g M rn Plans for Moratorium Vary Across Nation By ROBERT BORDEN Collage campuses across the nation will hold classes officially Wednesday, despite strong stu­ dent opinion supporting the Viet­ nam moratorium. The Lehigh University news­ paper, in Bethlehem, Pa., will suspend publication for the day. Deadlines and work schedules for staff members of the newspaper have been moved up so no one will have to work. Also. at I Le­ high a petition circulated among students urging dismissal of classes in support of the morato­ rium. More than 1.000 signatures were Included, but administration officials said it Is up to teachers individually to suspend class. At SMU, moratorium activities are coordinated by the Univer­ sity YMCA, which every full-time student automatically belongs to. Teach-ins, films opposing the war and a protest are planned. Yippies and members of the Revolutionary Youth Move­ ment will picket recruiters from Dow Chemical Co. and Ling- Torn pco-Vought, who will be on campus Wednesday. songfest Regular classes are scheduled at the University of Maryland, but university officials will pro­ vide a platform and public ad­ dress system for protesters. A campus coliseum also will be opened to demonstrators in case of rain. Student Senate of the Univer­ sity of Houston endorsed the mo­ ratorium, but left Individuals to decide whether to cut daises. A member of the UH Committee to End the War said, "One mourns the dead with dignity not with picketing or closing down the uni­ versity by force.” Young Americans for Freedom at UH are staging a "Victory in Vietnam Week,” through Satur­ day. Tile purpose Is to "educate and inform students and gain sup­ port for the fighting men in Viet­ nam.” Students are urged to at­ tend classes. Minnesota Democratic Se n . Walter F. Mondale and Georgia Rep. Julian Bond will address a night rally at the University of Minnesota. At the University of Arizona, the University Faculty Senate voted to hold classes, but left the final decision to individual i n- structors. Students at the Univer­ sity of Arizona set aside Mon­ day through Wednesday as a mo- ratorium, "to maximize public pressure against the war." On Monday, demonstrators #• rected 404 crosses in front of the student union In memory of Ari­ zona war df'ad. A candlelight vi­ gil was held on campus Tuesday. Wednesday, picketing of universi­ is a ty gates Is planned, as march to downtown Tucson to place crosses In front of the draft board offices. Dr. John Kenneth Galbraith, ambassador to India under Pre­ sident John T. Kennedy, ap* proved University of Arizona ac­ tivities in a telegram to the stu­ dent body. * < *" "C are I Florit which m oral asked to dis. Wednes held for Student Althouj end the gen Presi "The Unh acts differ dual as ar classes arm sanction sday” activities ie University of it Government, the fessors a r e te on w'hether •ar In class mass will be the Catholic C f t lr. A U, " y. JC ca c-t JC It is time to ity of Ore- . Clark said, t* university "he indivi- ■r* U * Regular * 4 . — but Uni- ° .-J ________ V- to o * CX—j* D-* ^ versify facilities are available to protesters. "condemned” University of Tennessee Stu­ dent Government endorsed the moratorium, but the Young Re­ publicans it. A YAF leader said, "We are not in favor of war of any kind, but we feel that the other side .should be condemned, not us." Tile Uni­ versity Moratorium Committee Is trying to interest high school stu­ dents in the antiwar programs. Student Senate at Texas A&M University urged officials not to dismiss classes or give excused absence permits to students par­ ticipating in the moratorium. University discipline code says a student may be dismissed or suspended for not less than * se­ mester for "membership in any group that might bring discredit to the University.” No speakers or meetings hav# been approved for campus facilities at A&M. A picnic for peace in Hermann Park In Houston is planned by St. Thomas University protesters. Speakers from Rice also will speak in the park. At San Antonio Junior College, the city's largest, permission to Ii old a campus rally was denied. A permit for the rally was ob­ tained at a park 200 yards off campus. Texas Lutheran College and San Antonio's Our Lady of th# Lake will hold m em orial sen d ees in their campus chapels. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student New spaper at The University of Texas at Austin House Election Roster Filled Page 3 • AUSTIN, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1969 Fourteen Pages Today No. 47 Vol. 69 Price Ten C e n ts W eather: • W arm er • H igh: Low 70's • Low: Upper 40's Blacks Hold Protest Rally In Austin Field M a r s h a l Don Cox Calls Capitalists ‘Pigs;’ A dvises B uyin g of G u n s By LYKE THOMPSON Associate News Editor A national field marshal for the Black Panthers said Tuesday night that "capital­ ism whether black or white, not racism, is what the black people and all oppressed minorities should be fighting.” Don Gix a member of the Harlem rally at Freedom Panthers, sp.ko at a Park, 1400 Rosewood, designed to show support for a Houston Negro, I>ee Otis Johnson. Johason was convicted in 1008 and sen­ tenced to 30 years in prison for the pos­ session of marijuana. His counsel will ap­ t h # in peal the conviction Wednesday Court otf Criminal Appeals In Austin. Cox said, "Racism is a tool used to divide all the oppressed people. It is the the few rich. Everybody masses versus Chat supports capitalist society is a pig. And there are nigger pigs as well as whit# pigs. "We will fight the pigs on their own grounds. If they carry guns we will,” he continued. "Every home should have a 12 gauge Oiotgun and double 00 buckshot to go in it.” "When I got into town I checked the gam laws here,” Cox continued. "You people better buy guns before they change the laws so only tile pigs and not the people can buy them.” Cox described Johnson as a "political prisoner.” He said that Johnson was ar­ rested because he was a threat to t h e “capitalist establishment.” not because he ■noked marijuana. "If everybody that smoked pot got 30 years, there wouldn't be too many people walking around Harlem or East Austin. Injury Jackson of Austin, who organized the rally, said other rallies were planned for ll am . and 2 p.m. Wednesday. Cox and community black leaders will speak at the rallies. The night rally drew about 250 persons. 'Bang, Bang, Boom— Free Lee O tis N o w 1 — P hoto by John Yale*. East Austin children chanted at a rally In Freedom Park Tuesday night in sup­ port of Lee Otis Johnson, a Houston Negro convicted and sentenced to 30 years in prison on a marijuana charge. Approximately 250 attended the rally. Ranger's Armadillo Dies; TSP Adopts New Look By CAROLYN' HINCKIJHY Staff Writer The old sap-happy, bikini-clad, armadillo* infested Ranger is dead, and a new higher quality magazine under the same name was approved by the Texas Student Publicar dons FUvird Tuesday night. Bob Bums, TSP magazine supervisor, plans for tile publication to contain cam­ pus-oriented f e a t u r e s , personality inter- views, good humor, satire and various ardri e« *‘It had just gotten to be a sick humor magazine.” said Dr. William Mindak, pro­ fessor of journalism, who served on a com­ mittee to investigate the Ranger THE MAGAZINE had operated at a fi­ nancial I ors far several years, and t h e TSP Board hopes the now look will in­ crease the advertising, which is at an ex­ treme low. “ Advertiser* just didn’t want to put an ad in that kind of magazine,” Mindak said. To allow' time to adopt the new format, there will be no Ranger In November, but the new' publication will start in December. An extra issue will be published in May so subscriliers and advertisers can get their money's worth. In other action, Students’ Association President Joe Frier proposed TSP assum# responsibility for a new publication f o r teacher and course evaluation. Tile pro­ posal will be investigated by a TSP com­ mittee. "WE NEED a group with a firm base of financial support to publish it.” Frier said. The evaluations have previously been produced by a volunteer student organiza­ tion financed through the Arts and Sciences Council. Since tie organization hoped to expand the evaluations to all colleges and schools at the University, they needed some group to provide continuity, Frier said. Board member Ken Sparks asked that the TSP executive committee consider al­ lowing the Students' Association approved free advertising about their interviews. He also suggested that the name lists of in­ coming freshmen be given Freshman Encounter without charge. These proposals will be discussed st a later meeting. A C L U Ready to Defend High School Protesters By VAUGHN ALDREDGE Staff Writer Roy M. Mersky, a University law pro­ fessor and the president of the Central Texas American Civil Liberties U n i o n , said in a statement distributed Tuesday that the ACLU will take to court Austin high school administrators who discipline students who participate in Wednesday’s moratorium on the w.ar in Vietnam. The statement referred specifically to the wearng of buttons cr armbands and pointed out a U.S. Supreme Court der ision which ruled that the wearing of such symbols of support is "protected by die First and Fourteenth Amendments the Constitu­ tion.” to Mersky said, "many students fear they least for the day, will be "suspended a* with den,a1 of credit for their work. . . Irby Carruth, superintendent of the Austin Independent School District, instructed all principal* of Austin high school* Tuesday to take disciplinary action against protest­ ing students. Austin High School Principal William R. Robbins, in a memorandum to his staff distributed Tuesday, said, "All principals have been instructed by the superintendent to follow' certain procedures.” One of the five procedures listed in th# memorandum said, "Students will be asked to remove buttons or armbands. If they do not do so take them to the appropriate dean.” Ar*'flier of the procedures listed said that, ‘‘students will not be permitted to hand out unauthorized material In the buildings or on the school grounds.” Tile other procedures listed included di­ rections to "check your rolls very care­ fully," to record zeroes for any t e s t s missed by students absent without proper excuse*, and to observe standard procedures concerning students with "improper dress” oi ' students leaving school without per­ mission.'* Full Day of Activities Slated For UT Antiwar Observance By G ARY T AY MIR Staff Writer More than 5,000 students will actively par­ ticipate in an anti Vietnam war morator­ ium Wednesday at the University and State Capitol, a spokesman for the Stu­ dent Mobilization Committee (SMC) predicted Tuesday. Part of a nationwide protest, th# mora­ torium on the University campus will fea­ ture a march around the Tower, teach ins and debates. An Editorial The m oratorium represents a u- nique opportunity for students lo dis­ play their opposition to the w ar in Vietnam. Members of the Student Mobiliza­ tion Committee on campus have ta k ­ en steps to assure th a t W ednesday's is non-violent. F u r­ dem onstration ther, they have designed a form at for the rally and small group discus­ sions which will be both educational and thought-providing. Broad-based support for the m ora­ torium has arisen a t the University. Groups as diverse as the Student As­ sembly and Students for a Demo­ cratic Society have passed resolu­ tions endorsing the boycott. Nationally, 79 private colleges and universities have canceled classes on Wednesday and m any national lead­ er's have voiced their support. Although President Richard M. Nixon has said he will not be swayed by the nationwide antiw ar protests, it I* evident he will be attentively watching and listening to the events of Wednesday. Regardless of the Impact or lack of it on the national leadership, the moratorium w ill the widespread disgust over Vietnam po­ licy. underscore F urther, it will be a day of com­ m itm ent to the principle of ending U.S. involvement in a tragic w ar by which nothing Is being gained and hum an lives are being lost. Young lives are being sacrificed in Vietnam. It is time for the country s youth to he heard on the m atter. Travis Burgeson, a member of th# SMU Steering Committee, said that since there seems to be no real Interest by the Nix­ on Administration toward ending the war, the moratorium is the only way to get re­ sults. Despite the protest, normal academie programs are scheduled, a statement from the office of University FTesident Norman Hackerman stated Monday. to SOME CUSSES WILL NOT mee' because the students decided to devote their atten­ the moratorium. TV Richard tion Byrne, professor of radio television-film and drama, said, “ In all my classes there was a great majority of students who pre­ ferred to attend th# moratorium activities. Ifs a matter of individual conscience.” Ryrne was one of 84 University profes­ sors who rigned a .statement urging teach­ ers not to hold classes Wednesday. TEX AS SEN. RAI JPR YARBOROUGH. in a telegram released Tuesday, said, "It Is my hope that the national moratorium movement . . . will reach such massive through t h # proportions as to b r e a k the White wail of separation that keeps from House and its occupants Insulated the feelings and ideals of th# American people.” The other viewpoint was expressed by Gary Bruner, Texas Young Republican Fed­ In p a r t , eration chairman, Tuesday. Bruner said, “The moratorium on the Viet­ nam war has turned Into an attack on th# N i x o n Administration. The Young Democrats and others have scorned real 'I-et 's progress as ‘tokenism.* The ery pol! them all out— NOW” That is sur­ render.” is WEDNESDAY S PROTESTS w il begin at 7:30 a.m., when the religious student centers located around campus hold bibli­ cal readings which pertain to war and peace. After an 8 a.m. meeting In the Univer­ sity "Y” , sponsors of the local moratorium will set up a picket line around the cam­ pus to encourage students to support th# anti Vietnam activities, according to Bur­ geson. Nine teach ins will besin at 10 a.m.. with students leading most of 'he discussion* Two discussions e a c h of the history of the war and the Cis’ reports of the con­ flict and University complicity in the war, antiwar movement and the ABM system will b# subjects of the campus teach-ins. DR. CLIFTON GRUBBS, assoc it# pro­ fessor of economics, will lead a teach-in on "Business Involvement web w >r,’ and Dr. M, Donald Hancock, assistant profes­ sor of government, will speak on " T h e Next Vietnam.” Ed Price, assistant dean of students, said that the SMC had applied for per­ mits to let bands play north of th# Tea- as Union from IO to 11:15 a.m. A ll 30 a.m.. the moratorium parad# will begin on the Main Mall, moving east on Inner Campus Drive. The march will make the complete drcie, ending back at th# Main Mall, Price said. “The parade could be larger in number than we have ever handled." said Allen Hamilton, chief traffic and security officer, "but we ar# planning nothing sperial.” AFTER THE MARTH, speakers from the SMC and Students for a Democrat!# Society will address a rally on th# Main Mall, followed by an open microphone for anyone wishing to speak. think Trice «?ald other group# had pe*ttfon«8 to a total of 65 this vear. The total of 417 represents an overall de­ crease of 146 arrests compared with 1968. Only mn of the persons arrested stated they were students at the University. Thro# sliced than were students at the University af Arlington campus. I-.*.- nos ted persons stated t h e y the University of Okla­ were students at homa. A to;a1 of 15 police incidents (oiiem m ) occur od during the pre-game festivities in the downtown area. Police say that number i> small for that area on a routine Friday n git Excluding students from either Univer­ sity, further breakdown of arrests showed! — 1% adults and 12 juveniles arrested gave addresses in Dallas or Dallas County, • 79 adults and two juveniles from Texas but outside Dallas or Dallas County, • 31 from the* state of Oklahoma, • 15 from out oi state, excluding Okla­ homa, and • one who refused to give any a d d r ^ a; lh# time of a rre st News Capsules _______ By The Associated P re ss______ C o n g Decrease M e k o n g Delta Activity MY THO, Vietnam V iet Cong activity has decreased in the Mekong Del­ ta despite th e w ithdraw al of 12,000 American infantrym en from the area, U.S. Army sources report. Speculation th a t the Viet Cong might launch a new round of attack s following the w ithdraw al of the U.S. 9th In fan try Division has proved unfounded. An American spokesman and other U.S. Army officers working as advisers to the South Vietnamese 7th Division said there has been no indication o f a n enemy buildup in th e three key provinces south o f S a ig o n where the I S. 9th and Vietnamese 7th Divisions operated to g e th e r . Now, w ith the Americans gone, the re s p o n s ib ility lies solely with the 7th Division. W a r Over in 3 Years, S a y s N ixo n WASHINGTON President Richard M. Nixon has expressed confidence th a t th ree years from now the V ietnam w ar will he over, and inflation and crime will have been checked. “I will say confidently th a t looking ahead just three years, the w ar will be over,” he said. “ It will be over on a basis which will permit lasting peace in the Pacific.” Nixon made the predictions in a speech at a dinner m eeting of th e board of directors of The Associated Press Sunday, and the te x t of his rem arks was made public by th e White House Tuesday. He said inflation will have been checked “because we w ent in a t the h eart of th e problem and took our hard knocks now and later this w inter so th a t we could have sm oother sailing later.” Senators A sk Repeal of Tonkin G ulf Act WASHINGTON Sens. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., and Claiborne Pell, D- R.I., Tuesday proposed repeal of the Tonkin Gulf Resolu­ tion effective Dec. 31, 1970, saying th a t would end con­ gressional authority for U.S. combat operations in South Vietnam. The resolution they introduced urged President Rich­ ard M. Nixon to w ithdraw all American combat troops by th e end of 1970. The Tonkin Gulf Resolution was adopted by Congress In August, 1964, after the Johnson Administration report­ ed th a t N orth Vietnamese vessels had attacked two U.S. destroyers in international w aters. It authorized the Presi­ dent to take all necessary measures, including the use of arm ed force, to repel aggression in Vietnam. Controversial Green Beret Quits A rm y FT. MONMOUTH, N J . Capt. Robert F. Marasco, central figure in the con­ troversial Green Beret case, was discharged from the A rm y Tuesday?* M arasco was one of eight Green Berets named by th e Army in the alleged m urder of a reputed Vietnamese double agent. The Army identified him as having actually shot the agent. M arasco received an honorable discharge and will re­ tain a reserve commission, an A rm y spokesman here said. George W allace Plans Vietnam Trip MONTGOMERY, Ala. Third p arty leader George C. Wallace, a presidential candidate last year, disclosed Tuesday he plans a trip to Vietnam next month. Wallace was asked about speculation he would go to Vietnam for a first-hand look a t the conduct of the war. “I ’m going to take an overseas trip,” he said. In answ er to another question, he confirmed he plans to make the trip. But he declined to go Into details. It was learned, however, th a t Wallace is scheduled to leave Nov. I for Southeast Asia, th a t he plans to spend about two weeks and possibly will visit “several countries.” Session Supporting M oratorium Fails WASHINGTON A planned all-night session of the House in support of the Vietnam m oratorium was cut short a t 11:17 p.m. Tuesday when the House was forced to adjourn. A m ajority of the members failed to show up when a demand was made th a t a quorum be present, and under House rules there was nothing left to do but make a mo­ tion to adjourn. I t barely carried, 112 to HO. Rep. G. VV Montgomery, D-Miss,, made the demand for a quorum and 210 members responded, seven short of a m ajority. Two earlier attem pts to cut short the session had been averted. Before the lights w ere dimmed by the adjournm ent, th e session produced a fa r ranging debate over U.S. in­ volvement in the war. Stock M a rk e t Soars to Sharp G ain NEW YORK The stock m arket—flying high on rising hopes of Viet­ nam peace developments and easing of m onetary restraints — soared Tuesday to a second straight sharp gain in the y e a r’s heaviest trading. The broad-based advance was a continuation of the rally th a t broke out Monday afte r the m arket had pulled out of a slide to the brink of its 1969 low late last week. The Dow Jones averages of 30 industrials rolled up a gain of 13.13 to 832.43, its sharpest advance since last April 30. I t had climbed 12.34 Monday. N A S A Says Space Prayer Never Required AUSTIN NASA D irector Thomas O. Paine says in a federal court affidavit the National Aeronautics and Space Admi­ nistration never required astronauts to pray or read the Bible in space. P aine’s affidavit is included in the U.S. government's request th a t a federal court dismiss atheist Madalyn Mur­ ra y O’H air’s suit against prayers in space. The governm ent’s answ er was filed by U.S. Dist. Atty. Seagal W heatley. W heatley’s answ er claims the suit fails to meet the U.S. Suprem e C ourt’s requirem ents for suits against the governm ent. Mrs. O ’H air alleges the Apollo 8 and l l astronauts conducted religious services in space to the benefit of the C hristian faith while on a mission financed by tax money. P«9« 2 Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN Soviets Send Satellite Aloft Russians Perform Space Maneuvers MOSCOW (AP) - As its three manned capsules maneuvered in space, the Soviet Union Launch­ ed an unmanned satellite Tues­ day “under a cooperation pro­ gram of Socialist Communist countries.” Initial information indicat­ ed the new satellite, called In­ tercosmos-1, was not connected with the mission of the manned two of which maneu­ Soyuzes, vered Tuesday to a rendezvous. Information on the unmanned satellite indicated its orbit was different from those of the three manned Soyuzes. Intercosmos-1, THU INITIAL d is c r e p a n c y in the two types of orbit suggest cd although that launched during t h e manned space flights, was not immedi­ ately related to them. Tass said Intercosmos-1 w a s ‘intended for studies of the ul­ traviolet and Roentgen radia­ tions of the sun and their influ­ ence on the structure of the up­ per atmosphere of the earth.” Two of the three Soviet man­ ned spaceships in orbit carried out a rendezvous but apparently did not dock. TASS SAID Soyuz 7 and Soyuz 8 launched Sunday and Monday respectively “have carried out an a p p r o a c h toward e a c h other.” Tass did not elaborate. Tass said third manned the craft Soyuz 6 made visual obser­ vations and tested navigation systems during the day. It was launched Saturday. space The seven-man flight has been reported by semi-offi­ cial sources as part of a pro­ gram to build the world’s first orbiting spare station. There was scarcity of official Information from which to g e t an indication of the Soyuz trio's real mission. Tass offered a few progress reports giving the num­ ber of orbits and generalities about work on board. “ Joint experiments have been started simultaneously in differ­ ent points of the near-earth out­ er space. Their results will pro­ vide an opportunity to obtain a fuller notion about the processes under study,” the official Soviet news agency Tass said in o n e dispatch. Action Column I TOWER CLOSED—Is there any way at all that an amateur photo­ grapher without newspaper mr group affiliation ran get to the top of the Tower at night to get some night shote of the city? ( ’an something be done about this?—B. W. Aller. R. Hamilton, chief of the University traffic and security force, suggests you check with Jam es Colvin, vice-president in charge of business affairs. He can give a special dispensation from the rule pro­ hibiting persons from the observation deck except during the hours set aside for its use. Hamilton said, “ we’d have to get a security officer to go with him since there must be an officer present at all times when persons are on the deck. I don’t say that it can’t be done, but he’d have to have a p retty good reason. They (the business office) get a lot of requests few this sort of thing.” LOCKED OUT—Why is the courtyard on the fourth floor of the Academie Center locked?—I). S. The courtyard and garden were dosed to the public this year be­ cause of a number of incidents of students sunbathing there last spring, said Mrs, Mary Hirth, librarian in charge of the fourth floor. “ It was thp only recourse we had after one particular incident in which a person simply would not obey the rules. It m ay be that the time is past now and we may be able to open it up again, but I we feel there are other places around campus for sunning, such as the Union patio,” she said. NO COUNT YET—How many “C” parking spaces arc on campus and how many “C" permits are issued?—P. V. As of Nov. l l , 1968, there were 2,456 spaces reserved for the 8,825 “ C” perm it holders of the fall sem ester of 1968. The next official count of University parking spaces will take place Nov. ll. said R. A. Reed, adm inistrative assistant the parking division. There were, however, 7,850 “C“ permits issued during the five days of registration this sem ester. in TI NING IN—Where docs the Audio library get its tapes? Could the library use some of my records to make tapes for its collection? I have several Wancini, Beatles and movie soundtracks that are popular now.—W. C. The library' buys the phonograph records from which it acquires its tapes, said Miss Laura Thompson, director. Copyright laws pro­ hibit their use of your records. However, if you wish to donate the recordings, they would be happy to talk with you, said Mi.ss Thomp- * son. There are* a few tapes in the library that were recorded by library employes on speeches and lectures by University instructors, but the bulk of the recordings are taken from commercial records. QI ESTION OF PHYSICS—Share there Is no correlation between the laboratory ss seized Hue during the Tet offen­ sive in February, 1968, was held beside a large pit at tho foot of barren Ba Tang Mountain. The skeletal rem ains had been uncovered last month by patrol­ ling U.S. paratroopers. Allied troops now have found a total of nearly 1,300 bodies buried in m ass graves around Hue since last spring. VILLAGE BELLE WAREHOUSE SA L E 409 East 19th C O M E B R IN G C A S H Y O U 'L L SAVE A S Y O U F I N D C o sh , Suit*, Dresses, Sportswear, Accessories, L in g e rie ............. C O M E BETWEEN C L A S S E S, AFTER W O R K , L U N C H H O U R JU ST C O M E ! THERE’S A LITTLE O F EVERYTHING, A N D A LOT FOR Y O U R M O N E Y ! Thursday, Friday; October 16th, 17th; IO A.M. Til 5 P.M. Saturday, October 18th; 9 A .M . Til 2 P.M. REMEM BER . . , IT'S AT O U R W A R E H O U S E , 409 EAST 19th s/ H A N C O C K C E N T E R O pen Until 9 p.m., M on d ay— Thursday— Friday and " O N - TH E - D R A G " 2300 G U A D A L U P E A N D IN S A N A N T O N IO ABILENE, Kan. (AP) - Post­ m aster General Winton M. Blount Tuesday rapped the critics of President Richard M. Nixon and his efforts to win peace in Viet­ nam. “There are none In this land that more desires peace in Viet­ nam than the President of this nation,” Blount said. “There are none that can m atch ids unceasing efforts to bring us out of this complex ag­ ony and there Is no finer advo­ cate for our nation*s desire for peace with honor.” Blount's rem arks cam e a day ahead of the Vietnam moratorium scheduled across the nation by opponents of the war. He outlined his views in a speech presenting a stam p com­ memorating the late Dwight D. Eisenhower on the Seventy-ninth anniversary of the former Presi­ dent's birth. “ The presumption of those who War is Bad Boogie Support the Moratorium f.u.i.s th e I feel they know better than I President how to obtain peace creates difficulties which ulti­ m ately diminish our prospects for peace,” Blount said. Blount said there is a “certain spiritual arrogance in those who J suppose that they are more sen­ sitive to the bloodshed in Viet­ nam than are the leaders of this country.” C a p i t a l (C o in C o . E x t« m iv » S a n c t io n of Coir>» and C u rre n c y Philip Nohra DELIVERY of K0DAC0L0R PRINTS Bring ut your expotod Film by 4 P M Print* r t * d y 48 houri lottr at 4 P M , S T U D T M A N PH O T O 19th st Lavaca • Camion Vitiate N o w I lay me dow n to sleep, I Pray The Lord my soul to keep, lf I should die before I wake, I Pray for the military establishment. lutheran campus ministry Sunday worship 2200 san antonio chapel in upper room 11:00 regular 5:00 folic The college you can’t get into without a job. The college is ours-Wastern Electric’* Corporate Education Center in Hopewell, New Jersey, Like your college, ours has a campus with dorms, dining halls, labs and a library. Unlike yours, you can’t get into ours without a joh. A job at Western Electric Our students-engineers, managers and other professionals-, develop and expand their skills through a variety of courses, from corporate operations to computer electronics. To help bring better telephone service and equipment, through the Bell System. For information contact your placement office. Or write: College Relations Manager, Western Electric Co., Room 2500, 222 Broadway, New York, New York 10038. An equal opportunity employer. Western Electric un atm aal eyemj I esm$sese% me A Very Bookless Christmas Calendar to Alter Old Habits the trip home for Christmas sans books and studies. Another coed complains “ With Christmas shop­ ping, parties and all the holiday activities, there is no time to study for finals.” High fall temperatures don’t seem to affect thoughts of next year. Mrs. Alice Bodoin, director of women’s housing, says th e reouests for un air-conditioned dorm space are running higher than ever. “ We will be open as early as need be and will retain the un-air-condtinned dorms for economic reasons,” Mrs. Bodoin said. University Panhellenic is still discussing how sorority rush will be conducted. Customarily, rush is held one wwk prior to regis­ tration with members returning to Austin several days prior to rush. faster registration proceas will be enough,” remarked University Junior Margie Poole. traditional Continuing r u s h procedures would put pre r u s h in conflict and rush activities with s u m m e r school finals. “ There have been several pro­ posals, but no decision has been made yet.” PanhelLenic delegate Leslie Hahn said. The new calendar gets aside only three days for registration compared with the usual five-day period of recent years. Registra­ tion officials say that new pro­ cedures will be instituted to com­ plete registration in the shorter time. “ If nothing else good results from the new calendar, a new, Al! public institutions of hlgh- ed education will have to conform to this type of calendar by 1973, University President Norman Hackerman told the Board of Re- gents at their Aug. I meeting. AIsot the Texas Education As­ sociation has been asked to align elementary and secondary school calendars accordingly. .Spring semester registration will be Jan l l to 13 with classes resuming Jan. 14. Spring vaca­ tion will be April 2 to IO. For those senior* successfully com­ pleting the new calendar year, commencement will be h e l d May 15. & J > C g / V A 99 File for Seats In Delegate Election The apathetic atmosphere sur­ rounding the forthcoming House of Delegates election was dis­ pelled Tuesday as 99 students filed for seats. tested seats are as follows: two in Fine in Education, one each Arts and Architecture, and L v t m the Graduate School. The election will be Ort. 29. The Student Assembly office in the Union Building was crowded as people pushed and shoved in­ to the room, trying to complete them candidacy forms before the 5 pm , deadline. T h e number of candidates surprised election officials who, until Tuesday, had registered only six hopefuls. AU .16 positions have been fil­ ed for, and only nine of these races. Uncon­ are uncontested Lynn Malone, election commis­ sion chairman, explauipd because of the large number of candidates, the ballots will be computerized rathe: than hand- counted. The House is composed of elected delegates from each of the University schools and rep­ resentatives from all campus or­ ganizer,ons. The total number of to be delegates about 200. is expected iii .I .ii min Mn .iwumn.mw i i w w iw p u Soap Box What arf yon doing a hoot tho morn tori nm and lr hat do you think about President Richard M. Nixon's plea for 66 day* of silence? David MI ne berg, sophomore, psychol­ ogy: “ I'm participating in all activities. Nixon has had enough time to do some­ thing about the war. Students want him to take a stand, one way or the other.” Jacqueline Seybcrt, junior, Anglish, government: “ I'm not for the morator­ ium and will not participate in any of the activities. As for Nixon, don t ask me about him. please.'' Richard Miller, graduate, science edu­ cation: “ I will not take part, but Nixon’s been in office long enough. He may have a plan In the rough stages and needs more time to perfect It." Marianne Parker, senior, education: "I'm going to classes, but I sympathize with the reasoning of the planners of the moratorium.” Arthur Ramlrer, graduate, Spanish: “ I'm not going to classes because the moratorium is a concrete, graphic way to protest the war and promote mass ex­ pression. Nixon’* plea seems very phony and more like a smoke screen against the truth.” Dr. David T. Sisto, Spanish teacher: “ I ’ve told my students’ to let your con­ viction* be your guide? As for Nixon’* plea for RO days of silence. I think when we elected him, we gave him the leeway to make decisions.” Jim Colby, sophomore, English: “T ll cut c la s s e s except the one with the quiz gcheduled.” Joyce Huff, librarian: "W e’ve been In Vietnam long enough. So, T would like to *ee us prove something. Nixon’s plea is a hunch of baloney." Daphne Rushing, junior. German: “I support it but it s bad for people who have missed a lot of classes I wish there were a better way of showing our feel­ ings on the war.” * « r r n t i Parker m w &L- W lSm i s 2 - v ' J D. Sisto D. Rushing Students behind In already classes should be thankful this Ls 1969. The 1970-71 calendar w o u l d place t h e m mid-way through first semester. With the revised Sept 3 start­ ing date, student behavior pat­ terns will undergo a change. Hot temperatures and shortened sum­ mer jrbs. though, will find com­ pensation in an extended Christ­ mas vacation, study free. Tlie usual number of pros and cons have come from students. One University junior anticipates Victim Names Three Attackers identified WICHITA FA LLS (AP) - A bi-1 ology teacher at Kirsch! High School three Negro | youths in court Tuesday as mom- j bors of a larger group of pupils who attacked and beat him In the school Sept. l l . The three youths have b e e n second degree charged with lynching in the alleged attack a little-used felony allegation carry­ ing a punishment of up to IO years imprisonment. C. H. Dowdy told the jury of eight men and four women that the attack occurred after he told a group of Negro pupils to button their shirts and take off their hats In school. He said he was tackled, knocked to the ground and kicked by a group of eight to IO after he reached for one boy’s elbow' to escort him to the principal’s office. (MI i**iBuw«moei!Bitrrfttftiim!fH^!ffmrw*Tnm*rsntT,srr tim1* r-flcrcrmr.. ^ College Association Plays Enigmatic Role] ganization. “It I* concerned pri­ marily w i t h the problem* of highly universities,” Ransom said. complex AAU member represen ta fives meet twice a year in a highly informal atmosphere to debate and share their experiences and responsibilities. Their direct ef- ALTHOUGH LACKING detailed definition, the total impact of the AAU ha* Impressive potential. Til* 44 member universities have a total enrollment of almost a million students and 100.000 fac­ ulty members with approximate­ ly 9.000 doctoral degrees award­ ed each year. “ The AAU is also concerned with university problems on an international Ransom said. scale,” I am mindful that the mititary war In South Viet Nam Is, from th* enemy’s point of view, only part of e protracted and carefully coordinated attack, waged In the international aren*. Regrettably, I see signs of enemy success in that world arena which he cannot match In the battlefield. . .Thus discouraged by repeated military defeats but encouraged by what he be­ lieves to be popular opposition to our effort in Viet Nam, he is determined to continue hi* aggression from the north. This, inevitably, will cost lives— American, Vietnamese, and those /fotrrtf of our brave allies. General William C . Westmoreland YOUNG AMERICANS FOR FREEDOM DEMANDS POSITIVE ACTION VIETNAM Th* October 15 moratorium for a unilateral withdrawal of American force* from Viat Nam i« a dangerous folly. Blinded to the realities of Communist tactics and to the strategic Importance of Viet Nam, thousand* of student*, rightfully enraged at a no-win policy in Vietnam, will sign the death warrant for hundreds of American soldiers and Vietnamese soldiers and civilian*. RESOLUTION ADOPTED BY THE N A T L. C O N V E N T IO N OF Y O U N G A M E R IC A N S FOR FREEDOM, SEPT. Y969: Bt ROBERT CARTER New* Assistant Til* U S. Senate ha* been Mild to ha va the most exclusive mem­ bership of any organization in the world. But It doesn’t The chief executive* of the 42 rn o * t prestigious universit­ ies in the United States, plus two in Canada, comprise the Associa­ tion of American Universities. , Compared to the Senate, t h e AAU ha* lew than half a* many m em bers; its deliberation* a r e not public; and it seldom issues statements. Despite these enig­ mas, many universitie* seek, al­ though unsuccessfully, die emin­ ence of AAU membership. “THE I UNIVERSITY wa* ad- m i 11 e d to the AAU In 1929. W e're the wily member of t h e AAU In the Southwest at the pre pent time,” Chancellor Harry Hansom said. universities Around the turn of the cen­ tury, when the United States was standard - conscious, becoming recogniz­ several ed the need “ to protect their doctor's degrees.” Prompted by the low' opinion in foreign coun­ tries of advanced academic* in the United Sta'cs 14 universities organized the AAU In 1900. INITIALLY T H E AAU w a * concerned with requirement* for admissions to graduate schools, needs to strengthen weaker col­ leges federal or uniform state legislation for standards of pro­ f e s s i o n a l education, and breadth of educational requirements for doctoral degrees. But die AAU Is no longer a standardizing or accrediting or­ PROFESSORS FORCE STUDENTS TO SUPPORT MORATORIUM Numerous University Pro- essors have announced that hey will not hold classes to- lay in support of the Student Mobilization Committee’s mor- itorium for a unilateral wlth- irawal of American troop* rom Viet Nam. A major part >f the Oct. 15 moratorium is i boycott of classes by sym­ pathetic students. By refusing o hold classes, professor* deny tudents the right to disagree md force them to support a joycott of classes whether hey agree with such actions or >ot. Young American* for Free- t h i s blatant lorn opposes ibridgement of academic and political freedom. W e seek the lames of any and all profes- ors who have stated in class hat they will give a walk on Deb 15 in support of the mora- orium. Call GR 1-3186, Ad Pm id f«r (iv I T Yon** Aincrlrint for Frrodom Y o u r s f o r She a s k i n g FREE T it RETS TO M ARY QUANT’S Cosmetic Sem inar On© hour sessions at 7 & M a.m.; 2 & 4 p.m., O ctober 20 25. G e t your reserved ticket at the cosmetic counter on The C o - O p 's street floor, 20 reservations per session. N O T H IN G TO BUY. S k i g o r v j trol of all of Asia and the Pacific, and W h ereas, military control of the Indochina peninsula may determine future con­ W h ereas, the present battleground for that control is the Republic of V ie t­ nam, with fighting between the So viet proxy North Vietnam and the military forces of the United States and those of South Vietnam, and W hereas, the United States has been fighting a no-win war of attrition in V ie t­ nam, and has precluded for diplom atic reasons ( I) an invasion of North Vietnam, (2) mining or destroying the main North Vietnamese supply point of Haiphong H a r­ bor, and (3) denying the North Vietnam ese privileged sanctuaries in Laos and C a m ­ bodia, and (4) impeding the supply of food from the irrigated regions of the Red River Valley, and date, and W h ereas, the war of attrition has been a failure, and has been Immoral in stra­ te g ic conception, and has cost countless wasted Am erican and Vietnamese lives to JO IN YA F IN ITS FIGHT FOR VICTORY IN VIET­ N A M . W E A R A PO SI­ TIVE ACTIO N BUTTON TODAY! W hereas, the Am erican people have demonstrated in the last year's election* that they desire a speedy and honorable end to the war, T H E R E F O R E IT IS H E R E B Y R E S O L V E D , by the Young Am ericans for Freedom that the United States should plan to bring the war to a satisfactory m ilitary and di­ plomatic conclusion through a military victo ry resulting from ( I) an invasion o f N orth Vietnam, with South Vietnamese troops, (2) blocking of Haiphong H arbor, (3) destroy­ in g p riv ile ge d sanctuaries in Laos and C am bodia, and (4) flooding of the Red River Valley through destruction of ifs Irrigation system — and that this be done before Septem ber of 1970. * Free gift for coming * Door prize with each session C o '•reties Street Floor N I V E R 8 1 lT YI d o o |p IH E S TUDE NT !> O W N i I OKE 0 UT Application for Membership TEXAS YAF 4723 Richmond Avenue Houston, Texas 77027 I am in agreement with the Sharon Statement and I wish to apply for mem­ bership. I enclose my membership dues of: $ ................. N A M E ..................................................... ........................................................ Please Print M A ILIN G ADDRESS ......................................................................................... C I T Y ........................................ S T A T E .............. ZIP ................. A G E .............. S C H O O L OR O C C U P A T IO N ................... ........................... IF STUDENT PLEASE C H EC K : G RA D U A T E STUDENT U N D ERG RA D U A TE I I understand that $2.50 of my dues is for a subscription to the New Guard for one year. Check O n e □ Student $3.CX)* □ Student $ 1.00 (Does not include New Guard) Non-Student $3.00 (Under 40)* Non-Student $1.00 (Does not in­ clude New Guard) Joint Membership Couples $4 00 (Under 40)* j Associate Membership $10.00 for Married □ H] (over 40)* I enclose a contribution in the amount of $ .................................. I would like more information about YAF. y / t d n n d a Y , G e t . I * I’ M t h f d a i l y T F X a n p . g » I T h e D a il y T e x a n A ll-A m e ric a Pacemaker, 1968-69 The firing line Why increase athletic fund? *A« I W as vSaying, ‘lander N o Circum stances W ill I Be Affected Whatever B v It*"1 y i CALC V MEETtofo- w i t h R H H. K l a t e s t F F A g f STATEm^ ! To the editor i i hts notes Thursday, the edi­ tor expresses his concern for 35 s t u d e n t s who were promised funds under the discontinued Pro­ pram for Educational Opportun­ ity and have not received those the $12.8 funds. Bv mentioning the million plan for expanding stadium, he acknowledges the true priorities of our university. Recent Erwin has stated that tile University well not actively recru it any person to become a student, Yet the athletic depart­ ment annually r e m u s and pax’s, through scholarships, many ath­ letes to become students here. We are told that the athletic de­ partm ent is an independent, self­ supporting agency. Then why is the stadium expansion as was the A*troTurf, being largely financed by University funds with endorse­ ment by Erwin, when it is the Ithletic departm ent which w i l l receive the monetary benefits of these expenditures? Why should taxpayers and students be forced to pax for a capital investment that will add only to the revenue of the athletic departm ent? One possible answer is that thp Athletic department needs more money to recruit a t h Ie t e s and this money can only come from Increased s a l e s t i c k e t which means enlarging tho stad­ this conclusion ium. Although may not be accurate, it is cer­ that University funds are tain being us the re­ to finance ctor tment of new students, who are lr ng recruited for partici­ pation in educa­ tion in sports, not i Tile decision-makers of our uni vc y, including Erwin, should be held responsible for explain­ ing xvi • the stadium can be ex panded and football player: ran be recruited, when Dean Slitter Contends more money is needed for the College of Arts and Sci­ ences which doesn't have enough teachers student de­ trijet mand- Frank Erwin can't find the $10 000 he needs to make good tho promises he made this sum m er, and money is denied for minority recruitm ent. to their cost Whether or not sports are a valid part of the University's ac­ is definitely tivities. degrad ng both the University's integrity and its ability to meet its r h ;" ' enal to students. responsibility •John R. Smith fi?0(l Grove No ll Justified cuts To the editor: for Wednesday. This letter is to inform those people who seem to be misin­ formed on the moratorium sched­ I have uled heard a number of people Ray­ ing "I'm sick and tired of toe SD? trying to disrupt classes.’’ In the first place It is not the SDS that is sponsoring the m ora­ torium. Tt Is the Student Mobilization Committee. These clubs are reg­ the Office istered separately in of Student Activities. Secondly, no one is going to be forced to stay out of classes. Wednesday will simply be a chance for those who are against the Vietnam war to voice their opinion in a large enough group to be- heard nationwide. Those who do not sympathise with the protest may attend class as us­ ual Isn t there). (unless your teacher As for th' >ge who want to file suit again** professors who call off their classes on Wednesday: How many of you asked or want ed sour teachers to call off Fri day classes to leave early for the Texas-OU game? It is dnne but I see no reason to hie suit. How many of you. like ny elf, have missed a class for no reason except that y o u wanted to sleep late* This time, students xviii rut classes, but for What they feel is a "nod reason. Din no Moore Blanton 303 V a lid protest? To the editor: Is the moratorium on (Vt. 15 the most effective way or even toe right w’av to m ake your feel­ ings and thoughts heard on the is­ sue of Vietnam? What wall be toe long range consequences of the moratorium? Is it good for your country'? If you can honestly answer that the rn ira tori urn will adequately express your thought and be oi benefit to the interests of your country, then you should pantie!- pate on Oct. 15. to important If, however, y o u have some­ say thing more about Vietnam and you wish to e x p r e s s it in a more dignified and relevant way than the meth od sanctioned by SDS and SNCC, then I urge you to think, speak and act according to your higher In •’ 01® Memoriam T h e D a i l y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w sp a p e r o i U T A u stin O pinion* a x w e e d in Th* Daily Ti vdii an t h o s e of thp e d ito r or of th e w r it e r of th e article and are not necessarily those of the th* Board U n iv e r s it y a d m l n i s t r at ion o r of o f R egents is published by Texas The D aily Texan Student P u b lication s inc , dally except Mon­ day and Saturday and hoi Ida' periods S*p- tem ber through M sv S eo o n d lclass n o ils it* paid et Austin N ew* contribution?-, w ill be accepted by telep h o n e IGR 1-5244> at the editorial office P ostm aster: S*md form 3579 to T exas Student 78712. J B I n q u i r i e s c f i n c e r n i n g J B. 103 or a- 102 b e m a d e t s , i n c the news laboratory , J B. t h e d e l i v e r y s h o u l d 107 ( G R 1-5 2 44 > a n d a d m i­ ( G R 1-3237) is The national advertising representative National Educational Advertising Service. 360 L exington Ave N ew york N Y.. 10017 in J B 111 The Texan subscribe* to The A ssociated Frees and is a m em ber of The Associated C ollegiate P r iss Th* Southw est Journalism Congress the T exas D aily New*pa**i A ssociation and P ublications. Inc P. O. Box D. A ustin. T exas PERMANENT STAFF .....................................................................Mark Morrison EDITOR ...................................... Karen Elliott MANAGING EDITOR ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR ...................Richard Scott ........................................................ ..L y n n e Flock* CITY EDITOR ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR .........................Jarrell* Dupont ....................................................... Gary Taylor SPORTS EDITOR .......................... Middy Randerson AMUSEMENTS EDITOR FEATURE EDITOR ......................................... Carolyn Hinckley PANORAMA EDITOR ................................... Bob M e rm a n ISSUE STAFF L ykt Thompson Associate News E d i to r ................................................................................ News Assistants .....................Robert Carter, Mike Fresque*. Debby Holme*, Jim I^ewis Assistant Amusements Editor ..................................................................................Sara Burns Assistant Sports E d it o r ........................ John Watkins Copy Editors .................... ....................................Anne Hagy. Pattie Tyler, Erie Leibrork ........... .................................................................. *.............. Brenda Guenther Wire Editor Pigs 4 Wsdimday, Oct. IS, 196? THI DAILY TEXAN conscience and your God-given power to reason. it from a technique Will you really be adequately expressing yourself by watching an "antiw ar skit" performed at the "guerrilla theatre?" What are the motives behind toe prod­ ucers of the skit? What is toe guerrilla theatre? Is it a borrow­ lost and ed alien ideology? Does fit you and what you would rather say? Would you stake your good n a m e on the validity of t h e t h ou g h t s of the moratorium 's l e a d e r s ? (toe of the leaders named Travis Burgoson has said that University officials should de­ clare a campus-wide moratorium and adds that "not suspending classes for the day xviii mean they approve of the w ar," One might just as well argue that not to support Dr. Spook would be to support child beat­ ing. I* e.ther one really a valid argument? Could it be that Uni­ versity officials are still prim ar­ ily responsible for toe education­ al process at this iustifution as well as other far reaching as poets of the Uni vers ry function that in toe long term transcend even Vietnam? have toe kind of Is Mr. Burgeson spokesman you wish to follow? Would you buy a used argument from this man? Americans traditional ]y been activists but the great activists have always been care­ ful not to confuse the real issues with fictions. The real issue is not whether we ought to get out of Vietnam, but how we ought to get out. Do you think SDS and SNCC members are really quail fled to give as an answer? Is their answer good for America? Is it goof! for you? I think there are better leaders we can follow, or as Bobby Ken­ nedy would have said. "I think we can do better." The answer to whether you participate in toe moratorium Will have to come from you. but juding from his­ tory and thought of great leaders throughout our nation's past. I would bet most of you will follow th.e wisest course on Wednesday. the John E. Dewey School of Jaw 2910 Red River N o sob story To toe editor: I will be the first to admit tost the m ajority of, it not all, landlords in the University area charge exorbitant rates and pram tire discrim mat on cf one sort or another, but I mu.u disagree with Joseph VV inkier'* aob story in F ri­ day’s Soap Box. is He claimed his landlord charg­ ed $12 50 more simply be< ause his brother grew his b a r long. The that hts d e a r actual fact brother alone signed the contract without informing the owner that not one but three people were to occupy the apartm ent, knowing that it was the owner’.* policy' not to Allow three occupant* id (or the sam e price as one or two. So, in v i e w of the fact that the usual hike for a to r d person is $20, Mr. Winkler & Co should be patting thorns* a es on their backs for t h e i r artful sagacity, instead of squawking Uke a flock of wet chickens! ! Name withheld Peace support To the editor: The undersigned members of the Department of Sociology wish to affirm their opposition to the w ar in Vietnam and to announce their support for immediate and effective initiatives for peace We thus support tile Vietnam m ora­ torium as an expression of this feeling. Frank D. Bean, Russell R. Cur­ tis, Jr., J. Mien Williams, Jack P. Gibbs, I/m is \ . Zurrher, Jos­ eph I/Opreuto, Dale Mc Le more, Norval D. Glenn. Benjamin S. ti. Tushing, Bradshaw. Robert John Higley, Richard Ifenshel, Egil Firersdal. Ap arim ei, s de fe n d e d To the editor: Obviousy Bill Whitehurst, di­ rector of Student Fair Housing Commission, has never owned or managed apartm ents Tile apart­ m ents I m anage are fairly nice and very spacious. Our rents are size, reasonable, location, Pto. considering Whitehurst make* little men- t.on of students who move out in odd months Uke November, leaving the apartm ent holding the bag. He alw) makes little mention that students, as a rule are among the m e r e s t , most de struct ive, noisiest dhtsaet of ten­ ants, In regard to racial discrimina­ tion, I might also note that we have rented to several Latins and Orientals, and the only reason we have not rented to Negroes Is be cause the few' that have come bv have never come back, in spite of a sincere effort on my part to rent to them. The owner and I have no tacit agreement to dis­ criminate. Our apartm ent ha* vacancies coming up Nov. I. and I would be only to tenants them rent of any rat e, creed or national orig n. to desirable too happy BID B allam 2208 Enfield No 102 Pay held back To the editor: Ii is a well-known fact that members of the University com­ munity arr* expected to rn ('et their financial obligations. Bad checks and unpaid bills have been knows to result in University sanctions upon the student, and vet the Uni­ versity is guilty of an inexcusable breach of the very rules which it has created. I am speaking of toe perennial failure af the University’ to pay Us graders academic assistants time. Year after and TA’* on that our ap- year vxe are told through “ go pointmen ts m ast channels ’ before we are paid. IO we had received no By Ort money, in fact the payroll de­ partm ent had not even received our a one: mm en ta which began their xveary journey on Sept. 18. Such a problem Is far from v. Las* spring the graders in the history departm ent reeeix-ed their February cheeks in April. tardiness not Such only sm acks of gross b u re a u 'ra­ tio in off ciencv b u t also repre­ sents a flagrant breach of faith. Inexcusable F t many of us this modest stipend constitutes all or a m a­ jor portion of our income. What choice is left us but to lean on parental support, got an emer- genoy University loan which is inadequate or borrow money at the prevalent usurious rates. Would It not seem a reasonable request to be paid on time from one of t h e wealthiest universi­ ties in the world in a state that glorifies the Protestant Ethic, or must we, in the best fundamen­ talist sense of course. !k to Heaven for our just rexvards? Thomas A. Rettean, J r. 705A E. 43th St. N o muzzling To toe editor: To Mr Dirk Powell: tt would be good if your letter about, the Jo*:or food service could remove the adverse circum stances occas­ ioning the troubles and spur the to n e w heights of en­ people they wish deavor. it could. I am sure Pleas" let me assure you thet muzzling of criticism wa* in no way intended. Dip food service office in Jester is alway* open to consultation and complaints. They welcome disgruntled stu­ dents. Ask anyone. I meant it when I said I believe in com ­ munication. So do they. that you Also, I regret infer much harsher criticism of the student* in Jester than was in­ tended. I stick by what I said, though, about this culture "hav­ ing it so good.” Why don’t xou make an ap­ pointment with the people down­ them stairs your story. They will see you. in Jester and tell ( atherine Gent Letters to the editor Firing Lint totters should: • Be ty ped triple-spaced. • Be less than 250 words. • Include name, address, and phone number of contributor. M a il letters to The Firing Line, The D aily Texan, Draw er D, U T Station, Austin, Tex.; or bring totters to the Texan offices, Jour­ nalism Building 103. Solution to airport congestion i t B y VRT BIT WTT ALD r :■ . us I it x :U h WASHINGTON — The thing ab ut flying of lime on a the ground at airports to think alout it. I ( have been rn k ny a H ’k off and two hours later xvhpn our plane landed in Atlanta another woman ran up to the sam e man and kissed him passionately with tears running from her eye#. As I I* k«d a* the : - ne I de­ cided, "The hell xxi th it. L e ts pass th# law' ” Copvrtfht (cl IWV Thi» Washington Pr«t Ou. Distrlbu?p-d bv Lo* An*, «• ’H in es Syndicate. I'M $\JFP0ti9 TD APPEAR BEFORE THE HEAP PEARLE AT T EN ... 'UKEN SOMETHING r f ? $ GOIN to happen HAVE I?) BE A N CHT BEF086*. • oadn U.S. university full of tension, concern structural committee appointed instead of elected, though those errors h a v e been somewhat smoothed over by the appointees themselves. ANOTHER PROBLEM for the faculty is simply that of time. The preoccupation with politics Is so overwhelming that many teach ers can get little scholarly work done. The cliche, not al­ together exaggerated Is that for a year no one has w ritten any thing more serious than a book review1. T here m ust, then, be a w ay to give the faculty influence w ith­ out having it do everything at the equivalent of town m eetings. At the end of this month the faculty of arts and sciences will consider a proposal for a new representa­ tive council that could help. but there will the central remain need to have a president who is responsible, who listens. iii IN ANY CASE. H arvard will have to look for a new president before long. and it will be look­ the new mold, ing for one who is able to deal with the poli­ tics of the contem porary u niver­ sity. It is interesting that people here say faculty and students will for the first tim e he consulted in som e w ay on the choice: None w orth having would accept the job unless they had been. H arv ard 's situation is w o r t h in som e d etail not considering only because it is our oldest and richest and most, em inent educa­ tional institution. Harvard's prob­ le m s are potentially those of all 'the great universities, and we cannot just shrug them off a* a minor aspect of society. More than 40 percent of Amer­ icans between 18 and 22 now go to college. They are increasingly serious, committed young men and w omen. Today Vietnam it the overwhelming focus of con­ cern; the universities cannot real­ ly expect peace until that war ends. But even after Vietnam our universities and all of us will have large and dem anding group of young people, aware of their power. to deal with a Buy this ahum and save $23721 There’s only one place to go if you want to hear the sound that started the San Francisco rock scene rocking. San Francisco. Fillmore West. W hat with the air fare, and the admission, it could cost you about $237. Or: Walk into your record store and order up Columbia’s "Recorded Live At Bill Graham’s Fillmore West.” You’re right there. In the middle of an unbelievable jam session. Mike Bloomfield, Tai Mahal, Nick Gravenites. Bob Jones, M ark Naftalin and others. If you live in New York, it’s a cool saving of about $23721. O f course, if you live in L A. you wouldn’t save as much. But if you lived in Sweden....? COLUMBIA RECORDS* r - i i I 4 c r It Takes Tlm e ° ^ S mm / A m flab te ta 8-tniHr M etro tapo c a rtrid g e 4 -tm rk reet-to-reel tap*. STUDENT FILM-MAKERS! Answer to Yesterday's Pirrrte K H U U B a a E IQ O B n r a r a o □ □ □ a m e B R o a s r a RDraDRH ra riG a n a s a n a s c l e r a ___ a n n a n a n a o d e e r a a r a E p a arara n ra o g H arara SKOR BQBQ a r a r a o J S g lffil 0E10OR 5 o u m a r a a a r a n g o B l a n a n ra g b u k l y l | 0 0O H ORB O S B CROSSWORD PUZZLE A C R O S S I Estimate 6 Part of foot *o') l l father or om mission I 14 Spoken 15 Raises 17-M a den loved by Zeus 4 Symbol tor tin 5-Strip»» 6-Worm 7 is mistaken 8-8itter vetch 9 "tote of acale 10-Marsh birds ll Mails 13 i sa sh e s fondness on 18-Yellow ocbar 19 Acromplir,hmentS IC Organs of bearing 20-Lifcely 21 b e n sil* strength 19 ocates 20 Winged 22 Boundaries 23 Move Reedy and smoothly 25 Repulse 26 Dirt JR M ost somber 29 Binds (abbr.) 2 ? Falsifier* 23 Merriment 24 Contracts 26-Drir king vessel 27 Finishes 28-Courage 29 Drinks heavily 31 Three pronged spear 34 W a r god 35-Mortification M *C o ile g» degree (abbr.) 37 Crony (coHoq.) 3 8 Barrel slat 39 Range of kr,o '. edge 4 0 l atin conjunction 41-Dec-a re 4 2 Goals 43 f ariier 45 Pertaining to cid age 47 Paper me is ire (p l ) 4»-E.r penance DOW N 1 Showy 2 Mountains of E -jrope 3 Lac prey 30 Speaker 31-Pronoun 3 2 Sewing implement 33 Taut 39 Intertwine 41 Nahoor sheep 42 Abstract being 44 Faroe Islands whirlwind 35 Heavenly bodies 46 Babylonian 38 Stalk deity i 2 3 4 5 I 6 7 8 9 IO r n 1 9 - H 22 25 27 ’ * I *»" 30 12 15 16 r nSS 13 17 >■ ■; 20 I 23 26 28 31 r r r 35 38 y j , \ 33 32 36 y > y out. 39 4 2 41 B S ,‘. V 4 4 4 7 . L L 45 46 4 8 D istr, by .United Fe *tu r« Synd icate, Inc. g 11 1 4 18 21 2 4 ;■ 29 34 37 4 0 43 By ANTHONY LEWIS (c) 1969 New York Time* News Service indicated CAMBRIDGE, Mb ss. — F or an A m erican rev isitin g his country after years abroad, there is no m o r e fascinating phenom enon t h a n the university. The w ell­ known incidents o-f student m ili­ finds, tancy and violence, he have only p artly the depth of the change that h a s taken place, am ong faculty as well as students — and the seem ­ ing perform ance of that change. At H arv ard this last week hun­ dreds of faculty m em bers crow d­ ed into a th e ate r for an im pas­ sioned d eb ate on V ietnam th at w as tafxxi and soon b r o a d e s t on the student radio station. B e­ fore the m eeting, conservative and liberal caucuses of the fac­ ulty had m et for endless hours to form ulate th eir rival positions. The Crim son, the undergraduate new spaper, w as filled with analy­ ses and argu m en ts and faculty letters. HOW' PALLID, by com parison, w as the scene 20 ot IO o r even fivp years ago. The Crim son's issues w as coverage of faculty superficial, and no one would have d r e a m t of broadcasting a m eeting: t h e r e would have been no interest. The faculty did not debate political questions, nor did it often dig deeply and p as­ issues. sionately The idea of caucuses would have been incredible. into university The sense of excitem ent today, the faculty’s involvement in the university and the world, can be seen in p a rt as an irnm easely ben­ eficial change from the torpor and rem oteness of the past. As for the students, no one who ex­ perienced th e boredom and sillin­ ess of so m uch of the old college life could altogether reg ret to­ d a y ’s atm osphere of tension and concern. But th e re are terrible risks, as everyone knows. Among the stu­ dents it Is the risk of chaos and sa v ag e ry ; am ong the faculty, the possibility of fatally em bittering division. ALL THIS POINTS to an im­ portant conclusion: U niversities in A m erica today a re cities in microcosm, with the sa m e turbul­ ence of em otion, divided loyalties and potential for b itterness, and they, therefore, need new-style them — m en politicians to run im agination of and flexibility. s y rn p a t h y, H a rv a rd 's president, N athan M. Pusey, has. unfortunately, be­ com e a symbol of the need for new leadership. Many value the serv ices he perform ed so cour­ ageously in the days of Sen. Joe M cCarthy. But he now appears too distant, too unresponsive, too stiff-necked. Mr. P usey in 1972. The question is due for re tire ­ is m ent w hether he can c a rry on success­ fully until then without som e new explosion, and m any responsible H arvard people fea r the answ er is no. at THE DIFFICULTY this m om ent seem s to be his re la ­ tions with the faculty of a rts and sciences. The students have com e back this fall “ read y to resto re a certain level of civility,” as one m an put it, and indeed feel­ ing closer to the faculty because of g rea ter aw areness of shared feelings on such Issues as V iet­ nam . that the But the faculty is uneasy and factious, worried influ­ ence it gained afte r last spring s violent d a s h between m ilitant stu ­ dents and is being underm ined. Mr. P usey raised hackles by m aking a se the ries of appointm ents conservative side of the faculty and by having an im portant new the adm inistration from Haynsworth chosen for mediocrity By RI SSELL BAKER (c) 1969 New York lim e s N ews Service WASHINGTON — With few ex ­ ceptions, P resid en t Nixon’s ap­ to federal office have pointees been distinguished for their Lack of distinction. Clement F. H aynsw orth, th e South Caroli­ na Judge whom he proposes to sent on the Supreme Court, is no exception. chiefly As a J u d g • , I t i d e , K '“ s W I Haynsw orth to have seem s anony­ drifted mously with the Juridical fetching up now and then on the shoals at south- ern resistan ce to desegration, but m ost often the w aters around him keeping sufficiently m uddy to prev ent anyone from noticing that he w as there. m likely T!ie S en ate’s exam ination of H aynsw orth’* cred entials has so fa r produced nothing to prevent his seatin g on the court. The to .Senate norm ally d efers P re sid en ts and cries later, as in the Tonkin Gulf Resolution which put the a rm y Into an Asian land war. IN ANY EVENT, it is a desic­ cated institution w ith m uscle for than one heavyw eight no m ore fight a y ear, and this y e a r’s strength w as spent in the losing b attle ag ainst th e ABM. is It taken for g ranted h ere th a t H aynsw orth will be found acceptable to the Senate. In af­ fa irs of this sort, given th e pres­ en t sta te of se n ato rial fatigue, anyone would probably be a c ­ ceptable wrho had not been con­ victed of felonv or overheard a- busing m otherhood before the SDS. Nothing of the sort has been adduced against Haynsw orth. The .Senate h earin gs have opened him to no ch arg e m ore serious than th a t he seem s given to bouts of absentm indedness in which he Is likely to forget th a t h e has In­ vestm ents in com panies th at a p ­ p ea r before him for die adm in­ istration of justice. THIS IS NOT surprising, con­ sidering the variety of his b u si­ ness investm ents. He ap p ears to have devoted him self alm ost as assiduously to finance as to B lack­ stone and, judging from the ex ­ tent of hjg investm ent activities, m ight just as well have been ap ­ the Su­ to the SEC as pointed prem e Court. Tile stro n g est case th at can be m ade again st him is the argu- Registration solution Truth learned Bv DAVE HELFERT NOW IT COMES D IT .............. • Tim U niversity ad m in istra­ tion has finally hit on a solution to th e problem s of chaos and crow ds a t registration. Next fail it will be held in a se c re t location w hich w on’t be revealed ’til October. • The national SDS o rg aniza­ tion actually broke ties with the local chap ter. Their overabund­ a n t use of handbills on cam pus h as run up an astronom ical p ap e r bill and someone is going to have to go to work to pay it. • Lt G en. Lew is B. H ershey, director of the Selective Service since 1879, has been prom oted to E agle Scout and nam ed sp ecial advisor to the P resident on youth. • OU weekend the b rilliant Idea of an alliance of D allas liquor store ow ners. is really signed by the Republican A dm in­ istration as a ploy to tra p U.S. D em ocrats rn Mexico indefinite­ ly- • The S tate Land Com mis sio n er's Office has released an of­ ficial sta te m en t on their stand in the trea su re controversy, “ F inders keepers, losers w e e p e rs.'’ turm oil over the to be getting • Some of the cam pus ra d i­ cals seem their m any causes a trifle mixed up. One young firebrand charged in­ to the adm inistration building of a sm all eastern college and de- rn a n d e d to H avana. it be flown th a t • One of A ustin’s neighboring Is h a v i n g a problem cities achieving racial balance in their schools as p rescribed by die Su­ prem e Court. T heir p ro b lem : three black students and only two IMMEDIATE Ther es O N E OCCUPANCY! For You! C o m p e titiv e Rates Lower Than M a n y A n d W e Still O ffe r MORE LIVING COMFORT A L L B IL L S P A ID STUDENTS I Bedroom w /Study Special Furniture For You! W O O DW ARD APARTMENTS 1722 E. W o o d w a rd St. Phone: 444-7555 "J u st 5 M in u tes From U T try to m ak e and ag ainst m ediocrity, m ont th e re is ev ery reason to believe th a t P re sid en t Nixon would love to s'H* som e poor misguided d ev­ il it. M ediocrity w as w hat H aynsworth w as chos­ en for. The P resident believes he knows the yearnings of w hite m iddle-class A m erica, and w hat he obviously d etects th a t yearning m a ss is a lust for m e d ­ iocrity, a th irst for H aynsw orth* capab le of destroying any poli­ tician who d are s fru stra te it. in calculated HAYNSWORTH is another token offered to the Nixon constituency of scared and angry w hites who resent the p a re at which techno­ logy Is uprooting their world and fancy they receive nothing in ex­ change but ab ase and taxes. Nix- onites rom anticize them as ‘‘the commem m a n ” and “ the forgot­ t e n A m erican.” a p air of ca n t phrases to confirm th e ill-tem pered in self-righteous­ ness and self pity. The P re sid e n t’s judgm ent of w hat they w ant can be a s c e r­ tained from his decisions and pro- nouncem ents since taking office —less governm ent concern about N egro rights, less com motion on stree t and cam puses, less solace for the poor, a little less blood­ shed in Vietnam , less brilliance in public life, less sym pathy for the m an who cannot afford a law yer, Nixon, whose political Instincts a re am ong the best, has a p p e a r ed and courted them with large less. The H ayns­ q uantities of w orth another bouquet in the courtship. On the Suprem e Court, Haynsw orth at appointm ent is less. He first glance prom ises m ay, in fact, turn out to be a regular H am m u rab i; such m e ta ­ m orphoses a re not unheard of on the Court. But at present, he prom ises less. HLS LACK of distinction prom ­ ises relief from the excitem ents generated by the W arren Court. His South C arolina background the support given him by and the S enate's D ixiecrats prom ise a justice less inclined to split the in support of civil rights, h air d efendant’s rights and the city d w eller's right to wield political power equal to the rustic's. His p riv ate absorption in busi­ ness suggests that he will view corporate rights with the sym pa th y they w ere accustom ed to r e ­ ceive from the court in the dis­ tant past. All the prom ise m a y b e false. of course, but he has been chos­ the bet th a t it will not en on on th at he will age com fortably into m ediocrity and not m ake tidal waves. the assum ption IT IS SAID by editorialists that the Senate should confirm H ayns­ w orth because the P resident has the right to appoint whom he will if the m an be honorable. F or a p ­ pointm ents which expire with the P resid en t's term , the argum ent is .sound, but S uprem e Court jus- tices often outlive their appoint­ is also ers by a generation. It arguable that the Senate has a responsibility to the next g en e ra­ tion which Is even heavier than its obligation to a sitting P re si­ dent. It is also certain th at it will not exercise it. Learn To Typewrite In Only 12 Hours By Electronics The University of Texas Is a ga in offering Typew riting classes by Electronics. C lasses begin Friday, O c to b e r 17. A ll levels of instruction below 60 words per minute will be taught. C la sse s will meet in Business-Econom ic* Building 556 at 7:50 a.m., 2:00 p.m., 6:00 p.m. and 7:15 p.m., M o n d a y through Friday. C la sse s will m eet one hour each d a y for twelve days. The cost of the twelve hours o f instruction is only $15. You m ay register by calling G R 1-3308, or com e by Business- Econom ic* Building 557. J a n He# * It a v a ( . u f h r t # I,. D u p o n t . J r . H o n H a m i l t o n D r n x n e d w a r d * B l u r * H u p p J a m e n N i*i*ir • t a n Kavi l i n e * F n c A i d f t t a i J i m T i f f a n y R i c h a r d W a i d m a n T h o r n * # N J o n # # S a t # F M s n d r l I ..-ah w h e r n e A l b e r t H a r p e r B e t h H il m a r R o b e r t J . A. P o u n d * I V E S ' ' t i l l * s h e r r y C a r d w r i t R o n a l d B u r n h a m S y l v i a H a i r c r o v # V a n n A l n ell M e l a n i e ■vt i ii id e r a C a t h y I r a n C a u l H e e e W a r r e n I l i u t c h t M ic k Ie rf h f a i t VI a r g y r i t e l . a n d r u m s n i a n n # C o v i n g t o n M a n i l a R e i c h e l ( . r a n t O H a l l Ch a Ilia J e s c h k e L i n d a K i h h l # B e v e r l y R o g e r P i t t s C h i l R o p e r h e n a n K i l a I ll B a r b a r a P o t e e t .1 a r k i e K ie v p a * • f a m e * SS K a t h v P l l k l M H t i S u z a n n e B i r r e d M i k e M u l l e n Man ti! B i l l I e r r v T h o m p s o n B r a c e I C . r u h # Ko* a I ie W a r d C a u d a C a r k e r s a n d r a s h a p i r # C o r e l * # J i m W a l k e r S a l l y B r e e rai n C v n l h i a M a r l i n e # I ii * H u h ! H a n n i n g L a r y C a r o l ! n C o n n e l l M i k e T e n n i s o n R o b e r t T . t i c t o c d e In C a n a , J r J e f f D a n i e l H e l l # Z e n a id n I a n i a e h # V. I W i l t o n K r i s K a p l a n D o n a l d J a w e # R e n t o n N i c h o l a s W Mao# t v n n M i k e C H o w a r d M r* . < h a r l n t t e R e b e c c a M a r t i n S o a a n L i n d s e y D a v i d C r o c k e t t B l e v i n s ( l a r k t o n ( . r i . h a m ( t e n a r t I . a n i o n t . n e b e l l l ! ! I s g u r f r a n k l i n I u r n n o d J a n e W i l d * C o d e t t e V o l e # V i r g i n i a B e n s o n C a r o l S t o r r s g e m h a B a r b a r * B a s k i n C a t t y W o o d re** E . K a r e n B r o w n C e l a i n e ( d i v e r M a r s F. M ill * J o e y C r o n ell K e n n e t h M B r o w n L U # S c o t t J o y S t e v e n s o n ( m i n t * H e n r v t o n M r I a b e S t u C e r t M e t e r J a c o b T e r r s - K a t r m a n I a r r v L e i i - M m a n J u d y B a r r y R a i s e d ( . I n n a M o r e n o D e n a i * C r a n k B e n n s S h e r r y H e i d e n B u r k R y a n J e n n i f e r C r a n # S u s i e C o s h ak C a r o l y n C o m b # K i t * C a r p e n t e r M a r c y A t k i n s R i c h a r d C l e a h l n J a y C r a n c i * L l o y d W i l l i a m . R i c h a r d M A l d e r a c n . S t e p h a n i e 4 D a l t o n ( r a i n T o m B l e d . n e ( . a rn h i # J o h n L e Ro y S h o r t t v o n e L t r e l K e n n e t h M J M B r e e d i n g J a m e s K i b b l e J e r r y R t e w e r t L d d i e C o d i n a C h a r l e s J o h n N u n n K a t h y S r h e l l M a r y M e C o n k e r M i c h a e l F N a n g n l n e t S t u a r t C N i c h o l s ( • - r a i d SS' N o d S ta r s - B K R s p r y C a n l N ' t i k e H i l g e r M i k e R e e d R o g e r R F I I * a b e t h I n m N e w b u r n D s n l e l ( . p e r t * R o b e r t S M a r k A rn m e c m a n D e n n i s SS’ . N a v e D o n a l d B R o s e m s n N a o m i L e l d m a n L ' r a n e e # B u r r o u g h s t r a n c e * T h o r n # * e d w a r d T T.ow e l l F . n q a i d J r K t s e n h o n r J A n d r e n a ( l i n i e r L e v e r e t t # f i e r c e R i c h a r d ( h a n k # C i i t o F i t c h I F l t c s l m m o n * ' d e n t w e a r i n g # # H o w a r d H a d a S c o t t L a s h b r o o k S h e l l e y C a e h a r t ! m a A m y D u n k e l b e r g R e b e c c a R i t c h e y t r i g o n B i d I o r i e l K i r s c h J a n # S t i l s o n ( r a i g I . c e r i t e R W i d m e v e r M i k e M a l l o r f J o s e p h M B r a d f o r d B e t h S c h u l t a I .# # N e e l y t h e r s I I l i t h e r B a i I ie vc t l i u a b e t h C m k e l t I i n d a s w a r t ? K i t t y W h i t e s i d e S c o t t SS h i i e f i r d t tv* a l t ( a r o l s n S n d e r s o n ( a r u i # R o b e r t 4 Ie l a n d e r I n t l .in o.t B e n n e t t M i c h a e l B o r d e n t . e o r g e K e g l e r 4 l t o n B r i c e * C u r t i s J o h n s o n t e d * C a r r o l l L i n d a D e l . n r # L r a n n l e F - e i J a n e ( t r a n s k o g D o n c a n SS ii s p a B i d I i c o n ( . a r s W e l l e s K u s . M e t . n o d # i # L y n n S a m e r d i e h a r d Ney il l # T o m T h o r n i * n n J u d y C l i c h L i n d a N m it fc C a t C v e a t t M a r k Ko#* F I rn e r B e # I D i r k e r a s e r F d x a h e t h N h r o s p s h i r # D a v i d M o n a S u s a n H u p M a r k M r ' f l l l i o n R i c h a r d J . D e n n i s J B o b M a b e r r y D a n i e l L o a B o b ' p e e r R i c h a r d A. F i n n e d J R o b e r t ' f a l l o u t (■ a r y I -ce T o m m y J B r o s e a f i e l d R o n a l d S l o a n T e r e # a N e l s o n R a y K i r k l a n d K e n n e t h F W y a t t D i a n a P e t t y B e t t i e SS a t f n r d K a r o l v n SS I K i c k y C o r b e t * J e r r y t . e o r g e By a r a I > a v # G u i d e t S h a r o n B a n i n g ti R i s k ) n d H e a d t I n m a n I M a r t i # l e v e r e t * # J r I d i m n f r a n k ' s t a r k J u n g I.. T e d h a m * I V P r a t a c h e r . J r . P L U S 153 M O R E S IG N E R S A d C a i d f o r h r A b o v e S t u d e n t a o f A n t h r o p o l o g y S u p p o r t i n g t h e A n t i S t a r M o r a t o r i u m I i t T S A R ll ii if! iP' ■ P i ! I Ii 1 ! j| Ii 11 i:iii iii;’ I UM ■ H r Ii I; HUI I : I-' Ii i; ' '■ I ' :: : ill I ll I 'Iii! iii ii I : :: Iii! j:;! I • : i ill WE, STUDENTS OF ANTHROPOLOGY support the position taken O c to b e r IO in the D a ily Texan by the faculty m em ­ 1. bers on the A d H o c C o m m itte e o f A n th ro p o lo gists to Su p p o rt the A n ti-W a r M o r a ­ torium; 2. wish to express our respect for the professors for taking their position pubs cly; 3. urge our fellow students in all fields to use to day s opportunity to express their opinion on the Viet N a m W a r , R'ata, student 'tferary roaqe*#',e. *s now accepting submissions to tee R:ata Fi rn Festival to be Ned October 25. The deadhe for a' I Ims (3rr si..per 8, ! 6 r ent or sound is 2:00 noon, O ct. 24th. Films w>! a idged eg .a y with no categorical c v .Tons. C A S H A W A R D S ! ! st Prize ................................. 2nd Prize .............................................................................................................. .. $ 2 0 $ I 5 I l l 3 rd Prize .......................................................................................................................... $ ! 0 2 Honorabe Mentions ............................... $5 R I / G A . THE STUDENT LITERARY MAGAZINE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS A n o th e r p u b l i c a t i o n o f T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L IC A T IO N S . INC.' Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1969 THE DAILY T E X A N Peg» I Acrobatics Salvage New York Win A g e e 's Grabs, Gentry's Hurling Blanks Birds, 5-0 NEW YORK (AP) — Tammie Agee saved five runs with t w a sensational acrobatic catches af­ te r hitting a 400-foot leadoff home run Tuesday and the N w York Mets took the World Series lead with a 5-0 victory over Baltimore In the third game. The Amazing Mets new lead 2 I in games. Gary Gentry, a 23-year o I d rookie, blanked the favored Ori­ oles with three hits before he struck a wild steak in the sev­ enth and turned over the job to Nolan Ryan With the bases load­ ed and two out. Ryan, cutting loose with his blazing fast hall, took it the rest of the way with the help of Agee, despite a ninth- inning Oriole threat. L EA SE Now you can RENT, BUY D E N O N or E L E C T R O N IC C A L C U L A ­ T O R this ThL* mwvhin<* * ill <*«t y o u r »n- * ta ti* n r s. rtntxprilt* p rn b lrm *. S Q I VRC RO O T in M u J S F X - OROS. UNIVERSITY Typewriter Exchange 2816 N ueces 478-4360 A L W A Y S P L E N T Y P A R R I N O IN F R O N T Luxury Townhouse A p a rtm e n ts w ith la rg e upstairs study/bedroom , fu rn ish e d o n ly 169.5 0 all bills p aid, S h a lim a r G a rd e n s 701 North Loop, 4 5 4 -3 8 3 7 ; 4 7 6 -2 6 3 3 UNBELIEVABLE PARTY HOUSE FOR RENT 3 Fire places — All Electric Kitchen M e xican Tile Floors — C o lo r TV Sw im m ing Pool Located! high on a hill with a Com m anding view of 3 Counties Short 12-minut© drive from Austin Contact; Courtney G rover 476-2230 A stand room crowd of 56,- 335 a? Shea Stadium rose In a mighty cheer When Agee raced Into right center and made a belly flopping d i v i n g catch of Paul B la irs drive that had dou­ ble or triple written all over It with 'h e bases loaded in the sev­ enth inning. Tn die fourth inning the same Agee, who once went 0-for-34 during a sad stretch in 1968, raced far into left center to catch E lb e Hendrick's sm ash with men on first and third base. Agee just got the ball in t h e web of his glove and then just had time to brace himself as he crashed into the wall at the 396- foot m ark. Two runs would have scored if he hadn’t been able to hold the ball. in .seat THG METS’ victor}’ put them into the driver’s this besf-of-seven series. The n e x t two gam es will be pished at Shea and the National League champ^- havp a chance to end it all at home. Manager Oil Hodges has Tom Seaver. his 25-game winning ace, ready to face Mike Cuellar, the Orioles’ big 23-game winner, in Wednesday's fourth game. Cuel­ lar beat Seaver 4-1 in the opener a t Baltimore Saturday. BALTIMORE had only f o u r hits, all singles, but drew seven walks and left l l men on base, in the seventh and three each ninth. Ryan, helped out of the seventh inning gam e by Agee’s great catch after Gentry had put t h e Mets in jeopardy, got himself into trouble with two out in the ninth. M ark Belanger walked on a 3-2 M O T O R C Y C L E S ! ! ! 5 % O F F — to all College S+udenQ T R IU M P H SU Z U K I B U L T A C O D & L T R IU M P H S A L E S 5120 Burnet Rd. 452-7554 I T D E N T b f ll M i l ) • 1 5 ) 7 0 rn \ I * ■ rn m m *' WM* rn 4 l l p p j f t arc A m a z in 1 M e ts . . . Tommy A gee (I) and Nolan Ryan. pitch and pinch hitter Clay Dab rym ple scratched an Infield sin­ gle. When Don Buford walked, loading the bases. Hodges came out to confer with Ryan. T 'n e bullpen was heating up but Hod­ ges decided to stick with t h e man who had won the pennant clincher in relief against Atlanta. Ryan went to two strikes and no balls on Blair and then threw a third strike past the batter, who was caught looking for the out that ended the game. AGEE PI T the Mets out front e a r l y when he rocketed Jim Palm er's fourth pitch over the eenicr field wall. He had been hitless in eight trip# in the first two games but had led off four regular season games with home runs. in The Mete struck again with two out the second w-hen Grate walked and Bud Harrelson singled to center. Gentry, an .081 hitter who drove in only one run all season and had gone hitless in his last 28 at bats, slammed a double to right center over the head o f Blair, who was playing sh abow. Both Grote and Harrel­ son scored for a 3-0 bulge. Ken Boswell's single past Boog Powell opened the sixth. Boswell just beat out Dave Johnson's hurried backup throw on which Palmer had his foot off the bag. It was a difficult play and was D R IV E A L IT T L E — S A V E A LO T 1/4 ct. 1/3 ct 1/2 c t 3 /4 2 0 0 0 D ,M ay bb 0 0 0 0 L eo n h r d p n 0 0 0 D lr m p l ph I 0 I 0 S im o n Dr 0 O O O 31 0 4 0 Tnt Bl B a lt im o r e .N f « W>rk A (tee I. K ran ep ool i - P a lm e r . ....................... be** 44^ iMNV—4 ........................ 120 M I O I*— 6 l l I .O B - B a ltim o r e N e w Y ork fi 2B < le n tr \. G rote HR S G a r r e tt R KH BB SO 4 5 IS 4 1 1 1 1 5 4 0 0 2 3 o n a sa. an I i r h . . . . 0-1 6 . I I ..1 - 0 « 2-3 3 2 1-3 I - S . 23 Sate Ryan T R O P P O R T U N IT Y For men and women to earn $200 - $400 and up monthly with options for future. Juniors, Seniors, and P o st-G ra d students with full study load and 1-3 hours free time daily for work are invited to make inquiry by sending resume with photo to: D R A W E R D-1 University Station Autfin, Texai 78712 it cr S B 5 0 rn I ruled a base hit by the official scorers. Roswell moved to second on Ed Kranepool’s infield out and scor­ ed when Grote doubled down the left field line, barely in fair ter­ ritory. The Mete’ final mn came In the eighth on Kranepool’s home run over the center field fence IN THE turmoil of the club­ house. Hodges said he would re­ turn to his opening day lineup. That meant restoring the right- handed hitters to the order — Al Weis to second, Ron Swoboda to right field, Ed Charles to third base and Bonn Clendenon to first base. The crowd was orderly. "Let’s go Mets” banners hung from all levels, but the usual hysteria seemed to be missing. Perhaps tt was more an expense account for a W o r l d crowd, typical Series. At the end of the game, nobody ran onto the field to rip up turf or steal bases as hap­ pened when the Mets clinched the East Division title and then the National League pennant. T h i s day special police had it all well In hand. HARRELSON had a fine day in the field, gobbling up ground balls from every angle. In t h e fifth he went into the hole to his right to get Dave Johnson, came in quickly to scoop up Belang­ er’s roller and then ranged far to his left beyond second base to get Palmer's grounder. In addition to the two g r e a t catches Agoc made on Hendricks with two on in the fourth and on Blair with three on in t h e seventh, he went to the wall in left center in the eighth to drag down a long blast by F r a n k Robinson. Transportation To UT-Arkansas Game Available Reservations are being accept­ ed for a chartered bus - plane trip to and from the Texas-Ark­ ansas grid battle Dec. 6 at Fay­ etteville, Ark. A chartered b u s will leave Austin at 3 a m. Dec 6, arriv­ ing at Dallas at 9 a m. A char tered plane will leave Dallas at 9:30 a.m. and Is due at Fayef teville two hours later. Charter­ ed buses will provide transporta­ tion in Fayetteville. The members of the tour will immediately leave Fayetteville after the game and are expect­ ed back In Austin at 10:30 p.m. Total cost of the trip Is $45 with a $25 deposit due by Oct. 31. Forty seats are available to the general public. If a full char­ ter is not reached bv Nov. 15, all deposits will be refunded. Reservations may be made by calling George Shannon, a Uni­ versity student counselor, at 471- 7423 or 477-8915. Deposits may be mailed to Shannon at Room M- 923 at Jester Center. yr fPenguin Reports on Winch Heroes and History % P IO N E E R S IN P R O T E ST . Lerone Bennett, Jr. A col­ lection of seventeen biographies of outstanding leaders, black and white, in black protest move­ $1.25 ments. A Pelican Book. B L A C K P O W E R U.S.A.: The Human Side of R econ­ struction, 1867-1877. Lerone Bennett, Jr. A detailed account of the Reconstruction era, Its promises, its failures and the lessons and inspiration it offers for $1.45 our own times. A Pelican Book. B E F O R E T H E M A Y F L O W E R : A History of the Negro In Am erica (Revised Edition). Lerone B en­ nett, Jr. A full and authoritative history of the Am er­ ican Negro from his origins In Africa through the $2.45 Negro revolt of the 1960's. A Pe! lean Book. C O N F R O N T A T IO N ; B L A C K A N D W H ITE. Lerone Bennett, Jr. Traces the history of the N egro rebel­ lion from the 17th century to our own times. A Pelican Book. $2.45 W H IT E O V E R B L A C K : Am erican Attitudes Tow ard the Negro, 1550-1812. Winthrop D. Jordan. W inner of the 1969 Nations! B o o k Aw ard for history and $2.95 biography. A Pelican Book. T H E B IA F R A S T O R Y . Frederick Forsyth. Penguin $1.45 Special Original. R E L IG IO N IN A F R IC A . Geoffrey Parrlnder.Fenguin $1-*S African Library Original. Send for brochure describing Penguin books In black studies. PENGUIN BOOKS INC 7110 Ambassador Road Baltimore, Md. 21207 ,<£3 ii Irf: I I rf I O TS M O U T H P I E C E The M o uthp iece loves to talk ab ou t his friend s— for a small price. For only $1.05 you can find out the lowdown on thirty-four thousand students, like phones, addresses, home addresses, clas­ sifications, G reek affiliations, co llege s or schools, and lots more. Listen to the M outhp iece talk M o n d a y , O c t. 20th. P p i P i I P Official Student Directory 1969-1970 Another publication of . i f ] TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS. INC. lie ge 6 Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1969 THE D A IL Y T E X A N f e d / C o y A Country Gut-Check I have learned in my four years of playing football a t the University that you never let up— you never even think about letting up. The idea must never enter your mind. Coach D arrell Royal is a teacher, and one of a player’* earliest lessons as a Longhorn is to understand that there is a “ way." It's understood that the way might lie touch and hard to travel, but if you stay calm, stay poised, stay strong and determined, there is a way. Coach Royal calls it “looking adversity in the face ” I f s also better known as a “gut-check." Gut-checking is a time when you’re behind 14-0, it’s a humid 93 degrees, and you can barely hear your quar­ terback because of the constant roar from <2.000 voices. I f s a time when your aggressive opponent has the momentum of the game, the physical punishment is brutal, and every play is a crisis. Keep on Hammering I f s a time when you can’t question, wonder, or hesi­ tate, and you can’t look behind to ask why. Y ou simply believe in the collective abilities of your team and know th at if you keep working, there will be a way. Y ou simply believe that no m atter how small a break may l>e, your team will be able to capitalize on it. You just keep ham ­ mering away. A gut-check is running when you are tired and haring the character to perform when the opportunity presents it­ self. Til ere is no question th a t the Longhorns had their most severe test of the season last. Saturday in the Cotton Bowl against Oklahoma. Oklahoma, as usual, was an aggressive team. They hit hard and clean; they challenge a team. Tile Sooners like to jump on an opponent, put him in a hole, and slam the lid. They have the spirit and the talent to carry out their intentions. F laring the Sooners is an Intensely emotional and phy­ sical experience for a participant. Tradition and history' surround the game. National attention and poll rankings add to the glamour. I f s an interstate rivalry that has been growing for 64 years. I f s a game th a t s+resses the funda­ mentals of football, T h e 27-17 Longhorn victory over Oklahoma was a good win, and adds to thp team ’s overall confidence, know­ ing th at when a gut-check is made, the team has the abili­ ty to pass the test. W e lc o m e Break The victory over the Sooners will make this week­ end’s open date a more enjoyable break. F or years Texas teams have come off the Oklahoma battle only to jump into the arena with the A rkansas Razor barks, which is never an easy task. The usual pattern of the Texas schedule was changed this year when ABU television choose to televise nationally the Arkansas-Texas clash. The only stipulation was that the game must be switched from its regular mid-October date to D ee. 6. “I really don’t think we needed an off-week,” said offensive tackle Bobby Wuensch. "But the pressure Ls off (of thp players) for a week and I feel relaxed. We’ll have more time for team polishing," Wuensch said. For the Longhorns, this week won t lie one for per­ formance, hut one for perfecting. SPOUSES C A N EARN UP TO $1500 OR MORE Between January & June IRS CENTER NEEDS 1500 NEW EMPLOYEES An Equal Opportunity Employer K n o w the Typewriter K e y b o a r d ? FR EE Training Classes for Data-Typish Being Filled N O W N e w Groups of Classes Start: 10-27-68 11-10-69 3 Classes Per Day: 8:00 A.M. - 12:00 N o o n (For 2 Weeks 1:00 P .M .- 5:00 P.M. Mon. - Fri.) 6.00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M. ,r . T0 «2» per HR. WITHOUT EXPERIENCE For Data-Typiif* A n d Clericai-Typt Job* Student Financial Aid, W M O B or Call 475-7635, Department L Longhorn Cagers Open Drills Today By GARY TAYLOR Sports Editor Previously, tho only basketball to speak of ors campus was Bully Gds trap's P E clashes and Lam b­ da Chi Alpha slaughters of unsus­ pecting ‘ pick up” teams in Greg­ ory Gym Annex. That is until Wednesday. Taking the court for the first day of official practice Wednes­ day, the Texas Longhorns and the seven other Southwest Conference schools begin preparation for opening day, a month and a half aw ay. W H IL E D E F E N D IN G h o o p champion Texas AAM and runner­ up Baylo r again appear to be the pre-season choices for the crown, Texas looks to youth to improve on a 9-15 record in 1969. There is an obvious difference between this 'Horn team and last y e a r’s sixth-place SW C finishers, instead of looking at IO men dur­ ing opening fall drills, as in ’68, Coach Leon Black w ill greet a 15-man squad, in years. largest the E X P E R IE N C E Is still lacking, how ever. “ W e’re pleased with the people w e're going to be working w ith.” Black said "W e 're going to be young, but improved. It s too early to tell how improved, because we have too many who have never worked on the var- Oiler Tight End To Miss Jet Tilt HOUSTON (A P I — Houston O iler Coach W ally Lem m said Tuesday tight end Alvin Reed is a doubtful starter for the Mon­ day night game Against the New York Jets. a suffered Reed, Houston* leading pass receiver, severely tom lip last Sunday in the 24-0 loss to Kansas City'. About 40 stitches were required to close the wound. It w ill definitely help, according to Black, to have “ good battles at each position.” To which the ’Horn coach adds, “ Right now everybody out for the team has a chance to start.” Junior Competing for the two guard slots w ill ho letterman B illy Black, junior college trans­ fer Terry M ullin, junior squad­ r o n Boh Towson and sophomores .Scooter Lenox, .Sam Bradley and Tres Blackenbeekler. Fighting for the post position w ill he only three players since sophomore hopeful John Langdon was lost to mononucleosis re­ cently. Cousin Richard Langdon. a s o p h o m o r e , and senior letter­ men M ike Smith and Bruce Mot­ ley will center their attention on that spot. Senior Wayne Doyal w ill lead the forward troops on the basis of experience, hut he expects strong competition from letter­ man sophomores Je ff Baker, Sammy Hyde and Erie Grosourth, and sophomore transfer Lynn Howden. T H E B IG G E S T name among die newcomers. 6-7 Howden, a transfer from South Texas Junior College, averaged 25 points per for the Louisiana State game freshmen In 1968. Besides Howden. many new looks w ill characterize the Steers this fall and spring in their at­ tempt to brighten a basketball Image “ down’' in the last few years. New Is the refinished Gregory Gym playing surface — birdseye maple, not Astre Turf. New are the In which Texas w ill display run-and-gun and full-court-press offense and defense, respectively. flashy uniforms As we all know by now. new paint does not make old paint go. You’ve still got to have the boss­ es Tn 1%^ and ’TH the Steers have more horsepower than in quite a few’ Gregory Gym generations. TEXAS END ZONE 4412 N. Lamar H A P P Y H O U R Mon. - Fri. 4 :30-6:30 $1.00 Pitchers G O G O G I R L S LD. R E Q U IR E D l l x Look of FINE THREADS Austin s High Fashion Men s Store ★ EDW ARDIAN FASHIONS ★ SUITS 4 SPORT COATS ★ FLARED & BELL BOTTOM SLACKS 2908 G u a d a lu p e 478-3374 W e ’ve got a good thing going . . . Duval Villa Students Welcome A L L B IL L S P A ID • E X T R A S T O R A G E C O M P L E T E L Y F U R N IS H E D • E L E V A T O R S Including Double Beds C O V E R E D P A R K IN G S W I M M I N G P O O L F R E E C A B L E TV F U L L T IM E M A IN T E N A N C E P O R T E R S E R V IC E • T O T A L E L E C T R IC • L A U N D R Y F A C IL IT IE S • R E C R E A T IO N R O O M • O U T S ID E L IV IN G A R E A • 15 M IN U T E B U S S E R V IC E T H R O U G H UT C A M P U S LOCATED 4305 DUVAL 454-9475 Ohio State Tops Poll Horns Still in Second Slot By The Associated Preen UC LA. L S C and Florida soared Into the Top Ten in the Associated Press’ college grid poll this week while first place Ohio State m ain­ tained a solid lead over No. 2 Texas. The Bruins. 5-0, advanced from eleventh to the eight spot. RSU climbed from fourteenth to ninth, and Florida moved from twelfth to the anchor opsition. Ohio State. 3-0. collected 31 first place votes, while the Longhorns received the rem aining five. Ohio State walloped Michigan State 54-21 last week, and Texas knocked Oklahoma out of the Top Ten with a 27-17 win. Southern Cal and Arkansas switched positions, the Trojans moving to third place and the Razorback* dropping to fourth. Southern Cal edged Stanford 26-24, and Arkansas downed Baylor 21-7. Penn State held fifth plat e, fol­ lowed by Missouri and Tennessee, Penn State bear West Virginia 20-0, Missouri, a 17-7 victor over Nebraska, climbed one notch to m am - wmmmmmmwmmmm * mmmmmr * sixth, while Tennessee advanced three slots to seventh after rout­ ing Georgia Tech 26-8. UCLA beat Washington 46-14, LSC whipped M iam i 20-0, and Florida edged Tuiane 18-17. their W hile Texas and Arkansas rest on laurels Saturday and Ohio State Is expected to sit on Minnesota, the Southern Califor­ nia Trojans will b f hard at work trying to protect their new No. 3 ranking. The Trojans, 4-0 after edging Stanford 25-26 last Saturday in a t h e R o s e giant stride toward Bowl, put their prestige on th* line when they travel to South Bend, Ind., for a clash with N o ­ tre Dame. A Southern Cal victory could move it ahead of No. 2 Texas, idle this week along which with fourth-ranked Arkansas. is The Fop Ten w ith fin n place vote* - •• c a lif o r n ia in p a re n th e s is 1 Ohio S tat* 2 Texas <5. a S o u th e rn 4 A rk a n sa s . . . . . . . . 5 ti Missouri ............. . ......... 7 Tennessee I OLA s ........................... 9 Louts ana Stat* ....... IO. Florida Penn S'fUe .............. . gun rho** Sippi State at Tech. SWC Statistics STA N D IN G S Team Texas Arkansas Tech Pace SM U AAM TCL’ Baylo r SEA SO N W L T 4 4 2 I I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 3 0 3 0 4 0 4 0 Pte. Opp. 149 41 139 13 68 97 76 73 77 90 35 75 58 147 40 149 Team Arkansas Texas SM U Tech Rice AAM Bavlo r TCL’ C O N F E R E N C E W L T 2 I I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I I 2 Pts Opp 45 13 49 7 19 17 20 58 — — 9 15 7 21 23 43 LA ST M E E K S R E S U L T S : SM U 19. TCC 17; Texas 27, OU 17 Arkansan 21 B aylo r 7; Tech 13, SM U 9 T H IS W E E K ’S S C H E D U L E : A&M at T C I’, SM U at Puce, M issis Team T e x * * Ark SMU Hic* re v A 6 M Te-h S a v io r 4 TOTAL OFFENSE Ida Avie. rn s a s s 1563 IR 389 5 1586 w< g 1439 .321 0 963 1249 312 3 rn* 247 O 970 242 5 ann o Sort Pl* .TIO 3.38 .334 219 362 29' 29* 273 >« A u 16-36 4 19-43 7 21-34 2 36-39 I 24-36 8 34-40 - 33-35 2 3 3 4 1 6 r u s h i n g P l i r r r and Seb eo l G P I* Y d* T D A v * , B i l l B u rn e tt A r k . 4 4 V 4 73 257 O 3 5 L S 'e re n * A A M J i m Be r*- sen T x 4 43 248 4 5 8 I F It H ard aw v. T rrh 4 8 46 237 5 2 ” 9 234 2 3 0 4 1 W p ra te r, T e x . 4 54 219 3 M a x * p . A r k SS 393 7 T e a m A rk Texas Rl'-e AAM Teeh S M ’ - T O T A L D E F E N S E \ ii*. Avg T I ) No-A cr. P l* . I 31-40 0 936 231.5 281 5 31-35'-* 979 244 8 290 7 27-37 7 236 SSI 283.7 300 1150 287 5 9 36-37 4 268 UTT 293.3 12 27-39 9 9 24-36 5 293 1.126 XV. 5 327 1 636 406 5 19 19-40 3 386 1967 491 8 20 1641.7 PUNTING P l a y e r and School C a r y Stockm en A rk . Bd M arsh. B a v l o r Ji m m y S h e ffie ld A A M B u c k y A i Is house P., re T e rry ' Ja c k s o n B a y lo r S c o o te r M o ro n g o , T ext* Ne A ve 29 43 23 34 25 IO I 8 P la y e r t a d Sch oo l C h u ck H ix s o n S M U Steve Judv TCC R o c k y S e lf A A M B ill Montgom ery Ark Si S o u th a ll. B a’ F O R W A R D P A S S I N O G 4 4 4 4 4 A tt. t om p. 152 126 85 T i 88 90 6'i 39 34 32 In t . Pet. 59 2 7 47 6 8 45 9 « 47 9 5 36 4 5 Tde 966 722 434 483 434 T D A i k . A ve . 11.0 12.0 l l I 14 2 13 3 6 6 5 5 6 5 1 2 « « 5 4 8 2 P A A S R E C T I! V IN O p l» v e * and Sehool G Ct Y d s T P A r r G H a lm o n d S M U 4 24 335 fr a u s . C A rk I 12 5 J S m ith B a v l o r 4 19 238 9 9 S a m H oM er. S M U 4 19 186 I '2 9 B H a r r l* A A M mmmmmmmmmmm mmmmm- 4 20 364 2 “ M 0 I 14 9 I S 4 S C O R IN G W a v e r and • '- W I G T O S P T F O P T S 9 42 B ill B urnett Ark 0 L:nzv Cole T C I ' 0 30 0 2" H ap p y fe lle r. Tex 4 3 ft 1.8 I i Bi* M edlard Ark ’ 25 0 A 24 jim Bertelson Toy a rf wmm rn r n 4 A 4 4 4 7 4 5 r SCO PRO LOUNGE 609 W . 29th 60 OZ. PITCHER $1.00 3-6 P.M. GREAT SA N D W IC H ES O U R C O L O R TV W I L L BE O N F O O T B A L L A N D F O R A L L IN C L U D ­ B A S E B A L L G A M E S S E R IE S. IN G T H E W O R L D DRINK BEER SHOOT POOL A U T H E N T IC E N G L IS H Free Orders Today For 1. Sharon Coker 2. Carl Burion Mann G R 1-2452 G R 1-7878 S. M arcy (.entry G R 1-7715 4. Je rry Wayne Zschieche G R 1-1873 Tantalizingly tender fillets of fresh cod covered in Alfie s special . Served authentic batter and deep fried to a crisp brown . English style with a sprinkle of m alt vinegar and delicious chip* of french fried potatoes. . OPEN 7 DAYS A W EEK 11:00 a.m. - 12 Midnight 2120 Guadalupe R E N T - B U Y $ 1 2 .5 0 m o . A ll R e n t A p p lie s R e n ta l O p tion * aa m ■ a R B S O D D O Q O t f S _ 4/6-3525 454-7?82 454-6731 2234 \j> .au d .p c 1746 A ld e rto n Lam* 5134 Burnet Rd. Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding C o m p lot* A utom otive Service F A C T O R Y T R A IN E D Volkswagen Specialists Th® O n ly Independent V W G a ra g e in Austin to G u aran tee Volkswagen Repair* A rld t’i Automotive Service 7951 B U R N E T R O A D Across from G u lf M a rt G L 2-0205 Clotad S*iurd»y PROTECTIVE LIFE Has D one A Lot O f Graduate Study A n d we’ve come tip with some pre!' import ant inform s- tion. For example, we know that college men are in the ben health period r f the r live*, that they have a greater life expectancy, and that they vt. command greater in- com cs in less’ hazardous occupations than moemieni* * 15. A ir F o re # 14 D e lta 0 T a u 14 A l AA 7, LCM 6 P h i D e lta C h i 23 A .ch a E p a lio o . S i em * A lpha E t * l. on 2C Zeta B eta _ _ _ . A lp h a P h i O m ega 14, » LA N * B l f . R E 7 S ig m a P n l E p « i I on 32, T a u D e lta P h i 0 S lam * A lpha Mu 41. K ap p a Sigm a * P h i K appa Pat 6 S igm a A lp h a E p ­ 'v in * on pen*:.rnv A .pita P M Ome­ » ga 14 L A W Avenger* 28 A a rd v a rk * 0 G R A D L A T Z W h l * K id * 13 Ph o to n s 7 mer *-to-rhum/, pl m o ra to riu m * ' m i / or mo r#*juir#*l or grant**! r e t o r t * l a a lo e a ll* a u t h o r it y ! prrtod of d r I ar o f f ir t a llr a *u*t>#n*tou of a r t l e t * - a t-rm porari ban on tho 11*0 or pro- a u c tio n •! th# moratorium o * V ie tn a m . O rt *o in o th tU f c t . I S t J You hove to look far »K* W * baccate i s silent AH of our jeons hove the *‘W " stitched on in plain tight, but w e're a little more modest with other kinds of W ranglers. They're mode just as well and they fit just .as w e ll, but the "V V " is tucked a w a y on a tag or label. You'll find It s worth looking for. This permanently creased end p erm an en tly pressed canvas weave jean is $5 50. Pile lined, W estern jacket $1595. Shirt about $5 00 Hondo^perma- n e n f l y pressed continental slacks $5 00. Knit shirt $8 00. A f in carefree foetal polyester end cotton. Only y o u can give it meaning. Give an hour. Give an answer. Give a damn. Wrangler* Jeans and Mr.Wrangler*Sportswear in Celanese Fortrel* AUSTIN ARMY & NAVY DICK & DEE’S Ranchwear A lt 37«6 — MINDAK • »•** «t«»t mw «*s • « A Etui*ma*» ft* *«***» mb*** »**.%. mr •cumffrt 0 Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1969 THE D A IL Y TEXAN Page 7 Vietnam Dissent Not New on Campus Moratorium Caps War Protest By TOUN P O F F Assistant News Editor The war moratorium Wednes­ day w ill be the capstone of four years of protest at the Univer­ sity against the war in Vietnam. Four years ago this week, two marches were scheduled by the Students for a Democratic So­ ciety (SD S) against the war to coincide with International the Days of Protest. around The first, which was held on campus, consisted of a “ death march*’ in which SDS members carried a coffin the campus and a rally on the Main M all with speeches and folksitig­ ers. The second march, sched­ uled for the next day, was to go d o w n Congress Avenue to t h e Capitol, H O W EV ER, the City Council dented SDS a parade permit by a three to two vote, and the 150 marchers were forced to use the sidewalks. Mayor L e s t e r Palm er, who new is director of the Univer­ sity’s Office of Facilities Plann­ ing and Construction, led the op­ position to the permit for SDS. He said, “ I absolutely loathe and despise the whole program of tho parade,” He came prepared to vote to grant a permit if the right of free speech and expression were at stake, Palm er said. But he said it was apparent to him that granting the permit was a pri­ vilege ca'or which the City Coun­ cil had discretion and not a mat­ ter of the rights of man. AT TH\T council meeting, stu­ dent opposition to SDS was pro­ vided by the University Com­ mittee to Support U.S. Policy in Vietnam, SDS brought suit to force the council to permit a street parade In protest of the war, saying the council’s action was “ discrimin­ arbitrary atory, and an unreasonable d e n i a l Of freedom of speech.” capricious, District Judge Herman Jones issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting the Uitv from interfering with he march. This order was overturned by two ap­ peals court justices. A Daily Texan editorial com­ mended Jones’ action: “ In grant­ ing the SDS the right to parade Friday, Judge Herman Jones ex­ pressed a democratic ideal: ‘While Americans are dying in Vietnam to oppose the closed so­ ciety of XHnmunism, it would be odd indeed if we deny the free society in Austin. Texas.’ TH E N EX T W E E K , the Stu­ dent Assembly scolded the coun­ cil’s action by the 14 to 13 vote. Tile case went before the Tex­ as Court of Criminal Appeals, where Jones defended his action. He said he felt the case was the most important ever tried in his court. The case involved the idea of liberty under law be­ ing assaulted by the “ Bull Con­ nor t h e o r y of police-making law,” he said. Jones s a i d his ruling w a s “ born of the revulsion and frus­ tration I feel when I see basic rights and in liberties the judicial district over which T preside.” flouted George Schatzki, professor of law, joined Jones in defending his action before the court. He said the case had been reduced to a matter of “ do we like what these kids have to say?” T H E OOI RT of Criminal Ap­ peals refused to decide whether a civil court judge may block enforcement of a local parade ordinance. The court held the is­ sue was moot, meaning it was no longer a legal question. Two more International Days of Protest against the Vietnam war were held in March, 1966. to m a r k SDS didn’t plan a march or demonstration the e v e n t, but it voted to co-sponsor a Free Speech Forum and to hold a campus-wide survey of “ Do you think the war in Viet­ nam is morally justified?” The results of t h a t referen­ dum were not made public. .SDS held an unscheduled Sun­ day afternoon rally on campus in April, 1%?, to protest the Aus­ tin visit of Vice-President Hu­ bert Humphrey' and the war in Vietnam. SIN C E SDS did not go through the u s u a l administrative chan­ nels in scheduling the rally, It lost its status as a campus or­ ganization, and six SDS mem- bere were put on disciplinary probation. This action set off a series of counter- demonstrations demonstrations commending and and condemning the University’s pos­ ition. University Chancellor Harry Ransom said, “ It seemed to the members of the Central Admin­ istration manifestly inadequate to take the risk of disorder at Sunday’s unapproved meeting. “ The proposed meeting w a s clearly a final r i s k that could not he taken without callous dis­ regard for the good order of the campus and for the safety of those ind’vidual members of the University who have a right to use the campus on Sunday for their individual purpose.” STO regained its status as a campus organization in Decem­ ber, 196?, and except for several Gentle Thursdays, which h a v e soft-sold the idea of peace in Vietnam. activity c a m p u s against the war has been almost negligible since that spring two years ago. However, antiwar sentiment has been evident in instances like Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy’s 196S presidential campaign a n d tile ubiquitous peace symbols. The first live Longhorn mascot appeared at the 1916 Aggie game. In 1919, Bevo I was the main dish at a barbecue celebrating a victory over A&M, and his brand­ ed hide was sent to the A&M ath­ letic department. German Scientist Opens UT Exhibit A noted professor of the history and philosophy of science h a s traveled from Germany to Texas on a two-fold mission. Under the sponsorship of the University Genetics Foundation, Dr. Adolph Meyer-Abich lectured Thursday to a group of fellow s c i e n t i s t s on the subject “ Alexander Von Humboldt a n d His Meaning in America Today.” The Alexander for Science Von Humboldt Exhibit at th e Miriam Lutcher Stark Library of­ ficially opened Monday. Dr. Meyer-Abich’i collection on Von Humboldt, now in the Hu­ manities Research Center, forms the nucleus of the exhibit which is expanded by other books and papers already in the University Library. Dr. Meyer-Abich received his doctorate from the University of Jena and is an “ Ordinary Pro­ fessor Emeritus for the History and Philosophy of Science” at the University of Hamburg. Dr. Meyer-Abich has written five books and more than IOO papers and articles — most of them in German, but some in English and Spanish. At 76, he hopes to “ finish a few more” on the science of “ the great Hum­ boldt time.” The professor has had a life­ long interest in Von Humboldt, a scientist-explorer who lived from 1768 to 1859. Most of his 90-year life s p a n was devoted to con­ sidering all problems of living and non-living nature with a view to developing a “ Universal Philo­ sophy of the Cosmos.” The goal was realized when ^ on Humboldt published his final work, Cos­ mos.” A reception and formal opening of the exhibit was held Monday at the Miriam Lutcher S t a r k Library. Meyer-Abich presented a film, made by the German government in observance of Von Humboldt’s 200th anniversary and based on Dr. Meyer-Abich’* bio­ graphy of him. The well-travelled professor (he has crossed the ocean 30 times by ship and 60 by plane) is ac­ companied by his wife, M r s. Siever Johanna Meyer-Abich, an historical novelist. Mrs. Meyer- Abich lectured on her ( herman novels Friday morning in t h * Robin Room of Batts H a ll Dr. Meyer-Abich’s save an ac­ count of how both he and his Von Humboldt Collection come to be at the University this week. A principal reason, he says, Is that after the terrible destruction of World W ar II, the U n i t e d States made by far the greatest contribution toward the rebuild­ ing (rf Germany, and as a re­ sult, he feels a debt (rf gratitude to this country. Professor G ives Collection — Ph oto by Rene Pere*. Dr. Adolf Meyer-Abich has contributed the nucleus of the new Alexander Von Hum- bolt Exhibit which opened Monday in Lutcher Stark Library. t h e Miriam The Daily Texan Classified Ads C A L L G R 1-5244 To Place Your Classified A d Tuesday Taian W ednesday Tesan Thursday Terse Friday Texan D E A D LIN E .............. . . . . . . . ............ .. ...................... S C H E D U L E 11:0 0 .a rn. I I OO a.m. 11:00 a rn. I 1:00 a.m. < 3 OO p.m. g I T i i Help W an ted Furnished Room s Roommate W an te d Typing P A R T - T IM E T E C H N IC A L E D IT O R S — graduates In chemistry, bio<-hemi*trv, chemical engine* ring, petroleum en­ gineering. o h 'sics, phvsiologv. phar­ macy. Good in English. Phone 472- 1187 PASO HOUSE 1808 W e st Ave. M A L E U P P E R C L A S S M A N quiet, comfortable, to share tw o bedroom apartm ent 454-905* S H A R F : T W O B E D R O O M luxury apart- ment w ith three. N ew . dishwasher, pooi $55 442-9821 after 3 C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S .................... $ OS a 1.50 (15 w ord m inim um ) ......................... • .............. ............................................ Eac h W o r d M in im u m C h a rg e • S tu d e n t rata ( 15-word maximum ) Ona tim a . . . . $ .75 * -50 • E ac h ad d itio n a l +ima #,#»#*» 20 C o n se c u tiv e Issue* io ....................................................... J j ss • I S w o rd * 20 word. ................................................. * 500 Classified Display I colum n * Ona inch Ona tim# ..••.•••••••••• E ach A d d itio n a l Tim a ( N o co p y ch an g a .........................• • • • ;.............. S issue rata*.) for eo m ae u tiva ....................................................... . • '-40 * CALL GR 1-5244 To Place Your Classified Ad L O W STUD EN T RATES 15 word* or Ie** for 75c the firtt time 50e each additional tima. Student mu*t show Auditor * receipt and pay in ad­ vance from Journaiitm Bldg e a m. to 11:00 a.m. M onday through Thursday. Until 3:00 p.m. Friday. 107 in L For Sale G U IT A R IN S T R U C T IO N B a n n i n g and advanced. Clas ? lcal-F ol k-Bl ucs £12.50 m onthly Call George En sle at 476-3665 M A T H T U T O R master*# degree 453-81*4 Largest Used Book Store in Austin Save Save — Come o L E A R N T O P L A Y guitar, beginner T H F R O O K S T A I 7331. m d advanced. D rew Thomason. 478- 11 1— 6103 Burnet Road 454-3664 For R en t NO T V S E T ? C a ll the Alpha M a n ! B TW A the N ew Color portables at Reasonable Rent Lease R en t bv Sem ester or Rent-Purchase A I- P H A T V R E N T A L S Call G R 2-2692 to r more inform ation You C A N Rent Furniture Y O U Like! You do have a choice At Modern F u rn itu re Rentals you can rent fine q u a lity fu rn itu re for your livin g room. It could be dining area, or bedroom. Spanish, E a r ly Am erican, Modern . . . or any com bination of the?e stvles Choose complete room groups or only th ? individual piece* you re ally need. Come by o r call. 100% O f Paym ents A p ply T o Purchase N o Charge F o r D e live ry Modern Furniture Renta's U S E D B / W T V 's. Good - better - ve ry good $25 50 up, Austin T V Center. 4306 Manchaca Road. H I 4-1345. M E N 'S SUITS, B LA Z ER S Below Wholesale Guaranteed factory fresh. Not seconds ny samples Over 400 on hand W id e range of sizes all patterns- stripes, plaids solids. Suits. $37 50-S55.00; blaz­ ers. $29.00. 477-7435 Registered Nurses idc« B'acke' arses in ava ab a Opening* at Hosp ta: for Registered ! arecs on straight 3-11 or 11-7 and a l­ ternating s' bs. Sa ary commemorate I with satisfactory app c a b a aspace ac* | and hour* worked. Cumulative vacation. , sick 'eave, retirement program and gen­ erous hospta ttahon and Iii* insurance program. C o ntact “ a Personnel O ffice, 3racker- cig* Hosp ta!, A ;St,n, Faxes. An equal opportunity amp oyer. 1961 station P A R T - T IM E T R A N S L A T O R S fo r Dutch, P O N T IA C C A T A L IN A ( A I A B IT IA P O N T IA C Czech HuRRMftan. Japanese N o rw e­ station conditioned pp wet* wagon. Air gian. Polish, Rumanian. Russian. Ser- brakes and steering. Good deal. $.175. bo-Creation into good E n g ­ 478-2079 lish: (or French, German. Ita lia n w ith extensive science background Phone 472-11*7 Swedish 1200'-V ’ C O M P U T E R IZ E D recording tape. equivalent to Scotch 201 $1 99, tax included. Accus* o, 730 South A la ­ mo, San Antonio, Texas 7*205. FU LL T IM E A N D PART T IM E H E L P Spe: al Clearance Sa e for day or night. G U IT A R S N ew K oehler's Bar-B-Q. 45th and L a ­ m ar needs waitresses d u s boy*, coun­ ter help and dishwasher? Opening soon Cal! collect for Interview. (512)- 826-0365. San Antonio 5789 A irp o rt B h d 454-2537 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D . four man apartment. $45. A/C. 442-9531. Trade Ins while they las4, $15 each 1624 Lavaca Angster Music W O R K F I F T E E N H O U R S a week for $58 50 A p ply 2 p.m. or 8 p m. sharp, through Thursday. 61'2 L a ­ L A R G E 4 bedroom ^urr’shed apartment. 2 roomma’es needed, female, $240. F O R S A L E : S E A R S girl s bike. new. $40 W om an's Judo-Oi, $15 Fencing equipment, 2 foil* mask, c a rf yin g bag. L a d y * Jacket w ith vest. size 38. $35. IOC® L o rra ln 476*1135 M onday vaca GO-GO week collect. 476-0962. 1965 c h e v e l l e M A L IB U SS, N ew tape stereo B e st offer over Si IOO. David. 444-3063. new brakes, engine T W O M A L E S . T W O bedroom, t w o hath Pool. $68./month. F ive minutes U T 477-6080 after 5 B R U S H E D F L O R E N T I N E yellow gold wedding set. V4 K a ra t S o litaire $500. 476-4595 until 5. 477-3727 after 5. G I R L S $25 per night every ,*nd Bell County Area, C all XI 7 77.1-1471. S A L E S P O S I T I O N S F u ll and part time position* are a va il­ able to experienced male and/or re males tlnne and/or part tim e Fashion shire* and Sportswear. Apply 3rd floor. F u ll 901 Congress. G R 2-2491 A F G H A N H O U N D P U P P I E S , show qualftv, a ll males. Terms available G O O D F R IE N D S Miscellaneous Room and Board Tutoring ID E L S O N ’8 G I F T S —handmade tew elrv, M exican Im p orts In d ian (N e x t to H i l l s Cafe) 444- _ _ ______________ Congress. 8814. _____ VACUUM CLEANERS. *^95 Year [_ow board ra+es, 3 blocks Campus. m S^SS%JtS£v9SS: STK __ _____________ ___ Congress. STAG CO-OP ,, 1910 Rio G rand* 478-5043 P O T S . J E W E L R Y . L E A T H E R W O R K . c lo th e s , c a n d le s e tc. TUI m a d e lo c a ^ fo lk a r t, oui a fin d in g s , R e v iv a l, j y vv eat 28th. ____ ___________________ g u i t a r l e s s o n ^ 5 t t ^ w1_ | B E p - __ Gut tars furnished. Call h r I i th* THE CONTESSA 2706 47" -9766 A U S T IN G U IT A R S O C IE T Y it actively waking new members. For information, ca'! 478-2079. Elegant living for yomg women 4 gir* sji+es ® 20 meals wee* TV • Poll • Study HYI Sun deck Maid service • Laundry room • Free parking BARRONE • Men, apply now tor fa 2700 N aces vacancies • TV lounge • 20 meals a week • Maid • Pool • Parking • Experienced management G R 7-0075 or 477-9766 The Contessa West 2707 Rio G rande 476*4648 Elegant living for young women 20 meals- week Kitchen & d in in g area 'n each suite Free parking • TV lounge Maid service ® Pod 1 Laundry facilities Study nail • Sun oeck Houses— for Sale Ti a N C F C O M P O S IT IO N C L A S S . In d i­ vid u a l expression. s t u d » n t s * e t o w n fees U n iv ersity \ days. 8-9:30 jxm ,________ . Tuesday*. T h u _____________ r r r F R E E J E W E L R Y from fashion C fhowF d T r^ tor 444-28.ni. 442-2200 442- 5 5 1 7 _________________________ ____________ L E A R N T O P L A Y G U IT A R , beginner and advanced. D rew Thomason. 47S- 7831 ........................ ............ P O R SC H E DRIVERS S £ er\ v c u b ..™ * . next m eeting is W ednesday, urto b et 15 7 30 p m. C all 34.-0541 even.ngs info rm a tio n fo r fu rth e r ter dates. D E A D L I N E N E A R I N G on fall compu­ F o r quest lonnairre call 44°-8798 or w rite P a r t ' Mate, P . O. ____ ______ B o x 6099. A ustin 78702 P A R T T I M E W O R K w ith computer d ating service $2 per hour or com­ ___________________ mission. 442-8798 student gallerv. P A I N T I N G S F O R Y O U R P A D U T lowest prices. A R ­ T H A N G 9* * V est 29th 477-122*) Open 2-10 M o n d a y *Frid a y ; 1(E6 Sa tu rd a y ; 1-6 Sunday. _______ ______________________ U N I V E R S I T Y ” A L T E R A T IO N S H O P has moved from 502 Vt est 30th to (betw een C raft 2906% Sa n G abriel C o m er. Gaston Bo atel 477-9121 4*1 pies of O bjectivism , contact Day id H a rp e r 477-5173. Lost and Found L O S T I N ring green stone J E S T E R . 1969 high school In­ I n iti als L U M side H e s s e call 454-1738 C A L L G R 1-5244 TO PLA C E Y O U R C LA SSIFIED AD P E R S O N S I N T E R E S T E D In hearing ______ N a th a n ie l B ra n d e rs Th e B a sic PFI*** screened porch P u t the childre O H MR. PROFESSOR T h is is It ! W est of UT. sp restricted area. All brick w ith Serve! m r condi­ tioning. A hideaway study. Downstairs large V \ / large master bedroom opens onto _____ BUY, stairs and let them “ have a hail spacious older home that spills nv w ith personality. $45 OOO A N N C R O C K E T T It s tru ly w o r t h 444-2702 : W a n t to Call G R 1-5244 To Place a Texan Classified Ad Services Ca SELL, OR RENT? NON-STOP, EXPRESS BUSES Austin-Houston, fare $5.95 Lv. Austin 11:55 am, Ar. Houston 2:50 pm Lv. Austin 4:00 pm, Ar. Houston 6:55 pm 7 additional local schedules. For charer buses: 478-9361 C R 1-5244 for a B E A T T H E P A R K IN G problem B u v m v three month oid 1969 H a rle y 125 j Priced right 836-0613. J • r • I a I 1968 T R I U M P H GT6 One owner Air. extras, $2700. 478-7108 cam. many extrz Classified Ad S A L ™ Kerrville Bus Company ne. Friendly Service Daily Texan n The 8 W ednesday, O c t. .15, 1969 T H E D A ILY T E X A N / 452-4975. _ 477-0969. T W O B A S S M A N A M P S $112 each One Gibson h o llo " trody bass $225 I 195.1 MG-TD. Excellent. $1400 or best offer Box 4129. Schreiner Institute. K e rrville Texas M A Y E S C A T T E R Y - Persian kittens Pet or show quality. Championship bloodline*. Papers available. 258-1811 a fte r 5 G R E T A 'S C A R R S W hen I am dead lin g no sad songs for me but w e ar m y shirts in memory of me 478-9787. F A S H IO N D IS P L A Y P O S IT IO N female, experience required Male or to plan and execute interior and ex­ terior Fashion Displays, F u ll or P a r t Tim e A p ply 3rd floor. 901 Congress. G R 2 2491 G O O D F R IE N D S SECRETARY , S T E R E O C O M P O N E N T S : N ew equip- , , \ . \ Magnum. Autom atic rant ee* most brands. Call 441-6448 af- ter 5 IO P rn. 1368 P L Y M O U T H 6 T X convertible 440 radio heater turban. Bronze/black. $2500 Call 476- 1527 ment at discount prices, factory' war- Prefer UDD BTClasSW an to work a r ­ proximate'/ 4 hours a day Mon­ day through Friday doing genera! office work. Must be able to type. Girl must be single, neat In ap­ pearance and able to assume re­ sponsibly. Apply 2120 Guada­ lupe or cell 472-7968 to arrange for interview. 1968 M G B-G T, grey w ith black In ter­ ior. Msnt condition, $2750 C all 452- '67 UTO. A/C, a/t a1! power Good condition, reason­ able 465-6060 after 4 30. 3559 up to 12 p rn. C L E A N . W H I T E i i i good condition Also, H electric piano. speed t e n Schw inn bicycle, almost new C all 454- 8897. T H E Phono­ graph. Ga rand 4 speed turntable F is h ­ P O R T A B L E F I S H E R er amp and speakers C all 476-5674. 1957 F O R D 292. Overdrive, radio, heat­ (dean good condition. er, new tires $325 472-IY H 302 Fast 17th. 250 E N D U R O Y A M A H A miles, ridden six weeks. w a rra n ty tune~up. 476-1647. 1969 BMO Ju s t had A T T R A C T IV E A M B IT IO U S college girl . needed for part t ime sales. Contact i Mrs. M ops 444-4395. CO 4-1945. p a r t t i m e : C A M P U S R U P P u t up adv posters, earn $5-$!0 per hour. No selling. W rite Univ. Publications Box 20133. Denver. CO. 80220 for de­ tails PART TIME SECRETARY 7331 4 hours each afternrxm. M ust be at­ tractive have outgoing personality, good telephone voice. G all 454-7874 be­ tween I and 3 p m . univ. J y . f North Of 27th St Ou3de -Od ^ j i 7t\oAtfiA Am Typing, ll D « V M BA M ulUlithing. Binding T h * Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service for language science and engineer- lng theses and dissertations ■ £ * , « * Phone G R 2-3210 and G R J-7877 2707 H em phill P a rk M A R IL Y N N H A M IL T O N 444-2831J Carol Sadler 444-2101 Experienced accurate reasonable, dependable N a I * alls after lo p m F A S T A C C U R A T E 454-8579. and reasonable. R O Y W . H O L L E Y 47X>-3018 T Y P I N G P R IN T IN G J u s t N o r t h o f 27th X G u a d a l u p e Ann fa&U, Typing. M u m m in g M B A U * Binding The Lomple'e Professional FULL-1 IME Typing Service to tailored In- nerds of U alversitv students Special keyboard equipment for science, and engineer- ing theses and dissertations language Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk Printed Copies 5c Each In C O M P E T E N T S U 'R O T A R Y T Y P I S T with maar- 'e a t s of * xper ,er, (> w ill give conscientious and meticulous (-are as to accuracy correct form and com­ position technical typing reports wpers. theses and dissertations in ail v f t - N B W IR M Executive, equipped w ith -cience engineering and foreign i*ng ls Xeroxing, m uliihthing , ' VORK SP EC IA LIST L-fJi1, and binding services on request G R 64894 W O O D S T Y P IN G S E R V I C E Th em ed theses, dissertations M uItUlth, Qua- reasonable rates Mrs itv work at Vt nods 472-4825. A N N E 5 TYPING SERVICE ^M arjorie Anne D elafield) or • Crofe Mortal ty p in g o f repo rts m an u ­ scrip ts. theses, d isserta tio n s etc R e a ­ sonable rates 442-70()8 * 442-0170 • • * M u itih thln g mimeographing copy lag. dittoing; sxmbols; binding) • • photo* for F a ll Now eccpetlng applications for men nnlv • L a rg e rooms • Quiet, secluded environment • Cen­ ti ii color a ir anil heat • < able. T V lounge, O C T O B E R RENT FREE I or 2 males to share two bed­ IO room, rn nutes walk to ma n build[ng. bJil ie paid, mad service $61.50. Ca 2502 Nueces. -AKB OVKR CONTRACT « Moor. F o n t Apartm ent 8 0 3 W « t 2 8 th . Hill now or spring. Call after lo pm. V A C A N C Y A T B R O W N L E E D orm itory two bath apartment. 0 R ?-6480. 478-3917 471 -3268 T O G R A D U A T E M A N . convenient t<> F E M A L E Tow n rind U n iv e rs ity Quiet A vail­ able November I or before 5<16 W e st 16th G R 8-41 OI ment $70 One bedroom ap art­ T w o blocks all bills paid East-Stadlum Gal! W endv, 478-8333 Furnished Apartments Cai! G R 1-5244 to place vour Classified Ad I M O N TH S RENT FREE Suitin ’* Newest a *d Most I .* ..* - P O S A D A DEL N O R T E id Tv in Apartments, ,ry Two Bedroom St 7200 D :va Ca'! J . A. Kr ,qar( 452-2384 Austin's Greatest Apartment Values ! THE BRITTANY 3 0 0 C a r m e n C r ) . 454-1355 452-2384 5 50 6 G r o v e r G L 2-0507 FRENCH COLONY W anted T O P C A SH P R I C E * paid mond« old gold Capital Shop. 603 Commodore Vt rrv tor din- Diamond 476-01 Cfi F E M I L E R O O M M A T E S H A R E groom ipartm ent w ith U T girl $70. T V . no biti* Close U T. 472-05-46 j T W O R O O M M A T E S N E E D E D bv Nov­ I Drop bv apartment 112. ember Soot Rpd R iv e r Riveroak*’* Apartment* Typing L E C T U R E notes double spaced 1317. reports Mrs themes 30c F raser G R 6 No H idden Charge* Toping Prin tin g M u ltlltth ln * Graphic Arts Resume* Thesis luiw Brief* le c tu re Notes Tutoring . nn I B R - 2 BR - 1100 sq. ft. qrom $ 170 I SM West 24th Street r, ft. H o rn $ !3 5 A . p L U s U N I V E R S I T Y S E R V I C E S sq. TT. from Close to Campus 850 so . r -5651 North C e d ra t eU 'c enc**. New, car- ; pated, draped, complete k tc’hen; rar qe, : oven, qarbaqe dispotsl. rerriqerttof. FHI ! b a w ample itoraqe and par) nq. A- partm ert manager: 453-2032, 454-681 IU Night* 453 0740. i n k anils T H ESIS ILLU ST R A T IO N S 1209 R IO G R A N D E F r e e E s tim a t e s 2811 S A L A D O F o r Inform ation about spacious 2811 Salado, contact former tenant* at 444-4146 O N E B E D R O O M . A L L B I L L S paid. Furnished Dishw asher, disposal air. carpet, pool, x hut tie bu* or " a l k to Campus i l l Fast 31 s' 478-6776 C A S T IL IA N R O O M two Im mediate occupancy, C all 477- for one or men 9751 now A P A R T M E N T F O R R E N T $92. water In person T r in ity gas paid A p p ly Terraep Apartment.«. 1309 T rin ity . Services O L D N O A H Ute Roofer tra ve l roof*!. cedar composition. lifetim e asbestos guaran­ repaired applied, shingles teed G R 7-12.10 M A K E & REPA IR Bools, Shoes Leather Goods Leather Sate BankAmericard M aHerCharge C A P IT O L SA D D LER Y 1614 Lavaca Expert Typing M. Itilithing Binding IBM Se'ectric A styles of T yps fast Service Capitol Typing Service 2105 Mu roc. No. 102: 452-1511 T yp in g of A l' K cd* Proofreading # B dig H O R S E H O A R D IN G SID $11 $14 Tw o miles 290 K C all 926-'>851 after 6 able rates Moore 836-4)861 P rn , a ll day weekends. L E A R N T O P L A Y a iii 'a r beginner m d advanced. Drew Thomason. 478- Malt tf.'-q # Mimeographing J H North of 27th % Guadalupe Bobbye Delafield— HI 2-7184 M E L T I L I ! H IN G and/or law theses, dissertations Reason Experienced Mrs Helen typ in g briefs Am Typing. M u itlilth iru M B A V • Binding (he Complete ProTesuoial FULL-TIME Typing S e r v ic e W A L K I N G D IS T A N C E U T , Experi- . need typist - A ll so u r U n iversity wdrk — Fast service, reasonable. La u ra Bodour. 478-8113 tailored students ment gineering theses and dissertations to the needs of U n iversity equip­ Special language science and en­ keyboard for C O ED S. B E A T H IG H prices on the Drag, L e t m e sow your p arty and fast. 451- sport* clothes. Reasonable, 2512. T H E S E S D I S S E R T A T IO N S , reports. briefs. Special key# for science, en­ language Reasonable rates gineering Mrs. Anthony 454 3079 M UN S E X P E R T A L T E R A T IO N S Aus­ tin T ailo rs Greenwood Towers, 1800 E X P E R I E N C E D accurate typist Low fast service M rs Tullos C L rates Lavaca. 478-7379 3-5124. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 Hem phill P ark S a t i s f a c t i o n Dissertation*, g i \r a .n t e k d — I>eg;R reports lyp is' w it* IB M Executive electric 4&3-8650. E:\perienifd specialist B R A theses Specializing of at the lowest possible Prue*. the needs student the universit*. In M O N T G O M E R Y T Y P IN G tiA !. ?-.?j£Viudin* I IST ic 5. 3 >tiOi S E R V IC E stall Exchange Delegates Discuss Construction —- P h o t* b r M ika S im m er. Visiting Russians are (I to r) Yurity G . Alek­ sandrov, Nikolay I. A bram ov, Ivan N. Dmitri- yev, A leksandr M. Tokarev, Minds G . C h en te- mirov, O leg G . Sergeyev, A natoliy F. Polu- yanov, and C herm an V. Il'inkiy. UT Becoming Leader In Electronic Teaching C A L L G R 1-5244 T O PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED a D NEW ARTISTS NOW Series Union Begins Fall 'Firesides' What like out­ is a professor side the classroom , aw ay from the U niversity cam pus? Is he the superhum an stereotype m ost stu­ dents think he is. or is he really a down-to-earth person who en­ joys mowing the backyard lawn? Next week the F acu lty F ire ­ sides, sponsored by the U nion's Student-Faculty Com m ittee, will give students a chance to find the answ ers to these questions. F rom O rt. 21 through Oct. 26. students will have the opportunity to get to know' professors inform ally in th eir own homes. REGISTRATION for fire the sidfis will be from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m . T hursday and F rid ay at the M ain the Union Building. R egistration will be on a first-serve first-com e, basis. Inform ation I>esk in N am es of the professors, the num ber of students each can ac­ com m odate In his hom e and the tirnp for each fireside will be provided. T ransportation w 111 be arran g ed for those needing It. “ An indefinite num ber of pro­ fessors will hold firesides next w eek,” said M rs. K aren Todar. Union p rogram assistant. “ We a re hoping for about eight or nine.” AMONG T H E PROFESSORS who will particip ate In the first firesides of the fall a re Dr. Irw in Spear, biology; Dr. K arl Ames. E n g lish ; Dr. Robert Wicklund, psychology; Dr. F ra n cis Johns­ ton. anthropology; Dr. G erhard Fonken, chem istry, and Jeffery H untsm an, English. ""E ast" y ear, 140 f ir e s id e w ere hold The com m ittee, headed by Austin Transit Cutback Told the dispute with Austin T ransit Co. win not cu r­ its bus ■arvice as a result tail of the C i t y Council, but will cot back t h e crosstow n route became# it is los­ ing money, says H. L. Criswell, com pany su p e rv iso r In a special arran g e m en t with the City Council, the crosstown bus will m ake 12 round trips per day until O rt. 21, then five round trip s per day until Nov. 4. Carol© E lliott, hopes to increase the num ber this year. The pro­ gram will be held every two the year, w eeks throughout W hat's it like at a faculty fire­ side? C om m ittee m em ber G ary G iles described it as “ a friendly fam ily visit—-like when you and and sisters all your b rothers load up in the ca r and go visit som e friends.” FIRESIDES ARE NOTED for th eir inform al atm osphere, Giles said. “ The professor actually lets his hair down and there is much talk about non-academ ic back­ ground. E veryone in the fam ily from the children to the fam ily dog is introduced.” G iles said the best filing aboyt the F aculty F ireside p rogram is “ the student really gets to see th e professor In a different light. H e gets a chance to see the pro­ fessor as another person. Too m any students think of faculty m em bers in term s of a stereo, type, superhum an or nonhum an. “The U niversity is becoming a lan d m ark institution and will es­ tablish education norm s through its use of electronic equipm ent in teaching.” Dr. R ichard Byrne, radio-tenvision film a n d d ram a professor, sa id Tuesday, B yrne assisted in preparing and coordinating the i n i t i a l list of equipm ent installed to th© Je ste r C enter auditorium He currently I© involved to the designs for fie multi-miUion dollar S c h o o l of C om m unication com plex for t h © U niversity, The auditorium in Je ste r was designed to producp “ any k i n d of sound and im age in any com- b nation,” Byrne ga id. “ T h e s e facilities m ake teaching exciting and will a ttra c t professors from all over the w orld.” THE FAH IRM ENT, of the high est quality available. Includes four in­ 2-b\-2-ineh C ariouse: two 3- tensity slide projectors, three by-4-ineh slide projectors, high Five beautiful apartments — one bedroom furnished, p o o l , patios, free C a b le TV, $135.00 plus electricity, St. Charles Place, 4320 Bull Creek Rd., 4 5 3 . 4 9 5 9 — 476-2633 16mm motion picture projectors, a turntable, a video tape recorder, two overhead projectors and * stereophonic sound system . An intercom connects th© lec­ tor n to the projection booth or backstage. There is rheostat con­ spot trol on house, lights. T hat is, they can be dim ­ m ed or brightened at the will of the professor stage and T here a re tentative plans to In­ stall a color television projection and a f i v e - p o l l individual re­ sponse sj'stem , BA RNE RAID 147.000 original Iv w as allocated for this equip­ m ent hut that jt will easily save that much in a y ea r by more e f f e r e n t teaching of larg e groups. One n#*w concept in education Is the initial design of classroom space for a specific purpose. The idea will tie evident in the pro­ posed com m unication complex. The latest sets of draw ings show a subterranean auditorium w’ith sector seating. T here is also continental seating and no center a ale. T hree re a r projection screens covor the front wall and will produce no shadow's, allowing th© professor from screen to screen. T hese screens can fly into the ceiling leaving a sta g e area to be used in speech interpretation courses. to wralk freely BA RNE SAID the com plex will have a tandem classroom situa­ tion with a projection are a en­ circling both rooms. This expert- Jester Centers in Russia Soviets Tour in Russia as well as T he u s e of high-rise a p a rt­ m ents to the United S tates was stressed by Cleg G. Sergeyev, in terp reter for a delegation of eight R ussian building rep re­ construction sentatives who toured Austin Tuesday. to in a take p a rt M em bers of an exchange pro­ gram , the delegates cam e to Aus­ tin tour ac­ quainting them with construction In this country. A delegation of A m erican construction rep resen ­ tatives toe* a sim ilar tour of the Soviet Union in August and Sep­ tem b er under term s agreed u p ­ on by the D epartm ent of S tate and the So­ viet Unto®. the governm ent of “ Not o n l y are we building m ore high-rise in R ussia, but we also are build­ ing blocks of flats,” said dele­ gate Sergeyev. ap a rtm en ts A leksandr M. Tokarev, anoth­ e r delegate, said th a t “ although we build approxim ately two m il­ lion hom es still annually, we have a housing shortage ” those the United Skates, all the hom es and a p a rt­ m ents f o r R ussia's population stato By a re provided by techni­ using the industrialized Unlike in ques, the sta te is able to produce the m a teria ls and construct th© buildings at a cost com p arativ e­ the United ly lower than in States. Je ste r C enter was one of the tour of the R ussians’ stops on th© cam pus. Sergeyev said that con­ It is ‘ well planned strue: ed .” He added there w ere buildings sim ilar to this on : Russian cam puses. and that “ T here are m any peculiarities and district features of construc­ tion to t h e United S tates," he continued, “ but there are also S ergey­ sim ilarities ” m any the United States had ev said a broader variety of chem ics, m aterials, different paper m ate ; rials and used m ore alum inum in construction than Russia. Each college or school in the U niversity has a special program of academ ic advising and course approval during the registration sem ester. F or days less ap ­ pointm ents m ay be m ade during the se m ester with individual fa ­ culty m em bers, counselors, or chairm en of departm ents. for hurried conferences, each “T omorroU’’ i A r t i s t s performing t o d a y s m usu Texas to Je s te r C enter, In addition the Russians the L yn- n saw Baines Johnson L ibrary, the Hu­ and m anities R esearch C enter the Balcones R esearch Cen cr, they w ere given an o p w here portunity and testing facilities for building ma* rese arch to see terials. FLY AIR TEXAS The Convenient Airline C lip T h is Schedule AUSTIN to FORT WORTH Arrive Leave 840A 11:30A 4:05P 7:55P 5.10P 9 45A 12.35P 5:10P 9:00P 6:15P SAN ANTONIO 945A 4;30P 5:25P 9:05A 3 50P 4-50P Frequency Ex. Sat, Sun. Ex. Sun. Ex. Sat., Sun. Ex. Sat., Sun. Sunday Only Ex. Sat., Sun. Ex. S a t , Sun* Sat., Sun. TYLER 10:50A 5:50P 6:40P 12:00N Ex. Sat , Sun. Ex Sat.. Sun, Sat-, Sun. 7;00P 8.20P LONGVIEW IO.SOA 5:50P C.40P 12:35 P 7:35P 7;50P Ex. Sat., Sun. Ex. Sat,, Sun* Sat., Sun. A ir -C o n d it io n e d R adar-Equipped A irlin e r s paul zuk “ At 25, Zukofsky can play ring© around m any fiddlers twice his age. In a repertory that few of them would even d are to touch." — H i g h F id elity M a g a z in e FREE +0 Blanket Tax Holders! Perform mg program of 2bth Centon* Music including R eich’s “ Violin Phases'* for violin and pre recorded tape FRI., 8:15 Oct. P.M. 17 H O G G A U D IT O R IU M Draw free tickets now at H o g g Aud, Box O ffice, open 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Non B lanket tax holders: $1 students, $1,50 non-studente Phone 4787396 .A*. JtJE m THE STORE OF C H A N G E S I Presents It's First Annual FALL JEWELRY SALE F O R M E N A N D W O M E N All Types O f Jewelry Reduced By O r More WEEK ONLY 1616 Lavaca 477-8105 M aster C harge BankAm ericard M o n d a y — S a t u r d a y .................................. 10:30 A.M . to 6:30 P.M. IF IT'S HAPPENING AT ALL •• IT'S HAPPENING AT MAYA rn. :'.u . .. '■ :• W ednesday, O ct. 15, 1969 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 9 m ental project would allow pro­ jection into two classroom s at the the U5V» of m ir­ ©ame tim e by rors. T here will be equipm ent which will be able to film aud once re action in the dark, and take skin responses. Byrne said this fan) I tv will be of physiological im port anc®. P lan s for the l o b b y show a in w h i c h room glass encased .Showing all net television sets works will be running sim ultan ©otisly, at all tim es. The m ain purpose of this room will not be o n l y for com parative R T F s to k e s but to keep the com muni cation students abreast of events. One of the most unique amtrac dons of the complex, B yrne said. will b© an elongated octagonal room with IO screens. T here will be no seats, just carpeting ex tending five feet up the wall. Tills room is sim ilar to an Expo ex hibit, but is for academ ic pur poses IN THIS setting alm ost a n y environm ent can be produced in th e .160 degree srreon area. It can also be cycled to run auto­ m atically. “ Inform ation will be d jsperied in an exciting m a n n er,” Byrne said referring to the com ing age of electronic teaching. advancing Technology to is rap id ly that equipm ent for t h © com plex will not be ordered un­ is w ell under til construction that m uch of 'a id w ay. B yrne the equipm ent th a t eventually will be used in th© com plex has not been Invented yet. Prizes Offered In Math Contest The Albert A. Bennet M ath? m attes Prize E xam ination will be held by th© m ath departm ent at 2 p.m. Saturday in Benedict Hall JIO. All beginning freshm en w h o have not had a previous course In college m athem atics a re eligi­ ble for the contest. Students need only appear to tak e the exam . P rizes of $51 for first place. $.54 for second place and $17 for third place will be aw arded by the m ath departm ent. Prof. Robert E. Greenwood said the exam will cover algebra and the “ ability geom etry and to think ra th e r than the ability to m em orize.” test The prize com petition is named for Albert A. Bennett, m em ber of th© m athem atics .staff of the U niversity from 1917 to 1925 and professor of m a th em atics at Brown U niversity from 1927 until his retirem en t In 1958. Third Com m ercial Jet Hijacked in Tw o D a y s MIAMI (AP* — A N ational Airlines DCS jetliner w ith TO p er­ to sons aboard was Cuba T hursday during a tra n s­ continental flight from I./* An g*!©* the F ederal Aviation Ad m inistration reported. hijacked The hijacking w'as the third to the F orty - sixth to two days and com m ercial airlin er Cuba this year. forced Im m ediate O cc u p an c y Furtmk#d On# Bedroom Bl!U rRu| $145.00 M iff a M o *709 HAH MON RT M M M M W MSI—ASS SM* P u t it this :D o you have to pi more th an rd;like to' than vou 1d y o u need to? Try Mil*, ta m p o n s . t ar< . y absorbent youJTl ***** *r<‘ oi titan. MKI* arc m o d ifie r ? n tf s , t hat swhy T hey’re made w ith M»ft, absorbent rayon First, there Va gentle rayon cover Then a laver of rayon fibers that absorb quick Iv, Then another las cr of fine rax on storage filters that absorb steadily. And, in the tenter, a cushioned laver that holds. and holds some more. Clan you imagine? Some tampons a r e ju s t chunks of cotton'. NTo w o n d e r you p r o b a b ly need more o f them. T h is m o n th try situs. T h e y come rn r e g u la r or super, w u h a soft p o ly e th y le n e applicator. S ec h o w m u c h b e t t e r few er ta m p o n s r a n be. House Hopefuls One-Time Choice Meet Tonight Moonlights in Nude Campus News in Brief CHI ALPHA will meet at 7:30 p.m . Thursday, a t Dr. Charles H. Meisgier’s home, 2703 Rich- creek, to hear Dick Pickens speak about “ Evangelism on Campus.” COLLEGE OF Bl SINES ADMIN­ ISTRATION will hold a meeting of class officer candidates at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in Busi­ ness- Economics Building 200. El LEN SPIEGEL VERIEN, Ger­ man club, will meet from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m. Thursday in Union Building 305 for its second reg­ ular meeting which will include German songs and dances. PHYSICS COLI >OQUIUM will ba held at 4 p.m. in Physics Build­ ing 121 to hear Dr. Alexei Mar- aduin, chairm an of the phy­ sics departm ent of University of California at Irvine. SOI P-SANDWICH FORUM will be held at noon Thursday in Nordan Lounge of University Christian Church to hear Dr. Irwin Spear, associate profes­ sor of botany, speak on “Al­ tering Human Behavior through Biological M eans.” TRAVIS AUDUBON SOCIETY will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thurs­ day at the American National Bank Auditorium to hear John L. Spinks Jr. speak about the activities of the National Audo- bon Society. A male professor posing nude . for a national magazine front and side views? . . It didn't happen here, although the freethinking instructor was at one time offered a job by the University. When representatives of t h e French ami Italian Department despaired of persuading w riter Jacques Vier to occupy a chair as French Writer in Residence, they offered tile job to dram atist Fernando Arr abel. This month, Arrabel appears in the nude in “ E vergreen” m aga­ zine, after or gin a I choice Vier decided to come to Texas, after all. Flurries of letters and cables let second-choice Arrabe! know of Vier’s decision, telling him in a kind way that Vier was in and he, Arrabel, was out — presum­ ably hefore adm inistrators were aware that Arrabel moonlighted as a nude model. In a departm ental letter, Dr. Jam es Stephenson, associate pro­ Italian, fessor of French and termed the invitation to Arrabel “ a goof on our p art.” “ R i c e may present its favorite students in the buff in their year­ book.” Stephenson admitted. “ But can Texas dare to allow its pro­ fessors to appear in such reveal­ ing poses?” Bevo I was barbecued in 1919 to celebrate a victory over Texas A&M. The branded hide was sent to the Aggie athletic association. Professor Discusses Indian Philosophy Buddhism Offers New Ideas Bv FRENCH! GOLDING When student* come to Univer­ sity Buddhist philosophy Prof. R aja Rao to tell him of their d r u g experiences, he a s k s , “Why stim ulate yourself w i t h drugs when Indian philosophy can help you achieve the same sensation?” Rao, who has been lecturing the University and teaching at since 1963, believes life's em phasis should bp on serious thinking and experiencing that life. RAO, leaning back in his swiv­ et chair, said he encourages stu­ dents in his classes to learn to understand themselves “because m o r e understanding in the world causes m ore love,” The 60-year-old professor, bom In Bassan in Mysore, India, does not live in Austin all the time. His wife, who was a student at t!he University, is in India now’ with their son. He took their pic­ ture from his wallet and proud­ ly explained that it is because of her that he is now teaching. “ She made me realize that the young in this country are t h e the most sincere and perhaps most of intellectually-seeking all I have encountered.” “THREE YEARS ago, ISO stu­ dents registered for my class, Since then. the enrollment h a s risen to 250.” With a gleam In his dark eyes, he added. “This obviously shows that today’s stu­ dent wants to think and is seek­ ing knowledge.” Ran encourages students 'lough Rao audit his classes, “ as they don’t mind sitting on floor.” A is a professor of Buddhism, he actually Is not a Buddhist. “The Vedantic philo­ sophy is my way of life. Essen­ tially.” he explained, “this is a non-dualistic theory which covers the whole of life.” He emphasized that as long as there is duality and the world to long a* the T H E Counseling-Psychological Ser­ vices Center Is Available To Serve You Immediately is divided into two parts, there Is suffering and pain and hatred and sorrow. to bring about “THERE MUST be unity, a 'oneness,’ love and peace. Til is can be accom­ plished by serious and realistic asking thinking, for example, oneself questions is the nature of man and of hu­ man relations?” like *what There must be objectivity in the world, not sentimentality, he stressed, to bring about under­ standing and therefore, love and peace. RAO BELIEVES that Budd­ hism and Indian philsnphv a r e an excellent introduction to se­ rious thinking and living. How­ ever. he fells that the future of the western world is somewhere beyond Buddhism, “because, as a religion, it does have its limi­ tations. That Is why I teach only the philosophy and not the reli- gion.” The long-haired Rao, d a d in a black Nehru suit, considers him­ self to be primarily a fiction writer. He has written three nov­ els and many short stories on philsophical fiction. HE DOES, however, g e t a great d e a l of pleasure from teaching his ideas of life, death and ego. Rao does not believe in death p e r s e . “ Something dies,” h e said, “ but something beyond the body exists and this permanent being within the physical body does not die.” The professor encourages his students not just to accept this theory but instead to think and experience it for themselves. The Buddhist philosopher also has ideas that are quite differ­ ent about negative thoughts. He gives an example: “If one says he hates his neighbor, he is say­ ing this statem ent from a stand­ point of love, or a positive posi­ tion. And when the neighbor who you once liked treats you bad­ ly, you forget the love you had experienced.” Therefore, he con­ cludes that entwined in hate ara love and involvement. for *eats Candidates the House of Delegates must attend a meeting at 9 p m. Wednesday in Union Building 325. in Lynn Malone, chairm an of the House election commission, said candidates will draw for ballot and sign positions. They also will receive copies of the election code. If it is impossible for a can­ didate to attend, he may send another student as a representa­ tive, but that student must have a written authorization from the candidate. THROUGH ITS W ALK-IN SERVICE N O A PPO IN TM EN T IS NECESSARY, JUST W A L K -IN Center Hours 8:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m. Mon-Thurs. and 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Fri. Ph.: GR 1-3515 o th er times call The 24 hour Telephone Counseling and Referral Service a p art of the C enter GR 8-7073 This service receives calls Students! Stop 'n Shop NO W OPEN IN OUR NEW LOCATION AT 2706 RIO GRANDE (RIO GRANDE MEDICAL CINTER! Plenty of Free Parking G IR LS -- W e have hose at only 49c a pair. 24 HOURS a Day 365 DAYS a Year WE CASH STUDENT CHECKS Raymond's Drug THE TEXAS UNION ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE Presents IN CONCERT Friday, Oct. 17 Gregory Gym UT Students, Faculty, Staff $3.00 (LD. Required At Door) General Admission $4.00 TICKET LOCATIO NS: Fine Arts Box Office, H o gg Auditorium Blomquist-Clark (Downtown) Hillel Group Plans Nightly Activities The Hillel Foundation In t h e University area has a full sche­ dule of events and things to do for the fall semester. The founda­ tion’s headquarters at 2105 S a n Antonio will be open practically every night of the week w i t h many different activities that are open to everyone on campus. Beginning on Mondays at 7 :3Q p m. there is a choir session and Israeli folk dancing taught by Mrs. Larry Caroline. On Tuesday. also at 7:30 p.m., there will be in basic Judaism and a class another called a Survey of Mod­ em Jewish History. On Wednesdays a creativity session is planned beginning at 7:30 p.m. There will be facilities for clay modeling, multi-media slide making, jewelry making and a jam session. A kosher meal Is served at 6 p.m. Tmirsday for a nominal fee. A Hebrew’ speaking table will be set for those w h • wish to keep up their language abilities. Jewish s e r v i c e s will he held at 8:15 p.m. on Friday*. A lox and bagels supper will be offered at 6 p.m. each Sunday. On Sat- u rd a vs the building will be open for anyone looking for a place to study or just talk with friends. The Hillel will have a social action project going all semester. Volunteers are sought to t e a c h children without adequate school clothes how to sew. Several special events are plan­ ner! for the year. An ice cream social and fun night is scheduled for Saturday. Later there will he a Shabdaton weekend, a three- day seminar based on the topic “Choosing a Sex Ethic.” A one- day Israeli institute with informa­ tion on soc’ia1 and economic issues in Israel also will be offered. Nuns, Priests See Once-Banned Films ROME (AP) — Twice a week, love scenes on film are torrid to hundreds of nuns, shown p r ie s t s and seminarians in a venerable Jesuit Institution di- recetly under Vatican control. The scenes cxrnie in films by Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni, Spain’s Luis Bunuel and other directors. They a r e part of a new course entitled “ Faith and Unbelief in the Mod­ em Cinema” being taught at the Gregorian University. For t h * 400 year-old Grego­ training ground for much rian. (rf the Roman Catholic church's It hierarchy, the course is consid­ ered revolutionary. indicate* the school's new approach to the the R e v . secular world Herve Carrier, a Canadian so­ ciologist, took over as rector la 1966. since in movie “ Some of the films have been banned by the Vatican for show­ ing theaters run by Catholics,” said the Rev. Naza- rene Taddei, the course direc­ tor. “But ours is considered a special case, We present t h e films only to those enrolled in the course and I give a one-hour lecture on each film.” Today's Events 11:15 a.m. Texas Union Ideas and Issues Committee meets in Un­ ion Junior Ballroom for a sand­ wich Seminar, with Robert B. Chambers, dram a instructor, to speak on “ The Human in Uni­ form .” Noon Baptist Student Union meets at BSH Center, 2204 San An­ tonio, to hear Jack Patterson, track coach. 4:00 p.m. .Spooks meet at Alpha Delta Pi. 7:30 p.m. American Marketing Association meets in Rusiness- Economies Building 155 for its organizational meeting. 7:30 p.m. Hillel Foundation meets at 2105 San Antonio for a crea­ tivity session. 7:30 p.m. Objectivism S t u d y Group meets in Business-Eco­ nomics Building 162 to hear David Heiber speak on “Meter physics: The Starting Point” 7:30 p.m. University Speleologi­ cal Society m eets in Physics Building 313 to discuss a club trip to Bustamente, Mexico. 8 p.rn. School of Architecture meets in Architecture Building 105. 9 p.m. College Life meets in Pl Bets Phi sorority house, 2300 San Antonio, to hear Ralph Mc. Cune, director of Austin Young Life. AH I>ay. Office of the University “Y” closed in support of the Vietnam war moratorium. AH Day. Student Travel office at 2226 Guadalupe closed in sup­ port of the Vietnam war m ora­ torium. TICKET DRAWING BEGINS TODAY CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE THE TEXAS UNION W S h e r m a n P it lu c k pretsnhI—. F IR S T A M E R IC A N T O U R PRAG U E SYM PH O N Y OFFICIAL ORCHESTRA OF THE CITY OF PRAGUE * a splendid ensem ble - played radiantly ** London, S un day T im et a provided memorable playing n L ondon, M usic and M usicians DATE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1969 TIME: 8:00 PM. PLACE: MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM TICKET DRAWING: MONDAY-FRIDAY 9-4 HOGG AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE FREE TO U.T. BLANKET TAX AN D SEASON TICKET HOLDERS BLANKET TAX A N D TICKET DRAW N MUST BOTH BE PRESENTED AT DOOR RESERVED SECTIONS ONLY BUS SCHEDULE TO BF. PRINTED IN THE DAILY TEXAN O N TUESDAY, OCT. 19(19 THE DESIGNING COMPUTER C o m in g Thursday in the O ctober issue of texas engineering & science m agazine Another p u b lic a t io n o f TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS, INC. wmmmm Fag* IO Wednesday, O d. 15, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN Attaining Manhood Theme of ’Johnny tors had done. The ensemble dren's tickets are 50 cents *nd adult tickets SI and are available method lets the directors look at in the Box Office in Hogg Adul­ what the actors have created toid urn. and then m a k e the final deci •ions on what Is best for any char acier The strange*! boy in the world wants to become a man. That is 12-year-old Johnny Moonbeam, A boy who has a moonbeam aa a guardian and a frontiersman as a friend is the s u b j e c t mf “ Johnny Moonbeam a n d the S il­ ver Arrow,” the first Children's Theatre production by the Depart- men of Drama. Directed and choreographed by France* Wolfe and Coleman A. Jennings, members of t h a drama department, the play Is an adventure to a new realm of theatre experience. Wolfe and Jennings have work­ ed with the cast as an ensemble. The actors have improvised and created alone, finding what Is best Jennings them, then and Wolfe okayed what the ac­ for “ This way of working has es­ tablished an u n u s u a l rapport among all of us.” Jennings said, "but it is very time consuming. We have taken as much a* two and one-half hours to work on a two-minute scene." that feels Tannings “ Johnny Moonbeam and Che Silver A r­ row” w ill rreate an atmosphere of fun and excitement for achoo! children of all ages. The play w i 11 be presented in the Theatre Room of the Drama Building F ri­ day through Sunday, Oct, 24 to 26 and Oct. 31 to Nov. I. Chil- Dept. of R ad io /T V /F ilm present* TONI GUERNICA W > !n « oman # 4 October 15 Jester Aud. 75c 6:30 & 9:00 A W i l l BALANCED ASSORTMINT NHICH WE STRONGLY RECOMMEND “ I STRONGLY URGE YOU TO SEL GENESIS I IT IS THE BIRTH OF A HIW ERA IN FILMMAKING T o e O'ct ti P Pa CINEMA 40 Presents Marcel Carre's Children of Paradise Friday, O at. 17, 7:30 P.M. Baths Had Aud. Non-Members 75c “INTRIGUING...SEE THE WORKS OF THE NEW HITCHCOCKS, GODARDS AND FELLINIS!” THE BOSTON GLOBE A FRESH CO LLEC TIO N OF C IN E M A T IC S T Y L « BY A N EW GENERATION OF Y O U N G FILM MAKERS UNIT ORMS f EXCELLENT - REPRINTING I KRY TYPE OF FILM SNORT N e v * . W . l j K ' RARITY LESS THAN FASCINATING AS A SHEER VISUAL TRIP Dress Rehearsal M el Freeland (I) es the Medicine Man give* Johnny Moonbeam, played by Robert logan, tasks before he can be a man in "Johnny Moonbeam and the Silver Arrow." Paul Zukofsky to Perform Free tickets are being drawn for the second event on the New Artists Now Series, 8 concert by Paul Zukofsky, at the University Box Office In Hogg Auditorium. The 25-year-old violinist, called “ the very best of new-generation violin playing" by the New York Times, comes on the heels of the Oct. I concert by the New Percus­ sion Quartet from Buffalo. Like the quartet, Zukofsky w ill perform some for-out music w rit­ ten in the Twentieth Century One piece, “ Violin Phases" by Steve Reich, is for violin and pre-re­ corded tape. He w ill also play two n e w works for solo violin by David Lewin and Charles W uorir G J I a*? well as works for violin and piano by Crumb. Rave! and I sang Vim. W illiam Doppmann, faculty art­ ist, w ill be at the piano. D ie concert w ill be at 8:15 pm . Frid ay in Hogg Auditorium. Admission is free to blanket tax holders and purchasers of the So­ lo Artist Series season ticket Other seats w ill be sold at $1 students and $1.50 adults, In addition to the concert, Zuk­ . ofsky wiH have an open violin rehearsal at noon Thursday in Recital H all and w ill talk about technique# cwt temporary violin TONIGHT, THE RETURN OF Shiva's Headband! WED. Oct. 15, THURS. Oct. I i 8:30-12 Hear Shiva's new single release "Take He To The Mountains' on Arm adillo Records S I C ( n i r r « H af Phil's 705 W . 24 LAST TWO NIGHTS! TEXAS UNION THEATRE 7:00 & 9:00 EACH NIGHT lead guitar,vocals,piano,acoustic guitar,words,music No other album can make that statement. On Colum bia Records Avadabk rn 8-trod* Koto tap* cornu!** arui 4-track rttl -co »tcl n a to 1apt W«dn*id*y, O ct. 15, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* I * TV In Focus Special Reports on Moratorium B y SU SA N W E ST M O R E ! A V D T V Editor Moratorium or no morator­ ium ; no matter what your poli­ tical betels happen to be, y o u might find it comforting to know that those Met* are still playing ball. In case you want to watch the fourth game of the Series, It starts about noon Wednesday en channels 4 and 42. Wednesday night’s TV r u n * the gamut, to say the least De­ buting on channel 9 at 7 p.m. is the first of eight half-hour inter- v i e w * with t h e '‘President s Men.” As it did during the John­ son Adm inistration, the show fo­ cuses on the man and his office, rather than trying to “ get t h e Inside poop.*’ Secretary of De- T e n s e Melvin Laird carries the torch Wednesday n i g h t , pass­ ing it to Robert Finch, George Romney, Arthur Bum s and Herb KJein, among other*, In the en­ suing weeks. From I^aird to Tennessee E r ­ nie Ford is a formidable leap. But for just relaxing and listen­ ing to country music Binger* from Campbell to Cash, Cram er to Goldsboro. Pride to Haggard, you can't beat the Country Mu­ sic Association A w a r d s cere­ monies. They're under the aus­ pices of K raft Music H all, 8 p.m. on channels 4 and 42. the moratorium close to home, channel 9 has planned an hour- long special (live and tape), at 8 p.m. KTBC called to tell us that CBS is giving M erv a day off to take his time slot for their s p e c i a l on the moratorium. That’s at 10:30 p.m. on channels 5 and 7. (NBG and ABC might change their programming, too —nothing official had been re­ ported at press tim e.) Our friendly cool medium ta its collegiate keeping up with friends, though. For a report of Would you just howl to think of Rod McKuen in a 1956 S a I adolescent Saxon M lncoJohn THEATRE F e a t u r e * 1 2 : 0 0 g g g j £ g 1 : 4 0 - 8 : 2 ® - 5 O O fi:40 . 8:2®- IO (to LAST D AY! in Mn pro ran moors fjj§ PANAVISION* TECHNICOLOR- gm From WARNER BROS.-5EVEN ARTS VII ] 3 U i » JHTERSTATEl NOW! l l * * * * PARK1 STATE Downtown ?1» consarn I THEATRE I I . i V 1 2 2 0 I 5 5 - 3 5 ® - 5 O O * lf) <1 • 4R *: • STARTS TODAY • F U A T I R E S M A T F V E E S f t O O U I I P I S T I L • r . M . TR A N S ★ T EX A S Ii o rI 2200 Hancock Drnre — 453 6641 e c ia l Lim ited EN G A G E M E N T S p V O T A R E S E R V E D S E A T A T T R A C T I O N M A T I N E E S D A I L Y — R E U L T A R K I N P R I C E S •OMC ENCHANTED EVENING YOU SHOULD SEE "SOUTH PACIFIC.” -SO U T H P A C IF IC " IS A M O VIE THAT W ILL M O V E YOU. rr HAS A WAY OF GETTING INTO YOUR HEART. AND ON ITS WAY TO OUR HEART, “SO UTH P A C IFIC * W ILL PUT A LUMP IN YOUR THROAT. -SO U T H P A C IF IC " IS A BIG MUSICAL, WITH S O M E OF R O D G E R S AND H A M M E R S T E IN ^ B IG G EST SO N G S. I T S ALL INVO LVED WITH BIG TH IN G S LIKE LOVE. COURAGE. PREJUDICE, WAR. CO MM ITM ENT, LAUGHTER AND DEATH. SEE “SOUTH PACIFIC," ANO YOU*U HAVE AN ENCHANTING TIME. drama c a l l e d “Rock, Pretty Bab y?” Get ready to m uffle the just noise then, because that’s what wraps up the evening, at midnight on 42. Eveoing viewing: 6:30 12 Flying Nun 4, 6, 42 Virginian 5, 7 Glen Campbell 9 News 7 :00 12 Eddie’* Father 9 President’s Men 7:30 12 Room 222 5, 7 Beverly H illbillies 9 Book Beat 8:00 4, 6, 42 Music H all 5 Medical Center 7 Movie—“ In Love a n d W ar” 9 Vietnam Moratorium Day 12 Movie—“Gidget G o a * Hawaiian” 9 OO 4, 8, 42 Then Came Bron­ son 5 Hawaii Flve-O 9 On Being Black 10:00 4, 5, 7, 12. 42 News, Wea­ ther, Sports 9 Insight 10:30 4, 42 Johnny Carson 5, 7 CBS Special-Vietnam moratorium 9 The Advocates 12 Movie—“ Divorce Am­ erican Style” 42 Movie—“ Rock, Pretty Baby” 12:00 7 News r^\ I / . rn 1 Longhorn, Dri ve I ti Theatre US H*y 183 H 4M .3880 A N D S o i l ! It W is t ill Oh vt1 'n Theatre 39Q0 M) Conf* 442 3116 P A R A S O L V T P I C H R E * pr, a m u n u t TIM RUNCO Ze f f ir e l l i PnJwlm al Romeo ^JULIET Hester Returns Carolyn He*4ar, originally from AurHn, wfll appear with har new band, The Coalition, Wednesday night at Municipal Auditorium. Other musician! to be at the 8 p.m. concert are Gordon Liqhtfoot, Jimmy Driftwood and Jerry Jeff Walk ar. Tickets may be purchased at the bo* office, and prices are $5 reserved and $3.50 general admission. Dennis Hopper Directing Film Based on His Experiences (c ) 1969 New York Times News Service N EW YO RK — Dennis Hopper, the 33-year-old w o n d e r w h o wound up in the winner’s circle with his first directorial effort, “ Easy Rider,” is ready at tne B O X O F F I C E O P E N 8 : 8 ® S H O W S T A R T S 7 3 0 — I ? R O P E R C A R L O A D — “DAZZLIN G ” - L I F E S T U D IO IV 2-J Lu*I bib • 4i- n4..t» RATED ” X ” — No One Under 18 Admitted starting line with his second fea­ ture. Ifs called “ The Last Mo­ vie,” but Hopper is quick to as­ sure that there w ill indeed be many others to follow. “ The script is by Stewart Stem, but I wrote the original story back in 1965,” Hopper said. “ It s based on my experiences mak­ ing ‘The Sons of Katie Ed ier' in Mexico. I ’m going to ask Henry Hathaway and John W ay­ ne, the director and the star of that film , to make brief appear­ ances in The Last Movie.’ I'll play a wrangler who works with the horses that are used in t h • film within a film . The story tells W h a t happens to the wrang­ ler and to the peasants of the village after the film company pulls o u t and re tu rn s to Holly­ wood.” Hopper plans to start produc­ tion tor Universal next month In Peru. “ I wanted to shoot it in Mexico, but the authorities a r e concerned about our show rig the poverty in their villages.” WTiat does a director do aper he's made his “ Last M ovie?” He makes Another, of course. “ I ll do The S e c o n d Chance.’ which P e t e r Fonda and I It's a have already set down. dramatization if our efforts to get enough money to make ‘Easy Rider.’ ” THE sensual experience of ‘69 "A SORT OF FANTASY-REALITY MIXTURE, TINGED WITH THE SUPERHATURAL!...WEIRD AND WAY-OUT AND MYSTERIOUS AND EROTIC-SOY I" -B e l ttld *n l, H. Y. Daily Catan* This motion picture is rated adults only, naturally. Q ic ’ 7 • "I 'I A, •- J- ■■ :'K ■ &iLf TECHNICOLOR* A PARAMOUNT PICTURE — C O - F E A T ! R E — J A N E R O B E R T F O N D A R E D F O R D . H A L W A L L IS R flg £ * Q o r rn f u f P a r k A PARAMOUNT PCTUftC A R E A L SU PER TH RILLER t M o r U - d I . a d i e u F r e e S u p e r S n e a k W e d P M . C o l l e j C A A M i l i t a r y W e l c o m e 8 / I . C A P I T A L P L A Z A w ^ y * * % JE * r% x > L ^ ■ 1 ^ 6 5 ? N O IN T t B R f O l O N M H W Y BOBBERS & HAMMERSTEIN COLOR BY DELUXE ROSSANO BRIZZI • MITZI GAYNOR JOHN KERR • FRANCE N U Y E N HN—rtn* RAY WALSTON J U A N I T A R A U . Produced by BUDDY ADLER s M g a f f i S r a s * - * - * — JOSHUA L06A N : • ta Nothta Ll** * PJS? L -J T rJL * a is ■ a * * * • • G o « * t a * * • * T h * Minht nota * ------- . . . . . O PEN 1:45 • $1.00 TIL 5 P.M. FEATURES 2-4-6-8-10 12224 Guadalupe St-477-1944 HEID OVER! 2nd RIBALD WEEK! IM GM presents A Carlo Font) Production Starring (avid H em m ing* Joanna Pettet FT Because ot the unusual nature of I h e t it le , we suggest you call tor the lull meaning so that you will not he surprised by the sophisticated subject matter ot this lilm _____________l(x ) Ea*tm an co lo r* c o s u r - g George Sanders -Dany Robin-Warren Mitchell ta COLON, T R A N S ★ T E X A S ROCKING CHAIR SEATS SMOKING p e r m itte d 1 L J 11 / T T 11 *1 ii " } " L U I D O U B L E F E A T U R E MAN NAS CONQUERED THE MOON WITH THE EPIC APOILO ll FLIGHT! NOW TAKE ANOTHER MOMENTOUS JOURNEY! f r e e p a r k i n g O F I C X C is ACRES | “SUCCUBUS" ftantat JANINE REYNAUD • JACK TAYLOR ernmm b, ADRIAN HOVEN DhwdaM % JESS FRANCO* PIER A. CAMlFRHECt a a caMknri • wmw mown on* (ta. Fwduee* ta TV* AQUM FILM EW W FRM f * taUUM A T M M AKMCAN F U A KLLASL, " tcswariptaj bg FREE PARKING a y u * « * m o * f l o t s , 7it> A I A V A C * S T S INTERSTATE 75c T IL 2:15 VARSITY ■ ( O I G U A O A L U . P I THEATRE • 4 K A T I K L I S 2 :1 0 - 4 :® * - 5 :5 0 » HELD OVER! 3rd RECORD W E EK " ” ll ‘ EASY RIDER’ IS TERRIBLY POWERFUL!’ -RICH ARD COL DSTEfN, N y. TIMES “ AN HISTORIC M0VIE!” "AN ELOQUENT FILM.’ -RICH ARD SCHICKEL. L ir * - ROLAND GELATT. SATURDAY REVIEW "ASTONISHINGLY PERFECT!” “ GO.SQUIRM!” -A RC H ER WINSTEN. NEW YORK POST -LOOK MACLAINE "WILL KNOCK YOU OUT OF YOUR SEAT!” " EXTRAORDINARY ACHIEVEMENT!” - n e w r e p u b l i c "THE IMPACT IS DEVASTATING!” - JU D IT H CRIST. NEW YORK MAGAZINE "A MAJOR RAKEHELL FILM I” - t im e "THE REALTHING!” ” STUNNING!” - PEN EL O P E GILLIATT. THE NEW YORKER - C B S RADIO "ROUSING, RHYTHMIC, SPLENDID!” —ANOREW SARRIS. VILLAGE VOICE "A VIBRANT, BRUTAL ESSAY.” - p l a y b o y " ELOQUENT, AND IMPORTANT!” •►JOSEPH MORGENSTERN, NEWSWEEK •attry* p-jw*m«« •mm ti rnrnta® e a 5 S m B * PETER FONDA- DENNIS HOPPER • ^ i*f TC** FONDA c * C * w - t a M O P K t R HRRYteujTMttat W FMKniw *nrtnfONO* w il l ia m hay* * * o ac »r s e w * o r * OwacietaWf R-wMt— m ». ..... -y D A D I / A m u 6 e m o n l o t s r A i V I v I m V J A O l A C E N n O T M E A T S t I k l / " * c o . OR AUSTIN C O N G K I S S 3 1 1 0 S O THEATRE “ J A L O P I E S ’ * 5 30 - S M “ O D D ( O I P L K * * V t? MUMEY TO THE HNI BIDE Of THE Sill! . ■ A P R I ! I I M S M M . M N C F E A T U R E S rills Beatles YeBow Submarine SHOW N AT 4.00 and 9: :ffT THINNES ■ IAN M U N N UK-PM BC* W M M - U i.n iM ( e ) J aERBERTlOM I X T E C H N I C O L O R A T 7 : 4 * P . M . D O O R H O P E N 5 :1 5 12 Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN TfCMMCtt TF /MMS* /1 PtMMOtfvT APtW FR EE P A R K IN G A T A L L T IM E S SOIK CFNTUtY FO* *»ES£NT* John Whyne Rock Hudson hthe Undefeated WMH tutti grift To n y A g u il a r CO IT Attune ROMAN GABRIEL DARIAN MCCARGO LEE MERIWETHER MERLIN OLSEN MELISSA NEWMAN BRUCE CABOT BEN JOHNSON W00UCED IT ROBERT L. JACKS DW? Cif 0 IT ANDREW V. McLAGlEN SCRf EKPUY BY JAMES LEE BARRETT •jute COMPOSED MIO COBOUCTfO IT HUSO MONTENEGRO PANAVlSfON* COLOR BY DELUXE (g [ tatami fa am ati, i? HELD OVER 2nd BIG WEEK O P E N T O N I G H T A T H I H S . S : 4 5 p . m . — F e a t u r e 7 I j o ■ I KAHOKA! GENERAL CORPORA KCW FOX Theatre •is: lim n m a . 454-2711 Artist Bridges Science Gap Gibbs Milliken bridges the gap between art and science. He Is scientist-tumed-artist w h o a paints images of nature, not man. He tries to find symbolism in natural life. How Milliken, assistant profes­ sor of art who received a BS in art and biology, switched to­ wards art from biology is inter­ esting. He was the assistant cura­ tor and later curator of natural science with the Witte Memorial Museum in San Antonio for sev­ en years. During this time he also did scientific illustrations and documented drawings. H i s shift of interest from biology to art came about this time. University of Colorado offered Milliken a scholarship in ecology. After a year of study, he switch­ ed from science to a visual in­ terpretation of natural forms. He then attended Cranbrook Acad, emy of Art In Michigan and re­ ceived a master of fine arts de­ gree in 1965. Since then, he has been teaching basic design and painting at the University. Milliken, w h o described his paintings as microcogisms of landscapes, has 18 paintings on exhibit in the Alumni Center. An e x a m p l e of his contemporary style is a painting titled Trans­ formation’ in which he envisions life coming out of death. He also has a painting series of stones on exhibit. Some In this collec­ 'Green Stone,’ ‘Blade tion are Stone’ and Transforming Stone.’ Hts works, which will be on ex­ hibit for the entire year, are for sale. Prices range from $90 to $900. His paintings have appeared in more than 50 exhibits in t h e United States and Mexico. Some of the shows in which his works have been exhibited are National Academy Galleries in New York, Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Corpus Christi Museum and La­ in guna Gloria A r t Museum Austin. Besides these exhibits he has some paintings in permanent col­ lections. They are Butler Insti­ in Ohio, tute of American Art Museum of Fine Arts in Mont­ gomery, Al a. a n d Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. In 1968, Milliken was selected to exhibit his works with 39 oth. er artists in the Modem Realism and Surrealism collection spon­ sored by tile American Federa­ tion of Art in New York. He is listed In Who* Who In American Art, Who’s Who in the South and Southwest and in the ninth edition of the Interna­ tional Directory of Arts. Symmetrically Balanced M AW V-inw iM O — 9 AUSTIN DRIVE-IN THEATRES Wgirje*** it ti ny —-jrr riv, {{elk Abeeflitpeople //foouj iud tie music I sin?!foe you cote iud s te t fife iudhyfinJf d is ft 9 THE WARM. WONDERFUL FULL-LENGTH MOTION PICTURE about the man who became A LEGEND IN HIS OWN TIME! b f WH TI* C A M OfcW W AHC* p m * the ARTHUR Mi OH rn BARRON inrturDoe rf 99 HE MAN HIS WORLD HIS MUSIC! J JWCWTEII n i l l M H T B W IK U i nieHTTIftMT ctA ih ns i rn Tone ma — I T R A N S ★ T E X A S m m MOG But nit Road - 465 6933 • BOX - OFFICE OPEN 6:30 S H O W STARTS 7:30 4 10:30 i CO -F l-ATI KR " T E N N E S S E E R E B E L " SH O W S — t : Ii J O H N VT CASH BOX-OFFICE OPEN 6:30 J S H O W STARTS 7:30 V&r ( O i K A I • K R P A I L V K W M A V A S "H O M B R E" ★ N O W SHOW ING — 2 AUSTIN DRIVE-IN THEATRES ★ The Restoration Comedy About What Cannot Be Restored... «von Tom Jones never had It so goodI C X UMH* PKI I UM. S »«*■>« * COMMO « * 0OUCT©N CHRSIOPHfR mine-SUSANNAH YORK-GLYNIS JOHNS rn bANNLN til SII L M WOR Jill owl . cXgcfcU p£our2ku*g/iters" • » ' n R u « M w m a r m nm w rnm we vets m a w n n e w ■ t v tm ^ ^ in i ai Mi mmMW a Im 80*00 fem* AHR Ami •» !•*■*» Mn Im a* mu* **«m* rn » m m ‘■-'im » ** .»rte t a * *w ta OSP Jjjj m m i i , ... 1 S h o t w n o w I .s. \ • ■ . . m U,\ .it IHI 4>) 844 J ® v l f * BOX OFFICES OPEN 6:30 SHOW — 7:30 C O ­ H U f ' Y 20th Century-Fox presents FELDER COOKS _ % SMA C a t o B y D i l i a * Pi1/fl6lices;PiI£ C O ­ H U — P hoto by R«»n« Pere*. G ibbi Milliken, artist, holds a student's painting while sitting in the background that he had the student paint. Program to Air Options on War A special program describing five options for resolving the Viet­ nam conflict wiH be broadcast at 2 p.m. Wednesday on KUT- FM, the radio service of the Uni­ versity. The program Is entitled "Viet­ nam: Which Way Chit?” Osborn Elliot, editor of News­ week magazine, will discuss the problem with three members of the magazine’s staff. T O N IT E ! THE SWEET TARTS PEACE DANCE No Cover Charge THS NBW m u m OPEN 8:30 P.M. 12th 4 Red River 478-0292 ROCKS FROM URANUS CATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER BASEMENT O C T . 13-17 8-9 p.m. FREE Der Wienerschnitzel 411 W. 24th Just Off "The Drag" Biggest Name in Hot Dogs Charles Magnan De Chavigny D O C T O R O F M I S I C VOICE AND PIANO Formerly with th* METROPOLITAN OPERA of NY AND THE PARIS OPERA ________________T E L . 4 5 4 -4 &4 S 48 HOUR KODACOLOR PRINTS •ring Us Your Espoied R U by 4: PM Prints Ready 48 Hrs. Later et 4 : PM STUDTMAN P H O T O • 19th at Lavaca Cam eron V illa ge m H p f i n i " " Behn Knows Reason! Why Spies Popular STARTS TODAY! AT L DRIVE-IN THEATRES! O ‘E l e c t r i f y i n g ... a fir st -r a te e x e r c i s e in a s t o n i s h m e n t t h a t g r o w s w ild e r -NEWSWEEKMagazine a n d w i l d e r ! " NM NEW YORK (AP) — Noel Behn (prounounced Ben), w h o has w r i t t e n two death and destruction spy thrillers, thinks he knows why so many well-or­ dered, law-abiding people read that kind at fiction. that "We come from a frontier tra­ dition and the hero there is the loner, the man outside of socie­ the hero ty. We consider can not be affected by society, or can control society. Most peo­ ple would like to be more im­ mune to the world around them, and our heros are Innovators, sports stars, presidents, gangs­ ters and .spies. "THERE’S no one more Indivi­ dualistic than the criminal. And we're interested in spies for the same reason we’re interested in Al Capone and Billy the Kid, "Spying is the part of intelli­ gence that is illegal-and ifs the only part that Interests people. We're not Intrigued with how our government monitors a coun­ try’s radio broadcasts and reads Its newspapers and gets m o r e Poet Schedules Public Reading1 Poet Louis Zukafsky will give a reading from his work Thursday at the University. The reading, which is open t o the public, is scheduled at 7:30 pun. in the Art Building Audi­ torium. j Zuko&ky, whose most recent work is a second volume of col­ lected poems entitled "All,” has been a published writer for more than 40 years. He continues work on a long autobiographical poem "A.” In tire foreword to "A,” Zukofsky is credited with creating the term ‘‘object:visf ’ In 1 9 3 2 to describe the best poets of the period. He has also written discussions of Henry Adams and Shakespeare. "Bottom: On Shakespeare" w a s published bv the University in 1964. All of Zukofsky’s major manu­ scripts and correspondence are in the collection of the Humanities Research Center. Information than recruited agents. from a1! our "I’ve got a feeling that down deep everyone would like to have a license to kill.” recent THE BOOM in spy novels is rel­ toe United atively in States — starting when former President John F. Kennedy said he read novelist Ian Fleming and his J a m e s Bond novels. Then, Americans rn e t the real­ ism school of spy fiction in John I.e Carre’s "The Spy Who Came In From The Cold” and bought 225,000 copies in hardcover and more than two million in paper­ back. S i n c e then, the purists and "exaggerated purist”, t h e type Behn is, have cut the wider swath. "As we learn more about spy­ ing, and as toe cold war goes on,” Behn says, "ifs not that easy to spoof it any more.” FLEMING and lie Carre, Erie Ambler and Len Deighton, t h e well-known writers of spy fic­ tion w e r e European. Behn’s "The Kremlin Letter” in t h e winter of 1966 - 67 is believed to be the first of toe genre by an American to become a No. I best - seller i the tough market of France. CninoNah Unfed mam AFada-MMnrMiBlFVoducfiaR Sandy Dennis ‘H e 1EikelBunS.8U5McBMbi-JoinG0Hd±-limJjste 0 ( O-FEATTKE q q I H WOMEN Maria Mart adaa SCHELL- MCCAMBRIDGE luciana Harbart PALUZZI LOM a s COLOR t h * G o v e r n o r hiw'rwi J r n C i r X . R A T E D — N O ONE UNDER 18 YEARS ADMITTED T R A N S ★ T E X A S 5601 N. Lamar Blvd - 4 6 5 1710 O P E N 7: SH O W S TAA TS 7 30 “ C OI .DDAY” 7 HO - l l : 15 “ W O M E N ” S i b ONLY OPEN SHOW ST ABTS 7:00 J "ALICES RESTAURANT' ARL0 GUTHRIE SPECIAL 2 hour IN PERSON CONCERT W E D N E S D A Y E V E N I N G OCT 22“ * 8:00 P.M. *Sho°wnW AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM TICKETS: $5, $4, $3 RESERVED RAYMOND’S DRUG • UNIVERSITY AREA MONTGOMERY WARD S • CAPITAL PLAZA RECORD SHOP • D OW TOW N GIBSON'S • BEN WHITE BLVD. ONLY MAIL ORDERS: P.O. BOX 1316, AUSTIN, TEXAS 78767 MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE JAM PRODUCTIONS — ENCLOSE SELF ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE A JAM PRODUCTION S f PRESENTS A CHEQUERED FLAG PRODUCTION AN EVENMG W rrfi CORDON LIGHTFOOT CAROLYN HESTER COALITION JIMMY DRIFTWOOD JERRY JEFF WALKER IIM PERSON-8PM‘WbJNEsdiy,OcT. 15 A ustin^ M unicipal AudhoRiuM tfRESBMd SMflqEN.AdM. TICKETS NOW ON SALE P I Z Z A Z Z - 1 4 1 5 L A V A C A R E Y N O L D S P E N L A N D — 1 1 t h & C O N G R E S S H E M P H I L L ' S B O O K S T O R E - 2 2 4 4 G U A D A L U P E M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D R E C O R D S H O P - C A P I T A L P L A Z A MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE OPEN DAILY AT 10 a.m. NO CHECKS ACCEPTED AT THE BOX OFFICE NO REFUN DS Wtdnatday, Oct. 15, 1969 THE DAILY. TEXAN Pag* l l W hat’* % Dialing your own Long Distance calls! (more economical, too.) And it’s so easy: a. Dial "1” * b. Dial the Area Code if different from your own c. Dial the telephone number lf you should dial a wrong number, call the operator. She’ll see you’re not billed for the call. For complete dialing instructions, see the front of your telephone directory. *S tu d e n ts liv in g In U niversity o w n e d d orm s m u st d ia l b efo re the ‘ 1 ” . An o p e ra to r w ill com e on the lin e a fte r yo u have co m p le te d d ia lin g the ca ll. “ 9 " Please give h er y o u r S tudent B illin g Code num ber. Southwestern Bel! Page 14 Wednesday, Oct. 15. 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN I