T h e Da il y T e x a n Astronauts Sail Quietly Into Space Corrective Rocket Fire C ancelled; T o u ch d o w n Sch edu led W e d n e s d a y SPACE CENTER, I fouston (AP) — Three American astronauts sped smoothly toward a risky moon adventure Saturday, their spacecraft spinning slowly through space and the earth receding slowly behind them. Apollo 13 astronauts James L. Lovell Jr., Ire d W. liaise Jr. and John I,. Swigert Jr. rode quietly Hut firmly on the path to the moon despite a launch marred by n premature rocket cut off. SWIGERT, a last minute substitute on the crew for another astronaut who is suspected of being infected bv German measles, was complimented by ground controllers for his flying skill. So accurately was Apollo 13 on Its path to the moon, mission controllers canceled a course correction rocket firing that had been scheduled for early Sunday. Another correction night, however. planned Sunday is ' oven. Haise and Swigert took pictures pf the earth on given signals from mission control. The pictures will later help mpfe- Geologists study the earth’s weather pat­ terns. SPEED OF THE spacecraft, which reach- rd 24,000 miles an hour just after Apollo 33 rocketed out of earth orbit, slowly de­ clined as It started up tile "gravity * hill" toward the moon. Its speed had fallen to 6,100 miles per hour bv 10:13 p.m. CST, eight hours after launch. The moon and the earth will play a game of gravity big of war with the spacecraft until lunar gravity gain* control Monday afternoon. The craft will then pick up speed. Legal System Faces Crisis, Says Speaker Abide Hoffman and Leonard Weinglass are placing themselves above the law, said Texas House Speaker G. S. (Gus) Muncher Saturday night at the School of Law’s Delta Theta Phi legal fraternity awards banquet. In his speech, Muncher examined the crisis confronting the judicial system, find­ ing is being challenged when it is badly needed. the system ironic that it “American society Is promised on the concept that ours is a government of and not men," Mutschcr said. "Yet here are two men who, by challenging American system, have placed themselves above the law.” Tile legal system will survive the test, Mutschcr said, because its basic values are essential to a lawful society. Hoffm an Lets Loose —Photo by R»n# Pere* Hoffman, convicted member of the Chicago^ Seven,“ gives vent to his radical views in a speech Saturday night in G rego ry G ym to a crowd estimated e t 11,000. Funds for To Aid Chuck By JOHN WATKINS Managing Editor Chicago Seven defendant Abble Hoffman said at a press conference Saturday that any collections made at his Saturday night speech would, go the Chuck ‘Wagon to defense fund. What happened In Chicago Is being repeated in every little town, hamlet and city across this pig empire. We aim to raise bread to support those trials as well." Hoffman aLso said he and "Seven" at­ torney Leonard Weinglass would speak at Rice Sunday, despite a ruling by the Rice Board of Trustees barring the pair from campus. "We defintely plan to go to Rice and speak," Hoffman said. "We got five years for crossing state lines (the sentence at the Chicago trial). We are most certainly not going to be prevented from crossing campus lines." Hoffman said they will speak at a park across from Rice, on the campus and "at the headquarters of John Birch Society'." the Weinglass will speak at I p.m. Sunday Defense Wagon Trials at Townes Hall Auditorium, preceding his departure for Houston. Hf is scheduled to talk on the n. ire technical aspects of the Chicago Seven triaL Students will be ad­ mitted free. Questioned about the contempt sentences issued as a result of many disruptions during the trial. Hoffman said, "We were In contempt of the whole court system and of the law that put us cm trial. We did in prison what defendants and people always wanted to do.” and Weinglass co-attorney William Kuntsler a^so received contempt sentences "vigorously for what Hoffman presenting their case for the defense"." termed Hoffman called the contempt sentences total madness." Hoffman said he and the other “Seven" defendants would aid the defense efforts of Black Panther Bobby Seale, one of the original defendants who was severed from the Chicago trial and sentenced separately to foul- years for contempt of court. Asked whether he was a radical or revolutionary, Hoffman laughed and said, Neither — I’m an egomaniac.” (See FUNDS, Page 9.) .rage y.) SM C Seeks Court Injunction By RI STV TOMI By RI STT TODD New* Assistant Student Mobilization Committee officials filed suit Friday afternoon for an injunction In force the Austin City Council to issue a Hr rnit for a Saturday antiwar parade, (- eduled to climax AntiVietnam Week at the University. I he suit was filed after the council twice denied their permit on grounds of heavy the Saturday afternoon traffic. Although im Today E D I T O R I A L : A Texan interview probes the philosophy, from pul­ pit to parade perm its, of A ustin C ity M anager L ynn Andrews. Full text, page 5. AMUSEMENTS: Musician C lark "M um bles” T erry discusses his job the Tonight Show with staff on w riter Bob Crook. P age 15. FEATURE PAGE: A rt pro­ fessor C harles U m lau fs works are discussed. Page l l . WEATHER: P a rtly cloudy and mild th rough Monday, w ith con­ siderable cloudiness and some fog in the early m ornings. High Sun­ day in the low 80’s, low Sunday night near 60. „ „ r ______________ . . SMC offered to move the parade's time, the parade the council maintained would place strain on the police. that Austin attorney Cameron M. Cunningham, legal counsel for SMC, said the suit calls for the Issuance of a parade permit and a judgement declaring the City’s parade ordinance unconstitutional. BRIEF filed in the suit states that the City Council Issued similar permits to other organizations, such as the University Round-Up Committee, and that the absence permit o f standards definite qualification allows to ar­ bitrarily issue permits. for the council The questions document con­ stitutionality of the ordinance on grounds It infringes upon rights of free speech and peaceful public assembly. the said there are Cunningham several favorable Supreme Court precedents deal­ ing with parade disputes and that som e lower courts have recently upheld the is­ suance of permits. SMC member Earl Broun cited a recent I ouston incident In which a court injunction forced the issuance of a parade permit. THE HOI SION SMC was denied a per­ mit because of the alleged possibility of violence," said Brown. "A district court forced the City Council to grant permission, and we think there Ls a good chance of that happening here." A hearing on the ease Is scheduled for in Judge Ja m e s R 9 a.m. Thursday Meyer’s 126th District Court. The antiwar parade is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. Saturday on the Capitol grounds. It will proceed, on the sidewalks lf the injunction is denied, down Congress Avenue to 6th Street. University Youth International Party leader John Lane says his group will march rn tile streets, regardless of the court rul­ ings, in civil disobedience of "discrimina­ tion against the SMC." tJI u®** hofore parade- AntiViet- nam Week activities will be held at the University,, beginning Sunday night with a SMC benefit at the Vulcan Gas Co. Salt, ^tertaTnma ^ HUb Q ty M°VerS At noon Monday, a free speech rally which was rained out last Thursday will be held on the .Alain Mall with Students’ Association President Joe Frier as guest speaker. Also speaking will be Drs. Edwin philosophy; Charles Cairned Allaire, Linguist I os; Donald Foss, psychology; David Edwards, government, and Gene Dolfi S S L 0' the ,,niversity youn* of ■ ■ P ^ T \ , MreSKT’ Peace author of American Intervention in Southeast Asia " in Vietnam" ^ a u th o r and m I T ^ J ; 30 pm - ta the u"<°» ^ Ai MC;Sp0kesman “ id he MU discus* . (her American servicemen are being ordered to commit war crimes in Vietnam Mireky has held discussions with Hanoi Paris o r ? h LibP.ratmn Front delegates in three different occasions since P an s on Work place teach-ins will be conducted on campus from noon to I p.m. Wednesday Topies include the history of the war in Vietnam, a history of the antiwar move­ ment and the war and the third world community. University musicians will present a peace conference at Ail Saints Episcopal Church at 8 p.m. Thursday. Mass leafleting in the community is scheduled for Friday. 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 Empire' ■ sted 0) ^0 ' Yippie Or t n iz e r By CLIFF AVERY Associate News Editor Surrounded by a horde of ecstatic follow­ ers Saturday night and a number of bewild­ ered sightseers. Abbie Hoffman decried the pig empire" and declared that youth was "an emerging nation, proud and ‘beau­ tiful and right." to ™ remarks Hoffman’s the 11, (KIO U)UW punctuated in Gregory Gym were by numerous cries of "right on" and many outbursts of applause as he explained his contempt for the court system that found hun guilty' of crossing state lines to incite a not, and sentenced him to eight months on 24 counts of contempt. "We are In contempt of that court system, we are in contempt of that law and we are in contempt of tile people of ashington who make those laws and every other . . . law in the book," he shouted. "THE LAW hasn’t got a . . . thing to do with justice, the law' is for keeping the people in power right where they are " the Youth International Party organizer ss id. adding that the Yippies would break every law, ‘‘including the law of gravity'." Hoffman’s remarks were punctuated bv the appearance of University Yippie leader John Lane. dresser! mockingly as Jud*e Julius Hoffman. Aftor reading of a "onn- tempt judgment,” I,ane turned his back to the audience, then raised the robes to reveal his bare posterior. Hoffman explained that this trial differed mom others throughout the country in that e stood UP and said why, how come and what’s that about?” ’ He advocated: • j“Sn2a5h imperialism." Citing the fact that in the United States one-sixteenth of the world's population controls 55 percent of the world's resources, "that ain’t fair and the little people are gonna kick the * - - of the big people that got SR that » . . money.” • "Smash racism.” He claimed 90 percent of the Cook County Jail population was Negro. ® Smash a society that robs w?omen of their dignity." He called for abortion In the United States. • Smash the Protestant ethic, "and bring heaven down on earth." • Smash "the biggest heroin pusher in this country', the universities, and school end ^rammer schools . . . right down to nurseries the University of Texas. Universities," he said, "pushed cynicism the and defeatism," which perpetuated like establishment." Hoffman stated he w'ould speak Sunday In Houston, despite Rice Board of Trustees’ forbidding him on campus. He said he would open up "that Quaker rice bowl." In contrast to the fiery, rhetorical manner lawyer Leonard Wineglass or Hoffman, thoughtfully described the process of the trial from the enactment of the Civil Rights law, including as a rider the riot statute nderi the grueling weeks of courtroom activity. through WEINGLASS termed the Chicago trial "a weird combination of humor and the most repressive tactics used in a courtroom bv the government.” The attorney detailed many examples of inconsistencies and fallacious logic that he considered biased judging by court officials. Weinglass asserted that U. S. Atty' Thomas Foran had called the seven "ba* revolutionaries,” In a speech after the tria f Foran allegedly added, "Our children don’t understand what we mean wrhen we use the term ‘nigger.’ They look at us as if W’e are dinosaurs.” ^ dinosaurs,” declared J T,h e y \ einglass, "and the Ice Age is over, and they have nothing left but their size and their sizes is what has them mired do\\ti in what is America today." I NI) ERS IT) police were hardly present at the packed gymnasium, as the crowd f ;sful throughout the evening. J c t Weinglass will speak at I n m oiinday in Townes Hall before leaving for Houston. * Hoffman’s appearance was made possible as the Texas Union Speaker’s committee and Student Assembly supplied $2,000 for the appearance. This money will go toward the I ideation costs of the Seven and other New Left causes. 11,000 Join Abbie In Gym for Evening Bv jo h n p o p s : By JOHN POPE News Assistant The crowds started filling Gregory Gym .0,' ? ,tl,e d'”’1 W 'a r a n r e Saturday , 'j Kh Of Abhie Hoffman and leonard Weinglass. 3n attempt tn limJt toe size of the throng was thwarted by persons who 6 ZV™ doors' Police gave u up and left the doors open. Horace B. Whitworth, University fire marshal, estimated that 13,000 spectators capacity Is normally 7,500. He 881(1 thG ^ m's maximum Pre-speech entertainment was provided by rock music and frisbee throwing. T ie stage was decorated with a large color picture of Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew lung upside down and a banner A r a ir e 0U“aWB ln ti,e Ey(* of One student attached a "We Love Mayor rostrum, which the pester ,? ■ ! to delighted a e crowd. There were many different types of m ! ^ hts' hlppies « d even the Silent Majority" - and their opinions the speeches and speakers covered a wade field. The primary reason most observers gave for coming w'as curiosity. "I want to expose myself to as many lews as I can, and I’m here to learn more about him,” said Marc Payton, a senior communications student. A member of the philosophy department said . S i m p l y curiosity. Why do people visit zoos I As the evening wore on, people filtered out lotibB so®* !L™2Teit92ni rjurned, but others left before Hoffman’s speech was over. tot0 4 I thought he (Hoffman) was going to say something,” fumed a crew'-ort man in an orange jumpsuit who led his wife and daughter out “ M. ‘Hoffman I* about a* coherent as ‘Laugh- l ' F e s notu offering any solutions for tho bad things he’s condemning." T iior h b ta y Nonie Sonkin, a junior, said, "I came because my fiance wanted to. I enjoyed what Weinglass had to say, but I walked out because Hoffman was so horrible. I didn t mind what he was saving but I 1 didn’t like his language." Other coeds In the audience winced at " A fw U ’ u ^ ! ! * ? ? - C*TOl raid. 3 repertoire of profane . x l r f ? expressions several times his speech had nothing more than shock appeal." Jo^ ^ W ^ h 9ooi°t7adi^, m e h ^ no i ^ . Uk9h9had' r ^ h‘ ^ Dr. David Edwards, associate professor of government, said, "I was disappointed hut T b c k ot V h at ** 0311 do.* but I think the Yippies are more and more H T 10 What 151 wron*’ A bie's light-hearted way is the only way to stay sane in this repressive world.” John Burkett, associate dean for student affairs in the College of Arts and Sciences, said he liked Weinglass* review of the trial. but he w'as disappointed in Hoffman, tn it CJ eap‘ Nothing Is easier than to stand In front of young people and cur- SvT m To Include 18-Year-Olds Voting Bill Urged WASHINGTON WASHINGTON __ a ( \ Pi _ A bipartisan (.AP) group of House members has launched a drive to persuade the House to accept a Senate voting rights bill that also would extend to 18-year-clds the right to vote. ... Nixon also has opposed the voting age by statute, as the Senate bill would do, but has said he would favor a constitutional amendment to accomplish lowering Although the measure cleared the Senate 64 to 17, a much closer margin is expected when the House acts in a week or two. The role of the Administration and the House GDP leadership will probably determine the outcome. The Senate bill would extend for five more years the 1965 voting rights act that President Richard M. Nixon has opposed The House supported the Administration position last December and scrapped the m favor of a broader plan that would dilute the act’s focus on the South. i Now the bill has come back from the Senate with the 1965 act restored, some provisions of the Nixon plan added and the voting age in federal elections reduced nim .1 to 18. Instead of trying to work out a compromise, House Democratic leaders w ant to accept the whole package. 'Chicago Seven': Attorney and Client SSj t . *• rathuriaaf,, «rewd w ild , L h r d a v S S S New Head Says Loans fo Mafia Ignored by SBA SAN ANTONIO (AP) -T h e head of the Small Business Ad­ ministration said Saturday that his past four predecessors knew .about SBA loans to Mafia-linked firms but took no action. Hilary Sandoval Jr., who took office March 5, 1969, said steps now have been taken to guard against such loans. ‘My past four predecessors knew about those Mafia-linked loans,” Sandoval told a news con­ ference. "And they could have called those loans and they didn’t do it.” Sandoval has previously said he was "putting out fires and clean- ing up dirt left by my predeces­ sors.” Three months ago, he said to the SBA was to i * ’cover some firms suspected of having under­ world connections. attempting loams made In remarks prepared for de­ livery at a local college Saturday night, Sandoval said SBA officials believe that, "percentagewise, a relatively small number of Mafia- linked loans were made.” I wo of the loans have been collected in New York and two in Chicago, with interest, he said In his speech. I >uring his news conference, Sandoval called his action "just a question of us taking a more aggressive positon” that taken by his predecessors. than WASHINGTON (AP) - Direc­ tors of the striking Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organi­ zation were ordered Saturday to direct their members to go back to work or produce medical cer­ tificates of illness. U. S. District Judge George L. Hart Jr., who on Tuesday found the organization guilty of civil contempt for calling a strike, put I the off any decision controllers for staying away from their jobs. fine to Hart set no deadline for their return. The strike, or "sickout,” Is now in its eighteenth day. to The judge accepted a statement by attorney F. Lee Bailey, PATCO’s executive director, that officials of the organization would frame a continue efforts direct resolution at In controllers facilities of the Federal Aviation Administration. Bailey said also the resolution, when completed, would be submitted to Hart at a further hearing Tuesday. that would check to Hart’s order also forbade offi­ INDIAN JE W E L R Y AT NELSON'S g i f t s N ex t to H ill’s Caf* 4612 S, Congress H I 4-3814 h o u rs IO - • News Capsules ________ By The Associated Press_____ N. Viet Ring Special Forces Cam p TAN C A M I, Vietnam i he North Vietnamese still have 1,500 soldiers around the shell-battered Special Forces camp at Dak Seang, and a South Vietnamese general warned Saturday that new at­ tacks may come In a week. "I have a feeling the enemy has exhausted all the poten­ tial of a first wave," said Lt. Gen. Lu Lan, 2nd Corps com­ mander, who told newsmen more than 1,300 enemy soldiers had been killed in l l days in a futile effort to overrun the camp. Dak Seang, only eight miles from Cambodia in the gently rolling Dak Poko Valley of the central highlands, is a pas­ toral setting for a bloodbath. Lan said throe South Vietnamese battalions — two of them American — paid and trained irregulars — had link­ ed up around Dak Seang and relieved the immediate North Vietnamese pressure against the camp’s perimeter. Lan said although attacks now consist of sporadic shell­ ing, he felt the North Vietnamese were trying to regroup, resupply and bring in fresh troops for a second wave of a t­ tacks that could come within a week. Soviet Encyclopedia ‘Forgets’ Stalin MOSCOW Tile first volume of the new Soviet Encyclopedia has ap­ peared in Moscow — completely cleansed of pictures of Joseph Stalin. The handsome volume, covering “A to Angola” also drops the thousands of Stalin quotations th a t peppered the old edition, published 21 years ago. This latest rewriting of history will bring up to date the Soviet line on nearly every aspect of history and human knowledge. Only Hie first volume has been released. The second is due in the fall and the last of the 50-volume set in about four years. Of all the world figures and events that have fallen from Kremlin favor since the 1949 edition, Stalin is the biggest loser so far. Editors of the old Volume I found four excuses to print portraits of him. Tile old edition also contained a full page of Stalin’s handwriting under Autograph, and a half-page picture of Mount Stalin under the Asia section. All these glorifications of Stalin have been eliminated. Extension of Troop Ban Sought WASHINGTON Sens. Frank Church and John Sherman Cooper announc­ ed Saturday they will attempt to extend the ban on use of American combat troops in Laos or Thailand to neigh­ boring Cambodia. Church, an Idaho Democrat, and Cooper, a Kentucky Republican, won inclusion of the Laos-Thailand ban in last year’s defense appropriations act. They said they will introduce the same amendment to tile appropriate military bills this year, with the addition of Cambodia where the recent overthrow of Chief of State Norodom Sihanouk has spurred increasing Senate fears of possible U.S. involvement. “D ie purpose of the amendment remains the same, to prevent the United .States from backing into another w ar in Asia,” Cooper said. But he said the amendment is consistent with U.S. policy. Rivers to Try Halt of M y Lai Cases ALTUS, Okla. Hie chairman of the powerful House Armed Services Committee told a crowd of 600 here Friday night he will attempt to stop the My Lai courts-martial. “ They’re not going to get by with this,” Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., said, "I had a little something to do with stopping the Green Beret business and I ’m going to have something to do with stopping this.” Rivers said he doesn’t believe those charged in the My Lai incident “concocted a conspiracy to murder innocent people. 5 hat’s for the birds. I’ll have something to do with it. You just w'ait and see.” The representative did not elaborate on w'hat part he bad in stopping the trials of the Green Berets accused of murdering a suspected double agent. Those charges w'ere abruptly dropped before trial. Neither did he explain w'hat he planned in connection with the alleged My Lai massacre In which women and children were reportedly killed. Collins Starts ‘Kickback1 Investigation DALLAS Rep. Jim Collins, R-Tex., said Saturday he triggered the FBI investigation into allegations that payroll kickbacks involving several employes have occurred in his office. Collins said the FBI became involved as “a result of my j • letter of March 5 to Atty. Gen. John Mitchell asking that • a complete investigation of this question of office irregu-; • j 0 larify be made.” Gov emmnnt sources earlier had said that the probe was ^ initiated from Washington. J. Gordon Shanklin, special agent in charge of the FBI in Dallas, confirmed Saturday th a t the investigation is being directed from Washington. Collins said he was “confident their FBI report will con- I have never received one fiim what I said previously . cent from any employe on my staff.” . . The investigation, Collins said, will conclude the report bn the m atter "as we have already received and published _ the audit from the finance department in the House of § Represen tati ves. ” Page 2 Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN On Desegregation Nixon's Policy Eyed Critically Loosened by Repeal NLY. Abortion Laws i| WASHINGTON (AP) — Tile U. S. Commission on Civil Rights | | scared President Richard M. Nixon’s school desegregation policy | | statement Saturday, contending it stirred emotions and might signal "a major departure from the policy of moving toward integrated schools.” In a 27-page statement the commission, headed by The Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh of Notre Dame University, avoided any personal attack on Nixon but analyzed critically the President’s March 24 policy message. It found fault with all of Nixon’s major positions, Including his distinction between legal and residential segregation, his support for the neighborhood-school concept and his opposition to busing pupils to achieve racial balance. The bipartisan agency said the “categorical distinction” between de pure, or legally compelled, and de facto, or ac­ cidentally imposed, segregation may be virtually non-existent For example, the commission said, practically all racial housing patterns throughout the country can be traced to official actions by state, local and federal government and, therefore, cannot be considered as purely de facto. The agency cited zoning ordinances, building-inspection standards and public-housing programs as ways in which official actions excluded minority group members from some neigh­ borhoods. Attacking Nixon's opposition to busing, the commission sug­ gested the President contributed to a general misunderstanding about tile issue. "The plain fact is that every day of every school year 18 million pupils — 40 percent of the nation’s public school children - - are bused to and from school. . ,” the commission said. "In many cases, busing was the exclusive privilege" of white I children — black children often were required to walk con- j siderable distances. No complaints then were heard from whites I of any harmful effects.” J H i t T h o l e a n o t a f A f l By Hie Associated Press Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller signed a bill Saturday repealing New York’s 140-year-old restric­ tions on abortion and giving the state the most liberal statute in the country. Similar measures are pending I t _________________________ before governors of Alaska and Maryland but are not yet law. i i . e <■ i New New York State Senate passed the abortion bill Friday, one day after the Assembly gave Its approval. It will take effect July I. The new law requires only that Contempt Ruling Handed Gov. Kirk i i * « t an abortion be performed by a doctor within 24 weeks of con­ ception with the consent of the woman. There are no age or residency requirements. Rockefeller signed the bill with­ out comment or ceremony. New York, with a population of more than 17 million is the most popu­ lous state to liberalize its abor­ tion law'. The old abortion law', one of the strictest in the nation, pro­ termination of a preg­ hibited nancy except to save the moth­ er's life. It stood virtually una­ mended since passage in 1828. The Alaska House passed a State Senate-approved bill Friday that would require that abortions be performed in a hospital or other approved medical facility and includes a 30-day residency It would make requirement. atxrrtion a medical m atter bet­ ween a doctor and his patient until the fetus can sustain life outside the womb, usually about after twenty-sixth week the conception. Both houses of the Maryland Legislature have approved a law eliminating virtually all restric­ tions on abortion. he show's this court . he orders of this court.” . that in compliance with die is . At the governor's mansion in Tallahassee, a Kirk aide said, "We have no statement.” Since last Sunday when Kirk first seized control of the school system, the governor has twice defied orders from Krentzman to clear the way for desegregation and has ignored the judge’s sum­ mons to appear in court on con­ tempt charges, Kirk has maintained he is trying to block forced busing of 2,600 pupils. He says he is not against integration. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - A federal judge Saturday found Florida Gov. Claude Kirk in contempt of court and said he would fine Kirk $10,000 a day until the governor shows that he is in compliance with federal law. The contempt ruling came after Kirk assumed control of the Manatee County school system and blocked an integration order in defiance of Judge Ben Krentz* man. "Claude R. Kirk Jr. is in civil contempt of the arder of this court . . . and such contempt is continuing,” Krentzman said in the ruling. **. . . Kirk shall pay a fine to tile United States of $10,000-a-day beginning April l l unless on ar before Monday SUMMER JOB OPPORTUNITY Earn about $600 a month. Only those with entire summer free need apply. Grade average must be at least C. Group interview 1:00 p.m. MONDAY or TUESDAY WMOB — Room 401. W h a t d O C h ristia n S c ie n t is t s really b e lie v e ? Come to this Christian Science Lecture “The Truth That Heals" by Jules Ceren, C. S. MONDAY, APRIL 13 12:00 N O O N BALLROOM, AUSTIN HOTEL SPO N SO RED BY FIRST C H U R C H OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST N u rsery A va ila b le A U STIN But N o Deadline Striking Controllers Ordered to Work cers of PATCO to issue state­ ments that might tend to en­ courage controllers to continue the sickout that began March 25. W HEN ALL ELSE FAILS. C O M E TO O UR HAPPY HOUR & Va 7-8:30 P.M. 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STATMAN PHOTO 1 9th at Lavaca & Cameron Village SOLID C O L O R S 4 SM A R T C H E C K S O R STRIPES / J / 7 ^ - y y&COv&MtJm M EN’S WEAR V 2222 GU A DA LU PE — NEXT TO THE TEXAS THEATRE r BENEFIT FOR THE STUDENT M OBILIZATION COMMITTEE *530 G U A D A L U P E , 478-0609 HUB CITY MOVERS FAT EM M A SALT VULCAN GAS COMPANY $1 316 S. C O N G R E S S CLASSIFIED STUDENTS ARE LOOKING NOW FOR I V FALL & SUMMER HOUSING CALL GR 1-5244 v NOW FOR QUICK SERVICE You Get 15 Words For One Low Price! IO Insertions For Only $ T 5 0 20 Insertions For Only $■ OO Enter Now in the Daily Drawing at the Co-O p for a free set of coordinated lingerie from Exquisite Form AABL Becomes The Blacks Not Crisis-Oriented, Less Radical (Editor’s note: This is the first of seven ar­ ticles about the rising counter­ in the University com culture Triunity. Others will follow daily.) By LISA SCHWERTNER On Feb. 27, 1969, Afro-Ameri­ for B l a c k Liberation cans (A A B L), presented to University President Norman Hackerman a list of l l demands aimed at “ es­ tablishing an atmosphere to make blacks a part of the system .” The demands called for a sep­ arate black studies department, a separate ethnic studies center in East Austin, the rem oval of the Board of Regents and the conversion of the L B J Lib rary into the Malcolm X Black Stu­ dents Center. .AS AN AN SW ER to these de­ mands Hackerman set up five ad hoc committees consisting of elected members of the Faculty Council the demands. investigate to This year, however, for a ll its flu rry of activity last spring, A A BL has been quiet. What changes have brought about such silence in this group? A A BL has in the last year changed its name and its direc­ tion. It was transformed during the fa ll semester into The Blacks, an organization whose objective, according to Chairman Richard Moore, is “ to create a more relevant University to the black community by making this af­ fluent ghetto which we call the U niversity of Texas realize there is another larger community of which it is only a part.” T H E S IL EN C E O F The Blacks since its formation can be at­ tributed to a new inward direc­ tion, an attempt to promote awareness of the black students on campus. But like the members of A A BL, students in The Blacks are ada- m a n 11 y their dis­ voicing satisfaction with their role at the their hostility U niversity and Fiery Auto Pile-Up Cia ims 2, Injures 5 Two persons were killed and five injured in a flam ing auto pile-up Frid ay night on North In ­ terregional. The dead had not b e e n Identified Saturday. Injured positively in the wreck were Lidiak, 27, of 300 in fair condition in Aurelia Crockett, RASSL Instruction To Enroll Tuesday Enrollm ent for die last Reading and Study Skills Lab classes of sem ester w ill be held die Tuesday in West M all Office Building 4U9. The free, non-credit classes w ill include study skills, vocabulary, reading comprehension and ef­ ficient textbook reading. M rs. Bee Ann Sm ith of RA SSL “ We want to encourage said, people who w ill make a last grand effort to save their grades to attend the classes.” The classes w ill begin Thursday and Frid ay, and arrangements may be made by calling 471-3614. Brackenridge Hospital; Gerald Johnson, 24, of 1201 Broadmoor, treated and released; and John Causey, 20, a Bergstrom A ir Force Base airm an, treated and released. Two other persons, Jam es Wilson, 23, of 7815 South F irst St. and Charles W illiam s, 27, of 7702 Rabalo Rd., weie treated for freeing received while burns victim s from cars. The complicated sequence of events involved at least four cars and a sem i-trailer truck at 3700 North Interregional about 7 p.m. A spokesman the Austin Police Department said a minor collision under the 38th Street overpass caused traffic to back up in the northbound lane of the expressway. for A truck came over the h ill and was unable stop before to slamming Into the stopped cars. Gasoline tanks in the cars ex­ ploded, leaving occupants trapped iaside. Flam es burst out from the left side of the truck, witnesses told police. A man and a woman in different cars were burned beyond recognition. toward its adm inistrators, faculty and, lesser to a somewhat degree, its students. THOUGH H E ST R ESSED that The Blacks is a permanent rather than crisis-oriented group and that it is speaking in terms of objectivity rather than radical­ ism , this hostility is obvious in Moore. Moore believes that now is the tim e for the U niversity to act to help tile black student and believes it could be this by crea­ ting a more positive image. “ Blacks see this as the white university. Now is the tim e for blacks to make beginnings to change this im age,” he said. “ TH E U N IV ER SIT Y should make It known that It is open to persons of a ll races and creeds. Our organization has no means to advertise this fact but the U niversity itself does. It could easily create that positive image by buying several minutes of a ir tim e on radio and TV and by distributing film s throughout the state.” Students’ Association Vice-Pre­ sident Ern ie Haywood, form erly an A A BL member and now a member of The Blacks, seemed noticeably warm er than the cool­ ly tolerant Moore. W hile Moore had dismissed the l l demands as a l m o s t a total failure, Haywood took a more optim istic stand. He felt the demands had served to give the adm inistration w a r n i n g that campus blacks were not happy. SPEA K IN G O F Tile Blacks, Haywood said, “ The Blacks is not now as radical as A A BL. But though it contains more of a cross-section of black students, it s till has the same activists as were in A A BL.” U SIN G TH E ELIM IN A T IO N of the Program for Econom ic Op­ portunity as an example of in­ stitutional racism , he said, “ The regents killed PEO even though it was successful. Admission to the U niversity is part of the set­ up against ethnic groups because to get into the U niversity so that you may further yourself you must first be able to make a high score on a SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test) test that’s bias­ ed against you.” tile Switching to student racism , he said; ‘ On a student level, racism is you’re being patronized or having people look down or away when they pass you on campus rather than look­ feeling ing at you like a norm al person THOUGH A 14-oourse Ethnic Studies Program headed by Dr. Henry Bullock was begun here this year in answer to one AABL demand, Haywood believes most courses on campus say nothing that is relevant to the Negro. “ Courses here teach the Negro nothing about the world he lives in now or the one he w ill live in after he gets out of school. And when he leaves here, he has gotten an education, but he still does not know what the problems of his people are about,” he said. and Moore praised Bullock for his work In the ethnic studies department. Both Haywood “ W E HAVE AN Ethnic Studies Program , yet we don’t because there is no degree program. And even lf there were, there is no money to build the program. One man who is quite learned in the field of black history with one woman working under him is given the go-ahead and is expect­ to build an entire ethnic ed studies department. It just can’t be done,” Haywood said. He said the Negro students, whose enrollment in the classes is equally balanced with that of whites considering the sm all total black enrollment, appear to him to be reasonably satisfied with the program. IN 1969 MOST of the AABL d e m a n d s died unnoticed. PEO wras killed quietly last summer. Project Info, an attem pt by Hay­ wood and other students to in­ form black students about the U niversity, has not been able to lack of talk funds. loud because of The formation of The Blacks seems to be but another indica tion that though the black move­ ment on campus is weak, there is s till determ ination to break through on a campus blacks feel is among the more racist in the nation. “PEOPLE SAY they aren’t ra cist. They say ‘Look, look, man, I ’m trying.’ But they’re trying on their own term s; they’re not trying to see things from our point of view at a ll,” Haywood said. As an afterthought he added, “ Oh sure, blacks have been able to say things are getting a little better for the past hundred years. But when are wTe going to quit moving at a snail’s pace? We just can’t move at that speed forever.” FINE REPRODUCTIONS Brush Stroke Prints in stock now at the Co-Op 2.49 Some of the prints in stock are frames. AH in a!!, there are eighty prints available. They come sixteen by twenty, twenty-four by eighteen, and twenty by twenty-four. Also, there are fitting The Chateau by Utrillo, Mardi Gras by Cezanne, Rue de Mont­ martre by Utrillo, Les Meules by Gauguin, Sunny C ave by Brad­ bury, G y p s y C a m p by Van Gogh, The Lovers by Picasso, Classical Head by Picasso, A b ­ sinthe Drinkers by Degas, C ath­ edral at Halle by Feininger, Don Manuel by G oya, Coming Storm by Innes, Fisherman’s W h a rf by Murray, O c t o b e r G o ld by W o o d , Boats off Shore by Albo, Ballet Girls by Degas, Barefoot Prodigy by M o o r e , Head of Christ by Rembrandt, Whistler's Mother by Whistler, The Break­ fast by Manet, The Blue Vase by Cezanne, Brother and Sister by Roth, Still Life with Lemon by Smith, G irl with Guitar by Tom­ aso, and View of Toledo (right) by El G reco. Exquisite Form Match— maker Coordinates have something extru n new non - ding '!Freedom Fabric" for each of the six winners M onday through Saturday for the week o f April 6-11, there will be a daily drawing for a set o f lingerie consisting of a bra, panties, and a slip. All you need to do is stop by t h e Cosmetics Counter (street-floor) at the Co-Op and fill out a ballot. I f your ballot i s drawn, you will receive this fine set free. special group second floor T H E S T U D E N T S O W N S T O R E © (Co-Op employees are not eligible to win.) THE S TUDE NT S O W N STORE 0 Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* I 1970 Chapt er *T Thought Be To Crow In The Job* Martha Mitchell's Midnight Madness Bv DAVE HELFERT Editorial AsisLant Tile wife of L.S. Atty. Cion, John N. Mitchell has struck again, Tt seem s'that she was so incensed after the defeat of G. Harrold Carswell s nomination to the Supreme Court that she felt com­ pelled to Join Spiro Agnew''s small hand of unelected media barons who decide what you will read in the newspapers. MRS. MITCHELL phoned the Arkansas Gazette at 2 a.m. Thursday to demand that the Gazette “crucify” Sen. William Fulbright, P-Ark.. for voting against Carswell. “ It makes me so damned mad I can't stand it,” she said. “ He could have done a great deal for the whole vote." “ Mr. Fulbright does not represent the state." she continued, also mentioning that she had talked to three or four people from Arkansas who are very influential and they said they would disown Fulbright. Hie news about non-representation will undoubtably be a stir- prise to Fulbright who was re-elected for another six-year term in 1968. ID R ALL HER eloquence, there are several salient points that Mrs. Mitchell failed to consider. The nominations for Supreme Court positions are based on recommendations from her husband's office. Rather than criti­ cize the Senate for voting as their consciences dictate, it might be worthwhile to consider the quality of the jurists picked by the Attorney General, even though such criticism seems to be a policy of this Administration. Her anger, however, Is understandable. She and her husband epitomize the Great American Mediocrity, causing the Carswell defeat to become a personal defeat for them. in MRS. MITI HELL has been the news before. Last November, after the moratorium, she told the press that her husband thought the group of militants storming the Justice Department “looked like the Russian Revolution." Though these impressions were probably gained “ Dr. Zhivago,” it would have been interesting if Mr. Mitchell had rem em bered what it was the Russian revolutionaries were trying to overthrow and then looked at his Justice Department. from watching Mrs. Mitchell also rem arked, “As my husband has said many times, some of the liberals in this country', he'd Like to take them and change them for the Russian Communists." This is precisely what it appears he is attem pting to do. IT DOES SEEM more than a little ironic that someone who eats, sleeps and breathes Americanism will resort to such tactics as coercion and “crucifixion" to punish those who dare to disagree with her. -JM T • The firing line: Media fears Guest viewpoint Please let me alone By JEFF JONES President-Elect Students’ Association Since my election on April Fool’s Day I have been con­ tinuously pestered by the bour­ geois press. From election night up to the present moment my phone has continually rung and, much to my disgust, most of my cabers have been reporters. The day after my victory I talked to The Dally Texan, Newsweek and The Austin American and by then I had had enough. But the press hadn’t: newspa­ pers from all over the country and across the state wanted to talk to me. But since I had a test on Friday I didn't want to talk to them. Tile exclusive Aus­ tin American story, coupled with that in The Texan provided as many facts about me that anyone could possibly want to know. Be­ sides that, all the facts were ac­ curate, so I presumed that any story derived from them would also be factually accurate. AND I WAS right: all the news­ paper stories concerning me, my platform and my election were accurate even though most head­ lines invariably proclaimed I was a bearded-hippie-radical. At any rate, I had to study, and the phone kept ringing. So I told my campaign m anager to tell the reporters I would only speak they for money, hoping would quickly disappear from my life. But the Dallas Morning News, after calling three times, resented the fact that I would not let its reporters and editors crucify me for free (and certainly they would have). So they printed an editorial which claimed I was an incompetent teacher, an out­ side agitator from New York and a capitalist. those AT THIS juncture Mark Morri­ son, Texan editor, realized the time was ripe to repay me for all I’ve made rem arks about him all year. His personal vendetta its first outlet when I refused to talk to a jour­ nalism laboratory reporter. found All year these lab people have been misquoting, distorting and not the understanding what people on the left have been say­ ing. A short tim e ago The Rag lost its printer because of the irresponsible reporting of one of these journalism students. I told Mark the day after the election to lab that I would not speak students but only four Daily Texan reporters who had a l r e a d y demonstrated their competence. the to In T hursdays Texan this result­ ed from a rath er poor interview which stressed minor points (sen­ sational ones) and ignored m ajor ones (ideological). Still several days later. M ark's editorial be­ wailed the plight of the lab stu­ dent I had supposedly m istreated. And as an extra stab in the back Mark threw in the bit from The Dallas Morning News about my wanting “ bread" for interviews. Several days later Mark re­ printed the whole insane article as a Texan editorial. During all tliis time Mark never assigned anyone to find out J the Morning News story really had all the facts. He assumed they were cor­ rect, especially since they could be used to make the subjective point that Mark obviously wanted to make. I GUESS you wonder what the true facts of tile m atter really are. I am still asking for m o n e y - half of which will be given to the Breakfast Program , half to the proposed Day Care Center. But I haven't gotten any yet. I'm not about to be put upon a state­ wide chopping blork for free. to those But I do have an alternative plan—I will re­ talk porters w'ho agree to read their final copy to me and allow me to correct their factual errors. Several reporters have been out­ raged by this suggestion, claim ­ ing I am trying to censor them. Since when is correcting factual story? censoring m istakes Perhaps is actually their goal sensationalism rath er than fac­ tual accuracy. So since the press won’t play my factual accuracy game. I'm certainly not going to play theirs. a I AM STILL being harrassed by last night the bourgeois press: a reporter illegally entered my house and went upstairs search- Pestered . . . P re sid e n t-e le c t J o n e s. the found reporter's ing for me. Although I w asn't home I have proof of this, for I note thumbtacked to my upstairs door. Meanwhile, I am doing all I can to keep them away. I have w rit­ ten this article to explain my press policy to people who don’t understand what I'm doing, “just the facts" as my good friend Mark Morrison woiild say. Those who still disagree with this policy read my should analysis of the bourgeois press which will appear in this week’s Rag. Letters to the editor Firin g Line letters should: • Be ty p e d trip le -sp a c e d . • Be less than 250 w ords. • Include name, address, and phone number o f contri­ butor. M a il letters to The Firin g Line, The D a ily Texan, D raw e r D, U T Station , A u stin , Texas; o r b rin g letters to the Texan office s, Journalism Bu ild in g 103. ' xw-..-. -WM.. .... .. .. ..... .. — a a a t Art Buchwald New fighter bombs again The S e n a t e is now holding hearings on the F -lll airplane originally called the TFX. It is developing in the hearings that all-weath­ this supersonic, er, electronic mar- v e t do c a n things no other p l a n e can do. The only thing it fly. can't do is There are some w'e insist wrho should forget about the F - lll and go on to something else, like the F-112. I spoke to one of the designers of the F-112, who told me that they were ready to go ahead on production of it as soon as the Air Force started scrapping the F -lll. “ We think that with certain modifications our plane can do anything the F -lll does, plus get off the ground. The Air Force told us that while they consider the F -lll the finest plane ever designed, their defense needs for the ’70s would have to include some kind of craft that could get into die a ir.” "But can ’t the F -lll get in the air? " the people "Not for too long.” "How could that happen? Sure­ ly the Defense in D epartment insisted they wanted a plane that could fly. Billions of dollars have been lost on the F -lll,” I said. ‘TOU MUST understand the background on building planes for the military. Most plane designs, w'hen originally submitted to the Pentagon for bids, look like Piper Cubs. Then someone says, ‘Can you add some equipment so it will fly above clouds?’ The manu­ facturer says, ‘Of course.’ Then someone else says, ‘How about adding guns and bombs?* The manufacturer says that will in­ crease the cost of the plane, but Defense says it doesn’t care. Then a general demands it carry nuclear weapons, which the manufacturer says is no problem, proriding Defense will pick up the bill. "During production, someone remembers the plane should be able to fly in all kinds of weather at almost any speed. The manu­ facturer says they were thinking of the same thing, so they add more equipment to the plane. Then someone suggests a com­ puter be installed which can do most of the work for the pilot. "The computer is added, which forces the designers to increase the size of the engine, which makes in­ crease the size of the wing, which frame workers the engineers to the the undercarriage, c a u s e s restructure which brings about a suggestion that instead of one pilot the plane have that two, which means another seat has to be added, which adds weight causing the designers to have second thoughts about the size of the flaps. "BY THIS TIME everyone is so excited about all the features of the plane that the question of its flying is completely forgot­ ten. Only after the wings start falling off does Congress get a little m ad.” "But if Defense goes ahead with the F-112, what will it do with the F -llls they’ve already paid for?” "They could give them to the U. S. Army. You couldn’t ask for a better-designed tank in the world.” Copyright (c) 1970. The Washington Post, Co. D istributed by Los Ange­ les Times Syndicate. Page 4 Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN To the editor: While I sympathize with Jeff fears about being mis­ Jones’ quoted I the news media, in would suggest that his proposed cure is considerably worse than the disease. At least It is worse from the standpoint of getting full and the reading public, in this case stu­ dents of the University. information fair to Under his ground rules, he will grant interviews to reporters who will later read their copy to him. so he can “ correct f a c t u a l errors,” as The Texan states. T hat’s wonderful. Every politi­ cian in the land would give an eyetooth for such a privilege. Can you imagine what kind of copy the we would have had from White House 1964-68 had in Lyndon Johnson been permitted to go over the news copy for “factual erro rs?” How w o u I d it be if Mayor Daley of Chicago could check the copy to make sure that reporters got the facts straight? This the media can fire away without re­ gard for accuracy. No. indeed. The burden falls upon the news media, including The T e x a n . Reporters must — they absolutely must — m ake every honest en­ deavor to get every fact precisely correct. But if they are to serve their readers — the students — they must not permit censorship by the source. Jones is playing with the big boys now, and he must learn to stand up and take his knocks. to say is not that If The Texan knuckles under to Jones and perm its him to clear copy, then The Texan should in f a i r n e s s perm it Regents’ Chairman Frank Erwin the same right. And w'ho wants that? Martin L. Gibson Department of Journalism Round-Up apathy To the editor: This letter is in response to the charges made by Miss Sue Menthe in the April 7 Texan that this year’s the problems of to student Round-Up are due apathy. that This statement is far from the truth. Was the reason, Miss Lenthe, that there were only 15 people to hear Secretary of State Martin Dies due to lack of in­ terest? No, it was due to the fact that it was simply unknown on campus because of lack of effective publicity. Was the rea­ son Judith Crist was scheduled at 10:30 in the morn­ ing, the peak class period, due to student apathy? No, it was due to ineffective planning on tile part of the Round-Up Committee. An example of how well plan­ ned the whole thing was is the fact that a friend of mine had to take personal responsibility for seeing that the group Fat Ima got extension cords simply be­ cause she happened to be in the Students’ Association Office at the time. No Round-Up affinal was to be found anywhere. And you can accuse CEC of not fol­ lowing throgh on their responsi­ bilities. I hope in the f u t u r e . Miss Lenthe, the that you will see faults in yourself before you go blaming others for your prob­ lems. Sincerely yours, John Feather C ity council To the editor: On Thursday, April 9, I had the honor of attending one of the more colorful sessions of the Aus­ tin City Council, where the issue at hand was what to do about the Austin an application Model Cities Program . for I cringed in my seat with frus­ tration as I observed how lightly the City Council seemed to treat the lives of thousands of people. To the honorable Councilmen Jay Johnson and Stuart MacCorkle, and City M anager Lynn Andrews, $75,000 (less than the amount pro­ posed for the construction of just one building on the good side of town) seemed to be more than enough reason to consider stop­ ping the application for Model Cities. My guts really ruptured when I heard Mayor LaRue’s reply to a citizen’s statem ent that the responsibility for getting things the City moving Is now with Council since the people involved have done what they could. To this the good mayor replied that he (the citizen) was assured­ ly wrong due to a lack of insight into the "mechanics” of the City Council. To this absurdity I can only ask that if the City Council can’t take the responsibility for getting things moving because of the "mechanics” which normal citizens have little insight about, and if we (the normal citizens) have done everything we could do within the law, what Is the next course of action? Mike Be lz rn an Senior, Psychology Poverty To the editor: I wonder, Miss Karrwtadt, how you would celebrate life if every time you walked down a street people would stare at you and you could see the hate and con­ tempt in their eyes because you happen in tile to be walking wrong section of town for the color of your skin. How would you feel as you walked by the shiny new schools, the expensive homes, and the paved streets, knowing you could look forward to an environment of slums, children in rags with dirty faces and hungry eyes? What if you could not afford an education and no one cared because your parents and theirs before them were forced to live in ignorance because they were preoccupied with w’here their next meal was coming from? Would you take solace in the fact that you w'ere alive or w’ould you open your eyes and see slums and opulence living together in different sections of town? Would it occur to you that people of a different ethnic origin were hoarding the wealth of jo u r city? Would you then think back and rem em ber the insults, the angu­ these the mental cruelty ish, people had subjected you to for no reason except the color of your skin? Would you celebrate you realize life or are just as your parents in an endless cycle of you would trapped, were, poverty'? Perhaps you would cry and scream , but most of ail you would hate. Celebrate life indeed, Miss F a rm -adt. It Is you who should celebrate life, and you can begin by facing it. Jerry Stewart 4.>18 Ave. A Nominee for dean To the editor: I remember hearing Daniel P. Bell (or somebody with a name like that, an eminent sociologist, at any rate) talk about the state of society in the United States today. He talked about Dionysian frenzy (or a phrase like that’ indi­ living and cating riotous good preoccupation with one's own sensuality’). He about Apollonian harmony (the arriving talked at a smooth working order, t society in dynamic balance). H( predicted manifest social dlsordei continuing indefinitely, and be foresaw' little in the arts or the sciences which could bring ordei to society again. To all win* lovers that's good now’s. When a body of men gathered to provide social order becomes itself disorderly, where does order come from? The men in this body often decry the conduct that body as of men outside precipitating their own internal strife. But if society is already orderly, that body will not hava been formed. Dionysian satyrs describe men in self-descriptive term s — hence, scapegoat. Students the word sandal-shod do not see them­ selves elovcn-hoofed, though they are often metamorphosed Into goats of this kind. Students think they see hoof m arks leading to where men meet In high places. (On preciptous cliffs fraught with peri! hoofs made the going great.) I shall talk about a non-student who could be described as a scapegoat. He is under 30. he Is a member of a minority group, and he talks with the accent of this country. in one not born Students see him, as t h e y see themselves, sandal - shod. They will feel they lose this if one most themselves. Get found. SUPPORT LUIZ F. S. NATALICIO FOR DEAN, College of Education. lost like Ron Kidd T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin ss hi St 2 “ n?si ; i ,5'E,11u, ?CRhw jm ' mad“ ln J a 107 ldR ‘-52441 a rs ai P . 'S ’S S 'I K APust!n.0ITexaj^7S?iafeXaS S1”’" ” toe. PERMANENT STAPF EDITOR .................................................... Mark Morrison MANAGING E D IT O R .............................j 0hn Watkins ASST. MANAGING E D IT O R ............... Karen Elliott NEWS EDITOR ................................... Lyke Thompson ASSISTANT TO THE EDITO R...............Lynne Flocke SPORTS ED ITO R .............................. Vaughn Aldredge AMUSEMENTS ED ITO R ................. Middy Randerson FEATURE ED ITO R...........................Carolyn Hinckley ISSUE STAFF Associate News Editor ............................................. Qiff Avery . A l a n t s .................................. Rusty Todd, Erie Leibroek Hel/ert Editorial Page Assistant ............................................. Assistant Amusements Editor ................................ Charles Davis ^SS>lStrft ^ rtB Kciitor ....................................Sylvan Rodriguez M ake-UpEditor .............................................................. ‘re Copy Editor .................................................................. Patsy Guenzel ............................... Bryan Martin, Robin Bracher Lynn Andrews terms parade restrictions 'necessary the City Council Austin City Manager Lynn An drews is drawing a stronger set of parade restrictions to present this to later month. Because of recent law suits and controversies involving University groups and the council two Texan on parade permits, reporters, Lynne Flocke and Dave Helfert, asked Andrews to explain the reasons behind the proposals. More than one Austin lawyer has said that some of the points could be unconstitutional. The new restrictions are expected to include: • Requiring the applicant to be an Austin resident. • A $25 perm it application fee. • An agreement whereby the applicant reim burses the City for loss or liability resulting f r o m the parade. • Requiring a deposit suffi­ cient to defray expected overtime expenses for City employes. parades • Prohibiting be­ tween 4 p m. and 9 p.m. • Prohibiting parades on days considered inappropriate, such as holidays or days of national mourning. Texan: In the stipulation that an Austin is an applicant be the resident, what exactly Austin resident? Andrews: A person who is living here, or a person who is working here. Texan: Is there a tim e limit? Andrews: No, not yet. There may be before we get through. W h a t constitutes a resident has about 20 different connotations. I ’m not a resident as far as voting is concerned. It’s obvious that if more than two or three people are involved, you can always get someone who is a resident. . . . Texan: What is tile purpose of the $25 application fee? Andrews: The purpose of if is, It probably costs the City $100 A u s tin C i t y M anager . . . $25 would have little effect, to process the application. Til is is to get the application, check tile people, to check the routes, get the police involved, tho ad­ ministration involved. Probably this is the sam e thing people we do for applications for many things. I t’s not any different than any other application. It doesn’t cover cost. Texan: the people I ’m sure are going to be saying that this was put on just to prevent an excessive amount of applications. At the (City Council) meeting last week Councilman Les Gage said that there was almost a torrent of applications in the last few months. . . . Andrews: The $25 would have very little effect on that, I think. T e x a n : What examples of charge for other purposes? some a re some fees you fees, Andrews: Zoning sub­ division fees . . . s e n d i n g out notices to places where you want to zone. . . . Texan: it usually around Is $25? Andrews: Depends on what the situation is. $25 would probably be a minimum. Texan: Do you think these add­ ed expenses are going to cut down on the number of parades we have in Austin? Andrews: No. If you have a parade of any size of all, Die $25 needed to process the appli­ cation is negligible. It has to be. Texan: Is there a precedent for the stipulation that tile applicants agree to pay for loss or liability? Andrews: We do it all the time. For example, when you want the auditorium. The Jaycees took out $200,000 worth of insurance for their carnival on the river front, in case somebody got hurt. This is not unusual a t all when you’re utilizing public property for a particular purpose. Texan: One of the stipulations is no parades between 4 p.m. and 9 a.m. . . . Andrews: Actually that means night parades; however, this will have to be changed, because there a re certain night parades th a t will have to be held. P rim ary y if s for traffic control purposes. The 4 :30, 5 o’clock rush and so on. But that will have to be amended to some option. Texan: What about the pay­ m ent of overtime employes? for if you rent a dance, Andrews: We do this already. the F o r example, the auditorium m anager down there would deter­ m ine how many police you would need in there. Depending on what type of activity. If there is going to be a symphony orchestra, you’re going to need one or two policem en; to have a rock and roll dance, you m ay need 20. I ’m exaggerating a t both ends. We’ll attem pt to determ ine how m any you’ll need a t the application. The applicants pay for the extra policemen, the off-duty policemen that are re­ quired to stop traffic at inter­ sections. if you’re going Texan: Tile last proposal was prohibiting parades on days that a re coasidered inappropriate. . . Andrews: This w'as thrown in there as a result of our study of ordinances around the country. F or example, we’ve got one lady in town a t least who is against If she all forms of religion. CROSSWORD PUZZLE Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle TFI to have a parade on wanted Christmas Day, for example, to tear down Christmas, tear down Christ, to tear down the religious aspects of Christmas, she shouldn't have a parade. It’s a religious holiday. If she wants to protest, th a ts her right. to Texan: Can you be more specific on why she couldn’t have a parade on Christmas Day? Andrews: I think it’s just good common sense. You'll have a lot of people mad, and the idea in running this city is to stop fric­ tion as much as possible. There’s no use in waving the red flag in the b u lls face. Also, it does a lot of damage. Religion is part of this government, at least in basic philosophy. Separation of church and state, yes. But “in God we tru st’’ on the coin, too. And I think there’s certain areas that we should be fairly careful about. Let’s take another side of that coin. Let’s say on Martin Luther King’s birthday you have parade downgrading the total Negro race. All you’d have would be a fight. Texan: Would this mean that on Veterans Day, the Student Mobilization Committee wouldn't be allowed a permit. Andrews: T hat’s right. I think th at’s the wrong day for it. It’s their day. Texan: Whose day, exactly? Andrews: Well, you've got Veterans Day th at comes every year at a certain time. Memorial Day that comes a t a certain time. Texan: What about Loyalty Day? If SMC wanted to have a m arch on Loyalty Day. . . . Andrews: On Loyalty Day, you wouldn't want disloyal groups to m arch on the sam e day. Texan: Who’s to determine whether a group is loyal or dis­ loyal? If the SMC was to join the Loyalty Day parade. . . . Andrews: T hat's fine, lf that’s their way to express loyalty, and if that is a national day, fine. Texan: Did the attorney gen­ eral's office (John Mitchell) set up any guidelines for parade or­ dinances? to say Andrews: None that I know of. You must trea t everybody al­ most equal as close as you can. You can’t treat everybody equal, you can come close. There’s no that this thing is way exactly equal. I t s as close a*- possible. I ’m not sure what he said. I mentioned to the council some time back th at we should have some basic regulations that people can read and say “I can or cannot,” just by reading. Texan: He mentioned t h a t most of the parade ordinances were set up for tim es passed, when things were smalled and . . Andrews: T hat’s right. True. We didn’t have too many cars then. We have now. Basically, it’s a problem of people and their inability to change. Most of us don’t accept change very readily. Grandmother wouldn’t r i d e in a h o r s e l e s s carriage. Mother wouldn’t ride in a jet. It’s pretty in a to get you to ride hard spaceship to the moon. You say “ I ’m not quite ready right now. I ’ll take it next year, or the next or the next.” Most people are reluctant to change on almost anything. Texan: Concerning the April 18 planned m arch by the SMC. They said they would go ahead and m arch on the sidewalks legally. The Yippies said they will m arch down the middle of the street anyway. What would happen to them? A -Golf cry 5 Dropsy «-C onspirator 7 Paddle 8 Gaelic S-Touchdown (abbr.) IO Calm 12-Pronoun 14 Hindu queen 17-Small am ount 2 0 Ox of Celebes 23-Note of scale 24-A state (abbr.) 25-Lim bs 27-Weak food 30-Vast ages 3 2 -Heavenly body 35-Specimens 37-Portico 3 8 Lowest point 3 9 Rubber on pencil More firing line Foreign To the editor: language I am writing In response to the letter from .Tanina Kowalska statem ents by Prof. and Jam es Stephens reported in the April 8 Texan. the Tile foreign language require­ ment is not the answer to better the understanding b e t w e e n peoples of the world. As Miss Kowalska pointed out through her illustration of an American’s knowledge of Britain, common language does not bring under­ standing of another country. It is not is also To properly understand why people in other parts of the world think and act the way they do one must know' their economy, religion, history, government and taught philosophy. Tuts through the language. It is true that a little of this is taught in tile language courses, but it is very little. that by knowing a language one can learn the culture of an area, but this takes years of study and few students have the tim e °r desire for such a study. As a result lan­ guage requirem ent just does not achieve its goal of conveying the culture of another people to the students. As for the simple a rt of communicating, most students the foreign true find that if they finish the lan­ guage requirement at the end of their second year they have for­ gotten almost all of the language by the time they graduate. student's knowledge If the College of Arts and Sci­ ences really wanted to broaden the of another country they could offer the students an option between four foreign language and two sem esters of the culture of a particular people. sem esters of a its culture by This would allow the student who wished to learn a language and study that means to do so. It would also expose those students who do not want or need another language in the reasons why people to other countries do not always agree with us, are resentful of our foreign aid, and do the things they do. Such a course would teach these students IO tim es as much about other people then four sem esters of a language that is then dropped and never used again. In short it’s time the College of Arts and Sciences stops talking about the goals of the foreign language requirement and starts looking for something that will achieve these goals. Gene Hudson A&S Junior ACROSS ! Simian A Symbol for iron 6 Fards 11-Punctuation m ark 13-Pantry 15-Symbol for tantalum 16 Earthquakes 18-Sun god 19 Note of scale 21-Send forth 22-Paradisa 24 G irl's name 2 6 Units of Siamese currency 2 8 Nu rn * r 2 9 Worship 31 -Lampreys 33-Cofiej’ R degree (abbr.) 34 Man’ s name 3 6 Decays 38 Comoass point 4 0 Break suddenly 4 2 Substitute piece 4 5 Exist 47-PmJpi! duck 4 9 Space 5 0 0 b s tru c ts 52-Saucy 54 Man’s nickname 55 Exists 56-H ishest 59-Chinese mile 61-Feast 63-Roman general 6 5 Rants 6 6 Initials of 26th President 67-Native metal DOWN 1-Likely 2 -Tolied J Teutonic deity 4 7 Skin of fru it 43 Part of sh irt 44-Hectorneter (abbr.) 4 6 P rin ter’s measure 48 Build 51 A ^ ie re d anim al 53 Former Russian ruler 57 Beverage 53-Symbol for te llu riu m 60-Anger 63 A state (abbr.) 64 Conjunction I 2 3 4 5 l l 16 24 29 38 45 50 55 61 $2 20 19 21 12 16 •;:; 25 IS S 39 34 W 46 $:■ 62 40 W 51 56 47 i 57 65 I 'Mi 6 w 13 17 IO 18 14 7 8 f $8 23 22 27 SS28 32 3 i \ ’v - 37 r— • 26 30 31 i 35 SSS36 41 42 43 44 48 49 52 53 54 ***£* 63 .66 58 59 60 X v 64 67 • \ v con cen fro tion You choose a m a jo r. . . (about 30 semester hours)v And four interdisciplinary courses . . . (about 12 semester hours) VZ explor ation And the rest is up to you. (totaling 120 semester hours) ST. EDWARD’ S UNIVERSITY Austin, Texas For more information please write: Director of Admissions St. Edward’s University Austin, Texas 78704 It’s your move. I PEANUT** ■ ■ ■ « ! /A "”'N i i i / " f > I I I — \ - n SUPDENLY, I FEEL •x-, w____, ^ , d b ® , P T ] I ■ \ i 4 L 5 " I ? j j f y / \ COME TOGETHER SSL THE TOGETHERMENT Being a student living in a big building with lots of other people is a kind of compromise. But combining the convenience of residence hall life with the freedom of an apartment means the compromise could be the greatest experience in living. We call this kind of living TH E TO G E T H E R M E N T What’s a TO G E TH E R M E N T? ■ It’s a way of life. ■ It’s freedom with responsibility. ■ It’s peace with nothing to hassle about. At Dobie your living space becomes yours . . . So does your life. When you have all this, everything else becomes incidental. E V E R Y T H IN G ELSE ■ Single, twin and triple rooms all with private baths. ■ Corner living rooms with refrigerators for goodies. ■ Air conditioning and wall-to-wall carpeting. ■ Sauna, swimming pool, game room. ■ Frustration room. ■ Co-educational floors. ■ Good food — Served SCRAMBLE style. ■ Unlimited seconds and steak every week. ■ Five minute walk to the center of campus. ■ Parking for 300 cars. ■ No sign outs/no hours. DOBIE Stop by the “ SHACK” at 21st and Guadalupe and see about your place at our place next fall. O pen M onday - Friday 12:00-5:00 P.M. Saturdays, 9 - 5 P.M. 472-8411 Andrews: Andrews: They would be arrested for parading without a permit. Texan: How about jaywalking? Andrews: Or jaywalking, what­ ever. But that penalty would prob­ ably be more. Texan: What stage of the law­ the ordi­ making process are nances in now? Andrews: They are still being drawn. We’ll try to get it to the council for consideration by the 21st. The council cannot take up an item unless there’s been 72 hours notice. This is to keep a councilman from reaching in his pocket and saying I want a pass on this bill and it’s passed, and nobody has a chance. At least It has to be posted 72 hours in advance. So, any item that is on the agenda, any person that is in the audience when that item comes lip has the right to speak — P h o to s b y L y n n e F lo c k y , "You must tre a t everybody almost equal, as clos* a s you can." the to it, protest, suggest changes, whatever. That’s informal hearing. The formal hearing is set by state laws. This is in such cases as granting franchises to bus companies — zoning. This is good. There’s a lot of things good about our laws. Simplicity should be the key. The parade ordi­ nances should be as simple as possible. So everyone will know beforehand what needs to be done for a parade permit. So someone who wants to have a parade will know, “If I follow these rules, I can get a permit, if I don’t, I can’t." Now there’s always a gray line, such as with night parades. Texan: And also on holidays and tilings like that. Andrews: Holidays and things like that. There may be some gray areas. Always is. If all else fails, I say use a little common sense. Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 5 i Sony simplified its TV system and got better color. They call it Trinitron.• Sony invented its color TV as it was meant to be: all colors are shot through one big color gun. The Trinitron® system has a bigger lens, too. Twice as large as other T V ’s. With the larger lens you get a sharper, brighter picture. There are many other features toot Automatic color control; integrated contrast-color control; pictures stay crisp and brilliant at all points on the screen; all solid state circuitry for greater reliability; contemporary wood cabinet styling. Come in and watch the Trinitron System with 12' diagonal screen de* liver a sharper, brighter, and a better color picture. Jr n ? ■ B H Horns Outrun Owls, Aggies Sights Set on Conference JOHNSON W EN T into the wire with A&M's Rocky Woods in the 100-yard dash and a murmer of disagreement greeted the an­ nounced times that gave Johnson a 9.8 and Woods, whose lunge barely nipped Johnson, a 9.7. Then in the 220, Johnson team­ ed with Baggett to claim third and fourth, each clocking 21.9. Tftey were in a three-way battle for second down the stretch with Aggie's Donnie Rogers, who clocked 21.7. The whole field felt the breeze of Curtis Mills, however, as the elder M ills brother turned 21.2 around the curve and tied his little brother for the top mark in the con­ ference meet. Texas’s w'eightrnen had a most productive Saturday, aided by the withdrawal of injured Aggie Ronnie Lightfoot, the conference leader the shot and discus. In the shot put, Randy in both SONY TV $319.95 Sony's TV-920U, with solid state circuitry, Is as easy to watch outdoors as it is anywhere in your home. The reason is clearly seen: An 8" black diagonally measured picture screen. Further­ more, this solid state set weighs only IO lbs. Revolutionary circuitry combined with Sony Esaki Diode and Mesa Silicon transistors assure sensitive reception (VHF and UHF), even in outlying areas. Pius a large speaker for sharp, strong sound and a carrying handle. Comes in black or white. Trip with the light fantastic— Sony’s TV-920U. By CRAIG B IR D Assistant Sports Editor HOUSTON — “ W e’re coming around’’ commented head track coach Jack Patterson Saturday as he watched his squad out-duel Texas A&M and Rice in a triangular affair in Houston. With the conference showdown that three weeks away, only statement about Texas’ chance to upset powerful A&M when the SWC title is at stake. says much In Saturday’s meet. Patterson’s charges racked up 62 points to Rice's 58 and injured-hampered A&M’s 50. T H R E E OF THOSE who took major steps in “ coming around” were quarter-miler Stan Mc­ Daniel. jumper Wyatt Thompkins and three-miler Tom Gardner. high McDaniel, doing double duty in the open quarter and the mile relay, turned in a season best of 47.0 on the second relay leg. Tompkins, even though having to settle for a third, was one of Patterson’s “ pleasant surprizes” in this meet. With a season's best of only a medicore 6-4, Tompkins sailed to 6-9 and placed behind two Aggies who also cleared 6-9 on the basis of misses. For Gardner his second place finish in the three mile run of 15:03.9 was a major step in a comeback. Last spring he was runner-up in a conference meet but missed tile cross-country season this year with a fractured footbone. IH T T H E R E W E R E o t h e r ’Horn heroes in tile sweltering Houston afternoon. Dave Morton, frustated once more in a rematch with Aggie Curtis Mills when Mills scratched off the 440, blazed to a 45.4 anchor leg. In the process he made up 14 of a 15-yard deficit he inherited almost catching Rice ace B ill Askey at the wire. Rice posted a 3:08.8 to the Steers’ 3:09.0. Earlier, in the 440-yard dash, Morton stayed on Askey’s heels most of the race before sweeping last curve to win out of the easily. junior The Houston clocked a season’s best of 46.4, the same as M ills’ best. With the ’Horns desperately in need of some outstanding sprint­ ers, Carl Johnson and Byrd Bag­ gett made good showings. The Sony TV-720U is called the Sun Set. Be­ cause its black screen gives the same sharp picture outdoors that It does indoors. Even when the glare is strong. And since it weighs a little over 9 lbs., you can take it anywhere— beach,} boat, boudoir or backyard. Plus a 7-inch diagonal screen that let’s you share the fun with the whole family. Sharp picture? You bet. 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The 5-5, 145-pound understudy pass to Texas’ All-America r e c e i v e r Charles Speyrer delighted spectators with the TD scamper, another punt return of 35 yards and a diving catch of a Gary Keithley pass. The Orange defense made the first big play of the scrimmage when White Steve Worst or coughed the ball up on the opening play. fullback $149.95 trog Kommen Sie am lo. A p ril und nehmen Sie, was Sie vvunschen! radio-TV-siereo downstairs P R O FESSIO N AL SIREN A C T IV A T IN G (AR BURGLAR ALARMS PROTECT H O O D -T R U N K -A L L DOORS PREVENT THEFT O F ENGINE PARTS— STEREO TAPES— CARS — m $75 00 INSTALLED BY A P P O IN T M E N T O N L Y jE f f ijS TEXAS SECURITY SYSTEMS, INC. 454-0558 Ifs light enough. . . only a bit over 9 lbs. Yet its diagonal picture Is big enough for the entire family.. .upstairs, downstairs, kitchen, porch or den. The set works on AC, or 12V auto/boat battery (with optional accessories.) Come in and see this popularly priced porta­ ble. 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For each it was a season's best, Nichols upping his mark by I foot 4 in­ ches and Gentry I foot 6 inches. Alan Thomas checked in at fourth with a 45 feet 2 inch toss. THOMAS and Nichols then ex­ changed the 16-pound iron ball for a discus and turned in a first and a third. Thomas claimed top spot at 166 feet l l inches to Gentry’s 160 feet l l inch throw. Another first place effort in the field event came long jumper Forrest Novy who leaped 22 feet, I01i inches. from Senior Fred Cooper, competing in the mile run, could manage only a 4:11.8, six seconds slower than his season’s best, but still good enough for another first place and five more Texas points. In the 880 though, things didn’t turn out so well. Tri-captain Mike Mosley grabbed an early lead over Owl Steve Stray but slipped into second on the final curve. When Mosley made his move, however, he couldn't find enough room and had to break stride to go a r o u n d . Even his 1:50,9 timing, lowering his season’s best by 1.1 second , didn't help Mosley’s feelings much. “ I WAS T R Y IN G to qualify for NCAA,” he explained later, “ and that takes a 1:50 or better.” “ Chase the Aggies” was the name of the game in the 440 relay, and the Farmers, even without the services of Marvin Mills, who is nursing a set of sore ankles, coasted to an easy 44.1 win. Johnson Mickey Ryan and Mike Leiserta placed a distant second at 44.4. Raggett, Hurdler Skip Archer, who had his finest day at the conference meet last year, showed signs he taking may that inter­ fourth mediate hurdles with a 53.6 timing, one of his better efforts of the season. feat the 440-yard repeat in The name of the game will still be “ Get A&M ” when the con­ ference meet is held on this same track May I and 2. But since Aggie coach Charles Thomas is fielding a healthy hopeful of squad by that time the ’Horns may the going a Utile tougher in their next encounter with the Farmers. find Taking over at the White 44, Orange quarterback Keithlev utilized all three of his running backs — Steve Fleming, Paul Robichau and Dan Steakley — in moving the hall to the one from which point the Alvin fresh­ man sneaked over for the first score. After Campbell’! TD, Phi IU pi got the White offense cranked up with help from a defensive holding penalty on a third down i n c o m p l e t e d pass attempt. Phillips picked up 27 yards on five carries in the 16-play. 61- yard drive before W on ter took it the final yard for the TD. A penalty figured in the White unit’s second score as a piss interference call helped propel the first offense on a 70-yard in drive which Phillips’ four-yard scoring run. culminated The White team had scarcely had time to savor its comeback when the virtually unheralded Fleming squirted through the Ir e on third down and four and raced 49 yards to put the Orange bar k out in front. Keithley drove the Orange to I the winning T D . keeping lur yards on one play and passing 19 yards to tight end Dan Tor- welp, with Steakley bursting through from the IO to cap the 65-yard drive. Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service F A C T O R Y T R A IN ED Volkswagen Specialists The Only Independent V W G arage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs A rld t’s Automotive Service 7951 BURNET R O A D Across from G ulf Mart GL 2-0205 Closed S*lurd«y firestone \ Brake Service Offer plus valuable ear service■ IO -PO IN T BRAKE OVERHAUL • 'V ” , <• IdMJ Not just a reline... 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Netters Score Tennis Victory ’Horns Move Up In SWC Ratings Matching the winning ways of the golf their counterparts on course, the Texas tennis team hung up a 5-1 decision over the I Baylor netters Saturday in Waco. Friday the golfers had blanked the sam e score a t; Baylor by home. Longhorn captain Avery Rush won his challenge over Gary Luft, 2-6, 7-5 and 6-2. Number ; 2 player John Mozola took 6-4 and 6 3 decisions f r o m Larry I Kohler. Second-year man John Nelson overpowered Tommy Shieves I with 6-0 and 6-2 wins. The only ! blemish on the other-w ise perfect trip w as Ron I Saturday Waco Touchon’s to Jack Vance loss with 6-4 and 6-2 scores. In doubles competition the Nel- son-Touchon duo notched a 6-3, I 6-4 win. T h e Mozola-Rush team beat Shieves-Vance with two 6-4 victories. The 5-1 win put the ’Horns up in fourth place in the conference standings, after being down fifth last week. The challenge to the Steers will be Tuesday, with TOU m eeting the ’Horns on the Penick Courts at 2 p.m. in I next | Women Take Two In Tennis Play The Texas Women’s Tennis Team scored their sixth straight match win of die season by- defeating a strong Trinity team Friday for a 7 to 4 victory. They then won a tri-match with Baylor and Temple on Saturday in both singles and doubles. Texas’ Nancy Clark and Royce Marshall won all four m atches two m eets. Both during a women challenge match during their two years of doubles competition. never have lost the Newcomers Lou Anne Lambert and Shirley Y ates are strong district contenders tourney of April 16-17 as the No. ; 2 doubles team. the for Ruth Mayer, who has been j T exas’ singles standout, took wins j in the singles bracket in double 1 elimination p l a y Friday, she was defeated. Saturday. Linda Dickenson, playing the No. 2 singles position, had three singles wins as compared to the I two double I in elimination meet. losses the Texas Duo George Machock (I) and Joe Anderson chalked up wins the the Bears as against took advantage of 'Horns playing home course to win 5-1. A A U Swimmers Set New Records CINCINNATI (AP) - National Short-course A A U Indoor en­ Swimming Championship trants kept up their relentless assault on records, putting six more American marks the books Saturday night. in the That brought three-day total here to 12 national records in 22 of 30 events that have been run off in the St. Xavier High School pool. A national record escaped Gary Hall but the Indiana University freshman moved into positition to become the lone four-time winner In the 1970 AAU m e e t Hall won the 220-yard butterfly In one minute and 50.54 seconds for his third triumph. He is en­ tered in the 200-individual medley Sunday, the final day of the m e e t The 18-year-old Garden Grove, Calif., product finished in front in the 440 individual m edley and the 200 backstroke earlier here. The new American record holders were Lynn Colella in the 200 butterfly, Brian Job and Linda Kurtz in the 200 breast­ stroke Mike Stamm and Susie Atwood in the IOO backstroke, and Southern the the 800 California A freestyle relay. University team of in a Stanford University Job, in his third freshman, figured American record in as many days when he breezed home in the breast stroke. His tim e of 2:04.3 broke his mark of 2:05.99 taken last month in the NCAA. M iss Kurtz, 22, a Long Beach (Calif.) State College junior won her first national title in 15 tries. She covered the 200 breast stroke, beating the 2:24.3 Kim Brecht of Lakewood. Calif., turned in last year. Miss Colella, 19, a sophomore at the University' of Washington, lowered the 200 butterfly for the second time Saturday when she turned the finals In 2:03.93. That wiped out the preliminaries. the 2:04.18 In Miss Atwood easily took the IOO backstroke in :58.75, eclipsing her 1969 record of :58.58. She sw im s for Lakewood (Calif.) Aquatic Club. Stamm, a high school senior from San Diego, Calif., timed the IO O backstroke :51.17 to top in his pending record of :51.6. for that e v e n t Andrew Strenk, Jim McConica, Grog Charleton and Frank Heekl swam on Southern California’s relay unit that earned a national record of 6:47.22. The Trojans broke their own record of 6:49.5 set in 1969. GILLETTS AT 2426 GUADALUPE r n . m &ffm Ae v BITTER SPORT JACKETS ll. 29.50 to 69.50 STORE HOURS 9:30 TO 6 P.M. 45 M EN ’S SUITS SALE REG. 59.50 to 79.50 Baylor Bows Golfers Club Bears longhorn golfers knocked Bay­ lor out of the Southwest Con­ ference golf lead Friday scoring the Morris a 5-1 victory at W illiams course diming match play competition. Texas scored an easy win with sophomore Tom Kite burning up the course and taking Baylor's Don Brown 5-4. Playing sub-par golf, the Texas flash continued to hold his ranking as the Univer­ sity ’s best duffer. U n i v e r s i t y junior George Machock followed suit and scored a 2-up victory over Larry Law­ rence. The combination of Kite and Machock won team match 4-3. the Sophomore Joe Anderson, com ­ ing through with som e brilliant putts for the University, scored a 2-1 win over Bill Munguia of Baylor. The only loss for the Orange golfers cam e as Baylor’s Bob Presley defeated William Crom­ well, I-up. However, Cromwell and Anderson took the team title 1-up. With the win, Texas increased .729 Its point standings percentage. Baylor, now 11-7 and .611, tumbled to fourth place. to a ALso Friday, stunned Rice 6-0 conference lead with a .750. take Texas to Tech the C o a c h George Hannon’s charges will next take to the golf in the All-American In­ course tercollegiate I n Houston Wednesday. Invitational Bears Outpoint Arkansas, SMU FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) — Baylor’s Pete Morales set a new' three-mile record as the Bears Southwest Conference won triangular track m eet with Arkansas and SMU at Razorback Stadium here Saturday. a Morales, the conference record holder in the three-mile run, won his specialty in 14:33.7, breaking his old recon! by four seconds. in the He also finished second m ile run Baylor ran up 88 points, while Arkansas had 49 and SMU 31. A r k a n s a s ’ Jim my Lawson in anchored the 440 yard relay 42 seconds, the best of the season for the Porkers. Arkansas freshman Vernon Hune of North Little Rock won the 120-vard high hurdles in 14.7 to tie the freshman record. Baylor’s Dan Moseiy w as the only double winner in­ dividual events taking first place in the shotput and the discus. the in NBA, A B A Near Proposed Merger At Saturday Meet ningham, would be resolved by the clubs involved. • The two leagues would con­ duct a common draft along the lines of the draft instituted by the pro leagues after their merger. football "Both the NBA and ABA have seen all the pitfalls of trying to operate separately for the last few years,” said Schulman, "and the wisdom of we all realize consummating of some transaction. It will be good for all parties.” type Schulman, however, declined to give a target date for the pro­ posed merger. clamer PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) - The warring American and National Basketball Associations to a proposed moved m erger Saturday when negotiat­ ing comm ittees agreed on three key term s — payment of $11 m il­ lion indemnity by the ABA, the shifting of its Washington fran­ chise and the return of star Ricky Barry to San Francisco. The terms revealed were taken to be a significant step forward sincp they meet the NBA’s most insistent Sam demands, S c h u I rn a n, head of the NBA's merger cautioned that the "recommendations are j subject to the approval of both leagues and Congress.” committee, but He did, however, add that Congress has in the past looked favorably on such mergers, citing "the precedent that has been set with baseball and football.” leagues appeared First news of the agreement of the merger comm ittees of the two the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the Washington Post with Schulman confirming them f r o m P a l m Springs, where the meetings were held. in Schulman pointed out that the m erger comm ittees had agreed on the following "in principle and now they win be proposed to the lea gues: ” • Tile ABA would pay the NBA *11 million In Indemnity over a 10-year neriod. • The AB A’s Washington franchise would be moved to a rita' to be determined bv the AR \ that does not infringe on territo­ rial rights of any other city in the NBA or ABA. • Th"' ABA would retain its identity for at least three years before actually merging with the NBA and then the two leagues would realign. • Rick Barny who left the Warriors to loin the ABA, would I re-ioin the NBA’s San Francisco entry. • Tile other problem " jumpers,” such as Zelmo Beaty, and Billy Cun­ D ave Bing of PHOTOS I SWEATERS t v PRICE PRICE RACK LEATHER TRIM SWEATERS Sport Coats JACKETS IOO Values To 29.50 BREAKERS f ' . m m , v* L _ f P R I C E REG. 6. TO 18. ■LIFETIME FRONT! END ALIGNMENT NEVER PAY FOR ANOTHER ALIGNMENT FOR 5 YEARS OR 50,000 MILES W « W ill Kaap Your Front End A lign ed and C iv# You rn Written Service Policy to Cover THI* HERE'S WHAT WE DO! e SET CASTER e SET CAMBER e SET TOE-IN e REPACK OUTER FRONT WHEEL BEARINGS e SAFETY INSPECT CAR FOR J ONLY Air Cond. & Torsion Bar $2.00 More. Most American Cars. PERRY ROSE FIRESTONE e NORTH 8415 R E S E A R C H BLVD. P h o n s 434-5221 H W Y . 183 B etw een N. Lam ar and B a rn et Rd. L am pasas H w y. H R S, 7:80-8:30 e NORTHWEST A T G U L F M A R T 7930 B U R N U T RH. P h . 465-7668 A PP L IA N C E S JU TV N ot at th is lo ca tio n 7:30 to 8:30 P.M . e CAPITAL PLAZA S H O P P IN G C EN T ER • Phono 452-8464 • D a ily R:fM» A .M .-8 :0 0 P.M . • SAT. 8 A.M. - « P M • O fficial S ta te Insp. Station e DOWNTOWN - 9th & L A V A C A • P h o n e 472-4141 • O P E N 7 A.M . - 6 P .M Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# 7 PASSPORTS RESUMES SUPER HOT SERVICE 19th at Lavaca • Cam eron Village s r ^ G l L L E T T S STUDMAN PHOTO 8.00 to 16.00 SWEATERS PRICE G U A D A L U P E ■ Major League Baseball Astros 8, Braves 7 te r field. HOUSTON (A P) — Jo e Pepitone crashed a double, a triple and his first N ational le a g u e hom er and w inning p itch er Jim Bouton also stro k ed th re e h its as th e H ouston A stro s defeated th e A tlan ta B raves 8-7 S atu rd a y night. Pepitone, trad e d to th e A stro s last w in ter from he New Y ork Yankees, slam m ed a tw o-run hom er in the first inning and scored H ouston’s last ru n a fte r lacing a triple in th e eighth. Sonny Jackson opened th e gam e w ith a triple off B ou­ ton, an o th er ex-Y ankee, and scored on th ird haesm an Dong R ad er’s th ro w in g e rro r. B outon allowed seven m ore hits, including a seventh inning hom er by Rico C arty , and ncod­ ded relief help in th e ninth. A fte r giving up C a rtv ’s hom er. Bouton poked a ru n - scoring single in th e bottom of the seventh. T he B raves rallied fo r five ru n s in th e ninth, chosing Bouton on a two- run single by Bob Tillm an. Giants 2, Reds I SAN FRANCISCO (A P) — S h o rtsto p Dave Concepcion th e bobbled G aylord P e rry 's bases-loaded g ro u n d er n inth inning, giving the San Fransico G iants a 2-1 victory over C incinnati S atu rd ay th eir w inning strin g to fo u r gam es. th a t extended in Concepcion booted tile G iant p itch er’s tap up th e middle and Ken H enderson scored th e w inning ru n although sec­ ond basem an Tom m y Helm s recovered th e ball in tim e to re tire P e rry a t first for th e second out in th e ninth. Senators 4, Red Sox 3 W ASHINGTON ( A P ) — F ra n k H ow ard rifled his first hom e ru n of the season high off th e left field wall w ith tw o on to cap a fo u r-ru n th ird inning and lead th e W ash­ ington S enators to a 4-3 victory over Hie Boston Red Sox S atu rd ay night. W ith one run in tw o out and two straig h t strik es to How­ ard, loser Sonny S iebert attem p ted to w aste a pitch and H ow ard crashed it to deliver his first ru n s b a tte d in in five gam es. Dick Bosm an pitched o u t of several dangerous situations to w in his first th is season w ith help from P edro R am os in th e eighth and D arold Knowles in th e ninth. Brewers 8, W hite Sox 4 Pinch h itte r Rich Rollins singled to put th e B rew ers in fro n t o-4 and R uss S n y d er’s single off D anny M urphy m ade it 6-4. Steve Hovley closed out the scoring w ith a two-ru n double off Don Secrist, th e th ird Chicago h u rler of th e inning. M ets 4, C a rd s I ST. LOUIS (A P ) — G ary G e n tly checked St.. Louis on fo u r hits and received last-o u t relief help from Ron T ay lo r S atu rd ay as the N ew York M ets handed the C ardinals th e ir firs t loss of the season 4-1. The C ardinals, who have won th re e gam es, w ere th e last rem aining undefeated club in th e N ational League, P hiladelphia having lost 3 -0 to P ittsb u rg h ea rlie r S atu rd ay . The M ets scored one ru n in th e second inning and kayoed St. Louis s ta r te r Nelson B riles w ith two m ore in th e third. In th e third, Bud H arrelso n singled, stole second and scored on Cleon Jo n es’ single. Jones also stole second and cam e hom e on Sw oboda’s second single. Two w alks and Joe F o y ’s single produced a M et in su r­ ance m n in th e fo u rth off reliever S antiago Guzman. T he C ardinals scored in the th ird on Lou B rock’s lead­ off w alk and a triple by Jose Cardona!. Joe H ague tripled to opon th e C ard s’ fo u rth hut w as stranded. O riol es 5, I igers 3 BALTIM ORE (A P) — T he unb eaten B altim ore Orioles scored fo u r ru n s in th e eighth inning, tw o on B rooks R ob­ inson’s double, an d b eat th e D etroit T igers 5-3 S atu rd a y fo r th eir fifth consecutive victory. Rookie T e rry C row ley launched th e belated ra lly w ith a double off E arl Wilson, w ho entered th e inning w ith a fo u r-h itte r and a 2-1 lead. B rooks Robinson, who won F rid a y ’s gam e with a te n th inning single, th en drove th e n ex t pitch to th e left ce n te r field fence and scored tw o runs. Tile T igers cam e back w ith one m n in th e ninth before reliever P ete R ich ert snuffed o u t th e rally. Pirates 4, Phillies 0 CHICAGO ( A P ) —- D anny W alton pulled Milwaukee from a 4-0 deficit w ith a p air of tw o-run hom ers and th e B rew ers eru p ted for fo u r m ore in the n in th and b eat the Chicago W hite Sox 8-4 S atu rd ay for th e ir first A m erican L eague victory'. W alker held th e Phils to th re e h its until th e n in th in ­ ning, when D enny Dyle slam m ed a one-out triple and L a r­ ry Hisle drew a walk. H arten stein then cam e out of th e bullpen and got D eron Johnson to bounce into a gam e-end­ ing double play. M ax Alvis s ta lle d th e tie-breaking n in th w ith a single and th e re w ere ru n n e rs a t first and th ird w hen relief p it­ ch er V irle Rounsaville th re w Ted K ubiak’s b u n t into cen­ R oberto C lem ente drove hom e th e first P ittsb u rg h ru n w ith a triple off th e rig h t ce n te r field scoreboard in tile th ird inning a fte r a one-out single by M atty A b u . P H IL A D E L PH IA (A P ) — Luke W alk er and C huck H arten stein com bined to pitch a fo u r-h itte r S atu rd ay an d R p p H I th e P ittsb u rg h P ira te s blanked Philadelphia 4-0, snapping th e Phillies’ w inning stre a k a t th re e gam es. ,1 U C U L C Q U 5 m i l t A d K n i r t c Casper Takes Masters Lead AUGUSTA, Ga. (A P) - Billy C asper, whose conservative play m ay have cost him the title last y ear, bolted out of a logjam of contenders with a four-under-par 68 Saturday and assum ed a one- shot lead in the th ird round of the M asters golf tournam ent. C asper, a bland, soft-spoken ch aracter, had a 54-hole total of 208. eight-under p a r on the fam ed A ugusta N ational course, and led his C alifornia neighbor and life­ long golfing com panion Gene L ittler by a single stroke. little r , who sh ared lead going into S a tu rd a y 's play, had a 72 for 209. the C asper danced an u n ch a ra c ter­ the sixteenth green istic jig on into when a 20-foot p u tt curled the cup and gave him sole pos­ session of the lead. U ntil then it had been a dog­ fight all th e way. At one tim e or another five p lay ers — C asper, L ittler, B ert Y ancey, Tommy A- aron and G ary P la y e r—led or sh ared the lead before the huge g allery of about 30,000. P la y e r, At still an o th er point, th ere w ere seven p lay ers locked w ithin one stroke before the greying, 38- year-old C asper took control. the steel-nerved little Soutli African who has been the object of intense security p re c a u ­ tions, cam e from off the pace to take third with a 68 for 210. Tied a t 211, three strokes aw’a y from the lead and v ery m uch in contention w ere B ort Yancey, the form er W est P ointer who held a sh a re of the second-round lead, Tom m y A a r o n and tall Texan C harles Goody. Goody had sparkling 67, a Aaron a 69 an d Y ancev a p a r 72. Coody and Aaron each m atched a tournam ent record. Dave Hill and D ave Stockton, with a 70 and 69 respective!v, shared a spot a t 213 w hile tiny Ja p a n e se Takaaki Kono had a 71* including an eagle th e first hole-for 214. two on Final Statistics Reveal Hit Every Minute M a (A P) NEW YORK - Pistol P e te M aravich, a lia s the Two~ MilLion-Dollar Kid from Louisiana State, is college b ask e tb a ll's first point-a-m inute c a re e r scorer. The final 1970 m a jo r college sta tistic s by the N ational Col­ legiate Sports S en d ees confirm ed th e all-tim e achieve­ S aturday th ree-tim e All-A­ th e m ents of m erica and the Y ear for 1970. the P la y e r of THESE A RE th e feats the 6— foot-5 M aravich achieved at LSU and which helped h im gain a re­ ported $1.9 million co n tract with the A tlanta Hawks of the N a­ tional B asketball Association. He se t a reco rd by scoring 1,381 points during 31 g am es during the recently concluded season for an av e ra g e of 44.5. Combined with his 44.2 a v e ra g e for the 1969 season and his 43.8 av erag e for 1968. he is th e first to score a point-a-m inute c a re e r pace in col­ lege com petition. He finished his th ree years with 3.607 points, 694 m o re than the old record of 2.973 se t by O scar Robertson of Cincinnati. MARAVICH finished with a ca ­ re e r av erage of 44.2, m ore than IO points b e tte r than R obertson's the B ear C ats during for 33.8 field goal p e r­ 1958-59-60. H is cen tag e shooting w as a .147 and he led the Southeastern Confer­ ence in assists with a 6.2 a v e r­ age. In his 83 college gam es as a .sophomore, j u n i o r and senior, M aravich scored 50 points o r m ore in 28 gam es. His highest, 69 against Ari llam a during th e the m ost 1970 cam paign, w as e v e r by an individual for a m ajo r te a m ano th er m a jo r team . ag ain st Pistol Pete overshadowed th e shooting of A ustin C arr of N otre D am e, who finished runnerup in th e 1970 cam paign with a 38.1 av erag e. RICK M O I NT of P urdue fin­ ished third a t 35.4, Dan Issei of K entucky, fourth a t 33.9 and WU- lie Humes of Idaho State, fifth a t 30.5 in the high scoring field. Founding out the top IO w ere Rich Yunjus. G eorgia Tech a t 30.1, R udy Tom janovich, M ichi­ gan, a t c l . C alvin M urphy of N ia g a ra a t 29.4, Bob l i n i e r . St. B onaventure, a t 29.1 and R alph Sim pson. Michigan State, a t 29.0. Jim M cDaniels, West (nm Ken­ tucky, w as next a t 2«6, followed by G ene P h i l l i p s , Southern M ethodist, a t 28.5, Don C um utt, M iami of F lorida, at 28,4 and John Johnson of Iowa at 28.0. TC U s Tracksters Win in Triangular Billy C a sp e r . . . leads after third round. Hixon Accurate In Scrimmage football the offense held DALLAS (AP) — Chuck Hixson passed for two touchdowns and Gordon G ilder ra n for two others as the upper in Southern M ethodist's hand s p r i n g scrim m ag e Saturday. Hixson IO of 14 com pleted p asses for 99 y ard s. G ilder w as the leading ru sh er, picking up 81 y a rd s in IO c a rrie s, including a 36-yard ru n to s e t up a touch­ down. C orry P ay n e, a 5-foot-T, 160- from D allas T hom as pounder J e f f e r s o n , highlighted the defensive effort w ith an 88-yard p ass for a touchdown. interception retu rn H ead Coach H ayden F ry said th e h ard interceptions. he was pleased w ith tackling and key In NBA Playoffs NEW YORK CAP) - Willis Reed led a balanced a tta c k and th e New Y ork K nicks cu t down th e M ilw aukee Bucks 110-102 S aturday in the opener of th eir E a ste rn D :\iso n final serie s of the N ational B asketball A ssocia­ tion playoffs. The second of the best-of-seven set will b e Monday night in Madison S quare G arden before the team s m ove to M ilwaukee for th e third an d fourth gam es next weekend. Reed scared 21 points, IO of them in the second q u a rte r when the Knicks pulled ahead to stay, in his personal duel with Lew Aleindor of th e Buries. Al candor had 35 points, but 17 of them c am e in the f aud q u a rte r a fte r the K nicks had pulled ahead 86-70. . Vvay290 East Austin, $ $ '^ B c tV u n a n Drive Apartment Hunting? FREE OF CHARGE! Our profess ional staff can help you l o c a t e an apartment within yo u r budget, in the right lo catio n and sire to suit vour I R E E I R AN SPOR I \ I ION: C all 4524)156 for help. n eed s. St ail ht I a n i H u r s t ani) Herr anil A tm napherf J I long (AP) - South­ ARLINGTON west Conference jum p cham pion C arl Mills of TCH leaped 24-5j 2 fo r his personal best this season, and Z ane R eeves of T exas Tech Jam es L ester of TCU for th e first tim e in the IOO in a tria n g u la r track a t m eet th e U niversity defeated a t E X C E L L E N T G E R M A N FO O D HAPPY HOUR DAILY 2-5 p rn. and a f t e r 9 p m . 64 oz. P IT C H E R — P R E M IU M BEER $ 1 2 5 4OO Wed SOIh § O N E BLOC K E A S T OF D R AO T H E C H E A P E S T " S N O W J O B " IN T O W N DIAL 478-0964 ( A R e c o r d i n g ) "W h a te v e r man does, H e does first in his m in d " ATTEND A LECTURE/LESSON ON: Eliminate: • Insom nia • Tension Headache- • Unnecessary • Undesirable Worry Habits ALPHA CONTROL The exciting new science of controlled sense of awareness for the re­ duction of tension, anxiety — the improvement of memory. ENERGY Develop: • Ability of Total Relaxation • Increased Intuition • Problem Solving Methods T IM E M O N D A Y , APRIL 13, 7:30 P.M. P L A C E C A M B R ID G E TOW ERS 1801 Lavaca S IL V A M IN D C O N T R O L Conducted by SOUTHWEST MOTIVATION CENTER A rlington Saturday. and also Mills had jum ps of 24-1% 24-3, ra n 24-5 and 24-5! second to R eeves in th e IOO aa T C I' g athered nine first places host and Arlington with 51 and crippled T exas Tech with 44. to beat points 72 rocketed R eeves out of his blocks lead all to the way in winning the IOO by a y ard over Mills in 9.6. Mills ju st shaded te a m m a te L ester, who stum bled a t for second. Both tho sta rt, w ere tim ed in 9.7. rooster, running in the outside lan e, got the 220, w hipping Reeves, who drew the c u rb lane, by th ree y ard s in 21.7. rev en g e in to come In a m uch closer ra c e than a n ­ ticipated, TCU’s L a m - M rB ryde had to d efeat Texas T ech's Ron G risbv in tile high hurdles in 14.2. G risby w as tim ed in 14.3. from behind T exas I o o h s Bob Blain, who this season, h as vaulted 15-83/4 failed th ree tim es a t 16-0 a fter clearin g 15-0 and 15-6 each time on third third vault. G re a t C om bination SPECIAL M O N D A Y & TUESDAY EVERY W EEK ° n iy 9 6 ° Taco, Enchilada, Tamale, Chill, Chili con queso, Rice, Beans, Tostatios, Hot Sauce [££ C h ic o g 5012 BURNET ROAD Join the war the Driskill Laundry has waged on the economic forces which threaten to Impoverish the woe begotten college student. Or, as nine- star General Builright might say, “Drop your socks and grab your pencils. The time has come!” No longer will college students have to abide dirty, baggy sweaters. This is a clean campus and we intend to protect it from unlaundered wierdo sweaters. You say it costs a bunch to have a sweater cleaned most places. Well, the Driskill Laundry, in its never-ending fight against tyranny, injustice and the un-American way, brings you . . . The Supple Sweater Special. This week for only $.59 we pledge to clean your baggy beast and make it “soft in texture, yielding, compliant, and flexible when bent or twisted.” lf that isn’t supple, we don’t know our Webster’s New Collegiate. Don’t wait! Bring in those pulled- out pullovers today. You know there must be one under every bed. AH you need is your college ID. Cash & C a rry O nly i-yvNVi V 4i'y5£. ■ &■/. Driskill Cleaners & Laundry Main Plant 411E 19th Branch 213 So. Lamar UAA.LUI**®* jam wmm This ic how it is at Hardin North • Three b lo ck s west o f U niversity c a m p u s • Fully furnished sp a c io u s apartm ents: tw o be d ro om o ne b e d ro o m e ffic ie n cy • All-electric kitchens • Sensible round-the- clo ck secu rity • S w im m in g p o o l • No hour restrictions • M a le guests until m id n igh t w eekdays/ 2 a. rn. w eekends • Restaurant f • S h o p p in g m all (goon to open) • /Staid service • Launderettes on every floor • In d iv id u a l clim ate, control • P arking garage • R o o f-to p sun deck C o m e a n d see for yourself. H ard in N orth is different. Convenien ce/ independence, security in a new style for living. H A R D IN N O R T H Ap artm ents for G irls 801 W est 24th Street 512-476-7636 Page 8 Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Funds .. . (Continued from Page I.) Hoffman also said monetary contributions would be made to “ four or five" other trials, in­ cluding that of Dr. Timothy Leary. He said he would work to free the Black Panthers in New York, raise money for the “ growing abortion network in the United S tates” and help organize a “ radical law yers’ conference” to defend cases such as the Chicago Seven. Weinglass, sentenced to more than 20 months in prison for con­ tem pt of court said the case is being appealed and is now before the U. S. 7th Circuit Court of said Appeals in argum ents will be heard is November, but no decision expected before following May. in Chicago. He the “ That M al Weinglass said. Is my life,’' He said there are “ample legal grounds” to reverse the district court decision, but “whether the court will do so rem ains to be seen.” the only The attorney, called by corrup­ tions of his nam e by Judge Julius trial, throughout Hoffman the tim e he was said correctly identified was “when Abb ie held up a placard with my nam e on judge also it. The apologized to me a t the end of the trial, shortly before he sen­ tenced me for contempt.” Council to Discuss Program Fate of M o d e l Cities to be Determined By KATIE FEGAN Associate News Editor The City Council will meet with the Model Cities Executive Com­ mission at 7:30 p.m. Monday to the program 's present discuss status. After that, Model Cities’ fate will depend on whether the council votes enough additional funds its planning stages. to complete Campus News in Brief ART DEPARTMENT and Central Texas (Austin) Archaeological Institute of America will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Geology John Building associate Griffith? professor of a r ­ chaeology and Greek, speak on “ Sardis in the Age of Croesus.” IOO Pedley, to hear classical CENTER FOK MIDDLE EAST­ ERN STUDIES and Depart­ ment of Drama will meet at 4 p.m. Monday in Business- Economic Building 262 to hear Dr. Pierce Cachia speak on “ Modem Arab Theater in its Form ative Stage.” CURRENT ISSUES FORUM will meet a t 7:30 p.m. Monday in Building Business-Economics 262 toward achieving radical reform. to discuss steps FILM “ The Big Sleep” will be shown a t 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in Je ster Center Auditorium. Ad­ mission is 75 cents. HILLEL will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Hillel Foundation for a workshop on conducting Passover. INSTITUTE OF LATIN AMERI­ CAN STI DIES STUDENTS AS­ SOC! AXION will meet at 4 p.m. Monday in Business-Economics Building 161 for the monthly meeting. SMC sponsors Jonathan Mirsky at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas Union Main Ballroom, speaking on “Are U. S. Cis Being Ordered to Commit War Crimes in V ietnam ?” STI DENTS INTERNATIONAL MEDITATION SOCIETY will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in Un­ ion Building 300 for group meditation. UNIVERSITY STUDENT TRA- \ EL ASSOCIATION sponsors “ Travel D ay” from 9 a.m . to 6 p.m. Monday in Union Build­ ing 325. Under a federal grant, resi­ dents of E ast Austin and Mon- topolis have been surveying the areas for 18 months to set priori­ ties for improvements. W h e n definite plans are made, the program m ust be approved by the council, which will in turn apply to the federal government for the funding. Deadline federal application Is April 30. for The program was granted $168,000 by the U. S. Housing and U r b a n Development Agency (HUD) to pay for 80 percent of the expected planning costs. The City m ust supply the remaining 20 percent. Planning is incomplete, and the the feels staff the can not m eet Model Cities program deadline. It will cost the Q ty $13,000 to m eet the current planning budget and $25,000 for each additional month the planning must be extended, City M anager Lynn Andrews said Saturday. lf the federal government approves the application, it will ' pay 80 percent of the improve- I m ents’ cost, with the City funding I the remainder. Johnny Trevino, a m em ber of | the executive commission, said I Saturday needs support from one or two more : council m em bers to get additional funds and final approval of plans. the program After college a Job or a c a r e e r ? When you leave college, w here will you go next? Into a job—and hope that it w ill lea somewhere in time? Or on to advanced trail th at will assure a real career w ith re w a rd s ___ p o w w ith the future? One of the fields of greatest opportunity today is the com puter industry . Only a few years old, already it has grown into a giant. A e ro sp a c e .,.fin a n c e ... communications—almost every business or industry now requires the assistance of com­ puters. A nd tomorrow s needs will be far greater. Demand for professional personnel is tremendous. B u tin order to qualify for a rew arding computer career, specialized train- g is a must. I his is the business of Control Data Institute /D allas. A division of Control Data Corporation, m akers of the w orld’s m ost powerful computers, CDI offers the finest training anywhere. A highly skilled staff of instructors plus the m ost sophisticated com­ pu ter equipment ara provided to give the student thorough grounding in both theory pufer in d rstry ^011 ° WG **10 yourself to learn aU & etfacts about opportunities in the com- DAY AND EVENING CLASSES Computer Programming Computer Digital Electronics • Accredited member, National Association of Trade and Technical Schools • Eligible under Federally-insured student loan program • Approved for veterans • Nationwide placement servico Control Data Institute A n educational division of Control Data Corporation C A L L (512) 454-7705 C O L L E C T (24-hour answering service) FO R A P E R S O N A L IN T ER V IE W W IT H H A R R Y M IN N IC K , THE A U S T IN REPRESENTATIVE O F C O N T R O L D A T A INSTITUTE We invite you to discuss your future with the CDI repre­ sentative in Austin. He will answer all your questions about Control Data Institute and assist you in planning your career in the computer industry. No obligations, of course. CONTROL DATA INSTITUTE XTL wiz 2 clo Control Data Corporation * 2 901 West 38th Street J Austin, Texas 78705 Yes, I would like to know more about CDI/Dallas 2 and career opportunities in the computer industry. * • Please send me complete details. J □ I am eligible for GJ. benefits. Name * Street___________________________________ 2 City_______ .State. Home Phone. .Work Phone. For MoPac Meet City Council Not Present Residents of Hie Clarkesville are a of West Austin, eager to m eet with the Austin City Council because of their impending suit to stop construction of the new MoPac expressway, were foiled in their plans Thursday night when the council did not appear a t the meeting. THE MIX-UP apparently re­ sulted from a communications problem, as Austin Mayor Travis LaRue was not aw are of plans for a meeting and was busy a t a prior engagem ent The council­ men also had previous plans. As soon as he learned of the mix-up, the mayor called the Clarkesville com mittee to apologize. for council Gayle Essary, a m em ber of the a d v i s o r y the Clarkesville group, pointed to this communications problem as “one m ore thing he (the mayor) should look into. It is one more example of his staff making policy by omission." No plans w ere m ade for another meeting with the council, since there would not be tim e to set it up before the Clarkes­ ville group files its suit, which seeks stop injunction construction on MoPac. an to in helping to Essary, THE GROUND FOR THE SUIT, according is th at the City has not followed federal statutes to relocate persons forced out of their homes by construction of the expressway. The Clarkesville residents want to release City-owned land in the area for sale to these persons. the council sites. According Another issue to be covered in tile suit Is the possibility that a crosstown interchange might ba to MoPac, which would added r e q u i r e more Clarkesville to property LaRue, MoPac as is now planned would take 18 or 19 pro. perty sites. If the crosstown In­ terchange is added, Clarkesville residents say the project will displace “ between 20 and 40 families.” it LARUE EMPHASIZED the crosstown that plans for inter­ change were very tentative and th at it is not included in the City’s capital improvement plan for th e next five years. “ There is no guarantee that the Clarkesville site would even be used,” lie added. “ I hope that the the possibility of building interchange won’t the delay construction of M oPac.” T o d a y ' s E v e n t s I p.m . —Leonard Weinglass sp- Hall Townes a t e a k s Auditorium. 7 p.m. . . —W estminster Youth Choir of the Oak Cliff Presby­ terian Church of Dallas pre­ sents a service of sacred music in the University Presbyterian Church. 8 p.m. — University Society for Atheism meets in Union Building 334-336 to discuss a course on atheism. An Angle A student checks the multitude of ads which covers the bulletin board in the Jester C e nte r academ ic section. A s usual, most of the ads here are from persons trying to ge t out of their Jester contracts, but others featuring m erchandise from w ed d ing gowns to m agi­ cians can be found. O th e r ads that can be —Photo by Steve Huitman on Ads noted on the various bulletin boards across the cam pus are the more com m on ones for typists, musical instruments, or cars, or the more exotic such as a ride to M exico City, an engagem ent ring and w edding band, au­ thentic C olom b ian clothes, or a "h a n d so m e " airman from W e b b A ir Force Base. ; ^ ,;:;i: ; • - ■ ■■■;««■,»!.* W hati it like at, home? I Swimming pool in the patio sun ^te# on fife roo! *. J ii ^guests in the ftvmg room. Who wouldn't stay at home with , 01: L « ^ *4 A. . . I at Hardin North. j, - n ' % if « v *> H? ' PfK; ' 1^' '/ X . v I ' >?5 r n - " T ' * ' i s w g n e i i x,« ' ^ 'ir*>*§ 'V 4 : * T' V<* ^ \,V' .m s ^ ••.;*x.:;,.. ...<:>»:: ;3 t - - . x , W X ■' f i l i i ups "M & 'v " % Apartments for Girls 801 West 24th Street 512- 476-7636 t < U M '-4 - Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN P ao . Professor Likes Virgin' Situation Inside Classroom By M IK E H E N N E N A University professor recognizer] for his teaching excellence says he prefers a classroom situation in which none of the students have previously known him or heard of him. Hr. Clifton M. Grubbs, a s s o c i a t e professor of economics, the recipient of the Jean Holloway award teaching, for exceptional and Cactus for- teaching excellence, says he doesn’t feel it is his place to talk about teacher excellence or to say what constitutes excellent an teacher. award On April 15. he is to receive another award for teaching excellence. Phi Pita Sigma, freshman men’s scholastic honorary fra­ ternity, will honor Grubbs at a banquet at 6:30 p.m. in the Main Ballroom of the Texas Union. “ but “ I feel honored by the teaching awards,*’ Grubbs I am also says, .somewhat embarrassed bv them.” He said publicity “ changes a teacher's situa­ tion.” “ Students come to class e x p e c t i n g something special,” he says. Grub!>s ideally prefer a would for “ virgin” experience each class in which none of the students know him or have heard of him. “ a deep respect Grubbs does say his teaching is characterized by for that •students.” He adds “ you should treat a student the way you hope he might become.” Expressing dislike for the system, Grubbs grading prefers a pass-fail system. to make grade evaluations, but then there has to be some structure ” he said. I bate Grubbs laments what he oalls “ a curtain descending between the professoriat andthe student body.” He this problem said he feels a large part of exists because “ professors are prim arily concerned with t h e i r and professional requirements.” specialties Graduate studies a r e slowly dominating offerings at the undergraduate level. There is a growing disin­ in undergraduates terest among professors,” Grubbs explained. Grubbs said a great deal of the discontent among students about the structure and direction of universities is “ quite valid.” Speaking of his own classes, Grubbs says he to feels comfortable in classes of up IOO students. Classes of 250, he says, are not as easy, but describes classes of more than 250 students as “ frightening.” describing his feelings about teaching, Grubbs simply says, “ I am doing what I am happy doing.” A native of Fort Worth, Grubbs received his BBA and MA degrees from the I nix ersity and an M A and PhD from Harvard. He has been on the faculty at the University since 1965. Pre­ viously, he taught at the University of Colorado and at tho University' of Massa­ chusetts. A&S Registers Mo st Enrollment Up 10% Enrollment for this year’s spring semester is up more than IO per­ cent to the Registrar’s figures Office. from 1969, according from A total of 33,913 students had registered for this spring, while 30,788 wore enrolled last year at the comparable period. According to the.se figures, 32,- 150 of the students enrolled this Spring returned to tho University while 1,524 wore college tran­ sfers. Other sources of enrollment increase were secondary schools and examinations. Arts and sciences had the lar- Z e s t the enrollment, with Graduate School and College of Business Administration second and third in numbers of students. The Medical Branch of the Uni­ versity was opened with the School of Medicine in 1891 In Gal­ veston, and the Dental Branch In was established in Houston 1943. C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T IS IN G R A T E S E ach W o rd <15 word m inimum) * OS ..................... f 1.50 one tim e $ J Mlnlm nm C h a rr* ’ Stndent rate <15-wnrd m aximum ) .75 .50 ‘ Each additional tim e 20 Consecotire Issue* IO words 15 words 20 word* C la r ifie d D isp lay I column TC one inch one tim e S I SO I 1.40 E ac h Additional T im e fin.OO ................................. 112.00 ............................. . S IS .OO .................... .. (N o copr change fo r consecutive Issue rates, k • L O W ST U D EN T R A TES 15 words or less for 75e the first time, 50c each additional time. Stu­ dent must show Auditor's receipt Journalism and pay Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M onday through Friday. in advance in D E A D L IN E S C H E D U L E Tuesday Texan M onday. 11:00 a m . W ednesday Texan Tuesday. 11:00 a.m. Thu rsd ay Texan W edn esday. 11:0ft a.m. F r id a y Texan T hn rsd av. 11:00 a m. Sun day Texan .. F r id a y . 3:00 p.m. F o r S a l e F o r S a l e I Shin P O N T IA C Tem pest 326, V-R, three on floor, pow er steering, heater. Runs Treat, clean. Need cash, must sell im m ediately. S i f>5/best offer. 472-3059. $2300. 1962 Skylark, power, air. $395. W ill > J o / ’ 1, A P- XK120 coupe. trade. 4,7-4978 after five. G I R L 'S B I K E , Sch w ln Collegiate, five r>«8 • G ° ° d condition. e a u 452-/268 after 6 p.m ., weekends. V O IC E O F M U S IC taperecorded, speak­ ers plus G a rra rd turntable 3 month old G a rra rd also. 327-1887. . Nohra, (472-1676 between IO a.m . - 5 p.m. equipment for sale 3004 Guadalupe. Call 1968 G O U G H Ch arg er R T , 410 engine power steering, pow er brakes, auto­ m atic. $2650. 477-8418. D u p l e x e s , F u r n . « A p a b t m e i u t s , F u b w . ■■ A p a r t m e n t s , F u ™ B 3 3 3 E S S E 3 3 3 H I R o o m & B o a r d T y p i n g North bedr Ju n e of University. large rooms, 2 tile baths, spacious closets. A ir c o n d - cned, centra! hee*. Adults r o pets. 3 person $162. W a t s A so, email 2 bedroom dup ex $115. I. 3 North Centra! efficiencej. New, paid, pe*et^> draped, complete latch en; range. oven, garbage disposal, refrigerator. Fu'l C R 8 5850 afternoons. bath, ample storaqa and parking. A- S P A C IO U S F I V E room. Carpeted air conditioned, w a te r /gas paid *1509 avis Heights B lvd . 454-9656. 452-3408. partment manager: 454-6811, 454-8903. O N E B E D R O O M . A ll u tilitie s except e lectricity' 4316 B u ll Creek. 454-8018. N O W RENTING FOR SUMMER I M A R K V 3912 A ve. D $1 15 I B R Fu rn . Apts. (2 dble. beds) A II huiit-ins, pool. w ater, gas. T V cable bd. by ow ner F o r show ing phone: 454-3850. S U M M E R JO B S IN EU R O P E .Switzerland. and G erm an v guaranteed for e a rlv an Pbeants. V ariou s job deser t i o n s £ pending upon you r i n t e r e s t A n d o u Y imato°on! Je°bs, are fssignrd on a now] 1 scrved basis- A PPIX ‘ STUDENT TRAVEL -226 G uadalupe Qpj 7-1340 W A N T Y O U R own p a rt tim L o s t & F o u n d 2 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS I bedroom apartm ent, central a ir and heat furnished cable T V L o w Sum m er Rates C a ll 478-5167 after 6 T H E W E S T E R N E R 2806 H e m p h ill P a r k K e ith Howard-—453-0847. TANGLEW O OD NORTH A N I C E P L A C E T O L I V E W a l k i n g d is t a n c e M OW RENTING FOR SUMMER I B R F u r n Apts. In T V * L aw > B u lU - ln . pool. w a ter gas T v cable pd. by ow ner , . . n „ , 11R ° r show ing phone: M A R K V II — 3100 S P E E D W A Y (2 dble beds 476-4542 I D IP L O M A T -1911 S A N G A B R I EL - $ 105 476-251 I V A L E N C IA - I BG I M A N O R RD - I H S 478-2364 EMBERS — 3107 SP E E D W A Y $1 IO 4"6-4542 rah!iS Thv V/e tircp laros 2 cable TV furnished. Ex cellen t location 1020 E 45th larg e pool*, C L 2-0060 W R N ° W R E N T IN G F 0 R S U M M E R H A L L M A R K A PTS. 708 W . 34th $110 W a n t e d U I S H I G H E S T P R I C E S paid for fu rn itu re v North Lam ar. Ju* »S’ r,'^r i aerators. M A B R Y 'S 6611 C O U P L E SEEKS en t apar1.- A .g u s within rn Hi -ch ap p ro xim ate ly Septem ber 5 a x I rn u m $ 50/w I Dept., 755. t h e c o n t e s s a 2706 N ecei 477-9766 Inspection invited for Summer & Hall Semesters E.eoant living for young women 4 g 'I suites • 20 meals week TV • Poll • Study hall Sun peck ^ • id,a service ® Laundry room • Free parking BARRONE 2,00 Nieces Invited Inspection for Sum m er kCaSeS> 0ddS* nllar. S m a ll white spo er. $20 re w a rd oflered. ' looking for work. H as good equipment. Gib­ son single pick-up guitar. $100. 472-5586. bas5 P la y e r T H R E E blue-point Sia m ese kittens - two i ,?rn5 it’s> one m ale ; not registered- 8 S le r e a ' I call 4,7-7652 aft er 6:30 p.m. P O R S C H E . racin g green paint, hauled country A pril 23 new 1961. G re a t shape, N ew engine over- radio. Le avin g Interior, 926-6330 evenings. 1968 V W Squareback. m ean, one owner A h - am-fni. s-w. L ig h t blue. L e a vim country A p ril 23. 926-6330 evenings. six. i LO S T w hite P e rsia n cat with blue eves S f s t h ^ R W es5 22nd area Sunday? A p ril 5th. R ew ard . 476-1796. LO S T shaggy m ale puppy. W hite unit brown. F ro m 37th and Guadahfpe Needs m edication. R e w ard . 454-1726. I diKin^ lot. Generous found P L E A S E - 453-0669 an ytim e! r''latch lost in Stadium r e w a rd 1 Tf U S E D B / W T V s . Good - batter - very good. $25.50 up. A ustin T V Service. 4305 Manchaca Hoad. H I 4-1345. 1965 C O R V A IR 4-stick. Clean, low mlle- tlrPS- Af,er ll a.ml, GRKT36:-! T O P C A S H P R I C E S paid fo r dia­ monds. old gold. Cap ito l D iam ond 8 hop. 603 Commodore P e r r y 476-0178 '65 S K Y L A R K , tudor, hardtop, V8, wide 7563ao ?4 7 Pnie563latiC shof;ks- *999- 454- F o r R e n t D R E W S R E C O R D E X C H A N G E Used Lavaca. traded, sold. 1624 L P s . 478-2079. B P W K / n A I ;F T R IC E . Pocketbooks, I 1.1> boys, Com ics, Records, Stereo buying. K la w d ’z 803 Red R ? v e r ‘ m a M O B N e w : Top, carpet, genera­ P ire llis , wires condition.’ transm ission. r7-3996S‘ tor, driving $1495. 4 E x ce lle n t H ? S i r J d A P ^ 6 d H k1 e,Kht track- me.ster. 478-2728. " ^ eat this s‘“ Ju s t m T T U w a y J. 4 iS-21 Jfj, Houston-London Ju n e 8. Fro m - J A "8 u st 14. $50 down, $235 N O T V S E T ’ vt/ut / H L thl A lp h a M a n ! B/W & the N e w Color portables at Reasonable R ent Lease. R ent bv Sem ester or . T _ Pen I -Pu rf ha.se A L P H A 'I'\r R E N T A L S C all G R 2-2692 fo r more inform ation C E S P A C E . Reasonable. ^ l !T orl- m ted businesses and student organi­ zations welcom e. 2303 R io G rande e' Come by or call 478-7411. Lar H A R L E Y C H O P P E R ! 900cc S po rtster' I Extended forks, good paint, excellent condition. $800 or highest offer. 472-4541 fist n it r ic xio a . , low' m ileage. 476-4181. 4 U A ir, four speed, power U H F l_ R N IS H F .D one bedroom apart- « J I L6 V ’_ r.e fr!« e ra ’j 'r. bed. fenc-d i',aT0d' , patlR- Private. M a rried ' couple e - $U9 Plus electricity. 452-8036. — — ' ----- - VILLA FO N TA N A 1951 Sabine Now rent,cg for summer— Summer rates L O C A T E D N E A R L A W S C H O O L Luxury I b« saroom. A / C , carps afte miming pool, laundry. 6 — G R 2-i 5 M IN U T E S F R O M UT N O W L E A S IN G S U M M E R RATES T H E D EL P R A D O A PTS 303 W . 40TH STREET ’ LaT*Tft?Ufnho-lsP type apartments. beautiful fu rniture. I lenti- of parking. S w im m in g pool. M anager Apt. 103 T V Cable 454-2436 N O L E A S E sw I a - J 2 b e d ro c rs furnished or unfurnished. Com plete G E kitchen with Tappan range. Poo:, private ba - conies, extra pftr*. hcj, 453-7608 65 G TO . V e ry good condition. New motor, paint, brakes, exhaust. State Inspection. A fte r 6. 442-6659 THE SUIT S H O P M E N ’S S U IT S . $52.50 and $59.50. V a­ lues to SUO S ilk & w’ool, dacron & wool, a il wool. Sizes 37-52. regulars & longs. 2 & 3 button. Plaid s, stripes <6 solids. 3006 Guadalupe 10-6 M . W . F . S -477-7435 A fte r hours 453-4045 S I N G E R Touch & Sew sewing machines <7 of them ) all are slant needle models and are fu lly equipped to zigzag, make buttonholes, and fancy stitches These machines ca rry fu ll guarantees and w ill be sold on a " f ir s t come-first served " basis, only 539.95 each. M o n th ly pay­ ments available. T h ey m ay be Insj/ei i- ed and tested at Unclaim ed Freig h t 2003 A irp o rt B lvd .. N orth (o ff 19th St ) til I p.m. b a.m.-6 p.m. M on.-Fri. Sat. N o sales to dealers. Ju s t received S deluxe 1970 solid state na tio n a lly advertised stereo consoles in beautiful hand rubbed W a ln u t finish. W orld renowned B S R turn tab le and 4- spoaker audio system, $88 each M onth­ ly terms available. M a r be inspected in warehouse at Unclaim ed Fre ig h t 2003 A irp o rt B lvd .. N orth loft 19th Sr > 9 am.-6 p.m. M on.-Fri. S a t 'til I p.m. N o sales to dealers. 1969 V W . Needs $320 b od y'w o rk. Runs great how ever C a ll 472-7530. ’67 T E M P F S T O H C 6 250cl 215bhp three speed hurst shifter tach a ir E x c e lle n t shape. $1550. 476-4203. 19? v . B? : V l0 n ,e t 650cc- L lk e new. 1609 " ! 3 7 » % > * » « V IV F A * ! * * , s t i u , w id e r w arren ty. Radio. $1450. C all 892-0150. -o.OOO miles. . us at S e r v i c e s THE HAMLET FOREIGN C AR SERVICE PROBLEM? f c mfu ShJ.eld and hIs craw W ill per- S T S y r S k c S ! i- K 'l l ector System s on Old U S just W e s t of Balcones H ig h w a y 183 o r call 454-4983. 1 T m h T r t ' furnished or un fu rnished ‘ 1 a fn iL°0ms u p sla irs- huge area dow nstairs ■Hi ' N 1 dining livin g pass- SUM M ER RATES Sen- sh V H o e A p a r - e - t DaUoUKandamanvaother figures DrH'a,e 2 nf>C,r00m Show ing hours 9 a.m. - 6 p m . In<’,udln« Sw im m in g pooh a/c & c / h . shuttlebus Hosd. One bedroom. $139 50 43P o s P l n n L ' . L Vxurlo us- quIet Ca-” 1 mi summer rates. S109! plus electricity 1 3 ^ 44t nm7b nlVersity- Downtown 345- C all G rlg sb v V rerlenTe Ruth stenographer 4 me v i r g i n i a C a l h o u n t y p in g s e r v ic e Pr0f,AM0'l' ' ,T' pin* pool - D* mac up La j -543! A p ‘j. SE E M A Y F A IR A N D C O M P A R E 2000 Pear! 472-5437 TO W ER M A N O R 19n$ University — 477-2185 Open for Inspection fo r Sum m er & F a ll Sem esters 07 2 7 *h Si Guadr j. M B . A M u itillth in g B in d In* Typing . TH 9 C o m p l e t e P ro fe s s io n a l FULL-TIME Typing Service illored udenbs Special thp net ice to nf University it'd equipment 1 Y O O and engineer- I dissertations for ing I'h on e G R 2 3210 and G R 2-76TT 2707 Hemphill Park ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 11 P IN G . P H IN T IN G . B I N D I N G R o o m s HAVE FUN — LEARN TO DIVE with hot plates and refrlge'ra- I TFXA S SKINDIVING S C H O O L D U N E B U G G Y bodies, parts headers, speed parts. 454-9089 V W •fjL . repair. 477-4972. ^ tors. Connecting baths. B ills n » 1 a . V W e JL T ? ' ' ° W lf,;,!ni! baths n k n,!y ersity *9 --- --nd. $80.00 Mo. 472-5539 or 478-7411. baths. B ills p a i d . Square. 900 W ,W1" ' **- ’69 T O Y O T A Crown, fo ur door sedan four speed R e clin in g bucket seats, ansmission 3800 miles. $2850 Call transm ission. 3800 afte r 5. H O 5-9674 3969 C H E V E L L E Malibu, miles, standard red. tudor transmission, 807V8, 12 months old. $1895. 478-6119. F O R R E N T . ' A rtist's studio. P riv a te '.a in l,us- One large n a m lean. ’i!u A in b rick build-ins. ( ’lose n. I M W room, good light? facilities bath c r kitchen v „ , $5o/month. 478-2079 o r 476-9753 G I R L S R O O M S w ith kitchen prlvl leges. V ic to ria n house. 608 W est 2‘T ri ------------------ $40 per month. 478-7411 N a tio n a lly R e c o gn iz e d C e rtific a tio n For m ore inform ation call (512) 266-9193 MARK XX 3815 G U A D A LU P E »rge, B R A N D N E W - S U M M E R R A T E S Extra Mediterranean dry, a I bi. paneled apts. 1 laun- -ins, over szed kitchens I & 2 BR furnishings, pool, H e l p W a n t e d 27>*r' » ? « ? * ' cab 9 $125 UP. For ^ Owner — owing phone — T O U G H M E X IC A N S A N D A L S , hand- „„ jew elry, pottery, etc. R E V I- M A L E . R e frig e ra ted a/c Hno made - --- _ tv -,1 JLJ1VIIVI1 SUMMER JO BS IN EUROPE 454 6234. V A L , 6 07 W est 28th, 1-6 p.m., Monday- Saturd ay. J A G U A R XK-150. Needs some restora­ leather, etc. tion but have new’ top, Cheap, runs. 478-6247. A F G H A N puppies One m ale, one ta­ male. Show quality. T erm s available Stud service. 452-4975, 478-7379. F I S H E R 500-B stereophonic F M multi- «1? r condition, lif d . 4-3 Zenith color TV, 1966 model needs tr&ntormer. ? xcei l ent ii2 5 892-0617. tranform er, $125 ( -T - Single, double rooms S u m m er P lace n ient T iL ? s'o J so a P artEbents Mustang 471- ■ Schoen House 478-8453. 478-7097 W O R K IN G o r college girl. K itch en pri- L em P ° ra O'-Permanent. 444- P m’ beK innljl8 Monday, A p ril 13 ft5' A p a r t m e n t s , U n f . and G erm any guaranteed fo r e a r f l a p - < S U N N Y V A L E A P T S . bendfng u p S ° ^ A 5 m S P a n ^ a | : QI I h J h J E D 1 D °A T r c M I T * i i m f e S t ; ^ 4 “ js r ,d Z v ' M M E R s a i e s — $ 120 u p STUDENT TRAVEL 2326 ^Guadahjpe^ en 7-.M, ”fje or “S jS f j sh' “ 442-9495 o r 444-5130. G IR L S , make good m onev In vour n,,SQmre time. sh2 " i ag yo u r friends our r z \ s t h°*e- M 5-1573 — QI/APvTIUR D E C K Apartm ents, 2308 En- Su m m e r Rates. T h o bedroom, ......... . field. t tvvo bath from $140. 476-1292. M i s c e l l a n e o u s E F F I C I E N C Y S U IT E S B o is nr girls B ills Paid. Parking . $130.00 Atn Uni W. 22/ 472-Y539 or 478-7411 uare’ One-bedroom apartment. C -ose to carn­ ous. C entra! air a ” d heat. G arag e. 2205-B Nueces. $130.00 Month. To see ca 478-7411 or come by 2303 Rio Grande. SUMMER ONLY Two-bedroom apartm ent. N ic e ly furnished. Central a ir and heat G arag e Close to campus. Z205-A Nueces. $240.00 Mo To see call 478-7411 or Come by 2303 Rio Grande. S U M M E R O N L Y l e a r n T O P L A Y G U IT A R beginner Drew " « « . Nl'jw tirvS -'9i0^n8Tndma4e Indian M exican Im ports — 4612 S Congress. Open IO to 6. 444-3814. Largest Used Bock Store in Austin S A V E S A V E — C O M ? TO th e b o o k st a ll i 6I03 Burnet Road Open w eekdays 'til 9 p.rn Sun. 1-6 454-3664 Sat. 9:30-6, L Y R I C S N E I V I?!!* rT m 2 bdrms ' 2 fuil bafh*' k itch e n & d in in g a re a In each suite. Bant liv in g ! lounge • • T V • Eleva* rn-. • M aid service • Sun deck • F u lly a/c r young women : irkin g • Fr.-c L a u n d ry facilities S tu d v hall I blk. Campus 13 m cals/wcek F O R M E N Close to U.T. A / C , maid service, weekly Dr montWy rates. Taking room reserve- K S S SHA."SIT . i t s : S I S ? * “ '«* 'any. Send num ber: Austin. 5 • - .. um mer at reaso n ab a rates. Mrs. Lyle, 2 = 00 W H t 's , 476-1712 Mrs. Williams, 2710 M,.e*:es. 4 ? ' =272. C U S T O M . 1- this week only, P I C T U R E fram ing. 50% off la rg e select ion. 3-6 p m M ondav-Frid ay. The , I W e s t 30th. 472-1234. Alcove. 500 3oard and room f< thony, G I. 4-307f) • Mrs. An- C R A Z Y ? it bo crazy with if you wa 1 D jt this qua Ity t y p i n g , p r i n t i n g & BINDING than C A LL M ARILYN 385-2144 V I L L A A R C O S S P E C IA L S U M M E R RATES T W O - B E D R O O M , nient. H authoi i meat. H a i l t h o 'm e .^ M lS ^ Leon 101). Central air -rf ,: _ CenV;ai. . ? ir . and heat. $240.00 Mo! To see call 478-7411 C O M E T O Bird sn e st and Inurn to f(v or 478- Cessna 150. J-3 Cub. 272-5337 9331 evenings. f e n d e r M i s t a n o electric g uitar G arden Apartm ents. 2 bedrooms. S O M E T H IN G D I F F E R E N T 478-5641,° a s k M r CJlm 'Y V t.s’o / '’ ,0n' ,135' ---------— ___ — _ snaaea. A vailab le now, ov\Tier'<; «nnri ? ? u rty ard entrance, tree ^ S M W w a S r s Z fiS S A F r $800-11100. 444-6825. *69 D A T S U N tudor sedan, new. $1560. 451-2653 Ju s t like 18t f* F Z i^ V E T r E T>350' E o u r speed, Post- t r a c t io n , a i r , P e r f e c t , v e iin u r m n T u t o r i i u g ex’ j ^ T H j TUTOR m aster s degree A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . GOING TO SUMMER SCHOOL? LIVE AT THE FINEST . ECONOMICALLY! The C h a p a rra l A p a rtm e n ts APARTMENTS & BEDROOMS ONLY FOR I TO 4 • c i t r a l a? r 4 . . ATTRACTIVE LOUNGE • COLOR TV • POO! MAID SERVICE • QUIET STUDY ROOM REDUCED RATES FROM $32.83/PER/MO VISIT OUR MODEL TODAY 2J g L ^ ° N_________________________________ GR 6-3467 Page IO Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN ,lM 'or,:w!’ed0aSa.vharP- Tl'” - 1 THE s a x o n j-, „ n- h o u r s f distinctive new restaur- n P a y ’ worklnK conditions, - - • Waitresses W Busboys • Cooks ® Hostess ® Cashier • Kitcnen H e p • G ri 1 man ® Parking attendants Apply In person I p . m . -4 p m , M onday -1 riday, 6801 B u rn e t Road. J ?.r ERfP* m a 3 ° r . w a n t e d .u , to b lin d s t u d e n t t-K s t a . i s t i c s a n h o u r . 472-6086. R ? im K* K E TE r W ’ t im e . p r e f e r r e d J35 0 I n t e l l i g e n c e f u n e n t h u s ia s m a n d to e x p e r ie n c e . M u s t b e able t w o y e a r s C a n " s t a r t f o r m i n i m u m o f 478-9811, e x t e n s io n 33. Call GR I-5244 To Place a Texan Classified Ad m e n ts* buskin**1' close t0 Campus- on shuttle^ 1 F A V IS H O U S E A P A R T M E N T S 1 ™ £ r , 3301 Speedw ay <7^5607! Students, see us before you lease. THE HAMLET • R E W L I P H O N E 4 in lorn T ? n T^ H ? F T H E C IL 'E M A t h e a t r e on ground0"?lr,L 'V0 N N l,nit available “ Oor w ith private patio Fu rnish ed or unfurnished, extrem ely spacious and w ell decorated Sho w in g hours 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. S S A P A R T aner'T5S p2m°8 San Gabl"ielf GH 6-9363 E N V O Y Reasonab e rates for summer and fa t I end 2 bedroom. Party room. Swimming pool. Bus to U.T. 1600 Royal C rest Drive. 442-9720. I U. i . Efficiency and one bedroom apart "- "iU c d / V ii'T p i 0n ca!i 4 54 ' 0239 or 478- L N ' r" ° rm 5822. 910 W . 26th $78T709S7?m m er rateS’ $115. w a ter paid CO NTIN ENTAL III APTS. T I IL XL SUMMER RATES — $140 R E D R I V E R FOR SUMMER SUMMIT VIEW APTS, I bedroom, a ir conditioned. N ew furniture. $110 plus bills 1714 S u m m it V iew (E n fie ld a re a ) 4/2-1838 — 472-9256. FO LKSIN G IN G every W e d n ig h t 8-12 w ith DREW THOMASON g u itar pickers find singers wclcoi A L F IE S FISH & C H IP S 2120 Guadalupe H E L E N M A Y F I E L D 'S dance composi- !'° n class U n ive rs ity ••Y” Tm-criiiv- d o T 'm "' SSS™* ™*1*- T H U W H IT E H O I S E . 510 West 23rd. $120.00 Mo. F a ll. o . , , , 4'2-8001 or 47S-7411 S U M M E R — $140.00 6 W K S . S lA h ) h P p i ? ^ * * 7* boJ ! rd availabile at Alpha Phi S o n o r it y House, 2005 I U S S , ^ N o H id d e n Charge* ( Typing Printing Muitillthing ( A Graphic Art. ✓sCC'N. D / \ A h I J \ & tsu!Tle# I t .* Sd i , T uto ring f lose to Campus D IV E R S IT Y SERVICES 477-5651 /in M re e t T y p i n g Jus! North of 27th & Guadalupe R o o m & B o a r d THE GOVERNORS for men S A T IS F A C T IO N G U A R A N T F f T ) B B A . I B M E x ecutive electric 453-8650 {TSK * A n 11 A N N E S T Y P IN G lim?” Ai'Y ',"8, 7008 ‘ • K S ! ? * " ’ O n iou can a ffo rd ? 442- y< Room & Bo ard I 23o sailboat rooms - maid service _ 2 color T V E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T S ~ r o n ^ i '7 7 lounges — gym . OU*, dependable Term L Y E ? r)s.T Y nt!- 1 5 ,5 K ^ * t K W | typing 2* p r i i f l UA V nJ lH ^ n d e r g r a S e oslo r’ E S "! Vacancies for Sp ring 2612 Guadalupe 476-6658 WOOP. 892-0727 a fte r 5 p m Small- Wth2DS I YPiNO SERVICE. Themes theses, dissertations. Muitlllth Qua' Woods°472-l825reaSOnable ^ ^ Aa*rn M B A A Y Typing . M u itillth in g . Bin d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service ing theses mid V.ssm' at ferns. Ph o ne C R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em p hill P a r k Muitillthing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS 476-7581 311 E. lith BARRANCA SQUARE APTS. welcomeUrSday’ 8' 9 3° p m ' 'Beginners E X E E W E N C p 3884 I B M electric rlbbon' Reasonable rates 45$: typist. Brand new. W ith in walking distance i , R i 0 4 M mG ? S A L E - 2101 San G abriel p.m .f Saturday> ^ IO „ rr, » a m. 104. ’' i f l ^ b u l i W n s . ^ ^ i M ™ ' br A 'n bedrooms), w a ^ g a s T V Phone 453 3Qgj*e r- F(ir showing ~ “ S u ™ , bedroom apartm ent. A / c Grandc? 478?74lLCe Can,pus' 2a,« tiU 61? V E « T 30th 'B f f t e t e n c V ! J A f r ° T J™ ? round* ,.LYa_lkJ PK,. distance Po o l. J slnKle u n d erg rad u ates!'1!)*;!*/ children ° i two bed~ I A V A I L A B L E A p ril , ™ °m s . liv in g room, dining kitchen 9395' Convenlent Campus. $125. 44-L 1 I . A/C. Call GR I-5244 To Place a Texan Classified Ad Charles Umlauf: Man Behin UT Sculpture By CAROLYN HINCKLEY Features Editor Statues of “The Family” at the Business-Economic* Building and “The Torchbearers’' at the Aca­ demic Center seem like per­ manent fixtures en the University campus, but they haven't been around nearly as long as their Prof. Charles creator, Umlauf. art in sculpture at He was lured to Austin 29 years ago from Chicago to become an instructor the newly-formed University College of Fine Arts. But the* word of the University’s “sculptor in re­ sidence" was not placed on campus until 1962 when the Busi­ ness- Economics Building was completed. Umlauf followed with “The Torchbearers,” “ Muses" on the Academic Center fourth floor, and a woman bather on an Art Building patio. then MOST STI DENTS notice the art, but few have made it to the upper floors of the Art Build­ ing to se<'> the man behind the statues. li es bald, a little on the roly-poly side, and as amiable as a puppy. An observer doesn't notice Um- twinkly eyes lauf’s smile and while he’s working in his studio. Only his hands. Three moves with his chubby fingers makes a toe. One motion of a small instrument creates a toenail. He almost makes it look easy. Rut the sweat that pops out on his forehead and his con­ centrated gaze prove otherwise. It s taken years of this hard work for Umlauf to become an internationally known sculptor. “ Before I came to Texas, I used to wonder, typical of a young artist, why nobody seemed to like my work. But since coming to Texas, I have begun to wonder why people like everything I do. They are so kind,” he said. IN 1943, an article in the Ma­ gazine of Art said, “Charles Umlauf is young, vigorous and hard working, and he refutes the theory that only those creatively sterile turn to teaching.” Umlauf originally became a teacher to support himself and his young bride, Angeline. Now he teaches because he wants to. “I like to keep in contact with young people,” he said, and the feeling seems to be mutual. He is one of the gentlest and best natured art professors. Umlauf artistically expressed th# his beliefs on teaching in bronze “Torchbearers.” The one- and-a-half ton work depicts two runners passing a torch. The artist said it represents the pass­ ing of knowledge from an older and perhaps “worn out” teacher to a younger and “fresh” student. is BUT UMLAUF far from worn out. He created 80 sculp­ tures last summer alone. That’s one of the beauties of his teaching position — a summer vacation. It also means that he doesn’t have to make a living simply on sculpture commissions. “ It is prostituting your work if you just do it for commission. J don’t like to please others, just myself. When I do sculpture I do it my own way,” he said. His own way is what has made him famous. One of his first major works was “War Mother,” done in 1909 out of cast stone. It was judged harshly by a Cali­ fornia critic. “ I’ve been raked up and down by critics,” Umlauf said. “If I’d listened to them, I would have quit long ago.” Umlauf thinks all art expresses a spirituality. “But when I say that art is spiritual, I don’t mean it reeks of a garden variety it conveys religiosity'. I mean con­ conviction. The viction. He can express it with any subject.” artist’s BUT HE DOES frequently convey this conviction in sculp­ tured figures from the Bible. They have included crucifixions, John the Baptist, Madonna and child, Ct. Francis, St. Michael, angels, pieta and numerous figures of Christ. One of the recent additions to his collection is a stringy donkey. Religious? said Umlauf. “The ass carried Christ into Jerusalem.” “Absolutely,” Another recurring subject is animals. They vary from the inhabitants of Tarzan’s jungle to Old McDonald’s farm. A long snouted rhinoceros, an elongated hippo, small goat, young steer, horses, owl, cat, snake, burro, and even a wart hog are mem­ bers of his petrified managerie. Umlauf really started his art work with animals at the ripe old age of 5. While other young children vacationing at the beach made mud pies and small sand castles, little Charles was sculpt­ ing creatures in the sand. He sur­ prised his family when they dis­ covered one day’s work—a boy his own size sculptured in sand. DURING THE Depression, Um­ lauf took a variety of jobs to be able to pay his tuition at the Art Institute. He was employed as a janitor from 7 to 9 a.m., attended class until 5 p.m.. when he resumed his mopping and scrubbing. He worked in a cafe­ teria at night for his meals. At another time he had a frus­ trating job as an elevator opera­ tor. He admitted years later that he kept a drawing pad and pencils on the roof of the build­ ing. On the top floor he left the elevator and sketched until the from light panel was ablaze would-be passengers. Umlaut s life seemed to calm down when he moved to Texas and had more time to devote to sculpturing. He and his wife moved to a larger home, even­ tually had six children, and have been so content since that Umlauf hasn’t considered any of the numerous job offers from other colleges. The house is on a two-and-a- fourth acre lot overlooking Bar­ ton Springs. While some people are content with just a bird bath for lawn decoration, Umlauf looks as if he would stop at nothing. THE FRONT YARD is com­ posed of gravel trails, with one of Umlauf’s sculptures about every five yards. A visitor feels like a child at a 10-ring circus. A bronze Icarus can be seen lying with his feet toward the sky. Christ upon the cross is to the left with a backdrop of trees. And a barn red studio, where many of is the works were bom, positioned across from the house. Many of these statues are scale models of works which he made in larger sizes. Umlauf begins with sketches of an idea. Then he sculpts a working model of plaster, clay, or terra cotta which is one third the size of the promised finished piece. This model is sent to Fletra Santa or Milan, Italy. Umlauf travels to Europe to check every stage of the enlarging and bronz­ ing process. He works side by side with the workmen as they make molds, slap on plaster, and pour bronze. AS UMLAl FIS SKILL develop­ ed and his reputation as a sculptor became more widespead, he sold more and more of has works. In 1959 he U'as chosen from among l l artists to sculpt a 40-foot monument to flight in the parkway of the entrance to L xve Field in Dallas. He was commissioned to make for chur­ numerous sculptures ches, 15 portrait busts of men, and many w'orks for new buildings. His hard work has reaped ac­ claim from many sources. While in Italy, Dr. Ulrich Middledort, art historian and director of the Orman Historical Institute in Florence, said of Umlaud: “His modelled work excels in liveliness In his and great sensitivity. carved severs the technique forces him to temper his exuberance, and he arrives at formulations close to those of the classical sculptors from the Greek to Brancusi.” pieces, J i I Photos By Phil Huber (J o . J ~*+ * • (left and upper right), "T h e F am ily" is the creator of C h arle s Umlaut, "T h e University sculpture T orch b earers" (below). A t right, U m lau f is helping workmen lower one of his sc u b tu re s from a crane to its position in ♦he courtyard of tho Texas State Teacher*' Association head­ quarter* ie Austin. left) and (upper Haywood C riticizes Delay Budget Received Tho Ethnic Studies Program w ill be able to go “ full steam ahead" next year after receiving $44,000 for its 1970-71 program and $88,000 for its 1971-72 pro­ gram. Dr. Henry A. Bullock, professor of history’ and sociology and head of tile program, said the money will be used for professors and basic personnel. Tile confirmation on April 4 by University President Norman Hackerman also included provi­ sions for a clerical assistant and Other operational expenses, said. he “ What really happened,” Bul­ lock said concerning the over­ sight of the first budget, “ was we got lost in a budget shuffle." ERNIE HAYWOOD, Students' Association Vice-president, said though the program now will have money, “ too much time has been wasted, and that’s inex­ cusable.” The program is presently using regular faculty, and it is late to he trying to get more specialized faculty for next year. Tills is the lf you want to see Europe on your own, pickup a traveling companion. I A Volkswagen beetle will be delighted to roam around Europe with ye J. Just fell us where you d like if fo me1;? you. And w e ’ll have it waifing there, in an/ one c f more them 40 cities. Registered. Insured, licensed. (All the red tape taken care of.) O nce you've discovered how economical it Is to four Europe by Volkswagen you’ll prob­ 5. ably want to bring your cc pee ion bac - ■ N o problem. W e can arrange to have it •hipped home. A Volkswagen beetle will be delighted to roam around /America with you fault of the administration’s slow­ ness, Haywood said. “ I don’t think they are inten­ tionally trying to toll the pro­ gram, but it is a question of priorities which reflect the atti­ tudes of the establishment- whites,” Haywood said. Trie year’s budget will be split equally between the Negro and Mexican-American studies. Dr. Americo Paredes, professor of English and anthropology, will head the Mexican-American part of the program, Bullock said. “ D IE PRO GRAM IS not gear­ ed to any particular ethnic group. It is merely re-orienting aca­ demic disciplines. It Is career- oriented and Is supported by the Legislature through the Institute of Texas Cultures,” he said. “ Every single thing Dr. Bullock asked for and listed on the budget justified,” was more Haywood said. listed only the bare necessities, while most budgets are often over­ estimated.” “ Bullw k than the program and Haywood expressed concern that loo few students are aware of it possibly wont be adequately publicized, which he said is necessary for its success. that Bullock added he “ respected the kids for their control and their actions in letting me try first to get the money through legal means.” He hopes that as the program expands, overall campus support also w ill in­ crease. However, Haywood stressed that the threat of confrontation will be used to insure that the budget vail be given as promised for the next two years. LA VASCA W Y E A T T , MTJCNf COM ING A P R IL 15! Please send me your illustrated brochure and a price list. A d d r * n --- City © . — — —S l o t * . A U T H C m U O D E A L ? A ------ Zip r n T h e D a i l y T e x a n T i w s r , l K to* AIA-1 ntmittl * W fc*. J ;r Proposed Gas Hike Not for UT Facilities University facilities and stu­ dents living on campus would not be affected by a 13 percent in­ crease in gas rates proposed Friday for all natural gas cus- University Student 'Recovering Well' University student Mike Moline was listed in fair condition after an operation Friday for injuries received in a swimming accident last weekend T h e freshman 19-year-old received a broken neck after diving into Lake Austin waters on April 5. His roommate, Walter Byrd, said doctors considered Moline’s chances for recovery good. After an operation to fuse the bones in the neck Friday, an offici i I at Brackenridge Hospital said he is “ recovering well.” from school Byrd added that Moline will withdraw this semester, continuing school this summer In Houston by co rres­ pondence courses. His "plans to return to the University next fall depend upon his progress after Friday’s operation. tomers in Austin. Students living in apartments, however, should add $1 to their monthly budgets for utilities. The average residential customer who now pays about $(>.60 per month will pay about $7.60 at the new rate. The University’s natural gas is purchased under “ special long­ term contract” that was recently renegotiated, said R. A. Bennett, acting district manager for Soul item Union Gas Co. The gas company requested the Increase to apply to all residen­ industrial tial, commercial and customers. The City Council, which must decide on the rate proposal, has 60 days to act, Bennett said. “ For the average residential customer in our Austin district, this increase w ill mean an added cost of about three cents a day over a year’s J . C r o w l e y , vice-president of Southern Union, advised the council. time,” D. The last gas rate increase was approved in 1962 and ad­ justed in 1964, leaching Awards Given by Yearbook Sixteen instructors have been named by the Cactus to receive irs first Teaching Excellence Awards. Early this semester, the Cactus s 0 I ic i t e d nominations from students to recognize those who have excelled in their respective tear!ling fields. A committee of Students, chosen by Dean of S t u d e n t s Steve" McClellan, Students’ Association President Joe F rie r and Cactus editor Joy Ste pp, and approved by the Tex­ as Students Publications Board so’coted the recipients. Aid was received from student-managed evaluation where possible. Tile 16 named were: Carl Oscar Borgquist, asso­ ciate professor of architecture; Richard Rurdick Byrri rn professor and of Radio-Tolevision-Film Drama: (Park, associate professor of business Charles T. statistics; Thomas IL Courtney, associate professor of mechanical engineering; David Van Deusen Edwards, associate professor of government; Clifton Madison Grubbs, ass xriate professor of economies; William T. Guy Jr., professor of mathematics and e d u c a t i o n ; Robert Louis Helrnre h, associate professor of psychology. A lso Robert Sidney Kahan, as­ sistant p ro fe sso r of journalism; W. Page Keeton, professor of law and dean of law school; Gregg B. Millet, assistant professor of c u r r i c u l u m and instruction; George Schatzki, professor of law; Ere " 'rick D. Sturdivant, associate professor of marketing administration: D o n a 1-1 Weismann, university professor in the arts; Victor A. la n c e .... assistant professor of pharmacy and Joseph Andrew Yura, assist­ ant professor of civil engineering. Committee Plans Seminar on Drugs Tentative plans for a drug to­ ff emotion seminar at toe end of April or toe fust of May resulted from a Friday meeting of toe University Committee on Drug Use and Abuse and toe Arts and Sciences Council. According to Dr. Stephen D. McClellan, dean of students and head of the committee, “ The seminar will provide information for all students on toe abuse and use of drugs.” information will be “ Some available the cornmunity,” to added McClellan, “ on all types of colisc.(»neo-expanding and mind- altering experiences.” Tentative plans for the pro­ include a question and gram answer column in The Texan, drug counseling service, a Media ’TO show describing toe campus drug tux ne and small group rap sessions. lie Tile rap sessions, said McClel­ led by campus lan, w ill resource people who can provide medical, psychological, nociolo gical and cultural information on dings. Referring to the problems In­ volved in organizing the seminar, M od ell aa mentioned creating a belief among students that toe drug information Is reliable and helpful. McClellan said the seminar may bn a “ kick-off” to a larger fall symposium concerning the motivation and nature of “ th* experimenting life style.” Vietnam Week Preparations —Photo by David Fisk. Student M obilization C o m ­ m ittee m em ber Sherilyn A l­ len prepares materials for use d u r i n g S M C ’s "A n ti Vietnam W e e k ,” beginning Sunday. A i d s Vietnam W a r Victims 3-Day Peace Fast1 to Begin By M ARY PAT O’M A L LE Y Tl:e \ iotnam Moratorium Com­ mittee is sponsoring a nation- three-day wide fast, Monday through Wednesday, asking that people contribute the money normally spent for meals during this time to aid victims of the Vietnam war. the A F’eace Fast Fund has been established by national moratorium office with a com­ mittee of trusff^es composed of P e t e r associate Edelman, director of the Robert F. Ken- n e d v Memorial Foundation; Charles Palmer, president of the U. S. National Student Associa­ tion and Episcopal Bishop Paul Moore of Washington. These trustees will oversee equal distribution of toe fund to tax-exempt organizations. four LUTHERAN GENERAL HOSPITAL SAN A N T O N IO , TEXAS RN’s Im mediate opening in medical, surgical, intensive care units. Difference! for late shifts. M any other fringe benefits. 200 bed fully accredited C all 433-9331, ext. 242 or 243 an equal opportunity em ployer Pup American Friends Sei’vice Committee, the Vietnam Relief Program, the National Welfare Rights Organization and the U n i t e d Farm Workers of America. Checks may lie made out to “ Peace Fast Fund.” 1029 Ver­ mont Ave., N. W. 800, Wash­ ington, D. C., 20005. Presbyterian Tn Austin, about 45 people at the Theological Seminary, IOO E . 27th S t, will be fasting from sundown Sunday, until sundown Wednesday. Each day at 6 p.m., the group will meet for meditation, talk and col­ lection of money for the food they did not eat that day. Service's in conjunction with the fast will be held at 8:30 a.m. and 8 p.m. Monday at 8 p.m. and Wed­ nesday. These services the Seminary Chapel are open to ii ie public. in Is first fast. “ Tile The VMC, In a committee new­ sletter, stated two objectives of toe to demonstrate our moral opposition to the continuing and expanding war. The second reason is direct­ ly related to the April 15 Taxpay­ ers’ Rallies, because the gover- ment spends $201 million a day on war and toe weapons of war. The fast represents our commit­ ment to improve toe quality of our common life and to alleviate human suffering.” UNMASKING THE U N K N O W N A Startling Demonstration and Discussion of Extra Sensory Perception W itchcraft • The Supernatural Your Best ADVERTISE YOUR STUDENT HOUSING FOR THIS SUMMER & FALL 70 YOU CAN ADVERTISE 15 WORDS AT ONE LOW PRICE ™ Runs IO Times for only h OL O m Total Runs 20 Times for only $ * 1 ^ 0 0 I Mm Total ECONOMICAL! FAST RESULTS! EFFICIENT! CALL GR 1-5244 Page 12 Sunday. April 12, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN hy A N D R E K O L E A m erica’s Leading Illusionist A n d re Koto h a s sp o k en in 43 countries on 5 co n tin en ts o f the w orld and on N a tio n a l T elev isio n in 30 cou n tries. A nd re R o le w ill be rev ea lin g som e a m a zin g p red iction s o f lives of th e fu tu re w h ich w ill a ffe c t the e v e r y p erson p resen t. MONDAY NIGHT 8:00 P.M. M A IN B A LLR O O M STUDENT UNION STUDENTS FREE! Sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ C a l e n d a r O f E v e n t s Monday, April 13 PL BLK . LEG IX RE. Sponsored by the Center for Middle Eastern Studies and the Department of Drama. Dr. Pierre Cadua, Visiting Professor at UT Austin from Columbia University. Modern Arab T irater in its F ormative Stage. Business-Economics Building 262, 4 p.m. 6 PUBLIC LECTURE. Sponsored by the U T Program on Public Under- s an mg o Science. Lord Charles Percy' Snow, author, novelist and former member of government in the United Kingdom. Role of Personality in Science, Academic Center Auditorium, 8 p m. DRAMA D EPA RTM EN T PRODUCTION . "A Flea in Her Ear*’ written by Georges Feydeau. Leu in Goff, Director. Free on Drama v eason Ticket. Student admission $1.25, adult $1.50. H or? Audi­ torium, 8 p m. Tuesday, April 14 CELL RESEARCH IN STIT U TE SEMINAR. P r o s s e r G e m , Bene- lander. Chairman of the Department a f Histology, U T Dental Branch at Galveston. Electron Miroscope Studies in Molluscs. Biology Laboratory Building 214, 12 noon. GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES TEG FINICAL SESSION. Hildebrande Martell. Graduate Student, U T Austin. Geology a f the Three Bar Field. Andrews County, Texas G e o lo g y Building IOO l p m GEOLOGIC AL SCIENCES TFX FINICAL SESSION. Cengiz Bas­ tile. Graduate Student, L l Austin. Subsurface Stratigraphy of the Bronte Field, t oke County, Texas. Geology Building IOO, 1:30 p.m. O R BIT A I MHC HAN ICS SEMINAR Dr Giorgio E. O. Giacaglia, Y luting Professor at UT Austin from Sac Paulo, Brazil. Rigid Body Motion of a Space Station. Engineering Laboratories Build- int, 3 p m. FRENCH LECTURE. Sponsored by the Department of French and Italian and the Visiting French Writers Program. Professor Jacques Vier, University of Rennes. Comment Batir Et Redigcr de Nos Jours Une Histoire de La Literature brandise. Calhoun Audi­ tor urn, 4 p rn. DF VE! O PM EN T AND REPRODUCTION AND PH YSIO LO GY- B IO PH1!'SICS SEMINAR. Dr John T. Emlen, Visiting Professor of Zoology- at U T Austin from the l Tnivers:'tv of Wisconsin. Dis­ tance Navigation in the Adelie Penguin. E x p e r im e n t a l S c ie n c e Building l l 5, 4 p m. MASTER S TH ESIS RECITAL Betsy Burleson Hines, Piino. Music Building Recital Hall, 4 p.m. RUSSIAN MOV IE. Sponsored bv the Department of Slavic Lan­ guages. In Russian with English subtitles. "Joan o f Angels.” Admission ‘■0 rents. Batts Auditorium, 4:30 and 7:30. ART FILM Sponsored bv the Art Department. Robert Rauschen­ berg Art Building 8, 7:30 and 8:13 p m. STI T )E N T -FAC IJL T Y DUPLICATE BRIDGE CLUB. U n io n Building 304-*, 7:30 p m. COM PUTER LECTURE, Dr. Barnard Sord. Associate Dean, College of Business Administration, I JT Austin. Computer Businesi Games. Calhoun Hall IOO, 7:80 p.m. ARCHAEOLOGY 'he Centra! ILC FI RE. Sponsored bv the Art Department ani Institute of America. John Griffiths Pedley, Associate Professor of Classical Archaeology and Greek, University of Michigan, Sardis in the Age of Croesus. Art Building 11, 8 p m. (Austin) A rchaenlogical le v is FO LLIES FAN TA STIQ UE. Presented by music fraternity, Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia. Annua! benefit show for Music Department scholarships. Admission $1. Music Building Recital H a l l 8 p m DRAMA D EPA RTM EN T PROD U CTIO N . "A Flea in Her Ear,” written by Georges I adeau. Lcwin Goff, Director. Free on Drama Seaton Ticket. Student admission $1.25, adult $1.50. H o g g Audi­ torium. 8 p.m. PL BI IC LF C TI RE Sponsored by the Symposium on Particle Theory and the Program on Public Understanding of Science. Professor P A. M. Dirac, formerly Lucasian Professor of Mathematics, C am­ bridge University. Relativity' and Quantum Theory. Academic Center Auditorium, 8:13 p.m. LECTURE-RECTTAL. DMA Candidate Roderic Keating, Tenor. Music Building Recital Hall, 4 p.m. GENETICS SEM INAR. Dr. Oscar L. Miller, Jr., Biology Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Fine Struc­ ture of Genes in Action. Experimental Science Building 113, 4 p.m. FILM S OF i HE T H IR T IE S SERIES. "Spanish Earth,” with narra­ tion by Ernest Hemingway. Admission 50 cents. Batts Auditorium, 4:30, 7 and 9 p m. PUBLIC LECTURE. Sponsored by the Texas Union Speakers Pro­ gram. Ramsey Clark, former U.S. Attorney General. Free to stu­ dents, faculty’ and staff with University identification; others $1. Union Main Ballroom , 7:30 p.m. DRAMA PRODUCTION . ’A Flea in Her Ear," written by Georges Feydeau. Lewin Coff, Director. Free on Drama Season Ticket. Student admission $1.25, adult $1.50. Hogg Auditorium, 8 p m. FA C U LTY CO N CERT SERIES. Frank Speller, Organ. Works by Bach, Franck, Dupre and others. Music Building Recital Hall, 8 1 3 p.m. Friday, April 17 BO TA N Y G RA D U A TE SPEAKER SERIES. Dr. Eldon H. Newcomb, Department o f Botany, Uni- versity of Wisconsin. Plant Microbodies (Peroxisomes). Union Building 334, I p.m. ST U D E N T V IS IT IN G D ISTIN G U ISH ED SPEAKER SERIES. Sponsored by the Graduate School of Business. Marion Sadler, Vice Chairman of the Board, American Airlines. Business-Economics Building 166, 12 noon. ACC OI 'N I IN G COLLOQUIUM. Sponsored by the Department of Accounting, Graduate School of Business. Y uji Ijiri, Professor of Industrial Administration, Carnegie-Mellon University. Integrating the Four Roles o f Auditors Sampling: Representative, Corrective, Protective and Pre\ entire. Academic Center 406, 2 p m. UN D ERGRA D U A TE STU D EN T RECITAL. Michael Unger, Piano. Music Building Recital Hall, 4 p.m. SO CIO LOGY COLLOQUIUM . Martin Murray, Graduate Student, I L Austin. The Disaccumulation Phase of Capital and the Division o f Labor. Garrison Hall Gett)s Room, 4 p m . CLASSICS D EPA R TM EN T LECTURE. Professor Douglas Young, MacMaster University', Ontario. Was Homer an Illiterate Impro­ viser ? IVaggener H all 214, 4 p m. UN IO N W EEK EN D FILM. Bad Day at Black Rock,” starring Spencer Tracy. Student admission 55 cents, non-student $1. Texas Union Auditorium, 3, 7 and 9 p.m. CO-RECREATION. Open to faculty, staff and students (including husbands and wives). Swimming. Free baby-sitting service. Women's Gymnasium, 6:30-10 p.m. STU D EN T IN T E R N A TIO N A L A R T FESTIVAL. Sponsored by the Spanish Club. Poetry’ by Luis Ramos and Craig Smyser, U T Austin students. Painting and slides by U T Austin student Bruce Johnston. Latin American and Folk M usic Jester Center Aud­ itorium, 8 p.m. DRAMA PROD U CTIO N . A Flea in Her Ear,” written by Georges Feydeau. Lewin Goff. Director, Free on Drama Season Ticket. Student admission $1.25. adult $1 5®. Hogg Auditorium, 8 p m. PUBLIC LECT! RE. Sponsored by the Symposium on Particle Theory and the Program on Public Understanding of Science. Professor \ ictor 5X eisskopf, Chairman, Physics Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology’. An Old-Timer’s View of Particle-Physics. Academic Center Auditorium, 8:13 p m. Saturday, April 18 U N IO N W EEK EN D FILM. "Bad Day at Black Rock,” starring Spencer Tracy. Student admission 55 cents, non-student $1. Texas Union Auditorium. 3, 7 and 9 p m. CLASSICS D EPA R TM EN T COLLOQUIUM . Professor Douglas Young, MacMaster University, Ontario. The Manuscript Tradition of Aeschylus’ Tragedies. W a g en er H all IO, IO a.m. DRAMA PROD U CTIO N . A Flea in Her Ear,” w’ritten by Georges Feydeau. Lewin Coff, Director. Free on Drama Season Ticket. Student admission $1.25, adult $1.50. Hogg Auditorium, 8 p m. Wednesday, April 15 Sunday, April 19 PHY SICS COLLOQUIL M. Dr. Peter Tanich, Lecturer in Philosophy, I T Austin. Photophysics (Philosophical Problem of Measure­ m en t). Physics Building 1 2 1 , 4 p m ELECTRICAL E N G IN E E R IN G SEMINAR. Dr. D G . Swanson, Associate Professor o f Electrical Engineering, UT Austin. The Landau Laser. En '''sneering Laboratories Building 102. 4 p m MIC R O B IO L O G Y SEM IN A R. D r. B illy H. Cooper, Faculty Asso­ ciate. Department of M icrobiology, UT Austin. Some Serological and Biochemical Properties o f Pathogenic Dematiaceous Fungi. Experimental S. ience Building 22 ?, 4 p.m. IT A L IA N FIL M Sponsored bv the Department o f Radio-Television- In Italian with English subtitles. "Rell'Antonio,” Directed Film bv Mauro Bolognini Admission "5 cents. Jester Center Audi­ torium. * and 7 p.m. C O R E C R E A T IO N , Open to faculty, staff and students (including Swimming. Free baby-sitting service. husbands and wives) Women s Gymnasium, 6:30—10 p m TE L E SC O P E V IE W IN G . Sponsored bv the Department of Astron­ omy. Individual Reservations unnecessary’. For group reservations, call 471-3147. Observatory atop the Physics Building, 8- 10:30 p.m., weather permitting. DRAMA D EPA RTM EN T PROD U CTIO N . ”A Flea in Her Ear,” written by Georges Feydeau. Erwin Coff, Director. Free on Drama Season Ticket. Student admission $1.25, adult $1.50. Hogg Audi­ torium. 8 pan. COLLEGIUM M U SIC U M CONCERT Gilbert Blount, Director. Music from Baroque, Renaissance and Medieval periods on au­ thentic historical instruments. Music Building Recital Hall, 8:13 p m . Thursday, April 16 SAN JA CIN TO JU N IO R COLLEGE CHOIR Robert F. Wham, Director. Joyce Gormley, Director Women’s Choir. Music Building Recital Hall. 12 noon. GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES TECHNICAL SESSION. Dr. William Newcomb, Anthropologist and Director, Texas Memorial Museum. 'T h e Nothin’ Buts.” (Discussion of “The Territorial Imperative,” By Ardrey). Geology Building WO, l p m . PHARM ACY SEMINAR. Kenneth L. White, Graduate Student, U T Austin. Status of Use of L-Dopa in Medicine. Pharmacy Building 101, I p m. T R A IN IN G PROGRAM O N PURCHASING FORMS AN D PRO­ CEDURES. Jointly sponsored by the University Purchasing Office, the Office of Accounting and the Personnel Office. For all new personnel whose duties are concerned with these matters. Calhoun Hall IOO, 3-3 p m. O R BIT A L MECHANICS SEMINAR. Dr. Joerg Waldvogel, Visit­ ing Professor at U T Austin from Zurich, Switzerland. Regularizing the Pursuit Problem of Rockets. Engineering Laboratories Building I i i , 3 p.m. U T L O N G H O R N B A N D S : A N N U A L S P R IN G C O N C E R T . Vincent D iN ino, Director, Municipal Auditorium, 3 p.m. | F A C U L T Y C O N C E R T SER IES. Donald W righ t, Viola, and WH- ham Doppmann, Piano. Program o f Bach, Hartley and Brahms Sonatas. Music Building Recital Hall. 4 p.m. U N IO N W E E K E N D FIL M . "Bad Day at Black Rock,” starring Spencer Tracy. Student admission 55 cents, non-student $1. Texas I mon Auditorium, 3, I and 9 p.m. j U N EVERSTTY C H O R U S C O N C E R T . A community performance for Northwest Austin. Perform ing T u Pauperum, Plorate, America and A Man and a W oman. Covenant Presbyterian Church, 3003 Northland Drive, 8 p.m. EXHIBITIONS UNIVERSITY ART MUSEUM AF RO-AMERICANS ABRO AD. Paintings by nine 20th Century black American artists who are working or previously worked abroad. Through May 3. CONTEMPORARY PRIN TS. Recent selections of prints from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Clark o f McAllen, Texas Through May 3. PERSIAN TREASURES. Pre-Islamic objects d’art from renowned collection of Mehdi Manboubian of New York. Through May 3. SURREALISM. Nine major wnrks of surrealism from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Jean de Menil of FFouston. Through May A. M U SEUM HOURS: Monday through Friday, IO a.m .-6 pan.; Sat­ urday, 9 a.m .-l p.m .; Sunday, 1-3 p.m. TEXAS UNION GALLERY April 12—16 JERUSALEM . Photographs by Abraham Zilkha, a native of the Holy City. M a i n b u i l d i n g g r o u n d f l o o r BO OK E X H IB IT . Books written by faculty and staff members and published since April I , 1969. Through April 21. MIRIAM LUTCHER STARK LIBRARY BO O K E X H IB IT . U topia'— Literary Voyages to Idea! Worlds. Main Building fourth floor, Hours: Monday through Friday, 9 a.m - 12 noon, 1-3 p m .; Saturday, 9 a .m .-l2 noon. TOWNES HALL BOOK EXH IBIT. Our Imperiled Environment Through Mar I First Floor Foyer. The Texan publishes the Weekly Calendar of Events each Sunday as a service to readers. Announcements should be sent to the University News and Information Sendee (attention Noreen Ross), Littlefield Carnage House, by 9 a m on Tuesday for inclus­ ion in the calendar the following Sunday. UNIS, not The Texan ’ ii responsible for its content CO-OP SPECIAL PURCHASE RECORD SALE sale records records records record records sale records records records choose from a fine collection prices from 1.98 to 8.95 Rod Mckuen Ramsey Lewis Jimmy Smith Grass Roots Blues Project Chari es Byrd Righteous Brothers Bethoven Mozart Paul Mauriat W o o d y Guthrie Ferrante & Teicher Leadbellie Ravi Sharker Peter, Paul and M ary and many more The Rolling Stones Stan G e tz Ray Charles Pete Seeger Mamas & Papas Hayden Tchaikovsky Bach records records records record records sale records records records record records sale SAVE UP TO ’3.00 record records sale records records records record records sale records records records second floor records H I t 5 I U 0 f N I o VV N 5 I ORI - Sunday, April 12, J970 THE DAILY TEXAN P«g« l l Put on a Happy Face Richard doesn't Benjamin know it, but the joke is just beginning in "Goodbye Col­ umbus at the Southwood. J f a m ily e n te rta in m e n t ★ * N O W S H O W IN G A T 2 DRIVE-iN T H EA T R ES . fcSurrirf A N D T H E t J N D E H W O i m ^ r r Inspired by JULES VERNE MUMMS I ta w f e j i i m ite | * t l i l fG] PANAVtSIOK? & MEI ROCOLORi T R A N S t I t x A S 10601 ti. Lamar Blvd.—451-1/iQ FREE T R A IN R ID E S S T A R T IN G 6:15 PLU S! 2nd F E A T U R E Green Slime O P E N 6:30 A Show Start* at Dusk P LU S! C O - H I T “ IMPOSSIBLE YEARS” DAVID XI VEX • LOLA ALBRIGHT COLOB Illusionist Andre Kole To Discuss Unknown predictions of the future. Andre Kole, an illusionist who has appeared in 43 countries, will discuss extrasensory perception and the supernatural at 8 p.m. Monday in the Texas Union Main Ballroom. Sponsored by die Campus Cru­ sade for Christ, Kole will punc­ tuate his speech, “ Unmasking the Unknown,” with demonstrations fourth dimension and of the With is eyes taped and blind­ folded, Kole reportedly is able to tell what objects are held up by volunteers from the audience. “ He even apj^ars to comprehend written messages, though he does not touch them, through his fin­ gertips,” W alter Steitz, director of the Campus Crusade, said. “ Sometimes he asks about 20 volunteers from the audience to write on separate cards the name of a famous person who has died,” “ Another volunteer selects the card with the name of the person who will be contacted. Sfcitz said. “ A message may be relayed by chalk which writes on a black­ board. Cr Kole has, on occasion, perjured voices of the dead,” he said. Steitz said Kole was at the top of his profession about five years ago when he committed himself to Christ, and his life took on new meaning and purpose. Kole still gives a few perform­ ances on TV, in large theaters and at the annual magicians’ said Kole Steitz convention. devotes most of his time to the Campus Crusade for Christ Inter­ national. Kole, who has patented more than a thousand magical devices, c l a i m s that he can, with the proper equipment, reproduce all of tile miracles of Christ, except on e — t h e Resurrection. Kole makes it clear that he believes in Christ’s miracles and that he is only producing illusions, Steitz said. BEST A C T R E S S 1969 in her winning role ’Jlic / '/ V / z n c {’Jean ‘Brodie “ C P ” I N C O L O B STARTS WEDNESDAY! -JI interstate’s M U S T I N - 4136 SO U TH CO N G RESS H i s f i r s t C a n d i d C a m e r a f e a t u r e f i l m . v . to a Naked Lady?” - V N O O N E U N D E R 17 A D M IT T E D ■ : . js’ife-A v l M S S C G I D R b v EfeLuxe* U n ite d A r tis ts V J I A K I 5 WEDNESDAY! Interstate's T A T E 719 C O N G RESS AVE. S C O M E A S L A T E A S 8:45 TO .SEE C O M P L E T E ! S H O W has been left out of‘The Adventurers” AP»R»MCM K K S ~ VIA X VON S Y D O W * - O R S O N W E X L F S V A t i l JOH* H L S T O N - - the N ovel by N O E L B E H N LL A ( ' , '*s A D M IT T E D — P a re n tal G uidance Suggested “ e ’ 16400 Burnet Road — 465-6933- ENTER PO PCO RN GUESSING" THING ADULTS $1.50 TEEN DISC. CARD $1.00 13 W/P> U G E B O X O f F IC K & S N A C K B A R O I E N fi:15 I*.M. ROBERT REDFORD • KATHARINE ROSS ROBERT BLAKE • SUSAN CLARK ■TELL THEM WILLIE BOT IS HERE” (PIQ , L . _________ A UNIVERSAL f t C M t t PLUS --- BckardWKMi-LefiaHopRe ^ U N IV E R S A L PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR* A Flea in Her Ear To Open Monday “ A Flea in Her E ar,” the next production of the drama depart­ ment, was conceived as a tum-of- th e-century French vaudeville sketch but has evolved into a humorous and complicated bed­ room farce. COMP LIGATIONS and farcical characters augment the plot of testing her husband’s a wife romp amoral fidelity. This through the bedrooms of the Vic­ torian Age has kept British and continental audiences entertained since its debut 60 years ago. George Feydeau, the writer of “ G a y “Night Parisians,” Session,” and “The Lady from Lobster Square” the play­ wright responsible for “A Flea in Her E ar.” It enjoyed im­ mediate success, and viewers have raved about the daring amorality and charming wit for more than a half-century. is Many of Feydeau’s comedies were revived in the 1950’s. John Mortimer accepted the task of translating “A Flea in Her E ar” from the original French. Oxford-educated Mortimer, who had served as a documentary scriptwriter, a barrister and a novelist, was unsure of his skill as a playwright, but the engaging humor him. When Mortimer’s adaptation opened in London the rivitalized script and tempted the new playwright’s style had found a new audience. THE FEYDEAU-Mortimer spoof has been a success with Ameri­ can theater-goers. The Wayne State University production of last year was chosen as one of the be productions represented in Washington at the American CoUegiate Theatre Festival. IO to The University production Is being directed by department chairman Lewin Golf. The designers are Frank Vybiral, cos­ tumes ; Robert Chambers, set^ tings and Charles Lown, lights. “ A Flea In Her E ar” is sche­ duled to run f r o m M o n d a y through Saturday. Tickets ara available at the Hogg Boce Of­ fice or by calling 471-1444, Fair H ousing Com m ission Students with problems con­ li cerning housing—contracts, ll deposits, eviction, repairs, | etc.—should call the Students’ | Association F a i r Housing Commission Office: Union Is Building 301 (I to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday), Telephone 471-3721 (8 a.m. to I 5 p.m. Monday through Fri- You're N o t Laughing, Dear terry Tannen (I) and Mavoureen Dwyer try to communicate in " A Flea in Her Ear" op­ ening Monday in H o gg Auditorium. Flight to Pre-empt By SARA GEORGE Amusements Associate Because of tile flight of Apollo 13, programs may be pre-empted or rescheduled. Here are some highlights of Sunday’s viewing just in case the programs pro­ ceed as usual. Sports dominate the screen. At noon there is the Stanley Cup hockey special on channel 5. A semi-final game in the Eastern Division will be covered. NEA play-offs for divisional finals will be broadcast on channels 7 and 12 at 12:44 p.m. “The Night of the Squid” is a Jacques Cousteau special on channel 12 at 6 p.m. The sea squid’s life cycle is explored in detail. Charlie Brown’s All-Stars re­ turn to tile screen at 6:30 p.m. on channels 5, 7 and IO. Additional viewing: 6:00 Jacques Cousteau Special 12 Lassie 5, 7, IO Wild Kingdom 42 F irin g Line 9 6:30 World of Disney 4, 42 Peanuts Special 6, 7, IO 7:00 FBI 12 Fid Sullivan 5, 7, IO The Show 9 7 :30 Bill Cosby 4, 42 8:00 Bonanza 4, 42 Glen Campbell 5, 7, IO Forsyte Saga 9 Movie—“BatUe Hymn” 12 9:00 Bold Ones 4, 42 Mission: Im possible 5, 7, IO Advocates 9 10:00 News, weather, sports 4, 5 7. * IO, 12, 43 Joyce Chen Cooks 9 10:30 Johnny Carson 4 Meet the Manager 5 It Takes a Thief 7 Speaking Freely 9 Movie— "The Desperate Hours” IO Move—"Scared Stiff* 12 Movie—’"The Chae” s 2 4 Movie—"T he Chase" 42 The Janus Concert Society Presents Forthe 1970-71 Season From the New York Rim Festival Cannes Film Festival Venice Rim Festival o S f h e Bellocchio’s NBCs 'Mumbles' Trumpeter Soulful By BOB CROOK Staff Writer C l a r k “Mumbles” Tern-, featured trumpeter with NBC’s “ Tonight Show” band, proved his showmanship Friday night at the Longhorn Band Hall the District VI Tau Beta Sigma and Kappa Kappa Psi convention. for He was accompanied by tile U n i v e r s i t y Jazz Ensemble directed by Dick Goodwin. Tile Radiant Set, a that sang with the ensemble on a recent tour to Houston and San Antonio also performed. trio Terry came bouncing onstage after the band and singers had “warmed up” the audience with Intricate and enjoyable renditions of standard as well as more far­ out jazz tunes. If Johnny Carson had been there, Terry would have apstaged him. HE PLAYED the trumpet, the flugle horn and a mini-trumpet, which he termed his “ trumpet after the taxes.” He blew trumpet upside down a s well as playing it at the sam e time with the flugle horn. And he mumbled. Mumbling, singing incoherent syllables in free jazz style, has been a Clark Terry trademark. He explained that he began it as a “puton of actual blues singers to sing a t festivals in St. Louis” when he was growing up. that used “ If you had the courage and would furnish the piano player a stein of beer, that made you a Iona fide blues singer.” “ WHATEVER THE SONG was, you couldn’t hear it after the first the crowd was line because grooving and drowned out the singer. It sounded like he was just mumbling.” He first put mumbling on re­ cords after a taping session sev- Texas M usic Fest Features Rock, Pop eral years ago with the Oscar Peterson trio. “I was just doing it because we finished early, and I wanted to cut a couple of mumbling tunes for party records tor my friends. But when Oscar heard it, he fell on the floor and said he had to have lit on his album.” Terry, who is one of the two senior trumpeters in a section of six, performs on the Tonight Show only two nights per week, and spends the others in concerts across the country. j( He rates the Tonight band as “the best band around for show music, but definitely not the best swing band.” His past experience with leaders like Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Lionel Hampton and to Quincy Jones qualifies him judge. He said the Tonight band call themselves the “proofreaders” because the music they play for guests is usually brand new and the kinks have not been worked out. “We straighten out their music,” he kidded. Terry had only praise tor Car­ son, the enigmatic king of sleep­ time that television. “He has boyish wit and daring type of personality that people really go for. And,” he a d d e d , “I think he really digs the band.” THE CROWD of 300 really “ dug” Clark Terry Friday night, too. He r e c e i v e d a standing the performance ovation after and came back for an encore, j It was a Bill Cosby-esque talk -; play routine that described a man on his way home from work. Before leaving, Terry told the audience that applause was like a meal to a musician and that they “had just made my belly poke way out.” SUDS POWER! COME TO OUR HAPPY HOUR & Vl 7-8:30 P.M. WEEKDAYS *wher« old friend# m eet” 12th A LAMAR format Friday, but the group did get on the stage and the duo was worth waiting for. The two men from the University show originality instru­ mentation and lyrics. They made the folk it the finals the division and were by far highlight of Friday's round. their into in in Saturday at 2 p.m. the semi­ final round got underway again with Walter Mitchell from louisiana State University in the folk section. His format was not very original, but he does have a good voice that shows much talent. He was followed by Joe Pollaro: a n d David Haworth from Grayson County Junior College. Pollaro. entered in the folk cate­ gory, sang an original com­ position for Haworth, who was entered in the pop category and backed him on piano. POLLARO followed with some of his own folk arrangements showing great talent on accousti- cal guitar using a style that ranged from classical to standard four-finger picking. Pollaro made it into the final round. By w in McKin n e y Amusements Associate Charles Bickiey and Tracey from the University won the folk division of the regional competi­ tion of the Intercollegiate Music Festival Saturday night. Winners in the pop division were the New Brass the University of Houston. from The Texas regional competi­ tions of the Intercollegiate Music Festival got off to a loud start In Friday night’s semi-final round with the Young Society from Texas A&I University. The group features primarily a rock format with a fairly good sound that really needs work. They were just a little too far instrumentation apart than and sound average. to be better their in the APPARENTLY judges agreed because the group didn’t make it out of the semi-finals. Susan Giles followed, also entered in the pop category. Miss Giles, from features popular sounds backing herself on aceoustical guitar, that frequently loses the rhythm set up in her songs. Miss Giles did make it into the final round Saturday night at 8 p.m. the University, David Smith from Baytown’s le e College was tile next act in the folk division. Smith has a heavy tenor voice leaning toward tile bass side that projects well. His was a quiet set, and the judges thought he showed talent for he made it into the final round. ZIC \L, the from T 0 M followed him and University, carried a set that had good var­ iety but was not up to what Zigal is capable of performing. He didn’t make final it round. into the took Tile New Brass from the Uni­ versity of Houston the spotlight next with a Blood, Sweat and Tears format that was the Interesting; hut, It originality and open composition that the former group has. lacked Tile sound of the group was not close and at some points it sounded as lf two groups, brass and strings, were competing for sound. This group did go into the pop finals. “CHARLIE BICKLEY and Tracey” almost got left off die FOR ONE WEEK! STARTING SUN. APRIL 12 £ OF PITCHER | BEER j J 75c for ^ ENDING SUN. APRIL I t # ^ HOGG AUO, for ticket reservations call GR 1-1444 CSinema 40 P r e s e n ts Ingmar Bergman’s Vilgot Sjoman’s complete and uncut f Am Curious (Yellow) is a "remarkable film (which) has been playing for a long time to droves of Swedes, and to several million people almost everywhere, it is the story of a young girl who Is, or was, curious about politics, nonviolence, Zen, commitment, socialism other Swedes and, to be sure, sex. It is a serious film with a noble theme’ and, in dramatic terms, it is original," says Look magazine. The Evergreen P ^ n t e d b y Grove Press stars Lena Nyman. A Sandrews Production. ADM ISSION RESTRICTED TO ADULTS. Playing SC0-PR01 609 W . 29 O P E N EVER YD AY A T 3:00 P.M. APRIL 17 & 18 BATTS HALL AUO. 7 & 9 P.M. Non-Members $1.25 ADVANCE SALE AT HOGG AUO. BOX OFFICE THE RITUAL TEXAS UNION THEATER STUDENTS $1.00 M et/ ase...M e AUSTIN ARMY & NAVY STORE HAVE TWO STORES NO W TO SERVE YOU CONGRESS CONGRESS ‘It J) o 'A rn& I 9* > "I r n 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Mon. & Thurs. nights 'til 9 p.m. bak jai SOMETHING NEW FOR AUSTIN-IT S OUR NEW BARGAIN "BASEMENT" - UPSTAIRS ON 3rd FLOOR 3RD FLOOR SPECIAL MEN S CORDUROY JEANS PAIR ALL SIZES AND COLORS FAMOUS BRANDS HEY MOM, BOYS CORDUROY JEANS FAMOUS BRANDS GIRLS & LADIES BLOUSES Reg. ’8.98 THIRD FLOOR SPECIAL is* GIRLS! T ° OFF ALL KNIT SHIRTS WITH COUPON V/Ul tni H COUPON THIS CO U PO N G O O D FOR S j O O TOWARD A N Y KNIT SHIRT EXPIRES APRIL 15 WI,,. . * „ r «S„| «« • -r. I A- HEY GUYS, UPSTAIRS FOR THESE $100 FIRST FLOOR SPECIALS ALL MOD BELTS ‘2.00 OFF Reg. PRICE S A N D A L S ALSO, GUYS SHOW YOUR U.T. ID CARD AND GET $1.00 OFF ON ANY SHIRTS WE CARRY WITH COUPON VALL,UHT ( OI PO V THIS C O U PO N G O O D FOR $^oo TOWARD A N Y M O D BELT EXPIRES APRIL 15 Austin Army & Navy Store Open: D aily 9 a .m .- 7 p.m. & Thurs. nights ’til 9 p.m. 412 & 410 Congress PAO* 16 Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILYTEXAN^H