30,721 Complete Registration 'Trip' By CAROLYN HINCKLEY News Editor An additional 6,943 students wound their way through the Gregory Gym maze Friday to bring the University’s spring enrollment to 30,721. While slow turnouts at the beginning of the week made it look as lf enrollment would lower drastically, the totals surged ahead when students returned from trips or finally decided to pay. Assistant R egistrar A. W. Keith expects about 2,500 students to register late before the Friday deadline, bringing the student population to about 33,000. Students should pick up late registration instructions at the R egistrar’s Office, Main Building I, and get approval for entrance in a course at each department. ABOUT 50 STUDENTS at registration found out the hard way th at the good guys always win. They had their course cards taken up because they had a fake “ Enter Greg Gym’’ stamp. They rated an A for effort, because most were barely noticeable. On cue card the square stam p was about one-eighth of an inch larger than the original. The letters were a little too wide on another. But tiny the main give-away was a smudge next to the letters. The real stamps could only print perfectly. One man came to the gym at 4 p.m. F riday to pick up his card with a supposedly fake stam p, since the forgeries were collected by regis­ tration officials during the week. He argued for five minutes with a representative of the R egistrar’s Office, telling him that the stam p was legitimate. Finally the student laughed and said, “ Well, you have to adm it It’s a pretty good stam p,’’ and off he went to get new registration m aterial. SEVERAL ENTERPRISING students m ade from $5 to $10 for the sm all green stamps. But one coed didn’t think it was worth the money. She hand drew stam ps for two cards with a green pencil. It was a great artistic effort, but they stuck out like sore thumbs before the APOs’ scrutiny. What began as a joke about getting into the gym will have its repercussions. “ W e're not in the discipline business, so we turned over the cards we collected to the Dean of Student’s Office for action,” said Keith. F or students who did m ake it through registration, the first day of classes m ay be a disappointment. If so, students m ay add courses or change sections through Thursday. Feb. 28 last day for is dropping courses without penalty. Cards with instructions for these changes may be obtained in departm ent offices on campus. the O rdeal Over, N orm alcy Returns The roar of the crowd In G re go ry G ym moved from registration tables to spectator stands Saturday. Less than 24 hours after the last class card was pulled, the Long­ horn cagers defeated the Rice Owls 75-67. —Photo* by Ren* Perea • C lo u d y , W a r m e r • H igh: Low 60's • Low: M id 40 s Vol. 69 Price Ten Cents Physical Science Petitions Request Separate College By KAREN ELLIOTT Associate News Editor University President Norman Hackerman and faculty members from physical science departm ents will meet Tuesday to discuss proposals for a separate collage of physical sciences. Petitions have have circulated in both the physics and chemistry departm ents and the petitions, bearing faculty signatures, are expected to be presented to Hackerman at the 2 p.m. meeting. V\ illiam W. Robertson, professor of physics, has sent letters to the chairm an to various faculty of both departm ents, members and to Arts and Sciences Dean John R. Silbcr, asking them to attend the meeting. Robertson, who has organized the physics petition, refused Saturday to discuss the substance of the petitions. THE PETITIONS are being taken directly to the president instead of passing through the offices of the departm ent chairm an and dean. “Tilere is a petition on behalf of the chemistry departm ent that asks for sm aller adm inistrative units, but I haven’t seen the proposal,” Dr. William Shive, chairm an of the D epartment of Chemistry', said. Shive said th at the chemistry faculty does as much work for engineering and phar­ macy as it does for arts and sciences. Shive was a strong supporter of a motion last y ear to split the college. Dr. Harold sent Hanson, former chairm an of Hie Depart­ m ent of Physics’ to a Hackerman In July, 1968, saying, “The searching for funds, salaries, etc. could possibly be done better on the basis of faculty of sciences, faculty of social a sciences and a faculty of hum anities.” request THE PROPOSAL to split the College of Arts and Sciences has been m ade three other times in the last 30 years. It was to get off the ground because never able support was either too too apathetic. slight or However, the ever-expanding enrollment the college has increased Interest In In support for a change by a group of faculty m em bers who feel strongly that sciences will benefit more from being a separate unit. Silber has suggested four associate deans. sciences social the division of the This would encompass four units: arts and humanities, biological sciences and physical sciences with an as­ sociate dean for each. Unity would still be maintained by retaining a dean of Arts and Sciences. into sciences, H ackerm an says this plan Is not feasible at present because of the lack of funds. Shive said that any proposal for a split should come from the faculty, a premise that Hackerman also advances. Hackerman favors a division of a rts and sciences into sm aller units but w ants the recommendation to come from the faculty. T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N ew sp a p er at The University of Texas at A ustin Athletic Council Nixes lith Game Page 8 • AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1970 Fourteen Pages Today No. 104 Nader Hits Inequities Cites Tax Valuation Findings By PAUL SORELLE News .Assistant SAN ANTG8STIO — Consumer protector Ralph Nader, famed for his attacks on the auto industry, Friday blasted what he called “ inequities” in the ad valorem or property tax. Nader said the system, used to provide money for city and county governments taxing and school, hospital and other districts, “ can be a fair system provided all of the property is appraised at its fair m arket value. But the potential for tax­ a b l e is g reat.” In his statem ent before m em bers of the news media, N ader based charges on supposed und erv alu atio n of oil lands in E ctor County. His report prepared by two University students showed school instances In which property w'as under­ valued as much as 50 percent. law is national The consumer protector stressed that the situation “ Un­ derevaluation of big business property and undertaxation of these corporate industries is not just an Ector County or Texas phenomenon,” N ader said. scope. in “ It is a nationwide injustice that has deprived local communities and cities of desperately needed local revenues.” “ We have heard the cry for law and order in the streets,” he said. “It is long overdue to have some law and order in the property tax assessment system, p ar­ ticularly as it affects the oil companies.” The investigation compared a report filed by operators with the Railroad Commission on the Headlee-Devonian unit, an oil acreage in Ector County', with the tax rolls. The investigation showed the property was undervalued by half for tax purposes. “ This is a startling example of under­ evaluation of producing property, but consider next the non-valuation of property having little if any production,” he said. N ader said m any of the mr*-producing leases were not even listed an the tax roils or had nominal evaluations, even though the companies owning them had paid large sum s of money to purchase them. “A lack of production does not mean th at the property is worthless,” Nader said. He pointed out that leases not profitable to a large operator m ay be to a small oil company. In the Investigation he named Pritchard and Abbot Valuation Engineers as con­ tracting for valuation work with almost 70 percent of tile state’s taxing districts. The company the Headlee-Devonian unit. the value of appraised engaged “ There has been no allegation that they have been In under-the-table situations, but the facts here simply in­ dicate that their evaluation standards do not m ake for good accounting sense,” N ader said. As the initial step in alleviating the problem, N ader has requested State Rep. Ben Atwell of Dallas, chairm an of the Commission on State and Local Tax Policy, to investigate the situation. of this these unwarranted companies un­ “ Because derevaluation have received an unjustified windfall,” Nader said, in closing his prepared statement. “ It is only right and honest to require a full public accounting to this multi-million dollar windfall and to give the other tax­ payers the benefits of a full refund plus interest from these companies.” the law students Richard Mithoff and Joe Tom Easly. Mithoff said the investigation was investigation were Preparing inflated when Odessa* attorney Warren Burnett th* investigation was a two- situation. The month study. contacted Nader about Contacted by The Associated Press, Texas House Speaker Gus Muncher of Brenham called Nader’s comments "an unwarranted attack on one of Texas’ leading industries.’* Mutscher said he planned to appoint an tax committee but no special Interim committee to investigate Nader’s charges. Government officials and oil producers of Ector County were either critical of N ader or refused to comment on the situa­ tion, when they were contacted by the AP. Ribicoff Talk Set Monday Sen. Abraham Ribicoff is scheduled to speak in the Texas Union Main Ballroom at 7:30 p.m. Monday as part of the Speakers’ Committee program. Ribicoff, a Connecticut Democrat, will b« Introduced by Ralph W. Yarborough, senioi U. S. senator from Texas. Ribicoff, a 31-year veteran of public life, has been a governor, Cabinet officer and congressman, as well as U.S. senator. He is a m em ber of the Senate Finance Committee, the Joint Economic Committee and the Government Operations Committee. He is now involved in an investigation of pesticides. A long-time advocate of the control of environmental pollution, his first bill in the Senate w'as the Clean Air Act of 1963. -Photo by Paul SoRell* H e ad Raider . . . Ralph Nader. Presidency For Lyndon? NEW VORK (AP) — Sam Houston Johnson say he believes his brother Lyndon will run again for the presidency. said “ I know' at this time it doesn’t sound probable, but I know' my brother if I know anyone, form er President's younger brother. “ And I tell you politics is in his blood. He’s going to run for some elective office. And I believe it will be the presidency.” the Johnson, who said he had not talked with his brother in a year—“ You can say we estranged”—m ade' his a re prediction interview copyrighted published Sunday in P arade magazine. tem porarily a in “ I.et the w ar in Vietnam tap er off, he said. “ Then let Lyndon make 20 or 30 ap ­ pearances on TV. And in no tim e at all he can change his im age.” 'No-Knock1 Provision Included l l V s V I WI v II 11 I W I l l V I V VS * ^ v# IV Officials Give Drug Bill Cautious Approval By BRUCE BEAL Staff Writer Several State and local officials have cautiously expressed ap­ pt oval of a federal bill to reduce penalties for illegal drug pos­ session. T h e Controlled Dangerous Substance* Act of 1969 is being acted on by the House of Repro" scuta Aves. The Senate passed the bill 82-0 with a controversial “no- knock” provision intact. THE “NO-KNOCK” provision to break allows federal agents into buildings without notice if they believe that a wanting could result of narcotics. the destruction in It was attacked in debate by Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.). “ Under this provision an officer of the law can come and break into a m an's house without ever va™ . telling him who he is or what his purpose is,” Ervin said. The American Civil Liberties Union also has objected to the “no-knock” provision as making “serious inroads into protection guaranteed by the Constitution,” Tom Oakes, executive director of the ACLU in Texas, said. NORMAN SUAREZ, an adm in­ istrative assistant a t the De­ partm ent of Public Safety, said a “ no-knock” provision would probably not be in conflict with State law since Texas has no criminal trespass law. Austin Police Chief Bob Miles said the provision would benefit law enforcement officers. “ At present when an officer knocks on a door and says ‘This is the police,’ persons have a chance to the com­ flush narcotics down mode,” he said. Maurice Angly, Republican State representative, agreed that law enforcement agencies would be aided by such a law but ad­ ded, some qualifications on a ‘no-knock’ pro­ vision from being abused and used for harassm ent purposes.” should be to keep “ There it IO years REDUCTIONS of penalties for simple possession of drugs are m ajor bill proposals. The first offense penalty is reduced from a maximum $20,000 fine and two to to a maximum $5,000 fine and up to one year in prison. a also provision to place first offenders on probation with no legal convic­ tion is recorded successfully completed. if probation in prison contains The bill In addition the legislation calls for heavier penalties for sale of illegal drugs from a maximum $20,000 fine and five to IO years in prison to $25,000 and up to 12 years for sale of narcotics, and $15,000 and up to five years the m arijuana, speed and other non-narcotic, dangerous drugs. H e r rn e n n Gotcher, Travis County assistant district attorney, said determining the difference between sale and possession can be extremely difficult and such provisions m ight be ineffective in putting pressure on pushers. HOW’EVER, Miles agreed with the bill and said, “I think there tm should be stricter penalties persons selling narcotics.” Angly said stiffer penalties on pushers the one-or tw’o-time violators “ makes sen­ se.” instead on Because tile bill Is a federal one, it would only be in effect when federal agents are involved in narcotics raids. The m ajority of arrests involving State and local officers would still be tried under Texas statutes. In Texas, the penalty for pos­ session of m arijuana is two year* to life in prison. Angly said he did not feel re­ ductions in present State penal­ ties for drug possession were that necessary. He most of those convicted for pos­ session of m arijuana are given the minimum, two-year probated sentence. explained SAID GOTCHER adequate controls for drug abuse need to be enacted before penalties can be reduced. Even if medical studies show m arijuana to have no harm ful side effects, regulation would still be necessary. Because it is easy & # to grow and process, regulation w'ould be very difficult, Gotcher said. reduction Therefore, in State penalities would be doubtful, Gotcher said. Steve Russell, w'ho works at for “ Middle E arth ,” a clinic thinks a persons on bad trips, reduction of penalties might cause the number of users to fall. try “ MANY times people beginning to smoke pot won’t get high until about the third of fourth time they lot of people wouldn’t go through the trouble of blowing grass three or four tim es if there w'as no authority to defy,” Russell explained. it. A The reaction of many people to the laws against drug abuse is “ they’re not going to tell me what I can put in my body,’* Russell said. News Capsules Shultz Denies Statement Railroad Lockout Halted rn a rn TU’ A C l rT K T/"W T V M LT / A WASHINGTON (A P ) - A fed- *ral judge Saturday halted for IO days a threatened nationwide railroad shutdown and the strike that prompted it after a railroad told him President attorney would give Congress time to take any action it deemed necessary. In this case there is no ques­ tion that irreparable harm would be suffered both by the railroads and the ap­ proximately 500,000 employes,” Sirica said. the unions and A F L - C I O Shultz said he would use the IO days to try to get a voluntary agreement between the railroads a n d unions four rail shop representing 45.000 maintenance and repair workers. Shultz said the Administration had been considering, before the court action, special legislation but that in light of the 10-day injunction had not decided pre­ cisely what steps it would take. Rut he denied the Labor De­ partment had told the railroads the Administration planned to seek a special law to halt the strike and lockout. He said Undersecretary of La­ bor told James Hodgson had railroad representatives “ We are not committing the Adminis­ tration to any particular form of action and they should not advise the judge that their position was based on the Administration.” However, he said, Sirica's res­ training order ‘‘creates a new or different situation and we will see what further steps we can take to bring about a voluntary solution to the problem.” that increased during term. H all’s present Senate term has nearly three years to run. and the 1969 Legislature raised the governor's salary from $10,000 to $55,000. Hall said he had looked into the law and thinks he would be eligible. If the State party refuses to accept his filing fee, Hall said he w ill go to court to get on the ballot. CATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER 2010 University — G R 6-7351 Mass Schedule S u n d a y : 9, IO, l l : IS 11:20 a.m. & 5:30 p.r ('n basement) Oaiiyt 12:05 it 5:05 p.m. (M o n d ay - Friday) Confessions: 4:30-4 p.m. ( Monday - Friday) Carnegie H all last week H I H og g Aud. th!* week HERMANN PREY * Fel FREE to B J. Holden VAUSTINEER UNION 334-336 EEB. 2,3,4,1-5 p.m. NAME BRAND BEAUTY SUPPLIES Wholesale & Rehail Dine “Neath the Rafters Auto Industry Going Rough' D ETRO IT (A P ) — Outside analysts use the term "reces­ sion.” Company men say it’s a temporary sales slump. But any way you look at it, the auto in­ dustry is finding the going rough. The Big Three have all laid off thousands of workers in an effort to trim production back in line with slumping sales. The question facing Detroit automakers now is how bad will things get and how long wall it last? " It ’s pretty clear now that we are in a recession which is af­ fecting the auto industry,” said David Healy, automotive analyst for Argus Research Corp., a New York investment counseling firm. Healy, in Detroit for a round of talks with the automakers’ fi­ nancial experts, is more optim­ istic than some. He is recom­ mending the purchase of auto stocks and said he sees Im­ provement for the automakers in the second half of 1970. A General Motors economist, who discussed the situation on the proviso that his name not be used, said he agreed with Healy’* prediction of an upswing by mid-year. He said he would not use the term recession, how­ ever. BAHA'I ASSOCIATION Open House Tuesday, February 3, 1970 8:00 P.M. Union Room 317 _ BARRY G ILLIN G W A T ER C O #04 H u t A v e n u e 476-2633 F R EE T R A N S P O R T A T IO N Many Beautiful Colors BmkAmethwh BUY YOUR OWN BEAUTIFUL GLOWING PEACE BULB FITS REGULAR EDISON BASE SOCKET / STARLIGHT SUPPLY COMPANY ( \ 4006 N O R T H L A M A R A U S T IN . T EXA S — O L 2-9511 WE ALSO SELL BLACK LIGHTS AND FIXTURES NOMINATIONS ARE NOW IN ORDER! Pick Up Nomination Blanks in J.B. 107 Nomination Blanks Must be Submitted by FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1970 to TSP Business Office in the Journalism Building, Room 107 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. WEEKDAYS U V A 1- V ir j T T ^ A R T M i w ^ : PLEASE OBSERVE FOLLOWING REQUIREMENTS F M R A D I O S S T E R E O T A P E S P E A K E R S R E C O R D E R S A M P L IF IE R S Rales fo r T e r m , Month, W'eek 2234 Guadalupe 454-6731 1746 Anderson Ln "7 Ii 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN To Unicameral System Student Government Faces Reforms By JOHN WATKINS: Managing Editor for While University students are the themselves readying regis­ from transition rigors of to tration week academ ia, student government m ay be facing a sim ilar con­ structive change during the up­ coming semester. relaxed the Assembly and House of Delegates in their present forms. THE PETITION, which grew out of an ad hoc com m ittee that included Daily Texan editor Mark Morrison and Students’ Associa­ tion President Joe Krier, cites Texan Interpretive The roots of the reform are found in a petition circulated last sem ester proposing a unicam eral legislative body, which would tile Student mean abolition of the non-representative character of both bodies as the essential reason for change. Both tile House will hold their first meet­ the Assembly and ings of the sem ester this week, with the House set to convene Wednesday and the Assembly Thursday. Both will probably encounter problems; the House may not have a quorum, not an uncom­ mon occurrence with that body. lf dealing with The Assembly, least con­ the any m atter of troversy, should see nothing less than its usual chaos. And as both go about their business, neither will be doing so in a dem ocratic manner. Student politics has been des­ cribed by one student as little people involved In petty maneu- verings to no purpose. The state­ ment is not entirely true; con­ structive action has evolved from last student se­ government the effective­ m ester, although ness of is still In question. the action THE ASSEMBLY, reacting to the Waller Creek incident, passed a "cam pus expansion’’ resolution, recommending President Norman Hackerman work toward firm of planners employing a responsible for creating a frame- that University S M C to Adopt Spring Plans Monday Night The University Student Mobili­ sation Committee to End the War in Vietnam, which coordinated Austin moratorium activities last sem ester, meets at 7:30 p.m. Junior Monday spring Ballroom the Union to m ap out in the agenda for the plans for strategy "spring of- ting the Vietnam !5t w ar and the National SMC con­ ference in Cleveland Fob. 14 and 35. Last semester, the University SMC, in conjunction with other antiwar groups across the nation, planned and carried out m ora­ torium actions protesting the war in October and November. 11,000 In October, the most noted Austin SMC action occurred when approximately persons gathered on the grounds of the to hear antiw ar State Capitol speeches. In November, SMC or- g a n i z e d of University students to participate in on the Washington. national march contingent a The antiw ar organization also arranged for a campus speech by Robert Scheer, author of "How the U.S. Got Involved in Vietnam" and a former editor of R am parts magazine. In additon, SMC organized and Black Experience 'Challenge' Subject Th# University community will take a close look at the black experience in America during Challenge ’70. February 19 to 21. This y ear’s colloquium, titled •TTie Crisis Is Consciousness,’’ is the ninth in a series which an­ imally focuses on some aspect of students and faculty and their environment or culture. black The conference will center on the a reflection of America’s collective lack of consciousness. experience as Activities will Include a fish­ bowl sensitivity group, rap ses­ sions, a feature-length film, soul food meals, a mixed-media p r e s e n t a t i o n and several speakers. Registration, which Is open to faculty and students, will all begin Monday continue through Feb. 13. Only the first 1,500 applicants will be accepted. and Registration forms are avail­ able outside Union Building 342. Fees are $3.50 for University participants and $5 for persons from other schools. A film festival, Soul Room and Creativity Room, a rt exhibits, a black style show' and several sandwich sem inars are scheduled the the weeks preceding for conference. Film s will hp shown the Union Auditorium. Admission for most is free. in Challenge is sponsored by the Texas Union. Q B B SD D D m iltfi RENT af! rent applies 90 days or Rent-Purchase TYPEWRITERS P o rta b le a n d Electric Adding Machina Calculators j::.* 5134 Burnet Rd. 454-6731 i:i:2234 G u a d a l u p e 1746 a n d e r s o n l n . led a legal defense and publicity in behalf of Pvt. campaign Robert Bower, an antiw ar GI who spoke at the October moratorium South Vietnamese Kill 72 North Viet Troops Near D M ! SAIGON (AP) — South Viet­ namese troops trapped a com­ pany of North Vietnamese regu­ lars Saturday rugged hills in three miles south of the Demili­ tarized Zone, killing 72 enemy soldiers and capturing ll, mili­ tary spokesmen said Sunday. It was the biggest battle along tho DMZ since mid-November, forces killed when American nearly 200 enemy troops in a two- dav fight. Ten South Vietnamese troops were wounded in the latest ac­ lasted nearly eight tion, which hours, spokesmen said. Field reports infantry said a South Vietnamese battalion was on a sweep operation when it spotted the enemy moving near Cam Lo, a district town of about 14.000 persons, most of them refugees. I a t the Capitol and faced a court­ m artial for his action. The de­ fense proved and Bower was released from the Army. successful, recently An SMC spokesman said no plans are concrete for the spring students sem ester. Interested m ay obtain more information from the organization’s office, at t h e University 2200 “ Y,” Guadalupe, phone 478-0609. License Plates On Sale Monday Car license plates will go on sale Monday a t the Travis County tax-assessor-coilector’s office. The new blue and white plates will be sold from Monday through April I. A person may receive license plates by mail by submitting his application, registration fee and $1 dollar by March I to the tax assessor-colleetor’s office. the Plates may be bought in person tax assessor-eollector’s at office at the courthouse or one of its substations. ,ND,AN J E W E L R Y AT NELSON'S GIFT S N e x t to nill’ii Cafe 4 fiI2 8 . C o n g r e s s TTI 4-3X14 h o u rs I O - # Interviews S e t ! For Encounter Interviews for Freshm an E n­ counter 1970 coordinator are sch­ eduled for the first week of class according to 1969 co-chairman Tullos Wells. Interested persons m ay sign up for interviews in Union Building 321 Monday through Friday. Prior knowledge of the program Is desired but not a requirem ent. Freshm an Encounter is a sev- eral-ueek long program designed to help new students become ac­ climated the University, provide an opportunity to make friends and stim ulate an new awareness of their new environ­ ment. to 48 HOUR RUSH KODACOLOR PRINTS Bring U * Y o u r Expojed Film b y 4: P M Print* R e a d y 48 H r*. Later at 4: P M S T U D T M A N P H O T O • 19th 9t Lavaca Cameron Village The name JOHN ROBERTS has a certain ring to it... the finest ring available. Your class ring should be the finest. And we have it. The John Roberts class ring. Choose Diamond Top or colored stone — in the weight ring you want. / / X x ? TTH f \ y z ~ S 'Z £ r i r Created by John Roberts ZALES*JE W ELCHS We're nothing without your love. H A N C O C K CENTER 704 CONG RESS THIS HIGHLIGHTS the core of the problem — lack of true re ­ presentation, by far the greatest shortcoming of both political bodies. Arts and Sciences As­ semblyman David Mincberg, writing a guest viewpoint article for The Texan, described the As­ sembly as a mockery, a political gam e with active members in the distinct minority. the people “The will of Is rarely listened to, even in elec­ tions,’’ Mincberg wrote. "Two persons who lost in campus elec­ tions last spring are presently in the Assembly, One such person lost his race and was appointed to an Assembly seat three weeks la ter.” The unicam eral proposal calls for election of representatives from each school or college on a proportional basis. The present the framework precludes even m o s t of form superficial representative governm ent THE PETITION received only 500 of the needed 800 signatures needed for consideration by the Assembly, but that body virtually canned the proposal before it got the necessary signatures. The ad hoc committee that con­ ceived the petition last fall will continue to work toward attaining the needed 300 signatures this se­ m ester, hoping to affect a posi­ tive change in student govern­ ment at the University, a change th at is sorely needed. work for determining future ex­ pansion plans. The Assembly also voted to channel defense funds to the students named in sealed Indictments for speaking to the crowd a t the Chuck Wagon, alleg­ edly inciting the so-called riot. There have been more sour moments. Tile Assembly, de­ bating a constitutional am end­ ment that would affect the com­ position of the Texas Union Board, voted to separate the pro­ posal thereby muddling the issue’s clarity. two parts, Into for The House, more often than not, lacked a quorum. The body did m anage to condemn the As- s e m b I y appropriating Students’ Association funds for an advertisem ent in The Texan sup­ porting the Vietnam moratorium. But the House was usually a three-ring circus. Aging student politician J. J. Hill battled with Vice-President Ernie Haywood for control of the microphone one evening, calling Haywood unfit for office. Hill and some sup­ porters had walked out moments earlier during a discussion of a resolution for K rier’s resignation. calling THE BIGGEST concern for House m em bers was the election of its delegates to the Assembly. It was a t this time that political panderings were at their best. A Texan to "e arn ’’ a House seat by forming a paper organization — just to dem onstrate how easily it could be accomplished. reporter managed Such maneuvers have resulted : frequent charges of House In packing to bloc vote in the e le c -! firms three Assembly seats. the for j | " It’s sort of like the inmates electing the w arden,’’ K rier said. Since the House represents al­ most nothing in the first place, the Assembly its delegates to hardly have a realistic con­ stituency. EUROPE 1970 T.I.S.A. Charter Flights ROUND TRIP FROM TEXAS FROM $2 8 5 7th Successful Year ★ Fly ON WORLD AIRWAYS 707 JETS A More Than 65 Texas Students Signed UP Last W eeki R Exclusively For University Students and Faculty and Member* of Their Families ASSURE YOUR ARRIVAL IN EUROPE THIS SUMMER O N OUR PROVEN PROGRAM. A LOW $50 REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT WILL HOLD YOUR RE­ SERVED SEAT TO EUROPE. 'L STUDENT TRAVEL INC. 2226 G U A D A L U P E C a ll 477-4340 Between Chambers & The Texas Theatre O n the Drag Sft&tG BREAK AUSTIN „ ACAPULCO MARCH 20-26 You can't take the gold out of Acapulco! S T U D E N T T H A V ll . IN O , IL Exclusively and uniquely specializing in elegant intimate apparel S O M E T H I N G ELEGANT FR O M 2520 Guadalupe HYDE PARK BAPTIST CHURCH To help serve you better, we are planning for three morning worship services at 8:30, 9:50, and I 1:00. Also, we have an evening service at 7:30. W e offer Sun­ d a y School for the University student at 9:45 a.m. or I 1:00 a.m. O u r Sunday even­ ing training program begins at 6:15 p.m. Below is a schedule of our bus route that will be followed each Sunday. STOPS A.M . P.M. STO PS A.M . P.M. B U S I BUSH Heflin .......................... 9:10— D e x te r..........................9:10— Madison ....................... 9:15— 22nd & Guadalupe ........ 9:15— Kinsolving ..................... 9:20— Womens C o - O p s ........... 9:20— S R D ............................. 9:20— 6:00 K i r b y ........................... 9:25— 6:05 Church ....................... 9:30— 6:10 Jester C e n te r ................ 9:10— 5:45 Brackenridge.................. 9:10— 5:45 Roberts-Prather ............. 9:15— 5:45 Moore-Hill Hall . . . . . . . . . 9 : 1 5 — 5:45 San Jacinto D o r m s 9:20— 5:50 Simkins Hall ..........9:20— 5:50 YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND A LECTURE ON tsp. AND A DISCUSSION OF THE LATEST SCIENTIFIC FINDINGS IN THE FIELD OF PARAPSYCHOLOGY AND HOW INDIVID­ UALS ARE SUCCESSFULLY BEING TRAINED TO USE E.S.P. MONDAY. FEB. 2, 7:30-9:00 MONDAY, FEB. 9, 7:30 1801 LAVACA - CAMBRIDGE TOWER 727 Non-Stop Jets on B F tn n if= F = m T E F in F t T I o n R L . from OO THIS L O W PRICE IN CLU D ES:* 0 R ou nd T rip Je t Fare from A u stin 0 6 Night* in yo ur C h o ic e of H o te l* 0 A irp o rt T ran sfer* 0 Y a c h t C r u it . on t h . Bay with O p e n Bar 0 F R E E A D M I S S I O N t o N ig h t C lu b * Acapulco Spring Vacation Comm. 4th Successful Year! C L IN T SAYERS, Chairman Can ATT 9 I 07 ^ / / - Z I Z O Administered by: ST U D E N T TRAVEL INC . 2226 Guadalupe — 477-4340 7— ’ O n the Drag Between Chambers and the Texas Theater N O TE: Prices in effect will remain in effect for first IOO applicants. Late bookers will b e charged $10 booking fee. Make your reservations today! 26th & Whitis ...............9:25— Southwest Motivation Center 476-5500 Sunday, February I, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 u r n tr n a i usa? t> mw or (CHAT I lt)AU W TO p f A S A 6 R 3 W U 0 P . I a te r r p ilo t- I k C O W e > ( H I A WU. RAYER' I POU TM v. AWP IM MOT PILO T. IM MOT A 0X063 V - IM MOTA friLPLA ves AMP IM WOT 6 R0W 0 A who mr IT u m p HARP? . D U S I Buchwald's Column An outrageous fiction by hungry Hollywood writers Ch icano I bird party underway in Valley By BEN S M U ,EVT Editorial Page Assistant The M exicali'A m erican civil* rights m ovem ent in T exas — alread y m anifested in A ustin's Econom y F u rn itu re strike, the g arb ag em en ’s Corpus C hristi strike, the V alley farm w orkers’ strik e and school walkouts at Abilene. T^amesa and C rystal City — has channeled itself into a chi­ cano third p arty in four South T exas counties. T^a Raza Cnida will field local candidates in Zavala County and Is completing requirements to do sn in Hidalgo, Dimmitt and Tv* Salle Counties. The party’s name has a diction­ ary translation of “ the united race.” hut “ race” Isn't the exact connotation. “ Culture” is perhaps a closer word, but it still lacks the force of “ raza” — which con­ notes the whole, rich Spanish- its roofs speaking culture, with in the fertile ground of Spanish, Indian and Catholic heritage. ADD TO this proud background almost a century and a half of anglo oppression, and you have a vigorous for popular movement such as La Raza Unida. tinderbox a Tile chicano civil rights move­ ment, the first, stirrings of which were heard in the California vine­ yards five years ago, has taken its lessons from the decade-long black rights movement. For the p a rty ’s nam e and can ­ didates to a p p ear on the ballot, the p a rty must present the county judge with a petition to that ef­ fect, signed by a t least 3 percent of the num ber of voters in the county in the previous election. Under a court in terpretation of the law, T,a Raza I ’nida will not he able to file for district judge or since they a re not counted as “ county’ and p recin ct" offices. rep resen tativ e, sta te THE STATUTORY process is com pleted in Zavala County, and I.a R aza Unida candidates will file for all county offices there, according to Jose Angel G utier­ rez, chief organizer of the p arty . G utierrez, 25, is form er sta te ch airm an of MAYO — M exican- A m erican Youth O rganization, the m ost active chicano rights group in the state. In D im m itt and La Salle Coun- ties, w here the “3 p erce n t” on involved about 48 the petitions signatures, the petitions have been filed, but not yet approved by the county judges. In Hidalgo the “ 3 p ercen t” County, w here the m eans about 1,200 nam es, petition is about half com plete. W herever the p arty is allowed to a p p e a r on the ballot, it will hold precinct conventions May 2 to elect delegates to county con­ ventions. conventions, m eeting M ay 9. will do the actual nom inating of for various local offices. candidates These in In PARTICIPANTS In La R ara forfeit U nida’s conventions will the pri­ th e ir participation the m a rie s or conventions of taking since statew ide p arties, p a rt a p a rty 's convention m ak es one an official m em b er of that p arty , and it is a crim inal offense to p articip ate in the pri* m aries o r conventions of more than one p arty in the sam e voting y ear. in Likewise, voters who vote the ma jor p arties' p rim aries or attend their conventions m ight he unable to take p a rt in La R aza U nida conventions. These strictu res against being a m em ber of m ore than one p a rty do not, of course, prevent anyone from voting in the general election Nov. 3 or from voting a split ticket in th at election. A voter who w anted to be a m em ber of La Raza Unida would atten d the precinct convention and have the precinct chairm an s t a m p voter-regh Aration certificate with the nam e of the p arty . his THE LAW is apparently silent on w hether voters who sign the petition to get La R aza Unida on the ballot would be counted as official m em bers of the party. Given the pride and vitality*of chicano culture — “ la ra z a ” — this burgeoning effort to win dig­ nity and influence through estab ­ lishm ent political channels should prove successful in South T ex as’ heavily chicano counties. of it was under When that movement began IO the years ago, paternalistic wing condes­ cending white liberals. Such an arrangement could not help but stifle a racial movement, and the black cause made a violent pen­ dulum swing to militant black racism , as a reaction. The chicano movement accepts without distinction into its cause anglos English- (sympathetic speaking whites, not to be con­ fused with “ gringo,” which m eans any bad person) and leadership, di­ blacks. But the and outlook are dis­ rection tinctively — even fiercely — Mexican, and even a hint of paternalism is proudly rejected. LA RAZA Unida is beginning on a local scale, for if it ever has pretensions statewide office, it would he folly to make such an attempt without a broad local base. to The party will be limited to filing for “county' and precinct because it is organized offices under a provision the State in election law that allows strictly local parties an easier process to get on the ballot than Is re­ quired of a statewide party’. notices JOB OPPORTUNITIES M r. VV m FU S c h m u m a c h e r . Sur>er- l n .e n d e n t o f T h e I n t e r n a t i o n a l S c h o o l o f B r u s s e ls , B e lg iu m w ill b e in T e a c h ­ e r P la c e m e n t M o n d a y , F e b r u a r y 9 to in te rv ie w p r o s p e c tiv e te a c h e r s I n t e r ­ e s te d p e r s o n s s h o u ld co m e b y th e o f- I lc e a n d m a k e a n a p p o i n tm e n t A R e p r e s e n t a ti v e fro m N o r th E a s t .San A n ­ I n d e p e n d e n t S c h o o l D is t r i c t ton,... in T e a u .v I e x a s w ill in te r v ie w • L p i 4‘35!, e n * O ttjC * T u e s d a y F e b r u ­ a r y 3. T n o s e w is h in g to b e in te r v ie w . e h s h o u ld c o m e b y th i s o f fic e a n d m a k e a n a p p o i n t m e n t A C M u r p h y . D ir e c t o r I e a e h e r P la c e m e n t S u tto n H a ji J Cfi P h o n e 471-3352 o r 471-3266 N O T IC E S f r o m t h e U n iv e r s it y L i ­ b r a r y o r _ aJiy o f I ts b r a n c h e s a r e o f ­ f ic ia l U n iv e r s it y C o m m u n ic a tio n s r e ­ q u i r i n g im m e d i a te a t t e n t i o n S tu d e n t s w h o f a ll t o r e s p o n d to L i b r a r y n o tic e s w i l l be r e f e r r e d to th e O ffic e o f th e D e a n o f S t u d e n t L ife I R E D F O L M E R , L i b r a r i a n By ART BUCHWALD WASHINGTON - The story- of Michael Brody, heir to an oleo­ margarine in millions, fortune thousands or hundreds depending wi which news­ paper you read on w h i c h day, sounds like it was written by t w o very hungry Hol­ lywood writers. They go in to see the head of the studio. “J. B., we have this great Idea for a movie. Tell him, AI.” “ Well, J. B., i f s about this 21- vear-old kid who plays a guitar and has long hair and believes everyone should love each other. He inherits $25 million from his grandfather, who a butter substitute." invented J. B. says, “Both of you get out of here!” the 'W ait a minute, J. B. There’s more to it than that. He walks down street handing out thousands of dollai's to anyone he likes. Pretty soon, there’s an army of people trying to get to him for schem es they want fi­ nanced.” J. B. looks at the two men. "Do you want me to call the studio police?" ‘‘Please, J. B., let Sam tell you what we ve got in mind. The guy can’t go anywhere without people following him and scream ing at him the money. People sit outside his home, his apartment. They call him night for som e of and day. They tear his clothes; they break his guitar. He has to hire a bodyguard. The press won’t let him alone. “ He holds a press conference and announces he has the solution to tile Vietnamese w ar.” J. B, clenches his fist. “How into the hell did you guys get my office in the first p lace ?" “Sam, tell him what happens next.” to “Then he demands see President Nixon. He says he’s got something very important to tell him. He goes down to the White House, but the g u ard s won’t let in. So he say s h e ’ll m eet him with Brezhnev the Kremlin instead. You take It, A l.” in “While all this is going on, the guy is being dogged day and night by nuts. H e’s sta rtin g to flip. He scream s at the people that they’re all greedy, and he won’t give them any money if they act like anim als.” J. B. pressed the buzzer on his desk. The secretary cam e in. "Show these men out and if they come back again, call the nearest mental institution.” to “ J. B., this could be a great movie. Bigger than ’E asy Rider.’ The guy gets so sore at the people that he hires a plane and flies the Caribbean with a planeload of reporters. But he eau f find any peace there, either. So he flies back to New York and decides to make a record about peace.” “Now, this is the p a rt vou’re going to like, J. B. I t ’s the finish T h e Da il y T e x a n Siudenf Newspaper a t UT Austin th e e d i t o r o r o f ,p a n d a r e n o t n e c e s s a r ily th o s e o f a n o / 11R e g e n t» a d m l n l s t r a t l o n Opinion! expressed In T h e D a lly T e x a n are th e th e the B o a r d P u b lis h e d b y T e x a s I n '’., d a ily e x c e p t M on- a n d S a tu rn la y a n d h o lid a y p e rio d s S ep - S ' S i u c w p t.P u b li c a t io n s th e w r i t e r o f th o s e o f T h e D a l! i, ° r o f W I , W N e w s Ma v * « » • m a b v telephone (ER 1-5244). at the editorial office — _ „ c o n t r ib u ti o n s w in be a c c e p t e d I ™ 102. , 103 I n q u ir i e s c o n e e r im K o r a t th e nesvs l a b o r a t o r y , J B. th e d e liv e r y s h o u ld SLTli" if,® V&U-”' “ a n a t i o n a l a d v e r t i s i n g is N a ti o n a l E d u c a ti o n a l A d v e r ti s i n g S e rv ic e . 360 A ve N e w Y o rk . N Y r e p r e s e n t a t h e l o o n s u b s c r ib e s T h e T e x a n to T h e A s s o c ia te d m e s s a n d is a m e m b e r o f T h e A s s o c ia te d C o ll e g ia te P r e s s T h e S o u th w e s t J o u r n a l i s m C o n g r e s s t h e T e x a s D a lly N e w s p a p e r A ssoc lAvion a n d 7 b 712 S < n d f ° r m 3579 10 T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b lic a ti o n s . In c .. P . O. B o x D , A u s tin . T e x a s PERMANENT STAFF A .................................................Mark Morrison EDIT0R ....................................Joh" Watkins . ™ MANAGING EDITOR ..................Ruth Doyle R ....................................... Carolyn Hinckley ‘ 'J)' rf R? ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR ..................... Lynne Flocke SPORTS EDITOR ......................................Vaughn A! Sedge ..................................M id d y A n d e r s o n o v ^ PANORAMA EDITOR....................................Bob M erm an ’,E. N T S E D I T 0 R A ssociate News Editor News Assistant Editorial Assistant Assistant Amusements Editor Assistant Sports Editor Make u p Editor Copy Editor Wire E d i t o r Photographer _ _ _ _ _ ............................... ISSUE STAFF ..................................... ....................................... ...................................... • • • • • • .................................................... Kj ie Fogsn p . . Ron?!'i . . - ........... ................................................................... c n ^ Tgent ........................ ....................................................................... ............................................................................. ...................................................................................................... PaJ?y Gu' nzeI ^ Page 4 Sunday, February I, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN The vicissitudes of registration The Firing Line To the editor: th an with absurd At m y first registratio n here sev eral y ears ago, I had fewer T exas difficulties procedures. T e c h ’ s I w as only a However, since sophom ore it w as T hursday a n d all history courses w ere closed (except for such ones as “ Watusiland from tra n sfe r student, to end Sam .” ail finishes. Tell him, “Tile guy goes on the Ed Sul­ interviews him livan Show’! Ed and then he sings a song." “Can’t you se e it, J. B.? The is watching him whole country and he tells them that money isn t everything, and the most important thing is to have good vibrations.” J. B. gets up from his chair. “OUT!!! O L T !!!” Both writers hold onto the desk as the studio police start pulling them. Al yells, “Now for the switch at^the end. The guy doesn't have $25 million — he only has a lousy $4 million so everyone gets sore at him, and hp finally discovers that you can't buy love." As they are being dragged down the hall, Sam cries, “All right. If you think it’s too far­ fetched, w e’ll take out the part about him going on the Ed Sul­ livan show!" C o p y r ig h t d into form T his Monday m orning w ith a sm ile on m y face I th ru st my registratio n the face of a stonv-faced functionary at tho history table. “ T here a re no th a t co u rse.” m o re c a rd s for H IH ? at p rereg istratio n th a t there would be som e c a rd s saved for Jan u ary . (With a sm irk and in a rude, cro ak y voice) “ T here a re no m o re c a rd s for th at co u rse.” told m e They “ Would it help if I talked to the p ro f?” (Very rudely, alm ost shouting): " I told you. you c a n ’t re g iste r for this co u rse." I called th e professor's office “ H e's not in ." When will he be? “ I d o n ’t know ." Can I m ake an appointm ent? don’t m ake appointm ents." Will he be Here today? “ I don't now." This w eek? “ I d o n 't know.” “ No. we Who are they to fu ck interested students off like so man.'' flies? Who a re ♦'hey to tr e a t students like (g rad u ates d irt? Who a r e they th a t they feel freshm en) or obligated to a c t like illiterate of­ ficials in som e underdeveloped country? Who a re they indeed? And w hy a re they th a t w ay? And how long will they be that w ay? I presum e th a t before I get m y PhD (if I ev er do) FII be able to take m aybe one A m erican history course. Maybe. Clyde Ja m e s Jr. Inconsiderate To the editor: in registration The attitude of m an y of those Involved is un­ d o u b t e d I v ahhoiTent. These people a re quite inconsiderate of the g re a t num ber of students who encounter problem s during the tedious precess. Supposedly, th eir purpose as to aid the student in obtaining the courses he has been advised to take. However, it has been my ex­ these people only perience th at ag g rav a te problem s resu ltan t ra th e r than alleviate them . The only thing they seem to be good a t is passing the buck. If th at fails they con alw ays resort to rudeness. It ap p ears th at these people have no connotation of the “ cour­ w ords tesy .” I suggest they look them up in th eir Funk and W agnalTs! Elaine Davis 2106 Oldham “ patien ce’’ and Common Defense? Tn the editor: That the U.S. governm ent Is constitutionally bound to neither legislate for the establishm ent of religion nor prohibit free thereof docs not m ean exercise it m ay not wage w ar on th a t a religious creed that violates in­ dividual rights. If a religion com ­ to m anded ex­ it would be term in ate Negroes, followers the its Study in contrasts Bv JAMES RESTON (c) 1970 New York Times N ew s Service WASHINGTON — President Nixon undoubtedly knows, as he s ta rts forw ard into his s e c o n d year, that there are many more people t h i s in country who want to believe in the noble Ideals of his State of the Un­ ion Message than there are people who actually be­ lieve in them, and many more who share his anxiety about the physical and moral squalor of the age but are not prepared to pay the price of getting rid of it. This is the gap that must be closed between now and 1976 if we are not to read the Declara­ tion of Independence on its 200th anniversary _ which Mr. Nixon made so much about — and feel rebuked by its moral and revolu­ tionary phrases: its assertion that its all men are created equal; “decent respect" for the opinions of all mankind; its promise of “safety and happiness" for the American people; and its per­ sonal note at the end that the signers of the Declaration not only agreed on their objectives but “ mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.” J™ l'lor™ „ J°lm Reett Katie Fegan It is interesting that Mr. Nixon should have the revolu­ taken tionary’ principles of the D eclara­ tion as his theme and its 200th anniversary’ as his challenge to Rene Perez the nation. He has been represen­ ted as a conservative man with “modest goals" who wants us to lower our voices and cut our commitments, and he has been moving this way overseas. But In his State of the Union address, he sounded like Teddy Roosevelt on domestic issues, progressive, idealistic and philosophical. important WE NEED a new bench mark for success, he said. The public good must be put above private interests. More than legislative programs, we need leadership "spiritual and moral which no programs for material progress can satisfy." The young need “ a sense of excitem ent, a sense of destiny . . , the greatest privilege an individual can have is to serve in a cause bigger than himself. We have such a cause.” It is very’ easy to be cynical about this sort of thing, and a lot of people were. It was the old State of the Union rhetoric, the cynics said. Even the P resi­ dent was not willing to pay the they price of his objectives, charged. His $10 billion for stamping out pollution was a “phony” to be financed m ainly by bond Issues, which the market would not bear. He didn't really deal with the race problem, and said very little about education, and w1d probably veto the HEW - Labor bill, which will prove he was merely talking and de­ ceiving. All this m ay be so. Presidents idealistic In are usually more their State of the Union Messages than in their actions. But most Presidents change, too, once they cross the threshold of the White House. They have to deal with the realities and ideals of the nation, as well as the politic* of their party, and the guess here is that the President's State of the Union Message, despite his partisan digs baout crim e and in­ flation. was mainly an expression of nis personal hopes and con­ victions, and should be taken ser­ iously. It is a fascinating conflict with­ in one m an’s personality — be­ tween political expediency and personal morality’, between the Quaker Nixon and the political Nixon — and the public and poli­ tical reaction this personal to dilem m a could easily determine w here he comes out. NOBODY KNOWS, as of today, whether is de­ the President terminer! to get out of Vietnam and use all his prestige and power to create the kind of equal, fair and decent society at home he described in his m essage — and take the risks and pay the price for both — but that is what he has said he Is determined to do, and it is clear that he cannot do it by himself. The program he has outlined for peace in the w’orld and the fair and compassionate society at home needs time and support. If he is merely using the ideals of the Declaration for personal and partisan purposes, this will soon be made clear by his actions. But meanwhile, he has pro­ claimed an ideal and a goal, and he should be given a chance to demonstrate that he m eans busi* ness. proper to make war on it. Such a war, however, would not be waged against a religion as such but against a religious practice which violates m an’s right to life — a right guaranteed by the Con­ stitution. According to the D e­ Independence our claration of government was instituted to se­ cure man's rights. The separation of church and state is an imple­ mentation of the protection o f Individual rights and not a pri­ mary principle. The U.S. involvement In the Vietnam war is unconstitutional not because communism is a re­ (communism does not ligion recognize individual rights) but because this war is not fought for the defense of the people of the United States. The Constitu­ tion states: “We the People of the United States, in Order to . provide for the common . defense, . . . do ordain and e s ­ tablish this Constipation for the of Am erica.” United States the Constitution was Clearly, established the defence of the United States — not the defense of other for “ free" nations. to provide for . Ernst F. Hermann Cynical To the editor: As a philosophy of government, lib ertarian ism is sn cynical as to be obscene. Apparently, the libertarian would not oppose or condemn in any way the violation of tile basic rights of people in societies other than his own. He could not because a government empowered only to "provide the sort against self-defense violence that an individual, if he were powerful enough, would provide for himself," would not and could not make an effective g e s t u r e anything, against anywhere. of It appears viewed with that atrocities in Greece, starvation in Biafra, or the rise of a Hitler, would all be a shudder of polite disgust, but not any helpful action. Moral ab­ dication is hardly the answer to a world of misery and injustice. perhaps fer, I found my' list of accred grades. When two those m arathons, cram ses: finals, and emptied aspirin. . . yea b u t no b ack on study ions before bottles of of CWi Lord, had I only known then what I know now! J or Jan na Price 2706 Nueces Uncle Tom To the editor: Frenchy Golding still believes to pretty th af women have a d uty as them selves present (and expensive) packages. What do expensive fashions ex­ p ress? Conformity and w ealth— precisely the qualities that enable th eir ru le as women I have sexual objects! alw ays wondered, doesn’t the public ap p earan ce of a man require hours before the m irro r? ) (Why, fulfill to Is it really “ worth all th e dol­ lars and hours you to achieve your finished p ro d u ct?” idea of being a Is not “ finished product" a bit incon­ sistent with human fulfillment? spent the to throw back Frenchy Is a w om en’s Uncle Tom bent on preserv in g the w o m a n ' s plastic, superficial m ask. The preoccupation with im pressing others with all the g litter industry can offer Is only a way of denying our Individual ch ara c te r. F ren ch y ’* philosophy th,if absurd is a high school m ania, “ being popu** la r." Worse yet. she would have our popularity' reflect nothing m ore than the am ount of costly junk we can paste o r d ra r e out bodies with. Are circles under the eyes, m idrift bulge and p e rsp ira ­ tion ugly? Certainly, if we follow the d ictates of Max F acto r. Play- tex and Amid. But hopefully we m ay shed the p la stir and end the alienation from our bodies which Miss Golding and Madlsorj Avenue encourage. Brenda Goldberg 1603 Sabin^ Ralph K, Du Bose To the editor: Shalom! No grades To the editor: Dave Helfert's editorial on Jan. 27 is justified in questioning the attitude takes toward its transfer students. this university’ accredit Tile Registrar's Office, it courses seem s, will from another t r a n s f e r r e d university, but for such courses have no merit ac­ cording to UT policy. the grades This was quite discouraging last fall when, as a junior trans­ in in T exas until Mazel tov! Tile New Y ear h ere was ushered in by five F ren ch boats, but I know that 1970 didn't, begin the clock ran out the Cotton Bowl. I cheered loudly from this end of the world, taking into account the tim e difference. At such a tim e one experiences im pact of being so fa r away. Tile anxiously! aw aited news was several days in coming — and w as excitedly received. I t’s a g reat feeling to be (»n a winning team . Shalom. th e Sharon Ret der C lass of ’69 Tel Aviv, Israel P E A N U T S ■ TIE-' 5X0 (T'S \ The school press 1 I CAN'T IL EAR AU 5AfOA’ 5- TO SCHOOL ANV MORE... UH R e a lly upset,,, $ h if . i A m t m e n t h i s u ie ir p KIP WITH THE BIS NOSE KEEP5 K IS SIN 6 M E ! V , Righfs of criminals (and everybody) rest with House CROSSWORD PUZZLE By TOM WICKER (c) 1970 New York Times Vews Service WASHINGTON - It is a good thing that neither the Bill of Rights nor the Magna Carta is the pending business of the Senate these days. If ei­ ther were to be presented to the world’s greatest deliberative body in i t s present mood of political fete panic and myo- tm pia, it would un- doubtedly be vot­ ed down as a needless restraint in the war on crime. There was, of course, one notable liberal “victory” in the drug bill. As amended by the Senate, it provides that federal agents may not break into any­ one’s house without warning unless a judge has certified iii advance that narcotics or other evidence probably “will” be des­ troyed if a warning is given. Originally, the judge could have issued a warrant for a “no­ knock” raid if he found probable cause to believe that evidence “m ay” be destroyed without it. This is a distinction with so little difference as to be absurd, since there is no way on earth for even the wisest of judges, whether he is Julius Hoffman or G. Harrold Carswell, to de­ termine whether evidence prob­ ably “ may” or probably “will” be destroyed if someone’s consti­ tutional rights are observed. THE NO-KNOCK vote followed passage of the so-called anticrime bill, which only Lee Metcalf of Montana, long a defender of con­ sumers and liberty, had the cour­ age and vision to vote against. Virtually this whole page would be required to detail this bill’s dangers and defects. It would invade Fifth Amend- C o m in g fro m e v e ry w h e re By RUSSELL BAKER (c) 1970 New York Times News Service WASHINGTON - President Ni­ xon’s habit of appearing in winn­ ing teams’ locker rooms, in per­ telephone, became son or by a familiar part of the American ritual football this winter, as the Presi­ d i d incisive dent’s commen­ sports tary. from t end of T o w a r d the the sea- son it i that no team could w ut receiving a phone can a personal ap- pearance tile President. Moreover, his commentary was ("One of rich the in praise greatest Trojan teams of all time.” “What makes Texas a great team Is its ability to come f r o m the President’s observations wore not available they were firsthand, paraphrased by winning quarter­ backs. ( “He told us we did a great Job and said the youth of the world looks up to pro players for courage.” ) behind.” ) When A bunch of us were sitting around a t Jim Carson's house the evening before the Super Bowl, arguing whether the President was faking football enthusiasm to make himself seem a regular fel­ low, when Bill Simpson^ wife, Madge, telephoned to ask if Bill was there. BILL, WHO was, talked to her, and when he came back he said: “You guys won’t believe this, but Madge says the President just dropped in over at the Samuel- son’s house. It seems the Samuel- son boy had some friends in today for a game of Monopoly and cleaned them all out by monopolizing the railroads. A few minutes later, Samuelson noticed that the house was surrounded. It was the Secret Service secur­ ing the President.” the neighborhood for We told Bill to cut it out. Bill said he was telling it to us as Madge had told it to him, and Madge had been there when it happened. “The President went to the Samuelson boy’s room, where the kid was preparing for his poRtgame shower,” Bill went on, “and said he had played one of the finest games of Monopoly that he. the President had ever heard of.” WE LAUGHED at that and dis­ missed the whole story as non­ sense. Bill had always been a joker. But then — well, it wras Sunday morning and coming out of church Randy Schwinn stopped us. “I know you’re not going to believe this,” he said, “but last night after Margo and I had absolutely clobbered Frank and Mary Provolone at bridge, our phone rang. This fellow said he W’as President Nixon. He said, ‘I just want you to know that I consider Randy and Margo Sch­ winn one of the greatest neigh­ now’ borhood bridge teams operating in the Cleveland Park district of Washington, D.C.’ ” “Come on now, Randy. You don’t really think that was the President, do you?” Randy laughed. laughed and “Of course not,” he said. “I wasn't born yesterday. Do you think for one moment that I think the President —? I mean, with Vietnam on his mind? And infla­ tion?” He laughed and laughed. AFTER THE Super Bowl and dinner that night Jim Fisk came over for a game of chess. As usual, he tried the Queen’s Indian Defense, forgot the fourth move and by the tenth move was down a pawn and a bishop. Taking ad­ vantage of an incredible piece of stupidity on the fourteenth move, however, Jim quickly captured a queen and rook and proceeded to an easy checkmate. Jim was still feeling smug when the telephone rang. There was no mistaking the voice. This was the real tiling. “You have just made one of the finest re­ coveries to win at chess that I can imagine,” President Nixon told Jim. “What makes you a great chess player Is your ability to come from behind,” the President said. Monday evening. Both Jim Fisk and Randy Schwinn at the house. “Let’s play a little pinochle,” Jim suggested. “ I ’D like to,” said Randy, “but I couldn’t enjoy it. I’d feel it w’as taking the President’s mind off his work.” rights against reluctant witnesses self-in­ ment crimination by requiring courts, on request of the government, to force to testify in virtually any federal case, in return for immunity not against prosecution but only against evidential use of the com­ pulsory testimony; and lf any person so ordered to testify re­ fused to do so, he could be sum­ marily confined in jail until he submitted, although convicted of no crime whatever. The bill would overturn a Su­ preme Court ruling that permits a defendant to see the transcript of an illegal wiretap from which evidence against him might have been derived; and it would estab­ lish the rule that evidence ob­ tained, even if illegally, more than five years after an alleged crime, Is admissible in court — which is nothing but a statute of limitation on Fourth Amend­ ment prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures. The Senate bill would permit grand juries to issue public re­ ports recommending the removal of public officials for misconduct or misfeasance, even when the grand jury had been unable to find evidence sufficient for an in­ dictment — a license to smear that is unlimited by a definition of or restriction on the kinds of misconduct that the jury could consider, much less by any right cross-examination or con- of f r o n t a t i o n granted to the smeared. THIS EXTRAORDINARY do­ cument also would create a class of “dangerous special offenders.” It Is not entirely clear who such offenders may be, but they in­ clude persons previously con­ victed two or more times of of­ fenses punishable for more than a year in jail, persons convicted once in certain conspiracies, and persons who commit a felony as ; “ part of a pattern” of criminal conduct (which “pattern” may or may not Include misdemeanors, and may or may not be proven beyond a doubt.) But no matter who these special offenders turn out to be, a judge could sentence one of them for up to 30 years, regardless of the penalty the law | sets for his specific offense; and in making his decision on o f for whether a defendant Is such a dangerous special offender, the judge would not be limited to consideration admissible evidence — he could take into account, instance, a con­ fession obtained by coercion, If he failed to sentence severely enough, even so, the government could appeal to seek a stiffer the sentence, or even offender” “dangerous judgment lower-court that judge had refused to make. to win special a All of this is necessary, says Sen. Roman L. Hruska, R-Neb., for the overwhelming majority, because “we are grappling for survival In the battle against crime.” What we are really grap­ pling for a survival against is those who think that the rights of criminals can be suspended or diluted without endangering the rights of all Americans. The rights of criminals are the rights of all Americans and the inescap­ able truth Is that if they are token away from criminals they are taken away from every one of us. And unless the House now acts courageously to prevent it. that is just what will have happened. Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: • Be typed triple-spaced. • Be less than 250 words. • Include name, address, and phone number o f contri­ butor. M ail letters to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Texas; or bring letters to the Texan offices, Journalism Building 103. 7-Bever*f» 8-Poet 9-Latln conjunction 10-Cuts 12-Township (abbr.) 14-Clans 17-Spanish for ’'three" 20-Appellation of Athena 2 3 Babylonian deity 24 Preposition 25-Fat of swine 27-Skin of fruit 30-Lifeless 32-Reward 35-Comes onto scene 37-Den 3 8 Unit of Mexican currency (pi.) □□□ag yassQ □□rattan rattenae cncjn ranttQO os □□a raattfiH finis aa Harass srawo □□ararao aranga □atta BSttE rattrarararara □ □ a ra ra □arara rararaas na attn oBttaa ttara as ttSttGD oasra raraarattn attmraraa □□aaa raaarara 3 9 Wipes out 41 Keen 4 3 Picturesque 44-Sym bol for tellurium 4 6-M a n ’s nickname 4 8 Danger 51 Woody plant 53 Withered 57-Goal 5 8 Com pass point 60-A month (abbr.) 62 Note of seal* 6 4 A continent (abbr.) I 2 3 4 5 7 8 9 IO n ij n 25 40 51 56 n 19 20^ 34 ‘♦VV iV.* m vsm f 38 39 n 46 l l TF n 24 29 45 50 55 61 n F § 1 J l 3 I 17* I T n 30 26~ H 35 TT n 41 47 M 57 52“ W n 4 8 * n 53 w _ _ S F 63 6* n n n TF 2 3 * l l 27 28“ n 32“ * W 36 37 14 TST :** I*.*.* reft 43 44 M W 60 49 l l S T I i 54“ M 64 6 7 ~ ACROSS l-Grwk latter 4 -A ir Fore* (abbr.) 6 -Infants 11 Fight 13 Puffs up 15-Prefix; twica 16-Mata 13 Brother of Odin 19-Note of seal* 21-Unusual 2 2 Profound 24-Tax 26-Jum p 28 Skill 29-Mountain nymph 31-Stalk 3 3 Steam ship (abbr.) 3 J Region 36-Part of foot 38-Hebrew letter 4 0 Mend with cotton 4 2 Fewest 4 5 -Period of time 47-Fall in drops 49-Gam ing cubes 50 Seasoning 5 2-Frosts 54 Note of scale 55-Bone 5 6-Holds In high regard 5 9 Negative 61-Calm 63-Peacefu' 65-Sows 66-French article •7-Perfom i DOWN 1-Recede 2 Clothesmaker 3-Near 4-W inglik* 5-Wild 6-Under YOUR HEMPHILL DOLLAR BUYS MORE i mm J g y rn im ?: W H Y WAIT 4'/2 MONTHS? HEMPHILL REBATES ARE CA SH IN YOUR POCKET— NOW ! Here’s how they work: Hemphill's pays you 1 0 % on the dollar— no tallying up— a straight 10%. Just keep your receipt— the one from the cash register— wait one day (that’s all it takes for a Hemphill’s rebate to mature)— then use your rebate as cash on your next purchase. It’s that simple and easy. Pay Cash For Your Books Today . . . Spend Your Rebates on Purchases Tomorrow ART and ENGINEERING STUDENTS One Stop for All Your Supplies Check Our Lists and Take Advantage of Our Low Prices. STUDENTS WANTING TO SELL BACK BOOKS: In order to maintain efficent service for the first week of classes H E M P ­ H ILL'S W I L L N O T P U R C H A S E U SED B O O K S - TH IS W E E K O N L Y W e will continue to buy back used books beginning Monday, Feb. 9 books for cash beginning Monday, Feb. 9 R H M S M Notice: FO R Y O U R S H O P P IN G C O N V E N ­ IE N C E H E M P H IL L W ILL BE O P E N 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. for the first two days of classes — M onday and Tuesday — Feb. 2 & Feb. 3 FREE CUSTOMER PARKING AT ALL LOCATIONS HEMPHILLS OFFICE MACHINES R e d R ;y e r & p apk p |a c 0 613 W est 29th (Across From The Law School) 2244 Guadalupe On the Drag Sunday, February I, 1970 IH E DAILY, TEXAN Page 5 robe: oatmeal orlon nylon whipped up E A S Y -Q U IC K -O N E F L O O R S H O P P IN G FO R ALL Y O U R natural knit - 5 ways Tolai knitmania makes a winsome ward­ ly. striped in apricot and berry. Left, tanktop with hip pocket, 20.00, pulls ver. ribknit berry flipskirt, 14.00. Right, tortoise - buttoned cardigan, 20.00, tops ribknit tunic with pocket at N E E D S • Required Texts heart, 14.00, tops r i b b y pantz, • Paperbacks 18.00. Tops are S-M-L, skirt and • Dorm & Apartment Accessories pantz 5-13. • Convenient Locations Fast Break Fries Birds Longhorns Utilize Hot Hands For Runaway Win Over Rice By ANDY YEMMA Assistant Sports Editor Taking advantage of early success via a lightning fast break, Texas’ stubborn Longhorns held off a determined flock of Rice Owls for a hard-fought * 5-67 Southwest Conference basketball victory Saturday in Gregory' Gym. The victory broke the Steers out of a .500 logjam in both their conference and season records, pushing the former to 3-2, good for a following TCU’s Sh-11 beating of Baylor. Texas A&M and Rice are tied for second with Texas, Texas’ season record now stand 8-7, for second place the SWC race tie in 50 7 - • ..v r> , * v ; •- to IOO On The Spot! . . .• -V. -•■ *•:’/• ■ •*: •*'•• ' ■ ' • ' - ■ r n ’ '.„ i $ For The 1st ‘ ' '■ ,' ’i 1' " : ■ •■■'. •-' *« World Fam ous Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics offers you a free glimpse of what It's like • to be able to read and study much faster., . •(, with equal or better comprehension, t'S im h iw . ■ •/ m f - l M 3tv* ft :Y' • * Y o u ll se© why President *9S&|J| his advisory and the Joint yJSpI Kennedy Invited Evelyn Wood the White House to teach : Chief$. of Staff how to read Jgm* •' faster, ^ : . • You'd actually be taught how to read and study * 50% to 100% faster during the 90 minute Speed-Reading Lea- ,-.jY - r % % , » . - « . Yo u ' l l hear what the entire faculty of one of Am erica's foremost colleges says about 'ISP? Evelyn Wood, and watch ! ■- N £ e m rea . Each Lesson. B ica u se of limit eel seating capacity, we ask that you please call the number list ed below to Reserve Your S e a t Choose the tim© most cbhven* lent to your schedule and call now for Your Personal Reserva- tion. =■ - •• " • : • ' W ' i . ' ' J ' , ■ Limited Searing Available CALI.: 476-6755 To reserve your Seats Better Than Safeguard Rice center Steve W endel (53) goes airborne to block an in­ coming Texas shot as team­ mate G a ry Reist (35) observes. O B K D D D E M ! 5134 Burnet Road 454-673 I 2234 Guada’upa St. 476-3525 1746 Anderson la. 454-7282 COLOR TV PHONOS RECORDERS R E N T D TUNERS TV'S TURNTABLE AODERS FM RADIO AMPLIFIERS fooo< IBM ELECTRIC S S GUITARS ints. Ho finished up with 20. The Owls were unimpressed by the 41-31 margin at intermission, however, and proceeded to cut the lead to five within the first three minutes of the last period, as Texas suddenly went ice cold. But Longhorn captain Wayne Loyal and fast-moving guard Sam Bradley got the crew moving with two field geals apiece and built up a 48-40 lead before the Owls put en their biggest threat. WITH A PAIR OF 6-6 FORWARDS, Ted Melady and Jim Naples, leading the charge. Rice moved within two at 54-52 with less than IO minutes remaining and a sudden scoring spree bv guard Gary Reist kept the Owls in contention until some heated words over a foul call brought two technicals on the Rice bench and Doyal eon verted them into a 63-54 safety margin. The Owls were never able to get closer than six points after that despite a nine-point spree by Reist in the fading moments. Tile feud between the Rice bench and die officials. Bob Smith and Dennis Jeter, grew worse in the late stages and reached a simmering- point when Smith ejected Naples from the game with a minute left, to the delight of the spanre 2,5000 partisan fans in attendance. Rice coach Don Knode! had a statement to make about the ejection. “JIM N A PLES DID NOT SAI* one word to warrant his removal from the gymnasium,” Knodel declared. “ It was me if anybody said anything.” Tile Owl strategist did not blame the officiating in general. “ Texas was just ready to play and we weren’t.” said Knodel. “ We boards t way, just stood around and got nothing done. They beat us and on tile floor. We were hoping that it wouldn’t h but it did.” Longhorn mentor Leon Black beamed his usual s a \ ic* tory. “OF COURSE, WE’RE .ALWAYS HAPPY to win even though we had to struggle at times,” Black mused. “ We had an excellent per­ centage from the floor ( 50 percent), which was nine better than theirs and we outrcbounded them by ll. TI it makes a big difference. “ But other than in statistics I thought our zone defense in the early going threw them off just some,” h^ continued. It was that zone defense which helped the fast break success and Black explained how Groscurth got the opportunity to go eight-for- eight. “ They had a front man on Lynn (Howden). Anytime they put a man in front of a man like Howden you can throw over both men and a man like Groscurth can get open**1 Groscurth did, man. OROSCT’RTH’S 20 TOTAL POINTS tied his previous season high, which he had reached twice. But Howdie s 25 led all scorers- Th® big 6-7 transfer from Louisiana State picked up 13 of them in the first half, mostly from under the hoop on tip-ins and layups, “ Everybody did a real good job following each other's shots,” Howden pointed out. “ We’ve used the fast break all along but it really worked well today. You could see the difference it makes when it works. It looked a whole lot better than it did against AAM. “ The TV didn't affect us any laughed Howden after either,” some ribbing from teammates about bungling a post-game inter­ view on the Southwest Conference broadcast, which was the first end of a doubleheader being tele­ cast by Television Spirts. DOYAL FINISHED with 17 and between himself, points Howden, and Groscurth 32 of the t e a m ’ s 41 rebounds were produced. Doya! h a d eight, Groscurth l l and Howden 13. Reist led the Owl scoring with 22 points followed by Naples with 12 and 6-8 center Don Sturr with l l and leading Rice re- bounder, Naples, picked up only seven. the M O T O R C Y C L E S !!! 8 % O FF— to a'l CoHsg* Student! TRIUM PH SUZUKI BULTACO DAL T R IU M P H SA LES 5120 Burnet Rd. 452-7554 Howls F e F r * F t P t s 2 4 Ll 12 sa IS ?4 T C F e * F t F t * l U h P f 4 t I -ABI’: 'iMmiRMM R-h ll a 1.3 a 5 0 5 «« Pf T it 30 2 17 25 IO .1 0 0 in T\ a n o 3 0 J rth io n t ^t», I). ii Brad! Mullin l^nox H v d « avant Total* Rir*» Naples Malady R-ist S n y d e r NVI ion Wend?! T Him Tot.ii, r 1 I t 7 IS S3 I* fir ' r y r n Texas' next outing comes at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday against T a i In Fort Worth. 'Die ’ H o rns then (. >sc out the first half of th*1 con­ ference race Saturday night in Gregory Gym against Texas Tech. You won’t find used VWs in b e t t e r shope than ours. The /'v a posse-! t^o 14-point S afety and Performance In sp ec ­ tion a n d b e en completely o v e r­ h auled ond re c o n d itio n e d . W e 'r e so lure of them w e g u a ra n te e 100°o the r e p a ir o r re p la c em e n t o f oil m ajor m echgn* leal p o rts * fo r 30 days o r 1000 miles lf It’* hard to find uied V W s In better shape than ours, It's b e­ cause it's hard to Pad a used V W guarantee better fhon ours. ‘ .djin* • traniniuton • r.ar oil* • (rent cV!» oil.mblt.* • bloke •yit.ie • a ectr Road AAM I ft.rn. (HI Son Jacinto 2 p m N o T im e (R ) N o T im e (R ) Eat H urst) Gulf AAU tat Houston**, pm (Ri p.m. (R> Apr. 17-18 SVC AAU FLY ME A fleet of planes Is available to you through Kommand Aire Klub. Attend the K A K O pen House this weekend at 1801 E. 51st. Klub planes will be on display and films on flying will be shown from I I a.m. to 5 p.m., January 31 and February I. Learn the fun of flying at K A K . ST =w \f<=/ZP RE NT 16 aa TV $4 5 S E M E S T E R FOR . . . . A L L W e give y o u Free 90 D a y option to buy. : ::? :jlj 18" C o lo r T.V. D I A S . M E A S . a l l s e m e s t e r F O R $75 IS BBI3320IA)Kiln)'! R E N T BY T H E W E E K , M O N T H or S E M E S T E R • .« . • ll: 2234 G U A D A L U P E h / 6-o azo 1746 A N D E R S O N LA. Like most hi-fi professionals, most of our salesman own Dual automatic turntables. Come in and see why. Take the new Dual 1209, for example. It has the flawless tracking, smooth performance and reliability that hi-fi professionals insist on in their ow n systems. The 1209 also has a host of features that everyone wants. For example: • Balanced tonearm that tracks at Vi gram. • Combination high torque and synchronous motor. end elliptical styli. semi-tone range. manual starts. • Anti-skating separately calibrated for conical • Pitch control for “tuning” record pitch over a • Feathertouch cue control for automatic and The 1209 is so new that our salesmen don't ow n it yet. But only because we don't have enough around. Him $|29.50 STERLING ELECTRONICS 1712 Lavaca 477-5866 lf you moved to Lake Trace Apartments, you d never want to leave home. You'd groove year around. G o o d friends, good times - times to remember. So if you're paying more than $140 for a one bedroom apartment or $160 for a two, you're simply not making it baby -- the way you could or should at the Lake. Visit this weekend and find out how you could be living. LUI TE 2217 South Lakeshore Blvd. A U ST IN • PH O N E: 444-3917 Page 8 Sunday, February I, J970 THE DAILY TEXAN Youthful Managers Run Shuttle Buses By STEVE DIAL Features Assistant Youth movements are shunned, ignored, berated by the establishment. But a suc­ cessful youthful venture at the Univer­ sity, regarding buses may make the older generation think twice before criticizing. Transportation Enterprises, Inc. — as it exists in Austin — is a youth movement of sorts. With the University growing by leaps and bounds, gobbling up land and pushing students farther and farther off campus, a group of youthful businessmen has brought effective transportation to the footsore scholar. WHAT STUDENTS know as the shuttle bus system originally began as a small commuter service between Austin and San Marcos. That route is still in opera­ tion, as are newer services between Cor­ pus Christi and Texas A&I in Kingsville and between Dallas and North Texas State University in Denton. Southwest Texas State University students drive the Austin- San Marcos route. “We’re all young; there aren’t any old people around here,” says Bob McMinn, TEI’s collegiate-looking assistant business manager. McMinn, along with Joe Marcan- tel and Dicky Reeves, runs the shuttle bus operation and TEI’s charter service in Austin. “I guess everybody around here has gone to the University at one time or an­ other,” said Reeves, a University senior. Added McMinn, “They say that you don’t live in Los Angeles without going to UCLA at least one semester. Most of us are from Austin so we’ve been at the Uni­ versity at some time or other.” MOST OF THE bus drivers are Univer­ sity students, hired through the Universi­ ty employment office. The basic require­ ments are a chauffeur’s license, a good driving record and 21 years of age. “We’re going more for neatness,” McMinn said. “We want the collegiate-looking young man. We’re not trying to propagate any political ideals.” While the rather homogeneous make-up of the organization leads to a generally harmonious relationship among the em­ ployes, McMinn says the turnover in driv­ ers is large. “It’s usually by mutual agree­ ment. Some people just cull themselves out. There are some who just aren’t suit­ ed to driving a bus all day. I know I’m not.” Although it is difficult to decide before­ hand how suitable an individual is for all­ day driving, McMinn and his associates try to determine how well an applicant can handle a bus. “We give them sort of a driving test to show them how the bus operates and to see how they do.” WITH THE EXCEPTION of approxi­ mately a half-dozen full-time employes, most of the drivers fit their work schedule around their class schedule. All the drivers report to the compact two-story office at 1602 Sabine at 6:45 a.m. TEI shares the office and adjoining “garage” with Austin Ambulance Service, which has the same owners as TEI. From there, a bus carries the drivers for the first shift to International Harvester Sales and Service on East 7th Street, where the majority of the buses are kept. Each driver then takes his bus to the designat­ ed starting point of his route. He drives either a four or eight-hour shift, depending on whether he works full­ time. Driver changes are made at a pre­ arranged location, usually in front of the University Co-Op if that point is on the route. The last driver returns the bus to In­ ternational Harvester at the end of the run, sweeps out his vehicle, and takes the drivers’ bus back to the Sabine office. THE ROUTES are worked out through the Office of Student Affairs, although McMinn says, “We know where the stu­ dents are. You can look through the phone book and get a pretty good idea. “I see in the Austin paper that apart­ ments are advertising the fact that they’re on the shuttle bus route. I think it's a good selling point. I wish I lived near one. “I think the traffic is lessened compar­ ed to what it’s been the last couple of years. I know of people who park out on Enfield Road and ride the Route 6 bus the rest of the way in.” As in any business, customer complaints are inevitable. “I know people get upset when the buses run a little late,” McMinn says. “When you wait IO minutes for a bus, that seems like a long time. And any time you run a bus as much as we do you're going to have some breakdowns. Lots of times we get calls from people telling us that the bus didn’t show up — people who think we don’t know about it. And some times we don’t.” BY AND LARGE, however, McMinn has found University students and faculty “ex­ tremely pleasant people to serve.” The shuttle bus system is only one facet of the Transportation Enterprise organi­ zation. The buses also carry women’s golf and tennis classes to their destinations and are available for rent or charter on week­ ends. “We can compete because we offer cheap transportation,” McMinn said. Our buses aren’t as nice as some other people’s which have air conditioning and reclining seats. But their buses can’t legally go any faster than ours can. I t’s the Volkswagen and Cadillac story. We serve a clientele th at wants to get to where he’s going safely and as rapidly as he can legally get there. “After all, it’s not how you’re going to get there or how you’re going to get back that really matters — it’s what you do when you get there.” O ne A fte r Another A * far as the eye can see, there is nothing but more and more of the familiar orange end white shuttle buses. Proposed Dial-a-Bus System: S Z E L E S * solve The dlal-a-bus probably wont replace the family auto, but It n a y transportation problems for "captives" of big- city traffic congestion, according to architecture professor. a University "Some one-third of the urban suffer* serious dis­ population advantages from being served inadequately or not at all by the vast auto based systems on which the nation has come to depend,” Dr. Leon Cole told a special State Senate Co^'fiittee on Urban Affairs ‘last^ji M c. Cole and several other Univer­ sity experts in government, jobs, transportation ap­ housing and peared before the committee, which plans hearings In Texas’ urban areas before reporting to the 1971 legislature. “TF A MAN cannot afford a car, and public transit is both inadequate and too expensive, and his Job has shifted to a a a b u r b , while racial and economic segregation prevent him from following the job—that man is effectively isolated from earning a living,” Cole said. “The poor, the handicapped, the elderly and the young are all locked in their narrow neigh­ borhood worlds because of poor public transportation,” Cole said. limited to fixed route* “Buses and stalled by traffic congestion, and rapid transit systems that are crowded and noisy will not meet the minimal transportation needs of urban areas.” doors after they had telephoned for service "could do what no other transit system now does: travel de­ handle door-to-door the of at mand demand,” Cole said. time the THE BUSES would be controll­ ed by a central computer, Cole explained, and would be almost as fast as a taxi but with a fare only a regular bus. slightly higher than over traveling Other transportation proposals Included vehicles the size of a car exclusive right-of-way or guideway net­ works. and automated circulation systems for areas where a large number of people congregate on a regular basis, such as airports and universities. Reynell Parkins, also of the School of Architecture, proposed that the State insure bank loans for poor people "much as the FUA does for the middle class.” Parkins also said persons dis­ placed by urban renewal should be paid on the potential value of their property, rather than on the current value fair market system. He said a person should be paid enough to relocate in a impossible similar home, often under present payment scales. DR. RAY M A R S H A L L chair­ man of A e Department of Econ­ omics, predicted “serious prob­ especially in Houston” lems, to is done something unless narrow is says the gap he developing along racial lines In labor. However, that would pick up passengers at their a dials-bus “It is painfully clear that urban problems are piling up a great deal faster than we can cope with them ," said Dr. Clifton Mo­ d e s key, professor of government. M c C l e s k e y proposed that “ some way the burden should be shared,” citing possible redis­ tribution of Texas’ wealth from the rich areas the more numerous poor ones. to and Claudio Arenas, assistant pro­ fessor of planning ar­ chitecture, said lack of up-to-date statistics force urban planners to rely heavily on the 1960 housing census in planning for population growth. aa a whole significantly "THE MAGNITUDE of the ho­ using problem from urban com­ has munities diminished since 1950,” he said. "However, hous­ in poverty a n d ing problems minority have remained concentrated and gen­ erally unresolved.” group areas Other states are experiencing the same problems. Arenas said. He also said there are no hous­ ing programs, and as a conserva­ tive estimate, there are 450,000 housing units in Texas urban areas that are in deteriorating and dilapidated condition. ARENAS SUGGESTED ere* tion of an urban land bank and changes estate the property tax law, which he said low-incoma is groups. regressive real for in Also, Arenas proposed uniform standards for local governments to follow in zoning, building and housing codes, and wiping out a law that requires a municipal re­ ferendum before urban renewal projects can be started. Roll C a ll for Buses Transportation Enterprises buses line up at the International Harvester perk­ ing lot waiting for tneir early morning shuttia runs at tha University. >;/ ■■ •• . 1 -v.. ■ y£ ,'\ v- - i < T y J ... v* . Sunday, february I, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag. 9 IB M Machines — Professional T yp ists ' 24 hr. A nsw ering Service U N IV ER SIT Y SPORTS CAR The Daily Texan Classified Ads For Sail For Sale Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Room and Board Positions W anted Business Opportunity Largest Used Book Store in Austin Save Save — Come To THE BOOK STALL 6103 Burnet Road 454-3664 MEN'S SUITS Beiow Wholesale G uaranteed factory mesh. Not seconds or samples, Over 250 on hand. W id e ran>s'e of sizes All patterns Stripes. plaids, solids $47.50 to $56.00 45.3-4045 — 472-3697 U S E D P M T V s Good better - very good. $25 50 up Austin T V Service. Road H I 4-1345 T O P C VSH P R I C E S paid cid gold. Capitol Shop 61 >3 Commodore P e rry monds for dla Diamond 476-0178 M C S ' 5 sell! 1967 Like condition Make offer. Orlgl- Im pala SIS. na. wner 444-8708 465-8398. 1964 C H E V Y top 327 300 hp. 4 speed, Im pala 2 door or hard­ factory lagoon blue achylic pain', exrepj.lonal- iran and so u n d ’ 836-1895 evenings, ta cim eter [•niied-pleated naugahlde 1- fiuages also. •68 197 ch: ISI* 1YOTA fordor F a c to ry air. au- ttlc Lo w o radio. One like new 476-5392 owner O N D A 175 One owner HOO in- 5195. Term s available. G R 6- Ele ctric starter Helm et M IT A L '’Rhine 50-350.00. W e buy file n ltu re and a pp! a nee* M A B R Y * F I ’R- N I T U R E 6611 N orth L a m a r 453-5800 S T E R E O S P E A K E R S One 15" woof- pr two 5 ’ tweeters In each system sat ) B ill 471-5583. W A N T ED Fin# Used Clothes -Is. lf von wish, bring all those F O R S A L E . ; r*66 Pow or radio Phone H r 2-5673. Im p al* convertible $1195. ana heater 87 C A M A R O autom atic, 327" R S power steering air. tape (leek Con­ c h e r trade In. Chria. 477-1079. prices on new equipm ent S T E R E O E Q U I P M E N T : Discount Fa cto ry w a rran ty applies most brands a v a il­ able. 444-8448, 454-5379 65 C U T L A S S C O N V E R T I B L E 4 speed. Rought new car, must sell this one W holesale or best offer over 478-3888 Houses— Furnished G U A D A L A JA R A , M EXIC O : Four bedroom until month. C-arming, quiet, acre. C i'e t ik e '/ g a r d s r tar. desired. $200. Steiner, 471-3676. Ju n e by ism rur« . Servant I For Rent NO T V S E T ? C all the A lp ha M a n ! <6 the N ew Color portables B / W at Reasonable R e n t Lease. R ent bv Sem ester or Rent-Purchase A L P H A T V R E N T A L S C all G R 2-2692 tor more in fo rm atio n 2R<* O F F A L L G rum b aeher art ane- piles Close out sale Calcasieu Lum- r P r i m r t v 7fi1 Wg»ct rtu *!0C K,kltche" i b a,h - a11 bllIa pala- 2407 Leon. I M O N TH 'S RENT FREE Dustin i Newest a.id Most Luxurious! CONTINENTAL UT AREA THE CONTESSA P O S IT IO N W A N T E D - G ourm et cook three or four nights week $3 meal Plus meal. 478-2791. 2706 Nueces 477-9766 A pp lication s fo r S pring now being accepted Roommate W anted POSADA DEL NORTE Leasinq now! O n e and Two Bedroom Apartments, plus Luxury Two Bedroom Studios. 7200 Duval C a I J . A. Kruqer, 452-2384 Austin's Greatest Apartment Values ! THE BRITTANY 454-1355 300 Carmen Ort. 452-2384 5506 Grover G L 2TJ507 FRENCH C O L O N Y BR - RSO sq. ft. from $135 2 BR - MOO sq. ft. groin $170 A P A R T M E N T S P O O L S ID E ; I S 2 BR.; BILLS PAID . $130 To $185 M A N O R R O A D A T O L D H A M ST. 476-1262 327-1466 Elegant living for young women 4 girl suites • 20 meals/week TV • Poll • Study hall Sun deck Maid service • • Free parking FEM ALE to share two bedroom, two bath apartment. IO minute walk to main building, bill* paid, Laundry room , maid service $61.50. Call Le Font Apartments, 803 West 28th G R 2-6480. "YOU W O N'T BELIEVE THIS PRICE” j On a brand new luxury apartment U.T. Area BARRONE 2700 Nuacas A pp lication s for S p rin g now being accepted TV lounge 20 meals a week Maid • Pool • Parki ng Experienced management 478-8345 or 477-9766 F E M A L E w anted Im m ed iately to share larg e tw o bedroom apartm ent. Shut- I V E R Y i l l , bus *ervlca. 2208 E n fie ld ' 63,3 472- ’ In Obtaining Ste steel weights, p referably 25 pound discs I N T E R E S T E D Please contact 442-0804 N A V Y w ife seeks service w ife or to sh ale apartm ent Own graduate room. S h e rry Ruckm an 444-81.38. M A L E : S h a re 1V4 miles two bedroom duplex from Campus $65 M. bills. C all 476-1059. F E M A L E roommate. U p per division or -raduate. T w o bedroom d u p I ex . „ F aduate- T w o bedroon plus H E A R N TO P L A Y G U IT A R , beginner advanced. G uitars also repaired tn D rew Thom ason. 478-7331 A l! the usual good Im pius m any extras 476-9973 444-0833 T I ^ " T T T The Contessa W e s t rr*N47«*« Typing SU M M ER JO B S IN EUROPE in England. Sw itzerland. Placem ent n i i l n u rm ? " y l guaranteed for e a rly ap- talons de- n e n H W „ „ u P ° n yo u r In t e r e s t and qua- f? “ signed en a flrs t served basis. A pply f r c t r c m . ’ n o w ’ u* ’1ob . are STUDENT TRAVEL .????_ J ? uadalupe G R 7-4340 W anted P I A N I S T N E E D E D fo r am etenr cham ­ (f lu t «- cello, kev- m a ) T * . lc o n J resj ed ln P a v in g Baroque Vsed t0 sleht reading. Call T Alex Mourelatoe, 476-8642. P A X 18.32 ,ri0 u t ■ J or th Centra! efficiencei. New, car­ peted, draped, complete kitchen; ranqe, A LL BILLS PAID oven, qarbeqa disposal, refriaerator. Fu1! bath, amp e storaqe and parking, A partment manager: 454-6811, 454 8903. M E D I T E R R A N E A N D E C O R D ishw asher, disposal, cable T V B a r and built-in desk. Spacious rooms, com pletely carpeted and paneled Close to Campus 4.307 Ave. A Mgr. apt, IG I I .os A rco* 454-0411 2.07 Rio G ran d * 476-4648 A pplications fo r S p rin g now being accepted U P P E R C L A S S fem ale room m ate for a- partm ent. W a lk in g distance. $60/ month. 477-3336. , z Elegant living for younq women Responsible male. serious student. share one bedroom apartm ent w ith . i 20 meals/week $62.50. Kitchen & dining area in each suite Free parking • TV lounge Maid service Laundry facilities Study hall M A L E student or professor to share three bedroom home Color tlx- owasher, etc. C a ll B ill Horton, 453-0349 afte r 6 p.m. F E M A L E to share ap artm ent W a lk • t o V T MO- 476- 6534. Asia Cestem tno. graduate electricity. • Sun deck " 'I bills paid business 477-5616 • Pool student. large Just North of 27th St Guadalupe T yp in g . M u ltllith ln g . B in d in g Th® Complete Professional F U LL-T IM E Typing Service tx $3 50. D esk. H om e P a r k U r g . spaces lots of i LUXURY POOLSIDE APTS Ti r ciiudl I] f natural ^ C o n ve n ie n t to U n ive rs ity . Route ? b e d r o o m , 2 b a th . A l l b ills p a id . I. B lu e B lu f f Road. 9266394’ ’or 385 * ^ t e a r o o m , 2 b a th . All 2800. NEAR CAMPUS Help Wanted ’t’H R F E E V E N I N G S and Saturd ay. SCi 5o per week fo r 20 hours C ar necessary. A pp ly 2 p m or 7:30 p.m.. Monday. Tuesday or W ednesday. 612 I-a Vann T A N G L E W O O D NO RTH 453-3233 0 minute walk to campus, $61.50 P ll person. Maid service. Vw'd.l Le Font Apartments, G R 2-6480. ‘y y J a n w i n lei. new efficiency. large G R 2-4331 1907 San G ab riel. living room— b e d r o o m ................ big kitchen & bath I or 2 persons, upperclassmen only. $115 plus electricity. P a rk in g , maid service V A C A N C Y . R O O M / B O A R D $67 month. T .L .O .K . Co-op. 1903 R io Grande. THE G O V ER N O R S fo r men F L U R D E L I S — Fem ale student needed to share one bedroom, lux ury apartm ent near Campus. 477-5282 N E E D E D I M M E D I A T E L Y Fe m ale to share four g irl R iv e r Oaks A part­ ment 126. N e a r Campus. $55 472-5210. to tailored the needs of U n ive rsity students Special keyboard equipment in * t e an(1 engineer­ ing theses and dissertations aBe A cJ ? n« Ph o n e G R 2-3210 and G R 3-7677 2707 H em p hill P a rk Clothes you no longer w e a r to O rann v's n R r \ u m n x- u A ttle at 4211 D uval. 126 p.rn Prem ium trices w ill be paid fo r lo vely garments in excellent condition 452-6022 , house to house, part o r full time. W e e k ly Income $tb-$ibo show ing makeup V ivian W oo d ard Cosmetics. C all M rs. Gant. 45.4-0613. techniques " _ ? / ? , , Spacious, attractive, choice of decor. 1 bedroom o r 2 bedroom w ith m or 2 baths and fireplaca. 2 large pools Ex ce lle n t location. 1120 S . 45th. G O L F C I A "BS. F O U R irons putter, tw o woods. Bag . $25 454-4129 after 4. C O N G O D R U M 11" head 30" Good condition $40. 454-4129 afte r 4 Registered Nurses tall. 1964 VOV C O N V E R T I B L E Radio good F.xeellent condition Call Lou tires Glatzer, 454-6335. 471-7443 471-7453 ~ DUCATI 250, ® o o d cond't'on t i n n >400 I Include! manual i J t ar,ovelv bedroom a d jo in in g bath Am ple clo­ sets kitchen privileges garage E ig h t blocks Campus. G R 8-5372. h ( >R I \\ O L A R G E , carpeted, cen tral heat and air. Close. $75. 1904 Nueces. L A R G E D IS C O U N T . Need male stu­ dent to take over contract at Cha­ p arral A partm ents. 477-5441. SEE MAYFAIR AND COMPARE 2000 Pearl 472-5437 S E N I O R S and G R A D L ’A T E wom en Va- o £ ? n r uS *} - Y ?rslty H o u s e . Room /board $<8. A ir conditioned 2309 L S S 47?4y.Ir* MarSh- Suzann8 ° r V A C A N C Y . R O O M and board fo r men students N e a r Campus maid service L y le food. C all 476-1712 M rs good or 477-8272. Mrs, W illia m s. G E T T IN G M A R R IE D . Resum e B a r ­ ron# contract R / B . 2n meals, $115 D a lly maid service 472-6.393 -* N o U h o f 2 7 fS X G u a c fflt UD * "W xAa A aa wa. T yping , M u I t ll! thing M B I 0 • Bind in g Th® C o m p t e Professional FU L L- T IM E Typing S e rv ic * to tailored * udents ment fo r gineering theses and dissertations. the needs o f U n ive rsity Special equip­ keyboard language, science and en­ Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 7707 H em p hill P a r k S A T IS F A C T IO N Dissertations, G U A R A N T E E D — Legal typist w ith I B M Ex ecu tive electric. 453-865). theses, reports Experienced specialist B B A A N N E S your 7008 ' typing done T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . W a n t co rre c tly ? On y ° U ean afford ’ 442- * V I R G IN IA S C H N E ID E R T Y P I N G S E R - V IC E . G raduate and Undergraduate typing p rin tin g binding 1515 Koenig Lan e Telephone: 465-7205 V IR G IN IA C A LH O U N TYPIN G SERVICE Pro fessio nal T y p in g A ll Fields M u ltllith ln g and B in d in g on Theses and Dissertations 1301 E d gewood 478-263* CLOSE TO U.T. • Personal ty p in g of all your u n ive rsity work These# dissertations, reports metlcul- o usly handled. Y ears of experience. rast- courteous resasonable Phone L a u ra Bo do ur: 478-8113 EXPERIENCED accur ate typist Low fast service Mrs Tullos. CL 3-5124 r a w EXPERIENCED, accurate typist after 5 p.m.. 465-5963 Call ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 TYPING. PRINTING. BINDING Miscellaneous S U M M E R JO B S IN EU R O PE In En glan d Placem ent Switzerland, and G erm any guaranteed for e a rlv ap­ plicants Variou s job descriptions de­ pending upon yo u r Interests and qua- Jo b * are assigned on a I m eat Ions. first come, first served basis. Applv now: ST U D EN T T R A V EL 2226 Guadalupe G R 7-4340 Store T E X A N S : W rite to P o r ’ pr's Cam era 2208 College Street. Cedar cabs. Iou a 50613. for our F R E E Illu s­ trated D IS C O U N T Pho to g rap hic C ata­ log Day ear*, agas 3 I. 7:30 im.-5:30 pm C O N G R E G A T IO N A L C H U R C H O F A U S T IN law fa cilities. A d ja c e n t to C am pus, H o t m e a s . Q u a lif ie d staff. Phone 472- 2370 or com e b y fo r m e r* inform ation. L E A R N T O PLAY G U IT A R , beginner and advanced. G uitars also repaired D rew Thomason. 478-7331. N E L S O N ' S GIFTS—handmade Indian lewclrv. Mexican Imports — 4612 S IO to 6 Congress Open 444-3814 HORIZONS UNLIMITED 1008 W EST AVENUE 478-6673 A B O O K S T O R E S P E C IA L IZ IN G IN M E T A P H Y S IC S , TH E O C C U L T , A S T R O L O G Y . H O U R S 10-6, M O N D A Y T H R U S A T U R D A Y C L A S S E S N O W F O R M IN G IN E S O T E R IC T A R O T P H IL O S O P H Y . B A C H T R U M P E T for sale Ex cellen t condition $225. C al! 472-1637. P A R T T I M E female help wanted Ap­ p ly tn person only U n ive rs ity D is­ count Stores. 2900 D uval B A R G A IN ? W I L L give $100 deposit lf you take up luxury 472-6520 a 471-2273 * bef° re Fe b rU a ry 1 lease on one bedroom C A R P E T E D R O O M convenient to U .T . and downtown. Fem ale upperclass­ man. C all G R 8-2808. 1964 B L IC K W ild c a t coupe Bucket seats v in y l top a lr. all power, m int condition $995 327-0891. T h r e e g e e s e fr'o n d lv T h * little shop overflow ing w ith .antiques and bygones. F u rn itu re br:ck-a-brae. Fe atu rin g book ends unique In Austin. Reason­ able prices. prim atlves Open week-end o n ly 9-5 U p the d rive by the T hree Gee*e” G R 8-0672 — 1500 W . 9th. M S T S E L L . N E E D money fo r achoo! 1962 T-btrd E x ce lle n t condition Al! Power, v e r v clean. D esperate Call 454- 174 evenings. F E M A L E : O N E bedroom: on three shuttle bus routes. Call K e y , 47 -3481. F E M A L E . No rent. S o m e housework. C a ll 472-8858 or 2311 San Antonio. NEEDY STUDENT J,oy 5 wanted to c i r * for 5 y#ar e | J evenings/week, 5:30-12:00. 804 W . 29th r re asportation necessary. $ 10/wee k St. i dinner. C a '' 478-5126 after 6 p.m. p SA I , E S L A D I E S needed. W o r k 0 n commission. You choose you r hours C all for interview 451-1615. Duplex — Furnished S T U D E N T vacancy in a tw o bedroom ^ red^ ,]V iu ri! "Partm e n t. A ll bills 5)9 50. T H E B L A C K S T O N E . G R 0- Ll L D tw o bedroom. ^ I f e n ? 7* utilities. W a lk in g distance L l /downtown 510 W est 8th. 4 7 M 063. O N E ury apartm ents. Two T W O — Three bedroom lux- large pools From ■,■ B R O W N S T O N E p A R K A P A R T ­ M E N T S . 5106 N o rth L a m a r 454-3496 MNV'kllng. Beau tifu l. A ll bills Lost and Found F O U N D C A T I year old. R u ira n blue near W . 24th/5aa Anton.o. Approxi­ mately fe- ma a worth $80 and up. Cannot keep, must find owner or home. W ill 9 iv# away. o n e b e d r o o m . 2501 Oldham. T O W E R V I E W A PA P.T - 476 288® after I . ^ sp rin g /su m m e r rate T w o blocks W a te r, g<-ts. cable paid Spe- L O S T E I G H T W E E K rn a I a m inny . Puppy ’67 T R I U M P H G T with air, miles Solid or w ire wheels 24 OOO $ 2 , 0 0 0 . *71-2175 L O O K F a cu lty , staff Old fashioned b lrck town house. 2-2 antique de- 476!,3-29 EaS t 32nd $16° ' 444-2607 See the rest, choose the best! Some space available for Spring. 2323 San Antonio St. 478-981 I Services STUDENT'S DAD TAKES IN IRONING W A L K C A M P U S . New one bedroom Carpeted, contem porary. 3104 D uval ? 5 5 « W a trr pald- S125- G L 2-1516. G L 4-4441. ALL BILLS PAID $145 Quiet, near U.T. 4307 Ave. A. 454-04 l l 453-7102 U N U SU ALLY ATTRACTIVE two k e d r room i, two blocks C am p us. E ach with p riva te en trance, co n n e ctin g ♦tie bath — snack bar. R efr Apartments— Unfurnished AVAILABLE N O W 3 bedroom, I bath with private am courfyard Carpets, drapes all kitchen appliances including dishwash­ er. Lease $195 m onthly plus bills. if you are tired of the "plastic apart­ ments. then come bv 1114 W. 7th (between Bay!or A B lan co for so m e different. Mgr.. No, 201, 476- 7833 or 477-6131 Services INCOME TAX Service, Experienced tax consultant. Reasonable rate* on all types of returns. 452-5588. there with to three boyt. $32 each. Efficiency A , 1906 Nuecet. G R 2-2071. sports clothe*. Call Judy. 451-2512.' W an t to— BUY, SELL, OR RENT? Cal! T W O R O O M furnished apartm ent near Campus. $95 u tilitie s paid. A fte r 5. 506 Elm w ood Place. B. CAMINO REAL — luxurious apartment living for two male students. Dish­ tind er washer disposal, a1! utilities, ground parking 477-7989. $7q Near Campus C A R M EA N CARPET C LE A N IN G S e t your c a rp e t sham pood, flo o r w axed GR 1-5244 •r a p a rtm e n t clea n e d . Phone 477-0747 for a D A N A BEA R N U R S E R Y Just North of 27th St Guadalupe Offering loving ears. 18 month* to 5 years. Convenlr-nt to U.T. and down­ town. Central air and heat. All modern yard equipment and play material. w&mAa Am 509 W. 18th St. GR 2-7939. MARDI G RA S * Typing M ultllithlng Binding M B A 9 The Complete Professional FU LL-TIM E Typing Service to tailored the need* of University students Special keyboard equipment ;or science, and engineer­ ing theses and dissertations language Phone GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 Hemphill Park BOBBY E D FXA F I ELD TYPING SER- m VICE. Theses, dissertations, reports. Mimeographing Reasonable. HI 2-7184 NORTHWEST, near Allendale. Years ^gtyping experience to help you. 465- Classified Ad In The Daily Texan Rerty Bul to New Orleans; $ !S Jn c K d e i tranipor+fltlon, fo o d. b a e r, and lo d g in g ! I . return Fab, l l . L e a v e Feb. C a ll S te v e , 476-1246. ing. hedge trimming YARD WORK w anted: Mowing edg­ free trimming XnMB am oved , hauling. Bed work. 454-3216. Call G R 1-5244 To Place a Texan Classified Ad Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX D U P L IC A T O R S 476-7581 311 E. lith Due +o high cost or a well-rounded education, Mr. J . D. Parker, father or University student Tommy Parker has been forced t o take in ironing. Duplex— Unfurnished I bedroom & living room, with screen porch & separate Mr. Parker, in order to support his shiftless son, will began slaving o/er his hot ironjfar+ing M onday a t th e IR O N IN G B O A R D in the H ab land Plaza Center (take a right on North Loop at the North Lamar Chicken Shack). study. roar Mr. Parker. H e needs your he lur help. H e won't take charity, so the you can do is take your clean laundry to him at the IR O N IN G ! Quiet & secluded, beautiful yard to enjoy this spring. ‘Ten minute walk or 2 bus j v lines to U.T. i • conditioner. Yard upkeep & water paid. O A R D . Cal! and ask him about his ridiculous prices (15c for a man's *ldea! for couple or 2 men 'H rt? and let him cry on your shoulder. His number is 465-7209. P.S. There's a washeteria next door. t n A i : r f A r M : e ^ r \ / C l H N /C I IT A L CT T O A O i A ? H i FFI r* , , xvi M $ 120 per month. *Located at 2708 B San Pedro, phone GR 8-2708. Page IO Sunday, F tb iw y I, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Campus News In Brief ACTUARIAL APTITUDE TES’ o r i g i n a l l y scheduled f< Tuesday, will be given at p.m. Wednesday in Business Economics Building 57. ARM Y ROTO is accepting a] plications through March I fc their two-year program. BAHA I ASSOCIATION will hoi an open house at 8 p. nr Tuesday in Union Building 317. CHI ALPHA will hold a Bibl study at 7:30 p.m. Monday 1: the Catholic Student Center. CURREN T ISSU ES FORUM wil discuss air and water pollutioi at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Unioi Building 315. FAC U LTY CONCERT S E R IE ! presents Harry Cardwell, tenoi and oratorio soloist, at 8:1! p.m. Monday the Mush Building Recital Hall. in J E S T E R C EN T ER will presenl a film, “ Tiger Shark,” at 6:3( p.m. Wednesday in Jester Audi, torium. Admission is 75 cents. LINGUISTICS CLUB will sponsoi a lecture by Prof. B. Schlerath, entitled “ The Endo-Europeans: Sociology and Religion,” at 4 p m. Monday in Union Building 315. MASO will hold of tions at 7 p.n^ Business-Economic - 153. onday noir no­ in Building * MATH EM ATICS UOLLOQl ll M will sponsor a lecture by Prof. G. Hedstrom at 4 p.m. Monday In Benedict Hall 115. S P E A K E R S C O M M ITTEE wfR sponsor a talk by U. S. Sen. Abraham Ribiooff of Con­ necticut at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday In tbs Union Main Ballroom. Huh will m e e t at 7:,30 pm. Tuesday in Business-Economic* Building 168. ITWVERSrrr YMCA it currently accepting applicants for Judo classes which will begin Fob. IO and cost five dollar* a month. T o d a y ' * E v e n t * NOON University Sport* Car Club to hold a Ground Ho? Day Gymkhana In the Gulf Marl parking lot 4 p.m. — Alpha Phi Omega ta for hold an open meeting prospective members the in Junior Ballroom (rf the Texas Union. 4 p.m. - Young Socialist Alliance to meet In Union Building 321 B a llo o n s W ill Prom ote ‘V a u stin e e r’ P ro g ra m Helium balloons will be sold for 19 cents Monday on the West Mall to promote the Community k,,urT lo le ™ GOTT t s new C o m m it t r o ’ in v o lv e m e n t Vaustineer program. , Vaustineer Ls a word coined to describe their novel approach to community work In East Austin. to 5 p.m. Monday, From Tuesday and Wednesday, slides will be shown in Union Building 334-335 to attract workers to the program. I VAUSTINEER UNION 3* 336 FEB. 2, 3, 4, 1-5 p.m. HARVARD PLACE APARTMENTS 5020 Manor Road Brand New. I A 2 R B., Fnrflinhed Stnd io Apt#. $179.50 $199.50 ( I B R .— I B a th ) (Z B.R.-1V6 Bath e) A L L BILLS P A ID ! Phone: 926-6258 Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service F A C T O R Y T R A IN ED Volkswagen Sp* medalists _The Only Independent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt’s Automotive Service 795! BU R N ET R O A D Across from G ulf M art G L 2-0205 C lo s e d S & iu rd e y Color TV Fire Hazard Cited those of study was to cover the products of four Jap a n ese manufacturers as well as the 13 dom estic com panies. The 17 com­ panies account for 95 percent of the sets sold this country. in B ecause of a lack of comparative d ata on the Japanese, however, findings w ere limited to domestic production. Six com panies were identified incidence of fire as having an and smoke claim s higher than the in d u stry ’s mean of 1.2 per 10,000 sets. N am ed in descending o rd er of incidence, they w ere the L ear Siegler Corp., m an u factu rer of Olympic se ts; P a c k a rd Bell, Magnovox, Sylvania, Philco-Ford and RGA. th e SIN BRANDS had an Incidence industry m ean. ra te below They w ere identified, also In des­ a s G eneral cending A dm iral, Motorola, E lectric, E m erson, W arwick (Sears) and Zenith. order, because categories W estinghouse was om itted from both “ no problem m odels could be identi­ fied.” A problem model w as defined as one having been in­ volved in two or m ore fire or sm oke incidents. For Representative (c) 1970 New York Times I News Service WASHINGTON - The national Commission on P roduct Safety h as listed 122 m odels of color television sets a s ex trao rd in ary fire hazards. The m odels w ere am ong 228 b u ilt by l l m an u factu rers. The com m ission, a federal fact-find­ ing agency, called on the rnanu- lac fa c tu re rs to re p a ir or replace the I Tile list w as b ased on a study fire and sm oke d am age claim s by 13 m an u factu rers in last five years. THE COMMISSION found that I claim s w ere m ade for each sets. The incidence of OOO w as a t le a st 3 p er 10.000 the m odels placed on the list. To estim ate w as available of num bers of sets m anufac­ tured under the 122 listed model num bers. Comm ission officials said it would ran g e in the hun­ d red s of thousands. in use About 22 million color television sets a re the United States. The com m ission estim ates th a t 7,000 to 10.000 catch fire each y ear, in P u b ll^ ^ w i of the list was as­ sailed M H x h p E lectronic In­ d u stries /fS lc ia tlo n and the Na­ tional T rad e Association of Tele­ vision M anufacturers as unw ar­ ran ted . It called th e incidence of fires “ infinitesim ally low.” The association accused th* com m ission of “ unduly alarm ing the public about this relatively lim ited problem ” and of illegally publicizing data th a t “ involves u n fair com petitive ad v an ta g e.” T O E ASSOCIATION also said sta tistic s showed th at fire and sm oke incidents associated with television sets “ a re a very sm all percen tag e of fires from products they using electricity and have for a nu m b er of y ears been d ecreasin g in relation to sets in u se.” th a t the The comm ission study did not cover black-and-w hite sets be­ cau se incidence of dam age claim s was m uch less than that for color sets. The g re a te r hazard In color television is attributed m ainly to higher voltage require­ m ents. Aa originally projected, the Essary Enters Race G ayle E ssary , Austin a d v e r­ tising and public relations consul­ tant, has announced he will file M onday for sta te rep resen tativ e, P lace 4. He will oppose D ean R ussell Rindy, a senior history m ajo r a t the U niversity, who announced for the office T hursday. L ssary , 29, resigned T hursday from the T rav is County Demo­ c ra tic E xecutive Comm ittee. E ssary Issued no sta te m e n t with his announcem ent and said H E R M A N N PREY bai »Ung in ai; Europa'i Operas and the N.Y. MET C o m in g H ere Feb. 3 FREE to B.T. Holders he would have no statem en t when filing Monday b u t th at he would focus attention on the problem s confronting T rav is and B urnet Counties by “ d em onstrating those than m erely problem s talking about just Issuing p ress re le a se s.” them or by ra th e r Free National C ham pionship L O N G H O R N G L A S S E S with IO gal. fill up at Ritter Stations at • 2718 Guadalupe # 6705 N. Lamar # 5035 Burnet Rd. • Airport B'vd. at IH 35 'R IT T E R S Rostow Talk Set Monday At St. Edwards University W alt W. Rostow, ad v iser to P re sid e n ts Lyndon B. Johnson and John F . Kennedy for eight y e ars, will speak a t St. E d w a rd ’s U niversity a t 8 p.m . Monday. In a talk titled “ Foreign Policy T ask s of th e Second Post-W ar G e n e r a t i o n , ” Rostow will problem s exam ine continuing facing ad ­ new m inistrations. p residential When Rostow, a history and the professor econom ics a t U niversity of Texas, spoke to the U.S. Foreign Policy Association W ednesday, he said the United States to in is now international partnerships. m ake the mood “ Much of the future depends the steadiness of A m erica,” on Rostow said. “ If we w ithdraw from V ietnam , or another, China will move one w ay in.” Rostow, who advised Johnson this in national security, said would conflict. cau se a major w orld P resid en t U nder Johnson and Kennedy, Rostow w as deputy a ssista n t to the for N ational Security A ffairs, counselor of the State D ep artm en t and chairman of the S tate D ep artm en t Policy Planning Council, m em b er of the Inter-A m erican Com m ittee on the Alliance for P ro g ress and special the P resid en t on a ssista n t to N ational Security Affairs. PRINT SALE WINN GALLERIES & LONDON GRAFICA PRESENT ORIGINAL PRINTS JAN. 30, 31, FEB. I 9-9 & SUNDAY 2-5 W I N N G A L L E R I E S / 1 0 8 C O N G R E S S / A U S T I N / 4 7 6 - 1 2 0 0 It's Girl Scout Cookie Time C f _ . , _ , — Photo by Reno Peres U n e senior w r l Scout found a boom ing busi­ Inflation has ness on G uadalupe Saturday, hit even the G irl Scouts this year. C ookies have gone up from 50 to 60 cents. McClellan Plans to 'Listen' Dr. Stephen M cClellan, dean of students, has declared Feb. 16 to 20 “ listening w eek.” In O range Notes, a n ew sletter of the Dean of Students’ Office, the office staff M cClellan said will stop normal activities each afternoon to have open house and ‘ ‘ r a p ’ ’ with all interested students. “ Concentration will be given to sm all Individual conversations w hich, hopefully, ideas about will produce new group and com m unication and sh ip s,” M cClellan said. relation “ At the end of our one week ex perim ent, inform ation t h e gained from the activities will be pulled together, with an eye to­ w ard Im plem entation of certain p roposals,” McClellan said. % Eat our whole menu $3*89 2 Eggs, fried or scrambled. ■401 IO*; | Toast ' ■ ■ ■ M I'C h ili Bacon................................ 20 Sausage..........................201 Coffee..................... .lo ............... 35 Waffles Orange or Tomato juice . . . Iff Krystal Hamburger.. . . . . . 15 20 Krystal Cheeseburger a n i French Fries ................ 151 | Donuts., iv ;y.; . ........... 05 os:" « P ie Coke’and soft drinks.. . . . . IO gM ilk.. . . . . . / i v . ............151 lOi s Milk S h a k e . . . . . . . . . . ; . . . 20i I Chicken, 2 pieces ____ . .4' . . . . . . ; .lM Cole Slaw, cup Potato Bops . . . . . . . . .lfr Hot Chocolate *«- • » rn • A.- I v • m # J , • . • J J I * # ' «, « , • , Krystal Don’t let our prices scare you. College students have plenty of expenses without being subjected to the bull market (i.e., steadily increasing) prices most laundries charge for shirts and blouses. The natural reaction of disenchanted students would be to boycott the established norms and wear unlaundered apparel which, of course, would result in social reprimand. To all of this the Driskill Laundry says— B u llsh it (our antl-bull-market- price special) This week we'll launder to perfection your shirts or blouses for only $.21 apiece. AII you need Is your college I.D. Cash & Carry Only I Driskill Cleaners & Laundry Main Plant 411E 19th Branch 213 So. L A l i i I i n ; a x ) N M M I Sunday, February I, |»70 THE D AILY TEXAN Fag* JI v Columbia Top In Recordings By DAVID ROS FA Staff Writer Col urn Ilia Rrvords was the dominant recording company of 1969, as revealed in Billboard m a g a z i n e ’ s “industry' per­ formance report,’' the finai recap of last y ear’s sales action. Columbia accounted for 13.1 percent of all albums charted by Billboard in 1969. Closest com­ petition came from Capitol with only 7.2 percent, a dram atic ack­ nowledgement Columbia’s dominance, followed by RCA Vic­ tor (6.7 percent), and Atoo (5.7 percent). of Likewise in singles action, 6.2 percent of those charted were from Columbia, followed in close pursuit by RCA Victor (6.1 percent), then Capitol (4.7 per­ cent) and Atlantic (4.6 percent). Creedence Clearwater Revival (on Fantasy Records) had the most impact on singles sales last year, accounting for 2.13 percent the the action. Next cam e of (1.6 percent), Tommy Beatles the Shondells (1.55 Jam es and percent), and Elvis Presley (1.53 percent). Tom Jones (on London—P arro t Records) had the most album chart action (2.93 percent). Glen Campbell the Temptations (2.08 percent), and Johnny Cash (1.75 percent) were runnerups behind Jones. percent), (2.47 aw ard is industry Columbia Records was also awarded the most Gold Record plaques last year (22). The Gold the highly Record c o v e t e d acknow­ ledgement of million dollars in sales of an album or single. Since th aw ard was initiated in 1958, Columbia has received 20 percent of all Gold Record plaques presented. sales strengths, The Billboard report does not reflect but percentage of listings a particular label or artist had during 1969 on IOO” tile magazine's “ Hot singles and “ Top L Ps” albums charts. A SOUTHERN TO W N TURNS INTO A TIME B O M B "P F T ! r w . ^ V G M presents A P jJph Nelson Film » tick tickM B tick... Jim Brown George Kennedy Fredric March Panavisioif and Metrocolor Stomno bi ARTS THURS. PARA M O U N T ^PREVIEW TONIGHT PARAMOUNT ONLY 8:00 P.M. " G 1 . . . t i c k . . . t i c k . . . t i c k . . . Jim Brown • Geo. Kennedy INTERSTATE HELD OYER I — Hitchcock e x po ses t h e most EXPLOSIVE SPT SCANDAL OF THIS C E M IX ! TH EA TR E FE A T U R E S: 1:30 - 3:36 -5:4* 'ak g ;(KlI 9:36 '- TRANS ★TEXAS T RANS ★TEXAS msL-JHT&4D0 Burnet Road — 455 6333- Bito M M M A D C I -T 8 *1.50 P E R P E R S O N C H I I ,ll ( • to IJ W /P > F R E E • THE STERILE CUCKOO" LIZA MINNT-I-II " M ” — ( O I , O R R»toA » 1im! IN COLOR "BLUE" T E R E N C E 8T A M T IIi WiI N I amar hlvri —Ani.) 7)0 T E E N D IS C . ( A R I)S *1.00 S N A C K D A K O P E N 6 P .M . ’VALLEY OF THE GW ANGI" .IA M ES F R A N C IS C U S Ratod "G" — (O D O R p i n * : ( ' O D O R "CHAM BER OF HORRORS" P A T R I C K O ' N E A L FREE! EXCLU SIV E! FREE! Color Photo of "Texas No. I Tower" TO FIRST ONE HUNDRED CARS TONIGHT ONLY I ONP PER CAR T R A N S t I t A A S 15601N. Univ Blvd.—451*1710 Extra C opies Can Be Purchased in the Snack Bar. They're B eautiful! Number # 1 HOOK 'EM H O R N S! Number I TRANS ★TEXAS s a ™ 2200 Hancock Drive— 453 6641 TODAY AT 2 & 8 P.M. A PICTURE W ORTH SEEING AGAIN & AGAIN {AMOUNT PICTURES CII KT ' LEE MARVIN EASTWOOD JWi SEBERG FAINT YOUR WAGON Rased on the Lrmpr and toe** Brcwixav tniftxal play OjM-n 12:30 P.M . P h one Reservations Accepted T i c k e t s a l s o A v a i l a b l e a t a n y T r a n s - T e x a s T h e a t r « ' « , S e a r s . R e m o l d s - P e n l a n d ^ ^ I TRANS ★TEXAS l i m n 1421 W. San While Blvd.-4422333 R O C K IN G C H A IR SEATS S M O K IN G PERMITTED A C R E S FREE P A R K IN G T O D A Y 'S FEATURE TIM ES 2:0 0 -4 :0 0 -6 :0 0 - 8:00- 10:00 "ASTONISHINGLY PERFECT!" "GO.SQUIRM'' - ASCHCR WINSTEN. NEW VORK TOST C tfo K MAGAZINE "WILL KNOCK YOU OUT OF YOUR SEAT!' " EXTRAORDINARY ACHIEVEMENT! -NEW REPUBLIC "THE IMPACT IS DEVASTATING!" — JUDITH CRIST. NEW VORK MAGAZINE "A MAJOR RAKEHELL FILM !’* -T IM E 'T H E REAL THING!" "STUNNING! •R C N E IO P C O H I (ATT. THE NEW YORKER _ CBS R A 0 !0 "ROUSING, RHYTHMIC, SPLENDID!’ —ANDREW SARRIS. VILLAGE VOICE " A VIBRANT, BRUTAL ESSAY." —PLAYBOY " ELOQUENT, AND IMPORTANT!" -J O S E P H MORGENSTERN, NEWSWEEK war rn M m m e a s a t i U a t f^ N w r o w * ctwisncwe* Wv>Ol>»«l»t ^ — rfonda-dennishopper JACK NICHOLSON' ................................................................ otNMs-QrstR eeresfojo* wkl>.m «**w.s9 best scwe.oea XV,., E g g a i J g ’.IIP1" * " — — « l « - « » - l — » colon — OPEN 1:45 _TRA N S-^reX AS 2224 Guadalupe St-47 7-1 96 4 FEATURES 2-4-6-10 (SNEAK 8} P. M. PREVIEW X R n als "I A m Curious" “Go see ‘Putney Swope’. Tells it like ifs never been told before.”— Judith Crist The Truth and Soul Mot ie “PUTNEY SW OPE" J V I VA I 18 Will De A d m itte d ’N" P e n o u I n der STARTS W E D N E S D A Y German Baritone Hermann Prey will give a re­ cital a t 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in H ogg Auditorium. Tickets on sale a t the door are $3 each and free to blanket tax hold­ ers. Prey Concert Set For Tuesday Night office opens at 7:30 p.m. Blanket tax holdeis may draw free tickets from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday and Tuesday at the Hogg Audi­ torium box office. Hermann Prey, one of the most .sought-after singers of German lieder in the world today, arrives in Austin Monday for a recital in Hogg Auditorium at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday. the Met The German baritone will be flying in from New York, where he has just completed four ap­ as pearances with Papageno in “Tile Magic F lute,’’ a performance of “Die Winter- reise’’ at Tully Hall in Lincoln Center Jan. 23, and a recital of songs by Strauss and Pfitzner in Carnegie Hall Saturday. Tickets for P rey 's con co rf will be on sale at the door at $3 each. There is no advance sale and seats are not reserved. Tile box A t t i c s AUTHENTIC ENGLISH Free Orders Today For 1. Raymond Boll 452-3145 2. Charles Day 478-8901 3. Pam ela Pape 476-4176 4. Ann Smith 141-7015 Theater Company to Hold Auditions on Four Topics The Living T reater Company of the Curtain Theater has not been idle. Tins group within a group is ready to go with their first perform ance Fob, 13, a play that of their o w rv creation Group Grows In Artistry By d o n McKi n n e y Amusements Associate is It Is a good feeling to watch a group of people grow in talent and depth. It shows the group Is taking their artistry seriously and not just as means to an end. Such the Case with Argir, Bernard and Hoherd — a group that has increased its depth and grown in talent since the original team of Fred Argir and Betsy Bernard began a duo last sum­ mer. The addition of George Hoherd on electric bass has into another the group moved dimension of sound. the The trio has dropped for the most part all songs but what the the three have written with majority of compositions coming from Argir. The dif­ ference in their sound was put to the test of an audience Friday I.e Potpourri coffee night house — and they passed adm ir­ ably. in THEY OPENED with a new song by Argir, “ Walking Back to Boston,” whose lyrics could bring vivid images of hitch hiking to anyone who has ever parti­ cipated in that wandering art. It was loaded with visions of people, places and the ideology that goes with both. The soft thudding of Hoherd's bass seemed to make the song move far from the tiny stage. last album, and is a big the The second set opened with from “ Autumn G irl,” a song the Argir's im­ present rendition provement over last. T h e bass guitar and two part har­ mony as well as the added guitar helped to m ark the passage of time that never came out in the original version. “VOICE IN A BOAT” is prob­ ably tile most poetic of the Argir songs for the night. They are extremely surreal with a mist quality. The stage composition as a whole could almost be inter­ preted as a religous experience with guitars and vocals merging Into a total mind experience. They closed out the evening with “Song for Peace.” All three members of the group took center stage with Argir supporting them on accoustical guitar. It was a very quiet cry for an end to w'ars everywhere and the atrocities men put upon men and w-as “ heavy” to say the i/Sittt. More than that it was a flaying end to a very enjoyabljfeuTening of quiet music from a * exceptional group. company contains no dialogue. Members of the Include Rhonda Harvey, Chuck Sci ber, Mike Read and Tom JarretL The company has many more Ideas for performances but they need people, so auditions for any­ one the Living Theater will be held at 7 p.m. Monday in Union Building 401. in being in interested The auditions will be for such varied subjects as the Travel Troops, from which people can order any one of three plays: room dram a, sensitivity living session, or “ for heads only,” to be presented in their owm home. Living Art Exhibit, the Travel Troops also Is available for private showings and consists of original play each time it is presented is d e s t r o y e d or given away. equipment since like Fresh from 4 Triumph* st tho N.Y. Met! HERMANN PREY * Feb. FREE to B.T. Holders INQUIRY CLASSES CATHOLIC DOCTRINE & PRACTICE Catholic Student Center 7 : 1 5 p . m . W e d n e s d a y * 2010 l'niver*ltY G R 6-7351 VAUSTINEER UNION 334-336 FEB. 2,3,4,1-5 p.m. Join tho Lively O n e s f r o m S w l n r l n * l e n d e r t o I ! t i t t i e I s t a n b u l E U R O P E or the O R IE N T q u a l i t y s t u d e n t t o u r s BY LUXURY LINER OR JET 24 59 D AYS $1 295-J2.245 In D e w • S l e h t e e e i n * • N # R o f f im e n t- a t in n • A m p l e T r e e T ir a * • P o p u la r Fvrnrt# • F u n G r o u p * H A R W O O D TOURS ’N TRAVEL AUSTIN. TEXAS 2428 G U A D A L U P E Introducing SLIMLINE. The First Bookshelf Music System that Really fits on a Bookshelf. Even the m ost com pact stereo m usic system s lack one very Important feature: they c a n ’t fit gracefully on a standard 12* bookshelf. Harm an-Kardon, leader in com pact m u sic syste m * h a s just developed an ultra-com pact stereo system that fit* perfectly on a bookshelf without overhang. The new S L I0 1 2 , features a sensitive A M / F M stereo re­ ceiver plus a pair of the most phenom enal sp eake rs y o u ’ve ever heard. The speakers scatter sound in a 360° circle to fill your hom e with m usic that is crystal clear and spacious. A n d the speakers can be p laced on a bookshelf, behind chair*, draperies or anywhere they look and so u n d best. The A M / F M stereo receiver Is super-sensitive an d can pull In distant stations you d id n ’t even know were on the dial. W ith­ out noise or distortion. The receiver can also be used with a record changer and any type of tape recorder. C om e in for a demonstration. Y o u ’ll be thrilled by the sound. A n d pleased by the price. Com plete M u sic System includes dust cover s jg g g s STERLING ELECTRONICS 1712 Lavaca 477-5866 A ■■OXF. OF TH E ^ 7 * Y E A R S IO BEST." N .Y . Times Tantalizingly tender fillets of fresh cod covered in Alfie’s special batter and deep fried to a crisp brown . . . Served authentic English style with a sprinkle of m alt vinegar and delicious chips of french fried potatoes. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ALFRED HITCHCOCKS 11:00 a.m. - 12 M idnight 2120 Guadalupe i J* ™ I — — — — ■■■■■ ..I I. H ill a 222 East 6th 472-0436 Steve McQueen "The Reivers’ A Cinema Center Films Present 3tkx»’ A National General Pictures Release Plus 2nd Rip Roaring • Adult Hit-ln Color RATED ”X ” — 18 And Over Escorted Ladies Free Super Sneak Wed. 8 P.M. College Students, Military Welcome FREE PARKING JS S & tS S INTERSTATE TODAY STATE D O W N T O W N 7 t f C O N G R E S S THEATRE F E A T I RES 1:40 - 3:45 - 5:50 1:55 - 10:00 HELD OYER! 2nd EXCITING WEEK! r n FREE. PARKING .'SVVS'. INTERSTATE ^ v a a ’f i i I A I ■ B O­ VARSITY 140 * GUADALUPE NOW: THEATRE FE A T U R E S: 2:00 - 3:35 - 5:10 6:15 - 8:20 - 9:55 “IN THIS ONE YOU GET AN ORGY THATS AN ORGY!" judith Crist, New York Magazine RELEASED DY UM FAM MSTWSyTCWS MC COLOM BV MOVKLAD HELD OVER! 3 MORE DAYS! FREE PARKING ADMOENTTO THEATRE INTERSTATE DOORS OPEN 1:3 0 A U S T I N 21)0 SO CONGRESS THEATRE I NO KFKATKD” 1:45 - 5:4 4 - 9:13 "MOON” 8:55 - 7:54 J o h n W h y n e R o c k H u d s c r " t h e ■ ruMsm* ■ toil* IT OC.OIE THE STALKING MOON FREE PARKING\AT ALL TIMES p NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX Theatre 6757 AIRPORT BLVD. • 454*2711 H U R R Y — EN D S S O O N OPEN TODAY AT 1:45 P.M. Feature at 2:00 - 4:10 -6:20 8:15- 10:05 p.m. N.Y. FILM C R IT IC S A W A R D Best Actress in Supporting Ro!# D Y A N C A N N O N * BEST SC R EEN PLAY Bf. “THE O Z A YEAR’S G p BEST COMEDY!” ■ SATURDAY MV!EW Alice A TW A M K O V1CS4 T W O O U C T IO M TOW C O LU M B U S R E L E A S E RESTRICTED UNDER 18 ADMITTED ONLY WITH PARENTS OR GUARDIAN S h o w to w n I .S\.V. Ih'estre "» Cantoon Rd at 183 454 8444 \( * \ BH B O X O F F IC E O P E N 6 ; 16 S H O W S S T A R T 6:30 — EAST SC R EEN — "Y E S " ( R ated X ) "T H E LO VER S" (Rate*] X ) (W EST SCREEN) "SPIRITS O F THE D E A D " (IC.I t e d R v — P L I S — "C H A S T IT Y " ( H ated I i > N O RTH SC R EEN — "T H E STERILE C U C K O O ” (H ate d M ) "R O S E M A R Y 'S BABY” (H ated M ) (SO U TH SC REEN) "Y E S " (R a te d X ) ’T H E LO VER S" (R a te d X ) :^RipTorn/Sally Kirkland/Viveca Lindfora U n d e f e a t e d ! ! Page 12 Sunday, February I, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Traveling 'Celebration' Show To Have Monday Preview American Educational Theater Association. Jill Greenberg, freshman said drama student from Mississippi. USO officials responsible for choosing productions were im­ pressed with the University’s re­ view “ Here’s Us” that made a tour last summer and asked drama department chairman Dr. Le win Goff to provide another production for this spring. The group win leave Austin on Thursday and fly to Frankfurt, Germany. “ We’ll land in Frank­ furt and find out where we go from there. We don’t know yet how many stops we’ll make,” THEY WILL tour for eight weeks principally In Germany take a 10-day rest and then period in london before returning home. All of the students are carrying spring semester course loads and w ill work on special drama projects for credit while traveling. Since no technicians will be making the trip, the actors have to double as lighting and set crew. TRA V ELIN G IN close quarters for such an extended period st time could be hard on Berv ie friendships, but Mlm a n d Greenberg **we have said, discussed foe problems that may come up and have decided we can handle them.” The tour w ill be foe first trip to Europe for most of the group. The actors making the trip arer M ary Lynn Melton, Pa t Spears, Randy Huebner, Ruth Ann Ash* more, BUI McClaren, Clark Cook, Susan Andre, Jill Greenberg, Perry Silvey, Larry Haynes, John Berwick and Lee Skinner. By MIDDY RANDERSON Amusements Editor People in the University com­ munity w ill have a final chance Monday to see the drama depart­ ment’s rousing musical “ Celebra­ tion” before the cast leaves for a United Service Organization tour of Europe. The re-staged traveling version of the play using simpler sets and lighting will be presented at 8 p.m. Monday in the Laboratory Theater, west of the Drama Building. Admission Is free. THE PRODUCTION itself w ill | be essentially the same as the I one staged in Hogg Auditorium in December. The players w ill! wear the same metal and leather costumes and the music they w ill1 use is recorded from the earlier production. The major differences lie in the smaller cast, 14 members for the traveling show as opposed to 18 in the Austin version, and the austerity of the new stage design. ! RAY POND, graduate student I and teaching assistant in drama ; who is serving as director of the show, said the troupe has to carry all of Its equipment in regulation-size arm y footlockers. These trunks w ill serve as on­ stage props and. along with some ladders and a backdrop, w ill be the entire stage setting. Such simplicity is quite a change from the elaborate metal scaffolding the players romped across in December. “ We have to think in terms of mobility since we have no idea if we’ll be performing on a stage or at the end of a hallway,” Pond explained. conducted THE EIGHT-WEEK tour will be the U.S. Department of Defense under the auspices of the USO and the for HOUR d e l i v e r y of K0DAC0L0R PRINTS Bring us your exposed Film by 4 PM Prints ready 48 hours later at 4 PM. STUDTMAN PHOTO • Cameron Vitiate t9th a t Lavaca V ILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Students Sunday Night Special Complete Dinner for $3.00 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak Just present your blanket tax or Auditor's receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional ONLY 2 BLOCKS FROM MEMORIAL STADIUM FREE TO BLANKET TAX HOLDERS! One of the most sought-after singers of German lieder in the world today HERMANN PREY Baritone Fresh from four appearances with the New York Met as Papageno in “Magic Flute” Tues., Feb. 3 8:15 P.M. HOGG AUDITORIUM Draw Tickets Now at HOGG AUD .: Open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mon.-Fri UT Solo Artist Series Single Adm. $3 No reserved s e a ts AST SERVICE! Storm-Tossed Orphan f I I I I I , r * s + t u riomeless d ark Cook finds himself surrounded by menacing figures and attempts a ladder escape in a rehearsal scene from the traveling version of "Celebration." A free preview of the show will be presented at 8 p.m. Monday in the Laboratory Theater. —Photo by Steve Hultman. l r RlqAFA s Poetry Diversified By THOMAS^WHITBREAD sift cation Is high. There is a re­ rn,_ . — I . vi«4, ** Beautiful . Amoci&te Professor of English, Rica University On Its face, lush hair partially shimmering, eyes hid, mouth wide, a greenish girhvoman—one of the Eumenides?—cries “ RIA- T A — W IN T ER 1969-70-38 c.” On its rear, backs damply aching, rumps turned toward us, two older ladies scan the seashore— source of life? stones? shells? Be­ tween these covers, the new Ria- ta offers a fecundity of creations. Editor B ill Smith and his co­ horts in the visual ans have achieved in each case a per­ ceptible between relationship artwork and verbal arefact, in ttie best instances a mutual il­ lumination of coequals. IN “ M V G K ',” Stepka Razin’s * T ’ maintains a complex tone, sardonioogentle, while revealing the coursings of an affair he had with an Anna “ a small c o c k r o a c h furnished home’’ shared with Frank-Quixote and Dottle—“ Sancho who was a deer thighs.” with heavy mutton liv e ly I in the from Smith) The poetic range is vast. Forms van' two accomplished villanclies (by Paul O’Henm and jingly- to B ill rapjangly railroad bl nos-ballad of Tom Crofut, from David Moon man’s light literary quatrains and Yeatsian dance extension to Betty Sue Flower’s imagistically and sonically beautiful “ When Moth Wings . . and from R. M. Zaner’s metaphysically medita­ tive ''Metamorphosis” to Zaner’s poem using placement of words on the page to point up a “ point-1 lessncss.” Controlled experiment- 1 abound. The quality of vei markable absence of the ram­ bling, flatulent outpourings which sometimes masquerade as free- verse. TH E CONCERNS of the poets include matrices, orifices, creati­ vity, procreation, loves, deaths, Miss America, Rodin, falls, flights, the buffalo nickel, Apollo, Dylan Thomas, numerous women and a small boy named Bobby McCloud, Tones are many. Just in the realm of orifices, for instance, Stephanie Francis Kom- kov has the Eumenides solemnly assert: ‘‘Whence the sun, and whence tile moon? — From one source, one source only: from the Jim Langdon's gaping womb.” t o n e ‘‘The Mariner’s Wife” is a bit more vvrv: addressing in that bania cie of mouth. DELIGHTING!,Y, the sequence in which poems are printed, at first apparently random, Is far from it. When publishing several poems by one author, Smith has u s u a l l y them throughout the issue in such a way to stimulate the reader’s imagination. distributed The editor’s arrangements also let rn meet a poet in several separate incarnations within one world, intensifying our sense of his achievement. For me this happened with Belle Lawton, Susan Thompson, Bruce Ballock, and specially Paul O’Heam and Robert Williams. F IN A LLY , Robert W illiam s’ l l poems are the most impressive group of all. “ Casual Anatomy While Walking,” is about a mouth . . . who wins the Orifice Derby. And "anything seeming more than sim ile” is a gem of a serious play. . .This house grows cold, sweet — freezes in my hand, roll­ ing to the floor with—soft clicks in cats feets—the hair between— its toes I SAY C A T S TO ES! holy, erotic — and madonna-like cats toes.” Any poem ending by celebrat­ ing such toes is worth reading. Never has Riata offered so much by so many and so worth reading. If Yon Need Help Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time Tile Telephone Counseling and Referral Service INQUIRY CLASSES C A T H O LIC DOCTRINE & PRACTICE Catholic Student Center 7:15 p.m. Wednesday* 1010 Unixernlty S R 6-7351 ANTIQUE SHOULDER BAGS from G U A D A L A JA R A NELSON'S GIFTS N u t to Hill** Cafe 4612 S. Congeon H I 4-3814 hour* IO - 6 FRIDAY — FEBRUARY 6 — 8:00 P.M. A U ST IN C O L IS E U M TEXAS SK A TIN G DERBYS, INC. PRESENT ROLLER SKATING GAMES H O U STO N WESTERNERS vs. DALLAS JOLTERS TRACKSIDE $3.50 RESERVED SEC TIO N S $2.50 G EN ER A L A D M IS SIO N $2.00 ($3.00 In advance) ($2.00 in advance) (Night of Game Only) Children 16 & Under Half Price TICKETS ON SALE AT TEXAS SPO RTING G O O D S r . b c ^ c t m . w ? d W L . 2101 We*t Ben W hite P * M O N TG O M ERY -W A RD Cap!fai Plaia R A Y M O N D ’S D R U G 2706 Rio Grande M A IL ORDERS: Te*a* Skating Derby, P.O. Bo* 1316, Au*tin, Texa* 78767 r < L ! XAS S K A T ,N S DERBY O N TELEVISIO N. EVERY SU N D A Y FRO M 12 M ID N IG H T TO I A.M. O N KT BC (Channel 7). R O C K ’EM — SO C K ’EM A C T IO N Der Wienerschnitzel 411 W . 24th Just Off "The Drag" UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT O PEN JA- MIDNITE F R I.- S JB It IL 2 A.M. Biggest in Hot Dogs O N L Y 18* Charles MAGNAN DOCTOR O F M U SIC Teacher of Voice and Piano THE W ESTG A TE H O U SE 1122 Colorado No. 1510 TEL: 477-7162 Aslan American Recreation Club Inc. SU M M ER JE T CHARTERS H O N G K O N G & OTHER A SIA N CITIES $185 Round-trip 3-month flight One-way to Taipei & 2-month flight Charter Japan Hong Kong I -month flight to Connecting flight* to Singapore, Manila, Bangkok, Seoul and Calcutta FOR INFO RM ATIO N, WRITE O R C A LL: Stanley Lo, Flight Chairman P.O. Bo* 2549, Stanford, Cal. 94305 Phone: (415) 325-9015 N A M E : . A D K E S S : IF YO U can sing, play a guitar, or shake sis rehearsals every Monday, 5:00-5:50 Guadalupe. a tamborine, you are Invited to Join In on in the Methodist Student Center, 2434 ...ONOUR TASTY CHILI ROYAL BIG MEAT PATTY SMOT­ HERED IN CHILI BEANS AND CHEESE, PIPING HOT! $.99 7A.M. TIL MIDNIGHT Sunday, February I, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Peoa IX School Supplies The C o - O p stocks at! your regular school supplies. O u r self-service policy extends here for you r eon- Notebooks, pencils, paper, typewriters, brief cases, v a le n c e . Rem em ber, we are open til 8 p.m. today carbon paper, pens, filing cabinets; in fact the whole end tom orrow only. G o o d luck this semester works. School Supplies Street Floor Buy Used Save Textbooks and 3 Ways: Example: 1. Save 2 5 % Buy a $10 used text off publisher's book for $7.50 list price. 2. Sell it back at 5 0 % of list price. 3. Plus your regular cash dividend. sell it back for $5.00 If book Is reuseable then, plus, Receive a cash divi­ dend on $7.50 at the end of term. Downstairs ~ ..... ' ~ "*..... —...... ' ■■min i i IBI line—.ii.... I. .............. THE C O - O P W IL L N O T P U R C H A S E U SED B O O K S UNTIL FEBRU ARY 9. Sales returns and adjustments will be made as usual. Full service will resume on Monday, February 9. D ‘d you know that $194,500 Tn dividends we-e returned to students, staff and faculty this last fall? It's true. A total o f 22,463 dividend enve­ lopes were turned in last semester (an average of over $8 per envelope). Did you turn yours in ? If not, y o u ’re missing out. M a k e a point of sav­ ing each and every one of your C o - O p register receipts. N ext dividend M a y 7-13. Save A ll Your Dividend Slips Open Sam to Spm monday & tuesday Oui y D I E T Z G E N Regular Store Hours: M o n d a y thru Saturday 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. A rt Supplies Acrylic, oils, newsprint, brushes, palette knives, pencils, charcoal, canvas; in fact a1! your art materials can be purchased from our complete art department. D o your shopping early and avoid the rush. Remember, we're open today and tom or­ row til 8 p.m. if you can not find what you are looking for, ask one o f our staff to assist you. That's what we're here for. Rem em ber to, that we have the official list o f texts and supplies required for all instructors. Pag* 14 Sunday, February I, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN T H E S T U D E N T ' S O W N S T O R E 0 Room Accessories Looking for the right ash trays or m aybe y o u ’re looking for kitchen utensils and cooking w are? C o m e up to the G if t H orse for these and other items to com plete your scheme. lf on the other hand you need things like b ed spreads, sheets and pillow cases, light bulbs, towels; they're to be found D o w n ­ stairs. W e also have radio, t.v. sets, stereo tapes, record payers, and cassette players. Looking for com ponent p a rts? G eek with our downstairs department. Remember, all pur­ chases plus your regular dividend. Engineering Supplies Y ou can find the best names in the business at The C o - O p engineering department. A n d because o f the technical nature ot your supplies, en­ gineering students are assisted by students who have been instructed to help you. Everything from T-squares to drawing pens to slide rules. A s an added service, we provide you with a list of texts and supplies re­ quired by all instructors (Drawing 201, 202, 208 and 303).