ pital here. Killed were Airman 2C William F. Bart­ ley Jr., 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Bartley of Indianapolis, and Airman 3C Richard G. Harmon, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon F. Harmon of Auburn, N.Y. A spokesman said the airmen were in­ side the space cabin simulator to monitor the activities of 16 rabbits, which were the subject of an experiment to study the effects of pure oxygen on the animals’ blood. Officers said at a news conference that the first indication of trouble came in the form of a “sudden muffled sound from in­ side the chamber” followed by the sound of running feet. A technician, monitoring the experiment on an intercom system, looked through a glass portal, saw the flames, and threw a lever which diluted the oxygen atmosphere in 13 seconds. The inside of the simulator was charred and blackened by the fierce flames, as was the Apollo capsule at Cape Kennedy. A spokesman said the airmen were taken from the cabin within five minutes of the blaze, and that doctors worked over one almost an hour before he died. The other was taken to nearby Brooke Army Medical Center with burns over 95 per cent of his body. ★ As the San Antonio tragedy unfolded, the three Apollo astronauts were buried after graveside rites. ★ ★ Air Force Lt. Col. Virgil Grissom and Navy Lt. Cmdr. Roger Chafee lie side by side in Arlington National Cemetery, across the Potomac River from the capital. Air Force Lt. Col. Edward White II rests in the West Point Cemetery in New York, above the Hudson River. President Johnson went twice to Arling­ ton to stand beside the families of Gris­ som and Chafee in the winter sun on a chill day. Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey and Mrs. Johnson flew to West Point to repre­ sent the tribute and sorrow of the nation at White’s burial. The three astronauts died last Friday when a ball of flame engulfed their Apollo I spacecraft at Cape Kennedy, as they re­ hearsed one of the steps designed to take man to the moon. At Arlington, six black horses drew a caisson bearing the casket of Grissom to tbs gravest* at 9 a.in. The first conference in December, 1965, took place in Mexico City. The delegates adopted a resolution setting forth the pur­ pose of the conference: “It is our belief that the relations of our two nations have never been, neither should they be, those maintained by the governments, but by the people of our two countries as well. We are convinced of the need and con­ venience to further this direct contact.” Relatively Short Effects By The Associated Press NEW YORK Scientists are toying with the importance of the puniest length—-a bit of space one billion trillion trillionth of a third of an Inch. It may be the Irreducible minimum — Hie point at which something is nothing, nothing Is something, and the common de­ nominator of everything. Dr. John Wheeler of Princeton Univer­ sity described that point Tuesday in a talk on relativistic physics at the American Physical Society’s annual meeting. He called It, “The end of time.” THE THEORY encompasses a pure de­ scription of a length—a single measurement in space, a point from here to there. But in this case here and there are so close together, they are neither here nor there. Physicists who take matter and energy apart and try to find out what it is, or isn t, have been confused of late because they can’t find a common building block, a common denominator. Sometimes they are even hard pressed to say what some­ thing is—matter or energy. They work with m atter and energy that behaves in so many ways that it is nearly useless to try to make up rules for the behavior. In fact, even trying to place a particle on an occurrence in terms of time or a point in space becomes difficult, lf not impossible. It’s something Uke seeing a highway collision and not being able to say where it happened, or how what collided. terms of to think in THAT S WHY SOME PEOPLE are begin­ ning the smallest length. It is, in actuality, only a bit of space, any space—but it may be in this tiny place that matter and energy are interchange­ able, and not recognizable as either. Admittedly, it sounds kind of crazy, but it would help explain a lot of things. For instance, the mere geometries of these tiny points may form more com­ plex structures which we recognize aa m atter and energy. It would also mean that m atter and energy, you and I, are just aberrations of twisting, changing space. It may be difficult to conceive of bow you can make On Your Right, Folks, Is The WorlcTs O nly . . • A P O Gu$ Voelzel points out interesting and important facets of the University campus to new students. Alpha Phi Omega, national man’s service fraternity, will conduct tours Wednesday and Thursday 1:30-2:30 p.m. Tours begin in front of the Union Building. -Puerto tar Virgil iotxwm (j twill Old Lovable “T he Pleasure o f U n Paul B. Pay Jr.; Hat ju t Ushers; S e w York, la am i • don; ,|5.95. i i K . > I m l | , l; , lU | h . n u l l o tlv R o b e r t U n b o r n tv VAH I illtoi IAI Manager aug ut .t im portantly of all, one is led to susjte t by job these rem iniscences—as court ter to Cam elot, F ay had a role ti' play. and the indications a re he did his best No pretensions So the record far as s u g g e s ts , he served his country and his President ably, if not brilliantly. After all, he was N um ber 2 m an the Navy (T exas’ in John Connally, it will be recalled, N um ber I ) , and all th a t was left for F ay w as to try a little harder, On F a y ’s p art, there are no preten­ sions in this 262-page record of Ins ll y ears of friendship with Kennedy. We a re not m ade privy to great decisions of sta te , and nowhere do we find the author furnishing the gilt-edge answ er th a t solved a m ighty crisis. What we do have here, essentially, is a s e rie s of vignettes and anecdotes, honestly in I straightforw ardly presented, most of them depicting JP K off-guard in his m om ents of leisure and relaxation. K ennedy, we a re led to believe, found F ay p leasant and entertaining com pany, as w’ell as an uncom plaining target for the celeb rated Kennedy wit. Besides, F ay could belt out a song titled “ Hoo­ ray for Hollywood” and this invariably broke up his Commander-in-Chief at p arties. F or the pleasure of his com ­ pany, F ay gave loyalty in return. Just ordinary mortals tim es, Indeed, th ere are it seem s, when F ay had to pinch himself to be­ lieve it wras really he who w'as within the eye of the hurricane. Repeatedly, his m em oir sm acks of True Confes­ sions: “ Im agine, little old me, here in the White H ouse!” But even this viewpoint is instructive, for it assu res us th at despite what tne m y th m ak ers would fab ricate to the con­ tra ry in the Kennedy circle and th at JKK liked it th a t way. th ere w ere ordinary m ortals the e ra can go the Sorensens the to Students of the for Salingers and w’hys and w herefores of the Kennedy y ears, but the hum anity is to be found here. F ay w r i t e s w ithout guile. Thus, a Catholic himself, he bem oans C ardinal Cushing’s overly-lcng p ray er at the lu­ T o d a y s T h o u g h t H e u ho teaches facts and facts alotie L u e s only fo r today and dies u ben facts hate changed, But he who teaches men to think L ite s for the future and survives ar long as thought doth reign. DR. I M M E T T E S. RED FO R D Ashbel Smith Professor of G overnm ent Little Man on Campus O ld Loyalty Oaths Just Fade Away the A fter 16 years enforcement a t the I niversify, loyalty oath required of all students to register in the school will no longer be enforced. A formal opinion w as delivered Tuesday by Craw ford M artin, the attorney general of Texas, holding th a t stu­ dents who “apply for admission to state supported col­ leges and universities (in Texas) are not required to exe­ cute the loyalty oath prescribed . . . as a prerequisite for admission to such institutions.” A fter this opinion was issued, the University adminis­ tration suspended the execution of the loyalty oath as a prerequisite to admission, ★ ★ ★ Although the attorney general’s opinion does not have the binding effect of a court order, there seems to be a lack of m easurable relief with the apparent end of an issue which has aroused so much controversy in the past. The loyalty oath has been said to restrain possibly unorthodox or unpopular thinking. This does not seem ap­ parent. It would be rath e r difficult to prove th a t such thinking has been restrained at the University—indeed, to the thinking of a num ber of Texans, it has appeared to be a hotbed and birthplace for it. ★ ★ Tile entire business of the loyalty oath has shown a lack of confidence in education. We must not forget, how­ ever, the tem per of the times when law created this dotted line monster. The loyalty oath was bom out of McCarthy- ism, but it now faces its demise due to more a favorable a t­ mosphere and increased sophistication of society. ★ ★ ★ ★ The irony of the ordeal is that It m ay not have neces­ sarily persisted so long. M artin said at a news conference Monday th a t his tentative opinion w as I h at the 1951 law which created the loyalty oath in Texas had been repealed by a 1953 statute. The attorney general’s opinion seems all the more anticlimatic. There was no huge legislative effort where one man stood up and cast the final deciding vote. Rather, the loyalty oath, like old soldiers, seemed just to fade away. Space Risks Are Not W ithout Benefit Americans can sincerely mourn the tragic deaths of astronauts Roger Chaffee, Virgil Grissom, and Edward White. The exploits of the astronauts have tended to pro­ vide entertainm ent to the mass public, but the men who participated in the Apollo program probably never over­ looked the im portance of the mission and the benefits it would have for hum anity in the long run. ★ ★ ★ The abrupt accident serves as a rem inder th a t the manned mission to the moon is at best an inexact science. Obviously, the conquest of space could come at a very high price. The United States has consistently put the safety of participants above other considerations, though a high element of risk remained. Yet, the manned mission to the moon should be con­ tinued unless the cost is prohibitive. The 1970 deadline m ay be altered now*, but the deadline rem ains useful, be­ cause any successful program needs an objective or target. No one can foresee the full benefits of the space pro­ gram. W hat can be seen is the effect th a t space explora­ tion already has had on many other lines of hum an en­ deavor and knowledge. ★ ★ ★ President Kennedy said, . . ask not w hat your coun­ try can do for you—ask what you can do for your coun­ try .” Undoubtedly, Chaffee, Grissom, and White, like other pioneers, knew w hat they had to do for their country, even at the risk of great sacrifice. Grass-Roots Philosophy Perseverance indicates a strong will; obstinance, a strong won’t. —The Foxboro (Mass.) Reporter Elsewhere: On Other Campuses No m ore grades is juxt a d rea m for those a t H am p­ for UT students, but shire C ollege, it m ay be a reality . The experim ental M assachusetts college, now the planning stage, m ay have no dep artm en ts or specific req u irem en ts as well. in According to the U niversity of Illinois student new spaper, students at H am p­ sh ire will work at their own ra te , m ov­ ing from a Basic Studies Division to to Advanced Stu­ In term ed iate Studies dies. The only grades will be pass, fail, or distinction. * * * Students at Vanderbilt and Tulane w ant longer residence hall room visiting hours. At Vanderbilt, the hours under consideration are I p.m . to 5 p.m . on S aturdays and l l p.m. to I a.m . one S aturday per m onth. The Vanderbilt proposal applies only to women visiting m en ’s room s and halls, said the V anderbilt H ustler. Ac­ cording to the Student Association com ­ m ittee on w om en’s visitation hours, the new hours “ the dorm itories undei would not increasingly be m erely as a place to sleep and study, but also as a cen ter of student social life." reg ard ed At Tulane, both m en and women stu ­ dents m ay en tertain visitors their room s on Sunday afternoons. H ow ever, T ulane Hullabaloo colum nist Jo e M ays would like to see the hours unlim ited or at least g reatly extended. in ★ ★ ★ While students at the U niversity lob­ by against a proposed increase in tui­ tion, students at the U niversity of U tah at Salt Lake City a re fighting for re ­ m oval of a sales tax from the price of books in the U niversity Bookstore. Tile proposal by a student govern­ th a t while m ent com m ittee points out state-ow ned educational institutions are required by tax on hooks, religious-oriented institutions are exem pt. to pay sales law The hill would not rem ove tax from sales of non-educational item s sold by the Bookstore. One m em ber of the com m ittee arg u es ag ain st the sales tax in the bookstore from two points of view : (I) that edu­ cation should not be taxed, and (2) that state-run schools should be exem pt if religious-connected institutions such as B righam Young U niversity are. Job O p p o r t u n i t i e s Mr. Alfred M Phillips. vice-president of th* Dellas fo u n t? Junior College will be tn our off,prs Thu-s- to interview prospect’va day, Feb 2. teachers for th e ro m inc school .nte-ested should -car Those contact our offices for appointments lic prospect ve Representatives of the following colleges and pub­ interview the cornin* school >ear: Centra! M-saoun S tate Co.iege, W arrensburg Mo , schools wit! be teach ers in our offices for to Southeast Missouri State Cbiiege, Cape G irardeau, r e b 7. M o , Feb « C entral Texas College K een, Feb 0 Tacom a Public Schul s. Tacoma Wash in Those Feb < .ewing, please contact interested; our offices for appoint- err? n - V ( Murphy. Director T eacher Placem ent lerv lcn vol Urn Hall 319 GR 1-2532. (iK I-330* lib e ra l Vrts Insurance underw riter; m a ;;rs needed art* a n i bus nest: x a 'a re - one- T exas l-.le Insurance: Fen 7; petition available In liberal I o ca‘ on Texas Army * Air Force Exchange Service; Feb, IO; m anagem ent (food, I * a r ­ c h itectu ral engineering^ d ata process.?!*, any m a ­ jo r personae . A a r lf, OOO; US re ta. Feb 13-16 C entral Intelligence Agency career tra in e e program n a d m i n ' n mte g e n .r and scientific and 'ast technical developm ent*; of a tadem ic m ajora posted on the g rad u ate r ace­ in graduate p iogram A un­ m e s! d ergraduates who have completed th e r m ilitary service: l f 900-tlI OOO Washi ngton A abroad board: atudents refer to National Security Agency . Feb 14-15: and carom .m ealion- research research analysts A cry ptography: developments, program m ing, guage stud,es art* m ajors Qua ifylng Test. Qua if> rig exam not m ath and degrees Washington. D.C who have passed majora area engineering translation S»', DPM) technical lan­ m anagem ent .be-a -ecru red f o r ‘for BA re ore se ntauve, V D Health, Education. A We fare. Fen 14-15; pro- g-am control Eng'rxh. Jour­ nalism . J story m a ’h. biology, pabtie adm .m itre* tine, ties health, economic!, IS.036: US. zoology, speech hum ani­ Bou'hwertem Bell Telephone Co : Feb 14-15: computer cc tenet, economics. to start. open: Southwest Texas m anagem ent m ath, A physics tra.nee P rudential L>fe In au ra-c* Co.: Feb 17 S. it K-esge Co.: Feb 20 m anagem ent ’-a.nee; n m erc h a n d s.n g : interest any m ajo- with an pf'VU); Southwest P-octor A G am ble: F»b a- m a jo t. opc r eer.ta’ ye lh profess lone repre- Southwest. Jones A Tough.;.n. Feb. 21 arts business, A m arketing sa es poi bons: open. mid- J'bera continent Civil service Feb JI H J H» nz Feb. 22. sales m anagem ent trainee: fl2 d lT i week bena a " • bus es* economic* A !y; Houston Aeronautical C hart a n i f> b 22 c arto g rst Force; m ath, physics, any m ajor <■•••».dared te r h o u 't u t college mat: nclude 1 • S t Lou < Information US Air geography, geology, f 5 sem es­ ll,til-lf.4 5 1 A m er.can Hosp?!*'. Fu;»r,:> industrial A tech r e a l sales tra.nee A a!r....n •-.•*..•s ed n unistrat.on m ajors open salt? • throughout US? Insurance tv. special agent Feb. 28 a r t s U t t e r s ! W e s t M a l l O ffic e B u i ld in g GR 1-4641 I a r r e r P lac em en t IW “Sensible solutions for the eighteen seventies.” Opinion* expressed bv the cartoon!i t i r e not necessarily those of the Texan God is not dead By Jon Buell University Director Campus Crusade for Christ H ie days in which we live a re satu ­ ra te d with the philosophies of m inority p ressu re groups advocating question­ able answ ers. A vocal hodge-podge of self-ap­ relativ ely to pointed “ au th o rities’’ the world the “ God is D ead" theology, atheism in the classroom , new m orality, and national such com m odities as sm all num bers of is m arketing disloyalty. Wrong; reaction tim es. These thinking today's Do not be deceived by the mood of truly ideas do not the in A m erica. Arnold rep resen t Toynbee, an aly st of leading W estern Civilization has said, “ Most m en have not rejected Christianity, but only a c a ric a tu re of it.” This c a rica tu re consists of the non­ plus of a painfully boring Sunday school class, the hypocrisy of som e so called “ C hristians.” and the sim ple inability of som e pro- f social g ram to satisfy the | I hunger of person­ ality. The p r o b l e m , however, t h a t is m o s t people are coasting on a child­ hood or adolescent reaction to the c a r ­ icature, rath e r than relying on an exam ination of C hristian­ ity with their adult m inds. Thus, they have m issed the vitality of C hristian­ ity, Who is Jesu s Christ Himself. J a il B uell It m akes good sense that a God of love would be just as accessible to the brilliant and the dull, and He Is. He revealed H im self in the only w ay th at He be­ all men could understand . cam e a man. . . Jesu s of N azareth w as born over 1,960 y ears ago. F or hundreds of y ears the g reat prophets before His birth, of Israel had foretold His com ing. The Old T estam ent, w ritten by m any indi­ viduals over a period of 1,500 years, contains m ore than 300 advance re f­ erences to His com ing. At th e age of 30, He began His public m inistry. Tile life Jesus the m iracles He p er­ form ed, the words He spoke, His death on the cross, and His resurrection all point to the fact that Jesu s C hrist was not a m ore m an. He Himself said, “ I and My F ath e r a re O ne.” “ He th at hath seen Me hath seen the F a th e r.” led, Conquered by love In exile on the island of St. Helena, Napoleon turned to his aide and said, “ Who in your opinion Is Jesus of N az­ the m an didn’t answ er, a re th ? ” When Napoleon said, “ Well, I'll tell you, then, I know’ m en, and Jesu s C hrist is not a m an. Superficial m inds see a resem ­ blance between C hrist and the founders the gods of other re ­ of em pires and ligions. “ T hat resem blance does not exist. T here is between Christ and all other religions w hatsoever the distance of in­ finity. From the first to the last He is alw ays the sa m e; m ajestic, sim ple, and infinitely gracious. A lexander, C aesar, I have conquered C harlem agne, and force. Jesu s alone g rea t em pires by conquered by love, and today millions would die for H im .” Do not m ake the m istak e of classi­ fying Jesu s with Buddha, Z oroaster, Gandhi, or M ohammed. These men said in effect, This is the way, w’alk ye in it! Jesus said, “ I am the the Life, no m an com eth Truth, and the F ath e r but by M e.” If His unto is false, narrow and audacious claim He falls behind these m en in in­ fam y of a ch arlatan . If it is true, He the Way, the stan d s before their C reator. them as E ith er way, He is not to be com pared, is incom parable and without peer. He Dr. C harles M alik, recen t president of the United Nations G eneral Assembly the real hinge said. “ Jesu s C hrist of histo ry .” is Powerful effect A g reat w riter put it so well, “ Nine­ teen w ide centuries have com e and gone, and today. He is the centerpiece of the hum an race, and the leader of of the column of progress. I am far within the m a rk when I say th a t all the arm ies th at ever m arch ed , and all the the navies th at ever sailed, and all the p arliam en ts that ever sa t, and a1] kings together, th at ev er reigned, put have not affected the life of m an upon th is ea rth as pow erfully as has th at one so litary life, Jesu s of N azareth. When asked w hat he believed to be the apex of history, Will D urant re ­ plied, “ The th ree y ea rs th at Jesus of N azareth walked th e e a rth .” It is the hollow c a ric a tu re of Chris­ tianity th at the Bible speaks of when it describes men “ having the form of godliness, but denying the power th ere­ o f.” N aturally, few' of us w ant to he p a rt of that. We need not be. The claim of Christ on every life is, “ but as m any as received Him, to them gave He the pow er of a Son of God.” So here is the crux. I have never yet m et a person who did not w ant an it fulfillm ent. Call abundant life. Call it joy. kicks, happiness, or w hat you will. Jesu s called it abundant life. He said, “ I am com e that they m ight h a \e life, and that they m ight have it m ore ab undantly.” He is truth they have had C hristianity then, stands or falls with Je su s Christ. Millions have found an exciting, purposeful, and abundant life w’here to investigate Him: for either He is an im ­ poster or He is to be served as Lord. today col­ The exciting legians a re the thousands, th at Jesus Christ pays off on His prom ises. thing finding, the integrity literally by th at is T hat is why He said, to H im self, “ Ye shall know the Truth, and the T ruth shall m ake you fre e.” referrin g ( “ Point of View” doe* not necessarily represent Texan editorial policy Contribution* are w e e n i e b at m u tt triple typed on a SO-ii* racier spaced 8A-93 line* only in order to fit sn the space available > line, t>e O f f i c i a l N o t i c e s The s p it .* en roc m eat sessions the Reading Im pro em wit Frog: ara anil be held le i) 13 and 14. A tte n d a n c e at one of these ae salon* s required for enrollm ent which ta d eterm .ped on a “ first-com e, f rit-ser-.ed bess* A d d it.o n a i information aboat o u r courses is a va.it bi* ta West Mail Office Building 4 id. for T h e Da il y T e x a n Th* Dally Texan, a stu d en t new spaper a t The L'nlver- «!ty of Texaa, It publlahed dally except Monday and S atur­ through May and day and holiday period* Septem ber M onthly In August by Texa* S tudent P ublications Inc.. D raw er D. U niversity S tation. Austin. Texas 78712 Sec­ ond-class postage paid at Austin. T exas News co ntributions will be accepted by telephone (GR 1-5244) or a t the editorial office. J.B. 103 o r a t the news lab o rato ry . Jf.B. 102 In q u ire s concerning delivery should be m ade In J.B . 107 (GR 1-52U) and advertising. J B 111 (GR 1-3227.) ASSOCIATED PRESS W IRE SERVICE T he Associated Pres* the uae tor republication of ail news dispatches credited to tin* newspaper and it or net otherw ise credited local item s of spontaneous origin published herein. R ights of publication o f ail o t h e r m atter herein also reserved. ii exclusively entitled to in N ATIO N AI. H I K tT IO N tl. 4D VERTIN IXG SERVICE* represented aaUoaaUy ta Ute field of * 4 The OaUy Texaa tertisiBg by th* NEAS. I* Oat S e m e s te r 'fail or spring) Two S e m e s te r s (fall and spring) Del i t er ed by c a r r i e r ( wi t h i n Austin a r e a f r om 12th t o 3»th and J e f f e r s o n I nt er r egi onal Highway to D e liv e re d by m ail wi t h i n Travi s Count y D e liv e re d by m a il o u ts id e T e a r!* Count y b ut wi t hi a I S IS 59 4.75 3.59 M i l I M ( i i The opinions expressed the editorial column ars those of the editor. Ail editorials unle?.* signed axe w ritten by the editor. in Guest editorial views are not necessarily the editor s Any opinions expressed in Th** Daily T exan are not those of The University of Texas Adminis­ n e c e s s a r ily tration or Board of Regents PERMANENT STAFF EDITOR .............................. J O H N E C O N O M ID Y M A N A G IN G EDITOR ............ C A R O LY N N IC H O L S ASST. M A N A G IN G E D IT O R LELA ABERNATHY NEW S E D IT O R ................................... ED BARRERA SPORTS EDITOR ........................ LARRY U P SH A W AM USEM ENTS EDITOR ............ RENEE FENDRICH M A R Y M O RPH IS FEATURE EDITOR P a g e 2 W w W a y , February I, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN O 0 V IO U 6 H E WA'SNT A6R.E TD LEARN JAE N U T H tN 1,* :NGLI6H INSTRUCTOR----- S T A F F F O R T H IS I S S U E Issue N ew s Editor .......................... Anne Pash koff Asst. Issue New * Editor* ............ M a ry A n n Teat, N a n c y Peterson M a k e -U p E d i t o r ......... Lela A b e r n a th y C o p y E d i t o r s R o b e rt Felling, Karen H o u g h to n , Jim K e m p W ir ® Edifor ........................................... Bill Ennis Issue Sports E d i t o r ............................. Larry M a y o Issue Am usem ents E d i t o r Editorial P a ge Assistant ......................... g;|| pau|a Bullard Union Pickets Nev/ Plant Site A m em ber of the Asbestos Workers Local 87 picketed the construction site of the Univer­ sity because union members had not been hired to do Insulation work at the new plant. The un- Lawyer Accepts Powell Payment By The Associated Presa NEW YORK Rep. Adam Clayton Powell fin­ ally paid off a basic, four-year- old to Esther judgment Jam es Tuesday, but only after her reluctant lawyer had been persuaded to keep the check. libel “ This check is deemed to be Mr. Powell’s property?” asked Mrs. Jam es’ attorney, Raymond Rubin, fingering a $32,460 ad­ vance on the congressman’s new r e c o r d i n g , “Keep the Faith, Baby.” “You have my word it Is,” re­ plied Powell’s business m anager, attorney Seymour Barash. The check represented a final paym ent on an original $46,500 libel judgment against Powell, who on a 1960 television program called Mrs. Jam es a “bag wom­ an ”—a graft collector for crooked policemen. Since a jury made the aw>ard interest In 1963, penalties and have boosted the total amount due Mrs. Jam es to $174,000, but Powell Is appealing the addition­ the state's highest al court, the Court of Appeals. levy to committee Paym ent in full of the original judgment is expected to wreigh in Powell’s favor with a special investigating House the Harlem Dem ocrat’s qualifi­ cations in Congress. Powell tem porarily barred from his seat pending outcome of the probe in Washington, but House Democrats already have ousted him from the chairm an­ ship of the Education and Labor Committee. to serve is ion says the University Is un­ fair and demands the hiring of union m e m b e r s , said Jack Thompson, director of facilities planning the construction. “ We’re using our own main- tenance personnel to insulate the steam headers on the boiler and some of that come off the boiler,” Thompson added. steamlinea the AU work by union m em bers has been stopped at the plant. Members of other unions will not cross the picket line. How- ever, University employes are j continuing work. “ We (the University adminis­ tration) are not engaged In a disagreement with the Univer­ sity’s own employes,” said H ar­ rison Gorham, power plant en­ gineer. “ Sub-union wages and condi­ tions being paid on this job by The University of Texas” were the union grievances stated on the placard the picket carried. “ This is not an attem pt to in­ duce or encourage the employes of any other employer to engage in a strike or a concerted re­ fusal to work,” the sign read. the Monday and Tuesday the gen­ erator and turbine were placed on the foundation at the plant. Traffic on Twenty-fourth Street in front of the site was blocked IO minutes both days. for about Gorham said that the plant is expected to be in operation in about four months. There have been some long delivery delays due to a shortage of supplies. Some of the equipment needed is also being shipped to Viet Nam, Gorham added. IM P O R T E D T R E A S U R E S From Mexico To G ivo • To W oor • To Own Bula Skinner Imports 1705 N uocot w p y . M i.ni - ■ fjg'.r - wyppyywiyy BUY F R O M THE C O -O P 'S Full Line of Arf Supplies • Save Steps By Getting All Your Supplies at The C o -O p OILS TEMPERA CASEIN BRUSHES PASTELS A CRYLIC WATER CO LO RS • G et The Best Brands Plus Your C o -O p Dividend C RU M BACH ER LIQUITEX PERMANENT PIGMENTS BELLINI SH IV A Tuesday and Wednesday, Feb. 7-8, You M ay Have Bulk Items Delivered Free To Art Building R O O M 303 S T U D E N T L O U N G E NEWSPRINT PADS D R A W IN G BOARDS ILLUSTRATION BOARD PORTFOLIOS nu N I E I R S THE S TUDENT S O WN STORE 0 ART SUPPLY • STREET FLOOR Be Cash Ahead: Shop the Co-Op Save Your Co-Op Receipts to Get Your Share of Co-Op Earnings. • C o -O p earnings not used for expansion are returned to you in C A S H D IV ID E N D S that you spend where you like. • Each student, like a stockholder, shares in the savings of the C o -O p . . . a corporation without capital stock. • The C o -O p Board of Directors consists o f unpaid students and faculty members. • One of 17 campus co-operative bookstores in th e country, the C o -O p is the only one in the Southwest. • Since its founding in I896, the C o -O p has operated for the student's benefit as THE STUDENT'S O W N STORE. Students Stop, Look, and Sign Tuition Increase Protest - - — p . . . . . Milling around the large red and white protest sign on the sidewalk at the rear of G regory Gymnasium, students appear unmoved about the bill now before the Sixtieth Leg isleMature to double University tuition. Petitions being arcula?- --------------------------- . . . ---------------------- - * I i - - ed by student organizations have accumulated more than 500 names, and will be presented to the Legislature following registration. I bolo by Virgil J o h im m First Kleberg Professorship Awarded Dr. Eugene Konecci Dr. Eugene B. Konecci, first recipient of the Kleberg Annual Professorship, recently joined the in a faculty of the University unique position, spanning three branches of knowledge. Culminating experience in a vast variety of fields, Dr. Konec­ ci is professor of m anagement in the College of Business Ad­ ministration, professor of aero­ FOLK Thurs., Feb. 9th 8 p.m. M u n ic ip a l Auditorium space engineering in the College of Engineering, and clinical pro­ fessor of bio-engineering in the University’s new South Texas Medical School in San Antonio. DR. KONECCI resigned his position as senior professional staff m em ber of the National Aeronautics and Space Council to accept the new position here. While with the Space Council he was chief adviser to President Johnson on the United States space programs. B. K. Johnson of I^i Pryor, a trustee of the Kleberg fund, said the professorship was established “ to aid the University in attract­ ing eminent educators and scien­ tists who will have an impact on the campus and upon the state of which the University will be proud and in which the Kleberg family will be proud to share.” The Kleberg Annual Professor­ ship will provide $25,000 annually for five years plus an annual sup­ plement of $2,500 to be used for travel and other activities related to the professorship. Stressing the cross-disciplinary nature of Dr. Konecci s past and future work, Chancellor H arry Ransom said: “ We plan to ac­ celerate our ra te of inter-disci­ plinary teaching and research ac­ the University and tivities at bringing back people like Dr. Kozmetsky and Dr. Konecci to the academic ranks will help us achieve our goals. The space pro­ gram has stimulated new sys­ tem s, approaches, and given us a wealth of new technology. We at The University of Texas plan to capitalize on these by ‘a trans­ ference program ’ from our na­ tion’s aerospace efforts to achieve the greatest benefits for mankind. The University of Texas is a nat­ ural place for such cross-disci­ transfer­ technological plinary ence. C O E D U C A T I O N A L C A M P F O R H I G H S C H O O L A G E S T U D E N T S H A W A I I • Need M ale Counselors, 24 to 26 Years O ld • Previous C am p Counseling or Related W ork Helpful, But • All Traveling Expenses to Hawaii, Room and Board, and N o t Necessary. Nominal W eekly Salary. • June 23rd to August 6th. • C ontact P .O . Box 5326, Beaumont, Texas, For Details. AS DIRECTOR of project re ­ search in the College of Business Administration, Dr. Konecci is re­ sponsible for several cross-disci­ plinary research projects involv­ ing advanced systems, planning, and management. Among them is an “ international business mod­ el,” a co-operative effort between the University and several other US universities and the National University of Mexico. He is also director of a project on “ transference of aerospace technology,” directed toward eco­ logical problems, health m ainten­ ance, and bio-medical instrumen­ tation, some of the most import ant aspects of the manned space programs. Other research will deal with the m arine resources of Texas coastal w aters and prob­ living underwater for lems of long periods of time. HIS EXPERIENCES with air­ craft began during World War II, w'hen as a young man, he joined the Air Corps, where he was a student at Clemson Col­ lege, S.C. Again in 1950 he joined the Air Force as chief of physio­ toxicology and also logy and worked in the Inspector General’s Office as development engineer­ inspector for weapons sys­ ing tems. He had assignments in space medicine, radiobiology, and physiology-b i o p h y s i c s at the School of Aviation Medicine, Ran­ dolph Air Force Base, San Anto­ nio. He has a doctorate in medical physiology from the University of Bern, Switzerland, did graduate work at the University of Chicago, and has a bachelor of science in chemistry from Roosevelt University in Chicago. He also received special training at the USAF Air Command and Staff School and the Atomic Com­ mission’s Institute of Nuclear Studies at Oak Ridge, Tenn. biology and Dr. Konecci Is optimistic about the future and says of his work, resources intellectual “ training for the last half of the century is a vitally important job and that is a part of my new duties at the University.” FURTHER REDUCTIONS SAVE 2 0 -5 0 Selected Groups Sport Coats Sweaters Raincoats Sport Shirts Dress Shirts Suits Vests Belts Ties Slacks r’S ’-’ I V Distinctive Store For Men / In The Co-Op / GR 8-6636 Clearance C learance c a r a n e * * 1 It- ALL REDUCTIONS PLUS YOUR CASH DIVIDEND 2246 G U A D A L U P E G R 2 -II4 I N I I EIR 8 T H E S T U D E N T S O W N S T O R E 0 Ii Wednesday, February I, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 Longhorns to Host Arlington In Preparation for S W C Meet Sporting n 3*1 record, Coach Hank Chapman’s a quam en will challenge Arlington State College in a dual meet here Feb. ll, but eyes Will probably be <"*n the SWC meet five weeks hence in Lubbock. Not that the rest of the sched­ ule is taken lightly but as Coach Chapman indicated, “ We train for the conference.” STUDENTS' A S S O C IA T IO N EUROPEAN GROUP FLIGHTS 7 A coo « « LOV* EST G R O U P F A R E S EVER! M m F m J Required) NEW YORK- LO N D O N CHOOSE FROM THE FOLLOW ING DATES: I. June 6 -Sept. 4 3. June 6 -July 18 2. June 5 - A u g . 17 4. July 1 8 -Sept. 4 # Round Trip Connections Available as low as $100.00. # Pure Je t Planes on Regular Scheduled IA T A Carriers. Group Flight Basis (50 persons). Participation Limited to Students and Faculty of University of Texas and members of their Immediate Families. • Lowest Transatlantic Group Fares Ever Announced. • All of These Departures W e r e Successfully O perated by Us Last Summer W hen Rates W e re $300.00. N O T E: The Students' Association Charter and Group Flights Program is the Only Program that Has Success­ f u l l y Operated in the Past. Malt® Certain That You En­ roll on the O fficial Students' Association Program. And Arlington w ill not be easy, he said, for they have two ex­ tremely fine swimmers in Doug Russell and R K ty Nesbitt Russell presently holds the nation’s sec­ ond best time in the 200 yard backstroke. But Texas Is not lacking In finp swimmers. Gary Langendoen fluttered to a new school record of 1:57.6 in the 200 yard butterfly event in the Oklahoma meet This is .7 seconds off the conference record. Steve Boss can also be found in the SWC record books in a couple of spots, such as 500 yard freestyle: 4:52.4, or 1,650 yard freestyle: 17:16.3. Dana Curtis, up from last year's freshman squad, took the 1,000 yard freestyle and placed sec­ ond in the IOO yard freestyle at OU. His second place time was better than an earlier first in the Texas Tech meet. Chapman ad­ ded that he was swimming “ real well.” Although the OU meet was their only defeat, he felt it was a good performance. Christmas vacation and finals create a training prob­ lem, but he believes the team is coming around and will continue to do so. He readily picked SMU, with their depth, as the top confer­ ence team with the Longhorns second. Texas’ fortunes will depend on tile performance of its sprinters, a problem SMU also shares. Chapman thinks Texas, ranked eleventh in the country last year, could be one of the top three teams in the country this year. For Reservations or Information, C ontact: STUDENT TRAVEL, Inc. 2226 Guadalupe St. G R 7-4340 LITTLE HUB BA R BER S H O P W elcom e Second Semester Students and Faculty Parking 705 W . 24th C A L L GR 1-5244 that's The Daily Texan C L A S S I F I E D A D DEPARTMENT Title Hopes Fading Baylor Halts 'Horns By Larry Upshaw Texan Sports Editor WACO When a game ends 88-86, die good guys and the finks appear like multilith duplicates. The Tex­ as Longhorns weren’t thrashed, and they certainly weren’t rob­ bed—they just Bearly lost. The fellows In white hats here Tuesday night were easily spot­ ted In their green Baylor uni­ forms. The best of those guys, Darrell Hardy and Randy Thomp­ son, resembled each other in only one department—point scoring. Muscular 6-7 center Hardy tal­ lied 31 points, most of them cru­ cial ones throughout the contest. Thompson, a wimpy-looking 5-10 guard, got the last two most important ones for Baylor. With 38 seconds remaining, the score favored the Bruins 84-82, and Scotty Brown missed two Texas basketball guard Dale Dotson, who had started 38 of 39 games since coming to UT (in­ cluding all 15 this season'), his become scholastically ineligible for further competition, it was announced Tuesday morning. Dotson was scheduled to start for the Longhorns Tuesday night as they resume the 1967 basket­ ball schedule against Baylor at ► Waco. His place in the starting lineup w ill be taken by senior Mike Gammon. Also ineligible is John Matzin- ger. redshirt soph from Graham, who had played in IO games. Mat- zinger was averaging 1.5 points for season and in SWC play. free throws for Texas. Baylor partisans rejoiced and sat a might easier. But it took Thompson’s pair of field goals to extend the margin ; to four points and tend Texas home unhappy. The first half was a study in consistency, with the ’Horns just j outconsistencing the Bears. Tex­ as hit a magnificent 50 per cent from the field, but the Bears were remarkable at 58 per cent. The backboard edge barely went to the Steers, who picked off 22 for Baylor’s 18. But this edge and the fact that the Steers took seven shots more than Bay­ lor added up to a four-point half­ time lead Orangewise, 53-49. It all began as a meeting tho mooses, with Longhorn Gary Overbeck and Hardy, both 6-7 the centers, squaring off IO points. Overbeck for canned M a d * Re- Boatful* a T*«£C T iD »f u i c v t t a p o o d u c i* I and U llliftr U M JOHNSON • WILLAM CONRAD B S Tutted by ; . v*." - . • NUAN URRVU«2JSMSAAlEVTI TECHNICOLOR' FROM WARNER BR0S.MB A F flR 6 P.M. ON LOTS FREE PARKING 7th & L A V A C A STS M r- Co^uc- ar* Adult* I-SS M IM .75 > • Child TV Apt* VARSITY IV a tu r e i I I OO A 0 5 t oo T U 9 M O N E O F THE YEA R'S TEN BEST! " ‘G E O R G Y G IR L' IS SUPERIOR! W O N D E R FU L PELL-MELL EN JO Y M EN T, IM M EN SELY O R IG IN A L !" B o ile r ( ro w th e r, .V V , T im e* “ Dnsttn*4l Inf Anadfmx A nard I* -ITI Kl Bt Mf! ' D O N T M K S FT! JAMES MASON • ALAN BATES • LYNN REDGRAVE e»mm Z m w t i ramping tame* R38t FIT A. GOLDSON * OTTO PLASCHKES Own » SHOO hAfUZZAHO AHWMWPo m im* rn m mm* Blum mm.* — im !■ Blini HWU ill G; FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P.M. ON LOTS AUSTIN IOO .............. 65 I M m i i ADJACENT TO THEATRE ......... 0:1 9 7 .3 0 C h ild A dult* M D C N « I- catur e t: I IO “BEST PICTURE OF THE YEARl M i D M O * BULT i n “KST FOREIGN FILM* IU VS W IIK ••OME OF THE YEAR S B E S T — /V K Times — /V. K Herald Tribune — N.Y. Poet — Saturday Ravia** m - Time Magazine — CVP Man azine FREE P A R K IN G A T ALL TIMES Page 6 Wednesday February j t 1967 THE DAILY. TEXAN m i H B S N A C K B A R O P E N S 6 OO r lf. \DUT.TS 1.00 D i s c . C A R D S .50 C H H U ) R E N P R E S TW O REAL SW INGERS COLUMBIA PICTURES Pnwenti m m E s EASTMAN COLOR PLUS! SEASIDE SW INGERS "FREDDY AND THE DREAMERS'* The bristling" best seller comes to angry life. *409 B T R N K T R D . BURNET Sat H O SMT! 2 SENSATIONAL MOVIES } ? K Y 0RTHE r m A T I R F . TTM K JI * IS and 1009 P .M . P L A Y l o r M T * : S M O O T (U N O - M A G N IIK IN T — MIOHTf S IN S AT ION AL M IASUAIM INTS (4 3 -2 2 -3 4 ) *s3S%s. June WilKinSori . y rn* V 'jC K I • IOUISI L A W S O N * P p p t t ^ l W . I «. , -FAMOUS nouai woofc P— w* p e n t wrtli Pm, * OIOI H ILO * A do rn M999l«99'l -»*vo«i’ i i v r MMM Nm *.!•«—t I ■ i *•..!**# COLOR • LOCI SHIA • W M M o , ., — . I WOLT roniLA* A i m * M i t w * bmtoM *.HVr cm ■J* ■ . COFEATURE DARES TO SHOW SCENES WHICH ARE SHOCKING-BLOODSTAINED UNBELIEVABLE-BIZARRE Dead Heat On A Merry-Go-Round Jam a* Coburn amt A Mo Rax Winter A Go Go d a m e * S t a r r a n d d i l l D o n a h u e 9:09 V* h i M -cT^ZEROAVOSIfcL PHIL SILVERS JACK GILFORD BUSTER KEATON ta V C I tm lin t A \ ‘ ‘AFHJNNY THING a - a i HAPPENED A r i T P ON THE WW ‘ T no TOWE FORUM CQUWHMn. _ U—ITrO J, ITT I* T* [vjaatiho fo* STARTS mon Her I j FRIDAY ‘The Light of Other Days1 —Photo bx Virgil John* The new exh libit at the Texas Memorial Museum traces the history of how men have lighted their homes since several centuries before Christ. The exhibit includes such dis­ plays as Roman pottery lamps which probab- ly burned olive oil, a pewter whale-oil lamp ly burnea oil with a burner, an 1893 students lamp from Germany with a visor type attachment, a Scottish town crier s lantern, and an example of the original Cape Cod lighter. Ballet Society Gains Barn for Costumes After having them shuttled from empty warehouses to cotton gins to garages for IO years the Aus­ tin Ballet Society has finally ac­ quired a permanent home for its costumes and scenery. Mrs. Fagan Dickson, member of the society, donated a barn and piece of land just off E . Riverside Drive for storage of the properties. The bam, Howev­ er, was not on the land, so it was divided info two sections and moved over a hill to its present site. Vernon Lemons Jr., president of the society, opened the build- Cinema 40 Tonight Cinema 40 will present the £| Marx Brothers in "Night at I the Opera" and W. C. Fields in "The Fatal Glass of Beer" Wednesday at 7 and 9:30 p.m. at Batts Auditorium. There | will he no admission charge, and the showing is open to the public. »■*;; awe ’S ’’ £ FOLK Thurs., Feb. 9th 8 p.m. Municipal Auditorium OeCwoodDRIVE ’ IN THEATRE 3901 List «vt Promise Her Anything l ^ s l l * C a r m i »rv1 W a r r e n B e s t i r I i 09 Johnny Reno Dana Antiroll* and Ja n * Ruvwdl Itta lng Tuesday to members for a ba rn warming - luncheon. Fried chicken and baked beans served from red checked tablecloth-cov­ ered tables lent a picnic atmos­ phere to tile rows of ruffled and sequined costumes hung through­ out the barn. Thanking Mrs. Dickson for her generosity, David Carson, pub-1 lie relations director, presented her with a Texas Senate resolu­ tion in appreciation of her philan­ thropy towards the society, and announced that the Senate had recommended increased financial support of the performing aids throughout the state. H ie next performance of the society will be Feb. 24 at 8 p.m. in Municipal Auditorium when it presents “ La Boutique Fantas- que.” General admission tickets w ill be on sale for $1 in the Fine Arts Box Office at Hogg Audi­ torium. Student Receives Hogg Scholarship Joyce Arce, University senior piano student, has been awarded the $500 Ima Hogg Scholarship for Piano Study for the second consecutive year. The award was established by Mrs. Albert P. Jones of Austin to honor her friend Miss Ima Hogg of Houston. Miss Arr© is a former fire ­ place winner the Amarillo in Symphony National Artist Audi­ tions and a second-place winner in the G. B. Dealey music audi­ tions in Dallas. She has also per­ formed in two concerts with the Miami Philharmonic. L IG H T O N ' H O PKIN S! coming FRIDAY, FEB. I lo THE M ATCH BOX 2513 S«n Antonio G R 2-0046 44 You may hate yourself in the morning, but I think you are going to enjoy'Alfievery much. Altie uses people— ►mainly women-and throws them away like tissu es* * * ★ ★ ★ ★ (USS) People are going to stop talking about 'Virginia Woolf' and start talking about 'Alfie'.’’ ■ w ‘•Bubbles with Impudent humor and ripe, modem wit...The first ‘bird’ he’s caught with is a two* timing wife with stray-cat morals whom he con* quers in the front seat of a car.*9 — 6OSIPy Crowlhpr. V. Y. TO AL* “ Unreels more like a score card than a scenario.*5 — TIME Magezma (RECOMMENDED POR MATURE AUDIENCES} (Color) M IC H A E C A IN E * AUTE m m MARTH\JU1A FOSTEB*JWf ASHER SHREYANNE FBD 'V M BIKID M ffl'BEAH N BRON* IIH SHELLEY WWTHiS ASHUBY STARTS TODAY OPEN 11:45 FEATURES 12-2-4-6-8-10 woody allen s t r ik e s Ba ck; ADULT ENTERTAINM ENT N O O N E ADMITTED UNDER 18 YEARS $1.50 Per Pedson STARTS TODAY STARTS TODAY ■ S i r A JZJ* s t a t e! FEATURES 12:20-1:55 3:30-5:05 6:30-8: IO and 9:45 r r r SEF.ndHEAR?^ L Z lov,»sm „,FU " “ " '" • P O W " Adults 1.25 ' MDC .75 No. Child Tickets Sold Board Asks Survey O f Library Education The University’s G r a d u a t e School of Library Science has been requested by the Coordinat­ ing Board, Texas College and University System, to undertake a new study, “ Education for Ll- Medical Branch Receives Fund The establishment of the Gay- nelle Robertson and Edgar J. Poth Forum Fund for Ophthal­ mology and General Surgery at the University’s Medical Branch has been announced by the Board of Regents. The Robertson-Poth Founda­ tion authorized a gift of $50,000 for graduate level discussions on ophthalmology and general sur­ gery, alternately, at the Medical Branch. brary Personnel in Texas: Ques­ tions, Evidence and Answers.” The study will begin Wednes­ day and w ill continue for one year with Dr. Robert R. Doug­ lass, director of the Library School, as director of the pro­ gram and Esther Stallmann, pro­ fessor of library science, as asso­ ciate investigator. The findings of the study w ill be used as a basis for a long-range plan for library education ranging from the certification program through I the doctoral level. that Douglass explained the plan was needed “ to protect the prospective students, to adjust the programs offered to the project­ ed needs of the state, to provide the best possible education as efficiently as possible, and to of­ fer within the state, preparation for each level and type of li­ brary work. . . . ” Douglass add­ ed that the school’s faculty has many guesses and suppositions and a few facts, and that the College Librarie Said Deficient Dr. J . K. Williams, state com­ missioner for higher education, released that several Texas colleges have book deficiencies. figures showing “ Accreditation of Angelo State College and reaccreditation of Arlington State, Lamar, Midwest­ ern, Pan American, and Texas Southern will be difficult unless the libraries in these schools are improved,” Williams said in a memorandum distributed to the Capitol press. M id -Semester Lab for Campus Leaders To Stress Effective Student Programs Forty-eight campus leaders will participate in the Mid-Semester Campus Leadership Laboratory Thursday through Sunday at Wim­ berly. Sponsored by the Union Lead­ ership Board, the lab is to in­ crease the effectiveness of co­ curricular programs and student leadership. Individual develop­ ment and personal growth of stu­ dents in positions of leadership w ill be emphasized. Dr. Ea rl A. Koile, professor of educational psychology, will be the is faculty consultant. He chairman of the University Fac­ ulty Committee on Orientation. Jack Holland, dean of student life, will be a special lab speak­ er. He will discuss “ Current Cam­ pus Concerns.” Other faculty members will serve as developmental group leaders. The enrollment for the lab is limited to 48 students. They rej>- resent organizations such as Stu­ dent Assembly, Texas Union, Uni­ versity Y, Cowboys, Orange Ja ck ­ Spooks, APO, ets, Longhorn Band, Student Engineering Coun­ cil, Student Bar Association, In- or-Club Council. Panhellenic, and Interfraternity Council. Committee, Students’ Association committee chairmen, Texas T o day and Tomorrow, and upper­ class advisers. Also represented are Model United Nations, Operation Brain­ power, Orientation Procedures Tile first master of business administration degree of the Uni­ versity was presented in 1920, R C P K M A N ’S P P M T S ■CUP* study is proposed to supply addi­ tional information as a prerequi­ site to the drafting of the plan. The Graduate School of Library Science was established in 1948 and much of the attention of fac­ ulty and students has been fo­ library problems of cused on Texas and the Southwest. More than 80 master’s degree studies have been made dealing with var­ ious aspects of librarianship in Texas. G e t Ready for Spring and Summtr . Put SUN SHADES ON YOUR CAR with SUN-X CAR GLASS TINT Mfgd. by DuPont, it reduces G L A R E , H EA T end F A D IN G . W e also do glass tinting on larger windows and doors in building, apartments, homes, etc. Colors to Compliment or Contrast Your Decor SUN-X ©LASS TINTING SU Phone H O 5-9130, if no answer call G L 2-0855 MEN: MOVE NOW TO THE CHAPARRAL A P A R T M E N T S 2 & 4 M A N U NITS T.V. (C O L O R ) L O U N G E A M PLE P A R K IN G 2408 LEO N $47.50 Mo. Up G R 6-3467 I V I 'K st R I T K U S C A L C C L A T O R A T A P E R E C O R D E R S SPEAKKRS TV SIS 50 Mo. T I" N E K S P A. S Y S T E M S I M K A I ) . U S T H U M M . It L P H I AM PLIFIERS D ictatin g Machine* 2434 Guadalupe BERKMAN’S GR 6-3525 THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RA TES .................................... .............................................................. . . . I 1.-0 .50 -$ (10-word m axim um ) one tim e........... I ........... ............ I LM *0 Charge rate Each Word (15 word minimum) Minimum • Student • Each additional time C larified Display I column x one Inch one time Each Additional Time ................ *0 Consecutive Issues » words I i words to words .................................................................................... .................................... ............................................................ #.W* ll.W (No copy change for consecutive Issue rates.) GR 1-5244 • N E W , L O W STU D EN T RATES IO word* or Io u for 50c tho first time, 25c each additional tim#. Student must thow Auditor*' receipt and pay in ad ­ vance from 3 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M onday through Friday. Journalism Bldg. 107 in CLA SSIFIED ADVERTISING DEA DLINES Tuesaav Texan ........................... Monday. 3:30 p.m. Wednesday Texan Tuesday. 3:30 p m. .................. W ednesday, 3:30 p m. Thursday Texan F r i d a y T e x a n ................................ T h u r s d a y , 3 :3 0 p .m . Su n d ry Texan .............................. F rid a y . 3:30 p m. In the event of errors made In an advertisement. Immediate notice must be given as the publisher* are responsible for only one Incorrect Insertion. GR 1-5244 Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Alterations Tutoring W anted F U R N I S H E D A P A R T M E N T : from *60 Three blocks *45 from reduced campus. Quiet, kitchen. Bo b Ridout, G A 6-1655. C A S A DE S A L A D O LE F O U N T A IN B L E A U Near Campus V acancies im m ediately for 4 ladies or 4 men. One fem aie roommate— 4 m ale roommates A / C sw im m ing r*>ol. laundry, recreation and study room, m aid service, utilities paid. G R 2-6480 903 W est 28th. G R 8-9414. I and 2 bedrooms — sw im m ing pool, cen tral a ir and heat Luxuriously furnished. - off street parking facilities la u n d r y 2610 Salado. G R 7-2534. M anager, Apait- 1 ment No. 110. A P A R T M E N T F O R men. 2 or 3 rooms near U niversity. B ills paid. G R 6-1712, M rs Lyle. L A D IE S , M E N , m ilitary. Mr«. Sims. 5308 S P A N IS H B Y experienced teacher. MA. Woodrow. O L 2-1196. V irginia Huller. G R 8-5178, A R X I S out- ask It at 0 *m *r- 6 m ith Bookstore or m ay be found on drag. Read* for ers-conlributors wanted, Miscellaneous Apartments— Unfurnished Rooms for Rent L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y : separate kitchen, wa- ie; gas paid 190-B Robbins. O R 6 D IE . T H R E E S I N G L E room* in cottage. R e frig ­ la *30 Double home 1810 ru n g less O R 8-275*. Parkin g erator. room LIFE D R A W IN G C L A S S E S G R 8-3192 i evenings i. Begin Fe b ru a ry 2 7 to 9:30 p rn, Tuesdays and Thursdays Q. M orris A rt Studio 2330 Guadalupe (above Som m eC s Drug Store on the Drag) H E A t m F l l , Fireplace., T O W N H O U S E fenced. 2 bedroom, dishwasher, disposal, range, central mr, W D connections Prefers Couples, teachers W A 6 1391 W W V W W ^ ^ W W W W V W W V W N W V W A For Sale O. HENRY Slept Here BEAUTIFUL Furnished Rooms C O M P L E T E L Y R K I i l ’Il. T 1952 Chevrolet convertible. Floo r shift. Dependable. *195. ENFIELD ARM S •lty girls Room meals 8-1790. Without means, 7-7744 G R 6-3607. als, 2101 Nueces. O R j C H A N G E D JO B S , must sell Sleek P M white 2103 Nueces, G R " r T W ire*; cover and top $1295. Phone j D IS T IN C T IV E B R A D F I E L D Houses Unlver- ] __ G R 7-7649. CU* 3-2271. NOB HILL APARTMENTS $99.50. Sm s'! cro-bed room , nicely fur- - shed, exec A n t ocation to UT or C a p ­ itol or downtown. M g r. A p t. 203 or ca.! G R 2 - 9367. L e P e tit A pts., 1606 San Ja c in to . U N EX PEC T ED 2 B ED R O O M V A C A N C Y Yr Spacious one and two bedrrrr Yr Huge wa-k-in closets Yr Dishwashers and Disposals Yr Large Pool Yr Custom Furnishings ☆ Individual climate controls Yr Private Balconies Yr Laundry Room Yr A L L BILLS PAID people wanting R O O M M A T E L O C A T E R S : M ultiple listing of to share apartm ent ex­ penses available. Moving unnecessary. H I 4-3920. O L D H A M H O U S E A PA R T M E N T CO NTINENTAL M anor Road at Oldham ne and two bedroom apartm ent* with ma- >gany paneled w alls and bish, open-beam >11 ins*. U tilities paid at *125 to $160. R 6-1262 GR- 8-8670 funnelled N O R T H W O O D T E R R A C E . One bedroom- G arag e for conditioned A ir •very apartm ent. Clar around for children I j i undry facilities F re e janito r service. A ll utilities’ paid. N ear com m unity center, un:- varsity, on bus line. 907A Ka.st 32nd. G R 8- 3149. VERSAILLES APARTMENTS 4411 A i r p o r t B lv d . Luxury I and 2 bedroom apartm ents A v a ila b le fo r spring se m e s te r See M rs . S h e r r y Schultz A p t. 119 or ca ll G L 2-836S B L A C K S T O N E A P A R T M E N T S F O R M E N A N D W O M E N J bedroom* - 2 both apartm ents -maid serv­ ice -complete kitchen ample off street park­ ing -excellent study fa c ilitie s - *56 per month, per person. 2910 Red R iv e r G R 6-5631 1914 Oldham G R 8-8911 to Its first occupants. built on the historic spot where O. H enry this Spanking brand new lived tn Austin, apartm ent complex is ready to be rented 1409 Enfield Rd. Dorm-apartments for girls Q U IE T , P R I V A T E entrance, on bits line. j law school, com munity center. G R i near 66'' H O N D A 4-8 p.m. 7*8598 $35. Graduate student I fiOrc. Call G R 2-1810 between For University, business co loge or work­ ing girls, every luxury and con venience, j F O R G I R L S Clean comfortable rooms with kitchen privileges, near U niversity. V e ry reasonable G R 8-4181. 0-100 H o n d a . Less than 1000 Ballas. 165 miles per gallon. E xcellent transportation, *193 G R 6 7067. A / C , wall to w all carp eting , b e a ^ f J W ^ d eco rated all t ile k to ens-fcat s. O p e - ings n ow aval ab e fo r 1-2-3 or more Antonio. G R 7-7342. girl*. Rates $55 to $55 References. G o see Mrs. Stansbury, M g r. N o. 7, o C a ll G R 7-0537, Mrs. R o a r , G R 8-7996 . fe d atmosphere .'Phone Refrigerator. Walk- S P R IN G V A C A N C IE S : A / C room*. Room j board *65 per month. Stag Co-Op, IS L ) HK n r M rs Lim on G R 8-3181 ‘ Grande G R 8 5043. o r M rs . L .g o n R E D U C E D R E N T P a rtic u 'a r upperclassmen room. Digni- p a ny m aid service. Good »tudy, 1906 San - m aum aml doublos, Air | : r : ' - r r r Z - - ..... Unusually quiet. A ttractive R o o m a n d B o a r d I tn* distance. G R 2-5348. Q R ^ a j i b e C C | ^ L I K E N E W 17 Inch R O A portable teSevP on. Grande. A L L B IL L S P A ID Pool 2 B e d ro o m C a b le TV 2520 Longview D eposal Stu d y Room G R 7-8741 Mgr. A p t. 302 Each with private entrance U N U S U A L L Y A T T R A C T IV E 2 bedrooms Connecting bath. Snack bar. Parking. R efrig erated A / 1', co n tro led Heat. 4 boys. l.ifx- Nueces See Apt. C. G R 2-2071, G R 6-1534 *32 each. Furn. — I B.R. Start at $ I 15 A / C and Heat Paid by Owner As well as water and gas W e Invite you to Inspect the premises of THE T O W E R V IE W (not law achoo!, huge one bed­ I S Mock east featuring Danish room modern refrigerators— garbage dispose)- pantry— quiet—plenty park­ *110. w ater - gas paid ing efficiencies' fumttu-e, frost-free .Sensible ra ’e. 2SO I O ldh am G R 2 8772— G R 2 4566. UT M EN A /C 2 bedrooms, large bath, kitchen W ater, gas paid. Maid. free parking Q U IE T K O R STUD Y'. A vailable units for I person. 2 or 3 men 3H blocks N. Campus. Reasonable rate*. G L S-3235. Rooms for Rent T O W ER V IEW N ew taking ap p licatio n* fo r S p rin g semester 505 E. 11 th AT C A M P U S G I R L S : O N E block off campus,, SOOD Whiti*. Single-double rooms kitchen G R 6-5941 THE C O U N C IL Efficiencies $79.50 ell bl s pa d 915 W e s t 21 st Y ou'll enjoy corpora ted the historical momentos Into th:* building, and we In know you w ill be Impressed with the quality of the ea rly A m erican furnishings. M anager on premises to receive your res ervation or call G R 6 9471. The EL SABINO APARTMENTS 2500 S a b r a O . H E N R Y H O U S E APTS. 505 E. l i t h A i r c o e d it A r e d , a t t r a c t iv e ly urn shed e f f ic ie n c y a p a r tm e n t. M a n y c c a r p e t e d . F o r S p e e d w ay. G R 7-6818. c o p i e s . C a ) a t 1920 B L O C K U N I V E R S IT Y 2 bedrooms. A /C, garage apartm ent—2 room efficiency—also single. 1910 Speedway. G R 6-9441. CA SA de S A L A DO. Sw im m ing pool, central air. off street parking. Luxuriously furn­ ished. Lau n d ry facilities 3610 Salado. G R 7- 1334. Mgr. Apartm ent DO. F O R M E N . 2 large bedrooms N>-e and quiet. N e ar campus. 2 men *75, 3 m en— *105. 911 W est 23rd after 5.30. P R I V A T E RO O M , bath for fem ale graduate | MSO. Student or teaching assistant beautifully furnished home, available Reavnnable price, reeded. HI 4-2378. in private Full facilities Transportation SINGX JC ROOM: residence Quiet upper class­ man. Wall furnished, private entrance, stu­ dent. GR 2-4021. NEW, QUIET. Ideal for student P rivate en­ to trance, bath. A/C. IO minutes drive UT GR 8-0505. For Rent A dm iral TV. COMFORTABLE B E D R O O M private bath. telephone, ideal for study. N ear west n m - $12.50-$15 50 pus. M ale student, - — I instructor. G R 2-8581. M anager Apt. 202 GR 6 9473 R E N T N E W monthly. Tape recorders. Alpha T V . G L 2-4057. No answer. G R 2-2692. M IS Coffer. G R 2 5890, ON E-1! A L F block from B B Building 2003 W ich ita, Sunset House. *60 per month. G R 7-0115, G R 7 4109. R O O M A N D board M aid servi » Clos# to cam pus. **■<) a month. 709 W e it 23rd. G R 2* age. MEN -ROOM and Board *65 monody a v e r­ block campus. Home cooked meals Exclusive meal plan. Cam pus Guild, 2804 Whit is, GR 8 4674. AXE P R O F E S S IO N A L chem iatry fraternity. to campus. Rooms and or meals. Close 706 West 26th Study residence for men, 3000 U n iversity Avenue R ate of $35 per month, catering to outstanding upper classmen. Opened September. 1964 -a new p rivately operated cable T V . air-conditioned. exclusive Northslde study residence Carpeted lounges, of campus, private parking close to campus. Em p hasis on study atmosphere. A c ro s s s tr e e t from law S c h o e ' 2 bedroom s, 2 baths, furnished. Dish­ washer, dispose’, p oo ’. $220 • m ont” . G rade point average 13 or better. F o r freshmen, S A T of 1150. *175— fall semester. A il bibs pa d. $140—spring seme-ter ('a ll Resident M anager, G R 8-8630. 3205 Helms Street Houses— for Rent P H O N F . G R 7-7179 (One block east of Speedway) Typing /nru yWvUl, M B \. V Typing. Multillthlng. landing A complete professional Dot ’* se• v ie* ©red to the need: of U n iv e rsity students, language. cia ! k c v board equipm ent for • " « s neering the sea and dis erie theses and a n e rig ’alf Phone G R 2-3210 * G R 2013 Guadalupe T Y P IN O : Tulle*. N E A T , accurate, C L 3-5121. , fast service. M r * T H E M E S Notary M a rjo i'e T H E S E S , dissertations, law briefs. IS year* experien •*. _5c per peg*. Delafield. H I 2-7008. Professional Typing Sfudents-Faculty Flxcellent - • dissertation* theses, term re­ ports. nnd books. Multi' thing and binding upon request. Reasonable R ates E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V I C E . A ccur­ ate. Reasonable. near Aliandale. H O 5-5S1A ALDRIDGE TYPING SERVICE 304 , E ast 30th Street GR 7 169$ O R 6-9387 T echnical paper* 9 specialty. Over 200 ex tra symbols »>n our IBM Executives for science, engineering, m athem atics language. Drafting, m iii*.athing, b .'ding. and xeroxing. a n i D O T 'B L E RO O M , boys sleeping living room, cable T V . 1010 West Kitchen, porch, 23rd. Call G L 1-2488, G R 2-2273. RO O M B O A R D E x c e l­ lent food *35 monthly King e-double rooms. for U n iversity men Mrs Bod our G R 8-8113 907 Wexst 2 ?H (F o u r B lo c k s W e d ) Men Graduate Students Largo a lr co nditioned house- C a rp a ta d , kitchen, wa king , d is ta n c e a N EED FEMALE room m ate to share 2 bed room apartm ent. *37 50 each. 912B West Com* by after 5 p m . Furnished Apartments LUXURY APARTMENTS FOR MEN Orange and W hite Apartments 2707 Rio Grande Located 3 blocks from campus, the Orange and W h ile provides an efficient at­ mosphere for living, learning and socializing. It features: 3 bedroom suites with 2 baths, dining area, fully equipped kitchen, beds, chests of drawers, ample closets, w allto wall carpet, central air and heat, daily maid service, garbage pick-up, fire proof construction, elevator, assigned covered parking, living room with a huge stone fireplace, study room, family room, game room with regulation size billiards and ping-pong tables, laundry room wiih coin-operated washers and dryers, TV room with color TV, and canteen. For more information contact: MRS. RUTH LEW IS Orange and W hite Apartments 2707 Rio Grande G R 6-4648 Apartm ent No. 2: 3 bedrooms, kitchen, bath Carpeted A /C bookcases. *100 water, gas paid. living room, Study desk, A partm ent No Si On# large bedroom, living room A kitchen, bath. *85 AU bills paid. N icely furnished. Clean, quiet shown by ap­ pointment. C all M rs. Freund. H O 5-8198. campus. C a ll G R 7 7876 after 1610 W e s t Aver. .# MEN W ANTED F O R R EN T T O M E N : e fficie n c y «part- ments. Furnished, p rivate. W e s t Side. C a r needed. Bi is p a d. G R 2-0159. G R 8 2258 LA C A N A D A Now leasing for spring term. Luxurious one two bedroom apartments. E a c h with and dishwasher, disposal, cable TV', epa deus walk-in closets, pool. L au n d ry facilities. Cen­ tra! air. A L L BILLS PAID W ithin walking distance from campus. G R 3-1598 1300 W est 24th Street L A D Y G R A D U A T E student' Larg e lovely room. Adjoining bath. Ktthchen privileges G arag e turn shed. 3101 Robinson. G R 8-3372, NEAR UNIVERSITY. P artly room home. Large furnished 7 living room, 3 baths; g arage a p a rtm e n t GR 8-2438. living 4 BEDROOMS, room, kitchen, den Ju st redecorated and furnished. N ear c am ­ pus at 1506 Concordia. *110 monthly. GR 8-8563. Roommate Wanted tor need* upperclassm an M A L E R O O M M A T E needed. Graduating sen- ; to share apart- : ment. Nice neighborhood. Nicely appointed. *42 50 month plus electricity. Call GR 2-2256. I 1300 Norwalk, A p t D. ; M A L E G R A D U A T E student to share modern I A / C one bedroom apartm ent I block from , campus. OR 2-0567. NEED FEMALE room m a's to share 4 girl tp a rtm e n t. All bills paid. *55 luxurious Close to cam pus. GR 2-4587. NEED FEM ALE room m ate to live with th-ee girls in nice apartm ent. Close to cam pus, rent *48 75 a month, ('all GR 8-'.*039. FEMALE ROOMMATE: 4,130 plus electricity luxury apartm ent, walking distance of cam ­ pus. A /C. carpeted in deep blue. Chil GR 7- 7697 after 5:30 or PAX 1788. L A R G E L O V E L Y a p a rtm en t Single girt 21 or over. Call G R 7-8593 between 8-5. M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted to share luxury apartm ent with 2 other males. Call G L 3 9693. MALE SKARE luxury apartment, three others. *46.25. bills paid. H I 2-7398. O N E O R two roommates needed four girt apartm ent with a to share junior and senior. *45 per month ail bdls paid. pool. C a va lier Apartm ents. G R 7-5621. F O R M E H : 54 block south campus Double room. ba*h, *60. Single, *-15. R efrigerator, j 1 laundry. G R 2-0216. ^ Prefer living with a family? | Investigate W E R T H S STU­ DENT H O U S E for men 1 /2 block from campus Single or doub'e rooms 2620 W ichita G R 7-2400 U N I V E R S IT Y R O O M S : girls .’IOO Nueces; boys 2024 Speedway. A /C , kitchen, m aid, T V *30-$T- G R 6-9490. MALE STUDENTS: single or double rooms you will like. T h r fty 2nd sem es’e r rates 205 West 20ih; 1700 North Congress; 26!l4 Speedway. GR 8-7097. STUDENTS Need Extra Quiet For Studies? room* now showing: J O N E S H O U S E at 1804 L A V A C A Inquire mgr. 1802 L ava ca— G R 8-4101 2 b io c k j o ff c a m p o s — park - g p o rte r— a r conditioned N U E C E S H A L L Room and Board for second sem ester Parking, swimming pool E at at the Contessa Maid service 2700 Nueces OR 7-9766 un*. Typing, Multiitthlng. Binding A complete professional typing s e t t e e tail­ ored to the needs of University students. (Mb language, set* | cia) keyboard equipm ent these* and dissert** enc#, and engineer mg for Phone GR HO A GR 2-7677 ruadaiupe EX PERT TYPING. Term p a p e r s - report*— briefs Mrs. Montgomery. GR 2-560L The Contessa Exqu’s’ta !iv ng C o ed lounge C o rr p 2706 N ieces or yo -Park: m g eg. men. Pool— st Food on Pr Mo: Virginia C a noun Typing Service G R 7-9766 i and binding on theses and d.e- j 1301 Ed; J Symbol* Inwood Xerox L a m in a tin g GR 8-263# Notary HOWELL HOUSE ■ T H E .-E S, dsssertat. Bobby# Delafield. reports ns. HI 2-7164. afters UT men excellent fam ily-stria meals Modern facilities convenient to cam pus, cen- riff street tral air and heat Maid service parking. Singles doubles, GR 8 2521, GR I* 0525. SPRING VACANCY: A/C 'la! Hudson House 2510 R o Grande. GR $-76 s m eats Help Wanted EUROPEAN SUMMER employment All job tn En,: and and Colntiner.t. App: cations now be n j taken Student Travel. 2226 Guadalupe. GR 7-4340. descriptions Placem ent I su p er-;v o n of MATURE. ENERGETIC. b e brother type for two sm all boy* week-day afternoons, not baby sitting. Recreation or I cam ping experience helpful but more in por- sense ; ta rt qualifications a re depeadab! tv. than 6 and 7 se a r olds Phone GR 6 9367 or GR 7-169$. O ar also needed. sxecuti"* electric by former -y. BBA in secretarial stud: OL 3-8650. THEME.-!, REBORI I M r:J. F r a s e r . G R 6-131' T Y P I N G I WOO D3 I p u aortalimns, M an user:]»ts. Comp i d :e d up- for mu: til. Ut. m im eogra pix I leat: ng Iservice S E R V IC E E x :lertenc j ditto. Re.a sortable, H O 5-1LOTS. j T H E :SKS, ma dissertsi aes. law-br .eft, repo r t * rip:*. IB M . O L 4-3339 in CO M P E T ! CMT S E C K E X A R Y-T Y P IS T ; with m an y ye a rs of expe■Hence In a l: fie idi, I Will give consc.enuou* aad met iou us c ar# as to accu racy, correct » m poM- pa pisr*, reports, typing 5 ’.ion I these s anut dissertations. L A W 'WOS:K s p :KC* la w re v e w ! U L I S T - Briefs, sem inar papersi. r e M E le ctru m s L.c, Mu! til.th. a g Xerox- notes. I mg ■ —* _____ I T H E SCS. D IS S E R T A T IO N S , birefs, ( IL 4-31379. I and b.r.dmg service i on req.test. G R 8-5894 form and tech;n c a l :d is. Anthony. rep o rt* ib m . PASO HO USE 1808 West Ave. • L arg e rooms • Newly Carpeted • New refrigerator • Quiet. se< uded environment • Central a ir and heat • Cable TV lounge. Now accepting applications for fall sem ester. GR 8-3917 GRADUATE STUDENTS o r 2 point GFA undergrads in Government, History, Geolo­ gy, Biology and Chemistry. E arn *3 hour, plus. Call GR 7-2423. E X P E R I E N C E D S T E A K cook a rd w aitres­ ses. evening shift. Good salary , south Aus­ tin 710 Ben White. H I 4-1315. Call G R 1-5244 To Place a Texan Classified Ad CACTUS TERRACE DORM CALL TODAY! • com pletely carpeted • ba it- In bookcases • m aid service • washer-dryer • study desk • pool *35 m onthly 2212 San Gabriel G R 8-9252 G R 7-2357 Learn How Y O U Can Earn W ith AVON HI 2-0576 MARGARET RITCHIE Professional, Observant Typing Stnca 1951 D IS S E R T A T IO N S , T H E S E S , R E P O R T S Accurately bola. Mu tlllthed and bour-1 upon request. electric with as rn* typed on 1404 Kent Lace off Enfield Road! GR 6-7079 IB M . symbols. H O 5-7883 ‘-afley 5 30 p.m. w eekday*). I T Y P IN G . I : C A L L G R I-5244 F O R A C LA S SF IED A D I Wednesday, February I, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 Fire Death Arouses Co-operative Tenants surrounding them. During a fire, residents would probably be in­ jured during the jump. Stones said they found a new house for their co-op at 2506 San Antonio. Only one of the former residents chose not to return. At a meeting next week the men will decide whether more fire prevention measures wall be taken in the future. “ We are thinking of buying rope ladders floor for each of the second windows,” Stones revealed. Other co-operative houses also face firefighting inadequacies. Ramshorn Co-operative on Rio Grande St. has a wooden fire inspection Hie escape. Upon stairway was found cluttered with several items including a water hose. A resident says that they have a gardner who cleans the yard, but apparently he hasn't been there for some time. Buildings on Rio Grande are thus providing IO maximum fire danger. Rams­ horn from one is separated building by only a tree. feet apart, Unlike the University-o w n e d women co-operatives, the four p r i v a t e ones have sim ilar fire dangers. However, the wom­ en’s houses have regular fire drills and are constructed of brick. Karen Houghton of Century House said they have a mini­ mum of two fire drills a semes­ ter. “ W e'll probably have more than that this semester,” she said. Century has no fire escapes, and according to the co-operative officers, there is little that can be done by University officials. Miss Houghton explained the women also plan to buy rope ladders. “ We worked closely with Theleme, so we naturally are concerned about the prob­ lem,” she said. A nighttime is planned. Cindy Beach, fire co­ ordinator for Century, says the drill w ill be held next week. fire drill Seven women live on the first floor, with 16 on the second. Miss Beach says women jumping out windows w o u l d fall on either a concrete porch or on a drive­ way. Miss Beach says an Austin fire inspector checked their two fire extinguishers in September, but no one has checked the co-op- erativa house since. inspection at Stones says he doesn’t remem­ their ber any house. “ The only fire extinguish­ er we had was in the pantry; thus making it impossible to use it,” he said. A By ED BARRERA Texan News Editor fire which destroyed the Theleme Co-operative and killed a student last week has brought concern to students residing in other co-operative houses. One student said that a fire could destroy their wooden build­ ing in a matter of minutes. In (Custom ai l eIe Clothes ^/Alterations Hdetsy (joodnoiigh J I O 5-0490 last week’s fire, firemen battled the blaze for some time before they could douse tile inferno. the David Stones, an officer at Theleme, said they did not have any fire escapes. “ We thought that two stairways were enough, but we found out differ­ ent.” Both stairways were de­ stroyed by the blaze within min­ utes. Tile central stairway was blocked by the fire and also tile roof after it collapsed. The back staircase the pantry room where the fire is believed to have originated. into led Several students were injured when they leaped from their sec­ ond floor window's landing on ei­ ther a large shrub or on a con­ crete patio. An inspection of other co-op­ eratives revealed that they, too, have shrubs or concrete walks EUROPE BOUND? . . . SEE US FOR ICELANDIC AIR RESERVATIONS • LO W COST STUDENT SHIP SAILINGS • FOR­ EIGN C AR RENTAL OR PURCHASE • EURAILPASSES • STUDENT TOURS C A LL G R 8-9343 H ARW OOD TRAVEL SERVICE • 2428 GUADALUPE FAST DELIVERY! CALL YOUR ORDER IN G R 2-8323 Delivery 25c Within 3 Miles— 50c Over 3 Miles S P E C I A L 'A CHICKEN French Fries & Bread 80' BILLY'S LITTLE CHICKEN SHACK 2003 AIRPORT BLVD. GR 2-8323 Good Used Textbooks g o fast! Hurry to Hemphill's for the best ones! SAVE 30% and get your Ever-Ready Rebate too At 4 Convenient Locations Bring us your list of courses. W e know the right books! I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Debris Surrounds Co-Op's Fire Escape • . . the wooden stairs and structure present a hazard. Photo by Virgil Johnson Board Begins Rules Governing Pollution By The Associated Press The Texas Air Control Board moved forward ever so slowly Tuesday with the vexing and relatively uncharted problem of cleaning up the air around us. Tile agency was well aware of President proposal Johnson’s Monday for an all out assault on air pollution. “ Prevention is cheaper than the cure with a lot of things, and air pollution is one of them,” said Dr. Herbert McKee of Hous­ ton, chairman of the 11-month- old board. The board worked on general provisions and Regulation I —to control smoke and particles In the air, and it was slow going. Members, examining each word in open discussion, had com­ pleted only 22 lines of the pro­ posed regulations in three hours. They still were not entirely sat­ isfied with the way the rule read. “ For some things, there are no c o m p l e t e l y satisfactory an­ swers,” said McKee. The board’s rule specifies that the burning of burrs, trash, lint, and other wastes from cotton ginning operations is prohibited, except with prior approval of the board. Tony Price of Dallas, execu­ tive vice-president of the Texas Cotton Ginners Association, said that group’s directors had rec­ ommended equipping all new gins to eliminate lint fly, a ma­ jor problem in the past. Price was one of the few company representatives present, in con­ trast to the board’s Jan. 5 pub­ lic hearing on the proposed rules when a couple of hundred spokes­ men showed up to testify. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I A T A THE STUDENT LITERARY MAGAZINE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS Now accepting m an uscripts for spring issu e the POETRY • PROSE • CRITICISM MANUSCRIPTS SHOULD BE ACCOMPANIED BY SELF-ADDRESSED ENVELOPE AND RETURN POSTAGE IF THEIR RETURN IS DESIRED. HEMPHILL'S 2501 Guadalupe 109 E. 21st Street 26th end San Jacinto 2244 Guadalupe ROOM HO, JO U RN A LISM BUILDING DRAWER D, UNIVERSITY STATION 78712 Peg# 8 Wednesday, February I, 1967 THE DAILY TEXAN m m a J Bills Proposed To Legislature Time, Pay Raise Measures Filed By The Associated Press Bills to put as much as $100 a month more in teacher’s pay­ checks and to keep Texas from going on Daylight Saving Time this year were introduced in the Legislature Tuesday. Rep. George Hinson of Mine­ ola proposed the pay increase, to $100 a ranging month. And 66 representatives signed the bill with him. from $61 Reps. W ill Smith of Beaumont and Ralph Wayne of Plainview introduced a bill exempting Tex­ as from the Federal Uniform Time Act, which w ill put all states on Daylight Saving Time this summer except those states which exempt themselves. Sen. Joe Christie of E l Paso introduced a companion bill in the Senate. Rep. R. H. Cory of Victoria Introduced a bill to make the governor “ chief planning officer of the state” to decide how rev- See related story on page I. enues w ill be spent. This bill would establish an interagency planning council and a division of planning coordination to work with the governor. Sen. Murray Watson of Mart introduced a proposed constitu- ; tional amendment that would re­ create the state veterans land program with a $400 million bond issue. The veterans land pro­ gram died after votes rejected a $200 million bond issue question in November, 1965. Sen. Charles Wilson of Lufkin Introduced a plan to regulate public utilities in Texas through a Texas Public Utilities Board, as proposed by the governor. Sen. Red Berry of San Antonio proposed an election law change that not only would remove the political party pledge from pri­ mary ballots but would remove the party affiliation blank on vot­ er registration forms. Atomic Energy Growth Foreseen By The Associated Press WASHINGTON The government, reporting rec­ ord-breaking activity in the nu­ clear power field in 1966, fore­ cast Tuesday that atomic power plants w ill furnish electricity by 1972 for more than 27 million Americans. The Atomic Energy Commis­ sion made the prediction in its annual report to Congress. The past year, especially the past six months, saw an upsurge in nu­ clear power planning by private industry that exceeded “ the most optimistic forecasts.” The A EC declared 55 per cent of the new steam-electric gen­ erating capacity announced by US utilities during 1966 was for nuclear power plants. Wall Street Closes With Brisk Trading points of the 183.57 which was their net loss in 1966. At the bot­ tom of the 1966 market, the Dow industrials were down 250.87, ft drop of 25 per cent. Of 1.455 issues traded, 637 rose and 596 fell. New highs for 1966- 67 totaled 69 and there was one few low. The New York Stock Exchange index lost five cents at $47.30. American S t o c k Exchange prices backed away from an early rise and ended irregularly lower. By The Associated Press NEW YO RK The stock market closed high­ er again Tuesday, ending the month of January, one of the market’s best in history. Trad­ ing was heavy. Gainers had the edge over los­ ers and the averages were mod­ erately higher in the final hour even though computer stocks and other glamour issues were hit hard. Volume was 11.55 million shares compared with 10.25 million Mon­ day. The Dow Jones industrial av­ erage rose 1.78 to 849.89. The average was higher than this in early trading but consid­ erable selling was generated by word from IB M that the Jus­ tice Department is investigating the computer industry'. This up­ set a number of the computer stocks as well as IBM . It led to some general selling. As January ended, the Dow Industrials had recouped 64.20 Thurs., Feb. 9th 8 p.m. Municipal Auditorium J 22342234 Guadalupe V V - A / V I X - V GR 6-3525 R T H E N TAPE RECORDERS ADDERS TYPEWRITERS Dictation Machines FM -AM RADIOS PHONOGRAPHS Mini p o rta b le CALCULATORS TUNERS AMPLIFIERS T v 90 Days Rent Applies on Its Purchase S H O W OUR YOUNG GENERATION* m l Z Z ? . ? t^P-M- o N l^ 1UESDAY, F®* AuDVtOR'UfA IA U N 'C JR s hoW o n 9 2501 Gu*4»,aP H£\arV. 6\7 9 ° / ^ * ^ 4.5747 I-166b . $4.00 » » $2- ------- FREE to $1828 Blanket Tax Holders or Purchasers of Spring Activity Fee THEODORE BIKEL, JUDY COLLINS Balladeer - - Folksinger Raconteur - - Folksinger Wednesday, Feb. 15 • Municipal Auditorium 8 p.m. Also FREE on C E C Season Ticket Blanket Tax Holders and Purchasers of Spring A ctivity Fee must obtain FREE tickets for all C E C events in advance at FINE ARTS BOX OFFICE • HOGG AUDITORIUM Open Monday-Friday 9-4 H M M M W V Student Bonus Events for February FREE Ticket Drawings Begin One W eek In Advance Feb. 13 Austin Symphony Orchestra Concert 8:30 P.M. Municipal Aud. Feb. 22 Eastman Quartet Feb. 27 Austin Symphony, Soloist: Edith Peinemann, Violin 8:15 P.M. Hogg Aud. 8:30 P.M. Municipal Aud.