Vol. 70, No. I Ten Cents TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1970 Fourteen Pages 471-5244 er at The University cf Texas at Austin 1 I - ' Interim Pr Chancell New Post For Ransom , > — flans pointed Resigns * D K e s i g n i n g * C h a n c e llo r H a r r y R ansom has re sig n e d his p o s t a t his re q u e st. R a n so m a t on e tim e se rv e d as b o th U n iv e rs ity Presi- d e n t an d S yste m C h a n c e llo r . N o r e ­ p la c e m e n t has b e en n am ed as y e t b y the regents. Nev/ Regent Rule M e e tin g Restricts EL PASO (Spl ) — A strictly-am ended rule limiting the num ber of non-student, non employe guests of registered student organizations, was passed without objection by the University Board of Regents Friday. The am endm ent, subm itted by Regents Chairm an F ran k C. Erw in Jr., prohibits the use of University buildings o r grounds for any m eeting of a registered student organization which is attended “by m ore than three persons who a re neither students nor employes of the institutions.” The rule exempts press am! law enforce­ m ent officials. The existing rule prohibited groups of non-students not rec: tire d with the Dr rn fi- a us.ng University (rf Students off.• facilities. Communism Taught Erwin said the rule was none -dated by a series of clar es In socialism las? sum m er sponsored by the Young So* alist Alban e, a registered student organ z it mn. A num ber of Austin-area h.gh schmo! student.- attended the classes, Erwin said. ‘'The classes were in socialism ,* ” Erwin told the board, “when In fact, they w< re d .sacs rn (“.'" '" " “ ‘WU. ‘classes labeled In a m eeting of the board’s Academic and Development Affairs Committee, Erwin attem pted the .student activity fop (blanket tax) for 1970-71, making op­ tional the $2 which goos to tile Student-' Association. to amend However, after Students’ Association Vice-President Jim Arnold argued against the move, Erwin withdrew his am en d m en t AN ikS-eyed Schemes* “ I wanted to put the Students’ Association on fair notice," said Erwin, “ that if they continue to spend this money on these wild ­ eyed schem es they have been in the past, one year from now I will Ik? serious about. m y am endm ent.” He did not elaborate on what he considered “ wild-eyed schem es.” Tim packed regents’ agenda also included approval of faculty legislation providing admission to the University of any high school graduate ranked in the top IO per­ cent of his graduating class, despite his soc re on t he Scholastic Aptitude Test. the laoard. All perm its except Parking fees f< r the 1970 TI school year will be doubled under a schedule approx ed for by disabled student perm its will increase in the additional revenue going price, will! to the employment of additional parking and traffic © film s to staff cam pus gates and lots for longer hours of the day. The b e rd also approved the sale of $10 million in Combined Fee Revenue Bonds f r the Austin cam pus. D ie bonds will be used for kind acquisition and construction. Bids R ejected An a1 *cr < n of $30,000 from the board the University's Art Museum will assist in at n ii: mg basic collections of Latin American art. T ee Liar I also rejected ’ ids on the pro- posed Com rn uni -a lion Building and ad­ jacent Texas Student Publications building because they fa r exceeded estim ates. In other action related to tile Austin cam pas, tile board: • Approved prelim inary plans for 200 new apartm ents for m arried students, to bi* built on the “ old Confederate Home” property in the 1600 block of West Sixth Street. to Southern Extrusions, for • Ratifier! the aw ald of a $156,000 con­ Inc., of installation of new in Memorial tra c t Magnolia, Ark., alum inum plank Stadium, replacing 66.000 wooden seats. seating • Awarded a $168,027 contract to the W. D. Anderson Co. of Austin for construc­ tion of a structural testing area at Balcones Research Center. EL PASO (Spl.) - The University Board of Regents announced Friday that Dr. H arry Ransom, a t his own request will retire as chancellor on Jan. I, 1971. He will become chancellor em eritus on the sam e date. Frank Ikard, chairm an of the regents* Committee on Adm inistrative Organization, announced the decision at the conclusion of a day-long the cam pus of the University at El Paso. regents m eeting on Ikard emphasized Ransom ’s change position rath er than retirem ent in stating: in “ This im portant new assignm ent re­ cognizes Dr. Ransom 's g reat ability, his leadership, and the tremendous contribution to The University of that he has m ade Texas System over the last 35 years. In this new’ position, he will co n tin u e to be active in adm inistrative work, wTiich will include regular consultation with the board on all m atters, and in adm inistration in the field of academ ic program s and plan­ contin ie System ning. He will also fields of development, especially in resea rch and foundations.” the c n flow rn en is collect ions, Ransom indicated pleasure with the new position saying: “ In granting my request for a new ad­ m inistrative assignm ent, the regents have given me both wide opportunity and specific responsibility in areas of my main interests. I am looking forward to the new' role in which I m ay serve all the institutions in the System. I am deeply grateful for the board’s confidence and generosity.” There was no announcement of selection or method of selection for Ransom ’s suc­ cessor. chancellor of Ransom became th e University System in 1961, succeeding Dr. I^g an Wilson. He held that position and the presidency of the Austin cam pus until the latter post was filled by 1967 when Dr. Norman Hackerm an. Ransom joined the University faculty in 1935 as a part-tim e instructor in English, advancing through the teaching ranks to full professorship in 1947. He becam e an adm inistrator in 1951, serving as assistant dean of the G raduate School, and associate dean of tile graduate school from 1953-54. He served as dean of the College of Arts and Scieni'es from 1954-57 and was vice­ president and provost until 1960 when he becam e president. Ransom ’s principal interests research law’ and Include the fields of copyright bibliography. A vigorous champion of library development, his adm inistration developed m ajor collections on the Twen­ tieth Century specialized as well libraries in fields such a s tho history of science, th eater arts, photography, c a r­ tography, aviation and the history of the press. as Library the U ndergraduate He initiated the construction and program of and Academic Center, which was completed in 1963 to offer opportunities for independent learning, and the Humanities Research Center, which will house more than IOO collections. New President Dr. B ry c e J o r d a n has accepted a p ­ p o in tm e n t as U n iv e rs ity President A d Interim. J o rd a n , who w ill leave his post as vice-president of student affairs, will take office 5epf. I as Dr. N o rm a n Hackerman leaves for th e Rice U niver­ sity presidency. 6,000 Ex n bum m er I erm g e * u p Sect ionizers and cr rd-puliers are expected to run 16.000 students til rough the Gregory' Gym registration null Tuesday and Wed­ nesday. R egistrar Byron Shipp said the estim ate surpasses last sum m er’s record enrollment by approxim ately 1,500 students. enced students going through and because there are plenty of sections.” “ We have tim larges? offering of sum m er courses and m ore money th in ever; m ainly the money is tor more sections of the sam e subjects, ra th e r than new courses,” Shipp said. R egistration is tor six-w«ek, nine-week and 12-week courses. Classes will begin Thursday. The sum m er school population will consist mostly of y ear round students continuing through the sum m er. The first sum m er term will end July 14, with registration for the second term scheduled July 15. Aug. 25 will be the last day of the sum ­ is officially designated m er session and graduation day, though no public exercises will be held. Only six days later, on Aug, 31, regis­ tration will begin for the 1970 fall sem ester. In the fall tho new pre registration system wifi be in effect. This sum m er will be the last tim e the Gregory Gym m aze of seetionizers and ca rd-puliers will lie used. Thursday and F riday will be add and drop days so students can change any courses they draw. The reg istrar few' problems “ because of the high percentage of experi­ foresees J Today J three The S u m m er T exan offers J | | | issu es a w eek —T u esd ay, I Thursday and Friday. The sum- I axI sis J m er n ew s rn per h as grown this J | y ea r w ith the addition of the J | Thursday cd ii ion. P a r t l y W E A T H E R : cloudy J | and m ild. N ortherly winds 5 to | I 15 m iles p er hour d im inish in g J I W ednesday’. H igh, upper 70’s, J I Low, lo w er 60’s, .■ j i l l : i ; ill ’ -»I!!!!!!! llliiiiSMiMttltilllS Jordan Gets Top Position By ANDY YEMMA Texan Editor EL PASO — Dr. Bryce Jordan, the Uni­ versity's vice-president for student affairs, was named President Ad Interim a t the University Board of R egents m eeting here Friday. His appointm ent becom es effective July I. University System Deputy Chancellor Charles LeM aistre announced the appoint­ ment in reporting the statu s of the Uni­ versity adm inistration a t the m eeting of the board’s Academic and Developmental affairs committee. Jordan will succeed Dr. tem porarily Norman Hackerm an, who to resigned become president of Rice University on Sept. I. A Presidential Selection Com mittee, which will screen applications for a new University President, is now' m eeting, but the System adm inistration feels th at the selection of H ackerm an's perm anent suc­ cessor will take at least until May I, 1971, and quite possibly longer. Vice-President Sought Jordan resigned his current post, which he filled when it was created in February, 1968. to accept the ad interim presidency. A temporary’ Vice-President for Student Affairs will be named la te r this week, with a perm anent selection to come at a later date. Jordan expressed enthusiasm toward his new post in issuing a statem ent Monday which re a d : “ I have been asked to take a special responsibility for a brief time in the long history of a distinguished University, and I look forward to the experience. To bo able to serve, in whatever way one can, an institution for which one has m uch affec­ tion and to which one owes a g reat deal is a privilege which I am delighted to have.” H ackerm an \vailable LeM aistre told the board that a period of transition is desirable during the sum ­ m er. H ackerm an will be on leave during July and August but will be available for consultation arid discussion. in Jordan will work with H ackerm an m any a re a s, particularly with budget im ­ plem entation for die 1970-71 school y e a r and budget reguests for the 1971-73 bien­ nium . University System Chancellor H arry Ransom , w ho the sari e day announced his tile adm inistration ef­ retirem ent ap­ said of fective pointm ent: from I, Jo rd an ’s Ja n . “ Bryce Jordan w as recom m ended to the regents as President Ad Inter, m because he is completely fam iliar with the daily operation of the University. Jordan is not available for consideration as president of UT-Austin. The advisory com m ittee on the presidency has been notified of this fact. “ A distinguished scholar, Dr. Jo rd an assumed the viee-presideney for student affairs in a period of difficult transition. He wels the first to hold the title at Austin. Under his leadership the whole organization has carried on com plicated assignm ents with unselfish devotion.’* Ceremonies Honor 3,500 Saturday C om m en ce m e n t Fetes G ra d u a te s By CYNDI TAYLOR Texan Staff Writer More than 3.300 University degrees were conferred Saturday although a considerably sm aller num ber of tho recipients actually a t t e n d e d traditional graduation ceremonies. the day The University's eighty-seventh annual commencement non­ denominational baccalaureate service, an ROTO commissioning service, college and school convocations and the official campus- wide graduation exercises Saturday night. included a The Rev. K. Theodore Baehmann delivered the sermon at the m orning bac­ calaureate service saying, “ The anguish of present-day America is that we are locked in conflict with ourselves.1* Rev. Mr. Baehm ann prescribed returning love for hate and “ learning to live with those who differ so that together we m ay open the way for change and growth.” their Rainy Recognition Commissioning of 135 students who com­ the University’s pleted ROTC units took place Saturday morning. The Arm y added 89 new officers while the Navy added 25 and the Air Force 23. training in Colleges of I location, Arts and Sciences, Engineering, Business Administration, Fine the Schools of Arts and P harm acy and Law, Nursing, Architecture. Communication and time, every graduate was recognized individually by his respective dean. the Crauu te School. At this An estim ated 8,000 persons weathered official graduation exercises on the Main Mall Saturday night despite persistent thunder and lightning and interm ittent ram . Almost 2,000 students and faculty m ade the im pressive m arch on the m all garbed in colorful academ ic faculty m arshals carrying m aces adorned with b rass symbols signifying various aspects of University life. regalia with \ Little Modern The traditional n iodin val-like ceremony had a hint of “ today” a s a num ber of students wore white arm bands urging an end to U. S. involvement in Southeast Asia. recognized by Graduates were their colleges and schools with the exception of the hundred doctoral degree candidates w ho w ere individually presented their orange- aud-white academ ic hoods, Afternoon convocations viers held bg the President Norm an H ackerm an. who w ill become of Rice University in Septem ber, presided over his president new? the last U niversity com m encem ent and con­ ferred the degrees. Outlook Dim Torn Wicker, associate editor of The New com m encem ent York Times, gave address welcoming change in the m oral, ethical and political \ dues th at have domi­ nated m an. tile recent endorsing Apparently student dem onstrations, W icker said, “ It’s cynical for society to insist that protest m ust be non-violent and that if it isn’t, it’s all right for arm ed lawmen to shoot down unarm ed people in tile nam e of law and o rd er.” Wicker raised questions on the m erit of technology' which has im proved m a n ’s life but endangered his n a tu ra l world. th a t He contended the problem which m ust be faced is th a t of preserving and expanding individual liberty, but concluded pessim istically, “ I am not confident we can preserve liberty in A m erica.” The Longhorn Band’s rendition of “The E yes (rf T ex as” and the Tower’s orange glow to honor the graduates climaxed Aw evening. G rad u a tes Endure Rain D esp ite tassel-soaldng thundershowers, m ore than 3,500 sen­ iors and g ra d u a te students w ere presented their diplom as S aturday, Texan Photo by Ike Baruch Peru Ravaged by Earthquake; Thousands May Have Died 652 Raids May Continue After Troop Withdrawal SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (AP) — The White House evidently left the way open Monday for continued B52 bombing iii Cambodia beyond the June 30 deadline for U. S. troop withdrawal, but said there will be no tactical a ir support for South Vietnamese forces there after that date. P ress secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said a t a briefing: “ We a re reserving comment on what actions tile United States will take on air support following June 30. We have said any action would be in relation to security of American forces in South Vietnam .” Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird told a Senate subcom m ittee last month he would recom ­ m end keeping up air strikes against Communist supplies and bases in Cambodia after U. S. troops a re withdrawn. Later, defense officials said U. S. a ir power used in Cambodia after July I probably will center on bombing enemy supply m utes and concentra­ tions in the sam e way American w ar planes have been trying to interdict the Ho Chi Minh Trail running through Laos. The South Vietnamese air force is expected to provide close air support for South Vietnamese troops in any future activities in Cambodia, defense officials have said. Before heading back to Washington after a Mem­ orial Day weekend, Pres: lent Richard M. Nixon scheduled for 8 p.m. CDT Wednesday a la-minute report to the nation on the course of the Indochina war. The report was to follow by hours the first the Cambodian crucial Senate lest on curbing phase of the conflict. Asked whether he was “purposely fuzzy mg this up or not,” Ziegler wont over what he had said before. At tidies he put emphasis on “ tactical' air support as what would end June 30. The big B52 la m b e rs are classed a s “strategic weapons systems. Ziegler did not deny that his statem ents left open the use of B52s beyond -lune 30. The President, who flew to his seaside retreat here Thursday, met f r two and a half hours Sun­ day with U n. Creighton Abram*, suprem e U. S. commander in Vietn un, and Adm. John S. McCain Jr., commander in chief, Pacific, and other m ilitary advisers. ________ S U M M E R LUXURY LIVING FOR UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS W O M EN! F A L L ■ . D e x t e r House I 103 W e st 241 h Street Austin, Texas 78705 ^ ;acjj,on House O W a <4 ? ? r r i jstin, foxes 78705 A ’ M a d is o n -B e lla ir e Apartments (C ontract meals, if desired) 717 W e st 22; d Street Austin, Texas 73705 Congenial, home like atmosphere for the inte lee u * anc fun-loving student. H O U S IN G O F F IC E 709 W e I 22 G R 8-9891 or G R 8-891A cent destroyed. A m ilitary pilot reported Monday afternoon that Yungay “ has disappeared from the map. It is no m ore.” An am ateu r radio operator re­ ported Monday from C eras that a wall of w ater from an icy An­ dean lake, apparently pouring through a n atu ral dike ruptured by the quake, sm ashed down on the valley town. He said the city had been alm ost destroyed the day before and estim ated the dead from the quake a t ?,000. Peruvian Other radio reports from the stricken area along 600 m iles of the coast, which rescuers w ere beginning to mTve into Monday, put the total dead thousands. An high in from Am erican priest H uaras in Texas estim ated the figure a t 15,- 000, but reports the casualty could not be confirmed. to a ham operator calling the Em ergency relief forces tried Monday to reach C ara1-', but re- p o r t s landslides indicated blocked access roads. There are no telephone or telegraph com­ munications with stricken area. the President Juan Velasco went to the hard-hit port of Chimbote, aboard a navy cruiser. He flew from a helicopter. to Huaras there in Velasco’s m ilitary government organized airlifts to a reas with fields, and landing serviceable m ilitary convoys left the capital a t dawn Monday with supplies for other areas. Helicopters took supplies into m ore rem ote sec­ tors. in The quake, whose epicenter the Institute the seabed 12 miles Chimbote, Peruvian Geophysical placed o f f s h o r e registered 7.75 on the Richter scale-compred with 8.25 for the disastrous San Francisco qi of 1906. from } I I News Capsules ________By Th# Associated Press_____ Television Crews Missing After Explosion PHNOM PENH, Cambodia Cambodian soldiers reported Monday that they saw a bumed-out jeep and another vehicle believed belonging to two American television crews feared captured by the Viet Cong or North Vietnamese. The eight men in Americans, have been missing since Sunday. two crews, the including three Soldiers said the crews from National Broadcasting Co. and the Columbia Broardcasting System passed the last government roadblock 35 miles south of Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital, Sunday morning. Their objective was the vicinity of Takeo, another five miles away. A few minutes later there was an explosion. A Cambodian soldier was killed while trying to reach the burned-out jeep Monday, and since then no troops have been able to get down the road without drawing fire. Gerald Miller and George Syvertsen, both Americans with CBS, were reported riding in the jeep. Welles Hangen, the third American, with NBC, was said to have been traveling in a blue Opel which the soldiers said was parked apparently undamaged behind the burned jeep. Soviets Launch Manned Spacecraft MOSCOW The Soviet Union launched its first manned space shot in eight months late Monday night, sending aloft veteran cosmonaut commander Col. Andrian Nikolayev and rookie flight engineer Vitaly Sevastianov. The launch of Soyuz 9 at 10:09 p.m., Moscow time, was televised nation-wide an hour later. All radio stations and television channels blared martial music and announcers proclaimed it “another glorious step in space explorations.’* * The Soviet news agency Tass announced that the two-man crew would carry out “ an extensive program of scientific and technical research.” It said the spacecraft would carry out maneuvers to perfect “manual and automatic systems of the ship’s con­ trol,” would study weather, and would photograph ground objects and water surfacees “with a view to improving the objects and water surfaces “with a view to improving the methods of using the obtained data in the economy.” Dollar Value Drops in Canada Market OTTAWA The value of the U. S. dollar in terms of Canadian money dropped by nearly four cents Monday following action by the Canadian government in unpegging its dollar from U . S. money. The U. S. dollar in relation to Canadian funds was off 3 25-32 to $1.03. The sharp drop followed an announcement Sunday that the Canadian dollar would be allowed to “float freely” in the world market, as the West German government did with the mark for a month last fall. Prior to the announcement, the official worth of the Canadian dollar had been 92.5 U. S. cents for eight years. Ruling Releases Reluctant Recruits 9 WASHINGTON The govenment is considering whether to fight two federal district court rulings that could result in release from the armed forces of up to 6,000 reluctant draftees. The district court decisions invoke retroactively the Supreme Court’s Gutknecht ruling, which held that a man cannot be reclassified or his induction speeded up as punish­ ment for infraction of Selective Service rules. I The Justice Department, acting in the wake of the decision, already has dropped evasion cases against 600 young men who refused to go when called up out of turn. The district court ruling, in contrast, involved young men who did not resist their speeded up induction and are now serving in the armed forces. The Selective Service System has estimated there are about 6,000 such soldiers. Wallace Tries to Reclaim Gubernatorial Seat MONTGOMERY, Ala. George C. Wallace bids Tuesday for an Alabama platform vital to a presidential campaign future, charging that if he loses the state will be delivered to 50 years of black political control. Wallace turned increasingly to race as an issue in his campaign for a showdown Democratic gubemational prim ary victory against Gov. Albert Brewer, a protege | turned arch rival. The national stakes appeared highest in Alabama, where Wallace sought to do what no politician there has managed since 1914: overtake in runoff balloting the candidate who got the most votes for governor in the first-round primary. Brewer, who as lieutenant governor succeeded the late Lurleen Wallace in the governorship, led the initial primary last month by 11,763 votes. But it was a seven-way race, and he failed to win the required majority. An Alabama defeat would deal a crippling — if not fatal — blow to any 1972 renewal of Wallace’s third-party presi­ dential campaign. Wallace has sidestepped questions about his 1972 plans, saying only that he would if elected serve a full four years as governor. Court Delays Death Ponalty Decision WASHINGTON The Supreme Court put off Monday for possibly a year a decision on use of the death penalty in the United States. The action blocks execution of the more than 500 men and two women on death rows and assures participation of Judge Harry A. Blackmun, who joins the court next week. The test case of William L. Maxwell, a convicted rapist, was returned to Arkansas for a hearing on the exclusion of opponents of capital punishment from his trial jury. At the same time, the court agreed to hear arguments next fall by attorneys for two men convicted of murder IU California and Ohio. Their cases present the two principal procedural arguments made in Maxwell’s appeal that remain unresolved. Two years ago the court ruled death sentences cannot |lg imposed by juries from which opponents of capital were automatically excluded. Pag# I Tutfday, June 2. J97Q THE SUMMER TEXAN LIMA, P eru, (AP) — Tile death toll mounted Monday, and a pic­ property incredible tu re of dam age em erged the after- in m ath of the catastrophic earth­ quake th at struck P eru 24 hours earlier. The governm ent released tile only official count of 200 bodies in the port city of Chimbote and 160 in the valley city of Huaras. But m any feared thousands m ay have perished. At least 100,000 persons were left homeless in P eru 's cold A n ­ dean winter. Thousands of build­ ings were destroyed and a num ­ ber of totally cities almost demolished. Hardest hit was a long, nar­ row canyon u re a wedged tightly between two tall ranges of the Andes and known as the “Switz­ erland of Peru.” Tile city of Huaras was 90 per- Israeli Planes Three Arab States (AP) — TEL AVIV Israel threw a ir strikes into three Arab countries Monday after artillery exchanges claimed the lives of two school children, one on each side, several other left children and adults wounded. and command The planes struck Jordan, Le­ banon and Egypt, and an Israeli m ilitary spokesman said all craft returned safely. In The planes flew into Jordan, to hit guerilla squads who fired rockets a t Beit Shean on the Jor­ dan R iver border south of the Sea of Galilee. The 9-year-old girl was killed on her way to school, the Israelis said. than Four Strikes Recorded In Egypt, four strikes totaling m ore seven hours, hit m ilitary objectives on the Suez Canal. Egypt said three of its m ilitary personnel w ere killed and five wounded. The rocket attack drew atten­ tion from the explosive Suez Ca­ nal situation. Only a day earlier, one en­ the countered Egyptain interceptor jets and antiaircraft fire. Israelis attack, Stock Exchange Rally Sustained In Pr ice A d van ce NEW YORK (AP) — The stock m arket its rally moved fourth day Monday with prices closing sharply higher. Trading was active. into stocks The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial climbed 9.92 points or 1.41 percent to close a t 710.36. Advances led declines on the New York Stock Exchange by a three to one m argin. Big Board volume totaled 15.02 tape million running one minute late at the close. shares with the The upturn Monday was a con­ tinuation of the m assive three- the Dow that sent day rally average up close to 70 points last week, analysts said. Teachers Wanted SOI T il WEST, EN T IR E W E S* & ALASKA. OI II 21 til YEA R. Southwest Teachers A gen cy 1303 C e n tra l A ve., NVE. A lb u q u e r q u e , H .M , 87106 F r e e R e g is tra tio n — G ood S a la rie s i ^ i a MyHHMinrifl'-iW'ywriiBiMwr h it DELIVERY K0DAC0L0R PRINTS Film In at 4 P.M< • • • Prints ready 4 8 hours later at 4 P.M. J st quality prints. See our dis• play of all the latest in ca m * e r a s a n d e q u i p m e n t . F u l l repair service. STATM AN PHOTO 19th at Lavaca & Cameron Village The Israelis reported a 9-year- old school girl was killed and five os her children and three adults wounded when an Arab rocket exploded in a playground beside th eir elem entary school in Beit Shean. Tile Jordanians said a 6-year- old w as killed and 12 other per­ sons, five of them children, were wounded in an Israeli artillery barrage on town of Irbid the which preceded the a ir strike. Israeli Israelis w ere shocked by news that Egyptian am bushers had killed 13 soldiers and abducted two. Two m ore soldiers were wounded in firing on the w aterway Monday, the m ilitary said. By late Monday, planes had been in action on the Suez Canal for 21 out of the last 36 hours, backing up official statem ents th at Israel was fighting to ham per efforts, fortification Egyptian with Soviet assistance, on the waterway. Northern Sector flit The latest raid s w ere on the the canal, northern sector of E gypt said. Planes in Lebanon ham m ered guerilla bases on the southwest the slopes of Mount Hermon, sam e frontier a re a where the Israelis conducted an arm ored antiguerilla sweep May 12. The Israelis said a 30-minute artillery battle developed between the Arab attack on Belt Shean and the retaliatory Israeli ab ­ raid. Meant for each other since time began. i f LYRIC SET Falling in love is learning that one and one can equal one. A rtCarved designs Love Kings to express ju st th a t feeling. Come in and choose yours soon. j A ^ r t C a r v e d the Love Ring people Shop and Save N E X T TO H E H PHILLS 2236 G u a d a lu p e » GO FRESH! MENS SHIRTS BEAUTIFULLY LAUNDERED AND FINISHED to W e lc o m e the U niversity, lf y o u 're n o t acqu ain te d with say hello. W e 'r e always g la d to us, com e see you. , One h o u r mmmine" THE MOST IN ORY CLEANING 5936 WESTMINISTER 3317 NORTHLAND 2326 S. CO NGRESS 510 W. 19 704 W. 29 907 W. 24 7847 SHOALCREEK BLVD. Coed U o o r s . . , it’s happening here.,. 478-9811 2323 San Antonio Chairman Referees Contested Election T exan photo by Stanley F arrar Chairman Charles Alan Wright of the Facul­ ty Senate, presides over the election of Vice- Chairman Winfred Lehmann. Lehmann's was the only contested election of the day Mon­ day s session. n C j J A l t e r a t i o n P l a n s I Hackerman Honored Received by Regents Texas, and the University shall always be in his debt for that reason, and Faculty Senate Re-elects W right cident or the recent General Faculty resolution to suspend classes. presiding for the exclusion by a majority vote, of all non-faculty the press, including members, executive session at any tim e so that members express themselves free from any threat “ can include a The by-laws aLso clause" ‘ ‘ l a c k of quorum providing the Senate with a method of dealing with poor a t t e n d a n c e , and a clause from executive sessions. of retaliation.” Wright stressed that regular sessions w ill remain public. However, the Faculty Senate now into the power of going has The Senate also voted to establish standing committees to be determined at a future meet­ ing. By EDDIE KENNEDY T exan Staff W riter With a slim, and at times non­ existent quorum, the University Faculty Senate considereu a three-item agenda Monday and then voted to adjourn for the summer. a resolution on Members elected new officers, passed the parking problem and adopted a set of by-laws for the Senate constitution. down Charles Alan Wright, professor of law, was re-elected chairman. Members the turned Nominations Committee’s recom­ mendation for vice-chairman, Dr. associate C l i f t o n Grubbs, professor of economics, and elected, by secret ballot, Dr. Winfred Lehmann, professor of G e r m a n i c and linguistics. languages Dr. H. Malcolm Macdonald, professor of government, was re­ elected as the Senate's secretary- treasurer. Members considered a request from Carl J . Eckhardt, director in parking of the physical plant, for the Senate to endorse the proposed raise fees. The proposed increase would double the parking and traffic budget from $100,000 to $200,000 a year. Eckhardt explained his depart­ ment is requesting the increase in fees so that an additional 13 employes — traffic security officers and two clerk­ ly pists — can be hired. l l new After debating the proposal, the Senate adopted a new resolution urging “ to develop new and innovative methods of parking.’’ the administration Following a lengthy debate, members adopted a series of by­ laws intended to supplement the Senate constitution. clause allowing The by-laws include an “ emer­ gency’’ the Senate to consider by a majority vote items not on the agenda. Members believed the clause was necessary so that the Senate might consider such unforeseen events as the Chuck Wagon in- III!!!lllll!il!IHIffllll!(llll!P “ W H E R E A S * Dr. Norman tendered his Hackerman has resignation effective Sept. I, 1970, to accept the Presidency of Rice University at Houston, Texas: “ B E of Regents responsibilities “ B E IT R ESO LV ED , That the of The Board University of Texas System wishes him every success in his new at Rice University, and I T F U R T H E R R ESO LV ED , That the Board unanimously expresses its deep nr, r.p cia ti on to President Hacker­ man and orders that this resolu­ tion be spread upon the minutes of this meeting as evidence of this appreciation.” E L PASO (Spl.) — A resolution of appreciation to University President Norman Hackerman, who w ill become president of in September, Rice University was adopted unanimously Friday by the Board of Regents. The complete text follows: “ W H E R E A S , Dr. Norman Hackerman began his career at The University of Texas at Austin a s of Chemistry in 1945; Professor Assistant “ W H ER EA S, For 25 years Dr. • Hackerman has continued in the Department of Chemistry, having been a Professor since 1950 and among other things having served as Vice President and Provost; in “ W H ER EA S, 1963 Dr. Norman Hackerman wras named Vice Chancellor for Academic Af- fairs of The University of Texas System w'here he served until 1967, when he was appointed President of The University of Texas at Austin; “ W H E R E A S , During this period of time Dr. Norman Hackerman has made great con­ tributions to The University of TOWER MANOR Come visit us and see why so many University women say Tower Manor is the ideal place to live! Living room, 2 bdrms, 2 full baths, kitchen, & dining area in each suite TV lounge Elevators M aid service Sun deck Elegant living for young women rn Fully a/c Free parking Laundry facilities Study Hall I blk. from campus 19 meals/week There are no closing hours with permission o f the parents Now Open For Summer Sr Fall Semesters! call: 478-2185 1908 University I come to the University from Hemphill*!? WHERE YOU GET . • Complete O F F IC IA L University books and supplies • Free Customer Parking at all locations with your purchase • Personal checks cashed • G ift Wrapping and mailing services • Free campus maps, book covers, and activities calendar with your books or supplies • Fast, courteous and efficient personalized service PLUS HEMPHILL'S EVER-READY REBATE It’s as EASY as 1-2-3! HERE'S H O W IT WORKS: Buy books, supplies— all your col­ lege needs at Hemphill's and save your cash register receipts bate slips). re* 2 Return any following day with your rebates— now worth 10% of face value A L L SEM ESTER! 1 pen, or a slide rule you need? Simply use your rebate slips as cash towards your purchase. Ifs as simple as that! 3 Is it stationery, books, pencils, a HEMPHILLS TYPEW RITERS and O F F IC E M A C H IN E S 613 West 29th (Just W est of Guadalupe) 824 Park Place (Across from the Law School) 2244 Guadalupe (On the Drag) I YOUR Headquarters for • BOOKS • SUPPLIES and all your COLLEGE NEEDS Tuesday, June 2, 1970 THE SU M M ER TEXAN Page 3 E L (Spl.) PASO - The University Board of Regents re­ ceived rvcommendations Friday from President Norman Hacker­ man for organizational changes in the College of Arts and Sciences. The recommendations would group 25 A&S departments into three divisions — humanities, science and social sciences — each headed by a dean of faculty. Hackerman’s plan was sub­ mitted by the Chancellor’s Office to the board for information only. The System administration will continue to study the structure of the college and expects to submit its recommendations to the board in time to allow' their implementation during tile 1970-71 fiscal year. The recommendations of Hac­ kerman were made after he received majority and minority reports from a special com­ mission of the college — one faculty member to represent each department in the college. elected The groupings he proposes within the college are: • Humanities: Departments of Classics, English, French and Italian, Germanic languages, Philosophy, Slavic Languages and Spanish and Portuguese. • Sciences: Departments of Astronomy, Botany, Chemistry, Computer Sciences, Geological S c i e n c e s , Home Economics, Mathematics, Microbiology, Physics and Zoology. • Social Sciences: Depart­ ments of A n t h r o p o l o g y , Economics, Geography, Govom- m e n t , History, Linguistics, Psychology and Sociology. Hackerman also recommended establishment of a fourth unit to be entitled General Studies and Special Programs. It would in­ clude the Department of Physical Instruction, the Plan l l liberal a r t s in­ ternational programs, such other degree program, special programs as now exist or may be added in the future and all functions relented to what have been called “ undetermined majors.” Tile Divisions of Humanities, Sciences arid Social Sciences would he headed by “ deans of f a c u l t y , ’ ’ selected by the p r e s i d e n t from nominations faculty-student submitted committees. An a sso c ia te dean, appointed by the dean of Arts and Sciences, would head the General Studies and Special Programs unit. by the “ To assure the unitary nature of liberal education, the activities of several divisions as represented by the deans of the faculties will be coordinated by the dean of the College of Arts and Sciences,” Hackerman said in his report. STUDENT HEALTH CENTER 105 W. 26th Street ESTABLISHED & MAINTAINED TO PROVIDE OPTIMUM HEALTH FOR ALL STUDENTS E | u l E D f %E I J ^ | E C w'll b® attended at any time, lf you sustain injury or suffer sudden illness requiring Immediate at- L m L n U L N U L J tention, report to the Health Center immediately or telephone 478-5711. DHI STINE A PPfilMThiFMTC w'^ nUUIInC ArrUIH I nCN I J 8:00 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. on Saturdays. No office hours on Sundays or official staff holidays. physician of your choice may be made in person or by telephone — 471-3082. Clinic hours are 8:00 a.m. to 5:45 p.m. daily Monday through Friday, E M ER G EN C Y PH O N E 478-5711 APPO IN TM EN T PH O N E 471-3082 ayment of your fees at registration entitles you to the following: 1. Medical services of staff physicians. 2. Routine medications and dressings. 3. Routine laboratory, physical therapy, and electrocardiographic services. 4. Administrations of preparations prescribed by your personal physician. 5. Specialty care as deemed necessary by referral only and as authorized by the Health Center, but not including care for chronic conditions, removal of tonsils, repair of chronic nasal conditions, etc. 6. Operating room service and anesthetic materials, for urgent surgery. 7. Room, board, and staff nursing service for: 5 days hospitalization in a 6-week summer term; 7 days hospitalization in a 9-week summer term; 14 days hospitalization in a 12-week summer session or the Fall or Spring semester. 8. Ambulance or car service to the Health Center when authorized by the Health Center. 9. Services of the Mental Health Section. Certain other services available to you require minimal charges, lf you require any of the following, you will be charged for: Special nursing care, tissue examinations, special laboratory determinations, intravenous medication, blood 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Diagnostic X-ray studies. Services of a surgeon, an anesthesiologist, or special consultant. transfusions, special drugs. Prescriptions filled in the Health Center Pharmacy. Specialized diagnostic studies such as arteriograms, myelograms, mammograms. Pre-marital and food handlers examinations. Room and board for hospitalization in excess of allowed days. Further details are published in Appendix C, General Information Bulletin. Your Health Center can provide the great majority of any required medical care. However, it is strongly urged that you avail yourself of adequate health insurance to cover unexpected and unpredictable emergency situations. Editorial^ On Ransom It w as in El Paso w h e re H a r r y R a n s o m was a p p o i n t e d C h a n c e l l o r o f the University of Texas System. It was in El Paso w her e he a n n o u n c e d the con clusion o f his d is ti ng ui s h ed career as an a d m i n i s t r a t o r at the U n i ­ versity w h ic h ow es so much of its excellence to his efforts to fulfill the goal set for th in the Te xa s C on s tit u ti on : to p r o v i d e for a U ni v er si ty o f the first class. F o r those ef f o rt s we will always be in d e b te d to H arr y R an s o m . O n e can take Dr. R a n s o m ’s retir eme nt a n n o u n c e m e n t w i t h a feeling o f fulfillment, with k n o w l e d g e that the academic, m o n e ta r y and e n r o l l m e n t g r o w t h s o f this I ni- versitv d u r i n g his tenu re ha ve left it a first-rate institution. But there is also a fe el ing o f t r e p i d a ti o n — w e face an u n p r e c e d e n t e d crisis in te ach er- stu den t ratios, b u d g e t a ry s h o rt c o m in g s an d e n r o l l m e n t explosion. T h e University, as o u r faculty a n d ad m in is tra ti on have cons tantly re m i n d e d us, is in a state of flux. T h e res ign a­ tions o f P re sid en t N o r m a n H a c k e r m a n a n d Ch an ce llo r H a r r y Ransom are only s y m p t o m s of this state. On Jordan Presi den t H a c k e r m a n ’s te m p o r a r y repla cem en t faces the grow ing co m p le x it y of a t t e m p t i n g to u p h o l d the b a ­ sically liberal n ot i on s o f an acad emic c o m m u n i t y and, at the same time, ap pea se the oft-times u nr ea s o n ab l e co ns er ­ vatism o f the U n iv e r s it y ’s m a in b en ef a ct o r — the public. F o r this reason w e mu st carefully scrutinize the a p ­ p o i n t m e n t of Dr. Bryce J o r d a n as P re s id en t A d Interim, a job he will h o l d for a year, an d possibly more. Jord an is a ca pa ble a d m in is tr a t o r an d a distinguished acad em ic in his field ( m us ic ol og y ). H e has been of fe re d several pr esidential positions at his relatively y o u n g (45) agC ' H is ex p eri en ce in the office of Vi ce-President for S tu de nt Affairs has e q u i p p e d him for the most i m p o r t a n t of all relation sh ips w h i c h a pres iden t must have today — his rela tio n sh ip wi th students. J o r d a n filled a new' office w hen he beca me Vi ce-Pre­ sident for S tu d e n t Affairs, a n d he m a d e his share of mis­ takes in b r e a k i n g in the office, most notably in deal ing w ith th e Texa s U n i o n Board. Lately, h o w e v e r , he has come into an agreeable u n d e r ­ st a n d i n g of th e stud ent m o o d on campus. T h i s was ev i­ d e n c e d particularly in the tension-filled wreck at the end o f th e the b r i n k o f co nf ron ta tio n. Jo rd an , w o r k i n g th r o u g h the p r e ­ sident, pr ov id ed teach-ins w hic h h e l p e d ease the tension d u r i n g the final tw o days of the last semester w h e n the University stoo d on the cam pu s with the week. T h e fact is clear that J o r d a n is the best ad m in is tr a t o r o n c a m p u s to step in and assume the co m p le x roles of the p r e s id e n t until a p e r m a n e n t one can be found. H e has u n ­ equiv oca lly stated that he has no intent io n of h o ld i n g the job p e r m a ne n tl y. W e are sure th a t there are those w h o are d i s ap p oi nt ed with J o r d a n ’s a p p o i n tm e n t , mainly because o f his a p p a r e n t trad it io nal ism a n d conservative image. T h e y need not be r e m i n d e d that the office of pres ide nt at this University has nev er be en a bas ti on of liberalism. T h e r e are those w h o are w o r r ie d th a t J o r d a n w ill too readily buckle u n d e r to the hard -line attitudes o f the Board o f Regents, especially the cha ir m an w h o takes such d e ­ li g ht in u s u r p i n g the p r e s id e n t’s p o w e rs occasionally. W e are duly co nc er ned wit h b o t h these aspects o f J o r d a n ’s personality. Bu t as critics on all aspects of the University, we feel th a t J o rda n deserves the chance to pr ov e himself. U n ­ the days d o u b t e d l y he will have a m p le o p p o r t u n i t y in ahea d. T he Summer T exan Student Newspaper at UT-Austin EDITOR .......................................................................... Andy Yemma MANAGING EDITOR ...................................................John Watkins ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR .......................Lyke Thompson ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR ....................................Dave Helfert SPORTS EDITOR ..................................................... Richard Lynch AMUSEMENTS EDITOR .........................................Don McKinney Issue News E ditor............................................................................. Cliff Avery News Assistants .................................. Bill Kellough, Eddie Kennedy Assistant Sports Editor ....................................................................... Ti™ Sisk Make-Up Editor .......................................................................... Lynne Flocke Wire Editor .................................................................................... Connie Smith Copy Editors .................................................... Debby Bay, Sandy Rosenfield those of O olnlons expressed those of in The Sum m er T ex an a re the editor o r of th e w rite r of the article and are not n e c e ssa rily th e U niversity a d m in istratio n or the B oard of Regents. The Sum m er Texan, a student, news- naoer at the U niversity of Texas ai Austin. Is published by T exas Student Publications, Inc.. D raw er D . Univer* city Station, Austin, T exas. 78712. The is published Tuesday. Sum m er Texan Thursday and Friday ex cep t holiday periods June through A u g u st Second- class postage paid a t A ustin. N ews contributions will be by telephone (471-5244), a t th e accepted editorial a t o r the (J R 103). office news laboratory • J B. 102). Inouiries concem - in the delivery should be made ing J. B. 107 (471-5244) and advertising in J. B. I l l (471-3227). The 'T e x a n The national adv ertisin g represent- ative of The S um m er Texan is National Educational A dvertising Service. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y.. 1001<. The Associated P ress and The New York Tim es News Service. The Texan is a m em ber of »he Associated Collegiate P ress, The Southwest Journalism Con- ference and the T exas Daily N ew spaper Association. subscribes to 9* 4 Tuesday, June 2, 1970 THE SUM M ER TEXAN .. i i ■_ •. In my war of attrition, comrade, am I the attrifor or the attrifee?f Guest viewpoint Outreach' organizing By RAY FLUGEL Outreach < hairrrtan For more than six years peace demonstrations have boon going on. Kent State and Cambodia have come and gone. Here our own strike, demonstration and march is past. Yet the Vietnam war continues and threatens to expand into a conflict engulfing all of Asia, if not the world. The war will end only when the so-called “Silent Majority" raises its voice against the war and demands that it end, and end quickly. Students must now go into the communities, educate these people about Vietnam — for Hie is dreadfully ignorant of the reasons that cause us to oppose the war — and then organize them into a strong, viable political force. Silent Majority Congress To this end, Outreach, a local chapter of The Movement for a (MNC was New organized at, and largely by, Princeton University last month) has been formed, Outreach and MNC seek the war by to end bringing direct political pressure to bear on Congress. supporting Our first step along these lines is door-to-door canvassing of Austin asking people to sign a p e t i t i o n the McGovem-Hatfield amendment to end the war (chis amendment to the military procurement bill in­ would end U. S. combat volvement in Indochina by the end of 1970 and would bring all American troops home by June 30, 1971). Also, Outreach is set­ ting up a speakers committee Which will seek speaking engage­ ments with local churches and civic groups. Following a congressional vote on McGovern-Hatfield, Outreach will convert to direct political action by working either for or against U, S. Rep. J. J. (Jake) Texas P i c k l e legislators, according their stand on the war (all members of the House of Representatives this s t a n d November). re-election other and for to For these efforts to be success­ ful, Outreach needs mass in­ volvement of University students now. Is Outreach organized to four nights a week, canvass Monday through Thursday. We meet on the Texas Union patio and on these nights at six o’clock. Join us — your effort is needed. Transportation canvassing i n s t r u c t i o n s are provided. people also Outreach tele- talented in p h o n i n g , and political research. Speakers are the speaker's com­ needed for mittee, leader-organizer positions are open on the canvas­ sing crews. needs recruiting, fund-raising and the If you want to help end Vietnam war, come by the Out­ reach booth outside of Gregory Gym Tuesday and Wednesday, give us your name and what you can do. lf you can’t come by, send a postcard to: Ray Flugel, 1714 E. Woodward No. 212, Austin, Texas, 78741. COMMIT YOURSELF! James Reston Graduates explain facts (c) 197# > 5 T im es New* S ervice is the WASHINGTON-— This season when the President and members of his Cabinet usually show up at the university the facts graduation exercises to explain of life to the departing scholars, but this year things arc a little dif* ferent. The graduates arn the explaining facts of life to them. W Ii W * 4 ^ * ^ ' v if - \ I y v-U— ■ not CUI i Tile President a n d most members of t h e accordingly, Cabinet. comm i ting are themselves in advance, and avoiding the main academic war zones this year. Vice- President Agnew is speaking at the Vest Point commencement, Secretary of Defense the Air Force Academy, and Laird at Secretary of HEW Robert Finch, in an adventure of unexampled bravery, will be talking at Arizona State, San Diego State and Ohio State. But Attorney General Mitchell, and Secretaries Rogers, Kennedy and Romney are sitting this one out, and the rest of them are avoiding the rebellious liberal eastern front. the platform, Who can blame them? Commencement used to be merely a bore; now, with tile they Attorney General on could be a riot. The Vice-President and the Secretary of Defense should be safe enough at the military academies, whore the they can get air cover, but even President could have a hard time at most of the large universities in the nation. Considering the level of past official com­ mencement oratory, most of it constructed out of old department handouts by weary press agents, this year’s drought could be a welcome relief, but it really is disgraceful the members of that the President and his official family can no longer go on to most largf> campuses in the land with assurance of civility or even security. This is one of the oddities of our present legal system. In recent years, the Congress has enacted specified federal remedies for interference with the right to employment, to housing, to vote — bu? no adequate remedies for interfering with the citizen's most fundamental rights under the First Amendment. that When tile Eisenhower Commission on tile in Causes and Prevention of Violence America recently made an extensive com­ pendium of federal civil rights laws, it there was only one ancient found even statute attempted, however that to deal with government inadequately, denials of the First Amendment rights of free speech and press, the right of peace­ able assembly and the right to petition for the redress of gr.evances. And there was no statute whatever to deal with the private bully-boys who break up or shout down Cabinet members or private citizens making perfectly legal public speeches. Fortunately, there is now a bipartisan to correct this oversight, Rep. effort William M. McCullough, the wise, ranking Republican member of the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. Hate Beggs, the Democratic whip agreed on a bill federal court injunctions and damage suits against both official in­ and private the exercise of First terference with from Louisana, have that would authorize Amendment rights. This bill, entitled the First Amendment Freedoms Act, would authorize federal injunctive for damages and court suits relief against any official or private person seriously preventing another person from exercising his constitutional right even to talk nonsense. Thus, under the Beggs-McCullough bill. a sheriff’s posse would be liable if it broke up a legal meeting of the Black Panthers, and equally Ute Black Panthers would be subject they broke up a speech by a member of the President's Cabinet, or Gov. Maddox of Georgia. to damages if Tl:is may be going a long way to protect tilings as commencement spoaki-rs, such considering that we used to think there should be a law against all of them, but the present guerilla warfare against free speech has clearly gone a bit far. the right The trouble is that everybody agrees with the principle of freedom provided freedom applies to his own gang, and not to those other characters on the oUier side. But the founding fathers or that’s not what the Eisenhower Commission or McCullough and Boggs had in mind. The idea is that everybody has to speak out without being blocked by die police or timid university officials, or campus thugs who talk like Communists and act like Fascists, or anybody else. And maybe by next year’s graduating class, if Milton Eisenhower, Bill McCullough and Hale Boggs get a fair hearing, we may have the President and his official family and anybody else the students want, back on the big campuses again. Dutch women succeeding B> BERNARD WEINRAUB (c> 1970 NY Tim es News Service T h e A M S T E R D A M , Netherlands — They sit on bicycles and whistle at men. They swarm into the offices of s e d a t e women's magazines dressed as cleaning women. They sip beer at men’s bars, light cigarettes for startled customers and ask the patrons to sat on their laps. “To succeed you must be amusing,” said 25-year-old Sofie LaRiviere, flaxen-haired trim, psychology student and a mem­ ber of the burgeoning women's liberation movement here. “We are amusing. We succeed.” Since its start four months ago the movement has grown into the most successful — and most endearingly militant — women’s liberation group in Europe. From 2,500 to 3,000 students, housewives and workers in such cities as A m s t e r d a m , Rotterdam and Anaheim have actively joined the “Dolle Minas,” or Mad Minas, named after Wilhelmina (Mina) Drucker, a Nineteenth-Century women’s emancipator in Holland. “ We are not against men,” Corry Ehlen, a 23-year-old stu­ dent, said in the frenetic second- floor Dolle Mina headquarters on the Herengracht, a busy student quarter near downtown Amster­ dam. “We the groups in the United States are too serious, too angry, think perhaps “We are serious and angry also,” said Miss Ehlen. “But this is covered with humor — so society will notice and our cause will grow. “After all,” she added, smiling, “making people laugh is the best way of waking people up to the absurdity of our position in society.” Like their militant sisters in France, Britain and the United States, the Dolle Minas seek to destroy the image of women as dependent, domestic figures. In Holland they press for equal job legal opportunities, equal pay, and free abortions and the break­ down of the traditional roles of men and women. Tile first major demonstration in Amsterdam attracted wide at­ tention in Europe. The militants, angry about “ wolves’’ who stand on comers and whistle at girls in miniskirts, struck back. They sat on tricycles and b e s i d e bridges whistling and hooting at startled men. “ Why can't women make this kind of advance to men?” Miss Ehlen asked. “ Why must it al­ ways be the other way?" In the last four months the Dolle Minas have marched into the offices of women’s magazines dressed in black stockings and shabby clothes and hats. “Stop the dependent-wo- perpetuating shouted, man image’” they passing out leaflets to editors and secretaries. Like most women’s groups — militant or not — the young radi­ cals have also squabbled, broken into and whispered angrily about one another. factions One group hopes to continue with humorous demonstrations to underscore radical aims. Another seeks direct, militant action such as strikes and demonstrations. “One wants evolution —■ the oilier wants revolution,” Miss LaRiviere said as she sat in her central apartment the station with her boy friend, Ewout van der Hoog, a 29-year- old graduate student. near Van der Hoog smiled. “I agree with what the radical women want,” he said slowly. “It is a movement for the liberation of society, not just women. You see, most of these women like men. very are feminine,” he added. “They are really such nice girls.” ‘ ‘ T h e y really Art Buchwa/d Tipster trouble WASHINGTON — You u s e d to m eet them everywhere — at cocktail parties, dinners, the beach club and college re­ unions. they came Although in a l l shapes a n d forms, they had o n e thing in common. They were the people w h o had invested in Xerox when it was $9 a share, Litton Industries when it was SIO and G u l f it and Western when was SI4. They used to tell you how they had first heard about Texas Instruments when it was selling for a song, how they had gotten into Ling Temco Vought through a fraternity- brother; and how they had bought Penn Central, Computer Data, Fair­ child Camera against the advice of their brokers. They weren’t unfriendly people. They al­ ways had time to chat with you and tell you how well they were doing in the m ar­ ket, They implied that they had a sixth sense about investing in 'Wall Street Without feel intending to do it. c c ' e t c ” they made you a as breadwinner, and a sucker for holding onto a salaried job. But in tho last few months something has happpened to these people. For one thing, you hardly soc them any more and when you do they’re very quiet. Their clothe- have gotten seedy—the bounce has gone fi >m their walk—and when they hold a drink their hands shake a lot. I nu ir ’n on* the other d; y on the plane. His name was Si napkin. The last time we flew up to New' York, a few years ago, Simpkin was <1 upping names Ike Planet Od, MGM and Boeing Aircraft. This time I hardly recognized him when I sat down. His hair was completely white, his eyes were bloodshot and he had a tic in his r.ght cheek. “How are things going?” I asked pleas­ antly. He raised his fist, but the stewardess came by and asked him to fasten his safely belt. Simpkin wiped his br'»w. “ I’m sorry.” he said, “but National General is down to 2 G . “ “Oh," I said. “ I didn’t know. Were you big in National General? ’ “ Not as big as I w s in Commonwealth wk the m arket." I said. “But ive been some a good time to i Y >ur B it’ sign I’m going to kill lf. n .rn “ T cned. n’t everything." low mu i I was o n ^ impkin said. vo IT50.0^0?” auld have never known “ I Un“ od and Chrvsler. n’t foil *5 IYC I understand there reverses. Would this buv anything?" “As soon as the ‘F gees off,” Simpkin sa you.” “Grab hold of you “ After all, money W “ Do you know bm worth on paper? “ A let, I’m su: “Would you be I whistled. “I it.” now?" ' Do yk it ." I replied. “ ’You SOB," Ksmpk.n \ led. “you prob- a savings and ably had jour rn one loan bank all this time “As a matter of f r did. And you know something Simt When I opened the account, they gave my wife a 36-piece set of Pyroware dishes ‘ ?t Simpkin cried all the rest of the way to New York. D .s ’.ributed >n P. Ca. GO:NS ID / WALK CLEAR ACROSS DuJM O LBC SOMEONE J L i I / A "CHU -iii- P E lT E B IU N n p H E N fW ' don't PATTIS TEAM 11 Th EV A s k HOO NEEDS IT TO Pl A i'? I T ----------------- TH EV PON T NEED \ THEN LET HER ME J m NEED / COME AKP SET M V 6L0VE / IT HERSELF i Tm W Whos saving Cambodia? IIMMRliuiWMMMIHlRBHttiMMRWMRfMMn ie ) IDT') N Y Tim es N ew s S e rvice WASHINGTON — Vice-Presi­ dent Ky, who is South Vietnam's Agnew, has called the statement troops that South Vietnamese would withdraw from Cambodia when America's troops did “ a sil­ ly argument of silly people.” This is a harsh way for an ally ’to speak of P re ­ sident Nixon, who said on M ay 9 that he “ would expect that the South Vietnamese would come out approximately at the same that we do because when we come out, our logistical support and air support will also come out with them.” time But will they? That is a more important obvious matter than K y ’s manners. Cer­ sources here are now tain less and guardedly explaining that while American combat troops will be out of Cambodia by Ju ly I, as the repeatedly promised by Administration, a strong South Vietnamese force may well have to remain in Cambodia, with the support of American air strikes from bases in Thailand as well as South Vietnam. And while Ky boasted that Saigon's forces had the capability to fight in both countries, the fact is that they could not fight in either without American supplies of every kind. This is precisely the nightmare that motivates the sponsors of the Cooper-Church amendment, to the m ilitary sales b ill: the amend­ ment, which the Administration is prohibit spending appropriated funds to in Cam­ keep American forces bodia, to pay for the operations of advisers or mercenaries from other countries in Cambodia, or opposing, would to conduct, “ any combat activity in the air above Cambodia after June 30.” Vietnamese would by then be to sw eep them strong enough again without American troops. in personally; On the face of it, this does no more than guarantee legis­ latively what Mr. Nixon has pro­ mised fact, h o w e v e r , the Cooper-Church amendment is designed also to prevent a strong-willed ally like the Thieu-Ky government in Saigon from dragging or per­ suading Mr. Nixon into continuing m ilitary operations in Cambodia. Why W'ould such operations he needed? If the sweep through the border sanctuaries has been as successful as the Administration proclaims, Communis? m ilitary activities wall have been badly set back for months to come. This is uh* Administration’s own eiaim, and its high-level officers have contended that if the sanc­ renewed tuaries the South problem became later on, a But the statement of K y and other South Vietnamese, as well as a State Department spokes­ man's concession this week that “ determinations have not finally been made" about when South Vietnamese troops will withdraw don't square with the hit-and-run kind of Cambodian operation the A d m i n i s t r a t i o n originally described. Therefore, backers of the Church-Cooper amendment have been strengthened in their fears that the United States will he dragged, lf it does not jump into a far wider war. The Administration has insisted that it has moved only to clean out the sanctuaries, not to sup­ port the Cambodian m ilitary government of Lon No!. Yet, if it is now to acquiesce in long­ term South V i e t n a m e s e operations in Cambodia, with American air and logistic sup­ port, the reason can only be to support wreak as it is. the Lon No! regime * That means, at the least, one more puppet or client state the United States will have agreed to prop up. It could lead, at the outside, to fulfillment of K y ’s proposal for “ an anti-communist front consisting; of Cambodia, Thailand, Laos ami South Viet­ nam” that would “ guarantee the security of all of Southeast Asia.” Continuing South Vietnamese o p e r a t i o n s in Cambodia. more ever, raise the possibility in some emergency the that United States might have to put its own troops back in for rescue or assistance; or that Thieu and Ky, with apparently their boundless ability to lead Ameri­ can administrations by the nose, might at some point persuade Mr. Nixon that “just one more” in Cambodia American effort would he decisive. All of this is put in chilling by Mr. Nixon s perspective reported rem ark to retired Ad­ m iral W. R. Srnedberg, two days before he told the nation on April 30 about the supposedly limited sweep into the sanctuaries. The admiral quoted Mr. Nixon as saying: “ I am not going to U t Cambodia go down the drain as some of my advisers w’ant me to do.” It is really no wonder, then, lhat the Church-Cooper amend­ ment is believed to command a m ajority in the Senate: even Mr. N i x o n ’ s opposition the amendment, in the face of his raises questions owrn pledges, about his in intentions Cambodia. real to nmiitiii!nii{it!iiti!i!iiini)!i!i!iitHn[»ti!iiuni!iitnftiflnif!nnt)iitf!!i))t!fiii!i>!iit!)i!iHi!ti}(fi:!if!i}fn!riit!!tRn!nt)i(n!;tr!tni!iiR)f!ntmrnRimt The firing line Nixon kidding only himself To the editor: I hope no one watching the President’s news conference of May 8 missed the significance of to him one question directed concerning the possibility of a coalition government for South Vietnam as for a negotiated peace. No, said the President, we won't accept a settlement that means the over­ throw of a duly elected govern­ ment, or the imposition of a government against the w ill of the South Vietnamese people. the basis is the Just who the President kidding besides himself? The “ elections" that put K y and Thieu in power were a farce that saw the losers jailed, and soldiers standing at the ballot boxes to peasants wade “ help” incredibly complex through an balloting procedure. *a j(£ m ?a W O N M P A c W e R n ) H S V T A G M L C-P M V IA L E P O P * * 1 s j T ' iS A T I P R t S E N T I R A G i v . MA e t l i I {TM P 6 £ R AN TM C A r I d Q 'e L A D £ E R j J P A 5jj|% N o V e M r u L E H P I T A P ' E S B m 'E A ■ a 'n ’ A M CROSSWORD PUZZLE 5 aevp'ap* 6-W the-aw 7-Nag £ FcefcVshesby New .-aland pa-rot •Swiss river Secret a^ent •Symbol tor nickel Note of sea;# Possessive pronoun Compass point Domesticate » Lane Ireland Soak Outfit 22 33 Possesses ACROSS i -Ordinal 4 rood a S-Tufkitf (atbr.) I ? a 23 ! Ish sa UC* 24 Harvest 15‘V j I* vessel 26 Au*.-ary 28-Move sidewise 20 lam b's pen nan* 19 2 2 21 Baby’oniaii * , J 1 17 de.ty 22-Unusual 23-Preposition 27-Through 25 29-Regret 26 30 Mi*, ss dough 2 31 -Three-toed sioth 28 32 Pronoun 2? 33 Pronoun 34*Proneun 35-Hitr.die 37-Rodent 38 too*' Ice part 39-Chit kens 40-Roman bronze 41-Be! v fetter 4 2-Sh ade 44 Adhesive ’I TTPI 18 HITT 21 ryy„ A rnM 16 v a 19 36P rirler’s measure 37Retreat 3 8 -Pounding instrument 40-Poker stai*eS AI Parent (colloq.) 41 Preposition 44 Entreaty 4P Row 46 Verve 47 Guido’S high note 48-Title of respect 49-Place 50 River island I 2 3 5 6 7 8 9 to l l 14 17 30 substance 47*Required 51-Sesame 52-Hc!d on property 53-Great Lake 54-Meadow 55-Academic subjects 56-Bristie 57-Sea eagle DOWN I -Taps around 2 Turkish regiment 3 Stroll aimlessly 4-Foundation 26 22 SS: 23 24 25 26 27 28 F P T 29 32 36 U v 47 48 49 31 35 39 v X 52 55 40 43 53 56 XX* •.VV 34 . V V '•'■I ■-%%' 43 46 XXX 3 i 37 C \v 44 50 S B I SSS38 n o r SS 51 54 X v 57 C lair. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc, J will not be able to extract any deal but an ignominious with­ drawal. The closer we get to the 1970 and ’72 elections, the less reason the Communists have to bargain; they can lie low, wait and take the whole ball of w'ax when the American people have had enough. The time for a negotiated peace via coalition may be passed, but it certainly would not harm any­ thing to present this proposal at Paris, coupled with a cease-fire proposal. If Nixon and his generals dawdle around looking for a m ilitary panacea, the ultimate result could ultimately be only more American lives shod needlessly, with no improve­ ment in the situation. there under Nixon may not have sent the troops there, but he Is keeping them intransigent conditions on our part which guarantee that their blood will be shed in vain. On Nixon's hands, from this point on. Mark W. Stevens Junior, Economics Day care center T o th e e d it o r : I have attorned several mect- Sftgs of Women’s Liberation and W o m e n ' s United (Radical Alliance) in which a strong case has been made for a day care the Uni­ center provided by versity. However, getting enough outspoken supporters is a major problem. Some research has been done Liberation by Women’s and Women’s United which indicates that many students, faculty and staff arc interested in a free day care center. Student support, hopefully, can be rallied for the day care program, but faculty and staff must also demonstrate their desire for this program if it is to arouse the attentions of the administration. But the research, as mentioned above, has indicated also that many workers feel intimidated by the University System and will not openly support the day care plan. Also, some workers fear no matter how connections, small, with the aforementioned organizations working center. toward a day care n o w actively I What is needed, then, is support of the day care proposal by* other organizations on campus, wiioso names and activities are not so controversial to the masses. Tile ; more participants involved in an I th e ; Issue usually intensifies i m p o r t a n c e of that Issue, especially to our favored silent ma jority. W o m e n ’ s Liberation and and (Radical j W o m e n ’ s United Alliance) post their meeting dates in The Texan and in the Texas students, Union. Any wives, f a c u ’ t. y representatives are urged attend to voice your ideas and opinions for this entire, I hope campus project for a free day care center provided by the University. organization j to j Mrs. Sondra Turner Brackenridge Vpartnients SUMMER SALE I SHOE SALE I BUCKLE SHOES British Tan and Black • • • Regular 34.00 Sale 27.20 Shell Cordovan Regular 40.00 Sale 32.00 A lliga to r Regular 125.00 Sale 100.00 Bennies British Tan Regular 30.00 Sale 19.90 Shell C o rd o van Regular 33.00 Sale 26.40 Shell Cordovan Saddles Al! Black and Brown & Black Regular 36.00 - Sale 24.90 U Throats— British Tan, Brown, Black Regular 36.00 Sale 24.90 C H E C K O U R N E W RATES ! THE DUVAL VILLA LU X U R IO U S APARTM EN T LIVIN G O N L Y 12 BLO C K S FRO M THE UNIVERSITY • FURNISHED • COVERED PARKING • ALL BILLS PAID • CABLE TV • S W IM M IN G POOL • RECREATION ROOM • ICE M AC H IN E • BARBEQUE PITS • EXTRA STORAGE • ELEVATORS • TOTAL ELECTRIC KITCHENS W ITH DISHW ASHER SHIRT SALE PANT SALE Best Known Maker of Button-Down Tapered Summer Pants Shirts in America Blue, W hite Yellow, Stripes, All Cotton and Permanent Press. Solids and Patterns. Sizes 28 thru 40. Great for Entire Summer R EG U LA R 8.50 to 10.00 R EG U LA R 13.00 SA LE 5.97 — 3 for 16.50 R EG U LA R 17.00 SA LE 7.97 SA LE 9.97 LO C A T ED 4305 D UVAL— 454-9475 CALL OR CO M E BY! SUIT SALE import Coats-SALE Year Round W eight Dacron- W ool — Natural Shoulder — Stripes — Solids — Plaids — R E G U L A R 85.00 SA LE 67.97 71.97 78.97 90.00 180.00 SU M M ER C O A T S A N D SOLID BLAZERS. R E G U L A R — 60.00 - 65.00 SA LE 39.97 BAWkAMERICARai ^ster^hafqej B R A N D N E W ! T R A V I S HOUSE A P A R T M E N T S (OFF RIVERSIDE DRIVE IN TOWN LAKE AREA) NOW ACCEPTING SUMMER AND FALL LEASES # Shuttle Bus Service to University # Swimming Pool # Party Room & Bar # All Electric Kitchen # Dishwasher and Disposal # Adequate Parking & Spacious Courtyards # Free Cable T.V. # Monthly Beer Bust by Management RATES For Fully Furnished All Bills Paid 2 BR ■ Vh Bath • i95. - 2 Bath - '210. 1600 ROYAL CREST DRIVE (Just Oft Riverside) — 442-9720 $ \ 2350 Guadalupe— on the drag Tuesday, June 2, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN. Page 5 Hooton Stars as Texas W ins District Six Title It w as a strange sort of series. The stuff that stories are m ade of. A young, aggres­ sive, upstart team from downstate cam e up to challenge the favorites on their home ground. They pressed the cham pion s into the corner and then let them out. Pan Am erican, an up-and-coming baseball team , .scrapped W’ th Texas for two gam es last F rid ay afternoon but lost the first one on a p air of walks and the second one be­ cause of a bad bunt. Texas got 30 hits and 16 w alks and scored l l runs, but left 36 wrm; Pan Ana cenHrfieldor back into first safely p'ck-off play started h Street. John Langorhai Busy day? Stop at McDonald’s, 2818 GUADALUPE D on t Have Time to Horse Around? WE HAVE 3 O T H E R L O C A T IO N S . McDonald's 795u BU R N ET KO. 5355 N. 303 E. O L T O R F IN T E R R E G IO N A L STUDENTS! THE W O O D W A R D A P A R rME Convenience, Low Prices." But you know tha else dees too!) T E X A S 2, P A N A M E R I C A N I Burt Hooton pitching an ex- N EW RECORD SHOP STEREO TAPES S/100 i e I8Trac< C A SSETTE TAPES ........... $<500 0 e< B A R G A IN CENTER 411 East 43rd W OODW ARD APTS I W w T AT Munti Cartridge City AUSTIN, TEXAS 1601 S A N J A C IN T O A O N E S H O T DEAL PORTABLE A M , FM R A D IO , CASSETTE RECORDER, PLAYER SAVE $30. N O W * I®95 W e Also Ha e Pre-recorded and Blank Cassette Tapes Available d see our new car CASSETTE PLAYER SAVE $20. S 0 0 95 While here, you will also see other new units; the lat­ est in styles , . . the lowest in prices. Take advantage of our straight 8 track unit for the SP EC IA L price of W e specialize i installation of ail units, lf you have one . . . C O M E M U N T Z CARTRIDGE CITY 1601 San Jacinto Austin, Texas GR 7-1425 C re a te d by John Robert* Choose Your Diamond C IL ............ 29.50 '3 CT. .......... 39.50 !/2 CT.................. 99.50 STAY INFORMED AS Y O U RELAX THIS S U M M E ! WHEN YOU REGISTER, SUBSCRIBE TO THE SUMMER TEXAN or come by J.B. 107 after registration & subscribe THIS YEAR EXPANDED TO 3 FULL ISSUES A WEEK TUESDAY • THURSDAY • FRIDAY $150 p u b licatio n of TEXAS STU D EN T PUBLICATIONS, INC IWewlpy, June 2, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN Tim Sisk Dugout Talk Tile Texas baseballer? may be without the ser­ vices of pitcher Jam es Street when they journey to Omaha for the College World Series, iune 12 to lf). Street suffered a groin muscle pull for the third time this season in Friday's second game with Pan American. Coach Cliff Gustafson said, “ We know from past experience that the injury will he slow to heal.” Third baseman David Chalk, who missed the District Six playoffs because of illness, is still in bed at home in Dallas. Chalk, the leading Long­ horn hitter at .354, hopes to be back in Austin when the team begins preparations for the world series on Wednesday. Southland Conference Swings Weak Bat Apparently the Southland Conference winner now receives an automatic invitation to the District Six playoffs. But after two years of playoff com­ petition the Southland champion has yet to score a run. Last year, Trinity dropped two straight to Texas. IOO and 5-0. Th s year it was Arkan.<4as State that couldn’t find home plate, losing to both Pan American and Texas by 5-0. Tho visitors from the Ozarks ended their season with a 16-17 record. Lou Bagwell now has 18 stolen bases this year, a school record. Bagwell and David Hall have both eclipsed the old record for career hits. Bag­ wyn has 125 and Hall 119. What is the key to Burt Hooton’s success on the mound? “ He thows a knuckle-drop instead of a curve ball,” sayh Gustafson. Gustafson has 99 wins in his three years at Texas. In 13 seasons at South San Antonio High School he won seven state championships. No other Texas high school coach has won more than two. Jim m y Crouch filled in ably in the absence of Chalk last week. The junior from Port Arthur collected five hits in l l at bals, driving in three runs. Hooton isn’t known for his bat, hut maybe he can give tainting lessons. In the first game against Pan American, with the ’Horns down I J) in the bottom of the ninth, Hooton laid clown a perfect sacrifice bunt to advance runners to second and third. Four hours later, he lofted a squeeze bunt attempt over the heads of the charging Pan Am infielders, scoring David Hall with the winning run in the second game. “ They sure carne at the right time,” said Gustaf­ son about Texas’ four consecutive double plays in Frid ay’s second game. The twin killings erased Pan Am threats in the seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth innings. What did Gustafson say to Tommy Harmon before the 3-2 pitch with two outs, the bases loaded and score tied in the bottom of the ninth? “ I told him that the pressure was on the pitcher, that I would rather have him called out on strikes than for him to go for a bad pitch.” Pan Am pit­ cher Tony Barbosa threw a curve that was a shade inside, giving Texas a 2-1 victory. Chase Continues for Wheatley Stars Basketball coach Leon Black says it’s between Texas and the University of Houston in the recuit- ment race for Houston Wheatley’* “ Big Three” — Dwight Jones, Lawrence Johnson and Allen Batre. The latest basketball signee is Steve Slaton, a 6-2*2 all-district guard from Dallas Samuel!, Slaton averaged 23.5 points per contest last season, hitting 50 percent of his field goal attempts. He is the sixth roundballer to sign with Texas. Track Team Awaits NCAA Meet Seven Longhorn thinclads have qualified for the NCAA Track and Field Championships, June 18 to 20 in Des Moines, Iowa. Mike Mosley has the fourth fastest time in the nation in the 880. Byrd Baggett will run in the 220, Dave Morton and Stan McDaniel in the 410, and Fred Groper in tile mile. Shot putter Randy Nichols and the mile relay team also will be entered. Running the mile relay will be McDaniel, Mosley, Morton and Mickey Ryan. In the Meet of Champions Friday in Pasadena, Cooper ran a career-best 4:03.5 to win the mile. Freshman Alan Thomas won the discus with a 166-3. Nichols, who ranks fourteenth nationally in the shot, was in Kansas last week working out with K U ’s Steve Wilhelm. “ Randy didn’t have anyone to lift weights with down here,” said Jack Daniels, assistant track coach. Standings A m erican League F as t W L iv . I ret. SSS _ Baiunv-T* N ew Y ork Washington D etroit Bottom C leveland . . . . . . . .3 8 ...............2*. ......... 22 ................... 21 ..................20 ............ u; W i‘*i . . . ........ rn M Inn asoka ............. 30 California Oakland ............ 2., Kan aas C ity Chiragn Milwaukee . . . . . . . . . . i s i v 23 27> 27 13 ir j r< 27 no Be* alt* r- 47~ 444 yon . . 1 J -I > i‘333 S o G a m e . irk s d a lrd N a tio n a l I (' ax tie R a* t W Chica sn ..........2 .' ,\>u york .......... 2,‘< Pr.mhurgh ........ 23 ........... .2! St Louis P hilad elp h ia ......... 30 Montreal ............... T i t c n ,4£9 4tr? . 426 4 A a att S y Hoy Wr^t . . . 29 ...21 Re Milt* * ★ N O T I C E ! W E G IV E H A IR C U T S IN A N Y STYLE AND CUT TO PLEASE YOU, O U R CUSTO M ER. Parking Available ★ ★ SUM M ER SPEC IA L — .25c OFF Regular Price of $2.00 W ith This Ad. A - O K B A R B E R S H O P 6 0 7 W . 2 9 th — Juit off Guadalupe M O H A W K X R -70 WIDE TRACK PREM IUM TIRE — 2 Plys of Rayon and 2 belts of Fiberglass Size E70-I4 (735 x 14) for set of 4 tires and your old ones. Also other sizes to H 70-1 5 SQC00 PLUS O O $9.72 F.E.T. BIG "S" Factory Tire Outlet 5005 BURNET RO AD (Next to Zuider Zee) • HENRY AN D BOB JACOBSON OFFER YOU 49 YEARS OF CO M BINED EXPERIENCE THE MOST COMPLETE MAN’S SHOP " ON THE DRAG" • Alterations FREE for the “Life of the Garment” • Free gift and mail w rapping • Complete shoe department • Master Charge, American Express and Bank Americard accepted J J e n r t f f Men’s Wear 2222 Guadalupe NEXT TO TEXAS THEATRE STORE HOURS Daily 9 to 5 p.m. Thursday Till 8:00 p.m. ' r n Baaaai t e w . .<■ autism I Playoff Results two champion, Texas will play Delaware, in District the opening round of the Col­ lege World Series. June 12 to 19 in Omaha, Neb. D istrict I: A three-team playoff beginning Thursday i n v o l v i n g Dartmouth, Providence and either Maine or Connecticut. D istrict 2: Delaware. D istrict 3: Florida State. District 4: A four-team playoff starting Thursday w i t h Minnesota, Notre Dam e, Southern Illinois and Ohio University. District 5: A rain-delaved playoff between Tulsa and Iowa State. District 6: Texas. D istrict?: Arizona. District R: HSC. Regents Approve Golf Team's Withdrawal The Board of Regents voted championships has been to of golfers, and which is in line Friday to withdraw the Univer­ medal-tvpe competition. Our with the competition of other sity's golf team from Southwest conference, over the years, had Conference competition. maintained a match-team play The decision was the result of a request by Athletic Director Darrell Royal and J. Neils Thompson, head of the Athletic Council. A statement issued by Royal and Thompson said: “ In our appearance before the Board of Regents of the Uni­ versity of Texas System we outlined briefly the actions of the Southwest Athletic Conference on golf competition. We explained that the present trend in other in NCAA and conferences competition, This type of com­ petition is now outmoded and is used in very few conferences and not even in our high schools. “ Since we would have difficulty in attracting good golfers with this the type of competition, Athletic Council recommended to the regents that the University of Texas at Austin withdraw from conference golf competition until such the conference adopts a program bf competition that w ill enable the development time as conferences and NCAA, We hope it will not be too long before the team returns to conference competition because w e a r e anxious the to participate conference programs as fully as possible. in “ It should be pointed out that this action on the part of the council is not related in any wray with the recent reprimand by the conference. Further, it should be pointed out that other schools in the conference do not participate in all programs of the con­ ference.'’ All-Star Game In Cincinnati NEW YORK (AP) — The 1970 league All-Star baseball major game will be played in Cincin­ nati’s new Riverfront Stadium aa scheduled, Ju ly 14, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn announced Monday. The commissioner said he had been assured by Frank Dale, president of the Cincinnati Reds, that Stadium would be available in time for in-park and the game with a1! playing in excellent shape. the Riverfront facilities Because of speculation that the stadium might not be ready, the commissioner on April 21 set a May 30 deadline for the Cin­ cinnati to advise him whether the new park would be ready. club 1512 L A V A C A DO YOUR THING IN LEATHER From Austin's Newest & Most Exciting Store. * THE LARGEST SELECTION O F FRINGE VESTS IN THE AUSTIN AREA. / V/. * FLOP HATS * FRINGE C O A T S * FRINGE PURSES * FRINGE BELT PO U C H W E A L S O FEATURE: * BELL BOTTOM LEVI'S * LEVI DRESS PANTS & OTHER DRESS PANTS * W ILDEST ASSO RTM ENT O F BOY-CUT LADIES STRETCH JE A N S IN THE AUSTIN A REA * C O W B O Y BOOTS BY: Tony Lama, Dan Post, Durango, Acme, and others * LA R G E ASSORTM ENT O F W ESTERN & M O D BELTS. * LA R G E SELECTION O F "H IP H U G G E R " LADIES W ESTERN PANTS. M A TC H UP THESE PANTS W IT H A BEAUTIFUL W ESTERN BLOUSE. This is your store. Come, Feel at Home and Brouse Around Tuesday, June 2, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN Peg* J Richard Lynch The Splendor in the Gross Nostalgia isn’t what it used to be. I have written for these .pages before. Before I learned to pass exams. Before I graduated. Before I got married. Before I had a child. Before I entered graduate school. Before I started work on my dissertation. Now I find that I have more to look back to. The old records of high school days return as hits out of the past; or worse, as new re­ leases to be enjoyed and bought by an­ other group of kids. I find myself listening with amazement as kids behind me waiting for the movie ‘Rebel to start say: “ Hey, man, great. Without a Cause’ is coming. Isn’t that the great flick with Marlon Brando and the motorcycles?” It’s as if I had climbed a mountain through the fog and when the haze cleared, there I was, at the summit, looking back at all those below me. And I sit and re­ member those days. And the fog. One of those I see behind me is my own daughter. A slim 3-year-old with blond hair and blue eyes. Last week I went to watch, along with other parents, a gymkhana. The people re­ sponsible for the gymkhana are Bee and Bill Crenshaw. Crenshaw looks like a Santa Claus. His wife is Goldilock’s grandmother. Together they husband a family of kids. They oper­ ate from a tin barn left over from World War II, but inside it has a homey grace. There are trampolines, mats, side saddles, parallel bars and balance beams. They run the Crenshaw Athletic Club. Their pro­ gram is designed to teach kids the rigors of gymnastics, a sport rigorous enough. The uniqueness of their program is that they take kids early. Not age 5, but age 3. fl snuck my kid in at 2l/2) The idea be­ hind this program is that: “Gymnastics is principally a sensory educational approach which can develop stronger and more effective perceptual concepts through body orientation and spa­ tial organization. The aims of our program are to integrate physical and mental acti­ vity; to bring about the development of physical fitness; and to attain gymnastic skills. In the eyes of our instructors every child is a distinct individual. Learning ex­ periences must be geared to his or her in­ nate ability to progress.” It was impressive. The little kids bounc­ ing on the trampoline or walking the ba­ lance beam, doing head stands and hand stands. Each exhibiting that enthusiasm so characteristic of young children. That enthusiasm that requires 12 years of public school to dampen. Maria Montessori pointed out many y ears. ago that children have an innate interest in learning. If left alone with their own motivation and given appropriate guidance they will develop quickly and independent­ ly. This true in cognitive as well as in phy­ sical areas. Now as I look at my own daughter work­ ing with colors or doing head stands, I re­ member the bright feeling of learning or doing something new’. And I see again that magic glow of life. “One generation passeth away, and an­ other generation cometh; but the earth abi­ ded forever. The sun also ariseth and the sun goeth down, and haseth to the place where he arose. The wind goeth toward the south and turneth about unto the north; it whirleth about continually and the wind re­ turned! again according to his circuits. “All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full; unto the place from whence the rivers come, thither they return again.” — Ecclesiastes Laissez-Faire Texas Wins Distr id ... (Continued from Page 6.) head and Alvarez was safely on. Shortstop Mike Duffey hit a long single down the left field line. Chute's ARCO Service Station COMPLETE AU TO M O BILE REPAIRS W E H O N O R Your University Goodyear Tire Dealer S&H Green Stamps Road Service W. 19th & San Antonio St. GR 8-3282 Next, Tyronne hit into a double play that advanced Alvarez to third. First baseman Al Pierce singled into right field to score Alvarez. Reggie Tredawav hit a single over second base. At this point, Coach Cliff Gustafson replaced Hardy with Nad Salazar, Salazar got Catcher Bo McNurlen to ground to end the inning. Pan Am was catching catching up, 3-2. In the top of the ninth, second baseman Tim Tully struck out, but pinch hitter Wilbur Gawlik walked. A pinch runner, Roel inserted. R o d r i g u e z , was Rodriguez was now in his first ball game of the season. Mike Tackett blooped a Texas League single over Langerhans’ head to Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service FACTO RY TRAINED Volkswagen Specialists The Only Independent VV/ Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs A r l d t ’s A u t o m o t i v e Service 7951 BURNET ROAD Across from Gulf Mart G L 2-0205 Closed Stlurday move Rodriguez to third. A pinch runner was inserted for Tackett. At this point, with Texas’ lead very much in jeopardy, Gustafson made a pitching change. He in his pitching ace, brought Hooton. Alvarez attempted to bunt. Tile umpire called the bail a strike, asserting that Alvarez tipped it. Alvarez protested, to no avail. On the next pitch, he hit it by Hall into left to score Rodriguez and tie the game up. The next batter, Duffey, hit back to Hooton to start a d ou ble play to end the inning with the scored tied 3-3. two For hitting the next innings, Hooton, pitching as if he had not already pitched nine innings, stopped Pan Am. In the bottom of the eleventh, Texas, which had been reliever Andre Rabouin, finally managed to put an end to the agony. Hall hit a 3-2 pitch atop Billygoat HOI, SGO feet away, but only got a ground rule double out of it. Ja c k Miller, after fouling a ball off the right field fence, grounded to out, advancing Hall third. Langorhans got an intentional pass. Pi telling too carefully to Amos, Robouin walked him to load the bases. With only one out, up cam e Hooton to sacrifice, On an 0-1 pitch Hooton squared around to bunt and bunted into the air. But alas for Pan Am: the pitcher and first baseman were charging, hard. There was no one there to catch the ball, which fell in for a single for Hooton, a win for Hooton, a win for Texas. you Buy mope than the eight time when you choose Every Role* watch it a unique example of fine contemporary watchmaking, supported by genuine Rolex service throughout the world. A s a franchised Rolex dealer, we’ll be proud to show you our selection. AT JOE KOEN& SON Since 1888 . . . Jewelers “ W here Austinites Shop With Confidence” Extended Terms Available 105 E. 6th Conveniently Located Just O ff the Avenue , th© , un-opart moot The un-apartment is apartment-style living without the hassle of cooking. W e cook for you and its good food too. (Unlimited seconds and steak every Saturday night.) THE UN-APARTMENT • A five minute walk to the center of campus. • Open visitation hours. • Sauna baths, swimming pool, game room. • Frustration room. • Co-ed floors. • N o sign outs/no hours. Come Together at the un-apartment, contains no cyclamates. rn i i COME TOGETHER DOBIE 2021 Guadalupe, Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 472-8411 Peg* a Tuesday, June 2, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN Library Schedules | Group Requests Aid In Finding President Tho University’s lib rary facilities w ill be available to students throughout the summer. In I most cases the library hours w ill differ from the fall and spring semester schedules. The revised | schedule is as follows: i I Unit I Academ ic Center rn Architecture I A rt I Barker Hist. Cen. I I I Biology | Bus. Adm.-ECO. Lib rary Hours, Summer Term , 1970 Mon.-Fri. 9-12 am;l-5 pm 8:30-12 am, 1-4:30 pm 9 am-5 pm C LB 6 D LB 201 Patterson 141 B E B 462 8-12 am 8-12 am 9-12 am 9 am-1 pm Room AC 414 A B 205 Art B. 13 Rat. 9-12 am closed closed Sun. closed closed closed closed closed closed 2-6 pm Archives Texas Coll. I I Chemistry I Classics S Documents I Education I Engineering I Geology I Journalism I Latin American I Law I Library School | **I/)an I Mat hematic* I Music i | Newspaper I Pharm acy | Physics-Astronomy I Reference Humanities Information D. Sorial Science Reserve Social Work Stark Library Textbook Chem. B. 219 W.H. I M B 13 U G L 301 T.H. 112 G.B. 302 J.B . 201 M .B. 316 Townes 215 M B. 323 M.B. 220 Ben. H. 214 U JH S-2 M.B. 6 Phar. 102 Phy.B. 401 M .B. 227 M .B. 218 M .B. 228 U G L 102 S.W .B, 126 M.B. 401 Wooldridge Hall 219 8 am-5 pm 8 am-5 pm 8 am-5 pm, 7-10 pm M-Th 8 am IO pm M-Th 8 am 16 pm Friday 8:30 am-5 pm 8 am-12:15 pm; 1:15-5 pm 9-12 am ,1-5 pm 8 am-11 pm 8 am-5 pm; 6:30-9:30 pm 8-12 am; 1-5 pm 8 am-5 pm 9 am-5:30 pm 8 am-mtidnight M-Th 8 am 6 pm Friday 8 am-6 pm; 7-10 pm 8 am-10 pm 8:30 am-5 pm 8 am-5 pm 7:30.9:30 pm M-Th 9-12 am; 1-5 pm 8:30-12 am; 1-5 pm 8:30 am-5 pm 8 am-10 pm 8:30 am-5 pm 6:30-10 pm 8 am-10 pm 8 am-10 pm 8 am-5 pm 7-9 pm Mon Thurs 9-12 am; 1-5 pm closed closed closed closed closed 8 am-5 pm 8-12 am closed 2-11 pm closed closed closed 9-12 am 8 am-6 pm I pm-madnight closed closed closed 9 am-3 pm 8 am-5 pm closed 9-12 am 9-12 am 9-12 am closed cloGed closed closed closed closed closed closed 8 am-5 pm 9 am-5 pm closed closed 8 am-5 pm 8-12 am 9-12 am closed 2-10 pm closed 9-12 am closed 9-12 am closed | Undergraduate Audio Library I '* The book st leks Will I I through Friday, from 8 a .I' .PII 1 , ' f U G L 101 U G L 301-A 9 am-5 pm 5-8 pm Mon & Thurs 8 am li pm 9 am-5 pm 7-10 pm he open to holder* of stack permits from 8 rn to 5 pm Saturday, and from I pm to l l : w p. iii: m r w "WH ff 8 am-5 pm closed 2-11 pm closed am to ll 45 pm Monday 45 pm Sun?lav Austin Bus Drivers Await Approval of Strike Vole By CUFF AVERY T exan S taff W riter The Advisory Committee on the Selection of a President for the University is looking for student, its faculty and staff help search for a new Austin campus president to replace Dr. Norman Hackerman. in Committee chairm an Charles Alan Wright, professor o f law, said in an interview that the 18- member committee w ill consider every nominee re­ commended. that is Wright had said in a statement before the General Facu lty M ay 14 that the committee “ invites students, faculty7, staff, alumni and other interested persons to submit to it names of persons worthy of consideration together 4 Shuttle Routes Begin Service Shuttle bus Routes 2, 4 and 6 and a new route, No. 8, running down Riverside D rive., w ill begin operating Tuesday morning. Buses on the new route w ill arrive at Gregory Gym every 20 minutes, from 7:20 a.m. to 6 p.m. The bus will go south on Inter­ state 36 to Riverside, heading east to Tinnin Ford Road. It w ill go down Tinnin Ford one block to Elmont Drive, to where it intersects with Townlake Circle, go around the circle and back on Elmont and Tinnin Ford to South I^keshore Boulevard. The bus will then go west on South Lakeshore one block to Ar<'na Drive and southwest on Arena back to Riverside and on . to campus. Three buses w ill be on the j route this summer. Routes 2 and 4 w ill run every 15 minutes and Route 6 even- off icia Is were very co-operative 20 minutes. abord •>< :*y things” I * ’ u n it ( rj r* to * told ’ mom , tin v Street, turning right on Leon and Street and didn t hav Austin ma Transport I Nueces, then returns to campus, 1 coing by the University Co-Op, I ’ Cl\ e Ma or e. circling of Arn • ; , ; Route 2, goes west on 24th' compony Littlefield Fountain, to 28th ramat the Art coiled. Building, the Student Health Cen­ is t with any supporting information and why he should be considered for the presidency.” W right told The Texan Monday that interest in the search for the new president had already netted more than 30 suggestions. W right noted that filtered these responses had to his office despite little note of his plea in a community newspaper and despite the fact that The Texan was not in publication. The committee has not lim ited its scope in the selection process and w ill make its three or more recommendations by considering persons, stated, “ throughout the nation with no or predisposition against the U niversity as against persons elsewhere.” either persons within W right has for W right said the committee, which grew to 18 members with the addition of student leaders Je ff Jones and Jim Arnold as non-voting members w ill meet often during the summer to find a successor for Hackerman, who resigned to accept the presidency of R ice U niversity. W right hesitated to m ake any predictions as to when the committee could make its three or more recom­ mendations to the Chancellor. The began com m ittee its selection process with meetings M ay 14 and M ay 27. W right, who has been cautious in his public statements about the committee, said no names were discussed at the most recent meeting, but rather the committeemen had discussed the nature of the presi­ dency at the U niversity. Shoe Shop We make and repair bools and shoes SHEEP SKIN A RUGS M a n y ______ Beautiful Colors _ ★ LEATHER SALE Various kinds, colors — 50c per foot“ J 478-9309 Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lava ca Austin, Texas Come. • -1 Istglw/ ^ A ll Bills Paid A p a r tm e n ts start a t 139.50 I , 2 , 3 b e d r o o m s 2 Pools P r iv a te C lub 6 F lo o r P la n s F e n c e d P a tio s C o v e r e d P ark in g F ir e p la c e s A ll E le c tr ic K itc h e n s E xtra-L arge L au n d ry F a c ilitie s Luscious L a n d sc a p in g _ L*X T a k in g L e a se s ® for F all S e m e ste r 454-2773 6855 U .S . 290 E ast E x it B erk m an Dr K in g st o n & Village B y CON V IK SM ITH T exan Staff W rlter iii-. week, Austin Transit bus drivers voted Thursday night to striKP sometime after demands for a pay increase and requests were several other turned down by company of­ ficials. The strike was ("died after Austin Transit management of­ ficials refused to grant a $l-an~- hour raise, uniform allowance and increased jury and sick pay. With all hut one of bs rrondiers I of to strike, the lex voting Amalgamated Transit Union is waiting for possible approval of strike plans by the union’s general executive board some­ time this week. If the walk-off occurs, more than BO bus drivers of Local 1091 will be on strike, according to Sidney Cravats president of I/Ocal 1091. He and other union officials met with managers of Amalgamated Transport, parent corporation of Austin Transit twice last week, hoping to avert the strike. Cravatt said the management Multiple Sclerosis Fund Drive Begins washes to help the society raise money it needs. Volunteers are still needl'd for the June 13 canvassing and all interested students are urged to call 477-0732. The success of the drive depends prim arily on tho support of Austin youth, chapter officials said. Tile Austin chapter of the N a t i o n a l Multiple Sclerosis Society has begun its summer fund raising drive. against MS, Joe Y an k s, hpad of the youth campaign has organized his volunteers in three fund-raising p r o g r a m s . Can­ nisters are being distributed to Austin area retail merdiants for customer solicitation. June 13 has been sd for city­ wide canvassing by youth volun­ teers, Also, youth organizations are holding bake sales and ('ar YOUK SENIORITY COMPLEX ter and back to 24th. Route 4 stops at Speedway and Street, going north to 38th 2 S’ retd, west to Avenue B and; b..ck around Speedway. to campus on Route 6 stops at Littlefield Fountain, providing transporta­ tion to people living in the En- field area, including Bracken- ridge, Deep Eddy and Colorado apartments. i ® WATERHOLE No. ONE • 2900 D U V A L J HAPPY HOUR DAILY 7 -DAYS A WEEK 4-6 P.M. J SCH LITZ or ^ cl icva/ciccd J ' I OO a BUDWEISER I . pitcher reg. pric« $1.30 ® POOR BOY SANDWICHES 50c each ^ FREE FLOWER MONOGRAM with each bag purchased.for this week only I TARTAN! STORES l l DISCOUNT HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS sB ■ A iit t 1 1 m n M i m u i i I u t * a * NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS UNIVERSITY AREA’S FIRST & ONLY DISCOUNT STORE! FEATURING COMPLETE SELECTIONS OF • HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS • MEN'S TOILETRIES • COSMETICS • HAIR CARE •SCHOOL SUPPLIES • RECORDS & TAPES • FILM — FLASHBULBS and PHOTO FINISHING • GREETING CARDS SAVE 15% to 40% ON EVERY PURCHASE EVERY DAY W e (nvife You To Come In — Look Around And See Our Complete Selections • . . •— R E M E M B E R — SHOP MORE and SAVE MO RE TARTAN f f STORES ^ ^ ■ n S C O U M T HEALTH ANO BEAUTY AIDS 2518 Guadalupe l l JLI FU I B B M i m AUSTIN, TEXAS Bag $12. All colors. Extra covers available at $4. the shop for J l o a " a a " c o ISppagafiScf No. 7 Jefferson Square Z A L E S JEWELERS ’ S tudent Accounts Invited 704 Congress H ancock C enter Tuesday, June 2, 1970 THE SUM M ER TEXAN Page 9 0) re J?* OO v- PO IO O ~ o kg V 3 Parade Ruling Test Unlikely For Summer By LYNNE FLOORE Texan Staff W riter The new and stricter Austin parade ordinance may not be tested for its constitutionality this summer. T h e permit controversial restrictions were passed four to three by the City Council for the third and final time May 21. in the the The individuals most active last injunction suit month against council’s parade ordinances, war protesters who were allowed to march in the street, have no plans for testing the ordinance. First Problems However, the first groups to be affected by the stricter ordinance is the American Legion’s Boys State. Legion Adjutant Willis IL McGregor, said Monday he was applying for a parade permit for both sides of North Congress Avenue from 8 to 9 a.m. June 12, so "800 Boys State citizens could march with band and colors to the Capitol, where they will govern for the day. violated or circumvented. But we feel the 787 high school boys from all over Texas have a right to parade on capital streets.” the State Double Taxation the McGregor had said last week he would withdraw ap­ plication when informed that a prohibits n e w parades from 7 to 9 a.m. and that his organization would have to pay for overtime police ser­ vice. restriction In a letter to the police depart­ ment and the council, McGregor stated that the American Legion was in sympathy with the inten­ tions of the council, but that the additional fees for a parade represented double taxa­ tion. involved “ It is not a question of money,” McGregor said, “ It is the prin­ ciple involved. The law can’t be The parade is a 20-year-old tradition. “It is just a method of moving the boys co the State Capitol the University,” from McGregor said. Guideline Assistant City Attorney Jim Dean said the 7 to 9 a.m. parade prohibition period was a guideline from the council and not a blanket requirement. Terry Tottenham of the Law Review said the instrumental law students who prepared a brief for U. Jack Roberts, who last month granted the parade injunction, were in Washington for the summer. S. District Judge “Normally, you have to wait for a fest case,” said Tottenham. “There probably will be more march activity in the fall.” M a r t i n Wiggington, a for Cam Cun­ s p o k e s m a n ning! lam’s law office, said he knows of no attempt to test the ordinance. “Several people think some­ thing needs to be done about it, but no action has been started,” Wiggington said. Dr. Charles Howe, Cunningham has represented the Student Mobilization Commit­ tee in a suit against the council for its previous parade ordinance. vice­ president of the Central Texas American Civil liberties Union, said that ACLU would seriously consider providing legal and financial aid for a test case if a parade application was turned down because of the ordinance or its administration. The Summer Texan Classified Ads H e l p W a n t e d A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . ■ A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . WM A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n T y p i n g CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Each Word (15 word minimum) $ .05 .................. .. * LSO Minimum Charge •S tudent ra te (15-word m axim um ) .j5 .50 •E ach ad ditional tim e 20 Consecutive Issue* IO words .................................... flS'So ................................... J 15 w ords 20 words ....................................Ila.OO Classified Display I column x one inch one time I 1.50 a LIO Each Additional Time one tim e $ $ (No copy change for consecutive issue rates.> •LOW STUDENT RATES 15 word* or less for 75c the first time, 50c each additional time. Stu­ dent must show Auditor s receipt in Journalism and pay in advance Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. DEADLINE SCHEDULE Tuesday Texan Monday. 11:00 a.m. Wednesday Texan T o d la y . 11:00 a.m. Thursday Texan Wednesday. 11:00 a m . Friday Texan Thursday. 11:00 a.m. Sunday Texan . . Friday. 3:00 P.m. F o r S a l e T O P CASH PR IC E S paid fo r dia­ m onds. old gold. C apitol D iam ond Shop. 603 Com modore P erry. 4 16-01 <8. D R E W ’S RECORD EXCHANGE. Used sold. 1624 Lavaca. __________ L P ’s. 478-2079. trad e d , STEREO C o m p o n e n t S y s t e m s (2 ) c o m ­ p le t e w it h speakers. A M -F M -A F C and m u lt ip le x radio. Ja c k s for additional s p e a k e r s , m icrophone, and guitar, also tape player. These solid sta te compo­ n e n t s e t s w ill b e s o j £ * or. .on ljL Unclaim ed Freight, 2003 A irport Blvd. (ju st off 19th S t.). BRAND NEW SEWING MACHINES $35. N ationally advertised brand. We have IO 1970 zig-zag sewing m achines com plete w ith 25 y e a r factory g u a ran ­ tee to be sold for $35 each cash or sm all m onthly paym ents These m a­ chines have built-in controls for m aking buttonholes, darning, m ending, over­ casting, em broidering and m any other features. T hey m ay be inspected and m any o th er features. They m ay be in­ tested a t U nclaim ed F r e ig h t 2003 Air­ port Blvd. 9 A.M.-9 P.M . Mon. thru F ri., S a t ’til 6 P.M . No sales to deal­ ers. AIR 1968 Volkswagen bus. Philip W hite, 258- CONDITIONER for 1651. ______ and SINGER Touch & Sew sewing m a­ chines (7 or them ), all a re slant needle m odels and a re fully equipped to zig­ fancy buttonholes, zag, m ake stitches. T hese m achines c a rry full g uarantees and will be sold on a ‘‘first com e—first serv ed ” basis, only $39.9n each. Monthly available. They m av be inspected and tested at UNCLAIMED FREIG H T, 2003 A irport (betw een M anor & 19th St.) 9 Blvd. AM to 6 PM Mon. th ru FrL Sat. til I PM . No sales to dealers. paym ents finish. World JUST RECEIVED five 1970 deluxe so­ lid state nationally advertised stereo consoles, in beautiful handrubbed wal­ renowned B.S R. nut turntable and 4 speaker audio system, $88 each. Monthly available They m ay be inspected at UNCLAIMED FREIGHT, 2003 Airport Blvd. (between Manor V 19th St.) S AM to 6 PM, Mon. thru Fri. S a t 'til I PM. terms USED B—W TV’s. Good very good. $25.50 up. Austin TV Service, 4305 Manchaca Road. HI 4-1345, HI 2 - __ ____________ 7475. b e tte r 1970 STEREO component sets (only three) complete with speakers, $49 95 each. UNCLAIMED FREIGHT, 2003 Airport Blvd. ’69 JAGUAR XKE 2 plus 2 coupe. A—c, registered IMO m iles. New, never Primrose yellow with black leather. Chrome wheels (Dunlop radials). $5595. 327-1525, 327,0454. ENGLISH g raduate o r E nglish In stru c to r's Assist­ an t planning a vacation i n /o r around G uadalajara. Mexico this S um m er for afternoon a n d /o r evening tutoring Eng­ lish to a M exican business executive who presently speaks English fluently but would to like additional im prove speech and vocabulary. P re ­ requisite: Applicant m ust be non-Span­ ish speaking and preferably a Texan (for accent purpose). C ontact Mr. Jose A. Valdes. C incinnati No. 131, G uadala­ jara , Jalisco, M exico: or ph.: 17-23-15. tutoring HOLIDAY HOUSE No. 5. KHOO Burnet Road, has opening for p a rt tim e fem ale food cashier. S tarting pay $1.50-hour, discount and good w orking conditions. Call M anager a t GL3-5155 for inform a­ tion. H o u s e s , F u r n . T A R R Y T O W N : I i P ro fesso r’s house adjacent to Lake ' Austin, 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, study, re- household room . Complete i creation equipm ent. To Aug. 31. Fam ily or women students. $300 per month plus ! utilities, gardener and w ater paid. In­ terior a p artm e n t m ay be subleased. 477-3632. FOUR BEDROOM, two bath. Centra) a ir and heat. Fireplace. Shopping. E ight m inutes U.T. $240. 454-7086. R o o m m a t e s MALE OR FEM A LE ROOMMATES 2 bedroom. 2 bath apartm ents. IO m inutes walk from Campus. Sw im m ing pool Maid service Study, recreation room and pool table S um m er rates. $49.50/m onth each — All bills paid. LE FONT APARTM ENTS 472-6480. — 803 W. 28th FEM A LE ROOMMATE needed m ediately. $55 m onth. Call 444-7126. im ­ student. Two FEM A LE GRADUATE bedroom duplex. $50 plus bills. N e ar 29th-North L am ar. F ra u , 476-0810 a fte r 5 and weekends. VERY C L O S E T O C A M P U S I bedrooms and efficiencies now renting for Summer. A ir conditioned, TV cable, pool. 472-5369. 2800 Swisher, Apt. 210. North Central efficiences. New, car­ peted, draped, complete kitchen; range, oven, garbage disposal, refrigerator. FuM bath, ample storage and parking. A - partment manager: 454-6811, 454-8903. VILLA F O N T A N A 1951 Sabine Now renting 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 bedroom. A / C , carpeted, swimming pool, laundry. Call after 6 — G R 2-1774 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 RA TES T H E DEL P R A D O APTS. 303 W . 40TH STREET tow nhouse type ap artm en ts. L arge B eautiful fu rn itu re . P lenty of parking. Sw iim m ing pool. M anager A pt. 103 TV Cable 454-2436 MARK XX 3815 G U A D A L U P E large, paneled B R A N D N E W - S U M M E R RAT ES I & 2 BR apts. Extra Mediterranean laun­ dry, ail built-ins, over sized kitchens, water, gas, TV ca b 's pd. by owner — $125 UP. For showing phone — furnishings, pool, 454-6234. A p a r t m e n t s , U n f . LARGE GARAGE a p artm e n t for rent. $75 month. P a rtia lly furnished — stove and refrigerator. L ocated ju st off 45th St. and Duval. P re fe r m arried couple and—or grad u ate students. G arage. Call 472-1801. SU N N Y V A LE APTS. 1300 SUMMIT SU M M ER RATES — $120 UP i L uxuriously furnished I & 2 BR apts., pool, laundry, all built-ins. w ater. gas. i TV Cable pd. by ow ner M ust see these to a p p re c ia te ' F o r show ing — apts, phone — 442-9495 o r 444-5110. H o u s e s , U n f . i TWO BEDROOM house (or rent. $95 month. P a rtia lly furnished — stove and couple refrigerator. P re fe r m arried a n d —or grad u ate students. Located just off 45th S t and Duval. G arage. Call 472-1801. F o r R e n t NO TV SE T ? Call the A lpha Man! B /W & the New Color portables a t Reasonable R ent Lease. R ent by Sem ester o r R ent-P urchase ALPHA TV RENTALS Call GR 2-2692 for m ore inform ation Com pact REFRIG ERA TO RS Portable TELEVISION R ent by T erm or Month Alex M cN air’s CENTRAL TEXAS APPLIANCE CO. 904 N. L am ar 476-6076 GARAGE PLUS storage. Can be locked. R e ar 2202 Nueces. All sum m er for $30. 444-2607. 476-3729. W a n t e d RCA MARK V i n stereo, two 6” speak- HIGHEST PRICES paid fo r furniture, ers. Poloroid with flash attachment. 12 ranges, re frig e rato rs. MABRY’S, 6611 books Texaa Gold Stamps. 442-9467 North Lamar. 453-5800 Nights 465-0006. evenings. 1967 SUZUKI X-6. Excellent condition. $450. Call Chris Boydston. 478-4830. B u s i n e s s O p p . T u t o r i n g LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR, beginner and advanced. Guitars also repaired. Drew Thomason, 478-7331. C A LL GR 1-5244 TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD N E E D M E N O F A L L T R A D E S to for NORTH SLOPE, ALASKA, up $2600 a month. F o r com plete inform a­ tion, w rite to JOB RESEARCH CENTRE. Point-R oberts, W ash., 98281. Enclose $2 to cover cost. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n , WILLOWICK LUXURY APARTMENTS Summer Rates Furnished I bedroom, $145. 2 bedroom $178. Shag carpet, dishwasher, disposal, gas, bar-b-que grills, pool. All bills paid. 600 South 1st. 444-0687. IO Tuesday. June 2. 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN C O N T IN EN T A L III APTS. 4003 RED RIVER SU M M ER RATES — $140 L arge 2 BR beautifully fu rn . apts. — All built-ins. pool, (2-dble. beds In bedroom s), w a ter gas. TV ca­ ble pd. bv owner. F o r show ing — phone — 453-3081. laundrv. U N IV E R S IT Y A R E A 476-4095 C A M I N O R E A L - E L P A T IO I & 2 bedroom Summer & Fall 2810 Salado N O W R E N T IN G F O R S U M M E R M A R K V — 3912 Ave. D — $115 I BR. F urn. Apts (2 dble. beds) All built-ins. pool. w ater, gas. TV cable pd. by ow ner. F or show ing phone: 454-3850. W A L K I N G D IS T A N C E N O W R E N T IN G F O R S U M M E R I BR F u rn Apts. (2 dble beds In m ost a p ts.) B uilt-ins. pool, w ater, gas, TV cable Pd. bv owner. F o r show ing phone: M A R K VII — 3 IOO S P E E D W A Y — $ JI 5 476-4542 D IP L O M A T - 1911 S A N G A B R I E L - $105 476-2511 V A L E N C IA - 1801 M A N O R RD. - $115 478-2364 EMBERS — 3107 S P E E D W A Y — $110 476-4542 N O W R E N T IN G F O R S U M M E R H A L L M A R K APTS. 708 W . 34th $110 B eautifully furnished I BR apis. All built-ins. <2 dble beds), laundry, water, gas. TV cable pd. by owner. F o r show ing — phone: 452-9930 D R A S T IC R E D U C T IO N ! S U M M E R R A T E S Austin’s Newest and M ost Luxurious! Leasing now! Ona and Two Bedroom Apartment*, plus Luxury Two Bedroom Studio*. 7200 Duval Call J. A. Kruger, 452-2384 P O S A D O DEL NO RTE S U M M E R R AT ES $118.50 and up Also, contracting for the fall. Pool, refrigerated air, water and gas paid. On shuttle bus route. EL DORADO APTS., 3501 Speedway, 472-4893, 478-1382 C A L L G R 1-5244 T O P L A C E A T E X A N C L A S S IF IE D A D ............ ................. ONE BEDROOM SOUTHERN A IR E A partm ents. 33rd and ■ Sm all com plex n e a r Shuttle. A ir condi- Pool. disposal, c a rp cted. 4200 Avenue A. $,25. Tom G reen. Spacious, cheerful. One ; tioned. dishw asher, apartm en t. luxury bedroom, six closets, w alking distance U.T. S u m m er rates, $115, w a te r paid. 478-7097. EX PE R IE N C E D ty p ist. Theses, a r ti­ cles. dissertations, etc. 50c per page. N atalie Levendecker, P e c a n Grove T ra ile r P ark. 476-8532. D u p l e x e s , F u r n . EX PE R IE N C E D accurate ty p ist. M w ra te s, fa st service. Mrs. Tullos GL 3-5124. Just North of 27th & Guadalupe SOUTHERNESE APTS. U niversity A rea 2 person a p a rtm e n t. A/c. wood panel­ ing. carpeted, pool, laundry facilities, parking. $99.50 474-1616 1007 W est 26th S treet ONE BEDROOM. All u tilitie s except electricity. 4316 B ull Creek. 454-8018. Drastic Reductions! Summer Rates THE BRITTANY 300 Carm en Crt. 454-1355 452-2384 FRENCH C O L O N Y 5506 G ro v e r G L 2-0507 1 BR — 850 sq. ft. from $135 2 BR — I IOO sq. ft. from $155 B A R R A N C A S Q U A R E APT S. I Brand new. W ithin walking distance j U.T. Efficiency and one bedroom apart- j ments, completely furnished. $115 up.; For information call 454-0239 or 478- 5822. 910 W . 26th B L A C K S T O N E APTS. For independent men and women students. N ear Campus. M aid service weekly. Summer rates. 2910 Red River 476-5631. CONSUL APARTMENTS on Town Lake, 1201 Tinnin F o rd Road. R enting for Sum m er. Two bedroom townhouse 1200- month, all bills paid. Two bedroom flat $180, all bills paid. 444-3111, 476-2633. MA UN A KAI, 401 E ast 31st. Student efficiency for Sum m er. One bedroom $100, all bills paid, two bedroom $150, all billa paid. 472-2147, 476-2633. TH E BACCARAT, close to U T . Sum ­ m er rates. One bedroom $115 pius electricity. 3707 H arm on. 453-7190, 476- 2633. FOUNTAIN TERRA CE. 610 W est 30th s tre e t. $105 up. No S um m er rates. Pool, walk to Cam pus. No pets, chil­ dren, single u ndergraduates. U.T. ST U D E N T S 1907 San Gabriel Apts. New I bedroom units. A ir conditioned, larg e kitchen, full size bath, dressing table, nicely furnished. $115 Sum m er, F a ll $120 plus electricity. Parking, m aid service. R eservations now to a s­ sure housing close to Cam pus. Ap­ pointm ent only, 453-3235. BE W IS E Choose from the best apts, now Sum- m er-F all reservations, 2802 W hitis. 3 4 blocks to Cam pus. 2 bedroom s, kit­ chen, bath, parking and m aid service. A ccom m odates 2-3 or 4 persons. R ea­ ra te s a t $130-$150-$160, plus sonable electricity. Air conditioned. Appoint­ m ent only, 453-3235. THE V.I.P. APTS. W alk to U T., Shuttiebus a t door. Sum ptuous 2 and 3 bedroom studios. King sized I bedroom s. Shag carpets, walk in closets, book cases, study desks, a /c , cable, pool, patio, quiet atm osphere. Speedway a t E. 33rd. 476-6363 478-2937 TOWER VI EW. ONE block from Law Sf hook S um m er $99.50, special yearly lease. 2501 Oldham . 476-5207. 453-6506. All bills except electricity, cable paid. A V A IL A B L E j U n E U t” M arried couple preferred. Nicely fu r­ nished one bedroom a p a rtm e n t with good size living room, well equipt kit­ chen. ttib-shower tiled bath, lots of clo­ set space. Air conditioned. Ample off stre et parking. U niversity shuttle bus passes property. $95 per month, gas and w ater paid. 1301 Exposition Blvd. Shown by appointm ent only. Call owner GR 8-4356. U N IV E R S IT Y A R E A New Efficiencies Sum m er - Fall Available now — furnished. Plenty of closet space, carpet, TV cable, cen­ tral air- heat W ater, gas paid. Only $110 per m onth. Sum m er rate. ANCIRA APTS. 313 W. 41st 454-7000 2 bedroom, 2 bath a p artm en ts. IO m inutes w alk from Cam pus, Swimming pool Maid service Study, recreation room and pool table Sum m er rates, $49.50/m onth per person — All bills paid. M ales and fem ales LE FONT APARTMENTS 472-6480 803 W. 28th MALE STUDENT needed to sh are with one. N ear W est Campus. Available Sum m er only. A—C. GR 2-8581. A—C, GARAGE a p artm e n t for one boy. Carport, two rooms, bath, re frig e rato r but no kitchen. $80 per m onth. 1509 M arshall Lane. 478-3168. NEAR UNIVERSITY. L arge nice effi­ ciency. Air conditioned. Quiet person. 906 West 22. LUXURIOUS FO U RTEEN unit Casa Rosa, 4312 Duval One bedroom, July 15, $109. Fall, $139.50 plus electricity. 453-2178, 345-1322. LUXURIOUS E N FIE L D duplex. 2101 Q uarry Road. New, all electric kitchen, two bedroom s, two baths, king size bed. linens. W ater, has furnished. $250. 472- 2762. 476-8959. AVAILABLE S E PT E M B E R — 2-2, fire­ place, sm all yard. COUPLE. $160. 806B W est 32nd. 444- 2607, 476-3729. se p a ra te dining, R o o m & B o a r d T O W E R MANOR. 1908 U niversity — 478-2185 Open fo r Inspection fo r Sum m er & F a ll Sem esters • Living room . 2 bdrm s.. 2 full baths, kitchen & dining area in each su ite • E legant living for young wom en • Free p arking • TV lounge • L au n d ry facilities • E levators • Study hall • M aid service • I blk. Campus • Sun deck • F ully a /c • 19 m eals/w eek • No hours THE GOVERNOR'S M E N St W O M E N F O R S U M M E R • $180/6 wks. sngl. • $150/6 wks. dble. • 2 m e a ls/d a y — 5 d ay s/w eek • 23 sailboat • Maid service • G ym nasium & steam bath. • A /c • L arge rooms • 2 color TV lounges i M.B.A. Typing. M ultilithing. B inding The Complete Professional FU LL-T IM E Typing Service to tailo red th e needs of U niversity students. Special keyboard equipm ent for science, and engin eer­ ing theses and dissertations. language, P hone GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk BOBBYE D E L A FIE L D TYPIN G SER­ reports. M im eographing Reasonable. H I 2-7184. VICE. Theses, d issertations V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N T Y P IN G S E R V IC E P rofessional T vplng All Fields M ultilithing and B inding on Theses and D issertations 1301 Edgewood 478-2636 E X P E R IE N C E D dissertations, TYPIST. Theses, I B M E xecutive. etc. Charlene Stark, 453-5218. C LO SE TO U.T. V A C A N C I E S F O R F A L L , „ 2612 G uadalupe typing, m ultilithing, and 476-5658 binding of all your U niversity work. • P ersonal prove your French. : . . . , , , c,0 TvAtjm c SUMMER LANGLAGE DORMS .Spanish o r Ger- m an. Coed dining. N ative sp eak ers in residence. Apply 2103 N ueces. Inter- national cooking. reports m etirul- im Theses, dissertations, im- OUS|y handled. Y ears of E xperience, v r . c o u m o u *' reasonable, Phone L a u ra Bodmir: 478-8113 j -------------- ------ ------------- — — _____ MAYFAIR HOUSE 1 J^t North of 27* & Gallup. tywtlot /m faticL Dormitory For M en & W om en Room & Meals, $ I 25/month * Typing. M ultilithing. Binding M.B.A V The Complete Professional FU LL-T IM E Typing Service to the needs of University tailored stu d e n ts Special keyboard equipm ent fo r science, and engineer­ ing language, theses and dissertations. P hone GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 H em phill P ark BEA U TIFU L TYPING. Ail kinds Special type fo r engineering, scien- e language. N orth University. Mrs. An­ thony, CL 4-3079 ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 TYPING. PR IN T IN G . BIN DUNG Just North of 27rh & Guadalupe Jm fa&oL * M B A 6 T yping. M ultilithing. Binding The Complete Professional FU LL-T IM E Typing Service to tailo red th e needs of U niversity students. Special keyboard equipm ent for science, and engin eer­ ing theses and dissertations. language, P h o n e GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk NO RTH W EST, n e a r A liandale Years tv p in g experience to help you. 465- 5813. T y ping P r in tin g M ultilithing G raphic A rts Resum es Thesis Law Briefs Lecture Notes T utoring Close to Campus A -P L U S U N IV E R S IT Y S E R V IC E S 504 W est 24th S tre e t 477-5651 SATISFACTION G U A R A N T E E D — D issertations, theses, reports. Legal specialist Experienced ty p ist w i t h BBA. IBM E xecutive electric 453-8650 VIRGINIA SCH N EID ER TYPIN G SER­ VICE, G raduate and U ndergradu ate typing, p rinting, binding 1515 Koenig Lane, Telephone: 465-7205 Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing A U S -T E X D U P L IC A T O R S 4 7 6 -7 5 8 1 311 E. l i t h M ayfair bus to a^d from Cam pus on the hour — M a id Service — Large heated pool — C o or TV — Private parking area — Da / pick up meaning service — ice machine — Laundry fa­ cilities. 2000 Pearl 472-5437 Call about our M ayfair Apts. — M i s c e l l a n e o u s LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR, beginner and advanced. G uitars also repaired. Drew T hom ason. 478-7331. NELSON’S G IF T S —handm ade Indian jew elrv. M exican Im ports — 4612 S. Congress. Open IO to 6. 444-3814. Largest Used Book Store in Austin S A V E S A V E — C O M E T O THE BOOK STALL 6103 Burnet Road 454 3664 Open w eekdays ’til 9 p m,. Sat. 9:30-6, Sun. 1-6 AUTO INSURANCE. B est ra te s for sin­ gle o r m arrie d m ales -m onthly pay- I m ents. LAMBERT INSURANCE ASSO- ! CI ATES, 452-2564. BIRD 'S N EST is relaxed. Solo a P iper j Cub for $110 total cost. 272-5337, 478- j 9331 evenings. D A N A BEAR N U R S E R Y loving c a re to your child, 2-5 offers years, in a home-like atm osphere. 4 blocks from U.T. Campus. C entral a ir / heat. Hot m eals, snacks, all modern outdoor and indoor equipm ent. Open to inspection. 509 W. 18th St. GR 2-7939. W E S T A U S T IN D A Y S C H O O L K indergarten, pre-kindergarten, all day care. D egree teachers, qualified w ork­ ers. A well planned p ro g ram ; fine a rts and Spanish. Hot noon m eal. 2 snacks a day. L arge indoor, outdoor play areas. C orner W est 12th and Elm . Open 7 a .m . - 6 p m. 478-1922. On y our way to U.T. ENROLL NOW in D arlington P riv ate School N u rsery — kin d erg arten and first grade. S um m er activities consist of m orning playschool, piano, g u ita r auld ukelele instructions, baton, tap an d bal­ let classes. Phone HI 2-3152. R o o m s MALE. R efrig erated a /c . One block U.T. Single, double rooms. S um m er rates. Also a p artm en ts. M ustang 472- 1941. Sehoen House 478-8453, 478-7097. 1909 S A N G A B R IE L I or 2 Rooms. A ir condiHoned. For I 3 parson*. Rata* $50 to $80 month. room apartment $ 125/month. Appoint­ ment only. Parking, maid service. Sum- mer-Fall reservations. 453-3235. SINGLE double. El MALES. C a m p o , 1912 Nueces. Kitchens, refirgerators. $22.50 up. Two blocks U.T. GR 7-0572, HO 5-7436. and GRADUATE STUDENT o r Room porch), in shower. 7600 Belview Place. GR 6-4270. teacher. private (glassed Hackerman Gives Views on Crises By MIDDY RANDERSON Texan Staff W riter University President Norman Hackerman, who is leaving the University in September to as­ sume the presidency of Rice University, addressed the spring meeting of the General Faculty May 14. He numerous troubles of the Austin campus during the 1969-70 school year. outlined the He said the year was one of “minor and major crises” with the most serious occurring May 5 to IO. “ I am grateful to the students and faculty whose good sense prevailed so that the purpose of the mass meetings also pre­ vailed,” Hackerman said, referr­ ing to incidents that week. Other Incidents He then spoke of the other crises, beginning with the protest last spring over removing grass to widen the sidewalks on the West Mall. In the summer there were problems with students bathing in the new East Mall fountain and concern about the way the topic of drugs was introduced at Orientation. In the fall, Hackerman said. “ we had an incident with trees.” He was referring to the protests over cutting down trees on Waller Creek to make way few stadium expansion. He “protest against athletics.” termed this S intercollegiate Then came the Chuck Wagon crisis, over the exclusion of non­ students from the Texas Union, that spawned the “only touch of real violence on campus this year,” he said. Jester Center was the scene of including continuing problems that food and curfew protests resulted the abolishment of hours for women under 21 with parental permission. in University Purposes Hackerman went on to speak of the dichotomy between the two purposes of a university: one to prepare the student to make his way to stimulate his mind. the other life, and in One of the biggest problems facing universities is their grow­ ing size. The structure is “an­ ti thetica.l to what a university originally was.” he explained. “It may well be that the end of the universities is in sight,” he said, ‘‘but T hope we have a better system in prospect.” The faculty passixi a resolution commending Hackerman for his “wise and forceful leadership in this difficult time.” and express­ ing gratitude for "the many contributions he has made to this University.” Ex-Students Hold International Meet The University Ex-Students’ Association, in co-operation with the University International Of­ fice, sponsored an International Ex-Students Conference May 13. Believed to be the first of its the conference kind anywhere, honored 10,000 nationals repre- senting approximately 50 coun­ tries. The conference featured such speakers as U Thant, secretary general of the United Nations, and McGeorge Bundy, president tho Ford Foundation and to of special former President John F. Kennedy. assistant Also featured was Alan Bean, U. S. astronaut, and Dr. Fer­ nando Bela unde, former president of Peru. Thant, the keynote speaker, talked on “ Human Environment and World Order.” Stressing the international aspects of pollution, Thant spoke on the problem “ in the interest of all peoples of the world. “ It is essential,” said Thant, “ lo evolve a new balance be­ tween economic development and the increase of die gross national product on the one hand and requirements and con­ social servation of tile world's resource* I on the other. reached “ Humanity has a j crossroads in pollution.” he said. “ hilther the rich and poor coun­ tries march together or they go their separate ways.” I D I A M O N D S D I A M O N D S D I A M O N D S L O W E S T P R IC E S IN T O W N P R IC E S START AT 29.50 1/4 C a r a t 1/3 Carat . . . . 39.50 1/2 Carat . . . . 99.50 S H O P A N D SA VE E W E L K R S 2236 I i ti t N H O U S E 7 0 9 W est T w en ty-Sscond Street A ’--:'", 7":as 737C5 478-9791 or 478-3914 DEXTER HOUSE 1103 West Twenty-Fourth Street Austin, Texas 78705 476-6074 or 478-8914 I SK fyH W oU HEADING DYNAMICS Cambridge Tower • 19th at Lavaca • Phone (512) 476-6755 Tuesday, June 2, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page J I I ■ J , xSsSfe^.^’-Tv^ffr-S'Sstv;;: .•:: £* . si ', I ; ' • "• is^^' * I M l l l f l S l P i l l l i l i W i i l i S i Union G Showing | . H m M Bf n gowQ I L > - O R ^ 0 C * ry C * I Thakor Patel, an international­ ly-known Indian artist, will have a one-man exhibit in the Texas Union. Varied Events On Summer ; « The University's Student Act­ ivities Office has arranged a pro­ gram of cultural events that Will extend from June through August on campus. The Summer Entertainment Program w ill consist of 16 con­ certs, 22 movies, and two drama department plays. Performing in concerts w ill be the Longhorn Band, the Univer­ sity Jazz Ensemble, Collegium Musicum — which plays Renais­ sance-Baroque music on ancient historical instruments, the New Music Ensemble, the Summer Chorus and tile Faculty Wood­ wind Quintet. Solo performers include cellist George Neikrug, organist Frank Speller, guest artist John E . Fer* ritto (pianist and composer) and pianist W illiam Doppmann. the movies in to be Among presented the Open Air Theater are “ Bom Free,” “ Bell, Book and Candle,” Charles Dickens’ classic “ Great Expecta­ tions,” “ H ie F it and the Pen­ dulum” starring Vincent Price, “ Cyrano de the landmark Western “ High Noon,” and “ Mouse That Roared” with Peter Sellers. Bergerac,” And for live drama, there is “ I i i Abner,” the Broadway hit musical that Later was made into a movie, and a dance drama directed by internationally-known ballet dancer Igor Youskevitch and drama instructor Frances Wolfe. Season tickets will be available at registration in Gregory Gym, in Union Building 340 and at the University Box Office in Hogg Auditorium. Cost for the entire 12-week pro­ gram is S4 for adults and $3 jun­ ior; a nine-week term is $3.50 and $2.50; and a six-week term is $3 and $2. Season tickets may be purchased by the general public as well as students and The exhibit will be on view through Friday in tho Unton G al­ lery. Patel, a mc lorn abstract painter, was born in Sojitra, Gujerat State, India, in 1932 and attended the L r J. J. School of Arts in Bombay. He received a “ first class first” standing and diploma, a1 ng with a postgrad­ uate fellowship in art. The artist I is won numerous awards, and his paintings are in in North private America, Asia, and Australia. collections Europe One of Patel’s paintings is fea­ tured in rile Indian Pavilion at Japan’s Expo 70. Taking a break from a world tour, Patel will be in Austin for five months. The Union exhibit will not be his first in Austin. the recent Laguna Gloria At Fiesta he exhibited paintings that represented his impressions of his first trip to America. The gallery will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Friday. Arr Swirl Drifts Down East River N ew York Tim e* N EW YO RK — A bright green spot moved swiftly down the East R iver one afternoon this week. It was of mysterious origin to river viewers w ho did not know it was a work of art. A light, minty green, the spot covered an area much larger than a tennis court. Un bura, The work of art was unsigned, of course, but it was the creation o f 30-voar-old Argentine artist, who had made a sim ilar green splash in the canals of Venice on June 19, 1%8. He uses non-toxic chemical dyes. a Uriburu is one of the new breed of environmental artists who use nature for their canvas. Uriburu thinks big. He will go to Paris to dye a patch of die Seine on June 15, Iii *X OI I ICE OFI NS 7 15 SHOW B E G IN S AT IU >K TH E S T E It! 1.1 i I < KO O I .lea si in ii (’Iii Wend**it Hurto* (GI*) KOM KO aud .ll I i I F R I H E I . K O I N E B S C a m e ro n M itc h e ll J a c k N icholson T H I . H V K ll M A K E R Anthony El*ley K» ThorriU I E . unit I? M . S I i s ■ ......... c u fftSfi a m Jft 11 IM T I 454-8444 T i l l : W I E D B l N C B W illia m Holden I roost H o rg ninn T H E H IG I t B E C a n a T u rn e r (i e o r r e C h a k iri* ( B i T H E S T F R I L E < I (K O O Liza M innelli W endell Burton ( G P I R O M E O and J I L I E r I t iA V LONGHORN Putman at 183 N 454-3880 H A IG H K H O L e e \ an < li ef W a r r e n O ates S I M W H I S K E l f B u r t R e y n o ld * ( l i n t W a l k e r ( G I * ) 16400 barre* Road — 466 63ii BO X-O FFICE OPEN 7:45 SH O W ST A RT S 8:45 T e x a n yiio to by s ta n le y I a i f a r Thakor Patel illustrates in hand gestures a couple of his paintings. The Indian Artist will hold his showing in the Texas Union A rt Gallery through Friday. T e x a n photo b y S t a n k } F a r r a r Meals cost only 12 cents at the Commons in the early years of the University. The Ex-Students’ Association was organized in 1885, two years after the University. versity. “ Hook'em Horns” , the Univer­ sity’s battle cry, originated at a pep rally to the 1955 football game with Texas Christian Uni­ Regents Allocate Art Museum Funds INTERSTATE LAST DAY! FE A T U R E S l l . 4 0 - I : 1 5 - .3 : 0 0 4:45 - «:30 - 8:15 - IO BARGAIN DAY! ADULTS 'TIL 7 P.M. 75c PARAMOUNT P IC T U R E S P f Hts GLEN CAMPBELL KIM DARGY .HAL WALUS'-— JO E KAMATH ® TECHNICOLOR* A PARAMOUNT PIOT URE -“ ** G O O D TIME GLEN and SUPER JOE DOING W H A T THEY DO BEST! C starts iF5 i i i 5 ;; h o w 3 ^^■iiiibb bis hi un ii ii nill! I ■!!■■■■ M— Hi8— — The story of a beautiful girl's lifetime between the ages of 19 and 22. An allocation of $30,(WO from the Board of Regents w ill assist in acquiring the Art Museum b a s i c Latin American art. collections of The board, meeting in E l Paso Friday, approved the allocation from the special Archer M. Huntington Fund that provides support for the museum. Dr. Donald B. Goodall, director CINEMA 40 FILM SOCIETY in cooperation with NURHYNO CORPORATION is p leased lo an n o u n ce a s p e cia l s u m m e r p ro g ra m of film s to be a d v e rtis e d in the S u m m e r T e x a n C in e m a 40’s r e g u la r long-term a c t iv it ie s M ill be re s u m e d d u ri.ig re g is tra tio n in the fa ll. HIGHEST of the museum and chairman of the art department, says the funds for Latin American art will assist the museum In its continu­ developing ing program of collections that represent the arts of the Western Hemisphere. Other aspects of that program include tile arts of the United States and of Canada. He also notes that the Hunting­ ton funds will help the museum “ build on the nucleus of Latin American pictorial and graphic that already have been arts” acquired by the University, notably paintings and graphics assembled in the Tinker Collect­ ion and by a University English professor, Dr. Thomas M. Cran- fill. that P o i n t i n g out tile “ University Art Museum has taken its place as a major teaching gallery,” Goodall says the Latin American art collec­ tions w ill have prim ary use “ for teaching purposes, and to give us an up-to-date picture of Latin American culture.” The museum director will soon start a six-week trip to explore art centers in five Latin Ameri- Modern A rt from India T R A N S I T T E X A S MGM mum aSTANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION _ 2200 Hancock D rive— 453 6641 FEATURES 2.00-4:45-7r30-10:09 Adults $1.00 Until 5:00 G An epic drama o f a d v e n t u r e a n d e x p lo ra tio n ! 2 0 0 1 a space odyssey 70mm & STEREOPHONIC SOUND T R A N S IT T E X A S E N D S T O D A Y ! W Ben White G;vJ.-4t?2?33 FEATURES 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 1 0 O v !-T~n •" ' ” 11. $1.00 A n y tim e WALT DISNEY pro d u ctio n s' . *eetu»’SSPS y ^ ^ 4 T £ C H N I CO L O R ' __ *»»* S u x lUetty A NAnONALGEN ERAL PICTURES RELEASE A CINEMA CENTER TI LMS PRESENWJON BSNAVTSION*TECHNICOLOR* , „ m > INTRODUCING STARRING ELLIOTT GOULD D A Y "M A S H " Today ° P en 6:45 7:00*.9H5 STARTS T O M O R R O W MATINEES DAILY WHAT LIES BENEATH MAY BE THE END! THIS YEAR’S RATED X BLOCKBUSTER! DON'T MISS THISI FLUS 2nd COLOR HIT Escorted Ladies Free Super Sneak Wed. 'th Century Fox presents P f c iuiarihcjrpjacobs - %WL( mw?' B eneath ROUSERS At SO STABB IMO BRUCE DERN DIANE LADD FlAfUBlMa JACK NICHOLSON r—, O' £ Mr WMH- [RJ (unum co,,* a tov* (***• tu n ne* tm nm M anet ares PLUS— CO-FEATURE THE W 1TCHMAKER IN COLOR P r e s e n t s P aul Muni and Betsy P alm er. Open Air T heater (IOO). Famed Music Ha!! to Move Opry/ America Change By ROY REED (c) 1970 New York Times News Service NASHVILLE, Term, — The Grand Ole Opry discovered Ameri­ ca about tile time America discovered the Opry, and neither has been quite the same since. Tile Opry was once the natural home of the fiddle, tile “break­ down” and the nasal twang. It now features so many percussion instruments and nationally popular songs that oldtimers like Roy Acuff, the “King of Country Music,” are beginning to feel almost out of place there. Some of the new performers do not even sing with a southern accent, much less a country twang. Opry to Move And now, as if to add one more flutter of acceleration to the headlong Americanization of the South, the Opry is getting ready to abandon familiar old Ryman Auditorium in the grit and Victorian decay of downtown Nashville and move to a fancy suburban home that would look as natural in Los Angeles as in the country setting of middle Tennessee. The new Opry house will be a can fully designed modem auditorium, complete with air conditioning and television production facilities. It will be part of “ Opryland U. S. A.," a $25 million murie park styled after Disneyland. Construction is to start tills summer. When the new place is finisher!, the Opry-goers will abandon the crowded wooden pews of the old converted gospel tabernacle that has been the Opry's home for a generation. Ixuiving Tobacco Smell They will leave behind the smell of sweat, tobacco and Juicy Fruit gum that has hung on the warm air of so many Saturday nights, and they will say goodbye to Tootsie's Orchid Lounge next door where thousands of farmers, truck drivers and factory hands have sipped beer — some of the m with guilt on their Baptist consciences — while they gaped at the fast-living musicians they admire. A trip to the Opry is more than an evening out. It is a pilgrimage. People travel an average of 47.6 m ibs to get there, and they come as often from Illinois and Indiana as from Alabama and Georgia, They are rural and small-fcown people. They may list their residenees as Detroit, Kansas City ca' Atlanta, but their hearts are still in Walnut Ridge and Murfreesboro. They come to the Opry to touch the past, to reach out for evidence of their roots. Radio Audience P artial The Grand Old Opry used to be one of the few non sectarian diversions in the South. Country people in many places turned it into an excuse for social gatherings. They would collect at a home that had a good radio, fiddle with the dials until they got a strong signal from Nashville's WSM, then sit from sun­ down until midnight listening to tho m use, the jokes and the Prince Albert smoking tobacco commercials. Opry humor was typically that of Minnie Pe tri, who was notoriously homely and unmusical. She would tell the Opry like singing a sc listeners, **l fee! and when the live audience would respond with unbelieA lg helots, she would add, Lookin’ Around Argir Group to Play Last Austin Show a musty horror flick, I K nr,” at 6, 8 and IO p.m. j sd.. Ties is the 1933 ver- •atuning Fay Wray. column will appear rlv in die Friday Texan. “I used to sing a lot down home, but it made the dogs howl so bad.” The hall would ring with laughter, and out in Arkansas and Alabama people would slap their legs with mirth. Fiddling Subsides Minnie Pearl does not come to the Opry very often now. Nor Is much fiddling done there anymore. Norman K. (Buddy) Spicher, a bearded young man from Pennsylvania, played the fiddle on the Opry from 1958 until 1968, then quit because there was so little demand for fiddling. Spicher says he does not know of a single person in Nashville wrho still taught fiddling, as opposed to violin playing. There have been many other changes on the Opry. Few singers know how to yodel now. Not as many religious songs are sung. Nearly every band has drums to set a more precise rhythm than was possible with strings only. Roy Acuff began playing the Opry in 1938 and still performs almost every Saturday night. He has accepted the changes with obvious reluctance. Acuff Reminisces He sang “The Great Speckled Bird” and “Will the Circle be Unbroken” at a recent performance then went backstage and discussed the Opry in an interview. “ It's not really what it was,” he said in his sad, gravel voice. “They go in for a parade of stars doing hit songs nowadays.” He noted that drums had been introduced IO or 12 years ago after the national advent of rock and roll. He has gotten along without them. Is the music better? “No,” he said, “it's not better. But more people will listen to it.” There is no doubt that more people are listening to it. If America has changed the Opry, so has the Opry, along with its numerous imitators, changed the musical taste of America, and indeed of much of the world. In 1961, only 81 radio stations in the United States played Opry-style c'ountrv music full-time. This year there are 610 such stations. Every major city — even New York — has at least one. Even the Japanese have learned to like country music. Tokyo has a Grand Old Opry — an imitation, without apology, of the original in Nashville. Nu Rynema - 40 Tuesday, June 2 ROOM SERVICE — MARX BROTHERS W ednesday, June 3 GRAND HOTEL — GRETA GARBO Friday, June 5 SHE DONE HIM W RONG Mae West & Cary Grant B A T T S A U D I T O R IU M - All Showings 7 and 9:15 75< By d o n McKin n e y Amo***menu Editor of the This column will run cm a weekly basis and will contain a summarization entep* t a I n m e n t activities around campus and Austin. Any person wishing to contribute s nnething to tile column should drop his notice by Tile Daily Texan office Monday the scheduled event. afternoon before Potpourri Opens Le Potpourri kicks off its sum­ mer activities with three troupe who will soon be leaving Austin. Fred Argir, Betsy Bernard and George Bokard (The Argir Group) will hold a weekend show starting Friday. Tile group begins their annual this engagement. after tour Requests Wanted Judith Sims from the Texas Union Fine Arts Committee has asked students to come by the Union Building and turn in any requests they might have for films or speakers for the long session. Jabbeme! to Play The Dungeon (in the back part of Marty's Pizza King) will be featuring the Jahbernel, Friday through Sunday. Tile trio with a bass some backup performs beautiful vocals with an extensive Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young repertoire. Admission is 50 cents. The Texas Union theater will PHOTOS S T E A K N B U R G E E S B U R G ER S: REGULAR HAMBURGER .................. $ .50 CHILI B U R G E R ..................... 65 CHEESE B U R G E R ..................................... 60 TROUGH BURGER W/COLE S L A W ............ 1.25 TEXAS BURGER — Texas Toast, Large Pattie, Lettuce & Tomato, Secret Sauce, and Served with French Fries and Dill Pickle............. 1.35 S T E A K S -“CHAR BR O ILED ”; 1. CHOPPED SIRLOIN STEAK - 8 OZ. Choice of French Fries or Baked Potato, Tossed Salad...................... 1.25 2. 6 OZ. RIB EYE STEAK (Petite) Served with Choice of Baked Potato or French Fries, Tossed S a la d .................. 1.98 3. 12 OZ. RIB EYE STEAK (Man Size) Served with Choice of Baked Potato or French Fries, Tossed Salad......................3.98 4. TEXAS T-BONE STEAK (Big Full Lb.) Served with Choice of Baked Potato or French Fries, Tossed Salad................ 2.95 CHILLED 12 OZ. MUG OF BEER 30£ BREAKFAST SER V ED 7:00 AM — 11:00 AM, EXCEPT SU N D A Y S ASK ABOUT OUR TROUGH MEAL COUPON BOOK! PASSPORTS RESUMES SUPER HOT SERVICE HUDMAN PHOTO 19th s t Lavaca • Cameron V i l l a s ® r? Open to the public — Open 7 days a week 715 West 23rd, across from Hardin North (o n e -h a lf b lo c k w e s t o f B io G r a n d e ) 7 AM — l l PM Mon. through Sat. l l AM — l l PM Sunday One hour free parking for customers with validated tickets — Pearl St. Entrance WM lf 4>*14if < I |P | * IIp ■ ■&M mm WM t i l rnm . x, is! i ... . - w w y ?.....V" yig r *"• V*W' * * _ •?>. *> •• ^ I; The University of Texas at Austin—An Outstanding 1970 SUMMER ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAM • Tw enty-Tw o Movies • Eight Concerts • Two Departm ent of D ram a Plays • Four Performances: Longhorn Band’s ’’Festival of Music” — Junior* Season Tickets for first six-week term at A dult Season Tickets for first six-week term at — Junior* Season T ickets for nine-w eek term at — A dult Season Tickets fo r n ine-w eek term at — Junior* Season Tickets for tw elve-w eek session at — A dult Season Tickets fo r tw elve-w eek session at *T h ro u gh Jun io r H ig h School 52.00 $3.00 $2.50 $3.50 $3.00 $4.00 I rn m i i i i r n l l i l l l l I 4 i. ifs I N D IV ID U A L A D M .: M ovie $.50, Festival $.50, Concert $1.00, D ram a $1.25-1.50 All programs, EXCEPT MOVIES, will begin at 8:00 p.m. Movies will begin at 8:30 p.m. OR SHORTLY THEREAFTER on days of “late” sunset. Summer Entertainment Program, 1970 June 9, Tues: Movie: “ Born F re e ” (color); a film of charm and power. Open Air Theater (95)'. June IO, Wednesday: Concert: The U niversity of Texas F aculty Woodwind Quintet — John Hicks, Flute, Rich­ ard Blair, Oboe, Leland M unger, Clarinet, Jam es Dickie, Bassoon, Wayne Barrington, F rench horn. R ecital Hall, Music Building, 8:00 p.m. No adm ission carge to Season Ticket Holders; Adults $1.00, Children 25c. June l l , Thursday: Movie: “ Bell, Book and Candle” (color): a sprightly story of w itchcraft in M anhattan w ith Jam es Stew art, Rim Novak, Jack Lemmon. Open Air T h eater (103). June 16, Tuesday: Movie: “ Great E xpectations” ; C harles D ickens’ thrilling literature classic with John Mills and Jean Simmons. Open Air T h eater (115). June 17, W ednesday: Concert: F aculty artist F ran k Speller, O rganist. R ecital Hall, Music Building, 8:00 p.m . No admission charge to Season Ticket Holders; Adults $1.00, Children 25c. June 17, Wednesday: P a rt I, Longhorn B and’s F estival of Music: “ Concert Band M arches” . E a st M all Foun­ tain, 8:00 p.m. No charge to Season Ticket H olders; Adults 50c, Children 2dc. June 18, T hursday: Movie: “The L ast Angry M an” ; a* true story of a dedicated doctor, a rem arkable film w ith June 19, F riday: Concert: Guest F aculty A rtist John E. F erritto , P ianist, in all-Beethoven program . R ecital Hall, Music Building, 8:00 p.m. No adm ission ch arg e to Season Ticket Holders, Adults $1.00, Children 25c. June 22, 23 , 24 , 25, 26, 27: D epartm ent of D ram a D ance Series: “ Ballet in M odem” . Hogg Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. No adm ission charge to Season Ticket H olders; Students $1.25, Adults $1.50. June 23, Tuesday: Concert: UT Jazz Ensem ble, Dick Goodwin, D irector. Recital Hall, Music Building, 8:00 p.m. No adm ission charge to Season Ticket H olders: Adults $1.00, Children 25c. June 23, Tuesday: Movie: “ The A dventures of Robin Hood” (color); an A c ad em y Award winning tale of ad­ venture, with E rrol Flynn, Olivia DeHaviland, B asil Rathbone, Claude Raines. Open Air T heater (102). June 25. Thursday: Movie: “ When Comedy Was K ing” ; a real history of visual hum or with Chaplin, L aurel and H ardy, B uster K eaton and m any others. O pen Air T h eater (90). June 29, 30, July I, 2, 3, 4; D epartm ent of D ram a Production: “ LUI A bner” . T heater Room, D ram a Building, 8:00 p.m. No adm ission charge to Season Ticket H olders; Students $1.25, Adults $1.50. June 30, Tuesday: Movie: “ Heidi” (color); a famous children’s classic, filmed am ong the m agnificent Swiss Alps. Open Air T heater (95). July I, W ednesday: Concert: The U niversity Collegium Music urn, Gilbert Blount, D irector—perform ing on rec­ orders, sackbuts, Rauschpieife, harpsichord and o th er ancient instrum ents. R ecital Hall, Music Building, 8:00 p.m. No admission charge to Season Ticket Holders. Adults $1.00, Children 25c. July I, Wednesday: P a rt II, Longhorn B and’s F estival of Music: “ M ilitary M arches” . E ast M all Fountain, 8:00 p.m. No charge to Season Ticket Holders; A dults 50c, Children 25c, July 2, Thursday: Movie: “ F ort Ti” ( c o l o r ) an epic of early A m erican frontier days; with George Montgo­ m ery. Open Air T heater (73). July 7, Tuesday: Concert: The U niversity Sum m er Chorus, M orris J. Beachy, D irector. Recital Hall, Music Building, 8:00 p.m. No adm ission charge to Season Ticket Holders; Adults $1.00, Children 25c. July 7. Tuesday: Movie: “ The Pit and the Pendulum ” (color); the tim e is 16th C entury Spain, the place, a forboding castle. Vincent Price, B arb ara Steele. Open Air T h eater (85). July 8, F riday: Concert: F aculty artist George N eikrug, Cellist, Recital Hall, Music Building 8:00 p.m . No admission charge to Season Ticket Holders; Adults $1.00. Children 25c. July 9, Thursday: Movie: “ Once More With Feeling: (color); this screen adaptation of the H arry K urnitz play is a ra re comedy w ith Yul Brynner, R ay Kendall, G regory Ratoff. Open Air T h eater (92). July 14, Tuesday: Movie: “ Cyrano de B ergerac” ; Jose F e rre r in a g reat perform ance as R ostand’s soldier- poet-hero. Open Air T heater (112). tain, 8:00 p.m. No charge to Season Ticket H olders; Adults 50c. Children 2.3c. July 16, Thursday: Movie: “ Haunted P ala ce” (color); a bone rattling E d g ar Allen Poe story, w ith Vincent Price, D ebra Paget, Lon Chaney. Open Air T h ea ter (85). July 17, Wednesday: Concert: F aculty artist William Doppmann, Pianist. Recital Hall, M usic Building, 8:00 p.m. No admission charge to Season Ticket H olders; Adults $1.00, Children 25c. July 21, Tuesday: Movie: “ High Noon” ; a study of a com m unity and one m an ’s courage, with G ary Cooper, G race Kelly, Thom as Mitchell, Lloyd Bridges. Open Air T heater (85). July 23, Thursday: Movie: “ Notorius” ; a Hitchcock cloak and dagger film, with G ary G rant, Ingred Berg­ m an, Claude Rains, Louis Calhern, Open Air T h e a te r (105). July 28, Tuesday: Movie: “ Damn The D efiant” (color); the exciting and explosive sto ry of the only m utiny in British N aval history. Starring Alex Guinness, D irk Bogarde. Anthong Quayle. Open Air T h eater (101). July 29, Wednesday: Concert: New Music Ensem ble, Thom as Wells, D irector; Newest Electronic and In stru ­ mental Music from Europe and U.S. — Stockhausen, Wolff, Wells. R ecital Hall, Music Building, 8:00 p.m . No admission charge to Season Ticket Holders; Adults SI.OO, Children 25c. July 29, W ednesday: P a rt IV, Longhorn B and’s F estiv al of Music: "P o p u lar Band M usic” . E ast Mall Fountain, 8:00 p.m. No charge to Season Ticket Holders; A dults 50c, Children 25c. July 30, Thursday: Movie: “ The D etective” ; a truly great detective com edy as only Guinness can play It. Alex Guinness, Joan Greenwood, P ete r Finch. Open Air T h eater (86). August 4, Tuesday: Movie: “ Fall of the House of U sh er" (color); Vincent P rice as Roderick Lasher in this te r­ rifying film. Open Air T heater (81). August 5, W ednesday: Concert: F acu lty artist F ran k Speller, O rganist. R ecital Hall, Music Building, 8:00 p.m . No adm ission charge to Season Ticket Holders; Adults $1.00. Children 25c. August 6, T hursday: Movie: “ Only the V aliant” ; G regory P eck as a cavalry captain in the 1860’s w ith W ard Bond, Gig Young, and others. Open Air T heater (105). August l l , Tuesday: Movie: “ Comedy of T erro rs” : (color); with P e te r Lorre, Boris Karloff, Joe E. Brown in slapstick comedy. Open Air T heater (86). August 12, W ednesday; Concert: New Cham ber M usic and Jazz, Dick Goodwin, Coordinator. R ecital Hall, Mu­ sic Building, 8:00 p.m. No adm ission charge to Season Ticket H olders; Adults $1.00, Children 25c. August 13, Thursday: Movie: “ Time Lost Time R em em b ered ” ; a G rand Prize W inner, San S ebastian In te rn a ­ tional F ilm F estival. S arah Miles, Cyril Cusaeh. Open Air T h eater (91). August 18, Tuesday: Movie; “ The Lavender Hill Mob” ; one of the cleverest and funniest ev er to com e from England, w ith Alex Guinness and Audrey H epburn. Open Air T h eater (80). August 20. T hursday: Movie; “ The Mouse That R o ared ” (color); splendidly effective com ic relief in to day’s mixed-up world. S tarring P eter Sellers, Jean Seberg. Open Air T h eater (85). U N IV E R SIT Y B O X O F F IC E H O G G M E M O R IA L A U D IT O R IU M * • Tuesday, June 2, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN Fag® DOUBLE B U R G E R ..................................... 75 July 15, Wednesday: P a rt III, Longhorn B and’s F estiv al of Music: “ Music From B roadw ay” , E a st M all F oun­ fl4C .477.41 in dividends returned to date by Co-Op (th is s p r in g , t h a t is) Used Textbooks For Sale 1. Save 2 5 % Example: off publisher's Buy a $10 used text list price. book for $7.50 2. Sell it back at 50% of list price. then, plus, sell it back for $5.00 if book is reusable 3. Plus your receive a cash divi­ regular cash dend on $7.50 at the dividend. end o f term, (downstairs) EIR IWP THE S T U D E N T S O W N S T O R E 0 F U L L R E T U R N FO R T E X T H O O K S P U R C H A SE D IN E R R O R The University Co-Op will accept the return of books under the following conditions: 1. B O O K S M U S T BE R E T U R N E D D U R I N G T H E C U R R E N T S E M E S T E R . 2. F U L L R E F U N D will be given if a book is returned on or before the ' a s t c a y to d ro p a course without penalty. (June 17, 1970) Books purchased atter this period must be returned by the close of business on the second d ay after purchase, i.e. a book purchased June 24 would be returnable fo r a full refund up to the d o se o f business June 26. 3. N O R E F U N D will be m ade without the cash register receipt. 4. B O O K S M U S T B E A R a C o - O p price tag. 5. N E W T E X T B O O K S M U S T BE free of all markings and considered b y store personnel to be in N E W C O N D I T I O N . 6. S P E C IA L O R D E R B O O K S are not eligible for refund. 7. Books returned at times other than specified above will be purchased under T H E C O - O P U S E D B O O K B U Y B A C K P O L IC Y . 8. D E F E C T IV E B O O K S W I L L BE R E P L A C E D F R E E O F C H A R G E . These defective books should be returned as soon as it is noticed. D O NOT C O N F U SE THE A B O V E POLICY W ITH THE REGULAR C O -O P USED BO O K BUY-BACK POLICY Toggery mo Y i 11 g out W A I 17 C A S U A L SL A C K S FLARES R A IN C O A T S reg. $8 to $12 reg. $10 to $13 reg. 45 to 60 S P E C IA L G R O U P S P E C IA L G R O U P D R E S S S H IR T S Long 4 Short Sleeve Short Sleeve 1/3 off SHIRTS 1/2 oft SHIRTS 1/4 off SH O E S D esigner'! collection S P E C IA L G R O U P reg. $21 to $30 I /4 to 1/2 off 1/4 off SHIRTS 1/3 off SHIRTS button-down 1/3 off 2 for $7.98 KNIT SHIRTS reg. $6 Special group to $16 1/3 off S W IM TRUNKS S P E C IA L G R O U P 1/3 to 1/2 off C O L O G N E S B E L T S reg. $1.75 to $15 A L L IG A T O R — reg. $20 1/2 off $13.33 DRESS SL A C K S S P R IN G t F A IL reg. 12.95 lo 22.50 1/2 off DRESS SL A C K S S U M M E R reg. 12.95 to to 19.95 1/3 off SHIRTS S P O R T S H IR T S Short Sleeve 1/3 off SW EATERS 1/3 to 1/2 off T I E S S P E C IA L G R O U P rag. $3.00 to $7.50 1/3 off sale has been on since M a y 13 - better hurry in don't forget that this summer the Toggery will move to 2304 Guadalupe (All " V i off" sales are final) street floor C O -O P Supplies W IN DBREAKERS 1/2 off JEW ELRY TABLE O F S P E C IA L G R O U P B A R G A IN S 1/2 off 1/2 off Art brushes oils, acrylics canvases pastels charcoal sketch pads (street floor) NEW STORE HOURS SUITS S P R IN G 4 S U M M E R SUITS F A L L SPORT C O A T S SPORT C O A T S S P R IN G 4 S U M M E R F A L L reg. $60 to $100 rag. 80 to I IO reg. 30 to 65 reg. 30 to 65 $30 to $80 $40 to $55 $15 to $54 $15 to $32.50 June 4-5 open at 8:00 A M close at 5:30 PM Summer 1970 open at 8:15 A M close at 5:00 PM Saturdays - 9:30 A M -1 :3 0 PM starting June 6 Co-Op School Supplies pencils, pens clipboards, notebooks, typewriter paper and typewriters (street floor) ITRS 14 Tirndey. A m 2,1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN