T h e Daily T ex/ ’t Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 70, No. 45 Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, W E D N E SD A Y , SEPTEMBER 16, 1970 i i * v , J t r I £ .i Y i w * ,r \ . i v , i - j - \ ** - t # i — - -Texan Stall Photo by PHIL HUBER. Black Spokesman . . . Julian Bond addresses gym audience. • “Many who say • “We cannot tolerate a Wood­ stock nation when we allow’ a Watts.” they are a counter-culture are actually only counter-capitalists. They buy pipes at $2.50 which are made in Taiwan under near-slave conditions for IO cents.” In a question and answer period after his speech, Bond said it was not busing but integration to which whites were opposed. “Some white students are being bused 60 miles to private academies,” Bond said. “ It's not busing, but where the bus takes you.” Bond said a third political party could be effective, but not if it wasn't started until 1972. At a reception after his speech, Bond said college students can help tile question of the black community depending “first on your level of interest and secondly on our eagerness to go to certain limits.” On “political prisoners,” notably Bobby Seale, head of the Black Panthers, Bond said freedom depends “not on Seale’s whether he has a good lawyer. It is tied to whether the political system changes so that he can operate.” There also w’as discussion of the recently-passed Washington, D.C., included an anticrime bill, which amendment entitling policemen to enter homes without a search war­ rant. “This just legitimizes what police­ men have been doing in the black communities for years,” Bond said. l l i M l l l l W ll l lllfllMMWfflB aw .3 for State for a public utilities regulatory called commission, tighter supervision of Texas Insurance companies, a State civil service commission lib­ eralization of the unemployment com­ pensation act, an increased state minimum wage, strict controls on lobbyists, more em­ phasis in education on students of Spanish or Negro heritage and a State office of consumer protection. employes, The Republican generally platform responded requests, to certain ethnic avoided a marijuana issue, and hit hard on problems of crime and student disorder. The party plank on drugs did not call for a reduction of the penalty for marijuana possession from a felony to a misdemeanor, which the chairman of the Harris County (Houston) delegation said might provoke a floor flight. One plank urged mandatory life im­ prisonment without parole upon conviction of murdering a law enforcement officer. “Our campuses must never be ‘sanc­ tuaries’ where lawbreakers would be exempt from arrest,” the plank on campus disorder said. The plank said college administrators “ should control any students who break the law by enforcing the schools’ own regu­ lations and existing law.” Although the platform did not contain a specific plank on labor, the policy-making committee did come out in support of a number of requests made by H. S. “Hank” Brown, state AFL-CIO president. Smith Assailed Republican gubernatorial candidate Paul Eggers, addressing what traditionally is called the “governor’s convention,” assailed Democratic Gov. Preston Smith on a num­ ber of issues, contending in effect that Smith is an ineffective leader. Parties Shape Platforms Demo, GOP Conventions Look to November Bond Blasts Misdirection Julian Bond told University students that an expected Tuesday night college alliance failed students in­ because terested the “ ennobling sacrifice of self-enforced poverty,” than in black problems. between white and blacks had students were more in music, drugs and Bond, a founder of the Student Non- Violent Co-ordinating Committee and the first black member of the Georgia House of Representatives said there had been a in blacks’ revolution thinking about themselves. “This revolution demands not greater than, but equal privileges with other groups,” Bond said. “We’d like to do as well as the farmers who got free land, special loans to buy land, government advice on raising crops, and are now paid not to do anything.” A crowd estimated at more than 7,000 gave Bond a standing ovation at this initial appearance on stage at Gregory Gym and at the end of his speech. Bond said although blacks were equal on paper, they pay more than their share of taxes, and (regarding the Vietnam war) blacks were “first In war, last in peace and seldom in the hearts of our countrymen.” “aggressive inde­ pendence,” Bond urged blacks to seize political power in cities and in rural counties in the South. He said old alliances with liberals, labor and churches had failed. Calling for When asked about new alliances, Including radical whites, Bond said they would work only w’here there were equal partnerships and when objectives wore the same. “ We cannot ask for liberation of special groups until the whole group is free,” Bond said of the women’s and gay liberation movements. Bond made several currently popular statements campus about causes. • "The presence of ROTC on campus Is not nearly as earth-shaking as rats in the ghetto.” ii,!;;. By The Associated Prevs Texas Democrats ani Republicans hammered out their respective platforms as they gathered Tuesday for their annual state conventions. In Dallas the Democrats fought and fussed, then adopted the most liberal plat­ form in the party’s history’, asking a com­ plete overhaul of the voter registration system. Meanwhile Republicans meeting in Port Worth shaped a broad platform and fore­ cast sweeping November victories amid traditional ballyhoo, balloon-popping cheers and ovations. The Democrats’ adjournment came at 5:22 p.m. after a hectic hour of yelling, voting and confusion over the party policy statement for the next tw’o years. A determined effort to make Texans bind themselves to a political party w'hen they register was defeated both in committee and in floor debate. The effort was led by Benton Musselwhite of Lufkin, a top aide of Sen. Ralph Yarborough, D-Tex., who was defeated by Lloyd Bentsen in the May 2 primary. Yarborough blamed most of his defeat on Republicans voting in the Democratic primary. Voter Changes The platform adopted by voice vote urges the legislators to lead the way in junking the present annual voter registration sys­ tem. It would be replace by a law’ allowing a voter to register merely by voting once every four years, the platform said. Other planks of the platform approved and presented by a convention committee Student Assembly Set To Discuss Referendum In its first meeting of tho fall Wednesday night, the Student Assembly will consider a p p o i n t m e n t s to several Students’ Association committees and selection of issues for a campuswide referendum. Students’ Association Vice-President Jim Arnold said the committee appointments would affect about half the committees. The group also may discuss appointments to the Texas Student Publications Board of Directors. The proposed referendum may include such topics as division of the College of Arts and Sciences, the nonstudent rule, Uni­ versity recruitment of underprivileged stu­ dents and proposed separation of student anumMrur t fawn tho blanket Jail. Egypt Says %S. Role Ends Peace initiative The United States is “working along this line,” presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said. Riad, asked if his statement meant Egypt now repudiated the 90-day cease-fire which was due to last through Nov. 5, replied: “Egypt accepted the temporary cease-fire to facilitate the Jarring mission. If Am­ bassador Jarring could start his work to implement the U.N. Security Council resolution of November, 1967, then we would welcome this and co-operate fully with Am­ bassador Jarring and continue to give him all facilities needed.” American Initiative Riad conceded the cease-fire was an out­ growth of the American initiative but said Egypt would observe it to aid the Jarring mission as long as the other side did like­ wise. He said if the other side resumed active hostilities Egypt would shoot back, de­ claring “of course, we will defend our­ selves.” Meanwhile in Jordan Prime Minister Ab­ del Moneim Rifai presented the resignation of his government to King Hussein Tuesday night. The resignation came less than one hour after the announcement of another agree­ ment between the government and Pal­ estinian guerillas to end their fighting. Observers here believe Rifai’s resignation may lead to the forming of a military government in Jordan. The new agreement called for a dis­ engagement of the Jordanian army and guerilla forces by l l a.m. Wednesday. Three similar arrangements made in the last few weeks were broken within hours after they were announced. Heavy Fighting The agreement followed heavy fighting near Zarqa, 15 miles northeast of Amman. The guerillas claimed they destroyed four army tanks after the tanks opened fire in the city. The guerillas’ Popular Democratic Front — PDF — said there were many civilian and guerilla casualties, but it gave no figures. Rifai W’as sw'om in as prime minister June 27, two wreeks after an assassination attempt on Hussein's life led to street fighting in Amman that claimed 1,000 dead and wounded. Rifai, foreign minister in the previous government, named a 17-man Cabinet, in­ cluding eight who were sympathetic to tho Palestinian guerillas. Rifai w’as considered to be on good terms with both Hussein and the guerillas, and his major task the last two and a half months had been to maintain the often- broken truce between the Jordanian army and the Palestinians. By The Associated Press Egypt declared Tuesday the U.S. peace Initiative in the Middle East is ended but promised to continue observing the tem­ porary cease-fire as long as Israel does. Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad told a news conference the Egyptian decision came because the United States had failed to act as an impartial mediator and was “Israeli supporting what he aggression.” termed “I can now say,” Riad said, “that the United States has brought its initiative to an end.” Hie minister began the conference with a prepared statement in which Egypt blamed the United States and Israel for blocking efforts by U.N. envoy Gunnar V. Jarring to promote substantial negotiations. Israel ‘Refused’ Israel persistently refused to co-operate with the Jarring mission, he said, while new American arms shipments to Israel Israelis’ “obstructionist encouraged policy.” the Before Riad addressed newsmen in the ornate old Foreign Ministry building over­ looking the Nile, the official Cairo radio charged that further U.S. aid to Israel would trigger “grave consequences, more serious than the mere collapse of the Mid­ east peace efforts. “By opening its arsenal wide to Israel, Washington is taking a very serious step tor a peaceful set­ counter tlement and will have to shoulder the grave consequences arising from it,” the broad­ cast said. to efforts Riad was asked if Egypt now felt free to move additional troops and equipment into the military standstill zone behind the Suez front, but he declined to give a direct reply. White House Response to In response the Egyptian an­ nouncement, a White House spokesman said in Washington the United States still hopes the initiative put forth in the cease-fire “will proceed and we’re hopeful it will be successful.” Passenger Thwarts Skyjack Attempt four years, was escorting a shipment of negotiable securities to San Francisco. He said he had never shot anyone before ex­ cept in Vietnam. Gunman Restless The remaining passengers had been or­ dered to sit together in forward seats, and the gunman alternately sat or stood three rows back in the coach section, to the rear of the first-class seats. De Nisco said he made his move after Stew’ardess Betty Hendricks, who had learned De Nisco w’as armed and had so informed to De the captain, whispered Nisco that the hijacker was in the open in the aisle. De Nisco said he yelled “Police!” to alert the passengers, then fired over their heads as the hijacker started to reach in his jacket. The hijacker slumped in a puddle of blood and raised one arm, witnesses said. De Nisco said he never had any doubts about his aim at the 20-foot distance and that after firing, “I immediately went to the man and stayed with him until the captain came with help. I reassured the man everything wras all right, I just told him to keep his hands where I could see them and stay still.” SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A former mental patient tried to hijack a Trans World Airlines 707 jetliner with a starter’s pistol Tuesday but w’as shot and critically wounded by a fellow passenger after a tense hour on a San Francisco Airport run­ way. The hijacker said he wanted to go to North Korea. No one else was injured among the 55 passengers and seven crew members. Donald Irwin, 28, of Reseda, Calif., a greeting card artist who w’as sent to a mental institution after a tangle with police in 1968, was hit in tile lower right abdomen with a .38-caliber pistol bullet fired over the heads of seated passengers. The marksman was Robert E. DeNisco, 34, of Brooklyn, N.Y., a Brink’s Inc. guard who was escorting a shipment of negotiable securities. Air Piracy Charged Irwin later was charged by the U.S. at­ torney with air piracy, which carries a penalty of 20 years to death. He w’as reported holding his own under armed guard after surgery’ at Peninsula Hospital. The drama began at 4:55 a.m. TWA Flight 15, from New York via Chicago and Los Angeles to San Francisco, had just taken off from Los Angeles. Stewardess Sandy Adamson, 24, Kansas City, said a man whom she had seen on previous flights came aboard at Los Angeles and sat in a window seat. Capt. John K. Gilman, 34, Kansas City, said, “Shortly after leveling off on the w’ay to San Francisco, Sandy brought a note in from the hijacker. . . After conversing with I determined it did not seem we ought to go to North Korea if we could avoid it, because of the safety factor.” (TWA officials) the company Courier De Nisco, a former Vietnam vet­ eran who had been employed by Brinks Felice Strikes Coast In 70 m.p.h. Gales HIGH ISLAND, Tex. (AP) — Tropical storm Felice moved inland before 9 p.m. Tuesday southw'est of Port Arthur and northeast of this Gulf Coast town. The Weather Bureau said highest winds W’ere estimated at 70 miles per hour — 5 m.p.h. short of hurricane force — near the storm’s center. At 9 p.m., the storm w’as blowing inland 40 miles west-south-west of Port Arthur and moving west-northwest about 20 miles per hour. Winds increased in the Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange area and along the Gulf beaches. Sabine Pass was a vacant town the population of almost and most of Cameron Parish, across in the Sabine Louisiana, had evacuated. Traffic Barricade Texas 87, the beach road out of Sabine Pass, already was reported under water. The Texas Highway Department put up barricades to stop traffic. The Weather Bureau, which indicated that the storm w’as dying fast, said: “Heavy rains with local accumulations up to five inches are expected along a narrow belt near the decaying storm’s track as it moves Texas through northw’estward Tuesday night and Wednesday.” East Earlier, the Weather Bureau said the storm would cross the Gulf Coast near Sabine Pass. Then it said the storm would go ashore near High Island, which it did. Lower Warnings The Weather Bureau said in its 9 p.m. bulletin that it would lower storm warnings along the upper Texas and West Louisiana Gulf Coast ait l l p.m. The storm w’as expected to blow itself out Tuesday night and Wednesday with heavy rains across most of East Texas. Mhwtag aHgw fhg M anna <*****>» m oto landfall, gale farce winds lashed the coast to Port O’Connor, from High Island sweeping and Matagorda Bay. bath Galveston Bay Winds gusted to 49 m.p.h. at Galveston and around 60 to 65 miles at High Island. W h en the storm struck the coast, more than 2.50 inches of rain had drenched Galveston Island since dusk. ‘Everything Floods’ Moderate to heavy thunderstorms swept the area from Galveston Bay to near Palacios. Heavy rains fell from the Houston vicinity northwestward and fanned over the College Station section. The rains moved west about 15 to 20 miles per hour. Constable Joe Faggard, manning a road block at the intersection of Texas 87 and 124, explained the name of High Island for the town nearest the storm’s center. “Every time a hurricane comes through,” said Faggard, “everything around here floods except High Island.” Disaster Meeting In Austin, the Emergency Operating Center opened at 2 p.m. The State district disaster committee met in Beaumont. This w’as the sixth time this year the emergency center has been activated. One was for Hurricane Celia which hit tile Corpus Christi area Aug. 3 and another for Hurricane Ella which approached Brownsville but turned and hit Mexico last Saturday. The other instances were because of tornadoes. Weather Cloudy to partly cloudy with a 40 percent showers chance of thundershowers or Wednesday, diminishing to 20 percent Wednesday night. Winds out af the north­ west 8-18 miles per hour. Low Wednesday stair TO. U gh near 90. You Should See the One That Got Away Fishermen brave high winds and water at Lake Sabine near Port Arthur Tuesday before tropical storm "Felice" moved in on tho Texas Coast with 70 m.p.h. winds* UPI Telephoto. F R E E ! BRINS T H IS A D A N D RECEIVE FIVE CO PIES FREE from any book or document of your choice. Make as many as 30 copies per minute with our new H IG H SPEED D E N N IS O N copiers. ADDITIONAL COPIES 5< Each VEND-A-COPY of Austin 3209 Red River Street — 476-7241 (O ne offer per person; expire* 9/30/70} F O O D FO R T H O U G H T . . . THE Castifttan F O R B R E A K F A S T F O R L U N C H F O R D IN N E R C O N T R A C T O R BY T H E M E A L A L W A Y S A G O O D P L A C E W IT H G O O D F O O D A R O U N D N IC E PEO PLE C O N T A C T F O O D S E R V IC E D IR E C T O R 2323 San Antonio 478-9811 Ext. 40 vJends BEAUTY S A L O N 9th & Congress Desegregation Aid Remains Unchanged recent Despite federal court orders forcing many Texas school districts to meet new integration r e q u i r e m e n t s , the Texas E d u c a t i o n a l Desegregation T e c h n i c a l Assistance Center (TEDTAC) at the University has not experienced a great increase in requests for assistance. According to Pete Williams, project administrator of TED­ TAC, the center’s present work load is about the same as it has the special project been since Tickets Going Fast For Saturday Game Blanket tax ticket drawings for the football Texas-Califomia game have been unusually brisk, ticket manager Richard Boldt said Tuesday. Approximately 12,500 tickets had been drawn after the first two days, leaving about 18,000 tickets for the remaining three days of drawing. Tickets can be drawn on blan­ taxes only. No auditor's ket receipts will be accepted. Although Tuesday had been designated as the last day for those picking up date tickets, missing the deadline will be allowed to buy a bleacher seat for their date and will be issued an adjoining blanket tax ticket. tickets G e n e r a l Date ticket applications for the Texas Tech game can be made from I to 4 p.m Wednesday. for the Oklahoma, A&M, Texas Tech and Arkansas games have been sold out. Only bleacher seats remain for the UCLA game and a few seats on lower rows are still available for the SMU contest. was established in July, 1968. TEDTAC is co-sponsored by the College of Education and the Extension Teaching and Field Service Bureau. It is financed by funds from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare under Title IV of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The purpose is to provide assis­ tance to Texas school districts upon request, as the districts seek to solve the administrative a n d problems associated with desegregation. Assistance in the form of suggested desegregation plans and Title IV proposals. instructional is seminars sensitivity An additional function Is stag­ ing for teachers in which they can ex­ change and test ideas for dealing with minority group problems in a protected environment. Stipulations involved with the $300,000 annual grant from HEW include a requirement that assis­ tance be rendered only when it is requested by tile chief adminis­ trative officer of a school district. TEDTAC officials also are not allowed to disclose the names of assist. school Williams said he could not say whether the Austin school district had received help with their current problems. districts they Texas Memorial Museum is open seven days a week with hours set at 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Sat­ urday and 2 to 5 p.m. Sun­ day. There is no admission charge. Four floors of per­ manent exhibits are devoted to the earth sciences, history, biology and anthropology. Mr. Gregory Presents Co-ed Specials Haircut, Shampoo and Set Regular $8.00, Now $ 5 .9 5 Frosting Permanent Wave Regular $25.00, Now $14.50 Regular $20.00, Now $ 9.95 Custom W ig Styling, Including Cleaning Regular $10.50, Now $ 8.50 F O R A P P O IN T M E N T TEL. 472-3535 M A T H & E N G IN E E R IN G P R O B LEM S G ETTIN G Y O U D O W N ? RENT A N E L E C T R O N IC DISPLAY C A L C U L A T O R A N D D O Y O U R PROBLEMS 4 SAO a 7 5 7/ T *100 IN MILL! SE C O N D S. BY T H E W EEK, M O N T H , O R SEM ESTER • M U LTIPLY • DIVIDE • S P . R O O T • D E C IM IL F R A C T IO N S • P E R C E N T A G E S A N D M U C H M O R E 2816 Nueces U N IV ER SIT Y T Y P E W R IT E R E X C H A N G E GR 8-4360 FREE P A R K IN G THIS kl IS a com WORTH $ I 0 . 0 0 on A NEW WIG* On your head styling by Joyce Varga reg. $34.95 with couponI $24.95 STREET FLOOR WOMEN’S BOUTIQUE 5 18. i i i nil r n 2 W *d<**day. Sept. 16, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Though it may seem odd to you that such a small area of such cheap paper should be worth so much money, this ad does represent a $10.00 discount either on the ’’Beau Geste" by Jerome Alexander or the "Fashion 70" by Nu-Look, wigs from a fine selection here at the Women's Botique. Simply bring in this coupon and receive a thirty-five dollar wig for $24.95. This price in­ cludes a free styro-foam head and on head styling of your new wig by featured stylist Joyce Varga (formerly with Andre of Houston). And you should hurry — our supply is limited — in a short while, you’ll no longer be able to get your head into one of these lovely wigs (and have it styled right here by Joyce Varga) for only $24.95 and this little piece of paper. Offer good Wed., Thrus. & Fri., Sept. 16, 17 *"Beau G este" by Jerome Alexander or "Fashion 7 0 " by Nu-Look. The Ouchless Bandage? —Texan Staff Photo by BENE PEREZ. .ilty _____ One University student seems to be acknow- ledging a broken heart and a future pain in the pocketbook with a bandaid over his dent- fenaer. Like many a faithful bandaid, tho one above will protect the wound until a trip to the doctor can no longer be avoided. ed 7 ext books C r it id zed too sympathetic The State Textbook Committee, in a meeting in Austin Tuesday, heard criticisms that textbooks are to com­ munism, that they fail to present American heritage in a proper light and that they use obscene language. Protests were heard against 23 literature and biology history, books. Mrs. Charles Baker of Sanger, chairman of the textbook com­ mittee of Texas Daughters of the American Revolution, attacked for calling one history book Russian history “ an Alice in Wonderland story.” Mrs. Mel Cabler, frequent critic of textbooks, objected to in another book's a statement discussion of Communist China that Marxism turns the people toward a future of unlimited pro­ mise. The publisher of this book said the book had been scrutinized by the Textbook Evaluation Com­ mittee of America’s Future Inc., a conservative organization. Another protest came from Dr. John J. Grebe, a former scientist with Dow Chemical. It concerned the question of evolution versus latter a sudden creation, philosophy by fun­ damentalist the Bible. upheld followers of the Grebe said evolution should be taught not as theory, but as a hypothesis. In an afternoon session Tues­ day, the 15-member committee, headed by Dallas School Superin­ tendent Nolan Estes, set up rules for Wednesday’s adoption of new books for use in Texas schools. A total of 150 newf books will be chosen from a selection of 261. Any decision may be appealed to the State education commis­ sioner and the State Board of Education. If You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will lis te n Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time Tho Telephone Counseling and Referral Service TYPEWRITING BY ELECTRONICS IN ONLY 15 HOURS Typewriting classes by electronics will begin Sept. 17. Classes meet in B.E.B. 556 at 2 p.m., 6 p.m. & 7:15 p.m. All instruction will be on electric typewriters. The cost is only $15. Call 471-3308 between I p.m. and 4 p.m., Monday thru Thursday. THE DAILY TtxAH SUBSCRIPTION RATES published daily except Saturdays, M ondays and holiday periods from September through May. One-Semester (fall or spring) Two Semesters (fall and spring) Delivered by carrier (within Austin area from 12th to 38th and Jefferson to Interregional Highway) Delivered by mail within U.S. or Delivered by mail outside U.S. s5.50 11.50 *10.00 22.00 I XKI ' l l l o I IH M H I X I ' I N S S H IV V > H I _VIWUNI> Shiva's Headband: “Describing Shiva’s music is kind of like talking about G o d ... I ve never really heard music like theirs b e lo re ...I came av* av j n o t only liking w hat they are doing, but respecting it as well.”| — Pat Pope, Dallas Soles "B IL L B O A R D " — SEPT. 12, 1970 APPEARING THIS FRI. a n d SAT. at SHIVA'S HEADBAND & WILDFIRE 8:00 P.M. ’TIL . . . TICKETS $1.50 A D V A N C E AT DISCO U NT RECORDS — GRACKLE N EW S $2.00 AT D O O R & O A T WILLIE S. Free Ticket from DISCOUNT RECORDS with purchase of "TAKE ME TO THE MOUNTAINS" — NOW ONLY I " at iscount records 2310 Guadalupe 478-1674 intuito rn Cl OPEN: Mon.-Thurs. 9:30-9:30 Fri.-Sat.-9:30-Midnight Tydings, Humphrey Hold Election Leads By The Associated Press Sen. Joseph D. Tydings of M aryland, riding hefty m ajorities in W ashington's suburbs, overcam e an early deficit and took the lead Tuesday night over conservative the challenger George P. Mahoney sta te ’s Dem ocratic prim ary. in F orm er Vice-President Hubert IT. Hum­ phrey, in the first step of a political come­ back, took a strong early lead in his race for the Dem ocratic nomination for senator from Minnesota. In M aryland, predom inantly ru ral returns gave the 69-year-old Mahoney, who built his cam paign on criticism of Tydings’ lib­ eral voting record, an early lead over the 42-year-old senator. But it evaporated when retu rn s started to come in from populous Montgomery and Prince Georges Counties — and from black precincts in the city of Baltimore. Returns from 611 of the 1,556 precincts showed Tydings 81,239; Mahoney 78,754. Rep. J. Glenn Beall J r., 43, son of the man Tydings unseated in 1964, easily won the Republican senatorial prim ary. In Minnesota, returns from the first 37 of 3,822 precincts gave the 59-year-old Hum­ phrey 1,036 votes to 238 for his opponent, E a rl D. Craig J r., a 31-year-old black studies instructor. Rep. Clark M acGregor was fa r ahead in the Republican prim ary. I n M assachusetts, D em ocrats re- LIA W Agreement Stalled One W eek DETROIT (AP) — The United Auto W orkers strike against General Motors moved through its first day Tuesday, with hopes for a quick settlem ent dimmed by the announcement that serious bargaining would be put off for a t least a week. The two sides said they had scheduled their first poststrike bargaining session for next Tuesday. Picketing was generally peaceful a t GM facilities in 31 states and two Canadian provinces. Walkout Costs Soar The cost of the strike to all concerned began mounting a t a ra te put by GM and the union at more than SHS million a day. E arl B ram blett, GM’s vice-president for personnel, detailed these daily losses: GM sales, $64.3 million; paym ents to GM sup­ pers, $28.5 million; U.S. and C anadian tax paym ents, $14.3 million and wages for the 34* OOO striking workers, $8.57 million. In addition, the union said its $120 million strike fund was being draine I of S2.5 million daily, as strik ers drew up to SIO weekly. First Shutdown The strike was the first national shutdown of GM, the world’s largest m anufacturing firm, since 1964 when it was closed for IO days. In 1945-6 GM was struck for 113 days, the longest national work stoppage in the industry’s history. CAW President Leonard Woodcock blam ed the strike on w hat he said was the com pany’s frozen bargaining position. Blam blett, GM’s top negotiator, blam ed the strike on the union’s refusal to “ come off its m ountain” of “ fantastic” dem ands. issues w ere Tile m ain unresolved the three top union dem ands which GM said it couldn’t afford: a substantial wage in- crease averaging 63 cents an hour in the first year, unlim ited protection against increases and rih.rem ent after 30 years with a minimum m onthly pension of $500. cost of living, the in GM and Chrysler were nam ed as twin last Sunday I, but targ ets Sept. strike C hrysler was excluded. Woodcock said a settlem ent had appeared close at Chrysler, but that tile firm “ was turned settlem ent” by from “ pressure from GM.” aw ay a Ford, struck for seven weeks was given strike im m unity earlier. in 1967, Ford and Chrysler announced Monday th a t they would not extend the old three- y ear contacts but would honor most provisions such as wage rates, seniority, pensions and others. However, the firm s said thev would not collect union dues for tile UAW. Election Bill Debate M a y End WASHINGTON Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., filed a petition Tuesday to shut off the week-old Senate debate on a constitutional amendment to provide for election of the President by direct, popular vote. The petition to put into effect the Senate’s debate cut-off rule will come on a vote Thursday, bringing a crucial test for the proposed amendment. A group of southern senators earlier organized for a fight to the finish against the proposed amendment. Their decision doomed any chance of agreement for a Senate vote this week on the amendment which the House has approved. Stock Market Prices Decline NEW YORK The bear m arket may be considered officially dead, but the ghost of the bear haunted Wall Street all day Tuesday as a rash of bad news hit the already jumpy investment public. Prices closed down in dull trading. Among the bearish factors rearing their heads in the m arket Tuesday were the auto s t r i k e at General Motors, the threat of a rail strike new developments in the Middle East and the reported slippage in industrial production for August. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial slocks dropped 6.57 points to 750.55 at the closing bell. E arlier in the day it had been off 8 points. Militants, Police Conflict in N ew Orleans NEW ORLEANS Black militants exchanged gunfire with a heavily armed police contingent near a Negro housing project Tuesday until tear gas drove them from a barricaded white fram e house. Seven persons were wounded. The militants — 12 young men and two girls — were members of the Black Panthers and the National Committee to Combat Fascism. Police said the militants used high-powered rifles, automatic weapons and handguns against the officers. Officers said they found at least IO rifles and several handguns inside, as well as several hundred rounds of ammunition. The group had used the building as a headquarters for several weeks and were kept under surveillance. But trouble developed late Monday night wrhen police said two men were pistolwhipped in Panther headquarters before the two escaped. A gnew , Militants to Appear on TV ALBUQUERQUE Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew, rejecting complaints about his rhetoric as a fake issue, said Tuesday he plans a television appearance with militant students — and hopes it will show that there are areas of agreement between them. “ Every accusation I ’ve seen that my rhetoric is polarizing the country is usually accompanied by some of the most violent, inflam­ m atory statem ents that I ’ve seen printed or stated by the very indivi­ duals that make these accusations,” Agnew told a news conference. Agnew, in Albuquerque to campaign for Anderson Carter, Republican nominee against Sen. Joseph M. Montoya, D-N.M., said he has no intention of altering the way he expresses himself on the political platform. nom inated Sen. E dw ard M. Kennedy for a new six-year term . Josiah Spaulding, the liberal form er state Republican chairm an, led John McCarthy, a conservative, in the race to determ ine the 38-year-old Kennedy’s Novem ber op­ ponent. In the bitterly fought four-way fight for the D em ocratic gubernatorial nomination, Boston Mayor Kevin H. White, 44, jumped into a strong early lead over his chief rival, Senate President M aurice Donahue, 52, who won the endorsem ent of the p arty convention last June. R eturns trickling in from sm all towns showed the other two hopefuls, form er Lt. Gov. F ran cis X. Bellotti, 46, and form er presidential aide Kenneth P. O’Donnell, 45, trailing. Partial Returns R eturns from 90 of 2,019 precincts gave White 5,970; Donahue 3,962; Bellotti 2,318; O’Donnell 1,152. In M aryland’s prim aries for governor, D em ocratic Gov. Marvin Mandel, 50, and Republican C. Stanley B lair, 42, over­ powered token challengers. Mandel was nam ed by the General Assembly when form er Gov. Spiro T. Ag­ new becam e Vice-President in 1969, while B lair form erly was Agnew’s top assistant. Governor Unopposed In Minnesota’s governor’s race, State Atty. Gen. Douglas Head, 40, won the Re­ publican nomination, while State Sen. Wen­ dell Anderson, 37, was unopposed for the D em ocratic designation. GOP Gov. Harold Levander Is retiring. In a hotly fought Minnesota congressional contest. Rep. Donald M. F ra se r of Min­ neapolis conservative back challenger. He faces another in Novem ber — form er radio announcer Richard Enroth, who won the GGP nomination. turned a Beauty Aids Questioned WASHINGTON (AP) — M ercury is being used as a preservative in som e cosm etics, say Food and Drug Administration officials, and should be replaced as quickly as possible with less toxic substances. skin The officials voiced p articular concern about lotions containing m ercury, saying they pose “an appreciable hazard of poisoning for persons using the prepar- tions daily on large areas of their bodies.” Only a relative handful of products contain m ercury, and there a re no reported cases of m ercury poisoning to linked sym ptom s of cosm etics. However, m ercury poisoning mimic those of m any other ailm ents, m aking it extrem ely hard to diagnose. the Tile findings and recom m endations were disclosed in interview's with Dr. Virgil O. Wodicka, director of the FDA division that includes cosm etics, and Dr. Alfred Weissler, chief of the FDA cosmetics section. The FDA was prompted to look for m er­ cury in cosm etics a fte r disclosures earlier this year for it was w i d e s p r e a d environmental pollution. M ercury has been found in w ater, fish and gam e birds and has turned up in 33 states. responsible th at The substance is a long-lasting poison th at Is capable of doing particular dam age to the brain and central nervous system , kidneys and liver. B y GLENDA OWEN Texan Staff Writer The solution to Austin's desegregation dilem m a is back tem porarily in the hands of U.S. Dist. Judge Ja c k Roberts. But school officials and public figures involved in the problem are offering only speculation and differences of opinion about R oberts’ decision and the outcome of the final desegregation plans. Roberts m ust give the school board a go-ahead on construction plans for a new high school, Hugh Eckols, assistant director of pupil personnel, told The Texan Tuesday. “ Then we will contact HEW through the courts and begin negotiations for new dese­ gregation plans,” he said. Authorization Given The school board gave its authorization for the negotiations to begin on a site for th e new northeast high school a t its Monday night meeting. The board and the U.S. Office of Education a re expected to subm it joint or se p a ra te plans to Roberts by Dec. 15. Roberts also faces a petition by parents of St. John’s E lem entary School students the to asking permission governm ent’s desegregation suit against the Austin schools. intervene in The parents a re asking th at the court p erm it Jt. John’s to rem ain open until I) Dec. 15 so th at it m ay be considered in the new desegregation plans, 2) until a new' integrated elem entary school can be built to accom m odate children in the St. arrangem ents Jo h n 's district o r 3) until for transportation to other schools can be m ade. Tile school board agreed to apply for federal transportation funds Monday. The board fielded criticism by one citizen who claim ed the new high school would not solve Austin’s problem since it was located in a predom inantly Negro neighbor­ to Anderson High hood. He referred Nixon Orders Overhaul Of Foreign Aid System - (AP) WASHINGTON President R ichard M. Nixon called Tuesday for a top-to-bottom overhaul of the U.S. foreign aid system , including creation of a new' security-assistanee program to help reduce the American m ilitary presence abroad. In sending his long-awaited reform plan to Congress, Nixon proposed also abolishing tile aid-handling Agency for International Development set up by the Kennedy Ad­ m inistration and handing its functions to new institutions. The President gave no overall figures for future U.S. aid levels in his blueprint for the 1970’s. But he m ade plain he wants Congress to reverse its past practice of cutting ever m ore deeply into tile politically unpopular overseas assistance. Says Need Remains While the global U.S. aid program s begun after World W ar II have been losing their effectiveness because of changing world conditions, for aid hag not slackened, Nixon argued. the need “The answer is not to stop foreign aid or to slash it further,” he said, “ the answer is to reform our foreign assistance program and do our share to meet the needs of the ’70’s.” And his six-point reform, he said, “ w'ould turn our assistance programs into a far more successful investment in the future of mankind.” Nixon’s recommendations, which Con­ gress is to act on next year, basically follow proposals set forth last March by his special aid task force headed by a former president of the Bank of America, Rudolph A. Peterson. In an unusual formal signing ceremony for his message, Nixon contrasted that re­ port with a score of past U.S. aid studies The changes Nixon which he said had mainly gathered dust. is proposing — if adopted by Congress — W'ould am ount to the most drastic shakeup of the program since it began with the M arshall Plan of m assive Am erican assistance to Europe in the late 1940’s. The President said U.S. aid should be grouped into three different p arts — se­ curity assistance, hum anitarian assistance and economic assistance — and handled under separate organizations to “ overcom e th e confusion inherent in our present ap ­ proach” of lumping all together. “ To provide effective support for the Nixon Doctrine I shall propose a freshly conceived International Security Assistance p ro g ram ,” he said. “ Tile prim e objective of this program will be to help other countries assum e the responsibility of their own defense and thus help us red ice our presence abroad.” Nixon Doctrine Applied Continuing large scale U.S. arm s and economic aid program s to South Vietnam and South Korea, as U.S. troops withdraw, a re exam ples of the Adm inistration’s use of aid under the Nixon Doctrine. The Peterson group figured American foreign aid of all types came to about $6.5 billion in fiscal 1969. Slightly more than one-half went for security purposes, 6 percent for humanitarian goals and about 40 percent for longer-range economic de­ velopment in low-income countries. To administer economic development now handled by AID Nixon proposed setting up International Development Cor­ a U.S. International De­ poration and a U.S. velopment the number of U.S. aid officials abroad would be sharply reduced. Institute. He said also Arm y W ins Jurisdiction O f M y Lai Defendant S / S g f . D a vid M itch ell and his attorneys return to the Fort H o o d court room after a noon break Tuesday. The m ilitary ju d ge in M itchell's court-m artial ru'ed that the arm y has jurisdiction to try M itch ell in connection with the alle ge d M y Lai massacre, despite his subsequent discharge. mxMrn ■—UPI Telephoto, Desegregation Plan Dilemma Continues in City District School’s difficulty in getting 300 students to tran sfer into th a t facility. Eckols explained, however, th a t the two locations under consideration a re centrally located between black and w hite districts. Both are located near the intersection of E d Bluestem Boulevard and D ecker Lane Drive. In addition he commented th at there are two completely different factors involved in an integrated northeast high school and the desegregation of Anderson. Different Housing “ The first is that the housing patterns a re different,” he said. “ The homes are new'er units and different residential pat­ terns than that of the Anderson district. “ Secondly, we wouldn't be im porting students into a school th at is surrounded by a different residential a re a than their own. Instead, this school would be located between black and white d istricts.” Eckols explained that a solution to the housing problem would solve the integration problem . “ The pupil population in th e downtown a re a around Austin High School and the w est side of the Anderson district are both depleting.” he said. “ By building a new school ca st of these areas, we can solve our problem .” Eckols said the new high school would m ost likely draw' students from these two present facilities and th at the closing of Anderson as a high school m ight be inevit­ able. “ More than 300 students from the An­ derson district would go to the new north­ east school,” he speculated, “and this would leave too few students a t Anderson. “ They would probably be split up for other schools.” Logical Solution Mrs. Exalton Delco, a m em ber of the school board, felt that construction would the only logical solution for the St. be John’s district. “ I f s only logical in my mind th at if construction is the solution for Anderson, it should be the solution for St. John’s,” she said. “ We have land and w'e can buy land and the funds have been allotted in the last bond election.” In addition, M rs. Delco expressed dism ay a t busing the pupils, calling it an “ unneces­ sary hardship." ‘‘Although the school is operating as usual there rem ains uncertainty, anxiety, and the cloud of not knowing what is going to happen,” she raid. Concern Over St. John’s Concern for the future of the St. John’s school also w'as expressed b Mrs. Virginia Brown, president of the school’s P-TA. M rs. Brown said she felt the school board h ad n ’t tried to solve St. John’s problem and w?as upset when she learned the board to had not presented St. John’s plans interim R oberts wnen he rescinded his o rd e r for im m ediate desegregation. “ This school has been ordered closed by th e court, yet the school bo-rd has let us rem ain o~2n until we get what we w an t,” she said. “ If they have th a t much power, I know they could do a lot more for us if they would try'. They’re just trying to m ake us believe they c a n ’t do anything.” Presidential Trip Slated - WASHINGTON P resident (AP) R ichard M. Nixon, planning his third m ajo r overseas tour, announced Tuesday he will go to Italy, Spain and B ritain. O ther countries m ay be added — notably Com­ m unist Yugoslavia. Accompanied th e President will leave Washington Sept. 27 on what is now listed as a nine-day journey. to be gone Most observers expect him longer, however. by M rs. Nixon, P ress secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, who relayed Nixon’s announcem ent to rep o rters, in rule out possible refused Yugoslavia and F ran ce but said tim e would not perm it a visit to West G erm any. stops to Although the White House did not im ­ m ediately confirm w idespread speculation the first U.S. th at Nixon wuuld become president to go to Yugoslavia since World W ar II, M rs. Nixon seem ed to let the ca t out of the bag in responding to reporters* questions about the prospective journey. In offering an explanation for Nixon’! travels, the White House said: “ This trip will afford the P resident an opportunity to undertake a full exchange of views with his respective h is ts and with our officials in an effort to strengthen the structure for peace and to give im petus to the P resident’s efforts to bring about an e ra of negotiations.” .•i’' -Ii::., (JI ■ 111 S J P M . Today’s Events The Student Assembly holds its first m eeting of the year at 7:30 p.m. in Union Building 325. R e g e n t s Chairm an Frank C. Erwin Jr. a d ­ dresses Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity on “ The Greek System Today” a t 6:30 p.m . l l • ■ 7 ior mc* i i u ersiup on Texas Union Council com m ittees a re continuing from 2 to 5 p.m. Wednesday. They also will be held from 7 to IO p.m. Thursday. P ro g ram Com m ittees for students to work on include: Challenge, Coffee House. Cul­ tu ral E ntertainm ent, E ntertainm ent, Film , F in e A rts and Genesis. Others a re Ideas and Issues, Lead­ ership Board, International Affairs, S p e a k e r s , Student-Faculty and Student Repertory T heatre. All interview's will be conducted in the Union Main Ballroom. It seem s c u iren t student unrest is affecting even children’s gam es these days. Seth Kahan, 11-year-old son of Dr. R obert S. Kahan, assistant professor of journalism , had his toy soldiers on the floor one night and was making th e typical noises of a boy playing army. Kahan asked Seth which a rm y w as winning and the boy replied th a t he w as not playing arm y . He was playing “ students rioting.” Wednesday, Sept. 16, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 F'fjtorfak Construction money lacking Folks connected with the School of Communication and Texas Student P ublications are wondering these days if that $7 million com m unica­ tions complex, to be situated at Whitis and 25th streets, is even going to get off the ground. It had been in the planning stages for two y ears before the Board of Regents approved the arch itects' draw ings and estim ates last spring and authorized bid-letting to contractors. IX MAY, HOWEVER, the low bid cam e in at nearly $3 million over th e arch itects’ estim ate of S6.8 million. That prom pted some delays, but School cf Comm unications and TSP officials th at final authorization for aw arding a co n tract m ight be given at last S atu rd ay ’s reg en ts’ m eeting in Arlington. felt Another snag turned up, however. It now seem s that a SI million federal grant scheduled to defray building costs has been withdrawn b y the Nixon A dm inistration, supposedly because of tight m oney and cu tb ack s in educational spending. So the U niversity adm inistration w as instructed by the Board of R egents to come up w ith a list of construction priorities by the next beard m eeting Oct. 23 in Houston. President Ad Interim B ryce Jo rd an , charged with the task, has indicated that the Com m unication Complex will probably be given a high priority, but it’s u ncertain w hether all the necessary facets cf the new com plex can be m et, or if other needed facilities, such as those the College of Education is asking for, can be met. WE RECOMMEND HE place high priorities on both communication and education facilities. The U niversity’s available fund for construction is at nearly an all-tim e low and will probably be exhausted soon if the current rapid ra te of construction on cam pus continues much longer. But th e re’s no doubt th at m any of the new facilities now in the planning stages the burgeoning U niversity a re badly needed, enrollm ent. especially with Enrollm ent is the real culprit in this predicam ent, as it is in m ost of the problem s the U niversity faces today, and it’s encouraging to know that the adm inistration and the Board of R egents are finally planning on curbing its cancerous growth. B I T TWO OTHER factors figure in to share the blam e for the decreasing allocations to higher education today — the Nixon economy and the Nixon adm inistration’s attitude toward educational funding. It’s too bad that we m ust wait until 1972 to try to solve those problem s. Police deserve raise The Austin Police Association deserves the support of the local citizenly and the U niversity com m unity in its effort to secure at least a $150 p er month across the board pay raise for policemen. The proposed 5 percent pay raise for all City employes which the Austin City Council is now considering is simply not enough to com bat the situation of bad m orale which is developing in the force over the rising cost of living and the lack of a corresponding hike in pay. POLICEM EN HAYE traditionally been paid ra th e r poorly, hence I1" 1 som etim es low quality of recruits and high attrition ra te am ong the older troops. A S150 raise would be a sta rt tow ard breaking the vicious circle which often results in lack of public confidence in the police. The City Council, and the City m anager in particular, should be sensitive to the policem an’s plight and im m ediate steps should be taken to alleviate it. / rf Bmhwafd Body motion WASHINGTON - There is a book called “Body Language” which deals with the new is nonverbal science of kinesics, which communication. Julius Fast, the author, maintains that body gestures can tell more about a person than what he says. An unconscious movement, kinescis tells us, is all-revealing. Fast is not the only person who is an “B o d y e x p e r t o n Language.” My friend, Dr. Heinrich Applebaum, has been working on a project for some time to find out if President Nixon’s gestures tell more about him than what he says. Dr. Applebaum has been watching every TV that president program Nixon has appeared on and has come to some interesting conclusions. “D ie President,” Dr. Applebaum told me, “uses his body as well as anybody we've had in tire White House. I have been able to the gestures he makes.” interpret many of “Could you give me an example?” “Well, as you know, when he appears before large crowds he always raises his arms out and upward. Most people have felt he does this to acknowledge the cheers. But subconsciously he is at die floodgates trying to hold back the waves of inflation.” “That’s very interesting.” “I have noted also that President Nixon is a fist-clencher. When he’s trying to make a point he clenches his fist and moves his arm up and down.” “What could that mean?” “IT MEANS that he subconsciously would like to sock somebody.” “I don't believe i t ” “It’s true. If you recall in his TV ap­ pearance with John Chancellor, Erie Sevareid and Howard K. Smith a few weeks back, the President was constantly clen­ ching his fist. He started doing this after Howard K. Smith asked him what legal right did we have for being in Indochina, since the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution had been repealed.” “He didn’t want to sock Howard K. Smith, did he?” “NO, STUPID. He wanted to sock someone on his staff who hadn’t prepared him for the question.” ‘What else?” I asked. “Die President is constantly using a karate chop when he’s answering a question at a press conference. He keeps cutting the air with the flat of his hand.” - “How do you explain it?” «|N INZ the President said the press wouldn’t have Nixon to kick around any m o re. What he meant by that was he was going to take karate and make sure they didn’t kick him. Naturally, as President, Mr. Nixon can’t chop a reporter in the neck so the gesture is symbolic of what he would like to do if he weren’t in a position of responsibility.” “I n ^ c e the President wrings his hands « lot h*’s sneaking.” “HAND WRINGING is not uncommon for a President of the United States. I don’t Clink you could put too much importance In President Nixon wringing his hands. But you could he concerned when he keeps his arms straight at his sides.” “What does that mean?” “It means that no matter what he says, In doesn’t plan to do anything about the ■ “What does it mean '• an the President ahs with Ms legs crossed?” “It he has a plan for getting us eat of Vietnam, but he isn’t going to tell m what it la.” - Q m rrlfh t (e) IffO, The Waahlmeton Post. Co. •d M fd sy , S*pt. 16, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN The firing line Hospitality versus taxes To the editor: Miss Carolyn Burkhardt chastises us in her letter in the Sept. 15 Texan for being “inhospitable” because we favor an in­ crease in out-of-state tuition. Her curious definition of southern hospitality seems to mean that Texas taxpayers should con­ tribute to the tuition of students from Wis­ consin. To this definition we certainly do not subscribe. taxpayers are MISS BURKHARDT seems to believe that It is only just that tuition for out-of-state students in Texas should remain low since rich oilmen, all Texas anyway. She would be astonished to learn that between the two of us we do not own a single oil well. Nevertheless, wouldn't it be equally just for us to insist that taxes in Wisconsin be raised in order that the tuition foe nonresidents at the University of Wisconsin could be lowered? After all, isn’t everyone in Wisconsin a rich dairy farmer? Die logic is the same. If Miss Burkhardt is so interested in stu­ dents getting an inexpensive education, we suggest that she should channel her efforts toward getting taxes raised and tuition lowered in Wisconsin, rather than toward keeping them that way in Texas. Alan Jones, Government Rim McGregor, R-T-F Symbols To the editor: I can’t help but pity Mr. Fisher, for his foes are many. However, intellectual honesty forbids me from defending him whole-heartedly, so let me take a position midway between the two camps. THOSE WHO would refute the Sept. 4 guest viewpoint have been admirably re­ strained and detached in their refutations. Thus let us dally momentarily with the word “detached.” Mr. Fisher’s detractors are obviously well trained enough to know that symbols are not synonymous with reality. However, those detractors are ob­ viously detached enough to realize that to those who have a less concise idea of what America is andor could be, the flag Is a valuable symbol of one thing which mate# life meaningful. No one can deny that there are some who are simply incapable of distinguishing symbol from symbolized. Furthermore, (here are many who can make the dis­ tinction, but have no need to in their daily lives. Theres certainly no harm in using the flag as a symbol for reasons of either necessity or convenience. THE DANGER ARISES when (I) our leaders exploit the lack of distinotion, or (2) they themselves fail to see the dis­ tinction. Is it too much to expect our de­ cision-makers to be both ethical and in­ telligent? One can easily visualize the results of muddle-headed symbol use. For example, imagine Power X sending IOO troops to Power Y to symbolically express dis­ pleasure with some Power Z, who is in invading Power Y. O the process of imagine the ineffectuality of those revo­ lutionaries who hold a match to nothing more menacing than a flag. A symbol is quite like a zipper; it gives some indication of what's underneath, but at the same time, it hides what's underneath. Most of us have enough sense to pull down our zippers when the need to do so arises. Let it so be with symbols. Brian Scanlon M 733 Jester Architecture? To the editor: John Ruskin, Nineteenth Century art and social critic, once wrote that all good ar­ chitecture is produced by a desire for beauty. If this is true, then the most recent I I He's NOT | out to destroy' I “no t ” altered I A proofreading error which resulted I | s in the inadvertent omission of the w o r d rather dramatically the conclusion of former University law professor Fred Cohen’s article on Page 4 of Tuesday’s Texan. The final paragraph should have read: “Somehow, you just have to admire Erwin (Board of Regents Chairman Frank C. Erwin Jr). He is not out to destroy the University as the Observer recently charged. He is out to change it in his own image and he is a man who knows how to get things done.” expresses The Texan sincerest regret to Mr. Cohen, The Texas Observer, which granted permission to reprint the article, and Mr. Erwin. edifice on the UT campus, Burdine Hall, is not simply bad architecture — it is atrocious! ! While last year's addition. Jester Center, has been described as a cross between decadent Spanish Colonial and early Penitentiary. Burdine is an exercise in brick masonry. NOT ONLY DO both buildings rank with the Business and Economics Building (an earlier absurdity') as monuments of modem ugliness, they rival the latter in their func­ tional faults. The dormitory rooms in Jester are calculated to induce claustrophobia or depression in even nonneurotic students (a rare phenotype). As for Burdine Hall, the architect, in planning the auditorium, forgot to leave the necessary space behind the stage for audio-visual equipment and in­ stalled toilets instead. funds are utilized It is well knowTi that die University of Texas is one of the richest educational in­ stitutions in the country and that most of its endowment for building purposes. Such being the case, it would be interesting to know why structures such as Jester Center and Burdine Hall have been erected. In other w’ords. who gets the construction bids and why? The University not only has serious enrollment problems w’hich challenge its definition as an institution of teaching and study (where many students are unable to get the courses they need), it is rapidly becoming an eye­ sore. Stephen I. Schwab Graduate Student in History Realistic To the editor: To destroy Frank Erwin's power by snatching from him the political base which appointed him and supports him is one of the most pragmatic methods yet suggested for “axing Erwin.” The Demo­ cratic Rebuilding Committee on Campus should be applauded for its efforts rn this direction. Die conservative Democrats in Texas, who support Erwin and prevent Texas from becoming a two-party state, have done more to damage, discredit and retard the intellectual growth of this Uni­ versity than any other factor. The efforts of the Democratic Rebuilding Committee on Campus to defeat these con­ servative Democrats and to build a liberal Democratic party in this state should be hailed as a realistic and effective way for students to “speak” to their government. Jan Yoon glove White C»op Recommended writings F ew people realize it even exists, but the U niversity W ritings Collections, located in the basem ent of the Academ ic Center, contains some of the m ost valuable inform ation into the workings of this in­ stitution to be found on cam pus or anywhere. D irector R ichard Flem ing founded the collection in the early 1960 s a t his own request. Flem ing is a retired New York attorney, a Texas-ex dating back before 1920 (he won’t tell us the exact y ear he graduated), and one of the most thoroughly likeable and interesting ch aracters on cam pus. The collection contains books, m anuscripts, and any published m aterial from U niversity graduates or U niversity faculty. A com plete file of The Daily Texan and The Cactus can also be found there. We recom m end the collection and a chat with Flem ing to anyone who thinks that the theory of history repeating itself is hogwash, especially at the University. Symbolic gesture? L ast w eek’s move of the U niversity System adm inistration into the Commodore Perry' Hotel Building (where it is awaiting renovation of its future home in the two old federal buildings at Sixth and Colorado), was described by President Ad Interim Bryce Jordan as both a necessary move and a “ symbolic gestu re.’’ The necessity was to allow the cam pus adm inistration more off ic® space in the Main Building. THE SYMBOLISM was supposedly to dem onstrate more faith in the cam pus adm inistration and to show that the U niversity at Austin, while it is the flagship cam pus of the University System, is not the only cam pus. I t’s ironic that the telephones in the Commodore Perry are still on the Centrex (GR-1) system. What kind of symbolism is involved in that? C. L. Sulzberger Pirates old worry (c) 1970 New York Dines News Service NEW YORK — Throughout its; history the United States has had Intermittent trouble with Arab pirates and kidnappers Our first overseas conflict was that with Tripoli (1801-1805). The Bey. along with other Barbar}' Coast chieftains, had been raiding merchant ships that refused to pay tribute. The resulting war featured the Dema expedition, a long- range commando raid and the exploits of Stephen Decatur. ONE CENTURY LATER Ion P e lic a n s. a prosperous American, was kidnapped in northern Morocco by a local thug named Rassouli. Rassouli hoped his action would embarrass the Moroccan sultan's relations with Washington. The Tripoli war and a subsequent clash between the United States and Algiers wore wound up by compromise settlements. The Perdicaris incident was decided by Teddy Roosevelt’s policy of waving the big stick. His Secretary of State. John Hay. in­ structed the U.S. Consul General in Tan­ glers: “We want either Perdicaris alivp or Rassouli dead.” He got Perdicaris alive and. incidentally. Roosevelt used the slogan in his successful campaign to stay in the White House. in TODAY’S DRAMA, while some respects similar to these precedents, differs strikingly In methodology and degree. It directly involves other nations. It concerns air piracy rather than sea piracy. The num­ ber of American and foreign innocents held under threat is large. Its philosophical genesis lies in the Arab- Israeli war and the noisome slum villages in which Palestinian refugees have festered for a generation. It is dramatized bv the jet age’s implicit dangers and television’s instant facilities which favor revolutionists by stressing tension and emotion. THE GUNBOAT diplomacy of Thomas Jefferson and the big stick diplomacy of Teddy Roosevelt have been outmoded by nuclear weapons. Today’s by-word is that one must not use a sledge hammer to smash gnats. No substitute has yet been found and as a result the gnats feel free to sting. This is an era w’hen armed handfuls can torment entire societies: nor does such action always require exceptional derring- do. The Israelis sniff at the Arab guerillas now tying great nations into knots, saying that w'hen captured canaries.” they ‘ sing like The present air piracies transcend others and are political rather than personal acts. Many aircrafts have been diverted by in- dividuals seeking safe havens — to or from Communist lands. But this time guerilla warfare has taken to the skies. THE IMMEDIATE ISSUE is not simply whether air piracy can successfully be out­ lawed as was sea piracy; whether planes can be guaranteed safe arrival at chosen destinations by security measures aboard and at airports. The immediate issue Is whether lives can be saved without yielding principles and without destroying hope of Middle East peace. It Is glaringly obvious that if nations yoeld to skyjackers the crime rate will in­ crease and the ransom price will rise The appetite of those who would hold iraxx'cnts in pawn for any cause must only grew in feeding. Moreover, concessions are bound to en­ courage all forces opposing a Palestine settlement. The new hawk- fluttering in left-wing faction the Middle East are a of incited by jingo the Arab guerillas, China. FOR LITTLE MONEY and less effort Peking is securing major dividends, to the embarrassment of Washington and Moscow’. It espouses the skyjackers; It sends arms to south Yemen (which Chou Kn-lai will soon visit, as suitably extremis*) and Syria to envision peace with (which Israel); it supports guerilla w'ars in Mus- catman and Palestine. refused Peking has also clearly gained a key voice in the largest and hitherto relatively moderate guerilla group, Al Fatah, which warns that it will deal with pm-peaoe Aralia as “traitors" and publicizes this statement: “Die Chinese government and people firmly denounce the political fraud jointly con­ cocted by the so-called 'superpowers' for a so-called peaceful settlement of the Middle East question.” THOSE NOU opposed by the minority faction of Arab Palestinian guerillas include the United States. Soviet Russia, Nasser, King Hussein and controlling forces in Israel. and sentiment Compassion dictates caution against recourse to the discarded gunboats of Jefferson and cudgels of Roosevelt. But if the gnats are allowed to pester the sledge unhampered, more dis­ asters will come. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin ..................................................... EDITOR .................................................................................... Andy Yemma MANAGING E D IT O R CITY E D IT O R .....................................................................Lyke Thompson ASSISTANT TO THE E D IT O R ........................................... Dave H elfert ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR ....................................... Cliff Av ery* SPORTS EDITOR ..................................................................... Gary Taylor AMUSEMENTS EDITOR .................................................. Cicely Wynne FEA TU RE EDITOR ............... ......................................... Eddie Kennedy steve Dial Associate News Editor .................................................................................. Katie Fegan News Assistants ........................................... Ron Martin, Jorjanna Price. Henry Wells Assistant Amusements Editor ................................................................ jim Shanahan ........................................................................... Tim Sisk Assistant Sports E d ito r Make-Up Editor ..................................................... Wire Editor ............................................................................................... Susanne Sullivan Copy Editors .......................................................... Marty Crutsinger, Sandy Roeenfield Opinions expressed In The Daily Texan are those of the Editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University admlnistraUon or of the Board of I, n< .v j The Daily Texan, the student newspaper at the University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student PublicaUons, Inc., Drawer D, U niversity StaUon, Austin, Texas 78712. The D ally Texan is published Sunday. Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except hoii- day periods. September through May. Second class postage paid at Austin. N ews contributions will be accepted by tele- phone (471-5244), at the editorial office (J.B. ^ iV iV i* iV » V » V mV V V V V V w a Texan 103). or at laboratory Inquiries concerning the delivery m ade in J.B. 107 and advertising in J B the news (J B should Tie 102) l i t The naUonal advertising representative n ‘t is National Education Ad- vertislnc Service, 360 Lexington Avenue New York. N.Y . 10017 The Daily Texan subscribes to the A««rw-i ated Press. United P ress International Photo Service and the New York Times N e w s Sen5?e The Texan is a member of the Ass^riVtVrf Collegiate Press. The Southwest Journalism Conference and the Texas Daily NewsDaoer *P«Per Association. Theresa Kane The impotence of power: Nagging presidential problem By JAMES RESTON (c) 1970 New York Times News Service NEW YORK — The supreme irony of this age of power is its impotence to deal with determined or fanatical minorities. Mr. Jefferson, who had very little military power, could deal effectively with the Barbary pirates early in the Nineteenth Century, but Mr. Nixon, who has apocalyptic power, cannot handle the Arab pirates without risking the Americans he wants to rescue. lives of the You can almost put it down as a rule that the more complicated a society is the more vulnerable it is to sabotage. It is not only the great jet airliners that can be disrupted the whim of a few desperate at men, but even vast modem cities like New York are at the mercy of any fanatics who know how to get at the critical centers of electrical power. The violent events of the last few years illustrate the point. We have not yet had to face organized guerilla war in the urban centers of America, but the skyjackers, the wreckers in the universities, and even the unorganized hoodlums have given us some idea of what can be done by tyrannical minorities. EACH OF THESE problems, of course, is different, but in all of them only a very few men were able to bring the operations of vast enterprises to a halt. Probably the most spectacular example of the power of the weak over the strong has been the operation of the Communist guerillas in Southeast Asia, first against the organized power of France, and then even against an American expeditionary force of over half a million men. The danger in the present wave of sky-jackings is that it can easily spread into an infectious disorder, and not only in the Middle East. It is a quick and comparatively easy way to dramatize any cause, and it seems to have a compelling appeal for deranged minds. Even the risks involved in highjacking a jet or going down the right manholes to sabotage the power of a city are scarcely as great today as robbing a bank. Nixon, for all his power, cannot even perform the first duty of government, which is to protect its own citizens, not because he is weak, but because his strength is so great that he dare not use it. Are we bombing or arent we? HE HAS 1,800 Marines with the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean and a 1,500-man airborne brigade in Germany. It is within his power to parachute them in the night into the Jordanian desert and overwhelm the Arab pirates, but he might easily lose the lives of the trapped Americans in the process. So we are left with the problem of dealing with anarchy. Putting a military guard on planes in international traffic is not a solution, though the armed guards on the E l Al planes have complicated the problem and raised the risks for the skyjackers. Probably the most effective sanction wrould be to isolate any country whose citizens engage in international piracy. This would mean an agreement by all the major airlines not to fly into any country harboring the pirates, and not allowing that country’s planes to use the air fields of the m ajor nations of the world. THE OBJECTION to this, of course, is that the sanction is not precise, and in the cace of Jordan would actually punish the government that is fighting the guerillas. Nevertheless, such an arrangement might encourage the Arab governments to take more vigorous action against the pirates than they have been willing to take in the past. There is, however, no foolproof way to deal with the problem. Closer inspection of baggage would help. So would very strict limitations on hand-baggage that could be carried into the cabin, but short of turning international flights into nudist parties, which might be a little awkward or even embarrassing, there f o u r t h , Thailand. Pentagon sources say that last month 7,000 attack sorties took place over South Vietnam alone. These are not milk runs; more than 3,000 planes and helicopters have been shot down and thousands of fliers killed since the start of the Viet­ nam w'ar. Uncounted hundreds of have thousands civilians perished under the weight of bombing that exceeds by far the tonnage dropped in all of World War IL of bohboms would still be the danger of comeling weapons even from a vigilant frisker. Accordingly, President Nixon has undoubtedly been right to hold his temper and hope that the Arabs wrould hurt their cause so severely by these adventures that they will stop the nonsense on their own. THIS, HOWEVER, is far from a sure thing. All you have to do 1% take a long walk through almost any American city these days to realize how many angry and demented people there are wandering around loose — many of them willing to risk their lives to remove some real or imagined grievance. Once the normal restraints of interdependent cities or systems are broken, the anarchy tends to feed on itself, and this is now the danger in a world with so many frustrated and even demented people. Caterbury Association is the Episcopal students1 organization on campus. W e meet for heaven's sake on Wednesday evenings at 5:15. CANTERBURY Reynell Parkins, Assoc. Prof. of Architecture, will speak at the 5:15 Eucharist WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 on the Christian and his decisions in the political sphere. # • •• • Everyone welcome. Supper at 6:15 (50c). 209 W . 27th. 477-6839. By HERBERT MITGANG (c) 1970 New York Times News Service WASHINGTON — It is not easy to hide a B-52. Nor is it possible to conceal — as anyone who has flown over the jungles of Vietnam in a helicopter can plainly see — the mooncraters caused by each plane’s 30- ton bombload. Long after the war is a dying the memory, these holes landscape of four countries in Southeast Asia will remain as reminders of the American way of life and death. in and that frontier, JUST TWO MONTHS ago, Pre­ sident Nixon told the public that United States armed forces had s u c c e s s f u l l y completed the destruction of enemy base areas along the Cambodian-South Viet­ nam “all American troops have withdrawn from Cambodia” on schedule. To­ day, with Vice-President Agnew again on the Nixon doctrine of presumptive withdrawal, Americans are back over the skies of Cambodia straf­ ing and napalming far beyond the border sanctuaries. But nobody in the Administration is asking the road selling l»l W I IS for time to tell that to the public on television. country, attacking Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., a former Air Force Secretary who is Washington’s most know­ ledgeable authority on the bomb­ ing escalation and its cover-up by the government, is willing to tell it: “ If American#; are flying over it with a bombs or other ammunition, it leaves a semantic problem . . . I believe you ought to say there are no combat around troops, or that air is not included. Other­ wise. it is misleading . . . at the same thing that this Admin­ istration has been openly Deesca­ in lating South Vietnam, wre have been es­ calating the air war secretly.” it#; military strength is assembling AS CHAIRMAN of the Foreign R e l a t i o n s Subcommittee on United States Security Agree­ ments and commitments abroad, Symington a strongly documented record of this nation's policies caught in the slipstream of past errors and present fables. It is worth plowing through the 1,500 pages of cen­ sored transcripts for their disclo­ sures as well as their deletions. For the transcripts dispute the Administration’s line that present combat to protect American forces in South Vietnam: rather, American funds and air power are being used is designed only to prop up mercenaries and regimes. The revelations about the half­ hidden air war amplify what cor­ respondents on the scene have discovered. Ironically, the pattern of public disclosure works back­ wards in Washington. “We are pleased when the press breaks the truthful facts on its own,” says a subcommittee staff mem­ ber. “ It cancels the excuses by the State and Defense Depart­ ments to censor the hearings for nonsecurity reasons.” SYMINGTON’S subcommittee finds that the Nixon Administra­ tion withholds in these areas: the increase in com­ bat sorties being flown by the air force and navy over northern Laos — politically motivated mis­ sions that government as distinct from operations along the Ho Chi Minh trail to halt infiltra­ tion into South Vietnam; facts about the bases in Thailand from which certain missions continue despite the recent announcement that one base there was being closed; the added millions of dollars it costs to fly B-52’s all the way from Okinawa and Guam in Laos, Cam­ targets against bodia and South Vietnam. information for What has now' become clear is that the United States is bombing three countries — South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia — from a Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: • Be typed triple-spaced. • Be less than 250 words. • Include name, address, and phone number of contri­ butor. Mail letters to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Texas; or bring letters to the Texan offices. Journalism Buildina 103. O N -T H E -D R A 0 W igs Second Floor GENERAL STUDENT MEETING 7:30 P.K UNION AUDITORIUM WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER Ii. 1970 Purpose I: — Brief analysis of Regents unorthodox administrative dealings last * summer — Dissolution of A & S — Unexplained firing of Dean Silber Purpose 2: — Introduction of Students for Responsible University Administration's present activities. — Preparation of a Sourcebook on the reorganization of A A S — Appeal to the Texas Educational Coordinating Board for open hearings on A A S reorganization. — Recruitment of additional student help in ,these endeavors: typing, legal research, office workers, etc. Meeting sponsored by: STUDENTS FOR RESPONSIBLE UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION GIVE M E A H E A D W IT H H A IR . .. By Tovar Tresses® Create a totally new you with a new head of hair: Easy care wigs of Kanekalon®; wash in a mild shampoo, let dry and brush. Center, Dutch Boy, 30.00; left, Pierrette, 25.00; right, Napoleon, 30.00. Miss Ellen Gikas will assist you in choosing just the right w ig at Yaring's-on-the-Drag 'til Saturday, September 19. Wednesday, Sept. 16, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN ftagaS SALES & SERVICE — EASY TERMS RADIOS, STEREOS, TAPE RECORDERS, SPEAKERS, RECORD PLAYERS, TV's, etc. for H O M E , C A R , BO AT, T R A ILER H O U S E Pre-recorded Tape, H e a d Phones, Patch C o rd s Batteries, Needles, Recording Tape, M icrophones, etc, B E D W A Y 307 W. 19th St. RADIO Ph.: 478-6609 LES AMIS CAFE 24th & San A ntonio O pen 7:30 am — 2:00 am B r e a k fa st S p ec ia l also . . . crepes & om elettes full-m eal sandw iches By TIM SISK Texan Sports Staff Freshmen their skills friends and a onlookers. footballers display in front of family, interested few Varsity ball generates more 60.000 e n t h u s i a s m . With boisterous fans in the stands and a press box packed with media representatives, many a sopho­ more suits up for his first game wishing he had brought a butter­ fly net along. three This year, only such sophomores will get to cope with first-game jitters, thanks to the 34 lettermen returning from the ’69 Horn squad. One is Alan Lowry, the defensive left halfback. “Sure, I’m a little nervous. I guess I won’t know until I get in the game Saturday how ner­ vous I really am .” Such trying tim es test the skill of the coaching staff. A player must be trained to respond to a particular situation on the field without thinking about anything else. With all the training Lowry’s TONIGHT 8:00 in the Main Ballroom Student Union j o s h M cDo w e l l International speaker and activist direct from the heart of the Revolution in Uruguay, Bolivia, Chile speaking on SEX A N D THE SIN G LE Open Discussion to Follow S P O N S O R E D B Y : (Campus Crusade For Christ Intern.) Sophomore Jitters Await 3 Gridders G ar^ Taylor Handwriting on the Wall? since moving up had the varsity, he shouldn't have any problems. to “Last year on the freshman team, the defensive secondary used only a basic zone defense. On the varsity, we mix it all up. There’s a lot to learn — man- to-man, zone, combinations, and disguised defenses where we switch around,” Lowry said. Lowry has earned a starting berth because he’s “scrapped, said hustled Coach Darrell Royal. “Alan is deep in citizenship and in time improved,” and he’ll be outstanding.” Other sophomore starters are offensive right tackle Jerry Sise- more linebacker Randy Braband. and Sisemore. appropriately named in when at 6-4, 235, stepped Randy Stout was sidelined with injury two weeks ago. a neck Braband “keeps on improving says Royal. and “He’ll look real good in a scrim­ mage, then be even better at practice the next day.” improving.” S W C Statistics TOTAL O F F E N S E T eam A&M TOU A rk a n sa s SM U T ech B a y lo r T eam T e c h T C I; A&M SM U A rk B a y lo r Hi G a m e : 550, A&M (W ich ita S ta te ) TOTAL D E F E N S E L o w est Y ield : 175, T ech (T u lan e) BISKING G P la y e r nnd School B obby D av is. T C I * .................................................................I L a r r y H a r ris , T C U ............................................................................ I S tev e B u rk s, A&M ...................... I I B ra d D usek, A&M Bill B u rn e tt. A rk a n s a s .................................................................... I D oug M cC u lch rn , T ech ................................................................ I G a ry H am m o n d , SM U ...................................................... I .................... PAUSING CI. Att. Comp. Int. P layer and School C huck H ixson. SM U ...............I B ill M o n tg o m ery . A rk ............I I C h a rle s N a p p e r, T e c h ..................I L e x J a m e s , A&M .................. I S te v e J u d y , TCU L a n e y Cook. B a y lo r ...............I ...............I J o e M ac K ing. A&M ..............I Si S o u th all. B a y lo r P et. 63.3 45 38.5 26 60.0 IS 58.3 12 25.0 12 25.0 12 66.7 3 28.6 7 49, K ing to G oodw in. A&M (W ichita S ta te ) 24 IO 9 7 3 3 2 2 I I 2 0 I 0 0 2 L O N G E S T : P A SS R E C E IV IN G P lap er and School ....................................... .............................. K en F le m in g . SM U G ary' H am m o n d . SM U ......................................... .......................... R a y m o n d M apps. SM U ................................................ ...................................................................... H ugh M c E lro y . A&M Jo n R ic h a rd so n . A rk .............................................................. D e re k D av is, Bay l o r ........................................................................ SEASON STANDINGS T eam W A&M ............................................................................................. \ .............................................................................................I TC U Tech ................................................................. I .............................................................................. 0 A r k a n s a s .............................................................................................0 SM U .........................................................................................2 B a y lo r % R ice T e x a s ................................................................... ••••* « <"• I I I I I <"» I I I I I I PIR. 85 73 90 72 74 63 FIs. 64 67 74 74 84 T i s . IS IS 17 ll 22 13 Yds. 230 129 77 367 I 42 Pl 25 Y ds. 550 437 367 279 259 121 5 lls. 175 193 272 415 422 424 Yds. 247 107 96 S3 68 63 TI) 1 2 0 n o o A v g . 6 5 6 0 4 I 3 9 3.5 1.9 TD 5 4 4 1 2 0 A vg. TD 8.2 3.0 4 8 6.6 5.7 5.0 TD 2 I I I I 0 0 A \g . 13.7 5.9 5.6 7 5 3.5 3.1 4.8 A vg. P er Comp. 9.6 32.9 8 6 23 9 0.1 14.0 30.5 12.5 f g l . Yd*. 65 79 55 67 66 45 8 7 4 3 3 3 TD 0 0 1 n I 0 A vg. 8 I 11.3 13 S 22 0 lo 0 P et 1.000 1.000 1.000 .non .OOO .OOO Pf* 41 31 21 28 II 0 Opp 14 7 14 34 28 38 o M any a coach h as seen the h an dw riting on the w all w hen his te a m loses the close ones and his p lay e rs s ta r t grum bling. B ut graffiti in the locker room ? T h at lin e ’s re se rv e d for coaches who feed th e ir sluggish th ird -strin g linem an, “ Get Good, o r G et G one.” Or then th e re ’s: “ They Say: W hat Goes U p M ust Com e Down. But Who Says W hen?” T h at p la c a rd hung above the e n tra n ce to T e x a s’ M em orial S tadium locker room w hen the ’H orns re p o rted b ack in 1964 to defend th e ir natio nal cham pionship. I f s not hanging, bu t is still applicable today. And the a n sw er is still the sam e as in 1964 — the pre-season football pred ictors. The T ex as Longhorns W E R E No. I, and they A R E w aiting for th e ir next test. The S teers reign as the b est in the land, and th en a g ain th e y ’ve been deposed. Crushing Answer in 1964 The m ile-high A rk an sas R azorbaeks '64 p red ic to rs by bringing helped out the the ’H orns down in a cru sh in g 14-13 defeat. H ad T exas won th a t g am e in an otherw ise p e rfe c t season, w ouldn’t they hav e defended th e ir title? D a rrell R oyal d escrib es the feeling of being No. I as “ v ery te m p o ra ry ,” an d he ought to know. T he cham pionship 1963 club g rab b ed the top spot a fte r stom ping O klahom a, only to be deposed of the honor and gain it back a fte r two g a m e s of the ’64 cam p aig n . The p rese n t te a m ’s m a rria g e w ith No. I h a rd ly lasted long enough to get on the books. S p o rtsw rite r su p rem e B lackie Sher* rod placed the whole w acky w orld of p re ­ season p redictio ns in p ersp ectiv e, say in g th a t rid in g the top spot w as like being m a r­ to M rs. E lizab eth T ay lo r Hilton ried W ilding Todd F is h e r B urton. M an, th ey d id n 't get the lights dim m ed before p a p e rs w ere filed. The S teers w ere branded No. I la st D ecem ber, b u t it m u st have been w ith d isap p earin g in k .” He pointed out th a t the team which ra te s the top slot, pre-season, and tends to its own business during the season is going to go out No. I. But Sherrod also pointed out th at, all things equal, the team w ith the toughest schedule w as a p p a re n tly being given the king-of-the-m ountain chance to w ard off all com ers. H ence Ohio S ta te ’s B uckeyes, w hat w ith th a t m u rd ero u s Big IO slate. Choice Is U p to . . . Well now, in c o n tra st, the best tea m w ith the e a sie st schedule should be situ ated atop the pack, “ Sports Illu stra te d .” “ Its (Ohio S tate) schedule, com pared to th at of No. I contenders, is a cakew alk (T exas A&M and Duke a re its nonconference opponents). .So, who do you believe? As a quick c ra m session, h ere a re your choices: “ Sports Illu s tra te d ” — I, Ohio S tate; 2, M ississippi; 3, A rkan sas; 4, T exas. “ Street and S m ith s” 2, T exas; 3 .Notre Dam e. I, Ohio S tate; “ Football R oundup” - I. Ohio S tate; 2, T exas; 3, USG. “ Football Y earbook” — 2, A rk an sas; 3, Ohio S tate; 4, M ississippi; 5, N otre D am e; and yes, fans, 6, Texas. I, LSC; “ P layb oy” — I, USC; 2, T exas; 3, Ohio ABC N etw ork I, Ohio S tate; 2, T exas; S tate. 3, LSC. A ssociated P re ss — I, Ohio S tate; 2, T ex as; 3, A rk an sas — oops! USC. A fter one week of play, th ere has a lre a d y been a d ra stic m ove of No, 3 A rk an sas in A P to the eleventh spot. LAST W E E K ’S R E S U L T S : M issouri 38. B a y lo r 0, S ta n fo rd 34. A rk a n s a s SS; O k la h o m a 28, SMU l l : A&M 41, W ich ita S ta te 14; TCU 31, U T A rlin g to n 7: T e x a s T ech 21, T u la n e 14. SA T U R D A Y 'S S C H E D U L E : T C U a t P u rd u e . I 30 p .m .; T e c h a t K an sas. 1-30 p .m .: B a y lo r a t A rm y. 2 p m , ; SM U a t T e n n e ss e e , 2 p .m .; C a lifo rn ia a t T e x a s. 4 p .m .: O k la h o m a S ta te vs. A rk a n s a s a t L ittle R ock ,7 30 p .m .; VMI a t R ice 7:30 p . m . ; A&M at. LSC . 7:30 p.m . “ The Longhorns and No. I laste d th re e g a m e s a t the m o st,” Sherrod w rote, “ and th a t’s grounds for ann ulm ent in any court. But the R azorbaeks a re ju st joining T exas in the uphill battle. Both a re w ondering if th ere will be a M ichigan this trip. Major League N a ti o n a l Leu*!]* " Pit ts burgh 8. P h i l a d e l p h i a I C hica* > 5. S' Louis 3 M o n t r e a l 5 N e w Y o r k 4 H o u sto n 9, C in cin n ati 2 A m e r i c a n F e i g n * B a l t i m o r e 6, W a s h i n g t o n 2 M i n n e i o t a 7-3, C a l i f o r n i a VS C l e v e l a n d 4. D e t r o i t 8 M i l w a u k e e I. O a k l a n d 0 N ew Y ork 8-3, B oston 6-2 I G O O D SEPTEMBER 18 THRU SEPTEMBER 21 GENIE S TIRE OFFER \G O O D frEA R I Harry- S i b ends Saturday night ill Something to SELL, BUY or RENT? DAILY TEXAN 2ud Tire Half Prioe PIM Fad. Ex. Tax Per Tire. Ne Trade Needed I Blackwall I lute I r n I Size I 700-13 I C 78-14 I E78-14 I F78-14 G78-14 H78-14 J78-14 F78-15 G78-15 H78-15 J 78-15 900-15 915-15 Replaces SLZ* — 6.95-14 7235-14 7.75-14 8.25-14 8.55-14 8.85-14 7.75-15 8.25-15 8.55-15 8.85-15 — - Regular Price- Each 534.45 $34.55 $35.95 $38.00 $41.70 $45.70 $51.75 $38.00 $41.70 $45.70 $51.75 $52.60 $53.70 $17.20 $17.25 $17.95 $19.00 $20.85 $22.85 $25.85 $19X0 $20.85 $2245 $25.8$ $26.30 $26.85 $1.90 $2.15 $245 $2.55 $2.67 $2.93 $2.88 $2.61 $2.77 $2.98 $3.08 $2.90 $3.06 FREE M OUNTING ON ALL T IR E S VSI OUR RAIN CHECK PRO&JIAM Because of an expected heavy demand tar Goodyear tires, we may run net of some sizes during this offer, but we will be happy to arder your size tire ut the advertised price aid issue you a rain chee* for future delivery of the nertfcewftse. POWER CUSHION POLYBIAS^BUICKWAU TIRES • 78 Series size with low profile for steady ride, steering • Broader footprint traction contact than comparable con­ ventional size tires. Two Polyester cord body plies, non-flat spotting, two fiberglass belts suppress tread-squirming wear and maintain traction effectiveness 3 WAYS TO CHARGE I . Sinclair & ■ i i i n i n i 2 . 3 . ' ■jLC. G O O D Y E A R —T H E O N L Y M A K E R O F P O L Y G L A S * T I R E S FREE CAR WASH CARDS AT SERVICE ISLAND Genie C ar Care Center John M. Kash III on Campus Distributor Phono: 453-7612 6:30 p.m. — 10:00 p.m. $ BURNET RD. 454-4831 i, W . .16.1970 THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED You Will Be Amazed at the GOOD, FAST RESULTS For So Little Money! C A L L GR 1-5244 You Get 15 Words For One Low Price! Insertions $ 0 1 5 For Only Insertions $ * fl C O O jw I For Only NEW RECORD SHOP YOO LPi $ * 5 0 S-Track Stereo Tapas f $400 450 to t h . L to J e t . a f " . .‘4 " . i s ALL NEW MERCHANDISE BARGAIN CENTER 411 Euit 43rd Frog, Raider Backs Gain W eekly Honors For games two backs who entered their respective Southwest Con­ ference blind, TCU’s Bobby Davis and Texas Tech’s Ken Perkins didn’t play touch in earning SWC and and go national honors for their per­ formances. Davis, a 205-pound halfback for the Frogs who speeded for a school record 247 yards rushing Saturday night, literally cannot see the daylight he supposedly hits. He was named College Back of the Week and SWC Offensive Player of the Week by The As­ sociated Press. Perkins gained top conference Defensive Player of the Week honors job against Tulane’s Green Wave, which came out in a brand new offense for the Techsans. for his secondary No I Spy Here Perkins and his fellow Red Raider defenders prepared all last week to work against Tulane’s split backfield and more passing. So what happens? The Green Wave comes out running from the I formation. It was a surprise all right, but Perkins, with a little help from his friends, picked it up quickly and tossed it back into Tulane's face in a thrilling 21-14 come-- from-behind victory. trailing 14-7 And it was Perkins who picked the Raiders up when they were in the the lowest, fourth quarter. He latched onto a Tulane pass and shot 46 yards down the sideline for the tying touchdown. Of his poor vision, TCU’s Davis said: "I see everything I need to see." He carried 18 times for fe n r tf C tIC6& 4M L r M E N 'S W E A R I I H (■uadalup* OPEN EVERY THURSDAY Till 8 p.m. Mon. - Sat. 9 * 5:30 WIXiGO the 247 steps and scored two touchdowns in the 31-7 win over the University a t Arlington. Davis, who is near-sighted with 20-200 glasses vision, wears everywhere except on the football field — even in the dressing room at half-time so he can see the blackboard. ‘The Spinner* " I tried contact lenses but I couldn’t wear them. Anyway, my eyes don't seem to bother me on the football field." The stocky Davis is a powerful runner with exceptional balance and strong legs. "He was a good hurdler in high school and that helped him build good knee ac­ tion," says Marvin Lasater, TCU’s backfield coach. Although Davis may not be able to see them too well, would be tacklers are having trouble locating him. He spins and ducks and runs low to the ground. His team m ates have dubbed him "The Spinner." "I have to take advantage of anything I can," he explains, "spinning, putting m y hand on the ground to keep m y balance, just anything. "In high school I could fake people. But here my high school moves are too slow. So I have to hit and spin. I have to lose tacklers by leaving them as small a target as I can," Asked if it was his best per­ formance ever, Davis said : "I rushed for 144 yards once in high school. But I only carried the ball six times then.” The sobering — if not startling — reflection about Davis’ per­ formance is that he almost didn t start. TCU head coach Fred Taylor has said often that he has three starting running backs and all will play equally. So it was the last minute before Taylor decided on Davis. ATTN: GOLFERS IT'S C LO SE -O U T TIME O N 1970 PRO-LINE CLUBS! B R IN S IN Y O U R O LD STICKS A N D TRADE THEM IN O N S O M E N E W ONES! REDUCED BY A S M U C H A S 40% George Mormon GOLF SHOPS M orris Williams G o lf Course M anor Road — 926-1298 Municipal G o lf Course Enfield Rd. — 477-6963 CATFISH CREEK R E S T A U R A N T LOCALLY OW NED AND O PE R A TE D S E R V IN G : F R E S H W A T E R C A T F IS H S T E A K S FRIED S H R IM P 6421 Burnet Lane Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE All above served with homemade slaw, beans, f-fries and hush puppies. Everything cooked in Poly unsaturated fats. W IN E ic BEER Tuesday thru Sunday 11-2 & 4-10 Closed M onday 404 S. L A M A R 476-7593 Morton Benched For Eagle Game into DALLAS - Roger (AP) Staubach, who drilled momentary life the Dallas Cowboys’ sagging offense against the New York last Sunday, was named Tuesday as the Cowboys’ starting quarterback for the reg­ ular season opener against Phil­ adelphia Sunday. Jets It marked the second straight that Staubach, a former year Heisman Trophy winner from Navy, had opened the season at quarterback for the Cowboys. Last season he started the first game because No. I quarterback Craig Morton was injured. This tim e i f s for a different reason. "Craig is in a slump," head coach Tom Landry said. "And Roger's been throwing good. We’ll just keep working with Craig in practice, and see if he can work it out.” W h i I e the quarterbacking change was the big decision, it wasn’t ail Landry had on his mind. defensive secondary Landry also once again shuttled his and announced fia t Dennis Homan would start the season at split end in place of "Bullet" Bob Hayes. Landry said that Homan, the Pokes’ No. I choice in 1968, had been the leading receiver in per­ formance during the pre-season after grading all the films. BULOVA* GIVES YOUR JEW ELRY A BEAUTY BATH Bulova b rin gs back its original brilliance with a new liquid jewelry cleaner. Treat your jewelry to the same kind of beauty treatment you like yourself. This new liquid jewelry cleaner from Bulova gently bathes away the microscopic film of dust, oil, and make-up that gives jewelry a lackluster look. You can make precious and costume jewelry shine like new again with this powerful non- ammoniated formula that's easy to use and lasts almost forever. With brush and hanger, t i fl. oz. are only $2.00. DIRECT DIAM OND IMPORTERS SHEET ALL’S ON THE DRAG A T 2268 GUADALUPE O P E N ’TIL 9:00 P.M. THURSDAY Ifs a fact: Sandy Beaches are commonplace CLEAN Sandy Beaches are not 111 TH A N KSG IVIN G BREAK T O U R O C H O RIOS, J A M A IC A $249* — 6 DAYS — 5 NIGHTS from D&llaa * p lu s tax N ovem ber 23-28, 1970 Includes all transportation, accom m odations at Jamaica Hilton Hotel, 2 meals daily, cocktail parties pius ali the activties you would expect at a super deluxe resort. For reservations and information Steven C. Foster 5000 Valley Oak Drive Austin, Texas Phone 465-0852 Reservation Deadline Sept. 23, 1970 Only University of Texas Students and Faculty Members Eligible "Proper means of illumination during periods of cerebral meditation ofttimes results in an environmental metamorphosis beneficial to the cat who’s using it!’ 4r f T v. • , a • . The right kind of lamp can do good things to your head. As well as your studies. Like the Panasonic Fluorescent Desk Lamp. With an electronic gizmo that gets 2? watts of light out of a 15-watt bulb. And sends some of that extra light through the trans­ lucent shade that keeps your brilliantly illuminated crib notes from blinding you. And if you have a small room or a small-minded roommate who likes to sleep occasionally, you ought to have Panasonic's High Intensity Lamp. With its sliding lever that gives you an infinite series of settings. From a cram-night 150 watts all the way down to a Saturday- night seductive glow. Now that you are adequately enlightened as to the relevance of proper illumination to emotional homeostasis, ambulate to that repository of knowledge and sweat shirts, your college bookstore. Where you can look at Panasonic lamps and electric pencil sharpeners. After which, we think you’ll agree that there s only one way to see things. Our way. PANASONIC* just slightly ahead of our time. Wednetday, Sept. 16, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 Put Down —T exan Staff Photo by PHIL H IB E R . Beta Theta Pi defender applies the stopper to airborne intramural action Tuesday. receiver in U SC Closes Gap on Texas With Win Over Crimson Tide By The Associated Press Southern C als Trojans ran over highly-rated A l a b a m a , 42-21 Saturday, but jump Texas in the firs* weekly college football poll of The Associated Press. failed to Although collecting fewer first place votes than PSC, the second­ rated Longhorns maintained a 13- point bulge on the charging West Coast team while remaining idle. Orange Coach Nixes 8 Blacks (AP) eight football suspended SYRACUSE. N Y - Coach Ben Sehwartzwalder, un­ der civil rights fire in recent weeks, has spoken up in his own defense and Indicated there is no way black players can rejoin the squad and still have a team at Svracuse University this season, Ending his long silence in an exclusive taped question and an­ swer interview with The Asso­ ciated Sehwartzwalder said “ if the plovers come back on their terms now we would not have a season. I don’t think the pl a vers we have would consider this a proper thing, to give way to players who h av e missed ail this practice.” Press Th<» 61 vear-old coach blamed the profiler *, at Syracuse, and elsewhere, on a “ third party.’’ situation and which enters a causes what he termed “ group- ism . * “A group of athletes went to a third party and discussed their problems with them, instead of discussing them with the football coach. Ti is is where you later had serious problems." after He defended himself agaiast the charges of racism by seven black pin vers, who w-ere sus­ pended they boycotted spring p rac tice and then not in­ vited to play in the fall. An eighth Joined them later and all were suspended when t h e y refused to sign a statement included their taking full responsibility for the boycott. that “We never wore conscious of racism." Sehwartzwalder said, revealing that the present prob- ; I ems began two years ago when the Negro players were freshmen j and sophomores He admitted “differences of opinion’’ with black players, but emphasized that “ if they hustle °nough, if they are good enough, they are going to be playing," Calling himself a “kind of benevolent dictator,” he said he Teated his players "pretty much as equals once they are on that field." He said he even gave the Negroes "a little special con- i sider anon" because of tile dif- ; from which j ficult background many of them come, and because they are more "sensitive.'' Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service S E R V IC IN 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 The O nly Independent V W G ara ge In Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET R O A D Across from G u lf Mart G L 2-0205 C L O S E D S A T U R D A Y Stanford, after a stunning 34-28 upset of No. 4 Arkansas, and Missouri, only produced major shakeups in the poll after one week of college play. the Arkansas was bumped to No. l l , while Stanford, previously ranked tenth, took over the fourth spot. Missouri, on the basis of an easy 38-0 win over Baylor, moved one notch to No. IO. Twenty-four of the 40 voters picked Ohio State No. I, giving the Buckeyes 728 points. Texas had six first-place vote* for 657 points while the Trojans accu­ mulated 644 points, including seven No, I votes Mississippi, ranked No. 5, Penn State. No. 7 and Michigan, No. 8. each received one fireplace vote. Top Twenty C.C i Ti 644 T he Top T w enty team *, with first- p lare v o tes In p aren theses, and total points. P oints tabulated on b asis of 20- 1S-16-14-12-10-9-S-7-6-5-4-3-2-1: 1 O h io S ta te 1 24) 728 2 T e x a s weak*. Ba co m m iition a d a 2*d Lf. upon graduation. F ro g m e n , Sophom ore*, •'"dl Junior* ara a iig ib lt. gro und . in it now lh * Qu a n t i c o , Va. for tor tho C H o o ia air or t a k ^ g ap p lica tio n * SEE: C A P T . B R Y A N BEB Sept. 16 it 17 8:30 A .M . to 3 P.M. JITTERS OPEN 24 HRS. 2718 Guadalupe L O W LEAD Ethyl gasoline low, lowest price Plus FREE Longhorn "Hook 'em Horns" glasses with IO gal. fill up. Library to Focus on Crime Law School Granted $ 40,000 for Collection A is library to fight crime being assembled at the School of Law. Funded by a $40,000 grant from the Texas Criminal Justice Council, the special collection will consist of books, studies and special reports in the field of criminal justice. The Federal Omnibus Control and Safe Street Act, passed by Congress in 1968, appropriated $480 million to the Law Enforce­ ment Assistance Administration (LEAA) to be used in developing programs aimed at crime control. block States their grants on population from a $340 million fund funds are action awarded from a $60 million fund the basis of awarded and are on the city, county and state level at the discretion of the LEAA. Develop Methods The Texas Criminal Justice Council administers the crime prevention program at Hie state is composed of 21 level, and members the appointed governor which equally represent state and local levels of the law. by in which “We plan to take materials relating to law enforcement and these develop ways materials can be made readily available to interested individuals and agencies in the field of law enforcement,” Roy M. Mersky, professor of law and director of the project, said. Texas law enforcement agen­ cies and agencies of other states will be the source for the m ater­ ials collected in the library. The prim ary objective of the to special collection, according Mersky, will be to meet the in­ of Texas formational needs police, correctional institutional agencies, legal defender offices, juvenile district attorneys and and criminal courts. Progress Reports Interested persons and agen­ cies, if interested in a similar program, read progress reports of other agencies and profit by their experience. can The program, believed unique in the United States, will strive to ex­ perience, Mersky said. duplication of avoid “We hope that we can collect the work of other agencies in the criminal justice area and thus avoid the mistakes others have m ade,” he is said. thinking of attacking a specific problem with a certain approach, without the expenditure of time and money. “ Texas “ Investigators can look at what other states have done in this area and have a better grasp they might efficiently of how thus approach problem, saving taxpayers’ time dollars,” Mersky added. and the received The grant was in August and the staff of the Uni­ versity’s Tarleton Law Library is busy getting the project ready for an October opening. University student Robert Ste­ wart was acquitted Monday of a charge of failure to obey a lawful police order arising from a May 5 student march and confrontation at the Capitol. in Originally Stewart was charged with parading street without a permit, but later the charge was changed to failure to obey a lawful order. Jim Dear, assistant City attorney, said. the The validity of the charge was questioned in Corporation Court since no restraining order had been issued at the march. Two other University students, Stephen Russell and Stephen Lulenski face trial in Corporation Court later this fall on charges stemming from the incident. Court Acquits! Nickel Gum Replaced UT Protester By 'Inflated Bundle By JOHN OWEN Texan Staff Writer Going along with the trend toward bigger, better and more e x p e n s i v e things, the Ex- Students’ Association in charge of University vending machines, has exchanged the old institution of the five-stick, nickel pack of gum for a bright, shiny eight- stick, dime bundle. In doing so, the organization has deviated from what most Austin merchants are doing. Local retailers have upped the price from a nickel to 7 cents, without enlarging the package. The William Wrigley Jr. Co. of Chicago issued a statement to all gum lovers, saying they had not raised their prices and that consumers of the sticky stuff should not tolerate the increase. The Ex-Students’ Association, according to Gene Seton of the Neelley Vending Co., is really saving the students money by changing packs. Seton said that gum sold for 7 cents a pack averages out to 1.4 cents per stick. An eight-stick pack sold for a dime tallies about 1.25 cents per stick. That means that a stu­ dent is saving himself .15 of a cent per stick if he buys it from the Ex-Students’ Association’s vending machines on campus. This was one line of reasoning to canned used to explain the recent switch soft from bottled drinks. The prices were raised, but the students are getting a little more soda. Tile use of cans the bottle also did away with losses the suppliers claimed they were suffering. increase just a small Students now can be sure they are getting a little more product in with price. Alas, many students will probably say they do not want more, that they are only sear­ ching for a rock to cling to in a raging storm and the only refuge left to them, the 5-cent pack been gum, of eliminated. has CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES .07 E a ch Word (lo word m inim um ) $ . . ........ $ .06 .......... $ ...7 5 . . . . $ ...0 5 ........................... ........ $11.00 ........ ................... ........ $15.00 ............................ ........ $19.00 E ach Additional Tim e Stndent rate one tim e E ach additional word 20 Consecutive Issues IO words 15 words 20 w ords inch I col. inch 2 col. 3 col. inch 4 col. inch C lassified D isplay I colum n x one inch one tim e $ 2.10 . ........ $ 2.00 E ach Additional Tim e ........................ ........ $38.00 ........................ ........ $70.00 ........................ ........ $96.00 ........................ ........ $120.00 (No copy change for consecutive issu e ra tes.) • . L O W S T U D E N T R ATES IS words or loss for 75c the first tim*, 5c each additional word. Stu­ receipt dent must show Auditor's in Journalism and pay Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y through Friday. in advance D E A D L IN E SCHEDULE T u e s d a y T e x a n M onday. 11:00 a.m . W ed n e sd a y T ex a n T u esd ay . 11:00 a m. T h u rs d a y T e x a n W ednesday, 11:00 a.m . F r id a y T e x a n T h u rsd ay . 11:00 a.m . S u n d a y T e x a n . . F rid a y . 3:00 p.m . F o r S a l e T O P CASH P R IC E S paid fo r d ia ­ m o nds, old gold. C ap ito l D iam ond S h o p . 603 Com m odore P e rry . 476-0178. Includes S T E R E O COM PONENT SYSTEMS. and am p lifier. All b ra n d new and w ith w a r­ ra n ty . $65.00. UNCLAIM ED FR E IG H T, 3003 A irport Blvd. tu rn tab le, sp eak ers, ST E R E O CONSOLES W e have ju st receiv ed a sh ip m en t of 4 brand new ste reo consoles. T hese 1970 natio n ally ad v ertised m odels a re in beautiful w aln u t finish w ith 4 sp eak ­ fam ous BSR er sy stem s an d w orld tu rn tab les. T hey fe atu re pow erful solid sta te c h asis an d will be sold for $75 each o r sm all m o n th ly p a y m e n ts. They m ay be inspected in w arehouse a t UN­ CLAIM ED F R E IG H T , 2003 A irport Blvd. (off 19th), 9 a.m . - 6 p.m ., Mon. - F ri. Sat. 'til I p .m . D R E W ’S R ECO RD EXCHANGE. Used L P ’s tra d e d , sold. 1624 L av aca, 478- 2079. E IG H T TRACK custom recording. Up to 40 M inutes, $4,95. Up to 80 M inutes. $6.95, 385-0822. ’65 MUSTANG. Six cylinder, speed. R adio an d h e ater. 451-3234. th ree N E W ST E R E O CO M PO N EN T^ T V . Sony, H itachi. BSR. The Alcove, 500 W est 30th. Open 3-6. 472-1234. 1969 KAWASAKI 500cc. Low m ileage, ex cellen t condition. Call Tom, 472- 4740. F o r S a l e F o r S a l e H o u s e s , U i u f . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . W a n t e d L o s t s F o u n d T y p i n g To Place a Texan Classified Ad Call G R 1-5244 I ALTO SAXAPHONE. Like new. Deluxe case. Cost $300, sell for $100. 454-19S0, I 263-2459. 1958 PORSCHE COU PE. Radio, radials. recliners. Like new. B eautiful, fast, econom ical. C onsider trad e . $1495. 454- 1980. 263-2459. ditioned, ’68 M ERCURY MONTEGO. Air con­ E xcellent 24,000 m iles. condition. N ew Ures. $2,000. Call 452- 2867. FO R SA LE: HONDA 160 w ith helm et 8,000 m iles: C all 472-7411 a fte r 6 p.m . T H R E E BEDROOMS, two b ath s, living room , dining room. kitchen. Brick. C entral air, heat. Carpet. N ear Uni­ versity. Acceptable, responsible adults. Lease. Deposit. $200-monthly. 476-3720, 251-4721. i T H R E E USED T A PE re co rd e rs worth $10-$50. M ake offer. Also Kenwood I receiver. Stereo tuner. 477-7177. 477-7757. 1969 TR IU M PH DAYTONA 500cc. 4,000 m iles, g re a t shape. $875. John Selmon. T u t o r i n g case. Binocular. MICROSCOPE. Bausch and Bom b w ith IOX and 5X oc- culars. IOX. 43X, 97X objectives. $400. 451-3130. GALAXY III. VOX. C ry stal c alib rato r, AC sp eak er console. Shure 444 m ike, all In top condition. N eed cash, m ak e offer. Call Speedy to see. 465-7881. old. GUILD 12 strin g g u itar. Only one y e a r In beautiful condition. Owned by professional m usician. Includes case. $300. 345-2053. 1968 GMG V6 Ai ton $1300. 1968 Saab V4 $1200. W rite Stephen Storm , Route 8, Box 265E, Austin. 1970 HONDA 750 w ith F a rin g luggage rack. th ree sprockets. $1300 firm . Call Brian. 454-0340 o r 444-4787. S IN G E R B rand new 1970 Sin g er Sew’lng M a­ chines (4). F u lly equipped to zig-zag. m ake buttonholes, etc. This is a 1st they will go fa st a t tim e o ffer and $49.95 each. We have th read ed th em for Inspection. UNCLAIMED FR E IG H T. 2003 A irport Blvd. (off 19th), 9 a.m .-6 p.m . M on.-Frl. Sat. 'til I p.m . No sales to dealers. y our HOME AUTO eight tra c k au to m atic radio stereo 21 volt a d a p to r sp eak ers, 30 tap es. 474-2733. AFGHAN PU PS . AKC re g iste red . Call an y tim e. 442-5319. '67 GTO. Air, pow er, turbo-hy d ra m a tic, facto ry tape. Call 444-0672. B E F O R E YOU BUY stereo equipm ent w rite to : G ary Goldberg. 3701 Chest­ nut, Philadelphia. P e n n sy lv an ia 19104. HONDA 350-cl for sale. $450 - b e st offer. tim e, m ornings before IO Cali any best. 451-2310. AM PBX HOME CASSETTE deck. m icrophone, p erfect condition Four m onths old. $125 o r best offer. 452-9684. TWO BEDROOM. F irep lace, c o m e r lot. trees, view Austin Lake E states. W rite Stephen Storm , Route 8. Box 265E. D ISCO U N T PRICES O N NEW Q U ALITY STEREO C O M P O N EN T S A vailable AR to T eac. Concord to M arantz STEREO SERVICE O F AUSTIN A student owned and o p erated com pany Call 452-3820 or 454-9015 1967 MUSTANG CON VERTIBLE. $1100. racin g stripes, sh arp G re at shape, wide ovals, roll bar. GL 3-0783. CUSTOM CH O PPER BSA 650. Com plete fork. high com ­ chrom e, extended pression. 477-3877. 507 W est 23rd. ELECTRIC GUITAR. F e n d e r Ja g u a r. S unburst finish. With case. C all 453- MATH. S e m este r R ates. A vailable often as n e ce ssa ry . F o r Business, Liberal- A rts M ajors. G.R.E. P re p a ra tio n . Gua- K uaranteed Results. G roup R ates. MATH EN AMICS, 452-1327. Work in TV commercials! No experience ncessary, unusual and ch aracter faces. All ages. Free audition! lf selected, we will tram you for work in this exciting field. Call 452-9711. openings PRIV A TE MUSIC STUDIO announces in voice and piano. All experienced. l e v e l s . M. Mus., T arrytow n. 452-8320. F o r R e n t PARKING. $50 this sem ester. 2418 San Antonio. One block from C am pus be­ hind V arsity T h eater. 476-3720, 251- 4721. MOBILE HOME SPACES on Lake Austin a t M ack’s M arina. Only twenty from Cam pus. Good fishing, m inutes sw im m ing. 327-1891. NEW AND SHARP mobile hom es. R ent or sell. V alley View P ark , ju st w est of Oak Hill-Highway 71. T en M inutes U.T. Adults. 288-1551, 263-2726. TWO SLA ZEN G ER ten n is ra c k e ts. $15 each. In good condition. Call 472-5553. 6252. AFGHAN P U P P IE S , Cham pion sired by E ighteen m onth m ale, trained. 477-8079. th ree m onths. top p roducer. obedience H IG H E ST PR IC E S paid fo r fu rn itu re . ranges, re frig e ra to rs. MABRY'S, 6611 N orth L am ar. 453-5800 N ights 465-0006. BLACK COCKER MIX with white chest lost n e a r 45th and Duval. HO rew ard. Call 465-6284. TEXAS-O.U. football tickets. Anywhere in stadium . B rian Newberry’, 477-4577 or 452-0361, extension 393. LOST FE M A LE SIAM ESE seai-point vicinity River Oaks A partm ents. Rew ard. 472-5210. WILL BUY GOLD — old rings — SHOP, 2405 N ueces. class jew elry T I JERRY "S SILVER blackish brown LOST W HITE FEM A LE” puppy" l i t h flea I collar. lx)st around Seton Hospital. An­ sw ers lo Freedom . R ew ard. Call 477- spots w earing T EN S P E E D BICYCLE. Will pay good price for good condition. Call a fte r I 8256 anytim e. five. 477-3102. WANTED: Big W eb ste r's dictionary. second o r th ird edition. Call D ucker night. 477-6079. at 441-1495. | LOST: REW ARD for billfold j Union or U niversity in a re a F rid ay lost , BLACK COCKER MIX with white chpst lost n e a r 45th and Duval. $10 rew ard I Call 465-6284. M i s c e l l a n e o u s S e r v i c e s NELSON’S G IF T S —handm ade Indian iew elrv. M exican Im p o rts — 4612 S. Congress. Open IO to 6. 444-3814. Largest Used Book Store in Austin SAVE SAVE — C O M E TO THE BO O K STALL 6103 Burnet Road 454-3664 Open w eekdays 'til 9 P.m.. S a t 9:30-6. Sun. 1-6 _ 2079. KEYPUNCHING, PROGRAMMING. CONSULTING. T.mv ra te s, fa st se r­ vice. ARB EC, 477-6366. 3005 C edar Si. F re e parking. WIG AND BEAUTY services. Save SS to 50 percent. Capitol B eauty College, G uadalupe a t 16th, 472-9292. LEARN TO PT,AY guitar, beginner and advanced. DREW THOMASON. 478- LEARN TO PLAY guitar, beginner and advanced. DREW THOMASON, 478- 2079. CAPITOL COIN COMPANY? Extensive selection of coins an d supplies. 3004 Guadalupe. 472-1676. A C O M PLETE DISHWASHING g e n it e? D ishw ashing p o w d e r s , sanitizing chem icals Auto-Chlor System , AusUn, TX. CL 2-6701 Inc PERSONAL COUNSELING SERVICE. G C C . Gadow, philosophy’, by a p ­ pointm ent, 243-1499. T A P E D SAVE YOUR MONEY! RECORDS PROFESSIONAL E Q U I P M E N T AT REASONABLE PRICES. CALL 476-0130. ON 836-0748. PHONOGRAPH and Musk: re p air Service. V. P . tu rn tab le re p airs. l unk, 'h a: I m g theses Phone XPERT) THE BIRD'S NEST FLYING CLUB A FANTASTIC W ARDROBE tor half the D rag price. Sewing, alterations, fast, reasonable. Call Judy, 451-2512 DEA TYP R o o m & B o a r d Just North of 27th & Guadalupe M B A T yping. M ultilithing. B inding The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Se ?rvtce the ne to ti d stu d en ts. for iangu in g theses Phone id di of U niversity ‘■rd equipm ent and engineer* ions. GR 2-7677 P a rk Nor 2 7 > uaqa!up® T yping. Mu: bing. B inding The Oomph FULL-TIME the to ore1 — C o lo r TV — Pr a — Dei y pick up c ea ice m achine — Laund 2000 P ea’! — 472-5437 C a i ab ou t o ur M a y fa ir A pts. MRS. PETERSONS D A Y NURSERY SPACE AVAILABLE In w om en’s co-ops Room and board $70-$78-month Apply Dean of Students’ Office or cai! 471-120! will offer b a b y sitting services U.T. home. I block west o f Speedw ay. licensed, games. State for a P rv a te ! U N EX PECTED VACANCY for m ale room. A -<•. T hree student. Double 1 m eals daily, M onday through Friday. : The Hudson House, 2510 Rio Grande, 1 478-7650. 41 1 2 A v e n u e D G L 3-5450 C L A SSIF IE D A D ~ T O P L A C E A T E X A N C A L L G R 1-5244 THE BLACKSTONE 2910 R E D R IV E R 476-5631 R o o m m a t e s Y O U N G LADY EXTRA NICE one bedroom a p a rtm e n t 24th. 1324 W est available now. M anager apt. 107. 477-7448. F E M A L E OVER 21. Q uiet one bedroom, m odern com plex. $80, all bills. 454- 1779. Shuttle Bus. A-c. T y p i n g to Austin. No 23-30 n eeded as a hostess to call on new c o m ers selling, strictly a g re e te r for the lead in g bread com pany in Austin. Must be poised, personable, and have dependable car. P re fe r stu d en t with I y e a r o r m ore availability. $1.80 an hour for approxi­ m ately 15 hours a w eek plus 10c a mile. MRS. BAIRD’S BAKERY 385-0126 new spaper UT vicinity. VENDORS! $12-$15 a day. New weekly Published T hursdays. G rackle Book Store, 407 W est 24, 9 a.m.-12mid. DISTRIBUTION MANAGER for new Austin w eekly new spaper. V ery good tra n s­ com m ission. M ust have own portation. 474-1717. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . AUSTIN 'S LARGEST! 2 bedroom apartments THE BRITTANY 300 C a rm e n Crt. 454 -1 6 5 2 451-1078 FRENCH C O L O N Y 5 5 0 6 G r o v e r 4 5 2 - 4 1 5 6 8 5 0 sq . f t . fr o m $ 1 3 5 1 BR — 2 BR — I IOO sq . f t . fr o m $ 1 6 5 I APARTMENT LEFT! 2 blocks o ff C a m p u s U nexpected vaca n cy. C a n m ove in im ­ m ediate / with Sep te m b e r rent p ro ­ rated. I bedroom . C e ntral air and heat with TV cable. W a t e r and g a s paid. C a ll 478-5167 or com e b y after 6 p.m. T H E W E S T E R N E R 280 6 H e m p h ill Park U N IV ER SITY A R E A " C A M IN O R E A L "— "EL P A T IO " 2810 S A L A D O I bedroom . $160: 2 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished. All bills paid. $190-$315 — all built-ins — fully carp eted — la rg e pool— p atios — recreation room s — 6 blocks from Cam pus — I block to bus. Security gu a rd s on prem esii. M a n a g e r — 476-4095 GRADUATE ST U D E N T . One bedroom apartm ent, 3503 H arm on. $110, bills paid. 454-0077. COME LIVE w ith the action a t Consul A partm ents! One town house and one com ­ flat availab le. Tw o bedroom s, p letely furnished on UT Shuttlebus route. 1201 Tinnin Ford Road. 444-3411, 476-2633. P L E N T Y O F O N E bedroom ap artm en ts still a v ailab le!C all P osado D ei Norte, 452-2384. FEM A LE. ONE BEDROOM. Studious senior or g ra d u ate student. $62.50, all bills paid. N e ar Cam pus. 477-2383. MALE TO bedroom ap artm en t. $52.50-month, bills paid. Off Riverside. Shuttlebus. 441-2153, 441- 1901. SHARE two FEM A LE ROOMMATE to sh are large luxurious two bedroom a p artm e n t. $75 m onth. Call 454-1652. FEM A LE TO SHARE two bedroom, two bath a p artm e n t $61.50-month Maid furnished, all bills paid. Le sendee, Font, 803 W est 28th, 472-6480. F E M A L E ROOMMATE N E E D E D to share tow nhouse. N orth w est. $80 plus bills. 926-1530. 12 to I 30. F E M A L E U PPE R C LA SSM A N to share one bedroom ap artm en t. 1709 San Jacinto. $67.50 plus electricity . Call 176- 5667. F E M A L E TO SH ARE luxury apart­ m ent. $61 25 per m onth, all bills paid. Shuttle bus 8 . 441-1506. GIRL ROOMMATE one bedroom ap artm en t. $50 plus e le c ­ share to tricity. Shuttle bus. Call 474-1637. T H R E E MALES. L arge two bedroom im p ressiv e view of city. apartm ent, $57.50 each , bills paid. 441-2185. URG EN T. FE M A L E room m ate w anted. N ew ap artm en t. $81.25, all utilities. 454-9038. c la ssm a n ROOMMATE N E E D E D . M ale upper­ Luxury sw im m in g pool. $72- or ap artm en t w ith m onth. C all 926-5503. grad u ate. M ALE ROOMMATE two bedroom a p artm en t with one other. 22 or older. Call R onald after six, 327- 0184. share to Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing A U S-T E X D U P L IC A T O R S 476-7581 311 E. l i th F IRST F IV E P A G E S 45c each, there­ after 35c each . IBM electric. T h eses, B.C. reports, etc. 442-5693. CLO SE TO U.T. • P erson al typing, m ultilithing, and binding of all your U n iversity work. T heses, d issertation s, reports m eticu l­ ously handled. Y ears of E xp erience, fast, courteous, reasonable. P hone L aura Bodour: 478-8113 V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N T Y P IN G SE R V IC E P ro fessio n a l T y p in g A ll F ield s M u ltilith in g and B in d in g on T h eses and D isserta tio n s QUALITY perience ii carbon M rs .Torn THEM HS. R easo n a 454 IR VICE. Ex- IBM electric, Re a son abl#, lert re n o te s , e r, 476-1317. CALL: 476-4179 TY ERV! 'Y .' 250 N AI & BINE R A T E S n g S e rv l ISI lh of z7th St Guadalup® // IVqmJia An ft Typing. Mu! W ithing. Binding The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailored the needs o f University stud-nts. Special keyboard equipment science, and engineer­ m 'm iuge ing theses and dissertations. Phone GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk I M ARJO RIE A . DELAFIELD W e hav factory duplicat rg. nr — satis- typ in g and free g iftl 442- 442 0170 _______ ______ BEAUTIFUL TYPING. All kind*. BOBBYE D EL A FJEL D T Y PIN G SER- VICE. Theses, d issertatio n s, report*. M im eographing. R easonable H I 2-7184. E X P E R IE N C E D TY PING. R e p o rt/’ e ic. My home. 453 3546 and-or 453-2079. NORTHWEST, n e a r Allendale. Y ear* to help you. 465- typing experience 5813. V IR G ^L A SCH N EID ER TY PIN G SER* VICE. G rad u ate an d U n d erg rad u ate typing, p rin tin g , binding. 1515 K oenig Dane. T elephone: 465-7205 ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 TYPIN G. PR IN TIN G . BINDING T Y PIN G in m y hr.me. R easonable rate*. Call R eba L ovett a t 926-8154 any tim e. CARRO LL-D AVIS SECRETARIAL SERVICE Dissertations, reports. X e ro xin g and du p licating. Q u a lity work, reason­ able prices. 1230 East 3 8 !/2. 206B. theses, T Y PIN G SERV ICE — R easonable - T erm papers, theses dissertations, re ­ sum es, rep o rts, etc. Pick up and deli­ very — Phone: 476-4179, “ City-Wide T yping S erv ice.” E X PE R IE N C E D typist. Theses, papers. L in g u a/-, 1N cfrt I?*" lf n i v er si ty ? dissertations, J>0e p er page. N atalie I thony. CL 4-3079. r s’' A n- I^y en d eck er. P a rk . 476-8532. P ecan Grove T railer A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . WOODWARD APTS. 1722 E. W oodw ard 444-7555 , • Special stu d en t o riented clu sters offer re la x ed living co m fo rt fo r sw inging 441-2518 8 separate clusters 242 units | STEREO AND TV. New discount prices, lines available. full w a rran ty , m ost singles. F ree initiation into Shore Club of Austin, w ith co m p lete sk i & sa ilin g ren tal 1970 VOLKSWAGEN. Only 6.000 m iles. fleet & p rivate club fa cilities availab le. Radio, p u sh o u t windows. P e rfe c t con­ • 2 sw im m in g pools. • M oderate p ricin g with a ll u tilities paid — no hidden ch a rg es! • C om p letely furnished I bedroom, I bath $149.50. 2 bedroom , V/3 bath $179.50. • J u st 1% blocks off S. Interregional. • O nly 5 m in u tes to U.T. • O nly 3 m in u tes to town. • F u lly ap p lianced kitchens. • C om p lete on-prem isis w ash aterla. • F r e e all-chan n el TV. • A m p le parking for ten an ts Sc gu ests. MOVE UP! TO BETTER LIVING AT THE CHAPARRAL APA R TM EN T S • 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH APARTMENTS AND BEDROOMS ONLY • CONVENIENT TO CAMPUS CENTRAL HEAT & AIR • ATTRACflVE LOUNGE-COLOR TV • FIREPROOF CONSTRUCTION QUIET STUDY ROOM AMPLE PARKING • MAID SERVICE POOL BEGIN UNDER $50.00 PER PERSON PER MONTH OPENINGS ARE LIMITED, SO COME BY TODAY OR CALL Mr. and Mrs. Boswell L. Turner Managers 2408 Leon E ST A BLISH ED A R T G ALLERY for sa le — F urth er inform ation w rite to P.O . B ox 1852, A ustin, T e x a s 78767. M O DERN TWO BEDROOM furnished ap artm en t. All u tilities paid. Pool, trees, S huttle, covered parking. Call 472- 6443. Sept. J 6,1970 IHE DAILY TEXAN 1301 E d gew ood 478-2636 454-4384 S O M E T H IN G H A P P E N S when the Balloon Is about to so up: people gather. They are all sorts of people. They m ay dress differ­ ently and have different ideas about how to live life, but it doesn't m atter: they gather. Some stand with arm s crossed sceptically in the squinting in the late afternoon sun that fills the open spaces where the Balloon m ust sit prep are to go aloft. O thers idly on w hether shade and ch atter thing,” and th ey ’d go up in “ that how much financial tender would coerce them to attem pt such a deed. Still others work terrifically w heth­ er they will go or not — to prepare the Balloon for its flight. As one “ They spectator-w orker observed, never lack for free help, do th ey 0” What m akes them g ather? W hat m akes m an so awed by th*"' adven­ the heavens ture of ( limbing w ith only a silk cloth filled w ith a ir and a light alum inum gondola to dif­ ferentiate them from the birds? into What could possibly overule com­ mon sense and a large portion of the perennial fear of the unknown to m ake m an and woman feel an em pti­ ness of the stom ach that signals a yearn to go along — a wish, passing or otherwise, that the little alum inum gondola could accom m odate the entire entourage? What could m ake a populace barraged by Moon Walks in the form of TY specials and cornflake com m ercials thrill at a p altry thou­ sand-foot-high hop a (Toss three or four m iles? P erhaps it is the sam e thrill kindled m any y ears ago by the barnstorm ing pilots in their wood and paper m achines that hit the heights in every small town and village in middle A m erica. That almost juvenile feeling that Man was flaunting the ele­ m ents. the very air. with his baling-wired audacity. P erhaps it is a m anifestation of w hat the rom anlies call a divine spark in Man. P e rh a p s Man w ants to share the view w ith God, to get above a Lilliputian society — for only a m om ent' And look down. With a sense of omnipotence, a sense of lonely power, to look down. Oh, sure, the cynics say that the view’s the sam e from a plane . . . and the stew ardesses are prettier, hut it is really not Iho sam e. As in many A m ericanism s, trying to m ake things sim pler but m ak­ ing them h ard er in doing so. There are no great iron wings on a balloon and the passenger is not lost in the num bers of DC's. Is it a seven? A nine? Do you have a youth fare card ? R ather in a time in which cries for Freedom , God forbid, have almost become trite, perhaps to a still-earthbound Man, the Balloon is the very epitome of a heady liberty, a high on the wind. P erhaps the peculiar gut-feeling com es only because the Balloon presents a novelty, som ething else to w atch besides “ I Love Lucy” reruns or when the cartoons are on. P erh ap s if the Wright B rothers had failed and the Hindenburg hadn’t blown and balloons had re ­ m ained on the scene, then people would view the Balloon with the before (ho Test sam e disinterest that they click off “ High I light pattern. But those are only ifs. And they are rath e r far-fetched a t that, and practically irrelevant. It is no m a tter, for whenever the Balloon prepares to go aloft still one thing happens, no m a tter when, no m a t­ ter where, no m atter why: People gather. B A L L O O N IS T S E X T R A O D IN A F R E D er­ (shown ek Howard and Randy Rogers in the picture at the left) differ little from earthbound U niversity students except in one w ay: they own a Balloon. Both at one tim e attended the U niversity and becam e interested in the 200-year-old sport of ballooning. And both journeyed first their to South D akota where they bought Balloon and then on to M innesota to learn the fine a rt of hot air prestidigitation. Then arm ed with their new Balloon and a com m ercial balloonist’s license, they set out for Florida. There, they landed a pro­ m otional job with an am usem ent park and began a barnstorm ing tour up the coast of Florida in their Balloon, hopping over towns, attractin g ra th e r spectacularly in Atlanta, Ga., by narrow ly train during a forced m issing a freight crowds, ending and landing. Now In Austin, they plan to rest for a while. The Balloon itself is sim ple in design and function. It consists of a m etal “ basket” suspended by steel cables from a brightly colored “ bag” m ade of inflamm able m a­ terial som ew hat like p arach u te silk. In the basket, itself are two tan k s of butane con­ nected to an overhead burner. Also there is an altim eter and a sophisticated ther­ m om eter. To become airborne, the balloonists first slide the basket with the Balloon packed inside off the small tow tra ile r and unroll its 50-foot length out on the ground. A fter partially inflating the Balloon with a sim ple fan, I he balloonists light the burners and with a roar, begin filling the Balloon with clean hot air from the invisible flame. Within a few m inutes the Balloon begins to rise, and the basket, which has been lying on Its side, flips up into position. in the air They continue heating the Balloon, watching th eir thermometer and fighting to hold the rocking basket in position on the ground until the trapped air has be­ com e hot enough to lift off. By then it is a battle to see who will win: the Balloon, straining the h arried free, balloonists and th eir helpers attem pting to keep the swaying m ass earthbound until the right moment comes to release. to be or And then they do release, climbing aboard as the Balloon begins its rapid ascent. Nothing rem ains for them to do but sail the currents of wind, much like their second cousins, the m ariners. Only theirs is a three- dimensional world of sunlight and wind and clouds, a unique view, and perhaps a unique state of mind — not because balloonists extraordinaire Rogers and Howard are different, but because they own a Balloon. This M e t h o d of filling the Balloon with hot A ir is cheap is and expeditious, and sup p osed , m ay be sufficient fo r certain purposes . . . it -— Benjamin Franklin photos by Rene Pere! and Leonard Guerrer® Stones by Cliff Avery and Eddie Kennedy Up, Up, Wednesday, Sept. 16, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* t b o b b o m s F e a t u r e s : 11:30 - 1:27 - 3 : 0 4 4 :48-6:32-8:16-10:00 A - SHOCKING THRILLER Bird M i j a m Plumage Definitely la Th. Hitchcock Tr^rion. SUZY KENDALL TONY MUSANTE FREE PARKING hNTERSTATE NOW J THEATRE F E A T I R E S : 11:30 1:15 - 3:00 - 4:45 6 :3 0 - 8:15 - 10:00 Barnabas Collins,\fampire, takes a bride in a bizarre act of unnatural love. Singing Group Unique Choral Union Formed to keep up with the steady pace; “ I expect to be very demanding and quite selective throughout the entire sem ester.” to from 8 G eared for able singers with the group will tight schedules, reh earse IO p.m. Tuesdays in Room 2.106 in Music Building E ast. T h e i r a t season Municipal Auditorium on Oct. 8, accom panied the Austin by Symphony in a perform ance of M ahler’s Symphony No 2, also known a s “Tile R esurrection.” opens Other plans include a Nov. I together with o f Beethoven’! perform ance Choral F an tasy with the Austin Symphony and a C hristm as pro­ gram th e Uni­ versity Symphony. Possible trips to Dallas, Houston and San An­ tonio also a re on the agenda. Be­ cause of their type of singing the Choral Union is expected to p a r­ ticipate in the annual University opera where a chorus of large m agnitude is required. Auditions have been held, but Beachy encourages interested in­ dividuals to call his office, 471- 1951, for information. 'Peace1 Play Leads Scottish Festival By CLIVE BARNES N. Y. Times Drama Critic (c) 1970 New York Times News Service the EDINBURGH, Scotland — As a festival center, Edinburgh has over the y ears learned how to m ake its disad­ le a st of lacks th eaters and vantage. It hotels — a new motel sponsored by an oil company on the out­ skirts of the town is the first new hotel to be built in Edin­ burgh since th e war. And looking around the town you will wonder w hether your inform ant m eant the Second World W ar, the F irst World W ar or the Boer War. A gourm et’s parodist E din­ burgh is not. And the w eather c a n most be characterized as uncertain. generously the two or all of Why then does the Edinburgh festival rem ain so successful and three most one of rew arding European festivals? P a rtly I suppose due to the smoky, granite grandeur of Edinburgh itself. It is a city of enormous character. There is N O W ! O P E N 2 P.M. Features 2 :1 5 - 5:30 - 8:45 REDUCED PRICES ’TIL 5:30 also the w arm th of the Edinburgh people to be considered. And finally there is the quality and diversity of the festival itself. One of the principal d ram atic visitors to this festival has been the National T heater of the G erm an D em ocratic Republic from E a st Berlin in their version of Aristophanes’ “ P eace.” The Germ an troupe perform ing it is obviously a strong andjw ell trained group, although on this evidence perhaps less im pressive than its principal E a st G erm an rival, The Berliner Ensem ble. The troupe in Edinburgh, known as the Deutches Theatre, is the older of the two, having been founded in 1883. of the plays However, trouble with “ P eace” is the play itself. In a sense it m ay well be the most “ contem porary” by Aristophanes but this does not m ake it the best. It is a cum ber­ some allegory, laced with a whole garbage scatological hum or and satirical references to gods who have passed out of even the credence of superstition and therefore a re beyond the reach of satire. pail of Tile D epartm ent of Music now s p o n s o r s choral o r­ nine ganizations under the direction of D r. M orris J. Beachy, professor of m usic. Tile latest development, features 80 th e Choral Union, m ixed voices and specializes in singing m ajor choral-orchestra works. Beachy, also director of the M adrigal Singers, explained th at the Choral Union is unique in that it offers both the University student and the Austin citizen an opportunity to perform with the and University Sym­ Austin phonies. D irector of the now inactive Austin Chorale for three years, incorporate Beachy decided th e a fte r adult num erous appeals bv the citizens for a cham ber m usic singing group. to com m unity Tight Schedule With a minimum of rehearsal hours, Beachy warned th at Choral Union m em bers will need “ TILK O U T O F TOW N K R S” J a c k L e m m o n S a n d y D e n n is “ F I V E ( A R D S T U D ’ D e a n M artin (G ) R o b e r t M ite h u m Cameron Rd. at 183 SHOW TOW IU U.S.A. T W IN 454-8444 “ N O R W O O D ” G len C a m p b ell R im D a rb y “ T R U E G R IT " John W ayne I (G ) G len C a m p b ell i I rder run and robs a syndicate n ar­ cotics distributor in retaliation when he is demoted. His own addiction leads to his capture. “ Dan August” track s down a peddler supplying heroin to a number of high school pupiLs, two of whom have died from over­ doses. B O X O I K H I O P K V 7 :3 0 S H O W S T u n s O I ->K B R O A D W A Y J O E • T H C J I I • I t s " G o e d i l m e G l e n " a n d " S u p e r J o e l d o in ’w h a t t h e y d o b e s t ! Se a ts Ik 't il I IAI L I EXC I PT SI N D A \ 1:30, 2:5fl, 5:10. 7:30. »:5< S E E ! Getting Straight tremendously is entertaining!” ( R I S T R L T L I ) C A N D I C E B E R G E N E L L I O T T G O U L D COLOR & SUPER \ JOI KAMATH? in his first movie role P A R A M O U N T P I C T U R E S P r e s e n ts GLEN CAMPBELL KIM DARBY £ .HAL WALUS: EEK2333 " J O E K A M A T H — T ECH N XXXO H * -A PARAMOUNT PICTURE f lu -* — ( O H I T A l I D K M \ W I L R D M I N N I ll B U S T A l T O H — J O H N VI M N E ***** JOHN WAYNE GLEN CAMPBELL KIM DARBY HAL WALLIS' P R O D U C T IO N S T I IM O I V 222 Kant 6 th 172 0346 R a te d “ X ” — N o O ne U n d e r 18 O P E N 12 .NOON I: s a WI cl U N D ER G R O U N D FILM Out) ' c- • " J r ■ l i t . O'- V rill’.* A D U L T S O N L Y / K U U l U U PLUS ON SCREEN No. 2 ALL N EW 16mm — Color U N D E R G R O U N D FILMS. FOR RED BLOODED ADULTS ONLY. SUPER SNEAK WED. In C O L O R ! I X I M / " * AFTER 6 P M ON LOT* ■VI Pl W A PM C C N TT O TH E A TR E INTERSTATE 75c 'TIL 2:30 VARSITY THEATRE 7 4 0 » G U A D A L U P E • I K A T I R E S • 2 :30 - 4:50 - 7:10 9*30 HELD OVER! 2nd FANTASTIC WEEK! An AL BF R T O G R IM A L D I Production F E L L IN I S A T Y R IC O N ' C O LO R by DeLuxe* PANAVISlON* R United Artists F R E E P A R K I N G *£" A f T f R 6 P M. O N C O T S 7 , h 4. L A V A C A ST S INTERSTATE DO O RS OPEN 5:45 A U S T I N 1 1 3 0 S O C O N G R E S S THEATRE F E A T U R E S 6:00 - 8:00-10:00 The Ruthless Panoramic Drama Of LEE'S SU RREN D ER LIN CO LN 'S A SS A SSIN A T IO N THE SIE G E OF ATLANTA — THE KU KLUX KLAN S H E R M A N 'S M A R CH TO THE S E A —AND MORE. The O r i g i n a l C l a s s i c D W G R IFFITH S IHE BIETH GF I NATIO N , N O W C O M P L E T E WI TH S O U N D EFFECTS A N D THE A U T H E N T I C M U S I C A L SCORE / 20th CENTURY FOX PRESENTS BARBRA STREISAND • WALTER MATTHAU I h w n — l MICHAEL CRAWFORD HELLO,DOLLY! trnutm „ UMM BY LOUIS ARMSTRONG ERNEST LEHMAN SNE Iff LLY ROGER EOfflS KOHEL KOO MUSIC MD LYRICS IV 100D40* S>unM lo JERRY HEHMAN caw n wTu<*L61 Mi IHM IM Int JOKI* «0 WOOVCt 0 »T **««#!» KS6C14tf MMU .n-rnT.n Im «Mk aa IM Cartwrta turn* | ^ g | OPEN 1:45 • $1.00 'Til 5 P.M. 2224 Guadalupe S I — 477-1964 Features 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - IO STARTS TODAY The Funky Movie. P A R A M O U N T P IC T U R E S P R E S E N T S JACK LEMMON SANDY DENNIS JI NEH. SIMM STOOT © TH E0U T-0F-T0W N ERSH b, BL AMOR x-wc* * nm. RUHM m „ MIMM IMLER -Q U IN C Y J O N E S tow— to rn.ru w o o u o o e . X C O L O R B Y M O V IE L A B A PARAMOUNT B C T J« £ T R A N S * I E X A S E m TWIATg« TK MOST SIIVME FILM IN MSIOBY! 15601 IL Umar Blvd.— 451-1710 P lu s ! C O - H I T : — "DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR DARING JALOPIES" P lu s ! C O - H i t : — " 5 C A R D S T U D ” D E A N M A R T IN / I . CAPITA L P L A Z A | > n £ n i a NO.INTMMOIONAl H W Y nt-hcnor i MM***' mu* A POSEPH TRENNER ASSOCIATES PRESENTATION * LILLIAN GISH * HENRY B WALTHALL - MAE MARSH • MIRIAM COOPER I DONALD CRISP WALLACE REID RAOUI WALSH to ri* At Hotel IHI CLANSMM By THOMAS CaOR • Directed by D.W. GRIFFITH I F R E E P A R K I N G A T A L L T I M E S IO W adrtMcUy, Sept. 16, 1970 TH E D A IL Y T EX A N COLUMBIA PICTURES Prowr n lllEno!wSS'D(MDPlEilSfiCt‘J(MIAKiiBCN'Mlira-F™ii««overAtri»iii rh,Sw'^MTOISViXSII-E.miivt Piojico JOSB) t W Music by ROY BUCO • Title Song by BUFFYSAME MARlE -Screenplay by JOHN GAY • Produced by HAROLD LOEB and GABRIEL KArZKA • Directed by RALPH KISON TECHNICOLOR® PANAVISION® AN AVGO EMBASSY RELEASE JEE M S m c T t (Jai* lr nawvt accompanying PWO* to ApuN (WMW A BENNETT—MIRCH—VAN PEEBLES Production ____ Written by HERMAN RAUCHER • Music by MEIVIN VAN PEEBLES Executive Producer LEON MIRELL*Produced by JOHN B, BENNET I g Directed by MELVIN VAN PEEBLES • COLOR I I n te r s t a t e ^ 1A R A M O U N T 7 1 3 C O N G R E S S A V E . Starts TOMORROW TIM trow was amlacra. iud (sad soldiers fallow olden. Thats soldiers wan tbs hast soldier blue THE MOST SIG N IFIC AN T A M E R IC A N FILM M ADE IN SEVERAL MONTHS. Bavarian's Letters Recall Nazi Horror By CHRISTOPHER LEHMANN- HAUPT (c) 1970 New York Times News Service of DIARY a MAN in DESPAIR; by Friedrich Percyval Reck-Ma I lecze wen; Translated from the German by Paul Rubens; 209 pages; Macmillan; $6.95. life “ I have hated you in every hour that has gone by, I hate you so that I would happily give my for your death, and happily go to my own doom if only I could witness yours, take you with me into the depths.” These words, addressed to Adolf Hitler, were entered in a diary, in August, 1939, by Friedrich Per­ cyval Reck-Malleczewen, or Fritz Reek, as he seems to have been called. He was a Bavarian land­ owner who lived on his ancestral estate southern Germany throughout the war — an aris- and well- t o c r a t , well-off in Austin Orchestra Auditions Today Auditions for musicians for the Austin Symphony Orchestra will be held Wednesday in Rehearsal Hall 2, Room 118 of Music Building East. Along with auditions for wood­ winds and brass instruments, there will be sessions specifically for violins and violas from 8 to 9 p.m., with celli and string bass from 9 to IO p.m. the Further information on the auditions may be obtained by codling office during regular office hours, at 4 7 6 - 2 2 1 6 or the personnel manager, Mrs. Nita Killen, at 926-5878. symphony Positions are open in most sections of each division, ac­ cording to Maurice Peres*, the symphony’s music director. HAPPY HOUR Water Hole No. I 2900 DUVAL 4 - 6 D A IL Y Schlitz & Bud. PITCHER $1.00 P O O R BOY — $.50 connected, the son of an East Prussian Junker family, and a popular novelist by trade. Eight-Year Diary He had begun his diary in May, 1936, at the age of 52, with the portentous news that his friend Oswald Spengler had died. He was to continue making entries in it until October, 1944, when his hatred at last caught up with him and he w’as arrested by the Nazis for evading a draft call at the age of 60! and neglecting to say “Heil Hitler!’’ in his daily rounds. in Hp died the Dachau con­ centration camp following February, of a bullet in the neck. the Publication Unexplained there How Reek’s diary reached sympathetic hands is not ex­ plained in the present edition’s introduction, but at any rate it was published in Germany in 1947 and republished in 1966. Why it has never before appeared in English is also difficult to un­ derstand. Paul Rubens, a former journalist now working at public in New York City, relations the German down tracked edition, read it, and, because he felt that w'hat Reck-Malleczewen was saying “applies to our lives today, however different the setting and the details,” trans­ lated it. So now', 26 years after Reek wrote his final bitter entry in an army jail in Traunstein, we have the diary in English. And even coming, as it does, too soon after Albert Speer’s “ Inside the Third Reich,” it is worth having and reading. For it is vivid historical evidence of what another type of German felt about the Nazis. It is an antidote to Speer — a v iew o f Nazi Ger­ many from outside the circle of power, etrhod by a man whose love of Germany and hatred of “ the mailmen and the school­ teachers” w'ho had risen to power never knew a md Iii-second of doubt And it Is stunning to read, for it is not often that invective achieves the level of art, and rarer still that hatred assumes a tragic grandeur. PITCHER OF BEER $1.00 From 6 - J* p.m. —- Every day GEORGE’S TAVERN * 3 1608 Lavaca I Foxfheatre P ^ l a a HIGHEST b a RATING! K a R K * LIZA RATES OSCAR IN TOP DRAMA” w m m m m . — d a i l y n e w s r n - JloirC I 9 h j y t > r y \ A N O T T O P f W M t N O C n B L M Iiii kca toward robert moor* james coco kiythoefiN STARTS TODAY D O O R S O P E N 5:45 P.M. Feature 6 - 8 - IO p.m. STA RTS T O D A Y ! A T 3 D R IV E - IN THEATRES! They make their own law* at “The Cheyenne Social Club” Faculty Art Show 'Excellent' L o ca l W orks Fill Exhibit chemistry while at the same time creating a restful, easy mood. On the other side of the coin is Robert Levers, who explores the aspect of violence that con­ society by tinues making even simple actions like bicycle riding seem chaotic and catastrophic. to plague There also is some satire in the works, such as Assistant Prof. of Art Edward Trig’s series of “Typographic Variations” in which egocentricity and the ten­ dency length about nothing are examined. talk at to Comments of a more disturbing nature are made by Michael Frary, associate professor of art. in his “Survivors,” “ O.B.E.,” and Museum of Light To Add New Time The Museum of Light film series, which has been showing is films on Thursday nights, two expanding nights a week. its program to The new time will be IO p.m. Wednesday in Burdine Hall Auditorium. The usual Thursday performances will show at 8 and 9:45 p.m. As a special multi-media pres­ entation, there will be a show produced by Lance Covington, a communication student at the University. Admission is 75 cents. “Enigma” which could portray the destruction of man and the aftermath. of Campus Artist The most notable the sculptors displayed was, I felt, Prof. of Art, Charles Umlaut, whose works show that he is a master of both form and style in almost all sculpture media. Umlauf, whose works include statuary in front of the Academic C e n t e r and the Business- Economics Building, alternates between deep detail and smooth curves. in the upstairs gallery, the Alan Davies Retrospect is an im­ pressive show. Davies was an styles and artist of varying moods, and they are shown to his advantage. His paintings employ explosions of light and color, and often have the ap- symbols of religion and mys­ ticism appear repeatedly in the paintings. There is a great deal of humor and happiness in Davies’ pain­ tings, such as “ Fish Sweetener,” a work which laughs at the arti­ ficiality of modem society. One of the paintings, “ F arm er’s Wife No. 2” or “ Jazz Musician with the farm er’s like Lady” wife when viewed one way, but when down becomes the jazz musician. viewed upside looks Best looks, But the best painting In the exhibition is Black M irror,” a truly horrifying picture in which one see himself, but instead sees name­ less horrors. It is a work that is bound to create a lasting im­ pression on most viewers. expecting to The museum is open from IO a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, and tours are given regularly. COLLEGE STUDENTS H U M B L E CREDIT C A R D A P P L IC A T IO N FIRST NAME MIDDLE L%ST “ M A IL IO : PR ESEN T ADDRESS HOME ADDRESS .............. - -....... SIGNATURE C M R C -R E P . 2103 N U E C E S A U STIN , T EXA S O r Cal! 477-2070 From 3 - 1 0 PM r-t A c cic ir ATioM e F S r a r c o a l e d s e PUMPKIN Stag Girls Free Pitcher of Beer $1.25 h s w o m a n s OPEN 8.30 P.M. 12th & RED RIVER 478-0292 HUGE & WILD DISCOUNTS! S T E R E O REC O RD S & TAPES SP EED Y S E R V IC E — SEND FOR YO U R FREE LIST P.O. BOX 64 T H E S T U D E N T ST O R E R E D O N D O B E A C H , C A L IF O R N IA 90277 NAME ........................................... A D D R E S S .............................................................. ............................................... ZIP ...... TP By RICHARD HOFFMAN Texan Staff Writer at and exhibited Currently conception the University Art Museum are two in shows vastly different both their their realization. In the main gallery is the thirty-first annual Faculty Art Exhibition, containing the works of 35 University faculty members, with paintings and sculptures of every possible style and medium. the upstairs In gallery is the Alan Davies Ret­ rospective, a memorial exhibit of works of the late Scottish painter. the Many of the works displayed in faculty exhibition are excellent, exploring the areas of light and per­ texture, color, spective in original and artistic ways. The paintings (and sculp­ tures) are arranged according to artist so that one can compare the artist with both himself and his contemporaries. vastness Displayed is Associate Prof. of Art Vincent Mari ani’b “ Probe,” numbers I, 2, 3 and 4, all of which explore the universe from various viewpoints. The viewer experiences of the space, and the realization that man is infinitely small in relation to it. Also displayed are two other Mariani paintings, both acrylics, including “ Black and White,” a illusion which study tends to give one a feeling of vertigo. in optical Chemistry and Chaos Sylvia Bialko does some very beautiful things with pastel colors cracked by a drying process. Her “ Protein Bound” and “ Nucleus” explore the cosmic implications complex of atom and the “SOUL IN M O T IO N ” Experimental Dance C om position Helen M ayfield, Instructor C L A S S E S FO R M E N A N D W O M E N BE G IN SEPTEMBER 22nd. Wednesday — 6 - 8 p.m. PRICE - $7.50 SEM ESTER Call or drop by the “Y ” to sign up. A b ov e Sommer* — on the Drag 472-9246 the finest ring available. though I walk through the halls of the shodow cf the Professors I shall fear no #/!, cause the Clinton has given me strength and nour*sh- ment. PASSPORTS RESUMES SU P ER HOT SE R V IC E STATMAN PHOTO 19th at Lavaca • Cam eron Village THE CLINTON FOOD FOR HEARTY INTELLECTUALS □ ONE BLOCK SOUTH LITTLEFIELD PTN C re ate d by John Robert* C h o o se Your D iam ond 1/4 C T ............... 29.50 1/3 C T ............... 39.50 1/2 C T ............... 99.50 MUSEUM OF LIGHT A program of the first Independent experimental films In America films by M A Y A DEREN, WILLARD M A A S , M A R IE M E N K E N , IAN HUGO, FRANK STAUFFACHER, J A M E S D A V IS Saurian Sex A curious mixture of sym­ bols and colors grace the detail of "Dragon Fetish," an oil on canvas by Alan Davies, showing in an exhi­ bition at the University Art Museum. TV Tonight One of the great contemporary philosophies sums up tile college crisis in “ It was a Short Summer, Charlie Brown.” The little people return for a brief visit at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday on channels 5, 7 and IO. T h e Lawyers Storefront promises to take its place in TV’s new social conscience. Three young lawyers set up a free legal aid service for the needy. Wed­ nesday night, they try to solve sensational murder. Dean a Jagger and Barry Morse are guest stars at 6:30 p.m. on 5, 7 and IO. Movies 8 p.m. 7 “Stars and Stripes Forever” (1952) Clifton Webb composer-bandmaster plays John Philip Sousa who led the Marine Corps Band. Robert Wagner and Debra Paget also star. 10:30 p.m. 12 “The Lieutenant Wore Skirts” (1955) is about a writer’s wife who enlists because she thinks her hus­ band is being recalled. Addition Viewing 6:30 p.m . 3, 12 Com edy Special —• ’T h e Mad. Mad. Mad Comedians'* 4, ti. 42 The Men from Shiloh 9 News 7 p.m . 3, 12 Eddie’s Father 9 Capital Eye 7:30 p m. 3, 12 Room 222 9 E vening a t Pops 8 p.m . 3, 12 E v erly B rothers 4, 6. 42 M usic Hall 5. IO M edical C enter 8:30 p m. 9 Book B eat 9 p.m . 3, 12 Sm others B rothers 4. a. 42 F oot in One — “ McCloud” f>, IO Hawaii Five-O 9 The W ay People Live 10:30 p.m. The B rady Bunch 4. 6, 42 Johnny Carson 5, 7, IO M erv Griffin ACROSS I Contends with 6-Ascend I I Father or mother 12-Eagles' nests 1 4 C ha ldea n c.ty 15 Weary I '/-Reverberation 18-Ccrr monist 19 Tops 23-Swiss river 24-Furbearing mammal 2C-hirer,-'n 23-Note of scale 29-Mistake 31-Taxes 33-Sound a horn 35 fight between two SS Renovate 39 -Wide 42-Man's nickname 43-Retail e st abashment 45-Epic sea tale 46-Small dog 43 Barrel slat 50-Sunburn 51 -Mental image 53-Smaller amount 55-Brother of Odin 56-Mock 59-Lifts 61 -Hinder 62-Twists DOW NI 1-Calling 2-ConjunctioM 3-Fondle 4-Wtfe of Geraint 5-Play a ukulele 6-Syrr bol for calcium 7-french art tele 9 Isinglass IO-1 merest l l Pocketbook 13-Rail b.rds 16-Prepare for print 19-Arr 21-Mild expletive 22 Bush 25 Blunders 27-Rows 30-Urv.X ground parts of plants 32 Move on water's surface St-Jog 36 Swift 3 7-Escaped 38 Pedainmg to an era 40-Century plants A r r i AWF s i p i i LM r -bien M I L C N E i T P l H R l A tBjLjE I f N p r r f f i p M v A ^ T M A j s S I M I MOL LR:0 T M a o R jg rj_ A H B M I a Jt M p ^ a i c :a H T ;A n _n E R j j i G 'o iiWiEMLiY^R^ESMAi i Tri P E A R C E A 5 ’TM P E-n| Ii 4 3 Europeans 44-7 urn insideout 47-French for “father*' 49 Brother o# Jacob 52 River island 54-T'rtle of rasped 57-Prefnc down 58-Teutonk: deity 60 Symbol tor tin i i 14 18 24 29 42 46 S I 36 ’.•y . i 2 3 4 3 7 8 9 IO v ! ‘.Is J A * 16 M 2) 13 17 27 28 IS v 23 19 20 22 23 26 Y A ax 30 31 32 33 33 36 37 38 39 40 41 43 - A V y > . 4/ 6 6 6 48 44 45 49 W Y 50 32 K 6 53 37 38 -4 BHO 35 4 Kvi 60 n61 r w rn 62 r n CROSSWORD PUZZLE Answer to Yesterday's Pinata T U E SD A Y — 6 - 8 p.m. PHOTOS The W orld and M e vin Sikes MTWMLttMUAL nCTlltES WI SOTS JAftES STEWART HENRY FONDA # W h y doesn't he want to bring children Into this world? # W hy is the 'top' an uneasy place for a black man? # Can 'encounter* really bring the cops and the community together? THE CHEYENNE SOCIAL CHIB SHIRLEY JONES S u e AME LANGDON B U R N E T Drive-In 6400 Barnet Bd. — Pins Co-Hit — “8 on the LAMB*’ Bob Hope SOUTHSIDE Twin Tit E. Ben White — plan Co-Hit — “ THE REIVERS** Steve McQueen BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:15 • SHOW STARTS AT DESK SHOWTOWN Twin aero Cameron Rd. at US —. plea Co-Hit —• pinfir i •CHARRO” Elvis Presley A DISCUSSION on ‘The W ay People Live’ The People-to-PeopIe Show TONIGHT 9:00 P.M. PRESENTED BY: CHANNEL 9 / KLRN-TV and THE TEXAS ASSOCIATION FOR MENTAL HEALTH SPECIAL SHOWING IO P M. - BED TIME SCREENING THURSDAY 8 and 9:45 p.m. BURDINE HALL AUD. 75c Wednesday, Sept. 16, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page ll < Police Effort Advertising for Raises Gains Public Support In response to the Austin Police Officers’ Association advertising campaign to gain public support for pay raises, the City Council has received “some 40 or 50 letters,” Mayor Travis LaRue said Tuesday. said. “All that I’ve read have been “The he favorable,” greatest effect of these letters is that the City Council now re­ cognize that all City employes need cost-of-living raises." This was the objective of the officers’ association. “We're not trying to do anything out of line — just call to public attention and the attention of the City Council and City manager that we need more money to live." said Lt. L. L. Morgan of the association. Sgt. John Pope, president of the organization, has been respon­ sible for placing advertisements in various media, including radio — with spot announcements — and newspaper. by The advertisement itself was prepared advertising an agency, Morgan said, “in order to maintain high-quality a campaign.” “We (the police department) have had quite a lot of favorable response from letters, even some donations,” he said. to unionize, Since the police department is not allowed the P o l i c e Officers’ Association permits members of the force to speak Its mem­ bership is almost IOO percent of the force. collectively. Campus News in Brief ALPHA PHI OMEGA will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the for a Faculty-Staff Lounge coffee for prospective pledges. ASTRONOMY DEPARTMENT an Advanced w i l l hold “Elec­ Astronomy Seminar, tronic Techniques in As­ tronomy,” from 4 to 5 p.m. Wednesday in Physics Building 224. BAHA’I ASSOCIATION will meet at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday in Union Building 330 to conduct a weekly fireside discussion. The “The topic will be N e c e s s a r y and Essential Harmony and Religion.” Science of C A M P U S CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will hear Josh Mc­ Dowell speak on “Sex and the Single Person” at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Union Main Ballroom. C A N T E R B U R Y will hold Eucharist (service) dinner and discussion at 5:15 p.m. Wed­ nesday at 209 W. 27th St. Reynell Parkins, associate pro­ fessor of architecture, will speak on the Christian and his decisions in the political sphere. CORDETTES will accept ap­ rush plications for Cordette until Friday at 472-7841 or 471- 5674. D A N C E R S WORKSHOP OF AUSTIN will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday at 1909 Whitis to discuss and begin rehearsal for fall performances. Students are invited to par­ ticipate and may call 477-2210. D I V I S I O N OF SPECIAL PROGRAMS AND ETHNIC AFFAIRS of the Dean of Students Office will meet at 7 in Calhoun p.m. Wednesday Hall IOO. A representative of the Council for Opportunities in Graduate Management Edu­ cation will recruit interested Mexican-American students for graduate programs in business. HEBREW HOUSE win hear Gadi Gil, an Israeli kibbutz member, talk on “The Significance of the Middle-East Cease-Fire,” at 7 p.m. Wednesday. MASTERS ASSOCIATION OF G R A D U A T E BUSINESS SCHOOL will meet at noon W e d n e s d a y in Business- Economics Building 151 to hear Richard Wilson, senior group vice-president of Brown & Root, speak on “Evolution of Marine Construction.” MUSEUM OF LIGHT will show films at IO p.m. Wednesday by Maya Deren, Willard Maas, Hugo, Ian Marie Menken, Frank Staffacher and Lance Hall Covington in Burdine Auditorium. Admission is 75 cents. PHYSICS DEPARTMENT will hold a physics colloquium at I 4 p.m. Wednesday in Physics j Building 121. Dr. A. E. S. Green j of the University of Florida will I speak on “Atomic Physics and j Aeronomy.” REBOUNDERS (BASKETBALL BOOSTER CLUB) will meet 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Alumni Center to hear Norman Hooton, SWC referee, speak on basketball officiating. SIGMA PHI EPSILON win host Frank Erwin at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. He win speak on “The Greek System Today.” SPOOKS win meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday at Alpha Epsilon Phi house, 2500 Rio Grande. S T U D E N T ENGINEERING COUNCIL win hold its first meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Engineering Science Building 602. STUDENTS FOR RESPONSIBLE UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRA­ TION wUl meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Union Audi­ torium to plan activities against the dissolution of the CoUege of Arts and Sciences and future! research projects on regental action. STRIKE & SPARE will hold for fan mixed tryouts bowling league at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Union games area. the S T U D E N T S FOR GEORGE BUSH will hold interviews for membership through Friday in Union Building 330. for TEXAS OUTING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Union Building 329 to discuss plans semester’s this camping and canoeing trips. WOMEN’S LIBERATION Hill hold a meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday at 2330 Guadalupe. YOUNG TEXANS FOR EGGERS will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wed­ nesday in the Academic Center Auditorium for a multi-media campaign presentation. OPEN^ - 9 P.M. Monday through Saturday Closed Sunday. D ia s 7301 BURNET ROAD -- r 2101 BEN WHITE BLVD. B E N W HITE PHARMACY 444-321S PH. 444-5566 PH. 454-7751 SPECIALS GOOD WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY! B U R N ET ROAD PHARMACY 454-6691 DURO PROFESSIONAL ART SUPPLIES W E INVITE YOU TO C O M E IN AND SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF ART SUPPLIES. BRUSHES BOIL PAINTS •ACRYLIC PAINTS • C A N V A S PANELS •STRETCHED C A N V A S • ARTIST CASES • AND M A N Y OTHER ARTIST SUPPLIES • W H Y PAY MORE! DURO Table Easel LIGHT 2015 PORTABLE Reg. $2.67 DURO Folding Floor Easel ADJUSTABLE Reg. $3.97 2016 99 97 GIGANTIC PLASTIC SALE 15 QT. R O U N D B A S IN A 2 2 9 • LA R G E D R A IN TRAY A 23 3 • 22 QT. RO U ND BASKET A238 * 1 8 QT. OCT. BASKET A 246 • 16 QT. EX. DEEP DISH PAN A732 • 13 QT. POUR SPOUT PAIL 742 • DRAW ER DIVIDER A53 • G IA N T SERVER A301 • 20 QT. UTILITY TUB A761. VALUES TO M.17 YOUR CHOICE NS • DELUXE SQUARE LAUNDRY BASKET • 32 QT. ROUND WASTE CONTAINER • lO'/t 2 TIER TURNTABLE DURO OIL COLOR SET CONTAINS 12 (lA"**") TUBES OF SELECTED COLORS, BOTTLES OF TURPENTINE AND LINSEED OIL, AND TW O BRUSHES. #305 REG. $3.77 47 ~ DURO ACRYLIC PAINT SET CONTAINS COMPLETE BASIC SET OF SIX (2 FL OZ.) TUBES OF DURO ACRYLICS No. 309 47 REG. $3.77 TECH MATIC Add jsteote Basac* &»nti ^ G illette stoo 5 u v e r etainfess steel edges GILLETTE Adjustable BAND CARTRIDGE 5's N O LIMIT REGULAR $1.00 v J LADIES COATS ‘'WET LOOK" E xp a n d e d v in y l double b reasted/brass buttons. Belted. Red and black. Siz­ es 5-18. tm 0 Similar to Pictures % VALUES TO *1.77 YOUR CHOICE REG. $19.97 CLIP AND SAVE COMPARE & SAVE AT GIBSON'S Y O U CAN’T GET ANY CLOSER j THE NEW /vore/co' TRIPLEHEADER 35T In Independent laboratory tests the New Norelco Tripleheader with M icro gro ove^ 'floating- heads’ shave as close or closer t h a n a b i a d e i n 2 o u t o f 3 shaves. Closeness plus comfort No nicks or cuts. And, there's a Pop-up trimmer, 110/220 AC/ D C vo ltage selector, on/ of f switch, coil cord and easy snap- off cleaning. The new Triple­ header 35T is available in a handsome metal wallet at: REG. $26.95 87 GIBSON'S PHARMACY BURNET ROAD ONLY! 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