T he S ummef t e x a n Student N ew spa p er at The University of Te,. * Vol. 70, No. 8 Ten Cents A U S T IN , T E X A S , T H U R S D A Y , J U N E 18, 1970 Twelve Pages 471-5244 ......................................... ~ ' ‘ ■ ■ ■ ...... — -------------------------------------------------------------------- Texas Laws O n Abortion struck Down p T ' ^ DALLAS (AP) — A U. S. D istrict that Texas Court said W ednesday abortion laws are unconstitutional because they infringe on the right of single women and m arried persons to choose w hether to have children. The three-judge federal panel ailed on a suit brought by a single woman who is pregnant, a m arried couple and a doctor facing two crim inal abortion charges. right of The court pointed out that “ the fun­ and dam ental m arried persons to choose whether to have children is protected by the Ninth Amend­ m ent, through the Fourteenth Am endm ent" of the U. S. Constitution. single women that The court also ruled the Texas statutes are unconstitutionally “ overbroad” and “ vague,” noting that the laws failed to provide physicians with proper notice of w hat acts would constitute crim inal liability. The court said in its opinion that “ free­ dom to choose in the m atter of abortions bas been accorded the status of a ‘fun­ d am ental’ right ' in every case that had rom e to the attention of the court where the question was raised. Sitting on the panel were Circuit Judge Irving L. Goldberg, and U, S. Dust. Judges Sarah T. Hughes and William Taylor Jr. T^e court said that “ it. is sufficient to state that legislation concerning abortion m ust address itself to more than a bare negation of that right.” The physician direotor of the University Student Health Service earlier had filed an affidavit in support of the suits. Dr. Paul Trioke't, who heads the gynecology clinic »• the health canter, said in tertirru'ny that a conservative estim ate would be that “ we dtagne.se at least one pregnancy a day a t the University Student Health C enter,’’ He said he found that a large num ber Of your, j women were hefting illegal abortions under very poor procedures “which can not only threaten im m ediate life but can also L ad to psychological and medi­ cal problem s.” (AP) — WASHINGTON President Richard M. Nixon delivered a stem lecture to business and labor Wednesday, urging them to curb price boosts and w’age demands. To back it up, he created two commissions and a new’ “ inflation ale rt" system to spotlight excessive increases. “ The fight against inflation is everybody's in a the nation told business,” Nixon broadcast speech, “ If yew act against the national interest; (Related Story, Page S.) if you contribute to inflation In your price and wage dem ands — then you are acting against your own best interests and your custom er's best interest.” Nixon's words were the strongest of his presidency and appeared to m ark another step aw ay from hts earlier policy of not seeking to influence industry's prices or lal>or’s wage settlem ents. It was the first time he had gone so "mm. ■ hi ii. w m m ’M - inurn ~ i innntwniiimiiuiamiwiii But W h o Listened? What if they gave an economic I address and nobody listened? finance representative | President Richard M. Nixon could be faced with the problem I if U niversity business, economic I faculty m em bers I and their I of are I colleagues across the country. The speech, delivered at 11 § a.m . Wednesday, lasted only 25 j minutes and apparently con- J fileted with lunches and meetings. classes, faculty Seeking local reaction to the address, The Texan contacted IO members of the University’s summer faculty only to find that none had listened. H o w’ e v e r , one business professor did offer to comment far as to set up an entirely new m echanism is for helping control the em erging as in November congressional elections — which tile Republicans have hopes of capturing control of Congress. inflation, which issue of crucial a The President’s speech received a mixed reaction in Congress, and drew praise from some I tpmocrats. tone was optim istic. He said in is succeeding the His nation task of converting from a w artim e to a peacetim e inflation economy while without a recession. to curb its dual trying He noted that spending for weapons is dropping and pledged to continue his previously announced plan to withdraw all U. S. troops from Cambodia by June 30 and 130,000 men from Vietnam over the next year. No P rice and Wage Controls At the sam e time, Nixon stood by his earlier pledges that he will not impose price and wage controls — and will not use such a standby authority even if Congress grants it. Nor will he allow individual businessmen or labor leaders to be called on the federal carpet and pressured into non-inflationary submission, he said. He to pass urged Congress seven legislative proposals he favors .which would provide a stronger unemployment insurance system , widened m anpower training and aid to the troubled housing industry. He asked Congress for a $50-million supplem ental “ to provide appropriation useful training and support to young people who are out of school the sum m er m onths.” for N i\on Take's Three Steps The three new’ steps he is taking a re : • To set up a 23-member National Commission of Productivity’, headed by a governm ent official, to seek w’ays to im ­ prove industrial output per man hour. This sum m er special P resident’s Conference on Productivity, Nixon said. it will conduct a said Administration officials the new commission will consist of six represen­ tatives each from labor, m anagem ent and the general public — not yet nam ed — plus Secretary of the Treasury David M. Kennedy, Secretary of Commerce Maurice H. Stans, Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson. Paul W. McCracken, chairm an of the Council of Economic Advisers and George P. Shultz, former labor secretary; Shazam! H e r e C o m e s ’Mr. A v e r a g e m a n 1 — Associated P ress Photo. red, wrote and blue Stanford graduate Thom as J. Teitge receive* his diplom a whi)p attired in a "C a p t a in A m e r ic a " suit. Teitge said he was re­ presenting 1 Mr. A v e ra g e m a n ." Teitge carries a g a rb a g e can lid as a shield and sports painted tennis shoes. Nixon Plans Inflation Alert' President Plans N o W a g e and Price Controls and director-designate of the new Office of M anagem ent and Budget. • To tell the CEA to prepare a periodic “ inflation a le rt” which will “spotlight tile Significant areas of wage and price in­ creases and objectively analyze their im­ pact on the price level.” • To create a new Regulations and P ur­ chasing Review^ B a ird to review govern­ m ent actions that might be inflationary. The board, officials said, will be headed by Caspar Weinberger, form er chairm an the Federal Trade Commission and of deputy director-designate of Schultz’s new super agency. N either new’ group requires approval by Congress. ' \ o f - ! V House ap p ro ve s Bill \ / wk Lowering Voting A g e j . . • . a WASHINGTON (AP) — Tile House, cheered by youth-packed galleries, passed Wednesday a bill th a t would lower the voting age in all elections to 18 starting next Jan. I. The bill, sent to the White House by a vote of 272 to 132, also would continue for five more years the 1965 Voting Rights Act under which one million Negroes have been registered in seven southern states. Climaxing a brief but emotional debate, R epublican Leader G erald R. Ford of Michigan raised the possibility that President R ichard M. Nixon might let the bill take effect without signing it. Nixon has said the voting age should be lowered by con­ stitutional am endm ent, not by act of Congress. Conference Motion Fails Ju st before the vote on passage. Ford failed, 224 to 183, in an attem pt to send the bill back to a House-Senate conference so the 18-year-old w ring provision could be deleted. Tile outcome was trium ph for the Dem ocratic leadership, particularly 78-year-old Speaker John W. McCormack of M assa­ chusetts, who has announced his retirem ent a t the end of this session. “ Nothing Would m ake John McCormack — who will not be back here next year — happier than to see this resolution adop­ said the white-haired Speaker. His rem ark brought m em ­ ted, bers on the floor and youths in the galleries to their feet in prolonged applause. The House art ion came 50 years after the last big expansion of the electorate — the extension of the vote to women in 1920. T hat was accomplished by constitutional am endm ent, however, and rn os J of the opposition to the 18-year-oM voting provision w as based on the argument Congress was acting by law instead of through the amending process. IO M illion M ore V o te rs The bu! contains a provision allowing for speedy consideration of the 18-year-old voting statute bv the Suprem e Court. Rep. E m anuel Ceiler, D-X. 5 w h o managed the bill, said the court could a c t before any 1971 elections are held. If it becomes law by signature or inaction of Nixon and is upheld by the court, the bill would enfranchise an estimated! in million youths between 18 and 21. The new age requirem ent would be in effect for all elections — federal, state, m unicipal, school and tax districts, and prim aries as well as general elec­ tions. Supporters of the \ ating Rights Aet were afraid that returning the hill to conference would permit its southern opponents in the .Senate to delay action until after Aug. 6, when the 1963 act is due to expire. Racial Erupts Violence in Miami Y S A Stays Within Rule By Regents The likelihood of Young Socialist Alliance losing its on-campus status Is waning. Is Dean of Students Stephen McClellan said Wednesday he investigating a still possible violation by YSA of the regents* new’ rule prohibiting the use of University facilities by cam pus organizations w’hen m ore three non-students or non­ employes are in attendance. than But McClellan added that he w as “ not a s anxious to press the situation.” Possibly this is because of a YSA policy of asking non-students to leave and send back only three delegates. This puts them within the new’ rulp. Laura Richardson, YSA m em ber said, “ We are m aking an effort to stay within the rule,” the McClellan said he is “ asking YSA to work within regulation.” He emphasized, however, th a t “ there will he a final de­ term ination” as to whether YSA w’as in violation of the rule at a Sunday meeting. McClellan interrupted the YSA Socialist sum m er school Sunday to ask if there w ere m ore three non-students or non- than employes present. McClellan, finding no response to his request for recognition of non-U Diversity personnel, returned later with University Attorney Jac k Musslewhite, who asked p a r­ ticipants in the meeting to identify them ­ selves. Approximately 40 people signed a note­ book giving their identification, and Mc­ Clellan said Monday he had found more than three nam es apparently not those of students or employes. The Board of Regents passed the tighter ruling at a m eeting in E l Paso May 29, and further am ended the rule at a meeting in Austin, la st weekend MIAMI (AP) — Snipers and police of­ ficers exchanged gunfire and at least four buildings were set ablaze two Negro sections Wednesday as M iam i was thrown into its third night of racial violence. in Police said they were returning fire from snipers a t two points in the Brownsville district where first began Monday. trouble the Firebom bers touched off a t least four buildings in Brownsville and Liberty City district, said Doug Taggerty of the Dade County (Miami) S heriffs D ep artm en t Firem en were bom barded with bottles and stones when to put out one fire, Taggerty said. The others were quickly extinguished. they attem pted Taggerty said there w ere no reports of injuries in the clashes Wednesday' night. The violence flared despite a strict curfew being d am ped on nearly half of M iam i and adjoining blade a reas of Dade County. Pick up 2nd gray Five persons were shot, two critically, and 25 others injured Tuesday night and Wednesday morning before City' M anager Melvin Reese dec la m ! a state of em ­ ergency and imposed an indefinite 8 p.m . to 5 a.m . curfew. The order banned vehicular or pedestrian traffic, sale of liquor, and sale or purchase of firearm s or ammunition in a huge area em bracing the Brownsville, Liberty’ City and Coconut Grove black communities. “ Everyone m ust be off the stre e ts in the affected districts during those hours," a police spokesman said. Ignited by reports that a Negro housewife had been insulted a t a superm arket in the Brownsville rioting began Tuesday and grew' m ore furious Wednesday. Many automobiles were overturned and set ablaze. Dozens of stores were fire- section, the bombed and looted Jackson Memorial Hos­ pital brought in IO extra surgeons to deal with emergency cases. Two white men, L. C. Morris, a 42-vear- old cem ent contractor, and Douglas Leach, 57, w’ere mistaken as snipers and shot by the roof police as they stood guard on of Morris* plant. Mal. Charles Black of the Dade County Sheriffs D epartm ent said a police unit was fired upon when they arriv ed a t the building to investigate % burglary’ report and the policemen returned the fire. that M orris was reported In critical condition and Leach in fair condition at a hospital Two Negro snipers were wounded after a 20-minute gun battle with police. Another N egro W’alked into a hospital and said ha had been shot as he sat on his front porch. Thirty-one persons were arrested on riot charges. S tarting in Brownsville, the rioting spilled over into neighboring Liberty City and la te r w here store windows were smashed and sp read m iles southward into Coconut Grove, rocks throwm a t passing cars. Caucus Set O n New Rule By CONNIE CHI ORF The Ad Hoc Com m ittee Against the Re­ gen ts’ Rule thait lim its the number of non-- students attending cam pus meetings will discuss the constitutionality’ and legal as­ pects of that ru le Thursday in an open meet­ ing. After m eeting W ednesday night, the ad hoc com m ittee decided to try to achieve I niversirv recognition. Its aim would be to become a cohesive unit, rath er than a coalition of approxim ately 30 diverse groups. Thursday the com m ittee will present inform ation concerning the application of the regents* rule, passed la st month. Bill Greenwood of Outreach read the proposal, the organizations for the Ad written by Hoc Committee. Two open m icrophones will be available to present other to T hursday for speakers proposals, A vote on which proposal accept will follow'. Spokesmen for the com m ittee said they w anted to avoid the pitfalls of the antiw ar strik e rally’ when sp eakers w ere restricted to narrow topics and a tim e lim it. They the Thursday m eeting said to be a tru e “ free .speech m eetin g ,” and do not want it to be lim ited to a 'n a r r o w IX'presentation. they w anted A m eeting place was not designated W ednesday night because approval had not come from Dean of Students Stephen Mc­ the ad hoc com m ittee does Clellan. If b e c o m e U niversity organization, a room in the Union Building and sound equipm ent is available. recognized a For the com m ittee to becom e an ap­ proved University organization it m ust have la m em bers and a faculty adviser. Unless the becomes the legality of ru le cannot be regents* tested. com m ittee the approved Weather: Warm and humid, with clear to partly cloudy afternoons. High near 95. Low 74. Southerly winds &-18 mjrti, - _ 1 A Friends 'til the End —T exas Photo by LEONARD GI EKBERG A young coed and her fraternal escorts stroll arm-in-arm down 24th Street, The trio will be buddies to the end . . * of tho block, that is. NEW YORK (AP) — Gaunt. gray and ailing, lobbyist Nathan Voloshen pleaded guilty Wed­ nesday to using House Speaker John W. M c C o r m a c k ’ s Washington office as a base for extensive influence peddling. The plea congressional left McCormack's long-time aide, Martin Sweig, 48, on trial alone in federal courts of conspiracy and perjury charges. Facing up to 20 years in federal prison, Vo loshen may be called as a gov­ ernment witness against Sweig. The pair were accused of con­ spiring in a scheme to pressure government agencies on behalf of favor-seeking clients, who were whining to pay for the prestige of McCormack’s name and office. Mayors Urge Funds for Cities DENVER (AP) - The U. S. Conference of Mayors urged Wednesday a reallocation of na­ tional resources from military spending to domestic needs but specific criticism or avoided support for President Richard M. Nixon’s Indochina policy. There was little debate on the war itself. The most vocal war critic in this annual meeting, Cleveland Democratic Mayor Carl B. Stokes, supported a suc­ cessful compromise statement that did not mention the war. A resolution to back “Honor America Day,” July 4, wfas sub­ stituted for one expressing sup­ port for presidential policies and U. S. troops. Two southern mayors, Inde­ pendent Henry Loeb of Memphis, Term., backed by Republican George Seibels Jr. of Bir­ mingham, Ala., offered a reso­ lution which Seibels earlier had said “supports the President both in Vietnam and at home.” Nashville Mayor Beverly Bri­ a Democrat, offered a ley, resolution supporting the ringing of bells and sounding of sirens on “Honor America Day,” in place of Loeb’s. H e wras supported by Republican Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York, who said Loeb’s resolution was “divisive and subject to massive misin­ terpretation.” An amendment to the national priorities specifying resolution which federal programs might be cut to give more aid to cities was adopted 71 to 45 over the opposition of Seibels and Loeb, among others. Watson Removal May Take Longer A ssociated P r e ss L e n g t h y e x t r a d i t i o n proceedings kept have that Charles Watson from joining four other defendants in the Sharon Tate murder trial may stretch out even longer. Bill Boyd, Watson’s lawyer, said in Austin Wednesday he is considering a federal appeal if the state he finally courts. loses in Boyd spoke with newsmen after pleading before the Court of Criminal Appeals that it change its May 6 decision upholding Wat­ son’s extradition to California. Both Gov. Preston Smith and a McKinney-area judge had ap­ proved extradition. Watson, in jail at McKinney, is one of six persons charged with murder in the bizarre slayings of actress Tate and six other per­ sons in Los Angeles. DRIVE A LITTLE — SAVE A LOT I 4 ct, 1 /3 ct 1 /2 ct 3 4 ct I ct 31.50 41 OO 125 OO 225,00 275 OO CAPITOL D IA M O N D SHOP 603 Commodore P e n , hotel AUSTIN 476-0178 SUMMER News Capsules _______ By The Associated Press_____ Communist Ring Tightening Around City PHNOM PENH, Cambodia Enemy troops continued tightening their ring around jit­ tery Phnom Penh on Wednesday, after seizing two trains and capturing another provincial capital. Rumors swept the capital that terrorists would strike here Thursday apparently to mark the day three months ago that Prince Norodom Sihanouk was ousted as Cam­ bodia’s chief of state. Tension increased when a grenade exploded in the capital Wednesday, seriously wounding two women. Cambodian officers said it was an American-made grenade accidentally fired by a soldier, but one youth insisted that he saw it tossed from a speeding car. Hussein Blames Strife on Foreign Origins King Hussein Wednesday blamed Jordan’s AMMAN, Jordan foreign “enemies” for last week’s bloody fighting between Jor­ danian troops and Arab guerillas. He said the situation was now calm but Jordan still faces a period of crisis. “The chisis had a foreign origin — of that there can be no doubt,” Hussein said. “We are firmly convinced that it was not an accident. “We hope to determine who was really responsible. We think there will be a long list of people who were respon­ sible, willingly or unwillingly.” The king did not publicly endorse guerilla charges that the week of bloodshed was the work of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Senate Refuses Sending of Planes to Thailand WASHINGTON The Senate rejected Wednesday a proposal by Sen. Strom Thurmond R.S.c., to permit “Freedom Fighter” jet planes to be sent to Thailand. The 45 to 36 vote confirmed the action of the Foreign Relations Committee in limiting sales of the plane to coun­ tries included in the Military Assistance Program — such as South Korea, Formosa and South Vietnam. But Thailand could still get the planes if the U. S. aid program to that country were taken out of the defense budget where it wasput several years ago, and restored to the Military Assistance Program. President Increases O il Import Quotas WASHINGTON President Richard M. Nixon boosted oil import quotas Wednesday to permit entry of 40,000 barrels of heating oil a day for New England and the East Coast. The crude oil quota was increased by 100,000 barrels a day. The crude import Increase applies to all sections of the country east of the Rockies. In a proclamation, Nixon specified that the additional heating oil destined for New England and the East Coast must come from Western Hemisphere sources. Market Falls Following Nixon Speech NEW YORK The market closed off Wednesday after seesawing down­ ward, following President Richard M. Nixon’s noontime economic address. The market had been up almost 6 points earlier in the day after Tuesday’s dramatic 18-point rally. But prices began their downward drift shortly before the President’s address. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed off 1.58 i t 704.68. Trading was relatively light. Analysts* reaction to the President’s speech was generally neutral. Previously they had attributed Tuesday’s rally to investor hope the President would offer encouragement about curbing inflation. Spy Plane, Tanker Collide in Mid-Air EL PASO The two-man crew of an Air Force plane, which crashed after colliding in mid-air with another, ejected safely Wednesday. They were taken by helicopter to William Beaumont Gen­ eral Hospital in El Paso. The air collision involved an SR-71 reconnaissance plane and a KC135 tanker. The tanker was not seriously damaged, but the smaller aircraft crashed in the area between U.S. Highways 62 and 180. The SR71 was on a training flight from California. It had just finished refueling from the tanker aircraft, prior to the accident. Dorrtos — Minus Eckhardt — Support Benison AUSTIN AU but one of Texas’ 20 Democratic congressmen an­ nounced Wednesday their support of Lloyd Bentsen Jr., Democratic nominee for the Senate. Bentsen’s news release gave no explanation why Rep. Bob Eckhardt, D-Tex., Houston, was not with the 19 con­ gressmen signing a letter of support to Bentsen. The other three members of the Texas congressional lelegation are Republicans supporting Rep. George Bush, RrTex., Houston, the GOP nominee for the Senate seat how held by Sen. Ralph Yarborough, D-Tex. Bentsen said the letter by the congressmen “emphasizes the value of having a Democratic senator who works with these men for the benefit of their districts, our state and the nation. It is important that Texas have a senator who can work with the majority of the Texas delegation as these congressmen apparently think I can.” IN K A M O S, STEREOS, TAPE RECORDERS, I SPEAKERS, RECORD PLAYERS, TV’s, etc.! ll for H O M E , C AR. BOAT, TRAILER HO USE I • !» •'Track Tape, Head Phonal, Catch Cord ■ I Batteries, Needles, Recording Tape, Microphone!, •Mb St. RADIO DWAY Ph.: 478-6609 lh® SUMMER TEXAN 'Us!n9'- sPea|<3r's office Prop in Growth Voloshen Pleads Listed for State Guilty in Court C of C Head Blasts Methods of Census A sso cia ted P r e ss The 1970 census count for Tex­ as, 10,986,293, indicating a slow­ down in state growth, came as a “profound disappointment” to the state Chamber of Commerce Wednesday. It fell below even the U. S. Census Bureau’s minimum ex­ pectations and was more than a million shy of what Chamber of Commerce men had expected. The preliminary figure means a rate of population growth of 14.7 percent, down from 1960’s growth rate of 24.2 percent. Not since 1940 has the state growth rate dipped below 20 percent. The head of the Texas Chamber of Commerce, Quentin Abernathy said he was of Gladewater, profoundly a n d “thoroughly disappointed” with the new figure. “I think we have more than 12 million people in Texas, and I am dissatisfied with the manner in which the census was taken. If you’re going to count people you have to talk to the head of the household — you have to count the people.” He said census workers this year relied too much on the mails and the telephone. Abernathy’s tone was like that of most regional and city cham­ bers of commerce figures who have joined in a chorus of com­ plaint the preliminary counts started rolling in weeks ago. since The 78-year-old Massachusetts Democrat was not accused of any involvement influence in peddling. McCormack has an­ nounced he is retiring at the end of the year, after 42 years in the House. the As the joint trial of Sweig and Voloshen was about to get under way, federal Judge Marvin E. Frankel announced that the 71- year-old lobbyist on Monday ex­ pressed a desire to plead guilty to conspiracy and three counts of perjury, stemming from at­ tempts to cover up the influence peddling in grand jury testimony. Voloshen suffers from a heart ailment, and Frankel said health was a factor in the defendant’s desire to avoid a lengthy trial. The judge said he since had satisfied himself that Voloshen’s un­ w a s derstanding guilty plea.” intelligent, “an Voloshen’s sentencing was put off until Sept. 17, and he was continued free on $50,000 bail. Frankel then turned to the task of picking a jury to try Sweig. fee Voloshen was accused by the government of secretly collecting from Parvin- a $50,000 Dohrmann Co. in a vain effort to head off a six-day suspension of the firm’s trading privileges on the American Stock Exchange, a penalty imposed for misleading press releases. ISum m er Sale! 30% ■OFF O N ALL SPRING & SUMMER M E R C H A N D IS E • 350 Hancock Center # In San Antonio V. $ • "On-The Drag" 2272 Guadalupe O PEN ’TIL 9 P.M. M O N .- THURS.-FRI. Ii W e Welcome MASTER CHARGE and BANKAMER1CARD British Races End P M Candidates Hit Economic Issue LONDON - Britain’s (AP) previously quiet election cam­ paign came to an end on a fu­ rious note Wednesday night, with Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s Labor Party attacking the leader of the Conservatives, Edward Heath. Wilson’s party hit back at Heath’s contention that another Laborite victory in the races for Parliament would bring another devaluation nation’s currency, the pound sterling. the of But Heath, in a final thrust for power, stood by his claim a l t h o u g h he injected new qualifications into it. The place Thursday with 40 million Britons election takes — including 2.8 million 18-to-20- year-olds — qualified to vote for the 630 members of the House of Commons. About 30 to 32 million Britons are expected to vote — more than have ever cast ballots in a British election before. The state of the nation’s econ­ omy has overshadowed all other campaign issues with Heath challenging the boasts of Wilson’s men that Britain is strong again after five and a half years of Labor rule and able to resume an influential world role. “If the country were to return the Labor Party with the same policies, the same people would be making the same mistakes with the same results,” Heath told newsmen. “There would be more taxation, a wage freeze, higher prices, more strikes leading eventually to devaluation of the pound at home and abroad.” Wilson, 54, and Heath, 53, rose from humble origins through state schools and scholarships that took them to Oxford and to the leadership of their parties for the last seven years. Every opinion poll in the last IO days has made Wilson a firm favorite to win —• and if he does he will be breaking a record. 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Agency Services Provided EVERYTHING NEEDED FOR PROFES SIONAL CAREERS - Male or Female BARBARA LYNN STUDIOS *■-* mr rn sis# fkfP >1 Si rn 452-9711 A Open Meeting Law Tested Commissioners in Dallas Charged By G O D FR EY ANDERSON Associated Press A bid to test a 1967 Texas State law requiring government bodies to hold their meetings in public has blown into a row in which a is threatening a county judge with arrest to get him to his court. the peace justice of The Texas Open Meetings Act, passed by the Legislature in 1967, requires all government bodies from the precinct to the state to hold public meetings, except when hiring and firing personnel or dealing with real estate or security matters. Since 1%9, when it was amended, these bodies must give three days advance notice of when and where they will sit, plus a brief agenda of business. This is filed with the secretary of state and posted in the Capitol in the case of state-wide agen­ cies. Sim ilar notice of local meetings is filed and displayed in the 254 county courthouses and in city halls throughout Texas. Tho only point not yet tested at law is: Just what constitutes an illegal closed meeting? Citizen’s Complaint Filed Mike Ritchey, a newsman at KERA-TV, the Dallas local edu­ cational television station, filed a citizen’s complaint in th * court of Justice of the Peace Robert Cole, accusing County Judge Lew Sterrett and four Dallas the County commissioners cf holding an last illegal closed meeting June S. It is believed complaints county welfare agaiast the d e p a r t m e n t were under discussion. Cole mailed a letter to the five county officials Tuesday, telling them of the charges and ordering them to appear in bis court to plead guilty or not guilty. Lie sent the letter instead of a warrant, he explained, “ as a courtesy” to those concerned. Sterrett reacted angrily. He said he had no intention of replying to Cole’s letter and in­ vited the sheriff’s office to issue a warrant for his arrest. Sterrett Said Complaint Serious Sterrett denied he was trying to ii.se his position to force the J P court to drop the charges. Instead, he said, he wanted to show how serious the complaints really are. “ There may he a lot of red faces when the public finds out who is behind all this,” he said. He did not amplify h's remark. “ If he wants to prove he’s too big to listen to these charges, that’s fine with me,” retorted Cole. “ But you can be sure he’ll be arrested and if he doesn’t respond to my letter with­ in the IO days allotted time.” jailed Cole said if Sterrett and County Commissioners Jim Tyson, John Whittington, Denver Seale and Mel Price plead not guilty, he would set a trial in his court for later this month or early July. If the county judge and the commissioners draw the maxi­ mum penalty for violating the act, thev could each be fined $200. Man in the middle is Dist. Atty. Henry Wade, who theoretically could bp both prosecutor and defending attorney in the c&>c, should it ever come to court. M o d e l C itie s Tops C ity C ou n cil Slate The Austin City Council will hear a report Thursday on the Model Cities Program from City Manager Lynn Andrews, hear Poverty Study Grant Awarded The economies department re­ ceived a $75,000 federal grant last of week for E c o n o m i c research on rural poverty. die Office ftpportumty from The project, headed by Dr. Ray Marshall, professor of economics, the is to concern relationship between poverty and the labor market of the rural poor. itself with According to Robert Chavez, the public affairs director of regional GEO, “ it will con­ centrate on economic develop­ ment and job creation, education, manpower, health, welfare and discrimination.” Tlte objectives set for the research grant include deter­ mining current data on poverty problems and evaluating studies already made to make recom­ mendations to reduce rural poverty. for programs residents speak on Shoal Creek erosion problems, and discuss a new school sidewalk program. Tony Ojeda, acting director of the Model Cities Program, said the City manager would probably the programs accepted discuss and the conditions under which these programs were approved. W. W . Newcomb Jr., spokesman for a group of Shoal Creek home-owners, w ill speak on erosion problems between the White Rock Street and Shoal C r e e k bridges. Boulevard Newcomb said trees have been toppled over and utility poles are next. “ Our group wants to see Shoal Creek developed as a creek, not as a drainage ditch,” he said. The school sidewalk program will consist of approximately 14 ! miles of sidewalk constructed around 17 schools. The amount appropriated for this project Is $200,000. The council will consider r e c o m m e n d e d priorities for schools and discuss bids on the project. Other actions will be considera­ tion of street improvements along with annexation discussions. (ming and WOMEN'S SHOE SALE! S A V E UP T O 1/3 N O W ! were to *16.95 NOW: s990 & MO90 (entire stock not included) O n the Drag — 2348 Guadalupe F a th e r’ s Bay: Don't let him down. Don't bring the old man down. Don't let yourself wake up Sunday morning, remember that it s the big day and you haven't gotten him anything, and then try to figure out w h a t you're going to do before he wakes up. Avoid it. Make it across to the Co-Op. G e t h i rn something today. A wrist watch, clothes from the Toggery, a stereo al­ bum, a novel, a poster, some incense — where ever he's at, we've got something for him. T h e C o -O p , fo r student pro blem s like Father's D ay U N I V E R I I t iy c o r n T H E S T U D E N T S O W N S T O R E (J) S O N Y S O U N D Jim Lehrer, news director at the K E R A station, said there was nothing sinister behind Rrichey’s move. “ It is not our position that these guys did anything mali­ cious,” he said of Sterrett and the commissioners. “ But the law has never been fully tested as to just what is an illegal meeting urrier this law. Let’s test it and find out.” Texas Atty. Gen. Crawford Martin held in 1967 that thp law does not require county commis­ sioners’ courts to permit live broadcast of their meetings, nor taped recordings to be played later. But his opinion has yet, to be tested in court. The law also Is being tesred before the 4th Court of Civil Ap­ peals in San Antonio in a case involving annexation of th? tiny West Texas school district of Toyah by the nearby Pecos-- Barstow Consolidated District. The Toyah district is appealing a lower court decision, main­ taining that the annexation order I is illegal on the ground that the J decision was reached at a private ; meeting that deliberately barred : the public. Pecos maintained j Toyah was given no opportunity ? of arguing its rase against an­ nexation to the trustees before they voted on it in private. Reaction to Nixon: 'Ifs Got to Work’ B y CYN DF TA YLO R T p v a n S t a f f W r i t e r A u s t i n spokesmen from the stock labor and hanking, market offered varied reactions Wednesday to President Richard M. Nixon’s economic address. Owen Revel!, a representative a firm, said he saw for Good body brokerage “ nothing new” in the speech. and Co., He said reaction in the stock market after the speech was unimpressive either way aud contended that the 18-point jump in stocks Tuesday might have been over-reaction in anticipation of Nixon’s report. Revell did conclude that the speech w ill have definite long range effects. “ This is the only program we have so it’s got to work,” he said. A FlrC IO Studying Speech Roy R. Evans, secretary of the Texas AFL-CIO, said he was still studying the speech, but did offer some first-hand impressions. “ I ’m glad he's (Nixon) gotten concerned with inflation.” Evans said. “ I^abor hopes he thinks a little more about the folks who put him in office rather than those who opposed him.” for Evans did not expect complete compliance with the President’s voluntary wage request controls. “ Where increases are justified, we are going to be asking them,” he said. However Evans added that he thought the address might make management and labor study terms of agreement more closely on the basis of productivity. for Projecting effects of the speech to the state, Evans said, ‘‘In Texas, a number of workers are still working for way below the national average. We would still be for raising their wage level.” Howard Chalmars, public in­ formation officer of the Capital National Bank, said the measures outlined in the address would have little direct effect on Austin banking. “ Banking is something that follows, rather than takes leads,” Chalmars said. if feel “ The only way banking w ill be affected,” Chalmars continued, “ is the economists economy is on the upswing, and a recession can be avoided while excessive inflation is controlled. Then perhaps following the lead of eastern banks, we could lower our loan and discount rates,” he said. Bus Route Five Closed Until Fall Ben Brooks, chairman of the Faculty-Student S h u t t l e Bus Committee, said Wednesday that shuttle bus Route 5 will not be reopened for the summer. The committee originally had reopening Route 5 considered because of student demand but decided that lack of funds would restrict them. Routes I, 3, and 5 have been discontinued for the summer. “ We’d like to reopen Route 5.” Brooks said, ‘‘but we just don’t have enough money. This is the first year we’ve had the shuttle buses, and we didn't anticipate this much demand.” Brooks said all the remaining routes except Route 8 remain unchanged. “ In the fall all eight routes will be running again with additional buses,” he added. Stereo records. FM stereo. FM/AM broadcasting. Sony’s" solid state stereo with matched twin speakers gives you them all. In one compact package you have a complete home music system. Compact? The HP-188, SS-188 is light and small enough to fit just about anywhere in your home. And on Sony’s 3-piece system, violins sound like violins, drums like drums, sopranos like sopranos. With all silicon transistors, the amplifier drives clear, natural sound through Sony's two-way speakers. 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The Texas Student Publications Board of Directors considered April 21 the fate of the Ranger, whose circulation has dropped miserably in recent years. The board decided by m ajority vote to continue publishing the general interest magazine, but as a monthly supplement to The Daily Texan. This would increase Ranger circulation to 28,000, that of The Texan. AFTER A SOMEWHAT heated discussion, the board voted to place the Ranger editor under the supervision of the Ranger Advisory Commitee, made up of TSP board members. failed An alternative to pass, recommendation, which was to make the Ranger editor responsible to The Texan editor, as are the news editor, sports editor, and so forth. This would have placed the Ranger under the supervision of The Texan editorial manager, a professional news man who reads all c opy prior to publication. The editorial m anager provides a check against libelous stories, style errors and the like. But this faileed, and the TSP board sent its proposal through the University hierarchy for approval. President Norman Hackerman and President Ad Interim Bryce Jordan both ap­ proved the TSP action, except for Hie crucial question —who controls the Ranger? H ackerm an and Jordan recommended that LeMaistre send this portion back to TSP for reconsideration and send the remainder of the Ranger overhaul proposal to the regents for final approval. LE MAISTRE, HOWEVER, is sending the whole mess back to TSP. with .the information that-the regents will not approve any change in the Ranger distribution unless the Ranger editor is placed under control of the Texan editor and the editorial manager. This decision raises two key questions. First, why should the TSP board even exist if its actions are meaningless? Why not let the regents make the decisions directly? It would be much more efficient. The second and more important question concerns free spceoh on the Austin campus, a more fundamental issue than the existence of the TSP board. IF THE REGENTS approved tho TSP action, the views and opinions of the Ranger editor would reach 28,000 students, where before his editorials had reached only 2,800. The regents apparently consider a circulation of 2,800 har­ mless. But expand that to 28,000 and the regents start to worry. With an autonomous Ranger editor, another viewpoint could be heard by the majority of University students. But with a Ranger editor controlled by The Texan editor, only one opinion line — that of the Texan editor — would be allowed to reach the campus community. It is obvious that the regents don’t want another viewpoint aired at the University. They forced The Rag off campus, and it now looks as if the Ranger will lose its independent voice, leaving Hie Texan a monopoly opinion source. DAVID MINCBERG, a student m em ber of the TSP board, said shortly after the April meeting that “ the R anger should be autonomous. The editor of the Ranger should not be respon­ sible to the whims, wishes and fantasies of The Texan editor.” By its action, the TSP board considered the subliminal ion of the Ranger editor to The Texan editor an act of censorship and therefore made his voice independent of The Texan. ANY REVERSAL of this action by the regents, which essen­ tially has taken place since the board refused to review the Ranger proposal without a change, is suppression of free speech and free press. The regents should approve an independent Ranger editor, as did the TSP board and should not remove another commodity from the free marketplace of ideas. JOHN WATKINS Texan Managing Editor T h e S u m m e r T e x a n Student N ew spaper at UT-Austin EDITOR .....................................................................Andy Yemma MANAGING EDITOR ................................................ John Watkins ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R ............... ....L y k e Thompson ASSISTANT TO THE E D IT O R ..................... Dave Helfert SPORTS EDITOR ............................. Richard Lynch AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ........ Don McKinney Issue News E d itor ......................................... H. Clifton Avery III News Assistants.............. Martin Crutsinger, Sara Lowrey, Connie Smith Wire Editor .................................. Jeff Newman Copy Skhtors ........ Pennie Freeland, Middy Randerson those of Opinions expressed in The Summer Texan are those of the editor or of the writer of the article and are not the University necessarily administration or the Board of Regents. The stammer Texan, a student news- paper at the University of Texas at j m a i It published by Texas Student Publications, Inc., Drawer D., Univer- Station, Austin. Texas. 78712. The ilfiM ie r Texan is published Tuesday, and Friday except hoi id ay • | June through August. Sec-on ti - ■ Mews contributions will be accepted tar telephone (471-5244), at the editorial paid at Austin. fit or the (J.P .103), office news laboratory (J.B. 102). Inquiries concern­ ing in the delivery should be made J, B. 107 (471-5244) and advertising in J. B. H I 1471-3227). The Texan The national advertising represent­ ative of The Summ er Texan is National Educational Advertising Service, 3B0 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y., 10017. to The Associated P rest and The New York Times News Service. The Texan is a m em ber of the Associated Collegiate Press, The Southwest Journalism Con­ fluence and the Texas Daily Newspaper Association. subscribes iy, June 18, 1970 THE S U M M E R TEXAN v-l \..Er, clam p...No, er, sutures...No, er, swab...Er, no, er, wage-price freeze...Er, no, er...f Critics tired of liberal trash taking place Many newspapers have come under fire in the last few months from Vice-President the more Spiro Agnew' for emphasizing sensational events the in world. This attitude has filtered down to the local level as well. The Texan has received several letters from citizens can­ celling they disagree with The Texan’s news judgment or editorial stance. their subscriptions because ON THE FIRST count, we have been accused of printing only “liberal trash” which tears down and destroys “our once beloved University.” According to one-jour­ nalism critic, The Texan publicizes only those “ultra-liberal teachers w’ho live in such a dream world that they could not possibly make it in any other than the academic field.” We should, according to another critic, print more about intramural athletics and the activities of normal, everyday students, making The Texan more “fun” to read. While we may be missing the boat by not making The Texan more fun to read, we don't feel that to be the purpose of any newspaper. For those who merely want to be entertained, The Texan runs the Peanuts column and a crossword puzzle in each issue. If that isn’t enough, the Sunday funnies in other newspapers should provide endless hours of fun and frolic. Television also has several programs which will be of interest to these readers. They can be seen any Saturday morning. These critics contend The is shirking its responsibility to the student the rabble- body by giving attention the rousers. They apparently students would rather read stories about to feel ’Iexan that Dave Helfert normal, everyday events, but such is not, by definition, real news, lf newspapers printed only the mundane, totally-unsensa- tional stories, these same people would probably quit reading them. in criticism of THE SECOND area of disagreement is the editorial content of The Texan. Ac­ cording to these critics, we should not in­ dulge ourselves the ad­ ministration. “ It is my belief that if a student doesn’t like the rules and regula­ tions of the University, he should not enter in the first place — if already there, hp -should leave-and -make room- for- someone who wishes an education,” says one Texas­ es. love of school? Why, This Is a classic symptom of the “love it or leave it” syndrome. But why does the Great Silent Majority have this monopoly on love of country, and in this case, if someone wishes to see improvements or any change at all, cannot they, too, love their school? Why do they either have to accept it the revered leave? way forefathers of this country had succumbed to the Great Silent Majority of today would be still drinking tea instead of Pearl. the same attitude, is or the If it to A CAMPUS newspaper Is supposed be an opinion leader. The people who staff it are usually more aware of events and are more able to express opinions, because of their proximity to them and because it is their job to know or find cut what is happening. Where the average student might he aware of one important item, tile newspaper has a staff trying to cover all important occurences. This is, of course, an impossible task but it remains the goal The firing line of any newspaper. is So it seems the critics of The Texan news coverage and editorial policy want it to be a nice, quiet, innocuous campus paper, never making waves, just reporting the prettiest freshman girl and who which fraternity won the campus spitting contest. These are they would deplore in their own newspaper, but then w'e’re here to get educated and learn how to make it in society', not to disagree or ask why. things . 4r ★ ours. They have their opinion and we have ....................... _ ★ IN A BRIGHTER vein, Jimmy Ranks, long-time columnist for The Dallas Morning News, has quit the newspaper business to join Lloyd Bentsen’s campaign effort. For those not familiar with him, Banks wrote a scorching article after the antiwar maroh in May, blasting the students for burning cars and throwing Molotov Cocktail*. Banks, politically slightly to the right of Millard Fillmore, should be an invaluable asset to the Bentsen effort. He should also provide people with a keen insight into the attitude of the Democratic candidate. ★ ★ ★ IN LINE with the recent antiobscenity ordinance proposed by the City Council, Dist. Atty. Bob Smith spent an hour and a half watching dirty movies before having the theater closed. According to Smith, the movie offered nothing but genitalia. It would be wise, sdrox* Smith was ex­ posed to the obscenity while in the per­ formance of his duty, to have several councilmen act as bodyguards for the DA until the effects of the movie wear off. TA problem budgetary To the editor: Since I also am a taxpayer, father of two who have studied at Texas, a veteran, at various times a worker with Scouts and other young people's groups, I deeply with can Thomas G. Saunders, whose letter appeared in the June 12 issue. sympathize First, the m atter of TA’s really Is a serious problem. My ex­ perience in supervising TA’s has been fortunate, for I’ve had con­ scientious and capable young people to work with. I suspect that most TA’s are conscientious and capable. Only young people devoted to an academic career would wont tills kind of poor- paying Nevertheless, I am sure there are some unqualified and careless TA’s, and, as a teacher at the University, I deeply regret that Mr. Saunders’ daughter and her boy bad have teaching. but demanding friend had job. BUT, AS A teacher here, I know other aspects of the TA problem, a problem wliich supervisors, department chair­ men and deans, take very seriously. Just why there are so many TA’s is one aspect, for example, which would take too long to discuss fully, but pari of it can be suggested by the fact that we face a 10,000-student fall without a this increase corresponding the teaching budget. To meet such a crisis —- not too strong a word — many departments will have to depend more than ever on TA’s, the cheapest way to man classes. This is just a part of the far-reaching question of how large the University at Austin should become, just what kind of teaching we want for our students, vehat kind of support the increased numbers will get from the regents. When I read increase in about the meetings of the Board the newspapers of Regents in in­ source of (my primary formation, as is Mr. Saun­ it ders’), I wish I could find some record that this serious problem is getting its share of attention the kind of — disciplinary problems the ad­ ministration is quite capable of handling on its own. rather than Second, I, too, am concerned about tile election of the student body president, not because of who was elected but because of Hie small student interest Since there are eligibility rules and election officials — as well as the watchful eye of opponents, I assume that the election Mr. Saunders feels to have been a farce w'as in fact valid. Certainly f r o m there w'as no outcry s t u d e n t s election irregularities. Why this president chose to run or why students elected him, I do not know', but I do know that the great majority of the student body couldn’t have cared less. That concerns me because it is the crux of the ef­ fectiveness of democratic gov­ ernment on any level. It would be interesting to know how — or if — Mr. Saunders’ daughter and her boy friend voted, but the basic point is a different one: about Is an election — or other demo­ cratic action — invalid because only a small percent of the voters participate even though they are completely free to do so? I don’t believe so. We’d be out of business if it were. Then how do we get the majority, silent or not, to participate in its own affairs? CuiTent talk of the great silent majority overlooks the fact that it is an apathetic majority; it accepts rights and privileges but refuses to carry its respon­ sibilities; they are the people who watch murder in the street and do nothing. Isn’t it even the same group wliich allows a Hitler to come to power? is PERHAPS Mr. Saunders right and the students elected the wrong president, but at least some of them took the trouble to vote — and there’ll be another election next year. Perhaps the “ vocal minority” with its non­ conformist ways in some respects, but — historically — it’s die vocal minority that’s kept our civilization going, by raising issues and suggesting new solutions, when and different authorities the to keep to try “good old ways” long after they have proved ineffective. is wrong Roy E. Teele Professor, Department of Oriental and .African Language and Literature Regents’ Rule To the editor: raises The recent regents’ ruling on non-student attendance at student meetings the difficult question of who is responsible for enforcement. This could be the responsibility of the organization, the non-students in attendance or the University. If the organizations are respon­ sible, then it is necessary for the organization to carefully check the official University identifica­ tion of all those attending the meeting, exclude those students iden­ and non-students without tification, choose to remain and then assume police power to forcibly expel all other non-students for the remainder of the meeting. three the it then If the responsibility lies with is the the non-student, responsibility of each non-student to make sure if there are more than two other non-students, convene for an election and then a kind of non-student form vigilante committee of three to enforce justice. If the University holds the responsibility, then police must be stationed at the meeting en­ trances to check .student iden­ tification and choose three non­ students — something that would require a considerable enlarge­ ment of the campus police force. in Any difficulties the en­ forcement of this ruling must be weighed against tile benefits. As in Regent Joe Kilgore noted regard to the ruling, “We are motivated by an effort to keep free speech unencumbered.” Roger Baker Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: • Be typed triple-spaced. • Be less than 250 words. • Include name, address, and phone number of contri­ butor. Mail letters to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Texas; or bring letters to the Texan offices, Journalism Building 103. Guest viewpoint—■—i» Milder view of new rule By DEAN BANKS rill) Candidate In History Frank Erwin has started revving his powerful administrative engine again, and he’s beginning to choke many of us moderates in the exhaust. Trying sincerely to be a George Washington of his University System, inadvertently he begins to assume the guise of an Alexander Hamilton. It’s an unfortunate situation, not a constructive one. If s unfortunate mostly because Mr. Erwin does what he feels is best for the University. Clearly, he strives to preserve it as an educational institution instead of allowing it to become a headstrong, self- appointed tsar of public reformation. The chairman of the Board of Regents feels as many of us do: to the extent that the University involves itself in direct social and political activism, it discredits itself as an educational institution and forfeits its academic freedom. That issue can be debated; but there is no reason to think the public cannot, or will not, extend con­ to trols over an institution sacrifice to non- academic academic convictions. that begins functions the hellish CHAIRMAN Erwin sits between public and University, with job of shielding the school from fluctuations in public opinion while assuring that the public has no just cause for reacting to all those provoking happenings on campus. No doubt he has at times kept both the University and the public from boing their own worst enemies. little With the latest ruling on the use of Indoor facilities by student organizations, however, Mr. Erwin tramples upon the educational freedom he tries so hard to preserve. Two freedoms already cling to his heels. Th# first needs academic comment: the right of legitimate student freedom, groups to discuss ideas and issues with whomever they wish. Tile new ruling, as those amended organizations academic freedom indoors cst campus if more than three "outsiders'' are to he in a meeting or group program. last Saturday, denies included The effect of the ruling, on academic freedom, is perhaps clearest when phrased like this: “ We are allowing you students to invite up to three outsiders to your ac­ tivities; but w’e are not n striding your educational programming.** limitations upon As long as tec intent is educational, the methods peaceful and the Rodents legiti­ mately organized, there should be ionised student meetings. no Mishaps will occur, as they do in every area of life anywhere. But they should be dealt with after the fact. The rule of “deer and present danger” as justification for to pro­ prior-suppression, hardly applies grams from all appearances academic; certainly that rule doesn’t fit the the workshop of the Young Socialist Alliance, which poses a threat only to the political beliefs of some ad­ the public and ministrators. “ emergency” stemming that arc from THE SECOND kind of free lorn suppres­ sed by the nil mg relates closely to the first. It is generally accepted today that faculties and students of universities have a voice in important decisions affecting academic m atters within their institutions. Boards of regents retain authority to make final decisions, after affording opportunity for consideration of issues by faculties and .student bodies and after seriously weighing the opinions and interests of those groups. Mr. Erwin’* board gave no such oppor­ tunity. As bad as the decision w’as, itself, the decision-making process ranks even worse. A FEW STI DENT leaders did appeal to the board last Saturday, when it met to amend its original ruling. I was there as young men and women finally w’ere summoned into tfie chamber in the Main Building, after waiting around until late afternoon. As regents sat around the large hardwood table, with the chairman at on# end facing the students, youthful voice* spoke. The chairman of tho board, however, seemed much more intent upon rebutting the students’ points than in allowing them the dignity of communicating. Once, while a girl spoke, the chairman stirred in his rhair and loudly crushed a sheet of paper In his palms. His appearance, unmistak­ ably, was that of an annoyed and impatient man. Along with the sheet of paper, Mr. Erwin crushed a bit of my moderate in­ clination. More of it withered as he merci­ lessly employed vast knowledge and skill in telling the students how fallacious their arguments were, He mowed them down. SOME MIGHT have regarded Erwin’* actions at the meeting as ar instructive or sobering exercise for the students. To this 35-year-old man, it appeared dif­ ferently. I saw the arbitrariness of power its best and understanding and com­ at munication at their worst. From haste and too-limited counsel com* bad decisions, bad rule* and regulations. Are the Board of Regents still receptive to pleas for moderation of the recent ruling? Or do they consider the issue closed? If the then reason and moderation are shut off. As a seemingly incurable moderate, I choose to believe tilt regents still are reasonable men, capable of dialogue, discussion and reconsideration. One thing is certain: in the near future the regents will validate that faith or smash it even more. latter, More firing line Wieker Legislating to end ithe war Self-righteous, mature hero versus dirty nothin's at UT To the editor: sorry teachers, . . . and on Friday, we were confronted with a member of the “silent majority,” who I daresay could easily be one of the most narrow-minded, pompous speci- ments of human life. He, taking the “objective” view that so many people with their heads in that the sand do, rationalized because two “so-called TA’s were plain short­ changing those who paid hard­ earned money,” all TA’s must be so. Well, I’ve definitely had my share of TA’s, from music, drama, languages, government and English and out of this multi­ tude, only one was really rotten. Most of these TA's had a type of spontaneous vitality that made me even w'ork harder. In fact, some of my most brilliant and stimulating teachers were those who caused “downright malicious dereliction of duty” to your daughter! Strange! As a taxpayer, you should first see if some of the rules are fair, before you argue with those fighting them. You gave no examples or facts, so may I say, that and ridiculous efforts to “reform our troubled youth.” But, even you are biased some PC A M I S will not quench my enthusiasm, I don’t want my above all, children to face a life of greater stench than is here already! When did you “make your place among men?” Are you now “mature?” Who are you, Thomas Saunders, your titles say nothing, only that you used to be some­ thing, but what are you now? Lots of people are taxpayers, parents and ex-students, but is that all you are? What’s on the inside? I suppose you think it is fine to spend millions of the “hard­ earned” money on a stadium, while our music library, theatre departments, art departments, opera departments, etc., need it desperately for basic survival? To tell the truth. I’m here for an education, not a damn football stadium! Sure, we can learn a “lesson,” which is if we don’t get people motivated, we’re going to be a field, with nice big “mature duties and responsi­ bilities,” like “planting” Astro- Turf and scrubbing benches. I don’t wrant my parents, my friends, and my money spent on such irrelevent “projects.” intelligent football some Sure, Mr. Saunders, you can cut us down, but you’d better look at yourself. Don’t criticize what you can’t understand, “take a lesson from history and think about it.” Yep, before you criticize us, take a look in the mirror sometimes, that is . . . if you have the courage. Cynthia Kamstadt, Shame To the editor: It’s too bad the brilliant University students couldn’t have spent the $1,500 they wasted on Abbie Hoffman for the good of the CUF and the hungry children of East Austin. Charles Depwee Free speech To the editor: in Organizations who believe free speech met Monday night, not only to discuss what has hap­ pened to YSA and the legal case, but also how we can best involve the student body. Already the Students’ Association plans to sponsor a meeting of the student body on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. on the Main Mall. The time was decided on in an attempt to acco­ modate more students who might not wish to interrupt classes but who believe in free speech. This meeting should be at­ tended by even those disagreeing since by the Constitution, they are also part of the Students’ Association. Let’s show Frank Erwin that while he is against certain “isms,” we are against Er- winism. Larry Owens P 0. Box 7753 Proud of Texan To the editor: I wish, at thifi time, to com­ pliment the staff for publishing an exceptional college newspaper. The Texan is far superior to the throwaway w'hich is the Arizona school paper. As a Texas ex, I am very proud of The Texan (and my alma mater), for the paper is the envy of most of the students here who have seen it, and they just cannot believe a college paper could be so large and with such a fine editorial page. Keep up the good work. Jim Sheffield Class of ’fix P F A N C T S RATS/1 CANT STAND LOS;MS AL-THE TIME/. I USED TO COME H O M E A N D HURL MV SLOVE INTO Tic CLOSET.. ■z-/t 31, 1970. It further specifies that all American armed forces would be withdrawn from Vietnam by June 30, 1971, unless Congress granted an extension. Those who want to reshape this proposal plan to eliminate its Dec. 31, 1970, stage and seize instead — as they did in the Church-Cooper amendment — upon Nixon's own pledge to with­ draw another 150.000 men by April, 1971 (Secretary Laird has specified May I, 1971, and said he hoped to beat even that dead­ line). Tile idea is to legislate the pledged deadline, again under the congressional power to support armies, and to provide that Congress woold have to give specific authorization for more than 284.000 troops (the prospective remainder if 150.000 are withdrawn) to be in Vietnam after the pledged date. FOR THE final stage of the McGovern amendment — im­ posing total withdrawal by June 30, 1971 — the rewritten version probably would substitute the datp of Dec. 31, 1971, this time providing that if any American troops remain in Vietnam after specific congressional that, Nixon would have authorization for their support. to seek The object of this is plain — It would put the burden of proof on the President to show why he could not keep his pledge to withdraw' 150.000 men by next spring, if it develops that he cannot, or to show why he could not complete troop with­ drawal by the end of 1971, if that proves to be the case. Such action seems clearly within the constitutional powers of Con­ gress, yet it wrould not inflexibly bind Nixon no matter what circumstances might develop. THIS WOULD be less an invasion of the President’s true prerogatives than an effort, through almost atrophied con­ gressional powers, to halt the trend toward unchecked and imbalanced dictation of foreign policy by the executive and its bureaucracy. In fact, the amendment would include language to align it as closely as possible with Nixon’s own pledges to withdraw all American troops as soon as practicable, and its real purpose would bo to give those pledges legal effect This approach obviously would be designed for maximum appeal to moderate Senators and to the more hawkish House of Representatives. And a Republican President might reflect that if a Democratic Congress should legislate an end to the war, the responsibility would at least be shared — as would any further political backlash W ll YA RIN SS And AMERICAN AIRLINES C o ngratu la te 9 7 0 S W IM -S IR L W IN N E R Miss Kay Dirks Have fun in Acapulco! WASHINGTON — The Senate’s rejection, 52 to 47, of an at­ tempt backed by President Nixon to water down the Church- Cooper amendment assures Senate passage of that legislation, which would halt any form of American participation in the war in Cambodia after June 30. And that means one more step has been taken to restore some bajan ce between congressional authority and that of the commander in chief of the armed forces. the so-called The first was require the President “national commitments resolution,” which purported to ask con­ gressional approval before making any further national commitments around the world; but in actual practice, it could have little effect on thp presidency. Not so the by passed rider next to Congress and even accepted by Nixon; it B Laos-Thailand _ _ _ prohibits use of any appropriated funds to support American combat forces rn those two countries. Based on Congress’ constitutional power to ra is e and support armies,” the Laos-Thailand action placed a geographical limit on the Southeast Asia theater of operations. Based on the same pow'er, the Chureh-Cooper amendment will place a time limit on American activity in Cambodia — the same time limit al­ ready pledged by Nixon for pulling out American troops, al­ though the amendment goes further and prohibits air operations, the presence of support for troops of other countries, or American advisers with allied troops. BY ACCEPTING Nixon’s June 30 date, and by including language disavowing any intent to limit the President s essential powders as commander in chief, the Senate has sought to make the Church-Cooper amendment as constitutional, as inoffensive to the President, and as practical in its substantive effect as possible. That approach is considered a major reason why such centrist senators as Jackson of Washington, Mrs. Smith of Maine, Pastore of Rhode Island, and even one southern con­ servative, Jordan of North Carolina, supported the Church- Cooper amendment. These successes ought to facilitate others, so the same mod­ erate approach to strong action is going to be tested on the longest step of all — the McGovern-Hatfield “amendment to end the war.” A group of senators, not all of w'hom are iden­ tified doves, backed by some non-concessional figures with experience in national security, are hoping to reshape the amendment for inclusion in the defense appropriations bill this summer. THEY EVEN plan to take the rewritten amendment before the defense appropriations subcommittee for a forma] hearing — which the Church-Cooper amendment never had. Although it is noeave Pitchers Street and Larry Hardy, shortstop Lou Bagwell, second baseman Pat Amos, center fielder Jack Miller, and right fielder David Hall ended their careers Wednesday night. BRAND NEW! T R A V I S HOUSE A P A R T M E N T S (OFF RIVERSIDE DRIVE IN TOWN LAKE AREA) N O W ACCEPTING SU M M ER A N D FALL LEASES # Shuttle Bus Service to University # Swimming Pool # Party Room & Bar # All Electric Kitchen # Dishwasher and Disposal # Adequate Parking & Spacious C ourtyards # Free Cable T.V. # Monthly Beer Bust by Management D A T C C — * For Ful,y Furn ll A I C t ) A ll Bills Pa 'shed id 2 BR • Vk Bath -’195. 2 BR - 2 Bath • ‘210. 1400 R O Y A L C R E ST ORIVE (Just O ff Riverside) — 442-9720 Catcher Tommy Harmon, a first round draft pick by the Kansas City Royals, might forego his a to fourth professional contract. season sign It was a frustrating end for the seniors and for the rest of the squad. There is no joy in Austin. . . . L IN E SCO R E OOO 020 OOO-- J T e x a s 121 OOO BOX— l l 12 O F S I I S t r e e t . R o t h e (1 ). S a l a z a r <7). H a r d y ( " ) a n d H o r n e <81 a n d H a r m o n : A m ­ m a n n a n d S a f e l i g h t . K e i t h ( 9 ) . W — A m m a n n ( 1 5 - 0 ) . L - S t r e e t ( 8 - 2 ) . T S Mini-Cops Help Open By WILL GRIMSLEY (AP) CHASKA, Minn - No trouble is anticipated at the U. S. Open Golf Championship here it should this weekend but come, it might be a pleasure to get arrested. if You ought to see the cops. They wear m ascara instead of guns. They have blonde pig-tails falling shoulders or brunette page-boy bobs. They w’ear blue nylons and skirts three inches above the knee. their to They are the Bums guardettes — a mini-skirt patrol assigned for the services at Hazeltine National Golf Club. security “ We are striving for the fresh, young look. Many people — espe­ cially the youth — find the uni­ formed cops, some of them dour and imposing with revolvers at their hips, objectionable. T h e Sum m er T e x a n Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes SHEEP SKIN SALE Ar RUGS M a n y _______ Beautiful C o lo rs_______ ★ LEATHER SALE Various kinds, colors — 50c nor foot BankAmericmi Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas S S 478-9309 GOOD PUCE to... f e l l - k : ADVERTISE YOUR STUDENT HOUSING FOR THIS SUMMER & FALL 7 0 YOU CAN ADVERTISE 15 WORDS AT ONE LOW PRICE Runs IO Times for only $ 7 5 0 Total Runs 20 Times for only $ 1 9 0 0 Total ECONOMICAL! FAST RESULTS! EFFICIENT! I CALL GR 1-5244 NOW! I Open lo the puoiic — Open / days a week 715 West 23rd, across from Hardin North (one-half block west of Rio Grande) 7 AM- l l PM Mon. through Sat. l l A M -1 1 PM Sunday One hour free parking for customers Pearl St. Entrance — Between 22l/2 & 23rd Streets u Jm IB, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN IL — A ssociated P ress Photo. Texas second baseman Pat A m o s forces an O h io baserunner in C W S action. The double play attem pt failed as A m o s ' throw to first went wild. Kite Heads NCAA Bid Baseball Ballet Open Qualifier Tom Kite Jr., top qualifier for the U. S. Open in Texas will be one of five University golfers competing in the NCAA national golf championship at Columbus, Ohio. Play begins Monday. Besides Kite. the Texas squad consists of Dean Ovorturf, a senior from Houston and South­ west Conference golf champion in 1970; George Machock. a junior from Austin wrho finished third in the SWC; William Cromwell. a junior from Austin and Joe Anderson, a sophomore from San Antonio. Kite also was runnerup to Ovcrturf for the SWC crown. SWC ( Ilanips Texas won the SWC team cham­ pionship in 1970. This was the fourth golf title for Texas; coach George Hannon in seven years. Texas Is rated a contender for the title this year, although not as powerful a»> Houston, Florida & & & Butter. .$ .59 Butter.. .79 Butter.. .99 State or Southern California, the other major contenders. The Ivonghoms' best finish in recent history’ was a tie for fourth in 1968. Prior to placing in the NCAA tournament, Kite will travel to Chaska, Minn., to participate in the Open. Lee Trevino, U, S. Open champion In 1%8, predicts an unknown will win this year. Ben Crenshaw, top amateur from Texas and a future Longhorn golfer, also will com­ pete in the Open. another Soccer Results S e m i-F in a ls Brazil 3, Uruguay I Italy 4, West Germany 3, over­ time Finals: -lune 21 Brazil vs. Italy •J J e n r u Qacofootti. * M E N ’S W E A R 2222 G u a d a l u p e O P E N EVERY THURSDAY Till 8 p.m. M O N . - S A T . 9 -5 :0 0 Specializing in the "In " Look i O n ly you and your Barb sr know you va had a haircut at ■lr Medical Arts Square BARBER SHOP • e e e e e e e e e WATERHOLE No. ONE 2900 DUVAL HAPPY HOUR DAILY 7 - D A Y S A W E E K 4 - 6 P.M. S C H L IT Z or B U D W EISER Ie pitcher reg. price $1.30 I OO « POOR BOY SANDWICHES 50c each NEW RECORD SHOP LP's $ 2 5 0 $i()0 8-Track STEREO TAPES CA SSE T T E TAPES ........ $3°° i ea. ea. ea. BARGAIN CENTER 41 I East 43rd CHICKEN 2 Pc. CHICKEN, French 3 Pc. CHICKEN, French Ar Pc. CHICKEN, French 2 Pc. CHICKEN, White Meat Served with Fries, Roll Fries, Roll Fries, Roll French Fries, Roll & Butter...................... 69 3 Pc. CHICKEN, White Meat Served with French Fries, Roll & Butter...................... 89 4 Pc. CHICKEN, White Meat Served with French Fries, Roll & Butter................. 1-09 FRIED CHICKEN DINNER - Served with French Fries, Salad, Roll & Butter, Honey 1.29 FISH 1. FRIED FILET OF FISH - Served with French Fries, Tartar Sauce, Roll & Butter.. .79 2. FRIED FILET OF FISH - Served with French Fries, Tartar Sauce, Cole Slaw, Roll & Butter........................................... 99 3. DEEP FRIED JU M B O SH R IM P - French Fries, Tartar Sauce, Cole Slaw, Roll & Butter 1.60 4. SEAFOOD PLATTER - Filet of Fish, Shrimp, Crab Roll, Served with French Fries, Cole Slaw, Tartar Sauce, Roll & B u tte r........... 1.99 C H ILLED 12 OZ. MUG OF BEER 3 0 * BREAKFAST SERVED 7:00 A M - 1 1 : 0 0 AM, EXCEPT SUNDAYS ASK ABOUT OUR TROUGH MEAL COUPON BOOK! $31.50 IN COUPONS FOR ONLY $30.00. rn n Texas Edged Disputed Call Provides W in OMAHA (Spl.) — Tex,is jumped into the College World Series driver's seat in the sixth inning Tuesday night, fell out into a crowd of three in the seventh and was all hut trampled two hours later after suffering a fourth-round setback and losing in a crucial game of chance. The cause of this strategic re­ versal was top-ranked Southern California. The Trojans came from far back to deal the ’Horns an 8-7 loss in 14 innings and won a subsequent drawing to gain a bye Thursday night the championship contest. Texas, undefeated in Omaha until Tuesday night, carried a 7-1 lead into the seventh and looked like a sure bet to blast once- beaten Southern Cal out of the double elimination tournament. for If the Steers had held on, they would have been given two tries to heat Florida State once, a team they conquered 5 1 on Monday. F S C Wins in Florida State stayed the picture by sending Ohio home 2-0, saving their ace pitcher. Gene Ammann <"14-0) to face Texas on Wednesday. Such a setup failed to ma­ terialize, though, as Southern Cal erupted for six runs in the sev­ enth to tie and one in the four­ teenth to win. As in Texas’ 196® CWS- eliminatjng loss to New York University, a controversial play contributed to the Horns’ defeat. With two outs in the top of the fourth and Texas leading 2-0 USG ’* Frank Alfano lined a base hit to center. Mike Ball then sort a Mike Beard fast bail down the right field line. The bal! larded fair but rolled toward the fence separating the bleachers from the field. Texas rightfielder David H all was about five feet away from the ball when a youngster in a red shirt, who had jumped over the fence, grabbed the ball and returned to the stands. Dede&ux Protests \¥hen this happened Alfano was third base. The first base ruled the ball dead. .11- WM held at third. Russ stepped into the batter s but before a pitch could lie Southern Cal cooch Roff Stood from the dugout OU the first of his many visits to the playing field. Dedeaux claimed the runner to should have been allowed score. The umpire* conferred briefly and waved Alfano across the plate. Texas coach Cliff Gustafson questioned this decision. Three members of the tournament rules committee disappeared into th^ third base dugout for a 10-minute conference. The umpires were not fam iliar with the rule in question. The run was allowed. Tile decision was based on a judgment call that the runner woald have scored without the interference. Texas lost by one run. Texas Snores Big The 'Horns temporarily broke the game open when they scored five times in the sixth. David Chalk opened with a one-bagger to left and was sacrificed to .sec­ ond by Harmon. Hall took three straight balls and was then put on forced Hall at second, but in an attempt to get Miller, the second baseman the Trojan lofted the ball into advanced d u g o u t . M iller intentionally. M iller automatically Chalk scored. to second and to shot Langerhans’ left brought home M iller. Amos and Beard followed with singles to load the bases. All moved up a base on a passed ball, with Lan­ gerhans then singled to right. Amos trotted in it past the and Beard made catcher, who dived to make the tag but couldn't reach the Texas pitcher. scoring. Markl That made it 7-1 going into the seventh and spelled the end for USO hurler Strom, an All- American selection this year. With one out and Alfano on first, Russ Bennett bounced a leaping bad-hop single over a Langerhans. Pinch hitter Jeff Port RBIed Alfano. Dick Cross grounded one over second. Amos was ready to make the force play at second, but the ball took a bad bounce into center. Bennett scored on the play. Cal Meier walked to fill the bases. Beard Leaves Gustafson relieved Beard with Natl Salazar. His first toss was a wild pitch, moving everyone up and making the score 7-4. Dan Stoligros grounded to Langerhans and heat the throw to Salazar covering. Cross stepped on the p la t e closing the margin to two. then Catcher Craig lashed a ball to right center. Hall couldn’t get over in time to cut it off. Perkins got a triple. Two bas#runners crossed the plate. Perkins La rry Hardy replaced Salazar things with a and squelched strikeout. Hardy and HSC reliever Jim in out­ locked up frames Barr then standing pitching with of scoreless bah. Texas’ last threat came in the thirteenth. Bagweil walked on four pitches with two out. Chalk was safe on an error, but Har­ mon ended the uprising by grounding into a fielder’s choice. With the game approaching the Je ff Pederson four-hour mark, stroked a one out single to left in the fourteenth. Shortstop Cal Meier provided the winning blow, lashing a triple off the wall in scored right center. easily on the play. Pedersen W alt Rothe came in to replace a tired La rry Hardy. Rothe yielded a walk, then whiffed two to retire the side. Texas, unable to get to Barr all night, went down in order in the bottom of the inning. T. S. I I SKM OR K f $ C no ion goo OOO OI 8 l l 4 Tpxh* 020 HOS OOO OOO OO 7 IO 0 S ’ rom. B a rr (7) and Perkin *: Beard. S (lazar (7) Rothe <141 and Harm on. W —B a r r Lr—H s rd y , (Ti H ard y Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service FACTORY TRAINED Volkswagen Specialists The Only Independent V W Garage In Austin to Guarantee Vo kswagen Repairs A r ld t ’s A u to m o tiv e Service 7951 BURNET ROAD Across from Gulf Mart GL 2-0205 Closed Saturday C H E C K O U R N E W R A T E S ! THE DUVAL VILLA LUXURIOUS APARTMENT LIVING ONLY 12 BLOCKS FROM THE UNIVERSITY • FURNISHED • CO VERED P A R K IN G • ALL BILLS PAID • CABLE TV • S W IM M IN G PO O L • RECREATIO N R O O M • ICE M A C H IN E • BARBEQUE PITS • EXTRA ST O R A G E • ELEVATORS • TOTAL ELECTRIC KITCHENS W IT H D ISH W A SH E R LOCATED 4305 DUVAL— 454-9475 C A L L OR C O M E BY! — Associated Press Photo. V A L ID D AILY A F T E R 2:30 P M. Miller Slides Under and Safe Texas cenferfieider slides info home safely following a single by Pat Amos in the second inning of the Ohio gam e. Standings A«*ociated Pre** A m erican League National League it. , , W . . . . . 39 B a ltim o re N ew Y o rk . . . . Detroit Boston Washington C le ve ’and ........... 30 ......... 2‘ .. . . . . 26 G B . rh ic a x o L . P c t 22 3 ' 24 28 - 63? 607 2 SIT 7 * 9 .491 h SS V o rit....... V I i p m jh u r * l i t , U ........ 27 i t Ph U lad elD h lA *‘ 26 4CT 148 IO '* M ontreal I I H ............. 22 W est w Pct. o n IO C- B 29 28 32 12 We«t L. -w I® 35 26 2« 39 21 88 41 Minnesota . . . . C a lifo rnia . . . . Oakland ......... Ti ......... 22 • 'hicago K ansas C ity . . M ilw au kee . . . 1 9 C a lifo rn ia rain 5, B a ltim o re I M ilw au kee Boston 3. K ansas C ity I Chicago 6, New Yo rk 3 Washington 3, M innesota I A m erican League at Cleveland, postponed. .579 - - ST 4 S H 548 7 361 IS H .356 18'-, 317 21 . . . 44 Cincinnati .......... 32 Atlanta Los Angeles .. 34 San F rancisco 29 San Diego . . . . 29 .......... 2T Houston National League _ C in c in n a l 7. N ew \ ork 4 Atlanta 6, M ontreal 5 Ptttsb r*h at Log Angeles, , St- Lo u is at San Diego, Detroit at Oakland, late late . lat i 24 l l v 33 r is 26 28 33 38 36 KR-701 W ID E T R A C K W IT H F IB ER G LA SS P L U S $9.72 F.E.T. S IZ E E70-I4 (735*14) PREMIUM TIRES B IG “S ” F A C T O R Y TIRE O UTLET 5005 B I B N E T R O M ) The Toggery lias moved To 2304 Guadalupe Open now, 9:30—5:30 Monday thru Saturday ABA Rejects Pact After NCAA Threat By LOUDON K E L L Y D EN V ER (A P ) pressure of an announced boycott - ^-nc|pr tract does in fact exist and is submitted to the commissioner, the contract will be rejected" and the Denver club would be fined college athletics, the $10,000. b y Ameriran Basketball Association j n urgjng member colleges and to commissioner said Wednesday coaches earlier Wednesday any contract between the Denver enact an immediate boycott of the pro the National Collegiate Athletic Association said the announced signing of Simpson “ indicates that the ABA has no regard for the welfare Rockets and Ralph Simpson, Michigan State star, would be rejected. Commissioner Jack Doiph said league, in a statement “ If such a con- of college basketball " INTRODUCTORY OFFER 15% DISCOUNT TO ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS J U S T S H O W Y O U R ID C A R D A N D E N J O Y T H E B E S T T A S T E IN M E X IC A N F O O D I i A M B IMUSRESTAURANTS 1507 LA V A C A IMPORTANT NOTICE! O u r W e e k -E n d Specials N o w B egin O n T h u rsd a y — O n e D a y Earlier!---- W A T C H FOR OUR ADS ON THURSDAYS, SCO TC H WHISKIES ----- 5.99 JOHNNIE WALKER RED CUTTY SARK or J & B » „ » U 9 QUART 6.39 TEACHER'S « KING JAMESo.GOLD COACH M f 3.49 LEGACY or KING GEORGE ..,,*3.59 .*4.89 YAT 69 Reg. or GOLD STRAIGHT BOURBON W HISKIES --- J. W DANT 4 Yr. * P............. s . 3.59 KENTUCKY BEAU s. s . 3.39 BOURBON SUPREME a, QUART 4.49 KENTUCKY TAVERN 8 Yr, aa P s, 3.99 J. 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Case 24 cans 4.17 tpk. 8-o l cans 99c SCHLITZ MALT LIQUOR OLD MILWAUKEE............ Case 24 glass cans 3.39 9.0.5. BEER 6 cans IN T R O D U C IN G IC Case cans This price will not be repeated after introductory period is over. ocjQini 1809 GUADALUPE 478-5903 1209 RED RIVER 476-8990 SPARTAN “S T 5501 AIRPORT BLVD. Thursday, June 18, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN Pope 7, Summer Guests in Jester Orientation Participants Predominate By DEBBY BAY Texan Staff Writer Jester Center acquires a dif­ summer ferent months when many conference groups, both state and national, use its facilities. during look “ Each of these conferences is approved,’ ” Dr. •University Firm an Haynie, director of the Division of Food and Housing Service, said. The main stipulation is that they be “ educational in nature and function.” Also they must have the sponsor University staff, he added. from a Miss Nevada Blackburn, assis­ tan t director, said, “Since we have facilities open, we feel we have an obligation to the state ■- mmm mm WM I Fair Housing | Commission I Students with problems con- | cerning housing—contracts, | deposits, eviction, repairs, I etc.—should call the Students’ Association F a i r Housing Commission Office: Union Building 301 (I to 5 p.m. | Monday through Friday). Telephone 471-3721 (8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri- I day). of Texas to allow these groups to come here.” will be sent to faculty advisers and later sectionized. Obligation to Citizens The University owes the tax­ payers the use of its facilities, Haynie said. The most extensive of these summer conferences is the fresh­ man orientation program con­ ducted each year by the Dean of Students office. Dr. Jack Lee Kaplan, assistant dean of students and director of orientation, said, “Orientation is filled already with 2,760 students planning to attend. We have had to turn some away, and probably next week we will have to turn away 1.000.” O r i e n t a t i o n co-ordinator Richard Nicholas said. “This is the first time all sessions have been filled before the first one began.” Explaining why the program was filled to capacity so early Kaplan said, “We are limiting enrollment because it’s a pilot program this year, and we want to iron all of the kinks out of it.” Monday and Tuesday of the four-day sessions, new students will be pre-ad vised by upper division students and fill out tentative course cards, awaiting advanced placement tests. After students have received their test results Wednesday, they Expanded Sessions Expanding from four sessions last summer to six, Orientation will “provide more personalized services,” said Kaplan. “The ratio of student advisers to new students will be two to 20 this summer, as opposed to two to 30 in the past. The reason for saying ‘two’ in the ratio is that our advisers work in pairs, and we like each team to reflect two different areas of student life at the University. “ It gives them a chance to in the University experience microcosm,” he said. said, “The Nicholas real benefits aren’t mechanical,” referring to campus tours, faculty discussion panels and meetings with college deans. The real benefit is found in the student who leaves saying, “ I know so much more — have learned so much about myself — have have met so many people,” he said. Of the program, which began in 1958 with one pilot session, Kaplan said, “It’s changed a lot. It used to be more socially orientated — go-go-Bevo — but has become more multi-faceted now.” Science, Education Groups Conferences which already have been held this month in­ clude Science the Nuclear Symposium, which is composed of high teachers and the state. students The engineering department and p o w e r companies sponsored them. school throughout Boys State and the Alcohol Studies Institute were in Jester last week. Haynie said the alcohol studies seminar was a “group of people to allied with State agencies prevent alcoholism.” on campus Other groups which have held conferences are Business Teachers and Texas Parents and Teachers, which operates on the university level, as well as on primary and secondary ones. Secondary School Principals are here now. Next week P er­ sonnel of Homes for Children will be meeting in conjunction with the School of Social Work. During July, the Small Schools Financial Aid Ad­ Project, ministrators. Superintendents Workshop and Life Underwriters, group, a n are for University con­ scheduled ferences. insurance The University Inter-Scholastic League Yearbook Workshop for high school students is the only confirmed event in August other than Orientation. Law, Journalism Joint Group Plans Course A committee study the to journalism mutual problems of the and law and possibility of offering a joint course for students in the two fields has been appointed at the University. to examine The committee consists of three journalism professors and three law professors. The members were chosen by Dean Wayne Danielson of the School of Communication and Dean Page Keeton of the School of Law. A two-day seminar for mem­ bers of both professions and a mutual course for journalism and law students are two prime areas of the committee's work. Rights of People professions said. “ The the rights of both of law are con­ journalism and the cerned with people,” Roy Mersky, professor of law and committee co-chair­ man, “ While both are concerned with the people’s First Amendment rights of free press and are speech, sometimes conflicts between the journalist’s the public lawyer’s client which can result in antagonism and animosities. there free and Dr. Norris G. Davis, chairman of the Department of Journalism and committee co-chairman, said he finds the ideas of a special course for journalism and law students “ quite fascinating.” Misunderstandings “ I have long felt that there wras a need for these two professions to have a better concept of each other’s problems,” said Davis, who has written a book on law and the press in Texas. “ All too often a lawyer will hesitate to talk to a reporter for fear of prejudicing his legal rights. The reporter then feels the to hamper the reporter’s right to freedom of information. Many such misunderstandings could be avoided and the reporter had a better under- other's of s t a n d i n g profession.” is attempting client’s lawyer lawyer the if Other committee members are S. Griffin assistant Singer, professor of journalism; Joseph Taylor, associate professor of journalism; and W. W. Gibson and Allen E. Smith, professors of law’. George Covington, law student and journalism graduate, serves as staff for the committee. a % Rhodes Faces Agnew Blast — Associated P re ss Photo. Joseph R hodes Jr., a m em ­ ber o f the President's C o m ­ mission on C a m p u s Unrest, refuses to resign his post after criticism T ue sday by Vice-President S p iro A g n e w . F o r S a l e A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . R o o m & B o a r d L o s t s F o u n d T y p i n g VILLA FO N TAN A 1951 Sabine Now renting for summer— Summer rates For luxury resort on Lake Travis. H o . r s 11 p.m. thro ugh 7 a.m., 5 days. Exce ant sa ary and w orking condition;. A c c o u n t ­ ing experience helpful. L O C A T E D N E A R L A W S C H O O L C o n ta c t M ke Burke, Lakeway Inn. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Each Word (15 word minimum) * *0® Minimum Charge . . . . . ------ • * 1-50 •Student rate (15-word maxim um) one tim e $ * ."5 .50 •Each additional tim e 20 Consecutive Issues IO w ord, IS words 20 words Classified Display I column x one inch one tim e S 1.50 Efrch Additional Tim e ...........* l.*0 ..................................... .................................... *J2.00 .................. *1*»00 (Ne copy chap** for consecutive issue ra tes.V • L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S less for 75c tho first 15 w ords or time, 50c each additional time. Stu­ receipt dent must show A u d ito r’s in Journalism and p ay Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y through Friday. la ad vance DEADLINE SCHEDULE Tuesday Texan Monday—11:00 a.m . Thursday Texan Wednesday—11:00 a.m. Friday Texan Thursday—11:00 a.m . Phone 471-5244 F o r S a l e 1951 MG-TD. Com pletely re sto red clas­ sic, g re a t engine. $1995. 453-2063. North Central efflciences. New, car­ TWO BEDROOM suites, dinette s e t living room furniture. 452-6807 and a fte r 5:30. U k e new. peted, drap ed , complete kitchen; range, oven, ga rba ge disposal, refrigerator. FuN 1960 PORSCHE R oadster. R ebuilt en­ gine, transm ission. Well restored, ex­ cellent condition. $1650 o r best offer. 453-2063. PERSIA N CARPET. 5x8 f e e t Contact IO. A M om ent 1808 W est Avenue, good buy, try it! DREW'S RECORD EXCHANGE USED LP'S TRADED. SO LD. 1624 Lavaca 478-2079 bath, ample storage and parking. A - partment manager: 454-6811, 454-8903. SOUTHERNAIRE A partm ents, 33rd and Tom G reen. Spacious, cheerful. One bedroom , six closets, w alking distance U T. S um m er ra te s, $115, w a ter paid. 478-7097. MARK XX 3815 G U A D A L U P E large, paneled B R A N D N E W - S U M M E R RATES I & 2 BR apts. Extra Mediterranean laun­ dry, all built-ins, over sized kitchens, water, gas, TV cable pd. by owner — $125 UP. For showing phone — furnishings, pool, D R A S T IC R ED U C T IO N ! S U M M E R RATES Austin's Newest and M o st Luxurious! Le asing now One and Two Bedroom Apartments, pius Luxury Two Bedroom Studios. 7200 Duval Call J. A. Kruger, 452-2334 PO SA D O DEL NORTE S U M M E R RATES $118.50 and up for Also, c ontracting fall. Pool, refrig e rated air, w a ter and gas paid. On shuttle bus route. the E L DORADO APTS.. 3501 Speedway, 472-4893, 478-1382 454-6234. H A L L M A R K APTS. 708 W . 34th $110 N O W R EN T IN G FO R S U M M E R B eautifully furnished I BR apts. All built-ins. (2 dble beds*, laundry, w ater, gas. TV cable pd. bv owner. F o r show ing — phone: 452-9930 cellent condition. Used very BEAUTIFU L HONEY m aple piano. Ex- little. j $500. 472-8262 o r GR 8-3895. I - i MOTORCYCLES — If you a re interest- ed in buying a bike, new or used, i call 478-4703. I 1962 CHEVY B elaire. Air conditioned, loser but tires. An aesth etic new m echanically good. Call 478-4703. T O P CASH PRICES Paid for dia­ m o n d old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop. 603 Commodore Perry. 476-0178, M G TF-DEAL F E L L through-com plete- ly resto red . See Law School “Dust Bow l". 12300-offer. 452-2420 evenings. and SINGER Touch & Sew sewing m a­ chines (7 or them ), all are slant needle models and are fully equipped to zig­ fancy zag m ake buttonholes, stitches. These machines carry full guarantees and will be sold on a com e—first served basis, only 539 95 each. Monthly payments available. Thev in cly Inspected cinel tested 3t W tSSbS F R U I T T . 2003 Airport (between Manor & 19th St.) 9 Blvd. S k i to 6 PM Mon. thru Fri. S a t til I PM. No sales to d e a l e r s . _______ finish. World STEREO "CONSOLES JU S T R E C E IV E D five 1970 deluxe so­ lid sta te nationally advertised stereo consoles, In beautiful handrubbed w al­ n u t renowned B.S.R. tu rn ta b le and 4 speaker audio system , egg term s available. They m ay be inspected a t UNCLAIMED FR E IG H T , 2003 A irport Blvd. (between M a n o r & 19th St.) 9 AM to 6 PM, Motu th ru F ri. Sat. each. Monthly 'til I PM . U S E D B—W TV’s. Good — b elter — v e r y good. $30 up. Austin TV Service. « 0 5 h f a n c h a c T Road. HI 4-1345, HI 2 - 7475. 1970 STEREO component sets (only th ree) complete with speakers. $39.95 each! UNCLAIMED FREIGH T, 2003 A irp o rt Blvd. 1966 250cc SUZUKI X-6 HUSTLER. 3400 m iles. Excellent condition. Hel­ saddlebags. $385 or deal. 454- m et, 0871. FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS on equipment: Components, ___________ ____ stereo system s, tapes. Satisfaction guaran­ records, teed^ Call 477-6626 evenings. '67 BLUE VOLKS. 24,000 miles, tape deck. One owner, excellent condition. 444-5928. ; PIANO and sta n d ard Royal typew riter. Call GL 2-3021 a fte r 6 pm and any­ tim e w eekends. IDEAL ECONOMY c ar. 18 plus mpg. two door. a /c . E xcellent '63 Comet, condition. $400. 478-3255. SPECIAL SALE New Bronica-C c am era, 214SLR, Nik- kor n o rm al lens, bellows S2, and other accessories. R etail p rice over $680. Sale p rice $350. L im ited supply. STU DER'S at Capitol P la za 452-7884 cellent HONDA 160cc. 1969, 1600 m iles. E x­ rack. S treet m odel. Asking $450. 477-0953 nights. condition. L uggage AFGHAN PU PS, y our choice of brind­ les, silvers, black-and-t&ns, blondes, arid apricots. 926-5061 a fte r 6 p.m . NEW DOUBLE BOX springs, m attress, legs. $25. firm . 385-4411. 1960 PONTIAC V entura. Two door sports coupe. A /c, good condition, ru n s well. M ake offer. 465-8058. F R E E T H R E E m onth puppy. S m art, well behaved. To good hom e. old Call 263-2517. '64 Ford SL. Two door hardtop, all power, a /c . $500. Call 454-1268 a fte r ELECTROLUX vacuum cleaners (4) and all attachments to be sold for each or monthly payments avail- UNCLAIMED FREIGHT, 2003 5 p.m . Blvd. 1963 CHEVY B iscayne. Good condition. sell, tires. P ric ed clean, good to $375. 206 W est 45th. ’S RECORD EXCHANGE. Used tra d e d , gold. 1624 Lavaca. a, 1965 VOLKSWAGEN. Radio. Good con­ dition. GL 2-5965. 300cc. 1963, Runs well. $300, offer. Rugs, desk, bookshelf, illg; prices negotiable. 478-2896. ENGLISH SPRINGER SPANIEL P U P­ PIES. AKC registered. Champion show stock. Excellent pet or field. Reason­ able. 442-4906. 1107 PLYM OUTH. A /c, heat, power tires. Must steering /brakes, good SriLSaOO. GR 2-4155 a fte r 8 p m SCUBA PRO tank equipped with re­ gulator with J valve, back pack. Per­ fect condition. $170. GL 3-2933. A P A RT fVU !\j TS, FURIN], W O O D W A R D APTS. 444-7555 1722 E* Woodward 242 units — 8 separate clusters student oriented clusters offer relaxed living com fort for swinging Into Shore Club of Austin, with complete ald 4k sailing rental club facilities available. ricing *w I th all utilities paid — no hidden charges! furnished I bedroom, I bath $149.50. 2 bedroom, VA bath $179.50. ’ off S. Interregional. _ to U.T. m inutes to town. _ “ iced kitchens. ■mists washateria. 5 M IN U T E S F R O M UT N O W L E A S IN G S U M M E R RA TES T H E D EL P R A D O APTS. 303 W . 40TH STREET L arg e tow nhouse B eautiful fu rn itu re . P le n ty of parking. Sw iim m ing pool. M anager Apt. 103 type apartm ents. TV Cable 454-2436 W A L K IN G D IST A N C E N O W R EN T IN G FOR S U M M E R I BR F u rn Apts. in m ost a p ts.) Built-ins, pool, w ater, gas. TV cable Pd. by owner. (2 dbl? beds F or show ing phone: M A R K V II — 3100 S P E E D W A Y — $115 476-4542 D I P L O M A T - 1911 S A N G A B R I E L - $105 476-25 ll V A L E N C IA - 1801 M A N O R RD. - $115 478-2364 E M B E R S — 3107 S P E E D W A Y — $110 476-4542 CONTINENTAL III APTS. 4003 RED RIVER SUMMER RATES — $140 L arge 2 BR beautifully furn. apts — All built-ins, pool, (2-dble. beds in bedroom s), w a ter gas, TV ca­ ble pd. bv owner. F o r show ing — phone — 453-3081 laundry. U N IV E R S IT Y A R E A 476-4095 C A M IN O R E A L -E L PATIO I & 2 bedroom Summer & Fall 2810 Salado N O W R EN T IN G FO R S U M M E R M A R K V — 3912 Ave. D — $ II 5 I BR F u rn . Apts (2 dble. beds) Aii built-ins. pool. w ater, ga s T V cable pd. by owner. F o r show ing phone: 454-3850. SUNNYVALE APTS. 1300 SUMMIT SUMMER RATES — $120 UP L uxuriously furnished I & 2 BR apts., pool, laundry, all built-ins. w ater. gas. TV C able pd. by owner. Must, see these to a p p re c ia te ’ F o r show ing — apts, phone — 442-9495 o r 444-5110. FOUNTAIN TERRACE. 610 West 30th Street. $105 up. No Summer rates. Pool, walk to Campus. No pets, chil­ dren, single undergraduates. SOUTHERNESE APTS. University Area 2 person apartment. A /c, wood panel­ ing, carpeted, pool, laundry facilities, parking. $99.5C 474-1616 1007 West 26th Street VERY CLOSE TO CAMPUS. One bed­ rooms and efficiencies now renting for Summer. A /c, TV cable, pool. 472- 5369. 2800 Swisher, 210. Luxury I bedroom. A / C , carpeted, swimming pool, laundry. Call after 6 — G R 2-1774 LUXURIOUS FO U R T EE N unit Casa Rosa, 4312 Duval One bedroom . July 15. $109. Fail. $139.50 plus electricity. 453-2178, 345-1322, Drastic Reductions! Summer Rates THE BRITTANY 300 Carmen Ort. 454-1355 452-2384 FRENCH C O L O N Y 5506 Grover G L 2-0507 1 BR — 850 sq. ft. from $135 2 BR — I IOO sa. ft. from $155 B A R R A N C A S Q U A R E APTS. Brand new. W ith in w alking distance U.T. Efficie ncy and one be d room ap a rt­ ments, co m ple te ly furnished. $ i 15 up. For inform ation call 454-0239 o r 478- 5822. 910 W . 26th B L A C K S T O N E APTS. For in d e p e n d e n t men and wom en students. N e a r C a m p u s. M a id service week'y. Sum m e r rates. $50/m onth, $70/sem ester 2910 R e d R iver 476-5631. C O O L P O O L Relax o r study under shade trees. B eautiful tow ering su r­ roundings with quality and conveni­ ence. I & 2 bedroom s furnished from $150, all bills paid. BROW NSTONE PARK APTS. 5106 N. L a m a r 454-3496 O V E R L O O K IN G D O W N T O W N C A ST LE H ILL APTS. Secluded yet convenient. Luxury I bed­ room furnished. Spanish decor, plush carpet. Walk in closet, central air con­ ditioning. Laundry, plenty of parking. 472-4171 477-3434 BARG AINS! 1 bedroom , I b a t h 2 bedroom , 2 bath ...........$167.50 $187.50 3 bedroom , 2 b a t h $140 SO U T H S H O R E APTS. 300 E a s t R iverside D rive 444-3337. TV. for tenants 4b guests.________________________ ______________ ONE BEDROOM. All utilities except electricity 4316 Bull Creek. 454-8018. J u n e 1 8 , 1 9 7 0 T H E S U M M E R T E X A N G A R D E N BEAUTY LU SH C O U R T Y A R D S V ILLA O R L E A N S 1-2 bedroom s furnished or unfurnished. sparkling pool, All bills paid, cable, giant closets, patios, laundry, Shuttle bus available. 452-3314 472-4171 N O LEASE Available July 1st, large one bedroom with carpet, a’r, G.E. dishwas er. dis­ posal, Tappan range, balcony, pool. 453-7608 H e l p W a n t e d TRANSLATORS - - B ulgarian. Czech, Danish. Finish. Hebrew , Italian, Ja p ­ anese, Polish, Portuguese, R um anian, Russian. Swedish, Serbo. 472-1187, TECHNICAL EDITORS — Chem ical engineering, chem istry’, e lectrical en­ gineering. petroleum engineering, ge­ ology. pharm acy, physiology — Good English. 472-1187. M A L E N IG H T A U D IT O R 263-2123. PART TIM E SEC R E T A R Y $2.3 5 /h r. Prefer U niversity student, flexible hours. { O ffic e will be c o s e to C am p u s. For ap plication and m ailing address to: nam e send M r. Jo h n Lockwood, P. O . Box D - 1, A ustin, Tex. 78712. GIRL 23 to 25 interested in teaching piano. Drew, 476-9553 or 478-2079. FU LL OR PA RT tim e, $3 p e r hour Apply Villa C apri Motel F riday, I or 8 p.m . See Mr. C arsel. No phone calls. WANTED. PROFESSIONAL m odels and p hotographers needed for new agen-; cy. M ust have previous training. 452- I 9711. TOWER M A N O R 1908 U niversity — 478-2185 Open fo r inspection fo r Sum m er & F a ll Sem esters • Living room . 2 bdrm s.. 2 full bath,-, kitchen & d ining a re a in each su ite lounge • E leg an t living • TV • E levators • Maid service • Sun deck • Fuliv a /c • No hours fo r young wom en • Free p arking • L au n d rv facilities • Study hall • I blk. Cam pus • 19 m eals/w eek MAYFAIR HOUSE Dormitory For Men & Women Room & Meals, $ 125/month M ayfair bus to e -d from C am pus on the hour — Maid Service — Large heated pool — C r ’or TV — Private parking area — Daily pick up cleaning serv ce — tee machine — Laundry fa ­ cilities. 2000 Pear! — 472-5437 C a ll a bout our M ayfair Apts. STOP H aven't found a place y e t? Consider RAMSHORN, a low cost coeducation a I co-op house Room & B oard—$57.50 per month. G reat m eals, nice room s. private bathroom s, a p r cable TV. Live easy a t RAMSHORN 478-6586 — 612 W, 22nd St. I G IRIjS, single room s. A/C. g re at food, I fine block Cam pus. $117/six weeks. I 176-6119, 476-61*4 F o r R e n t NO TV S E T ’ Cal! the A lpha Man! B /W & the New Color portables a t R easonable R ent Lease. R ent by S em ester or R ent-P urchase ALPHA TV RENTALS Call GR 2-2692 for m ore info rm atio n Com pact REFRIG ERA TO RS P o rta b le TELEVISION R ent by T erm o r Month Alex M cN air’s S e r v i c e s CENTRAL TEXAS A PPLIA N CE CO. 904 N. L a m a r 476-6076 STEREO R E PA IR service or c a r stereos. R easonable price, work guaranteed. Bill, 476-8450. for home FIV E ROOM, C entral air. th ree bedroom house. fenced carport, back y ard . Call 476-2494 a fte r 6 p.m . weekdays. large SULTING. Low ra te s, KEYPUNCHING. PROGRAM ING, CON­ fast service. ARBEC. 477-6366, 3005 C edar Street. F re e parking. W a n t e d H IG H E ST PR IC E S paid for fu rn itu re . ranges, re frig e rato rs. MABRY'S. 6611 N orth L am ar. 453-5800 N ights 465-0006. Use Texan Cia ss ifieds To Advertise For Summer and Fall Focusing NORTHW EST - DUPLEX 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Built-in kitchen, a /c , e /h . C arpeted, drapes, plenty closets. Inside utility. W asher-dryer connections. P riv a te fenced yard, patio, c a re . Lease. g arage, storage. Y ard 2305 A N orthland. U nfurnished $195. furnished $240. 845-0846. bedroom, NORTHWEST - LARGE HOUSE. Three two bath, den. C arpeted. c /a ,c /h . D ishw asher, disposal. Y ard Furnished-unfurnished ra re . $250. 2307 N orthland. 345-0846. Lease. T u t o r i n g LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR, beginner and advanced. G uitars also repaired. Drew Thom ason, 478-7331. FEM A LE ROOMMATES 2 bedroom , 2 bath ap artm e n ts. IO m inutes walk from C am pus. Sw im m ing pool M aid .service Study, recreatio n room and pool table S um m er ra te s, $49.50/m onth each — All bills paid. LE FONT APARTMENTS 472-6480. 803 W. 28th FEM A LE. Im m ediately. Two bedroom ap artm en t. $55 p e r m onth, bills paid. Pool, n e a r U.T. 477-3431. C A L L G R 1-5244 TO PLA C E A T E X A N C LA SSIF IED A D FOUND MAN'S gold ring with insig­ Initials. D escribe and pay nia and for ad 385-4411. FOUND SIAM ESE kitten, fem ale. 3106 Duval. 478-4117. R o o m s MALE. R efrigerated a /c . One block I U T . Single, double room s. S um m er j rates. Also a p artm e n ts M ustang 473- 1941. Schoen House 478-8453, 478-7097. BOYS. A/C, icebox, n e a r U T,, p rivate entrance. S um m er or Fall. Call 476- 3340, 477-0045, 452-2954. NU ECES COLLEGE House needs two girls. Coed. A /c, p leasant atm os f o r . I phere. $30/month. 478-0187, ask j Dick. Jim o r Judy. M i s c e l l a n e o u s LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR, beginner and advanced. G uitars also repaired. D rew Thom ason. 478-7331. NELSON’S G IFTS—handm ade Indian jew elry. M exican Im ports — 4612 S Congress. Open IO to 6. 444-38! I. Largest Used Book Store In Austin S A V E S A V E — C O M E T O THE BOOK STALL j 6103 Burkei R oad 454-3664 Open w eekdays ’til 9 p m .. S a t 9:30-6. Sun. 1-6 ; I a t’TO IN S U R A N C E /Best r a t e s ’for sfch- gle or m arried m ale s—m onthly pay­ i m ents. LAMBERT INSURANCE ASSO­ CIATES, 452-2564. - — — - _____ I BIRD'S NEST is relaxed Solo a P iper . I Cub for $110 total cost. 272-5337, 478- j 9331 evenings. ATTENTION STUDENT! The Houston this Sum m er Chronicle will deliver j for J* price offer again. 477-4485. PIANO INSTRUCTION, beginners’ and advanced. Call 472-4722. Lake I RE N T SAILBOATS w e ek "en d s. Town I (by IH 35 bridge). L earning's fun. To Keelboats — Lake T ravis by ' dam . M arsh Y achts — CO 6-1150. D A N A BEAR NURSERY 509 W est 18th Street GR 2-7939 Offers loving c are in a hom elike atm os phere to children 2-5 y ears. School age $40, 7:30-5:30. Air. c en tral heat. L arge modern play equipm ent, balanced m eal and snacks. F R E E KITTENS. Will deliver. 478-4911, WARDROBE WITH draw ers, rug, d resser, wash s e t desk, stand. tables, misc. sm all (.’hairs, bedroom GR 6-1019. T y p i n g ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 TYPING. PR IN TIN G . BINDING BEA U TIFU L TYPING. All kinds. Special type for engineering, science language. N o rth U niversity. Mrs A n­ thony, GL 4-3079. BOBBYE D E L A FIE L D TYPIN G SER* reports. M im eographing. R easonable. H I 2-7184. VICE. Theses, dissertations T yping P rin tin g M ultllithing G raphic A rts Resume* Thesis Law B riefs L ecture Notes T u to rin g Close to Cam pus A-PLU S U NIVERSITY SERVICES 504 W est 24th S tre et 477-5651 TY PIN G SERV ICE — R easonable - T erm papers, letters, dissertations, etc. P ick up and delivery — Phone: 476-4179, "City-Wide Typing Service.” them es, theses, WOODS TY PIN G SERVICE. Them es. theses, d issertations. M u ltillth Qua­ lity w ork a t reasonable rates.’ Mrs. W oods. 472-4825. Just North cf 27th & Guadalupe M B A T yping, M ultllithing. B inding The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service tailored to the needs of U niversity students. Special keyboard equipment for language, science, and engineer­ ing theses and dissertations. P hone GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 Hemphill Park Multilithlng, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX D U P L IC A T O R S 476-7581 311 E. lith E X PE R IE N C E D t y p is t Theses, aril* oles dissertations, etc 50c per Page r p ’vendecker. P e c a n Grove T ra ile r Park. 476-8532. EX PE R IE N C E D accurate MLM*’ tvpist, Lrv* #enrlce* Mrs- Tuli0« CIL Just North of 27th & Guada! ups MLB. A T yping. M ultilithm g. B inding Th© Complete Profess'onai FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailored the needs of U niversity Students, Special keyboard equipm ent fo r language, science, and engineer* Ing theses and dissertations. Phone GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N T YP IN G SERVICE Professional T yping AU Fields M ultillthing and B inding on Theses and D issertations 1301 Edgewood E X PE R IE N C E © dissertations, TYPIST. Theses, IBM E xecutive. etc. C harlene Stark, 453-5218. VIRGINIA SCH N EID ER TYPIN G SEIN VICE. G raduate and U ndergraduate ty p in g printing, binding 1515 Koenig Lane. Telephone: 465-7205 A N N E 'S TYPING SERVICE (M arjorie Anne D elafield) Theses, dissertations, m anuscripts, R C. reports, law briefs, m ultl­ lithing, m im eographing, binding, them es, 442-7008, 442-0170. Just North of 27th & Guadalupe ® T yping. M ultillthing. B inding M B A V The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailo red th e needs of University students. Special keyboard equipm en science, and engineer language ing theses and dissertations. P h o n e GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk Prlntini for binding. l a s t , accurate, personal se: da; night PickuiK lelivery- 385-2144 WANT TO DO typing in m y home. L< j - * ! Br ackenr i dge and C olon do A partm ents. Sherry, 477-7874. - THEM ES, REPORTS, lecture notes. Reasonable. M rs. F ra se r, 476-1317. N O RTH W EST, n e a r A llendale. Y ears help YOW 465- 5 8 1 3 ° * e x p er*ence * parti AF#?k’RATE. F irs t 5 pages 45a A fter 5 pages 35c each. 442- 6693. R o o m m a t e s No H idden C harges Students-H opef ul Mrs. Rostov/ Compares 30's, 70's By CONNIE SMITH Texan Staff Writer Speaking as a veteran of the 1930’s, Mrs. Elspeth Rostow pointed out the sim ilarities and discon­ tinuities between that period and the present, while n o o n sandwich addressing seminar Wednesday on “ Are We Re-Living tne the Texas Union’s 30’s?” Mrs. Rostow, associate professor of government at the University, pointed out that history does not repeat itself, but comparisons can be drawn from the two periods. Students from the two periods react much the same way to current issues, and Mrs. Rostow said, “ As undergraduates at Columbia University we didn’t l>eiieve a word we heard from our professors.’’ In the 30’s students were neither docile nor establishment-oriented. They had begun to believe that the judgment of some of their professors was faulty. But the main underlying feeling of the student 40 years ago was that there was hope for the future through the due processes of the government, she said. Students were restlessly anxious in the 30’s to activate, and become involved in change in society and government, as are their counterparts today. The difference lies in that today’s students do not necessarily feel that there is any great hope for improvement, Mrs. Rostow said, and they tend to want to “ cop out” and give up. She said this may be a reason for many campus disorders and the use of alcohol and drugs as an escape. She said her generation at Columbia felt President Franklin D. Roosevelt was speaking for their generation, whereas she said there is a definite degree of polarization between government and youth today. Another point Mrs. Rostow made was that the youth of both time periods had an interest in in­ novations on ah levels of government, from the national to the local. Their faith in government lay in the fact that in the 30’s they hoped the government could accomplish these changes “ Since there was no way to go but up,” Mrs. Rostow said, “ there was a certain hope for better things in the future.” She added, “ Youth wants change, but now as then, they do not always have faith that change wiU be accomplished if they do not become involved. There was never any thought by any of us that we should completely abandon the system,” she said. Outwardly, dissimilarities between the 30’s and today include a lack of political racial question, the fact that the major international problems are concentrated today in Southeast Asia and the Middle East, rather than in Europe as it was in the 30’s and the hope that within the democratic processes, major changes would somehow be ac­ complished. Mrs. Rostow, whose husband, W alt W. Rostow, was in the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations, said there is a need for some indications of what is being done in constructive terms by national leaders, more than just reassurances. She concluded her address by saying “ if a national leader can be found possessing more quality than charisma, there might be a chance to bridge the existing generation gap. and problems polarizing youth and government would be eliminated.” m o y f c x i T z . . . is a C O E D U C A T I O N A L dorm itory only four blocks from campus for 190 Y O U N G M EN & W O M E N . There s bus sarvice to and from campus every hour . . . plus paved off-street parking. There s a large study hall for quiet concentration and a large heated swimming pool for those leisure fun-time hours. M ayfair s services and facilities reflect a qu et emphasis on quality. Come see! Ju st $125.00 per month, per person! OPEN FOR BOTH SUMMER SESSIONS APPLY N O W FOR FALL, 1970 Now Open for MEN and WOMEN! M A Y F A IR A P T S . — righ t next door — $75.00 per month per person See Then N o w — For This Fall! m ayfcfirz . . . see and com p Mrs. Fay Huston Manager M ayfair House 2000 Pearl St. Information Desk G R 2-5437 Hie sign on the back oi the door This is your room, We encourage you to decorate your living areas in any way that makes you more comfortable, lf you wish to paint your room, do so. Any other decorations or w all ornaments may also be used. We leave the design and creation of your community to your imagination. COME TOGETHER J J N ow Leasing for Fall. Model Suite Open Monday thru Saturday. 9 AM-5 PM 2021 Guadalupe, Austin, Texas 78705 • (512) 472-8411 Thursday, Juno IS, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN Pogo 9 Professor Talks Thirties —T exan Photo G T E K B E R O Mrs. W a lt Rostow tells of the similarities of the 1930 s and the 1970 s at a sandwich seminar W ednesday. Stu­ dents of both eras were problem conscious, she said. 'Quake Aid to Peru Improves Relations By H. J. MAIDENBERG \ > w Y o r k T l m e i N e w t S r r v f r a LIM A, Peru — The massive flow of foreign aid arriving here In the wake of the disastrous earthquake two weeks ago has (Related Story, Page 12.) caused two pronounced political shocks. One is the sudden Im­ provement in U . S. Peruvian relations and tile other is the new respect that Cuba has earned in the eves of many people here. two These altitudes are reflected not only in th" con­ servative news media hut in the public comments heard in the streets ;md government offices in recent days. President Juan Velasco Al­ revolutionary varado, whose m ilitary regime Inaugurated a violently antiAmerican campaign shortly after the coup here on O d 3, 1968, has publicly ap- Texas Receives NASA Contract The University has been awarded a $61,000 contract by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration an analytical .study cm apace shuttle configurations. begin to J . Director of the project is Dr. J o h n assistant Bertin, professor of aerospace engineer­ ing and engineering mechanics and a staff member of the Ap­ plied Research Laboratories. The study, which will begin in to scheduled September, continue for 14 months. is “ It w ill be prim arily wind tunnel testing at hypersonic speeds, the idea being to simulate the re-entry' process of a space J . Parker vehicle,” said Dr. investigator I.amb, co-principal and new the D e p a r t m e n t of Mechanical Engineering. chairman of press, conservative plauded Washington and the many U. S. businesses operating in Peru for their aid. At the same time, the remaining bulwarks of the I-a Prensa and E l Comercio, have publicized the Cuban relief efforts and compared them to the ab­ sence of aid from the Soviet Union, the only major country that has remained aloof from the disaster that took an estimated 50,000 lives on M ay 31. “ E v e n Oil Company Sent Aid International the petroleum Co. sent money,” Velasco told a press conference recently. The military* seizure of tho local subsidiary of thd~Stan* dard Oil Company (New Jersey) .six days after the coup triggered the rapid deterioration in U. S.- Peruvian relations. Subsequent takeovers of U. S. agricultural properties and restrictions of in­ dustrial operations aggravated the situation. the As this was happening, Peru began improving relations with the Soviet bloc. Cuba, however, pale J outside remained because of its avowed support for j violent I^ t in , America. Nevertheless, Cuba shocked many officials here bv it* prompt shipments of medical teams and supplies, including a | large supply of blood, despite the lack of diplomatic relations. revolution in Great Risks IT. S, aid ha* obviously been far greater. U . S. army pilots are risking their lives daily to : fly relief teams ami supplies into I the stricken area of northern Peru, which is hazardous because of the autumn weather. Several U . S. and other foreign aircraft J have crashed, causing the deaths a three Argentines and of Peruvian, and injuries to several U. S. airmen and relief workers. Equally surprising to Peruvians is the outpouring of aid from private U. S businesses here, despite their having been the ob­ ject of the government’s wrath for the last 20 months. ‘Tattlers °Day is WexT Munday All year long you’ve meant to tell' him how much he means to you. So do it handsomely on June 21. And let Uncles, Nephews, Cousins, Sons, Friends and Dad know you care, too... with wonderful greetings from our Hallmark collection of Father's Day cards. 4 J a.CC\uaa!U cp b e C coutq S to o p 2900 G uadalupe 472-5733 Many First Editions Libretti Donated A major collection of Italian Asst. Prof. John W. Grubbs, original opera texts were revised. opera libretti-includtog many first editions published from 1600 to 1950 — has been given to the University by H. P. Kraus of New York City, an internationally- known bookman and publisher. The Kraus Libretti Collection consists of about 3,800 items, prim arily the texts of operas but also of Italian-originated can­ tatas, serenatas, oratorios, dialo­ gues and Passions that were written in a period that spans the Seventeenth through the mid- Twentieth Centuries. In addition to the Italian works, the collection also includes texts of operas written by French, Ger­ man and Austrian composers and in performed, Italy. The libretti of some Italian operas performed in Vienna and Paris also form a portion of the collection. translation, in Musicologists at the University explain that the importance of the libretti collection lies in the research potential it offers for the study of opera history. Scholars of language, literature and drama als® are expected to be attracted to the resources of the collection. acting co-ordinator of musicology in the music department, says the collection must be viewed as having special for music scholarship “ for opera, particularly in the Seventeenth importance and Eighteenth Centuries, was the most centrally significant musical genre and one which had far-reaching influence on almost every musical form and style.” to Kraus, the donor, earlier has given major private collections to the Library of Congress. He said the Humanities his gift Research Center is “ my way of acknowledging the fine work that the University in preserving original materials of scholarly importance for future generations.” is doing from The collection has 52 rare libretti the Seventeenth Century, 401 from the Eighteenth Century, almost 2,900 from the Nineteenth Century, with the remainder being in the Twentieth Century. • C h a n g e s made when the Among collection reveals for scholars are: important data • Indications of staging. • How the libretti of im­ portant librettists were treated in a variety of performances. • Indications of performers, places, occasions and musical insertions. works. • The popularity of given • Musical activity at the courts, theaters and oratories of such centers as Venice, Milan, Rome. Florence, Naples, Palerm o and Bologna. Dr. Patricia B. Brauner, a Yale-educated musicologist who is researching the Kraus Libretti the University, Collection at reports that significant among the Seventeenth Century libretti is the first edition, published in 1600, of Ottavio Rinuccini's “ La first opera, per­ the Dafne,” formed in Venice in 1597. The Main Building, completed near the end of the 1936-37 long term, took six years to construct at a cost of $2,800,000. P a ir Reverse R oles tale of N EW Y O RK (A P ) — The tri­ test saga of show business is the the clown who sad yearned to play H am let Je rry Stiller and Anne Meara demon­ strated the rare reverse; a pair who deliberately turned to com­ edy after plenty of exposure to tile Bard. In the last few' years, this husband and wife team have proved it to be much the better way to go. They have a com­ fortable home in Manhattan equipped with two children and a jewel of a housekeeper, a bank account, a car — “ We used to think that people who rode in cabs were rich !” — and just about as many TV, film and club dates as they want to fill without being awray from the kids too long. It is unlikely that either Anne or Jerry would have made a convincing Hamlet, anyway. in terst a te] Ih ELD O VER! I PARAMOUNT D O W N T O W N T H C O N G R E S S , THEATRE F E A T F R E S : 11:30 - 2:00 - 4:30 7:00 - 9:30 DIRECT FROM ITS EXCLUSIVE RESERVED-SEAT ENGAGEMENT...✓ " A B ig M usical H i t - In The Winner’s Corner!” •‘ A R C H E R W IK S T E N . N Y Roff \ “Explosions Of Laughter!’1 —Time Migizme WAAMOUNT nCWE I S CUNT JIAN MARVIN EASTWOOD SEBERG BUNT YOUR WAGON trintiili— iliinbiAn— R,l» ^ SnCOMONC&N) EQMCOICr ARMOX! NCR* f G P - g f r ewmmwus performances at popular prices! PREE PARK ^ J S S S E J m NOW! I S T A T E DC **r shows' 719 CONGRESS THEATRE F E A T ! E E S : 12:00 - 2:00 - 4:00 0 :0 0 - 8 :0 0 - 10:00 The D eadliest M an Alive ...T akes on a W hole Army! c u n t ASTWOOD SHIRLEY MACLAINE TWO MULES TOR'SISTER SARA' A MARTIN MACKIN PftOOUCttOM I C S P I A UNIVERSAL PIC TU RE • TECHNICOLOR* • PANAVISION* 75c TIL 2:15 VARSI TY 2402 GUADALUPE There weren’t supposed to be any more surprises in their lives. A ' < • F E A T ! R E S v 2:00 - 3:35 - 5:50 :4 A - 0:40 / w rn mm '■ rJ ■ $ i rn w jr s I W a I rn /I I J? w v / then they met each other. K A N m n w BERGim mi / l i m n r *• * im tm J m urm ur - cur t n t * notmcrioM P 5 * J t^ lk the S p r in g h ill m a WEAVER KATHERINE CRAWFORD • Stirling StlLphsnt • u " * tim*, tm.nam • flu/ Green *K>eveto tv Stirling SiHiptm t • Cater. FenerieietF E E P A R K I H G m OPEN I2?45 mm WAIT DISNEY ■ mass W A L T D I S N E Y p r o d u c t i o n s THE HORSE- CRAY FIBNNEL SUIT i T E C H N IC O L O R » ”G " L E P A R K I N G A T A L L T I M E S 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 3 Peer Gynt’s Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle I -Clothed 5-Weakens 9 Rent 10-Egresses 12 Depended on 13-Rely on 15-Retained 16-Employs 18 Beam 19-Bitter v^tch 20 Mark left by wound 21-Lease 22-Coniunction 23-Native of Latvia 24-Transactk>ns 25-Hauls 26-European 27 Social rank 29-Story 30-Pa rent (colloq.) 32-Chapeaus 33-Domesticate TM-Crony (colloq.) 35 Emmet 36-Harvest 37-Ripped 38-Bank employe 40-Neither Jewish nor Christian 42-Sows 43-Peruses 44-Flower 45 Places DOWN 1-Prison compartment* 2-Placed mother 4-Subtracts 5-Hebrew festival 6-Chopping tools 7-Fruit seed 8-Unproductive 9-Condescending looks 11-Trap 12-American ostrich 14-Changes color of 17 Posed for portrait 20-Stitches 2 1 -Healthy 23-Defeat 24 Food fish M 23 25 9 y y . y . 12 TS T9 22 - i i $ $ 77 28 32 35 38 42 44 25-Gossip 26-lndulges 27-Talk idly 28-Paths 29-Chinese pagoda 30-European capital 31-Fish sauce 33-Brief 34-Bodies of water 36-Communists 3 7-Pronoun 39-Sign of zodiac 41-Golf mound I 2 3 A 5 6 7 8 'M 16 17 x- - OOO 20 18 $$$ PW S 21 24 : y > 31 30 A * 34 999 37 33 k - v w s 36 39 40 41 i IO 13 26 999 29 43 n45 r Distr, b y United Feature Syndicate, Inc. I . . . . ii I T R A N S ★ T E X A S FEATURES 2:30 - 5:30 -8:30 O PEN 2:00 — N o Reserved Seats CHILDREN 75c ANYTIME REDUCED PRICES 'TIL 5:30 DOLLY's How Here in Austin For The Finest in Summer Fun 12200 Hancock Drive -453-5641 K l 20fh CENTURY FOX PRE BARBRA STREISAND • WAITER MATTHAUl MICHAEL CRAWF0M wa m u: mon* up louis m m JERRY HERMAN I N 70M M O N T H E L A R G E S T S C R E E N I N T O W N V WINNER O F A ! A C A D E M Y A W A R D S ! - ': £ CCNCftAi flvtfftncN ■ T R A N S ★ T E X A S E i u m i i i 11423 W. Ben Whit* Blvd.— 442 2333 ALL SEATS $1.00 ’TIL 5 P.M. W EEK DAYS DOORS OPEN — 1:15 FEATURES 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 A Brand fjgtf full-length feature of family entertainment of Oz-like fantasy!*VET* C H ILD R EN UNDER 12 $1.00 OPEN 1:45 • 11.00 ’Til 5 PM FEATURES: 2-4-6-8-10 LA U R EL & H ARO Y, C H A R LEY C H A S E And BUSTER KEATO N 2224 Guadalupe St— 477-1964 6 6 . The Film That Welcomes Back The BELLY LAU6HI Peru to Send Art Display If modern art leaves you cold, a new exhibit opening Sunday at the University may evoke a warmer response. It is “ Popular Art from Peru.” about 200 craft items made by contemporary native artists from IO different regions of Peru. and and retablos The folk art includes terra-cotta figurines from Cuzco; gourds, from textiles Lambayeque; Ayacucho ceramics from Puno; jewelry from Junto and Huancayo; fab­ rics, spears and gourds bearing the decorations of the Shipibo Indians of Ixireto; and silver, w'rought-iron, carved and gold- l e a f Lim a, Cajam arca and Ancash. frames from Items in the show w'ere selected by the Peruvian ambassador to the United States, Celso Pastor. The exhibit is being sponsored in part by the Peruvian Embassy and shown under auspices of the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. Tile handicrafts will be dis­ played in the museum’s Archer M. Huntington Gallery, through Ju ly 26. Recognized as a strong and creative force in the culture of Peru, folk art reflects the father- to-son craftsmanship that keeps alive Peru’s con­ ventions of form and decora tion. traditional The textile, ceramic, straw and particularly m e t a l illustrate a people’s desire to decorate objects of daily use. works U s i n g materials readily available, the Peruvian artisans transform wool and cotton into ’Prologue' to Show In Main Ballroom “ Prologue,” the first movie in summer the Curtain Club’s festival, will have its Southwest premiere at 6, 8 and IO p.m. Thursday to the Texas Union Main Ballroom. The film also will be shown Friday and Saturday at the same hours and place. It concerns the two publishers of an underground newspaper in Montreal and shows an interview with Abbie Hoffman as well as scenes the demonstrations at the Chicago National Democratic convention. led up that to B O X O I FIC K O P E N S 7 15 S H O W B E G I N S A T D i s k rugs of vibrant color and d ay into the whimsical and richly decorated bulls of Pucara, as into heavily painted w'ell as miniature churches that are placed atop roofs in the villages of Ayacucho to ward off evil s p i r i t s . Painted terra-cotta angels, saints and warriors show the influence of the Spanish con­ quistadores. The museum. located at East 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard, is open to the public without charge. Summer gallery hours are I to 4 p.m. Sunday, IO a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, and IO a.m. to I p.m. Saturday. Iron Etchings Exhibit Theme Five Austrian artists engaged in reviving an almost forgotten printing proceas, etching on iron, will exhibit their works beginning Sunday in the University Art Museum. The exhibit, “ Creative Print­ ing: Etching on Iron.” w ill be shown through Ju ly 26 in the museum’s mezzanine gallery. Theo Baurn, The almost IOO works are by Braun, Peter Margaret]*! Herzele, Guenther Kraus and Ludwig Merwart. All of them live and work in or near Vienna, have attended the school of painting and graphic arts of the Viennese Academy of Fine Arts and are active the modern development of the iron* etching technique. in on of iron the an Is Etching elaboration aquatint process, wherein iron instead of copper or zinc Is used as the plate material. The last major prinfmaker to use iron for in­ taglio printing was Albrecht Lurer to the Sixteenth Century. Most of the forms and motifs used by the Austrian artists are abstract. They etch several pintcs of sim ilar size and shape, then print inter­ plates changeable sequences, positions and colors. the to P i n t o s Birds of a Feather? Two hand carved toys are part of a Peruvian folk-art display scheduled for exhibition Sun­ day in the University Art Museum. Solo Recital to Feature Franz Schubert Sonata Franz Fantasy- Schubert’s Sonata will be the subject of a lecture-recital by Hubert Ken- nemer at the University at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in Music Building Recital Hall. Kennemer, a candidate for tile doctor of musical arts degree in piano, will assistant be professor of music at Humboldt in Arcata, Calif., State College in September. an A native of Dallas, hp has been a teaching assistant in music since 1966. In April of 1968, he appeared as soloist with the Dallas Symphony under Donald Johanos the premiere per­ formance Ct a piano concerto written by a University graduate student. in the performance Kennemer’s lecture-reoital will include of Schubert’s Sonata in G Major, Op. 78. The presentation is ad­ mission-free and open to the pub* lie. XX l l BH 14 n n I] T H U R S D A Y N I G H T ! W H G E N E S E E Star G irl* F R K R SAT. N IG H T : P L A Y B O Y S O F E D IN B U R G $ 1 . 2 5 P i t c h e r B e e r I O R S 13th Si R F I * R I V E R O P E N 8:80 r . M . 478-0392 ■ B . B . G K IN C O N C E R T A H IS B A N D C O M P L E T E D -H I S O U N D — L IG H T S H O W I N 7 P.M. - IO P.M. SH O W S • 11 P.M. - 2 A.M. • S A X A N T O N IO O N L Y THIS FRIDAY JUNE 19 P R F S A L E : SID O • D O O R : 55.(Mf T I C K E T S : R A N M O N O S D R E G S — O A T W I L l E S A T T H E D I I C I V A T r U j l - K A I C L E R 12fl V I L L I T A 223-5065 S T . A JA M PRODUCTION JAM#'- *i) UNIVER­ SITY FILM CLASSICS TO PRESENT WAGES OF FEAR Directed by Henri-Georges Clouzot TONIGHT J U N E 18 Batts Auditorium 8 pm T R A N S ★ T E X A S 465 6933 B O X O F F I C E A N D S N A C K B A R S O P E N A T 8.00 C H I L D E R K E T E E N D IS C . $1.00 A D I L T S $1.50 SKULL DUGGERY B u r t R e y Holds S u sa n C la r k -------- p lu s -------- THE SAVAGE LAND B a r r y S u lliv a n K a th ry n H a y s B O T H C O L O R THE LOSERS W illia m S m ith A d a m R o a rk e p l u s KILL THEM ALL AND COME BACK ALONE C h u ck C o n n e rs B O T H C O L O R S T U D IO IV 222 East 6th Ph. 472-0436 Rated “ X ” — No One Under 18 Admitted A THRILLER! RATED X X X X X ! w P w m p f G C r o t o n H i Abandon Hope A ll Ye. W h o Enter Here! WHIT BOYD PRESENTS ’PARTY GIRL PLUS: 2nd AD ULT H IT — IN C O LO R ! ESCORTED LADIES F R E E AND WELCOME STARTS NEXT W EEK ON SCREEN No. 2: ALL I6MM UNDERGROUND FILMS! EXTRA MIDNIGHT SH O W SATURDAY! 11:45 P.M. “ T H E L O S F R S '* W illia m S m ith B e ra te H a m ilto n " R I N W O R L H I N " W illia m Sm ith i l l ) V a le r ia S t a rre tt Camaron Rd at 183 SHOWTOUUN U.S.A. 4 5 4 * 8 4 4 4 T W I N “ T H E M W K A I . I R S ' 'l a k e T h e W ild H unch I .oak T am p A nd T he lli r t y Dozen Kook C le an JO A N \ V ’ G e n e v ie v e W a ite ( R I C h ris tia n D o e rm e r I I | i iVV 4 Ic Ic St “ K O H Si < A R O !. ti T I U & A L K E " N a ta lie Wood R o b e rt C ulp " C I R C L E O F L O I E " •lane i nu it a ( R I F r a u rin e Ite r s * LONGHORN Putman at 183 N 454-3880 “ S K I L L D C G G F . R Y ” B u r t R e y n o ld * S u sa n C la r k " T O P A Z " F r e d e r ic k S ta ffo rd ( G P ) D a n y B o b b in PASSPORTS RESUMES S U P ? R HOT SERV/ICE STUDMAN PHOTO 19th at La.aca • Can.aren Viiiag* MMHESM3RNHN , NATIONAL GE NEPAL CORPORATION F O X T h e a tre 8757 MWW! IOT. • 434-271! KELII OVER 2nd WECK MATINEE TODAY! DOORS OPEN 1:45 F R A T I B K T I M K S ‘.MMI— I UMI—6 : IHI I V W. 8 :(MI— IO (Mi Planet OI The Apes was only the beginninjm^^^H WHAT IIESK3 I M AYBE WSSBSSSm • TUEEND'^^^H J PLANET r Apis JAMES FRANCISCUS KIM HUNTER MAURICE EVANS LINDA HARRISON C t Su » « q PMA. (CHAROS • VCIOR BUONO • JAMES GREGORY JEFE COREY* NATALIE TRUNDY - THOMAS GOMEZ ^CHARLTON HESTON is Uyto Pwdwta bf Associe Pioduwi hetM bf APJAC PRODUCTIONS ■ MORI ABRAHAMS • TEO POST Sciw'ptef bi Sh*f bf PAIA DEHN • PAUL O EH N i^M O R I ABRAHAMS Amti rn Chicle.j Deflea bf MAM BOtALl Mw* Kl 11 (KAKO HOM NIO* PUIAWSIO*e Coto bf Bi UKE IU *3SB C A P IT A L P L A Z A N O . IN T E R R E G IO N A L H W Y Scheduled Friday Soloist to Present Recital U.S. Subject Of NET Show underneath the facades. What does he find? It depends upon who’s talking — the young man (Silver), Shepherd, or the pro­ gram’s mythical “sponsor,” an organization called America, Inc. “America, Inc.” will have a second showing at I p.m. Friday. | Fancy Jewelry Losing Appeal rubies, emeralds New York Time* NEW YORK — Never mind about and diamonds. Or even platinum, gold and silver. All that precious stuff can stay in the vaults as far as some new designers of body ornaments and jewelry are con­ cerned. Leather thongs, wood beads and even coils of rope are more their thing. satisfying This kind of jewelry is much m o r e the traditional sort that stays put, according to 24-year-old designer David Deutsch. than He describes his designs as jewelry” and as “involvement pacifiers for grownups. “People like tilings that make noise or that can be handled,” he said, picking up a rough leather belt that had a flurry of things hanging from it. On each thong, there were clusters cf beads that clattered or could be moved up and down. It wasn’t he sort of thing you put on and forget about. Discover America David Silver and Ed Beards­ ley (l-r) are the principals in experimental NET's drama about American at- tiftides toward life. new Drama Stages Department Workshop The University drama depart­ ment will stage a dance workshop June 25 to 27, the first of two the productions scheduled summer session. for Curtain time will be 8:30 p.m. in Hogg Auditorium. A highlight of the program will be an 18-minute production of “Romeo and Juliet,” choreo­ graphed by tile internationally- k n o w n ballet dancer Igor Youskevitch, who Is a guest artist in the department for the first summer term. In addition the classical to “Romeo and Juliet” presentation with music by Tchaikovsky, the workshop will offer three modern dance selections. They include “Crazy Colors,” directed by Instructor Frances K. Wolfe; “Jain Universal Cycle” by Susan Morrison, a drama department and assistant t e a c h i n g “Weilliana” Pond, by Ray graduate drama student/ The workshop is an outgrowth of an intensive course sequence in dance being offered this summer. The second summer production, scheduled for June 29 to July 4. is the Broadway musical, “Li’l Abner,” which also will afford student cast members further opportunity for dance experience. Choreographing and directing he Dogpatch show will be instructor Cathan Sanford. “Li’l Abner” will be staged In the Drama Building Theater Room. Reservations for the workshop and “UT Abner” may be made at the University Box Office in Hogg Auditorium. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A * * Theater East Sets Live Performances Teatro Chicano of Theater East will be performing live and free for the people of two cities next week. Featured will be Mexican songs and dances and skits por­ traying chicano life in Austin. A u s t i n performances are scheduled for 7:30 Monday at the Chalmers Courts Housing Project in the Recreation Room on Chalmers Street and at 8 Tuesday at the Govalle Park’s Community Night. Although Chalmers Courts residents have seen two other T h e a t e r East productions, Tuesday will mark the theater's in Govalle first performance Park. People in the Govalle area who missed the performance at Saint Julia’s Church Friday night thus will have another chance to take in a free show. With the weekend, Teatro Chicano heads for Houston to do two evening performances in­ cluding one at the Casa de Amigos. The group also will con­ duct workshop sessions at the in casa for Houston. interested people All performances are free and open to all, although contributions will be accepted to help finance the teatro in its travels ‘ ‘ A m e r i c a , Inc.,” which features British-born actor David Silver and veteran radio humorist three Jean Shepherd, presents clashing attitudes toward life in the United States at 7:30 p.m. Thursday on channel 9. opinions After the show was first aired last February, 2,258 letters about the program were received of which only 59 were negative. General the program ran from “it’s a sign of hope for the future” or “ it’s an assault against God and country” and even for those who don’t in­ the think compatible it is both. two are about Some composed poetry, other enclosed printed material to support their points of view and some wrote almost in a stream of consciousness about their own feelings regarding life in Ameri­ ca. The 90-minute, color program centers around a young family man who sets out on an odyssey to discover what America is like Fifth Annual Jazz Festival Slated Five years ago, Austin public relations man Rod Kennedy finally got tired of being able to hear great jazz only on record­ ings and resolved to bring big- time jazz to Texas in the form of a major festival. set about Kennedy raising $25,000 from 25 friends and then began to work to plan the first longhorn Jazz Festival which actually took place In Austin under chilly April skies in 1966. A musical success, the festival Inst $26,000. this Armed with a year’s ex­ perience, the project was under­ taken again, time with support from Schlitz Beer, and the losses of the second festival wnre covered. In 1968 and 1969, the festival went on the road playing DalLas-Austin-Houston on a three day weekend instead of playing Austin alone for three days. This year, the fifth anniversary I iO n g h o m Jazz Festival will be held July 18. There will be an afternoon concert beginning at 2 p.m. and another one at 8 p .m . that night Admission to the af­ ternoon concert is $1.50 (general admission). Tickets the evening performance range from $3.50 to $6.50 (all .wats reserved). to CHICK-A-GO-GO SO U T H E R N FRIED C H IC K E N OFFER EXPIRES JULY 1st * An all-Beethoven piano pro­ gram will be given by a member of the summer music faculty at the the University Friday on Summer Pro­ gram. Entertainment conducting, The pianist is John Ferritto, a musician whose interests in­ clude composing, coaching and playing the viola. As a pianist he has appeared as soloist or accompanist in Ohio, Florida, Virginia, Illinois, Mas­ sachusetts and Connecticut. Few the last three years, he has been assistant conductor of the New Haven Symphony Or- c h e s t r a . He directed the educational concerts, was con­ ductor of the “Pops” Series and the was musical director of Greater New Haven Youth Symphony. In addition, he was guest conductor of the New Haven Opera Society last spring and was musical director of the New Haven Ballet Company. Last year he was a quarter-finalist in the Dmitri Mitropouk» conducting competition in New York. M ary Pearson Reveals Poetry in ‘Windblown* M a r y Pearson, University senior, has demonstrated her skill as a poet and sensitivity in revealing human relationships in her slender volume of verse, “ Windblown,” which The Naylor Company of San Antonio will publish shortly. In “Windblown,” the moments in verse are she crystallizes frequently her thoughts about love — shared or repressed, ful­ filled or rejected. W All year long you’ve meant to tell" him how much he m eans to you. So do it handsomely on June 21. And let Uncles, Nephews, Cousins, Sons, Friends and Dad k n o w y o u care, too... with wonderful greetings from our Hallm ark collection of Father’s Day cards. elbe Ccoioj* Stoop 2900 Guadalupe 472-5733 N E W ! SO nee. r e t r i e s f The Place to go for people ( on the go! C O U P O N Buy an individual order 1 I ! and get No. I order FREE I —, h T o t H T j ■ * I. (moot p r e s e n t thi» coupon * j 1 j I 2 Locations 2105 E. 7 th 472 9150 600 W lo th 472-4456 a s PITCHER OF BEER Bud, Schlitz or Pearl ONLY 90c with this ad SCO -PRO LOUNGE Open Kvurjr Dap Ai I 477-0548 609 West 29th department of drama presents . . . D A N C E W O R K S H O P ju n e 25-27, 8:30 p.m., hogg auditorium "Romeo and Juliet" Choreographed by Igor Koustevitch "M odern Expressions" Choreographed by K. Francis W olfe U M unema 40 preien ls TRAGEDY AT KENT STATE (« docum entary) and BEFORE THE REVOLUTION (BERTOLUCCI) 7:30 FRIDAY, J U N E 19 75c BATTS AUDITORIUM Ferritto has written a number of musical compositions, many of which have been performed at the University of Chicago, Yale and the Cleveland Institute of Music as well as by members of the Minnesota Orchestra and In Europe. He has been a violist with various orchestras in Connecticut and Ohio and plays viola with the New Haven Symphony when he is not conducting. He has also been engaged bi private teaching and coaching of piano, chamber music and otter subjects. His students have In­ cluded Zara Nelsova, cellist who appeared on the University’* Solo A r t i s t Series season* Veronica Tyler and Robert Nagy. Admission is $1 per person or free to purchasers of the Summer Entertainment Program season ticket. last THE ATTIC RESTAURANT presents a distinctive dining opportunity for the University Students, Faculty, and Staff. You may choose from: • Champagne Dinner for Two inside The Attic Featuring U.S. Choice 8 oz. Club Steak And half bottle of Champagne .................. $8.95 (Thursday, Friday, and Saturday) • Weekend Discount of Bar-B-Que Sandwiches You may select a sliced beef, chopped pork, or link-on-a-bun for only .50c in our Vineyard (Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday) • Budweiser Beer on Tap inside the Attic for $130 a pitcher on Thurs., Fri., & Sat. Canned Beer .35c — all the time. • Plus many other great foods for your eating enjoyment on our menus bath Inside and in the Vineyard. Come, eat with us inside or outside and enjoy your food and have a good time. The Attic Restaurant 38th 4 Interregional SILENT PHONE in your future? i There Needn't Be . . . Just Pick Up a Copy of . . . It Contains the PHONE NUMBER, NAME, AUSTIN ADDRESS and H O M ETO W N of the 1970 Summer Students! ON SALE S«8£l ■ B U C I O R * • BOOKSTORES • STENO BUREAU • JB107 Ihuvfdayj June Ifi^ i£70 IK E S U M M E R T E X A N £ *9* J Ii Group Works Locally To 'Slow' Population explains that the number of cat's is increasing at twice the rate of people and three times as fast as highway con­ and struction. The result is going to be traffic jams of ever-increasing s i z e : witness Interregional Highway at any rush period. road is One of the measures that ZPG that families advocates voluntarily limit themselves to two natural children. Kitto says this should be made so obvious “that it becomes socially unac­ ceptable to have more than two children. Of course an exception would be made in the case of adopted children.” The group has a lobbyist in Washington who is pushing for revision of the tax structure to discourage large families, except for those with adopted children. legalized abortion ZPG favors and freely available birth control information to implement this. three A large-scale education plan, televison i n c l u d i n g programs in the Austin area in the fall, is being set up to combat the attitude that growth is always good for the community. The Austin chapter of ZPG has around 65 members. The group’s purpose cuts across the political spectrum, and the members are a cross-section of the community: p r o f e s s i o n a l s , students, housewives. Anyone interested in working with the group may call Jeff Elliot at 472-8171. r MM w m m “Concerned" , . U.S. Rep. G eorge Bush. Bush Cites Texas Problems Disorder, War, Economy Worry Voters By CUFF AVERY Texan Staff Writer George Bush, Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate, cited the “disordered society,” along with the economy and the Indochina war, as one of three problems uppermost in the minds of Texas voters. The Houston congressman said In a Capitol press conference Tuesday that “the outrages of dissent are beginning to hurt the cause.” Bush said young people are realizing that violence Is not the answer, referring to students who had visited him in Washington to lobby on their views of the war. “I don’t confuse the entire generation with the few, very few', radicals,” Bush said. He pointed out that he had been on a committee of congressmen who had visited campuses and had reported to the President that violence had resulted from I or 2 percent of the students. Bush was hesitant about the role of the newly-appointed presidential commission on campus disorders, saying that while more information could aid in combatting the problem, ‘‘I’m one of the ones that worry about the roles of commissions.” He said commission findings are often forgotten. In a prepared statement, Bush criticized a congressional logjam of legislation. “Surely the safety and security of the person and property of our citizens is not a partisan, political matter,” he said. On other issues, Bush, a backer of President Richard M. Nixon1* Asian policy, said that “With a month-and-a-half hindsight, the move into Cambodia will have the result of shortening die war rather than lengthening it.” Bush also stated, “Tile economy is better than (the stock) market signifies, and the Texas economy is better than the national economy. Figures of Texas unemployment lag behind figures of national un­ employment.” Bush said the tight money situation would cut. into his campaign funding and declared that funds would be critical against a wealthy Democratic organization. “When you’re up against the establishment, you’re up against a lot of dough,” Bush quipped. In a question-and-answer exchange about his race with Democratic candidate Lloyd Bentsen, Bush said the defeat of Sen. Ralph Yar­ borough in the May 5 primary had left “votes up for grabs that are not ordinarily Republican-oriented.” “There is not unanimity in the Democratic Flirty, and this will have to be in my benefit in the election,” said Bush, fresh from his endorsement by the state teamsters union. Bush said he was hopeful that Nixon would come to Texas to aid In the congressman’s campaign. “I am confident that if he campaigns in any state, he will come to Texas,” Bash said. PIM Si By DAVID TURNER Austin is no exception to the problems of the population ex­ plosion, say two spokesmen for Zero Population Growth Inc. ZPG is a nation-wide organization whose goal is the stabilization of population in the United States and the world. feel Dr. Guy Bush, assistant professor of zoology, and Dr. Barrie Kitto, assistant professor of chemistry, that dire s t a t i s t i c s and apocalyptic p r e d i c t i o n s concerning the population crisis in the rest of the world are not sufficient to make most Americans push for stabilized growth. The Austin chapter of ZPG hopes to educate and motivate people by con­ centrating on local problems that are related to excessive popula­ tion growth. Local the problem of transportation. Bush include issues Red Cross Seeks Aid to Peruvians By CONNIE SMITH T exas Staff Writer o f and Contributions blankets, sweaters, other coats clothing and funds are being accepted by the Centex Chapter of the American Red Cross to aid victims of the May 31 Peruvian earthquake. cleaned Tim Brown, vice-chairman of the Centex Chapter, said the Red Cross will accept only new or n e w l y serviceable blankets, heavy sweaters, jackets and overcoats for the Peruvians who are now beginning their win- j | ter season in the southern hem­ isphere. in Funds are needed, Brown said, to provide direct assistance to the the injured and homeless stricken South American country. The American and Peruvian Red Cross organizations are working together to provide emergency recovery help than 500,000 persons affected by the earthquakes. to more Six American Red Cross dis­ aster specialists have been sent to Peru, along with $25,000 In contributions, I,TOO blankets and medical supplies requested by Peru. Two more Americans are en route to aid in the recovery. Contributions can be made by | marking th a n PERU through the Centex Chapter, American Red Cross, P.O. Box 1784, Austin, Texas, 78767, or by bringing items to tile chapter office at 1225 Red River, Austin. Campus News In Brief AUSTIN ASTRONOMICAL SO- GETT is sponsoring a lecture at 7:30 p.m. Friday entitled “Special Relativity, New Con- J | cepts (rf Space and Time” at the Austin Natural Science Cen­ ter at 401 Deep Eddy Ave. INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday at 7107 Daughtery with Dr. Philip F. L i t t l e , physics professor, speaking. W E D D IN G LOVE R IN G S. ;'■* •%> y*' #/>- - * ..... .'.VI PRESIDIO SCT A j t C a r v e d the Love Ring We hav« Love Rings (rom Art* Carved lor people who know that love Ie what a wedding Ie all about. Our Love Rings era beautiful. Whether you choose rn contemporary sculpture, a tra­ ditional scroll or s ribboned de­ sign, ArtCarved Love Rings are for you. Come see. Shop end Save Thursday, June 18, 1970 THE SUMMER TEXAN tm * ^ j i i o p S a fe w a y & C o m p a re ♦ with"’0"* In ona SHOP". oH fiB# ,oo« - - TV !!! S o o * ‘ Sp,: " ’:LA„vind Safeway Blond ; WOn*Y’ ★ Extra * WldeSel«nionol Heal " 7 ^ Lids IfP ; Goods y f ( e m - a f c - a 994) Ground Chuck te a n B eef. C om pare Fat & Lean C ontent! Round Steak Full Cut. USDA C hoice H eavy B eef (B oneless— Lb. $1.05) —Lh. * Only USD* f .7 H ...I Brands! * f inest, IreshestT'U't' * rtu iS p w « H lv * iy ., * £ £ £ - » " £ ! S S S remember Sliced Bacon Rath Bacon Rath Franks All Meat Franks S lo b . Riddles* ★ R oth M ade H a w i a r ★ S a fe w a y . Sliced ★ R oth Black H aw k o r ★ S a fe w a y Paper. ★A ssorted or ^Decorated Safeway Special! cotTowels 29* ’''’■.J % ' ' Leg of Lamb Shoulder Chops Lamb Chops Rath Bacon Canned Picnics Sliced Bologna Smorgas Pac Lunch Meat USDA Choice G eode to m b B lade Cut. U S D A C h o ice G ra d e Lam b — lb . •★R ib ★ T -B o n u a r ★ S ir l o in U S D A C ho ice G ra d e Lam b Rath Block H aw k. Thick-Sliced S w if t '* Prem ium nos 8 9 * $139 2-lb.no. $165 3-Lb. C a n $269 ★ Rey. o r ★Thick S a fe w a y . Jum bo » 7 5 * Eckrich , Re gu la r W 9 9* 4 V arieties In Pkg. Sclfwey. Silted ★fickl.-fimieeto ★Mdtofwii I Chew*. ★Suicod ★ All I m ! Bologna ★Olive Rump Roast Boneless Roast Boneless Roast Arm Roast Top Round Steak Loin Tip Roast Top Sirloin Steak Ground Beef USDA Choice G ra d # H eavy Bee# —lh ★ Bottom H o u n d o r ★ Pikes Peak USDA Choice H eavy Beef ★ Chuck o r ★ Shoulder. USDA C hoice H e a v y Beef 95* $109 — Us 9 8 * -u 85* $129 . . Pull C ut USDA C hoice G ra d e H eavy Beef Sonnies*. USDA C hoice G ra d e H eavy Beef Boneless U S D A C ho ice G ra d e H e a v y Beef —Lb. $139 Boneless. U S D A C holee G ra d e H e a v y Beef -u . $1*9 S a fe w a y H andy Chub Pak J lh . Chub $125 Sea Trader. Light Meat Safeway Special! Chunk Tuna 29f : J Fruit Cocktail Oel Monte. G re a t Dessert Safeway SpecialJ 17-oz. Can 23* SAVE CASH at SAFEWAY! You'll find LOW Places EVF.1Y D A Y throughout the store .. . shelf after shelf .,. In ail deportments. No confusing coupons. No expensive messy stamps to accumulate. Save CASH every time you Shop at Safeway. SH O P SAFEW AY and CO M PAR E! Check These Safeway Low, Low Prices! Town House Vegetables (£, Y ■ ■ / 1 l l ! ★Cut Green Beans ★Golden Com *c^w"eiVlumoi ★Green Peas ★Whole Tomatoes 47/7. 44/1 i Hatch! Safeway Special! ,l*"d Van Camp's. Family Favorite! Can 1 6 - O X . Silk. Assorted Colors Paper Napkins^^! Pork & B e a n s j M i Potato ChipspiliSl Canned Pop ^Btll Twin Pet Dog Food!! Cragmont. Assorted Flavors Party Pride. Fresh & Crisp Dogs Love it! 12-oi. Can 15-OZ. Can USDA Inspected . . . Grade ‘A9 Ev e r y d a y L o w T r i a l R eady-te-C eob! (C u t-U p — Lb. 35<) C ut fro m USDA Insp. G ra d e 'A ' f ry e r s Leg Q u arte rs! Breast Quarters Drumsticks In sp e c ted G ra d e 'A ' fry e r * Cwt fro m USDA lese . G ra d e 'A ' f r y e r s — Lh — Lb. S w ift'* B u tte rb a ll. f r a r e r USDA Im p. G ra d e 'A* with Rib*. C ut fro m USDA Insp. G ra d e 'A ' Fryer* Split Breasts Ducklings Swift’s Turkeys Pork Chops Pork Spareribs I Vi to 1-Lb. A v e ra g e Smoked Pork Chops Smorgas Pac — Us 6 9 * _ 6 9 * 55* 7 7 * 8 9 * 9 9 * C e n te r C ot — t h si- r*. 9 9 * USDA Insp. G ra d e ‘A* — Lb Q u a r t e r Sliced Perk L e h i l r hr ic b, All Beef r S a la d Dressing. K raft Sa fe n ay Special! I WHA 15 BB f u r t h a t * o r M ora I .eluding C ig a re tte s ! Lucerne. A sso rte d Flavors. Dessert T reat For Alt the Fam ily! S a f e w a y S p ecia l! V 2»GoI.| Carton Dinners Banquet. A sse rte d Cream Pies Lemonade Ice Cream Sn ow S ta r. A sso rte d F la v o r* la l-u ir . Aborted R egular Req. fkq. 14-0* Fkq. Can ’ J .C a l. C arton 38* 29* IO * 65* Scotch T ract. 4-ox. Check TheseSafeway Big Buys! Safeway Frozen Food Low, Low Prices! k Garden fresh Fruits & Vegetables! Safeway Dairy-Deli Values! More Low, Low PricesI Watermelons C harleston G rey 24 to 28-Lb. Avg. “ Each Map- ' ;*■< - i¥£Z % s>' v'5f/ • ... . Variety A Quality At Safeway! Vina Ripon o d . L a rg a — Cb. 2 9 * Tom atoes Sunkist O ran ges *£*£•*’ — Lh. 1 9 * 2 i» 2 5 * Cucum bers Bell Peppers 2 f«25* m . 2 9 * C arrots Em, 2 9 * Pascal Celery T t n * G ra w n . . L a rg a. l o c h S a fa w a y . C ru e c b y - u 1 9 * Yellow Squash cr.irk —4 b. 1 9 * Blackeye Peas Purple Hull Peas Fancy —Lb. 1 9 * Sunkist Lem ons Betrothing! Callo 4 9 * Fancy Burm osa Plum s*vrs.'r -**■ 2 9 * Blueberries P lo t 59 * Deluxe F lav o r a. % • ... 'VMSfr* Munching Good SpecialI ' - - - . V ' .................. r.71.- . . ; ■ Bananas Golden Ripe! Special at Safeway! Lucerne. Ail Styles. Cottage Cheese (2-Lb. Ctn. 57#) Special! 29* Gelatin Salads A sso rted Ctn. Fresh Milk L u c a m a . Law F a t J C * — ’/j-G o l. C f*. T F Whipping Cream L u c a m a . Rick fla v o r I — V i-ft. CIR. 3 Q 4 Buttermilk L u c a m a . T a s te Tem pting! “Choc” Milk L ucam a C h o c o la te •at. ctn. r n * 29* 3 3 * 0 *. ctn. e S A w Sa few a y G uarantees Finest Q uality Available! Lucerne Dairy Products are Fresh and Wholesome ... es fine a product as you can buy! Extra-Rich, Extra-Pure, Extra- Good-Tasting. Liquid Bleach 30* W hite M agic. For A B righter W a th l — G olioa H o t tic M H F Margarine Saltines Paper Plates Cheese Spread Catsup Cake Mixes Black Pepper H e d m e at Vi 4 b . F a t l y 8* V Melrose Soda Crocker* I-Lh. Bai Baadwara. White f luck 100-Ct. J-Lb. B ru c ia Fkg. 69**?,7 Im itation Br u t a t* Bai 59* « 7 B ottle 19*"iu" R*o. Fhg. O O T 4 0 c Coo 33* - ”3 U f u r * , Trader H am 14-ai. 4-a* Batty Cree Aar, A ttarfud Highway Check This Value! Bakery Low, Law Price! Safeway Low Price! ■ A lc o h o l Rubbing. Refreshing! Invigorating! ■ l r "Rolls ★Twin or ★ C loverleaf Skylark. Briquets. Grlliit. T7f J (20-Lb. Bag 97c) ■Charcoal 49* S a f e w a y Special! 10-Lb. Bag Prices Effective Thun Sun., June 18-21 Austin, Texas. in W e Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. No Sales to Dealers. S A F E W A Y qpCopyrifkt 1940, Safeway Stere*, Incorporated.