Weather: • Clear to Partly Cloudy • High: Mid 90's • Low: Low 70's T he Summer T e x a n Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Barton Springs — In Photos Page 9 • Vol. 69 Price Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1969 Twelve Pages Today No. 6 ^ , Ci?°9 -J **es8 "Tlie Governor has not approved these bills, and the Governor is not protected nor bound by court rules of evidence which perm it him to close his eyes to the actual fact*,” he said. ‘‘Hie Governor Is part of the precess by which bills are passed, and as Governor, I do not intern! to become involved In any situations whereby the Con­ stitution was not followed.” “ ...F a ilu re to veto would also put the Governor in the position of condoning, ii not cooperating with, legislative disregard of constitutional requirem ents. Failure to veto could also result in confusion and liti­ gation,” he said. “ I am disappointed that one of the bills —the omnibus courts bill—which would create 27 new district courts for the state —is among this pac kage. This veto should riot be cort.' trued as criticism by me of the bills and their contents, nor of the authors. This simply is a m atter of following the law.” Board Considers j N i x o n A l Fee Hike Today 7 in Galveston Friday The University Board of Regents to will meet consider a lengthy list of proposals, the proposed hiring of a including students' attorney by the Students’ Association. Also included on the agenda: • Assessment of a new $10 per student fee authorized by the Legis­ lature. lf Regents approve the fee, it to be used for faculty salaries, this would be collected beginning September • Proposed establishment of a De­ partm ent of Oriental and African Languages and Literatures, • Proposed $1.40 increase in blank­ e t tax. • Proposed m ajor in ethnic studies under the degree of bachelor of arts. For US Grot,, Vt WASHINGTON (AP) — President Rich­ ard M. Nixon voiced a hope Thursday night his Administration can beat a tim etable for pulling 100,000 troops from Vietnam by year’s end and all ground combat troops by the close of 1970. T ie timetable was proposed by Clark M. Gifford, secretary of defense at the end of the Johnson Administration, in an a rti­ cle in Foreign Affairs Quarterly. “ I think we have started toward the with­ drawal that Mr. Clifford advocated,” Nix­ on told a nationally broadcast news confe­ rence. “ I hope we can beat his timetable and not be in Vietnam as long as he sug­ gested.” The President said, too. the target date for talks with Russia on limitation of stra ­ tegic arm s is sometime between July 31 and Aug. 15~perhaps in Vienna or Geneva. Many Topics Covered T ie President covered assorted topics at his first news conference in two months. On Vietnam, Nixon said the US military commander there. Gen. Creighton VV. Ab­ ram s, has orders “ to conduct this war with a minimum of American casualties ' and he believes the general is following or­ ders. “ W p have withdrawn forces,” Nixon said In evident reference lo his announcement More Black Students Filling Campus Leadership Posts By RICK SCOTT Managing Editor Black students across the United States are making prestigious gains in the area of student government. A rarity on cam ­ puses only a decade ago, they are playing increasingly important roles in the student rf fairs at their schools. A recent Associated Press survey showed black students holding leadership positions ranging from proctor to class president in schools across the Sou'h. Many sit on student councils and student courts in a policy-making and judicial ca­ pacity. in dormitories Many are the first of their race to serve in such posts. And they are getting good grades for their classroom work from uni­ versity officials. Aru aa uibctr fetors Compliment Student* "The election of Negro students to office reports Charles works well at Em ory,” Beall. Beall is dean of men at Emory, a suburban Atlanta school where a black student Is president of the sophomore class. ‘ They do their jobs well, and are well respected,” he added. A spokesman at Florida State University in student said blacks have been active government and contribute a great deal. The first black student to win a campus- the University Is E rnie wide election at Haywood, 21, elected president of the Students’ Association. in March as vice­ Haywood defeated his white opponent, Jerry Hunnicutt, in a runoff, 5.894 to 3,187. Jam es Baxter, a 26-year-old Air Force veteran, is the new president of the Uni­ versity of Tennessee Student Government Association and apparently the highest- ranking officer at predominantly white Southern colleges and universities. He defeated two white candidates in a campaign during which he ran as a stu­ dent, “ not as a Negro.” He came in third in the first election May 7, but the results were set aside by the Tennessee student tribunal cm grounds that the secret ballot was violated. Race No* toe Issue About 300 black students wore among the approximately 20.000 enrolled on the Knox­ ville campus at the tim e of the election. “ I never thought much about being the first Negro to run, or to be elected,” said Baxter. “I was running as a candidate, as a student, not as a Negro.” Baxter campaigned largely on a plat­ form of student power and freedom for students. He argued that th'-* present stu­ dent government was subservient to the Tennessee administration and “ is com­ pletely powerless.” Joseph B. Floyd was elected president of the sophomore class at Emory after serving in a sim ilar post for the freshman class last year. He is one of only about IO black students in a class of approxi­ mately HOO. The university’ has 5,500 stu­ dents, about 50 of them black. Haywood is a member of the Afro-Amer­ icans for Black Liberation (AABL) at the University. He said after the election that his connection with that group definitely hurt him. AABL had submitted “ dem ands” to the University administration only a few weeks before the election. Haywood: ‘Create an Awarn****’ Haywood missed a clear m ajority in the first race of four candidates by only 37 votes. “ I probably picked up some votes an the novelty of tx mg black, he said, ’ but I definitely lost some because I’m black and I ’m in AABL.” Haywood said, though, that he often dis­ agreed with AABL leaders and did not take part their demands. in pushing for instigation of Like Baxter, Haywood doesn't think stu­ dent government is especially powerful, but “it’s the only thing we have. “ You can have all the rallies and demon­ strations you want,” he added, “ but all you can do is create an aw areness.” of « ae 8 of 25,000 to be pulled out by the end of August. “ We will withdraw m ore.” Nixon began his comment by saying that for five years under the previous Adminis­ tration there was continued escalation of the war. He also said in the year during which Gifford was Secretary of Defense US casualties reached their highest annual level. “ This Is not to say that Mr. G ifford's present judgment Is not to be considered,” Nixon added. Of the Paris peace talks Nixon reported tinder questioning that there is no substan­ tial public evidence of progress in getting down to “ substantive negotiations.” Progress Hoped “ We hope,” he said, "within the next two or three months to see some progress in substantial discussions in P aris.” Nixon w'as speaking out at his sixth new's conference since he entered t h e White House. He cam e in with a big smile to 1he assemblage of reporters in the East Room and encountered a question about the continuing, heating economy. Asked if he contemplated any new moves against rising living costs and prices, Nix­ on said it usually takes about six months between the time of decision and their tak­ ing effect in the economic field. Discuss Budget He voiced a belief the decisions his Ad­ ministration has made on such things as budgeting and continuation of the surtax will begin to toke effect in two or three m ore months. In lite political arena. Nixon got an in­ quiry whether he will endorse State Sen. John J. Marchi and other Republican nomi­ nees in the New York Q ty election this fall. Marchi won a victory for the con­ servative wing of his party in defeating Mayor John V. Lindsay s bid for renomi­ nation the prim ary Tuesday. Lindsay will run as Liberal candidate. in Nixon grinned and said he would hack the winning COP candidates but also follow a longtime practice of campaigning and taking part only in national and state elec­ tions—not local ones. No Problems With Hoover Asked about controversies involving FBI Director J. E dgar Hoover to wiretapping, Nixon said, “Mr. Hoover does enjoy my complete confidence” and that in regard there had been no discussions about his te­ nure in office On electronic surveillance, Nixon said he had checked whether it was done by the FBI on its own, or approved by the attor­ ney general. “ I found that it had always been approved by the attorney general,” he said. “It should be used very sparingly, very carefully.” with regard to the rights of the individuals involved, Nixon said of wire­ tapping, Rocky’s Trip Useful The President said a "great deal of u s e ­ fulness,” will come from the trip to Latin America by Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York. “The explosive demonstrations indicate that such a trip was necessary,” the P re­ sident said. He recalled his own trip to Europe in which “ there were dem onstra­ tions in every city I visited—yet the trip was worthwhile.” Asked about a report by a score of GOF congressmen on cam pus un­ rest, he said "it was a very thoughtful re­ port,” and “ they gave me a k>1 of informa­ tion” which he needs to help him deal with cam pus unrest. “ I cannot support the legislative propo­ sals in the House of Representatives which would rut off funds to any college or Uni­ versity in which there was a demonstra­ tion.” t utting Off Nows “This would be cutting off our noses to spite our faces,” Nixon said. The responsibility for containing campus unrest should be on the shoulders of college adm inistrators, Nixon said. Asked about the Middle East. Nixon said he sees very little improvement. He said he trusts that four-power talks might develop some communication be­ tween Arabs and Israelis, and hopes that the Soviet Union might play a p a r t in its prospects As for his Safeguard anti ballistic missile the Senate, system and Nixon said polls indicate 51 senators in f^- vor and 46 against. “ We will win the fight on Safeguard. It will not be necessary to compromise,” he added, although there might be some changes in detail in the le­ gislation. He said new Information on Soviet tests of multiple targeted re-entry vehicles has convinced him that Safeguard is most im­ portant. If Tax No! Extended Asked what will happen if the income surtax is not extended by June 30, Nixon said Congress can pass a simple resolution to take care of the situation until it acts on extension legislation. “What is im portant,” he said, “ is that the world knows that it will be extended.” He said, however, h e believes *he surtax had bipartisan support and “duo to that support, it will pass the Congress ” Asked about recent m ayor a1 elections, Nixon said the snap reaction to the Los Angeles victory of Mayor Sam Terry m ay have been wrong as it was Interpreted as a white-black election. He said he doesn't believe the great m a­ jority of US cities a r e anti-Negro, o r an­ ti-poor or mem bers of hate groups. But he said Americans “ are led up to lawlessness ' and here by violence and they want candidates who will a strong stand on it. that he thinks this up t h e message to political candidates. take New Jester Center to Create Unique Living Experiences Fifteen elevators in the complex assure rapid transit to the top IpvcIs of the multi- storied structures. The academic unit, which will be under con moi of the College of Arts and Sciences, houses, among other things, a 400 seat au­ ditorium equipped with two huge television screens and $40,000 worth of visual aids, two 960-capacity dining floor* which will serve cafeteria style continuously from 7 a rn. to 7 p.m. for residents, and a post of­ fice with 1.600 boxes. Also w'ithin the academic area will be seven classrooms, one seating 72 arid six seating 63, each complete with movable chairs, four lecture rooms seating 90 each, thro** 30-seat labs, five confer­ ence and sem inar rooms, 40 offices, and a reading room with a 52-seat capacity and book stacks, language In the basem ent are the main adminis­ trative offices and the central kitchen, both of which will provide the heartbeat of the complex. The kitchen Is equipped with close (See JESTER, Page 12.) to By ANDY YEMMA New# Editor Construction continues at a bee-like pace on the “ Anthill” after what seemed for the last two years to be an an tlike process. The “ Anthill,” officially known as the Beauford H. Jester Center, is a massive structural complex that, when completed this September, will house more than 3,000 University residents and accomodate many more in its academic facilities. The director of the center, Jam es O. Braeutigam and the Student Services In­ stitute conducted a tour through the com­ plex Tuesday for newsmen, photographers, and University officials that left the visitors to marveling at speak, rather than the outer appearance of the .structure. inner sanctum, so the Although quite a bit of work rem ains on tlie 15-story women s dormitory’, only the finishing touches are ne*xied to finish the 10-level m en’s residence hall and three story academic-dining unit. T ie m i t e r ’s gross square fool age of 866,- 700 square feet will m ake it the r i m i e s t building in Austin and easily the costliest of University building projects at $18.75 mil­ lion. including construction and furnishings. late Texas Governor who served from 1947 49, the Jester Center was originally conceived in 1965 w'hen it becam e apparent that more University- owned housing was needed Named after the The Board of Regents, on which Jester served from 1929-35, approved final plans for the complex in November, 1966. and took bids for construction after a sale of dormitory revenue bonds in February, 1967. Construction by W arrior Constructors Inc., of Houston began March 6 1967. The total 3.040 students (1,800 women, 1,240 men) will pay a room and board rate of $1,008 per year for the community bath plan, or $1,030 for adjoining baths. Maid and linen service plus room telephones will tx* included. Each room contains built in furniture, in­ cluding beds. (convertible to couches for daytime use*, wardrobes, desks (complete with lam ps), lavatories, book shelves, and tack boards. Dormitory’ halls are carpeted and the room* i r e floored with tile. Iw o dining floors, classrooms flank modernistic atrium . I C > M16 Delivery Slow Contractor Behind Schedule WASHINGTON (A P )-A com­ pany which received a contro­ versial, high-priced contract lo manufacture M16 rifles for the Vietnam war has fallen behind its delivery schedule. The Army last year justified award of the contract to Harring­ ton & Richardson Inc. by saying the firm was better qualified to meet an accelerated delivery schedule than other companies ready to supply the rapid-firing, lightweight price. rifles at a lower According to the contract, the Worcester, Mass., firm was to have delivered 19,000 rifles by May 31. But Pentagon officials said totaled 12,210. actual deliveries Another contractor. General Motors’ Hydramatic Division, is delivering weapons ahead of schedule. As of May 31, GM had delivered 29,676 M16s. Its sche­ dule requirement at that point also was 19,000. The Pentagon says M16's are in the hands of all US combat units in Vietnam. But a week ago, it w'as reported that mo-d men of the 299th Combat Engi­ neer Battalion were not armed with M16's when they beat off repeated enemy attacks on their remote base. The contracts with H&R and GRAND OPENING! CHURCH'S FRIED CHICKEN 49(Regular Order) 2516 SA N A N T O N IO ST. (Behind The Forty Acres Club) “G O TO THE CHURCH’S OF YOUR CHOICE EVERY D A Y ’’ OTHER L O C A T IO N S AT: 6919 AIRPORT c t n w OI T O R P * ,U W ‘ 1150 AIRPORT ALL NIGHT EVERY NIGHT listening ear IS OPEN A Friendly Place Where, in the Late Night Hours, People W ho Care Will Listen, Over a Cup of Coffee, to Whatever is Troubling You. An Occasion for Face-to-Face Conversation, respectful of Your Privacy, with Community, Student and Clergy Volunteers. I O p.m.-6 a.m. METHODIST STUDENT CENTER 2434 Guadalupe Street S ponsored by: Au*+?n-Tr#vit C ou n ty M ontol H o ilt h A n o c ia tio n and R a in o u t W orker* A n o c ia tio n a t U.T. (lf You Wish to Participate as Volunteer Staff, Please Call 478-5693 For Information and Interview) Rocky s Trip Changed Leaders Request Aid ASUNCION. Paraguay (AP) — Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller wfound up an incident-free visit to Brazil Thursday and flew to Paraguay where student leaders h a v e threatened a resurgence of dem­ onstrations against his fact-find­ ing trip. The New York governor, tour­ ing Latin America on behalf of President. Richard M. Nixon, will meet Paraguay’s strongman pres­ ident, Alfredo Stroessner, Friday. Stroessner has announced he will ask for $115 million in long-term American loans for various pro­ jects. Rockefeller had been schedul­ ed to go on to Uruguay Friday, but his visit in Paraguay was extended until Saturday and he will fly then to Punta del Este, Uruguay, instead of Monteviedo, the capital, to avoid planned stu­ dent demonstrations. Some Paraguayan leftists said they would try to stage a dem­ onstration here before Rockefel­ ler departs. Cheered at Airport But there was no sign of hos­ tility at his arrival. Several thousand persons cheered the gov­ ernor at the Asuncion airport. Few police were in evidence. Winding up the three-day visit to Brazil, Rockefeller said in Sao Paulo private that Biazilian groups had suggested setting up a joint US-Brazilian commission to work together in the private sector. industrialists The governor held meetings with Brazilian rn an exclusive Sao Paulo club Thursday while the building was surrounded by the tightest securi­ ty guard of his Latin American tour. harassed by violent demon­ strations in earlier stages. Ald Requests Extensive This leg of Rockefeller’s trip has found him confronted with massive requests for foreign aid. In the last two days. Brazil­ ian leaders have presented their case in a clear-cut dollars-ind- cents fashion. In Sao Paulo alone, Brazil's largest and richest city, he has been asked for assistance in obtaining $165 million for pub­ lic works. in American foreign aid for Bra­ zil for 1970 will amount to $174 million in loans, and another $13 million technical assistance. Paraguay currently receives $3"> million in foreign aid a year, mostly from the United States. Despite the efforts of P a r a ­ t o guay's military government give Rockefeller a warm wel­ come, student opposition to his visit cropped up. US Continuing to Pressure North VietsforWithdrawal Pact Ambassador L a w r e n c e E. Walsh, sitting in for chief US ne­ gotiator Henry Cabot Ixxlge, first asked his question on North Viet­ nam in his troop withdrawals prepared statement. Then in the rebuttal period, he intervened at to ask: “Are least six North Vietnamese forces pre­ pared to withdraw from South Vietnam?” times Each time North Vietnam's deputy representative. Col. Ha Van Lau, replied by asking Walsh whether tile United States was prepared to end its aggression in Vietnam and to withdraw its for­ ces unconditionally. After the meeting Walsh said the “extensive rebuttal” period boiled down to his attempt to get an answer to his question. Women, Children 'Camp-in' At State Welfare Office the night. About 50 of t h e m camped inside the building Wed­ nesday night. The protest, which began Wed­ nesday with about IOO welfare recipients presenting grievances to State welfare officials, h a s been peaceful. free The welfare mothers say they want food stamps a n d changes in a referral system set up here when State welfare pay­ ments were cut because of lack of funds. I Communists Launch New Assault I SAIGON (AP) — Hie Commu­ nist command launched the big­ gest assault of its summer cam ­ paign on Tay Ninh and its satel­ lite ullages Thursday. Enemy forces broke through and fought allied drops in village streets. f l e d A US report from Tay Ninh said about 1,000 South V i e t- namese civilians their homes. Tile fighting encircled the city, and continued into the night. Battle deaths for the w e e k were 335 Americans, 516 South Vietnamese, and 4,260 enemy. Since the Paris peace talks be­ gan May 13, 1968, 13,427 Ameri­ cans have been killed. PARIS (AP)—The United States pressed North Vietnam repeat­ edly Thursday for a direct com­ mitment to withdraw its troops from South Vietnam, but each time the Hanoi representative at the Paris peace talks sidestepped the question. The US effort was the most persistent yet made at the talks to get a definite statement of North Vietnam's intention with regard to the estimated 100,000 North Vietnamese troops in the South. The main effect, however, was to drag out twenty-second the full-scale session to six hours, 15 minutes, making this the longest meeting since early February. No. 6. C O R N C H IP C H IL I PIE . . . . 34c t o r n » /c h i l l beans A c h eee e top ped chip* No. 7. T A C O BU RG ER 24c taco m e a t , c h e es e A sauc e on a bun No. 8. H O T D O G ... 24c w ith c h e e s e and sp eci al sauc e No. 9. G U A C A M O L E T O S T A D A fi s t tilla w / g u a c a m o l e le tt u ce and s ala d , fr ie d corn .. . 34c t o r ­ PNo. IO. N A C H O S . . . . 24c the subject of con­ GM were last investigations gressional spring after The Associated Press disclosed the Army plan­ ned to pay the two firms far more than it had been paying Colts Inc. of Hartford, Conn., for the rifles. In addition, two other companies said they were prepared to supply the rifles for lf>ss money. Money Not in B i d s But the Army countered that its choice was not based upon price. It said it chose H&R and it was confident GM because they could meet an accelerated production schedule. firms were to supply 240,000 rifles each over a two- year period. The Army said the higher price to GM was a result of higher retooling labor and costs. Both Maremont Corp. of S a c o, Maine, and Cadillacs Gage of Warren, Mich., also had sought M16 contracts. Both firms later told Congress they had estimated they could supply the same num­ ber of weapons for about $38 million. The Army told all four firms it did not want prices in­ cluded rn their proposals. Resume Delivery in July When asked about H&R’s de­ liveries, an Army spokesman conceded they “are slightly be­ hind.’’ But. he added, deliveries of M16’s from all three produc­ ers are running ahead of expec­ tations at this stage. spokesman The Army said “ H&R has stated to us that they have overcome some of their production problems and expect to be on schedule by the end of July.” No. I. BEEF T A C O .. 24c lettu ce and chcene No. 2. C H A L U P A ... 24c fl a t fr ie d corn to r ti lla w ith b e a n s , le ttu c e £ c h e e s e No. 3. 2 -E N C H IL A D A S 67c w it h c hil i, c h e e s e A sh ell to r til la No. 4. BURRITO . . . . 24c flo u r to r til la w r a p p e d ar o u n d beans, c h e e s e and B ur rito s auce No. 5. E N C H IL A D A D IN N E R 2 e n c h il a d a s, g u a c a m o le sa la d . A to r til la ahell .......96c fr ij o le s , 29th at Guadalupe v j P o C o T A c °- ^ Mon. thru Sat. 311 So. Lamar (Drive thru W in d o w ) Open I I A .M .— M id m te ^ n u , , S 1n^ ay Open 11 A .M .— IO P.M. EAT I N - T A K E O U T I • • i i f i I A# SAN ANTONIO (AP) - About 30 women and children Thursday night evacuated the State wel­ fare offices they had occupied for more than 24 hours in protest of welfare programs. Spokesmen they would said camp outside the office building through the night. State Public Welfare Depart­ ment officials earlier had closed the building’s doors to all b u t those leaving it. The State attor­ ney general’s office issued orders to close, officials said. The crowd of women and small children marched out of the big, pinkish-brown building about 7 p.m., charging that they in without a mo­ were locked ment’s notice and without access to telephones. stucco Newsmen, however, said t h e building did not appear to b e locked, although no one was al­ lowed inside. Mrs. Jo An Gutierrez, one of the group’s spokesmen, said the protesters would remain through STYLISHL Y DIFFERENT 1415 LAVACA 476-9716 % 9 am - 5 pm 8 pm - 11 pm ’- T r i / t o t . • • ...Residence Hall for 2707 R IO G R A N D E University Women... is ready to talk to YOU about Fall 69! I Come by...and apply! OR WRITE: THE CONTESSA WEST 2707 RIO GRANDE, AUSTIN 78705 • 20 M eals Served Each W eek • Fully Air C o n d itio n ed in Beautiful Dining Hall • Swimming Pool and Sundeck • Every Suite H as K itchen/D ining A rea • C olo r Television • Living in Elegance • 3 Blocks from C am pus • Parking • Laundry Facilities • M aid Servica • E xperienced, Q u alified Supervision m u P ig ! 2 Friday, Jun. 20, 1969 THE SUMMER TEXAN GR 6-4648 ja r com plete inform ation PAPPAGALLO IS HAVING A SUMMER SALE WHILE IT’S STILL SUMMER. iiku; m *12 ALL OF OUR BASAT SUMMER DRESSES a r e 40% OFF. (mm MBI AVMMMM IT WI) * • 7JflTFlRgMI m m f* f I i gT* • I 'Flower Pot' Savage s Select Community j j Encounters No Germ Problem Dr. Savage says that all of the animals are kept in special steri­ lized cubicles. All instruments, food, and vitamins mast be com­ pletely clean before being put inside. Disease: \ Greater Problem Tile mice who live in the iso­ lated colony at the University, like all germ free animals, are not as strong ar their counter­ parts on the outside world. Thus, they require special vitamins, ac­ cording to Dr. Savage. the microbial Vitamin K is produced in the mice by flora, There is the possibility that other vitamins also are produced, he points out. “ Tile defenses of the body are conditioner! by micro-organisms that w'p carry with us. Therefore, germ-free animals are more sus­ ceptible to disease.” Dr, Savage observes. The intestines of germ­ free animals are extremely large compared to those of germ-filled animals, he continues. Student Growth The University cannot become great if social and economic con­ trols determine its activity, said Dr. Roderick Bell, assistant pro­ fessor of government. Dr. Bell spoke at an Issues session Thursday. Ideas and Dr. Bell, in his speech, ‘'Pros­ pects for Growth at UT: Even if you Start with a Genuine Acorn, You Cannot Grow a nighty Oak in a Flower Pot,” said that the University shams the problems with schools across the country. It shares the ‘‘flow­ er pot” problem. He said a flower pot is a ves­ sel too small to hold a great tree. Dr. Bell challenged the University, asking if “ we consti­ tute a viable seed.” The University is committed to education with people Interested in knowledge and education as values in and of themselves. This takes money and personnel, he said. The University has potential money and "pretty good” per­ sonnel, Dr. Bell said, and it is a potentially great university. It Is hard to specify w'hat a great university will be, he said, but it is known what a great university is not. Dr. Bell staled that a university that has "ex­ ternally imposed criteria" of ex­ cellence will not be great. side economic and social ties. Dr Bell pointed out that the University could not get much in football ratings, but higher could in academic standings. Dr. Bell asked, ‘‘would we trade ath­ letic prestige for academic pres­ tige?" The University does not have to do this, he said, but w'hat if it came to a choice, which way would it go? Cultural shocks such as bla^k revolts, drugs, and confrontation tactics do not have to be present in a great university, but they are, and Dr. Bell asked if "Tex­ He said he believes a univer­ sity becomes a "paradox" if the reason it becomes great is be­ cause of its connections with out­ as will tolerate these things?” Knowledge and teaching may go on outside of the University through movies, TV, cheap press­ es. He feels these may take OV'T the function of universities if they do not reorganize. It is hard for administrators to change. Money given for football sta­ diums and business departments is permissable, but often poor motives are given for this action, he said. Dr. Bell thinks immedi ate tangible payoffs to social and political systems are not justifi­ able. Texas is growing and require a great university, he stated. If the University recognizes this, it can become great, he added, pointing out the administration cannot do this by itself and that the faculty must stand up for education for education s sake. See and Compare! MAYFAIR HOUSE OUR "SHORT ORDER” BREAKFASTS ARE GREAT! HOURLY BUS SERVICE NO EXTRA CHARGE! SOUND PROOF TV AND GAME ROOMS! Dr. Savage is reluctant to pre­ dict what his research will mean in the future because, he admits, there is so much to be learned. (what “ I presume thai one could say if we learn about the immuniza­ tion process the body gees through to adjust to m icro bial flora) that it may be possible to learn how to stimulate im­ munization to disease, but that is highly speculative,” he theoriz­ es. However, he adds, some types of surgery' are done in a germ­ free atmosphere Dr. Savage, w'ho has been work­ ing in this particular field for J the last five years, refers to his work with a highly specialized I vocabulary. But conversation with him, how'ever contusing to an un­ scientific mind, removes some of the mystery surrounding his work. The experimental seems sud­ denly more understandable. Dallas Pilot Dies In Fighter Crash DALLAS (A P ) — Investigators probM the charred wreckage Thursday of a Navy jet fighter which exploded and crashed into the parking lot of the company that built it 15 years ago, Tile Wednesday accident took the life of a 31-year-old airlines pilot. Witnesses said the plane ap­ peared to explode on takeoff from the Grand Prairie Naval Air Sta­ tion. J a CHECK THESE FEATURES: • Only Four Blocks from C a m p ti • Air Condi* oned— Centra' H eat • M a ’ .I and P ,r*er Se -.' e • Pr .ale Pa'* cg Area • Daily Linen & Cleaning Service Available • Soundp• oof Stud. Room 9 Heated Swimming Pool W *n P cen In M and 8a-r House! • *> Machine anc a K re hen for pr vate Use • Washers Dryers, Hair D r,eri ancj |ror Boards • Color TV-Radio-Stereo KODACOLOR PRINTS Bring Us Y our Exposed Film by 4: P M Prints R e a d y 49 H r*. Late r et 4: P M STUDTMAN PHOTO • Cameron Village 19th at Lavaca NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR FALL, 1969 Coll Us About Our NEW MAYFAIR APARTMENTS Next Door! Mrs. Fay Huston Manager — CA LL — M ayfair House 2000 P e a rl S t . Information Desk G R 2-5437 Plan for the Unexpected By RICK KEETON New* Assistant There is something eerie about walking down the long corridors the Experimental Science of is filled Building. Every room with overlapping, intertwining glass containers af varying shapes and sizes. Whirls of unfamiliar odors pervade the air. In this austere structure, which Is the longest building on cam­ pus, some unusual and interest­ ing experimental work is being carried out. One set of experiments is be­ ing conducted by Dr. Dwayne Savage, assistant professor of microbiology in normal micro­ bial flora. To a visitor, such names make the surroundings all the more frightening. However, Dr, Savage's congen­ ial personality quickly puts the visitor at ease. “ Normal microbial flora lives on all animals,” he points out. Es­ sentially, these are the micro­ scopic creatures that cover the exterior and interior of the body. "Tile flora consists of bacteria, some fungi, much yeast, virus and some parasites,” Dr. Savage explains. Animal^ I/ead Pampered lif e The present object of study for Dr. Savage and his eight grad­ uate student assistants is a col­ ony of ' germ-free” animals. He readily explains that the offspring of mast mammals are germ-free until they are bom. At the moment of birth, the flora begins to grow is "The number of these micro­ organisms astronomical, ” states Dr. Savage, adding that there are about IOO billion per gram on parts of the human body. The first research of this type began when baby animals were delivered from the mother di­ rectly into a germ-free culture. Now actual breeding is being car­ ried on in the special atmosphere. PARTY-MATE computer ( ta t* * •I date* • Jntv date* br Jolr ll... Bacteria-Free . . Dr. Savag e prepares Atmosphere 'pure ftrain' experiment. —Photo bv Van Bro Rum Professor Begins Insurance Study • • • • • • • • • • • ® ^ ® There I Still Time . . , 24 D ay Deluxe Escorted Student Tour I application • Spacial ra tea Dr. William T. Hold, assistant professor of insurance in the De­ partment of Finance, has been named by the Federal Trade Olm mission to direct a study of insurance "assigned automobile E l h o p e ; J ^ Viilhfig Eng *nd Germany Swit- Italy, France. Leaving • i*rl«nd, from N. Y. 1,295.00. July 23 I H A I ! W O O D 0 T R A V E L S E R V IC E risk plans.” • • • • • • • • • • a M i rn rn nm As a part of the six month, $2 million study, Dr. Hold, will col­ lect data from the assigned risk plans of Texas, California, New York, North Carolina. Wisconsin, South Carolina, and New' Jersey. “ Assigned risk plans” cover persons who have valid driver’s licenses but whose past driving i violations place them in too high a “ risk market” for standard po­ licies. V T S t u d e n t * , fe e H ie e o m p n te r p e r * * n a ] I t v fo r m w r i t e : F A U T T - M S T K . P . O B o t SPSS, A n / t in . T e a * * , a r < a ll 443-1791 ' D t p A S a v e ) T e x a s I n s t r u m e n t s j now. Enjoy the summer but don’t V 4 it qnt you down. Equ'pt vour- j tor 4h** months of f co n cern in g T h e n a tio n a l a d v e rtisin g re p re se n ta tiv e of T h e S u m m er T e x a n is N atio n al h d u c a tio n a l A d v ertisin g S ervice 360 L e x in g to n Ave., N ew Y ork. N.Y., 10017. to T h e A ssociated P re ss a n d is a m em b er of T h e A ssociated C o lleg iate P re ss T he S o u th w est Jo u rn a lis m C o n feren ce an d th e T ex as D ally N ew sp ap er A ssociation. T he T ex an su b scrib es PERMANENT STAFF EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR NEW S EDITORS ................... *.......................................................... Mark Morrison ............................................................. Rick Scott ................... Middy Randerson, Andy Y em m a ISSUE STAFF New s Assistants .................................................................................. Rick Keeton. Cicely Wynne Issue Amusements Editor ........................................................................................ R°b Inderman Make-Up Editor ................................................................................................................; Jirn Conley Copy Editors ................ Jim Hicks, Betsy Palmer, Larry Replogle. Susan Westmoreland J0*111 ^ an Brekum Photographer ......... 4 FtfaUy, Ju m 20, 1949 THE SUMMER TEXAN F lying B lind line The firing Remark seen as hypocrisy To the editor: the hypocrisy It doesn t take very sharp eyes to see in Larry Waterhouse's comment on Wag­ goner Carr's speech against the .SDS to a Boys State audience: “ I have never in my life seen a more Fascist paper that one. What he is doing is using a name and a label so he won't have to deal with concrete argu­ m ents.” than This implies that using labels and ignoring concrete arguments is wrong and that SDS does not make this error, but SDS thrives labels, pictures, and simple on ejaculations, and Mr. Water­ house's defense is barren of ar- gument. As for Mr. Carr, he reminds me most of Michael Klonsky, national secretary of SDS, whose (k-M e te. v .fv a ^ y '. Giiest viewpoint Tolerance lacking By DR (HARLES HARTSHORNE Ash bel Smith Professor of Philosophy K nowledge is chiefly of the past, bu', our view of the past is integral to our m aking of the tutus e. How we look backw ard is how we decide forw ard. today technology produces changes so fast But it seem s impossible to assim ilate the rele­ that vant p a st fast enough. Before assum ing responsibilities in Southeast Asia, we should have known som ething of the his­ tory of that region. But who did7 How m any of us even now have m uch conception ol Buddhism, for instance? Yet it is the g reatest alternative to our Judeo-Christian tradition. HOW M ANY SCHOLARS have assim ilated the change from a science which, for centuries, was based on the idea of absolute causal order to a science which, ap a rt from m ere talk, is based en a probablistic conception of causality', not just in m icrophysics but in biology, sociology, etc.? This has relevance for aoli rn If order w ere absolute, it seem s there could be a Wholly bene­ ficent order, a Utopia, in which everyone w as so condititnoed that universal harmony obtained. But conditioning only alters probabilities. N ature, including m an. is a m ixture of order and random ness. Also, some quantum physicists have long realized, it is active individuals, w heth­ er atom s or hum an beings, which evade absolute order. And they do this in proportion to the de­ gree of their individuality. Man is by far the most highly individuated of species, hence only gross statistical regularities can be expected in human affairs If people m an ­ age to harm onize their purposes together this is good luck as well as good m anagem ent, and some bad luck is inevitable. Science, by magnifying the scope of hum an from inseparable increases risks the choices, these. BUT WE HAVE TO distinguish between m ere utopian dream s and feasible way?, to better our society. Modern cities cannot survive very m any w eeks of civil and economic disorganization w ith­ ou t terrib le evils and losses. And the m ajor revo­ lutions of this century produced the two sta tisti­ cally most m urderous of all tyrants, plus som e m inor ones. Tile underestim ation of random ness in life re ­ sults in the scapegoat idea that haunts both Right and Left. Someone is to blam e But no one in­ tends events as they happen. All a re caught in a web of coxed intentions, blind necessity, and chance. Who intended the pop­ ulation upswing that has caught our educators un­ prepared to deal adequately with the new m asses of students? Like the New Left, I am disgusted with what we have done and not done about race. No major philosopher has, in any reasonable sense, been a ra c ist. Royce said som e tine this evil. Yet far m ore should have been said and done. It ought to have been a truism that per­ sons a re above all individuals, that within physi­ cs My identified groups variations in abilities are enorm ous. things about R io criterion of being hum an the “ sy m ­ bolic pow er," centering language; any group —say w omen—that can use language with elabor­ ate skill is thoroughly hum an. in is ANOTHER WAY in w'hich scholars have erred Is in the conception of science as “ prediction and control.’' These two functions are not only differ­ en t; carried to the lim it they exclude each other. One does not predict his own future because each m om ent life cinsists in controlling that future, de­ ciding bits of it for the first time. Nor can we predict future scientific and technological discov­ eries. so im portant for our lives. We predict most w'here we control least—thus an eclipse. The m ore nature com es under hum an central, the less predictable will som e things be, for the m ore prediction m ust reckon with hum an choices, as yet undecided. An excuse for us all Is that hum an freedom Is so great, and resulting clem ents of order n disorder so com plex, th a t life is a bewildering af­ fair. A touch of tolerance and willingness to see good in various groups m ight help. And we all m ight sec m ore good than sonic of us do in Texas and this university. Ja p an ese students a re less happy, so are some elsew here in this country. There i* som ething to he said for the injunction, “ count your blessings." Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: • Be typ e d triple -sp aced . • Be less than 2 50 w ords. • Include name, address, and phone num ber of contributor. M a il letters to The Firing Line, The D a ily Texan, D ra w e r D, U T Station, Austin, Tex.; or bring let­ ters to the Texan offices, Journalism B uilding 103. Motherly protection for Teddy By ART BUCHWALD WASHINGTON—The problem of w hat to do about Toddy Kennedy is still haunting the Republicans. The strateg y to hit him head-on alm ost worked. But w hat they failed to count on was M rs. Rose Kenne­ dy, Sen. Kennedy’s m other. When Sen. Dirksen attacked Kennedy on the floor of the Senate for K ennedy's re ­ m arks about the V ietnam ese w ar. D irksen received a telephone call from Mrs. Ken­ nedy thanking him for “ tile gracious and te m p erate” tone of his speech. The unflappable Dirksen b e c a m e after flapped And exchanging s o m e kind words walked out into the hall and told Sen. Kennedy, just “ Your m other called m e to thank me for rev speech.” Last week Sen. Kennedy and Sen. Strom Thurm ond of South Carolina had a bitter exchange on the floor over Ju stice Doug­ las. As of this writing Mrs. K ennedy hasn t called Sen. Thurmond, but I can im agine how the conversation will go when she does. I // “ Hello, Sen. Thurmond. This is Mrs. Rose K rnnedy, Teddy’s m other." “ How do you do, M rs. K ennedy." “ I just w anted to thank you for the nice way you treated Teddy on the floor of the Senate the other d ay .” “ GRACIOUS, NO. “ You’re very kind, but I'm afraid T lost m y tem per and said s me m ean things.” thought you w ere I very te m p eratp- You did bring up the busi­ ness at H arvard when Teddy w as a student and had someone else take his test, but I thought you did in a v ery nice w ay, and then you dropped it. A m ore petty m an m ight have stayed with the subject for a long tim e.” it “ Well, I'm not a m ean m an, Mrs. K en­ nedy, but Teddy really got me riled when lie corrected my pronunciat on of Jose Fi« guc-es. form er president cf Cesta R ica.” “ Teddy’s alw ays doing things like that. I ’ve told bim since he w as a little boy th at people pronounce Spanish words different­ ly in different p arts of the country, but he seem s to forget. Your pronunciation is beautiful. Senator, and I ’m going to speak to Teddy about it." “ THAT S VERY KIND of you, M rs. Ken­ th e re was no­ nedy. I hope you realize thing personal in our exchange. I w as just trving to m ake a point about Ju stice Doug­ las association with a private foundation and Teddy kept the floor." interrupting m e on "I appreciate that Mrs. Kennedy, and J m ust say in the heat of barth we do lose oui tem pers. I w asn't questioning Justice Douglas' ch a racter. I was dealing with the issues of the foundations." “ I know you w eren’t. I told Teddy vet! would never m ake a vir ous ar ck on any­ body. I t’s not in your nature as a Southern gentlem an.” “ T hat's mighty kind of you to say that, m a’am . I do pride myself on my kind­ ness.” “ DF r o t RSE, you've got to understand Teddy's problem . Everybody is picking on the way him. and he's very sensitive people criticize him. Thank goodness for men like you and Sen. Dirksen who refuse to get on tile bandwagon “ I don’t know what nedy. I ’m all choked up." to s a ;, Mi's. Ken­ to “ You don’t have to say anything. I know you will never say anything about Teddy that would hurt his m other.” “ No, m a 'a m . You can be assured of that.” Thurmond hangs up and rails Sen. Dick­ son and says. “ E verett, w e've been h ad .” C o p y rig h t <«*i 1966 T he W a sh in g to n P o s’ CUK D ix trlb u ted bv Los Ans* e t Time* Syndical**. m m k s is somewhat choice of animals than m ad different—pigs rather dogs and rattlesnakes—a diflo­ rence of metaphor which does, how’ever. point to how m u c h better at violence the more \iru- lent enem ies of SDS are than SDS is. things; WTiat is wrong with SDS is that it has attempted to cure certain diseases in America—fascination with physical ignorance of values, the ability to under­ stand, argue with, and persuade people unlike ourselves: preoccu­ pation wdth force and power; re­ verence for appearances; pre­ ponderance of the emotions of fear and anger—by repeating the worst symtoms of the diseases in their most exaggerated forms. Amid their apparent freedom they are really stuck to fixed phrases and compulsive m ove­ ments. Because they are so tied to the past I do not depend on them for the future. It is for others, who can tackle problems and thoroughly work them through, and for SDS mem­ bers who can their American upbringing, to conti­ nue to ameliorate conditions such as those the SDS has both ex­ pressed and aggravated by their spectacles. transcend Jam es R. Benett Heavy Music To the editor: The University’s radio station, KUT-FM, is beginning to be an important radio station. Possibly not important in the number of listeners it has. although I pre­ dict in­ crease. but important because of a new type of music it is play­ ing. the number will that The m usic is referred to as heavy and consists of hard-rock, folk-rock, and blues. acid-rock, classifications overlap, These but the is that the music idea is current. Heavy m usic m irrors the now' generation and captures the tempo of young adults’ lives. differs H eavy music from “ T op-Forty" by refinm ent. While top-forty overlaps hravy-m usic to an extent, and is closer than Mu­ zak, top-forty stations play m usic for 10-year-old's. The beauty af a heavy music station, especially a non-com m ercial heavy music station, is that it can use now generation people to screen the garbage top- that forty stations. is played on C urrently, KUT has an excel­ lent hard-rock show from 11:30 p.m . until I a.m . every week- night, and plays heavy music at various tim es all day S atur­ day. I enjoy KUT’* classical, new*, and variety form at very much, but wish that they would extend the heavy m usic to include every w eekday evening from 8 p.m. un­ til I a.m. (except for Night Ca'!) and into Sunday m orning on Sat­ urday night. I invite interested persons to call or write me, or KUT di­ rectly. John laisby ROTC belongs in academe By JIM HICKS .Staff Writer No target of student unrest has been attacked as consistent­ ly as university involvement with ROTC program s. On 186 college cam puses tho ROTC is the most evident part of the universify-military-indus- trial trium virate. Two ROTC in­ stallations have b e e n fire­ bombed at m ajor W estern uni­ versities. dem onstrations have scores halted more, and here the generally staid atm osphere of Texas Christian University was interrupted by a m ysterious fire that destroyed an ROTC facility there. at in Texas operations from This pressure student dissidents has brought about changes in ROTC. Despite of form er Defense S ecretary Rob­ predictions ert M cN am ara's to that ROTC would continue grow, enlistm ent dropped IO per cent this veal". In the last five years the number of colleges with com ­ pulsory ROTC h a s declined from 132 to 95. Even some of the most Establishmen tartan universities in the nation have downgraded ROTC. Harvard w as rent by bloody dem onstra­ tions in early April, on the heels of H arv ard ’s decision to rem ove any academ ic credit for ROTC courses and in­ structors of any faculty stand­ ing. M ilitary officials a re con­ cerned about the growing dis­ sent and the support the dissi­ dents are receiving from ad­ m inistrations and faculties. strip ROTC LAST Y EA R 18,000 college graduates w ere commissioned from ROTC units, about eight the service tim es m ore than a< a d e m i e s . With arm ed the forces growing and with 47 per cent of all m ilitary jobs falling into the “ w'hite collar" or lead­ ership category, the im portance of the ROTC program to the m i­ litary is clear. Student dissidents, however, do not believe that the universi­ ty com munity should assist the m ilitary in any m anner. academ ic or academ ic On first exam ining the issue it would seem sim ple to dism iss protest against ROTC with the reasoning of free dom. If one is free to take any course he chooses, or teach any matter with not outside scruti­ ny, then it would seem to fol­ low that one should be free to study ROTC military science. The military is considered an­ ti-intellectual by the dissidents and therefore outside the sphere of any argument incorporating academ ic freedom at its pre­ mise. Military insistence upon strict, unquestioning discipline, conformity, and inevitably kill­ ing. is in taken to be in direct contradiction to a proper aca­ demic environment. MORE GENERALLY, the dis­ sidents hold that ROTC signifies university participation in acti­ vities that many hold to be im ­ moral. University participation lends an exaggerated influence upon these affairs. Many arguments a g a i n s t ROTC programs are based on misconception if not outright falsehoods. Basically, an ROTC program can broken down into two parts. The first tw'o years are devoted to studies of mili­ tary history, world and Ameri­ can history, economics, Yr*,. economics, and ROTC stu­ dents are not taught that com­ munism is endemically evil but is only an economic system. and teach History courses them that it is only coincidence that its present practitioners tend to be more than slightly militaris­ tic. It is the sam e history and economics that is taught “out* ^ irmnrwMiiin n nm i side.” Any slant given to it by military-minded i s neatly balanced by subjects tak­ en on the “outside.” instructors THE LAST TWO YEARS of an ROTC program are con­ cerned mainly with student par­ ticipation. Leadership abilities are developed as well as the ability to express o n e s self. Dissidents could probably learn a lesson in self-expression and coherent thought. Many of the protesters lash out at the ROTC program suf­ fused with a vision of the mili­ tary mind as portrayed in Dr. Strangelove. If officers com m is­ sioned in our universities are brain washed into paranoid fear of anything non military, and truly believe blindly in “their the country right or wrong.” Nuremburg War Trials not with­ then ROTC has no standing, place the academic com ­ in munity. in If officers commissioned our universities are concerned solely a n d coldly with mega- deaths, maximization of civilian casualties, and how to build dir­ tier bombs, then no argument based upon academ ic freedom can excuse its existence on our campuses. The entire question of ROTC on our cam puses can be an­ sw ered without considering free­ dom. The m ilitary is an ever pres­ ent fact of life. It will not fade aw ay in the forseeable future. The m ilitary needs officers, and will get them. IF ROTT IS FORCED from the cam puses it will becom e to­ from w hatever tally leavening the ac ad e­ influence m ic com m unity now provides against im agined “ evil" m ilitary mind. ROTC stu ­ dents a r r first of all students within the academ ic discipline of all students, and only sec­ ondarily m ilitary trainees. the real or isolated it the Strangelove mind o f lf true m ilitary men d o e s the exist, to is m ore d esirable have it on cam pus w here it can be checked by academ ic influ­ ences, and (non by the dissi­ dents them selves. E xisting out­ side the halls of ivy and on ifs own inside walls of chain link and barbed wire, officer train ­ ing program s will only becom e m ore effective in producing m i­ litaristic minds, indeed is their purp se. if that, The som etim es myopic eye of the academ ic community will then find It impossible to train Itself upon m ilitary training m m m mumm I— — i — JFK Monument Costs $86,000 DALLAS (AP) - Tlte president of the John F. F>nnr*dy Memo­ r i a l Commission said Thursday "an extremely fair price" had been negotiated for construction of the memorial and that the mo­ nument w ould be dedicat od by Jan. I. John Schoellkopf told Dallas County commissioners that con tractor Robert E. McKee. a m em ber of the Memorial Com­ mission, had agreed the job for $86,000. to do "We are extremely grateful," Schoellkopf said. The monument will Ire erected in the center of a landscaped pla­ za to be built above an under­ ground parking facility. Thp housing committee is ex­ ploring University housing, co­ ops, and off-campus units to se­ cure low-cost housing for fall. Richard Wood, a program di­ rector, suggested helping students who can’t put up an early room deposit. that a Cervantes said liaison to the dean of students, Stephen D. McClellan, would be establish­ ed. McClellan will appoint a di­ rector of special program s "to do clerical functions and corres­ pondence,” Cervantes said. OUR SUMMER THING is a WEEKL Y SPECIAL For this Friday and Saturday: Choose an Armful! More Fun! Rudi's fa b le d POT-LUCK" R A C K Sportswear Sunglasses Etc. “Our th in g” is being Young and Alive and Reasonable Campus News In Brief Al l, - CAMPI S FELLOWSHIP, students from every segment of campus life, will meet for a program and guest speaker af 7 p.m. Sunday ir. the basement of the Cathole Student Center. interested Students taking activities with new in part in Need a Study A id ? A-PLUS LECTURE NOTES M ay be the answer. Complete sets of past notes available immediately at our office. B IO . 302, C H E M . 301, E C O . 302, G E O L 601b, G O V . 6 !0 a, PSY. 301. PSY. 351, FIN. 354, M K T . 337. 540 W est 24th 477-5651 A MAN’S GUIDE to th e WELL-DRESSED LOOK f i n e hour the MOST iru Makes Your Better... Last Clothes Look Much Longer! plus FAST C O U R T E O U S O N E H O U R SERVICE O N DRY C L E A N IN G O N E D A Y L A U N D R Y S E R V IC E Six Locations to Serve You: 1. 510 W. I9ih 2. 7 0 4 W . 24+h 3. 907 W . 24th 4. W in d s o r V illa g e 5 B a lc o n *! at N o r t h 'a - d Dr. t>. So. C o n g r e s s at O lt c r f r r o WM i i m o r r n e h o u r WRTtmim DR'fCtDSlSS- tho 3 - ■ J . r-- ± rsp _ l i ' i • B O N U S SER V IC E • Sa tu rd a y A f t t r n o o " O n a H o u r Se rvie * U n til 4 p.m. at 5 tO W . 19th L o c a tio n . O P E N : M O N . FR!., 7.7 S A T . O N L Y , 7-5 Project Info Plans Program O f Aid, Advice, and Tutoring By CICELY WYNNE Nows Assistant Elven before the Project Info volunteers greet them when they step off buses this fall, " d i s a d ­ vantaged” students will see their into personal needs m ore responsive services. translated Tuesday night, Project Info stu­ dent leaders fused committee rec­ ommendations into expanded fall program s. disadvantaged For the first time, culturally and financially stu­ dents will receive personal inter­ views on financial need before enrollment. Project Info members are looking for low-cost housing for the students. "We want to meet all needs that will occur to them in their first year, (their) academic and so­ cial problems,” explained Charles Cervantes, one of the three pro­ gram directors. He said they would work within the framework ot existing pro­ gram s. Tutoring Deserves t <»n 5 1/3 I I Marino I 0 I - 2 4 (W. 4-31 WF—Marino. PE—Baric HBt - Lakata (bv Hardy). U—-McDonough Harvey. Yeti. Newsome. T 2 ii. A 6 .000. lf it’s happening in sound Its at KEN’ S SOUND SHOP Current Popular Albums $3.50 and up Tapes and Cassettes $4.65 and up 3004 Guadalupe (next to English's) 477-9646 • 5 W a T OO p e r d a y . 7e p e r m ile • Must be ti, • H O O D e d u c t ib le In c lu d e d i fu ll co ve ra g e $1.50 p er d a y ) • S p e cia l \ acation R a te s • S p e cial SSeedend R a te * ( F r i d a y noon-M ondav noon) • C h e v e n * M a lib u ’*, I a m i n i At S U H , *.0O p er d a s. * r per mile • Im p a la '* I et. A 4 dr., power A a ir. $10,04* per d ay. I Or p er mile. • A ll SS rn ode I a A uto m at!# T ra n .m iM lo n * • (tu Furnished en All Model* • i v e f l a r e I .eave porch a *. F la n Im p ala, (A m in i, on: M a lib u , M o ra . A V W * • W e D e H a v e P ic k u p and D e ­ liv e r y S e rv ic e 5008 N. Interregional 454-9641 & udda,Su6M 04t6 l i q u o r s 6 5 0 1 A I R P O R T RL VO* mmnnJ WEEKEND SPECIALS & Saturday 6 yr. Specials Good Friday & Saturday 0 * 8 ANCIENT AGE 86 proc? Stra 'icf Bourbon Whiskey w 5-n EZRA BROOKS 86 proof Straight Bou’bon Whiskey EARLY TIMES 86 proof Straight Bourbon Whiskey S EA G R A M 'S 7 C R O W N 86 proof Blended W hiskey 65% Grain Neutral Spirits BOURBON SUPREME 86 proof Straight Bourbon Whiskey SEAGRAM 'S V. O. co,8 proof Blended Canadian Whisky 3 4 3 3 5 $age Special Savings on Full Half Gallons ANCIENT AGE 86 proof S *ra glint Bourdon Whiskey STILLBROOK 86 proof Straight Bonbon Whiskey CUTTY SARK SC O T C H Bo proof Blended Scomh Whisky BACARDI RUM 80 proof Puerto R can Rum SM IRN O FF VODKA an pr- >f D' id fr C S * a n lh Whisky CUTTY SARK SC O TC H Bn proof Blended Scotch Whisky BALLA N TIN E^ SC O T C H 8.6 proof Blended 5 H IG H LA N D MIST 80 proof Blended Scotch Whisky SM IRN O FF VODKA 80 proof Distilled from Grain R O N R IC O RUM 80 proof Puerco P'can Runa S EA G R A M 'S G IN 90 proof D ’ eo Hon- American Grain C H RISTIAN BROTHERS BRANDY SO proof Brandy ANDRE C H A M P A G N E cttra Dr, * SCHLITZ BEER 24 - 12 oz. Glass Cans LO NE STAR BEER 24 - 12 oz. Glass Cans OLD M ILW A U K EE 24-12 oz. Glass Cans No Depcs • No Deposit No Deposit Cold Duck. Sparkling Burgundy G al 78 6 9 48 49 78 3 3 3 OMAHA (Spl.)—'The Horn d^a- mondmen caffle back Tuesday from a disappointing 4-2 loss to Tulsa Monday with a 14-1 field day against Mississippi which erased some of the memories cf harder times. The Longhorns hammered Mis­ sissippi for 13 hits and 14 runs in this the third round of the NCAA College World Serif's and gave freshman Burt Hooton. who collected Texas’ only two victor­ ies of the tournament, an early 7-0 lead on which to coast. After retiring IS consecutive mon once Ole Miss had opened toe game with a single and a walk. Hooton left In the seventh so that his strong right arm could be conserved for tho third pitching start that never came, and sophomore Walt Rothe, Coach Cliff Gustafson's choice as mop-up man, allowed four hits and a run in pitching the final three inning*. Roused silence against Tulsa, Texas’ bals drove from their MOTORCYCLES!!! 5 % O F F — to #11 C o lle g e Student* T R IU M P H S U Z U K I S U LT A C O D JL TRIUMPH SALES 5120 Burn#) R d. 452-7554 A used car that won t give you gas pains? W e have a lot of them. ea'i#d Vrs-’ktw a g tn i. A nd fo r them all 1 0 0 % we g ja ra n t# # th# rep lacem en t of all r-pa r or major m echanical p arts* for 30 d#y* or 1000 miia* W h y no ga* pa n*. !# g *n d ary V W (ha) They still g a l 'Ira th# naw on#*. econom y. J j * f • rnimr • transit-, ss'on • m r *xip • from ax> assembl ** • brake system • electrical s-.stem ............7095 1947 M a l i b i C b**’, C on* P o w e r A S ir co n d itio n . I rllo w w ith new black top 19m> M a l i b u m iper 8 p o rt Co n* B l u e with whi te 136k P o n tia c O T O. H T l e i low with b l a c k *>nol top F u l l p o w e r A a ir m * S SS'. R a d io Si H e a te r t o p . . . . . . . . 2 * 9 5 ...1095 1795 O P E N E V E N I N G S GI 4-4575 out Mississippi’s Joe Milsgraves in an inning and two-thirds af­ ter the Rebel righthander gave up six Texas runs. Brown pro’. idM an initial 3-0 lead with a three run. 370-foot home run to lefr in the first, and the Longhorns caffle back to put up four more runs with two out in the second as Chalk tripled after a walk to Hooton and hits by Miller and Bagwell, then put up Texas seventh run on a wild pitch by Mississippi reliever Bob­ by Cain. The Longhorns had three more apparent run* wiped out in the *Goond as a result of a base­ running blunder by find baseman Gone Salmon, who failed to touch second as bo circled the bases on Harmon’s triple wnfh the bags jammed, so that ail three of the runs were erased on an appeal play and Harmon's hit changed to a fielder's choice. Harmon returned for a repeat rn the fourth, tripling in two of Texas* five runs in that inning. Tho Longhorns put two runners on v th two outs on Bagwell's double and Hall's walk, called on Salmon to redeem himself partially with a single that brought in ono run, then sum­ moned Harmon for a second tri­ ple that was longer than the first would-be hit. Amo* and Hooton followed Har­ mon's blast w ith consecutive dou­ bles to give Texas a 12-0 ads*an- tag*. Hall fetched in the last Texas runs with a home run that he hammered 385 foci with Brown aboard on an error. Mississippi, which used four pitchers in attempting to stop the Longhorns, while mustering only five hits on offense, could have told Texas something about frustration. Ole Miss was eliminated front the series, in tv o consecutive loos­ es. 8-3 ?,nd ! t I In 12 appearances in the world series, Texas stands 26-22. ‘Devils D u m p NYU, 4-1, Meet Hurricane Friday OMAHA, Neb. (A P )— Pitcher Herrin La Grow punched a base hit to left field with tho bases loaded, highlighting a three-run Arizona State rally that carried the Sun Devils past New York Universals 4 I. Thursday night and into the finals of tile Twenty- third NCAA Cojlegp World Series against the Tulsa Hurricane. FORMERLY ANDY'S Now A — O K BARBER SHOP Under N ew Ownership HAIRCUTS $2°%. 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. Tuesday — Saturday 607 W est 29th ^ , j s . v From the Bench By J O H N W A T K IN S J Sam e song, second verse, with the next stanza looking sw eeter. That, in a som ew hat sloppy analogy, best sum s up the 'Horn base. ballers' fortunes a t the 1969 College World Series and the outlook for next year. W ednesday’s loss to NYC w as the big one for the Steers, drop­ ping them from their role of p re s e rie s favorites to the doldrum s of obscurity. No one rem em b ers who played well, who nearly had things sewn up, o r who finished second—only the winner is firm ly etched in the m em ories of sports fans. Just one of the natio n ’s top four team s. Arizona State, rem ains in contention for title. The Sun Devils, rated N um ber 2, fell to the ’H orns and B urt Hooton in the series opener, 4-0. the covet'vi NCAA The N um ber I and 4 team s. Southern Illinois and UCLA, d e p a rt­ ed after -two gam es. Second Time Around The Steers a re also back home, having m ade the sam e m iserable journey last year after three CWS contests. L a rry H ard}. who w as driven from the mound bv NYU W ednesday, sal­ vaged the only win last year, throwing a brilliant one-hitter against B righam Young. losing m o of A y ear ago coach Cliff Gustafson took his first collegiate ba«e- ( ball team to O m aha, losing the opening gam e to O klahom a S tate. But m any veteran tournam ent o bservers were taking strong odds th at the ’Horns would not even bother to show up the next day. “ Tho NCAA ought to m eet them for b reak fast and give them their m edals sn they can get an early sta rt home,” laughed one sports w riter. T exas w as obviously a shoe-in. D ie ’Horns faced the sam e scene this tim e around, being tabbod tournam ent favorites. But, once again, the O range m ade the flight back to Austin without any NCAA gold. In 1968, when T exas befell such bad b aseball tim es at th e CWS, it w as a fluke—next y ea r will be the y ear of the observers said ’Horns (if you’ll pardon the expression) at the series. Well, this is next y ear, and it looks like ’70 deserves th at sam e, th at lose only four players to tim e-honored m oniker. The S teers g rea t athlete-robber, graduation. The Graduates P at Brown, Dennis K asper. L arry Horton, and Doug Fell a re the g raduates. Brown will be by far the g rea test loss, having earned Ail-SWC honors each of hts th ree v arsity seasons. K asper sta rted m ost of the season at shortstop, but w as spelled by junior P a t Amos at O m aha. H orton w as an effective relief p itcher for the S t e e r s , hut the likes of N atl Salazar, the bullpen is well stocked for ’70 with Donnie Horne, Mike B eard, and Walt Rnthe. Fell was a reserve outfielder, a very capable ballplayer, and his loss signals the only foreseeable Steer problem next season. Good outfielders a re a m ust to any championship club, and G u^afson needs to com e up with a replacement for Brown. Randy Peschel, who split bm p with David Chalk and Ja c k M iller this season, is the likely candidate to step in for Brown in left field. Chalk will set up shop in right, while M iller will patrol center. P itching? Well, add B urt Hooton and Ja m e s Street those h u rlers alre ad y mentioned and you get strength on the hill. H ardy, who w as drafted by the Yankees, has one more year of eligibility rem aining, but c a n technically forego next season for a shot a t the pros. to FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIALS C A S H ’N C A R R Y O N L Y -------------- S T R A IG H T B O U R B O N W H IS K IE S ------------- — 5 th - 86 pr. 86 pr. 5th 2 .8 8 .. , C A N A D I A N W H IS K IE S — 100% IM P O R T E D — 5* 3.69 3.69 4.49 5*4.29 5th 3.(9 SURBROOK JIM BEAM ANCIENT AGE .., OLD CROW Full Quart EARLY TIMES EVAN WILLIAMS WALKER'S CANADIAN.«... » 3.49 ^ 5.19 SEAGRAM'S V.O. 5.78 JIB RARE '/j G A L L O N J U G 13.78 CUTTY SARK 86 pr. 5th 5.69 .. BALLANTINE^ s* 3,37 ... K NG GEORGE IV H GHLAND MIST .. 5*3.29 SMIRNOFF VODKA s* 3.69 ... Distilled from gram .. „ 86 pr. 5tb Distilled from grain 5th FULL QUARTS of VODKA C O S S A C K or R U B IN O F F Distilled from grain 80 pr. RO pr. Puerto Rican GILBEY'S GIN )0N Q RUM IENCH BRANDY EAUJ0LA S EBFREAUMILCH {ENCK V N ROSE ALIAN CHIANTI BEER 80 pr. Cartier t or Napoleon 67 Beauville 67 Schneider Briault 1966 (Fabacher) Cs. 24 cans ................. I A V J AA PEARL PREMIUM BEER SAN MIGUEL Philippine Beer 6 pak NR I Q f. 3.19 ^ I Q 5th 0 . 1 7 5th 0 . i 7 80 pr, 3 A Q 5th 1*19 5th 8 8 * 5th 69* 5th 99* O Q Q C s. 24 glass cans 0.00 Texas Pitcher Goes to Yanks Larry Horton Inkod As Free Agent Larry Horton, Longhorn roll pf pitcher, signed a major league m n tract with the New York "V an- kees Thursday. Horton, who Inked with the for a American League club sm all bonus, will report to the Yankee Appalachian le a g u e farm club Saturday. Brown Expected to Sign Pat Brown. Texas let field er, Is expected to rome to terms with the Yankees Friday. Brown was selected by the New Yorkers in the annual major league player draft. junior Tiarry Hardy, Steer pitcher, also was drafted by the Yankees, but has not yet reached a decision whether he will ink a pro contract or play his final sea ­ son of eligibility’ at the Univer­ sity. Horton had a 2-1 record for the ’Home in 1969, with the loss com ­ ing at the hands of NYU at the College World .Series Wednesday. Bum Steer An area television station er­ roneously r e p o r t e d Thursday 'Horn ace freshman night that pitcher Burt Hooton had signed a co n tract with the Yanks, along with shortstop Par Amos Coach Cliff Gustafson said both reports were false, adding that Hooton was probably mistaken for Horton, and Amos for Brown. Oast af son said that Hooton was league-col- protected by major lege agreement that college play­ ers under 21 could not he signed by pro teams. Marina, Relayers Lead 'Horn Thins A t N C A A Meet KNOXVILLE—Eight Univer­ sity tractate!*, led by Southwest Conference halfm ile champ and record holder David Matina and team compete the m ile relay here Friday and Saturday In the NCAA championships at the Uni­ versity of Tennessee Matma is rated as a dark- in the 880 at the meet, horse having posted one of the best times in the nation with a 1:48.1 and having w’on the prestigious Invitational Com pion -Col i seum several half w-eeks ago, I/w Angeles in He will be a member of the ’Horns mile relay team which aion has an outside chance t o reap poi rtfs in the meet. Much of the Steers' chances in the event rest on injured ankle of sophomore anchorman D a v e Morton which he hurt in Cali­ fornia while in training for the Coliseum carnival. the Tho rest of the mile relay team will be composed of L. J. Cohen and Eddie Canada. the in long the relay take a shot fellow Other ’Horns entered are half m iler Mike Mosley, who will go in if Morton can't, high jumper Bill Elliot, who will long ab o jump, his jumper Charles Clifton, and Randy N i­ chols in the shot put. Elliot, who has .shown seven the high In foot jump, may be one of the b etter bets to place among the Steer entrants. Mosley has posted an other top 880 time not far he hind Marina, and a healthy Mor­ ton could place In the great quartermile field. capabilities Cmtfaftttftl Carr '68 M G B (Sharp) ..$2695 '68 FIAT 1245 (C le a n )....... $2595 ’56 T-Bird (sharp) .$1995 '60 Mercedes .. .$1295 65 M G B . . . . . . ..$1495 66 M G B . . . . . . ..$1695 ’66 SPRITE . . . . . $1695 '65 M ID G E T (New Paint) ........ ..$1495 '63 A L F A Coupe ..$1395 62 M E R C E D E S I90SL ........ $2495 W E SELL A N D SERV IC E H O N D A 'S M an y Used Bikes, rg# Stock of New Honda s. SO ce to 450 cc. Financing Available. Yi'll Come 200 West Huntland Dr. 4544821 Netters A Surprise In N C A A Showing The T exas tennis team , while the national not overpow ering scene with im pressed upsets, their coach W ilm er Allison with a fine perform ance in the NCAA cham pionships at P rinceton, N J,, M onday and T uesday. Allison said that for a “ young team they did awfully we!!.-’ and term ed the group's effort “ the best w e've done since 1956 ‘ The ’Horns scored nine points against nearly 200 of the finest players in the country. Allison said that m any players the W est and Southwest from w ere ham pered by the type of court on w’hich the m atches w ere held. The su rface is a synthetic m aterial called Rubico and he said that it plays “ very slow .” Allison said that m any players are “ terribly handicapped'' b v the slowed down play resulting from the use of Rubico. But despite the ad v e rsaries of co u rt and rom ped non. the Steers still m anaged the hest U niversity 1 .showing in 13 years. Both doubles team s w e r e am ong the last 16 team s left in com pets non before they w ere e li- , m utated, and singles players L a r­ ry E ichenbaum , John Mozola, John Nelson, and Avery Rush ad pi av od well Lichen haum ell initiated f»ne of last v e a rs' N a ­ tional Juniors finalists in tho first) round. E ichenbaum Is a senior, while Mozola is a junior and both N el­ son and Rush a re freshm an. Tho Southw est Conference s m ajo r hopes rest with conte- j rence cham p Rice, hut the Owl's Zan G u eiry w as clim ated in th e ' fourth round. His te am m ate Mike E step, though, is still in the com ­ petition. Both players nave been on a USLTA tour of E urope since the first of May so they have had the accustom them selves to the Rubico surface. opportunity to "The Eternal Life Corp." Sat. 9 ■ I Sun. 9.12 $3.00 Couple $2.00 S tag $2.00 C ouple $1.50 S tag Cold Draught Bee\ 20c glass or $1.00 pitcher every day : 4 - 8 p.m. starting next M onday Nit© Old Time Flicks TEX'S RED BARON (no r e v.r charg.) 1809 S an J a c i n t o FOR SU M M ER FUN TEXAS END ZONE BEER SET-UPS 4412 N. Lamar G O G O GIRLS N O M IN O R S Before or aftera the game. Before or after the ball g a m e ... or for a tasty snack anytim e.... bring your date to M cDonald s. Enjoy the g o o d n e ss of M cD on ald s Hamburgers made oMOO®. pure beef, governm ent inspected and ground fresh daity. They’re served hot off the grill on toasted bun. Here at M cD o n a ld 's you get fast, cheerful, courteous service... plenty of parking ... the tastiest food in town at prices that please. McDonald’s is your kind of place. 2818 G uad alu p e To: OUR MANY FINE CUSTOMERS OF BUDWEISER - MICHEL0B - BUSCH BEERS As vou max he aw are. A nheuser-Busch, Inc., the w o rld 's largest b rew ery and o u r sup­ p lier for th e w o rld 's largest .selling beer, B udw eiser, is present!} on strike. I he I m on that A n heuser-B usch is affiliated w ith is striking against all o f A nheuser-B usth pla n ts in the c o u n try . T h e reasons and w hy for this strike are u n k n o w n to us. N a tu ra lly , if this strike co n tin u es fo r ant length o f time, we at B R O W N D I S T R I B - l T I N G C ()., ( D is tr ib u to r for A n heuser-B usch p ro d u c ts in this area ) w ill he un ab le to su p ­ p h io u w ith BL DW EISER, M K ’H E L O B and B I X [\ beers. W e will he ou t o f o u r fine D R A F T p r o d u c t s b v the m iddle o f June w ith a little lo n g e r s u p p h o f P A C K A G E beer. It could he that this strike is settled b efo re o u r s u p p h is ex h au ste d , hut if not, PLEA SE, he patient for it w ill be o n l\ a sh o rt tim e before we will he hack at full stren gth. Regardless of the outc o m e o f this situation it gives us a chance to sat T H A N K > O U fo r d rin k in g o u r products. Y o u r u n d e r s ta n d in g of o u r situation is great!} appreciated. Regards, J D a * Brown BJI Johnson Tem Thompson R ichard Brown M a r y Johnson Dave David*©* (Schu eh e) Schuetzeberg Bill W h ite Ear! Gillay Rick Rollins Benny Baker Martin Acuna Ken Brown Ray Taylor B R O W N DISTRIBU TIN G C O . Austin, Texas 1809 GUADALUPE • LOTS OF PARKING • 478-5903 Friday, Jun. 20, 1969 TH I SUMMER T U A N Fag* 7 The Summer Texan Classified Ads C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G RATES .04 .......... . . . .........S (15 word minimum) ..................................................... $ 1.20 .50 .25 ta c h W o rd Minimum C h o rg i •Student roto ( 10-word m«*imum) one time . . . . $ •Each additional t i m e ............ .................... $ 20 Consecutive Issues IO words IS word............................................................. S 10.00 20 words .................................................................... S 13.00 Classified Display I column * one inch one time tach Additional Time ........ .................................. ........... $ 8.00 ............ .......................... J I . IO .......... $ 1.20 (N o copy change for consecutive issue rates ) L O W STUDENT RATES IO words or less for 50c. the first time, 25c each additional time. Student must show Auditor s receipt and pay in ad­ vance from Journalism Bldg, 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday through friday. IOT in C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G D E A D LIN ES Tuesday Texan .............. Monday, 11 OO a.m. Friday Texan ............ » ..................... Thursday, l l 00 a.m. In th# event of errors made in an advertisement, im­ mediate notice must be given as th# publishers are responses# for only one incorrect insertion. C a f! G R 1-5244 For Sale For Sale Houses— Furnished For Rent Typing U S E D B / W TV'A. Good - better■-j m m j . ""7 — “ ““ “ 1 good, S17 50 up Austin TV 43<>5 M anchaca Road. H I 4-1345 t enter. 6 p L A R G E P O R T A B L E O livetti I nder- ts’p ew riter $75. A fte r 6PM. wood 478-6898. Largest Used Book Store in Austin I A L L M E T A L J A P O N E S sewing tna- chine 1967 electric portable • Viset- $46 C all: N o rm a: 472-7087 after ti LA W or GRAD student ----------------------------- ---- P riv a te bedroom, to share house w ith from ram- Other student. Three miles S e r v i c e s ________________ ___________________________ j pus $75 ~ ail bills paid G R 2-6480. G R 1-7131: Ask sor Gerta. Furnished, for Profes­ A ; kind* of alteration* and fast service THE BOOK STALL 6103 Burnet Road 454-3664 C U T E B A B Y P O S S U M S , hand tra in ­ Ideal pet* 4/<-2496 or 478-7636 ed S T E R E O factory equipm ent: N ew . w arrantee, most brands, discount prices 444-6448 S A N S U I 3000A am/fm stereo tunner/ amp 130w two speaker s'ste m new vow two Sansei SP-200 3-wav $325 *peak«rrs $225 new Steve. 476-2572. Bridaestone of Texas 4117 Guadalupe 453-9429 Bridgestone. Ossa. Hodaxa Cycles— STREET. TRACK AND TRAIL CYCLES •m H A R L E Y S p rin t C R S . 250rv ••Dirt" racer. R e a lly excellent, w o rth $550, J r . 711 soil fo r $450. E. B. Reeves W est 17th. Y A M A H A I Sec M O T O R C Y C L E : Eigh t months old. M o torcvrle-utllltv tra il­ er 444-6448 3967 V O L K S W A G E N . Ex cellent condi­ tion 22,000 miles 2411 South 5th. O n ly $1395 444-799" ’62 IM P A L A autom atic 283. A ir, radio, In ­ tires V e r y clean. heater, new q uire Apt G, Tat W est 30th. FINE USED CLOTHES WANTED Coeds-- f you would care to exchange a ll thoae clothes you aren ? wearing anym o re fo r some extra pocket mone' rom e bv 'Ir a n m s A ttic at 4211 Duval o r call 452-6022 a n v afternoon. P S. G ra n n y also S E L L S o n ly v e ry finest labeled clothes the G R A D U A T E students In sciences w ant­ ed for occasional part time editing work. Good knowledge of En glish »**'- ole zed a i- s essen Cal! 472-1187 for appointment, g at ELI THE TAILOR'S new location, I5 '0 Lavaca. This coupon .s worth $2.00 on any adoration of $5.00 or more. G R 8 8295. O L D N O A H the Roofer— gravel roofs cedar, composition, lifetim e asbestos guaran­ repaired, applied, shingles teed G R 7-1230 G O S K I I N G T H IS S U M M E R ! Boat. included. 474-1717. 258- pilot, skiis 9662 Help W an ted GO-GO G IR L S and cocktail waitresses ('a ll 453-9434, 453-9411 > or apply at Texas En d Zone. 4412 N o rth Lamar. P A R T OFI F U L L T IM E . car necessary. 478-2207 after 8 30 p rn. G U Y S G IR L S ! E x c itin g part time, full tim e jobs evenings. 476-5543. Polish Czech. Serbo-Croatian Ita ­ lian. Roum anian needed fo r occasion­ al part Into En glish 472-1187. translation work tim e C O L L E G E men. part tim e job this summer, 454-6794 for information. j- dent G ra d .a *# a ccG '.n trq lo work cart time doing «cco.c*--q and tax work for two sn-a cor­ poration*. C e m p e rsatire s 5*ar. a- tion wages and tee e r e * '" " :ty ’ or va able experience. G eorge Sir rn, H O 5-7687. M A T I R E G I R L to babysit w ith six month boy, every Tuesday 9 30-3 OO in my home $1.00 per hour. 472-5724. Mrs P rat/ S T U D E N T W A N T E D to babysit nine and eleven ve e r old g irls , d aytim e . Cal! 453-4634 after 5:30 or week ends. Furnished Rooms I CO-EDS- S U M M E R & F A L L V A C A N ­ T I E S — S P E C I A L S U M M E R R A T E S P R I V A T E & D O U B L E R O O M S i A V A IL A B L E . N IC E - S P A C IO U S - F U L - L Y C A R P E T E D - !.' E N T E A L A IR C O N ­ D IT IO N E D RO O M A N D K IT C H E N F A C I L I T I E S . T W O B L O C K S C A M P U S . 2411 R IO G R A N ­ D E. G R 8-4205. 474-1694. ROOMS- L I V IN G I FIL C A M P O , 1912 Nueces Rent ex­ change for light w ork Also. vacan­ cies. Kitchens. H O 5-7136. G R 7-0572. FO R G IR I St Summer <* dent* a-d err • ;n -« | 9 01 ties. near cam- . ^ (? = -»- »* ™ serY9 a o A ' t -, K te e n tar oui, carpeted , bills po d. Doubles and Singles Phone 4 • 4 D Uce. IQI oni 7rand« ,r Univers e Village ] 43c2 2303 R S O U T H E A S T ROO M private entrance and Refrigerato r bath, cooled Miscellaneous LEATHER SALE Various kinds, colors — 50c per foot W e also make & re p a ir Boots, Shoos, Leather Good* Capitol Sadder'/ 1614 Lavaca N E L S O N ’S G I F T S - handmade Ind ian jewelry. Mexican Im ports - 4612 S (N ext to H U I'* Cafe) 444- ("onares*. 3814 L E A R N TO P L A Y G U IT A R , beginner and advanced. 478-7331. L E A R N TO P L A Y G U IT A R , beginner and advanced. 478-7331. P E R S O N S W I T H K N O W L E D G E of Tw o blocks campus G R 2-9665 N O T V S E T ? Call the Alpha M an! B / W A the New Color portables at Reasonable Rent Lease. R ent bv Sem ester or Rent-Purchs -e A L P H A T V R E N T A L S C all G R 2-2692 for more Inform ation F I V E bedroom house, three bath* fu r­ nished or unfurnished Three blocks campus. $225 lease to faculty or bond­ ed person 478-1811 W ant to— BUY, SELL, OR RENT? Call— GR 1-5244 for a Classified Ad n The Daily Texan E X P E R T ience typist w ith varied exper­ Legal specialist Mrs. Fow ­ IB M Executive E le c ­ ler. G L 3-8650 tric. Just North of 27rh & Guadalupe Ann fW U L M B A " T ' nine M u ltillth in g . Binding The Complete Professional FULL-11 ME Typing Service to tailored the needs of U niversity student1; Special keyboard equipment for and engineer­ science ing theses and dissertations language Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 Hemp hi! I Tark VIRGINIA CALHO UN TYPING SERVICE Profess; or: a I Typ ing A ll Field s M u ltllR h ln g and Binding on Theses and Dissertations 1301 Edgewood 478-2636 A C C U R A C Y E S S E N T I A L ? C all Carol Sad ler 414-2101. M arilyn n H am ilton E x ­ 444-2831. Fast, perienced In papers, theses reliable service reports. E X P E R I E N C E D accurate typist. L o w rates, fast service. M rs Tullos G L 3-5121. R O Y W . H O L L E Y GR 6-3018 T Y P IN G . P R IN T IN G Multillthing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS 476-7581 311 E. 11 th J uat Nor4h of 27th & Guadalupe m e n a p a r t m e n t s — f o r i o r 2 # Proofread 1 • B • o - g 1964 Buick LaSabre $995 Room and Board ~ ~ O C C U L T S T U D IE S ” 7 ^ 7 Apartments A r -Rado-S' ver qre, L ee " C B ' Smirk Used C a r Dept. C o m er 5*8 and Lamar 4"6-9l8l F O R S A L E . 1955 Pontiac. Rough but food got transportation 1969 license Slue Phone 472-9*08 1959 M O R R IS M IN O R Cheap trans­ portation. L o w price. C all 444-3702 nights. 1966 I M P A L A coupe 327 V-8 A ir. all power. 37 OOO mile*. O n e owner, clean. $1695 477-5318. N E W 14* S K I B O A T , 33 Johnson m o­ tra iler and ski paraphernalia. tor. O n ly $595 477-5318 3967 V O L V O 144S Low miles excel­ lent condition. 477-2888 after 5. Co-Ed for Sum m er G O V E R N O R S D O R M IT O R Y to campus. food, ' O ose I breakfast and dinner five da\s a week A ir conditioned, maid service. 2 color T V lounges 23' sailboat plus o'her recreation facilities Ex cellent $150 per term — Register now Also taking applications for fall. 2612 Guadalupe G R 6-5658 j The kind of books y ou can't find anvw here else in town. HORIZONS UNLIMITED 831 West 12rh hour*: 10-6 478-6673 North Centra! effieience*. New, ear- pe'ed, drap*d, complete kitchen; range, oven, garbag* disposal refrigerator. FU! ba'- amp a storage a-d pari ng, Ap­ partement ma-.ager: 454-68 i i . Nights J O H N W Y A T T K N O W S 453-0740. E a t This Sum m er At COLLEGE HOUSE Break fast $24 Lunch $30 per Semester C all P a u l Agricola. 478-r*277 or Come B v at 2208 R io Grande 5 Minutes from Campus LIFE IN S U R A N C E F ru d e n r 'd l irs . 476.73 M __ 453-7970 A utt - s N*w#st a rd M os* i > rious! POSADA DEL NORTE Occupancy Sep-e-iber 1st ars Aq now! One and I mo Bedroom A p ar'm e-cs, pius L . > / Two Bedroom S* nos. G E T IN S H A P E for the summer I ke new rowing machine. $50 Call 926- 0453 7 - DO D v a J . A. k '.,g e ' Ca 452-0 OI or 452-2384 Furnished Rooms FREE BOAT STALL 1961 V W Sedan $595 La green— Depended *- - "C B Smith Used Car Dept, Corner Stir e-a L*^ a r 476 - 9 lll W U R L I T Z E R E L E C T R IC piano with bench and foot pedal Excellent con­ dition. O n ly $195 477-5318 600A E lm ­ wood. G R E A T B O O K S of W e sters W orld . Complete set in leather binding with supplement.* B est offer 477-5318 ’ST H O N D A 65cc. Ex cellent condition, helmet* great for girls. 477-8796. N E W N IK O N FTNT cam era plus ac­ cessories O n ly $340 Call 477-8692. '63 P O N T IA C two door hardtop C a’a- hna. $395 476-9598 '6 i O L D S F-S5 AC V-8 new standard transmission $35o 453-7571 Q U IC K S A L E N ew Ro val Safari tvpe- w rite r Sells for fl2 0 W ill sell for S6( C all G R 6-3864 1969 M O T O R C Y C L E Cl matt i SOrT he; me* Need bread, sacrifice 472-6608 anytim e P A S O H O U S E 1808 W e s t A l n Now accepting application* for Slim ­ mer A F a ll • La rg e room* • N ew ly Carpeted • Refrigerato r* • Quiet -elu d ed environ men' • C entral a r and heat • ( ’ahi** T V lo mge • Re­ duced Sum m er rates G R 8-3917 - 444-7631 W anted need cook T W O B A C H E L O R S w ith lake house f«>r a couple nights a Transportation desirable Call week 474-1893 before 8 A M or after 7 P M fa -.iitv mem Uaivers.: v of Alabam a ber on lea1. e desifw* to rent furnished house or apartment in Austin .Septem­ Interested ber I. 3969 in residences vacated due to sabbatical or other leave M arried, no ch ..dren or pets C I) Havnes p. O. Box 1466 Universi­ ty. AI 35486 Tutorina L E A R N TO P L A Y G U IT A R , beginner and advanced 478-7331 Furnished Apartments Now Renting Summer & Fall In return fur occasional use of yo ur boat an enclosed boat stall is ai sour disposal at. no cost. ly ra te d 4.5 tulips from lovy w ater bridg*- on La k e Au»- tin Cal. 4,(-36**! or w rit* to P O. Box 5219. P A R T T I M E W O R K w ith computer salary dating service. Party-M ale $2 25 hour or comm ssion. 442-8798 961 Ford FaYane 500 $595 A r Radio Est*-a clean " C B Sn th Ut»d C a r Dept. C om er 5th a-d Lac ar 476 9181 ern, a/c T W O blocks campus F o r f a il: mod­ two bedrooms 24n6 R io two bed Grande $125 702 W e st 241? room $100 G L 3-5314 G L 2-1339. T R IN IT Y Terrace Apartments Tw o furnished apartments. W ood paneled, «/e, carpeted $93/month, 1300 T rin ity . Close downtown, capitol and U T. 476 2453 F U R N IS H E D Apartment, second se m e lter summer T w o bedrooms pool. la u n d ry alc Contiguous to campus. ( ’all M r. Jackson. 471-1525 between 1- 5 p rn. R E D U C E D summer rate* One block campus near law school Tow er V iew Apartm ent*. 2501 Oldham, 476-5207. *73-6506 A C L A R G E O N E B E D R O O M apart ment. Ju n e Im mediate occupancy tiro-rated 4TO-602B mornings and after 8 p m 967 V W Fastback Sedan $1 195 Red IB Smith U s a ar 5th and La* 4 691 F I F O U R B S R O O M S . A R-CO N D H O N FO. F U R L SH ED, C L E A N . S U M M E R S D E . C A R NEED ED . RATES. W E S * c a l l o w n e r n i g h t s , g r b 2 2se S A IL IN G S S U P E R B ! Rental* (boa rd- boat-keels(-Bale* < boardboats-auxiUar- ies>-Lessoi:s-Store-Marina 30 years ex­ perience Bay Mansfield Dam. M arsh Yachts CO £.1190 T W O B E D R O O M F U R N IS H E D apart­ ment with garage B ills paid $ 8 0 per month. 711 N elrav, H O 5-1544 NO LEASE S U M M I T V I E W A P T S . F R E E . F I V E P U P P I E S German She­ pard and collie rn: vt life 478-278ii I Bedroom paneled, carpeted. P a rk ­ ing, AC. water paid. VOYAGEURS APARTMENTS T W O BED R O O M UNITS: Two batns, a, c. carpeted, Cr- rushed, dishwasher, disposal, poo', study room. $200 BELMAR W RIG H T, sre a-e you? C a . p.m., cr Saturday per month, we pay bills. Tom, G R 7-4602 Two Bedroom apartment Near cam­ pus. $140 month, bill* pa d. 1714 S U M M I T V I E W 477-7625 U N D E R N E W M A N A G E M E N T N O L E A S E Perfect for Summer School J I G S W A L L I N G 477-7625 Unexpected Vacancy Southernese Ap«rtme"$ A .C Carpet. Pare #0 , I badmen" Poe Parking, Laundry Room, 15 min. wa « to *jl*rnpu*. $ .4 SO p ,5 alec ■ C a i! Je r r y F etcher • ma- ager 477-7625 Typing M u I ti I i th i ag Lecture Note* Typing and \Ult lT electric pi ca and cit)*- *\pf Rate* I Or/2k* m in­ utes, in W e s t Located Rooms of Academic ( enter un the 2nd and 3rd floors. 2.V- hour Roommate W anted F E M A L E to share two bedroom two bath apartment. IO minutes walk to main building, bill* paid, maid service. $49.50. C a li L e Fo n t Apartment*. 803 W e st 28th. G R 2-648* if no answer. 452-2620 M A L E share fo u r man two bedroom $45/month, bills paid apartm ent 3212 Red R ive r 216 478-2733 F E M A L E share three bedroom house \\ ill need second summer session car $75 plus bills. 453-2572. N A V Y W I F E S E E K S service w ife to share apartment, fail Prefers up­ perclassman w ith car. W rite Sh erry Ruck man 2870 Broadw ay, Apt. 8 San Diego. California 92102. An easy walk to campus. Cai! Rusty Russell, 478-6776 Room and Board TOWER MANOR 1908 University Avenue For University Women SPECIAL SUMMER RATES Open Second Seme- -cr Suites or Private Rooms With Electric Kitchens 19 Meals p er weetc Sun Deck — Air Conditioned Private Parking — Laundry Room Meals Optional Only One Block From Littlefield Fountain GR 8 2185 MRS.HENDRIX M B A Typing. MulUlithst Binding The Complete Professional F U L L * !IM E Typing Service to for 'he nerds of U n iversity equip­ Special keyboard language. *< .enc*- and en­ tailored students ment gineering theses and dissertations. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk A N N E S T Y P IN G SER V IC E (M a rjo rie Anne D elafield) or 442-7008 4 124)170 • • • Professional typing of reports manu­ scripts theses, dissertations, etc. Rea­ sonable rates • • • (M u ltillth in g mimeographing copy mg, dittoing; symbols, binding! photo­ in typin g C O M P E T E N T S E C R E T A R Y T Y P I S T with many years of experience. \\ ll give cons, am ;iou-, and meticulous ran as to accuracy correct form and coni teehmea position papers, theses and dissert*< ions in all L A W W O R K S P E C IA L IS T - fields N E W IB M Executive, equipped w ith science engineering and foreign lang cage v\mbols Xeroxing mult (tithing and binding services on request. reports ! I R 8-5894 W H E N Y O U N E E D secretarial ser­ vice dial 477-3701 - Austin Secreta­ L ittle fie ld Building. 6th rial Service and Congress T'|p ng of All KI nd* • M • -r'-q • M n eog/ac ’ g Bobbye Delafield— HI 2-7184 IJ E C T U R E notes, reports themes 3*>c double spaced M rs Fraser, G R 6- 1317 T H E S E S ports dissertations, re­ language sym ­ IB M M inim um 45c page Mrs. Science and briefs bols Anthony 454-3079. N O R T H W E S T , near AUandale. Years typing experience to help you. HO 5- 8813. Just North of 27rh & Guadalupe WqmxI a Ann ysAuL * Typing. M ultlllthlttg. Binding M B A 0 Tre Com p!efe Profesilcral FULL-TIME I /ping Service to the need* tailored " f Un iversity ytudents Spc'Ciai keyboard equintTieic for science and engineer­ ing theses and dissertation*, language Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk Printed Copie* Sc Each CLOSE IN • P: • M ye! typ.n *3 Excellent service, year* of experience. I le a r n a b le rates Phone Mrs Bodour: 478-8113 I Dissertations and Theses — Report in college typing Reasonable rates Vaned ex- j perienee typew riter 9*«, JOHN WOOLF M I PMA ASOP ICCHMCOLOR* JI) CAROL REED » jjfj S T AR T S W E D , J UNE 25TH M A T I N G S D A I L Y 2 P M . £ VININGS 8 PM. PASS LIST SUSPENDED b o x e r u c t OPEN IO AM CHILDREN $1 CO ANYTIME RESERVED SEATS NOW ON SALI AT BOX OFFICE OR BY MAIL PHONE RESERVATIONS ACCEPTID Starts Today I W E I K ONLY OPEN I 45 KIOS ANYTIME 73* ADULTS $1 OO TO S P.M. N o o r d in a r y love 'ON ft TIME IN THE WEST FRA N KEN STEIN 2:00 - 4:46 - 7:30 - 10:00 D R A C U LA 3:20- 6:05 - 8:50 PW mm / N A M PARRY I TORI M B B / S t e t / HMDS BRUSATI and M A M D AMO & , ANTHONY M X I-A L L A N and JOHN 8RAB0URNL Zfff| f£[| m m t ; »***« * t o rm m m m u r s a micham* m u m ‘BAREFOOT IN THE PARK’ “BAREFOOT IN THE PARK” K O B E R T R E D F O R D • J A N E F O N D A R O B E R T R E D F O R D • J A N E F O N D A R O M EO : 9: PM & 1:15 OPEN 7 P.M. PARK: 11:15 "R O M E O ' STARTS AT DUSK BURNET DRIVE-IN THEATRE SHOW TOW N DRIVE-IN THEATRE Pag. IO Friday, Jun. 20, 1969 THE SUMMER TEXAN HELD OVER! 1 % Interstate's P a r a m o u n t FEATURES 12:10 - 3:00 - 5:58 . 8:40 Band to Entertain Married Students The Longhorn Band’s concert Wednesday will be especially for married students and their chil­ dren. Explaining that married stu­ dents are often bypassed by the main stream of activities at the University, Director Vincent R. DiNino plans to move the 140- member band to the married stu­ dents housing at Deep Eddy fop an 8 p.m. performance Wednes­ day. Admission is free. Three married students will share conducting duties with Di- Nino—Alex Hamilton, who receiv­ ed a doctor of musical arts de­ gree in M ay; Dick Goodwin and Richard Prenshaw, do-tora I can­ didates now serving on the mu­ sic faculty. INTERSTATE CHILD 75c S T A T E DOWNTOWN T it CO W C ffSS THEATRE F E A T I R E S : 12:m* - *:3S - S M 7:S6 - LOM A beautiful film, to engross and satisfy and delight adventurers of all ages.” — Judith Crist Param ount p ictu res p re se n ts a ROBERT B. RADNTTZ psooucnoii J M y S id e o fth e ^ M o u n ta in 'Splendor in the Grass' . . . Erica Gavin does her thing in 'Vixen' at Texas Theater. Longhorn • , ’ - - Orive In Theatre US Hwy: JB I N. 454 3880 ;.jv , SJV ' '■yrfr I T RO P E H C A R L O A IT A T H O T H T H E A T R E S * S H O W I M , A 1 H O T H T H E A T R E S B O X O F F I C E O P E N T OO P . M . — S H O W S T A R T S N O W + I U s i t Some men are starved for love.. Paxton Quigley's problem was completely the opposite! ~ VtrTE M M S I X CaRjStoPHEG J ones In TheAItIC S H O W I N G O ' v I ' O N C Y * * IP Y O U 'R E THIRTY *****************/" r ' ' J ■ A boy who dreams : of leaving civilization ,, i of living ail alone in the wilderness of doing his thing and who dots, it f - A s You Like ll Vixen AHT Through Ju ly 7 at University Art Museum Room 17 gallery, Carica­ tures, paintings, and drawings by Mexican artist Miguel Covarrubias. Through Ju ly I at the University Art Museum, pastels, watercol­ ors, chalk, pen-and-ink drawings, and sculpture by the late Spanish artist Julio Gonzales. Through Ju ly 27 at the University Art Museum, recent works by University faculty in the thirtieth annual Art Faculty' Exhibition. Through Aug. 8 at Laguna Gloria, art school summer sessions. Through Sunday at the Union Art Gallery, photography by George Goddard. Beginning Friday at Laguna Gloria, selected works from the March Dallas exhibit; circulated throughout the Southwest. Wednesday: Longhorn Band concert for married students and families, Deep Eddy housing, 8 p.m. Admission is free. Sunday: “ Peter and the Wolf,” as part of Old Timers’ Night on the “ Sounds of Summer’’ series; KLRN-TV, Channel 9, at 7 pm. Sunday: Ai Capp and William Buckley unload on “ campus de­ stroyers’’ on K LR N ’s Firing Lihe, Channel 9, at 6 p.m. Re-broadcast Monday at 9 p m. Friday and Saturday: “ Bedazzled;’' a modern-day version of Faust’s old problem; Union Theater. MISIC TELEVISION MOVIES THEATER Thursday through June 28: “ Happy Days” at the Zachary Scott Theatre, 8:30 p m. June 25-28: “ The Em pire Buildcms” by Boris Vian in the Theater Room of the Drama Building at 8 p.m. Masterpiece B v ROB IN D ERM A N Associate Amusement Editor If you like general interest por­ love “ Vixen.” little something for nography, you'll There’s a everyone. For those whose philosophy bor­ ders on “ incest is best,” the v iv ­ acious Vixen and her beatnik brother gladly sidestep a little sibling rivalry for a sudsy show­ er. For those who like a little devi­ ation, there is a 10-minute close­ up of Vixen and her lover’s wife (both au n atu ral) exploring the world of lesbianism. Add a voyeuristic romp through a mountain stream and the se­ duction of a Canadian Royal M o u n t e d Policeman I thought they always got their m an?), common scenes of Vixen making love to her husband thus seem almost natural. (and Vixen, played by cinema new­ comer Erica Gavin, is the nym­ phomaniac wife of a Canadian bush pilot who is just a little too trusting. The Setting is the Northwestern bush country, but the bushes never quite get in the way of the camera action. Vixen does her thing — and often. The theme is racism. Our pro­ tagonist, Niles Brook, is a black draft dodger from America and a friend of Vixen’s offbeat mo­ torcycling brother. Throughout tho movie. Vixen constantly taunts Niles with south­ ern colloquialisms in place of the word Negro. She further insults his manhood by refusing to take time out for her traditional past­ time with him. After a vain attempt at rape. Niles seeks revenge by deciding to help a straight-looking Irish Communist to hijack Vixen’s hub­ by’s bu.-h plane to Cuba. “ Only six fueling stops and 30 hours and we'll be in Havana,” the red- bearded revolutionary say's. But as they approach the bor­ der, the quick thinking Vixen tricks the gun-wielding Commun­ ist to express his true feelings. “ Shut up, nigger,” he screams at Niles. A brief fight and the gunman Is subdued. Vixen (m ay her tribe increase) holds no grudges. “ Goodbye Niles,” she says using his real name for the first time. He smiles and returns the gesture, “ Good­ bye Vixen’ —the redeeming social value that saved “ Vixen” from the nimble-fingered censors, no doubt. While not the meet intellectual­ ly stimulating work of art show­ ing around the country, Russ Meyer's unique cinematography will certainly take your mind off University classes, but get a strong hold on your popcorn. Miss Gavin runs the complete gamut of emotions from A to B. But while her acting leaves much to be desired, her other attri­ b u te cleverly conceal her ab­ sence of talent. In a pomographical sense. “ Vix­ en” is a masterpiece—see it with someone you’d love to love. MOW SHOWING AT 2 DRIVE IN THEATRES CUNT EASTWOOD is BOCK AND BURNING RT BOTH ENOS if you can take it! KLRN to Show Buckley, Capp Cartoonist Al Capp unloads his barbs on what he calls the cam­ pus destroyers on K L R N ’s Firing Line cm Channel 9 at 6 p.m. Sun­ day. The discussion, lead by host William Buckley, centers primari­ ly on the tactics of the New Left and “ the campus destroyers,’’ and why the Intellectual community has failed to resist the uprisings more energetically. The program will be rebroad­ cast at 9 p.m. Monday. THE SWEET TARTS Austin's No. I Band Fri - Sat. - Sun. TBS KSW OR m n * OPEN 8:30 P.M. 12th & Red River GR 8-0292 A TEW DOLLARSmm I hose arc the two original " M a n W ith N o N am e " C lassics Prints by TECHNICOLOR* 4fm H Aa*tim* MCKCTlON WWW i..ow . J.-*. United Artists SOUTHSIDE TWIN NORTH SCREEN Box Office Opens 7 P.M. FIRST S H O W AT DUSK f ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK Ai BUMS AVA!LABUE ON UNITED ARTISTS RECORDS m iC C drive-in THEATRE M H U Box Office A Snack Bar Open 8 p.m. FIRST SH O W 9 P.M. FREE 11,000.00 CASH FREE t wo *■* * sa **■«.» MttMi TW a* rf aw* i * NMal Ar*rOeO bl Ut A lamer* lr Ajrrncrr Utrrrww ta O O M ( C D C C D A D | / l k J Z ! « t b » m . o n io t s rn a La v a c a rn: r tv 1 1 r A K I V I N VJ ' INTERSTATE M u n t h r u M i ’til 3 ; l j I ' M VARSITY W T T W T T T W T T T l ^ * THEATRE F E A T I R E S : 7 ; 55-10:M> HELD OVER1 2nd BIG WEEK Recommended by tho National Society of Film Critics PARAMOUNT RO JKSmr* 4 Mf M0R1A1 BiTETOSFIM i f “GO!-FOR THE FURY. FORCE AND FUN OF if JI -too. “ANGRY. TOUGH AND FULL OF STING “A PICTURE YOU MUST SEE THIS YEAR IS ifj* -LADi£$ HOME JOURNAL “LET IT SUFFICE TO SAY THAT tf_IS A MASTERPIECE”..,,^ THE MOST INTERESTING FILM SO FAR THIS YEAR”. -VOGUS •••■» hich side vt ill % on be on? MALCOLM McOflfEit-CHRi ROiAH) 'AAF.W IX-DA,IO WOOD W I M N JA'/CSHERWIi IWKm £ I JfcHAFl M I M * IM P ANDERSON CO n p r s s r a it.wm rem is: INTERSTATE DOO HS O P I N IJ 4;» A U S T I N H I O S O C O N S I I I t THEATRE “ I H AH L Y ” I :€N» - 4 :29 - I SS “ L I I . U B S ” ttM - 6:2* • lift t i l l R B v e s t a r y f b & t _ _ w i t h a n i n c r e d i b l e _ * e x p e r i m e n t ! IL . TA ........... C .. HT A K R IN G C O - S T A R R IN G ( L I U H O R I R T S O * ( I.A IK !, B L O O M FREE P A R K IN G A T A L L T IM ES Friday, Junr 20. 1969 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page I I the terror of a BLOOD PSYCHO gone BERSERK!! ” y S E E . . . N I C U T *1 " j W " " lr beautiful womentV; sudden f brutal horror.... r n a Q " ^ a a l r starring G e r a l d M c R a n e y G a y * Y o lle n E v e lv n H e n d r i c k s ! H e rb e r t N e l s o n I fj§&§' PSO DUC MORI k-Wl ^ W i: f i l m e d rn — V io le n t ^ V is Io n PLUS THIS CO-HIT O F H O R R O R ! M ASTER OF TERROR!!! Austin Annual Sandwich Seminar Aqua Festival Begins Aug. I By SI SAX WESTMORELAND Staff Writer Change Becomes Revolution Heart Care Course Offered “ Universities have got to be­ gin considering their obligation to people not normally consid­ ered for admission,” he speci­ fied. Even in a large university like Texas, there are ways of person­ alizing the educational process, he asserted. For example, tele­ vision could be used as the in­ formation source in the class­ room. The teacher would then be free to engage “ inter­ change with human beings.” them­ with students selves with the information, Dr. Donner explained. involving in There should be more overlap­ ping of the various fields, he added. As for content of courses, Dr. Donner believes that “ we teachers , you as students as have got to see relevance in what’s being taught.” Dr. Donner is optimistic about the changes the University Is making. “ I ’ve cast my lot with U T.” he said proudly. “ I believe in it; I love it.” If this time of change is “ one of the greatest times to be liv­ ing in,” Dr .Donner concluded, it, get “ we’ve got caught up in the excitement of it.” to enjoy Medical personnel from through­ out the state and University en­ gineers are taking part in the first of a two-part course on co­ ronary care which began Monday and will continue through June 27. The course, conducted by the College of Engineering in cooper­ ation with the Division of Exten­ sion and the System-wide School of Nursing, is designed to im­ prove the heart patient’s chance for life. Dr. 'Thomas M. Runge, heart specialist and professor of bio­ medical engineering at the Uni­ versity, the for registered course nurses, licensed vocational nur­ ses, nursing aids, physicians, and in charge of intended is students in premedical, parame­ dical, and biomedical engineer­ ing fields. Twenty-nine people are attend­ ing the first session. Coronary care units, designed and engineered as complete sys­ tems for use in hospitals, con­ sist of a number of instruments used to give medical personnel a picture of what is going on inside the patient’s circulatory system on a constant basis. Proper use of the equipment can reduce the death rate in cases of acute heart attack by one-half. The course is a collaboration between those who directly ad­ minister to heart patients and en­ gineers who have designed the equipment and share an inter­ est and responsibility in saving lives. Applications to attend the sec­ ond course on functions-opera- June 30 instruments, tions of through Ju ly ll, are still being accepted. For information, con­ tact Tile Coronary Care Unit, c/o Division of Extension, P. O. Box K, The University of Texas at Austin, 78712. Evolution is change. But when the rate of change is speeded up, evolution becomes revolution, ac­ cording to Dr. Stanley Donner, professor of radio-tclevlsion-film and education at the University. Student uprisings are a “ com­ munication of change, a protest of a lack of change” on society's part, Dr. Donner told approxi­ mately IOO students and faculty at a sandwich seminar Wednes­ day. Speaking on “ Communica­ tion and Change,” Dr. Donner pointed out why “ we’re really at the end of an era.” If 50,000 years of man’s his­ tory were compressed into 50 years, we would have stopped being cavemen just IO years ago, he explained. But electricity wouldn’t have been discovered until 20 days ago, the first radio IO wouldn’t have played until days ago, television four days ago, and first hydrogen bomb would have exploded yes­ terday. the Computers Cited Dr. Donner cited computers, television, and automation as contributing to the stepped-up rate of change. The growth of technology has also helped the population of the United States to increase 44.1 per cent since 1938. What do society’s institutions do in the midst of such change? “ They have to make changes In a revolutionary fashion, too,” Dr. Donner emphasized. Such in­ stitutions Christian church, universities, representa­ tive democracy, and business and relatively young in man’s history, he point­ ed out. industry are the as “ In universities can be found the first aspects of the revolu­ tion that’s on us,” Dr. Donner said. “ Students are reading the change, feel the change, know [ the change is here,” he said. Role of Media Student violence shouldn’t be read as revolution and anarchy, he continued. Thus the essential role of the mass media, partic-h television, | ularly should be to “ say what it is that’s happening.” radio and To prevent the destruction of universities, changes must be made in the admissions process, in the administrations' concern and belief in each student as a person, and in the actual struc­ ture of schools and departments, Dr. Donner theorized. Jester Center ... Twenty-six of the residences (Continued from Page I ) 10,000 square feet of storage space for supplies. Alter food is prepar­ ed, it’s to be taken up one of two large service elevators to the din­ ing floors. Officials say that the entire operation is dependent on the elevators and that if anything ever went wrong with them there might be a lot of hungry people. The most modern equipment a- vailable will be used in the prep­ aration of more than 10,000 meals per day. Most of the food will be frozen and Braeutigam esti­ mates that “ for once wre have adequate refrigeration on hand.” There’s even a dishwasher that sorts and counts the eating uten­ sils. Other interesting tidbits of in­ formation on the center: are adapted for handicapped peo­ ple . . . A dry cleaning conces­ sion w ill operate in the vending machine rooms of each dormi­ tory . . . One portion of the din­ ing area will remain open until l l p.m. or midnight as a snack bar . . . Post office boxes w ill be opened with the room keys . . . The auditorium seats are spaced far enough apart to allow easy movement . . . The University athletes, now housed in Moore* H ill Hall, will be housed in the Jester center this fall but will still eat meals in the Varsity Ca­ feteria. As one observed said; “ It has everything but a maternity ward and a crematorium!” S P E C IA L E V E N T S A L E Famous Names Special Event Cotton-Cotton Blend SKIRTS CULOTTES Reg. 12.00 14.00 16.00 18.00 20.00 Sale .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... ........... 14.00 Berumdas--ia m a ic a s Sale Reg. 8.00 12.00 14.00 . . . . . . .......... .......... Hurry down for best selections and sizes. While Sale shopping, browse through our new arrivals. KNIT SPORT Others 4.88 BERMUDA Others 4.88 HANCOCK CENTER O P E N M O N D A Y , T H U R SD A Y , FR ID A Y 'TIL 9 P.M. f MEN'S WEAR 2222 G U A D A L U P E — NEXT TO THE TEXAS THEATRE one block from the 2323 Sn Antonio St. 478 )811 Page 12 friday. June 20, 1969 THE SUMMER TEXAN More than 40 events have been planned for tile annual Austin Aqua Festival beginning Aug. I. Pre-festival events begin with the Governor s Cup Sailing Re­ gatta on Ju ly 5 and 6 and ending with a kirk-off luncheon Aug. I. Other pre-festival events are a beach buggy race, the Highland Lakes Golf Tournament, an old fashioned H ill Country barbecue, a IOO-mile canoe race, and the 1969 Battle of the Bands Elim ina­ tions. The festival theme, “ Summer Fun feu* Everyone,’ is joined this year by the parade theme, “ Fun Festival of Texas.” The themes will be carried oui on floats dur­ ing the Aug. I Twilight Land Parade and tile Night Lighted Water Parade. An AquaFest with entertain­ ment and music at Fiesta Gar­ dens follows the Aug. I parade. At 6 p.m., Aug. 2, another Aqua­ Fest w ill be held at Fiesta Gar­ dens with a Mexican theme. On Aug. 2 and 3, sports en­ thusiasts can view the Texas Wa­ ter Ski Championships on Town Lake and the Aqua Festival Na­ tional Sports Car Races in down­ town Austin. There also w ill be motorcycle competition. AquaFest continues Aug. 5, 6, and 7 at 6 p.m. and Aug. 8 at 6:30 p.m. at Fiesta Gardens. The Aug. 5 AquaFest w ill feature a Western evening, a German even­ ing on Aug. 6, jazz, rhythm and blues on Aug. 7, and Czech night on Aug. 8. The Battle of the Bands finals in the Municipal will be held Auditorium at S p.m. Aug. 7. The Rio Noche Night Lighted Water Parade will be at 8 p.m., Aug. 8 at Festival Beach on Town Lake A $5,000 fireworks show will follow the parade. The annual Southw-est Champ­ ionship Drag Boat races get un­ derway at I p.m., Aug. 9 and IO, at Festival Beach. The first Lake Travis Boat ’n Fun Fest w ill be held at l l a.m. Aug. 9. The 1969 Austin Aqua Festival closes its “ Summer Fun for ev­ eryone” with the traditional Gos­ pel Sing Swig at Zilker Park Aug. IO. Aquafer Seeks Contest Entries Pretty, unmarried girls, 18 or older abound on the University campus —■ and Austin businesses are looking for pretty girls. The crowning of Miss Austin Aqua Beauty is a high point of the Aqua Festival the first week in August Different businesses in town sponsor girls for the title and the winner will be chosen in a bathing suit competition Aug. 8. Any girl w'ho fits the above qualifications and would like to participate the Aqua-Fest should ccm tact Aqua Festival publicity committeeman Al Mus- tin at 472-8764. in You w on’t find used V W s in better shope than ours. They’ve poised the 16-point Safety and Performance inspec­ tion and been completely over. hauled and reconditioned. W e're so sure of them we guarantee 100% the repair or replacement of all major mechan­ ical parts* for 30 days or 1000 miles. lf it'* hard to find used V W i In better shape than ours, ifs be­ cause if* hard to find a used V W guarantee better than ours. •engine • tranMUfliae • ifont eft)* cfsewbRot • rear • broke system * electrical system '66 V W Sedan Green .. 1195 '68 Plymouth Barracuda Sharp Convertible Maroon & Black ... 1995 '67 V W Square Back White ................. 1795 '65 Comet Cyclone— Lf. Yellow 2-Door Hardtop Auto. Trans. 1195 67 V W Sedan Air - Radio-White ........ 1595 '68 V W Auto. Trans. Sedan-Bug. Air-Radio 1695 “CB” SMITH V01KSW ACEN D O W N T O W N 405 N u A M A R