T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r a t The U ni v er s it y of nt Austi n Vol. 72, No. 72 Please Recycle This Newspaper A U S T I N , TEXAS, M O N D A Y , O C . Ten C e n + t S i x t e e n P a g e s 4 7 1 - 4 4 0 ! y r Magazines Say Vietnam Se J> :o:*\ By The A ssociated P res* Both m agazin es said a c e a s e fir e would be in effect w h ile the Tt w ould w o rk wi th th e In te rn a tit, c ent Reached T im e and N e w sw eek m a g a z in e s reported Sunday the U nited S ta tes and N orth V ietnam h a v e rea ch ed a greem en t on a peace se ttlem en t in V ietnam under w hich South V ietn am 's P re sid e n t N gu yen Van Thieu w ould rem ain until rep laced by a ca reta k er govern m en t. that T im e said , “ Hanoi has agreed to n egotiate d ir ec tly with the T hieu g overn m en t w hile the South V ie tn a m ese president is still In pow er, w hich if has said that it would n e v e r d o .’’ The m agazin e com m en ted that this part of the U nited S tates- North V ie tn a m ese a g reem en t m e e ts a dem and by P resid en t N ixon that he not p articip ate in thp dow nfall of TTueu, w hom N ixon h a s prom ised n ev er to abandon. negotiation s w ent on. c o m m itte es would be form ed: su p e rv ise the cea se-fire. A ccording to T im e, o n ce a c ea se-fire is estab lish ed , th ree • An exp an sion of the International Control C om m ission to • A com position of rep re se n ta tiv es from the Saigon g o v e rn ­ m ent and the P rovisional R evolutionary G overnm ent m aintained by the N ational Liberation Front in South V ietn am . T his c o m ­ m ittee , con sistin g of C om m unist, n eu tralist and Thieu govern m en t fa ctio n s would ornate the c a reta k er govern m en t to rep lace T hieu. • A co m m ittee com posed of the U nited States. North V ietn am , the P rovision al R evolutionary govern m en t and the Thieu G overnm ent. is m a d e up of India. C a n a d a aim w h ich w ho c o n tro lle d w h a t n egotiatin g th e w ith d ra w a l and w a r and th e o th e r la r g e o v e ra ll p ro b le m s of e n d in g c o m b a t V ie tn a m .” th e r e le a s e of i. te r r ito r y at tim e th e tssio n — n itr a tin g c e a s e -fire , p r is o n e r s of in N e w s w e e k sa id th a t a f te r th e c e a s e - f ir e a n d a sh o rt-liv e d in­ te r im g o v e rn m e n t, th e r e w ould b e a n a tio n a l electio n su p e rv is e d by F r a n c e in South V ie tn a m . by N o rth V i e t n a m e s e P r e m ie r P h a m Y an D ong. in an in te r v ie w w ith N e w sw e ek , th a t n e g o tia tio n s " a r e in an e x tre m e !} n tp o r ta n t p h a s e .’’ for K is f in g e r c o n fe rre d w ith T h ieu tw o h o u rs M onday H e to P h n o m had m e; w ith T hieu S u n d a y m o rn in g b e f o r e flying P e n h for a th re e -h o u r c o n fe re n c e w ith P r e s id e n t I. rn No! L a t e r in S u n d e w K c o n g e r c o m m u te d b a c k a n o th e r m e e tin g w ith the South V ie tn a m e s e P r e s id e n t th a t la s te d n e a r ly tw o h o u rs p a st d u sk . to S aig o n for T hp W hite H ouse d e clin ed to c o m m e n t on th e m a g a z in e r e p o rt- . th e c o n flic t could he near S p e c u la tio n heigh ten ed during the w eekend with continued m e e tin g s b e tw ee n p resid en tial aid e H enry K issin ger and T hieu and th e sta te m en t th a t a s e ttle m e n t of T h e U.S. E m b a s s y d e clin ed to s a y w h a t K is U n g r r ’s n e x t m o v e im ­ to r e p o r t w ould be. Hic sc h e d u le a p p e a r e d fle x ib le T h e r e w a s no m e d ia te w o rd w hen he w ould r e tu r n to P r e s id e n t N ixon. to W ash in g to n Union Board Seeks Solution To Regents Beer Objections Bv BILL BRA Y T exan Staff W riter T he T e x a s U nion B o a rd w ill continue c fh rts to h a v e b e e r an d w ine in the Union B u ild in g e v e n though th e Board of R egen ts so u n d ly r e je c te d th e p ro p o s a l F r id a y . R e g e n ts voted five r e -solution w hich would have given I m on B o a rd a g re e n o f th e b e v e ra g e s . th re e to table a the the sa le light for to sh e w as su rp rised by a c tio n but w a s op tim istic A cting U nion B o a rd C hairm an Zia Ct peon the s a id S u n d a y re g e n ts that q u e s tio n s th e r e g e n ts had raised could be so lv e d ’h r ugh m e e tin g s w ith Sal L evatino. a s s is ta n t fo r leg a l cou n sel to th e U n iv e r sity p re s id e n t a n d o th e r o fficials. P r o b le m s fa c in g thp b o a rd , M iss G ipson Raid. a r e w h e th e r sue'*' a fa cility could be o p e r a te d by m e a n s oth er than a p rivate con cession and w hich group would o v e rsee the operation. law en forcem en t "The regen ts w ant to d isco u ra g e p rivate c o n c essio n s on cam p u s ” M iss G ipson said . the H o w e v e r, one m oney which would c o m e to the U n iversity if beer and w ine w ere served , sh e added. to con sid er factor is "We w ere in co m p lete ag reem en t w ith the regen ts (co n cern in g the ad v a n ta g e of the m oney such a con cession would b rin g ), but w e did not know how w e could arran ge the sa le of beer and w ine without a con­ c e s s io n ,” she said B e v er a g e C om m ission , Lynwood E lliot, leg a l counsel for the sta te said A lcoholic Sunday the "attorney gen eral has ruled that a nonprofit corporation cannot hold a beer and w ine lic e n s e .” The U n iversity faculty’, w hich will soon in the old Forty A cres Club h ave a club nnrimiiir nim im mm mm mum $ 3 7 5 , 0 0 0 Fling Taken In Navy Frisbee Project - IA P ) O ver WASHINGTON s fie nod of four y e a rs, the N a v y spent S.T75 OOO in a sc ien tific study of Frisbees if the flight characteristics of to s e e these p la stic toys could som ehow be adapted it w as no go for w arfare But From high atop H urricane Mesa in Utah. sc ie n tis ts sent F risb ee s, and c la y pigeons as w ell, sp in ning into the air T rack in g c a m e r a s m onitored fligh ts from the l,00(Vfoot-high cliff th# flight Ac w ith all the e x ­ p erim en ts w ere preced ed by e x te n siv e the Navy A m ­ wind-tunnel m unition Depot at C rane, Ind. te sts at testin g, The r esu lts of the te sts w ere reported entitled a tn of the F risb ee F light the D e liv e ry of Sp ecial .ast m onth A daptation to paper P rin cip le (ird n an ee.” to note throughout In the nortclassified paper, the N avy was c a reful that F risb ee is "a registered tradem ark of 'he VV! am© M anufacturing Co." of .San G abriel, Calif. A cc I d in g to Lf. Cm dr. H ugo A. Hard*, who took over the program two •e a r s a g ., tile N a v a l Air S y ste m s C om m and w a s looking for a new w a y 1967 to of d eliverin g flares Tins, he said, l e i It in v e stig a te, "an air- in launched illum ination system using a g y r o sc o p ica lly stab ilized d is c ,” in other w ords, a F risb ee . N avy ordnan ce e x p e r ts a* Crane used the data from the F risb ee flig h ts t e s ts to d e v elo p a d isc -sh a p e d fla r e w hich could be Launched at n ig h t from air- plance* to light up b a ttle fie ld ! as the disc spun through the air. H a r e s now used by the m ilitary bum for th ree to fiv e m inutes a s they float to earth by p a ra ch u te Hardt said the N avy w as hoping the F risb ee-ty p e flare would do the sa m e job at lersii\ o w n ed the ’ liar if T E I i high Nader Report Profiles Bentsen, Tower Texas Republican Senator Termed Antilabor Rv C, \YLE REAVES T ex a n S taff W rite r is “ one of Sen. John T ow er the m ost the IJoxd traditional liberal and c o n ­ to reports r eleased by Ralph N a d e r s C ongress im portant b eh in d-the-scen es m en of N ixon adm inistration" w hile Sen. B e n is o n s lie s i’i otion se r v a tiv e ." according Saturday P roject. record in te rm s of " d efies throughout Throughout last su m m er m ore than I.OOO volunteers the nation worked NNI th con su m er ad v o ca te N ader to produce ISt for e v e r y U.S. co n g ressm a n and sen ator not retiring or d efeated in p rim aries this year. in-depth p ro files—on e in The resu lts, individual p rofiles of 20 to 40 pages, w ere m a d e a v a ila b le to n ew sm en around the nation last w eek , with a request that the inform ation not be m ade pu blic until Sunday. law student on T E D S IF F , T exP IR G and organizer U n iv e r sity le a v e to work with the N ad er project, explain ed at a p ress con fe re n c e last w eek that the p rofiles are “d e sc r ip tiv e rather than e v a lu a tiv e .” "T here is no N ad er-raid in g h e r e ,” Sift em p h a sized . "The project is not partisan. I ’m not goin g to d ecid e for you w ho you sh ould vote fo r .” T h e p rofiles contain co n sid erab le m aterial on the votin g record of ea ch co n g ressm a n rn and their votes including senator, co m m itte e Th*1 rep orts a lso include " rea llv e x te n siv e rexnews of the personal financial legislator a s well as holdings" of each c o m m e n ts from garnered insigh ts com m u n ity lead ers in the leg isla to rs hom e d istricts. and THE P R O FIL E on Tow er predict* the T e x a s senator will b eco m e chairm an of one of the su b co m m ittees of the B anking and U rban A ffairs C om m ittee if a R epublican m ajority in C on gress follow s a return of N ixon to the W hite H ouse. In seat exp lain in g the phenom enon of a R epu blican rep resen u n g T exas, the report s a y s Tow er d efeated W aggoner Carr for in 1W6 by com bining anfiLRJ the the sen tim en t D e m o cr a ts and lite r a l faction s and a “ m a ssiv e , p erfect c a m p a ig n ” of his own. the betw een c o n se r v a tiv e sta te, a split of in N ew s colu m nist Jack Anderson is quoted a s ca llin g Tower “ N ixon 's errand b oy” in W ashington, w h ere he x-otes a straight Nixon it co n flicts with T exas line un less industry in terests. (L T V ), one of thp “ Lm g-Tem co-Vought la rg e st d e fe n se con tractors and sta te 's recip ien t o f m uch of T ow er's attention from h is position on th e A rm ed S e r v ic es C om ­ is one of h is la rg e st h a c k e r s,” the m ittee , sta n ce on pro-bank sta te s. “ H is profile the Senate every issue to come before Banking. H ousing C om m ittee is often backing by the banking in te r e sts.” and Urban A ffairs linked to his financial Tile profile goes on to d escrib e Tow er a s pro-m anagem ent and antilabor, a friend to an ticixil righ ts legislation forces and ac having voted against all m anpow er training programs, food stam p s and m odel cities expenditures. THE R EPO RT also notes that “ m a n y of his c r itic s harp on his a b sen teeism from floor v oting a s one of the se n a to r ’s m ost the b la ta n t report as absen t for 52 percent of floor vo tes in 1971. f a u lts ." T o w e r listed by is T ow er last year su pp lem en ted his $42,500 se n a to r ’s salary with $18,000 in honorarium s for sp eak in g en g a g e m en ts, m any before banking and the profile states. financial groups, On the other hand. B en tsen w as absen t floor v otes for l l percent of th e S enate in 1971. according to his profile. is d e sc r ib ed the e sp e c ia lly B entsen bu sin ess, aircraft m ittee and on the floor. ind ustries, by his votes a s aiding insurance big and in c o m ­ But D em ocrat B entsen h a s not d isp layed the co n sisten t c on servatism of T ow er. He is " m od erately critical of the V ietnam w ar and m ilita ry sp en d in g” but in his prim ary battle with Ralph Yarborough, he attacked in c u m b e n t Y a rb o ro u g h fo r h is s u p p o r t th e of th e w a r m o ra to riu m . bv "W VRML I fo rm e r EN D O R SE D " P re s id e n t L yndon B. J o h n s o n , fo rm e r G ov. Jo h n C o n n a lly an d Gen’. P re s to n S m ith , fo r B e n ts e n w a s g iv en a n a m e d c h a ir m a n of the S u b c o m m itte e on V o lu n tee r A rm e d F o r c e s and S e le c tiv e S e r v ic e ," th e r e p o rt s a y s . th e " r a r e h o n o r of boing fr e s h m a n s e n a to r ” M e m b e rs of th e S e n a te P u b lic W orks to N a d e r r e s e a r c h e r s C o m m itte e repo, ted c o m m itte e m e m b e r th a t w hile fellow tough w a te r B e n tse n w o rk ed h a r d on a pollution an a m e n d m e n t re d e fin in g p o llu ta n ts to e x clu d e oil. g a s, w a te r a n d o th e r m a t e r i a ls in je c te d in to w e lls th e p u rp o se of fa c ilita tin g for oil p r o d u c tio n .” c o n tro l hill, he " p ro p o s e d i m rn e n k e B e n tse n ' is “ p a r t a n d p a r c e l” of the o il-in su ra n c e -b a n k in g - ' closely so c o n stru c tio n id en tifie d w ith th e ru lin g p o litic a l c ir c le s ” of s o u rc e a c c o rd in g th e n a tio n , q u o ted in th e profile, a x is w h ich to one is H O W EV ER, h is sp o n s o rsh ip of the Big T h ic k et N a tio n a l P a r k Rill w a s n oted b y r e p o r t sa y s , a s of m a n y o b s e r v e r s , m a j o r th e c itize n s of T exas. th e f e d e r a l b e n e fit to T h e r e p o r ts w e re p u t to g e th e r o v e r th e c o u rs e of tho s u m m e r by m o r e th an 1,000 field volunteers, low-paid profile writers r e s e a r c h e r s an d e x e ry c o n g re ss io n a l d i s t r ic t " an d s t a te c a p ita l as w ell a s m W a sh in g to n . a lm o s t " in T he p r o je c t W as fin an c ed , Siff s a id , hy N a i e r ’s p e r s o n a ’ in co m e , th; ugh p ro c e e d s fro m N a d e r hook ro y a ltie s an d s p e a k in g a n d le c tu re to u rs. M iles H a w th o rn e , s ta ff m om lie r of T he s u p p le m e n t P e a r l, u : o le sm rir of T ex a n th e p ro file s. Siff c a lle d th e p ro file s " a e itiz e n 's stu d v in c u m b e n c y ." He in to g e n e r a te a to e d u c a te to m o tiv a te of C o n g re ss, a stu d y e x p la in e d , "V ie a r e C itizen s’ m o v e m e n t" not o n ly c itiz e n s a b o u t C o n g ie s s but th e m to a c t. try in g C o p ies of th e p ro file s a r e being . S hould O '1’ Un to • -e f • tim.se o p e r a ’cfi n r J a n u a ry of v e h i c l e s xvi!! be c o r - to xx m ild Ii® n r - c xv uld ( )t i c r v ise . m r $8 boo b u se s, e m rep x s a life e x p e c t . irex of fo u r to ’rn • f ? e f f i c en run . • 1 o c < He e m b e r tx ne* -uni! r ' n ; rn' 1 '■ r t i n C ’H of Vast in , P- t l f x e a r s . • ® • • ,f* ' ' >r E l xx c h e ye rs. ti v - ” : le e ry • e bi!* i” Ire ”, de >. ' xx a s said . “ But ‘T h e Un ive; a b o u t \* th® s y s t e m w h e n a g o ,” R io’:x • >e n u m b e r b®en an ohx ions s u c r e to a ’ of b u s e s p r o j> o se ; (TO for • ■ n a d - m in is tra tio ! xxi!! he re 1 xo to • ie idea of o p e r a t i n g I *'!e b ■ <- • -• ti n r fi r • ye it c - t ! ,rn n ! r r : cr ’ r " f o r o rs th e s'. - rem b a s R io u x so ' e p u r c h a s e th e b u -c s c h a r g e stu d e n t-. >r, \ In th a t v.ay he I w ould pax le s s th e y do now. for I p e s ■ c Hp \ e rsitx w ill dx u s own fu n d s a n d for o p e r a tin g c o s ts . o • e e v e s s tu d e n ts sin f i e s e r v ic e th a n R e g a r d le s s cf w h irl p ,c i c h o o se s ta r g e t q u a lity a n d q u a n tity of s e r v ic e . ta k e , R ioux s a id th e “ No ’ne * >■ rn itte e to of is to trie U n iv e r s ity I im p r o v * “ C u rren tly, the sh u ttle sy s te m c a n a e - th e s tu d e n t* though a il are req uired to p ay tat c o m m o d a te on one-fourth of even it*" b e sa id . UT Plans Attack on Cancer By BILL MINTZ Tov an Staff W riter Tho U niversity Roard of Regents approved F rid ay a plan to m uster all the fcrees of the U niversity biomedical units into a battle against cancer. Coordinating the effort will he the U niversity System Cancer Center which w as created F riday as part of a general restructuring of the System 's medical components. Named to d irect the center was Dr. R. I>ee Clark, president of Institute at the University M D . Anderson Hospital and Tum or Houston. Thp h osp ital w ill hp the “ flagship” of flip can cer (e n te r . Clark said he will coordinate research at the System 's four medical schools, two dental schools, nursing school and graduate schools of biomedical science, as well as the Environm ental Science P ark at Smithville. T he reo rg a n iza tio n of the S y ste m 's b iom ed ical units tow ard coot-I ring top charms bvJ Balfour 7 ell OW, g r e e n , o r ''i hi h o o x r f h e r om* w h i t e g o l d . IO o r I ! h m. i t i o n t o sui t y o u r k a r a t . S y n t h e t i c s t o n e , tastes, I h e n we en* m o r a l t o p , L i n d e s t a r g r a v e v o u r n a m e o r m - s a p p h i r e s , o r d i a m o n d di al s , d a t e , a n d d e g r e e t o p s . h o u r si zes o f o n t h e b a s k , i f v o u di s c s . d c v r e . $32.75 to $65.00 p l u s d i v i d e n d six w'-rk d e livert University Co-Op I e w e I n C o u n t e r one hour free parking with purchase* of <1700 or more Bank Americard and Master Charge w e h o m e dinated cancer research, said Chancellor Charles A LeMaistre "is in line with President Nixon's attack which he noted in his State of the Union address this year.” Clark was appointed by Nixon to serve on the three-m an P re sid en t’* Cancer Panel. As p art of the reorganization, the biomedical units will be coor­ dinated by geographic areas, each headed by a president. I nder the old system , each unit had its own dean who w as responsible to the chancellor. Hie medical and dental units at San Antonio will be called the U niversity Health Science Center a t San Antonio. The president of the unit has not been chosen yet. Dr. F. ( arter Pannill, who w as dismissed as dean of the University Medical School a t San Antonio by LeM aistre June 6, said the faculty council a t the medical school had suggested a sim ilar structure about t w o years ago. The U niversity Medical Branch at Galveston will have four deans reporting to President Trum an G. Blocker J r. The deans will be the School of Allied Health responsible for Sciences, the G raduate School of Biomedical Sciences and the M arine Biomedical Institute. the medical school, T ie units of the University System in Houston not included in the Cancer Center will he called the U niversity Health Sciences Center at Houston. The president has not been chosen. Dr. Charles Sprague, who was dean of the U niversity Southwestern Medical School at Dallas, will become president o f 'th e University Health Sciences Center in Dallas. The center includes Southwestern, the G raduate School of Biomedical Science and the School of Allied Health Sciences. , . Thf U™VT Sity S ystw i ^ hon] (yt Nursing will he headed hv Dean Marilyn b illm an , who will become president under the new structure. Fhe heads of the four component nursing schools become deans of their schools. They had been associate deans. Pick up a Rock* Ola Three-Pat for $9.99. (T h re e 8 -trac k tapes fo r $ 9 .9 9 ) W ith values like these, no w on d er Rock-O la is Austin’s most understood tap e store. G e t any 3 single tapes in entire stock for only $ 9 .9 9 . lf one of y o u r th re e tap es is a double, add 4 9 c to the price. So try Rock-Ola, the un-soft d rin k t h a t ’s easy on yo u r s to m p s - child on “ cf p: ;• :ts who c a n n o t a ffo rd to to a i o i 'U n a ry high cost d ay semi care center or kindergarten.” ti ti Emp! !S;zj rr * ip nerd for a free day ‘poor and op- the re cen mr the article added, -i -enc.es which are supposed interests of the poor such t e Human Opportunities Corporation n e tm r d out to be hollow sham* to serve pressed com m unity,” “ Even t<» p r o rod the as (lh ;C designed to <- -opt ra th e r than to se rv e .” ti:i By CANDY O’KEEFE *'Would you ca re to give to the breakfast p ro g ram ?” has been a question fam iliar for several y ears now to those who pass down the U niversity's West Mall and into th e Union Building. a program totally new But since mid-July, those who have cared to give have been dropping their change into the collection bucket for a different cause, the Malcolm X People's F ree Youth Institute, and unrelated to the free breakfast of yesterday. The Youth Institute, a combination free day care center and school in E ast Austin, is operated under the direction of We Tile People, a group described in its biweekly n e w s revolutionary organization dedicated to serving the needs Of the poor and working people of A ustin.” review “ a as Susan Ramsey’ serves as spokeswoman for Campus Friends of the Youth Institute, th e official on-cam pus affiliation winch allows the institute to collect donations on cam pus. IN THE FOUR m onths th at the group h as been collecting on cam pus, donations have averagfd approxim ately $25 per day, Ms. Ramsey’ stated. in R eferring to the fact that som e of the collectors still a re using the term “ b reak­ fast program ” their donation request, Ms. R am sey com m ented that she has urged collectors to refer to the institute instead. that the collectors kept referring to the break fast program b ecam e they knew' it w’as a widely-known program which prospective donors w ere already fam iliar with, while the institute w as not as well known. She explained At the co m er of 12th and Comal streets, in and around an old two-storv house brightly trim m ed in green, volunteers have been operating the day care center since Oct. 2, after closing for remodeling afte r the full capacity, the center will accom m odate go Children, ages 3 to 6. last sum m er. At session first X FULL I) \Y 'S activity is provided for tile children, including m eals, recreational equipm ent, a rts and crafts and basic skills education as a headstall: program for the preschoolers. An additional activity, noted on the ce n te r’s posted schedule a* “ Revolutionary C ulture,” em phasizes, in part, giving the children “ the beginnings- of an identity as black people with a rich history and cuihire the stan d ard that has been erased from history text I looks their parents and older brothers and sisters re a d ,” a We The People news review article stated. As a p art of tho revolutionary’ culture em phasis, w orkers also “ hope to take the CHICAGO (APX — After a week of published reports and attendant speculation, no clear picture has em erged of a group called De Mau Mau, nine m em bers of u filch the slayings of have been charged with nine whites. But some of the reports have drawn ti e the black especially descriptions at­ to authorities (rf a nationwide, tile ooun- lingam of some m em bers at com munity, tributed black tryside to kill whites. terrorist gang roaming M embers of Black Media Reps, an organization of employes of black-owned new spapers and radio stations, met with r * /j T e x a n S ta ff P h o to by M IR K B O B IN s o n . Shooting Probe Promised Following March in Dallas DALLAS (AP)—Following a determ ined m arch by more th an 1.000 blacks to City Hall Saturday, the D allas police departm ent and the G reater D allas Community Relations Commission have announced an independent investigation to be m ade into the death s of two blacks shot this month by police. Attornev S inc; Stahl, chairm an of the com mission, which will conduct in­ vestigation, s id Sunday, “ Work will begin im m ediately.'* the TH E STI DV will will look into the deaths o' Ja m es Charles Brown, 23, w ho was killed tty police Oct. 13, and Napoleon Vinson, 55, who w as killed by police Oct. ll. to Police gay both men the officers prior Holland, director of the the Southern Christian f e r e e “ m u rd ers." Evidence (SCLC), term ed threatened to kill shootings. George local chapter of lead ersh ip Con­ death s die in both shootings will be presented to a grand ju ry early this week, according departm ent pol <■ spokesm an also sax's both officers involved in the shooting incidents have been tem- to A p ira rilv assigned to other duties aw aiting the outcome of the commission investigation and rulings by the grand jury. A protest m arch scheduled by the SCLC for Sunday was apparently because of the investigation plans. Also, a t the m arch site, less than a dozen persons showed up. cancelled, On Saturday, a crowd of blacks that eventually num bered m ore 1,000 m arched five miles from South D allas to City Hall, protesting the d ea’h of Brown. than LEADING THE procession was Brown s mother, and behind hn carrying her son’s body. Tile funeral procession was originally to have proceeded ail the way to City Hall, but was Stopped just short of the downtown a re a by a b arn • de and about 50 riot police stretched toe to-toe across tile street. tic crowd becam e Increasingly As restless in the chilly rain, the Rex’. Ralph D. A bernathy arrived, late, and negotiated xvith police to let the m arch pass through. Police consented, bu* required the casket to be taken to a funeral home. De Mail Mau Stories Anger Blacks Group Protests 'Racist' Coverage by Chicago Newspapers l o by M I K I R O H I N > O H k offic ials of the city’s four daily new spapers F rid ay to complain about story coverage, W’hich they said was “ ra c ist.” Officials of each their publicauor - had acted responsibly but would consider the blacks’ com plaints. new spapers said the of ,ird THE STORY began Sunday, Oct. 15, when sherif} Pc J. Elrod, Police Supt. J in es B. O n lisk and S tate’s Atty. Edw ard ll inr.ihan announced a t a news conference arrases of six young Chicago black men t in r need n with the nine slayings, In­ cluding the m ass executions of tw'o families. Three other men w ere taken into custody Later rn the week. group, organized K in d said they w ere p art of a racially m otivated black V ietnam veterans, ca lla! De Mau Mau. He sl i d it appeared “ as if they’ were roam ing the count Tv-side to kill." looking for someone by the With tho arrests, authorities said the killings of two fam ilies, a Southern Illinois University student and a soldier w ere solved. Elrod announced that he had asked other » ' to- to investigate unsolved m urders to determ ine if they were possibly related to De Mau Mau. TI e I ii wing day, the Chicago Daily News public lf*. I a front-page copyrighted story quoting unidentified authorities as saying the a rrests fulled attem pts by m em bers of the r< up to begin a widespread cam ­ paign of killing whim policemen. CHK AGO TODAY, meanwhile, quoted s saying the nationwide m em ­ 6< u ra s bership the group was 3,000 and a t­ trib u ta l to federal sources the report that De Mau Man w as bent cm racial violent* in to replace the Blade P anthers, now con­ sidered too peaceful. The Daily News, Chicago Today, the Chicago Sun-Times and the Chicago Tribune each carried reports during the u’eek on the origins of the group, saying its nam e was derived from the Mau Mau terrorist m ovem ent in Kenya in the 1950s. On the sam e day the Chicago I fail- Ne vs ran a story’ saying 150 nam es of alleger! m em bers of De Mau Mau in Chicago w ere known to authorities, it also carried a story bv’ Lu P alm er, a black reporter, which quoted an unidentified source d o se to De Mau Mau as saying the group couldn’t num ber m ore than 50. SINCE THE Oct. 15 news conferee e, t ;lore has been no official roc-.-no;if on the various lejw rts or elaboration on details of the case. Black Media Rep* sponsored a com- ti unify meeting Friday m g:it where an est rn ted 500 persons approver] a motion accusing four Chicago dailies of ’’defile ; a whole con triunity of people just because they a re black.” the A stat--: • • f< ■ . ita l bv Bi . k Media ! ‘ Never bef re have we been Reps charged closer to an all-out rac e w ar and all dus total disregard for irs to the xvi re press re sp re journalism and to all < The denied rge of irresp r.sbile reporting was Is of the foul new spapers. iliry to ol e c iv e if Its readership.” by offic House Member Planning Investigation cf 'W atchlist1 WASHINGTON sub­ (AP—A House chairm an, Rep. William S. com m ittee Moorhead. la id Sunday he plans a full s Ie investigation of national censorship cor ■ ti agency planning and W atergate defendant Ja m es vV. Mc Cord V one-time nolo in it the Office Despite strong denials from of E m ergency P reparedness, the Penn- svlvania D em ocrat said he believes one of the activities of McCord’s form er unit w as eluding dividuals.” to prep are nam es a National Watchlist “ questionable of in- The chairm an of th" House gov em ir.e> • a subcom m ittee said in Information prepared statem en t: “ When mon like Ja m es McCord a r e ii volved in political espionage and a ls o a re f f responsible for inform ation through a censorship system , I have no doubt th a t the official N ational W atchlist will pinpoint individuals slated for political rep risa l.” the official collection Moorhead said th e Pentagon and O E F confirmed to him a Washington P ost story that McCord had been a m em ber of the Special Analysis Division rese rv e unit preparing contingency plans for cen­ sorship of international m ail, trav elers and t e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n s in a national em ergency. (SAD) The Pentagon said McCord, as a reserve lieutenant colonel, was senior last the unit until he left Air Force officer of F ebruary. This was four months before he w as arrested the W atergate D em ocratic N ational H ead q u arters with four other men arid charged with hugging activities. in But the GEP th a t denied Moorhead s th ere Is o r has been a allegation N ational W atchlist in­ form ation to look for since August, 1945, the end of World W ar IT. of people and It told a!ch )vhf* i fI one' of th e Ilr 'N rh)tir>* eedures for “ no actual w as to iirepar e “ com puter \ a Watchlist ” bu,t W atchlist is m aintained by th e unit.” It said the u n it’s mission is to prop •* for ceile diem and computerizeIlion of in­ formation from m ail, ira voleTS. ert ho; aud telephone calls in and out of 'ie I T e d States—a:ai dis* rihution of tiie inf rn. at ion to w ar un is th at would use it t of IS reserve Ar? Tho ur and \ ry of such a w o r r i t ip in a na hoi until the Pentagon took it over said. uM- a Mr >rc« ' hang® em ergency the ('E P Closet Fire in Jester Causes Lifile Damage A sm all tire CRI the 10th floe night. broke out above a c o s e t : cf Je ste r Center Sunday There wore o injuries f r rn 'he fire, which w as r• • -ai od about 8: 0 p.m., and p ro p erty dam age was limited to a s a t ion of clim a I u t rid ii mer si rn re da m a g i on the w;til and ceiling of room W1003. A coed p; s s i- in tho hall nitride th* room noticed smoke coining from under th e door and summ oned someone with a key. R cponf av, no one was in the room a t the tim e of the fire. The two lr -’n arar- out lf the room when the fire broke out. Tile fire was not reported to the Austin E ire Departm em or University police, but w as put or.- p rn Iv bv < fire extinguisher from the hailway outside (he room. One res; em ho w as helping to clear, th e room said pressu re the fire ex­ tinguisher was so low the fire am id not be completely put out without using o th er m eans. in T h e d a il y T e x a n Monday, October 23, 1372 Fag* X No Sign Yet as Boggs Search Continues ANCHORAGE, A laska (AP) - Tracking and backtracking, rescu e airplanes- dodged low ly ing clouds Sunday in tho sixth day of a search for m issing House M ajority L eader Hah* B iggs and three other men. Two jet reconnaissance planes went aloft with 52 other aircraft, but visual search w as partially blocked by clouds over “ two- the primary’ thirds search a re a ,” officials said. Four Coast G uard cu tters combed the coastline. ’hree-qu.irters of to The m a s s i v e wilderness search began last Monday when Boggs, 5*. Rep. Nick lV>gich of Alaska. 40; Russe] L. Brown, 37, a and Don E . Jonz, the pilot, Beg 11 tide disappeared on a to Juneau, iMk) miles to the southeast. from here flight Air Force M aj. Henry Stocker said two RF4-C Phantom jets, equipped with cloud- piercing electronic equipment, were joining the hunt. the Meanwhile, search w as extended south of Ju n eau Sunday, to an area which five California ham radio op erato rs said could lie the source of a m ysterious radio signal they’ picked up last Monday. Stocker said he was convinced the men believed they had monitored distress signals from Jonz but .said there w ere some m ajor discrepancies in their reports. One w is an apparent tim e tag of 8 to the tim e between the reported l l hours, distress signals and when the Cessna 310’* fuel was supposed to have been exhausted. However, one of the radio operators told newsmen here last week that the pilot had indicated he was going to put the airplane down and that the plane m ay have landed and then taken off again. Such a landing could account for the tim e difference, of­ ficials said. The search covered 56.000 squ are m iles of land and sea. Search planes, however, backtracking on old leads, have covered m ore than 102,000 sq u are miles. Th*. Air Force and Coast G uard has set no cutoff date on the search, although m ost rescue missions for light planes in Alaska are abandoned after IO days to two weeks. news capsules Pilots Say Traffic Slow on Ho Chi M inh Trail NAKORN F3 HA NOM, Thailand (AP) — North Vietnamese supply traffic down the Ho Chi Mirth trail has lessened considerably since the U.S. mining of ports in the North and the intensification of bombing against the North. That is the view of some U.S. Air Force pilots who fly daily over the trail, which runs less than 65 miles east of this base on the Mekong River border with Laos. The pilots, like Lt. John McNabb, 24, of San Diego, judge trail ac­ tivity by what they can see. They haven’t seen much in recent mon­ ths—even less than usual for the rainy season which washes out many trails this time of year. “I haven’t seen any lucrative targets for six months,” said McNabb, a forward air controller who flies a twin-engine OV10 observation plane. “Ti j inactivity is getting me down.” Philippine Troops Put Down Armed Uprising MANILA (AP) — Philippine marines and soldiers airlifted from Manila smashed Sunday the first organized armed uprising against the central government since martial law’ was imposed on the country five weeks ago, Information Secretary Francisco S. Tat ad announced. Government forces killed 13 insurgents and captured one while they suffered nine dead, six wounded and one missing in almost 36 hours of fighting in Marawi in northwestern Mindanao. The Marawi uprising is the biggest clash so far and the fiftli known incident betw’een government forces and the rebels in Mindanao since martial law was proclaimed. Ta tad reported tho insurgents’ strength was estimated to be 4(X) men, all well equipped. Preparations for Possible PO W Evacuation Cancelled WASHINGTON (AP) — Sources at two U.S. Air Force bases reported Sunday special alerts of air transport units, which they said possibly were in preparation for evacuation of U.S. prisoners held by North Vietnam, had been cancelled. Tile Pentagon, meanwhile, said no “unusual action” had been taken with regard to the POWS. The reported alerts, combined with published reports that an agreement for ending the hostilities in Vietnam was near, had given rise to speculation that m easures were being taken to fly freed American POWrs out of Indochina. Defense Department spokesman Jerry Friedheim, however, said Sunday, “The Department of Defense knows of no imminent release of POWS and we have taken no unusual action in this connection.” / T h e Da il y T e x a n Staff editorials and opinions Thumbs down Prohibition is alive and well at the University. At least for students. Occasionally, the Board of Regents gives a glimpse of Its more unreasonable and Irrational side so visible a few years ago. Friday, when the regents voted five to three against a resolution supporting further exploration of beer and wine sales in the Texas Union Building and dealt proponents a severe setback, was such a day. Following the lead of Regent Jenkins Garrett, whose frothings bordered on inanity most of the time- and crossed that fine line more than once, Regents Joe Nelson, Dan Williams, A.G. M cNeese and Chairman John Peace banded together in a successful effort to keep the Union dry and students scurrying across the street for a quick beer. Getting worked up over such a trivial issue as beer and wine in the Union Building is difficult; there are many more momentous questions at this university. But how the regents deal with trivial questions such av this iv- important to the extent that it is a classic example of how they deal with significant questions. Garrett undoubtedly offered the most foolish argument possible. Among other asinine objections, the Fort Worth lawyer said that if the regents allowed beer and wine sales in the Union Building, in effect they would be telling students who come here from dry' counties to go home and vote wet. If that’s true, then Friday he told students who come here from wet counties to go home and vote dry'. Since Garrett would undoubtedly be the first to object to this interpretation of Friday’s vote, then we ran only conclude his argument against the Union doesn’t hold water, beer, wine, carbolic acid or anything else other than pablum. Gems of logic such as G arrett's c a rry great weight on the Board of Regents, at least with most members. However, Regents Mrs. Lyndon IL Johi son, F ran k Ikard and, especially, Frank C. Erwin, deserve h earty thanks for a m ore reasonable approach to the issue and support for the Union. The outcome might have been otherwise had the Union Board done its homework well, but the Union’s presentation lacked such Important Information as who would receive a license, the Board of Regents or the Union Board? D early, the Union must be better prepared before any future presentation to the regents. Friday’s setback, as Chancellor Charles LeMalstre said later, was only that. A setback. While at least two regents, Garrett and Peace, stated unequivocal opposition to Union beer and wine sales, there is the chance that more specific proposals in the future would receive regental approval. The Texan encourages the Union Board and I niversity administration to continue efforts to resolve the difficulties and formulate proposals which will lead to beer and wine sales in the * nion Building. And It’ll be a fine day when the regents quit hosing students on such trivial questions when the\ don’t even have sub­ stantive arguments. Bad reflections stumping Dallas recently Arizona Sen. Barry Coldwater, for President Nixon, said that the break-in and bugging at Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington, which has been linked to the Committee to Re-Elect the President and White House staffers, is not important. Former Treasury Secretary John B. Connal- ly seconded Goldwater’s motion on a recent national television broad­ cast. Coldwater and Connelly s attitude is most disturbing. They ask the public to condone shady dealing and illegal activities in the political arena at the precise tim e the public should bo calling for reform. Coldwater's statem ent that there is nothing new about bugging is hardly justification for the practice, rather it is evidence of the depths A m erican politics has sunk to and all the more reason to cleanse the process. The so p h isticated attitude Coldwater and Connally are trying to foist off on the public is undoubtedly prompted by the political needs of Nixon’s re-election campaign. But political expediency is hardly an excuse to r the lack of integrity and disregard of the public interest Connally and Coldwater implicitly encourage, rhat a sinister practice exists is no justification for the practice. And Coldwater anc! Connally reflect on their own integrity by saying just the opposite. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student Newspaper of UT Austin EDITOR . . . . ......... David Powell MANAGING E D IT O R ............................................................................Cliff Avery ASSIST ANI MANAGUA > E D IT O R S ............... Tom Kleinworth, John Tilly NEWS E D U OR .. ......................................................................... Karen Justice ASSISI AN I IO I HE El ti I O R ....................................................Quin M athews SPORTS EDITOR ............................................................................... Alan Truex AMUSE. I ENTS E D IT O R ............................................................. E rie Leibrock FEA TI RES EDITOR ...............................................................Suzanne Schwartz City Editor ................................ Laurie Leth News Ass j » rn, ....................... Bin Bray, Robbie Marshall, Bill Minto, Alison Smith Contributor ............... Tom Richards Assistant lea urn .dear ..................................................................... Sheila Francis Assistant Sports Editor ............................................................................ Buck Harvey ................................................................................ Suzanne Freeman or ......................................................... Steve Nesbitt Sit Eau ors .............................................. Harry Levine, Tom Wells, Steve Renfrow Photographers ................................... John Van Beekum, Mike Fluitt, Stanley Farrar O p in io n s e x p r e s s e d th o s e o I th e e d it r D a ily T e x a n a r e th e a r t i c le a n d a re r th e t ne<» U n i v e r s it y a d n a in istra U o r o r th e Ho a d o f Rf g e n t s . Th th e w r it e r o f ... of th in iy o r a t the news I tboratory is p u b lis h e d M o m m y ’ A • s ■■m ; . <; l i t J o u r n a lis m B u ild in g 102). I n q u ir ie s c o n c e r n in g ?®*lv;e r y s h o u ld be m a d e in J o u r n a lis m B u ild in g 107 (471 j2 4 4 ), d is p la y a d v e r t is in g In J o u r n a lis m B u ild in g c la s s if ie d a d v e r ­ (471-3227), a n d t i n g in J o u r n a lis m B u ild in g 107 (471-5244). r e p r e s e n t a t iv e o f Che D a ily T e x a n is N a tio n a l E d u c a tio n a l A d- v ort: sing S e r v ic e , I n c ., 3G0 L e x in g to n A v e ., N e w York, IV Y .. 10017. a d v e r t is in g The n a tl I a1 s u b s c r ib e s T h e D a ily T e x a n to T h e A ss o - < la t e d P r e s s , T h e N e w Y o r k T im e s N e w s S e r - v'U" a n d F n ite d P r e s s I n te r n a tio n a ! T e le p h o to S e r v i c e . T h e T e x a n Is a m e m b e r o f th e A s s o ­ c ia t e d C o lle g ia t e P r e s s , t h e S o u t h w e s t J o u m a - !i rn C o n f e r e n c e a n d th e T e x a s D a lly N e w s - p a p e r A ss o c ia tio n Page 4 Monday, October 23, 1372 T H E D A IL Y TSXAJf , KL STAM P UP FDR we. IT S M T T w e. WHEW ISE WOO PR A ­ VCHIM. W H O ) t h ? 6IR L m e a ) A ROCKT a t m e WCO W A s e p H e f t . / m e l d TWC voe> BIT n e you c&Dssei? r n s i r eer I R D N T HATTE WOO. / I ’M A F F A I R OF WCO. LOOK AT ALL THS T R O U B L E V O O _ H AK E RTR ME, M The puny Nader Congress report in lives By Quin Mathew s As soon as the congressional profiles from the “Ralph Nader Congress Project” were unfolded Saturday, they were attacked as biased and incorrect in parts by some and yawned at by much of the press as if they were “old stuff.” Had the artless young man who the boarding house produced yet another inept document on the sad slate of Congress or had he simply outlived his honeymoon with the press? (He had certainly passed that time with the federal government years ago.) the Nader- installment of directed critique, released earlier in Oc­ tober and titled “Who Runs Congress,” has been described as flawed in its data, not persuasive and not explicit. Still, Nader defended the first book and efforts of his 1.000 soldiers. Following the presentation of the congressional profiles Saturday, it was announced that several had been recalled Hike Fords and Chevrolets) to fix a few tilings wrong or unfounded. first The A LOOK AT U.S. Sen. John Tower's profile, however, leaves one with the im­ pression that a lot more could have been corrected and less of a juvenile approach used. Tower’s Washington press secretary'. Martin Casey, said Saturday that Tower “said he feels the report expresses the view's of those who wrrote it. He says he feels it Is not particularly object ive...but he’s not concerned by it.” I look at Tower's profile mainly because I would usually tend I might to be critical of him, and, hence, be fair to the Nader organization. The author of the article, Robert Sussman, 24, is a law student at the Un- versity of Houston and worked for State Rep. Frances Farenthold’s unsuccessful campaign for governor. The report was edited by Sallie Helm and researched in the state by Diana Marshall and Dorothy Knowlton. two daughters THE PROFILE on Tower contains several inaccuracies which, while they may have been oversights, reflect on the com- petancv of the Nader group. The expense to Tower incurs sending school is pointed out. but Tower has three daughters. Texas’ 29 electoral votes are referred to, but Texas actually has 26. State Rep. Fred Agnich is called a state senator. These may be small errors in appearance, but they do not help build support that this profile draws accurate conclusions. What I do not know', for example, is how careful in recording data the researchers (or the waiter) were with all the material at their disposal. Their care does not point to the way to building volumes of definitive profiles. In another burst of questionable fact, the profile states: “John Tower’s senatorial salary of $42,500 puts him In the top 5 percent of all Americans. However, to the senator from Wichita Falls, where he made $50,000 a year as an assistant professor, '$42,500 is just not a living wage.’ ” JUST THIS PARAGRAPH points to some of the questionable character of the profile. While I must confess I have been unable to find what Tower’s salary as an assistant professor was, it is ridiculous to think that Midwestern University, a small, state college in Wichita Falls, would pay even tenure a third of that amount for a teacher with ac­ no complishments. Even the governor earned less than $50 OOO. and with no major If the $50,000 figure was a typographical error, and it was a smaller number, then the point of stating his salary would be lessened and would only refer to his ability to live off, say, $5,000. Ixti us say that if it was a typographical mistake, it was a convenient one. If the figure was several times less, the point Is mean and certainly not objective. And if some of the money was made from the statement Is totally misleading. investments, then is in (and report ASIDE FROM THE apparent fact that the I am Inaccurate presuming there are mistakes of which I am unaware), what Is most objectionable about the proftie is the way it is proven!cd, the same kind of p^eudo- written authorifarian tone as U.S. News and World Report, with a tinge of My Weekly Reader. Tower's profile stales. “The story' cf how’ an assistant professor of history at one of Texas’ lesser universities came to this position is a modern Horatio A’per story that could only happen in Texas.” Tt is not reassuring that such language which tells us that Texas characteristically produces such outstanding figures as Billie Sol Estes and Sissy Farenthold spreads the same kind of generalities over a report that Is supposed to be Gaol, unemotional and brilliant. Throughout the review of Tower are statements which are trite, generalized observations and which do nothing to add to understanding Congress or its members. “Texas is a state of fabulous wealth and equally fabulous corruption,” the report states. While I may sound like a typically defensive Texan myself, to quote another cliche, I would want to ask, “Does Texas really have more fabulous wealth than the States which houro corporation executives? Is Texas’ corruption more “fabulous” than in another state whei-e polb'e may have been bought by organized crime?” As one might expect, the report concludes by comparing Tower’s Senate race to the battle of the Alamo. It sounds more like Time magazine than like a hard- nosed research project of the Congress. rich SEVERAL QUALITATIVE evaluations of Tower also mar the pre file. since their Substantiations are minimal. Tower Is slyly accused of conflict of interest by taking honoraria for speeches to banking groups (Tower is ranking member of the Senate Batiking O mmittee). but rn charge is made, i1 e rec. ‘ a "chors do not show how Tower has he!fei t! ose groups av a result. Tower ai o is ca Ted "evasive.” “party- going’’ and is practically poked fun of for wearing British clothes—the implication is that such attire docs not befit a Wichita Falls teach* r. In addition, he is charged with reekier driving, and it Is implied that he smashed into parked cars twice while drunk. Despite my dis; ■ Torment with Tower on r »st Issues, I cannot find any basis in the report for tho puny charges the Nader report levels at him. The profile is sloppy, poorly written find draws conclusions which are largely emotional. Mailer in Austin (with apologies) By Neil Nakadate Aquarius was unhappy. He had come to Texas, the University of Texas, with high hopes for a high point in a sapping sojourn into the landscape of academic America. For one thing, he would feel somewhat at home; after all, weren’t these students the real and symbolic sons and daughters of the men of the 112th Cavalry, the San Antonio outfit with which he had hooked up as a young soldier in World War II? Tf he had experienced something of a brother-bond with their fathers during his coming-of-age in the Pacific, and thereby a serge of Texas in the late Thirties and A guest viewpoint early Forties, w'hy couldn’t his avuncular presence in Austin 30 years later enable him to communicate with young Texans in 1972? For another thing, the largest University in Texas had every potential to provide confirmatory emanations for every Texas tragedy, triumph and paradox his mind had experienced in recent years: the assassination in Dallas; Lyndon Johnson, a of magnificent genius proportions, transmogrified only recently into a tourist attraction; and finally, the football Cowboys, loved at home but hated on the road by everyone who disliked either Texans or the promoters of computerized sport, which by this time wras equal to Everyone minus the Lone Star State. legislative teacherly impulse* which had A ES, ALL THIS HAD promised a warm welcome, a fine speech and the sw’eetness of Socrates after satisfying for a moment the first twitched in him at Harvard, over three decades before. And to top it off. they had decided he would speak in the campus hoophall. Gregory Gymnasium, the perfect place for the momentary fusion of his politic.-)!, preacherly and gladiatorial selves. Wily, in surroundings like this he might even be able to successfully confront the small army of Miilettians and Steinemites who were sure to attack him for wrhat he had said in “The Prisoner of Sex” and go on from there to talk of more over­ whelming like McGovern, Eagleton, Dick and Pat. But now, in the midst of the speech, he found himself on the longhorns of a dilemma. Somewhere along the way, after breaking ice nicely and clearing early hurdles (the mere mixing of metaphor was the least of his worries now'), he had lost hie audience. He had already saved himself once, a few minutes back, had recovered his listeners by goading an inspired Texas yell out of a voice from the back of the hall, but In less time than it takes to say “The eyes of Texas are upon you,” he had once more lost their collective ear. Now he found urgencies, litany of bombing himself repeating a statistics from the Vietnam w'ar, and no matter how many ways he reorganized the m i n d b I o wi n g figures tons, Dresdens; he tried them all), they did not pop open enough eyes to justify the strain on his vocal chords. (bombs, LATER, IN A post-speech rap outside the student union, he was to m a ll publicly that he eschewed the role of Pontificator (Gregory!) in Public, the man whose one- line responses could be interpreted (or, by his enemies) misinterpreted as Brilliant Solutions to the most pressing problems of the day. Now, in the midst of his agony he even anticipated a question which was to be asked of him during the rap, the question which he later did himself the favor of rephrasing prior to taking it in: Was he becoming for the beleaguered band of the Liberal Left the rhetorical equivalent to Spiro Agnew? Was there a point at which felicitous metaphor was as self-indulgent for the literate left as alliterative assault was carnal satisfaction for the Agnewvian (sight, indeed, but not right? A cautionary to be heeded In the middle of a dragging speech; here he was. getting sweaty in a humid gym. and feeling tiny increments of his ego shaved off with each dainty droop of a coed's eye. Better to suggest, then, that Nixon Is the architect of a benign totalitiartsm in a boring monotony of a programed nation. Better to hit them with a declaration of the death of the counter­ culture; a visioning of oneself in the coffin is sufficient to dismiss even the deepest doze. Better to postulate that the United States bombing the hell out of Vietnam Is like a 250-pound man beating an 8-year- old boy with a baseball bat. And no sooner compromised in the mind tiian delivered from the podium. AQUARIUS WAS SAD about such a personally disappointing outcome of a promising night, and it was no solace to him that the local press would fail to report correctly. Right (which is to say correct) reporting would pay due regard to the in­ terstices of boredom hidden by threads of golden wit. Right reporting would be to tell of tlie anxieties of his ego, fearful of losing forever as willing an audience as he had ever come upon. But faced with a deadline and the need to pet who what when end where into 500 words, reporters were likely to get the high p lints of the lecture rather than the depths of Mailer’* message; they wore likely to remrd all of the rambling and none of the rap. Even one day of ('on’emplation might enable them to report on his visit with all the vigor and persuasiveness at W'ord-of-mouth. but Instead they would get their stories in that night, and were sure to lose a sense of listening to the Prizewinning Person himself. He wondered how many of them understood what he had tried to do in the “Armies of the Night.” No matter, in 24 hours he was due in Missoula, Montana He would have another chance to offer his conviction that sweat, sadness and a recognition of the evil undersides of our own i»est impulses must be borne before the lost mood of a beautiful America caa be restored. Veil Nakadate is an assistant professor of English. W ar talks turning serious By James Reston (c) 1972 New York Times News Service WASHINGTON - The Vietnam peace talks are now reaching the critical point where an “interim peace agreement”—not a final settlement—may be under serious discussion. It has been the hope of some officials at the top of the Nixon administration—and the conviction of others—that the Hanoi government would agree to a preliminary arrangement before the Nov. 7 election rather than risk the prospect that a re­ elected President Nixon would feel free to carry on the bombing of the North in­ definitely, or give Saigon the means to do so. It has also been assumed here that, to get an “interim agreement” that w'ould limit the President’s freedom to bomb as he likes, it would be necessary to negotiate this weeks before the election, rather than at the last moment, so that the President w'ould have some political to compromise. incentive NOW THERE ARE several signs that support this scenario. In his early secret talks with Le Due Tho in Paris, Henry Kissinger spent most of his time listening, not to practical negotiations, but to what the American negotiators called Hanoi’s “three epic poems”—propaganda themes in Homeric language and almost always in exactly the same words. This was not Kissinger’s experience in the four meetings he had in Paris last week. that Instead, the Communists discussed some of a the practical details of what preliminary agreement might be—what guarantees Hanoi would give that there would be no punitive massacre of South Vietnamese, the so-called coalition “ government of concord” w’ould last for several years and not be dominated by the Communists; and on the other side, what guarantees Hanoi would have that the Communists w’ould be able to hold the territory now that Washington did not want to destroy the Communist regime or the industries of North Vietnam, and that Saigon would not be given the bombers to carry out such a policy on its own. their possession, in since there So there Is obviously plenty for Kissinger to discuss with Thieu. and Abrams Especially increasing Is evidence in the Hanoi official press that Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap and the other “ total victory” advocates in the North have been seriously weakened by the failure of their Easter offensive. NOT ONLY HAS Giap’s power been reduced by the appointment to the 11-man politburo of two men who axe said to favor concentrating on the re-ons traction of ti North—Gen. Van Tien Dun, chief of st a of North Vietnam's armed forces and Tm Quoc Moan, the minister of public security- but there is some evidence that key Cor rnunist cadres are being moved in positions the Communists would natural try to hold after a cease-fire. All this is bound to worry Thieu In Salgc more then it worries Nixon or Kissing* for w'hile it Is natural that Thieu W'ou; want total control of all his territory, ti official view here is that once the thro; of a serious Communist assault on th major cities is removed by negotiate Thieu. with over a million men under amu should be able to handle any break I the peace by scattered guerrillas. Maybe this is too optimistic a repor and obviously there are many other eve more difficult problems to be resolved, sue as the main one about the future of Thiei hut at least there is now some movemer toward practical discussion of an “interir settlement” and some evidence that mor moderate elements are having some in fluence in Hanoi. Nobody here will say even an “ Interir agreement” is likely before the election but Kissinger does not It oui Something is happening anyway and at Iasi thai it obviously something more and •lection propaganda. rule The firing line Theres an easy way to eliminate discrimination fully refuge hastily took Germany. But if you blinked your Nations General Assembly Oct. as the campus Young Socialist fo (he editor! letter I think Elizabeth Powers, In “ Handle Gender her G ingerly,’’ has come up with a most valid criticism but has failed to pursue it to the proper conclusion. it can be I think assumed that our goal, or one of them, is the elimination of all discrimination its manifestations. One sure-fire way to tackle the problem is to remove all its possible sources; we have a long way to go. in to far For thus instance, in Journalism we have managed only religious eliminate p r e f e r e n c e , and perhaps nationality, as means of iden­ tifying an individual, and thereby showing them to be a member of some maligned minority. And even if we omit their m arital status and any direct reference to race, we are still far short of our goal. Powers is correct, of course, all references to sex should be deleted, but this is only a small step; .so should: a) A ll references to age. b) All references to education. c) All references to economic status. d) A ll references to state or place of employment. e) All references to position or office, whether in government, Industry, or otherwise. f) A ll references to surnames— most are dead giveaways (M- c G o v e r n , Abzug, LeM aistre, Muniz, etc.). g) All references to first names for sim ilarly obvious reasons. Perhaps we could use our Social numbers...or perhaps It would be better not to identify an entity at all... Security Peveril O. Settle I I I School of Law D ire straits To the editor: it the student body at I am dismayed by the caliber the of University. Doesn't have anything better to do than hark back to the bull and bear baiting days of the 18th Century? Yesterday afternoon my attention was attracted by the sight of a group of students intently staring at something in the Union Patio. Being only human, I too looked at what they were staring. A gray-striped tiger cat was sitting, frozen on its haunches, while a mongrel dog, of predominantly Airedale ancestry, was going in circles around and around the cat, gradually narrowing the circles so that it could have a pretty good chance of dashing in and rending the cat limb from limb. The cat knew better than to make a break for the nearest in any case, protection which, would have availed It naught, because only bare walls were available, too far to any bush, shrub or tree. I have five cats; the last two joined the household courtesy of the thoughtful people who threw two tiny, hapless kittens over a fence into our pasture. My one thought yesterday was to save tho cat from the dog in which endeavor I was aided solely by the dog. He didn t seem to be too eager to come to grips with the . station’a Is KM FA SIM n .A R financial crises have been almost epidemic across the I» s Angeles, nation and have resulted in th# in failure of classical stations San New York, Francisco and Houston to name only a few. However, since the apical for aid first went out two weeks have ago, Austinites responded with more than $10 ,0 0 0 in contributions. Now with a few weeks and $10 ,0 0 0 mer* to go Students for KM FA is anxious to thin station s base of broaden the University support within community. U>ur three-point program Is as follows: First, if you haven’t already, we invite you to listen to your classical FM .station. K M FA is on the air from I p.m. until midnight, seven days a week. We that K M FA think provides a pleasing element in the diverse musical environment of Austin. And second, if you feel is worth that this diversity other this have m any during preserving, we would a k you to join with us. Like nvrst of you, in­ We volvements very fail of an election important besides going to school. But, again in the spirit of diversity, we extend an invitation to join us in promoting something which will pr -vide a peaceful interlude when the din of politics is over and which will serve as a con­ in tinuing source of enjoym ent the future. Fin ally we offer a fam iliar appeal; if ; ou are able to, we would ask you to contribute to KM FA . For this purpose or for any additional information please write to K M FA , 1011 Perrv- Brooks Building, Austin, Texas 78701. David Hobbs Is a m em ber of Students for Cultural Music for A list in. B H L I B E R A T E JEW S FROM IGNORANCE D ijcuuioni of Chajsidic and Jewish Philosophy by Rabbi S. Lazaroff of (lubavitch) will be held •very M onday night (7:00 - 8:30) beginning O ct. 23, at 1008 W . 25!/2 No. 203, Austin. N o pre­ vious background is required and one s personal commitment isn’t questioned. Every Jewish stu­ dent is welcome. Com e join us! eves, you probably missed it. 3. Read if again, especially the last sentence and then stand back to admire a brilliant piece of satire. Warren Fawcett Radio-television-film Deceit To tho editor: “ There are two categories of wars, just and unjust. We support just wars and oppose unjust wars. If a Socialist still wants to be a Socialist, be should not o p p o s e a l l w a r s in- discrim inatdy.” So spoke Red A s long as collectivist ideologies, such as fascism, c o m m u n i s m or socialism, Inherently creature of view man as a the state to be manipulated according to the distorted values of the ruling ideologues, the potential for in­ ternational and civil wars will continue to persist. This poten­ tiality may become a reality in Chile within the next year, while in Peru economic development has an uncertain future. As Chiao Kuan-hua Is statement Indicates, the term “ peace,” that China’s Deputy Foreign Minister Chiao Kuan-hua to the United is piously chanted in Peking, Moscow, etc., and by such groups Alliance and the Socialist Workers Party, remains in reality a deceitful propanganda trick. Indeed “ peace.” as defined b v Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, can exist only after humanity suffers the violent imposition of dic­ a proletarian “ world tatorship,” which Milovan Djilas, Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes one-time Yugoslav vice pr psi den! under Tito, calls the imposition of “ the new class,” composed of the ruling Communist Party. The deceit and hypocrisy practiced by Marxist rulers arid certain domestic U S. political groups ought to be so labeled and recognized for the sake of our lives and our liberty. M .-L Sheara S A L E * ~ " SHEEP SKIN RUGS M a n v Beautiful C olors * * LE A T H ER S A L E V a r i o u s kin ds, co lo rs - T5o p c t I i Crossword P uzzle ACROSS i ” par-or# of iphthong illation 5 Russian s*'.' - j de oft 6 Tu 7 Be 8 Ro 9 Co IO Joi po it ' sen' 9 pre cion* o f th-c a 24 2 5 ,-e degn OU* per ■n 4 Dip 6 Im l l c 13 For 15 Pro 16 See­ l s A r r la Net 21 Sen Ste? 77 Oro 24 Wai 26 ire! Answ er to S a tu rd a y's P u n t * B T B E F 3 R E SS JE ’F? B rP e |r,ru e’k js]K« r :r jo ~uT a p a m n Ie b i t tTaTR-^^ o iVvTpKi P^t|e IP IS W 1 D Ip I ! r jE | R T E [I s ItTa jpi f R IE [p Ie A ll R J F p f t H y H K '- a R j E fti I Tn t - F e J s a i I l^lgCdOp l A j T E jSiyMTT Bo jgi j e i n I t M s T a t F r i a ip I 29 Make amends 31 Wife of Gera in' 3 3 F ." : for tellurium 34 Memorandum 36 Merry 38 Hebrew tetter 40 E-! -■ re 47. En- m 45 Abstract being 47 Gaseous 49 54 5 5 if al laity 26th * .c, o nor* 56 59 Preposition Cl 6.3 Wheel ot chair 6 6 5 -3 t a g e* 66 Spanish article 1 67 A - t DOWN •• h cap I 2 Fctg dish 3 Greek leger 4 Danish is and 11 13 e s s 2 4 2 9 3 8 4 5 5 0 5 5 J 4 4 • v - ' j measure 27 Firer in Af-:c* 43 Plastic band 1 or’ jacket to 32 Small valley to view 4 5 Con un son 35 Cor • 48 Fe n 3 ' At 33 Nuisar es 39 Ma n dish 41 WMd hot; re abv# 5 1 A-ab;an seaport 3 I 2 3 4 5 53 Transaction 57 Compass p o t* 6 0 '. *• ,-e f a t 62 P r cad (abbr.) 64 • •• • . - j rn 6 1 3 7 r I9 I'0 pix 17 I [ l l I -nr. Im .. I " 1 9 20 rn21 3 0 i i 2 6 S S S S S S 3 5 JOG-, 2 7 22 o o f i i r n 2 3 2 8 S S S 3 7 i i F L : - 43 v s 4 4 3 4 y . G 4 6 A I Ok •V Y , 39 4 0 3 6 □CXS 41 4 2 4 7 4 8 irm -r 49 51 - L V , 5 2 r S 5 7 5 6 5 3 5 4 A Y A T T T 5 8 5$ 6 0 6 5 I 6 3 ( Y r S S S 6 6 6 4 6 7 W \ W s D.»U. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc. I» Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin. Texas 478-9309 SH EET LLL HAVEL! RS A R E /1 /AV Direct Diamond E Importers C h >o e f r om h u n d r e d s of (terns sn rn sn) Ct rude r We Invite I n precious little time left to ipend in developing the stations’ potential, innovations and serve tile community in the way in which the staff of KM FA would like. And then there has to make P E A N U T S Yh&,maam.,.wed LIKE TO BOCROUJ The LATEST WOK . ev mss SMEASTOKG/.s W 1 ( J S A N N E D J lT J IT'S BEEN BANN6P FROM THE tem . u m w ii cant u m e n j HOW COULD AIMONE BAN ZUCH A NEAT BOOK AS “THE &IX WNW-WVNNI£S FREAK OOT'? Vote McGoveni'Shriver/Nov.7 1221 West Sixth Austin, Texas 78703 PAID FOR BY UMC, LUCY BLACK — TREASURER T h e D a i l y T e x a n Monday, October 23, 1972 Pagt s over town Texas' Wishbone-T Returns From Grave By ALAN TRUEX Texan Staff Writer Some had said the Wishbone, like m ost bones after their day Is done, had gone to the dogs, T exas' Wishbone-T offense was so dead it had flies. After the Oklahom a gam e last week they put a w reath on it. And another Wreath on Oklahoma's. The Texas Wishbone had been • n a p p e d , broken, crunched, crushed, splintered, bent out of shape. And everything else you can do to a Wishbone that has lost its touchdown magic. Some fans dem anded that the Wishbone be scrapped, dumped, J u n k e d , refitted, altered. And everything else you can do to an offense th at was replaced, so far aw ay from the goalposts it needed a telescope to see them. Defenses, it w as charged, had caught the Wishbone, passed it and left it th ree y ards and a cloud of dust behind. I>efenses had reduced the Texas up to S ta tistic s F irst D ow ns R u sh es—N et Y ard* N o t Y a r d s P a s s in g P a s s e s Punt* Return Yard asia K im ble-. f/i^t Y a rd s P e n a lize d A r k . 20 40-si 14.2 14-'i8-2 5-39 4 0 i- i 4 T e x n u 23 68 594 it 1- 1-1 2-3<< 0 51 r-i-S s 35 triple option to a double option: a fumble or an interception. Through it all, D arrell Royal stood firm ly behind his Wishbone, a brave thing to do considering the way the Texas offensive line lately. But had been blocking IN H O U S T O N THE WILLIAM PENN HOTEL 1423 Texaf Ave. — 713/222-0231 SPECIAL STUDENT RATES SPECIAL EVENTS: Oct. 28 — RICE vs. T E X A S — 7:30 P.M. Rice Stadium 12/24 thru 27th — B R O A D W A Y S H O W " N O , N O , N A N E T T E " — Don Ameche 10/27 — P R O F E S S IO N A L BASKETBALL Houston Rockets vs. Atlanta M O S T M A J O R C R E D IT C A R D S A C C E P T E D let it be known th at he Royal backed the Wishbone 1,000 per­ cent. it around so much Of course, he had already changed it had unrecognizable. He w as broken it into something of a pro sot. He had into a passing form ation, which is not unlike trying to turn a baseball diamond into a golf course. turned it In its adjusted form the Texas offense w as even less effective than before. It becam e downright em barrassing to be a m em ber of the Texas offense, also known as the Fum ble Bunch. “ Everybody was knocking us all week,” said Ixmghom guard Travis Roach. “ They had a right to. We knew we hadn’t con­ tributed against Oklahom a.” For a whole week the Longhorn of­ fense withstood the ridicule. the seventh day the And on critics rested. F or the somewhere out of the lustrous past or out of forgotten graveyard the Texas Wishbone—’T Triple Option ni.se again its resplendent glory, complete with fullback power and quarterback runs and pitches to speeding halfbacks. Saturday all in It was, as Sports D lustrated's Dan Jenkins used to say, Wor­ ste d y and Bertelsenly and body on bodv, only the nam es were PHOTOGRAPHERS ATTENTION § ANNOUNCING? A BP AND MAV AN!) REASONABLY P R IC E D MODELING SE R V IC E A V A IL A B LE TO S E R ­ IO U S A M A T E U R S, SEMI-PROFESSIONALS. A N D P R O F E SSIO N A L S . WHY KNOCK YOC RS ELK O LT T R Y IN G TO F IN D D E C E N T MODELS WHEN W E H A V E 25 M A L E A N D F E M A L E M O DELS (C A R E F U L L Y S E L E C T ­ E D FR OM O V E R 150 A P P L IC A N T S )? M O D EL S A R E A V A IL A B LE FO R, A N D E X P E R IE N C E D WITH, S E V ­ E R A L FO RM A TS — N U D E FIGURE, PO RTRAIT. L IF E D R AW ING. FA SHION, TV ADS, ETC. SO R R Y , WrE DON T P R O V ID E STUDIO, CAMERAS, DEVELOPMENT, F R E E A D V IC E. ETC. TH IS TS NOT A SCHLOCK W A LK-IN O PERA!.DNP ALL PERSON’S USING P L R M OD E U A R E C A R E F U L L Y SCREENED. TF IN T E R E S T ­ E D , CALL 451-3396 MORNINGS BETWEEN IO A M. A N D NOON. G IR I.S—I F YOU WOULD L IK E TO E A R N E X TR A M O NEY. CALI. FO R AN A P P O IN T M E N T . I /w r y and Leaks and Ealey. It w as five yards up the middle and eight around the flanks. It w as running tim es for 394 y ards. It was T exas 35, A rkansas 15. the ball 68 and And it was beautiful if you're a Longhorn if you fan rem em b er the good old days of the national championship era, and if football on a dam p, slip­ pery, heavy night can be term ed beautiful. And it was beautiful if you were not one of the hundred o r so .scalpers who were trying to un­ load unw anted tickets outside the superfluously expanded M em orial Stadium , They were selling, or rallier, trying to sell, 50-yard line tickets for two for five bucks. The price undoubtedly plum- S W C Standings B y The Associated T res* SEASON I, W T ex a s T ec h ............. 5 Texas ................... 4 ...........................4 SM U ......................4 TCL ................. 4 A rk a n sa s R ic e ............................ 2 x -H o u sto n ............. 2 Baylor .................. 2 Texas AAM ......... 1 x- Not c o m p e tin g for SWC title Pct. .835 .800 .800 .800 .600 .500 .415 .400 .166 CONFERENCE W L 0 0 1 1 1 1 I 2 Texas ...................2 SMU ............................ I ............................ I TCU ................. 1 A rk a n sa s ............. 1 T ex a s T ech .........................0 B a ile r Rice ...................... 0 T ex a s AAM ............ 0 T Ret. I.OOO 0« 1.000 0 n .500 n .500 .500 0 0 .000 .OOO 0 .OOO 0 Last Week’* Results Texas 35 Ar­ kansas 15; TCU IS, Texas AAM in- O klahom a S ta te 20-7. SM U 29. R ico 14; T e x a s T ec h 35. A rizona IO; M iam i 33, Houston 13. This W eek’* Schedule H ouston at M ississip p i S tate, 1:30 p m . : T e x a s T ech a t SM U , 2 p in ; TCU at N o tre D am e, 1:3 0 p .m .: N orth T e x a s at A rkansas. L ittle Rock, 7 3 0 p m . ; T ex a s AAM at Baylor, 7:30 p.m . T ex ­ a s at R ic e , 7:30 p.m . W I L C O H O I V I I A . 6509 NI. LAMAR Phone 452-2874 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE m etted still more when T exas fum bled the ball aw ay on its first two possessions, both on the 20- the y ard Ixinghorns the inflation fighters since g re a te st the G reat Depression. tim e like line. At looked that B ut the Texas defense, and m ay b e th at should be a capital D, sh u t A rkansas down like an em ptied mine. All the Razorbacks got fo r the fumbles was a field goal. And all Joe Ferguson got for his first 13 pass attempts was one completion, for eight yards. The Texas defense all but elim inated Ferguson this nationally televised contest. The Arkansas q uarterback finished the night with just 14 completions in 38 attem p ts for 143 yards. from The en tire Longhorn secondary, Mike Bayer, Mike Rowan, Tom m y Keel and G ary Yeoman, was alm ost never out of position. end The of defensive M alcolm Minnlck, who in­ tercep ted a pass, also impressed the Razorbacks. play “ T h at No. 48 (Minnick) was ev ery w h ere,” Hog running back Jon Richardson said. “ He hurt us inside and outside."* As good as Coach Mike Cam p­ though, for b ell’s defense was, a while th ere was som e question it would be good enough to keep the offense out of trouble. Tlie Longhorns kept handling the ball like a drunk does a handful of keys. Texas fumbled not ju st its first two plays from scrim m ag e, but three out of its first four. Tlie 'Horns ended up with eig h t fumbles on the night, and five of them were lost. But on this particular day the Longhorns simply outran their m i s t a k e s . Q uarterback Alan FOR $2452 YOU CAN OWN A SPORTS CAR DESIGNED BY THE MAN WHO DESIGNS $20,000 SPORTS CARS. REPAIRS- E N G IN E & T R A N S M IS S IO N S P E C IA L IS T B R A K E S — TU N E-U P S — E L E C T R IC A L — C L U T C H N E W — REBUILT — U SED PARTS I t H I-P E R P O R M A N C E PARTS SERVICE GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE Open Sat. 477-6797 1621 East 6 EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed HOW ACCEPTING MALE & FEMALE DONORS C A S H B O N U S P R O G R A M S F O R REPEAT D O N O R S Austin Blood Components, Inc. O PEN : 8 - 3 p.m. Tue*^ Thur., Fri. & Sat. 12:00 N O O N - 7 p.m. W ed. 409 W. 6TH 477-3735 Standing on Edge — T ex a n S ta ff P h oto by IK E BA B r o * , The football appears to be standing up as Texas quarterback Alan Lowry recovers his own fumblo in Memorial Stadium Saturday night. Texas fumbled eight times but still rout­ ed the Arkansas Razorback*, 35-15. No. 46 ii fullback Rosey Leak*. Lowry rushed for 156 yards on 22 carries. Fullback Rosey Leaks plunged for 154 on 34 attem pts. Donald E aley com plem ented his power blocking with quick run­ ning, netting 64 y ard s on seven carries. A rkansas gave T exas the pitch several tim es, and Lowry took advantage of his chances. The the Hogs gave T exas also quarterback run and the fullback play. They gave Texas everything but their locker combinations. On four occasions the Razorbacks even used a 10-man defen.se. Although Texas lined up with two light ends for most of the gam e, thus tipping off the run, A rkansas still couldn't stop the Wishbone. While 'Horas passed 32 tim es last against Oklahoma week, this tim e they tried only th ree passes. “ I ’m not an tip ass,” Royal insist til, “ but three passes sounds b etter than 32.” tile Lowry proved the Royalism that when you throw’, “ there are throe things th at can happen and two of them a re b ad." One of Lowry’* passes was good for a 14-yard completion. One of the passes was incomplete, which is bad. The third w as intercepted, which is also bad. Aside though, from fumbles, the the running gam e was In d iv id u a l Statistics AUK IN S i s Hushing-Morton 9 37. Saint 1-4. r a s p in g —F erg u so n y ard s. 88-105, R ichardson IF S * . I I , I U Berelv In* Rap pond 7 74, Rlcbard- f - n 3-22 Ettingor I 19, Craig M orton 2-13. I 15, TI \ \S Rax Mug ; J ; '.ti. Lr jilts 34- 1"*L Ko icy 7-L1, Akins 2-j• 1- 14. | , 34 y a r d s I;i F asx in K H r c r iv m e Ark anta* 'I <• va* A rk.—FG How T hey Scnrfd »< 7 3 0 Kirkland 84 « 6—IS 8 HO— SS A r k .- I A rk.—I T e x a s- Texas- T e x a s- T exas A r k ~ I

eaks getting most of the yardage and tho touchdown, a four-yard mn. However, the Longhorn* trailed 9-7 at haJf-time, aa Arkansas assembled field goal drives at 58 and 93 yards. Texas regained the lead, 15-1, late In the third quarter on a six yard run by I/w r y and a two-point conversion by Ealey. Tlie turning point cam e a play later when the Razorbacks steed the Texas around ignoring kickoff, and Tommy Landry wandered over and recovered It for the 'Horns (ai the Hogs* Vt. Lowry scored a minute later and Texas led 21-9. The early 72-yard drive was what pleased Royal the m ost “Now that's something you can hang your hat on,” he said. *1 feel those 15-play drives are a lot more solid than the ones that long take you three or passes. four “We had excellent blocking tonight, particularly by Ealey and it seemed like we were more sure of ourselves.” (Julias) W hittier/ and For once, Royal had reason to be pleased with the Wishbone. Of course, fumbles still con­ cerned him But he wasn’t going to pick any bones over that. the College Scores i Ex* t A m y 35 R life r * 2V Ik-st.,n 17. T em pt# 14 < c ig a le 35, I rini cion >> Dartmouth 4 9, Brown 20 Harvard .13. Cornell is Cerin SO, I el l ah 27 Penn St 17, Syr*. ** 0 W Virst 1 in St, Th ar.* IS Y a le 28. C o lu m b ia ’ 4 Kotlik ^ A labam a 17, T en n e sse e l f Auburn 24. G eorgia T ech 14 Clemson 37, V irginia 21 D uke 20. M aryland I i F la 16, M ississip p i 0 G eorgia 28. V anderbilt t Grambling 2g Jackson S t D SI IO, Ken' rk y 0 M iam i. Fla 33, Hoi stern U i f M iam i Ohio kl, S C arolina 8 T ern St. 44. Florida AAM 25 l l Midi* est I w a St 55, Kansas S t U 23 K ent S t 2*-: X a v ie r IR M ichigan 3L Illinois 7 V ic i S ’ 3 ’ W isconsin t M innesota 4.3 M issouri 30. N otre Darn# N N eb ra sk a 56. K a n sa s 0 Ohio S t 44 Indiana 7 O klahom a E t 44. Indiana T O klahom a S ta le 20. Ha>lor T P u rd ue 37, N orthw estern 0 V irginia T ech 53 Ohio 21 Irm a 14 Sooth we** A bilene 3. A rkansas St 0 M em phis St 7. N orth T ex** t i I N. M exico 56. T ex a s Kl P a so T S M ethodist 29. R ice 14 T ex a s 35, A rk a n sa s IS T ex a s C hristian 13. T e.\a« AAM T ex a s T ech 35 A rizona IO l f F a r Went A r i//n a St. 45. B rig h a m Y oung IT C olorado sn. O klahom a 14 Idaho St. I ' 85, Idaho 7 N a v y 31. A lrce F o rce IT O regon 15. Stanford PSC 34 W ashington 7 V C L K 49 C alifornia I tab 27, W yom in g R W ashington St. 37, O regon St 7 H aw aii 30, M ontana 3 l l l f • FOR I.D.’s • FOR P A SSP O R T S • FOR R E S U M E ’S SUPER FAST SERVICE! Studtman Photo 1 9 th a t L a v a c a C a m e r o n V illa q e They're Here! THE NEW 1973 PORSCHE, AUDI A N D V O LKSW A G O N S ARE N O W AT l / o A r m i t i e r / c u v v U a f t e x a * / 7 6 7 2 3 6111 U. S . H IG H W A Y 2 9 0 A T N O R T H IH 3 5 Nuccio Bertone designs Maseratis. He designs Lamborghmls. In the automotive world he’s considered a genius. He has designed some of the most revered and coveted sports cars in the world. The Bertone-deagned car on this page has all the Style and grace that he's renowned for. However, this Bertone original costs about $20,000 less than those others. But don't let that mislead you - the Fiat 850 Spider above is pure, thoroughbred sports car. Bertone wouldn’t have it any other way. And ©either would F iat For example, Fiat is the work!’* largest manufacturer of small high-performance engines, and the ©ne in the 850 is a beauty. It winds up all the way to 6,500 rpm before hitting red (and while we’re on the subject, the tachometer is standard equipment). And the 850 has everything else you’d expect to find Inside a body by Bertone: a four-speed, fully-synched transmission, front disc brakes, and fully-independent suspension. Rear-engined, of course,, for traction and road-holding. As for the interior, Road & Track magazine found "...the cockpit near faultless, the seats comfortable and the driving position excellent.” And the top is a new design, too. It can be easily raised or lowered with one hand. All of this in the lowest-priced true sports car in America. You keep saving money, too, because the 850 Spider gets about 30 miles to the gallon. It’s no wonder the readers of Car and Driver magazine voted the Fiat 850 Spider the best GT/sports car in its clasa-for the last two years in a row. The Fiat 850 Spider with body by Nuccio Bertone. Try it See for yourself why the sleek shall inherit the earth. The biggest selling car in Europe Overseas delivery arranged through your dealer* AUSTIN T H I ) P I T S T O P ,IM I, the best in the SWC. Quarterback Joe Barnes threw for one touchdmvn .md ran for another in the win. Bay Sot lost ifs third game of the year, fall cg’ to Ok! aboma State 20-7. The game was played in a steady downpour, and m arred by numerous turnovers. The Bears lost 7 of 15 fumble*? Ti.rec of quar­ terback Neil Jeffery’s passes were intercepted,with one Interception being returner! for a touchdown. Texas is now leading the SWC with a 2-0 record. SMU is second with a 1-0 mark. Arkansas Is 2-1 in SWC pl v after the loss to Texas. By LYNN PULFORD Texan Staff Writer Austin rugby Golds crushed the rain- in Dallas Dallas Harlequins d r e ne h e d game Saturday. in a A 13-0 score does not fully express the mastery the Golds showed over die Harlequins. Golds’ dominance kept the entire g a m e at Dallas’ end of the field. sat on Rain cancelled the Wild Bun­ ch’s game with Fort Worth. Both team s sidelines through the Golds’ game, wat­ ching the players getting soaked, getting soaked themselves, and to move together reasoning the If Yon Need Help Just .Someone Who Will or Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service Att. Volkswagen Owners O utstand ing C o m p lete Autom otive Service Across from G u lf M art G L 2-0205 C LO SED SATURDAY Tho Only Independent V W G a rage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repair* Arid t's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET R O A D S E R V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N V E H IC L E S IS O U R S P E C IA L T Y UNIVERSITY CO OPERATIVE SOCIETY, INC. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL CONDITION as of JUNE 30, 1972 and 1971 ASSETS C a sh F u n d s .......................................................... $ C urrent Receivables, N e t . . . Inventories o f Textbooks, Supplies, and .............................. 6 / 3 0 / 7 2 6 /3 0 /7 77,000 24 6,0 00 $ 126,000 302,000 O th e r M e r c h a n d is e ...................... Property, Fixtures, Equipment, Net, and L a n d O th e r A sse ts ....................................................... 1,162,000 1,169,000 33,000 1.132.000 1.128.000 50,000 $2,687,000 $2,738,000 LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL C u rre n t Liabilities ................................................ Long-Term M o r t g a g e D e b t .................................. Retained Earnings Reinvested in Property 1,024,000 6 1 0,0 00 1,035,000 671.000 E q u ip m e n t ............... 559,000 457.000 Retained Earnings Available as W o rk in g C a p ita l ......................................................... 49 4,0 00 575.000 $2,687,000 $2,738,000 STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS FOR THE FISCAL YEARS 1971-72 and 1970-71 Sale of Textbooks, Supplies, O th e r M d s e ............... $6,428,000 4,780,000 C o s t o f M erch a n d ise Sold .................................. O pe rating Expenses, Including Personnel C osts, and C it y and State Taxes .................. 1,299,000 1.315.000 O th er Income, N e t .............................................. 28,000 Am ount A va ila b le for Patronage D ivid e nd s ......... Dividends Paid to Students & Faculty .................. $6,352,000 4.638.000 1.714.000 399.000 20,000 419.000 382.000 37.000 1 2 .0 0 0 1,648,000 349,000 377,000 360,000 17,000 (3 ,0 0 0 ) Federal Taxes on Income (N e t o f C r e d i t s ) ............ Retained Earnings From O p e r a t io n s ....................... $ 20,000 $ 25,000 PO L ADV. PO, FORBY T E X A N S FOR TOW ER EDWARD CLARK, CHAIRMAN Barefoot Sanders is running a campaign of personal attacks against Senator John Tower. This is designed to cover up Sanders’ own record He attacks the Senator’s attendance record, yet, during a four-year period when Sanders was serving in the Legislature, he missed 266 votes in 224 legislative days, as reported by The Dallas Morning News. Sanders voted three times against ethics and reform measures, including a critical vote against an ethics amendment that re­ quired legislators to disclose their sources of income If the disclosure proposal had been passed, instead of being killed with the aid of Barefoot Sanders, the Sharpstown bank fraud and scandal probably never would have happened When the Sharpstown case broke open last year, according to the federal court docket of January 22,1971, Sanders was the attorney of record for the former Speaker of the House with whom he served in the Legislature. John Tower is a man of proven ability and integrity. Let’s keep him working for Texas in the U.S. Senate. THE DAILY T fflW Monday, Ocfcfxr 25, 1372 Pag* I RI Skins Upset Dallas, 24-20 W ASHINGTON (A P )- C h a rley H arraway's 13-yard flooring dash ■round tho loft side gave tho Washington Redskins a 24-20 oome-from-behlnd N a 11 o n a1 Football League victory over tho Dallas Cowboys Sunday. Ha ira way’s ae ain per capped a •even-plav SO yard drh’e ofter Dallas’ Toni Fritsrh miftsed a .W /ard field gonl attempt. lead The victory, Washington’s fifth In six games, gave the Redskins Hie in the National Con­ ference's Eastern Division race. Dalis* dropped to second with a 4-2 record. Hie game-winning drive, as Washington overcame an early 13-0 Dallas advantage, was fueled Jurgen - by quarterback Sonny Today drive a Mazda. The car with no pistons, no rods, no valves Only 1/3 the engine parts — less to go wrong. Outperforms cars costing $1,000 more. A n t c) C~ Pivcn engine. R o ta ry e n g in e . Pl-/ - r.s g o u p a n d d o w n . This m otion Is ch a n g e d into rotary mo* on lo turn wheels. N o up-and-down motion. N o ch a n g in g directions. Sm ooth rotary m otion from start. HOLCOMB-BEASLEY MOTORS 6^18 B U R N E T R D . 454-6848 sen's pinpoint passing. T h e veteran signal-caller, starting only his fourth game in two years, connected with wide receiver Roy for 20 yards and running back T,arry Rrown for 18. After Brown ran for three, he caught another Jurgensen aerial for IO yards to the Dallas 17. Jefferson Harraway pounded out four yards on the ground before he swept around left end into the end 7X»ne. ♦ ★ ★ HO I S T O N (AP!—Cleveland quarterback Mike Fhipps scored on a one yard plunge with 3:36 left to play Sunday to overcome touchdown pass plays of SO and Pro Football Stand ings ... . M a ....... M ia m i N Y . B u f f N. E n * . B a i t ........... A rn e rlrn n I onferen c* K a v t vi t I f i n n 4 2 n 2 4 ll 2 4 n I 5 0 < un.................. 4 2 o Bitt. ........... 4 2 0 .......... a 3 ii Cleve. "i o Houston I.OOO .Rn: 333 .333 .IR ? ....... I . 6 6 1 .667 500 .167 ( n n U .il r e t r t « o r 145 -r 187 544 128 11t 82 ISR fit 122 ins ss 13ft 8ft ftl l i t SO 165 Went I O a k .............................. 2 3 n K. C it y ........... 3 S. D ie c o ......... 2 3 I D e n v e r .......... 2 4 n .ROO 150 111 .Hoi 150 ll! .417 lift M3 .333 128 w I. t N atio n al C o n fe rrn re r.t .833 .667 .667 .333 .167 ......... 5 I ft W ash. ......... ....... D a lins 0 2 4 N V G iants 4 2 0 St, T/5uis . . . ft 2 4 Phil........... 0 5 1 G. B a y ..... I'e t r o it . . . . M in n ............. 1 eo I ' .667 667 .400 .300 < p f t r n l 4 2 f t 4 2 0 2 8 0 I 3 I W e s t 4 1 1 L A n c ......... A lla n la Sun D r ................ 2 3 N . O rln s ............ 4 2 ft I 0 5 I .750 .667 417 Oft I p i . o r M2 TS 122 73 152 124 82 12ft 59 150 109 ft.3 161 141 IOO S3 ft 2 108 130 80 142 94 135 106 88 177 linda,v’ a R r* u lla W ash in g to n 24, D a lla s ftft Pittsburgh 33. New Ergland 8 N Y G ia n t s 27 S t L o us 21 N Y . .tnt* 24, n ,ii"n n ri> 3ft M ia m i 24 B u ffa lo 23 A tla n ta IO. G reen B v 9 irip h ia 21, K a n sa s ( ‘Ity ' Ph i! I v ■■ -it 34, San Dingo 2ft i lev eland 23. Houston 17 Los Angeles 15, Cincinnati 1.J Dnn^ o r 3ft, Oakland 23 S-n E r a w is p * 2ft. N e w O rlM i yards by Houston’s Dan St Pastorinl as the Browns posted a 23-17 American Conference victory over the Oilers. Phipps engineered the Browns’ Sh yards on 12 plays the winning drive that was keyed by a 43-yard pass from Phipps to F a ir Hooker. in the The Browns, who led 13-7 at half-time had to scramble bark In fourth quarter after Pastorinl uncorked the 80-yard play on the first play of the second half to Ken Burrough who it at the Cleveland 32 snagged and ran in untouched. D ie Browns struggled back to go ahead 16-14 on Dan Cockroft’s third field goal of the day, a 26-yarder in the third quarter. The Oilers went hack up 17-16 on a 46-yard field goal by Skip Butler with 9:35 left in the game. the following kickoff and went RO yards for the clincher. Cleveland Then took T h e Oilers overcame a • • • • • • • • • • s s ® ^ meet your friends.. d> Jc M M I tie -ii I ^ 1 cross lite Street ^Special FREE FRENCH FRIES W IT H P U R C H A S E O F A N Y S A N D W IC H A T T H E R E G U L A R P R IC E SAVE 26c S P E C IA L G O O D T H R U SAT., O C T . 28+h iii l r . 24th 472-1052 C O M E IN A N D IN S P E C T O U R N E W L O W M E N U P R IC E S . multitude of mistakes to stay in the hall game until the very end. at 3-3 The victory evened Cleveland’s record and dropped Houston further into the A F C ’s Central Division’s cellar with a 1-5 record. ★ ★ * MIAMI (AF) —Caro Yepromlan kicked a 54-yard field goal, his longest ever, and Mercury Morris ran for two touchdowns, giving the unbeaten Miami Dolphins a 24-23 victory ovor the Buffalo Bills Sunday in a National football League game. The Dolphins, now 6-0 and threatening to run away with the Eastern Division championship, trailed 13-7 at half-time despite holding the Bills to one first down and only 30 net yards on 15 plays. The Bills, 2 4. grabbed the lead when defensive linebacker Ken Tee intercepted a pa<* and raced 16 yards unmolested for a touch­ down and John Keyport kicked field goals of 35 and 34 yards after two fumble recoveries. the Despite score, Miami eompletely dominated first-half action with 39 plays for 198 yards But and the Dolphins only score rame after the opening kickoff when Morris swept right end for five yards and the touchdown. downs, first 12 Texas W ins Two — Te xan Staff Photo hy I K E B A R I C B . Facing Off Texas1 rover Bruce Cannon (47) meets Arlcan- sas running back Dickey Morton, who was hop- mg to catch a screen pass in Saturday night's game in Memorial Stadium. The football, how- ever, splashed to the turf. (Related story, page 6.) Soccer Team All Smiles Bv BI CK HARVEY Texan Staff Writer The Texas soccer team got from scrimmaging with over the “ B " the Longhorns awny their weekend, and enjoyed every minute of it. team Texas was matched against tun teams rated below their own second team. Pan American en Saturday and Texas A&I on Sunday. And the scores proved it. The Longhorns won both games by a 10-0 score at Lie F fy'-m *i the second win coming Field, with only four regulars starting, as Texas ran up the most im­ pressive record the Texas Soccer League. in The wins built Texas’ winning string to 59-0-3 in league play for tile last five years, and gave them a 6-0-0 dominating lead in tne FSL division. The Longhorns have now scored 44 goals to 2 for opponents, which adds up to 12 points in league standings. Losjries ra luring the statistics of the tram, tho games did little more than give Texas substitutes experience. Everyone was given a chance to play and score. In­ Pan cluding defense on Saturday. the American Tan American did knock one In for the Ixwtghoms. accidently of course, hut there were no other mistakes in the other nine goal*. Five different Texas players score !. Including three bv record teamer T ern’ Moore, as the Longhorn* gainer! a little* revenge tie Pan American for the 1-1 accomplished in Edinburgh. year last But if Saturday’s in agal D O N T DONT Lock yourself into a perm anent life insurance program UNTIL Y O U 'R E O U T O F C O L L E G E ! 2200 Guadalupe Do anything about life insurance until you see our Modern As Tomorrow C oncept of Insurance! 100,000 IMMEDIATE ESTATE PLAN A G E S 20-24 — $25.25 M O N T H L Y A G E S 25-29 — $28.42 M O N T H L Y • w . -KUB- •, im Mio. itiiiiiMAni cgifAn Ii 0 ■ mf. S W M ! THE PRESTIGE RETAIL X OFFICE LOCATION "ONHIF. VT DRAG" P O k l T C U N I A C T : C A R R N E IM A N H A N K S & P U R Y E A R 476-70 ‘ cash payment or "conv«r*»on c re d it" of 51,000 i i THE JUGGLER it starring K IR K D O U G L A S W B D ., O C T . 25 7:00 and 8:45 p m. Admission 75c HiHel Members FREE! (Pl th# Unetrjrt) of Im ## 2105 San Antonio St. year* I IO The plan's flexible options - end of IO years A t the end of the first IO year period, you may continue th* $100,000 of protection for another tan year p erio d at the rate for your attained ag* , . . renewal is available through aga 54, covering the years dur­ ing which your financial responsibilities are greatest. Renewal p rivileg e Conversion An option of converting part, or all of your protection to a permanent plan is available throughout, and at the end of the IO year period, lf a part of the term is converted to permanent, the remaining portion of the term may be continued in force, and may be renewed through age 54. C ash paym ent or conversion cred it The $1,000 cash payment or "conversion cred it" is G U A R A N T E E D at the end of each IO years. This sum m ay be taken in cash, or it may be used to help p a y for continuing protection . . . whichever you choose. DO Find out the low cost for 100,000 immediate estate Mail Coupon Below (or paste on post card) TO G E T D O IT Y O U R S E L F A P P L IC A T IO N O R F O R A D D IT IO N A L IN F O R M A T IO N M A IL T O To: J A C K H. SU C K E, G E N E R A L A G E N T — Phone 478-6111 A L L A M E R IC A N LIFE K C A S U A L T Y C O . I 120 W E S T 6th St., A U S T IN , TEX. f L [ PLEASE MAIL DO-IT-YOURSELF APPLICATION. P L E A S E MAIL COMPLETE P L E A S E P H O N E ME F O R A N A P P O IN T M E N T . INFORMATION AND RATES. N A M E ................................................................................................................ DATE O F BIR T H ......... A D D R E S S ...................................................................................................................... P H O N E ............. C IT Y .......................................................................................................................................................... 2 ,P P.age 8 M onday, O ctober 23, 1072 T H E D A IL Y T E T A M frth hi U flW / f e w Male Quam O w a Pan American wa* Joking!* simple, Texas A&I was nothing less than a wild guffaw. Only five starters arrived for the beginning, as second team fill-ins were inserted until other regulars could show' up. Only two mote did. But Texas n ii remaining starte scored six goal'-, he made Sa'tird star-weakened against an even Johnny V ail along with one Teimpe. who against Pan Milton Coelho. ed without the i. I Yr- Nwojeki ak rg with *-«.o / a e he j■< and r >r‘ propertv owners. The n statute provides for ♦huso separate elections to satisfy any ormstituf • I questions that may be brought before the Supreme Court. A disagreement among tai .es—J * the property owners passing a resolution and non pr operty owners reject; g it- would result in considerable challenge for the city attorney’s office, I thought freshmen weren’t allowed cat* on campus. Yet I know many freshmen who own cars and park them on campos lots. Ha® there been a new ruling? Vlso, where do von get parking stickers and who is eligible to park on campus lots? I R , There was a new r v :ig In 1970 that now allows any University student to have a car on campus. Previous to 1070, freshmen were not allowed to have a c ir on ramptK. Any University student is #’ ; blo for a parking sticker aa long as ho is a full-time University student and has net been banned from campus because of too many parking violations Parking stickers ar* available at the traffic division office at 21th and San Jacinto streets. Colum bia I I KT 4.98 KALE 2.89 LKT 4.98 SALE 2 89 1 k t 4.98 8 .11.K 2.89 U S T 4.98 SALE 2.89 1 K T 4.98 s u e 2.89 LIST £ 9 8 SALE ^ 5 9 UST 6.98 SALE 4.29 SALE LASTS UNTIL MIDNIGHT SAT. OCT. 28TH OPEN 10:00-MIDNIGHT 6 DAYS A WEEK 478-6119 bankAmericarq nett RECORD TOWN DOBIE CENTER 21 si & G U A D A L U P E FREE PARKING IN THE COVERED DOBIE GARAGE J H E D A IE Y T e x a v M onday October 23, 1072 page 9 (N o c o p y c h a n c e fo r c o n s e c u t iv e is s u e r a te * .) $60 144- sr, ll. •S V ' rn. C A P I T O L C A M E R A R E N T S — e a rn e d lighting m e t­ lenses, projectors, ers, ca lc u lato rs. 476-3581. is, W a n t e d W H Y R E N T - H u y ' D o rm refrig e rato r, copper, Uke new , lee tra y s Included. ( ’all 477-9086. W I 1.1, P A Y W E L L two general idm isMon tickets f i r U T -A & M gam e. for D U A L 1009 T U R N T A B L E . E x c e l lent condition. G rn ch I ca rtrid g e A b argain ! ( all 472-7496 afte r 7 p.m. at $70 M C G O V E R N B E N E F I T g arag e sale, Oct. 28-29, needs donations of any- P fig and < v e ry to mg to sell in g arag e sale '-iring now lo 2908 F re n c h P la c e or ca ll 47* 7946 o r 477 2653 197! cut to air c Unfurnished M o b a ti drapai, carpet, 3 r d D r e , washer dr hor M c " " / 14x5!, I Centre! | St ve and I i assume j .33. A R T I S T d esp e rate ly need'; a co p y of ci B a r c la y s A n a to m y F o r T he A rtist. 478-9493. C a ll la te nights. • W O O I'R O S E P R O D U C T IO N S needs fin- for co n cert promotion. Contact C i r l S ch w a rtz at 1601 R o y a l Crest, 2140 o'.- st .r/ p artn e r ii C a ' M r. F *f 444 5534 or L3! 2497. I 35 m m C A M E R A K o n ic a C-35 range- finder. L is t $109 95. Sell $55.00, L ik e new. C a ll 441-5592 a fte r 5:00 1970 H O N D A lOOOcc w ith helm et, 1200 m iles, ju st tuned $250. 454-4919 afte r 3 p.m. 70 C A M A R O 270. air, auto, p< w cr, AM- , rad ials Intern I- M mags, low m ile s’ Instrum entation, 447-4000. 141-7728, e x ce lle n t condition. * tape, full le a th e r 476-3720. B Y O W N E R . 1971 V W Bus7~AC, rad Its ca m p e r package M a rb le F a lls . 693-4933. (bed. table, sink) I® S P E E D M en 's Sch w inn . V a r s it y E x ­ ce lle n t condition. H e a v y ch ain, fight reflect-ir. be k <• triers $85 Di-1506. M i s c e l l a n e o u s Fu n: N E L S O N 'S G I F T S ; com plete selection Je w e lry ; A fric a n and M e x ican im ports. 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. In d ia n P A R K I N G B Y M O N T H . $12.50. 2413 San Antonio, one block from Cam pus. EA R N $'s W E E K L Y Blood p 'ss’-’ h donor* needed. Casa paid in attend ant®. for $«■", ce*. Phys ciao 'r an 8 - rn.-3 p.m. * es., Th ;rs., Fri., & Sat. O p en 12 noon-7 p.m. W e d . A . ST l f C O D C O M P O N E N T S , IN C ., 4C9 W e r t 6th. 477-3735. T O P C A S H P R I C E S p aid for diam onds, ' cid gold, C a p ito l D iam o n d Shop. 603 Com m dare I v t r y . 476-0178 T R Y S y o u 'll lik e us. A u stin 's most i m piete, used book stores. Bo ok stall L (.103 ll .m e t R o a d , 454-3664. B o o k stall l l C a p ita l P la z a . 451-1432. 71 650cc T R K 'M P H . O n ly 3,000 m ile* E x c e lle n t all around condition — hon- ,- f995 o r best T est ride. 442-1910 ; est: 178-3006 ke.-p tryin g . 1965 F O R D C U S T O M , 6 cy lin d e r stand­ ard shift. R u n s good, clean $300 best Offer. 478-2937, 478-8602 F >: to :x H A S L A R G E S T selection of stereo low est equipment >■ F u ll w arran ty. <'huck 926-4698. a t p r IN F O R M A T IO N about Ja p a n e s e Said w a tch e s a v a ila b le . F r a n c is Lee. 472 8717 a fte r 2 p.m . S K Y D I V E ! Austin Parachute Center For ie formation please call 2” 2 5711 any tim® I.U A K N T O P L A Y guitar, beginner, iced. D re w Thom ason, 478-7331. >d\ 478-2079. P O R T R A IT S , ap plicatio ns, passports — > mie <1 iy. Stu d en t discount. F r e e plc- *"re announcem ent. g irls only M ira n d a Studio, 501 W e st 24th, across Lo s A m is. 476-1638. engagem ent 1 R E G I S T E R E D S I L V E R P e rs ia n m ale, 6 m onths old m u st sell due to a lle r­ ( a ll a fte r 5 90 p.m ., 474- gy $35.00. 1601. ( \ P IL O T . C A M E R A R E N T S — c a m e r ­ lighting, m e t­ lenses, projectors, ers. calcu lato rs. 476-3581. as, F A L L C O N F E R E N C E on metaphv.slcs^ Austin, O ctob er 28-29 F r e e d eta ils: (454- N ick L a w re n c e , B o x 9212, 78766. 1968). A K C W E I M A R A N E R puppies, 8 weeks, shots, pedigrees. 892-0981. S T U D S E R V I C E : ir is h S it t e r , no pafL c r s. pure blood. P ic k of litter. C all 444-4442 a fte r 6 00. T u t o r i n g ■ B S B XEROX COPIES 4c EACH ling!® ro p y rto® red .ct - as 6c each . a 1/ cop!®* en p 'a'n bond p a re r G IN N Y'S C O P Y IN G SERVICE 31-A DOF-'E M A E L 2 "d LEV EL, D O B IE C E N T E R 476-9171 c r 452-8428 v open M c -to ;rs. rig ht* 'til 8 Fri.-Sat, 'til 5. H A I R S H A P I N G , la y e r cuts, shag cuts. Ind ivid ual for split ends. .singeing lashes. B a r b a r a 454-3531-345-3000. lub. T Y P E W R I T E R R E P A I R S . C L E A N IN G ^ s e rv ic e man. lb um nable rates. F r e e p ic k up. A n y tim e 345-1297. E x p e rie n c e d PIANO LESSONS. Children and adults. and popular. C onvenient C la s s ic a l N o rth /C entral. 454-299S a fte r 2. A R E Y O U B O R E D w ith life ' C a ll 452- 6939. D IS C O U N T A U T O P A R T S and repair. '-GO o ff en t a in t, 15o on m ost parts W h ite 's, .3222 E a s t 5th, 385-8822. T i i UNG in m y home. T e rm papers, them es, dissertations. M rs . Peterso n 836-4818. VV/ E N G I N E S P E C IA L IS T S re lia b le E x p e rie n c ed , fast, Cheek o u r discount p ric e s on p a rts and labor. V a lv e Jobs - rin g Jobs - engine o verhauls - stud reseating. F R E E d iag ­ nosis. tests. estim ates, T im in g set a t no charge. A I'o m m u n lty A utom otive C oop erative com pression ° 1 „ « S Sup plier. 836 3171 1970 T R I U M P H B o n n e ville 650."” "good condition, runs great, $950 best offer J e f f a fte r fi p .rn., 477-7917 69 VW', co n vertib le, AC. au tom atic, A M radio, e xcellent condition C all F.M 476-5174 M O B I L E H O M E in co u n try 12x42 2 bedroom , $85/month. C a ll 454-1550. L o s t s F o u n d $1,000 REWARD G r a y fem ale C h lchu ahu a. W e ig h s about 2$4 lbs. w a s w e a rin g a sm all y e llo w c o lla r w ith bells. H e r nam e is " P r i s s y ” She needs sp ecial attention, food and m edication. W ill be 6 y e a rs old Cost $35 OO as a pup but she is as a b aby to US now Lost betw een V illa C a p ri 'and L B . J L ib ra ry '. (TIS» 468-2236 o r (71,3) 465-1225. No questions, R E W A R D b lack, w h ite ) (tan lost from .Saxony A partm en ts, R o y a l C re st D rive 444-6814 afte r 5:30 p.m. for re b im of ca lic o fem ale e at L O S T B E A G L E dog. m a in ly b la c k with w h ite and brown m ark in g s, h e a vy s e t 476-9331. T a g no. 6740. j L O S T N E A R E a s t L iv e O ak and South Congress. M a le Iris h S e tte r w e a rin g b lack c o lla r w ith B e rg s tro m tag*. He- w a rd . 411-8223. I / T S T : ( ’.old n e c k la ce n e a r P M A tm lid- found please ca ll I f , tog T h u rsd a y . 4 ,, -4760. R e v a rd. L O S T ' R e d nigskin w a lle t In o r around to P M A building. P a p e rs va lu a b le ow ner Sandi. 327-2219. H e l p W a n t e d C A R P E N T E R S K E L P E l IS. and nail d rive rs. C a ll 476-1801 o r 266-1183 S a t­ u rd a y and Sun day. E A R N Y O U R M E A L S — dish w asher needed at student dorm 7 a rn -9 a rn M o n .-Frl C ity H ealth ca rd C a ll 477-6371 fo r appointm ent. requ ired' P A R T T I'.T E help w anted n ig ht g u n ­ m an, 30 hours per w eek, no exp eri­ ence n e ce ssary. A p p ly a fte r 5 p m N< ohone c a lls accepted. 2 J N o I 391.8 N orth I,a m a r. Un usu al opportunity for m atu re, flexi­ ble, m a rrie d couple, desirous of a le arn in g exp erien ce w o rkin g p a rt time with 8 a d o l e s c e n t in a resident a1 sri ting Room and board provided while on duty in .addition to s a la r y Requires fine d ay a w eek and 2 w eekends per m onth. Contact Tri® r « tole me'"1 Club f ’ ~ a $36-2150. between 9 - 5 p m . / * . J ii -1 /. ■ - - * a at® > • *t east 2 y«®rs a - to - p art F ir ® A C P pot -ion r - poratiop. C P A preferred V * not r<- quired. Position offers sma wag® but unexcelled opporti.nit'es to qaln train­ ing a "d experience r®-e !y a.> - ». Ap- Phone Drox'mate / ..*•>.• j *rra v e e l' . • ?0 .r$ f G e o rg e V to for a r r L a m e n t / p art o r fell H . E . B . H A S O P E N I N G for experienced tim e g ro ce ry checker- stockers. A pp ly 824 W est J2th 912 1-4 p.m . o r ca ll 47S-518R, W A N T E D D IS H W A S H E R to wi7rk~iunch “ t ! ,V'.eo, kly ;,nci tope lunch. C astle o Crt^'k. M I ] L a v a c a . 472-7315. G I R L S ! W a n t In terestin g w o rk w ith good nay ’ T h e B o d y Shop neerls dancer/w aitresses, fu ll and p a rt time. » all Sam m y e o r D an a fte r 5 p m at 4784438. 3701 N o rth In terreg io n al. ' PART TIME Inform ation T e m p o rary to d istrib ute brochu re* and collect ap artm en t m an ag ers. F le x ib le schedule. Approx. I >-20 hour* w eek fo r -BS w eeks $1 65 p er hour plus auto m ileage allow ance. 454-2537 5789 Airport Blvd. from C H R I S T M A S H E L P ! S t a r t now' 3 e v­ enings and S a tu rd a y . Iziok n e a t and ha ve w heels, $60 per w eek A p p ly 7524 SCIO N orth L a m a r. 207 M o n d ay O n ly 4:30, 6:30 sharp. I FIT It A IT S , ap plicatio ns, p assp orts— me d ay. S tu d en t discount. F re e ire for en g ag e m e n t announcem ents. ; I r :1s only. M ira n d a Studio, OOI W e st 2Uh. a e ss I-es Am is. 476-1638. T H ."I B O O K R A C K , thousands of used paperb acks. T ra d e 2 for I. N o book t m o re th a n 75c. 3709 N o rth In te rre g io n a l. 477-2498. PC to ' • ' E T V s fr rn «• •« v • I kept B A W . 19 local hi.xplt.aU $50 cash. 444-1345. 442-7475. : o \v V I T Z E N I T H stereo, c ir c u la r j speakers. N e w $300. now $100 or best offer. 441-6897. yr ATWOOD KT -Fo ol stereo ENT tuner. Ex ce lle n t cond I UCH. $75. 465-8036. LY • \ S T B A ("TC E x c e lle n t condition. • to M u st se ll $1625 or best offer. In. 'm a li rr t revel® trad e V . UY - .VtCG 452-00(4. C A P I T O L C A M E R A R E N T S — c a m e r­ lighting, m e t­ I'ris e s , projector^, as, ers, ca lc u lato rs. 476-3581, 1963 C H E V R O L E T I L a ir m u st sell, I .-est o ffe r. 477-5224. SANUSI I S T E R E O 2000X. K LH -5 spesk- tape c-s. D u a l 1218 changer, Aka* de c. G ood rn ii ta r. R easo nable. 203 E a s t ; I Huh. 476-6733. 1972 T 'I I T ’M P H Bonn evil I® — 650CO — m ile s. M u st *#!! 441-8874 tinder evenings. R E P O S S E S S E D 4 ' J TO S ake an o ffer— 1972 C h e vro le t Concours ationvv.agrn, AC, only 6 months old. 69 VW V a n In good repair. 1972 Toy- q C o ro n a station w agon. 1965 F o rd '•cup t r ck, in need o f re p a ir -ant ict M rs K . R if le at th® a- r e ' pp- s a ' C PN O ’ U N IO N 476-4676 V P T G E C L O T H IN G - Low’est prices, rbb s. F a ir Shop. 311 E a s t 6th. H ( A K A S u p e r R a t lOOcc, tra ile r E x ­ tra il op race Used o n ly 3 ec lent rn nth-- 477 5969, 472-8974. Ut ’ F IX If « m o v e ca m e ra . P a n - d n o r 10-30 zoom w id e angle, 2 no rm al, ac- ' ces,series SHO. C a ll D a v id Keene. 5:00- 7 476-0219. D IS C O U N T S H O P S tereo *■ TV « Su.ny T V ’ s— Color. P A W * ■ • Son y stereo com p acks • Qual to bat k our sales M a r in Ret till n e a r Co m p'.nent* Kenw ood, S a sui, A D P . K T H D ual, T e a '’, A R Including A k a ’. and a CU, - I Cf >P*«sd r/ay £a*E A 2 A I 0937 r O CA P IT O I CA M E R A R E N T S —. c amer- ligh Inc. met- Ion *es, projectors, a.*. c a lc J i to TS a76-3581. 1970 H O N ' >A SOCB. E x ce lle n t condition. 3.400 rn lies. C a ll 178-0749 a fter 5 pm w e e k d ay s T t o ’~ s s ; I .Bf A T, J.U K T e rm s. 472-716 fiberglass. flail gear, : /to If. VV (doublet, S e c re ta ry 478-8209 B r a s s beds w a t e r colors, W ic k e r stand, c h a ir s ). B ra s s & o f F e a r ! id d ow n de ks B o o k ca ie (o ak ), (ro cker, sewing Iron M o th e r ;hie . Slant- (o a k ). Bentw ood chain*, in la y hen 478-3346 8 a.m . - 5 30 p m. Mon. - Sat. 2 r ie l vt it ■ t L a m a r B lvd . r..atween V .. st 5th and 6th Strei t. 72 C H E V R O L E T V E G A . M u st sell H as tran sm ission . R ad io , AC, a u to m a tic new. M ake offer. 452-4894 G I R L S C L O T H E S sale— clo thing fo r I m season, sizes, types. A ccessories. 2105 F o re s t T r a il. 10:00-6 OO. F O R S A L E c x v r -genie used ane month also used w a sh in g m achine. C a ll af­ t e r 5:30 p.m . 288-2527. P H O T O G R A P H IC 85mm j D u rst M-35 p ie * d ark room a c ce sso r- 0 clie n t condition, ( ’all Jo h n 472 E n la r g e r : Ic . 2678, M O T O R C Y C L E — 1970~ Ja w a ~ (b y C Z ) t se ll $150. C a ll 441 36C3 r, cc a fte r 5:30. CLOTHES: \/2 price CLEARANCE SALE tops start er $2. pants at $3. FRESH PANTS 10:30 6 : : $ VZ. 24 I '’WINS C O N T IN E N T A L IO .■ml c a s e hardened ch ain and I U $85. 472-6692. E x c e lle n t condition. speed I lock M U S T S E L L B Y 1st. 1970 Opel r a lly e " , 4 speed* d isc brakes, rad ial tires, . b k $1725, m ak e offer. 454-6655 b 451 2531. TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD C A L L 471-2544 Paee IO Monday, October 23, 1972 T H E DAILY TEXAN S e r v i c e s P R IN T IN G • typVg • type setting X E R O X IN G 4 C sing:® copy rate quick copy ® reductions • quality work • Inc'o?, dir. ertaliens • binding • 'atm# day service L E C T U R E N O T ES ® -41 cou,Dei • quality class notes • For informa^on call 477-3641 A I Available at I. D. A . C o. 901 W e s t 24th 477-364 Te x a n C l a s s if ie d A d s ''A # I 5 3 0 4 M O N . T H R U F R I . 8 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 F o r R e n t 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 . I I A p a r t m e n t s ^ ^ r ^ WE RENT AUSTIN Your time is valuable Our services free PARAGON PROPERTIES 47 2 - 4 1 7 1 M E N T . B E A U T I F U L E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T - Including location. M a n n a K a i Apts. 405 E 31 472-2147. e x tra s M a n y B E A U T I F U L I B E D R O O M ap artm e n ts ju st 6 blocks from U T L a w School b u lly carpeted, fu lly paneled, full kit- chon and m ore. P lu s ele. B a c c a r a t 3703 H arm o n . 453-7190. T H E C A S T I L E . W H E R E I he unusual is usual. F u ll kitrhen, sh ag carpet. gas g rills in p icn ic a re a . p riv a te sauna n il ££,eS L lo catlo n - ' Vest L y n n at W e st 9tn. 477-7 794. G re a t Location THE CARRELS Larga, carpeted, on® bedroom ^ c cable, disposal, sunder*. shaft!® campus, covered parking, O n ’y I vacan cy 2812 N uace* 472 6497 S P A C IO U S I bedroom ap artm e n t, avail- ioasP UU end of M a y «ino J ? ' shuttle pool, Sttt.8 0 r ia * eb-' tri<\ 4412 A ve n u e A, , flish y n-N r . IsoYi, L all 4o4-1360. AD VAN TAGE POINT APARTMENT LO CATO RS T op flig h t a p a rtm e n t locato rs se rvin g you TH F P R IC F >5 R G H T A partm ent* ranging from $ I 19.50 r REE I I I W e s t A n d e r 'on I an®, S i® 208 454-7566 FREE RENT FOR OCTOBER wo bedroom* tv.--, bath*, m * :d and andor, car ® TV re ar came * on --.A. I a b t? *64 50/rr— a LA FIESTA APARTMENTS 400 F » st 30‘h 4 7 - son I® Font Apartm ent* ar® just beautiful tor *tud®nt* because of the excellent location. O n shuttle bus route just off cam p..: and B IL L S PA ID . inc o,d® many extras. A L L 803 W e s t 28th 472 6480 TAI SHAN Excellent price tech $139-$169. arg® located, to! y carpeted kit, Dishwasher & Dispo­ sal and more. luxury apartm ents. W e l : for C om e ©ut to 1400 East 51st. 453-3306 THE BLACKSTONE $64.50/month A p a rtm en t ’ vinq Vs b'och from Cam pus In d ivid -*' a p p lia n t * m atched with com patible roommates 2910 Red River 476-5631 A Paragon Property S U C A S A : One bedroom lu x u ry a p a rt­ m ent on shuttle. A v a ila b le N o ve m b e r 1st. $159.50. 451-2268. T A K E O V E R L E A S E : furnished e ffici­ e n c y a t R iv e r H ills. $135 m onthly, shuttle route. C a ll R e g in a 10-6. 477-5196. R O O M A N D one bedroom a p artm e n t a v a ila b le . A p a rtm e n t w ith CA-CH, fu l­ ly carpeted, built in kitchen, pool, walk- to cam pu s, a ll bills paid. 311 E a s t 31st. 478-6776. L A R G E 2 bedroom^ w ith kitchen. 3 entrances, accom odates 4 , $225 plus e le c tric ity . A nother for 2 a t $225 b ill* paid Un usu al. 1902 Nueces. 476-3462. 476-8683. W A L K larg e 2 bedroom, $220. Hills paid. R iv e r Oaks, 3001 R ed I . A W school R iv e r . 472-3914. L A R G E e fficie n c y $115 P ius e le c tric ity . , I ool, nip conditioning, carpet, panel- I big, no pets. Huntington V illa , 46th at : Avenue A. 454-8903 W A L K T O ( A M B U S . 2 g irl efficie n cy, $4.j each. One girl e fficiency. $75. In ­ cludes utilities, reference*. Be tw e e n 9 a .rn - 4 p.m ., 478-9873 O N E B E D R O O M duplex, n e a r to shut- . .V .° XTutf>> ^ plus e le c tricity, 454- 4441, 4.>4-9914, a fte r 5 p m R E A S O N A B L E R EN T LA R G E S T U D IO A P A R T M E N T S THE BRITTANY 300 Twitter®** 465-0456 POSADA DEL NORTE 454-1154 7200 C aval I A p a r t m e n t s , U n f . O N E , T W O . B E D R O O M . T H R E E Spacious, p rivate, quiet ap artm ents. L a r g e pool arid grounds. $130-up, 452- 4011. B O C A C H IC A A partm ents, two bed­ inlet to L a k e A ustin. N o room, on undergraduates, children. 827-0479. UNIVERSITY AREA SANTA RITA APARTMENTS 2? 9 Rio G fft'O " I b e d r 1 apts — $82.50 Double — $57.50 Everything * ,rn:shed 472-7239 H o u s e s , F u r n . R E S O R T L I V I N G — Quite co u n try at mosphere, L a k e Austin, 15 m inutes cam pus One bedroom m obile homes CA-CH $100 2 bedrooms $120 to $130 i No dogs 227-1891, 327 115], R o o m m a t e s W a now Lav* I & 2 bedroom apartments for rent N eeded m ale two bedroom a p artm e n t at En g lish A ir e - spacious ap artm e n t C all S teve, home 444-7142. w o rk 453 9367. room m ate fo r ESTRADA APARTMENTS 1801 S. Lake hora Blvd. 442-6668 C O U P L E O R two sto ry a p a rtm e n t Lot,- of p riv a c y . fem ale liv e to In O nly $75 month. C a ll L yn n 892-3057. T H E D O E L H O U S E . 1-1 townhouses. S w e e n e y L a n e T re ­ mendous closets. B ra n d new. 454-4691 M a n o r R o ad REAGAN SQUARE TOWNHOUSES Northeast, 2— |'/j 7111 G ran d C an yon r " private back yard. B ' ;k fireplace*. (JH I * e j. 454 4691 M A L E R O O M E R needed: 1107D W e st 25th Stree t. Approx. $75 p er month, bills paid. S T A IG H T M A L E needed. Own bedroom room m s *e lu x u ry 2 bed room ap artm ent S R shuttle route $^0 no deposit. 447-2156. after IO p m student I 1 M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to share rgt w ° bedroom ap artm ent $77 50. 478- o T R A r r .H T F E M A L E ro o m m ate need­ ed by N o ve m b e r I with 3 other girls R iv e r H ills $63.75. 20 or older. C al! lane. 411-8754 Vt T r IT T N W AT.K I N G nf un ■‘T s ity , this lovely com plex Is Just p erfect for U T students One bedroom furnished ap artm e n ts w ith e x tra * A ll Lo s A rcus, 4307 A venu e A. distance 4 o4-1494. L l i X U R Y O N E bedroom and effleien- P a r k clos, p riv a te halconies-patio* P la c e A p a rtm en ts H ig h w a y 290 E a s t - » I B e rk m a n 451-4691 * S T R A IG H T F E M A L E 28 seek* sim ila r ) (xury ap artm en t own he a m om , $109 'n co ve r* everything , 454- Sharp type Call- W a n t t o B U Y , SELL OR RENT? A K C Afghans C ham pion p ed igree show' q u ality, below pet p rice s Good hom es o nly $125-$150, Gibson Co-Classic g u itar N ot one scratch , $125. 285-4503. E lg in . O M A O N E L E F T , 2 bedroom , 2 bath lu x u ry ap artm ent, located acro ss the street .amenities r a m ie s , m aid service, a ll hills paid, from $200 2910 R e d R iv e r 476-5631 from all APA nT ME NTS , FU Rill; BROADMOOR Luxury Apartments perfect for University Students and Faculty. S T A T T U T O R IN G . A l! business math. O R E p rep aratio n . 451-4557. M A T H . B u sin e ss, lib e ra l cation m a jo rs o ur p erienced ce rtifie d reasonable. M a th o n am ies. 452-1327. arts, sp ecialty. te ach e r.’ edu­ E x ­ V e ry and E X P E R T T U T O R I N G o rg an ic Intro du cto ry p olitical science, history. R u ssia n . C all 441-2170 afte r 6:00 p.m . ch e m istry, In M any extras, including full kitchen, patios or balconies, break­ fast nooks, some wet bars, 3 pools, 3 clubrooms, on shuttle b us route and A L!. B'l.LS PA ID . 1200 B R O A D M O O R $235 AND DOWN 454-3885 M A T .E R O O M M A T E needed to help \v,th o r take o ve r leasn T w o bedroom furnished ap artm ent. 478-4793 D u p l e x e s , F u r n . ( B O S E IN . N ic e opp bedroom duplex shag ca rp e t throughout. $125 no w a te r 1409R T r a v is H eight* nod ga* paid B lv d C a ll 454-6741. fourplex C arp e t* F U R N I S H E D one bedroom in N E In kitchen. ( A-< TI. w ater, ga* cable $135 454-7980, evening* drape*, b uilt R o o m s T E X A N D O R M _ 1905 - 1907 N ueces F a n . Sp ring Sem esters. $46.60 p er mo D a ily m aid service, ce n tral air, co m ­ pletely stogie rooms, parking, refrig e rato r, hot plates. T w o blocks from Campti* Co-ed P FSI DENT M ANAGERS 478-5 ll 3 rem odeled. Ai*o a va ila b le S I N G L E A N D double room*, kitchen A C m aid 2411 R io G rande. 477-3671' 202 W e st 3i st. 472-2368 R O O M F O R R E N T .- S in s . M ed ical P a r k w a y 2 ' lose to cam pus 451-3990 4411 S h a re house R o o m & B o a r d G R 1-5244 HIGHEST q u a l it y t y p in g S U S A N ’S 'Y R ,N G S F R V I P P for Classified Ad E X I In The M A L E \ A( A N C IE S . Coed-apt d orm : 19 m eals per week style I W o rk from cam pu * $135.00 per month. Ca ll 474-1761 or 474-4630. D a i l y T e x a n m : O d . : '/ . , ’ " '4 N ;:< l / ' t o i t o ' T y p i n g Jus} Norfh of 27th & Guadalupe W QtiJU Jbw \vU A L. M .B A. Typing , MultllltliLng. Bind in g The Complete, Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to .Sp* 1 language, tailored students. for ing theses and dissertations. tho need* of U n iv e rs ity ii keyboard equipm ent science, and engineer­ Rhone G it 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em p hill P a r k R O Y W . H O L L E Y : PRIN TER 4 76-3018 Typesetting, Typing, P rin tin g , Bind in g BF. A l ’T I F ! L T Y P I N G , theses, dissert tai u.u«. ii -sc. F o rm e r legal s e c re ta ry , M rs. Anti; my, 454 3079. S T A R K T Y P I N G Ex p e rie n ced these*. t bv op.s, I R . ’s etc. P rin tin g and la ity : technical. C harlen® dr-, Binding. Sp< S tark . 453-6218. V I R I i N r a Si ’H N E I D E R T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . G r uluate d crgr.id l it • bib, Koenig U in.'. T elephone 465-7205, and Un- typing printing, bind’ng. M V U V , .'M A ! V.(>< :•!» T y p in g S e rvlc ® I '-’sen ght ava llah l® . '.orI S ' u:set T ra il or 4-12-A545 • ' i- • : rn ;• .per* , these*, •. r Cha rg® ' N ’ ti 892-073.’ -1'' ■ A rt d ‘Cf honored tx. CROCKETT c7 a 1 a " * ‘ ,’ rr c t, e • -®'» typ ag of t ue *1 p iii 453-7987 rr-.q R . . . . B O B B Y E D I L A F I E L D . I B M S e le c trto G ” s < x perl' nee 443- . , ’ , y !Ju*J Norfh of f a f u D * YES, we do type Freshman themes. . ” • v * - t r . t w e b •to G ” 2-7671 ip h itl r o c k F " A r E T A I L 452 4290 > I ’ : m e r i r r r ® '• /page V A ■'■•to P R O F E S S I O N A L , it<• ■-. * d in e r t Atinna. ' s-baiding. ' e in. 478-8113, and report* 2.*Z>7 Hi -fix. 472-4715. ' ' briefs, I B M S e le ctrio , report*. P rin tin g , binding. B r . L A U R Mrs s y r O r J I* rial Sera ice* e rv lc ® on • • papers P I U N T I N G - M U L T I K e yb o ard s •e O' e rlng i p u le r ’s / P R ’s • I B M Selcotu- * • • P ic a and Trim s P a p e rs de And ru m s ' r U n iv e rs ity J m f TCC. • I .aug >.*K®g ....... * • alish # I''.story • Ft .'.-tem snit E x e c u tiv e s / E lit e types Resum e* and an tom prr*nnnHzed I N F O U M A T I t> puss rl'o rs fo r ' at r ratio n. F O R if> P R H 'F S - - C A ! L A L ! T I D — 444 655* W O O D 'S T Y P I N G R! it V I C E IO y e a rs '■'to -to v " ... dissertations. e t c . I T in tin g , b in d i n g s . 453-6090 M A R J O R I E A N I B M typewrit D E L A F I E L D — ’need typ- tions, lo ­ 1st; them es, sum es. p rin tin g Y o u r .......... , i* tion our goal. BankAmerlcard / Master C h a ra * honored 442 70o8 these*, d T ER R Y 'S T Y P IN G S E R V IC E r - .a-V'to, Report* * : *• to ' distorts? n* . t e as . «e-m paper* . - IB M Seiectric C a ro n Robbon - p ic a / I .- * p - e -a - v. a- - irr - C a / 444 • : or 442 4222, Just North of ? 7*h Si Guadafup# ST. CHARLES and GEORGETOWN SQUARE APARTMENTS $ 1 2 2 . 0 0 Townhouses, I St 2 bedroom apartments. Close to schools and shopping centers Furnished or Unfurnished 4320 -4330 Bull C reek Road 452-7797 453-4959 SmV! deposit. EL CORTEZ and EL PASADO $ 1 2 2 . 0 0 I & 2 bedroom Apartments Furnished and Unfurnished Close to Highland Mall and IH 35, Students welcome. Shuttle Bus One Block MO! and 1105 C layton Lane small deposit 453-7914 A L L N E W XXIV FLATS to?: 5 Palma Plaza - at West Lynn - I bile. off Enfield 2 BEDROOM $ 2 0 0 . 0 0 p us electricity •Shuttle bus — Cab's TV —- Fully equipped kitchens Contemporary chrome & glass furnishings 476-9472 476-9712 LA FONTANA $119.00 O ne and two bedrooms. Furnished & Unfurnished Close to Hancock and C apital Plaza Shopping centers, Easy access to IH 35. Students and families welcome. 1220 and 1230 East 38>A Street small deposit 454-6738 Use Texan Classifieds Advertise To For Housing Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS T y p i n g 476-7581 118 Neche* M B A. Typing . M u ltilith ing , Binding The Comp’eta Professional FULL-1 IME Fypmg Ser/ic® RESUMES with or without picture:. Ph one G R 2 3210 and G R 2 7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k BH !■• m I s II F P O RT.'* and R easonable. M rs. F ra s e r, 476-1317, la w not»g. E X P E R I E N C E D s e cre ta ry w ould lik e typing. 45c p er page. 926- fo rm e r 5136. TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 Chess Lecture Held Dobie Mall Site of Simultaneous Play of advice and never anything but games. study entire master "M y third ru’e for improving your chess game is to copy down every game you ever play, even a Saturday match with your girlfriend,” be said. confidence your Have resources, look at citess ob­ jectively, and never, never play speed chess, Acres siad. in “ Bobby Fischer told me last year that if he had it to do over, he’d never play speed chess. And he never w ill play it again.” take to play You must yourself seriously chess, he asserted, and when you begin to understand what the game is about, your game w ill improve rapidly. He added. " I found my game In a Greenville, Term., bus station In 1961.” During the entire length of his chess describing lecture, Acres moved piece* around, Acres suggested positions, defenses and strategies. that chess players read Logical Chess by Cherenar. “ It ’s like a circus,” he said. "You can read it once, twice, three times. "Confidence is my secret," can beat added, "I Acres anybody.” Janet Reed, official Dobie hostess for Acres, .said she ufas impressed by Acres’ outgoing personality. She said through her that conversation with Acres she has discovered "a very sensitive, high-strung young man.” Acres, orphaned as a small child, became a master at 17 and recently advanced his rating up to 2,399, almost the level of senior master. He Is rated 27th in a rating list of U.S. players. In addition, he is the world record holder for simultaneous exhibition play, having won 114 games played at a Louisiana State F a ir exhibition match. By MARTY PRUNTY Texan Staff Writer Moving words and thoughts like chess pieces, Jude Acres, U.S. Chess Federation master, carried an attentive audience through a rapid theoretical progression of chess positions and possibilities Frid ay afternoon, prior to his chess exhibition in Dobie M all. Strolling in 15 minutes late for his speaking engagement, Acres said. "You see Bobby Fischer has taught me a thing or two. "M y first rule for improving your chess game Is to always play with if you don’t have to,” Acres said. "B e incredibly accurate.” 'class'...even In a low voice he added. "Say to yourself every day....I am weak, Fischer is strong.” Turning from his magnetic display the chess board audience, he questioned. " If you had a king and a queen and I had a king, could you checkmate me in four moves?” to favorite Methodically he began placing pieces on the board, describing h I s and challenging his listeners to think and as quickly "decide which move given you the most possibilities ” as possible positions HLs second afraid to lose." rule— "N ever be "Fisch er has los* thousands of games.” he said, "but be learns from his losses and he knows where his mistakes were. A loss isn’t worth anything if you don’t understand and profit from it." everyone, Acres, who describes himself as a ruthless chess player, added that grand masters, make terrible mistakes. "The obiect is to watch for your •pponent’s mistakes and make lim pay in blood.” even said Never take advice from anyone Aeres. but masters.” that most people "Rem em ber teach other people to play chess. so that they w ill have somebody to beat." Acres that new players be skeptical of every bit suggested UNIVERSITY OMBUDSMAN Students or faculty members with University administrative or other University related problems should contact Hect­ or De I>eon, Ombudsman. Union Building 344. 471-3825. Judo Acres, U.S. Chess Federation Master, lectures an enthusiastic audience Friday on improving chess gamesmanship. "Always play with class' . . . even if you don't have to,” he said. Describing himself as a ruthless chess player, 'the object is to watch for opponen+s' mis­ Acres to'd the audience that takes and make him pay in blood.' In the chess competition that followed in Dobie Mall, 12 of the 45 qualifying players won checkmates against Ac^es. 7 Am Weak, Fischer Is Strong' TO PLACE A TEXAN Zales knouus horn to court a bride. UUith the diamonds she most uuants! 12 Checkmate U.S. Master " I had never played he was "certainly happy to w in." in rn tournament, so I really had no idea of my abilities,” Ende said. He described the tournament as "work under pressure" and "v e ry different from just playing with a friend.” Acres conceded on the 31st move of their game, smiled and shook his hand. All winners who by skill or checkmated Acres f o r t u n e received a $20 gift certificate from Dobie Center. Those who drew were given a $10 certificate. "The money was unimportant,” Ende said, "A fter all, in chess the object is to win.” T h e P a n t T r e e 2522 Guadalupe A l l new m e rch an dise! J E A N S $1.50-$3.50 C O R D S $2.50-$5.00 In 45 Games of Twelve competitors 45 qualifying players won check­ mates against Master Jude Acres In Frid ay’s Chess Exhibition at Dobie others Center. managed a draw. Four in the Winners rompetition were Andrew' Fono, Larry H ill, Horta C. Pairelras, Nelson Ford, Thomas Nieland, Keith Zim- m e r rn a n n , Edward DeMoll, Robert Musumeri. Jam e eLans. Mike Jof-ke, John Martin, John Maynard and John Bishop con­ ceded their games with a draw'. a junior DeMoll, the University, was the first to topple Acres, who was playing all 45 competitors simultaneously. at " I was surprised," said DeMoll, " It a a real experience to play someone like Acres." He explained tha* Acres had taken a look at their board, saw' DeMoll s position and walked off. later, He re'urnel a moment knocked over his king and said "good game " Maurice a graduate Ende. sin.lent at the I n,versify, said CLASSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 MUSIC HATH CHARMS TH AT SO O T H E THE S A V A G E BREAST SOOTHE A SAVAGE! MAKE MUSIC FRO M Y A M A H A PIA N O S Y A M A H A G U IT A R S B A N JO S B A L A L A IK A S M A N D O L IN S D U LC IM ER S K A LIM B A S T A M B O U R IN E S REC O RD ERS H A R M O N IC A S K A Z O O S $845.00 59.50 67.50 44.00 32.50 24.00 15.75 4.25 1.95 1.00 .25 Ju st Received Large Shipment Guitar Strings — Large Variety LE A T H E R BELTS $3.50 A ll brand name s t W E SELL MUSIC MAKERS! Pianos Available For Rent M A LE — O PEN 10:00-5:30— LA ND LU BBER A M ST ER M U S IC 1624 L A V A C A 478-7331 Near the Campus p r e s e n t a t io n o f s t u d e n t i d . g o o d f o r 10% DISCOUNT o n A . I PURCHASES Give her a 13-diamond Two- gether* bridal set. Interlocking 14 Karat gold d esig n Constellation bridal set, 9 diam o n d s 14 Karat gold $229 95 s250 Enlace brid.!' set, 11 diamonds 14 Karat gold $325 V .W 5-1 uvi)r O u i | ( • Z * — CAswxn C n a r g - • h , " - A r n m c r r f • C h in e * • T i " conTcn icn i t c t i to bur. "SFA! FC ® jn m w E ko ti^ b o n s cnfeged. SANT NA rn lif e f •CC-, J CARAVANSERI CAT STEVENS CATCH BULL AT FOUR M O N D A Y -W ED N ESD A Y ^-experim ent BOSI Guadalupe, 4 7 7 - 5 9 5 1 NEED W E SAY M O RE? rn * * ' SUMMER BREEZE J a CLOCKWORK ORANGE MOVIE SOUNDTRACK Beverley Braley Tours-Travel ANNOUNCES their new location iin LAVACA SQUARE 302 WEST 15 th, SUITE IOO W e invite you to visit us. Free parking available. P h o n e N u m b e r 476-7231 and Mailing Address P.O. Box 7999 CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS E U R O P E in E X C L U S IV E L Y for Members of the STUDENTS ■ FACULTY • STAFF of the UNIVERSITY of TEXAS and their Immediate Families IIT A L Y l FRANCE SWISS DALLAS-GENEVA-DALLASi (DECEMBER 25-JANUARY 8 15 DAYS . v i a C a p ito l A i r li n e ! S t r e t c h J e t i $27900 CHARTER PACKAGE EUROPE - On Your Own D A L L A S - G E N E V A - D A L L A S *219 December 25-Jenuary 8 ...1 5 Day* D e i g n ed to r the person w h o w ent* to ta l fre e d o m a n d fle x ib ility to t h a t he m a y visit o ne or m a n y of th e G r e a t C a p it a l* o f E u ro p e . En­ joy *ig h t*e e in g in Eu ro p e on your own w ith no to u r g u id e* o r large cro w d * to ruth yo u th ro u g h th e p la c e * you h a v e co m e to te e . T O U R I N C L U D E S : je t tra n s p o rta tio n fro m D a lla*— G e n e v a — D ad a*. • R o u n d - Irip • D e lic io u s m eal* and fr e e c o ck ta ils serve d d u rin g flig h t. • H o te l a c c o m m o d a tio n * — ho tel on yo ur la st n ig h t in G e n e v a , KC d o u b le o c c u p a n c y . • T ra n sfer from y o u r h o te l upon d e p a r tu re to a irp o rt. • B a g g a g e h a n d lin g and tio *. • In te rn a tio n a l d e p a r fu r e tax A N D , N EVER A N Y R E G IM E N T A T IO N YOU DRiYE CAR OPTION D e sig n e d fo r th e person w ho w e n t* to ta l m o b ility th a t a c a r w ith un­ lim ite d m ile a g e ca n p ro v id e . A . D e c e m b e r 2 6 - Ja n u a ry i ............ 7 D a y * 2 person* p e r co r ...................................................... $ 65 00 p e r person 3 4 person* D er c a r p a e o n s o e r c a r 8 D e c e m b e r 2 6 - Ja n u a ry 8 ................ $ 43.00 p e r person ...................................................... $ 33.00 p e r person .1 4 D a y s ............. 2 persons p e r ca r 3 4 I N C L U D E S : persons p e r c a r persons p e r c a r ................................................ ,..$ 1 2 9 .0 0 p e r person ................................ . . . . $ 86.00 p e r person ...................................................... $ 65.00 p e r person R R e n ta l c a r fo r 7 d a ys or 14 days, w ith u n lim ite d m ile a g e , b a s e d in Sw itier- on a m inim um of 2 p a ssen gers in c a rs as d e s ig n a te d la n d . • C o m p re h e n s iv e lia b ilit y en d collisio n 0 Ski or lu g g a g e rack. 0 Sn o w tires on re a r w h eels en d ch ain*. in su ra n ce. Based on R e n a u lt 12, O p a l A sco n e , K a d e t t e R e lle (S w itz e r la n d ). A ll o f th e a b o v e cars a re full-size, fo u r- p a ssen g er cars in E u ro p e . V W Buses a re a v a ila b le fo r six p assen g ers a t $55.00 p e r person w ith 1,000 fr e e K ilo m e te rs fo r 7 d a ys and e t $95.00 p e r person w ith 1,500 fr e e K ilo m e te r* f o r 14 d a y *. A ll a ir fa re * are a pro ra ta share o f the to ta l a irp la n e cost a n d are b a s e d on 84 seats from C a p it a l. The price p e r person it tubject to inereate* if a ll the seat* on re s p e c tiv e ch arters are n o t fille d . The cost on the a ir f o r b o th d e p a rtu re s is $250.00 per person. The la n d cost is $26.00 per p e r­ is $3.00 pnr person. Persons e lig ib le fo r tra v e l w ill be tho se who ar# members of the affinity group for at least son, and th e a d m in istra tio n ch a rg e six m onths p rio r to d e p a r tu re d a te, and the m em b er* o f th e ir im m e d ia te fam ilie s. SKI UNLIMITED, INC. A Division of BEVERLY BRALEY TOURS TRAVEL p O B O X 7999 A U S T I N , T E X A S 78712 P H O N E t- 5 12/476-7231 G e n tle m e n : E n clo se d p !ease as p a y m e n t f o r ................................. n u m b e r o f persons. M in im u m d e p o s it $100 fin d $ ....................... , as d e p o s it ? ie fu ll r p e r person and an a d d itio n a l $ tOO d e p o s it re q u ire d fo r e a c h o p tio n a l to u r. M a k a ch eck o r m on ey o rd e r p a y a b le to S K I U N L I M I T E D , I N C , .............................. .......................................................................... ............... .... N a m e S t r e e t .................. .......................... Z ip C i t y ............. R e tu rn this re s e rv a tio n insure fliq h t s p a c e . R e s e rv a tio n * lim ite d . R a te s b a s e d on d o u b le o c c u p a n c y . O u r p ric e s a re based on ra*es and ta riffs in e f fe c t es o f the d a te p rin te d h e rein . S K I U N L I M IT E D , I N C . reserves the rig h t to a d ju st to u r p rice s in e v e n t o f ra te and ta r iff ch a n g e s o v e r w hich im m e d ia te ly to it has no co n tro l. ................... P h o ne S ta te IS N O T U N I V E R S I T Y S P O N S O R E D . . . T H I S C H A R T E R U n d e rs ig n e d does h e re b y re le a se th e c h a rte r d ir e c to r and the U n iv e rs ity of Texas, th e ir d ire c to rs , o ffic e rs a n d m em b ers, fro m a n y and all m a n ­ n e r of causes o f a c tio n , a cco u n ts, c o n tro v e rsie s, d a m ag es, claim s and dem ands, law o r in e q u ity a g a in s t said o rg a n iz a tio n s, or a g a in st th e d ire c to r*, o ffic e rs a n d m em b ers o f e ith e r, b y reaso n o f a n y personal in ju ry, or d e 'a y , or loss o f o r d a m a g e to b a g g a g e , o r any o th e r personal p ro p e rty , w hich m a y a ccru e du rin g o r b y rea so n of p a rtic ip a tio n . P a r tic i­ is an p a n t, and th e a c c o m p a n y in g p a rtic ip a n ts , c e r tify th a t he or she in fa m ily m em ber, or a stu d en t, fa c u lty or s ta ff m em b er o f im m e d ia te th e U n iv e r s ity ot Texas. D a t e ................................ S ig n a tu re I. C H A R T E R P A C K A G E EUROPE O N Y O U R O W N I D e c e m b e r 25-Januery 8— IS Days— $279 per person I I. O P T IO N A L TO U RS A . S E E E U R O P E — S E L F D R I V I I. I- 1 De ce m be r 26 -January I — 7 D a y * M 2 persons par ear— $65 p a r person |~! 3 persons per ear— $43 per person 4 persons per c a r— $33 par person 2 J~1 De ce m be r 26-Jenuery 8— 14 D ays 2 person* per car— $129 par person j 3 persons per c a n — $ 86 per person ' l l 4 persons per ear— $ 65 per person 8 S X I C H A M O N I X , F R A N C E — G r a n d R o t C o n d o m in iu m 1. ! D e ce m be r 26-Janu ary I — 7 D a y s I | 2 person* per condom inium — $153 p a r pars 3 person* per con d om in iu m — $127 p a r person 4 persons per con d om in iu m — $118 p a r person 2. n Jan u a ry l-J a n u a ry 7— 7 D ay* ! 2 person* per condom inium — $136 par person I ! 3 person* per con d om in iu m — $116 per person I | 4 person* per condom inium — $109 p e r person C . L O N D O N — P A R IS I | Dee. 26-Jan. D. R O M E — F L O R E N C E I — 7 D a y*— $295 per person 1. |~T Dec. 26-Jan. 2. | | Dec. 26-Jan, 7— 13 D a y *— $300 per person I — 7 D a y s— $215 per person E. M O S C O W — L E N I N G R A D I. I | Dee. 26-Jan. I — 7 D a y *— $385 par parson P. G E N E V A I j Doe. 26-Jan. 2— 8 D a y s 7 N ig h t s — $90 00 parparson IT — E W T — I - 9 -1 9 7 2 K L M CHRISTMAS VIA 747 H O U S T O N — G E N E V A — H O U S T O N D E C E M B E R 26 - JA N U A R Y 4 D E C E M B E R 26 - JA N U A R Y 9 to GENEVA GROUP SPACE SWITZERLAND $344' ° plus $3.00 departure tax ICELANDIC CHRISTMAS GROUP SPACE to LUXEMBOURG D A LLA S - L U X E M B O U R G - D A LL A S D EC EM BER 23 - JA N U A R Y 8 D EC EM BER 26 - JA N U A R Y 12 O O 321 plus $3.00 departure tax 306O O plus $3.00 departure tax Friars Admit Eight Into Honorary Club By TOM RICHARDS The F ria r Society, oldest men’s honorary organization on campus, inducted eight new members Sunday. the The new members, Inducted at a breakfast Joe C. in Thompson Conference Center, are Dick Benson, Samuel Biscoe, Ronnie Franklin, Sandy Got- tesman, Jam es Ouleke II, Arthur Munneke, Alan W eil and W illiam Young. "m ake to To be eligible for membership, a a student must significant contribution the University and maintain high academic standards,” said Sam M illsap, abbot of the F ria r Society. Abbot is the equivalent of president. Benson is the Student Govern­ ment president and a member oT the University Council. Biscoe, a senior law student, la president of the Student B a r Association and a member of the Rock Garden Serene. Eternal. Beautiful. That's how ArtCarved has styled Its diamond rings. And ArtCarved has done it in many exciting ways. So you'll find an ArtCarved ring that's right for you. Your fashion sense. Come in and see our ArtCarved rock garden today. odrt Carved Law School Admission Com* mittee. Franklin is chairm an of th* Texas Student Publication* Board and a member of Phi E ta Sigma, n a t i o n a l honorary scholastic fraternity. in elected Gottesman Is die Junior class the College of president Business Administration, a past president of Silver Spurs and vice­ recently was president of Student Government. Guleke was the recipient of ths C a c t u s Outstanding Student Award in 1969 and is former co­ chairman of the Student Com­ mittee on Orientation Procedure*, 1968-1969. Munneke is a third-year law student, secretary of the law school’* Student B a r Association and a member of Omicron Delta K a p p a , national leadership fraternity. W ell. also a third-year Jaw student, is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and a Rhodes Scholarship finalist. Young, a graduate student of the L B J School of Public Affairs, graduated cum laude in 1971 with special honors in government and is the founder and first coor­ dinator of the Student Council for Voter Registration. student facilitate The purpose of the friars in communications "to and between alumni the problems of the University,” said Millsap. The friar* meet twice each year. friars concerning friars By R O B B IE MARSHALL Texan Staff W riter Sen. Oscar Mauzy of Dallas said Sunday that he refuses to apologize for a charge he made on a TV show that the House la I n s u r a n c e Committee dominated insurance lobby. by the House Speaker Rayford Price demanded apology a public Thursday from Mauzy for stating that the three members of committee—Reps. Ace Pickens of Odessa, Fred O rr of Desoto and Grant Jones of Abilene—were receiving signals from lobbyists on hnd» j .n I n.un H .ti<; tg aw , in p m . B> .M ne**-iu i.n o m ie s t» ai. a n d I-.i dle s vs iii m eet a l 6 .M '.i.d. j B u i l d i n g M ;n T I I I . I ll M d I s F sr I V I N S I , I T K R ­ .JU m w at ti B u i l d i n g Iii ? v ri..> O 'H a r a ...L o a of K ell- A UT MW I I I V I .ii V rn N n d a > to ht a r M< I.. u n s p e a k on ' mon T h e E v , H I K IN ST IT T T I O F I M I N A M I R - .,i 4 p in. M ll AN S T I I ii K S xx nj present cent Impression# oi Bi aril A S y n e po .slum la y rn B u s ­ iness Iv o n . an l N T & K V .AUM I \ K O W x iii I ’ xx . J speak on "Je s s Christ Return* So W h at B a s i n , xs II. I M H I V I I AN H I , B ill T a i l o r I . . , at , .Cl p rn. M onday Iii ii * Buildin g 151 lid n u 133 I, r , Leo nard B illm a n L l T A B IT . K H A N I A ls ( , xxii! meet At l l a in Monday in L e e H ail 307. -MATH I ' I A T K s < O K K O Q I l l vi w ith L r " A F rie n d ly Lin k at the In t e g r a l" w ill be held at 4 p rn Monday in Pbx #. Ic# Mal I Xxii ii IDI . .my ,g complex in Hardin North bai been herd hit with butine** failures since December. Seven stores have been forced to shut down operations through an inability to attract student dollars. O nly three business establishments remain in the belief that success is just around the corner. Austin Voters To Determine Fate of Community College By B U X BRA Y Texan Staff W lite r An election to determine whether Austin w ill establish a community college probably xxiii be held Dec. 9. W ill Davis, In­ president of dependent School District (A ISD ) Board of Trustees, said Saturday. The achoo! board will deride the election date at Its Nov. 13 meeting, bo said. the Austin An election for the establish­ ment of the community college in Austin was approved Friday by the Coo rd i na tin et Board, Texas College and University System. Austin voters refused a com­ munity college in 1961 .md 196#. Tile difference between the new plan and the previous ones Is that no local tax funding w ill be sought. “ I DON'T anticipate” that voters w ill be asked in the future for tax support, Davis said. The college v\ou’1d be housed Inefinitcly in buildings now owned by the school system, he explained. Funding w ill be pro ided by state money, tuition and student fees. Central Texas College of Killeen (CTC) has a branch in its Austin, but portions of curriculum probably wail be altered if Austin opens a college cf its own. " I think they’ll phase out part of their operations,” Davis said, adding that Austin school officials have met with representatives (rf CTC'. I I U S T O N - T I L L O T S O N C o l l e g e , a predominantly black Austin college, has en­ dorsed the formation of a com­ munity college here. Austin school officials have said th»-> community college, if ap- pr vo l by the voters, could be In operation next fall. C u r r i c u l u m w ill Include vocational and technical courses, cor turned educational courses for adults and some classes on a university level. Nothing Strikes Back IS AN ALTERNATIVE ICE CREAM PARLOR - serving Real ICE CREAM in Real Glass Dishes at FAKE ICE CREAM PRICES FOR EXAMPLE: iffy biffy Hof fudge Sundae i/ i WO “2 c c e SJO is> WOl o Any 2 scoops wifh fudge on fhe boffom, Fudge on fhe fop, Fudge spilling over your fingers covered wifh home made whipped cream & a cherry. 50c with this AD but regularly 45c we had fo gef your affenfion somehow S O LSI 52 -n o o acrn -< 90 o co c s -H = » c ° 5 re so \ 3 rn , 3 2118 Guadalupe CLIMB THE UGLY STAIRWAY TO THE FANTASY W ORLD OF COLO R HIGH ABOVE THE DRAG OPEN DAILY TILL MIDNIGHT FRI. - SAT. TILL 2 A.M. Super ARBY'S Special SUPER ARBY'S ROAST BEEF SANDWICH HUGE SANDW ICH OF ROAST BEEF, TOMATO, LETTUCE, & SPECIAL SAUCE ON TOASTED BUN: ONLY 74' REG. 99c SAVE 25c 1705 GUADALUPE 5400 BURNET RD. 472-1582 451-3760 Warning: Bein'# Put This Dinner In The Oven I! Eat It With Your Ears Ii A Banana Records Production for Blue Thumb R eco rd s > J ? ( k -I* a t t i c e • Snappy Same* • etaaiant AtmaapNafa • Claan and Colorful voce presents the ■obi al the bay VOCO — A Progressive D J. from KSAN in San Francisco has produced a really dynamite LP with the help of his friends and yours i e Lydia Pense, Jo h n Lee Hooker, Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks, and many great others. THE NATIO N AL LAMPOON comedy record that dishes It out to John and Yoko and Paul and George and Georoe and Yoko and Dylan and Baez and Kissinger and Kelindeinst and Ted Kennedy and Barbra Streisand 8nd Rod S e rin g and Ralph Nader and Les Crane and St. Thomas Aquinas and Yoko and Jim Nabors, not necessarily in that order HOT UCKS, COLD STKL 6THUCKCRS FAVORITES COMMANDER CODY & HJS LOST PLANET AIRMEN are just settling own * -■■■-?• n their last smash hit album LOST IN THE OZONE th s* time with probably some c CODY S b st talents exposed, especia v in songs I ke ' LOOK NG AT THE WORLD THROUGH A W NOSH “ M AM A HATED DIESELS,’’ WATCH MY 3d” and ’’TRUCK DRIV1N MAN.” ROCO TICKETS ARE STILL AVAILABLE FOR TONITE'S ROCK FESTIVAL DRAW FROM IO A.M. • 4 F.M. — H O G G AUD. BOX OFFICE BUS SC H E D U LE JESTER, K IN S O L V IN G , CO-OP, 6:30, 6:45, 7:00, 7:1 25c EX A C T C H A N G E REQ U IRED B L A N K E T T A X M U ST BE S H O W N W IT H TICKET O R A $1 F IN E W LL BE C H A R G E D . 5. Crusaders have been with Jazz/Soul for years. This is their first excellent effort- on Blue Thumb Record. Get in to it With s powerful horn section — and outstanding musicianship, RASTUS presents us with one of the best new groups to come along in the last two years, Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks coming on strong from the 40's, 50 s, 60 s and 70 s His magical blend of them all makes for a most exciting album. # On Special Sale For ONE WEEK ONLY!! iscount records MONDAY-THURSDAY 9:30-9:30 FRIDAY i SAT. 9:30- MIDNIGHT 2310 GUADALUPE 478-1674 OPEN: They play hard-driving rock mur chi- n* ding in sounds and lyrics that ecu : only come from five guys that grew up in New York City. No, they never split to the coast to live they stuck it out in N.Y. where the competition is part of their lives. hUVItfCf T EE DAILY T ex a n Monday, October 23, 1972 Page ll Public Radio Gives Listening Alternatives By SARA LEE KESSLER Texan Staff Writer Accusing fingers constantly are commercial AM pointed at broadcasters the feeding for public a 24-hour diet of Top 40 all-too-brief news music accounts interlaced with endless advertising. and KUT-FM, the University-owned and operated station, provides many with a refreshing relief from the usual AM fare. a its By nature, non­ commercial radio station like KUT can provide additional, and the often better, community because it need not retain a mass to struggle audience during air listening time. service to C O M M E R C I A L broad­ casters on the other hand, ar# somewhat their limited economic ability to provide public affairs and minority programing for the community. in The AM broadcaster, and even the commercial EM broadcaster, “ must always try to appeal to the mass audience because that’s where the financial hacking is,” explained Bill Giorda, m anager of KUT and the Longhorn Radio Network. “The noncommercial station doesnt have a m ass audience at SAB TONITE! • NO (OVER • GEANIE STOUT Exceptional Voice - Excellent Keyboard A Night of Heavy Comedy Starring GEORGE CARLIN C re e lo r of H ip p ie D ipp y W ea th e rm a n & W o n d e rfu l W in e NOVEMBER 9th 8 p.m. M unicipal A ud itorium A b o A p p e a rin g : KENNY R A N K IN Advance Tickets $ 3 .5 0 - $ 4 .5 0 - $ 5 .5 0 Available At: 19th H o le Liquor Store (Both Locations) M a g ic Mushroom (D o b ie C e n te r) C h e s s Ki n g ( H i g h l a n d M a l l ) Evolut ion Records (San M arcos) any time during the day,” the said, “It has KUT manager for specific smaller audiences programs.” Consequently, public broad­ casting on KUT-FM serves the community as a whole, but it does so in segments. Outstanding programs ranging from a new Latin American music show* to live broadcasts of In­ City Council dependent School Board meetings fill the bill on KUT. and Austin ALTHOUGH THE owned is stations license the by University, KUT still is required under FCC regulations to serve the surrounding community with programming that deals with city issues and public affairs. Since only a limited number of radio stations can occupy the available spectrum, “every effort should be made to provide as muck service as possible to those within listening range,” Giorda said. The station uses funds from the the Corporation University and to for Public Broadcasting for provide good programing listeners within a 25 to 30-mile radius of it. According to Giorda, the money provided for programing “sup­ the ports not only KUT, but longhorn Radio Network as well.” A system, the Longhorn Radio Network had tape distribution Its origins in the late 1930s when programs were shipped to radio stations throughout the state. It was begun as an extension ser­ vice of the University. “ It was started to provide Texans with material that would give them an idea of what was going on around them—to extend the boundaries of the University through radio beyond campus to the state,” ex­ the borders of plained Giorda. The network remained solely a state service until last January its programs were mad# when tape nationally to available on 79 radio station*;. “ The University has grown so tremendously in tin' last 30 years in size, stature and importance it’s become a national that resource,” the network director noted. “ Accordingly, we felt we should our programing with people around the country." share some of full-time WITH A STAFF of 28, including employes, KUT IO manages to turn out a series of 13 public affairs programs in the Longhorn conjunction with Radio Network. for both Shows designed In­ state and national distribution include “ Tile Human Grndition.” produced in association with the Hogg Foundation for Mental Health. It deals with problems the mental and programs in (See A RADIO, Page 15.) CASTLE CREEK 1411 L A V A C A 472-7315 T O N IG H T A N D TUES. FREDAAND THE FIREDOGS STARTING W ED. J O H N PRINS 454-8115 3 8 * # 1 H 3 5 TO NIG HT ( Kenneth Threadgill THC VELVET £AX(®rpU3 ■ ~ :$I£_AK5‘*LOpSTER«»I)j;5Q-6 MIXED DRINKS 2 ROR I Texas Union Ideas and Issues Committee p r e s e n ts Dr. Allan King, Dr. Vernon Briggs, Dr. Harold W o lf ‘The Economic Issues of the 1972 Election Campaign1 12 noon Jr. Ballroom Harkness Ballet Drawing To Begin for T I c k • t drawing th# Harkness Ballet of New York City, to appear at 8 p.m. Sunday In Municipal Auditorium In a Cultural Entertainment Com­ mittee-sponsored dance program, begins Monday at the Hogg Auditorium box office. The founder of the company, Harkness, Rebekah M r s . troupe as “an describes the A m e r i c a n company which cherishes the great traditions of classical ballet and at the same time presses forward into new frontiers of the dance, sponsoring fresh approaches to dance tec- niques, choreography, musical composition and design.” THE HARKNESS BALLET wa* formed in 1964 at a Watch Hill, R.I., ballet workshop, where leading composers, choreographers, designers and in coor­ dancers participated dinated program s to create new works for the ballet stage. The Watch Hill programs have ! since been Incorporated Into tile Harkness House for Ballet Arts in New York, which is home base for the ballet company as well as housing a ballet school. President OS OCT. 5, took place immediately l% i, the newly- formed company gave its first performance at the White House and Mrs. before Lyndon B. Johnson. The official debut, however, in France early in 1965. The com­ pany performed first In Cannes thereafter in and P aris where, under the artistic direction of George Skibine, they created sen­ sation. Now In­ ternationally, the Harkness Ballet has appeared in North and South America, Europe, Asia and Africa. international established firmly an Flight of Fancy Manolo Asemic, foloist with let, soars through the air in Stravinsky’s "Firebird." The the Harkness Bai­ ttle title role of ballet company will appear In a CEC-sponsored dance pro­ gram at 8 p.m. Sunday in Municipal Audito­ rium. daily horoscope A BIESt You need to do studying to got the answ er to your philosophical problem . Books and other people are your best source of Information. TAI III 'N: Hard, steady work should be your lot for today. This Is the only w ay you w ill get anything accom plished. GEM INI: Your approach to social large acquaintances m ay have a hearing on your job. They are ex­ pecting a lot of you. CA.W E B You m ay find yourself in the m idst of em otional conflicts. More often than not, though, there is no b asis for so much concern. LEO: Your dynam ic personality will win a few new friends ton igh t Be sociable and have a sm ile handy at the drop of a hat. VIRGO: Try to be a little more realistic concerning your finances One worthwhile investm ent now m ay save you a lot of m oney later. is a bit leave the LIBRA: Your mind foggy at the m om en t so im­ portant details of that project to som eone else. SCORPIO: Try to be calm when things in. and around the hom e don't go as you would Uke. E veryone has faults. Be tolerant 8AGITTABI1 S: F ind a short-term goal fo r the d ay or w eek and begin work now! This tho best w ay for you to relax a t this tim e C A P R I C O R N : Today you are to falls and unusually susceptible is b ru ise* so don't act hastily. T aks care or your knees and shins. to sit In the background AQ I'ARI CS: Therp is no reason for you In a partnership. Your Ideas have a lot to offer. a circum stance leave Involving your you at a loss for what to do. Force yourself cir­ face cum stances. fam ily m ay PISCES: crucial up to to —NICK LAWRENCE I The patio between the g I Texas Union and the Aca- J I demic Center is designated J I tor the school year of 1972- I 73 as an area of the campus § I for use by students and or- B I ganizations for peaceful pub- | | lie assembly, public discus- j i sion, demonstration or in- I I stallation of booth*; without : I prior permission of the Uni- i I versity. p re se n ts THIS WEEK 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. WEDS. 10/25 Wuthering Heights (1939) dire c te d by W illia m W y le r, with Sir Laurence O liv ie r and M e rle O b ero n THURS. 10/26 Duel in the Sun (1947) d ire c te d by King V id or, with G re g o ry Peck and J en n ifer Jones N O T E SP EC IA L T IM E S : 7:00 end 9 :30 Jester Auditorium 75c — Season Ticket SIO A Service of the Department of R /T /F . SHOW C HANGES EV LR) FRIDAY THE BEST IN ART ENTERTAINMENT FIRST AUSTIN SHOWING - TIVO SUPER SHOWS TUES. 10/24 Mother (1926) d ire c te d by V. kaya and N ic o la i Batalov I. Pudovkin, with Vera Baronoys- If You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 47G-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service X-RATED a d u l t m o v i e s RI T Z A R T S 1st RUN 16mm FEATURE: "LUBE JOB" PLI S P i HOI KS 16mm SHOUTS IV SOI NO ANT) COLOB OPEN DAILY AT 11:00 NOON SI 00 OFF VOMISSION PRICE — SI 'N., MON., TI ES. WITH THIS AI) PLX S STI DENT LD. Escorted Ladies Free With Membership No One Ender 18 Admitted NOW AIR CONDITIONED c a p l FEATURING: 521 EAST 6th 472-0442 THEATRE UNDER N E W M A N A G E M E N T "HOW TO DO IT" "THE NYMPH ll A N D BOTH IN C O LO R A N D S O U N D — RATED XXX BOX OFFICE OPENS D A ILY : 12:00 T O 10:00 1:00 O N SUN D A Y BRING THIS AD FOR Vi OFF ADMISSION PRICE 11111 f ir s ! S h o w 7 :3 0 G a l e s O p e n 7 .0 0 Mhed HMcbcookA ‘’FRENZA J o n F in c h Color — l R » H E IL THEM VI H U E BO'f is HERE’’ Robert Record Technicolor R a t e d Nm! ^ Omit. JBI First c l _ KVET JJS- *30 Sight ' 693J KANSAS CITY BOMBER" **duel Wekh - • £ ? - - % 7 | t f WRATH OE GOD" C o ,o r I G P ) N O W ! O P E N 2:15 FEATURES 2 : 3 0 - 5 : 1 5 - 8 : 0 0 R E D U C E D PRICES ’TIL 5:30 (M o n . - Fri.) r e t h e ! u c f c /e s# # > e o P , e l n t '* e lVO/y o O lU M B IA PIC TU R ES jn d BASTAR PRODUCTIONS presaot B A R B R A S T R E IS A N D * O M A R S H A R IF i n -F U N N Y G IR L ” O P E N — 5 :4 5 — 2 D AYS MORE FEATURES 6 - 8 - 1 0 A LL SEATS $ 1 .0 0 TIL 6 P.M. T R A N S + T E X A S MESE 122O0*tancock Driv#— 453-6641 Th® WILHAM WYLER RAY STARK P roduction ■o <6 0. H o EM IKA IN St I CAAS ■ AU ti. bm Whitt Blvd. -4 4 2 2333 Trinity’s back in the saddle D-gflin and still horsing around. Joseph E. Levine tnd Avco Embassy Present An Italo Zmgarelli Film “T r i n i t y I s S t i l l M y Jeju n e ” Prints by Deluxe’ • COLOR > *® A «« ii>ib.k -fe [ R : Uni ted Artists S T A T E 7 1 0 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E $1.00 ’TIL N O W The Best M o tio n Picture of 1 9 7 1 ! W h y w a s n ' t BILLY J A C K no m in a ted for a n V A c a d e m y P Q A w a r d ? 3400 G U A D A L U P E STRE ET $1.00 ’TIL 2:30 1:40-3:20-5:00-6:40-8:20-10:00 COLUMBA PlCTURtS Prewrtf GEORGE C. SCOTT STACY KEACH A ROBERT CHABTOFF- IRWIN WINKLER PRODUCTION! THE NEW CENTURIONS pom it* trove* try JOSEPH WAMBAUGH IR . puuvijior A U S T I N 442 5719 A v rJ 2130 DOORS OPEN 5:45 $1.00 ’TIL 6 30 FEATURES: 6 :0 0 -8 :4 0 POPULAR PRICES!* HELLO , 2a DOLLY! TOMAO* COLOR BT OfLUtf* ® Pas® 14 Monday. October 23, 1972 T H E D A ILY T K A * FINE ARTS FESTAL “IHE TWENTIES” Calendar for Oct. 23-29 “ Not So Long Ago: Art of the 1920s in Europe and A m erica," Auditorium. ART Harkn^ss Ballet (CEC Event); at 8 p m . Oct. 29 in Municipal showing through Dec. 17 in the University Art Museum. “ Stage Designs of the Twenties," shoving through Dec. 17 In the Art Museum Mezzanine Gallery. Lecture: “ New York in the ’20s: Fact and F an cy ," by William H. Jordy, professor of art, Brown University; Oct. 26 at 8 p.m. in the Art Building Auditorium. MUSIC UT Jazz Ensemble. Dick Goodwin, conductor; Boaz Sharon, piano soloist in Gershwin’s “ Rhapsody in B lu e ;" at 8 p.m. Oct. 24 in Hogg Auditorium. Gerre Hancock, New York City organist, to premiere “ Fan- tasv on ‘Divinum M ysterium ;’ " at 8:30 p.m. Ort. 27 in Recital Hall. University Symphony Orchestra, Lawrence Smith, conductor; Robert Sylvester, cello soloist; at 4 p.m. Oct. 29 in Hogg Auditorium. FILMS “ The Navigator” with shorts “ Neighbors" (Buster Keaton Retrospective); at 7 House" Ort. 23 in the Art Building Auditorium. and and “ Haunted 9:15 p.m. “ Mother” (Russian and American Film s of the ’20s); at 7 and 9 p.m. Oct. 24 in Jester Center Auditorium. “ Seven Chances’’ with “ The G oat" and “ Play House" (Buster Kenton R etrospective); at 7 and 9:15 p.m. Ort. 25 in the Art Building Auditorium. “ Thp Virginian" (1929) with Gary Cooper, Walter Huston and Richard Arlen (Film Festival of the ’20s); at 7 p.m. Oct. 2-5 in Batts Auditorium; at 9 p.m. Get. 26 in Batts Auditorium. “ Inherit the Wind" (1960) with Spencer Tracy, Frederic March and Gene Kelly, based on the notorious “ Monkey T rial" of 1925 (Film Festival of the in Batts Auditorium, at 7 p.m. Oct. 26 in Batts Auditorium. ’20s); at 9 p.m. Oct. 25 'A Radio Talking Book...' said, “ would provide a much better signal so we can serve in larger number of people a Central T e x a s." in KUT-FM also plans to convert to stereo when the station finally settles its new'home. By utilizing the two available side channels on the FM-Stereo hand, Giorda hopes a service for the blind and a wide range of instructional services for the University. to establish Program ing for the blind would be in the form of “ a radio talking book" and would reach persons ar home through special receivers to be installed in the individual's own living room. could including program s, Special full-length be plays, provided on one of the two side channels to supplement regular Classroom teaching m aterials. stations the take country' have chosen tremendous advantage of possibilities in programing of­ fered by stereo side channels," KI T ’s m anager commented. across to “ Few the With its existing radio fare and Innovative ideas for the future, KUT can provide an exception to the rule that broadcasting need be mediocre devoid of and creativity to survive. Shaw Play To Show 'Heartbreak House Major Production “ Heartbreak H o u s e , ’ * con­ sidered one of George Bernard Shaw’s greatest plays, will be presenter! by the Department of D ram a in a m ajor production to run Nov. 6 to l l and Now. 13 to the D ram a Building Theatre Room. IS in A witty and satiric comedy, despite its title, the play has been called “ a Shaw om nibus," since playwright’s It the questions about almost every kind of problem that besets mankind. answers covers and The story is of a widely diverse group of people who happen to turn up in the home of a retired sea captain, each representing a different stratum of society and a different version of frustration and unhappiness. The central figures are the eccentric 88-year-old captain, who is supposed to be a self-portrait of the author, his fatalistically big- daughters, attractive business sma 11- realist and a business idealist. a as PUT TOGETHER, they sym ­ a itself, bolized England ship. When Welles drifting revived the play in 1938. it was thought to symbolize America, too, and w as taken as a warning of the impending world w-ar. This seriousness, however, is in couched farcical situations and some of Shaw’s wittiest lines. broadly dram a Directed by Ray Keith Pond. departm ent's of the f a c u l t y , is presented a s part of the College the of Fine Arts Twenties. the production festival of General admission tickets will go on sale Oct. 30 at the Hogg Auditorium box office. Admission is SI.50 for the Monday through Thursday performances and $2 the Friday and Saturday for shows and faculty, students, and $2 and $2.50 b i ­ ttie general public for the sam e ! performances. staff for Student To Give Saxophone Recital Michael David Nascimben will appear in a saxophone recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Music Building Recital Hall. The include program will selections from Mueller, Amram, Stout and Dubois. Accompanying Nascimben on piano will be Miss Danielle Martin of the music department faculty, and he will be assisted by the Faculty Woodwind Quintet and the Percussion Ensemble. arts degree Currently with the Austin Symphony Orchestra a and candidate for a doctorate of m usical at the of Michigan, U n i v e r s i t y Nascimben has been associated with several musical ensembles ar the State University of New York and West Point. FOOTBALL & BEER SAT. & SUN. 2 • 6 7 • ll MOH. NITE C O L O R T.V. UP THE STAIRCASE 2405 Nueces A Y C D $ ^ 0 0 A L L Y O U CAN DRINK FREE M U N C H IE S NEW BRAUNFELS WURSTFEST Union Special Programs Hr PANCAKES 2 SAUSAGES l '( Coffee, tea, or hot chocolate LARGE ORANGE JUICE ALL FOR ONLY SPECIALTY PANCAKES with coffee +ea or hot chocolate BLUEBERRY STRAWBERRY PINEAPPLE each served with their own special sauce AH for only springs Road Hdqrs, and Beer Garden Round-Trio Bus Charter TUESDAY THURSDAY K FRIDAY INTRO DU CING DILLAPLANE 50e IN THE CABARET G O O S E CREEK S Y M P H O N Y N ITZIN G E R D O N ’T FORGET EASY HOURS FROM 4-7 $1.00 PITCHER 25c GLASS Leaves Frf., O c t. 27 a f 6:00 p.m. Returns a t 12:00 M id n ig h t In fo rm a tio n & Tickets Texas Union 350 IO a.m. to 3 p.m . P la y it again, Dobie. TRIPLE AWARD WINNER —N e w York Film C ritics BEST PICTURE OF THE HERR BESTDIRECT0R Bob Bsfeison BEST SUPPORTING RCTRESS Kiron Black CUPS IOC 20c 30c CONES IOC 20c 30c SUNDAES - 25c — 35c — 45c m PINEAPPLE l f , PEACH f CHOCOLATE BLUEBERRY STRAWBERRY H ot Butterscotch it CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE THE TEXAS U N IO N W IT H S O L HUROK presents HARKNESS BALLET SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29 M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M 8:C‘0 P.M. H O G G B O X O F F IC E TICKET D R A W IN G BEGINS T O D A Y IO A . M . . 6 P.M. FREE T O B LA N K E T T A X HO LD ER S. Where else but Mother Earth can you buy a Green Grendel f o r 7 5 « MENTO: WM. F. ENGLISH M ERCANTILE CO. CREOLE G U M B O ..............................$1.25 C A JU N S H E L D O N SHRIM P . . BRO ILED W H O LE FLO U N D ER FR IED JU M B O SHRIM P (7 ) . . CREO LE PORK CH OPS ............ C U T LE T IN W IN E SAUCE . . C L U B ST E A K (1 6 oz.) ................ T BO N E STEA K ( I O o z .) . . . . 2.5 0 2.50 3.50 3.95 2.50 3.95 2.50 T BO N E STE A K (18 oz.) ............ 3.50 , SIR LO IN STRIP STEA K (16 oz.) 5 95 N O W SERVING DINNER 7 NIGHTS 3010 GUADALUPE P H . 477*4451 Think about poor Grendel. Slain silly just cause he wanted a little human warmth. A mis­ understood monster who’s busted by Beowulf. Is th a t any way to fly, or slither? No! Mother Earth presents history’s firs t d rink honoring a much maligned monster: the Green Grendel. (Some­ times known as ’old hiss and miss’) Deep inside Mother Earth visit the recently C O L U M B IA P IC TU R E S Presents $ PBS Prado clio* JACK NICHOLSON F IV E KUSH PIEC ES BLACK.«SUSAN ANSPACH KAREN Scr»*i)pi»yby A D R I E N J O Y C E Story by B O B R A F E L S O N • < * A D R I E N J O YC£ Produced by B O B R A F E L S O N ,n d R IC H A R D W E C H S L E R Z «*eut'v» F>,oduc*r B E R T S C H N E ID E R O r» p iv, ii Bi* Vail ay I p m 5.7. H or# a L u c y 4 M ov # 6 42 M in* VPL ago IT 12,24 ( hr VV 'r h # A r t et l e v * Th ay Might ii M innesota ba ll P#ttJr<">at Junction 5 .7 D o r i s Day S h o w 9 Rookbeat • p m . 10 p rn 't N#sr u t * bt th# New Testam ent ll Movie I * t arn 4 7 Bill Cosby Sh^w . E x p ress 9 Th# W ay p # o p > Live All Other Station* New s 4 ft. 42 T on igh t Show 9 SotS 5 7 M a rie: "C u tter T ra il" 11 Kl p m 11 Movi# 12 Movie fldentiai 10 T w ilig h t Zone 9 I n s i g h t 'T a rn ish e d Arg#'? High School Con- < Oran blin* Football M i d n i g h t o Mldn'jrht S r - a - k * Forest R a n g e rs" K 'ng et 'hp fn M usic: Sh irley IO V) p rn I 5 € BEER, WINE COOLERS, SOFT DRINKS EVERY MON. & WED. & FRI. FROM 2 - 6 N O CO VER C H A R G E 2405 A NUECES THE A F R O -A M E R IC A N PLAYERS Open "The Ghetto: Don't Cry, Scream!" For a Final Run Sunday, O c t. 29 thru Tues., O c t. 31 8 p .m . M a tin e e Sunday 2 p.m. A .C . A u d ito riu m D on t Miss it cause i t ’s Super-Bad $2 00 478-2211 T H U Stall Photo by MIKE ROBINSON, Craft Class, Vendors Tinker With Baubles, Bangles, Beads M agpie Cook w as working on a ring in the Arts and Crafts Center of the Texas Union Building when she was approached by a m em ber of the Union staff who said casually, “ You look like you know what, y o u 're doing. Y ou're hired.” So, in F eb ru ary of thus year, Ms. Cook, a fine a rts m ajor, began teaching an in­ form al class in jewelry' m aking sponsored by the Union. She teaches two six-week sessions per sem ester, with classes meeting from 6 to 9 p.m. every Wednesday. INTEREvST IN the course runs high—as does interest in jewelry all over cam pus. Of all the courses offered by the Union, only one eotirse—r-rram ics- is m ore popular than jew elry making. Registration lasts for .spaces available the 25 th ree hours, hut In th e class e re filled within an hour, ac­ cording to Kay Keesee, supervisor of the A rts and C rafts Center. Bobbi Spooner said, “ I ’ve tried and tried to get into this class, but it w’as always so full. This tim e I w as the first one in line, but I cam e two hours early and sat on the floor to tra it.” interested only Although m any are in learning enough about tho craft to mako jew elry for for friends and family, others bim the art into a viable m oans of earning a living. them selves or as gifts to Such a person Is Duane F orre of Temple, who brings his w'aros tho D rag on weekends. However, he is careful to point out that hp is not an artist, but a “ wire is bending ben d er,” sinc-p his specialty black w ire intricate dangling earrings. Into hundreds of In an av erage day, he can m ake $fiO. “ BI T IT TAKES me to m ake cost of the m a teria ls,” he said. the earrings I bring, plus two d ay s’ work the Also, he m ust figure in travel expense and the num ber of hours worked. He sets up his display af 5 a m. Saturday and U su ally can count on staying there until 6 p.m . With a slightly wicked grin, F erre added, "I’ve heard all the stories people tell about the that can be m ade around C hristm as.” fantastic money of The Initial beginning investm ent jewelry' work Is prohibitive to some, and m ay explain why Ms Cook's class usually drops nine or IO m em bers by the end of each session. “ A lot of people don’t realize you’re going to have to buy all these tools,” Ms. Spooner said. A modest investm ent for the course a p ­ jew eler's proaches $35, which will buy a saw', m etal shears, a set of files, a rawhide m allet and m aybe three or four different kinds of pliers, according to Ms Cook. Then th ere's the cost of the silver. Seventeen dollars will buy a sheet af said Sara Smith, a class silver which, m em ber, “ will last me a long, long tim e.” A ring which can sell for $12 will cost about $3 50, including the prio* of a stone, W'hich can bp purchased on the Drag for $1 or $2. "B ut the cost is negligible when com­ pared to the total tim e involved in making the piece,” Ms. Cook said. MOST OF THOSE who take the class want to learn to solder, she added Some have cast m etal before, hut the vast m ajority have npver worked with m etal at all. U te class atm osphere Is relaxed Mem­ bers wander down the f ’huck Wagon to in their free time, bringing hack ice cream cones or tea to the L-shaped working area. Ms. Cook likes it that way, saying, “ I don’t like to feel like an authority.1' But she does have one firm nile, “ Keep your hair up.” To add weight to the order, Ms. Cook tells a grim story of one of her friends with length h air who sported a bald patch for weeks because his hair was caught in a whirling tripoli wheel, a m achine used for polishing. shoulder During the first class period. Mc Cook tools. dem onstrate* explains procedures second, the During and use of she •oldering and the making of a bezel. Thereafter, students use class tim e to work on projects. SOME ARE working on their second and third rings. “ AU relatives and to make their asking them said. “ Or they use what Christm as p resen ts.” friends start things,” Ms Cork they make for A student laughingly com m ented. ‘T m still working on all the birthdays between now and C hristm as.” Jennifer Rice, a first-year graduate student, said, “ I worked with jewelry some two years ago, but is much more thorough. It's something I’D never he ah!* to go into full-time, hut ITI be abl* to maka things for friends and relatives. T can’t see m yself selling on the D rag. though; I don’t think ITI produce that m uch.” this posts. Rebind PRODUCTION IS something F erre knows about. Rows of earrings hang neatly suspended from chains he has attached to two wooden are thousands of beads, neatly sorted according to shape and color, stored in sm all plastic containers. His hands work continually, bending w ire, attaching beads, making earrings to custom er spec!fica nor He can m ake a p air of earrings in 15 minutes, som etim es even quicker. him “ Right now earrings I ’ll he able hp said. I only do necklaces >nd liefer when T have more tim* to do more artistic things,” F erre is only one of a num ber of jewelry m akers who sell their goods on 'I e Drag, although his is perhaps the most els bora ’* display. O thers spread their creations on dark velvet cloth draped over tables or boxes. Tit en their goods will attract the attention of those walking by. they sit down hoping .So It goes. Whether ‘or fun or profit* at the root of the interest In se w eln . making lies the hope of creating som e’hlng unique, of making at least a sm all statem ent. Story by Sheila Francis - Texan Staff Photo by NANCI GOLDFARB — Texan staff Photo by MARLON TAYLO R Page 16 Monday. October 23. 1972 XHE DAILY TEXAN — .texan S U if Photo by MARLON TAYLOR — l u l u SUH Photo by MARLON TAY U N L