Controversy Grows on Chancellor s Residence BT JORJANNA PRICE And RON MARTIN Texan Reporters A faculty-student group from the School of Architecture conducted an inspection Wednesday of the nearly-completed official residence for System Chancellor Charles LeMaistre and arrived at a cost estimate of $734,000. Three students and one faculty member surveyed the grounds. Afterwards one commented, “A great deal of cost depends on the interior finish and detailing which we were not allowed to see, but it is clear that they spared no expense in doing what is visible.” The figure offered by the group rivals an estimate of $225,000 from the University administration which refused again Wed­ nesday list of to produce an construction expenditures. itemized However, the appraisal team submitted a cost breakdown of its estimate to the Legal Research Project of the University School of I>aw. (See Box). The independent appraisal of the Bauer House at 2801 Gilbert was initiated by a ■tory in Wednesday's Texan which said th* Board of Regents may have used State funds for construction without taking the competitive bids required by State law'. In answer to the story, the University released a prepared statem ent explaining that “no appropriated funds” were used in the project and therefore, “ no approval of the Governor or the Legislative Budget Board was required.” The release cited Article 2919e-2 of Texas Revised Civil Statutes as justification for the board to purchase the property with existing house at 2801 Gilbert following approval of the College Coordinating Board on April 8, 1968. However, CCB spokesmen say no okay was given the regents to raze the existing structure and build the house now under construction. In purchasing the property, regents told the CCB that funds would come from the sale of the chancellor’s home at 1610 Watchill Road, investment proceeds from an earlier sale of the University at Austin president’s home and the University P er­ manent Fund. The chancellor's residence on Watchill Road was never sold and is presently occupied by Chancellor-emeritus H arry Ransom. Accordingly, on March 14,1969, the Board from of Regents appropriated $163,000 Perm anent University Fund bond proceeds. con­ struction at the site, which they call “ im­ provements,” is being paid from monies advanced from nontax University funds. University officials claim that This “ debt” will be repaid when donated from private are funds received, they added. However, there was no that pledges have been received from private sources. benefactors indication The “ improvements” three- story main house, separate guest quarters, an air-conditioned bath house, a 10-foot brick retaining wall and landscaping. include a Administration spokesmen have explained also that W.T. Walker of Walker & Son a construction firm was hired as Cost Breakdown B & ner Houma C o st B re a k d o w n (S u b m itte d b y a g ro u p o f S ch o o l o f A rc h ite c tu re f a c u lty m e m b e r a n d s tu d e n ts ) ..................................................................... ................... ..................................... 1. A c q n lsitio n o f th e la n d a n d o rig in a l s tr u c tu r e 2. D e m o litio n of th e th e n -s ta n d in g Im p r o v e m e n ts S. 8,000 s q u a r t fo o t m a in h o u se 4. R e n o v a tio n of pool a n d pool h o u se .............................................................. 5. T w o -b e d ro o m g u e s t h o u s e (fu rn is h e d ) 6. F o u r - c a r g a r a g e I . A r c h ite c ts ’ fe e s 8. I n te r i o r d e c o r a tio n a n d fu r n is h in g s .............................................................. 30,000 42,000 9. S e c u rity e x p e n s e s 5.000 10. P lo t I m p r o v e m e n ts 15,000 11. L a n d s c a p in g 15’222 12. W all a n d g a te s 13. W . T . W a lk e r “ fix e d f e e ” ................................................................................... 40,000 43,000 14. I n t e r e s t o n c o n s tr u c tio n fin a n c in g ....................................................................................................... ......................................................................................................... .................................................................................................... ................................................................................................ ......................................................................................................... 320,000 5,000 30,000 10,000 ................................................................ ......................................................... .................. $150,000 * OOO T o ta l p r o je c t c o s t b e fo re o v e rh e a d a n d p ro fit .................... $734,000 "University employe” struction “on a salary basis.” to supervise con­ her son, W.R. Walker, is actually super­ vising construction. No contract was awarded by the regents; instead Walker was “ by negotiation just like any other University employe.” employed Although Walker may be considered an employe of the firm of tile University, Walker & Son is advertised in tile yellow pages of the city telephone directory. This could possibly contradict the Regents Rules and Regulations “Code of Ethics for Personnel,” Sec. 4.7 which states: “No employe shall make personal investments in any enterprise which will create a substantial conflict between his private interests and the public interest.” It is not possible now to substantiate whether Walker is a University employe because System personnel records are being moved to new offices downtown. Even though W.T. Walker was hired by the regents and has been repeatedly named by officials as the contractor, Mrs. W.T. Walker told The Texan that her husband has been retired for several years and that W.R. Walker confirmed that his father has had “ nothing to do with construction from the beginning. “ I was hired through the University personnel office Just like anyone else who w’orks for the University,” he said. Previously WAV. “Woody” Caffey, con­ struction foreman at the Bauer House, had told The Texan, that his checks were signed by W.T. Walker. Also an employe of one of the sub­ contractors had said that his checks, too, are signed by the older Walker. The Legal Research Project which has investigated construction of the Bauer House has called for a full-scale legislative investigation into tile entire Bauer House affair. It claims that information about the house is being withheld. An official release states, “The public has a right to know how its money is being appropriated. These funds should be used by the Board of Regents for academic p u r p o s e s , not ‘lucrative playhouses.’ ” to build T h e Da ily T ex v Student N ew sp a p er at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 70, No. 143 Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1971 Lobby-free Boards Sought Amendment Would Render Erwin Ineligible as Regent By KEN GEPFERT The appointive posts of at least three the University Board of m em bers of Regents and two members of the College Coordinating Board may be jeopardized by a proposed constitutional amendment now before the Texas Senate. The proposed am endm ent Introduced Tuesday by Sen. Jam es P. Wallace of Houston, would disqualify a lobbyist or his law partner from serving on a State board or commission. If the proposal passes both it would be the Legislature, houses of submitted to the voters in November, 1972. IF THE MEASURE should become law, Regents Chairman Frank C. Erwin Jr. and Regents Frank N. Ikard Jr. and Joe M. Kilgore would be ineligible to continue their term s. Beard is a registered lobbyist, and Erwin and Kilgore have law partners who are lobbyists. Coordinating Board members Newton Gresham and Jam es P. Hollers also would be affected. Hollers lobbyist and Gresham is employed In a law firm which has several lobbyists as partners. Is a Members of numerous other State ap­ pointive boards would be disqualified by the proposed legislation. Wallace said the amendment was needed •to keep undue pressure or coercion from being applied by board or commission members for the benefit of the special in­ terests they represent as lobbyists.” The freshman Houston senator added, “ It Is obvious that conflicts of interest exist In fact if not in theory in some of the ap ­ pointments to State boards and offices. This resolution is intended to eliminate those conflicts.” Wallace introduced his proposal after successfully opposing Gov. Preston Smith’s nomination of Searcy Bracewell, one of the state’s lobbyists, for chair­ manship of the Texas Water Development Board. In face of growing Senate opposition to his nomination, Bracewell asked Smith top utilities Wallace’s to withdraw the appointment and also to accept his resignation from the board. the for resolution amendment was referred to the Senate Constitutional Amendments Committee. A hearing on tentatively scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in the lieutenant governor’s committee room. the m easure calling is senators, including The proposal is co-sponsored by nine other entire delegations from Houston and Dallas. Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes said Wednesday he sup­ behind Wallace’* ports proposal. the principle the WALLACE said he anticipated some op­ position in the Senate, although none has surfaced as yet. “ We’re hoping to get a good public response so people (prospective opponents) will have to look mighty hard to justify voting against it,” he added. A source close to the senator speculated that opposition to the resolution would be weak because any opponents could be criticized as supporting lobbyist coercion. “ With the stock scandal and other vestiges of vested interest . . . the time seems right to take some positive action,” he said. if the m easure wins However, even Senate approval, it faces an uncertain future in the House. Rep. Dick Reed of Dallas, who voiced support of Wallace’s proposal, said he thought the House would reject the amendment because its mem­ bership is “much less independent than the Senate and more obligated to the lobby.” To be placed on the ballot, the m easure requires passage by a two-thirds majority of the membership of each house and the approval of the governor. The amendment, if adopted by the voters, would require the Legislature to enact a law “disqualifying persons from State appointive positions who have engaged in professional the year lobbying within preceding the appointment or employment, or who are in partnership or close business or professional relationship with such a person.” It also would prohibit appointees from lobbying within one year after termination of State service. Wallace said Wednesday he intended to Introduce a bill implementing the amend­ ment within two weeks. He expressed hope that legislation would be passed this session so the amendment, if successful, could become effective im­ mediately after voter approval. the enabling An examination of The enabling legislation will define “ close business or professional relationship” as ownership of 5 percent of stock in a firm which employs a lobbyist, he said. the State lobbyist registration file Wrednesday revealed that Board members would the purview of the amendment. law firm, Brown, Erwin, Maroney and B arber of Austin, would be involved because partner Howard V. Rose is a lobbyist. Rose is registered to lobby for the Dallas Chamber of Commerce, the Lumbermen’s Association of Texas and the Texas Automobile Dealers Association. fall under Erw in’s for IS A IKARD lobbyist t h r e e organizations—the Asian Development Bank of the Philippines, the Association of Texas F ire and Casualty Companies and the Texas Life Convention in San Antonio. Ikard is an attorney. Kilgore would be affected because lob­ byist W'ade Spilman is a member of his Austin law firm of McGinnis, Lockridge and Kilgore. Spilman, a former State representative, lobbies for the Wholesale Beer Distributors of Texas, Humble Oil & Refining Co., the Texas Association of In­ surance Agents, the Texas Legal Reserve Officials Association and the Committee for Sound Public Financing in Texas. Coordinating Board member Gresham is associated with a large Houston-based law firm which has four partners acting as lobbyists. The lobbyists—Oliver Pennington, Student Requests Injunction Against Election Commission BY SANDY HANSEN freshman dram a major A requested Tuesday that the Student Court enjoin the Students’ Association Election Commission from holding the constitutional referendum ■cheduled March IO. Sarah Schattman, in filing her injunction the Constitutional request, charged R e v i s i o n Commission was invalidly established and therefore any referendum Initiated by that commission is invalid. that She claimed that because the referendum Is invalid, the Election Commission should not be allowed to issue ballots for the constitutional referendum. Under the current constitution, a proposed constitution must originate with a con­ stitutional commission established by the House of Delegates “ upon petition of a number of students equal to 30 percent of the total number of ballots cast in the last general election.” Paul Leche, chairm an of the Con­ stitutional Revision Commission, said, “A petition to call for a constitutional com­ mission was circulated among students last spring and was duly certified by last year's attorney general.” the that Miss charged Schattman formation of a referendum held last spring — which led the Constitutional to Revision Commission — wily asked students’ opinions of student government and was not a petition requesting a con­ stitutional commission. Bob McLean, chairman of the Election Commission, said the commission requested Wednesday that the Student Court dismiss the suit on grounds it does not have jurisdiction over campus elections. THIS REQUEST is based in a provision in states, “The the election code which Election Commission shall have full original jurisdiction in disputes arising from elec­ tions.” The election code also states, “The Student Court shall have discretionary appellate the Election Commission in all cases in which error on the part of the commission is charged.” jurisdiction over McLean interpreted this to mean that the Student Court can file an injunction against the Election Commission only after a decision has been handed down by the commission and after the court holds a full hearing. Miss Schattman said, “ I do not question the good intentions of the Election Com­ mission, but I do not think the new con­ stitution will improve student government. "THE PROPOSED off-campus student government will not be able to get the money to continue programs like the Un­ dergraduate Research and Peruvian Ex­ change Program s which I think benefit the students,” she continued. to informed of Miss Schattman’* When objections the proposed constitution, Leche replied, “The question of whether or not the students will be willing to pay for the boundaries of the Student Court but is for the students to decide. these programs is not within instead of “ All the recent efforts have been directed towards keeping the constitution off the ballot the students’ minds (about the proposed con­ stitution). People know that if the con­ stitution reaches the ballot it will be ap­ proved overwhelmingly,” he said. to change trying Thomas Leonard, M.P. Martin and J. Wiley Caldwell—are registered to lobby on behalf of clients of the law firm of Fulbright, Crooker, Freeman, Bates and J aworskL Hollers, a new Coordinating Board ap­ pointee not yet confirmed by the Senate, is a lobbyist for the San Antonio Medical Foundation. Ikard be and Kilgore may significantly affected by the amendment, if it passes, because their term s as regents expire in Jan u ary , 1973. The appointments of Erwin, Gresham and Hollers expire in 1975. not Calley Says No 'Big Deal1 FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) - L t William Calley’s defense rested Wednesday after he testified at his court-martial that during the mass execution of My La! villagers “ the main thing was to go on, finish these people off as fast as possible and get m y men out into position.” “ It wasn’t any big deal,” the 27-year-old Calley said, referring to unresisting Viet­ namese men, women and small children who fell beneath the automatic rifles of American infantrymen at a drainage ditch in My Lai on March 16,1968. Calley ended the equivalent of two full court days of testimony a t 3:32 p.m. CST, and the defense immediately rested. The trial was recessed overnight with to present the prosecution rebuttal testimony Thursday from the first of three government psychiatrists. scheduled They examined Calley early this month and pronounced him “perfectly normal.” The trial began Nov. 12 and the govern­ ment rested Dec. 8, reopening its case briefly for two supplementary witnesses. Calley is being tried by a six-man jury of superior officers. He is accused of the premeditated murder of 102 civilians in My Lai while leading an infantry platoon of Charley Company on an assault mission near the South China Sea. The government said 70 or more of the victims died at the ditch. the defendant denied Calley admitted ordering the execution in the ditch, but said he did so under orders of superiors. However, the government’s charge that he ordered killed, and helped kill, an additional 30 civilians along a trail in the village. Capt. Aubrey Daniel, the prosecutor, c o m p l e t e d his cross-examination in midafternoon, after interrogating Calley for the equivalent of a full court day. In one of the final exchanges Calley was asked: Q. Did you ever receive any instructions on how to treat prisoners? A. Yes, sir. To treat them with respect. Don’t humiliate them. Keep them silent. Keep them separate. Keep them guarded. The defense had stressed Calley’s respect for his company commander, Capt. Ernest Medina, and his unquestioned obedience to the latter's orders, which were said to in­ clude the shooting of anything that moved at My Lai. On redirect examination, chief defense attorney George Latim er asked Calley about adherence to Medina’s orders. Calley said: "You had better carry them out now and aa readily as possible.” Cr f t * -P a 471-4401 Welfare Funds Aid Impoverished' By GLENDA OWEN Associate News Editor When Lorena Berry was 35, doctors in Galveston told her she had diabetes. They gave her less than a year to live. That was in 1942. “So I went home and got into bed,” she recalls. I looked at those four walls and I said, 'No, if I ’m going to die, it’s going to be while I ’m on my feet.’ ” Mrs. Berry did stay on her feet, working eight years as a nursing at­ tendant. Finally, she was declared a licensed Vocational Nurse. in 1950, In 1955, she was crippled by arthritis and forced to carry on her nursing practice for a few years from a wheel chair in private nursing homes. TODAY Lorena Berry, 63, lives alone In a small, three-room apartm ent in an East Austin housing project. She pays $15 a month rent. Most of her time is spent in a big black vinyl chair in her living room. She waits for her daughter’s daily visit, the cleaning woman who comes once a week, or some neighbor wanting to chat. Diabetes has taken her sight in the last IO months. The arthritis she has fought for 20 years has spread over her entire body. She suffered a stroke in 1964. A tumor in her thyroid gland has put enough weight on her 6-foot frame to require a size 54 dress. to Lorena Berry is one of 24,294 Texans receiving a monthly welfare check under Aid the Permanently and Totally Disabled (APTD), one of five categories of the Texas State Department of Welfare’s financial assistance program. Mrs. Berry qualifies for another of the State’s categories, Aid to the Blind (AB). No person can receive two welfare checks, however; and Mrs. Berry may through an regain part of her sight operation in April. The State will foot the bill, through Medicaid, its medical assistance program. IN ADDITION to APTD and AB categories, Texas helps its needy elderly and young through Old Age Assistance (OAA) to Families with and Aid Dependent Children (AFDC.) Recipients in all categories are eligible for Medicaid. Miss Lurline Smith, 72, never wanted to go on welfare. But when illnesses depleted her savings and bonds, she had no choice. “One 27-day stay in the hospital cost me $1,400 in medical expenses and $300 or $400 in doctors’ bills,” she said. “I paid it all myself.” had She to go back to work after since she was a heart attack in 1963. receiving $78 in Social Security and her rent and other expenses were too high. serious Three years illness later struck, resulting in two lengthy hospital stays. In August, 1967, Miss Smith, her savings exhausted and her heart too weak to allow hor to work, turned to OAA in desperation. She now receives SHO a month Social Security and $21 a month OAA to cover medicinal expenses. from from Ruby Melrose is a 50-year-old black woman who has been on welfare, receiving an AFDC monthly check, since 1958 when her husband deserted her. to work. Realizing She was pregnant at the time and unable that her children would starve, she turned to the welfare department for help. Within weeks she was receiving a monthly check and was able to have her baby through Medicaid. Her divorce was finalized in 1963. Since that time she has not seen her husband and she has never received child sup­ port. The mother of 13 children, nine (rf whom are living, she takes pride in her ability to hg.ve lifted her five grown children out of welfare. BUT LIKE m any mothers without husbands she realizes that her income alone cannot support a houseful of children. She depends on $53 a month from AFDC to help out. Every month thousands of Texans In turn to the State welfare desperation department for help. Many are simply hardluck cases, others have exhausted any feasible means of decent support, most get the help they need. In January, 1971, the welfare depart­ ment reported 233,916 on Old Age Assistance; 4,003 on Aid to the Blind; 24,294 on Aid to the Permanently and Totally Disabled and 255,186 children in 84,184 families on Aid to Families with Dependent Children. the total welfare recipients While the AB and APTD rolls have remained the OAA fairly constant, population has shrunk from 61 percent of to 39 liberalization of percent because of Social and benefits. In the meantime, AFDC rolls have grown 11,000 per month in the last nine months of 1970, to become the depart- requirements Security A Texan Interpretive mentis biggest headache. Needy children and caretakers their mothers the welfare represent 56 percent of recipients. and The growth of AFDC rolls has followed a national trend, since recent federal the entire court decisions affecting n a t i o n liberalized AFDC requirements. have In addition, the growth of the National Welfare Rights Organization has made recipients and potential recipients aware of their rigftt to be on welfare. Some argue the group has helped remove the stigma attached to the program which kept many fom applying. As a result, AFDC, never the voters’ favorite form of welfare, has come in­ creasingly under fire. legislation Thus when amending such is passed, ap- as p r o p r i a t i o n s and an amendment removing the welfare ceiling, lawmakers tend to soft-pedal the measure, knowing voters will be skeptical. emergency Such was the case with Sen. Charles Wilson’s bill to remove the $80 million constitutional ceiling the adult categories but it on AFDC. retain Wilson’s bill, however, cam e out of the House with a $55 million AFDC ceiling. from the finance division of Walter Fredrickson, director of field the staff for department, noted that many AFDC mothers can get jobs only as m aids, waitresses paying positions. other and low “ The same people who complain about welfare are the ones who expect m enial tasks to support these people and their children, and it just doesn’t.” (See WELFARE, Page 3.) A Gift for you from Miss Chantilly Integration Delayed \control Requested Of Rock Concerts Austin Awaits Busing Decision m m W M W — I M M M IB M M i mm IB 111 WH I " ‘ " T m By LORI RODRIGUEZ Texan Reporter The Austin Independent School District and U.S. District Court jointly agreed Wednesday to delay the c o u r t - o r d e r e d p r e s e nta t i o n of a feasible desegregation plan to the Justice Department until April 15. The postponement marks the second extension granted the school district since the federal that Austin ruled government must national comply with desegregation requirements last summer. The federal action came as a response to a charge by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare that Austin was not In compliance with the 1964 Civil Rights Act, Title VI. “The district fails and refuses to take prompt and effective action to eliminate its dual school structure and bring about an Integrated unitary elementary and secondary school system. Every program and activity In is operated and said system a administered In directly discriminatory manner or is Infected by a discriminatory Engineering Week Activities Continue The election of the Sweetheart of the College of Engineering was held Wednesday as activities of Engineering Week continued. The winner of the election will be announced at the Engineering Sweetheart Dance at 9 p.m. Friday at Griffin’s Party Bam on Bee Caves Road. Candidates for sweetheart are Martha Wade Bates, Donna Cheryl Dilllon and Martha L. Gallier. An engineering awards con­ vocation will be held at 4 p.m. F r i d a y in Burdine Hall auditorium. The first convocation, held last year, was the result of a student suggestion to honor o u t s t a n d i n g s t u d e n t s , faculty members distinguished and a company for Its service to the college. Bob R. Dorsey, president of Gulf Oil Corp., will be the con- v o c a t i o n ’ s featured speaker. Dorsey, a Distinguished Alumnus of the University, received his bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering from the University In 1940. Dorsey’s address, “To Improve the Quality of Life,” is the theme of National Engineers Week. environment,” Leonard Ralston, the HEW examiner, said. In early August, the Justice Department handed down an ultimatum to the AISD, ordering that immediate work begin on a plan which would end the alleged segregation remaining In Austin. The initial deadline was set for D e c e m b e r . School officials however, pointed out then that three cases before the U.S. Supreme Court would no doubt affect future desegregation action in Austin. that Recognizing the cases, Involving the constitutionality of tradition of the busing and desegregation of the AISD, U.S. Dist. Judge Jack Roberts ex­ tended the original deadline to March I. None of the Supreme Court cases have yet been decided. Charles Samson, administrative assistant to the AISD superin­ tendent, said Wednesday the most recent extension was again based on shortly expected Supreme Court decisions. “The urban school cases will have a definite effects on the course of Austin desegregation. We know that the cases have already been argued, and we a s s u m e that opinions are currently being prepared. under no is “The AISD o b l i g a t i o n to present a desegregation plan until decisions have been reached,” Samson said. PHOTOS Quickie Trips To: LAREDO ‘36. OR 95 W 95 SAN ANTONIO '21. FOR INFORMATION CALL TEXAS TOURS 454-1681 IN DOBIE CENTER bill Another designed to regulate rock music festivals in Texas was heard by a House committee Wednesday night, escaping the opposition which met a similar measure last week. Authored by Rep. Elmer L. Tarbox of Lubbock, the bill received prompt referral to a subcommittee of the House State A f f a i r s Committee without discussion. to Pertaining festivals held limits and outside corporate involving more 5,000 than listeners, Tarbox’s bill would require to register with a County clerk at least 60 days before the event. festival promoters in A nearly-identical bill, spon­ sored by Rep. Don Cavness of Austin, ran into questions of its the House constitutionality Committee on Governmental Affairs and Efficiency Feb. 15. “If Julius Ceasar had this bill, the Sermon on the Mount would never have been delivered,” Rep. B i l l y Williamson of Tyler remarked of Cavness’ proposal. Tarbox denied his bill would limit First A m e n d m e n t guarantees of free speech and assembly. “W’e are aiming at the promoters of these festivals, not the participants,” Tarbox said. “We want to insure that they be of good character and that they operate in good faith.” Among the provisions in Tar­ box’s measure are: • That the promoter provide a statement in his permit ap­ plication saying whether he or any of his associates or employes “have ever been convicted of any the misap­ crime propriation theft, burglary or robbery.” involving funds, of • That the promoter provide a financial statement specifying from whom capital for the event is being supplied and in what amounts. • That the promoter describe t h e sanitation and provisions to be available at the festival. health • The payment of a $5 filing fee. H e a l t h sanitation provisions would be subject to the and PASSPORTS ■r e su m e s ( s u p e r h o t I SERVICE from the wonderful world of easy care! a pretty pantsuit soft and clingy in all hand washable textured acetate and nylon. N avy or red, sizes 7 to 13, 38.00 others styles in pastel yellow or blue snyders-chenAr d s • downtown • pa the dreg • Allendale • Hancock cantar Miss Chantilly will b o hero Thursday, Friday and Saturday. 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. Meet HOtlBIGANT’S charming hostess who has a special fragrance treat for you — a Parfum Concentre Spray Purser (refillable of course) as a gift with any purchase of $3.50 or more of CHANTILLY. HOUBIGANT Cosmetics Street Floor Nominations Are Now Open For CACTUS '71 OUTSTANDING STUDENT and GOODFELLOW AWARDS T M * year we ar* asking for these nominations at th# lam a tim*. H i* qualifications for th*s« awards ara different, so it should not ba assumed that the Goodfellow award is a compensatory on# for those not selected as Outstanding Students. However, thor# m ay b a eoma who hava qualifications for both. PICK UP AND RETURN NOMINATION BLANKS to JOURNALISM BLDG, ROOM 107 FORMS MUST BE COMPLETELY FILLED OUT OR THE STUDENT WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED! DEADLINE: FRIDAY, MARCH 5th C a c t u s yearbook L P i g i 2 Thursday* Feb ruary 25* 197.1. THI DAILY TEXAN approval of the County health officer. Any the promoters, Tarbox said, would be subject to revocation up to five days before the festival. granted permit The sponsor noted his bill was inspired by a controversial rock festival held in the Lubbock area last March. “The people in my to par­ area ticipate in this kind of activity—it just doesn’t go with the tempo of our community,” he said. just don’t want Participants at In arms about that festival were forced to move twice to other locations by the actions and attitudes of the area residents, he said. “The people of Slaton rose up it— them anything,'* wouldn't sell Tarbox recalled. After relocating 45 miles east of Lubbock in Dickens County, “the hlppiei moved again of their own free will—they were scared of tile cowboys carrying guns around those ranches,” he said. The concert, plagued by rain, sleet and snow, ultimately drew only 500 people, although official! had expected 50,000 to attend. “A lot of us requested the as* sistance of the National Guard to help with law enforcement and health services,” he continued. C a v n e s s ’ proposal would require festival promoters to post a minimum $30,000 performance bond in seeking a permit from a County judge—Tarbox said he would have no objection to such a provision. “Tile people in West Texas don’t really care to have any more of these festivals,” Tarbox noted. Filing Dates Query Raised at In the C o n f u s i o n filing spring for deadlines general tile election University has been caused by that s t u d e n t s may pass a referendum on March IO calling for a new Student*’ Association constitution. possibility the Under the present con­ stitution the Election Corn­ in i s s i o n has established March 2 as the deadline for filing for campus office. I f is passed, constitutional the the referendum commission will re-open filing March l l to 16 to allow students to file for positions created under the proposed constitution. Regardless of the outcome of the c o n s t i t u t i o n a l the Election referendum C o m m i s s i o n will allow candidates to file for editor of The Daily Texan March l l to 16 because the con­ stitution requires candidates for their currently-held positions on the student newspaper two weeks prior to the general election. resign editor The general election win be held March 31, with the runoff April 14. V ALENCIA SE T 18K,Solid Gold As enduring as your love. From Art Carved — hallmark of quality and beauty In wedding rings. See our complete collection. ^ J E W E L E R S 2236 Guadalupe NEXT TO HEMPHILL'S Statewide College Grievance Panel Sought By PATRICIA FLORES A bill to create a Higher Education Student Grievance Commission to relay complaints from college students to the Legislature was introduced in the House by Republican Rep. Walter Mengden of Houston Wednesday morning. This measure (HB 736) would establish a 15-member commission composed of six senators and nine representatives who would hold periodic meetings in various parts of the state, including college cam­ puses, to hear grievances of students, offer advice to them and make a report to th* Legislature each year. “ The situation now is volatile,” Mengden said, “ and most school administrations do not give the students a fair shake. Students are simply not getting their views across to the Legislature and the remainder of the is establishment. This measure essentially a safety valve to assure students a recourse other then violence.” The Houston representative explained that State government needs to be made more responsive to the needs of its citizens. Situation Volatile traveling “ Since Texas is so large, it is impossible for students to travel tile distance to Austin to voice their opinions. “ Therefore, by to college campuses within the state, legislators would obtain a feeling for the state and its problems instead of staying here in Austin to wait for tile people to come to us.” he continued. The proposed commission would be bipartisan and funded by a $25,000 ap­ propriation for the biennium beginning Sept. I, 1971. strings of the State.” he “ We as legislators ultimately control the purse said. “ Therefore, we ought to do more within our power to implement nonviolent change on our campuses and tile disruption of classes.” to prevent Mengden explained that universities have built-in bureaucracies just as legislatures and other State agencies do. “ There is no way for students to make their feelings known to their administrators or to their regents because there is always conflict.” students He commended from Rice University in Houston for taking enough interest for to express legislation now before the House. support their “ Some complaints are unfounded,” he continued. “ But this commission will expose those grievances which have no substance.” Student responsibility would rest upon representatives who a r* their electing “ outstanding.” The representative also said that students might be made more awar* of their responsibilities, since there will be no excuse for their not expressing their complaints if the commission is established. “ This bill may not take hold this session,” he continued. “ But, I feel that such a grievance commission can be created during the next session if not this Ona.” ■'' i i m p § t p i M f p g ji| « ' \ , Mmm Temperatures Thursday will be a little warmer, ranging from the upper 50’s to the lower 70’s. Skies will be considerably cloudy in the morning, the afternoon. in clearing partly Winds will be westerly 8 to 18 rn.p.Ii., d i m i n i s h i n g Thursday night. Probability of precipitation is 20 percent. Col. Russell Norris of Ft. Riley, Ran., is looking for a lost toothbrush, according to The Dallas Morning News. It should not be too difficult to find—it is only five-and-a-half feet long. Norris, a dentistry officer, believes the toothbrush fell off the back of his truck on the way to a dental junior high hygiene course at a school. He is taking no chances with the rest of the truck’s contents—a spven-and-a-half-foot t o o t h with matching dental floss. The PiiD Qualifying Examination administered by the Committee on Graduate Studies in English will be given in Parlin Hall 203 from 2 to 5 p.m. April 16 and from 9 a.m. lo noon April 17. Two blue books will be needed for each session. to the examination must be regularly ad­ mitted to Graduate School and must register with the secretary in the English Office, Parlin Hall HO, by April 2. intending Students take lists and R e a d i n g specimen questions may be obtained from the Graduate Adviser, Calhoun Hall 210, or from the English Office, Parlin Hall HO. Texas Union Board meets at 3 p.m. Thursday in Union Building 307. House of Delegates meets at 7 p.m. in the Academic Center Thursday Auditorium. Sharp Fighting Reported Inside Laos s r r 3 SAIGON Sharp fighting was reported Wednesday at two South Vietnamese bases inside Laos, where the U.S. Command said air strikes hav e knocked holes in the enemy supply line on the Ho Chi Mirth trail. Field reports said six more U.S. helicopters were shot down or damaged in the fighting around the bases. Officers in the field on the northern front told corespondents that the two bases had come under heavy rocket and mortar fire. Ground fighting was reported around the bases, but no details were available. Commando Leaders to Merge Groups DAMASCUS In an effort to save the Palestinian guerilla movement from collapse, commando leader Yasir Arafat and Brig. Abdelrazzak Yahya, com­ mander of the Palestine Liberation Army, have agreed to merge the l l main guerilla groups. Meeting over the weekend in Damascus, Syria, with the Central Committee of the guerilla movement, the two chiefs also agreed to curb leftist commando groups urging the overthrow of Jordan’s King Hussein. Market Experiences Broad Gains N E W Y O R K Despite healthy gains Wednesday, analysts said action on the stock market was “ consistent with a market moving into a consolidation phase.” Monte Gordon, analyst for Bache & Co., said the market appeared to be “ regrouping, redeploying, consolidating its position from sharp advances.” There were broad gains throughout the list Wednesday as advances outpaced declines 970 to 414 among the 1,657 issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange where volume reached 15.9 million shares, up from Tuesday's turnover of 15.08 million shares. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks gained 5.62 to 875.62, Welfare... (Continued from Page I.) “ As far as having children on purpose, it’s ridiculous,” Fredrickson said. “ Another child is more a burden than extra money for a mother. We only allow $18.75 per month per child. “ That just isn’t enough money — th* more cliildren you have the more you’ll have to cut comers.” At present, the growing AFDC rolls have hurt the recipients themselves. With only so much appropriated to each category, a * * percenta ge-of-control factor” Is taken into consideration. This is done by dividing tile amount of money for each category by the number of recipients. The department, prohibited by federal law from placing a ceiling on the number of recipients, must pay a certain families’ percentage “ recognizable” needs. the of FOR OLA the recognizable need is IOO percent, for AB and APTD 95 percent, and for AFDC 75 percent Welfare has received much criticism from voters who feel that money is being given to people who are able to work. Some mix-ups do occur in which able-bodied people are granted the welfare department admits. But the department usually catches up with them before long. aid, According to welfare department figures for 1970, 90 percent of welfare recipients could not work because they were either too old, too young, too side, too disabled, had no marketable skills or were needed in the home. Of the IO percent who did work, 54 per­ cent were elderly, 30 percent were 17 or younger, 5 percent were blind, 5.5 percent were mothers of AFDC children, I percent were 18 to 20-year-old students and I per­ cent were second parents of AFDC children. IN THE AFDC category alone 33 percent worked, 20 percent were incapacitated, 15 percent were needed In the home, 12 per­ cent had no marketable skills, ll percent were seeking employment and 4.5 percent were not seeking employment. Though most recipients are grateful for tile help they get, they do have complaints. Mrs. Berry, the APTD recipient, is supposed to be on a high protein diet because of her condition. Yet her income won’t allow her to buy the proper foods she needs, especially meats. “ I CAN GET commodities,” she said, “ but I can’t use them because they are mostly starches, like meal, potatoes, syrup and butter.” Mrs. Melrose’s major complaint is the cyclic, self-perpetuating characteristic of welfare. “ You just can’t get ahead. You try to better yourself by getting a better paying job and your welfare gets cut down,” she said. “ Or maybe your welfare goes up; well, your rent goes up too. You just can’t win on welfare.” MRS. MELROSE in Booker T. Washington Housing Project, where rent is figured according to income. lives The result of such a cycle is a tendency for recipients to try secretly to hold extra jobs or. as a last resort, have their children drop out of school to help out, since income of 14-year-olds and younger is exempt from consideration. From these dropouts develops the Inheritance quality of welfare. Since they lack a high school diploma, they must take lower paying jobs which in turn makes them prime candidates for welfare rolls as adults. Chances are their children will also have to drop out of school and join the vicious cycle. (Friday: the administrative view of and the New York Stock Exchange’s index was up .37 to 53.23. welfare.) Rainmakers License Request Refused By The Associated Press Homer Berry, who says he can bring five inches of rain to Stonewall County, failed to convince the Texas Water Development Board Wednesday of his capabilities. . “ Apparent lack of qualifications . unethical claims . . . incomplete and apparently false documentation” were some of the comments of the board’s staff in testifying on a request for a license filed by the retired U.S. Air Force major from North Little Rock, Ark. Hie board, after hearing testimony rejected its staff and others, from Berry’s application unanimously. iii About 40 ranchers and fanners Stonewall County put up 810.000 for Bony to bring diem five inches of rain to the drought ridden area witliin 30 days. “ I WENT around selling a program that I didn’t believe in at first,” said Charles Abernathy, one of the ranchers, in Austin Wednesday. “He would have to produce five inches of rain before he receives a penny.” The five inches fall over a seven-hour period.” Berry did not attend the proceeding before the water development board on Berry’s request for a permit and license. Tile need for a license came to light when Berry’s efforts near Aspermont were carried by the news media. State law requires a weather modification permit. TO EXPEDITE matters, meteorologist John Carr of the Water Development Board went to Aspermont to confer with Berry and the parties concerned. “ Because of Berry’s apparent lack of qualifications, his unethical claims for his rainmaking technique, incomplete and apparently false documentation of his application. . .it is the staff recom­ mendation that hr be denied a weather modification permit,” Carr the board. told Berry’s application states that he in­ tended to “ create a low pressure area aloft with a trough. For one inch to five inches of rain—one inch for a row erop. five inches to break a drought. HIS EQUIPMENT consisted of a “ brick lined barrel with an air blower operating off a pickup battery',” and several cloud seeding chemicals. “ I asked him if he planned to make clouds in a cloudless sky,” Carr said. “ And he said ‘yes.’ This is against scientific knowledge and belief.” ‘‘The name of the game is cloud treatment,” Carr said. “ He cannot make clouds. He can’t make a low aloft.” Carr said the method and equipment used by Berry was an “ old fashioned system” and would not deny that it might work. However, he said, cloud seeding from the ground normally Is clone in mountainous area where there is sufficient upward air flow to get the seeding vapors to the clouds. “ YOU ALL know how flat It is out there,” Carr told the board. The staff had difficulty in checking Berry’s background, Carr said. “ He states that he has an ME degree, engineering, presumably mechanical from Rockwell College in Coronado, Calif.,” Carr said. “ A check of the National Educational Directory and a telephone check with the chamber of commerce in Coronado disclose no record of any such institution.” CARR ALSO said that several claims sub­ rainmaking could not be of stantiated, although he was not saying they didn’t happen. Abernathy gave the board a book of press clippings relating to Berry’s rainmaking ability. “ Mr. Berry is not known to any of the reputable scientists and technicians in the field of weather modification with whom we have checked,” Carr said, “ nor could we locate any publication by Mr. Berry or any reference to him in the scientific field.” Tile weather modification advisory’ committee to the board also advised against granting Benty’ a permit. Meanwhile, the National Weather Service reported clouds in the Aspermont area Wednesday afternoon, but now it’ll never be known if Homer Perry could squeeze rain out of those clouds. 'mm*- Dreaming of Home iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwiiwiiwiiininiiniimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiniiiiiiwniimini Raids Climax Drug Traffic Crackdown Relaxing between combat sorties supporting South Vietnam­ ese troops fighting In Laos, an American helicopter crew­ man sleeps beneath th* rocket launcher and machine gun mounted on his aircraft. — UPI Telephoto WASHINGTON (AP) — Conducting raids through the night, and into the morning, federal agents Wednesday concluded “ the largest federal crackdown ever on narcotics distribution by organized crime,” Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell announced. As a result of a five-month investigation called “ Operation Flanker,” 54 persons were arrested In raids that began at IO p.m. Tuesday in New York, Chicago, New Orleans and Bridgeport, Conn., Mitchell said. Counting arrests from as far back as last October, Mitchell said 143 persons- some high-echelon organized- including crime figures-had been apprehended during Operation Flanker. He it an unqualified success. termed Thirty-two persons for whom arrest warrants have been issued still w'ere being sought Wednesday night by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs- BNDD. The attorney general said the arrests and seizures of nearly $13 million in heroin, cocaine, hashish and marijuana had “ seriously disrupted drug traffic in seven cities—New York, Chicago, Detroit, Nevr Orleans, Baltimore, Philadelphia and Hartford, Conn.” In addition to the arrests. Operation Flanker has netted TI pounds of heroin, 50 pounds of cocaine, 261 pounds of hashish and 250 pounds of marijuana, officials said. They placed th* worth of the narcotic* at $12.8 million. The agents seized also $431,341 in cash, 78 guns and 35 automobiles, officials said. Mitchell said 12 court-authorized wiretap* were used to gain evidence upon which to base the raids. Eleven of them wer* productive, he said. BSiiimiiinmiiiiiitniiiiiiiuRiiinmiiniSKiuimuui Second Ethics Bill Scored Senators Hesitate to Vote Until Study Undertaken By The Associated Press Sen. Ralph Had of Rockwall said Wed­ nesday that a legislative ethics bill sub­ mitted by “ weakens existing Texas law.” another senator Hall’s bill to require legislators to make public their federal income tax returns has been in a subcommittee for three weeks, along with other ethics proposals introduced after disclosure of a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission stock fraud suit. Several State officials, including Gov. Preston Smith, were mentioned in papers filed with the suit. Sen. Charles Herring of Austin wrote a substitute for Hall’s bill, and the substitute was approved Tuesday night. But several senators objected to voting on it Wednesday because they had not had time to study it. Tile Senate State Affairs Committee voted to postpone consideration of the Herring proposal until Monday. Hall referred to the substitute for his bill as “ Herring’s proposal,” and Herring interrupted, saying, “ It’s Sen. H.J. Blan­ chard’s bill. . .” “ Don’t put it off on Blanchard,” Hall replied, “ You know you wrote it. Herring grinned. . Hall objected that Herring s bill removes Ruling Bars Candidacies Two members of the Socialist Workers Party have apparently erased their chances of running in the City Council election in April by refusing to affix their names to a mandatory pre-election affidavit. Mariana Hernandez, Socialist candidate for mayor, and Karin Salzman, a City Council hopeful, refused Tuesday to sign a statement requiring in part for the can­ didates “ to believe in and approve of our present form of government.” Since then, City Atty. Don Butler has advised City Clerk Elsie Woosley not to certify the two Socialist candidates or face a possible fine of as much as $1,000 under tile Texas Election Code. Calling the affidavit “ unconstitutional and unrepresentative,” Miss Hernandez has vowed to “ wage a legal fight” to repeal the statute. Because of several legal precedents, the 30-year-old University graduate believes the “ loyalty oath” will be struck dowai by the courts. Among these, she cited a ruling against former registration forms for University student applicants. similar clause in a Contrary to the filing provision. Miss Hernandez contended, Austin government is neither democratic nor representative. To balance the political and social inequity, Miss Hernandez said H i p Socialist Workers* platform is calling for the largely black and chicano East Austin community to be given the right to elect its own “ protectors” or police officers and to be given more control over deciding both curriculum and instruction in area schools. the requirement for legislators to file aa income tax report and would allow law partners of legislators to practice before State boards and agencies. Hall said the Herring proposal lower* some penalty provisions and cuts th* statute of limitations from tw’o year* t* six months. “ If the SEC charges are true, the six months would have run on it,” Hall said, meaning that it would have been too late to prosecute any State officials under th* ethics proposal. Sen. OJI. “ Ike” Harris of Dallas, a member of the subcommittee, said Hie substitute for the Hall bill “ is far more severe” than Hall’s. Harris said the substitute proposes a nine- member commission selected by State appeals court judges and the chairman of the Texas Judicial Qualifications Com­ mission while the Hall bill sets up a six- member committee of senators and House members to administer the law. Science Adviser Urges Building of SST Model (AP) — WASHINGTON President Richard M. Nixon’s science adviser said Wednesday refusal to go ahead with the experimental supersonic transport program would be “ timidity and lack of courage’* on the part of Congress and the country. Dr. Edward E. David Jr. said that only by building prototype SST’s can en­ vironmental questions about the airplane be answered. Depending on these answers, he said, a decision would be made on w hether to build a fleet of SST’s. “ Make no mistake,” David said, “ a limitation on experimentation in whatever cause is the beginning of a wider sup­ pression. When we fail to experiment, w'e fail. In failing, we bring the best part of American society’ as we know it today to a halt.” The President's science adviser spoke et a seminar on science and public policy at the National Academy of Sciences. The seminar was held by the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing. Thursday, February 25, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN P a ? * Editorials *Hey, M ajor — lf w e hear a n y red alerts on the radio, should w e let you know ?9 Public needs the facts The Texan’s report on alleged irregularities involved in the con­ struction of Bauer House, home for the System chancellor, was a culmination of three weeks of research into the facts and deductions surrounding the case. It’s quite evident that not all of the facts have been revealed. The questionable nature of this case is in the refusal of University officials to divulge figures on the breakdown of items and labor in­ cluded in the cost of construction. Since all the facts are not yet in, The Texan will not render an opinion on the legality of the University’s proceedings. BUT IF THE FACTS continue to remain hidden in the office files of System administrators there could and should be an arousal of public curiosity. As each day passes that curiosity is likely to increase in legitimacy. The public has a definite right to know the facts in any controversy involving public officials. Witness the interest in the Securities and Exchange Commission investigation of alleged stock dealings by high State officials. Public office is a public trust, and any time it refuses to respond to inquiry on matters of public concern it reduces public confidence. Removing the playpen A handful of campus politicians with a seeming affinity for per­ petuating the existing intransigence of student government will attempt to block the the Student Assembly-passed special election ratification of the proposed “ independent” constitution at what should be the last House of Delegates meeting Thursday night. for A coterie of the reactionary-bent delegates will need the votes of at least a quorum of House members to veto the Assembly’s action. This would automatically place the constitution on the general election ballot unless the House takes the unlikely further step of discharging the Constitutional Revision Commission, thereby eliminating the constitution from any ballot this year. Among other things, the constitution would establish a unicameral legislative branch of student government. THE CONSPIRATORS will be, of course, playing to the instincts for self-preservation of the assembled delegates since ratification of the new constitution would render the House of Delegates useless. But the unicameral aspect of the new constitution is only a minor implication of the entire package, which this group is seeking to prevent from appearing before the students for fear of passage. The new constitution takes a significant step away from ad­ ministrative controls of the University, both financial and statutory. This move toward more directly responsible student government would definitely have no place for the mid-1950’s style politicos who currently can be found displaying their showmanship on the floor of the House of Delegates. Thus the motivation for using parliamentary manipulation to remove the decision on the future of student government from the hands of the students. These same old tired faces predictably include those of Tom Moran, the perennial president protempore of the Model U.S. Senate; Ricky Smith, an aspiring presidential hopeful; and Tom Rioux, president of the Senior Cabinet (a powerless committee of college council presidents), fraternity brother of Frank Erwin, and aspiring assem­ blyman-at-large. BUT MOST PREDICTABLY the little clique has been seeking advice on its planned shenanigans from J.J. Hill, a 37-year-old former University law student who has made a practice of impeding progress In student government for the last decade or so. Hill, in fact, wrote the rules on which the House of Delegates operates. Tile Texan is not against these politicians having their fun and games but we certainly hope that after Thursday night’s meeting they will be forced to find another playpen. Voters have reprieve Those students granted a reprieve by the Constitution, the federal courts and the Texas Legislature for failing to register to vote before the Jan. 31 deadline have until Sunday midnight to rectify their error. The Texan and the Student Council on Voter Registration have been pushing since October of last year to increase student participation at the polls in 1971. An obvious reason for doing so is the important City Council election coming up in shortly over a month. If you missed the deadline last month, clip out and submit the ap­ plication for voter registration in Travis County printed on Page 5 before falling victim to the old Chinese axiom: “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on m e.” T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin EDITOR Andy Yemma MANAGING EDITOR...............................................................Lyke Thompson CITY EDITOR ........................................................... ...................... Cliff Avery ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR ............................................... John Reetz ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR ................................................... Cyndi Taylor SPORTS EDITOR ............................................................................... Steve Dial AMUSEMENTS EDITOR .......................................................... Cicely Wynne FEATURES EDITOR ................... Katie Fegan Issue News Editor .................................................................................... Martin Crutsinger News Assistants .................................................... Rick Codina, Debby Bay, David Powell Assistant Amusements Editor ............................................................................ Mike Fluitt Assistant Sports Editor ............................................................... ....................... Joe Phillips Make-Up Editor Susanne Sullivan Wire Editor .................... Faye Barbula Copy Editors ....................................... Gene Williams, Tom Kleinworth, Mike McClellen The Daily Texan the w riter of those of those of the Editor or of article and' are not necessarily U niversity adm inistration o r of the Board of The Texan Regents to the Assoc!- Opinions expressed In The Dally Texan are the ated Press. United Press International Photo the Service and the New York Times News Service. the Associated Collegiate Press, The Southwest Journalism The Daily Texan, the student new spaper at Conference and the Texas Daily Newspaper the University of Texas a t Austin, is published Association. by T exas Student Publications, Inc., D raw er D, University Station, Austin, Texas 78712. The Daily Texan is published Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, except holi­ day periods. Septem ber through May. Second class postage paid a ' Austin. is a m em ber of subscribes the news News contribuUons will be accepted by tele- phone (471-4401). at the editorial office (J.B. (J.B. 102). J 03). or a t Inquiries concerning be should m ade in J.B. 107 and advertising in J.B. 111. representative of The Daily Texan Is National Education Ad­ vertising Service. 360 Lexington Avenue, New York. N.Y.. 10017. The national advertising laboratory the delivery . a n i 1921 \ WX. i ) jP X T v V v g , ■ rn p ri i V / . e. \1971 - r t S j £•■•25^2 , U' ° \ J USS-— P a g e 4 Thursday, February 25, 1971 THE DAILY TEXA/1 Art Buthwald The TV blackout WASHINGTON—A week ago Sunday New York City had a blackout which caused all nine television stations in the area to go out for several hours. This created tremendous crises in families all over the New York area and proved that TV plays a much greater role in people s lives than anyone can imagine. For example, when the TV went off in the Bufkins’ house in Forest Hills Long Island, panic set in. First Bufkins thought it was his set in the living room, so he rushed into his bedroom and turned on that set. Nothing. The phone rang and Mrs. Bufkins heard her sister in Manhattan tell her that there was a blackout. SHE HUNG UP and said to her husband, “ It isn’t your set. Something’s happened to the top of the Empire State Budding.” Bufkins stopped and said, “ Who are you?" “I'm your wife, Edith." “Oh." Bufkins said. “Then I suppose those kids in there are mine." “That’s right," Mrs. Bufkins said. “If you ever got out of that arm chair in front of the TV set, you’d know who we were.” “Boy, they’ve really grown,” Bufkins said, looking at his son and daughter. “How old are they now’?" “Thirteen and 14," Mrs. Bufkins replied. “PLL BE DARNED. Hi kids." “Who’s he?" Bufkins’ son Henry asked, “ It’s your father," Mrs. Bufkins said. “ I’m pleased to meetcha," Bufkins* j daughter Mary said shyly. There was an em barrassed silence all around. “ Look," said Bufkins finally. ‘*1 know I haven’t been much of a father, but now that the TV’s out I’d like to make it up to you.” “How?" asked Henry. let's “WeU, just talk," Bufkins said. “That’s the best way to get to know each other." “WHAT DO YOU WANT to talk about?" Mary asked. go to?" Henry said. “Well, for starters, what school do yon “We go to Forest Hills High School," “ What do you know?" Bufkins said. “ You’re both in high school." There was dead silence. “ What do you do?" Mary asked. “ I ’m an accountant," Bufkins said. “I thought you were a car salesm an," Mrs. Bufkins said in surprise. “That wa* two years ago. Didn’t I tell you I changed jobs?" Bufkins said. “No, you didn’t. You haven’t told ma anything for two years.” “ Yup. I’m doing quite well too," Bufkins said. “Then why am I working in a departm ent store?" Mrs. Bufkins demanded. “OH, ARE YOU still working In a department store? If I had known that, I would have told you you could quit last year. You should have mentioned It," Bufkins said. There was more dead silence. Finally Henry said, “ Hey, you want to hear me play the guitar?” “ I ’ll be darned. You know how to play the guitar? Say, didn’t I have a daughter who played the guitar?" “ That was Susie,” Mrs. Bufkins said. “ Where is she?" “ She got m arried a year ago, just about the World time you were watching the Series." “ How about that?" Bufkins said very pleased. “You know, I hope they don’t fix the antenna for another couple hours. There’s nothing like a blackout for a m an to really get to know his family." Copyright (c) 1970. Tne W ashington Post. Coy Distributed by Loa Angelet Times Syndicate. The firing line Vote for vendors April 6 To the editor: In a push to improve the public image of a University suffering from possible dehydration and one-man administeritis, some members of the administration have attacked the new burst of life—the street vendors. Mr. Rooster Andrews, well-known local civic leader and UT football booster, and a University lawyer both appeared at a City Council meeting two weeks ago, and the street sought an ordinance against vendors. Chancellor LeMaistre stated at a Lions Club meeting “The situations we tolerate on the Drag and about the campus are no credit to Austin or to higher education." I suppose he prefers with Regent Erwin to have a collection of fine buildings and students isolated from the hue and cry of life, and from the m ajor problem con­ fronting us — how to live in a world in which 1/100 die people control almost all the wealth and assets, while most of the world starves. the vendors according He prefers that old grads visiting the campus not be reminded that there is a split in U.S. society, unemployment is on the rise, and that some students (about half to a Daily Texan survey) and some nonstudents (with long hair!) have decided to revert to a traditional American way of life, living in sm all communities and hawking their wares on the streets. In other cities — New Orleans, Boston, in Mexico, in the cities of South America and Europe, and for lots of us here, the informality, friendliness, and creativity of the open m arket vendors are a prized asset of tile city. Dr. LeMaistre, in the antiseptic tradition of some adm inistrators, would isolate us in Austin from that life. If we of the University handle cultural differences now by walling out the other (street vendors), how will our culture students (or we) handle larger differences in later life? By building walled cities? By bombing or shooting the other culture? By feeling powerless and tuning out on alcohol or other drugs? As Robin Ferris, a mild-mannered, strong person who supports his wife and child by selling incense, said at the last City Council meeting “ The m ajor problem here is a breakdown of communication between people, between groups." How can we communicate with a culture we wall off? Perhaps the most effective action we (I think most of the 15,000 voters among the students and faculty) who like the street vendors and would like a more just city can take is to help campaign and get out the vote in the coming city election, April 6. Tile Young Democrats, and the Student Council for Voter Registration are among groups working effectively in this election. Anthony Iarrobino, Jr. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Fraternity feats To the editor: This is in response to a letter from Jack M. Grimes, in Wednesday’s Texan. I don’t know Mr. Grimes, and I am sure he doesn't know me, but one thing is for sure; his facts are not correct. As a member of Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, I object strongly to the rem arks made by Mr. Grimes towards certain Greek houses and ours in particular; and I will defend the program and activities of our fraternity to his face if he so wishes, or if he has the nerve to make those ac­ cusations to m e personally. Our fraternity and others listed do a great deal for this campus and community and maybe if Mr. Grimes would come out of his gopher hole into the real world and open his eyes and his mind he might un­ derstand. On Jan. 17, AEPi co-ordinated the IFC and Panhellenic a drive with Councils to raise over $3,000 for Talia Carroll, a kidney patient and are currently sponsoring the Alpha Epsilon Pi Perm anent Kidney Fund for un­ derprivileged patients who are in need of the kidney dialysis machine and supplies. We are sponsoring a dance in the Union Ballroom Friday, Feb. 26, to help raise the needed money for the Kidney Fund. How much do you want to donate of your and money, Mr. Grimes? raise $20,000 to Last year we helped service the State Hospital on Christmas and a number of people have been helped through other services ours and other Greek organizations have provided. We do not seek publicity for the worthwhile projects we work on, the results are the only reward we ask for. So, Mr. Grimes, what have you done? Kenneth Schiller Alpha Epsilon Pi Monum ent to frogs To the editor: It’s a strange pond where all the frogs croak the sam e, (proverb) Wonder w hat those guys are up to? (folk expression) LeMaistre’s Lions Club speech set me pond: Reflecting. dredging Assesssing. (reflection pool? cess?) frog our What prevents our being a great university is students. And the climate. They attract nonstudents (Yankee). Dealing dope in the sunshine. Winter Playground of Dirty Nothin's Consider: Real estate and related the major power bloc in­ in terests form Austin. So anyway, it’s students: If you can’t get rid of them, you can at least destroy ttheir living housing. T hat’s what we do with “Nigras" and "Latins.’’ Call it Urban Renewal. Lot of living housing dead east of campus . . . making room for Lyndon's tomb. Consider: Who Renewal? Read Renewal and American Cities. fattens on Urban Scott Greer, Urban If you’re in the control-and-exploit set and you feel like doing an Urban Renewal, you talk about crime and health — not about the real stuff in your guts. How’rn I doing LeM? Maybe you could sweep students out of sight in nice, clean, crime- free, expensive, plastic, high-rise apart­ ments — out of the sunshine. Make a killing. Maybe give a contract to Brown and Root (as in Vietnam). Build a this university what it should be: center. And make geriatrics A Lucrative Monument to Retired Presidents and Governors and Provincial Political Hacks and Their Frogs. Douglas Uzxell Anthropology A ries on course To the editor: I have been consistently amazed a t the accuracy of the predictions and comments that in Nick Lawrence’s Daily Horoscope. find I Sometimes I find what he says irrelevant to my life, of course, but seldom outright wrong. He has been batting well above .500. so much What amazes me that sometimes I forget to read it in the morning and then look a t it after my day is over and find it to be a pungent and accurate description of what happened that day. Is It sure seems like Lawrence is making connections that can’t be accounted for by saying it’s just chance. William Meacham Graduate, Philosophy Letters to the editor Firing Line letter* should: • Be typed triple-spaced. • Be less than 250 words. • Include name, address, and phone number of contributor. M ail letters to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Tex.; or bring letters to the Texan offices, Journalism Building 103. Guest viewpoint District Council election urged BY PHILIP L. WHITE Associate Professor of History The undemocratic character of Austin’s City government affects every member of the University community in ways which are too obvious to require explanation. My Intention is to point out the m ajor defects in that system and to suggest what con­ cerned m em bers of the University com­ munity can do about it. for revision. Serving At-large election of City Council members under the place system is the most of­ fensive feature of an antiquated charter long overdue the purpose for which at-large elections were designed, the system produced in the last lawmaking body without any election a representation whatever. Every minority council m em ber con­ servative or extreme conservative anglo residing to the west of Lam ar Boulevard. Many this situation with some complacency, but it would take only a voter turnout comparable to that actually achieved in presidential elections to make conservative West Austin the unrepresented minority. in West Austin now is a moderate, regard THIS WINNER-TAKE-ALL system inrites extrem e fluctuation reflected in a rapid turnover of City managers, It is very bad for the morale and the efficiency of civil service employes. Worst of all it aggravates the most serious problem in the city—the animosity and distrust felt by minority members for public officials. What Austin needs Is a return to the time-tested practice of district represen­ tation which Americans had evolved even before the Revolution and enshrined in the federal constitution. The advantages of district representation over at-large election are perhaps not too readily apparent, but they are terribly important. Most difficult to comprehend, but most important of all, district representation affords each individual the confidence that even though he cannot himself participate in the lawmaking process, someone who lives in his part of town, knows and indeed shares his problems, and literally or figuratively speaks his language will take part in the lawmaking and will afford him both a channel of communication and representation of his interests. DISTRICT ELECTION of councilmen will afford people in every section of Austin precisely such assurance. Continuation of the the at-large election will perpetuate dangerous denial of such representation to whichever side has lost the last election. Fortunately the other advantages of district election are easier to understand. At-large election gives an undue advantage to rich candidates or those supported by rich special interests by requiring each candidate to campaign in the city as a whole rather than in one-sixth of the city. At-large election tends to foster voting the voters simply ignorance because in cannot or will not themselves inform adequately about the qualifications of 15 or 20 individual candidates. election at-large Similarly to produce disgracefully low participation which is due in p art to the widespread reluctance to make im portant choices on the basis of inadequate information. tends Finally election encourages at-large vacuous campaigns dedicated to name- identification and image-building because that is about all the voter can cope with when confronted by so many candidates. DISTRICT ELECTION on the other hand would greatly reduce campaign costs for individual candidates, reduce the number of candidates confronting the voter to a encourage m o r e manageable discussion of issues, and thus enable voters to make mara intelligent decisions. level, Many older people still support at-large elections because they rem em ber it as a reform designed to combat the evils of they ward-based machine politics. What often fail to take into account is that ward bosses flourished before Social Security and civil service. Under such modem programs there is neither so much need for such “ services" as ward bosses once performed nor is there such opportunity as existed before the introduction of the civil service system. Defenders of at-large election generally fail as well to perceive how, as outlined above, the basic it purposes of representative government. frustrates The present council refused by unanimous vote to put on the ballot a charter amend­ m ent calling for district election of council members. Still under the provisions of the charter the signatures of 10,000 registered voters can require that such an amendment be placed on the ballot for acceptance or rejection by the voters. Any registered voter who would like to assure that such a the petition available on the West Mall and, if possible, volunteer there to circulate a petition among his friends, neighbors or referendum occurs should sign The Texan Ombudsman Guest viewpoint Pricing UT out of market lik e ly that the present differential in tuition costs is the only factor explaining the enrollm ent of the few national p rivate fellowship holders currently on campus. Perhaps a larg er differential (lo w er out-of-state tuition) rather than a higher one should be induce m ore established to Fello w s to The U n iversity of Texas. The governor of Texas, the lieutenant governor, the Bo ard of form er Presid en t R e g e n t s , Johnson, and m any Lyndon B . per­ other state im portant th e ir sonalities express often hopes a U n iversity at Austin w ith ex­ cellent nationwide credentials. Such an objective cannot be accomplished by pricing The U n iversity of Texas out of the m arket for fine scholars. desires and for ON-THE-DRAS Sportswear Attic 2nd Floor By R. LYNN RITTENOURE Research Associate Center for the Study of Human Resources and Depart­ ment Of Economics provide fellowships One m ajor indicator of the qu ality of a graduate school is the number of graduate students enrolled holding national p rivate fellowships, such as the Woodrow W ilson and D anforth Fellow ship. M ost a stipend for the student and a m atching grant to the u n iversity to cover tuition and other ex­ penses incurred b y the enrollee. The fellowships, however, usu ally have a tenure of only one year. Follow ing the student has no assurance of financial support (The Woodrow W ilson Fellow ship no longer pays even first-ye a r tuition). firs t ye a r, the M any fo the fellowship holders are out-of-state students. A tuition increase would place an a rtific ia l from b a rrie r on the m atriculation of fellowship the holders standpoint that they would not be assured of finan cial support in the years following the te r­ m ination of their fellowship. ONE COULD WELL argue that H arvard , Princeton and Y a le have not experienced a decline in fellow ship holders due to high tuition. W hy, then, should The U niversity of the num ber of Round Trip C ALL Euro-American DIMENSION, In c Ph. G e n e Fackler — 452-8458 N ig h t or Day conspicuously” T ex as? G raduate students, lik e other consumers, are w illin g to “ consume and “ qu ality degree,” pay w here q u ality is defined by popular opinion rather than by objective standards. for a The U n ive rsity of Texas m ay indeed be the “ Cam bridge of the P la in s ,” but it does not have the qu ality reputation attached to Iv y League, B ig Ten, o r P a c ific Coast universities. F o r argum ent, let us assum e that the q u ality of graduate education at T h e Texas, | m easured b y objective standards j (assum ing such standards ex ist), | is equal to that of any other university. the sake of j U n ive rsity of A RATIONAL CONSUMER w ill at some point trade off the d if­ ferential in re a l and psychic incom e he expects to receive by virtu e of holding a degree from any given institution w ith the d ifferential in the cost of ob­ taining the degree. It is highly Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service MAKE A BUNDLE FOR YOUR BAG a in turn y o u o ff lf work doesn't contact ut. You can ta rn $50 or few hour* w orking more part-time— d ay o r night— d o in g on campus jellin g . G irl* and guy* fashion a c­ sell our d eco rative cessories to other girls and guys. It's super stuff — easy to p ed ­ d le — and neatly profitab le fo r you. write or call: TODAY 'N TOMORROW, Ltd. 95 Engineers Drive Hicksville, New York 11801 (516) 822-1400 TYPEWRITING BY ELECTRONICS IN ONLY 15 HOURS CHARTER FLIGHTS R O T C s freedom of choice F or UT Students, Faculty, Staff and their im m ediate fam ilies HOUSTON TO LONDON of Am erican means, our constitutional freedoms. freedom s w hich in d irectly, protectors of Midn. 4—c William R. Mayse NR orc C—amn Richard A. Vogt AFROTC To the editor: subm it I m essage: the following D ear Com rade, A fter looking over the results of our recently completed study of the U .S. defense posture, I believe the best tim e to launch our attack would be on Saturday m orning at 8:33 U .S. tim e. W e suspect that everyone in the United States w ill believe that our attack is a d rill carried out the Russian A ir join tly w ith Fo rce and w ill do nothing until it is too late. If the tim ing is perfect, w e hope that we can knock out a ll the U .S. re ta liato ry force. The obvious stroke of genius would fin a lly m ake the w orld safe for communism. C hief of Sta ff Russian A ir Fo rce P .S . It w ill be the w ar to end a ll w ars, Com rade! Mike Polmanteer Freshman, Phyrics entitled Editor’s note to Phineas A. Phillips: We received your gnest editorial “ The Girl Scouts;” however we are unable to publish it without knowledge of your identity. Your name need not appear in the paper. To the editor: In his letter to The Texan, W ayne C lark comes down hard against freedom of choice as it Is exercised by the m idshipmen campus. and C la rk ’s attitude causes us to wonder if he has a ll the facts at his command. cadets on this student scholarship w hile There are two classifications of R O T C students, R eg u lar and C ontract. The R eg u lar student has a the C ontract receives no fin an cial aid w hatsoever during his first two years at college. A t the end of their second year of college, R eg u lar and Contract students decide alike m ust w hether they w ish to continue in the program . If the m idshipm an or cadet decides against con­ tinuing is separated from the program with no hard feelings. A m idshipm an or his separation at any tim e during his first two years in the program so that no pressure is too great to force a m idshipm an or cadet to stay w ith the program . in the program he cadet m ay request I M P E R I A L I S M IS NOT practiced by the U nited States in Southeast A sia as it w’ould be to necessary for Washington govern the people of Southeast A sia. It is more lik e ly the North Vietnam ese who are trying to c a rry out a policy of im perialism in Southeast Asia. the arm ed State’s consequences The person who would ca ll for the im m ediate disbanding of the U nited forces would have to be w illin g to ac- of c e p t domination by a foreign power or insufficient relief aid after a m ajor disaster. C lark also stated a desire for a course in guerilla is w arfare. G u erilla w arfare taught to M arine Option students in the N RO TC program . ROTO GRADUATES can and w ill effect a change in U .S. m ilita ry policy. It is an officer’s duty to m ake suggestions that w ill im prove the m ilita ry ’s ef­ fectiveness. M any officers trained in the RO TC system leave the four-year j m ilita ry after obligation, and this is the m ajor few RO TC reason w hy so graduates m ake it to decision m aking levels in the service. th eir People who support R O T C are in no w ay supporting but are insuring a w ide cross-section of ideas in the officer corps. The arm ed services are the protectors UM I* DOES T O MEASLE BOARD PREDICT FOR ME , l TODAY? 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I I *i f f >; J J BRAID-TRIM JEAN 11.00 AND COTTON KNIT BODY TOP 7.00 ON-THE-DRAG SHOE STOP Ut Floor Use BankAmericard or Master Charge, if desired 809 CONGRESS — CAPITAL PLAZA BOOTS FOR SU M M ER! by Sbicca That'* *iqht, boots for spring and summer. A soft brown glove leather with open toe and cork-like sole. A great look with your spring and summer wardrobe. 30.00. Thursday, February 25, 1971. THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 F L A R E JEANS SLAX VALUES TO 13.00 PUFF SLEEVE SHIRTS e NEW IMAGES AT 2426 GUADALUPE Longhorns Praised Solon Resolution Lauds Gadders i n c l u d i n g Wonder, Speyrer, halfback B illy Dale, end David B ill Arledge Zapalac. linebacker and run But the pages—the youngsters who the errands lawm akers—were really excited. It gave them another chance to get the players’ autographs. for Netters to Open Spring Season The Texas tennis team wdll open Its season Thursday in the Corpus Christi Invitational tennis tournament. Tile tournament, sponsored by the University of Corpus Christi, in Texas Coach W ilm er is, Allison’s words, the biggest of the year.” “ one of There wdll be 16 teams com- p e t i n g , including Southwest Conference members SM U, Rice, A&M, Texas Tech and Texas. in the The six Ixmghom netmen en­ tered tournament are Avery Rush, John Nelson, Don Nelson, Jim Touchon, Bayless and M arc WiegancL Ron Rush and John Nelson, Don Nelson and Touchon w ill be en­ tered in the doubles. Rush, John Nelson, Touchon, Bayless and Wiegand w ill be entered in the singles. T e x a s Tie Legislature igratulated the 1970 Longhorn iball team, and particularly [back Steve Wonder and split d Charles “ Cotton” Speyrer, ■dnesday in a joint resolution. resolution also praised [Tie ach D arrell Royal and men- ned football Ijonghorns' ;cess since Royal became ach in 1957. the the Speyrer of Port Arthur and irster of nearby Bridge City *re given special recognition cause resolution was a o n s o r e d by Sen. Roy irrington and Rep. Carl Parker, ►th of Port Arthur. The Longhorns last ■ason undefeated and ranked finished No. I but were upset, 24-111 by Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl, a 30-game winning breaking streak. The resolution said “ Longhorn teams have become a legend in the world of collegiate football,” finishing among the nation’s top five teams eight times in the last 12 years. Also, the resolution said, the Longhorns have won s e v e n Southwest Conference football titles and “ probably no team over such a period of time has so dominated opposition” within the SWC. of Members houses both c l u s t e r e d around several longhorn players who appeared in connection with the resolution, LEIBOWITZ BAGEL BAKERY & DELICATESSEN NOW OFFERS A SUNDAY MORNING DELIVERY SERVICE 51.75 Roast Beef Pastrami Corn Beef N.Y. Salami Bologna Nova Lox Reg. Lox N.Y. Hot Dogs Dom. 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Interior M inister Theo Con­ doner issued a statement Wed­ nesday night saying Ashe’s ap­ plication was again considered, “ and in view of the fact that he is still persona non grata, his application was not granted.” No further explanation was given as to why Ashe is persona non grata, but observers here is because of his believe political and par­ ticularly his anti-South African statements. activities, it Gerdener told parliament Feb. 16 that an application from Ashe for a visa to visit South Africa four days had been received earlier and was being considered. Ashe, of Richmond, Va., is understood to have applied for a visa to take part in this year's national open championships, to be held in April. He was prevented from taking part in last year’s championship by a controversial government decision that he would not be allow'ed into South Africa to play as an individual, but only as a member of a national U.S. team. rescuing two wounded soldier* from a battlefield. His golf handicap is now five, but he says it hasn't gone up because of his physical handicap. He just can’t play as often a i he once did. You won’t find used V W s in better shape than ours. Ph. 476-9181 70 TOYOTA C O R O N A Mark ll, Lt. Blue, Automatic, Air Radio, W S W Tires, Like New ............. 24 9 5 70 SIATA SPRING (By Rat), New Racing Green, W ira Wheels, Radial Tires, Tach........................ 1995 70 V W SEDAN, Die. Blue, U t . New, Chrome Wheel, Ra­ dial Tires, Striped Plus many others 20 95 70 V W SEDAN, Red Low Mi le* 1895 69 V W SEDAN, Beige, Real Nice, Air, Radio .. 1750 69 V W TYPE III Fastback, Real N ice, AM Radio, Radial Tires ............ 1850 68 V W SEDAN, Green, Low Mileage, Tape Deck 1395 67 V W SEDAN, Red, Real N i c e 1195 68 OPEL KADETT, Beige 29,000 Miles ......... 8 9 5 66 V W SEDAN, Blua 1098 68 FIAT 850 Conv., ............. 1350 69 V W SEDAN, White, Reel Nice, AM Radio .. 1595 “ CB" SMITH VOLKSWAGEN A u th o riz e d Dealer D O W N T O W N 405 N. L A M A R Not by Me — T ex a n S ta ff Photo. Texas forward Lynn Howden blocks an A g g ie from driving during Tuesday night’s con­ ference game. Texas A & M won the contest, 65-64. Golf Adds New Hope U N IV E R S IT Y O M B U D SM A N o r fa c u lty m em b er* Student* a d m in istr a tiv e w ith U n iv ersity p r o b le m s c o n ta c t Jack should Strick lan d , H ogg Building: 1 0 3 (ft - 12 M onday through F r id a y ). T elep h on e 471-3825 or 471-1805. Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service SERVIC IN G V O LK SW A G EN VEHICLES IS OUR SPECIALTY The Only Independent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET ROAD Across from Gulf Mart G L 2-0205 C LO SE D SA TU RD A Y SAN FRAN CISCO (A P ) - Capt. Corbin Cherry lay in an arm y hospital bed two years ago, his left log sheared off nine in­ ches below the knee by a land mine while serving as a chaplain in Vietnam. A chaplain's first words to him were, to get “ You’re going depressed. But you’ll get over it.” “ He kept telling me I would he depressed, and he just made me mad,” recalls Cherry. W XX .CO H O W n A 6421 Burnet Lane Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AHD SERVICE VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS By V O LK SW A G EN TEC H N IC IA N S 100% GUARANTEED FIN A N C IN G AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT V . W . S E R V I C E REPAIRS ON DOMESTIC CARS GILBERT'S AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE 1621 E. 6th SERVICE 477-6797 PARTS 477-6798 Cherry adopted a positive at­ titude. He made the best of his handicap. And he got a chance to see what effect an optimistic chaplain would have on hospital patients. He became one. He's assigned to Letterman General Hospital, where many Vietnam wounded are taken. “ Come on, we’re going out to 30-year-old the tells his them am­ play golf,” Methodist minister patients, many of putees. 'T il give it a try,” responds a tall young man who never has held a golf club before and is taking up the game on one log. “ That’s all I want you to do,” Cherry replies and hands him a live-iron. On his second swing, he hits t a ball about 80 yards straight down the middle and a buddy in a wheelchair yells, “ Sand- i bagger!” Another beginner, with both legs gone, grins after connecting from his wheelchair and sending a ball about 20 yards. Golf isn't a formal part of the hospital’s rehabilitation program, nor the it chaplain’s normal duties. included in is “ But it sure makes a 60-hour work week seem short,” says Cherry, the 1970 National Am­ putee Golf Association champion. chaplain was a one- handicap golfer before going to Vietnam. He lost his leg when he stepped on a mine after The P. E. MAJORS Here's your opportunity to work in your chosen field. Start working part time N O W as a management trainee in one of the nation's leading Health and Beauty Resort chains. Full time work and an excellent chance for advancement will be waiting upon graduation. Apply in person only TRIM & SW IM HEALTH SPAS 5407 C LA Y AVE. STUDENT RENEWAL BUCKNER FAHNING GEORGE GAGLIARDI FEBRUARY 25-THURSDAY NOONDAY SERVICE AT 12:00 (Free Lunch) EVENING SERVICE AT 7:00 P.M. Have you ever gone on a retreat or to a conference with a water pot hoping to take home a sufficient supply until the next retreat but expecting that to grow less and less until you must come again to be revived? W hy not leave the waterpot at re­ newal and carry a way the well? Now on the last day, the great day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried, saying "It any man thirst let him come unto me and drink. He that believeth on me, as the scripture hath said, FROM W IT H IN HIM shall flow rivers of living water.” (John 7:37-38) THEMES: THURSDAY: How do we effect renewal BAPTIST STUDENT UNION UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS SCHOLZ GARTEN 1607 San Jacinto HAPPY H O U R 4-6. PM . ALL PITCHERS ALL BOTTLE BEER CLOSED SUNDAYS the finest ring available. Created by John Robert* Prices Start at S32.50 Ct. Diamond $29.50 J J 3 0 i s u a i i a M i ye YOU CAN ADVERTISE 15 WORDS AT ONE LOW PRKI Runs IO Times for only $ Q 15 J * Total Runs 20 Times for only $1 ROO Total I CALL GR 1-5244 NOW! ECONOMOU EFFICIENT! FAST RESULTS! Page 6 Thursday* February 25, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN PGA Begins Today; Amie, Jack Favored PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — A recharged Arnold Palmer and a slimmed-down, s u p r e m e l y confident Jack Nicklaus provided golf with an they old prepared to go to the tee as 6-1 co-favorites Thursday the fifty-third PCA championship. familiar ring as in “When the chips are down In the big championships, you have to go with these guys,” said John Miller of Napa, Calif., one of the game’s blond, long-haired new breed. “In regular tour tournaments we younger fellows feel it’s wide open. In the major events, it’s a different ball game. The p r e s s u r e Is greater. The established players try harder.” “No outsider is going to win here this week,” agreed South Africa’s Gary Player, one of the strong advance choices. “It’s a championship it will take a real champion to win.” test, and A field of 146 pros, IOO of the tourists tournament glamorous California 'Red' Haunts SF Giants the rest work-a-day club and men, start the 72-hole, four-day grind around the PCA National Golf Club east course at 7 a.m. CST. there Although is negligible betting on the e v e n t , an unofficial oddsmaker with Las Vegas connections established Palmer and Nicklaus as the players to beat, fixing their odds at 6-1. NEXT AT 8-1 came BUI Casper, golfer of the year for the last two years; voluble Lee Trevino, leading money winner In 1970, and Player, who is making his season’s debut on the American circuit. T h e current U.S. Open of champion, Tony Britain, was placed at 10-1 with Dave HUI and Tom Weiskopf, and four players were listed at 12-1— Australians Bruce Devlin and Bruce Crampton, Gene Littler and Frank Beard. Jacklin You had to go all the way to 15-1 to find Tom Shaw, only player to win two titles on the tour this year, representing the top threat of the so-called Young Turks. Also at 15-1 were Miller Barber and Bobby Nichols. WITH ARNIE’S Army again In full cry after Its hero broke a 14-months victory drought two weeks ago with a typically climactic 22-foot putt on an extra hole, Palmer the tournament with the best scoring average on the tour this season. is entering It’s the only major cham­ pionship never won by the strong- armed Latrobe, Pa., idol. Palmer needs a PGA title to join the exclusive club of Gene Saracen, Ben Hogan, Nicklaus and Player as winner of the professional grand slam—British and U.S. Opens, Masters and the PGA. Nicklaus, by winning, c o u l d twice _ _ _ _ _ make a double around. slam, ★ SALE * SHEEP SKIN RUGS M a n y Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SALE ★ Various k inds, colors — 50c p e r foot on c r u t i a t i n g l y embarrassing because it happened during an national All-Star game the city shied television. But proper away changes the tenant they wooed so assiduously from New York. to accommodate from making and reached HOWEVER, THE San Fran­ cisco 49ers, the football team of at­ Increasing promise tractiveness, had the point of no return with Its home gridiron, Kezar Stadium. So they abandoned this ancient dump for Candlestick Park which is being refurbished, reconstructed and expanded. None of this is being done to please the Giants, mind you. It's to please the 49ers, and Horace keeps blowing fuses. the Giants were Back in the ancient era of John McGraw the darlings of New York. But those times have gone forever. They never did become the darlings of San Francisco. Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes Capitol Saddlery S B 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 HANK's GRILL 2532 GUADALUPE Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2 pc*. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only Reg. SI .35 Happy Hour 2-5 p.m. Daily Light or Dark (c) 1971 New York Times News Service NEW YORK — At about this ago Horace time 13 years the New York Stoneham of Giants and Walter O’Malley of the Brooklyn Dodgers were packing their carpetbags and heading for the golden West to make their fortunes, one as the San Francisco Giants and the other the Los Angeles Dodgers. They struck it rich from the start. But where Walter is still doing well, even if on a somewhat reduced scalet Horace is in trouble. as Not only did the Giants operate last year in the red financially — the reported loss was $798,000 — but they are having vast difficulties with their ball park, a chamber of horrors from the first day it was opened. Perhaps remedies can be found for all those ills. But there Is no way Horace can put a halt to the way time is creeping up on his moat precious possession, Willie Mays. It’s true that Willie had a fine season last year at the age of 39, but he will be 40 In May, no longer the exuberant kid who once was the delight of New Yorkers. to IT TOOK San Franciscans a while appreciate Willie although the only time he could Inspire the Giants sufficiently for a pennant was In 1962. The normal Giant finishing spot has long been second place and yet the team drew an attendance record of almost 1.8 million customers in 1960. The turnstile count last year was 740,720. That isn’t even as much as the Oakland Athletics drew across in­ the bay. Charlie Finley’s truders reported an attendance o f j 778,355, slightly inflated because j deadheads and no-shows are counted. But two teams in the : one metropolitan area still can’t draw what one did alone. Experts in the vicinity of the Golden Gate insist that a super-1 saturation of sports events in the area has gouged so much out of the customer dollar that there Isn’t enough left for the Giants, ; among others. Nor will the remodeling of Candlestick Park be of any help to a ball c lu b that needs all the help it can j get. What Irks Stoneham so much Is that he suffered for more than a decade In that dreadful wind- tunnel where freakish winds once blew Stu Miller, a frail pitcher, off the mound. That was ex Thursday From 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Only 2 HOURS ONLY 6 TO 8 pm THURS. ' NEW TOWN COLLAR SHIRTS SOLIDS & STRIPES KNIT SHIRTS GROUP I VALUES TO 8.00 Season-Long Holdout Player Baffles N BA the former University of me,” Connecticut star said. But the fact is, he could present the NBA a king-size problem if he doesn’t sign. While in pro football a player can play out his option and insist on being traded to another club, there is the not such arrangement NBA. in In football, the player in effect becomes a free agent and can sign with another club, although has commissioner the the authority to see that the player s new team must give up a player or cash in compensation. It isn’t known if Kimball would be a free agent, whether ha would be free to negotiate with another team or how the Players react. A s s o c i a t i o n would However, Kimball was forced to take a 25 percent cut from his salary of last season to play this season without a contract. of NEW YORK (AP) — Toby Kimball the San Diego Rockets, big and bald yet still unnoticed, has quietly become the unprecedented center of the National happening Association that has Basketball NBA commissioner even the baffled. an in Kimball, a 6-8 reserve in his fifth year in the NBA, is playing out his option yeart or to be more exact, he hasn’t signed his contract for this season. Other players have gone into the NBA season without signing, but never this far along, and with the playoffs only a month away, he has NBA officials scratching their heads in puzzlement. “I ’ve never been confronted j with that situation,” admitted j Commissioner Walter Kennedy at Tuesday night's New York-San Diego game, referring to what would happen if Kimball doesn’t sign by the end of the season. “There’s no precedent for it.” Kimball, too, is waiting to see what happens. “ I’ve never done anything like this before, and I ’ll never do it again,” he said, emphasizing “never again.” I t’s not that Kimball wants to leave San Diego, where he has played since his rookie year with Boston. And he isn’t on a crusade to test the reserve clause. “ It’s just that I ’m not satisfied with the contract they offered DRYCLEANING & SHIRTS SPECIAL 257c OFF with this ad DICKENS CLEANERS & LAUNDRY 2918 G U A D A L U P E (A cross fro m S h ak ey ’s) you have tried (he rest . . . now try the best ti Y EA R S IN SAME LOCATION v , pl % Tourney Preparation ptf i mm — U P I Telephoto Jack Nicklaus drops a ball while practicing for the P G A Tournament, starts Thursday. Nicklaus and A r­ nold Palmer are co-favorites in the event. which UsngjSTHE NEW a r m y s t o r e SUPER spectott 517 CONGRESS NEXT TO PENNEYS MEN S & W OMEN S BELL BOTTOM HIP HUGGERS G E N U I N E N A V Y T-SHIRTS Reg. 88* each SUPER SP E C IA L '/ Hi\\ and up For MEN’S GENUINE ARMY CUSHION SOLE) s o x — made to sell fo r r SUPER SPECIAL COLORS IN GREEN, WHITE, or RED / MEN’S SANFORIZED BOXER SHORTS Reg. 98* pr. NEW ALUMINUM CANTEENS Super Specials JUST 66‘ 150 •v. SEVERAL TYPES TO CHOOSE FROM BACK PACKS JUST "144 and up 44 3 FOR IO00 VALUES lw TO 6.95 99 GROUP ll Values to 12.00 88 BOOTS & MORE BOOTS For Work, Dress, Hiking, & Rubber GENUINE SUPER SPECIAL IWALLACE BERRY SHIRTS 44 [Reg. 600 each JUST and up Just J J e n r y f AMERICAN EXPRESS f MEN’S WEAR 2222 Guadalupe N EXT T O THE T EXA S T H E A T R I O R Ba n k A m e r ic a r d THE NEW A RM Y STORE ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ■ 5 1 7 CONGRESS NEXT TO P E N N E Y S ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ I Thursday, February, 25, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 Smoke Bomb Put in Dorm Second Time for Mischief in Jester BV DAVID POWELL News Assistant Mischief hit Jester Center at the 6:30 pm . Wednesday for second week in a row. An unidentified youth set off a homemade smoke bomb that sent white billowing through the academic and dining areas of the mammoth residence hall. clouds No Injuries were reported. Sulfur-soaked rags were placed in the men’s wing ventilation system Feb. 15 and forced a partial temporary evacuation of the men's quarters. Placed under a firehose outlet outside the Language Laboratory in Room A230A Program Lab across from the second level of the the dining hall and near women’s wing lobby, the smoke bomb emitted smoke for about 30 seconds before an unidentified m ale kicked it down nearby steps and outside the building. residents The Incident occurred as the cafeteria was closing, when from 1,000 are to 2,000 usually in the dining area. One witness who the culprit set off the device said he had an accomplice nearby In the dining area who signalled an all-clear before immediately smoke began filling the area. saw Neither youths have been ap­ prehended. Remains of the bomb showed it was made of a soft drink can and had a 20-foot fishline at­ tached to a m etal trigger. “It was a good one,” said one the women’s head member of resident’s staff. b o m b remains Campus security officers took the f o r examination and said the case would under ‘ ‘ m a l i c i o u s mischief,” a misdemeanor. probably fall Prim arily affecting the lungs, the smoke was described as “ harmful but not deadly” by the staffer, a chemistry student who wished to remain unidentified. The thick haze hung over the area for about an hour, but normal activities resumed shortly House of Delegates to Debate Newly Proposed Government representative body An amendment th at would add the a proposed new student government will be considered by the House of Delegates Thursday. to 31 discuss general Delegates will the addition of the amendment to the M a r c h ballot, S t u d e n t s ’ Association Vice- President Jim Arnold said. Ar­ nold added that this was being considered under the assumption that the new constitution will be accepted on the March IO ballot. “I understand there is a move underway to try to get the March IO ballot called off,” Arnold said. Arnold also wants the delegates to discuss the appointment of Dr. Stephen Spun* as permanent president of the University. “ It seemed to be so hastily done,” he said. The delegates will meet at 7 the Academic Center in p.m. Auditorium. T h e amendment to the body called proposed constitution would add the Student a lu n ette Representative Council. Cooper, the an advocate of the council amendment, said through operated be would academic departments. Miss Cooper said such a group would “ create more interest in a c a d e m i c s . ’ ’ The proposed constitution deals mainly with student said, o m i t t i n g necessary faculty- student relations. sendees, she after the smoke first appeared. probably The staffer said the smoke in would Jester’s ventilation system about two hours before being filtered out. recycling remain Spurr to Ratify V-P Selection for Four candidates vice- president for student affairs have been proposed by a student* committee, faculty nominating President Ad Interim Brvce Jordan said Wednesday. They will not be identified before the appointment is made. interview Dr. Stephen H. Spurr, Incoming president, will the c a n d i d a t e s before the ap­ said. He Jordan pointment, the say whether declined appointment will be before or after Spun* takes office July I. In either case. Jordan said, “ any decision will be made with the full concurrence of Dr. Spurr.” to The position Stephen D. Mc­ Clellan, temporarily serving as vice-president, will take after a permanent appointment is made is on is undecided. McClellan leave from the post of dean of students. before Vice-president for student af­ the office held by fairs was became Jordan president ad interim last July I. He is resigning as of July I to take the the presidency of University at Dallas. he ART LECTURE AND FILM will feature John Akar, ambassador from Sierra Leone, speaking on “ Africa’s Cultural Heritage” . At 8 p.m. Thursday in Art Building Auditorium. ARTS AND SCIENCES COUNCIL will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday In Batts Hall Tobin Room for a general session, as well as committee meetings. ASTRONOMY DEPARTMENT will present R. Edward Nattier, special research associate in astronomy, at 4 p.m. Thursday in Physics Building 310. in AUSTIN LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday the Catholic Student Center to show what the Austin Independent School District has done in response to the suit brought against the d i s t r i c t by Justice Department last August. the AUSTIN RUGBY FOOTBALL CLUB will meet at 5:30 p.m. Thursday the University intram ural field for scrim m age and practice. at AWARE will meet at noon Thursday in Union Building 221. BAHA’I ASSOCIATION will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Union Junior Ballroom to see the film, “ It’s Just the Beginning.” present CINEMATEXAS FILM SERIES will award-winning commercials for 1964 and 1965 at 6:30 and 9 p.m. Thursday in Jester Center Auditorium. Admission is 75 cents. CHI ALPHA will meet at 8 p.nu Thursday in the Union Building to Faculty-Staff Lounge talk about “ The Well” coffee house. C H R I S T I A N S C I E N C E ORGANIZATION will meet at in Union 7 p.m. Thursday Building are welcome. 300. Visitors DMA DEGREE RECITAL will feature tenor Irl German at 8:15 p.m. Thursday in Music Building Recital Hall. GAMMA DELTA EPSILON will sponsor a book sale from 8 a rn . to 5 p.m. Thursday in front of the Union Building. G E N E T I C S SEMINAR will S. feature Dr. Alexander the chairman F raser, biological the sciences University of Cincinnati, who will speak on “Evolution of the Prim al Genetic System” at 4 p.m. Thursday in Experimental Science Building 115. of at G E O L O G I C A L SCIENCES SEMINAR will present Bur Von B. T e t t l e t o n , American A s s o c i a t i o n of Petroleum Engineers Distinguished Lec­ turer from Oklahoma City at in Geology' I p.m. Thursday Building IOO. for teachers JUNIOR FELLOWS is accepting as nominations of the Holloway candidates for in Award Teaching in Arts and Sciences. Nominations should be sent to H o l l o w a y c/o Associate Dean, West Mall Office Building 101. Excellence Award LE POTPOURRI will present Michael Martin and “ Green­ wood” at 9 p.m. Thursday. Admission is 50 cents. MAYO will present a 30-minute “Unconscious Cultural film, Conflicts” at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Catholic Student Center basement. PHYSICS of Vacancies DEPARTMENT is John Stark sponsoring Dr. speaking on “Therman Dif­ f u s i o n in Aluminum” at a solid state sem inar at 3 p.m. Thursday in Physics Building 440. A second sem inar speaker, Dr. Leonard Simmons, will on “ Progress Report: Self Paced Teaching in Physics 416” at 4:30 p.m. in Physics Building 313. speak REAL ESTATE SOCIETY will the h e a r Tony Meeks, educational director of the Texas Association of Realtors, speak at 7 p.m. Thursday in Geology Building 112. SECRET FUN CLUB will meet front of section “ C” at In Brackenridge Hall at 5 p.m. Thursday to organize kite flying over IH 35. TOWNES HALL FORUM will present “ Pollution as a Matter of Choice” at noon Thursday in Law School Auditorium. the of UNDERGRADUATE PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM will sponsor the film, “Radio Telemetry” at 8 p.m. Thursday in Physics Building 440. UT PRE LAW ASSOCIATION will hear B arbara Kazen, director of the Community Legal Aid Service in Rosewood, speak at 7 :30 p.m. Thursday in Geology Building 111. Y O U N G AMERICANS FOR FREEDOM will hear State Rep. Walter H. Mengden of Houston speak on “The State Legislature: Does It Reek?” in Business-Economics Building 151 at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Transportation Under Discussion transportation Municipal governments would be forced to transfer operation to of private enterprise under a bill being .studied by a House sub­ committee. systems The House Committee on Urban Affairs discussed the bill spon­ sored by Rep. Ray Lemmon of Houston Wednesday night. It was referred to a subcommittee for further study. to The bill would require cities to find an adequate business con­ cern tran­ operate sportation systems. The bill does time not specify the length of cities would be given to transfer control. city The cities, however, would he held responsible for paying out revenue slips. U N IV E R SIT Y OM BUD SM A N or facu lty m e m b er s Students a d m in istr a tiv e w ith U niversity .lack c o n ta c t should problem s Strickland, I 0 3 IIokk B uilding (8 - 12 Monday through F r id a y ). T elep h on e 471-3825 or 471-1805. F o r S a l e A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . H o u s e s , U n f . 1970 P E N T O N w ith e n d u ro kit, e x tr a s , $695. A lso 1967 H u sk y 250 M X . Ju st $75. C o n sid e r fo r s tr e e t b ik e of re b u ilt, tra d e , a ll o r p a r t , e q u a l v a lu e . 263-2452. $525. T r a i le r , A L T E R N A T IV E . 913 W . 24th, B ooks, m a g a z in e s , n e w s p a p e rs , p h o to g ra p h y , p o s te r s (so o n ), 478-0284. 67 VW BUS, ra d io A /C , good tir e s , C all 4(6-6171 a f t e r 6:00 p .m . a s k J im K le in . d e lu x e n in e -p a s s e n g e r , low m ile a g e . fo r VO X C O N T IN E N T A L O rg a n $400 or b e st o ffer. G ood s h a p e . C all a f te r 5:00 p .m . 453-2297. S IN G E R (T o u ch & S ew ) s e w in g m a - I c h in e s, 7 of th e m . All a r e s la n t n e e d le m o d e ls a n d a r e fu lly e q u ip p e d to z ig ­ z ag . m a k e b u tto n h o le s a n d fa n c y s titc h ­ e s. T h e s e m a c h in e s c a r r y full g u a r a n ­ te e s a n d w ill h e so ld on a " f ir s t c o m e . fir s t s e r v e d " b a s is . $39.95 e ac h . M onth- i ly p a y m e n ts a v a ila b le . T h e y m a y he in s p e c te d a t U n c la im e d F r e ig h t, 2003 : A irp o rt B lvd. O p e n to th e p u b lic fro m : 9 a .rn .-6 p .m ., M o n d a y -F rld a y , S a tu r- ! d a y ’til 1:00 p .m . 1970 D U N E B U G S Y 1969 K A W A SA K I 500. 7300 '7 1 P I k it. E a s t. $695. 477-0724. IO" b a r s m ile s. F E N D E R J A ZZ M A ST E R $75. F e n d e r p ro a m p $50, A R tu r n t a b le $50, S c o tt r e c e iv e r $150. 441-4276 d a y tim e . 1963 VW . J u s t r e b u ilt e n g in e , g e n e r a ­ to r. N e w c lu tc h , p a i n t 476-0300 11-6 M o n d a y -S a tu rd a y . $525. b a tte r y , b ra k e , R O Y A L E L E C T R I C ty p e ­ w rite r. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $75 o r b e s t o ffe r. M u st s e e to a p p r e c i a te . 451- 2759 p o r ta b le 1,00 m ile ta in s , to p , s id e c u r- ta c h , b la c k c a r p e t , w h ite d ia ; m e n d p le a t in te r io r , w id e o v a ls, m o re tra n s m is s io n , hof1y' I 1969 B R O O K W O O D m o b ile h o m e fo r s a ]e F u r n is h e d o r u n fu r n is h e d . 6200 G ro v e D riv e , L o t 82. C all 385-0123. ’64 IN T E R N A T IO N A L T r a v e la ll. good ra d io , good e n g in e , n e w b a t­ tire s , te ry , n e w p a in t. C all 452-8398. $1650.00. B A R R A N C A SQ U A R E A PA R T M EN T S S H U T T L E B U S R O U T E . E ffic ie n c y a n d o n e b e d ro o m apartm ents, c o m p le te ly fu rnishe d . $ 1 3 0 up. in fo rm a tio n call 4 5 4 -0 2 3 9 F o r S u m m e r rates $99.50 up. S O U T H S H O R E APTS. O V E R L O O K IN G TO W N L A K E A N D A U S T IN S K Y L IN E C o n v e n ie n t U T, B e r g s tr o m & D o w n to w n F U R N 1 S H E D / U N F U R N ISH E D I B E D R O O M KROM $135 2 B D R M . I & 2 B A T H F R O M $147.50 3 B E D R O O M F R O M $182.50 A L L B IL L S P A ID — C A B L E T .V . 3 00 E. R IV E R S ID E D R . 4 4 4 -3 3 3 7 A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y THE B L A C K S T O N E L U X U R Y L IV IN G — M A ID S E R V IC E ! L iv e >2 b lo c k fro m L a w S chool on th e U g ly B u s R o u te . E a c h a p t. Is c a r p e te d , d ra p e d , c e n t r a l h e a t & a ir. All u tilitie s p a id . D e sig n e d fo r 4 p e rs o n s p e r a p t. 2 b e d ro o m —2 b a th . In d iv id u a ls m a tc h e d w'ith c o m p a tib le ro o m m a te s . C o m e See! 476-5631 2910 Red River A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y C A S A DEL RIO j 1970 H O N D A 350cc S c r a m b le r . $700. In like n e w c o n d itio n . N o s c r a tc h e s , ru n s I p e rfe c tly . C om e b y a n d s e e a t 2300 R io G ra n d e . A sk fo r J o e o r B ill. 1963 B U IC K S p e c ia l. Six c y lin d e r, a u to ­ m a tic tr a n s m is s io n , p o w e r b ra k e s , r a ­ dio, h e a te r . 442-8433 a f te r I p .m . $375. •67 A U S T IN H E A L Y S p r ite M a r k IV . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . O n ly 33000 m ile s. $1050. 471-2166 7:30 p .m . - 8 p .m . 1969 O P E L R a y le e . 102 h p., e x c e lle n t h e a te r , a u to m a tic , c o n d itio n . ra d io , 472-1083. ’69 C O R V E T T E . P o w e r, a ir , e tc . C all 444-7126. 100s S U N N A m p lifie r a n d fo u r lo Inch L a n s in g D130f s p e a k e r s in tw o boxes. M u st se ll q u ic k . $500. R a lp h , K im , o r G e o rg e , 454-5075. 472-9982 a f te r 7 p .m . S T E R E O 15 to 2 0 % D ISC O U N T . M ost brands available. Call Stereo Service of Austin 453-4622 9 - 5 Q U A L I F I E D G R A D U A T E O R G R A D U A T I N G S E N I O R S T U D E N T . W o u ld y o u lik e to b u y a N E W O R USED FORD w hile d e la y in g y o u r p a y m e n t s u n til afte r y o u g r a d u a t e ? I f so, c a ll D on F u n d e rb u rq h at M c M o r r i j Ford, 8 72-8481. an A no rien S lg h th o u n d s p ro u d ly in tr o d u c e s litte r. CH S a s h a of S c h e h e r e z a d e - D lc m a r’s C a m e o . 451-2147. e x c e p tio n a l A fg h a n (T his 1968 C o rtin a G .T . N e e d s w o rk . $500. Is b e lo w N A D A w h o le s a le ). 1434-B B r a c k e n r id g e A p a r tm e n ts , L a k e A u stin B lvd. a t t e r 6. C A L L U S F O R y o u r P a s s o v e r o r d e r — L e ib o w itz B a g e l B a k e ry a n d D e lic a - j te s s e n , 465-6066. 1970 15 F O O T I n v a d e r R u n a b o u t. 55hp E v in ru d e e n g in e . L e s s th a n 50 h o u rs u s e . M u st sell im m e d ia te ly . 7910 G a u it, 207. 453-2054, 478-5903 a n y tim e . N O W L E A S I N G F O R S U M M E R s to re s . L a r g e pool, b ills p a id : h a n d y to L a w b u ses, S chool, m a ilb o x . I b a th , 2 b e d ro o m s 2 b a th s . R e a s o n a b le . 3212 R e d R iv e r. 478-1834, 452-8715. I b e d ro o m s , 2 b e d ro o m s S h u ttle , C ity ’69 K a w a s a k i 250cc w ith e x tr a s . 476-9254 ; 4587. a f te r 6 p m . 472-4643 a n y tim e . ‘65 VW bug. C le a n , r u n s good. G oing H a w a ii, m u s t se ll, $650. 2905 P e c a n C r. 926-1465. R o o m m a t e s W a n t e d W A N T E D : R ID E to D a lla s on w eek- _en d s. W ill p a y g a s . C a ll S a n d y , 477- C O N T I N E N T A L A P T S . U T A re a -S h u tt ie b u s 2 b e d ro o m , b e a u tifu lly f u r n is h e d a p a r t ­ m e n ts . C a r p e te d , d is h w a s h e r, c e n t r a l a i r a n d h e a t. C a b le a n d g a s p a id by o w n e r. 4003 R ed R iv e r P h o n e 453-3081 o r 452-3408 A fte r 5, 465-6036. __ M a r c h 1st E A T M O V E S . ’58 P O R S C H E C O U P E . R u n s w e ll. $800. H I 2-4173. 305 H o n d a . R u n s g r e a t, looks s h a r p . N ew s e a t. C all D oug. 441-2867. B IC Y C L E B U IL T fo r tw o. C o lu m b ia . L ike new . $100. C all A m s te r M usic, 478-2079. G ibson s ta n d a r d g u ita r , F r a m u s 5 s trin g banjo, C a n n o n S L R 135m m c a m e r a , 300m m te le p h o to le n s . 444-4060. " T h e G r e a t B o o k s " , " T h e H a r v a r d ' M A L E T O S H A R E tw o b e d ro o m , C la s s ic s , a n d o th e r b o o k s. 44^-6308. , tw o b a th a p a r tm e n t. $61.5 0 -m o n th . M aid s e r v ic e , f u r n is h e d , a ll b ills p a id ! S tu d y ro o m a n d p in g pong a n d ta b le . L e F o n t, 803 W est 28th, 472-6480. r e c r e a tio n a v a ila b le now . CH-CA. b a lc o n y , pool. $165 p lu s S ee m a n a g e r a t 4102-B S h o a l C re e k B lvd. 452-8094. e le c tr ic ity g a s . a n d fro m S H O A L C R L E K V IL L A . T w o b e d r o o m 1 C a m p u s . $15 p e r m o n th . T h e C a s ti- ^ ----------------------- C O V E R E D P A R K IN G . Va b lo c k T lla n , 2323 S a n A n tonio, 478-9811. 1969 BSA 5Q0ec. P e r f e c t c o n d itio n . N e ed __________ $700 c a s h . 441-2803. N E E D TW O C H IC K roommates. $56.50 b ills p a id . F e b r u a r y p a id . No. 2 bus. _ F r e e la u n d ry . 2708 S a la d o , 478-0637. C O N S U L A P T S . L I K E L A K E S ID E L IV IN G ? S u z u k i T-500. 1400 m ile s . u n d e r : W A N T E D . G IR L S to s h a r e tw o bed w a r r a n ty . B e tte r th a n n e w . B e s t o ffe r. ro o m a p a r tm e n t. All b ills p a id . C all C a ll a f te r five, 454-6508. 1414-0819 a f t e r 5:30 p .m . 1968 K a w a s a k i 250 tw in , 5 sp ee d . $350. 478-6937. M a le to s h a r e o n e b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t six b lo c k s fro m C a m p u s . $80 a m o n th . 476-8179. to s e e o u r u n iq u e a p a r t ­ T h e n c o m e fla ts to d a y ! L a r g e 2 -b e d ro o m m e n ts a n d to w n h o u s e s d e s ig n e d e s p e c ia lly fo r p e o p le w ith s ty le s ! On s h u ttle b u s ro u te . a c tiv e life 1201 T in e n F o r d R o a d 444-3411 476-2633 1961 R a m b le r , six, s ta n d a r d , O P ., cold a ir, g ood tire s , n ic e , $225. 3007 D u v a l, Apartment 306. 1969 O pel R a lly e K a d e tt, 102 h .p ., n e w ra d ia ls . A M -FM . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $1800 o r b e s t o ffe r. 477-3857. W a n te d . M a le c o lle g e s tu d e n t to s h a r e la r g e m o b ile h o m e In q u ie t c o u n try lo c a tio n . P r i v a t e b e d ro o m a n d b a th . C a r n e c e s s a r y . 288-1824. F e m a le m e n t to s h a r e one b e d ro o m a p a r t ­ s ta r tin g M a rc h 1st. $60 p lu s h a lf e le c tr ic ity . P ool, AC. 805 W e s t 10th. C a ll G a y le . 472-8111. a p a r tm e n t, O N E B E D R O O M , o ne b a th fu rn is h e d fu lly c a r p e t e d w ith S p a ­ n ish d e c o r, on U .T . S h u ttle b u s ro u te . $145, re s id e n t p a y s e le c tr ic ity . F ie s ta P la c e , 4200 A ve. A. 465-8823, 476-2633. F U R N IS H E D E F F I C I E N C Y a p a r tm e n t, 5 b lo c k s c a m p u s . All u tilitie s , c a b le , pool. $125 p e r m o n th . 478-6491. D y n a c o P A T — 4 P re-am p $90. F M 3 I tun er $110, S te re o 35 a m p $40, Be l & | H o w e ll cassette p 'a y b ack unit a n d 20 I cassettes w ith 39 r e c e d e d alb u m s $45 | M A L E R O O M M A T E or { 'a e if a b o v e e q u ip m e n t is p u rch a se d b y F rid a y 26th. S p e e d y 4 6 5 -7 8 8 1 , tw o b e d - ro o m . A /c . pool. $62.50 p lu s e le c tr i­ fro m c ity . 2400 E a s t 22nd. 12 b lo c k s C a m p u s . C all 472-9753, a s k fo r L eif. s h a r e I R o o m m a te b lo c k to s h a r e a p a r t m e n t o ne fr o m C a m p u s . P oo l. b a lc o n y , h a lf * 65 m o n t h - B e n ' 3007 D u v a l - 4 2 0 9 Sp e e d w ay, 103 after 5:30. R o o m & B o a r d EVS MOTORS 65 Opa! 2 door sedan, 4 speed, radio, $595. 67 Mustang 3 speed V-8, radio, real clean, $ I 295. 59 Ford automate V-8 Galaxie 500, 4 door sedan, $295. H U N G E R P A IN S " G et r e lie f a t T h e C a s tilia n . W e ’re n o w o ffe rin g v a ­ rio u s m e a l c o n tr a c ts fo r S p rin g . 2323 S a n A n tonio. 478-9811. f a s t $75 /M O N T H R O O M a n d B o a rd . Co-op. M a le -fe m a le v a c a n c ie s . 472-0071, 1805 P e a r ! S tr e e t. W ould y o u like to e a t a t a g ir l’s co-op'.' Good h o m e c o o k in g a n d g r e a t a t ­ m o s p h e re . O nly $32 p e r m o n th . C all W h ite h all. 478-1575. 1739 Babcock Rd. San Antonio, Tx. 78229 Off. 344-6224 Home 684-4122 T O P L A C E A T E X A N C L A S S IF IE D A D C A L L G R 1-5244 ‘71. O ne b e d ro o m S u b -le a s in g I M a r c h th r u I S e p te m b e r fu rn is h e d . G a s. h e a t, $115 p lu s e le c tr ic ity . 1902 S a n ta C la ra . I. 454-3495. S K Y D I V E A U S T IN P A R A C H U T E CEN T ER 44 1 -2 9 8 3 after 7 p.m. la rge Extra tw o b e d ro o m , on e bath. C e n tr a l heat, ce ntral air, b uilt-in kit­ chen, Shu ttle Bus. A ll b ill* paid, from $165. A v a ila b le M a r c h I, several Ju n e I. 2208 E n fie 'd R oad 4 7 7 -3 1 7 3 lf no ansewer, 4 5 3 -4 0 4 5 D ia m o n d e n g a g e m e n t rin g . % c a r a t n e w . n e v e r w o rn . O rig in a l c o s t $150, fo r $90. C al! 441-2708 a f te r w ill 2:30 p .m . M o n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y . s e ll A q u a ria n W a te r b e d s . 50 y e a r g u a r a n te e $50 fo r k in g -siz e . C a ll M icki a t 477- N O L E A S E 7298. a rg * I b e d ro o m , Bw • fu rn ish e d or unfur- W A T E R B E D S , k in g siz e, la p -s e a m $59, b u tt- s e a m $49. D e m o n s tr a to r a t 1007 m r n . . . I . W e st 26th, 107. 478-5112. nished. C a rp e t, a > , G .E. dishw asher, dis- pose!, T a p p a n range, b alcon y, pool. 2 blocks from R e a g a n H ig h . 4 5 3 -7 6 0 8 . N E W Y O R K S T Y L E B A G E L S d e liv e re d fr e s h to y o u r d o o r on S u n d a y m o m - I Ings. C all 465-6066. C O N T E M P O R A R Y E F F IC IE N C Y ; k it- E P r e v io u s ly ^ 1 m e m b e r '“U n i t e d c h e n e tte , stu d io p a n e le d b e d s. c e n t r a l w a ll, g la s s w a ll re a s o n a b le fir e p la c e , o p e n in g to p r iv a te p a tio , b e a m e d ceil- inKS; AH b ills p a id , $100. 4 (2 -6 (-l u n til 5:30. 2511 P e a r l, IN T E R E S T E D of E u r o p e , c a l l J e r r y R o sso n , 471-2686. IN SW A N K to u r i a ir, E q u is tr ia n T e a m . E x c e lle n t in s tru c tio n . r a te s . 454-2821 C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G B A T E S B a c h W ord (15 w ord m in im u m ) $ . ......... $ E a c h A dditional T im * Stu d en t rate on e tim e E a c h ad d ition al w ord 20 C o n sec u tiv e Issu e* IO w ord s ........................ ............................... 15 w o r d s .07 .06 ...........* ...7 5 . ___ $ ...0 5 ........................... ........................... ......... $70.00 ........................... ......... $96.00 ............. ............. I c o l. Inch 2 c o l. Inch inch S c o l. 4 c o l. inch C la ssified D is p la y I c o lu m n x o n e inch on e tim e $ 2.10 . ......... $ 2.00 E a c h A d d ition al T im e (N o c o p y c h a n g e for c o n s e c u tiv e ls sn e r a te s.) • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S less fo r 75c the first 15 w o rd s or time, 5 c each a d d itio n a l word. Stu­ receipt dent must show in Journalism and p a y B ldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y thro u gh Friday. in ad va n ce A u d it o r s D E A D L IN E S C H E D U L E T u e sd a y T e x a n M on d a y . 11:00 a.m. W e d n esd a y T exan T u e sd a y . 11:00 a.m . T h u rsd a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y . 11:00 a.m . F r id a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y . 11:00 a.m . . . F r id a y . 3:00 P.m . S u n d a y T e x a n “ In th e e v e n t of e rr o r s m a d e in an a d v e r tis e m e n t, im m e d ia te notire m u st b e g iv e n a s the p u b lish ers are resp o n sib le for only O N E in correct Insertion. A ll c la im s for a d ju stm en ts should be m a d e not later th a n 30 days a fte r p u b lic a tio n .” F o r S a l e O P C A S H P R I C E S f o r d ia ­ m o n d s . o ld g o ld . C a p ito l D ia m o n d lo p . 603 C o m m o d o re P e r r y . 476-0178. p a id 6768. u l t r a c le a n P O R T A B L E T V s : L im ite d la t e u s e d 19" s u p p ly of in s ta n t-o n W e s tin g h o u s e b -w . $55. 444-1345, 442-7475. 4305 M a n c h a c a R o a d . S T E R E O C O N S O L E S (4 ) b r a n d n e w s te r e o c o n so le s . T h e se 1971 n a tio n a lly a d v e r tis e d m o d e ls a re In b e a u tif u l w a ln u t fin is h w ith 4 s p e a k ­ e r s y s te m s & w o rld fa m o u s B S R tu r n ­ ta b le s . T h e y f e a t u r e p o w e rfu l s o lid s ta te c h a s s is to be s o ld fo r $75 e a c h o r s m a ll m o n th ly p a y m e n ts a v a i la b le . U n c la im e d F r e ig h t , 2003 A ir p o r t B lv d . (b e tw e e n M a n o r R o a d & 1 9 th ). O p e n to th e p u b lic fro m 9 a m . to 6 p .m ., M o n .- F r l .. S a t. 't i l I p .m . C O M P O N E N T S Y S T E M S . 1971 c o m ­ p o n e n t s o ts d u st s p e a k e r s . B S R c o v e r. T h e s e s ets w ill b e so ld f o r $69.95 e a c h . U n c la im e d F r e ig h t, 2003 A ir p o r t B o u le v a r d . (3) c o m p le te w ith tu r n t a b le , a n d tr a n s is t o r iz e d fu lly TV P O R T A B L E S . U se d b a r g a in s fro m $19.95-$125. C o lo r, B& W . 454-7014. IO S P E E D a n d 3 s p e e d b ic y c le s . D a v id H o u ck . 4 7 1 - 2 6 1 6 . ___________________ 1965 D O D G E 383. F o u r d o o r. H T ., c u s ­ tom f a c to r y a ir, pow ’e r s te e rin g - b ra k e s, AM 3310 R e d R iv e r, 476-1728. r a d io . $850. J o h n LA N G , ___ S T E A K S -R O A S T S . C o m p le te of m e a ts c u t to o r d e r . L o n e S t a r M ea t lin e C o m p a n y . 1717 I n te r r e g i o n a l. MAHARANI H A N D IC R A F T S F R O M IN D IA Clothing, Jewelry, Gifts I5 A & G u a d a lu p e 4 7 6 -2 2 9 1 R E A L IS T IC 140 w a t t A M -F M re c e iv e r. T h r e e m o n th s old. s te r e o I n n ew cofiCJtion. C ost $270 n e w , se ll f o r $210 or best offer. 444-0210. 1964 C H E V R O L E T I m p a la V-8 C o n v e r t­ ible. P o w e r. R ad io . R e c e n tly o v e r­ h a u le d . $495 o r b e s t o ffer. 327-2310, a f te r 6 :3 0 p m . TW IN book p re s s , $3: I N N E R S P R I N G m a ttr e s s, $10: tw o tu r n s p r e a d s , $4 e a c h . 452-9894 a f t e r 2:00 p .m . 1958 M E T R O P O L IT A N a c tu a l m ile s ; c o n v e r tib le : and e x c e lle n t. $475 o r b e st v is u a lly 31.500 m e c h a n ic a lly o ffer. 454-4255. 65 N O R T O N -A TL A S. $650. S e m i-c u s to m . 453-1101. R O B E R T S 808-D C a r tr id g e R e c o r d e r a n d p la y b a c k d e ck . T w o m o n th s old. C o st $170, S ell $130. 442-9622. F O R S A L E : 1970 F la t 124 C o n v e rtib le 471-5742 c o n d itio n . E x c e lle n t $2600. b e fo re 5. 1970 K A W A SA K I M a c h I I I . 7.000 m ile s. m e c h a n ic a lly p e rfe c t, n e w tir e s , C all 452-0902 w h e n e v e r. VW E N G IN E , c o m p le te ly re b u ilt. G u a ­ r a n te e d s a m e a s f a c to ry re b u ild . $195 e x c h a n g e . 453-9129. F R O M A FG H A N IS T A N . P r iv a t e c o lle c ­ tion fo r s a le . E th n ic c lo th in g , je w e lry , te n t h a n g in g s. 454-1708, w a ll h a n g in g s , 67 M GB. R E D c o n v e r tib le , w ire w h e els, A M -FM ra d io , $1595. C a ll S te v e 465- 65 C O R V A IR . n e w tir e s , new' b a tte n ,', sell. s h a p e . M u st e n g in e e x c e lle n t I G ood b u y . 444-8311. i S T E IN W A Y G R A N D P ia n o 6 fe e t. C om - p le te ly re b u ilt in sid e a n d out. An ex- I s e rio u s m u s ic ia n . I c e lle n t b u y f o r $3,250. A m s te r M usic, 478-2079 A ir, a u to m a tic , C H E A P C O M F O R T — 1962 S tu d e b a k e r. in te rio r, good tr a n s p o r ta tio n . $249.00/best offer. 454-5577 a f te r 5.00. ra d io , new E A T thru M a r c h moves. M o n d a y a !i item s 1 0 % off. Som e 1 5 % . Eat will re­ op e n a t 1002 W . 12th (12th & L a m a r) with a g re a te r va rie ty o f natural foods, spices, a n d teas. 1st, DYNACO STEREO S C A - 8 0 A m p lifie r e^d e x c e 'e n t A M - F M Ste re o R eceiver, D y n a c o A -2 5 Speakers, B e r 'a m in M ir a c o r d M o d e l 7 7 0 H c h a n g ­ er. R e c e n t S o n y T ap e deck. A ll o r part. M o n d a y thru Sat.— 47 6 6733, 4 54-6141. W A T E R B E D S in te s te d — 5 y e a r g u a r a n te e — k in g size —h e a t r e g u la te d —s m o k e fa c to ry a g a i n s t le a k s — ]2 to 1 /3 p ric e o f o th e r k in g s iz e m a ttr e s s e s — p u n c tu r e a nd c ig a r e t t e p ro o f — p o r ta b le — te s t e d 14 in o rth o p a e d ic h o s p ita ls . y e a r s Call 454-4929 o r v is it 1210 W. St. J o h n (5:30-7:30 p .m . W e e k d a y s 9 :00 a .m .-2 :0 0 p m . S a t. & S u n .) 1956 TRIUMPH 650. R e b u ilt tv-v. lig h tin g s y s te m s , e x h a u s t, 1650 C all J o h n , 441-2861 e n g i n e ; I H O F F N E R E L E C T R IC g u ita r a n d Glb- n ‘ T o g e tn e r son a/P ? ,' / j I a ? ! : - 00 ta n k . —$350. C a ll 4(6-0157, m a n y M IL E S b u t e c o n o m ic a l. 1965 6 . T a n d b e r g m o d e l 64 e> I M s tan g R A H g o o d tlr » s . N e e d s bod> w o rk so p r ic e d Tow. $300. 478-6798. .............................. ta p e d e c k T h re e h e a d s , s o u n d on so u n d , d u s t c o v er, te a k c a b in e t, e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $120, 452-6872. AK .HA N F E M A L E , 6 m o n th s , b la c k I ----------------------------------------------------------------- ta n . S h o w q u a lity . L e a s h a n d I P o r s c h e 911 AC, only 15,000 m ile s . 1968. b roken. $250. 454-5800. I C all m o rn in g s . 453-2767. ■ dc S Thursday, February 2 5 , I HE DAILY TEXAM I d e n . F o r S a le . T h r e e b e d ro o m , tw o b a th . to s h o p p in g c e n te r s . O w n e r 's e q u ity $3,000. 4331 A irp o rt. 926-9502. tre e s , c lo s e fir e p la c e , la r g e D u p l e x e s , U n f . 2303-A V E N T U R A . 2 -b e d ro o m , 1-bath d u p le x w ith c a r p o r t. D is h w a s h e r a n d d is p o sa l. C a r p e te d liv in g ro o m a n d b e d ­ ro o m . $145 r e s id e n t p a y s g a s a n d e le c ­ tr ic ity . 476-2633. H e l p W a n t e d M o n d a y N E E D M A L E S o r to w o rk to 1:30 p .m . P a id b y m e a ls . G o v e rn o r's D o rm , 476-5812. th ro u g h S a tu r d a y , 11:00 fe m a le s F U L L A N D P A R T T I M E h e lp n e e d e d . A p p ly a f t e r 5:30 p .m . K in g B u r g e r N o. 6, 3710 A irp o r t B lv d . B O Y w an te d to w ork in re c e iv in g room . M u st be a b le to sp a re 30 h ou rs weekly. H o u r s can be ad ju ste d to fit sch ool schedule. A sk fo r M r . Fuccello, Le o n 's, H a n c o c k C e n te r. M i s c e l l a n e o u s Z u n i N E L S O N ’S G IF T S : c o m p le te s e le c tio n a n d M e x ic a n im p o r ts . 4612 S o u th C o n g re ss . 444-3814. je w e l r y : A fric a n I n d ia n P A R K IN G : S E M E S T E R $50; m o n th ly $12.50. D ia g o n a lly a c r o s s S a n A ntonio r e a r of V a r s ity T h e a tr e . S tr e e t M c A d a m s P r o p e r tie s . 476-3720. fro m U S E D T U R N T A B L E S , p o r ta b le s te r e o s b o u g h t a n d sold. S e rv ic e on a ll m a k e s . M u sic R e p a ir S e rv ic e . 11706 S p rin g h ill D riv e . V in c e n t P . F u n k , 836-0748. FLY A G LID E R Exp e rie n ce the joy o f so a rin g D e m o R id e $10 9 :0 0 A . M . S a tu rd a y , Feb. 27th G E O R G E T O W N F L Y IN G SE R V IC E O n o r a b o u t M a y 1st, will h ave fa c ili­ ties to b o a rd horses. N ic e stables. 50 acre s o f w o o d e d g ra ss la n d to rid e on. $50 p e r m onth in c lu d in g care en d fe e d ­ ing. 2 0 m inutes from dow ntow n. 4 4 4 -8 3 6 5 after 5 w eekdays, all d a y on w eekends. H A IR L T D . C a ll In fo rm a tio n on fo r h a ir s in g e in g fo r s p lit e n d s, a n d s h a g c u ts . T r y o u r n e w e x c itin g s a lo n . 454- 0984. C u s to m A ctio n M o to rc y c le s , p a in tin g , 801 W e st 12th. f r a m e m o ld in g , r e p a ir w o rk . A ll m o d e ls m o to rc y c le s. S p e c ia lty c u s to m m o to rc y c le s . L o ts of H a rle y D a v id so n , T r iu m p h , N o rto n , BSA p a r ts . IN C O M E T A X A N D B O O K K E E P IN G S E R V IC E . T a x s e r v ic e fo r in d iv id u a l, s e rv ic e b u s in e s s . B o o k k ee p in g s m a ll a v a ila b le , a ll p h a s e s . C a ll 478-8804-24 h o u rs. F o r R e n t O F F I C E S P A C E a v a ila b le in d e s ir a b le d o w n to w n lo c a tio n to s h a r e w 'ith p ro ­ fe s sio n a l p e rs o n . T e le p h o n e fu rn ish e d . R e a s o n a b le . R e f e r e n c e s e x c h a n g e d . 478- 4021 o r 472-4963. L o s t & F o u n d L O ST! " D I B B E R " F e b r u a r y 9th . Two- y e a r o ld m a le . B e a g le -m a rk e d hound. 35 p o u n d s, c h o k e -c h a in c o lla r. R e w a rd . D an, 476-8809, 475-3606, D u p l e x e s , F u r n . d u p le x e s b e d ro o m SO U T H A U S T IN . V a lle y rid g e D riv e . 2- c a r p e te d , w ith p a n e llin g . W a s h e r /d r y e r c o n n e c ­ tio n s $114 u n fu rn is h e d , $174 fu rn ish e d . R e s id e n t p a y s g a s a n d e le c tr ic ity . 476- 2633. A f te r 6:00 p .m . 453-2530. fu lly B u s i n e s s O p p , M a r c h B A R T E N D IN G first, C L A S S E S b e g in n in g e v e n in g s . T a u g h t by p ro fe s s io n a l b a r te n d e r - te a c h e r . B ig <1e- in h ighly n m n d p a id p o s itio n s . C all 255-2555 f o r in fo r­ m a tio n . fo r m e n a n d w o m e n T y p i n g C A L L 452-4791 d is s e r ta tio n s , fo r th e m e s, e tc . M o d e r a te p ric e s . r e p o r ts , J u d y F r ie d e i, 7104 G u a d a lu p e . R E P O R T S , T H E M E S , T H E S E S , d is s e r ta tio n s . R e a s o n a b le r a l e s . M rs. K n ig h t, 4011 S p e e d w a y . 453-1209. B O B B Y E D E L A F IE L D T Y P IN G S E R ­ V IC E . T h e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n s , re p o rts . M im e o g ra p h in g . R e a s o n a b le . H I 2-7184. W O O D S N e a r C a m p u s . L a w , T h e s is . M rs. W oods, S E R V IC E . T Y P IN G 472-4825. L A U R A B O D O U R — 478-8113 (C lo se to U .T .) T h e fin e s t p e rs o n a l y o u r U n iv e rs ity w ork. ty p in g o f all U n iq u e ly low r a te s . T h e s e s , d is s e rta tio n s , re p o rts , etc. A lso m u ltilith in g & b in d in g . R e f e r e n c e s upon re q u e s t. E X P E R I E N C E D d is s e rta tio n s , T Y P IS T . e tc . IB M T h e se s, e x e c u tiv e . C h a r le n e S ta rk , 453-5218. T H E M E S , R E P O R T S , le c tu r e notes. R e a s o n a b le . M rs. F r a s e r . 476-1317. ty-low F O U R S T A R T Y P IN G S e rv ic e . Q u a li­ la n ­ g u a g e - le g a l- te c h n ic a l p a p e r s . S y m b o ls, 836-2830. ra te * . T h e s e s , re p o rts , E X P E R I E N C E D T h e se s, p a p e r s , d is s e rta tio n s . 50c p e r page. five, N a ta lie L e y e n d e c k e r. C a ll a f t e r 476-8532. T Y P IS T . E X P E R T T h e s e s , fe s sio n a l M rs. T u llo s, 453-5124. T Y P IS T . b rie fs , B C . re p o r ts . IB M re p o rts , Sc le e trim p r o bin d in g . P r in tin g , E X P E R I E N C E D E D U C A T IO N A L ty p ist fo r m a t. M rs. H a m ilto n , 444- — a n y 2831. s e c r e ta r y . T O P Q U A L IT Y T Y P IN G , f o r m e r legal d is s e r­ ta tio n s . S c ie n c e , e n g in e e r in g sy m b o ls. M rs. A n th o n y . 454-3079. th e s e s , B rie fs , D E A D L IN E T Y P IN G , p rin tin g , bin d in g . N e a r C a m p u s . T h e m e s , B.C. re p o rts , d is s e r ta ­ la n g u a g e - te c h n ic a l tio n s. 476-2047 a n y tim e . p a p e r s , T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . F a s t a n d " a c c u ra te . 40c p e r p a g e . 442-5693. Just North of 27th & Guadalupe "\mxAa Am 'fy/AwL * M B A T y p in g . M u ltilith in g . B in d in g 0 The Complete Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Service m g th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s e n g ln e e r P h o n e GR 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k v l$ S ! g 1Ar S C H N E ID E R T Y P I ty p in g , p r in t j ng. V n d l n g ’" { s r L a n e . Telephone: 465-7205 ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 T Y P E S E T T IN G , T Y P IN G , p r i n t i n g . B IN D IN G Just North of 27th J Guadalupe tywdA .4m 4lut, • T y p in g . M u ltilith in g . B in d in g M B A U The Complete Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Service s tu d e n ts . A p o d a l k e y b o a r d U nl,v e rs lt la n g u a g e fo r s c l e n t equl r >mr n th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s e n c ln e e i m g P h o n e GR 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2<07 H e m p h ill P a r k M A R JO R IE A. D E L A F l i l D ~ T % J T (%S0rtatl°ns, ’f t P f p e r°s TheB°C b rie fs m u ltilith in g , b i j d ^ g , g Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing AU S-TEX D U P L IC A T O R S 476-7581 311 E. l i t h Just North of 27th & Guad amp* tywxIuK Am jiduj, M .B .A T y p in g . M u ltilith in g . The Complete Profe FULL-TIM E Typing S ta ilo re d th e n e e d s of s tu d e n ts . S p e c ia l k e y b o a rd a n fo r m g th e s e s an d d is s e rta tio n s P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G 2707 H e m p h ill P a la n g u a g e , sc ie n c e , to V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N T Y P IN G SE R V IC E P r o fe s s io n a l T y p in g , A ll f i e l d s M u ltilith in g a n d B in d in g on T heses a n d D is s e r ta tio n s 1301 E d g e w o o d 47: BEST TYPING SERVICE A new source fo r yo ur t y p in g a n d p ro d u c tio n needs. Theses, d isse rta tio re p oi PR J, term p ap ers, an d B C 476-5318. A f t e r 5, 4 4 2 -1 6 9 5 . B est P rin tin g C o m p a n y , 205 E. 19th St. Radio Telescope Space Lights Studied By ALICE SCULL radio A new telescope Is making possible the study of the other side of the universe by the Department of Astronomy. The radio telescope determines the positions of many thousands of are beyond our galaxy. sources which radio One of the investigators In the project is Dr. Harlan J. Smith, chairman of the Department of Astronomy. Smith said “ these radio sources are so far away that we see them only by light which left them in the very early years of the universe—many billions of years ago.” OFTEN THESE radio sources are distant quasars, and after investigators they are detected physical must study this, an characteristics. To do astrophysical analysis of the light patterns in a spectrum must be made. their Light patterns are studied to determine how much they have shifted in their journey through time and space. Light shifts to red as it travels, and the farther it it “The becomes. distant enour- mously the greatest red shifts a l any objects known.” the more Smith quasars said, have travels red T H E UNIVERSITY’S Mc­ Donald Observatory, near Fort Crossword Puzzle 4 Railroad station 5 Nerve network 6 Responded to 7 Man's nickname 8 Profit 9 Go in IO Observe 12 Note of scale 14 Initials of 26th President 17 Opulent 20 Sum up 2 4 Lampreys 2 5 Declare 27 Monster 28 Vessel 29 Linger 30 Unemployed 3 2 Page of book 3 6 Electrified particle 37 Strive to equal 4 2 Ancient Greek district Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle . J J P EJ! R O B R T A N I R I t r~ SA ■ I P A II R S ■ A T rn- \ T E / P U L _ f f V E T R A S H R E U E T A S T E T T O T I NJ L L, E G R E O I I R S 6 l l ! J i T r I p i a Ti ElP T 3 IL IL I m p rte & >1r !e 44 Brood of pheasant* 4 4 Clever 4 8 Is defeated 4 9 Lifeless 51 Arrow poison 54 Allowance for waste B5 Helps 56 Conjunction 57 Footlike part 59 Symbol for tantalum 62 Near (abbr.) 64 Spanish for “yes” I u 15 19 3 4 40 45 61 J Z T T 5 6 7 8 9 IO 13 n>CXX 17 18 14 12 V § 16 20 &^ 2 1 I 2 3 2-< 29 30 rn31 3/ 38 3-i 3 6 . 42 r n 43 4 6 <*>V 47 48 49 22 SS A V 2 6 27 28 25 32 V Z - 33 44 Si!39 J ^5i 54 55 50 5 y y yrn 52 58 aa) 6 2 56 57 65 59 6 0 6 i 6 6 6 4 J! 67 A C R O S S J Fuss A District Attorney (abbr.) 6 Rants l l Climbing device 13 Kite 15 Indefinite article 16 Musical drama I E Roman read 19 Ocean 21 Pertaining lo the tar 22 Compass point 23 Discovers 26 Take unlawfully 29 Broad 31 Cure 33 Proceed 34 Paid notlc* 35 Falsehood 38 Change color of 39 Sun god 40 Prefix: not 41 Indefinite amount 43 Dilated 45 Afternoon party 47 Cancel 50 Roman gods 52 King of beasts 53 Greek letter 56 Unlock 58 item of property 60 A state (abbr.) 61 Feel regret for what one has done 63 Wiped out 65 Cubic meter 66 Saint (abbr.) 67 Possessive pronoun DOWN 1 Word of sorrel 2 European • 3 Hypothetical force Davis, is the location of the In­ vestigations. The observatory has a 107-inch telescope which is the third largest in the world. And an 82-inch telescope. These are among the few telescopes in the world powerful enough for this type of research. A $23,000 grant Science from finance Foundation will the project, officially titled “Spec- t r o g r a p h i c Observations of Seyfert-Type Galaxies.” the National A great portion of the research is being done by Dr. Marie Helene J. Demoulin, a radio astronomer who has been on the University staff since September, 1969. Smith said that she “is one of the few people skilled enough to do this kind of analysis.H UT Athletes Provided New Dining Room University athletes have a new dining room joining Jester Center near Prather and Roberts halls. intercollegiate Al Lundstedt, business manager athletics, o f reports the dining room was under construction for “a year it was and a half* and that opened for breakfast Jan. 30. The new facilities are used by intercollegiate a t h l e t e s par­ ticipating in baseball, basketball, football and track. The athletes formerly ate In the Moore-Hill dormitory, but Lund­ stedt says “it just wasn’t big enough. There wasn’t enough room for the workers, and there wasn’t enough room the athletes.” for Another reason for the building of the new dining room, Lund­ stedt says, is for “convenience.” Most of the University’s athletes live in Jester. U N IV ER SITY OMBUDSMAN or fa c u lty m e m b er s S tu d en ts a d m in istr a tiv e with U n iv ersity p ro b lem s c o n ta c t J a c k should S trickland. H ogg B u ild in g 1 0 8 (8 - 12 M onday through F r id a y ). T elep hone 471-8825 or 471-1805. Something to SELL, BUY Use or RENT? The DAILY TEXAN "<* MA? Furred Mf* tup CLASSIFIED ADS You W ill Be Amazed at the GOOD, FAST RESULTS For So Little Money! CALL GR 1-5244 You Get 15 Words For One Low Price! Insertions S ^ J 1 5 I InsertionsSl ^ O O For Only I For Only j f I Chow Time •—T e x a n S ta ff P h o to by L E O N A R D G U E R R E R O . University athletes (from fore­ l-r) Scooter Lenox, ground, H arry Larrabee, M ike Dukes and H a p p y Feller eat a meal in new dining facilities con­ nected to Jester Center. The has new been in use for one month. cafeteria athletic Revenue Bill Includes Raise In Sales, Entertainment Taxes Smith’s A tax bill centered around Gov. recom­ P r e s t o n mendations the Legislature will come under the scrutiny of the House Revenue and Taxation Committee at 2 p.m. Monday. to The bill includes an increase in the State sales tax from 3Vi to 4 percent which would bring revenue. The in an estimated $300 million In additional auto sales tax would jump from 3 to 4 percent, resulting in $70 million in additional tax dollars. The measure also includes a hike in the hotel-motel tax from 3 to 4 percent, a tax on ad­ and to or i s s i o n s sports State Laws Called Male-Dominated on Women earn less than men in the department e v e r y University campus, said Mrs. Bobby Nelson, law graduate, at a Women’s Liberation meeting Wednesday. Calling “ male- dominated,” Mrs. Nelson said laws tile Texas’ sex discrimination In hiring is one of the worst In the nation. said S h e the University situation is contrary to a 1967 executive order issued by former President Lyndon B. Johnson which states that federal con­ tracts are given to agencies only if that agency does not practice sex d i s c r i m i n a t i o n . Re naissance 801 RIO GRANDE PH. 476-6010 • S O U P 40* eSandwiches 50*-®1.00 •DESSERTS •BEER and W IN E • H APPY H O U R 3 - 6 • (Beer 51.00/Pitcher) ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY • Cover 50c Mon. - Thurs. $1.00 Frt. and Sat. • OLD FILMS — FRIDAY and SATURDAY OPEN 11:00 A.M. M O N D A Y thru SATURDAY KENT STATE: T h e c a m p u s £ A M P (IC call in the Guard? score: 4 students Jy ’ _ Here is what truly dead, l l wounded. UNDER happened — and Now Pulitzer Prize ETI DKT why. I ncl udi ng winner James Mich- ener reconstructs, hour by hour, the events that led to the bloody climax. He answers such ques­ tions as: -Were outside agitators involved in the riot? Was it necessary to p o r t r a i t s of key people who have re­ mained obscure — until now. Condensed from Micheners forthcoming book. One of 41 articles & features in the March READER’S DIGEST SM C Seeks Council Approval for March By LINDA JOHNSTON And JUT JE RYAN Tho first request for an antiwar parade perm it this year will be before City Council brought Thursday. T h e Student Mobilization Committee is requesting a parade perm it for April 18 to protest the war in Southeast Asia and “ to show solidarity with GI’s.” civilian UNDER the parade ordinance, SMC will have to pay $225 for cost of overtime police the supervision if the council grants the request. The parade, the first of its kind In Austin since Oct. 31, is to begin at the University, proceed to the Capitol, go downtown and return to the Capitol. Other requests to be brought before the council Thursday in- amusement events, a levy on cigarettes, and an increase in the franchise tax. Also included Is an extention of the sales tax to include the services of barber and beauty shops, laundry and dry cleaning businesses and repair services. Dallas Rep. Ben Atwell, the committee chairman, said, “If we can get it out of com­ mittee Monday, which I don’t know that we can or cannot do, it would be Wednesday or Thursday before the House would take up the m atter,” he said. With almost two months of the 120-day regular session already past, Atwell observed, “It seems to be a proper time to take some action, because if we can’t raise the money, then of course we’re going to have to cut the budget.” He said he believes that present legislative sentiment is against a tax, but he personal added, they’d think seriously consider a corporate income tax.” income do “I Meeting to Debate Vending Machines of The question returning vending machines which were j removed from the Union Building j last fall will be discussed at a ; Union Board meeting Thrusday. The board meets at 3 p.m. in ' the Union Board room. The 1971-72 budget will he In­ troduced by Union Director John Steele. The proposed budget will j be considered for approval at the ; next board meeting. it was Vending machines dispensing! canned soft drinks were removed from the Union Bulding last f a ll' the because throw-away constituted cans polution. Students’ Association President Jeff Jones initiated the action. Formerly, the machines offered bottled drinks. claimed I to 5, elude a “Hire a Student Week” proposal hy Mayor Travis LaRue. Is Tile week, March designed to “ put an education to work.” Its purpose is to benefit both students aud the business community in that many students are interested in part-time work, and is a means by which businessmen can find permanent and full-time employes after part­ time students graduate. it City Manager Lynn Andrews will propose to the council that the Transportation Enterprises, Inc. contract transit service he extended to March 31. for city The City is negotiating for a ‘ ‘ p e r m a n e n t type” transit operation, to be contracted for “ three years or more,” Andrews said Wednesday. Tile $20,792.12 subsidy the City owes TEI for January represents the gap between the company’s total revenue for the month and the 65 cents per mile the City guaranteed the company when it asked in December. financial help for “THE CITY Is taking the loss because it thought that special school to be routes needed m a i n t a i n e d until permanent service could be established,” Andrews said. regarding The council also will hear Dr. R.A. Dennison the Brackenridge School of Nursing and Mrs. Martina langley requesting a hearing on an or­ dinance banning the sale of raw milk in Austin. Other action to be considered Includes a request from Head Start Director Mrs. Evelyn Sell to appeal a decision of the Q ty to grant Planning Commission special perm its contingent upon conditions. Arthur Guerrero Is scheduled to appear regarding councilmen running by districts. SDS Plans Protest Of Lettuce Sale Student* a Democratic for an­ Society Wednesday night nounced plans the to picket Safeway grocery store at 1109 N. Interregional Saturday to protest the sale of nonunion lettuce. The SDS will be Joined by Community United Front workers and Economy Furniture strikers. SDS also will stage a guerilla theater presentation at IO:30 a.m. Thursday on the second floor of the Business-Economics Building to protest the arrival of Marine recruiters on campus. Coinciding with national SDS demonstrations March 4, the local group antiROTC rallies, a debate and question and answer forums March 3 to 5. plans also lf You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service capulcoV T in g I X APRIL 2-8 A P R , L Z - 8 Round Trip From Round Trip From San Antonio or D a lla s San Antonio or D a lla s v i a i i n i i v f p c a i a i r w a y VIA UNIVERSAL A IR W A Y FLIGHT ONLY FLIGHT & HOTEL $ OO $140!OO SPACE LIMITED SPA C E LIMITED Exclu sive ly fo r U n ive rsity of Texas stu d e n ts and their im m e d iate fam ilies. Tim p r ic e p er Rent is a pro r a ta sh a r e of th e to ta l c h a r te r c o s t and is sntv- je c t lo inc r ea se or d e c r e a s e dep en d in g on the nu m b er of p a r tic ip a n ts. T he air fare is $96.00 p er p erso n bu sed on full o c cu p a n c y of th e DC-8 Stretch .let h avin g as its a llo tted c a p a c ity to th e I n iv e r slty of T ex a » s tu d e n ts, fa­ cu lty and s ta ff a m in im u m of 40 and a m a x im u m o f 80 s e a ts . T he ad m in ­ istr a tiv e c h a r g e per p erso n is $5.00. T he ground a r r a n g e m e n ts a r e $39.00 per person. T ile air c a r r ie r is I n iv e r sa l A ir w a y s w h ich is an A m erica n C ertificated S u p p lem en tal A lr ca r r ie r. BEVERLEY B R A LE Y . . . Tours. . . Travel 1 \ * ‘ Box 7999, Austin, Texas 78712 HARDIN NORTH Box 7999, Austin, Texas 78712 40 ACRES CLUB . C a ll us fo r inform ation: 512-476-7231 Exclusively for the University of Texas students, faculty, staff and their immediate families JUNE 8 Dallas to Brussel* AUGUST 6 Brussels to Dalla* — 61 DAYS ABROAD— JUNE 8 Dallas to Brussel* JULY 21 Brussel* to Dallas — 42 DAYS ABROAD— ‘275 ii Vin A m e ric a n Fly cis Animus JUNE 7 Dallas to Brussels JULY 5 Brussels to Dallas - 2 8 DAYS ABROAD— JUNE 7 Sun Antonio to Amsterdam JUNE 28 London to San Antonio — 21 DAYS ABROAD — MAY 25 Dallas to Frankfurt AUGUST 17 Frankfurt lo Dallas — 84 DAYS ABROAD — ‘285 S P A C E L IM IT ED! APPLY N O W Authorly T rm f Aging B everley B r a l e y ...T e a r s .. . T ravel T he p rice per s e a t Is a pro r a ta sh are of the to ta l e h a r te r c o s t a n d Is s u b ­ je c t to in c r e a se or d e c r e a s e depend ing on Ute n u m b er of p a r tic ip a n ts . T h e airfare for No. I is $225. N o. J Is $243, No. 3 is $225, N o. 4 is CMI, N o . 5 Is $250 p er person b a sed on full occu p an cy of th e DC-8 S tr e tc h Jet h a v in g a llo tted KO s ea ts for u se by the stu d en ts, fa c u lty , aud sta ff o f th e Univer­ s ity of T e x a s. T he a d m in istr a tiv e ch a r g e p er p erson is $8.00. T h e c o s t o$ tho land a r ra n g em en ts inclu ded in the price ie $11.00 per p e r so n . The air c a r r ie r is as lu t e d in th e a d v e r tisem en t. 40 ACRES CLUB Box 7999, Austin, Tex. 803 W EST 24Hi STREET UNIVERSITY V ILLA G E (512) 476-723 Thursday, February 25, J9 7 i THE DAILY I&CAM Page 9 I Beverley Braley’s I European V W Adventures! J Tours from $795. J I I I I I I I | Nam * _ For additional inform ation, fill o u t and mail coupon to : Beverley Braley T o u rs.. .Travel P O. Box 7999 Austin. Texas 78 7 1 8 O r co m e by in A ustin: Beverley Braley Tou rs.. .Travel 601 W est 2 4 th Stree t Hardin Moue* North Or CB# co llect In Tax**: 812 476 -72 31 | Addr*** ________ State----------Zip----- J Grads Call Hollywood Home From Cheetah to Myra B t HANK M O O RE HOLLYW O O D — To look at tile motion picture and television screens, one might find several local people who have done well for themselves. University alumni are popping up more and more on the entertainment scene. And their lifestyles during University days would hardly suggest what they are doing now. Fess Parker of Fort Worth wag a business administration major whom I remember in those days because he was working his way through school (1949-50) as a janitor in my father’s office (the State Approval Agency). Ile would always punch in the time clock early to flirt with the secretaries, and he boasted a shiny custom-job Model T Ford several years his senior. One day, actor Adolphe Menjou was visiting the campus, and Parker was asked to (show him around. They got along well, and before lie left, Menjou urged Parker to try his hand in Hollywood after finishing college. With that in mind, he joined the Curtain Club and went to tinsel- town in 1951 “ because I didn't have any other job opportunities for sure,” he told me. W alt Disney discovered him and made the 6-6 Texan D avy Crock­ ett. That evolved into Daniel Boone and a multi-million dollar busi­ ness corporation which he heads. Since graduation, Parker hag kept active in donating time and influence toward projects furthering the University. The Ex- Students’ Association in 1968 mimed him a Distinguished Alumnus. “ I was very grateful to get that aw ard." he said. “ There was not STUDIO IV 472-0436 - 222 EAST 6th OPEN 12 N O O N private adult movie club I IR > T R I X F E A T I H K u r n r a i/ O I I T ” I R U M SA X’ F R A N C IS C O r K E A Ix - U U I Plus 2 Hrs. Color Shorts Programs change each Thursday X X X RATED MOVIES - ESCORTED LADIES FREE Today at m m sm jsa M B y f e A Interstate Theatres rn ST A R T S T O D A Y F R A T I R E S : 1 1 0 3:20 - 5:30 7 : AO - 0:50 FR O M A N ACE OF CONFLICT... A FILM FOR THE AGES! - t h e -kist valley ABC Pictures Corp. presents James Clavel! s "The Last Valley" starring Michael Caine Omar Sharif Florinda Bolkan Nigel Davenport Per Oscarsson co-Starr mg Arthur O'Connell Madeline Hmde Yorgo Voyage Miguel Alejandro Christian Roberts Music by John Barry Executive Producer Martin Baum Written for the Screen, Produced and Directed by James Clavel! A Season Production toaagwsgugfrec.i-v,» in8A.ggjjrgjwBs/Ouni’i.w<*-«flW«niirar3l Sub** Vary Of Th# Artier a. an Color Broadcasting Compar)*** Inc. Ostributed by Cinerama Beleaping Corporator* ~ Famed * 7000 ao —s r s i N S m n [G p p - rg C q FREE PARKING W I LAVACA STV JN T ER S U T E THEATRE HELD OVER STATE NOMINATED BEST ACTRESS - CARRIE SNODGRASS F R A T I R R S ; 12:30 - 2:OO - 4:15 6 :fl.i - 7 :55 - 9 :50 D O W N T O W N T I * CONG RESS - • P w diary of a m mad housewife louse wife a frank perry film [ g A u n iv e r s a l . P ic t u r e • t e c h n ic o v o r * ^ FREE PARKING 7 pkivz-tw TWIST— A »N 0 B O X - O F F I C E O P E N 6:30 — S H O W S T A R T S 7:00 A L L TEEN D ISC O U N T C A R D S H O N O R E D t w i n e n c SO U T H S ID E 7 1 0 I B e n W h i t e 4 4 4 - 1 2 9 6 9 W h a t's N e w 6 30 P.m . 4. 6. 43 F lip W ilso n 41 C adenas de A ug u stias 9 N ew s 6. 7. 12 A llas S m ith and Jo n e s IO F a m ily A ffa ir T p.m. 9 W ashington W e e k in R e v ie w 41 L iic e c ita 5, 7, IO J i m N ahor* 7:30 p m. 4. fl, 42 Iron side 9 D isco ve rin g F ly in g 41 E l U s u re rs 12 B e w itch e d t p.m. 9 The Tum ed-On C r!*!* 12 D an n y Tho m as 5 M o vie — “ P s y c h o ” IO M o v ie 7. W ife , Y o u D on’t” 8 30 p m 4 fl. 42 Adam 12 41 M I A m o r F o r T I 12 D an August “ N o t W ith M y p m 42, 4. 6 D ean M a rtin of W heels A ntiques Is Y’ our L if e ch an nels — N ew s 9 W o rld 9:30 p.m . 9 12 This 10 p.m . A ll 10:30 p.m . 42, 4 12 M o vie 6. 7 M e rv G riffin fl The Tonight Show “ T h a t C e rta in F e e lin g ” KIRlflOHHRnillHfamilRHIIHIIV'i^'IWBHmillHIHmiifnHimillUIBIiPIHNIIIM | M i d d l e Earth Ald for Bad Trips 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. Monday through Friday 9 p.m. - 6 a.m. seven days a week University “Y” No names, no hassle Mobile units available 472-9216 liiiiiiiBiffiiTinwiimifluiit.i.iiiflinramiiraiBiihiiTwnhiiiiiTiiiainrmitiHitiiimt^ a SMUK I «*«*** ANNA CALDER MARSHALL as City TIMOTHY DAITOR as IMcM & ALL NEw V V «*«•*» V V •ll an/J Ii Si '■ -'W The Power, the passion, the terror of Emily Bronte s immortal story of young love. UlutyeriiH) Heights COLOR by MOVIEIAB An American International Picture V I OPEN W EEK DAY S 5:45 p.m. Feature 6 - 8 - IO p.m. w a mm—ms p a n n g c t h e a t r e Fox Theatre (757 AIRPORT BLVD. • 4 5 4 - 2 7 1 1 1 I S I Never Sang for My Father7 ONE OF THE YEAR’S IO BEST! • THREE ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS B E S T A C T O R Melvyn Douglas CCK U M * LA PtCTU R«S p r e * " * M E L V Y N D O U G LA S • G EN T HACKM AN • D O R O T H Y STICKNEY and ESTELLE PARSONS * * "I N E V E R S A N G F O R M Y F AT HER Screenplay by R O B E R T ANDERSON Based on his play • vfc** w ax* ay mcnn •arf At co e co n i • T I* St— in a n e ** ha C e e ** W M m d Baa* Ma— • Produced and (Tweeted by G IL B E R T C A T ES n n T r o ! • B E ST S U P P O R T IN G A C T O R Gene Hackman & • B E ST S C R E E N P L A Y i L G P | — IJ T Interstate’s Va r s i t y 2400 G U A D A L U P E STARTS TOMORROW 'Zorba' to Benefit For Theatre Group Frost's Daughter Many-talented Poetess Enjoys Life By JULIE RYAN “ Culture Is the ability to per­ ceive in the closeness of love, as many aspects of life as possible,” Lesley Frost, daughter of Robert Frost, quoted Ortega y Gasset in a talk Wednesday night at St. Edw ard’s University. As she recited poetry and related personal anecdotes, her love of c u l t u r e as in traditional American and British poetry was evident. represented Miss Frost centered her talk on “ the various kinds of love poetry and us,” teach reminisced on her past life. can “ Memorize poetry,” the erect, white-haired woman urged her audience. “Memorizing poetry got m e Into one of my greatest adventures.” She had stocked a Ford truck with books and gone through New England selling them, at age 28. An old man in i n t e r r u p t e d her spiel a Williamstown, Va., with challenge to recite poetry. Halfway through “ Horatius at the Bridge,” the m an shouted the very person I ’ve “ You’re been looking for! Will you take books around the woild for m e?” Tours He was representative and immediately signed her to a six-month world voyage to supply books for his passengers. a Cooks “I knew I wanted to see as much of the world as possible and learn as many skills as possible,” Miss Frost said. One skill she developed, in addition to newswriting, publishing, and electrical t e a c h i n g mechanics. was “I believe everything in life is a collision between what we want the op­ strongly enough, and portunity it,” Miss Frost for declared. “Arthur Symons once said, “There is not a dream which may not come true if we per­ energy have severance to make it.” and the “ Of said, course, many writers disagree,” she noted. “Salvador can’t we ‘Why Dali systematize confusion so aa to discredit reality?’ I think that writers people give something to hold onto,” she rem arked during the discussion after her talk. should On contemporary poets, she said, “ There may be music in some of their poetry, but when there’s nothing you analyze it, to it.” The Municipal Auditorium box office will be open daily from noon to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and both $8.50 and $5.50 tickets to the Broadway musical “Zorba” will be on sale through curtain time at 8 p.m. Sunday. The New York musical hit is playing Austin as a benefit for the Zachary Scott Theatre Center and is the product of a trio of authors. The men who have collaborated on “Zorba” are Joseph Stein (book), John Kander (music) and Fred Ebb (lyrics). Stein wrote the book for the Tony-Award winning “Fiddler on the Roof”. . .now In Its sixth year on Broadway; and Kander and Ebb wrote the songs for “Cabaret,” other Harold Prince t h a t production which scored a smash in New York. Prince, hit — Texan Staff Photo. 'In Love... Life' Lesley Frost. Student Musicians Give Free Recitals Virtuoso to Sing toward Irl German, a tenor who is working the doctor of musical arts degree, will sing a program of EnglLsh, German, French and Italian songs at 8:15 p.m. Thursday in Music Building Recital Hall. He will be assisted by Dennis (Seventeenth instrument), Moser, Century and Jerry Stephens, piano. theorbo lute-type A baritone until three years ago, German taught privately and in public schools in Wichita, Kan., before resuming his study at the University. He has ap­ peared In community theater and opera as well as in oratorio concerts and recitals. in as Marcello As a baritone he sang such roles “La Boheme,” Figaro In “Barber of Seville,” Silvio In “Pagliaccd” and John Sorel in “The Consul.” Chief among his roles as a tenor was Rinuccio in “Gianni Schic- chi.” Last summer German played a dope addict in the premiere of a new opera, “The Com­ mission” presented by members of University Opera Theater. by Robert Nelson, the German, who holds bachelor’s and m aster’s degrees Wichita State University, studying with Willa Stewart in the Department of Music. from is songs by For Ills recital Thursday, he will perform John D o w I a n d , Franz Schubert, Eduoard Lalo, Henri Duparc, Ottorino Respighi and Ralph Vaughan-Williams. The recital is presented as part of degree requirements, and admission is free. Works Well-Received By GARY KENDALL The current Composite Concert Series continued Wednesday night with a program concentration on chamber music. A American special feature of this concert was that Ross Lee Finney, a visiting composer from Michigan, was present to hear one of his latest works performed. The most outstanding per­ formance of the evening was the of Emily T w e l v e Poems Dickinson by Aaron Copland with Martha Deatherage, soprano, and William Doppmann, piano. Miss Deatherage’s powerful voice and great versatility led her through these delicate and moving songs of Copland. At times the strength of her voice tended to overpower the sensitive music, as perhaps in “Heart, we will forget him.” But on the whole her control and her diverse expressive ability made the performance one of many excellent moments, such as in “Dear March, come in.” Special credit should be given to Doppmann, who performed on nearly the every piece program. He opened the concert with Four Excursions, Op. 20 (1945) by Samuel Barber. on Doppmann did the best possible job with these pieces even though one wonders whether the music deserved all this attention. In the third piece there were some extreme rhythmic complications that were very well performed, but this composition to tends simple-minded suffer interest in employing American idioms. from a Also included on A e program was a piece by University faculty composer Dick Goodwin. His Concerns (1966) for five wind Instruments featured G. B. Lane on trombone. The Finney Two Acts for Three Players (1970) provided some real excitement for the audience. It featured Leland Munger on clarinet, Doppmann on piano, and George Frock on percussion. Finney, who had studied in his student years with the famous early Twentieth Century com­ poser Alban Berg, used 12-tone serialism connection with notation that ranged from loose to deterministic. The audience enthusiastically brought Finney up to the stage to take bows with the performers. in Daily Horoscope A rtelt Financial w orrlei m ay crop up. but don't worry about them. All will KO well. T aunts: If doubtful situation* a x ils, avoid taking a risk. Sidestep em o­ tional conflicts. G em ini: Corruption and ugliness today. D o n 't participate or abound you wUl be defeated. Cancer: A smooth talker win try sw ay you. Take care of your to money and protect your im age. Leo: Do not reach beyond your capablllUes. Walt with patience. Virgo: Today Is guided with great subtlety. Moods and m em ory rule. Think and plan. Libra: M oney m atters m ay cause anxiety for you and your fam ily. It will p ass over soon. ^ meet your friends...4^ Scorpio: Be careful In w hat you sa y an d do. O th ers m a y tak e ev ery ­ thing w rong. Sagittarius: This Is a good day for m oving ahead, so p u t optim ism and e n th u sia sm behind you. for som ething exciting Capricorn: You a r e getting bored w aitin g to h ap p en . W aite up an d s ta r t som ething. In long Aquarius: Inclu d e an a c tiv ity th a t w ill c re a te y our schedule te rm benefits. Avoid argum ents. P isc e s: P lan how to do y o u r chores In a sh o rt length of tim e. P ut action behind y o u r am bitions. — Nick Lawrence Composers Featured Original compositions by eight music students will be performed et 8:15 p.m. Friday In Music Building Recital Hall. The student composers are Bruce Faulconer, Noel Alford, Eddie Fargason, Sandra Miller, Gary Kendall, Ken Whiteside and Peter J o h n s t o n — a l l un­ dergraduates—and Yvar-Emilian Mikhashoff, a doctoral student. On three the program are works for solo piano: Fargason’s Prelude, Dirge and Scherzo, Miss Miller’s “Stress from Nine to Five” and Kendall’s Piano Piece, 1970. Songs include Alford’s “Richly Realmed” on a text by Dennis Paddle, Mikhashoff’s “The Rain Flute: Eight Haikai” on a text by and Stanley Hartmann, Johnston’s “Ode to an Artificial Rose” on a text by e.e. cum- mings. have Faulconer will two compositions performed: Sonata for Trumpet and Piano as well for Woodwind Trio. as Suite Other ensemble works include Alford’s Andante for String Trio and Whiteside’s “Trio on a Row of Webern.” The composers are studying with Hunter Johnson, Dr. Gordon Goodwin and Dr. Thomas Wells in the Department of Music. The recital is free and open to the public. If Yon Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-707S At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service CRACKERJACK COVER CHG. ONLY 1.00 Ti PITCHERS OF BEER 1.25 The best of Johnny W inters & the M ystics mi camus O p e n 8:30 p.m. 12th & Red River 478-0292 museum of light FEAT U RES Bergman’s DEVIL’S EYE Friday 7:30, 9:30 A ca d e m ic Center Aud. Truffaut’s 400 BLOWS Saturday 7:30, 9:30 A ca d e m ic Center Aud. Each film 75c DEPARTM ENT OF DRAM A PRESENTS the rock musical THE EARL of R U S T O N Here's your chance to explore the full spectrum of pizza tastes. You'll find the favorite combination that's your taste among the tempting variety at the Pizza Buffet A complete selection of piping hot pizzas, plus fresh garden salad with our special Pizza Inn dressing. A L L Y O U C A N E A T $1.29 Monday thru Friday 11:00 A .M . to 2:00 P.M. 3000 Duval 477-6751 your fun. DRIVE A LITTLE — SAVE A LOT I 4 e t 1/3 et 1/2 ct 3/4 ct I c t ' #. # rn rn M 31,50 41.00 125.00 225.00 275.00 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP 603 Commodore Perry Hotel , . AUSTIN 476-0178 WATER BEDS] PLEXIGLAS ACCESSORIES CUSTOM PLASTICS 5124 sensation in sleep Burnet Rd. 454-9305 YOGA Begins March 1, 1971 15 Different Classes Beginners, Inter., and Advanced 1150 for six weeks 15.00 for twice weekly Com e by th* " Y " to sign up 2330 G uadalupe above Sommers — on the drag. ■ charcoal! HAMBURGERS m w . n i t 1 7 2 -W 2 This W eek . . . FREE NEW ORLEANS STYLE DOUGHNUT with purchase o f cup of coffee Deep fried doughnut squares with powdered sugar or cinammon sugar. n o w o p e n 7:30 A.M. Roberts Hall Council presents O N THE WATERFRONT REBEL WITHOUT A C A U SE Jester Center Auditorium ADM. 60c 7:00 P.M. TONIGHT C e leb ra te the Inten tion o f the H om e-D isposal U n it a i C in em a te x u s S sis p r i n g 1971 p reterits R D W I N N I N G COMMERCIALS FOR 1964 A N D 1965 “Commercials are the residue of an Industrialized civilization.” —Albert Schweitzer JESTER CENTER AUDITORIUM A D M . 75c 6:30 & 9:00 P.M. Here again! "CARRY IT ON Joan Baez and David Harris i i Documentary on Revolutionary Nonviolent Soldiers In America Friday, Feb. 26th Burdine Aud. Saturday, Feb. 27th Jester Aud. DIRECT ACTION 7:30 & 9:00 P.M. 75* Admission producer of the new Broadway hit “Company,” first produced “Zorba” in the 1968-69 season. “Zorba” is an adaptation of the the best-selling novel “Zorba Greek,” and is filled with it floods of Greek bouzouki music and Greek dances. The pace and color of the musical patterns create excitement throughout the production of “Zorba.” The cast of dancers and singers Is headed by co-stars Vivian Blaine and Michael Kermoyan. Miss Blaine is portraying the Frenchwoman of the tale, with her banners still flying after many a memorable encounter, and Kermoyan is taking the part of the vigorous vagabond Zorba with his all-conquering philosophy of easily taking everything as it comes — life, women, joy and sorrow. M i s s introduced Blaine “Adelaide’s Lament” and “Take Back Your Mink” songs in both the Broadway and movie versions of “Guys and Dolls,” and Ker­ moyan, who portrayed the Arab Auda in the movie “Lawrence of Arabia,” was recently seen on national television with Tammy G r i m e s and Mehitabel.” “Archy in Also in the cast of “Zorba” is Thom Koutzoukos in the role of the young teacher who learns so much rough-hewn, from uneducated Zorba. Koutzoukos has sung in a number of operas, appeared in numerous telecasts, in the and on Broadway was original cast of “Fiddler on the Roof.” In addition to the box office location, advance sales tickets are available at Scarbrough’s, Dillard’s, Hemphill’s, University State Bank and Gibson’s Ben White Boulevard store. VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Students Sunday Night Special Complete Dinner for $3.25 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak Just present your blanket tax or Auditor's receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional O NLY 2 BLOCKS FROM M EM O RIAL STADIUM Faze Productions Presents TONIGHT THE GUESS WHO WISHBONE ASH PLUS FROM ENGLAND 8:00 P.M. REMAINING TICKETS ON SALE AT BOX OFFICE MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM MARYLAND FRIED CHICKEN N O BRAG JUST FACT THIS IS THE BEST FOOD BUY IN TOW N FAMILY FEAST 2.79 FEED 5 6 Pc. C H IC K E N 4 Pc. OF FISH, 4 oz. EA C H I PT. CO LE SL A W $1.00 BOX FRENCH FRIES 5 ROLLS Admission $3.00 Drama Season Ticket Holder $1.50 O FFER EXPIR ES MARCH % WI 1422 TOWN CREEK DR. (Town Lake) 444-9224 1009 BEINLI 454-5469 (Capital Plata) 1810 W. BEN WHITE BLVD. 444-8254 (South) Thursdayt February 25* 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page l l Panel Studies Rights Effort WfBIWIBWIIIIfflllWUIIIIIWIffH l l WmiHIW ir)Wff!mtWWn^limi>)IIIWIWHWIl|fW)||ii||)|fUi,i!iiBHi||iJU|])H[|i|iaj|U)|H|fif!Bj|||BBWBHIWTOI»IIHHilim]ljl!)!ll!ni^ Soap Box What is yonr reaction to the appointment as University of Dr. Stephen Spurr president? Our Specials for this THURSDAY NIGHT (5:30 to 8 p.m.) $ 3 * 7 Sandy Woodward, Junior, English: think w e’ll have to w ait and see. He sounds like h e’s good. Reading about his interest In ecology m akes you wish he would have been here when the trees w ere getting cut down along the creek .” Richard Williamson, sophomore, Jour­ nalism: "H e seem s like he is a good guy. B ut the way his appointm ent was handled w as sort of secret. They ju st sprung it on us— ‘h ere’s your new president.’ I think he is qualified for the office.” Marian Pedersen, senior, English and speech: " I will have to w ait for him to act and then find out w hat he’s like. Kind of like F ran k E rw in—'w ait until he m akes a m istake and then com m ent.” Tom Paine, senior, government: " I t ’s new s to m e th a t they appointed him. But anything they do, I disagree w ith.” Steve Pouns, junior, finance: " I prefer D ean Keeton, but I ’ll be willing to w ait and see w hat he does before m aking a judgm ent.” S porty K n i t TOPS N y l o n 'Bikini PANTIES " W e try harder at P o u n s 2322 G u ad alu p e Cox W illia m so n Hon Cox, sophomore, accounting: " I think h e ’s a good choice by the com m ittee th at chose him . I preferred P ag e Keeton, but from what I'v e h eard about Spurr, I think h e’ll be good.” senior, Dennis Gottsehalk, business transportation: " H e il do the job just like anyone else. Most politicians a re about the sam e. They m ight have good ideas when they get in, but people around them per­ suade them so they m ight not do wiiat they started out to do.” sophomore, Marty Torres, Spanish- French: " I really w anted Keeton to get it. H e's at the U niversity and knows w hat’s going on. But S p u rr is too far away to know w hat is happening here. I thought they chose b adly.” a Chris Lin, Junior, math: " H e il be ex­ cellent. H e's adm inistrator. proven Everyone in the present adm inistration is very favorable to him. F rom his recom ­ m endations, I think h e il be good. Michigan has the best g rad u ate school in the nation.” of Business H e r m i n e T o b o l o w s k y , legislative ch airm an of the T exas Federation and Professional W om en’s Clubs, said of the m easu re, " I think T exas should establish itself as a sta te th a t believes in equal rig h ts.” She said th a t women have been left out of m any of th e laws of th e state, the Texas including Civil R ights Act. Another resolution sponsored by Rep. Bill Sw'anson of Houston, calling to certain persons accused of felony, w as discussed a t the hearing. for denial of bail th a t a person It proposes arrested and charged with a crim e, released on bail and then la te r arrested and charged with a felony offense, should be denied bail. It also w as to com m ittee for consider.it ion. sent sub­ S A F E W A Y ) S a f e w a y - 3 - L b . Con Kraft Dinner M acaroni & Cheese. SpecialI — 7 Va-ox. Box Tomato Soup Town Hoase. Rich Flavor! Big B u y ! — IO*4-ox. Can Canned Pop Snowy Peak. Assorted Flavors. Big B u y I —-12-oz. Can Tomato Catsup Highway. Adds Flavor! B ig B u y J -14-ex. Bottle optim istic'’ State Rep. Rex Rrnun of Houston said W ednesday he w as "cautiously about House approval of a proposed Women’s am endm ent which m et w ith no opposition Tuesday night a t a House Con­ stitutional A m endm ents Com­ m ittee hearing. Rights The m easure w as referred to a three-m em ber subcom m ittee by Com m ittee A m e n d m e n t s of C hairm an T raeg er Sequin. Two m em b ers of th a t subcom m ittee a re co-sponsors of the bill. John the Braun called resolution's approval "long p ast d u e.” "T his bill has been for 13 y ea rs.” he said. The m easu re has been introduced in o th er sessions only the sub­ com m ittee. to never around leave "We cannot call ourselves a 20th Century L eg islatu re if this bill isn’t approved—it should have 1 been passed 71 y ea rs ago,” B raun 1 said. it Proponents of the is designed legislation insure to ■ay equality of both men and women under the law. Convention Talks Set for Officials Four of Texas* top officials will ad d ress t h e twenty-seventh a n ­ nual Texas W ater Conservation Convention in Austin W ednesday through Friday. Gov. Preston Smith will speak ' the convention luncheon a t to noon F rid ay preceded by ad­ d resses from L t Gov. Ben B arnes, Land Com missioner Bob A rm strong, House Speaker Gus M u n ch er and Brig. Gen. Harold R . P a rfltt of the Corps of E n g in eers’ Southwest Division. J o s i a h W heat, association C dent, will present a plaque in g the outstanding leader In the field of w ater development and c o n s e r v a t i o n F rid ay preceding Sm ith’s address. Convention activities will begin the a t 8:30 a.m . T hursday a t S h e r a t o n C rest Inn. The resolutions com m ittee will m eet a t 9 a.m ., and se p arate caucuses of the a s s o c i a t i o n a r e scheduled throughout th e day. seven panels of the A luncheon for T exas m em bers cf hie N ational W ater Resources Association is scheduled a t noon T hursday. A hospitality hour and banquet will the d ay ’s events. T h e convention’s general m eeting will begin a t 9 a.m . F rid ay . close T h e W ater Conservation A ssociation’s Board of D irectors will hold its annual m eeting upon adjournm ent of the convention. Fair Housing I Commission Students with problems con­ housing—contracts, cerning deposits, repairs, eviction, etc.—should call the Students’ Association F a i r Housing Commission Office: Union to 5 p.m. Building 311 Monday F riday). through Telephone 471-7796 (8 a.m . to , 5 p.m . Monday through F ri- f day). (I D W N K Q I^ fI GULP SIPS WI GUZZLE,YOS! o f f , sw iz z l e . SLURP, P A R T A K E MSM A WINERY Detergent Parade. Family Wash! Big B u y I — 49-oz. Box Stokely Com Cream Style Golden. Big B u y I — 17-ox. Can Liquid Bleach-—Gallon Plastic White Magic. Big B u y I Enriched Hour 3 9 * Harvest Blossom. Big B u y I - 5 - L b . Bag w i J Fish Sticks ■own 3 9 * Cooked Shrimp Q ty Ca p ta in ’s Choice. H eat and Serve! S a f e w a y Special! — 8 - O X . Pkg. P e e l e d & D e v e i n e d . B r i l l i a n t — t O - o z . P k g . Oceon Perch. Captain's Choice R ed S n ap p er. Im press Perch Fillets Snapper Fillets Breaded Oysters Fish & Chips C a p t a in 's C h o ic e S a a Fab . 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C u t From ufDA Grade A Fryers -Lh. 344 —Lb. 6 5 4 flllll Banquet Dinners Q ty A s s o r t e d . E a s y t o P r e p a r e ! — R e g . P k g . w w o r ^ P um p kin. Bel-atr W h ip p e d T ap p ing . Birds Eye Mince Pie 3 js;u$1 Cool Whip Brussels Sprouts Cauliflower Vegetables Leaf Spinach Ja p an ese S tyle. Birds Eye 4 V i *01. C t n . K T 1 10-ox. Pkg. 10-ox. Pkg. B o x . Pkg. Bel-atr < m2 I I BB B nf I mm AfiiifOk** .(£p4ZsV - A y \ I ■ i W r Waffles H I O * > Bel-air. I B reakfast 5-ez. T re a t! Pkg. Lysol Spray 7Q. D i s i n f e c t a n t . K i l l s G e r m s ! ( 9 1 . 0 9 V a l u e ) ( $ 1 . 0 9 V a l u e ) — 7 - o z . A e r o s o l ■ w I m M * Vaseline Lotion Edge Shave Gel Crest Toothpaste Alka-Seltzer Bayer Aspirin Vicks Vaporub Intensive C o r e , (7* O f t L a b a l) ( 79# I'alu,) 4-ex. P lastic 57* Protective Shave A'/,-ox. Q Q & C w T ( 91.19 l a i n ) Can ★ Reg. a r A M in t 4 Va-ox. 7 Q i I H T ( 9 1 o s I a l l . , ) Tuba Past R a lle fl ( 69# I a l a , ) T a b le t s ( 4 S t I a l u , ) D e co n g e sta n t O in tm e n t ( 9 1 . 1 9 I a l a , ) 2 5 -C t. B attle 2 4 -C t. B o ttle 3Vi-e*. Ja r 53* 39* 99* L e t t u c e Large Crisp Heads! Favorite For Salads—Each Low In Calorics! — Each Texas. Larga Stalks. Top Q uality! Golden Ripe! S a few a y Special! 1 9 * 19* IO* Navel Oranges Saaklsf. La rg a — Lb. 23* Murcott Oranges N ew C r o p — Lb. 23* Delicious Applesl 59* Fuerte Avocados V ariety and Quality C a lifo r n ia — Each f c j Kztra Fancy! Bag — Lh. L a rg a . O C * 3-Lb. Rad Crisp Celery Bananas^ — S t Off S ale.'------ Dried Fruit 5* O ff Any Regular Package of Dried Fruit of Your Choice Prices Effective Thurs, Fri., Sat. and Sun., Feb. 25, 26, 27 & 28, in Austin, Texas W e Reserve the Rl^ht to Limit Quantities. No Sales to Dealer*. © C op yrig ht I960, Safeway Store*, Incorporated. Russet Potatoes " n r 20&99* Texas' Flnastl —Lb. 19* Texas Yams _Lb. 9f Green Cabbage t..0, t,, Golden Carrots a's 33* Zucchini Squash Texas G ro w n — Lb. 29* Orange Juice Vertagreen Fe rtilis er (2 Bags SS.40) B ag S afe w a y. P a r t From F lo rid a Q u a r t D e ca n . w t i T $ 2 ? 9 dhoti t‘ al Tivo Distinctive l\ii(orns S T A IN L E S S F L A T W A R E v a DINNER “• r • I FORKS E V E R Y IS P U R C H A S E EACH WITH29' *395 DISH no purchase r e f i r e d COVERED BUTTER ifig e i 2 T hursday* F e b ru a ry 2 5 ft J 9 7 1 I H E D A ILY TEX A N