T h e Daily T f ' an Student New spaper at The University of Texas at Austin \ % Vol. 71, No. 115 Ten Centi AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1972 471-4401 — 0 oft n Pages o .jr V Court Tackles Cru Segregation Considered tendance zones and bused white children. The civil rights organization takes the position this is just as unconstitutional as the way southern school officials acted out old segregation laws. Death Ruie Challenged WASHINGTON (A P)-T h e Supreme Court Set the stage Monday for its first full-scale Inquiry into school segregation outside tile South. Acting on an appeal by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the court it would look at the school announced situation large city with s i z a b l e black and Spanish-speaking minorities. in Denver, a Lower federal courts have granted the two minority groups some desegregation action, but the fund, speaking for them, contends it is not enough. They want about a dozen more of the city’s 117 public schools deeply integrated. The Supreme Court's desegregation decisions have come against a background of southern laws separating the races in the public schools. Denver and Colorado never have had such laws, but the fund and the minority families it represents will argue that Denver school officials pursued segregation policies in the way they built the schools, arranged at­ Denver has about 97,000 public-school children. About 20,000 have Spanish last names and about 14,000 are Negroes. The court will set a date for an oral argument later, with a ruling expected by the end of June. Monday’s announcement said nothing about the issues involved. It noted only that Justice Byron R. White had disqualified himself and gave no reason. At the same time, the court turned down an appeal by black parents from Newark and Jersey City, N .J., who wanted Negro and white children moved across city lines to reduce the heavy black concentration in urban schools. Only Justice William O. Douglas dissented from the court's eight to one refusal to hear the dispute. The blacks contended that the state’s system itself violates the rigiits of Negro children since the school districts are drawn along city and county lines. The court af­ firmed dismissal of their complaint by U.S. district court in New Jersey. WASHINGTON conscience must govern (A P) — The evolving national the meaning of the Eighth Amendment in lawyers condemning capital punishment, contended Monday in asking the Supreme Court to declare the death penalty un­ constitutional. “ The virtually unanimously repudiated by the conscience penalty death Is (Related Photo, Page 3.) of contemporary society," argued Stanford University law Prof. Anthony G. Am­ sterdam. The high court set up the historic con­ frontation over the Constitution by ac­ cepting the appeals of four cases—two for murder and two for rape—in which the defendants were condemned to death. A ruling on the issue is expected before the court term ends in June. It will directly affect, nearly 700 condemned men and women on death rows in 34 states. Issues Prior to Monday, 41 states and the federal government still had the death penalty. However, the New' Jersey .Supreme Court ruled Monday its law subjects an accused murderer to death only if he pleads in­ nocent, thereby coercing him to plead no defence and face a maximum sentence of life in prison. Under the New Jersey ruling, all 20 men on Death Row in Trenton State Prison wall have their sentences reduced to in poison, with eventual eligibility for parole. Moreover, the maximum penalty in r^nd’^g and future murder cases will be life in prison. life The sole question before the court now Is whether the death penalty cor''titufes the “ cruel and unusual punishment” which is prohibited by the Eighth Amendment. Amsterdam, arguing for the tw'o murder defendants, suggested the test is whether the punishment w'ould be acceptable to the general standards of conscience and decency if applied generally. His own answer was no. The death penalty, he said, is rarely applied and then only to minority members, the powerless, “ the personally ugly and socially unacceptable.” There have been no executions in the United States since 1967, when Colorado and California each carried out one. Outside Job Limits Proposed University Studies Curtailment of Faculty Employment — Texan Staff Photo hy IKE BARi < H. 'Give M e Your Tired, Your P o o r ..J Thousands of frustrated students endured what has been called "centralized confu­ sion." It is better known as adds and drops in Gregory Gym. Adds and drops will continue through Thursday, but this time at individual departments. (Related story, Page 5). Adds, Drops Gym Proceed Smoothly the Despite chaotic appearance in Gregory Gym Monday, add and drop procedures went “ as smoothly as possible under the conditions,” said Registration Supervisor Gary Speer. “ I have no idea how many students were processed,” said Speer at 3 p.m. Monday. “ It seems as if every student registered came through at least once.” He said at least 10,000 students, and probably more, went through the lines to add and drop in the gym. Although confusion seemed to prevail on the crowded floor, Speer said that “ once we got the students in, things went better than we thought they would.” He added that most of the confusion was because students did not know what to do once they were admitted to the floor. “ We tried to get the students on the floor so they could see what was going on and where the departments were,” he In UT EP Practices said, “ but there was quite a rush at 8 o'clock which caused a lot of confusion.” But even with the early confusion and long lines, the add and drop procedures at the Gym are expected to eliminate much of the burden on individual departments and students. “ I think this will definitely help the departments,” said Speer, “ it brought all the departments together under one roof so adds and drops could be better coor­ dinated, and gave the departments more room.” He added that it helped the students by making it unnecessary for the student to visit each department at its location on campus. But for those students who did not finish adds and drops at the gym, a trip to the office of each individual department for course changes will be necessary. Adds and drops will continue through Thursday. By LIZ BASS City Editor A proposed rule further defining the conditions under which faculty members may engage in employment outside the University will be brought before the regents’ at their March meeting. no The suggested modifications, which say that faculty member m ay be remunerated for regular work outside the University, will be considered by faculty before suggestion and submission to the Board of Regents. administrative In addition, the new proposal w;” attempt to establish punitive measures for those violating the rule. The present regents’ rules state only that “ members of the faculty or staff should from accepting regular be discouraged employment with units outside the University.” (Sec. 13) U N IV ER S IT Y P R E SID E N T Stephen H. Spurr Monday released a statement citing reasons for the desired changes in the existing regents’ rules. Spurr’s statement said that although most faculty members are employed “ properly and meritoriously” there are several complaints from both the business and University communities. “ The successful regulation of outside employment of the faculty requires sub­ stantial faculty involvement and substantial delegation of responsibility to the individual institution,” Spurr said. A total of 16 college deans were notified of the proposed changes and have met with University and System administrators on the subject of outside employment. Several University deans have expressed the the consequences of doubt about proposed change. Alan Y. Taniguchi, dean of the School Suit Alleges Discrimination B y RANDY FIT ZG ER A LD A federal law'suit alleging court discrimination against chicanos at the University at E l Paso w?as filed Monday in Austin by an E l Paso attorney seeking to enjoin enforcement of a University System Board of Regents “ behavior code” in addition to requesting a more equitable admissions disadvantaged students. policy for Naming Gov. Preston Smith, the Defendant Surrenders In Mf. Bonnell Slaying Elvoy Musgrave, 39, charged with murder with malice in the Jan. 9 Mount Bonnell slaying of Michael Leonard Harris, surrendered to police Monday night. called the Austin Police Department at 9:30 p.m. and was then escorted from his home on Ranch Road 2222 about eight miles from Austin by three policemen. Musgrave He came to the door wearing work clothes No weapons were found. charged with Also the slaying is Musgrave’s b r o t h e r , Dewel Bennett Musgrave, 41, wrho was arrested shortly after the fatal shooting of Harris. The victim, manager of a natural foods store, was shot in the head as he and a 19-year-old University coed strolled near the Mount Bonnell dedication marker. University System Board of Regents and four E l Paso administrators as defendants, the 19-page complaint filed by attorney Jesus Ochoa alleges 350 disadvantaged <4iicano students were denied entrance at E l Paso and requests that a three-judge district court be convened to investigate and enjoin enforcement of a System rules p r o v i s i o n pertaining “ disruptive behavior.” to Under the behavior code adopted by the System, five of the 15 plaintiffs and 31 other students were arrested and jailed last month for participating in what the suit describes as a “ peaceful, nonviolent” demonstration at the E l Paso campus to protest discrimination against chicanos at the University. Although none of the students were for­ mally charged by the County attorney, the suit maintains the college has sought to institute disciplinary proceedings without entitling the students to their “ procedural rights.” The class action suit also bases a com­ plaint of discrimination on the refusal of the regents to furnish or sponsor programs for disadvantaged students since federal funds are used by the System. The System has attempted to substantiate its refusal on the grounds any singling out of one particular group for funds would in itself be “ discriminatory.” Another provision o f law suit charges the vice-president for student af­ fairs at E l Paso with barring 350 disad­ th e vantaged chicano students from entering “ Special the University by rewriting a Services Program” which would have funded $130,000 towards financial support of disadvantaged students. The plaintiffs in the suit also contend the vice-president for student affairs, Gary Brooks, was named to his present position by the regents without prior consultation with the E l Paso faculty, an action the suit contends would be in violation of the regents’ rules. In the section of the lawsuit dealing with the University System behavior code, the brunt of the argument is to the effect that it and other regulations concerning student demonstrations are vague and fail to set forth an adequate explanation of what students’ rights are. According to the suit, this policy and two chapters of the student affairs code at the University are statutes of rights W'hich deprive the plaintiffs guaranteed by the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution. a policy of selective admissions Plaintiffs in the suit, three of whom are provisional students because of low' SAT scores, further allege in the suit, “ there exists of equal W'hich operates as a denial education opportunity to minority-group chicano students and there exists also an unwillingness on the part of defendants to furnish adequate educational programs designed to compensate minority-group chicano students for unequal educational opportunities resulting from past or present racial or ethnic isolation.” of Architecture, says the issue of outside employment “ has some serious implications for professional schools.” “ IN A PRO FESSIO N AL school, we need the balanced experience of both education and practice to keep up with the field,” he explained, adding certain accrediting boards require outside involvement. He said many of the architecture faculty members have clients of their own, work in local architecture firms or consult with architects and builders. He cited the newly established workload as one possible reason for the change to stronger rules. “ This is actually further insurance that that’s (teaching) all we’re supossed to do here.” Taniguchi said. Furthermore, he said he feels that enforcing the rules on outside employment is not the task of ad­ ministrators, but the responsibility of deans to see ‘ the freedom is not abused.” “ IN A WAY it’s an affront” that the administration has undertaken the problem, Taniguchi concluded. However, School of Law Dean W. Page Keeton said Monday he “ approves of” rogultaing the amount of work a faculty member may do aside from his full-time employment with the University. Outside work, according to Keeton, is “ highly beneficial if it is the right kind” and fulfills the need to gain practical ex­ perience in a specialized area. “ I approve outside activities for faculty in­ members as consistent with their w'ork at the Univer­ sity,” Keeton said. long as they are not Keeton said he personally oversees all extracurricular w'ork undertaken by his faculty and requires that w'ork of this nature be no more than IO hours per week. “ T H E R E IS nothing in the president’s memorandum which would prevent this,” he said, adding the “ memorandum does make sense” because outside activities may “ interfere with the work which a faculty member is employed to do.” Wayne A. Danielson, dean of the School of Communication, said the current efforts to revise the outside work rules “ may raise some serious problems.” He added it is not certain how the new rules would affect communication faculty, but he said although the ruling is extensive, “ I don’t think it would apply to professors writing books or articles even though they are receiving royalties.” D A N IELSO N said he thought many of the faculty members in his school are in­ volved in outside activities, and added that accrediting agencies urge this practical work within the field. J. W . McKie, dean of social and behavioral sciences, said “ the proposals will probably go through modifications” before they reach the Board of Regents. S.P. Ellison, Jr. and E .F . Gloyna, deans of natural sciences a n d engineering respectively, were unavailable for comment Monday. Kenneth H. Ashworth, System vice- chancellor for academic affairs, emphasized the role of the faculty in forming final plans for outside employment. “ This is a draft version with specific directions that faculty consult on the issue,” he said. He added the item w’as taken off the February Board of Regents meeting agenda so that the faculty could have more time to react and participate in the plan. ASHWORTH termed the issue “ a very sensitive one” . One of the difficulties, Ashworth said, Is to determine what constitutes “ regular that & outside employment.” He said regular outside employment is one of a permanent nature “ of such a magnitude that the University.” it detracts from his job at Ashworth said the faculty is and will continue to be encouraged to become in­ volved outside of their job and that ne attempt is being made to “ diminish or reduce" such activities. He said there are few cases of abuse, but that “ The University, the State and the students are suffering” for those few instances. State Demo Chief Retains Party Post By DOTTY GRIFFITH General Reporter Contrary to early reports Monday, State Democratic Executive Committee (SD EC ) Chairman Roy Orr says he has no intention of resigning that post following his ap­ pointment as Dallas County commissioner. Orr—who did resign as mayor of DeSoto, a Dallas suburb, “ since I could not hold in as tw'o elected offices” —was sworn commissioner Monday to fill the vacancy left by the death last week of Commissioner Denver Seale. The job pays $27,500 an­ nually. An administrative assistant to Orr, Jack Gaubert, was appointed by the chairman to the post of executive director for the State Democratic Party. Gaubert, also of De Soto, will take over the “ day to day” activities, said a spokesman in the SD EC office. ORR SAID Monday that one of his an­ nounced goals as SDEC chairman was to appoint such a director to provide “ con­ “ Gaubert has really bern doing tinuity.” the detail work for some time,” said Orr referring ad­ ministrative assistant. to Gaubert’s role as Even though Orr said an executive director w'as one of his goals, his decision to resign the mayorship and subsequent rumors about an SDEC resignation caught higher-ups in the Democratic Party by surprise, and could widen gaps between power-seeking factions of the party. Smith, who Orr, who was elected to the position three months ago, won by a 32 to 30 vote which some observers saw as a defeat for Gov. Preston supported Agriculture Commissioner John White for the job. Lf. Gov. Ben Barnes was reportedly backing Orr. Both Smith and Barnes are candidates the Democratic guber­ natorial nomination. had for Orr reported Monday that members had been “ calling all day” asking him not to resign his post. Mrs. Ralph S. O’Connor, SDEC vice- chairman from Houston, said she was “ taken by surprise” when reporters called her early Monday to inquire about Orr’s resignation. Acting on their information, she told them “ next month is soon enough” for the 62-member committee to elect a new chairman. Mrs. O'Connor told the Texan that she learned of Orr’s later decision to remain on as chairman. Barnes, upon learning of O rr’s new ap­ pointment, said, “ I ’m happy that Mr. Orr accepted this position in Dallas. It ’s what he has been wanting to do, and he’ll make a good commissioner. “ Regarding the SDEC chairmanship,” added Barnes, “ if he finds out that he simply can’t spend as much time as he thinks he should on the Democratic Party business, perhaps he might consider meeting with the different Democratic committee members and decide a future course.” The governor had no comment Monday. Orr said he foresees no heavier duties as County commissioner than before as mayor of De Soto, an unsalaried job. “ I ’m always overworked,” he said, “ I don’t go fishing, and I don’t play golf, so I ’ll have plenty of time for Democratic business.” T H E R E IS speculation that if Orr did resign before his term ends in September, another intra-party fight would erupt over choosing his successor. Orr was first elected after the resignation cf Austin osteopath Elm er Baum, who was under criticism for huge profits he and Smith made on stock deals with loans from the Sharptown State Bank. Since Orr w'as named SDEC chairman, the Democratic Party has been divided by controversies over party rules reform and party contribution disclosures. Orr and party conservatives have been credited with attempts to prevent rules reforms aimed at increasing rank-and-file participation within the party. As for party contribution disclosures, Orr locked horns with Secretary of State Bob Bullock—who was appointed by Smith—wrhen Orr refused Bullock's disclosure requests. The chairman of the Republican Party also refused to disclose party contributors. At least one SDEC member expressed dissatisfaction with O rr’s handling of the job switch. “ He could have written a letter and simplified the whole thing,” he said referring to erroneous press reports which began in Dallas. He feared Orr’s surprise move was “not the best thing for th t Democratic Party, frankly.” Residence Near Campus Damaged by Attic Blaze A fire in the attic of a twro-story house at 1907 Whitis Ave. w-as reported at 10:43 p.m. Monday with the first of five Austin Fire Department units arriving at the scene one minute later. No persons were injured in the seven- apartment structure, Deputy Fire Chief Robert H. Dickerson reported. He directed the fighting of the blaze with Section Fire Chief Harold Bush. Bush reported at approximately 11:20 p.m. that the blaze was tinder control. Ryan Allen, 28, University graduate in music and resident of the student building, to salvage personal possessions such as books and clothing from his first floor room, as firemen combatted the blaze atop the roof. f o u g h t Though Dickerson could not estimate the total smoke and w'ater damage to the house, he did say there was substantial water damage to the walls and floors. Page 2 Tuesday, January 18, 1972 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N /y /r IT* .. WANT TO SAVE MONEY? Come to Our SEMI-ANNUAL SALE M EN ’S SHOES and B O O T S N O W 10.90 to 26.90 SAVE $7.05 to $14.05 W O M E N ’S SHOES and B O O T S N O W 8.90 to 12.90 SAVE $5.05 to $14.05 • (e n tire stock n o t in c lu d e d ) t r a c e S H O E | S T O R E O N TH E D R A G — 2348 Guadalupe S p e c ia tin g in collegiate fashions Observation Deck Enclosure Studied to reopen or per­ A decision m anently close the U niversity Tower observation deck is being the offices of studied U niversity Stephen Spun* and Ja m es Colvin, vice­ president for business affairs. President through The Office of Facilities P lan­ ning and Construction has been assigned the task of examining the possibilities and designing an enclosure around the observation deck. 29, a THE TOWER observation deck after w as Sept. closed Moment A rm istead, form er student, jum ped to her death. It w as the second suicide from the Tower within a six-month period. “ This is a very tough assign­ ‘‘F irst it m e n t,” Colvin said. if such a m ust be determ ined stru c tu re is possible to build and then aesthetic consideration m ust be given to how the enclosure will look." ‘‘I suppose it would be possible it and to put bars all around b a r every window, but it then would look like a prison. Would the Tower then retain its im age as a sym bol and la n d m ark ?” I Colvin succession, said he ordered the observation deck closed because “ with those two suicides in such rapid thought m aybe there was som e attraction for a suicide-bent person.” COLVIN SAID a fte r last suicide he larg e num ber of letters supporting the perm anent closing of the ob­ servation deck. He didn't receive favor of “ a opening the to public. the deck again single one” the a received in MEMBER A M E R I C A N S E M SOCIETY i i i i f I carat Vl carat from $200. from $695. DIRECT D I A M O N D IMPORTERS D O Z E N S OF DISTINCTIVE D E SIG N S IN M O U N T I N G S A N D W E D D I N G BANDS On the Drag/2268 Guadalupe Suburban Store in Allandale Village Extended Terms Available Editor, TSP Elections Set Candidates for editor of The D aily Texan and for positions on T exas Student Publications Board of O perating T rustees m ust subm it their applications to the TSP office by noon F riday. P rim a ry elections will be held F eb. 2 and runoff elections Feb. 9. June 11-member term its board will The begin I, TSP G eneral M anager Loyd Edmonds said Monday. The board will journalism of consist four students, student two at-large m em bers, two journalism faculty m em bers, one at-large faculty m em b er the College of from Business A dm inistration and two professional newsm en. Student m em bers will be elected. F aculty m em bers and the professional men will be appointed by the president of the U niversty prior to June I. T H E FOUR journalism students will staggered te rm s so that two new m em bers will be elected yearly. Elections serv e of at-large m em bers will follow the sam e procedure. This year, the at-large however, one of term m em bers will begin his im m ediately the post to vacated when board m em ber graduated D a v i d M incberg recently. fill have sem ester Candidates from the Journalism d epartm ent m ust be certified by the chairm an of the departm ent as being journalism m ajors. No student will be eligible as a candidate until he has com ­ pleted—or will be the end of the com ­ spring pleted—12 hours of journalism courses, is in good standing and not on scholastic probation, and has one sem ester in residence during the long term a t the U niversity. dropped TSP ' ‘In­ Before corporated” title and from cam e under the auspices of the U niversity Board of R egents, the board w as com posed of nine m em bers. They w ere four faculty r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s and five com pleted least its a t students—those being the Student Governm ent president and four students the Student Senate. selected from should According to T SP ’s Declaration of T rust, the Student G overnm ent president not be selected as an at-large m em ber in the upcoming elections, he will serv e as an ex-officio m em ber without vote. include O T H E R ex-officio the board m em bers editor, m anaging editor and editorial m anager of The Daily Texan, the student editors of p u b l i c a t i o n s , TSP general m anager and the dean of students or his representative. other all Duties of the TSP Board are to appoint The Daily Texan I) m a n a g i n g editor. 2) take d i s c i p l i n a r y action against student publication em ployes and 3) to determ ine the ch a racter and p o l i c i e s student of publications. all Applications a re available In Journalism Building 107. iv I if'* * 5' C t / j . I t r n * . s t ^ -------------- (p+< >7*1, -- '-’C and with the funds to be spent only advertising for handouts their space. Receipts of ex­ penditures m ust be filed with TSP by 4:30 p.m. the day before the election. receiving totals during Those students two vote the the top general election in each p’ece and for editor will advance into the runoff unless a single can­ didate than 50 receives m ore percent of the vote in his race, in which case he is declared winner. Two ballots will be used: one containing nam es cf The Texan editor and TSP Board candidates from the cam pus at large, and one to be used only in the jour­ nalism containing the nam es cf editor and the TSP Beard the journalism departm ent. departm ent, candidates from ‘^ take WHEN a candidate is certified as qualified to run by the TSP leave of Beard, he m ust absence from a rn' r v z’ t i ^ rj he m ay hold with TSP until conclusion of the election. Also, any m em ber of the board who applies for Texan editor m ust resign from the board a t the tim e of his application. least nine a t He m ust The Texan editor m ust have cem nlefed 75 hours of college work, with in have journalism . com pleted at least two sem esters or one full 12-week sum m er session a t the U niversity. sem ester plus a C andidates editor m ust for have at least a 2.25 g rad e point average on all U niversity work, mu*‘ K-’ve com peted Journalism 312. 322 and 314 with a ” C” or batter average and m ust have com pleted or be registered for J336 a t the tim e of filing. An applicant m ust have served the editorial staff regularly on of The Texan IO w eeks nrior to the sem ester In which he applies and be serving at the tim e he applies. for a t least and “ Policies to According Procedures for Texas Student P ublications E lections” published by TSP the board will m eet on the the ninth day preceding to general election certify candidates for editor. At the sam e tim e, Alpha Phi Omega representatives and the board will m eet with all candidates to review cam paign procedures. (Jan. 24) Cam paigning will com m ence as soon as candidates have been certified and have attended the Jan. 24 meeting. ELECTION procedures require expenditures of under $300 on the general and runoff cam paigns. These funds m ay be spent only advertising for handouts space in The Texan. Campuswide candidates m ust file with TSP all receipts from the nrinter for their handouts by 4:30 p.m . the day before the election. and Candidates for the board from journalism departm ent will the be allowed to spend not m ore than $25 during both elections, .. I' - -£ s r -^.; C e n ter. U p p e r Le v e I 2Xr2 I G u a do I ap e 4 7 7 - 5 9 5 1 textb ook s Buy your textbooks at the earliest possible moment. That way you can be sure you will get them all. Moreover, you will be more likely to get some of our Used Textbooks which we sell for 25% off the publishers’ list price. school su p p lies SAVE YOUR DIVIDEND SLIPS N O T E B O O K S B IN D E R S PAPER PENCILS PEN S FIN E M E A SU R IN G and D R A W IN G IN S T R U M E N T S A R T M ATERIAL On the Street Floor. Textbook Refund Policy W hen you buy books in error, the C o-O p will accept the return o f textbooks u n d e r the fo llo w in g conditions: (S p rin g 197 1) (T his policy subject to ch ange) 1. Books must be returned d u rin g the cu rren t semester. 2. Full refu n d will be given if a book is returned on or b efo re the last day to d ro p a course w ith o u t penalty. Books purchased afte r this period must be returned by the close o f business on the second day after p u r ­ chase— i.e., a b o o k purchased January 20th w o u ld he re tu rn a b le fo r a full re fu n d up to the close o f busi­ ness on January 22nd. 3- N o refu n d will be m ade v ithout the cash register re­ ceipt. 4. Books m ust bear a C o-O p price tag. 3. N e w textbooks m ust be free o f all m arkings and con­ sidered by store personnel to be in new condition. 6. Special o rd er books are n o t eligible for refunds. 7. B ooks retu rned at times o th e r than specified above w ill be purchased u n d e r the U niversity Co-O p Buy Back policy. 8. D efective bo oks w ill be replaced free o f charge. These defective books sh o u ld be retu rned as soon as it is n o ­ ticed. Open Today* 8:30A M lo 9 :0 0 P M UlllllflDg THE CO-OP | [ WILL NOT BE ABLE TO BUY BACK BOOKS UNTIL JAN. 22nd. Sales Returns and Adjustments will be made as usual. U n iversity Co-Op DISCOUNT BOOKS 50% OFF AND MORE A fine selection o f hard back books. O n the Second Floor. JENSEN SPEAKERS Four Models Reduced: N o . 3 from $ 75.00 ea. to $ 69.95 ea. N o . 4 from $ 99.00 ea. to $ 89.95 ea. N o . 5 fro m $147.00 ea. to $129.00 ea. N o . 6 fro m $198.00 ea. to $179.95 ea. Downstairs GOLF CLUBS WOODS, IRONS, WEDGES, PUTTERS A N D BAGS R educed by up to 4 0 % o ff catalogue price. AND MORE UNADVERTIZED Co-OP SPECIALS Tuesday, January 18, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* I Dock Strike Resumed White House Intervention Possible SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — West Coast longshoremen resumed a strike Monday on tile order of Harry Bridges, their leader. The White House quickly announced it would ask Congress to stop the walkout. Pickets started marching again in the Pacific Coast ports closed down last year in a 100-day strike halted Oct. 6 by a Taft- Ilartley injunction. MARATHON weekend negotiations, with J. Curtis Counts, the Nixon Administration’s chief mediator, taking part, broke off a t the 8 a.m. strike deadline in the face of threatened federal intervention. In Washington, Labor U ndersecretary congressional Laurence Silberman action is “ the only remedy we have left” to halt the strike. Ronald L. Ziegler, presidential press secretary, said chances of settlement were slim. said Silberman has said the Administration would ask Congress either to extend the tim e period of a Taft-Hartley injunction or to submit the dispute to a so-called final offer selection board. THE BOARD could impose a settlem ent after selecting what it deems the most reasonable offer extended by the union or management. Tt could not piece together fragm ents of both offers. The break cam e on basic issues of cargo container handling and a work guarantee for 13,000 West Coast dockers. Bridges and Pacific Maritime Association officials said the talks would resume. No tim e was announced. Tile resumption could come by request of either side or Counts. “ We ran out of tim e,” a w eary looking Bridges said a t a news conference in the employers’ PMA board room, scene of the 20-hour bargaining session. been In force technically since Jan. 2, but retailers were given until Monday to comply. In the interim, the IRS has been checking businesses and giving advice and warnings. Starting Tuesday, retailers in violation of the regulation will risk fines of up to $5,000 or customers’ lawsuits. THE REGULATION originally applied to all businesses, but a new ruling, announced Saturday, lim its the posting requirem ent in to retailers with more than $200,000 revenues. Tile $200,000 requirement applies to central companies—not individual stores in a chain, for example. to What must be listed are base prices—the highest prices that could be charged during tile Aug. 15 to Nov. 13 price freeze. Base prices for all food items m ust be listed. For other items, retailers must list the top-selling 40 items in each departm ent or the goods which accounted for half of last year's sales dollars the departm ent, whichever is less. in Tile list can be In the firm of a book or pamphlet, the IRS said, but it must be displayed where the customer can find it without having to ask a store employe. Bridges said his I n t e r n a t i o n a l Longshoremen’s a n d Warehousemen’s Union wanted settlement term s retroactive to Nov. 14, the start of Phase 2 of the Nixon Administration’s economy control plan. He said the PMA wanted the contract to take effect on ILWU member ratification. Edmund Flynn, PMA president, later told newsmen is disagreement over a proposed $1-n-ton royalty on container cargo. issue outstanding the only repeatedly said “ PMA did its best to modify our position to see if it could come closer to the union dem ands,” Flynn said. Counts, who had the Nixon Administration would ask Congress to intervene in a renewed walkout, stated he was returning to Washington to report to the President and “ to recommend that legislation be enacted to settle this strike.” Bridges said Counts had made it “ very, very clear” there will be some legislative action. “ WE HAVE no idea what it may be,” Bridges said. Bridges said there was agreement in principle on a $1-a-ton royalty to be paid by shippers on cargo containers not worked by ILWU members in a 50-mile off-dock zone. He explained there was agreem ent in principle also on a PMA guarantee of 30 hours of weekly work or pay for all registered longshoremen. Bridges said the difference developed on insistence that the royalty revenue PMA be used to finance the work guarantee. Tho union, he said, contended a $5.7- million annual work guarantee commitment by PMA be spent first before any royalty revenue was used for this purpose. Flynn, the PMA president, said “ th# Union would not tell us what they wanted tile royalty revenue used for. II le y told us they had some ideas and would let us know at a later tim e.” AN ILWU spokesman later said the union improved for wanted the revenue used pensions and other benefits. ILWU and the Team sters Union The dispute and unloading cargo containers In warehouses and freight stations. jurisdiction loading over Senate to Study O f Employment, Issues Busing WASHINGTON (AP) — Tile Senate will be caught up in civil-rights controversies with the second, election-year session of the 92nd Congress. the start Tuesday of The issues of job discrimination and school busing are a t the top of the Senate’s agenda, with a scrap over women’s rights just over the horizon. F irst up in the House are compromise e l e c t i o n aid authorization bills that the Senate passed before Congress adjourned last month. reform foreign and In a break with tradition, both branches plan to swing into action without waiting for President Richard M. Nixon to deliver his State of the Union address Thursday to a joint session of die Senate and House. In addition to any new program s he may present, Nixon is expected to appeal again for welfare reform, revenue sharing and other 1971 proposals left dangling by the Democratic-con trolled Congress. The first bill up in tile Senate would broaden the ban on job discrimination and strengthen enforcement powers of the Equal Employment Opportunity C o m m i s s i o n (EEOC). The EEOC, now limited to the use of persuasion and conciliation to prevent job discrimination, would be em ­ powered to issue cease-and-desist orders. trying in the And p r o h i b i t i o n include State and against discriminatory practices would lie extended to local government employes and also employers and labor unions with eight or more employes or members. Only employers and unions with 25 or more employes or members are covered now. Legislation passed by the House in the 1971 session provides, as the Administration recommended, through court actions rather than giving the EEOC cease-and-desist powers. for enforcement another over a Tile fight over this bill Is to be followed $23-billion higher by education m easure the House attached antibusing am endm ents that w e rt stricken by the Senate Labor Committee. to which Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., plans to lead a fight to put in even stronger antibusing provisions. An aide said E rvin’s key amendment would strip the federal courts of power to order busing if they found that pupils were assigned without regard to race. Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D- Mont., said that once these m easures ar# acted on he will call up a constitutional Amendment to guarantee women equal rights with men. The House already has approved this but fatally it the Senate, where in the previous Congress, in filibustered faces another stiff fight. it was w e a t h e r Forecast for Austin and vidnity is mostly cloudy and wanner Tuesday with a chance of rain or drizzle a t night The high is expected to be in the upper 60’s Thursday with the low predicted in the upper 50’s. The probability of measureable rainfall is 30 percent through Tuesday night. Israelis Seek Nurses Killers in a hunt GAZA (AP) — Israeli troops rounded up suspects Monday for Arab guerillas who killed an American nurse and wounded an American missionary and his daughter. American residents of Gaza said the ambush Sunday night m ay have been a tragic case of mistaken identity. About IO suspects were seized but several were released after interrogation a t Israeli m ilitary headquarters in the occupied Arab territory’. of violence in Israeli-occupied territory and residents said the guerillas—who usually operate from inside refugee camps—m ay have fired at the first car they saw, not knowing who was inside. The ambush was the latest burst of violence in Gaza, where hand grenades and gunfire are a regular occurrence. The usual victims are Israelis, Arab bystanders or Arabs of accused collaborating with Israel. guerillas the by hospitals In E ast Pakistan, was believed to be the third American killed in Israeli- occupied Arab the 1967 Middle E ast war, and the first killed in Gaza. territory since But the ambush was the second escape from death for the Rev. Dr. Nicholas. His car was attacked by guerillas in 1969 and he and another daughter, Joy, 13, wer# slightly wounded. Miss Pate is to be buried in the hospital Killed in the ambush was Mavis Pate, Miss Pate, who formerly worked in courtyard Tuesday. Unity Intent Announced Pakistani President Seeks Compromise By The Associated Press Pakistani President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto said Monday he would m ake Sheik Mujibur Rahman “president, prim e minister or whatever he wants” to bring Bangladesh back and “preserve Pakistan’s oneness.” The Pakistan radio said Bhutto made the offer in a speech a t Quetta, an industrial city 370 miles north of Karachi. It came the day after Mujib, who has said Bangladesh will never reunite with Pakistan, accused West Pakistani troops of slaughtering three million people during his country’s fight for independence. In other developments Monday: • In Dacca, Mujib, now Bangladesh prime minister, appealed to Bangladesh guerillas to surrender their arm s within IO days, saying they should now turn to “ building a new society.” • In Rawalpindi, Radio Pakistan an­ nounced a three-man commission began a probe of “ the m ilitary debacle in the E ast and the cease-fire in the West.” Tile head of the commission said he planned to call form er President Gen. Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan or his chief of staff. • radio In New Delhi, the Indian government made an outright grant of $33 million to Bangladesh in the form of commodities and services to help the infant state reconstruct its shattered economy. The Indian govern­ from ment Bangladesh India of 93 Pakistani prisoners of w ar would be completed Tuesday. Radio Pakistan quoted Bhutto as saying his proposal to hand over Pakistan’s top job to Mujib “ is a sincere offer. . .in the hope that it will be accepted in the sam e spirit in which it was issued.” the movement said to In Islamabad, Pakistan, hundreds of women and school girls marched to foreign embassies that India return Pakistani prisoners of war. to demand They demonstrated outside the American, Soviet, Swiss and British missions and met officials of the International Red Cross. Out of Commission for G o o d The N e w Je rse y Su p re m e C o u r t ruled M o n d a y the law p ro v id in g fo r the death enal- ty in that state is unconstitutional. The ruling lifted the th reat o f execution or 20 men on d eath row. In W a sh in g t o n M o n d a y , R o n a ld M . G e o rg e , d e p u ty attorney gen. o f C a liforn ia, a rg u e d before the Su p re m e C o u r t that the d ea th penalty is p art o f the n a tio n 's m oral and religious he ritage . 7TO UPI Telephoto. Price List Posting Varies By The Associated Press Large retailers around the country said Monday they had posted lists of freeze-level prices in compliance with a Price Com­ Internal mission the regulation Revenue Service will begin enforcing Tuesday. Some shopkeepers said, however, that the customers didn’t seem very in­ terested. that AN ASSOCIATED Press spot check of stores in m ajor cities showed the degree of compliance varied: some shops had easily readable, prominently displayed price lists, others posted the information in obscure areas where customers don’t normally go. Some of the retailers interviewed said they were confused about the exact nature of the commission regulation and others said customers hadn’t even asked about the lists. A spokesman for Neiman-Marcus, the the Dallas-based departm ent store, said price lists had been issued two weeks ago end placed on reception and sendee desks on each floor. “They’re not being consulted much by the customers, but they're there,” he said. The Price Commission regulation has School System Eyed Professor Evaluates Ruling By RUSTY TODD General Reporter districts. A University education professor said Monday that the recent federal court ruling on Texas public school financing failed to recognize that equal money m ay not guarantee equal education. MINORITY CULTURAL influences and the structure of the teaching system pose education barriers that cannot be solved regardless of wealth variation among school taxes, violates last December that A three-man federal court ruled in San Antonio the present school finance system, based partially on property the State and federal Constitutions. The court gave the State two years to adopt a program which distributes funds equally among students, by money alone, said Dr. Robert E, Roueche. Attorney General Crawford Martin, who asked clarification of the original decision, says he will appeal the Supreme Court. the ruling to ghetto ROUECHE POINTED out that increasing the amount of money spent per student In bolstered educational achievement and said more into teacher funds should be channeled training and remedial education. areas has not “ In Dallas, for instance, the amount of expenditure per student has doubled in four years.” he said. “ But no appreciable im­ provement in educational quality has been detected.” Roueche referred to a U.S. Office of Education report which found that minority students lose an average of one year’s education for every four spent in public schools. Bora HRO of cultural background, minority to perceive themselves as students tend underachievers, he said, but the school system could reverse that trend if remedial program s were provided by a new financing system. a “EARLY LIFE gives many blacks and that m akes unat­ seem teachers have chicanos self image achievement educational tainable,” he said. “And come to expect that attitude.” transm itted Studies show that teacher expectations are the minority student through grading procedures and' teaching methods, thus reinforcing the feeling of intellectual inferiority, Roueche said. to The equitable financing program required by the court decision would no doubt im­ prove deprived school districts, he said, but negate pessimistic minority self image are needed for significant reform. program s designed to Special teacher training and rem edial classes for minority students could reverse that image, according to Roueche, but there exists no guarantee that a new finance plan would provide such programs. “ BL DGETAR^ INCREASES generally finance new buildings or pay raises,” he said. “ As in the Dallas case, those changes m ay not help the minority student,” Roueche said a “ great American m yth” increased spending with which equates problem solving had obscured the nature of the education dilemma. “ The minority student requires programs and teachers capable of reversing the in­ tellectual direction of his life,” he said. “ The ruling can provide equitable financing, but financing alone will not change an established teacher-student relationship.” recent court If the Supreme Court upholds the San Antonio ruling, several State agencies will begin developing alternatives to the present finance system. The Texas Research League and Texas Education Agency have begun studies of the problem and the Advisory Commission of Intergovernmental Relations has been appointed the various agencies involved in creating a new finance system . coordinator of 46-year-old nurse from Ringgold, La. from Austin, The Rev. Edward Nicholas, 49, a Baptist missionary and his 17- vear-old daughter, Carol, were wounded by bullets and shattered glass when their minibus—painted white like an ambulance— was sprayed in the ambush. A nearby Israeli arm y patrol saw’ 14 tracer bullets streak toward the little bus from an orange grove about 50 yards out­ side the Jabaliya refugee camp. Troops estimated fired about 50 rounds a t the Americans. the guerillas Miss Pate and the Rev. Dr. Nicholas both worked a t Gaza’s Hospital where thousands of Arabs and Arab refugees ar# treated. Jabaliya refugee camp is a flashpoint Smith Urges Youth Vote BEAUMONT (AP)—Gov. Preston Smith challenged college students and other young people Monday to surpass their elders In registering to vote. Smith spoke at Lam ar University. The governor said there are more W n in Texas 850,000 potential new voters because of the amendment the U.S. Constitution allowing persons as young as 18 to vote. to But he said, “ If these young people follow the voting patterns of their parents, only about 400,000, or fewer than half, can be expected to register and to vote in 1972. the “I challenge you and the other young people of Texas to change the patterns and trends of voting participation established by older generations. There is no reason that 80 to 90 percent of the 850,000 potential young voters of this state should (lot participate in the elections this year.” U. S. Air Action Increases in Indochina SAIGON U.S. w ar-planes attacked across wide a re a s of Indochina in a m assive cam paign M onday to blunt an anticipated North V ietnam ese offensive. U.S. officers said it w as one of the heaviest days of a ir action since autum n. Scores of B52 heavy bom bers and sm aller N avy and Air F orce ta c ­ tical a irc ra ft m ounted m ore than 200 strikes against N orth V ietnam ese supply routes and depots ranging from the beginning of the Ho Chi Minh tra il along the Laos-North V ietnam border 255 m iles southw ard to its exit n e a r cen tral South Vietnam . Britain Toasted into Common Market BRUSSELS com pleted B ritish and E uropean Common M arket officials negotiations early Tuesday to m ake B ritain a m em ber. C ham pagne w as broken out in the glass penthouse atop the 14-story C harlem agne Building w here talks have been going on for 19 m onths. The last points a t issue w ere ironed out at a m eeting betw een B ritain ’s Sir Con O'Neill and Je a n D odelinger of Luxem bourg who spoke for all c u rre n t m em bers. They a re F ran ce, W est G erm any, Italy, Luxem bourg, Belgium and the N etherlands. Gain Recorded after Slow Market Start NEW YORK A fter getting off to a slow s ta rt, the stock m ark e t chugged ahead Monday and closed the day with a respectable gain. The Dow Jones av erage of 30 industrials clim bed 4.44 to 911.12. Most of the advance cam e during the last hour and a half of trading. Analysts said the m ark e t was bolstered in p a rt by the prim e interest- ra te cuts by th ree m ajo r New York banks F rid a y and M onday. Kennedy Withdraws from Florida Primary TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Sen. E dw ard M. Kennedy of M assachusetts rem oved his nam e M onday from the ballot for F lo rid a’s presidential p rim ary , saying “ without qualification th at I am not now and do not presently intend to become a candidate for P resid en t a t the upcom ing nom inating convention.’* - n - - Kennedy w as one of 12 D em ocrats listed by Florida S e c re tary of S+or»e for the M arch 14 p rim ary . Kennedy said a t the tim e of Stone’s announcem ent th a t he would file an affidavit rem oving ins nam e from the ballot. Searching for a Culprit Israeli soldiers seeking suspected terrorists line up and search Arab men Monday in Gaza City in the wake of the Saturday ambush of an auto carrying Mavis Pate, 46, of Rhingold, La.; the Rev. Roy Edward Nicholas, 47, of Austin, and Nicholas' thre# daughters. Israeli troops reported 15 Arab guerillas wer» in custody in connection with th# ambush. — UPI Telephoto Editorials In search of a TSP board One of the main bones of contention during the rechartering of Texas Student Publications was w hat type of students should be allowed to serve on the TSP Board of Directors. The board serves as the publisher of The Daily Texan and its sister publications on campus. This is the board which sets the broad general policies governing the students* newspaper and handles the business and management of publishing for the students at the adm inistrative level. It was this board which last sum m er led the fight against the University Board of Regents in a turbulent attem pt to obtain an equitable relalionshii. Opinion throughout the reorganization crisis was split on whether the students of the TSP Board should continue to be selected from the University at large or w hether they should come from the jour­ nalism departm ent. Previously they had been appointed from Student Government representatives by the student body president. In the end a compromise was reached. Four of the six members would be elected from the D epartm ent of Journalism, with only journalism students allowed to vote for these candidates. The rem aining two, in what was actually to be only a minor triumph over the provincialism of in-departmental selection, are only required to be undergraduate students at the University. They, together with The Daily Texan editor, will run in an at-large election with the entire campus eligible to vote. THE ELECTION FOR ALL these positions will be held Fob. 2, thro- weeks before the general elections for student body officials. It is becoming increasingly apparent that splitting the TSP elections from the general student body elections was a m istake. Traditionally, Tile Daily Texan editor has run alongside the student body president and vice-president as one of the three most im portant student positions on campus. With the elections now split and the Texan editor lumped alongside a medley of TSP candidates, it is feared that student interest In both elections will wane. Thus far, no one has filed for the TSP Board race. And, so the rum ors fly about The Texan offices, only one staffer is seriously considering running for editor. The deadline for filing for all these positions is Friday. The im portance of all these elections cannot be over-emphasized. I t is this board that sets the policy for the students’ newspaper. I t is this board that is charged with maintaining the editorial freedom and high standards that have characterized The Daily Texan in the past. These will he the students whom, in the event of future attem pts to squelch a free student press, will lead the fight for an uncensored and aggressive newspaper on campus. In spite of recent efforts increasingly to remove students from the decision-making processes of this University, there still rem ain a few areas where student input is strong and viable. Tile TSP publishing hoard is one of them. We strongly urge all interested students to file for positions on the TSP Board. Applications can be obtained at the Journalism Building in Room 107. Obituary for Ed Brandon Show The word is out that channel 42’s “ Ed Brandon Show,” seen week­ days at 5 p.m., will be tem porarily discontinued Jan. 28, although Brandon’s F riday night show will stay on the air. KHFI-TV General Manager Dan Love says the show (and Brandon) needs a rest. One of the few bright spots of local television programing, Brandon’s show has been of consistent high quality; thought-provoking, intelligent and eminently newsworthy. The afternoon program has been especially good at presenting topics of Interest to University students. We hope to see the program ’s return soon and recommend the 30- minute tim e slot following the 6 p.m. news. When the Federal Com­ munications Commission prohibited more than three hours of network prime-time programing each evening, and thus opened the 6:30 p.m. slot to local shows, it probably had programs like Brandon’s in mind. (Besides, th at would be after the editorial page deadline and give us the opportunity to tune in m ore often.) Still, we congratulate Brandon and his staff for a job well done and hope to see the afternoon show back on the air soon. Closed doors and closed mouths Tile University has started taking its lumps again for secrecy in administering Texas* largest State-supported school. Richard Morehead, Austin Bureau chief of The Dallas News, reported Sunday, “News writers are grumbling over red tape they encounter in trying to talk with top officials in the University of Texas ad­ ministration. A Dallas News-man recently sought information from an assistant chancellor. Five days later the call was returned by Mike Quinn, information man and also an assistant to Chancellor Charles LeMaistre.” Precisely the problem The Texan has been talking about for quite some time. And while it’s good to know that we’re not alone in our difficulty obtaining it’s also discouraging that the administration doesn’t think better of the state’s citizenry to open its doors to m embers of the press. the University, information from T H E Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin E D I T O R .................................................................................................................. L o r i R o d r ig u e z M A N A G IN G E D I T O R ......................................................................................... S t e v e W is c h C IT Y E D I T O R .................................................................................................................. L iz B a s s A S S IS T A N T T O T H E E D I T O R ............................................................... D a v id P o w e ll A S S IS T A N T M A N A G IN G E D I T O R ............................................................. D e b b y B a y S P O R T S E D I T O R .................................................................................................... A la n T r u e x A M U S E M E N T S E D I T O R ...................................................................... M ile s H a w th o r n e F E A T U R E E D I T O R ............................................................................................. C liff A v e r y Issue N ew s Editor .............. ................................................................................................ jim Lewis General Reporters ........................................................ Dotty Griffith, John Pope, Ru*ty Todd N ew s A ssistants ............................................. Karen Justice, Paul Cooley, Anthony Stasny A ssociate A m usem ents Editor ................................................................................ Steve Hngner A ssistant Sports Editor ................................................................................................. Joe Phillips Make-Up Editor ............................................................................................................... Laurie Loth Wire Editor ............................................................................................................. Suzanne Schwartz Copy E ditors ...................................................................................... Bob Plocheck, Jam ie Carter Photographers .................................................................................... Marlon Taylor, R ene P erez Opinions expressed In The Dally Texan nallsm Building 103) or at the news laboratory are those of the editor or the writer of the (Journalism Building 102). Inquiries coneer;iin«. article and are not necessarily those of the delivery should be made In Journalism Building University administration or the Board of Re- 107 <471-.'.244) and advertising in Journalism gents. Building 111 (471-3227). The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at is pub- The University of Texas at Austin, lished by Texas .Student Publications, Draw- cr D, University Station. Austin, Texas, 78712. The Daily Texan Is published Monday, Tues- day, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday ex- cept holiday and exam periods August through J May. Second-class nonage M id at Austin. Tex. SSSTb&M^ Press t£sr o A N D UP S T A N L E Y F O L D IN G SH E L F B R A C K E T S F O L D IN G T ABLE L E G S 22" W x79" L Reg. 7.25 ^ 9 8 7 P A IR No. FL I OO SET O F F O U R #89 0 ESPANA 3 STANLEY FLAIR SHELF SYSTEM No. V79I, Fla ire shelv ing system uses the versatile tension pole idea. N o holes to drill, no bolts or screws. Put up or take down, rearrange in minutes. Make any size to fit your wall area, great as room divider! STANLEY FLAIRE PREFINISHED SHELVING 8" x 2 4 " S H E L V E S P R IC E D F R O M # > 8 8 EA. Z O T H E R SIZES: 8 " x 36", 8 " x 48 " IO" x 48", 12" x 36", 12" x 48", 14" x 36 " 99 EA. Modular wall shelving system of solid wood, custom carved and in dark beautifully pre-finished walnut, in solid brass finished studs. A variety of adjustable wall brackets present unlimited design possibilities. COLONIAL NORTH APARTMENTS Married students welcome Immediate Occupancy / All bills paid 1 bedroom, I bath $139.50 2 bedrooms, I bath $159.50 2 bedrooms, I bath $162.50 Ask about Joyland, Colonial North’s fully licensed, professionally super­ vised daycare center. Resident child­ care service available evenings & week­ ends by appointment. Call 836-4629 Playgrounds & green areas Patios & balconies available Shag carpeting Lennox air conditioning, Hotpoint appliances Walking distance to schools 15 minutes to UT Furnished and unfurnished Take Peyton Gin East from Research to Hunter’s Trace to Rutland and follow the signs to Colonial North. From North Lamar drive west on Rutland. From FNI 1325, go east on Rutland. Fully licensed day care center YOURSELF BOOKCASE CONCRETE BLOCKS 8” x T x 8” ....39c 8” x 8" x l r ...45c 49c r x 8” x 16" I ’’ x l r PINE SHELVING O N L Y 25* LFT. Many other sizes available to order. E N C L O SED S H E L F END S W IT H SH U TTERS, SH UTTERS IN W IL D C O N T R A S T IN G C O L O R S . . . W E H A V E IT A LL! J O N E S -B L A IR , 16 -oz. A E R O S O L P A IN T . . . I27 SH U TTERS A L L S IZ E S Sc P R IC E S § l f £ P I . OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 7:30 A.M. — 5 P.M. 476-8351 701 W . 5th St. 2208 S. Lamar S * a More Than A Lumber Yard . . . M U C H MORE! — Texan Staff Photo by M ARLON TAYLOR. Point of Order Vice-President for Academ ic Affairs Peter Flawn, presiding, and Secretary Forest Hill engage in debate over procedure during M onday's meeting of the University Council. Council Hears English Plan ii By PA U L COOLEY News Assistant of a the Discussion of proposed c h a n g e English requirements for freshman level students, led by Dr. James H. Sledd, professor of English and of a Monday meeting of the Univer­ sity Council. linguistics, dominated The proposed revision of the E n g l i s h requirement was classified major legislation by a 27 to 17 vote of the council. Sledd stated he wanted to have the proposal the placed General Faculty to obtain a “ wider quorum to force faculty to teach freshmen.” before In remarks before the council, Sledd said that lower division English Is in a crisis. The crisis arose because of the number of teaching assistants who are the lower division teaching required courses, thus lowering the quality of required English. accused S l e d d English professors of not being interested in the quality of required English. “ The administration does not give raises or promotions for teaching freshmen, so those in­ terested in raises and promotion will not teach freshmen,” he said. The proposal is to have a fresh­ man program comprised of nine hours. Three hours of required rhetoric and composition would constitute the beginning course, 302. The second course, 304, would include literature analysis and required composition. Three level hours of a sophomore students course In to help language and the study of literature would also be selected by the student. Crossword Puzzle A C R O S S I Vehicle 5 Goods cast overboard 11 Mammal's 12 Three-legged coat stand 14 Note of scat# 15 Athletic group 17 Memorandum 18 Likely 2 0 Wipe out 23 Obscure 24 Temperate 25 Locations 28 Prefix: with 29 Equip 31 Scorns 3 3 Girl’s nam® 3 5 Broad 3 5 Center for tfay Day sports 6 Army officer (abbr.) 7 Negative prefix 8 Alcoholic beverage 9 Footless 10 Observe 11 Set 13 The people 16 Servant 19 Sweet drink 21 Cook slowly 2 2 Weird 25 Nooses 27 Move sidewise 3 0 Penned 32 College officials 34 Caustic substance 36 Sloppy 37 Deer’s horn <7 38 Send forth 40 Smaller 41 Kind of cheese (pl.) 52 School organization (abbr.) 54 Illuminated 44 Dress for show 57 Teutonic deity (colloq.) 4 7 Comfort 49 Plumlike fruit 58 Rupees (abbr.) 60 Note of scale w. IO 13 3 9 Puff up 4 2 Printer's measure 4 3 Butt 45 Wife of Geraint 4 6 Sainte (abbr.) 4 8 Arabian princes 50 Nahoor sheep 51 Strike 53 Cash drawer 55 Negative prefix 56 Pertaining to time just past 59 Watered silks 61 Raises 62 Man’s name DOWN 1 Something to fight with 2 Man’s nickname 3 Ship channel 4 S-shaped molding 5 Approaches IU 24 29 42 46* IT 5dT >6 p i 38 39 41 IS 16 17 I? T20 C 21 22 25 26 27 28 23 32 30 31 33 34 35 ■v: 44 : C v 45 49 54 55 43 47 yTN48 poc 52 57 58 162 Distr, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. 17 HANK's GRILL 2532 GUADALU PE Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2 pcs. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only Reg. $1.35 Happy Hour 2-5 p.m. Daily Light or Dark Lg. Pitcher......................... 1.00 Sm. Pitcher......................... 75c Page ft Tuesday, January 18. 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN ~ Introducing the new Dual 1218. H At $139.50, we expect it to be the most popular turntable Dual has ever made. For years, the Dual 1219 has been widely acclaimed by hi-fi experts as the finest automatic turntable ever made And though priced at $175, it has been the best-selling quality turntable of them all. And still is. N ow , most of the 1219's precision features are available in this new medium-priced model, the $139.50 Dual 1218. For example: the twin-ring gimbal suspension o f the tOnearm. Adjustable stylus angle for perfect vertical tracking in single play. Synchronous motor. One-piece cast platter. Rotating single-play spindle. Pitch-control to [compensate for off-pitch records. And much more. lf you've always wanted these costly Dual features, plus Duals famed precision and reliability, but found $175 a bit high, the 1218 is your answer. And your “ best buy." RENT - BUY IB IIIS G S IJB ilC a in )'! 2234 GUA DA LU PE 476-3525 5134 BURNET RD. 454-6731 Tabs Assistant as Successor Devaney: O ne M ore Year LINCOLN Neb. (AP)—Bob Devaney announced Monday he will coach N ebraska’s two-time national football championship team through another season and then retire as head coach, while continuing as athletic director. D e v a n e y said he would recommend assistant coach Tom Osborne as his replacement at tho end of the 1972 season. Osborne, of Hastings, Neb., has been on Devaney’s staff since 1962 when Devaney left Wyoming to take the Nebraska post. Devaney explained he will to the Nebraska recommend Board of Regents that Osborne, now the offensive end coach, be elevated next year to assistant head coach in preparation for the top job. retire," “This has been a difficult to continue decision, whether coaching or said to Devaney, 56. "But after careful and because of consideration some commitments to players who have been recruited, I have decided coach one m ore season. to "Next fall will be it —win, lose or draw. We planning on it being ‘win.’” are certainly Devaney’s Comhuskers have won the national championship the ’ast two seasons and have rolled to 23 straight victories and gone through 32 games without defeat. Their includes wins over Louisiana State and Alabama in the last two Orange Bowls. record lifetime winning Devaney’s percentage, .819 on a record of 127-28-6, leads all long-term ac­ tive coaches. Devaney coached for five years to a t Wyoming before coming Nebraska. His Nebraska team s have won six Big Eight titles and tied for another and played in eight post-season bowl games. Asked if he might enter the pro ranks, Devaney said he has "no ambitions in that direction," but said he would "certainly consider an offer if one were m ade." Of Osborne, Devaney said, “I would like to see him elevated to head coach after I leave, but that decision will be up to the Board of Regents." AH Says W ill End NEW YORK (AP)—Muhammad AU was town Monday and appeared to be suffering from a severe case of Joe Frazier. in an Although the hastily arranged press gathering at a downtown eatery had been assembled to bout promote between the form er heavyweight champion and Alonzo Johnson in White Plains, N.Y., later in the e v e n i n g subject most discussed was Joe Frazier. exhibition the "F razier has held my job long enough," Ali said of the man who took his championship in March of 1971. " I have got to whip Joe Frazier. I go to bed thinking of „ L e v e I . & u a d a I u p s 4 7 7 ■ 5 9 5 1 1 t ■: ■ . - ' v. 1 *' y “ ' • - .Vim there’s a course that pars IOO a mouth AmwROT'C. In our Advanced Course the monthly sub­ sistence allowance has just been increased. From $50 to HOO. One hundred dollars every month for IO months of the school year. To spend on room and board, dates and ball games To save for grad school. But Army ROTO means a lot more than more money. It means management and leadership experience that you just can’t get anywhere else. The kind of thing that can land you a better job, and move you along faster once you get it. It means a commission as an officer and everything that goes with it. The prestige, the pay, the chance to travel, the experience. Now ROTO looks even better. For the money you’ll earn today. For the person you’ll be tomorrow. See your Professor of Military Science, or send the coupon for information. ArmyROTC. The more you look at it, the better if looks. A rm y R O T C P O. B ox 12703 P h ila d e lp h ia , P a. 19134 T ell me m ore a b o u t th is course th a t pays HOO a m o n th . Kame Address College attending .County. CN 17-2-72 All-Star Match Could Be Romp Wilt, Jabber Lead NBA's West Squad LOS ANGELES (AP)—David meets Goliath Tuesday night when East meets West in what appears the biggest mismatch in 22 years of National Basketball Association all-Star games. to be The West has what some call the greatest basketball team of all time headed by a coach, Bill Shaman, who recorded a 33- game winning streak in his first year as head man of the Los Angeles Lakers. The East Is blessed with great speed and good defense, but Coach Tom Heinsohn of Boston may need a slingshot. SHARMAN’S OWN center, Wilt Chamberlain, won’t even start In this classic, which begins at 9 p.m. CST before an expected packed house of 17.505 at the Forum. Hareem Abdul Jabbar the West, and his starts running m ates have power to spare. for Beside the 7-2 Jabbar of Milwaukee will stand Bob Love of Chicago and Spencer Haywood of Seattle, both 6-8, with Los Angeles guards Jerry' West and Gail Goodrich in the backcourt for the nationally televised ABC game. Southern California will be blacked out. to combat Jabbar will face off against 6-9 Dave Cowens of Boston as the the E ast attem pts West with speed. Cowens’ 6-5 teamm ate John Havlicek w ill b e a t forward along with 6-6 B illy Cunningham of Philadelphia. The guards at tipoff time will b e 6-5 Lou Hudson of Atlanta and New York's Walt Frazier. JOINING Chamberlain on the West bench are Portland rookie Sidney Wicks, Houston’s Elvin Hayes, Oscar Robertson of Milwaukee, Cazzie Russell of Golden State, Connie Hawkins and Paul Silas of Phoenix, and Bob Lanier and Jim Walker of Detroit. The E ast m ust rely on the jumping ability of Hudson, the tenacious defense of New York’s Dave DeBusschere and Frazier and the speed of Havlicek, Jo Jo White and Archie Clark. The rem ainder of the East squad: Butch Beard and John Johnson of Cleveland, Jack Marin and Wes Unseld of Baltimore and Tom \ an Arsdale of Cincinnati. S h am an hopes to make it two In a row for the West. Last year, the West broke a three-gama losing streak by winning 108-107. Some observers, however, feel the score of this year’s game m ay avenge a West defeat in 1968, when the score was 144-124. The losing coach: Bill Sham an of then San Francisco the Warriors. — UPI Telephoto. To Step Down . . . Bob Devaney. Only Title Rematch Dreams of Loss him and wake up thinking of him. I ’m gonna whip him and then I ’ll be able to rest for a while." The e x p e c t e d rematch, however, is not in the offing for this year, according to Ali. “I don’t know when," said Ali, now a Muslim minister, "but the world wants this fight more than I do. Things will fall in place.” "Everywhere I go, in all my travels around the world, they call me champ. the I t’s to meet inevitable, we’ve got again. But I don’t need Frazier. He needs me. I ’ve fought three times since cur fight and made $900,000. He’s only fought once and made $250,000. Does that look like I need him? It will come off, but it’ll be no contest. I ’m gonna whup him." Jack Now 2nd Place In 1972 Money Race n e w YORK (AP)—Jack Nicklaus’ $28,000 playoff victory in the Bing C rosby'Golf Tour­ nament moved him into second place among professional golfs money winners for the year. Nicklaus, who set an all-time record with $244,490 in winnings last year, moved ahead of his A ft. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service Across from Gulf M art GL 2-0205 CLOSED SATURDAY Independent V W The Only Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET ROAD SER VIC IN G VO LK S W A G E N VEHICLES IS O U R SPECIALTY Still on 19*1 pace by taking the Crosby event. His earnings after last year’s. Crosby totaled only $743. the money top of winners is George Archer, whose the ‘Crosby sixth place event was worth $5,577. That increased his two tournaments this season to $31, 077. total for tie in Third place in the money list belongs to Johnny Miller with $19,900. He is followed by Lee $14,26S, Dave ' Hill, Trevino, $11,855, Tommy Aaron, $11,741 Tom WeLskopf, $8346 Bruce Cr umpton, $7,235, Fred Marti, $6,890 and Hale Irwin, $6,683. Tickets Available For Baylor Game Reserved tickets to Saturday’s Baylor-Texas game in Waco are still on sale a t the ticket office athletic i n Gregory Gym, d e p a r t m e n t ticket m anager Richard Boldt said Monday. Boldt said about IOO tickets rem ain but that more can be brought from Waco if necessary. Ihe Cascades... I rn EH & e V_ & r n n i x fax Share the rent.. .and the way we live! EXAMPLE: Four students can share the rent on 2 bedroom 2 bath furnished apartment at The Cascades, with each Davinci average rent as low as S62.50 a month. Yet all 4 have full access make The Cascades such an exciting p la ^e toe|ive'n^ $ □ Clubhouse with wet bar, fire­ place & spa. □ Free lcemakers. D Fireplaces in some units. □ Choice of special decor for men and women. □ 11 floor plans: Flats & studios; 1, 2, 3, & 4 bedrooms. □ Ample parking & laundry facil­ ities. □ Two swimming pools, one with water volleyball court. H Built-in GE kitchens. D Large decks & patios. □ Shag carpeting, lots of storage. All Bills Paid Call 444-4485 From IH-35 South, take the Oltorf exit to Algarita. turn right one block to The Cas­ cades. The Cascades A development of Jogger Associates. 'Next Year Worries Landry Morton, Thomas Could Create Problems Tuesday, January 18, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 Ed Spauldina 8-3 Record Not so Bad 30'game w*n sfreak and two national championships, Texas’ makes d e h o r n s want to fo rg e t-o r sta rt looking ^ , I to Sept. 23, date of the 1972 opener with Miami (Fla.). Actually Texas 8-3 record isn’t that bad except by 10-0 standards— and a letdown was predictable. In fact, in the 12 seasons since 1959 the use of a simple statistic could have allowed any fan to predict (accurately) what the Texas football record would be in a given season. Accurate Formula The simple statistic is the record a given class of seniors compiled during their freshman season, and in the 12-year span from 1960-1971, the estim ate would have proved accurate on all but two occasions. Here s how it works. The 1970 seniors (Steve Worster, Scott Hen­ derson, Bill Atessis, etc.) were members of the 1967 Texas freshman team . As freshmen they were 5-0, and by doubling that 5-0 you get a 10-0 1970 season—exactly what the 'Horns were that year. By doubling the freshman record of, say, 1962, and advancing that three years to the 1965 varsity, you’d get a prediction of 6-4 for 1965, again the exact record. From 1960 on here’s what it looks like: Year 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 Freshman Record 3-1-1 5-0 4-0-1 54) 4-1 3-2 1-4 3-2 4-1 4-0-1 5-0 3-2 Estimated Varsity Record 7-3 10-0 9-1 10-0 8-2 6-4 2-8 6-4 8-2 9-1 10-0 6-4 Actual Record 7-3 9-1 9-0-1 10-0 9-1 64 6-4 6-4 8-1-1 10-0 10-0 8-2 The only two breakdowns would occur In the 1966 and 1971 seasons, and I m ake no attem pt to explain them. And while the above predicted a 6-4 1971 season, which wasn't true< there was an indication that the perfect records of '69 and ’70 were not likely to be repeated. Like any good student, you probably now wonder why such a for­ mula will work. I can't really explain that, and I guess if I could I ’d be helping Darrell Royal coach instead of commenting on what he does. A Look to the Future And what about future years? Well, the last two freshman team s have been undefeated so the 1973 and 1974 varsities look to be pretty strong. Next season’s seniors were 4-1 as freshmen, which might lead to an 8-2 1972 record. Assuming a quarterback can be found. Right now that’s the biggest problem facing Royal and hts staff, but until recruiting is over, sometime in I ebruary, it will be little more than something for everyone to speculate on. Alan Lowry has been mentioned as the most likely choice to succeed Eddie Phillips and Donnie Wigginton, but Lowry hasn’t played quarterback since his freshman season’. Even granting that Lowry Is a fine athlete, he will have to spend most of spring training learning the offense, and that could make Longhorn passing next fall nonexistent. Freshm an Mike Presley might be the best passer, but the intricacies of the Wishbone offense escaped him last fall, and neither of the two sophomores, Mike McCulloch and Rob Riviere, seem to be the answer, either. Departing Players Other seniors who played their final games last season include halfback Jim Berteisen, fullback Bobby Callison and split end-punt returner Dean Campbell on offense, and linemen Ray Dowdy, Greg Ploetz and David Arledge and linebackers Tommy Woodard and Stan Mauldin on defense. The offensive line returns intact, and the defense, bolstered by a freshman unit which allowed just 25 paints in five games, should again be strong. H ere’s a long range hunch that Lowry won’t be the only defensive player to join the offense next fall. How does Glenn Gaspard at fullback sound? With Randy Braband and Greg Dahlberg returning at linebacker and highly-regarded Fred Currin advancing from the Yearlings, Gaspard might be freed for ball carrying duties. I t’s a nice thought, anyway. in the glory of NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Dallas Coach Tom Landry, still reveling a championship m o r n i n g , said club now m ust Monday his in­ prepare volving No. I running back Duane Thomas and No. 2 quarterback Craig Morton. to solve problems “ I felt a lot better this morning than when I ’ve gotten up before,” said Landry, whose Cowboys won Super Bowl VI Sunday and ended six years of title-chasing with a 24-3 victory over Miami. “ We an long worked a organization to reach this point. tim e as “ NOW YOU can feel it through the whole team . The frustration tends to build up. But now we’re letting it go.” While the Cowboys are letting their emotions go, Landry pointed out they were reluctant to let either TTiomas or Morton go. But he a possibility that could happen in either case. there was admitted Thomas, the Cowboys’ leading during against England the gainer ground Dolphins with 95 yards in 19 carries, was traded by Dallas to N e w the exhibition season. But the trade was nullified when he refused to complete a physical exam with the Patriots and also argued with C o a c h about technique. John Mazur to SINCE RETURNING the Cowboys, Thomas has maintained a mysterious silence that Landry acknowledges created a tense atm osphere on the Cowboys. “ We don’t want to lose a good football player,” Landry said, “but he has to get everything worked out. I hope he'll be back, but the way he cam e back to us we’ve got to find out exactly what he feels. “I wouldn’t like to see another season of that. It created a lot of tension and the players feel it. I t’s not a real good situation. His silence is not natural. I don’t think situation has been blown out of proportion—it is a the problem. to LANDRY DID NOT “ I respect Duane and I un­ derstand what he’s doing, but sometimes he carries his logic to an extreme, sometimes you compromise. Duane have doesn’t, and that’s his problem ” reveal what he feels Thomas is doing. triumph over But Miami, Thomas did break his silence long enough to say he had not reporters because they would have hurt his concentration talked after the to Beyond that, it is also known that he wants m ore money than the reported $20,000 he has earned in each of the first two years of a three-year contract. f Landry said that the third year of Thomas’ contract would be renegotiated, is club since policy to do so in all multiple year pacts of that length. it Morton, the Cowboys’ No. I quarterback last season, now is In the unenviable position of standing behind Roger Staubach, No ’Rod' for Roger NEW ORLEANS (AP) — D a l l a s quarterback Roger Staubach received a new car the Monday for being named most valuable player in Super Bowl VI. It was a shiny, black-vinyl- topped sports car with a 400 Magnum engine, but the Dallas signal-caller asked if he could swap it for a station wagon. The former Heisman Trophy winner from Navy, who directed the Cowboys to a 24-3 victory over Miami in pro football’s big game Sunday, received the car from a national magazine (Sport) a t a luncheon in a French Q uarter hotel. The 20-year-old Staubach said it “ sure is a pretty car” but added that he has three children and a station wagon would be more practical. Staubach was told that he could indeed, swap the sports job for a station wagon and was asked what color he wanted. He said “ one of the wood those with paneling” would do the job. Staubach accepted the gift of the car during a press conference in which he said he probably would not press Cowboy Coach Tom Landry to allow him to call season. his own plays next L a n d r y plays called throughout the season by shut­ the tling tight ends as messengers from the bench. “Well, when you’ve won IO in a row this way, it's pretty hard to m ake an argum ent,” Staubach smiled. “ He let m e call the plays in the exhibition gam es,” when Staubach and Craig Morton were competing for the No. I quar­ terback job. “ I think we’ll go the sam e way next season, and we'll see how it goes.” Landry agreed. “ If the players sam e way with the react Staubach calling the plays as with me calling them, then the quarterback will call the plays,” said coach, wrho named Staubach his No. I m an after the Austin Rugby Club Seeking Players The Austin Rugby Club from this spring will expand two team s to three, with the third team composed prim arily of new players. During the next two weeks the club will hold practices every day at 6 p.m. at the intram ural fields a t 45th and Guadalupe streets. Richard Kopanda, club publicity director, emphasized that ex­ perience is not a requirem ent for joining in­ formation can be obtained by calling 451-3957. team . F urther the seven gam es when the Cowboys, alternating between Morton and Staubach, were foundering with a 4-3 record. They finished at 11-3. have could “ Craig done basically the sam e,” Landry said, “but I felt the team would unite around Roger because of his g r e a t and dedication.” determination W IX .G O 6509 N. LAMAR Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE J O B S A W A IT IN G IN BARTENDING O u r Graduate* Are W orking All O ver Texas — FREE P L A C E M E N T — BRADLEY SCHOOL OF BARTENDING — L O B B Y SU IT E — COMMODORE PERRY BLDG. TEL. 478-7488 THE BEST IN VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS 100% GUARANTEE — MODERN FACILITIES BRAKES TUNE-UPS CLUTCH — TRANSMISSION — ELECTRICAL OPEN SATURDAY — BankAmericard Master Charge W E HAVE A COMPLETE PARTS DEPT. EXPERT ON VALVE I ENGINE REPAIRS GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE 1621 EAST SIXTH 477-6797 long in a latest line of tho quarterbacks who have become Super Bowl helm s. And Landry expects fully Morton to ask to he traded. and he probably “ He will probably ask to be traded, is justified,” Landry said. “ I think, for him and his career, hp will ask to be. We will never trade unless we get value, but T can ’t imagine us not getting valup for him. He’s at the point whore he could bp a groat quarterback.” only The Cowboys’ other quarterback—at least on paper— is Dan Reeves, a reserve running back who also doubles as a coach. •T 5 9 51 YOUR HEMPHILL'S DOLLAR BUYS MORE WHY WAIT 4i/2 MONTHS? HEMPHILL REBATES ARE C A S H IN Y O U R POCKET— N O W ! Here’s how they work: Hemphill’s pays you 10% on tho dollar— no tallying up— a straight 10%. Just keep your receipt— the one from the cash register— wait one day (that’s all it takes for a Hemphill’s rebate to mature)— then use your rebate as cash on your next purchase. It's that simple and easy. Pay Cash For Your Books Today . . . Spend Your Rebates on Purchases Tomorrow HEMPHILLS 613 W est 29th OFFICE MACHINES 824 E. 26th Street (Across From The Law School) 2244 Guadalupe (On the Drag) We’ve invented the small sensible solid American car all over again. THE GALLOPING SALE With Low Prices and Hot Specials is on I C A R TA PE D E C K IN S T A L L E D W IT H 2 S P E A K E R S C O M P L E T E O N L Y «■ W Plus Tax 8 Track Tapes as low as .................... Cassette Blanks as low a s ................. 8 Track Blanks................................. 2 " 50* 99* CAR SPEAKERS ON SALE I V E R Y S P E C IA L - • Model SH -4 05 Set of Two Reg. 12.95........................ • Other Speakers Reduced To Sell ® Installation Available on Most Types of Tape Decks COME SEE THE HITACHI & BOWMAN CASSETTE SYSTEMS ALL AT MUNTZ CARTRIDGE CITY 1601 SAN JACINTO When people shop fora smell cor, they look for some very simple basic values. Dependability. Economy of money and style. Good mileage end long life. Those basics are our birthplace. The Model T, the Model A, the first mass produced station wagon — name a basic idea, and chances are ford built it. Now to Ford Pinto. Pinto is as simple and solid a small car as there is in the world. And it's priced lower than the three leading imports; lower than its ma|or US. competitor.Yet it has every basic modern necessity. A gutsy little engine that gets the some economical kind of gas mileage as the little imports. A solidoso-rock four speed transmission. Sports car steeriife’ A welded steel body with six coats of point. Ball-joint front suspension, and a wide stable stance on the toadl Pinto is one small car that doesn't have to fear a superhighway. And finally: Pinto gives you comfortable Interior leg and shout der room - yet it's only ll* inches longer than the leading little import. See the Pinto at your Ford dealer's. Ifs 40 years newer than if* Model A — but it's still the same basic idea W hen yew f et back ta basics, yaw f a t back ta N r i FORD PINTO FORD DIVISION See your lord Dealer new \\ ii Page 8 Tu«»3ay, January 18, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAtt CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES ...........9 E ach Word (15 word m inim um ) $ .07 .06 .......... $ ...7 5 . . . . . . $ ...0 5 Earh Additional Tim® Student rate one tim * E ach additional word 2ft Consecutive Issues IO w ords 15 words 20 w ords 1 2 3 4 C lassified Display I colum n x one inch one tim e $ 2.10 E ach Additional Tim e ...................................... $11.00 ...................................... $15.00 ........ ............................. $19.00 ................................... $38.00 ..................................... $70.90 ............ $96.00 ................................... $i20.00 col. inch co l. inch col. inch col. inch .......... $ 2.00 (No copy ch an ce for con secu tive issu e rates.) • . L O W STUD ENT RATES 15 word* or le u for 75c the fir*t ♦Im®, 5c each additional word. Stu­ receipt dent must show Auditor's and pay in advance in Journalism Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M onday through Friday. DEA DLINE SCHEDULE Monday Texan F riday, 3:00 p.m. Tuesday Texan M onday. 11:00 a.m. W ednesday Texan . . Tuesday, 11:00 a .m . T hursday Texan W ednesday. 11:00 a.m . F riday T exan Thursday. 11:00 a.m . “ In the event of errors m ade In an advertisem ent, Im m ediate notice m ast be given a s the publisher* are responsible for only ONE incorrect Insertion. AH claim s for adjustm ent* should be m ade not later than 30 days after publication. F o r S a l e T O P C A S H P R I C E S paid for diamonds. old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop. 603 _____ Commodore P e rry . 476-0178 G O LD F I L I , E D or sterling silver ear studs with birthstone, $1.50 pair post­ Box paid. Two p air $2 00. Huie, 17234DT, Dallas, T X 75217. Levi & Wrangler BLUEJEAN JACKETS Fresh Pants 24th & San Antonio N.E. MERCANTILE COMPANY 1600 Manor Road Antiques and collectables, art, pottery, comics, and pulps, vintage clothing. Large stock of second hand merchan­ dise, couches, desks, dressers, etc. Open Wed.-Sun. ‘til 6 p.m. LANDLUBBERS W e have your size. FRESH PANTS 24th & San Antonio T R A N S P O R T A T IO N C A RS. Call Jam es at 472-1839. H A R M O N I C A S , P A T C H E S . P A T ­ C H O U LY , B A N D A N A S and clothes— new and old, at Fresh Pants, 24th & San Antonio. S T U D E N Y D E S K S , chairs, bookshelves, tables, chests, bicycle. One block east IH35. N it N oy House, 1513 Manor Road. 1969 V W S E D A N . Lik e new. AC, radio, rear speaker, new tires, low mileage. 454-9392 4-6 p.m. O W N E R T R A N S F E R R E D . Must sell 12x64 Fleetwood. Two bedrooms, 1-% bath. Central heat and air. P a rtia lly furnished. Many, m any extras. 836-4261. N IK O N F T N B O D Y with case. $225. 478-2101 or Contessa 333. 1967 H O N D A Windshield, 305cc. new electric battery. Good condition. $301. Call Duane at 471-4695 or 444-5659. S U P E R H A W K s ta rte r 1967 F O R D C O R T IN A GT. Two door hardtop, standard transmission. AM- F M . Good mileage. Excellent condition. 452-9708. 8'x45’ T R A I L E R F O R S A L E . W ill ac­ commodate two people comfortably. 478-7667. 40% OFF the normal retail price of all posters fo r the rem ainder of this month. GAN DAL F'8 102 E. 31 st f P H O N E 4 7 1 - 5 8 4 4 M O N . T H R U F R I . 8 : 0 0 - 5 F o r S a l e F o r S a l e H e l p W a i n j t e d W a n t e d S e r v i c e s A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . ■ H o u s e s , F u r n H A IR LT D . Call for hair singeing for split ends and shag information on O N E M A L E needed to assume lease. to Blackstone Apartments. Next L a w School. Maid. $64.50. 478-1973. cuts. 454-0984. L A K E A U S T IN , to Campus. Two bedroom mobile home $80. one bedroom $75. Students wel­ come. No hippies, no dogs. 327-189L fifteen minutes M U S T S E L L 70 M A V E R IC K . R & H . $1350. 926-7095. Stick, AFROTC-Size 38R mess dress, all a c ­ cessories, class A blues. Both for $65 total. 476-4282. D A N C E R S A N D W A IT R E S S E S . P a r t t i m e or salaried. Experience not necessary. Apply 3003 South Lam ar, Sheree's Playb o y Club, after I p.m. K IN G S IZ E B E D $50. Atnla 25" fram e IO speed $75, 9x9 Hettrick tent $25. T O P L E S S C A S H IE R S . Apply in person 222 E a st 6th, Studio IV Theater. 474-2297. ___ Discount Stereo Most Brands Low Prices Full Warranty 453-1312 finish. W o rld — — ----------------------------------------------------- j speakers, and dust cover J U S T R E C E IV E D five 1972 deluxe solid state consoles, in beautiful handrubbed | North La m a r. walnut renowned B.5.R. turntable A M - F M - F M - S t e r e o radio and 4 speaker aud io system, $69 ea. M o n th ­ in­ ly terms available. They may ba spected at U N C L A IM E D F R E IG H T , 6535 N. Lamar, 9 a m. to 6 p.m. M o n . thru Fri., Sat. 'til I p.m. 30 mpg. $395. 453-0507. 441-2438. STEREO EQUIPMENT Sony M o d e l T C -580 Tape Deck with automatic reverse. A ltec Bolero Speak­ ers, Dual C hanger, Sony car cassette | L A T E player, or part. stereo rec All 476-6733, 454-6141. JU S T R E C E I V E D tapes. Suggested list price Is $5.95, to be $1.99. U N C L A I M E D so ld F R E IG H T , 6535 N. L a m a r . No D e a l e r s . 8-track o n ly fo r I S T E R E O C O M P O N E N T S ^ ) i G a r r a r d Including am plifier. In w alnu t finish. $49.95. Unclaim ed Freight, 6o3o turntable, ______ W A T E R B E D S $15.50. Guaranteed. C a ll 1967 F IA T 600. Excellent condition. O ve r 1965 O L D S M O B IL E S T A T IO N W A G O N . power, automatic, AM-FM, $750. 472- 8865 after 5 weekdays, weekend any time. S U N N S C E P T R E A M P, four 12" speakers. Gibson SG standard, good condition, both only two years old. $550 M468 Je ste r or 471-5314. 1970 Honda 350cl. 5000 m iles. Must sell. 452-0178, M r. Weidmann. HARVEY & JAMES P U R V E Y O R S O F F IN E M O T O R C A R S R O L L S R O Y C E - B EN T LE Y - D A I M L E R $1500 up buys a European Classic w ith modern perform ance and no d eprecia­ tion! C all 478-0870 after 6 p.m. 7 BEDROOM, 3 BATH HOUSE NEAR U.T. This huqe house for only $25,000 with $2500 down and very generous terms. Needs interior work. Price includes fu r ­ nishings, appliances, and air c o n d itio n ­ ers. W ill consider trade. 478-5115. M O T O R IS T S — O R D E R N O W ! A T R A V E L C A L C U L A T O R ! Resembles large slide rule. Determ ines accurately miles per gallon, travel tim e, miles traveled, gallons of gas con­ sumed. speed required to reach desti­ nation, etc. $2.19. Guaranteed. C H A SM A R . Dept. W W . Box 263, Elk h art, Ind. 46514 1963 V O LV O . Ex celle n t running con­ dition. $400. C all 453-1489 or com e see at 3811 Speedway (rear). M U S T Jeep W agoneer with 383 Roadrunner engine, C h ry ­ S A C R IF IC E sler rear end. C all 263-2121. P IA N O L E S S O N S . Beginner and ad­ vance. C all 451-3549. T u t o r i n g ST A T T U T O R IN G . A ll business math. G R E preparation. 451-4557. M A T H 603. Evenings. Daily, weekly, semester rates. Inexpensive. 808. ’ education m ajors our perienced certified reasonable. Mathem atics, 452-1327. teacher. liberal arts, specialty. E x ­ V ery A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . W O O D W A R D APTS. 1722 E . Woodward • Special student oriented clusters. • Swim m ing pools. • Moderate prices with all utilities 444-7555 paid — no hidden charges! • Only 5 minutes to U.T. • Complete on-premises washateria. • F re e all-channel TV . • Am ple parking for tenants & guests. FALL RATES $129.50 Large two bedroom near down- Swimming pool, carpeted, town. I t SA N A N TO N IO C A R P O O L . Riders wanted. Reasonable. L e a ve S A. 6:30 a.m., leave Austin 5 p.m. 475-2466 Austin or Jesse 923-1283 Covarrubias. S A . ask for studio and home. N E E D L A R G E E M P T Y RO O M for art Plum bing and electricity. $55 or less. C all LaDonna, 454-7088. L o s t & F o u n d How would you like to earn $2.50/hour talking to g irls? I f you are sharp, have a car, and can work 15-20 hours/week apply 3004 evenings and Saturday, Guadalupe, rear, suite 108 4 p.m. dally. L O S T CAT. blonde and white, male neuter, 465-7689. a t on tain bleau Apartments. $50 J j^ ^ T H long-hair. P in k collar. L a s t _________________________ B U S IN E S S , reward. C all 453-0338. L O S T B R O W N S IA M E S E CAT, T R A N S - A M E R IC A N D IS C O U N T C L U B S has found and trained 30 of the best people in Austin to seupervise T A D C agents who m ay now apply: F u ll & part _ _ _ timers selling 5 hours w eekly should earn $37,50 m inim um : m ore | L Q S T JA N U A R Y 1st, 41st and Duval. as you learn. Two hours daily can black and white border collie puppy make your day just right, earning $75 weekly, paid insurance, other fun-time benefits. Call 478-4994 (9-7 d aily). full grown m ale named Mort. V icinity Exnosition and En field. Reward. 477- 2533. Two months old. "Fre ed o m .” Please call 452-8386. 465-0392. I love him ve ry m u ch !! O V E R S E A S J O B S F O R S T U D E N T S Australia, Europe. S. Am erica, A frica etc. All professions and occupations, $700 to $3,000 monthly. Expenses paid. overtime, sightseeing. F ree Information Write, Jobs Overseas, Dept. 6A Box 15071, San Diego, C A 92115 P a r t time cashier help wanted 11-2 p.m. daily. See Ja n ic e Shotts after I p.m., 2-J's Hamburgers, 3918 North Lam ar. NEED SOME BREAD? — U N IV E R S A L S T U D E N T A ID — largest student discount "A m e rica ’s program ” is now interviewing In Austin. Don't hassle the Austin Job m arket — check this out: Appearance — no hassle! Hours to fit any schedule! E a rn $25-$100 w eekly! F u ll or part time! Advancement and travel opportuni­ ties after graduation! Must be able to com m unicate with other students! C all or come by U S A., Inc. (19th and P e a rl) 901 W . 19th F O U N D : P U P P Y - B lo n d e , white paws. black markings on back and muz­ zle. Found Satu rd ay night near The Trough. W a s w earing collar. C laim at 2210-C Nueces. flea S e r v i c e s G O IN ’ D O W N H O M E ? or anyw here? L e t us help got it together! Riders for d rivers: drivers for riders. F re e a c, wood paneling listing. 478-0043. 1 474-2649 : P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G . Reports, theses. dissertations. Stric t I rates. M aster Charge. quality. Lo w U niversity Thesis-Dissertation Service. 451-4557. XEROX COPIES 4c EACH single c o p y rate reductions 6c each Q u a 'it y copies on plain b o n d paper. THE BLACKSTONE Lu x ury living — m aid service! Live ’ 2 block from L a w School. E a c h apart­ ment Is carpeted, draped, central heat amt air. Utilities paid. Designed for 4 persons per apartment, 2 bedrooms, 2 ' bath. Individuals matched with com- j patible roommates. 2910 R E D R I V E R 476-5631 j A Paragon Property bedroom, Q U A R T E R D E C K . 2308 Enfield. Two two bath. Wood paneled, cable TV, dishwasher, Shuttle Bus. From $170 plus electricity. 476-1292. 478-2525 GINNY'S COPYING SERVICE 2200 San A n to n io 2nd floor $2 PER HOUR I b 'o ck behind The C o - O p et 22nd 476-9171 or 452-8428 straight salary, permanent position as retail accounts m anager for Interna­ tional company. Austin resident, busi­ ness m ajor preferred as tim e summ er employment is available. M ust have car and afternoons free. Call 478-7751 8-12 a.m. Mon.-Sat. for interview appointment. full CALL 471-5244 CLASSIFIED AD TO PLACE A TEXAN FREEWHEELING BICYCLE SHOP T ry our prompt repair work Lightweight Imported 10-Speeds Lo w er Prices — Compare 607A West 28th — 477-6846 3 BRAND N EW BEDROOM SETS inclu d'ng double dresser, mirror, chest, and double bed. To be so'd for $89.95 per set. Payments are available. W e al­ so have 3 livinq room groups. Unclaim ed Freight, 6535 N. Lamar, O p e n 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. M on. thru Fri. Sat. 'til I p.m. B R A N D N E W S E W IN G M A C H IN E S $35. N ationally advertised brand. We have 1972 zigzag sewing machines complete with factory guarantee, to be sold for $39.95 each cash or small monthly payments. These machines have built-in controls for m aking but­ tonholes, heming, decorative stitches, sewing on buttons, darning, mending, overcasting, embroidering and m any other features. They m a y be inspected and tested at U N C L A IM E D F R E IG H T , 6535 N. Lamar, 9 a m. to 6 p.m. Mon. thru F r i. S a t till I p m. FREEWHEELING BICYCLE SHOP T r y our prompt re p a ir w ork Lightweight Im ported 10-Speeds Lo w er P rice s — Compare 607A W est 28th — 477-6846 F o r R e n t PASO HOUSE 1808 W e st Ave. M E N Fall vacancies. Large double or sing's rooms A / C , m i d carpeted service, refrigerators in each room, color TV in lounge, free parking. C all 478-3917 TEXAN DORM FOR MEN 1905-1907 N U E C E S remodeled. completely Single $310. double $190 for spring. CA/CH. maid service, refrigerators and parking a vail­ able. 21i blocks from Campus. Mr. & M rs. L a r r y Burnside, managers, 478-5113. MIDTERM STUDENTS — LONDON SQUARE APTS. 2400 Town Lake Circle (Town Lake area off Rivers! da in South A u stin) PRIVATE ROOMS FOR MEN has limited number of 2 bedroom, P/2 or 2 bath apartments. On Four H ocks from University. C A / C H , kitchen privileges. $67.50/montn. A so room for three boys upstairs, kitchen. $45 each. 708 G raham P see, 472-2789 . any time M o nday, after 6:30 Tuesday, , th in g . 442-8340 for rates W ednesday. Shuttle Bus, club room, near every - T W O G IR L S TO S H A R E m y home. kitchen and privileges. C all 928-0834. p rivate room bath, R E N T A L S —Dorm size refrigerators, T V and stereos. Alpine Rentals, 204 E . 53rd, 452-1926. s i x F O R R E A S O N A B L Y Q U IE T P E R S O N . Campus Refrigerator, no cooking. $69-month. Call 472-6168. blocks North T H E C O M P A C E R E F R IG E R A T O R S anti B / W T V for rent by semester or month. C all Central Texas Appli- 4^4526COmPany* Burnet Road, T H E P H O E N I X , 1930 San Antonio. CA-CH, maid service. One block to Campus, free parking, singles avail­ able. 476-9265 after 2 p.m. weekdays, all day Saturday and Sunday. T y p i n g R o o m m a t e s Just North of 27th & Guadalupe N E W 1972 C A R S, T R U C K S , any make, ; 1970 B U L T A C O M etralla MK.2 2 5 0cc five speed. N ew condition. See at any model, tremendous honest 4411 Airport Blvd., 240. discounts, 454-3386. 1953 C H E V R O L E T . Good condition. N ew ; -------------------------------------- ---------------------- - R E G I S T E R E D L A B R A D O R R e trie v e r shots, puppies. Reasonable. Papers, wormed, generator, battery, voltage regulator, parents proven hunters. Term s available. 258-1756. $195. 454-9422. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . M i s c e l l a n e o u s t n r m v i p CLOSE CAMPUS PARKING Apartment-Suites Available PRIVATE BATH • 19 MEALS PER WEEK • MAID SERVICE LINEN • SHAG CARPETS • REFRIGERATORS SW IM M IN G POOL • SAUNAS TELEPHONE: 472-8411 21st & Guadalupe Monthly/Semester Rates Call 477-5777 or 477-5I92 ENJOY A DIFFERENT SCENE THIS SPRING AT THE CHAPARRAL APARTMENTS ACCOMODATIONS FOR I TO 4 PERSONS APARTMENTS, BEDROOMS (ONLY) & EFFICIENCIES .CONVENIENT TO CAMPUS 3 STORY W/ELEVATOR MAID SERVICE • CENTRAL HEAT & AIR • AMPLE PARKING • POOL 2 BR, 2 BATH APT. FOR 4: BEDROOM UNIT FOR 2: EFF. (BRAND NEW) FOR 2: $65.00/PERSON/MO. S52.00/PERSON/MO. $67.00/PERSON/MO. MAKE RESERVATION N O W ____ MODELS OPEN P A R K I N S c. impus. Semester contracts available. t m n Y v MJffi llrJp WmW WL JE* CENTER GARAGE $48/semester Hourly parking always available. Call 472-9293 or come by No. 6, Dobie Shopping Mall, 2021 Guadalupe R o o m & B o a r d CO-ED GOVERNOR'S DORM 2612 Guadalupe 3 meals a day Mon.-Fri., maid service, 2 color TV lounges, gym. For more information call 476-5658 EL PATIO APTS. Now renting Spring Sem ester (limited number of single & doublt vacancies for Spring.) 2 bedroom, 2 bath for $215, a il bills 1970 T R IU M P H 6.50cc T R 6 R condition. Must sell or a u beautiful me. 477- 4781. 2408 LEON 476-3467 A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . NEW ADDITION TO THE CLOISTERS APARTMENTS South Austin's finest new luxury apartments now leasing for spring semester. Studios All meals/month plan — $50 (Jan. 12-31) and flats, one and two bedroom. All electric, all bills paid. Dishwasher, disposal, on Shuttle Bus, swimming pool, private patio or balcony, attractive furnishings, luxurious SPECIAL MEAL PLANS Fourteen (14) meal plan — $22.50 (Valid for Spring Semester) Unlimited Servings/Three Entries/Salads & Desserts INQUIRE: O O B I E 442-6333 Main Desk (Third Level) 21 st & Guadalupe / 472-841 I shag carpeting, cable TV, 1201 Town Creek LEASING NOW! PONCE DE LEON • Striking I & 2 bedroom apts. • Dazzling decor • All the extras • Appliances by Hotpoint $185, all bills paid. 2207 Leon St. 472-8253 UT AREA — NEW LA CASITA APARTMENTS D IS H W A S H E R S C A R P E T S B IL L S P A ID 4 0' P O O L 2900 COLE (3 Bldks. Law School - I Bidk. Shuttle Bus] 476-1262 327-1466 TW O B E D R O O M . T W O BA T H . All bills paid. $180-mnnth. B ra ss Flats, 40 E a st Avenue, after 6 p.m. L A R G E TW O bedroom, one bath. CA/ CH, carpet, disposal, pool, Shuttle Bus, one block La w School. $220. All bills paid. 472-3914. C A SA DEL RIO on'y on® 'eft. 2 bedrooms, 2 beths, $240. Bills p e :d. Large pool, near Law School. 3212 Red River, 478-1834, 452- 8715. W A L K TO CAM PUS Large I & 2 bedroom apartments. CA/ CH, pool, sundeck. Shuttle routes 4 & 5, dishwasher & disposal, all bills paid. Call 478-6776 or come by 311 E . 31st, 102. TW O B E D R O O M , luxury apartments, daily maid. Shuttle Bus, walk to Campus, $75 per person mon­ thly, 1906 Pearl. 478-6775. two bath P’lK S T A P L A C E — 2 bedroom furn. apt. in U T area, carpeted, wood panelling, all built-in near shuttle bus. $180 plus elec. 4200 Ave. A. 451-2990. electric kitchens, LA F O N T A N A — best deals in town on room apts, a I the I and 2 bed- luxuries plus en optional shuttle * bus to UT. Fu rn. units priced from $144. plus alec. 1230 E. 3 8 ’/2 Street 454-6738 S P A C IO U S RO O M A N D A T T IC with nice view near Tower at 1904 Nueces. $180 month. 476-3462. F E M A L E needed. R O O M M A T E L arg e two bedroom apartm ent near Campus. $55 month. C all Kathy, 477- 8391. N E E D E D . roommate. F E M A L E bills. N ear j Campus. Call after 5, 477-2687 or 478- 1 5300. S T R A IG H T plus $35 * m e a / M.F..A Typing. M ultilith ln g. Binding The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Servi ce M A L E R O O M M A T E graduate or older student, N E E D E D , I , a ll luxury apartment, utilities paid. CH&A, Shuttle Bus, North Austin, $68, 451-4786. , tailored .. m e needs o f Un iversity special keyboard equipment language, science, and engineer- for mg theses and dissertations. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E N E E D E D . Two townhouse apartment. Shuttle Route eight. $60-month. 441-7834. b e d r o o m B ilo L e G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk F E M A L E G R A D liberal roommate. South. Shuttle 8. $85. C all 441-4822. S T U D E N T needs bedroom Two F E M A L E N E E D E D . Apartment two blocks from Campus. R O O M M A T E $55-month plus electricity. 474-1648. N E E D E D . S T R A IG H T F E M A L E roommate share one bedroom luxury apartment. C all Charla, 451-2667 after 5 p.m. M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted to share luxury one bedroom apartment. Call B ill 441-5906. F O R M E R S E C R E T A R Y with B B A do­ ing typing. 45c/page. 451-2732. T Y P IS T . A C C U R A T E , dependable. 35a typewritten, 45c handwritten. Over- higher, M rs. Ham ilton, 441 *’831 Experienced typist. 50 cents per page. after 5 .30 Leyendecker- C*U 476-8532 DIr f p o ? t? 01^ t,? e s F - b r i e f s : R E P O R T S , etc. Greek and other symbols. Mrs. Anthony (form er legal secretary) 454-307!). R E S P O N S IB L E F E M A L E to share one j bedroom apartment. $65 plus elec­ tricity. Nights. 454-9825. V | § g | N J A S C H N E ID E R T Y P I N G . " A *. Graduate and Un- dergraduate typing, printing, binding, lorn Koenig Lane. Telephone: 465-7205 j N E E D F E M A L E R O O M M A T E . Own room in two bedroom apartment. $70- month plus half deposit and bills. Joan, 451-2350. F O U R T H G IR L needed to share two I bedroom apartment. $55. On Shut­ tle. 472-9743. RO O M F O R M A L E . Two bedroom I apartment. AC-CH, dishwasher. $6.3, N ea r Hancock Center. electricity. 454-1216, Bob. M i s c e l l a n e o u s Indian N E L S O N ’S G IF T S ; complete selection jewelry- African and Zuni M exican Imports. 4612 South Congress, 444-3814 P A R K IN G H Y M O NTH. $12.50. 2418 I San Antonio, one block from Campus, i I_____________________________ 476-3720. EARN $'s W EEKLY Blood pl asm * rjono-s needed. C a sh paid for services. Physician in attendance. O ce n 8 a.rn.-3 p.m. Tues., Thurs., Fri., & Sat. O p e n 12 noon-7 p.m. W e d . A U S T IN B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S , INC., 409 W e st 6th. 477-3735. WOODS T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . theses, dissertations. 453-6090. L a w ! Just North of 27th & Guadalupa Jm fyrfuL * Typing. M ultillth in g. Binding M B A V The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service IT , tailored to tho U niversity students SDeeial ia n c u fc e *eI for equl P m<*nt ILL ‘jJHCUdge science, and engineer- theses and dissertations. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 Hem phill P a rk M A R J O R I E T Y P I N G D E L A F I E L D S E R V I C E —Theses, dissertations, law briefs, reports. Multillthing. mimeo- graphing. Save money — rome South. BankA m ericard, M aster Charge. 442- 7008. T Y P IN G , 50c/page. English, Fren ch, spanish. Carolyn Cates Wylie, 453- 2556. F A o f L T r ? D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G S E R V IC E . dissertations, Theses, i'L / Z u 8 ^ Mimeographing. Reasonable, DO Y O U H A V E T H E N E W Y E A R S S e le c t e d reports, B L A H S " . . . A R E Y O U B O R E D W IT H Professional reports. Printing, binding! E X P E R T T Y P IS T : T h e s e s , briefs, I B M B.C . L I F E ? C A L L 472-5811. i Mrs. Tullos, 453-5124. D IS C O U N T V O L K S W A G E N repair, pro­ fessional work, labor and parts com­ pletely guaranteed. 8.36-9972, 454-2-196. C A N " L A W S C H O O L — W IL L IT ? I M A K E IT ? " A new book b y law graduate for prosp e c­ I L IK E a recent tive law students. Send $2.95. Kroos P'ess, Box 3709A, M i Waukee, W is. 53217 or order through your book­ store. ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 T Y P E S E T T IN G . T Y P IN G , P R IN T IN G . B IN D IN G Just North of 27th & Guadalupa E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T M E N T , University area. Take over contract. L E A R N TO P L A Y guitar, beginner, advanced. D rew Thomason, 478-7331, 474-2590. 478-2079. R o o m & B o a r d TOW ER M ANOR Apartm ent Dorm itory for Men & Women I Block from Campus Room end board $127.50. Three meals $65 mon^h. Two meals $55 month. 1908 University Avenue. 478-2185 CO-OP HOUSES have openings C o -e d houses, m en’s houses, w om en’s houses. Room and board, $75-95 month. Inter-Cooperative Council 3 19 Texas Union 471-4556. HEBREW HOUSE CO-OP announces spring openings. $l20/m onth room and board. Kosher meals, unique environment. 1606 W e st Avenu® 477-0151 M .B.A . Typing. M ultillthing. B inding The Complete Professional 'FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailored the needs of U n iversity students. Special keyboard equipment for language, science, and engineer* big theses and dissertations. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 Hemphill P a rk D IS S E R T A T IO N S , theses, and reports, 2507 B rid le Path, Lorraine B rad y, 472- 4715. C L O S E IN . Beautiful, personal typing University w ork. MulUlithing, binding. L a u ra Bodour, 4 / 0- 8113, ,,-J • your ing. printing, oinding — All S A V E M O N E Y — F u lly equipped: typ ­ term Papers, theses, dissertations. City W ido * 40c per ft. Capitol Saddlery Ti 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 c a n d l e s , leather products, “bondage” devices and other gadgets. jewelry, to buy a “ We treat our customers just as though they were walking into table and Gimbels chairs,” said Bill Rifkin, the other partner in the store who is a 31-year-old former banker with F irst National City Bank. “ We don’t pry, We just try to m ake them feel comfortable.” is admitted) THE CUSTOMERS, he said, range from young couples (no to one under 21 that septuagenarians. He said men customers were more plentiful than women, and that about 60 percent of the customers were “obviously heterosexual.” best T h e shop's seller? “ Probably the Kama Sutra oil,” Colglazier said. It costs $5 a bottle. The newest boutique in Chapel Hill, N.C., is like most boutiques, a bright little shop with modern glass and chrome display shelves. There is a difference, however. Its name is the Adam and Eve Shop, a subsidiary of a concern c a l l e d Population Planning Associates, and its shelves hold nonprescription contraceptives men and women. Its backers like to call it “ We’re here “Am erica’s first love boutique.” to provide a tasteful response to a revolution already in progress,” said John Quinn, director of marketing. the middle ground “This between the clinical drugstore approach and the lasciviousness of smut shops.” is Besides the contraceptives and birth control devces, a customer can buy, for $20, a black iron chastity belt, complete with lock and key. Also available are books sox, birth literature on and control, m arriage and family planning. Registration w i l l continue throughout the week for Reading and Study Skills Laboratory (RASSL) classes, which begin Monday. Courses are free, noncredit self- improvement classes available to University students, staff and faculty. Classes will be taught in study v o c a b u l a r y techniques, d e v e l o p m e n t , advanced v o c a b u l a r y , textbook com- p r e h e n s i o n , textbook speed flexibility, speed reading, exam p r e p a r a t i o n , note-taking, grammar and math review and study in particular subjects. techniques Students may make use of the RASSL library even if they are not enrolled in a RASSL course. to 5 p.m. Open from 8 a.rn Monday through Friday and 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Monday and Thur- Charter Group Asks Public Opinion Give Us A Ring... O r if y o u 'r e on c a m p u s , d r o p in an d se e us. W e re b e t w e e n t h e C o O p an d C h a m b e r s . W e h a v e t h e b e s t s e le c t io n of d ia m o n d e n g a g e m e n t rin g s a n d w e d d in g b a n d s on t h e d r a g afford. S o why not c o m e rn. look a r o u n d a n d try s o m e t h i n g on for siz e li k e a fro m S 2 0 0 , b fro m $ 2 2 5 c fro m $ 2 5 0 ( 1 f ro m 5 2 5 0 . at p r ic e s you can So come find us and find what you’ve been looking for Casa del Oro J E W E L E R S SAVE 20%-307 Rent by Semester Rent a TYPEWRITER I $ £ 0 0 $24 OO PER SEMESTER PER M O N TH Electric Typewriters $ 1 2 50 PER M O N TH A N D UP AD D IN G M ACH IN ES and CALCULATORS $ 0 0 0 PLR M O N T H $24OO AND UP PER SEMESTER TYPEWRITERS— A D D IN G M ACHINES CLEANING & REPAIR SERVICE Free Delivery GR 8-8223 613 W. 29th H E M P H I L L ' S OFFICE MACHINES GR 8-8223 SALES • SERVICE • RENTALS mm Q the earth shoe . . . recreates walkingo barefoot in the sand 24th & San Antonio ’© I Doh! el C e n t e r , U p p e r 2 0 2 1 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 7 in The Citizen’s Charter Study Committee will meet at 4 p.m. Tuesday the City Council chambers, giving Austin residents to express their a City Charter opinions on revision. last chance in giving to “I think we’ve been more than the public op­ fair their express portunities views,” Bill Youngblood, com­ m ittee chairman, said Monday. that added Youngblood the committee has already held 17 meetings at which the public was invited to speak, and commended media coverage of the times and locations of the meetings. an said that although He this public m arked discussion of the charter, it was not the end of the committee’s work. end to “ We’ve got to cut off public discussion, but we will not hold private m eetings,” he said, “ the public m ay attend, but they will not be invited to speak.” “ We were a p p o i n t e d to . p m ^ :'UTTLCSAV£AJ-OT Va ct; ■•,j-/a'ei. \ 'ifijk 2 i w2 , 31.99 41.00 , 125.00 225.00 27*5.00 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP' .Iff* ‘603 CW*"***** Wiry HOM . A76-0178} . AUSTH> S T E R E O • H O M E & C A R • R A D IO S • T.V. • TAPE R E C O R D E R S tapes, needles, batteries SALE5 & SERVICE M E D W A Y RADIO 807 W. 10th 478-61509 in the entire charter review term s of what is best for the City of Austin,” said Youngblood, who added that, “ the charter has not been revised since 1953.” He the also said recom­ the committee mendations by would not be binding on the council, and any revisions must be voted on by the people. Telephone Information Service To Offer Advice, Counseling in A Community Switchboard and Information Service will open Jan. 31 with offices the University Presbyterian Church. The service will provide in- f o r m a t i o n transients, m igrants and individuals in need of a place to stay for the night, rides to cities, counseling ser- v i c e s , available government services and jobs. for John Lane, coordinator for the service, said donations will be solicited on the Drag during the next two weeks. A table will be on the West Mall next week where volunteers ex­ sign up. Counseling can perience for is not required v o l u n t e e r s , but would be desirable. Lane said. its program AIR FORCE ROTO is accepting two-year for applications in commissioning 115. Un­ ROTC Building graduate dergraduates students with years remaining are eligible to apply. More be information may obtained by calling 471-1776. two o r BIOLOGY DEPARTMENT will sections m offer Biology b e g i n n i n g Biological Laboratory IOU this week 206 BLANKET TAX holders may draw for tickets to the Henry Mancini concert from IO a.m. to 6 p.m. in Hogg Auditorium Box Office. D U P L I C A T E B R I D G E PLAYERS will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Union Building 215 for the weekly pair tournament. Admission is free only during this month. E N G L I S H 305 ADVANCED PLACEMENT EXAMINATION will be given April 8. Students interested in taking the exam should go the Freshman English Office, Parlin Hall 16, for information. to GEOLOGY DEPARTMENT will hear Robert T. Berg of Texas A&M at I p.m. Tuesday in Geology Building IOO. Berg will “Identification of speak on Sedimentary Environments in Reservoir Sandstone.” ■ j U S f i ^ T A B L B H RIDE BACK TO NATURE HORSES $3.00 per hour HAY RIDES ft PICNIC FACILITIES E. 19th I M ile Past Travis State School F O R R E S E R V A T IO N S 926-0493 : ’ f ' .. BOHMS c a ■ shag c a rp e ts ■ air conditioning ■ heated sw im m ing pool ■ sa u n a s ■ re c re atio n lounge ■ exercise room ■ co-qd ■ su ites with living room s ■ refrigerators ■ excellent food (all you can eat) ■ m eeting facilities ■ study; a re a s ■ sh o p p in g c en ter ■ activity program ■ color TV ■ ad jacen t to cam pus. 21st and Guadalupe Phone: (5,12) 472-8411 S P E ^ RENT WE GIVE YOU FREE 90 DAY OPTION T V ALL SEMESTER F O R ....... • • • • • 18" Color T.V. DIAG. MEAS. ALL SEMESTER $ 4 5 $7 5 Rent by the Week, Month or Semester ES B M E ) In f 2234 GUADALUPE 476-3525 5134 BURNET RD. 454-6731 •iii sday, the library and practice lab are in Jester A-332. Students wishing to enroll or obtain more information may call 471-3614 or visit the RASSL office, Jester A-332, from 9 a.m. to noon and I to 4 p.m. weekdays. Flu Cases Increasing Eight confirmed cases of type A2 Hong Kong flu have been the Texas Health reported by Department, a considerable in­ crease over last year’s figures. A total of 9,154 cases of flu-like illnesses have been reported throughout the state, according to the department. The Student Health Center reported one case of Hong Kong flu in late December. Dr. Paul Trickett, director, said no eases of Hong Kong flu have been the December confirmed since case. flu TRICKETT ADDED that the number of general and respiratory diseases reported is about average for this time of the year. “We thought we would get more cases after Christmas, but the kids back we’re ex­ with pecting many since January through March are our busiest months for that sort of thing. We’re not looking forward to it,” he added. cases Flu shots, which students were advised to obtain in the early fall, are not necessary anymore. “It’s a little late for shots now,” Trickett said. DR. JOHN Sessums, director of the Austin-Travis County Health Unit said that most cases of On are not reported to the depart ment. However, about 1,000 fin cawe# have been reported k l Austin os figures are of last ween* a total for three weeks, Dec. 27 through Sunday. None of these cases have been confirmed as Hong Kong flu. ORIENTATION ADVISER AP­ PLICANT MEETING will be at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in Business- Economics Building 150. Ap­ plications with information will be handed out at that time. PHYSICS DEPARTMENT will host a center for particle theory seminar at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Parlin Hall 305. Dr. M. Flato, Institut Henri Poincare Physique Theorique, will offer “Remarks on the Quantization of the Gravitational Field.” At 3 p.m., a relativity seminar with Anthony Hawg, University physics department, will be in Physics Building 440. held “A Hawg will on speak Hypersurface Approach to Singularities.” This seminar is a partial fulfillment of the PhD requirements. RASSL will meet from 9 a.m. to noon and I p.m. to 4 p.m. through Friday in Jester A-332 to register for classes. TEXAS OUTING CLUB will meet at 7 :30 p.m. Tuesday in Union Building 325 to plan trips for the coming semester. UNION ART GALLERY will show a print exhibition by Albrecht Durer through Friday in the Union Art Gallery from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. UNION THEATER will present “My Night at Maud’s.” directed by Erich Rohmer, at 7 and 9:05 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday in the Union Theater. Tuesday, January ti. 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Page f [ UNIVERSITY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION ANNOUNCES 1971 STATEMENT OF CONDITION LOOK AT OUR GROWTH! ASSETS D ec SI D ec SI 1971 1970 ash .............................................. $ <54,874 Accounts Payable............... Investments........................ 644,484. Membership Shares........... Loans to Members............. 3,571,279. Regular Reserve................. Other Assets (N e t)........... TOTAL ............................. 142,204. Undivided Earnings............ $4,422,841. TOTAL .............................. LIABILITIES D ec 31 D ec 31 1971 1970 $ 28,771. <126,467. 247388. 20,215. $4,422341. This Represents a V i'fo Bonus Over The Regular Per A nnum Com pounded Q uarterly SAVINGS IN BY THE 10th EARN FROM THE FIRST! LAST QUARTER DIVIDENDS EARN RECORD HIGH 6% PER ANNUM ALL SHARE ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $20,000.00 EACH BY NCUA (National Credit Union Administration) AN AGENCY OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT BORROW AND SAVE with your ¥ phone 476-4676 to Supervisory Committee UNIVERSITY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION Off Campus —108 W. 30th (Across From Fire Hall) Your Statement Has Been Mailed — Any Differences Should Be Reported Be Sure and Mark Your Calendar for the LIFC ANNUAL M EETING - J ANUAR Y 20y 1972 4B0 PM., Junior Ballroom, Texas Union Building _ D ra ff Dodgers List Terms — UPI Telephoto. A f a Pr|ss conference Monday in Toronto, a group of American draft dodgers and desert. ers rejected alternative service" as a cond!- tion for amnesty, and called for "totally non- punitive restoration" of their civil rights if and when they return to the United States. to represent between is said The group 70,000 and 100,000 fellow exiles. They are in e y are lu v .u u u Teno w exiles, w a n a '* “ “ ** ’ “ “ urroughs, Texas; Dee Knight, California; Dick Brown, Michigan; Jack Colhourn, New York; Larry Martin, California. 8-r) Dave Beauchene, New Hampshire; Dick Amnesty Affects Jobs ■* * Canadian Employers H ire Fewer Exiles (C) 1972 New York Times News Service radio station said: “I don’t think I did anything wrong. I did what I had to do.” OTTAWA—Americans who fled here to avoid service in Vietnam, already uncertain because of the difficulty of finding jobs, have a new quandary: whether to return home lf Congress approves an amnesty. And the proposal itself appears to be making jobs harder to find. in idea, implicit The very they were the wrong the amnesty concept, of acknowledging is in that repugnant the draft to many of resisters even though they may be pounding doors to find jobs in a the unemployment country where rate—6.5 percent—is higher than it Is at home. “I would never go back under the terms of the Taft bill,” Richard Godding, a 25-year-old former New Yorker, said in an interview. He was referring to a measure proposed by Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohio, that amnesty draft- dodgers—but not deserters—who, on being from prison or on returning home from exile, volunteer to give alternative service as non­ combatants or In civilian federal activities. offered freed be to I n Toronto, Warren Frederick, 24, formerly of Johnstown, Pa., who left the U. S. Air Force in 1969 and has a Job as a meteorologist for a Many others of the 50,000 to 70,000 resisters in Canada are not so for­ tunate where jobs are concerned. The various aid centers, from Montreal to Vancouver, w'hich for three years have offered shelter, food and job­ hunting help, are now discouraging flight to Canada. Most aid centers refuse help unless the applicant faces indictment or is threatened with “ the brig or jail.” “We definitely advise draft evaders and deserters to exhaust all alter­ natives before leaving the United States,” said Richard Brown of the Toronto AntiDraft Program. Tile employment situation has against bitterness p r o v o k e d Americans. resent having “Canadians for to compete jobs against almost 70,000 young Americans—dodgers, deserters, wives and girl friends—who have come to this country in the last five or six years,” said Daniel Zimmerman, a 22-year-old former New Yorker who tries to help exiles in Toronto. The job obstacles are increasing as potential employers learn that an amnesty has been suggested. “If the young Yanks can go home, may God speed them,” a businessman said. Texas Union Informal Classes SPRING, I r n Advanced Foreign Car Repair Advanced Guitar American Red Cross Standard First Aid Astronomy Basic Automotive Repair Basic Bartending for Home Entertaininq Beginning Guitar Bicycle Workshop Comparative Methods of Attaining Cosmic Consciousness Duplicate Bridge Games Enjoying Body Movement Fiction W riting Workshop Gourmet Cooking Lessons in Beginning Bridge Motorcycle Repair and Maintenance Organic Gardening Photographic Experimentation Wilderness Camping Wine Tasting and Appreciation REGISTER N O W ! TEXAS UNION 346 Page 12 Tuesday, January 18. 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN 4 f } By the Amusements Staff " D i a m o n d s Are Forever” copped four awards in the first Texan Armadillo Awards, in­ cluding the Olin Preminger Award for Worst Movie of the Year. The Dillys, as they are known, the selected by members of T e x a n staff, recognize those movies and stars to who did amusements least their level Dyan Cannon . . . triple award winner. "MY NIGHT AT MAUD'S" Diamonds Selected fexans W orst Movie contribute to the motion picture art. Year: Ken Russell direction of “ The Devils.” for his Besides the worst picture title, “Diamonds” also won the Biggest Crossing Film Award. Jill St. John received the Ali MacGraw Award for Worst Actress and Scan Connery won the My How You’ve Aged Award. Both are the principals of “Diamonds.” The Son of a Witch Award: “ The Mephisto Waltz.” T h e Miscarriage Award: “ Doctors* Wives.” Best Performance by a Ket­ chup Bottle in a Supporting Role: “ The Hunting P a rty .” “Pretty Maids All in a Row” was the runner-up, snagging the Most Tasteless Film of the Year. Rod Steiger as Napoleon in “Waterloo” was the winner of the Joe Namath Award for Worst Actor. named The IO Most Dubious went to: “Cisco Pike.” “Diamonds Are Forever.” “Doctors’ Wives.” “The Love Machine.” “The MephLsto Waltz.” “The Omega Man.” “ Pretty Maids AU in a Row.” “ Tile Stewardesses.” “ Waterloo.” “ Willard.” Other awards and citations went to: Biggest Disappointment of tho The She Tried But She Conldn’t Do It Award: Dyan Cannon for “The Anderson Tapes,” “ Doctors’ Wives and “The Love Machine.” The Oh, What a Lovely War Citation: “ Summer of *42.” The G(l)©ry That Was Rome Citation: “ The Devils.” The Wily Didn't Yon Close the Bathroom Door Citation: “ Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song.” The My, But Yon Really Cant Act Citation: Katherine Ross, “Fools.” The Stifle Yourself Citation: Charlton Heston, “ Tile Omega Man.” The Try If, You’ll Like It Citation: “ The Love Machine.” The I Tried It and Thought I Was Going to Die Citation: “The Stewardesses. ” Best Performance by a Rat in in a Leading Role: Ben “ Willard.” > * a, -n Cl , 3* VO U N IO N FILM C O M M IT T E E — U N IO N THEATER T R A N S -&• T E X A S N O W ! OPEN 1:45 FEAT.: 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 1 0 The Man with THE Blue Eyes! nu TK< HMC P .tN A V lS lO N I i d v e r s a l / A N o v p - n F o r ­ m a n P i c t u r e (G P J ^ ’ I faut, iiE iu nw in - H E R R S r o n o a L E E P E IR IC K -i m c n a E L s a R R a z i n Sometimes a Great Notion ST A R T S T O M O R R O W #The Devils the year's most disappointing film. D a ily H o r o s c o p e A R IE S : T h is Is a (lay full o f ann oy­ a n c e s. H a n d le them .swiftly and a s th ey c o m e o r th ey w ill sta ck on you. tryin g tim e w ill be T A U R U S : A y o u r s to d a y if you a llo w ch a n g in g p s y c h o lo g ic a l c lim a te s to b o th er you. G E M IN I: D o n ’t e x p e c t so m e th in g for to be n o th in g to d a y . If yo u see m g e ttin g it, be ca u tio u s. C A N C E R : T h is da y can b e v e rv stro n g for y o u if you take m a tte rs into y o u r o w n h an ds. If not. be rea d y for tro u b le. L E O : Y o u r p r e se n t attitud e Is o n e of a m b iv a le n c e . Y ou go out o f your w a y to tak e a stand o f n eu tra lity . V IR G O : P e o p le can g e t into y o u r hair to d a y . W hy n o t be r ea d y for them , and n o t g iv e th em th e c h a n ce. L IR R A : An em o U o n a l c r isis m a y be im p en d in g . Y o u should not a c t hasti- ly, n o r w ith to o m u ch o f the fla v o r of a m a rty r. SC O R PIO : D e la y s and m is s e d opp or­ tu n itie s can abound tod ay. D on't e x p e c t to g e t a n y th in g c o n stru ctiv e done. SA G IT T A R IU S: Y ou a r e in a rare position e ffe c tiv e ly to a rb itra te a i dispu te. D o n 't go o v e rb o a rd w ith ; the pow er. CA PRH O R N : Y o u r a c c id e n t p o ten tia l is h ig h tod ay. D on’t ta k e c h a n c e s ' nor p u rsu e .any risk y v e n tu re s. fine d a y for AOI ARM S: T h is refle ctio n and c o n tem p la tio n . T he day is p r e t t y m u ch y o u r s to do w ith a s y o u w ish. is a PIE C ES: Are y o u s o m e ­ thing Im p o rta n t? T ake a c lo se look to see th at n o th in g is b ein g n e g le c t­ ed. fo rg ettin g — P. Nick Law re nce. T O N I G H T MICHAEL MURPHY L O N D O N Magazine! . . . Be.t Songwriter of the coming decade.” SAXON PUB 38th & IH 35 454-8115 F K A I t U AU U LI MOVIE R I T Z A R T S Escorted Ladies Free with J », ONE KNUE I 8th £ R ed R iv er ^ a Membership i ,ue!- I ANGELA 9 and the R O C KETS • • % D A X ® 0 k ^ H A P P Y H O U R S iv m . i - s i i t u t B E E R 81.00 PITCH FIR ------------------------------------- • e ^ • NEVER A C O V ER • A 1f>mm feature s Sc shorts "C O N N IE A N D FLOYD" A L S O "UNBELIEVABLE AFFAIR" I fini rn C O N T IN U O U S S H O W I N G S — 12 N O O N TILL - 10:45 P.M FRI. A N D SAT. 11:45 P.M. JERRY G REEN PRESENTS A D M . — $ L o!T VO O N E U N D E R 18 AD.YIITTED SIX T H ★ THE BILL ★ A MILSON SHOW Doug Dyer Seeking Actors for Drama Armadillo World Series, a unique experiment in “crowd theater,” will muster a company o f players and assemble for its first performance, “Foreplay,” Tuesday night. the Those who wish to participate fantasy improvisational In venture are encouraged by its originator, Doug Dyer, to come at 7:30 p.m. to Armadillo World Headquarters, 5 2 5% Barton Springs Road. Dyer, who directed “Now the ‘ ‘ S t o m p ’ ’ and Revolution,” “Blood,” productions of the now- defunct Curtain Club, said Sun­ day that crowd theater is “a good big giant step” in a new direc­ tion. The concept differs from the sensory maze of the James Joyce Liquid Arts Memorial Theatre, he said, and im­ provisational drama as well. it differs from However, it dees contain sensory and improvisational elements. the The nexus of the Armadillo World Series “super­ is fantasies” of each of the mem­ the crowd, who are bers of simultaneously and a c t o r s audience. The “ superfantasies” individuals, are acted out by coordinated by Dyer and then allowed to interact within the rest of the dram a, he said. The result is a complex and flexible series which may range, Dyer said, from the entire group singing and jamming to several c l u s t e r s exploiting different “superfantasy” situations. Participants s h o u l d bring musical instruments and “fantasy item s,” Dyer said. The rest of the Armadillo World Series will be held Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at 7:30 p.m. Admission is free. Pink Lizard Lounge presents Birds of a Feather w ith ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK 9 - 12 $3.00 Guy* $2.00 Girl* " C T i K SMMIiP €» mr Co1 or by Movielab A Paramount Picture S H O W S AT: 12:30-2:20-4:10 6:00-7:50-9:40 b a r g a i n m a t i n e e $1.00 ’Til 1:30 (Mon.-Sat.) CAPITAL PLAZA ^ 0 ^ 6 3 7 NO.INTERREGIONAL HWY W A R R E N BEATTY A N D IN DOLLARS' "O N E OF THE IO BEST PICTURES OF THE YEAR” -— Wanda Hale, N.Y. Daily New* t | — Rex Reed, Syndicated Columnist OPEN 5:30 Feat.: 5:50-8:00- 10:00 p .m . “ W ILD R ID E R S G O LD IE H A W N Cameron Rd. at 183 SHOW/TOWN U.S.A. ’ WIN________ 4 5 4 -8 4 4 4 •TH E CLASS OF “ SB IN G IN O SUM M E R ” ‘T H E PIN K A N G E L S” “ W ILD R ID E R S ” LONGHORN Putman at 183 N. 454-3880 ‘‘ALL T H E LOVING C O U P L E S” ‘LOVING F E E L IN G ’ Starring G E N E H A C K M A N THE FRENCH CONNECTION M M I ENDS T O D A Y $1.00 ’TIL 6 W E E K DAYS FEATURES 6 - 8 - 1 0 ‘B E S T ACTOR'' — N ew Y ork F ilm C ritics ■ T R A N S ★ T E X A S ’ 1423 W. Ben While Blvd.—442 2333 oust a person vvno protects children and other living things .TOM LAUGHLIN DELORES TAYLOR S . . f o p ’ T O M .O R O . c N — 5:45 $1.00 'T IL 6 P.M. panovision ® • technicolor ® ■ from worrier bros, a Haney compar y [GP'ts* OPEN 1:45 • $1.50 'Til 6 p.m. -477-1954 Features 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - IO STUDIO I V TWO SCREENS 222 East 6th 472-0436 A LL M O V IES RATED X HELD OVER! MARRIAGE FULFILLMENT A N D “Z E R O IN" 16 mm "HOT PISTOLS” PLUS ill 'NYMPH MAMIE” Be Sure end Visit Our Boole end Novelty Store Upsteirs WEDNESDAY IS STUDENT DAY: ALL TICKETS HALF-PRICE WITH STUDENT LD. T R A N S ★ T E X A S I SOHM I amar Hi** OPEN 6 P.M. • START 6:30 Now Giving Bonus Checks Good For Free Admission T O N IG H T IS K O K E C O U N T R Y CLUB STICKER N IG H T • A N Y O N E W IT H KO KE R A D IO ST IC K ­ ER A T T A C H E D TO THE G L A S S O F THEIR C A R • THE CO M PLET E C A R W ILL BE ADMITTED FO R $1.50 C A R L O A D • A N D FREE PRIZES EVERY T U ESD A Y N IG H T (CHIEF DRIVE-IN). WALT DISNEY’S th. THE LIVING I DESERT Vanishing ■Prairie a TECHNICOLOR’ LAST NIGHT TONIGHT BOX OFFICE & SN A C K BAR OPEN 6 P.M. FIRST S H O W IN G 6:30 007 " _ _ _ Sean Connery The Anderson Tines Hi A JtOetRT M. WEITMAN PRCDUCTiON _ _ PLUS! "MACHINE GUN MCCAIN Cassavettes [HE *2.' - " John © BILL A N D E R S O N TH U R SD AY, JA N . 20th Municipal Auditorium O N E S H O W 7 Ort D i i / : J U P . M . O N L Y S TARRING • BILL A N D E R SO N ® JA N H O W A R D • J IM M Y G ATELY • THE PO ' BOYS a NET STU CKEY • C R A S H C R A D D O C K a BARBARA FAIRCHILD TIC K E T S ON SALE R e v e r i e : # Both Gibson Stores • L ariat R a n r h w e a r Gen. Admission: # Both Gibson Stores 9 L a ria t R a n r h w e a r t AII I 'T o t 'e m Store s T ickets 81.00 H ig h er a t Door iment D o b I e C e?n t et*, U p p e r L e v e l 2 0 2 I G ii***d eft u p e 4 7 7 - 5 9 5 1 THE CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE J THE T EX A S U N IO N P r e s e n t * rn rn r n Henry Mancini The Concert Sound of Henry Mancini and Orchestra of 40 Saturday, January 22, 8:00 P.M., Austin Municipal Auditorium. Ticket drawing begins Monday, January 17 Hogg Box Office 10-6 Tickets $1 to Blanket Tax holders. Bus Schedule in Friday's Texan. A M O 7 1,3 - CON.dR ESS AV $1.00 'TIL 2:15 1:35 - 3:40- 5:45 7:50-9:55 ALBERT R BROCCO UHARRY SALTZMAN mm Sean Conneiy Barnes Bond OOT'' ‘'Diamonds Ire forever I -ANAVISfON* TECHNICOLOR* -2 1 - ( IP ; u „ lted A r t is t s I S J T J S & ' . e ; $1.00 'TIL 2:15 2:15-4:10-6:05 8:00 - 9:55 3 M CUNT EASiWOOD HMY HARRY n PA N A V ISIO N * • T EC H N ICO LO R* Warner Bros.. A Kinney Company V A R S I T Y 24 0 0 GUADALUPE S $ I .CO TIL 2:15 • FEATURES • 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - IO ABC PICTURES COPP presents D U S T IN F K 2 F F I V I A N - SAM Pf CKlfJP AHR S 3 T R A W B O L I S " HELD O V E R ! (g) $1.00 'TIL 6:30 FEA.: 6:05 - 8:38 R ic h a r d B u r t o n Ge n e v ie v e BUJOLD HAI, W ALUS PROD! c n O N af M nm _ onsatib ^Day§ rfeTfii WERSAL flCiuRC GP -W» Kock Music Maturing | f v Tonight r Emerson, Lake and Palmer Innovative I « . / i * n f I / I Tuesday, January 18, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# 13 Tuesday night’s best bet is the rerun of a “ Sarge” episode in Which George Kennedy as Sarge and Raymond Burr as “ Ironside” of the long-running series join forces to capture a deranged killer who has slain three priests, in “ The Priest K iller” at 6:30 p.m. on channels 4, 6 and 42. “ The Mod Squad” at 6:30 p.m. on channels 12 and 24 spotlights Al Freeman, Jr., and Leslie Uggams in a tale of a killer’s vendetta. L a r r y Bagman, Barbara Feldon, Vivian Vance and Jim in Backus star at 7:30 p.m. “ Getting Away from It A ll,” a made-for-television comedy about a world trip. “ The Night Stalker” about a man who thinks he has detected a vampire in modem Las Vegas airs at 11:45 p.m. on channel IO. It stars Darrin McGavin, Carol Lynlcy and Ralph Meeker. 6:30 p.m. 9, 46 News 4. 6. 42 The Priest K ille r 12, 24 The Mod Squad 41 Angelito Negros 5, 7, IO The Glen Campbell Show 7 p.m. S, 46 Capita! E y e 41 L a s Comardes 7:30 p.m. 41 L a Gata 9, 46 The Advocates 5, I. 12. 21 M ovie: “ Getting A w ay from I t A ll” IO H awaii Fix ?-0 S p.m. 41 Do-Re-Mi 8 30 p.m. 41 La Constituclon 5, 7 Cannon IO Room 222 46 Social Security and You 9 B la c k Jo u rn al 4. 6, 42 Nichols I p.m. 9:30 p m . 41 L a Recoglda 9. 46 outhem Perspectives 10. 12, 24 N B A All-Star Game 5 Good Old N ashville M usic 7 Dragnet 4 Four-on-Four: M inority Forum 6 Newswatch Calendar 42 B ill Anderson Show IO p.m. 10:30 p.m. 4, 5, 6, 7, 42 News 9 The W a y People L iv e 4, 6. 42 The Tonight Show 9 Soul 5. 7 M erv G riffin 11:15 p.m. 10 News 12 M ovie: ‘‘Moss Rose” , starring V icto r M ature and Vincent P ric e 11:30 p.m. 11:45 p.m. 9 Y o u r Right to S a y It 10 M o vie: 'T h e Night Stalk er” Problem Preg nancy Counseling Service Student Health Center 105 W. 26th St. (4th Floor-South) Confidential counseling with nil alternatives discussed and refer­ rals made to appropriate resourc­ es. Call Mrs. Young or Mrs. Pren tice 478-5711 Ex t. 26 A Sen ice of The Department of R adio/T elevision/ Film PRESENTS... THE SPRING FILM PROGRAM Featuring this semester two integrated and interrelated s e rie s... TUESDAYS — HISTORY OF FILM A diverse collection of American and International films ranging from the Silents to the Wave. THURSDAYS — OTTO PREMINGER FESTIVAL A chronological examination of the commercial and creative development, the fame and foibles of a highly individualistic producer-director. JESTER CENTER • 6:30 & 9 P.M. (unless otherwise noted) • Adm. 75c T-* Jan. 25 THE MAN WHO LAUGHS (1928) directed by Paul Leni, based on the novel by Victor Hugo, with Conrad Veldt, Mary Philbin, Olga Baclanova Th-Jan. 27 LAURA (1944) T - Feb. I THE BIRTH OF A N ATION (1915) with Gene Tierney, Dana Andrews, Clifton Webb directed by D. W . Griffith, with Henry B. Walthall, Mae Marsh, Lillian Gish, and Robert Harron J D 3 I M D G M Th-Feb. 3 THE FAN (1949) 5134 Bums! Rd. 454-6731 S T E R E O TV 2234 Guadalupe 476-3525 T - Feb. 8 based on Lady Windermere's Fan" by Oscar Wilde with Jeanne Crain, George Sanders, Madeleine Carroll and Richard Greene SON OF THE SHEIK (1926) directed by George Fitamaurice, with Rudolph Valentino, Vilma Banky, George Fawcett. Plus C H A PLIN FESTIVAL, four early Charlie Chaplin co- medics (1914-1915) By BOB DOERSCHUK Amusements Writer The history of rock has been exciting, but its future promises even more dramatic develop­ ments, the particularly musically sophisticated minority continues to grow and to ex­ periment. as inspiration Many have already reached out toward the classics as a source and progress. of Some, such as Jon Lord, have net been too successful. Others, especially Zappa and (have we forgotten so coon?) the Electric Prunes, had better results. None, however, had been able to mold a definite style out of the two musics, mainly because reek has net matured yet to a musically respectable level. It is en its way, though, slowly but surely, and tho experiments grow loos its hcavy-hanc.ed with growth. K EIT H EM ERSO N, the most polished keyboard performer in rock, has been feeding around with classical forms for some time. Only with his latest album, “ Pictures at an Exhibition,” has he been able to convert his pyrotechnics a n d occasional musical aloofness into a hybrid of rock and the classics with an aporeciable degree of success. Emerson and his sidemen, bassist Greg Lake and drummer their Carl Palmer, performed arrangement of the Mussourgsky piece before an English audience last March, where this album was recorded. If you ignore bad engineering that at times sends the drums crashing over Emerson’s organ playing and the loutish crowd, which hollers over the quiet passages “ right on, Keith!” and so forth, there are some im- p r e s s i v e — a n d significant— episodes. too Emerson’s Improvisations are predictably good—extremely complex, always well-structured, in­ sometimes perhaos tellectual, but only sometimes. He plays organ, both Hammond and pipe, and Moog, often with moving de’icacy, as in the second the “ Promenade,” d'stant chords alternate with a s e n s i t i v e a capel’a vocal statement of the theme by Lake. in which Emers-n reveals his a’so dazzling Mcog technioue, creating scaring s’ren-like sounds and bone-jarring bass distortions with en P l cace. Although Emerson holds conter stage most of the time, Lake is given the sootlight several times. His acoustic guitar and singing in “ The Sage,” his own con­ tribution to the piece, are a sin ole and well-placed relief from the thundering rendition of “ The Gnome.” His forceful bass playing also adds substantial bottom to much of Emerson’s soloing. though important, less More subtle, is Palm er’s drumming. Since rhythm is the main point in most of rock, the smooth in­ tegration of the beat into “ The Great Gate of Kiev.” with its technical control and the complex time changes, create a singular, powerful effect that ceases to be UNIVERSITY FILM CLASSICS present! Starts Tomorrow "One of the year's ten best films!" A Must! Don't Miss! either rock or classical, and thus is a significant achievement. U N F O R T U N A T E L Y , the triumph is not complete. Despite E m e r s o n ’ s intenningling of different keyboards, there is no real change in musical texture, proving that the orchestral effect after which he was striving cannot be captured by so small a unit. In order to compensate for this, Emerson sometimes plays at piercing volume, as in the third “ Promenade,” but all he suc­ ceeds in doing is distorting the tone. Still, although “ Pictures at an Exhibition” and Emerson in general are fated, by the nature of their esoteric endeavors, to meager radio time, both are valuable to the maturation of rock. You can’t boogie to it, but there are those who will learn much from it. Hailey Novel Tops Best Selier List (C) The New York Times News Service FICTIO N 1. “ Wheels,” Hailey. 2. “ The Winds of W ar,” Wouk. 3. “ The Day of the Jackal, ” Forsyth. Maclnnes. 4. “ The Exorcist,” Blatty. 5. “ Message from Malaga,” G EN ER A L 1. “ Eleanor and Franklin,” Lash. 3. Kanin. 2. “ Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee,” Brown. “ Tracy and Hepburn,” 4. “ Honor Thy Father.” Talese. 5. “ Wunnerful, Wunnerful!,” We lk. BILL & BONNIE HEARNE (O N LY 50c C O V E R | TYPEWRITER WE'VE GOT IT! RENT — SELL SERVICE Dept. of Radio/TV/Film presents A SHORT HISTORY OF THE EXPERIMENTAL FILM IN F O U R P R O G R A M S M A J O R E X P E R IM E N T A L F I L M M A K E R S F R O M T H E 2 0 's T O T H E 7 0 's TUES., JA N . 18 • JESTER Program 1-6:15 and 9:15 p.m. Program 2-7:45 and 10:45 p.m. THURS., JA N . 20 • JESTER Program 3-6:15 and 9:15 p.m. Program 4-7:45 and 10:45 p.m. Program I: Dada & Surrealism Ghosts Brfo re Breakfast— H a n s R ic h te r Ballet Merhanique Fernand Leger En tr'a cte — Reno C lair The Seashell and the Clergym an— G erm aine Dulac Program 3: Psychocyclesexual Mass for the Dakota Sioux— Bru ce B a illie Confessions of a B la c k Mother Succuba -Robert Nelson Invoration of My Demon Bro th er— Kenneth Anger Chinese F ire d rill—W ill Hindle Program 2: American Surreal­ ism & Related Trends Triim pit— L a rry Jordan On The Edge—Curtis Harrington Tile Assignation— Curtis Harrington N .Y ., NLY.— Francis Thompson Firew o rks— Kenneth Anger Neighbors— Norman M cLaren Tas de Deux—Norman M cLaren Program 4: Expanded Cinema Allures— Jordan Belson Thnnatopsis— Ed Em shw iller Renaissance— W alerinn Borowcyzk Lapis— .Tames Whitney Offon— Scott Bartlett Cybernetik 5.3— John Stehura P relu d e: Dog Star M an—Stan Brak- hage AD M ISSIO N 75c i n emu 4 0 p re se n ts Th- -Mar. 16 BONJOUR TRISTESSE (1958) Th -Feb. IO THE THIRTEENTH LETTER (1951) with Charles Boyer, Linda Darnell, Michael Rennie and Constance Smith T -Feb. 15 STEAMBOAT BILL, JR. (1927) directed by Charles F. Reisner, with Buster Keaton, Ernest Torrence, Marion Byron, Tom Lewis Th -Feb. 17 WHERE THE SIDEWALK ENDS (1950) with Dana Andrews, Gene Tierney, Gary Merrill T -Feb. 22 MOTHER (1926) directed by V. I. Pudovkin. Plus short: LO O N Y TO M — THE H A PPY LOVER 1951) directed and photographed by James Broughton Th -Feb. 24 CARMEN JONES (1954) adapted from Oscar Hammerstein's modern version of George Bizet's "C a r­ men, with Harry Belfonte, Dorothy Dandridge, Pearl Bailey T- -Feb. 29 FOOTLIGHT PARADE (1933) directed by Lloyd Bacon, choreographed by Busby Berkeley, with Dick Powell, James Cagney, Joan Blonde!!, Ruby Keeler. Plus short: THE G O LD EN FISH (1959) directed by Edmond Sechan Th-Mar. 2 THE COURT MARTIAL OF BILLY T — Mar. 7 MITCHEL (1955) with Gary Cooper, Rod Steiger, Ralph Bellamy CITIZEN KANE (1941) directed by Orson Welles, screenplay by Welles and Herman Mankiewlcz, photography by Gregg Toland, with Orson Welles, Joseph Cotton, Dorothy Comingore Th- -Mar. 9 CENTENNIAL SUMMER (1946) T- -Mar. 14 MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS (1944) W it h Jeanne Crain, Cornel Wilde, Linda Darnell, music by Jerome Kern directed by Vincente Minnelli, with Judy Garland, Margaret O'Brien, Tom Drake, Mary Astor screenplay by Arthur Laurents, based on the novel by Francoise Sagan, with Jean Seberg, David Niven, Deborah Kerr T- Mar. 21 MY LITTLE CHICKADEE (1940) directed by Eddie Cline, with Mae West and W . C. Fields. Plus shorts: C O S M IC RAY and VIVIAN (1961) by Brqce Conner Th- -Mar. 23 ANATOMY OF A MURDER (1959) with James Stewart, Lee Remick, Ben Gazzara Shows at 6:30 and 9:30 T - Apr. 4 STALAG 17 (1953) directed by Billy Wilder, with William Holden, Don Taylor, Otto Preminger Th- -Apr. 6 EXODUS (I960) Apr. l l screenplay by Dalton Trumbo, with Paul Newman, Eva Marie Saint, Ralph Richardson, Peter Lawford. Shows at 6:30 and 10:15 THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE (1962) directed by John Frankenheimer, screenplay by George Axelrod, from the novel by Richard Condon, with Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, Janet Leigh TELL ME THAT YOU LOVE ME, JUNIE MOON (1969) screenplay by Marjorie Kellogg, from her novel, with Liza Minnelli, Ken Howard, Robert Moore, James Coco Apr. 18 THRONE OF BLOOD (1957) Apr. 13 T - Th- T » Th« Apr. 20 T ~ Apr. 25 directed by Akira Kurosawa, based on "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare, with Toshiro Mifune. Plus short: THE TEMPEST (1968) by Frank Olvey and Robert Brown THE CARDINAL (1963) with Tom Tryon, Carol Lynley, Romy Schneider. Shows at 6:30 and 9:45 TW O WOMEN (1961) directed b based on the novel by A lb e rto M o ra via, with Soph ia Loren based mondo. Plus short: THE SW O R D (1968), anim ated by J . Adam >v Vittorio DeSica, screenplay by Cesare Zavattini and DeSica, the novel by Alberto Moravia, with Sophia Loren, Jean-Paul Bel- Tonight: Tues., Jan. 18/72 C, P e r f o r m a n c e with James Fox 1970 Film In Color M ick Jagger sound track: Mick Jagger, Randy Newman, Merry Clayton, The Last Poets JEAN LOUIS TRINTIGNANT STEFANIA SANDRELIJ the conformist •*— ». BERNARDO BERTOLUCCI ALBERTO MORAVIA PLUS TW O SHORT FILMS BY RO M AN POLANSKI THE FAT AND THE LEAN T W O MEN AND A W A RD RO BE BATTS HALL W ED N ESD A Y AND THURSDAY 7:00 and 9:30 JA N . 19 AND 20 Adm. $1.00 H o d h v n it v i l l i t * r vs v it i s a music for austin ■ KMFArFM 5th ANNIVERSARY GAIA BrNEFITCONCERT *. \ F R A N K De V O L AND THE 35-PIECE K M F A S t a g e O r c h e s t r a , L E O P O L D L a F O S S E V ■ V--' ' •/ v . ‘ and Hts '■ . , * y L af os se B a c h E n s e m b l e ■% A N D G U E ST S T A R S IN P E R S O N ! , LES E L G A R T B O B B Y H A C K E T T EAR L S C R U G G S A N D O TH ER F A M O U S P E R S O N A L IT IE S T O BE A N N O U N C E D ! P R O D U C E D BY R O D K E N N E D Y M U S I C A L D I R E C T I O N BY- DI CK G O O D W I N * M U S I C A L ' A R R A N G E M E N T S 8 Y D. cVOL , L a F O S S E A N D G O O D W I N L I G H T I N G BY R I D G E R A D N E Y S T A G I N G BY LYLE H E N D R I C K S R EAR S C R E E N V I S U A L E F F E C T S BY R O B E R T ( A N S C H U T Z 8 PM WED.—FEB. 2 Municipal Auditorium ALL SEATS RESERVED $5.50 $4.50 $3.50 " A highly cohesive arfisfic sfatement. A n important, timely and original motion picture." L A . Free Press Th- Apr. 27 IN HARM'S W AY (1964) with John Wayne, Patricia Neal, Kirk Dougla Shows at 6:30 and 9:15 "Almost in a class by itself." T - May 2 HIROSHOMA, MON AMOUR (1959) directed by Alain Resnais, screenplay by Marguerite Duras, with Emmanuefle Riva and Ei:i Okada. Plus short: X FILM (1968) by John Schofill T I C K E T S N O W O N S A L E U n i v e r s i t y C o O p U n i v e r s i t y S t a t e B a n k S c a r b r o u g h 's D o w n to w n S c a r b r o u g h 's , feli.ghlai*)d M a ll H i g h F i d e l i t y , I n c . S e a rs in H a n c o c k C a n te r . U T F ifie A r t s U B o x O f fic e r - ; 4 ' ' I A . ; '■ v . . ' 5 ' 'KMFA TICKET OFFICE - 6 6 1 5 N. t a r n a l ’ O p e n W e e k d a y s I O A . M G P M . Tues. Night in Burdine Hail Wed. Night in Jester Aud 7:30 & 9:45 Both Nights Village Voice Adm. $1.00 SEASON TICKET $7.00 BUY A SEASON TICKET AND SAVE 66% OVER SINGLE ADMISSIONS. On sale at Jester Box Office before and during each film. Paqe 14 Tuesday, January 18, 1972 THE D A IL Y T E X A N nOBXECENTEROOBIECENTERlOOBXECENDTERDDBXECE1HTEHBOBIKCKltfTKH BOBIKCENTER BOBIKCKltfTKH BOBXECENTTBBI WHATS NEW AT CAPITOL C A M E R A ? v v.-v. mamiya/sekor auto XTL IS NEW! • FULLY AUTOMATIC EXPOSURE CONTROL • MANUAL OVERIOE • SPOT AND AVERAGE METERING • ALL CONTROL SETTINGS ARE VISIBLE IN VIEW FINDER SEE IT T O D A Y ! A WHOLE NEW WORLD IN SLR PHOTOGRAPHY OLYMPUS F T I - , KNEW! SIMPLICITY IS THE THEME OF THE FTL. • SMALLER, LIGHTER WEIGHT LENSES AND BODY • EXCEPTIONALLY HIGH QUALITY OPTICS AND MATERIAL • BRIGHT, WIDE APETURE VIEWING. JUST TRY IT. YOU'LL FEEL THE DIFFERENCE Vivitar w ill IF YOU ARE IN A PHOTO­ GRAPHY CLASS, OR JUST A BUG ON YOUR OWN. IT MAY HELP YOU TO KNOW WE STOCK THE FOLLOWING: • Dupont • Omit • Kodak • A G F A • Kodak • Savage • Seal • Print File • GIBA • Patterson • Negafile • Orbit Bath • Edwal • Ethel • Acufine • Premier AND M A N Y M A N Y OTHER TOP BRAND ITEMS FOR YOUR DARKROOM NEEDS. ALSO WE H AVE THE BEST SELECTION O F BOOKS O N PHOTOGRAPHY IN TOW N — SUCH AS: • “THE COMPLETE PHOTOGRAPHER" BY FEINNGER • “ CAM ERA AN D LENS" BY ANSEL AD AM S • THE TIME-LIFE SERIES the GUESS WORK out AVAILABLE FOR YOUR INSPECTION NIKON F-2 WITH THEIR NEW FAMILY OF CO M IN G SOON! WE ARE EXPAN D IN G OUR RENTALS TO INCLUDE • C A M E R A S • LENSES • STROBES A N D M A N Y OTHER ITEMS. Canon IS NEW! Our new F-l 35mm SIR sys- is completely new, de­ tem signed from the beginning as a total, fully integrated unit. The system consists of the n e w ly d e s ig n e d F -l c a m e ra and 180 separate accessories, fiv e in t e r c h a n g e a b le v i e w ­ f in d e r s , a re m a rk a b le n e w motor drive, and a 250-ex­ posure film pack. More than interchangeable 40 different lenses from the 7.5mm f is h ­ eye to the 1200mm telephoto. 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A L L THIS W E E K O N L Y ‘1599 7 w/CASE A "QUIET O N E " FROM KO DAK CAROUSEL 600H SLIDE PROJECTOR OI « H K Si U o b rn B B » o 9 EJ § 9 QUIET, RUGGED PRECISION (irs Here! mi Mew! SPECIAL LO W PRICE THIS WEEK .'A U T O M A T IC ,, c r T D r ^ L ? M o TIC " S X P D S U O F EL EC TRONIC FLASH C O N T R O L !UNITS- OUR HOTTEST SELLING LINE! THIS WEEK ONLY $59’7 COMPLETE WITH ONE SLIDE TRAY. LET US HELP lf You Have A ny Problem About Photography, Drop By Our Store. Our Staff of Professionals Will Be Happy To Help You Solve It. There Is No Obligation To Buy. lf You C an’t Come By — Call Us At 476-3581. , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ g H IO O B IE CJENTieHn OBIE CEN TE K M M PBM H'Hnnim Beiathl AM »10O r a e E m T m n n M n B ciranrma w i ning r n i m p n a y , r m m i c “ p W c ” n v " p “ c ‘ " ll CAPITOL CAMERA For Anything Photographic Dobie Center Shopping Center Phone 476-3581 PARK FREE Plenty of Easy FREE PARKING. In The Dobie Center Garage. Located on S S