Weather: • M ostly C loud y • High: M id 60's • Low: Near 40 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student New spaper at The University of Texas af Austin Vol. 69 Price Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1969 Sixteen Pages Td Gam e G uide For TV Viewers Page 6 • No. 84 Ss jdents Assembly to Aid Charged in Union Protest * .. ' 0 * 4‘ By CRAIG HIRD N ew s Assistant jury to grand In reaction indictm ents of students involved in the Chuck Wagon confrontation, the Student Assembly voted T hursday to channel defense funds to stu ­ dents charged with “ indirect” property destruction on Nov. IO. As S tudents’ Association P resident Joe K rier explained, this m eant those student* who w ere nam ed in sealed indictm ents for speaking to the crowd before the police action and thus, by association, w ere charg­ ed with destruction. O thers, who w ere charged w ith assault or d irect property dam age w o n t receive any of the donated money. No S tudents’ Association funds w ere ap­ propriated, since Board of R egents rules specifically forbid such action. R ath er, this action will allow students who a re in sym pathy with the accused to funnel th eir donations through the Students’ Association. The money will be ad m in ister­ ed by K rier. Such action will not entail solicitation of in violation of regents rules, but money will be shielded bv declaring an “ o p e n m eeting in Union 321 {the Students' As­ sociation Office) of the Students’ A ssocia­ tion.” The three-hour m eeting of the Assembly proved a storm y one a s K rier used his (Related Story, Page ll.) tim es gavel 52 to ask for order, as as­ sem blym en com plained tim e and a g a i n that they w ere unable to hear discussion th at was going on. Much of th at conversation occurred on m a tte rs concerning a cam pus-w ide referen­ dum set for Jan . 7, No less than four bills, applying to v a r­ ious aspects of the referendum , w ere plac­ ed on the floor, and each drew active de­ bate. The initial bill sim ply called for the re­ the postponed E r w i n ferendum . Citing vote the move to rev am p student govern­ m ent and a petition to elect T exas Ut ion Board m em bers directly, K rier pushed for the Ja n . 7 date. Several assem blym en charged that t h *» tim ing w as poor. since the proposed date falls only two day* a fte r classes recon­ vene afte r C hristm as. After several m inutes of discussion, how­ ever, the bill passed as proposed. Then cam e a collision betw een two am end­ the Union board. Al- to rev am p m ents City Council Denies Permit For S M C Dec. 12 Parade Photo by Phil Huber Bv I RH HARD THOMAS Staff Writer Johnson said a street p arade would he a “ financial dram on the C ity” and that SMC m a rc h ers on the sidew alks would be protected if necessary. $132,498 in the first phase of a construction program w hich will m ake 26th Street a m ajor thoroughfare from G uadalupe to In­ te rsta te 35. the ballot read y on am en d m en t, sponsored by the Young Democrats, w hich calls for thp direct election of the en tire an is six-m an Union board. However, another am endm ent w as a u th ­ ored by assem blym en D avid M incberg and Steve Van w hich would have two m e m b ers of the board elected directly, two elected by the Student A ssem bl) with the Student.*’ Association president and head of the Union board autom atically assu m in g se ats. The logical question of “ w hat happens if both p ass" was raised and the w ord-w ar w as on. When the rh eto ric settled dowm th e two am endm ent* had been com bined w ith a choice to form one question. “ sta tu s quo As a result, students w ill face t h r e e choices: for the YD am endm ent, for th e Van-M incberg am endm ent, or for keeping the present system . While the A ssem bly voiced its approval of the solution with a u n a n im o u s vote for tiro com prom ise, YD P re sid en t G ene Dolfl felt otherw ise. Charging the A ssem bly had su b v e rte d the YD am endm ent. Doifi indicated the is­ sue probably would be taken to th e S tu­ dent Court. “ Our petition w as signed by over 900 people who signed with the un d erstan d in g they would be allowed a yes-no vote on the th e y 're faced with a yes, yes; no or a yes; no, m ay b e type situation,” Dolfi explained. Instead, issue two for they h u rt th e “ By com bining th e the constitution chances of p assage, d e a r ly sta te s th a t an am endm ent m u st win by m a jo rity ,” Dolfi said. “ With th re e choices available a m ajority m ay be dif­ ficult to achieve." N ext up on th e debating list w as a bill seeking A ssem bly endorsem ent of a pro­ posed am endm ent which would abolish the the House of D elegates m ake-up of the Assembly, rev am p and Such an endorsem ent w as not forthcom - ir g, however, as the pros and cons w ere fully dis< u**cd. E v e n t u a l l y . th e bill w as se n t to a com m ittee headed by V ice-President E rn ie Haywood for study and will com e up for a vote at a special called m eet­ ing of the A ssem bly on Dec. 16. Fir illy restru c tu rin g of tiro A ssem bly voted to place the issue of the abolition of the House of I> le - g ates on the ballot se p a ra te from th a t on in t h e sp ite of a ruling by the atto rn ey g en e ral th a t such splitting w as unconstitutional, s i n c e the petition being d re u la te d com bin­ ed the two. t h e A ssem bly, THE CONTRACTS let T hursday, P ublic W orks D irector R e u b e n R ountree said, will provide for the widening of existing sections of 26th S treet to “ a boulevard- tvpe street with esplanades down the cen­ te r." Contract* to be aw arded la ter, R ount­ ree said, will provide for the extension of 2 6 u S treet through virgin a re a between San Jacinto Boulevard and In tersta te 35. The extension will m ake use of the P a rk P lace right-of-way. R ountree said the extension should h# com pleted next sum m er, if all goes well. IN THE COUNCIL debate on the SMC p ara d e perm it. J.tu es said, “ I t s not that big a d ea l,” and moved for ratification of the p a r a d e route requested bv SMC The motion died for the lack of a second. Ja n e s am ended his motion to provide the a lte r­ nate route down Speedw ay; G age second­ ed the resolution w as defeated, it. and five to two. G age suggested that the parad e ordinance th a t he be “ rew ritten .” LaRue replied and City M anager Lynn H. Andrews had discussed it, and th at an ordinance rew rite w as in the works. Fires Vandalism, Plague University By IIM HICKS In the w ake of increased confrontations at the University, acts of vandalism have becom e m ore prevalent. the Chuck Wagon Seven fires have been reported in the Un­ ion Building since in­ cident, and The Texan learned Thursday two fire s have beer, discovered r e ­ th at cently in the Main Budding and that an abortive fire-bom b and ground glass were discovered on in M em orial Stadium . t h e $500,000 A stroTurf W ednesdays fire in the Union alm ost destroyed a double m eeting room on thro tin rd floor. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR of the U n i o n L a rry Hannon says, "I believe th at all the fires have been set. U niversity F i r e M arshal H orace B. W hitworth and S ecur­ ity Chief Allen Hamilton are still investi­ indicates arson in gating. but everything this fire ." Vice-P resident for B usiness A ffairs J a m e s Colvin sa y s th a t he knows of two fires in the Main Building. “ One fire in a ja n ito r's closet a few s e t," Colvin w eeks ago was obviously said. Another fire in a stairw ell Is being in­ vestigated. Im m ediate!) after the W aller Creek af­ fair, a fire-bomb was discovered on the stad iu m field by grounds personnel. It con­ sisted of a bleach hottle full of gasoline with m atches and a rag trig g er­ ed by a lighted c ig a re tte functioning as a delayed fuse The bomb was placed in­ side a paper bag. to be “ DEPARTMENT OI VI BFK Safety In­ v estigators got a nice set of prin ts from the b ag ," Colvin said. Chief H am ilton said that before the Bay­ crushed glass in N ovem ber, lor gam e was Spiro ad on the A stroTurf. “ It w as pounded into sm all pieces and sp read over a considerable p art of the play­ ing area*. It could have seriously injured the p la y e rs,” H am ilton said. identified D epartm ent of Public S afety investiga­ the glass a s the rem ain s tors of old soft drii.x bottles, crushed with a metal object. AL Ll NYSTEDT, business m a n ag e r for that when intercollegiate athletics, said the glass wa* discovered, it w as brushed and vacuum ed from th e field. * Since the W aller Creek incident we have had surveillance of the stadium a t night. W e’ve in stalled b e tte r lighting, and both the F resh m an Field and the stad iu m a r e constantly p atro lled ,” L undstedt ad d ­ er1. The Union has begun stric te r control of ac ce ss to le sser utilized room s and hall­ w ays in the building. “ We a re trying to m ake sure th a t all doors to m eeting room s a re locked unless they a re in activ e u se," Hannon said. “ One fire cam e d uring the 30 m in u tes in a lietween the m eeting of one group room and the next m eeting.’* T hree student night m a n a g e rs a re r e . Sponsible for m aking sure that ail doors a re locked and th at all room s ace e m p ty when the Union closes, During the n ig h t, maintenance workers are in the building. Lone Star Spirit A l p h a Phi O m e g a , U n iv e rs it y m e n ’s ser- vice Fraternity, d r a p e d the la r ge s t Tex­ as S t a t e b a g over the front o f the M a i n Build ing T h u r sd a y to fire L o n g h o r n spirit for the T e x a s- A r k a n sa s clash S a t u r d a y . Mock U.N. Holds O pening M eeting Tile Austin City Council T hursday denied the Student Mobilization C om m ittee a par­ ad e perm it for D ec, 12 and adopted a new food service sanitation ordinance wrhich m a y have ram ifications for the U niversity YMCA* b reak fast program for under-privi­ leged children. Councilmen Ralph Janes and I c s G age supported a resolution which would have allowed a parad e down 21st and Speedway streets, hut the motion w as defeated, five to two. SMC HAD REQUESTED the perm it for a p arade south on G uadalupe Street from the U niversity Co-Op and east on lit h S treet, to “ hand out leaflets in the down­ town a re a on ending the w a r.” to In addition transp constitutional rights to g ath er to speak. But I don’t think the Constitution states you m ust have a right to a good crow d." NOTING TH VT SMC has had two p ara d es this year, Johnson said, “ T h e City h as been m ore than ju st" in g ra n t­ ing p erm its to SMC. tion* a re review ed and then the selections a re m ade. “ About IOO of the 400 delegates a re from other colleges,” Sheppard said. “ Although tins total is sm aller than past y ea rs the delegates a re well inform ed and I expect good debates. in "T he delegates a re very successful presenting their argum ents as rep rese n ta­ tive* of the country ra th e r than th eir own personal opinions," Sheppard explained. “ It I* accidental if th eir own view's enter into their d eb a te s.” tho believes .SHEPPARD accom plish­ m ent* of the MUN councils around t h e United S tates in th*' IO y ears a r e evidenced in a decision m ade by G eneral “ U secretary' U Thant, U.S. include Thant ask**! th at all delegations one m e m b er under 25 years of ag e,” Sheppard explained. general. last The G eneral A ssem bly will m eet again in contin­ a t I p.m . F rid ay and will be uous session until 5 p.m . S aturday. Nixon Threatens Special Session WASHINGTON (A P) — P resident Rich­ light ard M. Nixon sought T hursday a fire under Congress by threatening to call a special session on Dec, 26 to com ­ plete this y e a r's appropriations bills. to Senate D em ocratic Leader Mike M ans­ field of M ontana took a sim ila r stand. The P re sid en t’s th re a t was carried back GI Casualty Iota Passes 300,000 SAIGON (AP) — A m erican casualties in the w a r have passed 300.000 although the U S. Com m and reported T hursday that battle d eaths last week w ere am ong the sm allest weekly totals of the entire con­ flict. The U.S. Com m and said 70 A m ericans w ere killed and 1,049 w ere wounded in the week total th a t ended S aturday, raising casualties for the w ar to 300,829. The 70 dead w ere the lowest in two m onths and com pared with 120 the week before, the highest in nine w eeks. South V ietnam ese and enem y casualties lull also fell off la rt week, reflecting a that m ay be followed by a storm of battle. The South V ietnam ese governm ent an ­ nounced 24-hour cease-fires for C hristm as and New Y ear's. The U.S. Com m and agreed to observe the standoffs. to Capite! Hill bv the Republican leaders. and Sen. Hugh Scott of P ennsylvania Rep. G erald R. Ford of Michigan, a fte r their weekly m eeting at the White House. M ansfield, who said ea rlie r this week he would keep the Senate in session be­ tween C hristm as and New Y ear s Day if n ecessary, told a rep o rter “ I am delight­ ed to have the P re sid e n t’s support, and he has my support.” Both N ixon's and M ansfield's th re a t concurrence were ’dewed m ore as efforts to spur action than as likely events. The Senate m eanw hile passed and sent to the W hite House the y e a r’s fifth regu­ la r appropriations bill, a $4.7 billion m eas­ ure covering public works and the Atomic E nergy Com m ission. It contains $800 m il­ lion to fight w ater pollution — $586 m il­ lion above Nixon’s budget. The Senate aL*o sent to the White House by voice vote a resolution to keep fed­ e ra l agencies in funds until the end of the session. P revious authority that have not yet received th eir reg u lar appro­ priations for the fiscal y ea r th at sta rted Ju ly I. runs out on Saturday. agencies for Of the rem aining money bills, M ans­ field said the $70 billion Defense IVpart- m ent m easure, due for House action ea rly next week, and one for the Labor and for Sen­ W elfare d ep artm en ts, scheduled a te A ppropriations action next week, are the two biggest problems. C om m ittee D eputy Police Chief R. B. Laws told TTie Texan T hursday th a t a street parad e for ade­ req u ires m any m ore ’policemen q uate control than does a sidewalk pa­ rade. traffic flow',” Law s “ A sidewalk p arad e d c s not interfere a with stree t parad e interrupts the norm al cycle of controlled traffic lights, affecting tra f­ fic as mu<"h as IO block* a w a y .” said. ‘’But LAWS SAID sidew alk m a rc h ers are a l­ traffic to (Toss stree ts only when lowed is stopped by the intersection tights. Burgeson t o l d The Texan that SMC will m ake the Dee, 12 m arch ‘ as planned,” but on the sidew alks. In adopting the new food service ordin­ ance. the council broadened the definition of ” food-sorvice estab lish m en t” to include operations which serve food to the public w ithout charge, as well as those which charg e for their food. “ 'Die new ordinance possibly would ap­ ply to the breakfast p ro g ra m .” City Sani­ tary’ E ngineer H. E .. H argis said, referring to free b rea k fa sts served u nderpri­ vileged children a t the U niversity YMCA by the Com m unity U nited Front. the a C I F DOES NOT have food-service perm it now, H argis said, adding th a f a perm it probably would not have been re ­ quired under the old erode. H argis said the breakfast operation will ‘‘probably be in­ v estig a ted ” b e fire the firs t of Ja n u a ry , when the City will begin enforcing the new ordinance. H argis said the new ordinance was w rit­ ten in 1966 to bring regulation in line with a federal model health code. He said the council had not requested the new ordin­ ance be subm itted to it before now. H argis said the new code probably would not Im' applicable to such im prom ptu op­ erations as the “ Student Onion” which opened at the U niversity Y M C A when the Chuck Wagon w as closed in October. In another action, the council aw arded totaling Ed H. Page Co. co n tracts two | M i '(tusnfewaanuMiinMmi.w mom I Coming Sunday five-m an ‘THE (.AMJ team : A of Texan staffers will find th e ir w ay to F ayetteville and retu rn with com ­ plete coverage of the T exas-A rkan­ sas battle term ed by some as “ the gam e of the century.” THAT TIME OF YEAR: T he Tex an will devote four pages of Sun­ d ay 's Texan to C h ristm as p re p a ra ­ tions at the U niversity. Also includ­ ed will be hints for shoppers trying to find th a t special gift Irofore they head home. F eatu re d FOREIGN GIFTS: in The T e x a n s Sunday A m usem ents Section is a look at the w ide a rra y of gifts to be offered by foreign stu ­ dents at In te rn a ­ the Texas Union tional C hristm as B azaar next week. R ussia drew applause and the United S tates boos during the opening session of the U niversity's Model United Na t i o n s T hursday. Filch delegation spoke out on internation­ two-minute policy a l issues w ith brief, statem en ts. S cattered hisses and boos accom panied the announcem ent of th e U S deleg ate’s address. The U S. spokesm an, U niversity grad u ate student R andall Hollis, told the G eneral A ssem bly th a t the United S tates felt it recognized th a t w ar w as bad but w as the only w ay to insure independence for South V ietnam and freedom for the V ietnam ese people. The U.S. delegate was the only sp eaker to receive no applause at the completion of his address. The U.S.S H. delegate received loud a p ­ pl .use for his appeal for disarm an en t and b etter friendly relations with the United S tates. ALABAMA and N ationalist China had th e ir differences. The Albania delegation spokesm an as­ serted th a t the C hlang Kai-Shek governm ent of N ationalist China presently held the seat th a t rightfully belongs to Red China. In his the N ationalist China delegate rem ark s, argued is not a peace- loving country, is not a n a t i o n secure enough to be adm itted to the United N a­ tions and obviously did not w ant to lie a m em ber since they had never appeared before the G eneral assem b ly to petition for a seat. th a t R ed China TOPICS m ost discussed by the 14 dele­ gations who chose to speak w ere the s e a t­ ing of Red China, d isarm am en t of tech­ t h e nological M iddle-E ast conflict and U.S. intervention in Vietnam . and biological w arfare, Sixty-five of the IOO expected delega­ tions w ere present Thursday. The assem bly adjourned about 3 p m. D elegates then went to m eetings of one of two political com m ittees, the socio-econo­ m ic com m ittee o r the S ecurity Council. is to sa v e floor tim e by proponing and discuss­ ing resolutions in advance. The purpose of these com m ittees “ This assem bly w as norm al for the first one," said F ran k Sheppard, se cretary gen­ e ra l of MUN. “ Although there are m any experienced delegates here who have a t­ tended before, the atm osphere is alw ays tense the first m eeting. After the com m it­ tee m eetings, the delegates will loosen up and there will be m ore heated debating from the floor." facing “ THE MUN enables delegates to see the problem s rep rese n tat­ i v e s , ” Sheppard said. “ The debates and surrounding MUN m eetings discussions show the students why som e things a re so difficult to discuss in U.N. m eeting*.’’ U.S. Student* a re selected as delegates about a month in advance of the conference. Their qualifica­ applications personal and Haynsworth: Remaining on Bench ffce vigil .Jet Draft Directors Job At Fayetteville Hard Position to Fill WASHINGTON TAP) — T h e Nixon Administration has found it more difficult than expected to fill t h e shoes of Gen. Lewis B. Hershey as director of the Selective Service System . L a st Oct. IO the White House announced that Hershey would be replaced next Feb. 16. T h e delay w as to give h i s successor a chance for on-the-job training a s Hershey’* deputy W'hile await ing the transition. WHITE HOUSE press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said then the successor would be named “ in the near future.” Almost two months later, the estim ate had mellowed to: “ as soon a s p ossible." An informed source confirmed that the search for a new direc­ tor Is still on. He rejected the idea that it is find qualified people hard to billin g to assum e the thankless task. “ There are a number of peo­ ple th.it really want the jo b ," he said. “ We have a couple of high­ ly qualified people. But i f s hard to find the kind of qualities we’re looking fo r." What kind? They're fairly obvious, s a i d the ss I tree, but for one thing a new director would have to be “ acceptable to the various con­ stituencies with which he has to d e al." That m e a n t someone w h o would be welcomed—or at least tolerated — by the nation's d ra y ­ age youth a s well a s congression­ al loaders who oversee the draft. ONE P O SSIB LE prospect was David O. Maxwell, 39 - year - old budget Pennsylvania director, who confirmed he w as in touch with the White House about a jo b ; neither he nor tho White House would say whether they discuss­ ed the d raft post. But that was more than a month ago. Paul Dietzel, football coach at the University of South Carolina, said three weeks ago the White House sounded him out about heading the draft, but be wasn t interested. H ER SH EY , now 76, helped de­ sign the modern draft and h a s headed it since 1911. One P resi­ dent after another has kept Her­ shey despite his advancing age and nrar-blindnoss. 'Irradiated' Products Ready for Consum ers NEW YORK (A P) — Consum­ look forward to being ers can bombarded with more and more products strengthened through co­ balt radiation now that m arket tests have proven successful. In the radiation process, a m aterial, such a s wood or pre­ cast concrete, is coated or soak­ ed in liquid plastic, then expos­ ed to gam m a rays from a radio­ active substance such a s cobalt 60. The finished product comes Up times harder out three a n d stronger, say spokesmen for the radiation industry. until now. vood-plastic radiation has bee:: used largely in producing wood flooring f o r com m ercial establishm ents such a s departm ent stores and restau­ rants. This radiation process was de­ veloped by the Atomic Energy Commission and m ade available to private industry in the mid- 1960s. HILLEL’S 2ND A N N U A L . . . LATKE - H A M A N T A S C H E N DEBATE SUNDAY, DEC. 7, 1969, 7:30 P.M. LARRY C A R O L IN E • ELLIOT Z A S H 'N STEVE R O SS • IR W IN S A L M A N S O N M I S I C A L I M I K T A I N M t N r , I S RA F I I M H K D A N C I N G 1 A T K K - KATI NA* C O N T K S T . HAURI * T O S S B N A ! BRITH HILLEL F O U N D A T I O N 2105 S A N A N T O N I O 476 012! WASHINGTON (AP) — P resi­ dent Richard M. Nixon, after meeting with Clement F. H ayns­ worth J r ., announced Thursday Haynsworth will continue to serve judge of the U.S. 4th a s chief Circuit Court of Appeals. The Senate on Nov. 21 by a vote of 55 to 45 rejected Nixon’s nomination of Haynsworth to be justice of the Su­ an associate prem e Court. NIXON termed it “ a very close vo te" when he and Haynsworth talked Thursday with W h i t e House reporters. It w as the first tim e the two men had met. In announcing Haynsworth’* decision to rem ain a chief ap­ pellate judge despite Senate re­ jection of his higher ambitions following a lengthy debate over conflict-of-interest accusations, Nixon had this to sa y : ‘ ‘I must say that after t h e brutal, vicious and, in my opin­ ion, unfair attack on his integri­ ty, I would well understand why the judge would retire to private life. A weak man would; a fear­ ful man would. The judge is not a weak man, he is a s t r o n g m an ." Speaking in h i s pronounced Robb Disclaims Atrocity Charge (A P) LAS VEGAS. Nev. - M aj, Charles Robb, form er P re­ sident Lyndon B. Johnson’s son- in-law, said Thursday he knew of no instance in which men of his command killed or injured Viet­ nam ese civilians. Replying to reports of ‘‘indis­ crim inate killing” by m arines in his company, Robb said : ‘‘I bad no knowledge of any such order or policy. I know of no single in­ stance in which any of the civil­ ians were injured or killed. Robb's comment followed an announcement in Washington by an aide to Sen. Charles H. P er­ ry, that the Illinois Republican has asked the Pentagon to in­ vestigate charges of “ indiscrimi­ nate killing" by U.S. troops in Vietnam. in Columnist Ja c k Anderson, an article published Thursday in the New York Post, said a let­ ter from one of P ercy’s consti­ tuents claim s the killings were committed by m em bers of Robb’s m arine company. Southern accent, Haynsworth took over the microphone from Nixon to sa y : “ NO ONE likes to lose I don’t. But I never have felt that a set­ back should be accepted a s a fi­ nal defeat of a man a s a ju d ge." Turning to Nixon, Haynsworth said : constant, unflagging. “ I am very grateful to you for your trust. Your support h a s been It has been a great source of pride to me and I w ill take that pride with me a s long a s I live.’ ’ The White House has said the President will another nomination to the Senate early in 1970. submit F A Y E T T E V IL L E . Ark. (AP) —An organization called the New Coalition for Peace plans to m arch from the University of Ark­ an sas Library to a hillside over­ looking Razorback Stadium to hold a peace vigil during t h e T exas-A rkansas gam e Saturday. football for the Sonny Keys of Bentonville, a spokesm an antiwar group, said, however, "We will in no way attempt to disrupt or the field. come even close This is strictly non-violent." to “ We’re hoping that this will set some sort of precedent that e v e r y time President N i x o n m akes an appearance, he’s go­ ing to get this,” K eys said. Nixon has said he will attend the gam e. M y Lai Massacre Denied by Medina WASHINGTON (AP) - Capt. firmly denied Ernest Medina Thursday he ordered a m assacre of a South Vietnamese village but admitted that he shot a Viet Cong w o m a n who had been wounded. " I di«l atxt see any slaughter at My Lai that d a y ," the form er com mander of t h e company in­ volved in the alleged m ass kill­ ings told reporters. “ None w as reported to me. “ I did not order any m assacre at My L a i." THE CAPTAIN made his state, ment at a brief nows conference in the Pentagon where he had earlier appeared before A r m y t h e looking investigators possibility of a cover-up of the alleged m assacre into “ Yes, I shot a w om an," Medi­ na s a wl in response to a ques­ tion, explaining that a helicopter pilot had reported seeing a Viet Cong with a weapon. Medina w as asked why the men of his company would be m aking accusations against him. HE SAID there were certain individuals he had had discipli­ nary problems with, bul he did not name them. He said possi­ bly these individuals gave t h e interviews because they “ revoiv. od monetary valu e." also that suggested Medina “ dissident t h e in groups" United States had been trying to get the men to speak out against the military. The Pentagon hearing, headed by a three-star general, Is se p ­ arate from a current over-all investigation crim inal tho m assacre itself. Depending on the outcome, officers could be charged under regulations requir­ ing m ilitary men to report war crim es. of Luxury Townhouse Apartments with large upstairs study/bedroom, furnished only 169.50 all bills paid, Shalim ar G ardens 701 North Loop, 454-3837; 476-2633 mm ‘H eritage diamond distributing company 603 W EST 13th • SUITE 113 • 476-4434 FIRST Q U ALITY FINE D IA M O N D S af 30 lo 50% less M a k e an a p p o in tm e n t for a personal showing. C a ll Ronnie or R a n d y — University reps any time. af 476-4434 Matched H K yellow gold wed- Lustre finished, wide wedding ding bands with beaded Ladies’ band $23. Men s $-2. in I iK yellow gold With edge, bands band bright edging. Ladies' band $21. Men s band $23. where love has a perfect ring News Capsules By The Associated P r e s s ---------- Rogers Urges N A T O Rejection of Talks j>R( s s n s Secretary of State William P. R ogers advised foreign ministers of the other 14 North Atlantic Treaty Organiza­ tion nations Thursday not to bt- lured into a premature European security conference by the Soviet-led Communist , bloc. Rogers, speaking at the year-end session ct the alliant e s Council of Ministers, said NATO should demand proof of Soviet good intentions before accepting their invitation for East-W est negotiations. Allied sources said NATO would give a cautious reply to the Warsaw Pact bid when the council concludes its meeting Friday. H u n q e r Conference Approves Priorities WASHINGTON The White House Conference on Food, Nutrition and Health ended Thursday with the 3.000 delegates shouting acceptance of a series of priorities to feed America’s hun­ gry. The proposals call on the President to: • Immediately declare that a national emergency exists and implement programs to feed the hungry. • Establish a guaranteed cash income of $5,300 for a family of four. • Reform present food programs. • Shift administrative responsibility for all hunger-nu- trition programs from the Department of Agriculture to the Department of Health. Education and Welfare and its corresponding congressional committees. 7~Month Freeze on Urban Renewal Lifted WASHINGTON The Nixon Administration Thursday lifted a seven- month freeze on a controversial urban renewal program affecting more than 300 cities. It announced planned ex­ penditures of between $330 million and S340 million Aor accelerated rehabilitation this fiscal year. In addition to the dollar ceiling, the Department of Housing and Urban Development limited participating cit­ ies to 80 of approximately 3X5 applicants. But the Administration did not impose restrictions on the scope of the Neighborhood Development Program, which allows rapid spot rehabilitation, that were feared by city officials and their allies in Congress. Agreem ent Ends Threat of Rail Strike WASHINGTON The threat of a nationwide rail shutdown was erased Thursday when agreement was reached on a wage increase for 48,000 shoperaft workers—after 20 hours of non-stop bargaining. The agreement still must be ratified by members of the four unions involved, but Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz said “ WTe will not be having any strike on the railroads.” William W. Winpisinger, the chief union nego­ tiator, agreed. Details of the agreement were withheld. Beef, Pork Stakes in Senatorial W a g e r WASHINGTON Democratic Sen. Ralph Yarborough of Texas and Wil­ liam J. Fulbright of Arkansas have waged a Senate meal on the outcome of Saturday's football game between Tex­ as and Arkansas. If Texas wins, Fulbright will serve Arkansas pork spareribs to Yarborough and guests at a luncheon in th*’ Senate dining room. If the Longhorns lose, Yarborough will provide Texas beef steak for Fulbright and friends. M arket A v e rage s G a in ; Prices Close M ix e d NEW YORK In a late burst of buying Thursday, the stock market pulled out of a deep, broad-based decline and ended the day with prices mixed. The afternoon rally was happy news for investors, who earlier in the day had watched the Dow Jones aver­ age of 30 industrials fall almost 6 points below its lowest closing point in nearly three years set Wednesday. Tile Dow closed up 3.17 at 796.53. Illinois Panther Leader Killed in Shootout ( HI C AGO The leader of the Black Panther party in Illinois and a p ally member were slain and six persons injured Thurs­ day in the .second shootout within a month between the militant organization and Chicago police. Three members of the Panther party were charged with attempted murder and aggravated battery in the pre­ dawn gun battle in an apartment on the West Side. The dead were Fred Hampton, 21, chairman of the Panther organization in Illinois and considered No. 3 man nationally in the organization, and Mark Clark, 22, of Peoria, 111. Two policemen were injured slightly. it have . . but 'e have ving I 1415 Lavaca 9 am-4:30 pm shop at night 8 pm-11 pm inc. Page 2 Friday, December 5, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN I f s g o t to be the chicken, because d o g s are the new­ e s t rage o f the year. Pick one up . . . we know y o u ’H agree . . . a c lo g in the hand is worth tw o on y ou r feet, in perforated or solid navy, white, or red; gold, brown, navy or green suede; o r solid brow n with a white strap. $ i 2. H a n c o c k C e n t e r Lottery Affects Goals O pen 'ii 9 M on.-Sat. nights until Christmas Cadets Decide on Careers On-the Diag a long wrap with winter 30.00 looks e^ead W ra p around vuparski-t harks to ba • a ro sentimental things like tree- b mm rg parties and b la z in g unar*H- etc. Comes H a var- r . of pa^erm one size. Boloed acrylic, dirndyl Y a r r g $ Sportswear A ttic. By FRAN SMITH You are a member of a R e­ serve Officer Training Corps. You haven’t signed a contract vet, and you drew No. 357 in the draft lottery. Do you get out or stay in? This question fat e's a number cf freshmen anil sophomores in the University’s three ROTO pro­ grams. ( All ROTO members must sign a contract by the time they enter t h e i r junior year, a n d many sign before then on a reg­ ular, or scholarship, program.) SOPHOMORES in the N a y ROTC responding to an interview seemed most candid their evaluation of the p r o b I r- rn. One sophomore business major v ho drew No, 353 said he has dec id ell to be a career civilian. “ Getting my number made up my mind for me. Now I can do what I want without worrying about getting drafted. in “ I may leave school at the end of the semester and work a while, or go to school part-time a n d work part-time.” A Navy ROTC sophomore who drew No. 339 said the draft lot­ tery has added further confusion to his personal situation. “ I h a v e been undecided a l l along," he said. “ Now I ’ve got to think about a lot of tilings. I ’m getting married pretty soon. The service offers security, but I don’t know if I want to put up with it. “ AOTI ALLY THE B R U T wasn’t a major consideration in my joining the Navy ROTC,” he said. Another Navy ROTC sopho­ more business major said he had decided to drop out of the unit be­ fore the draft lottery, but that his number, 353, made the deci­ sion easier. two rears “ If I had to go. would be better than four,” he said. “ And the summer cruise r u i n s the summer. There’s no chance to earn money. The si hoi* arship isn’t worth it,” he said. However, some chose to stay in die navy program, despite high lottery numbers. R ib Hopkins, a sophomore who hasn’t signed his contract yet, drew No. 303. He pi; us to stay in the navy and do graduate work in in oceanography and work navy research programs. NAVY R O T C SOPHOMORE George King, who drew No 28, said his low number didn’t ef­ fect him. “ I would have stayed in the unit anyway,** M o s t members in the A i r One sophomore engineering Force ROTC program seemed satified with their program, re­ gardless of draft number. G ary King, who drew No. 288, Said, “ I feel I will stay in the program. I didn t get in as a draft dodge in the first place.” H A L H A G E M E IE R SA ID t h e Air Force offers many opportun­ ities in his field, electrical en­ gineering Although Hagemeier drew No 250, ho said he plans to stay with the program as long .as he can. “ ROTC teaches good discip­ line and provides a good chance to exercise leadership that will be invaluable in the future,” Hag- emeier said. student who drew No. 326 admit­ ted his number had caused him Confusion. “ I like the Air Farce ROTC. I certainly have no com­ plaints,” lie said. “ But I ’d like to get out of school for a while,” he said. “ The high number would make this possible, if I hadn’t already signed a contract.” F E E L IN G S N R F M IX E D in the Arm y ROTC program. One sophomore, who drew a high number, said “ As it is, I was committed already. I ’ve signed a contract, but I was considering dropping out of ROTC anyway. Tile number complicate? the de­ cision by making it possible for me to drop out <4 the {urogram without the fear of getting d raft­ ed.” Frank Stroube, who drew No. 115, said he's glad h e's in the ROTC program now. O n e ROTC sophomore w h o drew No. 329 and hasn't signed his contract yet said he’s going to “ wait and see how the draft lottery works out. “ I ll A A F I M IL next fall to decide about staying in the pro­ gram,” he said. Robert Trager. who drew No. 178, said his number didn't af­ fect his s t a y i n g in Rf )TC. Al­ though he hasn t signed a con­ tract, he plans to do so. ROTC Offers Haven For Top Draft Picks If you were bom Sept. 14 you're a No. I draft choice — not for professional football, but foe the U.S. Army. You can bet your bottom dol­ lar you'll be drafted when you get eligible. But you can go in as an officer, rather than an en­ listed man. The Air Force and Army Re. serve Officer Training C o r p s two-wear programs may be a salvation for you or anyone who wants to enter the service as an officer, but who doesnt h a v e time to complete the normal four-year ROTC program. Both tw o year programs feature a six weeks intensive training camp before the initial academic year. The training is designed to prepare the student to enter the third year of a four- year ROTC program. FOR T H O SE who join the Air Force ROTC program, only one summer camp is required. Army ROTC cadets attend another sum­ m e r camp between their first and last academic years in the program, Tile Air Force pays about $140 during the summer camp. Army ROTC cadets receive $193.20 per month during each of the two six-week summer camps. ROTC students in the twrvyear allowance. program are paid $50 a month subsistence B o t h army Maj. Malcolm H e n r y and Air Force Tech. Sgt. Robert C. Torn said a raise in the subsis­ tence pay to about $130 a month may be passed by Congress be­ fore September. ROTC STI D ENTS r< o f c o s t 24 names that will bring more than a smile. 3 M Games $7 Second Floor W ith uncannily accurate through-the-lens C d S expos­ ure system. The sensational new Spot- m atic 35mm single-lens re­ a flex contains cam era through - the - less exposure system that assures you of p erfectly exposed pictures, even under the most d iffi­ cult conditions. Lightweight and com pact, the Spotm atic is easy to use. can be changed Settings with your camera at every for level. You ll be ready m y picture . . . you Ii get the pictures others miss! PACKAGE NO. I PACKAGE NO. 2 Buy a S P O T M A T IC w /Takum ar ' B y a S P O T M A T IC w/Takum ar Reg. Reg. ................. $259.50 55mm fl.8 plus Takumar 135mm f 3 . 5 ............... $149.50 Total . . . . $409.00 ................. $299.50 50mm fl.4 plus Takumar 135mm f 3 . 5 ............... $149.50 T o t a l ____ $449.50 P A C K A G E SALE PRICE P A C K A G E SALE PRICE $359.00 plus your dividend $399.00 plus your dividend or, add Taltumar 35mm 13.5 ............... $ 94.5C . . . . 503.50 Total or, add Takumar 35mm f 3.5 Tot< $ 94.50 $543.50 P A C K A G E SALE PRICE P A C K A G E SALE PRICE $435.00 plus your dividend $475.00 plus your dividend O ffe r good until Jan u ary I, or as long as supply lasts. Camera Shop Second Floor See our complete selection of famous . . . IviiAAffi' cS tav tT C A N D I E * ? Store Hours Monday thru Saturday 8:30 to 5:30 Thursday, 8:30 to 9:00 Dec. I! m # ™ Princely Specimen Photo by M a r t i n T. Fulfer. W h ile he certainly won t be turned into royalty by a fair maiden's kiss, this amphibian is nevertheless im portant be­ is one of 50 over­ cause he in Dr. W . sized to Frank Blair's experiments study their evolution and de­ termine their genetic com pat­ ibility under artificial hybridi­ zation. toads used Giant Toads Aid Zoologist's Study A giant fresh water shrimp, pickled rn a jar, is also in Pat­ erson Hall. It is alxHJt a foot long and was caught in the San Marcos River by Tom Buchanon, graduate student in zoology. He was trapping fish f o r a study he is doing and the shrimp came into his trap seeking the powdered bone meal he was using for bait. A pamphlet published in San Marcos said the^e lobster-sized animals can reach a weight of more than three pounds and at­ tain a body length exceeding one foot. Their antennae may extend another 24 inches. “ T h is is a small o n e compared to other omx; I have seen down there,” Buchanon .said. One thing the is for sure only one of shrimp would make a feast Bs KELLE! SNYDER interested For anyone in a gam e of leapfrog or a big shrim p dinner, the place to go is P at­ terson Hall. It isn • a fancy r e Mur, > * or , bm ti e home a res area I -n <' • ' of tho zoology departm ent, An array of oversized toads or “Genus BuG” has tx •'ii col­ lected by Dr. W. Frank Blair, professor of '/'mingy. f n* experi­ ments he is using hybridization to study the evolu? n of to ds and to rom ­ ps tibility. « roriduetir g. Ho determ ine artificial genetic The toads, smile as large as cantaloup's, will eat “ anything that moves,” Je rry Grubb, grad­ uate student and as si » mf to they usually Blair, said. “ But ll anim als.” eat I n s e r t and sn Blair has about 50 species of tr*uds from a1! p arts of the world such as Africa, Venezuela. Peru. E ast Indues and Costa Rica. He Is the author of a book. “The of t h e < xmus Bufo,” Evolution which will tx1 published soon. YAF Debate Pits Left Against Right Young Am erie; ais for F ree­ dom will sponsor a <5'bate be* tween Dr. Fred Schwarz, presi- dcnt of the Christian Anti-Com­ of Long C r -adc munism R u c h , Calif., and Grog Calvert, former national sfxreti.rv of Stu­ dents for a IX mocrat •' Society. The topic of the debate will hi* •‘M arcuse and t i e Campug R*i'- volution.” It will ti)k(» place af 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas I ’mon Main Ballroom. The pub­ lic is invited anti v\ til lie allowed to question the two speakers. O N E M O O N DELIVERY! John Roberts ships fhe world's tinesf rings wPHn one moon (4 weeks) rec., pt cf ti e order. Why waif'5 C der now! ZALES We’re nothing without your love 704 Co: g :: 3ck C f it* r Friday, Decem ber 5, 1969 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N F a g # J Mitchell's wife fears liberals By ART BEC HW ALI) WASHINGTON — All of W ashington is talking about Atty. Gen. John M itchell'* wife, M artha. Mrs. Mitchell has m ade al­ m ost as big a splash as V ice-President S p i r o Agnew, u ith rem a rk s on TV such as the one that h e r husband would like to trade som e A m erican liberals for som e Rus­ sian Com munists. She also m agazine’s Fischer, told Tim e D e a n “ A n y tim e you get somebody m arching in the streets, it’s catering to revolution. .My fam ily worked for everything. We even had a deed from the king of England for property in South Carolina. Now these jerks com e along and try to give it to the Com m un­ ists. . . . Com menting on life in W ashington, she in m any said, “ It's quite a comedown w ays. We’re not living on the sam e m eans we had in Rye, N.Y. I think the govern­ ment. should give us free housing. We’ll be happy to go hack and m ake some m oney.” Mrs. Mite ell in her TV broaden its and interview s has given us an insight into a Cabinet officer's life that we never had before, and I cen im agine w hat happens when the M itchells return home in Hie even­ ing to their pc;-h ap a rtm en t a t the W ater­ gate in the Foggy Bottom p a rt of W ashing­ ton. The attorney goner I en ters first and checks all tile closets. “ There s none in I.ere.” MRS. MITCH ELI. looks under the bed. They both “ There s none her e ” look in “ T h e re s none here,' says. laundry room. the the attorney general Mrs. Mitchell sigils. “ Oh, John, c a n ’t you do som ething about the liberals so we don't have to go through this every n ig h t?” “ I'm trying. M artha. I'm working on a list of liberals to exchange for Com m unists with it drawn up. w e’ll present it to R ussians at the SALT talks in Helsinki." the Soviet Union. G lee we get “ Good," Mrs. M itchell replies. “ I ’d r a ­ ther have out and out C om m unists in this country, than people with M arxist ideas who won't adm it their true colors.” “ Well, let s go to bed. M arth a.” "Suppose they m arch Mitt hell says. tonight?” M r s . “ I dor i think they will. The Justice De­ part!..cut woul i have let me know if they had any plans. We should be able to get a good nig h t’* sleep.” (lo ww know they're not In ‘ H the lobby waiting for us to go to b e d ’’” "Don t you rem em b er? I checked t h e isn t a fcbby before I cam e up. T here liberal in the en tire W atergate com plex.” “ I ’M SO I*ROl D of you. John. H a v e you done anything vet about the 55 se n a­ tor- who voted against Judge Ha y r s w orth?” ' I ve got everyone at Justice working on it now. We think we m ay he able to prove a conspiracy between the mobilization o r­ lib e r a l E stablish­ ganizers. the E astern the senators w h o m ent. Jean B e- and voted against Ha y rs w orth.’’ “ T hat would be wonderful. John. did you hear something in the bathroom ”” The water s running. Stay bark. Mar­ ti i.” The attorney general goes into the bath­ room and com es out wnitefacedi “ It s John Kenneth G albraith. He s tak ­ ing a show er!” “ I knew it. ’ M artha cries, “ I told you we should have never come to W ashing­ to n .'’ C op r u '* 1 •> 5'i*n TI i» W , shi ne* n P « « t Co I';nu-* S> Attica t* Disinoutod bs Lo* Anftnies T h e Da il y T e x a n A ll- A m e r ic a Pacemaker, 1968-69 Ombudsman to recommend ways to answer grievances should be an Independent ap ­ pointee of a governm ent w h o a c ts as the people’s investigator, defender, pleader and guide in the struggle against the authority of an unchecked or insensitive b u reau cracy . Ja m e s D. Rust, the 59-year- for Michigan old om budsm an believes he S tate U niversity, should the student to help try who has been cau g h t in the m a ­ chinery of the university a n d snatch him before he becomes com pletely mangled. At Colum­ bia U niversity, the om budsm an, Irving Dekoff, sim ply roam s the cam pus, taking the pulse of the student body. The Advisory Council on Stu­ dent Affairs on this cam pus be­ lieves the om budsm an is a per­ son authorized to h ear grievances involving .students and to recom ­ mend corrective m easures. He is an investigator, adviser and arb rite r. I believe the role of the om ­ budsm an should encom pass all these definitions. In s ort. the om ­ budsm an should be available for any and every com plaint con­ cerning the student and he should re onl­ be able to correct or ine rn! m ea suras t h e rights of the student. The auth­ ority of ti ic om budsm an on t h i s insure to cam pus is based on the full co­ oper.;! ion of the president, acces­ sibility to all pertinent records, and Use dignity of the office. to that those I will concern tim e, At this inly with m inor issues m yself rr in contrast issues ex­ plosive in nature, like the Chuck Wagon incident. I feel this m ust the office of om ­ b n done inef- budsm an will not become t h e fc in eyes of it m ust be done this way because more things can be accom plished when the problem s are of a p e r­ sonal n atu re than when those problem s engulf the whole Uni­ versity. the students. I feel its inception ive at (E ditor's note: What is an om ­ budsm an and w hat xx ill ho a t­ tem pt to accom plish at the I ni- v ersity ? This > car's appointee explains the origin of tho office and his role the I diversity in com m unity.) Bv I IBN EG IE MIMS O m budsm an of in Sweden The office of om budsm an " a s f ir s t established in 1809, a t a tim e when citizens w ere t h e suspicious extrem ely power of governm ent. Official abuse of citizens’ rights had long g ore unchecked. Courts of I a w u c re pow erless to exercise judi­ cial control over the ad m in istra­ tion. Judges and other public of­ ficials could be rem oved from of­ fice only after tria l and convic­ tion for a crim e or by individual applications for tran sfe r or pro­ motion. it w as believed th at public of­ ficials should be controlled by an office entirely independent of the .cox- rnm ent, hence the office of om budsm an w as created. It w as to be a people s tribune to discourage authorities from disregarding the law sim ­ ply to please the governm ent. intended The om budsm an today in Swe­ den deals with new problem s th a t concern the legal security of tile citizen* in the ad m in istra­ tive process. The rapid expan­ sion of adm inistration has m ade it difficult to fill ail posts w i t h qualified officials. In specialized branches of adm inistration, offi­ cials easily lose the general view, and their own to press claim s vigorously w ithout taking other into considera­ tion. Interests tend Th* or bud-m an ask s: Are the decisions of the adm inistrative agencies f o u n d e d on sufficient evidence? H as the perron involv­ ed been given an opportunity to answ er evidence against him ? Has the m a tte r benn delayed? H ave the public and private in­ terests bcmi objectively balanced? Have the decisions b e e n influ­ enced by im p ro p er reasons? H ave the reasons for the decision been sufficiently explained? T ie concept of the ombdus- n v tn is catching on in the Uni­ ted States. Hawaii already h a s an om budsm an and California, Connecticut and New York are pushing for one. T here a re more than two dozen om budsm en a t universities across ti e country. W hat should the role of om buds­ m an be the U niversity? F ra n k P. Zc lier. a consultant on urban and m etropolitan a f­ the om budsm an fairs, believes f o r Traffic ticket system unfair A ppearing: on page five is a g u est op in io n colum n in re p ly to a re c e n t T e x a n e d ito ria l th a t criticized tra ffic tic k e t policy' of th e U n iv e rsity P a r k ­ ing and T ra ffic C o m m ittee. T h e reply does not a d e q u a te ly ju s tify th e po­ licy, n o r d o e s n ex p lain why th e p re ­ sent u n fa ir is n e c e ssa ry . tick etin g p ro c ed u re R o b e rt W. H am ilto n , p ro fesso r of law a n d c h a irm a n of th e P a rk in g a n d T r a f f i c C o m m ittee, argin s t h a t “ a d ­ v an ce p a y m en t (of a s e n ice c h a rg e ) h a s n o th in g to do w ith a p re su m p ­ tion of g u ilt o r innocence.*’ IT IS c le a rly a v iolation of due p ro ­ cess t o be re q u ire d to p ay such a fee b efo re an ap p e al is considered, and a lth o u g h H a m ilto n s ta te s t h a t p e r­ sons c h a r g e d w ith tra ffic o r o th e r o f­ fe n ses a re re g u la rly re q u ire d to post c o lla te ra l o r bonds ev e n th o u g h th e y a r e p re su m e d innocent, w e know of n o o th e r e n fo rc e m e n t agency t h a t re q u ire s such p a y m e n t before a h e a r­ ing in tr a f f ic violations. T h e re a so n s given t h e a d ­ van ce p a y m e n t provision is th a t tile U n iv e rsity has no sim ple w a y of in ­ s u rin g t h a t is paid an d th a t “ it w ould elim in ate an im p o rta n t in cen tiv e to f i l e appeals w h e n th e re w as no p ro sp e ct t h a t th e y w ould be u p h eld ." th e serv ic e c h a rg e for If collection of fees is a p ro b lem It should be a tta c k e d on a basis th a t w ould n o t conflict w ith th e rig h t of in d iv id u als th em selv es. to d efend A n d to in stitu te a policy in hopes is t h a t it w ould d isco u ra g e appeal in the in te re st of lessening th e w o rk load on th e ap p e a ls co m m ittee, n o t in cre asin g th e o p p o rtu n ity fo r a fa ir resolution to tic k e t recip ien ts. W e a g ree w ith H am ilto n th a t one of the mo t serio u s o b jectio n s to th e re q u ire ­ p re s e n t ad v an ce p a y m e n t m en t is the excessive d elay b etw een tim e of p ay m en t a n d tim e th e a p ­ peal is decided. A s h e say s, “ W e a re still fa r sh o rt of o u r id eal.” A re c e n t v isito r to T h e T e x a n of­ fice received a c ita tio n Fob. 21, a p ­ pealed on M arch 3 an d did not r e ­ th e ap p e als ceive an an sw e r fro m co m m ittee until Nov. 18, alm o st e ig h t m o n th s later. T he appeal w as in th e fo rm of a fo u r-p a g e typed le tte r, in w h ich th e ti.'k e t recipient s ta te d he w ould be fre e fo r testim o n y to provide a d d i­ tio n al in f o r m a ti o n . Rr-spt use by th e P .;eking an d T r a f ­ fic D ivision w as the follow ing le tte r: “ D e a r S ir: D u rin g th e m eetin g of th e A ppeals P an el on N ov. l l , 1969, th e y denied y o u r appeal on tic k e t No. 49... issued on F eb. 21. 1969. Y o u r c o u r­ ter.- in providing in fo rm a tio n is a p ­ p re c ia te d .” IN A D D IT IO N to being e i g h t m o n th s th e re w as ab so lu tely no ex p lan a tio n o ffered fo r denial of th e appeal. late, T he P a rk in g an d T ra ffic C o m m it­ tee should estab lish a new sy stem in w inch c ita tio n s would be given p ro m p t an d fa ir review . T h is goal is im possible w ith an ad v an ce p a y ­ m ent policy. Editors notes C A M PU S RI M O R — F r a n k C. E r ­ w in J r ., c h a irm a n of th e B o a rd o f R eg en ts, to be co n sid erin g e lim in a tin g v en d in g m ach in es fro m re a so n — tire d of th e c a m p u s . H is giving stu d e n ts so m a n y c a i cessions. is said ★ ★ ★ In re p o rtin g W e d n esd ay n ig h t’s to p ep ra lly T h e T ex an n eg lected m en tio n th a t th e K appa K appa G am ­ m a pledge c lass te a m e d up w ith th e S igm a Alpha E psilon f r a te r n ity in an e ffo rt th a t re su lte d in a s h a re of th e C ow boy S pirit A w ard. A sim ilar o v ersig h t o c c u rre d e a r ­ lie r in th e y e a r w hen th e sam e K ap­ pa pledge class, along w ith P h i D el­ ta T h e ta fra te rn ity , won D im es D ay h o n o rs fo r co llectin g th e m ost m on­ ey in the c h a rity drive S uch m ista k e s a re in h ere n t in re ­ p o rtin g ca m p u s ev en ts, b u t we a rc especially s o rry w hen one group is hit tw ice. ★ ★ A s ★ th e s e m e s te r ap ­ th e en d of p ro a ch es, s tu d e n ts aim in creasin g ly c o n c e rn e d w ith th e ir p erfo rm a n c e in c o u rse s an d w ith m axim izing tho e f­ fe ctiv en ess o f th e ir stu d y tim e. T h e U n iv e rsity R eading an d S tu d y im proving s tu d y h ab its, Skills L a b o ra to ry o ffe rs a m ech an ism f o r t h u s helping stu d e n ts to m ak e th e m o st of te x t­ books. th e ir h o u rs p o u rin g o v er in L o cated th e W est .Mall O ffice B ui ding 109, th e la b o ra to ry o u tlin e s sev e ral m eans of se rv in g th e U n iv er­ sity : • Five kinds of n o n -cred it, lab- ty p e i ’ isses a rr scheduled to im prove v o ca b u la ry , speed an d stu d y skills. co m p reh en sio n , • A lib rary of stu d y skills m a ­ te ria ls is av ailab le to stu d e n ts w h o p re fe r to w o rk in d ep en d en tly r a th e r th a n en ro llin g in th e re g u la r labs. • Individual in stru ctio n is o ffered to stu d e n ts w hose n eed s a re not m et w ith in th e scope of th e re g u la r labs. I n s tru c to r s will upon in v ita tio n m eet w ith a stu d en t o r fa c u lty g ro u p to m ak e b rief su g g estio n s fo r im p ro v ­ ing re ad in g and stu d y skills. • skills read in g As a R A S S L bulletin points out, im p ro v in g th ro u g h c o u rses req u ires m ore self-discipline th a n m a n y o th e r co u rses b ecause th* v a r no n -cred it and til it ion-free. RASSI* provides a channel fo r im ­ p ro v em en t th a t is free for th e ask in g . T h e Da il y T e x a n S tudent New spaper at U T Austin O pinions e x p re ss'd in rh o Daily T exan are those of th e e d ito r or of the w riter of the a rticle and are not nee*-warily those of the the Eoard U niversitv ad m in istratio n or of of R egents is published by Texas T he D aiiv T exan S tu d en t Publications daily except Mon- la dav and S atu rd ay and holiday period* Sen- tem b er th ro u g h May, Second class c o r a g e paid at Austin. I ■ I n at .KH laboratory. J R tho nan? jo g Inquiries loneerning the delivery should be made in J.B. IOT (GR 1-5.SD and adver- IU tis Ins?. J R (GR 1-3227) is Tits national advertising representative National Educational A dvertising Service. 360 L exington Ave. New York, N Y,. 10017 The T exan subscribes to The Associated t a m em ber of The Assoc.ated T he Southw est Journalism the Texas Dailv Newspaper Press and C ollegiate Press Congree Association N ew , contrib u tio n s will be accepted bv telephone (GR 1-5241). a t the editorial office. F m aster; Send form 3579 to Texas Student P ublications. Inc., P. O. Box D. A ustin. T exas 78712 and P E R M A N E N T S T A F F E D IT O R ......................................................................... M ark M orrison M A N A G IN G E D IT O R ................................................ K a re n E llio tt ............................................................. L y n n e F locke C IT Y E D IT O R A S S IS T A N T TO T H E E D I T O R .......................... J a n g le D upont S P O R T S E D IT O R ...........................................................G a ry T a y lo r A M U S E M E N T S E D I T O R ................................... M iddy R an d erso n F E A T U R E E D IT O R ............................................C aro ly n H in ck ley P A N O R A M A E D IT O R .............................................B ob M e r m a n IS S U E S T A F F ............................................................................. Associate New s Editor ......................................................................... John Pope. Craig Bird News Assistants A ssistant A m usem ents E ditor ............................................................................... Cicely Wynne Assistant S ports E d ito r ............................................................................. — Vaughn AJdredge Make-Up Editor ...................................................................................................... Lyko Thompson Copy Editors ............................................ Jennifer Evans, Bruce Beal, Cheryl Bolen Wire Editor ................................................................................................. Jeffrey Newman Randy Northern lish, H enry?” P a g e 4 F r id a y , D e c e m b e r 5 , 1 9 6 9 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N or war to Course on astrologers' forecast? IU R IS S E L L R IK E R ( v ) 1969 New \ ark Times News S e n ire - With WASHINGTON’ t h e row draft sy stem . we will even­ in which tually have an arm y everybody has the sa m e b irth ­ d a y Or, not quite everybody, of course. In a force of 500,000 men — ; ie present size of our Viet­ nam dont ii n e a t — th e e n u re group might have az; m any as nine or IO different birthdays. jm i t \ % Staff It is not b i rd to see w here we a re head' I under this system . L e t us leek a h e a d to 19 71. President Nixon is b e i n g briefed by Prof. K issinger for an im m inent confer­ the ence w i t h Jo in 1 Chiefs of “ I sim ply don’t understand, Professor. I thought we had all that 6:30 p.m. Tuesday agreed was the ideal tim e to kick o f f O peration Monsoon. Now t h e arm y w ants me to reco n sid er?” -IT SEEMS, Mr, P resident, that in casting the original ch arts for Operation Monsoon, the Air F orce failed to take into account the fact th at nearly 15 percent of our com bat troops w ere bom at a tim e when M ars w a s re- eum bent in Capricorn. An addi­ tional 40 percent turn out to have been born on dates when eith er Ju piter, U ranus or Pluto w a s ram pant on a field of S ag ittar­ ius.” “ Can you give it to me in Eng “ In short, Mr. P resident, for 55 percent of our com bat forces, is an extrem ely b a d ' Heyday d ay to em bark on new under­ taking s.” “ Don t we have any troops at a ll th a t T u e s d a y is a good fig h t­ in g d a y f o r ? -’ “ W e h a v e 80.000 L e o ’s. M r. P r e s i d e n t, fo r w h o m T u e s d a y is a d a y w h e n e v e r y e n d e a v o r , no m a t t e r h o w m a n y . s e e m s c e r t a i n to b e c ro w n e d w ith s u c c e s s . U n ­ f o r tu n a te ly , th e y w e r e a ll in la s t m o n th 's d r a ft c a ll a n d a r e , h e n c e , t r a i n ­ rn c o n c e n tr a te d in g c a m p s m th e U n ite d S t a te s .’* b a s ic ifcgainst th e p r e s s ” W E T E H A V E to t a k e p re c a u - tio n s le a k in g th e i r h o ro sc o p e , If th e y find o u t abru- T ic all p ic k t h a t d a y to g o o v e r th e h ill. J u s t b e tw e e n us. Professor, w h a t is y o u r p e rs o n a l o p in io n of M a ­ d a m e C a g iio s tr o ? ” t h e y m a y la y . “ T i e Cl a ir m a n of tile J o i n t O i i e f s ? Do y o u h a v e a n y r e a ­ so n to doubt, h e r e n t h u s e a n fo r p r e s s in g th e w a r to a n h o n o ra b ly n e g o tia te d c o n c lu sio n , Mr, P r e ­ s i d e n t ? ” m o st It q u o te s o n e of “ I h a v e a s e c r e t FBI h o ro sc o p e on h e r. th is c o u n tr y ’s d is tin g u is h e d a s tr o lo g e r s a s s a y in g th a t V en u s w a s in c o n ju n c tio n w ith H e r m e s a t the tim e of h e r b ir th , lf tr u e , th a t M a d a m e th is w o u ld m e a n C a g iio s tr o h e rs e lf th e w h o le h e a r te d ly h e a r t d u r in g th e n e x t f o r tn ig h t.” sh o u ld give to a f f a . i s of “ IT CERTAINLY wouldn’t lo o k good in th e p r e s s to h a v e th e J o in t C h ie fs th e c h a ir m a n of m o o n in g a r o u n d tho BOQ (B a c h ­ e lo r O ffic e rs ' Q u a r t e r s ) w h en w e a r e L u n c h in g O p e r a tio n M on­ I th in k the so o n , Mr. P r e s i d e n t to k r o p h e r s a f e tie d up th e m o o n w a n e s ’’ in c o n f e r e n c e u n til th in g w ill b e “ All r ig h t, but w'e still h a v e that sticky p o sitio n paj>or from to deal w ith .” A rm y Astrology " W e ll, they’re quite d ir e c t, M r. P resident. sim ply in­ T h e y sist that they h a v e to have 100,- 000 S c o rp io s to b o id o u r o w n m V ie tn a m th ro u g h if w e ’r e g o in g 1972. Due to the luck of the draw , the m anpow er pipeline is c ra m ­ m ed full of G em ini's for whom 1972 will be a futile y e a r for ag ­ gressive Scorpio's activititv. would be a perfer-t for 1972, hut the their b irth dates a re a ll at bottom of lottery list.” t h i s y e a r's “ D ies the arm y expect us to rig the l o tt e r y ? ” “ O F COURSE, t h e y would never be that explicit, Mr. P re si­ dent. T in y have, however, sent over you.- own d raft horoscope ft r 1972. They underline a pas­ sage which says, ‘By die use of infinite c u n n i n g , you m a y trium ph over terrible adversity in ' rn cerning v ca r.' “ “Well, Henry, I’m not going to w aste any of my t urni ng rig g ­ . ing the draft. I’H need a1! of it to g e t re-elected n e x t year. They’ll have to get by u-ithout Scorpio's. Do you have die Joint Chiefs’ horoscope outlook for the w ar in the com ing y e a r? ’ “ I have, sir. It says. “ I know w hat it says. ‘We will turn the corner in 1972 and see lie? * at tho end of the tunnel.’ One of the my g re a t disappointm ents a s P resident has been finding that astrologers tell us the sam e thing about Vietnam as generals. It m akes you wonder winch group has been consulting the other all these y e a rs.” "T h a t's the way it goos. Mr Pro., ion! Ai sec descends a n d Irion sits in the hon e of A trius." “Sam e to y. u Henry, Don't get caught out in any full m oons.” Hu e r e o u i s a i n g i t s e l f i j (r) 19(19 New \ ork T unes News Service HUE, South Vietnam — Piece by piece, this lovely old tVv on the banks of the P erfum e River together again. is putting itself From the rubble dint rem ain ­ ed afte r the Vietcong’* offensive* at Tee, the lunar New Y ear, in 1968, houses have been rebuilt, shops repaired and a n e w if un­ sightly central m a r k e t has ri a from the ruins of th e rid. Twenty- one m onths form er ago Im perial Capital w as all h u t pr strate, About 80 percent of its buildings and m onum ents h a d bee® destroyed or dam aged dur- ing the fighting. this The allies won back the city with 26 days of bloody, house- to-house, block-by block fighting, but their artillery an d a ir strik es devastated even throe-foot- thick stone w alls of the Im per­ ial Citadel. When Lie South V iet­ the namese flag was finally run up on tine m ain flagstaff on top of th e Emperor’* Gate, there was very Ii:tie left to reclaim . Of the I bn OOO residents, 115,000 had be­ com e refugees. N o tice s P rof John M rphy from George­ town b a h orO tj Law Center w ill he available for conference in Garrison H ail JOO warn 2 to 5 p m , M onday S p ecia l stu d e n ts -r-. re • ■! fo r ail funds arc for n le r e ste d iv M t* \ ; * an- A nu n c an stud'1 n is hie .IOU I VI I l i t I I H ' T u n representative* front the Hous­ ton Independent School District w ill be in reacher Placem ent O ffice in- HMV a w in g prospective leach ers D er. in from ll a rn. until 5 p rn. 8 9 e n d An orn- i n ’ c r e s t e d *n these i n t e r v i e w s should com e bv or cal! our office to ' s it up a tim e S a n A n i - nso. T h ere vvilj bt a r e p r e s e n ta tiv e from fndr-p< nd en t S c h o o l D is ­ H a lla n d a le I n te r v iew in g a t tr! t T ea c h e r P la c e m e n t O ffic e D ec IO In te r e s te d p e r so n s sh o u ld c o m e by or '. i l l in te r v ie w in g t i m e th is o ffic e fo r an C . M< r p h y D i e ! ^r A T e a i-b r r P l a c e m e n t S u tto n H all 471-3552 or 471-3266 The firing fine: M A S O member blasts City Council To tho editor: To say that a parade down Congress Avenue by Chicano ‘•strike” supporters would not be in the “ public interest” Is erron­ eous. B y not granting the permit the city council has alienated more people realizes, by contributing to friction in the to­ community and animosity ward public officials. than it The demonstration was also a protest against injus­ tices, and not solely a demon­ “ white” stra tio n against Economy Furni­ ture. which, by the way, is a prime example of “ white” pre­ judice. The implication of its state­ ments would lead one to believe that it only grants permits for activities which it “ sanctions.” Is that not a display of partisan­ ship? It is amazing that the tension- easing benefits of granting t h e march p e r m i t completely es­ caped the minds of the members CROSSWORD PUZZLE Answer to Yesterday'* P u n ! * 36 Insect egg 3 8 Wavers 41 Frame of mind 43 Wager 45 A state (a b b r) 4 7 A state (abbr.) 4 9 Is defeated 5 0 Tardy 51 Lam b's pen name 5? Tidmgx 56 Confederate general 58 Dine 59 Prefix: three 60 We ght of India 63 Sun god A C R O S S 1 ! and measu't 5 Cease 9 Small rug 12 c h .-ken house 13 Fee Ii Savoured 15 Ail 17 N e of scale 18 Fiectrihed particle 19 I jr-bf mg mammal 21 Lure 23 Puts into position 2 7 Note of scale 28 Posts 29 Period of time 31 Physician 5 Pilfer 6 Reposition 7 Ancient 8 Pa're! of land 9 Crippled IO Above and touching 11-Temporary shelter 16 Cause 20 Post graduate d egfee (abbr.) 2 ? ' “'.tonic deity 2 3 Mohammedan pf est 2 4 Title 25 Spanish for ‘•yes” 26 Deciare 30-Color 37 City in Russia 33 Solicitude (colloq.) 34 Pa-i ot "to b e " 35 Vast ase 37-StiH 39 Sun god 40 Fncounteretl 42 Penpoint 44 Pa'amouf 4$ Prmtpr'g measure 48 Informer 50 Citrus fruit 53 Sound a horn 54 High mountain 55 Spanish artize 57-Cand«‘S 61 Cravat 62 Existed 64 Unusual 65-Oigan ol hea-ng 66 Oceans 67-Mix DOW N I -High card 2 Study 3 Decay I Elegant letter of tho Pity Council who voter! against it. Since its rulings gen­ erally favor business and the es­ tablishment, is it not about time it ruled in favor of a minority? The Mexican American Stu­ dents Organization at the Univer­ sity feels the ruling was unfair­ ly biased and totally without con­ sideration for a rejected mino­ rity. We feel the majority of the City Council for tile harassment of a minority group while they were trying to obtain a marching permit and guilty of excluding the Chicane® from the Austin community by denying their request. is responsible We hope the Council will make a sincere effort to recognize the Chicano community in future de­ cisions b e c a u s e following the same course of non-action toward the Chicanos w i l l no longer he tolerated. Pablo Velez MASO Thanks, G S M To tho editor: Silent M ajority: An open letter to the Great Well, I guess that series wheth­ er or ’ not I go to law school. Most likely, I will spend t h a t time wallowing around in r i c e paddies with a license to kill. That in court, also. I can honestly claim to be a Coascientious Objector. And I don't care if anyone calls me a coward or an Effete Snob; it’s better than being dead. I am defeated is, if It was not I who started Viet­ nam — neither did I get to vote against th se who did start it — nor did I have any v o i c e concerning the draft lottery. I object cd the only legal way I could: because I am not 21 and do not have the franchise, I participated the morator­ in ium. However, the President, in whom the nation has emxusted its very heart beat, chose not to listen to my plea. How else can I have any effect upon my own future? What could ever be worse than a “ democracy" in which I have no voice? Should I be required to give the infinite for something I do not condone? How m a n y people in the Great Silent Major­ ity can be expected to answer these questions objectively? None. And intend to belittle them th e ir p r e ­ sumptions. M y plea is itself born of passion. I certainly do not for But, if I allow myself to lie inducted into someone else Is rn s- take, I have, in essence, gamb­ led and lost — without e v e r having rolled the dice. Ronald Smith Moor*-Hill USA W h y on To the editor: 2G0? I think that it is pathetic that out of 5,(XX) tickets, which were sent to the University by t h e University of Arkansas, the in­ dividual Texas students were is­ sued just a little over 200 to tile Texas vs. Arkansas game. Ap­ parently t h e r e was an extreme lack of foresight on the part of certain University officials. The students are the backbone of the University and main sup­ porting element of the athletic program, yet over 4,700 tickets out of 5,000 were given to Aus­ tin merchants, public supporters, University officials and organiza­ tions other than individual stu­ dent supporters. This is grossly Unfair to the ftudent who has paid his $21.40 student activity fee and tuition, to let everybody else have first grabs at e k e In 1065, under the same condi­ tions, 1.000 tickets were reserved for the student*. W H Y NOT T H IS T IM E ? One-thousand stu­ dent tickets would have more than satisfied those desiring to attend the game. Tf .somebody will get on the ball maybe the Texas students will be able to attend the Arkansas game in 1971. We find ourselves very distres­ sed with the lack of interest and consideration shown by the Uni­ versity in regard to the students in matters of this nature. Furth­ ermore, we r e q u e s t that an E X A C T accounting for all 5,000 tickets he published in The Daily Texan. Hopefully, this would aid in extinguishing the rumors which have been circulating in regard to the inequities in the distribu­ tion of these tickets. Ronnie \nderson, F. Thomas Bradshaw, O. B. Begley, Richard Harris, Vrt Elkins, Bong Strange, Ed Niets Jr ., Larry Gooch. Church and state To the editor: The Founding Fathers estab­ lished the United States as a sec­ ular nation. Tile religion clause of 11 ie First Amendment was de­ signed to provide what Thomas Jefferson called “ a wall of sep­ aration church and state.” between textbooks, Powerful groups of organized religionists successfully a r e breaking down this wall with pro­ vision of lunches, transportation, grants, salaries, and attempts to introduce prayer and Bible reading into the pub­ lic schools. All of these are clear­ ly unconstitutional. George Santavana wisely stat­ A T e m p tin g O ffe r United Feature Syndicate. Inc. Guest viewpoint Defends ticket setup ing. The requirement of advance I recognize that the advance B t K O B E R T W. HAM ILTON payment provision is extremely payment, it wa* hoped, would SATURDAY DURING THE GREAT GAME 12:20-3:00 ONLY EVERY DRESS IN OUR STORE ed, “ Those who cannot remem­ ber the past are condemned to repeat it.” Mrs. John ll. Hicks 2805 Wilke Dr. Pregame prayer To the editor: Howdy! While praying to my favorite saints inspired. Can we win this one, I prayed? I was Saint Tommy Nobis said he would be right on top of the defensive action. Saints R a y Poage and Jim m y Saxton said they would come back and put fire on our tails. The Archangel Wilkinson said that he would send the heavenly hosts to help Gabriel blow his horn. And, the ghost makers at Armour s a ; d the p i g they would welcome meat. start behoving it.” This is t h e year of the Royal IOO. Bevo and Bertha shall reign supreme and happiness shall be in this land. lf you knew the Streets and the Fellers and the Worst ors you would know that our beef is IOO percent prime and it puts the pesky Porkers way under. They are a bunch of hams, we steer clear and straight. T h e y they’re good on defense think t h e y but they’ll squeal when C‘»me to our fence. And if you compare the paths made by stampeding bulls to those made y o u by might as well compare Interstate 35 with Slippery Rock ravine. retreating peccaries After my prayer and medita­ tion I fee! ready. Can we win tlu.s one? I bet on it! Henry Flore* Room 166 Jester ■;#?£ f.'. Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: • Be typ ed trip!e-spaced. • Be less than 250 words. • include name, address, and phone number of contri­ butor. But, I prayed on. What about those vears we were so close? Then a big voice .said, “ Think- offices, Journalism Building 103. lng negative is a no-no. T h i s year is your year arid you better $-•■■■ M ail letters to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan, D raw er D, UT Station, Austin, Texas; or bring letters to the Texan - g . “T " "yryssiI HOOK K M HORNS! BEA T THE R AZORE ACKS just A Friendly Reminder That Both Of Our Stores W i l l Be Open Ti/ 9 Daily For You r Christ Dias Shopping Convenience S urrrtj tn e & (top f or appag aSlSa No. 7 Jefferson Sauare [M erritt S c h a e fe r & □ . o w n Downtown Hancock C en ter O p e n Til 9 Daily NOW IN FULL PROG S ESS M E N S WEAR 2222 G u ad a lu p e — Next to the Texas Theater eliminate an important incentive to file appeals when them was no prospect that they would be upheld. The most serious objection to the present advance payment re quirement is the excessive delay between the time of payment and the time the appeal is decided. During this period, a person ulti­ m a te ly found innocent loses thp use of his money. Ideally, this period should be very' brief — a week or IO days at the most. We are still far short of t h is Ideal, but are trying to cut down the delay. Your suggestion that there he a “ review board” to hear de tenses and a p p e a ls before any payment is due would, in effect, he a return to the old system. I nless the proposed system Is substantially improved over the old it w:Sl gradually slow' down under the weight of numerous appeals, and ultimately a lower level of compliance w ith the park­ ing and t r a f f i c regulations (which, after all, is the reason we have tickets, service charges and appeals) will result. Chairman, I Diversity Parking and Traffic Committee The editorial of Nov. 26. en­ titled “ Ticket Policy” objects to the current parking regulations which require a person to p a y the service charge in advance if he wishes to appeal from a Uni­ versity parking ticket. This edi­ torial is based on a rather funda­ mental misconception. First, advance payment really has nothing to do with a presump­ tion of guilt or innocence. Pe r­ sons charged with traffic or oth­ er offenses are regularly requir­ ed to post collateral or b o n d s even though they are presumed innocent. The parking regulations are based on the same principle. If a person s apical is upheld, the service charge will he promptly refunded. Also, every person receiving a University ticket has the option of defending in the Justice of the Peace Court if he desires. If a person does not want to pay in advance, he can try the Ju s ­ tice of the Peace Court. The Parking and Traffic Office will routinely Issue a court appear­ ance ticket (and tear up t h e University' ticket) at the request of any person receiving a tic­ ket. if a person utilizes the University appeals system, he still has the option of going to the Justice of the Peace Court if he is dissatisfied with the outcome. Indeed, even for unpopular. The Parking and Traf- fice Committee reluctantly impos­ t w o requirement ed this very practical reasons. First, af­ ter an appeal is decided, the Uni­ versity has no simple way of Insuring that the service charge is paid. In the past many ser­ vice charges, payable after an appeal was decided, have never been collected, for one reason or another. A regular court does not have this problem; after a person has been found guilty, he must pay at once or post a bond lf he wishes to leave the pre­ mises The problem of collecting service charges by the University U greatest in the case of far ulty and staff since the I Diver­ sity apparently larks authority to deduct such item* from a per­ son’s salary. However, a substantial amount of service charges owed by stu­ dents have also never been col­ lected. Second, in previous years, the appeals panels, composed of faculty, staff and students, have been inundated by appeals, many of which border on the frivolous. To illustrate, this fall, the ap­ peals panels carried over several hundred appeals from tickets is- t sued last spring. Many of these people have graduated or left the University community. The committee thought that m a n y , appeals were filed prim arily to delay the day of ultimate reckon­ UNITY The Pioneer or Positive Thinking SPECIAL LECTURE: “CHRISTMAS — OCK TIME OF REBIRTH*’ REV. B ER N A R D D O Z IE R Unity Minister, Author and former member of SILENT UNITY* Candidate for the UNITY OF AUSTIN Ministry. UNITY OF AUSTIN International Room of the Ramada Gondolier Riverside Drive & Interregional Hwy. SUNDAY EVENING, 8:00 P.M. A l d i m FU WITH UNITY SCHOOL OF CHRIST I \ M T Y I M i l VII I VCI MI "SO I HI REDUCTIONS FROM Friday, Decem ber 5, 1969 T H E D A IL Y TEXAN Pag® 5 TV W atchers Guide to the Texas-Arkansas Game Can Razorbacks Bottle the Orange Crush? Kickoff, 12:20 p.m., Saturday, Channel 7 No. 16 No. 62 aw esom e f A- & 'n ^ c h in e . S treet lam es S tre et: Tile AI1-SWC q u arterb ack is the man who m akes a wish as he pulls tile trigger 'Horn pulley bono offensive ma* is a slick o p erato r, m ixes has p lay s well and is “ controlled b ed lam " according to team m ate am i fellow co-captain Ted Koy. The T exas q uarterback, the m o st valuable offensive p erform er in the Steer Cotton Bowl win oveT Tennessee la st Jan . I, faces the unenviable task of playing chess with an A rkansas defense that has (Tiven up less th an seven po.nrs per contest Street is a th re a t on The ground or rn the a ir — not ju st one way. the Bob M cKay: A consensus All America per- fottntt* a t offensive tackle, 'H orn senior likely been a unanim ous choice would have * I had it not been for one of the nation’s t o p I tack les — team m ate Bobby Wuensch. McKay tops the soak's at 250, owns a quick s ta rt and is as agile as they com e. T ackles need to be fast to m ake the Triple-Option click, since th e y a re often called upon to chop down enem y linebackers to orion hole® for W cinter, B e rtrisen and Koy. McKay has that ty pe of speed and will c a n y in A rk a n sas' G arner and Powell. top b ackers the fight to I rn j i -5 i t - i t No. IO in of two y ea rs to be one Bill M ontgom ery: A rkansas’ junior quartci'back as proved t h e si b s : custom er* under pressu re from defen­ c e lines. Rushed furiously by a huge G eorgia iii a la. i vt i r s S ugar Bowl. M ontgom ery sustained a should­ e r injury tin ! sent him to the sideline for one play — just long enough to sui k up his m agic healing agent, guts, which allowed straig h t him to set a S ugar Bowl record of nine c •tripletions. Oms ng back again early this season afte r rib the 6-1, K'.5 pound. Carrollton, Tex., product used his in tries, Cli; k release and fleet feet to dem olish Texas Tech, 33-0, in h ic ta c t m itt nor. B*** No. 34 than Iron* M axwell: More last year, Mock- justing fullback Bruce Maxw ell has been used o ca rry the Corker rushing load. Through nine I gam es, Bruce has busted to 5a9 yards and a a.8 av e rag e, m uch m ore than last eam paign when he w as known m o re for his blocking. With a A l, 218-pound fram e. Maxwell the [> w er sweep. But despite hrs perform s blocking duties, to relieve Bill B urnett at the T exas line. Bet'; use of working iii the shadow pounding of his Texas counterpart. Maxwell did not bast into the Ali- SWC lineup, but head lh g P rank Broyles says he wouldn t look for Maxwell as a guard on No. 53 k y n n C la m e r : Trorr.eiV" a- quickness and range s’ this F o rt Smith senior's lr dem ark. A two- ti mu I L .nnnan-of-the- e a r sta rter, he w as _____________ __ Week for his ID tackles in the SMU gam e la st year. He added 14 m ore against T xas Tech and finished the season with in the Sugar Bawl hor the y ear, he m ade 67 tackles, assisted on 58, k i n tip five passes, ret unwit two interceptions for l l y teds. n win d two (urn’ a's, and dropped opposing ball c a rrie rs for 75 yards in lo ss e s An Al’.State Al! Southern and All An erica sole -til n rn high school, he sta rte d ev ery gam e bis last two y e a rs a ; a p ie p ste r. ll against Georgia No. 67 Ne. 20 Jkl ak (den lia is e d : One-third of the ’H orn trium vi­ ra te of captains, H alsell ra te s w ith the best in the Southwest a t his inside linebacker s l o t . Chuck B ednarik, form er all-pro linebacker, once said those who m anned th at position had to have flat n )se* (ostensibly from hitting), great speed for a big m an and a d e sire to be Where th e action is — liaised is a prototype of til : description, a headh unter with an uncanny nose f r find­ ing the bad and severely punishing its possessor. A senior, the sturdy defender has never m issed a playing m inute due to injuries. • . * ’■ huck D im s: NTo m a tte r from whence he com- >lh, ac e R azorback receiver Chuck Pious cuts mite a ru g am idst enem y secondaries. He had is best d ay (1.2 receptions) against an All- lea ti 'fender in last y e a r’s S ugar Bowl. Overcom ing both Am. • operatic ii and sw itch fix rn flanker to split end, a sum me kn threat. Testing D 'Us is ti: • P o rk e rs' rn >st potent offensive the ball-hav, c :g T exas defense S aturday, tho G arland. Tex., is A rkansas' reception re •< rd although only a p r d u c t r a lr junior. Once touchdowns, 1 1 ti f»-. m m ore than 50 yard s out and another on a 105 y a rd kickoff retu rn . in high school P io u s scored . f t five No. 77 No. 24 Bill Ytessis: O of the m ost Im proved Long­ ue hora players, ’his hulking defensive end demoi- ishes enem y blockers with a stiff forearm , and could probably leap over buildings a t a single bound if he ever so desired. Only' a junior, the pro talent ch a rts next year. Big Bill, high cm ’Horn all-league p erform er, holds down the left defensive end gpor and sim ply refuses to give ground. A trem endous pons ru sh er. A tes s personally m anhandled SMB’s Chuck Hixson m ere rem em ber. la tte r would c a re w ouldn’t w ant to m eet him in a d a rk alley. A tessis will be another tim es th an the to \ o u die tackle put on Jerry S tew art: T )ileal of the A rkansas defen­ sive style in last w eek’s Tech gam e, re p o rts sports Illustrated, was the Raiders’ P enny H ardaw ay by defensive h au ­ te k f e r r Stew art. Leaping for a pass a t the A rkansas IO, H ardaw ay went down in a heap. the bal! rolled out of bounds and the Razor! irks had \ - -cssion on d o w n s . “ T h at’s the h ard ­ e n I'v e ever he .» hit " rn rvelcd H ardaw ay later. “ In fact, hit. really hit, not just th a t’s the ta kl- I. I would walk up and r I ■ n I a h i » h 'I rt r i first time this y e a r I ’ve [.cen lam (Stewart), lf I - .Od . 57 Rodney B rand: 'Hie P orker offensive line, and therefore pass protection for M ontgomery and read paving for B urnett and Maxwell, ce n te rs around All-America center Rodney B rand. A consensus choice for Ali-SWC bonnes a t that position the last tw o years. Brand has left his m ark on the opponents' defensive guards and linebackers with his savage blocking. Overshadow ed by the stingy A rkansas defense, tim Red express has averaged - running 85.1 plays tier 4.9 yard per play this season, wk t< uchdmvn ev ery 18.7 gam e. Bt and has led the offense to a No. 35 No. 88 •lim Bertel,sen: Thus Hudson, Wise., product, on a visit to the F o rty Acres his senior year in high school, was tre a te d to a case of food poisoning a t the athletic dorm — but he signed w ith th e ’Horns anyw ay, and has d e a lt nothing hut «f» et Stom achs and headaches to enem y coaches since. Averaging 7.6 y a rd s every' tim e he lugs tho leather, the ’Horn halfback is a scoring th reat anyw here, anytim e, eith er as a runner or pass receiver. A sophomore, B ertelsen leads the high-powerful T exas rustling offense with 711 yards on only 94 ca rrie s. Keep a n eye out for an O range and WI, te 35 in the A rkansas de­ fensive secondary. j* .I**#* tt Cotton S p ey rer: H aving ? I-op th re a t like Spey- re r w'hen one has a set of running bat ks like t the 'H orns is som ew hat akin to having a Cc>r- votte as your s e c ad car. But S peyrer. an Ali- SWC choice a t split end, provides signal-caller Street with a p le a sa n t alternative to handing off to W orster, B ertelsen or Koy. Cotton has sure hands, enough moves to e m b a rra ss L ittle E gypt and deceptive speed. He can break a gam e wide-open w ith the bom b (ie—OU) and S tre et can chunk it. Could be an interest!! g battle between S peyrer and P orker defensive hack T erry Stew a r t No. 33 just m ight be - p s:-,es Saturday Bill B urnett: I, st am id the expected flurry of the Vkm. s tr m ’ive 11 g running gam e—spell that Bill Burnett. The la st b rother a c t in the fam ous rut ling hacks for the P orkers, Bill has brought i rn O zark enthusiasts than Ado G uthrie a t ant. He’s not the biggest or fastest runner the or had—but he is probably the Hogs’ g reatest (818 yards, into the end zone for H i:, v moves with fluid motion ; : illy when pouring No. 64 Cliff Powell: Tho la test n long lint* of out­ standing A rkansas linebackers. Powell has been two-year start* r, making most of the All- a '68. Ho led the P orkers in SYVC selections in ri* -w e statistics last year, m aking 72 ta rk h x assisting on 82 more, breaking up thi'*e pa«s plays. r< cover ng a fumble, and dumping rival ball e a r n e r s for 32 yards in losses. The E udora senior w as an all-state q u arterb ack in high school, b e­ r. In one prep ing nam ed the outstanding back in his distr g am e he sc ored TDs on an interception, a QI) sneak, a punt retu rn and a pass play. Obviously, h e ’s some kind of athlete. one of his 19 TDs this year. 'H O RN DEFENSE ® ® © H O G DEFENSE o 0 0 ® © ® (if) ® © © o O O O O O O 0 o o 0 H O G OFFENSE O O O _ O O O O o © © ® © © ® © © © © © 'H O RN OFFENSE Razorbacks 'N’.im # VV t. 1*1 19" 1*4 r n . . . . .QB . ...Q U ............... QU . . . . . WH D U B D U B ................KS ............... SE D U B ..S H h i t ............. TR . . . . . . K B P H B ...............3 8 ....S A K MM . . . L B ..............TH Bill M ontgom ery Dave Lundequi*t John Kit ‘Dei W aller N< .*<»b ISO Gus Hustler 193 J erry Moore Bill McChord 19>i 172 Chuck D lcus Im David H ogue ISO S teve U oekersm ith Mike H endren TH 20a . . . . P H B 183 lo rry S tew art 2U5 Don Brennan Paul Blevins 175 3Uu Bobby N ich ols IE* R onnie P r u e 19" D ick KuUer lf?) S ieve W allers 206 Steve F.; raw ell 202 Rn nard Colem an 185 Bill Biune;! KB 216 Bruce M axw ell ..................HR 198 Ronnie Jones lh ' D ennis . . . . S A I .Berner 175 Louis Cam pbell .. . . D H R 210 . . . . . . . . FU Buss (.arber UM . . . . . . . . LB S teve Vestal 205 ............... TE Bill.' Lively 225 . . . . . . K S Carv S lo ekdeil 20u ................... TB Mike S ain t 175 . . . . . . . . TH R ussell Cody ITI Robert Dew D H B lhf> M ike Schaufele 180 John Recs 18* Ti n - H opkins ................ C 20(i 23u I’errv Turner 195 Robert I*ewis . . . . . . . . H i t 200 L ynn Garner . . . . . . . . L B Bin Carter c g 218 Rodney Brand ........... . . D E 210 Ste'** Benoit LB 195 Mike B osch etti Hick Vickers ............... HT 21" IJT 215 Dick Bumpus . . . . . . . O O 209 D ew itt Sm ith . . . . . . D L 2‘ *> Roger H a re.sh CUff Pow ell . . . . . . . . LU 210 . . . . . . . - O H 22" .Jim M ullins Of, . 225 NLke G riffin 220 .HT Terry Don P h illip s 225 Ronnie Bennett . . . . . C G 239 R onnie Ham m e n ....O '* . . . IU-? Gor don M cNulty 21S . . . . . . . . DT Rick Kersey Tom Mabry ............... OF .Of! Jerry D osaey Bob S ta n k o v i'h UT . . . . L F L-nd.-l Thom as . . . . . . . . OT Gary Parson ............... GT M ike K elson John 'I it m er ................GT David Cox ................... SE . . . . . . . . . .T E Roy Fears . . . . L B To! am y H opper Tim W ebster KS . . . . . . . . D E Bruce Jam es Tnnffliy Den DE . . . . l'a t M u r u it* . . . . . . . . X L 25U 23" 23" 235 2fk) 225 240 IS" lh" 2"7 "hi 216 ton ................K H MM Hobby Field ........... •« F L IO 14 13 16 IT 18 19 act 21 22 28 24 25 26 ah 29 an 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 4) 42 43 41 45 4t> 47 48 49 Si) 51 52 53 54 57 58 59 6i« Kl 62 63 6! 63 60 6* 69 Th 73 72 73 71 75 76 77 7S 79 8) hi 82 8 hi 81 bo r : Sn Stuttga Little Br in kit Benton Norma < .aria rn Lad-at Little MUSKO) I- I S i Prairie s M S p n n I’m** N I, L oth Ham 1L\ ei I tour P a ia Rich) T ex * Rugs' War: LUU J one: Farw Lawi Dew Rust kl Ll IU New] Shre P ine Durn h I Fort LUU Kudo w an Main Long < E re Mars Pine t < *nw Conv Law t Bent Warr II ant Horn St. I Datla nae* J r Sop h. Sr, >• pit. Soph. Jr. Soph. J r. So ph. Soph. Jr. Sr. J r. .lr Soph. Soph. J r . Jr Soph Sr. Sr Soph. Soph Soph. Soph. So pnu Sr S '»ph. Sr. Soph, Soph. Jr. Jr. Jr Soph, Soph. Si Soph. Sr Soph, J r. Soph. Jr. Sr Soph Sr Sr Soph Sr Soph J r Sr. Jr Soph. Sr. Sr, J r . J r. S p h . Jr. Sr S< 'ph. J r ' Jr. 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-0 6-2 6-3 6-0 6-0 6-1 5 I L EJ 6-0 6>3 5-9 E l E 2 6-0 6-0 EV 5-11 E» I E l 6 2 6 2 E l Eh 5 ii EJ 6 5 E l E l l .VU 6-1 E l V U 6 -0 6-5 6 1 EJ El EJ E l E l 6-2 EJ 6-3 6 J El 6-1 EJ E I EJ E J E l 6-. I 6-6 E J E I E l Eh E t 6-3 6-f I E t E d El E J 6-0 6 2 No. 23 p m Fred S teinm ark: An Ali-SWC safely, the stum py St Finm ark owns ail t h e tools to be a top de­ fensive back, including a desire for contact and an eagle eye for e rra n t enem y aerials. Ark­ an sas throw er Montgomery will be trying to pass over him and split end Pious will try’ to run around him — n eith er an ear', try to run over him. if they ever get past the likes of Atessis and Halsell. F reddy is also a dangerous m an once he has clam ped to a re tu rn a punt or .stray pass, and also has been known two task. And Pig backs Burnet? and M axwell will in his day. 'rn to No. 30 m for the stev« W orster: Look big Steer fullback on short y ard age situations, av er­ age y ard a g e situations, and Hrs* and IO from - your own 20. In a word, anytim e. A consensus all-conference selection and a m em b er of sonic A ll-America team s, the junior running back possesses d evastating blocking techniques a s well a s brutish ball-carrying form. The m iddle m an in the Wishbone, W orster has stru ck fear in the h e a rts of opposing linebackers, defensive backs and coaches, F ran k B royles, the top P ork chop, said W orster is the key to the T exas triple option. " I jiBt wish they wouldn’t hand off or fake to him every tim e ,’' he m oaned. Longhorns . . . . . . . . . KB Fed R oy . ............. lapp* F eller F led stPirsmark .-•cooter M onzingo Jfo. Nam# 5 ...K S . . . . . .OK ......... .D H B ...Q B . . . . . . .P H B ............. . ..K S . -TE . . ............. .D U B . ...L B ........ .. . L B . .LB ............. .. . S E ,. . . . IO R obbie P atm an 13 Jim m y Gunn 14 Kiddie P h lllip* . . . . . . . Jam es Street 16 . .QB IS D on ih e W igginton 19 Paul K r is ly n ik .. . . .D U B . KS 20 JI D ickie Joh n ston .. HB J2 B illy D ale . . MB 25 D®» ns L e s t e r ......... .D H B ................. .. HB 24 . • P H R 2 b Joh n n y R obinson . HE . . . . 27 Tom m y Axaff .SAK 27 . . . . . . 29 Robe rt P ain e . . . 3" S iev e W orster TI Greg F lo e Ut . . . . . .. LB 32 Mike H u tchin gs . . B B aa Terr.' C ollins TI David Richardson . . . LB 35 Jim B ertelsen 36 David B ah ew 37 Rob L a> ne 4" Rand > P eseh el Jim Nabors 41 42 Mack M*’K inney 43 Larry W ebb 44 Raym ond F onten ot 45 Ken Lim j 46 Bobby Cal I Ison 47 Paul Robichau 48 RICK Troller m an 80 Bubby W uensch . . . . . J eff Zapalac 51 52 Forrest W iegan d 54 Rick M artin 55 Bonnie Ty ier 57 Jim A chilles BO Syd K easter RI K2 Bob McKay sa G eorge ( *obb El Bobby M ii'-heii as El Mike Dean RT Glen H alsell Jay Cormier rn m ("harip* Roger* 7" Carl W hit# Leo Brook* 7! 72 Jon WUUamaon 73 Travis Roach 71 Randy S tou t . . . P T 7ft Charles Crawford . ...C k ; 76 Chria Young 77 B ill A tessis 78 Tom m y la.-* 79 Hu Bill Zapalac 82 83 Si Tom Cam pbell 85 Stan M auldin 86 Milt* Cam pbell R S 89 David Arledge Po#. Wt. 18ft 164 ISO ISH 175 i m 174 183 p o 190 174 212 177 188 166 182 208 205 19! ISI 193 197 177 196 aor} 169 195 190 215 173 190 189 173 221 185 ans 195 2! 9 204 205 213 245 186 211 224 306 202 200 306 236 244 198 225 241 208 219 257 215 225 215 ‘JOI 225 183 ! 95 186 169 177 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........... Scott H e n d e r so n ... . . . . . . ......... . . DG ......... . . . L B . . . . . . . . ........... .......... . . . . . . . . . . Tommy W oodard . .. . T E I >eryl Comer ......... . . . T E . . . • D B B . . . . . . . . L R ('bar! es ^ tm v rer... . . .Sh: . .D E ..H B . . . . LB . . . . D T . . . C . . . c .. LB . . . P T . . . C ......... ........... ......... ............. . . . . . . . . OT . .P T . - PG Scott Palm er . . . . ............. Pat Mach a ..D E ..D E .. P T . . . Fredericksburg Texarkana Carrollton Cia#* Hem plow a J r. Sr. Soph, Soph. M esquite Lon.;, ievv S p r.n g Branch B ay City D el Rio C'lovi*. N M. Odessa A mar* Ho B ellville P lano M arshall D enver. Colo. H ouston B ridgp c i t y Sherm an Mount p e a sa n t San A ngelo A bilene Hudson. V .sr C larksville Lubbock A ustin A ustin Cameron Angleton Bort Arthur Gonzales Abilene Beaum ont San Antonio H ouston A ustin Ed na Sr. Soph. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr Soph. J r. Jr. Sr, Jr Jr Soph. Soph. Sr Sr. Jr. Sr Soph. J r. Sr. lr. Jefferson S p rin g Branch H allsville 1 ‘alia* Crane A m arillo W hr#(.ridge Colo, Houston Sherm an Odessa F-’re# por* San Antonio Soph. Odessa Soph. J r. Soph. .lr Sr. Sr Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr Soph Soph. Soph. McKinney Sr Sr. K erm it Dallas Soph. Marlin Soph. Soph. Sr. Jr Soph. Soph. Orchard San Angelo Spring Branch H ouston H ouston B elton Ut. V U V9 6-0 EU V 11 V9 5-9 6~2 6-0 VKI V U EJ E l V U VTO V U 6-0 v i a En 5-E 6-0 5 JI VII VU) E l 6-0 EJ E l VII V 11 VK) V IO Soph, 5-9 Soph. E 3 Jr V U Soph. 6 I Sr E2 E2 V U 6-0 E l 6-6 v i n V U EJ 6-0 V I I Et) E 3 6-4 E6 6-0 E3 8-2 V II E l 6-3 E 2 V U E4 E l 8-2 5-11 VII VII V U V I I Jr Soph, Sr. Sr Soph Sr Jr Soph A ustin A bilene Pat 13* A ustin Azle Austin Port Arthur R ichardson Page 6 Friday, December 5, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN UT-UA: Game of Numbers toward this Saturday. By V U G H V A LD R ED G E They have blanked six opponents and given up only 34 points. Assistant Sport* Editor The butterflies for This One Started their subdued activity in­ side many fans Iona about mid- aft eraoon last Thursday, Thanks­ giving Day. Texas sat on top of a 39-point half-time lead versus A&M in College Station and Arkansas en­ joyed a 17-point advantage over Tech in Little Rock. It was ajr proximately the then thoughts and emotions of thou­ sands of onlookers began to turn that Saturday. Dee. 6/ lh69. 12:20 p.m. CST. The stage is sot. ST XRT WITH the No. I r. fed learn in the country, 18 victories in a row, No. I in rushing of­ fense, No. 5 in total offense, No. sir­ ■I in total defense, No. 2 in ing, tested bv only one learn rn its last 18 gamer, led by a con­ sensus All-America tackle and three other stars se!ce* I to one or another all-star to, in. Than take the No. 2 ranked squad, 15 victories in a row, No. in defense against scoring, I 24 point* going onto the final quarter before the Razor backs scored twice in the late stages of the contest. That game marked only the second substantial vic­ tory for either team in the 60 s, the first being Texas’ 33-7 win in 1961. OF TH E OTHER seven games played within the decade, only one, The ’Horns’ 21-12 win in 67, was decided by more than a touchdown. In that game, t h e Steers ba 11-eon trolled the end zone in the last two minutes to ice the victory. into In Memorial Stadium sn 1966 the ’Horns drove to the four late in the game before a clutch inter­ f r ception saved a 12-7 win the Razorback, The '63 game ranks as a classic in the history of conference football. W hi I e it was only the fifth game of the reason, the circum - stances were remarkably simi­ lar to Saturday's. Both elevens were unbeaten. Arkansas sport­ ing a 16-game winning streak and Texas boasting a IO gam** skein* Texas was rated first n die nation and Arkansas was tab­ bed as runnerup. TMK TEAM S u t in Fay-- viUe and, aided by a Texas at­ tack of fumbhtir, the Hogs broke out to a 20-0 lead. The Steers fought back in determined fash ion to fake a 24-20 margin late in the game. With about three minutes to go. Arkansas took the ball and marched the length of the field mainly on the gifted fin­ gers of Al I-Am erie a receiver Bobby Crockett to score with 1:32 left and win it 27-24. Texas had lost its No. I rank ing again one year before h- thev dropped a I M3 thriller. The Steel* elected to go for the win when they scored late the game and the two-point conver­ sion attempt came up short in In the national championship season of 1963. the 'Horns mok a ITO lead a? Little Rock a n d watched it dwindle late in the con­ tes- to IT 13, but held on for the win. I IIF! H O G S almost spoiled another unbeaten year for Tex ’62 when Tommy Ford as rn seared with 0:36 seconds remain mg to give the Steers a 7-3 win. Texas had driven 90 yards in 20 plays to ge* the victory tally. Arkansas won toe I960 game on a field goal by Mickey Cissell with 16 seconds left lo pull toe Hogs our of tire fire 24-2.3. 'Dus will be time since 1933 for two unbeaten SWC firs* rho with a host of big-piay anis Us. an offense-eating defense that has given up six touchdowns in its last IO games, and one sure- shot All-America and two other mentions. Sprinkle in unprecedented news coverage, an estimated TV view­ ing audience of 50 million, one President and one ex-President in attendance along with sena­ tors and congressmen galore, and an astronaut in quarantine watch­ ing en the tube by necessity ra­ ther than choice. P I T I I* FO R grails a South­ west Conference championship, a Cotton Bowl berth opposite legen­ dary Notre Dame in the prime New Year's Day clash, a na­ tional championship, and a pre­ sidential plaque awarded after the ga me by the man himself. NTw place the whole affair into a smallish, 43.000 seat stadium jammed with fanatic Razorback fans covered in red from hats to si: eg and from tho r Snoev- singed tonsils to their fire ' re ­ cti eyes — and have that group all scream at once as the two squads a (tempt to push e a t h other through the AstroTurf grid- hr>n. (An that day and at that time, lf w ill seem to lie the game to end ail games — and it might be. From all outward appearances, It ic close to a perfect match. T"\as, the methodically devasta­ ting unemotional juggernaut on offense and the vacuum sucking I ass grabbing, rush crushing sn wall on defense, m i g h t rate a slight nod over Arkansas’ well-balanced ground eating of­ fense and goal lim* hiding ue- fenso on a neutral field. Razor­ back Stadium, though, could only seem neutral to o n e who is color-blind and deaf. Is O M A fitting that tho mammoth battle crystal balled and momentarily moved into its season ending position by ABC la t spring, should eomn’ctp col. loge football’s Centennial Cele­ bration, IT Both coaches have declared their charge?? to he well primed at id physically fit for the Battle of Fayetteville, Coach Darrell Royal, speaking before an im­ pressive 30,OGG-person pep raliy .Stadium Wednes. in Memorial day nigh* (only slightly less than t! • crow t at Fayetteville Satur­ day), ended his remarks with a leis.- “ we’re ready.” H g rn e n t o r Frank Brm !es said Thursday that unless Tex- as is a “ superteam” they will get a battle all the way from j his Porkers. W H IL E TH IS is the fifty-first meeting in a series that Texas leads 37-13, the Hogs will be at­ tempting to even up the series for the dec ide. Both teams rose to national prominence at approx! j ma?civ the same time at them turn of the decade, and Texas went out ahead 3.4 in games since I960 with a 39-29 win last sea­ son. Tile Steers led that game b) teams to rrmet at the end of the season for the national and con­ ference crowns. TCI W D SMT r it >. I th U 0 records that year vita a Rose Bowl bid awaiting the victory, SM U won it 20-14 on a last gasp bid by All-America Bobby W il­ son, This is tho ninth time t h a t both teams have corno into this game undefeated and tile ’Horns have won seven of those contests, ie that ft w ill be the twelfth fir the two .squads have squi red off s h a s in Fayetteville, and ’N --a ie pre- triumphed in rune of ti vinas 11. The press coverage will be ex­ tensive with almost every rn.nor national newspaper I magazine sending representatives. Sports Illustrated w ill have bree writ­ ers and two photog: piers at five contest. I IR M T EX VS* • sr u? * has improved steadily since the season began and is currently riding quite a hot streak T h e Steer regulars have wared 21 out of the last 18 tin *s they have had the ball. The defensive starters r a n match that track record, though, with a feu of their own statistics. The injury situation looks good for lioth teams. Bruce Maxwell, the Razorback*’ bruising fullback will return to action after sitting out the Tech tilt, and defensive end Gordon McNulty, who had a stellar game in the Hogs’ 16-2 win over Georgia in the Sugar Bowl last year, may see sjiot action. Terry Don Phillips, senior de­ fe n s iv e tackle, will return to ac­ tion for the first time since the Baylor game, the Porkers’ four­ th contest of the season. ON T H E OR ANGE side of the ledger, linebacker Scott Hender­ son, who sat out the A&M game \h 11h a bone fracture in his ankle, will start Saturday. He has been running slowly in drills this week, I v Royal said Monday that he should be ready to go by game time. So it will all come down to one la- tor Saturday, There are plenty of goodies up for grabs in This One. not the least of which is the pride within a team, and who- * '.> r w a r t s the goodies the most will get them. S t a r t wanting. ’Hon I, t e countdown is getting close. GET IX OX ALL T H E AI T I O X . . . Even if yen can’t make it to the game I !y^\ * I 0 \ 4 . I S D I t \ S It \ / O l t 8I A 4 K S Airtime 12 N o o n Exclusively yours on t E T I M ' R A D IO & TS rn ms 3 W m Tmh S S S C h a n g e o f C o m m an d — Photo bv* John Yale*. G o v . Preston Smith (r) de­ clared C oach Darrel! Royal (cj 'C om m and er of Texas Forces for the Battle of Fayetteville in a press conference Wednes­ day. Horn stars Bill A t, isis (I) and Bob McKay observe the proceedings. AP All-America McKay Picked N EW YO RK CAP) - Oklaho­ ma’* Steve Oven*, winner of tile Heisman Trophy as college football’s outstanding player, and Mike Reid of Penn State, reci­ pient of the Outland Trophy as the best interior lineman, have been named to the 1969 All- America team as selected by The Associated Press Joining tailback Owens in the offensive backfield a r e Mike Phipps, Purdue's record-break­ ing quarterback; halfback Bob Anderson of Colorado and full- ba< k Jim Otis of Ohio State. The dream backfield would have little trouble moving the ball behind a line that includes tackles Bob McKay of Texas and John Ward of Oklahoma State, guards B ill Bribees cf Houston and Chip Kell of Tennessee and center Rodney Brand of Arkan­ sas. On the flanks are tight e n d Jim Mandich of Michigan a n d split end Walker Gillette of Rich­ mond. The defensive unit consists of Jim m y Gunn, Southern ends California, and Phil Olsen. I tab State; tackles Reid and M i k e McCoy. N o t r e Dame; middle guard Jim Stillwagon, Ohio State; linebackers Steve Kl aer of Ten­ nessee and D e n n i s Onkotz of Penn State — the only repeaters — and Don Parish of Stanf >rd and backs Jack Tatum of Ohio State. Tom Curtis of .Michigan and Buddy McGimtomof Auburn. EURO PE 70 U.S.A. Charter Flights ROUND TRIP FROM TEXAS from 285 OO 7+h Successful Year O v e r 15 D epartures To C h o o se From O n W O R L D A I R W A Y S 707 J E T S M o re Than 300 Texas Students H a v e A lr e a d y Signed Up Exclusively For U n iversity Students and Facu lty and M em b ers of Their Fam ilies ASSURE YOUR ARRIVAL IN EUROPE THIS SUMMER ON OUR PROVEN PROGRAM. A L O W $50 REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT W ILL HOLD YOUR RESERVED SEAT TO EUROPE. STUDENT TRAVEL INC. 2226 G u a d a lu p e Between Chambers & The Texas Theatre On The Drag or CALL 477-4340 P.S. There are still a few seats left on Our Christmas C h arter to N ew York. TEXAS STUDENTS’ B K I FACULTY'S I X ■ I I — ^ I I I CHOICE IN LIQUOR STORES m e THI BOTTU SHOPS anil SPA R T AN S LIQUORS 7 C R O W N 86 pr. Blended W hisky SEAGRAM'S 399 C an a d ia n W hisky 80 pr 719 Famous C R O W N RO Y A L 5 th 5th Straight Bnarfcon Whistle* Seagrams v 4 * n 4 v « *, *«» I . . . . . . . . 7.19 86 pr. Sour M a s h ......... 5th 3.59 [ WILD TURKEY J. W. DANT HIRAM WALKER S TEN HIGH th pr..... 5th ^ 3 9 KENTUCKY BEAU 86 pr................... 5t‘ A STILIBROOK 86 pr........................ 5th c Jo .' EZ R A B R O O K S ...........90 pr • Your Choice A O LD G R A N D D A D ___ 86 pr. 5th * * 2 9 O LD S U N N Y B R O O K ......... 80 pr. 5th 2.99 M A T T IN G L Y & M O O R E . . . 86 pr. 5th 3.19 C A N A D IA N C L U B ......... W A LK E R S C A N A D IA N . . . . 86 pr. 5th 5.39 80 pr. 5th 3.59 IMW; (Af IT IR I L I> CANADIAN’ WHISKIES O LD C R O W ....................... 86 pr. ^ 9 9 K E N T U C K Y T A V E R N 8 Yr. * . 86 pr J J. W. D A N T IO Y r............. 86 pr.to.r C h o k e S A V E B I G on B I G S I Z E S ! O LD C R O W 86 pr. . . Ot. 4.79 Vi ga l. 8 98 BELLOW S 86 pr................. Va g a llo n 7.99 J" SCOT! II W ll I*>K 11 % — IM',. IM PORTE ll ** 5.991 TEACHER'S s. Pr QT 6.39 w sal 1138 B & L so p ............ Quart 4.29 Ballantine^ EPICso pr IOO PIPERS 86 ........... s. 5.69 J & B Rare 86P.......... 6.19 LANG'S 8 Yr.a.,. . . . . . . . . . » 4.99 ...... . 3.59 KING GEORGE IV OLD SMUGGLER * 4.49 CUTTY SARK aa .......... st, 6.39 H IM P O S T E D TANOUERAY or BEEFEATERS GORDONS O R A N G E X W H IT E L A B E L I CORDON G Vodka I IMP OR TEO * - , I /amy/// rati I EE53ZJ I I i .,, . I MILLER S sth 4.99 5th 7.59 Sth 7,19 ...... 5th 7.59 .... sth 1.69 .....5th 1.69 I c . . . 3.991 C ase 4.19 C s 24 C e n t TEXAS NO. 1 BUMPER STICKERS SOLD HERE I [ P A S S - O U T I G A M E S ------- A D U L T X - M A S Two Pearl quarts hold almost as much as a six-pack. But you don’t pay anything near a six-pack price. So you get a lot of Pearl Beer for a lot less money. We may be the only beer bargain left. And that’s worth drinking to. 1809 GUADALUPE • AND SPARTAN DISCOUNT LIQUORS 5501 AIRPORT BLVD. 1209 RED RIVER • Friday, December 5, 1969 THE D A ILY T E X A N Page 7 Fayetteville Film School Hogs Do Homework F A Y E T T E V IL L E (A P ) — Ark­ ansas coach Frank Broyles and his team are “ cramming” f o r the big test Saturday between Texas and the Razorbacks as the countdown began t h e “ big shootout.” for While public discussion rages across Arkansas about whether the touted Arkansas defense can stop Texas’ high-scoring offense, Broyles was saying, “ if they’re super, we can’t do anything about “ IF TUEY ’K E not, we c a n win,” he said. “ It will be a ques­ tion of who gets t *'■ fumble or w ie makes the big play on of­ fense or defense. “ I think we've got a good atti­ tude about the game " Broyles said. “ Every off period the play- *prs b i*?* down hor?* looking st films trying to got acquainted with the Texas offense and dn- fi ase. “ What we need especially on the defensive plays is recogni­ tion,” Broyles said. “ We puked up a little bit today. T H E NO. I rn re-. *‘d Longhorns and the No. 2 Razorbacks will match 9-0 records in tile game of the year and perhaps of the cen­ tury. President Richard M. Nix- on and a host of dignitaries will be in the stands to see the na­ tionally televised game. Broyles describes the Texas offense as one with “ bread and butter plays,” explaining t h a t “ not very thn longhorns are complicated in what they do ARKANSAS tailback Bill Pur- nett, who hrs scored 19 touch­ downs this season, said, “ People up here believe Texas may be supermen. They've awed a lot of people. It’s like their team has maybe hypnotized people.” Broyles said the coaches have tried to keep everything calm during the w e e k, "knowing that the themselves will make this an emotional game.” circumstances ★ ★ ★ Bv The Associated Pre4-* Texas has won 106 games since Darrell Royal took over as coach in 1957, hut he probably would trade a few? victories for a onc- point margin over Arkansas Sat­ urday in college football’s game of tho year. “ This will be one of the stern­ est tests this school has r v 0 r faced or ever will face,” s a y s 1500 L A V A C A 5353 BU RN ET RD. 1327 S O . C O N G R E S S G R 8-5423 H O 5-8689 HI 4-1089 j skey . Bourbon W H Va GAL. W IL D TU R K EY S',, gh- Bourbon W h K EN T U C K Y T A V E R N A N C IEN T A C E 86 ore^f Sir6' a K EN T U C K Y B E A U ?», O LD C R O W 86 proof Straight Bourbon W H J I M B E A M 86 Drocf St-n ghf Bourbon W h s k e y .......... . • r f 3.99 t i 1 3.39 So c o n f Se a g V Bourbon W h Iskey . . . . . . . . 5An 3.99 8.98 IQI nrorif $ii'rA! qni Bourbon VVh’ ■ >ev . . . . . . . 5Ah 7.19 QUART 4.79 6 .39 5,99 86 p'opf Sec**h V A ' - , «y . . . . ...................5th 5.29 r4h 4,49 ...................5th 3 oL Va GAL. 8 V , G A L. 12 B A L L A N T IN E S 86 proof S-o‘ " ’n Y ."- 'v ny . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D‘ n CUTTY S A R K 86 pre i f Scorch V/- -.Key . . . . .......... . S M IR N O F F V O D K A 80 proof p f ed from Grain B & L SCOTCH 80 proof Scotch Whiskey O LD S M U G G L E R B L A C K & W H IT E O O o - ,5th O O O o c • • • T EA C H ERS SCOTCH 86 proof Sec ■ ch LL hiske / . . . . DURO FATH ERS RO SE Imported Portugal Rose LL -g ....................5th G O R D O N S V O D K A 8 J p r o " f ' BC. " c m Grain . ........................ 5th 2 b . 99c oo S C H EN LEY G IN 90 proc* D V ! sd foe'*; Gra'n D O N O R U M to on * P * D CfU C O .19 O .39 C T i l i s “ p a t c h Royal, whose coaching c a r e e r is dotted with big games. O N E O F the most memorable was in 1963 when a television camera caught Royal bounding on to Texas A&M’s Kyle Field f a c e at College Station, his flushed with excitement and one Ii md making the familiar “ Hook ’em Horns --ign, after the No. Pranked Longhorns had scored late to beat tile Aggies, 15-13. On Jan. I, 1964, the Longhorns proved they were the b e s t in the nation by thrashing No. 2 Navy, 28-6, in what was billed s the most important intersec­ tional victory in Texas’ history. One sports writer wrote t h a t “ Texas is already the No. I col­ lege football team in the world. Wednesday it became No. I in t!a East, which is a whole lot more authoritative.” The Ixmghoms returned to na­ tional prominence under Royal, and they were riding h i g h in the polls in 1959 when a tough TCI team broke Harry More­ land loose in the ice and snow at Austin for a 14-9 victory. TCL ALSO pinned the next big game loss on Royal in 1961 bv pulling the upset of the year, 6-0, to knock Texas off its No. I pen h. "lf somebody would have play­ ed tup organ real soft I w-ould have cried,” Royal recalled re­ cently. Most of the longhorns’ b I g games have been rated that way because Texas lost. Had it won it would have been just another victory' in a long string. T W IC E A RKAN SAS has d o n e the trick. Both to mis were undefeated in four games in 1961 when No. I Texas failed on a bid for a two* poult; conversion in the closing minutes and dropped a 14-13 squeaker to Arkansas, w h i c h its next five foes to shut out finish the regular season un­ beaten. Texas was No. I and Arkansas No. 2 when the two unbeaten teams met again at mid-season in Fayetteville. Ark., in 1965, with the Razorbacks winning, 27-24, in what Southwest Confer­ ence fans regard as the measur­ ing s t o c k for great football games. The mixture appears even rich­ er this time. MOTORCYCLES!!! 5 % Off— to all C o lle c t Students TRIUMPH SUZUKI BULT ACO DAL T R IU M P H SA LES 5120 Burrio- Rd. 452-7554 TEXAS * I Bumper Stickers Now A t The BOTTLE SHOPS 1809 Guadalupe 1209 Red River (May ba ordered by natl et 2 for SI.00) Jacquins D i s t i l l I r**m ti mitt if» Front 2.89 l/j Gallon CUTTY SARK Import^ Sf«tfh \\ hiskt"*’ 14 38 OLD GRAND DAD 8*; proof Strs.cht fU»nrfeon Whbkr? 4.39 F U LL Q U A R T OLD CROW S t r a ig h t n .’ UrhoB W bUko\ fir, Proof 4.99 THI* lit rqniv iU»nt to 3.9ft » F if t h EZRA BROOKS 7 Years Old S t r a ig h t (Io u r h o * VfhUkrr 90 proof 4.29 I m n o r tor! Seagram's V. 0. < a n A d t U Hli>ndf«l TVhltkev RO Proof 5.39 BALIANTINES Import of! fie «trh St hi-!,* RC, Proof 5.99 EARLY TIMES Straight FTonrboa 4.29 KENTUCKY TAVERN * Year* OM At rajfrM Bourbm* \\ ht-L* V 99 Proof 3.99 EDELWEISS BEER 3.49 Cusr- 2i C a n * Cold at S o I art rn < barer \ va ll a Ii lf* at Al I, SY ORK8 Specials G ood From Noon FR ID A Y Until 6 P.M . S A T U R D A Y Cash & C arry Centennia! • 2932 Guadalupe i 9th and Chicon • • 2125 East 7th • 6309 Cameron PA Y -LESS • B is t & Cam eron Road • 6534 N. Lamar identifies the world's best beer drinkers! A N H E U S E R - B U S C H , IN C . • S T L O U IS Page 8 Friday, December 5, 1969 THE DAILY TEXAN Bob Crook Wuensch Punch Bobby Wuensch plays left tackle ors the best offensive line in college football. His teammates have earned the rushing yardage championship by using the holes he has helped create in enemy defensive lines. Wuensch explains that the blocker that opens holes is the one who has “ the initial punch and the 'want to.' Wuensch, who has already been named to two All-America team*, sees football without the euphemisms and glen’ words often attnbu ted to the sport. C ontact Is the Key “ Football Is a moan game. A lot of schools don’t play it the Way it was meant to ho played, though.” Ti is refreshing to hear a player w-ho plays a contact sport and relishes in the contact. “ If a guys a hitter, thats football,’ he assorts. really blows off Aggie coach Gene Stallings learned the hard way that the Texas the line.” Wuensch is quick to emphasize line t ;it there are *'seven guys who fire out,” and that “ size doesn't make the difference.” it’s ‘‘the punch.” Wuensch savs the blocker has only in there and blow them off the line.” That is Again, to “ stick his head easier said than done, however. Wuensch rev a led that part of the Longhorns' game plan for every Wuensch revealed that part of the Longhorns’ game plan for every play and hit a linebacker or halfback. “ We list people until thev ‘-an't take it any longer. We hammer ’em, and we keep it up Pretty soon they get tired of getting hit. Then we’re doing our .job.’’ He further offered that “ everybody we’ve played so far has given up. Vt hen you're hitting somebody, they're gonna get tired sooner or later ” It appears that sooner has been the rule this seas*rn. Triple-Option Treat Wuen.M ii enjoy-; ?! o triple-option offense. “ We take the ball and clr vo c and drive if. We want to put that guy (the defender) on his back every time we go up against him.” During the A&M game last Thursday, the ’Horns incurred a penalty for holding. Wuensch did not let. the setback affect him or the oilier IO in the huddle. “ C'mon guys,” he yelled. “ We < an still get em. We’ve just got to hit harder.” In the locker room after the game, Wuensch was quick to re mind that “ we did get our first down and went on to score on that series.” That one example Is a prototype of the ’Horns’ success this sea.vn. When .something goes wrong, the Longhorns hit harder. So far, tills attitude has spc led victory’. Tills attitude also spells P-R T-D-K. And pride is what g