T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 71, No. 6! Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1971 Twelve Pages 471-4401 Preregistration End? Faculty Senate 7o Eye Reports By CUFF AVERY Associate News Editor to follow and to R e c o m m e n d a t i o n s abolish present preregistration policies on enrollment control will be aired before the Faculty Senate Monday. A Faculty Senate panel headed by Dr. the speech to hammer out to “ fieldhouse in recommend Robert Jeffrey, chairman of department, mpt Friday thp details of returning registration." The group had voted p r i n c j p I p Tuesday elimination of the system. .said that while preregistration will survive for the spring of 1972, his committee will ask the Senate to vote to amend the University calendar to allow for fivp and a half days of Gregory Gym registration in August, 1972. Jeffrey to The Senate will also be asked to endorse better spacp and air conditioning for the gymnasium. Jeffrey Its Unanimous mendation. The committee recommended: thp flve-ma.n panel was recom­ said in five-point requiring each department •Stream lining registration through three methods: to have a faculty adviser present at the gym the student's to approve changes schedule, asking a “liberalized procedure” such as abolishing return to sectionize™ lf the student finds a desired section closed and admitting only seniors the first day of registration. for •Providing for a two-day add and drop two in the gym during the first period days of classes. the •T h a t to continue decision preregistration for the spring semester be postponed to see how the system works next spring. In other words, students may continue to preregister for spring semesters but not for fall, depending on how the system works next semester. •T h a t the administration the feasibility' of a monetary penalty’ for late adds or drops. study •E stablishm ent of a special presidential to study the possibility of a committee computerized preregistration one week before the beginning of the fall semesttr. In essence this would become a “ com­ puterized Gregory Gym system”, with so daily printouts tho computer may suggest an alternativo section and reserve the student spacp in tho *ry Gym system stemmed from the I ng lines there. “ If u’e can do something to streamline the procedure—to avoid the problems that existed that the student reaction will not he negative ” the past—we hope in “THE COMMITTEE was concerned with Jeffrey said. students.” the panel in­ that m em bers of feedback adding formally polled students in their classes from Jeffrey’ said he believes most of student support for preregistration came from “tho 52 percent they wanted,” hut that these advocates fail to account for those that w’eren’t so lucky. that got exactly what He said his committee worried about from derived students disadvantages preregistration inadequate ad­ including vising. late-starting classes as a result of tardy class rosters and the use of faculty time for lengthy advising periods. Meeting at 2:15 p.m. in Union Building 202, the Senate will also hear a report from the Enrollment Control Task Force for controls for 1972-197,3. While the task force report keeps the same T !-’72 controls and quotas for en­ tering freshmen and lower division tran s­ fers. tim e adopt steps for control of upper division transfer students. it would for the first LIRE NEW FRESHMEN and lower division transfer students, upper division transfers would face priority application periods. For the fall semester only, no more than transfers vvould be 3.900 upper division admitted. Registrar Byron Shipp, a m em ber of the task force, said the 3.900 cut-off would be “ample” to take carp of all the University's junior and senior level transfer students. He said that while considerably less than 3.900 came to the University this fall, the task force was “doing some controls in case they become necessary’.” ' O ffJ N o n e for Me, Thank You F orm e r Pre s id e n t Lyn don B. Joh nson re­ leaflet offe re d to him b y an fuses a antiw ar a d v o c a t e after the T e x a s-O re - g o n g a m e S a t u r d a y at M e m o r ia l S t a ­ diu m . Photo by MIKE P L U T T . mmm the ballot after his two rivals, retired Gen, Duong Van “Big” Minh and Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky, dropped out of the race claiming the election was rigged. The situation has proved a major em­ barrassm ent to the United States, which had made a democratic election with multiple candidates a cornerstone of its Vietnam policy. Final results arc not expected to be available before late Monday. Group Seeks New Bus Route Shuttle Service Urged for East Austin Students By RICK CODINA News Assistant The strategy for possible implementation of a shuttle bus route to East Austin was mapped out Sunday night in an informal meeting of the newly-formed Action Group for Better Shuttle Bus Service. The committee, made up partially of East Austin students, was created last week and has since garnered the assistance of the Black Student Union and the Afro-American Culture Committee. At the end of nearly two hours of some Including emotional discussion, debates with Joe Pinnelli, chairman of the University Shuttle Bus Committee, the group agreed on a plan of action: to per­ suade City Council on the necessity’ and desirability of East Austin service. John Galloway, a spokesman the group, explained the East Austin route had been actively sought by a number of East Austinites for two years but their efforts until now had fallen on deaf ears. for “ Under the present routage system,” a group statement said, “ all students that live to the east are forced to forget the convenience of shuffle bus service. In ad­ dition to paying the mandatory service fee which supports the shuttle bus system they must maintain a car of their own, or pur­ chase transportation on the municipal bus lines or take taxis. “ Many of the students that live to the east of carnous are black and chicano. They do not need transportation this double burden,” the statement added. The group's pronosed route runs east on Manor Road to Chicon Street where it dins south to Rosewood Avenue before turning west the to Interstate 35 and north of University. A similar plan. Route 7, was passed unanimously by Pinnelli and his committee in thp summer but died before reaching City Council, where it ultimately must pass the Transportation to as an amendment EnUrnris'-'s Inc. City f r a n c h i s e . In explanation, Pinnelli said Ho and TFI officials feared the pronosed route into new territory would be discarded if placed before the conned prior to the completion of a 898.000 mass transit study being un­ dertaken by 'he City. Tile study, which is operating on funds from the Model Cities Program, is not expected to hp completed until soring. I admit it. T guess T made a m istake.'* Pinnelli told tfip group which had e a r l i e r resignation as chairman, demanded his But you can t say I rn net for bus service In East Austin. I rn for the rou'o and have been from thp start.” to PINNELLI ALSO a g re e d the c o m ­ m ittee's second recommendation that the shuttle bus committee he amended to in­ representation. At clude more present, the committee is composed of three students and two faculty ti.embers. regional students Galloway .said a committee composed of represent a ti ve from faculty two should have f o u r geographical quadrants and members, one of whom technical expertise, would be desirable. TO INITIATE the political machinery necessary before Route 7 can be officially established Student Government President Bob Binder promised to direct the Student Senate at its general meeting Tuesday night to ask the shuttle bus committee once again to approach TEI with its proposal. If no further action resists. Binder said, the itself will present the student body matter before the council. . . . — Texan Staff Photo by B E N E PER EZ . rinnelh Explains Actions J o e Pinnelli, ch airm an a f the S tu d e n t G o v e rn m e n t Shuttle Bus C o m m itte e , exp'ains S u n d a y w hy he d id n t su p p o rt the original plan for shuttle buses in East A ustin . Pin- nellt said he d.dn t want to present the plan before the C it y C o u n c il until the results •t a federally funded transit study were known. Viet Balloting Bolsters Thieu SAIGON (AP) — President Nguyen Van Thieu was assured Monday of an oxer- whelming “vote of confidence’’ far in ex­ cess of what he had asked in his unopposed but violence-rn a rred bid for reelection. With final results tabulated in 45 of South V i e t n a m ' s 56 voting constituencies, authorities said Thieu had Won an average (Related Stories. Pages 3 & 5.) of 95.55 percent of the ballots cast with 4.45 percent against him. Election officials claimer! that nationwide, a record 87.7 percent of the more than seven million registered voters cast their ballots. Thieu, the only presidential candidate, had specified 50 percent of the vote to claim one-man elections. He had said he would resign if he did not get many votes. South Vietnamese could vote against him by mutilating or defacing their ballots or by putting an empty envelope in the ballot box. Sadec province in the Mekong Delta had the highest pro Thieu vote, with 99.8 percent and Thieu's province of Ninh Thuan reported 9k.fi percent of its ballots for the President. The recorded was 64 3 percent in Hue City’, long a center of an­ tigovernment feeling. lowest figure THE ELECTION was marred by enemy street terrorism, and bloody shellings, rioting which loft more than 21 persons dead and more than IOO wounded across tho country. In Da Nang, South Vietnam’s second- least 57 persons were largest city, at wounded irv anfi-Thieu street disorders. The day-long clashes between protesters and police tapered off by late afternoon and Da Nang was reported quiet overnight. Thieu cast hts own ballot at Saigon’s City Hall. He told newsmen that winning the 50 percent margin would not guarantee that he will accept another term. “ I will consider all the factors.” he said, speaking before the size of the vote in his favor became apparent. The President also reported his pledge to retire when he achieves peace. HE ALSO declared the enemy had failed in its efforts to disrupt the voting. In the hours just before thp polls opened, enemy forces launched rocket and mortar attacks on at least 12 cities, towns and military installations, killing 17 Vietnamese and wounding to South Vietnamese officials. .33, according At least one American also was killed In the shellings, which the Viet Cong ap­ parently intended as a traditional reminder of their presence. The election climaxed a tumultous three months of hitter political maneuvering and, in recent weeks, recurring violence stem ­ ming chiefly to Thieu's from decision to run alone. reaction Thieu's name became the only one on HEW Raps UT Discrimination^ Spurr Sees No Policy Change The Department of Health, Education and Welfare has reprimanded the University for being derelict in its minority recruitment, particularly for Educational Opportunity (PEO), and its law school complement, the Council on Legal Educational Opportunity. former Program thp released The HEW report, made public Friday, to University President was Stephen Spun* on July 20 after completion of the department’s compulsory study of the I Jniversity each tw’o years. It notes only 3.7 percent of Hic enrolled the 1970-71 school year Student body in consisted of students with Spanish surnames W’hile only 289 students or .8 percent were black. “We deeply regret,” the report staled, “ the dropping of two potentially useful admissions programs at the University”— PLO and CLEO—and further recommended its the administration “re-examine that policy equal Statement this statement is not hindering or defeating its own purpose and intent." opportunity certain educational to make that The policy statement, issued by the Board of Regents in September, 19fi9. insists on admittance based solely on “accreditation standards and consistent with maintaining a high quality of education,” while barring the use of funds for direct recruitment of students. In effect, the policy eliminated both the PEO and CLEO programs which waived Dirty 30' May Announce Plans to Oust Mutscher Throe “ Dirty .30” members, State Reps. I^ane Denton and Tom Moore Jr. of Waco and Mrs. Frances Farenthold of Corpus Christi, have called “an important" Capitol press conference for Monday morning, but declined to disclose subject of the meeting. A likely topic would, however, be a “30” attem pt to remove indicted House Speaker Gus Mutscher. Aides would neither confirm nor deny speaker’s it “a pretty' good concerning termed the the question removal but guess.” Mutscher, charged with bribery, an­ nounced Thursday he does not plan to step down “ any time .soon” and will take an active part in reapportioning chores for thp House and Senate. He is one of a five- member Legislative Redistricting Board. The “ Dirty 30” is a coalition of liberal Democrats and Republicans who challenged Mutscher and “ the team ” throughout the last legislative session. They were defeated in an attem pt to pass a House resolution calling for an investigation of State officials in the Texas stock scandal* the required SAT and USAT scores as a basis for University admission in favor of a more relaxed criteria involving personal recommendations, interviews and financial need. IN HIS REPLY, Spurr said, “ We have re-examined the regental poliey statement. on Equal Educational Opportunity. We are confident that substantial progress ran be made and that the goals we share can be achieved by operating within this policy statement as it stands.” is in favor of Spurr also reaffirmed his position that he improved educational opportunity for all students, not solely on the basis of race. He said the report in­ dicated progress had been made, “but that we’re not making enough progress.” study recommended “ rom para hie recruiting efforts be made for Negro. Mexican American other minority race faculty members with that of Caucasion faculty m embers" as well as in the recruitment of athletes. Tile HEW also and DR. LORENE Rogers, a newly appointed vice-president of the University, explained that while no specific changes have resulted from the HEW report Spurr will hp con­ sidering a recommendation passed by tho University Council on Sept. 19, calling for a new policy on admissions which de­ emphasized SAT scores and emphasized individual factors. The plan, which would affect only IO percent of the existing admission quota, by University a visitation calls for r e c r u i t e r s schools which to high traditionally have not produced University students. Still Noncandidate Smith Refutes Quote * tov. Prom on Smit h denied Sa tu rd ay a statement quoting him as saying he w ill run for re-election next year. According to a Mexiro-based r e p o r t e r for a D a lla s in Mexico newspaper, Sm ith, < ity for the opening of a branch of the Texas Industrial Com* mi ,don said F r id a y : E v e ry b o d y in Texas knows I am going to do next what y e a r. I m going to run for re ­ election, and I'm going to win.” In denying the statement, Sm ith said. “ When I make my political plans, I'll make them in T exas." Smith, who was first elected IWS and was re­ governor in elected last year. had hc°n expected to announce for re­ election, hut that was before the disclosures of his making as much as $62,SOO in quick- profit stock transactions in thp stock fraud scandal, which has rocked Texas polities. Smith has denied any wrongdoing in the rase. Sn far. two have announced for governor— Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes and Uvalde rancher Dolph Briscoe, who ran for the office In 1968. University Coed Wins Miss World-U.S.A. Title A U niversity coed was crowned M iss World-U.S.A. Saturday night in Hampton. Va. Br,leone Smith, a 20-year-old junior in elem entary education from Port La va ca , w ill next the United month States in the Miss World Contest in Ivondon. represent “ I'm still in a state of shock.” she said of winning the title. “ I'm ins* real happy, but honestly am a/ed." ACTION with a is the PURPOSE BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL MANAGER of the Briscoe Denies LBJ Pressure B y The Associated Press Fo rm er President Lyndon B Johnson never pressured Dolph Briscoe to stay out of a race against Lf. Gov. Ben Barnes for governor, Briscoe said Sunday. “ Let me say that President Johnson put no pressure on me concerning what I might do politically,” Bi iscoe said on a radio-television panel show. Briscoe, a Uvalde banker and rancher, and Barnes are the only a n n o u n c e d candidates for governor. Briscoe said he had received plenty of advice to run against U .S. Sen. John Tower rather than Barnes. “ T'd say certainly there were thorn who p inted out the ad­ vantages of getting into a dif­ ferent race. T had encouragement from seme to run for different offices, including the U.S. Senate. I think that most of it was done m'\st nothing changed m y mind.” he said. sincerely. But the largest landowner Briscoe, one of the largest, ’f in not Texas, ended up owing a $500,000 campaign d< bt after his 1968 race for governor. “ I ’m not going to spend m y own money in this campaign,” he said. Spurr Pondering Required Theses A proposal to make the thesis for graduate r e q u i r e me n t students optional probably will be Graduate discussed Tuesday meeting, Assembly’s f t ding to University President the at Stephen Spurr. Die proposal started developing last spring when a group of g" duate stud nts suggested the mange, fi e Graduate Assembly, made up of deans of the col Dees I gr innate school professors, to the proposal r •''oily sent S c u t for consideration Parking Ain't What It s Cracked Up to Be — Texan S ta t! Photo by M A R L O N T A Y L O R . A squirrel observes the panorama of passing cars and pedes­ trians from his curbside seat. University police must have not seen the squirrel because at last count he didn t have a ticket. Representatives will visit the campus to discuss the University of Michigan M.B.A. T H U R SD A Y , N O V EM B E R ll P LA C EM E N T O F F IC E 2608 W hitis Avenue Congress Fights Raise Delay ( A P ) — W A S H IN G T O N fight, In a both House party-line Republicans a n d Democrats marshalled forces Sunday for a Monday President Richard M. Nixon's postponement of government workers’ pay raises. vote on Readers of both parties sent out telegrams over the weekend urging members to be present Monday a the resolution to veto the President's p o s t p o n e m e n t . Usually, at­ tendance is down in Congress Mondays because m any members vote on for take long weekends. a I n last-minute appeal conceded S a t u r d a y , Nix,an Congress “ political is under pressure” to veto the six-month delay, from I, Ja n . cf the pay raises for more than federal workers, four million including the m ilitary. I to Ju ly The President, in a statement Issued from the Florida White House, said that if Congress were to ‘‘cave under that pressure, the inflationary consequences . would he rapid, extensive and severe.” . . the United Campus Ministry A N N O U N C ES A RELIGIOUS VALUES LAB O C T O B E R 8 - IO 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 MORE I N F O R M A T I O r J & P C^-ISTR A U O ’ C A LL 478-4677 The President has i.ssued an executive order putting off the payraises for 1.4 million civilian and 2,9 million m ilitary personnel as part of his new economic policy to half inflation and cut unemployment. The six-month delay Is intended to save $1.3 billion to help balance the revenue loss resulting from proposed tax cuts designed to stimulate the economy. White House sources have said a separate S2.4-billion pay raise for m ilitary personnel designed to stimulate enlistments and the move to volunteer armed forces would go into effect Nov. 13 when the wago-price freeze ends. Voted as part of the draff extension bi!) this r a r e was to have been effective Oct. I, hut Nixon postponed it until tho end of freeze, and proponents have not fought this delay. the Passage of a rem! either the House or t! * to veto the nosip-nemei scheduled rn is override the President. Ja n . I Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound List $5.98 SPECIAL PRICE FOUR TOPS JACKSON 5 ; v ' • ' ‘ ••• $ i * rnA JbD. v r j l " A VALARIE SIMPSON DIANA ROSS Smokey Robinson & The Miracles SEE W H A T HAPPENS W H E N YOU D O N ’T KEEP YOUR APPOINTMENT FOR YO UR CACTUS PICTURE? C H EC K YO UR APPOINTMENT SCHEDULE N O W l Monday, O C T O B E R 4 thru Wednesday, O C T O B E R 6 Alpha Epsilon Pi A'pha Tau Om ega Beta Theta Pi Delta Sigm a Phi D«lta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon Kappa Alpha Kappa Sigma Lambda Chi Alpha Thursday, O C T O B E R 7 thru Monday, O C T O B E R ll Pi Kappa Alpha Sigm a Alpha Epsilon Sigm a Alpha Mu Sigma Chi Siqma Nu Sigma Phi Epsilon Theta Xi Zeta Beta Tau Phi Delta Theta Phi Gam m a Delta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Tau Sigma Pi Tau Delta Phi Tau Kappa Epsilon TUDIO HOURS 8:30 A.M.-1M0 and 1:30 P.M.-4:30 P.M. JOURNALISM BUILDING — RM. 5 All Appointments Must Be Made Through Y ou r Fraternity. COME SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION OF SOUL ■ BLUES ANTHOLOGIES • BLUES • PARK FREE UP TO ONE HOUR AT THE 23RD & PEARL ST. G ARAGE Have your ticket validated when you shop at SOUND SHOPPE IN HARDIN NORTH APARTMENTS 815 West 24th Phone 4Z4-1275 MARVIN GAYE THE UNDISPUTED TRUTH USE YOUR OPEN IO A.M. TO 9 P.M. OUND H O P P E University Village Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • Sound Shoppe • So: Page 2 Monday, October 4, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ". . . . . .. . . . . . — . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . IIH m-nMmammmmmmmmmmmmmommmmm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . IIH I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii. T _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ■ infiinfmiuninirinriHnlPFinnvfnif'nTiM^rmnr'nffnnMrlmnilnnnrnnrPVPIffVITnw I W R ! " ! 1! ! ! ! " . l ! ! i | | ! ! l | l ! . n i n n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 1 ! '. '" H r 1 Riots, Unrest Plague S. Vietnam Elections Demonstrators Rock Da N ang In Bloody Show DA NANG, Vietnam (AP)—Gunfire rattled in tho streets of South Vietnam's second largest pity Sunday, and armored cars rumbled in to quell the bloodiest an­ tigovernment demonstration on election day. Hundreds of monks in saffron robes, high school students, disabled veterans, Viet­ namese Boy Scouts and teen-age girls in ao dais clashed repeatedly with police and arm y troops in savage street fighting. By day’s end, local hospitals reported treating a1 least 57 wounded. 31 of them by gunshot and 26 by shrapnel from hand grenades. All but nine were civilians. MONKS AT the Tinh Hoi Pagoda claimed two persons were killed, a 17-year-old student demonstrator and 42-year-old man they described as an onlooker. They said to prevent they were hiding the bodies authorities from them away and later a n y knowledge of fatalities. disclaiming taking Tile disturbances erupted early in the morning as columns of demonstrators lee! by monks tried to block roads leading to nine polling places in downtown Da Nang. They were m et by barbed wire barricades and combat police with M16 rifles. When the monks removed some of the barricades, the police began firing tear gas retaliated canisters. The demonstrators with cocktails, and Molotov screaming “ down with the election.’’ rocks At mid-morning, and in the city, personnel carriers appeared and police began firing their rifles over the heads of demonstrators. armored cars As the fighting intensified, they shot lower and lower. YOUTHS IN black uniforms, wearing atm bands of the militant Quoc Dan Dang (Vietnam Nationalist Party) erected flags with a white star in a blue circle at several intersections, the police bombarded them with tear gas. scampering away as By siesta time, some of the demonstrators- had dispersed, but several hundred con­ tinual to hurl rocks at police and troop- carrying armored cars near the Da Nang market. At midafternoon a platoon of Rangers arrived. The elite combat troops set up 30-calibre machine guns on a few street corners around the pagoda, which appeared to be demonstrations. the organizing center for the They did not file them, however. Some youths distributed leaflets in the streets urging Da Nang residents: “ Don’t follow the American pirates and don’t vote for their lackey. The wind will blow the Americans the east, but Thieu will remain. Keep him bent over, crying. Da Nang will not submit.” to Street fighting petered out as light faded. N. V ials Fail To Shut Down Saigon Polls SAIGON (AP) — Communist command forces launched 60 small attacks across South Vietnam and pressed their offensive along the Cambodian border into a second week Sunday, but President Nguyen Van Thieu said they failed to sabotage the presidential election. in their plans At least 28 South Vietnamese and one American were reported killed and 139 Vietnamese and one American wounded in enemy shellings, terror incidents, an ac­ cidental bombing by U.S. aircraft and street HIM1 Il'in ilililiitllltlllillH llllltllllllllllllllllH lllllliiiillllM IH IIIIIIIIIIIim illiiillllllll’llllilllllllltlllM rioting by antigovernment demonstrators. still their offensive ON THE BASIS of incomplete reports, eight of the dead and 38 of the wounded were casualties suffered by South Vietnamese troops on the Cambodian side of the border. Pressing thorp, North Vietnamese forces kept a key South Viet­ namese firebase isolated from its mother base at the Cambodian town of Krek and heavily shelled it for the eighth consecutive day. Seven South Vietnamese soldiers were killed and 26 were wounded at the base, called Alpha, 4.5 miles southeast of Krek. At the sam e time. U.S. fighter-bombers trying to ease the pressure on the Krek region with massive air strikes killed one South Vietnamese soldier and wounded 12 in an accidental bombing. Tile U.S. Com­ mand said the bombers struck very close to their assigned target but shortly before they dropped their bombs, a South Viet­ namese unit moved into the area. On the plus side, the South Vietnamese were able to move a convoy north along a section of Highway 22, the first road traffic since regiments of North Vietnamese troops cut the 30-mile corridor leading from Tay Ninh to the Cambodian border last Sunday. three The truck convoy wras moving up and down a 20-mile stretch of Highway 22 from Tay Ninh to Firebase Tran Hung Dao, 20 miles to the north. The convoy brought supplies to the firebase, which had been under siege until a relief column reached it Friday. Thieu, after casting his ballot a t City Hall, said the Communists had planned an offensive to coincide with the election a long time ago. In the hours just prior to the opening of the polls. North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces launched rocket and m ortar attacks on a t least nine m ajor cities, in­ cluding Saigon, Da Nang, Tay Ninh. Bien Hoa, Vung Tau. Can Tho. Dalat, Vinh (zing and Quang Ngai. OF THE ATTACK on Saigon, the first in nearly IO months, Thieu said: “ The Communists have prepared to sabotage the election for one year. And now they have fired only three rockets at Saigon. I feel that’s an indication that they have failed in their efforts.” The U.S. Command reported eight rocket and m ortar attacks against American units and installations, including two units sup­ the South Vietnamese operation porting along the Cambodian border. At least one American was killed and one was wounded in the eight attacks, all of them small, and a few U.S. helicopters were damaged in an eight-round m ortar barrage on the big Tay Ninh West base camp. the c e ra tio n northward along the border is being staged. from Tay Ninh that is It Four Pacifists Establish Own 'U.S. Embassy1 SAIGON (AP) — Four American pacifists set up their own “American Embassy” on Sunday “to represent the people” in one of the sideshow s to South Vietnam’s one- man presidential election. Me feel there should be some kind of alternate preser.ee which really represents the m ajority of the American people ” said F ather B arn- Bury. who Saturday had chained himself to the U.S. embassy gate. • • e UPnt see Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker yesterday and we tried to express this to him,” he added. “We found that he is uli\e and well and living in the 1950’s.” F ather Bury, along with two other Roman Catholic priest,a and a Jewish professor, had chained themselves to the embassy gate Saturday to protest what they called fraudulent elections. F ather Bury is with the University of Minnesota Newman Center. The others are F ather Bob Willis of La Jolla. Calif.. Father John Dee of Winona, Minn., and Fen Hirsch of Cleveland. rn Russian M o o n Probe Enters Lunar Orbit MOSCOW l i t e Soviet I nioii's new est m oon p ro b e, th e u n m an n ed L una ID, e n tered a lu n a r orbit S unday and w as functioning as a m oon sa te llite , T ass announced. The official Soviet new s ag en cy g a \ e no w o rd about th e p re cise m ission of L una 19, lau n ch ed Sept. 28 a fte r th re e co n secu tiv e sp ac e failu res by th e Soviet Union. But Hie w o rd in g of an n o u n cem en ts about L una 19 c a u s e d som e w e ste rn scien tific o b se rv e rs to sp ec u la te ii would not lan d on the m oon. T a ss sa id L u n a 19 w as put into n ear-m oon o rb it “ to beco m e an a r ­ tificial sa te llite of the m oon" an d “ to conduct scien tific in v estig atio n of the m oon and n e a r-lu n a r sp ace. . Sovief Scientist Supports Citizens* Riqht to Leave MOSCOW E m in en t R u ssia n p h y sicist A ndrei D. S ak h aro v h a s p roposed th a t the Sot iet U nion g ra n t all citizens the right to le a v e th e co u n try . He said su ch a rig h t is “ an e sse n tia l condition for s p iritu a l freed o m for everyone.** S ak h aro v , d ev elo p er of the Soviet hy d ro g en bom b and a cham pion of h u m an rig h ts , proposed the free e m ig ra tio n policy in an open le tte r to the S u p rem e Soviet. He reco m m en d ed th a t the le g islativ e body rev o k e the cu rre n t law th at p e rm its persons fleeing th e co u n try to be trie d for high treaso n . The s c ie n tis t also ask ed for a g e n e ra l a m n e s ty for p erso n s d etain ed in la b o r c a m p s o r m e n ta l hosp itals b ecau se th ey h ad tried to leav e the Soviet Union. It is b elieved th is ap p e al is the first tim e th a t an officially resp ected m e m b e r of the Soviet in tellig en tsia h a s called for a com p lete o v erh au l of the K re m lin ’s em ig ra tio n policy. Dock W orkers’ Participation in Strike Uncertain BEAUMONT P ic k e ts c a m e down at the P ort of B eau m o n t about 5:30 p.m . S unday, and th e re w e re conflicting re p o rts th at m e m b e rs of the In te rn a tio n a l L o n g sh o rem en ’s Union h e re would join o th e r ILA m e m b e rs in T ex as in ignoring a n atio n al dock strik e call. T h e ILA m e m b e rs h e re w e re th e only T ex a s d o ck w o rk ers to w alk ort the job w hen a strik e w as called by ILA P re sid e n t T h o m as G leason e a rly F rid a y on all A tlan tic and Gulf p o rts. D ock w o rk ers a t H ouston, G alv esto n an d o th e r T ex a s p o rts refu sed to join th e s trik e w hich w as o b serv ed by ILA m e m b e rs in o th e r sta te s. W.C. Y oung, b u sin ess ag en t for ILA Ixxml 1610 h ere, said his m em ­ b e rs h ad d ecided to re tu rn to w ork e a rly M onday m o rn in g and h ad called off the picketing. L a te r S un d ay night, local P resid en t E d d ie B lackw ell said th a t the pickets would go b a c k up a t the port in the m orning. FORT MORTH (AP) — The new owners of the historic Baker Hotel in downtowm Mineral M olls Saturday offered part of the facility as a temporary' residence for the Children of God. who have been asked to leave the Texas Soul Clinic in Thurber, the Fort M’orth Star-Telegram says. The 14-story, 450-room resort hotel was purchased Thursday by Dr. B. Owen Oslin of Arlington and his partner, Mrs. Virginia Rush, of F ort Smith. Ark., former owner of two Arkansas manufacturing firms. OSLIN SAID he was en route to Mineral Wells Friday, the day after the purchase was finalized, when he learned of the plight of the Children of God. His wife was reading aloud a morning Star-Telegram article about the eviction of the colony of religious young people as he drove westward, he said. Oslin said, instead of going to Mineral M olls, he changed his course and headed for Thurber to offer help. Friday, hoverer, Oslin arrived in the middle of a confrontation between leaders of the Children of God and the Rev. Charles Johnson, a trustee of the American Soul Clinic in California which owns the 400-acre Soul Clinic in Texas. After making Ills plans known here VA Works to 6J O O Wait Meet Demand for Medical Aid WASHINGTON - Veterans Ad­ (AP) ministration hospitals, struggling to cope (lie medical needs of a growing with veteran population, have built up a waiting list of 6.300 patients even though they are rejecting four of every IO applicants. The waiting list of eligible patients for to the VA’s 166 hospitals has admission more than doubled since the first of the year. The the growth statistic reflects In veterans rolls resulting from the Vietnam ll war, plus veterans are growing older and more in need of medical care. fact that World Mar the WHILE CONCEDING the 6,300-patient List is the highest in recent years, VA Ad­ m inistrator Donald Johnson said in an in­ terview it is only a fourth of the peak year, 1958, when 25,000 veterans were on the waiting lis t Johnson said last year, the VA cared for 818.000 patients in its hospitals while logging eight mission “ ambulatory care visits”—outpatient treatment or treatment by private physicians a t VA expense. INTERVIEWS with scores of patients at a dozen VA hospitals disclosed that most of them are, in fact, satisfied with the care they’re getting, once they get in. Almost involved invariably complaints delays in gaining admission, although some complained of inadequate attention. Ted Chute, 23, a paraplegic from Puxport, Maine, who is a patient a t West Roxbury, Mass., VA Hospital, said: “ I can’t turn over in bed by myself, and I have to be turned every- two hours so I don’t get sores. There have been a lot of times I’ve bad three and a half or four hours to wait to get turned. I don’t know- if they don’t have enough aides or if the aides don’t care, but whatever it is, I haven’t always gotten the attention I’m supposed to get.” SIMILARLY, at Hines VA Hospital near Chicago, Glenn Mayer, 46. paralyzed from the waist down, said: “ One day not long ago they took me down to the central bath for a shower at IO in the morning. I didn’t get back to the room until 2. My lunch was here waiting for me, but it was cold.” Mast patients, however, said they were pleased with they’re getting. “ They’re doing all they can to help us,” said amputee Tommy Clack, 24. a patient at tho Altanta VA Hospital. tile care On a typical weekday morning at the Atlanta hospital, every chair in the long, narrow- waiting room was filled and dozens of people stood against the w-alls awaiting treatm ent or examination. Upstairs in the orthopedic warn, a 24- year-old Vietnam amputee, former Marine S g t Richard Evans of Macon, Ga*, said he had no complaints about the quality of care but “ it took me three days to get into the hospital,” where he is learning to walk on his artificial leg. service-connected PATIENTS with m- juries or illnesses receive priority f o r __ ad- mission, a requirement set by law-. Veterans with ailments unrelated to m ilitary service are treated on a first-come, first-served basis , or, in the case of crowded hospitals, on a siekest-patient-first basis. In DTO. records show, VA hospitals rejected about 400.000 of tile more than one million veterans who sought admission. Most of these, VA officials said, were examined and found not to need hospital care. t ssm - ¥v' TifTW y'f ' :;y | ' I*®! * Mostly cloudy and a little cooler Monday through Tuesday, with a few showers and thundershowers through Monday night; southeasterly winds 5 to 16 m.p.h., gusty thundershowers and becoming nor­ near theasterly 6 to 16 m.p.h. Monday. High Monday in the middle 80’s, low Monday the upper 60’s; precipitation night probabilities 30 percent Monday and 20 percent Monday night. in Development of Child Potential Emphasized House OKs Day Care Plan (AP) IV A S H I N G T O N - Congress generally takes years to enact programs with a wide social sw-eep, but in a couple of hcurs last week the House approved One that could have a tremendous impact on the nation’s future. It has as its goal nothing less than seeing to it that each child bom in the United States is given an opportunity to develop to his full potential. In pursuit of that goal it would establish a nationwide network of day care centers where the preschool children of working impoverished mothers, or those from families, would receive a wide variety of health, educational and nutritional services. No one knows how much it would cost. Before the House trimmed the number of children who would be eligible for free A n AP N ew s Analysis services—to those from families with in­ comes under $4.320—the Administration estimated it at S20 billion a year. The Senate, which passed a similar program a few months ago, thinks it might cost $2 billion. The managers of the House bill talked vaguely of $250 million or $350 million. When the House voted to launch this new program hardly any of the members knew more than the broad outlines of what thor were passing. It was offered as an amend­ ment to the Economic Opportunity Act; not as a separate bill, so there was no report from a committee explaining is required with a bill, and members were limited to five-minute speeches in debating it. it. as Evicted 'Children of God' Offered Space in Old Hotel It was opposed by the Administration and most Republicans mostly on the basis of its cost. but not entirely'. “ It is a question of collectivized child raising, and it perverts all traditional cultures,” said Rep. Durward G. Hall. R-Mo. “ I see this as a long step toward the socialization of our nation.” the To those who rem em ber the seven years it took for Medicare to run that course, the decade of struggle that went into the enactment of federal aid to education, and the slow progress now being m ade by Nixon’s welfare program , such speed is hard to understand. in lies P art of the explanation the procedure. A small bipartisan group In the House Education and Labor Committee headed by Reps. John Brademas D-Ind., and Ogden R. Reid, R-N.Y., had been working on a bill for two years and planned to move it separately. But the Senate made its version part of the antipoverty program so Brademas had to tack his hurriedly on as an amendment so the House would have something to bargain with in conference. But to a greater degree the vote showed an awareness that the country is changing, that new problems have arisen and the search for solutions can’t wait. MttiiuiiHHtMwnintimtiHttiiijiiftuHitiiuiiimuinRHiHTifiiHiitiwiMimitwii^ti^^iwHNiMaimi^^M Saturday, Oslin got in his car and again drove to Thurber. He talked with Abel and Amos of the colony and officially extended the offer. He told tile group that lie had IOO vacant rooms and baths which they were welcome to use plus a sizable dining room and a ballroom which could be used for meetings and studies. Oslin. who said he has spent 25 years In diversified businesses, said he has been involved with young people for 30 years. “ It’ll be like the icing on the cake, lf I could know that after 30 years of helping young people, I can aid this >roung group.” he said. He said the hotel would also provide linen for the group if they did not have any. but the group would be responsible for cleaning it. WHILE THE Children of God were at the hotel. Oslin said they would use his contacts in securing a ranch or acreage for permanent residence. “Somewhere ive can find these kids a place where they won t be evicted, where they can stay permanently,” Oslin said. Oslin’s offer does not include food, but Abel said the Children of God have a good food supply. A part of the hotel’s m aster kitchen, just below- the dining room which would be used by the young people, would be made available to the Children of God. Abel and Amos, who have not yet ac­ cepted Oslin’s offer, said they had tried the to work out an arrangem ent with owners of a Dallas hotel to perform certain duties to reside there, but nothing has been done yet. The Children of God. they accept Oslin’s offer, would have a small work detail for some maintenance jobs in ex­ change for the services. if Oslin said he is deeply concerned about the young people and feels their problem deserves immediate attention. “THOUGH, T do not totally endorse and subscribe to all of their techniques and training. I ’m convinced that their work has produced some good which comes as a result efforts of rehabilitation of former drug users and other social misfits.” combined their of Oslin Raid he wa* prepared to start receiving the group now. “ Hopefully they w ill accept.” When asked how Mrs. Rush reacted to the offer to the Children of God, Oslin said, “She flipped over i t She said it was great.” Leaders of the Children of God. who have already shipped some of the members to colonies across die country, are expected to look over the hotel facilities soon and decide either to accept or reject the offer. Abel said he would have to check to see how m any members of the colony would be needing places to go. “ It could be less than IOO,” he said. Travis Jail Conditions Object of Leafleting Demonstrators p e a c e f u l l y protested Travis County Jail conditions Saturday, observing first National Political the Prisoners' Day. About 30 people gathered at IO a.m. to picket and hand out leaflets in front of Travis County Courthouse. Later in the day they passed out leaflets at Highland Mall and the Texas-Oregon football game. A two- hour candlelight vigil ended the day’s ac­ tivities. Gathering in front of City Jail, some d e m o n s t r a t o r s sang, w-hile others distributed wiiite candles in white plastic the cups. The group later marched courthouse. The atmosphere remained quiet and relaxed throughout the demonstration. to PEOPLE took turns ea rn in g a sign read­ ing ‘Release the Prisoners.’ and exchanged friendly banter with three police plain­ clothesmen w-ho sat on the steps. Steve Russell, senior education major, said, “The philosophy of many of us here is ‘love your enemy but confront his evil.’ A quote from Gandhi. Our theory is militant nonviolence. in “ I’ve been jail a number of that times.” said Russell. “There are no m at­ tresses. You sleep on bare metal with two blankets and fleas.” Russell said he used a roll of toilet paper for a p i l l o w and made friends with tho prisoners by giving them his food. “ They never give you enough to eat there.” he said. COMPARING the jailers to those of tile South, he said they are “ just as bad about beating people. Once I heal’d a jailer beating on a guy in the cell next to mine. I started beating on the bars of my cell and scream ing at him to stop. Everyone else started yelling, too, and he went away. He came back later and told the guy he’d been beating that he hadn’t been beaten, but that he’d fallen down.” Janet Stockard, mid-law student, co­ ordinated the event. Two grand jury reports have come out, she said, condemning conditions jails, but in Travis County nothing has been done. “Me're opposed to treating people as animals. People shouldn’t be caged. Everyone’s outraged by Attica, but these conditions exist everywhere in the I nited States. Jails should be replaced by rehabilitation programs.” Tile women’s section of the County Jail is better, according to Janet Stoddard. “It’s bad in the City Jail. though,” she said. “ Secretaries search women, and there are no women officials at all on the floor where women are kept.” National Political Prisoners’ Day was initiated by the People’s Coalition for Peace and Justice in Washington. Tile Austin effort was sponsored by C o rn mu n i t y United Front. Vietnam Veterans Against the War and Direct Ac­ tion. War Protesters Rally at Game Head Coach Darrell Royal’s Wishbone T formation can lend the antiw ar movement fall, said one some helpful hints protester at an antiwar demonstration after Saturday’s Texas-Oregon game. this I ti link the Texas Wishbone can offer the antiwar movement some useful tips on how to be successful.” said Tom Kincaid, a former varsity football player at Mc­ Murray College in Abilene. He added. “ Just like the Wishbone, the antiwar movement relies on its own organized strength in the st leers, not the goodwill of the government, UT does not rely on the favors of its op­ ponents. We don’t either.” students and other Approximately 65 front of Peace in onlookers gathered I oun ta in and listened to antiwar speakers sponsor cd by the Student Mobilization Committee (SMC). Large banners promoting the rally were displayed in front of entrances to Memorial Stadium. Also at the rally, but not speaking, w ai City Councilman Jeff Friedman. E m ir Mailhot, an SMC tour speaker, told the “ people the gathering country are asking why Vietnam, wrhy Attica?” He said inmates in U.S. prisons are like the Vietnamese and are seeking “ decent lives.” throughout A national student strike, sponsored bi SMC, will be held Nov. 3. Mom !**. October 4. 1971 THE D A ILY TEXA N Pa Editorial *1 kno w , I know . . . You love me.9 The one that got away? v sy itii I hr* big fish arr* si ill swimming around.” Hon. Gus F. Mutscher Speaker of the Texas House I hat statem ent by indicted Speaker Gus Mutscher Sept. 24 appears on the cover of the Oct. 8 issue of The Texas O bserver and aptly sums up the current status of the Sharpstown stock fraud scandal which has shaken the Texas Statehouse and implicated just about every m ajo r officeholder in Texas. Indeed. Hic O bserver s cover depicts such prominent fish as Gov. Preston Smith. State Dem ocratic Party Chairman E lm er B aum , T reasu rer Jesse James. State Rep. W.S. (Bill) H eady of Paducah, chairm an on the powerful House Appropriations Committee, and the mastermind him self, Houston financier and wheeler-dealer F rank Sharp. M utscher and three of hi- cohorts have received the brunt of the attack on the latest corruption un­ covered in Austin. The Travis Count} Grand J u n . with its sweeping indictment of Mutscher. his aides S. Rush M cGinty and Speaker Pro Tempore Tommy Shannon, and form er State Insurance Commissioner John Osorio, tem porarily drew attention from everyone else m entioned in the scandal. Lately the heat has centered on the speaker and his cohorts, although sev eral other m ajor political figures in Texas were im plicated when the Security and Exchange Com­ m ission filed its suit last January. ST IIX THOUGH, one figure. . .and one figure alone rem ain s conspicuously absent from The Observer’s and everyone rise’s coverage of the affair—Ben B arnes, lieutenant governor and presiding officer ot the State Senate. There have been reasonable allegations as to how S harp’s two banking bills, the object of the alleged bribery, passed the House during a special session in 1969. There have been reasonable allegations as to why the\ were put on the agenda for the special session by ihe governor. But there never has been much said as to how the bills passed the Senate after M utscher and his team ram m ed them through the House. The lieutenant governorship is a powerful position. H ie State Senate is his domain and, as presiding officer, he names com mittees and sets calendars. Because of his duties and influences, it is safe to say that few bills, especially during a special session when the amount of legislation is usually small, pass the .Senate without the lieutenant governor’s support. How and why did Sharp’s bills pass the Senate? WJiv did it take the Senate only 24 hours—24 hours—to receive the bills from the House, refer them to com­ mittee, report them onto the floor, suspend the rules to allow Immediate passage, pass the bills and send them to the governor to be signed into law’? How and why could such a complicated and tedious process be accomplished in one day? BEN BARNES HAS been mentioned on the fringes of the scandal. In the beginning, when die SEC filed Its blockbuster suit in Dallas, it was revealed that Barnes owned substantial stock in National Data Communications, a firm related to Sharp’s now defunct empire, and had loans from a Sharp-controlled bank in Dallas. But that tinge of scandal quickly died down. This August during grand jury hearings in Houston, B arnes’ nam e again surfaced during testimony from Sharp. According to the financier, now under immunity from crim inal prosecution, Osorio told Sharp one af­ ternoon outside the Sharpstown State Bank in Houston: OSORIO: ‘'Well, Ben delivered for us." SHARP: “ John, are you telling me w e're obligated to him like we are to the others?” OSORIO: “ No, Ben’s sm arter than the rest. . .He deals only in cash.” Damning testimony, so it cam e as no surprise to hear the lieutenant governor lash out at Sharp, quickly branding him a “ liar." Despite Barnes’ relative noninvolvement in the stock fraud scandal, it is quite possible that his golden image could be tarnished. No longer Mr. Clean, Barnes might the pinch during his upcoming gubernatorial feel campaign. Indeed, the only other announced candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor, Uvalde rancher Dolph Briscoe, took up B arnes’ role in the Senate passage of the banking bills when he jum ped into the race Sept. 29. the sam e special BRISCOE, ASSERTING that B arnes played a role to M utscher’s, said Sharp’s banking bills sim ilar the “ received lieutenant governor, who pushed them through the Senate. The people of Texas hav e a right to know why this special interest legislation, designed to benefit the floundering financial empire of F rank Sharp, was given such VIP treatm ent in the Texas Senate.” treatm ent from The stock fraud investigation hardly seems finished. Three grand juries—the county grand jury in Austin which has indicted M utscher & Co. and federal grand juries in Dallas and Houston—are still delving into our latest governmental mess. Indeed. U.S. Dist. Atty. Anthony J .P. F arris of Houston has said “ the sharks, not just the minnows" will be caught before the probes are completed. Legislation must pass both houses of the Legislature to become law. After months of silence from the lieutenant governor, it’s high time Ben Barnes levelled with the public. I t’s high time for some definitive statem ent from Barnes as to his role in the passage of Sharp’s banking bills. It’s high time for an in­ vestigation into the Senate side of the stock fraud scandal. The Texan understands that sooner, rather than later Ben Barnes’ role in the whole slimy affair will come under close scrutiny. And to our mind, the sooner the better. Steve Wisrh Student input marginal L ist Wednesday, Dr. Peter T. Blawn was named vice-president for academic affairs by University President Stephen H. Spurn To most students who read of Flawn’s appointment, the matter surely makes little difference. However, to some students and more faculty, it loomed as the forecast of the year’s coming events. Flawn’s selection, indeed the process by which he was selected, demonstrates clearly that student imput into University decisions is marginal. the committee that Having served on three other can­ nominated Flawn and didates the following is my view of the committee process and its significance. for Spurr's consideration, Students were appeased with three voting seats on this committee: the faculty had nine votes. I was an alternate member, full-time students were: Student Govern­ ment administrator Dick Benson, Plan II student Mark Jopling and freshman Law* student Richard Moore. WHEN THE COMMITTEE first convened In June, Spurr outlined wrhat he wanted the vice-presidency for academic affairs to entail. He saw' the post as heading up professional schools, occasionally aiding on undergraduate affairs. Uke the provost for arts and sciences, the vice-president would have direct access to Spurr on the matters he would handle. In tile past, the academic vice-president was a notch above the provost or A&S dean. Now, they would have equal stature. There was considerable discussion on whether die interviews would be opened to candidates from other campuses. Finally, the selection process was restricted to the University. It was the committee’s strong contention that Spurr would need a vice­ president familiar with campus affairs. Often, debate over a particular candidate became heated. A sure means of quelling such clamor was one faculty member saying “ I wonder if this is what Dr. Spurr wants. His concept of the job wouldn’t seem to fit this man’s abilities.” This being Acknowledged, die candidate would be dropped. FROM TUE EARLY meeting I attended In late June and July, student com­ mitteemen shared the common belief that Flawn could best serve the University in some other capacity than the post wre were considering. Since Flawn served Dr. Bryce Jordan as his ad interim vice-president for academic affairs, his name would lie dif- The firing line The Tower: Its neater than the Alamo' generations of furtive graduate students, and a verse from “Black Marigolds,” a poem translated from the Sanskrit comes to mind: “ Even now I mind the coming and talking of wise men from towers Where they had thought away their youth. off the Tower. I only w ish more of us could display that same courage. A final note. Many people characterize all suicide “victims” as insane. I disagree. As a matter of fact, I think the person who wrote that he imagined God hiding the Tower with fog is sick and demented. Keith Blackwell And I listening my girl. . .” Found not the salt of the whispers of M a c a b re W o m e n ’s rights To the editor: in for debate in its fate this year, This W’eek the constitutional amendment to grant full legal equality to women Is scheduled the House of Representatives, with a strong chance of the being passed. Although Senate the is questionable amendment will undoubtedly pass in the near future. One thing, however, Is graphic: full legal equality for women will prove for American a society. The current issue of the Yale Law Journal outlines the probable extent of the changes. Anyone who wants a preview’ of the impact of the amendment might read the article there. traumatic experience Of course, equality before the law will not automatically produce immediate social equality for women any more than it did for blacks. Only the resulting society where women are full citizens can change the basic attitudes of both men and women still opposed to women's liberation. But the necessary legal sanctions can foundation by opening new areas of op­ portunity and responsibility on which women can build their lives and, together with men, our society. lay impending Most discussions of legal equality center on the vital Issues of rights and opportunities, often to the neglect of the concurrent responsibilities, lf we gain the benefits of equal access jobs, freedom from “ protective” statutes, and retention of full economic and legal rights the after marriage, we must accept to obligations of full participation In society’. For the first time, the demands of govern­ ment and the law will fall equally on men and women. Are we ready to be drafted for military’ service? To give up the ad­ vantage of current divorce and alimony arrangements? To accept the exigencies of earning our own ways and living our own lives? We should welcome both sides of legal equality and must be prepared to have both equal opportunity and its resultant power. We must as individuals comp to know ourselves, not as someone’s daughter, wife or mother, but as persons in our own right. Exploring our own potentials and limitations, pursuing our ambitions, we ran work out of the conditioning of role and Inferiority so tellingly described by Simone de Beauvoir and Germaine Greer. from social Freed from existing legal restrictions and increasingly harassments directed against women, we can mature as few women in our society have been allowed to do. Along with this maturity, vve can accept our part in and responsibility for the functioning and direction of society. No longer will we bo able to rationalize our minimal elective and political par­ ticipation. We will be ready to move into all levels of government and institutions so that we also are accountable for the nature of American life. This, then, Is the equality the con­ stitutional amendment holds out to women: personal rights in our individual lives and full participation and respoasibility in the life of our society. Is there really any question as to whether we want it? Addeano Kelly Graduate History Student 1 To the editor: With consummate taste as befits the ledge surrounding Pacemaker awardee, The Texan has published a pathetically macabre apres- doath shot of Miss Armistead’* shoes perc hed on the Tower’s observation deck. This surpasses the close-up of Ernie Kovac’s half-smoked cigar on the cement next to his wrecked automobile, which was circulated by the wire services following Mr. Kovac's demise. J o you. then, go my compliments and the Yellow’ Journalism Special Merit award for this year (don’t be surprised if you receive some juicy job offers from the National Enquirer). In passing, it is indicative of a less-than- oohesive editorial policy on your part to ask that the observation deck be closed in with steel and glass, when only a few days ago, you printed an editorial denying the way we Americans tend to enclose ourselves, separate from our environment. At any rate, the only way that innocuous Tower could claim any livc*s. as the Texan editorial went, would bo if to collapse (which I hear will happen only if ta* I/ nrbrrrw lose diree in a row.). it w’ore Stephen Gardner Junior, Plan II To the ed itor: The Tower of the University, our om­ nipotent symbol, through the years has turned from orange to black. My freshman year, 1959, T remember the exhilaration of hearing the bells chiming Christmas carols on crisp December mornings, and seeing the thing glowing orange, weekend after weekend. Lost In the hills, and not knowing Austin very well, it was a handy landmark as I hastened a girl to her dorm. I remember hiding a snowball under my coat and ascending the 27 flights as cold water dripped conspicuously on the elevator floor. It was a place to meditate and to get away from the hustling crowds below. Once I watched a norther blow into Austin, the trees abruptly bending on line as the invisible wave swept into the city. Peace, heights and fresh air. all time. lonely Once, during a very I dropped a hundred bits of paper with my phone num ber on them. “ Call m e” they said, but nobody did. In Trigonometry .125 cb sap notated when our we were if it fell it wouldn’t calculation* showed rh- even reach the fountain. The Tower taught m e a basic lesson in aeronautics: Once I took three wooden glider planes to its thrown to windward, heights. Tile first, turned crashed overhead Into the bells. The second was ejected on the leeward side, and quickly plunged down, bouncing off the windows a few floors below. But the third plane, thrown laterally to the wind, sailed far out over the campus, over rho rising steam exhausts of the University's heating plant. arid off towards the distant blue hills. sharply upward and for an But now the complex symbologv of the Tower has changed; tile m agic is still there, but it is somehow hexed. My parents recall the dedication banquet when J. Frank Dobie stated that the Tower was a permanent erection impotent administration, and of course the famous professor was fired. An anthropologist, commenting on the pyramids at Teotihuacan, noted how an autocratic priesthood had had them con­ structed to give preem inence to their reign, and to m ake the peasant in the field feel small and the peasant forget that the men in power also too many woke up with hangovers from rtagrettes, martinis, and jab.perms, and with headaches over misappropriated fund- insignificant. .to make the returned from Vietnam I When I remember joy at first seeing that symbol of my dreamlike undergraduate years, and then, only five days from Saigon, watching cm television the crazed man with his rifle. in last late sprite sering when the ubiquitous Could Ibis also be the lament of “Mooza Poegle.” the library’s stacks and author of all those little academic witticisms? I remember a time I was sequestered within the stacks. A shocked murmur arere from the folks in the fetid concession area below, and looking our the window I saw the prostrate form of a man who bad inst sailed bv my window. And now* Moment Armistead. a friend T once knew ; she. too, felt small and insignificant. Enough, I can’t hear the Thing any longer. Perhaps it isn’t feasible to tear it down. although as one of the nation's great libraries it is hardly functional. Perhaps the observation deck could be enclosed. My exams are coming up soon, and I trod again to the Tower. The elevator door opens and off steps a wide-eyed little boy in Cub Scout uniform. “Gee. we saw where that guy shot everybody.” he said, and he was fascinated with the pork marks of the bullet holes in the store. “Wow” he said “if was neater than the Alamo.” Ru*s McCloud win Graduate Student in Anthropology C u ttin g C o rn e rs To the editor: Your treatment of the recent suicide and the letters regarding that suicide in your paper are ridiculous. I don’t understand why everyone is so shocked, always, at a suicide. Do we expect everyone to be content with life? The girl, T’m sure, is better off now than w’hen she was alive. I see nothing wrong with suicide at all. People say, “Well, ifs an easy way out.” It sure is, and I can’t blame a person for culling corners. As for the Tower, it should be open at all times with no barriers. If a perron wants to jump off, let him. It’s his decision. not ours. Who are we to say he should live? I lielieve the most basic freedom of all is the freedom to decade to live or not to live. It’s the individual’s choice and the choice should not be contested. Personally, I admire Moment Armistead a great deal for die courage she displayed In jumping dismal stacks, Now the Tower connotes those dark arid the asylum of countless P a y 4 M o n d a y . O o t o b o r 4 , 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin O pinions e\rres>spd In T h e D a ily T ex a n those of th e editor or the w riter o f the a re ai ti, Ie and a re nut n e c e s s a r ily t h e U n iv ersity a d m in istr a tio n o r th e B oard o f R e ­ g en t s. th ose o f T ile D a ily T ex a n , a stu d en t n e w sp a p e r a t T h e U n iv ersity o f T e x a s a t A ustin, is pub­ lish e d by T e x a s Student P u b lic a tio n s, D ra w ­ e r D, I d iv e r sity Station. A ustin, T e x a s , 78712. is pu blish ed M onday. T u e s­ T h e Du !y T e x a n d a y . W ed n esd a y , T h u r sd a y and f r id a y e x ­ eunt h o lid a y and e x a m period s A u g u st through M ay. . - f und . la ss p o s ta g e paid a t A ustin. T e x . N e w s c o n trib u tio n s w ill lie a c c e p te d by te le ­ phone (471-4401), a t the ed ito ria l o ffice (Jou r­ n a lism B u ild in g 103) or a t th e n e w s la b o ra to ry (J o u rn a lism B u ild in g 102>. In q u iries co n cern in g d e liv e r y should be m a d e In J o u rn a lism B uilding 107 In J o u rn a lism B u ild in g 111 (471-5227). '471-5244) and a d v e r tisin g T he na tio n a l a d v e r tisin g r e p r e se n ta tiv e o f T he D a ily T e x a n is N a tio n a l E d u c a tio n a l Ad­ v e r tisin g S e r v ic e . In c., 300 L ex in g to n A ve., N ew Y ork, NVY.. 10017. su b scr ib es T h e D a lly T ex a n to T h e A sso ­ c ia te d P r e ss . T h e N e w York T im e s N e w s S er­ v ic e a nd U nited P r e s s In tern a tio n a l T elep h o to S e r v ic e . T he T ex a n Is a m e m b e r o f th e A sso ­ c ia te d C o lle g ia te P r e ss , the So u th w est J o u rn a ­ lism C o n feren ce and th e T e x a s D a ily N e w s­ p a p er A sso cia tio n . ..................................................................................... Lori Rodriguez E P H O R m a n a g in g e d i t o r ......................................................................... R* etz NEWS EDITOR .............................................................................. c „ Tayjor ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR ........................................ Mike Presque* ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR David Powell ASSISTANT TO TUE EDITOR ............................................ Lvkc TI,ompson SPORTS EDITOR ........................................................................ I Joe Ph ilips AMUSEMENTS EDITOR .................................................. FEATURES E D IT O R .......................................................J : : : : Robin Beacher Theresa Kane Issue News Editor ................................................................................................... u General Reporters Dotty Griffith. John nope, Steve Wlsch Nows Assistants . Rick Codina, Hana Shields, Mike Smith, Sheila Francis Linda Milnes Associate Amusements Editor ............................................................ Susan Maxwell Assistant Sports Editor ..................................................................................... Make-Up Editor Wire Editor .. Copy Editor* . Photographer* .............................................................................................. Cliff Avery ’rn V ...................................................... Laurie Leth Toby Radasky, Tom Kleinworth, Debbie Pizzitola, Debbie StowittB ................................................................. Rene Perez, Marlon Taylor Roy S Z fieult to exempt from the list going to Spurr. Important Students felt Flawn’s association with Jordan would mar the image of tile new administration. the committee asked all candidates about were: increasing minority enrollment at the University, restricting general enrollment, recruiting young faculty and augmenting the library’ system. teaching Issues Flawn’s most damning answer came on recruitment question. His the minority answer was unsatisfactory student committeemen and would not allow’ for rapid increases in minority enrollment. to Hi is Is not an attack or proverbial “ hatchet job ’ on Flawn. The real fault lies in the manner the committee was .set up. It was stacked v*. nit faculty members like sympathetic sciences, research and business. to technic ii disciplines Students were given unequal represen­ tation on the committee and were never a serious threat to the outcome. Tile odds were students were hopeful but not naive. three-to-one, and seems FL VNV VS APPOINTMENT to foreshadow future events. As one dissenting faculty member said after a meeting, “Spurr's action on this’ appointment will be his first big test. lf lie appoints Hawn over serious opposition, it will show what this year will be like.” In this casdl This appointment also adds to the callous disregard Un sentiments of members on selection committees. th® committee was honestly divided on Flawn. An earlier case resulted in Ronald Brown being appointed vice-president for .student affair*. Brown had been an assistant to Spurr ut the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The .selection committee for that post wa* never given an opportunity to interview’ Brown, or even m od him. That committee met for nearly a year. T had hoped for a different selection, yet Flawn’s appointment did not surpris® me or other .student committeemen. Tile most succinct comment voiced on this selection belongs to Richard Moore, who viewing student input said, “We never really had a chance to begin with.” * 7H M O B I Letters to the editor Firing Line letter* should: • Be typed triple-spaced. • Be less than 250 words. • Include name, address, and phone number of contributor. Mail letters to Tho Firing Line, Th® Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Tex.; or bring letters to the Texan office!, Journalism Building 103. mom Bond Service More Lenient Free Release Possible mmmmmammmmm By SARA LOWREY Staff Writer A University student is picked up for possession of marijuana. a After a plush North Austin p a r t y distinguished member of the community ia picked up for DWI (driving while intoxicated). A family man low on funds Writes a few hot checks. All are arrested, booked and bond set. And none can afford to pay the bond. In addition a crowded docket forces a distant court date. A long stay in jail for each seems inevitable were it not for a special program called Personal Bond. This service, started five years ago by the Austin Bar Association, is jointly funded by the City of Austin and two* Travis County. The member staff operates out of the basement of the court­ house. T h e Bond Personal p r o g r a m allows certain persons to be released from jail on a personal bond, i.e. on a person's personal work instead of posting momentary bond. “ It bypasses a professional bondsman who would charge twice the bond and take IO percent for his service, and allows many persons to, in effect, ‘go free’ by swearing they will the assigned court date,’’ De Vere Button, director of the Personal Bond program, said. appear at P e r s o n a l Bond office statistics lower show percentage of persons jump personal bond than monetary bond. a Button reported a number of University students use the service when booked for possession of drugs, hot checks and DWX. of Although there has been no the publicity formal personal program, bond jailed persons learn about its possible help through friends, arresting officers and other prisoners. The office screens about 700 to 1,000 prisoner cases per month and recommends personal bond of about 300 per month to the courts. Louis Kelldorf, Personal Bond secretary, outlined the for obtaining a procedure personal bond: “After an offender is arrested, booked and fingerprinted, he can request an interview with the Personal Bond office. Then either Button or I interview the applicant In the County Jail.” He is asked a series of questions such as address, p e r s o n a l references in friends and other Austin, personal data. system was “ If he has a family, a job and some contacts in Austin, then we are fairly sure that he is a good risk and is not going to jump the personal bond,” Button said. An example of the sim­ plicity and the lenience of the demon­ strated by a man who had been released on personal bond but had taken a job in San Antonio. He had missed his forwarded mail informing him of his court date. After he was arrested and rebooked he again was im­ granted personal bond mediately. I Council Aide Jobs Open to Students Applications for two positions as City Council administrative aides are being accepted bv the Austin City Council. Mayor Roy Butler said Thurs­ day, “The doors are not closed to University students” applying for the job since it had not been definitely decided whether both full-time positions will is it employment. He added “quite possible” that a part-time aide will be hired. involve He further said he prefered someone with a degree and or background in public oriented studies or work such as govern­ ment or journalism. The positions allotted $20.HOO in combined salaries in the 1971-72 City budget. are The positions, according to the mayor, are intended to help the council be more responsive to the needs of the public and will in­ volve doing background research for the council and in some cases representing it. He the said administrative aides will be hired by the council and will be responsible to i t Applications resumes should be mailed to Butler at his office at City Hall. a n d Quiet' Viet Official Worries for Country By ALVIN SHUSTER (c) 1971 New York Times News Service SAIGON — Tran Van Huong, who is slated to be the next Vice- President of South Vietnam, is a man who would prefer to spend time these days with his books, birds and plants. At is now says, he had the age of 70 and often troubled by rheumatism Huong acknowledges a he politician with “ little vigor.” But, he to accept President Nguyen Van Thieu’s offer to be his running mate in t h e presidential ejection because “The country' is In danger, and I want to help." unopposed lik e other men elsewhere who face the prospect of becoming Vice-President, Huong con­ cerned with the question of whether he will have enough to do. He said he would not mind is taking on an anticorruption fight, but added that he would need the “ much more power” than Viee-President here usually is given. teacher said “PRESIDENT THIEU has told me he would he giving me a series of jobs to do,” the former school in­ in his modest Saigon terview villa. “ And if he does, I'm sure he knows that I wall need power to carry out these duties. Tile Vice-President's a u t h o r i t y otherwise is quite limited.” in an the presidency Huong, who served beice as South Vietnam’s Prem ier, tried four years for ago and to Thieu, ran fourth though he attracted more votes in Saigon than any of the other l l candidates. It was not a surpriring showing .South call for a politician whom respectfully Vietnamese “ Uncle” and who enjoys a rare reputation for integrity. That is one reason his former supporters expressed he teamed-up with Thieu. surprise when Huong said he is in full accord with Thieu's “ four noes’’—no c o a l i t i o n government, no to North territorial concessions Vietnam, no open political ac­ tivities by Communists and no procommunist neutralism. said, troops “SOUTH VIETNAM will have the ability to cany' on the war after American leave,” Huong “ But w’e must continue to have economic and military aid, logistics support and air power. And the United States must make it clear, just as it did in South Korea, that It will not allow South Vietnam to fall under communism.” P E A N U T S IT S THAT W EIS? LITTIE KIP FROM CAMP.. ANYWAY, WHY DON'T YOU COME OYER? I'M 6ETTIN6 SOME OF THE 6AN6 706ETHER TO PLAY* HA HA, HERMAN- Crossword Puzzle Answer to Saturday's Puzzle 3 4 5 6 7 a 9 10 11 17 19 21 23 25 A stale (abbr.) Greek letter Storage space Shout Preposition Fondle Bundle of grain Greek letter Old pronoun Exist Supposing that Spare Century plant Commissioned officers In Navy Handles Paired with Wife of Geraint Lengthy Dillseed Mud Merry Microbe 5 2 4 A C R O SS I R ent 5 Business •sta b lish m e K . * Secret agent 12 Single item 13 Sharpen 14 Hasten 15 Latin conjunct loft I S Son of Adam 18 Cravat 20 Spanish artic!* 22 Girl's nam* 24 Datum 26 27 Woody plant 29 Tumbled 27 31 Preposition 23 32 Babylonian hero 30 34 Space 3 6 Pronoun 37 Sun shad* 39 Riddle 41 Note of seal# 42 Secluded valley 4 4 Massive 45 Goal 47 Caudal 12 I I i appendage 49 Sea eagles 50 College officials 52 Small valley 54 Physician (abbr.) 8 5 Things. In law 57 C ontainers 59 Babylonian deity 61 Chicken 63 Tiller 65 Musical instrum ent 67 Abstract being 68 Region 69 Formerly 27 32 37 45 50 ■iY DOWN 1 Tint 2 Enmesh 43 Responsible 46 Mends with cotton 56 The U rie ! 58 Pronoun 60 Emmet 48 South American 61 Pronoun 62 Printer’s animal l l Compass point 53 For example (abbr.) 6 7 \ v « 5 k measure 64 Teutonic deity 66 Conjunction i i l l 9 14 13 16 17 20 21 2 i 18 19 ,-\v! r.3 V VV 24 • iv TTT 25 26 28 iv ! ; 29 30 . v c 31 33 34 »s v . ’-V«]*y 54 38 39 40 42 43 44 46 v > 47 51 52 49 48 A »• 53 y Y 54 x.v 55 56 5 ? 61 62 07 63 64 68 58 59 60 L Y : 65 66 69 k’f D istr, b y United F e a tu re Syndicate, Inc. 2 7 Our College Insurance Plan offers more Benefits. . . and service in every state after you have graduated M ilitary se r v ic e , a career, fa m ily and p o ssib ly e x te n siv e tra v el await y o u after graduation. 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Those people who did not have their numbers drawn may still pur­ chase ticket by drawing at regular ticket win­ dows. a blanket tax 196. 221. 309. -Ill, 553. 566, 574. 609, 665, 683. 789. 804, 845, 861, 928, 969, 984. 1119, 1215. 1301 1227. 1518. 1527, 1542, 1555, 1616. 16S2, 1745, 1717, 1762, 1807, 1841. ISM. 2018. 2101 2135. 2204, 2229, 2270, 2293, 2123, 2110, 2453. 2470, 2471, 2482, 2194. 2514, 2533, 2558, 2701. 2707, 2710. 2781, 2935, 2214, 2461, 2549, 2993, 3101, 3154. 3165, 3173, 3222. 2178. 2180 3260. 8848, 4100, 4309. 5283. 32s 2. 3365. 3602. 3768. 3834. 3306. 4048, 4110. 4421, 4245, 4351. 4718. 4438. 4450, 4172. 4645, 4675, 4916. 4996. 5106, 5147. 5166. 5216. 5342. 5367, 5393. 5489, 5618, 5670. 5964, 6003, 6012, 6023, 6026, 6065, 6074, 6134, 5804. 5805, 5720. 5752. 6313, 6191, 6520, 5626, 6657, 6716, 6816, 6845, 6931. 6961, 7005, 7010, 7011, 7016, 7068, 7071, 7125, 7179, 7270, 7309, 7414. 7567. 7631. 763,9. 7654, 7668, 7702, 7735, 7740, 7782, 7804, 7808, 7817, 7859, 8015, S116, S200, 8401, 8565, 8653, 8675, 8723, 8729, 8755 8809. 8816. 8818, 8957, 8967, 9068, 9078, 9085, 9123, . 9258, 9276. 9321, 9326, 9328, 9394. 9452, 9481, 9537, 9547, 9566. 9645, 9651. 9769. 9802, 9805. 9982, 9994. 10006, 10100, 10227, 10380, 10506, 10564, 10192. 10215, 10688, 10700, 10853, 10919, 10565, 10663, 10953. 11270, 11342. 11649, 11724, 12259, 12306, 12656, 12720, 12835, 12837, 13070, 13081, 13139, 13235, 11517, 11490, 11744, 11934, 11980, 12058, 12364, 12409, 12437, 12484, 12721. 12748, 12774, 12815, 12893, 12967, 12980, 12988, 13247, 13497, 13560, 14019. 14050. 14558, 11597, 14860. 14909, 14996, 15029, 15133, 13256, 13346. 13443, 13386, 13561, 13767, 13785, 13796. 14107, 14138, 14253, 14328, 14598, 14669, 14784, 14819, 14910, 14933, 14958, 14964, 15075, 15087, 15207, 15213, 15227, 15461. 15702, 15762, 15765, 15875, 159-13, 16199, 16238, 16352. 16390, 16393, 16448, 16509, 16561, 16624, 16674, 16782, 16894, 16990, 17079, 17141, 17159. 15075. 15087. 15475, 16078, 16440, 16696, 17142, 18021, 18121, 18281, 18359. 18822. 18936, 19391, 19507. 19945. 19946. 17699, 17730, 17755, 17731, 17904, 17986, 18141, 18168, 18179, 18273, 18553. 18556, 18725, 18814, 18985, 19062. 19161, 19382, 19587, 19725, 19744, 19941, 19984. 20090, 20163. 20179. 20253. 20386, 10484, 19513, 20618, 20650. 20396 10405, 21044, 21051, 21299. 21333, 20882 20922, 21477, 21481, 21504. 21505, 21774, 21839, 2198 4, 2 22025, 22098, 22120. 22880. 22340, 22479 22600. 22653. 22772. 22814, 20127, 23029. 23078. 23426. 23464. 23789. 23802, 24103, 24191, 24571. 21617 . 2-1942, 25136. 25745, 26971, 23934, 23963, 23974, 24334. 24359. 24388, 24684, 24743, 24840, 25248. 25354, 25483, 2608S, 26156. GIFTS UNUSUAL F ra te rn ity a n d S o r o r it y M u g s «— Pottery — V a se * —• — E m b o sse d H a n d c r a ft e d Iron — D e c o p a g u e W a ll Plaques — Sce n te d C a n d ie l fro m ail o v e r Ik e w orld — H a n g in g A sh tra y s — W ic k e r Furniture — In ce n se — M o b ile s — W in d C h im e s — M o u n te d C o lo r P h oto gra p h s — Plastic Flow ers — Lam p s — G if t C a r d s — Ba m b o o C u r ta in s — D e c a ls and P atch es — B e a n b a g C h a irs — C a r d b o a d Furniture — W a t e r B e d s and Frames — Jew elry — Leathe r — Silver. P X Q U I SIT 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 ! NEW WORLD IMPORTS H Phone 472-6440 1602 Barton Sp rin gs S u n d a y 12-6 Mon.-FrT. IO a.m.-9 p.m. — A P photo Nguyen Van Thieu . . . has quiet running-mate. Storeroom Fire Strikes Scholz's While Scholz's Beer Garden received “quite a bit of damage” from a fire in a storeroom about 8 p.m. Saturday, It was not severe enough to force closing, said Robert Bales, manager and owner. the Bales said tire fire, which broke out while Scholz’s was packed after-game football with crowd, damaged a section of the roof and forced the removal of a part of a wall in the front of the building. B a l e s firemen explained believed the blaze was caused by “some the faulty wiring storeroom area.” in IfihMUjb ^ | A N D * MflYER} u tM M JM V K . ■ Car! Mayer, famous for diam onds since 1865 has for acquired Y A R I N G ’S jewelry department fine your shopping convenience. For beautiful gifts shop at the: HO M E OF COLLEGIATE DIAMONDS® M EN ’S BONUS BUYS AT THE CLOUDS It took a while to find It. The so u n d all th e record a n d stereo equipm ent co m p an ie s s a y y o u sh o u ld get. W e felt S a n t a n a 's " S a m b a Pa T i " crying for it. Then w e found the depth Emerson, Lake a n d P a lm e r'* 'l u c k y M a n " w a s search ing for. It h a p p e n e d w hen we h eard L W E speakers. We have marked down a great number of shirts for M o d tl LWE I this special sale. Regular prices from $4. to $20. N O W ONLY from $2.99 to $14.99 S o m e b o d y h a d been talk ing ab ou t LW E sp e a ke r system s a n d h ow different they are. T h e y're different b ecause L W E use* o fe ed b ack system that m akes yo u r set-up deliver ail the sound, esp ecially the critical high s a n d lows. C le an. Sam ples shown: Rib knit body shirt in dusk pink only, $3.99. The L W E Clip-Klt hooks your am plifier to the speakers. A n d then you've go t a w hole system that won't let anything through but pure sounds. H igh trebles an d low bas* tones come out like they were p laye d in the studio— sharp an d clear. A n d that'* all we want. Laced short sleeve shirt in pl urn o n ly , $3.99. The zipper front ehirt comes in maroon, salmon, lavender and brown for $5.99. UWEI A u d io Concept* 19 Doble Center 478-8880 A sk for Dave I C L O U D S B O U T IQ U E O N - T H E - D R A G M o * * * O ctober 4, IWL THE DAIEY! TEXAS Sa m S I Injury Situation Critical fo r Texas-Oklahoma ©ame Oregon Webfoots Trip over Longhorns, 35-7 P A N T S! FLARES! BELLS! (all famous nam# brands — O N SA L E 1) REGISTER FOR FREE OUTFIT1 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 ! SEAT COVE! 13231/, Koenig— 2 lights west o f L a m a r IT’S WORTH THE DRIVE TO SAVE Bv ALAN T R I E X Associate Sports Editor it was a For Oregon third mooting with a Top ID opponent and a third loss: for Texas it was a third straight victory, and for I longhorn fans it was a second straight boring football game. Texas won by the typical Texas- sixed m arg in of 35-7. What happened w as that D arrell R oyal’s team w ent most of tho w ay Saturday without m ost of its backfield, and Je rry F re i’s team went all of the way without its qu arterb ack , and in the end— actually, long before the end— T ex as’ Donnie Wigginton proved is a bettor 5-8 q u a r­ that he te rb ack than O regon's H arvey Winn. And, frankly, the gam e had little m ore significance than that, although a knee injury to Texas split end Jim m y Moore could ha vp plenty of signifies nee later on. Moore suffered a sprained knee in the first quarter and was helped off the field. No ligament tear could be found, but as Royal said, “ any knee injury has to be considered serious.'’ There were numerous other Longhorn injuries, although none were as scary as Moore's. Quar­ terback Eddie Phillips required his hamstring muscle, and run­ ning backs Jim Bertelsen and Bobby Callison and defensive back Tom Landry all had shoulder problems and missed consider­ able action Saturday. The big concern is that the injured players may not be fully healed for the Oklahoma game this weekend. As for Saturday’s game, for it was little more both teams than a prep for this week’s ac­ tion. To givp you an idea of how much it interested Oregon fans, when tickets went on sale for a closed circuit TV showing of the game in Eugene, Ore., only 120 persons were whiling to buy. T H E D EC K S were really more concerned with their next op­ ponent, Southern California, since that game w ill do a lot towards determining the champion of the now not-so-powerful Pacific 8. And Texas fans, if not the already football looking to Oklahoma, which was whipping Southern Cal 33-20. team, were ahead So next Saturday you have another big shootout, with Texas and Oklahoma meeting in the traditional Cotton Bowl clash. Last Saturday all you had was the ex-en more common Ivan shorn massacre, staged rn that Little the Southwest, Big Horn of Memorial Stadium. AC TUALLY , IT was a rerun of the week-old Texas-Texas Tech game. For a while it was a fairly interesting the contest, led only 7-0 at the Tjonghorns quarter and 14-0 at the half. as The Ducks got Into hot water In a hurry, punting 14 yards after “ HriT-o" c-tolli^J An their c n i i n i V H I a. . n i l e * I So it was a good day for a 5-8 quarterback only if he had Je rry Je ff Sisemore, Rill Wyman, Zapalac, Travis and Roach Crosslin blocking for him. Of course, Wigginton had other helpers. Bertelsen, who departer! ea rly in the third quarter, gained 114 yards on 13 carries. And replaced Dennis Ladd, who Callison second half, the in gained 51 y ards on five attem pts and scored twirp. But it was Wigginton who made the Wishbone go. His slashing runs, his accurate passes and his perfect pitchouts accounted in larg e m easure for Texas' finest offensive showing of the season. took Wigginton the ’Horns to a second-quarter touchdown after Tommy Woodard smashed the runner Bobby Ducks Moore, forcing a fumble on the Oregon 41 yard line. Eight p la y s later, Wigginton got touch­ down on a three-yard keeper. super the H E SC O RED again in the third q u arte r on a five-yard run. After that, hp let Ladd do the scoring on two one-\ ard plunges. M e a n w h i l e the Longhorn defense let Oregon do nothing. Moore w asn’t exactly stopped, but he was held to 110 yards on 25 carries. However, he im ­ defense. pressed “ Moore is as good as they sa y ,” Woodard said. “ When he cam e flying around end I thought I'd have to go into the grandstand stop him. He has great to m oves.” Texas the Royal, however, was equally impressed bv the Webfoots’ “ I'd hate fullback, Grog Herd to havp to faep that guv every week,” Royal said. “ He showed lot of power; he's bullish " a Herd gained 62 yards on eight carries for the day. though, Ironically, it was neither Moore nor Herd who got the Ducks on the scoreboard O regon’s onlv touchdown cam e on to a 44-vard bomb from Winn In lan d Glass T hat was In the q u arter, whpn T exas’ fourth second-string secondary was in the gam e. IT WAS one of the few’ break­ d o w n s suffered all afternoon by a defense which shows promise of being the best Royal has had since the Tommy N obis-J Im Hudson era. Greg Ploetz * * . defensive standout. their 24 yard line. So the 'Horns, with their bandage backfield led by sore-legged, sore-toed Phillips, moved 39 yards in two minutes for the touchdown. Callison ran three, aided by a the wipeout block from Don Crosslin. final Phillips didn’t do much running himself, he was indicating bothered bv his injuries. Rut they had no noticeable effect on his passing. Phillips’ first and last pass floated in and out of the hands of Oregon’s All-America linebacker, Tom Graham. should rest up AT THAT time Royal decided Phillips for Oklahoma. So Wigginton came in, and Phillips, while not enfirelv f o r g o t t e n , c e r ta in ly w a sn 't missed. The same could not be said for Oregon's Dan Fouts. One of finest sophomore the nation's quarterbacks last year, Fouts. out of this game with a knee injury, definitely was missed. While Phillips' replacement, Wigginton. ran for 116 yards on 13 attempts. Kouts' replacement, Winn, had eight eam es for minus 42 yards. Winn hit IO of 22 passes for 125 yards, but 87 of those I against Royal's yards came '■eserv’e defense, and I two of iVinn's passes wfere intercepted. ALTHOUGH WIGGINTON” ? massing was almost incidental, he lid connect on thre« of five for (8 yards, with no interceptions. THE BEST IN VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS 100% GUARANTEE — MODERN FACILITIES BRAKES TUNE-UPS EXPERT ON VALVE I ENGINE REPAIRS CLUTCH — TRANSMISSION — ELECTRICAL OPEN SATURDAY — BankAmerlcard Master Charge W E H A V E A C O M P L ET E PARTS DEPT. GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE 1621 EAST SIXTH 477-6797 Jimmy Moore . . . out for O U . “ Our defense p !a\ed an out­ standing said. gam e,” Royal “ And our offense was smoother than it v as last week. We moved the ball m ore Cl insistently hut we had some nagging penalties.” about Royal didn t seem very jubilant too the victory. He w as oxer worried the Oklahoma Sooners, u : o by rushing for 516 yards against LSC indicated thev may have a better backfield than all Texas—even the I/>nghoms’ shoulders, leg* and toes are healthy. when learn Statistic* Oregon Texas 19 RS-157 125 IO 22 J 6-340 I n 8 24 2661 SSI SS 3-6-6 3-46 7 83 I M 7 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RI 'FUNG * r -r ’ 13-116: Bertelsen. •51 La (Ii. 9-51 ■ .re .--im. Herd. M 2 J. -38; P h illip s. Texas 13-114 Oregon Ander: T ex a s 0-1-0 Oregon: T exas Oregon Speoh* I IlilMBinBRIIlin i SW C | i F A S O N .................. J ” arn Texas Arkansas x-Houstmt T C I’ ...................... ................. B * y r £>• .................... R t e * .................... l e x , , A A M ........ T ex as Tech ......... x-Nnt competing for SW C titJa 0 3 ............ a 1 I .......... 3 2 I 3 1 J I .1 I I .1 I 3 W I, Pct- Pts On, 91 f t I nm .750 151 so 7.50 66 63 ,113 S3 33 13.1 as 6,1 333 40 79 .350 38 96 .250 47 95 .250 22 66 C O N F T HF. V C IS \V I. m r P ts Op. T e a m r c \ a * I 0 .................. Arkansas ......... 1 0 Texas Tech ........ o 1 0 1 T C I ...................... I OOO 26 0 I OOO 49 15 roo 0 28 000 15 45 L A R T W F F R S H E S C L T S : Texas IR, O re trn 7, A rk an sas 49 T C I ' is- SMT 28, New V v m state 25 Texas H uston 34. San l ech I. Ar /or.a ' (-in­ IR, R ic e 3 I S i St He TO. i 'inn a ti 17, T e x a s .V IM 0; M iam i 41. Hay lor p., at a " 1 T i l l s M F F K S s m r n U L E t T ex as vs. Oklahoma at Dallas 2 r rn. C D T ; S M I rn*}-; e Texas A Q uern OveComcVa Hope You’re Feeling Better incident At Neshabur M others Daughter $ " > 6 9 r . KC 3059S Columbia ON COLUMBIA RECORDS • * AMO TAPES LISTEN TO KT AP AND K-98 FAA "Tell Your Ears You Lore Them " 1 \ i l l S«»99 \ INCLUDING EVIL WAYS’JINGO J J YOU JUST DON T CARE PERSUASION,'WAITING / $ & ... Et » U"U f m C S 9781 O p e n * m o n ' fr i- 9:30* 9:30 FRI. & SAT. 9:30 to Midnight = iscount records 2310 GUADALUPE 478-1674 Whats new in sweater shirts? (Brittons has pointedly collared the market.) Brittons On The Drag at 2346 Guadalupe, 478-3411 Monday, October 4, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page J Pittsburgh, Baltimore Score Playoff Victories B y The Associated Pre** The defending world champion Baltimore Orioles took a big step toward the World Series and the Pittsburgh Pirates evened the series with the San Francisco Giants league playoffs Sunday. the major in seventh Paul Blair'*; two-run double in the the finishing touches on a four run Balitmore uprising and Vida Blue’s attempt to stall the Orioles’ inning put bats as Baltimore belted Oakland A ’s 5-3 in the opening game of the American League playoffs. the Bob Robertson rocketed three home runs and Pittsburgh clawed six San Francisco pitchers for 15 1-4 and hits, ripping the Liar League squaring the Nation vies at championship playoff one game apiece. T H E THIRD game of the playoff is scheduled for Tuesday Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes ★ S A L E ★ SHEEP SKIN RUGS Many Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SA LE ★ Various kinds, colors — 50c nor loo t Capitol Saddlery C S 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texa* 478-9309 WE NOW HAVE HOOK EM HORNS Bath Accessories BED and BATH 1739 Anderson Lane A C H IE V E Y O U R G R E A T E S T P O T E N T IA L T H R O U G H S E L F - E X P L O R A T IO N & PSY C H E1 RON1CS With a highly sophisticated, complete new technology PsychEtronics is able to display, record, and give controlled bio-feedback training over the full range of commonly detec­ ted dominant brain wave rythyms. Structured into a carefully developed course of study based on recent psychological developments and designed to achieve a higher level of personal fulfillment, this results in a practice! and useful path to a happier life and greater goal realization. L A W Y E R . S T U D E N T , S A L E S M A N , IN D IA N C H IE F Whatever your inclination Enhanced mental capacity, control, motivation & confidence can’t hurt! F R E E IN T R O D U C T O R Y SESSIO N S Sunday 3 PM Monday & Tuesday 7:30 Armies 302 wcest1 F lo rid a S ta te 17. V irg i Georgia 35. Mississippi Georgia Te.-h 21. Clem Louisiana S tate 38, Miam i, Flu 41. I; i>: N o r th C a r o lin a 77. N • Tennessee 20, Florida T rin ltly 27. SW Iconic- V o k n F o r e s t is. M a r t W illiam & M ary l l. T Souths* t"-% A r k a n s a s to T p x .is C l Cincinnati i? T< \-is A Houston U niv 31. San South Methodist 2s N rl a 14 3 n 13 T e x a s 35, Oregon 7 T e x a s S o u th e rn 28, Terre«see Stat# 23 Tulsa 17. West Texas State 7 l u r W est A rizona S tate 24. T o ' * Colorado 31. Kansas St Duke 9 St an 5.rd 3 New Mexico 14. Brigham \< rig 0 Oregon State 34, COLA 17 T e x a s T e c h 13. A rizon a 1b W ishing'on St. 34, ll (uh 12 i ii:',' 21 V P a s o 7 YO U R SENIOR RIN G Created by John Roberts Largest Selection Best Diamond Prices tasadelOw J E W E L E R S 2236 Guadalupe ’Next to Hemphill's” ^ 0 - 816 W . 23rd IN HARDIN NORTH SUPER SAVINGS M O N .-TUES. - W E D . OCT. 4- 5- 6 SCOTT LADY ACCENT FACIAL TISSUES Reg. 39c ^ ■ W VISINE EYE DROPS Reg. LSO Q O c PLASTIC W CREST TOOTH PASTE Reg. O O - (IOC off) Robinson with the tying run. Jim Palmer went in to run for Mot­ ton, and scored behind Belanger when B la ir stroke a liner down the third base line for two runs and a 5-3 lead that put it out of the A ’s reach. riding T H E GIANTS, an emotional high after Saturday’s opening game victory, nicked Pirate starter Dock Ellis for a run in the first on W illie Mays' R B I double. But Ellis escaped further damage, patching his way out of a bases-loaded, one-out jam. In the second, Pittsburgh tied it on Robertson’s double and a single by Manny Sanguillen, but hits by Chris Speier and Ken Henderson restored the Giants’ edge in the bottom half of the inning. It stayed 2-1 until the fourth leading off, when Robertson, lofted a long fly to right field. Dave Kingman, playing in place of injured Bobby Bonds reached over the eight foot-high fence but the ball glanced out of his glove for a home run, Wing the score. Then the Pirates took the lead when Sanguillen singled, stole second and rode home on Jackie Hernandez’ hit. P IT T S B U R G H AD D ED another run in the fifth when Gene Clines who had only one home run during the regular season, .socked a shot over the left field wall to make it 4-2. LEARN TO PLAY THE PIANO THE EASY WAY Instant Plano F o r adult* P l a y 21 p o p u lar song* In stan tly no previous musical training NECESSARY! AMSTER MUSIC AND ART CENTER 1124 LAVAC A 478-7331 : H ANDM ADE 6-WAY PUZZLE BLOCKS C A N N O W BE PURCHASED AT : TSS BEST SH TSS I WGBBX) SHG? CO UNTRY STORE C O M PO U N D 1304 L A V A C A : OR FOR CUSTOM ORDERS. C A LL ITA — 454 8977 or Writ# N A N C I - Rf. No. I, Bo* 55-C CEDAR CREEK, TEXAS H A V IN G A PARTY? NEED A BARTENDER? CALL 478-7488 Bradley School Of Bartending — LOBBY SUITE— C O M M O D O RE PERRY BLDG. Our Used Cars Are Guaranteed 100% Not To Make You Nervous 1971 V W Sta. W ag. 7 Pass. O O O C Like New 2000 miles . . . Z 1969 V W Ste. W ag. ^ > 1 F A 215 0 1969 V W Sta. W ag. 2 1 J J Q 7 Pass 1970 V W Squareback Std. Air 15000 miles .. Z Z # 3 O O A C 1 1969 V W SE D A N Std. 4 A A P Radio, White . 1968 V W Fastback I Z # w 1 0 A K ? Std., Radio .. | Z / 3 1970 V W Squareback I Q A r Automatic 1969 V W Squareback . . . | / 7 w Std., Air, Radio I A A C 17000 miles .. | / / J 1970 V W SED A N Std. I / C A Radio ........ I D O U 1970 V W SED A N Std. I C C A I D D U Radio, AmFm 1968 V W SED A N Std. 1 0 C A I Z v U ........ Radio Radio, Air .. . 1967 V W SE D A N 1970 V W SED A N Std. I A IT A I O D U 1 A O F 1025 I # A C 1970 Toyota Mark ll s+d Corona ........ | Q / J "CB" SMITH VOLKSWAGEN ® Comer of Fifth and Lamar Austin, Texas 476-9181 Your Downtown VW Dealer Two-Ti rn ed Oregon's Larry Battle (81) is jarred loose from a Harvey Winn pass by Longhorns Ronnie Workman (I I) and Malcolm Minnick (partially hidden) during the second half of Oregon- Texas qame. Texas won the game 35-7. • mumm • H Crimson Tide Rolling Aga in Bv Tho \xsooialed Press ground A' i.bamn, using a vicious and attack, qui k striking wasted in crushing arch-rival Mississippi but Coach Paul “ B e a r” Bryant still wasn’t satisfied. little time Asked why Alabama began the game by running a series of plays without railing a huddle, Bryant said: “ We wanted to line up anti go without giving them time to make a bunch of signals, changes and stunts. We probably made a mistake not doing more of it.” ran Actually, Alabama two quick plays ar the start of the game before Mississippi called time out to adjust to the speedup, and Alabama then reverted to huddling between plays. W II I I, E ALABAM A was its record to 4 0, the boosting other members of The Associated Press’ Top 10 except for No. IO Stanford, remained unbeaten and untied. Top-rated Nebraska its winning streak to 23 games, in­ cluding four this season, routing previously undefeated Utah State ran D W Y*. A UTTUE — SA V E A LOT $/4et. ! let * s§ rn rn # 4100 13500 329.00 275.00 31.50 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP ....... 603Commodof* Perry Motel AUSTIN 476 0178 43 6. Michigan, it. rode to ti re shutout and (> ut th season, battering N, its its for Texas, No. 3 wl 35-7, th Fourth-rank cd-N< t r its third ai a nm stubborn M i iran Auburn rah l f th third straight, w; tucky 38 6. biurnph. toe w n Wing off ate 14-2. o won ifs ing Ken- COLORADO, NO. P. hiked bs record to 4 0, trimming: Kansas State 31-21 in’ a Rig Might Con­ ference encounter. ( 'klahoma, ti n No. 8 team, be ut seventec’ th ranked Southern California 33 20 for its third vi< < t v. Ninth-rated Penn State also made its record 3-0, edging tho Air Force Academy IE ll. w! de Stanford was upset; by nineteenth rated Dukz- 0-3. Among tile second 10, Georgia, No, ll , walloped M srissippi State 35-7; twelfth-: .inked Tenner tx* drowned Florida 20-13; ti rteenth- rated Arizona State lo. k Texas HI Paso 217; Ohio State, ranked fourteenth, pounded California 35- 3; Washington, No. 15, ambushed Illinois 52-14; I /mb ma State, rated sixteenth, battered Rice 38- 3; Arkansas, No. IS, beat Texas Christian thirteenth straight time 49-15, and North C a r o l i n a , ranked twentieth. subdued North Carolina State 27- 7. the for PROTECT FRO M BIC Y C LE RIP-OFF W IT H CHAINS AND LOCKS FROM EVERETT H A R D W A R E Co ALL CASE HARDENED CHAINS 'A” x 4’ RUBBER COATED % ” x 4’ N O N -COATED % ” x 6’ N O N -COATED MASTER LOCKS WITH CASE HARDENED SHANKS SESAMEE COMBINATION LOCK WITH CASE HARDENED SHANK COM E SEE OUR COLUM BIA IO SPEED BICYCLES Everett Hardware Co 2820 GUADALUPE 816 W . 23rd 478-5365 Law StudenfsAttack Job Discrimination By BAXA SHIELDS News Assistant In response to a discriminatory comment allegedly made to a woman law student by an to­ t e r v i e w i n g law firm, ap­ proximately 60 people attended a meeting of the Law School Placement Committee Friday in Townes Hall. Tile Women's Law Caucus, Thurgood Marshall Law Society, La Raza and The Radical I .aw Students Caucus were catalyzed toto action by tile statement “we won't hire niggers or women,’* that a woman law student says a law finn member said to her Suring the course of an interview, Regina Rogoff, a member of the Women’s Law Caucus, ex- p l a i n e d remark that motivated tile groups to attend the meeting. this She said the statement is only the more dramatic one of exam ple of jiroblom of tile discriminatory employers who use University facilities to solicit employes. WHILE THE University holds that all em plovers who recruit on campus must do so without regard to race, color, national origin or sex, there is no method of enforcement. The idea of a national blacklist, in which discriminatory em­ ployers would In* readily iden­ tified and not allowed to recruit on campus was .suggested. comm it tot4 rn em lier O n e em ­ suggested ployers should not be allowed on campus. discriminatory D isagreeing with tills idea, one person said, “all you’re doing actually law is hurting students because they will just go to another school.” a explained blacklist is the only answer. national the He M i l l a r d Harrington Ruud, professor of law, said he felt blacklisting would not solve the problem. “I hope there is some solution other than blacklisting. I like to change people,” he said. non committee member sitting in the audience responded by saying, “I suggest that it would not be realistic to think that you could speak to people and convince to change their ways.” them One Ruud said, “Ifs Just t h a t blacklisting scares the hell out of me.” “WELL, discrimination scares the hell out of me,” the speaker responded. Another woman added, “firms at to that Harvard shouldn't be able recruit here.” discriminated have “The essence of what we are saying is the policy (University policy) is well and good, but it has no teeth to It,’’ she added. After listening to an open discussion on the issue, Russell Weintraub, a committee member, plan whereby suggested discrimination complaints would be investigated. a of His proposal consists of a special committee to investigate c o m p l a i n t s and recommend sanctions, and a plan to forward all the University to all accredited law schools. actions taken by n ^ S I , . J . ’ _ 0 11U 110 II • Louisville Court Tries 'Ecological Criminals’ LOUISVILLE, K.Y. (AP) - themselves residents who about pollution are Louisville are careless finding faced with changes in a new kind of court established to prosecute wrhat a ‘ ‘ e c o l o g i c a l judge criminals.” calls Judge Glenn McDonald of the Jefferson Court Quarterly Criminal Division has set aside every Friday afternoon for cases on pollution and ecology. He described the sessions as “a court of public awareness,” adding, “This court Is for the people—to make them aware of the the Legislature aware of the need to enact new laws.” laws and to make W H E N T H E court was established five months ago, most of the cases were brought by either the Air Pollution Control Board or the Board of Health. telephone “We got more complaints on actual.” the McDonald just don t seem to w’ant to get in­ volved.” “ People said. than L a t e l y , however, ordinary citizens have gotten toto the act, individuals, filing suits against groups or companies they think are polluters. the violator, TO BRINO a suit against a polluter, a citizen must obtain a summons at the County clerk’s office, name the alleged violation, and provide his own name. Within four to six weeks, plaintiff and defendant are summoned to court. Fines have averaged to several hundred dollars in tho nonjury cases. from $10 few laws cases There are tinder laymen can prosecute which ecology in Kentucky, McDonald said. The strongest, he said, littering tile highway statute, which prohibits roadside dumping of trash. is Other cases may be prosecuted under a public nuisance statute, which covers private property. violations on ONE SUCH case involved a man who collected manure from local racetracks to sell as fer­ tilizer. The manure pile, located at his home, caught fire through spontaneous and, according to McDonald, emitted combustion “all sorts of obnoxious odors.” The man’s neighbors brought suit, and a conviction followed. The law says air pollution must be measured on a Ringleman scientific measuring scale—a device—and that simply seeing a car pollute does not constitute proof. Free Clinic Sponsors Block Party Marathon By TERRY MADDOX The Austin City Council has granted permission to the Peoples Free Clinic to use a city block for a fund-raising “marathon.” The “marathon” will include 16 hours of live entertainment and will be broadcast remote by KHFI-FM. The Free Clinic, 408 W. 23rd St., provides inexpensive medical care to needy patients every Tuesday from 8 to IO p.m. John Lane, spokesman for the clinic, said Friday, “This is the second time that a City government has given permission for a benefit like this. The only other instance was in Berkeley (Calif.) The council's action, voted Thursday, climaxed a month of canvassing of Drag merchants and residents to secure permission for the event. “ Wneh we made our presentation to the council, we had signatures from every businessman on the Drag and every rasident in the area,” Lane said. Lane said the 400 block of West 23rd Street will be blocked off for use as an entertainment area from 2 p.rn. Oct. 30 through 6 p.m. Oct. 31. The event will feature bands, solo artists and public speakers. The “marathon” will be staged to raise funds for expansion of the clinic s services. ‘‘We’re open one night a week now and this is not enough to serve the community. We want to work more nights, treat more people, and offer dental facilities In addition to medical care,” Lane said, The cMnic presently has a staff of 15 doctors and 40 nurses and can treat approximately 120 patients a night. Its facilities are not available for use by University' students except when the Student Health Center cannot treat a patient for some reason, Lane explained. Lane emphasized the Free Clinic is not a “street people’s clinic.” “Only 30 percen of the people who use our facilities are ur. em pl. wed •!«, transients. The rest of our patients are chicanos and whites who live on modest in­ comes.” The marathon will be conducted somewhat like a telethon, “but with no hard sell techniques,” Lane explained. Telephone pledges will be solicited and people who attend may be a.-ked to make small contributions. City Councilman Jeff Friedman and University student body President Bob Binder are slated to speak during the marathon. Acts booked for the event include Doug Sahm and The Sir Douglas Quintet, Shiva’s Head Band, Storm and Daily P lanet P hoto by JA ., l . i U A ! H S . A s the W o rld Slides By A young girl enjovs the warmth of one of the early days of autumn on a slide in Barton Springs Parle Saturday. r n m f r n i r n & a, m m m s in B X *>* ‘ w m " I 4 f * >' / * $ i - • ' t rn t ’ WM ,. ■ H & -S'. 1 IP & " I Eg WM* I H IM C L A S S i r i K l * \ m K U T IS IN Q Ii ATES E a c h W o rd (15 w o r d m i n i m u m ) S #7 . . .........I ......... SII OO .06 ...........$ ..75 . . . . I . . . 0 5 ........... ............................... .........St 5. OO ......... $19.00 .............................. K a r h A d d it io n a l T i m e S t u d e n t r a t e o ne L i n e K a r h a d d i t i o n a l w o r d 7ft C o nM -ru li ve I s s u e s IO w o r d * IS w o r d * 20 w o rd * Inch I col. in c h ? r o t . 8 col. in c h 4 co l. Inc h C l a r i f i e d D is p la y I c o l u m n x o n e Lnrh o n e t i m e $ 9.19 B a c k A d d itio n a l T i m e • ..... I 2.00 (No ropy chanco for •concentive Issue rate*.) .......................... .........$3H.Oft .......................... .........$70 Oft ......... $96.00 .................. ............. ............ .........$120.00 • . L O W ST U D E N T RATES IS w ords or lot* for 75c tHo first tim *, S s sash additional word. Stu- racoipt d ont mutt thow Auditor’* in Joumalitm and poy Bldg. 107 from 8 a m. to 4:30 p*m- M o n d a y through Friday. In advance D E A D L IN E SCH ED U LE M onday T e to n 1 'rld ay , S:0fl p.m . T u e sd a y T e to n M onday. 11:00 a.us. W ednesday T exan T u esd ay , 11:00 a.m . T h u rs d a y T exan W ed n esd ay . 11:00 a.m . F r id a y T e x a n T h u rs d a y . 11:00 a.m . “ I n th e e v e n t el e r r o r * m ad e In n a a d v e r t i s e m e n t , i m m e d i a t e n o ti c e m u s t be g iv e n a s th e p u b l i s h e r s a r e r e s p o n s i b l e for only O N I! i n c o r r e c t I n s e r t i o n . All cla im s for a d j u s t m e n t s s h o u ld be m ad e n o t t h a n SO d a y s a f t e r p u b l i c a t i o n . ” I n te r F o r S a l e P O R T A B L E T V s: 19” A dm iral all- c h an n el. U ltra clean , little used B/W , left). P hone 411-1345, 442- ffiti.50 (few 7475. 4305 M an chat a R oad, TOP CASH P R IC E S paid for diam onds, old Kohl. C apitol I ’I,.mum! Shop. 603 C om m odore P e rry . 476-0178 F o r S a l e NIT-NOY h a s e m : M a ttre s s packs, desks, ch ests, cab in ets, d re ss e rs , so­ ran g es, h e a te rs, g lassw are. fas, gas K ar-h a r. 1513 M anor R oad. 477-0550. AFGHAN HOUNDS, en d ag es, a t S ta rla n e w h ere q u ality be­ gets q u ality . C ham pion stu d services. 452-4975. colors all ‘69 C O R V ET T E CO U PE. R e al beauty. C all 477-7204 o r 830-1300 extension 6656 and a s k for Jim . Cai! 47: b p in 2-7389 USAK uniform s. •71 CANARY YELLOW VW convertible. AM -FM . F o u r m onths old. John, 451- 420*. FOR SALE. m achine ’68 N elco tlg-zaz sewing four-drawered In nice ca b in et f l * l or best offer. 474-1738. OLD BLUEJEANS FO R SALE: $3. Upstairs at FRESH PANTS 24th & San Antonio 472-1341 BILL K A SSO N Y A M A H A . . . NOW does tune-ups Ss m inor r * pairs on Ronda & K awasaki these specials . . . Offers (this week only) fender b ra c k e ts Y a m a h a E n d u ro b ra* * Sc clutch lev ers 12/pair S m all H onda lev ers $2/p a ir Y a m a h a E n d u ro $3 eac h Mini bike*' clutches $7.50 H onda tall light lenses $1.30 each NOK -BEH X K aw asaki su rfa c e gap plug 99c each E R K E m otorcycle & book tra il bike hand­ 1607 South Lamar 444-7482 PUBLIC N O T IC E U nclaim ed freig h t h a s re c e iv e d se v e ra l new sh ip m en ts, a n d w e a re re lay in g i th ese tre m e n d o u s new buys the to Ar r a n d n e w s e w i n g m a c h i n e s $35. N atlot illy ad v ertised b ra n d . We h av e s — 1970 zig-zag sew ing m ach in es co m p lete w ith 25 y e a r ta c to ry g u a ra n ­ tee, to be sold fo r $35 each cash or sm a ll m onthly p a y m e n ts. T h ese m a­ chines have built-in controls fo r m aking buttonholes, hom ing, d eco rativ e stitches, sew ing on buttons, darning, m ending, em b ro id erin g a n d m any o v ercastin g , o th e r featu re s. R E F R IG E R A T O R S — 1971 M odels $75 & up. C O M PO N EN T SYSTEM S — W alnut finish. G a rra rd tu rn ta b le s. P ow erful so­ lid st rte ch assis, a n d sp e a k e rs $49.95. Also t jTI Console S tereo ’s, w a ln u t with BSH tu rn ta b le s, solid sta te . 4 sp e ak ers, long w aln u t stereo s, w ith $69.95. 8 ft. AM-FM m ultiplex. R adio a n d built-in 8 tra c k . Clcsc-out $299. I KILLY MADISON — B edroom sets, including double d re ss e r, b ra n d new lied. To be m irro r, ch est an d double sold fcr $69.95 p e r set. Also 7 living room groups to b e sold for $79.95. Closing out all m erc h a n d ise th is w eek to m ak e room for new sh ip m en ts. F in ­ ancing availab le. B a n k -A m ericard & M aster C harge. Open To T he P u b lic 9 AM - 6 P M Mon. T h ru F rt., S at. T ill 1:00 6535 N. LAMAR CA M PER . HOU3E-CAR, N ew engine. th a n 200 m iles. C o n tact Jim , L ess 1601 W est 6th, u p sta irs. I 1966 DODGE p an el. Good engine, clean, good condition. 444-4871 8-3, 444-2043 a fte r 5. 5 p.m . SUZUKI, 1970. T h re e speed au to m atic, 150 m pg. $135. 472-9367 a fte r 6 hp, « bn tv m ix lifter ii 'to Just a rriv e d . New a n d used sa ilb o a ts CaU *.>--134$ a fter J.30 all sizes. Sailing Im p o rts , 926-5804. AQUARIUMS. T h ree la rg e ta n k s with sta n d s, dynaflos, everything. lights, A U D I O C O N S U L T A N T S O F A U S T IN 452-3950 weekday* after 5, a l d a y weekends. S T E R E O • S P E A K E R S A L E • C om e an d vet them w hile th ey last. C o n sid ered ’ A B E ST BUY” by top test com pany. D ynaco SCA - SO kits. ■(did y o u r own high pow ered stereo a m p a t low cost. M a r a n ts receiv ers, S ony receiv ers. Dual ch an g ers, G a r ra rd ch an g ers. M lraco rd ch an g ers, AR tu rn ta b le s, a n d m an y o th e r top brands* S T E R E O C E N T E R 203 blast 19th A cross 19th fro m J e s te r C en ter K U I S P E A K E R S , S ony STR-45 A M /F M re c e iv e r. D ual 1218 reco rd c h a n g e r, Sony TC 165 stereo c a s s e n a deek w ith a u to m a tic re v e rse . 476-6783, 454-6111. M UST S E L L 1965 M ustang V-8. S tan ­ d ard . R ed. $495. 476-0244. 472-0482. 1971 PO R SC H E 914. 2800 actu al m iles. F ull w a rra n ty , im m a c u la te condition. $8650. C all 452-6047. PANTS: $5. 300 pair of corduroy 4 denim bell-bottom* ON SA L E U P S T A IR S e t F RESH P A N T S 24th 4 San Antonio 472-1341 1969 VOLVO. A-C P S , disc pow er brak es, all le a th e r upholstery* radio. M ay be seen an y tim e a t 1710 L avaca. M ust sell by M onday. $1995. GR6-5781. M A KE O F F E R ON COUCH, (lining set. bedroom suite, an tiq u e dresser, nnd clock. M iscellaneous. 1401 S t E d w ard s, 231 441-2512 a fte r 5. 1970 KOUR W H E E L D R IV E T oyota L an d C ru ise r. Air, pow er w ench, a tta c h e d gas, $3150. E xcellen t. 477-5394. ’64 VW KARM ANN GHIA. Cond con­ dition. $550. C all a f te r 5 p .m ., 453-1557. 1967 MG M ID G ET. N ew tire s. $950. 476-3778 5-10 p m. a n d MWE 8-2 p.m . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . NEWEST NEAR CAMPUS! Luxury 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartments shag carpet, cable, lun deck St large pool. GREAT OAK APARTMENTS one block to law school three blocks to U.T. From $220. A U . BILLS PAID 477-3388 1965 CH E V R O LE T IM PALA four door sedan. VS, A-C, Good condition. $795. 836-4051. 66 VW B E E T L E . One owaler, reb u ilt engine. 52.000 m iles. $695. C all a f te r 5:30. 327-0182. F IS H IN G R IG —1970 G am e fish e r boat, tilt tr a ile r. Also c a m p e r 9hp Hnotor, shell for 1952 C hev. P ick-up. 414-2865. V.-iTl GLASTRON. 140 lip M e rc ru lse r. Finest, n m st sought a fte r ski an d fun boat. E x cellen t condition. M ust sell. $2150. 476-1178, 465-9231. E x cellen t 1965 MUSTANG, .Standard tran sm issio n . engine. LOO o r b est offer. Call 444 8693 a n y ­ tim e. condition. S m all IRISH S E T T E R . 16 m onth old fem ale. C ham pionship blood linos. $125. M rs. H olm sley, 836-3325, 9015 Slayton. 1969 HONDA CL350 $525. B ike tra ile r. tra ile r, m o to r. $250. F ishing boat, W eekdays a f te r 6:30, ,327-2626. co nvertible. C hallenger 410-six p ack R /T . B lue w ith yellow side-stripes, w hite top an d Interior. I.OADED ! ALL pow er, a la rm , hooker. H u rst, m allo ry , coneine, hood locks, driving lights, and AL L -otiered M o p ar options. N ew E60- 15 G oodyears and Die H ard. 13 m o nths old $3195. CaU H ugh a fte r 4. 454-655L SONY 6060 ste reo receiver. 45 w atts RM S p e r channel. P e rfe c t shape. $225. M ight sw ap o r haggle. Call D w ight a t 472-6860. WATERBEDS $ 18.50 5 y e a r g u a ra n te e . F re e lin er to 1st 20 cu sto m e rs a t T AND A L F ’S 102 E . 31sl 472-1472 40 WATT am p lifier AM -FM ste re o 8 tr a c k p re-a m p ta p e deck, 2 a ir su s­ 245-5431, sp e a k e rs. $100. pension SU TSU . 1971 T R IU M P H Bonneville. E x cellen t condition. $1250 firm . 472-5893. G IR L ’S T H R E E speed bike, $22. C a­ noe. $35. 472-3411 a lte r b. CLASSIC condition. need s m in o r w ork, p lus engine and '57 T R 3. good m a n y p a r ts sold se p a ra te ly . 476-0157. ’70 JA G U A R X J6 sedan, pow er, w a r­ ra n ty . a / c , AM-FM-SW. automatics, all options, m id n ig h t blue, D unlops, silv er-g rey in terio r. 476-6157. HSA 650, 1969. M ust sell. E x c e lle n t con­ dition. 476-9266 office T u esd ay an d T h u rs d a y 8-2 478-7341 C H A RLIE. HUSKY K E ESH O U N D puppies, seven two fem ales. $20. w eeks. One m ale, Call Anne before 5, 475-2664. ■■■■■■■■■■■I M i s c e l l a n e o u s Zuni N E LSO N ’S G IF T S ; co m p lete selection jew elry - A frican an d M exican Im ports. 4612 S outh C ongress. 441-3814. In d ian In g ru m , D allas. H IL L E L — O P E N fo r studying, sm ooztng 7-10 w eeknights. 2105 S an Antonio. LEARN to p lay GUITAR, b eginner, ad v an ce d . D rew T hom ason. 478-733L 178-2079. S A I L O N T O W N LAKE Rent a sailboat or canoe. 2-9 weekdays 12-9 weekend* Student* take Shuttlebu* Route 8 to 1800 S. Lekeshore. SKYDIVE Austin Parachute C e n te r For further inform ation a fte r 9 p.m. CALL 477-2416 EA R N $'s W EEK LY Blood plasma donors needed. C ash p a ’a for service*. Physician in attendance. O p e n Tuesday through Saturday, 8 o.m.- 3 D.m. A U S T IN B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S , IN C .. 409 W e st 6th, 477-3735. PA R K IN G BY MONTH. $12.50. 2118 S an Antonio, one block from C am pus. 476-3720. T r a v i s . B o a rd R E N T SAILBOAT fun — b eau tifu l I ,ake th ro u g h keelboats, acco m m o d atin g 1-8. M arsh Y ach t S ales — by M ansfield D am . CO 6-1150. b o a ts B U M P E R STICK ERS. D esign y o u r own, w ill p r in t a n y th in g cheap. 454-6907. R E M O V E UNWANTED^ HAIR p e r ­ m a n e n tly w ith m ed ically ap p ro v ed electrolysis. U n iv ersity electro ly sis. 477- 4070. JE N N IN G S M O VI N G-HAU LIN G . AU ty p es of m oving. L arg e, sm all. 7 d a y s w eek. E x p erien ce d . H12-7233, GL2-1923. N E E D F O U R to Texas-O U tick ets gam e. M ust know soon a s possible. 926-7359. N E E D M A LE : S hare two bedroom , two $68-m onth. N e a r a p a rtm e n t. c a m p u s ’ 478-5013 for N ath an . b a th M ALE N E E D E D fo r one bedroom apartm ent. $87.50/m onth. Six blocks from Campus. All bills paid. 453-6444. tw o b ath . M ALE, F E M A L E sh a re tw o bedroom , In dividual c o n tra c t $61.50 p e r person, bills-m aid .sendee furnished. Pool. L E FONT A p a rtm e n ts, 803 W est 28th. 472-6180. L E FONT A p artm en ts. SOS W est 28th. F E M A L E ROOMM ATE n eed ed Im m e­ diately. L a rg e one bedroom . AC/CH, sh a g c a rp e t. N o rth . $67.50. d is p o s a l 454-6005. F E M A L E N E E D E D two bedroom a p a rtm e n t. C h a p a rra l A p art­ m en ts. All bills paid. Pool, Shuttle. $70 p e r m o n th . Close to C a m p u s. 471- 2 455. to su b le ase W a n t e d 4-6 T IC K E T S O klahom a-T exas gam e. 214-231-1328 collect o r w rite R o b ert T rail, 13S30 R am blew ood DOLLARS F O R OLD T E S T S fro m Dr. W h eeler’s Zoo 330 (p a ra sito lo g y ). Call C lay 411-7137, 444-6189 an y tim e. W A N TED : TWO NON-STUD ENT tick ets to O U -Texas football g a m e . C all 441- 2376 a f te r 5 p.m . WANT TO BUY used V olksw agens. G ilb erts A utom otive, 1621 E a s t 6th. N E E D STU D EN T le tte r to to H u n g arian . 10:30 p.m .-m idnight, tr a n s la te c all 471-1946. H e l p W a n t e d av a ilab le G I R T * W ITH TRANSPORTATION tw o school children 2-6 p.m ., M o nday-F riday. 476- 5110, M rs. P e r ry . 442-3838 a f te r 6. sta y w ith to E D U C A T IO N A L S A L E S M A N FOR O LD ESTABLISHED S C H O O L Permanent position I- Austin. G o o d in­ come, b right future. Prefer background in testing a -d counseling, but r n s t be experienced in sale*. Professional, d ig ­ nified, no high pressure. Phone 478-5194. W E AI N E E D S tim e biconic nnd sch o larsh ip four m en —good p a r t if you q ualify. Apply I o r 8 p .m .. 3108 N orth L a m a r. S uite 203-A. H E L P W A N TED . T he B ucket Is tak in g utility g e n e ra l ap p licatio n s w o rk e rs an d sandw ich chefs. Apply T u esd ay , O ctober 5th betw een two and fo u r P .M . only. for A p a r t m e n t s , U n f . B R IC K F IV E ROOM, a ir conditioned, c a rp e te d . Couple. L ease, deposit, no p ets. 707 G ra h a m P la c e a t R io G rande an d 25-U S tre e t. 476-0S33. L o s t . g F o u n d F o r R e n t Irish L A R G E REW ARD. F o u r m onth fem ale a n d G uadalupe. N eeds m ed icatio n . CaU 454- 6988. vicinity se tte r 35th FO U N D : P a ir of glasses. Call 454-8095. LOST SIL V E R St. C h risto p h er s m ed al on gold chain. R ew ard $10! No q u es­ tions ask ed . J e r r y Levinson. 452-0507. LOST W H ITE G erm an fe­ m ale. E x tr a toe on hind foot. CaU 441-6188 o r Art Building 112 MWE a f te r ­ noons. sh e p ard , LOST M ALE se tte r T h u rsd ay aftern o o n vicinity' 30th and S peed­ to S hea. P le a s e call Iris h w ay. A nsw ers 472-3411 a fte r 6. I and 2 bedroom apartments. Pool and tenni* courts. S h a g carpet, fenced pa­ fum iihed tio or ba cony. $180. 2 bedroom, 2 bath furnithed $235, I bedroom Bi!:* paid. 1401 St. Edwards Driva or call 442-9369. R o o m s SH A RE O L D E R H OUSE on L ak e w ith prof. a n d fam ily. IO m in u tes UT. 2 room s. $125. 327-2445. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . T u t o r i n g s t u d i o tw o bedroom S E E T H E L O V E L IE S T In A ustin. a p a r tm e n ts R e aso n ab ly p ric e d . F o r in fo rm atio n call 451-2465. N O L E A S E Large I and 2 bedroom , furnished or unfurnished. C arpet, air, G .E. dishw ash­ er, disposal, Tappan range, balcony, po o l. 2 block* from R eagan H igh . 4 5 3 -7 6 0 8 . W O O D W A R D APTS. 1722 E . W oodw ard • S pecial stu d e n t o rie n te d clu ste rs. • S w im m ing pools. • M oderate p ric e s w ith all u tilitie s 444-7555 p aid — no hidden c h a rg e s ! • Only 5 m in u te s to U.T. • C om plete o n -p rem ises w a s h a te rla . • F re e all-ch an n el TV. • A m ple p a rk in g fo r te n a n ts & guests. FALL RATES $129.50 Large two bedroom near down­ town. Swimming pool, carpeted, a/c, wood paneling. 442-3910 472-9147 C A M I N O R E A L 6 blocks to U .T. J U S T R E L E A S E D L A R G E I B E D R O O M F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T All bills paid, cab le, d ish w ash er, d is­ posal, pool, 2 la u n d ry room s. S huttle B us ro u te, co v ered p a rk in g a v a ilab le. 2810 S alado 476-4095 C A M IN O REAL — EL PATIO 6 blocks to U.T. 2 b ed ro o m —2 b ath s. AH bills p aid . N E W LY D E C O R A T E D — S H A G CA R PET la u n d ry Cable, w ash er, disposal, co v ered p a rk in g a v a ilab le. room . 2 pools, d ish ­ s e c u rity g u a r d , 2810 S alado 476-4095 N E E D TO S E L L c o n tra c t on efficiency a p a rtm e n t. N ex t to L B J L ib rary . CA­ CH. P hone 477-2188. 5 M INUTES FR O M UT THE DEL PR AD O APTS. 303 W. 40TH STREET L E A R N to p la y GUITAR, b eginner, advanced. D rew T hom ason, 478-7331, 478-2079. 451-1557. STAT TU TO R IN G . All business m a th . MATH. S E M E S T E R R ates. A vailable often a s n e c e ssa ry . F o r B usiness, G .R .E . L i b e r a l - A r t s M ajors. P re p a ra tio n . G u a ra n te e d R esults. G roup R a te s. MATHENAMICS, 452-1327. U N IV ER SITY L IT ER A R Y SER V IC ES. in expository, Instruction P erso n al business w riting. 477-9043. GUITAR LESSONS. G u itars for sale. C all Bob, 441-1485. MATH TU TO R IN G —M a sters D egree $4 hour. C all 453-8164. CALCULUS 808.4, B. 470-7883 befo re 8, a fte r IO. John. Close to C am pus. S e r v i c e s H AIR LTD. CaU in fo rm atio n on fo r h a ir singeing fo r sp ilt ends a n d sh a g cuts. 454-0984. IDA PRESS 504 W est 24th Multicopy service. Specializing in handbills. Call 477-8351. PIA NO LESSONS. B eginner a n d a d ­ vanced. CMI 451-3549. P a r ts E X P E R T VOLKSWAGEN R E P A IR S . to students. G ilb erts A utom otive S ervice, 1621 E a s t 6th. service. D iscount an d T y p i n g M a ste rc h a rg e honored. SMALLWOOD T Y PIN G — 892-0727. 5001 S unset T ra il. L a st m inute an d o v er­ te r m p a p e rs, night d issertatio n s, n ew sletters, bulletins. typing. T heses, S E R V I C E . G rad u ate V I R G I N I A SC H N E ID ER T Y PIN G an d Un­ typing. printing, binding. d e rg ra d u a te 1515 Koenig L ane. T elephone: 465-7205 ACCURATE T Y PIN G .. R eports, b riefs, theses, d issertatio n s. Sym bols. M rs. T y p i n g Am Just North of 27th & Guadalup# • M .B .A T y p in g . M u itilith in g , B in d in g r Tho Complots Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service t o ta ilo re d th e n eed s o f U n i v e r s e stu d e n ts. S pecial k e y b o a rd e g u lom en fo r lan g u ag e, science, a n d e n g i n e d m g th eses an d d iss e rta tio n s . P iton# GR 2-3210 a n d GR 3-76TT 2707 H em phill P ark E X p E RT T Y PIN G in m y l ^ 7 m e r te a c h e r. W est A ustin. 474-ii SAVE M O NEY - naJJF* P apers, theses, d iss e rta tio n s . Cit* doping, 4,0-4179, 6 a.m .-m idnigh F u lly equipped E n d in g — All «» 8113 B eautiful, persona] your I n iv ersirv ’ blnUlng- L a u ra Bodi ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 TYPESETTING. TYPING, PRINTING. BINDING Just North of 27th & Guadalupe Am M B A a * T y p in g . M u ltllith in g . B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to ta ilo re d th e n eed s of U n iv e rs e stu d e n ts. S pecial k ey b o a rd equipm en fnL |*Jn Kuage. science, a n d engineer m g th eses a n d d iss e rta tio n s . P h o n e GR 2-3210 an d GR 2-7677 2707 H em p h ill P a rk CARBON-RIBBON Soleetric~ “ in mid n ig h t: O ut by S. 478-0753 evenings. L arge townhouse type apartm ents. Beautiful furniture. P le n ty of p ark in g . S w im m ing pool. M a n a g e r A p t 106 TV C able 454-2436 A nthony, 451-3079. E X P E R IE N C E D IBM. A ccurate, ra te s. 327-1531. T Y PIST. fa st E le c tric se rv ice. Low FAST. ACCURATE typist de type for stu d e n ts a t home, t u p /d e liv e r. 263-2276. G R E A T IXXiATION. L u x u ry one bed- room , new ca rp e tin g , co v ered p a r k ­ ing. sundeek. bills an d cab le paid. Only $150. 2812 N ueces. 472-6497. SHORT WALK UT, u n u su a l a ttra c tiv e efficiency, p an eled , a / c , y ard -p a tlo , v e ry p riv a te . 476-5886. L A R G E O N E BEDROOM , living room . S huttle. R easo n ab le. C onvenient. C o n tact m a n a g e r E ld o rad o A p a rtm e n ts, 1 3501 S peedw ay. AVAILABLE bedroom a p a rtm e n t, One furnished. Air, p ets w elcom ed. 2504 Leon. 476-1708. T hree bus ro u tes. IM M ED IA TE LY SO M EO N E ASSUM E H ard in N orth co n tra c t. F o u r girl suite. 2nd floor. T w o v acan c ie s. S p ring se m e ste r. 477- R o o m g B o a r d AND ROOM BOARD. U niversity stu d e n ts. 20 m e a ls p e r w eek. F re e lau n d ry facu lties, m aid s e r­ p ark in g , vice, sw im m ing pool. a-o. P hone 477- 9766 o r v isit 2706 N ueces. SIN G L E ROOMS U niversity' H ouse m en s dor m . R oom an d b oard for F all re a so n a b le se m e ste r. Good ra te s . T h re e from C am pus, blocks S huttle B us ro u te. A C, m a id serv ice. 2710 N ueces, 477-8272. food an d ROOM & BOARD. U n iv ersity stu d en ts. 20 m e a ls p e r w eek. F re e p arking, la u n d ry serv ice, sw im m ing pool, n-e. Long session r a te s from $1,060. P hone 472-7850 o r v isit 2700 N ueces. facilities. m aid U N IV ER SIT Y L IT ER A R Y SE R V IC E S —IB M S e le c te e , carbon ribbon, sym - j hols—D issertatio n s, T heses, P R ’s, BC’s, B riefs, T h e m e s—477-9043. SE R V IC E . B O B B Y E D E L A F IE L D T Y P IN G d isse rta tio n s, T heses, rep o rts. M im eographing. R easo n ab le. HI 2-7184. THEM ES, R E P O R T S , le c tu re notes. R easo n ab le. M rs. F ra s e r, 476-1317. T h e s e s , E X P E R T T Y PIST . Selective. rep o rts, briefs. professional rep o rts. P rin tin g , binding. M rs. Tullos, 453-5124. IBM B.C. W E T Y P E TH EM ES, le c tu re notes, rep o rts. WHI pick up and deUver. R easonable. 444-0394. d ependable. E x p erien ce d EDUCATIONAL T Y PIST . A c c u ra te an d for­ m a ts R easonable ra te s. M rs. M arily n n H am ilton, 444-2831. in all F O R M E R SE C R E T A R Y w ith BBA doing s tu d e n t typing. 4 5 c /p a g e . 451- 2732. T Y PIN G SERVICES. P rofessional typing on any subject m atter. R easonable ra te s. 2405 N ueces, 472-675S. WOODS T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . N e a r ^ C a m p u s . L aw , T hesis. M rs. W oods, E X P E R IE N C E D d isse rta tio n s, T Y P IS T . IBM Theses. •c e c u tiv e etc. C harlene S ta rk . 453-5218. PARTIA LLY H A N D IC A PP E D LADY light bookkeeping. tw elve m o n th s s e c re ta ry b u sin e ss co u rse. d esires F o u r y e a r s executive 454-0707. ty p in g o r college, Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing A U S-T E X D U P L IC A T O R S 476-7581 118 Neches M A R JO R IE D E L A F IE L D TY I S E R V IC E —T heses, d issertatio n s, b r i e f s , M ultility re p o rts. S av e m o n e y s m im eo g ra p h in g . ??.,utj k J 3 a n k a m e r ic a r d . M a s te r Ch. 44w- <008. th e U n iv ersity WK P R O V ID E p ro fessio n al student. typb Re p a p e rs , theses. briefs, m em os, 4<*-379t. 1209 R io G ran d e, suite Just North of 27th & Guadalupa M B A T y p in g . M u ltilith in g . B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailored the needs of Universlt; students. Special k ey b o ard equipm en for science, an d engine®* m g th eses and d isse rta tio n s. language, P hone G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a r k Monday, Ootobar 4, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Raga 9 [FOOTBALL WIDOWSKI ARISE! ■ ta WE’VE GOT SOME- THING SPECIAL JUST FOR YOU EVERY MON­ DAY NIGHT AT EVERY INTERSTATE ABC THEATRE! MONDAY' NIGHTS ALL ABC INTERSTATE THEATRES FOOTBALL W I D O W S - S I . PARAMOUNT wrong. $1.00 'TIL 2:i 5 1 : 4 0 - 3 : 2 0 - 5 : 0 0 6 : 4 0 - ? : 2 0 . IO OO W illiam Tepp«'r and Karen B la c k ; produced and directed by Ja c k Nicholson; at the Texas. By CICELY WYNNE Amusements Associate “ D rive. He Said” is the kind of film that leaves you numb from standing out in the cold. nose flattened against the win­ dow, straining until it hurts to see something that you want desperately to be there, but isn t. For several good reasons, I expected a stimulating film : the Jerem y Larnpr novel, stylistically unconventional, b r i l l i a n t in content finally coming to the screen: Jack Nicholson, one of our most versatile actors, directing his first film ; and, more importtntlyf these two intense young men collaborating on a screenplay. But something went Although comparing a novel to its film counterpart remains a dubious task, in this case, the Drive' Lacks Depth Nicholson Directs First Film “ D riv e , Tip Said:** starring; helps locate the p r o c e d u r e fr a c tu r e s . does plead with Hector to do something to save whatever he can before T H E Y take it away. Tile shallowness that cripples His fluid the film 's script stands in striking c o n t r a s t Nicholson’s to cam erawork. For a first film , it’s rem arkable that he appears so comfortable behind a camera. aggressive, style shows through no better than in the basketball scenes. Using slow motion, zooming, swish panning, tilting, almost giving us a ride on top of the ball. Nicholson stages a choreographic display that involves us as few action sequences have. t h e blares, O N E Ruch s c e n e w o r k s especially well. As the national anthem crowd slouches ritualistically by. As the anthem the game proceeds. Pushing com petitively o n w a r d , shouting “ friendly’’ epithets in the effort to win, win, xvin, the teams give their all to the game. Beautiful irony. continues, The cast performs adequately. As Hector, Topper gets away from cutesy mannerisms enough to be personable. Margotta in­ vests Gabriel with force and glassy-eyed insanity. Unfortunately, Miss Black is wasted. Looking like a cheap whore after a long night, Miss Black shuffles through her lines as if she really wanted to be somewhere else. T felt that way myself when I felt. F o r “ Drive, He Said,” doesn’t ja r many emotions or ideas with its lifeless characters. But, despite all its flaws, the film should mean a future for Ja c k Nicholson, director, who at least understands where to put his cam era and how to give a scene movement. Nicholson and Lam er watered down the characters, lopping off so many facets of their per­ sonalities, that little more than implication survives our compassion. to arouse Except for Gabriel (M ichael M argotta), the people resemble s h a d o w s , floating aim lessly seems about. Ju st when it something w ill materialize, the figures slip away. Hector Bloom (W illiam Top­ per), college basketball star, is disenchanted with the game. It doesn’t seem relevant, he feels. This occasionally defiant young man ( “ No, coach, T won't do IO laps” ) involved with Olive (Karen B la ck ), a rather unin­ teresting professor’s wife. is M ISS Black does have a few revealing lines, in fact, one of the substantial few film ’s statements: “ All you can do. Hector, is sit around and shake your head.” Hector’s roommate Gabriel projects a more concrete image— the stereotype. Without the subtle shades of Greek tragedy that make him a unique, sympathetic person the book Gabriel comes across as the middle class conception of a campus rad ical: extremely paranoid, rhetorical, violent and floundering in a sea of impotency. in True to the spirit of L a n ie r’s original Gabriel, the film Gabriel 7224 Guadalupe St.—477-1964 Open 1:45 • $1.50 ’TIL 5 PM Features 2-4-6-8-10 ^‘ B R I L L I A N T ! " ' N-ASOo/ L A S T 2 D A Y S COLUMBIA PCTuRES Pri«nu A BBS W OCXJCTtON DOME! IHE SAID “ Around the World in 86 D ays;’* starring David Niven, Cantinflas, Shirley M aclaine and Robert Newton; screenplay by Jam es Poe, John Farrow and S. J . Pere! man; produced by M ichael Todd; directed by the Michael Anderson; Americana. at (Ed ito r's Note: “ West Side Story,” companion feature to “ Around the World in 80 Days,” xviii be reviewed in Tuesday’s Texan.) What can you say about two r e i s s u e d that are film s (collectively) 25 years old? That they wear well. That they both won Oscars as “ Best Picture of the Y e ar.” And that they are better entertainment than anything else in town. Tile plot is basically simple, hut highly interesting. Phileas Fogg (D avid Niven) bets 20.000 pounds that he can circle the globe in 80 days. (In the pre­ late airplane days of the Nineteenth Century, this would be quite a feat.) W ith his servant Passepartout (Cantinflas) Fogg sets out—the same day that the Bank of robbed. The is E n g l a n d twosome’s departure quick moves Scotland Yard to put a detective, M r. (Robert Newton), on Fogg's trail to nail him for the crime. F ix Fogg makes it back to London in time—barely—to win both the wager and vindication, after a series of adventures. These escapades include a breathtaking balloon ride across France, bullfighting in Spain, journeying India by through train and elephant, rescuing an I n d i a n (Shirley princess M acLaine) from being burned alive, traveling across Am erica by train and sail car. crossing the Atlantic in a weatherbeaten ship and hoofing across London to claim the 20,000 pounds. The performances are rich. Victorian epitomizes Niven correctness, Cantinflas is a delightful jack-of-all-trades and ap­ Shirley M acLaine propriately lovely as Aouda. is a bi'autiful countryside— and lyrical train-and-elephant ride through India, which affords a rich view of the country’s in­ terior. However, the real delight is watching Newton ogle and leer his way through the part of M r. A w a r d - W i n n ing music ac- Fix. Though he is the villain companies all of these scenes, Victor Young’s Academy '8 0 Days Returns; Still Best Picture' By JOHN POPE S t a f f W r i t e r of the piece, lie is delightful to behold. to say, N e e d l e s s the photography is beautiful. Two outstanding sequences are a to balloon Spain — where Fogg a n d P a s s e p a r t o u t drift over from Paris ride setting the proper mood. Unlike other scores—notably M aurice Ja r re ’s deafening music for “ Ryan’s Daughter” —Young's does not dominate the scene, it, rounding but complements out a perfect entertainment that does not seem dated at all. Children's Play Misses Mark B y K R IS T IN A P A L E D E S Amusements Associate H a v i n g read Graham e’s The Wind Kenneth the in W illows as a child and ranking it along with Alice in Wonderland Graham e's book Tile Wind in the W illows is an adventure story about Toad, Rat, Mole and other anim al characters set in M erry speech O ld department does a delightful adaptation of the tale. England. The and Black Beauty, I enjoyed die Besides the live performers, the mood is also utilized, a slide show setting for various scenes in the spring and winter, showing slides of The River, by which much of the play is sot, as well as showing sketches of some of the animals and Toad Hall. speech department’s production of the play. Unfortunately, though, the play is intend^ for children of the pre and grade-school age, not for the middle elementary grades who \xouId have been able to get more out of it. For the age level at which Is aimed, there is not enough visual activity or excitement to keep younger children attentive. Still, the performance was good. the performance Daily Hor w a n t co m p lish som ething A R I E S : Y o u have the p otential to ac­ y o u 'v e been p lan nin g fo r a w h ile now. E it h e r do it now o r forget it. T A I H I >: Look fo rw a rd if you don’t to be caug h t holding back. D on't let y o u r better jud gm en t be out- \ ted by y o u r com fort. ( • E M I N I : T ile w o rld seems to be ag ain st you today. Y o u should try to keep to y o u rse lf if possible, or at least m ake allo w an ce s for others. ra n e a s ily get < A N K E R : You into one o< you r depressed moods to d ay lf you don't start rig h t now to m ake the d ay a successful one. L E O : D o n 't expect to m ak e m uch p rog ress today. Y ou art' being held b ack by conditions, and you m ust be content right now to bide y o u r t u n thinking as V I R G O : Y ou a re not ENJOY! ENJOY! ll e Feature One Sandwich OL Sc/, fat cd SCHLOTZSKY'S SA N D W IC H ES 412-9003 1301 S ('i o g ress C I. O S H P P O N P A Y S O M V c le a r ly as you w ould Y thought processes are m uddied by re le v a n t Im pressions w h ich k e creep in g In. L I B R A : Y o u m a y feel caught in so i ke sort of squeeze pla> Y o u 'r e re a lly being persecuted as though you are. st O R B H I : I lei ,N s and causin g volt no end it ohst; of fri T h is is one p rob lem \ >u should not m eet nead on. B id e y o u r tim e and tie sneaky. h AI >1 X T A R U >* : You a re fe< nu crc it today. T his pres. pts the d ang er thai yo u feel so good you w o n 't w a n t to do an yth in g w o rth w h ile < XI-Kit O R N : Y o u r .spirits a re in bet­ ter shape than they h ive been iii a long tim e T r y to m ake some useful o n ig ress today, w h ile the opportunity rn ripe. A O I X R U Y o u pre In a d r y " per­ i o d right now Y o u r best co urse is to hold fast to yo u r b eliefs and w a it for things to change B IM E S ; T h is d a y is just an oth er d o for you. In o ther words, y..u w ill be operatin g at w h a te v e r y o u r usual norm Is, w ith ou t outside influenc< — N II K L XXX K E M V Tho character performances and the makeup are attention- getters and skillfully done. Steve Holliday portrays Toad exactly as he appeared in the b o o k — a pompous braggart, always sorry for his sins, but always forgetting his promises to be better. Dru Christian plays the shy, easily pleased Mole who can always find something exciting in whatever he does. She comes on xvoll as does Maurine Lloyd as Rat, Mole's friend and con­ fidante. good, including The other performances were also Frank Cherry as tho narrator who is on stage at all times and com fortably meanders around In front of the children. U’s just too bad that the on’v flaw' in the play is a serious one, for the acting and the subject matter arc' definitely directed at a very young age level, and it doesn't quite come off that wav. Final performance of ‘‘The Wind in the W illows” is 8 p.m. Monday in the Academic Center Auditorium. QUEEN CAPRI THEATER 521 E. 6th 472-0442 O PEN I LOO A.M. 'TIL? OPEN SUN. 1:00 P.M. 'TIL? UNDER N EW M A N A G EM EN T C A LL SOR MOVIE TITLE — W E C H A N G E MOVIES EVERY FRIDAY M ID NIGHT SH O W FRI. & SAT. 11:00-2:00 BEST X-RATED M O V IE S IN T O W N WITH THIS COUPON — 50c off Regular Admission S H O W IN G NOT O M X T H E B E S T , B I T A L S O T U E B I G G E S T S T A I F I L M S A l S T I X IN Escorted Ladies Free with Membership RIH ARTS C O N T IN U O U S S H O W IN G S 12 N O O N TILL - 11:45 P.M. " H E A D PARTY" A LSO < ~ U P I >t I t I ' " PUBLIC A C T I O N " Z p 3 "H A PPY H O U R " DAILY 5-6 P.M. — $2.00 ADM. STUDIO IV T W O SCREENS 222 East 6th 472-0436 ALL MOVIES RATED X 35 mi I I BACKSEAT CABBY" AND "ANIMAL LOVERS" 16 mm 'DEVIL'S LITTLE ACRE' W E D N E S D A Y IS STUDENT D A Y : ALL TICKETS HALF-PRICE WITH STUDENT LD. W aterloo Social flu b 7th S Red River present1! TUESDAY NITE JUG BAND MUSIC WASHBOARD WILDCATS No Cover who needs the 'Acrid when you OMI the moon and stars. PARAMOUNT PICTURES "friends TECHNICOLOR* I S MUSIC BT ELTON JOHN HELD OVER 2nd Week F E A T U R E 6:05-8:00 - IO p.m. D O C STACY K E A C H Orated ArMa FAYE D U N A W A Y S T A T E A 76 5066 7 i 9 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 <>•40-8:20- 10:00 SAMUEL Z. ARK OEF a n d JAM ES K NICHOLSON Bene Davis lERnesT B0RGNIN6 VARSITY $1.00 'TIL 2:15 F E A T .- 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 1 0 Just a person who protects children and other living things Attar JA C K 5 r ..JOI,I LAUGHLIN til* "» $1.00 'TIL 6:15 F E A T U R E S 5 : 4 5 - 7 : 0 7 8 : 7 9 - 9:51 DAVID 0. SELZNICK D('(Cv ;ur. al M A R K T W A IN S Birhard R<>undtr«-«* Mokro Gunn “ S H X F T " R o d T a y l o r Vs ot t o Mi t ni ei i x •‘D A R K O F I HF. S I \ ” LR) V i n r r n t P r i c e ( o t t on • l o - c ph “ D R C H I R K S ’' •lohn B lo o m “ T H E I M R Kl MBI. TWO III T R A N S P L A N T ’’ \ D E D ( G S H O W IN G AT 3 D R I V E - I N ’S SHOWTOWN ★ BURNET ★ SOUTHSIDE TXX I N 1 )R IV E - IN ' D R IX I IN T W IN D R IV E - IN BOX O FFICE OPEN 7:00 — S H O W STARTS DUSK J? mu% . SHAFTS hb name. SHAFTS his same. Va M E T R O C O L O R I (51 KJIfc MGM © PLUS — C O - FEATURE AT EAC H S H O W S H O W T O W N - SOUTHSIDE ROD TAYLOR YVETTE M I M I E U X “D A R K O F THE S U N ” — BURNET — R IC H ARD WID- M ARCK - ALLEN ALDA "M O O N SH IN E W A R I T R A N S*T E X A S M E E J 2200 Hancock Drive-453 6641 N O W ! OPEN 2:15 ADULTS $1.50 Until 5:30 "Around the W orld" 2:30-8:11 "W est Side Story" 5:30 i'O G I:(H E R FOR THE FIRST TIME we? side p a m m H M B T VfORli IN SO DAYS | W I U 1 1 1 United Artists I in T0D0-A0 technicolor* «- r«iu»< tv, United Artists | "AROUND H E L XST I) X X S T R A N S * T E X A S TE33TJ O P E N - - 4:45 $1.00 'TIL 5 P.M. FEATURES -5:00 an d 8:30 | T W A N S jriC A M S 15601 N. lama r BW1-H5H710 EN D S T O M O R R O W H U R R Y ! *** / The SUI JHI OU- 0**0 UA* »*»"*•< W in n e r of 7 Academv A w ard s 'B E S T \ P IC T U R E !* K 03 J® OPEN 7:00 • START 8:00 N O W G IV IN G BONUS CH EKS G O O D FOR FREE ADM ISSION FREE TRAIN RIDES ON LIL TOOT BEFORE SH O W TIM E (STARTING AT 7:30) FREE GIVE A W A YS WATCH FOR EARLY BIRD JO E N A M M I ^THE I LAST R E B E L G F 8:00 & 12 AALSO THE P R O F E S SIO N A L ’S B I R T LA N C A S T E R 10:00 L E E M A R X IN XEC MNKXX OF? n m i f f r r Page IO Monday, October 4, 19*71 THE DAILY TEXAN ALL SEATS $1.00 THE HUNGRY HORSE Fftlt K n TONIGHT! 1909 San Jacin to 477-0432 D R IN K FREE F R O M 8:45-9:15 P.M. & LISTEN TO M O O N PIE Stronq Boogie 4 Austin % B ist Guitar Pleine H A P P Y H O U R 3-6 P.M. $1 P i‘ch«r 25c G la u DEPARTMENT of R-T-F C 1 N E M A T E X A S F A U . I