T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The University of Texas af Austin Vol. 69, No. 157 Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1970 Sixteen Pages 471-5244 Nixon tv Of Student ^ for Abolishment jft Deferments WASHINGTON (AP) - President Rich­ ard M. Nixon abolished future occupational and fatherhood deferments from the draft starting Thursday; asked Congress for au­ thority to abolish future student deferments and urged an eventual end to the draft it­ self. Nixon issued an executive order permit­ ting men who now hold or have applied for occupational, agricultural or fatherhood deferments to keep or obtain them. But the order bars the granting of such defer­ ments in the future to men who were not qualified for them before Thursday. THE PRESIDENT AKSO sent a message to Congress, seeking authority to impose a similar ban, under similar conditions, on deferments for students above the high school level. Tile message strongly endorsed the un­ animous conclusion of a commission head­ ed by former Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates favoring a transition to an all­ volunteer army. two years of service, to take effect next Jan. I. His fiscal 1972 budget, he added, will contain a $2 billion request for added pay and other benefits for the military. NIXON DIRE! TED THE secretary of de­ fense to step up enlistment and re-enlist­ ment programs and to see that the armed forces pay more attention to the “indivi­ dual needs, aspirations and capabilities” of their personnel. Spokesmen at a White House briefing de­ clined to estimate when an all-volunteer army could be achieved or how big would be. it But Nixon’s message said that the draft “cannot be ended all at once” and that it would probably be necessary for Congress to extend authority for the draft beyond the present expiration date of July I, 1971. A spokesman said an extension of at least tw'o years would be needed. Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., said he does not plan to have his House Armed Services Committee consider any draft leg­ islation this year. At present, 1.8 million men hold student deferments and 431,000 hold occupational deferments. in MORE THAN FOUR MILLION men are category 3A because of deferred dependents, but there was no immediate indication how many of these are deferred for fatherhood. Nixon said the first step toward an all­ volunteer Army was taken this month when military pay was increased by $1.2 billion a year along with a 6 percent pay raise for civilian government workers. High Numbers May Avoid More 1As. Faster Quotas By GLENDA OWEN and GARY BOWERS Nixon said that in addition to the 6 per­ cent pay raise recently voted by Congress, he will propose another 20 percent pay in­ less than crease for enlisted men with President Richard M. Nixon’s removal of occupational, agricultural and paternal draft deferments may squelch the hopes of majiy graduating males. If Congress gives him the go-ahead to end student deferments, many other young men un­ doubtedly will join the ranks of unhappy draft eligibles. , But if a potential draftee’s number is high on the lottery list, he still may stand a chance of avoiding the draft, Maj. Joe City Approves Ordinance Council Tightens Parade Permit Restrictions R a d i c a l ’Fun1 —Photo by Johnny VV. Jenkin s. Self designated d rill sergeant Peter Van Bavel examines his charges who were part of the "conspiracy" protesting the war at R O T O troop inspections Thurs­ day. Antiwar Protesters Mock ROTC Drill By SYLVAN RODRIGUEZ News Assistant Marching to a 1-2-3-4 cadence and raised clenched fists, 50 war protesters made their w ay from the West Mall to the football practice field to protect the University's inspection Army ROTC annual Thursday. federal Armed to the man with w ater guns, the group a t first tried to assemble in formation on the padded AstroTurf field alongside the even rows of ROTC troops and Cor­ del tes already (Mi tho field. However, their field manuevers were cut short when Edwin Price, assistant dean of students, and of Lawrence Franks, students, asked the protesters to stay off the drill field. associate dean The group complied but pestered troops with squirts of w»ater from weapons for 45 minutes. the their “I MERELY told them that the field was reserved for ROTC classroom functions and w’ould you please keep off the g rass,” P rice said. The protesters, described by one of their members as an anarchist, terrorist and Yippie conspiracy, then took up the chant “ war, w ar, blood and gore” and headed to the other side of the field's edge where the cadets were facing. Carrying a red and black flag, non­ student and free evangelist, Charles Ganiy, in antiw ar chants the conspirators led finishing with “ War is hell." THE PROTESTERS, under the watchful eye of campus security officers, then held a mock family killing. A volunteer couple the artificial with a small child set on grass and sacrificed themselves to the rain of shots from their comrades. the w ater guns of As tile ROTC ranks were being inspected, the group posed for pictures taken by a campus security officer. They then ran around the field shouting Indian war cries. John Lane, Yippie leader, took advantage of the disturbances to steal a kiss from one of the shocked Cordettes who was still standing in formation. After the tap on the cheek, Lane hurried off the field leaving the woman visibly shaken. ATTER THE 45-minute inspection was troops disassembled and no the over, disturbances occurred. A cadet lieutenant, who along with many others, was squirted in the neck, ears and eyes, said he did feel bitter about being a target. “But what can you do?” he said. Last year, a similar group sat around the sidelines and created a small distur­ bance but, then as Thursday, no major confrontations occurred. When asked about the objectives of the protest, Lane said, ‘‘The first thing was to have fun but as long as ROTC is around tool to kill people, there will be as a protests. "Squirt guns were used to show them w e're playing around right now." Cambodia Given Arms has WASHINGTON (AP) — With full U. S. support. South Vietnam secretly delivered about 1,500 automatic rifles to Cambodia in an apparent move to buy time for President Richard M. Nixon’s delayed decision on Cambodia’s request for U. S. m ilitary assistance. The action was announced by the White House and State D epartment Thursday only after a report published by The New York Times disclosed an assurance had been given to tile government of Cambodia last Friday that it would receive a supply of captured Soviet-designed AK47 rifles. that INDICATIONS were instigated the United the South Vietnamese States delivery of the weapons to avoid taking direct action itself awaiting determination by Nixon of how' to deal with the dilemma in which Cambodia’s appeal for help placed him. the army, He is under pressure from the military, notably to provide urgently substantial assistance to tile regime of Premier Loa Nob He is under pressure from some congressional leaders not to become more deeply involved in Southeast Asia at a time when he is withdrawing troops from Vietnam. White House press secretary' Ronald L. Ziegler made the first official disclosure of the secret weapons arrangement among the United States} South Vietnam and Cambodia. HE SAID several thousand AK47s were involved and that deliveries had been made by South Vietnam “with our knowledge and approval.” He brushed aside a question whether the deliveries w'ere made by U. S. planes. At the State Department, press officer Robert J. MoCloskey later said the weapons were flown into Cambodia by South Viet­ namese planes. Some officials privately indicated that a declaration of U. S. “knowledge and ap­ proval” w'as a considerable understatement. There that Washington initiated the transfer. impression general is a DIPLOMATIC SOURCES say the number of rifles delivered within the last day or so totaled around 1,500 with 3,000 or 4,000 more to go. MeCloskey said ammunition for those captured weapons is being sup­ plied. Nixon met Wednesday with the National Security Council, his top foreign policy aides. Another council meeting originally set for Thursday morning was rescheduled for Friday afternoon without explanation. There has been no official word on the subject of the council’s sessions. By BRUCE BEAL Staff Writer A new Austin parade ordinance was passed on a first reading by the City Council in a five-to-two vote Thursday. The proposed greater restrictions on ,p.u .de application require­ ments and times. ordinance contains Despite passage, several of the council­ men voting for the ordinance said they had objections to it and that it could be amended before the final reading. CITY MANAGER LYNN ANDREWS said the next reading of tile ordinance will be April 30 unless the council issues special instructions. At that time, three proposed bus or­ dinances w’hich would require City fran­ chises for all buses operating in tile city are scheduled for a second reading. In other action the council postponed until F riday action on an application for a $3.5 million Model Cities P rogram made by the Model Cities Commission Wednesday. Councilmen Los Gage and Ralph Janes voted against the parade ordinance, saying it contains provisions which give the City too much discriminatory power. The new restrictions include: • Applicants must be Austin residents. • Filing must be between 20 to 60 days before the parade. parade • A $25 application fee required. • Conduct of not the reasonably likely to cause injury to person or property', to provoke disorderly conduct or create a disturbance . . . not provoke disruptive reactions by persons observing a national or State holiday. is • P arades prohibited between 7 a.m. to 9 a.m.; l l a.m. to I p.m.; 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. except Sunday. to the City against liability as result of parade ac­ tivities. • Agreement indemnify • A deposit to defray expected overtime expenses for police. Gage said the section which prohibits parades on days considered inappropriate was too broad. He also said the deposit required to pay the cost of police super­ vision gave too much leeway to the chief of police. Janes said “I think the $25 application fee is too high and should be lowered to about $10 or $15.” HE AISO FOUND FAULT with the in­ demnity agreement. “It’s meaningless and it concerns unenforceable, especially groups unable to pay.” if Janes favored extending the dates for application from 60 days before the parade to 120 days. Dr. Charles Cairns, an assistant professor of linguistics and speech at the University, speaking for the Austin Parade Committee, said the parade ordinance was unconstitu­ tional. “Persons should not have to pay to exercise their constitutional rights,” he said, referring to the proposed $25 ap­ plication fee. the The application fee also was attacked by Cameron Cunningham, a lawyer who Student Mobilization represented Committee in a suit against the City dealing with a parade permit. He said the $25 application fee even though small like the $1.25 poll tax “interferes with a person’s constitutional rights. REPRESENTATIVES OF THE American the Socialist Civil Liberties Union and Workers Party along with several private citizens called the ordinance “ unconstitu­ tional.” In their afternoon session, the council heard discussion on the model cities ap­ plication. They decided to study the ap­ plication overnight, and to take action at a 2 p.m. Friday meeting. The council heard Don Dillard with the Waco Model Cities Program explain some of the problems which Austin could expect to face with its own program. The council learned that it will take from two to six months for the Housing and Urban Development Agency to process the application. Hub Bechtol, an Austin realtor, said a program w'hich will encompass 2,800 acres should not be undertaken. “I AM NOT AGAINST model cities but I am against a program of this scope at this time,” he said. Bechtol said building permits would not be available for land in- the model cities area. However, Andrew's said this w'ould not be true. The model cities area extends from Montopolis to the University area. Dr. J. J. Seabrook, a member of the Model Cities Commission, offered a plea for the model cities program to the council. “We need to help the people in that area that should have a better life. We need to look ahead and prepare for the genera­ tions to come,” he said. “Model cities can help us do this.” Daylight Saving Causes Nation-Wide Problems By The Associated Press Most of the nation switches to Daylight Saving Time Sunday, but the annual change continues to bring confusion and problems in several areas. Clocks will be set ahead one hour at in 47 states. They will 2 a.m. Sunday remain on Daylight Saving Time until Oct. 25. Michigan, Arizona and Hawaii are ex­ ceptions — they decided to exempt them­ selves from die federal Uniform Time Act and remain on Standard Time. Yale Faculty Suspends Classes for Teach-Ins NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — The fac­ ulty' at Yale College voted Thursday to suspend academic instruction in favor of teach-ins in hopes of avoiding violence next week during a May Day demonstration in support of eight Black Panthers charged in connection with the death of a New York City Panther. Organizers of the May I demonstration have predicted up to 50,000 persons w’ill come to New' Haven. Many faculty mem­ bers and student leaders have expressed concern the observance could become vio­ lent. The college administration did not en­ dorse the faculty action by formally sus­ pending classes, but university president Kingman Brewster Jr. said he would have no objection to a week long moratorium on regular academic work. Black Psychologist Kenneth I. Mills said he hoped the teach-in period W'ould head off serious violence. “We just might bring it off,” he said. Approximately 1,000 of Yale’s 8,700 stu­ dents participated in a rally Thursday af­ ternoon, during the second day of a class boycott the administration said was 50-to- 75 percent effective. John Turner, a Panther seeking Yale help for the eight jailed Panthers and New Haven’s black community, told the dem­ onstrators to avoid violence, swear off drugs and to “get politic a1” Complications and controversy are in­ volved in the change in Arizona and In­ diana. The Navajo Indian Reservation, which stretches across northern Arizona and just into the Daylight Saving Time states of Utah and New Mexico, has decided to set its clocks ahead tor administrative con­ venience. But right in the middle of the Navajo domain is the separate 55-by-65-mile Hopi Indian Reservation which will stay with Standard Time. THIS MEANS A PERSON making a 250- mile drive from Gallup N. M., to Grand Canyon across the two reservations wall need to reset his W'atch three times for tile correct time of day. In Indiana, Hie issue of time led to a lawsuit by Allied Theater Owners of In­ diana. The state once was split down the middle by the eastern-central time zone boundary, but the U. S. Department of Transportation has shifted most of Indiana into the eastern zone. Two pockets of six counties each, in the northwest adjacent to Chicago and in the southwest abutting central time areas of Illinois and W'estem Kentucky, are in the central time zone. The theater owners are awaiting a decision by the U. S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago on their contention all of Indiana should be in the central zone. IN MICHIGAN, Sunday’s time change will bring the city of Menominee in tune with the rest of the state. Because of their isolation from the rest of Upper Peninsula Michigan and their proximity to Wisconsin, Menominee residents use Central Standard Time in the cold months and Central Daylight Saving Time in the summer — although the county courthouse clock alw'ays shows the legally- recognized Eastern Standard Time. When Menominee residents make their switch to Daylight Saving Time on Sunday, they will be setting their clocks on the same hour as the rest of Michigan where the time change is being ignored. Ponce; manpower State headquarters for the Texas Selective Ser­ vice Board said Thursday. officer at “Tile more people wiio are classified 1A and are put into the lottery pool,” said Ponce, “ the more likely are the chances for local boards filling their quotas Lister.” Ponce did not predict any point on the lottery list at which chances for being drafted would decrease when present oc­ cupational, paternal deferments run ou t agricultural and “Through the month of May we are allowed to go through No. 145 and we are calling people for physicals through No. 215,” he said. The elimination of the occupational deferment will include every type of job, including engineers working for defense plants. Ponce was unsure of the chances for a successful volunteer army as proposed by Nixon, citing the failure of such a U. S. army in 1948 during peacetime and other failures in Australia and England. “However, men would be going in at a higher base pay and would have more fringe benefits while serving than they would have been offered in 1948,” he said. Lance Wittlif, cadet information officer of the Army Brigade, said the proposal should increase the enrollment in ROTO programs which allow students in ROTC to complete their study programs before going on active duty. “Logically, this will cause more students, graduate and undergraduate, to join the ROTC,” Wittlif said. Nixon’s proposal would allow' college students to finish their current semester when drafted. “ROTC enrollment has been increasing because of Vietnam,” said Arthur Her­ nandez, lieutenant colonel of the AROTC Brigade. “The lottery had little effect since those joining and quitting offset each other.” The added enrollment also has increased the number of men with antiVietnam feeling, Hernandez said. “ If Nixon is em­ powered to effect his proposal on student deferments, then this feeling will probably rise with enrollment,” he said. mmm M Today NEWS: The W a t e r Quality Control Board tells the City of Austin to stop polluting Waller Creek. Frenchy Golding reports. Page 3. EDITORIAL: A Cherokee In­ dian examines what the white man has done to the land in America. Page 4. AMUSEMENTS: M i k e Fluitt reviews Three-Dog Night after their two-and-one-half hour per­ formance in G r e g o r y Gym Thursday. Page 14. SPORTS: The Longhorns trav­ el to Fort Worth to meet trouble­ some TCU in a three-game ser­ ies vital to their chances for the Southwest Conference baseball crown. Steve Dial previews the series. Page 6. W E A T H E R : Considerable cloudiness except for partial af­ ternoon clearing through Satur­ day. Slight chance of morning drizzle and afternoon thunder­ showers Friday. High Friday near 86; low, upper 60’s. * News Capsules I ^ mand's Weeklv RePort Enemy Downs 12 U S. Planes T A K IS SAIGON (A P ) — Enemy gun­ ners shot 12 American aircraft out of the skies over Lacs and South Vietnam in a two-day pe­ riod this week, the U.S. Com­ mand said Thursday. Seven of the aircraft were hit on missions over South Vietnam and five were shot down on flights over Laos. Two Americans were killed, IO were wounded and one is missing. The losses over Laos Tuesday and Wednesday were the heaviest since President Richard M. Nixon lifted some of the secrecy from the U. 3. air campaign in that country six weeks ago. The two-day toll indicated that U. S. air raids have not let up in Laos despite a in the fighting recently. lull As for South Vietnam, this was the third time this month that Insurgents Seize Control O f Trinidad's Headquarters seven American aircraft have been lost to hostile fire in two successive days. Since 1961, a total of 6,%9 American aircraft have been re­ ported lost to all cause*; in North and South Vietnam and Laos. The U* S. Command said IOT Americans were killed in action last week, 40 fewer than the we He before, and 698 were wounded. This brought American casualties in the war to 41,516 killed and 273.436 wounded. South Vietnamese headquarters said 740 government troops were killed in action, a 35 percent increase over the previous week, and 1.750 wounded. This raised South Vietnamese totals to 104,543 killed and 215,175 wounded. Both commands said 2,962 en­ emy troops were killed last week, a decline of more than 500 from the vveeK before. This was be­ in the cause of a slackening enemy offensive launched April I. This raised enemy deaths in the war to 624,573 by allied count. his group held some army of­ ficers hostage. He declined to say how many mutineers were holed up in the base, six miles from Port of Spain, or how many hostages they held. Six U. S. warships, dispatched from Puerto Rico and other Caribbean points when the trou­ ble erupted Tuesday, lay just out­ side t erritorial waters of Trinidad and - aba go, prepared to evacu­ ate American residents a n d tourists if necessary. Two British frigates also lay off this former crown colony ready to evacuate British nationals. But the government appeared to have gained the upper hand in the crisis touched off by the arrest of about a score of leaders of the nation’s Black Power movement. Originally 200 to 300 members of the army were reported to have mutinied, but the number dwindled to about 50. The present strength of the insurgent move­ ment is not certain. Seizure of army headquarters was apparently intended as a In the rebel bargaining lever. telephone interview, the insurgent leader said the government of Prim e Minister E rie Williams had made contact with his group. He declined to go into details. saving: “ We don’t want to do a n y t h i n g compromise to negotiations.” I arest has been mounting in Trinidad and Tobago over the demand of militants that the black government put an end to domination of the economy by the white minority. contessa girls have time for convictions. . . • Chauffeur Driven Limousine • Swimming Pool and S unde ck • W alk to Campus in 5 minutes TRANSCENDENTAL M EDITATION AS TAUGHT BY M A H A RISH I M A H ESH YO G I TRANSCENDENTAL m editation is a NATURAL s p o n t a n e o u s TECHNIQUE WHICH ALLOWS EACH INDIVIDUAL TO EXPAND HIS CONSCIOUS MIND AND IMPROVE ALL ASPECTS OF LIFE. INTRODUCTORY LECTURE M R. BOB BRANDT FRIDAY, APRIL 24,1970 8:00 P.M. GABB,,Si!„V;L AlD- ST I D EN TS’ INTERNATIONAL M EDITATION SO C IETY ■’•I: rn afrfcL fcSSHHI madison Bellaire apartments. luxury summer living for U.T. women large A / C bedroom, lovely patio & pool. daily maid service, laundry room. TV cable. contract meals at rn-' private bus. lison house if desired, for 2706 Nueces u n iversity w om en Gstm sssa Austin, T exas 478-9891 new leasing for summer se e • come com e live. 717 West 22th Street ___________ By The Associated P re ss_ Troop W ithd raw als Termed ‘Cunning’ North Vietnam and its V iet Cong allies said Thursday that President Richard M. Nixon's promised new massive troop withdrawals from Vietnam was a cunning maneuver designed to deceive the Am erican public and pave the way for the permanent establishment of U.S. bases throughout Indochina. Nixon’s Monday speech, announcing the withdrawal of an additional 150,000 Am erican troops in the next year, was the main theme of all speakers at the sixty-fourth session of the Vietnam peace talks. No progress of any kind was recorded and the 15-month-old negotiating deadlock rem ain­ ed complete. Von Braun Sees 1970 Mars Landing NEW YORK Rocket expert W eather von Braun said Thursday that Am erica’s space projects for the next decade include or­ biting skylabs, space shuttle vehicles, an unmanned land­ ing on Mars, and a nine-year shot to Pluto during the rare, Grand Tour lineup of outer planets. “ I am firm ly convinced that the space program w ill prove to be one of the most important, creative and beneficial projects to mankind ever undertaken by the United States,” said Von Braun, the former German rocket expert who now is deputy assistant adm inistrator of the U .S. space agency. He spoke at the final session of the American Newspaper Publishers Association’s eighty-fourth annual meeting. He called the aborted flight of Apollo 13 “ no more than i temporary setback,” which taught something important ^-“ tbe human capacities and capabilities for innovation that are in everyone when the need arises.” Biggest Stock Loss in Nine Months NEW YORK The stock market took Its biggest loss in about nine months Thursday in moderately active trading. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials sank 12.02 to 750.59. Fo r the sixteenth consecutive session on the New York Stock Exchange declines outran advances: 1,189 to 200 among the 1,598 issues traded. Analysts attributed the sharp decline to investor discour­ agement. They said investors were waiting on the sidelines for the current slump to end. Some analysts said they expected the m arket to ra lly within a day or two. They said selling had been heavy, as evidenced by the advance-decline Index, and that the Dow Jones average had moved close to its 1970 low of 744.06. on Jan. 30. They said they expected selling to exhaust itself at that point and the market to turn around. UT Professor Decries M oney Lag ST. LOUIS The honeymoon between taxpayers and the colleges is ending, Dr. Carl Hereford of the U niversity told the South­ western Psychological Association Thursday. Hereford, chairman of the educational psychology depart­ ment, said the “ quite deadly reduction of financial support” —not stones, fire bombs and torches — is most likely to destroy a university. I fear not a shattering blast of violence but rather an enervating, withering on the vine,” he said. “ And society in the long run w ill most surely retain those of its institu­ tions that are functioning and cast off those that are non­ functional.” How does a university become non-functional? “ B y trying to do what it cannot do,” Hereford said “ or even more deadly, doing what it can do but should not do.” Flowers Parade Highlights Fiesta SAN ANTONIO Thousands of spectators w ill line downtown streets F r i­ day for the Battle of Flowers Parade, the founding event of Fiesta Week, now celebrating its diamond jubilee. I he coloi ful afternoon parade w ill wind through city streets for more than two hours. A “ festival of arts” theme w ill be featured by nearly 300 entries. Included in the caravan w ill be l l vehicle*, 18 pep squads, 20 marching groups, 147 clowns, 51 floats, 53 bands and 18 mounted troupes, including 282 horses. A formal moment wall come as the parade pauses before lh 0 Alamo where each float w ill deposit flowers in tribute to heroes of the historic mission, shrine of Texas freedom. I riday va i JI be the final day of one of Fiesta W eek’s most popular events, the conservation society’s “ Night in Old San Antonio,” a gala festival of food and entertainment. BUCK and MEXICAN AMERICAN STUDENTS interested in health professions are urged to attend an information meeting at 7:00 p.m.— Friday, A P R IL 24th R O O M 300 — T E X A S U N IO N Sponsored by Alpha Sigm a Delta and Baylor Cotieg# of M edicine W o rk and Study Program Discussion from I to 10p.m. Page 2 Friday. April 24, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN of PO RT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (A P ) — Army mutineers claimed control at the Trinidad’s m ilitary headquarters Thursday, but loyal troops ringed the base and sealed off the in­ surgents. armory A spokesman for the rebels said in a telephone interview that Committee OK’s Popular Voting For No. 10ffice WASHINGTON (A P ) — a sharply divided Senate Judiciary Committee voted Thursday to provide for election o f’ the nation’s presidents by direct, f popular vote. The proposed constitutional amendment, which would scrap the Electoral College, was ap­ proved by an l l to 6 vote after rival reform plans were narrowly rejected. The issue now moves to the Senate, where Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., spearheading the fight the direct election plan, for said it may run into a filibuster by opponents. Sen. Jam es O . Eastland, D - Miss., the committee chairman, said the series of close votes in the committee makes it unlikely the Senate will approve any plan by the two-thirds majority re­ quired for an amendment. The direct election amendment was approved by the House last September by a 339 to 70 vote — well in excess of the necessary two-thirds margin — and sub­ by endorsed sequently was President Richard lf . Nixon. It is not expected to be brought up in the Senate for about a month, and Bayh sad that even if the Senate approves it, “ it w ill I be really tough to get it ratified bv the states” in time to take effect for the 1972 presidential election. Warnings Curbed Eclipse's Damage N EW YO RK (A P ) - A nation­ wide survey of eye specialists and hospital emergency rooms has found far fewer eye injuries than the major from eclipse of the sun last March 7. feared The survey by the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness has found only 95 pos­ itive cases of eye damage so far, not all of them permanent. This compares to the 247 cases the society less found comprehensive survey after the previous major solar eclipse, in 1963. in a A society spokesman said the relatively low number of cases this time appears to be the result of widespread publication given to warnings of the dangers. DRIVE A LITTLE — SAVE A LOT 1/4 cl. 1 /3 ct. 1/2 et 3 /4 ct ( I ct. * ’ ■ 31.50 0 -rn rn m A I M 125.00 225JO 275.00 I CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP Commodore IVrry Hotel AUSTIN 476-0178 PHOTOS PASSPORTS RESUMES SUPER HOT SERVICE STUDMAN PHOTO 19th it Lavaca • Cameron Village C ollie Sunday afternoon from 2 until 4 ^ v; -1’ '* ' - A/-A. ' " ■ S- ' v? ■' -** » r * >4 ->44?'" ■" $* .*• ‘ ^ ■ ’'V" Snacks.. .Cokes... and Information # i While you're looking, look at Hardin North. 801 West 24th I UT Gels Grant For Drug Center The University has been select- ed as one of four colleges in the nation to receive a federal grant training for a drug education center. The announcement came Thursday from the office of U. S. Rep. J. J. “Jake” Pickle. The center, which will be loc­ ated at the University Medical Branch in San Antonio, will serve one of four regions of the nation. course will be A to help educators established identify drugs, acquaint them with law’s on drugs and help them communicate with students on the problem. six-week The exact borders of the re­ gions have not been determined. The other three colleges are San Francisco State in California, the and University of Wisconsin Adelphi University in New York. The entire program, handled through the Office of Education, will cost $350,000. The grant is effective from May I through April, 1971. Dr. Joseph B. Sprowls, dean of the School of Pharmacy, who wall serve as director of the cen­ ter. stressed the interdisciplinary na ha re of the program. “ The pharmacy faculty will be assisted by personnel from the Medical School at San Antonio, the College of Education and the College of Social Work,” he said. Conference on Tort Claims Act Slated A conference on the new Texas Tort Claims Act will be held at the University April 30 and May I . Sponsors of the program are the School of Law, the office of the Attorney General of Texas, the Texas Association of Defense the Texas Municipal Counsel, Teague and the Texas Trial Lawyers Association. Following registration, late (information Ls available from Michael Gammon, lawr school) the program will open at 9 a.m. with welcoming remarks by President Norman Hackerman and Texas Atty. Gen. Crawford Martin. The first speaker on the program is Dean Page Keeton of the law school. r . , Scene of Air M ish a p 1 i j* I —Photo by Ken Skinner, Only the tall assembly (r) remains intact in wreckage of private twin-engined plane which crashed late Wednesday while attempting landing at Municipal Airport. Crash claimed eight lives. Woman's Death Brings Toll To 8 in Private Plane Crash s l e e p i n g . Freddie Anthony Bobbitt, 23, her husband, died instantly. Republican executive committee­ woman from the 14th Senatorial District. The death of a 16-year-cld woman brought the death toll to eight after a twin-engine private plane crashed into an Austin residential area near Municipal Airport Wednesday night. The dead were: • Mrs. Peggy Bobbitt, 16, who died Thursday from bums received after one of the plane’s engines crashed into the bedroom where she and her husband were • Dr. Robert G. Farris, pilot of the plane and a prominent Austin neurosurgeon, and his family — his wife, Charlotte, and daughters, Judy, 17, and Marilyn, 14. Farris was Travis County Republican Party chairman from to 1968. His wife was a 1964 Yarborough O pposes 'Pollution Tactics1 Use By JANICE HAAG Through a din of country- western music and shirt-sleeved supporters, U. S. Sen. Ralph Yarborough arrived Thursday night at City Coliseum to blast his opponent on “pollution tac­ tics” in campaigning. “We will beat the big money machine in the May 2 primary,” Yarborough said about Lloyd Bentsen, his Democratic primary foe. The veteran senator said the pollution problem was not only in the air and water but also in the campaign his opponent has been waging. As for funds used for his cam­ paign, he said they come from his many loyal supporters. He said his opponent had gotten his from “squeezing money from wetbacks in the Valley.” “If there was a five-year drought in the Valley, it would still be green with all the money they are spreading down there,” fiery Yarborough said speech. in his • Dr. Ben Edward Becker, another neurosurgeon and part­ ner with Farris in a medical team brain surgery. specializing in at senior • Jimmy Doyle Dickens, 26, a the University Medical Branch at Galveston, who was to be a studying neurosurgeon. The Bobbitts’ four-month-old s o n , Arthur, was u n h a r m e d bedroom. rescued from a second The occupants of a second house, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Goll and their two children and a nephew’, escaped unhurt when a passerby pulled a screen from a bathroom window to let them out. The Goll home at 916 E. 48th St. the is next door Bobbitt home. to The Farris family, Becker and Dickens had been in Washington, where two surgeons had attended a medical conference. the The plane was two hours overdue on its return flight when it contacted the airport shortly before midnight. m adison fly use BEST SUMMER ACCOMMODATIONS FOR U.T. WOMEN. THE ULTIMATE IN OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING. W ater Board Studies Creek By FR ENCHY GOLDING and LORI RODRIGUEZ Staff Writers The Texas Water Quality Board singled out the City of Austin and Mayor Travis LaRue Thursday for “flagrantly violating every­ thing the board is trying to do.” Jerry Brownlee, former City manager and a member of the board, was upset by a local news­ paper article that reported that L a R u e ’ s laundry business, located at 12th and Red River Streets, was dumping a black cleaning into Waller Creek. residue Waller Creek extends from North Austin through University campus and the downtown area into Town Lake. LaRue admitted that his busi­ ness had been dumping the residue he described as carbon black and said “it is used in our cleaning process to remove loose dyes in the cleaning fluid.” He said is non-soluble and would not pollute the water. It would just settle to the bottom. He promised the dumping would stop. it Also reportedly discharged into the shallow creek is a milky white waste detergent from an automatic car wash owned by State Agriculture Commissioner John White and Assistant Com­ missioner Ed Nichols. Neither were available for comment. “Foul-smelling chicken feath- j ers” are allegedly dumped into the creek from a produce com- Jones to Debate Libertarian Manis After “liberation” — what? Two radically opposed radicals will debate this question in a contest sponsored by the Society for Individual Liberty at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Hogg Building 14. Students’ Association President­ elect Jeff Jones will support the view of the Socialist against laissez faire capitalist Rod Manis, a leader in the California liber- tarianist movement. Manis is working on his doc-j toral degree in economics a t; UCLA and is employed as a researcher at In­ stitute for the Study of War, Revolution and Peace at Stan- j ford. the Hoover pany located across the street from police headquarters. LaRue j said he had heard accusations about this report, but has never seen the disposed waste. The chairman of the Texas W a-j ter Quality Board, Gordon Fulcher, wanted some sugges- | tions about cleaning up the water. Hugh Yantis Jr., executive di- ’ rector of the board, said 1,000 extra inspectors would be needed to keep an eye on every city in Texas that has waterways. The board gave two alternatives. Either the City must by or­ dinance require local industries to establish adequate antipol­ lution systems, or they must charged an inflexibly high fine for releasing noxious wastes into the environment. Austin was instructed “to take immediate corrective action” and to appear at the May board meeting to explain what has been done to meet this and similar problems. Brownlee also won approval of his motion that every city in Texas with more than 100,000 population should submit at the May meeting survey of unauthorized discharges into tneir streams and rivers, and what they propose to do about it. a He said that 100,000 was the cut-off point because “generally, the greater the population, the greater the problem.” WE NEED YOU! lf you are a new graduate — an RN, LVN or a Senior Nursing Student, we'll take you for Summer employment or life. Live in attractive nursing home $15.00 a month. $575 new graduate — $30.00 diff. 3-11 and 11-7; $350 LVN or Senior RN Student. 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Laundry Facilities. Color TV & Stereo. Convenient to Campus. Private Air-Conditioned Bus & Chauffeur Driven LTD. come see. come ive. 478-9891 Distinctive Store for Men In The Co-Op A Friday. April 24, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa» 3 Editorial wmgm • • I uition proposa (E di t or ’s note: T he fo l l owi ng guest editorial was submi t te d by Sol omon Schneider, a so ph om ore .) T h e T exas Col lege C oo r di na t ­ ing Board has re c om me nde d in­ creasing t ui ti on at State schools from $50 to S 125. Also, it has rec­ om m e n de d t hat private schools in Texas be pai d for each degree they a wa rd a T e xa s resident, since this relieves t he State o f ha vi ng to e d u ­ cate those students. Students w h o attend both long sessions and summ er school woul d to pay an additional S225 have } early in i ncreased tuition. T hi s is a bout wh a t each of us wo u l d have to pay if we purcha se d a c ol­ o r television set today. O f course ii we all own e d color television the board wo u l d sets I'm sure t h ink we w e r e ail rich kids an d re co m me nd even hi g h er t uition in­ creases. But regardless o f w h a t p urpose t he m o n ey wo u l d be used for, the bu rd e n wou ld be equal to t hat of paying for a n e w color television, T he C oo rd i n a t i n g Board s a y s this increase will decrease a p p r o ­ priations ne ed ed from Si IO m i l ­ lion to S35 million. But wh a t w ill we receive for this extra m on ey ? Has the boa rd r ec omme n de d t h at we increase faculty m e m b e rs’ sal­ aries, a d d mo re p a rk i n g spaces, i mp rov e stude nt h ousing, h i r e mo re professors o r build m o r e classrooms so t hat we can h a ve smaller classes? No. It has only re c o m m e n d e d t h a t the students pa y tw ice as mu ch for w hat they are already getting. Fur the rm ore , if we start pa ying this Si05 million di ff erence t he boa rd is asking, will we receive some guarant ee t hat Te xa s wi ll re­ duce all future a ppr o pr i a t i on s bills by this a m ount ? O r will we see I “0 State r epresent ati ves a nd sen­ ators take the floor to ask for a p ­ their respective propri a ti ons for "p or k - b a r r e l ’' projects (like a State pa r k to increase tourist flow' to P od un k) ? After all, these things could be a pp rov e d right a nd left wi t hout raising the average vot er wo ul d never kn ow he had an extra Si05 million on his hands. T h e n we m i ght ask, is the C o or di na t i ng Board, in e f ­ fect, a sking students in S t a t e schools to pay f or State pa rks ne ar Podunk? taxes, since T h e best a r gu m e n t against the is a b o a r d ' s r e comme nda ti ons r e a di ng of t hat request itself. O n the one hand, the boa r d :s a sking students in Stale schools to pay m ore mone y so the State can decrease a ppropri at i ons; w hile on t he othe r hand, it is aski ng the State to dona te m ore m one y to pr i ­ vate schools. It is asking t ha t we not onl y pay for " p o r k - b a r r e l ” legislation I have already m e n t i o n ­ ed, but also that students at State schools help subsidize p r i v a t e schools whi ch w e all chose no t to attend. Most of us coul dn't a f f o rd t he ir hi gh t uition fees, d i d n ’t t hi nk it w as fair to t urn do w n student s on the basis of race or religion, and d i d n ’t like the daily c hapel a nd no smoki ng on c amp us re­ quirements. N o w w-e are be ing asked to pav $225 a year so t hat these schools can c onti nue to a dmi ni st er sectar­ ian missionary pr ogra m s a br oa d, and roll preachers off the assem­ bly line at home. If the boa r d was really that c oncer ned a b ou t e d u ­ cational burdens a nd the ethics of fi na nc ing hi ghe r education, w h y di dn t it pr ovide for payment s to all schools in all t he states., so t hat no n e of t hem wo u l d be overly b u r ­ de ne d with Te xans? If Bi got Seminary College, u n ­ der this program , were faced wi th a choice of failing 75 seniors in t hei r g r a du a t i n g class o f 500, or letting t hem gra dua t e so t he school woul d receive $75,000 more, could we expect o ur future e mpl oye rs to feel c onfi dent t hat a Texas d e ­ gr ee was g oo d e no ug h for t he m ? Last year Gov. Prest on Smith vetoed the Legi sl ature’s bill to i n­ crease fees. T h e Legislature, you may recall, s n e a k e d t h e bill t h r ou gh as soon as most students we re gone for the summer, since they knew' no effective c a m pa i gn to defeat the measure wo u l d be m ou nt e d at t hat time. to Fo r this reason, I urge all stu­ dents at take the University e nough time away from their stu­ dies to w rite the G o v e r n o r and at least s ho w w h a t wre t hi nk o f the c o-or di nat ing b o a r d ’s p r op os ­ als. Either t hat or pitch a t ent in f ront of the Financial Ai ds Office next September. “I W t W orry Alcorn Sonic B o o m s W ell Just Let I fte Cities Co T o P ieces In s he Sawn; OW W ay” Guest viewpoint Guest Viewooirtf Lame duck ems Us JE F F JON ES President-elect, Association S t u d e n t s ’ I am writing this article to in­ form the University community about what is currently going on behind the scenes in the dying moments of the Krier administra­ tion and to make public what I shall do on or around May I, to block his last-ditch attempts to sell out the interests of the University as a whole. All year long Mr. Krier has sold out the students in an effort to protect his future political career: his actions at Waller Creek and the Chuck Wagon are clear illustrations of this. In both 0 f instances Krier demonstrated his willingness to be a puppet of the administration, and it is well known among those in student government that Mr, Krier refers to Frank Erwin as “Pops.” these in his top At Monday night’s assembly meeting (hopefully his last) Krier acted characteristic fashion. After admitting he had conferred with a ranking administrator that very day, he railroaded a bill through tile as­ sembly which appointed himself, Tullos Wells and Susan Hass- 1 ocher to the student-faculty com­ mittee which will select the suc­ cessor of departing President Norman Hackerman. Krier’s move, possibly inspired by administration, was designed to insure that no “radi­ the cals'’ would have any say in the selection of the new president. In fact, Krier and his cronies Were all prominent figures in the Sparks campaign, tho very same group of campus politicos over­ by whelmingly the Student body this spring's election. Yet Krier campus claims they represent a broad base! rejected in Since die rule governing the selection process does not specify whet lier the executive or legis­ lative branch of student govern­ ment shall make these appoint­ ments, K ner actually had every technical right to make these ap­ pointments, and to make them the m a n n e r ho did. But in technically the House of Dele­ gates can also make them. And technically, so can I (and I will): the Student Consntir on states that “the President shall make all appointments necessary and proper to the fulfillment of the responsibilities and duties of the executive branch.” The fact of the m atter is that Krier interpreted the original rule in his way, and I shall interpret it in mine. to When I take office sometime around May I, three new mem­ bers will be appointed the committee, three students who represent the interests of the stu­ dents rather than the administra­ tion. Since Krier has already demonstrated which side he's on, I will feel obligated to remove him and his cronies from the important positions he had him­ self appointed to on the grounds that it is an incompetent sell-out. Since the president’s the one who calls them in, I intend to see to it that Hackerman’s suc­ cessor has a clean record in this area. Of course, such matters are of little importance to Joe Krier, who was instrumental in calling in the police on the day of the Chuck Wagon incident. For pre­ cisely tiiis reason I feel obligated to descend to the level of petty political maneuvering, but I do so because Joe Krier has forced me to. Before the assembly meet­ ing I informed Mr. Krier of what I intended to do if he made those appointments, explaining that I did not want interrupt or to complicate the functioning of this important committee, but that I would indeed do so if he forced me to. Neverthelelss Krier proceeded fully with his original plans, aware of tile disruptive conse­ quences. the For all the above reasons I am the hereby publicly requesting nine professors who shall help us choose the University president to admit students named above only as temporary members of the selection com­ mittee. The three permanent student representatives will he named as soon as Joe Krier s lame duck is finally dead. three The firing line: A S lS Coy To the editor: Re: Wednesday’s article on the Arts and Sciences Council en­ dorsement of Jeff Jones’ impend­ ing attempt to overturn the Stu­ dent Assembly’s students to Nominating Committee. selection of the Presidential Three facts ought to be pointed the Arts and out concerning ics blasted Sciences Council: 1. The members of that body are appointed by the chairmen of the various departments in the College of Arts and Sciences. The A&S student body has no voice in says their selection. This something about the kind of in­ terests they represent. Further­ more, the existence of the count ii is in flagrant conflict with the mandate of the students of that college who voted more than a year ago to provide for popular election of that council, a man­ date that council has refused to abide by. 2. Joe Sharkey, the “govern­ ment representative” who mani­ pulated this move by the council, is the same Joe Sharkey who ran 200 votes behind Mickey Mouse in this year's presidential race and over 1,000 votes behind the the winner assembly-at-large seat last year. in his race for 3. Contrary to The Texan ar­ ticle, the assembly did not vote to retain the appointive system for Texas Union Board members. The assembly voted to provide for the. election of board mem­ bers by the incoming assembly, than appointment, until rather the result of the Union board election could be put into effect by the regents. Furthermore, Jeff J o n e s ’ the statements assembly meeting notwithstand­ ing. to Joe Krier’s efforts the Union referendum ever worked its way up to the Board of Regents rn the first place. It would not seem appropriate to hold him respon­ sible for the boards’ failure to act. it was only due that at Finally, I am concerned with coverage by The Texan which does not clearly indicate the facts in either the Union board bill or the selection of students for the Presidential Nominating Commit­ tee. Apparently The Texan reporter did not investigate the facts of either of these items following the meeting. However, I am even more concerned at the actions of perennial candi­ dates whose only concern in this instance was their own political existence rather than a concern for the interests of the student body as a whole. David M. Mill che rg Assemblyman Lucky Fan To the editor: Of course no red-blooded Long­ horn fan could ever dream of protesting the expected shortage of good stadium seats this fall. After all, we are unspeakably lucky to have the privilege of viewing our own No. I football team; who are we to care if it be f r o m the end zone or the bleachers? Students must indeed “rough it" next year, since we all know that would be much too much to ask of the option holders. They are clearly entitled to bet­ ter seats than anyone else; they have paid $100 for the opportunity to buy choice seats, while the rest of us who merely live and work at the university have only put up a meager $21.40. How can we expect an equal chance to see our own university football team in action? And who the most unpatriotic un- but the State oranges, reflecting upon pro­ posals such as stadium seating and tuition increase (who could saving be against money, even though no one has sairi how the saved $105 million will be spent?', would oven begin to think that this university is run by and for those who have money? Shame on them! Patrice Pargaman W222 Jester Ra d ic al Rig hts To the editor: Instruction ment. Part I. in radical harass­ as Protesters. ill-mannered, Protesters must strive in the extreme to be as l o u d , as disruptive and as obnoxious as possible. All slang phrases and Anglo-Saxon terms which generally excite surprise, disgust and shock in the great silent majority should be used continuously to excite nausea due to boredom. epithets, Rights. Only protesters have rights. As a matter of fact, they have all the rights. Individuals protested against have no rights. They may be assaulted, drenched with squirt guns and maligned in whatever terms seize the fancy of the protester. Ideology. Protesters don't need any ideology, just something to protest against. No answers are necessary, just criticism and pro­ fanity. It is perfectly logical to wave a NFL flag and chant the Bara Krishna and the Lord s Prayer ail in one breath (if you’ve got that much breath), recite Just babble, baby, 'cause we love the sound of your voice. Police. They take pictures and arrive late; don't sweat it. Lance Wittlif Senior, History S W T S U Views To the editor: university Recently your views concerning our paper were published in the aforesaid publi­ it a cation. You “satirical parody on life at SWT ra flier than a serious attempt at journalism.” considered Usually the mood concerning such is apathetic but your ef­ fective letter has moved us to write. We are not journalism stu­ dents; we are average students trying to uphold the integrity of our campus. In summation, we would like to commend you for your interest and simply state that a school paper (The University Star), does not necessarily represent the ac­ curate campus views nor ac­ curately reflect all its students. Richard Mcrta Jimmy Broughton SWTSV Students Concerned? To the editor: As I walked across campus Wednesday, I couldn't help but “concerned” notice the all students wearing their green armbands as they cut across the grass on the West Mall. John Sessions Graduate School Of Business T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student Newspaper of UT Austin O pinions expressed In The Da ly T exan are those of the editor or of the w r ite r or the article and are not n ecessarily those of the U niver­ sity ad m in istration or of the Board of R esents. T h e D aily T exan is published by T exas S n ,dent Publications. Inc. daily e x cep t M onday and Saturday and h olid ay periods Septem ber th rou gh May Second c la ss p ostage paid at A ustin. 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Sylvan Rodriguez Anne Hagy, Robin Bracher Copy Edi'ors ..................... Page 4 Friday, April 24, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Free country was stolen By J. B. DURHAM This land is your land This land is my land, From California to the New York island. . . . This land was made for you and me. —Woody Guthrie Who says so? By what right is it yours? Who made it “ for you and me?" Woody Guthrie (ne from Oklahoma — was American zoo. He, along with his f a t h e r , the Oklahoma dust bowl (“created" is a poor word hero from which he ran away, bitter, poor and blaming the whole situation on "the bosses.” created etc., In 1934 Oklahoma dust covered Now York, hiding the sun for hours. This dust was precious topsoil, once held down by a thick mat of grass which supported millions of buffalo, which in turn supported the children who lived on the plains. so that children The U. S. government syrte- nautically and deliberately killed ti e buffalo as a means of killing the the “ pin n ers” could settle on the land. It worked; they settled, dug up the grass, planted their crors, depleted the soil, made a dust bowl. Then, many left — on to California and new lands to kill. the sad All songs and the proud songs. The land was plentiful and inhabited only by savages — “dirty red niggers.” the while singing from a They were I am Cherokee, and my people region you call are George. force- marched to Oklahoma by what we now call The Trial of Tears. the way. Thousands died on Thousands died after reaching Oklahoma, of disease and star­ vation. At that, we were treated better than most who were sent info toe zoo, because we were of tribes." Which meant that we obeyed and tried to negotiate with the white men. the “five civilized That is surely all very sad, hut if is past, it is history. What has it to do with today? I want to propose .some theses which we have been proposing to you for three hundreds of years and more. They are radical, disloyal, and, I think excusably, vengeful. They concern ecology and tile land you live on. Firstly, when you say “th!* country,” or “this land,” you are speaking of your government and yourselves. You are speaking of the white men who are here. And you are here as occupational forces. This “ country,” this gov­ ernment of yours, w-as founded on genocide. On murder. Every one of your colonies was established for the purpose of exploitation. Even, or perhaps especially, the religious colonies. They were not founded so that the white men could live on and in this land but so that you could “ live off of,” profit by, this land. Your fathers came here, either to escape or to conquer, not to be here. Not to live in this land, to recognize this land. Not to love this land. The murdering has been a deliberate, conscious and con­ tinuous policy of your govern­ ment. It has not stopped. But it is not just the doings of your government or your forefathers. You are guilty. Guilty of the murder of the people whose land this is, and of the land itself. When you lie out in the sun on your Saint Augustine grass you are exploiting. Look at that land, under the grass, under the conf rere, and try to imagine It es it was. Try to imagine the life it once supported. Your Zilker Park is an exploitation. You are the pollution In Am­ erica. You are now concerned with ecology. For what reason? So that the land will not be used up. so that you and your children can continue to exploit this land. And all of your teach-ins, and all of your programs, and all of your bills passed in Congress will be mockery. the As long as our minds hold such concepts as “ mastering environ­ land,” ment.” “conquering and imposing your alien, hateful wills on this soil, you are killing and you are polluting. You are hiding from this earth. You even try to rise above it—that is the point of your philosophy, science and religions, to escape. 5 ou must change. To stop polluting you must become at­ tuned to the land w'hich is sup­ porting you. You must come to if. It has been dying under you for too long. It is waiting for you. PEANUTS CROSSWORD PUZZLE Nations leaders need occasional breaks in order country doesn’t want. to achieve goals the lives a cautious and calculated existence. 4-The sweetsop 5 Expiring 6-Steamship (abbr.) 7-Note of scale P Bitter vetch 9-Hawaiian wreaths 10 Hire 11 Handle 13-..brinks from 16 Chimney carbon 19 Approaches 21-Linger 22-Stalk of grain 25-Eva po rated 27-Dinner course 30-Scatter 32 Put off 34-Sicilian volcano 36 Portion* of medicine ACROSS I -Fear 6-Graveston« 11-Pact 12-Enticing women 14 ■Artificial languaga 15-Units of Portuguese currency 17-Deep breath 18-Vast age 20-Winter precipitation (pl.) 23-Capuchin monkey 24-lmitated 26-Horned animals 28-Earth goddess 29-Former Russian rulers 31 Angry outbursts 33-Ceremony 35 Story 36-Sandy wastes 39-Thin cookie 42-Beast of burden 43 Depressions 45 Strike out 46 Drink slowly 48 Laments 50 Knock 51-Verve 53 Paper measure 55 Symbol for tellurium 56 f ollowing first 59 Gloc-sy paint 61 I evantme ketch 62 Warm DOWN 1 Fags 2 Note of scale 3-Organ of hearing 37-Those living outside native country 38-Mix 40 Puffed up 41-Repulse 44-Hail and rain 47-Rat*, 49-Rationat 52-Negative 54-Chart 57-Comoas* point 58 Prehx: down 60 Note of scale D istr, by caline Syndicate, Inc* By JAMES RESTON (c) 1970 New York Times News Service ^ suddenly WASHINGTON — The fierce winds and driving: rains of early April have subsided here, and the capital of the Uni­ ted States is a- blaze with flow­ ering trees: tulip r trees by the In- J terior Depart- cherry ment, iL ^ N blossoms circl- F a i r * / the T i d a l ing |> \ Basin, and every­ where a m ist of welling buds on the great elms a- long the famous streets. the weak from Last month we had the great confrontation of nature, with savage gusts of wind shaking creation, stirring the Potomac, troubling our spirits in the night, the separating strong, the old from the young. It is here in the natural world that we see the real generation gap — but also a certain com­ the passionate season of natural confrontation is followed by a season of calm and startling beauty. rhythm — for The m aterial world less regular and less considerate. It is has no seasons. The political winds keep blowing, month in, month out. The struggles and dis­ putes of men — what we now call confrontation politics — are endless and they take their toll even among the sturdiest of men. and the so does After the long winter, the w ar goes on spreads across Southeast Asia; inflation the creeps up and unemployment; the pressures of w ar revive the antiw ar demon­ strations at home; the inflation encourages the strikes the truckers, the air mailmen, traffic controllers and even the teachers. And so it goes, and so it promises to go, and get even worse, long after the trees are full and Washington is breathless in the summ er sun. by One wonders how the natural life of man can bear all the en­ dless analyses and endless pres­ sure of the political world. The last month has been a torture in the White House, the Senate and In­ the Supreme Court. telligent men have been saying and doing silly things, adding to unavoidable conflicts avoidable stupidites, nominating people who cannot be confirmed, impeaching people who cannot be impeached, fighting for things they don’t need This is a very serious question. It would be hard to overestimate the dam age done in our national fighting tired minds life by relentless sometimes un­ necessary battles. and In Richard Nixon seemed to un­ derstand this danger of human exhaustion even before he got to the White House. the presidential campaign of 1968, he s u r p r i s e d and occasionally irritated his staff by leaving the campaign trail every week or so and or to somewhere else to rest. He has insisted on escaping to Camp David in the Maryland mountains ever since, and is now planning another working-vacation later this month at his house in San Clemente Calif. Florida flying and the Cabinet This creates problems for his the staff, bureaucracy, but it is a sensible and even essential idea. It is not in his nature to delegate respon­ sibility, like President Truman. Golf is not a consolation for him as President Eisenhower, but a torture, as it is for most of the rest of us. Despite his television confidence and his premeditated smile, he suffers agonies of shyness and it was for More firing line: Get a bicycle To the editor: Before a lot of us forget what E arth Day was all about I would like to m ake a suggestion which I previously brought before the Arts and Sciences Council hoping it would Itecome a movement from there. a mass move . . a is to get a bicycle— the kind with a chain and no motor. The benefits to be gained from to use bicycles for in-city transportation so far outweigh the disadvantages that it Is surprising why more of us haven't been riding bikes for years. The cicycle would probably pay for itself within two months from the money saved on gas, not to mention the ease with which we could all find a place to park bicycles. As for the pollution crisis, why if we it would be half solved all rode bicycles. Finally there is the added extra that we would be enjoying better the exercise. The health personal commitment that every from one of us must make if we are to beat tile pollution crisis could well begin with each of us deciding to get a bicycle. Harvey Worohe| 2)15 Wheless I .ane Ecology? To the editor: Whose environment so concern­ ed the guy with the green arm band who sat in front of me in class on E arth Day as he threw his gum w rapper and cigarette ashes onto the floor, and then ground out the butt in the same, previously clean spot? Not mine. And not yours. Bruce H. Davis School of Communication N o wasp To the editor: Re: Robert Aguirre on “ La Causa.” (April 16, 1970) Ah! Now you catagorize me as a WASP!! You are quite wrong, I'm not a WASP now', nor over. I am a human, and I feel as much pain and wrongdoings as you do. You act as if your “rac e” the only one which has is problems, well, let me tell you about oppression sometimes! Obviously you desperately want m e to be a racist anglo, which I'm not, and I am extremely offended that you put my article on your level of racism. I am not a lily-white, sweet, “do-no- evil” WASP!! I am a human —• I ride a bike, and I am quite poor, but I do not belong in a box! You see, I am a singer and my whole joy in life is through experiencing life — the bad and the gftod. You seem to shun life — I cannot help that. Sure, I know you have been mistreated by some, but I cannot feel obliged to believe that I have a part in it, for I do not. You see, we are brothers in a common cause — the struggle of life. I have pains too, but would you sing mine with me? I doubt it — but I want you to know I sing yours . . . just listen sometimes, you I don’t suggest pain to alleviate can’t anybody's miser}', read! I wasn’t talking to M ar­ tinez as anything other than a human. I have no god but one — he is the god of peace, mercy, and life. He’s yours, too, you’ll see. find peace You seem to be an angry man — at yourself and at everything else. I have the feeling that if in yourself, you someday you will be able to feel sorry for those who are narrow ­ minded and hateful. felt degredation and oppression, but it does me no good to hate them — that is their sin, not mine. I ’ve Sure, I ’m idealistic — possibly because I ’ve found something to live for. Sure, my ideals can be cut down by your sharp tongue, what i f s ideals can’t? Maybe that I ’ve spent tho last 19 years hating, that I wrant to stop now and type of to find some peace. try So, Mr. Aguirre — you are all wrong about me — I’m not a WASP and I'm not a racist, and I do care about you! What I'm fighting is hate — not races or sexes, or anything else. You see, even those who hate are humans, and them worth something. Pity those who hate, Mr. Aguirre, but if you hate them back, what good is done? that makes Cynthia K arnstadt I In short, he is not the sort of man who does things easily and naturally, whatever the outward im­ impression. He knows the portance of seeming to be at ease and he manages the appearance of command, but he has to struggle for it and contrive the this all adds it and pressure of control. to give to Nobody speaks out clearly and courageously these days against the pressures everybody feels, but they are present in the fierce competitive struggle of American l i f e wherever men have responsibility, and often where they haven’t. in commerce, the state capitals, Not only in the presidency, but in the government departm ents, the city in the councils, the trade universities and the churches, the to do things every compulsion day is so great that the men in charge have little tim e to think unions, even in in about what they a re doing. Getting Judge Carswell con­ firmed by the Senate became such a compulsive and pervasive idea in the P resident's mind that he didn’t have tim e to consider whether it was a good idea. The political winds here don’t separate the old from the young or the weak from the strong — at least not in season — they just keep on blowing beyond April, beyond May, and beyond normal human endurance. f ided to come to U of Texas (Who Cares! c . ' • ‘ There are some people at Doh ie who care. They’ve got something going, eycall it community. Sharif in i t — it’s O.K. DOBIE More than just a place to live It’s a boy - girl world at Mayfair. A place to study, to live . . . social contacts to put you in touch with real life and it’s responsibilities. Get back in touch at mayfain. 2000 Pearl Street, Austin, Texas 78705 512 472-5437 instantly adorable with Tovar Tresses learn how to be instantly adorable, . . join us in our w iggery fo r some real fun. meet- John Emanuel, special consultant from Tovar Tresses, who will be in our drag store w iggery 'til sat., feb 25th to introduce you to the latest in w ig r e a d y - to - w e a r , al! ara made o f Excelon* fo r easy care. They're washable, packable, and need no setting. only 25.00 each shown here: plerrette Friday, April 24, 1970 TW DAILY TEXAN Pag* S Froggies Cast in Familiar Role TCL! Plays Spoiler for 'Horns By STEVE DIAL Assistant Sports Editor FORT WORTH — It’s that lime of the season again — when the Curious Cowtown C reatures shed their ‘Horned Frog costumes and crawl into their Cockroach outfits. Darrell Royal once said that the thing that hurts so badly about TCU is “not what they eat or carry away; it’s what they fall into and spoil.” Well, this time the gam e’s different but the nam e’s the same — Spoiler. The Purples get their shot a t both the first and second place team s in the Southwest Conference base­ ball chase on successive weekends and right now it’s the longhorns’ turn to sweat. THE REASONS for anxiety on the part of Texas partisans are several. For one, pitching stalw arts Jam es Street and Burt Hooton are both coming off bouts with the injury bug. Also, the ’Horns are in a batting slump of late. But the big reason lies in the threat that belies TCU’s 13-11 season record and its 7-5 conference standard—power, and lots of it. The Purples comprise the kind of club that can put itself into a gam e or you out of it with one swing of the bat. And with the 'Horns still chasing league-leading A&M, one swing of the bat could send Coach Cliff Gustafson’s troops reeling and present the Aggies with more momentum than they know what to do with. So I he series shapes up as a big one for Texas, and Gus­ tafson is sending his Big Ones — crippled though they m ay be — to the mound on Friday, with Street pitching the sev­ en-inning opener and Hooton the nine-frame nightcap. Street is trying to fend off a nagging groin muscle pull while Hooton is attem pting to battle back from a shoulder ailment that has kept him on the bench for much of the season. STREET STRUGGLED through seven innings against Baylor last weekend, giving up seven hits, while Hooton seemed to approach his All-America form in setting the Bears down on three hits and notching 13 strike-outs. Gustafson called the perform ances of the two “ encourag­ ing” and said he will call either on Mike Beard or Larry- Hardy to pitch the Saturday game, depending upon which, if either, is called upon for support duty Friday. Although Street experienced a shaky sta rt in his last out­ ing, the senior righthander m aintains a 6-0 record and an 0.92 ERA. In 39 innings of work, the Longview- dandy has Summons- SUPERMARKET LIQUORS (500 L A V A C A 5353 BURNET RD. 1327 SO . C O N G R E S S G R 8-5423 H O 5-8689 HI 4-1089 DAN'S No. 2 MOVING SALE given up only six bases on balls, while striking out 50 and is unscored upon in 20 innings of SWC competition. Hooton is 5-1 for the campaign, but his miniscule 1969 ERA has “ ballooned” to 2.31, due mainly to his arm trouble. Hardy, the Steers’ workhorse for the season, stands at 6-2 after an 0-2 start and has sliced his ERA down to 1.41. The senior righthander leads the team in strike-outs with 55. Beard, the only southpaw in the rotation, shares the team lead in innings pitched with Hardy at 44 2/3, but the Little Rock native s ERA is 2.62, despite his 6-0 record and has experienced control problems, giving up 23 bases on balls. Hardy, therefore, would be the likely choice for the Sat­ urday starting assignment, particularly since TCU has only one left-handed hitter. TOP BULLPEN hands are Nati Salazar, with a 1.10 ERA and 2-0 record, and Walt Rothe, 0.92 and 2-1. Catcher Tommy Harmon, apparently recovered f r o m damaged fingers, will again be the battery m ate for the mound corps. Harmon, hitting at a .342 clip, has been wielding a hot bat of late, along with centerfielder Jack Miller (.326), leftfielder Mike Markl (.364) and third base­ m an David Chalk, the team ’s leading hitter at .365. First basem an John Langerhans, the ’Horns’ rbi and home run leader, has “slumped” to .327, followed by rightfielder David Hall (.298), .shortstop Lou Bagwell (.271) and second basem an P at Amos (.258). The Frogs will send against this lineup a rotation of sen­ ior righthander Rod Monahan and sophomore southpaw Bob Shaw on Friday, with either E arl Wallace or Johnny Grace going in the finale. THE ’HORNS swept a three-game series from TCU in Austin last year, a feat that did not come easily and which propelled them on their way to the SWC crown. A sim ilar perform ance would be desirable this time around, since A&M is still unmolested at 31-0, with Texas a game and a half back at 8-0. Gustafson’s troops, 27-5 for the ’70 campaign, look the opener from the Frogs last year by a 7-3 count, but fell be­ hind 4-0 in the second game as TCU’s Jeff Newman punch­ ed a three-run hom er over the Centerfield fence. Four un­ earned runs and Streets’ im pressive off-the-bench perform­ ance in relief of Hooton aided Texas to an 8-4 triumph. Larry Hardy maintained a two-hitter until the eighth in­ ning of the finale, when he gave up a three-run shot that started TCU on its way to a five-run inning that put the ’Horns behind 5-3. Chalk’s pinch-hit triple with the bases loaded led Texas to an eventual 7-5 victory. Both F riday gam es will be broadcast over KOKE-FM (95.5), beginning at 12:50 p.m. Golfers Host Tech The Texas golfers, sitting alone at top of the conference stack, play second-ranked Texas Tech on the Morris Williams course Friday, and will try to solidify their hold on the conference crown. Coach George Hannon has not made up his mind as to who his four Friday entrants will be, but he will pick them from George Machock, Tom Kite, Dean Overturf, George Tucker and William Cromwell. At the present, with two matches away from the conference tour­ nament, the ‘Horns at 23U-6^, are four ahead of Tech. lf the Steer golfers continue their lead, it will be their third consecutive SWC crown. Last year on a typical blustery Panhandle March day. the Raiders hold the ’Horns back and beat them 4^-1 Mi on their home course. Tech’s Ronnie White defeated highly favored Rik Massengale 3 and I by shooting a 74 to Massengale’s 78. Monday the golfers go to Fort Worth to play TCU. The Horned Frogs are presently in the conference cellar with SMU, Arkansas and Rice. L I Q U O R S 6 5 01 A IR P O R T BLVD. WEEKEND SPECIALS K E N T U C K Y TAVERN 86 proof Bourbon 4 years old .................... CALVER T EXTRA 86 proof Blended Whiskey ............................... M A T T IN G L Y & M O O R E 86 proof Bourbon 5 years old ........................ C A R S T A IR S 80 proof Blended Whiskey ........ .......... . 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R ed Raiders Entertain Longhorn Tennis Team The Longhorn not tors travel to Lubbock to play their final con­ ference opponent Saturday against tho Texas Tech Rod Raiders on what Texas Coach Wilmer Allison has called “a. court surface alien to a ny tiling we have ever played on bef ire.” Allison will take his charges to Lubbock Friday to get used to die polished concrete court, a surface much slicker til an any of die other courts the ’Horns normally play on. “When wet,” Allison said "it is Uke playing on a bar-room floor.” Since their last outing, with the ’Horns splitting 3-3 with the Aggies, sophomore John Nelson has replaced Avery Rush as Hie No I Texas player. Nelson will play with Rush, John Mozola md Ri< k Murray in single* matches and team with Ron Tour hon on one of thp doubles teams. 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C A S E Straight Bourbon W h is k e y ............ 5th ............................. C A S E ...................5th .Quart . . .. . 5 t h 10th 5th 5th 5th Pago A Friday, April 24, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN I Thinclad Relays Split for Drake Longhorns to Des Moines, Arlington leaders w ill be toting the baton for the Steers. Wisconsin are baton crews. all top-ranked in that event at 9:40.6 in the THE DISTANCE medley crew carved out a new school mark Captain Mike Mosley (leader in the 880 dash at 1:49.3) and Fred Cooper (the four lap leader at 4:05.8) and junior Dave Morton (front runner in the 440 in 46.6) w ill team up in both events and w ill be joined by quartermiler in the two-mile David Caffey relay and sprinter Byrd Baggett in the distance medley. Iuonghom stock in the two-mile event took a sudden surge last weekend when Caffey stoked to a 1:50.9, by far his best effort of the season. It will take top efforts by everyone to win the event, however, as Texas must battle Kansas State, Kansas, Wisconsin and Nebraska. Kansas State with Ken Swenson, and Wisconsin, with Mark Winzenreid, will be especially tough behind their outstanding anchormen. The distance medley has been Texas’ top race all year, with the ’Horns being nipped at the wire by University at E l Paso at the Texas Relays. E l Paso won't be there this time but the University of Houston is back to and Kansas, f u l l John’s and M i s s o u r i , St. strength L e a d s R e l a y s Texas sophomore Byrd Baggett has run on four relay teams the Horns are taking to Des Moines. P 1%9 Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co., Milwaukee and other great cities. Texas Relays the first weekend in April. That meet also saw' a Texas quartet step off a season’s best of 7:25.7 in the two-mile event. Baggett, who has been taking cortisone shots for a cyst on flip back of his knee, w ill be the busiest member of the Texas delegation as he is entered in four of the five relays the ’Roms are contesting. Tn the mile relay, Baggett, Morton and Mosley line up with Stan McDaniel, whose 47.0 last week tied his career best. M c­ Daniel and Morton etched their names into the Drake record book in 1968 as members of the premier Steer mile relay team that clocked 3:05.5, the best time in the nation that year. But the ’Horns, who have a 3:09.9 best this season, may have to watch their record bettered by Texas A&M. The Farm ers’ best outdoor time this campaign is only 3:08.4 but they clocked 3:05.7 in the Astrodome in February and Drakes’ fast Tartan track could boost M ills Brothers and Company into the record book. In the short distance relays, Baggett will share lane assign­ ments with Micky Ryan, B ill Tooke and Carl Johnson in the 880 and 440 relays. TH E 880 at the Texas Relays was a pleasant surprise as Texas clocked 1:24.6 in a closing cause. However, it wall take a faster time than that to outrun a field headed by Memphis State (and Gerald Tinker), Kansas, Murray State and Indiana. In the 440 relay , the Texas quartet will get a taste of con­ ference action to come if the pre­ meet form holds. The Aggies who own a sparkling 39.7, are expected to lead the field but should be pushed by Memphis State (39.9). the Individually, ’Horns will enter six men, five in the field e v e n t s . Weightman Randy Nichols, the conference leader in the shot put at 57-7, who also has a 167-1 discus effort on his ledger, w ill be the only double­ duty Longhorn. Joining him in the discus circle w ill be freshman Alan Thomas, the surprise of last week's quadrangular meet when he uncorked a throw of 173-1012. Nichols w ill also have a team­ mate in the shot in Adrian Gentry (55-414). In the javelin, Walt Cham­ berlain (212-014) is ‘‘feeling-good” and may be ready for his best effort but doesn’t appear to be in the same class as North Texas State’s B ill Schmidt (270). DISTANCE MAN Tom Gard­ ner, trying to come back from a broken foot, w ill line up in the six-mile event. Gardner’s race is the three- mile run finished (where he second in the SWC last spring) but he is running twice that distance to get ready for the conference meet. While the select 14 w ill be rubbing shoulders with track’s elite, the rest of the squad w ill either be preparing for con­ ference action or battling for a spot on the ’Horns’ conference roster. Coach Daniels w ill be doubling in up many of the thinclads torturous combinations (like the j 880 run and the mile run) as I the ’Horns ready for a showdown with A&M. “ These guys are pretty ex-; cited,” Daniels ' “ and everybody is going up there with a good attitude.” said, f *3 'n i ■ . at Arlington. P a t t e r s o n Steer head at Drake. 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I ^ Zip, By CRAIG BIR D Assistant Sports Editor Turning schizophrenic better to prepare for the Southwest Con­ ference track meet M ay I and 2, the Texas thinclads split into two squads Saturday, sending units to both the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa and to the Arlington Relays in Arlington. Head Coach Jack Patterson tabbed 14 Orange cindermen to make the trip to the prestigious Drake meet, the ’Horn point majority of producers. including the “ W e're entering boys at Arling­ ton that we feel may help us the conference meet next in week,’’ assistant coach Jack Daniels said Thursday. He w ill take “ about 25” ’Horns with him to Arlington Saturday. TH E M ID W EST entries left Thursday morning a n d will be running in fast company (no pun intended) as the nation's track powers chase the individual titles a t thp sixty-first running of the annual track classic. Texas’ best hopes seem to be in the distance medley and two- mile relays where three SWC Tour Vets Share Tallahassee Lead TA LLA H A SSEE (A P ) — Tour veterans Jack McGowan, Harold Henning and Terry D ill fired five-under par 67’s to share the in the $50,000 le a d first-round Tallahassee Open Thursday. Battling a blistering 90-degree suns lune, trio grabbed a slim one-stroke advantage over young Harry Toscano at 68. the r e n r i j (taca&uutk. " M E N ’ S W E A R 7777 G u a d a l u p e OPEN EVERY THURSDAY Till 8 p .m . M on.-Sat. 9-5:30 KODAGOLOR PRINTS Film In at 4 P.M. . . . Prints ready 48 hours later at 4 P.M. 1st quality prints. See our dis• play of all the latest in cam ­ e ra s a n d equipment. F u ll repair service. STUDTMAN PHOTO 39th at Lavaca & Cameron Village SCO PRO 609 W 29 games like "g et the student" don't make it here. lf you're tired of paying $1.60 for pitcher of beer that has a two inch head and still isn't full then you should come by our place. W e sell the fullest pit­ chers at the most reasonable prices in town. REGULAR PRICES $1.40 Pitcher Open Everyday at 3:00 p.m. Happy Hour Everyday 4-6 p.m. $1.00 Pitcher Standings AMERICAN LEAG UE NATIONAL LEAGUE White Sox, Yanks Notch AL Victories Player Gains Lead In Champs' Tourney \ u t r n - - T M RANCHO LA COSTA, ■ R A V r u r t T ( Ii/ (AP) — South African Gary Player, the defending titleholder, fired a four-under par 33-3A 68 Thursday and stormed into the first-round lead of the prestige­ laden Tournament of Champions, " I ’m playing the best golf of m y career.” said Player, who h won $61,000 in only six we ks on the American tour. Player had a one-stroke I ad nv on British Open champion Jarklin and Australian I < > C ram pon, tied a t 69, throe under par on the 3.114-yard La ( t Country Club course Arnold P alm er, a three-time winner of this tournament, which carries a $150,000 price I g 1 s year, headed a group of four a t . * ** The others were Dale Douglass, I rank Beard and the season's l e a d i n g money-winner, Lee Trevino. •bick Nick] aug and M asters champion Billy Casper, two of the fop choices for the $30,000 frost prize, each carded 71. Player, one of four men to sweep all the world's m ajor ti­ tles, had a six-under par until ne played two of the last three » the flag for another birdie two on the seventh. Tne crew-cut little champion, who had plainclothes policemen through his gallery, scattered started a string of four consec­ utive birdies with an eight-foot putt on the ninth. G ary P la y e r ..................................... I was so excited, so charged up, I kind of rushed it a little bit,” Player said. "I could have had a 63 and should have had a 66 a t the very' worst.” He canned a 25-foot putt for a deuce on the third hole and put a five-iron three feet from Btu Casper... L a r r y H i n s o n . H a v e Hill . . . O r v il l e M o o d y B o b G o f t l b y . . . l a r r y Z le e l e r . R o n C u e r r u d o M i ll e r B a r b e r . M ike H ill.......... G ardner Du kin Chuck C ourter Detroit Baltimore . Washington B o s t o n ___ New York Cleveland . Minnesota . California .. Oakland . . . Kansas City Chicago . . . . Milwaukee . E ast W. L. 3 P ct. GB — .727 C h i c a g o ......................8 P itts b u r g h 8 S t. L o u i s ....................7 N ow Y o r k ..................7 P h ila d e lp h ia Montreal 5 I 4 4 6 8 9 .667 .636 ,538 .385 ion I 2 4 6U Cincinnati . . . San Francisco Los Angeles . H o u s to n .......... San Diego Atlanta ........... Big Three Carry LA Hopes Against Knickerbocker Depth ALL NEW FILMS (LAST P R O G R A M O F THE SERIES) FRIDAY & SATURDAY AT 7.00 & 9:00 P.M. B.E.B. 150 TICKETS AT H O G G BOX OFFICE & AT THE DOOR $1.25 Announces Three New Programs of 22 Short Films by the World's Leading Film Makers VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Students Sunday Night Special Complete Dinner for $3.00 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak Just present your blanket tax or Auditor's receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional ONLY 2 B L O C K S F R O M M E M O R IA L S T A D IU M NEW YORK (AP) - I t’ll be Los Angeles" Big Three vs. New York’s stream of troops when the Lakers and Knacks meet. .Friday night in the first game of the National Basketball Association championship playoffs. Dave De Busscherp, the Knick’s strong forward, mulled it over Thursday and shook his head ev­ ery tim e lie thought of trying to stop the Lakers’ Big Three—Wilt Chamberlain, Je rry West and El­ gin Baylor. ‘‘They have maybe the greatest forward ever in Baylor,” said DeBusschere, “one of the great­ est guards in West and maybe the greatest center in Chamber- PLEASURE UNITS Bridgestone 90cc - $279 175cc - $425 T W IN — 350cc - $699 GTR - AH P O E prices include oil injection & full w a r r a n t y B R ID G E S T O N E OF T E X A S 453-942 4117 G U A D A L U P E SAL B O A T SP E C IA L ‘339” STARFISH or GOLDFISH N E W .AU. F IB E R G L A S S , R EA D Y TO SAIL WINDWARD SAILBOATS 7 1 ON W. Koenig- L a n e {* Blk*, w est of L a m a r) ■Hi >-9215 o r 4.Y3-1TOH lib r a r y - s t u d y A N I T S F O R R E A L S T U D E N T G O V E R N M E N T - s a u n a bath - P U S J g J P O N S Schroeder ran toward home plate umpire Neal Ballard to protest a play by Texas catcher Tommy Harmon. Along the way, he pitcher collided with Texas Jam es Street and was knocked unconscious. ‘‘I didn't it happen.” see Schroeder said. "My players tell m e there were some fisticuffs.” A Baylor assistant coach said Street struck Schroeder with a forearm. Texas C^ach Cliff Gustafson said Street was truing to act as saw a peacemaker when he plate. Schroeder the ‘‘T h eres no possibility Jam es threw a punch,” Gustafson said. ‘ He (Street) didn t even raise his arm s,” charge The m atter may be discussed the SWC May I and 2 whop representatives meet in Houston. Howard Grubhs, SWC executive secretary, said the item was not fin the agenda for the meeting because the agenda already had been drawn up before in­ cident occurred. the Grubbs said, however, that the m atter could be brought up ahead of regular business. in­ ‘‘We made some routine quiries like we always do in cases of this nature and we have tho information there if they (SWC representatives) want to* go into it,” Grubbs said. a of COLLEGE STATION (AP) - Houston erupted for l l runs in the first two innnings to defeat Texas A&M 11-0 in the second game non-eonfejVr.ee baseball doubleheader Thursday to the Aggies’ 13-game end winning streak. a nm socked Billy Hodge scoring single the eleventh in inning of the opener to jjive the Aggies a 7-6 victory. In the second game, called after five innings by darkness. third baseman Charlie Aggie Jenkins Iva Stag— loaded error allowing three ru m to score. committed a Houston scored six m ns in the first inning and added five more in the second to ic# tile game. Pat Jamison was the winner for A&M in the opener and Elroy | Othold got the loss. The Aggies, who the I Southwest Conference with an 11- I 0 record, now are 21-5 for the ; year. Houston is 17-14. lead THE C H EAPEST " S N O W J O B " IN TOWN D IA L 478-0964 Many Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SALE V a rio u s kinds, c o l o r s — 50c per t fUXKAMFRIGA’ H! K S S K sa, 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas s tu d y ro o m s W OMEN - ONLY. M EN - ONLY. OR g O F D FLOORS age 8 Friday, April 24, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN 478-9811 2323 San Amenia ‘ ' I •• • ' One of those days? Stop at McDonald’s, 2818 GUADALUPE P O O R G E O R G E , H E D ID N T R EM EM BER THERE W A S a M cD o n a l d ’s i n h i s n e i g b o r h o o d . 7950 B U R N E T RD. 5355 N . 303 E. O L T O R F IN T E R R E G IO N A L APPLICATION FOR [te x a co] NATIONAL CREDIT CARD Name □ Mr. □ MrS. □ Mist CHECK ONE* (WMT NANK) (I N I T I A L ) (L“ T,“M,) Mail Statement to □ Home Address ( N U M B C B A N O S T R E E T ) C ity - - State .zip Code—_ Mail Statement to □ College Address ( N U M B E R A N O S T R E E T ) ___ • B B B « « B * « — ^ S ta te ........... Z ip C o d e. C itv . ... H o m e Phone No._ M a jo r S ub ject P aren t, G u ard ian or N e a rest R elative . .S o cial S e cu rity No. .C o lle g e C lassification R elation sh ip A ddress . ( N U M B E R A N O S T R E E T ) Cl tv S tate Zin Code D ate. .Signature Terms: Full payment upon receipt of statement. Deferred payment plan available on purchase of tires, tubes, batteries, accessories, and other authorized merchandise if requested at time of purchase. RESPONSIBILITY FOR ALL PURCHASES MADE THROUGH THE CREDIT CARD PRIOR TO SURRENDER TO TEXACO INC. OR PRIOR TO WRITTEN NOTICE OF ITS LOSS OR THEFT TO TEXACO INC. RESTS UPON APPLICANT. 0801 Ag* Number of Cards Desired....... . Married? Yes n Na n | ■ £ ■ I ■ - ® ■ m | J Q ■ 8 I I ■ It’snofuntryingtogetastranger to take a check when you’re running short of cash and you need gasoline or other products for your car. It’s embarrassing. Unnecessary. Whatyouneed isa Texaco Credit Card. And here’s your appli­ cation. Just til I it out. Sophomores, juniors, seniors, and graduate students are eligible. Sorry, freshmen, you’ll have to wait another year. Don’t delay, fill out your applica­ tion now. Then mail to: Att: New Ac­ counts, Texaco Inc., P.O. Box 2000, Bellaire, Texas 77401. For the whole story, call Marcus Schwartz at 454-2858. Complaints Office Opened at Jester i i. m U ~ C*4 . . JI - T h e Student Co-ordinating Board, governing body of the women’s section of Jester Dormi­ tory, ha s recently opened an office where Jester residents can voice their complaints. . sent through the ranks of Jester's governing body. If a suggestion is rejected, the student who made it is told why his idea could not be used. Marilyn Orton, chairman of the co-ordinating board, said idea for the office came about when students voiced displeasure at the ineffectiveness of Jesters student government. “ We in the government decided there was not enough feedback. Now residents can come by the new' office and give us their suggestions for speakers and films as well as their ideas for making our student government more effective,” said Miss Orton. She added that suggestions are The office w ill be more func­ tional next year when it also will have material posters available for anyone's use,” Miss Orton stated. “ W e’re also hoping for more interaction with the men s .section on this program next year.” for Miss Orton said that though the office is mostly concerned with problems of residents, anyone is welcome to voice his views. Office haul's are from 3 to 5 p.m. on Tuesdays and from 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursdays. Jester Pharmacy Filing Deadline Slated for Deadline filing for two Pharmacy Council posts to be filled by independent Pharm icy Students has been set for 4 p.m. Friday. The election will be held Wed­ nesday with two places to ho filled from each professional year. Applications are available in Pharm acy Building 106. Pharmacy elections will be the conducted according University Election Code, Nor­ man Anderton of the pharmacy school said. to The University derives 60 per cent of its financial support from state appropriations, 20 per cent from the Available Fund, 12 per­ cent from student fees, and 8 per­ cent from miscellaneous sources. l w how it is at Hardin North • Three blocks west of University campus • Fully furnished spacious apartments: two bedroom one bedroom efficiency • Anelectric kitchens • Sensible rpund-the clock security • Swimming pool • No hour restrictions • Male guests until midnight weekdays, 2 a. rn. weekends • Restaurant • Shopping mall (soon tp open) • Maid service • Launderettes on every floor • Individual climate control • Parking garage • Roof-top sun deck Come and see for yourself. Hardin North is different. Convenience, independence, security in a new s fy le for living. Ifs the real thing. Coke. ’ T r if le m a r k * > >, , > Real life calls for real taste. For the taste of your life— Coca-Cola. jtT.'v Bo ttled under th e a u th o rity of tho Coca-Cola Com pany b v : A n sti tin Coca-Cola Bottling Company FRIDAY & SATURDAY, APRIL 23 & 24 C O N C O R D — 300 tape recorder with purchase of this Parte, system. (Tri. 4 Sat. only.) P ER F EX RTA-300 H a n d s o m e 30 w a tt stereo A M / F M re c e iv e r. M a g n e tic phono and in ­ puts, stereo h e a d phone jax and in clu d e d . G r e a t w alnut fo r the small sp a c e and sound easy on the b u d g e t. ta p e case I — M a t c h in g stereo P E R F E X speaker system. H e a v y m ag nets and 8 ' w oofers. O n ly 8 "x 8 " x l5 " . Concord i£300 SPECIAL CLEARANCE SO N Y - CLOSEOUT R e g . $ 3 4 9 .5 0 S O N Y Auto Reverse N A S A Called Indifferent Resigned Scientisf Says Lunar Landings Technical Stunts assistant professor (Editor’s Note: Brian O'Leary is of a n astronomy at Cornell University and author of the forthcoming book, “The Making of an Ex- Astronaut.”) B y BRIAN O’LEARY (c) 1970 New York Times News Service The return of the astronauts on the crippled Apollo 13 was a magnificent achievement. The world watched and admired the great courage and proficiency of all hands. But now that they are safely on earth, was their aborted voyage really necessary? the moon to in Two years ago, I resigned from tile scientist-astronaut program prim arily because of NASA’s indifference to science its manned space efforts. Since then an impressive array of scientists associated with the Apollo pro­ gram have also resigned for similar reasons — Chief Scientist Wilmot Hess; Seientist-Astronaut F . Curtis M ichel; Director of the Lunar Receiving Laboratory P. R. Bell; Principal Investigator of Apollo Lunar Surface Geology Eugene Shoemaker; Curator of the Lunar Samples Elbert King and Geologist Donald Wise. It seems utterly incredible that so many well-respected scientists could resign at a time one would suppose to be their finest hour — the return of the first rocks and detailed pictures from the lunar surface. Do these people have a reasonable complaint? Definitely yes, in my opinion. Shoemaker, now chairman of Caltech’s Division of Geological Sciences, quit his Apollo work “ out of deep concern for the direction of the nation’s space goal.” He described Apollo as a “ poor system for exploring the moon, and added, “ the same job could have been done with un­ manned systems at one-fifth the cost three or four years ago.” The resignations of Michel and myself involved another signifi­ cant factor: our wait for a trip into space would have been at least a decade — perhaps for­ ever. As Michel put it, there is simply no pressure on the as­ tronaut office to fly a scientist nor are there enough missions to go around for all 45 astronauts. Meanwhile, during the endless wait, most of our assigned work would have consisted of space­ craft engineering and jet flying which is risky, t i m e - consuming and costly. If given the chance, the scien- tist-astrnnauts would add a new population to space experience from an otherwise homogeneous corps of pilots. Each scientist has had years of training, not just a few hours of instruction, to perform space experiments in his specialty. Though the profes­ sional test pilot is better qualified to command an Apollo spacecraft on ifs treacherous journey to the moon, he cannot be expected to be a skilled, meticulous observer in space. There have been, in fact, numerous examples of Petroleum Executive Outlines Crisis Facing Gas Business By FR ENC HY GOLDING News Assistant Federal regulations of natural gas field prices have lessened for exploration and incentives the United development and States is facing a major shortage of natural gas. John E . Hodges, an American Institute, executive, Petroleum the University who spoke at Thursday, said regulation by the Federal Power Commission “ has resulted in the perpetuation of depressed price levels and has encouraged consumption, but at the same time, has kept field prices of natural gas at unrealis­ tically low levels since 1954.” “ As a consequence,” he said, for the first time in the history of the United States, production a c t u a l l y new discoveries in 1968 and 1969.” exceeded Hodges said that unless price controls are removed or much higher prices are permitted that would encourage gas producers to explore and discover, only depressed prices, supply shor­ tages and an ultimate need for rationing w ill result. He underscored the approach­ ing crisis in the supply of gas by pointing out that the ratio of known reserves to production had dropped to 13-to-l in 1969 from 30-to-l in 1945. “ Regulation inefficient solution for an industry that is naturally Prices serve as a sufficient rationing device in all free markets,” he said, “ and constitute the most ef­ ficient mechanism for deciding which supplies wall be consumed by which user's.” competitive.’ Is an a suggestion to the present supply crisis, Hodges said the stimulation of greater domestic production of natural gas offers tile most promising long-run alternative. to of There are, however, enormous await gas volumes “ Probable un­ d i s c o v e r y . discovered reserves are esti­ mated at 260 trillion cubic feet, possible reserves at 335 trillion speculative cubic and reserves at 632 trillion cubic feet.’’ the director stated. feet “ The termination of regulation might be phased out over the time, but the more rapidly it is abolished, the more rapidly gas supply is likely to increase. “ The approaching gas supply crisis is almost certain to in­ tensify before it is alleviated, no matter what is done in the in­ terim,” Hodges concluded. j ‘UNWANTED PROBLEMS’ REMOVED PERMANENTLY BY ELECTROLYSIS Stop Tweezing, Shoving, W ooing to riej for tem porary rem oval. •r w in g Depilo- fo r Complete com plim entary consultation— D ay or Inform ation and Appointm ent Iven in g tor CALL 452-5656 JEAN’S ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO ju. M I1S- J,f»A N D A R T O N _ T E C H N IC IA N . A ccred itee by 1969 Director o f Professional Electrologist* 7201 D augherty — • • • • • • • • • • • • • WATERHOLE No. ONE • 2900 DUVAL • J HAPPY HOUR DAILY • 7 - DAYS A WEEK % £ Z 4 *6 P.M. I OO a f SCHLITZ or J BUDWEISER I. pitcher J r*9- price $1.30 J POOR BOY S A N D W IC H ES 50c each astronaut error periments. in Apollo ex­ Certainly the public would like optimum knowledge from every it. half-billion dollars spent on each lunar landing now that the drama of Apollo l l is over. As Ralph “ That’s more Lapp puts money than Congress grudgingly bestows on the National Science Foundation each year for the support of all basic research in the United States.” Yet it ap­ pears that the landings have become one technical stunt after another, with only minor increments in scientific return. lunar The reason behind NASA’s “ operational overkill” goes back to 1961, when a crash program was launched to fulfill John F. Kennedy's goal of a manned lunar landing by 1970. Like the Pentagon. NASA has adopted the problems of bigness, inflexibility and vested interests. After the magnificent o f Apollo ll, if is pretty hard to deflate tile balloon overnight. achievement 5 et, I feel deflation must lie done, and done soon. The space agency is now under careful congressional and public scrutiny and the lunar landings are lack­ ing both tho luster and scientific return to justify the cost. viable In my opinion, if NASA wants space to continue a program, it must for once listen to the scientists. We should en­ courage science looking for a mission rather than a mission looking for science; we should ask, how can we best perform a given mission, manned or un­ manned, not what can we do with the man; and we should start t linking of collaboration with the Soviet Union now that the big race is over. Tn those times of Conflicting', uncertain goals both inside and outside NASA, I think the unman­ ned planetary' program provides a good exam ple of what c a n be done. Fine Arts Council Seeks Applicants Applications are being accepted for Fine Arts Student Council candidates for president, vice­ president and three m e m b e r s from each department. Applicants must be registered in fine arts and have at least Iii hours of credit. Applications should lie filed in Art Building 222, Music Building 206C o r Drama Building 101. Call Keith Math, 4714655, or Melanie Harris, 444-8934, in- formation. additional for F lig h ts fo r m e m b e rs a n d im m e d ia te fa ROUND TRIP FROM TEXAS CHARTER JET FLIGHTS Data Depart To Date Depart To f. June 5 Houston London Aug. 13 London Houston 2. June 3 Dallas Brussels July.23 Brussels Dallas A IR FARE G U A R A N T E E D /P L A N E S U N D ER C O N T R A C T /S P A C E LIM ITED 40 Acres Club 2500 Guadalupe/Austin 512-478-8888 Page IO Friday, April 24, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN A 5430 BURNET RD, Rooms Open For Summer Between 400 and 500 women are expected to take up residence at Kinsolving Dormitory this sum­ mer, and all will benefit from changes effected by the Division of Housing and Food Service. Je ste r Center will house men In one section, and participants in various University conferences the other. Conference par­ in ticipants were housed in past in Kinsolving-North, summers and graduate students lived in Kinsolving-South. Both sections of Kinsolving will be open to all women students this summer. Twenty meals per week will be served in the Kin­ solving dining room. A student must sign a room and board contract, with prices ranging from $160 for a double room with com­ munity ba th for six weeks, to $288 for a single room with connecting bath for nine weeks. All prices include room and board. for men Jester Center has rooms avail­ students with able connecting baths between two double rooms. Jester rates range from $179 for a double for six weeks, to $319 for a nine-week single room contract. Moore-Hill Hall, on 21st Street east of Gregory', offers rooms to men students only. Residents of Moore-Hill Hall may eat at Je ste r Center on a contract basis, for $94 for each six-week term. They may eat at an adjacent Univer­ sity-owned cafeteria. There is no curfew in men’s dormitories and women 21 or older have no such restrictions. I residents below 21 Kinsolving years of age who have parental permission will have no hours. i Residence halts furnish and launder sheets and pillow' cases, I and students are responsible for their own t o w e l s , p i l l o w s , ; blankets and bedspreads. Coin - operated washers and dryers are available. Maid or porter service is provided one day each W't-ek. Each room is equipped with a telephone operating the central University switchboard at no extra cost. from In Students may apply for a room In the University Residence Halls at the Division of Housing and Food Service Office, and must pay a $20 deposit which covers possible damage charges, and serves as a guarantee of oc- Mb cupancy for the contractural per- | | || iod. ji | III I) If Yon Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-707$ At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service A ll Brands Checked See the Com plete Marantz Line STEREO,. - TELEV ISIO N • RECORDERS • C O M P O N E N T S 'n diatom High Fidelity" 7530 B U R N E T RD, Dial 4 5 4 - 7 7 7 7 |, ' 6. f,r 47^ S625- on a co ld b la c k bough. Im m a c u la te condition. “ W e t faces ■ b e a d a lig n m e n t; e x tra sp e ak ers- p ien ty tope r e c o r d e r ; n e w m otor, o f tap es. *150. 478-8625. ,5L i : O R S ^ E E x c e lle n t co n d itio n .476- 8530 o r 472-4641. good co n d itio n , s e r v ic e re c o rd , good top' Z O O M L E N S , *1295. 451-1053. A uto f 4.8, 85 to 210mm. 2. m on ths old. E x c e lle n t P o w e r co nditio n. less. a ir, 452- A I R C O N D I T I O N E R V o lk s w a g e n bus. P h ilip fo r W h ile , 1968 258- 1651. D E A D M N E SC HE D U LE S A I L B O A T A N D tr a ile r , ch eap, offer. P h i l ip W h ite , 258-1651. B e s t N o rth C a n tra J e ffic ie n c e i. N e w , car- I p e tad , d ra p e d , co m p lete kitchen; range oven, q a rb a q e disposal, refriq e ra to r. Fu'! bath, a m p le storaqe and parkinq. A- p a rtm e n t m an ag er: 454-6811, 454-8903. VILLA FO N TANA 1951 S a b in e N o w renting fo r summer— Su m m er rates L O C A T E D N E A R L A W S C H O O L Luxury 1 b e drocm . A / C , c a rp e te d , *65/ Cat! a fte r 6 — G R 2-1774 swimm ing poo!, laundry. 5 M IN U T E S . F R O M U T N O W L E A S I N G S U M M E R R A T E S T H E D E L P R A D O A P T S . 303 W . 40TH S T R E E T ’ -arge tovvnhouse B e a u t if u l fu r n itu r e . P l e n t y o f p a rk in g S w lim m in g pool. M a n a g e r A p t. 103 ty p e a p a rtm e n ts . T V C a b le 451-2436 N O L E A S E Largs t new I and 2 bedroom s f.rn is h e d nfurftished. C o m p le te G E kitchen with T ap p en rang e. Poo!, p riv a te bal- conies, extra parking. 453-7608 THE HAMLET Lt h e * c i n e m a Et h e x S N o r t h ™ T v A ha i i a r t ' fu rn is h p d o r u n fu rn is h e d , liv in g rt,-ninX)m S u p sta 'rs. h 'tee and f ,n '1 pass- d o w n s ta irs d in in g tn ro u g h bar. spa cio u s clo sets p riv a te P a tio a n d m a n y o th e r fe a tu re s a re a e S h o w i n g h o u rs 9 a .m . - 6 p.m . N O W ' R E N T I N G for R o o m s F O R R E N T . A R T I S T ’S S T U D I O m o n th . 478-2079 o r 476-8753. R e fr ig e ra te d a / c . O n e blo ck u . i . Sin g le , double ro o m s. S u m m e r f n , , th ju s t o ff D u x a l. C a ll 472-1801. T r a v e l FOR SUM M ER SUM M IT V IEW APTS. I bedroo m , a i r co nditio ned . N e w fu rn itu re . *110 p lu s bills. 1714 S u m m it V i e w 1 E n f ie ld a r e a ) — 4,2-1838 472-0256. P h o n e G R 6-3109 (n e a r L a w S c h o o l) UT S T U D E N T S S U M M E R — F A L L 453 3235. W A L K TO C A M PU S L u x u ry , 1 b e d ro o m ; a / c ; p a n e le d : d ish ­ w a sh e r. d isp o sa l: w alk-in clo set and p a n tr y ; sh u ttle bus route 1. *140 plus e le c tr ic ity . S u m m e r, $115 plus electri- } to C a m p u s . 2 bedroom s, oath, k itch en . P a r k in # , m a id s e r v ir e A v a ila b le fo r 2. 3 o r 4 persons. R e a s o n ­ a b le ra te s. R e n t $130, *150, $160 plus e le c tr ic ity . 453-3235. A V A i L A B L E J U N E 1st tub-show er M a r r ie d co u p le p re fe rre d . N ic e ly fu r­ n ish e d one bedroom a p a r tm e n t w ith good size liv in g ro om , w e lt eq uipt k it­ chen. lo ts of c lo se t space. A i r co nditio ned . A m p le otf s tre e t p a r k in g . U n iv e r s it y sh u ttle b is passes p ro p e rty . *95 p e r m onth, gas a n d w a te r paid. 1301 E x p o s itio n B lv d Sh o w n b y a p p o in tm e n t o n ly . C a ll o w n e r G R 8-4356. tiled both, S H O A L CREEK VILLA 2 bedroo m fu rn is h e d I pool. S u m m e r & K a il *146-$155 p lu s e le c tr i' nio a re a , s p a cio u s g o v e rlo o k S h o a l Creek- a p a rtm e n ts . A /e. ipenings. S u m m e r ty. S e c lu d e d p u - oundx w ith trees 4102 B S h o a l C re e k B h d. 452-8094. R o o m m a t e s N e e d two up perciass fem ales to share a rg e two C a m p u s pool, all $55 Fall. bedroo m a p a rtm e n t close to )n S r ittleb u * ro ute. L a ra e p aid. C a ro l $48.75 S mmer, 476 0255 5-7:30. t F. T A L L b edroo m s h a re a p a r tm e n t E n f ie ld R o a d C a ll 472-2536. one T O S U M M E R S E S S I O N . F e m a le to liv e L a *65 p lu s e le c ­ P a z A p a rtm e n ts . P oo l t r ic it y . J u d y D ra k e . 454-0955. S T U D E N T G R A D l A T E w a n te d b e d ro o m m y s e lf Q uiet, a-c, c le a n . M a y 1. *55. | 474-1317. o r sp a cio u s n e a r U T w ith a p a rtm e n t sen io r s h a re tw o ; to R o o m & B o a r d THE CONTESSA 2706 N.ece* 477-9766 In s p e c tio n In v ite d f o r S u m m e r & F a i l S e m e ste rs S U M M E R R A T E S *125-1155. O n e T w o bedroo m n e a r S h u ttle . P o o l, a ir co n d i­ tioning, paneled. d ish w a sh e r, disposal ca b le . 4200 A v e n u e A. 451-2589. people. A il b ills p aid St. M M E R A P A R T M E N T fo r o ne o r tw o Po o l. N e w a p a rtm e n ts . $135. So uth A u stin . C a ll 442- 244i night. Vi H I T E H A L L C O -O P. S u m m e r openings, g irls o n ly. *25 p e r m onth p riv ile g e s . 2500 N u eces. 478- K i'c h e n 1575. T W O R io G r a n d e . T w o bedroom s, a-c O w n e rs B L O C K S C a m p u s , 2406 telepho ne n u m b e rs on signs, for in k r m atio n. Extra q et W a <;ng a sranca ENVO Y APTS. 2108 S a n G a b rie l L b£ ? rw °m *™ C a rp e te d « a /c - eabli* T V . S h u ttJe b u s B u s No. !. *110 p lu s eleeir.- c ity s u m m e r. *120 p lu s e le c t r ic it y F a l l . Im m e d ia t e v a c a n c y . Q U A R T E R D E C K A p a rtm e n ts . tw o bedroom , * niq u e ? b ath s fro m $140. 476-1292. 2308 tw o A p a r t m e n t s , U n f . G R 6-9363 — 345-2300. S O M E T H I N G D I F F F R E N T THE V.I.P. APTS. W a lk to U T . S h u ttle b u s a t door. S u m p tu o u s 2 and 3 bedroom studios K in g sized 1 bedroom s. S h a s ca rp e ts, w a lk in closets, book ca se s stu d y desks, a /c , ca b le , pool, patio, q u ie t a tm o sp h e re . S p e e d w a y at E . 33rd. A v a i l a b l e ' G a rd e n A p a rtm e n ts b a 'h , p r iv a te co urty; shaded a p a rtm e n t w ith brig fa b ric w a lk shades, - 2 st soon. S tu d io cony, bedroom . *145. 7th (b e tw e e n B a y l o r a g e r 201 o r c a ll 477-6131 2 bedr d e n tra i a to r s n m a n ble 0 *19,'. A \m r>’ apt w ith H om e b y 1114 W , -419< M o n d a y - F r td a y 8-5 . in te rio r. Vi w ith \ loaded le a th e r red . . M A T H T U T O R 153-8161 ’’ v d l , l r A S S 850cu. H u r s t shift. $1500. W e e k e n d s o r a f t e r 5 p .m ., 453-1368 B u s i n e s s O p p . m a s te r ’s d e g ree ■StSDSL.al'-“ jostle*p a M .“ o i , T I n ( l twj «<>.' A ll u tilitie s ex cep t * t t c it v 4316 B u ll C re e k . 454-8018. C O N Q U ISTA D O R APTS. 2101 S a n G a b rie l G R 6-9363 a fte r 5. SU M M ER JO B S IN EUROPE In E n g la n d . S w itz e rla n d , P la c e m e n t a n d G e rm a n s g u a ra n te e d f o r e a r iv a p ­ p lic a n ts . \ n r io u s jo b d e s c rip tio n s p o n d in # up on y o u r in te r e s ts a n d qua- liflc a tlo n s . Jo b s a r e a ssig n e d on a f ir s t co m e, L r s t s e rv e d basis. A p p ly n ow ; 2236 S T U D E N T T R A V E L G u a d a lu p e G R 7-4340 MARK XX 3815 G U A D A L U P E de- B R A N D N E W - SU M M ER RATES 'a 'g e . p a - e ie d Extra M e d ite rra n e a n , I & 2 BR gs. pool, furnishin , built-hs, over sized kitch, aprs. laun- tens, a ° “ ' w ater, -as, TV c a b e pd. $ i 25 U P . Fo r showing by ow ner pne AUSTIN TIGER TRACK 454-6234. SUM M ER RATES $1 18.50 a n d up A lso, c o n tra c tin g fall. P o o l re frig e ra te d a ir, w a t e r a n d gas paid On shu ttle bus ro ute. the fo r E L D O R A D O A P T S . 3501 S p e e d w a y , 472-489,1. i bedroo m $125. 610 W E S T 30th. E f f ic ie n c y $105 O n e ra te s N o Lea s e , w a lk in g d ista n c e sin g le u n d e rg ra d u a te s pets, c h ild re n ro u n d Y e a r P o o ! FR A N C H ISE A V A ILA BLE SU N N YVA LE APTS. r i , _ 1300 S U M M I T Id ea l fo r g roup o f lunche s college S U M M E R RATES — $120 UP young m en to t own and o p e ra te . Ini- ; tial investm en t back in 4-6 jnths. AUSTIN TIGER TRACK Lu x u rio u s!'.- fu rn is h e d l & 2 B R ao>s i a u n d r y a ii built-ins. w a te r gas' p h r . °w 'n e r. M u s t s e e 'th e s e a p p r e c ia t e ' F o r s h o w in g -_ i. ph one — 442-9495 o r 444-5110. G E . P O R T A B L E _stereo ta p e r e c o rd e r Z e n ith p o rta b le *75. ea rp h n and stereo. *25. 4420626 a fte r 5:30. 6300 In te r re g io n a l, N o r th a c ro s s fro m H o lid a y In n N E W ^ U D W I G d ru m s . B e s t s in g le bass , „ ae_t - A U h rd w . a n d ca ses. *550. T r a c y , 4 <7-3984. P h o n e (512) 625-6634 T ig e r T r a c k s , In c . 6L0-SI6I P . O . B o x 531 N e w B r a u n fe ls , T ex . 78130 VILLA A R C O S I SPECIAL SUMMER RATES W A N T E D S A L E S M A N (c o lle g e s e n io r a n d g ra d u a te s tu d e n ts), w e a r e lo o k in g fo r s a le sm e n w ith th re e s p e c ific re q u is ite s — D e s ir e to m a k e m on ey, w illin g n e s s to w o rk h a rd , and to his clien ts. sense o f re s p o n s ib ility u u i. -s a ,c a r e e r w h ic h h as u n u su a l pos­ s ib ilitie s fo r e a rn in g s a n d a d v a n c e m e n t. Se n d r e s u m e to j L . ^ p ry r ? " ? hedroom furnished apart- I ni nt-s- Dishwasher, ca b le T V awtm- hLrKi Lo°!' close 10 CamPus. on Shuttle- bus lin e 3301 S p e e d w a y 477-3996 THE HAMLET X 1-0*' FI- T ip to n , P . O . B o x 830, W a c o , T e x a s . 1100 ¥ ! v R Y / ' 7 , ™ E* C W E M X k H K A o i E D u p l e x e s , F u r n . F u r n is h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d e x tr e m e lv spa cio u s a n d w e ll d e co ra te d ex irem el> S h o w in g h o u rs 9 a.m . - 6 p m, S P A C I O U S F I V E ro o m . C a rp e te d , a i r o nd ition ed , w a t e r / g a s p a id . 1509 442-9323. T r a v is H e ig h ts . *155. 451-9656, QUIET DUPLEX T w o b ed roo m s, a /c , c e n tr a l h eat S u m m e r R a t e : T w o P e rs o n s *110 T h re P e r s o n s *123 . , p lu s u tilitie s b lo c k s no rth o f U n iv e r s it y . 15 , A d u lts _ N o P e ts G R 8-5850 a fte rn o o n s. W a n t e d H I G H E S T P R I C E S p a id f o r fu r n it u r e ra n g es, re fr ig e r a to r s . M A B R Y 'S . 6611 ' N o r th L a m a r . 453-5800 N ig h t s 465-'«06. I SU M M ER RATES A V A LO N APTS. I 100 East 32"d 632 L a m a r G R I G S B Y & CO. G R 2-6234 CO NTIN ENTAL III APTS. r i , S U M M E R R A T E S — $140 „ 4003 R E D R I V E R 1 b d rm , 1 hath and 2 bdrm , 2 bath, a / c and c/h. w a t e r b ill paid, s w im in in # G R 6-S295n 0311 ° ' M ' Bran> " n at i U j S ' h0 0 *- M irgrh ..n ,B R b e au t,i f u llv fu rn . apts — h a (2-dble r i ? h e d ro o m s ). w a te r gas. T V oa- ble Pd. b v w n e r . F o r s h o w in g -- phone la u n d rv . 453-3C81. U N IV E R S IT Y A R E A 476-4095 C A M IN O R EA L-EL PATIO I & 2 bedroom S,:m rrer & FaIJ 2810 Saiado 1804 L A V A C A , tw o B r i g h t bedroom . S u m m e r only. A H u tilities co lo rfu l and c a b le . A-C. *250. 478-7149 TANGLE W O O D NORTH L E A S I N G F O R S U M M E R A N D F A L L M A L E C O U N T R Y G U IT A R P L A Y E R A N D S IN G E R to cu t D e n i'is of m y o r ig in a l song P le a s e c a ll o r w r ite R ic h a r d a t 392-3936 o r 392-6196; .*(0 N o rth G u a d a lu p e , S a n M a r c o s , W A L K IN G DISTANCE u r n „ A p ts. e> \ N O W R E N i IN S FOR SUM M ER S u S in m ent? ninct u ‘ ‘I 2?,9sf a P tS' > B u ilt- in s . pool i V ca b le Dd. b y o w n e r ki * oiz i , , r ° r «b o w in g ph one: M A R K V II — 3100 S P E E D W A Y (2 d b le beds u ru S w a te r, ga . c :__ Sp a c io u s, a ttr a c tiv e 1 * 2 b ed roo m s b ed roo m s h a v e 1-1Y-2 baths. F ire - flr e n ic e fe atu re of 2 hath npart- la rg e pools, • h e au tifu l, e x tr a a ir & heat. G a s, w a te r, T V C e n tra l c a b le fu rn ish ed . $115 1020 East^ 45th 5b G L 2-0060 2 b lo cks H a n c o c k C e n te r L A W S T U D E N T w a n ts s h a re d r iv in g ex pen ses fro m K ille e n d a ily b e g in n in g Ju n e . 526-4359 — 1205 E a s t A v e n u e G, K ille e n . L o s t & F o u n d L O S T T U E S D A Y A p ril 13th. U n iv e r s it y a re a , fe m a le po o d le m ix . C u r ly b la c k ; | w h ite b e a r d ; m e d iu m . L o v e d . 476 9217. L O S T H O L D T is s o t w a tc h on w a lk w a y I f betw een P i e r c e H ali-Tow er-Co-op. found, 472-1393. R e w a r d . F E M A L E M I N I A T U R E s ilv e r pood le un clip p ed , blue c o lla r lost n e a r 29th- R io G ra n d e . R e w a r d . 477-6220. T X . D I P L O M A T - 1911 S A N G A B R I E L - $105 476 4542 476-2511 V A L E N C IA 1801 M A N O R R D $115 478-2364 E M B E R S — 3107 S P E E D W A Y — $ | i n 476-4542 N O W RENTIN G FOR SU M M ER M A R K V 3912 Ave. D $115 h„n tR i n F u r n ' ,A p ts (2 d b le- t w l s ' A l l built-ins. pool, w a te r, gas. T V c a b le Pd b y o w n e r. F o r sh o w in g p h o n e ? 454-3850. S ( T ) m ^ r v ^ A I R e S A p a rtm e n ts . 33rd a n d S p a c io u s, ch e e rfu l O ne bedroom , six clo sets, w a lk in g d is ta n c e T o m G re e n 478 7097?m m e r ra ,C S ’ * 115' w a t e r p a ln a H a m ilto n . 444-2831 a n y t im e M r s M a b v l Sm a ll- w o o q . 892-0727; a f t e r 5 p.m . 8 W O O D S theses, l l t y w o r k W o o d s . 472-4825 a t T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . T h e m e * ' d is s e rta tio n s . M u l t i l lt h Qua- re a s o n a b le ra te s . M rs . T H E M E S , re p o rts , le c t u re no tes so nab le. M r s . F r a s e r . 476-1317 Rea- E X P E R I E N C E D a c c u r a t e tv p is t L o w s e rv ic e . M rs . T u llo g g l , 1 3-5124S Sign 4-month lease beginning May 1st on l-bedroom furnished apartment that regularly leases for $145 00 per month and . . . Lost license and credit ! ^ O W R E N T IN G F O R S U M M E R tonio> Texa^7S205BaAC SlT-'227*223^ M A N A G E R SAVE $25.00./monfh A PT , 106 K. R O G E R S 452-5631 T r a v e l EUROPE or the ORIENT You csn afford to go __ 6 weeks of fun and Summer '70 travel 12 different programs Co. ege credit —- optional C o now pay some later fo r A m e r ic a ? ' M,id^'est R egional D ire cto r SUNDAY, APRIL 29 9 P.M. THE C A STILIA N H IG H LA N D S RO O M for f .rther information, 477-7194. p«fl* 12 Friday, April 24, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Virginia driver’s c a r d s b e lo n g in g to Jo h n W e stb ro o k . T h e c r e d it c a r d s a r e no good H a v e im ­ p o rta n t p a p e r s in it. P le a s e re tu rn . *5 re w a rd . 1601 B B r a c k e n r id g e A p ts. G e rm a n S h e p a r d L O S T B L A C K a n d tan lo n g h a ire d m a le re s e m b le s H u s k ie u r g e n t : N e e d s m e d ic a tio n . L a s t seen 19th and L a v a c a . 472-6315. R E W A R D i H e l p W a n t e d ula*C(n lent S ’J r i a ” i m r Y T ? n UDfT T ° U r ip tere srs a n d V a r io u s ln E n 8 land, S w itz e r la n d . g u a ra n te e d f o r e a r l y ap- .lob d e s c rip tio n s de- qua- on a A p p ly Jp b s art> assig n ed ‘ ,a ” - st'rvcd basis- n o w ! STUDENT TRAVEL 2226 G u a d a lu p e G R 7-4340 M E N . P A R T tim e “ M o te l 1 o r 8 p.m . o nly M r c ' ? r S tim e ^ m m e m ^ T o o ' T p p i V v i l ^ c f f i N I C E E F F I C I E N C Y : N e a r C a m m T T bills p a id , *75.50 m o n th ly y e a r S d T a k e o v e r le a s e . 472-5S96 afternoons H A L L M A R K A PT S. 708 W . 34th $110 B e a u t if u lly A ll built-lns. fu rn is h e d 1 B R apt*. la u n d r v w a te r, gas. T \ c a b le pd b y o w n e r . ’ J L f db,e beds), F o r s h o w in g — p h o n e : 452-9930 T A R R Y T O W N . L U X U R I O U S . sem i-a p a rtm en t-o ffice. ca rp e te d , A d u l t s . R e fe re n c e s . GL2-2000. fire p la c e , E v e n in g s , qu iet P a n e l e d ’ te rra c e , p a rk in g ' ends w e e k DRASTIC REDUCTION! SU M M ER RATES Austin On- Newest and Most Luxurious! Leasing now! plus Luxury Two Bedroom Studios 7200 Duval Call J . A . Kruger, 452-2384 PO SA D O DEL NORTE N ew , u ltra - m o d e rn du plex apt., In clu d es hang ing fire p la c e , p a n e lle d W’ails, slant­ floors, ed b e am ed c e ilin g s, T e rra z z o furni- lu x u rio u s m o d e m ru iiy d ra p e d , tu re and a ll tile bath. 2 bedroom s, a ir conditio ning , c e n tra l heat, m o d e rn kd- chen re- ?gUi.r P xk SurS}P}?r ren t H 3 0 / m o n th : Sept. thru M a y *14o/m onth. N o u tilitie s T e ­ nants u ’lll show. 340S-B W e s t A v e To y a rd / p a tio . p r iv a te L e a s e n o f F ^ i r ° rxTWT ite ,A p a r t m ent R e n ta ls , 1009 F r o s t N a tio n a l B a n k B ld g ., S a n Anto nio , T e x a s , 78205. A C 612 - 227-2231. S U M M E R J O B S IN E U R O P E and Two Bedroom Apartments, EURO PEAN TOUR 22 days departing Ju ly 6tn. $780. Personally escorted by Carolyn Marshall. Call 472-6877 for brochure. SPECIAL SUM M ER RATES S P A N I S H M O D E R N . O n e la r g e bed ro o m a p a rtm e n ts 51st and D u v a l. ....... BLESS YO U 900 L a s t 51st. 110.454-1753.453-6720. ^ S f r t S r t S S S ? N h‘1f:Dr f O U R 8 b arp loo kin g m en. C a r h elp ful. *2.50 p e r hour. A p u lv 7 30 p.m . o n ly 612 L a v a c a . M onday-Tues- d a y o r W e d n e s d a y . , ™ ... : Rosa. O n e bedroo m . $139 50. 4312 D U V A L . L u x u r io u s , q u ie t Casa L o w rates. $109! p lu s e le c trle itv J " i v e r s U y , D o w n to w n 315: s u m m e r 1322. 453-2178. SANDRA FIEDLER Y O U A R E A B IG G IR L N O W ! H A P P Y 21 st B IR T H D A Y S U M M E R L A N G U A G E D O R M S im ­ p ro v e y o u r F re n c h . S p a n ish o r G e r ­ ( oed dining . N a t iv e s p e a k e rs in I n t e r ­ m an . resid e n ce . A p p ly 2103 N u e c e s . n a tio n a l co ok ing. The Micky Baubles, Bangles Tiara Feels Great The Texas Union Entertainment Cnmrnittai presents in concert tu a em m tr DAVIS SHYE U 6 B M IU S E (c) 1970 Xew York Times News Service n e w y o r k - is always given time she cries. Miss America one. The first wears it she usually Mrs. Richard Nixon doesn’t own one and wouldn’t. “I don't want any of that,” she said when the idea was broached. are them and manage The First Lady and the pageant exceptions. Most queen tiaras women who are given to accept r e s t r a i n tears. An their astonishing number have done so. AS IN MOST facets of fashion, there are status tiaras and tile garden variety that do little more than fit the dictionary definition of “a decorative band of semi­ circular ornament for the head, often made of flowers, fabric or metal for wear by women on formal occasions.” The status of the old tiaras is the conferred by u s u a l l y eminence of the former owner (almost any kind of royalty will do) and in new tiaras, price is the name of the game. ‘‘You can’t do much for less than $10,000 —- not with the price of diamonds today,” said Harry L /nston, president of the jewelry firm that bears his name. “We have a few in stock but most of them are made to order in platinum and and diamonds sometimes with emeralds.” AT VAN CLEEF & Appels, in ‘‘tiaras are always where demand," according to Claude Arpels, prices go from $20,000 to $300,000. T h e store’s boutique does, however, carry a gold tiara with semi-precious stones, for $1,000. A practice followed by many women including, so they say, Princess Grace of Monaco, is wearing a tiara on what is called a ‘‘platinum band system.” The band forms a basic semi-circle Television Specials to Cover World's Fair, 'Man's W o r ld ' Owr e l m B y SARA GEORGE Amusements Associate Viewing is great Friday night— that is if you don’t have three exams plus a paper due Monday. Two specials make for good viewing. A tour of the World’s Fair in Japan is the first special at 6:30 p.m. on channels 4 and 42. Edwin Newman is the host. "It s a Man s World,” on chan­ nel 4 at 9 p.m., is the second the evening. Harry special of Belfonte, Richard Benjamin, Douglas Fairbanks, Peter Fonda, Dick Gregory, Yves Montand and Andy Warhol will make guest ap­ pearances for this program. - . . . Additional viewing: 6:30 F ly in g N un 12 E x p o 70 S p e c ia l 4. 42 J o h n n y C ash 7 G e t S m a r t 5, IO N ew s 9 7 :00 B ra d y Bun< h 12 T im C onw ay 5. IO < a lim e n ta l C o m m e n t 9 7:30 G host a n d M rs. M u ir 12 N a m e of the G a m e 4, 42 H o g a n ’s H eroes 5, 7, IO M ovie— ‘W ilso n " 9 S on ^ M ovie— "T h e A ngel W ore R e d ” M ovie—" D a k o ta In c id e n t” 7 H e re C om e the B rid e s 12 ® $ J L 3& lg h O ’B rian S p ecial 4 ABC N e w s S pecial 12 M a rc u s W elby. M. D. 42 10° 12^ 42°* V' t a th e r ' s p n rts 4. 5, 7, 10:30 J o h n n y C arso n 4, 42 M ovie— "H ouse o f D ra c u la ” 5 M erv G riffin 7, IO N E T P la y h o u se 9 The N ake(l D aw n” J - OO M ovie -"R e te n U e s s ” 4 12 T w ilig h t Zone 5 N ew s 7, IO M ovie— "A B lueprint for M urder” on the head and the adornment consists of one’s own baubles. This system allows for greater variety and is, of course, less expensive, but the owners of honest-to-goodness tiaras regard the idea as just a few s t e p s the $500 Miss from removed America Crown. M r s . Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney is ‘‘terribly happy” with hers, once owned by the Empress Elizabeth of Austria, wife of Emperor Franz Josef. “ IT WASN’T ONE of the Empress’ major tiaras,” Mrs. Whitney said candidly. “It was just an everyday tiara br when you wear it, inside you fey ab­ solutely great. A tiara moves a lady greatly.” The everyday tiara has 1,900 diamonds (weighing 180 carats) and 75 rubies and is shaped into wild roses and sparkling dew drops. It is set on little springs ‘‘to wiggle a little with a lovely movement when I walk.” Mrs. Whitney pins her tiara on with four bobby pins and then forgets she has it on. “ I enjoy wearing it because it’s light and so well distributed,” she said. “A heavey tiara can ruin a woman’s evening.” ’Heal' Splits Up; New Group Signed Canned Heat’s performance in Cultural Entertainment Commit­ tee’s Spring Event has been cancelled because of the splitting up of the group. Instead of the Canned Heat, the Electric Flag_ Mike Bloomfield and Friends will be playing. The event is 8 p.m. 53 for students ^y* L Tickets ^ and $3.50 for non-students. FARRELL NORTH PRODUCTIO NS PRESENTS NEIL DIAMOND IN CONCERT SUNDAY, M A Y IO; 8:30 p.m A U ST IN M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M l J J - 4 - 5-00 on tale at lh, t l Record Shop, Montgomery Wards Raymond * Drugs, and Gibson'* (Ben W h it e B lv d . o n lv ) SE N D MAIL O R D E RS TO* Box 1316, Austin 78767 Fusfion Appearing at Le Potpourri this weekend are folicsing- loosing- ers (l-rl Fred Argir, Betsy Bernard and George Ho- herd. die Violinist to Lecture O n Artistic Freedom A prominent violin teacher and concert artist from London will be at the University Monday and Tuesday to present a lecture and a string workshop. She is Ka to Havas, a Hungar­ ian-born violinist, who is founder and d i r e c t o r of the Purbeck Festival of Music, Corfe Castle Dorset. Ignor Kipnis to Give Recital Saturday A top-rank harpsichord virtuoso has been booked to appear in concert at the University'. Igor Kipnis. “ a passionate champion of the harpsichord” by Time magazine, will perform in Music Building Recital Hall Saturday. called Prominent as a recording ar­ tist, he has recorded recitals of French, English, Italian, German and Spanish music as well as the harpsichord and clavichord music of Johann Sebastian Bach. He was nominated for Grammy Awards in “Best Classical Per­ formance” and “Most Promising New Gassiest! Recording Artist” categories his recording of French harpsichord music. 1964 for in Kipnis Ls appearing at tho Uni­ the Department of versity on Music Guest Artist Series. The 8:35 p.m. concert will be ad­ mission-free. Miss Havas’ first Austin ap­ pearance will be at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Art Auditorium. She will speak on ‘‘What is Art­ istic Freedom?” under auspices of the ait department’s Creativity and the Human Spirit Lecture Series. On Tuesday, she will conduct a violin workshop at 7:30 p.m. in the Music Building Recital Hall. rn the workshop, sponsored by the University String Project's lecture series on creative ideas in string teaching, Miss Havas Will discuss some of the ideas developed in her book, “A New Approach to Violin Playing.” Beth the lecture and the work­ shop are open to the public. Assistant Prof. Phyllis Young, who directs the String Project. said Miss Havas, in the string workshop, will cover such sub­ jects as ‘ release from anxiety fundamental and balances to virtuoso technique.” tension and applied Miss Havas, who has been call- ' ed ‘the teacher of teachers,” re­ ceived her musical training at the Royal Academy in Budapest and later studied violin in New ^ ork with David Mendoza. THE CHEAPEST " S N O W J O B " IN T O W N D IA L 478-0964 ( A R e c o r d in g ) WANT A GOOD SUMMER JOB? W I T H A L A R G E N A T I O N A L C O M P A N Y ? H IG H STARTING PAY — M A N Y O P E N IN G S Interviews — Saturday, April 25 7:30 p.m. North Austin State Bank Bldg. (B e h in d A lle n d a le S h o p p in g C e n t e r ) 21 DO N o r t h la n d D riv e o f f Burnet R d . get it together... • Swimming Pool • Chauffeur Driven Limousine • Kitchenette in all Suites at 2707 R io G rande Austin, Texas for university women I * THE BEST IN FOOD AND EVENING FUN That s the combination that has made Trim s Restaurant so popular for lunch, dinner or a stopover before or after the movie. Enjoy the true taste in M exican food from a menu full of tasty specialties, or try a glass of Sangria, Trim's special wine punch that is so popular with an evening snack. SI H I n i i RESTAURANTS' 1507 Lavaca n o F M PML.Y FOR LU N C H A N D D IN N E R [ean-luc godard with "SFE YOU AT M AO rr film at 6:00 & 7:15 pm — union aud. comments by G o d a rd at 9:00 pm sat., april 25 students $1.00 tickets at union box office union film committee. 1411 L A V A C A 472-323: C f te tp w r e d /' la y F R ID A Y -S A T U R D A Y JIM SCHULMAN ELECTRIC FROG PATTI RICKER ALLEN DAMRON SEGLE FRY S^6 d a i l y 0 * b e e r l/f pRICE J a m s e s s io n FRI5DAYmAT CLIFC0 PRESENTS IN CONCERT §P IJ*IT with special guest, Freddie King T O N I G H T ! AUSTIN CITY COLISEUM T IC K E T S. SS OO M a in Floor - »4 OO G randstand. Ticket* on sale et G ibsons - 2101 West Bon White, Montgomery Wards - Capitol P la n , 612 Brazos. Raymond's Drugs - 2706 Rio Grande. The Record Shop Fine Threads - 2908 Guadalupe. Tu'i/rro „GREG0RY GYM.-SAT. MAY 2-8:00 P.M. T I C T O C (U.of Texas Students)—$3.50 (General Public) ON SALE AT: FINE ARTS BOX OFFICE (Hogg Auditorium) & BLOMQUIST-CLARK (Downtown). FALS!AFF BREWING CORP. t h e c u l t u r a l e n t e r t a i n m e n t c o m m i t t e e THE COLLEGE of FINE ARTS — THE AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SOCIETY and THE TEXAS FINE ARTS COMMISSION in cooperation with presents The San Antonio Grand Opera Production MADAMA Victor Alessandro; Musical Director SOPRANO: Maralin Niska TENOR: John Stewart A C.E.C. BONUS FOR STUDENT BLANKET TAX & SPOUSE TICKET HOLDERS ONLY. (Faculty-Staff blanket taxes not included) DATE: SUNDAY, A P R I L 26, 1970 — ACE: MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM TIME: 3:00 P. M. Ticket Drawing Continues at Hogg Auditorium Box Office. Hours, 9-1, BUS SCHEDULE BUSES DEPART 2:15 1:45 2:30 2:00 University Co-Op C arollers Form '' M A K IN G S T O P S A T Kinsolving Dorm S c o S i t i ? . ' “I T S ta id * H e ! B“" ‘ t o u N D ATRmiF l l i r e,li' te,y ROUND TRIP FARE 20c — EXACT CHANGE REQUIRED 20 m;nl,,e, f°"°W!n9 P**""*nce.° 0r*'H'11 Friday, April 24, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Rag, FRIDAY NITE P ly m o u th R o ck ! SATURDAY NITE B A B Y ! Concert Spaced Out 3 Dog Night Defy ' Sweat-!n l.’th A R L O R I V E S O P E N 8:30 P M By M IK E FLUITT Amusements Assistant 478-0292 t t lC X Z Man, were the gotxl vibes ever coming on in Gregory Gym Thursday night. Although’the two- W ILLIA M SHAKESPEARE S A MIDSUMMER NIGHTS DREAM APRIL 24, 25, 30; May 1,2 — 8 P.M. ZACH ARY SCOTT THEATER CENTER 204 EAST 5th ST. RESERVATIONS - 476-0541 Auditions: I DO! I DO! Sat., April 25, 4 p.m. If You Need Ilelp or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service and-a-half hour show began to taxe on the appearance of a “ sweat-in” because of the heat, it didn’t deter the enthusiasm of the near-capacity crowd. B y the end of the concert, it was hard to tell who was having a belter time, the crowd or the people on stage. I guess I should have made a distinction there, since half the people on stage were crowd. of part Momentarily, anyway. the The fun started before the mu­ sic, however, with the traditional Gregory Gym Frisbee Throwing (and Ducking) audience par- N O W S H O W IN G AT 2 D RIV E-IN THEATRES ★ EAST SCREEN ★ BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 SH O W STARTS DUSK • BEST STORY * ggsy S O N G • BEST C IN E M A T O G R A P H Y • BEST M U SIC SC O RE You never m et a pair lik e Butch and The Kid. nirn.)|»|im«iHHnii|imi!iii|itii;iurii;;;ii|ii,ir:»ininii»rnpttfi|i||rin!::nin;,ii;t|c|n[H!Tirn; Godard to Show New Film 'Mao' Jean-Luc Godard will visit the University Saturday to discuss his new til, “ See You at Mao,” and answer questions. The film will be shown at 6 p.m. and 7:15 p.m. in the Texas Union Theatre. Admission is $1 for students and $1.50 for non-students, and this ticket is good for a lecture at 9 p.m. in Union Main Ballroom. Tickets for the lecture only are the same price as for the movie tickets. Film Maker Godard, with Truffaut, Antonioni and Fellini, is one of the most discussed directors in tune with youth throughout the world. “ Breathless,” “ Weekend” and “ Svmnathv for the D e v il” W yler Enjoys Making Films With Social Significance NEW YO RK (A P) — William Wyler still takes a wistful pride in the $60-a-month disability payment he gets from Uncle Sam for damage to his right ear while filming high altitude scenes as a combat photographer during World W ar I I . “ Ifs a shame that only war and common danger bring out the best in men,” he said. But at 67 Wyler, a landmark Hollywood director and producer whose films have accounted for 40 Oscars and 140 Academy Award nominations, is still trying himself to bring out the best in men. “ It is my philosophy that a man should stand up for some-, thing, ’ he said. “ I like to make entertaining pictures, but I also get great satisfaction out of making a film that hopefully can contribute something to the im­ provement of our society’.” Right now he is hopeful that his latest film, “ The Liberation of L. B. Jones,” a drama of lust and revenue, will help the plight of the Negro in the South. A careful craftsman who takes two years or more to complete a picture, W yler has been re­ markably successful in turning out films that ring the cash register whether they are pure entertainments or also carry a message. His work since then has won him 13 personal Academy Award nominations and three Oscars. They were for directing “ Mrs. M iniver,” “ The Best Years of Our Lives,” and “ Ben-Hur.” He has also won critical ac­ claim for such other films as “ Wuthering Heights,” “ Tile Little F o x e s , ’ ’ “ Roman Holiday,” “ Detective Story,” and “ Funny G irl.” What are the chief require­ ments of directing? “ I d say they are a knowledge of your (‘raft and a passion for replied Wyler. your subject,” “ You have to have both. One alone is not enough. “ And that’s a big problem. I t isn’t always easy to find a story or a subject that stirs a passion in you.” ticipation gig. fatalities, without a hitch. 'There being no the concert started The opening group was from Scotland, and proved that the Scotch have more going for them than just their whisky. The group really had some solid stuff, but their lead singer must have won a Joplin Sound-Alike” contest in Edinburgh. “ Janis When the curtain went up for 3 Dog Night, it was a little con­ fusing at first, since there were seven of them on stage, but it soon became apparent which ones were TH E three. It isn’t very often that you see a group give as much as they did. The trio: Danny Hutton, Chuck McGrone (the B IG one), and Cory Wells, and their back­ up men far surpassed anyone s expectations of them. Two of the back-ups have got to receive special mention—Floyd Smeed for his fantastic IO minute drum solo (heavy), and organist Jim m y Greenstone, for his mind- blowing introduction to “ Chest Fever.” And a good time was had by all. Refunds Now Available For Missed ‘Curious’ Students w'ho missed the 5 p.m. showing last Friday of “ I Am Curios (Yellow )” may pick up their refunds until 5 p.m. Monday in the Student Activities Office, Union Building 321. The film arrived late, and stu­ dents holding tickets who missed for this reason are the film eligible refunds, David for M cKay of Cinema 40 said. I T R A N S 4r TEXAS p I M FEATURES 2-4-6-8- IO OPEN 1:45 12200 Hancock Drive— 453 6541 2200 Hancock Drive— 453 6641 ALL SEATS $1.00 UNTIL 5 P.M. W hen the rushing: and pressure start Kettin* te je u . m ayb e von chonta sit fo r°a w h i e V h ^ m n V* Vn" ind ,s « n * y V - f® ' a w h i l e - T h « » •>£. ju L1? * ? 1* * * kse c r e a m a n d p a s t r ie s . *» ‘ he Basem ent and just *, s *en t<> a n d th e c o f f e e o n l y c o s ts |,tlk wi ‘' nS‘°n erode' T,u> »««"•«* th. # I s SP A T H E *AAS E ME N T & £ C O P F E E H O U S E , U N D E R - C A T H O L I C JS T U & fc N T C E N T E R 9 30 - 2 .....................................................FRI. i SAT. TH! .AUS KAM OKUIIUHOA OOMS ThUSTku* tnt Evant BARROR CKrtKWn t H E M A N “ H IS W O R L D H IS M U S I C ! JUHL CARTER SOI CTLM MOTHER MAYBELLE/ TVE CARTER FMRir CML PEfflNS THE TEWfESSEE THREE JSs.'SSr. ,s / I V % PLUS — C O -HIT . . K IT T Y MG LL# A Ift C a in g in ’ Nashville % / c R io to u s Laffsvilje] we 88^ ARNOLD STANG HUNTZ HALL IEO GORG EY "SECOND EID A* ' in Glorious EASTMAN COLOR ' IO R STIEL BUITBR” Q — C0.5TAIRIHC— \'v, SONNY JAMES* CARL & PEARL BUTLER j d U i net JImmY DICKINS • .BILL MONROE M u.cc d ot™ wee* J0HHNr WR,CHT • MERLE KILGORE «HOMI - I jfc OOIIJEW EST • BILLY HALKER • PETE DRAKE SH O W TO W N — WEST SCREEN 'I Added Attraction ER one! JETHRO ONE OF THE YEAR’S I O B E S T ! " —*kex Reed, Holiday Magazine ROBERT REDFORD • KATHARINE ROSS ROBERT BLAKE • SUSAN CLARK TULL T H E M WILLIE B O Y IS H E R E 1 PLUS — CO-FEATURE — m d m PRM. R E U M ilORMlE U18QDU1RRD Robert tufionER , l U l l l l l i l B WINNING...IS EVERYTHING! J I A UNIVERSAL I NEWMAN-EOREMAN PICTURE ■%J IMI M B* C O L O R B O X - O F F IC E OPEN 6:30 S H O W STARTS AT DUSK Ud Madison Ave. PUTNEY S W O P E '' 7 h e T ru th a n d S o u l M o v ie — PLUS — C O -FEATURE - TITLE SONG ON VMC RECORDS Page 14 Friday, April 24. 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN " D a m m i t a l l . W h y is everything ’we’re good at illegal! .acorns WfaMCfOWTf Q.L FA «o a/ V C V N ® . m ix NEWMAN ROBERT REDFORD KATHARINE ROSS BUTCH C A SSIA N O THE SUNDANCE KID I T R A N S * IE X A 5 W rffi ■ biiiiiJl 5601 Ii. Lamar Blvd.—452-1710 OPEN 15:30 • FIRST snow 7:5 nlus! lintl FEAT I RE O P E N 6:30 • S T A R T S A T D I S K plus! CO - E E A T I R E iKM ES nm swum M M m m m m welch m m 20*b Century Fox Presents PAAAflSION ® cot oe by OeLUXE ’THE FUMIEST PICTURE I HAVE SEEN rn AGES !” - N e w Y o r k e r I N C O L O R 2 0 th Cenbry-Fo) HELD OVER! 2nd St Final INTERSTATE NOW! PARAMOUNT _ .THEATRE » lr A T I U I.' s. . F R A T I B K S : I I :*« - 1:75- 3:25 it SS - 7:45 - 9:55 WITH THE UNINHIBITED SEVENTIES COMES PT i so honest and outrageous he ought to shake up the place pretly good. He's not worried about his future. He's almost got it made. When he speaks, you listen You wonder about the freaky things you hear and the people he raps with. Then after all is said and done—you'll figure you should tell your uninhibited friends to go see what y o u ' v e h e a r d . F y £ S l Y O U R E Y E S [.■ •J L T m w o n t b e l i e v e 4 p U J A L L Y O U H E A R J ^ ' J l N T H E l A W f J U . e ft NEWMAN K S S * ! ® ? wmOMEYSferCOtM lr SMI J RAK *£»(* ZZ?’** J R “i - T S S r r * J WMB*! mn* I— ....— IW4MW18UTH r n FREE PARKING JJjTERSTATE DOORS OPEN 5:15 IT R A U S T I N i 1 J ) so c o N e u s s THEATRE F E A T ! B E S : 5 :39- 7:44 - 9:49 j] M W B T E 5 T ACTRESS Of THE YEA1 j 2 oiiBTUtY> IQI stke 3 >dm eqfGM iss _ HAL WALLIS RESTRICTED PERSONS UNDER 18 Y E A R S MUST BE ACCOMPANIED B Y PARENT OR G U A R D I A N I I I I l r J i l l I I A n i l ■ I i i l l 4 m 1423 W. Ben White B W .- 442-2333 ROCKING CHAIR SEATS SMOKING PERMITTED ACRES FREE PARKING ______________ _________________________ T O D A Y O r 't N 5:45 • F E A T U R E S 6 - 8 - IO T^e srron9es» trio ■'"r ever to track a kilter. U.S. marshal w ho never knew a d ry d a y in his life ... A fear!ess' m r J P * Q Te* ° ’' 'a n g e r tH 'sty for bounty money. f i g a n d a g irl still w et b ehind the eons w h o d ido t care w h et they w ere T R of w ^ ° ,h e y w ere a s long a s ,h eT b ad true g rit. P j e j f i am B l i M a w a r d ACADEMY £ JOHN W AYNE I T H E YEAR’S BEST SELLER ABOUT THE TRUE WEST! ■UMH SUK -WO! SHU . SW I** M m ra w w iu n r u tK K im M ens o « « i r s s i» S S £ « a s 5 5 s .'s s .i s = o plus! C O -FEATURE AT EACH DRIVE-IN ( in c o l o r ) COLOR A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION c a d u s n o w e r . IntfoAjting GOLDlO H3V\fl as TONI A* w « jor -s o l d i e HAW N" Bes* Snpp«itta» A ctre sg JACK WESTON SATURDAY Sc'**nc,t*)f bf . Era;. Way By, feltttfdn dick IQC - VITO scorn • mf ME HERVEY I.A L DIAMOND - ABE BURROWS •* BARTLET GREOY & SUNDAY O N LY FEATURES 2-4-6-8-10 M a g g ie Sm ith CO KT MMM* rVTT^SJ*!” -.,_ iSSS S M N S • FRANKLIN • JACKSON - JOHNSON • f i X ' S S B S f g GORDO* CAMfL* «... ■ I III OOO mnutH IOU—PT..c, .V.H..1I ON Km Cl«l„«„c7 .ICu.O. I FREE P A R K IN G A T A L L TIMES I W V FRI. & SAT. NEW ATLANTIS AND HUB CITY MOVERS ADMISSION: 1.50 316 Congress 472-0316 PERSONS BEARING LIVE ARMADILLOS ADMITTED FREE!. . . LEFT REAR CLAWS, HALF PRICE . . . TAILS, ONE FOURTH! Music 9 to 2 or so. OPEN I P.M. STARTS 1:30 P.M. W E E K 5657 NO. INTERREGIONAL HWY. O n ly If id t D isn e y co u ld M I th is in cre d ib le J u le s } erne adventure! Swept up in I pant WAIER SPOUT I Engulfed by a TIDAL WAVE Trapped rn the FIERY OMBU TREE W alt Disney.- J U L E S V E R N E # Air Conditioned ADULTS ON LY Open Weekdays 11:30 — Sun. 1:30 G R 2-0444 "TH AR SHE BLO W S” — I N C O L O B — — And — "SWEET SICKNESS” X - R A T E D c h i l d r e n Under 12 Yrs, $1.00 AT ALL TIMES „ ^ LIEB HAW MILLS ^ S A N D E R S ^ TECHHfCOLOR'Uzs* GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION S* ™ S I 1 P-">. 'Til $ i OO o rtC IA L • 2 p.m. I * FEATURES TODAY 1:30- 3:40 - 5:35- 7:30- 9:30 Art Exhibit Shows Variety one sees a myriad of color, style and technique. Lithographs, drypoints, wood­ cuts and etchings are on display, done by prominent printmakers such as Leonard Baskin, Adolph Gottlieb, Otto Dix and Stanley Hayter, whose prints were on d i s p l a y here earlier this semester. The collections, belonging to Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Clark of McAllen and to the Univer­ sity also include embossed works and collages using fabric and foil. As interesting as the different print-making techniques are the very different styles to which they are applied. A drypoint portrays a free- speech movement at a Univer­ sity, while silkscreen is used for posters or a collage effect. One woodcut allows all the texture of the wood to show while another is a design emphasizing various colors. Otto Dix made a seld-portrait which is autographed to Charles Clark — using lithography. The colors are dazzling — some the prints are bright and of glowing, others use one color for a theme. And on the other end of the spectrum is one embossed print — which uses no color at all, just the texture of Its white page. B y PEN N IE FREELAND Amusements Associate Would you like to learn the dif­ ference between a woodcut and an etching — and see the reason why an artist would choose one or the other? The show of ’‘Contemporary Prints” at the University Art Museum’s Main Gallery would be a good place to observe these differences. Among the 70 prints, f £ I 16606622 f A | • Set for May Day May I has been set as the date for the annual student art auction at the University. The event will be held from IO a.m. to 6 p.m. on the patio of the Texas Union. Should it rain, the event will be moved indoors to the Texas Union Main Ballroom. The features several hundred paintings, prints, drawings, ceramics and sculp­ tures done by students from the art department. A few works donated by members of the art faculty also will be offered. auction art Proceeds go into a scholarship fund for art students. like Persons who would to familiarize themselves with the items to be auctioned may attend I a preview showing Thursday in; the Texas Union Art Gallery. The auction is sponsored by the I Art Students’ Association in cooperation with the art depart-! ment. Art student John Sample is chairman of the auction com- 1 mittee. Faculty sponsor for the ! Art Students’ Association Associate Prof. John Guerin. is STUDIO IV 222 East 6th Ph. 472-0436 R a ted “X ’’ — N o O n e U n d er 18 A d m itte d FOR T H E F IR ST T IM E A N ADULT FILM G O ES B A C K TO X Troubadours \ i varsity hingers rehearse tor a pop concert scheduled at 7:30 p.m. Monday. -—Photo by Steve Hultman , Union Patio Party? You Bef Your Bippy The second annual Interna­ tional Rites of Spring Sweet Bippy Party will be held from 4 p.m. to IO p.m. Sunday on the Texas Union Patio. A dozen bands will be featured in 20 to 30 minute sets. They in­ clude Laughing Kind, Shepherd's Bush, Genessoe, Pall Rabbitt, Contraband, Fat Emma, Pump­ kin. Eternal Life Corporation, Fast Cotton, Whistler and Dick Goodwin Big Band. Two other bands have been in­ vited. In case of rain, the party will be held in the Union Main Ballroom. Food will be sold. Admission is free. The SAIRSSBP is sponsored by the Music Performance Trust Fund and the Austin Federation of Musicians in co-operation with the T e x a s Union Entertainment Committee. TV Special to 'Prove' Invisible Objects Exist By JERRY BUCK AP Radio and TV Writer IsLW YORK (AP) — J u l e s Power, who has spent much of his career producing programs that make science understandable and Interesting, presents next week what he calls his most dif­ ficult show. Power is completing his eighth year as executive producer of "Discovery,” and his production of “How Life Begins” attracted more viewers than any other documentary last season. “The Unseen World,” his new show brings to view things that are too small or too far away to be seen, or slows or speeds action to give a new dimension to things that normally escape the human eye. “The Unseen World” will be shown at 7 p.m. CST May 3, on ABC. things Power said, “This was a much more difficult show than I've ever done before. You’re dealing with that are unseen. You’re dealing with things that you can’t go out and photograph y o u r s e l f . For some of our sequences scientists waited up to 15 years trying to get that precise moment.” The show ranges from highly magnified pictures of insects to the stars to stopped motion of a baseball shattering a window. The script is science writer Isaac Asimov’s first for televi­ sion. C in e m a 40 Presents THE MARX BROTHERS A Day a1 the Races & A Nigh! af the Opera (J comoid* showings of each) 5:00 & 8:30 p.m. Friday, April 24 Batts Hall Auditorium Non-members 75c 2ND RIP ROARING ADULT THRILLER In Color ESCORTED LADIES FREE A N D W EL C O M E LATE LATE S H O W SATURDAY — STARTS 11:45 P.M. TH RECORD ' WEEKI "PICTURE OF THE MONTH!’ -S ev en teen Magazine I J T Interstate’s V A R S IT Y 2400 GUADALUPE NMWMmMMMMWJUMIlJjBManiMMMn m a n NGC THEATRE FOX Theatre» 8757 AIRPOST BLVD. . 4 5 4 -2711 \ HELD OVER 2nd BIG WEEK T O N I G H T H O O K S O P F T J f 5 : 4 5 P . M . F e a t u r e G O O - 8 : 3 0 a n d J O : 15 p m , P I .E W : CALL TH EATR E FOH TIMES SAT! H O W \ SI NOW TH A SM T I S WHAT T H E N E W F R E E D O M O F T H E S C R E E N IS ALL A B O U T !” —Richard Schickel, Lila XA Ctitimy foi t»es<"ts M ASH An Iago Preminger Production Staring DONALD SUTHERLAND ILIOTT GOULD TOM SKERRITT C o r r a l * SALLY KTUXRMAN • ROBERT DUVALL JO ANN PTI UG • RENE W KRJO NO IS Produced by INGO PREMINGER Directed by ROBERT ALTMAN Screenplay by RING LARDNER, Jr. from a novel by RICHARD HOOKER Mum by JOHNNY MAN0U Color by DE LUXE* PANAVtSKX* R E S T R I C T E D U n d e r 18 R e q u ir i n g ac- c o m p a n li ig P a r e n t o r A d u lt G u a r d ia n . What you will see when you see Luchino Visconti's'The Damned' is a motion picture that will be loved and hated...bailed and denounced...but never ignored. Some people will say “The Damned” goes too far. We don’t think so. dk Academy Award Nominee Best Original Screenplay T R A N S + T E X A S N. Y. TIMES. CUE FEATURES 12:25-2:15 4:10-6:00-7:50 9:45 S Interstate’s T A T E 719 CONGRESS AVE Friday, April 24, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page IS T Publishes New Monthly Magazine The first Issue of The U niver­ sity “ Y " Hot Line w ent into the m ails and on Austin new s-stands T hursday. C a m p u s N ew s In Brief BLOCK P A R T Y at 27th and YVhitis stre e ts n e a r C am pus Guild will be held Saturday afternoon with entertainm ent provided by Hub City Movers and E te rn a l Life Corporation. CONSTITUTION AL REV ISHIX COMMISSION will m eet a t 7 p.m . Sunday in the T exas Union F aculty-Staff lo u n g e to discuss plans for revising the Students’ A ssociation constitution. HILLEL HOUSE will m eet a t 8 p.m . Sunday a t 2105 San An­ tonio to view7 the movie “ D eath of a S alesm an ,” with affiliates ch arged 25 cents, all others, 40 cents. The m onthly m agazine Is de­ signed to keep people with both favorable and unfavorable in­ terest in inform ed on the “ Y ” the ex act n a tu re of the program s, said Chad Haywood, m anaging editor a d v e r t i s i n g representativ e. and Haywood explained good com ­ m unication is im portant because “ Y ” p rogram s have often been controversial. “ B ack in the 40’s the ‘Y’ w as catching heck for the M exican- s u p p o r t i n g A m ericans. In the 30’s and 2 0 s th ere w ere other p roblem s.” the describes The first issue of eight pages, w hich 85-year history of th e U niversity “ Y ” and plans for the new building under construction on G uadalupe, has been m ailed to “ Y ” supporters in T exas and across the country and also to 1,200 m em bers of the U niversity faculty. Haywood said the probably publication will double in size in a few months. L E PO T PO U R R I C O FFE E HOUSE is sponsoring Jam boree W eek featu rin g student talen t from 9 p.m . to m idnight nightly through S aturday. M ODEL SEC URITY COUNCIL is through registration holding Monday. U N IV E R SITY .SOCIETY F O R ATHEISM will m eet a t 8 p.m . Sunday in Union B uilding 334 to p ro te st T exas Union policies on Sunday closing. The editorial prom ises that The Hot Line will not be a propaganda bulletin but ra th e r a professional publication th a t deals with hard fac ts. “ It will not profess to be the official organ for the cure-alls for A ustin’s problem s.” J a y Cooke, fo rm er U niversity student and sports editor of The Texan is editor-in-chief of The Hot Line. Haywood is a senior advertising m ajo r from Brow ns­ ville. Gregory Gym Thefts Increase The thief slick-fingered of G regory G ym fam e stru ck again T hursday m orning w here it h urts the m ost; in* the P . E . basket. rig h t G ary S tu a rt lost all his clothes, his glasses, accounting notes and 5 cents, a s well a s his basket contents. F our other and its students to the sam e 10:30 in 11:30 a.m . basketball class had th e ir baskets broken into and lost their m oney, and nothing else. the forced thieves All the baskets were apparently locks, locked with com bination the and com binations. C am pus traffic and security officers w ere called to incident, which investigate they said is a ra th e r comm on occurrence in the locker room s of the gym. the the have last several m onths, In during thefts team athletic during dressing physical education classes in the locker to room s, coaches and instructors. occurred in and practices room s according said Investigators apparently the thieves did not w ant to take rings or w atches th a t could be traced. S tu art asked through a lette r to The Daily T exan’s Firing Line column th a t all his notes and clothes be returned, since the notes and his glasses w'ere of no value to anyone but him self. A ssistant Chief of T raffic and Security W. L. P u rse said he is investigating the possibility of tile thefts occurring in som e so rt of T uesday-T hursday pattern. Financial Strain on Students Hike III-Received Student opposition to the co-or­ dinating b o ard ’s proposed tuition in in crease h as aroused action t h r e e w om en’s dorm itories, A ndrews, Blanton and C arothers. A petition opposing the tuition the bulletin hike ap peared on the ABC dining hall board the a fte r T uesday proposal ap peared in The D aily Texan. news of in One coed said several pages filled w ith a lread y have been signatures. ABC dorm residents also a re Individually w riting and calling th eir S tate to oppose the increase. rep resen tativ es from One resident of Andrews said the increase would “ keep m an y girls to school retu rning next y e a r.” She added th a t she could m anage to finish h er senior increase would y ear, but prevent h er siste r from attending college a t the sam e tim e. the Jose Limon, m em b er of the M oxican-A m erican Youth O rgani­ zation, said his group had taken no action on t:he m a tte r, but would probably discuss it at a Monday night m eeting. Limon speculated th a t MAYO to do probably w'ould be able little m ore than pass a public resolution opposing tuition in crease because of the g ro u p's prior other areas. com m itm ents the in D ave T urner, vice-chairm an of the House of D elegates, knew of no b il ls concerning the increase to he presented at Wednesday n ig h t’s m eeting. He added, however, th a t by nbxt week the House “ m ay conceivably have se v e ra l b ills” on the m a tte r to consider. N either Joe K rier, student body Jones, president, president-elect could be reached T hursday afternoon to com m ent Jeff nor on any action that the Student Assembly might take. Marylin Orton, chairman of Jester Women’s student govern­ ment, and Mark McGee, speaker for the m en’s government, both said neither organization has had a meeting since the news of the increase. Both expect proposed som e discussion on the m a tte r in meetings early next W'eek. Today's Events Noon— G rad u ate School of Busi- n p s s M aster’s Association m eets in Business-Econom ics Building 166 to h ear a speech entitled “ C urrent M anagem ent P ro blem s” by B. H. Sloane, vice-president for Alcoa. I p.m. — Moslem Students As- s o c i a t i o n m eets in the M ethodist Student C enter for talk by p ray e rs and a tne president Mohsen on Social Jih a d in Islam . 2 p.m. — D epartm ent of Physics sponsors a solid sta te sem in ar on “ Liquid C ry stals” with Prof. C harles W ade in Physics Build­ ing 301. 3 p.m. — Faculty7 W ives of the School of Comm unication spon­ sors a Com m unication Week picnic in P e ase P a rk , with m usic by M organ, bar-be-que and beverages available for $2 a person. 7:30 p.m. — Society for Indi­ vidual L iberty m eets in Hogg Building 14 to h e a r Students’ Association President-elect Jeff Jones and Rod M anis debate “ Two R adical Views of Society A fter L iberation: Laissez-faire or Socialism .” 7:30 p.m. — C am pus S partacist Club m eets Business- Econom ics Building 51 to dis­ cuss culture and revolution. in 8 p.m. — Students International in M editation Society m eets G arrison Hall I for an introd­ uctory lecture by Bob B ran t on “ Philosophy an d Techniques of T ranscendental M editation.” 8:30 p.m. — Chinese Students As sociation in its re g u lar m eeting in Union Building 202. Where is Your Brand M ade? BUDWEISER BEER is made at HOUSTON, FALSTAFF BEER is made at GALVESTON, JAX BEER is made at NEW ORLEANS, TEXAS TEXAS LOUISIANA LONE STAR BEER is made at SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS MILLER BEER is made at FORT WORTH, TEXAS PEARL BEER is made at SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS SCHLITZ BEER is made at LONGVIEW, TEXAS fjattBel snit (grpfel B u r st unit U lm anil A tm n ap ifm EXCELLENT GERMAN FOOD HAPPY HOUR DAILY 2-5 p.m . and a fter 9 p .m . 64 OZ. P IT C H E R — P R E M IU M BEER 25 409 West 30th ONB BLOCK EAST OF DRAG | WEEKEND SPECIALS!!! Specials g o o d through Sunday, A p ril 26th at all Austin area 7-Eleven Stores. O A K FARMS BUFTERMiLIC 2 Q 'A GAL. CARTON M O A K FARM S SHERBERT 'A GAL. CARTON 59 39 IVORY LIQUID 12 oz. BO TTLE SA VE 6c P IL L S B U R Y R E F R IG E R A T E D C H O C O L A T E C H IP COOKIES Package makes 3 - 4 dozen. LETTUCE F R E S H L A R G E H E A D S S A V E lOc 49 19 p a r k a y • P IL L S B U R Y n u iN o K T J A C K H U N G R Y J A C K Margarine ^ g c BISCUITS 7 7 ty2 oz. C a n ML rn 1 lb’ plcg’ R A T H Breakfast L IN K SAUSAGE 4 8 oz. pkg. R A T H Sm okey Q < SAUSAGE A O < m 12 oz. vac. pack. SAVE 2 c S A V E 20c RATH LUNCHEON MEAT 4 g 6 oz. vac. pack JOY Liquid 12 oz. bottle45 D E T E R G E N T For Dishes CASCADE coe D I S H W A S H I N G D E T E R G E N T Reg. size box Recently, we have received many Inquiries concerning beer sold in the Austin market, and where the various brands are actually made. This information is furnished as a public service by: Consumer Committee Austin Association of Beer Wholesalers P«fle 16 Friday April 24. .1970 THE DAILY TEXAN DIVISION OF THE SOUTHLAND CORPORATION