T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The Universit*• of Texas at Austin Vol. 72, No. 89 Please Recycle This Newspaper AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NC j i i 4 1972 Ten Cents Twelve Pages 471-4401 M * -IF (•ULAK TAMS1 mum i s t mf S M 1* «$« w i f • * * J p» fl i ^ E K l i i K C I VO I L A R E D O ! , ss* rt y. ivmm *-, t> 41> *'*£i * ie** i t*m$4iu!u :•« M'Sm ^k*S4HI0Si#-®‘ * . ll\Q L A R E D O M } f c a B J £ U * « u < .C o (n e r e i i “*« 4 *Jr -to* tv • ji L A R E D O I •*...* . J I r n . i i I . mumm* A0B Jfij f Mr Jfa A which tm MI boy ic i hang lite fa d e d hop s in the harsh n oonday sun o f Nuevo Laredo. W it h his m odern M exico on the m ove was Karen W iles, a U n iversity student. tho reason for his haste undisclosed, speeds p a s t a wall of old posters, it s c erta in he's qoing places. The p h o to g rap h e r in this study of hustle, though, Young Man in a Hurry k'irjUj by UA BKN W il.lv Demo National Chairman Under Fire (A P ) _S a ­ ing W A S H I N G T O N t! e ne xx fxi*n e of rx*:tuicratic P direction folioti in rt- pf- ctrl r»nt Nix >ri’s land- slide re electim I f£u ‘-.c-'vk, fhi* Ie:jders of tlie DenSficrati c Govt ruers C. I UCH* Mondo y urged party ("haim n Jean Weshwood to resign. “ I would Ila •f. to say M.-s. W e twooil is what’s wr it;g w th the IVrnof Ta1 i c I Mr tv,” a lid Ark’*’ s is Gov, Dale Bum [.ere fec. 3. \ FO R M \ L res-bu ti ai asking Mrs. ’Vt*s‘ u Rxi to step down could tie passed at that t me, he s lid, unless she re-signs before t' rvj, wiii' the p;.miens fl ing for lier to do.” “ would be he said, Tile if?-ye tr Id Mrs. Westwood was va at!<>•:mg in Miami Monday, but an aide to the first woman chairman of either ma tor party said she is standing by !r*r st cement last Thursday that she ".ill resist efforts to o j st ber. “ •IKAN' WESTWOOD is ail a and we’] a: I intend*, to remain < n the job. ' «•• ,e Sa ! at that time. She said she has been lining up support among DMC members and thinks she can defeat any effort to Vote I er out. Mrs. VVestw' kxI’s opponent*, who are known to include some leaders of the A F L CIO. several Democratic members of Coup “ss and mar y of the Democr ti governors, gay she is too closely associated with Sen. George McGovern and party reforms inspired by McGovern to be ef­ fect ive as party chief. Manv of the anti West wood Democrats including former party I-ofor treasurer Robert S Ira u s of Texas fur the post. But several other names have been frequently men­ t i o n e d , former Chairman La vrer ce F. O Brien. New* York State Democratic Chairman Joseph Crangle. and McGovern’s Southern California campaign cltairrnan diaries Manat. the five governors meeting Monday did not discuss possible rrplnceme us. “ We don’t have a candidate at this point,” Maine Gov. Kenneth Curtis said. B l MI*MKS Cl id Oti cis present Mi nday w ere Minnesota Gov. Wendell Anders ai and Florida Gov. Rouble Askew. Utah (hv. Calvin Hampton, the sixth in Hawaii and could not attend, Bumpers said* immittee mer ••en, was Austin To Receive Federal Payments IG ( R MU I HOM USON At ■ citv budget v b! us vive a Of S? ■ Nil h The bonUT sharing plan in two inst d by the ray balance aul < Randy Turn the City r m of the rover a and how mud are still being money will be paid alf will be t c< fixed I »• fit !>er w .th the listn 'ive a>-lst.mt to Mondav that detail* ' plan—exactly when Austin will receixe— ;Ut in Washington. “ W H A T E V E R VMOI NT of m c. the federal revenue xharinf pn pram allo's to Austin, the program v. s r it written into the 1972 city budget,’’ Turner ‘■ald. tie a bonus beearn* it vt, “ T. dr everything into consideration the strings,” rciati*. eD free of < \ r Turner said. {): u pi,'bac, the city faces concerning Hie revenue sharing program is that the c y own and operate* it., own power plant. \ \ VKI\Bf.F, a the revenue sharing P gram is lo a1 tax effort. Sin- e tim city ojierates I c electric plant, local tax base mw*'red and the fetleral government re. /r.i/cs that as little tax effort. -Vc ie c;'y officials believe it is unfair to ( at Atis'u, allotment under the prognim bf* O U M * the city runs the electrical utilities rather th in private enterprise. ( tv Mon u:er Dan Davidson does not e at definite proposals to place tiefore e City Council concerning the revenue r: ' c\ said Joseph U fo, budgrf Federal guide!it lie used L r pu! spoliation and en pocify that the money safely, public trati­ lt cental protection director. Other fire.is the gr .ernment wants the for include health, recreation, and aged, money soda I service financial administration and libraries. fur the |xj< The money may be used for capital improvements, since Austin's City Charter allows such expenditure of federal revenue sharing money. IIH XI S H N City (u iu icil will make de IMO's on how and where the mone* will or used after Davidson makes his recommendations to the council. ,,()ur operational and maintenance need* are pretty well taken care of, which lend* me to believe most of tin* money will be Used for capital items, but the final der ision rests with the City Council,” Turner said. Papers D uo Loses Plea For Hearing WASHINGTON (A P - T h r Supreme Court ruled seven to two Monday that the Pentagon papers trial of Daniel Ellsherg and Anthony Russo could be government resumed disclosing the to defendants. without its wiretap logs the TI e ruling, which drexx dissents from Justices William O. Douglas and William J. Brennan Jr., was in the form of a routine a s i d e that Ellsberg's and Russo’s petition for a heurin . The order contained no com­ ment on the questions they had raised. turned ruder the had ordered Doug s trial suspended In Ju ly to allow' Ellsberg and Rtiss i ?» De an appeal that contended the defendants and tho r lawyers had the wiretapping ri "it a to examine to determine whether De record- bunging produced illegal evidence or leads for the prosecution. Douglas said the court -houJd have i granted fbi* defendants a hearing immunity the execul; e resolve what f branch has in setting up soho/m**-' pervasive fnrcc'o surveil lance nationals that is Unrelated to espionage.” Trial Judge Matt B y me of D k Angora and in San I S, Circuit Court Francisco had ruled that the xviretapping wats irrelevant to the prosecution. the of Daniel Ellsberg A P Ph. .to.s Anthony Russo 0 V t-' r*o v ( Hanoi Negotiator veluring to Paris For Peace Talks SAIGON Vietnam peace talk.*. left I' i ii I k* (AF’)— T/* Due T a . North lr* P * t .» U.S. side proposed another private meeting the between the United States and Democratic Republic of Vietnam (D RV N ) to solve the signing of the agreement on ending the war and restoring peace Vietnam, in “ Once again, to show its good will and seriousness, the D RVN has ■ /reel with the above proposal of the U.S. side. On Nov. M, 1972. Comrade I D u e Tho, special adviser at the Paris talks, left Hanoi far P i ris to join Minister Xuan Thuy at a private meeting with tie U.S. side ” Meanwhile. Kissinger and his top aldm Gen. Alexander M. Hate conferred with President Nixon at Camp David. Md., flew’ bv helir | Monday ni rht, the? Andrews Air Force Bairn about 12 from Washington, a president!,-)j pre; said. Ti e White Pm sc • • * , >s-i destination until hour- after their ( ST departure fr rn the moun compound. Presidential refuse disclose where Kissinger and Ham st >oko siren ■"> g after landing at An In • >. He ie* pter* returning the President or his aides front ('amp David do not normally land there. Tim airmort is frequer.dy n* > I • rturn pm.;! for pre idential nu.sG is is abroad. WASHINGTON (Al said Monday there may be a th additional consulta lions with Vietnamese berend “ one negotiating session outlined last r presidential adviser Henry A. KLs.si the Ziegler told newsmen he < Confirm nor dptiv reports ti and chief Si nth Vietnamese Due Tho would meet this week ' But id when such a taken p ace, Ziegler said, “ there will lie further consultations required” with South Vietnam and perhaps Hanoi. Tiff. PR U SS spokesman dc led this w >n a shift from the statement Kissinger made lost month in which he predicted that “ what tertial ss to be defile can be se*tie-} in one more negotiating session with the North I etnamese negotiators, lasting. T would think, no more than three or four days.” {hat told reporters Ziegler als • A ’exander Haig, dc brought a letter to President Nixon South Vietnamese President Nguyen Thieu when he from S Monday. Ziegler confirmed that Haig Kissinger’s returned •'jaiI’ n las- week carrying a ‘ ixon lei'er address* ] to Tliieu. Nixon met with Ham and Kissinger for an hour md a half a? (.'amp David. M i , receiving the report of the Ha g m ss: >n to Saigon, said deputy prose secretary Gerald L. Warren. ’to meeting, bot IR r a-d After Kissinger at Camp David although V atren said thee were not ex­ pected to stay there overnight. remained Election Miscues Face Correction Bv PAM < III R< II XX ELL Representatives from Voter Instruments and Products told Travis County commissioners Monday they might have made some mDtakos and a ux-ed to c o rre l them bef ire the next eh’Ction. (V IP ) The commissi oners not to discuss t # delay in totaling the Travis County election results Nov. 7. X ll* has a 1157/100 comr,’ ct xvjth * e county to pro*, ide voting erntir menf, educate routev tiersonnel in the use of equipment and to oversee two elections. I the r ur< O N E OF •’ e rn f.len n e *i ne* the commissioners irnohed the nr- -r; ming t i the machines i rd f.-» accent ba Mots from the rough e«h*e where the still had be*'n tern off. Commv.sione’ Richard felt V IP sh mid have Moya said he r, reprogramed election f: rn • r* smooth edge. the n chine*} b r' -e the card.- to accept Moxa als > said I " felt V IP shoid I replace ,*;. e tile. tree broken stylu r*s fj--e of had recommended the stylus “ V IP is fhe-khig imo’ t * re. s ,•* f, -• I ,«s I he high amount of agreed to rep’a ce bunn if thee find flab the problem was due to something w * '.ru­ in the m itor: ds,” M* -v,, -..id k ge and ! “ Iin s ejection wa not really unusu d ,. •». ,, first eVeth n, ,,hv Tliere is: always going to t->e amount of error e-jjexhally when po pie are I familiar with the programing,” Ernie in a \ ineide t where Tom bs. V IP election consultant, said. til rep h ■. ■ i - An 'rom the computer mr i p' -se: r used by • f» j, mming of a card in t t cotnpu’er, Tom bs added. ere Tn tie pnx*ess of removing b e rind and restarting the computer, the boxes were somehow erased. T ie information w s re-entered in the computer, but it slowed ti e process down,” Toombs s. id. Moya has asked County Atty. Ned Granger for- an opinion or. the legat alter­ natives a va iL'i hie for dealing with VII* " V i a fever the county a f o r e; suggc^s, I'm sure we ssiid. ro aion “ XX F XX IU . be cheeking •• V IP to •• be •* *'rp r” *y have insfie- led the equij m e t and made the necessary adjustments *o insure ti; ' next election will go as sinootIily SM it should,” Moxa added. Aith lush she was not complete!; sa ti st (-1 'he electi -n. County Clerk Doris '• •' (f e weather cc! h r T ir^ d a y V in y 7 to 15 mph. iii the rn id-60s. Low Tu he mid-40s. be V. ill wall Budget Board OKs Pay Raise, Parking Lot By DXN D ABN EY Texan Staff Writer A parking lot to la built at lith Street an i Congress Avenue and an over-all 6.8 percent pay raise for tate employes over the next biennourn were two major items approved bx the Legislate e Budget Board (L B B ) Monday “ The Legislative Budget B. god staff recoin- mended that ta** I. ghway department be repaid 51.5 million out of gen -rnI revenue money f<*r the property at lith and Congress slreetji,” Rein Don Cavness of Austin, a member of tile L B B , said. “ There was first a motion to transfer it (the property) to the Parks and Wildlife 0 >m- mission, but they finally voted to repay the $1.5 million out of the State Building Fund and transfer tile property to the State Building Commission.” Tile site would be utilized for a parking garage and a small park. The motion passed by a “ unanimous voice vote” Gayness said, but there will be “ no final action until December’” when the last L B B meeting will be held. Speaker The I.BB, composed of Ut. Gov. Ben Barnes, House eight representatives and senators appointed by them, also recommended $91 9 million in state employe pay raises. Rayford Price and Jim Stewart, director of the Texas Public Em ­ ployes Association, called the pay raise “ woefully short.” Tile T P E A wanted a 13.6 percent across- the board raise effective Sept. I, 1973, with another C S percent raise a year later. Including additional “ anniversary raises,” merit Increases and longevity boosts, tile association's package would cost $114.3 million from general revenue, plus an additional $178.7 million from other funds. Cost of raises recommended by the L B B would be $56.5 million from the general revenue fund, and another $35.4 million from other funds. “ We intend to take our story to the Legislature and to the people.” Stewart -aid. “ Our position is that rn comparing Texas state salaries with other states, we find ourselves in 38th pi aition. That’- not anything for Trvi^ to bi* proud of In addition to the 3 I percent across-the-board the L B B also approved for certain Increases, employes merit raises of up to 3.4 percent in the fiscal year starting Sept. I, 1974. Tile average merit raise for employes—including those who will not get merit increases—would amount to 1.7 percent a vear. Tile pay raises will be included in th* stat* the board will r» budget Jar., 9. Tup pax Legislature, which convenes recommendations could be c! urged bef re tho LH B makes its final budget dea d rn rec* ne* 'n W h ile recom m ending m er:' an “ Most judges are making more than they are worth,” Rep. Richard Slack p l P o e ts said. “ They’ are getting supplements from county tuxes and work three days a week. And rn st pr a little law on the side, in the country,” Sen. Bill Moor* of Bryan *a.)cL FU. nos sud ' to remember .’ was “ u’ljv-t; that higher education didn't get a- gocxl of a pay : -■* the othci emf* es. They a.-* tin *v years bt*hind.” la .st time A ou and I kn*>xv they are no* hurting. Tbev I- lier of Na pl ■* kl* ■ i* ise judge- Rep Jc- a sa id • *o. A I! Si hw;trt7 of Guive-ton h.nd he thougSf #9 'e employe*; would D-nefir from having pa; day rx ery two weeks instead of once a month. Rh is would be a very legitimate pax rats* for people who have to borrow money in the middle of the month to make it to the end of the month,” S thwart! said. Keel said it would cost the state about $100/100 In added clerical ousts to pay employe* twice a month. EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed Language Rule M ay Change Committee To Recommend Lowering Requirement NOW ACCEPTING HALE & FEMALE DONORS IU DAVID PETERSON many people as language after the three semesters are, for the most part, un­ C A S H B O N U S P R O G R A M S FOR REPEAT D O N O R S Austin Blood Components, Inc. O P EN : 8-3 p.m. Tues., Thur., Fri. & Sat. 12:00 N O O N - 7 p.m. W ed. 409 W. 6TH 477-3735 A recommendation to lower thp number of hours of foreign language required for students in tho College of Arts and Sciences will soon be proposed to Provost Stanley Ross, Ttie recommendation will be a by facul ty-student made committee appointed by Ross to i n v e s t i g a t e language requirement, which has been the Discover the power of Musk Oil. Thecxcitingerogenous scentthat has stimulated passion since time began. Now—today—you command its provocative power in full strength Musk Oil byjovan. Earthy, sensual. Musk Oil is the newest rage in perfumes. Just a drop behind thft ear, at the base of the throat, back of the knee will set pulses racing. Suddenly you're more female. And, while you scarcely notice its subtle scent, he will! Why not put its magnetic attraction to work foryou? "'N JOVAN MUSK OIL Yz oz. $5.00 Cosmetics Dept. — Street ii t D iversity C o-op One hour free parking with purchase of $2 OO or more A WIDE SELECTION OF PAPERBACK 50' • \ In the general book J7. A / v f • r ' w a r - J? . / department on the second floor. A special group of quality paper­ backs, all in good shape, all 50c. DISCOUNT BOOK DEPARTMENT Now open in the basement. A good selection of general and technical titles at reduced prices. TSP Board To Consider Repeal O f Editorial Manager's Power criticized by irrelevant. Dr. Paul English, eommittee the essentially chairman, p r o p o s a l s will said Monday "reaffirm the importance of foreign language in the liberal arts education bv increasing flexibility to moot the needs of the student.” THE PROPOSAL would reduc e tho number of .semesters required from five to four, with language proficiency courses reduced to th roo semesters. Flexibility is to be increased by allowing for a number of options for the fourth semester, including culture and civilization studies in the studied language or in English pertaining to the area where the studied language is spoken. Another option would two semesters of be take in another profieienev courses to of the first language. to the In addition language requirement, the committee also will recommend making general studies into a program with fewer requirements and more flexibility than it has now and creating bachelor of science degrees in as s p e c i f i c mathematics, which are now under the BA program. fields such Other problems of facuity-student com­ mit) pes are currently studying s t u d e n t {lie library’s counseling funding to students. service and and the its SAID ENGLISH ad­ the is working the ministration hardest it ever has to solve academic problems, but that few students have been helpful. Jean Setzer, a student member of the committee said, "Students SPEED READING COURSE SET TO BEGIN AT U.T. N ational Sp eed Reading Schools announces the fo r­ mation of speed reading classes to be held this fall at U.T. The skills taught in this course will enable a person to read any average length book in less than an hour and understand it better, In addition to rapid re a d ­ ing the course also em pha­ sizes im proved study te ch ­ niques, better test talcing increased con ­ slcifls, and centration and retention abilities. Classes are lim ited to 12 students. G ra d u a te s of the course are guaranteed a reading speed over 1,000 words per minute with a definite in com ­ increase prehension. For those who would like more inform ation, without obligation to enroll, a series of free one hour orienta­ lectures have been tion scheduled. A tte n d the one most convenient for you. M O N , N O V . 13 I, 3, 7 p.m. T U ES., N O V . 14 I, 3, 7 p.m- W E D S ., N O V . 15 IO a.rn, 3 p.m., 7 p.m. T H U R S , N O V . 16 1, 3, p.m. All meetings will be con­ ducted in Sem inar Room of M etho d ist Student C e n ­ ter, 2434 G uad alu p e. concerned with University affairs that affect them—the kind of issues that are discussable and is probably changeable. This because they feel that they are to do not powerful anything.” enough English cited Student Govern­ ment and The Daily Texan as major offenders. He said that Student Government should have more interest in the needs of its constituency. Citing disinterest on the part of The Texan, he said, " I don’t know why The Texan is concerning itself with bras instead of problems that affect 20,(KIO students like the language requirement.” The Texas Student Publications Board (T SP ) of Operating Trustees will meet Tuesday to consider and vote on a resolution that would end The Daily Texan 89'er HAMBURGER FRENCH FRIES 20* DRINKS CE CREAM CUP A L L F O R O N L Y 8 9 c WKL****** • . • * / / ’:/'/■ ' Y 'V '.;'/ t i y . - -v ■' 'h-GYY.,; d y y Ww- - 7 v Y W /.; ...... y .. *:■/?■'., y ’ ‘ ti I ' I) Y‘ y r n Whitman Estate Due To Be Sold Final disposition of the estate of Charles Whitman, who fatally shot 16 people from the University Tower years ago, will be six attorney completed Donald said Monday. soon, F. Nobles Nobles, administrator of the estate, said County Judge J . l f . Watson approved Monday an application to scil the remainder of the estate. The attorney said he had a $1,500 offer from Bobby M. Bums of Wichita Falls to p u r c h a s e the remaining items of the Whitman estate. Burns made the top offer several months ago after Nobles had advertised seven guns to Whitman. belonged that Bums will acquire items 4 through 60, which include seven guns and personal papers. case Victims and survivors in the Whitman last D o c e rn b e r received and divided $32,000 which came from the partial sale of the estate. The $1,500 received from the final sale also will be divided among the group, Nobles said. editorial manager's withhold copy from publication. right to Presently, Robert Milburn, Tho Texan editorial manager, has the authority to withhold publication of any copy, based on Section 17 of the Declaration (if Trust, tho working agreement, between T S I’ and the University Board of Regents. Last Friday the Handliook Revision Committee of the T S P Board voted four to three to seek the repeal of Section 17. changes " It now goes to the board with the eight other Declaration of Trust for the new h a n d b o o k . ' ' Cliff A ve ry, managing editor of The Texan, the said. changes The in in agreement must be marie before certain handbook changes are possible. An announcement of person* appointer! to The Texan Format Committee will ire marie. The F'ormat Committee will study and in redesign the Texan’s preparation the into the new Com­ publication munication#; Complex. for moving format Tile board al*> will consider for appointing a requirements replacement editor for Pearl Magazine, monthly supplement to The Texan. Michael Patterson, tile current editor, will graduate at the end of tile fa!1 se m ester. The Godfather"' would ike you to order your '73 Cactus when you pre-register. You will order one, won't you? CACTUSy e a r b o o k ^ J h e 'I fu n et-a I tj o j f a c ia s h o o f o f ~ jLa u / a n n o u n c e d / In a |j| Ele venth Annual Lecture I H rn 4 Law and the Free Society: 3 LAW WITHOUT ORDER On by LAURA NADER Professor of Anthropology University of California, Berkeley For $299.95 you can buy a Fisher 2V)1 receiver, two Fisher X P 5 6 B speakers and a BSR 31 OX changer with base, dust cover and c ar­ tridge. AU this would normally set you hack $409.80, hut who among you would argue that these are normal times? The fact is that Fisher has discontinued the receiver and made a package deal of the whole system. And even though the receiver is out to pasture it’s still covered with a two year warranty, paris and labor. And of rn rnc e | Wm I H is course the warranty still goes for the rest of the system, 5 \ears for M ODERATOR the speakers and I year for the changer. Edward R. Cohen, Professor of Law, UT Austin. There’s a limited supply of these, so get interested fast. | | COM M ENTATORS; M u s i c R o o m O n e SIV r n Richard N. Adams, Professor of Anthropology, U T Aus­ tin; Robert C. Means, Professor of Law. UT Austin- and Edward R. Cohen, Professor of Law, UT Austin. 23rd and Guadalupe DEAN PAGE KEETON WILL INTRODUCE THE SPEAKERS One hour free parking will. purchase of $2.00 or more BankAmericard & Master Charge Welcome Wednesday, November 15, 2 p.m. CHARIES I. FRANCIS AUDITORIUM LAW SCHOOL University Co-Op One hour free parting with purchase of $2.00 or more. BanlrAmericard & M aster C h a rg e w elcom e Fisher Page 2 Tuesday, November 14, U 72 T h e D a i l y T e x a n In Cuban Hijacking RtKUfMinnrnrmmrn 'IIIHWIIW'II IWBPWBII FBI Shooting Attempt Criticized B y Tho A ssociated P ress T he h ija c k e rs who forced 31 persons a b o ard a Southern A irw ays je tlin e r on a violent jou rney o v e r 3,HOO m iles w ere pic­ tu re d by th eir c a p tiv e s M onday a s squ ab ­ bling, vicious m en who p a sse d out ran so m m o n ey w hile lives of th re a te n in g ev e ry o n e on the p lan e. th e to halt T h ere w as c ritic ism , m eanw h ile, of an a tte m p t by FBI m a rk sm e n the re tu rn of the DC9 to Cuba by shooting out four of its six tire s a s it p re p a re d to leave O rlando, F la . The p la n e ’s wounded co-pilot said the th e shooting “ re a lly p rovoked” hi jacke rs, w ho told him he would be killed a s an exam ple. them “ FT DROVE info p a ss e n g e r Alex H alb e rstad w ere ra v in g m a n ia c s. B efore w ere docile m a n ia c s.” a said. frenzy ,” “ They they th a t, The ended 28-hour n ig h tm a re e a rly Sunday w b"n Hie a ir c r a f t’s bone-w eary pilot b ro u g h t the tw in engine jet, its b a re w heels kicking up -parks, down on a foam -covered ru n w a y in H avana. T he p a ssen g e rs and floun crew , oui of Cuba fiundav by a second Southern IX th injured, wen* four of them T he th re e a ir p ira te s w ere into c u sto d y lr Cuban officials who also c o n ­ ransom m oney, p a sse n g e rs f i s c a t e d taken ;he said . Thp am ount of th e m oney paid the h ija c k e rs—they had d em anded a re c o rd SIO m illion—h as not been disclosed, but one p a ss e n g e r sa id : “ T he w'hole back scat w as full of m o n ey .” to be filed ag ain st TUE FBI said a ir piracy charges w ere expected trio— Identified a s a prison e sc a p e r and two m en w anted ra p e c h a rg e s—in B irm in g h am , Ala. W hether C uba would im m e d ia te ly re tu rn known. the m oney w as not in D etroit on the O rlando w a s the la s t of eight cities w h ere it the a irlin e r w as forced w as c o m m an d eered F rid ay night over A’ab n m a . It w as th e re th at 20 FR I sh a rp ­ shooters blew out tire s a fte r it had picked up m ore fuel. th e p la n e ’s land a fte r to The F B I and Southern have declined to th e the decision to fire at C om m ent on plane. “ I STIBB doubt th e decision to shoot a t th e tire s w hile th e p lan e w as fully loaded w ith fuel and the fuel truck w as so close by, O rlando Police C hief R o b ert Chewriing said. Michael Coff, the m ec h a n ic who refueled th e w aiting jet, said th e fu sillad e of shots je pardized the lives of “ all throe on th e a irp la n e .” “ They shot w hile I w as .still n e a r the a irp la n e ,” he said. “ If they had h it fuel a irp la n e and everyone e ls e .” th a t would h av e b ren tru c k , the it—the AI T E R THE TIRES w ere shot out, Coff sa id , th e h ija c k e rs o rd e re d pilot Bill B aa s to ta k e off and “ he hit full pow er . A gents k e p t shooting, try in g to d isab le the engines. T h e re w as ru b b e r in those en g in es and trem endously. T hey could have c ra s h e d .” they o v e rh e a te d . . Co-pilot Hilly Johnson, hospitalized In a h ija c k e rs M em phis responded the s h a d in g by using him a s a shield to keep the pilot from being shot, th fun b lasted him to show th e ir o th e r hospital, to said th e ca p tiv e s “ they m eant b u sin e ss.” RIBOT HAAS w as quoted by a ham radio o p e ra to r m onitoring b ro a d c a s ts betw een the p lan e and control tow er a s saying, “ Why did they shoot m y tire s o u t? W hoever got funny down th e re su re m essed m e up ” h alf-b ro th er, Tile h ijac k su sp e cts w e re identified as L ew is K . M oore, 27; M elvin C ale, 21, M oore's and H enry D. Ja ck so n , 25. P olice said Moore and Ja c k so n h ad been freed on $500 bond la s t m onth In D etroit a fte r being c h a rg e d with forcible ra p e . Gale e sc a p e d a m inim um s e c u rity prison in T en n essee, w here officials Said he had com piled a good reco rd . from Blacks Arrested for Taking Dallas City Council Hall itself DABBAS (A P J—T h irteen m e m b e rs of an organ izatio n calling the Black and P oor P e o p le’s Council ro-eup cd the D allas C ity Council c h a m b e r Monee;, ma! w ere p rom ptly a rre s te d on c h a r g e s of d iso rd erly conduct. Family Awaits Investigation McCrarys Possibly Linked to 2 2 Unsolved Murders SALTA BARBARA, Calif. IA P )—Tile five m e m b e rs of the Mc­ C ra ry fam ily v.«-ne in .separate prisons and ja ils in th re e d ifferen t • fa te s Mot lay aw aitin g the next ste p in an investigation of a b lo l ly m u rd e r tra il. Only the m other. C arolyn M cC rary, rem ain e d in custody a t S an ta B a rb a ra , w here the fam ily first c am e to legal grief from c h a rg e s ste m m in g from a holdup--hooting case. Since last w e en . when a g a th e rin g of hey officers from se v e ra l s ta 'e s c a m e to S a n ta B a rb a ra to question th e fam ily on at le ast l l m u rd e r cases. D anny M cC rary has gone to c u sto d y in D allas, arid G in g er M cCrary' T a y lo r h a s gone to L akew ood, Colo. Tile tw o ot r r s , fam ily head S h e rm an M cC rary, 47, and Clinger s in N orthern C alifo n ),a the S anta B a rb a ra holdup-shooting. h u sb an d , C p riso n s under se n ten ce M cC arr is in F c ’.som P riso n and T ay lo r is in San Quentin. l R aym ond T aylor, 38. a re in P olice say officials a re a tte m p tin g to develop th e facts in w hat could be a cl u n of 22 unsolved m u rd e rs in the W est, including th e slay in g s of th re e young w a itre sse s in all-night doughnut shops. O fficials s ta rte d to I ak up the c a se s a fte r b a llistic s tests con. in the w ounding of -m gs to vv< pons used tv*' ted •- >. Pf x i- i Biota B rbar.i pol T he b ro th e r and siste r and th e ir m o th e r had beer In S anta B a rb a ra County Ja il on nine-m onth « r ten. . , b o rin g two o th e r fam ily. fugitives—the Im prisoned m e m b e rs of ,n custody f, -■ h a r ­ th e ir T he senior M cC rary and T a y lo r a r e ex pee •*d e r r ltua Iv to he e x tra d ite d for tria l in N evada or Ct ah A feder I v. irran* cha': gm g k id n ap a lre a d y Is on file a t Salt L a k e C.Vv in t e abduction of doughnut shop w a itre ss Sheri I .ne M artin, 17. B ut a u th o ritie s believe M iss M artin ac tu a lly d cd in N ev ad a, a fte r being kidnaped, so officials a re cons.'teeing filing m u rd e r c h a rg e* in th a t sta te ra th e r th an U tah. T h eir s ta tu s in th e o th e r m u rd e r c a se s rem : rn I; s r I osed, b u t none of the fam ily to d a te h a s been c h a rg e d in an y of ti * slayings. the Tile group, led by G eorge H olland, head le a d e rs h ip in n o rm a lly the th e city of .Southern C h ristia n C o nference's O peration B re a d b a sk e t D allas, re se rv e d m ay o r, m a n a g e r’s s e c re ta ry . c h a irs councilm en, tho city m a n a g e r and occupied the th e city for in H olland w as the p ro c ess of read in g a list of IO d e m a n d s w hen tho group w as a rre s te d by a force of 20 city policem en w ho m arch ed into the c h am b e r. T he a r r e s ts c a m e a fte r the group fwd' e the m a y o r leave, first by then by an a ss ista n t police w as a sk ed p ro ’em and chief. Both tim es the group refused. to T hey w ere led q u ietly from One w om an refu sed policem en c a rrie d h e r out. to w alk out the room , two so On the list of d e m an d s w as a call for th e resig n atio n s of M ayor Wes W ise, P o lice Cl ief F ra n k D yson, and City Affy. Alex B e x le y . O ther d e m a n d s included: • A black a ss ista n t police hief • Tw enty four p e rc e n t of the rify (ohs, • sir ce 24 p e rc e n t of th e city is black. Im m e d ia te a rr e s t of th re e officers re c e n tly c le a re d by a g rand ju ry In con­ nection with the u n re late d shooting d e a th s th re e b lack s. T he shootings o ccu rred of Uoilp police w ere a tte m p tin g to m ak e a rre s ts . Of the I? who w ere booked, one w om an. sm all accom panied two by w ho W'as children, w as relea se d . news capsules 79 Countries B an O c e a n D u m p in g LONDON (AP)- An international convention w as signed by delegates of 79 countries Monday banning the ocean dumping of oil, m ercury and cadm ium compounds as well as w astes with high radioactivity level*. ITic convention also prohibits the dumping o f all compounds con­ taining arsonic, copper, fluorides, pesticides, load and /in e into the oceans by s h i p s or aircraft. The convention Is to com e into force next year after ratification by tho signatory countries. Stock M a rk e t Hits A ll-Tim e C lo sin g H ig h NKW YORK (AP) Despite a .setback from adverse Vietnam n e w s , the s t o c k market fought its w ay back up Monday, and the Dow Jones industrial average hit an all-tim e closing high of 997.07. The Dow average of 30 industrial stocks w as up 1.81 for the day and eclipsed by tin t margin the previous record of 993 26, set Friday. The Dow s intraday high, com puted after the end of the session by using the individual highs of each of the JO component stocks, w as logged at 1004 89. Six tim es now-four tin t's in 1966, last Friday and again Monday the market has exceeded the 1,000-mark on an intraday basis but bern unable to close above it. A & M S tu d y in g Texas Suoerport Plan COLI,EDE STATION (AP) T exas A&M University researchers, who have l>een conducting studies on a T exas superport, said Monday that such a dropwaJrr term inal would create 336,770 new jobs in IO years and add V 1 ! billion in benefits to the s t a t e ’s econom y. The figures were released in a report, on a study jointly conducted by the nonprofit T ex a s Superport Study Corp. and T exas A&.M’s in­ dustrial econom ics research division. O f f i c i a l Business Pvt. B il'y D e a n S m ilh , (c). a cc isndi o f m orel0 m g tw o o ffic e rs in a " f r a g g i n g " i n c - d e n t in V ie tn am , a rriv e s fo r his trial in Ft. O r d , C a lif. The jury b e g a n dc ae ra tin g the c a se M o n d a y . Jury Begins Deliberation in Army Fragging’ Trial to te a c h a v erd ict in F T ORI), Calif. (A P )—A m ilita ry ary deli berat rv] for three* h o u rs Monday but the c o u rt­ failed m a rtia l of Bvt. Billy D ean Sm ith, who is accused of m u rd e r in a 1971 V ietnam “ fra g g in g ” incident that killed two young A rm y officers. The co u rt T uesday, when the re su m e its d elib eratio n s. rec e sse d until a .m . jury is e x p e lle d to 9 leg al F ra z ie r, v e te ra n s, E a rlie r, Col. R a w ls the presiding judge, g av e th e ju ro rs, all of in­ th em V ietnam stru c tio n s to help t i iem re a c h a decision in the fir: t fragging tria l to be conducted in file U nited States. the find Sm ith innocent of killing th e officers if g believed his tew m ony th a t he w as sm oking m a riju a n a e lsew h ere w hen th ey died. He also lf m ust jury told re c e iv e W hen the g en e ra l c o u rt-m a rtia l began Sept. 6, PY a/ier ruled that Sm ith could no? the d e a th p en alty . B ut a guilty verdict of p re m e d ita te d m u rd e r would m ean a m a n d a to ry .sentence of life for Sm ith, w hose law y ers say w as re lu c ta n tly d ra fte d info the A rm y in 1970. im p riso n m en t U nlike civilian c o u rts, five guilty ’votes am ong the p an el of sex on c a re e r officers would convict Sm ith A vote fc r a c q u itta l the officers on a 1] counts bv th re e of would set him free. SM ITH, 24, a fu n or bus dr vee nd m ac h in ist from the W atts d istric t of Los V i'DOHttltHftlttlHtttH I W S i HW 1 f it IIH1 t i l tWiltjMi! It! ! I An gel es. pleaded innocent to c h a rg e s he M u •ed a fragm ent itian g ren ad e to kill Est I L T hom as Del wo of C hoteau, Mont., J a id 2nd I / . H ic hard H arlan of D allas, i or M arch 16, lf)71, at Bien Hon A rm y I B ase n e a r S ailo ri. A third officer, P e te r a B H iggins, 25, of H arriso n , N .J., sum I V ved. tin? instead I Tile p iw e c u tio 1 contended th a t Sm ith I di d not m e an to kid the t’.'.'o lieu ten an ts, | injt ta rg e ts w ere his 3 (as Cfun m adding off aer, Clapt. R an d all L l R gby of Vt. Si I. O kla., and 1st Sgt. J B !be Willis of I :g Star v Clap. V a. T he 3 thought I A ronv said Smi th m ista k e n ly th cy were sleep) ng in ’ e q u a rte rs and I cl a tte m p tin g to m u rd e r ll th a rg e d him wit! DI RING T H E tria l, Sm ith the J st and rn testify that he w a s sm oking lf TVa d )liana with 1wo bu d d ies in a n o th e r 9 FOet ion of the b ice w hen the g re n a d e M en plod'ri. One of the friends. H enry S JI took sto ry , bu* *r testified ie m ilitary sowing no I I s ou* .set he could not be believe W hile t1 e judge add: ju ry . Sm ith s a t qui v isib le em otion. At Sept. 6, F ra z ie r ruled he sentenced not given g u ilty . to life the d e a th its kin ! to tie held Fate of Controversial Shuttle Buses Up in Orange and White TEI Fleet May Become Extinct to c am p u s ( ' rn verse! v, he said re d e n ts of L e prof IC J \ MIE CARTER rp x an s t a f f W riter • As Cf* Cm c s s a tle bus Inc. e n tra n t w rh Transport,) Bon E n te rp rise s (T E I) draw?) cloner to irs August expiration d a te , the fate of bus .service on c a m p u s re m a in s a m a tte r of con­ jecture. T he o ra n g e and w hile TEI buses first m ade th e ir a p p u nice in 19t>9 a s an e x p e rim e n t—mo*-! people thought no one w ould tid e them . Since that tim e, the n u m b er of buses 1ms rise n from I) to 12 and tile rid e rsh ip is an »*stirnated to 31) (JOO (huh E ight m idnight. from 7 a .rn lo u ies ru n MAINTENANCE p roblem s have plagued the increasingly, as m ore and m ore people w>! bus t\j>c vehicles w hich a re they the continuous, rough w ear buses crow d onto th e not built receive. for A s tr.k e b \ d iver* last spring brought atten tio n -s as s c i ’, ce w as c u rta ile d for eight to th e bu w eeks. D riv ers asked for b e tte r w ages, higher sa fe ty .standards and recognition of th e ir c h a p te r of the A m algam bed T ra n sit Union T h e st; ike end* -I in April with a co m p ro m ise w ag e In c rea se a p ro m ise fo r g re a te r safety co n ­ c e rn and a n ag ree m e n t with the tra n sit union Now the fu tu re of the alw ays co n tro v e rsial buses Is in question, with se v e ra l a lte rn a tiv e s a v a ila b le : • C om petiti co bidding for a new c o n tra c t whir Ii would sa tisfy U niversity specifications. Bids could com e from TBI, o th er tran sit com panies or the city. • A U niversity tak eo v e r of sh u ttle service, w hich would re q u ire p u rch ase of new buses the hiring of d riv e rs and construction of m ain te n a n ce facilities indicated R egent F rank C. E rw in has the U niversity would bo forced to go into th e .shuttle bus b u sin ess “ if bidding for th e c o n tra c t is not c o m p o titiv o .” • Use of to help U n iv ersity o p e ratio n of the sh u ttle system . funding finance fe d e ra l T om R ioux, c h a irm a n of th e U n iv ersity S huttle Bus C om m ittee ha.s s lid th a t g ra n ts for tw o-thirds the cost of buying buses and building a m a in ­ it te n an c e facility m ig h t be m ad e a v a ila b le if r uld be show n th a t U n iversity and c it) servi es w ould not o v e rlap or Ire com petitive. I C oordination of tho sh u ttle sy ste m with th e city beginning in Ja n u a ry , with a fully-integrated sy ste m in o p eratio n when TEI** c o n tra c t e x p i r e to T hese p ro p o sa ls for com bination, d e ta ile d in City T ra ffic and T ra n sp o rta tio n D irec to r Jo e T e m u s’ tr a n s it action p ro g ra m for the next five y e a rs, would a' ow anyone rid e sh u ttle busies fre e until FEI s c o n tra c t e x p ire s. Students would pav a to : > cent ridi» a city bus. U sing an stu d e n ts would continue rn p re p a y a sh u ttle serv ice fe*> and would iden ho allow ed ti tr a ti o n , O ther c ity thp re sid e n ts would pay p roposed re g u la r 30 cent fa re to rid e all buses. to rid e any bus by show ing th e coordination p lan , in teg rated s y s te m , f ire, u nder THE ENTIRE H E E T would be a irc o n d itio n e d , c oach-type bu ses, although th o se in th e U niversity a r e a m ight Im* painted the fa m ilia r o ra n g e and w hite, T en n is said T h e S h u ttle Bus C om m ittee would c o n tlin e stops and m ilking re n n m n e n d a tiu n s on m u tes o th er m a tte rs re latin g to U niversity bus se rv ice the Two thirds of initial costs of such a bus sy ste m could be paid by fed eral g ra n ts, w hich an- being used to help fin an ce th e c ity 's 40 new m unicipally-ow ned buses. T hey will begin o p eratio n in J a n u a ry . • Addition of a sm all s u rc h a rg e to waiter and e le c tric ity bills, w hich would be used to finance free bus se rv ic e to all Austin residents, Including stu d e n ts. W hile T e m u s and Ja m e s Colvin, U niversity vice­ p resid en t for b u siness a ffa irs, have said they fav o r th is sy ste m , T c m u s h a s suggested th a t th e public Is not yet re a d y to a c c e p t it. M eanwhile, TRT officials have grown defensive about w hat they consider to be biased, inaccurate reporting In Tile D aily Texan. ‘MMR BIGGEST problem I-a wide, T E I 's is Tile Texan,” c h a rg e d Bill tra ffic m a n a g e r. “ W ere doing our darndest to fulfill our end of t3e harg n. We feel a m o ral as wolf as fin an cial resp o n sib ility to the U n iv e rsity .” L a u r ie , who said he fav o rs “ anything th a t go’s tre e fs .” explained th a t overcrow ding c a r s off the “ is te a rin g ti.'" hell o u t of our b u se s.” He point- I out th a t overloading uses m ore engine pow er arui stra in s d ie clutch, tra n sm issio n , b ra k e s a n d sus [ms isi-rn ss ste m s of the buses. “ I t's one of T c re tjor c a u se s of our m a in ten a n c e p ro b le m s,” he said. E x tra m oc:.< nirs have freon hired to keep the bu x '•!»• ating, and p rev en tiv e check* a re done on ca a le a s t m onthly. o L - now. and need m o re m a in te n a n c e ,'’ LawTie said. ' The buses a re l ls- IH E Bl SKS p resen tly in use would lie re tire d the a new c o n tra c t w ith if T E ! U n iv ersity , he indicated. should g'-t L a w rie < i:* f/-d last sp rin g It w a s b ro u g h t up a g a i n a t an O ctober m e e t i n g of t i " the B oard of R egents, w hen Erw in said c o st of a U niversity ta k e o v e r could be as m uch a s Si a million, He hinted h e m a y h ave a re c o m ­ m e n d a t i o n on from a d m i n i s t r a t i o n Officials by t h e re g e n ts’ ri f e t i n g D er. 8. the s i t u a t i o n S tudent shuttle fees w ere increased from c th a t rn ""tin'.:, $5 50 af bus se rv ic e until m idnight. O perating I been "a ria i'"ft to provide m ore d r so: • , -e to a ir w re in ‘-ta to :o t of irs b d R ioux painted out, how ever, that fees c a n n o t continue to rise indefinitely. fees ’• fie said “ T h ere is a $30 legislative lit v ic e s not in'.; a g en cies a re clam o rin g for mere Ut on student m anx U aiver: asps in funding THE PRESENT F E E is alm ost $24 per sem i ti af R ioux sa id his c o m m itte e is hojreful fa te of th e buses is dei ated Si ion We b i e s tim a te rid ersh ip and set a fee v lits! , e fvi nt y ea r1 this spring ” he said tor. th e to t He has calc u lated that Mj Ii uses will lie n m s s rv to acco m o d ate the ex prs ted nundM*r of rid e rs r xt y e a r. Colvin Indicated a id e to afford the $42 OOO (*oa i : by T em u s for an in te g ra te d city sy stem . the U niversity would no' be j#> buses proprised THOSE Bl SEN o p e ra te o ffieio n 'h for la vex <*, the $8,000 to $10 <)00 birses now in use w h e rea s will hold up for only four to five year's T e m u s ha.s said he does not believe it Is in ti <» U n iv ersity ’s in terest to p ro v id e its own bus s e n we. H e said he is convinced thai som e co o p e ra tiv e sy s te m with th e city is n e c e ssa ry . A lthough U n iv ersity officials and S h u ttle Bus C o m m ittee m e m b e rs m in im ize the o v e rla p of th e c ity sy stem w ith the sh u ttle buses T e n n is ca lle d the com petition significant HE SAID com bining the s ste m s would er able is p re se n tly not aporia lion stud or. ?s se rv e d by sh u ttle buses, in E a s t A ustin, whit Ii to h a v e t: p re se n tly . T h e re have bf stu d e n ts, w’ho ut a n ins: c o n tra c t r h ig h er \ t 'n e cps m e m b e rs i T e m u s ’ tim e to s' A cub! N' ny I, h a v e been pl a t *od AUL OUI KT I ES tv off lf tie Bl to pf * nr" e o r condem n rr)ny0*) * ii"- *• K ^ , o r • v j d p n t j lev? p i pi) I a ted ieh ss not to p ro v id e -x ight school T v ie es fee, I err-! p led r fie- T E IG T E I would and 'n : H » ’ s t ■ ;> I • re le a se d xersitj and city t > a c e e th a t e bes! se rv ic e f 1 if p re jxtid to continue tx i". tr a n sit I ic ' >r Stud CT t -e to fi-r-s d ‘ ’O jv'-a ♦ ion posts would re m a s i n c o n tra ct which the Un cero he -aid. “ I T ’S n o I M P O R T A N T th to g e th e r before fees w o rk in g I * '• ik w e ca n keep the tot , J c System ” ' ’ e sa m e as for eeulri negotiate,” cr p f f-] o> % ' ‘J % * "Ut of sight, down by a joint I *rnu.s rn et F rid v wit! Si utile Bus C o m m ittee m e m b e rs and to d is c u ss his p la n s w ith sa id he hopes to h av e fu rth e r m eetings s o w w ith U n iv e rsity officials. them “ S tu d en ts don t w an t to lose ti I Identity,” Le roe ident tv il‘ !»<• t c r e A]; We ’Aar,? •» d<» is o p e n u p i a p ro p I » f id. ‘ t r d v. 'ti V st th e s ’ -.tem .” T h e E uuur T exam Tuesday* November Ii, 1372 Page ft rHE Da il y T e x a n Staff editorials and opinions Pledge your dollars The T exan again urges U niversity students and organizations to becom e involved in the U niversity Econom ic Comm unity being of­ ficially launched this week by Student Government. Participating in the project requires only a pledge to com bine the joint financial resources of the student com m unity into a lump sum to be deposited in a local bank in O' ••Ii.rn for favorable changes in hot check charges, underwritten student loan pro;.-rams and better service for U niversity students. The concept Is exciting and requires a bare m inim um of effort on an individual’s or an os m ization’s part. And no cost whatsoever. • control over his own funds and receives The depositor ret a the benefits of what <>n the bank m akes in exchange for the pledged funds. • As the U niversity’s Purr i of Business R esearch estim ated recently, st udents spend a pf -ox .) million annually in Austin. A portion of this sum charm led throu ii a local bank in exchange for response to genuine student financial needs would be profitable for both the bank and the students. There's Something here for everyone. Student Governs u n d e r t a k i n g u n intensive drive within the com m unity to ga la r fina.u aal resources for this p r o j e c t . A p p e a ls ut i are being m ade not, on! student organizations which abound on cam pus. to individual students, but also to the m any We urge every student and organization to sign the pledge cards are not legally binding, and return being distributed, though tin them to I E t s booth on 1 he Main Mall or the Student Government of fire in Union Building 321. Mandatory executions In the last sess m ade commenda!) stim ied the death of Waco and Stab order in a House e< ment bills could ha •e v, • T< v is L egislature, two state legislators to kill legislation which would have rein- Had not State Rep. Tom Moore ! I Hemal of San Antonio raised points of d on the Senate floor, the capital punish- 11 passed. The bills were last sum m er that a different opinion that a constitution? to c ir c um ve nt the Supreme Court’s ruling * \v-iing statute. The decision contained 1 h of the ju stices and left open the possibility from < ll statute could be written. ! The Nov. 20 i ' o f Tim e m agazine reports that other states m ay h penalty law. Nineteen state attorneys try to w rite a c o o • t uuior general are drat . Ms ranging from an am endm ent to the U.S. Constitution to a m o d e l law with a mandatory death sentence for certain c r i m e s OvhiGi would be sim ilar to the defeated Texas proposal). F u r i b ., least IO state legislatures will cor ; • r ach < iatutes at their next sessions. v in e states that at - p 'a Fortunately, the Legal Defense Fund of the NAACP claim s that p un is hment law s will not m eet with su ccess. attem pts to enact e pi ald be adm inistered arbitrarily, and thus M andatory executor:-; would be found rn: -o: a l. No one now on D ealh Row would face execution, s nee no p u ni s hm en t law can be m ade retroactive. As the fund’s attorney, J ic H lm m elstein, said, "People will realize that trying to find ‘he loonhok s is an enormous w aste of tim e, energy and funds." We hope that the ne • Texa Lf al lature will take that advice. Financial disclosure The E xecutive Glut) of mounting a cam paign v m ay open a major loop} and contributions dis. lo i la of challenges to the Ie? aspects of politics. The New Jersey Rf pul th exem pt from repordn m ittees working for Pres cam e from "dues." Neva is covered by the legiskdio These repeated chalk n a a prerequisite for reform i from Republican groups th in Congress to water dov position to public p. in on is best to gird for this ba confronted with the quos! and several reform Ie rd ! Quite Iii.' Iv, it will !•<• ch the Republican Party of New Jersey is the General Accounting Office sa y s in the new federal cam paign expense his is only the latest in a series u which aim s to shed light on the financial an challenge m aintains that the club is s e n es of SIDO,DOO channeled to 34 corn­ 's axon's re-election because the funds • the GAO claim s that contingency 11 ail i the donors m ust be revealed. ttie principle of full financial disclosure, political process, have com e mainly . though there has been form al action me existing law. The never-ending op- ti M public's business is deplorable, but it Ie now, for I he Texas Legislature w ill be 11 ( Common Cause, the citizens’ lobby during the upcoming regular session, g haul. T h e Da il y T e x a n S tu d c n i N ewspaper o f UT A u stin e d i t o r .................. MANAGING E W G * ................................................... ASSISTANT M WAG! \G NEWS EDITOR . ASSISTANT TO 'HIE i SPORTS EDITOR .. AMUSEMENTS E l IIT C t i t FEA TU R ES EDITOR . . . . ti' . rn.fr a™ , ' i o n s ................Tom Kleinworth, John T il ly ....................................................... Karen Justice ....................................................... Quin M athews ............................................................... E rie Leibrock ....................................................... Suzanne Schwartz C ity E d ito r R e p o rte r ................................... A s s i s t a n t F e a tu re l l : / Associate Sports iv tor M ake u p E d ito r T h ird P a g e O I ' r Desk E d i'o rc ................ P h o to g rap h er'! ____ .......... ........................... ......................... .......................... ...................................................................................... Tam to r-,rt*»r ........................................... Tom Sharpe, Jane Chesnutt .............................................................................. Stove Renfrew ....................................................................... Mark S i m s D avid B. f a r rep Sylvia Moreno, G ayle Reave* O pin ion s e x p r e sse d th o se of th e edit arr- a r tic le and are not ne' U n iv e r sity a d m ln lstr .r - rn or t g e n ts . in T r- ti< T h e D a lly T exan , a st 'N t r ■ T h e U n iv e r sity of T< ll sh e d by T e x a s Stu ii at e r D , U n iv e r sity Station. A T h e D a ily T e x a n I ti p W ■■ ■ d a y . W e d n esd a y , T hursday md c e p t h o lid a y a n d e x a m i - M ay. S e c o n d -c la s s p t vc N e w s c o n trib u tio n s ■•- p h on e (471-4401), at the < n a llsm B u ild in g 103) c r r.t the rn at ‘ ■ ; ls bora tory ® tiding 102) In q u iries con cern in g . '.'G R O ,R . ,ilri , fi'-m a d e in Jou rn a lism B uild ing A A d isp la y ad v e r tisin g In J ou rn alism (4.1-3227;, and < la sslfie d adver- .......... R I bsjoB in J ou rn alism B uilding 107 <471-3244). ’ , 0 ' ! a d v e r tisin g rep re sen ta tiv e of is N ation al E d u cation al Ad- - Inc.. 360 L exin gton A ve., N ew I* ■'tan T he D ny ' 1 . T '1,. ' ; • ' , ; 1 ' ' ' p ap er A ' * ' n a tio n 'iv.can su b scrib es to T he A sso- . D ie N ew York T im e s N ew s .Ser- • /■ I C ress Internationa! T elep hoto is a m e m b er o f the Asso- - the S ou th w est Jn u m a- the T ex a s D a ily N ew e­ I'-xan at'd - s ; -712. I Y r And w hile E z ra Pound m ight h ave w ritten a est ipticnlly p leasin g poetry, J m ust a d m it , indge his p oetry a p a rt his political view s. M any m ight from desig n ate this a s .some so rt of intolerance but to those of u s who know from rela tiv e s the N azi co n centration and frien d s w h a t ca m p s w ere jn" is „ wrirW7)P it like, to leran c e and one which I hope will never cease. ^ “ p a tric k ’* ra s h com parison of Pound with F onda lea d s one to w onder w h a t o th e r ra s h a sse rtio n s K ilpatrick m ig h t m a k e . A fter all, if Pound w as so g re a t, his ideas m u st h ave so m eth in g to them . M aybe all his a n tise m itism w as w a rra n te d ... Mr. K ilp atric k c a n afford to be tolerant. The people wlio were murdered were not his a c q u a in ta n c e s o r rela tiv es. N eith e r w e rt they Mr. P o u n d ’s. And all those w ho stood by an d w atched, o r fanned th e fires of th e in c in e ra to rs w ith rh e to ric , a p a th y o r b la ta n t physical effort ('an all com e out. now. T o lera n ce is a t a peak, and horrible crim es c o m m itted 30 and 40 y e a rs ago ar* forgotten by people like M r. K ilpatrick. I rn glad th# art* are drawing varied to our beloved facets of Austin aonery A rm ad illo .. .but heav en s! don't original Armadillo off!! run th# Andriennr Kellom Claudia Siege! 2800 S w isher St. To the editor: Bad to worse To the ed ito r: Thanks I w ant thank Bob M cM inn to publicly and T ran sp o rta tio n E n te rp rise s, Inc., for th e ir donation of a bus to ta k e student* to the polls in P re c in c t 4.30 last T uesday. to for effort T heir n o n p a rtisa n inrrea.se stu d en t p a rtic ip a tio n helped c re a te a 70 p e rc e n t v o te r th e g en eral turnout election in P re c in c t 430. I his w as one of in the highest p recin ct tu rn o u ts th e city. M oreover, g re a te r n u m b e rs of stu d e n ts voted In this .student- dom inated p re c in c t than e v e r before on Nov. 7. itself, this p re c in c t and e a se To fu rth e r in c re a se stu d en t p a rticip atio n the balloting In p ro c ess any I ’d suggestions from re sid e n ts of P re c in c t 430 (w ho v ote a t R obert E, ] a* E le m e n ta ry id e a s to 3111 H a rris P a rk School). Moil ’ Austin, 78705. a p p re c ia te Arian Hirst E lection Ju d g e P recinct 4311 C i t y service To the editor: In resp o n se to M s. D illon’s le tte r p rin ted on M onday, th e re is a dead a n im a l service. n t h e phone book, u n d e r "A ustin, City of, the n u m b e r is listed a s 477-6511. Tom GU** Graduate Student Comparative Rtndle* Everyone rem em bers the fatalistic prediction of future man becoming enslaved by machine. H ell, that tim e has already arrived—at least here in Austin. Election results were fouled by a misfunction in a new "ultra modern com puter.” And now reported that U niversity It has been students will not receive credit in hour* or addition to their grade point average because of som e error in “our” com puter’* programing. Upon first hearing of this, I called the instruction departm ent to secure physical verification of this seem ingly im possible occurrence, sin ce I w as told repeatedly at the beginning of the sem ester that credit with a grade would be given. The depart­ m ent confirmed the rumor and im m ediately launched upon som e bizarre explanation layman jargon using computer comprehends. that no The fact is that I dor t give a damn what their explanation is. I took PI 18400004 with th# knowledge that I would receive credit and grade and now the U niversity reneges on its word. If it is a greater pain to inconvenience a m achine than It is to i n c o n v e n i e n c e and penalize several thousand students, this place Is going from bad to worse. Ben Culpepper Freshm an To tho editor: Ballet Letters to the editor ( atte n d e d Sunday n ig h t’s p erfo rm an c e F irin g Line le tte rs should: H e a d q u a rte rs.^ ** Am,a,ii110 W w,d I would like to sa y I think the A rm adillo h T and Z T Z of the floor sea tin g . the lirs t p e rfo rm a n c e of the com pany At t A to r e w as half n « r th e au d ie n c e w as sittin g In ch a irs. B ut lo su rp rise , w hen I a rriv e d la s t Sunday he se atin g a re a w as filled w ith c h a irs and th e re w as no c a rp e t sp a c e in fro n t of the sta g e no choice! D oes th e m an a g e m e n t of A rm adillo re a lly think that everyone w an ts u> folding sit chairs UT tortuous m e ta l those in • Be typed friple-speced. • Be 25 lines o r less. ® Include nam#, eddrost, en d phone number o f c o n trib u to r. M ail ta tte rs to The Firing Lino, Tho Daily Texan, D raw er D, UT S ta tio n , Austin, Tex.; o r bring le tte rs to th e Texan offices, Journalism Building IQI. UT Must Pay Price' for Years of Racism The Longhorns and the Black Athlete I feel about myself. That's the kind of athlete I am .” And he tells the same thing to Wilson Whitley, the black high school lineman in his home town of Brenham. “ He says, ‘You think I have a chance up there, you know, of playing?’ I say, ‘Hell yeah, you have a chance.' “YOU KNOW, this cat’s good. He’s got a good chance. I figure he’s just as gorki as Sisemore (Texas’ All-America offensive tackle Jerry Sisemore). “The only thing, he’s black, you know? I think he’s just about as good as Sisemore. He's big, and be s black. Because of that he thinks he won't get a chance to start. “ I say, ‘Man, it doesn’t m at­ ter.’ I say, ‘Only thing you have to do is come out there and prove yourself. I guarantee you’ll start. I mean if the coaches like you or no*, you will be starting, , because they’re gonna be needing blacks. They are just gonna have to boil down ti) it.” (Wednesday: Better Deal.”) Part Two, “ A sports .some different ways, hut to me, they're okay, you know’?’” He found prejudice on the coaching staff? “ Yes. It's here... What more can you expect?... There’s gonna ive prejudice wherever you go to school,” he said. the But all talk bark home about not getting a chance slid right off Leaks, “ ...Well, I tell you what's in myself. I figure I can beat anybody out. I don’t care where you play. I figure I can beat you out. That’s what J I M - YO* OOH H A V F TO H C L P n e J T H I # * 2 A H OY I# Or „ X J U S T T I V I S HEO L A 5 T C A # O f YO A ATO PAS T F - X A # ! SYA****, ^ 0 V F A Y H I T h e D a il y T e x a n (Editor’s Nota: This Is tho first in a fivo-part sorios on the racist image that the t ’niversity has among many blacks, and what Coach Darrell Royal is doing about it.) By The Associated Press Of all the great black football players to come out of Texas high schools, none have gone to the University. Coach Darrell Royal knows he has a problem. He admits the athletic program at Texas has image among many a blacks. He says is a false image. racist it There are six black football players at Texas now, including sophomore Roosevelt Leaks, who has been sensational in his first year and may turn out to be a great one. Some of those blacks say Royal Is a racist—a racist who is trying to change. Royal rejects the label but says he is not surprised they put it on him. As recently as IO Nears ago, Southwest Conference schools Ignored blacks, and players like Bubba Smith loft Texas to go to places like Michig in .State. When the conference decided to recruit blacks, players like Jerry LeVias went like to Southern Methodist not Texas. schools BPT YUI can’t win without b l a c k s a:lyre. ie. K v r iiody recruits them now. recruit,rig But Royal scored zero in I.is effort. Texas last coaches say six great black running bac ks graduated from Texas high schools last year. And Texas Is a running team. But all six went elsewhere. In fact, there is not one black on the entire fre< ? man to m In an effort to rid Texas of its racist Hag'' and help Ins to an recruiting, Rey a1 agreed P l A N U T S Interview of the six blacks on his varsity. He told them he didn’t know what questions would be asked, but he sent them to the interview with instructions to give honest answers. They did. BESIDES LEAKS, a physical education major from Brenham, the others were: senior tight end Julius Whittier, a philosophy m ajor from San Antonio and a sort of unofficial leader of the Texas blacks; senior halfback Donald Ka ley a n d s e n i o r defensive end Howard Shaw. both physical education majors from junior halfback Lonnie Austin; Bennett, an advertising major from Bonham; and sophomore linebacker an Fred education m ajor from Corpus Christi. Perry, Leaks, Whittier, Ealey and Shaw said they came to Texas because it was close to home. Bennett said he wanted to get thought a good education and about going to Ripe, “but, like, I don’t like to play on a losing team .” All said they came despite what they had heard about Texas from the people back home—not from coaches and players at other schools, who said nothing about the racism but simply made sam e pitch that is given to white players: Texas has go many good players it is hard to break into the stalling Lineup. “ The area I'm from, you know, most of the black fxx.ple thought that, well. they would ask me why I would come to a school like this, a racist school,” Ben­ nett said. “ . People around my town, they hated that I came to Texas. you know?” H a h s said. "They felt like I wouldn't get a fair break, or something like that.” explained W h i t t i e r that Texas is nearly IOO years old but no black came here until Heman Sweatt won fight— a “against white people's cherished hopes”—-to get into law school in 1950. Sweatt was the test case for the entire state. court they tradition “ That's a lot of years of, you know, have,” Whittier said. It's going to “hurt them ,” and to “ pay the price” for that tradition in recruiting blacks for football, law school or anything else, he said. they will have In 196.3, Texas officially broke the color barrier in the Southwest Conference by saying athletic scholarships could be offered to blacks. But Texas did not offer them for several years SMU was the fist conference school to give a scholarship to a black whpn it recruited Je rry LeVias in 1965. What blacks rem em H r about Texas is not 1%3 but 3950 and Heman Sweatt. IN THE INTERVIEW, Leaks was the first to say there was prejudice at Texas. The question was what do they tell prospects they’ are asked to escort around the campus. Halfway through his answer he said: “ I tell them about the coaches. I say, 'Yeah, you know they are gonna be prejudiced some, and JO A /- YO * O H OU L O H A V ? L I S T ? AZZO H A V f G A I M f V S P0*#OS YO A i r - Y T H IS T F # AI / * C V f T O T H * C A S T A L IA # tv b v t r e PA! ~ A i l y o u c a # I A T o f P e a l l y g p ( a t p o o p DISKED MY ENGLISH m a n ' m w * ' IT [M &fT MICH A REPORT* I CHANGE!? MV NAME TO PROTECT THE INNOCENT Crossword Puzzle A newer to Yesterday's Puzrle ACRO^ I Tws 6 P lie r In Sr* mr b r r ~nie omed 12 14 is w 17 Pronoun J 5 I arpe tu b 20 Narrates 21 N « ‘'oor sheep 2 2 Greenland settlem ent 24 Baker s product 25 Mix 26 Sufferers 7 Falsehood* 8 A state (a b b r.) 9 Com pasn po in t 10 I agar) 11 Carouse 13 Periods of t me 25 Man's name 19 Diminished gradually 21 foot support attached to saddle n cut rh Kilted 2J Things, In law 29 Creek f >m Nansen's disease 28 Touvenir* 30 t ornate sheep 31 Salter letter 32 Bu od lea 33 White poplars 34 Covered with tar 35 Pretenttow home 3 « n t£ r consumpt tea 3 7 Depressions 4 0 Illuminated 43 Gun like bird 44 Falsifier 47 edible seed 48 New Deaf agency (4nlL) Bl A stats (abbr.) 53 Bona (colloq ) 32 Baldest 35 Coit; od 3s? In bed 39 A stats (abbr.) 41 Undenied 42 Conducted 43 Wart ’# 45 Metal faste-er 46 Spar. ch article 47 Have reference 49 Baronet (abbr.) 50 Stem 52 Sings 54 Pertain erect 55 Wipe out DOWN 1 Chastise 2 Pronoun 3 Scold 4 Soil 5 Slumbers 6 Deer's bom t i 14 18 t i 26 32 38 42 46 50 r n IO 13 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 r n V 16 b i 15 % * r » I ? 23 5 4 27 28 21 25 30 ; ! v l 33* 'Y A w 34 *.y. 3 ) •VA Vm'm 35 36 37 43 IWW- 47 51 54 39 40 41 r n 44 v X 45 48 49 ' •***.* 53 52 i i i i i i i i M Get a good cassette for a bad cassette. m ax e ll ULTRA D YN A M IC C 60 Bring in your cassette that’s gone wrong and a dol­ lar and we’ll give you a shiny new Maxell Low Noise C-60. (Suggested retail $2.25 ) O r bring in your cassette that’s gone wrong and $1.50 and we’ll q vc yea a shiny new Maxell Ultra Dynamic C-60. (Suggested retail S3 70.) We can make this offer because the way Maxell cassettes are designed and constructed they can't go wrong. They’re made of heavy-duty precision- molded styrene; they have nylon rollers that run on stainless steel pins where most other cassettes have fixed plastic; and they aren’t welded, they're seated with precision screws. As for the tape inside: In laboratory tests pub­ lished in Stereo Review Maxell was shown to ba unsurpassed in its overall quality and consistency. Which means you’ll hear your woofers woof and your tweeters tweet better than they've ever woofed or tweeted before. Bring in any brand, any length of play and as many cassetles as you like And we guarantee you'll never be interested in an offer like this one again. Come in and trade up to Maxell. The Sound Gallery 38th and IH 3 5 Preregistration for Spring is now being conducted by A c a d e m ic Depts. from NOY. 13 - NOV. 17 till 4:00 p.m. Check with Departments tor Advising Times. A D IV IS IO N O F P A M F X F O O D S . IN C . HUM M ON f \ f \ U SPECIAL LUNCHEON SPECIALS SERVED YEAR -R OUN D ATSAME PRICE- -Mid-Pay Only Monday thru S*turd*y,| I MWW •> rti, lT**n SPM*. (H ill ■Sfif "’VI (•moi, , UZ k«* tot>r>n « net rn, S Pin ti* rh,ti ■ *°p« '• '"• rf •Wirt >"*. • " C S T , i**" o r . Stom* ** - d SPECIAL l U « f " L l . , t*cO, I • , tnt XI*™' 1 I . s A nllh ’ 111.' I CHM* (rad g'**n' '•rs? ss**. 1 ... ,„ ,.i • » S homem*^ysp, n,»h ’ IU»o«mo'* icd ct"'* To t.do'1 ha — * ” A ll You fa /7 $4 4.9 I a s ' Eat Buffet ■ A T A X B U F F E T S E R V E D A L L D A Y B U F F E T S E R V E D A L L D AV Y E A R R O U N D A T S A M E P R ICE 7 5 * ,7*: 5800 B U R N E T R O A D P H O N E : 4 5 1 - 2 2 9 6 £ Locations In Houston, Dallas, Richardson. Fort Worth, Arlington, San An too Vs, V , Austin, ti Paso, Corpus Christi, Longview, Albuquerque Phoenix, Oklahoma City K Bossier City, Baton Rouge & New Orleent. ti SEMESTER BREAK JAN. 2-9, 1973 «.iy '119 t. '139 I N C L U D E S i lo d g in g — c h o ic e o f a c c o m m o d a t io n s ★ 7 n ig h ts A L ift tic ke t f o r th e e n tire w eek ★ Free bus t ra n s p o rt a t io n to ski a re a s ★ C o n t in e n t a l b re a k fa s t e a c h m o rn in g ★ C o m p lim e n t a r y w in e e a c h e v e n in g a fte r skiin g ★ A ll sta te a n d lo c a l taxe s R E D U C E D F L I G H T A N D B U S O P T I O N S A V A I L A B L E C O N T A C T : MERIT INTERNATIONAL C a t t iN ™ . L o b b y 2323 San Antonio St. 4/ 0- j 4/ l Roosevelt Leaks . . . ’you have a chance.' Open Meeting U n iversity Co-Op Board of D irectors t h e c i f This board meeting is open to you. If you've ever had anv J questions about the Co-Op, bring them this Thursday, N ovem ber 16. w rn a l 7 : 0 0 f a m i l y - * ! m i e n I l o u n g e s e c o n d f l o o r $ l n d e n l u n i o n The new Texas Instruments pocket calculator: it multiplies, divides and conquers. Conquers every problem in your daily arithmetic. Instantly Accurately. Electronically. And, above all, easily. it s budt by Texas Instruments — and it adds new precision and confidence to all your personal calculations. In its own carrying case it fits in purse, briefcase— or just pocket it. And it s completely rechargeab e. The TI-2500 electronic calculator from Texas Instruments. It always proves you right U n ive rsity C o -O p On* hour fro# parking with purchaia of $2.00 or mora. Mattarcharga and BankAmericard ara wt'coma. S u p p ly D e p a rtm e n t T h e D a il y t e x * * Tuesday, Novem ber 14, 1972 Page 5 HANK's GRILL Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2532 GUADALUPE 2 pcs. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only $1.20 Reg. $1.45 Shoe Shop We « » , . r f repair boots and shoes * SALE * SH“ RPU(; i K IN M any Beautiful Colors ♦ LEATHER SALE * Y a r ln t i* k i n ' l l , r o t o r * - 1 ’t r p e r f t . Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca A u s t i n . T e x a s 478-9309 SPECIAL — WHILE THEY LAST! THE GITANE TOUR de FRANCE 3 K A T I R K S : S A N D IEG O (A P )—-Mike Phipps threw a 38-yard touch­ down pass to Frank Pitts with 41 seconds left as tho Cleveland Browns stunned the San Diego Chargers 21-17 Monday night in tho National Football League. The winning pa.songhom system, as does Shaw. Shaw was not exactly a star during his years as a Longhorn. In fact, he wasn’t even a front-line player. For that matter, he didn't even letter. .So, the obvious thing to come to mind is that Shaw was merely bitter about not getting to be a star with the Horas. And Shaw was as much responsible for this as anyone. But there are things that do come across amazingly well. For In­ stance, Shaw gives insights into the personality of Darrell Royal. The insights appear accurate from the point of one who has seen Royal at close range. Royal, or Daddy D as Shaw rails him, seems to l>e basically an aloof, sophisticated and condescending figure. “ He wanted to be roach of the Year and hobnob with the Governor. What a fraud,” says one player In Shaw’s book. Shaw also takes pretty goof! swipes at trainer Frank Medina and recounts the My Lai-typc brutality of some of his training sessions. Shaw offers a look (whether true I can't say) into a medieval torture dungeon somewhere within the depths of Memorial Stadium and the Longhorn locker room. Lan Hewlett is not spared, either. Hewlett is th0 “ brain coach,” and serves thp valuable function of helping athletes get tutors and make out their class schedules. Running 'em O f f Also offered are looks at the way athletes made it through the classrooms, how tutors wrote term papers, and many ingenious (and useful) cheating methods. But the most serious charges leveled arc those regarding the way Royal treated certain players and their injuries. Shaw claims that Royal attempted to run off certain Inadequate players and make them give up their scholarships. Th\s was done through brutal drills, drills with no legitimate purpose Also, Hewlett would Insist that certain lower-ranked placers t courses like chemistry and economics, courses they would flunk and thus have to resign the team and their scholarships Tile injuries of must lower-string players were treated casually, haphazardly. .Shaw goes so far as to recount a couple of instances where players' injuries were igno re I and, according to Shaw's reports, only through the interest of the players going to a doctor on their own were loss of life or limb avoided. These tales seem almost too fantastic to be true. This book is a “ must-read" re t just for Long hi ’ n football faas or an­ il Longhorn people. People interested in the effe< ts cf Texas high school football, in in Darrell the psychology of the athlete, in M oi Hi!’ dormitory, Royal, in living around athlete'- in Tej is Club, in the University as it was IO years ago, in what h rppenr d iring a game or in football in general should read this book. It's not the kind of book you send to } ( 1 m \ a / s 5012 Burnet Road (Near W. 49th) 406 E. 6 T O N I G H T HAPPY HOUR PRICES _ 4 TO IO P.M. HIGHBALLS 50c — COCKTAILS 75c LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NEIL F IT Z P A T R IC K NO COVER PIOOF OF AGE REQUIRED R E P A I R S - K J U l T ENGINE A TRANSMISSION SPECIALIST BRAKES — TUNE-UPS — ELECTRICAL — CLUTCH N EW — REBUILT — USED PARTS MU WI I i v u_rJ us SERVICE HI-PERFORMANCE PARTS GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE Open Sat. 477-6797 1621 East 6 PIZZA 'N SUDS 'N SUBS The Best Pizza in Town (Honest) booths* OUR HIGHWAY 71 LOCATION NEAR BERGSTROM FEATUES 2 OUTDOOR BEER GARDENS AND IS ONLY MINUTES FROM OUR RIVERSIDE LOCATION. A n o t h e r p u b lic a tio n o f T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L I C A T I O N S • ENJOY MOONLIGHT DINING IN ONE OF TWO • OUTDOOR BEER GARDENS. PHONE 385-5691 FOR FASTER SERVICE. • 6 Tuesday, Ncr.-en.ber 14, 0372 I S S D A U S T S S A X Texas Wins SW C Cross Country The University outclassed the field Monday with an easy vic­ tory in the Southwest Conference Cross Country Moot at the Texas A&M golf course. The Longhorns placed five runners in the top IO and claimed the individual winner in Ricky Yarbrough in a time of 19:58.7 four-mile minutes course. over the Texas had 29 points followed by Rice 72, defending champion Southern Methodist 93, Arkansas 105, Baylor 107, Houston 110, Texas A&M 175, Texas Tech 178, and Texas Christian 179. Second place went to Boh Ayres of SMU in 20:01. Pete Morales of Baylor was third, Lloyd Stephenson of Texas fourth and Paul Craig of Texas fifth. Defending individual champion Frank Ybarbo of Texas A&M was eighth. UT Up to 7th By The Associated Press Southern California, Alabama and Michigan, the only major college teams with perfect records, nailed down the in The this week 1-2-3 spots Associated Press ratings. football The Troians of Southern Cal, pacesetters since the first, week of the season, had last weekend off but still received 42 first place votes and 981 points from a nationwide panel of sports writers and broo dc, vten Runner ip Alabama whipped their Louisiana State 35 21 ba'tle of Southeastern Conference unbeaten** and held onto second place with five first place ballots and 8ft0 points. in fr rn Nebraska's 23-all standoff with t o Cor­ Iowa State dr pped nhusker.-; fifth, to third virtually en din r their hopes for a consecutive national third enabled championship, Michigan, victor over Iowa by 31-0, to inch up from fourth to third with three first place votes and 812 points. a n d Oklahoma defeated Missouri 17- to from seventh 6 and fourth, ahead of Nebraska. rose Penn State climbed from 10th trimming North to sixth by Carolina State 37-22 for Its eighth in a row. Then came Texas, up from ninth to seventh after beating Baylor 17-3; Louisiana State, down from sixth to eighth; Ohio State, which fell from fifth to ninth, and Notre Dame, up fr .rn 12th to 10th following a 21 7 triumph over Air Force. in) .. .98t Th** Top 20 tram* with ftr*t-ptare In parrnthrsp*; and total point* V* ba.sen! on 20-1K16-14- 12-10-9 8 e .c.; .Sn ithern ( at (42) I 2, AI sham a . . . :t MI fhigaii (3) . . . . •i .......... ..... ....... .. .527 N braaka i, Vinn .Staff* .. -i./l . . . . . ............• •, 7 Ta x a a . . 137 bImulilana Stnte , .. .if*VS Oh lo State* ........ ,, Jtff$ M in 11 tmo . . . . burn ............... .............. .. .273 J I I _ a State ........ Ti . . . . . . . . . I orado -1. Ninrth Carolina 17. Wa *l;;ni?ton I K Ar zona State ... l l Mi Sn Wa «b ’ S’trip ............... .. . 47 ....... ................ .. . 88 .. . L’9 .. . 9. Mast-ers Marie Hulling* and Mark Ploch com pete in the University Sail­ ing Club's regatta Sunday on Lake Travis. The club won the regatta, and Hulling* and Ploch won their division. t i lousing Fa Comm ission Students with problems con­ housing—contracts, cerning deposits, eviction, repairs, rte .—shonld ra il the Students’ l a i r Bousing Association I nion Commission Office: (I to 5 p.m. Building 314 Monday Frid ay). through Telephone 171-779*5 (8 a m. to 5 p.m. Monday through F r i­ day). Injuries Blacken Royals Day B y K IR K B O H L S Texan Staff Writer Darrell Royal was wearing black at his Monday press con­ ference for the first time this year. It might not have been a coincidence. About this time last season, a move began to change the Texas mascot to an armadillo. There could easily arise a similar movement the ’Horns’ orange and white colors to black and blue. switching for Tile only wood that Royal has to knock on now for good luck Is the crutches and canes some of the ’Horns w; I be carrying around. Halfback Don Burri.sk received the most serious injury, undergoing knee surgery Monday that will put him out of action for the rest of the season. Six months of rehabilitation are expected. OFFENSIVE T ACKEE Je rry Sisemore, who severer sprained an ankle but came back to In­ spire two Texas Iou r h quarter drives against Baylor Saturday, “ is lie can't walk,” Royal said. limping badly; “ If s been my experiem e that sprained ankles don't get well in a week's time. I ’d say we’d be lucky to have him back for A&M. The side of his t< it looks like my shoe,” Royal said. Royal’s shoes sh'-r.e as black as his thoughts about Si:-emore's injury, But he was also preoc­ reflections cupied with glur. about Don Kales s arui Mike Bayer’s bruised shoulders. Ja y A r n o l d ’ s brui-ed abdominal I muscle and Tommy K ^ d ’s brief knock <»u’. Sophomore Bruce Hebert will fill in for Sisemore, Tom Landry will replace Burrisk and Lonnie Bennett wall step In for Ealey. SISEMORE SUFFERED his Injury racing dowufield on Texas’ third down quick kick, a move that made ’Horn fans gasp in disbelief and momentarily lifted the spirits of the Baylor fans. “ W e’d have to have mon-1 than one backfire to stop us from running a certain play,” Royal said. “ I think th** quick kick is a bold. aggressive offensive move which has the dcfen.se built in ” Royal singled out defensive halfback Mike Rowan for playing “ steady, football” aggressive again. “ On several occasions he Bengston Takes Mazur's Place A s Patrio t C o a c h FOXBORO, Mass. ( A P )—Phil Bergston. who helped build the Green into a Bay Packers National Football I/cague dynasty in the 1960s, was named interim head coach of the New England Patriots Monday night. Bengston, who was head coach of the Packers for three year* after Vince Lombardi left to take over the Washington Redskins in 1968, was name*! bv the Patriots’ Board of Directors a few' hours after John Mazur resigned as head eoa'-h. Mazur became the third coach in less than four years to leave the Patriots. A tt. Volk O w n swagen ers O utstanding C om plete Autom otive Service Across From G u lf M a rt G L 2-0205 CLOSED SATURDAY Th® O nly Independent V W G a rag e :n Austin to G uarantee Vo'icswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 B U R N E T R O A D S E R V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N V E H IC L E S IS O U R S P E C IA L T Y has saved touchdowns He plays good position football,” Royal praised. Cited as the most improved player on the team, defensive tackle Fred Cumin “ has gotten to k m k harder and harder (Steve) Ox ley down. and (Don) Crosslin played v.■ Glen Gasps rd has had not ing but outstanding games, and he had another ono last. Sound; I thought ” R« \h CALLED to n offense “ kind of sp.: rn d • mid Inconsistent in over vt hr.-.' v. r. were doing up until th'- touch down drives. We didn’t come int > the season with a worldbe. : team. We vc had to fig t to ker p our head a1- we wa I st I don’t think we’r*- an out-to: Cir r but I, team. W e’re real not,/; ing out o f the* exfraord ' 1 Asked if the final s e c - g <;•. n ; oie Texas bad c ■ s- ■ than six minutes was the best of the year, Royal replied, “ No, t; e one lief ore it (that put Texas ahead) was a little better." D e f e n d i n g Alan Lowry's I sing proficiency, Royal added, “ I still feel we can throw the bs.h ’ It's the catching part that has been giving ’Horns problems. the L O O K I N G A H E A D , Royal e,i the TCU defense “ tough r r They’ve got two big rn strong ta kins that it. a hard to do rn r ll I - I si ness With. They've go- now i fxd in their offense. i en ' I <; >n’f think they’ve used up billet, T imagine they e ne left in the chamber for i Tile haymaker they (TCU) CG;' -cd on Texas Tech was no accident.” accidents are something II val would just as soon An f • avoid. DOES Y O U R LAST N A M E START W IT H "Af" or "S" lf so fhen you ara en h t rd to buy our Mexican B .-fat or a ry ,f our M exican Dinners en our menu at % % : -RICE O FFER G O O D N O V . 13 T H R O U G H NO V. 17 M U f-T S H O W IC > ST JOENT OR STAFF LD. O FFER G O O D FO R IN D IV ID U A L O N L Y Sn Casa R E S T A U R A N T S 504 E. 5th St. 2330 N O R T H L O O P 476-4841 465-5449 Is*?tic '<£* X S K t SIJ* Guadalupe Chopa A T "CW* S M IT H V W E C O N O M Y MINDED e c o l o g y MINDED \ ESTA f IAU TV dal it Uke a hike • O r enj< y the ii. .t<,r tor I..ii ai A • omf< rt • Vc-.spa ( mo he* 2 sep arate d rive gyatems thai, you select • G re a t for e xercise • E a s y to I de # I A. . -t a ■ iK a 'm i. . » . v . VA ■ > Sa- L r . - «?'.* vt',/ .■ ’ V / a a. ‘IM’ .* • Here’s something to be thankful for: The Co-op’s Columbiam T< I . J Columbia C lassical Catalog Sale has been extended through Novem ber 2 2 Sale Priced Special Priced I IST .ALT w M.'S OZ' V if. 'I T, V4S MbS 9n 11 !#P IMW 29 9tt LVS 03S D4S t)bS K UL ilttB ll 9 I 18 ll) ll >4 tt, 11 95 5 81 6 88 to id I / 22 1/ 22 13 ?0 7 99 is zn NO D I V I O f N O O U T H IS S A I F - - Co-op Records > O n th e seco n d floor. *■ W HA T IS Ti TEKE is a new concept in fraternise-,. TEKC e bt n-{,is of being the largest international organiiation — we have over 300 active chapters - » n : en of * > hang ups of older, traditional fraternities. In TEKE you can enjoy close lasting friend - ps with a wha.., v , inly o- people — TEKE was the first large national fraternity to eliminate discrimination, lf you're int e cst od in knowing more about a new social happening, come to our first organizational meeting is ai V i i * /'CFI VVf#ai Room 202, Stu dent Union, B ‘30 W e d n e s d a y N ig h t N o ve m b er 15 For further inform ation ca ll Terry Russell a t 452-7519 — — — — — — r The d a ily Texan Tuesday, November 14, 1972 Pa^e 7 • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S ITA i Z E G A 1 0 - S P E E D S 2 M o o e s — N O U V O P E C O R D C L A S S I F I E R A i n K E H S ! N O It \ T K S E a c h W o r d (15 w o rd m in im u m ) 8 ........... * ............ 8 .07 . . . . . . . S fto 20 word-. ......................................... 810 00 1 aal. mr h ............................ su ’ OO im h 2 col, ................... $77 OO in r h S c a l. .................................. $10. OO Inch .......... ...................$ 1 2 .‘ OO 4 col. C la s s ifie d D is p la y i c o lu m n x o n e in c h o ne tim e I I M $ 2.20 E a c h A d d itio n a l 'l i m e (N o c o p y c h a n c e fo r c o n s e c u t iv e is s u e r a t e s . ) D I . A R L I N E H I I I I I i i L E M o n d a y T e x a n F r i d a y , 3:0ft p m . T u e s d a y T e x a n M o n d a y , 11:00 a rn. W e d n e s d a y T e x a n T u e s d a y , 11 OO a rn. T h u r s d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y , l l OO a rn. F r i d a y T e x a n T h u r s d a v , 11:05 a rn. In " I n th e e v e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e a n a d v e r t is e m e n t , im m e d ia t e n o tice m u s t i>e E lv e n a s th e p u b lis h e rs a re r e s p o n s ib le f o r o n ly O N E in c o r r e c t In s e r tio n . All c l a im s fo r a d ju s tm e n ts sh o u ld he m a d e n o t la t e r th a n SO d a y s a f t e r p u b l ic a t io n . " 15 words or lets for 75c the first tim *, 5c each ad dition al word. Stu­ receipt dent must show A ud ito r's Journalism end pay Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p m . M o n d a y through Friday. in ad van ce in f o r S a l e T R Y u s y o u 'll Uke us / .sun s m ost com plete, used ta .ok stores Bo okstall L 6103 B u r n e t Jto ad . 4 A 664. B o ' k tall I I C a p ita l IO az a. 451 1432 S O U N O E JC J I AR I. A R C I . fine p re <• stereo equipm ent F u ll w a rra n ty . Ct > k 926 469- *< Ie. • a of t lo at C A P IT O !/ CA a*, lenM-v, ers. ealcu iat IM E R A R E N T S iig l projectors, f amen* ting, met- T O P C A S H f old gold. ( C om m odore I R I C E S paid for aplU>l D iam ond ‘ut ry. 476-0178 diam onds. Shop. 603 V I N T A G E C I D erbies. I • /OTR I N G — Ta w <.r S to p S D E ( 'os? prices T O O U S A ? ; s T ra d e 2 to N o rth in t e r n 1-6 47" 249*' O F 1 S U D - 1 -n e J: ' k gi^na! Mer. Sat rack. 3709 9-6, Sun. S T E R E O - -I/5WE:- m a jo r brands P R K >ry orient C a ll J.r n at 465-6376. E S < type a ell eg ;ip- Ma re ce • • a - M a# / I to,, Shoo e t N am# t ■ . o , Hr S T E R E O C E N T E R 201 Es rf 47( '7 3 ? FREEW HEELING BICYCLE SHOP J U S T I N - - e n d N O U V O S P O P T Eq . r-r.*d w •• : C - ' - JCS . d»to /<*'■•># M d 61 t • » In .-I p .. \ A l l 6846 2404 S A N G A B R EL t o 6 M o n . A r u S I I O p e n THE DISCOUNT SHOP STEREO a TV U t t e r s : s*#rao com r •en ' " - ' r e c ' Yin! Iron cols :ony it ryt ♦#" t Full Service DepariTient 18th ?/. S p e e d w a y IO a rn. 6 pun. 4 7 7 0 9 3 7 Mon. - C d f. R O Y A !/ E L E '" T R I G t.ypf■writer for sale Good con rt)Hon $115 C all 47* 6242 0452. 66 D A I'S U N S E D A N fa ir condition. $200 i* I. Bo or w ell, 6018 W e st O ’Dell. M f S T J E U . tw o bedroom 12x50 Nev. Moon Moth ie home. J.! kl- now S ell at Go mtry A ir !Inn . Lo t 254>, Highway 71W 1336 W M m M O N . T H R U F R I . B i O O - f o p S a l e R o o m s A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . f o r R e n t H o u s e s , f u r n . T y p i n g S I N G E R S E W I N G M t'h ln e s Zig z . sow ing m achines, some still in car- I tons <5). No a ttach m e n ts needed button holes, bllndsUtching, terns, m onogram m ing, etc or term s. U n claim e d N o rth L a m a r, W e e k d a y s 9 3, S a tu rd a y s I 9-6. fa n c y p a t- 1 ($59.95) ca fh j F re ig h t, 6535 for 1970 D A T S E N 2000 R o adster, E x ce lle n t imdy and interior, m e c h a n ic a lly perfect. $1875, co n sid e r an y offer. 477-2957. P E N T A X T E L E P H O T O 135mm, 2 5, E x c e lle n t < or •'itlot-. w ith case $100 476 34SS afte r 5 30 pm Mn far. E M e r r ie r , S im p lex , j W O M E N 'S S M A I d en 's 23' I , v. her I* Sim p lex . <>lc. w- $35 478 0,506. A nquetil, one brake, . $90. 50 O L D T T M ', rad io show'# R e e l to rec! tape I R C C a ll C a r y 4M 1992 T E X A N D O R M 190;,-1907 N o - -'•* F a ll, Sprint: Semi- lers. $46 50 per mo. D a ily m aid serv joe, < entj al air, co m ­ p letely rem odeled Also a v a ila b le — single rooms, parking, re frig e ra to r, hot p lates T w o blocks from cam pu s. Co-ed. ' f S D E N T M A N A G E R S 4 7 8 5 1 1 3 N E A R U N I V E R S I T Y , la rg e com fortab le hom e. M ature .rooking. 906 W e s t 1 bedroom. P r iv a t e fem ale student. No 22nd. R o o m m a t e s F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E - three bed­ furnished, stud! jus atm osphere, $60 month plus room ho•.:.*> nil facilities, P E U G E O T R I K E T ok. 23'. excellent condition, "■ .st sell im m e d ia te ly. < all ! till!:-.. 327-2152. Es f,ri afte r 3 W 453-0441 W E RENT AUSTIN Your time is valuable Our services free PARAGO N PROPERTIES 4 7 2 - 4 1 7 1 R O O M M A T E S N EED ED M A L E & F E M A L E two bath*, m aid and T A-o bedroom*, (an tor, cab e TV, r*»ar cam p .* on shut­ tle bu*. $64.50/month, all bills. LA F IE S T A A P A R T M E N T S 400 E e l 30th 477-1800 C A P I T O L C A M E R A R E N T S as, lenses, projectors, ers, calcu lato rs. 4TS-3681. c a m e r­ lighting m et­ R E F R I G E R A T O R S : Ju s t ref rive d new shipm ent of dorm size refrigr raters W e d e liv e r from 9 a rn. -9 p.m . Special | rates to students A lp ine R e n ta ls, 204 E a s t 53rd, 452 1926. FURNISHED EFFICIENCIES M i s c e l l a n e o u s /.uni N E L S O N 'S G I F T S ; com plete selection Je w e lry : A fric a n and M e x ic a n Im ports. 4612 South Congress. 444-3814 In d ia n at r» dent a 1 neigh bori sod, re a r UT a d ah A / C H , inoG id .aG to - # room,, I P A R K I N G R Y M O N T H b . ' ns, c a /v^n, .no-/io -a store rooms, $123 50 - wafer, gas and TV cab:# pa d. d ata o '. et. ■ carpet, S I.aq $12 .VI. 2413 San Antonio, one block from Cam pus. 476 3720. 7016. F U R N I S H E D H O U S E 1201 R ld g cm e n t (a t C am ero n Ken-!) <,n uh * itt Ic?, three bedroom , $185/mnnth plus uti I flit s L o s t & F o u n d I /OST I R I S H S E T T E R OM months W est Lyn n . E n fie ld vicin ity . Sm.-UI scar on ta ll skinny, < all M a rty , I j rig ht cheek, I 473-4273, L O S T - R E W A R D gold B u lo v a w atch on i unpus N ov. 6. C all 444-5078 or 471 1738. Ja n ie . D O E S A N Y O N E know w here L e n n y bs? I ha ve hi# album s, C a ll Steve, 471- JtrY ftorfh of 27th ?/ Guadalupe M R A. Typing, M uJtU lthing, Binding Tho Complete, Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service " A N N I IC W H I T E Poodle 17th R e w a rd O rt 23 478 1965 lost GOO W. F O U N D - G ray-b lack W ire H a ir te rrier P le a s e cla im . Ph o ne 452 1263 39th A A ve B a r e . . to t i e needs of U n iv e rs ity Special keyb*,ard equipm ent im .11 1. science, and engineer­ labo red studenti for ing theses and dissertations. Ph o n e G R 2-3210 and G R 2 7677 2707 H e m p h ill P i r k N E E D G I R L tw o bedroom to share a p artm e n t wl»h 2 otto r girls. Ja n u a r y j I S R Route $78.33, 411-6435. T W O M A L E T< two bed mon : Jo'-ember ] 961.50/1 n. I to '.hare large at<•*'• • »« G IN N Y ’S C C F /IN G SERVICE 9822 I F $*00 $1000 I C A N S H O W yo 1 how to m ake lift a finger, would you he interested in whet I have to s a y ? P O . Bo x D I , Austin, 78712. a y e a r and ro t 11 X p r p ;p tut A L ! 2nd I F . ' [.D F " C ; - C F R 476-9171 or 452 -428 R U M T O R B U Y , new H o o ve r portable w ashers. Id e al for a p artm e n t or & rm A lpine Rentals. 452 1926 c r en M ' Fr I-AY E R C U T R , S IN G E IN G , ♦ in k y last e« ! astro lo g ical ch arts. B a r b 454 3531, 345- 3tX8) t h e Bt G IN N Volk- vng ■ p U repairs d isplay j Good prices F r e e ’estim ate# 307 R ed , . viT-,. vvork j,,. g R iv e r. 478-1553 f A lo I SECRETARIAL SERVICE IG? f v.t lOfh St. 4 / 2 - 0 1 4 ? r '-.''ta* T!-*«*>i t, theme#, P P *. BC Pepqrts, re: " a i M lit? *! r q Binding • '/ ' j i " , A to Z Ll- - e rt.•••ions, the es, and report# 2507 B rid le Path. O u i,e rie B ra d y , 472-4715, B E A U T I F t IL taUons. ml* M rs. Anthon. T Y P I N G , thi M i. dtsser- k'orm er legal se cre ta ry. 154 3079 j ;X( I M d .UT I YIM.'IT I 1 m e r se- re- a il U T B per#, f/k /; ig<- 8 ;8- t • 22s'• W O O D S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E , IO y e a r * ex pf • J .av., ti.<•?: dissertations, etc Prin tin g , bindlngf 453-6090 S T A R K T Y P IN ,enig I^ar G ra d u a te V U N K ! L U R T Y P I N G and Un­ rig. printing, binding. Telephone 465 72t>5. B O B B Y E D E L A I p !c a / 0lUe, as t 71k t FII THM S e le c t rim— 1 > ; crp - < c 443- RO Y W . HOLLEY: PRINTER Al b 30.3 Typeset*.ng, Typing . P rin tin g . B ir d in g . U h t i - - o f h G l v J V . ' * Al'.O Q'.t in M O T O BEC A f JE tar-;# %f - ' ,n ! like cats. J L M A T .I-; E O C M U VI ry one bedroom 7 1 . beginning .Jar a ry 1973 f cru s h 'd , o re b)--.-k frr.m p er mouth. 441-2968 afte r 6:30 p.m . M u st 478-6776. E needed to share R O O M A N D one bedroom ap artm e n t ap a rtm e n t f ornpletely shuttle $95 to < arripus, all bills paid. 311 E a s t 31st Iv carpeted, built In k it'ru n. pool, w a lk a va ilab le. A p a rtm en t w ith CA-C H ful- or 472 8253. m ent, A T K R A C T IV E E E I IC I K N O Y a p a r t ­ ' t v near cam pos, carpet, < A- C H quiet $122 month, plus e le c tric ity 3203 H ell.is 4.21 111? E F F I C I E N C Y apartment sep arate frr.m borne. Merinos m ale student $80. bills paid ( all afte r 5 pro, 4.54 0219. N E E D A c f m , to take C an tin o R e a l ( all ' co li .ct for te e in g . $6.Qmonth. 476 2872. B R A N D N E W E l E I C I E N C Y ap artm e n t I T area, $125 all bills paid. 453 8470 478-2079. S e r v i c e s H e l p W a n t e d 1>A R T 'H M E H E U P w anted, hours to in­ (o r m o re schedule, form ation C all 266-1885. suit .nr P a r t S T U D E N T S ! E A R N W H I L E you learn. tim e co n tact w o rk, prom ises good m oney and in va lu a b le exp erien ce to thr u- who q u a lify Ph o n e 442 9319. H a m - 2pm for appointm ent. j , S T r - T I M K fo r c h r i s t e n •=. E a rn incom e and h a ve fun doing I irt • :• it! (.'ail 398-3170 in ly jc k h a rt a fte r 5pm. P.-4 ab # un /• ip * •isling nd c s. f c n i now n /n r q r 5 w " o d « s if a t to >d nerring potnn- 'V with corr rn ny. enc 4 76 3617. ch nr-on , P A R T T I M E sale# help needed e x tra m oney for Chn L a m tma.#. C al! 345- N U R S E R Y S C H O O L te a ch e r 8-12 a rn. for 3 y e a r olds, also, full tim e attend an t 9-6 m ust love ch ild ren. 1611 K r a m e r Lan e . N o phone i-all.x. C O L L E G E G I R L S w anted for r»"hier- lr, work I un weekday#. Jn- F r id a y and Mon­ cou nter help. M ust he able 10 arn I 30 te rv ie w s 2-5 pm d ay. R o y R ogers. 19th & G uad alup e thru W ork tor C a ll 477-5307. R E A G A N 'Q U A PE T O W N H O U SES Ti orth i 2 -IV:72 7 M I U - a r d Catty* POO B- elf *' rep e re . P ' va*# b # '* 7#r<4. • -I 1211 lutist 52nd A quaint, ado,Po y vx, m try and secluded .vetting d is tin g u is h e s th e se u n iq u e a p a rt- p i R g t w n J-treat !f l.S !ll>, ' g " i ‘ t t ' i,r; , h • ' z ' ^ s r A : S rA room with hidden elevated sleeping loft ‘ $175 Also a va ilab le, one 2 bedroom hou«e $200, 8 minute# from cam pus. B : 4 5 4 4691 417-3661 , T H E T>r)T.T, H O T S 1: 1 I townhouses Sw een ey Urn e T r e I m end',us closets B ra n d new 454 4691. M a n o r Road S T U D E N T E F F I C I E N C I E S Next L a v a c a . A ll details cam pus ]804 Included. 472-3223. F ro m 6 8pm. Q • et r " ■ #d e ’( -. fe e d e r* al rte qhberhood. M #8r IJT and Chat# O f . f.r# rom p mr. C A O H , cantar $*23.50 O a t : i d. Lo cated et 4406 A va. C . ' G ' laundry vs**- TV c a b a ag ca rp e t! A Ii I itorsfoom . '*52.9 /588. ind j o', r lf L A R G E E F F I C I E N C I E S . $115 plus e le c tricity, po..!, AC, carpe*, paneling at no pets. Huntington V illa A venu e A 454-8903 46th L U X U R Y O N E bedroom and e fficie n ­ P a r k cies, p riv a te b a iconle« p atio . Pitter* A partm en ts. H ig h w a y 290* E n st B e rg m a n . 454-4691 O N E B E D R O O M ap artm en t for rent ' usa Dei blo Apartmrr.t.s 3212 R ed R iv e r. 472 4232 O 'U . B E D R O O M ap artm ent. $110 North '■f cam pus, shuttle A v a ila b le Novem - 1 * r 15 Bd l 454-1148, 47o 9079 2802 W H IT IS , t'.a lk to campu#, 2 room o f',' o r, y p arking , m«"1 2 persons - $150 plus e lec tricity. 453 3235 S U B - L E T . Ja n . - M a y. T w o bedroom, 2 bath, cable, dishw asher, CAA lf ne a r cam pi s $225 4305 D u va l, 310 453-2200. V I P 101 E a s t 33rd W a lk U T , Shuttle. Studio, 2-2, fii-d brith, plus study. Q u iet a t rn o s p >1 e r e . c o n te m p o ra ry dei o t . M a tu re t..'dents only. 477-5560 476-0363. afte r 5 OO A p a r t m e n t s , U iuf. TW C) S T O R Y studio B a lc o n y bedroom, lu I v ‘ito patio Q u iet and secluded at I t l l W est 7th. $150 plus bills. Manager- 476 7822. D u p l e x e s , U iu f. ditloned, U P P E R D U P L E X co m p le te ly recon 2 bath, three hedrr.om carpet, drapes, unusual storage 1401 W oodlawn, 477 0035 locked personal, j ft AMATE JR PHCTCGRA PHY Need 3 serious amate irs to sh are great set up, Including darkroom , larg e prl va le studio, p riv a te s t o r a g o f f i c e , BKK) #q, space P r iv a t e , secluded N W . lo* ition p lenty of p arking, each bes own key to be able to v.ruk 24 hours a day, 7 I/iW < 'att of $25/month d ays a week. plus help keep i l< m, fixed up rind ( are some equipm ent P r e p r m a rrie d grad unte student o r o ther m atu re persons interested form mg c re a tiv e group Ple a se w rite ; D a ily Texan, Box D-2, A ustin, 787)2 O utline y o u r background, experience Bud photog*.ip.Mi Intere :•. in of Mr# G a y n e ll A N Y O N E K N O W IN G the w h ereab o ’,1 (Jo h n ) U ryn e Cor Is l 442 tact Lind a H ernandez 1903 R (,334 man# cord .coy pants A wr-Mem shirt*. F^.ESH PA N T S 30-5 30 R A R jhfing, IT !0 - JEV/FL P Y ! Gold. Gold frie d . Bead s from V ic to ria n W A I T E R " W A N T E l • time# to the 1930's - lookers bracelets, ‘ m eal. Mon I-rl ring#, lavalie r# , pins, etc H u nd reds of M rs. S a J/ u g e r o r H a r ry , strands of glass bear!# and o ther eam p y baubles ' from t i $50! N o w until fh ris tm a # only, 4211 D u va l G R A N N Y 'S A T T IC P ric e s - y o u 'ii w eekends them thru lev# 1 - 6 p m . room., !■ r;K P A L E !..'v..'»4 mot, e home, two bed furnished, w ar her, a ir condi­ tioned. Good investm ent. E v e n in g s 385- 6976. 4 P> C O E D F O R L I G H T housework an d/or na by sitting. ( nil 327 0490 evenings or U i D N E W L L ----- E F F I C I E N C Y — ..........-- apart- merit. T'T area. $125, all hills paid ( ft K A T I V E C H I L I ) l o - housework. supervision. 2U- M W T H 2 30 5 p m . U B T * tm portutlon. $2.00/ • . J new T W O bedroom w ith kitchen. ! duplex, co u n try a tm o sp h e re ’ w ood. $150 .n ie ce s 476-3462, L e a se 4005 V a lle y v ie w . O w n e r *27-0891 'd r.it,ce#. A ccom m od ates 4 $225 T w o bedroom, I S O U T H - U N IQ U K L Y appliances beautiful al! ’ ' W A I T R E S S E S and cook* p a rt tim e - 5 p rn M o n d ay f i l l tim*- A p p y r and T uesd ay. P iz z a Hut, 1212 South tot m a r A 11'*** J U S T O F F IH85 n e a r Capitol Pinza, Highland M a ll arid N E shuttle u' 1 niq j e v illa g * styled apartm ent# 7 he ■■ ’ h mari.v extra conveniences S A N T A C L A U S E S needed. T h re e 4 h e ir H am let. DOO R , rd; 452-3202 TO PIA Cb A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD C A L L 471-5244 476-561u 472-8253 . J 'A K ' -' , . 476 ' ... H A N K R. Body 968 iud ike c o r Igs ll 'H O N , re 12 441 1552. lm- id Sport, B A ' $50 19 p. nu 1Y S T K IS (4 1 * hang .M T 5 tape Ja ck M U S T R E ! . ! . 1970 CT A 50 E x c e lle n t con­ dition H elm et# and tiook ra c k 9 W ) m iles A fte r 6 p m 385-6976. ( J t i l l . D DBO acou stic g u ita r w ith case. $4(Xr. 4.51 4819 r,r 1500 V.5 st 6th 64 P O N T I; Af 5 one 444 7339 ‘ M er s A u to m a tic radio f ail 475 422') or r $4 /! Ah *.lf 8N cham pion sired $150 up T e rm s B la c k m asked D ouble Pl. P R golds ar d brin IB'.s 2-2 0152 1972 H O N D A S.N175, D irt b lk " .Nik*- 4!9 m iles W ill sell for $550 new r a 444-7165 a fte r 5 p rn. 67 II E N A i;i;7' $$50: 68 F ia t 850 Sp id er $650 Mijst &/•ii before No* f-mber 25, 4767 72 VAV 'MkrO ml Ie*. AG. radio,, c a ll after 6 P Iti 836 9097. A P, t 'Ti r i p r i E STEREO ni,> v. '!i uh .re M 91ED , $1V) Shu re M 55E (lis t $30 >. $19 999 .":./X 1. ' $79.95) $6.5 I Em,*. J Si 4'to 70 / a tis I '.MN/' i urinal Integrated A M P p m am p $299 90 ./'-OH 377B 40 W. 10X18* ditioj hjciwim 2278 4 'E H BO end, ' I or 478 T E N T .H P g b a ll bag 8mm 71 227U H O N D A C I Ju st tuned, !■ K C E IO 2900 rn! : ed. 454-21 Lr- ( A K C J U , th; excel) 454-4458, 1965 V W B U S ( engine, b attery, a ’ i p t : $700. at Highs.m d M a ll d< r 1969 I V U Pe ting, good Jo e l, 471-2365, .Stereo r; mnditton. t ag • ,).« i rd. $8 55 A W H [T i. M U T S R a le E -*■> < ,.59 after < *pr ed b!e> I in ( .oil 478 $80 ,gh .Sp ri •nt cond p rn 197! V W K U P E R Beetle, 12,300 m ile s e xcellent vs A M E M , AC -ight b i'jc. 476-8513. M U S T K H LU 8 tra c k stet brakes. 11550. 70 M O B . R a d io hi star, and 282 1985. p ra c tic a l U N F I N I S H E D B f g J K U A S E S $7 up. (.cod T yp e w rite r I'.xch-ifige, 1708 Man Ja c in to 472- 3233 ty p e w rite rs $24 50 M X N O L T A S R T - IDI 2ay 154-1971; N ig h !* Rf-as'-nable prices 315 1297 J205B W est 3P* P O R T A U U E M E I JIA .*.'!' von. W o rk g uaranteed. W e com<» to 472 9141, 8 00- %FJC r {i c : I . T A R Y W IT H B B A T y p in g pi /page 926-1429 th* cs, I i. 4 T Y I T N G the rn'*#, if. m y f m r I crm p a p e r*, d ls v r ta u n n * . M rs Pe te rso n , KW, 4818 E X P E R T , K X P E R I E h R e fe rrn c c s a1 ii D issertation * .Sadl'-r, 444 2101, D T Y P I N G , F‘H p «rs, T h e is , n , 444 2(>311 l i t 10pm. •J H U M ! I * l’ ! : f '( / l 'T ; A N D la w r tea, J . : F r a s e r . 476 1317 E X P E R T T t> «• * e # . T Y P I S T Se!a< rrtT, repel 11 s, ■ J ref rt* P rin tin g , binding, I B M B U bt ••'*. prof' M rs. T u llo s, 453 5124. 5 no p rn. 465-771!. P L U M B I N G R E P A I R S T/>wct r >" « No n 'f per ch a rg e on m ost J' bs. ( all PORTRAITS A S ART rend'* on of y t f r\ rfia w f pit ■ P f qtoqrer / e l a t « ; or yr, a uniq ••*'•. ir tera*.ted n * "no*? com rrerice ’ work ce'! 4 In t e " * '’ od n «• / a / ’ -* -rj * '/ lf yr. i ara * h t 3396. W R I T E - O N , It< ‘. T ile N a tln n 's R f s e a r c h and In fo rm t'U o n C all M a r y 47•' <)'Ah I d a y 7-10 p m r fo r m a r e In fo rm a t io n . . I-arg<-si ! <-r\,o .r U n iv e rs ity • 'iii. i p an eis ! P R I N T I N G M U L T I M T H I N G B I N D I N G ■ ' . . ' # E ' • • • • • 0 ('orni g • 0 11 tory rn i x/pfi l u . l 5 i ' in • .-tora and I . i ' it; es/ Pi< i and a -t ii od E lit e types I R f mf typ ew riter# tot p e r * on a 11/, d ii B i o s o f a p o u t ‘ H o n I O R IN F O R M A T IO N A N D P R I C E S rii?iO< -- G A L ! . A L 1.1 E D 444 6551 M A R J O B I U A .N N J: D E l J V n i J l . D U B M typewrite) s; experienced tyi>- themes, thf'He*;, dissertation#; re- ,r A'itlafa(‘Unn la B .ii kA riierlf ■ rd / M n ste r I.st Rurtu** o ii r g •• a ! C h ju g '- h o n o i e d 442 70Ok p n o tln )' 5' - E X P E R I E N C E D secretary would J.k>- typing. 4 A per page 926- former 5136 E X P ! B I E N ' J !». ty p is t. irs m y i. tile. N ig h t se rvi' e also. 442-5209. dependable i G allo n s, thf-M*s, e tc W ill t> lie <: M u ltilith in g , T y p in g , X e ro x in g Jo'* North rf 2 7 t h ?/ G u a d Q u p i A U S - T E X D U P L I C A T O R S u\p/iZflA 4 7 6 -7 5 8 1 118 f Je c h e i B E A U T I F U L P E R S O N A !/ Typing - all your U diversity work. Printing - bind­ ( ’lo.sa to U T. La u ra Bodour, 478- ing 8113 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G Graduatg work only. SOC and up. I B M. E le c ­ tric. Call 472-4)224. M A B Y L S M A LLW O O D Typing Service last minute and overnight available, 892-0727 500$ Sunset T ra il or 44 2 8545 - 2005 A rtliur la n e Tetin papers, theses dissertations, letters;. M aster Charge honored. M B A 3 ) ping, M iJU lith ln g , Binding Tha Comble ‘e Professional rig S o r v ic # I I U L L - T I M L RESUMES of without picture*. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2 7677 2707 Hemphill P a rk F A S T 'T Y P IN G at 4 ii* a pat:a ('.ill Sally, 471-7 ( all Sahy. 4717230 or 478-0981. Lfzngej papers preferred. Proseminars in History Popular With Students an discovered The Departm ent of H istory has in- croarringly favorable student to its program of response academ ically challenging undergraduate seminars. In the last two years, the number of proseminars, all topics under the heading of H istory 350L, has increased from four to l l . the spring, 14 w ill be of departm ent's the history best-known In of fe m !. Some tile teach small scholars c l a s s e s — m e n such as Prize winner P u l i t z e r W i l l i a m II. Goetzmann, diplom atic historian Robert A Divine and form er Rhodes Scholar Gaines Post Jr. Subjects that w ill be of­ fered for the sprint; semester include Tophus in Chicano H istory, M aterial Culture in America, history of Witch­ ( ’old W ar and craft, The K thn icjfy and Race the City. in T h e c l a s s e s a r e deliberately kept to 15 s t u d e n t s and emphasize teacher-student reading and discussions. dialogue, the Additional inform ation for students who wish to apply for seminars during preregistration m ay be ob­ tained from Hie department's undergraduate a d v i s i n g renter in Garrison H all 118, open from 9 a m to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Environmentalists Save City Arroyo By BUCK H ARVEY Texan Staff Writer In Northwest Austin, scattered natural creeks running from a spring lead to B ull Creek, One untouched arroyo is still visible to the public, but if three .Sierra Club members had not acted, landowners would only private have been able to see the ground again. the David R-skind, Don Walden and Tuld have done the I v vs .riled . »r w h ;" it up c r concrete land. F ill it, l f ) le o <■> the 'and the We warn v iv lr .s. To have an urban . natural area.” to Bl I I HU three men view the r of ii - one canyon as only 'ion cf what can be done t a fo r tho beaut- of Austin. ti ‘ v e wanf'-d to Introduce these natural gems so that the r i'y w ill to g ro w n o t c o n tin u e lik e c e r , ” W ald en sa id . “ T h e cif th e Id ea th a t i d u r a l pal no p l a i n w eli-m anir*ured s w in g s, b a s e b a ll d iam o n d ; th e in Austin. They p a r k s like “ E V E N T ! M X I WU if it won.] r t a k e <•>;.' o < is Urn to th e c ity a r e a s , ” h e s a id . “ It tin ■ Viri d, in Sik etv ! . 11 in th e long ru n b u ' m u c h b e tte r tho ta k e c o n tro l a n d fo rm th e at TTie S ie r r a C lu b w ill h< th e can y o n t i l d e sh o w on th a t w a s s a v e d fro m co- a t 7 30 p rn f U n ita r ia n C h u re l . 4700 G -o . T u c id a ' Graduates Reinstate Council to Improve lines of In an attem pt comm unication w ith the U niversity ad­ m inistration and academic departments, a group of graduate students has reinstated the Graduate Student Council. for The council, Initiated last year arid later abandoned interest, w ill be Int k of remodelo I this year under new leadership issues to facing graduate students ’’ the problems and “ confront Harlan Cooper, secret a rz-trea surer •■wild Monday “ process the council a lo w ill grievances with grade *e students arid their departments and the a dm inistration." In ifs firs t meeting last month, the group the eventual decided as exemption of teaching assistants, resident firs t goal its assistants and other part-tim e employes the state Teacher fiorn contributing to Retirement Plan. Also Initial listed as the placing of graduate projects v.ere students on U niversity and departmental policy committees and improvements in the pro< -dares and f a c i l i t y of U niversity libraries. Cooper also said to study admission policies affecting m inority and foreign students. the council hoped The council w ill adopt a constitution when it meets at 7 30 p m Thursday in Union B uilding 304-305, and v«. ill establish a graduate salary and wage committee. U niversity adm inistration comm ittee and lib ra ry committee. Steve Kesler, chairman, and H arry M r Cullough, vice chairm an, were elected on an three months until fo r the council is fu lly in operation interim basis £ ■idol * ^ im k ■ f j * t m. I s « J rn % ’'-ie w% f p i f l H H r a H I x s it - * '■ 'U 'MjM.c ' J J U I Va**/.. Wmmt&Bm "A RESERVE Y O U R FRESH DRESSED T H A N K S G I V I N G TURKEY N O W ! . . . SEE Y O U R K A S H K A R R Y BUTCHER mmiiumm .M m s.'ZW... - •, WK C's iv y j, -I E x c e p tio n a l Values and T re m e n d o u s Savings in Every D e p a r t m e n t Yes, after 21 years at 2268 Guadalupe, next to the University Co-Op, we have lost our lease — lf you've ever moved you know what a chore it can be. We can't move everything into our new store so you have a once in a lifetime opportunity to buy fine jewelry, watches, diamonds, and gifts at exceptionally low prices. To help us move out our inventory we will honor the sale prices at our suburban store in Allandale Village at 5726 Burnet Rd. as well as at our Drag location. We are not going out of business, we will have a new Drag location, in the same block, in January — Everything we s e l l is guaranteed to your satisfaction and backed by Shef ta 11's liberal free service warran­ ties as always — Tv UamonaS / 1.73 carat M arquise Cut — Fine color 1 5 6 carat Brilliant Cut — A fiery stone 1.79 c arat Bound Brilliant Cu* 1.90 carat Brilliant Cut 1.13 carat Brilliant Cut .91 carat Marquise Cut — (a b eauty) HUHDBEDS OF OJHFB DIAMOHPS fancy shapes and round 1/10 ct. to 8 cts. W a t c h e s $3800. $3400 938. SI 987. 495. $1125. M AK S m Corum V O Gold Piece Watch ( was $2200.) $1800 6 PIAGET WATCHES VIOO. to $4000. NOW Va OFF l l OIAMOHD WATCHES $200. to $3000. up to 1 a OFF A 6 B 0 U P OF TECHHICAL WATCHES (Divers * Chronographs • Chronometers) 20% OFF 41 WATCHES Assorted Styles and Types V i OFF j i n il a aes V IC T O R IA N SILVERPLATED COFFEE URN $ 0 0 / 1 (W a* $295.) / U U . W E D D IN G C H A L IC E C IR C A 1840 (W a* $200.) $ 1 / 1 0 R U . A FEW ITEMS OF A N T IQ U E JEWELRY IN 14K A N D GEMS A L L REDUCED 1/ 3 CJLtulL A N T O N IO BORSATOS ST. FRANCIS ^ 2 7 5 (A Signed O riginal) GENUINE EMERALD IN H A N D M A D E SETTING w 4 FULL C U T D IA M O N D S $ 1 1 C O Was $1600. n o w MDU. A SMALL ASSORTMENT (63 item*) from the H ER ZO G C O LLE C T IO N — JEWELED CROSSES (Some Very Large), BROOCHES. LAVOLIERS, BRACELETS A r r A N D RINGS — 1 / /3 U l l N O W OVER 600 COLORED GEMSTONES from our Loose Assortm ent 'I, OFF S HO P B O T H ST OR E S SOME I TE MS ARI O N E OF I K I N D ■ 5726 Bl R S I T RD SHBI R B A N U NI VE RS I TY — 2268 GUADALUPE CLE NEW WESTMINISTER C H IM E G R ANDFATHER STAND UP FLOOR C LO C K (wa* $800) *590. SOLID BRASS STRIKING C L O C K N EW BUT N O W O U T OF P RO DU CTIO N (an Heirloom o f the future (we* $295.) $ 1 0 0 I 7 0 a O N L Y FOUR A N T IQ U E C LO C K S FOR M ANTLE 40% OFF O N SH FTT M L S RE VOLV ING ACCOUNTS YOL FAY AS I U TU. A S JOU D O W S A N D G OF YOUR B ALA NCE M O N J U L Y ( Mi ni mum Monthly $10.) OPEN THURS. T IL 8:00 P.M. L A Y A W A Y SHEFTALL C H A R G E REVOLVING A C C O U N T S B A N K A M E R IC A R D MASTER C H A R G E FINK JEWELRY N O T EVERY DUCFD. HUNDREDS O F LISTED HF RL APL M ARKED D O W N . IS PF ITEMS N O ! IN STOCK ITF M W h o le o r P ie c e , Lb Pound 0 SNOWDRIFT SHORTENING 3 Lb. Can SLAB BACO A R M O U R S STAP Deer H unter* Feature P o e g e le in 'j Tasty Breakfast SMOKETS BARBECUED BEEF BRISKE! nm O u r O w n Rotisserie — V? or W h o ! > Pc 12 oz. Pkg. SMOKED CURED RAMS SP ink P ortion B utt P ortion " J ( j{ C C anter N E U H O F F ’S conc my C uts let / i.89 T H D ^ C V M C M C I DKRCT H tN i U R l ' P V T O M S I , J 1 I t L l b . 7 f “A " Planfrttlon no.o un. Lb. 0 ii 6 " FCr: ■ >n 3/ l U n j Beauty (20 to 22 lbs.) .L o . CHOCK ROAST U S D A C h o ic e H e a v y Beef C e n t e r C u ts Lb T i Blade C u ts F a l l D a y s , F a v o r i t e B r a n d s , K A S H K AR R Y Is Y o u r G oo d T h i n q s To Eat Store , f ' i s m CLING PEACHES Pound H u n ts SPiCLD No. V / 2 Can 3 F O S V ita C ru n c h 16 oz. Pkg. W o l f Brand C H ILE No. 2 Can 75 H o m e G r o w n BEAMS POUND TOMATO JUICE “ L “ “ fE.. 0-j 11K A P P LE JUICE “ 1MOT » , c . 35' 4 A r.-r ORANGE BREAKFAST DRINK DEL M O NTE O R C H A R D ........................................ 1/2-Gallon LAVER CAKE MIXES D U N C A N HINES ......................I B’A or. Box ^ F< WESSON O i l LEMON JUICE "“ li“ 0N PITTED DATES ” OMa“ " DOG FOOD “" " " S ., c, 6 tm DETERGENT PRESTONE ANTIFREEZE FL O O R GOLD MEDAL 59* . . . , , . , , . 5 9 * 59* 98* ......... a.„, * . 59* .. .. .. *1.99 CLEAN-UP BAGS61*? ,...,69* APC . 5 L b . B i g H i V IV A iU/£?.S MINCEMEAT HILLCREST CE CR .................. Big Roll CROSSE & BLACK WE l ................................. 18 oz. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... I A G , HILLCREST CHEESE ci’ SI-COLA ^ _ 6-Pack 16 oz. Bottles . . . . . . . . plus Deposit OLD MILWAUKEE BEER 6-Pack O ne-W ay Bottles W arm PAUL MASSON PREMIUM MIA U i I Jar J / 3 ic, S1 - KOC “IHCi i I l b. C tn. 39 Cc I FOR $2.99 , 37' 29' 20 o* Po E J „ * f f " C F R O Z E N V A L U E FEATURES WHITE CORN t r “ r . ’ PUMPKIN cr MINCE PIES M O R T O N frozen ............................... N IG H T H A W K frozen TOP CUOP'T STEAK DINNER PiZZA S a u s a g e o r Pepperoni C h e f B o y A r - D e o fro z- n ...............................13 oz. Tray 7 0 14 oz. P kg . / ^Jl F e at u r es F r o m O u r P r o d u c e D e p a r t m e n t VtV S HAM LIN ORANGES n , w P IN E S A P I ROME BEAUTY APPLES D ANJOU PEARS . c a b b a g e ... , 12c 21c , 2^c 09c THESE PRICES G O O D AT A l L STORES TUESDAY, "I | WEDNESDAY, A N D THURSDAY. , v . h Ti J * - ' S r : ■■ /-■ U4. jj-x-fcmif *. .ic.a. I ® UT v T H E DAILY TEXAW Tuesday. Novembt r ii, I 2® $ \ Excavations Reveal Ancient Culture £a n n THEATRE 521 EAST 6th 472-0442 UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT FEATURING. H U S T “ BLUE S H O W r n A V G R S KA K R Y I R ID A Y T M I H E S T IN A H T E N T E R T A I N M E N T A E S T U S ' S H O W IN G — T W O s i I I H SHOW STYLE” LOVE AMERICAN PM S 2ND I E ATI RE “ TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE” D O T H IN c o l o n A N O S O I N O — K A T I O W X B O X O P E N S ll A IEA 1.' OO T o 10:00 I l>0 ON s i NO \Y BRING THIS AD FOR l/2 OFF ADMISSION PRICE I I I I I I I I T I I T T T I T I T T Y T T T I I * _ ‘ I i r II • G H V f A D U L T TH J ^ r ^ u w E S fit ft 3 % OFF ADH. WITH THIS AD rn . rn O N L Y * x ij 'T O A .M . - 12 E M . l l ' B y ROLANDO R E N E G A RC ES (Ed ito r’s Note: Rolando Reno (•arces is h University student s t u d y i ii i; at tho Catholic University in Lim a, I'eru .) PARAGAS, Pen:— Tim Peruvian coastline tod tv is miles and miles and milos of empty desert. A rain falls once every 25 or 50 years, animal and is vegetation is almost nonexistent. scarce life Yet thousands of years ago, extensively this desert was jx>pulated by cultures which planted the seeds of agriculture in the world, laying the basis for th** development of one of the few original cultural focal points the W'orld has known. Peru, along with the Near East, India, the in China and the Indus Valley in Yangtse Valley parts of Mexico, is one of the few truly original cultural centers of the world, believes Dr. Frederic Engel, a French ar­ chaeologist who hag led extensive excavations in Peru. All other cull urns, Engel said, have deriv'cd from these focal points. The oldest cultural assemblage known in Peru which contains daily horoscope for med with your j ou could easily enslbl* tatmg and Wrong I'-e >s jtilo rn n e s s Is, In a point in business sure, though, that it h in d e r y o u r t the moment you stem ii,' toward your own end. F* situfitk®. Ait* your ng Jus!). ,. to everyone" ir sensitivity Is indeed you t:u< Ii h i i i c pi I sun to know. H o w e ve r, w h en people need sym p ath y there are tim e* » sw ift kirk. not L E O : T o you It seem s as though y o u r c a re e r at this point Is Iii! o r m iss. A c tu a lly It Is som ew hat, but all you can do the punches. ro ll with is V I R G O : An a c tiv e social life Is yo u rs it. Don t neg le ct let to day y o u r essential duties, though. if you E l H U A : T o o nun ti o f a good thing could be y o u r dow nfall. C o nversely, you c re a tiv e a b ilitie s today. P u t them to use. e x c e p tio n ally ha ve A M E S : health avert a modltiei T Al H I - tense, partner* 8l S C O R P IO : Pe o p le enjo y y o u r help w hen they nerd it, but you must first re q u ire that they ask O ther­ wise. j e u ap p e ar to be m eddling P A G IT T ,\ R H S : M o n ey lm- p o rtan t to you right now so ron- ce n tra te on getting It A f'h iis tm a s Job m ight be ju st the an sw e r. seem s C A P R I C O R N ; studies m ay R ig id becom e d iffic u lt for y o u today, b it It is som ething w h ich m u st be done. E v e n Is not required, do l f lf studying A O I A H II S : Y o u r home w ill give you lot of p leasure this evening, so ii p lan to spend som e tim e there, lf you must in vite friends, h a ve only a few. P I M E V th# friendship of the opposite sex* this evening, but at nil costs don’t force ’ hem intr. It. M a n a g e on y o u r own lf n e ce ssary. Y o u m a y re q u ire — N IC K L A W R E N ! V. proof of an Incipient agriculture is that of Caracas on the southern coast. Here, in 1966, amidst tremendous barren sand dunes, Engel uncovered a village with human remains and cultivated plants which have been dated by radiocarlxm at 6,930 years B.C. In the ancient towns of Chitra and Lurin, on the same southern coast, several well-con served s k e l e t o n s and remains of cultivated plants also were found by Pin gel. The individuals of a meter and a half (about 5 feet) in stature have been dated in the laboratory at 5,000 years B.C. the these Archaeologists doubt strongly that first are agricultural civilizations in Peru. “ We have not even begun to e x p l o r e said Dr. Peru,” Josephina Cox, a Peruvian ar­ chaeologist from the Univorsidad Catoliea, who strongly believes that even earlier civilizations exist but are yet to lie found. These d e s e r t cultures revolutionized the eating and dress habits of the modem world, having begun the cultivation of i presents T O N I G H T 7 and 9 p o t a t o e s , yams, tomatoes, peanuts, yucca and cotton. squash, How were these people, in su 'h an arid climate, able to make an economy of agriculture? It is difficult to prove any single theory, but it is thought that these people lived both as nomadic hunters and sedentary cultivators, living in the Andean the summer highlands during months and moving in the winter months to the arid coastline to places calked “ lomas” where they cultivated their crops. These “ lornas” are areas where vegetation is supported without rain and irrigation, but from the condensation of the humidity in the cold air. the splendid For many years the world has admired Inoaic empire of Peru while being c o m p l e t e l y of civilizations thousands of \ears older. These civilizations were the cradles of world agriculture making p ssible the descent from primal iiialily to civilization. ignorant action line “ I know Austin has been named one of th:- nation’s 14 “ most pleasant places to live.” What are Uh- other 13? C IE. The March 29, 1965, Issue of U.S. News and World Report listed tile nation s 14 “ most pleasant places to live.” They were: Princeton, N .J.; Santa Barbara, C alif.; B i»uIdea Colo.; Mm.lvm, W is.; Salem , Ore.; Santa Fe, N .M .; Orlando, M a.; Austin, Tex.; Lexington, K y .; Hartford Conn.; Ann Arbor. M ich.; Iowa City. Iowa; Burlington, 111.; and Palo Alto, Calif. Toe cities were not ranked, but m erely placed into this general category. Doe* the “ cable” interfere with antenna reception by broadcasting on the wrong channels? L H . It should not, if the cable has been installed properly and !«; in good repair. However, if the cable is birken or not properly installed, there w ill be a leakage of radiation, which might cause a cable channel to interfere with a kx-al channel. This could cause you to get two stations on channel 4, for example. What also might cause interference is the weather. This complication is in the form of lines am>ss the picture alxmt an eighth of an inch in width. If you do have this type of int' rh*:once over a long period of tim *, contort the roble station. This is important, since the cable sub­ scribers might also he getting the same interference as antenna users. Who do I contact to have my children join the swim classes at Gregory’ Gym during the week nights? CID. You should contact Dr. Stanley Burnham at 454 2725. He ran giv# Action Line will answer any questions concerning the University or any local or national issues. Address inquiries to Action Line, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, University Station. Austin, Texas, 7871?, or bring them to Journalism Building 103. Only Initials will he used. SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER, directed by Francois Truffaut, I960) with Charles Azanvour and N icole Berger you a1] the information as to cost and limes. JESTER A U D I T O R I U M 7 5 c A Service of the Department of R /T /F. ★ T EX A S TRANS ★TEXAS Th eir last week to play in ACADYMY AW ARD WINSER b i s r A c r o n e m u imam m a s asa/m 1 WerrejitMi _________ FEATURES 1:00 - 3.00 - 4:45 - 6:40 - 8 25 - 10:15 R I T Z A R T S X RATED A DULT M O V IE S 1 6 m m F E A T U R E 320 E. S IX T H 478-0475 THF BEST AND BIGGEST STAG FILMS IN TOW N "REFORM SCHOOL GIRLS" P L I S 16mm SHORTS FN SO I X I) A N I) COLOR O P EN D A IL Y AT 12:00 NOON $1 OO O F F ADM ISSION P R IC E — S I'N ., MOV., T I E S. W ITH T H IS AD P L U S S T I D EN T LD . Escorted Ladies Free With Membership No One Under 18 Admitted NOW A IR CO ND ITIO NED IN T E R S T A T E T H E A T R E S $1.00 'TIL 2 30 1:40 3:20-5:00 6:40 8:20-IO OO © S t o w Metrocolor $1.00 'TIL 2:30 I s15 3:00 *4 45-6:30 8:15-IO OO A dude with a plan to stick it to The Man! STARRING RON O'NEAL AS PRIEST Austin for this year!!! KENNETH THREADGILL and The Velvet Cowpasture Ken sez, ’ G o in ’ to do some pickin' and skiing in Colorado for a spell — be back for N ew Years Eve at the Saxon Pub." PR E S H O W W A R M U P 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. A !1 Beer $1 Pitcher Mixed Drinks 75c S A X O N P l B 38th & I.H. 35 454-8115 S P E C IA L B A R G A IN N IG H T A D U L T A D M ISSIO N $1.00 i i t m [2200 Hancock Oriva — 453 6641 O P E N : 1:45 FEA TU RES: 2-4-6 8-10 R ED U C ED P R IC E S TIL 6:15 R u n F i R u n f st a iring: P ATTY DI K R m n i l l L I K E M Y M O TH ER a thriller HELD OVER “ FANTASIA” W A L T D ISN EY'S O PEN 5:45 P.M. r»afur*« 6 OO 8 00 - 10• OO p.m. HAMMERSMITH, master criminal and nut, is out. Watch out I l» , WM ARSITY UMM oo Gu a d a l u p e s t r e e t $1.00 ’TIL 2-30 1:30 3:35 5:40 7:45-9:50 n i, > Starts Tomorrow of i M JR i% yRf . n afatm tur • 9i F jON ASSOCIE! CLIFF ROBERTSON., C t ^ i y CLAIRE BLOOM LII It Tm A lf OI !A»«fY RMH DUHME I /-RALPH I jj; /T „ -v 1 STIR! ING /NELSON ;SHMMtt/SEI MHK SII URBAN I tm.* warn RALPH NELSON LAST DAY! 2-4- 6-8- IO A D V A N C E T IC K ET S A V A IL A B L E A FT ER 2:00 P.M . STARTING TOMORROW \\ ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S FRENZY$1 rf J I 2IHVT ^ 2nd Level Dobie Mall 477-1324 21 st at Guadalupe Austin, Texas \ era >1 I Ii* h “ V i o l . E Y I M I . l o l l S ’ * L A W L E S S W a r r e n O n t o . “ T H E HI I! E D H * \ |)*> i CG , L O N G H O R N Patroon of 113 N 454 38*0 I R I D A X '■ J K AN ! X S Ply* ■ E l E L I I L L M E N T ” ' V» No Oui* I tuto r IP Ailinitlfit NOW AT LA ST ON TH E WI DEST 'HE EN - T I / E MOST TALKED ABOUT G IR LS IN A M ERICA—TU E ONE, THE ONLY... A a THE UNPUBLISHABLE NOVEL IS NOW AMERICA’S MOST CONTROVERSIAL FILM! A STEREOVISION PRODUCTION COLOR BY MQVIELAB CHRISTINA HART • MICHAEL GARRETT ANGELIQUE Of MOLINE DONNA STANLEY I «CU» IV! PROO JC IR LOUIS K SH I R w« nib tm Burelle »» ALT SII I IMAN IR S t a r t s Wed. rv * shi ar-.) must T E X A S YIH GuiMimSt.-477 1 * The Mafia. The way they liv ed - The way they died. The Valachi Papers A DINO DE LAURENT I IS presentation A TERENCE YOUNG Film from Columbia Picture* L R ; . © . II I n t e r s t a t e s A U S T I N g !3 0 SO. C O N G R ES S AVE. D O O R S O P EN 5:11 $100 'TIL 6:30 Feature*: 5:30-7:40-9:50 Forqet the world ..corno to the Cabaret Tech nicolor* Di*hvt*<3 by Wried Mists WW jp Q IZ A M IN N F L L I M IC H A E L Y O R K J (WUU! OKA* HUK MC Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Peter Ustinov, Beau Bridges in HAMMERSMITH /SOOT ■ C l ••ow M .I AUH* IS) ow* KSSJ* Second Feature Title Censored L A D I E S A M ) < OI P E E S W E H O M E BTI D E N T S <4 P r i c e W>i1neMl:iy< IN PERSON ON STAGE FRO M 4 TO 12 M ID N IG H T IN OUR PENTHOUSE ALL GIRL REVUE Ice Cold Suds, Etc. 100% Air Conditioned F E A T U R IN G TINA and DOLLIE NOW O P E N IN THE READING ROOM. ADULT BOOK STORE ALL TH E LATEST GOODIES. B O O K ' M A G A Z I N E S N O V E ET I E S ' £’V -aJJU•*’. & „ %jki\I* .TEXAS ] I AU ti Ben Whit* Birt — We 2A5J FNDS T O D A Y "JUNIOR BONNER” Featoro Time-.: 6-R IO $1.00 TIL 6 P.M. C s t a r t s T b l M O W R O V t T ) O P E N 5:45 • FEA TU RE TIM ES 6-8- IO f y w O f r L ■ f,w ^ T^ u f> Pb< r A PsTe K &OGfc>a^OViOW PwooUcFon ml . • *** a . v- TE( HN < .0! Of ' • I rem Warner Bios A War fief Commurncatono Compar./ jGj“3LS> T R A N S ★ T E X A S TF Ll, JR 'lh k MOO Burnet — 465 69:3* S T A R T S W ED N ESDAY T r i n i t y ’s™ b a c k i n t h e s a d d le a g a i n a n n S till h o r s i n g a r o u n d . Jovpf K Lev, ae iud A.cn Kin busy Pe .tm Aa halo Zi/ig4«)ii I "Trinity Is S till M y N am e jfi3 H U M M (C* rSSuf PrmU Ny D» luxe* - COLOR ' Ad Avus \\TPf k.” Miss Diehe! said in describing her f i r s * leading University fans. a-tempt at First year cheerleader Dan Uh linger said that concentrating on what he's doing offsets: some of the state fright he would or­ rewards dinarily 'eel in front of so large a crowd. T h e University cheerleaders receive return in for their physical exertion and emotion a I seem small. The special privileges are limited to being able to get their dates good seats a' the games. feel the But the cheerleaders c r o w d ' s their to response presence is reward enough. ex pend .tures Miss Boykin per! Id s best summer! things up in saying, "lr is the neatest feeling when you’re down there and you start veiling and the crowd yells back with you. I think cheerleaders keep the crowd going. They seen * > appreciate you " CASTLE CREEK 1411 L A V A C A 472-73 5 JERRY JEFF WALKER STEV E F R O M H O L Z A N D !T E 3 2 A S I V IS IO N A R T S & T H E A T E R COMMITTEE presents DARLING with Juiie C h risti, Laurence Harvey, DI: Ic Bogarde A ptnetr#*!eg study c* manger* e-'dl mora'v of today's st >* .s s-- log society. TONIGHT 7 and 9 p.m. S tu d e n ts 75c M e m b e rs 1.25 Cheerleaders Steve Horns at a prp rat to root for the tea got in tho way. T eomwork Clark and M arsha P e a rco ye'f for the ly. The cheering squad must f*e$ rn, without letting rain or lost eyelashes tv tonight M >v!e continued from 9 p.m. In te rn a tio n a l P e r 'o r m a n c 5 ga r 4. 42 * 1 6 jn p ; I P i so 9 t> 9 t 10 r the Truth 4 4. ie: R Rust 2 9 Behind tie '.'ne* 4 42 The J- Id < >r.es it Found th* Future** IO 15 p 12 - V 4,42 5,7 IO l l art P rn .Vt W I O W V 1 A U T T L E Y S A V E A LOT : Is tat 1/20. 1/4«L. SCL , # rn # $ I H M m w # U M « J t I H M CAPITOL D IA M O N D SHOP ' 4^03 C-u*rn AUSTIN f H©l#t fSfe- 0 1 7 8 DIAL - A - JOKE 476.5913 Hi!!-! Foundation of Austin presents THE FIXER W ed n e sd a y, Nov. 15 a t the Hiilel Foundation: 7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. 2 I 05 San Antonio A Must To See This Semester Students 75c Hiilel Members: Free An Invitation from Motlier Earth I You Be tbs Judge. I Don't plan anything else until you have accepted this invitation. Every night Mother Earth features a live band, and every week it changes. Which amounts to a continuous display of fantastic variety of musical tale* It is so good we couldn't ^ wait to let you know and offer you a special invite tion. Y o u / be the '?* 'WMP w i ; , > * w judge; we think you'll like it. Mother Earth, 10th & La­ mar. A Week at Mother Earth: MON — Unescorted women admitted free; T U E — Drink and Drown Nite; All the beer you can drink, Men S3, Women G2; V. E D —Free Nite; One free keg of beer; TH URS-Holiday Nite; 5^ Beer between 8-9 PM; unescorted women admitted free; F R I- Forqet Frustra­ S A T - tions Niter Live band, $1.50 cover charge; (Live Band, Pizzas mtely) Drink and Drown N ie M en $3, W o m e n $2 PHOENIX-UVE lOth at la- r7-3783 EN fER M M M EN T! ■ W H A T ’S ■ ■ C O M IN G XUSTM TEXAS UNION Academic Affairs Comm Hee presents SPECIES: HUMAN PHENOTYPE: WOMAN Today's Schedule: Quartet of Four Female Voices on Prostitution A r t G a l l e r y — 12 n o o n Neglected W om en in History by Laura Richardson Star Room 3 p.m. Film: Darling Union Theater 7 and 9 p.m. Hoi! Kvnnvdij t*rvsvnIs IN P E R S O N ! ANITA BRYANT CHARLIE BYRD CHUCK BIRD WITH ORCHESTRA DIRECTED BY AND HIS AWARD WINNING TRIO I N C O N C E R T ! I N A U S T I N ! 8 P.M. SUNDAY NOV. 19 AUSTIN'S MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM All seats reserved $6.50 $5.50 $4.50 TICKETS ON SALE NOW S C A R B R O U G H S D O W N T O W N A H I G H L A N D M A L L S E A R S I N H A N C O C K C E N T E R . U N I V E R S I T Y C O O P TICKET OFFICE 6615 N. LAMAR M A I L O R D E R S A C C E P T E D N O W P A Y A B L E T O A N I T A B R Y A N T . B O X 5 3 0 9 , A U S T I N 7 8 7 8 3 £ n e lo * e i H m o t d , s * ' f » d d r # a * * e ) e n v e lo p * A n d I n d . c e te b a lc o n y o r m a n f lo o r p r e f e r e n c e . . a n ! t S i r r « ; ONLY 50c COVER EVERGREEN (an origin*! cookin’ band) TO M O R RO W BALCONES FAULT % - i f * ★ ★ ★ #S F . * jf. That’s Right . . . That s Right . . . It's Tuesday Night * Amateur Night * * at f t . * l l ; "HOOK-EM ll * * 3 4 th A G u a d a ’ jp e * l f /■ > 1st Prize 2nd Prize 3 rd Prize $50.00 $15.00 $ 5 .0 0 * if , v % . . . FIRST TIME ON STAGE! HORSES PERFORMING THE GRACEFUL STEPS OF THE SPANISH RIDING SCHOOL LEO" the colossal horse 'EL PALOMO” spectacular EL REBILDE" world s only clowning Portuguese horse The great sound of ManachrSan Miguel*1 Municipal Auditorium NOV. 14 OO p.m. ADM. $4 h SS For Into. Cal 385-6779 S2 $3, Tickets may ba purchased at J o il a t n Vernon Je w e le r* M a 4 or ado Record Shop The D riak ill Bar k G rill. To in tro­ d u c e y o u t o o u r new " a f t e r - o f f i - ’ hours (4 30 to 6 30 Mon. thru Fri I the D rlskill Is featuring 65* cocktails. And now you can en joy live p erfor­ mances by Marcus —a singer/guitarist Mon. thru Sat., 5 pm. t ill c lo s ­ ing. Marcus runs a m u sica l gamut from smooth Man- cini-styled sounds to swinging current pop to gritty coun- try western and then to fiery South of the Border tunes. So join us at the Drisk ii I. Drink, eat and be merry. I t ’s the after- office place to be. skill tog Seguin 6th and Brazos ; -CUA P* COLORING FURIOUSLY TO GET YOUR KODACOLOR PRINTS OUT ON TIME! You Won’t Buy That? O K . Then you can believe our modern lab allows us to process your pictures in only 4 8 hours . . . In by 4-out by 5, two days later. NOT BAD, FOR AN ELF. Studtman Photo 19th at Lavaca Cameron Village The Texas Union Special Programs Committee Public Lectures Committee and The School of Communications present KENNETH A D A M Former Director of the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) in a public lecture Wed., Nov. 15 at 8: p.m. Art B uilding Auditorium Free GREAT WESTERNS; GREAT COMEDY U N IV ER SIT Y FILM PRO G RA M C O M M IT TEE STAGECOACH Directed by JO H N FORD with JO H N W A Y N E and CLAIRE TREVOR -<•- Jo h n Fo'd Ka* s w e a t a In one s u p e rb ly e ip a n s iv a g e stu re o f a r t.fee# and t a l l! * com p r o m * • tin g s a tong of ca m era . It n o ses en d h o * b e a u tit ly It m o v e , pla in s o f A m e n * , skirling the iky-ranc.h'ng m esas c f M o r me-* has m ad e a m o tio n c • * • • presents 1 and thro u g h a - th e c i d -fash;c n e d , L P'jo d - U p * l f u d banks w h ich e v e ry p h o to g ra p h e r d ream s a b o u t' . c f I * nave'- r i a v o u t- d a tf * r I Pralrja fra v # i ln fK » scalp-raisin g sa va n t!# *, w hen G e r o n im o ’s A p a c h e s w ere on the w a rp a th . — ( N Y T im es) FILMS O F THE 1 9 3 0 $ AND EARLY 1 9 4 0 $ DESTRY RIDES AGAHI Directed by G E O R G E M A RSH A LL with MARLENE DIETRICH and JA M E S STEWART , I O r e o f th e fu n n ie st W e s t e r , e v e r m ad e w h ich also se- ed 'n rev -a *» *a 9 9 'n q ca re e r. A b it o f the o ld W e s t w ith a good b • o f th, ' (O ld D ie tr.c h rn it « tig h tly w r.tte n c a p •*' . e re c te d s 'g r a n d s u p p o rtin g p e r fo r m a n c e s ' — (NY T im e s ;. * ; -* v TONIGHT ONLY! __ T U E S D A Y N ovem ber 14 Stagecoach 7:00 9:00 Destry BATTS AUD/ 75c F E R FEATURE T h e D a i l y T e x a n T u e s d a y , M e m b e r 14, 1372 P a ^ e l l Symposium Probes Female Stereotypes to the them, By CH ARLEEN SEB EST \ Examining various stereotypes or women and how a avoid University graduate student said Monday night that because women are being stereotyped as dominated by men, that women are accused o? being underhanded, and catty. it then sneaky follows of Jud y S P E A K IN G \T the open ng session three-day a c a rn p ii s syrup* shun on w o m e n , Smith, graduate student in zoo! igy, told approx mately 50 per* sons in Academic Center 21 that stereotypes come from three s n o re s ; the biological idea that women naturally like be;ng dominated by i men; the idea of division Hinson-H a 7. I e w o o d b o rro w e rs , w'ho w ill receive th e ir checks by Jan. 6, will be eligible f >r a delay in fee payment for preregistration. Scholar-hip Education O p p o r t u n i t y Grant (LO G ) recipients will their money in the form of checks made payable to the University receive and for preregistration fee payment. Checks for National-Direct Student Loan borrowers will be available to students af the office of Accounting, Main Building 152, before Dec. 19. Students must be prepared to pay preregistration fees the accounting office before receiving their check*. in C areer Library Relocated Tup Career Library of the University Counseling Psychological Services Center has moved from the West Mall Office Building to Jester Center 115A, Bob Richer, executive assistant of tho counseling facility, said Monday. “ We're trying t o hit incoming freshmen and transfers rn they can have determined majors before they reach their junior and senior year,” Pusher said. Tile Carcer Library, which functions as a Job counseling res'jurc e center, offers an extensive basic collection of information relating to careers. T ie library also provides information on other on campus resources. Including the Faculty Adviser Referral List and location of placement offices. The Career Library' is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m Monday through Friday. Y o u Can Have Y o u r Pie and Fat It Too! OPEN 5 P.M. - 12:30 A M. Sunday - Thuriday 5 P.M. - 2:30 A.M. Friday A Saturday LOCATED INSIDE THE FLAGON A TRENCHER B IG D A D D Y D ELIV ER S PIZZA Call 471-6795 7513 SAN ANTONIO STREET Texas Union Ideas and Issues Commiftee present* "An Analysis of the Election" by Dr. Clifton McCleskey, Professor of Government Mr. Rick Piltz, Instructor in Government Sandwich Seminar Room 304-305 Today Arf Gallery campus news in brief * P *n. V. .- is • 'a y in Union B u ild in g 315 to celebrate the birth of B A H A - ( I.LAH the Baha'i fi th. There -.iii ba a film featuring folk mu Si .•cs and Crofts, and s e r v e d , T h * founder of iitu o j is b a : public vs, I i i is invited o f D I l*/\H T M K S T IH-. IO K Y A S T R O N O M Y v e il present L r , and at t p.m. T uesday 1 av. r C ngei In Physics M a t h - A s tronomy Build- I»r. ( , ink'etich w ill sp eak in-: R e v o l u t i o n ’* I 102. H ic ll T h e public Is v. h* un:#* "< Cpl ■ Ii I M U H M ,I I W I L K S S T I O IK S ORC. \- M / X T I O V will meet at 7 30 p.m. I nlon Uuilldlng 325 to T u e s d a y in oi»ai.i/.« fu r the y e a r and plan ao­ li v Hies. i O I 11 s i . C l i n v. i I! p r “ s r*n t N e a I W rig h t at tho I nil t M ain Ballroom to speak on r n T u e sd a y lit » i S a v e Bits Thicket." B O I TU W K S T M KF H A M I 8 I. M T I B K s i ft I IJS vutl i r< st ut L r . J . I' Den- h a riot: at K l n rn. T u e s d a y In Kn- i. n r L . b B e d d in g 102 to *r>< ak on • Recent Experiences In V ib ra ­ in S I I IM t e a M - ir c m ii n i N v i B ' t r i O N " HI rn - - - t it 2 p rn T u e sd a y In B a i n H all 201. i I \ ( I I*. l i t ’ b i r n h o r T I ON’ A1, t O i l . M U I \ w ill meet at In the K i s t 7SIO : br a r y B u ild in g L e c tu re t 'in tr ii m W e d n esd ay H a ll- L B J L ib ra ry Complex to hold :t business meeting. 7 M I \ :M (Z en K a r a t * ) w ill m e ! a t 4 lf. p m Tuesday in Moore-HU) I -rum R oom to practice. T U X A S O I I IN G < L l ll w ill m eet at , 30 n rn, T icsday In Union BuUd- ine 30T) ta plan a T h an ksgivin g baek- p.-■ ' clio- end rally. I V I A F i t '-IT A MI T l X t s S T I I I K N T N I B - IN O A SS O C IA T IO N * W ill m art In he a r T i-alay in C P B a i! PH ‘‘C u rre n t Ex»nna K n a p p speak < n E f t : I l-ti'.e A ctio n and H e alth R e !- J Hied Hills-." Edward J. Petrus M.D. " E S THE O P EN 'N G O F HIS OFFICE FOR I K l I IE PRACTICE O F O PH T H A LM O LO G Y fDi eases and Surgery of the Eye) A T ' 38(0 MEDICAL PA R K W A Y 'Q U AD RAN G LE BUILDING SUITE 209 AUSTIN, TEXAS 78/56 E I OURS O I NT M f NT TELEPHONE 454-4651 73 Cactus order it when you TELEVISION DOCUMENTARY For about IMM I M ENTA K Y D*xa*4 IN SU R A N C E R E F O R M , television producer seeks per- legitimate personal -.ons « itll insurance gripes (high prices, cancellation, non- renewal, non-availability, claim s problems), call Don Please ( raig al 171-lFt.Tl between 9 ami aiKMit car Take Advantage o f Experts! Graduating? Need a job? Then Senior Send-off can help you. Professionals from various fields, deans of colleges, and representa­ tives from all campus placement centers will be at Senior Send-off. This in fo rm al an d in fo rm a tiv e session is designed to make the transition from academia to car­ eer easier. Take advantage. Come. v c V A M A N L Y D E O D O R A N T W O > V *TJ ' • f JK'- ' - - - ■ G ■ , irishsprmg NET W I 5 OZ. •'M anlyyes...but ladies like it too" This unusual patch is light green satin on black velvet with white stitched lettering. Sew it on. Iron it on. Or turn it into an e/e patch. But however you wear it. wear it proudly. You can get one free when you buy 3 bath size bars of Irish Spring. the manly deodorant soap that ladies like too. See coupon, c Mall to- Irish Spring Patch Ofter P O Hoi 768, Darien, Conn. 06870 Picas* S*nd mr- (quantity) of Irish Spring Patches) I am encl©* ing the front pa aals with "Net WI." makings from i package* of Irish Spring (bath si/e only) tor each patch ordered. Allow 2 to 4 weeks I HA M I ______________________________________ cot LFC.r ________________________ CITY _____________________________ _ 3TATF __________________ 7i» OFF! R EX PIRES OF Cf MEIER 31. 1973 Eureka! Casa del Oro. Find Us And Find What You’ve Been Looking For. On The Drag. a J r n J E W E L E R S R e g is t e r fo r F R E E $100 Seiko Watch to Ik: Given Anay Dec. 19. No Purchase Necessary. Do Not Have To lie Present To Win. 7:30 p.m. Thurs. N ov 16 A lum ni Center Paza 12 Tuesday, November 14,1972 T H E D AILY TEXAN |