Anderson Warns of News Controls In Government's Abuse of Secrecy Bv ALISON SM ITH Texan Staff Writer When it comes to manipulating the news. there's not inurh difference between a democratic- government and a dictatorship, syndicated columnist .lark Anderson told • half-filled Gregory Gym Friday. “ In the Kremlin, restriction of thp press is called censorship; in the White House, it s called security,” he said. THROW ING H IS arms wide and pointing his index finger at the audience. Anderson warned repeatedly that information received by the publie. I 7.S. officials are trying to centro] “ I.ook at President Nixon halting the printing of the Pentagon papers. They contained no information that would have jeopardized U.S. security. Nixon was just afraid that allowing publication might set a precedent that would stop him from manipulating the press,” he said. Of all the Washington correspondents, Anderson said, Only a few haven’t been “ seduced by the government,” and only a few still belier* jn the constitutional right of freedom of the press. “ Thp government tries to silence these few reporters bv keeping vital information from them,” said Anderson. information The major way government conceal* is by classifying documents, labeling them matters of security, he added. “ Right now, there are 20 million federally classified documents. More than 90 percent of these contam information the public needs to know,” he said. “ lf the public had known more about Lyndon Johnson s goals in Vietnam, it might have realized that he was wrong. If this information had not been concealed, the United States might never have been involved in the Vietnam mistake,” Anderson said. Anderson also acknowledged the fallacy of thp press. 'TV) newspapers make mistakes? You bet fhev do, but so do presidents, and I never printed a column that cost IV),OOO lives TI RN ING HIS attention to the November election, Anderson found both of the presidential candidates Jess than perfect “ The American people have two exact opposite can­ didates from which to choose. George McGovern un­ derstands people, but is a little slow on the brainwork. He knows in his gut whats right hut can't shape that into pram ,-a! politics,” he said. “ Nixon, on the other hand, understands the prae- tfcaliber hut has no feeling for the people no un­ derstanding of thp human element,” he added Anderson said both men are slightly schizophrenic, each with a political and a private personality. ‘There's McGovern the compassionate human, who has tears in his eves for the poor and Motk>\ m n the politician, who has learned to stretch the truth Then theres Nixon, the shy introvert huddling in a turtle shell and the hard public official who eats arr; breathes politics and rose to power slashing and slicing his op­ ponents in a rock 'em, sock ’em campaign,” he ex­ plained. T H U N A T IO N M I V K NOU \ columnist did not men­ tion in his speech his public retraction of his report of dr unk driving charges against former vicp-pre> der tin! candidate Thomas Eagleton. Earlier, at a private reception Anderson adn tfetf the Eagleton affair wag one of * p biggen rn makes of his career. ticket,” he said. “ I don't know if my column forced Ern cion of' 'he Democratic to helio- o McGovern when lie says the decisive 'actor in Eag etnn's withdrawal was his lack of candor over his history of mental illness and not mv charges ” i have “ My job is to dig deeply, to go beyond ne-sided press releases Should I do it even though I might some* -v-eg make a mistake?” he asked * I s-ouid and I rn going * to go on megaphone for the government.'* taking chances hoop ,;p ! ;; po r,r T h e ' TI,Y V ol. 72, N o , 44 Ten C e n t* A U S T IN . T E X A S , M o . cN4BER I 8, 1972 T h irty -Two rn Tw o o options d 7 j 440 Student Ne_ of Tex o s at Austin Special Session Opens Today Smith Proposes Competitive Insurance Rates o r based U n d er the prearm system , uniform rate* pro ex-pepenne, the prem ium s ve rs ii* losses, of *J1 in su ran t* com panies w ritin g home and auto policies in Texas. total as • ex d: rf the previous yea; s expel <• • e bxs been f o r c a r rates g o a1 > v. • C“ f losses jto up, insurance tb s yc\ir. B u l so do rates 1 mg rales subsidize to some extent compar, that h ave had had luck, Inefficient m anagem ent or both, w h ile providing w in dfalls for c.ompanie* ’hat a1* rep,'- w ere profitable under thp old rates. HIGHLY efficient companies and tho«p with policyholders who few claims presumably would lower flier ra le s in a file competitive system, advocates of mr-w * viewpoint say. “ Eighty p e rc e n t of tile good, average drivers or homeowners will have a reduction in rates. ’ predicts Tearer. Teaver was chairman of the insurance board until Ju-v, when the Senate re levied his appoint!) c: • infuriating the governor le a v e r ha* been Advocating p special session to strip the board of cs rate-making power. Sin e her He compared aum rate* of one ma mr company, state Farm Mutual, in Texas with those if chargee in Atknfa. Pittsburgh Birmingham, Phoenix. Oklahoma City, Denver and San Diego. Al seven cities are in competitive rate states I ith exemptions -srix *, ,r ha mc t-n— * full comprehensive and UDO liability, of deducible collision 'or a 1972 Che -to let lr*'.pala vere higher it r cl of ■ n- a ii r 7<- as cit-es Thai sn L e s p w cut-of-st -a cities chosen for comparison. SMITH, never much in In- inrforosted sun--ice p> iblerns until his close freu d Teaver was “ busted ’ as insurance br-ard < haina an, leaves no doubt that he * benin ® a believer in competition as a cure-all, He enthused ar a recept news- conference! '-.ares mil] solve 73 to St) “ Uompetitive percent of rhe probicr s people ^rP fronted un!h on insurance premiums,” In Conspiracy Case Veterans Say Jury Used' Bv G A Y L E R E A A E S Texan Staff AA riter Two Austin men charged with contempt In the federal grand jury investigation of an alleged conspiracy to disrupt the 1972 Republican national convent rn said Friday the government Is trying to curb peace movement efforts through unconstitutional use of grand juries to get evidence against protest pi's . John Kniffin and Robert Beverly, along with eight other Vietnam Veterans Against (VV AW) members, were sub­ the VA ar poenaed to appear before a grand jury in Tallahassee, Fla., in Ju ly to Answer charges of conspiring to cross .state lines to incite to riot. in Beverly has not been indicted on the conspiracy charge, although he was named in­ as a co-conspiraior the dictment. The \ \ AAA prosecutor told him he was “ the target of the grand jury,” and that the jury was trying indictment against. him. The conspiracy case comes to mal Oct. IO. the original leader said to secure an 7>A hen you go before the grand jure you give up all your rights.” Reverb said. “ Die whole grand jury- thing was just a farce.” Beverly referred to his claim that in grand investigations, a witness cannot refuse to testify on grounds of self- incrimination. jury AV hen Beverly arid the others refused to testify on these grounds, charges of con­ tempt w-ere lodged against them. The merits of the contemp- case a re being appealed to the Fifth Circuit Court in New Orleans. Cameron of Appeal* Cunningham, American Civil Liberties I nion attorney, said. A decision is expected by Sept 25. Is representing V unningham. who the VV A AA7 members, charged -hat the Interna! Security Division of the Justice Department for the was jury conspiracy proceedings by subpoenaing defend,nits trying to discover evidence’ during grand trial “ In rhe past grand juries have ne> «r subpoenaed defendants." Cunningham s. d. the Beaumont, Tort Arthur and Orange area, Revere, VV A AA" coordinator for also charged tha* U 7 R Midrilebrooks, had in co­ government'.* case” d vestiganon, and had it d e f e n d a n t s ’ affidav wiretapping of WAVA' mer “ He threatener! our la cg said. Knifer Texas for AT A AV, added ’rat r > to hear arguments ria.sec grounds.” Beverly said inc ho members had been stavin had been bugged. During proceedings, he said. didn't even make a mnde^ wiretapping." but instea disrega rded. VV.AAV Cunningham said the li­ Ie i lens w the conspiracy to cross state a riot—was a Lo being c constitutional in several decided. Ruin gs m t esp thp outcome of the F r ice T). argued rh® id the in­ to admit ■st Ling to phones. . ” Beverly coordinator e “ refused i sfitulienal ne h VV A VV " iUahassee grand jury -nvemment P? , -ic- V harge was 11- d Vietnam veterans (1-r) John Kniffin, Robert Wayne Beverly and Bill Patterson are charged with contempt for refusing to •iuw.r th, question* of , fed.r.l gr.nd jury. ! W y ,„d ~ Kniffin rhernpd tho constitutional methods t ^n^e>rnm0n i r -.i wi h using un- to 9*ther .v,d .n c. a9s,n*t then*. VV AW Fights Back I . t i l Watchdog on Government S y n d ic a te d co lu m n ;it Jack A r g o n o n lam b asted the fe d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t In a sproch F rid a y for f i l i n g the righ* of fre e d o m o f the press in A m e ric a . "The reporter * ,ob u n o t to b e a m e g aph on e for th e g o v e r n m e n t , he said. I K E B A R I ( H. Tf <* n ss. r Israeli Army Returns Home From Lebanon Incursion claiming Lebanon h d ordered all Palestinian guerillas to leave inh,(hired a reas and to stop circulating in uniform or with arms. But lebanese Pron cr Saeb S.tlam denied that his ga-, err merit iud given the guerillas an uJtrn aturr res-nota g their activities. Travelers from Lebanon to Cyprus said the ultimatum was issued Saturday night and gave the Palest mans until 6 a,rn. Sunday to comply. Bv The Associated P r e s * Gov. Preston Smith makes his pitch for insurance reform at a joint sos.s-.oc of the legislature at ll a.m. Mot av. art hour after the foim'h special session of the vnar convenes here in Austin. Some observers fee! that Sn (b's move Is an attempt to strip the State Insurance Board of its powers after chief aide I^trrv Teaver •« as rejected by the Texas Senate [or the chairmanship of the board. Smith proposes no nstitute competitive rates for car and home lasurance. allowing ti e consumer to shop for the cheapest premiums available. State Rep. INvn Cavr.est of Austin and lame duck State Sen Mike McKooI of to present Sm iths Dallas are expecter! proposals for consideration Monday. .said SM ITH the present svstem of Uniform rate* set by the State Insurance Board “ h is failed to serve the best interest of all Texans ’ He recommended “passage of workable legislation establishing competitive rating for property and casualty insurance.” realistic and He starts trying to convince the lawmakers when he addresses thp meeting of the House and Senate. JRt )omt B t Tho Associated Tress An Israeli army raiding fort* finished up Its search-a nd-d es troy mission against Arab guerrillas in I lebanon and returned jut ’ bo bino sundown—the home Bundax beginning cf Yom Kippur, the Jews' hol-est holiday. The Israe’i troops wore jubilant and waved rn Arab villagers as they left. The Israeli military command in Tel A\dv termed the 32 hour operation a success, saying an est i mat fid 60 terrorists were killed. Israeli l<-*vst*s vs ere pla- ed at thr-e® ■nldiers killed and six wounded. AN IS R A E L ! communique said: lebanese army, he ring •uttered I asse* ” It gave no figures. “ The intervened, also Israel's chief of staff, Et. Gen. David invasion opera lion had Flazar, said the been a ccmpleto success. *T can assure you we will pursue and root out the terrorists wherever they may be,” declared Prime Minister Golda Meir In an emotional radio speech marking the beginning of Yom Kippur. ARAB ST ATES ?; not uucreed existem c ” she tdr ed. apport terrorists 'will in disrupting our national Three days aber the death of the Olympic IO athle’es. gueril in what A i - then described -is the first battle of the 1 -r. Lr; cli pl tries hammered !>eba non in S t and ba‘ es An organ of Israel's dominant l-abor Party said other base* wert open to attack in the fit1 ire . I • was up to the lebanese government to prevent fur-her Israeli incursions. the guerillas to expel Tho : pi-.n e government declared a state of emergency and imposed cons-;? '-ip on all news dispatches sent out of the country. Guerillas in Syria issuer] a communique S I 'Dials Direct1 from Vietnam, Wants to Speak to 'Pretty Girl' I want to s]>eak to any pretty girl,” the young m a n s voice crackled on the phone. After a pause he .settled for any girl home on a Saturday night. Ii* wa* calling from Vietnam, and his voice had reached Kathy Moore, a pretty 19-year-old resident assistant working at Blanton Dormitory's main desk. Miss Moore talked to the young GT, who identified himself at ‘'Paul a higl sc ioo] graduate from McKinney. Paul explained that he had been in Vietnam for two years. This wa; his Korund tour of duty, he said, with fix e-and-a-iialf months ID added that hr had gone to SM U for two years, then worked left in Au f n selling computer parts prior to enlisting.' Hp ;us wanted some e like a little sister to talk to. T guess he ' Miss Moore said. “ We talked about girl s curfew-, igs, readjustment and football. The Dallas Cowboys arr his favorite was just Urich < team.” Tie Gi said that 'he last timp he called the .states he talked to his parents in McKinney. He randomly called Austin this time and rev letted the operator to find a girl who would talk to him. After talking to Paul for a short time, Miss Moore explained to I rn th.it there were pp r e at the desk and she had to hang up. Paul amiably agreed, thanked her and said goodby. No I won t write him ' Miss Moore said. “ I didn’t even find out his ast name, and he didn t ask mine. He just wanted to talk to Someone,” Beer.- Union To Ask Regents T h e Union Texas voted unanimously Friday the University Board of Regents to discuss the sale of hoer and wine in the Union Building and the construction of Union East. Board to go before Board Earlier in the day, J.R . Seaman, Texas Union Steele, chairman; director of tile Union and Dr. Ronald Brown, vice-president for Student Affairs, met to discuss the liquor issue. Jack Brown said the major obstacle to the serving of liquor in the Union Building is still the City ordinance that prohibits a weather Monday's skies will be partly cloudy and warm, with winds out of the south from 8 to 16 m.p.h. The high temperature will be near 96, with the low Monday night a ta r 73. nonprivate club to srii alcohol within 3(10 feet of a school, church or hospital. During the afternoon Union Board meeting, however, Beeman said that 16 establishments were in definite violation of the ordinance by selling alcohol near the University. He said it L not right the Union should be the only establishment to have to comply with the ordinance, I wa st year, th'-’ Alcoholic Beverage Commission said it would offer the Union a license once it received legal sanction, Seem an added. Union Board adviser J P. Duncan said that University President Stephen Spurn had indicated to him that he “ would not he personally opposed” to the sale of beer and wine in thp Union and is willing to work with the board towards a solution. Ute objective in taking the issue before the regents, Beeman said. is to ask for thier support in the Pvent the issue is taken before the Austin City Council. I,a.st spring, city councilmen said they would he willing to repeal the ordinance if Spurr approved. Tho regents also will he asked to approve funds for the construction of the Union East. In further action. Beeman announced his resignation from the chairmanship. He i* no longer a student and is employed by an architect in Houston. At his suggestion, the L ia r d passed a resolution Zia Gipson, current president of the Union Program Council, as interim chairman. recom mending Miss Gipson acknowledged the resolution by saying that she has been “ sincerely concerned” with the issues confronting the Union and announced ber intention to run for the permanent board chairmanship. D -* K a m s e y /v\uniz.7o M ake fhe D !fference’ 'There Are Enough Students m l - M O r . . KA i Ram.v*y' Muniz, I .a Raza Unida party gubernatorial candidate, predict cd Friday that if he docs not win in November. Republican Hank Grover will. Muniz’ speech followed a Mexican food lunch served by the Mexican-American Youth Organization (M AYO ). Mariachis, dancers and plays by Tea fro en- Campesino of California terta.ned the Union Patio crowd. TH Kl KUSTIN ITIF.S lasted from late morning until .1 p.m., and a dance was held at night in the Union Ballroom celebrating “ FU Die/ y Seis de Septiembre,” a holiday honoring the beginning of the Mexican revolt against Spain in IBIO. Muniz, speaking at the Capitol after his campus appearance, told the press his candidacy may put the Republican candidate in the Governor’s Mansion. “ The impact we are making throughout Texas indicates to us that if I don't become the next governor of Texas, the press shouldn't he shocked when they find out Grover will win,” Muniz said. H E SAID he has been warned his candidacy is weakening the “ We don’t Democratic ticket. and c a r e . Democratic Dolph Briscoe) are both the same to us," he said. candidate (Grover They Briscoe will be put on the spot Tuesday at the Democratic state supporters of convention by George Wallace and George McGovern, Muniz said. “ Is he g o in g to take a Wallace Questioned whether youth will turn out for him, Muniz said, “ I think there are enough students to make the difference. Grover and Briscoe won’t waste their time talking to students.’’ M U N I Z SLA M M ED Gov. Preston Smith, saying, “ He calls to consider a special discriminatory u n j u s t .session and line or Is he going to support McGovern? Liberal Democrats say, ‘Don’t be surprised if we endorse you (Muniz) outright,’ ” he said. practices in insurance and talks about reduction of rates. But. the insurance abolishment of hoard should be con­ sidered.” itself the U.T. RING GIVEAWAY T o ce le b ra te tho h a * d e r )d e ll ,p< •. i « . f - now st re "it ti <• D r »*. T.c lo st . -t g n hn aw a y net, T h a t s r i t 'i t I t , y c o u p o n a n n d ro p j. rig i c a n v r. O c t. I f yo u don t sp e n d a n y m o n o } spend on y o u r w a rd i be. It o ff a l h « sto re, at n e o f th r e e J ' - t n . s S i n and t utus v a •• I n r rin g , ju s t th in k w h a t J •'<* tv y i« r J e w e l M S In th is tty fllltitK the d' an b e fo re P to $2.V> OO. ‘ :irl N A M E ......................................................... AD D RESS ................................................... C IT Y ............................................. STATE PHONE .................................. ZIP .. ID’s Still Available The 1,000 or more students who have not had ID cards made can do so this week in Gregory Gym 200. Facilities will be open from 8 a.m. to noon and from I to 5 p.m. throughout the week. To accomodate those who work, the office also will make the identification cards until 6 p.m. Tuesday and Wed­ nesday. There is no charge for the first ID, but duplicates will cost $5. Students may have the card made any time during the semester, hut office operation hours probably will he nit after this week, Bill Taylor, of the Office of Accounting, said Sunday. Use Texan Classified Ads He told the press that support for his candidacy is growing in all areas and announced that Bobby Smith of Corpus Christi, a football player, will head his statewide campaign for black voles. former processional Of the position La Raza holds In Texas, Muniz said, “ We are the balance of power. They'll come around and check our paws during the next election.” Tn his spirited campus speech, former his Muniz restated campaign planks. HK ADVOCATED fhe abolition of the appointment of the Board of Regents in favor of statewide elections. Muniz has said regents are politically appointed and motivated. A tax on corporations was another of Muniz’ proposals, which he said would raise $600 million annually for the State. Muniz focused on the plight of the in the Mexiean-Americans the United told audience there would he “ no begging, no pleading" this year for election pledges. States and (W IT H THIS AD) 5 FREE COPIES COPIES 4‘ DUPLICO INC. SELF-SERVICE — N O W A IT IN G 707 W. 19th OPEN: 8:30-6:00 472-8057 FRESHM AN CHEERLEAD ER TRYOUTS P ractice Sep t. 14 and IS Freshman Football Field 4 p.m. Sep t. 18 G re g o ry G y m 3 p .m . Tryout S ep t. 19 G re g o ry G y m 3-6 p.m. Standing Ramsey Muniz, La Raza Unida gubernatorial candidate, talked informally with celebrants of “ El Diez y Seis de Septiembre" on the Up for the Candidate Union Patio Friday before His speech. Muniz restated his advocacy of the abolition of the University System Board of Regents. T exan Staff P h oto I K K B A R I C A Treasury Chieftain Opens Canvassing UJhot this campus needs is a good 8C check M R. OR MRS. Y O U R N A M E I0«1 YOUR STREET AUSTIN ) TEXAS 71711 Pay to the order of. TEXAS STATE BANK Austin, Texas u r n I * " 2 u o i : .19. 127 TEXAS CHECK .Dollars And that's what it gets from Texas State Bank. You see, we know that you, as a student, probably have to write just a few checks each month. And that your average balance isn’t, well, as large as it will be someday. So we've come up with a plan that lets you just be charged for each check you use. Eight cents, to be exact. Instead of having to try and maintain a minimum balance that ties your money up, or an average balance that’s hard to figure, you're just charged a reasonable amount for the checks you write. A statement is mailed to you each month showing the activity of the account. Come see us about a “ Texas-Check" account today. At Texas State Bank. A quick drive downtown, at Congress and Ninth. TEXAS STATE BANK Northwest Corner,Congress at Ninth Downtown/ M e m b e r F.D.I.C. P. Schultz Secretary of flip T it.usury Saturday George kicked off tho Austin end of a national voter canvassing effort by supporters of President Nixon with appearances at the Hardin North and regional Republican cam paign offices. Schultz, who from Washington, Friday night, joined a can vass cf several houses in of H am * block the 2400 Boulevard to after campaign workers speaking arrived S H E F T A L L J E W L E E R S 1 C/ TJ o~ n r O'I FO R EX PER - N T ' SA! E 3 HF IP. BOTH FULL TIME AND P a r t I me cr. I • -- -5. Arp y ;► j pep eofI AT S H E F T A L L JE W I L E R S r. : a d a d e Tile secretary appeared with a c t r e s s Maureen Reagan, daughter of California Gov. Ronald Reagan. Sa'ring he came “ not bx a sc, rotary of the Treasury, but a-? someone who supports the President.” Schultz told cam­ paigner* that Nixon needs s wide margin in November. "Don’t forget that margin I* very important A big victory will allow the President to accomplish more than a small margin," .Schultz said, About IOO persons met at the reg amal office Saturday morning at 9th Street and East Avenue. A spokesman said FO persons were ar the Hmm n North office v hen Schultz and Miss Reagan arrived. The canvass led by Schultz on Harris Boulevard found two who supported the Democratic ticket, tv, i not af home and five who supported Nixon, a local Nixon press aide said. Sri .1*7 returned to Was' S a tu rd a y aft ernooru LSAT Application How Available \pp1ioat1or a for t' e I .aw School Admission Tov* G.SAT* are available from ti e prelaw adviser in each school on campus. in Robert Corner, prelaw Dr adviser tee history' depart­ ment, urged all seniors planning to take tile GSAT to pick up an application form a 'd mail it aa soon as possible. Students may apply for either of two tests to be gi\ n on campus Ort. 21 or Der. 16. test during Tile USAT la required bv most law schools, and students who plan to enroll in the summer or frill semesters of 1971 should t a k e current tlie semester. Cotner emphasized that schools want to have scores early, so students will benefit by test as anon as taking possible. the tile c o l o r i n g '* ' FURIOUSLY TO GET YOUR KODACOLOR PRINTS OUT ON TIME! You Won't Buy That? O K. Then you can believe our modern lab allows us to process your pictures in only 48 hours . . . In by 4-out by 5, two days later. NOT BAD, FOR AN ELF. Studtman Photo 19th at Lavaca Cameron Village O L Y M P I A A L L ELEC T RIC PO RTABLE W IT H C A R R Y C A S E REGULAR $225. Now Save $45.50 at Berkman's TH EN IF Y O U LIKE IT, Y O U C A N RENT-BUY IT. RENT IT FOR $20 to $15 M o n th ................. 1/7# $170 50 OR 1 0 %o C A S H DIVIDEND 17.” i^ l'L4BW:T *161“ LIMITED OFFER SEE TODAY 2234 G U A D A L U P E • 476-3525 5134 BURNET RO A D • 454-6731 ;H E IS T S A G R E A T O PPO R T U N IT Y : Evelyn Vfood Reading Dynamics offers you a free glimpse of what it is like to be able to read and study mech faster. A t our free introductory lesson yon will actually participate in tech- rnqnes that w ill improve your reading and Steger speed on-the-spot. See what is holding batik your reading rate and see how you can erat? read mach laster: W H A T Y O U ’L L IJR A R N : Atour introductory lesson you will see that Reading Dynamics is a comprehensive reading improvement program. YooH learn that our students not only read faster but also comprehend more, and remem­ ber better. You 11 learn how our study method can cot study time in half. In short yoq will have a t opportunity to see what we teach and bow we teach it. O T H ER S H A M : D O N E IT — SO CAN YO U : Seeing the instant results of your progress at the introductory lesson will help you under­ stand why our average graduate increases his reading speed 4.7times with improved compre­ hension. You’ll see why over 5<)0,(X)0 people have improved their reading skills through the Reading Dynamics techniques. You’ll under­ stand why Reading Dynamics has been taught at the White House to staff members of Presi­ dents Kennedy and N ixon. COM E S E E FOR YO U RSELF: We want you to decide for yourself the value of becoming a rapid reader through the use of the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics techniques. Plan now to attend a free introductory lesson; they are informal and last about an hour. Come as you are,even bring a friend. Come to your free lesson. 4:00 or 8:00 p.m. W e d n e s d a y and Thursday Sep tem b er 20 & 21 CAMBRIDGE TOWER 19th & Lavaca 0 Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute J Page 2 Monday, September 18, 1272 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N Hanoi Releases Three Prisoners Freed in Ceremony Sunday HANOI (A P )—An A m erican m other Joyfully clasped h er prisoner-of-w ar son, and an A m erican wife em braced her husband room hot w ith glaring television lights and emotion Sunday night In Hanoi. in a It was a unique release cerem ony for th ree Am erican pilots who had been shot down over N orth Vietnam. Olga Charles, 27, who had flown from San Diego, Calif., and had h e r h a ir washed and set in a downtown Hanoi b e a u ty shop Sunday in anticipation of the rele ase , fought through a wall of V ietnam ese and European television technicians and cam e ra m en to em brace b er husband. Navy Lt. N orris Charles, d resse d neatly lier In a new, grey civilian suit, held w arm ly. Minnie Dee Gagtley from D unedin, Tin., Who for the la st four y ears h a d actively picketed Congress and the White House for an end lo the War and the release of her N avy pilot son, Lt. M arkham (Hartley, put her arm s around the tall blond man. “ He's even better than I had rem em ­ b ere d ,” she said. looking ILSO RELEASED w as Air Force Mal. E dw ard Elias, who until Sunday had ex­ pected his wife or his fath er to come and get before microphones. Elias said: " I h ave been told that for various reasons they could not m ake it, but I will be seeing them soon. statem ent him. Tn a Freedom for American POW’* has been a m ajor political issue between supporters the In- and opponents of U S . policy dochina war. President Nixon has set release of I he prisoners as a precondition for a settlem ent of the conflict. Peace ac­ tivists argue that the fate of POW’s rem ains in Tower Visits Austin On Campaign Tour Bx VLISON SMITH Texan Staff W riter Republican U.S. Sen. John T ow er cain* to Austin F rid a y as part of a “ whistle sh p ’ cam paign covering m ore than 20 cities in th ree days. “ If McGovern and his follow ers are elected.” he said, “ I see nothing but black days ahead the country and Texas, in p a rtic u la r.” for to ach iev e Citing m a ss busing racial balance in schools as a m ajor cam paign issue, Tower term ed it “ a social experim ent of th e biggest travesties of education and our children. the courts” and "one of “ IT IS PRESUMPTUOUS to believe th.it a r y ethnic gt up m em ber would be hefter served by attending school w ith an eihnic in­ m ajority. That. alone racial ferior! ty,” be said. Tower supports the am endm ent passage pf a constitutional perm anently forbidding forced busing im plies Saying he believed that he will receive m ore votes than ever before. T ow er noled he had “ excollent support am ong Texas Mexican-Am erira n s and grow ing support arming blacks ” judged th a t 50 percent of Director of T ri a nos por Tow er, H un berm the Aguirre, chicanos would cast their votes- for Tower. “ THE SFA VTHR has done m ore for Mexican-Am*• neons than any Other c a n ­ didate. Not only has he recently introduced a B ilingual Job Training Bill ti e Senate, he also cosponsored an Equal Employm ent Opportunity BHI w eb Ralph Yarborough back in 1964,* A guirre said. into Also present a t the rally w as Lionel Rawlins, black candidate for P la c e I in the Texas House. Rawlins estim ated that Tower would receive in excess of 25 percent of the blade vote in Texas. These estim e 'e s bx- Aguirre and Rawlins of minority sn p p T t h r Tower ca m e despite the fact that Tower has not strongly a d ­ vocated m inority rights in his cam paign to » literatu re o r platform . A ccording T o w p r se n ato r* arent, Washington headquarters staff includes only one M exican-A m en can and one high school- age black, hired two months ago. p c s the THERE WERE FEW blacks attending the rally until 65 children from B lackshear E lem entary School were bused in waving proTower signs. The children received an hour s vacation from school for attendii g the rally, said M arfa Sauls, supervisor of the children and director of Black Texans for Tower. Accompanied bv his wife. Loa. and his ti ree daughters. Jeanne, Penny and Pooh, Tower criticized his D em ocratic opponent Barefoot Sanders for "alienating Nixon by virtue radical McGovern it es. support his for of “ The only qualification my opponent has for U that he w ants the job.” Tow-er said. His OWN QUALIFICATIONS the Senate position. Tower said, were his ‘ - c r ionty and closeness to the P resident.” The senator said Texas was going to get substantial to m aintain State functions through the revenue sharing bill ho supported in Congress. revenue "M y reasoning for supporting this bill 1aign.” C a rr rend, "and I prom ise you that Sen. Tow er s shirttail won’t touch his back until be s won.” Ry MIC H IE L CL \R K Texan Staff Writer D em ocrats a re heading for Houston while Republicans travel to Dallas for the sta rt of T exas’ state party conventions Tuesday. P relim inary com m ittee m eetings began to be a political is expected of pair in w hat contrasting .Saturday sharply gatherings. The D em ocrats a re gearing for a series loyalty and platform of fights on parry the Republicans a re an­ planks while ticipating a convention as unified and harm onious as last m onth's Republican national convention. THE D IFFER EN C ES over D em ocratic P a rty loyally center on the reluctance of som e top party officials, mainly within the S tate D em ocratic Executive Com mittee, to endorse publicly the national McGovem- Shriver ticket. F alm an Liberal party leaders, including AFDCIO form er National P resident Roy Evans, Com mitteewoman Canun and statew ide McGovern organizer Billie C arr, that all party ap p ear ready to dem and the officials pledge public national candidates. E vans will be sponsor of a resolution calling for the expulsion of any elected party official who refuses to do so. support of The battle over to be a> prom ises tire party platform the ram bunctious as A n d Let There Be Democrats... — To., a Staff Photo* by MIKE KH ll r. Th* ©W-$ty!e ora to ry of Ralph Y arb o ro u g h (fop photo), th a spirited, cutting hum or of Jo h n H e n ry Faullc (below, left) and the quieter persuasion of G o lfre y C onnelly fed the excite- ment of 2,000 p oo pl° ga th e re d at Zilire* P-irl Sa tu rd a y for a M c G o v e r n Rock Festival. The event w as spo n so re d locally to raise funds for the D em o cra tic ca m p a ign . Zilker Rally Attracts 2 0 0 0 Event Sports Beer , Music, Oratory IU PIT.! m i n t / I . van M att Writer A crowd of L M '* listen ed Saturday ’n rook music and form er U.S. Sen, Ralpii Y arborough as tv* attacked the television networks the R epublican' ” “ cam paigning for for ti TV: ne: candidates Speaking at a fund raising rock festival f o r Gem e McGovern an i Sargent Shriver at Zilker P ark , Yarborough said the network* have been “ covering up the Nixon ad­ m inistration.” Charging the n e t w o r k s had landed their cover --re with “ apologists for in par* tile Adc * re: th o r .” he attacked ti it for (Related Story, Page 9.) titu la r ti e coverage >»f tile V lm inistratioi’s role in the W atergate I lugging incident ar I of “ R ejubh an den s u jth big business the Republican Golfrey GonrmJiy, brother of form er Nixon T re a su ry Se retary John B. Connolly, a t­ adm inistration * tacked fiscal ped <- • rid pr, ;sed McGovern s eemoer itir West Virginia, I is las itin erary suggested he keying is presidential bid to sta te s w here a big bloc of electoral vote? Is concentrated. ch; McGovern said he in iring ivix* n, (tale Depar'lment v. ho participates infem ational the conference Monday on drug the North V ietnam ese are a g rea ter th reat to our national security than the crim e, violence and internal decay caused by narcotics.” traffir, “ to explain flow this Except for to West Virginia, trip and stops in Billings. Mont., and his home State of Sou'h D akota next weekend, McGovern lo his apparent selective strategy. is hoi* ting C o u r t Upholds Texas Ele c tion C o d e Socialist Workers f La Raza on Ballot for Tire law yer th e American P art} , Gloria Svanas of Odessa, has contacted the Fifth C ircuit Court of Appeals and Is on her w ay to Washington to attem pt to appeal the case, Fikes said. “ We don’t intend to give up.” he said. "WTe plan to continue the cam paign, even on a write-in basis.” OTHER EMERIC IN P a rty candidates include Rep. J o in Schmitz, R-Calif., for president; Tom Anderson of Pigeon F or;-**, Tenn., for vice president and Elwood Smith of Tem ple for U.S. senator. The Am erican P arty has already qualified in 26 oilier states to app ear on the ballot and should qualify in a t least seven other states, party spokesman William K. S hearer of San Diego said. O ther suits have been fib ti in A rkansas, Indiana, Missouri, New Florida, Y ck and Rhode island, said Shearer. Illinois, The Texas New Part}- could not be con­ tacted for a statem ent. ALTHO!. (HI THE Socialist Workers P a rty (SWP) was given a place on the ballot, two of its nominees were apparently kicked out of the running by the m inimum age req u irem en t Debby leo n ard of Houston w as 29 when turn 30 she filcxi for governor and will this month. Mike Ale wits of Austin. SWP candidate for lieutenant governor, Is 21. the SWP Also running on ticket are R ichard Garcia of Houston for U.S. serin ’ and Melissa Singler for rep rese n tativ e of tire 10th Congressional District. The Raza Unida party sought assurances that it would not have to g ath er signatures again if it dot's not receive the 2 percent of the vote in November th a t it needs to qualify for future ballots. Raza Unida candidate'- include R am sey Muniz for lieutenant governor and F lores A m aya for U.S. senator. for governor. Alma C anales By ROBBIE M \ RSH ALL Texan Staff U ritcr A three-j.dge federal court has upheld the T ex ts Election Code, leaving only the Socialist W orkers P a rty and Ex Raza Cnida to appear on tile ballot with the Republican arui D* moor a tic parties in November. The American P a rty aud the T exas New P a rty , as well a s a group of independent candidates from the Waco area, will not be included on the ballot. Tire court upheld tile ruling th at minor parties must submit petitions with 22,365 signatures the S ecretary of State by June 30 to be included on the ballot. to MINIMUM AUE requirem ent of 30 for governor and lieutenant governor also w as upheld. In fu rth er action, the court denied a challenge filed in Midland by the American P a rty against tire political prim ary finan­ cing law-. The American P a rty claim ed law u-as discrim inatory since S tate the m ajo r parties to prim aries, but not to the sm all parties. funds that the it allotted fur Tire petitions from the Am erican P arty in com ­ w ere subm itted pliance with a 60-day extern ion aw aiting the court decision. two weeks ago Secretary of S tate Bob Bullock had to the petitions because of the turn down decision, “ I FEEL THAT political parties ought to have the m axim um possible opportunity the requirem ents to app ear on to fulfill tire ballot,” Bullock said. "P e rh a p s the petition deadline should be extended by law, but in this instance, I am bound by the court’s decision.” The Am erican appeal "very definitely” the Supreme Court, said gubernatorial can­ didate Homer lik e s of Fredericksburg. Party will the decision to news capsules U.S. Jets Hit Fuel, A m m o Dum ps SAIGON (AP) —■ U.S. jets set fire to fuel, amm unition and storage facilities in raids in the Hanoi corridor and shot down the 16:)th MIG of the war, but stayed aw ay from the North V ietnam ese capital itself, tin' U.S. Command announced Sunday. It also announced the loss of five A m erican aircraft, but said all IO crew m en w ere rescued. Two w ere lost south of Da Nang where en em y forces launched a new’ w ave of attacks that threatened three towns. M eanwhile, a delegation of A m ericans is in Hanoi to escort home three U.S. airm en being released by the North V ie tn a m e s e from prisoner of war cam ps. Black Panther Seale Running for M a y o r OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Bobby Seale, running for mayor of Oakland, says his Black Pan tilers are m ore of a threat to the established order with ballots in their hands than with guns. The sam e Seale w’ho w as bound and gagged in a Chicago courtroom and charged in New Haven, Conn., with a torture m urder is talking to Rotary Clubs th ese da^s about how Ute Panthers are registering black voters, testing for sick le cell anem ia and h a n d in g out b a g s of free groceries. "The party is more of a threat to tile system with what we re doing now than it ever w as b efore,” Seale says. S eale's cam paign for m ayor sig n a ls the m ove from militant } and clash es with the police to a m ore political push within the system . He see s the party "returning to its original vision. W e’ve put the party back on the right track. . . We look at tile party in the past and realize our m istak es.” Senators V o w to Press Antibusing Bill WASHINGTON (A P ) — The irresistible force re coni rent mg tile Immovable objeet as the Senate ponders a House-passed bill to apply strict lim its on busing for desegregation purposes. A band of Senate supporters of the bill insists there is an irresistible demand for it in the cou n try—at least in their sections. But its foes, m ostly c iv il rights advocates, say th ey are full} deter­ mined to stop it and w illin g to use any tactics to do so. N evertheless, the bill's backers declare they will get it before the Senate rn som e form Uhs year. THE DAILY TEXAN Monday, September 18, 1972 Fag* S will be a great suffering and hardship this will assure their in jeopardy for as long as U S bombing cf the North continues. tho official E ach of die pilots made a statem ent inio release. Bai orc pfe on es before They said they had been fitted for new clothes and that they w ere in good health. They will sta y with two American women md the rest of a delegation of American peace activists until their retu rn home later in the week. the The to a banquet af the}' were escorted released prisoners—one of win rn, Gar!Je> 28. had been imprisoned for four y ears—slid easily into freedom. After th# 40-mi nu to re le a se cerem ony at the People’* Army quarters, into waiting automobiles and drove out past * about 30 North Vietnamese group of civilians the Moa Binh hotel. IN \ STATEMENT before microphone* prior to his release, E lias, 34. said “ I wa* a little disappointed not to sot nn relative* here them very soon. I sincerely hope and pray that step and for tire future release of all POW’* both here and in the .South.” this ‘o the end of f e ■ .rn tonight However, I fee] of release r will ^ act for Charles. 27. said. “ F irst T would like to release express my appreciation for rn;, like to to my family. Secondly I would thank the hum ane the V ietnam ese trea tm e n t and generosity they have show n that I me. Finally. am a happy m an, but I cannot truly 1># happy until term inated. By ending the v r. people urn u t. .rn T lucre lived feel end will return home to ’rem loved ones, and to their loved ore*, they want to return.” much also this w ar that and I would to say like is G ofdw ater Decries Pilot Restrictions SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Sen. B arry Coldw ater, R-Ariz., says the Vietnam w ar "could have been over seven or eight year* agn” if restrictions had -i,>* been imposed on U.S. fighter piiots The World W ar II p l " 4 told the American Fighter V-ps Association that the pnlh-v of waiting for “ hostile to be shown before U.S. pilots can do battle i* tire reason tho w ar ha.* gone on sr* long intentions” He blamed form er S ecretary of Defe* r n im plem enting for Robert S M cN am ara such restrictions “ If . I have to have a h ea rt tram p! int . . I’m going to he around when they tack that Robert S. M cNamara to the '.vail.” the group, v hirHh enthusiastically he told agreed. Meeting h< re for it** lith annual rem the F ighter Aces Association cited Cold­ w ater and other pilots Saturday night for distinguished sen d ere, tine over loyalty Supporters of Alabama Gov. George W allace have pledged to fight for a strong antibusing plank which would be contrary to the national p arty platform . FOLLOWERS OF presider,ti;, nor ere# George McGovern are known to be pushing a controversial anti Vietnam w ar resolution. the antiw ar plank likely However, will conservative ’he bv be Resolutions Com m it!ee. which will probably podome the antibusing proposal. Either of these actions will probably lead to a floor fight. ti is killed The likelihood of on party resolutions depends. loyalty c r platform However, tire ant var plank McGovern forces are to compromise with gubernatorial nominee Dolph. B rise re like!y ti it fi to w rite Briscoe has so id earl ' sonally war.re handpick the member* D em ocratic E xecutive Co any I > all} fie’ t on “ peaceful” convention. McCiOt LRN I I M>Eire a ttractiv e offer in return f support of enthusiastic candidacy. U ,]j.,(.p is tire Unit} McGovern anti caucus separately M in day r for the ct mine their st! atry; ti lento of t i tonal cai m eeting. C ube rn: i. John G rover. U.S. Sci I •and-idates statew ide G( >P < chance to address the dele; Confident G< ti’ d e ’agal ct- JI j u r e >rn per­ a n d of the Stare nittee avoiding a insuring ti ay find this an Bi is n o s ti ' ire he Mi Govern IU dida on ■nubirean , Henry and all ha' r a o rs W 111 I * likely nix cation, no repeat of their divided >t. ’n h a 9 w here Grove* failed in an at and Mrs. Dr George \\ iieford of Vie rimed a Q Malcom Milburn of Austin ihe state chairm an arri vice-chairman Republican Part} Willet red is expected to be nam ed chairm an without opposition. , h ire THE R EPI B LK A N S, tin i n g the state for President Nix ti, vail also consider a p arty platform and the election of m em bers the S tate Republican E xecutive C om m its < to The state GDP platform is expected »o be a curb n copy of the national party * platform . It likely will conte >n an antibusing th* plant P resident's Vietnam a denunciation of the “ radical politics of Sen. McGovern.” codol .potent policies of and strong a The night before the convention in I ‘alia* nill be preceded by a series of “ g ala cocktail p a rtie s” and a lavish banquet. In Houston, D em ocratic delegates M onday night will lie in senatorial and prroidential- nominee caucuses followed by a "T ops in T exas” dinner. State Conventions To Open Tuesday T h e Da ily T e x a n Editorials and opinions Union suds After occasional periods of inertia, the Issue of beer and wine sales in the Texas Union Building is back in the headlines again and, if the University’s purchase of the Forty Acres Club as a faculty watering hole is any gauge of this institution’s dedication to improving the conditions of leisure in the area, there should be no stopping Union beer and wine this tim e. Last year, an intransigent President Stephen Spun* and Vice-President for Student Affairs Ronald Brown put the damper on Union beer and wine sales by citing a City ordinance prohibiting sale of alcoholic beverages within 300 feet of a school at a nonprivate club. Again Friday, Brown said the major obstacle to suds sales in the Union was the City ordinance. But Union Board Chairman J.R. Seeman pointed out that shouldn t be a stumbling block, for he said 16 establishments already are in apparent violation of that restriction, and if anyone doubts it, just look at the bars, sawdust-floor beer joints and other dives that dot the perimeter of the campus. Many are less than IOO yards from the University campus, and that may say something about the City’s support for the ordinance. (It also raises the question of what Union beer and wine sales would do to those privately-owned establishments’ income from imbibing students, and any role the City mrehl have in protecting that income.) Clearly, the University has put itse lf on record in support of le is u re ly sipping for its faculty by buying the Forty Acres Club. Logically, it follows that obstruction of similar opportunities for students and teaching assistants over 21 would be most peculiar. Last year. Spun* seem ed hesitant to support the Union Board's request before the City Council without the express approval of the Board of Regents, which says something about his willingness to exercise his own initiative, so the Union Board will appear before the regents Oct. 20. As unpredictable as the Board of Regents is, no telling what the board will say, but refusal to support the Union Board s request would be Indefensible. The way is almost clear for Union beer and wine sales. The Alcoholic Beverage Commission has indicated before it would grant a license, and the City has indicated how much stock it puts in the 300-foot barrier. The University should follow the lead of Oklahoma. Cornell, Wisconsin, Tulane and Colorado and support the Union Board before the council for formal approval of Union beer and wine sales. POWs release Failure of President Nixon publicly to call a halt to air attacks against areas of North Vietnam in which Americans are now visiting m ay endanger American lives, will serve as good propaganda for Hanoi and will certainly give him no added popular credit In the first five hours two American women were in North Vietnam Saturday to escort their captured loved ones home, they had to run for safety during four air raid alerts. Although no shelling was actually se e n , the Americans said they could hear “explosions” in the distance. Whether American planes actually did bomb areas of North Vietnam near the Americans is not the most puzzling question. If such bombing was carried out. the actions of the United States were without excuse; but if it was a fabrication of the North Vietnamese designed to dramatize the effects of bombing to Americans or to show the United States as callous, then Nixon should have announced a halt in the air activity so that such assertions could not be made and so that the Americans near Hanoi would feel more secure. Or, on second thought, was to express dissatisfaction that it was an antiwar group which secured the release of the prisoners'’ the silence designed —QUIN MATHEWS Jobs well done Several campus organizations deserve a pat on the back for activities sponsored last week. The Union Musical Events Committee sponsored singer Ken Threadgill and the Velvet Cowpasture on the Union Patio Thursday night and their good time music combined with a beans and cornbread dinner dearly made for a memorable night for about 800 country music fans. Friday, the Union Speakers’ Committee brought Pulitzer Prize­ winning journalist Ja- k Anderson to Gregory Gym for a rather long, but interesting address. A sparse crowd and sweltering gymnasium dampened the committee's event but It was worthwhile all the same. Other notable activities last week were the Speakers’ Committee presentation of author L arry M cM urtry in the Union Main Ballroom and the C ultural Entertainment Committee’s show' of rock group It’s a Beautiful Day. These organizations have started well and, hopefully, they’ll continue throughout the year. These jobs w ere well done. T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin E D IT O R David Powell MANAGING E D IT O R ............................................................................ Cliff Avery ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS ................. Tom Kleinworth, John Tilly Karen Justice NEWS ED ITO R ASSISTANT TO THE E D IT O R ......................................................Quin Mathews AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ............................................................. Erie Leibrock FEATURES EDITOR Suzanne Schwartz SPORTS EDITOR ................................................................................ Alan Truex ........................................................................................................... Laurie Loth Q ty Editor News Assistants ......................................... Contributors ................................................ Michael Clark, Brian Mitchell, John Yemma Assistant Amusements Editor ..................................................................... Jam es Stanley Make-Up Editor ................................................................................................. Cicely Wynne Third Page Editor ............................................................................................ Steve Nesbitt Desk Editors ......... Laurence Eighner, Harriet Hubbard, Harry Levine, Tom Wells John Van Beekum Photographer Bill Bray, Robbie Marshall, Alison Smith Opinion* expressed to The Dally Texan are those of the editor or the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration or the Board of Re­ gents. The Dally Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas a t Austin, Is put> llshed by Texas Student Publications. Draw­ er D. University Station. Austin Texas, 78712. The Dally Textrn Is published Monday, Tues­ day. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday ex­ cept holiday and exam periods August through May. Second-class pottage paid at Austin, Tex. News contributions will be accepted by tele­ phone (471-4401), at the editorial office (Jour­ nalism Building 103) or at the news laboratory (Journalism Building 102). Inquiries concerning delivery should be m ade in Journalism Building 107 (471-6244), display advertising in Journalism Building 111 (471-3227), and classified adver­ tising in Journalism Building 107 (471-6244). The national advertising representative of The Dally Texan Is National EducaUonal Ad­ vertising Service, Inc., 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y., 10017. The Dally Texan subscribes to The Asso­ ciated Press. The New York Tim es News Ser­ vice and United Press International Telephoto Service The Texan Is a m em ber of the Asso­ ciated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journa­ lism Conference and the Texas Daily News­ paper Association. 4 Mooda/j September 18, 1972 TBS AUST T S U JI en cy issue complex By Quin M athew s The Texan reported Thursday that a University committee under the auspices of the Admissions Office is looking into in possible changes the state residency tuition purposes. While requirements for residency recent in changes requirements have aroused in adjusting the tuition residency requirements accordingly, it must be stres-ed that the one change does not necessarily legally Justify the other. interest voting Tuition rights are not the same as voting rights, which are specifically guaranteed by the United States Constitution. Thus that the United States Supreme Court last year ruled as unconstitutional lengthy residence requirements for voting rn state and local elections need not mean that any residency requirem ent be limited to 30 days. THIS IS NOT to say that Texas’ present law is fair (or even legal) but that revision m ust be approached from a different view. The question that must be asked, and that m ay likely be asked by the courts, is whether the law is rational or arbitrary in setting up standards for residency' strict A three-judge federal panel in August struck down a law in New Mexico which imposed standards under which students could become state residents for a reduction in tuition. The law said that any student enrolled a t a State institution as a nonresident could not change his status to that of a resident unless he either at­ tended as a part-time student or dropped out of college for a year to work in the state. that THE CCM KT ruled the law was “ unreasonable and arbitrary” and that it violated portions of the lith Amendment. Similar in Connecticut and several other states. laws have been overturned One thing considered arbitrary about such requirements is that while a nonstudent or part-time student can become a resident Within a specified tim e period, one who attends school full-time cannot. Various court decisions have said that this is a denial of either “due process” or “ equal protection of the laws.” THE TEXAS LAW tuition discriminates against students—and par­ ticularly against women students—in a covering manner similar to the New Mexico law. For example, to qualify as a Texas resident, a man or woman student who has never lived in the state, and who is at least 22, must work full-time or own his own home. As long as he attends school and does not buy residential property, he cannot become a resident. A married woman student cannot establish her own Texas residency. times the cost The cost of tuition to out-of-state students to Texas is almost IO to a good residents, a rate prohibitive to become number who earnestly seek Texas residents. For state residents the rate is $50 for the first 12 hours; each additional hour is $4. Out-of-state residents must pay $40 per hour. For 15 hours the cast is S62 for Texas residents, $600 for nonTexas residents. STILL, the Legislature is committed to serving the educational noels of “ real Texans” before outsiders and they are not without legal grounds in excluding those of questionable residence. Tile question is whether the State Is rational or arbitrary in setting up standards of Texas residency. The g ra d u a te s life begins to ber By Terry G allo w ay (Editor’s nolo: Terry Galloway was ex- p e e l i n g degree complete requirements in American Studies this fall when she suddenly received unexpected notice this summer that she had aire ally graduated. She recounts her reactions to being thrown into the “real world” after plans collapsed for yet another semester in school.) I thought Bd type out a quick con­ fessional. The need to chat with some in­ direct one is strong; and, after a bad day A guest viewpoint of printing out employment pleas by the dozen, the old psyche is keyed for a Smith- Corona purge. OK. Let’s hope that words denude: Pushed off campus sidewalks smack into the clogtraffic of the world, the graduate prays for a red light, a respite, a stop for a sec to let me get my bearings, a reconciliatory lull that would endear the fateful freeway. Something. Some small humanizing little carradio tune or two, pine scent as buses irregularity—a catchy stop and t;o. is Everything BUT NO. Out here there’s no new concept of theater, and you’re not even invited sweets. fundamentally dubious and that’s that. So I stretch out on the concrete and make myself a home: the healthyred creative juices slow; trying to visualize gets harder and harder; LIFE hustles by and all the idealistic demands I ’d make on it seem so unreasonable. I go with the habitual flow of things and find myself in a new neighborhood!. Subtle suggestions reside in every apart­ ment—whisper's of “Rent must be paid; jobs must be found.” It all boils down to REMOVE THOSE JEANS. So, ne\v to this neighborhood and new to the first Real Job I strip off my jeans and begin again. I —Ah, what an elegant dictaphone, say—trying to ingratiate a way in, effect a little security. It doesn’t work. They glance at my heels and hose, get down my name and the hardcore probe begins. INTERROGATION: —References? My a r e demure (pastels, a iii tie lace at cuff and collar). nightgowns —Very nice (the noneomattal reply). She writes it down. More mouth positive she says, Very little is permitted here—no bleeding (Qose thumbs. Do you scrutiny) Your opinions on virgin birth? type? tub lawn, my times, often I f s my mistake, I admit if s my mistake. But who wants everything wrested away? I spill it all: I don’t sing well, I stay up nights to read, I fail to discover the truth, is I have no backyard Stained; (I go deeper) I am unreasonable at (Tinning, more often brusque, my words can fail, I ’m bitter foiled in love, smooth gestures make me rude and yes I’m often motionless with fright. My life Is very difficult—if s rough, it flames. Hilarity is no dead threat. I’m still drawn in to things. And now how' ’bout that job? Stolidly alternative em barrassed my won’t say. But I know' her one unspoken phrase: Let them eat Duncan Hines. ERADICATION of the liberal arts heart of you? You bet. These ceremonial pita were dug long, long ago though with no one in particular in mind. And told me < so cap~gown en­ thralled) now your life Is supposed to begin. they Spare time' of no concern? By Jam es Kilpatrick (c) 1172 The Washington Star Syndicate WASHINGTON—Erie S e v a r e i d , the resident pundit of CBS, journeyed to Goose Prairie, Wash., in June for a two-hour in­ terview with Justice William O. Douglas. Their conversation, boiled down to an hour, was aired on Sept. 6. With deference to Sevareid, who has one of the highest batting averages in the game, it was not much of an interview'; but it defined one arca of sharp disagreement between Douglas and his critics. The interview' failed because Sevareid the hard crunchy never bore down on questions: he served up little but cream- puffs and bonbons. In term s of news as the story of distinguished from history, Justice Douglas is not the story of Douglas on the court, but of Douglas off the court. Here, Sevareid did not dig; he barely scratched. THEY CREPT UP on tile story when tire conversation turned to former Justice Abe Fortas, who resigned in part because of the disclosure that he had accepted a life-time fey from Louis Wolfson. Sevareid asked a soft leading question: “ You didn’t the then what Abe Fortas did feel Wolfson case was even an impropriety?” in Douglas answered: “Well, It depends on what you do with your spare time. And I don’t think it’s anybody’s business as long as it doesn’t interfere with court work or collide with court duties or create con­ flicts of interest.” A bit later, Sevareid got around to asking Douglas about “this Parvia Foundation, at I idea of w’hlch you W'ere an officer, think.” Sevareid wanted to know why Douglas had resigned from the foundation if he hadn’t done anything wrong. Douglas responded by saying that the the Parvin Foundation came out of a book he had written. The foundation w'as formed, he that said, to the potential Middle E ast be brought to the United States to receive courses in government. He had resigned when the success of the foundation made it appear that the work would require more time than he could give to It. effectuate his proposal leaders from Africa and WELL, THERE was a whole lot more to this story. If the questions had been asked by Andrew Alexander and Keith McKnight. two hard-nosed reporters from the Dayton Journal Herald, some curious circumstances might have the national attention they deserve. Alexander and McKnight went cir­ cumstances in a sorb's of three copyrighted articles in June, but their findings never got far out of Dayton. received these into The tale goes back to the spring of I960, when Albert B. Parvin was making a deal to sell his Flamingo Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas for $10.4 million to a group of Florida Investors headed by Morris Fans burgh and Sammy Cohen. A part of the deal involved the payment to mobster Meyer Lansky of a $200,000 “finder’s fee.” An agreement to that effect was signed on May 12, 1960. On July 25, 1960, Parvin got overwhelmed by Douglas’ book, “America Challenged.” He wrote the justice a bashful, barefoot letter: “So moved and impressed was I by its contents that It gave spark to an idea that has emboldened me for many years.” The upshot was that six months later- the Parvin Foundation sprang into being, with Douglas as its $12,000-a-year president from February, 1961, to May, 1969. to IT WAS IN tills period, according Alexander and McKnight, that Parvin was paying the $200,000 in quarterly installments to Lansky—out of funds diverted from a trust account of the Parvin Foundation. Douglas w’as ignorant of the whole business. He came to know Parvin closely in this period, but the possibility seems never to have crossed his mind that Parvin might bo buying respectability on the cheap. This is not a consideration that greatly troubles Justice Douglas in the uses of his spare time. He wrote a couple of articles for Playboy magazine, he told Sevareid, reaches 18 million because “Playboy youngsters—and they’re the minds I’d like to reach.” Very well, but the primary reason his byline appeared in Playboy was that Hugh Hefner and his Playboy philosophers knew a bargain when they saw one. The point Is that the public things a Supreme Coml justice does with his spare time are not his business alone. They are everybody's business. Those activities cannot be viewed simply in terms of court work, court duties and conflicts of interest. They also have to do with th# Court’s image that ought not to be image—an bandied about in pious foundations and sex- exploiting magazines. Smoke rises By William V. Shannon (c) 1972 New York Times News Service WASHINGTON—The Nixon people wat­ ching their 30-point lead in the opinion polls, their swelling campaign coffers and the dissension among the Democrats have only one nervous fear as they count the days until Nov. 7, They’ dread that one or another of the scandals smoldering around them into open flame before the may break election. Each day brings some fresh danger. The latest is the amended complaint in the Watergate case naming Maurice H. Stans, former secretary of commerce and finance chairman of the Nixon campaign, three lesser aides, and the Nixon campaign organization itself—the Committee to Re­ co­ the President—as additional elect defendants. Previously only the five men arrested last June while breaking into the Democratic National Committee offices In the Watergate apartment complex had been listed as defendants. to hush up The Administration has been hoping desperately the Watergate scandal—easily the most ambitious and most sinister espionage operation ever mounted against the political opposition in this country—by indicting the five agents who were caught by the police and then proclaiming the case “solved.” W H A T THE Administration most definitely does not want is the publication of any evidence that might link the cap­ tured agents with Stans or John Mitchell, the former attorney general who was the Nixon campaign manager at the time of the Watergate affair. Yet it is an op»-n secret that the five arrested men had to be operating cm behalf of someone more powerful than themselves to whom they turned over the wiretapped material and from whom they received $114,000 In Nixon campaign funds. The Nixon people are trying to t ike cover behind tile FBT investigation But tile FBI is now headed by a political lawyer wlwi Is a Nixon pro’ege. The FBI Investigation has been kept to a very narrow channel. For example, it appears that federal agent* did not obtain a search warrant and make an exhaustive search through the office* of the Committee to Re-elect the President to find any scrap of information which might open up all the ramifications of the operation. the lawyers re p n -sen ting Lacking the police powers of the govern­ ment, the Democratic Party In the Watergate suit probably cannot get the whole story, but tile fact that Edward Bennett Williams, th# city’s foremost criminal lawyer who I* representing the Democrats without a fee, has amended the complaint to include Maurice Stans' name is enough to send tremors through the Nixon organization. Does Williams, they worry, know something that they wish. he did not know? A SECOND PRH ATE lawsuit h a brought tho milk scandal back into the news. On March 12, 1971, the Argrirultur# Department denied dairymen's request for a higher gov em rn en t -ordered price support for milk. Two weeks later, it reversed itself and approved the increase, a shift which cost consumers upward of $'>00 million in higher milk prices. Last month, a lawsuit of the National Farmers Organization against the major national dairy cooperatives brought to light letters which detailed how the dairy lobby kicked large sums of money to th# Republican Party in the days fust before and just after the Agriculture Department reversed itself. in Common Caus.', headed by John Gardner, last week filed yet a third private lawsuit on still another front. This suit seeks to require tile Nixon campaign organization to obey the federal Corrupt Pre''tires Act and give an accounting of more than $10 million in campaign money collected in th# weeks leading up to April 7, when th# new federal law went into effect requiring d i s c l o s u r e of political contributions. Lawyers for the Nixon campaign insist that loopholes the Corrupt Practices Art permit them to hide the names of thes# e a r l y contributors. Common Cause, however, is asking for an injunction that would compel the disclosure of all Nixon contributions made between Jan. I, 1971, and April 7, 1972. in fixes W H I L E ALL THESE ar# smoldering, smoke begins to rise from th# grain bin. It now appears that ordinary wheat farmers sold their early crop at low prices while the big grain dealers mad# a killing, perhaps because they had advance information that the Russian purchases of wheat this summer would be much heavier than expected. Tile suspicion that the grain dealers may have had such prior knowledge is strengthened by tile fact that under the Nixon administration, top officers of those firms and top officials of the Agriculture Department regularly exchange positions like partners in a square dance. an these, general attorney The Watergate case, the milk case, th# hidden contributions, the grain case— everywhere the smoke is rising. In times like of acknowledged distinction could be a great help to a troubled Administration. But til# mention of Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst only recalls the long struggle over his confirmation because of his involvement in the Irregular settlement of the ITT antitrust if Mrs. Dita case. What might happen Board, the once talkative ITT lobbyist whose confidential memo put the ITT settlement on the front pages, were to recover from her mysterious heart ailment and teil all that she knows? There are some worries that even a big lead in the Gallup Pail cannot relieve. 'Forty Acres Suit Only Affects 'Club' Acquisition of the Forty Acres G ub apparently w ill not be af­ fected by a lawsuit involving the its former manager, club and Ja c k Cox. The suit, filed Wednesday in 200th D istrict Court., names Cox, form er Republican nominee for governor, as defendant, and seeks almost $55,000 in damages. Filed by Mike Butler and R. H. Johnson, the suit seeks to stop from the Forty Acres Club distributing any assets to Cox until he pays the plaintiffs $55,000. Butler and Johnson claim Cox owes them the money from his purchase in 1%6 of controlling interest in the club. The suit asks that the club tx* the assets to the shareholders d i s s o l v e d and distributed (including Cox). assistant Mike Quinn, to Chancellor Charles LeM aistre, stressed that this dissolution of the club assets does not involve property the purchased bought the University. We furniture and building, fixtures and we do have titles to the property,” Quinn said. He did not know what other assets would be included in the "club.” land, by the B arry Bishop, the attorney who .suit for Butler and filed Johnson, said the court would decide who would receive those assets of the club not purchased by the University. The court also will decide who w ill receive w’hat proportion of purcha.se funds from the University. Neither Cox nor his wife, Joyce, who co-rn ana g el the club, could be reached for comment. action line How does the University Co-Op determine Its book prices? P .I* The Co-Op has nothing to do with determining the prices of its books. TJie publishers send the ordered hooks with an invoice listing the priop of the books. These are the prices charged by the Co-Op. Pm a freshman at the University and am very unhappy atxuit the curfew regulations imposed on me at my dorm. F* there anything thai can be ai!y Texan, Ih-awer T), University Station. Austin, Texas, 7X712, •r bring them by Journalism Building 102. Only initials will l*» used. campus news in brief S I . P H A R A P P A P S I r o t a t 7 VO p m. M on day in t m n B u ild in g 302 P le d fo « mil! feet at 6 p tm n Bun- tnoff-Econom ic* Building M C H I R I . FTI K. R T K * R V R I IT k K A R T W H I K T V w ll moot at 7 art p m . In U n io n B u n d lin g S IT for Bo n d n y o r ro and npor, 4'.vu**1rm Vaiia- iyn Murray O'Hntr win gpoak on Th# Hitter!city of Je*u* Oirt«f O T T F I R S 4 T I O > ' A I . KOT K T M N C I N O will moot at * p m Monday In Union Ju n io r B a llro o m ?olkdan< uig Every on# is loam to lnv od T H KT A M i d i ! P H I win hold an or at T p rr, gaalzatkm al m eetin g T h u rsd a y a t the R iv e r ( sty Inn. 600 VV I :it h St I MV I KHI TV TF, VM w I.. A > and F riday a* tho ROTT' Rifle R an g e . For Information, ran Sgt. Charlo* P o rte r at the ROT' fl­ ing V VK'ITV Ii > n il I I ?1 > pm . Mon da' V. Ii ,! V o l i t t a R T A m n ' t r r v T r n w in Interview from in a rn to i p rn M o n d ay fbroogh F r id a y tn the D ean of Student* O fflre the Speech B u ild in g V o lu n te e r* a ra needed to w o rk th)* fa ll lr t Homosexual Leaders: UT Gays Oppose Marriage The refusal of Travis County Clerk Doris Shropshire to issue a marriage license to two women has stimulated little reaction from University gay activists. Jr . Most of the gay community seems to oppose homosexual marriage. Troy T. Stokes and Neal Parker, Gay Liberation spokesmen, said they think m arriage is not designed for members of the same sex. The problems of two men or together are not the same as those of a man and a woman, they said. two women living just *The whole legal structure of marriage should be for restudied, not heterosexuals but for the homosexual as well,” Stokes said. Ed Frazier, also of Gay Liberation, said he thinks the only reason homosexuals would he Interested In marriage is for legal protection and security. LESBIANS CONTACTED were equally adamant against marriage. imagine any not wanting to get a license to m arry. lesbian she knows LAST W E E K , two women applied to Mrs. Shropshire for a marriage license. Mrs, Shropshire declined, and Travis County Atty. Ned Granger asked Atty. Gen. Crawford Martin whether the County clerk Was authorized to issue a marriage license to two persons of the same sex. “ We think m arriage is one of tho bad things about the heterosexual relation­ ship” one said. Another said she could M artin’s opinion, that released Thursday, slated the Texas Fam ily Code, containing the laws governing marriage, Is permeated with the terms "husband,** "w ife” and ‘‘m arriage.” Since the legislature must be presumed to know' the definitions and usages of these words, it is eminently d ear that under Texas law only two persons of the opposite sex may he granted a License to m arry in Texas.” Martin said. "Nevertheless,” he said, "subject to a contrary ruling, we are of the opinion that the County Clerk ic jy>t authorized to issue a marriage license to two persona of the samp sex.” Plan to Aid Poor Austin State Rep. Don Cavness is working on to establish a Brackenridge Hospital legislation district to provide medical care for needy patients from eight surrounding counties. Tlie district would be supported by funds .supplied by the counties in the district. Tile plan was conceived In response to Mayor Roy Butler’s request that counties sending patients to Brackenridge share the hospital's expenses. Butler said that up to this point, Austin taxpayers have been paying for hospital service for patients outside the county. The expense-sharing plan had been by County Commissioner David Sa na ue Ison suggested J Wf U P I Telephoto 'Hmm, I W onder...' A Secret Service agent ex­ amines sheets of counterfeit $10 and $20 bills totaling more than a half-million dollars con­ fiscated in Milwaukee Friday. FATE Program Open F A T E , Freshman Transfer Experience (form erly S .id*‘ut F r e s h m a n Encounter), will register students for the six week program through Tuesday at a t ’bie in Jester Center. tries The program to per- s nahze the University and to in rn vin ce various aspect* of college life Beginning Thursday, a different topic w ill be discussed each Thursday. human Planned are a multi-media s e x u a l i t y show, discussion, sensitivity groups, m inority affairs discussion, self. the effect*? of awareness and d r u g s in­ community volvement. and Jack F. Roberts Jr. D.D.S. Announces the opening of his o ffice for the p ra ctice of Dentistry. 2404 S. Interregional at Oltorf 444-1871 last week as a .solution to the problem. The adoption of an expense- sharing plan would he provided for in an election granting taxing authority to the hospital district. Each county would submit the Issue to a vote. The counties that would 1*» affected are Bastrop. Blanco, Burnet, Caldwell, Fayette, Hays, Lee and Ida no. Cavness has asked the Texas Hospital Association to supply a s t a t i s t i c a l breakdown of Brackenridge services to indigent patients from outside Travis County. fellow City' Councilman Dick Nichols councilmen told his that Cavness would Thursday introduce the the bill when legislature convenes in January for its regular 197.5 session. for Cavness, a Democrat, is run­ ning tlie re-election legislature in November against Republican John King. lo I l>l W I I s l _ J’ I § Hi A f ' rn) 4'-b> J ? £ A \ ! ii / J I ' I -\ i p (A WORM TWO FEET LONS ?, ^that's Ridiculous ! J - J Z L — I • Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzlo ACROSS I Girl’s name A High 8 Remain 1 2 Noth -g 13 Turkish regiment 14 FVropean 15 Scottish cap 16 Familiar form of proper name (Pl.) 18 By way of 20 Sharp 21 Conjunction 22 rootlike part 2 3 Greek letter 7 1 Witty remark 29 Insane 30 Pertaining to punishment 31 Part of "to be” 3? Debars 33 Crony (■colloq.) 34 Pronoun 35 Fleshy 37 Uncouth person 38 R-sort 39 Girl J nam* 4 0 D ista l 41 Symbol for tantalum 42 Bellow 44 lavished fondness on 47 Shield 51 Period of tim* 52 Ruffle 53 African antelopa 54 Goddes s of healing 55 New England university 56 Break suddenly 57 Openwork ta brio DOWN 1 Pilaster 2 Face of watch 12 15 18 y y y 31 33 39 52 55 3 Needy A Zest 5 Mohammedan name 6 Required 7 Is fond of 8 Breed of dog 9 Man’s nickname IC Beverage l l Affirmative 17 Compass point 19 Negative 22 Remuneration 24 Preposition 2 5 Pound down 2 6 Appellation of Athena 27 Parent (colloq ) 28 Foreboding 29 A month 30 Cushion 32 Frighten 33 Equality 36 Indef.r.tt* article 37 Cardboard box 38 Glossy fabric 4 0 fjata 41 Preposition 43 Faroe Islands whi'lwind ti 44 Fall In drops 45 Great lake 46 Arrow 47 Lift wit Ii (ever 48 Brown kiwi 49 tub', ate 50 New Deal agency (inlt.) ho l l I9 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 13 16 : : / 'n'- 99/ G V, 19 I8 14 I JG 'J 17 t o I v .;. 21 22 23 24 25 26 ■ A $ 3 27 28 V / 29 V A * * I-] A W 32 30 33 36 37 42 43 S S S i v ; 47 48 49 50 44 45 46 34 I \ ’. 38 41 51 54 ,V< 57 40 s i 56 |jjj$ Distr, by United Pe*tare Syndicate, Inc. jj W h a t will you say when your children ask, What did you do in the Vietnam W a r ? Psst! Rumor has it Dobie Center is really a surplus grain elevator. Dobie Center ha* been the topic of many rumors circulating around Austin thew day a. Ona of th# mort prevalent m mors la that D eb it la rtaBy a wrplus grain elevator. Hava you aver heard of anything "cornier” ? But In all fairness lo you rumor-mongtrs, we hcve to admit Dobie look* Uke many things that it len t. W e Have a suggestion to make to you gossipers out there. Instead of speculating on what Dobie is, why don’t you step inside and find out for your­ self. Then you I I discover that Dobie is in fact a shopping center and a very' nice one at that. It ’s close to campus, offers free parking and has an exciting potpourri of stores. For instance, in one fell ewoop you can purchase some co lo rfu l marimekko fabric, munch on a delirious kolache, pick up some Mexican imports, stock up on your favorite records and more plus top it all off with a delirious lunch or dinner at one of Dobie s restau­ rants. So take all those rumors with a "grain of salt”. Stop bv and see Dobie in person. W e think you ii find it a very "elevating experience, S A Y : I helped end it. I worked for G e o rg e M c G o v e rn It's easy to say you’re against the W a r . A nd it's easy to say you support G e o rg e M c G o v e rn . But, it's hard to get out and knock on doors. Elections are won and wars are ended when people get out, knock on doors, and change minds, W e need your help. lf we knock on enough doors we will turn the polls around, and e lect a new president Make it happen Volunteer for McGovern Call: Precinct 451-3204 232 John Reed 420 Mary Erdmann 478-4429 477-3913 425 Dela Davis 428 Sieve Lulenski 472-7305 429 Susan Raliegh 474-5512 m n I JU BB* Dobie Center was not built in a daw JO O B IE 2021 Guadalupe 430 Alan Hirst 431 Sherri Valentine 478-6151 454-1268 435 Jeff Harmon 472-8915 436 Mary Birdsong 478-3067 t h e d a h x T e x a n M q n f c ft fe p ta o s b tr £8, 2972 P a * * 5 HAMI# PAID POR BY IfNfV. MCGOVERN C A M P A IG N — LUCY BLACK, TREASURER T h e Da ily T exan sports Shoe Shop * S A L E * sTu<;sK,K . « repair boots and shoes M a n y Beautiful C olors * LEATHER SALE * V arious kind*, co lo r* - 75c per ft. Capitol Saddlery I h I4 Lavaca Austin. Texas 478-9309 What to do when yonrWtareedes gives yon the benz. When your Mercedes stops working H and starts cramping your style, it’s time to go to International Motors. Doke, the expert Mercedes mechanic, thinks there is something fishy about a Mercedes that doesn t run. So don’t let your Mercedes put you under pressure. Take it to International Motors and it will run swimmingly. v International Motors Twelfth at Lamar, Austin, Texas, 477-5747 NFL Roundup Cowboys Win; Reeves Hurt From The Asaoofated P r e * DALLAS—It was not an en­ couraging beginning the Dallas Cowboys and their new football season. for First, even before the opening k i c k o f f against Philadelphia Sunday, Dallas’ No. 2 quar­ terback Dan Reeve* injured his knee. It happened while he was warming up. Then shortly after the kickoff, Bob Hayes dropped a pass. It happened whil* he was wide open on an 80-vard pass pattern. That was enough to send Craig Morton on fine of his interception binges. He had two passes picked off in the first half and Dallas traded 6-0. The Cowboys finally put it all together, all except for Reeves’ Is. D a lla s ended up knee, that winning 28-6 when Morton began hitting his passes regularly in the second half. He threw for two touchdowns ami 235 yards, while completing 13 of 26 passes. Pro Football Standings B r Th* Anserated Frees Am erica* Conference Fast W. I.. T Miami ............. I New Y o rk ......... I B a lt im o r e ........ ft N. England . . . . f t Bu ffalo ............... « FCS. T F F A IO 1.000 20 1.000 St 24 .oixi 3 IO .OOO 7 31 41 .OOO 24 C entral P i t t eta Hous Clev 0 0 I OOO ............. . . . . I .................. I o o I OOO .OOO .OOO ................... 6 ..................... 0 I 0 I 0 D en ver Oak X C i t y S. DIe Ko W est ............... I 0 o I Otto .OOO .OOO .OOO 1 ft I 0 ............. 0 1 0 ..................... 0 ..................0 M SI 17 IO 30 28 IO 3 D etro it 30 New Y o rk G ian t* IS M iam i 20. Ran as C ity JO San F ra n c isc o 34. S an Diego I » s Anurias 34. New O rlean s M iam i 20. K an sas C ity D en ver 30, Houston 17 .10 R 14 H a tt o n at C o n f e r e n c e Fau t W. I, I 0 0 ......................0 0 I I D a l l a s ............... St. I.oui* ............. I W ash. N Y . G iants . . . . 0 P h i:...................... o F c t. 1.000 I 'XVI .IKK) .OOO .OOO T. 0 0 0 0 0 T F FA 6 28 IO 3 ft 0 IR SO 6 28 D etro it G. Boy Winn. .. Chicago A tlan ta . . . L .A ................. S an F r a u . . New OrL. . . C entral . . i n n . . l o o . . O O O . . 0 1 0 W est . . I 0 0 ,. I OO . . I 0 0 . . 0 1 0 I.non I OOO .OOO .OOO 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 SO llI IO 26 0 0 21 37 30 16 14 34 34 3 14 34 C incinnati 31. New England N ew Y o rk .lets 41. B u ffalo G reen B a y 26, Cleveland IO P ittsb u rg h 34, O akland 28 A tlan ta 37, C hicago 21 St Trouts IO, B altim o re S 24 Sunday'* He snit* Now’s the Time! S p e c ia l Piper $5 Introductory Flight L e sso n T h is certificate, w h e n p re se n te d to the P ip e r Flite C e n t e r b e lo w with $5, en* " o s y o u to a S p e c ia l In tro d u cto ry F ligh t L e s s o n in a P ip e r C h e ro k e e . T he n, if y o u the k f ly in g 's for > :>u, " e $ 5 w b e cre d ite d to w a rd the S p e al $ 8 8 F ly in g .S ta rt C o u r s e c o n s is t in g of fo u r le s s o n s , pilot lo g b o o k a n d p re lim in a ry g r o u n d instruction. O u r F A A - a p p r o v e d F! ;rit T ra in in g S c h o o l is a ls o q u a lifie d to g,v a y o u a d v a n c e d instructio n for c o m m e r c ia l I ce n se , in strum ent r a 'in g a n d m u lti-e n g in e rating. * * * r i i I i i i i L . im m m m Flite Center A V IA T IO N TRAIN IN G CENTER TIM S AIR PARK I M U E S N O R T H O F C I T Y L I M I T S O N I H 35 — D E S S A U E X IT . 251-4103 Aa far Reeves, he has a bone chip floating around ta his left knee. Surgery was performed Sunday night, and if there are no complications he could be ready by next Sunday's game. usually However, about something knee surgery, so Reeves may miss more than one week. there complicated is With Roger Staubaoh still out with a shoulder separation, t.hp two Cowboys are down quarterbacks, Morton and Jack Concannon. And Morton has never gone through a full season healthy. to Morton wasn’t too pleased with his game Sunday. ‘T m not a bit happy about that first half,’* he said. Said Hayes about the missed bomb: " I just dropped it. That's all there is to it. I guess I was just anticipating too much.” Dallas Coach Tom Landry said, “I was concerned about every phase of our game in the first half. We were fortunate to come out with only six points against us.” The Eagles also had quar­ terback injury problems, as Pete Liske went out In the third period wth a shoulder injury. Rookie John Reaves replaced him and hit ll of 19 passes for 143 yards. DENVER—-The Houston Oilers successful had a much opener than the Cowboys. The Oilers lost 30-17 to Denver Sun­ day. less Steve Ramsey's clutch passing led Denver to a 17-0 advantage, but the Oilers closed the gap to 23-17 late in the fourth quarter. A Houston drive then stalled at the Denver 32. The Broncos scored their final touchdown on a 66-yard fake punt by Bill Van Henson on the last play of the game. KANSAS CITY—The American champion Miami Conference Dolphins opened .strong, stopping Kansas Qty 20-10. Larry Csonka and Mercury Morris burst huge holes in the Chiefs’ vaunted defense, while Bob Griese mixed in key passes to Paul Warfield. The Dolphins led 7-0 after eight minutes of play and were never threatened. iniiiiiiuwiwtTiRJHiiiiffmiiiittitfWinniiiniiiinnni; Major League Standings A m e r i c a n L e a g u e East B oston ................... 7(1 D etro it ................... 77 B altim o re ............ 76 . . . . 75 New Y o rk ............ 64 (Cleveland . . . . 58 M ilw aukee 63 64 66 67 79 86 W est O a k la n d ............... 81 ................. 79 Chicago .Minnesota ............ 7! 68 K an sas C i t y C l ii Corn la ............ 67 ..................... 53 Te\-a* 57 62 69 7! 74 88 .5 4 0 .547 .537 .527 . 446 .404 .595 .559 ..VK* .488 .475 373 S u n d a y ' s K e s n l t * New Y o rk 2. B a it !m ore I Oakland 4. T e x a s t D etro it 6. M ilw aukee 2 K an sas < ' tv IO M innesota • C aliforn ia 3, C hicago I Cleveland 9. Boston 2 — — V i 2 ’ a 14 ao'4 5 12'-4 15 17 32 m S a lien al League • F a s t vt . . . . . 89 Pittsb u rgh ......... . . . 7 8 Chicago . . . . . 7 2 N ew Y o rk St. Itouls . . . . . . . 69 . . . 6 4 M ontreal . . . 51 P hilad elp hia . . . . . 85 C incinnati ......... . . . 7 8 Houston I a>s Angeles . . . . 74 ......... . . . 65 A tlanta San F ran cisco . . 6 2 San D iet:.............. 53 W r it L 51 64 67 74 76 89 55 62 66 75 78 Handily'* R esu lt* i I ii.. *->r) in Philadelphia 3. Mourn ii 2 i" f'im 'irm ntj 7 S t. I A>uls 6, P ittsb u rgh 4 nla 7 Sini Frau -co 4 Ho lston 15, D is A m ides 11 I IPrt. O B 638 550 ,520 482 456 .365 12 16H 211 a 38 609 532 464 415 334 — 7 1 ! 20 33 31 Use Texan Classified Ads Hey, LOOK ME OVER! N E W MAGAZINE f U P L E M E N T T A K E A L O O K A T T H E N E W M A G A Z I N E S U P P L E M E N T In Today's Texan — lf Doesn't H a v e A Name ! ijjl ii I ii LOOK IT OVER, GIVE IT A NAME, THEN SUBMIT YOUR ENTRY IN TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS NAME THE M A G A ZIN E CONTEST! ENTER BEFORE 4:30 P.M., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. T H A T S T H E L A S T D A Y T O E N T E R : r RULES FOR E N T E R IN G : I.) Ail entries must be in Journalism Building, Room 107 b y 4:30 p . m . Fri., Se p te m b e r 22. 2 j You m ay enter as m any times as you wish, but all entries must contain your name, address and phone number. 3.) O n ly University students m ay enter. Fmployev of T^xas Student Publications, and their families arn net eligible. A) The winning name Is subject to app roval b y the Texas Stu de n t Publications Board of O p e ra tin g Trustees. 5.) In case of a tie, the entry received first will be considered the winner. M A I L Y O U R E N T R Y TO: N am e P. O . Box D, Austin, Texas 78712 It, Texas Student Publications, o r BRING YOUR E N T R Y TO: Journalism Building, R o om 107 WIN ALL THESE PRIZES I. A fabulous weekend in Mexico City for one. Courtesy O. C. M O R G A N TRAVEL I BOLEX 233 SUPER S MOVIE CAMERA Courtesy CAPITOL CAMERA 3. 15 TOP HIT RECORD ALBUMS Courtesy DISCOUNT RECORDS 4. MEN’S C. ITOH 10-SPEED BIKE Courtesy CO-OP Another publication of T E X A S ST U D EN T PUBLICATIO NS Fag* 6 Monday. September is, 1372 TH E P a HST TXXA # by alan truex Balance. It is the watchword of the Southwest Conference. Whether you go to Waco or Lubbock or Houst rn or Dallas, you will keep hearing that word. At the beginning of e\ery year each team in the SWC claims the league is more balanced than ever before. Needless to say, no halfway informed sportswriter paid much at­ tention when Jim Carien and Al Conover and Grant Teaff and th# others told us tho conference would be more balanced this year. Well, the time has come to start believing. T>pt us Itegin with the Baylor Bears. In a conference jammed full of inept football teams, the Bears have achieved singular notoriety. By all accounts, they are absolutely the worst the SWC has to offer. The Bears go into every game 30-point underdogs. Heck, the odds are even that they’ll put their jerseys on inside-out. At one time things got so desperate in Waco that the Bear mascot hanged himself. Really. With a team like the Baylor Bears field even” year, who needs intra murals? At most schools you need a program to tell who s playing* At Baylor you need a program to tell what sport they're playing. That’s the way it has been. Shucks, in the last three seasons th# Bears haven't even scored a touchdown until the second game. They consider the first game funnies. Now, get a load of this. They bop on Into Athens, Ca., .Saturday. They are something like 35-point undtrdogs before anybody will put down any money on them. By some quirk o f tho schedule, the Baylor Bears were supposed to play the University of ( Georgia. In every poll tho Georgia Bulldogs were picked well inside the Top 20, Tile Bears, according to one newspaper, were well inside the bottom IO. Unfair Schedulinq The guy who scheduled this ballgame must have arranged th* Rpani-h-Amerwan war. He would have put Patton against the Ger­ mans. King Kong against Cheetah. So what happens? The Baylor Bears go out there and gain eight more first downs than Georgia. They outgain the Bulldogs by 47 yards. They hold All-America runner Jimmy Poulos to a 3 9-yard average. They hold star quarterback Andy Johnson to 0.9. The Bears’ quarterback, Neal Jeffrey, hits 18 of 30 passes for 183 yards. So the Bears fumble six times and lose th*- game 24-14. You call that a defeat? I call it balance. But that was not the only blow struck by th** SWC this weekend. Southern Methodist comes out to start th*- season waving a passing ‘‘We’re gonna throw the ball this year,1* Mustang Coach banner. Hayden Fry swore. ‘‘It's gonna be like Hixson in 68. Pass, priss, pass.” So what happens? SMC opens against Wake Forest Saturday nigvt and throws Ti pulses. Tile Mustangs run the ball 52 rimes for 356 yards and win the game 56-10. The biggest victor; by an SMT’ team in 20 years. ' Not in my wildest dreams did I think we would explode Uke that,” Fry said. The big guns in the Mustang win were tailbacks Alvin Maxton and freshman Wayne Morris. Max»on scored four touchdown* and gained 169 yards on 22 carries. Morris rushed 18 times for 154 yards and scored on a 50 yard run. Raiders Romp Quite an offensive performance by SMU, but did you notice Texas Tech? Tile Red Raiders scored 45 points against Utah Saturday, which seems bk** more than they sowed all last year. Utah scored only 2.. Junior college transfer George Smith gave the Raider* something they’ve always lacked: outside speed. Smith, who runs a 4.5 forty-yard dash, ga ned 15.3 yards on l l carries. Of course, all mas not v-Hl for fro Southwest Conference. Texas A&M was pi< ked as a miracle team solely because of the arrival of En: *ry Ballard as head coach. So much for miracle teams and miracle coaches. Thp Aggies kist 37 7 to Nebraska, coached bv that old reliable. Bob Devaney*. And in the AstroDome, the Houston Cougars affied illy par* of th* SWC, dropped one to Arizona State. The score was 3.3-28, although some Hill say An/ >na State should have won ii. ah bigger and other* will say Houston should have won, period. The reason for the paradox: Tile Sun Devils ai:fgained HousTm bv more than IOO yards and out first -downed them 19-10 However, the Cougars might have won the game had they not fumbled on th# visitors’ four-yard-line. A week ago. Houston lost 14-13 to Rice. Which Indicates that Rum, as well as SMU, Tech and Baylor, is mm it improved this year. And the indication# are that Arkansan and A&W are rn f as gr*«1 as ex­ pel ted. Texas and Texas Christian still haven’t played, but so far there is one clear trend in the SWC. They rah it balance. Att. Volkswagen Owners Outsfardmg Complete Automotive Service Across from G u lf M a rt G L 2-0205 D R I V E A u r n - * — S A V E A L O T (feet. I ' I c * I / t v .* f e e t I m # n.M # - r # 4 1 * 0 m a * m o o m oo 0 < ! $ CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP AUSTIN ; " Y I 476 0178 C L O S E D S A T U R D A Y The O n ly Independent V V / G a r a g e in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repair* LAFAYETTE R A D I O A S S O C IA T E S T O R E Arldf's Automotive Service 7951 B U R N E T R O A D S E R V I C I N G V O L K S W A G E N V E H IC L E S IS O U R S P E C IA L T Y STEREO AND FOUR CHANNEL SOUND M O I L A V A C A ST. We'H show you the value of a good time. Jeep original. We * eft and service the vehicle t h a t 's built with goo d tim e s in mind, the Jeep original. With a tighterturningcircie. transm ission/ t r a n s fe r c a s e sk id p la te e n d fam ous Jeep 4-wheel drive, this baby is ready to play . . . anytime or anywhere. And the sam e rugged construction that ha s m ade the Jeep original fam ous a s an a'! pur­ pose workhorse m akes it en ideal recreational vehicle for *73. Com e on down end test drive th# Jeep original today. We've got on# that's just nght tor your kind of fun. Tgualieri 4-lettcr word on wheels. FI Jeep HOLCOMB-BEASLEY MOTORS 6918 BURNET RD. 454-6848 Sports Shorts Trevino Edges Deane Beman From Thft AwmHnted Prow ST. LO U IS —After lurking on* or two strokes behind for most of the tournament, I>ee Trevino finally overcame Deane Beman to win Hie Greater S t Louis Golf D assie Sunday. Trevino birdied the first two holes and held on to take the $150,000 by one tournament slrr>ke. The victory boosted bls so ison's winnings to $199,168. Trevino’s 72-hole total of 269 was Hie best this season. It matched the score set by Trevino and I>oo Polder in the Hartford Open. reoorded At one point In Sunday’s play, Trevino led bv four strokes. But he shot a three-over 38 on the bark nine to turn the rout bito a nerve-tester. ★ ★ ★ WACO—Sandra Haynip of Fort Worth shot a four-under-par 68 Sunday to win the $20,000 Quality F irst Golf Classic. shot Miss H a yule ha d rounds of 69- 69 68 in the three-day tournament. Going info Sunday's round she was one shot behind Marlene Hagge, who finished four strokes behind rn second place. Kathy Whitworth TI Sunday and finished third, five strokes behind Miss Haynie, First prize was worth $3 OOO. ♦ ★ took them a record-tv inc 14 pitchers to do It, b i* the Houston Astros and the I m Angeles Dodgers finally finished their ballgame Sunday. The Astras won. 15-11, HOUSTON—It A Cesar Cedeno’f two run double gparked a four-run rally in the seventh inning. I>ee M ay hit his 29th home rue for Houston and a *o I ad a single and a three -run double. O AKI.AND —T © Athletics' Tm Hunter claimed his 26th victory rtf the bc'v-b.i I sen .son Sunday, checking Texns en three hit* as the A ' s w< m 4-1. Hunter, who has lost seven, became f h Am cr,-an League pitcher to reach the 29- win plateau. tin The Oakland w In moved the team five games ahead of Chicago in the American r>vtgu« West. UT Soccer Shows Up By BUCK HARVEY Texan Staff Writer before the half, the ’Horns halfback from Nigeria. Don, as boomed in two quick goals, by his teammates call for must call) Don Mwokeji and Gentil M arin, and Texas was never threatened again. him, chipped In four goals with no assists to lead the second half barrage. p lay." The Texas soccer team has this certain hangup about playing soccer. They don’t perform too well until they show up. at the Saturday Freshman Field, the soccer team had to dig and scratch to put together a full team against Texas AAM until the missing starters arrived. But when they did, so did the goals, as Texas routed the Aggies the first Texas Sooner 8-1 In Leagne game for both teams. The Aggies did make it close in the waning moments, scoring on a goal by Henry Filsinger. and were only behind by one before half-time, 2-1, as a result of Texas* Johnny Vallejo’s goal and Mime Alvarez-Calderou’s blooping score. The Initial half d:d provide a temporary scare for the Texas coach, Dumitru Teodoresou, in his first game, one he was not pleased with. "O ur most Important problem w a s said Teodorescu, "W e were trying to passin r,” our work in four new pl vers, so we were shaky. I ’m not rn happy.* The Texas defense did virtually abut down the Aggies ss the back line, composed of Alfred Frier, Craig Litton, Oscar Martin ex- Garza and Paul F r a z e r a1! but made up the loss of lr. used star defensJveman Jon Hoi -n. But the real star O' the hot But then, with five minutes afternoon was Mwokej , the little were ragged," the second-year star said. "A A M also played grx>d defense, and that reflected in our Marin knocked in the eighth and last goal to ring up the 8-1 final score, which paired well with the ’Horns’ second team 15-0 vin e ry over the Aggie second team. And sn the Texas soccer team next f< rwr-d lo k to can Saturday's match against Hic* Freshman University the at Field, a game they should win again handily. " I didn't do what is expected of m e," said Mwokeji. " I ’m supposed to score five goals, and I only got four.” Aside from his personal failure, Mowokeji, who may have already filled the vacant gap left bv last year’s leading scorer Alfredo tote lly V a l l e j o , was not team's dissatisfied with bis problems. " It was our first game, so we That is, lf thev show up REPAIRS- E N G IN E & T R A N S M IS S IO N SPEC IA LIST BRAKES - TUNE-UPS — E LE C T R IC A L — C LU T C H N E W — REBUILT — USED PAINTS L 111 L U I *; n r Gent r \ f* i J S J J s l h s H I- P ER FO R M A N C E PARTS SERVICE GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE O p e n Sat. Sun. 477-6797 1621 East 6 e wants the big things in your life to be happy. CLAUDE D. JOHNSON, JR. ,76 74M i;3 2 Dob!, C , . ‘.r — B Southw estern Life U F I • HEALTH • A N N U I T I E S In -Ste p with the Ball T e x a n Staff P h o to by M IK E F L I IT T . Texas forward Bill Gonzalez (I) fights for pos- session of the ball during the H orn s' 8-1 v ic ­ tory over Texas AAM Saturday at Freshman t o r y o Field. College Football Austin Rugby Club Wins Three By LYNN PIXFORD T e x a n Staff W rilor Auriin rugby teams won three games front Son Antonio and from St. Edward’* University Saturday. Austin Golds outscored S t Edw ard’s 28-4 and Austin Blacks topjied San Antonio 9-3. Austin’s third team defeated by 16-14 a team composed of players from all the other squads. In the firs* game with the Golds, St. Ed va rd ’s scored thp first goal. Joe Davis tied the match for tho Golds. Tile firs* holt ended tied, but in the second pen od. tho Golds raced away from St. Edward's. Pom Ma chott* and Rusty Marchman each scored one goal. Luke Ashley, with lf) points tm two goals and one rom rrsiou, and Ii.ll Rider, warn six pants on one gool and one conversion, were the high sixxners for die Golds. In four rugby, genial rn «re points and conversions count two. are than kicks straight (nit from less Conversion automatic in American football. Tlie kirk must be at­ tempted the goal line from where the runner goes O’' cr for the goal. Saturday several goal* were attempted and missed from within five yards of the sideline. Austin Black* and San improved An­ team tonio's much played a close contest. Dan “ Wolfman” Hilliard led scoring for the Blacks with a th cee point field goal and conversion for five of the Black's nine points. Al Proctor scored die other four on a goal. j San Antonio scored only a first half field goal. Austin’s third te-un earned a dm mn tic victory after falling 14 the first half. points behind in (*n the last play of the game George Allen kicked the wanning two points on hi* second oon- \ *Tsion T o m Bubba Gook, Ijochndge Holgstra, and Pat Ho tither**! N eb raska S F Tpx as A & M T G p o rsla 24. B a y lo r 14 A rizona Stat© 33, Houston O klah o m a State 21, U T A r lin f t S M C 56, VV aka F o re s t Tax as T ach 45. U ta h 3 Tpitas A A I 20 T r in it y I I j i m i r 42, U T E P 28 ’0 rn 3 T'CT.A SS Pittsb u rg h TS W e s t V irg in ia 28. R ich m o n d 7 H o lv C ross 24 R u tg e rs 14 N a v y 13, W illia m & M a r y 9 Ka«» South th C a r Una 6 It G e o rg ia T e ch 84. S Flo rid a S ta te 37. M ia m i ( F l a i K e n tu c k y 25. V illa n o v a 7 North C a ro lin a 31, M a ry la n d 26 D avidson 18, V M I 14 V irg in ia 24. V irg in ia T ech Tennessee 28, P e n n St al© 21 '20 UNIVERSITY OMBUDSMAN Students or faculty members with University administrative or other University related problems should re n ta l Hect­ or De Leon, Ombudsman, Union Building 344, 471-3825. scored goals for the Austin subs. injuries. But several No one had to leave the games two- for minute timeouts w-ere called to allow shakenup players to clear their heads, hike a drink or stop their bleeding. injury If a player cannot continue his team must play shorthanded until half-time, or until the injured man feels he can make it back to the field. R e g u l a t i o n s bv Au * in a u t h o r i t i e s prevented the field o traditional rushing off both reams to drank away game effects. Kegs were not allowed on the field. Gibson's Discount Pharmacy Specials • B A R N E S - H IN D W E T T IN G S O L U T IO N ........ • S E B A N IL 16 oz...................... • P E R N O X Reg. ........ Si.89 ......... 3.50 4 oz........................ ......... 3.75 S A L E $1.19 2.29 2.78 SALE GOOD THRU 9/23/72 PR IC ES G O O D AT BOTH L O C A T IO N S 7301 BURNET RD. 2 I0 I W . BEN W H IT E M ississip p i S ta te A ' S tate 7 A lco rn A itM 9. < N orth Carolin-) St- L S U 31, P a c ific I: M ississip pi 34, M'-i O klah o m a 49 C olorado 5> Ohio State 2! M ic h ig a n 7. 7 M ich ig a n Ste In d ia n a 27, S M ia m i (OM O) Toledo 16, Es B o w lin e 'I r e T u lsa IO, W it W isco nsin 31, I? SALES SERVICE PARTS 25% OFF on first new Prescription with this coupon. OFFER EXPIRES 9-24-72 STU. LD. REQUIRED HOLCOMB-SEASLEY 6918 Burnet H i <34-6848 H o m e o f A M E R IC A ’S F A V O R IT E ROBUST BEEF BRISKET PLUMP CHICKEN, DELI­ AND RICH SMOKED SAU­ SAGE IS WHAT THESE CATELY SPICED AND COOKED BY MY SECRET HERE FOLKS WANTS: RECIPE . . . THAT’S WHAT THEY'RE AFTER! OL’ SMOKEY THE COLONEL Everybody responds to the smell of hickory and the savory flavor of Austin's finest barbeque cooked to perfection by OI' Smokeys Texas crew. “ Move over, Colonel, real tasty barbeque has come to town!” Everyone loves what tho Cc!or fT cooks . . . especially when is !l; ger lickin’ good” Kentucky F ic C ken. The regular or the crispy redoes blend herbs and spices to create a taste delight. “ Relax OI’ Smoke/. The world is big enough foi t/.o g eat tastes!” YOU CAN DECIDE! Cone mokes fabrics people live In. ON THE DRAG 2120 Guadalupe BIG 16” D IA M ET ER INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL BBSBBBES5t5S!SlS?52Si ?5 T‘ s a S S S B S S ? W BRING THIS COUPON AND RF CEIVE ONE PIZZA FREI WITH TK PURCHASE OF ONE OF EQL AL VALUE. ONE COUPON PER n r ASE VALID THI r- -- NA WE a d d r e s s ........................ P I Z Z A I N N M E N U Vim!! «*£.»• Id© 0W«<* Ob ............ .. ................................. .. ZI A CKI OU -1 o b i MUSHROOM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 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I S S I FU- I> A I U K R r t o lN O Ii I T E S F.acb W o rd (15 w ord m in im u m ) 05 % E a ch A dditional T im * .. .. $ Stud en t r a te one tim e . . S . . . * l at h ad d itio n al w o rd ........... $ 20 U a n se e u tlve F M te s IO w o rd 1* ...................................... $11 OO 15 w ord * ........................ ............$15.00 20 w ord* ...................................... $19.00 in c h I rot ...................................... SI ! IMI inch ................................. $77.00 I ro l. 3 col. inch ............ $105.00 4 col. inch $132.00 C Taxsilied D is p la y I co lum n x enc inch one tim e J 2.30 K a r h A d d itio n a l T im e .......... $ 2.70 (N o copy ch an e e for co n se cu tive issue r a t e s ) ................ OE VOLINK ''I HI DI l f I riday, 3:00 M ondav T ex a n p.m . T u e sd a v T r i in M onday, 11 OO a rn. W ednesday Tex in T uesd ay. 11:00 n m. T h u rsd a y Tex sn W ed n esd a y , l l OO n.m . F r id a y T e x a n T hursday, l l OO a m. “ In th e e v e n t of error* m a d e in an a d v e r tis e m e n t, im m e d ia te n o tice m u st lie l i v e n a* the pu blisher* are r esp o n sib le for only O N E in correct in se rtio n . All c la im * for ad ju stm en t* should be m a d e not later than 30 d a y * a fte r p u b lic a tio n .” • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T ES IS words or le i! tor 75c the firtt tim e, 5c each ad ditional word. Stu­ receipt dent must show A u d ito r”* Journalism end pay B'dg 107 from 8 a rn. to 4-30 p.m. M o n d ay through f r day. in advance in T O F c a s h P R I C E S paid for diam onds, old gold. C ap ito l D iam o nd Shop. 603 C o m niud o re P e r r y . 476-0178 STEREO CEN TER H A S T H E B E S T S T E R E O D E A L F O R Y O U . 4 7 6 - 6 7 3 3 203 Ea« F O H S A L E — Jo s e R a m ire z C la ssica l : G u ita r, m ad e in M a d rid . D rew , 478- f 2079 T R Y U S y o u 'll like us. A u stin 's m ost com plete, used book store*. Bookstall I, 6103 B i,m e t Road. 4..4-:)664. Bo ok stall l l C a p ita l P la z a , 454-1432. H O L Y M O LE Y S H A Z A M su rvived F M e n -mille ha* N s nun cr. W e are still a t 16mpnnent system * (S ' , _ w ith speed G a r r a r d tuner U ses 2 j o L L pieta 4 j chanki>r. speakers, dust co ver. A M - F M I F stages to Ja ck s record and p la y and t$109 951 each, cash ! tune I for tape deck 1 head phone ja c k term s or Fre ig h t, 6535 N orth L a m a r Open w e e kd ays 9 a rn.- in F M stereo, also e x tra U n claim e d U S E D S T I R E O equipm ent Thorens, 9 p.m. and Sat. 'J a .m . -6 p m. H a hOD, Ort don. T ho rens S, M. FT, Stan ton, M a ra n t* 250, 3300. 20. 454-0418 noon to nine. 7 d a ys a w e e k. 1968 V O L K S W A G E N Bus, sunroof, front spare, carpeted, beds. gas heater, I 3 A C R E S S E . of Bu d a. 20 m inutes w e ll cared for, $1,295, 474-1738. t” A i -tin. E x c e lle n t so il 50 a c re la k e ne a rb y. M obile fishin g h mes, horses and o ther pets w elcom e. E le c t r ic it y and w a ter. O w n e r w ill fln- an(lp * ’r o n ,y $38 00 p er m onth. 441- 1966 M U S T A N G . 289 c l., hi po, S h e lb y In rise B o d y like new. $1000.00 cash. 327- 0833. street and strip cam , K delbrook for garden 1969 A U S T IN A M E R I C A 4 speed A u to ­ m a Bi- T ran sm issio n , only 25.000 m iles, $400 OO 454 1560 afte r 6 Of) p in I C A N G E T for you wholesale, m ayb e. T r v me and see. Anything. S O U N D S X H A S I T ■ UC* 0 d raw- f or -j eight, I A nytim e. 441-4781. ‘ L H A SA - A P SO S. 477-6586 a fte r 6.00 p m '66 D O D G E C H A R G E R 318 V R. A ir, au to m a tic tach, loaded. N e w radials, brakes, shocks, etc. $900. 465-5064. of fine stereo equipm ent with full w a r ­ larg e st selection ran ty. C all C h u ck an ytim e. 926 1698 T H E R E S A 'S , 1122 R e d R iv e r. P ic tu re fram es, oil paintings, ch a u s, bottles, copper, desks, rugs, cups, saucers. 6535 ' 9 p.m. B t O Y C l tuned boys rn' D e ra il! f w'eek a Sp* clali Al F ally a ■rubied and A ll strength IO speed 'd els' W e im a n n brake; ut 399 50 F re e tune up one tor p urch ase ! Kasson B ic y c le * y. 1007 South L a m a r. 4 44-6441. M U S T $3,945 .AC R I F C E 1972 D atsun 240Z ii w a rra n ty . B e a u tifu l, AC. 7 4167 a fte r 6 p.m. •■"-j C O T H R O N ’S BIKE SHOP P a c o h S .. p e r C o u r s e s , G r a n d P r : 'S , R e c o r d s Ord S p o r t s a n d ^sim plex A t a , a 2 0 8 S ar:(^ 104 5 In s 9 t o 25 in c h f r a m e s’zes. 5 0 9 R io G r a n T o 4 7 8 - 2 7 0 7 . Smqer zig-zag fo c k - never been used. These mach -et bz fo r z g zag, button- (7. never been used. These m ach > e! have built in centro : botai, blind ie w : g m er - et. | monogramming, & much more. fan cy patterns, I $49.95 , -ash or term !. Unclaim ed Fraiaht, 6535 Lamar. O p en weekday 9 a m. - q ortj, lUtche*, 1972 Y E G A G T d ark brown w ith w h ite racin g stripe, full pow er w id e : i res, $2,600. 477-9066 and a ir, - • c *. o 7 p m . end hat. V a.m. - 6 p.m. , B U I L D E R S . I have a '67 — -------- — ---- No f> ut end M a k e T Y P E W R I T E R O lym p ia, portable, 13 c a rria g e , with ease in excellent S A V E $60.DD B ra n d n e w F is h e r 201 re c e iv e r A M - F M , $189.00 A lso speak- D ra c in g b ic y c le new. S' 10 r -■< — - $80 C all G reg. 67 C A P R I C E , AC, P S . P B , In —— — ............. very clean, c a ll 452-0534 ask condition. $85 00, 477-3406. era a va ilab le, r a il Jo h n. 474-5484. •---------------------- —----------------- - hardtop, for K ip . 5te-eo . Maqnovox 6 , t. A M - FM raci o, excellent condition, $150.00. Canon zoom-tan! 100-200 M M 1:5.6 with ft. c o n ic 'ET- '» H IK I . 3 months old. Ex- ’67 G R A N D P R I X . Cheap. 477-4833 n t condition. 926-7528 aft- r 6 p m . N I K D N I Mi (A T O M IC E T N . 60mm, ?/2 N ik kor. L ik e new. L is t $460. S e ll $300 and ski equipm ent $1,850. 327-2094 Fib e rg la ss , E V I N R U D E S p o rt 16 boat and tra ile r. ca^> n«-v ll5ecL $ I2C.00. Oak Inboard-outboard, safety co ffee tob * J end f a b le r le t, $60.00. Mink fur Hole, neve- worn, appraised r e ’ “ ' sn offer. 451-2325. 71 V E G A H A T C H B A C K . L im e green, I $700.00, will tell $150 00 or best offer. A M P F X 145'.A tape deck Auto-re ve rse a'.do-threading. l i s t $340, A sking $200 AC, radio, 4-speed, m ake o ffe r! 476- 8007 453-5111 afte r 5 p m. I 976 O '39 sr best offer C a ll 451 2325. test first $250 take* it. Ph o n e 444-5113. S U Z U K I 250X-6 e x ce lle n t condition. In­ cludes luggage rack. ow ner s m anual, new batt. i t , $325 C a ll 327 2308. S T E R E O i H P , fiy n a c o S C A 35, n e v e r used, $12-5 o r best offer, ca ll 477 7716. 1966 F O R D G A L A X ! E , pow er r e ' 476 4714 574 a fte r steering, ondition, p rn. H ^ m r d A& Y e c 8t t o « r , S>.Cn{n m(^ ra n ty. Lots of accesso ries All for $265. 1 C O M P O N PU T S A I F- IN F IN IT Y 2000A”S 598 af7,e r 6 P m . M -W -F ask fo r F m s y j fro u b ad o r tum to l * A D V E N T 20! Dolby r e 'order, M C ' N O S H C 28 _ 1 csisett# O N E A M - F M PHT L C O a m p lifie r 150W. I Preamp M C N'T O S M 2505 Pow er am I N E A R E M P IR E P H A S E 400, 1 (iS C r ard.utu I?L’-lb ,e ’ ______________ ... ers. $200 w ith album s 8364211 1968 M G B - G T good condition yellow v Mi b lack 'leather In te rio r $1500. 477- ... 3102 before 8 OO a m . a fte r 3 OO p m . 1962 C H E V Y , runs, has 1972 plates 8P eak- d ‘ tar. A l equipm ent 'es! than 9 months I o a. Ca*' O a r , « f**r 6 at 44' 4828. , 1967 A U S T IN H E A L Y 8000 co n vertib le, condition, best o ffer W e e k d a y s _ , , , 1969 C H E V R O D IC new paint and tire*. M a y need some w o rk $75 00 A fter 477-6481 ext 63 even.np* 893 6470 tic $995. C al! 476- 8:00 p m . 465-7586 U94, a fte r 9 p m B A U E R C-2 Sup* r 8mm , 6X 1 au to m atic zoom S in g le ti im e N e w $200, now j- ■ - , Tom 454-1179 M U S T S F I . L 1970 Bo n n e ville 650 B ra n d 1971 V E G A Station W agon. E x ce lle n t ______________ 1970 G R E E N N O R T O N 750 Com m ando. Rood condition, new b attery, 7,500 condition, air, pow er sle e rin g radio, m iles C all 282-0.,34. luggage ra c k $1,995. C all 478 7946. C O T H R O N 'S B I K E S H O P has the new S u p er Sound. F re o n horn for b icycles _ ~ ~ r _ , _ R O B E R T S 770X re co rd e r 4-track, 2 , channel classifie d heads W ill dub. condition $180 00. 1007B Eason, . new engine looks now $1200: 1956 509 R io G rande. 478-2707. Austin. W illis station wagon. 350 V-8, 4-WD, ex- 1 --- - - c e ile r t > : ” • U - >?• ,1 is : _ A — 1970 H S A 650cc, dual ca rb u rato r*. 9000 P A S Y S T E M . B o t a n 50 W a tt a m p with '-‘U*0 sp eaker boxes. $lo0 441- m iles, good running condition. C a ll U P R I G H T P IA N O m u t sell Vo se and j 441-1275 ask for D ale 5379 nights. F O R S A I L 1972 R a r a I Ie. B e a m y . 12 1966 OPE!, Sp o rt Coupe C le an , day sane, T r a ile r and spare $725 472 1239 0 v p r on? y e a r sloop-rigged, fiberg lass foot, . on j 111'® and 96,4 S C O U T 4 W D m e c h a n ic a lly ex ce lle n t 19* L ig h tn in g .Sailboat Good condition, co m p le te ly equipped, tra ile r IO’ e le c tric fishing boat, range 90 m ile*. Must sell all best o ffer 477-0849. 5379 nights Bo b , T W O C Y C L E helm et* and v iso r*. $25 I tor both. One m edium , one sm all. C all 385-4740 afte r 5 p rn. 1971 O P E ! 1900 2 door sedan, auto­ take up p a y ­ transm ission, m a ’ o ment*. 263-2327. N IK O N F T N head. F-levei head, type lcn^hood, focusing screens. fl 4 lens $180.00. 452-5582. A & B 50mm 61 V W C A M P E R , wood paneling, tent, 20 gallon w a te r tank, sunroof, leo box, 67 engine. $550. 477-7828 r ’ L Y M A N , wooden hull boat and 60 ITT’ Skiis, rope. Johnson . two^ . . re a l good gas tanks, shape ladder, j cartridge. $59.95 each while they r I be,$' du,+ cov®C and 5hur» M a g n e tic lait. , r , r . u , . .......................... U n c a p p ed Freight, 6535 North Lamer. ,, „ evenings. $6./) 453-6414 | fan. W o rld ^ a m o ji BSR turntable*. O n ly ! 7 . . turntable! come com plete with j cl , Fheie , „ . m . Sons of Boston, d ark wood, keys, b eautiful 477 - Ai'* n. evenings best. keep tryin g . tone, $275 00. Ivo ry Lew is, 1971 5 EXC 1972 1 H A m o to rc y cle lTBcc. $400 OO. t cond Ai on. (h ie owner, must „5n. O' • v ’ l r E x ce lle n t » -/int, firm -■ built engine t-W-D. with AUO, E x 253 ask for Doug. R E F R I G E R A T O R 4 5 c Ch . 4 y e ar, W a rra n ty , $85 foot Phil- E x ce lle n t condition, 444-4991. '62 R A M B L E R Statio n w agon V-6 cy Under engine good condition, 471-5005 cushions -------- afte r fo r p.m . rn 1500 home $1-9 w ill X040 I fie f F O R P e r I L E . G ir ls 21” IO t condition, $95 OO ■ycle Sport convert . air. s t e n o ! Robbins Ck .■’•! (5 beds . 8>50' 1DFAL F O R S T U D E N T H iv e y 2 roommate* payin-i $60 and own t >n approximate y 12 month!. 3 tra er ha! I aa- -': - ce ra te r $!0/m onth 4.9 cu bic foot Now! A month o p t on to buy. " N o t one c f those ' t, r tty rnr-i, " ■ C o m r TV $30/morth f i& W TV $ 15/month * Stereo W / A M / F M $15 month - e'«o 8 track $20/month. W e tell ail Pa d s of light* and posters. G ; tr fo r every c r cac'O'- 8 R ran ds Stereos. I ’V s R a d io * Com e in & look - free pens W O R L D O F S T A IN L E S S L IG H T S & S O U N D S 3004 G u ad alu p e 476-2267 le-ving machines with 3 Ne// Zig-Zag factory q ara rtee . Nattone '/ ad- OY verti.'-d br«-d !o ’d for $39.95 to bo cast or terms These machines may be ir-x-- ’(-a at U n claim ed Freight, 6535 North Lamer, W e e k d a y s 9 a.re, 9 p.rn • Saturday* 9 a.rn -6 p m . ^ S T E R E O S H O P ~ Discounts on stereo And photo equipment. Sony, FEAC, Scott, i Nikon, Canon, Beseler and many others. 454-6513. TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 Discount p rice! Joint. G u ita r!, amps, strings, tamborines, picks, kazoo* and mere. in a high c ass M U SIC MART ' D'ano-Organ M a rt) U p p e r level — H H • -J M al! O N L Y O N E LEFT Two bedroom , two bath luxury ap art ment ccntod across the street from the campus —- all amen ’ ’es — maid ser­ vice — ell b !s paid — from $200. 29 IO R e d R i v e r 4 7 6 - 5 6 3 I P I E D R A D E L S O L. The finest apt. d ec­ or in N orth w est A ustin. E v e ry ' ex tra to m a k e student livin g a pleasure. 5403 Je f f D a v is . 453-2201 — - — A p a r t m e n t s , F ur i vi. luxurious 14 unit fo r SHOO I C a sa R o sa, 4312 D u va l One bedroom Q U IE T . S P A C IO U S , T H E D O U , H O U S E . 11 5140 plus e le c tricity. 453-2178. 345-1322. W A L K T O C A M P U S . T w o bedroom. 1 bath fu rnish ed ap artm ents, ca rp e te d . lt-in kitchens. CA-CH, pool, p riv a te polios and balconies, all b ills paid. 1008 W e st 251' 178-5592 or 476-4655. M a n o r R oad-Sw eenev Lone. T re m e n don* closets. B ra n d n e ” . 454-4691 townhouses, b A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . ST. C H A R LES and G E O R G E T O W N S Q U A R E APARTM ENTS $ 1 2 2 . 0 0 Townhouses, I & 2 bedroom apartment,. Close to schools and shopping confers Furnished or Unfurnished *320 -4330 Bi 452-779 7 I Creek Road 453-4959 S m a !l c 5 posit. EL C O R T E ? and EL PA SA D O S I 2 2 .0 0 I & 2 bedroom apartment Furnished and Unfurnished Close to Highland Mall and IH 35. Students welcome. I 101 and 05 Clayton L ane 453 7914 sma'l deposit LA FO N T A N A $ 119.00 One and two bedroom . Furnished & Unfurnished Close to Hancock and Capital Fla a Shopping centers, Easy access to !H 35. Students and families welcome. 1220 and 1230 East 381A Street sma de d c It 454-6738 W ILLO W CREEK HILLS ALL BILLS PA'D BR FURN — $165 un BR FURN — $205 up Shuti!e Bus Route Dishwashers — 2 I arqe Pools Travis Security Guards N ightly - - C !ub Room — M O V E IN T O D A Y 1901 Willow Creek 444 O D IO .J B R O A D M O O R Now Leasinq for Fall to University Students. Finest In student living. Ex tra s u n lim ite d such as G o r m e t k it; P a tio s o r b a lc o n ie s , rell- ' b r e a k f a s t nooks, so m e w e t b a rs, 3 DOo's, a n d 3 d u b ro o m s. ^ , < ^ r \r \ n n C A A P X i a /"'N /'"'N P ) Come See US at I 200 B R O A D M O O R or call at 454-3885 TANGLEWOOD EAST APARTMENTS • Low Fall Rates • 1 BR FURN — $ 133.25 2 BR FURN — $169.00 Luxury Fully Carpeted Apartments in friendly complex — l arge Pool — W ater & Gas pa! i by owner. 2604 Manor Road 477-1064 TANGLEWOOD NORTH APARTMENTS • Fantastic Fall leases • 1 BR FURN — $138.25 2 BR FURN — $165.00 FuMy carpeted — Dishwasher — 2 Lwge Pools — VVa’er, Gas & A ir Cond boning pa! i by owner. 1020 East 45th St. 452-0060 SEPTEM BER RENT FREE ALL N EW XXIV FLATS 1515 Palma Plaza at West Lynn I blk off Enfield 2 BED RO O M - EFFIC IEN C IES $225.00 $ 115.00 ihirttlo bus Cable TV plus electricity -ully equipped kitchens Fu p p e c khinc Contemporary chrome & glass furnishings A V A I L A B L E O C T . I, quiet larg e I bed­ room ap artm ent, $130 plus bills. M a r ­ ried couples only. 1715 E n fie ld R oad. 477-1303. THE BLACKSTONE $ 6 4 .5 0 / m o n t h A partm en t living M/j block from Campus Individ .V ap plican ts matched with com patible roommates 2910 Red R iver 476-5631 A P a r a g o n P r o p e r t y R E A S O N A B L E R EN T L A R I, ! S T U D IO A P A R T M E N T S THE BRITTANY 300 T cin crest 465 0456 THE FRENCH C O LO N Y 454-9724 5506 G ro ve r N E W M A N H A L L W O M E N S RESID EN C E Sing’es, Doubles, Quadruples Across from Campus Guadalupe at 2 I st A ir conditioned, carpeted, maid service, goad food 476-0669 Ju t North of 27th & Guadalupe tyaAtJu; M B A T yping, M u ltilith in g , B in d in g The Complete, Processional FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailored students fie mg theses and dissociations. the needs of U n iv e rs ity Sp ■ i d keyboard equipm ent (an gun * -, seirnee, aud engineer* Ph o ne G R 2-3210 and G R 2 7677 2707 H em p hill P a r k M F N O R W O M E N -- AC. single rind double rooms. T w o blocks cam pus. 476-1712, M rs. L y le . M A R J O R I E A D E L A F I E L D , I B M Se- le ctric ii, fast aeourate. 25 y e a rs ex- M a s te r B a n k A m e rie a rd , perien< e C harge. 442-7008. W E RENT AUSTIN Your time is valuable Our services free P A R A G O N PROPERTIES 472-4171 SINGLES & DOUBLES Reasonable rates, good food Walking distance to campus UNIVERSITY HOUSE 2710 N u e c e s 477-8272 V A C A N C IE S F O R M A L E and fem ale residents R am sh o rn Co-op Room and B o ard $h>4 pet sem ester. 710 W e st 21st. 478 OSM:. C O - E D CO-OP has openings for men and w om en for F a ll T h e Hom estead, I JUKI R io G rande. 47* 1.T90 B d b M s a i l ’W l a u r a " B O D O U R " 4 78 S I 13 (C l >.se to U T ) ''V A ? B a r t;7 I r typ • q rj a!! your Univ* it/ flo rin re: -its etc. Sr b ird aq. Th/ C R O C K ETT f a s t x e r o x 4000 M U H : rU E MD '- 3 453-7987 553C B met P sci SPANISH VILLA NORTH The ultimate in student living. Located m a r H ig hlan d M a il and tile ne// N.E. S .j I.' *• , e/tras. Inc . c i s: J carf et, f -ap -ice, gorm et k h a ” d more. C a l on us at 909 Rein!! or 454-9863. TFXAN DORM 1905 - 1907 Nut ' • s I-’all, Sp ring Sem esters, $46 50 D a ily in aid -el viui*. c e n tra l a p letely remodeled Also ava l single rooms, parking, re frig erato r, plates T w o blocks from cam pu s Ct RESIDENT M A N A G E R S 478 5 abl per t T Y P I S T E X P E R T T h e s e s . S e le ctrle . report*, briefs, professional reports. Prin tin g , binding. Mrs. T I B M B c E X C K U E N T e \ j h i g h l y 'T j Dissertations, T reports, etc T F hot i ii i rlbbi n typ e w rite r 113 Dissertations, th Bridle Path. L 'R K T A R Y I Y P I ST, ■•nu, d typing in s o s , professional i 'r b o * E\» 'lit h e sytnliols 478 0762 and report* 2507 inc B ra d y , 47.' 4715. LEASING N O W ! S I N G L E and double room. K u ch en, AC. m aid 2111 R io G rande, 477-3671; 202 W e s ’ 31-st, 472-2368 ROY W . HOLLEY: P O N C E DE LEO N • Sir king I & 2 bedroom apts. • Daz' rq decor • All the ex Has • A p r • -os b j H ' W ' W $ I 69.50, al! b : s pa d. 476-5613 2207 Leon St. 472-8253 SINGLES & DOUBLES Revon ab '0 • ue' good food W d k Y g d ! ’ * a " r e t o c a m p u s UNIVERSITY HOUSE 27 i0 Nueces 477-8272 O N L Y $129.50 LA R G E 2 BED RO O M N EA R D O W N TOV/N EAT FAMILY STY; E *' d a * ;S 1 at c op ’ „ t» ' ’ - i pper $23 $30 ’ "" & lunch c y $50 it Carpeted, poo!. A/C. wood pe^ -g, , IN T E R C O O P E R A T I V E C O U N C IL I | 910 VV. C !*orf si® VV. 23rd 476-1967 u sp * 44 5511 4 a ? 5°35 R O O M E R . W E S T 25th Stree t P r lv n 'e room with AC, bills paid $7.Vmonth ' PRINTER 476-3018 Typesr-c --jj, T r i ne. Printing. Bin d in g J j H North C r 27th Sr G u ade .n e 7/\o/ixJa Jnnjvvuujs M B A Tvidng, M u ltilith in g , Bind in g T h e C o m p e r e P 'o t e Yo-fl-’ F U L L T ’ M E T r - g S e r v ! e to ta . red ti e n>-ed* of U n iv e rs ity students. S p e cia l keyboard equipm ent or lam • :;/*. « ■ nee. and engineer* ng theses and d!*sertat1on». L A R G E trimly, E F F I C I E N C Y $11!' OO plus clee- C all Ann e r N orm an. 4 7 k inst. 476-6785. pool, A /C, carpet, p aneling, j --- ----------- no pets. H u ntington V illa , 16th. A A ve A. C all 454-8903 F E M A L E R O O M E R - 2 room * with kitchen p rivile d e e s $6.r>/rnonth N* >r sti ittte C a ll P a t 442-1664, 9 a rn -6 p m Ph o ne G R 2 32to and G R * '871 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk Lea Aq Now! THE PEPPER TREE $169.50 — bilk paid ® Outstanding color schemes and furnish -q$ - a r d r i- • ■ iotDoint appi'ances throughout • 304 E a s t 34'h — P.T. I 408 W e s t 37th — P.T. # 2 s p i t a 4^7 8920 472-6253 EL PATI O ~A PA R T M EN TS 2 8 10 * *> ( /ranee r’/ee gas » ••- • f c ■ a r d D ' - a' e f, F " spacious, pool, near UT. ty *(!/ ' a"d eat 0 ' ad and laundry. O n thutfla bu* 2 bedroom , 2 bath M a n a g e r A ru . 102 - $?nC 476 4095 "LIVE EETTER FOR LESS" W e /e red cad o ' ra’ e i and mr >• - 01 r to ciiiiie ' So ind» Im doss : i e ? C A L L AN D SEE THE CASTILIAN 2-. - Son A ntonio 478 '- S II Leaning for G 'l POSADA DEL NORTE 7200 DUVAL 1 bedroom apartme-4, from $'40 2 bedroom apartment! from $185 452-2334 454-1154 RENT FREE FOR SEPT. 2 I " if /oms, 2 baths, pool, » lid. L A F IE S T A 400 East 30th 477-1800 G O R G E O U S H E W one bedrcom cicer In U T area $169 50 ail hill* paid IMT470, 472-2518, 477-8930 to T W O G I R U S D E S I R E ’ wo ru o m n v itf s rn ap a rt­ m ent R ent $4800 per m onth 2811 S a la ­ do 476-0962. 1 ipy a h ge 4 bedr< ; A p a r t m e n t s , U n f . W H Y PAY RENT? VO ' 0*11 I na ' ■ 1 toe'' ••• rs. * ’ n r ' V ’ r V Ct. ... •- ■ *■ * j a * » TERREL L-LYN C H ENTERPRISES 454 6741 REA G A N SQ UARE TO W N H O U SES -st, 2 rand Ct b a d y 7111 Br k * 4A9I T u t o r i n g — SUSAN'S TYPING SERVICE Pa'iona' - pro (* ii'o n * J LAST M IN U T E AN D O V E R N IG H T T Y PIN G A V A IL ABLE lr e ia i b ’ a ” ! d:n a *t# ’ 'on*, « rd • * t * 'i i e 4* >n, symbol*. r-y L O G A " LD IN D O B IE C r ” cl Le / 4 Re rn 3 L R 4 4 4423 A T T E N T IO N U N IV E R S IT Y S T U D E N T S c a l l A L L IE D S E C R E T A R IA L S E R V IC E S 444 6SS8 type * 2 min. r pc. Setae •I A pa br dg« M A T H Business, lib eral art*, edu- cation m a lu rs cur sp*'la ity . perlen< cd ■ ertlfled reasonable. M a th en amic* 452 1327 —............. E X P E R T T U T O R IN G teacher. in organic chemistry. and Introductory ! political science, history’, Russian. Call 441-2170 after ti OO p.m. Ex- j taboos misc, J -.rm> *• B E A U T I F U ! T V F I N G those*. dG*an. legal se cretary. Very Mrs Anti > o j S T A R K T Y P IN G — Experienced these* '.seriation*. P R s etc Printing anri ter hnlcal. Ct- irlene 1 Binding Spa Uty Shirk. 453-521! F A ST . P R O F E S S IO N A L w k on all University r >pers In Portuguese and Spanish with Seleetric typewriter *41- 6559. J u e.t North of 27*’ C .adal rd L o s t & F o u n d LO ST M E D IU M S IZ E D dog vs11ti -tralght, black and white hair ward. No question 472*9625 after ling, Re ■ IM) In Hast Austin, stubby L O SI' TA N and white Border < >llle mix tail, black rimmed yellow eyes, tag no. 533. R e ­ ward. 476-1402. LO ST M A L E black A white spaniel mix, 2 weeks age. chain with circle on neck Reward 478-5285 W e ml** him IV JST B L A t K german shepard on campus Thursday, answers to Nahunl Tj ping, Multilithing, Binding The C o m p ile Profe'-'lonal FULL-TIME Typ og SorvJca 2 B E J ’ROOM - pow shag, $175 00, all hills paid, STA T T U T O R IN G All bicone** math I bath, shuttle, pool, — i 465-0764. O R E preparation. 451-4557, **ty 444 B R A N D NF:W L A R G E one bedroom Reward offered Call 472-9644, 476-1084 apartments. $169 50 A B P 453-8470 or 477 8920. H A M L E T - bus route Now on new N E Shuttle geared fo r students. HO R e ln li. 452-3202 LO ST I W A L L E T . No money! Need -indent*. Sr-- ID/pictures If found please turn lr fpr langoagt tailored to the needs of University ’ k* yaonrd equipment science and engineer* to Lost/Found or call Eleanor Mi-Kin- j big theses and dissertations LLy: J G U 4420:___________________________________Phone G R 2-3210 and GI I R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k REA G A N SQ UARE TO W N H O U SES Northeast, 2— I'/ j 71 I I G ran d Canyon Pue' p' /ate back yard. Brick fireplace-. U : ! b e!. 454-4691 IDEAL FOR STUDENT Hove only 2 roommates, paying $60 and owti tigs In apprcximntety 12 months 3 bedrooms '3 beds) 8x50’ trailer has 8x16 kitchen w itii 10x16’ cabana living room ready to live in. A-l condition, clean Everyth in g goes $2,500 cash. Going ov erseas Sept. 25. 2705 Hoeke Lane 385-0115 F o r R e n t REFRIGERATORS Dorm sa* or for Apt. Spec:al rates to st idents. W e a so re "4 TVs ste eps AC . Dm .efy & Pick p 9 9 G , v8 A L P IN E RENTALS a try and we both be happy 204 E. 53rd 4 ^ ? - 19 2 6 1 r. rn CAPITOL C A M ER A RENTS Cameras - Projectors - Lighting Calculators too! # 1 4 Dobie Mall 476-3581 D u p l e x e s , F u r n . T y p i n g S E R V I G E V I It G I M A S i H N E I D E R T Y P I N G ar.a Un* printing binding. d erg ra ii ult* 1515 Koenig La n e Telephone 465--7205 U N I V E R S I T Y S T U D E N T S I d ay m-o- vice, f ti st, acei ii etc, guaranteed w o rk G rad uate lypin- on all >our typing needs 444-65.'#. C A L L F O R H E L P Prof* -dona! ty p is t: expert, exacting, expedient, econom i­ cal. e cle ctic e l c In c D H M S e le c tn c ( all 4.ii 10,58 afte r 6 carbon ribtK>n». , W O O D S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E , in y e a r* experience Law , thesis. d Usertatlona, I etc r’r ’’ ;i,rr bindings 46S4090 I Phono 892-0727 L A S T M I N U T E & • verntgbt A p in g 5001 S u n se t' T r a il A rth u r L a n e T e rm pa p. \ ars, these*, dissertations, letters M a * I te r C h arg e Honored. or 4 12 8545 Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX D U PLIC A T O R S 476-7581 118 Ne Let 45? 0908 476 9472 2 B E D R O O M 4012B Le w is Lun e A /C B O B B Y E D E L A F IE L D , I R M .Sele cto r -- b/ll, $j35.00. ca ll 454-6448, a fte r 5 30 | pica /elite. 25 y e a rs exp erien ce 442- P-m. 7184. H e l p W a n t e d M i s c e l l a n e o u s H e l p W a n t e d W A ITRESSES & HOSTESSES Who lilt® to make good money come by the 6006 Norm Lamar M y -O -M y Club D A N C E R S Will average $200 Weekly 6006 North Lamar My-O-My Club Unusual opportunity for m ature, flexi­ ble, m arried couple, desirous of a learning experience working part tim e with 8 adolescents in a residential set­ ting Room and board provided while on duty In addition to salary Requires one day a week and 2 weekends per m onth. Contact Th® Settlement Club Homa 830 2150. betw een 9 - 5 p m . THE SECO ND STORY 2708 South Lamar ti hiring 3 dancer waitre s s this week. Best of work:ng conditions, friendly atmosphere. Apply between 12 noon & 6 p.m. WANTED EX PER IEN C ED cook dorm itory. Call 478-2185 ; 476-1862. for DANCERS WANTED. Apply Replay, I 1516 Guadalupe 12:00 to S OO dally MASTER VALET LAUNDRY. Manor Road. Student for part time delivery, hours between 2 & 5, five days a week. 27041 FOR HIRE • m ale - good driving r e o to work. lo u r s a v a ila b le. ord, dependable, wining full-time 8art-tim e A I or over, 478-6439. PART TIM E Bel! flowers. Earn K%, ('all 451-1516. Manday-Thursday be f re tv n. Should be $1 50-$2 50 an bour R E S P O N S IB L E warm -hearted baby­ s itte r with references for tw o am a ll In Tarrytown, weekdays or Bldren S-tn. 478 5067. MOONLIGHTERS N E 1 JI JED P o sitio n s available for akin* I and non drilled workers H sr* are 6 p rn. to IO f.m ., Monday thru Friday. 7 » n m .- ;80 p rn. on Saturday No experience a ssistan ce) Bailab le. C all B ill G a lla g h er c o lle c t . tween 7:30 a.m -4 to p.rn at 272-5503, I a fte r 4 TO call coli* « at El gin-B i lier Brl- k a ccessa ry . Tranaportad'in 'Cb 575. ( ’ An Equal Opportunity Em ployer THINK ABO UT IT Working 4 hours In a n ice air-condi­ tioned office. Doing what you like best, talking to people on the telephone, and getting paid it. 5 days, parking, w ill train, $1.75 to $2.00 an hour, plus $10 00 bonus Wear shorts or pants to work. Call for interview today. for 465-7671. LARGE FINANCIAL FIRM Interview­ ing men 21 or above for full or part tim e work leading to career and m an­ agem ent. Contact Itandy Erwin, 478- 7341. S e r v i c e s XERO X COPIES 4c EACH single c o p y rate reductions 6c each Quality copies on plain bond paper, G IN N Y 'S C O P Y IN G SERV IC E 31 -A DOBIE MALL 2nd LEVEL, DOBIE CENTER 476-9171 or 452-8428 N ow open Mon.-Thurs, nights Fri.-Sat. 'til 5. 'Hi 8 HAIR SHAPING, layer cuts, shag cuts, individual spilt ends. singeing for ■lashes Barbara 454-8831 - 345-8000. PIANO LESSONS. Children and adults and popular. Convenient Classical North /Central. 454-2998 after 2. ★ NEED TA LEN T ★ Caf! Alamo Production* 432-0983 or w rits 1534 B a n d e r s R o a d San A n to n io , T*. Top b a n d s, C o u n t r y Rock $ Pep. AU b g names. OFFSET PRINTING Very low prices Sc Very fast service Zuni NELSON S GIFTS; com plete selection Indian Jew elry’ African and M exican Imports. 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. PARKING BY MONTH. $12.50. 2418 San Antonio, one block from Campus. 476-3720. EARN $ V W EEK LY Blood pla sm a d o n o rs n e e d e d . C a s h p a id a t t e n d a n c e . for O p e n 8 a.rn.-3 p.m. Tues., Thurs., Fri., & Sa t. O p e n 12 noon -7 p.m . W e d . services. Physician in AUSTIN B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S . INC ., 409 W e s t 6th. 477-3735. S K Y D I V E ! Austin Parachute Center For in fo r m a ti o n p ’a a s a call 272-5711 anytim e LEARN TO PLAY guitar, beginner, advanced. Drew Thomason, 478-7331, 478-2079. TRAVIS CO UN TRY STABLES INC. Horses rented boarded and told. Miles of scenic riding trails. W eriern riding lesson*. Appaloosa *tud service. O ff 290 West on Boston Ln. Open daily year round. 892-2171 E X I S T I N G D IS C O U N T R econ! business. « od v o l u m - e x c e l l e n t location a v a i l ­ able for purchase, 477-3654. F R E E P U P P Y . Dick. the m anager, says no dog* Wormed, affectionate •m all fem ale. 476-8189. 4i6-f>',36. through SAILBOAT FUN! Rent bos rd bo a ti accom m odating e ig h t P rofessional sale*, lessons, store. shop, marina Marsh Yacht*. By Mans- Held D am , 266-1150. k c l boa ta R o o m m a t e s STRAIGHT FEM ALE two to luxury a p artm en t $75 per share bed roo n month. 454-1835 after * 30 C o c k t a i l W AITRESS Mu«t be IL :th Lamar, Apply after * p m 517 F A ustin B ow l-O -R am v EXPRESS PRESS 504 W est 24th 472-2645 THIRD f e m a l e to a h a r o t e bedroom 1/3 Im m ediately. apartment $58.33 /m onth, plus A vailable electricity. Phone 417-2700. ^ A R T TIME 8 evenings. 2 Sat mini- I mum Apply todsy only a ’ I un p in. l.nr. ;>r No mr 8 OO P rn.. SIO* J >rth SOSA. 0 , 9 *y pr in t ead’ en re iii** ab ou t o' >pes ! end boo - " V I , pocars FEM AI.E N E E D E D to share spacious 2 bedroom apartm ent $85 OO/month shuttle bus, dishwasher. 2 At baths After 5 OO, 478 f o il. p o -I Student with o w n transportation to help graduate student w'-A and faculty husband tars c n re o f ’heir house and kids any 2-3 a* from 2:30-6:30. T n * ary an benefit*. - or% fringe MENTAL PATIENTS liberation pro­ j e c t Been hurt by "Psychotherapy’* anil v, »h to speak out? Call Sherry 471 7569, find TYPEW RUTER REFAI RS - Cleaning lubrication. Independent service man No rip-off p rices. Cali day or evenings. 845-1297. Phone 454 3867 eve' as. LADY to work In surplus store. { '©ricing at your cr.nvenlc-.ee, 886- •603 N. Interregional 4 4 4 - 3 4 2 6 ! Don't be a blue bad— t y at the NEW ! B RD S NEST AIRPORT V. era paved r ow ays, P A A approved • A t Va ■ g, FAA instructor a-d Ion* rate*. » I cteer you up, 7 rr es • ait on 2 9 - eft at Manor intamactioa and f o ' W Sign*. 272 £337. c a ' i t WE CAN PLACE m ale or tarnal* arith room m ates. Two bedroom, two bath luxury units $61.50 per person, al! bills paid. Call 472-C4V) or 476-2633. TWO GIRT/* N E E D two gi rls as "room­ m ate*. Share bills In huge 4 bedroom a p a rtm en t 2*11 Salado. $48 90 each. 476-0962. MALE GRAD N E E D S room rn ate to -a 2-2 apartm ent near cam pus. a? Sh itll* SWI West 28th. No. 206, NL v;:> FII MALE ROOMMATE to shake sm all apartment apartm ent Have now b t w line to reiocta. 444 7618. H o u s e s , F u r n . EXPERT Sir AIN a. Wedding gowns. for­ m als. pant Bult*, dresses, alteration*. 448 3109. SH I RE HOI’SE for on# or two people Share billa. 451-3990. €411 MedTcai Parkw ay, Daycare & Educator*! Program for children age* 2 thru 5 yea's 7; I ’ e - to 5 :45 et rn. H ot mea s d a ’ y Near UT First English & Lutheran Church l i t h sad WVK* I FROM ROCK it COUNTRY TO HU IXGI DANCE MUSIC THE BARONS AGENCY OF HOUSTON BOX 1136, BELLAIRE, TX. 77401. (713) 666-0800 H - M ol I NOW TAKTNcT application* ftw day or *T*r!n* part tim e '-rip. ; , Wed.. Tbunk, FrL 3 :0 p rn., K or fem ale Contact I>; k Spiller. $918 North Lamar, MECHANIC~HEIJ*ER — port tim# ev 517 anlas;*. Austin Bowl-O- Kama, South Lamar. CTR! .3 WANTED for telethon# work. I? CO par houri alter hour* flexible m in in g . Call *78-7341 day or night. • T O D E N T W IT H C A R reeded 2 SVS sn w aekdayt to stay aith children and tH r# to appointments when necessary. €77-6183 : 477-7502 attar 5. MODELS WANTED for figure photo­ graphy. Exceptionally e n a c t iv e , no •wperiano# necessary. Mutt ba weU- groomacL 481-3396 Inventory Work Mala student* through Thursdsv aff-rn ally S mdajrs Star; I; 90 prox. 20 hour* a week part tim* Monday s, met ic r. .r. Ap­ r r Contact leon ard Johnson 47* 845$ H E P. Grv-'ery rom party *24 West 12th PHOTOGRAPHY. natural portrait*; Ju ly Camps. 474-1258. POTTERY LESSONS Wheel throw tai taught by Bob W right Inquire a: Bar­ ton Springs Pottery. 474-2200. AUTO BODYWORK: expert repair o' Volkswagen* and fore;gn cars We!! br ow retail rata. Brent, 478-064$. DISCOUNT a i t o REPAIR and Mute 822$ E ast 5th, 385-6822 or 4 4K366, Ed. Bob. or Brad. W a n t e d WB WANT to buy a light weight canoe In good condition. 2*>S-1880. Labor to Caucus McGovern, Party Loyalty on Agenda By MICHAEL CLARK Texan Staff Writer State labor leaders are scheduled to meet in Houston for Monday to McGovern fund-raising committee and to hammer out a controversial party loyalty resolution. the groundwork for a Labor lay Roy Evans, president of the Texas AFL-CIO, an­ nounced Friday that a labor caucus will offer a resolution at Tuesday’s State Democratic convention requiring all elected officers of the state party to en­ dorse publicly Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern. The state's top labor leader said he would like to see any member “booted off" the State Democratic Executive Committee who doesn’t support the entire party ticket. Tlie resolution which Evans expects to be drafted would force officials of the state party to “support all the Democratic nominees” from McGovern through tho state ticket, or be disqualified from serving. Evans also pledged that labor will work at the con­ vention to assure that youth and minority groups are fairly represented in the selection of three new' mem­ bers of the Democratic National Committee to be chosen Tuesday. Evans made his remarks at a Capitol press con­ ference called Friday to announce the formation of Labor for McGovern, an organization he said “will closely parallel national McGovem-Shriver fund-raising efforts.” Labor for McGovern will replace the financially (LaFAD) for All Democrats unsuccessful Labor committee, formed last month to raise campaign cash for state and national Democratic candidates. Tony Sykora of Dallas, regional director of the Communication Workers of America, will head the new group which hopes to raise an initial $50,000 to support the campaign for the national ticket in Texas. Some labor sources have suggested LaFAD was dissolved because of national labor organization pressure and the reluctance of liberal unionists ta contribute to a fund which would benefit the candidacy of conservative gubernatorial nominee Dolph Briscoe. To aid the campaigns of Briscoe and senatorial nominee Barefoot Sanders, the Committee on Political Education (COPE), formerly the political fund-raisef of state labor, is being reactivated. Private Funds Help E. Austin the heart of East Austin. An educational program, a Job legal aid placement service, a program and a youth program for the poor of Austin—all are part of the Citywide Committee for Human Rights (COHR). CCUR, which operates on a and without volunteer basis ifs government funding, begins year Monday with seventh r e g i s t r a t i o n i t s free educational program for the fall semester. f o r The CCHR educational program Is “designed for any resident of Austin and the surrounding area find who might otherwise it difficult to receive an education,'” said Dr. Joseph Witherspoon, voluntary executive director and University law' professor. “TOFFEE IS a great need for about 200 tutors” to W'ork per­ sonally with those enrolled in the education program, em­ phasized. The University com­ munity, he said, usually supplies more than half the tutors. he Classes are held from 9 to l l a.m., 4 to 6 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. .Monday through Friday at 1106-B Concho St., an old building in Extra Daytime Run Planned for Shuttles Shuttle buses will make one more run during the day than they have in past weeks, a©. carding to Tom Rioux, chairman of the University Shuttle Bus Committee. Previously, last daytin e the bus for off-campus routes loft the University at about 5:25 p.m. Night runs did not start until about 6 p.m. This left a “kind of slack period,” Rioux said, ut ch will be filled by the ad­ ditional run, scheduled to leave campus about 5:45 p.m. This run will be the last one made by the day buses. Tlie extra nm will be made .oil five off-campus routes: on (NR), South North Riverside Riverside (SR), Married Student (MS), Cameron Road (CR) and In'ram ural Field (IF). weslej foundation GUILDS groups that are: SMALL ENOUGH TO BE HUMAN COMMITTED ENOUGH TO BE SUPPORTIVE CURIOUS ENOUGH TO BE MEANINGFUL SPIRITUAL ENOUGH TO NOURISH NOW FORMING (register at Methodist Student Center 2434 Guadalupe St.) C a l l i n g educational the p r o g r a m “remarkably suc­ cessful” both financially and in educating and finding jobs for the people enrolled, Witherspoon said from CCHR programs basic English—reading, writing and si>eaking—to preparation for college entrance examinations. range MECHANICAL D R A W I N G , typing, and basic electronics are some of the other subjects offered. shorthand Witherspoon s t r e s s e d that CCHR has “no federal strings” is affiliated with no par­ and ticular charity organization. CCHR Is financed solely by private contributions, he said. religion or “ Governm ent program s do not in­ u n d e r s t a n d community volvement,” he continued. “They often stimulate disputes over who will administer and get the government money rather than substantially respond to the real needs the and disadvantaged.” indigent of WITHERSPOON said that at present, about 45 percent of the 400 persons using CCHR services weekly are Mexican-Americans, 45 percent are blacks and IO percent are anglos. Planned for Sept. 27. Wither­ spoon Staid, is an Employer In­ terview Night—an event designed to faciJirate regular face-to-face meetings between people needing jobs and prospective employers. to Those wishing serve as tutors or in any other volunteer capacity can visit the Concho Street office or call 474-1556. mmxmM 3 > iC h ; , , . lr ^ " 1 ' >>>„-* yv v .a i mi Cj ° - i O p e n i n g . \rv 0 c o o t e r (T Y y — S T o g S ' . 4-bru. Set-*-. . ^ I 3 o fp rv\ 6” prrv . W e u j l W b e . s e c vi* in 3 ‘ h o n v e c o o k e c L . l o ! I K . d i n n e r ' / o a r € a c X c h o i c e . o £ Ii 5 ‘ I ^ O L O A K C I £ h * % t v J U a * *V re ss449 a 2 * 8 Protect your bike - 4 ft. case hardened steel chain* M ASTER LO C K S CLASS-A 69* REFLEC T O RS ELITE BATTERY LIG H T 0 9 8 2 W / BR A C KET T R U IN G B IC Y C L E 1 2 5 W H E E L ........................... Adjust brakes - derailleur* - grease all bearing* - clean and lubricate chain .......................... 0 5 0 im I each . . . . . . . . C O M IN G S O O N COMPLETE LINE OF MOTOBECANE BICYCLES Mon.-Sat. 9 : 3 0 - 6 : 0 0 Sat. 9 : 3 0 - 1 : 0 0 453-3078 / Your City Councilmen L o v e ’e m o r L e b e r m a n i v (Plus Friedman, Handcox, Dryden & . Nichols and His Mayorship, Roy Butler.) WITH A CAST OF 35 CITY DEPARTMENT HEADS LIVE AT DOBIE MALL. SEPT. 20TH. (INFORMAL COFFEE 6:30-8:30 PM.). 2021 GUADALUPE m — I — Whats the big Almay idea7 Almay Hypo-allergenic Cosmet :s for Fashion Lovers. I < ?i LH I S o p y ^ j S S ^ j ■] So you're not allergic to makeup. Why take chances'! Almay hypo-allergenic cosmetics are so pure they make you seem lots cleaner. And so fashionable they make you feel I a bom leader. A world of beautiful eye makeuns in the dea­ th© purest plums, the clearest blues. Pure Beauty Face Makes to create a soft, glowy complexion th a Hooks bom to"you! i p , Dozens of delicious, stainlessly pure Color-Moist Lipsticks. ‘ Hlgh-Frost Nail Enamels, dazzling and dermatologist recom- mended. Deep Mist total skincare, because skin is where pura begins, (if you re a one-cream woman, you can’t do better than Deep Mist Moisture Cream to cherish you day and night.) Come see the Almay Collection. Everything fashion-lcvers dream of. Only purer. Think pure. Think Almay. world's leadina authority in hypo-allergenic cosmetics. At the purity place. . . SOMMERS DRUG STORES T h e DAILY TEXAN Monday, September IS, 1372 Page i HeM Over 2nd Big Week Open 12:30 Showi 1:15-3:25 5:30 - 7:35 - 9:40 l a s t of the, a m IM L o w s " ^ ONI (n Mtr.fi J* » ►*»■«/« too* . J E p * ® I . l i Mgrnl. doe* not recommend for children. B A R G A IN M A T IN E E $1.00 'TIL 1:30 Mon-Sat. CAPITAL P L A Z A | > ^ ^ ^ 6 5 7 N O.INTtRREGtONAl HWY i a £ n f f i AD U LT A D M ISSIO N $1.00 [S P E C IA L B A R G A IN N IG H T C la u d ia < .1 r u in a te I r . ' i n c o N e r n ’■MUI V” I a blan l o r r h ii Cane “ \ B l U t I I OR '• R I T T ' it •*<:> ( .iii ...ii Ile . i ii ’’T H E T E N CO M M W P M I N T S'' I EE H a n in C lin t E a s tw o o d “ P U N T VE U R LONGHORN P u t m a n a t I t 3 N 4 5 4 -3880 I ■ The Stor> th e S u m Tho Mil-ie " IM N I U E HEE" P r o * I M a * - M u r r a y N in e s' EM*nn ■•MIN EEK F L T B u r R ’’ IGI Today at © Interstate Theatres fd— v, I n t w i a l a l o s i i * r n k JC D re c A urkin t 7 1 3 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E $ 1 . 0 0 T I L 2 . 3 0 2 : 1 1 - 4 : 1 0 - 6 : 0 $ 8 : 0 0 - 9 : 5 5 SIX MEN OUT OF HELL T H ESEARE RANAVOOI# C O O " ST OC u n * * ( P e e p I n t e r n a l s a T A T E 7 1 9 C O N G R E S S A V E N U H $1.00 T IL 2:30 1:35 - 3:40 - 5:45 7:50 - 9 55 isS t U M tnt Le* Eatbcoj NHEM At lute Urn “T rinity Is Still m JMy J V ^ s u m e ^ c S bp* w iv*. I. collis [Ca] * ^ An Avco tm bossy R elease jM z I n t e r s t a t e s VARSITY 2 4 0 0 G U A D A L U P E S T R E A T $ 1 .0 0 ' T I L 2 :3 0 PEAT. 2-4-6-8-10 H E L D O V E R ! A FRANKOVICH enOOUCTIOH BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE ^ r U * ^ Y ^ G O D E H I W i r w L _ € © H € C K N ( T *—C.. JPGj 'AT- WJMR ✓— v I n t e r s t a t e s f e m U L M 23 30 SO. CONGRESS AVE. D O O R S O PEN 5:00 FEA TU RES 5:15-8:30 RATED (P G ) I WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! icRXsaiwmvg? IWO pow raxjcnoN DAVID LEANS FILM oraoMSMStoMKt DOCTOR ZH ilftG O W PARA VISION' ANO Mf TR0COU* T I • • * I , I Playwright Humorist, Lover iHninmniniiiinrniii .iHllfflnWIIHIM t „onig 10 p m 9 A i-rm s the Fe n ce 4. 6, 42. 5, 7. 11 N ew « fare Professional football provides the most for interesting Monday night's viewing. ABC's inim itable trio of sportscasters w ill match their antics in the pressbox against the action on the Washington the the Minnesota Redskins Vikings the regular season opener for lx>th teams at 8 p.m. field as face in Fo r those fans with low’ foot­ b a lls turn don Lauren Bacall, Robert Stack and Rock Hudson star in a tangled love levels. UNIVERSITY OMBUDSMAN Students or faculty members with University administrative or other University related problems should contact Hect­ or De Leon, Ombudsman, Union Building 344, 471-3825. triangle, “ Written cm the Wind, at 9 p.m. 6 30 p.m . 6 P a re n t G am * 5 Good ON- N a sh v ille M u sic 11 W ild . W ild W e st 9, 40 N ew s 10 L e t ’s M ake A D eal 12 T o T ell The T ruth 42 T ru th or Consequence* 7 D ra g n e t 24 I D re a m of Je a n n la T p m. 9. 46 Spec ial of the W e e k "T h e R e stle s s E a r t h " !_. 24 The R ookie* 4. 6, 42 Laugh-In 5. 7. 7.30 p.m. IO Gunsmoke 11 B ig V a lie r 8 p m Ti. 7. H e re s T.uor 4 M ovie- " G a m b it " 6. 42 M o vie: " W it h S ix Y o u G et K g g ro ll" 10. 12. 24 N F L Fo otb all, Washing- i in ss. M innesota 8 SO p.m . 11 Pe ttico a t Ju n c tio n 46 B o o k Be n t ">. 7 D o ris D a y Sh o w • pun 46 C am pus L ife W ith D ebb ie o Rook B e a t i i M o vie: ‘ 'W ritte n on the W in d " 6. I N e w B ill C osby S h o w 46 Georgetown U n iv e r s it y Fo ru m 9 One W e lco m in g P la c e 9 30 p.m. m\ Guadalupe a-4/7-1364 Starts WEDNESDAY NEW-DIFFERENT-REVEALING! the S^wingin’ S t e w a r d e s s e s CX EASTMAN COLON . A HEMISPHERE PICTURES RELEASE N O O N E UNDER 18 ADMITTED \Cc inn THEATRE UND ER N E W M A N A G E M E N T 521 EAST 6th 472-0442 FEATURING: N Y BED IS CROWDED PLUS WAYWARD MISTRESS BOTH IN C O LO R AN D SO U N D — RATED XXX BO X O F F IC E O PEN S D A ILY: 12:00 TO 10.00 1-00 O N SU N D A Y BRING THIS AD FOR Vi OFF ADMISSION PRICE * Kaufman Biography Engaging 10:15 p .m 10:3U p.m . I ! 9 p.m . M o vie Continued 4. 6. 42 Tonight Sho w 9 S p e a k F re e ly 5. 7 M o v ie : F le s h , and the D e v il” 'The W o rld , The 11 p .m . l l :30 p.m . IO. 12, 24 N ew * 9 In s ig h t 11 Movie- ‘ 'Fixed B a y o n e ts " 24 G ra m b lin g Football 12 M o v ie : "12 O 'clo ck H ig h " 10 Tv\ d ig h t Zone 12:30 a rn. 7 N e w s I 15 a.rn. 11 N e w s 1:30 a.m . l l M ed itatio n s “ OkMirge S. Kaufman: an In ­ timate P o r t r a i t by Howard Teiehmann; Anthoneum; 372 pp.; SIO: Undergraduate Library. tile in B y LU T H E R S P E R B E R G Tho biography of George S. Kaufman, playwright and wit, has been riding high on the bestseller lists, but few students seem to know who Kaufman was. Fo r the college audience, this central problem with is a T h e D a i l y T e x a n spectrum D aily Horoscope A R I L S : B e w a r y of stran g ers bearing gifts. Un do ub tedly they w a n t some­ thin g return -much m o re than is re aso n ab le . in T A I K l S : I f yo u must d isciplin e some­ low er station than y o u r­ It with a heart. H o w do one self. do y ou lik e being yelled a l ? in a G F M I M : Y o u r m e n ta lity Is u n usually s h a rp fo r a while. U s e this to Us fu lle st a d va n ta g e in w h a te v e r m an­ n e r se e m s suitable. C A Y<’ K R : I t m ight he w ise to avoid u n u s u a lly today, they w ill In v a r ia b ly w a n t yo u to do so m ething ag ain st y o u r w ill. forceful people L E O : T r y to get together w ith some " t h in k in g " people to w o rk on that p ro je c t w h ic h needs y o u r attention. D O O R S O P c N W c cK D A Y S 5:45 F EA T U R E 6:00 - 8:00- 10:00 G e t It un der w a y as q u ic k ly as pos­ sible. V I R G O : K e e p on y o u r toes to day and " t r y " to be sharp. I t ra n be done It w ould he w ith to y o u r ad van tag e to use this m eth­ od. little effort, and L I B R A : B e loving. Fin d som ething good in e ve ry th in g you see. T h is at­ titude ca n do wonders fo r y o u r per­ so nality. b< O K P IO : Tf someone asks fo r y o u r If he doesn’t, m ind help, help him y o u r own business. S A G I T T A R I U S : Som e people w ill try to take ad van tag e c f you if you let them . D o n 't be cruel, but don’t ba a pushover, either. C A r K K 'O R N : C oncentrate on yo u r e f­ try in g to get co ntrol of forts on y o u rs e lf and the situations of you r life. A fter all, th a t's the whelp point. A li i VKI ! * -: D on’t exp ect m ira c le s to happen in the technological endeu vers. W o rk things out for you rself. IT SC K S : F in d one p ro je ct to w o rk on and do Ign ore e ve ry th in g else th a t tries to crow d itself into you r schedule. it. — N IC K L A W R E N C E . biographies. Tf you haven’t read the newspapers from 30 years ago, you probably don’t care to read about the man who was in the headlines then. George S. Kaufman wrote, directed and even starred in some of the greatest productions in American theater. The first playwright after Eugene O’Neill to win two Pulitzer Prizes, he had 27 hits—and 18 flop*— in 37 years, an unequalled mark. He wrote and directed three of the M arx Brothers’ hits and even served as a model for Groucho, who said, “ Kaufman molded me. Kaufman gave me the walk and the talk.” in Kaufman also was the central figure in the M ary Astor divorce the mid-’30’s. After case remaining a virgin until he was 28, Kaufman found himself im­ potent with his wife when her first child was stillborn, and he innumerable thereafter seduced chorus girls and actresses. In 1933, Kaufman had an affair with Miss Astor, who indiscreetly kept a rather graphic diary. Her husband found out, and she first agreed to a divorce but then sued for a better settlement. He leaked portions of the diary to the press, and Kaufman was branded I ” for his “ Public Lover No. (One excerpt sexual prowess. r e c a l l e d : ‘many exquisite moments . . . 20—count them, diary, 20 . . . I don’t see how he does it.” ) Kaufm an’s life makes teresting reading because he. figured in so many anecdotes, the ! backbone of any biogranhy. His celebrated wit developed in daily other encounters with the In­ members of tile Algonquin Round Table (approximately six of these have their own biography, plus three more just about the group). Among such masters of the quip as Dorothy Parker, Alexander Woollcott, Robert Bm chley and H e y w o o d Broun, Kaufman became known as the fastest wit in the East. Howard Teichmann did not know Kaufman until the last IO became years of his life, at which time t h e y collaborators (Kaufman had 16). Thus the book is less a personal view than a compendium of anecdotes and friends’ characterizations served up by topic. But it passes ti e important tests of the bestseller biography: is revealing and entertaining. Don’t scorn the bock just because you didn’t know the man. it Guitarist Montoya To Play Wednesday Carlos Montoya, world-famous Flamenco guitarist, will appear in a “ Silver Anniversary” concert at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Municipal Auditorium. year as a Tile concert w ill begin Mon­ toya's 25th solo Flamenco guitar performer. On Tuesday night, he w ill be honored dinner w i t h celebrating his long career. black-tie a Montoya, who had no formal musical education and never learned to read music, began lessons with his mother guitar at the age of 8. At 14, he began work as an accompanist for singers and dancers and con­ tinued to play in that capacity until his first solo concert in 1948. Hp now is regarded as the most accomplished Flamenco guitarist in tile world. He has toured and in almost performed every country of Europe and the E a r East, in addition to his annual transcontinental the United States and South Am erica. He has more recordings to his credit than any of! p i* guitarist. tours of Montoya regards tile premiere “ Suite composition o f his Elam enca’’ with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra in 1966 as the high point of his career. Tickets for the Montoya concert are $3.50, $1.50 and $5.50, and are on sale through Tuesday at the University Co-Op, Scar­ broughs, Sears and the ticket office at 6615 N. Lam ar Blvd. On Wednesday, all tickets w ill go on sale at tile auditorium box office from IO a.m. to 8 p.m. • • • • • • • • • a * y it again, Dobie. ROBERT REDFORD “THE CANDIDATE” fro m WARNER BROS. T R A N S V ★ TEXAS A M E R b 3 3 12200 Hancock Dnva— 453-6641 N O W ! OPEN 1:45 FEA: 2-4-6-8-10 REDUCED PRICES 'TIL 6:15 M C M I L L E R CASTLE CREEK 1411 LA V A C A 472-7315 — CVERY M ON D AY — • NO COVER • CEANIE STOUT Elevation*! Voice Eicellent Keyboard BEER $1.00 Pitcher 8 9 P.M. rutr. a ta i m y Nth A Rf-d RO** M O N . S T O R M B A IT Y R O T RN v * p m. B I KR JI OO PIT C H Y B NEVER A COVER T O N IG H T — IN C O N C ER T TOWNES VAN ZANDT AND KEITH SYKES a d v a n c e t ic k e t s a t d i s c o u n t k e c o k d s D Y N A M IC D U O ! KENNETH THREADGILL m e e t s KITCHER OE HARVEY W a U B A N G E R S HARVEY WALLBANGER $2.50 SAXON PUB T R A N S l r T tT K K S I ? 12224 Gnaajtuw St —477 i% i OPEN 1:45 • $1.50 'TIL 4:30 Features 2-4:30-7-9:30 purveyors of paradise WARREN BEATTY* JU L E CHRIST It rn The Robert Altman-David Foster Production OI MCCABE & MRS MILLER' Also Starring REN!. AUBERJONOIS • Screenplay by Robert Altman and Brian McKay • Produced by David Foster and Mitchell Brower Based on ir e novel McCabe" by Edmund Haughton • Directed by Robed A'tman PANAVISION ’ TECHNiCOl OR • From Warner Bros A Kmney Services Company Through Sept. 19 3- 5:15- 7:30- 9:45 $1 I B400 Burnet Road — 465-6933 OPEN 7:45 • START 8:15 CO LO R T.V. ROOM • OUTSIDE SEATING • AIR CONDITIONED SN AC K BAR & REST ROO M S ' T i USIE MARVIN & I GIENIEHACKkVIAN # ' , m “PRIME CUT” >I%C ‘ PANAVISION* TECHNICOLOR'*' PLUS A Man Called Horse" R IC H A R D H A R R IS TRAN S'*- fC A A S l l iiim n SWI It. Lamar BI»t-45M/iO O PEN 7:30 » START 8:15 N O W G IV IN G BONUS C H ECK S G O O D FOR FREE AD M ISSIO N Released through Columbia Piclures [G j ^2* 2nd Level Dobie Mall 477-1324 21st at Guadalupe Austin, Texas SCOTIA INTERNATIONAL presents L EE VAN CLEEF-HRRDLL BAKER "A Town Called Heirr ROBERT S H A W STELLA STEVENS (R) _ T R A N S ★ T E X A S THHlIvidilil ■ 1423 W. Ben White BW - 442 2333 OPEN - 5:45 • $1.00 'TIL 6 FEATURE TIMES 6 - 8 - 1 0 ENDS TO M O RR O W - HURRY! JACK UmmON*8AR8ARA HARMS SPECIAL ROAD SHOW THE RITZ ARTS IS VERY PROUD TO PRESENT THIS VERY SUPERIOR ADULT MOVIE W hich was produced as a sequel to "D ee p Throat" on location in M iam i Beach, Fla. with a new cast of M iam i Beach lovelies like you have never seen before! Don't Dare Miss This Show! IX) ^ A H o w o m e w v p l -(I JASON ROBARDS £ o j ® ' ALSO FIRST RUN FEATURE W ITH TITLE TOO HOT TO PRINT! RITZ ARTS 320 EAST SIXTH 478-0475 Couples Welcome! A LSO SURPRISE SHORT FEATURE S a g ! rn M o a d a y,Septem ber 18,1372 T H E D A IL Y T E Z A K Museum Exhibit Explores American Artist Abstracts by Augustus Vincent Tack on Display By E R K ’ LEIBROCK Texan Staff Writer wsgm- of "* ......................... jade—greens glacial lakes lay like .jewels on the breast of the world—malachite and every variation. Battlements and pin­ nacles of rock close to the clouds and on the mountain slopes great white glaciers seem motionless and slumbering, hut terrible in their potentialities.” The This description fits almost first abstract perfectly Tack’s painting to be purchased by Duncan Phillips for his collection In 1924, titled "Voice of Many W a t e r s . ’ ’ soaring, f r a g m e n t e d comp as i ti on in delicate shades of blue, green and purple succeeds in capturing the beauty of the mountains, hut goes a step farther in communicating the almost spiritual mood ex­ pressed by Tack. . . “ COLOR H AI) a mystical meaning to him,” according to Mrs. Franklin. "H e was trying to evoke a mystical mood ” As thp catalogue states, ’ Tack was after a new vocabulary, one that ter­ would, minology, have ‘correspondence,* would analogy between nature and metaphysk ii reality through line, form and color...Brand new forms had to he invented without benefit of art history, an almost impassible task for the most imaginative of artists, but especially for a portrait painter w'bo must free himself of the figurative 'habit of the hand.’ ” the Symbolist establish an in To do thus. Tack resorted to rather unorthodox methods. He used photographs of natural scenery, blown up to IO or 15 times their original size, which were transferred in outline to canvas by an assistant. Tack then rn colors, sometimes f i l l e d following often them. The canvases ignoring were the assistant for an overlay of gold paint to give a final lustre to the painting. the outlines, returned then to T U R R E S U L T S of this unique process are phenomenal. "They seem to float in spare,” said Mrs. Franklin, a feeling emphasized by the oval and arched shapes of many of the canvases. "You really can't see it up close,” she said. "There is a clear landscape in some of the paintings which is lost when they’ are viewed from a short distance.” As Philips wrote, "In the new technique there are lyrical land­ scapes...(that) seem to me the most sucr-pssful things he has done...there is...a note of the fantastic—a sense of .something impending is in the air...figures may l>e seen disappearing into the uncertain distance—always, always beyond.” Tack’s in flu e n t on is hard sub­ sequent painters to assess. sincp the onlv exposure his paintings have had is the exhibition of two or three at a MONDAY NIGHT DANCE TO SOUTHERN FEELING NO COVER DRINKS BEER SISKEBAB ( S M K - 2 t o r i s p a g h e t t i - 9 9 C w it h m e a t b a lis - $ 1 . 4 9 a ll d a y C X Z SOUCJf SOOK -JI Saloon- A IC?] F M • J* 474-2321 2100-A G U A D A L U P E time in the Phillips Museum. However, his Influence can be seen in the work of the so-called Washington Color School, which sought Tack’s techniques as an alternative to the abstract ex­ pressionism of Jackson Pollock. said. Franklin "People have always used cer­ tain keys for seeing paintings,” Mrs. "Today, fxx>ple are hung up on realism. Painting was never real.” The "keys far seeing" of Tack s style, j jut t beginning to be discovered, may still have an influence on both artists arid viewers of art. CC o k s J B l S to b u i i S u - ‘ « • z . ’ Si w i l © B s ID £ “ I9 I Af ’ I ,of i y ■. v C/5 i • 3 f- OC O C IU LU O © U V . o 5 =5 a h ~ i a I U| • a § 3 V vhS. . < 1 a * a - s EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed MALE DONORS O NLY - H BO N U S P R O G R A M S FOR REPEAT D O N O RS Austin Blood Components, Inc. O P EN : 8 - 3 p.m. Tues., Thur., Fri.., & Sat. ‘.12:00 N O O N - 7 p.m. W ed . 409 W. 6TH 477-3735 MUSIC HATH CHARMS THAT S O O T H E THE S A V A G E BREAST SOOTHE A SAVAG E! M A K E MUSIC Y A M A H A P IA N O S Y A M A H A G U IT A R S B A N JO S BA L A L A IK A S M A N D O L IN S D U LC IM ER S K A LIM B A S T A M B O U R IN E S REC O RD ERS H A R M O N IC A S K A Z O O S PR O M “ " ” M M ** l l M l l »« $845.00 59,50 67.50 44.00 32.50 24.00 15.75 4.25 I 95 I OO .25 Guitar Strings — Large Variety W E SELL MUSIC M AKERS! Piano! Available For Rent AM STPR M U S IC 1624 L A V A C A 478 7331 N ear the Campo* presents THIS W EEK TUES. 9/19 WEDS. 9/20 THURS. 9/21 taal) D AM ES d u c t e d by Ray Enr’ght d a^ c* n .-*b»n er*at*d and staged by Busby B °r k a * y w th D'ck Rowell, R .b y Keeler end Jean P m d * !’ 7 OO and 9 OO P M. W HO'S AFRAID OF VIRG IN IA WOOLF? asea d '« c te d by M Ie Nichols based on a p ay by Edward Aifcst with fliz e b ith T*yior a-’d Richard B -ton. S P E C IA L T IM E S 7 00 and 9 5 P M . THE PHANTOM CHARIOT d irected Short- S W E D IS H C N E M A C L A S S IC S S E A S O N TICKET H O L D E R S O N L Y ! 7 OO end 9:00 * M. Ssestrorr Victor ,„ P .« b y USM AUDITORIUM - 75c Buy a $10 Season Ticket - Save s 17.75 A service of the Department of R T F "Remember that a painting- before it is a battle horse, a nude represents anything what­ or s o e v e r — i s an arrangement of colors and shapes on a two-dimensional surface.” esentially could create of Ameriran This statement by French artist and critic Maurice Denis was a favorite artist Augustus Vincent Tack, and helps to explain how the traditionalist painter of portraits and religious m u r a l s the remarkable abstract paintings f r o m Phillips the Duncan Collection on exhibit through Oct. in the Main Gallery of the 3 University Art Museum. “ ALTHOUGH H E little known outside Washington, IXC., interest in Augustus Tack is just beginning to surface." according Franklin, Deborah to Mrs. educational the at curator museum. The exhibit of Tack's paintings here is one of the first outside of the Phillips Collection In Washington, and was prompted by the desire to expose the ar­ tist’s work to a larger audience. is Tack made his living and from a more r e p u t a t i o n traditional Style of painting than that on exhibit bete. As the catalogue to the exhibit states, •‘Urbane, charming portraitist to the rich and famous, connoisseur o# wine. executor of mural commissions and for ■tate, Augustus Vincent Tack was not an artist to whom one would look for radical painting.” church TACK NEA E R gave up the traditional side of his painting, and was working at the time of on a series of his death in portraits of President Truman and his Cabinet is un­ derstandable that the artist was It in Pittsburgh Cluetant to leave a style that d enabled him to earn more than finn OOO during a single v*ar ■f the Depress "en Tack, born in 1*70, started his art educat rn after being discovered drawing a caricature of a math teacher. Supported by income from his father's nHLl onmpeny, he studied in America and with painters to made at france, being strongly influenced fey the Im prosit on isrt and Sym­ bolist schools. least tripe two Aa Mrs. Eleanor Green, guest aura tor for the exhibit, sia'ed in the catalogue, a strong Influence on Tack’s traditional style was his marriage in 1900. “ ...Violet TO N IG H T * THE ROYAL JESTER (O N E NIGHT ONLY) EVERY TUES. A THURS. BEER BUST AT ELI S 10c BEER 9 - ll U N E S C O R T ED l a d i e s FREE ADM. SU N . thru TH U RS. MAKE RES. N O W 670* N. lar-ar — 453 ’ 205 THE 89'er HAMBURGER FRENCH FRIES URGE* PEPSI FREE REFILL CE CREAM CUP FREE REFILL ON 20c DRINKS All Tor only 89‘ THRU MAY '73 FREE REFILL O N A L L 20c D RINKS I (215] STREET LEVEL A bstraction of M u s i c Rhythm," by Augustus Vincent Tact, is on? of 76 Abstract paintings by the American artist currently on exhibit in the University Art Museum. A persona! viewing of the paintings, from the Phillips Collection in Washington, is necessary to sea the glowing, "spiritual effect of the colors Tack used. Turk's lose of furs, Packards, wolfhound*, thoroughbred horse*, Impromptu tripe to Venire, and In 1900, Tack and his Wife took a trip to the Uanadian Rockies. and he was greatly impressed by season* spent at fashionable spa* the grandeur of the mountains, c o s s e t i n g her ever delicate health kept her husband fagging •way at the lucrative portrait and mum] business until the end of hia life.” writing to a critic a “ valley .walled in bv an am­ as phitheater ro'rxjsa] a* to seern an adequate of mountains setting for the Last Judgment. SCHLITZ, BU D W EISER , A LO N E STAR BEER 90e per Pitcher W ith This Coupon At The SIT N BULL IKM GUADALUPE 453 2*31 FOLK SINGERS NIGHTLY — NO COVER • PO O L T O U R N A M E N T SU N D A Y AT 3 P M. (Coupon Good Mon. A Tu*»., S»pt. I I A 19.) 3 Pool Tables G o G o Girls j u g s ) ! UNESCORTED LADIES Mon. & Wed. 6:30-9:30 i r e FO R BEER, W IN E 1 3 C O O L E R S SOFT D RINKS ALL YOU NEED IS A Q U A R T E R 25c DRINKS UVE ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY 25c WINE COOLERS N O C O V ER C H A R G E SOCIAL UPHEAVAL AND PROTEST I IN1VI RSH Y FILM PROGRAM COM MITTEE presents I AM A FUGITIVE nm FROM A CHAIN GANG DIRECTED BY M ERVY N LeRO Y with PAUL MUNI AND GLENDA FARREL! I'On* of th* b*$t of th* Social Prot*$t Film* - n«iv«, h*« y. amen. but! • itraightforward, unadorned *oct*l horror a ie ry' — Paulina Kiel FILMS OF THE 1930’$ A ND EARLY 1940’$ F U R Y ,im> DIRECTED BY FRITZ LA N S with SPEN C ER T R A C Y A N D SY LV IA SIDNEY |"Wh«r* FURY peuei luparbly beyond th® apt melodrama of BARBARY) COAST and FRISCO KID and avan BIRTH OF A NATION ii in exhibiting land diagnoiing the Irind of amotion that unit*! nice middle-clasi people) obscene hysteria.” — Alistair Cooke MONDAY & TUESDAY Sept. 18 & 19 FUGITIVE 7:00 9:00 FURY BATTS AUD. 75c PER FEATURE C L A / / D & INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION TEXAS UNION 350 REGISTER N O W - SPACES STILL AVAILABLE Advanced Guitar American Red Cross Advanced Fundamentals of Investing Gourmet Cooking Menu Planning First Aid Instruction Appreciation and Tasting of W ines Art As An Eye-Deal Astrology Astronomy Bartending for Home Entertaining Basic Foreign Car Repair Basic Pattern M aking and Alteration Beginning Knitting Carpentry Creative Application of Photography Crochet and Crafts Duplicate Bridge Games W ith Spirits Health and Nutrition Introduction to Natural Foods Cookery Intermediate/Advanced Knitting International Folk Dancing Introduction to Macrame Introduction to Skydiving Intermediate Photography Lessons in Beginning Bridge A Listener s Introduction to Music Motorcycle Repair and M aintenance Needlepoint Stereo Maintenance Tarot Reading T H E D A U T T EX A N .Monday, September IS , 1972 Raga J I O n ly a few farmhouses decorate the lonely road of Webberville* Webberville: Scars of an Old Texas Town Ju st cal! ft a sm all Texas t e m that simply faded away. Eighteen m iles east of Austin Is a sm all com­ m unity known as Webberville. Several house* and farm s denorate what Is no m ore than a lonesome p rairie on the Colorado River. TR FIRE'S NOT much happen ing in Webberville today. People either busy their farm s or take a glass of ired tee to the front porch and watch the field across F arm Road 969. the cattle graze in them selves on More than a century ago things were d ifferent In 1851, O I. John Banks bought the land from the com m unity’s first settler, John Webber, and laid out a townsite. Within a few years, people began their d ay ’* work in the cotton fielda Others labored in the broom or furniture factories. The women irisied them selves taking the children to school, and later, gossiping with the other women as they shopped In the general store. In the evening, the}* prepared to one of th® supper, while the men journeyed m any saloons. the On weekends, families gathered on town square and entertained them selves with a baseball gam e. Others travelled across the river in a rope- drawn ferry and visited neighbors while some fam ilies joined in fishing contests or picnics on the banks of the river. T E tR S PASSED, and Webberville continued to grow. A hotel, feed .store, church and a service road. Fam ilies station soon hugged to raise more cultivated vegetables and cattle. They even did a little trading In a nearby town called Austin. the m ain land and began their T h u g s looked good for Webberville. Rum ors the through that a railroad would pass spread town. A railroad would m ean m ore money 'o r tho towm and the families. But their dream s w ere shattered when it bypassed the town. large population ftwn. TN? town seemed to be moving toward a big growth. But Aria growth stopped In 1925. Rising w ater! of the Colorado flooded the lower p art of the town. Two years later, the entire town was Inundated tem porarily by the river. But the dam age was done. Stores, homes and crops were ruined. The they townspeople were disgusted. Should rem ain, rebuild the town and bo threatened by floods settle felt elsew here, sn they left Webberville and travelled to Austin. again? Many should they A few people. how'cver, did rem ain. They rebuilt their homes and farm s. But they left the stores Standing to bake in the hot Texas sun. TODAY, a few people still rem em ber the floods of ’25 and '27 They are th** ones who refused to leave because this sm all rural area was their life. Mr*. Lillie Fuller, who ha* been living in th® are a with her m other since around 1919, said, “ Why should we leave. This has b een our horn® a1! these years, and it will always will he. We have our cows and our garden. T hat is all we need. W e're happy here, and we always will l*e happy. “ The peopip who left Webberville just couldn't make a living after the floods, so they m<»vci away. I don’t makp much. I get a little Social Security every month. But we get by.” There are a few' other people like Mrs. Fuller who .stay. But most of the people drift into the community for a few' years and move on. T here’s nothing special about Webberville. There are no historical m arkers. An old county park and used lum ber m ark where the town used to he A few' m ins of the old town rem ain: a carriage house, service station, rattle corral, rhurch a n i homes. But these m ins serve m erely as scar* of the proud m om ents of the town. The people, however, continued lives. They continued to build their towm. By the early 1900's, nearly 200 people lived in Webberville—a their Webberville is like any other sm all Texas invvn that died. It’* just a sm all, peaceful place that bites the dust of passing cars. Story by Mark Sims Photos by Ike Baruch A service station marks the past. Cattle have m oved to other grounds. We didn't leave because this is ho m e/ Page » Monday, September 18, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Volume I Number I . — y m m w \ y - i ' m a£> *V ^ »: " •. S« * i SKS?* it.. I *>r*r' r*J£MMM v ?> •$?$$ 'V V Vs *•' tea a s s y SSW k s? ii IM *.**?**: ' ;■*?«% im The s55 discount we offer you is real. The $200 Smiling Sam offers may not be. Our Advent S H E R W O O D / P . [ ^ s y s te m s : 1419. for a VV en shopping around st ere o sy s t e m b e wa r e of list pri ces b ea ri n g large discounts. T h e s e discounts a r e often and easi ly a t t a c h e d to eq ui pme n t which h i s an inflated list pri ce one which r e p r e s e nt s a level of q u a l i tv up to which the eq ui pmen t may not m e a s u r e the big savi ngs give you less tor your money S o m e t i m e s T h e $55 OO VK e re taking oft the $474 (X) list price of our Advent Sherwood P K s y s t e m r e prese nt s a meani ngf ul savi ngs b ec a u s e even at $474 (Hi the sy s t em r e p r e s e nt s a bet ter val ue in p e r f o r m a n c e and reliability than d<*-s any other s y s t e m you could buy for the s a m e price or l e s s The sav ings a r e real b e c a u s e the val ue of the c o m ponents at list price is real I ’he S m a l l e r Advent l oudspeaker has g r e a t e r f requency r esponse and f reedom f rom distortion than do many far more ex p e ns i ve s p e a k e r s It provides the final, lowest oct ave of b as s offered by only a handful of the most e xp e ns i v e s p e a k e r s and none cost i ng near its price of $72 Sherwood has brought the pr i c e of a m plifier power down T h e Sherwood S7100A s t e r e o r e c e i v e r d el ive rs m o r e c l e a n , un distorted power than most r e ce i v e r s higher rn pri ce produced as little* a s a y e a r a g o 22 watts R M S a c r o s s tile ent ire audio r a n g e at less than o 6 p e r c e n t distortion < R M S is the most d ema ndi ng and least flashy of the various power rat ing methods. ) that t he* S h e r w o o d T o m a t c h the value tin* S m a l l e r r e c e i v e r A d v e n t s a n d re pr e s e nt , we r e c o m m e n d the P F 3012 au t o ma t i c t urnt ab l e with a St anton 500A c a r t r i d g e T h e P K has a well bal anc ed pl at t er for good speed st ability and a quiet synchronous motor for low wow. flutter, and r u mb l e It a l s o f ea t u r e s v a ri a b l e pitch control, viscous -damped cueing, and an e x c lu s i ve fail s a f e stylus protection devi ce I he S t an t o n .>00A c o m e s with a diamond sty his and t r ac k s at a record sav ing two g r a m s In our st ore these c o mpone nt s add up to $4/4 OO; we oiler you the s y s te m , com for pletely g ua r a n t e ed $419(Mi At $474 00 it s a n exc el lent value but at $419 00 it s a great buy on an ex cedent value for F i v e y e a rs , 816 W . 23rd Street H ard in N orth Bu ild in g A u stin , T e x a s 512-478-7341 Computerized Financial Planning by l l The Financial Architects" €RWIN & dtfO C IK T esJJ 816 W. 23rd St. Hardin North Complex Austin, Texas 78705 478-7341 PROTECTIVE LIFE® INSURANCE COMPANY "Your Future Is O u r Business-Com e A n d S e e " TAKE A t / S A c BACK THIS FALL I# PED ALER 615 W 29 at Guadalupe Bob Callison Owner 472-5549 V o lu m e I N u m b e r I S e p t e m b e r 1972 Monthly Supplement to The Daily Texan Articles S ta ff 5 E n ch a n te d R o c k Jeanne Arm strong 8 Retrospective E m m a K e lly 1 1 Unseen and U n n o tic e d : T e x a s M em o rial M u se u m R y a n P etty 2 Verse Jo A n n D a le 4 Verse Departments M iles H aw thorne 2 Journal Staff 4 G a m e ^ on too can be President! Lyn n Pulford >o E nvironm ental Action Natural (iard en in i; Suzanne O 'M a lle y 15 Epicurious E ating and E ntertainm ent in Austin in We h a d h o p e d t a a n n o u n c e t h e w i n n e r a f t h e n a rn e - t h e - m a g a z i n e c o n t e s t t h i s s p a c e . Hut o u t a f a p p r o x i m a t e l y VOO e n ­ t r i e s , n o t h i n g w a s f o r a c o l l e g e m a g a z i n e . So t h e c o n t e s t c o n t i n u e s f o r b e t t e r n a m e s . T h e t h r o u g h T r i d t t y p r i z e s , a t r i p t o M e x i c o i ' i t y , a m e n ' s 10- s p e e d b i c y c l e , a m o d e c a m e r a a n d ti r e c o r d c o l l e c t i o n , r e m a i n t h e s a m e . H r i n g y o u r s u g g e s t i o n s b y J o u r n a l i s m K u i l d i n a 107. s a t i s f a c t o r y VV ith this issue, a m agazine, still unnamed, is born. The T exas Student Publications Board didn t approve the ju d ges’ selection from the “Nam e J I ? ’r s o ,,asu, y0U notice, we're tem porarily running without a m asthead. Can t blam e the board, though. Out of approxim ately 300 entries ranging in seriousness from the highbrow Unctuous Trans gression to the frivolous Orange Juice (how- about Hoof and Mouth or Armadillo Abreast Abolition9 ), nothing satisfied us. Thus the contest is >eing continued until Friday in hopes of som ething better The en­ thusiasm is heartening, and no m atter what kind of entries w ere turned in, this staff is thankful for each and all. * * •« !“ *“ t0 lhi'!k * e re editl"g for a "ew type of student, one of more sophistication and education than before. We are leaving behind those stale m ores of the F ifties and Sixties, and are no longer the detached individual on cam pus. A descendent of three previous cam pus puhlica bons—-The Hanger, Texas Engineering and Science Magazine and R iat a - w e intend to go beyond previous editorial restrictions to carry a of S tu dents ma a1' expandm S aPPeal and involving increased numbers I n o artic le s in particular illustrate our editorial stance First turn to P age 5. our Travel Log column originally scheduled as a short p i « e ^ Enchanted Rock But upon visiting the spot, w e were so moved with its magnitude, we decided to expand it to include photographs. Second is a portfolio by the late Mrs. Jeanne Armstrong Mrs Arm- ?«r£ ngi? photos are part of 80 of te r prints being exhibited through Oct I in n fhLn,VerSI^ Art ‘Museum and which dem onstrate an eye for beauty and the unusual in the most ordinary sights Miles Hawthorne’s Journal is on Page 2. Miies, like us all, is a cultural t i m ^ o r another 131601 ° f expressing what we aI1 feel a* one 1 Vt°u Emma Kelle> ’s reP°rt on the Texas Memorial Must urn. She found there s more behind those exhibits than you realize tor care) when sketching bones for geology Ever been caught on Friday night fresh out of ideas for places to go? Read Suzanne () M alley (P age 15) for a run-down of the eating and en­ tertainment attractions around Austin. Lynn Pulford handles our en- \ nonm en ta I column and will be showing us how we can make ecology a fun thing without too much technique. Future issues contain stories on the ma mg of a skydiver (pending the sate return of our w riter), fiction, verse, plus the regular columns. And so what it we re having trouble finding a nam e9 We can alw ays call it the Monthly Supplement to The Daily Texan! / t / / f or . M i c h a e l P a t t e r s o n Managing Editor: W a l t e r D e a n \ ssociate I ditor M il e s H a w t h o r n e Graphics / ditor S t e v e C h e w n i n g Feature Editor Jo e D a v y ll I ntertainm ent E ditor S u z a n n e O ’M a l le y I h vironm ental / ditor I y n n P u l fo r d Poetry Editor., K e n S te in Contributing Editors: K e l l y . D an D a b n e y , A li s o n I rn. ta I e g a u l t . Joe R\ an t Hima S m ith . / 'h o l o g r a p h 1 Ike B a r a t t e h , .su pervisor, Sta n le y F arra r Xii ie nixing Jim M o r g a n , d i r e c t o r ; Bill M e t c a lf, man ager; M a n n s O r t iz H u e y K e e n e y . I \ un P e t e r s o n , G a r y F dlis! Jim S e w e l l C ir c u la t i o n John R o ss M o n th ly s u p p l e m e n t to Th D aily Texan, th is m a g a z in e is p u b lis h e i th ro u g h A p r il by Texa S e p t e m b e r S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s . D r a w e r D U n i v e r s i t y S t a t i o n . A u s t i n . T e x a 787 1 2. All o p in io n s e x p r e s s e d hereir a re th o s e of th e in d iv id u a l a u t h o r s anc d o not n e c e s s a r ily im p ly e n d o r s e m e n by th e E d it o rs , T he D aily Texan, th* P u b lis h e r , th e Ad the F a c u lty or m in is t r a t io n S u b m is s i o n s a r e a c c e p t e d in J o u r n a l i s m I I C a lth o u g h th e E d it o r s c a n n o t assum e r e s p o n s ib ilit y for u n s o lic it e d m a te ria l B u i l d i n g R o o m i s h e r d e a t h c o v e r a T h e p r e v i o u s l y ti ti - p u b l i s h e d p h o t o b y t h e l a t e M r s . J e a n n e G. A r m s t r o n g , w h o w a s a s e n i o r a r t m a j o r a t t h e I n i v e r s i f y a t t h e t i m e l a s t o f s p r i n g . .4 r e t r o s p e c ­ t i v e e x h i b i t c u r r e n t l y t h e o n A r t I n i v e r s i f y M u s e u m i n c l u d e s m o r e t h a n 8 0 o f h e r b l a c k - a n d - w h i t e p h o t o ­ g r a p h s . F o r s t o r y s e e P a g e s 8 a n d 9. d i s p l a y a t A n o t h e r p u b lic a tio n o f T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L I C A T I O N S from their own. Drinks available at Jasmine Isle include jasm ine tea; tam arind the setrup, tamarind bean; and bandrek, an excellent thirst quencher made from ginger root. Dessert is always fresh fruit, and homemade whole wheat breat comes with every meal. Jasmine Isle is open Friday, Saturday and Sunday from noon to IO p.m. Personal checks will be accepted, but no credit cards. River City Inn - the only place in town that sells mixed drinks by the pitcher A n o t h e r e n j o y a b l e r e s t a u r a n t , R IV ER CITY IN N , is lo c a te d a t 304 E . 6th St. ( ju s t off IH35) in a b u ild in g n e a r ly IOO y e a r s old w h ic h R u f u s Y. B a n d y S a d d le r y Co., a n d l a t e r R h o d y a n d W e b e r C a r r i a g e a n d B u g g y Co. once c a lled h o m e . R iv e r C ity 's a t ­ m o s p h e r e is a s ric h a s its p a s t. T h e tw o -story bu ild in g f e a t u r e s high, r a f t e r e d c e ilin g s w ith tw o d o m e d sk y lig h ts , p r o d u c in g a n a u r a of the G a y N in e tie s w h e n c o m b in e d w ith th e c e ilin g fa n s a n d bentw oo d c h a ir s . T h e g r e a t , m i r r o r e d b a r, bu ilt in G e r m a n y in the 1880’s, a d d s the final touch. d a i l y c h e e s e R e m a r k a b l y , the p r ic e for this c h a n g e of p a c e is n ’t out of r a n g e . L u n c h is s e r v e d ll a m. to 2 ( c l o s e d S u n d a y s ) . p m P r i c e s r a n g e f r o m 95 c e n t s for a s w i s s s a n d w i c h w i t h po ta toe c h ip s a n d a K o s h e r dill p ick le to$1.65 for a R e u b e n A good the light idea h o m e m a d e so u p a n d half a s a n d ­ w ich fo r 95 c e n ts . T h e s a la d s , d e s s e r t s a n d h o m e m a d e b r e a d s a r e well w o r th a try. fo r a lu n c h is R i v e r City s e r v e s d i n n e r f ro m 6 to IO p m M on day th r o u g h F r i d a y (until ii p .m . S a t u r d a y ) . T h e d i n n e r m e n u is e s s e n tia lly the s a m e a s the lu nch eo n m e n u , but the hot lu n c h e s a r e r e p l a c e d by f a m ily s ty l e d in n e r s w h ic h inclu de soup, s a la d , v e g e ta b le s , rolls a n d coffee or tea T h e d in n e r s a r e p ric e d f r o m $4.25 to $6.50 for s u c h m a i n c o u r s e s a s s h r i m p c re o le , b e e f s tr o g a n o f f a n d p r i m e rib All m e a ls fo r c h ild r e n u n d e r 12 a r e half p r ic e M e a ls m a y b e p a id for w ith B a n k A m e r i c a r d or M a s t e r C h a r g e , but p e r s o n a l c h e c k s will not be a c c e p t e d R iv e r City is the only p la c e in town th a t se lls m ix e d d r in k s bv the p itc h e r T h e p it c h e r s a r e $4 *25 to $4 95 a n d s e r v e fo u r to six people. T h e b a r o pens a t ll a rn arx! c lo se s a t m id n ig h t (I a m S a t u r d a y ) . B e e r is $1.95 p e r p itc h e r , m ix e d d r in k s a v e r a g e $ I 25 D u r in g hap p y h o u r (4 to 6 p .m . d a ily ) d r in k s a r e n e a r ly h alf p r ic e , a n d a p ia n o p l a y e r livens th in g s u p W e d n e s d a y t h r o u g h e n ­ t e r t a i n m e n t , u s u a lly folk s in g e r s , be g in s e v e ry nigh t a t 9 p m a n d c o n tin u e s un til closin g F r i d a y . L j v e O d d s on g e ttin g a p a r k i n g p la c e w ith in tw o to t h r e e b locks of R iv e r C ity a r e slim , b ut c u r b s id e v a le t p a r k in g is a v a i l a b l e a f t e r 6 p m. on w e e k e n d s . R i v e r City is a v a i l a b l e fo r p r i v a t e p a r tie s . Old Pecan Street International Cafe At the* e n d of S e p te m b e r , T U E O LD P E C A N S T R E E T IN ­ T E R N A T IO N A L C A F E will open a few d o o rs d ow n th e s t r e e t I ro m R iv e r City (316 E . 6th S t.). L in d a r e s u r r e c t e d S a tv a O ’B rien , w h o this s u m m e r , h a s n a m e d h e r c a f e for the d a y s w h e n tlx* e a s t- w e s t s t r e e t s of A u stin w e r e n a m e d a f t e r tre e s . S he h a s a t t e m p t e d to c a p t u r e a t m o s p h e r e by- the s i m u l a t i n g a s id e w a lk c a fe c o n tin e n ta l O ld P e c a n S t r e e t will s p e c ia liz e in in te r n a tio n a l cu isine, s e r v in g s u c h p a s t r i e s a s R u s s ia n a n d Bl i n y , Q u i c h e L o r r a i n e G n occhi F r e s h l y g ro u n d coffees i n c l u d i n g k o n a . J a m a i c a n a n d capu chin© will a ls o be f e a t u r e d All p a s t r i e s sold will the Buda tx* f r e s h ly b a k e d fr o m B a k e S h op whi c h in B u da c o n ju n c tio n w ith Old P e c a n S t r e e t H o u rs w ill be to a rn to lo p .m . is ope n in g H a w a i i a n in —S u z a n n e O ’.Mallev 474 2666 474 2666 474 2666 474 2666 Rivas of Texas His and Her Styling The N a tu ra l Cut The N a tu ra l Look The O n l y W a y Shoe Shine & Manicure 3004 G u a d a l u p e 474-2666 We Don t Cut Hair We Shape It HOUSE OF FRAMES 10% Discount To A ll UT Students & Faculty ♦ Artists Supplies G ru m b a ch e r & Liquitex ♦ Custom Fram ing Featuring Chrom e Fram ing ♦ Ready M a d e Fram es A ll Standard Sizes ♦ Large Selection O f Prints ♦ O r ig in a l A rt W o rk Local Artists A n d O thers 5437 N. Interregional C A P I T A L P L A Z A 451-4111 M O N D A Y , T H U R S D A Y A N D F R I D A Y 10-9 louse pf frames T U E S D A Y S , W E D N E S D A Y A N D S A T U R D A Y IO 6 To start the new seme ster off right, Long John S il v e r 's has S a v i n g i s s u e d a D o u b l o o n Coupon. So enjoy the finest Fish 'N Chips you'll ever taste. Laag John Silver ’s A SEAFOOD SHOPPE 5209 BU RN E T RD. IOU PON BUY I REGULAR GET ONE FOR 39* FISH & CHIPS DINNER 39 * 474-2666 474 2666 474 2666 474 2666 O F F E R E X P I R E S OOT. 15, 1972 epicurious EATING & ENTERTAINMENT IN AUSTIN Dry ('reek Cafe Jasm ine Isle a pleasant mixture o f freak and kicker nothing disturbs the Buda calm except an occasional fast freight train F o r th a t n ig h tc a p or for m a k in g a n e n t i r e e v e n in g of a b e a u tifu l su n s e t, try D RV C R E E K ( A FK on Mt B onnell R o ad . T a k e H igh w ay 2222 to Mt. Bonnell R o ad or t a k e 24th S tr e e t, v e e r left w h en it e n d s a n d m a k e a rig h t tu r n a t the w a t e r s e w a g e t r e a t m e n t p la n t No m in o rs a r e a llo w e d ; p e r s o n s u n d e r 21 c a n 't e v e n get th ro u g h the fron t door T h e r e ’s a pool ta b le <25 c e n ts p e r g a m e ) , a n d b e e r is 40 c e n ts a bottle F p s ta irs is a n open p o r c h o v e rlo oking L a k e A ustin or a s c r e e n e d in p o r c h for the w e a k of h e a r t D r y C re e k is open fr o m 5 or 6 to m id n ig h t (I a in. S a t u r ­ p .m . s o m e t i m e s open d a y s ) , a n d S u n d a y s , s o m e t i m e s not (p h o n e ; 453-9244). A p l e a s a n t m ix tu r e of fre a k a n d k ic k e r. G o g ru b b y . is JAZMINE ISLE is one p la c e w ith a lot of p o te n tia l. W h e th e r d riv in g , h itc h h ik in g or b icycling, h ead to w a rd S a n A ntonio on IH 35, t i k e the B u d a ex it (a b o u t 20 m iles so u th of A u stin ), g o s t r a i g h t to d o w n to w n B u da (you c a n ’t m is s it), a n d y ou 'll find the m a k in g s of a n e x c e lle n t a f te r n o o n or ev e n in g . T h e food, a t m o s p h e r e a n d p eople a r e a ll s u p e r b . I s l e sp e c ia liz e s in I n d o n e s ia n c u is in e ; the r e a l t r e a t is in the t a s t i n g - s a v o r in g the m a g n ific e n t m ix tu r e of t e x t u r e s w h i c h a s s a u l t the m o u th a t once. t a s t e s a n d J a s m i n e In 1914 the b u ild in g in w hich the J a s m i n e Isle is lo c a te d w a s a it d r u g s t o r e a n d m o r e r e c e n tly w a s k n o w n a s Morn s Cafe. But now h a n d c r a f t e d In d o n e s ia n b a tik s d e c o r a t e the w a lls a n d d ra w at- t h e c e i l i n g te n d o n to th e h igh m e t a l p r e s s e d ceiling. A b a tik c a n o p y c o v e r in g a s m a l l g a r d e n is s u s p e n d e d by ro p e s f r o m P l a n t s a r e n u m e r o u s th ro u g h o u t th e ro o m a n d th e soft lig hts w h e n m ix e d w ith fr o m p a p e r g lo bes a n d a few f e a t h e r s , o n e u n e x ­ p e a c o c k r e l a x e d s lip s p ec te d ly a t m o s p h e r e . S e a t in g in c lu d e s low’, ro u n d ta b le s w ith floor c u sh io n s (no tro u b le s e a tin g a g r o u p of IO), t a b l e s , c h a i r s a n d t r a d i t i o n a l in, nothing boots. O n c e s e ttle d d is tu r b s the B u d a c a l m e x c e p t a n o c c a sio n a l f a s t f r e ig h t tra in . into th e Of c o u r s e , those not f a m i l i a r w ith I n d o n e s ia n food m a y h a v e a little tro u b le d e c ip h e r in g the m e n u , bu t the w a ite r s , w a i t r e s s e s a n d m a n a g e m e n t a r e p a t i e n t a n d a r e happy to give the novice a crash c o u r s e in I n d o n e s ia n e a tin g . T h e food a t J a s m i n e Isle c a n la r g e ly be c o n s i d e r e d of t h e h e a l t h a n d o r g a n ic v a r i e t y . M ost of the d is h e s h a v e a b r o w n r ic e b a s e , a n d h alf the d is h e s a r e v e g e ta b le . All of the h e rb s a n d the J a s m i n e f r e s h , n o t p o w d e r e d a s in the sto re . In fa ct, m a n y of the h e r b s m u s t b e i m ­ p o rte d f r o m In d o c h in a or H o lla n d b e c a u s e they a r e not a v a i l a b l e in the U nited S ta te s . sp ic e s u se d a t I s l e a r e I s l e J a s m i n e f r i g h t e n i n g , I n d o n e sia n food is re a lly m a d e to be e a t e n “ f a m ily s t y l e ” —l a r g e p o rtio n s of s e v e r a l d if f e r e n t d is h e s a r e s e r v e d , a n d e v e r y o n e b e g in s w ith a n e m p t y p la te . T h a t ’s w h a t m a k e s a n t h e e s p e c ia lly fine p la c e to b r i n g a g r o u p of frie n d s. T h e a la c a r t e d ish e s r a n g e in p r ic e f r o m 35 c e n ts to $2.50. If b e g in n in g so b r a z e n l y s e e m s c o m p l e t e d in n e r s a r e a v a i l a b l e f r o m $2 to $2.95 in c lu d in g d r in k a n d d e s s e r t. T h e B a h m i G o r e n g d i n n e r is fa irly m ild . B a h m i G o re n g is the t r a d itio n a l good luck d is h of I n ­ d o n e sia , m a d e of e g g noodles, c a r r o t s , of c a u l i f l o w e r , c h ic k e n a n d s h r i m p a n d d e l ic a te spices. S a te , m a r i n a t e d c h a r c o a l bro ile d v e a l on a s k e w e r , a n d O r a O rik, c h in e s e v e g e t a b l e s s a u t e e d in s o y b e a n p a s t e o v e r ric e , a r e a ls o inc lu d e d in the d in n e r . T h e N asi G o r e n g d i n n e r is s p ic ie r , b its of s h r i m p a n d c h i c k e n in fr ie d ric e I t a ls o w ith c u c u m b e r g a r n i s h . inc lu d e s s a t e a n d ta lge , s a u t e e d b e a n s p r o u t s a n d b its of re d p e p p e r on r ic e . t u m is b i t s B u d a is a d r y p r e c i n c t, b u t customers are welcome to bring OUR VOLVO WAGON HAS 3 WIPERS FOR THE SAME REASON IT HAS TWO SETS OF 3-WHEEL DISC BRAKES. I he reason a Volvo 145 has an e le c tric windshield w iper an d w asher on the tailgate window is tra n sp a re n t. T h e reason it c o m es with four wheel p o w e r disc bra k e s and tw o in d e p e n d e n t b ra k e circuits, e a c h w orking on th ree wheels. is lust as clear. ^ So w hen shopping fur a wagon, you have tw o obvio us reasons for co m in g to us r n * Import Motors 3540 N. Lamar 452-0266 x ' 15 Journal albu m s rack, w ere the top selling album s. Alice Cooper was selling well enough to m ake m e feel too old to u n d ersta n d young people's taste, yet Donny Osmond w as also selling well, and I w ondered w here people young enough to enjoy that music w e re getting enough money to buy the album . the Stones and In W ashington we listened to a ra d io station w hich played a lot of old songs from m y e a rlie r youth. The good old days, back then when Dylan and the Beatles w ere on the radio. And it w a s n ’t so long ago that Sly Stone and A retha and the Lovin’ Spoonful w e re still on the radio. Now the times hav e changed. Now is tile time of Donny O sm ond an d Bobby S h e rm a n and David Cassidy, the neckbanded beau ties of the a ir waves who m a k e you a p p re c ia te the the tru e a rtistic m erit of Monkees. Now is the e ra of bubble gum banality. W h atever happened to the cultural revolution? Is everyone listening to FM now? the prom ise of E veryo ne w as talking about the s ta te of m usic when som e friends finally c a m e to town. No one cixiid believe the d isastro us buncom be com ing out of the radio tubes. I stopped by my old high school to find out w ha t these heirs of the youth culture looked like and learned them had a s su m ed all of the w orst qualities of the revolution. H air was an end in itself. The angry young m en and women of the Sixties w e re nowr prom organizers with m a riju a n a b re a th All of the d ecadence which was once an exhibition of contem pt for the e s ta b lish m en t was now p a rt of the establishm en t. that m ost of is I never was I d o n ’t m ean to sound like the old C om m unist w ho is d ism ay ed by the frivolous young. The truth of the m a t t e r that m uch of a m e m b e r of the co u n te r­ cu ltu re But I alw a y s had one gre a t dislike and that w as a contem pt for those high school students of style, the conscientious d re s se rs and e v e r y o n e of f a s h i o n a b l e s ty le . Those people who buy Chicago album s, despite the fact that the* songs a r e all re m a rk a b ly sim ilar They buy them becau se you a re supposed to buy them I t ’s not that you listen to them a lot. just like table books no one those coffee re ad s; yo u’re not req uired to listen to them or re ad them , you a r e just supposed to ow n them An old girl friend was in town. She was a v ariety of that type of person, but she covered it very well w ith a contem pt for the* h e r d ’s taste She belonged to a more refined herd I went to visit her to “ be frie n d s,” to put aw ay our differences, blah blah blah The result was that we didn t do a lot of talking, and she gave me two Dashiell H a m m e tt books and told me I should read them They a re th e d e t e c t i v e n o v e ls w ritten ‘b e s t ” The d ay s passed with painful I packed slowness Finally I left my bags and filled up w ith Darvon I w as taking afte r the dentist pulled a wisdom tooth three d a y s before my d e p a rtu re . We turned on the radio and sta rte d out for the high­ way. Ricky Nelson was singing “ G a rd en P a r t y . ” The symbolic the song w ere ram ifications of num erous. T h ere he was, Ricky Nelson, the kid who I p ractically grew up w ith, singing a song about seeing old friends an d so forth. F ort Worth fell a w ay to the left and right, all tra c t homes whizzing by and the curler-h ead ed m others tending their children by the m im osa trees. the old I t ’s not that you c a n ’t go home ag ain, or anyth ing nearly so d ra m a tic . I will go home again, and ITI probably go through the three s a m e ordeal (I still have wisdom I'm feeling this displaced and aged a t the ten der a g e of 20. what will it be like the spring when I ’m a seasoned adu lt of 21? left), but teeth in if These are the good old days by Ryan Petty Through an open door we walk into a room as deep as an alleyway with high dark ceiling hanging b a re light bulbs and cold d ra fts over the cem ent floor Our ap p roach to the salt-lick B ar B-Q Dow n one stained and broken p la s te r wall a table and bench s tretch HO feet At intervals sit clu s te rs of 2 or 3 draw n to the spots w here ch a ins tie b utcher knives to the' table top An old m an explains ‘So the niggers won t cut ea ch other u p ” F u r th e r back the room exp a n d s into m o re tables an open fire vented by large fans a pickle b arrel the counter where business is c a rrie d on a chopping block and on saw d ust on the floor the w a rm co m m u n al presence of m ice and m any s tra n g e voices lb of beef O rder 1 yellow onion 2 pickles soda c r a c k e rs served on brow n butch er's paper by Miles Hawthorne I did my part. I gave of m yself for the s a k e of hum anity and good g ov ern m e n t and all the rest. I worked all s u m m e r trying to m ak e reform of the system a little m ore possible. I had, as a friend said, done my p a rt to m ake capita lism safe for the world. So w ith my p o l i ti c a l c o n s c ie n c e assu ag ed, I left Washington, D C., despite the fact that the airlines did their best to bum p m e and my student fa re ticket off every flight they could, and despite the fact that the D C. police d e p a rtm e n t w as still sending m e notices of “ intent to issue w a r r a n t ” for my failure an d or refusal to pay a $5 jayw alking ticket. In Atlanta I switched to a 747 jet for the sim p le reason that I had nev er flown on a 747 jet, an d took off with m y “ D elta-sonic” stereo earph ones plugged into a n a r ra te d a nd ab ridg ed version of the Con­ c e rt for Bangla Desh The n a r ra to r k ept re fe rrin g to Bob D ylan as “ the m a s t e r ” a n d c o u ld not s to p praising the m otives of the concert im p ressed until I I w as highly hea rd him on a n o th er channel praising the lyrics of Hal David and the m usic of B urt B achrach. As the plane trem b led off the ground, I had in­ trospective p leasu re of im agining m yself in a movie, listening to “ A H ard R a i n ’s A-Gonna C all” as though it w ere the sound track. It all fit in so b e a u tifu lly ; there I was, the prodigal son. ju s t a sim ple liberal from T exas com ing back from a s u m m e r in big D C . having seen all sorts of things which I think should have alte re d m y life At least in the context of my movie. I w as com ing back as a new m an the enorm ou s landing I had less luck in D a lla s ’ Love Field. The best song I found to listen to was som ething by Nancy Wilson or Dionne W arwick or som ebody oddly s im ilar singing about love or a re ason able con­ s u m e r ’s facsim ile thereof. w a s D a l l a s for my p r e d a w n desertion and policem en and one s tra n g e taxi driv er who kept trying to con a black soldier into taking the ca b to Ft. Hood. I sa t and w aited ride and was disappointed to find th at Dallas w as m o re hum id than Washington. When I got to F o rt Worth w h e re my p a re n ts live, I s a t out­ side until daw n. I h a d n ’t seen the sunrise in W ashington all s u m m e r b ecause the a ir w as so cluttered w ith th e e c o n o m y ’s n e c e s s a r y trash. I spent a week in Fort Worth. It w as, by and large, m iserable. Like all trips home, it brought back sordid ghosts of the past which re qu ire th at you sm ile and, yes. I really do miss those old high school c a n teens and the w acky things we used think I re m e m b e r h e r . . . oh. really, w ho d she m a r r y ? to do, and yes, I it F irst, there a r e the p arents. I d on’t is any b re ach of think fam ily confidence th at to say the folks an d I don’t see eye to eye. I had w ritten my m other that I had cut my hair. The reason, which I didn ’t w rite her about, w as p artly that I did n’t like it falling in my face when I bent over an d partly that I w anted to m ak e my visit with the p a re n ts as free of controversy as possible. One night la s I recall, I was a little drun k a t the tim e) I razor and took my T e c h m a tic s ta rte d hacking off my cherished locks, put them in a shoe box and took them hom e to Mom. W’hen I walked in the door that first night, I was g reeted with, “ You d id n ’t cut your h air very m u c h ." The visit was off with a bang. n e v e r F am ily crises w ere limited. r e a l a n y T h e r e w a s arg u m e n t, only the underlying m i s u n d e r s t a n d i n g s w h ic h p u t everyone on different levels of thought and m ad e it impossible for anyone to u n d e r s t a n d s hat anyone else m eant. joined a in Austin the I had gotten my sleeping schedule m essed up, waking a t 2 or 3 in the afternoon and going to bed around 6 a m. I s a t in the den with headphones on so I w ouldn’t wake the household I tried to find som e m usic to listen to. having left all of my own alb u m s I t a p e t h r o u g h r u m m a g e d ca rtrid g e s which had s ta rte d to fill the house since m y m o th er and g ra n d fa th e r each tape club. I found one tape called “ Hits of the Sensational S ixties” or som ething s im ila r and slipped it into the m achine It was one of those tapes w hich w as recorded for a reason no one can fathom No person in his right mind w ould buy it It was p rim arily com posed of top 40 songs, but most of them w ere sung by people who have m ade their livings singing other people’s songs and s u m m a riz e d in the Ray Conniff S ingers' version of “ Sounds of Silence ” One of the only w orth­ while v enture s on the en tire tape w as O C Sm ith m aking “ Wichita L in e m a n ” bearable. The situation was getting d e s p e ra te T h ere w as alm ost no one I knew in town I could visit, nothing worth w atching on the television and nothing in the way of music I finally went to the local G.C. M u rp h y ’s to pick up a few records And there, on the top selling A Word or Two From the New Craftsman On the Drag, Charles Leutwyler: CARE CONCERN CUSTOM CREATIONS Allow us to make fine jewelry from your id eas; we are particularly concerned with your happiness 2518 Guadalupe LEUTWLER JEWELERS \LSO IOO EAST SEVENTH r n m limn mu mm* mumm — — — — — m bw h -tm - mm mmmmm wtmmmm Discounts O n ALL Dem o M odels of Panasonic, M otorola, Fisher, and Jensen. 1/3 O ff O n Recton Stereo Head Phones (Ask A b out our Special W arehouse Prices) (speed w a y 307 W. 19th St. RAD ,° ph 47g.6609 Parking in Front Bobby Shapiro’s S U I T S UNLIMITED Phone 454-321 I 4322 B North Lam ar Everything Double Knit Po lyester Suits ..Compare at $135“ - 59.95 Sport Coast. Compare at $75“ - 34.95 Slacks .. Compare at $20“ - 12 99 T ie s .. Compare at 750 - 3.50 Best Quality for Les>! Master Charge a rid Bank Am ericard Bridal Shoppe £rFormals 401 6 N . Lam ar unnotu ed of liquid plastic. It takes about a week to complete the ground surface for one c a s e The plastic water liar dens within 24 hours Then the permanent placement of plant m aterial la rg e r stones and animals, forms the scene.” Story explains “ We ran into a problem when we found one of the coons was too small the setting, so another has been ordered from the taxidermist,” Story continues “ Lighting has been tricky for tin1 We need enough animals to be seen but not so much as to destroy the night time et feet. Stor\ says light for Lab elin g displays presented another problem How the could viewers read descriptions in the dark ' This problem w as solved by using light boxes with reversed negatives of the printed label The light shines through the words, making them white letters on a black background At first a regular light bulb was used, but that caused a double image Their a blue bulb was tested and now the labels can be easily read Finishing touches include insulation of tho cases to keep out dust Automatic sound tapes of chirping crickets will increase the exhibit s ‘ night atm osphere “ Martin says. “ And w ho know s, we might even mount a swooping owl overhead and put stars in the sky that is. the ceiling HEY TEXAS! LET'S GO QUAD WITH L A F A YE TT E 4 Channel it LA 524 l l ) Decoder (2) Discrete 4 Channel (3) Derives 4 Channel Sq. • f a P L U S A W A I ! C - A P B U U T I N W I T H T W O ( B I T E SOA S P E A K E R O N LY ~ ~ | A 4 | O O ■ » J I A F A Y E ! TE Ei.EC TONICS 1401 L A V A C A B a in owl, a rm a d illo , Hying sijuiirel. bobcat, otter, opossum ringtail cat and coon decisions bad to be made. What g o e s where? "M uch rn putting the exhibit together fins been experimental. We just had to see what would in ­ w o r k ," says Story dividual display cases were built lo create the correct setting, consideration was given to the life style ot each an im al P la n t material, grasses, tree stumps and branches had to be collected Then Story planned and oil-painted a background suitab le for each display. E ig h t I he next step was molding the earth surfaces, involving the creation of elevated areas using styrofoam and plaster to give the ground texture. Pebbles were used in an artificial water stream made com mut’d PuKc 14 hi Ktorv monument. It is a tribute to the stout little ponies, mustangs, that carried the cowpunchers of early Iexas trail drives. The center panel states- in scrip tio n M U S T A N G S T H E Y C A R R I E D T H E M E N WHO M A D E T E X A S in In 1957 the Texas Legislature made the museum an integral part of the Uni versify. The museum is a c tiv e paleontological, zoological and anthropological In conjunction with research . U n iv e rs ity it m aintains growing study and research collections, publishes pamphlets, booklets and technical digests. departm ents, A class in museuology w ill be offered by the University this fall Dr WT W Newcomb, Memorial Museum director, will teach the course covering all facets of the art of museum work. Geology and anthropology classes often use the museum for lab work since they their departm ental disbanded to museums and sent Memorial Museum. them its W ith ever-growing collections, the museum is in need of more space for exhibits, storage, workshops and offices. The building, r.s it stands today, is only the first of three units. The original plans called for wings extending north and south, but no action has been taken to initiate new con­ struction The Balcones Research Laboratory and other buildings on campus serve as work and storage centers. The museum is open from 9 a m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from 2 to 5 pm Sunday. There is no admission charge STEREO AT IT’S BEST LAFAYETTE F-1000 HEADPHONES ★ Individual V o lu m e Controls ★ Response 20- 20,000 HZ LAFAYETTE ELECTRONICS S inn in g,;, ahs 1401 LAVACA PURVIS JOCK SHOP 2416 G u a d a lu p e BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL YOUR NAME LETTERED FREE ON ANY SHIRT PURCHASED I PAIR SOCKS FREE WITH ANY ^ ^ ■ S H O E P U R C H ASED ■ ■ I CAN OF WILSON TENNIS BALLS FREE WITH PURCHASE OF ANY TENNIS RACKET I J SERVING THE UT ATHLETE AND THE ATHLETIC SUPPORTER SC H O L Z E B E E R G A R D EN U T ’ s Oldest Rendevous Good Food and Ice Cold Beer 1607 San Jacinto 477-4171 Gam e viewpoint. Depending on your own 1972’s political presidential election is one of unexpected, unpredictable punish­ ments and rewards, courage and shrinking from courage. America is election crazy, turned from that 1968 seriousness against raw, brute power. The tone changed until we saw the young, old and minority represented together in Miami. This election With a smite of humor, grinning at the absurd, we relax, no longer the stone-face demon­ strators of earlier years. It’s election fever, pop-art, com ­ mercialism, mass produced, mass packaged for easy consumption. is coined a carnival of excess, in spending, talking, preaching, monopolizing, lacking by many in thinking. But all this makes the thing go, and that’s how we elect our leaders—for better or worse. And usually worse for the can­ didates. though N e v e rth e le ss, d o e sn ’ t everybody want in? D oesn’ t everybody have their secret desire to command a nation, an armed forces or change the world? Sure. that carnival of excess? We’re giving you a chance, but enter at your own risk. We’re a tough bunch of critics. Why don’t you join Here’s how you run. You’re being judged by just one answer, which will determine your election as president. This staff is the electoral college and thus deter­ mines the election. We want the most original, humorous and ab­ in solutely clever candidate fit history. Do our qualifications? If you think so, answer this question: you If elected you were president, what is the first thing you would do? few: We’ve considered a resign, let Texas finally secede from the union, or disinherit California. How about some better answers? There are a couple of movie tickets for the winner, and the winner’s name and answer will be published in a later issue. Send your entry to us, Game, Texas Student Publications, Drawer D, Austin, Texas 78712. And if you have any ideas for future games, let us know. If your game is used, you’ll get a by-line and some tickets yourself. 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W o o d w a rd St. - Austin, 78704 - (AC-512-444-7555) gently caressing a distant cosmic her texture. doesn't want to awake No sound no motion. Only the glaring light emulating from that mass of-energy, the sun. A new day. Held in + Time held motionless, suspension Forever, eternity by her movements, this early dew hour, we watch, Slowly, light laps intruders invading at the Rock, her privacy. \ V v , v \ y*" V v c ;'vs 'A M tO I I V / # . r \ ' i - UlUv /tx r\\u!u\i '^N /Vs TV Am) *Vy\v, t, v y.\\ .V -U . A V 'si ••/TV Go for authentic Can­ d e l i c a c i e s t o n e s e pepared by masters of in a the culinary art a t ­ qu ain t O rie n ta l mosphere. LIM TING RESTAURANT 3900 South Congress Avenue Austin Phone 442-6330 Closed M ondays u n n o t i c e d i n g e n u i t y H is is e v i d e n t t h r o u g h o u t th e m u s e u m w ire s culpture, multi-view show cases, draw ings that re c re a te pots and vessels from pottery fra g m e n ts and sk e tc h e s of how prehistoric an im als once a p p e a re d . they the h um or “ A fre q u en t reaction from visitors is their s u p ris e an d delight find a t tin* in m u s e u m , ” r e c e p t i o n i s t s a y s C ath erin e Gent. ‘‘Hal s w ry wit is reflected in his a r t His draw ings a r e often c h a r lea lures. And his eye-catching, cartoo ned trash cans bridge the generation g a p ” “ A little hum or keeps the m u seu m from being stodgy and too serio u s ,” says Story. He takes a p a te rn a l pride the m useum exhibits, having been involved in som e w ay with alm o st every one* When thinking of dinosaurs, im agination runs to the fa r past an d d is ta n t places But a f te r a visit in to Memorial Museum one realizes g ia n t p r e h isto r ic that creatures roam ed right here in T exas th ese tx* m ad e Another project underway is the exhibition of a 15-foot-long T e x a s d in o sa u r, the Cam p- tosaurus Fossil bones of this 13&- million year-old plant-eater were found in Wise County, northwest of Dallas The paleontologist, Wann Langston, fit the* bones together and prepared them for mounting Story had com pleted one life­ sized d ra w in g when the paleon­ tologist d iscovered a big m istake in A ch a n g e had s p e c ie s L a n g s t o n ’s calculations, the s k e t c h of s k e l e t a l b ody s tru c tu re . Nim the giant draw ing m ust be done ag a in Story plans to project tlx* C a m p to s a u ru s skeletal im age onto a l4*-a by 6 foot board for the final d ra ft, ensurin g ex a ct p r o p o r t i o n s w h e n th e e x i s t i n g bones will be a tta c h e d to the wall s t a g i n g s iz e d d i a g r a m enables viewers to see tin* shap e a nd m a s s of that the sou thern ro a m e d I’ex a s an d the C retaceous I rn ted S tates period millions of s e a rs ago to o r i g i n a l thus modifying the the a n im a ls T h is in In recent m onths m useum staff m e m b e rs have given prioritv to tlx* new “ Night Shift” d io ram a, conceived last y e a r during a staff planning session The n atu ralistic exhibit set in a darkened alcove shows nocturnal an im als in their habitats. Story designed the display c a s e s shortly a f te r the planning session After s e v e ra l versions, the best design went into the building the c u r a to r of stag e Story and biology. Dr Bob M artin, used stuffed an im a ls the m useum liad on Ixind but m o re an im a ls were ordered taxid erm ist from the tropical indoor house plants— cacti and succulent AUSTIN DCUy WORKS REPAIRS AT PRICES YOU C A N T BEAT” • COMPLETE AUTOMOBILE PAINTING • FRAME STRAIGHTENING • COLOR MATCHING AUTO GLASS ALSO — 24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE FAST INSURANCE CLAIM WORK 472-3522 1310 E. 6th AUSTIN FREE ESTIMATES OWNERS — J. W. (JAY) WHITEAKER S. 0. GOURLEY Unseen and Unnoticed: Texas Memorial Museum by Emma Kelly Finishing touches on an oil painted background are applied by Ha! Story. This particular exhibit. “Night Shift,” involves eight display cases and has taken more than a year for completion. I he g re a t cat c ro u ch es lower, keeping its keen eyes on the little e le p h a n t that w anders fa rth e r and fa rth e r from the safety of the herd. Strong forelim bs tense and stealthily c a r r y the feline to the a ttac k Her claw s sink deep into the flesh ol toe young elephant. Her long canines slash; life d ra in s out. The stru gg le over, she d ra g s her prey into the ca v e w here two hungry saber-toothed kittens aw ait her re tu rn Gnawed bones of other young elephants a r e s c a tte re d about the floor of the cave This scene took place 10,000 y e a rs ago. 21 miles north of San Antonio, betw een the trib u tary d ra in a g es of ( ib olo C reek The fossilized bones of the saber-toothed c a t and two kittens w e re found by an exploration group from Texas M em orial Museum. Beginning in 1949, the men spent three s u m m e r s digging trenches to find fossil proof of prehistoric plants and anim als. Cave conditions w ere per lect for p re serv in g evidence of flora and fauna- mastodon, cam el, m a m m o th , arm adillo, peccary, dire wolf and bison, in addition to eleph ant and saber-toothed ca t telling Besides the kind of an im a ls lived, evidence told which ones w e re the prey and which the preyed upon Only s p a r s e evidence w as found of plant life. Hints of bone, and flint tools but no positive evidence was found of m an, although there is still that possibility since m uch ot the ca v e re m a in s unexplored. that Into! m a hon com piled bv the m u s e u m 's explorers has allowed scientists to fit the picture together. Now F r k s e n h a h n ( ave, nam ed for its owner, will be p artially re co nstructed at T exas M em orial Museum Exhibits chief and A ssistant D ire ctor Hal Story walks am id sty rofo am stalac tites and stala g m ite s in his office as he d escribes the cave scene he is creatin g for m useum visitors. Story. ii young-looking m an tor ag e 55. explains, I he F i iesenhahn ( a v e is one of the exhibits W e a r e t r y i n g to get finished light aw ay. Geologists from the m useum t i r s t explored the c a v e 23 y e a r s ago. Not m uch has b e e n done since then. It takes time and money, and we do n’t have it.” Story s voice is pleasant, like gravel rolling down a w a te r stre a m He continues, “ E v e ry th in g from m ouse to elephant re m a in s w ere found in the cave. Most w ere s m a l l e r b o n e s . ” VVhile lie talks. Story goes to the bookshelf and takes down a handbill of bulletins which he has illustrated with draw ings and photographs. In the F rie se n h a h n Cave bulletin, he points out pictures of the fossilized skeletons of the saber toothed cat and two kittens, a p e c cary ( piglike, hooted m a m m a l > and an early variety of cottontail rabbit as items to be show n in the ca v e exhibit. 'The saber-toothed cat and the p e c cary skeletons have been asse m b led and shown in the m u seu m for 12 yea rs, s ay s Story But the c a v e 's fossil rabbit, recently placed on view, had been stored in a protective p laster jacket since its discovery in the early 1950’s. No a tte m p t to was m a d e to as se m b le it until this y e a r when efforts com plete the naturalistic ca v e exhibit began. With the fossil a n im a ls now p re p are d , the ca v e replica will be readied for viewing late this fall The set. designed in m in iature by Story, is being co n structed by the m useum c a rp e n te r Bill Draw bough Meanwhile, the num ber of sta lac tites and s ta lag m ites are increasing in S to ry's office-w orkshop After he shapes them from styrofoam , he uses plaster to give them a n atural stone a p p e a ra n c e Rocks for the floor of the cave and a pool a r e planned, with paint and the proper lighting to com plete the n atu ralistic design for the F rie sen h a h n Cave exhibit. It s not unusual for staging to take 12 m onths or m ore Some projects a r e in the m aking for as long as 20 y e a rs as is the F rie s e n h a h n C ave exhibit E a c h display is a careful grap hic a r r a n g e m e n t by the exhibits chief and the scientific specialists. What the sig htseer sca n s is often the result of m any y e a rs of scientific work and study the m useum becau se most of the item s ac qu ired by necessitate lab oratory study arx! docum entation In the c ase of fossil bones, p ainstaking p re p a ra tio n is required. With m any y e a rs of m useum experience. Story explains, “ It s slow We h av e n 't got the crew to do the w ork There a r e a c e rta in num b er of jobs w e h ave to keep going at the s a m e tim e T h ere a r e new exhibits, and the old ones have to be kept up to d ate; just takes a lot of tu n e .” St ors lias been with the m useum for 23 y ea rs, longer than a in other em ploye While still a student, he began doing illustrations for the m useum as a p art-tim e job One week after his grad u atio n from the University, with a bachelor of fine a r ts degree, he was hired full time He fit right into the work An a rtis t in his own right. Story ha: IS done book illustrations throughout his c a re e r, such as Ka r h Man in A m e r ic a ” by E H S ellards. and ‘ The Indians of T e x a s ” by W VV Newcomb. J r Wh\ has S tor\ stayed with the m u s e u m ’’ A sp ark le rn his eye, he say s, It s the most interesting p art of co m m e rc ia l a r t. and I love it Se e u n n o t i c e d Pat>e 12 Memorial History The T e x a s M em orial Museum, at 24th and Trinity streets, is often described as “ that white building with the statue of the horses in front.” m a g n ific e n t The m useum , graced with th e M u stan g Monument, resulted from the 1936 Texas Centennial. The celebration inspired excellent exhibits. To preserve and house the original displays in Dallas, plans for the new m useum began; P resident Franklin D. R oosevelt a tten d ed the g ro u n d -b rea k in g cerem onies that sam e year. first shown In 1939 the central unit of the museum reached com pletion. The to ta le d the b u ild in g c o s t of $392,435.06, of which the federal governm ent supplied $300,000. The first director, J. E. m useum ’s P e a r c e , (a p r o fe sso r of a n ­ thropology at the U niversity) took charge of the Centennial exhibits from the main cam pus to the m useum . the rem oval of The M ustang M onum ent, a group of seven m u stan g horses unveiled in 1948. b e c a m e a land­ m ark (the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph R Ogden of Austin). Con­ necticut's A. P h im is te r P ro cto r sculpted the model for the nine-ton bronze statue. J F r a n k Dobie, fa m e d T exas folklorist-wri ter, chose the sculptor inscriptions and also auth ored the en g raved on the b ase of Se e history. Pa tf e 12 ll Life teems. A solitary scrub oak Breeze calls us, leading us to the Rock’s heart. stands as citadel We nestle to the against the lady’s breasts, approaching dawn, and we become one, waiting for Breeze with the Rock, Breeze, And finally she waves, ruffling the lady’s hair. Dawn, and Heavens. We return forever to the Earth. Travel Log Photo Courtesy: Texas Highway Department and m o st L ea v in g on im p u lse one found our­ Friday evening, we selves 180 m iles and two hours later at the foot of one of the most u nu su al un- com m ercialized natural wonders in Texas. Though it w as past sunset, the outline of the 500-foot granite* mound known as En­ chanted Hock stood clearly defined Its deceivingly in the moonlight steep slope reminded us of one of the celebrated stories of the Hock, told in part by a bronze plaque planted along the road It seem s theet Capt. John Hays, of the T exas Rangers (back when Texa as w ere ca lied Texia as), found him self separated one a f­ ternoon from his com pany when detected by a handful of Tom mac he Indians With the Indians in hot chase, he headed toward the great Rock. jumped off his horse and ran to the sum m it where Ik* was able to hold off what soon becam e more than IOO Indians before his com pany cam e to the rescue. This story is am ong many concerning the pink granite mound and is unique only in that it hap­ pens to be true One of the wilder legends we heard tells of an ex ­ pedition that found the Rock a subject of annual worship by the Indians. When a stranger ap­ proached it, he struck the granite, creating a “ ringing sound which can be heard m iles around.” The Indians naturally felt the Rock they to be enchanted as frequently listened to eerie sounds em m itted from beneath its sur­ face. According to geologists, they were actually the mundane phenomenon of an ex ­ panded m ass of granite heated by the day s scorching sun. cooling in e v e r a v a i l a bl e the e v e n in g ’s listening to breezes, rather ancestors. than loquacious A nice feature about the Rock is that its two-hour distance (if you drive at 80 like w e did) puts it within range for a quick weekend excursion Admission is 50 cents per person, plus IO cents cam ping charge For $2, a screened cabin is available, and picnic tables and grills adorn the park area. For the more adventuresom e, a decent night's sleep with an adm irable view can be found at the sum m it of the Rock, free from the millions of ants that assaulted us. Rem em ber however, this is solid granite and a super soft sleeping bag is in order. The quickest way to E n­ chanted Rock is to go west on U.S. 71. turn left in Llano, heading south on I .S. 16. About 30 m iles down this road is a labeled turn-off for En­ chanted Rock Envirnomental Action Each month this column will appear, giving readers ideas on how they can personally take part in preserving the environment. We trying to have want you fun something that you might or might not have thought of before. Future columns w ill contain natural food recipes Or ways you can turn into cre a tiv e trash co llectin g Come Be A * * (if you arn t a lre ad y ) . RRegul ar ’ ' You'll find Ifs FUN and FRIENDLY Ifs Full of G O O D THINGS And best of all you 'll find Easy T h e Little Store that cares M O R E ! im it will sink, heap decomposes, i.laking room for more material You aren’t likely to fill a two-foot cubic area in one winter In tin* spring when you dig up and prepare the garden, spread the compost ami mix it in with the top layer of soil If you have access to a lawn­ mower, use it to cut up the leaves before you compost them Leaves will decompose much faster if they are chopped small And also, if you have the time and can find the leaves, mow up enough to spread over for w inter leaves will not blow Chopped around too much Th ey w ill decompose and add a rich mineral covering to the garden Then in the spring, just mix them in the gar­ den the garden Want to grow food inside this winter0 T ry peppers Use a large clay pot to give the roots room to grow and breathe Mix garden soil, peat moss and compost if you can find or buy some. Use rain w ater or cooled water from the hot tap because hot water has less chlorine than cold Also try organic fertilizer. Make a broth by soaking animal manure or vegetable scraps. Then strain the broth through a thin cloth to remove grubs or eggs w hich cixiid cause trouble later All you do is pour the liquid fertilizer over the* plant Finally, don't drown the house plant More plants succumb to too much loving care and watering things than die of neglect. All considered, though, hixise plants make fine pets ~ I . \ n o B i l l f o l d pursuits for hidden treasures Or like this first action, how to begin a natural garden While we don't pretend to have earth shattering effects on the ecology, we think you should a t­ tempt new' ways of living So whether you're an eco-freak or not, we hope you can enjoy these en­ vironmental actions “ Natural Gardening: A few hints’’ Natural gardening will work in Austin It ’s not just a fad. and you don't need a farm Use the materials of nature which you have been viewing as a problem and discarding Begin by keeping a bowl in the kitchen and fill it with all fiur food scraps. except bones. hen spread the rinds and peel s into a garden plot area or < •sit them in a compost heap. in Start a comp* heap now so the compost w ill Im* ady next spring It need not be •verly scientific. Ju st dig a ho the yard, somewhere out o: the way, or use a large wastebasket. If you use a waste basket, cut a few holes in it to speed so air can circulate decomposition. Alternate layers of grass and weeds with layers of leaves. Y o u 'll see the leaves around town this fall. No one in in particular owns them Ju st toss the food leftovers in the heapand cover with grass, leaves o ra thin laver of dirt. As the material in the compost TALL**" BIG MEN SUITS & SPORTS C O A T S TO SIZE 60 DO U BLE KNIT S LA C K S TO SIZE 60 DRESS SHIRTS TO SIZE 22" NEC K & 37" SLEEVE TALL M E N DRESS S H RTS A N D TALL M E N S TIES SW EATERS TO SIZE 4 X L S H O E S TO SIZE 18 Josephs Men’s Shop , 609 Congress Ph 472-1215 Open Thurs Till 8 P.M. H T T E N T IG h '! Austin's original self-service copy center AND A M U S T when you need copies of anything of -f M ake your own copies and protect confidential n a tu re your documents. + No over runs; + original stays clean. ^ Q u an tity - ♦- Di s c o u n t available. Discounts. c a r d Lighted Grounds -f Plain Paper copies -f Choice of: High speed copier Photograph copier Reduction copier Plain Paper copies Double-sided copies Your paper or ours A lso punch/binding service THE COPY SHOP 3209 Red R iver (Slaughter Shopping Center). P a r k a t d o o r . Welcome Bock \52/® SOB DD Goats© a w a e a G O G ife s „ * [F [7 @ @ P§GD(°]@[7 § © [ 7 W B g @ * orru Gillingwoter Co lOOO West Ave • 470-2033 IO Retrospective Jeanne Armstrong The1 sun b u rsts ac ro ss our cover, youth glim pses age, eyes twinkle with a nostalgic glow, sig n atu res becom e a work of art, “ raw s e x ’’ finds its way into a d ram a departm ent production. And perhaps we see a reflection of ourselves. E ach of these scen es w as captured on film by the late M rs. J e a n n e G. A r m str o n g , an aw ard -w in n in g U niversity photography student currently being honored by a retrospective exhibit at the U niversity Art M useum. No wonder R ussell L ee, noted photographer of the art departm ent fa cu lty , describ es her a s “ a dedicated young photographer of g re a t prom ise, one who had a line feeling for people.” The exhibit, on view through Oct. I in Gallery' 17. in­ cludes m ore than 80 black-and-white photographs by M rs. A rm strong, a senior in the art departm en t w hen she died of can cer last spring. Hours a re IO a m. to 6 p.m . Monday through Satu rd ay , and I to5 p.m . Sunday. M rs. A rm strong, the form er Je an n e Gober, w as a student of L e e ’s and the wife of F ran k A rm strong, chief photographer of the U niversity News and Inform ation Service and a photojournalism teacher. C h aracterized by her husband a s an “ a rt photographer who had a sen sitive eye for the an im ate and in an im ate,” M rs. A rm strong began the serious study of photography only about four y e a rs ago. Many of the pictures in the show' were created a s assign m en ts for her photography c la sse s. Others are from free-lance projects she undertook for the d ram a departm en t and the State D epartm ent of Public W elfare. Several of the pictures convey ab stra c t e f f e c t s - reflecting, for exam ple, the frenetic energy of a rock band or the alm o st Dali-like look of an urn of greenery. M rs. A rm stron g’s hum orous shot of a wom an in an inner tube won her an honorable mention in the 1969 Nikon International Photography Contest. P lan s a re now under way to estab lish a fund in M rs. A rm strong’s m em ory that will provide a yearly scholarsh ip aw ard for a photography student in the art departm ent. Contributions to the Je an n e A rm strong M em orial Sch olarsh ip Fund m ay be sen t to the a rt departm en t or the jou rn alism departm ent. UT Art Museum, Gallery 17 ... ...through Oct. I