Indictments Upheld; Mutscher Trial Feb. 28 A B IL E N E (A P ) — A district judge denied two key defence motions Thursday, and the State announced it would prosecute Texas House Speaker Gus Mutscher and two associates Feb. 28 on charges of conspiracy to accepl a bribe. Judge Neil Daniel struck down two motions to quash the criminal indictments against Mutscher, his chief aide. Rush McGinty, and State Rep. Tommy Shannon of Fort Worth. Travis County Dist. Atty. Bob Smith disclosed then that he would move first against all three defendants on the conspiracy charge. Mutscher, 39, is also under State indictment alleging he ac­ cepted a bribe. SHANNON AND MCGINTY were named only in the conspiracy indictment, although the defense argued that the charge is worded in such a way as to allego acceptance of a bribe also. The case, arising from the Texas fraud scandal, was tran- sfered from Austin on a change of venue. State and defense attorneys waded through a motions, most dealing with technical aspects of the trial. flurry of The tall, dark-haired, soft-spoken judge cleared the courtroom SO minutes after the hearing began for debate on a motion to quash subpoenas of four newsmen. The judge granted the motion after the four reporters testified THE DEFENSE THUS FAILED in its attempt to learn the sources of information for two news stories that appeared last September before the grand jury indictments were returned. In what was interpreted as a related action. Daniel overruled vague . . . and should be dismissed.” “ I overrule the motion,” the judge said softly. Mutscher, flanked by McGinty and Shannon, sat silently and Unsmilingly behind his attorneys, occasionally adjusting his horned rimmed glasses while the legal confrontation unfolded. I E FOUR REPORTERS, who testified behind Closed doors, were Robert Heard of The Associated Press Austin bureau, Glen Castlebury and George Kuempel of the Austin Ameriean- Statesman, and Don Fisher of the Dallas Times Herald. Tile four had written stories last September linking Mutscher, in­ indictments before the McGinty and Shannon with the dictments were handed down by the grand jury. Daniel told newsmen that the reporters did not disclose the sources of their exclusive information. He said that their an­ swers were immaterial to the motions presented by the defense. The judge said that newsmen h a d no special privilege to refuse divulging news sources but said that was not the issue here. MUTSCHER'S BATTERY of lawyers won one battle without firing a shot when the judge ordered the jury selection will be on an individual basis, which is unusual except in capital cases. It was at this point that chief defense attorney Frank Maloney told the judge that the newsmen subpoenaed for the pretrial hearing could be excused. Presumably Maloney intended to u s e t h e articles they published and broadcast about the case to support a motion for individual jury selection. — U P I T elephoto. separately behind closed doors. Rushing. . . Rush McGinty, aide to Texas House Speaker Gus Mutscher, arrives at the courthouse in Abilene Thursday for pre­ trial hearings on bribery conspiracy charges. the first two defense motions to dismiss the indictments. Smith voiced no objections although he had previously sai' The defense itself as un­ constitutional, contending also that it is “ overly broad, overly later attacked the indictment that he saw “ no reason to make an excepton in this case.” The hearing ended in mid-afternoon. t defier (I) and State Rep. Tommy Shannon of Fort W o rth bribery conspiracy charges stemming from two 1969 . s>> ... fo Court — UPI Telephoto* T h e Da il y T ex a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 71, No. 133 Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY ll, 1972 Fourteen Pages 471-4401 SAIGON (A P )—President Nguyen Van Thieu declared Thursday night that South Vietnam will make no further peace con­ cessions despite Secretary of State William P. Rogers’ assertions of flexibility in the allied position. Thieu confirmed a rift between Saigon and President Richard M. Nixon’s Ad­ ministration over the latest ahind peace plan. He sharply criticized Regers, saying that if the secretary meant what he said, “ It is a serious violation of Vietnamese sovereignty.” ‘‘I nail talk with Mr. Nixon about it,” Thieu said 'n a television interview with five Vietnamese newsmen. In Washington, the State Department declined comment but Gerald L. Warren, deputy White House press secretary said: “ There's no disagreement between this government and the government of South Vietnam.” While saying nothing about a future Nixon-Thieu meeting, Warren emphasized the United States would not indulge in “ connivance with Hanoi at the expense of the people of South Vietnam.” Under the allied eight-point peace plan, new elections would follow a cease-fire and Thieu would resign a month before the vote, in which all political factions including the Viet Cong could participate. Rogers told a Washington news con­ ference Feb. 3 that the United States was flexible on the composition of a caretaker government, on the length of time that Thieu would resign before the election and on other unresolved questions. “ Everybody knows that the proposal is a joint peace plan of the United States resign now and that the United States set a that troop withdrawal deadline so discussions could begin on a political set­ tlement. “ The enemy’s aim is not peace,” he said. “ It is a domination of South Vietnam. So they have rejected our proposals, and they keep presenting their unacceptable two points. We will never accept their two Thieu Claims Rift Over Allied Plan and South Vietnam,” Thieu declared. Thieu said that “ we cannot go farther because if we make another step. I am sure we will fall into a bad hole and South Vietnam will fall into the hands of the Communists.” Thieu termed unacceptable two points of the revised Viet Cong peace plan—that he points. It means a surrender.” ★ ★ ★ W ASHINGTON (A P )—President Nixon said Thursday he has gone as far as he intends to go to entice the Communists to a negotiated settlement, of the Vietnam war until Hanoi begins to negotiate seriously. In an impromptu news conference at the White House, Nixon said the Communists had not yet responded formally to his Jan. 25 eight-point peace proposal and “ there will be no further concessions on our part” until or unless the other side joins in genuine negotiations. The President also announced that his historic journey to China would begin next Thursday. But he advised friends and critics alike not to expect too much from the trip. He said it would produce more talk than solutions. The President praised South Vietnam’s President Nguyen Van Thieu as courageous and discounted speculation of a rift between Saigon and Washington. ★ ★ ★ P A R IS (A P ) — The Vietnamese Com­ munist delegates to the Paris peace talks accused the United States Thursday of planning “ new’ military adventures” and poured scorn on the new allied peace plan. The United States then announced an indefinite postponement of the next round of talks because of a pro-Communist an­ tiwar meeting scheduled for this weekend in Versailles. The United States feels it will trouble the neutral atmosphere of the peace talks. Legality of Primary Funding Tested B y RUSTY TODD General Reporter After a quick trip through the comp­ troller's office, three expense vouchers which test the legality cf Secretary of State Bob Bullock’s plan for State financing of party primaries went Thursday to the at­ torney general for a formal opinion. Bullock personally delivered the vouchers to State Comptroller Robert S. Calvert early Thursday, asking for “ immediate action on the payment of expenses relating to operation of primary elections.” Calvert promptly took the forms to Atty. Gen. Crawford Martin, but Martin said a ruling would require several days of study. The vouchers, which were to have been paid from a fund alloted to the secretary of state’s office, detailed about $70 of printing and postage expenses incurred by Bullock's office and the Harris County Democratic Party. “ Aside from the primary, the vouchers legal to meet appear do not the requirements of the State,” Calvert said. “ I will not issue funds from the Treasury until I get a legal opinion.” State law prohibits spending funds for Spurr to Discuss M AY O s Demands 4 New Proposals Submitted By BERTHA LOPEZ News Assistant University President Stephen Spurr will Issue a statement Friday on each of seven demands presented to him Jan. 28 by the Mexican-American Youth Organization. Af a second meeting Friday, Spurr will speak on a minority admissions program for the School of Law, first delivered to him Nov. ll by members of four law school organizations. The meeting will be with these organizations in Townes Hall 124. “ It ‘will be a progress report,” Spurr said Thursday night of his meeting at 9:30 a.m. Friday with M AYO representatives. M A YO ’s demands include changes in the Mexican-American studies program, a more viable bilingual education curriculum and the establishment of a recruitment program for chicanos and a clearing house for financial aids. A NEW ethnics studies program with a 33-hour concentration in Mexican-American studies which was approved by Dr. Americo Paredes, director of the Mexican-American Studies Center, will be mailed to faculty members this week, the president said. Spurr met with Paredes and Jose Limon, assistant director of the center, to redraft this new tho catalogue to conform program. to If there is opposition to the changes from faculty member on the Colleges of Humanities, Social and Behavioral Sciences or Natural Sciences, a hearing by the faculty in a called meeting will be requirer!. IF THERE is no opposition, then the program will go into effect within IO days of circulation. Students who had been Mexican-American studies majors and switched majors when the program was said to be non-existent have decided to keep their present majors. OF MAYO’S demand that no person be appointed director of the Mexican-American Studies Center without approval of the chicano students and faculty. Snurr said “ a faculty-student committee will be set” to choose the director. “ M AYO has been working on them (the demands) for the last three weeks,” Beatriz Gonzales, president, said. “ We hope to hav® to work with s o m e t h i n g concrete . tomorrow.” Law .students meanwhile, worked with Law Dean W. Page Keeton to establish a plan similar in nature to the now defunct Council for Legal Educational Opportunities (C LE O ). Later learned a second proposal had been sent from Keeton to Spurr and made a second appointment with Spurr, which was canceled. they The following proposals will be submitted by the student law groups to Spurr Friday: • The admission of a minimum of 75 minority students, both men and women, beginning with the 1972 freshman law school class. These students shall be the best qualified of those minority students making application. • The active recruitment of minority students, adequately financed from public and-or private funds. • An extension of the deadline for filing applications from minority students until the quota is filled. • A IO percent yearly increase in the number of minority .students accepted info law school until enrollment reflects the racial composition of the Texas population. New Presidential Aide Selected for Libraries University President Stephen Spurr has former assistant at a new assistant. the David Clay, p r e s i d e n t of Massachusetts, will move to Austin next month to assume his role which will center about the management of the University’s complex library system. to the University Clay also will serve on a special various vice­ assignment basis under presidents issues evolve concerning “ as academic priorities and long-term planning within the University,” Spurr explained. At the University of Massachusetts, Clay was director of libraries for more than five years. Clay also doubled as a philosophy teacher while at Massachusetts. purposes other than stipulated in the ap­ propriations bill. Calvert said, and the bill does not mention primaries. If Martin does not approve the vouchers, Bullock said he would place the primary the Texas financing question Supreme Court “ at the earliest possible moment.” before That court ruling could take several weeks, and a negative decision apparently legislative would necessitate a special session for primary financing. The three vouchers are being used as a test of Bullock and Gov. Preston Smith’s plan, which would spend around $1.5 million in State funds on the May 6 primaries, said Donald Ray, to the secretary of state. legal counsel Calvert pointed out that Smith could have Utilized a clause in the appropriations bill which allows the governor to transfer funds from one State agency to another if the matter was not so “ legally involved.” “ It seems to me that the question might have to be settled in the Supreme Court,” he said. Beer, Wine Permit Union to Request License By DEBBIE WHITE News Assistant The Texas Union Board of Directors unanimously approved a proposal Thursday afternoon asking University President Stephen Spurr to grant per­ mission to apply for a license to sell beer and wine in the Union Building. Under thr proposal, beer and wine would be served in the (for­ Upstairs Dining Room merly the F a culty-Staff Lounge) and the Le Potpourri Coffee House Bar. Service would not extend to the Commons or the Chuck Wagon. Sandwich and “ Since 63 percent of the UT faculty (including population and staff) is 21 years old or over, we feel they are tx ing depriver! of the decision of whether or not they can drink on campus,” said J . R. Seeman, Union Board chairman. come Some obstacles to acquiring approval might up, Seaman explained. One of these is an Austin City ordinance prohibiting the sale of alcoholic beverages within 300 feet of any church, public school or public hospital. “ Since 16 establishments the immediate vicinity of University and in the surrounding churches all sell beer this ordinance is Seeman emphasized, clearly ignored,” is A n o t h e r obstacle of the B o a r d rule prohibiting in- toxieating beverages on campus and public campus areas. Regents’ the use of for The Union Board is basing hop^s approval of ifs proposal on a section of the rules which permits regents’ waiving the rule “ with respect to any specific affair which is sponsored by the institution and which will not be attended by is unac­ any student who companied by his or her parent.” Bob Binder, Student Govern­ ment president, noted that the rule does not mention students over the age of 21. I have attended campus functions when cocktails were served without my parents, and if the regents can interpret their that own loosely-worded rule way, I don’t think they will be strict,” Binder said. The proposal puts the burden on Spurn to waive the regents* rule about a “ specific occasion” and to interpret the “specific occasion” to mean 365 days of the year, Seeman explained. The Texas Union Board of Directors headed by Chairman J . R. Seeman, voted unanimously Thursday to send a proposal to University President Stephen Spurr recommending beer and wine be sold in the Union Building. _ ^ ~ Texan Staff Photo by JO H N V A N B E E K U M . For Suds ...and the Grape Page 2 Friday, February if, 1972 THE D A ILY TEXAN TEI Hearing Canceled of Bus Driver Petition Unknown Fate By BETSY HALL Staff Writer A hearing scheduled for Thursday morning between the National Labor R elations Board ( N L R B ) and T ransportation ('TEI) shuttle E nterprises, Inc. late bus d riv ers w as canceled W ednesday by ac­ the NLRB to C harles H unter, an cording AFL-CIO The AFL-CIO rep resen ts T E I drivers. representative. The hearing would have con­ cerned a petition for election of unionization for the shuttle bus is d rivers. No T E I unionized a t present. d riv er While th e hearing has not been r e s c h e d u l e d , an NLRB representative told Hunter that at an NLRB m eeting in Houston the hearing m ay be I riday rescheduled. There is also a the petition m ay be chance completely, Hunter canceled added. “ I’ve been working with the AFL-CIO for over .30 years, and that a is this time th e first hearing has been changed on such short n o tice," Hunter said. U sually when such a hearing is canceled, he noted, about one is given. The w eek’s notice cancellation normally is m ade through paperwork rather than by phone, the manner Thursday’s meeting was canceled. Robert M arkey, the NLRB representative, left Austin early T hursday and w as afternoon unavailable for com m ent. to federail law, a According of p e t i t i o n unionization -3 0 percent or m ore of the people in the unit involved desire to be represented. If a petition is ap­ proved, a t least 51 percent m ust then agree with it for unionization to take effect. for requires election th at Services Today For UT Professor F u n eral services for William F. F ritz, University law professor who died Wednesday a fte r an apparent h ea rt attack , will be a t I p.m. F rid ay in th e Weed-Corley F u n eral Home Chapel. G raveside services will be a t 4:30 p.m. F riday in the Hamilton Cem etery a t Hamilton. A 26-year m em b er of the U niversity law faculty. F ritz is survived by his wife, M rs. F ay Hobdy F ritz ; two sons, D avid and K erm it F ritz, both of A ustin; two sisters, Mrs. R. M. F uchs Jr. and Mrs. H enry Wood, both of Cuero; and a num ber of nieces and nephews. Reach out to someone Because you care about other people’s feelings, because you know how important it is to tell them they’re needed, wanted, loved...that’s why we feature Hallmark cards...the kind that say those important things exactly the way you want them said. Especially for Valentine’s day, Monday, February 14. O n the street floor. University Co-Op — T exan S t a f f P h o to i>y JO H N VAN KE KH I AI. Republican R a p Session U n i v e r s i t y Y o u n g R e p u b l i c a n s s p o n s o r e d a d e b a t e T h u r s d a y n i g h t in J e s t e r C e n t e r , a n d als o c o n d u c t e d a m o c k p u b lic o p i n i o n vote . S t u d e n t d e b a t e r s w e re B o b C a r a w a y , P a ul S a r- vis a nd J o h n C a r l s o n . P re s id e n t R i c h a r d M . N i x o n c a m e o u t o n t o p o f the Y R ra c e — Paul M c C l o s k e y a n d J o h n A s h b r o o k w e r e the o t h e r R e p u b l i c a n c a n d i d a t e s in the s t u d e n t se le c tio n . Council Hears Praise, Boos for Civic Center By JANE HALL and JILL STEPHENS In a four-hour public hearing Thursday the Austin City Council heard a proposed civic center com plex praised as an economic boon to the city and denounced as a project which would benefit only special interest groups. The Civic Center Committee, appointed by the council, recommended that a $31 million complex, which would include an arena, exhibit hall and convention center, be located in downtown Austin. The site covers a 16-block area on lower Congress Avenue and is adjacent to Town Lake. “The area where the center would be located Is now a commercial slum," John Kingsberry, a m em ber of the Civic Center Committee, said. Federal funds would pay for two-thirds of the downtown convention center through an urban renewal program, Kingsberry said. If the center w ere located at any of the four other proposed such funds would not available, sites, Kingsberry added. A bond issue, to be submitted in April, would finance the City’s part. be “This ceTfcer would only provide pronts for a very limited group of people,” Dean Rindy, a member of the Travis County Young Democrats, said. Representatives of the Austin Taxpayers Civic Center Association advocated a civic center and proposed it be located along the shores of Town Lake. In their regular daytime meeting, the council ruled out any future speed boat races on Town Lake. The council also approved a request by Regent John Peace to remove 120 parking m eters on West 21st Street from Guadalupe to Sneedwev streets. Purpose of the action is to make it easier to pick up and discharge for passengers without blocking traffic. shuttle buses Six Indicied on Drug Charge; Attorneys Question Warrant By RICHARD FINEGAN News Assistant Six persons, including one U niversity student, w ere indicted T h u rsd ay by the Travis County grand ju ry on charges of illegal possession of m arijuana. The indictm ents w ere returned despite a question on the validity of the search w arrant used to m ake th e arrests. The issue w as brought up during a W ednesday exam ining trial. City Councilman Jeff F ried ­ m an, an attorney representing two of the defendants in the case, said T hursday the w arran t failed to include a statem ent of the tim e line exam ining of issuance and was signed on th e wrong During the trial Judge before Municipal Court Ronald E arle, defense attorneys the w arran t also con­ alleged tained no certification by the it was based on a judge th at sw orn affidavit. In addition, it was charged that th e w arran t failed to specify the it w as issued county in which the wrong ap a rt­ included and m ent cum ber for the prem ises to be searched. EARLE TOLD the attorneys he would study the question of the w a rra n t's validity and give a S U M M E R C A M P JO B S C A M P W A L D E M A R FOR G IRLS . . . HUNT, TEXAS 78024 IO an d l l a t the Forty A c re s In te rv ie w in g fo r counselors, Feb. cJub, 2 5 0 0 G u a d a lu p e . For a p p o in tm e n t write a b o v e a ddress in a d v a n c e or call M is s D o ris Johnson (472-3191) after 5:30 leave p.m., F eb . 9, or any tim e Feb. for w om en sophom ores, n am e a n d in sports, art, d ram a, juniors, a n d seniors with sp e c ia l skills m usic, c a m p c ra ft, o ffic e work, or b a n d . telephone num ber. J o b s l l . lf no answer, IO or DATES: June 2 - July 9 . . and/or . . July I I - Aug. 17 Rock-Ola is on the right track with 8-tracks. ruling on it. However, the grand jury’s indictm ent Thursday the case out of his jurisdiction, ac­ cording to Roy Minton, attorney for another of the defendants. took Named in the indictm ent w ere Christopher C. Butler, 18, of 709 W. 22nd St., a U niversity stu d en t; David A. Blakely, of Houston; F rederick F. F erraro , 22, of 2408 Rio G rande S t.; M ichael R. M artinak, 20 of 707 W. 25th St.; Michael M. Rider 23, of Dallas and Stephen C. Robinett, 20, of Route I. persons E L E V E N were arrested when the warrant was served Jan. 18 on an apartment at 2408 Rio Grande St. Charges against five were dismissed later on motion of the district at­ torney’s office. Minton said Thursday the question of the search warrant definitely would be taken up In a pre-trial motion when the case comes up in 167th District Court before Judge Thomas D. Black­ well. Candidates File For Positions to positions Ten University students have filed since Monday for Student Government be decided in the M arch 6 campus elections. J or the office of president, candidates a re Michael G arrett Boraddus, a senior, and Shelton Smith, a sophomore. Vice-president candidate* in­ clude Kyl« Stephen McAlister a junior, and Joanne Ruhland a junior. Robert L. Collins, a sophomore, for Student Senate, filed bas Education Place I. Other Student Senate can­ didates are: Paul J. F ra n z e n , G eneral and Com­ a parative Studies, P lace I. junior. a R o b e r t Ray Herring, sophomore, Social and Behavioral Sciences Place I. Luis Vallejo, a sophomore, Business, Place I and Joe E. yle a junior, Business P lace 3* Ronald Ellis Wade a junior, Place 2 at large. JESTER CENTER M EN 'S RESIDENCE HALLS RESIDENT ASSISTANTSHIPS O PPO RT U N IT Y FOR LEADERSHIP EXPERIENCE, SERVICE, PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT. C O M P E N SA T IO N R O O M A N D BOARD A p p lic a t io n s fo r Fall n o w a v a i la b l e at J e s t e r C e n t e r , M e n ' s R e s i d e n c e Hall s O f f ic e , D e a n of S t u d e n t s , D i v i s i o n o f H o u s i n g a n d F o o d S e r v i c e THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN An Equal Opportunity Employer Train yourself to get on the Rock-O la track and clim b aboard for the lowest-priced 8-track tape specials in town. $3.79 singles, $4.49 doubles. This W e e k 's $3.29 S p e c ia l. M e a ty Beaty Big A Bouncy by The W h o . WXJf-CXA The 8-Track Tape Store/913 West 24th Dostoevsky/ Hesse, and D. H. Lawrence meet fireside? Dobie Canter, Upper Level, 2021 Guadalupe, 477-5951, Monday-Friday 10:00-9:00, Saturday 10:00-6:00, Free Parking and you'll see f U.S. Air Strikes Increases Lack of Faith in S. Viet Abilities Shown Friday, F eb ru ary 11, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Paga 3 a high point of activity tuts been under way for the last three days. announcer! THE U.S. Command two Americans were killed in action last week and 31 were wounded. South Vietnamese headquarters listed government casualties as 205 killed and 718 wounded. There were seven U.S. deaths from non hostile causes. Tile death tolls were somewhat lower than the previous week, but this week’s casualty figures are expecter! to be far higher as a result of increased action. WASHINGTON (A D —The sudden buildup of U.S. air power in the Western Pacific suggests the United States has less than full confidence that the South Vietnamese arm y can adequately prefect the remaining American troops in Vietnam during any m ajor new offensive. It also backs up President Richard M. Nixon’s warning to Hanoi that “ I shall fully meet m y responsibility. .to protect our rem aining troops” in the event of a North Vietnamese offensive. . Law Student Files For Congress Seat SAIGON (A D —U.S. and South Viet­ nam ese warplanes took to the a ir in large to numbers Thursday raids counter increased enemy attacks in the central and northern provinces. intense in jet M ilitary spokesmen said U.S. Navy and Air Force flew 85 strikes in South Vietnam, compared to a daily average of less than IO in the last four months. fighter-bombers Propeller-driven Skyraiders and subsonic jets of the South Vietnamese a ir force flew another 85 strikes, m any of them in the lowlands central highlands and coastal where an enemy offensive has been predicted. Tile targets w ere suspected enemy troop concentrations, bunkers and supply trails. Some strikes were in direct support of allied ground troops battling Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces around the out­ skirts of district towns and m ilitary camps. U.S. reconnaissance jets also ranged over North Vietnam to pinpoint supply buildings in the event President Richard M. Nixon orders another bombing campaign against the North. BESIDES THE sm aller jets. U.S. B52 bombers rained explosives on an enemy base camp 26 miles southwest of Da Nang. separate The Stratofortresses missions near South Vietnam’s second largest city after it was hit by a 25-round rocket barrage Wednesday morning. flew six The show of aerial strength also raises the possibility of massive retaliation against North Vietnam should Hanoi launch an all- out offensive. The enemy continued its numerous at­ tacks across Vietnam. So fa r m ilitary spokesmen have hesitated to call the at­ tacks an offensive, although they concede University instructor Dr. Douglas Harlan, who doubles as a law student and faculty m em ber teaching a political campaign course, filed this week for the Republican nomination to oppose incumbent U.S. Rep. O. C. Fisher of San Angelo in the 21st Congressional District. the term ed Citing w hat he “inef­ fectiveness” of Democrat Fisher, Harlan said the long-time congressman “ has spent nearly 30 years in Congress and despite his seniority, has yet to become a com­ m ittee chairm an.” A student, freshm an University the H arlan said he expected student vote by presenting “a more enlightened outlook” than w’ould the hard­ line conservative Fisher. to attract law H arlan said “ Campaigning and the University course he teaches, the Elec­ tioneering Process,” will be put to practical female use during his campaign. One student in the 14-member class has already announced in Austin, adding a perspective of class par­ ticipation to the course. representative for State attend Asked how’ he expected and campaign to conduct a prim ary the University both as a student and faculty member, Harlan explained, “friends will and help me although my time will be limited I will m ake weekend appearances around the district.” the campaign, through H arlan emphasized his congressional race “ will not interfere in any form or fashion with m y duties at the University of Texas.” A graduate of Rice University, Harlan received his doctorate in government from The movements of nearly 40 huge Air Force B52 bombers from U.S. bases to Guam, in range of Vietnam, and a third Navy aircraft carrier the Gulf of Tonkin came only a few days before tho Tot lunar new year. into A n A P Ne ws Analysis intelligence For we ks, reports have indicated the enemy was moving troops into position and otherwise preparing to in launch possibly widespread attacks Vietnam starting about Tet, which falls on Feb. 15. As the U.S. withdrawn! has progressed a: an accelerated pace. American troops in Vietnam have become in­ and bases creasingly vulnerable. U.S. GROUND combat strength, on re about 10 divisions, has b e e n cut to It battalions for security duty. Tile bulk of the 133,000 U.S. troops left in Vietnam are trained chiefly logistics and other for support functions, not for infantry duty. the reduction Along with in ground combat strength, the United States has been its air power in Southeast scaling down Asia. But For the record. U.S. officials from Nixon on down have voiced confidence I n t h e ability of tho South Vietnamese arm y to “ handle the North Vietnamese challenge.” last month Secretary of Defense Melvin It. Laird, while praising the Saigon arm y’s progress, also acknowledged that training and equipment providing U.S. termed South cannot assure what he Vietnamese “will and desire.” The singer, cabaret estranged wif# of a Dutch baron, m ade her pledge to tell the whole truth through her m anager John Marshall before leaving London. Although the federal grand jury Is in recess while the two men from the U.S. attorney’s office a re in Switzerland, tile Manhattan district attorney’s office an- nouneetl a New York County grand jury would begin its own investigation Friday. Court .sources said Miss van Pallandt would not l>e called, nor w’ould other m ajor figures in the case. Expected to testify, these sources said, are officials of McGraw- Hill and a handwriting expert. The county grand jury also Is expected lo study an affidavit Richard Suskind, a literary researcher for Irving, submitted to New York State Supreme Court saying he saw Irving with Hughes a t the Black Angus-President Motel in Palm Springs, Calif. Suskind arrived here this week. Times Says Deal Perking In Irving-Hughes Dispute Children of War — UPI Telephoto* Two y o u ng South V ietnam ese soldiers take a rest T h ursd ay at a new fire support b a s t 20 miles south of Pleiku a ft e r re turning from a search f o r C o m m u n ist bunkers. British Predict IRA to Push N. Ireland Fray passes without at least one bomb planter blowing himself to pieces. OPEN COMMUNIST involvement with the IRA campaign so far has largely been limited to political guidance for the leftist “ official” wing of the movement and ac­ intellectuals tivity alongside IRA in the leadership of the Roman Catholic-based civil rights campaign. Of all the weapons soiled in Belfast, not one was of Communist in origin Czechoslovak arm s last year was thwarted. In Dublin, Dr. Roy Johnson, computer theoretician, was and Marxist though an attem pt expert ship to education and policy adviser to the IRA's “ official” political wang but quit after last y ear's assassination of a Northern Ireland Protestant senator. His departure, tile analysts believe, may lead to a further drawing together of the rival IRA wings, the “ official” reds and the “ provisional” greens. This wmild pose new' m ilitary problems for the British here. In purely m ilitary term s, the British say they are confident of containing whatever the IRA can throw’ at them but they admit that the situation here is on a knife edge. BELFAST (AP)—British authorities have forecast a stepup in the Irish Republican Army's (IRA) guerilla fight to take over Northern involving heightened Ireland, firepower and greater expertise. This intensification, they said Thursday night, could be accompanier! by more overt Communist exploitation of the Irish struggle and perhaps an attem pt to make it an issue between the Atlantic Alliance and the Communist bloc. These a re predictions only, based less on direct evidence than on the deductive reasoning of men skilled in analysis of guerilla w ar situations. AS ONE PUT it: “These things might never happen, but they would be the next logical stop. If they’re going to win, they m ust get better weapons and greater ex­ pertise.” coincide with These predictions in­ dications that the nationalist “ provisional” wing of the IRA is in process of retraining. Heavier and m o r e sophisticated weapons have been reported on the way to supplant large-caliber the machine IRA’s traditional weapon. guns which ineffective relatively arc the Another indication of probable retraining is that Belfast for the last eight days has suffered only two major bomb explosions compared with the preChristmas campaign against the city. to 20 a day IO in in Recent bombs have not only been fewer but less .sophisticated. The clear conclusion is that the more skilled bomb designers have been caught up the province's continuing internment swoops or have taken tim e off to learn new techniques. techniques, say, probably would involve plastic explosives of the kind which helped drive France out of Algeria. The IRA’s current reliance on commercial gelignite has been expensive terms of casualties. Hardly a week in experts These the fljjH P flp W W I SPIL .... i n I , - iii {SMI pfiPlfiS | The forecast for Friday is cloudy and chance of drizzle and to be cold with a slight rain. The low Friday is expected in the 30’s with the high in tho lower 40’s. The high Saturday should be in the 40’s. There precipitation both Friday and Saturday. low is a 20 percent chance of School Desegregation Case Awaits High Courts Ruling DALLAS (AP)—Developments a t the 5th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans stirred speculation Thursday Texas school desegregation cases may await a new decision of the U.S. Supreme Court. Tile 5th Circuit Court notified the Corpus Christi School District that a decision on its desegregation case will be indefintely postponed awaiting the high court’s ruling in a Denver case. SPECULATION quickly spread among the top officials of Dallas. Austin and Fort Worth school districts that the development m ay signal delays in all Texas cases. However. Barry Stevens, senior clerk of the 5th Circuit, the Dallas Times Herald only Corpus Christi has been sent a letter reflecting a major policy action of the appellate court. told Dr. Dana Williams. Corpus Christi school superintendent, confirmed he received a letter informing him that the 5th Circuit decision on his school district’s case “ is being withheld pending a decision by the Supreme Court of the United States.” far die “As know as we only desegregation case now before the Supreme Court rem arked the Denver case,” the 5th Circuit Williams. “ It appears believes the Denver case has some relation to ours.” is Tile Corpus Christi superintendent noted Hie Denver case involves issues of de facto segregation of Spanish surnamed children. He pointed out the sam e issue is part is the Dallas and the Corpus Christi in of significantly involved Austin cases. case and “ I can certainly see how the Dallas. Austin, Corpus arid Denver cases can be related,” Williams added. One unofficial source in New Orleans said that Austin and Dallas could expect delays sim ilar to Corpus. However, all official sources with the court said no formal actions have occured in any case other than Corpus Christi. A decision of the 5th Circuit Court in the Dallas and Austin cases is considered overdue. Since the school districts are approaching the end of the school year, it is highly unlikely that any court decisions can become effective until the new term next fall. THE THREE-JUDGE panel of the 5th Circuit which heard the Corpus Christi case has different justices from the Dallas and Austin cases. those in Conceivably the 5th Circuit panel in the Corpus case and the one in the Dallas- Austin cases could take divergent paths on the desegregation issues. One source reported Thursday that 5tJi Circuit Court Judge Bryan Simpson, a m em ber of the panel in the Da Has-Austin cases, has sent a personal letter to all circuit court judges. The letter is said to call attention the Denver case before the Supreme Court. to city faced with THE DENVER CASE, first involving a northern facto segregation problems, for both blacks and Mexican-Americans, is expected to be heard by the high court in late May or early June. de Normally the Supreme Court recesses at tile end of June. All school desegregation cases in southern states heretofore have arisen from de jure (by law’) segregation policies prior to the 1954 Supreme Court decision holding segregation to be unconstitutional. The courts have been repeatedly asked to eliminate the “vestiges” of the racially segregated school days. However, legal segregation in Texas involved only Negro and w’hite students. In the recent Dallas, Corpus Christi and Austin cases Mexican-Americans have districts with school c h a r g e d segregation of Latins by policies rather than by law (de facto). the tie University in 1967. He is former director of the Department of Education and Human Resources in San Antonio and was deputy the Paul Eggers campaign m anager of gubernatorial effort in 1970. Harlan will be opposed in the Republican prim ary by Pete Williams of Austin, former the Texas Education d i r e c t o r of Desegregation Technical Assistance Center (TEDTAC). Congressional District 21 is composed of 30 counties, with 50 percent of the district’s population in Bexar County. NEW YORK (AP)—Author Clifford Irving Is seeking a deal in which he would cooperate with investigators in Hit' Howard Hughes autobiography case in exchange for assurances that no legal action would be taken against his wife either here or in Switzerland, The New’ York Times said in its Friday editions. Tile Times, quoting unidentified sources “ close to the case,” said that under the deal, researcher Richard R. Suskind would be offered immunity from prosecution to testify in the case and Irving “ would plead guilty to predetermined charges.” IRVING COULD not be for comment, but an associate reached at Ir­ ving’s hotel suite here, Jam es Sherwood, said the author had no comment “ pro or con” at the advice of his attorneys. reached U.S. Dist. Atty. Whitney North Seymour Jr. also could not be reached immediately for comment. The Times said federal prosecutors had traveled to Zurich Wednesday apparently to determine, among other things, if Swiss authorities would go along with the deal. The paper said its sources emphasized that the deal was “ in the early discussion stage,” but that the Irvings and their at­ torneys were “hopeful.” SHOULD THE Swiss refuse to cooperate, The Times quoted its sources as saying, Irving would then have to decide whether to seek a deal securing protection for his wife only in the United States. In Zurich, Mrs. Irving has been accused of using a false passport to open a Swiss the nam e H. R. bank account under Hughes, and investigators here have been exploring possible perjury, forgery and mail fraud violations in the complex case. Nina van Pallandt, meanwhile, flew here from London Thursday after vowing “ to tell the truth about Clifford Irving, even if it moans him going to jail.” to The blonde Danish cabaret singer is scheduled testify Monday before a federal grand jury probing possible m ail fraud in the m ystery surrounding Irving’s purported billionaire Howard Hughes. autobiography of Irving claims he collected the material In IOO hours of meetings with Hughes sod that one of them was in Mexico just a year ago. Miss van Pallandt. who has said she loves Irving, disputes that claim, saying she was with Irving on the Mexican trip and that he could not have met Hughes during the less than two hours they were apart. Peddlers Atop Dome Dem and Licenses VATICAN CITY Ten jobless peddlers occupied the balcony of St. Peter’s Dome for several hours Wednesday to dramatize their demand for licenses to sell Vatican souvenirs and other items in the street. After the men abandoned the balcony under the 435-foot high dome, police said they would intercede for them at City Hall to see what could be done about the licenses. Other peddlers and jobless people have taken turns on the Roman ruins of the Colosseum since Dante Ottaviani, a young father, won a peddling license after a record seven days and seven nights on a ledge there last month. Coal Strike Causes Electrical Blackout LONDON Electricity was cut off to thousands of homes, offices and factories throughout Britain at lunchtime Thursday, the first of the blackouts caused by a miners’ strike that has hit coal-fueled power stations. Leaders of the 280,000 striking miners rejected a new pay offer but agreed to continue talks with the state-run National Coal Board. Under its emergency powers the government has banned the use of electricity for advertising displays and floodlighting for sports and other entertainment W idow C harged w ith Tourist 'C lean Up’ MIAMI Grandmotherly, 54-year-old Adele Borserine has been released on $5,000 bond after being charged with cleaning up Miami Beach hotel rooms “in more ways than one,” police said. A spokesman for the Dade County Sheriff’s Department said the 115-pound Kansas City, Mo., widow used maid’s uniforms and pass keys to burglarize rooms in hotels along the tourist strip. “She was spending her month’s vacation in Florida,” a sheriff’s department spokesman said. “She apparently has uniforms for all the hotels on the strip, and she’d just walk into a room, clean up, and split with anything that took her fancy.” Stock Market Closes with Slight Gain NEW YORK The stock market closed with a slim gain Thursday after falling ^ack from early highs By The Associated Press Three Texas Towns Cited as ‘Safe Places’ — UPI Telephoto* The Baroness Baroness N in a Van Pallandt prepares t« b o a r d N e w York-bound flight in Lon­ d o n Thursday, en route to an app ear­ an c e b e f o r e a federal gran d jury in­ v e s tig a tin g th e so-called H ow a rd H u gh e s a u t o b i o g r a p h y by C liffo rd Irving. ilM llllllilllO K IilllllllllH The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 2.56 to 021.28. At one point the blue-chip indicator had been up more than eight points. The initial spurt was a carryover from Wednesday’s rally, when the Dow climbed more than l l points and broke through its old January recovery high of 917. ALPINE This West Texas town is one of three “safe” spots in Texas according to a new book, but the Alpine Police Department may not agree with that assessment. The book, “Safe Places,” lists Alpine along with McAllen and Fredericksburg as three of the 47 U.S. communities where one can escape from crime. However, the Alpine Police Department has announced receipt of riot equipment ordered through the El Paso Council of Governments and partially funded by the State Criminal Justice Planning Council. The gear includes riot helmets, riot batons, and the chemical spray Mace. Police chief W. H. Hardaway said there had never been a civil disorder in Alpine but “awhile back there was some trouble at a dance.” Editorial Oh, what a tangled web.. The so-far luckless attem pt to wrest a liberal recruitment program for the University s School of Law is Quickly and ingloriously sinking to a level of sheer absurdity. It all began when the law school’s minority recruitment program, Council for Legal Educational Opportunity (CLEO), was axed at the hands of the regents. Tile sudden and untimely killing of CLEO was done on the altar of a regents regulation which states, rather obtusely, that the Uni\eisity shall not discriminate either for or against on the basis of race. creed, color or sex when recruiting. Much lamenting was carried on over the extinction of one of the more progressive and effective methods of swelling minority recruitment ever to hit the University. So much lamenting, in fact, that before too long the law school decided to take matters into its own hands and formulate a plan which would meet both the regental restriction and still increase the enrollment of blacks and browns. ThINGS BEING WhAT they are at this university, it was necessary the development of a resurrected CLEO to disguise throughout carefully the actual intent of such a program. Several “givens” governed the logic of this attempt. Given that a regents rule prohibited any recruitment based on race. Given that the University’s Law School badly wished to enroll minority students. Given that most minority students are coincidentally educationally and economically disad­ vantaged. Therefore, why not formulate a program to aid those students who could not meet the entrance requirements because they were educationally and economically disadvantaged. Brilliant. Yes, said the students and faculty from the law school working to replace CLEO, this wall increase minority enrollment to a more equitable level. Yes, said Dean Page Keeton, of the law school, this will meet with the approval of the University administration and concurrently “get by” the regents. Yes, brilliant. And so they all patted themselves on their collective back and sent the program to President Stephen Spurr. NOW IT IS IMPORTANT to note here, for the record if for nothing else, that Spurr came to the University last summer widely lauded as a liberal wiio, I) would support such progressive programs as minority recruitment, and, 2) would stand up against the conservative regental forces when necessary. In an October meeting with the students pushing the enrollment program, Spurr even went so far as to endorse their efforts and promise that a program of that type would almost surely be put into effect by this summer. that law school proponents of the CLEO replacement plan winged their proposal to Spurr’s desk in November. And it was with much chagrin that they quickly witnessed the return of their plan to Keeton’s desk. Spurr gave a cool if wishy-washy rationale for his action, i.e. it was sent back with “suggestions” which both Keeton and Spun' felt w e r e “of m erit.” it was with high hopes Understandably, the hMMM., . Well, time passed as it tends to do and all was quiet on the law school front until last week when it was learned that Keeton had sent another plan, revised of course, to Spun*. This plan would waive normal en­ trance requirements to those educationally and economically disad­ vantaged, but, and here’s the rub, only if the applicants have a 3-point grade average. It takes little perception to recognize how far this latest plan has gone from the special training sessions that were the mark of CLEO’s success. The students who backed the original Keeton plan are outraged. For days they have vainly attempted to meet with Spurr. For days, Spurr has been unavailable. In the absence of any explicit rationale for the changes in the proposed plan, one can only deduce that Spurr has opted for a program that will succeed politically, i.e. satisfy the law school people and keep the regents from denouncing the new plan as CLEO’s twin sister in disguise. Beyond the changes, Spurr has repeatedly assured the students that the program would either be accepted at the institutional level or would be taken before the regents for their approval. ThUS FAR, hE RAS DONE NEIThER. It is this inactivity, this do-nothingness that has become and thi eatens to remain the mark of Spurr’s administration on this campus. He was immobile when the chancellor changed the selection process of future University presidents to strip it of student and faculty input entirely. He was immobile when the regents brought the mandatory faculty work load crashing down on the professors of this campus. He was immobile when the chancellor refused to bring the question of permanent funding for The Daily Texan before the Board of Regents. He remains immobile now. IT IS WITh EMBARRASSMENT that we have watched the law school groping for an effective program that would both increase its minority enrollment and circumvent the regental ruling which squelches it. Such an inherently retarded rule should not exist and should not be allowed to block liberal recruitment programs and hence perpetrate our image as a racist institution. Such tangled webs of necessary deception should not have to be woven by people seeking only to attain a more racially equitable enrollment at the law school. But considering the closed regental frame of mind, and considering the general hesitancy to challenge regental authority however unjust it may appear, this rule will probably remain part and parcel of this University for some time. Because of it, students and faculty wishing to bring more blacks and chicanos to campus will be left with little recourse but such chaotic attempts as the star-crossed Keeton plan—a plan which may yet succeed but surely no thanks to a University ad­ ministration and Board of Regents that remains equally obstructive and destructive. T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin Opinions expressed In The Daily Texan the a re those of the editor or the w riter el article and a re not necessarily those of the University adm inistration or the Board of Re­ gents. The Daily Texan, a student new spaper at The University of T exas a t Austin, is pub­ lished by Texas Student Publications. Draw­ er D, U niversity Station, Austin. Texas, 78712. The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tues­ day, W ednesday, T hursday and Frid ay ex­ cept holiday and exam periods August through May. Second-class postage paid a t Austin, Tex. News contributions will be accepted by tele­ phone (471-4401). at the editorial office (Jour­ n a l i s m Bu i l di ng 103) or at the news laboratory (.loum allsm Building 102). Inquiries coneer.'.ir.n «wlvf i £ be ™a(le >n Journalism Building Building*air^ (47?-3227?.Ve S*nK ta Joumallsni nationa! advertising representative of £ J c.xnn t !S National Educational Ad- so° ^xtog-ton Ave New Y o r k * y .Th** Daily Texan subscribes to The Asso­ ciated P re ss The New York Times News Ser­ vice and United Press International Telephoto •)-'lTv’i^eu T,he. T.exar!? ls a member of the Asso­ ciated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journa­ lism Conference and the Texas DaUy News­ paper Association. 5«g« 4 Friday, February 11, 1972 THE DAILY T E X /* Anthony lewis Stability for Survival (c) 1972 New York Times News Service LONDON — A hundred years ago John Stuart Mill urged human society to limit its population and wealth and seek “ the stationary state.” He had a vision of a cramped and depleted earth. He sincerely hoped, he said, that men “will be content to be stationary long before necessity compels them to it.” Mill’s was a prem ature vision, and for a long time hardly anyone shared it. Now, suddenly, impressive scientific evidence is being put to us that necessity compels an early end to the dominant earthly ambition of economic growth. For the exponential growth of population and production is putting strains on our environment that cannot be sustained. TO TALK ABOUT limiting growth a s a philosophical m atter is easy enough. But when one begins to consider the .specific changes of course that would be required of mankind, the difficulties a re soon seen to be enormous. The economic habits of a milennium, the very conception of a good society would be af­ fected. the motivations, The whole question of equality as a social goal, for example, would be transformed. In most societies. East and West, there are gross inequalities of wealth today. They are made politically tolerable in good part by the notion cf the whole economic pie growing constantly larger so that everyone can have a bigger slice. That is why politicians from Brezhnev to Edward Heath promise their constituents faster economic growth. But what happens if everyone in a society knows that there can be no increase in the total volume of m aterial goods? Is it still bearable that one man has three cars in his garage and another not enough to eat? affect SIMILAR considerations our as a traditional view of competition Leading economic motivating ecologists say we must a 'b p t a policy of no net increase in capital investment from now on — only to match depreciation of capital. enough force. of more But if the United States had such a policy, how could manufacturers compete in the traditional way productive machinery? Would it not follow that new forms of social control would have to be imposed on production, on marketing, on advertising? And how would they be squared with our ideas of freedom? Equality Is an issue not only within but the ecologists are rf between societies, light, then it is foolish and dangerous for developing countries to dream of having industrial economies and a standard of material wealth like the developed world’s. But how can the rich few advise t h e poor many that they will be better off forsaking the old m aterial goals? And does not that again imply a change in one’s whole view' of social organization, toward a less material society on Hie Chinese model, with enough for everyone to eat but little competition for goods or ease? Do^s it not follow in international as in national life that an end to growth m ust not be an imposition by the rich on the poor and hence requires a fresh com­ mitment to a decent level of equality? Merely to state such problems is to make one thing evident: the complete irrelevance to of most of today’s political concerns the most the woi Id in the long run. And not very long at that. important problem facing there are There are men in government who un­ derstand that — certainly in Europe and the Americas and Japan — hut the leaders they advise are too busy trying to win this year’s election to ba interrupted with such disturbing thoughts. And so those who understand that earth is finite read the news with an ironic sense of unreality: (he politicians are still talking about more guns and more goods while the scientists know limits are the urgent need. that ONE CAN LOOK at the future projected bv tile ecologists and be shaken by what it asks for survival. Or one can regard it as a challenge to m an’s psyche "md organizing skills. A correspondent, one who has begun to be convinced of the inescapable significance of exponential growth, writes to argue that men who understand will nevertheless be powerless to act effectively. For w'ho, he asks, are the “ we” who can take rem edial steps? Even the United States now rejected the growth fallacy, how would that m atter if the rest of the w'orld went on as before? if In of a world nation-states, the correspondent writes, “We are fools not o eat, drink and be m erry because there is not and cannot be any who can prevent us from dying tomorrow. And I and mine expect to die last.” THE UNWILLINGNESS of politicians to recognize ecological necessity so far m akes that view a convincing one. But there is another a more hopeful view of human nature. Like John Stuart Mill, those of this mind wU think that a stable state is not only necessary but desirable - a society in which the mind and the a rts would m atter more than owning goods. They will hope that man will adapt as he has before. ironic, but those prepared to grapple with the idea of doom will b t the optimists. may seem Michael Patterson Beyond jealousy and pain There is nothing innately wrong with being jealous. It is a common experience that hurts for awhile and finally passes. Only when jealousy takes control of our lives can it end in disaster. I have a friend who nearly succumbed to its destructiveness but instead lived the hurt out. MY FRIEND, Phillip, was very fond of Janet. She was full of laughter, excitement, and if the term describing a young colt is personified, this was her spirit. Janet was a unique woman. Now Phillip was a quiet, shy person. People were often offended by his outside hardness, but inside he was a tender, loving man who because of his roughness, had never had his own girl. It was Janet who first fell for Phillip. When they met, Phillip was in a ra re mood of joy, letting his deep feelings em erge. And she liked this. But Phillip could not h a n d l e the situation. He became caught in her web of enthusiasm. A confused, uncertain man, Phillip began to mold his life after what he thought Janet imagined it to be. Uhe wanted him an outgoing person as when they met. But he was too conscious of her desire and spent his time thinking about being what she called energetic in­ stead of being himself. By then. Phillip had lost himself. c o n t i n u e d Janet attempts molding him and seldom did they perience an intimacy; they tried too and Phillip gave ail he could, and were very unhappy. a t ex- hard they Phillip wanted to know her, to be one. not since he did not accept but he could himself. Another mutual friend of in mine, Arthur, moved roommate. Phillip’s and as Phillip’s An intelligent, open, warm person, Arthur soon enthralled Janet. PHILLIP WAS gradually edged out. Late one night he and Janet went for a walk. He said he loved her, she smiled. A flower was picked. And they went home. They parted as Janet placed the flower in Phillip’s shirt pocket. He knew it was over, and he was empty. Phillip finally accepted their affair though he hurt for months. His jealousy turned The firing tine inward to a self-despair; he felt he was nothing, having to someone eLse. lost what he loved But he continued, fighting his seLf-inflicted despair with a hope that someone would pull him out. No one did. NEVERTHELESS, something happened that changed him. He was suddenly placed in the hospital for two weeks. What he saw and felt was a kindness. A human feeling for someone other than oneself. There were horrible things he said he saw. Yet rather than running, he wanted to help. His own despair was forgotten in the lives of those around him. and he was cured. What Phillip said he found in his jealousy and hurt was not merely an envious lust for Janet. Further, Phillip said he found jealousy is a pain in ourselves to know someone else can give what we can’t. Ar­ thur could give Janet life when Phillip couldn’t. It hurts, he said, to find we can not communicate our love; it implies we do not know what love is or know ourselves. Meanwhile, I sit here listening to a wind the rafters of my house moan among calling forth a cry to live. Open Tower deck needed To the editor: Concerning the continued closing of the observation deck of the Tower: as a student, from time to time, I seem to feel in hassled, fed up with red general just tired of the m any pressures that one encounters while attending college. Thus, the question, “How do I relieve these pressures?” arises. tape, and PEOPLE DO IT in different ways, and obviously some people don’t do it a t all, until they can no longer take the pressures that come with life (as seen by the recent suicides from the Tower). To take it easy on campus, some students play frisbee, others merely the grass (weather permitting) and soak up the sun. P E is a good pastim e to get away from it all. lie around on But if one is not taking P E it m akes it kind of hard to run to the gym and suit up for some relaxation between classes. In the past I found It very relieving to go to the Tower between my classes and just let my worries fly. ThE VIEW is very beautiful from such a vantage point. It is quiet there with the wind blowing in your face, looking down at everything. One begins to appreciate the beauty of our landscape from the top of the Tower. It really looks different from way up there. You don’t realize how much you can see until you go to the top of the Tower. Oh, but I forgot, we can’t go up there any more. I f s a taker of lives. But is it really? I tend to think i f s more a giver of life. Whichever, the question rem ains as to whether the Tower will rem ain closed to observers or reopened. If reopened, what should be done to prevent further suicides? I hardly think any kind of enclosure could help to enhance the Tower’s appearance, but this would be better than to have no observation deck at all. I tend to think that with all the money the University throws away (i.e. SI,OOO,OOO houses. $600,000 walls, Humanities Research Buildings, etc.) that they could afford to place a University policeman on the deck a t all times. I mean after all, if Mr. Spun* is concerned enough to close the deck, why not go one step further. IF NEITHER of these suggestions can be worked out, perhaps somethine else can be suggested, but I definitely feel the Tower should be reopened. I know that no one likes to see suicides, but the Tower is not the people are committing the suicides; (or maybe we should say society is). Why should the Tower be closed? That is not going to stop someone from committing suicide. Locking the door is certainly not the answer. After all, if in the course of the next year six people commit suicide by drowning themselves in the toilets of the University' restroom we certainly would not close all the restrooms to avoid further deaths. Mr. Spurr, please give back our Tower, or I ’ll drown myself and then after you lock the doors where will you go when nature calls? Brian McDaniel 2208 Enfield Road Fear abortions To the editor: In reply to Thursday’s letter, birth control pills are like aspirin in that it is assumed that anyone can take them safely until proof is offered to the contrary. Birth control pills have nothing to do with pap tests, which is an annual check for cancer of the uterus, except that women taking the pills had fewer cases of cancer is a woman’s in studies. several It E D ITO R ........................... MANAGING EDITOR .. . CITY ED ITO R ................ ASSISTANT MANAGING ACTING ASSISTANT TO SPORTS ED IT O R .......... ACTING AMUSEMENTS FEATURE EDITOR . . . . Issue News E d i t o r .................. . General Reporters .................. . News Assistants ....................... Editorial Assistant .................. Associate Amusements Editor Assistant Sports Editor ......... Make-Up Editor ..................... . Wire Editor .............................. Copy Editors ............................ Photographers ........................... .......................................................Lori Rodriguez ................................... Steve Wisch .................................................................. Liz Bass E D IT O R ...............................................Debby Bay THE EDITOR .................................. Steve Dial ..................................................... EDITOR ........................................ David Stekoll ............................................................. Cliff Avery ................................................................................ Jan Reetz ............................................... Rusty Todd, Mike Fresques Debbie White, Bertha Lopez, Richard Finegan ■................................................................. Michael Patterson ............................... Kristina Paledes ........................................................................ Randy Harvey ..................................................... John Reetz .................................................................... Marcia Aronson ... Susan Maxwell, Suzanne Freem an, Joanne Ruhland ........................................ Rene Perez, John Van Beekum Alan Truex responsibility to request and keep track of her pap tests. for Each manufacturer of birth control pills the patient ex­ prepares a booklet plaining how the pills work, what ehe can expect as a result of taking the pills, and what symptoms to report to a doctor. If our w riter did not receive such a booklet, her doctor m ay have assumed she already had one. to issue birth control pills, Our writer apparently does not know how' much effort went into getting the health center r to borrow a rem em ber when girls had wedding band and lie their heads off to get the pills from any doctor in Austin. All we need is a few more letters like this one to make the pills hard to get again. Most fears are unfounded. If you fear the pills you have to fear the abortionist. Helen Berry Senior Action protested To the editor: Is it a crime to make people happy? Thursday a t about IO a.m ., two very charm ing people did something nice for m any students and passersby. They made us smile, laugh, applaud. It was a good time, a pleasant surprise, and a gentle break from work and classes. Many skipped a class to stay in on the fun. Tile two (a man and a woman) performed an excellent act, combining much with a format of the “ Drag” vendor and showman. Everybody in the r „wd (aoouc 150) thoroughly enjoyed himself. There W'as no trouble. Many people were packed into a small a re a (in front of the Co-Op), but there was no animosity, no trouble. Everybody who wanted to pass was given room. There w’asn’t a single com­ plaint. the Suddenly at 10:35 a.m ., three policemen arrived, telling the crowd to move, because we were blocking sidewalk. The sidewalk was not blocked. All could pass if they wanted; few did. Then the brave public servants started to hassle the actors, identification. When a asking young m an protested, the police also demanded his ID. Shortly afterward, two patrol cars drove by. them for Were the two (or the crowd) hurting anybody? Everyone enjoyed himself. Were we blocking the sidewalk? Assuredly not. Why, then, were we m ade to move? Did the police want to show their mi’" '1*'' Ts it any wonder that we have lost all respect? Michael Rikard Framed enrollment rn By LIONEL CENICEROS, JOSE Guest viewpoint Quest viewpoint UT System “ to trying rules continues run businessmen down’’ the appropriate federal regulation or trying to find the “ right agency,” we are becoming m ore concerned with the rules than with the business, while the num ber of to grow. New rules to clarify old rules, perhaps a theorem now and then, some new obscurity to cover an old one. And the reason: the president of the University has very little significant power in the conduct of the affairs of the University. No one knows who is wearing the “hat” . The Sys­ tem knows but the System speaks to the System. University ad­ m inistrators spend an increasing amount of their time trying to cover their own tracks and to protect themselves against some question — always questions — m anufactured by your System. By the General Motors Corp., years ago, had the to g o o d disaggregate their system and to give of autonomy operating divisions. You are running your to business System principles that were repudiated years ago by real businessmen. Your system I is invite you to try to find a single professional economist the United States who will tell you that your System is efficient. rem arkable to comparison, inefficient. according business powers sense the in derivatives implies function, efficiency a But, then, who ever said the the System was efficient? Did System say so? If so, what then does the System maximize? It is an unavoidable fact that the the term the existence of partial of which vanish a t the point where ef­ ficiency is maximized. What is the explicit form of your func­ tion? What is it that your System does? It is said that the System the is stan- for responsible the parrs d a r d i z a t i o n of the System, of (universities) while efficiency is the product of standardization. And this has been said time and again. In the the any creates BUT WHY m ust the university be standardized? The answer is because of the System. If the System did not exist, the problem of standardizing the’ p a rts of the System would not exist. Thus, the System problem which is solved by the System. stan­ event, dardization of the' parts of the System goes ahead. The result is that the individual guts of the its U n i v e r s i t y of Texas, its pride, u n i q u e n e s s , its traditions, and its dream s are slowly being flattened out under the one-dimensional drive of your System to achieve “efficiency” through stan­ dardization. time — and unavoidably — the regents who sit on top of the System become divorced from the actual the device of the In By CLIFTON M. GRUBBS Professor of Economics Danforth Laureate in Teaching A n O pen Letter to the C han­ cellor and to the members o f the Board o f Regents G entlem en and Airs. Johnson: It all indeed its uniqueness, The spirit of the University of its T e x a s , imagination, the precious qualities which have attracted in the past many ex­ cellent scholars and teachers — the continuity of all these values is now very much in doubt. This is a grave requires issue. decades to build a fine university, but the sam e university can die within the short span of a few years or months. I wish to note in the outset that none of my rem arks is intended as a personal affront to any individual or group if my of thinking were toward those channels, it is too late for that. individuals. Even inclined of powers MY ARGUMENT is that the u n c r i t i c a l development and g r o w i n g stan­ dardization of the University of Texas System is inconsistent with the nature of a free institution, and that the further elaboration of your System will involve the certain destruction of in­ dividualism and spirit of The University of Texas at Austin, if that point has not already been passed. the and t h e growing spirit of The underlying question is the autonomy the University as very often opposed by rules, bureaucracy and standardization of the System. Logically, your System is partly a derivative of concepts of bureaucratic the in either s o c i a l i s m . And production the s y m p t o m s of bureaucratic socialism are the erosion of individual spontaneity, the reduction of variables to a c o m m o n the growing paralysis of complexity and the professional rigor mortis of red tape. denominator, the sam e: education, or I It to OF COURSE, efficiency. As is always argued in defense of your System that the resulting standardization a leads professional economist, find th at argum ent difficult even to imagine. The simple truth is that a t the University today, we spend m ore and more time each month trying to identify the appropriate rule for some technical item or regulation handed down by your small S y s t e m . Not unlike P F A N L T S /misisA N f IETTEKT0 MI55 I HEliN 5(i)8T5T0RY.. I II * « L l ------- \ I DEAR MISS fimSTOW.., IT OCCURRED T i ME THAT NO ONE HAS EVER WRITTEN THE STORY OF YOUR LIFE ...I SHOULD LIKE TO DO SO.,, ---- the inferior education, receive been have p e o p l e who in their discriminated against earlier years as a result of segregated public prim ary and secondary schools. Most other have states this answered in the negative. They question adopted h a v e far-reaching recruitm ent programs minority and have fully recognized their responsibility all to segments of our society. educate the THE LAW SCHOOL entrance examination plays an essential part in the law school’s selection process. Because of in­ creasing number of applicants, the score the school has set required at such a high level that it has become a barrier to almost all minority students who apply. As the exam is in large m easure an evaluation of an individual’s cultural background, we believe that it is a discriminatory device t h a t the e d u c a t i o n a l discrimination against blacks and chicanos. accentuates only In the time, recent years, applicants. As the LSAT requirem ent continuously has m ade it difficult for even white Texas residents to compete with out-of-state a increasing out-of- result of an state enrollment, the Board of Regents decreed a 15 percent lim it on out-of-state students. At the sam e this Board of Regents refuses even to consider is a device of how test cultural discrimination against minority students. Compare this behavior with how the best law school in the nation selects its students. Harvard Law School not only has no limits on out-of-state students but actually encourages geographic diversity. Harvard ateo encourages cultural diversity in actively recruiting blacks and chicanos and will dispense with the LSAT score as it sees fit. it now that is As long as the administration and the Board of Regents are allowed to maintain the fiction th at tile LSAT is not culturally discriminatory, as chicanos remain and educationally d e p r i v e d , the University win fail in its duty to provide educational equal opportunities for all the people of Texas. as blacks long Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle S P E A R ■ A T E lo I |H R £ B A T !e w A R N E D o R E L B B O I S E l A (J A M T ■ t A R NJ s ■ A S S D I U S E T A e H p L o T 5 r E £ R E D B R A I N S L A S S M c A I N c o N N E C T 5 H A MT E T A M S J I T E p E L B A I E N D ■ G R I p E H E L L £ P R L £ L I E T H A L I R Ii N M E R P R A VOH S T E E RI A N I L E I 51 Sacred bull 53 Reverberation 57 Soak 53 Preposition Discharged* gun Laborer Page of book Female relatives 60 Skill Conjunction Syfnbol for niton Take from 62 Compass point 64 Pronoun the in to seek to do better, to take risks and to think in term s of new approaches — all that requires faith faith in your colleagues and the University. Your faith System has moved t h e wrong It has made a deadly way. mistake with the imposition of a standardized teaching load on the University. Indeed, the Faculty Senate of the University, now almost two years ago, took at that time the absolutely unprecedented step of constituting a group of men to examine undergraduate education to make concrete recom­ and the mendations for action by Senate. As the turned out it period during which this group to function was a was asked period of such anarchy in the affairs of the University that the absolutely p r o j e c t becam e is rem arkable, hopeless. What the Faculty that however, Senate of the University was the first body of the United States which called for a critique of institution. its own Today, however, the sam e spirit its kind in is in the faculty Is broken. to going AND THE QUESTION before is very sim ple: the University Who the run is University? If not the president of the University, then the alumni m ay simply write off the spirit of the University and, indeed, all the magic of the old Forty Acres. Both the Office of the Chancellor and the Board of Regents have delegate t h e significant powers to the Office of the President of the University of Texas. This step is worthy af very serious consideration. authority to its By very nature the University is an eye in the storm. But if that eye is cut out, if the University is not given the chance to find its own way into the future, then the alumni will have no right later to charge the faculty with the responsibility for the the intellectual decay of University. If you really love the University then give it respon­ sibility. Give it back the right to hope. Failing that, you will completely destroy the great University in Austin. SUMMER STUDIES IN ATHENS. GREECE June 28 to A u g . IO. Economics, S o cio lo gy, Philosophy, H istory, H isto ry of A rt. Distinguished A m e rican and European faculty. C lasses and lo d g in g in suburban A th e n s — near the sea. Ex­ tensive trips to m ainland and cruises to islands. Tuition, room and board, and travelling within G re e c e $850. For brochure and details write: Box 8932 J.F.K. Station Boston, Mass. 02114 Come Join Our COPY CLUB You'll be glad you did PUNCH-BINDING SERVICE ALSO AVAILABLE THE COPY SHOP 3209 RED RIVER (in the Slaughter Shopping Center) P.S. This a d worth Five C o p ie s Free thru 2-18-72 (one offer per customer) r * 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 + + 4i * * * * * * * « « « * « « banks, this effect corporations, cares and hopes of the univer­ sities which they oversee. Tile individual universities, as data to the regents, are soon regarded like any other set of holdings, or like is whatever. And unavoidable. It is a human fact that when you become divorced from the actual cares of any subject, you tend increasingly to regard it as an abstraction, the implicit meaning of which is given to you by the suppositions in which it appears: namely, the suppositions of the System. And the System sees the System. It is a conjunction of Marcuse and Kafka. economics. My LET ME ALSO add a brief tile new stan- rem ark about d a r d i z e d teaching-load point system of the System. Teaching load has no more relation to teaching than does bull fighting to agriculture. Quality of teaching is definitely a m atter of the mind and the heart. You cannot weigh it, m easure it, classify it, count it or standarize it. During o n e sem ester last year I taught 425 students and tried to direct (more precisely undirect) 38 sections of freshm an so­ load was only called sem ester This three fewer teaching and directing the sam e number of sections, my teaching load is said to be 12 hours. Clearly, there is a silly gam e being played with figures by men and women who should otherwise wish to regard themselves as adults. Moreover, to place any teacher under a teaching-load point setup is to tre a t the teacher like a child, and to undermine the dedication which he or she brings to the class and to the lecture. There is an intangible quality about teaching, a magic in it and this teaching hours. students quality is partly nourished by the teacher’s love for and confidence that the University. Break in spirit and you will break the University. to the the future Tile growing uncertainty with is also respect producing a general abandonment undergraduate o f dedicated rare ex­ teaching. With very is no national ceptions, there undergraduate for m a r k e t investment teaching. That is made local university. in Consequently, in the presence of uncertainty about the University the young teacher or assistant professor must turn his mind and energy increasingly to publication and writing because there is a national m arket for publication. He m ust protect himself. It will to do no good increase his teaching if he brings no load heart to the teaching. To repeat: to teaching — from linguistics, classics, to freshman economics — deeply involves the heart of the man or the woman who has elected to enter the noble profession. You cannot force more heart out of I the teacher because you have no way to m easure his heart. NONE OF THE to m athem atics, foregoing j rem arks is to deny the existence of very serious problems in the a c a d e m i c community with e x c e s s ive r e s p e c t to tendency specialization, teach lower division methodological details of prim ary interest only the academic to specialists, and the contempt in local some university by the specialist. To suggest that these problems do not exist would be to indulge a lie. These problems a re common to all American universities. instances of the the the t o a t But to try to find a m ore imaginative way into the future v ^ ■ w - w r w w v w v w i - w w w w w w w w w w w w w T r 'w w w w 'w v 'w w w yrw 10% DISCOUNT T O A L L S T U D E N T S A N D F A C U L T Y O N A R T S U P P L IE S A N D C U S T O M F R A M I N G . O n e d a y services on custom fram ing. House of Frames 5437 IN T E R R E G IO N A L C A P IT A L P L A Z A 451 4111 REFORM THE TEXAS LEGISLATURE? THE "DIRTY 30" NEEDS YOUR HELP. W R IT E : P. O . B O X 13086 A U ST IN . T E X A S 78711 Pair For by The “Dirty 30” Comm. Free giftwrap You’ve gotta have heart CAMACHO and MIGUEL SOLIS L a Raza Law Students Association School of Law Association To understand the basis of the grievance of black and chicano students on the issue of minority enrollment at the law school, an in overview of legal education Texas has to be taken. of an the this excellent the State of Texas tax-supported greatly Two facts are crucial to un­ deteriorating derstanding taxpayers situation. First, to allow law m a i n t a i n schools differing quality. The University School of is a quality school with Law s u f f i c i e n t appropriations to support faculty, staff, library, etc., while other State lesser law schools get appropriations and thus provide a p o o r e r quality education. Second, law schools, p ar­ ticularly that a t the University, a re forced continually to raise their criteria for admission to the point law that most minority applicants are forced to enter inferior or costlier, private law schools o r to abandon their desire to enter the profession. the law school AT THE OTHER end of the specturm is Texas Southern University Law School. In 1972, it remains virtually all black and chicano. The discrepancies in facilities, faculty, library and the other characteristics which make a quality remain they were since unchanged pointed out so vividly by the U.S. Supreme Court in Sweatt vs. Painter in 1950. This is especially amazing considering the rapid development of the new Texas Tech Law School. Tech w a s founded in 1968 and has already developed into a respectable law after 22 school, whereas TSU years of existence, still provides an inferior legal education. The question which must be answered is whether the State should be permitted to provide unequal quality of education for Its lawyers, especially since it is minority-group mem bers who Crossword Puzzle Deadly Measure of weight (abbr.) Heavenly body Norse gods Welcomed Lamprey Part of church Note of scale Heelless shoe Near Crown Narrow opening War god Note of scale Hebrew letter Genus of maples Lamb’s pen name Golf mounds Fat of swine Overpower Shakespearian king 12 16 ACROSS I Everyone 4 A continent (abbr.) 6 Wheel teeth l l Refund 13 Iterate 15 Latin conjunction 16 Pendant ornaments 18 Symbol for nickel 19 Exclamation 21 Irritate 22 Icelandic writing 24 Brazilian estuary. 26 Repetition 28 Paddle 29 Choose 31 Narrate 33 Note of scale 3 4 Sow 3 6 Face of watch 38 Distance measure (abbr.) 4 0 Walk unsteadily 4 2 Place for combat 45 Electrified particle 4 7 Eject violently 49 Platform 50 Girl’s name 52 Unusual 54 Note of seal* 55 Spanish, article 56 Chief officei 59 Symbol for calcium 61 Negates 63 Downpour 65 Remains at ease 66 Preposition 67 Superlative ending DOWN I Exist 15 24 29 (50 55 61 14 18 t h e r e fo r e, i p l a n to v i s i t YOU FOR A FEW WEEKS TO BECOME ACQUAINTED, AND TO GATHER INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR LIFE AND CAREER... ~t3 ~ t P.5. P E R R E I ARRIVE,PLEASE LOCK W HOUR C A T S' 2 3 4 5 7 8 9 lo 19 20 21 22 25 26 27 30 31 3T 34 35 36 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 46 47 48 49 51 52 53 54 56 57 58 w 60 23 28 37 64 65 Distr, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. I REVOLUTIONARY DECISIONS AND OUR CRIES FOR LIFE a series of Lenten W orship Services 12:07-12:30 p.m. Beginning Ash W ednesday, February 16 the Chapel University Christian Church 21st & University Avenue (across from Littlefield Fountain) Sponsored by United C am p u s Ministry and A nd we've got over 30 . . . different styles Sweet­ and sizes o f fam ous heart boxes, all with filled Lammes color Candies. rainbow . . . in flavor you can every imagine . . . Sweetheart Every the boxes from as little as 72c 10th & C O N G R E S S 2510 G U A D A L U P E N O R T H L O O P P L A Z A 5330 A IR P O R T BLVD. G ood Morning, Sunshine th e e a rth says "h e llo " to y o u r glow ! Sp rin g d re ssin g includes th e s e acry lic knits in g o ld e n yellow . O n c e m ore, th e in d isp en sib le B attle J a c k e t . . . b u t, sh o rt-sle e v e d th is tim e o v e r w ash ab le nylon knit shirts in m o re su n -b rig n t colors. J a c k e t a n d stra ig h t-le g p an ts, 36.00. Shirt, 14.00. Tank to p a n d skirt, 22.00. Sizes 5-13 Austin Congregational, University Christian & University Presbyterian Churches Sta rtin g Feb. 10th the N orth L o o p a n d A irp o rt Stores W ill Be O p e n 'Til 8:30 p.m. O n - the - D r a g rn Page 6 Friday, February ll, 1972 THE D A IL Y T E X A N UT Tankers Fall to Niavs Alan Truex The Steer’s record is now 4-5. But their competition for this weekend is still far from settled. Friday’s regional meet, which lasts through Sunday, promises to be important. “ We have a three-fold purpose in going to this meet,” Coach Pat Patterson said. “ First, we will use this to help our boys qualify for the AAU nationals. Second, we hope to use this to set some qualifying times for the conference meet. And, finally, we want to use this AAU regional to help our boys prepare and qualify for the Tennessee and North Carolina meets.” The North Carolina State meet is Feb. 19 and the Tennessee meet is Feb. 21. Before those meets, however, Texas hosts Texas Tech Thursday. Patterson said he thinks as many as six ’Horns will qualify for the nationals. “ We’re counting on Munoz, freshman backstroker Worrel, Dick Shanks, freshman breast stroker Robert Rachner and maybe a couple of our divers to go to the nationals,” Patterson said. “ We think our boys are ready for this meet; they’ve been swimming pretty well lately.” The AAU National Cham­ pionships will be held in Dallas, April l l to 14. ARLIN G TO N (Spl.) - Tilings went about ag expected for the Texas swim team Thursday night as it. lost to the University at Arlington Texas blew Christian out of the pool. and Arlington soaked Austin, 79-34, and the ’Horns demolished the Homed Frogs, 98-10. But the meet can be viewed as a warm-up for the Longhorns. Friday they go from Arlington they will to Dallas, where compete in A m a t e u r regionals. the Southwestern Union Athletic Diver Donnie Vick was again the 'Horn hero as he garnered half of Texas’ four firsts. Vick scored 254.50 in the one-meter dive and 276.20 in the three-meter dive. Freshman Dick Worrel took a first in the 1,000-vard freestyle with a time of 10:08.1. Felipe Munoz, who set an Arlington pool record in the 200- yard breast stroke with a 210.4. Munoz’ time was good enough to qualify him for the NCAA nationals and bettered the school that event. Munoz mark in originally held the University record with 210.7. Texas took three second places, in the •'500 yard freestyle, the 400- yard medley relay and the 400- yard freestyle relay. The only other first went to The Steers finished first and third in the 200-yard breast stroke, first and third in the three-meter diving, first and fourth in the 1,000-yard freestyle and first and fifth in the one- meter diving. in fourth spots The Longhorns won the third and the 200 freestyle, the 50 freestyle, the 200 individual medley, the 200 but­ terfly, the IOO freestyle and the 200 baskstroke. T e x a s took second and fourth in the SOO freestyle. JE R O ’S BUTTERED RUM BA T T ER - 16 oz. Ja r ( M i r e ) 12th * RED RIVER 476-8990 1809 G U A D A L U P E 478-5903 SPECIAL W INE VALUES! 1941 Chateau Petit Cadet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 1941 Chateau Bellville. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ^ 5th 1941 Chateau Latour Folliage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 1941 Chateau Victoria . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 1949 Liebfraumilch St. Paulinus . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th ITALIAN CHIANTI in straw baskets C alam assi. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FULL QT. ONLY 99c 2.49 2.49 2.49 2.49 97c LAMBRUSCO CHIOU from It a ly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 1.39 BOURBON 5ths WILD TURKEY 84 p r ... 4.59 Jack Daniels Cr. 90 pr. 5.98 J. W. DANT IO yr. 84 pr. 4.19 4.29 JIM BEAM 84 pr SC O T C H 5ths J. WALKER Red 84 pr... 4.19 CUTTY SARK 84 p r .... 4.59 CHIYAS REGAL 12 yr. 84 p r . LAGACY • BSL 80 pr. 8.09 3.49 COLD DUCK or CHAMPAGNE 5th LEJ0N J. BONET s. BIG EC0H0MY QUARTS! Puerto Rican Rum Qt. nT#0# i aq BACARDI SMIRNOFF " a4 g9 GORDON'S °®in4 ™ 90 pr. BEER PRAGER BOHEMIAN 4 CANS 89c .. Cs. 24. 3.39 BALLANTINES Cs. CANS 3.79 BUDWEISER Cs. NR’s .. 4.49 BO H EM IA ALE 6 oz. b fls ............ for Weekend Sports COACH LEON BLACK’S Longhorn basketball team is on television for the first time this season Saturday when it goes to Houston for a 4 p.m. Southwest Conference game with Rice. K H F I television, channel 42, will carry the game live beginning at 4 p.m. KOKE-FM radio, 95.5, on the dial will also broadcast the game. The Yearlings are also in Houston, facing the Rice Owlets at 1:30 p.m. ★ ★ ★ TEXAS’ TRACK TEAM gets back in action Saturday at the Astrodome-I ’ST FF Meet in Houston. Coach Cleburne Price will carry 21 men to compete against some of the nations top athletes. ★ ★ ★ THE l TT SAILING CLUB opens its spring racing series Saturday and Sunday at the Windjammer Regatta in New Orleans. Tulane will sponsor the meet which includes teams from Notre Dame, Brown, LSC. McNeese and Intercollegiate' Sailing the Middle Atlantic Association. t r THE AUSTIN BLACKS rugby squad hosts St. Edward's at I p.m. Saturday at the Austin Rugby Field behind Fiesta Gardens. Tne Black* will also meet the Austin Golds immediately following the St. Edward’s game. iAr PEACE CORPS V I S T A Representatives will be on Campus in the West Mall Mon. — Fri. Feb. 7-11 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p . m . Dead Horse Rises Back in the fall of 1970, when the Longhorn football team was beating every opponent and The Daily Texan was beating dead horses, the length of one athlete’s hair became the major issue of the day. He wasn’t a football player a n d although he was an All-American he really wasn’t very well known, but Texas swimmer Frank Salzhandler quickly became a household word. It all began when Salzhandler, Southwest Con­ ference champion breast stroker as a freshman, showed up for practice as a sophomore with his hair too long to suit his new coach, Pat Patterson. The coach banned Salzhandler from practice until he cut his hair to conform to Patterson’s hair code. Naturally, Salzhandler protested. Immediately, he became the campus sensation, the hero of the antiestablishment and the greatest advocate of the B ill of Rights since William Kunstler. Salzhandler took his case to the people, with several open letters, printed in The Firing Line, to Patterson and Darrell Royal, who sup­ ported Patterson’s ultimatum. Students Respond There were student demonstrations and a public outcry in Salzhandler’s behalf. The Texan ran petitions calling for “ self expression in speech and appearance” for all athletes, and Salzhandler was accorded attention on the front page, the sports page and the editorial pages. He received more publicity than Frank Erwin would get if he were caught burglarizing the Bauer House. Eventually, Patterson and Salzhandler com­ issue, and the slightly promised on the hair trimmed-down swimmer rejoined the team. After that, you didn't hear too much about Salzhandler, largely because he didn't have an outstanding sophomore year and because he retired from the sport after the season was over. And because this hallowed newspaper found new dead horses to beat. Salzhandler decided that swimming just wasn't worth the trouble. “ I wanted more or less to go on to bigger things,” he said Thursday. “ I got tired of athletics and all the emphasis on winning, and I just didn't want to have much to do with it. I hoped to form a club of athletes and try' to change things, but that never got going,” he said. i He claimed his main reason for giving swimming was that it took too much time. “ took up four or five hours a day, and that didr leave enough time for my studies,” he said. “ I ’ an art major and I have labs all day.” Salzhandler remarked that the sport require extensive year-around conditioning. Even in ti summer, he had to put in “ five or six hour; of physical labor to keep in shape. He downplays Patterson and the hair code ; reasons for leaving the team. However, he admi that “ the hair had a little to do with it.” “ I could see,” Salzhandler said, “ that Pattersc was not going to end the hair code, even thou£ he had told us that he would be more lenient c hair” in the future. Salzhandler, who set the Soutl west Conference record in the 200-yard brea< stroke, says he “ is on speaking terms” with h ii ex-coach, tellectually.” He added, “ I w'ant to stress th? I wish all of them (Patterson and the team) th best of luck.” though wre don’t agree “ even Slips as Sophomore Another possible reason for Salzhandler’s leavin could have been that he had a somewhat disap pointing sophomore year after his brilliant fresl man showing. But Salzhandler also denied tha theory. “ It’s true I didn’t better my time,” h said, “ but that’s to be expected in view of th sporadic workouts I had because I spent so mud time off the team.” S a l z h a n d l e r maintained that his mail dissatisfaction with swimming was the “ win-win’ attitude. “ It’s too competitive,” he said. “ Whei I beat somebody I felt sorry for him, althougl I was beaten a lot of times myself. “ I like athletics more on an amateur basis,’ he added. “ It’s fun and it’s a good w’ay to bulk your body.” While he has lost his desire for athletic com petition. Salzhandler remains interested in physics fitness. “ I do a lot of bicycle riding now,” hr said, “ about an hour and a half a day.” He even says he is going to start swimmini again. “ I don’t do a whole lot of swimming am more,” he says, “ but I ’m going to get started on a program.” But he doesn't mean the University athletics program. U.S. W ins More Gold S A P P O R O , Japan (A P )— Barbara Cochran of Richmond, Vt., twisted through a heavy snow Friday to win the women's Nelson Automotive 5126 BURNET RD. 452-2600 Repairs on American & Foreign Cars Free Pick-up Open: Mon.-Fri. 7-6 Sat. 7-11 sp>ecial slalom and give the United States its first Olympic 1952. Miss Cochran’s victory' came gold medal in Alpine skiing since about two hours after 16-year-old Ann Henning and Dianne Holum, both of Northbrook, 111., and the other U.S. gold medalists of these Eleventh Winter Games, failed to win the l,000-mex >... r«n> !<> \lake Farm* Pa* t nt.'**'. WX X* « «« 4- ' ».<• <■ <■ *S*-s'-4»V* AN • 0 rn% CLASSIFIED You W ill Be Amazed at the Quick, Fast Results For So Little Money! CALL 471-5244 You Get 15 Words For One Low Price! For Only $ ^ ^ 1 5 Insertions JW InsertionsS^ C O O I For Only I J 'W ingless' Owls Host Horns friday, February I f, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Page J Champagne and ’i i for your Valentine.. may take the Owls too lightly as well. The Longhorn coach wouldn't name a starting lineup Thursday, t h o u g h Robinson, Larry averaging 25.4 in conference play, and Scooter I^enox seem certain to begin the game. The play of reserves Harry Larrabee, John Mark Wilson and in the win over Lynn Howden A&M could have some effect on W’ho starts. SWU NOTES: The big game of this weekend pits the Aggies at SMU, in a game which could start the SWC ra re all over again if the Aga win, or put the Ponies in a commanding position. SMU is 6-1 with the trips to Lubbock and College Station already behind it. A&M is 5-2. Texas Tech, (4-3) but loser of two straight, visits Baylor (3-4) and a Boar win could eliminate the West Texans. TCU (also 4-3) will try Arkansas (2-5) the Ozark*. in LAM S YUM YUM Chinese Restaurant is THE PLACE FOR AUTHENTIC By ED SPAULDING Assistant Sports Editor HOUSTON—Coach Leon Black touched upon some of his team’s problems Thursday in discussing Texas’ upcoming game with Rice, the but compared with what Owls’ Don Knodel faces, Black’s t r o u b l e s are minor—almost nonexistent. Black’s Longhorns are not doing as well as expected with a Southwest Conference record, but Knodel’s Owls have 4-3 SATURDAY’S Texas-Rice game will be televised locally with a 4 p.m. air time. Tickets may be purchased at Gregory Gym until 4 p.m. Friday at the ticket office. real problems. Rice is 0-7 in SWC play, the two games deep conference cellar, and has lost 12 of 13 games dating from Christmas. in Furthermore, Rice’s top player, forward Mark Wehrle, is slowed by a bad knee. Things have been going so badly that Knodel has started 12 different players this season. The Owls were Texas’ first SWC victim, losing in Austin 87-63 in mid-January, but Black is more than a bit apprehensive about the return match, which begins at 4 p.m. Saturday in Rice Gym. “This is the type of game that gives coaches the most concern,” Black said. “You always have a feeling we might let down after the A&M game.” in Texas stayed alive the conference chase by outgunning the Aggies Tuesday 80-71, but club is wary of his Black overlooking the wingless Owls. A to Rice Saturday would loss certainly eliminate ’Horns from any title ideas. the Rice, while a helpless 0-9 in games away from home, is a respectable 5-5 at home, and had a shot at upsetting conference leader SMU Tuesday. The Owls led by a point at half-time, and with just eight minutes remaining Rice w a s behind by only one when it took five trips down the floor without scoring, as SMU pulled away. troubles The Texas coach believes his stem team’s current from of sources: two leadership from the players and his own inability to find a way to convince his players of what they face. lack “What our guys don’t realize,” said Black, “is that every time we go out there, it’s the big game to the team we’re playing. Texas La the big one, I guess because of our success in football. one feels “We’ve got to be challenged some way, prepared to play.” of Texas’ Black problems against TCU in an 88-75 loss a week ago was the players had seen TCU and Rice play on the TV—very Frogs pulled out a win. poorly—though “Our kids saw the TCU-Rice game,” Black said, “and that more than anything else might have beaten us (at Fort Worth).” Obviously Black feels his players HH* Height ..................... 6-6 TEXAS E rie Groseurth L arry Robinson ........................... 6-8 .......... 6-10 B. G. B m sterhous ......................... 6-3 Scooter Lenox ...................... 6-2 Jim m y Blacklock Reb. Av*. 5.5 7.1 10 2 20 8 S.4 9.R 2.7 13 3 3.1 9 8 STARTING LINEUPS RICE M ark W ehrle Leroy Merton Steve Em shoff Scott F ish er ............................. Dan McGuire Avg. 12 I 4 3 IO 7 5 4 10.8 Pos. F F CT G a ......................... ........................... 6-5 ......................... 6-9 6-2 ........................... 5-11 Reb. 6 4 2 6 6 5 2 0 l l Height 6-11 Pos. Freshmen Seek Revenge Yearlings Face Rice out the same five: Chris Voegele, who leads all scorers with an 18.5 norm, Alan Heilman, Ed Marks, James Fallon and Jay Lapeyre. Mark Anthony will also see a lot of action. Fallon tops the rebounding category with a 9.5 average. Texas now sports a 73-point scoring average, while Rice manages 79.8 a game. However, the Horns hold a five-point ad­ vantage over their opponents and Rice’s foes own a 10-point lead over it in scoring averages. George RICE Mehaffey’s include Tim Moriarty, top scorer with a C O A C H line-up will 19.4 mean, Darryl Hughes, Danny Carroll, Paul Scott and Mike Claybum, all of whom score consistently in the double figures. Coach Lenox said he plans to use his usual game plan of a pressing defense and fast-running attack. “We have to do a better job of defensing Moriarty this time. This team (Texas) has had to work hard and for everything it gets.” fight The Yearlings will try to even the score when they bring the fight to Rice Saturday in hopes of .500 per­ centage in the SWC and exacting a little revenge. improving their HANK's GRILL Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2 pcs. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 2532 GUADALUPE 59 p.m. only 9 5 Reg. $1.35 New hours for your shopping convenience All shops now open IO AM-9 PM n O B X B SHOPPING MALL By KIRK BOHLS Sports Assistant come HOUSTON - The Texas to Houston Yearlings Saturday to battle a Rice team that has claimed victories this season over just two basketball squads. And one of those w’as the “Scrappy Bunch” itself. The Shorthorns will arrive for the 1:30 p.m. contest in the Rice gym with their minds set on avenging their earlier defeat to the Owlets in both clubs’ first Southwest Conference outing. As a matter of fact, that win was the last one for the Rice fresh­ men who have compiled a less- than-to-be-desired 2-7 record. for free throw line the Yearlings Turnovers and cold shooting at spelled the downfall in their first go-around, 70-61. Since that time, Texas has upped its in con­ record to 7-4 and 3-3 im­ ference play, pressive 69-59 shellacking of a favored Texas A&M team. including an “IT WAS just a great over-all team effort and excellent defense that beat the Aggies,” Coach Bennie Lenox explained. “A&M has scored over IOO points a couple of times a n d averages about 85 a game. We just con­ tinued to show great hustle.” Lenox indicated he would send Austin Blacks Vie Saturday The Austin Blacks rugby team takes on St. Edw’ard’s at I p.m. Saturday at the Austin Rugby Field behind Fiesta Gardens. Immediately f o l l o w i n g the game with St. Edw’ard’s, th e ! Blacks will get back into action I against the Austin Golds. The Golds are coming off a to loss the Champagnat; 14-0 Rugby Club of Argentina Wed-1 nesday. The Argentines, playing their I sixth game of a statewide tour to Dallas before moving on Thursday, jumped to an 11-0 first half lead before coasting in the second half. M O A T E X A M T R A IN IN G C O U R S E . information write: For further Graduate Studies Institute, P. O . Box 386, N.Y., N.Y. I0 0 II Compete in Dome Longhorns Ricky Yarbrough (i) and John Berry are two of 21 members of Coach Cleburne Price's squad who will see action in the Astrodome-USTFF Track Meet in Hous­ ton Saturday. Yarbrough will run the mile while Berry is entered in the IOO yard dash and the long jump. Track Team Under Glass By ROY MARK Assistant Sports Editor HOUSTON—“Track under glass’’ gets under way Saturday for possibly the last time with 21 Longhorn trackmen scheduled to compete in the financially plagued Astrodome-USTFF Track Meet. “They (USTFF) have one year left on the contract but lf they don’t do well this year it could be the last,” 'Horn Assistant Track Coach Bill Miller said Wednesday. Head Coach Cleburne Price has been in Houston all week serving as coordinator for the meet. This will be the fourth year for the Dome meet and although world class athletes compete every year, attendance and sponsorship are sagging. ON CFI AGAIN some of tile world’s top Olympic hopefuls are entered; hurdlers Rod Millburn and Willie Davenport, high jumper Pat Matzdorf, miler Marty Liquori, sprinters Willie Deckard, Cliff Branch, George Daniels and Willis McGee, pole vaulter Dave Roberts and shot putters Randy Matson and Karl Salb. Steer hurdlers Gordon Hodges, third last week in the 60 highs at Fort Worth’s Coaches Indoor Meet, and Randy Lightfoot, who failed to qualify, are entered in the 120 high hurdles with Milburn and Davenport. Sophomore John Berry’ will run in the IOO yard dash against Deckard, Branch, Daniels and McGee, which will make even qualifying difficult. In the 440 are Randy Randolph and Glenn Goss. Randolph is a sophomore and his best mark in the 440 last season was 52.8 while Goss is a freshman who has posted a 49.3 in high school. In the mile run are Bill Gamble and possibly Ricky’ Y ar­ brough. FRESHMEN DON AUSMUS and Bishop Dolegiewiez will also find stiff competition in the shot put with Salb and Matson entered. In the high jump Bill Oakes and Wyatt Tomkins will be leaping against the world record holder in Matzdorf, who broke Valery Brum el's long standing record with a jum p of 7-6*4. Long jumping for Texas are Berry’ and Larry Thornhill. Texas pole vaulters Bill Smalley and Gene Hackney should find ample competition in R ices Dave Roberts, the NCAA champion. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY SPECIAL ViBBQ C H IC K EN with Beans, Potato Salad, ONLY $•140 Bread, Onions & Pickles (limit 50 each W e d . & Sat.) BERT'S B-B-Q AIQ W. 19th (in the alley) OPEN 11:00 a.m. 474-6135 CHARLIE'S 403 W. 19 for Delivery 476-0633 105 E. 7th • 318 South Congress • 3216 S. Congress W HISKEY ROYAL so Pr.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 3.19 n C^ . sth 5.69 SEAGRAMS V.0.8rP“ WALKER'S DELUXE decanters.......... 5th 4A9 KENTUCKY BEAU « » 3.69 MATTINGLY & MOORE 3.09 SEAGRAMS 7 CROWN » ,... . 4.39 p. --------------------------- - SC O T C H " I CHECQUERS 86 pr................. 5th 6.T9 J I HIGHLAND MIST 80 pr...........5th 3.79 J i BALLANTINES 86 pr.................. 5th 5.99 J SMIRNOFF VODKA»„...... „ 4.89 UM 80 pr............ CAPI. KIDDl 5th 3.19 AQUILA 80 pr. ... SOMBRERO ■ 5th 3.79 M 80 pr..................... 5th 3.79 RON RICO R W INE GUILD ROSE 5th L A N C E R S ............ 5th MATEUS ROSE ...5th M ARQ UES 5th BOONE'S APPLE ..5th GUILD M U SC AT l/2 gal. BEER S H IN E R 24 Ret. SCHLITZ warm cs I /wy FALSTAFF ....24 cans 6 cans HANLEYS OLD MILWAUKEE 3 QTS..................... 4 BIG SPECIALS CAT STEVENS "TEASER AND THE FIRECAT" 55.98 List C A T STEVENS "TEA FOR THE THIERMAN" *5.98 List for $069 C H IL L IW A C K *5.98 List $3 6 9 for DELIVERY of KODACOLOR PRINTS Bring us your exposal Him by 4 PM Prints ready 48 hours later at 4 PM. STURMAN PHOTO • 19th at Lavaca 1.39 ® Cameron Village CALL & COMPARE Budget 472-4680 Specialize In Rock Mu*le SALE G O O D THRU. THURS. SPECIALS "e v e r y WEEK r n for S 3 * 9 r O P E N 1 0 -9 472-4680 FREE PARKING SALE G O O D THRU. THURS. PAUL W ILLIAM S "Just An Old Fashioned Love Song" 55.98 List $ 3 6 9 for ASM RECORDS CALL 472-4680 BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS 3004 Guadalupe ASM RECORDS CALL 472-4680 CH INESE FOODS & ARTS A N D GIFTS 3301 N. INTERREGIONAL 477-1687 DON’T B t L/KE M E flN O OUT THE ' TACTS BEFORE YOU BUY A DIAMOND there ../ire no argatn Diamonds W hen you sec a “d iscou n t* d iam on d offered at an in ferior price, it’s u su ally an in ferior gem . T h e best w ay to be sure o f h on est value is to select your jew eler with care. W e are a m em b er o f the A m erican G em S ociety —your guarantee o f the quality and value o f every d iam ond in our store. M EM B E R A M E R IC A N G E M S O C IE T Y Flexible Student Terms S/fteSBummdfficcm I in WesTSATe — — - - — - -J 9 106 E A S T S E V E NTH w A U S T I N , T E X A S I*A T* & e BUFFET L o r u i s e * * * * ye H ie M ost R om antic W ay T o Say " I JLove Y o u ” (anc! m ore fun than candy!) N orm an Eaton’s Champagne Buffet M onday, Feb. 14 Roast Sirloin, Chateau Briand, Chicken Breast in Burgundy W i n e Sauce C ham pagne and Buffet $7.00 p er person 6:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m . o lo n a ls e Restaurant 23rd Floor Westgate 478-4628 Page 8 Friday, February ll. 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Hopeful Talks Mathews Raps Drug Law Dist. Judge Charles Mathews of Austin said Thursday he did not think m arijuana possession should be prosecuted as a felony. The jurist spoke to a group of the Students’ law students at Attorney’s Office. Mathews is seeking re-election to 200th District Court. He op­ poses Peace Justice Buck Smith In the race. The form er regent of Texas Tech and former member of the State Insurance Board said, “I don’t think m arijuana is a hard drug.” Mathews also complained about of appointments the federal judges. He said, “A federal judge is next to God. They can do no wrong. There is a lot of good in being subject to the voters.” The judge also said voters expect more judicial reform in the next regular session of the State Legislature. He said he did not think lawyers should have the option to choose which judge will hear their case, and when filing a case, a random selection process should be used in deciding which cases go to what judges. Price Attacks Primary Plan By MIKE FRESQUES General Reporter State Rep. Rayford Price of Palestine accused Gov. Preston Smith and Secretary of State Bob Bullock Thursday of attempting to usurp the constitutional authority of the Legislature by not calling a special sesson to deal with the issue of filing fees. Price, who is seeking the House speaker post, was charged later in the day by Bullock with ‘‘self-serving demagoguery.” TEXAS’ filing fee laws, amended the Legislature, were recently held unconstitutional by a federal court to set rules and panel. The panel gave Bullock reasonable fees for the primaries. Bullock moved for the use of State monies for funding of party prim aries. last session of the authority the in Price said, ‘‘I ’m speaking of their action in asking the federal court in Dallas to give to the secretary of state complete control over the operation and financing of the state’s prim ary elections, establishing a czar-control of this basic democratic institution that rightfully and constitutionally belongs to the elected representatives of the people of Texas.” Price denied using the issue of filing fees to seek a special session in which House m embers might unseat Speaker Gus Mutscher, who goes on trial for bribery Feb. 28 in Abilene. The representative also denied charges that he sought the post p. now to facilitate his re-election in Palestine, wheie Fred Head in the Democratic primary. ie aces IN REBUTTAL Bullock said, “ I wish that Mr. Price had evidenced sim ilar concern about this m atter during the last session of the Legislature when he and his colleagues, because of their mac ion and lack of foresight, forced this serious problem on the poop e or Texas ** “ While that Rep. P ric e s political aspirations and his chances for re-election to the House might b# substantially advanced if a special session were called at an early date — prior to the primaries — it should also be obvious that a m atter as serious as the calling of a special session, which concerns all the people of Texas, should not be decided on the basis of one individual’s petty personal political interests, Bullock said. it Is quite obvious to me “ I tend to think that the orderly operation and financing of prim ary elections in Texas and the interests of the people are more important than any aspect of M r.Price’s political future, assuming he has one, * Bullock’s statem ent concluded. — T e x a n S ta ff P h o to by JO H N VAN B E E K I M . Campaigning on Campus ,. 200th Dist. Court Judge Charles D. Mathews. F o r S a l e F o r S a i r R o o m m a t e s A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . ■ . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . T y p i n g IM. T H R U F R I. 8 : 0 0 - ; ~ / - \ \ \ -f-- * V W -B A JA B U G , m a g s , P o ly g la s tire s , e x t r a c t o r : n e w c lu tc h , w h e e l h e a r in g s , s h o c k s . S p o t lig h ts . $350 o r b e s t o ffe r. 444-5405, 441-2469. 1963 SAAB-96. W h ite, n e w tra n s m is s io n . A M -F M , g o o d tir e s . C a ll P a t t y a f te r 6 p .m ., 476-2746. VW . ’66 S E D A N . G re e n . M u st sell. tir e s . E x c e lle n t e n g in e , R a d io , good n e w m u ff le r. $700. 451-2810. m is sio n , ’63 C H E V R O L E T I m p a la . N ew tir e s , t r a n s ­ b a tte r y , s h o c k s . A M /E M . J u s t $450. C a ll 441- 3778. m u ff le r, VW BU S. N E W e n g in e , tr a n s m is s io n , s t a r t e r , g e n e r a to r , b a t­ tir e s . M u s t s a c rif ic e . c a r b u r a to r , te ry , u p h o ls te ry , 452-0849. 458*5811. 1967 E SA 441. M e c h a n ic a lly so u n d . $300. to o ls, m a n u a l. firm . H e lm e ts , C a sh , 476-0125 10am -12 n o on. 1970 H O N D A CL350. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . C a ll 411-6602 a f t e r 7 p m . $600. K LH-12-1 Y E A R old, r e ta il $550 n ow $ 120. R e c tilin e a r III. n e w w a r r a n t y y o u r n a m e , $430. G a r r a r d SL30 tu r n t a b le w ith P ic k e r in g V ia . o n e y e a r old, $35. 444-0742. r e t a i l n o w $560 T R IU M P H B O N N E V IL L E , 1967. 444- A U S T IN H E A L Y 62, A M /F M , g o o d c o n ­ d itio n , n e w b a tte r y , n e w tir e s . M u st 0742. s e e to b e lie v e . 441-3778. V O X B E A T L E a m p lifie r, f o r g u ita r o r b a s s , e le c tr o n ic e ffe c ts , e x c e lle n t c o n ­ d itio n , c o m p le te w ith c o v e r s . G ib so n E B O s te r e o b a s s , g o o d c o n d itio n . 477- 7023. 1969 V W . R a d io , h e a t e r . V e ry c le a n . M itc h e ll E n c o . 24th a n d R io G ra n d e o r 477-0893. $1195. C U ST O M 63 V W c a m p e r . F a c t o r y r e ­ b u ilt e n g in e u n d e r w a r r a n ty . N ew lic e n s e . 327-0660 a f t e r fiv e. p a in t, M U S T S E L L TW O a c o u s t i c a l w a ln u t b o o k s h e lf s p e a k e r s . $60 v a lu e f o r $35 p a ir . C a ll a n y tim e . 452-5423. H O U S E Sc A P A R T M E N T • PLANTS • • F L O W E R I N G • S E M I - T R O P I C A L • H A N G I N G B A S K E T S 4004 Avenue H M e x ic a n sw a g la m p $20, p o rta b le sew ­ in g m ach in e $10, reclin er $20, 4 stro n g ; M e x ic a n ch airs $60, la rg e b e v e le d m ir­ Y E L L O W 1962 F o r d E e o n o lin e v a n . S ta n d a r d tr a n s m is s io n . 170 s e r ie s . $500 o r b e s t o ffe r. C a ll 471-3734 a f t e r 6 p .m . ror $25, n ig h t sta n d $10, straw ru g $3, c o ffe e tab le $5, d nette $30. 4 6 2 5 D e ­ pew, A p a r t m e n t N o . 4. P O O R S T U D E N T S ’ g a r a g e s a le . 4614 R a m s e y . S u n d a y . G a s s to v e , AC, lo ts of m is c e lla n e o u s . U L T IM A T E T R U C K IN G c a r . ’61 V a ­ lie n t. R u n s s u p e r. $175 c a s h . 454-8262 a f t e r 6 p .m . T D C , N O D IN G S . G ib so n e le c tr ic g u ita r s : 335 $547.25: F la tto p , $217.35. H a r d s h e ll c a s e s . 477- 3128. L es P a u l, $397.45; 1968 F I R E B I R D c o n v e r tib le 350. H u r s t s h ifte r, d u a l e x h a u s ts , p o w e r s te e rin g , d is c b r a k e s . C all 477-0832. 1956 M E T R O V A N . B ed s, c u p b o a r d s , tir e s . $150 o r b e s t c a r p e tin g , g o o d o ffer. L e a v e m e s s a g e , 478-2184. M U S T S E L L 69 VW. $1450. ’68 VW b u s w ith AC, $1650 o r b e s t o ffer. H A R P S IC H O R D , Z u e k e r m a n n AA-I3. O ile d w a ln u t, g o o d p la y in g c o n d itio n . 1621 E a s t 6th. $500. 453-4928. M A L E , F E M A T .E s h a r e tw o b e d ro o m , tw o b a th . In d iv id u a l c o n tr a c t $61.50 p e r , p e rs o n , fu r n is h e d . P o o l. L E F O N T A p a r tm e n ts , 803 W est 28th. 472-6480. b ills -m a id s e r v ic e F R E E R E N T ’til M a r c h I. F e m a le to n e a r tw o R iv e rs id e w ith o n e o th e r g irl. 444-3855. ! b e d ro o m s h a r e lu x r y F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d . V e ry n ic e a p a r tm e n t. $55 p e r m o n th , a ll b ills p a id . S h u ttle b u s. 477-6581, e x t.237, A lice. A fte r 3, 441-4802. b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t. $70, M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d s h a r e o n e a ll b ills. T h ro e b lo c k s C a m p u s . 300 E a s t 30th, 476-4257. R O O M M A T E . in h o u se. L ib e r a l a c a d e m ic a tm o s p h e r e . S E P A R A T E ro o m $ 60-m onth. C a ll J i m a t 451-4363. M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d to s h a r e th r e e b e d ro o m h o u se. $50, b ills . C o m e b y 904 E . 48W a f t e r six. M A L E F O R A P A R T M E N T . 31 st a n d I S p e e d w a y . $67.5 0 /m o n th u n til M a y 15 A t le a s t c a ll B ill 5-7 M -F . 472-4625. R O O M M A T E (S) N E E D E D : S h a r e 3 /2 d u p le x w ith o n e o th e r. C A /C H . c a r ­ p e tin g . fir e p la c e , e tc . N e a r R iv e rs id e a n d I n te r r e g io n a l. 441-1416, L e s J a n k e y . I N e e d e d , fe m a 'e ro o m m a te 2 2 -3 0 to share u n fu rn ish e d 2 b e d roo m , 2 b a +h h om e on Lake T ra - s (C o m a n c h e T ra il). H c . s e has fire p lace , patio, late access, m a n y e th e r n o o d le s. Pets w elcom e. Y o ^ r ut! ties. C a I R e e v e L o v e at 4 7 6-6361 b e fo re 5. $ l3 0 / m o n t h in c lu d in g ! share, R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to s h a r e tw o I b e d ro o m s tu d io a p a r t m e n t w ith th r e e g irls . T o w n L a k e a r e a . 441-2395, 441- 2685. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E tw o b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t w ith o n e o th e r. to s h a r e A fte r fo u r c a ll A n n e, 444-6924. C O M V C T C D C O C T D O V V lN I i n i C o I C K E L J o I K - o U O O I 1969 D O D G E S P O R T v an . N e w t r a m s m iss io n . tir e s , b ra k e s . R ic h a r d F ilip , le a v e m e s s a g e , S a x o n P u b , 454-8115. S e r v i c e s D U A L 1 2 1 9 C H A N G c R . 1970 C H E V E L L E SS. p o w e r, a ir, e x tr a s . L ik e n e w . C a ll C a ro ly n , 476-9980 o r , n ,, D y n a c o A 25 speakers, casse tte r e c o r d e r / 454-0656 a f t e r 5. p la ye r deck. A ll o r part. 203 East 19th 476-6733 Stre e t I SOD I S e Y.e0n J,etrievei s ’ O u tstan d in g p ed ig ree. 403- '71 C H E V Y VAN. lo a d e d . A /C . PS. PB, fro’ V S s S s g la s s , A T. S ax ap ' g la s s , AT. S a x o p h o n e , k e e p c a llin g 478-0625 W E W IL L se ll y o u r s te r e o e q u ip m e n t q u ic k ly a n d a t a f a ir p ric e . T h e S te re o S hop, 477-1511. 1970 911T P o r s c h e . A ir A p p e a r a n c e g ro u p , A M -F M . m ile s . C all 266-1405 a f t e r 6p m . c o n d itio n e r. 19,000 _ CD G IR L 'S T H R E E s p e e d b ic y c le . A lm o s t L ig h t b a s k e t’ ?’50’ J c n n y ’ 477' 1966 M G B . E X C E L L E N T c o n d itio n . $10C0. A lso C r a g a r C r a n P r ix m a g s , fit C h e v ro le t, 14x6" w ith h u b c o v e r, lu g s, a n d lo c k s. $110. 926-8695. 1966 VW-1300. V e ry goo d c o n d itio n . R -H , r e b u ilt e n g in e , n e w p a in t. $700. D on, 477-8259. S U Z U K I 305, 1969 w ith 7600 m ile s . V e ry h e lm e ts , J U S T R E C E IV E D 5 1972 d e lu x e solid s ta t e c o n so le s In b e a u tifu l h a r d ru b b e d fin ish . W o rld 's re n o w n e d B S R tu r n ta b le a n d fo u r s p e a k e r a u d io s y s te m . $79.95 I 1969 R E N A U L T 16. S ta n d a r d , a ir . e x tr a VW, 405 te r m s a v a ila b le . T h e y e a c h , m o n th ly m a y b e a t U N C L A IM E D F R E IG H T , 6535 N . L a m a r . O p e n 9 a m - 6 p m M o n .-F ri., S a t. 't i l I p m . 1969 F I A T 121 S p o rt. F iv e sp e e d , ra d io , a ir, 13,000 m ile s . $1995. " C B " S m ith " C B " S m ith N o rth L a m a r . P h o n e 476-9181. fa rin g . $425. 452-7535. c o n d itio n . T w o n ic e . $1295. in s p e c te d e x c e lle n t ‘VW, 405 N o rth L a m a r . P h o n e 476-9181. H A IR L T D . C a ll in fo r m a tio n on fo r h a i r s in g e in g f o r s p lit e n d s a n d s h a g c u ts . 454-0984. XEROX COPIES 4c EACH sin g le c o p y rate re d u c tio n s 6c eac h Q u a lit y c o p :es on plain b o n d p a p e r . G IN N Y 'S C O P Y IN G SE R V IC E 2 2 0 0 San A n t o n io 2 n d flo o r I b lo ck b e h in d The C o - O p at 2 2 n d 47 6 -9 1 7 1 or 4 5 2 -8 4 2 8 Discover "THE ADOBE" Luxury Efficiency Apartments Pool T.V. Cable • All Bills Paid • Fireplace Central Heat A.C. Mexican Tile M O E . 37th St. Call 477-9954 (Shuttle Bus) 478-1382 After 5:00 Sc Weekends 472-4305 N O W LEASING $135 MONTHLY A LL UTILITIES PAID A LL ELECTRIC, EFF IC IEN C Y • F U L L Y F U R N I S H E D • D I S P O S A L • L A R G E W A L K - I N C L O S E T S . 2506 M anor Rd. 474-5550 U N EXP EC T ED V A C A N C Y W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E L u x u ry ’ I b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t 5 b lo c k s w e s t of G u a d a lu p e . AC, d is h w a s h e r, d is p o sa l, b a r. c a b le TV . p a n e le d , ric h c a r p e t a n d s h u ttle I . $140 p lu s e le c tr ic . 2101 S a n G a b rie l, T e r r y B elt, 476-9363. O N E B E D R O O M F U R N IS H E D a p a r t ­ m e n t, O n e b lo c k to L a w S c h o o l. $130 p lu s e le c tr ic ity . 472-5369. $240 F O R F O U R , P L U S b ills. K itc h e n . le a s e , n o d e p o s it. S tu d y c u b b y , n ig h t N o c h e e r y n e a r U nion-— sh o p p in g . 1902 N u e c e s . G R 6-8683. d e c o r, 2222 APTS. on Town Lake N e w sm a'l com plex. A t t r a c t iv e room s. C H / C A . $ 1 5 5 b ' s p aid . S h a g , p oo l, s h c p c ’ng. 4 4 4 -2 0 7 0 I b e d ­ o r all $170, Shuttle. N e a r 9 2 6 -5 7 1 2 . S A V E S A V E S A V E Tenant has bro ke n lo v e ly 2- b e d ro o m ap artm en t. M a k e his loss y o u r gain. C a ll now a n d ask a b o u t spe cial lease on S T A N F O R D ’S P A IN T IN G I n te r i o r a n d e x te r io r p a in tin g . F r e e ; c o m p a n y . I D rices. e s ti m a te s , g u a r a n te e d s a tis f a c tio n . 4 5 4 2826, J e r r y S ta n fo r d . 454-9726 _ ; O w n e d by a recen tly retired minister, : this 2 - 11/; h om e w as c a re d fo r M o n d a y | thru Sa tu rd a y . M a n y trees an d ail new J paint. fo r on ly j $23,750. Firm ; g o o d fin a n c in g a v a i!a b !e. I C a l D o n Em erson 453-6671 o r 4 52-1170. Im m e d iate p o sse ssio n F O S T E R N O R T H W E S T R E A L T Y . 1969 P L Y M O U T H F U R Y I . A u to m a tic . " C B ’’ S m ith VW, ra d io . $1195. a ir. 405 N o rth L a m a r . P h o n e 476-9181. _ j 1968 R U B E L 770. A u to m a tic , p o w e r a n d C l a r e s a ir . $995. " C B " S m ith VW. 405 N o rth L a m a r . P h o n e 476-9181. S H O W R IN G T R A IN IN G . VILLA DETTE , | N o w le a s in g I & 2 b e d ro o m s . C e n tra l 2 2 nd. : a ir, sp a c io u s , p a n e lin g . I & 2 b e d ro o m s , Pool. a t t r a c t i v e f u r n itu r e , f r e e c a b le TV, C o m p i e e S n o -v r in g setup, inside. Kas & w a te r , c a r p e t . S m a ll c o m p le x . la u n d ry . N e a r M e d ic a l P a r k T o w e r & Al! breeds trainer. U .T . S e le c t te n a n ts . A p t. 114, m a n a g e r . r e D r u a r y s t a r r in g 1966 VW S E D A N . S ta n d a r d . $895. " C B " S m ith VW, 405 N o rth L a m a r . P h o n e 476-9181. 345-1765, 345- 69 C L A S SIF IE D A D V E R T ISIN G R A T E S tim e .07 .Oft U ' d ? ......... $...0.1 E a c h Word (la w o rd m in im u m ) $ ........... $ ...................... *.......................... -"5 ................................. fjjj-®® ......................................... $19.00 f 3 8 .0 0 E a c h A dditional T im e S tudent ra te o n e E a c h a d d itio n a l w ord 20 C o n secu tiv e I s s u e s IO w o rd s 15 w o rd s 20 w o rd s in ch 1 c o l. in ch 2 c o l. in ch 3 c o l. 4 c o l. in ch C la ssified D isp la y I co lu m n x one in ch o n e tim e $ 2.10 ..............$ 2.00 E a c h A dditional T im e ................................ ..................................... ..................................... .... ......................................$120.00 (N o c o p y c h a n g e for c o n s e c u tiv e is s u e r a te s.) D E A D L IN E SC H E D U L E M onday T ex a n F r id a y , 3:00 p.m . T u e sd a y T e x a n M o n d a y . 11:00 a-m. W ednesday T ex a n „„ „ T u e sd a y , 11:00 a .m . T hursday Texan W e d n e sd a y . 11:00 a .m . F r id a y T ex a n T h u r sd a y . 11:00 a^ n. « . . . ‘Un th e e v e n t o f e rr o r s m a d e in an a d v e r tise m e n t, im m e d ia te notice m o s t be g iv e n a s th e p u b lish ers are resp o n sib le for o n ly O N E in co rrect Insertion. A ll c la im s Tot a d ju stm e n ts should be m a d e not la te r th an SO d a y s a fte r p u b lic a tio n .” • . L O W ST U D E N T RA TES 15 word* or las* for 75c tho fir** time, 5c each additional word. Stu­ receipt dent must show Auditor’* in Journalism and pay in advance Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d ay through Friday. F o r S a l e T O P C A SH P R I C E S p a id f o r d ia m o n d s . o ld g o ld . C a p ito l D ia m o n d S h o p . 603 C o m m o d o re P e r r y . 476-0178_____________ 3 B R A N D N E W B E D R O O M SETS in c lu d ’nq d o u b le d re sse r, m irror, chest, a n d d o u b le b ed . T o b e so d fo r $^89.95 p e r set. P aym en ts are ava ila b le . W e a.- to h ave 3 liv in g ro o m g ro u p s. U n c laim ed F re ig h t, 65 3 5 N . L am ar, O p e n 9 a.m . to 6 p.m. M o n . thru Fri. Sat. 'ti! I p.m. B S R S T E R E O C O M P O N E N T S (5) a m p lif ie r , In c lu d in g s p e a k e rs , a n d d u s t c o v e r in w a ln u t fin ish . $49.95. U n c la im e d F r e ig h t, 6535 N o rth L a m a r . tu r n ta b le , THE STEREO SH O P Most Brands Low Prices 1800 Lavaca 477-1511 FREEWHEELING BICYCLE SHOP T r y o u r p r o m p t r e p a i r w o rk L ig h tw e ig h t I m p o r te d 10-S p e e d s L o w e r P r i c e s — C o m p a re 607A W e s t 28th — 477-6846 70 N O V A SS 396-375, P S . P B , 4-speed, c le a n . 452-0843. SA V E M O N E Y b u y fa m o u s R A L E IG H B IC Y C LE S m a d e in In d ia. N o m id d le m a n , no extras. D e liv e re d co st $60, T hree spe ed . W r it e S h a rm a , 3 0 1 0 O a k h u rst, A u s t in o r p ho ne 4 7 4 -1 7 2 4 m o rn in g s a n d e v e nin gs. '6 9 P ly m o u th F u r y I I I V -8 fo u r d o o r h a r d to p . P o w e r, a ir , n e w tir e s , 55,000 m ile s . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . 1650. 478-0231 a f t e r 6p m 288-2675. A F G H A N h o u n d , S ix te e n m o n th s . B la c k a n d tem . C all 477-7372 __ f e m a le . o r 411-4839. H u r s t fo u r s p e e d , ’68 C A M A R O c o n v e r tib le , In d y s p e c ia l s u s p e n s io n , s te r e o $1600. B e f o re 6 , 478-3959. fu ll p o w e r, tir e s , m a g s , ta p e . M o re . 1970 C H A R G E R R T -S E fo u r s p e e d . A ll p o w e r T a p e d e c k . C o n s id e r t r a d e fo r 1969 C o rv e tte . 471-7952. P U P P I E S . C O L L IE S $50-$75, M in ia tu re S c h n a u z e r s $75-$125, P o o d le s $50-$100, C h ih u a h u a s $75. C all 345-1765. E v e n in g s 4 5 1 - 3 7 0 8 . B a n k A m e r i c a r d , M a s te r C h a r g e a c c e p te d . L a k e w o o d K e n n e l. M ID D L E A G E D , B A B Y G r a n d P ia n o , c o n d itio n , v e r y C a b lo -N e lso n , g o o d $450. C a ll 471-3017 o r 454-2414. fu r n is h e d N E A R LAW SC H O O L. O n e b e d ro o m e le c tr ic c lo se ts , CH -CA, T h e k itc h e n , B a c c a r a t, 3703 H a rm o n , 474-5126. a p a r tm e n t. All la r g e UT A R E A — N E W LA CASITA A P A R T M E N T S D I S H W A S H E R S C A R P E T S B IL L S P A I D 4 0 ' P O O L 2900 C O L E (3 Bldks. Law School - I Bldk. Shuttle Bus) 476-1262 327-1466 W a t e r f r o n t livin g — S e lf c o n ta in e d v a ­ catio n t ra c e r on w a te rfro n t lot — Lake T ravis — 14 mi s s from A u s t in — W it h B oatd ock. $ 1 2 0 p e r m on th — Q u ie t TO V/ER M A N O R A p a r tm e n t D o rm ito ry fo r M en & W o m e n I B lo c k fro m C a m p u s R oo m an d b o a rd $127.50. Three m e a 's $65 m o n H . T w o m eals $55 m o nth. 1903 U n ive rsity A v e n u e. 4 7 8 -2 1 8 5 T H E L E M E CO -O P. O ne v a c a n c y , ro o m a n d b o a rd . 1909 N u e c e s o r c a ll 476- 0219. L o s t & F o u n d s $25 R E W A R D . B la c k L a b ra d o r, fo u r m o n th s o ld . F e m a le . N a m e d ‘ L a c y ” . C all 476-2151. P le a s e r e tu r n h e r. g r a y c a t LO ST C A L IC O C A T a n d s in c e S u n d a y (W e st A u s tin -U n lv e rs ity A r e a ) . 478-8113. (p r o b a b ly p r e g n a n t) (p r e g n a n t) Just North of 27th Sc Guadalupe TrpAt&A A t n j i d u j , M F . A T y p in g . M u ltll.th in g . B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Service to ta ilo r e d th e n e e d s o f U n iv e r sity s tu d e n ts , s p e c ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip m e n t fo r a n d e n g in e e r ­ s cie n c e , in g la n g u a g e , th e s e s a n d d is s e rta tio n s . P h o t e G R 2-3210 a nd GR 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k S E R V I L E . G ra d u a te V I K G I N 1 A S C H N E ID E R T Y P IN G a n d U n­ ty p in g , p rin tin g , b in d in g . d e r g r a d u a te 1j15 K o e n ig L a n e . T e le p h o n e : 465-7205 se c lu d e d — P refer y e a rly lease. C a n 4 7 2 -3 4 3 7 fo r a p p 'ic a t io n L O S T B L A C K L a b r a d o r p u p p y N a m e T H E M E S O m a r. N e e d s m e d ic a tio n . c a ll J o h n a t 478-0443. R e w a rd . If fo u n d R E P O R T S . R e a s o n a b le . 476-1317. M rs. F r a s e r . la w n o te s . o r in fo rm ation . L O S T M A L E IR IS H s e tt e r p u p p y T h r e e m o n th s o ld. L o st in a r e a o f 26th a n d L eo n . L a r g e ro w A L eo n . L a r g e re w a rd . P le a s e c o n ta c t 476- l o w C r e e k A p t s . 50 7 7 A r 478-4492. I I \ A / • I I W i l L U X U R Y FO R LESS 1 R E W A R D B IL L F O L D s o m e w h e re a ro u n d B u rd in e < F O R lo s t E x - S E R V IC E . D E L A F IE L D T h e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n s . T Y P IN G r f rP ori? 8 . M im e o g ra p h in g . R e a s o n a b le . H i J-1184. U m V E R S I T Y T H E S IS -D IS S E R T A T IO N S E R V I( E. T y p e , p rin t, bind. S y m b o ls. ty p is ts . M a s te r B rie fs . C o lle g e -tra in e d C h a rg e . 451-4557. L O S T : t e r r i e r S M A L L F E M A L E Y o rk s h ire E s t r a d a J a n u a r y 28. on v ic in ity . R E W A R D . 411-5007. T h e s e s , t y p i s t . b rie fs , IB M B .C . Selectee. re p o rts , 1 unfurn shed. D ishw ashers, fu lly ca rp e te d , 2 pools, c .b room , bea..tif,.l v 'e v o f C .ty. T r a v :s S e c u rity G u a r d s n igh tly. 1901 W illo w C re ek , 4 4 4 -0 0 1 0 . TH E E S T A B L IS H M E N T M i s c e l l a n e o u s M in i-A p a r t m e n t s — a new c o n c e p t in s in g le * living. F .''/ fu rn 'sh e d , s h a g c a r - 1 p e tin g , poci, 2 b lo cks to shutt e bus. sw im m ing c o m p le te kitchens, Z u n i N E L S O N ’S G IF T S : c o m p le te s e le c tio n a n d M e x ic a n im p o r ts . 4612 S o u th C o n g re ss . 444-381 J. je w e lr y : A fric a n In d ia n 4400 Avenue B 453-1671 P A R K IN G B Y M O N T H . $12.50. 241S S a n A n to n io , o n e b lo c k fro m C a m p u / 476-3720. F r 'n a n s - * • « « • C A M P u s pI c k u p ! i m . rn I rn e o g r a p h i n g , x e ro x c o p ie s. I r im in g b in d in g a r r a n g e d , 50 c e n ts D er p a g e . R ita S p o h n h o ltz^ 452-2974. L X i E R I ENC E D F O R M E R s e c r e t a r y 926-5136 h k e ,y p in g ’ 45 c e m s p e r p a * e - Just North of 27th & Guadalupe Feb. rent free on leases through Aug. 3 I. L E A S IN G N O W ! P O N C E DE LEO N • Striking I & 2 bedroom apts. • Dazzling decor • All the extras • Appliances by Hotpoint $ 169.50, all bills paid. 452-2384 2207 Leon St. 472-8253 O N E B E D R O O M , fu lly c a r p e t e d a p a r t- m e n t. SHO S h u ttle . A v a ila b le M arch o. (ta ll 472-9614, T a n g le w o o d W e s t. N E W E F F IC IE N C Y . 4111 A v e n u e A. 105. S e e m o rn in g s . C a r p e te d , C A /C H . 454-1184. F A N T A S T IC DEAL! le a s e a llo w s m e to r e n t y o u A b ro k e n a la r g e tw o b e d ro o m , tw o b a th o r o n e b e d ro o m , o n e b a th a p a r t m e n t a t a n e s p e c ia lly to U T C a m p u s a n d on S h u ttle R o u te s 4 & 5. W e h a v e d is h w a s h e rs , d is p o s a ls , c a b le TV , a n d p o o l. F o r a p p o in tm e n t c a ll 47S-6776. r a te . 3 b lo c k s low 311 E . 31st. H e l p W a n t e d EA R N $’s W EEKLY services. P h y sic ia n B lo o d p la sm a d o n o rs n e ed e d . C a th p a ’d fo r in atte nd an ce . O p e n 8 a rn.-3 p.m. Tues., Th rs„ Fri., & Sat. O p e n 12 n o o n -7 p.m. W e d . A U S T I N B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S , IN C ., 409 W e s t 6th. 4 7 7 -3 7 3 5 . L E A R N T O PL A Y g u ita r, b e g in n e r, a d v a n c e d . D re w T h o m a s o n , 478-7331, 478-2079. I DO Y O U H A V E T H E N E W Y E A R S B L A H S ?. . . A R E Y O U B O R E D W ITH L I F E ? C A L L 472-5811. S K Y D I V E ! Austin Parachute Center F o r !n fo rm a t:on p 'e a se call 2 7 2 - 5 7 II a n ytim e Q U IT S M O K IN G P A IN LE SSLY A n e w p ro d u c t, d e v ise d b y a te a m of d o c to rs a n d s u rg e o n s , c lin ic a lly te s te d le ts y o u s m o k e w h ile fo r fiv e y e a r s , y o u q u it! W e ig h t g a in no lo n g e r a p ro b le m . If y o u c o n tin u e sm o k in g . 2 p a c k s o f c ig a r e tte s e q u a ls 4 c ig a r e tte s , w ith in fo r c ig a r e tte s m o k in g . M D S M O K E R S K IT . $10- ro u g h ly ih o p r ic e o f 2 c a r to n s of c ig a ­ r e tte s . 451-4557. th e s a f e ty r a n g e A rt is t s ' M a rk e t, A p r il 8-16 F a ir Park, Dallas. A ll o rig in a l art, an y m edia, o r o riq m a l crafts. R .n o f show oi end b o o th e s availa ble. C o n t a c t W o m e n 's D ire ctor, Box 26010, D allas 75226. Phone I - 214 - 823-9 9 3 1 . H E A D S H O P . P o s te r s , p a tc h e s , p a p e rs , in te r e s tin g shop. M o st s to r e in A u stin . 320 C o n g re ss . b o o k s, p a w n BIBLE CLASS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. every Friday, 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. every Sunday. T y p in g . M ill W ith in g . B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Service t0 t ?'L)re? tb e n eed s o f U n iv e r sity s tu d e n ts . S p e c ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip m e n t fo r sc ie n c e , and e n g in e e r ­ in g la n g u a g e , th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s . P h o n e , £ 5 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k t h e s e s M IN U T E S and o v e rn ig h t ty p in g , d is s e r ta tio n s . . ' l a s t e r c h a r g e h o n o r e d W nh vi e m a i l . ,!onurf' ri M a by I S m a ll- - jL a n I f wood oOOl S u n s e t T r a il, 892-0727 o r 892-0321, te r m p a p er s. E X P E R T ty p in g —f o r m e r o v e rn ig h t s e r v ic e 50 c e n ts p e r s e c r e t a r y - fu ll p a g e w ith c o p y . 452-8707. S e rv ic e M A R J O R IE A D E L A F IE L D T y p in g I I . T e r m IB M S e le c te e th e se s , d is s e rta tio n s , p rln U n g . M a s te r p a p e r s , o d e /p a g e . C h a rg e . 442-7008, 412-0170. B a n k A m e ric a rd . T Y r IN G IN M Y h o m e . F a s t, e ffic ie n t 06 at r ea so n a b le P rices. C all 454- 4370 ROY W. HOLLEY 1-76-3018 T Y P E S E T T IN G . T Y P IN G . P R IN T IN G . B IN D IN G L X L ( I TI VE F a c ilitie s. B l S IN E S S c o m p le te s tu d e n t s e r v ic e . T y p in g of th e se s , d is s e rta tio n s , te r m p a p e r s . A lso ?L£LP •' N h 's tra tio n s d e p a r tm e n t. 345- 1847 n in e to five. I t h e s i s , ty p in g . 453-2556. D IS S E R T A T IO N , g e n e r a l 50c p a g e . C a ro ly n C a te s W ylie, CLOSE IN . B e a u tifu l, p e rs o n a l Tur?imi*ui I 4 t o-o lit'). ty p in g U n iv e rs ity w o rk . b in d in g . L a u r a B o d o u r, y o u r 1 Just North of 27th Sc Guadalupe M .B .A T y p in g . M u ltllith ln g , B in d in g The Complete Professional FU LL-T IM E Typing Service to ta ilo red th e n e e d s o f U n iv e r sity s tu d e n ts . S p ec ia l k ey b o a rd e q u ip m e n t for sc ie n c e , and engineer* m g th e s e s and d isser ta tio n s. la n g u a g e, P h o n e GR 2-3210 a n d GR 2-7677 2707 H em p h ill P a rk T h e s e s , LAST M IN U T E S and o v e rn ig h t ty p in g . d is s e r ta tio n s . M a s te r c h a r g e h o n o re d . M abyl S m a ll­ w ood. 5001 S u n s e t T ra il, 892-0727 o r 892-0321. te r m p a p e r s . 1971 M G B M id g et, B ritis h r a c in g g re e n , 2000 a c tu a l m ile s, P ir e lli tir e s , w ire w h e e ls . M a n ’s g o ld A e e u tro n w r is t­ w a tc h , Va p ric e . 75 w a t t s te r e o a m p , tu r n ta b le , m o d e l 24 K E H s p e a k e rs . $125 c o m p le te . P o lo ro id c a m e r a , $20. O ly m ­ p ia ty p e w rite r, $60. C a m p a ig n c h e s t s ty le d r e s s e r , m a tc h in g en d a n d c o c k ­ ta il ta b le s , a ll b ra n d n e w b y L a n e . 4" s o lid m a p le b u n k b e d s, a lso b ra n d n ew , 926-5915 e v e n in g s. 1972 S IN G E R S E W IN G M A C H IN E S 1965 V W S E D A N . F o u r sp ee d , g re y . " C B " S m ith VW, 405 N o rth $795. L a m a r . P h o n e 476-9181. V O L K S W A G E N , V o lk sw a g e n V o lk s w a g e n . r e p a ir . C h ea p -O -N e a t-O - T o rp e d o . C a ll C liff o r T o m , 453-9553. 1968 VW S E D A N . S ta n d a rd , ra d io . $995. " C B ” S m ith VW , 405 N o rth L a m a r . P h o n e 476-9181. T H E SU N D A Y P h o to g r a p h e r , n a tu r a l 6 p m p o rtr a it* , 474-1258 a f t e r e tc . w e e k d a y s , 8-6 w e e k e n d s . F A A A P P R O V E D flig h t i n s tr u c to r w ith in ­ in s tr u c t V ie tn a m v e t. $5 p la n e s tru c tio n , $7-$IO p la n e . A r t 451-1585. S IZ E r e f r ig e r a t o r . M u st s e ll q u ic k ly ! $20. C a ll 477-5575. k itc h e n w a r e , G A R A G E S A L E , M A N Y ite m s in c lu d in g (g o v e rn m e n t, books, h is to ry , R u s s ia n ), c lo th in g a ll sizes, 1512 P e a s e R o a d (o ff E n fie ld ) S a tu rd a y - S u n d a y , 9-6. a n d la te s t m o d e ls in c a r to n s . T h e s e a r e (5 ). S o m e s till a r e S in g e r ’s e q u ip p e d to do m o s t k in d s of s e w in g s u c h a s : Z ig z a g s titc h , b u tto n h o le s, s e w in g on b u tto n s , m o n o g ra m in g , a n d m u c h m o re . $49 95 e a c h c a s h o r te rm s . U N C L A IM E D F R E IG H T , 6535 N o rth C o m p le te ly re c o n d itio n e d . $60 474-4204 L a m a r ; o p e n 9 a m -6 p in M o n .- F ri., S a t. ____________ I ’til I p m . 1966 MGH, W h ite, good c o n d itio n . R a d ia l tir e s . $700. C all 345-0351. BAW a n te n n a . W e s tin g h o u s e a n d R C A P o r ta b l e B I G T V ! 19” 1960 M O D E L T R -3. $150. 472-4680, a s k fo r K en . F R E E TW O Y E A R fe m a le W e lm a r a n e r to goo d h o m e . 454-8320. F o r R e n t $Parking Cheap$ ,/2 blocks west of Campus Call 476-7693 for information. 452-5631, 453-6745 4318 B ull C re e k R o a d E X P E R I E N C E D L U M B E R y a r d h e lp n e e d e d . F u ll T im e . C a lc a s ie u L u m b e r C o m p a n y , 701 W e s t 5 th . 476-8351, e x t. 52. a p a r tm e n ts W A LK TO C A M P U S . F u r n is h e d m in i fu ll c a r p e tin g . f e a tu r in g AC, s tu d y ro o m , p a r t y ro o m , pool, a n d a ll b ills p a id . M a u n i K a i, 405 E a s t 31st, 472-2147. d u r in g m o rn in g h o u rs W E N E E D S U B S T IT U T E S p e rio d ic a lly to s u p e r v is e k in d e r g a r te n h o u rs . F o u r c h ild re n . $1.65-hour. P le a s e m a il p o s tc a r d to 800 W e s t 30th. A u stin 78705. N o c a lls p le a s e . n is h e d a p a r t m e n t F I E S T A P L A C E . T w o b e d ro o m f u r ­ in U T a r e a . All b u ilt in e le c tr ic k itc h e n s . N e a r S h u ttle B us. $180 p lu s e le c tr ic ity . 4200 A v e n u e A, 465-0528. G IR L S T O S H IN E sh o e s. A p p ly 6 I 8 V2 1 C o n g re s s A v e. F u ll o r p a r t tim e . O V E R S E A S J O B S F O R S T U D E N T S V W P A R T S & S E R V IC E —O . E . & S .— o p e n in g s p e c ia l: C o m p re s s io n c h e c k , s e t tim in g F R E E ! T u n e - U p - $13.75— in c lu d e s n e w p a r ts , la b o r. O .E .& S .— 836- 3171. E N F IE L D A R E A . O n e b e d ro o m f u r­ n is h e d a p a r tm e n t. C a r p e te d , p a n e le d , fu lly a p p o in te d k itc h e n . $134.50. L a d rillo B la n co , 801 W e st L y n n , 477-8871. A u stra lia , Eu rop e, S. A m e ric a , A fric a , etc. A ll p ro fe ssio n s a n d o c cu p a tio n s, $ 7 0 0 to $ 3 0 0 0 m onthly. Exp enses paid, in fo rm ation . overtim e, sig h tse e in g . F ree L E A S E A S S U M E L u x u r y e ffic ie n c y U N T IL a p a r tm e n t. N e a r S h u ttle . $120 p e r m o n th p lu s e le c tr ic ity . 3805 A v e n u e B. 453-6211 6-10pm . A u g u st. N E W L Y C A R P E T E D , q u ie t tw o b e d ro o m . CH -CA, pool, S h u ttle , p a in te d , C ab le. B ills p a id . 2208 E n fie ld . 472-4841. W r ite , J O B S O V E R S E A S , D ep t. N I , Box 15071, S a n D ie g o , C A 9 2 1 1 5 . W A IT R E S S . $1.50 p e r h o u r p lu s tip s. 10 p .m . to 3 a .m ., F r id a y a n d S a tu r ­ d a y . B a c k 40 S te a k H o u se , 501 E a s t 5th. H A M M O N D B-3 P R 4 0 a n d c a b i n e ts fo r $2000. 451-1371 a n d 477 ' ,Qhin“ ' e 4754 a f t e r 5. A ~ ' ■|0 '” *°'w ' L e s lie R E N T A L S — D o rm size r e f r ig e r a t o r s TV a n d s te re o s , “ *” * - ............ A lp in e R e n ta ls , 204 E . 1 53rd, 452-1926. R o o m s T u t o r i n g 1970 VW S ta tio n w a g o n , r a d io , t r a i l e r h itc h , $2,175. 4515 S h o a l C re e k . \ — b y o ld . A K C T O Y p o o d le p u p p ie s . 20 w e e k s I n te r n a tio n a l S ir e d 1971 c h a m p io n . $125. 282-1042. ------------------------------ S T IL L W A L K IN G ? K a s s o n M o to re y ie s I ----------------------------------------------------------------- 70 P O N T IA C L E M ANS. L o w m ile a g e , th re e n o w h a s 1 0 -sp eed b ic y c le s . F in a n c in g s p e e d a u to m a tic , 350 e n g in e . E x c e lle n t a s k f o r P h il. a v a i la b le . 1607 S o u th L a m a r , 444-7482. $275. 474-4243 th e n 477-4252. tw o d o o r h a rd to p , o n e o w n e r, F O R D F A IR L A N E . C le an , good tr a n s p o r ta tio n , s t a n d a r d tra n s m is s io n . c o n d itio n . C a ll 476-3581, M a k e o ffe r. H O N D A C B IOO, 1970, n e w e n g in e , a f t e r 6 p m 327-1674. $275. 1969 M O B IL E H O M E . 12x60. T w o b e d ­ fu lly c a r p e t e d . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . 476-0386. f r o n t k itc h e n , C A /C H , ro o m s , L E A R J E T A M -F M r e c e i v e r w ith b u ilt­ in I a p e d e c k p lu s 2 2 -w a y s p e a k e r s . R e t a il - $230, s e ll - $125. C a ll 442-3620. S U Z U K I 500. L o w m ile a g e . A d u lt tie d . C o n s id e r t r a d e f o r 1970 Y a- a 650. 452-6135. C H IF F R O B E In g o o d c o n d itio n fo r s a le . A lso g r e e n d e p r e s s io n g la s s . C all V e ra . 476-5571. Y A S H IC A E L E C T R O 35. C o m p lete kit. C a se , tripod, th r e e le n s e s . S ix m o n th s o ld. $100. 472-5920 a f t e r 6. ST A T T U T O R IN G . All b u s in e s s m a th . G R E p r e p a r a tio n . 451-4557. M A T H d a ily , W eek ly , s e m e s te r r a te s . I n e x p e n s iv e . E v e n in g s 808. 603, ’70 H O N D A Cb350. E x c e lle n t co n d itio n . in c lu d e d . 465-0888 a f te r B ell h e lm e t fiv e w e e k d a y s , a n y tim e w e e k e n d s . 465-7689. 1971 TO Y O TA C O R O L LA . Excellent c o n d itio n . R a d io a n d a ir . S td . M u st s e ll q u ic k . C all R o n , 474-4642. 1970 T R IU M P H GT-6. 13.000 m ile s . $1995. 452-7507 w e e k d a y s a f te r 5. 1971 V W D R IV E N o n ly la s t s u m m e r in E u r o p e . 7 m o n th s o ld . I n w a r r a n ty . F in e c o n d itio n . 454-1833. T R IU M P H B E A U T Y ” ‘‘M ID N IG H T c h o p p e r . O ne o f a k in d . R a k e d , a d d e d c h r o m e , s p e c ia l lig h tin g . In m in t c o n ­ to a p p r e c ia te . $1100 d itio n . M u s t s e e o r b e s t o ffe r. 454-1923 a f t e r 3. B U S IN E S S , M A TH , e d u c a tio n m a jo r s o u r p e rie n c e d c e r tif ie d r e a s o n a b le . M a th e n a m lc s . 452-1327 lib e r a l a r ts , s p e c ia lty . E x ­ te a c h e r . V e ry M A T H T U T O R IN G d e r s ta n d . S e m e s t e r th a t y o u c a n u n ­ r a t e s a v a ila b le . C all 476-0757. F O R P H Y S IC S 416 " S o lv e d P r o b le m s o f E l e c tr ic ity a n d M a g n e tis m .” 120 p a g e s , $5-copy. P e t e r C how , 472-8717 e v e n in g . V O IC E L E S S O N S . B e g in n e r a n d a d ­ te a c h e r w ith v a n c e d . E x p e rie n c e d B .M u s. in p e r f o r m a n c e . 474-4204. P A SO H O U S E 1808 W e s t A v e . M E N S p rln q v a ca n cie s. L a rq e d o u b ’e or single c a rp e te d service, r e frig e ra to rs in e a c h room , cc'or T V in loun ge , free p a rk in g . $4 5 / m o nth. ro o m s A / C , m a id C a ll 4 7 8 -3 9 1 7 M E N : F U R N IS H E D fo r ro o m s lr o m C a m p u s . m o n th ly . C all 471-7424 o r 476-9243. b lo c k s T h r e e re n t. $45 P R IV A T E R O O M a v a i la b le now'. CA­ C H , c a r p e te d , s h a r e k itc h e n a n d h a th . T h r e e b lo c k s fro m C a m p u s . C all J im , 474-2660. TIO G r a h a m P la c e . S H A R E M Y H O M E . P r i v a t e ro o m a n d b a th . K itc h e n a n d la u n d r y p rlv e le g e s . $G0-m onth e a c h . 928-0834. T O P L A C E A T E XA N C L A S S IF IE D A D C A L L 471-5244 EL P A T IO APTS. N o w r e n tin g S p r in g S e m e s t e r 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th f o r $215, a ll b ills p a id . C a b le TV, pool, bus. 2810 R io G r a n d e S t. M g r. A p t. 304 476-4095. w ill n e e d 1-5pm , M -W -F, M A L E R E S E A R C H s u b je c ts . $ 1 .75-hour. t r a n ­ s p o r ta tio n , g o o d h e a r in g . C a ll T r a c o r , 926-2800 e x t. 187. "Learn what the near future holds" Free to everyone. l i n t - o n p r e f e r m o rn in g h o u rs 8-1. W ill a c c e p t T U 0 fro m 1-6 if n e e d be. A sk f o r M rs. M a so n | 1 ' e — 11 r 11 cjr I o r M r. H a ll. $1.50-hour, Y a rin g s , 8209 B u r n e t R o a d . 452-0641, P O R T E R N E E D E D a t 105 W . 20th. C u t c o , d iv isio n o f A lc o a , n e e d s 6 neat m en. P u b lic re la tio n s work. 2 0 hours T y p i n g p e r week. A lso 2 full time. M u s t be h iq h sc h o o l g r a d u a t e a n d h a ve tra n s­ p o rta tio n . In c o m e op e n. A p p l y 7 5 2 4 N. G e t y o u r ty p in g d o n e b y a p ro f e s s io n a l w h o c a r e s . T y p in g , p rin tin g , b in d in g , d ra f tin g . 50 c e n ts -p a g e . L in d a P ro c k , 836-2596 a n y tim e . fu rn ish e d a p a r tm e n t, N E A R S H U T T L E B U S— o n e b e d ro o m fu lly c a r p e te d , w ith d is h w a s h e r, d is p o s a l. All b ills p a id . L o s A rc o s, 4307 A ve. A. 454-1494. AT A P R IC E yo u c a n afford , 1-bedroom fu rn ish ed a p a r tm en t, n o rth o f U .T. c a m p u s. C entral h e a t, a ir, s w im m in g pool. E l C haparral, 407 W. 38th. 452- 2869. F U R N IS H E D O N E B E D R O O M e f­ fic ie n c y . N o le a se . W ith a ll b ills paid. from C a m p u s. 900 W est fiv e F ou r b lo ck s 22nd. N o p e ts . 478-7411 o r a fte r 477-7163. L am ar, room 207, IO a.m . S a t u r d a y only. N o p h o n e cat's. C O M B I N A T I O N G O -G O d a n c e r- w a itr e s s . T o p p a y . M u st b e a ttr a c tiv e , g o o d p e r s o n a lity . P a u l S to n e , S it N ’ B u ll. 3500 G u a d a lu p e , 453-9831. W a n t e d W ILL P A Y T O P p r ic e fo r A c o u stic R e se a r c h s te r e o sp e a k e r s , a m p lifie r , In g ood co n d itio n . 472-1871. W A N T E D TO B U Y books. P la y b o y s, r e c o r d s , s te r e o ta p e s , g u ita r s , re c o r d p la y e r s, ra d io s, ste r e o s . 320 C o n g ress. D IS S E R T A T IO N S , T H E S E S , B R IE F S , a n d o th e r le g a l e tc . G re e k R E P O R T S , s y m b o ls. M rs. A n th o n y s e c r e ta r y ) 4543079. ( f o r m e r M A R G A R E T 'S T Y P IN G S e rv ic e . 4 0 c / p a g e . S o u th n e a r I I I 35. 442-5693. Mulfiiithing, Typing, Xeroxing E X P E R I E N C E D d is s e r ta tio n s , T Y P IS T . e tc . IB M T h e se s, e x e c u tiv e . C h a r le n e S ta r k , 453-5218. F O R M E R S E C R E T A R Y w ith B B A do­ ty p in g . 4 5 c /p a g e . 451-2732. in g E x p e r ie n c e d ty p ist. 50 c e n ts p e r p age. N a ta lie L e y e n d ec k e r . C all 476-8532 a fte r 5:30. W O O D S S E R V IC E , th e s e s, d isser ta tio n s. 453-6090. T Y P IN G L aw , AUS-TEX D U P LIC A T O R S 476-7581 118 Neches ing, printing, olnd ing — A ll SA V E M O N E Y — F u lly eq u ip p e d ; ty p ­ te r m p a p e r s , th e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n s . C liv W ide ty p in g . 4(6-4179, 6 a .m .-m id n ig h t a n y d a y . • F U L L Y C A R P E T E D A N D D R A P E D * 2 b e d ro o m ap artm en t, fu rn ish e d or p e r im e n ta l S c ie n c e. 472-5377. WMI FrMav, February I f, J¥72 THE DAILY TFYAN Pssete ¥ Acapulco concomidasl (with food) SPRING BREAK S IB S SENSATIONAL S1UFF-YOURSELF SPECIAL March 24-30 Party bus (with kegs) Austin 'San Antonio 'Austin Round-trip jet air (via Braniff International) San Antonlo/Acaputco/San Antonio Transportation in Acapulco airport hotel/airport Rooms at delightful Embassy Hotel—open buffet daily (Baracuda Hotel $10 additional) Swingin' Acapulco Cocktail Party Fun . . . f u n ... fun Yacht Cruise Partv/Free admission to Night Clubs plus Drink Discounts $79.00 deposit N O W -llm lte d avaHabHity-So hurry! « ECONOMY SKOAL * $ 1 3 9 - 0 0 Price Includes only round-trip jet air and accommodations at Embassy Hotel Kus register In our lobby for flit oost of a fro# trip. -w e need reps to sell—earn your own trip by selling your friends—ask tor Information -*• Beverley Braley Tours,Travel «- 512 476-72 31b o x 7999. a u s t i n , texas 70712 2500Guadalupe La Raza Intends Serious Bid Gutierrez Confident of Party's Election Success and win/' “ We are serious about running. It’s not a joke. We’re gonna raise Jo se Angel hell Gutierrez, University instructor in ethnic studies and organizer of La Raza Unida Party, said Thursday. p o p u l a t i o n , “ If we get I percent of the 22,358 state signatures, we’ll be on the ballot,” Gutierrez said. If our candidates get 2 percent of the votes in November, “ we’ll be on the ballot for ’74. We’ll be a new major party.” G u t i e r r e z , who previously supported running La Raza Unida candidates at a regional level, is now working for the 54 statewide candidates. “ We have to make people aware not their in primaries so that they can sign said. our petition,” Gutierrez to vote “ There will be a vigorous campaign on campuses, also in metropolitan areas and South Texas,” he continued, estimating their votes will be from chicanos. “ We have two blacks, a white and women on the ticket. No other party can claim that.” “ There’s a slim possibility we’ll lieutenant win or governor lower the governor. Definitely ones. We’ll probably come up Broken Crane Cause of Accident Unknown ; with four State representatives, someone on the State Board of Education, and a State Senate seat. There’s no question locally. If we handle it right, a State treasury post,” Gutierrez said. Candidates will emphasize their political experience l a c k of t h e i r p o s i t i v e l y “ From a chicano campaigns. they are very point of view', cynical about politicians,” he explained. i n Age also is an advantage, according to Gutierrez. “ A good fourth of the chicano population is between 17 and 25. This is not even touching on white and black youth. All of our candidates are under 35.” The mystery of the hanging crane w as still up In the air a s of Thursday afternoon. The cause the accident remained un­ of determined and may not be known for a while. With the arrival of an auxiliary from Houston on Wed­ crane nesday, work began on disassembly of crane. the the defective The problem stems from the shape of the crane. It is shaped much like a capital “ T,” with both arm s free to move up and they move down. How much Court Grants Delay In Drug Rule Hearing A federal court hearing challenging the two-year suspension rule for students convicted of sale or possession of illegal drugs has been postponed until late March or early April. The reason for the postponement is to allow tile plaintiffs time to amend pleadings. Until a week ago, students convicted of sale or possession of illegal drugs faced automatic expulsion. While presenting a new rule at a regents’ meeting last Friday, Regent Frank C. Erwin noted that U.S. Dist. Judge Jack Roberts said informally the revised ruling could “ withstand any attack.” Erwin, one of the authors of the new rule, also said the University has been faced with several lawsuits questioning the constitutionality of the automatic expulsion rule. Currently, the regents face two such lawsuits. lifting a depend! upon the amount being lifted. While light- standard support, the lifting arm gave away, resulting in an im­ balance with the offsetting arm. of An engineer from the Liebhrr Corp., manufacturer the broken crane, spent the better part of Thursday afternoon on the the crane’s damage the removal of excess weight from the arms. surveying supervising t-bar and I After coming down from the top of the crane, the engineer, j Art Crisoollo, is | nothing to be told yet. We have to wait until we get the crane; on the ground to find out what the problem is .” said, “ There The auxiliary crane is costing : the Lyda-Lott Co. $140 per hour. A spokesman for the Lyda-Lott Co. said they “ hope to have the , street unblocked either Friday or Saturday.” TJ Gob fest Sail into summer in the wide-legged C uffed G o b with nautical b utto n trim by Thermo-Jac. P olyeste r/ co tto n blend fo r easy-care. Comes in white, black, blue, red and purple. 15.00 First mate is the striped M a te lo t w ith w hite shoul­ der yokes in c o tto n rib knit. Sizes S-M-L in black, blue, yellow, red and purple stripes. 8.00 THE ( f r f x lX D STALL ll 1512 L A V A C A IS M O VIN G TO CAPITAL PLAZA FEBRUARY I, 1972 TH E B O O K STALL ll IS N O W C A R R Y IN G A COMPLETE LIN E O F M E TA P H Y S IC A L BOOKS A L O N G W ITH THEIR LAR G E SELECTION OF PAPERBACKS A N D H A R D B A C K S TAmancK.^ jewelry by James Avery Crown Shop 23th $ the Dray H IG H L A N D M A L L C harge it or use our Lay-Aw ay o r 30 day charge plan. rn tm Heads Up Spectators gathered Thursday a t M em orial Stadium as a sec­ ond crane began disassembling the one which broke during construction a t the Stadium Tuesday. The crossarm o f the crane at rig h t, which now hangs groundward, is the section which gave way. Two Texan Staffers Reach Photo Finals Sparkling diamonds for a Valentine W edding. ArtCarved diamond-set wedding rings. Luxury, beauty and fashion captured in two perfect golden rings. The most exquisite expression of the Christmas spirit and your love. See them now. i \ r r C a r v e d A — ANDROMEDA SET B - F A L L I N G - S T A R S P T Casa del Ow JEWELERS STUDENT NEXT TO HEMPHILL'S O N THE DRAG and Van Beekum will submit a n o t h e r portfolio of their photographs to the judges. The winners will be announced the first week in April. Van Beekum placed eighth in die competition last year. ' 1601 Barton Spring* Rd. N E W W O R L D A* ? / \ I M P O R T S £ A ? Anilin, Ten a 5I2-?4T2-4440 Two Daily Texan photographers have been named finalists in the W i l l i a m Randolph Hearst Foundation's photo competition. Marlon Taylor, a junior, and John Van Beekum, a senior, are among 20 other college and university for scholarships that the winners of the contest will receive from the foundation. Both are journalism majors. students vying Ten of the 20 students will place. The IO winners will receive scholarships ranging from $1000 for first place to $100 for tenth place. Their schools will receive matching grants. Taylor and Van Beekum sub- m i 11 e d four portfolios representative photographs they had taken last year. of For the final judging, Taylor D R IV E A L ITTL E — S A V E A L O T 1/4 ct l / 3 « » . 1 /2 ct. ; 3 /4 ct, l e t # 31 50 # 41 00 # im 125.00 225.00 275.00 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP 603 Commodore Pmy,Hotel AUSTIN 476*0178 PACHA MAMA means EARTH MOTHER in Quechua W a sell ea rthy clothes from South A m erica & other places. 503 W. 17+h St. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. S T E R E O • H O M E & CAR • RADIOS • T.V. • TAPE RECORDERS tapes, needles, batteries SALES & SERVICE (Ut*BEDWAY RADIO 307 W. 19th 478-6609 N O W OPEN TUESDAY — SUNDAY 8:30 — 7:00 P.M. CLOSED MONDAYS Between Rio Grande & Salado 1971 BLUEBONNET BELLE, TRISA EDW ARDS 1972 CACTUS BLUEBONNET BELLE NOMINATIONS ARE NOW BEIN© MADE. PICK UP AND RETURN NOMINATION BLANKS TO: JOURNALISM BUILDING, ROOM 107. deadline: TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 15. 4:30 P.M. Page IO Friday, February 11, 1972 THF PATLY TEXA N FRIDAY N IG H T T E X A S THURSDAY CHILDREN SATURDAY N IG H T $1.00 C O V E R at the ^ — - THE TEXAS U N IO N 'S STUDENT REPERTORY THEATER presents Three Short Plays: Occupancy by John MacNicholas Desperation in Hiding by Debbie McHale The Death of Patroclus by Christopher Logue Monday, Feb. 14 and Tuesday, Feb. 15 8:00 p.m. .50 Students Union Pr. Ballroom .75 Non-Students Summer School Jobs Available Work-Study Plan Open to Students Applications for summer work under Program are available Student Financial Aids Office. the College Work-Study in the jobs M ore than 650 is based on are available for financially needy to attend students who plan summer school. “ Acceptance of applications the resources of students applying,” said B ill Robbins, director of the program. “ We have determined an average budget by which we feel the student needs to get by. Students whose budgets fall below the average budget m ay be eligible for a job award,” Rob­ bins said. Other requirements are a C average and enrollment for at least six hours by the student if he attends one semester of school and nine hours if he at­ tends the full term. to P r o g r a m benefits include scheduling of working hours according student's schedule, placing of students iii jobs relating to their field of location on study and a campus. the job N early 700 students are em­ ployed under this program, which offers office and secretarial work, lab work, r e s e a r c h and photography, c o m p u t e r and grading work. Bill Dabaghi, resident assistant at Moore-Hill Hall, peddles an ice chest, one of many items sold at a Thursday night auction. Other articles sold were ping pong balls, orig- Inal corrugated cardboard paintings, handballs,^ highway blinker and a slide rule. The auction was held in the cafeteria be in oore i _____ Going Once, Going Twice, Gone THE HOOK EM 3405 Guadalupe Amateur Nite Every Tues. & Thurs. TOPLESS D AN CERS NIGHTLY BODY PAINTING SUBLIT D A N CE FLO O R LIG HT S H O W S BY PHIL 453-9029 Parking in Rear O PEN 4 P.M. E D W A R D G. R O B IN S O N IN HIS C L A S SIC ROLE LITTLE CAESAR ONE NIGHT ONLY SAT., FEB. 12, 6:30, 8:00, 9:30, 11:00 PM JESTER AUD. RECENTLY REDISCOVERED IN C A N A D A AN D O N E O F THE LAST IN THE G REA T M ARXIST TRADITION; G R O U C H O C A LLED "C O P A C A - B A N A " AND "A N IM A L C R A C K E R S " HIS T W O FINEST MOVIES. NEVER SH O W N O N CAM PUS BEFORE! SAT. NITE ONLY! S H O W IN G S : 6:30, 8:15, 10:00 75e AUDREY HEPBURN ALAN ARKIN WAIT UNTIL DARK FRI. & SAT. FEB. I I 4 12 G E O L O G Y RM. IOO 6:30 - 8:30 - 10:30 W A A C 75c "THE WILD directed by Sam Peckinpah am Holden I I , 12, 13 FEB. Union Theater 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. 75c Students, Faculty, Staff union film commift(?e U T dept, of drama presents YOU’RE A GOOD MAK CHARLIE BROWN feb.11-13,18-20, 25-27 drama bldg. GOOD GRIEF I : / T h * L o ? < L £ * * * & £ * js including <1 jsh.cz h ' 6) — *-®un-4-r / , BLVFF SP R IN G S^ ROAD ^ SSW 0' The Country Dinner Playhouse Austin’s Professional Dinner Theatre 12173 FM Road 1325-North of IBM Broadw ay P roductions — G ourm et F o o d MHJSAND MMUS" A Comedy by HERB GARDNER Those displaying UT Student Identification Cards will be given a special discount for Sunday evening buffet and performance . . . regularly $7.50 . . . student price $5.00 per person ylus tax. Closed Mondays Doors open 6 p.m. nltely FOR RESERVATIONS 836-5921 Madness Saturday & Sunday Z sh e ZJlciC fO n O f d r e n c h 2513 San Antonio . . . Behind "Jaclc-in-the-Box" T.C. I. Flap. tine FRIDAY. FEB. II. 1972 2 - 6 BEER ‘100 I PITCHER Rudolph to Run For Treasurer Baker Rudolph, former State investigator, has an­ insurance nounced he is running for State treasurer on tfle Democratic ticket. Rudolph, a graduate of Baylo r University, called a .special press the Monday conference after filing deadline to review his programs and proposals. “ From all accounts, the other candidates in this race are too concerned with the Sharptow n scandal which is now history,” Rudolph said. He said he is viewing such problems as the abolishment of phantom charters that are now being issued by the State Banking Board. “ These phantom charters allow ‘chain’ banks to form and flourish and severely threaten the economic life of our sm all, in­ dependent banks,” Rudolph ex­ plained. is One solution Rudolph recom­ mended constitutional a revision authorizing the establish­ ment of branch banking in counties of 200,000 population and over. “ If we lim it branch banking to the larger communities we can get the good out of it and leave the bad. independent banking to be the backbone of Texas,” Rudolph said. I want “ Also, with the establishment of branch hanking in our larger communities, the people w ill find their hanking much more con­ venient,” he added. Politicos Invited To Informal Talk With Methodists Candidates for County com­ missioner w ill present their platforms and participate in an informal discussion at 9:45 a.m. the Sunday, U n i v e r s i t y United Methodist Church. in Room 306 of Taking part w ill be incumbent David W. Samuelson, Tom W yatt and Robert Cedar, candidates for incumbent Precinct Johnny L. Roy Schnautz and Noble E . Raison, candidates for Precinct 3. and Voudouris, I, The discussion is part of the “ Meet the 1972 Candidates” series sponsored by the Questors, a voting-age class of both singles and couples who are concerned about Christian citizenship. The main topic of discussion w ill be the upcoming county bond election, tentatively set for M arch ll. COMPLETE Service for your stereo system ^ ^ A u d i o M a s t e r s Service & Design 1712 L A V A C A 477-2033 4 blocks off campus H O C to Discuss Findings of OEO Members of the Human Opportunities Corporation will meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday and all day Saturday at Palm School, 706 E. 1st St., to discuss the findings of the 11-man Office of Economic Opportunities monitoring team sent annually to in­ vestigate the progress of all OEO-funded projects. H. R. Kingt chief of the metropolitan operating division of the regional office of OEO, will preside over the series of presentations, speeches and workshops, planned for the weekend. Art Yarbrough, community relations director, explained the annual monitoring procedure is crucial to the operations of the HOC, as it is largely responsible for the amount HOC will be refunded in 1973. . ' -/J1 , - By BILL BRAY Staff Writer A along c a s t l e the Mediterranean southern France may become a University facility for overseas study. I n The chateau and adjacent Villa Margarita, in the small town of La Napoule, are currently in the hands of a foundation. The property was left by a sculptor, Henry Clews, to the foundation w h i c h the University System as the land’s foundation has recipient. The considering is Draft Order Clarified Tile Daily Texan has been notified by the University draft counseling office that a recent article explaining the change in the draft was unclear and that further clarification should be made. Affected by the order can­ celling induction notices are those men whose original 1971 induction dates were postponed “to the first call further notice.” as well as those whose induction postponements wTere to in 1972, or until terminate on a specific date prior to April I. Initial postponements which are to expire later that month are unaffected by that directive. The 1972 Extended Priority Selection Group includes men who became eligible for induction in 1971, but did not receive in­ duction notices. These men had to be at least 20 years of age on Dec. 31, 1971, and have lottery numbers below 126. U n d e r Service directives, registrants with lot­ Selective tery numbers below the highest number reached that year (125) who became 1-A and liable to induction too late in 1971 to fill draft calls retain their liability through March 1972. Because there will be no draft calls in the first three months of 1972, no one from the Extended Priority Selection Group will be inducted. This action does not relate to the lottery held Feb. 2, since it in­ involved men eligible duction in 1973. for „ .... UT M ay Acquire French Castle Negotiations Under Way for Foreign Study Facility Friday. February ll. 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Page, ti managed various uses in the last 20 years. land through the handled Negotiations for the facility are being ad­ ministration and the International Programs and Studies Committee, a faculty committee. the by and Cost to the University would be a commitment for upkeep, gardening improvements, although the Fourteenth Century structure is completely moder­ nized. This money could not be taken funds, but rather through a donor for the program. from State THE FOUNDATION suggests a five-year trial period before tile title is conveyed to the Univer­ sity, but discussions are still under way. The chateau in La Napoule, within a few miles of Nice near the France-Italy border, could “accommodate some 20 students,” student said Robert Dees, member of the faculty committee involved. Dees indicated that although a p r o p o s a l for an exchange program with the University of Nice was turned down two weeks ago, some committee members hoped the chateau at La Napoule could revive the Nice program. the acquisition of “ It is thought,” said Dees, “that La Napoule could serve as a home base for other foreign study programs, not only in Europe, but elsewhere.” foreign THOUGH THE University has language highly-ranked departments, it is behind many in coor­ American universities dinating overseas study with domestic language programs. While many schools offer ex­ change programs with European universities, the University has adopted only a program in I Germany. This program is for graduate work only and is ex­ pected to be phased out after the 1972-73 term, Dees noted. are “ Often not curricula designed for foreign students in fur­ European programs, and thermore, the problem of ac- c r e d i t a t i o n for University students wTould lessened considerably.” be NOIV, a University student can get credit only through advanced placement or by the expensive process of first receiving credit through an American school with an exchange program, such as New York University, and then transferring the University. the credit to Pieces of sculpture by Clews, the man who left the land to the foundation, are on display in the La Napoule chateau. They would remain with die property for public display should the University acquire the castle. Apart f r o m the graduate has facility study program In Germany, the only existing University foreign study a P e r u v i a n summer exchange program. two weeks ago were plans to abandon the summer program for full semester exchanges. Just approved been The value of the short summer program tagged in Peru was “questionable” by Dees, who said the semester-long sessions should be “of definite value.” Students through the Peruvian program can study either In Lima or other university cities. A full-time position for a secretary to handle information on overseas study far American students has been created this semester. The secretary, Mrs. Cindy Keever, has an office in die International Office and can provide students with information on schools in many countries. EUROPE CHARTER D A L L A S - BRUSSELS - D A L L A S M A Y 24 - JULY 14 ROUND TRIP: «273«* — 49 DAYS IN EUROPE. RETURN FOR SECOND SEMESTER SUMMER SC H O O L — U.T. SYSTEM STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF & IMMEDIATE FAMILIES ARE ELIGIBLE. C A L L : AIR TRAVEL P. O. BOX 7952 U.T. Station 78712 454-0582 ANSWERED UNTIL 9:00 P.M., Monday & Wednesday *Price based on 225 passengers. Maximum capacity: 252. Price on 252: $245.00. Prices include $8.00 per person administration cosh. Aircraft is a World Airways DC8-63. offers the best arid the worst of the San Fran- cisco and New York A L L SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 209 VV. 27th St., will have a confirmation class for adults at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the Guild Room of Gregg House at the church. Also, Rev. Reynell Parkins, University ar­ associate professor chitecture, will guest preacher at 9 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. services Sunday. be of A U S T I N SPIRITUAL COM- MUNITY offers to share with everyone free music, food, song and love beginning at 2 p.m. Sunday at Armadillo World Headquarters. A U S T I N BD M E N ’ S LIBERATION will have a coffeehouse with music and food at 8 p.m. Saturday and a potluck supper at 6 p.m. Sunday in the Everywoman’s Center, 1106 W. 22nd S t B ’ N A I B RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION, 2105 San An­ tonio St., will meet for a Shabbat dinner at 7 p.m. the Friday. Contribution meal is $1. Shabbat services will be held at 8:15 p.m. with Rabbi Roy Walter of Houston. An all-night Shabbaton will follow. for D E P A R T M E N T OF CIVIL ENGINEERING, Atmospheric Science Gr,:up, will meet at 3 p.m. Friday to have a graduate seminar in Engineering-Science Building 602. William G. Bat­ tista, graduate student, will speak on “A Behavioral Ap­ t o Synoptic Analysis proach Instruction.” DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS will hold a relativity lecture at in Physics I p.m. Friday Building 224. Dr. Michael Ryan will speak on “The History of Cosmology.” A nuclear physics seminar will be held at 4 p.m. Friday in Engineering-Science Building 145. Forrest Hopkins and Brant Johnson will present research progress reports. GDE will have a weekly meeting at 7 p.m. Sunday in Union Building 202. INNER PEACE MOVEMENT will hold an introductory lec­ ture at 7 :30 p.m. Friday in the Director Room of the Stenhen F. Austin Hotel. Topic will be “Discovering Your Identity.” INTER-VARSITY Friday CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 8 p.m. in Business- Economics Building 133. The pastor of Rhinehart Bible Church, Dallas, will be guest speaker. LE POTPOURRI, the T exas, Union coffeehouse, will offer f r e e entertainment beginning at 8 p.m. Friday. live M O R T A R BOARD, national s e n i o r women’s honorary society, is reviewing applicants for membership. GPA of at least 3.0 and 90 hours are Inquire at Speech required. Building 105 by Feb. 18. TEXAS UNION THEATER will feature “Tile Wild Bunch,” Friday through Sunday with showings at 7 and 9 p.m. TRAVIS AUDUBON SOCIETY will sponsor a bird walk at a ranch near Austin Saturday. All W errsted meet at 7 a.m. at Texas Medical Association parking lot. West 19th Street and North Lamar Boulevard. WOMEN S UNIVERSITY JUDO CLUB will meet at 6 p.m. Friday in Women’s Gym 134. Beginners are welcome. -VALENTINE SPECIAL- CHICKEN FRIED STEAK SERVED ON A GIANT SESAME SEED BUN WITH LETTUCE * TOMATO. (Plus all the mayonnaise,mustard or ketchup you need.) 2, for 89c R E G U L A R 69* SA V E 49* 4 D l f ' H A V C OFFER S O O D N O W D l t 7 U A I J THRU M O N , FEB. 14. Bring Your Valentine To Arby's • S n a p p y Service • Pleasant A tm o sp h e re • C le a n a n d C o lo rfu l 5400 BURNET RD. 451-3760 1715 GUADALUPE 472-1582 T h e S i d e S h o w A program we've planned for months— So great, the Texas Theatre jumped us! FREAKS "One of the perhaps half dozen great horror films of all time" — N.Y. TimTimes DEMENTIA "The first foreign film made in Hollywood" — Downbeat Magazine. "In human, indecent, the quintessence of gruesomeness" — N. Y. Censor Board PLUS: CHAPTER 2 OF "THE PERILS OF PAULINE" lf you've seen these already, you'll want to see them again— lf you haven't— don't miss this 2nd chance! FRIDAY, SUNDAY, MONDAY JESTER AUDITORIUM ALL SEATS: 75c FRI: 7:30, IO P.M. SUN: 4 P.M. ONLY MON: 7:30, IO P.M. JANUS New Cinema A Program of Award Winning Shorts From: L a J e t e e R e n n a i s s a n c e E n t e r H a m I e t Francois Truffaut, France Richard Lester, England Roman Polanski, Poland Jordan Belson, U.S.A, Chris Marker, France Fred Mogubgub, others Pictured Above: DEATH AT W ORK in Chris Marker's Science-Fiction Short, La Jetee Friday, Feb. 11/72 7:30 & 9:45 B.E.B. 150 Adm. 75 The Running, Jumping and Standing Still Film | Corrida Interdite Allures T h • F a t a n d t h • L a T w 0 C a s t 1 s Donald Sutherland Genevieve Waite in Jo Anna MICHAEL SARNE (director) "free wheeling, breezy movie . . . has a I finale which is a take-off on Fellini's 8l/j • • Saturday, Feb. 12 l l B.E.B. 150 7:30 & 9:45 (kinem a 4 0 a collectioniof love songs, a flowering of sex as in the mind's eye, a joy FRIDAY & SATURDAY FEB. II & 12 7, 9, ll pm ART BUILDING AUDITORIUM Page 12 Friday, February l l, 147? THE DAILY TEXAN Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes ★ SALE * SHEEP SKIN RUGS Many Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SALE * Various kinds, colors - 50c per ft. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 Sidney Poitier Claudia M cNeal In A Raisin in the Sun r f Voted one of IO Best Pictures of the Year F R I D A Y . F E B . i l 6 :0 0 ,8 :1 5 ,1 0 :3 0 H O G G BLDG. 14 ICO 75c Roaming Singer Entertains Modern Troubadour Gathers Crowds As You MOVIES By BEN KING Amusements Assistant Wander around the Union patio the University Co Op some Or day: you may notice a young m an playing a guitar, kazoo, jug and tambourine, collecting a few stares and much applause from passersby. The young man is Jay Bell or, as he is known by his “ stage” name, “ Jug Band Ja y .” Most of Bell's “outdoor con­ certs” start with a loud and fast jug band featuring his kazoo. Once he has gathered an tune suit audience, Bell will vary his songs to singing his moods, anything from original folksongs to field hollers. Depending on the day. Bell’s to 40 audiences vary from 15 people with whom he establishes r a p p o r t by either playing requests or by asking people to “ sit in on kazoo” with him. Bell's part-time career a s a stroetsingor started in December when a friend asked him to come out and play in front of the Co- Op. After waiting a few minutes TV Tonight night's Friday viewing is highlighted by Gregory Peck’s in Oscar winning performance t h e movie A be Mockingbird,” which will shown at IO p.m. on channel IO. “To Kill Humphrey Bogart fans will be thrilled to find out that at m id­ night the celebrated “Casablanca” will be shown. channel 24, on repeat a At 10:30 p.m. Sunday, channel 9 will showing of “ Abraham Lincoln,” first the talking picture made by m aster of silent films, D. W. Griffith. the FRIDAY’S SI lf FDI LF 7 p.m. 9. -IR W ashington Week in Review 4. 6, 12 Santo rd and Son 12, 24 B rady Bunch 5, 7, 10 O 'H ara I '.S. T reasu ry 12, 24 P artrid g e Fam ily 4, 6, 42 Movie: "Two Mules for Sister S ara” 9. 46 Movie: "Seven Sam uri” 12. 24 Room 222 5, 7, IO Movie: "C rawlspace’' 12, 24 Odd Couple I t Petticoat Junction 7:30 p.m. 8 p.m. 8:30 p.m. 9 p.m. 9:30 p.m. 12, 24 Love Am erican Style 5, 7. IO The Don Rickies Show ti Odd Couple 12 Ed Brandi rn Show 4 Hollywood Squares 10 p.m. 10:30 p.m. All Channels News 12. 21 Dick Cavett 7 M ere Griffin IO Movie: "To Kill a Mocking­ bird” !> Movie: "The Blob” 11 p.m. Midnight 9 D ance: Africa 7 News 5 M oyie: "Falcon and the Co-Eds” 24 Movie: "C asablanca" (2 M ovie: “ Cape F e a r” H a O O V E R — 4th FUN W EEK TONIGHT S W EE K D A Y S OPEN 5:45 - Feature 6-8-10 p.m. MATIN"-’! TO M O RRO W & S U N D A Y W a i f D i s n e y ?s S o n g ii, S o u t h f e w ® j r . „ HWA 0nc* * « f» u , •n tth m s t a D i s t r i b u t i o n c o IJt*" TEC HNICOLOR’ © 0 S72 Wait Citral production* i n c . DISNEY'S - WET BACK H O U N D " @ IN T E R S T A T E - T H E A T R E S SI.OO 'TIL 2:15 2:15 - 4 :1 0 - 6:05 8 : 0 0 - 9 : 5 5 STARTS TODAY! Robert lo u is sievenson’s Great Adventure Story Now a Monumental Motion Picture! started friend. Bell for his playing by himself and, as he put it, “ found out that I really liked that sort of entertaining.” of entertaining “Most musicians a r e getting hung up on tile money making aspect and forgetting about the people. When you play outside the people come and go as they please and don't feel forced to stay because they paid some money to hear you.” With this “free spirit” attitude toward music, the people who stay and listen to Bell are really interested in his music and m ake a truly attentive audience. In recounting some of his tales about being a modem traveling minstrel. Bell remembered the time during December when he into the Christmas had gotten to Hancock spirit and went Center because he “ felt playing for some people.” like It seems, though, the secuurity police were not in the spirit of the season, because soon after Bell started playing they asked him if he had a perm it to sing in the shopping center. Since the modern-day troubadour did not have the necessary permit, the police accompanied Bell to the m anager's office of the center. This episode had a happy ending though, because “ Die manager turned out to be a nice man and ended up paying m e to play there.” Bell doesn't know when or where his next appearance will be—“just whenever and wherever I like entertaining some feel people.” Daily Horoscope ARIES: A difficult decision can be postponed until later. You will probably be better equipped to deal with it then, also. TAL B I S : Don't go out of your way to help someone today. Unless you are very clear on the liabilities, you are likely to get burned. GEMINI: Sit down and spend time thinking today. You have a positive contribution to make if you will take time to wrest it from your mind. CANCER: A little comm on sense is the best rem edy for the trouble you can encounter today. Try to laugh and look beyond it lf it comes. LEO: A discouragement should not be viewed as a defeat You can pick yourself right up if you will and continue as before. VI ROO: Sam ple some of the things th at a re going on around you. Perhaps you have heen m issing too m any details while trying to analyze others. LIBRA: T here will be an a ttem p t to disrupt the plans you have laid before today. D on't fight back now, just get through the day. SCORPIO: Your creative talents will seem to be drained today. You m ay be called upon them and fall short. They will shortly return. to exercise SAGITTARIUS: An argum ent can easily develop over some very flexible point. Try to see if your position is really that rigid. CAPRICORN*: A very sensual ap­ proach to the day is w hat you need today. T ry to be more aw are of the conditions and situations around you. AQUARIUS: A nervous sort of energy will keep you jum ping today. It can easily prove to be one of your m ore productive days. PISCES: Settle yourself down for a. very enjoyable weekend. Try to do things today which will give you free tim e tomorrow. —Nick Lawrence. M E X I C O U N IO N FINE A R T S C O M M IT T E E C U LT U R A L TO U R M A R C H 24-31 7 days/$l32 information, union 342 “The Wild Bunch,” Sam Peckinpah's highly acclaimed Western, is the Texas Union weekend movie. Showings are 7 and 9:30 p.m . Friday through Sunday in the Union Theater. Admission is 53 cents for students, faculty and staff. Museum of Light will sponsor on Erotic Fi’m Festival, the and worst cf the San Francisco and New York erotic films, at 7, 9 and l l p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Art Building Auditorium. Admission is 75 cents. “A Raisin in the Sun,” starring Sidney Poitier, will bo sponsored by IGC at 6, 8:15 and 10:30 p.m. Friday in Hogg Building 14. Ad­ mission is 75 cents. “Little Caesar,” Edward G. Robinson's classic role, will be shown by YSA at 6:30, 8, 9:30 and l l p.m. Saturday in Jester Auditorium for 75 cents. “Wait Until Dark,” the acclaimed suspense thriller starring Audrey Hepburn and Alan Aricin, will be presented by WAAC at 6:30. 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Geology Building IOO. Ad­ mission is 75 cents. “ Repulsion,” “ Cul-De-Sac” and “Rosemary’s Baby,” three Roman Polanski films, are scheduled for this weekend by the radio-television- film departm ent. “Repulsion” will show at 6:15. 8:15 and 10:15 p.m . -Al! films will be shown in Burdine Auditorium and admission for Friday. “ Cul-De-Sac” is scheduled for the same times Saturday. “ Rosemary’s Baby” will be presented at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Sunday. Each is 75 cents. Four films a re scheduled by the French Film Festival Friday. “ Le Petit Matin” will be shown at 5:45 p.m., followed by “ Peau d ’Ane.” “ Les Camisards will begin at 9 p.m. and “La Maison d ’Eglantine” will be shown immediately following. All films are scheduled for Batts Auditorium. “Freaks” and “Dementia” will be presented by The Side Show. Showings will be at 7:30 and IO p.m. Friday, 4 p.m. Sunday and 7:30 and IO p.m. Monday. All seats are 75 cents. Sands Scbuldmann-Clark will give a piano recital at 8:15 p.m. Friday in Music Building Recital Hall as a p a r t of tile requirements for the Master of Music degree. Dub and the Dusters, a country rock group, will play on the Union patio 4 to 6 p.m. Sunday. They are sponsored by the Union E n­ tertainm ent Committee. David Renner, pianist from the faculty of Michigan State University, will give a program of Beethoven, Nielsen and Schumann at 4 p.m. Sunday in the Music Building Recital Hall. MUSIC DRAMA The Student Repertory Theatre will put on “Occupancy,” by John Mac Nicholas, “ Roots,” by Debbie McHale, and “ The Death of Patroclus,” by Christopher Logue as their spring workshop — all written, acted and directed by University students. Performances are at 8 p.m. Monday and Tuesday In the Union Junior Ballroom. Admission is 50 cents for students and 75 cents for others. Department of Speech will present a reader’s theater production of Edwin Arlington Robinson's poem, “ T ristram .” Performances a re scheduled for 3 p.m. Sunday and 8 p.m. Monday in Burdin* Auditorium. Tickets are available at the door and admission is $1. MIDNIGHT • FRIDAY & SATURDAY 2Features Feb. 11-12 r t o c g g presents The Rolling Stones MIDNIGHT 2Features Feb. 11-12 i i i i GIMME SHELTER FIREMAN'S BALL plus BOX OFFICE OPEN AT 11:20 FOR ADVANCE SALES ii ii FRIDAY & SATURDAY M I D N I G H T Q T H g n Q Q n i FRID A Y & SATURDAY M I D N I G H T i d m s Anarene,Texas,1951. Nothing much has changed... COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A BBS PRODUCTION THE LAST PICTURE SHOW A Film By PETER BOGDANOVICH O ffcut \ Selection % New York J J Film Festival / TIMOTHY BOTTOMS/JEFF BRIDGES/ELLEN BURSTYN/BEN J0HNS0N/CL0RIS LEACHMAN/mtroducmS CYBUL SHEPHERD as j . c / D i e t e d by PETER BOGDANOVICH/LARRY MCMURTRY.^ PETER BOGDANOVICH larry m cmurtry BERT SCHNEIDER/STEPHEN J. FRIEDMAN Executive P roducer S cre en ?!* / by P roduced by |Origin>l Soundtrack Album on MGM Records.! | F ' - “ =— I STARTS T O D A Y $ 1.00 'TIL 2:15 • FEATURES • 1:4 0 - 3:45 - 5:50 7:55- 10:00 V ARSITY 474-4351 2 4 0 0 G U A D A L L J P E S T R E E T GINEKAL CIN IMA COWOUnON^ HELD OVER! CLINT EASTWOOD p la y m isty roe M r Imitation to terror^ - ■ “ I 'v e t a w * . MOU* • IttXBMUW" P l OPEN 11:45 • S H O W S i 1 2 - 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 1 0 P.M. B A R G A IN MATINEE $1.00 ’TIL 1:30 Mon.-S*. CAPITAL PLAZA I: NO. INTERREGIONAL HWY — TONITE— Larry G roce R O A — DAYBREAK R EC O R D S with Willis Ramsey SHELTER RECORDS 38th & Interregional 454-8115 Lavaca TONITE & SATU RD A Y ALLAN DAMRON end J IM M Y JO H N SO N Open 11-3 a.m. 472-7315 & Q P "NBH1 J. M U D M T O a A U S T I N i,;s? 2 1 3 0 SO . C O N G R E S S A V E .' FEATURES 1:00-3:00-5:00.7:00-9:00 ADULTS $2.00 CH ILD R EN .75 N O PASSES NOW SHOWING I _________ LAST 5 DAYS ! M a t The stirring saga of a Grizzly Monarch's conflict with man MICHAEL CAINE ...as Alan Breck. With his knife he could split a nation. Wi iii the price on his head he could buyits future. JACK HAWKINS ...as Captain Hoseason. He'd murder for a penny ...for two he'd kill a friend. LAWRENCE DOUGLAS ...as David. Before he could claim his love... jf he must fight for his birthright. VIVIEN HEILBRON ...as Catriona. Her name was a queen's; her desires ...a woman's. featuring L e o n A m e s as the old man mountain P lu s Sp e c ta cu la r S K I S h o rt “ G et H ot” Sun International Productions Inc.* • W holesome Family Entertainment Always UtHiSlri e x u u j l u : i n u 'Charlie Brown Musical Set for Today “ You’re a Good Man. Charlie Brown,” t h e musical adapted from Charles Schultz’ cartoon strip, opens at 4:40 p.m. Frid ay in the Dram a Building Theater Room. The Department of Dram a production w ill have 1:30 p.m. performances Saturday and Sunday and w ill continue during the next two weekends of February. Jam es Thomason-Bergner, musical director, said Thursday, “ More than 50 percent of the show is m usic.” All of the songs, furthermore, “ were written especially for the show; out of context they would be meaningless.” IN D E E D , Bergner added, the song lyrics “ are more significant than the spoken dialogue.” The reason is the show’s vaudevillian format—a series of brief comic sketches with songs and dancing. The show, which enjoyed a four-year run off Broadway from 1967 to 1971t encompasses a variety of musical styles. A song about a baseball game, for example, employs a waltz tempo, while “ Suppertime,” sung by Snoopy, has a Charleston beat with the notation “ in raucous ragtim e” on the score. One song in which Charlie Brown, Lucy, Schroeder and Linus prepare a book report on “ Peter Rabbit,” is something of a madrigal, requiring four-part harmony and intricate timing. Providing the music w ill be a seven-piece or­ chestra of two pianos, flute, bas* and percussion. Players, selected from both dram a ami music departments, include Bergner, Noel Alford, Debbe B e v il and Ken M cLain. Unlike most plays, each performance of “ Charlie Brow n ," w ill be given by a different1 cast. COMPRISING the cast are John Berwick, Jack Glaze Lonnio Hirseh, Daniel Jones, Bill Leigon, K elly Payne, Rob Ram sey. Cameron Sevier, Patti W yss, Lynn M cIntyre, Beth Klein and Susan Andre. Tickets are 50 cents for children and $1 for adults. Reservations may be made by telephoning in Hogg 471-1444. The University Box Office Auditorium IO a m. to 6 p.m. is open from Monday through Frid ay for the sale of tickets. Tickets m ay also be purchased at the door I I 30 minutes prior to curtain time. Show times for the next two weekend* are 8 p.m. Fridays, 10:30 a.in. and 1:30 p.m. Satur- | days, and 1 :30 p.rn Sundays. One performance has been added lo Saturday, Fob. 26 at 8 p.m. PrUey. february TI.' 1972 THE BAILYT&dkW P t q e 'f l' CU Ca ra v a n Room j of V H I. C a p ri Corporation OPEN TO THE PUBLIC DINING, DANCING, ENTERTAIN­ MENT, MIXED BEVERAGES NO COVER NO MINIMUM MONDAY Thru SATURDAY 2390 M. Interregional in the Villi Capri Hotel GR 7-4331 HANSEL and GRETEL INTRODUCES HALSEY -TAYLOR - FRIDAY I SATURDAY HIGHT SATURDAY t SUNDAY NIGHT SPERRY HUNT - PLAYING IN THE BEERGARDEN — N O W WITH A C O ZY FIREPLACE BEER — $ I .JO/PITCHER — AS USUAL N O C O V E R 409 W . 30th — I Blk. East of Guadalupe 477-0634 Sana*! a n i (Sr*!*! I TRANS * TEXAS 2200 Hancock Drive—453-6641 NOW ! OPEN 1:45 FEAT.: 2-4-6 6-10 REDUCED PRICES TIL 6:15 (Mon.-Fri.) "Curse You, Red Baron!" ie x a n sta ff Photo by MAHLON TAYLOR. One of the several students who will play Snoopy in the drama department's product­ ion of "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown," shakes his fist at the imaginary German fight- er pilot. The presentation open* et 4:30 p.m. Friday in the Drama Building Theater Room. Tickets are available at H o gg Auditorium Box Office. Reservations may be made. Symphony, Singers Excellent By B E N K IN G Amusements Assistant a At given at speech “ Challenge ’72,” M aurice Peress, conductor of the Austin Sym ­ phony, described the modern symphonic orchestra as having become “ nothing more than a museum for masterworks.” After Thursday night’s per­ formance of Gustav M ahler’s “ Songs of and the E a rth ” Schubert’s “ Unfinished” Sym ­ phony, No. 8 in B minor, Peress can be metaphorically described in his own terms a* a grand curator of an extremely in­ teresting museum. The h i g h p o i n t of the p e r f o r m a n c e was M ahler’s “ Songs of the E a rth ” which combines both song and sym­ is a phony in a work that spiritual autobiography of the A u s t r i a n composer. Mahler MWWIIIIIIMyB BM BW B IIiailllllMBMIIIllMMMMIIIIIIB B g B M a | M i d d l e Earth I n Aid for Bad Trips 9 p.m. - 4 a.m. Seven Days a B eek Also 8:30-4:30 University “Y” No names, no hassle Mobile units available 472-9216 Ij L rn | SnilMBBBBWHillHWWIIIitttfttWHIItHHIH lllHIHHtl if Wli Ii! tlilltiBllHBIWttH^ • THE ONE KNUE J itll & iud River ^ J • DUB and the DUSTERS * • D. K. and the DIAMONDS J t SNARER A a l i a s T H E J the SHAKERS • £ » UNCONTROLLABLE URGES • rn sun* a « EASY STREET • HAPPY HOURS DAILY 4-8 p.m. BEER $1.00 Pitcher > NEVER A C O V E R i — THIS WEEKEND — Bloontz All-Stars — Plays Rock and Roll — DANCE FLOOR BEST MIXED DRINKS "A qood time is guaranteed for all" Happy Hours 1:30-6:30 Every Day C X S SO V C X DOOR - A S a lo o n — 1523 TlrrNIN FORD RD. OFF E. RIVERSIDE R-T-F/ ARCH. presents "LISTEN" A Multi-Media Production FRIDAY 9, IO, ll a.m. JR. BALLROOM UNION No admission charge Box Office OPEN 6:30 Just a person who protects children and other living things B l LOT JA C K TECHNICOLOR® from W a rn e r Bros. A Kinney L e is u re S e rv ice SH O W STARTS 7:00 SHOWTOWN - SOUTHSIDE CO - HIT PAUL N E W M A N IS "H A R P E R ” CHIEF CO- HIT “C A W K T O R O B L A S V E G A S ” TRANS -Ar TEXAS URNET A M .JB64Q0 Burnet Road — 465-6933- O P E N 6:15 • START 6:45 H O T FO ODS, B O N U S C H E K S lOc H O T P O P C O R N AUSTIN’S FIRST SHOWING THE GREAT AM ERICAN O BSESSIO N G ETS LAID TO REST. "G O L D E N G L O B E A W A R D S " Winner of "BEST D R A M A T IC M O ­ T IO N PICTURE" Gene Hackman "BEST A C T O R " “The niftiest chase sequence since silent films.” •Pao/ 0. •I sat on the edge of my seat I dont know of a mara exciting movie entertainment today!” • to u ts Aipert, Saturday Psi ie . “ Smashing entertainment Asapremn movie-movie!" .•Judith Ccitt, Mew York M i f u in e PLAYBOY MAGAZINE say*: “‘Guess What. We Learned In School Today* Is tops in Rs class of recant comedies drawn from the hotbeds of eexual revolution:* ‘Guess What Wk Learned In School Today?” from the anti-Semitic suffered sentiment of the late 1800’s that was prevalent in the music world during his career as a composer, resulting in lack of recognition of any of his works until after his death. The over-all performance of M ahler's works was marked by the full sound of the orchestra, as it switched from the different passages of the work that in­ corporate such varied musical influences and marches. During the performance of “ Songs of the E a rth ” both Betty Allen, mezzo-soprano and Arturo Sergi, tenor, proved themselves top to be vocalists. two of Am erica's folksongs as Miss Allen's voice has that that quality of vocal velvet that other lacks completely "forced effect” which is the downfall of singers. s o many Throughout performance her Miss Allen proved herself an extremely singer, giving the passages just the right amount of force and tenderness whenever it was called. expressive in coloring Sergi marked his part of the program by giving the music beautiful certain passages. Despite the mediocre a c o u s t i c s of M unicipal Auditorium, Sergi’s voice had the quality of excellent dram atic projection throughout his part of the program. The Austin S y m p h o n y proved to be one of the better symphonies the Southwest, when, under Peress’ direction it Eighth performed Schubert’s in SHOU S H O W IN G N O T V OVLY X-RATED ADULT MOVIES IN Escorted T H E B E S T . B I T ALSO T H E B IG G E S T STAG V U . M s A l ST IN R I T Z A R T S | 'WEEKEND ROULETTE" : | "JUNIOR M ISS GO ES W R O N G " Ladies Free with Membership 35mm, 3 hour full longtJi feature I ti rn rn ; § I S : ■st 40 Minutes of 16mm shorts STUDIO IV TWO SCREENS 222 East 6th 472-0436 35 mm A N D ALL M O V IE S RATED X HELD OVER! "PRIMAL PLEASURE" ”0 0 N A" "ERNIE'S JOINT "SALES WOMAN" a n d 15 mm BE SURE A N D VISIT O U R TOPLESS B O O K A N D NOVELTY STORE UPSTAIRS. $1.00 B R O W S IN G FEE. M O N E Y REFUND­ ED O N PURCHASE. WEDNESDAY IS STUDENT DAY: ALL TICKETS HALF-PRICE WITH STUDENT LD. (Unfinished) Symphony superbly. The orchestra moved flawlessly from in­ the troduction impassioned the clim ax of the work. slow melodic to During the performance of both j M ahler’s and Schubert’s works, Peress exhibited the same control over the orchestra that brought him praise for the w ay he con- d u c t e d Leonard Bernstein’s “ M a s s . ” It is hopeful that with per­ formances the caliber of Thur­ sday’s the symphonic orchestra m ay be saved from its fate of becoming a “ museum” and once again become an integral part of contemporary music. TONIGHT! TWO FOLK & GENE TANKERSLEY SAT.: KELLY MCFARLAND & BILL MAGLIOLO ■ t h e ■ h e r m S PLACE W O sh* Veered I e l oi the Doh* Stopping Mel!, , Let's Head For The Back Forty! LISTEN TO I t f / Folksinging1™ COMEDY and 'jf\ DEAN SHEPPERD • E A C H FRIDAY & SATURDAY 10:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. Large Pitcher* Michelob - 95o No Cover Charge The BACK FORTY Just Behind Th* Pit at 5th and Neches Dennis Friodltnd etc Christopher C. Dewey Zachary Haines • Jan* M acLeod • Y vonnp M c C a ll- Bovina Of Aor w ewee-e» Eugene Price Nwwwb, David Oil v i m * John G Aviidsen • Coky •* D eluxe*, a Cannon Ch an * Moor# • Original m usical acor# » Harper M jr.K jy D ^ t u w * Craddock F,jms. mc. * Cannon Production * * * « R ichard O rb a ilo - Devin Gnkfenberg 2aectrruWTFOI MHM PLUS 11 PUTNEY SWOPE" THE TRUTH A N D S O U L M O V IE STARRING GENE HACKMAN W IN N ER N EW YORK FILM CRITICS "BEST ACTOR A W A RD " THE FRENCH CONNECTION SMOKING PERMITTED ROCKING CHAIR SEATS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING O PEN - 5:45 • $1.00 T IL 6 W EEK D A Y S FEATURE TIM ES 6 - 8 - 1 0 l l T H E MOVIE IS A GREAT BIG RICH AMERICANA E X P E R IE N C E ..^ !" - a v w i Q P O L n A N MAGAZINE TR A N S * TEXAS £24 Guidance St-477-1964 O PEN 1:45 • $1.50 'TIL 6 P.M. FEATURES 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 1 0 W INNER AT THE ATLANTA FILM FESTIVAL T I M E A N D S P A D E D i f I E M F A N T A S Y FIRST AUSTIN SHO W ING “ MOONLIGHTING MISTRESS’ PLUS — C O -FEATURE 4 B /"tit I ‘FEMME EMCH starring RUSS TAMBLYN • JENIFER BISHOP • LON CHANEY, JR. B O X O FFICE O PEN 6:30 S H O W STARTS 7:00 A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION " t f q n e lin e S w a m is p P l M l f * l E l K U I h I U H S I mc L g w M M f t t o from Columbia Pictures l f • u s W IV E S / f ' X COLOR-from Columbia Pictures ’ < / ; v r - y J U X V i y ’ * * * - * S t* $ % ^ v'J¥ - LGGSHLLLS music by spencer perskin/shiva’s head band pm schulman/timberline rose non bamhart mahfon format! bons schnurr directed by tobe hooper david I. ford raymond o’leary produced by eastman color H I eim ep ] I f a ll x m m m m n • ) .../iy better than he has been in yearsI" — TIM E MAGAZINE ■— ....... mnsnm the best work of a lifetime I * H M E MAGAZINE. 'LEBRmiCH ...is simply fantastic!9 - COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE— — wcHaeLsaRRazm ...sensitive!” — CORONET MAGAZINE ..."fine!9 —CBS-7V "Sometimes a Great Notion” RICHARD JAECKEL-LINDA LAWSON-CUFF POTTS Screenplay by JOHN GAY . Based en the Novel by KEN KESEY • Music by HENRY MANCINI Directed by PAUL NEWMAN • Produced by JOHN FOREMAN A U reversal/Newman Foremen Picture [ p m IM ** TECHNICOLOR^-PAfWnSIOH* F M W U . G UM Cf SU C C U B I AU A,.:, UL •jr., I .r - * ! D Page 14 friday. February ll. 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN To Mexico City Union Offers Tour The Texas Union Fine Arts a tour of Mexico during Committee cultural spring break. March 24 to 31. sponsoring is Miss Judith Sims, student specialist at the development is tour Union, designed mainly students, faculty and staff, but anyone who is interested may go.” “ The for said, The tour is being arranged with Mexico Avisa Tours and All Air Sea Travel, Inc. It will include seven nights’ accommodation at in Mexico the Metropol Hotel City, a six-hour tour of Mexico City, a six-hour the pyramids incuding lunch, tickets for the Ballet Folkloric© at the Palace of Fine Arts, two trans­ fers with baggage handling and seven breakfasts at the hotel. tour of tour of Miss Sims said the Mexico City will Cathedral of Mexico City and the the National the include Palace where Justice Group Seeks Recognition from UT United States Committee for Justice to Latin American Political Prisoners (USLA Justice Committee) is seeking recognition by the University, according to George Cox, local secretary for the com­ mittee. "The aims of USLA Justice Committee is to direct aid to all the victims of repression and injustice in Latin America. To this end this organization has been striving to get out the facts about the reality in Latin American countries, and to offer effective aid to the political prisoners,” Cox said. "Over one-half of Latin America is under dictatorial rule and there are 399 political prisoners who need our support,” Cox added. Guitars Guitars — Guitars Guitars — -CT 3 0 .*♦: i ^ I murals of Diego Rivera are located. The archaeological zone of San Juan Teotihuacan outside Mexico City will be visited. “Other than the tours, the trip will be loosely structured with a maximum of leisure time for the participants to shop or tour , *5 on their own,” said Miss Sims. vt 0 i I The cost is based on room for occupancy. It will be $95 single occupancy, $70 for double and $65 for triple. The cost does not include air fare, which will '5 bo $67 per person on the group 0 fare. It is necessary to have 15 persons participating or the group fare will not be effective. The plane leaves San Antonio March 24 and returns to San ’5 Antonio March 31. Half the cost 0 . per person must be sent to the I tour company by Feb. 24, with final payment due March 15. vt Further information about the tour can be obtained from Miss *5 Sims, 471-3616. 0 ■ (SALE ENDS M A R C H 1st) A ll Ventura Guitars 15% off (steel string or nylon) A ll Recorders All Guitar Strings 10% off 10% off $50 Dulcimer ----- Now $39.00 $39 Dulcimer ----- Now $24.00 W e also have Kalimbas, Harmonicas, Kazoos, etc. AMSTER MUSIC & ART 1624 L A V A C A CENTER 478-7331 Guitars — Guitars — Guitars — Guitars Of I GA I CD -f* OI CZI CT c t V a*“I vt CD 5. at vt CD c 3-* 0>-I vt Decision Still H olds — UPI Telephoto. N ew U.N. Secretary G eneral Kurt W ald h e im told newsmen Thursday that he would stand by the decision to bar correspondents o f the Nationalist Chinese C entral New s A g e n c y from the United Nations. Former Secretary G eneral U Thant barred the newsmen after Com m unist C h in a replaced Nationalist China in the body. If Yon Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling O n a R A f o r rn I S o r v ip A Homemade Soup, Hamburger & Pepsi 89c DO BIE CENTER STREET LEVEL lie d to a t te n d our D . Q . 3 . 3 . P a r t , (J^eer $1.O O p itc h e r 3 - 6 p m U L WILD TURKEY fro m ^Jdouston 4 - 6 p m Va cooer — F R ID A Y N IT E — The Jet Express Back by Popular Demand Super Soul Sound — SATURDAY— Don't t i i miss Jabbernow A real treat to the ear — Superb Vocal - C.S.N, & Y, Greateful Dead & others 1809 San J a c in t o ^ ^ ^ ^ 477-0432 R A T ’ O N CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE TH E T E X A S U N IO N presents A M USICAL COMEDY STARRING ALLEN CA SE S U N D A Y FEBRUARY 20 8:00 P.M. A U ST IN M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M TICKET DRAW ING BEGINS M O N DAY HOGG BOX OFFICE IO a.m. - 6 p.m, FREE TO BLANKET TAX HOLDERS GENERAL ADMISSION AT THE DOOR $3.00, $4.00 & $5.00 UT SOLO ARTISTS presents JOHN ALEXANDER Tenor Fresh from operatic per­ formances at the Met, Ft. W orth & Conn., including a role opposite Beverly Sills! Hogg Auditorium SUN., FEB. 20 4:00 P.M. Performing: Rave! Don Quixote songs, arias from Tosco, Monon Lescaut, Turandot, & songs by Poulenc, Strauss, Mendels­ sohn, Purcell, others Single Adm. $3 N o reserved seats Data Satellite Fails; 2 Experiments End SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) — An electronic component in a satellite left in orbit of the moon by Apollo 15 has apparently failed, causing a loss of data from two of three experiments aboard the craft, officials an­ nounced Thursday. A space agency spokesman said the satellite failure occurred Feb. 3 and engineers have not been able to restore it. Officials said the failed ex­ periments are the magnetometer, the magnetic which measures fields of the p a r t i c l e s experiment, which analyzed the stream of particles flowing from the sun. A third the moon, and experiment, the measuring device, continues operate. lunar gravity to 15’s satellite was Apollo to operate for a full designed year and it has supplied six months of science data. Both of remaining Apollo moon the missions, Apollo 16 next April and Apollo 17 are scheduled identical science satellites. Officials said tests are being conducted to understand the failure. in December, carry to In normal operation, the satellite gathers the science data and the mission to radios control center here. it Armadillo Presents: Friday ST O R M Saturday Blind George McLane and G R E E Z Y W H E E L S $1.00 cover pitchers $1.50 5251/2 Barton Springs Rd. (in the cabaret) Armadillo is available for concerts, parties, events. EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed MALE DONORS ONLY C A S H B O N U S P R O G R A M S FOR REPEAT D O N O R S Austin Blood Components, Inc. OPEN: 8 -3 p.m. Tues., Thur., Fri. & Sat. 12:00 N O O N -7 p.m. Wed. 409 W. 6TH 477-3735 LOVE! LOVE! LOVES for Valentine’s Day For the perfect way to say "I love you” on Monday, February 14, visit our complete Hallmark Valentine department. We have all the exciting new Valentines you saw featured on the Hall of Fame special, "Love! Love! Love!" c t b c C tO lD J J Stoop 2900 G U A D A L U P E P L A Z A B A L C O N E S H IG H L A N D M A L L 3 gruesome, ribald, psychotic horrible, scary, degenerate w ei r d, chilling decadent sick, compelling, sad, funny saoo-masochistic e r o t i c , perverse, morbid, diabolical sexy, absurdist, suspenseful FILMS POLANSKI BY ROM AN Friday, February 11 REPULSION ( 1 9 6 5 ) starring Catherine Deneuve The erotic desires, fears and fantasies of a young women drive her to madness and violence Shows at 6:15, 8:15 and 10:15 Saturday, February 12 CUL-DE-SAC (I’M) starring Donald Pleasanee Francoise Dorleae Lionel Stander A combination of horror and slapstick involving three strange people caught on an island off the coast of Britain Shows at 6:15, 8:15 and 10:15 Sunday, February 13 ROSEMARY'S BABY ( 1 9 6 8 ) starring Mia Farrow John Cassavetes Ruth Gordon Suggestions of witchcraft turn a woman's pregnancy into a night­ mare, until she can finally no longer tell fantasy from reality Shows at 7:00 and 9:30 BURDINE A U D IT O R IU M An R/T/F/Special Presentation - 75* es 'ouueaux ms rancaiS Presenting the Grand Finale of this weeks festival of new French feature films. T O N IG H T four feature films presented in two double feature programs program one LE PETIT MATIN the story of a troubled family whose estate is taken over by the Nazis during W W II. Starring Catherine Jourdan and directed by Jean Gabriel Albicocco PEAU D ANE a *a'ry *a^ *°r a9es" starring Catherine Deneuve, directed by: Jacques Demv 7:30 BATTS A U D IT O R IU M program two LES CAMISARDS 9:30 BATTS A U D IT O R IU M EGLANTINE "a tale of Intrigue and betrayal set during the 17th century Huguenot rebellion" directed by: Rene Allio F R E E to Blanket tax holders! Drawings starts MONDAY, FEB. 14, at Hogg Aud. box office Actor Jean Claude Brialy (Claire's Knee) debuts as director in this beautiful and technically exquisite Romance. (in original French — without English subtitles) Sponsored by D ept. o f Music in cooperation w ith Cultural Entertainm ent Committee A D M IS S IO N $1.00 per program 11:00 BATTS AUDITORIUM