Texas Student Publications By CLIFF AVERY Associate News Editor Things a re n 't much different around Texas Student Publications these days. In the Texas R anger office, the staff is trying to read proofs on issue, attem pting its October to negotiate around piles of papers, chess pieces and the usual litter of m em orabilia from years past. to m istake The Texan editor’s dog still finds the strangest things the new spaper's offices, ami dow nstairs, w orkers on The Cactus are still trying to unload '71 yearbooks as they start work on the ‘72 volume. fire hydrants for in NO ADMINISTRATOR looks over shoulders, and nobody expects one Friday. their clients' T hat’s the day TSP and U niversity attorneys file a will drop trust and dissolution papers with declaration of the secretary of state to end T SP’s life as an in­ dependent nonprofit corporation. law suits and Texas .Student Publications, Inc., drops its “ Inc.” (prompting one office joker to com m ent, How can you have publications without In c.?'' Rut no one noticed) to become an auxiliary enterprise operated in trust by the University. rep o rter’s to move In TCP will—in the course of the next two weeks— in convey to the U niversity m ore than $531,000 bank accounts and investm ents, says Business M anager Loyd Edm onds, ‘‘but they ll be held for our use.” FOR 50 years a nonprofit corporation, T exas Student Publications rejected last su m m er a reg- ental bid to rec h arter as a corporation, citing a controversial “ self-destruct” clause. The clans** the new c h a rier would have dissolved the corporation had TSP received a court ruling nullifying any of the new ch arter. in Tho TSP Board of D irectors claim ed in­ dependence and faced a two-way court b attle with the regents. The U niversity governing board (•fea re d jt was the solo owner of the corporation's assets when the ch arter expired July Ii—despite a ch a rier extension by .Secretary of S tate M artin Dies Jr. TSP claim ed censorship. Then surprisingly a settlement, was announced at the Sept. IR Board of Regents m eeting. TSP assets passed in trust to the U niversity for student, publications, and the present TSP Board will se rv e as an ad interim board until six elected students two (four from journalism departm ent and the three a t-larg e), journalists replace it June I. faculty and two professional NOW, AS TSP self-destructs to rim* from the ashes as a U niversity subsidiary, th e re 's not really much change. U nless you no tic e t h e little thin gs. Like noticing in the Cactus office, there's the prevalent memo on the changeover from Edmonds. Editorial T exas Student, Publications, Inc., dissolves todav and will no longer exist as a private nonprofit corporation. Tt will °n te r a joint trusteeship with the U niversity Board of Regents wherein both bodies will co-operative publication for the students of this cam pus. charged with be Throughout the b attle with regental powers. TSP, Inc., guided The Texan well, protecting its status as a viable, on-cam pus new spaper. Under TSP, Inc., The Texan has alw ays been free of censorship and prior restra in t, a high-quality publication of. by and for the students. We hope the tru ste e agreem ent will yield the sam e. A scraw led addendum proclaim s, “ What a Rip­ o f f ! ” fill out “ applications'' Like noticing Texan staffers searching for pens to for U niversity em ­ ploym ent, a form ality as they already have their jobs. Like noticing furniture and office equipm ent— their TSP the emblazoned with tags proclaim ing are which once carried ownership—now U niversity crest. THE TSP tags now appear only as souvenirs on a few keyrings. S taffers still congregate to discuss dtp of the day—as they m ust have hack in in the days of patron s a i n t Willie Morris. issues '21 and they talk with THIS TIME tongues-in-cheeks about plans for the change-over day. One staffer suggests black arm bands. Lanky general reporter John Pope to run pictures of (TSP attorneys Joe) Patting and (Tom) Gee and their fam ilies on the beach in Acapulco.” thinks. “ We ought Cactus editor Jan Andrews worries about a change the way her staff gpfs paid. Cactus section editors will have to get wages as U niversity em ployes instead of the traditional scholarships. in THE BIG change comes in t h e operation of the TSP business office where congenial e m p l o y e s a re still able to smile from under a deluge of form s—at least three for each of 200 TSP em ­ ployes. Edm onds, with a slight im patience that inflicts itself on anyone dealing with m assive paperwork, points out TSP can no longer handle petty cash and m ust he subject to the routines of the ac­ counting and b u rsa r’s office. Traditionally, thp use of —30— d e c ig ra m the end of a story. The ‘‘turned rules” between the columns are used only upon death of someone close to the newspaper. “ As a corporation, w e're used to ordering what w e need and paying for it. Now we h a 'P rn go through the purchasing dep artm en t.'' he says. And most of TCP's em ployes express som° irritation at the loss of those “ little things” —these little things one hardly notices. Not being able to go over to the U niversity Co-Op to buy a pen with funds from petty cash. Not getting paychecks friend—but from w aiting for the U niversity to crank out its un­ bendable. “ unspindle-able” and unm utilatable cash. it u p ' “ Before, we had a little family business operation. Now w e’re p art of the b u reau cracy .” thp m anaging R anger editor Jack Stockton editor—your sum s T h e Da ily Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas at Austin SZZSL XI ‘ sexiBCi 9C*?S<7 xog *o‘d •oui cJ3}uao * Vol. 7!, No. 59 Ten Cents AUSTIN , TEXAS, FRIDAY, O C T O B E R I, 1971 Sixteen Pages 471-4401 'Dismayed' Mutscher Stays in Leadership By DOTTY GRIFFITH General Reporter Week-long Capitol guessing gam es ended T hursday when indicted House Speaker Gus M utscher said he would not relinquish the speakership at this tim e and would rem ain on the Legislative R edistricting Board. the House has a Tn a statem ent released early T hursday, is t h e 'consensus the* p M utscher r ad, “ It the speaker of legal, nondelegable obligation to sit as a m em ber of the Redistricting B oard.” M utscher said the decision had come after conferring with “ the parliam entarian, Bob Johnson, with knowledgeable House m em bers and with counsel; in addition we have received a report from the attorney general's office.” now. My political future Is not part of our thinking at this tim e." but he added he has “ no thoughts of stepping down in the future.” Describing his m em bership on the LRB as “ my statutory (which) cannot be delegated.” M utscher said. “ I w ant to m ake a fair contribution to the assignm ent before m e .” responsibility House advisers, resign or colleagues, political friends and foes had reportedly been ad­ vising M utscher for the last week either speaker pro to appoint a to tem pore the sit redistricting hoard. Rep. Tommy Shannon of F ort Worth, the current speaker pro tem . who was indicted along with M utscher, was these to have been replaced under plans. his place on to in M utscher indicated T h u r s d a y th# issue of Shannon's rem oval rested with the legislator. “ This will bp a F ort Worth decision for Mr. Shannon,” said M utscher dismissing for Shannon’s resignation. the possibility of asking M utscher also said ho expects “ p ressu re (to resign or appoint a tem porary speaker) will somewhat cease.” following his an ­ nouncement. He said. “ I will ask m y colleagues to assist in establishing an en­ vironment where a fair trial can bp held.” It is expected, however, there will b# a move among certain House m em bers to the L egislature oust M utscher when to ap­ reconvenes propriate funds for the second half of th# biennium. special session in a Senate It U.S. Sets Pullout Date POW 's Released W A S H I N G T O N ( A P )-T h e Senate renewed T hursday its call for total U. S. w ithdraw al from Indochina, setting a six- le a d e r month deadline after D em ocratic Mike Mansfield appealed to “ bring this horrible w ar to an end.” for action “ Why not try ?” Mansfield appealed. “ What have we got to lose? You've got a lot to gain.” The vote was 57 to 38 rn favor of Mans­ field’s am endm ent six-month to deadline—which would not be binding on P resident R ichard M. Nixon—contingent on release of American prisoners. set a “ You can’t stop the w ar by an act of Congress of this kind," Republican I>eader the Nixon said, expressing Hugh Scott A dm inistration’s contention am endm ent is potentially harm ful. a w aste of the M ansfield time—and Scott's plea was echoed by C hairm an the A rm ed John C. Stennis, D-Miss., of Services Committee. “ E very tim e we pass this am endm ent in this way we put obstacle^ in our path, and the enem y,” Stennis said. lend encouragem ent to Noting M ansfield's am endm ent to the $21 billion m ilitary procurem ent authorization bill, like one with a nine-month deadline passed last June, faces House opposition stalem ate, and a Stennis said to p a s t it as separate legislation. it would be b etter conference possible Urges Nonviolent Force Shaking his fist at "d o m e stic oppression," D avid Dellinger in a lecture Thursday night compared Attica killings to destruction of Vietnamese villages. Texan Staff Photo by JOHN I a s HfcfcKi SI* Stat© C om ptroller Robert S. C a lve rt (I) whisper* to H ou se ' Speaker G u s M utscher at Thursday m eeting of the Legislative Redistricting Boafrd (LRB). The speaker ended a week of spe- c o a tio n by announcing he will continue to serve on LRB. Strictly off the Record B Views House Division h Speaker Steals Show Rep. W. J . “ Bill” Blythe J r. of Houston w arned. “ I believe it will be taken to court lf you rom e up with anything except single­ m em ber d istricts.” This m ay not be the case, as the Suprem e its opinion Monday Court pointed out ordering LRB to redraw district linos. in The justices stressed the high court Is “ not to be understood as proscribing m ulti­ m em ber districts within a single county in the absence of some discrim inatory ef­ fect.” WITNESSES districts—a plan didate would nm testified produce this “ discrim inatory effect.” favoring single-m em ber in which only one can­ from each d istrict— d istricts that m ulti-m em ber Rep. Dick Reed of D allas, a m em ber of the “ D irty 30” reform coalition, s a i d m ulti-m em ber districts keep representatives of m inority groups from being elected. D allas has one black representative—Rep. Z. W. Holmes J r .—but with single m em ber districts, there would be “ at m aybe four blacks elected said. least three, in 1972,” he With through the election of minority group single-m em ber representatives these legislators would bp “ far districts, m ore people's of d esires.” and the voters would he “ closer to the people who represent them ," Reed said. knowledgeable the MULTI-MEMBER districts are wrong in concept, said D allas County GOF Chairm an Tom Crouch, because they “ put pow er in the hands of very few people. Tf we had single-m em ber districts, we would have morn blacks the L egislature.” and Republicans in Crouch's D em ocratic counterpart, E a rl Luna, opposed this view. Saying m ulti-m em ber districts represent “ an Am erican m elting pot,” he m aintained they “ a re the surest guarantee that there is no discrim ination in politics in D allas.” to THE SPEAKER who has been Indicted on two counts of bribery, was 20 m inutes the 9 a.m . T hursday m eeting. late th at Bist. Atty. Bob M utscher explained Smith had instructed him at T ravis County Courthouse for arraignm ent, but upon M utscher’s arrival. Smith told him no action would be taken Thursday. to appear to According Smith, however, the arraignm ent date had been set for Oct. 7 in a m eeting early thus week with Judge Tom Blackwell and M utscher’s attorney, F ran k Amloney. a g a i n surrounded been the case since the were brought in Sept. in­ As has 23, dictm ents by M utscher was m em bers of the press when he stepped off the third floor Capitol elevator on his way to the LRB m eeting. M utscher spoke to the press twice more—during a 15-minute break the in conclusion. the m eeting and again at EACH TIME he stressed his desire for “ a fair trial. T hat's all I w ant at this tim e.” A tired-looking M utscher told reporters, I ’m I’m disappointed “ I'm hurt, dism ayed, but innocent.” He said, however, “ some real good is going to come out of this tria l,” in that acquittal would clear his nam e. and I'm M uncher deferred further com ment on the upcoming trial, for which no date has yet been set, to his Austin attorney. Maloney also w as uncom m unicative on the m atter, saying, “ We don't m ake any com m ents on pending litigations.” ASKED WHETHER his resignation would be forthcoming when the LRB finishes its job O rt. 23. M utscher said, “ I w ant to put political plans for the future aside right Dellinger Blasts Oppression By IO CLIFTON News Assistant “ How can we love our brothers and sisters in Vietnam whom we have not seen if we do not love our brothers and sisters in the ghettos and prisons and kitchens of America whom we have seen?" veteran pacifist. David Dellinger asked an estim ated 1,000 persons in the Texas Union Main Ballroom T hursday night. Presented by the Union Speakers Com m ittee and D irect Action, the “ Chicago Seven” m em ber outlined plans for a fall antiw ar offensive. Dellinger em phasized the necessity of gearing the fall offensive toward a combination of "struggle against dom estic oppression'' as well as against the V ietnam w ar. He said th e sam e basic a t­ titude underlies both dom estic and foreign aggression. D ellinger stressed the use of nonviolent force when talking about the fall antiw ar offensive. He said, “ It’s very easy to get discouraged and decide to turn to arm ed struggle. But we can 't afford the illusion that we would win by resorting to violence.” He also cautioned the audience against thinking they could “ cure the sickness by instant demonstrations. Even ii you get 73 percent of tile people against the w ar, you c a n ’t change attitudes all of a sudden.” W hat is needed, he continued, is new relations and now* institutions. Dellinger drew hearty applause when he criticized the New Left for no t living up ‘‘to its early vision of avoiding rhetoric.” and when he said New Y ork's Gov. Nelson Rockefeller should be indicted for m urder for thp deaths at Attica Stat? Prison. “ The thing that offended Nelson Rockefeller was that this riffraff who revolted” wanted to see him, Ppllinger continued. He com ­ pared the Attica killings to a search and destroy mission in Viet­ nam in which a village is destroyed "in order to save it." Dellinger, who spent three years in prison for refusing to serve in the arm ed forces during World War II and has been imprisoned several tim es since for antiw ar activities, said he believes prisons should be abolished. Refering to prisons as “ crim e factories,” he said, “ we m ust get over the notion that people who break the law are unequal or of lower m orals. I don't advocate robbing banks, but the bank robbers I ’ve met have at least as m uch sense of social solidarity as the bankers I ve m e t ” Bv .jo h n p o p e G eneral R eporter The issue of single-m em ber versus multi- m em b er legislative districts w as the official topic of the Legislative R edistricting Board s (LRB’s) hearing T hursday, but the principal the spectators and reporters was House Speaker and LRB m em lier—G us M utscher. interest of M utscher arrived at the m eeting 20 m in­ utes late explaining to reporters Dust. At­ torney Boh Smith had told him to report to the Travis County Courthouse for arraign men-t. The speaker is under indictm ent on bribery charges. When he reached the courthouse with his attorneys, “ the district attorney informed the th a t he was not rea d y for action,” M utscher said. judge and my counsel MUTSCHER SAID he will sit on the that he does not redistricting board and “ plan to walk out on my duties, thereby squelching rum ors he might step down from office The speaker, the only URR m em ber known to favor m ulti-m em ber districts, sat silently throughout the session as Texans from Dallas and Houston offered their and m ulti-m em ber single- opinions on districts. M utscher wrung his hands and visibly paled when w itnesses sp o k e rut strongly against any typo of m ulti-m em ber district plan. One of these was form er S ecretary of S tate John L. Hill of Houston. “ I know that single- for a certainty m em ber d istricts are favored by a m ajority of this board," h r said. The abolition of the multi m em ber district system — in which several representatives run at-large in a district—would “diminish the role of the kingm akers, w here you have to "p downtown to s o p if you can run,” said Hill. “THIS IS NO tim e for com prom ise,” he said. “ I beg, beseech and im plore you not to m iss the opportunity to do something that holds out the prospect of more solid government in this state that has been so good to us.” S in c e th e church is IiW#=- a ship, w e d e c id e d to have A SINKING BUILDING Parking Com mittee Alters Regulations Tn a move by the U niversity Wednesday and is now in effect. Attempt to Remove Bounty' Plan Fails That's not true. W e 'r e really aflo a t . . . even tho you have to walk a g a n g ­ plank to g e t in. ampuj ministry irstvp ll a m. a n t o n i o ( n e w a d d r e s t ) Parking and T raffic Committee, all distinctions between C and S parking permits have been abolished. According to Dr. Richard Dodge, assistant professor of architecture and chairm an of the committee, the recommendation to give C and S parking permits approved equal status was sri “ A I HutekoH M E X IC A N BUFFETI THE HACIENDA OF FLOWERS a Prices Are Back To The Good Old Days! Al! You Can Eat $ < 4 9 Buffet Style— S e l e c t F r o m O v e r 2 0 D i f f e r e n t V a r i e t i e s les Jalapenc G rP> n C hile Sa u ce G u acam o le Salad v.hile Con Queso Hand M ade T am ales Red C hile Con Carne Green C hile Con Carne Red T aco Sa u c e r ned Bean s S p a n s h Sa u c e C rispy Beef T acos So p a ip illa s H oney Sour Cream En chiladas Green En ch ilad as Red E n ch ila d a s allenos s h Ri LUNCHEON SPECIALS CHILD S PLATE 9 9 ° 7 5 ° 5800 Burnet Road F a m o u s T h r o u g h o u t T h e S o u t h w e s t H O U S T O N D A L L A S F O R T W O R T H A R L I N G T O N S A N A N T O N IO A U S T IN C O R P U S C H R I S T I V I C T O R I A B A T O N R O U G E O K L A H O M A C I T Y B O S S I E R C I T Y mz r jw r r W p i, M I S Lit Dodge explainer! there were so many v i o l a t i o n s over qualifications for C and S permits it was impassible to maintain a distinction between the two. To solve the problem, the decision was made to let the two permits in question share lots. A second recommendation by received the use of the committee approval concerned bicycle racks on campus. that Toh committee recommended that use of I he bike racks not. be enforced at the present time. Dodge explained there wpre too many bikes and not enough racks. However. Dodge noted that students should use judgment in chaining the campus so trees and property are not damaged. around bikes YO U R SH NI OR RING C re a te d by Jo h n R o b ert* Largest Selection Best D iam o n d Prices 2216 Guadalupe "N ext to H e m p h i l l s' A proposal by Councilman that City Friedm an Je ff $-"00 the Council delete “ bounty” being offered for information concerning drug pushers on the Drag met a quick death Thursday for lack of a second in support of the measure. Fried m an’s proposal was offered to the council twice, but neither time could he muster support. Also present at the af­ ternoon session of ti e council wpre representatives of th ° Yippie P a rty , protesting th" reward. They w e e k - o l d five retaliated by offering as pounds of marijuana for r e w a r d information leading the arrest and to conviction of a councilman. F A C E S themselves smoked what A N D ROD* E S painted, the Yippies passed around Grape Nuts Flakes and a m o n g ap­ openly peared to be marijuana in the council chambers. Oc­ casionally they disrupted proceedings with applause, laughter and shouts. Yippie spokesman Jo sh vehemently Bowers against the bounty saying. “ You can buy a lot of white spoke (heroin) with $500. powder W h y ' do you want to help the junkie? “ I DO N’T R E S P E C T one of you that is trying to kill a brother." Rowers said, adding he thought the council was dangerous to the com­ munity as long as the bounty was in effect. As they were leaving, one girl addressed the council. “ I your hate with m y fight love." She then planted a kiss on the check of Chuck Sneer, adm inistrative aide to City Manager L y n n Andrews. Appearing earlier in behalf of Friedm an's proposal were Austin members Chapter of Vietnam Veterans A g a i n s t the W a r and representatives of the Austin Plan, which w as offered as the alternative a n “ bounty" system. the of to Saying the drug plan took a to “ punitive approach" A us t i n ' s drug problem, John V V A W Kniffin requested Die council take more positive steps in t h e addict area rehabilitation. spokesman of Kniffin cited examples of the success of methadone in the treatment of addicts. Sutton Named Ta Ethics Panel Dr. John Sutton F . J r . , University’ professor of law, has hem named to the State Ethics Commission. S u t t o n ' s appointment was announced by John F. Onion Jr ., the Texas p re s id in g Court of Crim inal Appeals. judge of The commission was created bv tile Leg slahire to uphold ethical standards cf Skate legislators and employes. Tim presiding judge of the Court of Crim inal Appeals atip' tin s the two members commit don for two-year terms. to R E S P O N S IB IL IT IE S of the rules and commission include e t h i c s regulations m a k in g "overrun.: ifs proceedings and investigating alleged violations of the co Ie of ethics set forth in the act. The code fro ployes pensation f; using their privileges business en* conflict with office. receiving prohibits State em- com­ n ma private sources, position to secure engaging i n n d " which will in rformance to this In addif on listing ethical legislation also standards, re'I a ires employe State whose sal iv exceeds $11,000 to file a financial statement with the secretary of state. ain S IT ID N graduated from the School of Law in 1911 and has been a member of the law faculty since 1957. He is a legal ethic* and evidence specialist* S m o k e y Issue D em onstrating h’S in d ig n a­ tion at the C it y C o u n cil s $500 narcotics arrest boun­ ty, an Austin Yippie Thurs­ d a y shared a roach clip with ■friends. Students Set Voting Drive B y M A R V - L O V E B IG O N Y population. campaign The Student Council for Voter (S C V R ) w ill begin Registration to next week its register eligible students to vole in forthcoming elections. The goal for is 21,000 campaign the the University students, half H A N D M A D E 6 - W A Y P U Z Z L E B L O C K S C A N N O W BE P U R C H A S E D A T ■VtWV* * «| 4-- IS A A A A t a ^ A ♦ ♦ «.» VNV M W V f A A S A A A Aa I f i V A M V y A" V V a s * A i i V sa* A ', A a A a m r A A sr* A C O U N T R Y STORE C OMPOUND i s n t I, a v \< v O R FOR C U S T O M ORDERS C A LL ITA — 454.8977 or W rit* N A N C I - Rn No. I. Box 55 C C ED A R C REEK , TEXAS ■ B H H M H a M V *m i M i i a i tm Is This Your us™ L E A T H E R W I N E B A G S M A D E IN S P A IN L*tex Lining K e °p s You r G o o d ie s Fresh -a a , a a *>P«5* / / rim A ii Malt l l i n i l l i n g A A R H U S I* (I B O X 3VI 11 H O I ' T I O . T I \ “ « • Thursday Rob Binder. Student Govern­ ment president, opened a SC V R meeting by stressing the need for students to vote and emphasizing the effect the student vote ran have in elections night Attorney S T I D E N T S ’ Jim Roy!o urger! students to become active in elections “ in order to change to moot the needs of an Urban society.” He spoke briefly of activities of the students’ a t­ torney’s Office, describing cases in which students lose money to rn e c h a n i c s and apartment managers. Dan Rovd, chairman of the S C V R explained the organization registration campaign. for the The County tax assessor and collector's office will deputize persons in each precinct to talk J voters and register po nit deputies will man (it her sun on campus which a substatio will he onen from TO a.m. to 2 dailv Workers a No are p m rended in the S t'V R s office on Deb ic Center first floor. Office work will include keeping files of registered students. “ W E ’R E Ll C R V to be on this campus,’’ Rovd told the group. “ It is a politically astute campus with fairly mature students.” He explained the number of students registered to vote rose to IR.OOO last year from 7,500 the previous year. Students Interested in working with the campaign can contact ♦ he SC V R office in iXtbie Center next work. ItmrnI There is only one Love’s Fresh Lemon Now there are 14 fabulous ways to use it! - y j , my o 0j v\ . V l H r n CT' n. Lv. vDb . V V * . v a Three of them are ne.v: Love s Fresh Lemon Glossy S p la s h ™ $2.50 Lo ve ’s Fresh Lemon Glossy Body T a lc ™ $1.75 Love s Fresh Lemon Foot & Body Skin Unrough™ $3.50 Plus: E onus S'ze— 12 oz. Love's Fresh Lemon Bath G e l™ with Free Sp e cia l Body Mitt $4.75 Cosmetics Simp Street Floor LOWEST EVERYDAY PRICES! Every Day Prices This Week Special Reg. 4.98 •• 2.99 Reg. 5.98 3.99 Reg. 6.98 ■■ 4.99 Reg. 6.98 4.99 TAPES COMPARE T H E S E FIND T H E M T H E P R IC E S A N D L O W E S T IN A U S T IN ! THE N E W Cat Stevens Teaser & the Flrecat LIST 5.98 N O W 3 5 9 Plus Two New 5.98 list Records G O O D T H R U T H U R S D A Y lo , 3 . 3 9 9- 12 WEDNESDAY NIGHT BUDGET TAPES AND R EC O R D S 3004 GUADALUPE a i Page 2 Friday, October I, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN r ***** i. Officers, Vendors Show Dear: Co in Drag Area Ray said he thinks th e re is “ some pretty interesting scenery on the Drag. D rag vendors and m erch an ts have been especially nice, the patrolm en said. Most D rag vendors a re happy to see tile police on the beat. “ I’m glad to see them here. There are less narcotics around,” said one vendor a s he carved leath er crosses to sell. He said th a t w ithout the local police, federal people would soon com e in. He’d ra th e r few er see m ore uniform s and plainclothesm en, he said. THE VENDOR, who said he w as once a policeman, observed th a t patrolm en a re hum an. He said the ones on the beat a re friendly, courteous and like a joke. He told of one patrolm an who took a pig s m ask from one of the vendors, put it on and said, “ Ju st my style.” Some street people do not think the police b ea t will help the drug problem . Some say police should focus more attention on E a st Austin. Several said uniform ed policem en only hit the surface of the problem . For m any of the vendors, th a t's a help . . « “ just to get them awray from here.” say Tile beat has already brought som e inhabitants. A the D rag ch an g es, salesw om an in one of the D rag stores said, “ I f s the m ost wonderful thing they’ve done for us.” The police a re keeping out shoplifting and harassm ent, she said. k l New KOI ice r% |» n By St SAN CH A MBI JCSS Anyone saying “ You can never find a pop when you need one” hasn’t been on the D rag lately. Austin policemen a re in their second week of walking a beat in tile 21st to 26th Street a re a of Guadalupe. When asked if the D rag beat is connected with the City Council’s w ar on dnigs. Sgt. M arcus Cutler of the police T raffic and Control Division, said the program “ is in conjunction with it.” But the patrolm en looking for anvilling specific.” “ a re not They a re there in case there should be som e kind of trouble, he slid . to w alk and observe “ IF WE HELP one another, m aybe we can cut down on some of the bad things th a t are going on,” Cutler theorized. Austin policemen once had three walking beats including the D rag, Congress Avenue and 6th Street. The beats were discontinued because of lack of manpower, Cutler said. Now there are two shift* on the D rag beat, l l a.m . to 7 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 3 a.m . E ac h shift includes two officers and two police cadets. Officer Sam Cox. walking the Drag during the hottest p art of the day. voiced occasion­ to street people. “ When a al greetings policem an drives a car, it's im personal,” he said. “ H ardly anybody will flag one down . . . but a patrolm an walking a beat is a different story’.” Cox said their m ain function is to answ er questions and talk to people. COX SAID his beat on the day of the T exas Tech gam e w as “ crowded . . . but everybody w as happy. We answ ered a lot of questions and gave directions.” He felt a little like an inform ation board, he said. the law ,” said Cox, but Tile patrolm en a re not walking the beat to “ a rre s t people for breaking a fraction of to establish good will. “ A lot of things a re going on out here that people a re sick and tired of . we w ere needed,” he said. No a rre s ts have been m ade so far. . . Police Cadet R andall Smith voiced the general opinion of the patrolm en th a t “ Most jieople are accepting us real well. We’re pleased so friendly.” The policemen say they have m et w ith alm ost no hostility. the people have been th a t But som e of thp men walking the night shift say it is dark, hot and “ hard on your feet.” One of them joked, “ It’s a drag. Officer B. R ay walked this beat six and a half y ears ago, and he is a t it again. The place is “ quite different now,” he said. Low Draft Quota Set by Pentagon Officials said actual inductions in the final q u a rte r this y ear will total close to 15,000 is because the Selective Service System expected to deliver nearly another 5.000 men under a previous quota which had not l>oen filled when the d raft law lapsed tem porarily Ju n e 30. in mid-October, The first men to be inducted under the renew ed d raft likely will w ear the Arm y uniform die Defense D epartm ent said. These inductees probably from am ong college and will be junior college graduates whose deferm ents have expired. taken W A S H I N G TO N (A P )—The Pentagon T hursday set a 10,000-man d raft quota for the next three months and indicated next y ea r's level off a t about 1971’s nine-year record low of 98.000, induet ions w ill s|x>kcsman Je rry w. M e a n w h i l e , of that S ecretary Friedheim disclosed the Defense Melvin R. Laird has orderer! Army to rev erse the policy under which A rm y recruiters rejected veterans seeking to re enlist. THE POLICY conflicted with la ir d 's recent public w arnings of a dangerous shortage. Friedheim m ilitary m anpow er attributed to what he called “ confusion” on the part of recruiters. the conflict Friedheim also denied the low’ d raft call for the rem ainder of this y ear suggested th a t L aird w as crying w’olf when he predicted during Senate debate that Army readiness would lx> dam aged significantly law w as unless revived quickly. the Selective Service The Pentagon spokesm an argued that, low as it is, the new d ra ft call for October, Novemt>er and D ecem ber will generate voluntary enlistm ents in the arm ed forces. A d m inistration U n yie ld in g on M on etary Terms WASHINGTON The United States took a hard line Thursday against devaluing Hie dollar and called on other governments for progress in dismantling trade barriers as a condition for removal of the IO percent U.S. tariff surcharge. Secretary of the Treasury John B. Connally delivered lo the I IS nations of the International Monetary Fund an address that was con- cilatory in tone but basically unyielding on the U.S. terms for ending the monetary stalem ate. But he offered a new suggestion: That there be a transitional period of freely floating currencies, during which day-to-day dealings on world money markets would determine approximate levels at which realistic exchange rates could be pegged. U.S., Soviet Union S ig n D isarm am e n t Pact 9 WASHINGTON Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko signed two disarmament side agreem ents Thur­ sday and promised anew that the big powers will strive for a major accord to curb their m issile system s. ' At a State Department signing ceremony, Rogers hailed the lines and agreements on modernizing the Washington-Moscow hot guarding against accidental nuclear war as “ this nevi' imperative of the nuclear age.” M arket Rallies Feeble in M oderate Trading The stock market staged a feeble rally Thursday trading. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed up 3.36 at 887.19. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange totaled 13.50 million shares, compared with 8.59 million shares Wednesday. NEW YORK in moderate Thieu's Victory Predicted Election Results Contingen t on Am erican A id SAIGON (A P)—Despite widely publicized dem onstrations against P resident Nguyen Van Thieu and his uncontested cam paign for re-election, few dbubt he will get the “ vote of confidence” he socks in Sunday’s polling. The opposition the m ost cohesive and w idespread of Thieu’s political career, is A n AP N e w s Analysis not win a la rg e r m ajority. He predicted to aides and new sm en, how ever, that he m ight receive a s m uch as 80 percent of the vote, and this seem s possible. What would happen then is uncertain. He has told newsm en he would resign ra th e r than see U.S. aid to V ietnam cut off, and although the Nixon Adm inistration is com m itted to Thieu, Congress is likely to take a hard look a t continuing aid. He has told the country's leading generals h e will resign ra th e r than h av e the nation tom by a coup—if they w ant another leader. H e has said he expects to bring p e a c • to the country within two y ea rs and will resign once this task is accom plished. This m akes his continuance in office contingent on American aid and the arm ed forces’ support, both unpredictable factors. of afternoon Cloudy to p a rtly cloudy and continued through Saturday. Slight w arm e r F rid ay chance show ers F riday. Southeast winds 8 to 15 mph. Low F riday in the 70’s and high F rid a y and S aturday in the upper 80's, with a 20 percent chance of precipitation F riday. Unusual C u s to m e r s A n effort policemen to curb drug traffic on the Drag has brought to the University area extra such as Sam Cox (I) and Steve Farwell. Texan Staff Photo by JOHN VAN BKUKLM* but it lacks significant popular support. He has succeeded in either suppressing or ig­ noring his foes. Thieu has said he will resign if he receives few er th a n half the votes and has implied he might step down of he does STUDENTS! DON'T LET THIS BECOME A YEAR! YOU CAN MAKE IT A BY ORDER- ING YOUR 1972 CACTUS YEARBOOK DIAMOND class rings LIFE-TIME GUARANTEE FOUR WEEK DELIVERY YOUR DIVIDEND NO DEPOSIT IT'S NOT A W HOLE LOT OF EITHER... ONLY *7.88! 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T h e stones range in size from 1/8 of a karat ($35.00) to 1/3 of a karat ($115.00) — chough you may select a stone size of up to one full karat. Friday, O ctober I, 1971 THG DAILY TEXAN Pagf 3 Editorials ’By all the indications I think we can n o w get rid of these ridiculous little red books! ’ Muskie, Nixon and racism From tim e lo time, we receive interesting odds and ends in the mail which inundates the Texan office. Just yesterday, we received a sprite little hatchet job on M aine Sen. Edmund Muskie from the Republican National Com m ittee's weekly newsletter, MONDAY. Keyed to ihe D em ocratic senator’s perhaps intemperate rem ark that he didn’t think a ticket with a black running for Vice-President was electable now in the United States, the GOF sets forth a barrage of criticism from black spokesmen, prominent officeholders and our leader himself, President Richard M. Nixon. A black congressman is quoted as decrying Muskie's “ plantation politics of M aine.’’ Sen. Hubert Horatio Humphrey chirps about what a good integrationist he is. But Nixon comes forth with possibly the classic. “ I believe frankly that it is a liable (sic) on the Am erican people to suggest that the American people . . . would vote against a man because of his religion or his race or his color,’’ the President intones. “ I think it is very important for those of us in a position of leadership not to tell a large number of people in A m erica, whoever they are, that because of the accident of their birth they don't have a chance to get. to the top.’’ This, from the man who brought you the Southern Strategy. Since everyone else is being frank, we’ll do the sam e. The United States of America is a racist country. Hardly a shocking statem ent; we have all seen and experienced discrim ination during our lives, from Freedom Riders who were bullied in the early Sixties while integrating southern buses and depots, to the filibusters in the U.S. Senate against the Civil Rights Act of 1964, to the K ern er Com­ mission’s report on “ white racism ' ’ in A m erica, to A labam a Gov. George W allace’s “ law and order” cam paign for President, to having Negro maids enter their employers’ homes through the back door. Not much has been done since Ja n . 20, 1969, to stem the tide of racism in America. Indeed, the Nixon Administration has adopted a self-proclaimed policy of “ benign neglect” toward blacks. The President lins nominated for a Suprem e Court seat Judge G. Harrold Carswell of Florida, who was rejected by the U.S. Senate because of his previous devotion to segregation. Nixon's cam paign promise >o promote black capitalism , giving the nonwhite community more economic clout, has proved to be nothing m ore than sheer campaign rhetoric. (We can still re ca ll Nixon’s furor in 1960 when his running m ate, Henry Cabot Lodge, promised a black Cabinet m ember if Nixon was the hearts of black elected. And Americans during that cam paign by boldly expressing concern over Martin Luther King’s arrest in Alabam a, it was John Kennedy.! it w asn’t Nixon who touched No, the President's pious statem ent seem s perfectly incredible in light of the Administration’s record. And while we are not calling Nixon a racist, we are forced to ask; What has Richard Nixon done for black A m ericans lately? All in all, we find Muskie’* candor refreshing. While we continue to deplore the clim ate in A m erica which leads anyone to m ake such statem ents, we cannot help but feel that the nation is better for what Muskie has said. The senator has laid the card s on the table for all to see. We would do well to ponder his assessm ent. Words to live In an astounding statem ent Thursday, T exas House Speaker Gus Mutscher primly announced he has no intention of resigning from ihe suddenly-important Legislative Redistricting Board. Mutscher is under indictment for bribery and conspiracy to accept a bribe. L R B will redraw House districts since the T ex as Supreme Court has declared unconstitutional M utscher’s original plan. But the highlight of the good speaker’s abbreviated m essage was a real knee-slapper. “I never have avoided nor will I now avoid my obligation under law to do my duty to the best of my ability,” Mutscher said. “ I have never nor will I now walk out on . . . the people of T ex as.” That's debatable. Rack the bikes University Police Chief Donald R. Cannon recently announced that, students who park bicycles in places other than official rachis will not be ticketed, a> had previously been stated, unless walkways are obstructed or University property is damaged. “We just don’t h aw enough racks, even though we are getting m ore in,” Cannon said. “ And our officers have been advised to use common sense (before issuing tick ets.)” Cannon also said students who ride bicycles on campus sidewalks and m all areas may be issued warnings by campus police. “ If students have to take their bicycles onto sidewalks, we prefer that they walk them. I f s just too easy for someone riding a bicycle to accidentally run into and hurt a pedestrian,” he said. The Texan commends Cannon for relaxing the “ racks only” role and also agrees that bicycles and sidewalks are a bad combination. As anyone who has ever ridden a bicycle on campus knows, rack s are often difficult to find, and vacant spaces in the racks are usually m ore scarce. And, as anyone who has ever been inn down on a campus sidewalk by a speeding biker knows, University sidewalks are simply too crowded with pedestrians to allow for sale bicycle riding. Willie the dog Rmeff Baker Pill pact (o) 1971 New York Time's News Service the WASHINGTON— Kenneth Clark, psychologist, said the other day that it might save the world from a big explosion if its most powerful leaders had to take a sort of peace pill, which would be designed to keep the natural aggressive instincts of these hyper-aggressive men subdued by chemical action. This is a very bad idea, lf we assume that the leaders have all agreed to take the peace pill regularly, we can see what evil consequences will almost inevitably result. First, the agreem ent—“ pill p act,” the papers will call it—will have to provide for inspection. If President Nixon, Ia?onid Brezhnev and Mao Tse-Tung all agree to take one pill a day, each leader will insist on firm assurances that the other two are going through with the agreem ent. LET IJS SAY that President Nixon has to take his pill daily at noon. Does anybody think that Brezhnev and Mao a re going to be satisfied when th*' phone rings a t 12:01 p.m. and a voice says, “ Gentlemen, this is President Nixon, and I am calling to inform you that, in accordance with tho treaty, just taken my 12-o’dock pill.” I have F a r from likely. Brezhnev will naturally suspect that President Nixon has not taken anything at all. “ Aren't you going to take your peace pill. I^eonid?” Mrs. Brezhnev will ask. “Why should I risk feeling unaggressive when that Washington imperialist may a t this very moment be turning himself into an aggressive nervous wreck with a third cup of coffee?” the leader of all Russia will probably reply. In any case, inspection will be necessary from the outset. Both Moscow and Peking will have inspect a s at the White House to make sure that President Nixon takes his pill, and the United States will also have inspectors watching Brezhnev and Mao. After awhile President Nixon’s in­ spectors—lot us them Sergei and Wong—will probably become fairly friendly with him. call AT F IR ST, of course, everything will bo very official. Before Nixon takes his pill, he will hand it to Wong, so that Wong can sec that it is a genuine pence pill and not just an aspirin tablet. Then Wong wall pass it on to Sergei, who will inspect it and hand it to the President. After awhile, light banter will inevitably begin. “ Well, Wong,” the P re ident m ay say, “ How P.» you like American food?” reply, “ Fine, Mr. prompting Wong President, except that you don’t get hungry again for several hours after you eat it.” • to Sergei’s report to Moscow will suggest that the Chine <• and Am ericans may be in concert to sneak Nixon and working Mao off the peace pill. Brezhnev will have to be on his guard now so as not to be (’aught zonked out on a peace pill and smiling happily if the Chinese and Americans try to clobber the Soviet Union one afternoon immediately after pill time. THE SITUATION, In short, is becoming fatal in­ to mankind. President Nixon nocently makes it catastrophic one day by telling Sergei and Wong that the peace pill has Iicen causing him gastric distress due to stomaeh-gas form ation lately, lf it is all right with Wong and Sergei, he says, he would hereafter like to take his pill ground up in a glass of orange juice. Guest viewpoint 'Throwing the student out...’ By S I ZANNK O M ALLEY a stepping stone necessary for fulfillment Junior Communication Major of degree requirements. I entreat the Faculty Senate to do its In other examples, students were unable best to protect an academ ic freedom to register for courses they had been recently gained by University students. successfully Namely, freedom the to register for classes of one’s choice, under tile teachers of one's choice and for tim es during the day when one will be receptive to learning. Form erly this freedom was reserved for those on athletic scholarships and other lucky souls who drew that coveted Gregory time—S a.m . Monday. Gym registration under computerized Now, preregistration system perfect schedules, new the i.e. requested courses at requested tim es, are possible for many students. The positive attitudes generated by attending selected classes in selected settings can greatly affect academ ic performance. A year ago it was not unusual to have friends who failed courses simply because they never made it to class (particularly those who did their best studying during the wee hours). Further investigation might have revealed that “ G regory Gym ” had bestowed these individuals with 7:30 a.m . classes. The course m ay have been timely, looking forward to during the previous sem ester. As a result, due to the draft, degree requirements, etc., they took other courses merely as substitutes and had little real interest in them. Under the new system the m ajority of friends my received perfect schedules. and acquaintances have Timing is one of the problems. In the four months between fall preregistration and die beginning of the long term, many students change their minds! I would hate to estim ate the number of m ajors some students could sort through in that length of time. A student m ay get every course he requests as a chemistry m ajor, but finds those courses unsatisfactory now that he has switched to business. A related problem is that many students are not concerned about their course lead until the day before classes start, when they begin to worry about requirements, degree checks, graduation and frantically look forward to adds and drops. Efficient little more advising would encourage a The firing fine foresight. Too often advisers are as poorly informed as students. is that factor timely Another fall preregistration takes place before summer school registration. Many students were forced to add and drop this fall on the basis of what they had taken during sum­ mer school. It is not difficult to understand the five­ fold increase in adds and drops. However, faculty m em bers must beware of using the escalation of adds and drops as an index for student dissatisfaction with the new system . Admittedly, there are some necessary changes to he made. But these are not drastic enough to merit scrapping the entire system , and I doubt that any students are distressed enough by the new system to willingly return to Gregory Gym. I trust that the Faculty .Senate will not engage in the age-old tradition of “ throwing the baby out with the bath w ater,” and its counterpart, “ throwing tile student out w ith the personal inconvenience.” I wish to extend my personal thanks to Dr. Gerhard Fonken and his Committee on Admissions for and releasing the University from Gregory Gym with the sincere hope that I will not soon be retracing my steps. Registration W om en don t rate rides To the editor: law The school's sponsors Criminal Law a Police Action A s s o c ia tio n law students are able P ro ject to ride two eight-hour shifts in a patrol car w ith an Austin policeman. in which that any member At the organizational meeting last week, Herman Little, the student chai; man of the PAP, presented a rem arkable set of ground rules for participation in the p ro je c t He announced the Criminal Law Association qualifies except those who happen to be women. When questioned on this point Little ipologetically explained that it is and has been ti e policy of the Austin Police Departm ent under the direction of Police Chief Miles and City Manager Lynn Andrews and law students are bound to abide by this policy. that of The reasons given for the policy were essentially that the wives of the policemen wouldn't like to have their husbands driving around with other women and that Austin citizens might frown upon the sight of a police ca r at 2 a.m . with a woman in the front seat next to the driver. One woman at the m eeting asked Little if the association would permit the program to continue if department policy excluded blacks or chicanos instead of women. The answer was of course no. In an effort to somehow’ am eliorate the situation, the chairm an did point out that women are perfectly free to go down to the police station and “ snoop around.” In addition to the elimination of women students it was also pointed out that the male students who did ride would have to have hair that was short and orderly, and no long sideburns, full mustaches ar beards would be tolerated. The attitude among the m em bers tended to be along the lines of “ Gee, we’re sorry you-all can’t ride. .but why ruin it for the rest of u s?” . Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: • Be hyped triple-spaced. • Be less than 250 words. like That it seem s those students can sanction this blatant discrimination dictated by Police is pathetic. And more than Chief Miles the Criminal Law this, Association is fostering an expansion of the credibility gap between the police and the student community. these continue to receive support, how will the Austin Police Department ever find out that not all long-haired, bearded men are dope addicts and more importantly, that not all women are dumb broads. If rules like Ja n ie Jachimczyk Women’s Law Caucus C o o l the gym To the editor: The proposal to abolish preregistration and return to a registration system sim ilar to that formerly used means, I should think, that it is desirable to consider again the air-conditioning Gregory desirability of Gym. a of F o r 40 years around here, or longer, registrations in September, June and Ju ly in Gregory Gym have been an ordeal the heat. And an August because of registration September instead registration will not be any better. Also surely the people involver! in physical in­ struction for men would like to have the the building students enduring physical instruction. Also the building w'ould be more comfortably usable for various other public functions during it were a ir­ conditioned. the hot months air-conditioned, as would if to build too difficult lf we have that the motley limestone wall around the Forty Acres, it should not be to scrounge around and get the necessary funds for air-conditioning In­ tercollegiate Athletics might even take the this con­ position it could that tribution. The profits that “ upper deck” might do the job. Gregory. Maybe finance from Wendell Gordon Professor of Economic* Travis protest To the editor: T strongly support the plans the various groups have made for Saturday in regard cir­ living to protesting cum stances of Travis County prisoners. critical the There is very conspicuous evidence that prisoners are treated like anim als once they a re locked in the cage. This needs to be stopped somehow. I will be happy to know that every county and every state in America has pledged to make Saturday a national day of treatm ents and inhuman protesting critical living conditions prisons are now undergoing all over America. the I was profoundly shocked and disap­ pointed with tile knowledge New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller displayed in regard to A t t i c a and prisoners’ psychological situations. depressive Mr. Rockefeller could have prevented the by at Attica S tate Prison m assacre negotiating a simple, workable solution. In conclusion, I strongly urge every person to participate in Saturday’s protest of the m istreatm ent of Travis County prisoners. living conditions and the critical In this world of great change we can no longer ignore prisoners’ cry to America. The Attica m assacre should have awakened every soul in America. Ia)rado Cole “Orange ju ic e !” tho commander of the Red Army replies to Brezhnev. “ We’ve never tested the pill in orange juice. But if ground we know that up in borscht.” ‘ "iou m ay it doesn t work take the pill in orange ju ic e ," Sergei tells the Pre ident next day, “ on the understanding that the F irst Secretary will henceforth take his pill in borscht.” Next night the CIA notified the White House just wrestled a he ir in the Kremlin gymnasium and pinned it in two consecutive falls. that T .eon id Brezhnev has And in faraw ay Peking Chairman Mao is writing a thought he has had during the soup course at dinner, “ Psychology is worth more to the leader of people than a carnation in his lapel, but a psychologist is like the barrel cf a gun.” T h e Da il y T exa n Student Newspaper at UT Austin ED ITO R ............................................................................................. Lori Rodriguez MANAGING ED ITO R ............................................................................. John Reetz NEWS ED ITO R ...................................................................................... Cyndi Taylor ASSISTANT MANAGING ED ITO R ........................................ ’. ’. ’Mike Fresques ASSISTANT NEWS ED ITO R ....................................................... David Powell ASSISTANT TO TH E ED ITO R ................................................. L yke Thompson SPO RTS ED ITO R ............................................................................... .'. Jo e Phillips AMUSEMENTS ED ITO R ................................................................. Theresa Kane I EA I URDS E D I T O R ....................................................................... Robin B la th e r Issue Nows Editor ................................................................................................ j j rn Lewis News Assistants ........................................... Jo Clifton, Richard Finegan, Chuck Heller Editorial Assistant ...................................................................................... Gaylon Pinkies Associate Amusements Editor ...................................................................... Cicely Wynne Assistant Sports Editor Randy Harvey Make-Up Editor .................................................................................................. Dcbby ^ Wire Editor .......................................................... Copy Editors ...................................... Joanne Ruhland, Bob Plocheck, Harriet Hubbard General Reporters.....................Dotty Griffith, John Pope, Jennifer Evans, Steve Wisch Photographers ......................................................................... Phil Huber, Marion Taylor Opinions expressed Tti'* Daily T exan a re those of the editor or the w riter of the the article and a re not necessarily those of University adm inistration o r the B oard of R e­ gents. In The D aily T exan, a student new spaper at The U niversity of T e x a s at Austin, is pub­ lished by T exas Student Publications, D raw ­ er D, U n iversity Station, Austin, T exas, 78712. The D aily T exan is published Monday, Tues­ day, W ednesday, T hursday and F rid ay e x ­ cept holiday and exam periods August through May. Second-class postage paid a t Austin, Tex. News contrlbuUons will be accep ted by tele­ (Jou r- phone (171-4101). at the editorial office nalism Build intr 103) or a t tho new s lab oratory (Jou rn alism Building 102). Inquiries concerning delivery should he m ade in Journalism Building Journalism IV7,, 1471' 5,244) and advertising Building 111 (471-3227). in The national advertising rep resen tative of The Daily T exan is National E ducational Ad­ vertising Service. Inc., 360 Lexington Ave., New lu rk , K Y ., loot?. The Dally T exan subscribes to The Asso­ ciated P ress, The New Y ork Tim es News Ser­ vice and United P ress International Telephoto S ervice. The T exan Is a m em ber of the Asso­ ciated Collegiate P ress, the Southwest Jo u rn a­ lism Conference and the T exas Daily News­ paper Association. Bonnie Cox The editorial lackeys would like publicly to thank Linda (in our exuberance we m issed her last name) for responding to oui' an­ nouncement regarding the disappearance of our editor’s dog, Willie. Though after finding Willie, we somehow lost Lori, we are sure everyone will somehow find each other again, and undoubtedly be better people for it and a closer staff because of this traum atic ordeal. • Include name, address, and phone number of contributor. M a il letters to The Firing Line, The D aily Texan, Drawer D, U T Station, Austin, Tex.; or bring letters to the Texan offices, Journalism Building 103. H O B di hO» * W a * . October I, W I THE DAILY TEXAN Afore firing line Readers dislike coverage Art Buchwnid True Life tales To the editor: It in a given is unfortunate that people who se© themselves as budding field professionals often possess the zeal and energy to pursue a course of action without due consideration of its full implications. Such is the case and editor Rodriguez with reporters Taylor and Tilly who no doubt with in­ tentions but with even more thoughtlessness n a i v e t e and front page of the brought Thursday’s Texan the story of Miss Armistead’s suicide. the hest of to inform reports It Is the duty of the efficient newspaperman the to public and to provide details in Instances where sketchy word-of- produce can mouth baseless and un­ conclusions warranted fears. However, in the era of “ press responsibility” it Is not beyond reason to demand that newspaper editors consider errors of commission as well as those of omission. Might not the editor of The Texan have exer­ cised greater responsibility and m aturity the potential effects of playing up the story as much as was the case? examining bv in t o Studies on the mass media have pointed to a reinforcement instances where e f f e c t predispositions particular behavior patterns already exist. Thus while crime-oriented TV program s will not necessarily in bring out hostile behavior children whose aggressive im­ pulses are within socially ac­ ceptable limits, violence in the media can lead to violence on part of the audience m ember when the latter already exhibit! a strong disposition to violence. The media can serve as a trigger or catalyst. While wholesale and deliberate neglect of violence and crime-based news stories Is both unrealistic (life is not so con- and undesirable ■ t t t u t e d ) occur) (reform would some consideration should he given to portions of The Texan's audience who stand to lose more aa a result of publication of the ■Dory in question than to the more s u b s t a n t i a l portion of the audience which has little to gain from it. never Psychologists and sociologists the live repeatedly noted p e a n of late adolescence and •arty adulthood are often harsh suicide and transitional ones; that a 1,000 psychological counseling figures these lead to and substantiate conclusions. During single month earlier in the year more students than sought counseling a t the University’s Mental Health Service. Coun­ selors and psychiatrists lament that this figure notwithstanding they still cannot reach many students with hard-core problems. It is with consideration of such facts that The Texan staff might have acted. More limited, or even total lack of coverage would not have been unjustified or inex­ cusable. Further, the editorial stand calling for enclosing or closing of the observation deck would prove feckless. Tile problem is not one of eliminating a means of self-destruction but of at­ its causes. The Texan tacking serving as a trigger or catalyst is far more dangerous than the Tower—merely one of many available “bullets.” The space the devoted editorials could have been far more effectively and responsibly put to use with an in-depth study that would have detailed the assistance available to students with personal problems such as those which became too extreme for Miss Armistead face without proper professional at­ tention. stories and to to Unfortunately enough students can identify with Miss Ar- mistead's behavior as described In The Texan; with just a bit more thoughtfulness on part of The Texan staff, those students might have benefited from a tragic loss. Tom A. Gelt* Graduate Student, Journalism W ake up, guards To the editor: of I’m angry, angry at the police mentality this university. Millions of dollars are spent at the University creating physical is barriers. A blatant example the wall being built around this campus. Another example is the scores of policemen and ticket guards present at the stadium for football games. If so many people and so much money can be put to use for these purposes, why can't something be dime to prevent further suicide attempts at the Tower? I almost Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday’s Ptrrrle fired off a letter when a student jumped from the Tower about five months ago. I had previously the guards sitting on noticed watch at the Tower with their feet propped on desks and caps covering their eyes while they napped in the observation room. Is that what is called security? One sleeping cop inside? Now another person has jumped, there Is no longer any doubt in my mind about the “security people” at the Tower. from I t’s time the campus police get up their desks and do something in term s of preventing suicide attempts. It’s sickening to think a university will spend thousands of dollars to prevent some poor guy from seeing a football game because he doesn’t have the bread and then see that almost sam e nothing to prevent people from committing suicide at the Tower. The physical barriers around this ap­ are the propriate; closed-minded a t t i t u d e s and football mentality of the ad­ ministration and law enforcement people of this campus, and to very they exemplify university campus do be fair about this, some of the students. a As this from school the graduate University I now begin to have second thoughts about returning to for graduate courses. I do not claim to know the reasons of those who have the Tower. But jumped off sometimes I wonder if a quick reappraisal of the m erits of the University could have something to do with it s certainly not worth it. it. I hope not, Roland Romo Fog-shrouded Tower To the editor: As I walked to school early Tuesday morning, I noticed the fog-shrouded Tower and imagined that God was ashamed for man and was this looming memorial that represents m an’s blind insensitivity which has driven several of its own to desperate ends. to hide trying WASHINGTON—We’re n e v e r going to close the credibility gap in this country until the television programs become more honest. No TV show tells it like it is. If the TV producers were really mirroring life, this is how some of their programs would go: “Dr. please.” Edwards, come in “Yes sir, Dr. Fauntenroy, you asked to see m e?” “ I was curious about that little old in lady who almost died Room 506. They say you forgot to replace her oxygen bottle.” “ So I made a mistake. One lousy error and you’re going to wash me out?” “ It wasn't just the little old lady in Room 506, Edwards. I was thinking of the man in the emergency ward other night—the one whose leg you amputated after the automobile accident. You cut off the wrong leg.” the “ So that’s why It took him so 1 long to recover.” George O’Connor “ Dr. Edwards, you’re a good Khrushchevs ghost By HARRY SCHWARTZ (Member of The Time* Editorial Board) (c) 1971 New York Times News Service NEW YORK Khrushchev's ghost haunt Kremlin in the years ahead? - Will Nikita the to fear The present Soviet rulers ap ­ pear it may. That trepidation .seems the most likely explanation for the orchestrated silence the Soviet press and radio maintained about the event. Only after the cables had reported the enormous and sorrowful reaction to Khrushchev’s passing in the rest of the world did a Pravda the news spokesman announce would be reported. For roughly 30 hours or more the only way most Soviet citizens could find out that the man who ruled their country' for a decade was dead was through listening to Radio Liberty and other foreign broadcasters. is important evidence now' indicating that Khrushchev's There P F A N U T S lived B u t s e v e n long enough reputation in many Soviet minds is far greater than it was when he was purged in 1964. t h e years in obscure Khrushchev disgrace were to demonstrate that many of the ills for which he was blamed have also been insoluble for his suc­ cessors. It In­ tellectuals—scientists writers, teachers arid the like—that the re-evaluation of most positive Khrushchev has taken place these last several years. among Soviet is While he these elite ruled, groups tended to view Khrush­ chev as a crude, uneducated and unpredictable boor. They were grateful to him for cracking the releasing Stalin myth, labor from millions camps, for lifting the Iron Cur­ tain and for greatly widening the area of free speech and free press. the slave for But they were repelled by what they considered his uncultured behavior—notably per­ formance banging his shoe at the h i s United Nations in 1960. And most of all they were bitter at his ten­ dency to retreat from liberal at titudes and to denounce publicly some of the Soviet Union’s most I eminent intellectuals. Seven years of t h e post- Khrushchev era, however, have taught many Soviet liberals that the alternative to Khrushchev was much worse. The Brezhnev leadership has put writers and other dissidents into jail or insane asylums where Khrushchev relied on verbal chastisement. The censorship in the Soviet Union today it was. To many Soviet liberals it the con- is now evident s e q u e n c e of Khrushchev’s removal was a partial counter revolution, a partial return to Stalinism which makes the Khrushchev era seem like the good old days. tighter than that far is Thus the possibility arises that in death Khrushchev may become the symbol of Soviet liberalism just as the dead Stalin has Tong bern of Soviet symbol reaction and obscurantism. the intern, but you have to stop making so many mistakes. Now what I’ve called you in about is the that grapevine that you left an In­ strum ent in Mr. Cumming’s stomach this afternoon.” I've heard through “But I remembered it as I was washing up and made them bring him back.” impetuous “ Edwards, you’re young, and and you're you’re careless. But to going recommend that you be kept on. Do you know why? I ’m “You look like a doctor and that to me is very important. Most of the men trying to be doctors these days have long hair and beards. Keep your hair short, Edwards, and you ll have a job here for life.” Copyright (e) 1971, The Los Angeles Tim es. LEARN TO PLAY THE PIANO THE EASY WAY In sta n t P ia n o F o r adult* P lay JI popular son** instantly no previous musical N E C E S S A R Y ! training AMSTER MUSIC AND ART CENTER 1124 LAVACA 478-7331 DELIVERY ti K0D AC0L0R PRINTS ■Hag * yew weeeed Film by 4 PM WM* reedy 48 Keen toter ti 4 PM, SILTMAN PHOTO • 19th at Lavaca • Cameron Village JR. D R E S S DEPT. O N - T H E - D R A G the United Cam pus Ministry ANNOUNCES A RELIGIOUS VALUES LAB O C T O B E R 8 - 1 0 Fri. 7 - 10:30 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m .- 9 p.m. Sun. 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. Cost: $15.00 F O R M O R E I N F O R M A T I O N & R E G IS T R A T IO N C A L L 478-4677 FOOTBALL SPECIAL W e 'll care for your child (2 to 12) while you attend gam es throughout the season. 2 hrs. Before Start of G am e Til I hr. After Gam e Fee: $5.00 per game CONGREGATIONAL NURSERY & CHILD CARE CENTER 428 W . 23rd St. Y I Block from C a m p u s C a ll 472-2370 for inform ation. Re ser i cit ions Necessary. h / / r / / Car! Mayer, famous for diamonds since 1865 ha* for acquired Y A R I N G ' S jewelry department fine your shopping convenience. For beautiful gifts shop at the: HOME OF COLLEGIATE DIAMONDS® l'VE TRIED, ANO TRIED AND TRIED* I'VE REAU * TRIED* cif ll 32 Novelty 35 Passageways 3 6 Deity 3 7 Fruit (pl.) 3 9 Danger 4 0 Bein 4 2 Existed 4.1 Ascend 44 Part of body 45 Period of time 4 6 Damp 4 7 Tierra de* Fuegan Indian 4 8 Marry 51 Symbol for tantalum IO U 14 I t WU KNOW HOU) HARP I’VE TRIED! TELL ME HOU) I'VE TRIED.. 13 16 20 4 Dispatched 5 Youngster 6 King of Bas hart 7 Repulse 8 Malay dagger 9 Washed lightly 10 f uss IX Aetr 1am fluid 16 Organa! hearing 18 Essence 2 0 Rap 21 Begin 2 2 River to Italy 2 3 Small chBd 25 Winged 26 Arkport lane 28 Man's nickname 2 9 Part of face 31 Sailing vessel I |2 |3 ACROSS S B a w 4 Long-toggedl bird 9 Tattered cfcgh 12 Reverence 13 Ardent VK tool gillie ti Onto I S Rely on 17 Musket inst rumania 19 Dine 2 0 Trtota 21 I lnawwnlybody 23 Hindu cymbal* 2 4 Athletic group 2 7 Sesame 2 8 Cry 2 9 Dipper 9 0 Hebrew month 81 Posed far portrait 8 2 Evergreen tree 33 Near 3 4 Domain 3 6 Opening 37 Devoured 38 Group of three 39 Seed container 40 Simians 4 1 Seeded 43 Tear 44 Assistant 4 6 Shade tree 49 Anger 50 Ceremonies 52 Compass point 53 Dance step 54 Puff up 55 Mcntmfiil DOWN 1 Possessed 2 Female sheep 3 Amend 22 24 25 26 28 31 29 32 33 3 4 35 36 37 39 41 42 40 43 45 49 S3 46 31 SO 34 mm 47 48 32 35 Distr, by United Feature Syndicate. Inc. 24 NICE TRY-FIVE CENTS; PLEASE V nuecsf at ' t e n t h , . [W E S T lion .frbohel -{bodbs • AM P g e a f c g u K S tzu m n r [ T u g s - ani S A T U R p / W ..FfiQtf rn - N e w A L S U M * P F P f l B N E P ' C - n £ FROM R E N/K-K5 o f Y our PTE- PKO SHOP Z I N G Y P R IN T S F O R J U N I O R S ! Silky slinky nylon jersey th a ts a nosegay of colors on a mod black 'n whit® background. The long-«leeve style The short sleeve style $28. $22. T H E B B B O O T F R O M A F A M O U S L O N D O N B O U T IQ U E Just in time fo r the new season: the newest style over the knees. Very long on fashion in chocolate, brown or sand $30 -— —— - ' "" ' " " & K S T O N e p / H U N Q i l E - S ' G O O D V U 3 e $ Sizes 5 - | 3 O N - T H E - D R A G Friday, O ctober I, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg* S H A N K 's GRILL 2532 G U AD ALU PE Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2 pcs. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5*9 p.m. only 95 Reg. SI.35 H a p p y H o u r 2-5 p.m. D aily L igh t or D a r k Lg. P i t c h e r ................................................ 1.00 S m . P i t c h e r ................................................... 75c (c) 1971 New York Times News Service MIAMI—“ I t ’s a real tragedy. Many people will never see their relatives ag ain .” said a Cuban refugee* here recently. “ I t ’s sad, but m aybe there will be m ore work for the N egroes now ap artm en t ren tals will com e down,” com ­ m ented an American. and m aybe Tho two rem arks, referring to the halt by the Castro govern­ m ent of the Cuban refugee airlift, reflect differing views here about the U.S.-sponsored exodus, which since Doc. I. 1965. has brought EARN CASH WEEKLY « ' 'Yr ' r n • - Vt'- '• i:--' ■ V J* V -J, 54 vWlSSKp-. VHSflBtt 'JF- **!•_ .’IS* Blood Plasma Donors Needed • ^ * . ' x - V # $ ^ -• ^c" -‘TS*' v* ■ Male Donors Only Ages 18-60 - I V-'.SS- • .•* tiW k rat.•*•:<«**s s * ■ ■ • '“ V ■ # ' ‘W :if 'jP V.v-'r IM M !?! > v •* I M I WITH PARENTAL CONSENT UilTII B V 'V -.# - --J • • *’> . Sh*"’ MSk rami for Repeat Donors Castro Stops Airlift Of Cubans into U.S. MAYO to Meet With Dr. Spurr The M exican-American Youth Organization (MAYO) will gather en m asse in front of the Main Building at 4 p.m . Monday to support” while lend inside eight-m em ber com ­ m ittee of MAYO leaders m eets w i t h P resident Stephen H. Spurr. U niversity “orderly an “ We’ve got to show him w e’re here and we really c a re .” said “ Spurr one MAYO m em ber. won’t notice just a few people talking to him, but h e’ll know is really on cam pus lf MAYO we all show up,” he continued. According to MAYO P resident P aul Velez, the com m ittee set the meeting, so MAYO can “ establish communication and better rap ­ port with him. We want to m eet him and let him m eet our people so he ll know we’re on cam pus.” Velez said they will discuss eight proposals MAYO subm itted to the adm inistration last spring, standard admission including revisions and minority recruit­ m ent program suggestions. T ex an St aff Ph oto by RKNF. PK RE Z . C h a n g e -O Peress-To A u ifin Sym ph ony DiVector M aurice Peress (r) was honored by C ity C o un cil Thursday when M a y o r Roy Butler, on ladder, and C ouncilm an Dan Love replaced C o n g re ss Avenue sign with marker reading "M a u ric e Peress A ven ue ." Union Vetoes N o Special Treatment' for Funds Student Bar about 246,000 Cuban refugees ta this country. issue THE AIRLIFT h a s been a c o n t r o v e r s i a l in M iam i...Cubans have generally supported it, even though som e thought it w as beneficial to the Castro governm ent. B ut m any te r­ A m ericans have urged m ination. too costly, th a t it w as inflating the price of re a l e sta te and th a t a steady influx of Cubans w as altering the ethnic c h a ra c te r of M iam i and creating social and econom ic problem s. its it w as saying According to officials of the D ep artm en t of H ealth. E ducation and W elfare, which through its ad ­ Cuban m in isters the airlift, its ending will resu lt in a saving of about $12 m illion this y ea r and much m ore next year. pro g ram refugee T he funding of the program , which social provides m any services for needy Cubans is also expected reduced next y ear. to be BUT A MORE im portant long- the airlift halt ran g e effect of H A V I N G A P A R T Y ? N E E D A BARTENDER? C A L L 478-7488 Bradley School O f Bartending — L O B B Y S U IT E — C O M M O D O R E P E R R Y B L D G . SHI the Latinization will be a considerable slowdown this in m etropolitan a re a of 1.2 million people. of In the last several years, the of M iam i’s Latin, g r o w t h especially Cuban, population has been spectacular. T here w ere 100.000 the airlift Cubans h ere when began. Today is estim ated a t 350,000. With other L atin im m igrants, th ere a re m ore than Spanish-speaking residents in g rea ter M iami. their num ber 400,000 about About 40,000 Cubans have been arriving annually in the United States t h e from Cuba o n V aradero Beach Miami airlift. An estim ated 10.000 m ore com e from Spain. Mexico and other “ third countries.” Despite a vigorous cam paign by the refugee program seeking to resettle new refugees in are as other than F lorida, it is believed that m ore than half of these have rem ained here or have either la ter com e back to Miami from places of their resettlem ent. other U.S. TH E R E FU G E E S prefer Miami to cities m ainly because its clim ate is sim ilar to that of and because of a sense of together­ ness produced by the la rg e and prosperous Cuban colony th a t has developed here. th e ir hom eland, F o r people who have been coming here stripped of m ost of their belongings and without any money, the Cubans have done well for them selves. They have opened con­ tributed tow ard making Miami a growing garm ent m anufacturing center, and provided m anpower in m any other vital economic and social sectors. businesses, 6.500 By MIKE BRI NER report A m ajority recom ­ m ending a $3,800 Student B ar A s s o c i a t i o n allocation w as rejected T hursday by the Texas Union Board of D irectors and replaced with a m inority report r e c o m m e n d i n g SI,600 plus finances for at least one speaker a n d nonlegal periodicals. funding for SBA P resident John Howard, who had worked earlier, but $8,000 for unsuccessfully, allocation law- request, students did not utilize Texas Union services as much as other "for- students did, but w ere ceably” being compelled to pay an said 409 W est Sixth 477-3735 (Hr CACTUS STUDIO FRATERNITY SCHEDULE approxim ately $20,000 fees. in Union HOWARD contended it would be only fair to give back $8,000 law the' $20,000 to the 1.600 of the students of form allocations for law-oriented ac­ tivities. A h o a r d in rejected however, request and adopted m ajority report. subcommittee, $8,000 the $3,800 the Howard said the average law student w as 26 and .most were m arried. “ For every three hours of class tim e they have to study eight hours.” “ For these and other reasons, law students cannot enjoy most of the services the Union offers,” he added. Hence, those activities which a re law-oriented, such as distinguished lawyers for speakers and law-related films. require they Union President G ary Tolland said the "Union concept” would .school if he destroyed received “ special treatm ent.” law the “ No school other separate requests such attention. The Union m ust operate and allocate funds which benefit the student body as a whole and not Just one special group," he said. if Polland said law students dissatisfied with Union w ere services, they should bring their criticism s to the board and not go outside to fulfill the Union their needs. Polland said. “ If. for exam ple, the law school needed a certain law-related film or speaker, it would be much easier to let the Union's film or speaker com ­ m ittee do the necessary' work to film or acquire speaker ” specific the HOWARD SAID, however, the SBA could save the Union a lot of trouble if it could get its own the film s and necessary money of requiring the Union com m ittees to do the job. speakers with Instead The board voted, rejecting the subcom m ittee’s m ajority report and the m inority report. approving The accepted report included a $1,600 allocation and funding for nonlegal periodicals. Also, the scheduling and financing of et least one speaker was guaran­ teed. 'Game Plan1 Offered By Ticket Manager last week's To elim inate upper-deck seating problems which frustrated fans at football game, several suggestions have been offered by the Athletic Ticket Office for seating at this Satur­ d a y s clash between Texas and Oregon. R ichard “ The main problem last week,” Boldt, ticket that everyone the east side.” said m anager, “ was in tried to go (Related Stories, Pages 7, IO Si ll.) Upper-deck ticket holders, tickets num bering 103 to gain entrance on the west side for the upper level, he said. to 108> need B o l d t suggested upperdeek ticketholders should rom p to the southwest corner of the stadium and take escalators to the upper level. Tickets will bo checked on level for adm ittance the upper to seats. from T raffic plans for S aturday’s gam e will hp the sam e as for la st week's. Beginning at 9 a m. Saturday, traffic on San Jacinto and Red River streets will be one-way 32nd streets. San Jacinto will be for northbound traffic and Red River will southbound traffic. T raffic on Manor Road will be eastw ard the tow ard stadium before the gam e and w estw ard after the game. accom m odate 15th to As of 5 p.m. Thursday, 62,000 tickets had been draw n or bought for the gam e Saturday. Tickets for blanket tax holders will be available until 4 p.m. F riday when all undrawn tickets will go on sale to the public. A pep rally will bp held at 7:30 p.m. F riday on the steps of G regory Gym. F reshm an cheerleaders will be introduced. STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION D ate of FiLing—Septem ber 29, 1971 Title of Publication—The Daily Texan Frequency of Issue—5 tim es weekly, Monday through Friday—except for holiday & exam times. Location of office of publication—Journalism Building 107. The Uni­ versity of Texas. 24th and Whites, Austin, Texas. Travis County, Texas 78705 Location of headquarters of business offices of the publishers -Jour- nalism Building 107, The U niversity of Texas, Austin, Texas NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF PUBLISHER, EDITOR AND MANAGING EDITOR Publisher—Texas Student Publications, P. O. Box D, University Station, Austin, T exas 78712 E ditor—Lori Rodriguez, 903 E. 14th, Austin, Texas 78702 M anaging Editor—John Reetz, 300 E Riverside, No. 307, Austin, Texas 78704 O W NER—Texas Student Publications, P . 0 . Box D, U niversity Station, Austin, Texas 78712, an organization of The University of T exas ait Austin. Avera*# Sn. Coni** r.arn inane H arm * E a c h b m D u r ra * Preceding ll month* Single teen* N e a re st te ruing D ate TOTAL NO. COPIES PRINTED (Net P ress Run) ................................................. 30,000 30,500 PAID CIRCULATION Sales Through D ealers and C arriers, Counttr Sales Mail Subscriptions .................................... 27,115 250 ........................................... 1835 1,750 TOTAL PAID CIRCULATION ................................ 28 950 2,000 ......................................... ’goo F R E E DISTRIBUTION 28.350 ......................................... 29 850 TOTAL DISTRIBUTION 30.350 O FFIC E USE, L E F T O V E R .................................... 150 150 ......................................................................... 30,000 TOTAL 30,500 I certify th at the statem ents m ade by m e above a re correct and com ­ plete. N L. L. Edmond*, J r ., Gen. Mgr. AQUATIC W OULD Welcomes You To Austin P le ase com a b y an d s a * ui. W a ara h a v in g s p a c ia l* for you S a tu rd a y, the 2nd. Red Tail Shark Reg. 1.98 N O W 2 for $2.00 M ale Betta 1.98 $1.25 39c 5 for $1 .OO Black Moon Tiger Eel $1.98 4.98 Tin Foil Barb 2 for $1.00 98c LIVE ADULT BRINE SHRIMP 812 B R E N T W O O D ULU a x SSS H i •a? j. te ip E J : SALE Buy ONE pair of HEELS for $26 Get a SECOND pair FREE Get a THIRD pair for $1.00 the (hop tor appag afii&Y No. 7 jefferson Square SEE W H A T H APPEN S W H E N Y O U D O N ’T KEEP YOUP. A PP O IN T M EN T W ITH Y O U R C A C T U S PICTURE? C H E C K Y O U R A PPO IN T M EN T SC H ED U LE N O W ! Monday, O C T O B E R 4 thru W ednesday, O C T O B E R 6 A c a c ia A l p h a Epsilon Pi A l p h a Tau O m e g a Beta Theta Pi Delta S ig m a Phi Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon K a p p a A lp h a K a p p a Sigm a L a m b d a C h i A l p h a Phi Delta Theta Phi G a m m a Delta Phi K a p p a Psi Phi K a p p a Tao Thursday, O C T O B E R 7 thru Monday, O C T O B E R ll Pi K a p p a Alpha S i g m a A lp h a Epsilon S i g m a A l p h a M u S ig m a C h i S i g m a N u S i g m a Phi Epsilon S ig m a PI Tau Delta PKI Tau Kappa Epsilon Theta Xi Zeta Beta Tau S T U D IO H O U R S 8:30 A.M.-12:30 and 1:30 PX-4:30 P X . J O U R N A L I S M B U IL D IN G — RM . 5 All Appointments Must Be Made Through Your Fraternity, the CACTUS ye arb o o k A n o t h e r p u b l i c a t i o n o f T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L I C A T I O N S i s i Page 6 Friday, October I, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN UT Alumni Band to Perform AFTER THE G A M E W H Y DON'T YOU C O M E TO The "Blast from the Past” returns to the University Saturday. The "blast”—The Longhorn Alumni Band—will gather for the eighth annual Band Day honoring past Longhorn Band members. Highlights of the day will be a luncheon in the Joe C. Thompson Conference Center and a performance by the Alumni and I longhorn Bands during the halftime of the Texas-Oregon football game. During the luncheon, Garland Haygood, president of the Alumni Band, will present scholarships members. to four Longhorn Band Tommy Cowan, past president of both the Longhorn Band and the Alumni Band, explained the scholarship recipients are chosen on the basis of loyalty and depen­ dability to the "Showband of the South­ west.” Recipients of the scholarships will be Nancy Nugent, a junior journalism major; Fred Ellis, industrial management major; Ronald Keeney, a senior mechanical engineering major, and Chuck Yarling, electrical a engineering major. sophomore senior a A salute to the State of Texas and music from the West will highlight half-time ac­ tivities at Saturday’s game. The Alumni Band will join the Longhorn Band to form a double script Texas at the conclusion of the performance. Pregame festivities will include a salute to the Eagle Scouts and their mothers. The the Texas Cowboys at the University will also be acknowledged by the band. fiftieth anniversary of The Longhorn Band is under the direction of Vincent R. DiNino. James G. Hejl is assistant director of the band and Steve Rode is the drum major. DALE BAKER S BAR-B-Q W E WILL BE OPEN UNTIL 9:00 P.M. THIS SATURDAY ONLY 3003 L A K E A U S T IN BLVD. 477-8961 Head of Gulf Oil Denies Interests In Vietnam Coast By RICHARD FINEGAN News Assistant The president of Gulf Oil Corp. denied Thursday Gulf has any "concessions” in Vietnam. Robert Dorsey, president of Gulf and a University graduate, made the statement during a panel discussion on "Students and Big Business” held in Business-Economics Building 166. DORSET WAS responding to an allegation made by Student Government President Bob Binder that Gulf had facilities off the coast of Vietnam. The corporation president said Gulf has no interest in Vietnam at present because of "political instability” there. He did not respond directly to Binder’s question whether Gulf is "playing an active role in continuing the war.” Binder and Dorsey were part of a six-member panel com prised of three students and three businessmen. The Student Government president also questioned Gulf’s operations in Angola, an African colony of Portugal. BINDER NOTED Gulf’s contracts with the Portuguese government to protect the company's interests there from "native terrorism.” He also said white American technicians In Angola are paid $2,800 a month while local African laborers are paid $1 per day. Dorsey denied American technicians are paid $2,BOU and said "we pay the Africans probably the highest wages paid in that . part of Africa.” The corporation president also said native rebellions in Angola . . may be "Red Chinese inspired.” AUDIENCE DISCUSSION of the subject was cut off when an incoming class forced evacuation of the meeting room. Other members of the panel included Dr. David Learner, president of Applied Devices Corp.; James Bayless, executive vice-president of Rauscher Pierce investment bankers and busine**? students Tony Alonzi and Henry Randazzo. Dean George Kozmetsky of the College of Business Ad­ ministration was moderator. Texas Pokes Plan Reunion To honor a 50-year tradition of campus and community service, approximately 200 present and f o r m e r members the University’s Texas Cowboys will attend reunion activities Friday through Sunday. of Special recognition will be given the twenty-fifth anniversary of the 1946 active Cowboys. Reunion activities include a cocktail party Friday night, a buffet luncheon Saturday and a banquet Saturday night. Fifty years ago Amo Nowotny, University head cheerleader; Bill McGill, president of the Longhorn Band, and other student leaders selected 40 men active in campus and community service to form the Texas Cowboys. The Cowboys selects its new members each semester from a list of outstanding men on campus. Funds raised from the annual Cowboy Minstrels has primarily helped the Austin Association of Mental Retard­ ation. support State surgeon; Prominent former Cowboys are Bob Armstrong, land commissioner; U.S. Sen. Lloyd Bent sen; Dr. Denton Cooley, Joe heart Greenhill of the Texas Supreme Court; Tom Landry, coach of the Dallas Cowboys; Jim Langdon, member of the State Railroad former Gov. Commission and Allan Shivers. Judge Mike McMahon, foreman of the is co­ the for is honorary current Texas Cowboys, ordinating reunion. Nowotny activities . chairman. East Austin Shuttle Bus Route Sought by University Students Concerned University students will meet Sunday to discuss the need of a shuttle bus route to East Austin. The meeting, to be held at 7 :30 p.m. at 104 E. 37th St., is open to all students and interested citizens. Eddie Blum, one of the plan­ ners of the meeting, said Thurs­ day those attending wall help organize a program to "get a shuttle bus out there now'.” the route and that "the City is definitely holding this up.” Blum noted a "substantial number" of students live in East Austin now without shuttle bus facilities and that many of these are blacks and chicanos. Ronald Holcombe, another of the meeting’s planners, said the University, Transportation En­ terprises Inc., and the Shuttle Bus Committee have approved Holcombe called the situation "de facto segregation” involving blacks and chicanos. Holcombe added a portion of the mandatory student service fee goes tow'ard support of shuttle bus service and said students in East Austin are not getting their money s worth. Harvey Wallbanger, Bloody Mary, and M argarita invite you to the before the game lunch at Rings $11.95 Would you like to stop smoking? You can. Not through human will. Or a substitute. But through prayer which can help you prove the unreality of any power opposed to God. Many people have been freed from smoking this way. And they have found their freedom from other habits as welL Come In and read this week’s Bible Lesson. I f s a free "lesson” you can read anytime we’re open. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM 1405 Lavaca 9 to 9 Dally Sun. & Holidays 2 to 5 IHI Mod* I IWS I To bear a1! of the sound. That'* why you listen to music. But most speakers distort sound. Especially high trebles and low, low bass tones. LWE stops that hassle. First we got hold of some strong speakers, ones that can physically handle sound extremes. Second, we linked them up with the amplifier through our patented Clip-Kit, shewn rn the picture, so that hey re getting what they should, lf they're not, LWE's feedback system kicks in and corrects the amp ^ output. It's there to keep Emerson, Lake and Palmer from coming off like the Kingston Trio. The treble comes out pure and electric, the bass thunders out clean. You're going to hear a different sound because you'll be hearing all the sound. W hen you put it to work with your set-up, there's only one thing to do: hear. oLonaise TOP OF WESTGATE $2.95 to entice you, Strutting Steer Steak Sandwich 23rd FLOOR WESTGATE, 1122 COLORADO, 12-3 P.M., 478-4628 THE LAOS HOUSE Southwest Center for Human Potential GESTALT THERAPY Lecture — Film.— Demonstration Announces BY JA M ES S. SIMKIN, Ph.D. Sunday - October 3rd 7:30 p.m. Catholic Student Center 2010 University — Austin Admission General: $3.00 Student: $2.00 IN T H E N O W and discuss t h e Dr. James S. Simkin will present his film on Gestalt Therapy, theories and principles of this approach. Orig.nally developed by Fritz Peris, M.D., Gestalt The- raDV is currently receiving much attention from therapists, educators, and many others who are concerned with personal growth and self-integration Dr. Simkin will demonstrate the application of Gestalt Therapy in an individual session. James S.mk.n is one of the foremost teachers of G e s­ talt Therapy in the United States. He has led professional and non-protess.onal seminars and workshops at Esalen Institute, The Laos House and many other Growth Centers and at Uni­ versities in the United States and Canada For many years he was in private practice rn Bever­ ly Hills. H e now leads training workshops in Gestalt Therapy at his home in Big 5ur, California. Additional Information and Advance Tickets The Laos House -- 700 W est 19th 477-4471 Tickets available at the door Sunday, October 3rd “ Oa th* D m " X u ! to 0*-Of G e m o l o g i s t s - J e w e l e r s - D e s i g n e r s Audio Concepts 19 Dobie Center 478-8880 Ask for Dave u the Image GRAND OPENING! SEPT. 30-OCT. 1-OCT. 2-REGISTER FOR FREE PRIZES! YOU’LL the image Portrait Studio i i ? 'n rn "the image" in the new DOBIE CEN TER - 2021 Guadalupe created especially tor today— with the N O W look in PORTRAITS POSTERS BLOW-UPS LD. and RESUME PHOTOS GREETING C A R D S C AN D LES Special Portrait Offer! N A T U R A L C O L O R I 8x10 — 6 W A L L E T S Reg. Price $18.90 J w " I C H O I C E O F 4 P R O O F S \ B L A C K & W H IT E I 8x10 — 6 W A L L E T S Reg. Price $8.75 A J 195' M A ST E R C H A R G E ® - ST U D ER’S C H A R G E - B A N K A M E R IC A R D ® O F FE R E N D S SA T U R D A Y - OCT. 9 W H IM A C AM f AA rut AK Of Visit Studer’s brand new portrait and card shop 1 TH E I M A G E during their G R A N D O P E N IN G , T H U RS., FRI., S A T . Register for over 76 FREE G IFT S, no obligation, you do not have to be present to win. G RA N D PRIZE! O n e 16x20 N A T U R A L C O L O R P O R ­ T R A IT , regular $47.50 value. DAILY PRIZES! T E N G IF T C E R T IF IC A T E S (one per hour) each good for an 8x10 N A T U R A L C O L O R P O R T R A IT , valued at $9.95 each. O N E B L A C K LIG H T , $12.95 value. T W O $5.00 G IF T C E R T IF IC A T E S (per day) to be applied on items of your choice, blow-ups, posters, candles, etc. portraits, frames, O N E B L O W -U P each day, $7.95 value. E L E V E N P O S T E R S (per day) one each hour, value $2.00 each. Register for Over 5 5 OO00 IN PRIZES! 4 O T H E R ST U D E R L O C A T IO N S : • 917 Congress Ave. • 5732 Burnet Rd. • 5417 Interregional Hwy. • 1633 Ben W hite Blvd. JL, S T O R E H O U R S : IO a.m. to 9 p.m. ★ "the Image" In Dobie Center, 202! Guadalupe Friday1 October J, 1971 THE D AILY T E X A N Page Juvenile Court Drug Program Rehabilitates By JENNIFER EVANS General Reporter (This Is the last of a two-part series.) A youngster whose hobby is scoring amphetamines is something m ore than a problem child. He is a problem to his family, his school, his community and, most of all, to himself and those who try to help him. The time-honored method of treating lawbreakers, even youthful ones, Is the “lock and knock” method—“lock ’em up and knock some sense into ’em .” This punitive approach, derived from the Quaker concept of man* daton» penance, simply “turns loose convicts to be more vicious crim inals,” said Bob Anderson, Travis County chief juvenile probation officer. The alternative approach is rehabilitation, the underwriting of an unusual Austin program called Open Hand. to coping with drug abusers “ OPEN HAND Is a phenomenal success/* Anderson stated. Of 151 juveniles handled in the first six months of its operation in 1970, he said, only five have been rearrested, about a 3 percent reoividism. In hisrh contrast the rearrest figure for juvenile theft cases is more than OO percent. Open Hand, an offspring of the Omnibus Crime Bill, Is financed by the Criminal Justice Council and administered through Juvenile Court. Because of its startling effectiveness, it is one rf the few such programs in the nation carried for a second year rf operation. Its raison d ’etre is “ comprehensive treatm ent for young drug users,” according to the Justice Council, but crucial emphasis is Centered on the word "comprehensive.* “WE DON’T TALK about drugs much,** Jim Bentley, Open Hand psychologist, explained. The focus is on the youngster’s problems, whatever they may be, and the aim is to solve them. The problem may be as uncomplicated as betag ashamed of shabby clothes, ta which case the solution is simply buying him some new ones. Almost none of the young people in Open Hand are truly mentally disturbed. Bentley’s roster of cases shows “adjustment reaction of adolescence” as the overwhelmingly common diagnosis. The Open Hand rationale is client-centered behavior modification therapy, that is, the center of discussion is the client's ideas, not the psychologists theories, and the aim is to enable the client to attack and defeat his problems. THE IDEA of “attacking problems” is important. “ Drug abusers feel they have a wide range of choices In their lives but most of them are boring. They don’t feel like they have the ability* to assert themselves, or have the responsibility to. They are con­ forming personalities. “ Drug abusers are unable to create enough variety in their lives; they lack stimulating social contact; they lack awareness of in­ teresting things. They are not curious about things. Public school trains students to be intakers rf stimuli, copiers rf assignments. Passivity is reinforced.” Bentley, a University PhD candidate, tries to shake this passivity by encouraging the attack of problems, but barriers exist. “Different kinds of kids come in. Often they are co-operative on the surface hut resentful underneath. They have subtle ways rf being hostile, particularly if they feel forced to change. They hate coercion. Threat rf punishment (Sees arf Mer them." MOST OF THE participants ta Open Hand come there ta NMB a condition of their parole after a drug a rre st Often juveniles are given the opportunity to cooperate in Open Hand and have the record of a criminal arrest erased rather than face a court trial. Others come on the recommendation of their friends. The types of therapy within Open Hand are comprehensive. In* dividuals meet with counselors; interaction groups meet with a counselor to do Gestalt a r t ; individuals, parents and counselors meet to “negotiate family policies;” parents meet with adolescents not related to them; those very disturbed or high can be given crisis counseling. “ Any good drug abuse program should be a total treatm ent of the patient within the context rf the whole community in which he has to live,” said Jam es Ferrero, director of the Austin Mental Health-Mental Retardation Center. “IT YOU LOOK UP a drug addict, you take away the drugs, hut you don’t take away the addiction,” he said. Ferrero's thesis is that anxiety* and immaturity work together to cause drug use. “ The culture (of America) encourages drug abuse. People resist change: people 16am one thing and find it hard to unlearn it and learn another thing. That is the simplest way of stating the obstacle to curing drug abuse. There s only a poor second choice (to drugs), or so the addict thinks: your own self and other people.” Young drug abusers do not all turn into addicts, admittedly, but the possibility may be a grim probability for them. “ Addicts are old adolescents who never grew up,” Ferrero said. “ Some addicts spend half their lives in jail." M i s c e l l a n e o u s A p a r t m e n t s , U n f H o u s e s , F urim T y p i n g B R IC K F I V E R O O M , a i r c o n d itio n e d . i i r p e te d . C ouple L e a se , d e p o sit, no p e ts 707 G ra h a m P la c e a t R io G ra n d e a n d 35->2 S tr e e t. 476-0833 T R A D E . TW O B E D R O O M fu rn ish e d house. W e s t A ustin. R oute 6. $ 1 5 0 plus b ills fo r o n e b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t, $100 m a x im u m E liz a b e th , 472-4039 J u s t North o f 2 7 t h & G u a d a l u p e TW O G O O D Y E A R R A L L Y . 4 V o lk s w a g e n d u n e b u g g y , e tc . c h ro m e w h e e ls , a n d S E P T E M B E R 29 b e tw e e n 12 45 and 3:15. w itn e s s to d a m a g e to 1969 w h ite A m b a s s a d o r. A re n a D riv e , 385-0976. 68 V W C A M P E R . P o p top. A M -FM ra d io . B e s t o ff e r o v e r $1600. 441-7218 a n y tim e . J E N N IN G S M O VI N G -H A U L I N G . All ty p e s of m o v in g . L a rg e , s m a ll. 7 d a y s %%eek. E x p e rie n c e d HI2-7233. GI .2-1923 B O R Z O I (R u s s ia n W o lfh o u n d s ). P u t p ie s. $150-5350. 478-7183 o r 441-6224 R U M M A G E S A L E th is S a tu r d a y fro m l l a m . , 2005 E a s t 7th. 7 a m to C om e o ne a n d all. F o r R e n t C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T ISIN G R A T E S tim e E a c h W ord (15 word m in im n m ) J ........... * .07 06 ...........$ ..75 . . . . . . $ ...0 5 E a c h A dditional T im * S tu d en t rate one E a c h ad d ition al word 20 C onnerntlve Issu e s IO w ord* 15 w ord* 20 w ord* inch 1 col. 2 col. Inch in ch $ c o l. 4 col. in ch C la ssified D isp la y I colu m n x on e inch one tim e $ 2.10 ........... $ 2.00 E a ch A d d ition al T im e ......................................... SIJ.OO ......... ............................... $15.00 ......................................... $10.00 .......................... $38.00 ..................................... $70 OO ..................................... $96.00 ......................................$120.00 (N o rop y ch a n g e for c o n s e c u tiv e Issue r a te s.) • . L O W STUDENT RATES IS words or lass for 7Sc the first ♦im#, 5c aach additional word. Stu­ dent must show Auditor's racaipt and pay in advance in Journalism Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. D E A D L IN E S C H E D U L E M onday T e x a n F r id a y , 3:90 p .m . T u e sd a y T e x a n M o n d a y . 11:90 a.m . W ed n esd a y T exan T u e sd a y , l l OO a rn. T h u r sd a y T ex a n W e d n e s d a y . 11:09 a m. F r id a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y . 11:00 a.m . *ejn the e v e n t of e rr o r s m a d e lit mn a d v e r tis e m e n t, im m e d ia te n o tice m a s t b e g iv e n a s th e p u b lish e rs are r e sp o n sib le fo r on ly O N E in c o r r ec t In sertio n . AU c la im s for a d ju stm e n ts should b e m a d e n o t la te r than 30 d ay* a tt e r p u b lic a tio n .” N IF T Y . H A R D T O -F IN D , r e f r ig e r a t o r . $50. C all 474-5264, D a v e. c o m p a c t M E S T S E L L 1065 M u s ta n g V -8. S ta n ­ d a r d . R ed . $495. 476-0244. 472-0482. h a s N IT -N O Y e m M a tt r e s s p a c k s , d e sk s, c h e s ts , c a b in e ts , d r e s s e r s , so g la s s w a re , fas. g a s K a r-b a r. 1513 M a n o r R o a d . 477-0550. h e a le r s , ra n g e s , s te r e o SO N Y 6060 45 w a tts R M S p e r c h a r n e l . P e r f e c t s h a p e . $225 M ig h t sw a p o r h a g g le . C a ll D w ig h t a t 472-6860. r e c e i v e r t ir e ;, e x t r a c le a n , n e w p a in t Job 66 VW S E D A N . R e b u ilt e n g in e , good '63 VW K a rm a n n G h ia , good tir e s , n ew engine n e w p a in t Job. 1621 E a s t Stir, 177-6797. 1971 P O R S C H E 914 . 2800 a c t u a l m ile s . im m a c u la te c o n d itio n . F u ll w a r r a n ty , $3650. C all 452-6047. 1970 H O N D A 750 G old, new parts. 17,000 m ile s . M ST A. B e s t o ffe r. 478- 5285 a f te r 4 p m . E X T R A C L E A N S te re o . N ew p a in t. G ood 2744 o r 477-1181 a f t e r 5 p rn. '66 S t a r f i r e L o a d e d . ti r e s 475- 1 9 7 0 C T O . B lu e w h ite v in y l P S , a u to m a tic m o n th s o ld C a ll 472-0589 to p tr a n s m is s io n , G A S S T O V E in c h e s w id e . I m m a c u la te ly c le a n . $60. A fte r g rill. 30 tim e r 5. 472-1869. 1970 H A R L E Y -D A V T D S O N 350 S p rin t. G reat, f o r r o a d o r d ir t. $550 o r b e s t o ffe r. 441-7377. C O U G E R X R -7 c o n v e r tib le . 1969. A ll p o w e r a n d a ir , AT, A M -F M . B e a u ti­ fu l. M a k e o ffe r. 454-2987. 440-six c o n v e r tib le . C h a lle n g e r p a c k R / T . B lu e w ith y e llo w a td e -s trip e s . w h ite to p a n d in te r io r . L O A D E D ! A L L p o w e r, a l a r m , h o o k e r, H u r s t, m a llo ry , c o n e la c , h o o d lo c k s, d r iv in g lig h ts , a n d A L I^-offered M o p e r o p tio n s . N e w E 60- 15 G o o d y e a r s a n d D ie H a r d . 13 m o n th s o ld $3195. C all H u g h a f t e r 4. 454-6551. OLD BLUEJEANS FO R SALE: $3. Upstairs at FRESH PA N TS 24th & San Antonio 4 7 2 - 1 3 4 1 BILL K A SSO N Y A M A H A . . . NO W d o e s tu n e -u p s A m in o r r e ­ p a ir s on H o n d a A K a w a s a k i . . . O ffe rs th e s e s p e c ia ls (th is w e ek o n ly ) le v e r s $ 2 /p a !r f e n d e r b r a c k e ts Y a m a h a E n d u r o b r a n # A c lu tc h le v e rs $ 2 /p a ir S m a ll H o n d a Y a m a h a E n d u r o $3 e a c h M ini b ik e s ’ c lu tc h e s $7 50 H o n d a ta ll lig h t le n s e s $1 3(1 e a c h N G K -B t'H X K a w a s a k i s u rfa c e g a p p lu g 99c e a c h F R E E m o to r c y c le A I r a n b ik e h a n d ­ b ook 1607 South Lamar 444-7482 1965 C H E V Y II NO V A . A u to m a tic -6 G ood c o n d itio n . $400 o r b e s t o ffer. 1217 B W e s t M a r y 5-7 p .m . P O L IC E R A D IO S b y S o n a r : T w o h a n d h e ld u n its $49 95 w ith c r y s ta l s . S o n a r FR -175 w ith tw o c r y s ta l s $159 S p e e d w a y R a d io , 39? W e s t 19th. 478-6609. S A IL B O A T . S a s e n o w on a s h a r p 15' D o lp h in S r. w ith ic e c h e s t. C all 327- 0906. SA IL B O A T . 18 foot. S a ils, tr a ile r . tin g s . $375. C a ll 452-1348 a f t e r 2 90, F E N D E R S U P E R c o n d itio n . g o o d r e v e r b a m p , v e r y h e st-w ill $350 o r h a s s le . K e ith , 454-2938 e v e n in g s . A Q U A R IU M S . T h r e e ta n k s w ith la r g e s ta n d s , d y n a flo s , e v e r y th in g lig h ts , C all 452-1348 a f te r 2 .39 SA A B . 1979. re d . P r a c tic a lly n e w . 5,000 m ile s. $2095. C all 926-0353. 1962 VW b u s N e w e n g in e , c e lle n t c o n d itio n . 471-2483 tir e s P O R T A B L E T V s : all- e b a n n e L U ltr a c le a n , littl e u s e d B /W , le ft) . P h o n e 444-134o, 442- *66-50 d e w T475, 4306 M a n c h a c a R o a d . 19" A d m ira l fr O P C A SH E R R IC E S p a id f o r d ia m o n d s . c id g o ld . C a p ito l D ia m o n d S hop. 603 E o m rn o d o re P e r r y ’. 476-0178 (TNFTSH — A M E R IC A S m o s t p o p u la r s a i l b o a t N e w s to c k of S u n fish p a r t s let a r r iv e d . N e w a n d u s e d s a ilb o a ts 1) a te e s . S a ilin g I m p o r ts . 926-5804. R 5 D E G R A D A B L E : S h a k le e h o m e a n d p e r s o n a l c a r e p r o d u c ts . A sk a t w i t Loney-hack g u a r a n te e . E v e n in g * b e st. S T E R E O • SP EA K ER S A L E • O m r a n d g e t th e m w h ile th e y la st. (C o n sid ered ' A B E S T B U Y " b y to p te*t c o m p a n y . D y n a c o SCA — R9 k its. B u ild y o u r o w n h ig h p o w e re d s i r r e e a m p a t lo w c o st. M a r a n tz r e c e iv e r s . S o n y re c e iv e r s . D u a l c h a n g e r s , G a r r a r d c h a n g e rs . M ir a c o r d c h a n g e r s . A R tu r n ta b le s , a n d m a n y o th e r to p b ra n d s . '71 C A N A R Y Y E L L O W V W c o n v e rtib le . A M -FM . F o u r m o n th s old. J o h n , 451- 4208. S U B S T IT U T E B A B IE S . A K C D a lm a tia n p u p p ie s. All th e fu n a n d n o n e of th e b o th e r. R e a s o n a b le . 327-1875. B A B Y G R A N D a n d q u a lity m a h o g o n y fin ish . m o r n in g ;, a f te r 5 39, w e e k e n d s . P IA N O . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . R u sh -O e rts $695. C all 441-2873 AC, P S . P B , A M -FM . 1967 O L D S 98 F o u r d o o r to w n s e d a n r e a r s p e a k e r, r e m o te n r r r o r . $1590. 4G4-9T1B. 471-7202. ra d io , '69 C O R V E T T E C O U P E R e a l b e a u ty . C all 477-7291 o r 836-1.399 e x te n s io n 6656 a n d a s k fo r J im . S N I P E c lu d e d S A IL B O A T . In­ F ib r e g la s s hu ll, c e d a r d e ck , E v e r y th in g a lu m in u m m a s t $1299. 444-7356. Save r'e - ty bread on new K IM , K enw ood e n d o z re r c o m p o n e n ts. N ow In Stock: 2 DYN A C O S C A -80 Kit* $ 13A ee I pr. A R A s le e k e r* , $ I 30 I SO N Y 680 d a m e ., cheaD All w ith full w a rra n ty . Audio Consultor)**; of Austin S T E R E O C E N T E R 293 E a s t 19th A c ro s s 19th fro m J e s t e r C e n te r 159 L B SF.T of b a rb e lls . In c lu d e s tw o lh p la te s a lso . U S A P u n ifo rm s . 25 C all 472-73*9 1969 V O LVO four door s e d a n A u to m a ­ $2000. 926- e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . 0646, 5315 P e a c e d a le L a n e tic, S H A R P 1979 P L Y M O U T H S a te llite tw o d o o r h a rd to p . B lue w ith w h ite \d n v l N e w tir e s . $2,590 476-8S'3. OSCTLIS C O P E K e n w o o d KC6060. Solid s u ite A u d io -L a b sco p e , n e w . $125. 47*- PANTS: $5 309 pe r of cord uro y & p e n m be! -b o tto m s ON ' S A L E U P S T A IR S at F R E S H P A N T S % Sen Anton o 472 T H O R O U G H B R E D D A C H S U N D w ith p a p e r s . A ll s h o ts . Six m o n th s old. fr e e k itte n s . 454- $35 T h r e e a d o r a b le PUBLIC NOTICE ICLH S P E A K E R S , S o n y STR-45 A M /E M r e c e i v e r . D u a l 1218 r e c o r d c h a n g e r. S o n y TC.-165 s te r e o c a s s e tt e d e c k w ith a u to m a tic r e v e rs e . 476-675" 454-6141. 1969 Y A M A H A 250 E n d u r o . E x p a n s io n head. re'e a se e o m p re - ;o n com pression ch a m b e r, high fa c in g piston, 475. 478-7108 1959 B O R G W A R D g in e . G oad c o n d itio n $819 B a ile y L a n e i a n . C h e v ro le t en- $250. 451-4765, F O R B A L E m a c h in e 68 N e lco z:g-7az se w in g f o u r -d ra w e r e d nice In •a b in e t. $125 or best o ff e r 47-1-173- 1961 A L F A R O M E O S p id e r. R e b u ilt e n g in e , n e w to p a n d to n n e a u . R a d ia ls . U n d e n te d b o d y . $399. 44f.qnn7. Ah G H A N H O ’ N OS, and a g e s , a t S ta r l a n e w h e re q u a lity b e ­ c o lo rs s o ts q u a lity . C h a m p io n a tu a s e rv ic e * all 1970 H O N D A CL-70 5.500 m tle s -p lu s h e lm e t. C all 442-8963 a n y tim e . G E N E R A L E L E C T R IC P O R T A C O LO R TV . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . C all 465-5043 fo r m o r e in fo rm a tio n . S U Z U K I. 1970. T h r e e s p e e d a u to m a tic , 6 hp, 150 m p g . $135. 472-9367 a f te r 5 p .m . tw o b a th M O B IL E H O M E . 62x12. T h r e e b e d ro o m . im ­ m e d ia te s a le $100 fo r $750 e q u ity p lu s b a la n c e 472-9367 a f te r 5 p m . E x t r a s P r ic e d fo r 1965 C H E V R O L E T IM P A L A fo u r do o r s e d a n . VS, A-C. G ood c o n d itio n $795 836-4051. 18.50 A N T IQ U E B R A S S d o u b le b e d $120 C all 444-8589 o r 441-2435. 66 Y W B E E T L E . O ne o w n e r, re b u ilt e n g in e . 52.OOO m ile s . $695. C a ll a f te r 5 30, 327-0182. F IS H IN G R IG — 1970 G a m e f ls h e r b o a t. tilt tr a i l e r . A lso c a m p e r 9hp m o to r, s h ell fo r 1953 C h ev . P ic k -u p . 4 4 4 -2 8 6 5. M i s c e l l a n e o u s Z uni N E L S O N S G IF T S : c o m p le te s e le c tio n a n d M e x ic a n im p o r ts . 4612 S o u th C o n g re ss . 444-3814. J e w e lry : A fric a n In d ia n L E A R N to a d v a n c e d . 475-2979. b e g in n e r. 'la y G U IT A R , Ir e w T h o m a s o n . 478-7331 O N T O W N LAKE R ant a s a ilb o a t or c a n o e . r/?»kdays I2-9 w e ek e n d ) S tu d e n ts tak e IH u ttleb u s ta 8 to 1800 S. le« * « h o re . SKYDIVE EARN $'s W EEK LY B 'ood p lasm a d o n o rs n e e d e d . C a th p v d a tte n d a n c e . ‘ or O p e n T u e sd ay th ro u g h S stu -d e y , 8 a.m .- 3 p.m . serv ice -. P h y v c H n in A U STIN B LO O D C O M P O N E N T S , IN C ., 409 W e s t 6th. 477-3"?5. P A R K IN G B Y M O N T H . $12.50. 2418 S a n A ntonio, o ne b lo c k fro m C a m p u s 476-3729. T r a v i s . R E N T S A IL B O A T fu n — b e a u tifu l L a k e th ro u g h a c c o m m o d a tin g 1-8 M arsh k e e lb o a ts , Y a c h t S a le s — b y M a n s fie ld D a m CO 6-1150. B o a rd b o a t* B U M P E R S T IC K E R S . D e sig n y o u r ow n. w ill p r in t a n y th in g c h e a p . 454-6907. m a n e n tly w ith m e d ic a lly R E M O V E U N W A N T E D H A IR peT- a p p ro v e d e le c tro ly s is . U n iv e r s ity e l e c t r o l v s 477- 4979. T U T O R W A N T E D fo r a c c o u n tin g 311 C all 441-4957 a f te r 5 p rn. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n NEWEST NEAR CAMPUS! room, 2 b a t h a p a r t m e n t s b !e , «un deck & large p e r GREAT OAK APARTMENTS — O P E N fo r stu d y in g , sm o o z ng e e k n ig h ts . 2105 S a n A ntonio L O S T : L A R G E , SH A G G Y , lig h t brow n n a m e d C h iq u ita . C all dog J a n e t, 454-8515, 476-9611. fe m a le L o s t & F o u n d LO TT. DOG, fe m a le Six m o n th s b e a g le an d b a s s e t. W hite w ith b la c k hear) a n d b o tto m R e a c ts to ' B o o g ie ." l i p a s e c a ll 441-1421. L O ST A R O U N D 31st S tr e e t, fe m a le g re y an d w h ite c a t n a m e d Io la n th e . R ew ­ a rd . 311 E a s t 31. 103. a f t e r 3 L A R G E R E W A R D . F o u r m o n th fe m a le a n d G u a d a lu p e . N e e d s m e d ic a tio n . C all 4 5 4- v ic in ity s e t t e r Irish 35th H e l p W a n t e d IM M E D IA T E L Y W A N T E D 472°6753iflC transla,nr- CaU R u ssia n H a n n a a t M O T H E R 'S H E L P E R w a n te d # « h*o5iBe in ex- s a la r y . C all ro o m a n d fn r S P R IN G A H E A D TH IS FALL S e t a i m p ne $ ? 5 /w e e k n**t i : r o o l e n d tim e o 's r a ile r *> A e r 7 e t W EA !, 8 30 p.m , M on , W e d ., F r 1 Thurs. a t KOKE B uilding, 3108 N o r u Lame*. I T living •« S r - n a - I cr m a r r i e d m e n $150-1200/w e e k . W o rk e v en in g * . S a le s. 441-7931. ** NEED SO M E BREAD? ** — U niversal S tu d e n t A d __ "Am erica * Jarqe-.t student program” is now in te rv ie w ing lo Austin. Dor, t hnf s'e th* Austin ~b market__ ch ec k this p u t; rn i r s 3* 9 9 9 h r- I T W - $2.00 h r • $1 un m w a l k to w o r k ! a r e a ) (L T • full o r p a r t • q u a lif ic a tio n s : m u s t he ab l# s c h e d u le tim e • h a i r no h a ss le • h o u r s rn fit a n , to c o m m u n ic a te w ith o th e r s tu d e n t* ! G rad u al# i t , dent, accounting d eg ree, work ap p ro U m ately 20 hours weekly. $2 the most valu able • <- per hour income per enc# of yo u r lif®, H :gher r us F R E E M A L E , Z e b r a s trip e d , six w e e k s old. k itte n fre c k le d n o se Quite a c h a r a c te r . 441-1274. neqof a r a for ' ’ .cen t with outstanding C re d e n tia l $ .rh a i C P A . Phone for AUSTIN PARACHUTE CENTER appointm ent. G » o rq # Smith, 465-7687. a v a ila b le G I R L WITH T R A N SPO R T A T IO N school tw o c h ild re n 2-6 p .m ., M o n d a y - F n d a y 476- 5110, M rs. P e r r y . 442-3838 a f t e r 6. s ta y w ith to will be closed October 2nd a^d 3rd, Saturday and Sunday, T u t o r i n g G ER T R U D E A N D L ’S D AY C A R E N U R SER Y 481-4557. ST A T T U T O R IN G . All b u s in e s s m a th . L E A R N b e g in n e r. a d v a n c e d . D re w T h o m a s o n , 478-7331 to p la y G U IT A R , 478-2079. •»<.uo'lai j ‘ aff, ro m # a tm o tp r e r * G erm an la n g u a g e p ro g ram . ’pen 7 :30-5 30. 1405 East 38'/2 St. A g » i 2-6. 474 2840, 452-1696. o ften M A TH , S E M E S T E R R a te s . O v aU ab le a s n e c e s s a r y . F o r B u sin e ss, L i b e r a l - A r t s M a jo rs. G R E. P r e p a r a t on, G u a r a n te e d R e s u lts G ro u p R a te s . M ATH E N A M I CS, 452-1327. H E A D S H O P. P o s te r s , p a tc h e s , p a p e r s in te re s tin g b ooks, p a w n sh o p . M ost s to re in A u stin . 329 C o n g re ss. SWAP-O-RAMA S W A P MEET & FLEA M ARKE' U N IV E R S IT Y L IT E R A R Y S E R V IC E S . e x p o sito ry , in b u s in e s s w ritin g . 477-994.3, in s tru c tio n P e rs o n a l G U IT A R L E SSO N S. C all B oh, 441-1485. e x p e r ie n c e d E X P E R T T U T O R IN G in S p a n is h by tu to r . C o m ­ con­ p o sitio n , v e rs a tio n . c o m p re h e n s io n . R e a s o n a b le r a te s R e s u lts g u a ra n te e d . C all S te v e , 478-6720. tr a n s la tio n . lite r a tu r e g r a d u a te re a d in g , M ATH T U T O R IN G — M a s te r s D e g re e -- $4 h our. C all 453-8164. C A L C U L U S S0SA.B. 476-7883 b e fo re 3, a f t e r 19 Jo h n . C lo se to C a m p u s. TO PL A C E A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD C A L L 471-5244 C A M I N O R E A L 6 b lo c k s to U .T . JU S T R E L E A S E D L A R G E I B E D R O O M ^ U R N iS H E D A P A R T M E N T All b ills p a id , c a b le , d is h w a s h e r, d is ­ p o sal. pool, 2 ro o m s. S h u ttle la u n d r y B u s ro u te , c o v e re d p a rk in g a v a ila b le . 2810 Salad o 476-4995 C A M IN O REA L — EL PA T IO 6 b lo ck s to U T. 3 b ed room —2 b ath s. All b ills paid . N E W L Y D EC O RA TED — S H A G C A RPET lau n d ry room . 2 pools, dish C ab’p. w a s h e r, g u a r d , sec u r ity d is p o sa l, oo\ e rod p a rk in g a v a ila b le. 2810 S a la d o 476^1095 T w o b e d ro o m , LF! F O N T A p a r tm e n ts , 803 W e st 28th. Individ ual c o n tr a c t $61.50 p e r p e rs o n , bilis-m ald P o o l. R o o m m a te s e r v ic e s p a c e a v a ila b le . 472-6480. tw o b a th . fu rn ish e d . S O M E O N E A S S U M E H ardin N orth c o n ­ t r a c t. F o u r g irl su ite. 2nd floor. Tw o v a c a n c ie s . S p rin g se m e s te r . 477-1895. A TTR A C T IV E , P R IV A T E , tow n-U niv#r*ity. c o n v e n ie n t carp ort. C ity bus. $80, w a te r paid. C ouple only. 477-8613. T U O B ED R O O M , tw o bath. C A C H , d is h w a s h e r, d is p o s a l, c a b le TV, pool, su n d e c k , laundry. One block fro m U T. S h u ttle . Cai) M r. or M rs. E d­ u a r d s , 478-6776. 311 E a s t 31st. s tu d y , N E E D T O S E L L c o n tr a c t on e ffic ie n c y a p a r tm e n t. N e x t to L B J L ib r a r y . CA­ CH. P h o n e 477-21*8, 5 M IN U TES FRO M UT I H E DEL PR A D O APTS, 303 W . 40TH STREET to w n h o u se typ e a p a r tm en t!. L a rg e B e a u tifu l f u r n itu r e P le n ty of p a rk in g . S w im m in g pool M a n a g e r A pt. 106 T V C a b le 454-2436 C o n \o n ie n t L A R G E O N E B E D R O O M , liv in g ro o m . S h u ttle C o n ta c t m a n a g er E ldorado A partm ent*. 3501 S p e e d w a y . R e a s o n a b le R o o m & B o a r d N O W AVAILABLE Graduate Students A D a r t merit Single enc Double Accommodations uaaa ShBfWsy, October I, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN 1969 V O LV O A-C P S . pow er b ra k e s , a ll l e a t h e r u p h o ls te ry , ra d io M a y he s e e n a n y tim e a t 1710 L a \ a c a . M u st sell b y M o n d a y . $1995. GR6-5731. d is c b e d ro o m M A K E O F F E R O N C O U C H ? 'd ining s e t su ite , a n tiq u e - d r e s s e r , a n d c lo c k M isc e lla n e o u s . 1191 St F ld w a rd s 231 441-2512 a f t e r 5 1979 F O U R W H E E L D R IV E T o y o ta p o w e r w e n c h L a n d C r u is e r A ir. a tta c h e d g a s , $3459 E x c e lle n t. 477-5294 ’ 64 VW K A R M A N N OHTA. G ood c o n ­ d itio n . $559. C a ll a f t e r 5 p m , 453-1557 66 VTV R E D A N . N e w p a in t, e n g in e , g o o d tir e s $*=/). W ill b a rg a in good 472-4789 C A M P E R . HO I S E -C A R . N ew e n g in e L e s s th a n 290 m ile s . C o n ta c t J im , 1691 W est 6 th , u p s ta ir s . 1967 MG M ID G E T . N e w tir e s . *959 476-3778 5-10 p m a n d M W E 8-2 p rn 1966 D O D G E p a n n l G ood e n g .n o c le a r 444-4871 8-5, 444-2043 good c o n d itio n a f te r 5. W a n t e d 'C H IC K E N MAN 454-8252 a f te r five. a lb u m . P le a s e c a ll N E E D TW O T IC K E T S OU g a m e . 453- T h u r s d a y , a n y tim e T u e s d a y , 0085 w e e k e n d 2^4 p rn M W E. W A N T E D TO B U Y books. P la y b o y s . r e c o rd s , s te r e o ta p e s , g u ita rs , re c o rd p la > e rs , ra d io s , s te r e o s 320 C o n g re ss W A NT TO B U Y u s e d V o lk sw a g e n * G ilb e rts A u to m o tiv e , 1621 E a s t 6»h 4-6 T IC K E T S O k la h o m a -T e x a s g a m e 214-231-1328 c o lle c t o r w rite R o b e r t T r a il. R a m b le w o o d 13830 rn g ru m , D a lla s. D O L L A R S F O R OT.D T E S T S fro m D r W h e e le r s Zoo 330 ( p a ra s ito lo g y ). Cal! C lay 441-7137. 441-6189 a n y tim e W A N T E D : TW O N O N -S T U D E N T tic k e ts to O I'-T e x a s fo o tb a ll g a m e . C all 441- 2376 a f te r 5 p rn. R o o m & B o a r d AN D ROOM s tu d e n ts B O A R D , 20 m e a ls p e r w e ek U n iv e rs ity F re e p a rk in g , fa c ilitie s , m a id ser- v lc e , s w im m in g pool, a-c. P h o n e 477- 9766 o r v is it 2706 N u e c e s . la u n d r y S IN G L E R O OM S U n iv e rs ity H ouse m en s d o r m R o o m a n d h o a rd fo r F a ll a n d s e m e s te r. Good re a s o n a b le food r a te s fro m C a m p u s. b lo c k s S h u ttle B us ro u te A C. m a id se n . ice 2710 N u e c e s . 477-8272 T h r e e 20 m e a ls p e r w e e k ROOM & B O A R D . U n iv e rs ity s tu d e n ts F r e e p a rk in g . s e rv ic e la u n d ry ’ fa c ilitie s s w im m in g pool. a -c l^or.c sessio n ra te * from $1 non. P h o n e 472-7850 o r v isit 2709 N u eces. m a id A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n s t u d i o tw o b e d ro o m S E E T H E L O V E L IE S T A ustin a p a r tm e n ts R e a s o n a b ly p ric e d . F o r in fo rm a tio n c a ll 451 2465. in W O O D W A R D APTS. 1722 E W o o d w ard • S p e c ia l • S w im m in g pools. • M o d e r a t e p r i c e s with all uti lit ie s - no h id d e n c h a r g e s ! s tu d e n t o rie n te d c lu s te r s . p a id 444-755)! • O nly 5 m in u te s to U T. • C o m p l e t e o n - p r e m i s e * w a s h a t a r l a . • F r e e a ll-c h a n n e l TV . • A m p le p a rk in g fo r te n a n t* A gu est* FALL RATES $129.50 Large Two bedroom near down /own. Swimming pool, carpeted a/c, wood paneling. 442-3910 472-9147 pus 477-52*2. R o o m s r o o m s a v a ' THE PHOENIX 19 3 0 S an A ntonio C all C h a rlo tte . 477-5192 H a llo w ee n p a r ty p la n n e d F r e e b e e r S H A R E O L D E R H O U S E on L a k e w ith IO m in u te s UT. 2 prof. a n d fa m ily ro o m s. $125 327-2445 H o u s e s , U n f N O RT H TW O B E D R O O M S, den. living fe n c ed y a r d C a rp e te d . ro o m , la r g e CA-( H $1(13 452-9921 a f te r five H A IR L T D . G all in fo r m a tio n on fo r h a ir sin g e in g fo r s p ilt end* a n d sh a g c u ts 4*4-0984 IDA PRESS S M A LL N U RSERY S C H O O L for I Vi to 2 ’i y e a r old s. O nly 6 c h ild ­ ren VV ell e q u ip p e d an d spacious E x­ p e rie n c e d p re school te a c h e r w ith ch ild d e v e lo p m e n t d e g re e L ic e n se s 2. 3. or 5 m o rn in g s p e r w eek a t $16 24 o r $49 p e r m o n th . C all in v isit at 192 S u m m it S treet (n ear IH35 A R iv e rs id e D r ). 444-4107. for a p p o in tm e n t N E E D D E L P M O V IN G ’ K . - f -’n T r u c k in ' m nver* A pproxim ately $7 59 p e r p i c k - u p l o a d C al l 451-1777 PIA N O L ESSO N S. B egin n er and a d ­ vanced Call 451-3549 Part* e x p e r t V o l k s w a g e n " r e p a i r s aervlce Student* G ilb erts A utom otive S e r v ic e 1621 E a s t 6th D U co u n t and to MRS. PETERSON ’S C O M M E R C IA L DAY C A R E NURSERY * ll a n a n b a o p e n (or a I UT g am es O d# b o c k W e s t of S p e e d w ay . S ta te icense. 4112 A v*. D, 453 5450. R o o m m a t e s M ALE. Q U IE T u p p ercla ssm a n or grad­ u ate to sh are ap artm en t n ea r C am ­ e le ctric ity . 478-7832, $77.50 plu* O N E OR TWO F E M A L E S Luxury a p a r tm e n t Ow n bedroom . 454-1209. U R G E N T . M A LE N E E D E D for a p a r t­ m en t n e a r C am pus. Own bedroom . $65 phi* u, e le ctric ity . 477-0963. e x p e n se s M ALE ROOM M ATE S haiT bedroom large ap artm en t. All h ills paid. $47 Mi Close to c a m p u s . Shuttle B us. Call 476-7818. n eed ed tw o on ON E G IR L V a c a n c y at R am shorn coed Co-op. 710 W est 21st S treet. 478-6586. M A T U R E ROOM M ATE to sh a r e 3-3 w ith tw o e n g in e e r s. T ow n L ak e A rea. $112 m on th ly. Shuttle Bu*. 444-7717. N E E D R OOM M ATE tw o to fu rn ish ed hou*e, R oute A sh a r e bedroom $75 plus bills. E lizabeth, 473-4029. IM M E D IA T E L Y . M al# room m ate share house a quiet C am pu s c lo se . $60. hill*. 474-2967. oth ers, with tw o N E E D OUTG O ING fe m a le r oom m ate tw o bath a p a r tm e n t „ T w o b e d ro o m , Pool. $.->5-month, bills paid. 476-8468 F E M A L E G R A D U T E stu d en t to share la r g e tw o bedroom a p a r tm en t In two story h om e N ear C am pus. $66 plug 1-3 bills. 472-1403 after 3. N E E D M A L E : Sh are tw o bedroom , tw o $68-m onth. N e a r a p a r tm en t. c a m p u s ’ 478-5013 for N athan . bath T y p i n g T Y P IN G s e r v i c e on a n y s u b je c t r a te s 2V15 N ueCp^ P r o fe s s io n a l ty p tn g m a t t e r R e a s o n a b le 472-6753. Jut! North of 27rh & Guadalupe Theses executive. Multilithing, Typing, XeroxR AUS-TEX D U PLIC A T O R S 476-7581 I I 8 Neche* ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 University Area Drinking Establishments Vary in Atmosphere, Clientele, Traditions Local Beer Joints Offer Suds, Games, G ood Times ween bars and drinking gardens. In its candlelight atmosphere, drinkers gather, as at Scholz’s, for pleasant conversation. t l K E ANY OTHER nightspot, Hansel and Gretel has had its rough evenings. Assistant manager Paul Speir recalls the night one waitress couldn’t do anything right. Trying to soften earlier errors, she brought him a pitcher of beer with the untimely greeting “happy birthday.” Predictably, she dropped the pit­ cher. To smooth things over, Speir made drinking for the rest of the night “on the house.” Like other bars and drinking gardens, restroom walls at Hansel and Gretel are covered with graffiti. A blackboard on the wall offers an alternative, but the walls rem ain full and the blackboard is usually empty. Speir says students and faculty; from all parts of frequent Hansel and Gretel. the University “ Lately, we seem to have become students and and among from chemistry a favorite f a c u l t y engineering.” Like other proprietors, Speir finds his work thoroughly enjoyable. He says working behind a bar “ is an Immensely enjoyable thing. It’s like being the Cheshire cat; you can see everyone but they can’t see you.” B y STEVE WISCH Staff Writer line A Friday night before a football is thick with gam e, Austin’s air h u m i d i t y , thousands of and University students contemplate how to pass their evening. Some go to fraternity parties, others the D rag waiting for their next hit or fix, but m any simply to repair nearby bars and drinking gardens. drinking establishments generally confine their spirits to beer and wine. In the drinking houses closest to the Drag, loud music, loud talk and the endless clamor of pinball machines fill congested confines of abodes like The Orange Bull, The Pink Lizard, The Flagon and Tren­ cher and Bevo’s Westside Taproom. S u c h one hears WINDING U P THE stairs to the “ Bull,” echoing reverberations of hard rock music with strains of ringing bells from pinball machines. the inside A gaze reveals a long wooden b ar with stipped-sleeved arm s pushing empty pitchers for­ ward for refills. One couple dancing to the blaring music of a juke box is only a few feet away from two couples bent over a “ foosball” game. scaled-down IS version of a soccer game and has become the highlight of several local bars. FOOTBALL a Games are a m ajor drawing card for bars within the Drag area. Tex Vanzura, proprietor of The Pink Lizard explains, “ People come here to drink beer, play the machines and to have a good tim e.” senior majoring Many of those that frequent local bars don’t coniine their pleasures to a the weekend. Frank Albano, University in English, works at The Flagon and T r e n c h e r . He says weekend the same customers are “ mostly crowd you see every night of the week.” Albano says students frequent the Trencher “ like any typical un­ dergrad bar. They’re middle-class kids whether they have long hair or short hair. They come here to drink beer and hang around, every night of the week.” AS ONE WALKS down West 24th Street to Mrs. Teethe Comstock's Bevo's Westside Taproom, the wail of bands at fraternity parties per­ the background. Entering meates B e v o’ s , are somewhat sparse, and unlike other bars, it is not overcrowded. surroundings the Mrs. Comstock explains that her is com posed ox trad e” "heaviest to parties during sorority and fraternity people “who usually go the weekend.” The tavern’s lone pinball machine appears somewhat crippled after several years of constant battering. than She was quick to point out that Bevo’s attracts more varsity football p l a y e r s competing establishment. Most of her anecdotes like pertain Steve Worster, Bill Bradley or Cotton Speyrer. to gridiron hallmarks any Before Bevo’s became a tavern, it was an ice cream parlor. Explaining the switch, Mrs. why she m ade Comstock says, “ Most people eat. one dip of ice cream , but nobody drinks one beer.” GRATEFUL TO her patrons, she swears, “ My customers are the best people in the world. The people who say kids are rotten don’t know what they’re talking about. They’re good kids who just want to have a good tim e.” One thing that most “ college bars” seem to have in common is that they have flourished for years and their owners believe they will continue to flourish. A somewhat striking ob­ there are often servation “ street people” around these bars, but few venture inside. that is Differing from the bars clustered closely around the Drag are several larger drinking houses or beer gardens. Two of the best known of these are Scholz’s and Hansel and Gretel. A State historical spot, Scholz’s is more than a hundred years old. Personnel m anager Freddie Lowden recalls the centenniel celebration took place on the same day that Charles Whitman climbed the Tower to take 14 lives. It was Aug. I, 1966. B ESIDES ATTRACTING large students, numbers of University Scholz’s retreat of is a legislators and other State officials. During regular sessions, lawmakers seem to vie with students for the best garden tables. favorite On one night last, spring, a group of legislators and reporters sitting together noticed a snake climbing a tree above them. Boldly emerging from his chair, Sen. Charles Wilson of Lufkin attempted to wrest the snake from his perch. After several unsuccessful bouts, Wilson called it quits. Friends from this group oc­ casionally refer to Wilson as “ the snakeman of Scholz’s.” Opened in October, 1969. Hansel and Gretel broadened the gap bet­ I, Being Dry, Sit, idly sipping Her# My Beer. George Arnold By TERRY MADDOX Ever felt like stealing that pitcher your beer is being served up in from your local pub? Many people have done just that in bars around the University ares. Pitchers and glasses have gotten up and walked out of the Pink Lizard, Flagon and Trencher and other bars around campus at such rates that some places now' station employes to watch the doors. “WE LOSE something like six or seven cases of pitchers a week,” John Brooks, who tends bar at the Flagon and Trencher, 2507 San Antonio St., said. “At 70 cents • pitcher, this runs into a little money. We’re serving In paper cups now because our glasses are disappearing so fast.” Glasses and pitchers with the emblem cf your favorite beer are available from beer distributorships shops; however, many students avoid this expense gift or by ripping out the suds, deftly tucking the glassware in purses or under coats and walking out. back? “We don’t press the Issue lf they’re hostile or big,” Holden smiled. “We hardly ever call the police.” “Some people don’t bother to hide them. They Just walk out,” Jim Holden, who keeps bar at the Pink Lizard, 2614 Guadalupe St., said. These are generally Brooks told of a young woman who walked toward the door with a bulge in her coat one night. “We didn’t want to confront her directly, because we weren’t Pitchers and glasses aren’t the only items filched from local watering holes. Peter Kriestner, assistant manager of Hansel and Gretel, 407 W. 30th St., said ashtrays, napkins and even mugs hanging from a beam across the ceiling have been stolen. “We’ve even had three chairs carried glasses to decorate their rooms. These are the same people who put up ‘Bud Man’ posters everywhere.” WHATEVER THE reasons for the petty pilfering, the total cost to the establishment mounts up. In most cases the glassware can be purchased from the bar at little Student 'Sip end Tuck* Capers Spirit Away Beer Classes, Pitchers the more intoxicated customers, Holden explained. “HT WE SEE someone walking out with a pitcher, we just try to catch them and ask them for it. Most people give them back.” What about those that won t give them sure.” out during the past month.” “SO I GOT a pitcher and walked outside behind her. I walked up and said, ’Hey, I got out with a pitcher, did you?’ She brought it out from under her coat and squealed, ‘Yes!’ I told her I worked here, and she gave me back the pitcher.” such Wily do people, especially students, steal quantities? Dan glassware in the Hock-Em Harrington, manager of Lounge, 3406 Guadalupe St., explained that “many younger students identify with a certain brand of beer, and want these more than cost, Brooks said. “We’d rather sell them for little profit than have them disappear.” So next time the urge to take home a pitcher from your favorite bar overtakes you, go up and buy it instead. You might be saving yourself some embarrassment. fittable ll, J&U IHE DAILX IfitSU Baga t By The Associated Press High-kicking Juan M arichal pitched the San Francisco Giants to the National League’s elusive West Division title Thursday night with a masterful 5-1 victory over tho San Diego Padres in the final game of the season. In In s Angeles, the Dodgers were slipping past the Houston Astros, 2-1, in the finale for both clubs. Rut it made no difference. The victory sends the Giants Into tho bost-fo-five playoff series the East against Pittsburgh, champion, the National League pennant. The series starts Saturday in San Francisco. for The Giants, who had frittered away almost all of an eight-and- a-half lead to the pursuing In s Angeles Dodgers with a dreadful September slump, had to call on the ace of their staff to nail down the division crown, and M arichal was superb. The veteran right-hander from the Dominican Republic per­ mitted just five hits and the only run the Padres managed was unearned—the result of an error by M arichal himself. in for ROOKIE DAVE Kingman, injured Bobby filling Bonds, the Giants’ offensive leader, ripped a two-run homer that provided the big difference for I he Giants. M arichal and Dave Roberts, ace left-hander of the Padres’ pitching 7.oroos through the first innings of the tense game. staff, had matched three In other major league action, Tom Seaver won his twentieth victory as the Mets topped S t 6-1. Chicago defeated Louis, Montreal 5-3, Atlanta won over Cincinnati 6-2 and Pittsburgh beat Philadelphia 4-3. In the Am erican League, New York won a 9-0 forfeit over Washington. The Senators were leading 7-5 with one out to go in tho bottom of the ninth when Washington fans ran onto the field, causing the game to be the stopped and Yankees. forfeited to Also, California squeaked past Minnesota 3-2 and Chicago won over Milwaukee 2-1 as White Sox slugger B ill Melton hit his thirty- third round tripper to win the Am erican run crown. League home Meanwhile, the National in League East, Pittsburgh manager Danny Murtaugh said he had no In the GI ant-Dodger druthers shootout, although the Pirates beat Los Angeles eight to four in their 12-game regular season set, while losing nine of 12 to the Giants. “I f s just a question of who gets hot,” he said after his Bucs f i n i s h e d in the Philadelphia Thursday. “In a short series whoever gets hot is going to win; i f s as simple as that.’’ season The tobacco-chewing Murtaugh indicated he will open the best-of- five right-hander Steve Blass and use Dock Ellis in the second game. series with Blass won 15 and lest eight with an ERA of 2.85 while Ellis is 19-9. In the American League, the the Oakland Athletics and Baltimore Orioles weren’t so much in the dark about their upcoming playoff series which begins Saturday in Baltimore. V I D A BLUE, Oakland’s 24- game winner who beat the Orioles 1-0 and 2-1 during the season, w ill oppose Baltim ore’s Dave M cNally, a 21-game winner, in the first game of the best-of- five playoff. Oakland doesn’t feel at a disadvantage playing away from home. The A ’s set a league record this season with 55 road victoriest one more than the 1939 Yankees. In Baltim ore, the Orioles are on an 11-game winning streak which equals a club record set at the end of the 1970 season— when they continued to sweep Minnesota In the playoffs and take Cincinnati—four to one—in the World Series. last their IN WINNING l l the Orioles scored 74 runs and rapped out 123 hits. B y contrast, Oakland scored 43 runs while winning seven of its last l l . “ That’s the way we go when we’re successful,” Oriole slugger Frank Robinson, who the Birds with 28 home runs and 99 runs batted in, said. “ You can’t go through our lineup inning after inning without somebody getting to you.” led Robinson rates Oakland as “ over-all a better club than Minnesota's the past two years. It has tho better pitching, the hitting is a little better and th* defense is better.” Steer Backs Still Hurting contact practice. coming along. By STEVE RENFROW Assistant Sports Editor Same song, second verse, Things could get better, Or they could get worse. T hat was D arrell Royal's statement, paraphrased, T hurs­ day afternoon as the Longhorns 7ipped through an hour of light The M em orial Stadium mentor was noncommittal about whether quarterback Eddie Phillips w ill start against the Oregon Ducks Saturday afternoon. Royal also refused to position himself on how the bruised shoulders of Jim Bertelsen and Bobby Calli son are SF Clinches West Crown Playoffs Begin Saturday PANTS! FLARES! BELLS! REGISTER FOR FREE OUTFIT! (all famous name brands — ON SALE!) Reg. Price $8.00 9.00 10.00 I LOO 12.00 Sale Price $3.19 3.59 3.99 4.39 4.79 YOU SAVE $4.81 5.41 6.01 6.61 7.21 i SEAT COVER I 323I/2 Koemg— 2 lights w e s t of Lamar IT S WORTH THE DRIVE TO SAVE HflimiHniiiiiiimiiitniiwHitwtiwiiiiniimitiiiniiiimHtittiiimniiiiiiHiiuiJiiHiiiiii^ Ticket Sales j For Oregon [ 'Fantastic' In I I Memorial A crowd of almost 66,000 J is expected to be on hand J a t Stadium I Saturday as the undefeated | it j try to make Longhorns four in a row against the I Oregon Ducks in a 4 p m. | battle. Only from 60,000 to 62,000 I were being counted on early I this week assistant I but business manager Bob Roohs J has called this week's ticket I sales “fantastic.” The Longhorns are 20-point I favorites over the Pacific 8 § I Webfoot*, 1-2 on the season. The D aily Texan will issue I a special edition Saturday I concerning the game. It will | regular fj be Texan outlets. available at The early forecast ■ for J game time is partly cloudy | and warm with a 30 percent | chance of rain. Temperature f the J is expected to be in I upper 80 s. And, finally, as for the prac­ tice, Royal saidt “Oh, we weren’t really looking at how good they looked. You really can’t tell when they’re not in pads. “THEY DID have a lot of spirit, though, and are looking better than they did a couple of days ago,’’ Royal continued. “ As for our injuries, we’ll wait until Saturday afternoon to see how Eddie is. He went at it pretty hard yesterday, and the thing that impressed me was that he didn t have any after-effects this morning. no soreness. But we still can’t he certain that he’ll be well. We weren’t certain before U C LA .’’ “ The toe hurts me the most but the leg is the most dangerous. But I think I ’ll be ready to go Saturday,” Phillips said. “ I feel a lot better today than yester­ day.” BUT THAT’S only a fourth of the starting backfield. There’s still Bertelsen and Callison, both nursing sore shoulders. “ My shoulder feels pretty good. I could start,” said T think Callison. “ My shoulder? Oh, It’s O .K.,” Bertelsen said. to know And Royal’s opinion? “ We’ll just have to walt ’til for sure,” Saturday Royal said. “ They were running full speed, but if s their shoulders that are hurt. You really can’t tell.” WANTED CAMPUS SALES REPRESENTATIVES REFLEX WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS WATER SKIS are being Introduced In the U.S. for the first time. 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JA X or FALSTAFF Case 24 Cans ............................................ C A S E . . . . . . . . . . . ,5th ......... . . . . . . . 5 t h ................... . . . . . 5 t h CASE 5th 5th Saints Picked Over Houston By BRUCE IX)WITT Associated Press Sports Writer N E W Y O R K —Can there really be Monsters? Do the Saints have more than a prayer? Come to think of it, does this prognosticator really have more than a prayer? The answer is a resounding maybe as he goes out on a limb once again, forecasting upset vict,'Tries by Chicago over Los Angeles and New Orleans over Houston in this weekend s slate of National Football league action. That rash decision is the result of an 8-4-1 record in last week's picks. NEW ORLEANS 28. HOUSTON IT: Tile Oilers have been all hut helpless against the pass, which Manning w ill use to great advantage. Houston has no ground game to speak of and the Saints are among the hest in the National Conference against the pass. DALLAS 31, WASHINGTON 21: Til is collision between tho Cowboys’ No. I offense and the Redskins No. I defense in the N FC should send D allas off and running to a repeat as champion of the East, leaving in its wake the dreams of glory of B illy Kilm er and the rest of the surprising ’Skins. DETROIT 30, ATLANTA 14: Bob B erry of the Falcons may be the top passer in the N FC but he hasn’t run into a solid defense—until now. BALTIMORE 27, NEW ENGLAND IO: Tile Colts seething over their loss to Cleveland last Sunday, H ill he trying to take it out on the defense-slim Patriots. Baltim ore, tops in defense in the AFC. should bury' Jim Plunkett. CINCINNATI 27, GREEN BAY 20: The Packers ran stop the rush hut not the pass. The Bengals’ Virgil Carter just happens to be the best in the A FC in that department. KANSAS CITY 16, DENVER IO: lyon Dawson w ill find it difficult passing against the Broncos, but he’ll have die Chiefs moving steadily through their proud line. MIAMI 3.1, NEW YORK JETS IO: The Dolphins* running hack tandem of La rry Csonka and Jim K iick w ill move into high gear and the Bob Griese-to Paul W arfield passing combination will. SAN FRANCISCO 38, PHILADELPHIA 13: John Brodie hasn’t been able to get unbacked so far—but he’s been licking his chops at the thought of opening up against the hapless Eagles. CLEVELAND 21, OAKLAND 20: The Raiders’ pass defense will be a challenge to B ill Nelsen and the Browns’ precision quarterback should meet falters against G eveland’s strong secondary'. test while D aryle Iyamonioa the ST. LOI IS 27, NEW YORK GIANTS 6 : The Cards have the N F C * second-best defense—but in this case, who cares? The Giants hava little to throw against it. THE BEST IN VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS 100% GUARANTEE — MODERN FACILITIES BRAKES TUNE-UPS EXPERT ON VALVE I ENGINE REPAIRS CLUTCH — TRANSMISSION — ELECTRICAL OPEN SATURDAY — BankAmericard Master Charge W E H A V E A C O M PLET E PARTS DEPT. 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S IX FLA G S is the number one tourist attraction in Texas, lf you’ve made the trip before, you know Why. lf not, this is a great time to find out. Other adults pay $5.75 per, or $11.50 for two. But you and your friend can do S IX FLA G S for only $8.00. Discount tickets available at SIX FLAGS main gate. You must have this coupon and Student I D. Card. Count Me In on S IX F L A G S ’ 2 for $8.00 Date Rate Name. S c h o o l. City/Stale. SIX FLAGS O V E R D A L L A S / F O R T WO R T H. T E X A S T E X A S iii friday .October J* f 97.1, THE DAILY TEXAN ♦ • •*— < • • • • • • • • • • 't •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• m in r r ^ • :• a *■' I . > ' HM W W “ ? ? ? ? ? ? ? , \ \ \ \ % v H % \ \ *"~L ‘-‘ i* «• -1 -■ -■ -• <■ •• »• Dining at Briarcliff lls Worth the Ride. Your destination is Lake Travis. A t Briarcliff Lodge you can sip your favorite cocktail for a starter. Frid ay evening's fare is B riarcliff^ brand new Shrim p and Seafood Feast. Boiled Gulf shrimp — all you can peel and eat. A platter of stuffed crab, catfish, french fries, hush puppies, cole slaw and homemade breads. $4.95. Saturday means football. Toast yo ur team's victory with Briarcliff's unbeatable Prime Rib of Roast au Jus. Baked potato, green vegetable, tossed salad with your favorite dressing, homemade breads — and a complimentary glass of wine. Served from 5-10 p.m., by reservation only. $5.95. A new treat for Sunday appetites: Briarcliff's Four Course Lunch. A choice from three entrees prepared by our chef, lots of garden fresh vegetables, soup, salads, homemade breads and great desserts. Served from 1 -4 p.m. $3.75 adults, $1.85 children under 12. No need to miss any football action! Yo u're always w el­ come to watch the games on the color T V in the Briarcliff Lounge. Dining at Briarcliff is always worth the ride, no matter what you're riding in (or on). Take Highway 71 northwest and turn right on Ranch Road 2322 to Briarcliff Lodge & Golf Club. Phone 264-1844. BRIARCLIFF LODGE Randy Harvey Wishbone Worries p u p i^ Oregon Without QB Ducks Down By PAUL BUKER Oregon Daily Emerald opponent Saturday (Editor’s Note—This story is an analysis of the Oregon Ducks, in Texas’ Memorial Stadium, by a member of the sports staff of Oregon’s student newspaper, The Daily Emerald.) the EUGENE, Ore. — Oregon takes the and field against potent highly favored Texas Saturday .services of No. I without quarterback Dan Fouts, and in Eugene that’s got people mighty nervous as they consider the dim prospects of outscoring the Longhorn’s triple-option Wish­ bone machine. FouLs, a junior who took aven­ in mid-season last year and brought dreams of a Rose Bowl to Eugene for the first time in a long while, strained ligaments in his left knee in the first half of a 38-17 loss to Stanford. He didn’t play at all in the second half, and the Ducks went with backup Harvey Winn, 5-8, 185-pound junior who displayed a lot of nerve against the touted Stanford defense. Unfortunately, for Oregon, that wasn't enough. IT BILL probably be Winn longhorns will see whom the Saturday. With the miniature field general leading against the Indians, Head Coach Jerry Frei was forced to scrap, for die most part, the Duck’s air attack and concentrate on giving the ball to Bobby Moone. bat k-of-the-week Who’s Bobby Moore? Only the (as national chosen by Tile Associated Press) two weeks ago after rolling over Utah to the tune of 249 yards as Oregon won. 36-29. Tile Ducks lost their opener to No. I Nebraska in Lincoln, 34-7, before thumping Utah in Eugene. In that one, Oregon had leads of 7-0, 20-7 and 36-21, and vet had to come up with a key fourth- down defensive play in the last 1:40 to win. The Utah game typified the up team. With and down Oregon times on spectacular play at it is a machine which, offense when working, is capable of chewing up 615 yards (Oregon’s totals against Utah). Yet the defense, in return, has been as loose as a bar girl s morals. OREGON IS last in the Pacific 8 in the most important defensive statistic—opponents’ points. The Ducks have been riddled for 101 points while scoring only 60. Yet the offensive total is misleading. The Ducks have missed some golden scoring opportunities in each of their three games. With Fouts at the controls, Oregon the ball well, yet con­ moved touchdown hopes tinually saw disappear because of fumbles, penalties and other mistakes. Fouts completed l l of 18 passes for 107 yards against Stanford in only two quarters. Add to that 13 of 25 and 118 yards in the Nebraska game and 18 of 32 for 245 against Utah and you come up with 42 of 75 and 470 yards. However, Frei isn’t predicting disaster in Austin on the premise that without Fouts the Ducks are dead in the water. Summing it up curtly earlier this week, Frei play said: defense. If we can defense Texas we can beat Texas.” But that might be the railroad tracks and trying to stop a train with your bare hands. like sitting on doesn't “ Fouts OREGON, HOWEVER, HAS Moore. Moore, a senior from Tacoma, Wash., has run through, around and over various defen­ sive formations for 452 yards in three games. He collected 150 yards in 29 carries against a touted Stanford defense that had not allowed a single touchdown before the Ducks visited Palo Alto. the also Moore, defending Pacific 8 rushing champ, led the loop in scoring two years a g o , as a Banket and was picked on 1 the first-team All-America back- j field this fall by Playboy. the key Despite Moore, to Saturday’s game will not be the Ducks' ground game, but Winn and his passing prowess. At 5-8. rollout Winn obviously is a passer. And he’s accurate. in But his lack of actual game experience is a hindrance, as was proved the Stanford game when he throw an interception while the Ducks were behind by a scant, three points, 17-14 in the third Indians followed the interception with a touchdown and the game was as good as over. quarter. The THE DUCK offensive line, so effective at times this voar in blowing open holes for Moore and the fullback Jimmy Anderson, forgotten workhorse cf the back­ field, will have to do a super job if Winn is to stay out of the grasp of Texas rushers. But, if Winn is given a chance to put the ball in the air, there's plenty to throw to. Perhaps the most impressive Oregon strength is its receiving corps. Leland Glass leads in receiving (IO receptions for 88 yards six catches for 79 yards against Stanford), and his backup, Larry junior college Battle, was a legend. the conference against Utah and Battle, who handles the Ducks’ punting and place-kicking chores, broke the national junior college scoring record (formerly held by O.J. Simpson) by rolling up more than 200 points. Grog Specht, a junior, Is the other starting end. He’s beet remembered around Eugene for his catch against UCLA in Los Angeles last year as the Bruins. 41-40. the Ducks beat second clutch last THE H A IR C U T STORE IS M O R E Than a Barbershop WITH TWO SU PER STY L IST S BECKY A N D M A R G A R E T Call 477-0423 for ap p o in tm e n t or information Head Coach . . . Jerry Frei. starting Defense, however, is another m atter. Tile Ducks must pla\ safety Bo without Green, and All-America hopefu Tom Graham IOC percent after being hurt in the opener against Nebraska. isn't still Graham, at 6-3, 238i has mad No. 52 a lucky number in Eugene and he anchors a pretty fair-sized defense. Steve Rennie (5-10> 202 > and Mike McConnell (6-1, 218) are the other two linebackers. But despite the presence of the talented linebackers, the Ducks have been unable to halt anyone thus far in the season. oddsmakers the they won’t start are this And, figuring Saturday. SAVE O N AU TO PARTS D ISC O U N T TO STUDENTS V w . s e r v i c e : V O L K S W A G E N & A M E R IC A N C A R PARTS OPEN SAT. & SUN. GILBERT’S AUTO PARTS 621 E. 6th 477-6798 W I L C O H O K T D A . 6421 Burnet Lane Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE NEWEST N E A R C A M P U S ! one block to law school three blocks to U.T. GREAT OAK APARTMENTS Luxury 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartments shag carpet, cable, sun deck & large pool. From $220. ALL BILLS PAID 477-3388 the roomma that turn you on. S te reo F M / A M R a d i o / P h o n o S y s t e m - m o d e l 9290. Put together by M agn avo x (they’ve been mak­ ing great sounds for over 60 years). 20-W atts E IA music power. Air-Suspension System. T w o 6 " and two 3!4" speakers. Precision Automatic M ark I Player. Plug-in provisions for optionals (tape, headphones). Check it out. It’s one of many in the M agn a v o x line of value-packed roommates that are great com pany— at hom e or aw ay. C o m p o n e n t s y s t e m s an d a c c e s s o r ie s , radios, tape recorders/players, portable TV and stereo. 249 t f 5 0 N o w — Total Autom atic Color in a portable! Model 6114 offers you a M agn a v o x T A C System (less Matrix Tube) for easy-to-tune 75 sq. in. brilliant color pictures. Y ou've got to see it to appreciate its big set features and fine performance. Slim and trim, its an ideal second set for any $ room in your home! See it soon . . . 319 COLOR TV Tho year w as 1962. “ W est Side S tory" was showing in Austin. A fine a rts -enter, nam ed for an assassinated President, w as opened. The Giants and the Dodgers were battling for the N ational League pennant. And Oregon w as bringing an All-America halfback into M em orial Stadium to face the Longhorns. And they say tim es are changing. “ West Side Story" is back in Austin. The Kennedy C enter has replaced the Lincoln C enter as the cultural place to go. The G iants and the Dodgers are still at each o lh cr's throats. And Oregon is returning to M emorial Stadium to face the lo n g h o rn s with another All-America halfback. Same Grade “ You m ay rem em ber the last tim e Oregon cam e into town," D arrell Royal said earlier this week. “ They had a fellow nam ed Mel Renfro. This tim e they have Bobby Moore. They’re cut from the sam e grade of cloth." The Longhorns’ 25-13 victory in that 1962 season opener w a s as thin as a piece of cloth. With the Ducks leading 13-10 in the second half. Renfro took a kickoff and danced BO yards before Knox Nunnally made a diving shoestring tackle to save a touchdown. Actually, Oregon w asn’t supposed the highly touted Longhorns much battle even though it boasted Renfro a n d q u arterb ack Bob Berry. to give But it s e e m s Head Coach Len C asanova dusted off some films of t h e 1941 Texas-Oregon gam e which showed tho ’Horns dunking the Ducks, 71-7. T hat gam e, by the way, \ as Dec. 6.1941 a day before the attack on Pearl H arbor. “ Renfro w as some kind of runner," Longhorn assistan t David M cW illiams, a ju n io r s ta rte r in that 1962 gam e, n ‘mills. "ITI never forget th a t kickoff return. He went i ight up the m iddle, m ade a move to the outside and was gone. Knox ju st barely brought him down—grab bed him by the foot.” McWilliams says Renfro was probably the best run ner th e Don horns faced th at season even though he gained only 55 y ard s in ll c arries. ’Moore1 Than Good And M cW illiams, who has scouted Oregon in its three the this season, says Moore the best back is gam es Longhorns have faced this season. “ I won’t sa y he’s b etter than Renfro w as," he says. “ But lie is m ore dangerous. You can’t say h e’s the best back w e’ll face all season because we play a couple of pretty Kid ones next week in (.Toe) Wylie and (Grog) P ru itt at Oklahoma. But Moore is plenty tough." I- He’s already gained m ore than 450 y a rd s in three gam es, lading 249 against Utah. That w as good enough to nail 'ATI Back of the Week honors for the 6-2. 212-pound senior, ■■ore had 150 against Stanford last week. But No. I N ebraska held Moore to 59 yards in the season • nr r. McWilliams was taking notes. "T hey (N ebraska) never gave Moore a chance to get ta rte d ," he says. “They pursued well and d idn’t give him a hole. And believe m e, if th e re ’s a hole h e ’ll find ■ lie ’s tty mg to score everytim e he gets the b a ll." T he’I Toms just hope they can stop Moore and keep Oregon out of M emorial St a F ........................................ 5th 1.69 J A F Q F E S B O N E T MATEUS R O S E ...................................5th 2.29 ----------------------- BEER --------------------- SHINER BEER SCHLITZ N ° o ^ r E,SER OLD MILWAUKEE .Cs. 24 ret. bot. c s. 24 i/w 4.49 , pts 1.39 HILLEL CALENDER Oct. 3 Sunday OCTOBER 1-17 2:00 p.m. General meeting 4:30 p.m. Graduate 6:30 p.m. Kosher dinner; to discuss and organize the ■future course of Hillel this year. students cocktail students only. party. Grad Hillel affiliates free, others 75c first of our weekly dinners on Sunday af­ ternoons. Please call in ad­ vance. Affiliates $1, .non-affil. $1.50. This week: stuffed cab­ bage. First Day of Succoth Social work committee organi­ zational meeting. Planning to help out in the local hospitals, state schools, etc. Meet in Li­ brary. Lecture sponsored by Hamag- "Between W ar and shamin Peace; in the Middle Issues East Conflict." Speaker Carl Gersham, Director of Youth Committee for Peace Demo­ cracy in the Middle East; Vice Ch airman of Young Peoples Socialist League. Traditional services Reform-Conservative Service Oneg Shabbat and Israeli dan­ cing. Kosher Dinner Faculty-graduate student cof­ fee hour Simchat Torah John Henry Faulk to lecture on "Courage to Speak Out" Oct. 4 Monday Oct. 6 Wednesday 8:00 p.m. 8.00 p.m. Oct. 8 Friday Shabbat Oct. IO Sunday Oct. I I Monday Oct. 14 Thursday Oct. 15 Friday Shabbat Oct. 17 Sunday 6:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 9:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 6:30 p.m. Services/dancing 6:30 p.m. Dinner Other events will probably be planned, so consult THE DAILY TEXAN. B'nai B'rith Hillel Fo undation 2105 San Antonio / 476-01 25 J-' ->v -VO • • ' • • ' ' < ;•.......... *■: - • • V Page 12 Friday, October I, 1971 THE D A ILY T EX A N (c) 1971 New York Times News Service WASHINGTON — Tile use of embassies as legal “ cover” for espionage operations is standard practice around the world. The United States, the Soviet Union, Great Britain, France and many countries, American ex­ perts say have intelligence of­ ficers opera) ing their em­ bassies a b r o a d as political, economic and cultural officers, or under other cover. in The Soviet Union, however, is said tile to have developed practice more extensively than has any other power. U.S. sources estimate between 50 and is 60 percent of any Soviet em­ bassy—or other diplomatically recognized missions such as AMTORG, Aeroflot or Tass—is composed of intelligence officers. the Soviet trade AMTORG agency_ Aeroflot is the Soviet national airline, and Tass is the Soviet Government press agency. IN T U E United States, f o r instance, there are 1.300 Soviet personnel whose presence is legally recognized bv the U.S. government. If any of these are detected in espionage or other subversive activities, they can only be expelled. They are not liable to .sentence under U.S. laws. THE GREEN BUILDING T O N IG H T D O W N S T A IR S ( L I S T E N ) FO O D A N D DRINK — G O O D VIBES NO COVER CHARGE HOI RED RIVER 478-0349 GIFTS UNUSUAL F ra tern ity and Sorority M ugs — Po tte ry — Vases —• — Embossed H a n d c ra fte d Iron — D eco pag ue W a ll Plaques — Scented C an dles from all ovpr the world — H an g in g Ashtrays — W ic k e r Furniture — Incense — M o b iles — W in d Chim es — M ounted C o lo r Photographs — Plastic Flowers — Lamps — G if t C ard s — Bamboo C urtains — D ecals and Patches — Beanbag Chairs — C a rd b o a d Furniture — W a t e r Beds and Frames — Je w e lry — Leather — Silver. E X Q U IS IT E D E C O R A T O R IT E M S F O R E V E R Y D E C O R BmsAmckmi HEW WORLD IMPORTS H Phone 472-6440 1602 Barton Springs Sunday 12-6 Mon.-Frl. IO a.r n .-9 p.m. OPENING!! ft OO S e <*5 50* a Pitcher ■ 0 Chalupas - 15* l l "TEXAS" no. WATERHOLE" no FRIDAY! MAKE 4 p.m. - 12 p.m. 2716 GUADALUPE ST. 472-0070 ^ ■ c a f e t e r i a BUFFET 99 Each Adult each plats Serve yourself All you can eat! Drinks and Desserts extra SERVED DAILY FRIED CH IC K EN ASSORTED SALADS ASSORTED HOT VEGETABLES FISH M A C A R O N I AND CHEESE MASHED POTATOES AND GRAVY HOT DINNER ROLLS, FRENCH BREAD AND C O RN BREAD Plus 3 SPECIAL ENTREES daily BRING THE ENTIRE FAMILY! EATING OUT IS FUN AND THRIFTY AT NEWBERRYS! OPEN SUNDAY 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. DAILY 11 a m. to 2 p.m. AND 4 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Of these 1,3000, approximately 450, including dependents, are attached to the Soviet Embassy here. Their movements axe restricted to an area of 25 miles unless they receive previous State Department clearance to travel outside this area. This, State is in Department sources say travel for similar reciprocity limitations U.S. on placed diplomatic personnel in Russia. There are 130 Soviets with diplomatic status serving at the U.S.S.R. mission to the United Nations in New York whose movements are unrestricted, pius 160 who serve as interna ti/ma I civil servants. within the U.N. Secretariat. All have diplomatic immunity from prosecution under U.S. laws. SO VIET espionage civilian abroad is directed by the KG B secret police, In Moscow. Its chief is Yuri V. Andropov, a close political ally of Soviet Communist party leader I^eonid Brezhnev, who appointed Andropov to his post in May, 1967. range In each Soviet embassy in a noncommunist c o u n t r y , ac­ cording to specialists here, there is a “ resident,” or spy-master, whose power often exceeds that of tho ambassador. His cover may that of a from political counselor to that of a chauffeur but more than half the total embassy staff is said to corno under his authority. In addition, the resident controls the “ illegals,’’ or agents working under deep cover without diplomatic immunity. Soviet In Communist countries, ex­ perts say, the KG B chief officer is known as the “ adviser.” His main task is to advise and co­ ordinate collection activities. Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes ★ SALE ★ SHEEP SKIN RUGS Many Beautiful Colors ★ LEA T H ER SA L E ★ Various kinds, colors — 50c per foot Capitol Saddlery ( i i 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texai 478-9309 W A T E R L O O S O C I A L C U R 7th 6c Red River presents a MELODRAMA 'THE GAMBLER' FRIDAY & SATURDAY — FOR RESERVATIONS C A LL 472-8284 or 472-7136 SUNDAY GREASY WHEELS FREE BEER 8:45-9:15 .50 COVER 1 1 :3 0 -2 p m . LUNCH-INN W e 'r e n o w serving a U n iv e rs ity o rie n te d lu n ch e o n b u ffe t M onday- thru Frid ay, 11:30am-2pm. ■Hot Meat & Dishes "Cold Meats ■ Vegetables -Salad Bar ■Fish ■Various Unusual Drinks Come as you are arui eat. There's bo hassle and plenty of room. THE PLACE M U X MUTHER'S 1411 Lavaca Div. of Rock-More Inc. Sun. Special Surprise Night. Each Sunday a different special on drinks. The first IOO people, a free roast beef sandwich. Mon. — Harem Night. Guys $1.00. All Ladies FREE. $25.00 prize to guy who brings in most girls. 7 - 12 p.m. Tues. — Muthers Revival. 0 !dies Night. $1.00 per person. 9-10 p.m. oldies dance contest. $10 prize to best oldies dancer. $10 prize to best dressed from 50 s. Wed. — Freebies Night. No cover. Thurs. — Th urs. Night Freeze. Muthers price freeze on drinks. Bar drinks $.50, call drinks and beer i/2 price. Fri. — $1.50 per person. Sat. •— After Game Specials. Happy Hour Prices. No Cover. O PEN Mon. - Fri. I I a.m .-12 p.m. Sat. - 12 noon to I a.m. Sun. - 7:30 p.m. • 12 p.m. Sandwiches, happy hour 4-6 (1/3 off on everything) VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Students Sunday Night Special Complete Dinner tor $3.25 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak CAPITAL PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER 5451 IN TERREGIONAL Just present your blanket tax or Auditor's receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional O N LY 2 BLOCKS FROM M EM O RIAL STADIUM — I P I Telephone C a ll for 'Black Strategy' Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes called Thursday for a "black political strategy for 1972" which "may mean the actual running of a black person for President. Stokes often has been mentioned as a presidential or vice-presidential candi­ date, but he said he was interested in neither post. The Cleveland official spoke in connection with Black Expo in Chicago during its second day. Bicycle Race Set Sunday Afternoon A second bike race sponsored by the Great Southwest Overland Bicycle Association Ltd. will be held at I p.m. Sunday on the south parking lot of Municipal Auditorium. Hundreds of bicycle enthusiasts are expected to compete on a half- mile track laid out on glass free, sm.>oth asphalt. The only entry fee is will power and stamina, according to a poster advertising the race. Riders can compete in several categories: children, 13 and under; juniors, ages 14 to 17; and girls' and womens’ race, no age limit. Appealing to the more "m ature" male racer uil] be a four-mile rac« and several heats of devil-take-the-hindmost races in which the lagging rider on each lap is eliminated until only the winner remains. The Great Southwest Overland Bicycle Association Ltd., bv corporated in September by Charles Pantazc and James Bryce, s;x>nsored its first race Sept. 12. More than IOO racers turned out, and several hundred spectators cheered the cyclists on and helped handle minor mechanical emergencies. Riders will have an opportunity Sunday to sign up for membership In the bicycle association, although membership requirements and dues have not been set. Tile association plans to organize tours and more rams throughout the year, including grueling 25- and 50-mile cross-country jaunts. University Women M ay Vie for 'Dimes' A “ Miss March of Dimes” contest open to all University organizations begins Friday. Sponsored by the Capital Area Chapter of the Marrh of Dimes. the competition is a prelude to the March of Dimes fund raising campaign in January. to Mary lionise Tindle, chapter secretary, said invitations have been m a i l e d local organizations requesting them to submit candidates for the contest. “ We want lots of youth par­ the especially ticipation, University level,” she said. “ Last year, no University groups en­ tered, a n d we certainly don't at FIFTH AVE. BOOK STORE • • BEST S E L L E R S • P A P E R B A C K S • M A G A Z I N E S • N E W S P A P E R S S P E C IA L O R D E R S H IG H LA N D M ALL 452-6995 7 DAYS A W EEK • want that to happen again.” The winning girl will bt* chour on the amount of money collect* in her name, with each 10-oei donation counting one vote. SI will be announced around Ja I and awarded a $250 srholarshi lasts un Nov. 15, at which time funds rn? be turned in at th** March 28: Dimes Hancock Drive, open daily un’ 4:30 p.m. chapter office, fund raising The “ Procedures for entering ti contest are simple,” said Mr Tindle. “ If any interested groi hasn t already received an i vitation, all they have to do call the office at 452-2438 and gi' me the group's name and ti name of the girl they are spo soring. In return, I'll answer ai questions they may have and ti them about the fund raising ki our office has which they mig find helpful.’' E N J O Y ! li e E N J O Y ! Ute One Sandwich J.Ie Sci JotJn, It r 7 hat (toad S C H L O T Z S K Y 'S S A N D W IC H E S 442-9003 1301 S. Congress e i . O S K I ) M O N I >A V S O M A ’ X .. D R IV E a L IT T L E — S A V E A LO T 1/4 ct I 3 ct 1/2 ct. 3 4 ci l e i r n * 31.50 41.00 125.00 225.00 275 00 % CAPITOL DIAM O N D SHOP 603 Commodore Pere/ Hotel AUSTIN 476-0178 Business Agency Increases Access Because of an increase demand in the Austin area, t Small Business Admini.st.rati will have a representative Austin from 9 a.m. to 4 p.i every Wednesday. Previously the representati was in Austin only tho S e c o and fourth Wednesdays of ea month. Director of the Central a •South Texan District Jim Re also announced the representati will relocate in Room 576 of t Federal Building beginning ii mediately. Before, the .SBA I used the Chamber of Gummer Building. JEAN BENARD RISHI of Centre du European Y O G A returning to Austin for I week Yoga Classes for info: 477-3206 War Not Over for Thousands 13,000 New Soldiers Arrive in Vietnam Each Month (c) 1071 New York Times News Service B I E N H O A South Vietnam — “They tell you they’re winding turn the war—then you down around and bang, you’re here,” the young draftee said after he stepped off the chartered troop carrier at this air base. Like many others, the soldier, pfc. William Rodecker, thought he American role in Vietnam uas just about over. But, ac- ording to Army figures, about lh OOO new men have been arriving each month this summer far one-year tours. BETWEEN 22,000 and 27,000 are leaving each month, keeping up the pace of the gradual with­ drawal. Some of die new arrivals were unhappy about being here, but, surprisingly, a m ajority of the 130 men on the sam e plane with Rodecker said they were glad to come. Vietnam duty has its advantages, they explained. Almost all replacements the land either at this American base about 20 miles north of Saigon or a t the giant Camranh Bay air base on the central coast. Most destined for combat duty reportedly arrive at Camranh the Bay, and Army men say mood is grim m er there. But at Bienhoa today many of those on the United Air Lines jet said they were on their second tours and waiting to finish their stints in the Army or had asked to come h e r e serve rather “ stateside” or in Germany. than “There’s some guys who were unhappy about coming over,” said Spec. 4 Dunbar Brooks, who was back for the second time, “ but we settle ’em down. We m ake ’em happy. We told them if there was anything wrong with Vietnam, we wouldn’t be coming back.” siad a young with “ DOPE AND MONEY, dope and money, th at’s all there is tank to it,” shaggy, c r e w m a n unregulation-length blond hair. While his friends grinned and nodded, he explained he had asked for a second tour because the cheap and in addition plentiful m arijuana, hashish and heroin, Vietnam duty pays an extra $100 a month. to Gar Paper Published the Gar, A new' campus area newspaper, (•signed as a “vehicle for people to express '-em selves,” will soon be sold beside hawkers of other underground ncwspiapers. a University Dr. Harold Wyliet assistant professor of French and member of the paper’s .editorial board, said the board would let the paper .!<-tine itself. “ We hope to keep it broad and con­ cerned with the issues of today,” he said. Tile first edition of the Gar came out in Sep- t :nber and contained a variety of articles. Tile first annual International Armadillo Exposition in Victoria was the subject of a three-page layout The paper also carried a story about urban problems, plus photographs poems, songs and several other articles. A story outlining its aims and purposes stated, “ We would like to bring to your attention the doings of Texas artists, writers, scientists and politicians. To let you know what s happening in an area you can readily visit. We’d like to explore the countryside and its denizens, be they professor, fisherman, hippie, worker, tree surgeon, redneck,” the story continued. . “ The next edition Is coming out about Oct. 8,” said Mrs. Wylie, also on the editorial board. “ It will have articles on such the Big Thicket, education and street vendors. It will also have comic strips, photographs, poetry and songs,” she said. things as The paper which originated in Austin, also is being distributed in Houston and San Antonio, Mrs. Wylie said. “ We hope to m ake it statewide and possibly regional.” she continued. The "editorial board consists of six m em bers including the Wylies. It will be published monthly by the Gar Publishing Co. and costs $3 per year or 25 cents a copy. “That’s m y car payments right there,” said Tom Mason, a 19- year-cld combat engineer from St. Ivouis. Another reason given by many of the young draftees was that Germany was much worse than Vietnam could possibly be. “Half of these guys were just fighting to come here,” said Pfc. Dennis Allan, an Army telephone lineman from Norfolk, Va. “I volunteered for Vietnam to get out of Germany.” TUE VOLUNTEERS from Ger­ many cited the wretched living conditions and crime in barracks, the the “hassling” from career men and the that antagonisms plague the Army in Europe. unfriendly people, racial Others pointed out that by volunteering for Vietnam when they had less than 17 months to serve, they could leave the Army five months early, at the end of their Vietnam tours. The Army does not consider it worthwhile to assign new duties to a man with less than five months to go. B ’ N A I HILLEL B RITH FOUNDATION win hold Or­ thodox Shabbat services at 6:30 p.m . Friday at 2105 San Antonio St. Reform-Conservative ser­ vices will be held at 8:15 p.m. Friday. CAMPUS MANSA win meet at in Union 8:30 p.m. Friday Building 315. COMM UNIVERSITY SCIENC E F I C T I O N LITERATURE CLASS will meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Catholic Student Center. DIRECT ACTION win meet at 6 p.m. Sunday at 4515 Roswood. G R E E N O R I A R SCHOOL Is having an open house and free meal Sunday to celebrate the opening of Daily Bread Bakery. The meal is a t 4 p.m. For further information coll 472-2035. IN- T E R N A T I O N A L FOLK- DANCERS win meet at noon Friday in Hie Union Junior Ballroom. HILLEL LA CHAYIM ICHTHUS COFFEEHOUSE, 2434 Guadalupe St., will present folksingers Randy Keen and Mary Fulgham at 9:30 and 10:30 p.m. Friday and Satur­ day. M U T H E R ' S N O W H A P P E N I N G 1411 L A V A C A Sandwiches for Lunch — l l a.m. Happy Hour (mixed drinks) 4 - 6 p.m. DISCOTHEQUE EVERY NIGHT /jT J bladed |c a Acoo^amdL bcxyrmzi/n. act {^Aouj raakt/ ' c/jl- hjubby Cany ? Womens Libenation p a re n ts ’HIS GIRL FRUM Rosalind Russell i Cart) Gaant dUsctuL bu HoumimL Hojukb sun,oct.5, 7:30,9:50, buRdine-, 60t jester Dorm Plans Community Work B arbara Paynter, president of j Women’s Government at Jester Dorm, said Thursday the Cabinet; and Legislative Council are in the J pr ocess of forming their newest committee to m ake Jester “more j than a place to sleep.” for organization of a Plans Involvement Com- ’ Community mitt re were discussed in a meeting Tuesday. The Cabinet m eets every Tuesday and the Legislative Council every other Tuesday. It Is hoped the new committee will provide a means for Jester men and women to get out and deal with ecology and other c o m m u n i t y problems, Miss Paynter said. \ v v v , IN JE S T E R CENTER A C H A M B E R OF HORRORS O R I G I N A L UNCENSORED VERSION R A T H E R H O R R IB L E — A R T LEY S N U F F R A T E D X X X — A R T L E Y S N U F F 6 - 8 - 1 0 P.M. JESTER A U D IT O R IU M SU N D AY , OCTOBER 3 (FIN E ARTS STUDENT C O U N C IL ] a worthy causa MOTHER EARTH CO RN ER 10th & N. LA M A R M O N D A Y — W O M E N FREE! G U Y S 50c T U E S D A Y — Drink and Drown — $3 Guy*, $2 Girls Beer Free All N ight Mixed Drinks 55c W E D N E S D A Y — Anti inflation N ight — N o Cover T H U R S D A Y — W ino N igh t $3 Guys, $2 Girls Free W in e All Night, Mixed Drinks 55c F R ID A Y & S A T U R D A Y - $1.50 Cover (G e t it on G o o d Time For All) S U N D A Y __ Concert N igh t with live groups — mixed drinks 70c S U N D A Y LAST A P P E A R A N C E O F O L D “S U N D A N C E FIRST APPEARANCE OF HIW SUNDANCE THE | | ucket PROUDLY PRESENTS.. FRIDAY N IG H T G E N E S E E Featuring The Prosperity Blackstone Light Show D O N ’T FORGET FRIDAY AFTERNOON'S T. G. I. F. BEER & B.S. "The Best In Entertainment . . . At The Lowest Prices" Cover $1.00 BEER - $1.30 Pitcher $.25 Glass 23rd and Pearl Streets IN NEW HARDIN GARAGE COMPLEX 477-6135 FRI. & SAT. OOT. I & 2 7:30 & 10:00 PM Jester Aud. Before the Game PRE-PARTY!! STARTING 1:00 PM MOTHER EARTH COR NER OF I and N. LAM AR After the Game Victory Party!! N O COVER SPECIAL PRICES (Sc Mixed Drinks Pitchers S U S Glass 35c No Hassle with Stadium Eat with Mother "Texas" Size Sandwiches at Special Prices Parking! FREE SHUTTLE BUS T O STADIUM AND BACK I . L . A . S . S T U D E N T ASSOCIATION will meet at 4:30 p.m. Friday in the student lounge of the Institute of Latin American Studies. INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet a t 8 p.m. Friday in Union Building 305. LAW WIVES will m e e t from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday in the Tom Clark Lounge of Townes Hall for a newcomers reception. MARRIED STUDENT HOUSING COUNCIL AND TEXAS UNION will sponsor a free movie at 8 p.m. Friday in the outdoor theater at Deep Eddy. S T U D E N T MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE will meet at noon Friday on the West Mall. TEATRO LATINO w ill meet from l l p.m. Friday and 7 to Saturday. sponsor “Dogfood” T E X A S U N I O N E N - TERTAINMENT COMMITTEE will in outdoor concert from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday on the Union Patio. The group w ill also play for a free dance from 8:30 p.m. Saturday to 12:30 a.m . In the Union Main Ballroom. WESLEY FOUNDATION will meet at l l a.m . Sunday in the Methodist Student Center. YOUNG SOCIALIST ALLIANCE will present the m ovie “The Trial” at 7:30 and IO p.m Friday and Saturday in Jester Center Auditorium. f NORTH BY NORTHWEST Directed by Alfred Hitchcock Starring Cary Grant Eva Marie Saint James Mason Friday, Oct. I Batts Aud. 7:00 & 9:30 .75 W ild H orses of Fire by Sergei Parajanov W ild H orses of Fire A FILM FROM THE U.S.S.R. W ild H orses of Fire A C O LO R FILM W ild H orses of Fire MADE IN 1964 I W ild H orses of Fire ® "BRILLIANT" Bosely Crowther N.Y. Timei YSA • W ild H orses of Fire Franz Kafka’s THE TRIM ORSON WELLES directed by starring Anthony Perkins Anthony Perkins plays Joseph K. a man ar­ rested without charge, tried tor no cause and executed for lack of guilt. The nightmare dis­ play of law with no reason, justice or mercy. Plus Chapt. VII of "FLASH G O R D O N " "Thlt poLom ise ( j - , * * * ' * VZ WesTSAiel SH O W IN G Sat., Oct. 2 Batts Aud. 7:30 & 9:30 Adm. .75 ClM e rn a 40 Next Friday Truffaut's New Film The Wild Child MADE IN 1970 Norman Eaton's CHAMPAGNE BUFFET S a t u r d a y OCTOBER 2nd 6:00 PJA • Roast Tenderloin • Roast Sirloin • Stuffed Chicken Breast W ith W in e Sauce $6 50 per person o h m ! se RCS CAUKAHS 478-4628 23rd Floor, Westgate Friday, O ctober I, 1971 THE D A IL Y TEXAN Page 13 OT { SHOWING N OXM TBF. BKST, BI T _ ALSO THI BIGI .FST STAG I TI.MS IX Al STIX X-R ATED A D U L T M O V I E S RITZ ARTS C O N T I N U O U S S H O W I N G S I ? N O O N TILL - 11:45 P.M. Escorted Ladies Free with Membership se ISH M .G M M HEAD PARTY1' ALSO As You Like It "PUBLIC ACTIO N " "HAPPY H O U R " DAILY 5 - 6 P.M. — $2.00 ADM . W I T H T H IS C O U P O N — $5 0 O F F R E G U L A R A D M I S S I O N N O T G O O D D U R I N G " H A P P Y H O U R ' 320 I. SIXTH VO ONE I NOER I* ADMITTED 478 0475 'SF 3 &I ‘How Jo comedy. will In business succeed a Without. Really Trying," musical be previewed at 8 p.m. Sunday in Hogg Auditorium. Tickets for the special performance will be sold at the door for $1, while run. the tickets regular for Monday through Saturday, may be purchased at tile auditorium box office. “ The Wind in the Willows," the be through children's classic, will presented Saturday Monday in C e n t e r Auditorium. formances are scheduled for IO a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. p.m. .Monday. the Academic Sunday Per­ and 8 FILMS “Midnight Cowboy," starring Jon Voight and Dustin Hoffman in the much-heralded story of an offbeat friendship, the is weekend feature in the Texas Union Theater. ‘ ‘ N o r t h by Northwest," one of Alfred Hitchcock’s better m ysteries, sta rs Cary Grant and Eva M arie Saint, at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday in Batts Auditorium. Fonda ‘ ‘ T h e W i l d Angels," with Peter and Nancy Sinatra, will be presented free of charge at l l a.m. Saturday in the Union Theater. “ Wild Horses on Fire", by the Russian director Sergei Parajanov. for 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday in Batts Auditorium. is scheduled I % I IN T E R S T A T E T H E A T R E S SHOWING AT SHOWTOWN twi n hr. VK-1v * BURNET n im k in 3 D R IV E -IN ’S SOUTHSIDE TWIN 1IRIVK-IX * B O X O F F I C E O P E N 7:00 — S H O W ST ARTS D U S K The mob wanted Harlem back. They got Shaft... up to here. JMHM XisinMONTEM POP A L S O J A N I S J O P L I N • OT IS R E D D I N G • C A N N E D H E A T M A M A S A N D PA PAS • H U G H M A S E K E L A • J E F F E R S O N A I R P L A N E A N D M A N Y , M A N Y M O R E MIDNITE s h o w FRIDAY OCT. I J— 1 1 : 1 S K I I m M u m m OO PER PERSON .............................. MIDNITE s h o w F R ID A Y OCT. I PW W E— M i i i i i m m i m i i n n r ISAAC SHAFT! his name. SHAFTO Hit same. HAYES PLUS — C O - FEATURE AT E A C H S H O W MUSIC BY S H O W T O W N - SOUTHSIDE ROD TAYLOR YVETTF M 1 M I E U X “ DARK OF THE SUN” — BURNET — R I C H A R D W I D ­ M A R K - A L L E N A L D A "M O O N S H IN E W A R IN T E R S T A T E T H E A T R E S E R S T A T E T H E A T R E S $ I .UU I I L z : I o 1:40- 3:2C -5:00 6:40 8:20 - 10:00 PARAMOUNT 472-5 sri, 7 1 3 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E $1.00 TIL 2:15 1:40 - 3:20 - 5:00 6:40 - 8:20 10:00 Pc M e e t B u n n y O 'H are Som e m en bought her. A nd som e got her for nothing. Cine hand of stud and she belonged to the winner. Or the loser. T h ey all treated her like dirt. W hy not! im , filia l i lur Tv Book Foretells Social Doom By WILLIAM K, STEVENS (c) 1971 New York Times News Service CAMBRIDGE, M ass.-B . F. Skinner, who is widely viewed among his peers as the most influential psychologist in the country, paused between bites of a ham and cheese sandwich the ether day to talk about his latest book, an uninhibited assault on some of the western world’s most prized ideals. “ Traditional concepts of individual freedom and dignity have made an immeasurable contribution, but they’ve se r vet J their purpose," the rangy, cheerful, 67-year-old Harvard University professor asser­ ted. THAT ASSERTION is tile cental theme of Skinner’s new’ book, Beyond Freedom and Dignity, his first attem pt to set out a com ­ prehensive social philosophy based on the insights of his brand of behavioral psychology. Skinner contends wrestern society if going to lie in “ terrible trouble" if the ideals of individual freedom are pressed much further. Such ideals are at odds with modem reality’, he continues, ex­ plaining that unchecked individualism is going to exact a disastrous price in overpopulation, the rapacious use of natural resources and pollution of the earth, among other things. Skinner argues that contrary to prevailing wisdom, individual men and women are incapable of controlling their owrn behavior through free will, that their behavior is an inevitable product of external influences. HAYING THEREBY disposed of “ autonomous m an," .Skinner goes on to say that the only way to control behavior is to manipulate the environmental influences that regulate it. So he proposes widespread application of a developing “ technology of behavior,’ in which the actions of individuals would lie controlled through subtle conditioning techniques that would encourage and induce through positive means, but not coerce or tyrannize. Skinner's thesis is sure to raise howls of opposition from the humanists and libertarians who have long opposed his behavioral psychology. Gallery to Display Theater Sets, Props The Department of Dram a, In conjunction with the Texas Union Art Gallery Committee, is setting up an exhibit to give viewers an inside ti»chinical aspects of theater production. look at the The opens exhibit, which Monday, contains examples of costumes< props, lights and sets the dram a of various plays department has staged the in past, the majority of sets having iieen made by students. Renderings — paintings o f proposed costumes and sets b r be designers—also will the displayed, along with slides of how the costumes and sets looked for the performances. A member from the dram a department will be at the exhibit in in­ to supply formation on the exhibits. The exhibit will he open daily from l l a.m. to 2 p.m. and from 6 to 8 p.m. the evenings | NOW SHOWING!! Senor let me blow my own n o s e f l! please! % r n Joseph E.Levine Presents An Avco Embassy Film Tbrence Hill in "They ■ Gall Mel Trinity" J with Bud Spencer Steffen Zacaharias Dan Shute [Gisela Hahn Elena Fedemonte and with F a rle y G ra n g e r Produced by Halo Zingarelli Directed by KB. Clue her ~ ” Prints by Deluxe a n a v c o immiiy h e l s a i i \j- ■■ I JACK CASSIDY • DELANEY- ROBINSON m * » - - S H JOAN JAY A U S T I N m 2 1 3 0 S O C O N C H E S S A V E FEATURES: 5:45-7 :07 8:29 - 9:51 $1.00 'TIL 6:15 BILLY JACH Just a person who protects children and other living things “ THE SELZNICKST . . i i i i H i r i m n i m n i i . n i H Page 14 Friday, October I. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN -TO M LAUGH! IN • DELORES TAYLOR l I H i m . m H g n Compositions, Production Inadequate stills Album Flounders in shallow seas ‘’UPL “ Stephen Stills 2 ;’* Stephen Stills; Atlantic SI)720fi. B y M IK E M Y E R S Amusements Staff from disturbingly lyrical content, and the album ails flim sy production and powerless com­ positions. “ Stephen Stills 2" is at best a disappointing enterprise from cup of rock m usics supposed paramount performers. Shallow the and plastic best describe Such an ineffective endeavor is singularly abnormal in contrast to the high standard of Stills’ previous work. former triumphs included membership in His Daily Horoscope A R I E S : A hennvolent feeling com es o v e r you w h ich is a p p a re n tly foreign lo y o u r usual natu re . T r y to follow w h a te v e r it d ictates. T A I R I S : Y o u could su ffer a little depression to d ay if you let you rself. in a good mood Y o u h a ve been all week. and the os or shoot. this eould be G E M I N I Y o u are feeling the urge in do som ething for other people F in d a co n stru c tive outlet fo r this em otion. f \ NC E R T he throes cf depression w ill ha ve y o u if you g ive it half a chance. S ta rt y o u r d a y feeling bright and stay th a t w a y . today L E O Keep the p ressure on the tasks y o u 'v e begun. It only takes a little slack to let a good thing get a w a y fro m you. A I Ut IO : Y ou should seek to follow y o u r in n e r d irectio n today. Y o u have Som e leanings and they should be em phasized. fine h u m a n ita ria n M U R A . Y o u m a y be on edge and thin k today. T r y quite testy’ to before you someone, t re g re t la te r. snap re p ly lump that re p ly to you w ill S C O R P I O : Y o u w ill p ro b a b ly yo u rse lf resting today. T h is n e c e s s a rily bad. and havp a n y p ressing business, the best course. find is not lf you don't is It S A G I T T A R I U S : S om eth in g r e a lly puts In y o u r bonnet today. You a bee set out to acco m plish an alm ost su p e rh u m an am oun t of w o rk . Lo ts of luck C A P R I C O R N : G e t fin a n cial a ffa irs in order. Do you r e a lly need to b uy rig h t n o w " W ill It put a strain on y o u r w a lle t? y o u r A Q U A R I U S : P la n to do som e p h ysical ex e rcise today. Y ou could use a little c o n ta c t w ith that so rt of thing now and then. P I S C E S ; Y o u m a y think fro m to d ay's the w eek en d w ill be it w on't, so ch e e r up th a t mood lousy. W e ll, and e n jo y F r id a y —VICK LAWRENCE R o o m o f V illa C a p r i C o r p o r a t io n CU ca r a u a n OPEN TO THE PUBLIC DINING, DANCING, ENTERTAIN­ MENT, MIXED BEVERAGES NO COVER NO MINIMUM MONDAY Thru SATURDAY 2300 N. Interregional In the Villa Capri Hotel GR 7-4338 uslcal M e n t o r Stephen Stills may surprise a few fans with his latest album, a markedly inferior product in comparison to his first album. Television Tonight 2 20 p rn. 4, fi, 42 M o v ie : " R i v e r pf I t.’ .S T re a s u ry F a m ily in o Hora 12. 21 Partridge 9 F a c e to F a re S p rn. 12, 24 Room 222 > :m p m . 5, 7, IO M o v ie : "T h e D ead ly I t i n t '' 12 24 Odd Couple 9 B obq ut v a i l 9 p rn 12. 24 Lo ve A m e ric a n S tyle 9 The Incorrigible* 9 IHI p in. 42 N ig h t Show w ith E d Brandon 4 N F L (la m e of the W e ek fi Odd Couple in J) rn All stations new s 10 20 p rn 4. fi. 42 Tonight Show t ’.Tiffin Me iv 21 Show 12 V r> - rh rep Guns for H ire ' "Night C re a tu re s " "A m az in g C olossal M an ' p rn 9 Washington Week In t’ht 42 Movie "Dangerous Movie: "Sherlock Holmes Faces N e w * T m : S i r e S h o w two rrf music’s more talented groups—Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. Not only did Stills lend his vocal and instrumental talents to these groups, but some of their most memorablp compositions rolled off his pen— ‘T o r What It ’s W orth" and "Blu eb ird " for the Springfield and “ Suite Ju d y Rlue E y e s " and “ C arry On" for C, S, N Sr Y . AT,THOUGH Stills' first solo performance was .somewhat stiff and it contained some above average in delivery, immobile tunes and quality production. In “ Stephen Stills 2" many of the songs have a hurried, incomplete sound that can only be attributed to poor production. However, the most disen­ chanting aspects of Stills’ second solo venture are the mediocre songs found therein. The most objectionable pieces include a a perversion of jazzed up poorly sung rendition of the Springfield classic, and “ M arianne," a moronic tune sung bv Stills in an unappealing falsetto. "Blueb ird ,” The album starts out well with “ Marianne’ the bit “ Change Pa rtn e rs.’ followed by two vigorous up Revsited,” Horns. a n d wa th The •'Bluebird M e m p h is tempo numbers, “ Nothin’ to Do But Today” and “ Fishes and Scorpions.’’ From this point the quality goes down fast. "Know Y o u Got though Stills has a bad roll. to R u n " sounds as S ID E TWO opens with the t r i v i a l flavored country “ Relaxing Town” and then offers “ Word Song," an unrem arkable cipher of a song with too many lyrics and little music. The album tasteless e n d s with the Stills has surrounded himself, as in his first, solo album, with in some of rock the greats m u s i c — E r i e Clapton, B illy Preston ( David Crosby and Nils Lofgren. Talent such as this should have been able to turn out than a better produet “ Stephen Stills 2." It seems implausible that Stills like most of this could really music himself. And why would he wax this for everyone to hear? QUEEN CAPRI THEATER 472-0442 521 E. W k O P E N 11:00 A .M . ’T IL ? O P E N S U N . I -.00 P.M . T I L ? U N D E R N E W M A N A G E M E N T C A L I R O R M O V I E T IT L E — W E C H A N G E M O V I E S E V E R Y F R I D A Y M I D N I G H T S H O W F R I. A S A T . 1 1 :0 0 - 2 :0 0 BEST X - R A T E D M O V IE S IN T O W N WITH THIS COUPON - IOO*/. A I R C O N D I T I O N E D 50c off Regular Admission N O O N E U N D E R 18 A D M IT T E D I TRANS db TEXAS 2200 Hancock Drivt —> 453-6641 OPEN 2:15 ADULTS $1.50 UNTIL 5:30 A RO U N D THE W O R LD 2:30-8:11 W ESTSIDE — 5:30 T O G E T H E R F O R T H E F IR S T T I M E .. . G R E A T E N T E R T A I N M E N T F O R A L L A G E S ! BEST PICTURE!" Winner of IO Academy Awards! 52 BEST PICTURE AWARDS—From Around The World! STUDIO IV T W O S C R EEN S 222 East 6th 4 72 -0 4 3 6 ALL MOVIES RATED X 35 I I BACKSEAT C A BBY" AND "A N IM A L LO VERS" 14 mm "DEVIL'S U H LE A C R E" W E D N E S D A Y IS S T U D E N T D A Y : ALL TICKETS HALF-PRICE WITH STUDENT LD. Unlike other classics “W est Side Story' grows younger! PANA VISION* TECHNICOLOR* _ t ow B n M A n a * IN T O D O -A O TECHNICOLOR* i » ^ w m tm Um tad A r tn ts G A T E O P E N S O N E H O U R B E F O R E S H O W T I M E N O W G I V I N G B O N U S C H E K S G O O D F O R F R E E A D M I S S I O N 8:00 12:00 O n e hot M is s o u ri n ig h t, t h e y ta k e on a to w n fu ll of hard - n o sed d irt- m ea n cra c k e rs . A n d th e cra c k e r* g e t w a s te d . J O E I M A M A ’ I T H E I l a s t I A pre-Halloween special W itchcraft doubt# feature DAY OF WRATH D ire cte d b y C a rl T h eo d o r D re y e r F ilm e d ( b v the ( D o c t o r o f V A M P Y R a n d J O A N O F A R C ) d u rin g th a N a i l o c c u p a tio n a f D e n m a rk B a n n ed by th# N a iis u n fi1 a f t e r th e w a r. " I t ha* b e en *aid th a t C a r ! D re y e r'* a rt b e g in * to u n fo ld Just a t the p o in t w h e re m ost o th e r d ire c to r* qiv# up. W i t c h c r a f t and m a rty rd o m a ra h it th a m a * — b u t hi* w ite h a * d o n o t rid # bro om stick*; th e y rid e the e ro tic fe a r* o f th e ir p e rs e c u to r* . . . . In 1623 th e y o u n g te c o n d w if a of an au ste re p a sto r de»ir#s hi* d e a th b e c a u s e o f h e r lo v e fo r hi* io n ; w h e n th e p a lt e r f a ll* d e a d , the I* trie d a* a w itc h . . . It I* a w o rld th a t su g g ests a d re a d fu l fu sio n o f H a w t h o r n e and K a fk a ." — P a u lin a K e e l, K I S S K I S S B A N G B A N G "T h e style he h a t w ork ed out fo r this film has a s a v e rs n o b le p u rity w h ic h v e r y little else in m ovies or, fa r as I know, in c o n te m D o ra ry a rt can a p p ro a c h . . . I d o n 't th in k th e r e is a sin g le atees* in w ord or lig h tin g or m o tio n . . . . Tha fin e s t th in g s in his film a re his close-ups. T h e y are held lo n q er than an yo n e else e s e e p t C h a p lin co u ld d a r e to ho ld th e m . T h e y c o n v e y th e kind o f in tric a te s u b tle ty , m e n ta l and s p iritu a l, w h ich o ne ean o rd in a rily fin d o n ly in c e r ta in kinds o f w rttinq . . . . The film in terests th# eyes, and d o e * its jo b th ro u g h th# e yes. F e w m ovie- m akers do that, even those w ho are g e n e ra lly w ell e s te e m e d . F o r th a t reaso n a lo n e , ev e n if I d id no t also re s p e c t him a* one o f the few m oralists, and h isto rian s, and cla ssicist*, a n d in c o r r u p t ib le artists, in m ovies, I w ou ld re g a rd him as a m as tar and this film as a q u ie t m a s t e r p ie c e ." Ja m e s A g e e , A G E E O N F I L M And HAXAN (Witchcraft Through the Ages) C h risten sen , N a rra te d b y W illia m S . Bu rro u g h i "D e s p ite m ueh e ro ticism , n u d ity , and e le m e n ts o f g e n u in e h o rro r as v a r ie u * ritu a l* and B la c k M as se* are re c re a te d , it is e s se n tia lly a le a rn e d tr e a tis e on the su b je c t, m o re e o n e a rn e d w ith info rm in g its a u d ie n c e s than shocking them Its se q u e n c e s o f p u re G o t h ic h o rro r and th e p le th o ra of d e ta il tell m ore than one re a lly n e ed s to know a b o u t w it c h c r a f t and S a ta n is m . I f s a fa s c in a tin g film , and Ona q u ita u n iq ua in film h isto ry a n n a ls ." — Bill E v a rto n FRIDAY, OCTOBER I BURDINE AUDITORIUM O N LY 75* DAY OF WRATH - 6^)0 & 9:10 HAXAN - 7:30 & 10:30 PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A FILM BY LEWIS GILBERT "friends" maim an* VtctW by feiiw K LEMS GIBERT X X RUSSEIL-VERNON KARRS LEWSGABERT On*** Sue Sr ELTON JOHN „ BERNIE TAUPIN CRT Ame mr emote :Y HELMAN GEOFFREY HELMAN TECHNICOLOR* A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Scuvfrtck Aam An**. or Ptttmourt Ifccord. B O X O F F IC E O P E N S 5:45 F E A T U R E 6 :0 5 - 8:00 • IO p.m. M a t in e e s S a t . A Su n. O n ly TRANS db TEXAS OPEN 1:45 • $1.50 'Til 5 P.M. 17324 Guadalupe St-477-1954 FEATURES 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 1 0 C Th* disenchantment U M H * W K M l N M a i JOE N A M I A S 'W E IAST B O E L - A S W NflLW KCTU8ES LTO PW OUCTKM) 0-ssm*| JA W BAM. WOOOY STTOOt TY HABON VICTORIA GEORGE ky WAW*N K B W P L U S — 10:00 "THE PROFESSIONALS" B U R T L A N C A S T E R — L F E M A R V I N f "m TRANS ★ TEXAS H m m 11423 ti. Bin Whit* Blvd.— 442 233J R O C K I N G C H A I R S E A T S S M O K I N G P E R M IT T E D A C R E S F R E E P A R K I N G O P E N — 4:45 • $1.00 TIL 5 W E E K D A Y S FEATURE TIMES 5:00 AND 8:30 “THE MOST VISUALLY STUNNING MOVIE EVER MADE!" — THOMAS THOMPSON. U U I l l ■Va' - H - ■> -.J ^ - - A R A B IA , “ A REALLY EPIC SPECTACULAR! FORCEFUL AND DYNAMIC! I! you’ve never seen it. what ire you welting for? lf you have seen it, you'll enjoy it more this time aroundl' — 608 S ALM AG G I, Group VV Network “ AS BREATHTAKING AS EVER! Drenched with the light of David Loons tolontl —uzsmith,cosmopolitan -A TITANIC SCREEN ACHIEVEMENT! Nearly as monumental as the true events it depicts. ••— JEFFREY L Y O N ! WP1X-TV COLUMBIA PICTURES N u t t n * SAM SPIEGEL DWID LEAN N t e t o a LAWRENCE O f AKASA / . N stwKi ALEC GUINNESS ANTHONY QUINN JACK HAWKINS JOSE TERRES ANTHONY QUAYLE CLAUDE RAINS ARTHUR KENNEDY .t x QMAR SHARIF * n .r*i t t i V L i i n i w jm s t a . M u 'ts r ama -j* - t r PETER Q T O O lf «s L A M U G u h — «mem • * * * • V l tL*. : . - x y . y Q g j G — * Q ' Friday. October I. 197! T H E D A ILY T E X A N Peg* IS WILLIAM TEPPER KAREN BUCK MICHAEL MARGOTTA• BRUCE DERN' ROBERT TOWNE HENRY iAGLOM MIKE WARREN * Nam* * Stet* Blunter n 1 2 . 24 Stand I'p and Cheer , " H o p H a w 24 L a s s i e 4 [lic k V a n D yk e fi Brad!' B inoh in Ow on M a rs h a ll, Couselor at 7 p TI 4 fi 12 Tho p A 12, 24 Brady Bunch 5 Chtraco Teddy Bears 9 C a p i t o l E y e Faculty Artists Cancel Wednesday Concert concert A Wednesday b y University faculty artists Orville White and Delmar Rogers, an- neuneed Frid ay rn the Calendar of Fine Arts Events, has been cancelled because of illness. The program of songst which srns to have been part of the Faculty Concert Series, has not Keen rescheduled. UKE AUSTIN INN Call 327-9028 Summer Close-Out BIG BOOGIE D E E D D L L R * L50 P'*cher -30 glass Open Fri., Sat. A Sun at 5 U V E MUSIC 9-Closing Fri. KEN NETH THREADGILL k the Original H O O T T E N A N N Y H O O T S B E R T • C H U C K • J U L I E Sat. & Sun. MULLET Cit jck ® J u l i e ® D a n n y ® C h a rlie cover charge SOc a head available for private parties TONIGHT! W I L L I S A L A N R A M S L Y SHELTER RECORDS REC O RD ING ARTIST SATURDAY R I C K Y S T E I N SAT. - SUN. DRAFT BEER $1.00 Pitcher 2 - 5 iU k 38th & Interregional 454-81 15 y .. *:•> A BRAND NEW CONCEPT IN MERCHANDISING WHERE YOU ALW AYS GET SOMETHING * — RECORDS Reg. 598 - 2 Reg. 498 - 2 TAPES 99 49 Reg. 698 399 LARGEST STOCK IN AUSTIN WATERBEDS KING SIZE 5 -YEAR GUARANTEE YOUR CHOICE OF COLORS 1799 AND GET A WATERCHAIR FREE (REG. S15 VALUE) OUR W A Y OF INTRODUCING YOU TO THE FINEST FOOD IN AUSTIN - 14 EXOTIC HAMBURGERS— WITH EACH GET A COKE AND A $1 B&W POSTER 13 PIZZA COMBINATIONS— (LARGEST & BEST FOR LESS) FRIE WITH EVERY PIZZA GET A COKE AND A $2.00 CO LO R POSTER FRF * * h a t J * Friday, October I, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN' ■ freebees^ 2800 GUADALUPE 478-3549