t h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Aus Vol. 71, No. 67 Ten Cents A U STIN, TEXAS, TU ESD AY, O C T O B E R 12, 1971 Twe|ve pages 4 7 1-4401 Baum Resigns as D e n ^ % ^ a d After Initial SEC Furor u.es By JOHN POPE General Reporter D r. E lm e r B aum , a c e n tra l c o n tro v ersy , fraud stock a s S ta te D em o cratic figure in re sig n e d P a rty th e M onday c h a irm a n . sta te m e n t, In a p re p a re d the A ustin o steo p ath said he w an ted to quit th e post to devote m o re tim e to his m edical p ra c tic e a n d to his fam ily. HE SAH) HE had w an ted to step down “ e a rlie r this y e a r so th a t a su c cesso r could he selected for the c ritic a l political y e a r com ing u p ." to p re p a re tim e in H ow ever, b e cau se of stock-fraud c o n tro v e rsy and th e p u b lic ity su rro u n d in g the it, B au m said he delayed his decision “ until resolved. A d e lib e ra te th e situation w as a n d the T ra v is C ounty G rand J u r y h a s accom plished th is." thorough investigation by T h e g rand ju ry studied alle g a tio n s th a t top S ta te officials w ere involved in quick- p ro fit stock deals designed tw o b a n k in g bills through tho L eg islatu re. H ouse S p e a k e r GUS M utseher, his a id e R ush M eG in ty and Rep. T om m y Shannon w ere in d ic te d Sept. 23 on b rib e ry ch a rg e s, and th e ir tria l is set for Ja n . IO. 1972. to speed BAUM AND Gov. P resto n Sm ith ad m itted m a k in g $125,000 profit on N ational B an k ers L ife stock—the type involved in the recen t S e c u ritie s and E x ch a n g e C om m ission in­ v e stig a tio n —but each denied a n y connection the ban k in g bills, b etw een w h ich Sm ith la te r vetoed. the deal and tra n s a c tio n ,” “ It w as just an o rd in a ry B a u m told The T exan M onday. S m ith had nam ed B aum to th e S ta te B a n k in g B oard, but he resigner! from th a t p a n e l M ay 5 before th e S en ate acte d to co n firm the appointm ent. T his a \o id e d a p o ssib le furor. He would h a v e needed a tw o -th ird s vote of the S enate—21 votes—for c o n firm a tio n . (SD EC) B a u m said M onday he h ad planned to s te p down as S ta te D e m o cratic E x ecu tiv e C o m m itte e before re s ig n in g from the B anking B oard, but he th e top SDEC spot d ecid e d in u n til “ th e publicity criticism con­ and c lu d e d ” concerning the stock fra u d scan d al. to rem ain c h a irm a n HE F E IT the tim e to resign c a m e w hen th e g ra n d jury handed down its in d ictm en ts, a n d he hoped his resign ation would “ help c le a r the a ir .” tim e, a c tiv ities, to oth er p a rty T h e rig o rs of the 1972 ca m p a ig n , in a d ­ dition “ will d e m a n d a g re a t deal of tim e and atte n tio n . M o re I will be able f0 co n trib u te sir,co I h ave neglected m y fa m ily and profession I feel, th e re fo re , th a t I m ust step dow n," he said in a letter to the governor. in fact, long. than too T e x a n staff P h o t o . Steps Down Dr. E lm er C. Baum . Bombs Precede Arrival of Agnew On Mideast Tour the looks w ith disfavor on the G reek govern­ m e n t g en erally looks w ith g re a t d isfav o r on m e .” he added. U .S. m ilita ry to G re ec e w as aid su sp e n d e d a fte r the 1967 m ilita ry coup that b ro u g h t regim e of P re m ie r G eorge P ap adopoulos to pow er. The N ixon Ad­ m in istra tio n re sto red the aid 13 m onths ago. T he House of R e p re sen tativ e s h a s voted to renew the ban un less P re sid e n t R ich a rd M. Nixon certifies th a t o v e rrid in g U.S. s e c u rity re q u irem e n ts justify m ilita ry aid, a n d the Senate F oreign R e latio n s com ­ m itte e is v irtu ally c e rta in to reco m m en d s im ila r Senate action. ta rg e ts M onday m a rk e d of V ice-P resident ANKARA (A P) — B om bs hurled a t two the A m e rica n S piro T. beginning Iran A gnew 's 13-day m ission and G re ec e . Thp in Istan b u l. 220 m iles northw est of here, a few hours before A gnew 's plane lan d e d . to T urkey, exploded bom bs U.S. o fficia ls in Istanbul said an a tte m p t w a s m ad e to throw a bom b over th e fence of the U.S. C onsulate G en eral grounds, but th e device fell short and exploded, c au sin g no d a m a g e . The second bom b blew up the c a r of K enton K eith, a U.S. c u ltu ra l a t ­ tach e . T he c a r w a s p a rk e d in front of his hom e. The co n su la te w a s closed for C olum bus law g o v ern m en t to p rin t no D ay. T u rk e y ’s m a rtia l o rd ered sto rie s of the explosions. the n a tio n ’s p re s s AGNEW SAU) in an a rriv a l s ta te m e n t the U.S. c o m m itm e n t to tile N orth A tlantic is T re a ty O rganization, of w hich T u rk ey a m e m b e r, foundation of b e d ro c k .” " s ta n d s on a Agnew w as m et a t the a irp o rt by P re m ie r N ih at E rim . T hey rode the 20 m ile s into th e city along a highw ay clea red of o th e r tra ffic and lined by c lu s te rs of T u rk s. “ the A gnew link o u r told E rin i two c o u n trie s have sh a re d in NATO for m o re than a d e c a d e re m a in s v ital, not only to o u r m u tu al se c u rity hut also to th e peace of the w o rld .” On th e flight from W ashington, th e Vice- any to longest stop on his opposition on m ilita ry voiced ban the la s t a n d aid to P re sid e n t co ngressional G reece, c u rre n t trip . He said C ongress would he “ im p a irin g an d im p e d in g ” a foreign policy g e a re d to U.S. se c u rity by voting for such a ban . is A gnew to spen d tw o d a y s confering w ith E rim and o th e r officia ls of th e T urkish coalition a go v ern m en t, w hich possible c risis o v e r co n se rv a tiv e re s is ta n c e to political th e p re m ie r re fo rm s w hich ad v o ca te s. fa c e s flies W ednesday T he V ice-P resid en t to Ira n to re p re se n t th e U nited S ta te s a t the 2,500! h the P e rs ia n m o n a rc h y . H e begins h is G reek visit, “ re tu rn in g to the co untry of m y a n ­ c e s to rs ,” S a tu rd a y . a n n iv e rsa ry cele bration of AGNEW TOLD new sm en on th e plane im p o rta n t NATO th a t G ree c e w a s an m e m b e r and C ongress should not “ m a k e it m ore difficult for us to provide th e pro p er a m o u n t” of m ilita ry assista n c e . “The opinion in the United States that H ow ever, he ad d ed . “ I hope the p a rty in an y c a p a c ity I c a n .” to serv e SMITH, WHO w as in W est T exas M onday, w a s u n a v a ila b le for com m ent. B aum did not say in his le t'e r to Sm ith o r in his m issiv es to the 62-m em ber c o m ­ m itte e w hen his action would takp effect o r w hen SDEC would m e e t to elect his su ccesso r. H e also did not in d icate any p a rtic u la r fa v o rite to succeed him . By election law , SD EC to m e e t until M arch, but m a y convene it a t a n y tim e. is not re q u ired the c h a irm a n S D E C V ice-C hairm an M rs. R alp h O ’C onnor of H ouston said she w as “ v e ry s o r ry ” to le a rn of B a u m 's decision to step dow n. She added, “ I hope the p arty will be a b le to w ith stan d his resig n a tio n .” R e p o rts of B a u m 's im pending resignation h ad com e up previously, but he denied th em . The g overnor h a s denied ru m o rs he u rged B aum th e S tate D e m o cratic P a rty . to resig n to sa v e fa c e fo r As fa r as possible su cce sso rs a re con­ cern e d , C apitol so u rces have said S m ith law y er- w an ted E d C lark , an Austin se rv e d as a m b a ssa d o r Inbbyist who to d u ring P re sid e n t Lyndon B. A u stra lia J o h n so n 's a d m in istra tio n , re p la c e th e osteo p ath . to O ther sources h av e said U. S. Sen. Lloyd B entsen J r . and L t. Gov. Ben B a rn e s—w ith th e hacking of fo rm e r Gov. John B. Con- n a lly —w ant L a rry T em ple, a fo rm e r W hite H ouse aide during Jo h n so n 's ten u re, as the new SDEC head. the governor, Though the 62-m em ber c o m m ittee nam es titu la r head th e m an , of influenced selection of m a n y of its m e m b e rs, can e x e rt a g re a t d e a l of clout on its choice. the p a rty who the Seats Available in In Search of B i g g e r Fish R a lp h N a d e r, in te s tim o n y M o n d a y b e fo r e th e S e n a te G o v e rn m e n t O p e ra tio n s S u b ­ c o m m itte e , accuses P re s id e n t R ic h a rd M . N ix o n o f u n d e rm in in g th e C o n s titu tio n w ith his e c o n o m ic p o lic ie s . The c o n s u m e r a d v o c a te said N ix o n w ill g o d o w n in h is to ry as o ne o f th e m o s t r a d ic a l p re s id e n ts th e n a tio n has h ad. The s u b c o m m itte e is in ­ v e s tig a tin g th e ro le o f a d v is o ry c o m m ifte e s in th e fe d e r a l g o v e rn m e n t. — U P I Telephoto. , Filing Deadline for Elections Set Thursday fieldhouse or p re re g is tra tio n : and policy on U n iv e rsity Co-Op re b a te s, w h eth er stu d e n ts p re fe r re b a te s in th e form of cash , p rice disco u n ts or w ant into th e S tu d en t G overn m ent. th e m funneled P e titio n s a re being circ u la ted w hich propose a constitutional am e n d m e n t to do a w a y w ith the S tudent R e p re se n ta tiv e Council. said M cH am 750 th a t sig n a tu re s needed be obtained, the am e n d ­ m e n t will be placed on the election ballot. should the T he council w as put into the constitution b y groups w anting a b ic a m e ra l le g isla tu re , in sp ite of a stu d e n t refe re n d u m indicating p re fe re n c e for a u n ic a m e ra l le g isla tu re , sa id M cH am . L a te st referen d u m s favor an open stu d en t forum o r m a ss m eeting, w hich is on th e petition and proposed a m e n d m e n t. O th er reaso n s for doing a w a y w ith th e council a re concerned w ith the difficulties involved in election and a d m in istratio n of the council. lf the am en d m en t is not p assed , elections for S tudent R e p re se n ta tiv e Council w ill b e held the w eek a fte r S en ate elections. to be P la c e s filled on the S tudent R e p re se n ta tiv e Council from H um anities a r e : C lassics. I ; E n g lish , 5; F ren ch and Ita lia n . I ; G erm an , I ; O rien tal and A frican I ; Philosophy, L an g u ag e and L ite ra tu re , I ; Spanish and P o rtu g u e se, I ; and un­ d ete rm in e d . 3. In th e College of A rts and S ciences I ; openings a r e : Biology, C h e m i s t r y , I ; H ome E conom ics, 3; M ath em atics, 4; M icrobiolo­ gy. I : P hysics, I ; Zoology, 2; and u n d e te r­ m ined, I. 2; G eology, 3; B otany. THE COLLEGE of Social and B ehavioral Sciences h a s : A nthropology, 2; E conom ics, I ; G eography, I ; G o v ern m en t, 5; H istory, 4; L inguistics, I : Psychology, 6; Sociology, 3; and u n d eterm in ed , I. In the D ivision of G e n eral and Com ­ p a ra tiv e Studies, o penings a re : A m e ric an Studies, A rc h ite ctu ra l E th n ic Studies. L atin A m erican Studies, P lan II and u n d eterm in ed , 7. Studies, a n d In s u ra n c e ), F rom B u s in g s A dm inistration, o p en in g s (A c tu a ria l a r e : A ccounting, 4; F in a n c e Scieno? 2; G e n e ra l B usiness (B usiness S ta tistic s, E n g in e e rin g R oute to B usiness. O ffice A d m in istra tio n and G ra d u a te B usiness A d m in istra tio n ), 5; (In d u stria l M a n a g e m e n t, M a n a g em e n t P e rs o n a l an d R ela tio n s I n d u s t r y M an ag e m e n t 2 ; T ra n s p o rta tio n ), and M ark etin g . 2; and u n d e te rm in e d , I. all a r e : openings E d u catio n u n ­ d e rg ra d u a te divi ions. 16. T he C ollege of E n g in e erin g a n d E n g in e e rin g S e rin e0 , I : D e p a rtm e n t of A ero sp ace, I : A rc h ite ctu ra l, I : C h e m ic a l, I ; Civil. I : E ric tir c a l, 3; M echanical, 2 ; and P etro le u m , I. u n d ete rm in e d h a s : OPENINGS IN the College of F in e A rts include: A rt, 3; D ra m a. I ; an d M usic a n d u n d eterm in ed , I. L aw h as 5 openings: P h a rm a c y , 3; A r­ c h ite c tu re . 2; and N ursing, 2. School of C om m unication openings a r e : Jo u rn a lis m , 3; R a d io -T d e risio n -F ilm , 2; a n d Speech and u n d eterm in ed , I, In 'Reciprocal G esture1 North Viet POW SAIGON (A P )—The re le ase of a N orth V ietn am ese w a r p riso n er M onday ra ise d cau tio u s hope for the freeing of m ore U. S. prisoners by the enem y. LL S. E m b a ssy officials said a N orth in C a m ­ V ietn am ese lie u te n a n t w as freed bodia a s a “ re c ip ro c a l g e stu re ” the for re tu rn on F rid a y of an A m erican A rm y se rg e a n t. Tile release of th e lieu ten an t w a s m a d e “ in response to indications th a t the e n e m y would w elcom e such a re le a se a t a given tim e and p la c e ." T he sta te m e n t g a v e no clue a s to these “ in d icatio n s” and tu rn e d asid e all questions re la te d to the u nusual p riso n e r ex change, m a rk in g A m erican ca p tiv e w as se t free. tim e since first the 1969 a n T h a t, how ever, w e a re w o rking.” T he referen c e indicated d isco u rag e EMBASSY SPOKESMEN w ent to len g th s to by fu rth e r new sm en on the grounds it could jeopardize effo rts to obtain tile re le a se of ad d itio n al A m ericans. discussion The e m b a ssy s ta te m e n t s a id : “ We h av e th a t no a ss u ra n c e w h a tso e v e r a t p resen t th is the to re le a se of add itio n al A m erican p riso n ers. recip ro cal g e stu re will lead for both F ilin g d eadline the S tudent S enate and Student R e p re sen tativ e Council elec tions is 5 p.m . T hursday, but a s of M onday afternoon, only six p erso n s had filed the S enate. the 13 s e a ts a v ailab le for in P la c e s a v a ila b le and n u m b er of c a n ­ d id a tes who have filed for th e S en ate a r e : School of B usiness A d m in istratio n : one place a v ailab le , one filed. School of E d u c atio n : tw o p lace s a v a ila b le , of E n g in e e rin g : one p la c e G ra d u a te School: two place s a v a ilab le , of H u m a n itie s: two p la ce s none filed. School a v ailab le, one filed. none filed. School a v a ila b le , none filed. a v a ila b le , tw o filed. School of N a tu ra l S cience: th re e p laces School of Social and B e h av io ral Science: tw o p laces a v a ila b le , two filed. ACCORDING TO S tudent G o v ern m en t V ice-P resid en t Ken M cH am , “ A big reason not m any people h a v e filed for th e elections is th a t th e re h a s n ’t been enough publicity the a n d no one know s ab o u t sp rin g , and elections e v e ry o n e is a w a re of th e m .” th e m . In a big d e a l a r e S tudent S en ate elec tio n s a re cu sto m a rily beld in the sp rin g , but a re being held Oct. 27 becau se, acco rd in g to M cH am , th e new Student G o v ern m en t constitution allo ts one S tudent S en ate re p re se n ta tiv e to each 1.500 stu d en ts, a r e not enough S e n a te m e m b e rs to m e e t this a p ­ portionm ent. Also on th e election ballot w ill be a th e re p re se n tly and stu d en t re feren d u m . M cH am said a for topics list of the re feren d u m h as not been com pleted yet. long re fe re n d u m . “ It m a y be a h o rrib ly We h ave the U n iv ersity c a le n d a r: like w hen do stu d en ts w ant fin a ls,” M cH am said. to h av e sp rin g b re a k a n d issu es such a s in m ind OTHER ISSUES u n d er consid eratio n for of p re fe r, th e re g istra tio n a re : w hat re feren d u m stu d e n ts sy ste m ty p e Released is th e goal to w a rd w hich to th at the “ given tim e a n d the A m e ric a n s h a d p la c e ” co m m unicated w ith tho C o m m u n ist c o m ­ m and en the freeing of P O W 's sin c e S-Sgt. John C. Sexton J r ., 23, of W a rre n , M ich., was reposed. The recip ro cal re le a se of the N o rth V iet­ n am e se lie u te n a n t a p p a re n tly w a s c a r r ie d in s tru c tio n s g iv e n out by tho o th er side. in acco rd a n ce w ith T??E IL S. AR?*CY h e lic o p te r c a r r y in g tw o V ietn a m ese g u a rd s a n d th e p riso ner, a four-m an A m erican c re w flew into an a re a on tho C am bodian side of th e fro n tie r ju s t a fte r daw n. It b ad a n e sc o rt of U . S. h riic o o te r gunships, b u t th e y h u n g b a c k discreetly* and th e re w a s no sign of e n e m y a c tiv ity in the a re a . All a ir and a rtille ry s trik e s w e re s u s rm r rid in th e a re a , a b o u t 15 m ilos from th ° South V ritn a m e se b a s e c a m p a t Loc N inh, w here Sexton show ed up a f te r w h a t th ° said w as an eig h t-h o u r hike. Tho South V ie tn a m e se w e re “ in fo rm °d b u t not involved" in tho m e c h a n ic s of th e re le a se although they su p p lied th e p riso n e r, A F oreign M inistry so u rc e sa id it w as m a d e through “ an a g re e m e n t b etw een tw o g o v e rn m e n ts,” LL S. a n d South V ie tn a m e se . S P E C ! LATHON th a t LL S. o fficia ls hoped for fu rth e r POW re le a se s w as e n c o u ra g e d bv the fa c t th a t it w a s th e first one e v e r d eliv ered by th e U nited S ta te s r a th e r th an South V ietnam , th e obvious h a ste in w inch it w as a rra n g e d , and the the IL S. E m b a ss y a nnounced it. th a t fact th e Tile n riso n ° r situ a tio n c a m e to th ° fore a t a tim e w hen fighting on both sides of the C am bodian-S outh V ie tn a m e se b o rd e r w as continuing but on a d im in ish ed scale. c lash ed South V ie tn a m e se ra n g e r s and a rm o re d troops a g a in w ith N orth V iet­ n a m e s e u n its ju st south of F ire B ase A loha, a m u ch -sh ed ed a rtille ry outpost ju st in sid e C am bodia th re e and a half m iles e a s t of th e tow n of K rek. TDE VIET CONG’S L iberation ra d io said C om m unist-led forces h ad m a jo r v ic to rie s in e a s te rn C am ­ in bodia a n d th e South V ie tn am e se side. in Toy N inh P ro v in c e on the b o rd e r cam p a ig n the b o rd e r fighting an d h e a v y T he a llie s have la rg e ly rep o rte d su c c e sse s lo sses in to e n e m y fo rces by LL S. B52 b o m b e r ra id s , a ir strik e s by in ground clashes. ta c tic a l b o m b ers and Campus Group Enlists Voters By TOBY RADA SK Y Staff W riter A voter registration substation opened on the West Mall Monday to facilitate voter registration procedures for U niversity students. Operated by the Student Council for Voter R egistration ( S C M R ) , the substation registered 86 people in its first day. Open from IO a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday, the substation will be located on the West Mall until it can he moved into a perm anent room in the Union Building for the duration of the registration period, which ends Jan. 31. Any student m eeting residency requirem ents m ay register to vote directly through the substation. To be eligible to vote a student must have lived in Travis County for six months and in the state for one year. It is possible for a student to register before ho has fulfilled the residency requirem ents, but he cannot vote until all requirem ents are met. Dan Boyd, SCUR chairm an, said the group hopes to register at least 21,000 students by the Jan. 31 deadline. In addition, SCUR m em bers will co-ordinate a precinct-by-preeinct drive to register students at their places of residence. A system of roving deputy registrars will be em ployed to im plem ent the operation. Student Leaders Sign U p Dan Boyd. chairman o f the Student Council fo r Voter Registration (second from left), joins Ken M c H a m , vice-president of Student G overnm ent (c), and Jim Boyle, the coming elections. A students attorney tab'e has been set up on the W e s t M all to enable students to register. registering in Austin to vote (r), in Il'xail sui 11 Photo by P H I L Hi UKK. h u m PACKAGE No. I Darkroom Dataguide Print Dryer (twin surface) Polycontrast 8x10 S W F Timer Polycontrast Filter Kit G radu ate, 36 oz. Dektol, I gal. Stop Bath, I pt. Fixer, I gal. O rb it Bath, I pf. D-76 Film Developer, I gal. Tank, Reel, Loader Set (IO ) Print File 35-7B (3) Plastic Bottle, I gal. (3) Developing Tray 8x10 (3) Plastic Bottle, I pt. (3) Developing Tray 11x14 Color Thermometer (2) Film Clip Easel 11x14 Darkroom Lamp with O C Filter 21 I Enlarging Lamp. SALE Reg. With Durst M600 — $213.00 $270.89 With Durst M3QI — $183.00 $232.39 darkroom sale Camera Shop ^ Second Floor Durst M600 Durst M301 w h a t i s i t , a n y w a y s ? W E D L IK E T O E X P L A IN T O Y O U just p recisely w hat a D arkroom Sale is. There are es­ sentially five m eanings con noted by ' D arkroom S a le .” W e are not sim ply philologizing on sem antics but are disposed to the c o n ce p t th a t advertising be c le a r and to the point. . • T H E F IV E M E A N I N G S h ave to do with light, space and the w hole vs. part co n cep t. LET S B E G IN with light, under which we shall discover tw o m eanings. A c c o rd in g to J o e M c ­ C a r t h y 's R evised Free W o r ld D ic tio n a ry (W e lc h e s G r a p e Ju ic e , Boston, 1953, p. 2), "D a r k ­ room Sa le can m ean either a) the sale of any person, place or thing in the dim light of a state ow ned store or b) the sale of m aterials and ideas in ten ded to inhibit the entry of light into a room and thus render it m ore or less d a rk .” E X P L O R I N G T H E spacial p e rsp ectiv e, we see th a t Tim othy Leary, while addressing the Louisiana Su p rem e C o u rt in a p p e a l of a speeding ticket from M a d Dog, Texas, re ferred to D arkroom Sale as the sale o f television tim e fo r go vern m en t sponsored com m ercials th a t a tta c k the 'ex pan ded mind' c o n c e p t and posit th a t V itam in Bl reduces one's mind to a small, dark room .” W H E N W E E X A M I N E the whole vs part c o n c e p t, we encounter a c o n tra d ic to ry situation w herein tw o opposing view poin ts co n flict. Fa c e tio u s M elon, colum nist for the A ustin G a z ­ e tte , asserted last night at the annual con ven tio n of the N a tio n a l A ssociatio n of Part-tim e Jo u rn alists and R e la te d Fields th a t "D ark ro o m S a le ” clearly implies the sale of a darkroom and not th a t of a dark room . M ean w h ile, the m anager o f our Photo D ep t, (second floor) state d c a te g o ric a lly th a t a "D ark ro o m S a le " is the sale of those m aterials and accessor! w hich are em plo yed in the d e velo p in g process and which c o llectively constitute the contents of a darkroom ; and though con cedin g th a t th eo retica lly M iss M elon was correct, he in­ sisted th a t her m eaning was not im plied. So, w here does all this leave us? W it h a lot o f silly, ab stra ct theories on the true essence of a "D ark ro o m S a le " and only one means (em p irica l evaluation) o f determ ining the actu al m eaning of this puzzling group of phonem es. W h a t w e'll do is convene any tim e to d a y fo r as long as the supply lasts on the second floor o f the C o - O p where a Darkroom Sale is being he'd and put to the test of re a lity each of th e five possible meanings. (substitutions can be m ade) Darkroom Dataguide PACKAGE No. 2 Timer Kodabromide 8x10 S W F2 or F3 Graduate, 36 oz. Dektol, I at. Stop Bath (packet carton) Fixer, I qt. D-76 Film Developer, q+. Developing Tank Print File 35-7B (3) Developing Tray 8x10 (3) Plastic Bottle, I pf. Thermometer Safelight Blotter Book 9x I 2 (2) Film Clip Easel 8x10 SALE Reg. With Durst M600 — With Durst M30I — $145.40 $183.42 $ 115.00 $ 144.92 DARKROOM PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE A DIVIDEND Page 2 Tuesday, October 12, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN ’Dirty 30' Work Open LRB Meetings Urged By DAVID POWELL A ssistant News Editor Three members of the “ Dirty 30" reform coalition met Monday with Atty. Gen. Crawford Martin, Legislative the chairman of Redistricting Board (L R B ) and urged him to hold (mon meetings en House redistricting but said they received no assurance he would do so. Speaking at a Monday af­ ternoon press conference, State Reps. Frances Farenthold of Corpus Christi, Robert A. (Bob) and Gammage Charles Patterson of Taylor said of Houston L R B which must draft a reap­ portionment plan by Oct. 23, should continue to hold meetings open to the press and public. Mrs. Farenthold said Martin had originally assured her that meetings would he open hut lie V’ o u I d not promise future meetings would be open. Mrs. Farenthold pointed out that the Texas open meetings statute does not apply to boards created by the Constitution, such as L R B , but only to agencies, commissions and boards created by the Legislature. But Patterson said L R B should , STEREO SPECIALIST • HOME AHD CAR STEREO • T V. RECEIVERS COMPLETE STOCKS: TAPES, NEEDLES, BATTERIES • RADIOS • TAPE RECORDERS SA I SS AND SERVICE CS) hold open meetings anyway. They also reiterated tho Dirty 30‘s support for single-member House districts, L R B members Lf. Gov. Ben Barnes and Land Commissioner stated Bob Armstrong have s u p p o r t for single-member districts but House .Speaker Gus Mutscher and Comptroller Robert Calvert, also I J I B members, are opposed to the concept. Martin has a publicly preference. stated not Mrs. Farenthold said Martin did not commit himself at tho Monday meeting on the con­ troversy over single-member and multi-member districts. think single-member districts are politically dead.’’ she said. “ I riidn t comp out of our conference feeling any more h o p e f u l single-member districts.” ‘ 4 I for Gammage agreed but said he hoped public pressure would force L R B to draw up a House p l a n single-member districts. with Gammage said he thought members of tho board were all working on their own plans and only one would be accepted. He pointed cut that only three hoard members must sign a plan for it to bp final. Cerning a Dirty 30 from meeting in Dallas Sunday, said there \\orp no G a m m a s “ concrete plans” to mount a campaign aimed at tho Hon e calling itself back in*o session to c o n s i d e r im­ peachment of Mutscher, who is under for alleged bribery and conspiracy to accept a bribe. removal or indictment Republicans The Dirty 30 a reform coalition of liberal Democrats consistently opposed Mutscher during the last session and in and were vehement their his House of c r i t i c i s m redistricting plan, which placed many Mutscher opponents into tho same districts. (T o plan has been declared ur constitutional). call the Legislature Gov. Preston Smith rejected Friday a pica from tho Dirty 30 to into session to consider possible action against Mutscher. They had the support cf 41 House members and three State senators. Smith said he had polled House members and a majority were opposed to a session. Several members have said, however, that Smith’s office did not contact them. Gammage said tho Dirty 30 has no plans to conduct its own telephone poll or to get a majority of House members, 76 out of ITO, to sign a petition calling tho House into session. 307 W . 19th S t. RADIO PH. 478-6609 Parking in -rent Board Hears Chicanos f H K B A L F O U R C L A S S R IN G • LIFETIM E GUARANTEE • FOUR WEEK DELIVERY • YOUR DIVIDEND • NO DEPOSIT • TIME PAYM ENT Jew elry street floor By ROBERT E. NELSON group. The Austin School Board halted its regular meeting and went info executive sessirn Monday night to hear arguments of a group of Mexican-Americans demanding the dismissal of an elementary school principal. The chicanos, more than 45 in number, sought removal of G. A . Goethe, Brooke principal of Elementary School. The school is p r e d o m i n a n t l y Mexican- American. A paddling incident, in which Goethe allegedly administered an overlv-harsh spanking to Ixiuie H. Carrazco, a first grader, is what sparked the protest, according to Irene Barre, a spokesman for the O t h e r complaints leveled against Goethe were listed in a petition, signed by members of KIS families. The petition alleges that Goethe “ does not know how to get along and communicate with students and their parents.” that he “ has failed to provide reading in several grades” and that he “ has failed to make Brooke an in­ stitution of the community.” for students liooks achievement The petition further states the “ educational of children attending Brooke is far below the t h a t student district,” a n d teachers and teachers' aides ain the school not being used at average of the Labor Heads to Decide Phase 2 Participation the W ASHINGTON ( A P ) — T h e Executive Council of the 13- millic n-membcr AFL-CIO and the in­ heads of dependent unions, tho Teamsters and the United Auto Workers, to decide will meet Tuesday whether the in Phase 2 economic plan. to participate largest two Sen. Jacob Javlts, R-N.Y. sent H A N D M A D E 6 - W A Y P U Z Z L E B L O C K S C A N N O W BE P U R C H A S E D A T T S S £ A m m m w a TTY T T v 77 a a a m s A w a t M M a r a a w A C O U N T R Y S T O R E C O M P O U N D 1304 L A \ AC V OR F O R C U S T O M O R D E R S : C A L L ITA — 454-8977 or W rit# N A N C I - Rt. No. I, Bo« 55-C C E D A R C R E E K , T E X A S telegrams to A F L CIO President George Meany and other top union officials Sunday, trying to resolve their rep tied doubts on whether Living the Cost of Council would have veto [tower over wage decisions that would bf» made by a newly created tripartite Pa y Board. be The Whitp House has said the P ay Board, as well as a seven- m e m b e r Price Commission, w o u l d semi-autonomous bodies. While their individual pay and price decisions would bo final, the Cost of Living Council could step in if the wage-price criteria they developed got out o r line with the Administration's goals. “ deepile a great need.” Leaders of the Mexican to American group attempted have their charges heard before tho regular School Board session, hut B a rd Pres id wit W ill Davis insisted on the executive session. Executive se>,..»ns are closed to lvith the ptvNs and public. Goethe, who has been principal at Brooke for more than IO years was not available for comment on the charges. Rally to Launch Antiwar Activities an Jim A no>n rally on the West Mall will serve as the focal point for activities Wednesday antiwar s p o n s o r e d by the Student Mobilization Committee. Rally speakers include: Lafferty, attorney specializing in military law what recently inturn' from North Vietnam and is a orc! inn tor C t th? National a 'o Coal it1; n; ( : avern mr if President le r; Gonz.ih Barr! onto Kist Austin Comb rn uni tv ti .anization; Asst. P r o f.® Joe Oppcnheimer of the govern* men? department; and Howarcfl Petrie k , one of the first antiwar! GI's. Student Bob Bm Actions After tho rally will be an an­ tiwar training session at 7:30 p.m. in Burdine Auditorium. X panel of active duty G I's front th* Aut a in-San Antonio a r c a military bases and veterans will discuss their role in the antiwar “ Richard campaign. A movie, Nixon’s Checker Speech” of 1052, will conclude the dnv's activities. NEWEST NEAR CAMPUS! one block to la w school three blocks to U.T. GREAT OAK APARTMENTS Luxury 2 bedroom , 2 bath apartm ents shag ca rp e t, cable, sun deck & large pool. From $220. A L L BILLS PA ID 477-3388 th e BRIDAL sh o p p e e rn rn rn rn M a c r a m e learn it ^ Don't think its all that hard to do —- if J you have some one to show you, it s really ® rather easy. J Nancy Stover (one of Texas' very own art 0 students) is dropping by the Co-O p today. She's going to be here to show you how to macrame . | a d em on stration tod ay 12:30 - 4:30 on the street floor right b y the south door LOWEST HOUTH FARES TO EUROPE *200 round-trip {et from Naisou (Add $ 4 2 ro u n d -trip fro m M iam i) For only $200* round trip, In­ ternational Air Bahama (IAB) jets you (rom N an a u to Luxembourg in the heart of Europe for belt connection} to everywhere. Effec­ tive for youth! aged 12 thru 25. Book within 30 day! of departure. Best bargain from the loufhern U S. Major credit cards accepted See your travel agent, (he real expert! Mail coupon for detail}. •Add $10 one w a y tot O soO fiu rei - th. in ten fla y ! p « to r« and o ile r C h fiH m q i « » o io n . n « d F o r ‘ e r a n d d u r in g Fore* ond c-inrjitlons ,u b ,e tl lo change. tn ie rn o 'io n o l A r Bah am a To J7*l 9. E F u ll S treet M ia m i, f a. 3 3 1 3 1 - I3 M ) 379 •>991 Toll Free In f i r . , a a |8f>0) 432 " S ’ O Send fa in e r C N en L o w e ll Youth Fore* to E u ro p e O Nome , Street, C it v _ Slot#. . l o . M y fro .e l ogent ii K l LA w ax: A l A U M S G oner*/ A f n u CSE- 1016 N. L A M A R Dock, Coal Strikes On Texas Workers Decide To Cross Picket Lines BEAUM O NT (A P ) — Officers of four of tho five longshoremen’s locals in Beaumont voted Monday night to return to work and cress picket lines if the fifth local continued picketing. for the Spokesmen locals at a meeting said they hoped all picket lines al tile Port of Beaumont would be down around noon Tuesday. four Officers from all the Beaumont locals longshoremen's to local 1610 voted International ° Association except return to work. f‘10 Eddie Blackwell, president of lo cal 1610, the meeting and was did not attend unavailable for comment at once. I AM H O PEFU L that all pickets w ill be down by noon Tuesday.” said Peter IoBlanc, business agent for lo cal 1316. Local 1610 picketed Beaumont docks Monday, and Blackwell said there never was an agreement to keep Texas ports open. He said the Question of keeping ports opec was not discussed at a Sunday m eting in Brownsville of the Central Dock and Marine Council cf the ILA . Beaumont has five longshoremen’s locals. Early in the national stiikp. the locals vo’ed •I to 2 to stay on the jobs. But the two who voted to strike set up picket lines and the other locals have refused to cross them. POCK C O R K ER S at other Texas ports have continued to load and unload ships • • • Los Angeles area piers remained shut down Monday, while the rest of the West Coast throbbed with activity after a 14-week longshoremen s strike was interruoted over the weekend as a result of a Taft-Hartley back-to-work order. no day, with ON T H E E \ST and Gulf coasts, a walkout of 15,000 dockers continued for an negotiations eleventh scheduled. The In- striking AFL-CIO Longshoremen's Association fematior ti continued to be plagued by a revolt of Texas dockers, as most of them ignored strike orders and continued to work the West Gulf piers. More titan 100.000 soft coal miners remained idle in 2D states in another 11-dny old walkout. Tit were seeking an increase in the top daily wage from $37 to $50. plus a doubling of a 40-rent per ton royalty paid by the industry to the United Mine Workers pension fund. rn Increasing cloudiness and warmer Tuesday and Wednesday, with light southerly winds increasing to 5 to 15 m.p.h. Wednesday. I-ow Tuesday, upper 50’s; high Tuesday, mid-80's; low Wednesday mid- 60’s; high Wednesday, mid-80's. For School-Lunch Program Stiffer Rules Set W ASH ING TO N (A P )- T h e Nixon Ad­ ministration wants to overhaul the nation s S750-million school-lunch program, which one Agriculture Department official says is threatening to become a nationalised meal service for all children, regardless of need. A new plan being drafter! in the depart­ ment is aimed partly at heading off growing demand from state school-lunch lobbies and some members of Congress for full federal financing of the program. EXISTENCE OF the plan, still closely shrouded, was discussed in an interview' with Asst. Secretary of Agriculture Richard E. Byng. who is in charge of the govern­ ment’s food programs. Under pressure the department announced last week it w ill reimburse states at the rate of 45 cents per meal this year for serving free or reduced-cost lunches to an estimated eight million needy children. from Congress rate On Aug. 13, the department proposed a 35-cent feeding poor children compared with an average of 42 cents last year and a 46-eent lev e l later specified in a Senate resolution. for THE MOST disputed provision of the new rules is the decision to reimburse states only for free lunches served to children whose fam ilies are within federal poverty guidelines. A child from a fam ily of four w ith an income of $3,910 a year or less is eligible, while oi*' from a fam ily with larger arn- jugs w ill be cut off. U ntil now, states were allowed income eligibility. to set their own Approximately 8 percent or the 7.3 million getUng reduced-price lunches last year— 591,000 children—were from fam ilies above th,e poverty line. COSTS O F serving school lunches vary widely, but average between 53 and 63 cents per serving. Byng said the rule excluding children from the higher-income poverty fam ilies would not prevent states and school districts from providing free lunches on their own. The idea of providing free lunches to all children regardless of fam ily income is warming up rapidly as an issue in Congress. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D- Minn., has introduced a bill which would set up the universal lunch plan. It is catching on also with some state “ W hat school-lunch officials, Lyng said. we're doing now that program in a sense.” Lyng added. “ W e’re saying: ‘No matter how’ many lunches you serve free, this is what we’re going to pay for’.” is open-ending Lyng said the new school-lunch study w ill require legislation and that an attempt w ill be made to get bipartisan support before it is sent to Congress. By The Associated Press Market Characterized by Slow Trading NEW YORK Stock market prices strengthened somewhat in late trading but remained lower Monday in the slowest trading in more than a year. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks lost 1.97 to 891.94. Earlier it was off more than 31/> points. “Today was just a combination of Columbus Day, the World Series, and some concern about whether labor will go along with Phase 2 of the President’s economic package,” said Newton Zinder, an analyst at E. F. Hutton Co., Inc. McGovern Against Byrd for Supreme Court WASHINGTON in a statement his office called a ^ Sen. George McGovern, “clarification” of earlier comments, urged President Richard M. Nixon Monday not to nominate Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., to the U.S. Supreme Court. McGovern said if he were elected President he would never make any such nomination. McGovern said he would not make a final decision on how he would vote on a Byrd nomination until Senate hearings on such a nomination were concluded. But, he said, it is self evident “that Sen. Byrd has a heavy burden to overcome ” a heavy burden to overcome.” Children at play atop some huge sections of pipe are sil- houetted against the setting New Mexico sun. Although the children could probably care less, the pipes are being install- ed into a new storm-drain system in the city of Las Cruces. # Pipe Dreams — UPI Telephoto. Dignitaries M eet in Persia Party Honors Empires 2,500th Year (A P )—As P E R S E P O L IS , their Iran Im perial Majesties the Shah of Iran and Empress Farah took up residence here Monday in the ancient capital of Persia, the whole kingdom seemed to buzz with excited court chatter and delicious name dropping. Almost every hour from here on out a steady stream of kings and presidents and sultans and cardinals and other heads of state and royal persons will be jetting into the glittering tent city that the House of Jensen, the fashionable Pa ris designers, caused to bloom in the desert for the birth­ day bash celebrating the 2,500t.h an­ niversary’ of the Persian Em pire. THE JUICIEST bits of royal chitchat had to do with who was not coming and why. for It was rumored instance, that President George Pompidou passed up the Shah's gala in favor of his prime minister, because he just couldn’t see himself getting to the back of the caviar line behind all those kings and crown princes. there was Not true perhaps—the desert is famous for mirages—but another delicious hit about President Richard M. Nixon wanting to show up with an official party of 120 and the Shah turning him down. Instead the United States fielded a sm aller team headed by Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew who w ill arrive Wednesday. Chou En Bai wasn’t coming, so the ladies- In-waiting gushed, because he was afraid to leave the store in these precarious times, whatever they are. The same was being whispered about King Hassan of Morocco. W HAT W ITH menus by Maxims, crystal by Baccarat, cup and saucer service by Robert Haviland, uniforms for the royal guards by Lanvin and TV coverage by satellite, the empress—it rumored— thought there wasn’t anything very Persian, is University Professors Join Iranian Festivities Three University professors arrived Frid ay in Iran for the celebration of the 2.500 anniversary of the founding of the Persian Em pire by Cyrus the Great. languages and African Mohammad Ali Jaz ayery, professor of Oriental and literatures, Hafez F. Farm ayan, associate professor of history and the Center of Middle Eastern Studies, and Paul W. English, professor of geography and the Center of Middle Eastern Studies] flew from Austin to Iran. All three received invitatioas to the celebration about a month ago. Both F a r­ mayan and Jazayery are from Iran and all are Iranian specialists. and In ­ ternational Congress of Iranologists w ill be held from Tuesday to Oct. 20 at Shirag, Iran. celebration third The the ancient or modern, about the glittery except the gold lump caviar. As if eyeing the glow of the oil wells in the Persian Gulf above the glitter of candelabra, while many western the countries are sending in their second drawer political personages, the Communist is fielding the presidents of the world Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Romania. R E D CHINA, a bit cut of step here, is sending the directors of its academy of sciences who placed third from the bottom on the 63-man protocol list, two behind Vice-President Agnew. His Im perial M ajesty Shahanshah Mohammed Reza Shah Aryam ehr, king of kings, sovereign of the Aryan people, w ill officially kick off the four-day blast with a ceremonial visit Tuesday to the tomb of Cyrus the Groat at nearby Parsargadae. MEANWHILE A coterie of horsemen dressed like Rudolf Valentino rampant on the back lot at Paramount are beating their w ay across the desert, relay-race style, from the modem capital at Tehran to deliver a message written on goat skin to the Shah in his desert tent. This re-enacts the Persian Pony Express which Cyrus the Great is said to have invented 25 centuries before G ary Cooper learned to ride a horse. When last heard from, the desert riders were passing through Qum. birthplace of tile original Mohammed A li and one of Iran ’s holiest cities. Ira n ’s holiest cities. the celebration, the professors w ill attend a conference on Iranian studies in Teheran. - m inerenre on MOHME CENTER OPHUS CEIWTKH MOBUS dSlWTKH BOBBE CENTER DOBIE CENTER BOBBE CENTER MOBUS rawnmena iranian studies rn Teheran. two days of During last the -.V- ^ -- n n r n ^ “ CAPITOL CAMBIA “ OVER STOCK AND CLEARENCE SALE! WE HAVE SOT TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW MERCHANDISE ON THE WAY* “ OVERSTOCK ITEMS ARE LIMITED - CLEARANCE ITEMS WILL STAY AT THESE PRICES gUNTIL THEY ARE SOLDI si s ■ neon CLEARANCE ITEMS •• LIMITED QUANTITES --------------- MIRANDA LIMITED QUANTITIES OVERSTOCK ITEMS PRICE ITEM ssH U B8 aaa K * SB H Ussa & k £ ITEM PRICE Soligar 400mm 6.3 A u t o .............. 109.97 V U x V U CAMERAS M a m iy a /'Sekor - 80mm 2.8 twin lens 59.97 M a m iy a / S e k o r 135mm 4.5 twin lens 79.97 M a m iy a Sekor 105mm 3.5 twin lens 79.97 (Both of above items to fit Pentax, Nikon, Canon, Minolta) Soligar 70-235mm 4.5 Zoom Auto (To fit Pentax, Nikon, C a non, dark r o o m e q u ip m e n t a n d su pplies Prim 35mm S.S. Reels .................. 1.97 4.92 10.97 Prim 4 reel S.S. T a n k ................. Prim I I Reel S.S. T a n k ............. Prim 14 Reel S.S. T a n k ............. Prim 11x4 Adjustable Easel . . . Durst Lens Boards (any in stock) . . 12.97 7.97 1.97 Magna Sight Focus A i d .................. 8.97 Micro Sight Focus Aid ................... 15.97 Prem ier Single Chrome Dryer (11-14) 16.97 G r a y la b 300 Timer ............................. 26.97 Prim Dial S.S. Thermometer ........ 5.97 Minolta) ................................... 139.97 Soligar 180-400mm 5.6 Zoom - t-2 L e n s ..................................... 189.97 35mm SLR CAMERAS Miranda Sensomat w/1.8 and Case 139.97 CAMERA ACCESSORIES Prontor Cable Releases Reg. 6.95 and up ............... All Priced at 1.97 Kako Hi-Beam ll Electronic Flash Rechargeable/w Charger .......... 19.97 Graflex 250 Strobe H.V. (Hi-Power SLR LENSES V iv ita r 20mm 3.8 A u t o (to fit Pentax, 99.97 M a m iy a / S e k o r, Nikon, Minolta, Canon, Konica) PROJECTORS Sawyer 747 A Q Slide Proj. C ano n FL 135mm 3 . 5 .................... 59.97 C a n o n FL 19mm 3 . 5 .................... 189.97 29.97 S o lig a r 180mm 3.5 T-2 L e n s THESE ARE SPECIAL PURCHASES Soligar 300mm 5.5 A u t o ................ 89.97 Reg. — 174.97 List ................ 119.97 Kodak M-109 Sup. 8 Cartridge Proj. 79.97 Kodak M-95 Dual 8 Projector . . . . 84.97 Bell & Howell - (used) Reg. 8 Proj. 15.00 Heurtier Dual 8 Proj. (Top Quality) (New) Sound can be added to this Proj. later if desired List 249.50 199.97 SENSOREX SPECIAL PURCHASE • SENSOREX w/1.8 LENS OVERSTOCK $17997 w/CASE REG. PRICE FOR THIS CAM ERA $22596 MANY - MANY ~ MORE GREAT BUYS - THERE JUST ISN'T ROOM TO LIST THEM ALL. MANY YOU WON'T BELIEVE TILL YOU SEE THEM! Fire Ball S a fe lite .............................. 7.97 Fast Recycle Pro Unit) .............. 79.97 NO SUR-TAX C H A RG E 35mm SLR CAMERAS R IC O H 401 Black w/1.4 lens and Case 139.97 R IC O H Singlex Chrome w/1.7 Lens and „ ^ CaSe 119*97 K O D A K Instamatic Reflex 45mm w/f2.8 79.97 MOYIE CAMERAS BAUER C 2B ......................................... 199.97 BAEUR C-20 ......................................... 180.00 BAUER C - R O Y A L -6 ............................ 259.00 BAUER C - R O Y A L -8 ............................ 299.00 CAMERA ACCESSORIES B C -2 F A N F L A S H G U N —-Goldcrest (Reg. $6.97) ..................................... 1.97 BR A U N FL-515 STROBE Reg. $114.95 92 97 HONEYWELL ELMO 104 O UTFIT 106 O U TFIT ....................................... 13997 ........................................ 179.97 VA”XTA CAMERAS Y A S H I C A M A T (Pro B la ck ) $79 97 DARK ROOM EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES AIRQUIPT D IA LM ASTER 11x14 EA S EL 21.97 Y A N K E E 11x14 PAPER S A F E .................. 5.97 ISCO 75mm 3.5 E N L A R G I N G LENSES 10 97 SLR LENSES M IR A N D A 105mm 2 . 8 ............. .............59.97 K O N I C A H E X N O N 85mm 1.8 ............... 79 97 K O N I C A R E X A N O N 35mm 2 . 8 . . . . 59*97 M IN O L T A R O K K O R 35mm 1 .8 ......... 79*97 M IN O L T A R O K K O R 28mm 3.5 . . . . 84*97 M IN O L T A R O K K O R 35mm 2 . 8 ............64*97 A E T N A 135mm 2.8 Auto (to fit Nikon S Minolta) .................................. 29 97 PRINZ lOOm 2.8 Auto [to fit Nikon,’ Cannon, Minolta, Nikon ................ 29.97 LEN T A R 135mm 2.8 A u t o .................... 29.97 K O M U R A 135mm 2.8 Auto (topcon Mount) ............ 29 97 USED EQUIPMENT 35mm SLR CAMERAS Honeywell Spotmatic w/1.4 Lens (used) 177.97 Nikon FTN Body (used)........................ 187 97 LOTS O F (USED) LE IC A C A M E R A S & LENSES — M-4 — M -3’s — 11 IF ............................ 159 97 ZEISS IKAREX f 1.8 2 % "xIV" CAMERAS . ITEM Mamiya/Sekor 180mm 4.5 twin lens (used) ........................................... Mamiya C -220 w/80mm lens (used) p r i c e 89.97 129.97 H A SSELB LA D 500C w/80mm Planar ............................................. 499.00 (used) SLR LENS ES Takumar 24mm 3.5 (used).................... 110.00 Takumar 85mm 1.9 (used) . . . . . . . . . . 94.00 Takumar 200mm 4.0 (used) ......... 110.00 250mm 5.6 Sonnar for Hassel Blad (US«osition th a t the route should as possible, reach irresp ectiv e of race. We a re of course aw are th a t the m ajority of those persons affected w ill be m in o rity students and staff ju st as it is those groups which have not been served in th e p ast. It is our position th at the se n d e e should he extended only to those persons entitled to the sendee. Any econom ic flux resulting from an E ast Austin route would be a n atu ral by-product is not of shuttle se n d ee and as such n ecessarily a m otivating factor. We a re not aligned to su b v ert the corporate stru ctu re of A u s tin - E ast, W est, North o r South. W hatever positive changes tak e place in E a st Austin a s the resu lt of a route a re to be welcomed r a th e r than bem oaned. som e grand schem e in A ttem pting rational and to present a unem otional discussion of the issues which surround th e E ast Austin shuttle bus route so and total com plicated restru ctu rin g of is p articu larly difficult. T here a re v ast ideological differences, a s well a s m any com peting personal and institutional in­ terests. On the one hand the shuttle system is inequitably distributed in Austin a powerful case can be m ade, and indeed, m u st be m ade, for a the shuttle bus system as a necessary’ precondition for a genuinely “ fa ir” route policy. On the other hand th e U niversity and unfortunately the Shuttle Bus Com m ittee. Is so ridden with stagnation th at an y attem p t to "c h an g e” or "in n o v ate” through norm al channels, as we a re attem pting, is stiffly resisted. To the degree th a t the economic asp ects cf E a st A ustin’s sep arab le condition political and cultural ones, the question is one of: to w hat extent can those U niversity students, staff and faculty who live in E a st Austin depend on the norm al channels to " g ra n t” them a service to which they a re legally entitled and to w hat extent should they be forced to rely totally on their own resources, even though they a re required to financially support a shuttle se n d e e ? The form er should n ever be an obstacle, but if has. It should be equally obvious th a t the la tte r should not be the case, but it is. a re IT WAS PREDICTABLE that m any I>eople, including Tile Texan staff, would be irritated at the sight of minority students T h e D a i l y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t U T A u stin EDITOR ..................................................................................... Lori Rodriguez MANAGING EDITOR ........................................................................ John Reetz NEWS EDITOR ............................................................................... Cyndi Taylor ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR ........................................ Mike Fresques ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR ...................................................... David Powell ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR ........................................... Lvke Thompson SPORTS EDITOR ............................................................................. Joe Phillips AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ............................................................Theresa Kane FEATURES EDITOR ........................................................ . Robin Beacher Lssue N ew , E d ito r ................... General Reporter ................ News As,*: Man is ........................ Associate Amu emends E ditor M ake-Up Editor ....................... W ire E d i t o r .................................. Copy E ditors .............................. Photographers ................................................................................. Steve Dial ............................................................................... John Pope Gaylon F inklea, Belva W illiams, Paul Cooley .................................................................... K ristina P aledes .......................................................................... Steve Hogner .................................................................... M arcia Aronson . Suzanne F reem an , Betsy Hall. Suzanne Schw artz, J a n e t Schreibm an, Joyce H otchkiss ...................................... John Van B eekum , Phil H uber O pinions > those a r e a r tic le an d U n iv e rsity a r Cunts. rf tilt • use aides whose role it is to make ad­ vance arrangem ents for presidential journeys. In tu rn i the assignment of the senior foreign policy assistant to that will lead a delegation arran g e technical details for Nixon’s trip to O lina illustrates ad­ difficulties—and v an tag ed -in h eren t in conducting diplomacy in the absence of formal diplomatic relations. potential the Before Nixon ventures to Peoria, much less to Peking, his staff provides him with minute-by- in blue- m inute schedules and codifies details bound, loose-leaf briefing books about where the President, will sit at ceremonial dinners, points his discussion p artn ers will make and his strongest counterargum ents, and drafts of arriv al and d ep artu re statem ents he will memorize en route. THURK XKK iv) established patterns for these details in China, however, and no American per­ sonnel stationed there to provide them. “ I believe that the Chinese, in their long and distinguished history, have never encountered anything like a presidential press p arty ,” quipped Kissinger. Will the Chinese perm it hordes of w riters and photographers to descend on Peking? Will they allow U. S. Air Force jets to m ake from tho Washington with technical docum ents? custom ary courier flights daily Who will exchange Chinese currency for dollars, a task norm ally handled by the U. S. E m bassy staff, which also provides liquor at $1 per fifth and cigarettes for $1 a carton? WHERE WILL the presidential party o b t a i n typew riters and duplicating m achines? One ex­ perienced White House advance m an said, “ You just don’t go to your local Xerox representative in Peking and say, ‘Send me a m achine.’” What vehicles will be m ade available to the Peking delegation, lacking the usual motor pool provided by an em bassy or b y t h e n ea rest U. S. m ilitary base? D ie White House is said to be planning to establish a satellite com munications link between Peking and Washington, but will not rely on it to provide security from eavesdropping. U ncertainty about com munications security Is off sot. however, by relative confidence th at Nixon’s physical security will not be jeopardized in China. Officials fam iliar with such arrangem ents say it frequently is easier to arran g e security in countries with au thoritarian governm ents. “ It can be safer than a trip to Chicago.” said one official. Even the style with which advance m en conduct their negotiations can be im portant. They attem pt to be deferential to their hosts, but insistent on arran g em en ts satisfactory to the President. P F A N U I S Crosswprd Puzzle Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle [S H U L ™ sMtfliff 3 S y m b o l for te llu r iu m 4 Sum up 5 Del i neat® 6 Man’s nam® 7 Part of “to be^ 8 Encountered 9 Man's nam® 1 0 Stamp of approval 11 Pronoun ••17 Sun god 19 Near 21 Jason's sWp 23 Crucifix 25 Authorization 26 Gets up 27 Wipes oat 23 Withered 30 Girl’s nam®. 33 Trade far money 35 Think 33 Bridge term l ‘ 2 I ACROSS I Ttilnf -. clon® 5 British streetcar o S e e d 1 2 I c ilia ta student 13' European capital 14 Man's nit kium® 15 Printer'* measure IS Colorless 13 Hindu cymbal* 20 Symbol fcr tantalum 2 2 Genus of . maples 24 Bark cloth 27 b mistaken 29 I lad of low* 3 1 Weight Of bid i.» 3 2 Rants 34 Frog 36 A state ( a b b r.) 3 / Worships 3 9 Visions . 41 Spanish for “ yes” • 4 2 Girl's nam® 4 4 Eagle'* neat 4 5 Comb. term: outside 4 7 Tardy 4 9 Army meal 5Q Pierce 5 2 Burrowing animal 54 Conjunction 5 5 W ag er 57 River in A frica 59 Exists 61 Everyone 6 3 D illseed 65 Portico 67 Insect 68 Flower 69 Man’s nickname DOWN 1 High card 2 Gainsay 4 0 Reg ion 4 3 Mates amends 46 Article of •furniture 4 3 Choice part 51 Exist - 53 Spanish art id® 56 Sailor (colloq.) 58 Superlative ✓ ending 60 Declare 61 Ftebrew month 62 French article 64 Negative 66 Preposition 4 7 IO l l 4 w5 IO VV* 12 IS $I® 17 Ty? 20 21 TV 22 • 28 33 ■ V< 34 27 32 37 41 45 50 62 S i 61 67 46 47 42 r _* • j n 51 56 63 68 w iv y 29 38 52 & 64 55 57' ' S ' : 3’ 43 y . fx 48 £ 4 4 ii 8 I 9 i18 Y,S« 19 14 *4 30 25 26 31 5v S 40 36 • il l w . 59 60 66 $ $ 53 'v - 54 49 58 65 69 , y i I i IT'S ME..MARCIE...HOU KNOU, FROM C A M P L E WERE P L A IN S "HA HABERMAN" TOGETHER. I___ IF M BROTHER D0E5N'T WANT TO SE E WU, I THINK HOU SHOULD LEAVE HEBREW H O U S E SA Y S RAZ0RBACKS AREN'T KOSHER Help Texas Beat Arkansas by Keeping Kosher this week AT HEBREW HOUSE Wed. BLINTZE NIGHT 6:00 p.m. Thurs. STEAK NIGHT 6:00 p.m. Fri. MATZO BALL NIGHT 7:00 p.m. For Reservations Call 477-0131 1606 WEST AVENUE Tuesday, October 12, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Paao S I Steers Drop to Tenth Sooners Second in AP Poll Michigan by 1,058-886 with Texas third at 818. Arkansas, Toledo, Washington, Florida State and Purdue. R e n a is s a n c e 8th & Rio Grand© 476-6019 Midnite Breakfast Buffet (Monday-Saturday) Scrambled Eggs — Grits — Toast & Jelly $115 Bacon —- Ham — Sausage I 12-2 a.m. Beefeater's Hanging Beef (Thurs. - Sat.) Beef (cut to order) — Baked Potato Salad — Vegetable — Rolls $ ^ 7 5 L 6:30-10:00 p.m. Visit our New Shop — Silver, Etc. and game room, upstairs By The Associated Press O k l a h o m a ’ s decisive 48-27 trouncing of Texas Saturday shot into second place the Sooners behind Nebraska in this week’s Associated Press college football poll and set up a possible Thanksgiving Day showdown between the nation’s 1-2 teams. The d e f e n d i n g national champion Comhuskers received 40 first-place votes and 1,056 points from a panel of 55 sports­ writers and broadcasters across the country following a 36-0 rout of Missouri. Oklahoma received eight first- place votes and 888 points in climbing from eighth to second. One of the teams the Sooners passed was Michigan, runner-up a week ago and 24-13 winner over Michigan State. The Wolverines polled four first-place votes and 880 points. Last week, Nebraska led COMPLETE i:1&T5R OVERHAUL K e a v y d u ly premium grad e lin in g , everhaul a ll four., w h e e l cylinders, precision turn drums, arc linings to fit drum. Pack front wheel bear­ ings, install new grease seals. 30,000 mile warranty. Reg. 49.95 job. Complete Job Only *39a5 MOST AMERICAN CARS a b s o r b e r HEAVY DUTY - - INSTALLED I iv,* ’ Reg. 60.00 ★ JI All Four FRONT END ALIGNMENT m r- f\ A im 3 U f a l l Reg. ■ $8.50 iBdrkhalter will align the front end of your car to factory specifications and set caster, camber, toe-in and center steering wheel. You’ll get easier, safer steering & less tire wear. Done by experts. Pickup Trucks Reg. $12.50—$8.50 BURKHALTER Spring Company Inc. Serving Austin Since 1923 jBAHXAMERICMa 310 Colorado 476-6761 High Speed On The Car- O p e n M o n da y-F rido y , 7:0 0 A .M .-5 P M . Satu rd ay. 7 OO A .M .-1 2 00 N o o n WHEEL BA LAN CE Par Whcot pius Weights , Alabama didn’t receive any votes for the top spot but still managed to move from sixth to fourth iii the wake of a 42-0 thrashing of Vanderbilt. Auburn, fourth a week ago, received two votes for first place but slipped to fifth after a hard-fought 27-11 victory over Southern Mississippi. Colorado, a 24-14 winner over Iowa State, also dropped one position from fifth to sixth but received first-place the other vote. 17-0 and tenth eighth Notre Dame blanked Miami of remained Florida seventh, while Georgia was up from after to whipping Mississippi 38-7. Penn State’s 42 0 rout of Army kept the Nittany Lions ninth, whereas Texas skidded from third to tenth following the loss to Oklahoma. Tile Longhorns are the only team in tho Top IO to have lost a game. A n o t h e r unbeaten team, Arizona State, went from twelfth to eleventh by defeating Colorado State 42 0. The rest of the Second IO consisted of Louisiana State, Ohio State, Tennessee, Stanford, JA N IE G O NZALEZ IN V I T E S M L ll K R F R I E N D S A N D ( T S T O M E R S T O V I S I T H E R A T I I I R N E W L O C A T IO N . VARSITY BARBER S H O P ■JOO I (. ii a cl a I ii pc St. the quickest and easiest way to make contact with your fellow students . . . The Official 1971-1972 STUDENT DIRECTORY The O fficia l 1971-72 Student Directory can be a vital tool of communication! The over 39,000 listings will include the student's Austin address and telephone number, home town address, University classification, and school or college. Be sure to pick one up at any of the seven handy campus locations manned by the A P O 's and Naval ROTO. $IOO I • Tax lrTax Included A n oth e r publication of T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L I C A T I O N S Page 6 Tuesday, October 12, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN J o e Phillips Don't Call It tout Ss?* Describin II I is like I It just isn't so. Saturday’s Texas-Arkansas game as Shootout [erring to the Vietnam w ar as World W a r I I I . First, there is no national championship riding on this one. Second, the great riva lry of the “ Worster Hunch vs. “ Montgomery’s Monsters’’ is missing now that most of the leading characters of the first two .Shootouts have graduated. And finally, the schedule change which moved the game back to mid-season from early December has taken away the clim actic aura which surrounded the origin­ al, season-ending Shootouts. But there is a more important difference in this year's match between the prim ary power brokers of the SWC. F o r the first time in three years, neither participant can be placed on the pedestal reserved for “ super-great” teams. Both squads are blessed with solid personnel and are well-ciiscnlined. B t each has committed that sin which is usually avoided by D arrell Royal and I" rank Broyles to a non- teams—the loss of an early season contest conference opponent. In 1969 and ’TO, Texas played six regular season, non­ conference games and won them all while Arkansas played seven sim ilar nonconferenee contests, winning all except a 34-28 loss last season at the hands of Stanford. This year, tho Razorbacks were not expected to have any difficulty entering the Texas conflict undefeated. In fact, Arkansas' cotton candy early season schedule (California, Oklahoma State, Tulsa, TC C and B a y lo r) made even Southwest Texas’ Lone Star Conference opponents look difficult in comparison. And then the Hogs committed the unpardonable. Breezing into Tulsa with expectations of a one-sided dream er like last year (49-7), the Razorbacks were jarred out of the Top IO poll by a 21-20 upset. Broyles offered no excuse for the defeat. He didn’t try' to blame it on injuries (which have been scarce in the Hog camp this season) or on a sudden breakdown of both the offense and defense. Instead, all lie would say was that it was just one of those things you can’t explain. The To xas loss to Oklahoma, however, was a different story. Tin' defeat cannot be described as a fluke, since everyone knew the Sooners had one of the finest offenses in the country. And to make matters oven worse, the Longhorns’ training room before the game resembled an ow r-populated rehabilitation ward of a veterans hospital. Realistically, tho crippled Steers should have been listed as the underdogs, instead of being tabbed as five and one- half point favorites. And understandably, Texas lost. Not only did tho ’Horns lose to Oklahoma last Saturday, but they m ay have lost to Arkansas as well. F o r instead of traveling to Little Rock with only two starters (quar­ terback Eddie Phillips anti split end Jim m y Moore) listed on the disabled roster, the Steers are also without the services of the back-up quarterback (Donnie Wigginton), one of the .starting halfbacks (Don Burrisk ) and a starting linebacker (Glenn Gaspard), all casualties of the bash in tilt' Cotton Bowl. Had Texas played Arkansas in September, before either team suffered any injuries, the ’Horns probably would have been listed as slight favorites. But things have changed, and even the most optimistic of Steer supporters admit that Orange hopes for a Cotton Bow l berth are almost as remote as the odds of a third consecutive championship. I t ’s just not likely. to Florida State and Purdue were the Top 20, North their newcomers replacing Duke Carolina which suffered first setbacks. and Last week’s Second IO was W a s h i n g t o n , Arizona State, Tennessee, Duke, Ohio State, LSO, Arkansas, North Carolina, Stanford and Toledo. • • • The fop Twenty teams, with sea­ son records and total point- Points tabulated on basis ol 20-18-IS-14-12-10- ............ 5-0 ......................... 4-0 .VO t. N e b ra s k a 2 O klah o m a 3 M ic h ig a n .......................... ................. 4 A la b a m a ..................... 5. A uburn a. C olorado ................... 7. N otre D am e ........... 8. G eorg ia ..................... 9 Pen n S t ....................... ........................ IO. T e x a s I t . A rizo n a St ............. 12. L o u is ia n a S t .............. 13. Ohio S t ........................ ................. 11 Tonne --see ................... I V Stan fo rd in. A rk a n s a s ................. ....................... IT. Toledo ............. IS. W ash in g to n ............... th. F lo rid a St ......................... 2-2 ..................... 20. P u rd u e 4-0 5-0 t-0 5-0 4-0 3-1 4-0 4-1 4-1 t-1 151 I ti 7 New York Giants Lose to Cowboys D A LLA S touchdown shot (A P ) — Dallas recovered five New York fumbles and quarterback Craig Morton came off the bench to nail a 48- to Bol) yard Hayes and give the hard-pressed Cowboys a 20-13 National Football League victory over the Giants in a nationally televised game Monday night. The victory gave Dallas a 3 I record and second place in the Football Conference National East Division behind unbeaten Washington’s 4-0 mark. Tile Giants are 2-2. replaced M o r t o n starting C o w b o y quarterback Roger Staubach as Dallas built up a shaky 13-6 half-time lead on Staubach’s four-yard touchdown pass to tight end Billy Tnt ax with in the second 17 seconds quarter. left Duane Thomas, who retired last spring and launched a bitter t i r a d e a g a i n s t C o w b o y first management, made his appearance of the season as ho joined Morton in tho backfield. W I L C O h o s t d a 6421 Burnet Lane Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE AVOID DEALERSHIP RIP-OFF SPORTS C A R C LIN IC 100% GUARANTEED W O R K O N ALL IMPORT SPORTS CARS BEFORE YOU GET BURNED ON REPAIRS C A LL US 477-1027 1314 W . 51 THE BEST IN VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS 100% GUARANTEE — MODERN FACILITIES BRAKES TUNE-UPS EXPERT ON VALVE & ENGINE REPAIRS CLUTCH — TRANSMISSION — ELECTRICAL OPEN SATURDAY — BankAntsricard Master Charge W E HAVE A COMPLETE PARTS DEPT. GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE 1617 EAST SIXTH 477-6797 IM Eleven I 8 . TV PTM. Club (4-0) Sigma Phi Epsilon (4-1) Stars (4-0) Hill Hall (3-0) Phi Gamma Delta (3-1) Tat! I'Xclta Phi (4-0) Lambda Chi Alpha (4-1) Buzzards (4-0) Petunias (4-0) Roberts Hall (4-0) Zeta Beta Tau (5-1) 9. 10. 11. Notice: All University student! interested in­ tramural volleyball games should contact the intramural depart­ ment at Gregory Gym 33. officiating in ★ ★ ★ B la n k H a w k s HO, R o g e rs R a id e rs IR B u s h m a s te rs 25, B uz z ard s 20 /.i la B o la T a u fi, Ai ic ia 0 W hiz K id s I 22, Photons 6 L C M ll. A ir F o rc e « K a p p a A lp h a 31, I .am ix ia Chi Alpha . P h i G a m m a D elta 20. S ig m a Ph i E p It si Ion *> Je s t e r 1-5 Hast 14. .Jester 6-10 W e s t T e a m l l . R oughnecks 7 S te a le rs 7, L e g a l E a g le s 6 S ta rs 24. P e tu n ia s 12 EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed Male Donors Only Ages 18-60 I W L WITH PARENTAL CONSENT Cash Bonus Programs for Repeat Donors Austin Blood Components, Inc. 409 West Sixth 477-3735 r n % * Royal Tired of Role Horn Injuries Fatten Hog Chances By ED SPAULIDING Assistant Sports Editor The outpatient list at Longhorn M em orial Hospital was spelled intern out Monday by chief D arrell Royal and future the doesn't look too bright for this week's now-diminished Shootout I I I with always-potent Arkansas. Despite the Oklahoma disaster and the ominous spectre of the R a z o r b a c k s ahead, injuries dominated R oyal’s Monday press conference. And Royal, obviously irritated the deluge of questions the health of his the with concerning team, opened by ailment situation head on: facing “ I WANT to face this injury thing right now, get it out of the way and leave it. I ’m not gonna change what I ’ve got to say now all week, not at practice, not Friday, not at noon Satur­ day.” And as Royal told the writers, “ People want to pin me down to make a .statement. I ’m not a doc­ tor, and I ’m damn sure not a fortune teller.” doubtful His grim analysis indicated that both quarterbacks, Eddie Phillips and Donnie Wigginton, for Arkansas. are H a l f b a c k Don Burrisk is definitely out, as are split end Jim m y Moore and linebacker Glenn Gaspard. Tight end Rick Davis is also doubtful. R o y a l describes Ph illips’ present status this way: “ He’s not well, he fought gamely against Oklahoma, and did a heckuva job taking us 80 yards for a score. His hamstring is tender, it’s tight, it’s not well. toe “ The doctors tell me that for a person who’s not an athlete, the injury would sideline them for six weeks. If s been only three weeks since he hurt it, and all the massage, all the whirlpool treatment in the world won’t help. Mother Nature w ill not be speeded up.’’ The rib injury which farced FAR OUT SHAG HAIRCUTS AND OTHER THINGS HAIR LTD. 2411 RICHCREEK C orner of B urnet & Richereek 454-0984 CANDLE CUT S3. Wigginton out of the OU don­ nybrook has been diagnosed as sim ilar to that suffered by Steve Worster prior to the Arkansas game last December. “ The ribs are very painful,” Royal says, "and I know Donnie won’t work out this week, he can’t. W e’ll be very lucky to have him for Saturday, and it could be three weeks.” So. . . ifs step back, take a deep breath and see just how good Rob R iviere and Mike M c C u 11 o c h are. Both are sophomores. R iviere has about, two minutes of playing time and McCulloch has done nothing more than quarterback the demon­ stration team offense at practices this fall. Those two, or Wigginton, may have to carry the QB load the rest of the way, too, since Royal indicated Phillips might not recover from his ailments for the rest of the season. SWC Rank B y The A sso ciate d P res* S K \ S O N .......... ........ 4 3 T eam A rk an sas T e x a s > - H o u s t o n T e x a s T e ch T C U .......... . . . . B a y lo r ......... S M U R ic e ......... T e x a s A & M . x-not com p etin g for S W C title W I. T P c t. P t s .ROO 186 0 .750 TIS i 0 I 0 750 .400 2 3 0 I 2 I .375 .250 I 3 0 I 3 0 250 250 200 3 0 4 0 O P 67 65 62 73 107 98 109 96 123 C O N F E R E N C E . . . . . . . . . . . T eam A rk a n sa s T e x a s T e x a s T e c h .......... 1 I ......................... 0 I T C U T e x a s A & M .......... 0 I B a y lo r ..................... 0 I W L P e t. 84 22 ................ 2 0 1 000 84 22 I 0 1.000 28 0 -500 35 35 .OOO 15 4 9 1 .OOO OOO 7 28 7 35 I . A S T W E E K S R E S U L T S : A r k a n ­ sas 35. B a y lo r 7: T e x a s T e ch 28. T e x ­ as A & M 7: O klah o m a 48. T e x a s 27: I O U 14 O k lah o m a S ta te 14 tie ; A ir F o r c e 30. S M U 0. T H I S W E E K S S C H E D U L E : V illa- (7 30 p.m . n o va at Houston. F r id a y L ittle C D T I: T e x a s (n a tio n al T V 3 SO p m C D T I; R o ck S M U at R ic e (S W C 7 30 p.m . C D T I; T ex as A & M at T C U (S W C 7 30 p m . C O T ); Boston College a t T e x a s T ech <7.30 p.m. C D T I. at A rk a n sa s, HOLIDAY GROUP FLIGHTS AUSTIN/NEW YORK (o r W A S H IN G T O N , D .C .) R O U N D TRIP JET A IR F A R E I A Z C l j (plus tax) Departures N O V . 20 and 24 D EC . 22 and 23 Return A N Y D A Y ! A S K I S A B O U T O U R L O S A N G E L E S G R O U P HARWOOD TRAVEL 242R Guadalupe § 478-9S4S Burrisk suffered an injury in the area of the shoulder-collar bone-breast bone, and may miss the rest of the year. Three weeks would be the most optimistic guess for his return. Burrisk’s replacement w ill be Dan Steakley, but guess who’s knee? a bothered by Steakley. from Colorado City turned his knee in practice last Thursday and was not at full speed versus OU. bad junior The S t e a k l e y alternated with sophomore Lonnie Bennett in Bu rrisk ’s spot in Monday after­ noon’s workout, R ivie re ’s firet introduction to the first team. 1 In the only other key move, safety Tommy Landry switched to the offensive backfield with Alan Moore working at safety. T h e Tommy ever-moving Woodard may see action at tight end with D avis questionable. D avis has a sprained ankle and strained knee, and Royal in­ dicated he may move Woodard back to the post he manned as a sophomore and junior. Woodard I was slated to play safety in 1971, but has been used as an outside linebacker. Fin a lly, there’s Gaspard. He severely sprained an ankle in the first quarter of the Sooner secretest and w ill be replaced by Greg Dahlberg, whose per- f o r m a n c e Saturday pleased: Royal. The head coach was satisfied with the offense until Wigginton left the game, and singled out tackle the tiny quarterback, Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service Across from Gulf M art G L 2-0205 CLOSED SATURDAY The Only Independent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET RO AD SER V IC IN G V O LK SW A G EN V EH IC LES IS O U R SPECIA LTY Je rry Sisemore and defensive lineman Ray Dowdy and Greg Ploetz as having played well. C o - c a p t a i n Stan Mauldin received special praise. Royal said: “ Let me tell you this about, that kid. I didn t think he was even going to suit up, he hadn t worked out since hurting his knee in the Tech game. “ He strong linebacker in over a year. And played hasn't in and fights Like he goes I champ, plays great. He made things happen. His knee was not sore the next day, so he’ll start this week.” Typical of how things snowball once they start. Royal related that reserve back G ary Yeoman sprained an ankle Saturday. He was hurt on the sidelines on an out-of-bounds ^idn * even get into the game. play—l"*e BERT’S BAR-B-QUE BUY ONE SANDWICH FOR 40* S E T O N E FREE W ITH THIS C O U PO N 11:00 A.M. to 11:30 P.M. TUESDAY O N LY October 12 610 W . 19th u t SUPERSTYLISTS Becky Bt Margaret Shape-up your head at THE HAIRCUT STORE on east side of UT Campus 2819 SAN JACINTO HAIRCUTS FOR ALL PERSONS 8:00 - 5:30 M-F f o b " a n o i n t m e n t ^J4enry 2222 Guadalupe ^ J I _ NEXT t o t h e TEXAS t h e a t r e PRESENTS CLASSICS IN MODERN MANNER n V A N HEUSEN* r n n u n m n i B E S S E N n First of a D e l u g e U P I T elephoto. in the Baltimore's Brooks Robinson singles second inning of Monday's second World Series game to drive in Frank Robinson with first run of the game. The Orioles the whipped Pittsburgh, 11-3, to take a 2-0 lead in the Series. Birds Bust Bugs , 11-3 (AP) Robinson B A L T I M O R E - B altim ore’s boys— Frank and Brooks—led a 14-hit attack as the Orioles shelled a disintegrating Pittsburgh pitching staff the Pirates 11-3 Monday in the second game of the World Series. embarrassed and Tile Orioles, taking charge in a manner reminiscent of last y ear’s World Series triumph o%rer a mauled Cincinnati staff, thus built their lead to 2-0 over the for Pirates in the best-of-seven series as the teams headed for Pitts­ burgh and Tuesday’s resumption of play. Oddly tho power-hitting Orioles, every one of their hits was a single. But they were bunched enough to produce three runs in the fourth inning and six in the fifth inning as a total of 19 men went to die plate. The assault on six Pittsburgh pitchers brought the victory for Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes * SALE SHEEP SKIN RUGS Many Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SALE ★ Variou s kinds, colors — 50c per loot Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 staggered Jim P alm er, who through seven shutout innings, was tagged for Rich Hebner’s three-run homer in the eighth and needed Dick H a lls relief help in the ninth. in Brooks and Frank Robinson collected three hits each, Brooks driving three and Frank scoring two. E ve ry Baltim ore starter except Don Buford, M ark Belanger and Palm er contributed to the attack. The Orioles appeared virtually invincible after having run their winning streak to IG, including l l regular season games, three playoff victories and the two triumphs over the Pirates. E N J O Y ! E N J O Y ! W e Feature One Sandwich D L ScUobJn VV J It’s That G ood SCHLOTZSKY’S SA N D W IC H ES V io l s Congress 442-9003 I " . O S !- ; ; I M O M 'A Y S O N L Y YOUR SENIOR RING Created by John Roberts Largest Selection Best Diamond Prices 2236 Guadalupe "NexF to Hemphill's" fcfctjdc*! This little slipstick could increase your typing speed by two or three days. Students will be elated over a completely new way lo correct typing errors: Liquid P a p e r s * new dispenser, slipstick. When you're typing the big one the 30 pag paper you've been sweating tor weeks, that s when mistakes bug you the most. S o y o u s ow down- And the closer you get to the bottom oMhe page, the more you clutch up. Mess up now and you vc got a whole page to retype. When you've got a slipstick handy. V worry about mistakes. One easy touch releases a special fluid that buries the mistake and leaves - clean new surface like the paper itself. so you typo relaxed. And make fewer mistakes. On the big assignments, Liquid Paper s new „ stick could put you days ahead. --- 1 I Liquid Paper slipsticns @ $1 25 ea Liquid Paper Corporation Dept. C S • m o M ariaville D rive D a lla s , T e x a s 75231 Please rend me---- Name— Address. O ty/State/ZiP- I J Total amt enclosed $ _ --------------- -— - (Texas residents, add 4 Vt % stale and local sales tax ) . J Liquid Paper Corporation Tuesday Special RIB EYE 29 served with salad, baked potato* and texas toast B O N A N Z A SIRLOIN PIT 2815 Guadalupe 478-3560 MICHAEL S MENS WEAR 2424 GUADALUPE 25 MORE ITEMS ON SALE BUT WE DON'T WANT TO MENTION THEM IN THIS AD. YOU WILL BE VERY SURPRISED — THIS SALE IS FOR THE EN- TIRE WEEK! ENTIRE STOCK OF SPORT & DRESS SHIRTS L O N S SLEEVES M A IN LY (SOME SHORT SLEEVES) BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS & SOLIDS ALL SIZES — S, M, L, XL & 14 to !7 4000 SHIRTS — ALL ON SALE N O W BRANDS — YES — H.I.S., VAN HEUSEN AND OTHERS $ 2 0 0 SAVE TO 400 ON EACH SHIRT ON E G R O U P OF Jeans & Dress Flares 417 PAIR O N SALE SIZES ON H AN D ARE 28 To 38, LENGTHS 28-34 VALUES Mr*o w *5OO PR. T-Shirts ASST. C O LO R S with I Pocket Sizes M, L, XL N O W O N SALE FOR $ 1 9 9 I Van Heusen makes your vibrations visible! Styles, patterns and colors that really send out your message. Get with it! Get your body into a Van Heusen 417 B o d y Shirt, Give real style to your vibes! VISIT V O S S VIA S A S ... Ski the fabulous slopes of Voss, Norway. Frolic in Copenhagen. Two lucky people will win a free round trip ticket via S A S Scandinavian Airlines. Send your name and address to: The Van Heusen College Contest, 417 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016. Contest closes November 30, 1971. Void where prohibited by law. V A N H E U S E N ' laud**. October .12, (971 THE DAILY TEXAN P*9« J (worth $3.00) with each bag purchased for this week only 2532 GU AD A LU PE Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2 pcs. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5 - 9 p . m . o n l y R e g . S 1 . 3 5 Happy Hour 2-5 p.m Light or Dark Lg. Pitcher............................ Sm. Pitcher........................... Tax Office Sells Shuttle Passes The new shuttlebus passes for dependents of University students went on sale Monday at tho City Tax Department offices, 207 W. 9 t h St. Joe Temus, director of the T r a f f i c and Transportation Department, said the passes will sell for $7 and w ill be mandatory for all dependents of students riding beginning Nov. I. The pass, which "•ill be on sale throughout the sem ester, expires Dec. 22. shuttlebusos Students and their dependents must have a University iden­ tification card and seme other personal to pur­ identification chase one of the passes. Bag $9. Every color, a p p a g ' in Reynolds-Penland on the Pray More than $3,000 in un- ! dergraduate research grants ; will be awarded by Student I to ; Government i m p l e m e n t programs of : ; independent research. this year A c c o r d i n g to Blanch J the J Cohen, co-chairman of Undergraduate R e s e a r c h J Project, students may submit : applications for grants before Friday. Information about grants may be obtained from faculty members. Miss Cohen said grants, up to $1,000 each, will be given to students whose projects show the most merit. She explained proposals were graded by graduate students on their originality and their value to others. feasibility, their Athough anyone is eligible to apply, the majority of the projects have been done in the areas cf social science, radio- totevision-film, p s y ­ chology a n d architecture, she commented. Citing several successful projects which have been conducted under the grant program. Miss Cohen noted a study in drug research, a bio-engineering project that proposed a new type of in- ; rental thermometer and an | extensive study in Mexican ; folk music as completed. . ■ PUBLIC NOTICE F O R g a llo n C o m p le te a q u a r iu m s y s te m . $45. An o u ts ta n d in g SA L E . lo d e a l. C all 474-4520 a f t e r 7 p m . 1951 B IR C K R O A D M A S T E R . N e w ly p a in te d $125. C all K e ith a t 478-0042. 71 H O N D A CL100. $325 1500 m ile s . T w o m o n th s old. C all 453-0983. O v e rd riv e , 1970 T R IU M P H G T-6 tw o d o o r h a rd to p . d e f r o s te r , f e a tu r e s . a n d m a n y o th e r a d d itio n a l A c tu a l m ile a g e u n d e r 8000. $2880. C all 327-0620 a f t e r 5 30 M o n .-F ri. r e a r w in d o w , H E A T H K IT A R -15 s te r e o r e c e iv e r . B e s t o ffe r. 476-0068. C a ll a f t e r 6 p m ., 454- 1971 T R IU M P H T R ID E N T 750cc. F iv e fiv e m o n th s old. D e s p e r a te , s p e e d , m u s t sell. 474-4386. O W N E R 3 B E D R O O M , 2-’j b a th . 3 a c r e s 327-1461. N E W H U R S T C O M P , s h if te r p lu s 327 350hp C h ev . h e a d s . 452-5695. r e c e iv e r . D u a l 1218 K L H S P E A K E R S . S o n y ST R -45 A M /F M r e c o rd c h a n g e r , S o n y TC-165 s te r e o c a s s e tt e d e c k w ith a u to m a tic r e v e r s e . 476-6733. 454-6141. • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S 9435. less for 75 c the first 15 w ords or time, 5c each a d d itio n a l w ord. S tu ­ d ent m ust show receipt in J ournalism and p ay B ldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y th ro u gh Friday. in a d va n ce A u d it o r's D E A D L I N E S C H E D U L E M onday T e x a n F r id a y , 3:00 p.m . T u e s d a y T e x a n M o n d a y . 11:00 ».n». W e dne sda y T e x a n I tiesday, l l :00 a .m T h u r s d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y . 11:00 a. m F r id a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y . 11:00 a. m ••la th e e v e n t of e r r o r s m a d e In an a d v e r t is e m e n t , i m m e d i a t e notice m u s t be g iv e n as th e pu bli shers are respon si b le for only O N E incorrec t insert ion. AH c l a i m s for a d j u st m e n ts should be m a d e no t la te r th an 30 d a y s aft er p u b li c ati on .” P O R T A B L E T V s : all-■ c h a n n e l. U ltra c le a n , little u s e d B /W . 1 9 ' A d m ira l $66.50 7475. 4303 M a n c h a c a R o a d . le ft). P h o n e 444-1345, 442-: I (few T O P " c A S H P R I C E S p a id f o r d ia m o n d s , old g o ld . C a p ito l D ia m o n d S hop. 603 , C o m m o d o re P e r r y . 476-0178 S U N F IS H — A M E R IC A S m o s t p o p u la r s a ilb o a t. N ew s to c k of S u n fish p a r t s J u s t a r r iv e d . N ew a n d u s e d s a ilb o a ts a1! size s. S a ilin g I m p o r ts , 926-5804. SO N Y S T E R E O m o d e l 6055 R e c e iv e r, R M S P o w e r 8 o h m s 40/40 w a tts . D u a l 1209 C h a n g e r. KUH 5 .S p e ak e rs TC-165 S o n y T a p e D e ck . 476-6733. 454-6141. 750 H O N D A 1971. G old N ew p a r ts $1095. 478-5285 a n y tim e N E W T H R E E S P E E D R a le ig h , a n d c h a in In c lu d e d . $95. 47 4 -4 2 0 0 lock IB M T Y P E W R I T E R . $295, t e r m s 476- 8.532 a f b r 5 70 M A C H III 3700 m ile s , good s h a p e re c o rd e r, th a n o ne y e a r old. e x c e lle n t c o n ­ T w o h e lm e ts T ear- 4-1500 le ss d itio n . 441-7726. 478-1095. 66 V O L K S W A G E N fa s tb a c k . $650. 454- 1005. G R E E N A U S T IN H E A L E Y 3000. 1960 ru n s w e ll. $650 o r b e s t G ood b ody, Mffer C all 474-4427 IR IS H S E T T E R p u p p ie s . A K C. h e a lth y r e a d y now . 477-8023 a n y tim e 441-3166 a lte r 5 w e e k e n d s E C F O R D ID M O D E L 360 N e w c o n d itio n S a c rific e S te Urn! d e s c a s e a n d fla sh 472-7126 a f t e r 6 p m . N IT -N O Y h a s d e sk s , c h e s ts fas. ra n g e s , h e a t e r s , K a r-b a r, 1513 M a n o r R o a d g a s e m M a ttr e s s p a c k s . c a b in e ts , d r e s s e r s , so ­ g la s s w a re , 477-0550 5892 APT. w / S T E R E O O N W H E E L S camper. Red, AC. p op 7! V w ‘ c d A M /F M mu tip ex stere o with 4 speakers Icebox, cas sett e ta p e deck. S-ee cs 3. storaae ca bine ts, sink and a a te ' ta o e top. Like new 2 months o a. $4775. 478-9898 c r 477-66°8. 1971 P O R S C H E 914. 2800 a c t u a l m ile s im m a c u la te c o n d itio n . F u ll w a r r a n ty , $3650. C all 452-6047. HSA 650, 1969 M u s t sell. E x c e lle n t c o n ­ 476-9266 o ffice T u e s d a y a n d d itio n T h u r s d a y 8-2 478-7341 C H A R L IE c o n d itio n '61 C O M E T W A G O N , M ic h e b n re a s o n a b ly go o d P r o v e n ro u g h c o u n try v e h ic le , w ell m a in ta in e d . 476-0390. tir e s . VW B U S. L o w m ile a g e , low p r ic e . 472 1472. 474-4287. STEREO SALE STEREO CENTER r a c r o s s 19th fro m J e s t e r C e n te r 19+h 203 I966 M U S T A N G Tv>w m ile a g e , V-8. a u o m a tic . E x c e lle n t a ir. c o n d itio n . C a ll 454-8338 a f t e r 3. 1971 B O N N E V IL L E T R IU M P H c p lle n t c o n d itio n , $1250. F ir m . 472- N E W E S T NEA R C A M P U S ! ry 2 bedroom, 2 balh aparfm e rri arpef 'a c e sun dec if b large poof REAT O A K APARTMENTS one block to law school three blocks to U.T. H O O K 'EM IN THIS err D e . Ye ow w ith ta n lot. A C , pow er, a u to m a - a w n e e s, 4 new tires 47 8 98 5 8 H O O K 'EM IN THIS '70 GTO c o n v e x d e. Ye* ow warn to p , q o d tic, $2975. tan interijp. AC. p o * e e a u to m a t res ra d io , m a q w heels, 4 new 478 -9 8 98 o r 477-6698 NEVER BEFORE S O U T H A M E R I C A N A u stin I M P O R T S P A N C H A M A M A A o a c a pons'■ os & F a ro u t mu? rn sh irts & 17th St 503 W DISCOUNT STEREO IO - 5 0 % off M o s t Quality Brands Available 2 years in business. 453-1312 477-0022 G I R L ’ S F I V E S P E E D S c h w in n C o lle g ia te . $80. C all P a tty , 476-6789. A N D P O R T R A I T P H O T O G R A P H Y W a n t W E D D IN G s o m e th in g d iffe re n t'.' C all A n n e tte 's S tudio. 472- 4 4 8 4 b e a u tifu l m o n o c h ro m e . E le g a n t c o lo r, F O R S A L E . ra d io C all 926-1198. A t', '64 F o r d F a lc o n F u tu r e . a n d h e a te r . V e ry c le a n 1966 P O N T IA C L E M A N S R ed o u ts id e , in te rio r. 49.000 m ile s . O rig in a l w h ite o w n e r. $850. 836-3447. S IN G L E R O O M S U n iv e rs ity H o u se m e n s d o rm R oom a n d b o a r d fo r F a ll s e m e s te r . Good re a s o n a b le ra te s fro m C a m p u s , S h u ttle B u s ro u te A C, m a id s e r v ic e . 2710 N u e c e s , 477-8272. food a n d b lo c k s T h r e e J E S T E R M E N S now o r a s soon a s p o s sib le c o n tr a c t A v a ila b le P le a s e c a ll 471-2181 o r 472-2722 N E E D G IR L to a s s u m e J e s t e r c o n tr a c t fo r S p rin g R oom 516. G ood s ite . C all S h e ry l. 471-2156. C A L L 471-5244 T O P L A C E A T E X A N A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n R o o m & B o a r d From $220. A l I. BILLS P A ID 477-3388 C L A S S I F I E D A D Page 8 Tuesday, October 12. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN L E A R N to p la y G U IT A R , b e g in n e r, advanced. D re w T h o m a s o n . 478-7331 178-2079. O N T O W N L A K E Rent a s i ' b e a t or ea-'ce. 2-9 w eekdays 12 9 wee>ends SMc^nt-s take S H t t l e b j * P ure 8 to 1800 S. L a k e s - ore. SKYDIVE Austin Parachute Center For further information after 9 p.m. C A L L 928-0539 EARN $ s WEEKLY R ood p «sm e se rv 'c e s . o r A U S T I N B LO O D C O M P O N E N T S , I N C 409 W e s t 6th, 4 77-3735- P A R K IN G BY M O N T H $12.50. 2418 S a n A n to n io , o n e b lock fr o m C a m p u s. 476-3720. T r a v i s . R E N T S A IL B O A T fun — b e a u tifu l L a k e B o a rd th ro u g h l-S. M a r s h a c c o m m o d a tin g k e e lb o a ts , Y a c h t S a le s — b y M a n s fie ld D a m . CO 6-1150. b o a ts m a n e n tly w ith m e d ic a lly R E M O V E U N W A N T E D H A IR p e r ­ a p p ro v e d e le c tr o ly s is . U n iv e rs ity e le c tr o ly s is . 477- 4070. J E N N IN G S M O V JN G -H A l 'L IN G Ail ty p e s o f m o v in g L a rg e , s m a ll, 7 d a y s w e e k . E x p e r i e n c e d HI2-7333. GL2-1923. Want to— BUY, SELL, O R RENT? | GR I-52441 C a ll- Classified Ad In The Daily Texan M i s c e l l a n e o u s H e l p W a n t e d R o o m m a t e s D u p l e x e s , U n f E N ( ’Y C L O P E I UA B R IT T A N ICA , tim e , full tim e . 452-4541. W A N T E D a t t r a c t i v e M u st E X P E R I E N C E D neat, be p e a r I n e e. o v e r 18 F u ll o r p a r t A p p ly in p e rs o n . S tu d io 222 E a s t S ixth h e lo t e I. rn sh ier. a p ­ rn tim e . IV T h e a tr e , F E M A L E H O U S E K E E P E R 12 30 p rn. - 4 :3 0 p m , M o n .-F ri. C a r e of < • i i I cl - light c o o k in g R e f­ t e n s ' sch o o l c lo th e s , e re n c e s , $37.50 w e e k ly . 926-120C a f te r 5, all d a y w e e k ­ e n d s. tr a n s p o r ta tio n ow n W IL L E X C H A N G E d e lu x e d i r e c t c o lo r for d is tr ib u tin g ($50 v a lu e ) p o r tr a i t tic k e ts in y o u r d o rm 472-4219. G O GO G IR L S F r i d a y n ig h ts 8-11 h o u r. C all S a m B e rk le y , 414-853 t e r 5. 20-:') H O U R S P E R w e e k s a le s - s e r v ic e I n t e r r e ­ C all 15' 4111 o r 5437 N o rth g io n a l, C a p ita l P la z a . C A R P O R T E R . 21 y e a r s A fte rn o o n s in p e rs o n . 3515 M a n o r R d ., a p p ly A irw a y s R e n t A C a r . tw o b o th . M ALK , KKM VLK s h a r e tw o b e d ro o m , In d iv id u a l co n t! a e t $*;t.5i p e r p e rs o n , b ills -m a id s e r v ie e I r n ish ed P ool. L L FO N T A p a r tm e n ts , SOU VV. a L’sth . 172-.: iso L E F O N T A p a rtm e n ts , 803 W e s t 2Mh M A L E S H A R E AC i ll, w ooded la r g e m o b ile h o m e la k e B ills p a id lot, g rle r.e e m a im ' itrts. 253-2635 W A N T E D F E M A L E I" s h a r e t vs b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t n e a r C a m p u s . $55 a m o n th , it 1-1643 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D tw o b lo c k s fro m t* p e r m o n th C a m p u s a n d $40 U tilities 476-0068. 154-9435 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E b e d ro o m , tw o A u stin $12 pl is I, ii-. 327-0983. b a t h si.a i h o u s e F E M A L E , N E E D E D tw o $Sr>-inonth. C o n su l A p a rtm e n ts . C al! .Lanut, 172 9062 to a p a r tm e n t b e d r o o rn s h a r e R o o m s P A S O H O U S E 1808 W es* A e. M FG B R IC K K IV I! R O O M S. • unriitioueri. c a r p e te d I.< no p e ts . 707 G r a h a m Pin* >■ a t 25-’ 476-0833 * W a n t e d M n s te re h a rg e h o n o re d SM ALEW OOI ' TV IMN< '. S u n s e t T r a il. L a s t m in n ig h t d is s e rta tio n s , new a tie rs . T in ■ t v pn i S E A SO N T IC K E T holder'--. I i n t b u y to W u n n -p c e R o y al t. O c to b e i 24. P l e a s e c a ll K .ithte, tic k e ts M r A V T y p in g . M u lU L th ln s . B in d in g G R IT AU. b e g u in e T h o m a s o n , 478-.:'.' to ta ilo r e d th e ne.M s c f U n iv e rs ity s tu d e n t s S p e c ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip m e n t fo r e n g in e e r ­ in g la n g u a g e a t I s th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s n e. Phone G R 2 U lt) and G R 2-7G77 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k ST A T T I TORI NG All tv n e ss m a th . G U E p re p a r a tio n 451-1557 o fte n M A TH , S E M E S T E R R a te s A v a ila b le F o r B u sin e s s < '■ R I a s n e c e s s a ry I, i b e r a I - A r t s M a i irs. Pl epa I Iii rn. I Itta I I!1' c d R< suits G lo IP R a te s . M ATH EN AM IC S, 452-1327 E R SIT Y '■na I ss w ritin g . 477-9013 I I t ER ARY S E R V I e x p o s in s tru c t i'm rn .1 A T H T U T O R IN G M J I hum C all 453-8164 P O S IT IO N M A N A G E R IA L in H ig h la n d M all fa s h io n b o u tiq u e R e ta il e x p e r ie n c e m a n d a to r y . F o r a p p o in t m erit c a ll 451-3675 b e tw e e n IO a m . a n d 9 p rn M o n d a y - F r ita y . deck C a s a pa a in e tr e n d a nee. 5• - rd e y , 8 a.m .- H A N D Y M A N -D IS H W A S H E R w a n te d 8! 75 p e r h o u r, m e a ls o p e n tim e p a r t fu rn is h e d . 264-1966. Fa'! v v lancles c a r p e ' e d retriqerators lo u n g e , tre e p a r > e g , I a rm; A/C. in vflcn room, co or r 'a or r i d d C l 478-35 17 L O S T B LA C K K IT T E N v ic in ity 46lh a n d S p e e d w a y . W e m is s h e r. P le a s e c a ll 451-4464 a f t e r 5. H A IR E T I' C all for m f" m o tio n on I.a ir s in g e in g fo r s p ill e n d s a n d sh a g c u ts 451-0984 S E MI L O N G H A I R O K F a i r l y C le an C u t - No S w e a t H a rd W o rk is a B u m m e r W e p la y h a r d h u t w e m a k e th e b r e a d to do it. L O S T : T ASOKA, s m a ll b la c k < ;it w ith flc a c o lla r , n e w b o rn k itte n s . R e w a rd , n u t' ti g r a titu d e C all 477-X90v r e d d is h LO ST, EA S T W O O D S P a r k a r e n , m a le S ia m e s e e a t A n s w e rs to " M u tt ". R e ­ w a rd 477-8632 o r 453-0395. $697 per mon L O S T : M A L E R E D IR IS H s e tte r , b la c k to S h e a . P le a s e c a ll c o lla r. A n sw e rs 472-3111 a f t e r six If Y e n M eet O u r R e q u ir e m e n ts R i g h t On. 477-3749 fo r in te rv ie w O V E R S E A S J O B S F O R S T U D E N T S ira 5 , Eu ro p e, S. A m e r i c a , A f r i c a A etc. A p r o " ' - es and OC: .nation:; UTO to $3 OOO monthly. Expense ; pa d ov e rti m e s i q h t se e 'n q . fr ee in fo rm at io n J O B S O V E R S E A S D ep t. 6A, W r i t e B .> 15071, S a n D eqo, C A . 9 2 1 1 5 A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n S E E T H E s t u d i o tw o b e d ro o m ID V K U E S T A u stin . a p a r t m e n t s R e a s o n a b ly p r ic e d . F o r in fo r m a tio n c a ll 451-2465. in N O L E A S E I a n d 2 b e d ro o m , L a rq e fu rn ish e d or u nfu rnish ed . C a rp e t, air, G .E . a w ash­ er, ranqe, b a c o n y , pool. 2 b ocks from Pm aqan H iq h . d isp o sa l, T a p p a n 4 5 3 -7 6 0 8 . W O O D W A R D APTS W E E K - E N D S A L E S P E R S O N N E L W A N T E D W e Sell " B E A N BA G ” C h a ir s on W e e k e n d s fro m S tr e e ts id e I d e a tio n s in in A ustin lf Y o u ’re I n te r e s te d up to n e s a le s m a n m a d e C o m m is s io n s $7 se last w e e k e n d ), C all m e At 414-7016 a f t e r 6 P M W ork p e r m its re a d in g o r lig h t stu d y . $sn rn W e e k e n d A v e ra g in g Use Texan Classifieds to Advertise fo r Fall Housing FALL RATES $129.50 Large two bedroom near down town. Swimming pool, carpeted a/c, wood paneling. 442-3910 472-9147 fro m S h u ttle . L e a s e C A R P E T E D , A /C , g a r a g e O ne block r e q u ite d O ne b e d ro o m $150. tw o n e d ro o m $180. W a te r p a id . 477-6091. SH O A L C R E E K V illa T w o b e d ro o m d u p le x , fu rn is h e d . AC, pool. N o p e ts. $156 p lu s ut i l i t i e s HOI A S hoat C re e k , 451-4023, 452-8094. A P A R T M E N T fro m C a m p u s . N u e c e s , iou. 478-3180. to s u b le t. F o u r blo ck s 2812 S h u ttle B us. P O R T H E L O V E L IE S T o n e b e d ro o m in tow n c o n ic by a n d se c T h e B ritta n y $160 in ­ A p a rtm e n ts . m o n th ly f o r m a tio n c a ll 452-3096 o r 452-238-1 .sq u a re e le c tr ic ity . feet. p lu s F o r 850 T H E F R E N C H C O LO N Y h a s a lo vely tw o b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t. All e le c tric , in fo rm a tio n fu rn is h e d . F o r c o m p le te ly c a ll 451-2465, 452-2384. O N E B E D R O O M a p a r tm e n t. 2 K t a n d R io G ra n d e $l6ti m o n th . R o o m m a te n e e d e d . C all 472-9818. IDA PRESS 504 W e s t 24th ri-o p/ servi se, ria iring in handbn.;, Call 4 7 7 - 8 3 5 1 . P IA N O LE SSO N S B e g in n e r a n d \ .m ee d . < ' al l 4.51 3549 C A R P E T S H A M P O O IN G P r o fe s s io n a l e q u ip m e n t. M ost re a s o n a b le p ric e s in to w n ' M oney b i n k g u a r a n te e ! 444 3970, 441 6901. 178-5482 T y p i n g S E R V IC E . B O B B Y E D E L A F IE L D T Y P IN G d is s e rta tio n s , T h e s e s . re p o rts . M im e o g ra p h in g . R e a s o n a b le . H I 2-7184. E X P E R T T Y P IS T . IB M T h e s e s b rie fs . p r o f e s s io n a l r e p o r ts . P r in tin g , b in ding. M rs. T u llo s, 453-5124. B C. S e le c te e . re p o t t W E T Y P E T H E M E S , le c tu r e n o te s, r e p o r ts W ill p ic k u p a n d d e liv e r. R e a s o n a b le . 444-0394. j E D U C A T IO N A L T Y P IS T . A c c u r a te a n d I for I m a ts R e a s o n a b le r a te s . Nit s. M a rily iu i d e p e n d a b le . E x p e rie n c e d in a ll H a m ilto n . 411 2831. F O R M E R do in g s tu d e n t S E C R E T A R Y w ith BBA ty p in g . 4 5 e /p a g e . 451- T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . P r o fe s s io n a l ty p in g ■in a n y s u b je c t m a t t e r R e a s o n a b le r a le s . 2405 N u e ce s, 472 11753 W OODS S E R V IC E . N e a r C a m p u s . L a w , T h e s is . M rs. W oods, T Y P IN G 472-4825. E X P E R I E N C E D d is s e r ta tio n s , T Y P IS T . e tc . IB M T h e s e s , e x e c u tiv e . C h a r le n e S ta r k . 453-5218. E X P E R T T Y P IN G I- m e r te a c h e r . W e s t A ustin. 471-1760 iii m y h o m e . P A R T IA L L Y H A N D IC A P P E D EA D Y lig h t b o o k k e e p in g . tw e lv e m o n th s c o u rs e . ty p in g rn1 d e s ir e s l o u r y e a r s e x e c u tiv e 454-0707. s e c r e t a r y b u s in e s s c o lle g e, ing. p rin tin g , o in d in g — All SA V E M O N E Y • - F u lly e q u ip p e d : ty p ­ te r m p a p e r s , th e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n s . C ity W ide T y p in g , 476-4179, 6 a .m . -m id n ig h t a n y d a y . C L O S E of IN . B e a u tifu l, p e r s o n a l ty p in g w o rk . M u ltillthinR . b in d in g . L a u r a B o d o u r, 478- 8113 U n iv e rs ity y o u r a ll ROY W. HOLLEY 4 7 6 - 3 0 1 8 T Y P ; S E T T IN G . TY PLM PRINTING. BINDING binding, >5-7205 A C C U R A T E T Y P L M J bi . G. th est s. d is s e rt th o u s. S y iu tx :s. M rs. R e p it A n t h o n y , 451 ii,ti Just N o r t h of 27th & G u a d a l u p e M B. \ V T y p in g , M u ltU lth in * . E lu d in g The Complele Professional F U L L - T IM E Typinq Service to ta ilo re d th e n e e d s o f U n iv e rs ity s tu d e n ts . S p e c ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip m e n t a n d e n g in e e r ­ scie n c e , fo r in g la n g u a g e , th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s . P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7C77 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k :< 'K ER 176-8.532 a fle i l.v p in g C A R B O N -R IB B O N night O u t b.v 8, ev e n in g s H A V E TYPEWRITER W I L L T'iPE ' Just North of 27th Se Guadalu pe M B A T y p in g . M u lU U th ln g , B in d in g The Complete Professional F U L L - T IM E Typing S orvice to th e n e e d s or U n iv e rs ity ta ilo re d s tu d e n ts . S p e c ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip m e n t fur a n d e n g in e e r ­ s c ie n c e , ing th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s . la n g u a g e , P h o n e G R 2 3210 a n d G R 2-7G77 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k S E R V IC E U N IV E R S IT Y T H E S IS I MSS F, IIT A TK IN bin d . All sy m b o ls. P R 's b rie fs. X e ro x in g . M a s te r c h a r g e . 451-4557, T y p e , p rin t, M ES, R E P O R T S , ts o n a b le . M rs. F r a s e r , 476 1317. le c tu r e n o te s, U N IV E R S IT Y L IT E R ARY S E R V IC E S IHM S e le c tric , c a r b o n rib b o n , s y m ­ bols D is s e rta tio n s , T h e s e s , P R ’s, IH ' s, B rie fs , T h e m e s 477-90-13. M A R J O R IE D E L A F IE L D S E R V I C E —T h e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n s , T Y P IN G la w re p o rts . M u ltllllh in g . m im e o , c o m e S o u th , I Hi- b rie fs , g ra p h in g . S a v e m o n e y B a n k A m e ric a id , M a s te r C h a r g e 7008. New Deadline Set for Friday for Tile deadline Student Government health and life in­ surance applications has been extended to Friday, Ken Sim­ mons, group representative with the student insurance program, said. the The extension will allow as many students as are interested to participate insurance in program. Simmons stressed that enrollment is required each year. Many students who were enrolled last have he e r r o n e o u s l y assumed their coverage is being automatically continued. noted, year, “We’ve made several efforts to reach everyone— 45,000 brochures were mailed, three booths were installed on campus, and 1500 brochures were distributed in the married student housing area. But we still have students calling our office wanting to know when they will receive their September bill.” he explained. Simmons said the health in- “ con­ is program surance improved over any siderably p r e v i o u s l y offered at the University.” He cited the absence of any pre-existing conditions for students enrolling this fall as one ot the major improvements. a or $32.57 The annual premium for the student health insurance program Is nine-month enrollment Is available at $24. This includes coverage for a c ­ cident and sickness. Dependents of a student may also be enrolled with the premiums payable an­ nually or quarterly. in Students who wish to par­ ticipate the program m ay obtain an application form at the Student Government office, Union Insurance Building 321, of the the Student Health Office of Center. The insurance will be effective retroactively to Sept. I for students wrho enroll this week. the next op­ After portunity to enroll will be at ti e beginning of the spring sem ester. this week, pfiwWWS rn ATOMIC AND MOLECULAR SEMINAR will meet at 4:30 p.m. Physic* Building 440. Dr. J . Nolle will “Threshold the speak Impact on Behavior of Electron Tuesday in Ionization.” DEPARTMENT Steve McLean OF GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES will present and Steve Katz at I p.m. Tuesday IOO. in Geological Building on M c L e a n will speak “ Sepiolite and Attapulgite in West T e x a s.” Katz’ topic wall l>o “ O stracodes of the Lisbon Form ation, Alabama.” D U P L I C A T E B R I D G E a for PLA YERS will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Union Building 301- three-hour pair 305 t o u r n a m e n t . A four-hour tournament will begin at the , Rim e time in Union Building ; 317. GAS CO-OP requests that all meml)ers who have moved their mem- since purchasing bership the Student contact Government Office either by (Union Building 321) or mail b y phone (471-3721) and leave a current address. This must I be done within three days to I hold an election to fill vacan­ cies on the board of directors. Je s te r A332 from 9 a rn . to noon and I to 4 p.m. Tuesday for registration for new classes with an option of independent study. TEXAS OTTING CLUB will meet in Union to organize ex­ a t 3 p.m. Tuesday Building 325 ploratory outings. UNIVERSITY SPORTS CAK CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Rusiness-Economlcs the Building 155 calendar of events. to discuss UNIVERSITY “ Y ” needs more math tutors for Johnston High School and people interested in for elementary doing drama school Interested people may apply at the “ Y ” offices at 2330 Guadalupe. ciuldren. UT SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday In Business- Economics Building 151 to give the “Novice Sailing E xam .” WOMEN’S SECTION OF THE I X I V E R S IT Y OF T E X AS JUDO CLUB will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Women's Gym 134. WOMEN’S LIBERATION will hold a book sale Tuesday in front of the Union Building. A | regular meeting will be beld Wednesday at Everywoman’s Center, 1106 W. 22nd St., with an informal rap session afterward. 8 p.m. at The most Meaningful Sem ester you’ll ev e r s p e n d ... could be the one on World Campus Afloat S a ilin g F e b . 1 9 7 2 to A fric a an d th e O r i e n t T h r o .r h a tr a n s fe r fo r m a t , m o r t th a n 5 ,0 0 0 s tu d e n ts from 4 5 0 c a m p u se s ha ve p a r tic ip a te d to r a sem ester in th is u n iq u e p ro g ra m in in te r ­ W C A w ill b road en yo u r h o rizo n s , lite r a lly an d fig u ra tiv e ly . . . an d give y o u a b e tte r c h a n ce to r a k e i t — m e a n in g fu lly — in th is c h a n g in g w o r ld . Yo u ll s tu d y at sea w ith an e x p e rie n c e d c o s - r >pr tan (a c u ity , and th e n d u rin g p o r t s to p s you ll stud y th e w o rld it s e lf . Y o u 'll d is c o v e r t h a t no m a tte r how fo re ig n an d fa r a w a y , y o u h a ve I lo t in com m on w ith p eop le o f o th e r la n d s . W C A is n t as e xp e n s iv e as y o u m ig h t t h in k ; w e' ve done ou r b e st to b r in g it w ith in reac h o f m o s t c o lle g e s t u d e n t s . W rite t o d a y f o r f r e e d e ta ils . TEACHERS- Summer travel w ith credit fa r teach­ e r s and adm inistrators. § S § § W rite T o d a y t a ; / C h a p m a n C o lle c t, v i k y Box CC26, O range, Cafiforaia 92666 R ASSL classes wall meet in , n a tio n a l e d u c a tio n . 2-404 qaa.daEu.pe/ F A L L S A L E DRESSES S P O R T S W E A R J E A N S NOW I/ 3 T O 1 /2 O FF PARK AT REAR WHILE SHOPPING USE YOUR BANKAMERICARD OR MASTER CHARGE Middle Earth Seeks House Middle E arth , the bad trip per month to operate if they are I counseling service and drug in­ formation conter which is a part of the University “Y ,” needs a large house to expand the scope of its services. to get new headquarters. E x - j penses will include rent, utilities, \ a sm all salary for those living in the house and a sm all stipend I for these performing counseling 1 services, lsgur estim ated. Middle E arth operates seven j days a week from 8 p.m. to 4 J a rn . as a “ bad trip” service and j during week days a t the sam e | information. I times Approximately volunteers m ake up the staff. Additional resources include the “Y ” staff, physicians, psychologists, clergy and referral organizations. for drug 45 STUDY NOTES LIT-SCIENCES- LAW-FICTION- NONFiCTION The facilityt which Is located is above Sommers Drug Store, to operate too sm all “entirely effectively,” according to Stuart Lsgur, director of the “Y .” “ We need a larger facility so that we can offer a place for people to stay for a couple of days or a to its for a month, if necessary, according to their need s/' said lsgur. “ We are looking two-story large to rent.” Middle E arth house wants drug expand education program and establish a “ Half-way House” for drug users and others. It wants to provide a 24-hour-a-day staff, rap sessions and group counseling. “ We also feel the need to present alternatives to drug use by opening a sm all crafts center and giving in Yoga, meditation and other activities,” said lsgur. instructions The Middle E arth program will need approximately $500 to $600 BOOK STALL I 6103 Burnet Rd. 454-3664 Open W eekdays Saturday Sunday 9 :S0 ti! 9 9 :3 0 HI • 1:09 til S BOOK STALL ll 1512 Lavaca 477-1053 Open W eekdays Saturday 9 :3 0 til 9 9 :3 0 til I Sundays Closed We Trade Paperbacks HUGE SELECTION OF USED PAPERBACKS & HARDBACKS DELIVERY of KODACOLOR PRINTS I r in g M y a u r a s p o s a d Rim b y 4 P M P r in t* rutty 4 1 n o u n U t a r a t 4 P M . STOKMAN PHOTO • 19th at Lavaca • C a m e r o n V i l l a g e Everything in Its P lace T h i s a n n u a l f a l l ritual m a y r e m i n d o n e of the the th e m a t i n g o n s e t s e a s o n , is in p r e p a r a t i o n for having one s p r i m p i n g lik e n e s s * c a p t u r e d f o r p o s t e r i t y in t h e Cactus b u t all o f I t yearbook. just goes t h a t women have thought all along is bale­ are just as vain as they are. t o s h o w w h a t -m en © o O o Co/& toe juice oil That’s the difference between I Q S I I Lemon Up and products with or extract. That’s why Lemon just a little lemon fragrance Up Shampoo makes hair shiny clean. That’s why Lemon Up Facial Cleanser is far better than soap. And that’s why Lemon Up Anti-Blemish Lotion with hexachlorophene is your best defense against oil-troubled skin. Tuesday. October 12. 1971 THE DAILY TEXA N Paps 9 DEPARTMENT of R-T-F C I N F.M A T E X A S F A L L 1971 re Senti TONIGHT "CITIZEN K A N E ” (1941) Directed by Orson W elles. NX ritten by \\ dies and I lerman Mankiewicz. Starring Joseph Gotten, Everett Sloan, Acnes jNfoorehead, Ray Codlins S h o w s at 6:30 P .M . and 0:00 P .M . J E S T E R C E N T E R A U D IT O R IU M Season Ticket $7.00 Admission $.75 Arby's Shake Special! SHAKES O N L Y ll* with purchase of any sandwich 35* V A L U E • S A V E 24* TRY OUR T W O N EW FLAVORS • C O C O N U T S N O W • TOASTED A LM O N D OFFER G O O D TUESDAY, OCT. THRU SUNDAY, OCT. 17 1715 GUADALUPE 472-1582 ARBY'Smd 5400 BURNET RD. 451-3760 T R A N S -A-TEXAS 12200 Hancock Drive— 453 6641 NOW! OPEN 1:45 FEAT: 2 • 4 . 6 - 8 - IO ADULTS 51.50 UNTIL 6:15 Mon. - Fri. Caravan' Moves Slowly “ Medicine B a l l Caravan:’* starring B. B. King, Alice Cooper, Doug Kershaw, Sal Valentino and o t h e r s ; produced by Fred Weintraub ami fam ily; directed by Francois Riechenbach; at the Paramount. By BRF.TT BAYLO R Amusements Assistant “ Medicine Ball Caravan" is a film best classified as another in the continuing series of "Wood­ stock" syndrome productions. It is the story of lad people trekking across the nation, from San Francisco to Washington, D. C. in psychedelically-painted buses; concerting, doping, skinny- dipping, rapping, being busted, "spreading the word" and filming a movie simultaneously. Sounds like Ken Kesey, doesn't it? The idea of the film reminds me of Kesey’s Merry Pranksters, who were made legend in Tom Wolfe’s book Tile Electric Kooi- Aid Acid Test. "Caravan" is the "love trip.’* The purpose of the film as stated by director Francois Riechen­ bach, is to show' the w'orld "The new minority of America" in "an o r g a n i z e d happening." Un­ fortunately for Riechenbach it is also tile boredom nip. buros failed, and as it turns out, the brakes on the two buses went out while she was asleep! The film is packed with such s c e n e s , making sure that "Caravan" never moves faster than its dozing audience can move. that it has "Caravan’’ is an unusual movie in the strange characteristic of Doing exciting iii one scene and dull in another. For example, there is the "shall we move on now?" scene, depicting the great significance of the group’s discussion over whether to continue through the desert or to set up camp for the night. After some debate it is decided the ground has "too many anthills to camp on big ones and little ones, black ones and red ones. ’ T IIE X T H E R E is the "ESP- brake incident." in which one of the female participants in our experiment in busing, dreams that the brakes on two of the As the buses cross the country’, we run into various local oddities such as a hobo who says he is "King Paul of the World—I don’t do nothin’ but eat and sleep," and a cowboy who shows us the dif­ ference between the smoking styles of a typical cowboy and Eleanor Roosevelt. We also meet the "S T P Fam ily," wrho turn out to be a group of ex-Green Berets who travel around wearing bear traps, death shawls and carrying strange wooden staves resembling the sickle of the Grim Reaper. ONE O F TH E closing scenes of "C aravan" occurs in Dayton, Ohio, at Antioch College, focusing on an argument between the radicals. A local group and lengthy debate begins as the l o c a l s accuse the caravan members of being part of a "W arner Brothers rip-off," ob- jecting to the filming of long-hairs for capitalistic profit. T h i s becomes discussion altogether too drawn out and confusing to follow’, but the viewer can always fall back on the ob­ servation that the participants are people w’ho are really into the like man, revolution, because, they’ have really got their lingo together, man. T H E F ILM is not all bad. however. "Caravan" has some really good aspects—the music and photographic effects. Tile performances of B. B. King, Doug Kershaw, Alice Cooper and Sal Valentino are all good quality, especially King’s "How Blue Can You G et?" Kershaw's "Louisiana M an," "Battle of New Orleans" and "Orange Blossom Special." and The latter is one of the brighter spots of the film, mixing an ex­ cellent performance with great camera-work. As Kershaw strokes his electric violin, the screen turnes into a flurry of blue laser- beam projections and continues in a display of optical convulsions. C o o p e r ’ s performance is / X good, but the track has been dissected into parts which do not intertwine well and leaves the spectator wondering where the rest of has disappeared. "Black Ju Ju What we are left with is an 80- minute film that is much like other recent releases aimed at an under 20 audient*’, with geld effects in music—and very little cise. It is almost as if director Riechenbach filmed the ex­ cursion, and, upon accu iae second thoughts, tried to save the film with g<> xl music and 8°od camera-work. g p fP THE HUNGRY HORSE 1909 San Jacinto 477-0432 Finest in Food and Entertainment MORE FREE BEER!! DRINK FREE FROM 8:45-9:15 P.M. EVERY TUESDAY Bill and Bonnie Hearne CROSSWINDS A talented couple that can play anything Ya'll come & Dig em W elcom e to the Pioneer Club Jam boree Tues. Oct. 12 8:30 P.M . Bring your instruments Play, dance and sing along to the music of special guest Bill Neely Location 1/2 Blk. East of Airport B'vd. on Oak Springs Rd. TV To Barbara Stanwyck and Barbara Parkins star in the made-for-TV movie "A Taste of E v il" o n channels 12 and 24 at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. A young girl returns home from a mental institution but is still convinced someone is still trying to drive her insane. National Geographic Society investigates the world of lcw’er primates and tile keys it holds to characteristics and behavioral patterns in man at 6:30 p.m. on channels 5, 7 and IO. 12. 24 Mod S q u a ll 7 p.m. 7 :30 p.m . 9 M asq u erad e 4. 0, 42 Sortie 5, 7, IO H a w a ii Five-O 12. 24 M O V Ie : “ T a ste of E v i l ” 9 T h e A d vo cate s 8.30 p.m. 4. )>, 42 T h e F u n n y Sid e 5. 7. Cannon in Room 222 9 B la ck Jo u rn al 9 p m . 9 30 p.m . IO . 12. LM M a rc u s W e lb y 9 Sou thern P e rs p e c tiv e s 7 C hicago T e d d y B e a r s 42 B i ll A nderson Show 4 Fo u r-O n -F o u r: G e n e ratio n 5 Good O ld N a s h v ille M usic 6 D a r re ll R o y a l Show 10 p.m . A ll stations new * T U E S D A Y ’S S C H E D U L E 10:30 p m 6:30 p.m . 4. 6, 42 Iro n sid e s 5. 7. IO N a tio n a l G e o g rap h ic S o c ie ty S p e c ia l: “ M o n key, A pes and Man” 4, R. 42 T o nig ht Sho w 5. 7 M e r v G r if f in 24 D ick C a v e tt S ho w 12 M o v ie : “ H e ll's F iv e Hours 10 M o vie : “ The L a s t Child'* 9 Sp e akin g F r e e ly D R I V E A L I T T L E — S A V E A L O T 11 30 p rn. , I 4 ct 1/3 ct 1/2 cl 3 4 ct let. M id nig ht I m p r o v i s a i i o n a l s "The Proposition," a production by an improvisational theater group, will be presented at 8 p.m. Tuesday in M u n icip al Auditorium. The production, sponsored by the C u ltural En ter­ tainment Committee, satirizes p olitical issues and public per­ sonalities. Beginning its fourth year, has recently moved from Boston to B ro ad w ay. Adm ission is free to blanket tax holders by advance draw ing at H o g g A u d i­ torium. Remaining seats will be on sale at the door for $5, $4 and $3. "The Proposition Poet to In Main Lecture Ballroom Lawrence Ferlinghetti, poet and author, will lecture at 8 p m. Tuesday in the Texas I Ilion Main Ballroom. Ferlinghetti’s hook of poems, "A Coney Island of the Mind," is going into its sixteenth printing. and abroad and has recorded thorn on the Fantasy label. Admission is free to University students, faculty and staff with current identification. There will be a reception in tile Facility Staff Lounge after the lecture. 9 Y o u r R ig h t to S a y I t Ferlinghetti has given many poetry readings both in this country I HELLSTROM CHRONICLE PARAMOUNT 412-54 TI 7 1 3 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E H H H H H H H H h^ O P E N 1:45 • $1.50 Til 5 PM A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION $1.00 'TIL 2:15 2:10-4:05 - 6:00 7 :5 5 -9 :5 0 31.50 41.00 125.00 225.00 275.00 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP 603 Commodore Perry Hotel A U S T I N 476 0178 {a IN T E R S T A T E T H E A T R E S ■ H B H B B B M B AN EXPLOSIVE RUSS MEYEH FILM! ■ Gwdaluoe St.—477 1964 LAST 2 DAYS Features 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - IO T H E S E V B M P i* I MINUTES! 2oth C E N T U R Y f O X I COLOR BY D ELU X E* ,v l f S t a r t s T O M O R R O W J ‘'BR ILLIA N T . T H E AUTHOR W OULD R E L IS H SO FA IT H FU L AN IN T ER PR ETA T IO N OF H IS W ORK* A B EA U T IFU LLY M ADE F ILM .” Judith Crist. NBC TV ALEXANDER . S O I/ IIIM T S W S Ja c q u e lin e S u s a n n ’s DYAN CANNON ROBERT RYAN T h e L q w M a c h in e from Columba Pictures R < S T A T EE 476-5056 7 1 9 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E $1.00 'TIL 2:15 FEATURES 2-4-6-8-10 ANNE BAXTER IS "THE LATE LIZ** LAST DAY! ASP, S t a r t s T O M O R R O W ! 7 N ew s 5 P a s t o r ’s S tu d y • • • • • • • • • • 8th A Red R iv e r tues. ONE KNUE ANGELA & the ROCKETS H A PPY H O U RS D A I L Y 4 - 8 p.m . BEER $1.00 PITCHER • NEVER A CO VER • TERENCE H ILL IN “ THEY CALL M E TRINITY’1 “ G ” OPEN 12:30 • SH O W S; 1*10 - 3:15 - .V LO 7:30 9:35 B A R G A I N M A T IN E E d i A A $ I . U U ’T I L l:S 0 MON. . SA T . P . m . 5637 NO.INTMMOIONM HWY K a t h e r i n e M c K e e T i m K in c a i d “ Q I .MAROON” M ic h a e l ( a i n e •lan e F o n d a •HI KRY S I N DOW V* (Kl LONGHORN Putman at 183 N. 434-3880 h a t h > C a n n o n J o y c e W illia m s • P R I V A T E DI TY N I R S E S ” A nn J a n n i n A nne A c r e s “ T H E L O V E (K) DO( T O R S ” T R A N S ★ T E X A S U R N E T # * M |6400 Burnet Road — 465-6933- OPEN AT 7:PM SO UTH W EST PREMIER Vi B la c k ... 34 W hite... ALL Woman! W IT H 8. B. K IN G — A LIC E COOPER D O U G KERSHAW-STO NEGROUND 10:00 p. m . " R IP - O F F , L O V E T R IP or O T H E R W I S E " QUEEN CAPRI THEATER 521 E. 6th 472-0442 OPEN 11:00 A.M. 'T IL ? OPEN S U N . 1:00 P.M. 'T IL ? UNDER N E W M A N A G E M E N T CALL COR m o v ie TITLE — WE CHANGE MOVIES EVERY FRIDAY MIDNIGHT SHOW FRI. A SAT. 11:00 -2 00 BEST x Tr a H iT ^ WITH THIS COUPON - 50c off Regular Admission NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED 100% AIR CO ND ITIO NED S H O W IN G NOT O N L Y Tin; It KST, B l T VLKO TMF, B I G G E S T STAG F I L M S AI ST IX IN Bi MM HIM M n u v jL i r v iw ic R I T Z A R T S "HOUSE OF JOY" ALSO Escorted ladies Free with Mr rn brr ship C O N T IN U O U S S H O W IN G S — 12 NO O N TILL - 10 45 P.M. FRI. AND SAT. I 1:45 P.M. f t a d m . — $2.00 NO O N E F N D E R 18 A D M IT T E D 320 I. SIXTH 478 0475 STU D IO IV TW O SCREENS 222 East 6th 472-0436 ALL MOVIES RATED X The Picture You Have Been Waiting For Is Here! 35 mm THE UNDERGRADUATE "DAILY DOUBLE" AND nm "THE COMING DOZEN' AND l l BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL W ED N ESD A Y IS STUDENT DAY: AIL TICKETS HALF-PRICE WITH STUDENT LD. STARTING AT DUSK "PRIVATE ENTRANCE" rn lY IN TH E L IF E OF IVAN D EN ISO VICH Bv the winner of the 19 <0 Nobel Prize for Literature ^ . G S TRANS ★TEXAS 0UTHW00D 11423 ii. Een White Bul- H O O K S «»**»-. . — - ’T H . b I'M SI.IM) R O C K IN G C H A IR SEATS SM O K IN G PERMITTED A CRES FREE PA R KIN G F E A T U R E S 6 — 8 — IO d o n a ld / u th e r la ftd It was his first job in 9 years. It was his last chance to do it right THE ACADEMY AWARD WINNER IN HIS FIRST BIG ROLE SINES "PATTON" P G M F George C. Scott TlM Last Run TONY MUSANTE-TRISH VAN DEVERE SMITHo J by CAR TLR DE H A V :1 lAVf.N ) '• mc by A R R Y GOLDSMITH SHARp.pfcd CHUR • »/ by a l a J .HARD F i t HJ [GPI MOM j jR -P A N A V iS $1.00 ’TIL 2:15 2 :0 0 - 4 :0 0 - 6 :0 0 8:00 - 10:00 Ju s t a person who protects children and other living things Biuy JACK .TOM LAUGHLIN • DELORES TAYLOR technicoior* . / ^ ::: :.1:;;. . ’Q I* in an alan j pakula production Mute p a n o v is io n ® technicolor® from warner bros.. a Hnney leisure service I ( S t a r t s T O M O R R O W J FEATURE TIMES 5:30 - 7:30 - 9:30 ■J, FOR ALL THE WORLD TO ENJOY! r n lls jQr TECHNICOLOR (JUafcDiMteyfc . Pr»4>;! !xw • Atittoftri fcj I. FA Ouiflfciba* U. lr,i Page IO Tuesday. October 12, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN LAST DAY FEATURE 5:45-8:40 $1.00 TIL 6:15 nm la m s! ■>S9> LUDY I OL TICHNICOIOR PANAVIS10N ■>rj by WERNER SSO' PLUS AT BURNET THE GRASSHOPPER Jacquine Bi sr.ett Joseph Cotton PLUS AT S H O W T O W N HURRY SUNDOWN Michael Caine Jane Fonda OPEN 7:00 • START 8:00 Free Train Rides on "Lil Toot" Before Show R O T T O N ONE SH O W ING ONLY 8: P.M. PLUS---- “ BUTCH CASSIDY & S U N D A N C E KID” 11:00 • PAUL N E W M A N • C O LO R A FRANK McCARTHY- FRANKLIN J. SCHAFFNER PRODUCTION r Dances Expose Rich Mexican Tradition By SUZANNE SHELTON Nothing is quite so frustrating aa watching Mexican folk dancers across footlights. Those drumming feet should be pounding bare earth; the colored the canned music, live mariachi bands. lights should be sunlight; But an Austin audience was content Monday night to use its imagination in viewing the Ballet Aztlan de Mexico’s version of Folklorico, presented at Municipal Auditorium. This was Folklorico unlike others to visit Austin. Choreographer Silvia Lozano stresses the quiet dignity of Mexican folk dance, the simple dip-and-glide of the Oaxaca tradition or the patting feet of the Tarascan wedding ritual. What is lost in complexity is gained in subtlety. The tiniest movement of the head becomes the audience's eye glues to the haughty head held proudly. important, incredibly and carriage and grace of It becomes enough to delight in the erect the male dancer. There was, of course, some of the flashy Folklorico: the “ Fiesta in Veracruz'’ in which a laughing couple tip a bow with their toes, their swaying bodies contrasting with hum­ mingbird feet. But rituals such as “Nahuatl Scene” are more characteristic of this company. Girls clad in bright pink and blue weave a maypole of flower garlands in a religious offering, typical of the Nahuatl culture which originated with the Olmecs through the Testees and Az­ tecs. The movement is undulating, the tempo leisurely. In unfortunate contrast was the filler group, their the Tex-Mex Trio comedy team with burlesque jokes and crude asides. One wishes they had been satisfied their excellent voices and musical talent rather than pandering to the gringo brand of humor. to rely upon But back to Folklorico. What a rich tradition this culture has preserved in its dance. It has chosen to represent the struggle between Good and Evil in the movements of a deer being shot by a hunter. It has made its “ community jester” the male who can im­ provise rhymed couplets and execute the most complicated of dance steps with his feet. in And even acoustics, crudely mariachis, that tradition comes through. lighting, recorded music mixed with this century, with poor and the excessively dim If we could just see it, participate in it, in its natural habitat. THE CBflER FOR ASIAN STUDIES l l THE W O R L D O F APU " presents SATYAJIT RAY’S Music by RAVI SHANKAR • 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 TEXAS UNION * AUDITORIUM * 2 50c —New York Tim es ‘ O ne o f the IO best fo reig n film s o f I9 6 0 '’ ONE SHOWING ONLY! TUESDAY, 8:00 P.M. OCTOBER 12 • 9 9 9 9 # 1 \9 public without charge. Gallery hours are 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. j Monday through Saturday, and I to 5 p.m. Sunday. In 1952 White founded and became editor of Aperture, which of p u b l i s h e s and Photography,” books and photographers. “Quarterly portfolios photographs of Before joining the MIT faculty in 1965, he was a staff member of George Eastm an House and the of Technology. Rochester Institute For the last 25 yearns, he has conducted p h o t o g r a p h i c workshops throughout the United States. FRI., OCT. 15th SAT., OCT. 16th A R M A D IL L O PRESENTS Tracy Nelson I Mother Earth ALSO SHIVA'S HEADBAND 478-4651 TICKETS A VA ILA BLE AT: D ISC O U N T RECO RDS, O A T WILLIES, BUDGET TAPES & R E C O R D S $3.00 8:30 Oct. 22nd TAJ MAHAL & LIGNIN* HOPKINS Oct. 22nd Wedding Festivity — Texan Staff Photo by JOHN VAN B E L K I N . lexicon Folklorico Ballot Members of the Mf perform a wedding dance, "Boda Darrasca," from Michoacan as paid of ‘their repertoire in Municipal Auditorium Monday night. Photography on View: Artist Opens Exhibit The Texas Union Art Gallery will present the works of Joseph A. Cain through Oct. 22. local, awards Cain has received more than state in IV) in­ r e g i o n a l , national and ternational competitive e x h i b i t i o n s . His painting the Top “ Fragment” Citation Award, the Prix de Paris in Paris, France, in 1963 while showing with the Ligoa Duncan Gallery. received E x h i b i t i n g throughout the United States, Canada, Japan and France, the painter has shown work in rn or# than 500 com­ petitive and group shows ainee the 1948. Among important museums and galleries that have shown his work are the Radio the City Music Hall Gallery, Ligoa Duncan Gallery (New York and Paris), the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, the Smithsonian and the Laguna Gloria Museum in Austin. in more throughout In addition, the painter has than 120 participated the one-man shows United States and is a past president of the South Texas Art League. In 1967 he was appointed to the Municipal Art Council by the mayor of Corpus Christi. A photography exhibit by in­ ternationally known Minor White is on display in the mezzanine the University Art gallery of Museum. To be exhibited through Nov. 14, the photographs are of people, places, architecture, textures and landscapes. Details such as “ the unease of bark on trees.” as one w riter it, and “cracks and phrased LISTEN TONITE! 1st PITCHER OF BEER FREE! A F T rn o-lO -U h this ad — (Limit I Per Party) JAN* ROOM 15th at San Jacinto • 476-2459 Final Auditions Slated For ‘W est Side Story1 for The final auditions the Broadway production “ West Side Story” will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday at the Municipal Golf Clubhouse. The auditions are open to the public. Roles are available for both in men and women interested iillural itertainntent oui in it tee The Texas Union presents THE PROPOSITION The Proposition, located in its own theater in M assachusetts, is now in its 4th institution in the city of year It ranks as the 3rd most highly attended artistic Boston Only Boston Symphony and Boston Pops are seen by more people each year. D O N ’T M IS S IT ! Musical, Satirical, Improvisational Theater T O N IG H T P . M. Municipal Auditorium Tickets Free to Blanket Tax Holders TICKET DRAWING CONTINUES TODAY at HOGG AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Drawing Continues until all tickets are gone. BUS SCH EDU LE 25c R O U N D TRIP — EXACT C H A N G E REQUIRED Departing at 6:45 P.M., 7:00 P.M. and 7:15 P.M. Starting at University C o-O p to C a ro le rs Dorm, Kinsolving, Scottish-Rite, Simkins Hall, and Moore-Hill Hall. PRESENTS EUGENE O'NEILL’S LONG D A Y S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT O S e i l l s crow ning ach iev em en t — a m o v in g and eloquent dram a about a p a in fu l, lo n ely period o f his life, h e once called it a "play o f o ld sorrow, m itte n in tears and blood:* " S o one w ho has e ie r d em a n d e d serious, m ature entertainm ent on the screen can af f or d to m iss it . . . the actors com e to the peak o f their pow ers just as the play rises to its clim ax. 7 ogether, they p ro vid e a fin a l h a lf-h o u r o f sustained intensity the like o f w hich has seldom been seen on th e screen.” — A u th u r K n ig h t, Saturday R e n e w STARRING KATHARINE HEPBURN, SIR RALPH RICHARDSON, JASON ROBARDS, JR., DEAN STOCKWELL/DIRECTED BY SIDNEY LUMET (19621/BEST ACTING AW ARD AT CANNES FILM FESTIVAL PLUS: The Little Rascals in "T W O T O O Y O U N G ” WEDNESDAY / JESTED AUDITORIUM SHOWINGS AT 7 & 9:30 P.M. ADMISSION ONLY 75c MOTHER EARTH C O R N E R 10th & L A M A R TONIGHT BEER BUST! All the fre e beer Y o u C a n Drink For Price of A d m i s s io n Mixad Drinks 55c “A n experience in sight 6 sound" MOTHER EARTH C O R N E R 10th & L A M A R UNIVERSITY FILM CLASSICS p rese n ts Makes And Remakes MACBETH (1948) DIRECTOR: ORSON WELLES WITH: ORSON WELLES, RODDY MCDOWALL MACBETH (i960) DIRECTOR: GEORGE SCHAEFER WITH: MAURICE EVANS, JUDITH ANDERSON A COMPLETE DOUBLE - BILL BOTH DAYS WED. 7:00 WELLES (1948) 8:45 SCHAEFER (I960) THURS. 7:00 SCHAEFER (I960) 8:55 WELLES (1948) BATTS AUD. 50c per feature Tuesday. October 12, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11 t furrows openings, man-shapes...” are &sen in his work. White, photography professor at M a s s a c h u s e t t s Institute of Technology and widely knou'n, has in major museums and private collections. He has displayed in more than photographs 40 one-man shows. in their The curator of photography at th Museum of Modem Art has written “the quality of Minor’s lucid photographs lies articulation spirit. ’ of Photographer Ansel Adams has called White “one of the greatest of photographers.” The exhibit, Photographer,’’ “Minor White; the is open the to H A V IN G A PARTY? NEED A BARTENDER? C A L L 478-7488 Bradley School O f Bartending - L O B B Y SUITE— C O M M O D O R E PERRY BLDG. Happy Hour 5-7 95c PITCHER DRAFT NACHOS, BURRITOS, & POOR BOYS WATERHOLE # 2 2716 G U A D A L U P E 472-0070 Our Noon Buffetl Is all you can eat and eat: * A delicious selection of J pizza and salad A LLY O U CAN EAT $ 1 .1 9 11:30 A.M. tit 1:30 P.M. Monday thru Friday Pizza lim 1*10 W. B E X W H IT E 444-6655 3006 D U V A L 477-6751 their talents to prepare singing and dancing. However, the production is primarily for high school and college students, giving local youth the opportunity to exhibit in a musical considered by many to be a protest, revolutionizing the theatrical world. Singers need a selection from a musical. An accompanist will be provided. Dancers should come dressed and prepared to dance. Actors should contact Chester the Eitze, director for the production, at 476-0541 for an appointment. the first tim e “ West Side Story” has played in Austin in a community theater setting and the opening productiin for the new Zachary Scott Theatre Center building. This will be is it W aterloo Norial Club Theater TONIGHT JUG BAND MUSIC with the WASHBOARD WILDCATS NO COVER G O O D F O O D & D R IN K O PEN 4 P.M. 7th & Red River Draft Group to Dem onstrato Direct Action Challenges Courthouse Use Ban it will still attempt to set up the tables because regulations are discriminatory. feels it In the regard federal to regulations, Hedemann said some people feel the regulations are unconstitutional on the grounds of free speech and discrimination against some groups. Direct Action feels the regulations set no real guidelines about who should be allowed to distribute tho handbills, instead in decision up to the person leaving charge of the building, he said. Last week during National Fire Prevention Week, a booth was set up in the Federal Building to distribute literature by per­ mission in Washington. authorities from Since one group was given permission to pass out leaflets Direct Action feels to deny it the i s s a m e p e r m i s s i o n against discrimination them, Hedemann said, adding that since the U.S. Courthouse is public property and Direct Action warns only to make available peacefully draft resistance information to young men, it feel*; it should he a l l o w e d its literature. t o distribute Hedemann said expects some opposition the group from authorities when they try to se. up the tables, but hp was not ° r sure whether federal authorities will to intervene or what action they will local, state, try take. Because of the federal holiday Monday, federal officials were not available for comment on what action they will take against Direct Action’s plans. By LISA JOHNSTON Direct Action, an antiVietnam W ar organization, announced Monday it will attempt, to set up t a b l e s bearing draft resistance information in the U.S. Court­ house Tuesday morning. Earlier Direct Action had In­ dicated tables also would be set up in the Federal Building, but the group decided to confine its activities only to the courthouse until it finds out what resistance it may meet. said Ed Hedemann, a spokesman. The group, which advocates militant nonviolence in opposition to the war. will join with mem­ bers of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War and other draft protesters at 9 a.m. to attempt i to set up information txxrths. The draft protesters plan to attempt to set up tables in th? courthouse at different times every day this week. Federal regulations regarding distribution of handbills in federal buildings stipulate leaflets may be passed out only with “ prior approval of an authorized official the the agency occupying of space where the material is to be distributed.” A l t h o u g h permission to distribute literature was denied by Building authorities, the group maintains Federal local By BAYLON FINKLEA News Assistant Prof. Robert Dawson told an assembly of American Civil Liberties Union Members Monday that at least one southern prison thinks prison problems official can bo solved by “ a better quality of inmates.” Dawson, a criminal lawyer and professor at tho University, said is far he thinks the situation Lawyer Predicts Prison Reform more complex and that part of th? problem is the largo amount of people being sent to prisons. "There have to bo prisons,” Dawson said, "but there is no they shouldn't be reason why humane.” He gave examples of three institutions: levels Arkansas-type ‘ ‘ s o a k e-pits." T e x a s-tvpe well-administered penal of prisons and those that make a to rehabilitate the real effort inmates. Dawson said that although the for prisons are basic reasons rieterencp rehabilitation, there is no md hod of measuring tho success of the programs. and No statistics are available, but Dawson estimated from one-third to two-thirds of all inmates return to pi ison after their initial sen­ tence has been served. institutions "Tlte number of prisoners returning to good systems like Wisconsin and those returning to poor like Arkansas are probably tho same. The problem lies in our not knowing how rehabilitate,” Dawson said. to on tho civil Dawson spoke rights of prison a inmates, subject he said has only gained recognition in tho recent past. legal Parole conditions are subject to less than any control other—the inmate has no right to legal counsel and there are no legal standards or limitations on pare,lo processes, he pointed out. But Dawson predicted the courts will become more in­ terested in this phase of parole circumstances. Classification decisions as to where an inmate will be sent for his sentence or the type of job he will do while in prison will be considered bv the courts in tho future Dawson said. Autopsy Report Not Conclusive F u n e r a l arrangements were incomplete Monday in H o u s t o n for University student James Andrew Knox. 18 who was found dead Sunday in his apartment at 2404-B McCall St. The youth’s body was discovered in his bod by roommates at 12:05 p.m. Judge Sunday. Municipal R°nald Earle said results of an “ in­ conclusive.’’ autopsy were in Knox was enrolled in an the English 301 course D i v i s i o n of Extension been program working part-time a contractor’s helper. had and as 170 Tickets Rem aining For U T -A rkansas Clash There are ITO student tickets r e m a i n i n g for the Texas- A r k a n s a s game Saturday. Students drew 664 ducats Mon­ tickets w'ore day, while ha returned to the ticket office by various alumni organizations. Sales will continue through p.m. Wednesday, according Richard Boldt, ticket manager. I to Schools to Explain Aid Representatives from graduate schools throughout the country w ill visit campus this semester t o schools’ programs. describe their The visits begin Wednesday, when a representative from the Southern Methodist University School of Law will explain ad- Miller Takes Part In Japan Seminar professor A University is currently participating in Japan's Research Science Society lecture series marking the fortieth an­ niversary the death of philosopher G e o r g e Herbert Mead. of Dr. David L. Miller, professor of philosophy, presented papers T>n "M ead’s Theory of the Past and the Present” and on “ A Comparison of Mead’s Theory of Universals with Whitehead’s” during sessions Saturday and Sunday in Tokyo. A former student of Mead's at the University of Chicago, Miller has written numerous articles on the in­ renowned philosopher cluding a book which has been accepted for publication by the University Press. In August, i970, M iller ap­ peared in an international con­ ference on Mead in Winterthur, Switzerland. m i s s i o n requirements and financial aids. Interviews will be held at the Liberal Arts Placement Office, ap­ 2608 Whitis. pointments may be made in Pierson or by calling Mrs. Betty Ross at 471-5661. Individual to According to Mrs. Ross, the to screen interviews are not for admission, but applicants school the give rather representative a chance to ex­ plain admission requirements and particular for financial minority groups. Thus students do not need resumes for the in­ terviews. aids Literature on the different graduate schools is available at the placement office. that Other schrals have scheduled interviews are Harvard University Graduate School of Business, Oct. 27; University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Brown University Graduate School, Nov. Nov. l l ; 16; Institute for Paralegal Training (Philadelphia), Nov. 17; Boston College Law School, Nov. University 22; C o l u m b i a Graduate School of Business, Dec. 6 and University of North Carolina Graduate School of Business, Dec. 9. SMU School of Law \ r e p r e s e n t a t i v e o f th e S o u t h e r n M e t h o d i s t I n i v e r s i t j S c h o o l o f L a w , D a l l a s T e x a s w i l l h e o n c a m p i l y WEDNESDAY, OCT. 13 IO a.m. • 12 p .m . and to t a l k w i t h I p.m. - 4 p.m. i n t e r e s t e d students r e o i i l r e m e n t s and a b o u t a d m is s i o n f i n a n c i a l a s s i s t a n c e . F o r in fo rm atio n a n d to m a k e a o o o i n t m e n t s , see M R S . BETTY R O S S LIBERAL ARTS PLACEMENT OFFICE 7 m W H I T I S R e n a is s a n c e U p stair* at 8th and Rio G ra n d s 476-6018 P in b a ll G a m e s F oosb all Po o l Jukeb ox HAPPY HOUR: 3 -6 P.M. BEER $1 PITCHER V isit our N ew Custom Silver Shop — Silver, Etc. NOTICE Singers, Guitarists, Piano Players Auditions Will Be Held 6:30 P.M. To 8:30 P.M. M o nda y, Oct. l l , A n d 4: OO P.M. To 6:00 P.M. Tuesday, Oct. 12 In The Viscount Room Of The Villa Capri Motet For A Pop Vocal Com bo To W ork At The Country Dinner Playhouse. Applicants Must Be 21 Years Old. Singers Must Have At Least O n e Song Prepared. Piano Players Should A p p ly Monday. FOR M O R E IN F O R M A T IO N CALL 451-4651 OPEN THURSDAY TILL 8 PM (tong sleeve SHIRTS price F ENTIRE ST O Ctots 1/3- (FLARE) REG. 10.00 to 20.00 KNITS N O T IN C L U D E D ENTIRE S T O C K LO-RISE JEANS 20%OFF Page 12 Tuesday, October 12, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN BELL JEANS & PANTS OO • FAMOUS BRANDS BLUE JEAN BELLS I75 Bob Elliott's NEW IMAGES FOR MEN 2426 GUADALUPE UT ORGANIZATIONS DEADLINE ■for buying pages in the 1972 CACTUS is FRIDAY. OCTOBER 15 ENTIRE STOCK SHORT SLEEVE SHIR TS Avoid the Crowds! Come By and Reserve Your Pages Early! PRICE A n o t h e r p u b lic a t io 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 CACTUS y e a rb o o k