T h e Da il y Student N ew sp a p er at The University of Texas at A u stin AN fa? Vol. 70, No. 181 Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, W E D N E SD A Y , APRIL 28, 1971 Pages 471-440!’ Atrocities, W ar Crimes Uncovered W itnesses Relate Instances O f Killings, Tortures Used A g a in st V C Sym pathizers WASHINGTON (AP) — Volunteer wit­ nesses told an informal congressional panel Tuesday that while serving as military interrogators they routinely used electrical telephone hookups and helicopter drops to torture and kill Vietnamese prisoners. One army intelligence specialist said the pistol slaying of his Chinese interpreter was defended by a superior who said, “She was just a slope anyway,” meaning she was an Asiatic. The unsworn testimony of five Vietnam veterans was offered before an unofficial war crimes inquiry headed by Rep. Ronald Pellums (D-Calif.) which has no official standing and no subpoena power. THEY SAID AMERICANS who dealt with prisoners or Vietnamese civilians w'ere encouraged to use any degree of torture just so intelligence information resulted. Michael Uhl, a former lieutenant who supervised teams of questioners said the unspoken nile was, “ I don't care how you get the Information, just so you get it.” TTil said he served with the Amerioal Division in 1968 when he witnessed Viet­ namese civilians wired up to electrical field telephones. In one case, ha said, the "crank was fumed for so long,** that a woman under Interrogation menstruated profusely. ANOTHER WITNESS, Kenneth B. Osborn, 25, said he was trained af Ft. Holabtrd, Md., as a spy handler. In Vietnam in file spring of 1968, Osborn said he twice traveled on U.S. Marine helicopters when Vietnamese were dropped to their deaths to frighten other suspects aboard into telling all they knew about enemy activities. Osborn, an enlisted man who posed as H civilian In Vietnam, said his female Chinese interpreter drew the wrath of an army captain, also a member of the 525th Military fcitelligenee Group. He said the captain shot her In the neck and left the girl In his back yard, saying he believed she knew too much about American intelligence activities. Committee Approves Draft Extension Bill WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate Ar­ med Services Committee approved Tuesday a bill extending the draft for two more years and permitting President Richard M. Nixon to end deferments for college un­ dergraduates. The hill, close to the version requested by the Nixon Administration, is expected to face a strong fight in the Senate from Indochina war foes and advocates of an all-volunteer army seeking to limit the extension to just one year. Consideration Ls exacted in the Senate In about two weeks. The current draft law expires June 30. The two-year duration is the same as Voted earlier by the House. But the Senate version carries only a $987 million increase In pay and allowances—Ihe figure sought by the Administration—rather than the $2.7 billion approved by the House. Both versions would give the President the authority he sought to end deferments of college undergraduates. The Senate version would make this ef­ fective with enactment of the legislation, thus permitting all students now' in college to finish their undergraduate education. Tile House version W'ould make the authority retroactive to April 23, 1970, making students who entered college last fall eligible for the draft at the end of the current academic year. House Okays Voting Issue 18-year-old Suffrage Ratified By JOHN POPE Texan Staff Writer The Texas House approved Tuesday afternoon the proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution winch would give 18-year-olds the right to vote in all elections. The House voted 99 to 40 in favor of the Senate-endorsed resolution, making Texas the twenty-first state to ratify the proposed amendment. Thirty eight states must approve the proposal for it to become part of the federal Constitution. A federal law already gives 18-year-olds the vote in elections for national offices. Rep. Frank W. Calhoun of Abilene, the resolution’s House sponsor, said endorsing the amendment wrould acknowledge that “it’s high time that we let young people participate in government.” Earlier in the day the House approved 138 to 9 and sent to the Senate a proposed amendment to the State Constitution giving 18-year-olds the right to vote in local and state elections. Sponsors said the proposal, which will be voted on in the November, 1972, general election, was necessary because several years might elapse before the federal amendment is ratified by 38 states. Much of the debate on the resolution centered on an amendment by Rep. Harold Davis of Austin to require a college or university student under 21 years of aga to use his parents’ Or guardians’ voting residence lf he receives most of his financial support from them. The House approved it, 91 to 55. Davis said his amendment was “worthy in that it allows the students to get into the mainstream of the communities from which they come.” Discussion was heated, and many students in the galleries cheered file Davis amendment’s opponents. Rep. John Traeger of Seguin Implied that the motion might be called an “Austin home rule amendment," and several ofter scions called the part relating to financial support unenforceable. The House also approved an amendment by Rep. Dewitt Hale of Corpus Christi to the resolution. Hale’s suggestion changed the wording so the resolution would conform with any system of voter registration. The original wording only provided for the present system of annual registration. The House defeated two amendments to the measure which woald have raised the minimum voting age from 18. Rep. Bryan Poff Jr. of Amarillo moved to raise It to 20, and Rep. D.R. “Tom** Uher of Bay City suggested 19. Each man said important psychological changes justified hiking the minimum age from 18 to the age he advocated. Toward the end of the long debate over the bill and its amendments, Rep. Dan Kubiak of Rockdale suggested raising the minimum age to 45, but he withdrew his amendment to the accompaniment of loud laughter. Demonstrators Block Entrance A Selective Service employe, returning to work from his lunch hour Tuesday, required the help o f police to vault antiwar dem onstrators who blocked the entrance to the building in W ash in gto n in protest of the draft. . —HPI Telephoto. TSP Elects to W ait Delay Unfit Regents Rule on Charter By HENRY WELLS News Assistant Texas Student Publications* Board of Directors adopted a “wait and see” attitude Tuesday on taking legal action to make TSP’s charter, w'hich expires July 6, per­ petual. The directors will walt to see what action the Board of Regents takes at its June 4 meeting after a committee of Texas n e w s p a p e r m e n submits its recom­ mendations on The Daily Texan and TSP. The TSP board voted four to three to “ take no action on rechartering until the (TSP) board meets on June 5 or some legal time.” The directors heard prior advice, lengthy debate on political and legal aspects of the move and a petition signed by 40 Daily Texan staff members that asked the board take no action until June I TSP WILL CEASE to exist as a cor­ poration when its charter expires July 6 and its assets, valued at roughly $600,000 will revert to the Board of Regents unless legal measures are taken to extend the life of the corporation. Filing a charter amendment with the Texas Secretary of State would be the legal action the TSP Board would take to make the corporation exist either perpetually or for some definite period of time. However, a legal question exists'as to which body, the regents or the TSP Board, this the has amendment. right and pow'er to file The TSP charter specifies that amend­ ments may be proposed by the regents or by a majority vote in a student election. This indicates power lies with the regents, lawyers said. ON THE OTHER hand Texas’ nonprofit corporation act states that the governing board of a corporation has the power to amend its charter. Since TSP was originally incorporated by private citizens, not the regents, this law seems to place powrer in the TSP Board, according to lawyers. Under those conditions three possibilities exist under which TSP could be rechar­ tered : • The regents could tering June 4 and legal cleared; approve reoil a r- paths would be • TSP could file without regen tai ap­ proval and the Secretary of State could accept the amendment; • If the Secretary of State rejects TSP’s amendment, TSP might petition a state court and win an opinion directing the Secretary of State to accept file amend­ ment. Discussion grew heated during the meeting over W'hat action should be taken and when. At point Students* one Association President Jeff Jones, chairman of the TSP Board, offered to resign as president and swear in president-elect Bob Binder on the spot to allow Binder to sign the amendment. Dr. Norris Davis, chairman of the Department of Journalism, argued against filing until June 4, saying, ‘‘(Regent) Frank Erwin has introduce a said he will resolution to take aw’ay campus space and take The Texan off the blanket tax if we file this.” \ TIM DONAHUE, student member of the board, said lf the board did not file the amendment, it W'ould “throw away a free Texan for the price of the blanket tax.” Eugene Sauls, professor of accounting and fa ality member of the board, said he w'ould vote for filing independently if the regents take no action at their June 4 meeting. The board heard legal advice that they had “about a 50-50 chance” of winning a court case to continue as a corporation. The TSP Board Authorized April 20 the filing of the “perpetual” amendment if the regents rejected or took no action at their meeting last Friday. THE REGENTS TOOK no action, but TSP did not file the amendment because TSP Board Secretary David Mincberg refused to affix his signature to the document. Mincberg said Tuesday he had been “ empowered,” rather than required, to sign at any time after the regents’ meeting. Mincberg had said after Friday’s regents’ meeting that he wanted to w'ait until the next TSP meeting because “ there was a different attitude on the Board of Regents than the TSP Board realized.” Erwin told student members of the TSP Board Friday that “if TSP goes down to file that at the Secretary of State’s office, then you will be In direct confrontation with the Board of Regents, and both of us will do what each is big enough to do.” Amendment Considered To Raise Building Fee By GAYTON FINKLEA News Assistant The Senate Finance Committee referred to a subcommittee Tuesday an amendment that would authorize the boards of regents in 14 Texas universities and colleges to raise the building use fee for students to $50 per semester. The amendment by Sen. A.M. Aikin Jr. of Paris w'ould increase by $45 the current fee of $5 per semester for each student in most State universities. Tile University of Texas and Texas Tech, however, have a present building use fee of $26. THE AMENDMENT STATES increase It in­ “shall not stitutions amounts excess of authorized or hereafter authorized by said Article 2654c, as amended.” that tuition at said tile in But tw'o witnesses heard by tile com­ mittee voiced concern that tuition costs would be raised to take care of this ap­ propriation. Alan Hurst, speaking as legislative assistant for University Student Govern­ ment President Boh Binder, said students would object to the amendment because it would raise their fees and put a college education out of reach for some students. Frank C. Erwin Jr., University Board of Regents member, said the amendment would not increase the cost for students but would pledge part of the current cost to obtaining lands, building new facilities and paving streets. Erwin expressed c o n c e r n Impossibility of carrying over the through building plans of present institutions for new medical and other academic schools since the new appropriations would be spent on presently existing campuses. Hurst said that in effect the proposed Aikin amendment would be a companion bill to a tuition increase, but Aikin stressed repeatedly that the proposal did not call for a tuition increase. Texas Tech Vice-President Bill Parsly said unless certain monies were ap­ propriated, his institution could not build a new’ medical school, now in the planning stage. Parsly said tuition costs would have to be doubled and that the State would have to appropriate approximately $100 million In revenue before Tech could afford the new medical school under the proposed amendment. ERWIN AND PARSLY both said their respective universities were special cases in the state since they haw higher building fees than other colleges. Erwin offered a solution that the resident tuition be doubled with the first $50 going for construction on the present campuses and the second $50 for building new’ campuses and medical schools, which are in the plans of both Tech and the University. Several representatives from the College Presidents Council were present at the meeting, and those who spoke stressed that their institutions were in desperate need of money for building new facilities. M ay 18 Set For Welfare, Liquor Vote By LINDA JOHNSTON Texans will consider amending their Constitution for the 201st in absentee voting Wed­ time nesday for the May 18 con­ stitutional amendments ballot. Four amendments are on the ballot. In addition, local option elections liquor -by-the-drink will be held in “wet” precincts that approved in November. issue the for The amendments on the ballot read as follows; • The constitutional amend­ ment to create a State Ethics Commission em powered to set rules of ethics for members of the Legislature, State officers and legislative officers, to investigate thereof, and to v i o l a t i o n s recommend for members of the Legislature and the and lieutenant governor improvements and recommend economy legislative process. compensation the In • The constitutional amend- the m e n t providing legislature may propose an amendment to the Constitution at any session of the Legislature. that • The constitutional amend­ ment removing the limitation on the total State appropriations for assistance grants for the needy aged, the needy disabled and the and needy blind, a limitation on total State ap­ propriations during any fiscal year for assistance grants for needy dependent children and the caretakers of such children. setting • The constitutional amend­ ment to authorize the Issuance of one-hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in bonds to provide financial assistance to cities and other public agencies for water quality enhancement purposes, providing for the improvement the water and continuance of r e s o u r c e s and establishing an interest ceiling on water development bonds at 6 percent per annum. program, six-year Amendment I provides for an Ethies Commission which would consist of nine members ap­ pointed by the judiciary branch and tw'o ex-officio members of each house. The members would serve The commission’s functions would be to set salaries and determine r u l e s legislators. All legislators would be required to financial submit a complete the commission. statement However, these statements would not be made public. terms. for to Comments on the amendment range all the way from, “ It’s a sham. . .a gimmick to obtain a pay raise” to “ Ifs one of the finest pieces of forward-looking legislation. the state of .In Texas.” . Rep. Maurice Angly of Austin the loudest has been one of spokesmen against the amend­ ment, although he contends that, “Theres a crying need for ethics regulation as evidenced by the recent SEC stock controversy.” that because of Some of Angly’s arguments against the amendment are that the he feels commission’s make-up it will become a political animal, and that one party could control it. However, he legislators* financial statements should be made available to the public. He also holds that legislators are not the Texas justified people to lot the commission set salaries. in asking feels Supporters say the proposed amendment should go far toward Improving public confidence in State officials and legislative officers. Those approving also assert that with the commission setting salaries legislator w'ould no longer be considered a part-time official since the present annual salary of $1,800 is scarcely adequate to meet present-dav costs of living. the (See ‘LIQUOR,’ Page 2.) British Leader • • . Harold Wilson to speak. Wilson Sets Friday Talk Harold Wilson, former Prime Minister of Great Britain and now a member of the House of Commons, will lecture at th* University Friday. Wilson arrives in Austin at 2:30 p.m. Friday. At 4 p.m., he will speak in Burdine Hall Auditorium. His is “Anglo- American Relations: A Special Case.” This lecture is open to the public. topic Wilson is coming to the University on the invitation of Dean John A. Gronouski of the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. friendship with Another purpose in visiting Texas is renewing his former President Lyndon B. Johnson. Wilson will ho a weekend guest of the Johnsons at the LBJ Ranch near Stonewall. He will he accompanied by his wife and H.A. Field, his personal assistant. Dn Sunday, Johnson and Wilson will hold an informal seminar with graduate students of the LBJ School. This will be at the LBJ Ranch. On Monday, W’ilson will address a feint session of the Texas Legislature at ll a rn. e and Mrs. W ilson will also be given a tour of the Johnson Presidential Library and the LBJ School of Public Af* irs by Mrs. Johnson, a member of the University Board of Regents of the UT system The W’ilsonS and Field will leave Austin Tuesday. Wilson served as Prime Minister and First Ix>rd of the Treasure from October. 1964. until the Labour P arfv’s defeat of the general election of June, 1970. He now has the role of leader of the opposition party in Parliament, in which he has served since 1945. The defeat of the Labour Party came as a surprise since the party had been predicted to win a six to one victory- W’ilson is known for his excellence rn pub liq speaking Aud his capucu^ lur del ate. f | I I • Liquor: the Voters Turn... j Summer Jobs Lacking in City why Amendment 2 was proposed by Rep. Jack Ogg of Houston. ^'Hi'ininniiinffiiinmnmisniimnnninimiMnjinninninnnnnTMninmraimininiMnniiinmrannmnnnfHiinnnnnmiinniiinniirfFnnnnfnmninfflninnii (Continued from Page I.) % ^ f ■ F. B. MEN S SHOES 478-9132 2414 Guadalups 700 and up B O O T S - Canvass Check Our Prices! "First In Latest Styles" The 62nd Legislature opened on a severe welfare crisis. As the only state in the union to have a welfare ceiling, in danger of reaching the $80 million maximum by June. it was Sen. Charles Wilson of Lufkin proposed lifting the ceiling on all welfare rolls but was forced to limit on to the con­ tack a to Dependent troversial Aid Children program it to get passed. Therefore, Amendment 3 removes the ceding on the adult welfare programs—aged, blind Currently a legislator can only propose a constitutional amend­ ment during a regular biennial session. Amendment 2 would allow such proposals In special and called sessions also. against A r g u m e n t s the amendment include criticism that the Constitution is amended all too frequently as it is and that passage might hamper badly needed the Con­ stitution. revision of Gov. Preston Smith expressed c o n c e r n for environmental problems, Texas water in par­ ticular, in his inaugural address. Amendment 4 seeks to improve the quality and increase quantity of the state’s water. systems AT PRESENT it is the city or town’s responsibility to provide waste water treatment facilities, and disposal sewer systems with federal assistance on the basis of up to 70 percent local funds and up to 30 percent federal of Amendment 4 would add a third participant, the State of Texas. The split would then be 20 per­ cent local, up to 25 percent State grants and loans and up to 55 percent federal matching funds. funds. Adoption the attempt Those supporting the amend­ to ment praise realize a greater return on tax dollars now going to Washington. Those opposing the amendment feel the State should not un­ dertake another financial burden which is rightfully the respon­ sibility of local government. T H E effects of Prohibition may finally come to an end In some Texas counties, Including Travis and all the urban areas of the state. Teetotalers lost their fight for in November when voters repealed the 52-year- old constitutional mandate that “ the open saloon shall be and Is hereby prohibited.” temperance Sen. Joe Christie of El Paso, who sponsored the bill in the Senate, first introduced liquor-by- the-drink four years ago under G o v . ad­ ministration, but it was defeated. He says that now they have “ a g o o d enforceable, workable bill,’' and is confident of passage. John Connally’s strong, The age-old arguments that lower liquor-by-the-drink will morality the and number of drunken drivers still exist, but the fact that it would increase State revenue cannot be denied. Increase and disabled and place* an almost double annual ceiling on AFDC, $55 million, which should maintain the next it through biennium. Much argument against the amendment concerns the A FD C program. A RECENT report by the Senate Interim Committee on Welfare lifting R e f o r m recommends ceilings saying, “ The time has passed when selected public vigilance over the resources of the state can wisely be exercised by constitutional provision.” fear Arguments against the welfare amendment that include unless a halt is called on the spiraling welfare costs an ever­ increasing tax burden will be placed on Texans. Some also contend that the entire program of public welfare should be a function of the federal govern­ ment To avert crises such as the welfare problem is one reason ATTENTION Off Campus Dorm Residents Volunteers Needed for Clothing Drive to Benefit th# poor Call 476-7351 472-7841 for Info 478-4206 PHOTOS B y J O H N H O W E Tile summer job outlook for University students may be described as bleak in Austin and across the nation. Austin, because of the number of high school and college students competing, is a particularly poor place to seek summer work, according to Walt Maurer of the Texas Employment Commission. He added that nationwide, “ there are just not enough jobs to go around.” Maurer said University men will find their best chances of obtaining summer work in construction and light industries in Austin, while the worst chances will probably fall to those applying for clerical positions. Women who can type 4S words per minute or better, as well as those with some degree of expertise in taking shorthand, should have good chances of finding summer clerical and secretarial work. Maurer expects these jobs, as well as those in construction and light industry, to pay from $1.75 to $2 per hour in Austin, a city lie describes as not being noted for Its high paying market. Ben Stough, assistant director for Student Financial Aids, also describes the Austin summer job market as poor. Tuesday he listed l l summer jobs available at his office in labor, stenography, summer camps, teaching assistance and child care. Needs Smith's OK House Approves Bill For W om en's Rights The Texas House endorsed 119 a to 25 Tuesday proposed constitutional amend­ ment granting equal rights to women. afternoon Rep. Rex Braun of Houston the proposal, which sponsored has already been approved by the Senate. The measure must be signed by Gov. Preston Smith and then approved by a majority the of November, 1972, general election to become part of the Texas Constitution. the state’s voters In The “ equal rights amendment,” which has been Introduced In each legislative session for the last 13 years, states: “ Equality under the law shall not be denied or abridged be­ cause of sex, race, creed or na­ tional origin.” The language Is simple, but groups like the Texas Association of Business and Professional Women claim It will wipe out numerous forms of discrimination against their sex. Braun led op­ successfully position to several amendments which, ha said, would got His proposal. Two defeated motions would have prevented the amendment from state’* property laws. affecting the Rep. Carl Parker of Port Ar­ thur cited previous discrimination against women In property laws, which, he said, are “ where th* most blatant discriminatory law* are on the books. Women h & v* been classed with lunatic* and other incompetents.” proposal self- is that operative, which means enabling legislation will not have to be enacted to put the amend­ ment into effect. A proposal to make it not self-operative wa* defeated. Braun's AAUP MEETING (TO A L L IN T E R E S T E D F A C U L T T ) Tht American Association of University Professors will hold on important meeting in B.E.B. 161 a t 3:00 p.m. on Monday, May 3, 1971. Please plan to attend and mention the meeting to In- terested colleagues. May Day? The Last Day of Classes? The Last Saturday before finals? Yes, but ifs also the C ity Council Runoff election — Vote - "The Choice Is Yours Poll open 7 a.m .-7 p.m. — Outreach — U T Approved Student Organization PASSPORTS (r e s u m e s ■ SUPER HOT I SERVICE STUDTMAN PHOTO 119th at Lavaca • Camaron Village exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams exams PAPERS AND EXAMS The bleary end o f this semester's stuffing absorbs substance and assumes a grim ta n g ib ility within the mental permutations o f paper com position and exam preparation. The sweet calling o f Shangri La, images o f women talking o f Michaelangelo, rhap­ sodies in the night, and the b itte r ironies o f your last duchess all beckon inseminatingly — sirens o f re lie f from te st anxiety. In about these flow ing states o f mind, perhaps from the depths o f mental storage a memory trace will wind itse lf into consciousness, whispering "exam supplies, paper supplies, across Guadalupe, The C o -O p ." reason. Come. Listen to Spencer's Dwarf. Heed the voice o f papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers papers I HT STUD t MI S OWN STORE The Co-Op, for student traumas like papers and exams Fag. 2 Wednesday. April 21. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAft Dick Nichols W ick Fowler Absentee Vote Big Hopefuls Ready for Saturday Ca Cut Back 7 9 7 7 Figure Lowest in I Years WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary' of announced Defense Melvin R. Laird Tuesday a cutback in the draft call for May and indicated total 1971 inductions will be the lowest in seven years. Laird told a news conference the actions are possible “ because of the progress we have made” In Vietnamizing the war and withdrawing U.S. troops. TUR DEFENSE SECRETARY in effect cut the May call from 15,000 by combining it with June and setting a two-month quota totalling 20,000. This, he Indicated, means 10.000 youths will be called up and another 10,000 in June. that about in May This will be a sharp drop from the 17,000- a-month draft quotas in the January to April period, totalling 68,000 men. Projecting ahead for the rest of this year, Laird said, “ I would estim ate the draft calls would not exceed the 10.000 figure for any month.” He hinted the calls may fall below that average and that the final draft figure for 1971 might be around 142,000. That would Kotouc Acquitted Lai Assault be some 21,500 below last year and the lowest total since the 112.500 in 1964, the year before the United States got deeply into the Vietnam war. LAIRD’S NEWS conference was unan­ nounced in advance and came amid fresh the capital, antiwar demonstrations suggesting it might have been intended to take some of Hie bite out of those demon­ strations. in On other subjects, Laird said: • Tile Russians are “ going ahead with a sophisticated ABM system.” Tile Soviets have resumed construction of their an­ timissile defenses in the Moscow area, he said, expanding the system beyond four sites with 64 defensive missile launchers toward shield with 128 defensive missiles designed to guard the Soviet capital area from U.S. long-range missiles. eight-site an • “There is some evidence that they (the Russians) have gone forward" with installing multiple warheads on their SS9 missiles, but “ I can’t state positively” whether they can be aimed independently at separate targets or whether they are earlier generation multiple warheads which are fired shotgun fashion without separate aiming. • He can’t tell yet for certain whether a new Soviet missile deployment, spotted within recent months, Ls “a brand new missile or a modified SS9.” If • to move the Russians continue ahead in their missile development without progress in the Strategic Arms Limitation negotiations “ I would not hesitate to go to Congress to ask for additional funds” to offset the Russian moves with additional U.S. nuclear weaponry. • The new budget reflects his decision to go into “ full acceleration” in develop­ ment of advanced bomber and a new’ un- d e r w ’ a t e r submarine-launched missile system, but that a production decision will not come until at least fiscal 1973. Laird hinted he might be leaning toward adding to the force of 1,000 U.S. Minuteman TCBM’s. • The Vietnam war will cost the United States $8 billion next year, about half this y ear’s cost and S20 billion below the 1969 peak. • A U.S. Navy reconnaissance plane photographed a Soviet ballistic missile launching submarine on the surface about 400 miles northeast of Honolulu last Friday. the first officially produced evidence that the Russians have deployed the their Polaris-type Pacific. Soviet “Yankee class” subs mount missiles with a range of about 1,300 miles. submarines This was In Laird announced that within the next few days “we will have our first black ad­ m iral.” The officer will be Capt. Samuel Gravely, currently in command of a frigate. Tile army end Hie air force each has a black general. the july to find Kotouc innocent of the assault after the prosecution concluded its case by reading a statem ent from tile defendant. tile denied assaulting the prisoner by cutting him on the neck. He admitted cutting off tile tip of his little finger, but said it was ac­ cidental. statement, Kotouc In KOTOUC, 37, of Humboldt, Neb., is the fourth soldier tried on criminal charges arising from the My Lai assault and its afterm ath. He faces a maximum sentence of seven years imprisonment. to be Capt. Norman Cooper of Southern Pines, N.C., one of three defense attorneys, had asked that both charges be thrown out, saying to prove either accusation. the government failed MaJ. William Eckhardt of Starkville, Miss., the prosecutor, argued that it was only necessary to prove the prisoner was injured and that the government's wetnesses testified to that fact. In the statement, read to the jury by the government, Kotouc said he questioned three “Viet Cong terrorists,” one to two miles from the village of My La! after U.S. troops staged the assault. Kotouc said it was his duty as the operation intelligence officer to question the suspects and obtain information from diem that might help U.S. forces still operating in the area. “THEREUPON, I CAUSED a board to be placed under the right hand of one of the terrorists and I tapped on the board with the sharp edge of my knife,” said tile statement. “ I hit the board several “ Unintentionally and by accident, I hit the end of his little finger, cutting off the tip of the finger. I. .immediately put my knife away. . f t . McP h e r s o n , Ga. - a m ilitary judge directed a jury Tuesday to find Capt. Eugene M. Kotouc innocent of assaulting an unidentified prisoner after tile My Lai raid in 1968. (AP) The judge let stand a charge accusing Kotouc of maiming the same prisoner by cutting off part of his finger. THE DEFENSE then opened its case and called in­ l l of 13 scheduled witnesses, cluding several who testified as to Kotouc's the court-martial was character, before recessed for the day. The judge, Col. Madison Wright, directed U.S. Position On Peking Due in M ay LONDON (AP) — Secretary of State William P. Rogers has pledged U.S. backing far a constructive role by Red China in Asia. He indicated the United States will decide within about four weeks on how to handle the issue of Chinese represen­ tation in the United Nations. The secretary told the opening session of a two-day conference of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization Tuesday that his government welcomes Peking's overture for a new relationship. Later, in private, he discussed the China Question with Foreign Secretary Sir Alec Douglas-Home of Britain, a country that recognized the Peking government in 1950. Rogers gave Douglas-Home to understand Washington will make up its mind finally on the m atter of Chinese representation In the United Nations within the next four weeks or so, informants said. The issue for years has been a source and of disagreement between London Washington. Britain wants Peking to take over Chine s •eat from Nationalist Olina even though In it has backed American demands for a two-thirds General Assembly margin on the question. the past The Nixon Administration has displayed readiness entry provided Nationalist Chinese on Formosa remain a member of the world body. support Peking's to This "two-China policy,” urged again Monday by a presidential commission under Henry Cabot Lodge, is unacceptable to the Chinese Communist and the Nationalist Chinese. China’s new diplomatic posture dominated the exchanges within SEATO. Tile alliance was formed by eight nations 37 years ago as a shield against the real from threats and or Peking. Since then things have changed. frightened of imagined thrusts France, no ^ n g e r is Chinese, Pakistan, tu Peking, friendly represented only by an observer. boycotting the the meeting. is being Rogers, as if to reassuie his listeners that the Nixon Administration is not exactly ping-pong starry-eyed about China’s diplomacy, served notice the U.S. com­ mitment to SEATO and its members will go on. Volunteers Can Blitz, Leaflet, Campaign Pre-election Action Planned Four University groups are planning activities in­ cluding “blitzing,” campaigning anc! in connection with the Saturday City Council runoff election. leafleting The Student Voting Campaign will c an y on a drive through Thursday in the four precincts near the University, Dean Banks, chairman, said Tuesday. Volunteers will canvass streets, urging residents who are registered voters to vote. This vote drive is termed blitzing, Banks said. Volunteers also will leave personalized notes about the election with each registered voter if he is not home. Those who wish to work in the blitzing may sign up at a West Mall booth manned from IO a.m. to 4 p.m. through Thursday, Banks said. Volunteers may pick up information to distribute at the same booth from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, when the blitzing is scheduled, Banks said. About IOO have volunteered so far, said Frank Dupuy, SVC member. Students may also help in a telephone drive that will contact residents in the Lake Trace Apartments area across the Colorado River, Banks said. They will phone all residents in the area under age 130 and urge them to vote, he said. “This is the last chance that students will have to work on the election unless they work for a can­ didate,” Banks said. Tile Student Action Committee (SAC) is campaigning for three runoff candidates, Jeff Friedman, Berl Handcox and Dick Nichols, said Dirk Schenkkan, SAC co-chairman. Students can volunteer lo campaign for the SAC slate at their information booth on the West Mall, he said. The group has been leafleting on campus and will extend the campaign by canvassing in the University community. SAC will also mail material to registered voters and may employ sound trucks on Saturday to urge students to vote, Schenkkan said. The Armadillo May Day Tribe and Direct Action, two radical groups, will leaflet polling places Saturday. They will pass out material that explains the May Day w’ar protest and demands, said John Pearcy. The leafleteers probably will be working in the largest precincts, Pearcy said. By JENNIFER EVANS News Assistant At the close of absentee balloting Tuesday, 1,870 Austinites had voted in the City Council runoff. The turnout was heavy, said City Clerk Elsie Woosley, since in the 1969 runoff, only about 750 voted absentee. Total vote in that runoff was 20,467. The election is scheduled for Saturday, the day after University classes end and dead w’eek begins. The six candidates seeking three council seats are: Place 2, Jay Johnson and Dick Nichols; Place 5, Wick Fowler and Jeff Friedm an; Place 6, Berl Handcox and Harry Smith. the JOHNSON, native Austinite and former University student, said tile City needs to the establish better communication with University Board of Regents and the students. “ You think the students have problems with the regents!” he said. “We do. too.” Johnson, the incumbent, said he is against the quadrant system of taxation and favors a biennial evaluation. Better public safety, police education and ecology action are issues important to him, Johnson said. NICHOLS, former 1968-69 City Council member, said Tuesday that “ the hodge­ to City podge, chaotic, crisis approach government” should be ended. He said his opponent wTas a main cause of such inef­ ficiency. Nichols emphasized that the City should establish better rapport with the University and other governmental entities. He ad­ vocated reforming the quadrant system of taxation and finding other sources of City income. More ecology study, ecology control measures and City parks also are important to him, Nichols said. FOWLER, former Austin journalist and columnist, said he has emphasized crime protection. “Our No. I problem is crim e.” he said. “ I want to make Austin safe.” Fowler advocates adding men to the police force and paying the problems of women being attacked and drugs being pushed were m ajor ones con­ nected with the University and should be eradicated. them better. He said The former Austin detective and DPS patrolman has served as a journalist in Vietnam and at the White House, as well as an assistant former Gov. Allan Shivers. to FRIEDMAN, Austin attorney and 1970 University law school graduate, said he will work representative City government, “ where every group has a fair hearing and an adequate representation.” for a He tile said stress council professionalism, “Not move from crisis to crisis.” should Austin should remain a beautiful city and smokestack industries should not be built here. Friedm an said. Tile areas of Austin’s health care and its ambulance service need to be improved, he said. HANDCOX, an IBM employe and former Job Corps worker, stressed unity, balance and progress as his goals for the council. “Representation for all groups who fee! that they have not been fairly represented” is vital, he said. The total Austin com­ munity, including the University, should be tied together more closely. As a councilman, Handcox said be would give attention to the problems of municipal services and personnel, parks and ecology. SMITH said his 25 years of business as a council run “ the $73 million experience qualify him member business that Is the City of Austin.” to help Smith Is vice-president and general manager of radio .station KNOW. “ I want to help m ake a great city greater,” he said. His main goal, Smith said, is to improve the quality of life in Austin without abusing the taxpayer. The way to do so is to make City spending more effective, he added. Nichols, Friedman and Handcox are endorsed by the University Student Action Committee. Fair and cooler Wednesday. Partly cloudy Wednesday night and Thursday. Winds from the north at 8 to 18 m.p.h. becoming light and variable Wednesday night. High: mid 80’s. Low: low 60*s. Jeff Friedman Berl Handcox mm Vs. mmm rn mmm. MMK arson in a dormitory fire. H arry Smith Pakistanis M ake Major Indian Raid NEW DELHI Pakistan troops crossed into India and exchanged fire with Indian security forces Tuesday in the most serious border incident between the two countries since their three-week war in 1965, official sources in Calcutta said. The sources said the Pakistani soldiers raided an Indian village 65 miles northeast of Calcutta on the border with East Pakistan about 3:30 a.m., killed five persons, injured many others and set fire to several homes. About five hours later, these sources added, the Pakistan army came back within 300 yards from the border and fired toward the Indian border checkpost at Haridaspur, which many East Pakistani refugees have used to enter India in the last month. Indian officials said the Indian border forces returned the firing during both incidents. Airline, Speculative Stocks Advance NEW YORK Airline stocks advanced strongly Tuesday, and more speculative issues attracted new buying as the stock market closed higher in active trading. Analysts said they expected interest in the more speculative issues, partially demonstrated by stepped-up trading on the Amex, to continue. They said corporate earnings reports and special situations were affecting individual stocks. ft. Kansas Students M a y Give Fees to U.K. LAWRENCE Students at the University of Kansas, scene of disorders a year ago, voted Tuesday on whether $130,000 in student activity fees should be turned over to the university. The move would help offset a $220,000 budget cut made by the State Legislature. David Miller of Eudora, Ran., student body president, said the results w’ould be announced Wednesday at a news conference of the student senate. The projKisal was advanced by the student senate, which recom­ mended that the contribution come out of the $24 activity fee paid by each of the 18,000 students. Arson, Violence Cost Stanford $225,000 STANFORD Stanford University reports its fire and violence damage in less than a month has reached $225,000 with a seventh certified case of The blaze which burned out a student dormitoiy lounge early Monday causing $75,000 damage “was a set fire,” said Alan Carter, Santa Clara County deputy fire marshal. A battle between police and demonstrators at the Stanford Medical Center caused damage estimated at $100,000. A bomb of military’ type plastic explosive in the attic of the president’s office caused additional $25,000 demage, and vandals did another $25,000 worth when they ransacked the library’s card cata­ logue. Rubin, Kinoy Share SM U with Mitchell DALLAS Nationally known radicals Jerry Rubin and Arthur Kinoy will be allowed to share the campus of Southern Methodist University with U.S. Atty. Gen. John Mitchell when he dedicates the new Underwood Law Library there Friday. University officials said Tuesday that Rubin and Kinoy w’ould bo allowed to hold an antiwar rally on campus two hours after the library dedication ceremony. They are being brought in by SMU’s Student Mobilization Committee. Rubin is a convicted member of the Chicago Seven. K in o y was ap­ peals atlomey for the controversial group convicted of disrupting the 1968 Democratic national convention in Chicago TOo attorney general’s dedication address bs "scheduled for 3 p. nu Rubm and Kinoy will speak at 6 p.m. Wednesday, April 28, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page J The firing lins The case of the grade-school bully To tho rd! tor: too. I, favor an independent, student- controllod Texan. It makes for a more interesting, free-thinking, generally higher- quality newspaper. However, along with such independence, there is a responsibility to be thoughtful, mature, professional. I don’t think that any of those three ad­ jectives can be applied to this year’s staff. The past few weeks alone have seen several articles and editorials evidencing what can only be called a childish attitude on the part of the Texan staff. Your response to the “radical clique” charges was trite and proved nothing, except perhaps that there is a clique, though radical it is not (Truly radical students were the likely more embarrassed by charges than you). Your reply to the letter from the anxious father out in the sticks was meaningless to most readers—University students and that a university faculty already know community is not like others. FINALLY, Sunday’s editorials and ar­ ticles concerning regents’ decision the contained little more than hysterical, im­ the likes of which I passioned rhetoric, haven’t seen since my high school debate class. These are only three of a year-long series of instances in which you refuse to let any criticism, no m atter how slight, pass unchallenged. The Texan is going to be criticized no m atter what you do, so you may as well learn to live with it and devote your space to more important m atters. The best metaphor I can think of to describe your attitude is a grade-school bully who dares anyone to call him a name, and then provokes a flstfight with each and every person who does so, or even TEXAN PETITION We, the undersigned, support the following statem ent concerning The Daily Texan. We support keeping The Texan in its present form, that is a student-controlled, m a n a g e d , written a n d edited new spaper. We strongly believe th at any faculty and professional aid should be solely advisory. (Please sign only once.) TO TA L: A s o f Tuesday, the list of signatures turned into the Texan stands at 17,145. Editorials Music to smolder by When anointing Bryce Jordan as U niversity P resid en t ad interim a y e a r ago (and dropping his private reference to Jo rd an as “The Music M an” in the process), then-Regents C hairm an F ran k C. E m in accom panied the selection with a good deal of frap p erv concerning the “ new type of a d m in istrato r” th a t he feels should run m ajor universities. “ Gone is the d ay ,” Erw in said, “ when a college president gets his job simply because he happens In be a PhD. We need people trained in m anagem ent ” A couple of insights on Jo rd a n ’s superior m anagem ent techniques have come to light recently. One w as revealed in the resignation lette r of the nationally-known and highly-respected Prof. Sigmund Koch, director of the C om parative Studies P rogram . Koch related how he had w ritten sev eral letters to Jordan, some of them urgent, concerning the interdisciplinary program , but had never received the courtesy of a reply. Koch reported his p ro g ram w as butchered, and the only method he could use to find out about it w as to read the U niversity Course Schedule upon its cam pusw ide distribution. The im portance of the dem ise of C om parative Studies can scarcely be overem phasized. L ast sum m er, when Jo rd an w as ordered to fire Arts and Sciences D ean John Silber and break a p a rt thu-A ^S College, he did so while prom ising th at interdisciplinary pro g ram s would be improved. JORDAN’S CRITICS ripped him on the issue th a t interdisciplinary activity would surely suffer from the splitup, and R egent Joe Kilgore even felt sufficiently m oved to push through an am endm ent to the A&S breakup resolution specifically instructing Jo rd an to preserve interdisciplinary’ activity. We tru st Kilgore will now check into the integrity of his am endm ent. looks like they might do so. MR. ERWIN’S POLITICS are distasteful. But he is not the diabolical figure The Texan makes him out to be. He is simply a man, doing what he thinks, in his own perverse style, is right. And anyone who goes about doing what he thinks is right with such single-mindedness and dull is to be admired, even if he is on the other side. It is admirable, also, that The Texan has taken such a courageous stand in op­ posing Mr. Erwin, though it would have been more admirable had you not chosen to oppose him on a personal level. You have been rather effective in your op­ position, considering your limitations. You have created no end of annoyances for Mr. Erwin, the evidence of which is seen in his desire to wipe you out. The amazing thing is that you seem to expect him to take no action. It is as if that same grade-school bully bloodied the nose of a grown man at every opportunity, and then calls the man a childbeater when he tries to hit back. QUITE PROBABLY, Mr. Erwin has had plans for several years to bring The Texan under control. But the immaturity displayed by this year’s staff and the persaial attacks against him can only have exacerbated his desire. Under the spectre of a faculty-controlled Texan, I suppose we can envision an amateurish newspaper, devoid of con­ troversy, but full of lengthy editorials on dull subjects and the personal piques of the staff. In some respects, you have already brought us to that. Michael Junkman Open forum To the editor: Concerning the renewing of the TSP charter: The Daily Texan is the only new'spaper in Austin with a wide cross section of student opinion. I don’t want to see this paper turn into an announcement sorority dances. The students of the University of Texas need this open forum. If they can’t get it here, where will they get it? for all the Barbara Dorf Fed up To tho oditor: Frank Erwin and Jenkins Garrett are now trying to take over with a complete dictatorship at the University of Texas—by killing Tile Daily Texan. I am fed up with Frank Erwin and his entire establishment—and I believe he is the University having really hurting anything further to do with it. All those lies he told about somebody giving money to the University for the chancellor’s house was just a lot of malarky—they didn’t have the money so they had to act like they were giving it back. How gullible does he think the people are? Charlet! A. Spears BBA ’38 Chairman ofhe Board Grayson County State Bank Sherman, Tex. bargaining methods and inflated prices. This is why unions cannot tolerate com­ petition. Bill Shellorne On Koch To the editor: I was deeply disappointed to hear that Sigmund Koch feels unable to remain at the University. It Is a personal loss for me. He is the only professor I have studied under W’hile I’ve attended graduate school here who has been my teacher in a com­ plete sense—he is a model for me of a more conscious, more wise, more passionate and more loving person. Many thanks, Dr. Koch, and Godspeed. Virginia Walls Graduate Student Educational Psychology More on Koch To the editor: The two courses which I have had from Sigmund Koch have been the two most vital and meaningful courses I have had in my three years as a graduate student at the University of Texas. It is highly improbable that these unique courses can be given by anyone else, and certainly not with the understanding, sensitivity and insight with which they are now being taught. But most of all it is Dr. Koch’s passion, honesty, genuineness, brilliance and in­ tegrity as a human being which will be missed and which cannot be replaced. Roo Ruhnkft Graduate Student Educational Psychology Good news To the editor: We, the undersigned, of Campus Crusade for Christ, would like to thank Ed Eiland for his letter to the editor in Sunday’s Texan concerning the CCC leaflet. Although Christians have been criticized often, and sometimes justly, we have never heard a valid criticism of the One we serve, Jesus Christ. The leaflet, though offensive to some, stated very clearly the claims of Jesus Christ. F i r s t l y , all men, regardless of background, have missed out on real living. Secondly, Jesus Christ, who loved you enough to die for you, said that only through Him can a man come to know God and thus receive inner peace and joy— the essence of reality and living. It is this good news that we and the leaflet are proclaiming. Mike Davisson Lane Fusilier Linda Kolb Bill Kroeger Stephanie Lawrence Bob Singleton David Smith Susan Talley Jim Washburn Gary Wilson Assessment To the editor: Now’ that the emotionalism of the great lettuce conspiracy has quieted, we may assess the long-range results. One to im­ mediately obvious. Walk into any Safeway store and appraise the quality of the let­ tuce. Where before, Safeway could buy In an arena of free competition, their lettuce was always of the finest quality. Now' that they are forced to buy only certain labels, is of terrible quality, dirty the wilted and diseased and at twice the price. lettuce I believe if one would look around at those areas which are controlled by unions, you will generally find the same results: to shoddy workmanship, unwillingness utilize modern or efficient methods, Gestapo Brain child To Che editor: While I am not In the habit of writing letters to The Daily Texan, and while I consider such activities as somewhat futile there Is a state of affairs that has gone largly unnoticed in your pages. What I refer to to the demise of the Comparative Studies Program. As this is the brain child of a now past generation of University administration cannot be denied, it nevertheless would seem to a reasoning person that this program was an integral part of a program which, inasmuch as it affects the humanities, should at all costs be maintained. Harrv K. Tompkins 1300 Lavaca St Another exam ple of Jo rd a n ’s m anagem ent finesse can best be told by students at the College of Pharm acy, who tried to w ade for 16 m onths through an adm inistrative red-tape m aze to set up a lounge in th eir academ ic building. (Students are currently forced to eat th e ir sandw iches and F ritos in the library'.) Finally, the students confronted Jo rd a n personally in early M arch and extracted a prom ise from him to move “ within a d a y ” to create the lounge area. Then w hat happened? Absolutely nothing. Jordan allowed the m a tte r to m older on his desk. The pharm acy students now have, as th e ir rew ard for “ working through channels,” exactly zero to show for it. Although num erous exam ples of Jo rd a n ’s do-nothingism can be cited, it should be noted th at he isn’t the exclusive m em ber of the Ad­ m inistration P rocrastination Team . F or some reason, difficult decisions tend to be postponed quite regularly until students leave school for the sum m er, or not to be m ade at all. THUS, CHANCELLOR Charles LeM aistre needs from Jan u ary until (surprise) May to decide the status of the Gay Liberation club appeal. And Regent Erw in takes from M arch 23 until (you guessed it) May 3 to come up with answ ers to charges of legal irregularities on the $1 million B auer House fiasco. It m ay give somebody a clue to note th a t The Daily Texan ceases publication for the sem ester on April 30. If this perform ance is the standard for the “ new administrator,** then we suggest there is nothing new about it at all. The historical antecedents for this type of inactivity can be traced all the way back to Im perial Rome—and Nero. Indeed, history' will likely’ record this year as one in which the ad­ m inistration played the piccolo while the University comm unity did a slow burn. Sour Grapes In a throw back to the “ Know-Nothing” days prior to tho W ar Bet- w'een the States, the Texas House of R epresentatives attem pted to put before the s ta te ’s electorate Tuesday an option to deprive th e ir own sons and daughters of their right to participate in local govern­ m ent. Although the action wjas iced over with the Ioss-than-overwhelming ratification of the Twenty-sixth Am endment to the U.S. Constitution (providing for the 18-year-old vole in all elections), the egregious House m aneuver wras an attem pt to restrict potential student voters from voting in towTis where they attend school. I t came in the form of an am endm ent to a State constitutional am endm ent (the state has quite a few m ore constitutional amendments than the federal Constitution) that would perm it 18-year-olds to vote in state and local elections. Tile purpose of the State am endm ent is to provide for an 18-year-old vote in case the federal am endm ent is not ratified before Novem ber, 1972. Senate approval is still needed. the provision for discrim inating against students. It w as im m ediately labeled an “Austin home rule bill” by opponents who pointed out th at Davis m ight not have introduced the am endm ent if the recent City Council elections had been decided differently'. Rep. Harold Davis of Austin introduced ONE OF DAVIS’ backers astutely pointed out that, students should be barred from voting in cities w here they are attending classes because they should be m ore concerned with getting educated than with local politics. The insidious portion of Davis* proposal w as that providing that the ban only apply to students who receive the m ajority of theiu financial support from their parents, allowing them tc vote In their hometowns (big of them ). “ Would students have to file a (financial); disclosure le tte r? ” asked one representative. If somehow it escapes the notice of the Senate and the governor, we trust that the good m others and fathers of the state will recognize D avis’ amendment for what it is — a raucous attempt to disenfranchise a significant chunk of the state’s electorate, motivated mainly by a case of sour grapes. Interesting proposition One interesting proposal which recently came forth in the discussions surrounding the rechartering of Texas Student Publications, Inc., Ss the desire of the Board of Regents to place professional newspapermen in control of the TSP Board. Such an action could set quite a precedent for the University. E l* vision what could follow: Johnny Unitas, Wilt Chamberlain and Arnold Palmer could be ap­ pointed to the Athletic Council. The Union Board could find itself headed by the presidents of the AFL-CIO and Team sters’ Union. Who knows where it all might lead? Professional educators might even be named to the Board of Regents! T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin EDITOR ...............................................................................................Andy Yemma MANAGING E D IT O R ................................................................... Thompson O T Y EDITOR ..................................................................................... Q iff Avery ASSISTANT MANAGING ED ITO R ................................. .. John Reet2 ASSISTANT TO THE E D IT O R ....................................... ........V w I Tavlnr SPORTS EDITOR ............................................................ " " T L ^ S S J b W AMUSEMENTS EDITOR .............................................................. Cicel ^ FEATURES EDITOR ....................................................................... Katfe Issue News Editor .................................................................................. ^ News Assistants .......... Susanne Sullivan, Gaylon Finklea, Rana Shields Henrv Wells Editorial Assistant .................................................................................. ’D&vid Asastan Sports Edttor Affiisten Amusements Edttor .................................................................... ................................................... Hartley Hamptwv-30- ™ 5 UCS Edit°r ....................................... Kobln Braches, Kristina Paledes .......................................................................................... Bmce Beal = ® OT ............................................................................. Copy Editors ............................................ Laurie Leth, Steve Hogner, Debbie Stowltt* Jennifer Evans Opinions expressed In The D ally Texan are those of the r.ditor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration or of the Board of The Texan is a Collegiate P ress Regents’ The Dally Texan sub-m-ih... ated Press, United P ress Service and the New York Times News In te r ^ ti!^ ai m .?ft« The Southwest A u m a U .m The Dally Texan, the student newspaper at Conference and the T exas D aily Newsnaner the U niversity of Texas at Austin. Is published Association. by T exas Student Publications, Inc., Drawer D. U niversity Station. Austin. T exas 78712. The D ally Texan Sunday, Tuesday, W ednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holi­ day periods, Septem ber through May. Second cla ss postage paid a* Austin. is published paper N ew s eontrlbuUons w in be accepted by tele­ phone (471-4401). at the editorial office ( J E. (J.B. 102). 103), or at th? news laboratory Inquiries concerning the delivery should be m ade in J.B. 107 and advertising in J.B. 111. The national advertising representative of The Dally Texan Is National Education Ad­ vertising Service. 360 Lexington Avenue. New York. N.Y., 10017. Please return to The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, 78712 or Journalism Building 103. P«9» 4 W*dna«day, April 28, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Afore firm fine New heights To the editor: The Student Assembly has risen to new heights of mediocrity with a new budget (unfair in many “ self-righteous ways) m o r a l against crusade” 4 ’ p r e v i o u s l y nonexistent” cronyism. and a The Assembly has allotted a budget of $76,922.36. Admittedly, there are many worthwhile projects such as the students’ attorney and draft counseling. However, we find Radical Law Students’ Caucus receiving $200 and $5,000 given to Women’s Lib, while Round-Up gets $1,200, but is in the third priority group, and almost didn’t get anv money at all. there is a very WE CANNOT overlook the fact that large segment of students who enjoy and participate in Round-Up. These were largely ignored by To many, t h e especially many freshmen, it is a special thing to look forward to. Assembly. In the second priority group we have the college councils. Yet the B u s i n e s s and Engineering Councils are put last priority along with Round-Up. in as to represent It is inconsistent and unfair to discrim inate against one and not the other. It is even more in­ consistent and unfair for student government the interests of a select few, while denying representation to other large segments of our university. IT IS equally unfair to see an assemblyman attack Bob Binder for putting someone he knows and trusts to represent him as P E A N U T S administrative assistant — even ii it was his campaign manager. To base an attack on these grounds is either ignorant or a ploy to increase one’s popularity. I am sure the other candidates, had they been elected, would have put people they knew well in a position to represent them. To do otherwise is not practical. It is about time students took look at their student a close government and the men that control it. C o l l e g e Gerry Arlvello of Business Ad­ ministration Seeing red To the editor: One of your editorial writers made a big splash on the coin­ figures — cidence of $600,000 known as to scarlet leaping conclusions. What does your staff make of the coincidence of ( I) “ M ayday” at the top of the last page of Real Faculty Forum No. 3 and (2) the setting of a nationwide peace demonstration for Saturday with Communist International’s 1st of M ay observance? Or am I seeing red? Charles A. Walker If You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service THERE WA5THIS Cl/TE^ LITTLE SPA R R O D E, AMP HE SORT OF KAPELL FOR HER. SITT THEN THIS BLUE JAY TLO HIM THAT THIS ROBIN WHO WAS WITH THIS HUMMIN6 BiRP STILL LIKEP THIS SPARROW WHO LIKEP THIS CANARY WHO LIKEP THIS BLUE JA/, AKP, ACTUALLY/, i t s a ll v er y CONFUSING THE CLOUDS ARE GATHERING . • < tlcMwjk * FINE JE W E L R Y 1st Floor O N -TH E-D RA S W E HAVE A DIAMOND IN YOUR PRICE RANGE Do come in and see our extensive collection of fine diamonds featuring quality at a price you can afford. 3/4 ct. from 370.00 1/2 ct. from 165.00 I /3 ct. from I 12.00 James Reston A flypaper for trouble' (p) 1971 New York Time?* News Service is Vice-President Agnew in trouble again — this lim e for differing with P r e s id e Nixon on China — and people keep asking how he manages to do it. Tile explanation fairly ■rimple: He’s an amiable man who says about what he thinks. really is It is easy to differ with his opinions and often with his the judgments, but h u m o r l e s s in Washington, he is at least faithful lo both his principles and his predjudiees. unlike calculators The Capitol and even the Cabinet are well populated these days with influential men who in private and say one thing in something quite different public. But not Agr “MV. and HE DIDN’T like the way the reporters commentators behaved last year and said so. He still doesn’t like our behavior, but while many of his colleagues have the stopped • hounding scribblers for tactical reasons, he keeps on scalding them at every opportunity. There is nothing personal about Ibis either. He w ill drink with the reporters and condemn them at the same time, but the one thing he won’t do is change his tune just to fit the Republican Pa rty line. Thus, when his opinion was sought by Nixon in the National Security Council the other day about playing diplomatic ping­ pong with Communist China, he said he w’as against it. He thought it would be a cheap propaganda victory for Peking and said so. SIMILARLY, when he had a few reporters into his room at William sburg, V a.t for a nightcap at the Republican Governors Conference, and was asked the same question, he gave the same answer. This helps explain why, unlike Nixon, the Vice-President has inherited the affection and loyalty the Republican conservatives us*-u to give to B arry Coldwater. Even like him reporters personally, despite his attacks on the press, because he does not pretend. the The result is that he Is a flypaper for trouble. He is likely to have more and more trouble with the White House because he has the courage of Nixon’s prejudices. He thinks the Chinese Communists are a menace and he’s not about to change this opinion for a couple of ping-pong games and a tentative smiles. few NOR IS IT likely to homer him too much if in the process his opinions and plain talk cost him die vice-presidential nomination next year. He is quite frank in saying that the President should the mnning-mate who pick strengthens the ticket, and lf that is not Agnew, he will campaign for whatever ticket comes out of the convtr.Hon if he’s wanted, or just disappear quietly lf that Is the President’s pleasure. is harder to define his political philosophy than to un­ derstand why people of different political persuasions like him personally. No doubt he thinks classic as o f Republican conservative, rather like Coldwater, but he’s nothing of the sort. himself It a His A short while ago I listened to him talk privately for over an hour about the problems of the country. first theme was old­ fashioned Tory gospel. People, he said, had forgotten the obligations of charity. Well-heeled people in this country weren’t giving more IO percent of what they than could to the poor, while the poor were accepting handouts from the state without the slightest feeling of gratitude. HE DEPLORED boti! attitudes, and recalled the weekends in Baltim ore when he and his friends used to go out to the Glenn M artin airplane factory and pull nails out of used lumber, so that it could be given to the poor. But when I asked him if he despaired of the nation’s capacity to absorb 25 million new people every IO years, and solve the urban and economic problems of the nation, he said he did not. “ What we need,” he said, “ is total environmental planning.” Piecem eal planning such as the liberal economists propose was not good enough for him. It was inefficient, he said, to have partial and separate planning for education, urban renewal and all the rest SO IT WOULD probably be wrong to say that Agnew has worked out a coherent political philosophy. But at least he is not a fraud. He does what comes naturally, and in the calculating capital, is both a relief and a that problem. Soft, smooth pencil for shapely brow. Lightest pastel shadow for highlight!. Fetal shades for color and contour. Cake Liner to define and shape The mascara that lengthens lashes with every stroke All Eyes Kit Now there’s a compact that hold* all you need for beautiful eye*. The new Maybelline All Eye* K it And it's specially designed for all eye* .. in kits for blondes, brownette*, and brunettes. Each kit has a pencil for a shapely brow. Three shadows with applicator to shade, shape, and highlight Cake Liner with fine-line brush. And a special feature, famous Maybelline Ultra Lash Mascara. All packed into the most compact compact there it I total experience in luxury living FOR UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS MEN AND WOMEN madison house for the intellectual and fully carpeted end eir-conditioned. The loving girl. Spacious four and six Congenial atmosphere is accentuated girl suites, ell landscaped patio area complete with heated swimming pool. Your ex­ by e graciously perience in luxury living is made com pete by the finest mea s in the Uni­ versity area. Not to mention our maid service. Laundry facilities and air-conditioned M A D iSON-DEXTER bus and chauffered LTD Country Squire station wagon. (21 of them) luxurious indoors fun dexter house The pWsh place. Total experience in luxury living plus a lot more. The 2! delicious gourmet mea:S, the comp et# maid service, the wide screen color te avision, the hair dryers, and the well trained, understanding house mothers and counse ors e'i add .p to t.n# total experience in your University luxury living. A ll this p 'us the M A D IS O N H O U S E extras of air-conditioned transportation. dexter east The plush place; plus something e s# for men. A complete floor, separate from DEXTER H O U S E proper, with your own private entrance and exit. Everything that is DEXTER H O U S E is DEXTER EAST; plus. Plus separate living quarters. Piu.s s < day ma'd service. Plus total freedom to come and go as you please. Plus off street parking. For the man's stomach, 21 deliciously prepared meals weekly. This is the piece for the man, DEXTER EAST. madison-bellaire apts. full baths, we ll arranged kitchen with colorfu This is apartment living at its best. Attractively furnished, spacious, walk-in c'osets, free appliances and o t h e r cab1# T V., 2 niceties ere "rn". And super-thick corpets, matching full length draperies and se t con­ tained heating and cooling systems make it! You a’so have the benefits of M A D ISO N - DEXTER living. All next doer to M A D IS O N H O U S E, they include air-conditioned trans­ portation to and from campus, delicious contract meals if desired, and off street parking. dr madison-wes t Something for the male student. Something bold a^d new for it I* to*a! experience in Uni­ versity living. Ail the extra! and benefit* of M A D :S O N DEXTER ho .se* with a spec a touch added to suit th# campus man. The lam# delicious 21 w ^ . y mea's, the sam# air-con- d'tioned transportation, th# sam# b day maid service, th# same cao r te avision, but with th# atmosphere of complete freedom especially for the man. . . . COME SEE. COME LIVE. TAKING APPLICATIONS N O W FOR SUMMER AND FALL INQUIRE AT MADISON HOUSE EXECUTIVE OFFICE C O T T O N K N IT CO O RDINATES SET, 16. Choose your look from a collection of cotton knits in com­ binations of red, yellow, purple and green. Shown here, tank top of pea wife purple hot p a n t belted with stripe* of red and yellow, «izes S, M, L The finest in J eye make-up, yet sensibly priced. 709 W. 22nd STREET 478-9891 or 478-8914 Wednesdays April 28, 1971 TH E DAILY TEXAN P a y I A la n Truex The Latest A ggie Choke Along with the Dallas Cowboys and the Los Angeles Lakers the Texas A&M Aggies share the least glamorous of sports traditions: they are, by reputation, “ chokers.” Although the status of team s will always be debated—some people insist there is no such thing as a “ choke”—it's undeniable that the ballclubs in question have lost more big games than a veteran Las Vegas gambler. these Rut as for the Aggies in particular, they could give choking lessons to the Boston Strangler. The Aggies have done for choking what Noah did for shipbuilding. By now, surely you know the story. I.ast Thursday, A&M was 12-0 in the Southwest Conference and No. 4 in the nation. All the F arm ers had to do was to beat feeble Texas Christian two out of three and Texas one out of three, and the Aggies would win the conference title. Granted, they would have to do it without the guidance of their coach, Tom Chandler, who was recovering from a back operation. But still, it looked like A&M could dump TCU if Gene Stallings himself were doing the coaching. Frogs Like Cockroaches Frog’s Rut of course most of us weren’t taking into consideration the like cockroaches,” Darrell Royal used to say) and the Aggies’ tradition as chokers. (“They’re tradition spoilers as The Aggies’ reputation goes far back, but perhaps their most famous fadeaway cam e in 1962, when the Farm ers cam e into Clark Field to decide the conference winner. To win the title, Texas needed a sweep of the two-game series, while A&M needed to win just one. Tile ’Horns won the first game, but in the finale they trailed 9-3 going into the eighth inning. Texas’ Ruddy New, a reserve infielder, pounded a two-run homer to make the score 9-5. The ’Horns then got runners on second and third, but there were two outs. Then cam e the choke. Ed Kasper walked to load the bases. Clean-up hitter Dave Skinner hit a harmless grounder to third baseman Bill Hancock, who was just a few feet away from making an easy force out at third. But Hancock, faced with the choice of touching the base or standing still, decided to stand. He started to throw home but changed his mind and threw to second, too late for the forceout. One run scored and the bags were still jammed. Tile next batter, Chuck Knutson, bounced another grounder to Hancock, who booted it, allowing Texas to up the score to 9-7. A walk forced in the eighth Texas run. Although A&M added a run in the top of the ninth, tho ’Horns cam e back in the bottom of the frame to tie the game, 10-10. Tile tying run scored when Hancock bobbled a grounder with two outs. Texas won in the tenth inning. TOU: Trouble for A&M In 1966, the Aggies were putting together another super year, but they lost the last game of the season to TCU, 4-0, and brought about a four-way tie with A&M, Texas, Baylor and TCU. In the Great Coin Flip which followed to decide the conference winner, TCU and Baylor “odded out” and the Aggies faced the ’Horns for the final toss. But A&M blew the coin flip and Texas went into the playoffs. And last year, A&M was rolling along undefeated until they again faced TCU in a series in College Station. The Aggies lost two of the three games and went on to drop two of three to Texas, allowing the longhorns to take the SWC crown. So in view of past performances, it really isn’t all that surprising that A&M Friday and Saturday dropped all three of its games with the Homed Frogs. What is surprising, though, Is the sudden revival of Texas title hopes. Just last week the Longhorns were on the brink of extinction, and now they are on the threshold of their fourth straight league championship. It wasn’t too long ago that this writer had stated, “ The way things look now, Omaha (Neb., home of the College World Series) could just as well be in Red China.” Well, if our table tennis team can now go to Red China, maybe the Longhorns will make it to Omaha, yet. % r n ISsW mr P A N T S” 305 W . 19+h O pen Mon. - Fri. IO a.m. - 9 p.m. Sat. IO a.m. - 7 p.m. w e d c e th™ °s°adt . Where Everybody Loves To Get “ OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FASHION BELTS Values to IOOO JEAN & DRESS FLARES By • Levi • A-1 • Lee • Mr. Leggs • Male • Landlubber each v I STUDENT ly*RI Discount Card up HUGE SELECTION OF MEN’S LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS H U G E SELECTION O F M EN 'S SHORT: Sleeve Bulky KNIT SHIRTS / I Values to IO00 Sale Price w e /a m e / ism each nm \| Values to I500 S a le Price G U Y S & G A L S TANK TOPS BLUE DENIM JEANS By Values to 900 and up • Landlubber • Male • Mr. Leggs • Master Sale Price HOUSE OF JEANS BOOTERY 309 W. 19th M 5|i \rMM rn Mi ll a pair "REPEAT" G R A N D O P E N IN G SPECIAL SANDALS Reg. 6 50 IP DIMOS For '71 N E W C O L O R S & STYLES to • Reg. I 50 • Asst. Colors MENS DECK SHOES Page A W.dneaUy, April 28. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAW VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS By V O L K S W A G E N T E C H N IC IA N S 1 0 0 % G U A R A N T E E D C O M P L E T E PARTS & SE R V IC E 0 * V . W . S E R V I C E REPAIRS O N D O M E S T IC C A R S GILBERT'S AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE 1621 E. 6th SE R V IC E 477-6797 PAR T S 477-6798 JOE ANGELUS VOLKSW AGEN SERVICE F O R M E R L Y BEN W H IT E SER V ICE H A S M O D E R N IZ E D F A C T O R Y T R A IN E D V W M E C H A N IC S W O R K IN G IN C O M P L E T E L Y N E W G A R A G E A L L W O R K 1 0 0 % G U A R A N T E E D A U S T IN 'S FINEST 4222 S. 1st 444-3313 hit a home run over the left field fence. Catcher Pat Thompson also had a home run the second game, giving Texas its last run and making the final score 11-0. in Analyzing the game, Gustafson said, “It boiled down to pitching; they didn’t have any.” Talking about the crucial series with A&M next week, Gustafson said starters two in games would be Hooton and Beard. the first Injured player Lowry is " . . . still hampered, but he feels allright, and we could use him.” Markl is ‘‘still a little sore, but he'll start. Tile three-game series with the Aggies Monday and Tuesday will decide the Southwest Conference champion, the title going to the team that wins two of the three games. No advance tickets are available. G o a ll the w a y ... PICK A PAIR In brew ing Buds, our choice is to go all the way. W e hope beer matters enough to you that you too will g o all the w ay . . . to Budweiser. A n d right now, that g o e s double: Pick up two 6-paks of the King of Beers® It's the smart w a y to buy. W H E N YO U SAY 25-Run Deluge Sinks D B C Steers Immerse Baptists for Keeping By AN TH O NY ST A ST N Y their sharp showdown with Texas A&M next the Longhorns swept a week, doubleheader from Dallas Baptist College Tuesday, taking the first game 11-6, and shellacking DBC 14-0 in the finale. Reliefer Natl Salazar claimed the first win for the ’Horns after turning back a DBC rally in the fourth inning. The starting pit­ cher, Greg Duffey, was touched up for four runs in the fourth, putting the Baptists ahead 6-3, when Salazar took the mound to end the rally. Texas came back to score six runs in the next two innings. Jimmy Crouch started the run skein with a base on balls. He advanced to second on Charlie Crenshaw’s single, then scored on a single by Salazar. Crenshaw also scored on an error on John the Skeins, centerfielder to Baptists. Salazar advanced third on the error and scored on Mike Markl’s sacrifice fly. for After Salazar retired the side In order in the fifth, Longhorn bats again made connections. Walt Rothe started the three-run parade to the plate with a single to right. He then advanced to third on Bill Berryhill’s double. in, and singled him Crouch Crenshaw singled putting men on first and second and scoring B e r r y h i 11. Amador Tijerina to score Crouch, but doubled thrown out at Crenshaw was home to end the inning. Texas went on to score two more runs in the sixth, including two-run homerun by Walt a Rothe, bringing the final tally to 11-6. Salazar held the Baptists scoreless in the seventh. Burt Hooton, expected to start the first game, did not. “ He was still a little sore from Friday,” said Coach Cliff Gustafson, "and we didn’t want to push it.” the Most of second game consisted of Mike Beard’s pit­ ching and once again Longhorn hitting. The ’Horns took the nine- inning affair 14-6, garnering 17 hits. Beard pitched six scoreless innings facing only 22 batters. “I felt real loose,” he said. ‘‘It was a warm day, and that helped. I got the curve over, and that was the key.” for big The inning the Longhorns was the seventh as they scored five runs on four hits. Aready leading by eight runs, the ’Horns opened the seventh with a double by catcher Dennis Magro, Alan Lowry and Markl walked to load the bases. David Chalk then singled to Big Bals F ir s t O a m e D a lla s B a p tist T E X A S ( l l ) a b r h bl ah r h bl 2 1 0 T ijerin a , ss 4 I I I Wert?:, ss 2 2 0 1 1 1 I 0 M arkl, 2b M onter, 2b 4 0 0 0 0 4 H ick s, 3h 0 1 1 P a p e , 2b 3 1 1 2 3 0 1 1 Chalk, 3h Sk ein s, c f 3 1 1 0 L n g r h n s .lb 4 1 0 0 B ee le r , lf 4 2 3 3 S a m u ils, rf 3 I 1 2 R othe, rf C.arrlsn, lh 3 0 0 0 L ow ry. rf 0 0 0 0 R o ssllin i, c 3 I I 0 B rry h lll, c 4 I 1 0 T utrow , p 1 1 1 2 C rouch, lf 2 2 1 1 D zn w sk l, p 0 o 0 0 P y k a , 1 0 0 0 C arpentr, p 0 0 0 0 Crnslnv, c f 3 I 2 I G oodnight, ph E rsk ln e, c f 0 0 0 0 lf 1 0 T otal . . 27 6 0 0 D u ffey . p 1 1 1 0 8 6 S a la z a r , p 2 I 1 I T otal 30 l l 12 IO D a lla s B a p tist ........... I 0 1 4 0 0 0— R .......................... 0 0 3 3 3 2 x—l l T E X A S E- H ick s 2, Sk ein s, S a m u e lls, T u­ trow , T ijerin a . D P —T e x a s 2. DOB— D B C S. T e x a s 5. 2B— B erry h lll, M arkl, T ijerin a . Tutrnw , H R —S a m u e lls. R o th e. SB — W ertz. S — M ark l. S F — M ark l. T u tro w D z en o w sk i (L, C arp en ter D u ffe y S a la z a r fW, 2-1) IF H R E R B B SO ............................. 3 5 6 I 2 2 0 0-1) 2-1 /3 fi 3 3 0 ..................... 2 /3 1 2 2 0 I ........................ 3-1 /3 R 6 6 2 2 . . 3-2 /3 2 0 0 0 0 fW ertz). T —1:50. H B P —B y D u ffey A —750. U —S tep pak & K irsch n er. S eco n d G a m e D a lla s B a p tist (OI T E X A S (14) ab t Ii bl 3 0 0 0 P a p e, ss 3 0 1 0 C halk. 3b ab r b bi W ertz, ss-p 4 0 0 0 T ijerin a , s s 2 I 0 0 1 0 0 0 M onter. 2b 3 0 0 0 B a ll, 2b H ick s, if-ss 4 0 0 0 M arkl, 2b 4 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 S k ein s, c f B ee le r , rf 5 3 4 2 G arrisn, lh 4 0 0 0 P e te r sn . 3b 0 0 0 0 D znw sk , 3b 4 0 2 0 D nprh, Ib-p 5 1 1 3 R sse llin l, c 2 0 0 0 R oth, r f-lb 4 1 2 2 S m u e lls, c 2 0 0 0 C m sh w , c f 5 2 3 2 E p p ersn , p 2 0 0 0 E rsk in e, c f 0 0 0 0 P o lla rd , p 0 0 0 0 C rouch, lf 3 2 1 1 Carpntr, p 0 0 0 0 P y k a , r f 0 0 0 0 M agro, c 4 1 2 2 G oodnight, lf 0 0 0 0 T h m p sn , c I I I I 0 0 0 0 B ea rd , p 3 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 L w ry, c f-lf 1 1 0 0 T otal 3!) 14 17 14 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 0 ................. 0 2 0 1 3 2 5 1 x— 14 E —Chalk. D P —D B C I. T E X A S 0. L O B —D a lla s B a p tist R, T e x a s 9. 2B— R o th e 2. B ea rd , C ren sh aw 2, M agro 2, L a n g e rh a n s. 3B— C ren sh aw . H R — C halk, T hom p son. SB -C halk 3, Crouch S F —C rouch, D a lla s B a p tis t T E X A S Starr, p r lf D uke. T otal . . 31 0 3 (I E p p e r so n (L, 5-4) P o lla rd C a r p en ter W ertz B ea r d AV. 5-2) L a n g e rh a n s ...................... 3 0 IF H R ER BB SO 3 I . . . . 5 IO 2 0 ............................ 1 2 2 0 .................... 1 /3 2 .......................... 1-2/3 3 2 2 0 1 0 6 4 7 ........... 6 3 0 0 0 0 6 6 2 2 4 4 W P — E p erso n . T — 2:30. A —750. U - HA UL TRAILERS lf you're needing a trailer or truck for leaving Austin at the end of the term, come by and look our supply over. Com e by early so you can make reservations for the equipment you need when you need itl AIRPORT RENTAL YARD M . E. " G e n # " Johnson, Owner 4801 Airport Blvd. Phone: 454-3543 and s c o r e Magro, John Langerhans, who had relieved Beard, doubled to score the three men on base. Another double, by Crenshaw, scored Langerhans and Crouch flyed out to end the inning. Langerhans, w h o relieved Beard in the seventh, protected Beard’s shut-out. ‘‘I hadn’t been pitching in so long, I had trouble with my control,” Langerhans said. The Baptists had trouble too, as he struck out the side in the ninth to end the game. During the game, Chalk passed the SWC season record for base hits, by bringing his total past 57. He also stole three bases and Aaron's Homer Sinks Pittsburg P IT T S B U R G H — Hank Aaron hit a two-run homer in the first inning and Phil Niekro held the Pittsburgh to six hits as the Atlanta Braves defeated Pirates 2-0 Tuesday night. Aaron’s homer, his sixth of the season and the 598th of his career, came with one out in the first off Bob Moose after Ralph Garr beat out a hit to short. Niekro, who won his first game of the year, retired the first nine Pirates before Dave Cash singled to lead off the fourth. Vie Davalillo had singled in the inning sending Cash to third, but the Atlanta knuckleball artist get Willie Stargell on a pop foul and Al Oliver on a liner to left. the finest ring available. C reated by John Roberts Prices Start at S32.50 1/4 Ct. Diamond $29.50 cm del Ow J E W E L E R S 2231) (iu ad.irtiva 2350 GUADALUPE - O N THE D RA G Clyde Campbell AVAILABLE N0W-SUMMER Absolutely the finest one and two bedroom apartments. Completely furnished with the latest in kitchen equipment. You owe it to yourself to see these luxury apartments before you make a decision. Summer rates available. sognteh ullage* apartments 910 DUNCAN LANE AUSTIN, TEXAS 78705 512 476-1509 or 454-2631 Calling It Quits —U P I T elep hoto. Washington's Curt Flood has jumped the team that lured Ii the major to leagues. back Flood Hangs 'em Up — Leaves for Europe (AP) NEW YORK - Curt Flood, the Washington Senators’ controversial outfielder who sued baseball over its reserve clause, Jumped the team Tuesday night Baltimore Signs Oregon's Love BALTIMORE (AP) — The Baltimore Bullets of the National Basketball Association signed Stan Love, their No. I college draft choice, to a reported multi­ year $500,000 contract, it was announced Tuesday. from Tile 6-8 the center University of Oregon will play at forward for the NBA Eastern Division champion Bullets. in T e x a s the American B a s k e t b a l l Association also drafted him. Bullets coach Gene Shue said he didn’t think Love would have any trouble making the transition from center to forward. The University of Oregon star who set 20 school records, in­ cluding the most points in a game, in a season and career during his the contract in Washington about two hours after a noon press con­ ference at the Baltimore Civic Center. three years, signed Love, who averaged 24 points per game as a senior, also averaged 11.3 rebounds. Love’s three-year field goal shooting percentage was .493. and was reported en route to Europe. In a telegram from John F. Kennedy International Airport to Robert Short, president of the American League club, Flood said: “I tried. A year and one-half was too much. Very serious personal problems mounted every day. Thanks for your confidence and understanding.” the 32-year-old The telegram referred to the star t i m e remained out of the game. He played with the St. Louis Car­ dinals of the National League during the 1970 season then was Philadelphia the traded Phillies. to # instead moved But he refused to report to the Phils and to Copenhagen, Denmark, and filed suit a $2.5 million damage against baseball, contending the reserve clause—which binds a player to a club unless he is traded, sold or released—treats players like slaves. But Short lured Flood back Into the game with a $115,000 con­ tract. WILCO s o n r n a u 6421 Burnet Lane P M n e 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE DOOM A BO AHD A MOUE. MECH MOKE. S u n d c c k S a u n a B a lli B o o m r « v o r e d P a r k i n g H o r r e n t io n B o o m H e a t e d I n d o o r P o o l ■ teg u la r H o u s e k e e p i n g ■Dry ( l e a n i n g L au n d ry S e r v i e e , (fille t A r e a s t o e d F l o o r s M e n ' s F l o o r s W o m e n ' s F l o o r s C u r r e n t M o v i e s S t u d e n t t . o v e r n m e n t Ll B i f f e r e u t M e a l P l a n s \ o n - K e s i d e n t M ^al C o n t r a i l s ‘Tfte Castilian 2.‘I2.‘I S a n A n t o n i o • f."»l2> 1 7 8 - 9 0 1 1 • A u s t i n . T e x a s i A i N J T ( Basque Knit: M a n ly knits trim me d with canvass collar. Rugged, for the man away fro m work. C om es in tan, navy blue and chocolate. Short sleeve S I B Wednesday, April 28, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN E«a« 7 NEED Dick Nichols Jeff Friedman Berl Handcox on the city council VOTE S A T U R D A Y You can't expect action unless you take action. Sponsored by: Student Action Com mittee & Y o u n g Democrats Morton Due Busy Weekend 'Horn Senior to Compete in Several Events By JOHN WATKINS Associate Sports Editor The 110111 L o n g h o r n co-captain Dave Morton could be a busy man at fifty-sixth Southwest Con­ the ference track meet at College Station Friday and Saturday. senior m ay see in anywhere from three action this weekend, to p o s s i b l y running in three Saturday night's finals: the open quarter and half and the mile relay. races five Coe ch Cleburne Price said Tuesday, however, that Morton will probably run only two—the anchor leg of the mile relay and either the 440 or 880. "He’ll probably not run both the quarter and the half,” Price said. "The two events are only 20 minutes apart. I’m not decided on which way he’ll go for sure, birt I’m leaning toward the 880, where he set a SWC record.” could THE LANKY SENIOR n ill probably run both the quarter in Friday’s prelims, and half w i n Fair Housing ‘ Commission Students with problems con- | cerning housing—contracts, | eviction, deposits, repairs, *| etc,—should call the Students’ ’ Association F a i r Housing i Commission Office: Union j Building 314 (I to 5 p.m. I through Friday). J Monday Telephone 471-7796 (8 a.m . to ii 5 p.m. Monday through F ri-p I day). — T e x a n S t a t ; P h o to . S W C Finale • « . for Dave Morion. qualify In both and then pick his spot for Saturday night's finals. Morton's 1:50.5 is the best time among conference half-milers this 'Horn standout season, and the ran a blistering 1:46.8 half in anchoring the sprint medley unit to a record-setting 3:16.7 at the Kansas Relays. The SWC record Is 1:48.1 set by ’Horn David Matina in 1969. former king Defending Steve 880 Straub of Rice, who has a best of 1:51.4 this year, will be Morton's chief competition. In the open quarter, Morton’s 46.6 last Saturday at the Drake R elays gives him a share of the second-best SWC clocking. Rice's Chip Grand jean also owns a 46.6, while world-record holder Curtis Mills of A&M has done 45.9. Mills STUDENT S H O W Y O U R STUDENT I.D. for Special Discount Rates on Apartments This Summer at LA F O N T A N A , 1230 E. 381/2 ST. 454-6738, 476-2633 Professionally Managed by Barry Gillingwater Co. DISCOUNT Bob Soft set the 44.7 world record in 1969 at the NCAA meet. Morton clocked a 44.8 anchor leg in the m ile relay at Kansas, pulling the 'Horns to a second- place 3:07.2, Texas' best of the year and second-best in the SWC. Morton set the conference mark of 45.5 as a freshman in 1968. is Although Morton in good s h a p e — b o t h physically and four mentally—for team mates are illness and Injury. the meet, fighting Sprinter Mickey Ryan and h u r d l e r - r e l a y man Gordon Hodges are troubled with a "little flu bug." Price reported Tuesday, while specialist Walt Chamberlain has a sore elbow and sprinter Bvrd Baggett a sore hamstring. javelin “Byrd is still sore, but he has looked good this week.” Price said. "I think he'll be ready this weekend.” in workouts if Morton runs PRICE SAID Baggett m ay mn the open quarter at College Station rather than his customary the half. 220 Baggett has a 21.2 in the 220, trailing Rookie Woods of A&M and Joe Bouncy of SMU, each with a wind-aided 21.1. Tile ’Horn junior co-captain will also mn on both D elays. The status of both Hodges and 440-relav leaves the Ryan soreness the air, and somewhat up In complicates Baggett's the picture. The foursome of Hodges. Baggett, John Berry and Carl Johnson have mn the top Texas time ( 40.4) . Price indicated that both Ryan and Hodges would work on baton exchanges th!* week injury in case Baggett’s precludes his participation. THE MILE RELAY is fairly well set. Baggett will lead off—if possible—followed by Ed Wright, and Morton. Bill Goldapp at Impressive Goldapp was Drake, mnning a personal best in the half-mile, a 1:51.2 leg on the sprint medley. If Baggett can’t mn. best bet Is Randy Randolph (48.1). In the field events, Alan Thomas and William Oates look like the top ’Horn entries, with Chamberlain also a favorite if healthy. Thomas has the SWC’s best discus throw, 189-0, Oates Is tied for the top high jump at 6-10 and Chamberlain has the best javelin throw, 236-10’ 2 - AU track finals will be held Saturday night beginning at 7 p.m. Prelims in tho IOO. 220, 440, 880 and both hurdles will be mn Friday afternoon, when finals in all events are also .scheduled. A total of 23 ’Horns will make the Thursday trip to College Station. SWC Statistics track perform ances SWC B est th r o u g h A p r il 24: 10(t-yard H a s h : C arl J o h n s o n . T e x a s , 9 3w . a n d R e n n ie A lle n . R o o k ie W o o d s, A & M , 9 4. B a y lo r , T e x a s 14 :1 3 .7 . 5 2 0 -y a rd B a s h : R o o k ie W o o d s, A&M , a n d J o e P o u n e y , S M U , 21 l\v . Byrri B a g g e t t , T e x a s , 21 2. ♦4 0 -y a rd B a s h : C u r tis M ills. A&M, 4.5 9 P a v e M orton . T e x a s , a n d C hip G r a n d je a n . R if e , 46 fi 8 8 0 -y a rd B u n : D a v e M orton T e x a s . 1 :5 0 .5 . S te v e S tr a u b , R ic e , I 51 4. If You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service M ile R u n : R ic k y Y a r b r o u g h . T e x a s 4 07..'.. B r u c e M a r tin , R ic e . 4 : 1 0 9 . T h r e e -m ile K iln : J a c k C o lo v ln . 14:05 5. B r u c e M a r tin , R ic e , 120 H ig h H u r d le ': R o c k ie W o o d s, A&M, a n d T ack F a u b io n . R ic e . 13 8. G o r d o n H o d g e s , T e x a s , a n d B o b L a t> b en b e n ? , Ri c e , 13.9. 44rt-yard H u r d le ': M ik e C r o n h o lm , R ic e , SO.5. T o n H o lla r . A&M&, 52 0. 4 4 0 -y a rd R e la y . A & M I S te v e B a r r e , C u r tis M ills , M a r v in M ills, R o o k ie W o o d s). 39 9 T e x a s (G o rd o n H o d g e s , B y r d B a g g e t t , J o h n B er n .', C a r l J o h n ­ s o n ) . 40 4 M ile R e la y : R ic e (M ik e C r o n h o h n . P e n n y P i. ko. S tra u b . C hip S t e v e G r a n d j e a n ). 3 07.0. T e x a s (B y r d B a g ­ g e tt, B ill G o ld a p p , E d W rig h t. D a v e M o r to n ). I 07.2. S h o t P u t: S a m m y W a lk er . S M U , 63-3. D a n M o s le y . B a y lo r . 5 9 - 3 4 . D is c u s : A la n T h o m a s T e x a s . 189-0. D a n M o s le y , B a.vlor. 185-3. H ig h .lu m p : W illia m O a te s. T e x a s , a n d M a r v in T a y lo r . A & M , 6-10. R ic k D y e s s . B a y lo r , 6 - 9 V L o n g .lu m p : P a n n y B r a b h a m , B a y ­ lor. 2< 7 K en F o r d , T e c h . 25-6. C ole V a u lt : D a v e R o b e r ts . R if e , 1 7 - 1 4 . H a r o ld M c M a h a n . A & M . 16-6. J a v e l in : W a lt C h a m b e r la in , T e x a s , 236-10. M a r c B la c k . A A M , 236-0. JEANS & PANTS ■ j A LL STYLES Vi tmENTIRE STOCK OF S H I R T S B O O T S N EW IM A G ES BY 88 & UP Bob 2426 GUADALUPE - "O N THE D RA G " iott's . . . you should be at Hardin North • . . swimming in the pool • • • sunning on the roof-top sun d e c k . • . studying or entertaining in your spacious apart­ ment. Hardin North has so much more to of­ f e r . . . all-electric kitchens, individual climate control, round the clock secur­ ity, open hours. . • male visitors 'til 12 P.M. weekdays and 2 A.M. on w eek­ ends . . . all of this and much m o r e . . . Let us show you Hardin North . . . just phone us and tell us when you're com ­ i n g . . . we'll give you a tour o f Austin's m ost desirable apartments, catering to the needs of the University coed. Free parking while you visit us in the Hardin North parking garage, 23rd at Pearl. HARDIN NORTH P t p t W ^ M x k y , A p ril 28, 1971 THE D A ILY T E X A N 801 W est 24th Street, Austin, 476-7636 °0 o O o o o o SU CASA APARTMENTS A b solu tely the finest in one a n d t w o bedroom apartments including the latest i n furnishings, dish­ washer, disposal, ail electric G.E. Kitchens. A ll apart­ ments have heavy shag carpet, fully draped, walk in closets and many other interesting features. C a b le TV system is furnished free. Shuttle bus routes on the corner. A ll o f this quality and space is seldom o f ­ fered in a campus area. ASK US ABOUT OUR SUMMER RATES 109 W. 39th Call 453-5760, 454-1547 or 4542631 he “Furthermore,” s a i d , “it must* use its massive pur­ chasing power to eradicate job discrimination the private in •ector.” Irons proposed establishing a system of urban development banks to provide short and long­ term capital to urban enterprise where such capital is slow to flow or nonexistent These banks would “facilitate the development of existing minority-controlled or other banks located and doing a majority of their business in the ghetto.” banks Irons concluded, “Ideas such as these, coupled with the will of all Americans to achieve equal economic development for all, can change the attitude of minorities from destructionism to constructionism, for they will own a part of their homeland.” House Coming Down | Urban Renewal Claims Graduate Apartments party, Inviting all resident and faculty members of his individual area of study at the University. Initiated. Banker Seeks End To National Racism The group of resident has also taken “supereconomical” trips to Monterrey and San Francisco; others in camping often take group camping ex­ cursions. interested Tenants foresee an end to Graduate House when they are forced out July 9, 1971. On the issue of removing all buildings from the area, Tom graduate philosophy Fischer, student, said the agency “is badly confused about the entire redevelopment issue.” for He said the agency has tom several d o w n housing thousand students since he came to Oldham Street yet he main­ tains that less than one-tenth of the housing was “substandard." Residents noted their area is being cleared by urban renewal yet in East Austin that should benefit from the agency. they see houses Students living in the graduate apartment unit, approximately 12 years old, said the local renewal agency is to provide dislocation compensation for students living In the area. Thus, until residents move from the doomed Graduate House, one resident said the “big thing to do is watch the apartment units being moved at midnight and then take bets on whether the apartments will the trucks.” fall off Tech Gives Gloyna Engineering Honor Dr. Earnest F. Gloyna, dean of engineering at the University, has been named a Distinguished E n g i n e e r by Texas Tech University. He earned Gloyna received the award in ceremonies last week in Lubbock. his bachelor’s degree in chil engineering at Tech in 1946, then came to the University, where he earned his master's degree in 1949. He received his doctorate from Johns Hopkins University in 1952. Gloyna has attained an In­ ternational in en­ reputation vironmental health engineering, s a n i t a r y engineering, public health and water resources. He has served with the United Nations and U.S. government advisory bodies and is a con­ sultant to State agencies and i n d u s t r y . He has written numerous books and more than 150 technical articles. By SUSANNE SULLIVAN News Assistant Graduate House, a unique for 24 j i v i n g experience students, University graduate once a quite, peaceful residence ideal for graduate study en­ vironment, will be terminated in June unless students can find another suitable facility close to campus and inexpensive. Graduate House, like 30 other apartment complexes within the shadows of Memorial Stadium between Red River Street and IH SS, has been disrupted by the Urban Renewal Agency, which is clearing the area for neigh­ borhood redevelopment Students living at the orange- bricked apartment complex, still continue to work on theses and dissertations amidst the noise of bulldozers, dump trucks and the pounding of equipment tearing down housing once occupied by University students. The property in the area has been bought by the University from agency; parking lots have been con- gU-ueted on the hillside since the program was redevelopment renewal the Students at Graduate House, which appears to be the only building untouched by demolition crews, are trying to preserve the style of living and atmosphere found within apartment complex. the Residents, who are mostly out- o f - s t a t e doctoral candidates, believe the purpose of the house is to bring together all majors so they can keep a broad scope of interests, personalities and areas of specialized study. Apartment says one rent, r e s i d e n t , William Lawhead, philosophy graduate student, is usually less than other apart­ ments within a close distance of campus. The spacious apartments are arranged with male and female residents alternating every other unit. Graduate House was originally located on Nueces Street but moved to the present location, 2100 Oldham St., two years ago. When reminiscing over the last two years, residents talk about parties they had In which each unit took a turn In having a Whitaker to Assume RTF Chairmanship C h a i r m a n Stanley Donner resigned to return to full-time teaching. including Whitaker, specializing In film, drama and English, has won several awards, the Esquire magazine film award for the Atlanta Film “Stasis,” F e s t i v a l gold medal for “Cinemanla,” and a Riata Film Festival special award. Whitaker is a member of the Southwest Creative Film Project Committee, the University Film Committee, the School of Com­ munication Advisory Council and t h e Journalism Committee. Electronic A faculty member at the University since his arrival in Austin in 1966, Whitaker has BA and MA degrees the University of Washington, and PhD from N o r t h w e s t e r n University. from m n v E B s m r o m b u d s m a h nr faculty m em ber* Student* adm inistrative with University problem s should contact Jack Strickland, Hogg Building I 0 S tS - 12 Monday through F riday). Telephone 471-3*25 or 471-1805. Associate Prof. Rod Whitaker will become acting chairman of the Department of Radio Televislon-Film June L President Ad Interim Bryce Jordan made the one-year ap- the recom- p o i n t m e n t on m e n d a t l o n of Dr. Wayne Danielson, dean of the School of C o m m u n i c a t i o n . Present Aid Applications Deadline Saturday Saturday is the deadline for student financial aid applications for the fall semester. Ben Stough, director of the Office of Student Financial Aids, said there are sufficient funds for those whose applications are received before tie deadline, but l a t e applications have no guarantee of being accepted. information concerning financial aids, call or go by the financial aids office at 2608 Whitts S t The phone number is 471-5662. For GOP Solon to Address YAF Meeting Tonight ( Republican State Rep. Edmund Jones of Houston will address the j annual meeting of the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) at 7:30 p.m. Wediesday in Business-Economlcs Building 155. j He will speak on “The Wild and j Woolly State Legislature” Jones recently announced his intention to seek the Republican 1 nomination for the Seta ta seat of Henry Grover, who has an-1 nounced his candidacy in the republican gubernatorial race. j MEN! WOMEN! THIS SUMMER ENJOY EVERY LUXURY . . . ECONOMICALLY AT THE CHAPARRAL APARTMENTS B E D R O O M F O R 2: $32.83/Per./Mo. Per Person A P A R T M E N T F O R 2: $63.83/Per./Mo. Per Person POOL — COLOR T.V. — CENTRAL AIR A leading spokesman for black banks said Tuesday unless in­ dividual and institutional racism is eradicated,t no amount of programing will be of con­ sequence toe economic development of blades. upgrading In Dr. Edward D. Irons, executive director of the National Bankers Association, made this statement when he delivered toe annual Richard J. Gonzalez Lecture. IRONS, who holds a doctor of business administration degree from Harvard, said, “It is in toe take nation’s self-interest toe decisive action economic problem of black development.” His speech was e n t i t l e d “Black Economic Development: Myth and Fact.” to solve to Pointing out toe average black family earns 40 percent less than their white counterparts and pays 25 percent more for housing in the ghetto their white than counterparts pay for housing in “A the comprehensive program must be initiated the black Americans Into the system—for the first time.” to bring suburb, Irons said, He said blacks and ofter minorities have been left out of the system without the means to influence it “HISTORICALLY, it has been the case that if enough people are getting rich at the top, some of it trickles down to the black community at the bottom.” added, “Historically, though, the trickle has been just enough to keep the black com­ munity at a bare subsistence level.” H e of Irons said since the federal g o v e r n m e n t has been the progenitor economic conditions of black Americans, it is incumbent upon that body to take the lead in eradicating those conditions. the He suggested “the executive branch of the federal government e r a d i c a t e job discrimination within its own ranks as a first priority.” DRIVE A LITTLE — SAVE A LOT 1 ,4 ct. i / 3 ct 1 /2 ct. 3 4 ct l e t 31.50 41.00 125.00 225 00 2 7 5 0 0 C A P IT O L D IA M O N D S H O P 603 Commodore Perry Hotel AUSTIN 476-0178 CHARTER FLIGHTS F or IJT Students, F aculty. Staff and their Im m ediate fam ilies HOUSTON TO LONDON Round Trip $2 70 ° ° F L IG H T ............. $262.00 A D M . FEE ............. $8.00 th# Full P rie st Ara Batad on O ccupancy E xpected. A FEW SEATS REM AIN , S O H U R R Y ! These flights are non-stop via Boeing 707 supplem entary c a r­ rier. C A L L Euro-American DIMENSION, Inc. Pit. Gene Fackler — 452-8458 N igh t or Day lo communicate is the beginning of understanding. Southwestern Bell AUSTIN ARMY & NAVY STORE 412 CONGRESS WED., THUR., FRI. AND SAT. ONLY REG. I300 METAL FOOTLOCKERS The MAYFAIR HOUSE and MAY­ FAIR APARTMENTS ara under new ; management. Both locations are being redecorated for the fall season. • a relaxing place to live • a quiet neighborhood • moderately priced Both units will be open for the sum­ mer term. SEE THE MAYFAIR HOUSE . . . • Co-educational • 19 meals a week—excellent food • a large swimming pool • excellent living suites • open for summer and fall living the MAYFAIR HOUSE . . . at 2000 Pearl Street . . . phone 512/472-5437 Let us show you our way of living tmyfaiR STORE HOURS 9 a.m. - 6:45 p.m. Mon. & Thurs. 9 a.rn.-8:45 p.m. Ba n k Am e r ic a r h .Wednesday, April 28, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 9 F o r S a l e F o r S a l e F o r S a l e L o s t & F o u n 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 . B B A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . PEOPLES M U SIC CO ALITIO N A L L A L B U M S A N D T A P E S $ 1.50 Comm n e now form ing. Free meals and no rent lo ll ose with high q uality re ­ cording equipm ent. 478 0951 a fte r 5. A M - P M S T E R E O , F I C O am p lifie r, 70 w a tt E lc o turntable, tuner, Tho rens R o za k speakers, Am pew 4150 tope. 472- 5276. L O S T I N H Y D E P A R K area, w h ite fe ­ m ale S h e p h e rd / La b ra d o r, five month pup. N a m e d “ D u lc ln e a " . R e w a rd . 478- 8100. L O S T : puppy. na m e d 477-8158. S M A LT ., m o stly b la c k m ale Shepherd. "H u b b a .” R e w a r d . 476-9453 o r C o llie - G e rm a n $100 R E W A R D for re tu rn of lost fem ale boxer and five m onth old p u p ; T r a ils En d , Jo n es to w n a re a. 452-0875. C A S A DEL RIO N O W L E A S I N G F O R S U M M E R stores. L a rg e pool, b ills p a id : handy to L a w School, Shuttle, C ity buses, m ailbox. 1 bedrooms, 2 bedroom s I bath. 2 bedroom s 2 baths. Reaso nable. 3212 R e d R iv e r . 478-1834, 452-8715. S U M M E R R A T ES per person $49.50/month Bills Paid 2 bedroom , 2 bath apartm ents. IO m inute w a lk from C am pus S w im m in g pool — M aid service Stu d y & R e c . room P in g pong table M a le & fe m ale ro o m m ate space a v a ila b le LE F O N T A PT S. 803 W . 28th 472-6480 C o ck e r- T errie r m ix R E W A R D . L O S T C am p us a re a. B la c k M a rs h m a llo w tall, w h ite undersides of paw s. A n sw e rs to C h ristian . P le a s e c a ll 454-6509, 478- 1079. large Extra tw o bedroom, one bath. C entral heat, central air, built-in kit­ chen, Shuttle Bus. A ll bills. p s .J, Trend I, several Ju n e $165. A v a ila b le M arch night, L O S T : E A S T W O O D P a r k a re a F r id a y four month old m a le te rrie r puppy — “ A n d re w ” . M o stly brow n w ith b lack tail, w h ite chest, long w h iskers. R e w a rd . C a ll 243-1205 or 474-1031. 802B P a r k P la c e . I. 2208 Enfie'd Road 477-3173 lf no ansewer, 453-4045 L O S T B L A C K Cat. w h ite chest, fem ale v ic in it y 38tn and D u v a l. $5 rew ard. N O L E A S E Large I and 2 bedroom, furnished or unfurnished. C arp e t, air, G .E . dishwash­ range, balcony, er, disposal, Tappan pool. 2 blocks from Reaqan H ig h. 453-7608. W H Y HUNT FREE RENTAL SERVICE W e h a ve listin gs of ava ila b le apart- ments, town houses, and duplexes p riced from $120-$350. D on't w a ste you r tim e — first c a ll us. No charge. M Y R T L E W I L L I A M S <5r A S S O C IA T E S 324 S . Congress 472-7201. C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T ISIN G R A T E S E a ch W ord <15 w ord m in im u m ) « .07 . ......... $ ......... $11.00 -06 ........... I ...T S . . . . . . $ ...0 5 E a ch A dditional T im e Student r a te o n e tim e E a c h a d d itio n a l w ord 20 C o n sec u tiv e Issu e # IO w ords 15 w ord* 20 w ord# in ch I c o ! in ch 2 r o ! in c h 3 c o ! 4 c o ! in ch C la ssified D is p la y I colum n x o n e in ch one E a c h A d d itio n a l T im e ............................... ............................... ......... $15.00 ............................... ......... $19.00 ......... $38.00 .......................... ......... ................ ......... $10.00 ........................... ......... $96.00 .........$120.00 .......................... tim e I 2.10 . ......... $ 2.00 (N o co p y ch a n g e fo r c o n s e c u t iv e issu e r a te s .) • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S loss for 75c th e f ir if 15 word* or tim e, 5c each ad ditional word. S tu ­ re ce ip t dent must show A ud itor s and p ay Jo u rnalism Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y through Friday. in ad van ce in D E A D L IN E SC H E D U L E T u e sd a y T e x a n M onday. 11:00 * • * . W e d n e s d a y T e x a n T u e sd a y . 11:00 n .m . T h u r sd a y T ex a n F r id a y T e x a n T h u r sd a y . 11:00 S u n d a y T e x a n W e d n e sd a y . 11:00 a .m . a .m . F r id a y . 3:00 P.m . “ In th e e v e n t o f error* m a d e In an a d v e r tis e m e n t, im m ed ia te n o tice m u st be g iv e n a s the pu blisher* a re resp o n sib le for o n ly O N E in c o r r ec t Insertion . A ll c la im s for *(iJn«tm<>n*. should b e m a d e not la te r th an SO d a y s a fte r p u b lica tio n .’' F o r S a l e T O P C A S H P R I C E S paid for d ia m o n d s, old gold. C ap ito l D iam ond Shop. 603 C o m m o d o re P e r r y . 476-0178 P O R T A B L E T V s : L im ite d su pp ly of u ltra c le a n la te used 19" tnstant-on W e stin g h o u se b-w. $55. 444-1345, 442-7475. 4305 M a n c h a c a R o a d . U S E D F U R N I T U R E . House. “ A little bit T h e N it N o r of e v e r y th in g .” 1600 M a n o r R o ad. S T E R E O C O N S O L E S — $79.95 just U n c la im e d F re ig h t has received 7 b rand n e w 1971 8-track stereo con­ soles. T h e y featu re pow erful solid state ch assis and 4-ipeaker audio system s. These are in b eautiful w aln ut finish and fa c to ry w a rra n te e s. O n ly h a ve $79.95 p aym en ts. These m a y be inspected at U n cla im e d Fre ig h t. 2003 A irp o rt B lv d . Open to the p ub lic fro m 9 a.m . - 6 p.m ., Mon.- Sat. or m onthly e ach full _ _ Model 360 Po lo ro id w ith electro n ic flash, p o rtra it attachm en t, and close up kit. R a y D e llo va C a ll included. C ase an ytim e. 478-8804. S A N S U I 2000A re ce ive r, A-25 D ynaeo sp eakers A R turntable, Soni 352D tape reasonable. 476-6733, 454- I deck V e r y 6141.' SLIG H TLY S C R A T C H E D — $39 In shipm ent. U N C L A IM E D F R E I G H T I has re ce ive d 8 brand new 19.1 zig zag ' sew ing m ach in es w ith full fa c to ry gua- I rantees. T h ese full size n a tio n a lly ad- : vertlsed m ach in e s have m a n y fe atu re s: A u t o m a t i c bobbin w inder, n e w e st push button re ve rse , and built in controls for m akin g buttonholes, fan cy stitches, dou- needle sewing, and m a n y o ther features. T h e y w ill be sold on a “ F i r s t com e. first se rv e d ” basis for $39 each. U N ­ 2003 A irp o rt C L A I M E D B lv d . Open to the public 9 a .rn .-6 r rn.. Mon. - Sat. F R E I G H T . m agnum , 1970 C H A L L E N G E R . R / T - A C / P S . 383 10.000 actu al miles. M u st sell. D ra fte r. C a ll 414-2583 afte r 6. v in y l top. C O M P O N E N T S Y S T E M S . 1971 co m p lete ponent and dust speakers, cover. T h e se tran sistorized set® w ill be s o l d for *62.25 each. U n cla im e d I Fre ig h t, 2003 A irp o rt B o u le v a rd . (3) turn tab le, sets B S R co m ­ w ith fu lly U N D E R G R O E N D N E W S P A P E R S . F o u r re ce n t issues, each a d iffe re n t p aper. I Send $1.00 to Pan te ch n ico n , Bo x 9386, i B e rk e le y , C A 91709. W A T ER BEDS $15 off th ru end of sem ester. Strongest m a te ria l* and best p rice of a n y bed in town, l f you h a v e n 't allow ed y o u rse lf the lu x u ry of floating on a w a te r bed yet, then drop by 1210 W E S T S T . J O H N • r c a ll J i m Hodgson — 451-4929 (6:30-9 p m. w e e k d a y s : all d a y w eeken ds) B R I D G E S T O N E 175. la te 1970. 2100 miles. $350 asking. 476-8546 evenings. S I B E R I A N H U S K Y puppies — dogs of d istinction. B e a u t i f u l m ark in g s, gentle, affection ate. $150-up. 444-1791 afte r 5. H IT A C H I C A S S E T T E condition. R E C O R D E R . T w o E x c e lle n t S o n y speakers, tapes, m ikro , $125. C a ll 451- 3122, 5-7 p.m . 4 K E Y S T O N E M A G W H E E L S , 14' a ll G M ca rs. $60. C a ll 452-5436. fo r 1970 V W S E D A N . A uto m atic. D am ag e in d rivin g condition $250. only. $1550. C a ll 451-3122 5-7 p.m . I 6 0 W R1100 professional m odel, $109 lf sold by 5-1- R E C E I V E R . P ilo t 71. C a ll T re n t: 453-6252. R U S T O M 200 B R A IN , H o w a rd Com bo organ, R ic k e n b a c k e r 12-string deluxe. C a ll 452-5049. STEREO C O M PO N EN TS ttereo Kenwood A M FM receiver. 2 Kenwood KL220 speaker*. Pioneer stereo turntable. T e ac stereo tap e deck A- 4010 S a tom atic reverse.^ Pioneer h e a d ­ phones. bast otter. iO months old/sell $1,000 345-0856 after 6 70 C IT A T IO N D U N E B u g g y , factory’ built, hardtop, sldccu rtatns, carpet, p urp le m e ta lfla k e , ch ro m e wheels, 5 passenger. $iA0O new , best offer o v e r $2200. 385-0782. 1969 F O R D T O R IN O G T co n vertib le. A ir, au tom atic, a ll pow er. 351 engine. M in t condition. 477-8687. BEST W A TER BEDS the m a rk e t. S p e c ia l on shipm ent on ju st received. W e have 50 beds fro m the W A T E R B E D C O M P A N Y . 5 y e a r w ritte n g u a ran te e ; h e a vie st guage, m il­ dew resistent v in y l. T h e y w ill go fa s t at $85. ( ’a il 451-5119 fo r d e live ry . W a t e r pillow s too, only $5. 1968 V W : G O O D C O N D IT IO N : C lean, radio. C a ll a fte r 5pm, 476-8452. Z E N I T H 23” B & W Console T V . p ictu re . S w iv e l base. C a ll P e r fe c t 442-4109 C arb uretio n, 1969 A M X 390-315 hp F O U R B A R R E L four speed box, h e a v y du ty clutch and suspension, p ositraetion. D a r k blue w ith w h ite stripe, has g re y v in y l bucket seats, h lac k ca rp e t. A C . P S , disc b rakes. S a c r ific e a t $2195. R o n 472-3671 a n ytim e . 1969 B S A T H U N D E R B O L T . 8000 m ile s $950. 465-7001. '61 V W C A M P E R . N e w v a lv e s and head tent, stove, etc. $600 or best offer. 453-6979, 702 W . 32nd. 69 T O Y O T A C O R O N A -- Spunky, funky, and blue. R ad io , a ir. 70 engine. 477-7949. 472-7821. B A R G A I N — 1968 T R O IN O . AC. A T , 50,400 m iles, $1500. 1967 M a lib u SS. AC . 46.000 m iles. $900 . 477-1187, 345-0770. G O V E R N M E N T P R O F E S S O R le a v in g p e rm a n e n tly s a c rific e s R a m b le r, 1960. R u n s b ea u tifu lly. $195 or best offer. 453-6286. J A G E R X K E R O A D S T E R 4x2 L it r e R e d w / b la c k co n ve rtib le top, $1900 o r best offer. 441-3765. '69 C O U G A R . O N E owner, low m ileage, p o w e r and a ir, v in y l roof. 452-6667. re frig e ra to r, C A M P E R — C H E V Y Stove. tires, engine. $525. C a ll 472-6156 m ornings, 476- 9793 evenings. carpeted. Good bus. factory’ '67 C A M A R O . 327, G O O D Condition, blue, au to m a tic on floor. $1,200. C a ll M y’ane, 452-1494, 478-7148. o vals. w id e a ir. S A C H S 125 C R O S S - C O U N T R Y w ith lights. Vobbles. Trail-street. C a ll 453- 6317 afte r 5 fo r P e g g y . '63 V W . N E W C L U T C H , brakes, b attery. $150. C a ll 453-6317 a fte r 5. 1969 G R E E N M GB, N e w condition, tires. 444-9988 a fte r 5, b ran d n e w a n ytim e w eekends. '67 M G B . N E W P A I N T , rad io A M - F M . E x c e lle n t condition, C a ll Steve , 465- 6768. 1966 B S A V I C T O R “ 441” . N eed s $40 w o rk. $200. 477-4608 afte r 5. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . I960 M G A . G O O D C O N D IT IO N . $525. 476-1891. GO IN G TO SUMMER SCHOOL? EC O N O M IC A LLY ! LIVE AT THE F IN E S T APARTMENT FOR 2: t63.83/Per./Mo./person BEDROOM FOR 2: $32.83/Per./Mo./person THE CHAPARRAL A P A R T M E N T S W A T E R B E D S . KTNG-Slze (6'x T ) . G u aran te e d 20 guage v in y l. S a le . P r ic e d o nly $29. 478-4893. 1968 K A R M A N N G H IA . 30.000 m iles. tires. E x c e lle n t con­ A M - F M , n e w dition. 452-3110 o r 454-1612. 1968 500Cc S U Z U K I. G O O D Condition. $7)30. C a ll 477-7630 evenings. N E W C O M B O Sp e ake rs, 4'x3’x2'. 2-12” Je n s e n w oofers and horn d riv e r in each system . M a tch e d p a ir for $300. Dobie, room 2108. M O B I L E H O M E , 38x8. A C, re ce n tly refurnished . In e x p e n s ive w a y to live . $1295. 385-0878. 1970 V W . 20.000 M IL E S . Good condition. C a ll 477-3938. 283C1 C H E V Y b attery. A u to m a tic H .T ., tires. tw o door. A C . ex tra n ic e in te rio r and engine. T e st d riv e it. O n ly $450. 478-0983. I M P A L A . N e w B E A U T I F U L P E R S I A N ru gs fo r sale. le ave n u m b er or C a ll 478-0983 and co m e by 5205 E v a n s . T E A C 4O10S A U T O R E V E R S E . E x ­ ce lle n t condition. $500 new , now $339. C a ll 478-5392. VISIT OUR MODEL TODAY 2408 LEON G R 6-3467 STEREO SERVICE of AUSTIN W H I T E M I N I A T U R E poodle. P u r e bred registered . C a ll 478-2617. Serving U.T. 2 5 % saving nents. fo r over 2 on quality years stereo with 10- compo- 453 4622 R o o m & B o a r d W a n t e d W A N T E D T O B U Y , books. P la y b o y s , records, stereo tapes, radios, guitars. Y ou nam e it. 320 Congress. W A N T TO BUY OR RENT A bedroom, 3 baths: prefer large trees; W e s t Austin: $30,000.00 range. R eply— P. O . Box 1411, Lubbock, Texas 79408. C onsider trad e for newly re-decorated 4 bedroom home in Lubbock. N e w fa m ily F a c u lt y bedroom three re n ta l house w ith A C , beginning August 15. W r it e : M ik e I L . Conroy, 2202 Hazelwood, U rb a n a , 61801. needs young E M P L O Y E D G R A D U A T E student w ith ap a rtm e n t for rent m an ag ership bookkeeping. M a in tain an ce , painting, decorating se rvices. Good references. H . P h a r r 476-5658, N o. 319. w a n ts reduced fa m ily or o r sub-let P R O F E S S O R A N D W I F E w ish to re n t furnished o r unfurnished house or duplex fro m M a y 12 to J u l y 12. C a ll 444-8189 a fte r 6 p.m . R I D E H O M E a d ja ce n t to A lb e rta C an ad a or a r c a a fte r M a y exam s. Ph o n e 441-4419 around 6 p.m . W A N T E D T O L e a s e — A p a rtm e n t w ith in w a lk in g d istance U T cam pu s for .Tune. W rite T ru d y M a ty o k a H is to ry Dept,, T C L ’, F t. W o rth 76129 D E S I R E O X F O R D E n g lish D ic tio n a ry su p p lim en ts). plus vo l s. ( 1 3 Reaso nable. C a ll 6-9 p.m .. 478-0753. W A N T E D : F I V E speed 478-1783 a fte r 3:15pm. b icycle. C a ll F o r R e n t A S S U M E O N E m onth one bedroom furnished. AC. all bills paid. B u c k in g h a m S q u are A p artm en ts. 32nd and W e st A ve n u e . C a ll 454-4822, Jo h n ___________________________ H o lle y. lease, front I largo peeled pine trusses, m ille d ce d a r L a rg e 2 bedroom cabin, shag carpeting . and back porch, hand in- i te rio r and fu rniture. On one acre of wooded oak and ce d a r w ith scen ic view s, p erfect secluded liv in g 12 m ile s from A ustin C ity lim its, off of H i-w ay 71. $150 a month. relaxed, for C A R L K L U T T S , IT T . Stud en t Ph o n e 512-229-2042 I, B o x 70-E, C e d a r C re e k R t . No. F O R R E N T . S u m m e r. L a r g e house. of C e n tra l C a m p u s (n eg o tiab le). $125 month Ph o n e d ay 471-7253, K e n . N ig h t 472-0102. furnished, W e st air. F A R M , 81 A C R E S . S h an g rala. S w im T w o secluded. cabins. L e a s e $110 month. 478-6940. L a N a tu ra l, fun, H o u s e s , U n f . b ath. N O R T H W E S T . T H R E E B E D R O O M , tw o carpeted, double g arag e, fenced y a rd . $250. W ill furnish. GL2-4897. C e n tra l eat-air. 1969 H O N D A CB350. R U N S G R E A T , but a few scratch es. H elm ets. $495. C a ll 472-8501. F O R L E A S E , fence, four bedroom homo. law n , drapes. F a m ily C e d a r only. One y e a r old. 444-4025. T L O K C O E D co-op. Room and 3 m e als a day, $90 p er 6 w e e k S u m m e r Session. R o o m and 2 m eals. $75 p er Session. 1903 R io G ran de, 472-4331. W H I T E ! ! A L L - W O M E N 'S now taking ap p licatio n s for S u m m e r and F a ll. S u m m e r rate s are $47 p er m onth (o r 100m and evening m eal. F a ll rates. $72.50 m onth for room and three m eals. C a ll 478-1575. co-op. TO W ER M A N O R N O W COED L O W RATES S U M M E R : $149.50 for 6 weeks. $127.50 per month. F A L L : 1908 University 478-2185 F o r S a l e HOUSE OF STAINLESS OF AUSTIN 700 Rio G ra n d e S treet Lowest prices in town. Black lights or U.T. plaques, zodiac plaques. Hook-em Horns desk paper weights. All types unusual candles. Various stainless steel gift items. New LP record albums, $2.25 each. Beautiful butane candies. Come in nd check our prices. Special Mother's Day gifts. Open I p.m. until — R o o m & B o a r d SUMMER LEISURE — WHERE? THE CASTILIAN B U C K IN G H A M S Q U A R E MARRIED STUDENTS A V A I L A B L E M A Y first, one and two to U T . pool. $13(^ bedroom. Close S u m m e r rate $115. 472-5183. V. I. P. APARTMENTS W a lk to U.T. or shutes bus. Plush two-level units. 2 o r 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Designed for 3 to 5 residents. Luxurious, quiet atm osphere. S u m m e r rate s; fall leases a va ilab le. 477-8437 or 478 2937. IQI E . 33rd & S p e e d w ay FIESTA PLACE APTS. Su nmer Rate* N ow leasing e fficiencies and one and two bedroom ap artm ents. S w im m in g pool, c e n tra l heat-alr. fu lly paneled and carpeted. N e w Shuttlebus Route. F ro m S lid a month. 4200 A ve , A 465-8823. 476-2633 C A SA FELICE B ’ and N ew Efficiencies Summer rate — $110 a month New e f f i c a c i e s with shag carpeting, central heat and air, and all built in kitchens, on Shuttle B .* ro le . 4204 Speedw ay 454 9827, 476-2631 A. D RIL LO 5LANCO APTS. S U M M E R R A T E S N O W b c j'o o m fur to Shuttlebus lished apartment*. Route 6. $120 a 801 W e s t Lynn 477 8871, 476-2633. Sm a1! complex near Law School now leasing at Summer Rate*. O ne bedroom apartm ent* with centra heat, a r . A ll e lectric kitchens, ipace. $ 120/month. The Baccarat A pt*., 3703 Harm on, 453-7190, 476-2633. lots storage M O D E R N D U P L E X Fu rnished, I bedroom, near U n ive rs ity , Includes w a ll to w a ll carpeting, drap­ ery, a ir conditioning, central heat, kit­ chenette and p riv a te p itlo , 2 tw in beds. covered ca rp o rt and all tile bath, block off G uadalupe at 612 W e st 31'v St. L e a se required. Ren* — $105/month. gas and H a te r Included. To lease ca ll or w rite A partm en t Rentals, 1009 F ro st N atl B a n k B ld g , S fn Antonio, T exa* 78205. A C 512 — 227-2231. L A C A N A D A A partm ent*. rates, ohe bedrooms $130-$140, Summer two bedroom s $180. A ll Dills paid. 1300 VV, 24th. 472-1598. R o o m m a t e s tw o bath apartm ent M A L E , F E M A L E sh are two bedroom. S u m m e r rate, fu r­ 49.50 m onth e a c h M a id se rvice, nished, and S tu d y b ilk paid. re crea tio n room and ping pong table. L e Fo n t, 803 W o k 28th. 472-6480. * all M A L E S H A R E ap artm ent. $37.50, b ill* $15. Shuttle, p-irk, A C . A fte r 5:30pm. 472-5829, R ic k . F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed: O n* bedroom to m chouse ap a rtm e n t: R e d R iv e r ; S u m m e j or F a ll . 282-1401. Ja n e . la rg e M a le la w o r graduate student to *h a r* ap artm en t. S u m m e r am i F a ll. $67.50 plus eleo- tric ity . E d , 4J2-3189. bedroom one F E M A L E N E E D E D fo r F a ll to sh are lu x u ry one bedroom ap artm e n t clo** to Cam pus. Shuttle. $80 plus e le c tric ity . C a ll Corbie i t 442-1459. F E M A L E ^ U P P E R C L A S S M A N . T w o bedroom. Tool, close Cam pus. Shuttle. $60 b ills p ad. 206 W e s t 38th. S u m m e r. 451-2731. F E M A L E J O U S E M A T E needed. T h re e bedroom, a ir, sm all dog allow ed. $45, $4 hills. C ill 465-6353 afte r 3. S e r v i c e s R E P R O D U C T IO N en larg e n en ts, P H O T O S T A T S — reductions. T h e a I • d i s s e r t a t i o n s , p o rtfo lio s; q u a lity guarranterd. a l's photostat 1916 M A N O R R O A D . 47t-4155. E X P E R T S ON VOLKSWAGEN engines, re p a ir, rebuild by V W tech nician s. G ilb e rts \ W R e p a ir, 1621 E a s t 6th. 477- 6797. COPIES 4c each W ATCH REPAIR — Fast, inexpensive 38th St. Pharmacy 1008 W . 38th IDA PRESS 504 West 24fS Multi copy service. Call 477-8351. T H E B T G - IN N . V o lksw ag en, P o rsc h e re p a ir. Good rates, student operated. 1816 West 36th. 465-0517. FINALS ARE HERE! LECTURE NOTES SERVICE Is Currently Monitoring $8.26 PER SEMESTER P s y . 3(1 B ru e ll P s y . 301 T rau pm ann P s y . 301 C hase G ov. 3)1 H aven s G ov. 610a H irsch Eg o . 303 Hazelton Chem . 301 Cowley Chem . 301 W ad e G en 303 Long A Scott Goo. 30T Fo lk * Note* A vailab le From First Lector* • F o r In fo rm atio n C all 474-2600 504 W . 24th E X P E R I E N C E D P H O T O G R A P H E R ^ Po rtraits, passports, weddings. blow*, ups, e t Re asonabl e prices. 474-2528. HAIR LTD. OUR SPECIALTY— SH A G CUTS. H A R SIN G EIN G FOR SPLIT ENDS. 454-0984 U N I V E R S I T Y 477-5043. S E R V I C E S of A U S T IN . V O K S W A G E N , M E R C E D E S Volvo — K e rrv ille mechanic: offers cheapest to w rate s guaranteed service. F re e K e ^ Tm ef)(b5\-2)25% 777,0n A utom otlve. THE BLACKSTONE L U X U R Y L I V I N G — M A ID S E R V I C E ! L iv e t 2 block from L a w School on the U g ly B u s R o ute. E a c h apt. is carpeted, draped, c e n tra l Ticnt- A ..I.. A ll ut:!:tIc " paid. Designed for 4 persons p er apt. 2 bedroom 2 bath. In d iv id u a ls m atched w ith co m p atib le room m ates. C om e see! 476-5631 2910 Red River A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y S U M M E R V A C A N C Y . One bedroom studio ap artm ent. A/C. $99 p l u s ele c tricity. 901 E a s t 51st, n u m b er HO. 434-1753. R E A G A N V I L L A . N o w one bedroom. co m p letely plus e le c tric ity all y e a r round. 451-2154, 452- 1761. furnished. $125 T A N G L E W O O D E A S T tin d e r N e w u w n e rs m p N o w Le a sin g — S u m m e r R ates $105 and up fine These featu res are designed for livin g enjoym ent. C hoice of Ita lia n or Span ish decor, T V F M m usic, built-in bookcases, air, disposal, 60 foot pool. cable and O ne Close month. 2604 M a n o r Rd. 477-1064 M A N A G EM EN T W H O CARES I & 2 bedroom apartment*, all H u ge bills paid. Idea! fo r sharing. From »— $149.50. Broadm oor Apartm ents, 1200 Broadmoor. C all 454-3885 d a y or night. N o w L e a s in g — L o w S u m m e r R ate s I and 2 brm . a ttra c tiv e ly furnished ap artm ents. Built-ins. lau n d ry facilities, and pool. Custom drapes, carpet. I brm . $135, a ll bills paid. 2 b rm . $150 plus e le c tricity. 711 W e st 32nd S tre e t 452-4265. FLEUR de LIS 404 E. 30th Summer rates. Lo vely I bedrooms. W alk in g distance Campus, Shuttle Bu* 1/2 block. Telephone 477-5282. beam ed ceilings. panelled fireplace, P L A Y B O Y S N ew , ultra-m odern duplex apt.. Includes w alls, hanging slanted Terrazzo floors, fully draped, luxurious m odern fu rn itu re and all tile bath 2 bedrooms, a ir conditioning, ce n tra l heat, modern kitchen, p riv a te yard /p atio . Le ase re ­ q uired — rent $t45/month. N o utilities. T e n an ts w ill show. 3408 W e st Ave. T o lease ca ll o r w rite A p a rtm en t R entals. 1009 F ro st N atio n al B an k Bldg.^ S a n Antonio. T e x a s 78205. AC 512 -227-2231. S U M M I T A P A R T M E N T S F u lly furnished, C A / C H . d ish w asher. Shuttle bus. I s the height of y o u r a m ­ luxurious 2 bedroom a p a r t ­ bitions a m ent w ith a ll the trim m in g s, but w ith a low p ric e s ? I f so, ca ll S u m m it A p a r t ­ m ents at 478-5592, o r better y e t co m e bv 1008 W . 2512. A little hard to find, tre asu re hunt! T o but co nsider ‘'S u m m it u p ” aim fo r the height* — at a S u m m e r rate of $170/month, you ca n 't afford not to. it a W A L K I N G D IS T A N C E T O U T S u m m e r R ate s I and 2 b rm . furnished ap artm ents. Built-ins, pool. W a te r, gas, T V cab le p aid by ow ner. Ph o ne M a r k V I I — $115 — 476-4542 A 4/8-5173 E m b e r s — $110 - 476-4542 A 478-5173 D ip lo m at — $105 — 472-5943 H a llm a rk — $115 — 452-9930 A 4o*-19o8 M a rk X X - $125 — 454-3953 C ontinental — $140 — 453-3081. S H O R T W A L K to T o w e r. L a rg e tw o bedroom ap a rtm e n t. A ll night shop­ ping at c o in e r. T w o entrances, a c ­ com m odates four. A C. carpets, drapes, w e e k ly clean in g . $225 plus utilities. 1902 N ueces, G R 6-8683. G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T , n ic e ly fu r­ nished. A C , n e a r U T , a v a ila b le Ju n e 1st. R e fe re n c es , lease, d ep o sit 476-4435, 476-5553. . O N E B E D R O O M a p artm e n ts a v a ila b le for S u m m e r or F a ll on S hu ttle B us. Pool, AC. gas and H a te r paid. E l D orado A p artm en ts, 3501 S p eed w ay, 472- 4893 on 478-1382. each. L U X U R I O U S , quiet fourteen unit C a s a R osa. 4312 D u va l. One bedroom. S u m m e r ra te $119 50 plus e le c tricity. F a ll $139.50 . 345-1322. 453-2178.___________ U N USUALLY ATTRACTIVE 2 bedroom apartm ent. C o m pletely fu r­ nished except linens. 2 blocks off C a m ­ pus. V avan cy for 2 boys to share with 2 for Summer only. R efrigerated A / C , for 2 students, $32.50 parking. Rates 1906 Nueces, A p t. B. 472-2071. Shu ttle R A V I N E T E R R A C E , n e a r U n iv e rs ity . 2-3. W ater-gas furnished. A v a ila b le now. G R 8-5528. A ccom m o d ates bus. SOUTH SHO RE APTS. O V E R L O O K I N G T O W N L A K E A N D A U S T I N S K Y L I N E Convtenent U T . B e rg stro m & D owntow n F U R N I S H E D /U N F U R N I S H E D I B E D R O O M F R O M $135 2 B D R M . I & 2 B A T H F R O M $147.50 3 B E D R O O M F R O M $182.50 A L L B I L L S P A I D — C A B L E T .V . 300 E. R IV E R S ID E DR. 444-3337 A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y L O N G V I E W A P T S . 2408 L o n g v ie w ap artm e n ts. 7 blocks w e s t of Cam pus. One A two bedroom Po o l, g arb ag e disposal, ca b le T V . Shu ttle Bus. S u m ­ m e r ra te s : I bdrm ., $115: 2 bdrm ., $150. Phone M r. E c k o ls, 472-5316 betw een 5 St IO p.m . S o u th e m a lre A partm en ts. 33rd and T o m G reen. L a rg e s t one bedroom y o u ’ll find. Six closets, w a lk in g d istance U T , w a te r paid. S u m m e r rates $115. 478-7097. T w o bedroom, S U M M E R R A T EJS — Q u a rte r D e ck. furnished or unfurnished. L a r g e p o o ! P r iv a t e . F ro m 8120, w ater-gas paid. 2308 E n fie ld . 476-1292. tw o b ath : T A N G L E W O O D N O R T H U n d e r N e w O w nersh ip N o w L e a s in g — S u m m e r R a te s O fferin g the best in price, decor, lo c a ­ tion, floor space, and closets. 1-2 brm . w ith I, IV2. o r 2 baths. T w o b rm ., 2 bath have fire p lace s. 2 pools, fre e T V cable. F M m usic. 2 blocks to H an co ck C enter. $115 and up. 1020 E . 45th St. G I, 2-0060 T A N G L E W O O D W E S T U n d e r N e w O w nership N o w Le a sin g — S u m m e r R a te s $100 and up Lux u rio u s furnishings, carp e t, c e n tra l a ir and heat, dishw asher, disposal, 3 larg e pools. W e st on Shu ttle B u s route. 1403 N o rw a lk L a n e G R 2-9614 THE V O Y A G U ER S E x t r a larg e 2 bedroom s w ith 2 baths, walk-in closets. 2 entrances, 2 AC co n ­ trols. C o m pletely furnished. A L L B I L L S P A I D VTanv extras. S u m m e r and F a ll ra te s. 478-6776, 452-9721. A lso oversized efficiencies. TRAVIS H O U SE APARTM ENTS STUDENT Now leasing for Summer and Fall 1600 Royal Crest Drive 442-9720 SUMMIT APTS. Larg e 2 bedroom apartm ents. Fully fu r­ nished and ca rp e te d . Central air c o n d i­ tioning and heating, laundry facilities, twimming pool. Seclud ed location, walk­ ing distance to Cam pus. Summer rates. C a ll 478-5592. N O W LEA SIN G FOR SUMMER C A SA DE SALADO APTS. street parking, Luxury one and two bedrooms, C A C H , o ff facilities, pool. N e ar UT, 2610 Salado , manager N o. HO, 477-2534. laundry THE C O N SU L Lakeside living — Sum m er Rates Jo in the action at the Consul, luxury 2 bedroom flats and townhouse: packed with lots of extras. for you r summer budget A n d priced 1201 Tinnin Ford Road 476-2633 4 4 4 . 3 4 1 I living SPANISH VILLA NORTH a t reduced sum Luxury A p t. rates. Beautifully ap po inted apts, w/shaq c a r­ living area, patios, and pet, paneled fo r yourself hugh pool. C o m e see 909 Reinli 476-2633 N O W L E A S I N G — S U M M E R R A T E S furnished A t t r a c t iv e ly I and 2 b rm . a p artm e n ts. Built-ins. p oo ! W a te r, gas, and T V ca b le p aid by owner. F o r show ing phone M AN O R V IL L A $95 and up — 478-4011 STAFFORD H O U S E $95 and up — 477-3578 CASTILE APTS. S P E C IA L S T U D E N T S U M M E R R A T E S I end 2 bedroom s a v a ile r s for Sum mer from $129. Shag c a r p e ! all built-in a p ­ pliances, pool. Sauna batn, and plenty of parking. Ju s t o ff Shuttlebus Route 6. 477-7794, 476-2633. 807 W e s t Lynn LA FIESTA APARTMENTS C O L L E G E C O U R T A p artm en ts, 3001- 3D07 D u va l. N ow leasing for S u m m e r. W a lk in g d istance C am p us. Fu rnish ed , ce n tra l a ir. A ll bills paid C o n tact resident m an ag e r, 3001 D u v a l, A p a rt­ m ent 204 o r c a ll GR6-3088. leasing su m m er, C O M A N C H E A P A R T M E N T S now L a w Sohool, p o o ! AC, once bedroom and e fficie n cie s. 2800 S w ish e r. 472-9369. $110 TO $135 plus e le c tric ity . S u m m e r rate s if y e a r lease signed. fall. N e a r 2 B E D R O O M , 2 B A T H A P A R T M E N T S leasing for Summer 400 E. 30th, N ow and Fall. Special for reduced Summer. $45/person, all bill* paid. A d ­ justed rates for Fall. rates C all 477-1800. L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y a v a ila b le Im ­ m e d ia te ly. One block fro m U n iv e rs i­ ty. $100 plus e le c tric ity . C a ll 477-7826 o r 477-5494. Saxony A p a rtm en ts. S u m m e r rates. One and two bedroom s. All hills p aid plus cable. A ll built-ins. 444-6631. T W O M A N two bedroom ap artm ent. A /C, p o o ! M a n o r R o ad A v a ila b le e a r ly M a y $50/month. 472-9753. STEREO DISCOUNTS 1 0 % - 2 5 % off — Sony— RLH— A R — Kenwood— Shure— Dual and others. All new, with factory war­ Immediate delivery on ranty. many items. SPECIAL: Sony 650 Tape Deck- Retail $450, Our Price $360. AUDIO CONSULTANTS of AUSTIN 452-3950 L E A V I N G T O W N M a y 8th. 12x50 foot m obile hom e bought In October. $350 assum e p aym en ts. W ill down and ncgociate. 451-2009. 1963 F O R D tran sm ission , V-8, a c, S ta n d a rd rad io. E x ­ ce lle n t condition. $100. 476-4263 H a m. to 9p.m. G A L A X I E . 1970 T R I U M P H 750cc C O N V E R T E D T ig e r b y fa c to ry m e ch an ic alu m in u m steel sleeves, new condition. G ettin g cy lin d e r housing, pistons. m a rrie d , m u st sell. $1200. 477-1668. E x c e lle n t '64 C H E V E L L E . S I X c y lin d a r, stan d a rd shift, a ir, radio, glass belt tires. $500. 477-3849. FOR G O L F AND BO ATIN G FANS A Laoo Vista Lake Travis home fo r the sma f a r ly, eas'ly expandab’e as growth occurs. Larg e LR with excellent fire place, 2 BR, 2 Bat s, a~d easy to add tb :rd BR. Large lot with trees and wonderful view. G o o d financing. $22,500 267-1541, 267-1457, 267-1436, 267-1257 J . D. NUNN, REAL ESTATE 1969 650 K A W A S A K I street scram b le r. 4200 m iles. E x c e lle n t condition. $750. 453-9728 a fte r 6 p.m . $250. L e diam ond wedding ring set. A l­ setting. most new . M o d e m gold Ph o n e 454-0505 a fte r 5. 1966 V W B U S . N e w 1600cc engine. clutch, starte r, s h o c k s , b attery. M u st sell. $1295. 472-1676, 478-7698. 1966 J A G U A R X K E coupe. R H D ; new tires, a ltin a te r, exhaust system , disk brakes, p ain t. Looks an d operates lik e new . $2675 or offer. 472-1676, 478-7698. G A R R A R D M O D E L 4 0 M K II reco rd ch a n g e r w ith base and dust co ve r. 465-0678. B T .A C K V I N Y L H A R D T O P for B a tso n 2000 o r 1690. U sed four m onth*. E x ­ c e lle n t condition. $135. 452-6834. LONDON SQUARE APTS. 2400 Town Lake Circle • 442-8340 Bus service to University every 5 minutes. South Austin off Riverside. Special rates for Summer. Call for Judie Use and she will return your cal! for special Summer rates. 3 BEDROOM - 2 FULL BATHS 1340 Sq. Ft. Immediate Occupancy Un fu rn ish ed Fu rn ish e d I Bed roo m , I B a t h 750 S q u a re F e e t . . . •I 29“ 2 Bedroo m s, IV , B a th s ? I r . M OOO S q u a re F e e t 1 J ‘ $ | 4 950 $ J 7 9 5 0 3 Bedroom s, 2 F u ll Baths, 1,840 Sq. F t . . . *214“ *244“ •All U tilitie s P a id - F r e e A ll C h an n e l T V • O n ly 5 M in u te s to I J T • O n ly 3 M in u te s to T o w n • M in u te s to B e rg s tro m • A F e w Stops fro m In te rn a l R e ve n u e S e r v ic e & V e t­ eran s A d m in istra tio n Woodward Apartments 444-7555 1722 East Woodward This summer why not live at THE CLOISTERS APARTMENTS? Call us about our special three month lease. 442-6333. BEFORE YOU LEAVE SELECT AN APARTMENT FOR FALL AT THE CHAPARRAL APTS. N O INCREASE IN RENTALS APARTMENT FO R 2: $77.89, Per./Mo./person; BEDROOM FO R 2: $49.44/Per./Mo./person VISIT OUR MODEL OR CALL m IFON M*-*"d ___________________________ ' G R 6-3467 1 A i l ' 1 -------------------------------------------------- ------------- W YM w sd a & .gpH Lim THE DAILY TEXAP Indoor Swimming Pool Rooftop Sundeck Covered Parking I/2 Block From Campus Completely Air-conditioned Rec. Room Kitchenettes 2323 San Antonio 478-98 FOREST CREEK VILLA G E L iv e for the su m m e r w ith a c re e k as y o u r neighbor. R e s o rt atm o sp here w ith tennis courts, club, and 2 sw im m in g j T O D A Y , pools. I and 2 bedroom, a ll bills p aid 4 5 4 e g o including cable. 7 m inutes from 2 m inutes from L R . S.. V .A . R a te s be­ gin at $170 C all 412-9369 o r co m e by 1401 St. E d w a rd s D r. I T , 1 H e l p W a n t e d 10,000 m ile g u a ran te e . Blue. B E A U T I F U L 1970-11-12 V W . 15 m onth/ le a th e r­ ette, rad io, w a ln u t dash. 452-2420 e ve n ­ ings. m o v i n g , w i l l s a c r i f i c e m y 1969 Subsidiary of Alcoa has openings for students in their home for. -111 8054. SUMMER JO BS * it and m ake an of- r • j town this summer. W rite National Personnel Manager, Suite C hoice acre ag e , fo r building o r in v e st­ m ent, ran g in g from .3 to 3 acres, each tra c t h a vin g m a g n ific e n t oak tre e s and 150 ft of p aved ro ad frontage Lo ca te d on high e lev atio n w ith scen ic vie w s, b ord ering on the old J . F r a n k Dobie R a n ch , only l l m iles from A ustih C ity lim its. P a y m e n ts as low as $15 down and $20 a m onth C A R L K L U T T S , U .T . Student Ph o n e 512 229-2042 R t. Mo. L B o x TO L', C e d a r C re e k 618, 800 W est 47th St., Kansas City, Missouri 641 12. Give summer address, summer phone number, and expected date of arrival. WWW!! W ill! Sib e ria n S tu d y Tour Planned fo r Su m m e r B y A L IC E SC U LL w ill conduct tours. House Panel Studies State Obscenity Bill A House subcommittee Is considering a b ill that would alter the procedures which law en­ forcement agencies enact in tile process of obtaining obscene to m aterials deemed harmful minors. The bill met little opposition Monday in a House Crim inal J u r i s p r u d e n c e Committee Vi T*i 7^ c* Sponsored by Hep. sets for authorities B illy Williamson of Tyler, the proposed specific l e g i s l a t i o n procedures to obtain obscene m aterial. When Such m aterial film , magazines, photos) is reported, an affidavit requesting a search warrant would ba filed with a magistrate. (books, The m atter thought to be ob­ scene would be described in detail. In the case of magazines, bocks and other literature, the alleged obscene m aterial would be attached to the affidavit so the magistrate could examine It. the filing After affidavit for the the search warrant, magistrate would set date for a hearing at which the owner of the questionable m aterial would have to appear. The person or persons the m aterial would be notified of the time and place for the hearing, at which it would be decided if a search warrant should be issued. in possession of the persons owning A court order could be issued the could not the T r ite r to m aterial so destroy or described in the affidavit. they sell A L E X B IC K L E Y , Dallas Q ty in attorney, explained the bill detail. He said it is “ merely a search and warrant procedure.” S e v e r a l representatives questioned the meaning of the ‘ ‘ o b s c e n e . ’ ’ One word representative said what is ob- Socialist Author To Present Views B y F R E D Y O R K L i n d a currently Jenness, touring the United States for the Young Socialist Alliance, said at a press conference on the steps of the State Capitol Tuesday that “ socialism is the only answer to our problems.” Her tour through the Southwest is the last leg of several national speaking engagements in which she has Socialist expressed support for liberalized abortion law, ending the war in Vietnam and liberation movement. the women's not give women the right control their own bodies. to objective Ending the Indochina w ar is of another main Socialists, she said. “ The w ar is standing in the w ay of every program of progress. Locally elected Socialists should and w ill use their position to denounce the conflict,” she said. Jenness. The war also Is suppressing feminine equality, according to “ The w ar has Mrs. caused an economic crisis,” she said, “ and women are always the first to be fired from their job and the last to be hired.” scene to him might not he ob­ scene to another. Rep. Tom Moore Jr . of Waco questioned the entire purpose of the measure. that pornography Bickley quickly responded with evidence is abundant in Dallas and Houston; consequently, the people have the right to know what is going on around them. Ile said that ob­ scenity filii i _ books and magazines leads to prostitution and to the production of more obscene m aterial. in entirely; Another representative noted that the State needs to stop ob­ scene movies he suggested that a newspaper take pictures of persons attending the “ X-rated movies” then print the photos in the newspaper for every one to see. Another representative quipped that this method of stopping p o r n o g r a p h y was tried In California, but they ran out of film the first night. floor ACTION, bill was IN O T H ER an ecology favorably reported out of subcommittee for reading. The a second a it measure would make rural misdemeanor litter roads. law provides only that fines be levied littering major highways. for Fines for littering are set at not less than $10 and not more than $200. Presently, State to to make Another bill, in­ to medical formation given doctors in relation to volunteer t r e a t m e n t in drug abuse p r o g r a m s privileged, was reported out of subcommittee. A b ill that would permit oral confessions by accused persons while in ja il was referred to a subcommittee. Tired of the hot Texas sum­ mers—why not spend part of your summer in the Soviet Union? Fo r $990 you can be flown from New York to spend six weeks in Russia attending classes and touring the country, receiving college credit for your work In classes held for four hours! in the morning students w ill be I n s t r u c t e d in the Ru.ssian language and culture by native Russians. The afternoons w ill be spent the cities and surrounding areas. touring Knowledge of Russian is not necessary to be accepted, and applications are being taken now by Mike Moore in Loo Hall 419. There is no lim it on the number of students who may attend, and students from all over the United States w ill participate. Students w ill be staying in resort areas which are ap- ; proximately a IS minute drive from Moscow and Leningrad. There w ill be American coun­ selors available for advice and consultation, and bilingual guides Summer Texan Seeks Applications by Friday Students wishing to fill a staff position on The Summer Texan should pick up the necessary forms in Journalism Building 103 and return them by Frid ay to Journalism Building 103B. Tile Summer Texan w ill publish times weekly beginning three June I. Positions are open the editorial, news, copy desk, sports, a m u s e m e n t s and features departments. In Teachers Wanted S O U T H W E S T , E N T I R E W E S T A A L A S K A . O T R 24th Y E A R . Southwest Teachers A g e n c y 1303 C e n tra l A ve ., N E . A lb uq uerq ue, N .M . 87106 F r e e R e g is tra tio n — Good S a la rie s the American The study-tour. being aponsorod by Institute of Foreign Study, includes a four- day stopover in London, three weeks in Leningrad, three weeks in Moscow, and nine days In Europe. The tour leaves from New York Ju ly 4 and returns Aug. 28. LZ 'J3 - r n Even bathing every day c a n ’t stop it. Feminine odor starts inter nally, and no amount of bath­ ing can remove it. Soap and water simply can’t reach the area where the odor starts. T h at’s the reason you need N orform s*.. . the second dcodor ant'." These tiny internal sup­ positories kill germs—stop odor effectively yet safely. In fact, gen tie, doctor-tested Norforms are so safe and easy to use, you can use them as often as necessary No bath or shower can give you Norform s’ protection. Get Norforms, and you’ll feel se cure and odorfree for hours. The second deodorant. F R E E N O R F O R M S M IN I- P A C K Rim inform ative booklet! Write! orwich Pharmecal Co .Dept.ON R, Norwich, N Y. 14815. (Encloje 25# for mailing, handling.) Name_ Street_ City— State_ Don't forget your lip cod*. -Zip. 48 the Mrs. Jenness was the southern delegate of a group of Young Socialists attending tenth r e v o l u t i o n a r y anniversary celebrations of Cuba in 1969. She has written for The M ilitant and the International Socialist Review ’ and is co-author with Fidel ^ Castro of “ Women in Cuba.” She; ;4V was the 1969 Socialist candidate for mayor of Atlanta, Ga., and ; has served on various national committees involved in the an­ tiwar movement and women’s liberation. ; ; She believes liberalized abor- j tion laws are only a m atter of time. www.- c-r’T' oo, .< ■ e-r iv; ** Tri ANNOUNCING A NEW STUDENT RESIDENCE FREE RENT IN MAY i v ' The Facts: for men & women. O ne j block from campus. Designer decorated. ; o—. \ Optional waterbeds., hee parking. i— - ’" a , ,■>/ - ■ V ,. I . t Your Keepsake Headquarters Q u a lity is o u r fir s t C o n sid era tio n 5228 Burnet R o ad in North Loop Plaza • GL2-649I D iv id e n d P a ym en ts — " N o In terest, N o C a rryin g Charge* Just North of 27th & GuaJolu Pe TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD CALL GR 1-5244 I Optional contract meals [all you can ^ Y o u can afford it/ What you should know about diamond) when you know it's for keeps PASO HOUSE 1808 W a s t A ve. Be g in ning P r o f e s s i o n a l g uitar instruction. Un n(‘quito Flam e n co . D avid M cD onald, 806A W e st 32nd, 478-7331. C la ssica l, g u ita r; S atisfactio n G uarantee^ . D issertation s, theses, se m in a r papers. Conscientious, I B M experienced ty p ist w ith executive e lectric. 453-S650. B B A . , __ , 1 S m allw o o d T yp in g S e rv ic e — Phone 892 Clinton. N e a r Cam pus. G roup and 0707 5(X)l * S u n se t” T ra il 'off B e n W h ite carpeted rooms. A / C . ma.d s e rv.e e .re - p riva te tutoring. 478-3846. 476-0757, 452- S m ’s S S S L a m a r. F a s t rn In u fe t h ernes! frigerators M E N ! , rn~ dtv-b!» or tlnn'a M A T H T U T O llT N G downstairs at The a./c in each room, in , OMI. color ^ 'A IV j ' dissertations, theses. lo'Jnq!-,A 6P,Cm0i*h Lnq'0' *iiJ douk *' ENGLISH COMPOSITION. C a t 478-3917 atter 3 p.m. —------- —— ; T T T G entlem en. Single-double tutoring for term papers and graduate of 7 7 7 requ irem en t. U n iv e rs ity S e rvic e s rooms. A C , ; A U S T IN . 477-9013 Special j block C am pus, S u m m e r rates “ “ re frig e rato r. B e s t accom m odations. 205 I W est 20th. 472-1941, 478-7097. _________ N E A R C A M P U S . F u rn ish e d room w ith p riv a te bath, p riv a te entrance, r e fr i­ clean. S u m m e r $75, gerator. Quiet, F a ll $85. B ills paid. 478-5967. A C F U L L Y C A R P E T E D suites w ith fob p er person p er sem ester. bath A c a c ia F r a t e r n it y . 478-3787, 477-5307. _ M i s c e l l a n e o u s Zuni N E L S O N 'S G I F T S ; com plete selection je w e lry : A frica n and M e x ican im ports. 4612 South Congress. 414-3814. In d ia n A P A R T M E N T S A N D R O O M S . Le a sin g now for S u m m e r and F a ll. 2’*> blocks off Cam pus. S u m m e r rates. C a ll 476- 1712, M rs. L y le . P A R K I N G A L L S U M M E R $30. o r $10 / month. D iag o n ally across San Antonio Stree t from re a r of V a rs ity T heatre. M c A d a m s P ro p e rtie s. 476-3720. F a il U N I V E R S I T Y H O L S E . M a k e Sum m er- rese rvatio n s now. A /C . m aid service. S u m m e r rates $15 single, $35 double. 2710 N ueces. 477-8272. R O Y A L CO-OP. Coed. R o om six week con­ A ir Session. ditioning, use of kitchen facilities. S u m m e r $15 A A A C O N AUTO TRANSPORT cars Free driv-us 21 or older anywhere U.S.A- availab le respomibU to 912 Com m erce Dal es, Texas 214— 742-4272 F o u r S t a r typing. Theses, linguistic-legal papers. reports, I B M carbon ribbon. P u n tin g , binding. 451-2304. V I R G I N I A S C H N E I D E R T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . G ra d u a te and U n­ d erg ra d u ate typing, printing, binding. 1515 K o en ig Lan e . T elep hone: 465-7205 W O O D S N e a r Cam pus. L a w , Thesis M rs. Woods, S E R V I C E . T Y P I N G 472-4825. Multiiithing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS 476-7581 2nd & Neches B E A U T I F U L T Y P I N G . R eports, briefs, theses, dissertations. S p e c ia l type for M rs. engineering, science, language. A nthony 454-3079. E X P E R I E N C E D term thesesr. M rs. H am ilton , 444- T Y P I S T -- papers, PRIVATE RO O M S S P A C IO U S - C A R P E T E D - C E N T R A L H E A T & ATR - K IT C H !IN P R I V I L E G E S A L L B I L L S P A I D —V A C A N C Y N O W . — H E L P S l ' M M E R Le a s e A F A L L . - R e n t 477-3671 4 "’ 8 8225 ----------------------------------j 28.ii. i .ast m inu te typing. S A V E A M E R I C A ! A M E R I C A N V I G I L A N T E S ! F o r Jo in the — — -----------— ...................................... . T Y P I N G In- ; B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D dissertations, S E R V I C E . form ation — B u y and R e ad T H E I A M E R I C A N V I G I L A N T E by A la rtc Bran do n P re ss, 221 Colum bus A ve. I H I 2-7184. — ---------- --------- Boston, M ass. 02116 $4.95 -----------------------------------------| R A P I D , A C C U R A T E , reasonable typing. A L L S U M M E R parking, $15. H O 5-6363. P a £ps and under p refered : --------------- 1__________________________ C a ll 478-7906 a fte r 6:30p.m. W A T E R B E D E X P E R I E N C E — Whole- I ~ . , n ; Theses. reports. M im eo grap h ing . R easonable. _ . ---- sa ie /retail. B e d s $9-65, 20 m ill union S T U D E N T T Y P I N G —- m y ------------------ home I „ ~ carbid e vin yl, 20 y r. guar. H e aters $12 35, silicone rubber, 4<)0 w a t t 115 v. th e rm s ta t W aterbed Ex p e rie n ce. 2259 Polk. S F . C alif, c a ll (415) 411-2744 D is­ tributors w anted. R E A L I T Y W H A T IS IT ? I This summer live In a community. Rooms $55 a month p us kitchen and bathroom privileges and anything else you bring to the community. H E B R E W H O U S E C O O P 1606 W . A ve . 477-0151 N O T R E D A M E alum n i Interested In trip In F a ll w rite or 1505 Sch le ich e r, to N D - L S U gam e F r a n k c o n t a c t Rid g e cre st D rive , 327-0327 evenings. L E A V I N G M A Y 5th Return in g 13th o r 14th. for Corpus. Need riders. 476-5645. physical. R A Y M O N D G I L L A S P I E failed his draft T y p i n g tim e. 50 cents a page. C all afte r 6 , 453-1355. 5106 N o rth L a m a r , 156. T Y P I S T . E X P E R T T h e s e s , S e le c t e e ! reports, briefs, professional reports. P rin tin g , binding. M rs. Tullos, 453-5124. I B M B C , Just North of 27th & Guadalupe tyvtdA Am jiduy M B . A T y p in g . M u ltiiith in g , B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailored the needs of U n iv e rs ity students. S p e c ia l keyboard equipm ent language, science, and eng ineer­ for ing theses 3nd dissertations. Ph o n e G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T . A cc u ra te , fast se rvice . L o w rates. 327-1534 any Them es, U N I V E R S I T Y S E R V I C E S of A U S T IN . theses, dissertations. B .C . reports P . R . ’s. Selective, carbon ribbon. 477-9043. E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T , fast and ac- cu rate . 40c p e r page. 442-5693. E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G in m y home. V e r y neat and accu rate . 50cents a page. W ill in Spanish, type papers F re n ch , Ita lia n , Portuguese, and L a tin . C a ll 836-2158. ET, C A M P O , R e a s o n a b l e kitchens without e x tra ch arg e, four re frig e rato rs. 465-7436. N ueces. M en. T w o 1912 rates. |50 — S U M M E R S E M E S T E R . C e n tra l AC. m a id se rvice, p riva te p arkin g 1905 fro m ava ila b le D o rm ito ry. T e x a n N ueces, 477-8868. T w o blocks Cam pus. A P A R T M E N T S , U N F . BEAUTIFUL GROUNDS ALL BILLS PAID I poo Ie, 8 clubs, and a m anagem ent who cares. Huge 1 * 2 bedroom ap a rt­ ments. 12 OO Bro ad m oo r. C ad 454-3885 d ay or night. H e l p W a n t e d F A M I L Y D E S I R E S foreign student (fe ­ m ale ) to liv e In nice larg e home for Bu m m er as te ach e r to three children. W alk in g d istance U .T . Room , board. and s a la ry . 465-5841 afte r 6 p m. N O W H IRIN G Bum m er w o rk for college students. Y ou must be clean c u t hard w orking, and Able to get along w e ll w ith the op­ posite sex. T h is is a w hite co lla r job. E A R N $99.50 W E E K L Y & H IG H E R plus m onthly bonuses, scholarships, and chance for free overseas trip. A pp ly at Perso n nel office when you can begut Im m ed iate ly. A pplications accepted thru M a y 20. Sta n d a rd Ed u c a tio n a l P ro g ra m s *23 B . O lio rf S t . Austin, Tex. (Tw in-O aks Shopping C enter) A p p ly m orning s only — no phone calls. lu m m w work. CuTto Division of A lco a has openings for IOO students. W o rk in Austin or your own home town. A p p ly 1427 North Lam ar M onday, L . alday, W e d n e s d a y ; 4 or 7 p.m. sharp. A 'so Saturday, IO a m. No phone calli. Full or part time. $2.65/hour. $TUDENT$ Cal! 444-1933 tor interview. S U M M E R J O B S A K E S C A R C E jroar old but not for the rig ht m en. L o c a l branch com pany of In te rn a tio n a l 1 Austin, expanding and has opening - In Austin, expanding and and N e w O r­ mo*it other T e x a s Cities, leans. P a r t tim e or full tim e. N e a t ap pearance and c a r ne ce ssary. T h is I' not selling books, va c u u m cleaners, or cosm etics. Tf you can ta lk to g irls and need to m ake $2000 to $4000 this Sum m er, ap p ly 700 R io G ran d e 2 p.rn d ally. S u m m e r w orkin g w ith WOULD Y O U U K E a unique Job this foreign stu­ d en ts’ M u st be livin g in Austin or San Antonio Ju n e through A u g u s t C all 4,2- 6434 for appointm ent. or c a re e r. J O B S O N Sh ip s! P e rfe c t su m m e r Job Include d ra ft B e n e fits exem ption, excellent pay, w o rldw ide tra ve l. info rm atio n Seafax , B o x 1173, D ouglas, A rizon a 85607. Sen d $2.00 fo r E D U C A T IO N A L C O N S U L T A N T for D a y C a re C e n te r and N u rs e ry School M a ste rs e a rly childhood o r equivalent experience. P a r t 4600 L a u re l C an yo n D rive . tim e. W r it e time, Good pay, age W A N T E D . F E M A L E accountant p a rt IS to 26. C a ll 463-5676 o r ap ply at E l l ’s C lub between 5 and 7p.m. W A N T E D , A D M I N I S T R A T I V E d ire c to r for D a y C a re C enter. B ack g ro u n d of education, psychology, social w o rk or C h i l d E x p e rie n c e p referred . W r it e 4600 L a u re l Canyon D riv e , 78731. developm ent. D u p l e x e s , F u r n . f Conscientious and proficient teeretary- ty p s t, with a even years of experience typing report!, thesei, dissertations, and kindi of term papers for students take the University of Texas, will m eticuloui c a re to type every student'! work carefully proper form, composition, and correct spelling. New IB M Executive, carbon rib- j bon, e Y c tric typew riter, equipped with I icience and engineering sym bols lf you I are excellent ! quality, experience, end dep end ab le ser­ vice, please dial 478-0762 accurate y, interested observing receiving in TflqMC&a. Am M B . A 9 T y p in g . M u ltiiith in g . B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailored the needs of U n iv e rs ity students. S p e cia l keyboard equipm ent language, science, and eng ineer­ for ing theses and dissertations. P h o n e G R 2-3210 an d G R 2-76TT 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k D E A D L I N E TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING. N ear C am p ui. Theme*, term paper*, ianguaqe-teehnical paper*, dissertation*. 476-2047 anytime. LAURA BODOUR 478-81 13 (C lose to U.T.) The finest personal typing of your University work. Theses, dissertation*, report*, eta. Also multiiithing St binding. ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 T Y P E S E T T I N G . T Y P I N G , P R I N T I N G . B I N D I N G T H E M E S , R E P O R T S , le ctu re note*. Reasonable. M rs. F ra s e r, 476-1317. D E E '8 T y p in g R easo n ab le rates. 452-8096 w eekdays, an ytim e on Se rvic e . weekends. E X P E R I E N C E D dissertations, T Y P I S T , etc. I B M Theses, executive. C h arlen e S ta rk , 453-5218. BEST TYPING SERVICE A new source for your typing and re ­ production needs. Theses, dissertations, report* PR'*, term papers, and B C 476-5318. A fte r 5, 442-1695. Best Printing Com pany, 205 E. 19th St. A cro ss the stre e t from the U n iv e rs ity . M A L E F O R fu ll o r p a rt tim e w o rk In person, 615 in ca ll office. A p p ly R E P O R T S , T H E S E S . dissertations. Reaso nable rale s. M rs. T H E M E S , W e s t 19th. Knight, 4011 Speedw ay. 453-1209. Fourteen blocks north University. A C , C H . Responsible adults, no p e ts .1 O n e bedroom g arag e apartment. $120, j -ll „ ( r r -j a , Utilities p a d . i c (Sum m er (tate), omal . . I .tw o bedroom duplex, $115 plus utilities dissertations c „ _ M A R J O R I E A. D E L A R U E L D - N ot ju st theses. a n d typing se rvice . Reports, B a n k A m e ric a rd a M a s te r C h arg es honored. 442-7008. I (Sum m er ra te ). G R 8-5850 afternoon* Just North of 27th & Guadalupe H o u s e s , F u r n . F A N C Y T H R E E bedroom house plus patio — $250 plus utilities. 474-2160. W O AC. A v a ila b le from end of M a y to end B E D R O O M S , one bath. >f August. $135. 453-1753. IO R T H O F C H . U n iv e rs ity . R espo n sib le adults, no pets. R e n t Ju n e S u m m e r ra te ; T w o bedroom s $125. aree bedroom s $138, plus utilities. G R $5850 afternoons. AC, P E R S O N S W O bedro .ms of house. $95 each im m e r, 2001 Sabine. ITS 3529. occup y to two for tya /cd a . A m f a t y s Typing. M ultiiithing. Binding M B A " The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailo re d the needs of U n iv e rs ity students. S p e cia l keyboard equipm ent fo r language, science, and engineer­ ing theses and dissertations. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk Still trying to beat Officer Van Horn to your parked car between classes? Would you gladly sacrifice your "A" in biology for an "A " on your parking permit? Are you starting to ask people for spare change? Then come park with us! We have a non-resident parking contract for people just like you. Unless, of course, your name happens to be Van Horn. The Castilian Just 13 parking meters from campus. You've dreamed about your diamond engagement ring a thou­ sand times. But now m at you know it’* for keeps, it** time to stop dreaming and start learning about diamonds and their value. Because no two diamonds are exactly alike, jeweler* have adopted exacting standards to de­ termine the relative value of each and every diamond in the world. itandards include a dia­ These mond'* rite (carat weight), color, cut and clarity. - folk .IIT! COLOR: Fine white diamond* are Suite rare and valued accordingly, ither shade* in relative order of their worth are: blue, yellow, brown and black. CUT: The cut of a diamond—the facet* placed on it by a trained cutter—brings out the gem's fire and brilliance. Anything lets than correct cut reduce* beauty, bril­ liance and value. CLARITY: Determined by the ab­ sence of small impurities. A per­ fect diamond has no impurities when examined under ten power magnification by a trained eye. size in size, CARAT: A diamond’* is measured in carats. As a diamond increases its price will increase ex rn more if the quality remains constant. But larger dia­ monds of inferior quality may ac­ tually be worth less than smaller, perfect diamonds. Although it’s important t o know the facts about diamonds* you certainly don't have to be aa, expert to choose a Keepsake Dia* mond Ring . . . because Keepsake guarantees a diamond of fine w h ite color, correct cut and perfect clar­ ity or replacement assured. T he fa­ mous Keepsake certificate provide* trade-in permanent registration, value and protection against lot* of diamonds from the setting. Your Keepsake Jeweler has a complete selection of new st>les. He* in the Yellow Pages under "Jewelers.” Or. dial free dav or night long distance 800-243-6000. In Connecticut, call 800-942 06 3. Keepsake* REGISTERED DIAMOND RINO* EAT at D O B I E A variety of entrees at each meal Choice of salads, beverages, desserts Unlimited seconds on everything but the weekly steak dinner Sunday mid-morning brunch Good quality food, varied mends, and excellent preparation. Come on over and taste for yourself. DOBIE 2021 Guadalupe, Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 472-8411 H O W T O P L AN Y O U R E N G A G E M E N T A N D W E D D I S C ! Send new 20 pg. booklet "Planning Your Engagement and Wedding'' I plus full color folder and 44 pg. Bride's Book gift o f f e r all for only 25(. I Book gift offer all for onb 25#*- S-71 P S . You could live there too. ONL. B O * SO, S Y R A C U S E , NEW YORK 1820l j Wednesday, April 28, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11 A D V A N C E D ASTRONOMY SEMINAR presents Dr. J. Dollard, associate professor of mathematics, “ Hilbert S p a c e , Unbounded Linear Operators. E tc.,” at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Physics Building 440. o n AWARE will hear Susan Conrad on “ The Modem Intellectual Woman” at noon Thursday in Union Building 221. COLLEGE LIFE will meet at 9 p.m. Wednesday at Phi Delta Theta fraternity house, 2300 Nueces St. “CRISIS IN AMERICAN IM­ PERIALISM” will be the topic of an address by Linda Jen- ness, co-author of “Women in Cuba” at 8 p.m. Wednesday in .-B etter th a n ,. A B arefoot. Union Building 304. GAMMA DELTA EPSILON will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in Felecia Co-op for a session of the new executive council. P E R S O N A L INTERACTION COMMITTEE of the Students’ Association will meet at 8 p.m. in Union Building Wednesday 202 to discuss programs for next fall. For more informa­ tion. call Carol Bloomer at 474- 2181. PHYSICS C O L L O Q U I U M presents Dr. J. C. Hosea, Plasm a Physics Laboratory, Princeton Universityt on “ Ion Cyclotron Resonance Heating in C-Stellerator and ST-Tokomak,” at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Physics Building 121. Coffee will be served at 3 :45 p.m. SPOOKS will meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the Delta Delta Delta sorority house. TOMATOE HUBRIS FOR WIT ANI) WISDOM will hold a press H o w c o u l d t h e r e b e a m o r e a p p r o p r i a t e g i f t ? ■SirTTT/ l l :30 conference a.m. at Wednesday on the West Mall to present returning astronauts and Walt Zelma Booster Rostow. UNIVERSITY SAILING CLUB will hold a general meeting at in p.m. Wednesday 7:30 Business-Economics Building 166. UNIVERSITY SPELEOLOGICAL SOCIETY will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Physics Building 313 to discuss a club trip to Indian Creek. V O U N G AMERICANS FOR FREEDOM will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Business- Economics Building 155 to elect delegates to the national con­ vention, elect new officers, and hear State Rep. Edmund E. “ Sonny” Jones of Houston on “The Wild and Woolly State Legislature.” research is hope for a break­ There through the in treatment or cure of lymphatic leukemia, the type that usually strikes children and teenagers, says a University researcher. in Jam es P. Allison, doctoral the University, candidate at in biological sciences working under the supervision of Dr. Barrie Kitto, is investigating the effect of an called asparaginase on leukemic cells. enzyme IT HAS BEEN FOUND, says Allison, types of that many leukemic cells will not grow in this enzyme. the presence of Tests show this is because the leukemic cells have a need for the asparagin, a protein nucleus of the a s p a r a g i n a s e destroys this protein in the blood and thus stops the growth of the cell, the biologist continued. in the cell, and Biologists have searched years Resistant Enzyme Discovered Leukemia Progress Cited for differences between cancer cells and the normal cells of the human body, said Allison. One difference found that many leukemic cells require an outside source of asparagin for growth, while normal cells do not. he added. is Allison noted that although this line of research has so far only provided the means to lengthen lives of those who are afflicted by the disease, there is hope that a cure may be found in the on­ going research. ALTHOUGH ASPARAGINASE has succeeded in causing growth retardation in about 80 percent of the cases where it has been used, Allison noted the effects usually last only from six months to five years. Then, the symptons resume and continue until death results. S e c o n d treatm ents with asparaginase rarely give more than a six-month extension, said Allison, and many times are totally useless. “Up to now the only source we have had for asparaginase has been a common bacterium known as escherichia coli,” said Allison. Tliis has been a great problem, he continued, because many times people on the serum would become sensitized to it and have to undergo a long desen­ sitization process. The main purpose of the at the University, research Allison said, Is to find n e w sources of the enzvine so that serums may be substituted for one another in the event that a patient becomes allergic. “Any results we get here will probably be sent to M.D. An­ derson Hospital In Houston for further testing,” he added. The resulted which is a asparaginase. research has already in one new bacterium large producer of Allison explained that leukemia has the effect on the body of building up white blood cells in the blood stream until it is filled to capacity. These cells then Invade the bone marrow where the red blood cells ar® grown. In doing so, they consume most of the nutrients needed by the red blood cells. This creates severe anemia, the absence of red blood cells the blood in stream, he explained. is the ANOTHER PROBLEM, that said Allison, leukemic white blood cells are immature and as such can seep in and out of the blood vessels more easily than normal white cells. Because of this large numbers of leukemic cells seep out in some places and cause lesions on different parts of the body, he explained. Allison recently received the O.B. Williams Award for his work from the Texas Branch of the A m e r i c a n S o c i e t y f o r Microbiology. VA Asks Vets For UT Status attending V e t e r a n s the University under the GI Bill have been asked to return their cer­ tification of attendance cards to the Veterans Administration as soon as possible. Students not tho cards to the VA wall not receive their final checks for the spring semester. returning Attendance cards also ar* necessary for students desiring automatic to VA entitlement benefits under the GI Bill for the fall summer upcoming semesters. or veterans should have All received the preaddressed at­ tendance cards along with their April entitlement checks. Those who did not receive an attendance card the mail should contact the VA Regional Office at 1400 N. Valley Mills Dr. in Waco. in University Y ' Lacks Funding To Occupy New Site in '7 2 The University “Y” probably will not occupy its new building, at least not at first. “Y” , said Tuesday Stuart Isgur, acting director of that the because of financial difficulties, the ” Y” will have to rent its new building to local businesses to pay for the costs of con- struction. Construction of the new facility, which will be started June I and completed in Sep­ sometime tember, 1972, has been delayed because of the high level of in­ terest rates. Isgur the $1 million building will be financed partly by the local YMCA endowment fund and partly be the rent from other businesses. said He said if the “Y” wins Its current it probably will be able to move at least some of its offices into $30,000 suit, tax the new building, to be located at Guadalupe and West 22nd streets. here If not, he continued, “we will remain (on Guadalupe above Sommers Drug) or find an old house near campus to move into.” Because of its sore financial condition, Isgur said, the “ Y” has had to cut back on staff and salary this year. “ In fact,” h« said, “ the only thing keeping us financially afloat over the past few years has been our yoga program .” Scholl Exercise Sandals with the exclusive toe-grip. They shape up your legs, while they comfort your feet. I n flat or r a i s e d h e e l. In r e d or b o n e I t r a p . $12.95 The MOTHER’S RMG* Tti'in b a n d s o f 14K g o l d s y m b o l i z e M o t h e r a n d F a th e r — jo i n e d lu stro u s s y n t h e t i c b y ston es o f t h e m o n th , o n e fo r ea ch c h i l d in t h e f a m i l y . S h e ’ l l c h e r i s h t h e Mother's R i n g forever b e c a u s e s h e ’l l k n o w y o u c o u l d g i v e h e r n ot h i ng more i n d i v i d ­ u a l , m o r e p e r s o n a l , mor e significant. P r ic e s M o th er’s R ing: one child $25, each additio n al child $5. PIZZA PARLOR & Ye P u b I ic house r n YE OLD GOOD TIME HOURS MONDAY - THURSDAY 8:30 P.M. TILL CLOSING MILLER H IG H LIFE Light or Dark .25 STEIN 1.25 PITCHER 2915 GUADALUPE 6321 CAMERON RD. D o e s y o u r b r e a k f a s t m e l t in y o u r H a n d b u t n o t in y o u r m o u t h ? Is y o u r l u n c h a b o u t a s b i o - d e g r a d e a b l e a s t h e c a n it c o m e s i n? Is y o u r d i n n e r s a n d w i c h e d in b e t w e e n a c o u p l e o f c h e e s e c r a c k e r s ? T h e n c o m e d i n e w i t h us! W e h a v e f i v e d i f f e r e n t n o n - r e s id e n t m e a ! p la n s f o r y o u to c h o o s e f r o m . A n d f o r d e s s e r t ? W o u ld y o u b e l e v e . ..a H e r s h e y b a r ? O n l y 7 v e n d i n g m a c h i n e s f r o m c a m p u s . cIhe Castilian (ma: em IT? I\ C 0 K G € C O rrH S I O IS ! (HR9T PRIZ€ 2 ^ 0 0 5 0 SECOND PRIZES 2 MMG TEM HOT PrtMTC OUTHITS & A MIRO M I CI I eXCRCIK MIMS ■150 THIRD PRIZ^iE A MR Of SCHULL EXERCISE WIMS /C o u ld you be w alking around on the Great Gams of 1971? C ould yours be the g re a t-lo o kin g legs w orth $2,500 cash, for your education or w hatever else you please? Could you be one of the 50 co -e d s (one from each state) whose legs win you S econd Prize, two great hot pants o utfits by Hang T e n * - p lu s a pair of S ch oil Exercise Sandals to keep those gorgeous gams in shape? Runners-up from each state get Third Prize, a pair of Scholl Exercise Sandals. Limber up those legs, gals. Go g et the details at your Scholl local departm ent, shoe or drug stores. Sandal display in EXERCISE S41D4S tf you’re not ready to put your legs on the line, get yourself a pair of S ch o ll Exercise Sandals, th e ones w ith the exclusive toe-grip, th* su per-com fortable sandals th a t help shape up your legs while you walk. CONTEST RULES: Send p rin te d nam e, hom e a dd ress, sig n a tu re and full-flgure ph o to to S ch o ll G reat G am s C o nte st, Box 812, T im es Square S tation, N e w Y ork. la te r than m id n ig h t, July 31, New Y o rk 10036 E n trie s m ust be po stm a rke d no 1971. O nly g irls e n ro lle d fu ll- o r p a rt-tim e tw o- o r four-ye ar c o lle g e or u n iv e rs ity (o r 1971 g radua tes th e re o f) w ill be e lig ib le . W in n e r* w ill be chosen by an In d e p e n d e n t and Im p a rtia l g ro u p of ju d ges. Ju d g e s' d e c is io n w ill be fin a l. A ll prize s w ill be aw arded. No purchase re q u ire d V o id where p ro h ib ite d by la w A ll p ic tu re s s u b m itte d beco m e the p ro p e rty o f The S ch o ll M fg. Co., In c., and cann ot be returned Y o ur sig n a tu re In d ic a te s th a t you have read and und er­ stand the rules of t h * contest. In an a c c re d ite d SUMMER R o b e r d e a u ) SCHOOL? WE OFFER: Private bedrooms, free covered parking, swim­ ming pools and sun decks, daily maid serv­ ice, fully air-conditioned, plus a delicious breakfast and dinner Monday thru Friday. our And at The Contessa West kitchenette suites are equipped with a refrigerator, electric range and oven so you can prepare your own s n a c k s , lunches and weekend meals. Why not call or come over, cause you’d be sur­ prised how reasonable we are. You’ll be glad you did ,we promise. © 9NTESSR 2706 Nueces 477-9766 £TBB ' W e s t 2707 Rio Grande 476-4648 And For You Mon 'H fs tlQ j 2700 Nuee«( V A N A N D S T O R A G E 207 San Jacinto • Austin, Texas Phene: 472*2488 LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MOVING Summer Storage Packing ★ Crating ★ Shipping ESTIMATES WITHOUT OBLIGATION "AMERICA’S NO. I FAMILY MOVER.” Aa g e n t/ a llie d van U T . . . W hat's it W orth to you J gives you a membership with thousands who care. NAME ADDRESS. CITY____ STATE. ZIP. GRADUATING CLASS. DEGREE____________ THE EX-STUDENTS’ ASSOCIATION 2110 SAN JACINTO, P. O. BOX 7278, AUSTIN 78712 2JSJSJSJSJSISISJSJ3JSJS/SJ2ISMSISJSJSISJiSJSJSJi3M3JSJl! Air conditioned private bedrooms, free covered parking, and daily maid service. Your ten delicious meals, Monday thru Friday, will be served at the Contessa, where you also share the TV lounge and swimming pool. Cost? So reasonable you can’t afford not to stay with us. Why not come over or call for further information. 472-7850 or 476-4648. ' h p I t W M y . April 28, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN T H I N K I N G O F TAKING A PACK TO EUROPE? COME BY AND TALK TO US ABOUT SLEEPING BAGS & PACKS. WHOLE EARTH PROVISION CO. 504 W. 24th 478-1577 HANK's GRILL 2532 G U A D A L U P E Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2 pct. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only 95 Reg. 41.35 Happy Hour 2-5 p.m. Daily Light or Dark Institute to Study Ecology Problems Wolfe said. “There will he no set number of credits or length of time attending the institute for j graduation. No degrees will be offered, with only certificates of merit.” “ A REGIONAL’ environmental I Inventory’ mast be taken before j the center can begin to educate j students in the needs of the Aus- j tin community. This inventory; will provide the data needed to j decide the Immediate needs of the community,” Wolfe said. » IEAS will study four major i c a t e g o r i e s concerning en- ! vironment In the Austin area: J economics, law, communication and education. These problems are all present In the area. “ Austin Is an Ideal location for this type of institute because of the earth sciences studies In the area and the intellectual make-up of the community,” Wolfe added. THE CENTER IS funded by Environmental t h e federal funds at Education Act. The present are few. but the center hopes to apply for more federal assistance when It has some meaningful programs under way. 1 Dean Exalton A. Delco Jr. of j Huston-Tillotson C o l l e g e is chairman of the faculty which h a s faculty 18 University members participating, Including four deans. By BOBBY EVANS The nation’s first independent educational w i t h studies has opened near University. institution dealing environmental the applied former Thomas H. Wolfe, to the dean of assistant the U n i v e r s i t y graduate school, recently announced the opening of the Institute for Advanced Environmental Studies at Helen Kirby Hall, 306 W. 29th St. Wolfe, administrator of the project, said the organization is Courses Added At Law School As a direct result of student and faculty Interest, University law students will be offered several new courses beginning next fall. “Eight to IO new courses are being considered, and six of these will be offered for sure,” said George Schatzki, professor of law and chairman of the Curriculum Committee. Among the new courses is Civil Liberties Problems Related to Selective Service and Military Law. Other new courses scheduled for next year are Environmental Law, Real Estate Transactions, Legal Problems in Low Income Housing, the Products Consumer, Law and Education, Regulated in Latin America, and Civil and Political Rights. A course con­ cerned with women’s rights and is also under con­ law the sideration. Industries, Law and modeled after tile Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton for post-doctoral work. hut will be and open un­ graduate interested dergraduate students specifically environmental education. to in IS “ LAES intended students of colleges to pro­ in vide the Austin area a chance to help protect the environment,” Wolfe said. than The center will remain small with no more than 24 faculty members and will accept no more two students per member. “Admission to the in­ stitute will be left strictly up to the faculty member the student intends to work with. There will be no for ad­ set criteria mittance.” ENROLLMENT W ILL begin immediately, and the program should be under way by Sep­ tember. “We hope to train students to lead and educate organizations that deal with fire environment,’* Thursday Deadline Set For Cheerleader Filing Those interested in becoming varsity cheerleaders fall must turn in their applications by Thursday night at cheerleader practice, Cheryl Goodman, head cheerleader, said Tuesday. this Applications also can be filed at the Students’ Association of­ are fice. These necessary if a candidate is qualified to run. applications to determine The Longhorn Band will make of selection f i n a l the cheerleaders. Winning Team — Texan Staff Photo by R EN E PEREZ. University Debate Team members (l-r) Steve Kering, Ed Cockrell, Dr. John Schenk, debate director, and Tony Wins, discuss the 767 tournament debates this year. The team has earned a 493-274 win-loss record. The group set a record by qualifying four debate teams for the Tournament of Champions hosted in Illinois in April. Debaters End Year— 493 Wins,8 Sweeps awards in both first and second places. director of University. forensics at th* “A sweepstake award is based on a total point accumulation by one school during a specific tournament for all the speech events,” said Dr. John F, Schunk, The University set a record this year by qualifying four debate the Tournament of teams for Champions hosted by Illinois State University in April. HAVE ANYTHING TO SELL? The Texas Forensic Union at the University completed the 1970-71 season on an unusually successful note this year. Participating in a total of 767 tournament debates this year, the teams compiled a 493-274 win-loss record for an over-all 64.3 percent, wins. This is the highest per-' centage of wins in the last three years. representation The highlight of this year was the t h e University for the first time in IO years at the National Debate Tournament held at MacAlester College in St. Paul, Minn. of Ed Cockrell, a junior speech major and Robert Mott a junior economics major, represented Texas at the national tournament, finishing In a tie for 19th place the the nation. However, hi University fourth finished {dace over-all. in A total of 54 awards was taken by the Texas Forensic Union at v a r i o u s debate tournaments throughout the year. These awards included eight sweepstake t fK B E S T O E B k B S S M ffil WHERE ANYONE CAN SELL ANYTH ING TO ANYBODY - MAY I & 2 1 0 - 4 WEEKDAYS CALL 476-8611 U.T. EUROPE SUMMER GROUP FLIGHTS U S IN G R EG U LA R SC H ED U LED C O M M E R C IA L A IR LIN ES MAY 31 AUGUST 5 DALLAS/NEW YORK/DALLAS VIA AM ERIC AN AIRLINES 747 NY/LONDON/PARIS/NY VIA KLM ROYAL DUTCH AIRLINES 747 MAY 17 JULY 12 DALLAS/NEW YORK/DALLAS VIA BRANIFF INTERNATIONAL NEW YORK/MILAN, ITALY/N. YORK VIA ALITALIA AIRLINES 747 ( M I C i- t i l l ; I J C 9 Q E V i 7 J AVO ID CHARTER FLIGHT CANCELLATION S AN D LAST MINUTE PRICE INCREASES CANCEL YOUR EUROPEAN CHARTER FLIGHT BEFORE IT CANCELS YOU E L IG IB IL IT Y R E Q U IR E M E N T ! M inim um Forty University of Texas Students, Faculty, Staff and mem bars of their Immediate families. V W ADVENTURES, INC. CASTILIAN LOBBY 2323 SA N A N T O N IO ST. 478-4700 S e e t h e G O V E R N O R S D O R M b e f o r e y o n s ig n u p f o r s u m m e r r o o m s o r f o r n e x t f a l l . . . W e ’r e C O ED ! S u m m e r r o o m s o n ly $ 5 0 d o u b l e 6 w e e k s $ 7 5 s in g l e . L o n g - t e r m s e s s i o n $ 1 0 9 9 . C o m e b y 2 6 1 2 G U A D A L U P E o r c a l l 4 7 6 - 5 6 5 8 f o r m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n . FREE SAILING LESSONS • FREE USE OF 23 FT. SAILBOAT TO RESIDENTS Are you cooking more but enjoying it less? Do you get up at 6 to catch the shuttle bus at 7 so you'll get to class at 8? Is cleaning up your apartment like cleaning up Chicago in '28? Then come live with us! And swim with us! And dine with us! And relax with us! And study with us! And park with us! And . . . ‘The Castiliaii Still II/2 blocks from campus. K l n U f l Don't worry anymore n i l V V ! about typing errors! ERRORITE TM N YLO N TYPING RIBBON CORRECTION RIBBON POR A U WACH I NBB NA VW O RIO/BLACK RIBBON S SU CTIO N ERRORITE™ Is a quality nylon typewriter ribbon featuring a built-in error corrector. ERRORITE" 1 eliminates the need to purchase ribbon and correction aids separately. ERRORITE™ is always in position to make quick, clean corrections... no more fussing with separate paper or fluid correctors. Purchase ERR O R ITE™ at your book store. , Sold Exclusively at College and University Book Stores N O W AVAILABLE TO PIZZA HUTTERS FOR PARTIES, MEETINGS, FRATS, SORTS ALL SPECIAL O C C A SIO N S OUR BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED AND UNIQUE PARTY ROOM. For Information 472-7511 or 454-4151 OOI ARRETED OURTEOUS 19th & Guadalupe 5 <► » I * ♦ 6 THIS COUPON GOOD FOR 50c OFF ON ANY LARGE PIZZA OR 25c OFF O N ANY SMALL PIZZA PITCHER OF BEER $1.00 iNY LARGE PIZZA O N ANY LARGE PIZZA | f ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ ? ▼ ▼ ▼ v y v r V V f w w W ell Show You Ours, lf You'll Show Us Yours We Want To Show You The NewCo-edTOWER M A N O R NEW RATES SU M M E R 149.50 for 6 weeks Room & Board FALL ... 127.50 per month, Room & Board Includes: □ I block from campus □ 4 people suites; with 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining area, full kitchen; the most spacious of any place □ A community-—small enough for a friendly atmosphere □ Security— night guard service □ Sun Deck □ Spacious Living NEW MANAGEMENT: MRS. FAY HOUSTON NEW POLICY: CO-ED FOR SUMMER & FALL Now We Want You To Show Us — Your interest. Come by and look at what we've got; you'll like it all, new people, new place, and new price. Also, come by, and inquire about our "new name" contest. W in free room for summer or falL J fllNOBlMCttS CORP. 651-651 tlorsaliAienue, JnUuk. JU.JMHB T O W E R M A N O R ^ B dan. Ascii B tisxj, m g DAILY TEXAN Pas* 11 1908 U N I V E R S I T Y A V E N U E 478-21 BS S T U D Y S O U N D S IMPROVE ORMES Improv* <.»'* >* VVh<> Devoting The Sam* Amount Of T-me t© study USE STUDY SOUNDS Ye r C o n c e n tra tio n A nd Im p rev # - ■ r Cr p'C ’** »n«ion S tu d y At A F a s t e r Par* . ELECTRONICALLY PRODUCED SOUNDS CAUSE THIS TO HAPPEN R T'*fW T ap*. O s * * t t * . d r I P R e c o rd **"d Charr ©r Money Order — *9.95 Cad* Ir.-Ji.rt* 7 5 s Ha t d h n g a n d P o s ta g e %o na c - t - f p ts, In c .. — B o a 3852 C h a rio tt* fv iife . Va. 2 2 9 0 2 f Bonfield 'V Concert Outstanding Heat, Finals Hinder Annual Art Auction By GART KENDALL Amusements Staff its T h e U niversity Symphony concluded season Tuesday night in Hogg Auditorium with a strong, consistent program of student soloists led by Volker Banfleld, pianist. Banfield's perform ance of the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No I in B-flat w as by fa r one of the highlights of this sem ester's the most concert exciting p art of the evening’s program . His perform mice w as season and an display of v ir­ overwhelming His and sound m usical tuosity judgment. interpretation molded the music into a powerful and aggressive vehicle for his technique, w hile never splendid losing the m usic's of direction and purpose. It w as a such p l e a s u r e to professionalism on cam pus by a student. h e a r o f f e r e d sight The concert began with tile Vivaldi Concerto grosso in A m inor with I>arry B radford and Denise Villere a s soloists. The string o rch estra retained and sound precise this piece and en- a throughout clear "FU N N Y , IN A NEW ANO FRIGHTENING W AY!* - N E W S W E E K "DEVASTATINGLY FUNNY AND COMICALLY DEVASTATING! A HOWL OF LAUGHTER!" — J u d i t h C rist, NSC-TV J U L E S F E IF F E R S little _ MOTHERS countered fewer pitch problem s than a t previous tim es. In fact this w as Hie best tile o rch e stra’s strings have sounded recently. The prinicpal problem w as one the soloist the orch estra; a problem the p e r­ of balance between and th a t did not hinder form ance from being enjoyable. The Ib ert Concerto for Flute and O rchestra returned som e of those pitch problems, but then again it w as a m ore difficult piece. Soloist Virginia M urphy’s a p ­ pearance and presence w ere as delightful as her playing. Despite balance problem s, she m anaged to display a virtuostic technique and a lovely tonal quality. One could only wish for a m ore ex­ citing piece to have played. for her Credit should also be given to the orchestra and its conductor, S tu art Sankey. The m usicians accom plished die difficult job of accom panying these soloists with fine style and co-ordination. a presented F or a closing concert, the o r­ ch estra strong program with im pressive soloists and a consistent perform ance on th eir own p a r t The audience m ade up of students and older responded with A u s t i n i t e s overw lielming approval of the orchestra, soloists and especially Banfield. We forw ard look the to concert possibility of another devoted to student soloists. By JACK BALAGIA Amusements Assistant Despite heat and upcoming finals, the annual Art Students’ Auction proceeded a t its usual hectic pace Tuesday as volun­ te ers helped for scholarships. Although raise money buyers the and Program to Honor Retiring Teacher P h I Mu Alpha Sinfonia, professional m usic fraternity, will present a recital of compositions by students of H unter Johnson, U niversity faculty com poser who Is five y ears of teaching this spring and retu r­ ning to composing. concluding The recital will be at 8:15 p.m. In Music Building W ednesday R ecital Hall. Two m em bers of the University m usic faculty who are form er students of Johnson. Thomas Wells and Gordon Goodwin, will be presented the program . in Wells and Goodwin earned the doctor of m usical a rts degree from the University. to Johnson, who is perhaps best known for the M artha G raham the W orld" ballets, “ L etter and “ Deaths and E n tran ces,” has won num erous honors, including a P rix de Rome. A recital of som e of his favorite cham ber w orks was given by the New Music Ensem ble in M arch. 'Going Once, Going Twice .. Texan Staff Photo by BENE PEB EZ. Dr. Stanley Donner auctions off a work at the annual stu­ dent art sale Tuesday on the Union Patio. As You Like It ART “ F ists in the Pocket,” M arco Bellocchio’s film presented by the Ja n u s Concert Society, will be shown at the Union T heater a t 6, 8 and IO p.m. W ednesday. Evening of O pera, directed by W alter Ducloux, w ill be presented in ac­ com panim ent a t 8 p.m . Wed­ in E ducation Annex nesday costum e with piano lDwtvi-m micr** SO U TH SID E 710 I Ben W h ite 4 4 4 - 1 2 9 6 “ D ante” will be presented by in a Dr. R. David A rm strong classics lecture a t 4:15 p.m. W ednesday in W aggener Hall 116. DRAMA Spanish plays by the D epart­ m en t of Spanish and Portuguese P lay Production Class, directed by Prof. Beltran de H eredia, will be staged a t 6 and 8 p.m. Wed­ nesday in Calhoun Auditorium. B O X u . » H E O P E N 7 :1 5 S H O W S T A B T S O I SK EXPOSED! THE NAKED TRUTH AT LAST . . JERRY GROSS P«f>striK V s FOR ADULTS ONLY • MIE I I M I 'M J i j ^ U L 's a j M MIE C A P R I 472-0442 521 E. 6th D O O R S O PE N DAILY 11:30 A .M . Y OU 'V E SEEN THE REST, N O W SEE THE BEST' REVENGE « SMASH ESC O R TED L A D IE S FREE W I T H M E M B E R S H IP U T STUDENTS !/ j PR IC E O N S U N D A Y — F e a tu re * c h a n g e * each M o n d a y FREE P A R K IN S A C R O S S T H E STREET pleased with the Union Patio passersby on s e e m e d tile festivities, the sponsors w ere not the out­ entirely satisfied with come. Dr. Michael F ra ry , faculty auction chairm an, rem arked that upcoming th e hot finals and the auction from w eather kept being as successful as in other years. The heat alm ost caused a casualty, when auctioneer Jack D arrouzet started to sway on the stage. Luckily, he w as rescued in tim e. The crowd on the patio reached a peak about noon, and the bidding becam e fairly hectic. The prints w ere selling th e best, but th at w as due considerably to their Inexpensive price. John Sem ple’s Bob Dylan paintings proved quite popular with starting bids a t $15. Tom R icks’ inks and draw ings sold well as did Stephen M ayfield's w atercolors. Susan C asey’s batiks also did their well, perhaps because of unique texture. Among the auctioneers w ere Texas Land Commissioner Bob A r m s t r o n g , KTBC’s Cactus P r y o r , businessm an Willi* Kocurek and U niversity Profs. Stanley Donner and R ichard Byrne. Horoscope 3 Aries: Your thinking cap la really on today. If you sim ply apply your­ self, you ran figure out w hatever you need Taurus: You've seen better days. lot worse. Don't for granted. B e ob­ hut you ’ve seen a take anything servant. f.etnlnl: Today you are Just plain lucky. to be If som ething appears backfiring. Just w a lt You'll be sur­ prised. C an cer: Minor projects you c a n m ake progress with easily. Major projects Just don't have a chance, however. today Leo: Insulate yourself against un­ predictable errors. You should h a \e quite a few of those today. Virgo: With the outlook you have today, you sim ply can't help but ac­ complish your goals. Everything is going right. Libra: Today’s results are entirely up to you. Today you get w hat you bring yourself. If that’s nothing, vs be it. -rorpio: You'll get a lot done to­ day, but you won’t like the results. Hor exam ple, you could finally dis­ prove some pet theory SagtttariUN: This w ill be anything but a restful day. It will seem as though you don’t get a moment'* peace. Capricorn: A m ediocre day at b e st Your ambition is low and your effec­ tivenes s even lower. Plan anything, then do som ething else. A quarius: So you've Just realized that thought w as finished isn't really? Better get busy. Tim e's a-wastin.' the project you P isces: You could be a ee r y un­ pleasant person to be around today. E specially if som ething goes wrong Which It m ight. •—Nick Lawrence the ONE KNITE 8th Si Red River wed. CODY HUBACH tb u rt. SNAKER & the SHAKERS N O COVER S H O W TIMES 1:00, 3 :4 5 , 6 :3 0 , 9 :1 5 "A HIP EPIC!" —P a u lin e K art, — N ew Y o rk er M agazine DUSTIN HOFFMAN “LITTIE BIG MAN’ F^navwxxi* Technicolor* [GPI* All Seats $1.00 'Til 1:30 E X C E P T SUN. A HOU! DAYS dday at ® Interstate Theatres P A R A M O U N T 47? 5411 7 1 3 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E in BURT LANCASTER VALDEZ^ " l f COLOR by Deluxe ■ FEATURES — 1 :4 0 - 3 :2 0 5 .0 0 .6 :4 0 - 8 : 2 0 - 10:00 S T A T E 476 5066 7 1 9 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E ■ FEATURES 2 :0 0 - 5:15 - 8 :30 | WB® WINNER OF 8 ACADEMY ■ ■ AWARDS i n c l u d i n g I M & M o z c j p ic t u r e ! a c t o r I R o m * IPOWLWHKCBI DIRECT FROM ITS SENSATIONA RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT 2Cth Canlvry-Foi prewar** lillOIUil' KAUI. C. SCOTT/MALDEN VARSITY .744351 2 4 0 0 G U A D A L U P E S T R E E T f ^'amount Pictures presents A HOWARD W. KOCH- HILLARD ELKINS PRODUCTION uniter n im Elaine Hon A Heil) Lent" f f j ] - Feature —- 2 :0 0 - 3 :5 5 - 5:50 7:45 - 9 :4 0 $ 1 .0 0 ’TIL 2 :1 5 M A U S T I N 4A2 5719 " 2 I JO . INGRESS AVE K R A K A T H EAST OF JAVA in aam broadcastrgcoom _ rn m m Knm nm -wim -M ' JOth Century-Few preso rts QUOIT G O U ID SS^K SIIE -MAN ARKIN , who* woo At AN ARKIN I garden* euzaseth miso* ion hows »■ JACK BRODSKY Strewn »T JULES PEIFFER MURDERS” A8»-*jsiry uouw Product— OU*Pig UMd> *n » [*» j RESTRICTED U n d e r 18 R e q u ire s P a ren t N A T I O N A L . G E N E R A L ' FOX AIRPORT BLVD 4 S 4 - 2 7 1 1 ■ NOWW e e k d a y s Open 5:45 F e a tu re 6 - 8 - IO Please C a ll T h e a tre fo r Times SAT. & S U N . N O W ! O fc N 1:13 $1.50 U N T IL 5 :3 0 FEATUR ES 1 :3 0 - 5 :0 0 - 8:30 ROADSHOW EN G AG EM E N T P A SS U S T S U S P E N D E D WINNER 2 ACADEMY avVARDS BEST SU P P O R T IN G A C T O R — J O H N MILLS BEST C IN E M A T O G R A P H Y METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER Present* ) A story of love. Filmed by David Lean Ryan’s Daughter Sarong ROBERT MITCHUM TREVOR HOWARD CHRISTOPHER JONES JOHN MILLS LEO MCKERN SARAH MILES ~ I METROCOLDR and SUPER RANAVSON ® — NOT RECOMMENDED FOR CHILDREN— ' U P ® ATH and U FINAL W E E K 12224 Guadaluoe S t-4 7 7 -19 6 4 O PEN 1:45 • $ 1.00 'TIL 5 P.M F e a tu re s 2 - 4 :3 0 - 7 - 9:30 ...... ■N.'-sSa w William Shakespeare’s J u l i u s c a e s a r No grander Caesar... ^ _ £0, No greater cast! k A U NEW ^ C l ADVENTURE M t&r ^ fflTEWHMEUT £ ? «as* 4 t -CL - - - William Shakespeare s - United ptesenls a Peter Sneil production Julius CaesarCharl t on Heston Jason RobardsJohn Gielgud ©«> Richard Johnson-Robert Vaughn Richard Chamberlain & Diana Rigg Christopher Lee & Jill Bennett ****** peter shell S C H O O L G R O U P S ! C o n ta c t K<'~ 'a g e r For G ro u p R ates JAVA - CUSTER 6 :0 0 - 9 :4 2 7:37 P,9, H Wednesday. A pril » , 1971 THE DAILY TEXAI PLUS C O -F E A T U R E ROBERT W A L K E R STEVE ROSSI U T H E M A N FR O M O .R.G .Y" T R A N S ★ T E X A S BOX OFFICE & SNACK BAR OPENS AT 7:30 6400 Burnet Road — 465-6933 MARLON BRANDO A l RUBAN and JAM SHAW P re se n t A am F a u t C a S E j w e v e s HUTH ll— T f M jj a , by AL RUBAN >suk>«*• Pr42=5^ Presents Marco Bellocchio’s Fists InThe Pocket THEY ARE BACK! THE SPARKLES featuring MISTY Cover Charge $1 Pitchers of Beer $1 H S V O R L E A N S ™ 12th & RED RIVER OPEN OPEN 8-30 P.M. 478-0292 i Cooled ( jive ’ Possessive pronoun ! Seines I Fruit I Part of circle Cheer i Anger Growing out of Speck Frolics Worship Pierce Crown Go in. Before Communist Essence Wild ass of India ACROSS I Existed A Once mom 9 Prohibit 12 Likely 13 Angry 14 Macaw 15 Mock 17 Foul odor 19 Mountain nymph 21 Nahoor sheep 22 Garden tool 24 Cover 26 Poker state 29 Poem 30 Amuse 32 Astate (abbr.) 33 Exist 34 Bom 35 Near 36 Objected formally 39 Prefix: heft* 40 Dispatched 41 Drunkard 42 District In Germany 43 Swiss river 45 Spoor 47 Rue SO Deer's horn 53 Native metal 54 Commonplace 56 Eggs 57 Vehicle 58 Tendon 69 Soak DOWN Small lump Simian An impact Assistant Quality of being big 38 Smell child 39 Paleness 42 Pose for portrait 44 Soak* 46 Again 47 Fabulous bird 4b Pertly! of tim* 49 Prefix: 51 Girl's nam* 52 Rodent B f Preposition 17 21 TODAY 6 :0 0 , 8 :0 0 & 10:00pm Union T h eater stu d e n ts $ 1 ,0 0 COUNTRY MUSIC Spectacular Monday - May 3 8 P.M. Municipal Auditorium IN PERSON and the CHARLEY PRIDE TOM PALL GLASER BROS. Johnny Duncan JOHNNY BUSH Adv. Res. $5.00 and $4.00 Adv. Gen. Adm. $3.00 Adv. Ticket Locations B E SE B V E D SEA TS: Gibsons Disc. Montgomery Ward L ariat B an d i Wear , .University Stat* Bank GEN EBAL ADM: All U-Totem Stores (Ben White) An Tickets l l OO Higher at the door ★ SALE * SHEEP SKIN RUGS Many Beautiful Colors Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes Capitol Saddlery ★ LEATHER SALE ★ Various kinds, colors — 50c per fool Austin, Texai 478-930$ C LU B C A R A V A N GOOD DANCE BAND PLAYING NIGHTLY MONDAY Thru SATURDAY 2300 N. Interregional In the Villa Capri Hotel GR 7-6338 AT THE enaissance RICK STEIN ED SHOOK FRI. SAT. KAREN BELLA & MACK WEBSTER 801 RIO GRANDE 476-6019 tic b e PROUDLY PRESENTS.. W ED - PH O EN IX F R I - NAVASOTA FROM HOUSTON SAT - 1900 STORM "The Best In Entertainment. . . At The Lowest Prices” 23rd and Pearl Streets IN NEW HARDIN GARAGE COMPT EY 477-6135 audience contact and refuged to use a microphone. This gave his reading a more Intimate, in­ formal atmosphere. After being introduced by Visiting Prof. of English John Lehmann, an old personal friend, he read such poems as “ Icarus,” “ Not to You I Sighed . . . ” and “ The Ultimate Argument of Kings.” He moved the audience with a touching final poem, “ One More New Botched Beginning,” about the immortality of poets. APTER THE reading session, Spender explained that he did not write “ Of for an audience. course,” he said “ one would like that one’s poem to w ill be one of the six immortal poems of the world, but ifs quite enough for oneself.” to get think right it Spender is now working on in a Time,” and is writing every day. long poem, “ Pronouns The poet was brought to Austin by the Ruth Stephan Poetry the Humanities Center and Research Center of the Univer­ sity. Middle Earth Ald (or Bad Trips 8 a .in .. 4 p.m. Monday through Friday 9 p.m. - 8 a.m. seven days rn WCH*l£ University “ Y ” No names, no haaalo Mobile units available 472-9248 'T u t out and save this ad;“ “ D o n 't Call Your Travel Agent! When you want the most charters available for Summer 1971, Call 212-697-3054 A s a student at this college, YOU may be eligible for our low, low cost fares. Flights from New York to all major European Cities. Weekly departures. Flights under the auspices of World Student Government Organization. Send coupon. . . call, write or visit W.S G.O. please sen* □ Travel bulletins. □ Application (or International C/a Student LD. Nam eu -Zip. Charter & Group Travel Specialists 6 0 East 42nd S trsst New York 10017 Call (2 12)6 97-3 084 J U P P i . ■ f e a a K i K t t % ■ r n -- ^ -- a — - : ~ ■ T S - - . • = s m s - . JR J * - tz SD) His own life, filmed as he lives it. Dennis h o p p g r is th8 Am em can nneameR A Film By LAWRENCE SCHILLER and L M KIT CARSON roouta'Onn lr■*, .km LVR Progranii 5 DAYS ONLY BURDINE AUDITORIA M A Y I 6-8-1 0 MAY 2 * 3 1 2 - 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 IO BATTS AUDITORIUM 1 2 - 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 1 0 MAY 4 & 5 University Cinema Association Wednesday, April 28, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page IS Renowned Bard — Texan Staff Photo by B E N E P E R E Z . Stephen Spender read from some of his worb Tuesday in the Texas Union Theater. TV Tonight 6:90 p.m. IO, 13 Courtship of Eddie'a rath e r A A 43 Mea From Shiloh I 7 M ea At Law 9 Newa T p.m. IO, 13 Room 399 9 French Chef 7:30 p.m. 13 Smith Family 5, IO To Rome With Lo\* 7 Room 222 9 Trial I p.m. I 6. a Multo Ban 6 M e d ic a l Center 7 Movie — "Montana"* (1950) 10k 13 Johnny Cash I p.m. A 6, 43 Four ta One—McCloud A IO Haw aii Flve-O 9 Masterpiece 13 Young Law yer! 10:30 p m. A 6, 42 Johnny Carson 6. 7 M erv G riffin 9 Advocates 10 F B I 13 Movie — "Woman ta Hiding" (1950) 12224 Guadalupe St—47M964 STARTING WEDNESDAY M A Y 5th THE UNPUBLISHABLE NOVEL IS NOW AMERICA'S M OST CONTRO)rERSIAL TU M I cThe Stewardesses STEREO VISION a p BIG FEATURES — 3 The Deadliest M a n Alive ...Takes O n a Whole Army! ^ E A S T W O O D SHIRLEY MACLAINE 'TW O MULES FOR SISTER SARA' [G P I A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR* • PANAVISION* A M A R T IN M A C K IN w iow w tiO M HIT it 3 HIT # 2 Who says they dortt make W »t£m s like they used to? Vfejietdkl, DEMI GEORGE mural pepprrd awuvuiAirtctuM TECHNICOLOR* :hellfightersti] A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR** PANAVISION* .jL C o m P a,rf lo v t 4 k‘ng " “ t i f f i n g '° 0 ! o SOUTHWEST PREMIERE SHOWING HELD OVER BY PUBLIC DEMAND His picture of the century KAM A SUTRA 71— Color & Scope. A film magnified in all detail on the big 20x30 foot screen from the BOOK O F LOVE written 2000 years ago. Come and see if anything has changed PLUS 2nd XXXX ADULT FEATURE and carefully selected SOUND and wide screen short subjects. ITS DYNAMITE PLUS ON SCREEN No. 2 The greatest 16mm all color— Sound programs available. TIDAL W AVE IS COMING 75 minutes of sound and color excitement and thrills never before presented. Plus Shorts. STUDIO IV— always the finest in adult entertainment from the largest chain of Adult en­ tertainment in America. LADIES AND COUPLES welcome to one of the finest theatres in Am erica......................... STARTS APRIL 29 on our big screen: 101 Acts of Love in Scope and Color So far out— no rating available. S T U D IO IV 472-0436 222 East 6th OPEN 12 NOON Crossword Puzzle „ Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle BOX O FFICE O FEX S 7 :1 * • SHOW STARTS DUSK 320 E. 6th St. 478-0475 'Miss Martha—the M int Lady H . Recipe for Hand-Painted Candy Guarded Miss M arth a the m int lady—th a t’s th a nam e a Dom inican sister gave her m any y ears ago. She lives in a big, w hite two-story hom e in B renham . H ere for 49 years, the m int lady, Miss M artha Schweiss, has been hand-painting tiny hom e-m ade m ints friends, churches, sick people in hospitals and soldiers all o ver the world. friends and th eir for frequently “ W here did you get the re c ip e ? ” asked is question. Miss a M artha tap s her head with one finger and keeps her lips sealed. “ How about the molds for your can d y ?” the curious ta ste r will ask. ju st “OH, I’M AFRAID I ca n 't tell you that e ith e r,” says Miss M artha. So the ingredients of the m int candy, which was so popular during World War II that boxes of them had been sent to Am erican soldiers in in every country in the world, a re a well-guarded secret. Miss M artha is RI years-old now and partially blind from a cataract, but she still sits a t the big round table in her living room and carefully strokes color into each mint. She has hats for Halloween, Santas for Christmas, hearts, flowers, bells and slippers for weddings, factt you flags, sta rs and fruits. probably couldn’t nam e a shape that she doesn’t have. In “I took m y yellow out, ding-dong it,” says Miss M artha to an interview er. “ I'll m ake you a blue slipper instead.” She bends over her color pot with one brush in her mouth and one blush in her hand and dabbles that she mixes herself onto the tiny slipper. tim e Mrs. Winkleman (her beautician) told m e I had green in my hair. You’re likely to find anything on m e.” the blue color “ One Before the first box of candy was sold in 1921, Miss M artha worked on her recipe for th ree years. A candy com pany in A tlanta once to copy her product. tried “ They got the idea from me, but they su re didn’t use a brush. They had the sam e molds but no v ariety ,” said Miss M artha. PRESIDENTS Woodrow Wilson, Ike Eisenhower and Lyndon B. Johnson have all received boxes of candy. Miss M artha notices of people sends them candy right away. read s in the p aper for the hospital and the mailing of h er candy She has only one com plaint as far a s is con­ cerned : she sent som e boxes to a friend of hers in the Phillipines and because of the rainy season, the m ints melted. “ They just stacked boxes up and let the heat and m oisture get to th em ,” said Miss M artha. The boy she had given ' it to died shortly a fte r in a plane crash. Miss M artha w as bom on the sam e piece of property on which h er present home stands. She had two brothers, August, who died in F rance, and Albert, who died of a h ea rt attack. “ I alw ays cried for a sister,” said Miss M artha. “ M am a told m e th at God didn’t w ant m e to have a sister. The candy has never been a real money m aker, but it would’ve been different if Albert had lived. We m ade lots of plans, but they didn’t m aterialize.” Miss M arth a’s m other alw ays m ade candy and cookies for neighbors and friends. She saved all of her husband’s collar boxes to put her baking in. “ P ap a alw ays asked m e, going to w aste all th a t s u g a r? ’ ” ‘Are you Miss M artha grew up when women w ere supposed to stay a t home, so she never attended public school. She did, however, have a private tutor, Mrs. Jam eson, who died in 1913. “ They called m e baby Schweiss back then. I went to school for another y ea ! after spending four y ears with M rs. Jam eson, but I didn’t like my teacher. H e twisted my nose, stepped on my toes and hit me across the shoulders. He also called another teach er friend of m ine a spider.” Miss M artha w as 15 when she stopped going to school. “ But, m am a le t me read, and I w as so glad. I was 24 when she died. I t ’s ju st as fresh in m y mind now.” Miss M artha loves flowers. She had a fresh bowl of picked petunias on one shelf and some new boxes of petunias on the front porch. “ When m am a died, there w ere 54 rosebushes in the yard. I moved som e to another place in th e yard but they d ied .” MISS MARTHA ONCE m ad e an agreem en t with a friend of h ers across the street th at they would w atch each o th e r’s front porches. If the m orning’s bottles of milk ev er failed to disappear on one porch, the other neighbor would to im m ediately com e over and check see w hat had happened. Miss M artha awoke one day and saw the m ilk jugs still standing on Miss M am ie’s front porch. “ I found the milk, b u t I didn’t think sh e was dead. I went to h er window and saw ju st h e r back with h er long w hite braid showing. I had talked to h er the d ay before, which was the d ay before M other’s D ay and she had told m e she dreaded going to bed because sh e felt so bad.” The sheriff, who was Tiem an Dippel, still a resident of B renham , had to b reak into a window because all doors w ere locked and the windows nailed s h u t Miss M am ie had died in her sleep. Life is a little lonely for Miss M artha som etim es but sh e never com plains. She bustles back and forth Iran kitchen to living room mixing colors and bringing in new p latters of candy. She talks of falling down in her y ard four times. “ I do th e craziest things.” Close friends, like Evelyn Dippel, wife of the form er sheriff, w orry a little about her and try to keep in touch. But Miss M artha ju st m akes her candy and pays h er bills in preparation for another c a ta ra c t operation. She doesn’t w ant the doctor until afte r to May I when bills will be paid. to go “I DON’T WANT to leave anything hanging fire. You n ever know w hat m ay hap p en .” Miss M artha has had help with h er candy from tim e to tim e because m ore orders come in th an she can handle. C harles Schmidt in his History of W ashington County, Texas, in 1949 called her hom e a m int factory. He noted th a t “ people in practically every sta te in the union w ere ordering the m ints because they m ake the m ost delightful gift anyone could im agine.” He said this is not really a business firm , but a source of joy. E v ery day in Miss M a rth a’s life m ust have been significant because she has a fantastic m em ory for nam es and dates and can recall the person she was talking to and the tim e of y ear from 20 y ea rs back. “ Well, I ’ve lived so long, Tm bound to rem em b er.” Lots of people wouldn’t rem em ber, but then lots of people wouldn’t have spent alm ost 50 y ears m ixing and painting candy for sick, lonely friends who need cheering up. . .or for th e girls who w ant personalized candy for wedding guests . to or for rep o rters who happen com e by and w ant to talk. . . Miss M artha is ju st doing w hat she .m aking other people . knows best. happy. ’• V*' »:%Ki flu mil, i . % ujmi Brenham Keeps Flavor of Old Southern Living Heritage Society Plans to Restore Homes SE C R E T IN G R E D IE N T S , bright colors and plenty o f individual at tention give each o f M iss Martha's m ints a personality. She wield the brush herself unless orders are so heavy that she needs extra help pointed gable above it, with a carved pointed finial. The steep gable with its highly ornamented scrolls suggests a type of Swiss scroll-work. The double doors have finger- carvefa and arched panels. The young boy who con­ ducted the tour pointed to one of the fireplaces in a bedroom and said that young Vernon Pam pcll died after falling into the fire. A picture of Pampell on the wall shows him holding in a a pistol and sw'ord m anner custom ary for men of that time. the tour Also is the in h o m e Schurenberg-Wilder built in 1886, the Ross-Carroll home built in 1893 and the Hohlt-Schleider-Krause home completed in 1895. The personalities and lives of the earliest settlers of Texas are preserved in these old homes. Tho Twentieth Century one territory that wall not let it infringe upon. found has * History Is hard to preserve. C o n c r e t e , and prefabricated homes reshape the mood and smell of a town until Its past is irretrievable. glass Brenham won’t let the past escape that easily. It has the wide-eyed, clean look of a modem town, but in certain sections the early homes of the first permanent Anglo- American colonists have been restored. Seven of these homes were opened to the public Sunday in a heritage tour sponsored by the Heritage Society of Washington County. A tour of the the homes brings on sleepy, drawling mood of the South of the 1800’s. large p a r l o r s , f i r e p l a c e s , The numerous canopied beds and stained glass windows of the homes also indicate the prosperity of many of the German settlers who decided in Washington County. to settle the the that from MRS. BETTY PLUMMER in her book, Historic says Homes of Washington County, 1821-1860, settlers who came to Washington County w'ere “of a different earlier stripe American and Spanish im­ migrants four definite for reasons: first, the background and sagacity of Stephen F. Austin, who brought the first permanent Anglo-American second, to Texas; settlers only reputable and desirable settlers were tolerated In the Austin colony; third, the Tiigh class citizenry’ which was attracted to the Washington County area took an early in developing i n t e r e s t religious and educational institutions; and fourth, many wealthy men immigrated to the Austin colony, bringing with them the manners and trappings which accumulated.” they had The Wood-Hughes Home at 614 South Austin wras com­ pleted in 1897. The great-great granddaughter o f Liberty Victoria Hughes, Ruth Spain, conducted the tour in a long flowing gown and her great- great g r a n d m o t h e r ’ s jeweler}'. “I used to slide down these banisters all the time as a child,” said Mrs. Spain as she pointed to the long stairway leading to the second floor. W.A. Wood, a lumberman, built the home and did not accept a piece of wood that had knots in it. The home covered one-fourth of a block and included a rose garden, c a r r i a g e house, stable, lot for horses and grazing servant quarters. LOUISIANA CYPRESS was used for outside walls, oak for and hard-edge, woodwork grain pine for floors. The home has four fireplaces and f o u r bedrooms upstairs. Lower floor ceilings are hand- painted metal, with gold-leaf u s e d the elaborate embossed designs. lower floor ceiling All the lights are original and four reception hall windows of imported stained-glass allow colored light to filter through to the inside. high-light to T h e Seelhorst-Lehrmann in 1850, is House, built by magnolia, surrounded pines and oaks. This was Southern living in its prime. The Greek Revival style architecture has remained for 120 years primarily because the walls are 13 inches thick and a change is nearly im­ possible. The entrance is flanked on either side by a large room and two galleries are cen­ tered by the two front doors. The chimneys are concealed in the walls. The doors and windows have wide Roman arched tops and both front doors have narrow or panes. arched lights Mrs. John Giddings, second vice-president of the Heritage Society, conducted some tours t h r o u g h the Seelhorst- Lehrmann House. She said the society started with six people at a luncheon and has grown to 40 members. is “Since Brenham the cradle of Texas history, it’s time we started something like this,” Mrs. Giddings said. The society hopes to restore as m any old in Brenham as possible. homes The Walker-Bockhom log house was first in the valley near Woodward’s Creek and wras owTied by one of Stephen F. Austin’s first colonists in 1820’s. Texas during James Walker had a grist­ mill there but the house was soon moved to the hilltop. chains ropes or Winding Iron pin around a heavy pulled by oxen the house to the hill top. lifted the Most of the lumber used for this log house came from cedar trees. The logs were form L-shaped hewn tightly comers together. Some of the cut logs are 30 feet long and 12 to 13 inches on each side. that fit to TRE PAMPELL-DAY home of 1844 was originally a tiny cottage of three rooms and a long porch. Traugett Pampcll went to New York in 1875 to buy wares for his Brenham store and saw a house on the Hudson River which he copied when he got home. The style he copied is River c a l l e d Hudson bracketted. The balcony in the center front has a steep, H I E P A M P E L L -D A Y H O M E on 409 IF. Alam o in Brenham provided one stop along the Heritage Tour sponsored by the Heritage Society o f W ashington County. It is constructed of ‘ native pine and sand brick. F O L K R E C E P TIO N H A L L windows o f im ported stained glass add elegance to the l h ood-llughes H om e o f 614 A ustin in Brenham. Mrs. B Nth Spain, great-great granddaughter o f a form er owner o f the home, conducted tours. Stories and Photos by Crispin James Pi>3* ^Wednesday. A|»ril Z», 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN