Suit Hits Admissions Policy Academic Programs Also Called Discriminatory Bv BERTHA LOPEZ, KING WATERS and IRWIN SPLICER The U niversity System faces a su itt filed W ednesday its adm issions In federal d istric t court, claim ing and academ ic p ro g ram s are d iscrim inatory. th a t The suit w as announced a t a press conference T hursday m orning by rep resen tativ es of five organizations which a re am ong 20 plaintiffs in the action. NAMED AS DEFENDANTS a re the State of T exas, Gov. P resto n Smith, the U niversity B oard of R egents, System C hancellor Dr. C harles L eM aistre, P resid en t Stephen Spun*, R e g istra r Byron Shipp, the U niversity A dm issions Com m ittee, the School of Law and the T exas College and U niversity System Coordinating Board. The suit alleges th at “ little progress has been m ade In effecting m eaningful d esegregation” since S tate in­ stitutions w ere instructed to d eseg reg ate in the mid-1950's. Filing the petition w ere nine U niversity students, four applicants who did not apply because of the U niversity's ra c ia l stru ctu re . Jacqueline Lee, presently enrolled a t Huston-Tillotson College in Austin and an honor g rad u a te at h er high school, claim s in the petition that she did not apply for adm ission to th e U niversity “ b ecause it is a white m a n ’s school.” Also plaintiffs in the action a re the M exican-A m erican Youth Organization (MAYO), the Blacks, La R aza Law Students Association, Thurgood M arshall Law Students the Human Rights R esearch Council Association and (HRRC), all cam pus organizations. THE PETITION STATES “ All plaintiffs allege that a racially identifiable dual sy stem of higher education exists in the State of T exas.” Out of 40,000 undergraduate students, th ere a re at m ost 400 blacks. Samuel Biscoe of the Thurgood M arshall Legal Society said at the press conference. “ T here is less than one black .student for every IOO w hite stu d en ts," he con­ tinued. also Plaintiffs ag ain st discrim ination chicanos that against blacks on cam pus, rem inding that federal courts have alread y recognized chicano segregation in lower public education. allege to is equal that “ Justice in the quality of education m ust m ean m ore than just us w hite people," B eatrice Gonzales, MAYO president said. Wayne Oates, sta te director of the T exas affiliate of the American Civil L iberties Union, also a plaintiff, has tho U "'v ersi:y at worked against s im 'b r practices af El Paso. Hates said the “ public education in T exas works effectively to deny equal opportunity in education” and that tho U niversity adm issions policy violates the equal opportunity clause of the Fourteenth Amendm ent. Two special adm issions p ro g ram s, Council for Legal for E ducational Opportunity E ducational O pportunity to provide m inority students With g re a te r access to the acad em ic com m unity of Texas, tho suit states. (P E O ), attem p ted (CLEO) Project and These p ro g ram s have been discontinued. PLA IN TIFFS AL*JI (JIN '<’ J.TI the In -:itutr* of M exican- A m erican Studies, designed to a ttra c t qualified chicanos tho fall of IDTI and w as to tho U niversity, opened in discontinued se v e ra l leaving in students without degrees. Jan u ary , 1972, late “ A week ago the adm inistration declared a d egree plan in ethnic studies with a concentration in M exican- A m erican studies as nonexistent,” M iss Gonzales said. However, U niversity Provost .b lin Stanley R ss said th® . ■ in n n of Thursday program , last 18 m onths, doubled the am ount of money available for in sta te ', rs* sa laries in this program . tin t co n trary the U niversity has, the <'■' in the to MAYO will m eet with Spun* af 2 p.m . F riday to “ clarify these v ery pressing issues” M iss G onzales said. A rally will be held in front of the Main Building at 1:30 p.m . T he * T I V S S t U X I *1 * or I jo j T e x a n JI W v« « of Texas at Austin Vol. 71. No. 123 Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, j m . , J A R Y 28, 1972 Fourteen Pages 471-4401 Paredes Exit Called Mistake By RANDY FITZGERALD Special Assignment Reporter the adm inistration knows full well why D r. P ared es and m yself resigned.” w hat procedures to take for a Ph.D program , but no for­ m al proposals have been forthcom ing as far as T know ,” A “ m isu n d erstan d in g ” seem s the resignations th is week of the C enter for M exican-A m erican Studies directo r and his assistant. to have prom pted Dr. A m erico P ared e s and his assistan t, Jose Leimon, resigned in response to w hat they term ed “ adm inistrative conflicts.” However, th e ir im m ediate superior, Dr. Jam es R oach, contended T hu rsd ay it was a m isunderstanding in which “ Dr. P ared e s assum ed opposition w here none existed.” LEIMON CITED a notification he and P ared es received from Vice P rovost for A rts and Sciences Roach as initiating th eir decision to resign. This notification, Leimon saM. inform ed P ared es a BA program in ethnic studies of M excan-A m erican concentration w as being discon­ tinued. “ This co ncentrated program w as n ev er im plem ented,” Roach em phasized. Leimon would not confirm the resignations being based on a m isunderstanding, saying instead, “ w e d o n 't w ant to get into a press battle, but. th e possibility of Roach could not lay the blam e for tho apparent m isun­ d erstanding on any one source since “ I'm not su re exactly w here this breakdown o ccu rred .” Roach said he introduced a proposed m odification of procedures the “ concentration” hut didn't receive “ a very good reaction from D.R. P ared e s and Leim on.” to alleviate P ared e s would not com m ent on the situation prom ising Instead “ to m ake a form al statem ent soon.” In a press conference T hursday morning, M exican- A m eriean Youth O rganization P resid en t B eatrice Gonzales said the ethnic study dcgrep plan w as declared nonexistent by this “ understandably” caused the resignations of P ared es and his assistant. the adm inistration. She said WHEN QUESTIONED president’* on statem en t, P rovost for A rts and Sciences Dr. Stanley Ross responded, “ There is a degree program in ethnic studies on an u n d ergraduate level. Dr. P ared es w as told the MAYQ G lo o m in g w hat P aredes described as an “ identification pro b lem '' in the U niversity not perm itting his p ro g ram to hp identified as M exioan-A m eriean, Ross said it was a m atter of academ ic decision. “ This went through sev eral faculty com m ittees, and it Is the program th at w as ap­ proved. He is fully aw are of th a t.” the conflict with ra re fie s fu rth er stated in his resignation announcem ent th at the adm in istratio n dated “ b ark a y ear when the statu s of the M exican-A m erican p ro g ram cam e into d o u b t.” Ross denied any such doubt existed. U niversity P resid en t Stephen S purr, who is to m eet with IO MAYO m em bers at 2 p.m. F rid ay to discuss the resignations and other grievances, said he knew of no proposal for the M exican-American program . , A m erican program at After announcing his resignation Monday night, P a re d e s presented several proposals for a productive M exican- thoso recom m endations was one m aking the d irecto r responsible only to the president, thereby elim inating red tap e and ostensibly “ m isunderstandings.” the U niversity. Among TSP Reopens Texan Editor Filing By TOM KL KIN WORTH News Assistant Thp Texas Student Publications B oard of D irectors voted unanim ously in a special m eeting T hursday to reopen the filing period for Daily Texan editor until 5 p.m . F rid ay . The m eeting w as called by Student G overnm ent P resident Bob Binder after E ddie K ennedy withdrew' from the ed ito r’s ra c e W ednesday, leaving David Powell the sole candidate. Elections for editor and TSP Board m em bers will be W ednesday with runoffs a week later. The election* a re a p a rt from Student Government, elections this y ear under the new tru st agreem en t betw een TSP and the Board of Regents. To qualify for editor of The Daily Texan, a candidate: • Must have com pleted 75 hours with a m inim um GFA of 2.25, • Must have com pleted J312 and .1322 (news writing courses) and J314 (editing course) with an average of C o r b etter. Hp m ust have com pleted J336 (graphics course) o r be reg istered for it at the tim e of filing. • Must have served regularly on the editorial staff of The Texan for a t least IO weeks prior to the sem ester, as well as at the tim e he applies. • M ust agree to fulfill all the duties of the editor during the full term of office beginning Ju n e I and m ust ag re e to sign the ed ito r's contract. B inder opened the board m eeting by presenting three options to the m em b ers: to presen t David Powell a s the sole candidate; to re-open filing procedures for the elec­ tion; or allow Miles H aw thrne to run in the election. Hawthorne will have com pleted J322 and 75 hours at the close of the spring sem ester, but the board decided by a th ree to-th rep vote Monday not to waive the rule th a t candidates m ust have com pleted the requirement*? before filing. the Dr. F ra n k P ie rre one of th ree faculty b o ard m em bers present, pointed out, how ever that if the board “ does som ething, we m ay be grav ely u n fair to D avid Pow'pll, who acted out of good faith. But if we d o n ’t do the stu d en t som ething, we m ay be gravely u n fair to body.” House Threats Against Barnes Legislators Refute Spellings Charges R obert investigation because Two legislators denied Thursday they had th reaten ed Lt. Gov. Ben B arnes tw ice with House they w ere unhappy over changes th at the L egislative R edistricting B oard m ade in th eir d istricts. executive Spellings, B arnes’ assistan t, had said th at Reps. Bill Clayton of Springlake and Jim Slider of N aples th e had to call lieutenant th e House G eneral Investigating Com m ittee unless House d istricts w ere altered to suit S peaker Gus M utscher and other m em bers of the sp e ak e r’s “ te a m .” la st October governor before th reaten ed Spellings said these statem ents grew out of “ about 25 or 30” conversations with Clayton about changes in the d istric ts of Slider and Rep. Jim Nugent of K errville, both of w'hom a r e m em bers of the House G eneral Investigating Com mittee. th e over redistricting HE ATTRIBUTED these th rea ts to ten­ sion b o ard 's redraw ing of House and Senate lines, ex­ plaining th a t “ w'hen you’re talking about som eone’s legislative district, you’re talking about his political life.” the period w as a “ tim e Spellings said w'hen people had their sleeves. I think a lot of things w ere said during this tim e th a t people wouldn’t have said a t any o th er tim e .” th eir feelings on Clayton, how ever, denied T hursday th a t he had m ad e an y th reats, saying Spellings’ accounts of the conversation w?ere “ news to me because I ’m cam paigning for B a r­ n es.” Clayton, whose P anh an d le d istrict w as unchanged by the red istrictin g board, a d ­ m itted th a t “ it’s possible th e re’s been som e threaten in g , talk, but if I said anything I su re didn’t know it.” SLIDER WAS even stro n g er in his denial of the th reats, calling Spellings’ account of the alleged conversations “ a total lie a s fa r as I ’m concerned.” losing T itus County The E ast T exas Solon, wrho said he w as upset over the reapportionm ent process, added, “ I have m y own ideas as to w hat they (Spellings, to B arnes and new spapers) a re accom plish by spreading this sto ry ,” but he refused to elaborate. trying in B arnes said T hursday th at “ to the best of m y m em ory th ere has been no real th rea t m ade to m e or to a m em ber of m y sta ff.” Though Slider. Clayton and N ugent a re all loyal M utscherites, Spellings doubted th at the speaker urged Clayton and Slider to th reaten B arnes with investigation, ad­ ding, “ The sp eak er is perfectly capable of delivering his o w t i th re a ts.” the TO HIS KNOWLEDGE, Spellings said lieutenant governor never m en­ that the that the m a tte r to M utscher and incidents “ in (redistricting) events that tioned he took course of w ere happening a t th e tim e.” these alleged the P laintiffs have challenged both plans, and the case has gone to a three-judge federal panel. A decision is expected this week. —JOHN POPE Publish or Perish — UPI Telephoto Irving (r), author of the purported H o w a rd Hughes autobiography, and C liffo rd in N e w Y ork W e d n e sd a y , law yer M a rtin Ackerm an answer newsmen's questions Irving is the center of controversy over what happened to the $650,000 in M cGraw - Hill Book Co. advances he claims to have handed over to the billionaire recluse. Summing Up the Situation — T e x a n S t a f f P h o t o b y J O H N VAN H E E K U M . I s I a press J Ja c k D avid so n , su pe rin ten d e n t o f A u stin schools, said Thursday n igh t a t confe re n ce disturban ce T hu rsd ay afternoon. E ig h t students were injured in the clash. that classes will resum e F rid a y a t R e a g a n H ig h School d esp ite a racial ;g Reagan Incident Step Classes •ss rA By JANE HALL and JOHN POPE Staff Writers Austin School Superintendent Ja c k Davidson called a T hursday af­ ternoon in te rra c ia l fra c a s at R eagan High School “ a step backw ard in our efforts to provide b etter understanding betw een stu d en ts.” In a T hursday night press conference in his office, Davidson said th a t classes would be held at R eagan F rid a y and that the school ad­ m inistration p lans to “ take w h atev er steps a re necessary to provide an app ropriate school atm o sp h ere” —including police m otorcycle units, uniform ed a rre s ts of persons precipitating a confrontation. and plain-clothed officers and Two students w ere a rre ste d and eight w ere injured in the fight, which broke out at 1:15 p.m . T hursday. Davidson said a W ednesday skirm ish—in which one white and two black students w ere suspended— prim ed R eagan students for the next d a y ’s m elee. AT THE HEIGHT of the disturbance T hursday, betw een 80 and OO blacks and w hites sq uared off n e a r the school’s new m all area, Davidson said. Among the articles confiscated by police at the scene w ere a sawed-off pool cue, a tria n g u la r piece of m etal and a belt with a large buckle. Arrester! and charged with disorderly conduct by abusive language w ere Leonard Thom as R oberts, 19, 4805 Hilldale D rive and Mike P. W illiams, 18, 2209 Palo Pinto Drive. E ach w as released from City J a il a fte r posting a $102.50 cash bond. Feb. 8 has been set as the trial date. T reated and released from B rackenridge Hospital w ere John Ab- bcrhoff and R icky Sauls, both of whom had been stabbed. Stephen Freydenfield, who was hit in the head with a brick, and K enneth Kirk and Ronnie Cavanaugh, who suffered head wounds, w ere kept a t the hospital for fu rth e r treatm en t. T hree students who w ere M aced w ere brought to B rackenridge. They w ere Susan Jones, Alfred M anor and Jeff Cane, R e a g a n ’s Student Council president. S everal student leaders tried to break up the fight, Davidson said. Ted Cole, a sophom ore, said the police did not o rd er the students to disperse before spray in g Mace. “ I W A S S A T I S F I E D with the perform ance of the police today,” Davidson said, adding that he had been assured of enough police protection F rid a y to m aintain order. “ I hate to see us have to patrol our schools,” M rs. E xalton A. Delco, a school board m em b er said. “ It is literally im possible to patrol every area. What we will have to do instead is change the h e a rts and m inds of the stu d en ts.” Davidson pointed out that approxim ately 2,500 R eagan students w ere not involved in the actu al confrontation. “ We would have been w ading in blood if even half of the students had p a rtic ip a te d ,” M rs. Delco, a black, said. THE SUPERINTENDENT SAID he hoped student and paren t groups at. R eagan would provide the initiative for im proving relations at 1he school. A group of p arents representing the H um an R elations Com­ m ittee, the FTA and other school gorups will m eet at 8:30 a.m . F rid ay in the audio-visual room at R eagan. A black student council m em ber at R eagan said the presence of police officers on cam pus F rid a y would not affect long-range change. relatio n s,” M ichale “ It m ay p reserv e order, but M edearies com m ented. it won’t help Page 2 Friday, January 28, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Rogers Expresses Optimism North Viets Question Peace Plan (AP) W A S H I N G T O N - Secretary (rf State William P. Rogers expressed some hesitant optimism Thursday about the future of President Richard M. Nixon's eight-point peace plan the North Vietnamese because had not rejected the proposal at the Paris talks. After saying a main sticking is the negotiations insistence on a Com­ point Hanoi’s in munist-imposed government for told a South Vietnam, Rogers c o n f e r e n c e of editors and broadcasters: “ I am somewhat encouraged by the fact they (the North Viet­ namese) have not rejected our proposals at Paris this morning. “There has been a good deal the secretary they have not the plan outlined by of invective,” continued, “ but rejected’’ Nixon earlier formally presented Thursday. thus week and at Paris the Paris Rogers said he had talked to the chief U.S. William Porter, talks, delegate at following his meeting with the North Vietnamese representatives and was told the other side had asked the A m e r i c a n plan, particularly dealing with procedures for a questions about Where You Eat To Your Heart's Content! TfaftekoH proposed election. “ That is a good sign,” the secretary declaredt ‘‘that is what negotiations are all about.” H e tempered en- his c o u r a g e m e n t with such statem ents as: “ It is not clear at all ’ that the North Vietnamese their Viet Cong allies are and seriously interested in a peaceful settlement. “North Vietnam insists that the government of South Vietnam be removed and a government of their choosing take over,” Rogers said, the American position insists on a free election. adding procedures “We are perfectly flexible” on the an election, the secretary said, and "we are prepared to do anything to insure the election is fair.” involving However, he said, “ we cannot accept North Vietnam imposing . a Communist government the United States cannot retreat from that as a m atter of prin­ ciple.” . . he outlined Although the various points of the Nixon plan, the Rogers stressed prim arily m atter of an election as the keystone to the current deadlock and an area of flexibility. I Church & Law | Keeton Topic in the “ The Law in a Free The 8 p.m. talks will focus • Monday: and the Church ► Law Dean W. Page Keeton I will present Monday the first | in a series of four lectures ► on “ the law and the church" U n i v e r s i t y ► ► Presbyterian Church. ► £ on: I ► ► Society.” the • Tuesday: “ Law, ► I Church and Sexual Conduct.” » • Wednesday: “ Law, the J Church and Abortion.” ► • Thursday: “ Law, ► Church and Drugs.” ► ► a m i d - w i n t e r ► program ► Presbyterian I Seminary. Keeton’s series are part of lecture the Austin Theological by the G O P Contest Hot As McElroy Enters for A battle the Republican gubernatorial nomination began Thursday when Tom McElroy, a Dallas trial lawyer, announced his candidacy in a Capitol press conferece. State Sen. Henry Grover of Houston is the only other announced candidate for the nomination in the May 6 GOP primary. A contested primary is rare for the Republicans, who in the past have generally relied on party leadership to pick a gubernatorial nominee. In his announcement, McElroy stressed the “urgent need for reform at the State level of government.” McElroy said he would oppose State Corporate or personal income taxes. He called for a revised Texas Penal Code and revision of the State Constitution to provide annual legislative sessions and other reforms. When asked if he thought the University System should have a student on the Board of Regents, McElroy replied, “The University should either have a student regent or an official framework to meet at certain times with the regents. "Students should have a voice, but they snouldn’l run the school,” he added. McElroy received his BA degree from Yale University and his law degree from the University School of Law, where he served as student editor of the Texas Law Rsivew. GOP leaders said recently that several possible candidates have removed themselves from con­ sideration, the party's including Paul Eggers, gubernatorial nominee in 1958 and 1970, State Rep. Fred Agnich of Dallas and U.N. Ambassador George Bush, who ran for the U.S. Senate in 1970. Republican Party said a contested leader* primary would provide the exposure and name identification needed for a victory in the November genera] election. Penlagon Wants Planes W ait WASHINGTON (A P )-T h e Air Force’s 1st Airborne Command Control Squadron waits, as it has for IO years, for doomsday. At any hour, day or night, one of its three planes stands fueled and ready for takeoff only IO minutes by helicopter from the White House. Within minutes of alert of impending nuclear attack on the United States, the President and his military command staff could be airborne in one (rf these flying command posts. Sophisticated electronics and communications e q u i p m e n t aboard the plane would enable the President the nation’s defense and counter­ attack while cruising more than 40.000 feet above the earth. to direct In The President would be constant touch with U.S. military commands around the world even if the White House or Pentagon were destroyed in the first wave of a surprise nuclear attack. finger on An underground sanctuary at Ft. Ritchie. Md., in the Catoctin Mountains, serves as an alternate command post. Or. the President could keep his the trigger at a hardened nuclear underground shelter in Virginia, at the headquarters of the North American Air Defense Command buried deep inside Cheyenne Mountain, Colo., or aboard the flying command posts of the Strategic Air Command. All are part of an elaborate system designed to maintain uninterrupted control of U.S. air, ground and sea forces under all circumstances. “Silver Dollar,” the code name for the three airborne command planes based at Andrews AFB, Md., marks its tenth anniversary of operation this year. Its planes are converted four- engine KC-135 tankers, derived from the commercial Boeing 707 jetliner, which are capable of staying aloft for several days. EARN C A SH W EEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed MALE DONORS ONLY C A S H BO 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 PACHA MAMA means EARTH MOTHER in Queehua W e tell earthy clothe! from South A m e ric a t other placet. 503 W. 17th St. 11 a.rn.-6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. SOME Co-Op SPECIALS Good Today and Tommorrow In O ur Record Shop on the second floor. WINGS by PAUL MCCARTNEY ALL N E W W A RW ICK APARTMENTS LEASING N O W 2907 WEST AVENUE MOD FURNITURE, SHAG CARPET, DISHWASHERS STUDENTS WELCOME! I BEDROOM, I BATH AMPLE PARKING LAUNDRY ROOM SWIMMING POOL 474-1712 Health and Beauty Aids — street floor. TRIAL SIZES Stayfree Mini-pads 10c Special — $3.99 List — $5.95 RAGA SOUNDTRACK Special — $3.99 List — $5.95 SANCTUARY by DION Special — $2.99 MASTERY OF REALITY by BLACK SABBATH List — $5.95 Special — $2.99 List — $5.95 Jergens Extra Dry Skin Formula 20c loc I oz. Crest Toothpaste SPECIALS 70 - 2 ply KLEENEX 10c This Package 6.75 oz. Colgate Tooth Paste $1.09 VALUE $ .69 SALE PRICE $ .40 YOU SAVE PLUS — FREE Colgate Tooth Brush CONVENIENT TO UT CAMPUS—CAPITOL—D O W N T O W N TIME has almost R U N O U T i9 * mr . University Co-Op Before ifs too late PAID FOR AND SPONSORED BY STUDENT COUNCIL ON VOTER REGISTRATION Student May Claim Police Entrapment Could entrapment he used as a defense in the recent narcotic cases involving E. R. Calabro Jr.. the police undercover agent and former Jester resident assistant? If a defendent can prove that he was lured into committing the law enforcement crime by a agent, be possibly can acquitted of the crime. However, because various court rulings have differed, detcrminig what is dif­ constitutes entrapment ficult. according to University Law Prof. Al Aischuler. he .said School of Law Dean Page the determining Keeton is factor depends upon who responsible of idea for committing the crime. If the law it, enforcement agent suggests the entrapment may be used as a defense. to Ravenburg. assistant ad- R a l p h minisfrative the University police chief, added that the accused must prove that he had no idea of committing ap­ crime before being the proached by the law enforcement agent. if Calabro had For example, offered one of indicted a the cigarette, not revealing that it c o n t a i n e d m arijuana, the defendant could plead that he had been entrapped. According to John Scott Mc- Clintock. a student charged with possession of marijuana. Calabro had smoked with him but had not given him any m arijuana. University to Calculate Final Enrollment, Bills Official enrollment and bills will be calculated Tuesday. final Any student who changed his original course load by adding or dropping will be entitled to a refund or be required to pay additional tuition fees. Texas residents will be charged an additional $4 for each hour added and will be refunded the sam e amount for each hour dropped. If the course load drops under 12 hours, however, student* pay a flat rate of $50. The procedure is the same for nonresident students except that payments and refunds will be at a higher rate per hour. Although can he courses d r o p p e d without scholastic penalty until Feb. ll, only those dropped before Tuesday will affect tuition bills. Refund checks to be are ready by latter part of February. tentatively expected the TO SPARE. OR TO SHARE. A plAN dcsiqiVEd For MulTtpUs. < a. \ KITCHEN DINING ' IVfNG r n w et bar BEDROOM m * 2 1 0 . ° P « " daily 9;6. J 200 Broadmoor. Drive north to IBroadmoor.amer0n Road’ north broaiEmoor A Bluebonnet Property Division of N P C I-Term Presidency Proposed by LBJ WASHINGTON (A P )—Form er President Lyndon B. Johnson favors limiting chief executives to a single term of six years. serious problems we have,” and added, “ I think every candidate for public office is beholden to groups and people with m eans.” Johnson made the statem ent in a filmed He acknowledged that contributions in­ hour-long interview with correspondent fluenced him to some degree “ in p ractically W alter Cronkite for broadcast over Hie every campaign that I ’ve ever run.” He Columbia Broadcasting System Thursday night. went on: Johnson argued that if a President knew I was President and it was not an expensive “ I don't guess it did much in ’64 because that “ he had to get everything through In six y ears” and need not worry about getting re-elected, it would probably “ be in the best interests of the nation.” But he wasn’t too optim istic about chances of such a reform, which would require a constitutional amendment. “ I WOULD LIKE to see us try it,” he said, “ although I don’t think we’re likely to do it right now.” Cronkite, who chatted with Johnson in the L B J Library in Austin, asked if Johnson m eant to suggest that a first-term President must be governed in part by a desire to win re-election. Johnson said he thinks every public servant “ has to think of that from the day he takes the oath until the tim e his term expires.” Cronkite also asked about the influence of campaign contributors on the people they support financially. Johnson termed this “ one of the most campaign for m e and we had adequate funds.” Johnson said that Congress was “b etter to me than they w ere to any other President I ’ve known.” He described his Vice-President. Hubert H. Humphrey, as having done the best possible job. Hum­ phrey, he said, “ did a lot more work than he got credit for doing.” JOHNSON SAID that some well-meaning friends look back on his presidency and argue that he was misled by some of those around him. He said: “ Well, that’s a lot of bosh, tommyrot. Nobody misled me. I don’t recall a serious m atter ever coming up that my people didn't give me both sides of it.” He said he considers himself personally responsible for all the m ajor acts of his Administration and feels President Richard M. Nixon now bears sim ilar responsibility. 'It's A-Okay' President Richard M . Nixon gives the go -a h e a d Thursday after signing the econom ics report he is sending to C o n gress. The report predicts the econom y will fo rge ahead on all fronts in 1972, but cautions th at w age-price controls will remain in force until inflation cools. — U P I T e le p h o to . Labor Union Asked by Bus Drivers NLRB to Hear UT Shuttle System Proposal By B. S. SCARBOROUGH A hearing has been set Feb. IO by the National Labor Relations Board (N LR B) in connection with efforts by some drivers for the University shuttle bus system to organize a labor union. A possible outcome of the hearing would be a referendum among drivers to deter­ mine whether they want to be organized. Charles W. Hunter, fourth vice-president of the Amalgamated Transit Union, filed a petition with the N LRB requesting the hearing. Clifford Potter, regional director of the N LRB, said Thursday. Hunter could not be reached. “ I DON’T KNOW who contacted the N LR B or the name of the union, Tran­ sportation Enterprises Inc. President Scott K eller said. He added he thought the AFL- CIO was connected with the petition but could not see many reasons why the bus drivers would want to start the union. Membership in a union, Keller noted, dees not guarantee a higher wage. He said he supposed that the bus drivers wanted higher wages. The union, if created, would work a “ hardship on students.” he claimed. Tile drivers are generally students working part­ tim e, K eller said. Keller said he knew Hunter and had talked informally with him. Keller said his talks with Hunter did not mean that Hunter was qualified to represent the bus drivers. He indicated he would wait until a decision is made by the NLRB as to whether Hunter is qualified. STEV E FRED ER ICK , who drives a Route 3 shuttle bus, said a “ vast m ajority” of shuttle bus drivers favors starting the union. Another shuttle bus driver, who declined to give his name, said T E I (Transjiortation E nterprises the proposed union since Septem ber, when the bus drivers becam e interested in the idea. Inc.) has known about He said Hunter had informally contacted Keller to ask if T E I would consent to a. general election among shuttle bus drivers on the question. In the absence of T E I ’s consent, the bus driver said, Hunter filed a petition with the N LRB. Both shuttle bus drivers said a meeting of drivers was held Ja n . 19. K eller’s lawyer was at that meeting, said Frederick, and someone from the N LRB also was present. Potter said Wednesday that Hunter filed is a there a petition Ja n . 12 requesting a hearing to find out whether sufficient “ showing of interest” to require that the N L R B conduct an election. The hearing is scheduled for l l a.m . Feb. IO. in room 8f>3 of the Federal Building in Austin, a t 300 W. 8th St. lf 30 percent of the “ full-time and p art­ tim e bus operators” employed by T E I petition for an election, a c ­ cording to Potter, the N L R B will conduct the N LRB Election Views Clarified By TSP Board Candidates The following (Editor's Note: are statements of candidates for places on the of Texas Student Operating T ru ste e . The election will be these held Wednesday. Where rem arks corrections of statements are published in Wednesday’s Texan.) Publications Board indicated, PLACE I—JOURNALISM Pain Mayo: “ Mandatory funding Is the most important issue, but if we don't get mandatory funding, then we must look into other alternatives. I will work for man­ datory funding sim ilar to the T exas Union funding, and want to avoid an optional fee funding.” She also emphasized that the independent autonomy of The Texan must be m ain­ tained, with opportunity jour­ nalism students to contribute. ( a correc­ tion) for other “ I am quoted Richard Finegan: in Thursday’s Texan as having stated I was a m ember of the editorial board at San Antonio College (SAC) .which has respon­ sibilities sim ilar to T S P and thus have had I did not in such situations. experience say this. I said that I had worked under an ‘enlightened’ board at SAC which held no commitment to freedom of the press and that I know what it is like to work under those conditions.” (a correction). PLACE 3—-JOURNALISM Diane Callid: ‘‘I withdrew from the ra c e because I didn’t have as much tim e as I thought I would.” PLACE 4—-JOURNALISM Rana Shields: “ I was misquoted in Thursday’s Texan. My statem ent should read that I have had one year of experience on The Texan.” ( a correction). PLACE I—AT LARGE David Gentry: Unavailable for com ment Thursday. PLACE 2—AT LARGE John Adkins: “ As a section editor on the 1972 Cactus staff, I am concerned about the board’s influence on the size and con­ tents of our yearbook. I want to see an unstifled and professional-looking Daily Texan. “ I Is an sophisticated improved humor magazine, The T exas R anger, which has been discontinued by the present board.” that UT-Austin to appreciate feel enough also Charlie Brown: “ I am proud of the high standard of excellence of The Daily Texan and I will diligently work to maintain and improve this record. If elected, I will push for full student representation on the Board of Regents and full im partial reporting of fa cts.” secret-ballot election among a the bus drivers. If a simple m ajority of the bus the bus drivers approve, Potter drivers will the by Amalgamated Transit Union. said, represented be P otter also noted that K eller’s attorney had raised a question of appropriateness of bargaining unit, a question related to the question as to what constitutes a full­ tim e or part-tim e employe. D allas attorney Allen Schoolfield, who represents T E I, denied raising any question of appropriate unit. He said he did not know anything about T E I ’s attitude toward the transit union. F or T E I to recognize the union without benefit of an N LRB hearing might be an illegal act, Schoolfield claimed. No the proposed union reached Schoolfield before the petition was filed Ja n . 12, he said. information concerning FR ED ER IC K SAID of the union, “ It’s going to happen.” He complained about what he called a lack of a definite policy on the part of T E I. He said there was no definite policy concerning accidents. He also told of trips shuttle bus drivers made to other states to pick up buses, when the drivers, he contended, w ere not adequately compensated. The average shuttle bus driver stays at T E I about three sem esters, or about one and a half years, K eller said. A bus driver’s pay starts at SI .60 per hour and increases with tim e to $2 per hour. The University pays T E I $5.70 per hour, K eller said. KEVIN McGreevey of T E I said that 90 to 95 shuttle bus drivers work part-tim e, while only five or six w-ork for T E I full­ tim e. Since Dec. I , 1971, Austin Transit Corp. bus drivers are paid $2.62 per hour, Clyde Malone, m anager of Austin T ransit, said. New Austin Transit bus drivers s ta rt out a s “ student em ployes” who a re paid $2.54 per hour, Malone said. He said that after 12 months with Austin Transit, a bus driver is paid the $2.62 per hour m axim um rate. friday, January 28, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Paq» 3 In Sen. Bates Case Trial Nears End CORPUS C H RISTI (A P) — A U.S. T reasu ry agent form erly assigned to the governm ent’s organized crim e strike force testified Thursday against State Sen. Jim B a te s of Edinburg. Agent W illiam in D allas, was one of several T exas lawmen who testified against the ch aracter of the Lower Rio Grande Valley legislator. Ikard, now stationed BATES IS being tried on a charge of receiving a stolen five-carat diamond which Adrian I /am bort the lawyer Edmond home of Corpus Christi to go to J . Ford. The case is expected four men jury’ of eight women and the late Friday. .said he stole from Tkard said lie knew B a te s when stationed at Brownsville in 1969. He said he worked with the organized crim e strike force af jobs as a K ansas City and held other T reasury agent. R ates took the stand earlier in the day for six minutes. He declared he is innocent and gave a b rief background of his life. The law officers who testified against B a te s included T exas Ranger Capt. John Woods of Corpus Christi. T exas R an g er Ja m e s R . P eters. Kingsville P olice Chief Paul Hulsey, U .S. Customs Agent Jo e J . Rizzo of Del Rio, U.S. Customs Agent Ja c k Compton of El P aso, Department of P ublic Safety polygraph exam iner Henry Canli of Austin, F o rt Bend County Sheriff R . L. Gaston, Corpus Christi Police Commander Ted Bullard and Corpus Christi policeman Henry G arrett. ALL O F TH E officers described Bates* reputation as “ bad” , except Bullard who in said “ very b ad .” Bullard said he charge of all crim inal Investigations for the Corpus Christi P olice D epartm ent. is for telling the truth Bullard appeared to surprise Dist. Atty. William Mobley W’hen he said that L am ­ is b e rt’s reputation bad. Other officers had that self-proclaimed professional Lam bert, a burglar, had a bad reputation but they had said they would believe him if he told them he had burglarized Ford 's home and sold the diamond to B ates. testified Three key prosecution witnesses testified that B ates was driving a green Oldsmobile May 6. 1969. when he allegedly drove to Rosenberg to have the large diamond ap­ praised. Numerous defense witnesses had testified that B a te s’ c a r was gold. Jim B ates J r . , the defendant’s son, was one of several who testified that the South Texas legislator did not own a green Oldsmobile in May 1969. Mobley got the defense apparently to end Its ease abruptly by nome maneuvers. BA TES HAD testified during the morning to bo cross- session and w as scheduled examined soon after the afternoon session started. Mobley had B ates take the witness stand after lunch. He then asked defense lawyer Frank Maloney of Austin if B ates was to he the last, defense witness. Maloney replied that B ates would be. Mobley then said. “ P a ss the witness.” indicating that he did not intend to cross­ exam ine Bates. Bill Hamilton, Southwestern B ell s Telephone Co. employe at Austin, testified that records of all long-distance telephone calls from numbers assigned to B ates in destroyed. Hamilton May testified that die records are kept for on# year. have been The prosecution was apparently seeking lo establish that there could be no proof either way concerning telephone calls which witnesses testified were m ade from Bates* to Herfort. Diamond Ring Austin office B a te s F a c to ry Rosenberg in allegedly went the stont appraised. to have before there Mostly cloudy with occasional light rain, and continued cool Friday, Northerly winds 5 to 15 m.p.h. with a 20 percent rain probability. High, upper 50’s ; low, upper 30’s. Economy Predictions Cause Market Rise NEW YORK Tile stock market Thursday made a spirited comeback from a six- session slump as it responded to good economic news. Trading was active. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials surged ahead 10.68 points to close at 899.83. Advances on the New York Stock Exchange led declines by nearly three to one. Analysts attributed the upturn to news that the government’s Index of leading economic indicators rose sharply in December. The per­ formance of the index foreshadows economic activity in the coming months, they said. Famed Gospel Singer Dies C H I C A G O Jackson, whose rendition of gospel songs had traces of the late Bessie Smith, died Thursday of a heart seizure. M a h a 11 a The 60-year-old singer rose from scrubwoman in the levee section of New Orleans to win international fame with her soothing, contralto voice. Miss Jackson, in ailing health the last several years, entered the Little Company of Mary Hospital in suburban Evergreen Park on Jan . 19, suffering from intestinal obstruction associated with heart disease. For two days, attendants said, she was . . in a semi-conscious state in the intensive care unit. . . . . . . — CPI Telephoto. Mahalia Jackson Students Offered Insurance Policies At Special Rates By M ARCU ARONSON and RU SSE L L BANKS Monday is the deadline for purchasing low’-eost health and life insurance sponsored by Student Government. The insurance in independent of the $4 Student Health Center hospitalization fee paid during registration. “Through this program. students can get the most coverage for the least amount of money any p lace,” Ken McHam, vice-president for Student Government, said Thursday. EIGH T TO IO percent of all University students have the Student purchased Government program since September. the health policies through Tile health insurance plan operates as a supplement to services offered by the health center. “ It (the policy) has been very beneficial. I t’s paid well for those using it to cover extensive b ills,” said M rs. Mary Rhodes, ac­ counting clerk for the health center. In sponsoring the program, the Student Government annually accepts bids to decide which insurance company will underwrite its program for students. Presently, the Prudential Insurance Co. is handling the program . Ac­ cording to McHam, the coverage available in this y e a r’s plan is an improvement over past policies. AS AN ADM INISTRATIVE fee the Student Government deducts $1 per policy. This goes toward publicity, bidding procedures and the policies, said McHam. improving towards in A claim s exam iner-socretary for Prudential w ork s the Student Government office (Union Building 321), an­ swering questions concerning the policies. A student wishing to make a claim can obtain the necessary forms from the examiner. She will then review the claim and forward it to the Prudential district office in Houston. Health policies bought before the 5 p.m. Monday deadline becom e effective insurance policies will not provided the application is approved by Prudential. im m ediately. However, life take effect until Feb. 15. Tile life insurance plan is offered to all students enrolled in the U niversity; however, dependents of students are not eligible for coverage. Students m ay choose between $5,000, 810.000 and $25,000 renewable term policies. THIS PLAN IS autom atically renewed unless I) the student is no longer enrolled in the University, 2) the Student Government ceases sponsorship of the program, 3) the underwriting company fails to renew all sim ilar policies or 4) the student does not m ake the premium payments. The life insurance rates a re based on the age of the increasing as he grows older. Students are applicant, billed annually. F o r exam ple. under the life plan, a 20-year-old student would pay an annua] rate of $11.70 for a $5,000 policy, $23.40 for a $10,000 policy and $58.50 for a $25,000 policy. Protection under the health pi an m ay be purchased for either the spring sem ester only, or through Aug. 31, 1972. There is no autom atic renewal of coverage, but students m ay re-enroll each year. THE HEALTH PLAN m ay also be extended to depen­ dents of students (spouses and unmarried children under 19). F or exam ple, students m ay buy a year of health coverage for $32.57, while the yearly rate for both student and spouse is $71.35. Tho health plan will pay the first $350 for qualified expenses incurred within 52 weeks after the first treat­ ment for sickness or the date of an accident. Also within a year, the plan will pay 80 percent of additional expenses up to $15,000. The health policy does not apply to health center ser­ vices or supplies previously covered in registration fees. These include a $4 hospitalization fee and a $21 student service fee which goes toward men’s and womens’ ii» tram ural activities, shuttle bus service and the health center. Bobby Cook, business m anager for the University, notec that 90 percent of the health center’s revenue for the 1971 the mandatory fees paid bj students. fiscal year was in THE REMAINING IO PERCEN T of the revenue was obtained through health center sales and services nol covered in fees. It is this added expense to students thai the health plan offsets. “ It's a good policy considering the premiums and available benefits,” said John M, Wilson, assistant director for administration of the health center. Tho as well ai covers hospitalization due to sickness. Benefits common to both program s include: accidents policy health • Hospital room and board. • Hospital services and supplies such as operating room, durgs. X -ray and laboratory examinations. • Services of a the scope of his practice. licensed practitioner acting within In addition to these, sickness benefits also include private duty nursing by a registered graduate nurse or RVN. Accident benefits also cover local ambulance ser­ vice. IN THE CASE of accidents, hospital confinement is not necessary to receive benefits. Tile health plan also offers optional m aternity benefits: however, these are available only during fall enrollment for full 12-month coverage. Students insured by the Student Government program are protected not only during school, but during school including summer holidays, vacation (if summer coverage is chosen) and other ab­ sences from school. interim vacation periods, r n Editorial TexPIRG and brick walls E ver since Ralph Nader burst on the national consciousness, fighting for the little guy on the street against the bigtime corporate interests that seek to squash him at every turn has become tinged with glamour. Naderism is in. I f s cool and noble and altruistic. I f s verging on becoming a fad. Interest Research Group. Tile purpose of Here in Texas, students on three cam puses have apparently caught the fever. Their brand of naderism comes under the label of Texas Public the planned organization will be to “ articulate and pursue the concerns of students on issues of general public interest.” Its method would be using “ the media, the institutions of government, the courts and other legal m eans to advocate the public interest.” Hmmm. . . THERE IS LITTLE doubt that TexPIRG is a worthwhile program . The idea behind it is beautiful; pure, unadulterated, selfless research conducted on behalf of the common people. But beyond this basic idea, beyond those glittering generalities that describe naderism in its essence, there is a disturbing lack of cold and hard facts surroun­ ding what exactly TexPIRG intends to do. Will it go after unscrupulous landlords? Will it fight the pollution billowing forth from industries across the state? Will it opt for consumer protection in foods, in c a r production, in the insurance business, or in door to door rip-off sales? The list is endless. What will be the arena in which TexPIRG chooses to do battle? And will it even reach an arena? At both Rice and the University of Houston, TexPIRG has been endorsed by the college student governments and petition drives are well underway. Here at the University, a sim ilar petition drive has already yeilded well over 3.000 signatures. The basic plan is to get a m ajority of students on each cam pus to petition their governing boards to increase the student activity fees by $2 per student per sem ester. This money then would be used to hire a staff of lawyers, ecologists, engineers and other professionals to work full-time on behalf of the students. An elected board of student directors would hire the staff and set general policy. THE STUDENT LEADERS behind the TexPIRG movements on each campus are refreshingly optimistic. At Rice, the students have expressed almost certainty that their trustees will be responsive to such a plan. Considering the liberalism that m arks the Rice ad­ ministration, that might well be the case. But the University of Houston Board of Regents has never exuded an inordinate amount of open­ mindedness. Indeed, a move there to create a students’ attorney’s office patterned after the U niversity’s controversial students’ attorney m et with hard and fast opposition. Considering the Houston regents’ track record, there arises considerable doubt th a t they would be predisposed to fund an unquestionably liberal and progressive program such as TexPIRG. At the University, it seem s alm ost certain that the move for Tex­ PIRG is headed toward an adm inistrative brick wall. The students behind it are energetic and hard-working, and it seem s virtually certain that they will collect the necessary 25,000 signatures by their deadline date of Feb. 15. But then they will be faced with the University System Board of R eg en ts.. . IT IS CLEAR that TexPIRG is, at least in principle, an offspring of Ted Siff’s Legal Research Project, a program working out of the School of Law that last year led to the Bauer House expose. During the furor that ensued, regental antipathy grew strong against LRP, so strong in fact that then Chairman F rank C. Erw in publicly damned LRP as a ridiculous group of N ader’s raiders bent on causing trouble for the regents. Beyond this existing prejudice against such investigative endeavors, it can be readily understood that if TexPIRG is to do the type of work it intends to do, its purpose would be in direct opposition to the regental interests. It is well-known th at the Board of Regents is distinguished by their degree of involvement in the business and political sphere of the state. Monied and powerful concerns put our regents in power, m aintain them and, to some extent, form their constituency. It is highly dubious that these sam e regents would support and fund a program which will almost certainly come into conflict with the in­ terests that are behind them. PERHAPS THE TEXPIRG people realize this, and realizing this, are walling to take the risk. Losing before the regents after all, would bathe the program in the sweet glow7 of m artyrdom and conceivably enhance its chances of attaining alternate funding, perhaps through voluntary contributions or a student-based funding drive. However, the regental rejection wrould come at a tim e when the public will be bombarded by the confusion of the prim ary elections, a possible special legislative session, and closer to home, final exam s and sum m er vacations. Public sympathy, even if initially strong, might well prove fleeting. TexPIRG might em erge from the confrontation situation with a radical imago that could very well dam age its appeal to the poor and middle-income citizens which otherwise would support it. Given all this, the future of TexPIRG appears tenuous at best. For it to succeed will require almost total dedication from those who are behind it and widespread, lasting support from the student body. The idea behind it is solid and worthy of promotion. But, we speak from experience In hoping that TexPIRG recognizes both the need for a more definitive purpose and the necessity of alternate funding should their efforts before the regents prove predictably futile. T H E Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin Opinions ex p ressed those of the e d ito r o r th e w rite r of those of In T he D aily T exan the a re a rtic le and a r e not n e c e ssa rily th e U niversity a d m in istra tio n o r th e B o ard of R e­ gents. T he D aily T exan, a stu d e n t n e w s p a p e r a t The U n iv ersity of T e x a s a t A ustin, is pub­ lished by T ex as S tu d en t P u b licatio n s, D raw ­ e r D, U niversity S tation, A ustin, T ex as, 78712. The D aily T ex an is p ublished M onday, T u es­ day, W ednesday, T h u rs d a y an d F rid a y ex ­ cept holiday an d e x a m p erio d s A ugust through M ay. S econd-class p o sta g e p aid a t A ustin, T ex. News co n trib u tio n s w ill be a c c e p te d by tele­ phone (471-4401). at the editorial office (Jour- n a llsm B uilding 103) or at the new s laboratory (.Journalism B uilding 102). In q u iries co n cern in g d e liv ery should be m a d e In J o u rn a lis m B uilding (471-5244) a n d advertising In Journalism 107 B uilding 111 (471-3227). The n atio n al advertising representative of T he D aily T ex an Is N atio n al E d u catio n al Ad­ v e rtisin g S ervice. Inc., 360 L exington Ave., N ew York, N .Y .. 10017. T he D ally T exan subscribes to The Asso­ c ia te d P re ss , The N ew York T im es N ew s Ser­ vice a n d U nited P r e s s In te rn a tio n a l Telephoto S ervice. T he T ex an is a m em ber of the A sso­ c ia te d C ollegiate P ress, the Southwest Journa­ lism C onference and the T exas D aily N ew s­ paper Association. ‘Stop w o rrying — w e'll call it protective reactionI1 Mkhae! Patterson Beware: family questions You can be certain your graduation js anxiously awaited by parents and relatives when they begin asking why you haven’t graduated. My family began asking me two years ago although m y escape from the academic world is still barely in sight. Your family a t one tim e or another will probably ask you this question, so be ready. trying Their approach is simple. A great aunt or grandmother will sit beside you on the couch while you’re to watch television. She makes herself comfortable, pulling her stocking garters above the knee and meticulously folding her print dress around her legs, so as not to be out of place by having a wisp of white slip showing. And there is that smile, that sweet smile of pride in her upcoming college graduate. You begin to feel self-conscious and even a little peeved that she can sit there and stare while you’re earnestly trying to hear the Partridge Fam ily’s newest release. My grandmother, a saint if ever there was one, would tell everyone from the next door neighbor to the package boy a t the grocery store I was the first “ grandchild” the “State university.” Her to attend husband had graduated from law school here many years ago. And I was em barrassed that she would take such pride in my achievement. Anyway, I ’ve learned to spot the over­ anxious zealot. When they approach me with stares and comments, I shrug off the inquisition with a mumbled excuse that I changed my m ajor and require extra time. Actually I haven’t been in school too long, but after the third year, it begins to seem an eternity. You are certain to be asked for the fourth tim e what your m ajor is. With me I can the repetition because I am understand always changing from one department to the next. If you are clever, you can use your m ajor to an advantage. in anything you do and often believe because you do it, that is the only wor­ thwhile thing. On a whole, I believe this true. There are always some who do not care what happens, but this is not the rule. And there is always some twice removed uncle who cannot understand why you don’t want to follow the southern tradition by owning a plantation. Their is com­ lack of understanding pounded by a narrow outlook at university life. Just as old war veterans reminisce about the fun they had in the “big one,” our parents tend to distort their college experience into a magical world of sunshine and dating. They are startled to learn I no longer want to be a fireman but rather a jour­ nalist. And that rings magic in their ears, eyes brighten and heads turn my u’ay. They fought so hard just to enter and finish college, it is difficult for them to understand why you don’t see the reason you can’t drop out and leave for Europe. Journalism conjures images to them of Paris, barroom brawls, Washington. Hemingway, the President and the great E rnie Pyle. These represent an outlet from m y fam ily’s country ways, and they share in a secret desire to travel and see. But any m ajor is enough to fascinate your family. They see something special My patriotism would be questioned if I told my parents I am safe from the draft in college or else would be travelling across the country’. So I’ve found many things are best left unsaid to my parents and hope they will bear with my remaining years in school, only because I am their son. The firing line Calabro editorial one-sided To the editor: Your subjective, one-sided reporting has gone just about far enough. In answer to your Wednesdays’ editorial entitled “ . . .Who Can You Trust?” , we would like to say that E.R. Calabro did meet the criteria set out in your definition of a resident assistant. He was a good adviser to Jester residents. To refute your statement that the job of narcotics agent is incompatible with the job of RA, we would like to express the opinion that the job of narcotics dealer Is incompatible with the job of RA. If the Jester administration professes that they would never have hired Calabro if they’d known he was a narcotics agent, do they also profess that they would never have hired the arrested RA’s if they’d known these people were drug sellers? We have never heard the Jester administration make such a statem ent. Are they really trying to protect their residents? Also, you cannot say that the students who were arrested wrere unsuspecting people being preyed on by a “supposed friend.” They knew exactly what they were doing and should be prepared to take the consequences of their actions. If the editor believes that the campus police have more serious problems to deal with than drug traffic, we would like to know what your definition of serious is. We suggest that you visit Middle E arth or the methadone center a t the Mental Health and Mental Retardation Center and then decide what kind of a priority you place on tile eradication of drug abuse. In conclusion, we would like to say that The Texan is a poor excuse for a newspaper when it prints rhetoric instead of fact. LH. J R . M.T. S.K. (Jester residents) Board of Regents should be clear to anyone who read Dr. Gregorian’s essays. few However, the University System the courage necessary for a faculty member to write such candid articles at this time. people outside can appreciate it No doubt Dr. Gregorian is protected somewhat by his international reputation as a scholar and a teacher. By the same lends token authority to his views—authority that is sadly in the statements of the noneducators who govern the University despite their self-acknowledged “expertise.” is his reputation which lacking William A. Berry Assistant Professor of Art Articles Praised To the editor: This is to express appreciation for the tremendous service Dr. Vartan Gregorian and The Daily Texan have performed for the faculty and the State of Texas by ex­ posing in the press the nature of the new’ “ minimum workload standards.” That the new work b a d standards represent but one m ore phase of a con­ tinuing suppression of the faculty by the E D IT O R .......................................................................................... Lori Rodriguez MANAGING EDITOR ..................................................................... Steve Wisch CITY EDITOR ....................................................................................................... L iz Bass ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R ................................................ Debby Bay SPORTS E D IT O R .............................................................................. Alan Truex AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ..................................................... Miles Hawthorne FEATURE EDITOR ......................................................................... Cliff Avery Issue News Editor ................................................................................................... Jan Jarboe General Reporters ................................................................. john Pope, Randy Fitzgerald News Assistants . . . . Debbie White, Richard Finegan, Tom Kleinworth, Bertha Lopez Editorial Assistant ....................................................................................... Michael Patterson Associate Amusements Editor ........................................................................ Kris Paledes Assistant Sports Editor ................................................................................. Randy Harvey Wire Editor ...................................................................................................... Marcia Aronson Copy Editors ......................................... Joyce Hotchkiss. Debbie Pizzitola, John Yemma Photographers ...................................................................... Rene Perez, John Van Beekum at these locations: Business-Economics Building M a ll IRegister to Vote Burdine H all East M a ll Jester C e n te r W e s t M a ll University ’Y 1 IRegistration to dote: 20,000 (est.) 2 days left James Raton Connally bold, loud (c) 1971 New York Times News Service WASHINGTON—The spunkiest character In Washington these days ie the Secretary of the Treasury, John B. Connally. You m ay not like his politics or his economics, and the other financial m inisters of the world clearly don’t like his rough tactics, but if you really w'ant to understand the state or the nation, Connally is a better source than most. He is tossing away those computerized Treasury speeches and telling American business and American labor to get off their respective duffs. “The rest of the world is at w’ork while told big-business we’re worrying,” he leaders at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on State of the Union day here. “They’re out-working us, they’re out-thinking us, and they’re out-planning us.” THOUGH CONNALLY came up here from Texas with a reputation as a big-busdness lawyer, he is now’ shouting at big business like a latter-day Lyndon Johnson to stop whining about the uncertainty of wage-and- price controls and longing for protection against foreign competition. in the “ Those of you w'ho work in­ ternational field,” he told the U.S. Cham­ ber, “know full w’ell w’hat I ’m talking about. Somehow you have to lead a resurgence of the American spirit of w’ork, We have to return to our puritanical system of work if we are going to survive.” Well, it’s not a bad sermon on the weekend when the British, the Irish, the Danes anc! the Norwegians sign their in­ tention the European Economic Community and turn it into a vast com­ petitive trading un;t of 256-million people, the largest in the world. join to to PRESIDENT NIXON noted this in his State of the Union address as one of m any the United new economic challenges States. Peter G. Peterson prepared a superb report for the President’s Council on International Economic Policy on the problem, but it is Connally W'ho is really running interference for economic, trade and monetary reform and taking on the prelectionists in Congress, Big Business and Big Labor. The facts are fairly obvious. For most the United States could of this century, pay higher wa "os, w;ork shorter hours, af­ ford Social Security benefits, tolerate strikes and still outproduce and outsell all others, and the reason was quite clear. The United States led every’ other nation in technology, mass production, distribution, salesmanship, m anagement and capital investment. Besides, the United States had its own empire, which could employ and supply its people without worrying about overseas m arkets. B IT WHAT ECONOMIC scholars have been paving for years, and now even the Republican Administration Is saying, Is that the other industrial nations of the world have now’ mastered the a rts and techniques of the industrial and scientific revolutions. Tl:e President and Peterson are saying, rather gently, that this is a real problem. Connally sees the same facts more urgently and is making a frontal attack on the protectionists. It is a fascinating exercise by a bold, ambitious and self-confident Democratic politician in a Republican Administration. Connally went to the House for the State of tile Union address and listened to the President’s main theme that this Ls a “good country” on to peace and prosperity. Then he drove downtown to the U.S. Chamber and emphasized the op­ posite—not that all was well but that w’e W’ere in more trouble at home and in the world than w’e realized. its way THE FACTS OF America’s declining position in the world of production, trade support Connally’s and money clearly urgent rhetoric. In 1950, the U. S. gras* national product amounted to 40 percent of the ONP of the whole world; now It is about 30 percent. During the 19S0’s, U.S. exports of manufactured goods IKJ percent, but West Germany did even better, increased by 400 and Japanese exports percent. The Peterson Report suggests the reasons for the decline. increased by trading discriminatory “ They include,” it says, “ the emergence of agreem ents abroad, the development by sem e of our partners of export development programs more aggressive than ours. .a marked deterioration in American competitiveness aggravated by a rapid rise in U.S. labor costs per unit of output.” . BUT THIS IS not all. The European Economic Community countries already exceed the United States in steel produc­ tion, and Japan will almost certainly sur­ pass both of them by 1975. U.S. imports are not exceeding U.S. exports for the first time since 1893. And on top of all this, organized labor in the United States, which used to be for free trade, Is now arguing for protection. All this worries the President, the Stats Department and Peter Peterson, but Connally is the boldest and loudest voice around here on the problem. He is shouting out what he thinks, and this could have political implication on the vice-presidency next November, even though Spiro Agnew is almost the only other character ie Washington who speaks his mind. Register to Vote Before Monday Pag* A Friday, January 28, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Guest viewpoint Boyle needs support By MITCHELL JOHNSON Junior, School of Communication Upon reading about the recent attem pt of Frank Meece, an Austin landlord, to dissolve the office of students’ attorney, I decided to investigate the m atter. I wanted not only to determine whether Meece had a good case against Jim Boyle, but also> if in fact he did, what course of action interested students might take to reinstate and possibly expand this valuable service. B e i n g unacquainted with technical points of the law, I met with a group of law students in an attem pt to gain their opinions the the constitutionality of on funding of the Office of Students’ following Attorney. The is a description of their collective opinion. T H E to support LANDLORD’S suit challenges the Office of Students’ Attorney on grounds that the use of State funds the office violates Article 3, S 51 of the Texas Constitution which reads in p a rt: “The Legislature shall have no power to m ake or authorize the making of any grant of public monies to any individual, in­ dividuals, municipal or other corporations whatsoever;. . association of is by The collected recent Texas Student Publications litigation established that one in the position of the students’ attorney is supported by State funds because blanket tax the money University, an educational arm of the State. The question then becomes whether the money utilized to support the students’ attorney is used for State pur­ poses. is used for State purposes instead of being given away or wasted, the funding of the office does not violate the Constitution. If it THERE IS A very strong possibility that the doctrine of parens patriae might be invoked to sustain the Office of Students’ A t t o r n e y . Traditionally this doctrine had been interpreted to stand for the proposition that the for State has the inherent power to provide the protection of persons who suffer from some disability such as minority or insanity. if a re not In 1944, the U.S. Supreme Court in Georgia vs. Penn Railroad Co. expanded this concept to allow the State to bring suit for persons from suffering who some absolute disability the State has some valid interest of its own to protect. The parens patriae concept was relied upon Jersey Supreme by to Court uphold a consumer protection statute which authorized the New Jersey attorney general to bring suit on behalf of aggrieved consumers. in a recent decision the New THE SAME rationale should apply to the analogous students’ a t t o r n e y situation because students are a group with little worldly experience and limited financial resources with which to defend their rights just as the individual consumer can do little against the corporate giants. in The State of Texas has a valid interest in funding the Office of s t u d e n t s ’ attorney two respects. Texas has an interest in seeing that its statutes are complied with. In this case, its landlord-tenant laws. The State also has an interest in seeing that U n i v e r s i t y students have adequate housing since Univer­ sity dorms are physically limited. Ultimately, the court that hears suit must de­ landlord’s the cide whether it will uphold the landlord’s interest in evading the laws of Texas or whether it the will allow students that State see University students’ legal rights are enforced. the State and to separate IF THE COURT finds in favor of Meece, the students must take action to insure future funding of student legal services. This might be accomplished through a different m eans of collection of student money which would be from University control such a s a fund raising drive conducted by volunteers on the campus. If the court finds in favor of Boyle, the students should attem pt to gain additional State the students’ attorney’s effectiveness might be increased. This could be accomplished by a student interest group led by their elected student representatives which would introduce a bill in the State Legislature drafted by University law students appropriating funds for the students’ attorney. funding that so Too often student leadership has given up after its requests for increased rights have been denied by the Board of Regents. Students can only realize their full political power if they unite in an effort to use their new­ found voting power as a weapon In dealing with the Legislature rather than by stopping at the intermediate level of the Board of Regents. Guest viewpoints The Texan welcomes contributions to the editorial pages which delve deeper into an issue than will a letter to the editor. Before writing or submitting a Guest Viewpoint, secure clear­ ance from the editor or the assistant to the editor either by phone (471-5244), by coming by The Texan offices (Journalism Building 103), or by writing (P. O. Drawer D, University Sta­ tion, 78712). Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle P E A N U T S Friday, January 28. 1972 THE DAILY TEXAW Page S Guest viewpoint W A A C urges abortion law repeal By WENDY W IE N B E R G and SALLY ARMSTRONG Women’s Abortion Action Com­ m ittee the right For thousands of years, women to have been denied control their bodies. We have been relegated to the position of breeders and for the most part confined to the home to care for the children, sim ply because we do not have the right to bear children when and if we want to. There is no IOO percent ef­ fective and safe method of birth control, and except for wealthy women in a few states, We are denied legal abortions. access safe, to July, m ore WOMEN ACROSS the country and around the world are banding together to fight this oppression. than 1,000 Last women from around the country m et at Columbia University in New York to form the Women’s N a t i o n a l Abortion Action in (WONAAC), Coalition August, women from Austin who attended the conference formed the Women’s Abortion Action Committee (WAAC), here on the University campus. and repeal Our dem ands are the same as WONAAC’s: F irst, all antiabortion laws. A woman must have the right to control her body. In particular this includes the right to have an abortion whenever she needs one, without length restriction of antiabortion pregnancy. Most in the mid- laws were passed the dangers 1800’s because of involved surgical techniques in use a t the time. aseptic a s to in it PRESENTLY, WITH modem antiseptic surgery, is often safer for a woman to abort than to carry the pregnancy to term. Abortions need not be performed in hospitals. P resent techniques such as vaccum aspiration allow them to be perform ed by trained para-medical personnel in clinics. Second, repeal all restrictive contraceptive In most laws. states, it is illegal for a w om an, under the age of 18 to receive 1 birth or devices without parental per- | mission. This m eans that most high school women, although they m ay be sexually active, cannot protection adequate o b t a i n information control against conception and when they refused safe do conceive are abortions are forced to quit school and carry a child they do not necessarily want or are able to care for. generally and END FORCED T H I R D , areas sterilization. In many w e l f a r e m o t h e r s a n d “delinquent” young women are to undergo sterilization forced o p e r a t i o n s without their knowledge or consent because somp social worker or judge decides a woman should not have any more children. No one has the right to m ake such a decision other than the woman herself! Last Nov. 20 saw thousands of and England, women in the streets of m ajor cities worldwide, demanding our right to self-determination. More in both than 3 OOO assembled San Washington, D.C., Francisco. France, Canada, New Zealand, Germany, Italy and Australia all reported s p i r i t e d demonstrations of varying sizes. Thirty-nine women and men supporters from Texas participated in the national action in Washington IN ADDITION TO participating In the Nov. 20 demonstrations, WAAC also sponsored a number of educational activities last fall, including an abortion speakout, talked about in which women having their personal experiences with abortions. When Shirley Wheeler in Florida was convicted of m anslaughter an for illegal abortion, we joined with women nationwide to fight for her to collect defense, petitioning hundreds of signatures of women and men demanding tho reversal of her sentence as infringing on her rights. There is much to be done this spring. WONAAC has called its second national convention in Boston for Fob. I i through 13, in which we hope to participate and plan the spring activities and focus of the abortion movement. And the few gains we have m ade must be defended. The New York State Supreme Court has granted R o b e r t Byrri a Catholic professor, guardianship over all four to 24-weok fetuses in danger of being a bor I od. Because of this and other attacks by the fetus the country, fetishists around women must band to together our continue movement. We urge everyone who upholds the right of women to control their lives to come by Union Building 319 or call 471-4528 and join us in building a strong, viable movement to repeal all anliabortion laws in this country. strengthen to Guest viewpoint Two days left another county it takes only 30 your to s e c o n d s registration to Travis County. transfer Also if you have not received your voting certificate yet do not it by worry, you will receive March. We have so many forms collected that our sm all volunteer staff is snowed-under. Th tim e has arrived when you should be thinking of the coming elections. If you don’t register and vote, then all your griping is useless. Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: • Be typed triple-spaced. • Be less than 250 words. • Include name, address, and phone number of contributor. Mail letters to The Firing Line, The Dally Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Tex.; or bring letters to the Texan offices, Jour­ nalism Building 103. By LARRY SARVIS SCVR Two more days. After four months and thousands of hours of work by the Student Council for Voter Registration you have just two more days to register. the to vote By this tim e everyone should know in reasons Austin and not at the home of your parents, such as it is nearly impossible absentee. to vote A couple more reasons are that you can read two newspapers, The Daily Texan and the Austin paper. You also have a wide range of campus organizations th at will keep you fam iliar with the political situation in Austin. and Since t h e City C o u n c i l last year when elections of student workers student voters helped get rid of every incumbent, the politicians have us their stopped as scapegoats their own to cover stupidity and dishonesty. This is the direct students voting in Austin. result of using Everyone can vote here. If you in registered currently a re —I < (J £* I— < IO GET THE S H A F T FROM SO M EO N E BESIDES THE UNIVERSITY 2 O £ z January 31 - February 3 DR. PAGE KEETON, Dean The University of Texas School of Law "Law and the Church in a Free Monday 8:00 PM Society” Tuesday 8:00 PM "Law, the Church, and Abortion" Wednesday 8:00 PM "Law, the Church and Sexual Conduct" Thursday 8:00 PM "Law, the Church and the Use of Drugs" University Presbyterian Church 2203 San Antonio One of Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary's Mid-Winter Lecture Series, co-sponsored by the University Presbyterian Church. 10% DISCOUNT TO ALL STUDENTS A N D FACULTY O N ART SUPPLIES A N D C U STO M FRAM IN G . One day services on custom framing. House of Frames 5437 INTERREGIONAL CAPITAL PLAZA 451-4111 jewelry by James Avery Crown Shop 29 th £ the Dray MEN'S SHOP IN CLOUDS BOUTIQUE experiment (hoi*) n ic e * ) 1 W G IG A FRAGRANCE IVE NEVER HE ARP OF... -jy - A CR O SS I Condensed moisture 4 Willow 9 Drink slowly 1 2 Turkish commander 13 Feeling 1 4 Exist 1 5 Mental state 1 7 Coal car 1 9 Lake In Italy 2 1 Note of scale 2 2 At this place 2 5 Possessive pronoun • 27 Otherwise 3 1 A state (abbr.) 32 Street clearers 34 Symbol for tellurium 3 5 Wheel tooth 3 6 Peacock butterflies 3 7 Exists 3 8 Substance found in plants 4 1 .Imitate 4 2 Cease 4 3 German for “yes" 4 4 Paradise 4 5 Man’s nickname 4 7 Small amount 4 9 Made of wool 5 3 English seaman 5 7 Macaw 58 Invent 6 0 Greek letter 61 Obtain 6 2 Lock of hair 63 Skill DOWN 1 Obstruct 2 The self 3 ‘ Armed conflict 4 European capital 5 Apparently 6 Preposition 7 Superlative ending 8 Musical instrument • 9 Mournful 10 Anger 11 Through 1 6 High card 18 Christmas carol (pl.) 20 comb, form: ear 2 2 Detests 2 3 Choose 2 4 Sun god 2 6 Floggings 41 Paid notice 2 8 Behold! 44 Lamprey 2 9 Steal (slang) 3 0 City ta Germany 4 6 Direction 3 3 Small dog (colloq.) 48 Go,f " I 00" * 4 9 Move from Side 3 5 Resin 3 9 Preposition 4 0 Dutch measure to side 50 Native metal 5 1 Grain 52 Conjunction 54'Music: as written 5 5 Paddle 5 6 Hard-shelled fruit 5 9 Note of scale I 2 3 5 6 7 8 IO l l 12 15 14 17 18 19 M i l 22 23 24 20 25 26 27 28 29 30 13 32 21 33 36" 37 35 39 40 43 44 45 46 47 48 50 51 52 53 55 56 59 58 62 Distr, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. 41 54 60 63 W OULD A N Y OF THE FO LLO W IN G ITEMS BE HELPFUL TO Y O U ? • GREATER FOWERS OF CONCENTRATION • A BETTER M EM O RY • MORE CREATIVE ABILITY • A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF YOURSELF A N D OTHERS. • MORE SELF-CONFIDENCE, SELF-MOTIVATION, AN D SELF-CONTROL. IF THEY W OULD, THEN PERHAPS Y O U SHO ULD INVESTIGATE THE NEXUS P R O G R A M FOR A C H IE V IN G THEM. BASED UPON RECENT DISCOVERIES ABOUT THE W O R K IN G S OF THE H U M A N M IN D A N D BRAIN, W E HAVE C O M B IN E D PROVEN SELF-DEVELOPMENT TECHNIQ UES W ITH PSYCHETRONICS EEG BIO-FEEDBACK T R A IN IN G INTO A SYSTEM THAT IS UNIQUELY PRACTICAL A N D EFFECTIVE. IF Y O U W O U LD LIKE TO FIND OUT M O RE ABOUT W H A T WE D O A N D W H Y IT W ORKS, W E CO RDIALLY INVITE YOU TO ATTEND A FREE, NON-OBLIGATORY, O P E N HOUSE AND DEMONSTRATION SESSION NEXT SUNDAY AT 3:00 OR M O N D A Y AT 7:30 P.M. AT THE BOOKS S O M A divine mushroom of immortality R. Gordon Wasson $15.00 A SEPARATE REALITY further conversations with Don Juan paperback . . . $2.95 C R O S S IN G THE W ATER Sylvia Plath transitional poems.. $5.95 THE LAST PICTURE S H O W Larry McMurtry . . . 95* NEXUS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT CENTER 1709 SA N A N T O N IO 472-2239 Dobie Center, Upper Level, 2021 Guadalupe 477-5951 Monday-Friday 10:30-9:00 Saturday 10:30-6:00 FREE PARKING Avant-garde for Spring. Mod print shirt in brown, beige, cranberry, navy. 100% cotton. S-M-L 15.00. Polyester flare pants in brown, beige, cranberry. Machine washable. Sizes 30-36 S-M-L. 18.00 Pag* 8 Friday, Janoary 28,1972 THE DAILY TEXAN 'Horns Open League Action Patterson's Winless Swimmers At Rice, SMU By STEVE RENFROW Sports A ssistant T ex as Swim Cooch M elvin R. “ P a t” P atterso n divides his forces this w eekend in hopes of taking a giant step tow ard th e Southwest Conference cham pionship. H alf the Longhorn swim team is driving east to Houston w here it challenges Rice a t 3:50 p.m. S aturday in the league opener for both squads. B ut then com es th e rea l te st as the rem ain d er of the Texas team sw eeps northw ard for a 7:30 p.m . S aturday confrontation with SWC favorite SMU in D allas. THE PONIES h av e wan the conference the la st 15 y ears under la te H ead Coach Red B arr, who died last su m m er of a h ea rt attack. B a rr w as replaced by assistan t Harold McMillon. But the win­ ning w ays h av en ’t changed causing P atterso n to “send our best boys to SMU.” DAN’S 1600 LAVACA 5353 BURNET RD. 1327 S O . 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CASE 5th E arlie r In th e season, P atterso n felt th e Longhorns m ight m ove the Mustangs out of the throne room this y ear. But SMU won the SWC Relays in D ecem ber with 522 points w ith T exas a d istan t second with 408. Since then, the S teers have been convincingly beaten by Southern Califom aa and K ansas. KANSAS OUTSWAM the 'Horns, 64-49, la st week. D ivers Donnie Vick and Bill Holloway and b reastro k er F elip e Munoz w ere all P a t­ terson had to sm ile about. Vick captured two firsts in three m e te r diving and one m e te r diving. Holloway was second in the th ree m e te r and third in th e one m eter. Munoz, Mexican Olympic gold m edalist, set the m eet record in his specialty, the 200 m e ter b reaststroke, w ith a 2:12.95. P an A m erican G am es champion J e rr y H eidenreich is the m ajo r force for the Ponies. In last y e a r’s SWC m eet in Austin, H eidenreich captured first places In the 50 y ard freesty le, and IOO y ard butterfly while helping SMU to first places in the 400 y ard freestyle rela y and 800 yard freestyle relay. While SMU w as running aw ay from th e r e s t of the conference with 612 points in la st y e a r’s SWC m eet, R ice w as next to the bottom with only 63. PATTERSON DOESN’T expect the Owls to be much stro n g er this year. Texas Is favored to whip the Owls even with its second string. But P atterson tak es nothing aw ay from R ice’s John Allen, who finished fifth in the conference in th e IOO y ard b reastro k e and tenth in the 200 y ard breastroke. Texas returns to th e G regory Gym Pool Feb. 5, for another con­ ference outing with A rkansas. SUPERBURGER SPECIAL ^ meet your friends 1/3 lb. chopped steak with lettuce, tom ato, and our own secret sauce. *Free O rder French Fries Now Thru Saturday Jan. 29 W ith New Superburger Regular $1.19 Value Only 89e SAVE 30c A MUST! f BULLETIN NEW YORK (AP)—The New York Giants of the National Football League quarterback Fran traded Tarkenton to the Minnesota Vikings Thursday for wide receiver Bob Grim, quar­ terback Norm Snead, run­ ning back Vince Clements plus two draft picks. The Vikings, last season's National Conference Central Division champions, gave up this year’s No. I draft pick and 2 selection. year’s No. next SWC Notes Former Texas Trainer Dies By The Associated Press Milton “ K el” Kelley, SI, athletic train er a t the U niversity to 1944, died Wed­ from 1926 nesday. Kelley, a law g rad u ate of the U niversity of K ansas, invented a line of knee pads and equipm ent h angers which w ere once widely used in athletics . . . RICE UNIVERSITY announced T hursday th at Kim K aufm an, a sophom ore g uard on the Owl been team_ basketball declared scholastically ineligible for the rest of the season. has Coach Don Knodel said it is his understanding th a t K aufm an would rem ain in school and seek to regain his eligibility. K aufm an, from Muncie. Ind., had played in all lo gam es for the Owls and w as a sta rte r in nine. He w as in season scoring with 113 points for a 7.5 average. . . fifth D istance ru n n er Ricky Y arbor­ ough will be the only Texas en try in the Oklahom a City Invitational Indoor M eet to be held Saturday. Y arbrough w ill en ter the open mile. run a 4:03.8 Y arbrough h as m ile and assistan t track coach Bill M iller said he felt Y arbrough should “ be able to hold his ow n.” k a r a t e A N D SELF DEFENSE Classes begin Feb. Is l and will m eet on Tuesdays & Thursdays Beginners A dvanced 9-10 p.m. 7:30-9 p.m. UNIVERSITY Y 2 330 G u a d a l u p e ■CHARCOAL! HAMBURGERS 411 W . 24th . 472-5032 Thoroughbred Farms You can buy a farm & country home on nearly a half acre lot, with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, vaulted ceilings, shag carpeting, patio, central heat and air conditioning, a country garden kitchen and a 2 car garage for $163.45* a month, and nothing down. (You better hurry!) Hedd back to the country. Get back that sense of pride and security. The feeling of neighborliness. The room to grow and expand. \ ^ L T S at Thoroughbred farms. A sk about a Farmer’s Home Loan on a 3 or 4 bedroom home, exquisitely designed fo r private, but open, indoor/outdoor living—country living, with stables, riding trails, acres of wide, open green belt parks, and conveniently located in the Del Valle School System, within minutes of Bergstrom and Downtown. For country leisure and city conveniences, drive the trails to Thoroughbred Farms. (You’ll get more home for your money!) Randy Harvey Joey's Nightmare One day about a year ago the phone in Joey Aboussie’s Wichita Falls home ran g for what seem ed like the hundredth time that day. the state’s It was Bob Hope. Aboussie, a high school senior and one three running back of prospects, was impressed. Not enough to sign with SMU for which Hope called, but still impressed. top That was one of the finer moments for the Wichita Falls blue chipper. Most of the three months while he was being recruited was a nightmare that didn’t end until he signed with Texas. Aboussie, relaxing in his tenth floor room in J e ste r, nearly b reak s out into a cold sw eat recalling recruiting. He has only pity for those hunted high school athletes who c a n ’t sign aw ay th eir n igh tm ares until Feb. 8. Rice for Dinner “ It got to w here I hardly ev er got to see m y p a re n ts,” Aboussie recalls. “ I would e a t th ree m eals a day aw ay from home. It would be SMU for breakfast, TOU for lunch and Rice for dinner. I didn’t w ant to go home when I got some free tim e because the phone w as alw ays ringing.” Aboussie says he felt like telling some of the schools to leave him alone. But he n ev er did. “ But they ju st took up a lot of tim e I really didn’t have to s p a re .” h" says. As a result, Aboussie feels the highly specialized business of recruiting should be curbed. “ T h ere's a lot of p ressure put on by the schools,” he says. “ You have to learn to develop a trained eye. T here's a lot of under the table stuff that goes on.” Aboussie wouldn’t be specific about the “ under the table stuff.” But he adm its being offered ca rs by several schools. He says he knows players in the Southwest Conference driving new c a rs, courtesy of the athletic departm ent. “ But you c a n ’t base a decision that will affect four y e a rs of your life on a c a r or a call from Bob Hope,” he says. “I was im pressed by these things. But th ere are other things th at are m ore im p o rtan t.” Sooner Fan Aboussie has alw ays been an Oklahoma fan since his brother went there. But he decided to go into recruiting with an open m ind. He cam e out a Longhorn. “ I t’s funny,” he says. “ They don’t try im press you here. They show you to the cam pus and their records over the past few’ years. H ere it is, if you like it, sign. If you don’t, go som ew here else. I f s that sim ple.” liked Aboussie it as did high school team m ates Mike H ardage and F red Currin. But another W ichita F alls blue chipper— q uarterb ack Law rence W illiam s—w ent to T exas Tech. “ I w as surprised when he signed with T ech,” Aboussie says. “ The four of us had gotten together and decided we would go to the sam e place. Rut the sam e T hur­ sday night I signed with Texas, he signed w ith Tech.” T here are a lot of things about recruiting Aboussie will never be able to forget no m a tte r how hard he tries. T here a re other things he doesn’t want to forget. And as he sits in his room in J e ste r, far rem oved from frenzy of a y e a r ago, you can alm ost hear him say, “ Thanks— thanks for the m em o ry .” IMPORT SALE! DOLLAR D E V A LU A TIO N W ILL RAISE PRICES S O O N STOCK UP A T THESE L O W PRICES N O W ! D R IV E A L IT T L E — S A V E A L O T I * <■' I 3 ct 1 / 2 ct 3 4 ct I ct AQUATIC WORLD 812 BRENTW O O D UNIVERSAL AQUARIUM 1617 C FERGUSON RD. 5 GAL. TANKS IO GAL TANKS ARUANA NEONS 5.98 BUNCH PLANTS m SUNSET VARIATUS 4 for I.) 4 for 1.00 5.50 RED WAG PLATIES 4 for 1.00 0 for 1.00 GOLD CRESCENTS 3 for 1.00 PISCO BRANDT from PERU 80 p r . ................ GALLIANO ITALIAN LIQUEUR 80 pr. HENNESSEY COGNAC Bras A m e 80 p r . ...... IRISH WHISKY Pride of Kilarney 8 yr. old 80 pr. CHIVAS REGAL 12 yr. old SCOTCH 84 p r . ...... LANG’S LIGHT SCOTCH 86 p r . .............. JOHNNIE WALKER RED SCOTCH 86 pr. .5th 6.49 ,5th 8.09 5th 7.49 5th 4.95 .5»h 8.09 .5th 4.39 5th 6.19 GERMAN WINES MOSEL BLUMCHEN 70 LIEBFRAUMILCH '69 MAY WINE 3 5ths for S3 LAMBRUSC0 C H IO L O 5th 1 .0 7 FULL QUARTS — Calamassi STRAW -COVERED BOTTLE CHIANTI Italy 99* NEW CALIFORNIA JUG WINE GOLD PEAK BURGUNDY Gallon 3 . 9 9 PRAGER BOHEMIAN BEER 6 c a n s ................95 Chicago Bear Job Goes to Assistant CHICAGO (A P)— Abe Gibron, an assistan t Chicago B ear coach since 1965, signed a m ulti-year coach co n tract as new head T h ursday. He Jim Dooley, who w as fired after the B ears lost th eir five final gam es of the 1971 N ational Football league season. replaces Gibron, 53, a big, boisterous m an who m ingled freely with B ear players on and off the field, line coach on served a s both offense and defense since joining the B ears in 1965 a fte r five years as line coach for the Washington Redskins. OWNER George H alas, clearing the the coaching decks before the NFL player draft sta rt of Tuesday, th at Gibron's contract was for an unannounced duration. said B ear coaching tenures w ere previously held by H alas on four se p arate 10-year stints, from 1920 to 1967; Luke Johnson and Hunk Anderson, co-coaches from 1942- 45; Ralph Jones, 1930-32; P addy D riscoll, 1956-57; and Dooley, 1968-71. D o o l e y , Also B ear organization m an, w as fired by H alas shortly a fte r the C hristm as holidays, TTie en tire roaching a 31 50 41 OO 125 00 225.00 275*00 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP F»OJ Commodore Perry Hotel AUSTIN 476 0178 staff, except Gibron, w as also given its w alking papers. Dooley’s dism issal followed a disappointing 6-8 record afte r the B ears compiled a m oderately im pressive record a t midseason. G i b r o n w as w ith the P hiladelphia E agles and B ears for two seasons before he becam e an assistan t coach of th e Red­ skins. He w as with the Redskins for five years. Crenshaw Ups Tourney Lead in D e f e n d i n g cham pion Ben torrid Crenshaw continued his pace the M assingill Tour­ nam ent with a five-under p a r 67 T hursday a t M orris W illiams Golf Course to in crease his lead to 16 strokes over senior Tom Kite J r. Crenshaw, defending national individual cham pion and W alker Cup altern ate, now has a 268 total through four rounds of play in the eight round It w as his second straig h t 67 on the M orris W illiams afte r playing the first two days a t the Austin Country Club. tournam ent. course K ite shot a one-over p a r 73 for a 284 total while B rent Buckm an had a 69 for a 287 total to rem ain in third place. The tourney continues Monday a t the Austin Country Club before moving to Austin M unicipal Golf Course Tuesday. I Guitars — Guitars Guitars — Guitars — G c (SALE ENDS M A R C H 1st) All Ventura Guitars 15% off (steel string or nylon) A ll Recorders A ll Guitar Strings 10% off 10% off ’ $50 Dulcimer ---------- Now $39.00 CP c 3-* CU WI enc . Ie at WI 3? Of ta I ut u. <0 '5 0 WI <0 *5 0 3 0 3 0 WI L. •a *5 0 jj**l F hium ’i H o b . Admtnlrtntfoa u l t : C u t Brie* 917JOO.O* JE?!"1!? ! Clod n j co * $391.00. Unpaid ‘n lm re H 7.500.00 la 396 equal monthly payments of * 163.45 including .principal, interact, taxes and insurance. 7 1 / 4% Anana! Percentage Bain. ( J J s n o u t ADAMS a AUSTIN, TK A* I SCHLITZ BEER 24 NR Btls............................. 4.59 $39 Dulcimer ---------- Now $24.00 - II - I -.ll- * 1'“ ) I 12th & RED RIVER 476-8990 1809 G U A D A LU P E 471-5903 L IQ U O R SPECIALS IN T O D A Y 'S A U S T IN - STATES- M A N W e also have Kalimbas, Harmonicas, Kazoos, etc. AMSTER MUSK & ART 1624 L A V A C A CENTER 478-7331 Guitars — Guitars — Guitars — Guitars Steers Host Terry, Hogs By ED SPAULDING Assistant Sports Editor Describing any team’s offense as a one-man show is probably inaccurate but keep your eye on No. 45 for Arkansas Saturday and you won’t miss too many shots. No. 45 belongs to Razorback guard Martin Torn’. He likes to shoot, and he can be deadly. Ask Texas AAM. Terry bombed the Aggies out of Fayetteville a week ago with 46 points. Check with Southern Illinois. Terry gunned in 40 points on the Salukis. And while Texas has to be conscious of other Razorback® like Vernon Murphy and Dean Tolson, Coach Leon Black Is aware that his Longhorns can go a long way toward getting back in the Southwest Conference race if they are able to contain the point-crazy Terry. THE LONGHORNS and Razorbacks tangle at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, with Texas needing a win to stay close to undefeated Texas Tech. While Arkansas will bring the SWC® worst over-all record (4-11) Into Gregory Gym, Black is well aware of the talent Arkansas has. "Arkansas just has real fine personnel,’’ Black says. "They had one of the top IO freshman teams in the nation last year and they've added three or four good junior college transfers. We have to expect them to be real tough.” Preseason guesses had the Razorbacks competing for the SWC tide, but a 3-9 nonconference record pretty well ended such dream*. Coach Lanny Van Eman anticipated a m u c h improved Arkansas team this winter after seeing his club finish the 1971 SWC race with a 1*13 record. Off court problems *eem to have been Arkansas’ downfall. Consider: guard Aimer Lee, Arkansas’ leading scorer a year with 19.2 points a game, has seen almost no action this fall; freshman standout Tolson, a starter in earlier games and still averaging about IO a game has played little; and Murphy was suspended from the team last month for disciplinary reasons. Tolson averaged 30.4 as a freshman, second only to Texas’ Larry Robinson. He now sees his action coming off the bench for brief spells, and disciplinary measures may be responsible in bis case as well, though a bout with meningitis last summer reduced the 6-8 Tolson to a rail-thin 180 pounds. Partly because he expects Tolson to be in reserve Saturday, Black says "Arkansas has a fine bench. They’ve got a lot of potentially good players.’’ ROBINSON (19.1) continues to pace Longhorn scoring, but Tech found a way to reduce his effectiveness with tenacious guarding by Ron Douglas. "We can still go to Larry, even when he's guarded that way,” Close Game Expected Yearlings, Leopards Tangle Frtday, January 28, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 Black says. "Larry just has to keep moving and he'll get open. And we have to counter that defense by going to someone else tor the shot.” Tech was able almost to stop Texas’ offense by sticking to Robinson and Scooter Lenox, and Baylor used a similar tactic in the second half at Waco to slow Texas scoring. Tho ‘Horns’ best offensive weapon in the last 20 minutes of the win over Baylor was the free throw. Black claims that despite its appearances in recent games, Texas has more than a two-man offense, and that his players have to react to the defense and go to someone else. SWC NOTES: Rice visits TCU in the SWC’s televised game of the week Saturday. The start time is earlier than usual, 12:30 p.m. Other conference games find Baylor traveling to Texas A&M and front running Texas Tech hosting SMU. . . . Though the Razorbacks won only one SWC game in 1971, it was a memorable one, an 88-87 overtime decision over Texas in Gregory Gym. Two I/>nghoms, Lynn Bowden and Jimmy Blacklock, missed free shots which could have forced a second overtime in that one. P O S .r r c a A T E X A S L a r r y R o b i n s o n , 6-® E r i e G r n * r u r t h , 6-6 B. O . Rro«ter hn ui», R I # .Timmy R ln rk ln rk , R-l S e o o t e r L e n o x , 6-1 A R K A N S A S Dow* ( o m p h a li A o r n o n M u r p h y L arr y Rnv, 6-!> M a r t i n T r r r v , 6-4 J o e l H e ll i e r , 6 3 RT aa Use Texan Classified Ads By ANTHONY STASTNY Sports Assistant the The "Scrappy Bunch” returns to Gregory Gym at 5 p.m. Texas Saturday when Yearlings t h e Temple Junior College Leopards the coaches of both in what teams expect tough to be a contest. tip-off against "They’re a fine team,” said Freshman Head Coach Bennie Lenox, analyzing the group that will test his Yearlings, who need a victory to remain above the .500 mark on the season. The Texas freshmen take a 4-3 season record into the contest, while the Leopards are also slightly above .500 with a 12-10 ledger. AND LENOX’s appraisal of the visitors indicates the game will be as close as the records. strong and big, quick.” said Lenox, sizing up the Temple team. "They're The big man for the Leopards is 6-8 postman Julius Howard, but the whole team looked larger than life after a 96-95 overtime victory over perennial junior college power San Jacinto. San Jac was ranked No. 2 in the nation at | the time. But Temple Coach Bob Scott has respect for the Texas fresh­ men. “I saw the Baylor Cubs, and they impressed me,” he said. them play ★ SALE * SHEEP SKIN RUGS M an y Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SALE * Various kinds, colors - 5fle per ft. ‘ ‘ T e x a s La a well-balanced club,” he added. "They run and shoot well.” beat the Leopards, if tho fresh­ men forsake costly errors, and play “intelligent basketball.” Scott did not see the Yearlings in their last outing against the Texas Tech Picadors, however, when the club shot a meager 35.3 percent from the field. Lenox feels that his club can "We need to improve our hall handling and avoid the had fouls and turnovers,” Lenox said. Lenox said his starting lineup of last week will be the same with Jam es Fallon (6-7, 180) at Weekend Sports UNIVERSITY FRATERNITIES Beta Theta Pi and Alpha Tau Omega meet in a charity football game at 2 p.m. Saturday at House Park. Former Longhorns James Street and Bill Bradley will he public address announcers while Scott Palmer and Jim Bertelsen are referees. The admission price for tile Armadillo Bowl is 50 cents. Proceeds will go to the Darrell Royal Workshop for mentally retarded children. THE UNIVERSITY SOCCER CLUB hosts A ugustan College of South Dakota at 3 p.m. Sunday on the freshman football field. It is the first competition of the spring for the Longhorns, Texas state champions for the fifth straight season. TEXAS’ SWIM TEAM sees Southwest Conference action in Houston against Rice at 3:50 p.m. Friday in the league opener for both squads. The Longhorn.-; meet SMU in Dallas at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in another crucial SWC match. COACH LEON BLACK’S Longhorns host Arkansas a,t 7:30 p.m. Saturday. KOKE-FM will carry the game live beginning at 7:25 p.m. Tho Yearlings face Temple Junior College in a nonconference tilt at 5:15 p.m. BULL C R E E K PARTY B A R N & STABLES (formerly J a y c e e s ) Parties • Hayrides Horses — $2.00 an Hr. Fm. Rd. 2222 (west of Austin) 345-0348 W lllO O 6509 N . L A M A R Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE T e x a n Staff Pho to by JO HN VAS B E E R E M . Tip for Two Longhorn sophom ore Larry Robinson tips in two points in Tuesday night's loss to Texas Tech. Red Raider Ron Douglas (22) screens out Texas center B G . Brosterhous as Tech's Richard Little ( l l ) and Ralph Palomar wait for a rebound. Texas hosts Arkansas at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Littler Leads Williams Open (AP) SAN DIEGO - Gene Littler birdied seven of eight holes in one stretch, fashioned a 66 and established a two-stroke lead Thursday in the first round of the $150,000 Andy Williams-San Diego Open golf tournament. Among the afternoon victims of wind and cold were pretourney favorites Jack Nick! a us and Lee Trevino. Nicklaus, seeking his sixth victory in seven starts, had a 73 and Trevino was two over par at 74. Littler, who had failed to make the cut in his last two starts, led by two over club pro Paul Harney, Jim Colbert and a 27- y e a r - o l d Japanese longshot, TaJcashi Murakami, tied at 68. Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes Capitol Saddlery J J S Austin, Texas 478-9309 JUSTICE STABLES RIDE BACK TO NATURE HORSES $3.00 per hour HAY RIDES I PICNIC FACILITIES E. 19th I Milo Past Travis State School FOR RESERVATIONS 926-0493 VILLA CAPRI RE ST AUK. ANT Students Sunday Night Special Complete Dinner for $3.25 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak Just present your blanket tax or Auditor's receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional O N L Y 2 B L O C K S F R O M M E M O R IA L S T A D IU M WmOf V E A T E R 4 o f COME IN 4 SEE FOR.YOU! 2021 GUADALUrt IN CEN TER THE BEST IN VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS 100% GUARANTEE — MODERN FACILITIES EXPERT ON VALVE & ENGINE REPAIRS BRAKES TUNE UPS CLUTCH — TRANSMISSION — ELECTRICAL OPEN SATURDAY — BankAmericard Master Charge W E H A V E A C O M P L E T E P A R T S DEPT. GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE 1621 EAST S IX T H 477-6797 NO LIMIT — CASH & CARRY SPECIALS GOOD FRIDAY A SATURDAY CENTENNIAL PAY-LESS • 2932 Guadalupe • 19th and Chlcon • 2123 E a s t 7th • 6309 Cameron (Beat;ait Square! • 51 st & C a m ero n Rd. • 6534 North Lamar STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKIES inoo I0NGH0RN COMMEMORATIVE BOTTLES 36 PROOF 7 YEAH OLD STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY D ill IU .77 WILD TURKEY 86.8 Pr. 7 Year O ld .......... 5th 6.59 BLEN DED WHISKIES SEAGRAM'S 7 CROWN 86 Pr................... 5th 4.39 IM PORTED CANADIAN WHISKIES SEAGRAM’S V.O. 86.8 P r . .............. 5th 5.69 IMPORTED SCOTCH WHISKIES DESMOND & DUFF or KINGSTON 80 P r......... 5th 3.59 BALLANTINES 86 Pr. ....................... 5th 5.99 JOHNNIE WALKER Red Label 86 Pr........... 5th 6.19 CUTTY SARK 86 P r . ........................ 5th 6.59 RUM BACARDI 80 P r.............................. 5th 4.19 VODKA TAAKA 80 Pr., Equivalent to $2.95 5th SMIRNOFF 80 P r . .................. Full Quart Full Quart 3.69 4.99 GIN SEAGRAM'S 90 P r . .......................... 5th 3.79 B E E R FALSTAFF Case of 24 Glass C a n s................ 4.09 SCHLITZ Case of 24 Glass C an s.................. 4.59 WINE MATEUS ROSE Imported from Portugal... 5th 2.25 F ILL O D O U G H - G R E E K O L IV E S L E B A N E S E B R E A D -F E T A C H E E S E VINE LEAVES - TWINING TEA AVAILABLE ONLY AT 2932 GUADALUPE post, and the Texas "four guard” unit consisting of Ed Marks (6-4, 175), Mark Anthony (6-1, 190), Chris Voegele (6-3, 170) and Jay Lapeyre (6-1, 170). Fallon should have a busy I night, as he draws the assign- j ment to cover Temple's tallest ; player and leading scorer, at 26.5 j points per game, Howard. S T E R E O • H O M E & C A R • R A D IO S • T.V. • TAPE R E C O R D E R S tapes, needles, batteries SALES & SERVICE ® p BEDWAY RADIO 897 W. 19th 478-6609 EUROPE J GROUP FLIGHTS • NY/LUXEMBOURG 2 M ay 2 2 /A u g . 21 May 2 6/A u g . 24 II May 3 0/A u g . $195 ▼ ■ wm0 A J DALLAS/N.Y. # 1 9 9 9 9 ? (Rtrn. Any Day) R T / p l u i T a x ^ Call 478-9343 £ H A R W O O D • T R A V E L S E R V IC E 2428 GUADALUPE CHARLIES 403 W. 19 for Delivery 476-0633 105 E. 7th • 318 South Congress • 3216 S. Congress HOOK'em HORNS Commemmorative Bottle A Collectors Item 86 pr. ..................................................s. 10.95 M ATTING! SEAGRAMS ,Y & MOORE so pr 7 CROWN •• ---------- . . . . . . . ------ S C O T C H ---------------- * ---------- JOHNNIEWALKER RED 86 pr. ...5»h 6.19 j CHARLIE’S SCOTCH, 80 pr 5th 3.79 BALLANTINES 86 pr...................5th 5.99 5th 3.09 » 4 J 9 SMIRNOFF V O D K A -,................... BACARDI! SOUTHERN SEAGRAMS GIN (UM - p..... ■COMFORT PT. 4.89 5th 5.69 ....................» 3 .7 9 IOO pr W IN E BEER G U IL D R O S E 5th L A N C E R S ...............5th ...5 th M A T E U S R O S E M A R Q U E S ............. 5th B O O N E 'S AP P LE ..5th .49 S H I N E R ...........24 Ret. 3.59 2.99 M IC H E L O B . . . 6 I /w a y 1.39 . . . . 2 4 can* 4.29 2.25 ! F A L S T A F F .88 M IL L E R S ........24 l/ w * 1 9 .95 I O L D M IL W A U K E E G U IL D M U S C A T y 2 gal. 1.19 3 Q T S .......................... 1.39 WANTED CAMP COUNSELORS (Alive) COLLEGE MEN A N D W O M E N (Who Like Working With Children) — by— CAMP LONGHORN on Inks Lake For Boys For Girls "America's Number I Camps" Choice of 3 Terms June 5-28 — June 29-J u ly 22 — July 23-A u g . 15 *125 to *225 per term (Room, Board & Laundry Furnished) COUNSELOR INTERVIEWS AND RE UNION by Directors — Helen Frady, Bill Johnson, Tex Robertson and Bob Hudson FORTY ACRES CLUB Monday Jan. 31 10:00 A.M. Till 5:00 P.M. F o r S a l e F o r S a l e S e r v i c e s R o o m s A p a r t m e n t s , F u r i m . A p a r t m e n t s ,; F u r n . T I 1 - 4 o i w n i i l C D m i I I a P a g e 8 F r T 3 a y , J a n u a r y 2 8 , 1 9 7 2 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G B A T E S E a c h W o rd ( I S w o rd m in im u m ) $ ..........$ .07 E a c h A dd itio nal T im e 06 Stu d en t ra te one tim e .......... *■••75 E a c h ad dition al w o rd ......... $...0o 20 C o nsecutive Issues IO w o rd s 15 w o rd s 20 w o rd s 1 co l. inch ...............................§38 00 inch 2 col. 3 col. inch 4 col. inch C lassified D isp la y I colum n x one inch one tim e * Z-in E a c h A dd itio nal T im e ................................... * Jt . W ................ f iS 'JX ......................................... SIO.OO ................................ ................................ ............ ......... $ 2-00 SL.0.00