T he Sum? ^ T exan V %.9 > Student N ew spaper a t The U rn. V ' ’>stin It* AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, JUNE Twelve Page* 471-4401 y<*. n , Ho. to Ten Cent* uiiiiuiijnniiiim iflnim nnm nnninnim ininiiiiniiflnrniiw iiiiiiinsi'nnniiiiH ininiiiiiinniinm iiiniim H iH iH iiiiiiiiiH uiiiiniiH nH iiH H M U iiiiH iiiiiiiiH iK iitiiiiiiiiJiiiiiiiniiniuiiiH iiuii Judge Rules for Post Government A ppeal Extends Ban By Tho Associated Press stop A U.S. District Court judge refused again Monday further to publication by the Washington Post of a secret study on Vietnam, but the government immediately appealed and a higher tribunal extended until Tuesday a ban on more articles. The action paralleled that in a case Involving The New York Times, which first disclosed the Pentagon study. The Times case was set for a hearing on Monday but was delayed until Tuesday. T H E L A T E S T Washington development came after the govern­ ment appealed U.S. Dist. Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell’s ruling against a preliminary injunction. Turning down the government for the second time, Gesell said the publication of the documents was “ of paramount public importance” and the government failed to prove its claim that disclosure of the material was dangerous to national security. the The panel to which the government appealed was the same unit that Issued restraining temporary order after Gesell’s initial rejection Friday. The appeals court extended the restraining order until 5 p.m. Tuesday and set * hearing on the question for Tuesday afternoon Gesell, in denying the injunction, said, “ The government has not presented . . . any showing that the documents at the present time and in present form are top-secret.” The hearings started in open court, then were moved to closed session. said a review of During open, proceedings, Dennis Doolin, deputy assistant secretary of the defense, documents was begun in 1969 at the direction of Defense Secretary Melvin R. la ird and was still continuing. He said that after an initial study it was found tho documents were “ so highly sensitive they should not go outside the executive branch.” TH E R E V IE W was ordered, Doolin said, because Sen. J.W . Fulbright, D- Ark., asked for a copy of the report for his Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Doolin said the papers contained messages between heads of state, ambassadors and other officials which he felt should not go beyond those to whom they were addressed. On cross-examination, Washington Post attorney William R. Glendon asked Doolin if any of the operational plans were current. “ They were, they are,” Doolin said. TH E \R T IC LE in The Times said the United States conducted clan* destine warfare against North Viet­ nam prior to the 1964 Tonkin Gulf that incident, Johnson Ad­ the ministration decided before the 1964 election to bomb North Vietnam and Johnson decided secretly early in 1965 to use American ground troops of­ fensively. The Post stories said the Saigon regime prevented elections throughout Vietnam in 1955 and that the Johnson Administration had little hope that bombing halts between 1965 and 1968 would bring peace talks, but thought they would placate world opinion. In the Times case, U.S. Dist. Court Judge Murrary Gurfein granted a temporary restraining order barring further publication, then, Saturday, rejected the government’s request for a preliminary injunction against the newspaper. He and the higher court continued a ban on further publication of the material, however, awaiting a decision on the government’s appeal. THE NEXT step in the case after the appeals court ruling would be an appeal to tile Supreme Court for review, seeking immediate relief. Such petitions usually are addressed to the justice presiding over the circuit in which the case originates— in this instance, Justice John M. Harlan. There were the orgiginal study ordered by Pchert S. McNamara when he was secretary lo copies of Vietnam Study Chairman Leslie H. Gelb, chairman of the Pentagon task force that made the study of the Vietnam W ar ordered in June, 1967, looks over copies of The New York Times and | J the Washington Post which published the secret documents. —UPI Telephoto of defense. A former Times newsman identified Daniel Ellsberg as the man who leaked the documents to The Times. FURTHER proceedings in the case involving The Times had been scheduled for Monday morning before a three-man appeals panel, but Chief Justice Henry J . Friendly delayed the case so it could be heard by the eight-man 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “ This case raises a question of such it extraordinary should be heard by all the judges,” Friendly said. importance f nifnnn!!iiiii»i!!!iimiHi?mf!»ni!i!«iimtn!iifnitiroHi!iiiminni(?wfn!imniHrnnmnniint!imiifwwmn!wnN that I I I ^ = 1 nnnni. I'liH H H H iiiiH iiiiR iu iiu iiiiiiiiiiR iiiiiiiR iiiM R iR M iiiin ffliiin im iflran w n Desegregation Suit Testimony Ends By M IK E FBESQ U ES Associate News Editor Testimony In the federal government’s desegregation mdt against the Austin Independent School District ended Monday as both sides rested their cases before the court U.S. Dist Judge Jack Roberts said his ruling, which will determine the type and scope of desegregation for the Austin schools, would be “ .shortcoming. Roberts commented he fully understood the im­ the portance of the verdict hut also recognized necessity for expediency’. The court can rule two In desegregation plans: The Department of Health, Education and Welfare plan or the Austin school hoard plan, or it can reject both plans and create a plan of Its own. favor of one of The Austin case la the federal government's first attempt to establish the use of busing to desegregate schools after a recent Supreme Court decision which c ted busing as a useful means of obtaining integration. Tile federal plan utilizes extensive busing of school children to arrive at school population proportions that coincide with those of the community. Tile school board plan attempts to integrate by retention of neighborhood schools in the elementary level ami some busing is the junior and senior highs. The school board plan also initiates “ learning cen­ ters,'' school visits and field trips in which multi­ cultural activities would be undertaken. The plan would allow students to be involved in activities from one- third to onn fourth of the school year, or about one week out of the month. The school hoard maintains the federal plan will cost $2.9 million to implement and the Austin plan about $1 million. School officials estimated that implementing of the Health, Education and Welfare plan would necessarily raise property taxes from the current $1.10 per $100 valuation to $1.32. School officials said there has never been such a drastic raise in property’ taxes at one time. Tile major concern in the case, and the object of most of the testimony, is whether to include Mexican- Americans in the integration plan. The school board maintains it attempted to meet the special needs of the unique Mexican-American migrant farm worker children who were absent from the school several months of the year. The government contends that the school district practiced de jure segregation (by law! by construction site decisions which isolated the Mexican-American children. The federal plan includes Mexican-Americans in Its busing program, and the school board plan does not. Supt. Jack Davidson testified that chances for an adequate reimbursement of the cost of the additional 20 buses needed In the federal plan were “ cloudy.” Donald Thomas, attorney for the school board, called a string of witnesses to testify on the system’s treat­ ment of the Mexican-American children. Willie Kocurek, president of the 1954 school board; Tom Graham, president from 1954 to 1966; C.N. Avery, Austin lawyer, and Noble Prentice, school board member from 1949 to 1956, all testified that no in­ tentional discrimination of Mexican-Americans had existed. The defense’s last witness was present school board president W ill D. Davis, who also testified to the nondiscriminatory manner in which the Mexican- Americans had been treated. TSP Asks I - Month Extension Secretary Dies to Decide V a lid ity of Filing Charter W ithout Regental O k a y B y KATIE FEGAN Associate News Editor The Board of Regents gave no Indication Monday whether it would approve a seven- month extension to the present Texas Student Publications charter as approved Sunday by the TSP Board of Directors. The TSP directors voted to try next Monday to get Texas Secretary’ of State Martin Dies to accept such an amendment to the charter, which expires July 6, if the regents do not approve the amendment and file it DIES R EC EN T LY rejected a set of amendments presented by TSP to recharter the corporation along the lines of a charter approved by the regents. He said the amendments were Invalid because, under both the present charter and the proposed rechartering, amendments must be approved by the regents. TSP attorney Joe letting predicted the regents would meet this week and could then consider the amendment and other proposals for a long-term rechartering. Regent Joe Kilgore of Austin said he had not been informed of a special regents meeting. Regents’ Chairman John Pea re of San Antonio could not be reached for comment. Peace told TSP attorneys he would post notice of a meeting Monday or Tuesday lf one w’ere called, Ratting said. THE NEXT regular regents meeting is July 30. TSP attorneys and the regents have been negotiating about a dissolution clause in the charter passed by the regents. This clause, which would dissolve the corporation, if any portion of the document were ruled illegal in court, was deleted from the charter TSP presented to Die?. TSP directors have indicated that a charter containing such a clause would not be acceptable to them. REGENTS HAVE said they would not approve the rechartering without such a clause to prevent any legal action seeking to eliminate ultimate regental authority over TSP actions, as specified in the charter. Some TSP Board members have discussed such legal action, based on tbs State Nonprofit Corporation Act, which states that such a corporation may have only one board of directors. After the TSP Board rejected the regents* proposal and filed the amendments, Peace directed LeMaistre not to file the charter for the time being. LeMaistre has said he w ill “ take whatever steps necessary” to insure that the continuous publication of a campus newspaper is not interrupted if the TSP charter expires. LATTING SAID he hopes Dies would accept T SP’s second amendment attempt, if the regents do not approve it, because the changes would be smaller than those previously proposed and would give TSP and the regents more time to work out their differences. the Drs. William A. Mindak and Dewitt Reddick of journalism department, Eugene Sauls of the accounting department and Clifton McCleskey of the government department were appointed last week to the Faculty’ Committee on Student Publications by University’ President Ad Interim Bryce Jordan. If the present board structure is retained, the four will serve on the TSP Baa rd next year. If a proposed board comp,', ’ion with three faculty’ members is includ 'd in a new charter, the University preside it would announce those appointments separately. Supreme Court Favors No Juries tor Juveniles WASHINGTON (A P) — Juveniles accused of crime may be tined without juries, as they are in most states, the Supreme Court ruled six to three Monday. The decision, given by Justice Harry A. Blackmun in Pennsylvania and North Carolina cases, ended a 23-vear trend of applying B ill of Rights protections to juvenile proceedings. Juries, said Blackmun,are not necessary to get at the facts, and jury’ trials would impose a formality and clamor on a process that is supposed to be intimate and in­ formal. If a state wants to allow jury’ trials for juvenile defendants, that “ is the state's privilege and not its obligation,” Blackmun said. At least 34 states and the District of juvenile Columbia bar proceedings while IO other states authorize trials jury in juries to judge the young. Judge William O. Douglas, one of the three dissenters, said that since a juvenile found delinquent may be confined until he is 21, “ he is entitled to the same procedural protection as an adult.” Meanwhile, in another area, die court granted the Nixon Administration a hearing on its claim that federal agents can wiretap suspicious domestic organizations without a judge’s permission. The federal appeals court in Cincinnati and federal district courts in Detroit and St. Louis have drawn a line between sur­ veillance to intercept foreign intelligence and the wiretapping of domestic groups. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell contends “ there is no visible distinction” and President Richard M. Nixon has attempted to refute what hp called hysteria over F B I wiretapping. Dedijer Linked to Tribuna Yugoslavian Presided at W a r Crime Hearings By MILES HAWTHORNE Associate News Editor Vladimir Dedijer, former vice-president Yugoslavian rejected as a visiting professor by the Board of Regents June 4, was the presiding officer of the War Crimes Tribunal sored by the late Bertrand ril in 1967. Speculation has arisen that Dedijer’s connection with the t r i b u n a l , which strongly criticized then President Lyndon B. Johnson, may have been a reason for the Board’s refusal to hire him. THE TRIBUNAL, h e l d i n Stockholm, was a “ hearing” led by American and European leaders States and for its genocide and other crimes of war in Vietnam. A m o n g intellectual th? luminaries participating in the trial were Jean-Paul Sartre, Hie French philosopher and author; David Dellinger, American pacifist known widely as a member of “ Chicago Seven.” and Russell, English mathematician, philosopher and writer. In 1968, while Johnson was still President, Dedijer applied for a visa to visit the United States. His request w’as rejected by the State Department at the time on the grounds that his visit January’, the TH E DEC ISION, which was attacked at the time by The New York Times, was based on and I m m i g r a t i o n the Naturalization Act, which states that a visa may be denied to anyone “ who seeks to enter the United States solely, principally in incidentally to engage or activities which are prejudicial to the public interest, or en­ danger the welfare, safety or security of the United States.” Dedijer had been invited to speak to students at Boston University, according to The Times. At the closing of the tribunal in mid-May, 1967( Dedijer said, to all kinds be subjected pressures, particula; y United States.” of in the DURING the “ trial,” Walt W. Rostow, now a p: ' s. at the University and then a top ad­ viser to the President, told Taga Erlander, then prime minister of Sweden, that the President thought the the actions of tribunal “ highly regretful.” The final verdict of the tribunal was that the United States was guilty of crimes of aggression and “ widespread, d e l i b e r a t e and systematia bombardment of civilian target^ in Vietnam’s as w ell as violation of “ neutrality and territoria > Army Hears ProtestOver Calley Case FT. McP h e r s o n , Ga. (A P) — Former Army Capt. Aubrey Daniel, the prosecutor who won a conviction in the court-martial of L L William L. Calley Jr., tesified Monday he was barred from calling Capt Ernest L. Medina as a witness. Daniel, testifying at a pretrial hearing for Medina, said an order not to call Medina came from Col. Robert Lathrop, Identified as a staff judge advocate of tho Infantry Training Center at Ft. Benning, Ga., where Calley was tried. Defense lawy er F. Lee Bailey’ asked how Daniel received the order. Daniel, now a civilian lawyer, in Washington, said ha received an oral order. Earlier Monday, Maj. William Eckhardt, the prosecuting attorney, said he argued against tile government calling the captain as a witness in the Calley trial. ECKHARDT SAID H E feared Medina might use his appearance in the Calley case to block his own prosecution on charges of murdering 102 villagers at My La! and assaulting another. Eckhardt, 29, was one of nine persons whose testimony was ordered by a m ilitary judge last week by lawyers for Medina. Bailey has moved for dismissal of charges on grounds that command influence was improperly exerted to bring the casa to trial. THE LAWYER CHARGED that the army conspired to keep Medina, 34, of Montrose, Colo., off the stand In the trial of Calley. Medina testified in the Calley trial at the request of the jury, denying that ha gave his troops orders to “ waste” My Lai civilians during a 1968 attack. Calley, a platoon leader in Medina’s unit, has been convicted of murdering at least x, .jjgg >• Captain M edina W aits UPI Telephoto Army Capt. Ernest Medina talks with his wife Monday after a break in his pretrial hearing at Ft. McPherson, Ga. The leadoff witness said he had been told murder charges would be placed against him unless he turned state’s evidence against Me­ dina* vwhft ii charged with i02.xnurderi,At in 1?68. , PARIS - $200.00 From New York Between June 20 a n d J u ly 25 - $20 Higher Y O U TH FARE! Le Ben V oyage via AIR FRANCE Fly N O N -S TO P from H ouston to Paris, the shortest and fastest w ay; From Austin, NO g ro u p required! Student Status NOT re q uired ! Maximum age, 25! No a dd itio n al charge fo r weekend travel! Reservations can be m ade 7 days in advance. F O R M O R E D E T A IL S , PLEASE C A L L LONGHORN TRAVELERS, INC. A P ro fe s s io n a l T r a v e l A cen ry — 239 HANCOCK CENTER Austin, Texas 78751 — 452-9426 Ransom Says Library Funds M ay Decline Dr. H arry Huntt Hansom, em eritus of chancellor University System , has predicted library lim itations on financial program s during this decade. the “ If one believes, as I do, that it is nonsense to assum e that the, is barren market of now collectible print and that there are no new fields for collection, this decade’s problems will be finances and new laws affecting collection,’' R ansom said to the American L ib rary Association Thursday. RANSOM CHARGED THAT a specific limitation would restrict gifts of “ self-created’’ collections. “ Plain talk by tax attorneys it and tax accountants makes clear that vre will soon confront new perplexities foun­ dations, especially those that are private,” he said. among expressed R a n s o m en­ couragement over the “ sustained and vigorous generosity of the friends of the lib ra rie s.” lies “ T H E GR EA T POTENTIAL still interest in common motivated by common sense In the cause of common cultural heritage,” he added. Ransom, who initiated new research d e v e l o p m e n t of collections the said in 1952, purpose of the current develop­ ment is the sam e one utilized two decades ago “ to m ake a good library better.” DULCIMERS? GUSLES? M O O NLUTES? C H IM T A S ? KALIMBAS? MBIRAS? IP Y O U W A N T PAR OUT M U S IC A L INSTRUMENTS. THERE IS O N L Y O N E PLACE TO G O . AMSTER MUSIC 1624 LAVACA Erwin Denies Times Report Regent Frank C. Erwin, former of the Board chairman Regents> has denied published accounts that he drew a $600,000 check on a foundation associated with former President Lyndon B. Johnson to pay for the Bailer House. in The Austin Times, a copyrighted story Thursday, said Erwin drew the check on the Health, Education, and Con­ servation Foundation which was m erged with the L B J Public Affairs Foundation on April 8, 1971. Three days before the Times said the check was drawn, Erwin told a State Senate subcommittee that a foundation had made a $600,000 contribution to the Bauer House. ex-chairman for “ THE HEO Public Affairs Foundation has no relation with the Bauer House,” Erwin told the Austin American and Statesman Thursday. T h e the the HEO registered agent In Public Affairs Foundation. addition to Erwin, Chancellor Em eritus Harry Ransom and form er U.S. Ambassador to Sweden WAV. Heath are listed as Incorporators the foun­ dation. for Is about asked W h e n the relationship between the L B J Foundation and the UEC Foun­ dation, Envin told the Statesman, “ Those are private foundations. They are not public, and I am under no obligation to tell you about them.” T H E UNIVERSITY has repeatedly refused to disclose the name of the Bauer House donor, a n d controversy a financing and surrounding the construction of the regents voted to return the gift to its unidentified source. the home, after The Legal Research Project, In a prepared statement, said the Times “ the m ysterious $600,000 donation for the Bauer House’’ Is “ dishear­ t e n ^ but not surprising.” concerning story “ For months many Texans have believed gift was solicited after the fact to cover the fantastic cost overruns on the the UT Chancellor’s residence. Now, according to the Tim es reporter Kathy Kennedy, there is evidence after gift was obtained the System em­ officials were barrassed by publication of the Bauer House costs,” the LRP statement continued. LRP also suggested that Erwin and Deputy System Chancellor E.D. Walker may not have told all to the Senate subcommittee. Both Erwin and Walker testified to the subcommittee that the donation had been received in February'. “ Since both of these men arg not only officials in the Univer. sity, but also have intim ate ties with the foundation W'hich made the donation, they had every reason to know what they said was false,” LR P said. ACCORDING to the LR P , had the subcommittee required aa oath of Erwin and Walker, the officials might have been “ open to criminal charges for perjury.” Ruling Awaited On Coed Death services W’ere held Monday in San Antonio for Linda S u e McDougall, 18-year-old University student who was pronounced dead early Saturday m o r n i n g Brackenridge at Hospital. Funeral M iss McDougall w as brought to the hospital by two young men who w'ere questioned by police. Lt. Roger Rountree, head of tbs homicide division, said an offldal investigation depends on test results. conducted An inquest intn her death Ii by Austin being Municipal Judge Ronnie E arle. Chemical tests are being made by the Texas Department of Public Safety. Surviving are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George McDougall; a sister. Dobra McDougall; and a brother Marshall McDougall; all of San Antonio; and her grand­ mothers, Mrs. B os* McDougall and Mrs. George Thompson. Preregistration Continues Today Tuesday Is the last day for University students attending the first summer session to preregister for fall. All students not previously preregistered may partied pat*, with the exception of provisional or transient students. Provisional students are high school graduates who made low admission test scores and are attending sum mer schoo l. I f they' pass 12 hours, they qualify to register Aug. 25 to 27 in Gregory Gym. Preregistration m aterials can be obtained at the department of the student’s academ ic major. The procedure will be the same as in preregistration in the spring, with students going from their m ajor department to their adviser, and then returning their m aterials to their m ajor department. Approximately 22,000 students have preregistered and 400 freshmen are registering weekly, Woody Keith, Incoming registration supervisor, said. A one-day registration period will be July 27 for students registered in the second summer session. Keith estimates 30,000 students will be preregistered b e fo re the final registration period In August at Gregory Gym. Billing, fee payments and schedules will be m ailed out beginning July IO . Are You Looking For A Change? PROGRAMMING . i is r ™1 COLLEGE Of AUSTIN PCA Announces REGISTRATION IN THEIR NEW JUNE DAY & EVENING CLASSES Com plete Computer Programming Logic • Applications • Languages PCA cornbin#* the most up-to-date curriculum with highly unique teaching method* to provide a thorough and extorsive education in computer pro- grammmg. W e are seeking qualified applicant*. O p p o r tu n e * in the field lf you desire challenge end of computer personnel were never better, e tecure future, investigate Programming. INQUIRE N O W About the Opening of Austin’s Most Unique COLLEGE OF DRAFTING AND KEY PUNCH CURRICULUM Investigate TODAY P C A 3401 Interregional 476-4344 P h oto by G L Y N I S C R A W FO R D . Raindrops K ee p Falling Bradley S tu d t, freshm an o rie n ta tio n student fro m Longview , p lagued w ith slipp ery m echanical d ifficu ltie s seeks th e shelter o f a n earby u m b rella while he re m e d ie s the situation during a heavy rain d ow n p o u r M o n d a y on d ro u th -p la g u e d A u stin. Why not live a little this fall? (W T E S S & "W e s t 27 0 7 Rio G ra n d e 476-4648 Luxury apartment-hotel sty Ie living for University women — all the conveniences of home and m ore; sun deck, maid service, free parking, swim­ ming pool, delicious meaLs and more. Each suite is equipped with electric kitchen and refrigerator for late sn ack s or weekend m eals. 2 7 0 0 N u e c e s 4 7 2 -7 8 5 0 o r 4 7 6 -4 6 4 8 The ultimate in accommoda­ tions for men at the Universi­ ty. Spacious private or two- student rooms with bookcases, carpet, drapes, daily maid service, free covered parking, fully air-conditioned . . . con­ venient and comfortable. Bar- rone residents share the TV” lounge, swimming pool and dining room facilities with the Contessa right next door. Phone us, or drop by . . . you’ll live a little this fall! « r MV SHRIMP IS BIGGER TMH YOUR SHRIMP//}! i what kind' OF A FUNKV N o r IS THIS, ANYWAY WE DONT KNOW IF WE HAVE THE LARGEST IN TOWN, BUT WE DO KNOW THAT YOUR GETTING A GREAT DINING VALUE AT HOLIDAY HOUSE # 3 WHEN YOU TRY OUR SHRIMP PLATE. BUTTERFLY. GOLDEN FRIED. GULF FRESH SHRIMP TARTER SAUCE AND RED SAUCE FRENCH FRIES AND TEXAS TOAST COLE S LA W ROLlOAV^a ROUSE ^ 3 2606 Guadalupe Street rmr . . . A Ralph Moreland Restaurant Hie Castiliari 2323 San Antonio S t ./A u s tin , Texas 78705 Date: To: From: JUNE- 1971 O RIENTATION STU D EN TS STAFF & RESIDENTS OF THE CASTILIAN Subject: OUR IN V ITA TIO N TO YO U TO COME VISIT AND SWIM AT THE CASTILIAN WE W OULD LIKE TO EX TEN D AN IN V ITA TIO N TO YOU T O CONSIDER THE CASTILIAN FOR YOUR FALL A N D SPRING LIVING. YOU M A Y ASK, W HY SHOULD I CONSIDER T H E CASTILIAN? THE REASONS F O R C O N S I D E R A ­ TIO N ARE: one-half block from campus three different meal plans coed floors all women floors all men floors quiet floors, if you wish pool, saunas, and sun deck WHY N O T COME B Y A N I) LOOK AT OUR FACILI­ TIES. W E LOOK FORW ARD TO SEEING YOU. _ _ _ _ _ _ I_ Page 2 Tuesday, June 22, 197.1. THE SUMMER TEXAN _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ UT Minorities Lagging Regents' Rulings Block Total Program By STEVE WISCH General Reporter Recent scrapping of the Counsel for Legal Educational Opportunity (CLEO) program by University President Ad Interim Bryce Jordan was the second .such controversy at the University in less than two years. On Aug. I, 1969, the regents adopted a General Admission Policy for the University System which paved the scrapping of the undergraduate counterpart to the CLEO program, the Program for Educational Opportunity (PEO). the way for At that session, the regents ruled the University System would admit "as many qualified students as possible. .Neither the faculty nor students of any component institution will solicit or recruit for ad­ mission to that institution any person who academic c a n n o t meet the requirements in­ for admission stitution.’’ usual that to . Tile immediate effect of this 1969 policy was the elimination of PEO. During its (1968-70), PEO two years of operation brought 47 "underprivileged'’ students to the University. Some critics of the regents’ ruling felt it was specifically aimed a t PEO. Among these critics were the vice-president of the Students’ Association, Ernie Haywood, first former that black association vice-president, Rick Keeton. to hold and job Haywood described the program’s first year saying "PEO offered the educational opportunity of coming to the University to 25 disadvantaged students who did not meet the admissions standards of the Univer­ sity." Then-University P r e s i d e n t Norman Hackerman, pledged his support to PEO, which would have lasted through the 1972 academ ic year. But the regents’ admission policy effectively overruled Hackerman’s pledge and terminated PEO. Though PEO was not specifically aimed at minority students, it provided an avenue for a few of them to reach the University. As Haywood noted, "No racial restrictions were placed on the students, but they did have to be economically and educationally disadvantaged, and they did have to be motivated.” The program endorsed by the regent* to supplant PEO did not do this. Applicant* not meeting regular admissions standards m ay be admitted to the University through the Program (PAP). Under this program, a provisional student with a 2.0 (C) average in 12 hours of University work becomes a regular University student. • Admissions Provisional is However, as critics of PAP noted, this program tough on economically un­ derprivileged students. Though more than 145 students were admitted to University courses during PAP’s first year, only one student received financial aid. Rick Keeton noted this effectively cut off minority students from benefitting from PAP. regents’ A similar rule gave Jordan justification for not renewing CLEO, funded by a Ford Foundation grant. The regents’ rule that the University may not "discriminate either for or against" minority students effectively killed CLEO. for the last Enrollment preceding academic year was 39,155. Yet, only 1,100 of those students represented black and Mexican-American ( c h i c a n o ) minority groups. Considering that chicanos make up 15 percent of the state's population and blacks 13 percent, minority enrollment at the University would not appear to be representative. The Texan the University System’s office is aware of the legislative resolutions. learned Monday that As one System official noted, "many people in the System offices support an extension of that (CLEO) program. We're trying that to work something out on m atter.” That being the case, the possibility arises that Chancellor Charles LeMaistre might ask the regents to alter their policies on general admissions and discrimination. By MIKE FRESQUES Associate News Editor Gov. Preston Smith prefaced and con­ cluded his Sunday night State of the State message by asserting his innocence in the recent Sharpstown Bank stock fraud. He stated he would veto the entire second year appropriations bill passed by the 62nd Legislature. Smith also said he would veto certain line items in the first year of the biennial appropriations measure. The veto would trim $5.5 million off the 1972 budget. The governor will now have to call a special session next year to work out the 1973 budget. Tile special session has been in the works since the beginning of the regular session when Smith recommended lo tho Legislature that it only appropriate Hie first year of the welfare funds for the biennium. SMITH EXPECTS tile federal government to assume responsibility for all or much of welfare after 1972. Smith explained his unprecedented veto of the second year’s appropriations as necessary to reduce the rapidly rising cost of State spending. Smith’s action the second year’s spending came as an apparent contradiction to a 1969 decision in which in vetoing Soviets Demand Talk with Defector LONDON The .Soviet Union dem anded M onday night to talk to a Russian defector, described a s an expert in space travel, who is under the protection of British secret agents in an undisclosed London haven. The Soviet dem and w as conveyed to the British governm ent by A m bassador Mikhail N. Sm im ovsky during a m eeting w ith Sir Denis Greenhill, perm anent under secretary a t the Foreign Office. Sm im ovsky form ally requested that a m em ber of ins staff be allowed to confer with Anatoly Fedoseyev, 52, who quit an a ir show delegation In P a ris May 27. The Russians reported him m issing to the French on .Tune I. G reenhill, the Foreign Office said, agreed to convey Sm im ovsky s m essage to Fedoseyev but he added th a t the Soviet scientist was iii any c a se free to contact the Soviet E m bassy at any tim e. A Foreign Office spokesm an described Fedoseyev' as a Soviet scientist who has been given perm ission to stay in B ritain. M arket Continues Downward Trend NEW YORK Stock m arket prices fell sharply M onday for the second straight session in what some analysts described as a m ajor consolidation. T rading w as m oderate. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials dropped 12.63 points to 876.53. This brought the total deeline in tlit* last two sessions to m ore than 29 points and sent the Dow Industrial to its lowest level since Feb. 24, when it closed a1 875.62. Lucien Hooper, analyst with VV.E, Hutton & Co., said the m arket w as undergoing “ a m ajo r interm ediate correction.’’ The Dow has risen m ore than 300 points in less than a year. Tile feeling that interest rates a re going higher, p artly because of the balance-of-paym ents problem and the disappointm ent over the ra te of business recovery w ere cited by Hooper as background factors. Nixon’s ’68 Campaign Totaled $35 Million WASHINGTON Tt cost R ichard M. Nixon a record $35 million to becom e President in 1968, a new study says. Compiled by the nonpartisan Citizens’ R esearch Foundation, the report says a record $100 million w as spent by all the presidential candidates, including early losers in the prim aries. Nixon spent $10 million or more on the prim ary trail, the study says, then added $24.9 million in the N ovem ber race. The la tte r figure alone equalled the total for both candidates’ spending in the 1964 presidential race. Symbolic G ra d u a t io n President Nathan M . Pusey (rear, standing) performs one of his last duties as out­ going president of H arvard University as he confers degrees on H arvard College and Radcliffe C o llege graduates. Two Radcliffe graduates (foreground) wear symbols on rear of their gowns. Smith Vetoes 73 Appropriations Governor Asserts Innocence Smith vetoed a bill backed by Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes that would have appropriated the State budget for only one year, instead of the present two-year method. Smith, in explaining the contradiction, in Sharpstown Fraud Suit said as conditions change, opinions as to what is best for the state do also. THE GOVERNOR then assured any funds the special session would appropriate would be covered by taxes already existing. He Court Orders S. Africa To Surrender 'Namibia' THE HAGUE (AP) — Tile International Court of Justice ruled Monday that South Africa should terminate immediately its "illegal occupation" of the mineral- rich territory of South-West Africa. Prime Minister John Vorster rejected the ruling in a nationwide radio address in Pretoria, the South African capital, saying, "It is our duty to administer South- West Africa so a6 to promote the well being and progress of its inhabitants." In Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, Organization of African Unity' officials cheered the ruling and spokesmen for guerilla movements said they would step up their campaign to end South African rule in South-West Africa. In its 13 to 2 "advisory opinion" sought by the United Nations, the World Court recommended that U.N. m ember states abstain from sending into South Africa diplomatic or special missions which included "in their jurisdiction the territory of Namibia." South-West Africa was renamed Namibia by a U.N. vote. The aim of the court’s ruling was not to isolate Namibia, but to underline that economic and diplomatic contacts wth tile government of Vorster m ust in no way "entrench" its existing control of the territory'. SAIGON (AP) — "We had all the assets to win this war; we had half a million troops, unlimited amounts of money and the backing of the Administration. No doubt we could have won if we d had commanders who knew how' to use these assets instead of those ticket-punchers, who run in for six months, a year, and don’t even know' what the hell its all about these amateurs, Col. David H. Hackwork, who ex­ presses those views, is about to quit the arm y. "In the land there's 30,000 Jeeps, driven by 30,000 Vietnamese," Hack- worth went on. "WHY THE HEIX do they need 30,000 jeeps. Every captain and above has two, four, five flunkies, houseboy s. the number of Multiply that by A n AP N ew s Special captains and above, and you’ve got probably four more divisions. How many guys you got out packing a rifle? . . .’’ He also expressed the view that by 1973 the situation in Vietnam will be sim ilar to the tough days of the 1963-65 period. "I think all of Vletnamization is a public relations m an’s dream, from some guy on Madison Avenue," he the Nixon says. Vietnamization Administration’s plan of turning the fighting over to the South Vietnamese and allowing for the pullout of U.S. combat troops. ’ is Hackworth Is full of praise for tile GI’s and middle-rank American of­ ficers. "Dam n good men. The arm y ha* never had better kids than it has today. They’re sm arter, stronger, far sharper than when I started out 25 years ago. tho higher “So why has the arm y gone to hell0 Because loaders couldn't recognize the problem until it was too late. These kids, all they wanted was leadership.’’ level W IT H 25 Y E A R S of service behind him at age 40, Hackworth is in ex­ cellent position to m ake general, a cinch. Although the Pentagon says ii For an officer like Hackworth to resign is a blow to an arm y beset by crises. And quitting is no small decision for an orphan boy who went to sea a t 13, enlisted at 15. won a battlefield commission in Korea and never has had any home town except "fort somewhere." He didn’t say how he managed to join the arm y at 15, but presumably he didn’t look his age. the United States should have placed a few crack The colonel suggests did from '41 to ’45, island after island without one goodie.’ ’’ This was a reference to the U.S. Pacific cam ­ paign in World War II. In Hackworth’* view the Vietnam v\ur was always a guerilla war, even after the North Vietnamese entered the battle in force. "We came in with a conventional arm y, led by conventional people, and all the tactical concepts, if there were any, were conventional,” he said. " It’ll saying, ‘They were be over in a few months, we’ve got the enemy on the run’ . . . If we were going to get involved, and I think we never should have, we should have come over and organized the South Vietnamese arm y into a guerilla posture, instead of as a direct reflection of the U.S. corps with its divisions and regiments and all the junk . . . . "We should have come with real Retiring Colonel Assails U. S. Vietnam Strategy can’t prove it, he is widely believed to be the most decorated U.S. officer now on active duty. Wounded four tim es in Korea and four more times in his five and a half years in Vietnam, Hackworth holds two Distinguished Crosses—the nation's serond highest aw’ard for valor—nine Silver Stars, nine Bronze Stars with V for valor and eight Purple Hearts. brigades around Saigon to protect it, then undertaken a program to "train soldiers properly for this kind of war." ‘‘THE CITIES should have been off limits and tile troops told, "forget about rotation, forget about creature comforts, you're not going to town for a year, you’re not going to have these big logistical depots behind you, so be prepared to do like your father "We thought we would steamroll our way through this war as we have every other war, World War I, World War TI, Korea. We’ve won by the output of (lie assembly line, not by any tactical skill on the ground. And you have this tremendous grouping of shallow dilettantes who were running the arm y, I ’m talking about battalion and up, who didn’t know anvilling about the situation. professionals, absolute studs, who would stay until the thing is over, all volunteers. There are many guys who feit like me, who would have stayed over here, who didn’t care a lieut going home in a year." A few' years ago Hackworth was one of a small group of officers whose views were solicited by Gen. William C. Westmoreland after he became arm y chief of staff. Tuesday, J u n e 22* 1971 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 3 ♦ W elfare Bill Posts First House Win Major Test Falls Today When Reform Measure Faces legislative Cut WASHINGTON (AP) — A welfare reform- Soeinl Security bill broke through its first obstacle in the House Monday as an effort to open it to drastic change was defeated. for a $2,400 The major test, however, comes Tuesday when opponents can force a vote on cutting out altogether the welfare section. It I* based on President Richard M. Nixon * recommendation federally assured annual income for a family of four. This proposal, bringing the working poor as well as the unemployable under welfare and imposing work requirements on em­ ployables, would substitute for the present federal-state system that varies among jurisdictions as to eligibility, requirements and benefits. to The bill went the House under procedures permitting amendments except one to delete the family welfare iection. no Opponents mounted an effort to onen the or to provision welfare modification, but lost. 200 to 172. substitutes The opposition included a number of black congressmen who contend the $2,400 level Is too low and the work requirements too strict plus conservatives of both parties who object to the principle of assured in­ come. Rep. Wilbur D. Mills. D-Ark.. chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, con­ tended the bill is w idely misunderstood both In and out of Congress. He argued the m easure would curb tile soaring cost of welfare by putting emphasis on recipients accept that Training and job assignments to become self-supporting. requirements The Social Security sections of the bill a re much less controversial. They include a five percent benefit increase effective in June, 1972, and provision for future cost of living increases. said there would be no new taxes In 1973. Smith used a chart to demonstrate how the Legislature had raised the State budget $287 million over what he had proposed. Tile chart showed how at tile beginning of the session he had suggested a $420 million budget; the House had raised the budget to $607 million; the Senate raised that figure to . .694 million, and a conference committee between two bodies had drafted a final bill of $707 million. the Smith then spoke on how he had not made up his mind on his being a candidate for governor in the next election. The broadcast carried by 31 stations In prime time across the state and costing $20,000 was paid for by the governor. Warm and humid through Wednesday with a chance of showers mainly during the afternoon and evening. High Tuesday and Wednesday in lower 90’s. Low Tuesday night in lower 70’s. South to southeast winds to 15 m.p.h. Probability of showers 5 diminishing to 50 percent Tuesday, 20 percent Tuesday night. " W e s t m o r e l a n d ? . . . He was so steeped in management, if he had known what was going on. how this fought, he w ar should have been wouldn’t have gone into this huge— what he called—battle of attrition, a search and destroy mission, which I thought was a huge waste always been Hackworth scorns the idea that the Americans' ability' to fight and win political limited has restrictions. Rather, he contends, it was the "misuse of assets" in the big multi-battalion search and destroy operations of 1965-68. by firepower, tremendous "You always cam e in there with such such tremendous preparation, that by the time you got located and were ready to meet the enemy he was gone. He only fights to win. It’s a principle of Mao Tse-Tung’s strategy that when the enemy moves in. he falls back; when the enemy withdraws, he a t­ tacks, harasses ‘Our strategy " . . . It seems to me that Westy thought: is attrition, we’re going to kill more of them and wear their arm y out.’ Well, you can’t wear out a guerilla army, not one that’s working out of sanctuaries in Cambodia, b io s and North Vietnam, who’s got a population over 300,000 young studs a year. There’s just no way of killing or wounding that many people. "Take a look. at one time we had more than 550.OOO people over here. I’d say not more than 40,000 at any one time out in the bush . . . If you're looking at this from the standpoint of Mr. Robert McNamara working on a systems analysis program , is this an efficient way to fight a w ar?" Editorials Extension allows time to think The TSP Board of Directors-Board of R egents marathon struggle lim ped through one more attempt, at com prom ise Sunday when TSP voted to submit yet another am endm ent to the Secretary of State. T his tim e, the proposal if accepted would extend the life of the cor­ poration for eiglu more months. The rationale: m ore tim e to negotiate. That, there has been am ple tim e lo negotiate is recognized by readers and writers of endless stories and editorials on 1he T SP crisis. Their m utual and evergrow ing boredom with the by now tired issue is m ute testim ony that tim e has hardly been lacking. WHY, THEN, the bid for an extension? Sim ply put, there has been tim e, but it has been w asted. TSP began efforts toward a sm ooth rechartering last Septem ber. In an attem pt to avoid a last-m inute lunge to beat the expiration deadline of July 6, TSP subm itted to Chancellor Charles LeM aistre a revised charter last January. What followed then was a m elange of m isunderstandings between the corporation and the adm inistration during which much was at­ little w as accom plished. The result w as achingly tem pted and predictable. In the last few w eeks of the spring sem ester, a com m ittee of editors w as h astily appointed to hastily review the situation. Con­ ducting round-the-clock and discreet consultations, LeM aistre drafted his own charter and subm itted it to the regents. The week of the regen ts’ m eeting, LeM aistre presented his proposals to TSP m em bers in a seven-hour session which left everyone thoroughly confused. The day after regental approv al of L eM aistre’s plan, TSP m em bers voted to file their own charter. T im e had becom e of the essence. D ecisions w ere rushed and per­ sp ective w as quickly lost. It seem s that the adm inistration deliberately stalled in an attem pt to confuse the issue. So long dormant, the rechartering of TSP suddenly burst into life w ith such frenetic activity that even closest observers lapsed frequently into abject confusion. . SOMEWHERE ALONG THE WAY, TSP surrendered any attem pt to recharter along the sam e lines under which it currently operates. Som ewhere am idst the confusion, TSP also forgot about setting the life of the rechartered corporation at perpetuity to avoid sim ilar future conflicts. In the end, TSP has even surrendered control of its one m illion dollars in a ssets to the regents in the event of dissolution. The pressures of tim e perpetrated by the recalcitrant efforts of LeM aistre and the regents had their desired effect. Tile politically naive and new ly celebrated TSP Board of D irectors com prom ised alm ost everything. The only real a rea of contention rem aining is the dissolution clau se which would prevent the corporation from ever contesting the legality of any charter provision in court. To the TSP Board, the provision represents that which cannot be com prom ised, its legally-protected a cc ess to the courts. To the regents, the clause sym bolizes that which they are loath to lo se, ultim ate legal control of cam pus publications. Continued negotiations are im perative. The frenzy of a deadline van only scar the charter with more poor and hurried judgm ents. If TSP is to escape such a m aim ing, tim e m ust cea se to be a factor. Right on Times! Tile New York T im es story' on the top secret P entagon analysis of Am erican involvem ent in Indochina g ives A m erica its best look yet at the deliberations, covert actions and what appeal's to be outright warm ongering w hich bogged down the United S tates in the longest war in its history. So far. The T im es has published only three of five parts in the series (and The Texan has reprinted abridged versions of the first three parts, the third appearing today). B y breaking this story', The N ew York T im es, w hose credo is “ to g ive the news im partially without fear or favor, regardless of any party', sect or interest involved,” h as proved once again why it stands at the peak of A m erican journalism —it w ent out and got the story' its readers, indeed the entire nation, needed to know. And, as repaym ent for a job w ell done, the N ixon Administration has taken The T im es to court charging further publication of the series endangers national security. Saturday', the Nixon Administration lost Round I. U.S. Dist. Judge M urray I. Gurfein rightfully upheld Tile T im es’ right to publish and rejected the national security argum ent presenter! by Atty. Gen. John M itchell’s Ju stice Departm ent. Not content with G urfein’s ruling, the Justice Departm ent appealed forbidding Tile and won a second T im es from resum ing publication of the series and the case is scheduled to be heard before an eight-judge federal court later this week. temporary' restraining order In the midst of the current controversy, new spapers around the world have praised The T im es for its industry and courage. The Sum m er Texan adds its support. It takes a great newspaper to stand eyeball to eyeball with the federal governm ent and wait for the other side to blink. Not every newspaper would. We are confident that any court in the land w ill see the governm ent’s attem pt for what it is—a try at stifling the free flow of information that is essential for a viable dem ocracy. Thom as Jefferson once said that if he had to choose between a governm ent without newspapers and new spapers without governm ent he wTould certainly choose the latter. In view7 of the current controversy raging in New York w e are inclined to agree with him. The tubes brightest star Gov. Preston Smith took to the airw aves Sunday night and we soon e x p e c t to hear of his nomination for an E m m y. "The good governor got things rolling with a short heart-to-heart talk about his m uch-publicized stock dealings (spelled “SEC stock m anipulation su it” ). Smith assured the citizenry that his w heeling and dealing wras on the level and any questionable aspects were not his fault and, furtherm ore, nonexistent. R iding on the coat-tails of his fervent and pious denial, Smith took about 20 m inutes to sa y that he w as vetoing the second half of the they didn’t follow his 62nd L eg islatu re’s biennial budget because recom m endation for a lean spending bill T his m eans the L egislature will reconvene (all three rings!) in early 1972 to w rite a n ew budget. “ Som e m ay think it inconsistent,” Smith said, that he would tell the L egislature first to w rite a tw o-year budget and then cut off the s e c o n d year of it. Y ep, som e m ay think so. But T exans m u st not be too harsh on their governor for his per­ form ance. After all, it isn ’t often they have the opportunity to watch a truly fan tastic m ind at work. Pag* 4 Tueiday, June 22, 1971, THE SUMMER TEXAN , Crack! Equal time Rioux! By TOM RIOUX Chairman, Senior Cabinet The students need to know som e of the facts in the recent -controversy over the Student Government budget that The Texan has not published: Last year at this tim e, the Board of informed Students’ Association Regents President Jeff Jones that they were con­ sidering making all item s on the blanket tax optional. This was not done last year, but the Students’ Association w as put on notice that the blanket tax would probably j be broken into optional p a rts this year. I Last year. told Jones the college councils were going to try to separate from and the Students’ Association become a line Item on the blanket tax, just as (a) the Athletic Council, (b) Texas Student Publications, (c) the Cultural En­ tertainm ent Committee and (d) the Stu­ dents’ Association. budget Jeff agreed that this was a good Idea because when the blanket tax was split, the Students’ Association would not have to carry the councils. THIS YEAR, the Student Assembly, under Jones’ leadership, passed a budget con­ taining “ Women’s Liberation — $5,000.” This money w as designated as: “$4,000 — Abortion and Pregnancy Loan Fund — to women and men w-ho need available financial aid in obtaining a legal abortion or adequate pregnancy’ r a re and childbirth; $1 OOO — birth control handbooks similar to those produced at McGill but updated and made relevant to Austin.” the development When Student Government P resident Bob the budget requests to Binder presented President Ad Interim Bryce Jordan, the women’s liberation requests was designated “ Em ergency Medical A ssistance’* with the explanation that “ 1110 main expenditure of this and/or item educational procuring m ateri.il regarding population control. Will e w e r any research projects accom plishing ob­ jectives.” After is and distributing information and final Student Governm ent budget was approved by die Assembly, I informed Binder die Senior Cabinet, acting on behalf of the college councils, w'ould request that they be m ade a se p arate line item on the blanket tax. n e e d e d the in THIS VI VS MADE n 'Cossary by the fact the A&S Council w as not allocated th at any funds and several of the other council budgets were cut. B irder acknowledged the statem ent but made no comment. from the councils Rick Smith, vice-chairman of Senior Cabinet, and myself, chairm an of Senior Cabinet, met with Jordan and requested that he rem ove the Student Government bud md and m ake the Senior Cabinet a 13-cent line Item on the blanket tax. (Senior Cabinet is composed of the presidents of all the college councils.) It should be noted that we did not m ake any suggestions as to the Student Govern­ the m ent budget. We did point out th at the function without councils could not funds that th at they had requested and even with the 13 cents wp were requesting, we would still he forced to raise money from outside sources or depend on the Dean respective of Students’ Office colleges to pay some of our expenses. in our WE DID NOT KNOW w hat decision Jordan had m ade until 'Hie Texan reported th at the Senior Cabinet had been made a 13-cent line item on the blanket tax. At flu? regents* meeting, Binder stated th at the “ Em ergency Medical A ssistance” w as in fact an “ Abortion I/xin F und.” The Board of Regents pointed out that State funds (blanket tax money) could not he used to pay for something that Is illegal In the State of Texas. In conclusion, tim reduction In funds to Student Government was done not because the Senior Cabinet requested 15 cents from tile P residents’ Office but, because the budget the Student Government president presented was falsified. it should also lie noted th a t last year tile Students’ Association w as given one y ea r s warning before the funds were cut a t all, and even now' Student Government will receive only 13 cents less this year per blanket lax sold than it did last year. Lyke Thompson UT politics: rtJ"dXr w as not engaged in an academ ic “ exercise” but in killing people. am sure, BLT ROSTOW, an I honorable m an, and he is a scholar. From an academ ie standpoint, he is a valuable specim en—as one of that helped sta rt the only w ar A m erica ever lost. the few men is He is a valuable asset to the U niversity a t $33,000 a year, teaching only one course, but doing research as well. But there a r e other valuable, intelligent honorable men. Vladimer truly and Dedijer, for instance. Dedijer is a Yugoslavian Communist, a scholar, an author of eight books and M arshall T ito's official biographer. AN OUTSPOKEN MAN, D edijer got himself drum m ed out of the Yugoslavian Communist p arty . He could no longer follow the party line. la ter again Ile was outspoken as Presiding Officer of the 1968 International W ar Crimes Tribunal, held in Stockholm the United S tates guilty of which found crim es of aggression and “ widespread deliberate and system atic” bom bardm ent of civilian ta rg e ts in Vietnam. Then P residential-aide Rostow that he considered that the told tile it trials were Swedish P re m ie r “ highly reg rettab le being held in Sweden.” OTHER THAN THAT the U.S. had no com m ent about the findings of the tribunal. but D edijer w arned that “ some of us m ight be subject to all kinds of pressures, particularly the United S tates.” the m em bers in Eight m onths later his visa to enter the United S tates w as revoked by tho State D epartm ent on it wots “ untim ely.” the grounds th at So now in 1971, Dedijer w as being con­ sidered for a visiting professorship at the U niversity that has the dubious honor of being the home for the Johnson Library, which contains tho Pentagon papers which Indict Johnson and Rostow and prove D edijer’s belief that the V ietnam w ar is a bad thing. AND ROSTOW is now' a professor here. Lady Bird Johnson is a regent. to realize And D edijer that failed academ ic credentials don’t m a tte r a t this university. He failed to realize that here, a s in \ ugoslavia, one m ay pay dearly for expressing his view point. And he w as rejected. Tt is painful th at academ ic to realize freedom is not a principle th at is im portant a t it, this university. One m ust realize though; one m ust realize th a t political in­ the fluence. to essential, overwhelming w hether one is hired or fired or never hired. is becom ing criteria not m erit, as Witness John Silber, fired not because he w asn't doing an excellent job, because he w as, but because he had become too influential and threatened E rw in boys like C harles LeM aistre or Bryce Jordan. (In­ tellectually, Silber could crush Jordan in one brief, fiery exchange of words.) Witness the now nearly-forgotten case of L arry Caroline, fired because he w as an all-too active sponsor for the SDS. OR MORE RECENTLY and m ore to the point, consider how two professors, one for and one against Lyndon B. Johnson’s V ietnam w ar policy w ere treated by the U niversity Board of Regents. Consider W alt Rostow, professor of economics and history. “ I doubt w hether Rostow would have ever been hired except for the influence of the Johnson fam ily on this board,” said a regent recently. I venture the regent would know. He hired the man. And a good m an he w as, an honorable m an. He possesses that academ ic credential all men desire, the PhD. And furtheim ore, he had served as close adviser to form er P resident Johnson. INDEED AS TITE Pentagon papers of R obert M cN am ara reveal, Rostow seem s to be a most im portant civilian architect of our pleasant little w ar in Southeast Asia. In fact, he seem s to have been alm ost w ithout assistance in suggesting that by bom bing North V ietnam he could end the w ar in South Vietnam. The ‘‘Rostow thesis” suggests that by cutting off external support from North V ietnam , the South could be ended. He forgot that the w ar in the South was not so m uch a revolution a s a civil war. the ‘‘revolution” in In any case, the Rostow thesis didn’t w ork; the air w ar w as ineffective. Rostow w as not one to give up easily. When the a ir w ar didn’t bring the “ enem y” around he supper tex! the idea of landing troops to fight in the South. LESS THAN TWO w eeks a tte r Johnson w as elected President, on Nov. 16, 1964, Rostow said, “ I am convinced that we should not go forw ard into the next stage without a U.S. ground force com m itm ent of som e kind. . .” th a t Again and again Rostow reiterated his the United S tates should be belief prep ared form of to “ face down any escalation North V ietnam m ight mount on the ground.” Rostow approached the whole w ar with a cool objectivity, w ithout a trace of com passion, seem ingly without the con­ sciousness that he w as recom m ending the d eaths of thousands of hum an beings. Continually Rostow said, “ the object of the ex e rcise” was to convince ilanoi of this o r th at, never seem ing to realize that he The gavel Rioux refuted By BOB BINDER Student Government President It is unfortunate that, with all the other problem s students are having this sum m er, some students, such as Tom Rioux, devote their efforts and energy into taking ad ­ vantage of the situation for a power play of their own. In T uesday’s E qual Time, Rioux has presented and advocated the regents’ position on Student Government. T here was discussion last y e a r regarding m aking Student G overnm ent optional. There w as discussion on a lot of things. The notice we w ere given on this m a tte r was, however, two days. Apparently, Rioux had much re st of Student m ore notice G overnment did, and w as in included discussions of some funding aspects of S tauten t Governm ent which w ere not brought the attention of die rest of Student Governm ent or the students. than the to I did sign the budget which w as sent through norm al channels to P resident Ad Interim Bryce Jordan because J e ff Jones w as not around and it needed to be sent over a t th a t time. G etting adjusted and learning the ropes, I did not a t that tim e go over the budget th a t w as to be sent by Jones. It was signed by m e m erely to facilitate th e m ovem ent of the budget through channels. Regarding the actual wording, is it for em ergency m edical assistance, both abortions and pregnancy care. The m ain expenditure is on literature. Loans a re not an expenditure since they a re paid back. Tom th at deception w as attem pted. Student Govern­ m ent knew w hat was passed. Students knew it was passed. A dm inistrators knew it w as passed. There w as no deception. Everyone knew there w as an abortion loan fund. is apparently to say liv in g Regarding to serious the A&S Council and other cuts, I have been inform ed that they w ere cut due tile councils’ selection process, usage of monies to take certain individuals’ C actus pictures and giving dances of very low attendance. That was by Student Government. irregularities approved not in Rioux should further explain w hat college councils a re and how students a re selected for them . He should also explain w hat they do. Most people don’t know. Apparently, m ost people they a re voting for program s and sendees in the spring general elections. Jordan informed me that Rioux and Smith had complained about the A&S think Sm ith informed m e budget cut and about the abortion loan fund when they talked. Rioux and Smith deny the latter. It should be noted here, a s elsewhere, that th ere w ere two m eetings w ith F rank Erw in by Rioux and Smith the night before the Ju n e 4 regents meeting. that he m et with them because he knew how to get things done. Since Rioux and Smith know how to get things done, apparently they w ere knowledgeable enough im ­ plications of w hat they w ere doing and a d ­ they w ere giving m inistrative cannon aim ed a t students and Student Government. to know fodder tile the to Rioux says the Senior Cabinet Is a 13-cent item on the blanket ta x but the regents m ade it a 25-cent item . Surprise, surprise. Rioux’s conclusion th a t virtually all Student Government funds w ere cut while his Senior Cabinet’s funds w ere virtually doubled due to the w ording of the abortion loan item just doesn’t m ake sense. As I told Rioux and the regents, if th a t one item was the big objection, it alone could have been cut. But th a t item w as sim ply the excuse the regents used to gut Student Governm ent’s purse, with Rioux’s defense of their actions. the It appears Tom Rioux h as a conflict of interest. The night before regents’ m eeting Rioux said he had arranged with E rw in to speak to the regents on The Texan issue. I asked the position he would take, in light of the S enate’s unanim ous vote the night before supporting student control of The Daily Texan w ith Student Govern­ m ent selecting senators for the TSP Board of D irectors. Ile said th a t would be his position. As it was, he told the regents he w as a senator and he thought Senior Cabinet people should be on the TSP Board. It should be abundantly apparent th a t when one or two disgruntled students will not accept the fact of th eir position’s defeat instead run in covertly to Jordan and Erw in, the whole forum can be destroyed. the Student Senate, hut Rioux knows this. H e is engaged in a pow er play. Tile m ore serious conflict of in terests I see in Rioux is in his being elected as a students’ representative and then advocating the regents’ position to the students. falsification or deception, it appears to be in where Rioux’s loyalties lie. He says it is to the students. It appears to be to the regents. there be If T h e S um m er T ex a n Student N e w sp a p e r at UT Austin .............................................................................................. Ix)ri Rodriguez .......................................................................... John Reetz e d i t o r MANAGING EDITOR ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R ............................................ ASSISTANT TO THE E D IT O R ................................................. SPORTS EDITOR .............................................................................. .’ John Watkins AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ...................................................................Theresa Kane FEATURES EDITOR ......................................................................... Glenda Owen Ann Bennett D avid Powell Associate News Editor ............................................................................................ K atie Fegan News A ssistants ........................................................................................ Liz B ^ s , J a n Jarboe General R eporter ....................................................................................................... Stove Wlsch Assistant Sports Editor ................................................................ Make-Up E ditor ................................................................................................ M artin C m tsinger V\ire Editor .............................................................................................................. Steve Hogner Copy E ditors ...................................................... Bob Plocheck, Debbie Stowitts, Betsy Hall RaJldy Benham *■ * i* l*^ cW W > A A A . Y ork. N Y .. 10017 D r! L , Vm s ’lb scrlb rs to T h* A sso- I n D ie N ew York T im e s N o w s Sen- rt7iS Internation al T elep hoto l u . m a A . n , ,K a m e m b er o f th e Asso- ii«or? Conf r ,hp S o u th w e st J o u m a - r n , % iS!uS«.“ d ",p ■r«u“ Dal11' **»'- “ ss’ t O pinions e x p r e s s e d !n T he S u m m e r T ex a n a re th ose o f th e editor or of Ute w r ite r of the a r tic le and a r e not n e c e s s a r ily th o se of the U n iv ersity a d m ln istra U o n or th e B oard o f R e ­ gents. T he S u m m e r T ex a n , a stu d en t n e w sp a p e r at is pub­ Tile U n iv e r sity o f T e x a s a t A ustin, lished by T e x a s Student P u b lic a tio n s. Inc., D ra w er D. U n iv e r sity Station, A ustin, T ex a s, 7S7IU. The S u m m e r T ex a n is p u b lish e d T u esd a y . T h u rsd ay and F rid a y e x ce p t h o lid a y p eriods June through A u gu st. S e c o n d -cla ss p o s ta g e paid a t A ustin. T ex . N e w s co n trib u tio n s w ill be a c c e p te d by te le ­ phone (471-1101). a t the e d ito ria l o ffic e (Jou r­ n a lism B u ild in g IOU) or a t the n e w s la b oratory (J o u rn a lism B uild ing 102). In q u iries co n cern in g d e liv e r y should be m ad e in J o u r n a lism B uilding 107 (471-5244) and a d v e r tisin g In J o u rn a lism B uilding 111 (471-3327). The n a tio n a l a d v ertisin g r e p r e se n ta tiv e of T he S u m m e r T e x a n is N a tio n a l E d u c a tio n a l Ad­ v e rtisin g S e r v ic e , Inc., SOO L ex in g to n A v e., N e w a n d w e w ill decide w hat n e w s is fit to print!1 Miles Hawthorne S P O R T S W E A R A T T IC 2nd Floor O N - T H E - D R A G W $.'P 7t^M@a?77&WcW I U ie ? JT H 5 w i t e mm m m Enriching UT of the For and quality sake education, maintaining the status quo relieving numerous tormented souls from witnessing things which disturb I forthwith sim ple the University alteration System which I would like the regents to consider at the earliest possible convenience. propose in them, a The plan is simple. It would establish two separate branches of the U niversity; one would oe for the benefit of training young men and women for a productive life in the legislative system, th e other would educate their p eers in the m ore scholarly pursuits. The first branch would have no classes. To say the least, it would not be a mamsy-pamsy academic sort of stuffy place. It would be alive and lively. The students would learn all the basics of fun, games and licientioais behavior. They would spend their time, instead of in some classroom, the names and net values of all th e ir fellow students. learning AT THE END of each sem ester all students would have to p a ss tests which satisfactorily on would be prewritten and im ­ possible to pass without som e tricky dealings. In this way, no one could get ahead of his neigh­ like bor by reading books, the professors or going to class, since none would be available. trying something to talking At the end of the four years, the highest graduates would tak e jobs with various lobbies or within the Legislature itself. The valedictorian would get his choice between governor and speaker of the House. Some suspicious folks around the state m ight wonder where the money would go from the un­ derstandably high tuition. Since there would be no staff other th an adm inistrators and maintainence and no need of buildings, th e re would be quite a surplus of funds. The answ er Is that all of this extra cash would go to the other branch of the University. THIS BRANCH would educate people in a m o re conventional' way to carry out the other duties of the educated citizens of any society. It would train them in the arts, both practical and esthetic, the more mundane but necessary skilled labors. the sciences and the Some of you will see the ob- | vious flaw h e re : regents! would never accept it. Thoughj many might se e nothing wrong j with a few good politicians who know their business, they might gasp at the id e a of turning out, I within our sta te borders, to roam at will, real live intellectuals who cause nothin’ can't do trouble. but architects E v e r y o n e teach ers, and knows what journalists, engineers, chemists are supposed to do. But what, after all, is the u se of a bunch of sociologists, psychologists, Eng­ lish majors and advanced math- meticians? That kind of person only causes trouble. Real trouble, like asking questions, or w orse still, finding answers. QUESTIONS LIKE: Why does the adm inistration spend almost $1 million for a chancellor's home when cam pus housing so crowded and m arried students’ housing is a ro w of barracks but still has at le a s t a year’s worth list? of waiting is Why is $550,000 spent f o r “beautification of the campus” (i.e., a series of walls) when as PEO and programs CLEO are abandoned for “lack of funds?” such Why is it th a t A&S was split for “more efficiency” and then is an extraordinary made for adm inistration of the new colleges? increase These and questions like them are touchy. When the answers show up, they might prove em barrassing, or worse. TYPEWRITING BY ELECTRONICS IN ONLY 15 HOURS New classes in typewriting by electronics will begin Wednesday, June 23rd. Classes will meet in B.E.B. 553 at 10:00 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. The cost is only $15. Call 471-3308 between 9:00 a.m. and 12 noon, Monday thru Friday. BOOK STALL 6103 BURNET RD. 454-3664 STALL 1512 L A V A C A 477-1053 Huge Selection of Used Paperbacks & Hardbacks # S T U D Y NOTES W E •L IT -S C IE N C E S -L A W T R A D E • F IC T IO N -N O N F IC T IO N PAPERBACKS ROOK W eek d a y s S a tu rd a y Su n d a y STALL I 9:30 til 9 9:30 til « 1:00 til 6 BOOK S T A L L II W eekdays Saturdays 9:30 til 7 9 :3 0 til I Sundays C lo s e d SU M M ER SEPARATES Top 12.00 Hot Pant 9.00 H o t pants with indian inspired e m b ro id e ry dow n the sid e * In natural, brown, orange or navy polyester/cotton, sizes 5-13. Flatteringly sty!ed nylon to p in p o w d e r shades o f blue, pink and creme, also purple, sizes S , M , L James Reston U.S. versus New York Times (c) 1971 New York Turn's News Service “ Hero various nows we toll, of love and strifo, of peace and war, health, sickness, death and life . . . of turns of fortune, changes In the state, the falls of favorites, projects of the great, of old mismanagements, taxations new, false nor all neither wholly wholly true.” —New london (Conn.) Bee March 26, 1800 NKW YORK — Gr^at court cases are made by the clash of great principles, each formidable standing alone, hut in conflict limited, "all neither wholly false nor wholly true.” If the latest legal battle, “ the United States versus The New York Times” is such a case: the government's principle of privacy and the newspaper's principle of publishing without government approval. This Is not essentially a fight between Atty. Gen. John Mitchell and Arthur Oohs Sulzberger, publisher of Tile New York Times. They are merely in­ cidental in an ancient dram a. This is the old cat and dog conflict between security and freedom. figures the it: “For It goes back to John Milton’s pamphlet ”A re o p a g ite ” in the against Seventeenth Century' government censorship, or as he called liberty of unlicensed printing.” That is still the heart of it: the government’s to claim license, what is published ahead of publication rather than merely to exercise its right to prosecute after publication. to prevent, in effect Put another way, even the title of this case in the U.S. district court is misleading, for the real issue is not The New York Times the United States, but versus the govern­ whether publishing m ent’s own the Vietnam tragedy or suppressing that story is a service to the Republic. analysis of it that THE USUAL CHARGE against The New York Times, not without some validity, is a is tedious bore, always saying on the one hand and the other, and like The Times of defending, London “ the in government commercial establishment.” the Thirties, and During the last decade, It has for attacked vigorously been “ playing the government gam e.” It refused to print a story that the Cuban freedom fighters were going to land at the Bay of Pigs “ tomorrow' morning.” It agreed with President John F. Kennedy during the Cuban missile crisis that reporting the Soviet missiles on that island while Kennedy was deploying the fleet to blockade the Russians was not the national interest. in Beyond that, it was condemned for not printing what it knew about the U.S. U-2 flights over and t h e Soviet paradoxically, the Yalta papers and the Dumbarton Union, for printing The firing line Who ignores whom? To the editor: There seems to be either a very complacent, very uninformed or a very uninterested faculty on thus campus when tile m atter of the students arui their treatm ent Is concerned. Apparently a very l a r g e students received semester grade reports that were in error. The result was that the students involved must fighting through the massive bureaucratic process these errors corrected. to have number spend hours of But, even the crime was greater for a certain percentage students. These were of the receiving incorrectly p e o p l e announcement scholastic probation or scholastic dismissal o f left corner with the joyous notation in the lower their parents were receiving a copy of in­ formation. incorrect same that the allowed has their attem pts Since the administration of this the institution horrors of to automate their red tape to con­ tinue and apparently become worse rather than improve, one must wonder why the faculty will not or cannot, at least show their awareness if not their displeasure inefficient operations of in this institution. the Many of the 40,000 students are registered voters and all have a voice, yet there seems to be no protest of the legislative actions that have held faculty salaries at their present levels. Can it be that the students that have so long been ignored are the ones doing the ignoring? Maybe even a little laughing? Jim Harrison Graduate Student Suggestion ' To the editor: May I suggest to Ray Neubauer that while you are taking out the paintings you also might discard any books that have at one time or another contained unsettling ideas. comfort Perhaps to even achieve fur- t h e r you might redecorate using only your own paintings and books you have written. John B. Langston Senior, Pharmacy 5T0RY APOUT* S W E CAYE M B / Crossword Puzzle ACROSS DOWN Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle Oaks papers on the organization of the United Nations. in that, the world ALL OF WHICH suggests that there is no general principle which governs all specific cases and of new'spapering, where men have to read alm ost two million w'ords a day and select 100,000 to print, it human down judgments where “all is neither wholly false nor wholly true.” comes to So a judgment has to be m ade when the government argues for even over historical security, documents, and The Times argues for freedom to publish. That is what is before the court today. It is not a black and white j the C uban! case—as it was in missile crisis when the S oviet1 approaching Ken­ ships were nedy’s blockade in the Caribbean. the battlefield, It is a conflict between printing or suppressing, not m ilitary in­ formation affecting the lives of but men on historical documents about a tragic and controversial war. Not between what is right and what is wrong, but between two honest but violently conflicting view’s about what best the national interest and the enduring principles of the First Amend­ ment. serves NELSON'S GIFTS 4612 So. CONGRESS P h o n e : 444-3814 • Z U N I IN D IA N JEW ELRY • A F R IC A N & M E X IC A N IM P O R T S O PE N IO a.m. to 6 p.m. "GIFTS THAT INCREASE IN VALUE" 1 Tibetan priest 2 Sacred image 3 Second of two 4 Cornered 5 Aeriform fluid 6 Pronoun 7 S h ip 's clock 8 Ricochet 9 M uddles 10 Walk unsteadily 11 Finishes 1 6 Decorate .1 $ Spoken 2 2 Played with 2 3 Cook quickly In hot fa t 2 4 Pale 2 5 M an’s nicknam e 2 7 Fish eggs 29 Female sheep 30 Damp 3 5 Surgical saw 3 6 Tableland 3 7 Portico 3 8 W hipped 4 0 Pitchers 4 2 Experience 4 3 Shellfish 4 4 Wife of Zeus 4 6 Baked clay 4 7 Observed 4 9 Tennis strok# 50 Girl’s nickname 53 Sun god THEY'RE SITTING AROUND A CAMP FIRE, 5£E, WHEN ALL OF A 6UPDEK THEY'RE ATTACKED TK A HUSE JHEEAURU^i VOLUME ONE OR VOLUME TOJO? in's iwnossietETo pisrawg OTI A PIS BOTHER i I Rhythmical swing 5 Alcohols beverage 8 Solicitude 1 2 Hebrew month 1 3 Devoured 1 4 Arabian seaport 15 Choral compositions 17 Walked across • stream 19 Changa 2 0 Baker's products 2 1 Prepare for print 2 3 identical 2 4 Armed conflict 2 6 Ethical 2 8 Stitch 3 1 Hebrew month 3 2 Pronoun 3 3 Pronoun 3 4 Openwork fabric 3 6 Encounters 3 8 Permit 3 9 Musical Instrum ent 4 1 Girl’s nam® 4 3 Masticates 4 5 Kilns 4 8 Amend 5 0 Golf club 51 Sandarac tree 5 2 Native metal 5 4 Prefix: distant 5 5 Prohibits 5 6 Container 57 Paradise A Kaleidoscope of body shapers by ■ V A N IT Y - F A IR / now AT SAVINGS UP TO 25% The costume kaleidoscope is spinning new im ages and Vanity Fair has the ideal body shapers for any fashion at special prices for a limited time only. For example, this Juliet® decolletage bra, Reg. $6 now $ 4 .9 5 , and Double Tulip girdle, Reg. $15 now $12.50* "WU2404 C^uadacwpe/ DAILY STORE HOURS 9:30 to 5:30 The MAYFAIR HOUSE and MAY­ FAIR APARTMENTS are UNDER loca­ NEW MANAGEMENT. Both tions are being redecorated for the fall season. Both units will be open for the sum­ mer term. SEE THE MAYFAIR HOUSE . . . • Co-educational • 19 meals a week—excellent food • a large swimming pool • excellent living suites • a relaxing place to live • a quiet neighborhood • moderately priced • open for summer and fa ll living the MAYFAIR HOUSE . . . at 2000 Pearl Street . . . phone 512/472-5437 Let us show you our w a y of living m ay Pa ir Pistr. by United Feature Tuesday, June 22, 1971 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 5 Longhorns Skip A A U Trackmen Limp Home From N C A A Trevino Wins Open By JOHN WATKINS Sports Editor After * weekend, of upsets at the N ational Collegiate A telene Association T rack and Field Championships at Seattle, m any participants will of be the the AAU for south heading national m eet and Friday Saturday a t the University of Oregon a t Eugene. Not so Longhorn trip the Washington cam pus. for the handful of trackm en who m ade the U niversity of to coming “ E verybody’s home now,” said ‘Horn assistan t coach Hill Miller. it “ We because that kind of competition is always trem endous.’’ enjoyed THE COMPETITION for proved the Texas con- stiff too BERT'S BAR-B-QUE BUY ONE SA N D W IC H FOR 40* GET ONE FREE W IT H THIS C O U P O N TUESDAY O N L Y June 22 610 W. 19th ti agent- no ’Horns m ade it to the finals of the six events In which they w ere entered. The cold hug struck sprinter Carl Johnson, hurdler Gordon Hodges and halfm iler Bill Goldapp last week. As a result, Hodges failed to qualify in hoth hurdles, clocking at 14.5 in the highs and a 54.1 in the interm ediates. His respective bests this .season are 13.fi and 51.7. The sub p ar condition of Goldapp and Johnson hurt the T exas m ile rela y crew’, which also failed to m ake the finals. Goldapp turned in a 48-flat leg off the blocks, Johnson clocked 48.2, E d W right followed in 47.9 in and D ave Morton anchored 45.8 for a 3:09.9, com pared to a 3:06.7 season best. T eam champion UCLA took the m ile rela y crown in the finals, running a blistering 3:04.4. The by open Bruins w ere paced “W A L K IN ” to the Counseling Center 303 W est Mall Office Building G R 1-3515 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY A counselor is available to serve oyu immediately: From 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Monday through Friday ^ Cd J The 24-Hour Telephone Counseling and Referral Service Other times call 476-7073 Receiving calls anytime o f the day or night ever}7 day o f the year. C /jO . wk Like Hai Finding All Those N A M E S , A D D R E S S E S & P H O N E N U M B E R S So Easily in the All N E W SUMMER STUDENT DIRECTORY On Sale N O W at the Following Locations: • University C o -O p • Garner & Smith • Hemphill's Stores • Steno Bureau • J. B. 107 PICK YOURS UP TODAY ONLY Page 6 Tuesday, June 22, S9 THE SUMMER TEXAN \ Tax Included quarter winner John Smith (45.3) and Wayne Collett, two of the best quartermilers in the nation. SENIOR to in co-captain Morton f o r qualify t h e failed finals running a the 440, lackluster 47.4 in his heat. Tile ’Horn standout has a hest time of 45.9 this season and a career- best 45.5. of in a them selves elim inated trem endously prelim M iler Ricky Y arbrough and discus m an Alan Thomas hoth found in the prelims. Y arbrough, who ran a ca reer best 4:03.8 last month to qualify for the NCAA, ran a fast 4:07.3 s e r i e s heats. V i 11 a n o v a ’ s M arty Liquori, eventual winner in 3:57.6, turned in 4:00.7 in the prelim s. Thomas, holder of the school record of 189-0, threw only lfifi-8 and didn’t m ake the finals. rest of the Southwest Conference didn’t fare too well either, with R ice's D ave Roberts claim ing the only SWC victory. The Owl ace cleared 17-fi' > to win the pole vault, a personal hest and the host ever by a Texan. SM il’s Sam m y W alker pin cod second in the shot with a toss of 63-2. The RICE ALSO MANAGE!) a in the m ile disappointing sixth GUITAR SALE W E HAVE SEVERAL TRADE-IN G U IT A R S AT $ 15 each. A L S O N E W C O N Q U E R O R G U IT A R S REDUCED FOR C L E A R A N C E AT $17.50 and $27.50 While They Last. Ideal for beginners and summer fun. AMSTER MUSIC 1624 L A V A C A in 3:09.2, while relay In­ t e r m e d i a t e hurdler Mike Cron holm placed sixth in 51.6 and q u a r t e r m i l e r Steve S traub finished out of the money. The biggest question of the fiftieth annual m eet w as “What happened to Willie Deckard?” Tho Southern Cal star, favored in both the IOO and 220, placed eighth in the century and didn’t m ake +he 220 finals. the 220 North Carolina C entral’s Larry Black claim ed in 20.5, while U niversity a t El Paso’s H arrington Jackson was a su r­ relatively in prise winner slow century, registering a 9.5. Jackson had run a 9.2 in the prelim s. the D eckard, who has tim es of 9.2 ran a and 20.2 to his credit, m iserable 23.1 220, although he slowed af the end of the race and trotted across the finish line. just tired ,” figure sa id Deckard. “ I c a n ’t out why. I just couldn’t pick up com ing out of the curve. It w as the slowest 220 of m y college c a ­ r e e r.” “ I WAS TIRED, third UCLA won t e a m its championship scoring 52 points, including IO each for victories in the mile relay and 440. Southern Cal, which had counted on 20 points from D eckard, was second with 41 and Oregon com pleted a 1-2-3 sweep the Pacific 8 Conference with 38. for our “ The m eet Is six w’eeks aw-ay conference m eet.” from M iller explained, “ but is tailor- m ade for the West Coast schools. They run their conference m eets about the NCAA. It was hard on us to stay in top shape, and you have to be a t your peak against that kind of com petition.” two weeks before rvTVEnsiTT o v n ro sM A 1* o r f a c i lit y m e m b e r * S tu d e n t* a d m in is t r a t iv e w ith U n iv e r s it y J a c k p r o b le m * r o n t a c t sh o u ld S t r ic k la n d , H o g g B u ild in g I ll J Ik - 12 M o n d a y t h r o u g h F r id a y ) . T e le p h o n e 471-3*25 o r 471-1*05. Monday Thru Friday - SAILBOAT SPECIAL - 2 HR. REG U LA R RATE $6.00 O N L Y $4.50 W IT H THIS A D ! SAILBOATS & CANOE RENTALS TownLake SailAway 1800 S. LA KESH O RE (Off Riverside) — FO L L O W THE S IG N S — S A IL IN G LESSONS AVAILABLE Tuesday Special RIB EYE 29 served with salad, baked potatoe and texas toast BONANZA SIRLOIN PIT 2815 Guadalupe 478-3560 Here Agami Duchess JUICY RIPE de lux* PEACH ICE CREAM ★ d-e-e-licious! from Superior I DAIRIES ARDMORE, Pa- AP — Lee T r e v i n o abandoned his happy-go-lucky role for that of grim destroyer, shot a two-under-par 68 Monday and beat Jack Nicklaus in their 18-hole playoff for the United States Open Golf Cham­ pionship. frustrated The Nicklaus had a 7L Nicklaus, favored to make his third American national open title, never recovered from poor play out of traps on third holes. second and the He failed to get It out on his first try on each hole, taking a bogey six and a double bogey five. That gave Trevino, who had bogeyed the first from a trap, a two- stroke lead and he never trailed again. His rain-delayed playoff the victory over Nicklaus, feared Golden famed and Bear who holds both the PGA and British Open titles, vaulted him past Nicklaus and into the leading money winning spot again this year a t $165,110. The victory was worth $30,00 to Trevino and second w’as $15,000 to Nick­ laus. They finished Sunday the regulation 72 holes in 280, m atching p ar on the historic Merlon Golf Club course, a 6,544-yard layout. They started M onday’s play in hot. humid w eather that gave way to a violent thunderstorm th a t delayed play for 22 m inutes as they played the sixth hole. N icklaus had closed to one stroke at that point. B u t Trevino, chewing determ inedly on a rud of gum, went two ahead again flagstick when he hit the with his approach on eighth hole, the ball dropping down less than a foot from the flag. the Trevino, usually a nonstop- talker hut quiet and deter­ mined in this playoff round, saved par from 12 feet on the fourteenth hole, m atched birdies with N icklaus on the L a u g h in g Lee G olfer Lee Trevino Ic leks for joy as his putt drops for a par on the 18th green of tho U.S. O pen. fifteenth and bo’h mussed potential the birdies sixteenth. on it Trevino had in hand when Nicklaus buried hi? tee the in a bunker on shot seventeenth to and failed par. Trevino also m issed the green, but chipped out of the rough and three feet to stroked it in T b it put the margin at three. lit his NVklaus second clove on 18, hut m issed the putt. Trevino w as hunkered in two, hut blasted to three feet, leaped out of the trap and d mer I on to the green. He sank for the par he didn't SO LID STATE SPECIALISTS % G A R R A R D • FICO UHER • SO N Y • M O T O R O L A KOSS 0 CRAIG • F I S H E R J E N S E N SALES A N D SERVICE BEDWAY RADIO & TV Ph. 478-6609 307 W . 19th St. “ Th? B i g g e s t Little S t e m Sto re in A s o t i n ” Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes ★ SALE ★ SHEEP SKIN RUGS Many Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SALE T V a rio u s kin ds, co lo rs — 50c per toot Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texai 478-9309 T O N I TE from 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. PITCHER OF BEER 96 ' WATERLOO SOCIAL CLUB L W E P I A N O M r SIC 600 E. 7th St. Ph. 472-7136 HANK’s GRILL Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2532 G U A D A L U P E 2 pts. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only Reg. 51.35 Happy Hour 2-5 p.m. Daily Light or Dark Lg. Pitcher..................................... i .QO Sm. Pitcher......................................... ...... Texas G o lfers Piav in Tucson / T i'.- A ( API — Texas ' “ 1 ' ’ 's na* ’ n In k ’er:; W. ' Golf (" im t I lese ; rat.. • nut a field of collegiate I" st la y in th e NCAA the at I ;hips ( ’ untry C u b . •'•’I 5" V d e fe r e n t sr*hon\e v ll be represented, and eight of kvidualg from last the 'op lo y ear's c rn pions p tournam ent will he b irk for another try at the individual crown. T hin -seven colleges will send their entire five-m an team s to tho in hopes week long tournam ent, of tak ng home the Maxwell Cup, golf of college symbol the boasts in- the m o st do di. ii golfer v til ivrnr i He’s Lanny im pressive 'A a lk ins. w 10 finished second in List yn I s com petition- W adkins ’’FO U.S. A m a te u r th e w as the a m em ber of c .a m p h ' ' J G ;p tm rn, and a m e m b e r of dip I s. Walker Cup team . ' TAKEOFF AND : TRAVEL HOLIDAY! f i r e c r a c k e r JULY 4th SPECIAL! 4 FULL 24 HOUR D A Y S .. . + 9c A MILE •Pay only for the cai you actuary m a . W E FEATURE O L D S CUTLASS and oth er fine ca rs C A L L 478-6437 U u i i y e t R&nta Gar 3103 M A N O R RD. AUSTIN, TEXAS A fic*n$n* of Pud5«i PanI * Car Corpora Blue Records 15th Victory Oakland Ace Fires Seven-Hitter allowed Bert Campaneris scamper home. to With the game tied, 2-2, two out and two on in the A’s seventh Joe Rudi broke from first base. When catcher George Mitterwald Jumped up to throw, Campaneris broke for home and scored aa Mitterwald into center field. the ball fired Blue, settling down In the late Innings after losing pitcher Ray Corbin and Harmon Killebrew delivered run-scoring singles in the third, hurled his 15th com­ plete game. The 21-year-old left-hander, who virtually leads every major league pitching category, worked out of early jams, finishing in a breeze and padding his season strikeout total to 146. The A’s took a 1-0 lead in the on Corbin’s wildness. first Campaneris singled to start the game and dashed home on Sal Bando’s groom lout after Reggie Jackson and Mike Epstein walked. Corbin, 4-4, kept the A’s in check until the sixth when Ep­ stein lashed a one-out ground rule double to right, took third on Sal Bando’s single and tied the game 2-2 on Dave Duncan's bloop single. In other American League a c t i o n Monday, Baltimore trounced Washington 7-2, Chicago cooled off the red-hot Kansas City Royals 5-1, Milwaukee squeaked and by California 3-2, rain cancelled out the Cleveland- Boston game. In the National League, P i t t ­ sburgh shut out the New York Mets 6-0, Atlanta stormed by Montreal 6-4, Philadelphia took Cincinatti 5-3 in twelve innings, and St. Louis played Los Angelet on the West Coast 2350 Guadalupe lyde Campbell Clyde* now has this very “with-it" pant for active people. Cool, light weight, wrinkle resistant material in shades of summer earth: Tan, brown, white, red, yellow-gold and navy. This summer try the flare in pants. . . $20 S T . P A U L - M I N N E A P O L I S (AP) — Oakland's sensational Vida Blue recorded his fifteenth victory of the season Monday night, firing a seven-hitter and striking out 13 in a 3-2 decision over the Minnesota Twins. The gam e’s winning run scored when Oakland’s delayed double steal attem pt in the seventh in­ ning drew a throwing error that Major Standings AM EBIC AX LEAGUE E ast W. L. P c t. G .B. B altim ore .................. 41 22 D e t r o it ........................ 37 29 ................. 35 29 Boston .................. 30 34 Cleveland N ew York ................ 30 36 .............. 23 40 W ashington West Oakland ...................... 45 22 K ansas City ........... 85 28 M in n e so ta .................. 34 34 California .................. 31 39 Chicago ...................... 24 38 ................ 24 38 M ilwaukee M onday’s Results .651 — .561 BH .547 6‘* .469 l l t i .455 12Vi . 365 IS .673 — .556 8 . 500 1 1 4 . 443 1.5ia .387 IS 1 a .387 18}* Oakland 3. Minnesota 2 B altim ore 7, Washington 3 Chicago 5, Kansas City I MUwaukee 3. California 2 T u esd ay’s Schedule Oakland (Hunter 10-4) a t M inneso­ ta (P erry 10-5) night California 0-3) at M ilwaukee night (Fisher 5-3 or H assler (Lockwood 3-6) K ansas C ity (Drago 7-2) at Chica­ go (B rad ley 6-6) night B altim ore (Jackson 0-0 and Cuel­ lar 11-1) at Washington (Janeskl 1-5 and Cox 2-3). twi-night Detroit (Cain 5-1) and (Coleman 6-3) (Stottlem yre 7-5 and at New Y ork Bahnsen 6-6) Cleveland (Siebert 9-4), night (Hargan 0-5) at Boston NATIONAL LEAGUE East W. L. P et. G .B. Pittsburgh ................ 44 25 New’ Y o r k .................. 37 27 St. Louis .................. 37 32 Chicago ...................... 34 33 Montreal .................. 26 36 ............ 27 39 Philadelphia .638 .578 . 536 7 .507 9 .419 1 4W .409 15VS West . . . . 46 25 San F ran cisco .......... 37 30 Los A ngeles H o u sto n .............. . . . . 32 35 Cincinnati ................ 31 38 ...................... 32 40 Atlanta San D iego ................ 23 46 Monday’s Results Pittsburgh 6. N ew York (V Atlanta 6. Montreal 4 P hiladelphia 5. Cincinnati 8 (12) St. Louis at Los Angeles, late night .648 — .552 7 .478 12 .449 14 .444 1 4^ .333 22 gam e T u esd ay’s Schedule N ew Y ork (W illiam s 2-1) at P itts­ burgh (N elson 1-1) night Chicago (Jenkins 10-6) at San Fran­ cisco (R eb erger 2-0) night Montreal (P.enko 7-5) at A tlanta (Recd 6-5) night P hiladelphia nati (N olan 4-7) night (Wise 7-4) at Cincin­ St. Louis (Carlton 10-3) at Los An­ geles (O steen S-4) night Houston (B lasingam e 4-7) at San D iego (Pnehus 3-6) night EXPERTS O N YW ENGINES R E P A IR E D — REBUILT B R A K E S — TU N E-U PS GILBERT'S V.W. SERVICE 477-6798 1621 E. 6th The A she Smash Arthur Ashe survived the first round at Wim bledon Monday, using his backhand for a come-from-behind victory. —UPI Telephoto Top Yank Netters Advance in England aside Bob Howe of Australia 6-2, 6-0 , 6-1 . D e f e n d i n g champion John Newcombe of Australia, seeded No. 2, ousted Boh Hewitt of South Africa 6-4, 6-3, 7-5. W I L C O B O S T D A . 6421 Burnet Lane Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HOKDA SALES AND SERVICE WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Stan Smith, Arthur Ashe and Cliff Richey, the top three U.S. hopes, coasted through the first round of lawn championships Monday, tennis but it was giant-killer Tom , Gorman of Seattle who registered the biggest upset. the Wimbledon in Gorman, who eliminated Rod last w eeks London Laver Grass Courts tourney, shocked eighth-seeded Cliff Drysdale of South Africa 2-6, 6-8, 6-3, 6-4, 7-5 in an amazing comeback. is the No. 4 U.S. J player, behind Davis Cuppers Smith, Ashe and Richey. Gorman Smith of Pasadena, Calif., won en impressive 6-2. 6-4. 6-3 victory over Michael Leclercq of France. ASHE OF RICHMOND, VA., trouble before over-1 had some coming Erik Van Dillen of San Mateo, Calif., 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-5. Richey of San Angelo, Tex., had a few rough moments before s u b d u i n g Dick Crealy of Australia, 6-3, 9-7, 2-6, 6-3. Laver, the world’s top player and No. I seed here, seeking a title, brushed fifth Wimbledon Att. Volksw agen O w ners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service S E R V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N V E H IC L E S IS O U R S P E C IA L T Y The O n ly Independent V W G a ra g e in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 B U R N E T R O A D A c ro ss from Gulf M a rt G L 2-0205 C L O S E D S A T U R D A Y • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e B B • • • • • # Going Hiking? lf you are going outdoors this summer, your shoes are yo ur most important items. W e carry the finest hiking and mountain clim bing shoes and boots evadable any­ where. IS styles of the great V O Y A G E U R boots are in stock now in all sizes for ladies and men sizes 5 to 14. RED WING SHOE STORE 5504 Burnet Rd. 454-9290 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Randy Harvey '"esL W Exile Ends Jack Nicklaus blows a putt on the seventeenth green for a bogey and hands Lee Trevino a three-stroke lead in the U.S. Open playoff and Bill Fleming takes the opportunity to throw In a plug for the football game his network Is telecasting Saturday. Southwest Conference sports Information directors, just relieved of a grueling basketball season and right in the middle of baseball and track, get together to put out the 1971 Football Preview by the end of May. And an English professor takes time out to tell his class how Huey Long used to sit on the bench with the Louisiana State football team. Whether you like it, King Football Is returning from its five-monfb exile to reclaim the throne It never really relinquished except maybe to Canonero II. Yes, football is hack in the blood or at least on the mind of every red (or Orange! gridiron enthusiast In America. Not even unexpected rain heating down on the roof can wash out Cotton Speyrer's catch against UCI,A, Ray Dowdy and Scott Hen­ derson heading the goal line stand against Arkansas or Mike Curtis picking off a Craig Morton pass in the Super Bowl. Memories like that send a true football fan to the cedar chest In search of the Fred MacMurray raccoon coat and mothball-smelling pennant A ll-A m erican Memories And memories like that will send the true football fan to his favorite easy chair in front of the television set Saturday night for the eleventh annual Coaches All-America Game from Lubbock, the one Bill Fleming interrupted U.S. Open play to advertise. The All-America Game, which drew a record 42,150 fans In Its first year at Texas Tpch's Jones Stadium last season after un­ successful stints at Buffalo and Atlanta, should score well In the Nielsen ratings although it’s up against Mary Tyler Moore, Amie and Mannix. , Why? Because the All-America game will dance with who brought It. . .the passers. This year's festival features Jim “Heisman Trophy” Plunkett of Stanford and SMU’s Chuck Hixon for the West and Alabama's Scott Hunter, Ohio State's Rex Rpm and LSU's Buddy Lee for the East. And that filling of Lubbock skies with pigskin is likely to make fans forget some of the players who won't be on hand like Steve Woreter, Notre Dame's Joe Thelsmann, Archie Manning of Ole Miss or Ghio State's Jack Tatum. By the way, despite “ Woo’s” absence, there will be a shade of Orange among the All-Americas. Offensive tackle Bobby Wuensch and defensive end Bill Atessis are representing the University in Red Raiderland. They’ll play for the West In the rubber game. The East won last year, 34-27, to tie the series at 5-5. Passing's I he Test Whichever team takes the advantage this year will depend on how well Coach Boh Devaney s (Nebraska) West quarterback Plunkett and Coach Charlie McClendon’s (LSU) E ast Leader Hunter can hit fheti* targets. And with targets like Chuck Dim s of Arkansas. Ernie Jennings of Air Forop, Boh Moore of Stanford for the West and Indiana's John Andrews and Michigan’s Paul Staroba for the East, how can you m iss? The AU,America game has been unusually lucky for an all-star fa m e of getting quarterbacks who do not m iss often, even in losing. Georgia’s Fran Tarkenton still hold the touchdown pass record of three after his E ast teem lost the Initial battle in 1961 before a scant 12,913 fans, 30-20. Another losing man-under was Arkansas' Jon Brittenum In 1967, who was named Most Valuable Player in a 12-9 West loss. Perhaps the hest show by a losing quarterback, however, was last season when .San Diego State’s Dennis Shaw broke three passing records in the West defeat. Ironically, .Shaw was also the goat as he threw an Interception t t a t was returned for a touchdown with only 4:15 left In the E ast's 34-27 victory. And those were losing quarterbacks which makes It easy to un­ derstand why Sports Illustrated calls the All-America game “the best of the all-star gam es.” Some of the winning signal callers Include Heisman Trophy winners John Huarte of Notre Dame, Florida’s Stere Spurrier and UCLA's Gary Behan. T hat should give Stanford’s Plunkett something to think about Plunkett, Rill Fleming and that English professor. D R IV E A L IT T L E — S A V E A L O T i * c» I 3 c t L i e u M u I ci 31 50 41.00 125 00 225.00 2*5 03 C A P IT O L D I A M O N D S H O P <.03 Commo.}?.* Hex* H.j’r AUSTIN 47b ui:$ SEMI-RAZOR CUT Medical Arf* Square BARBER SHOP 2915 RED R IVER RENAISSANCE HUNGRY? Renaissance has the hest, cheapest food in town and a completely new menu. HOT? BORED? Renaissance Is alf conditioned at last! Renaissance has live entertainment. Rick Stein, Thursday and Saturday, Greenwood, Friday. "Captain Video", Friday and Saturday. THIRSTY? Renaissance has a happy hour 3-6. Light and Dark Schlitz and Bud is $1.00 a pitcher on tap. LONELY? Don t be. Come to RENAISSANCE 801 RIO GRANDE 476-6019 "ALL THINGS TO ALL PEOPLE” total experience in luxury living FOR UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS MEN A N D W O M E N madison house for the intellectual and fun Congenial atm osphere g rl suites, all fuMy carpeted and air-conditioned. The by a graciously pe-’ence in luxury versity area. hint to mention our m s d M A D IS O N - D E X T E R bus and chauffered LTD Country Squire station wagon. ii* is accentuated landscaped patio area complete with heated swimming pool. Your ex- in the Uni­ facilities and eir-conditio ned loving girl. Spacious four end indoors iv rg is made com p ete by the finest meals (21 of them) service, Laundry luxurious dexter house T1- * plush place. Total experience in luxury living plus a lot more. The 21 delicious gourmet men s, the comp ete m a:d service, the wide screen color te avision, the hair dryers, end the we I trained, understanding ho.se mothers and counselors ail add up to the total experienca in your University luxury living. A l this plus the M A D IS O N H O U S E extras of eir-conditioned transportation. dexter west T”e p'ush place: r 'u s som eth'-g e’ss for men. A complete section separate from D EXTER H O U S E proper, w.th y c . r own pr vate entrance and exits. Everything that is D EXTER H O U S E ;s D EXTER W E S T ; p Plus separate living quarters. Plus six-day maid service. Plus total freedom to come end go as you please. Pius off street parting. For the man's stomach, 21 ae iciously prepared mea s waex;y. This is the place for the man, D EXTER W EST. madison-bellaire apts* is apartm ent living at its best. A ttractively furnished, spacious, walk-in cosets, free full baths, we I arranged kitchen with colorful appliances and o t h e r length draperies and se f con- it! You also have the benefits of M A D IS O N - living. AT next do o r to M A D I S O N H O U S E , they include a.r-conditioned trans­ Th’s c a d e T.V., 2 niceties ere "in ". A n d s.per-thick carpets, matching full tained heating a -d cooling systems make D EX TER portation to and from campos, delicious contract meals if desired, end off street perking. I & 2 Bedroom Apts from *145 TRACE 2217 S. Lakeshore Blvd. at Town Lake 444-3917 Open l l A.M.-7:30P.M DAILY THE MOONLIGHTERS: They roam the campus after dark in search of movies, guest lectures and other events. But after all is seen and said they need to be fed . . . with something like our number 7 charcoal burger with pizza cheese and Dolly Sauce (pizza-type, spicy tomatoe sauce). Oh riches! Hindi soil- wes t t i l l Som ething for tl e m a '* student. Som ething bold and new for It Is total experience In Uni­ versity living. All the extras and benefits of M A D IS O N - D E X T E R houses with a special touch added to suit the campos man. The same delicious 21 weekly meals, the same air-con­ ditioned transportation, the same 8 day maid service, the same color television, but with the atmosphere of complete freedom especially for the man. c/lcross The Street People ACROSS THE STREET, 411W. 24th, Open 8 a.m.-l a.m. Our Specialty: Charcoal Hamburgers . . . COME SEE. COME LIVE. T A K IN G A PP LIC A T IO N S N O W FOR SU M M ER A N D FALL INQUIRE AT M A D ISO N H O U SE EXECUTIVE OFFICE 709 W. 22nd STREET 478-9891 or 478-8914 Tuesday, June 22, 1971 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page Food Scares Stimulating Health Fad t e ) i m » * * Y o r k T t m e * N e w * S e r v i c e has led to abuses. Bruno Cordgliano, who Is L O S A N G E L E S — I T . e r e w a s t h e D D T s c a r ® manager of a Tore here called Naturway, said: a n d t h * c y c l a m a t e s c a r e , th ® c r a n b e r r y s c a r e a r . i ‘‘When I took over they had ‘organic* signs on t h e t u n a fis h s c a r ® . R o b e r t C h o a t e s a :d * .'.°r e That’s impossible because I know w a s n o t e r w u g h n u t r i ‘'.o n in c e r e a l s , a n d D-;- p h N a d e r s a i d t h e r e w a s to o m u c h f a t in h o t d o z e . M e m b e r s o f t h e c o u r i e r c t " i r e s a id a r r T h i n g t h e i r p a r e n t s a t e rn us* b e bad. people just don't grow organic cauliflower and b ro co i. Another produce guy started sending rn® stuff he said was organic and I got suspicious. I took a razer blade and stared scraping an apple, O v ® r th.® l a s t f e w '-'ears t h e s e s e e d s h a v e b e e n f e r t i l i z e d b y p u b !i c i ‘.v. N‘o w t h e y h a v e b lo s s o m e d and all th® 'p ra y came offT I n t o a v e r d a n t a n d r a p i d l y g r o w in g i n d u s t r y — “ There I ' nothing mysterious a b o u t health h e a lt h fo o d . Th® health foods business, of course( Ls not f ew, but traditionally it catered to a group of faddists who mixed their rnr*' s in h.er. lens and foods.” added Corigliano. who was form erly an insurance underwriter. “ It ’s just the natural food with nothing to put into it or tak®n out of it Tee staples in any health food store include (Related Story, Page IO.) whole grains and breads, unrefined sugar and guzzled * arrot jur.-e. Lodi »<• f.>-» mothers are murKh.nsr organic es a: bdle class establish­ gi\.ng their k.ds wheat germ as sna'.-:s. E X P E R T S estimate the number of health ford jr*rjr®<: had doubled Lo three years, from . _• *: o 2 500. In California alone, three r.ev stores open tr:c»r-; 7,*®eic. And some big supemr.arkets and department stores have already opened beg.'n I sod feet ions or are exploring the idea. Tr.fi boom has centered in California and New York but New Orleans, for example now has 12 stores, four of which opened bn the last year. In fact, the biggest problem facing the industry today is not selling but buying. There is hist not enough merchandise to go around. Recently a store owner in Los Angeles placed orders for 73 different products, including 13 kinds of herb tea, that went unfilled. Thie enormous demand and the lack of supply unbleac ed flour a bewildering array of tea and honey, dried fruits and nuts, pure juices, special cookies and candle?, fertile eggs, raw milk. peas, yogurt, peanut bulter that is all peanuts, and jam that is all jam. SOM E C A R R Y chickens that have been allowed ‘o ran around and scratch for their own food. Meat is scarce, but a few stores offer such products as frankfurters made from cows that What all health foods have in common is high prices. A survey in Berkeley estimated that the local stores charged 150 to 250 percent more than regular markets. Most prices are not that inflamed, but one stor® here was selling organic tomatoes last week; nonorganic for 95 cern*; a pound tomatoes in the next bin were 59 cents. Eggs in Manhattan cost 60 to 75 cents in regular stores and SI.19 in health food markets. Students Argue Employe Status Do UT Marrieds Want Day Care? Editor s Note: The following is a questionnaire designed to aid Student Government in its attempts to establish a day care center for the University. It is directed prim arily at m im ed students who are asked to complete the questionnaire and return it to the Student Government office in I nion Building 3-1. Statistical Information: Age---------- Spouse s age No. children-------- Ages of children — Approximate Monthly Income Are you on the G I B ill? ------ Husband: Student?--------- No. semester hrs.- Em ployed? Hours per week------ W ife: Student?---------- No. semester hrs.- Em ployed? Hours per week Child care arrangements for preschool ehildren- Approximate monthly cost of child care- Type of housing you live in----------- distance from campus--------------- - A p p r o x im a t e Do you regularly use the shuttle buses?-- Do shuttle buses run near your residence ?- Would you need the shuttle buses for transportation to and from a campus day carp center? - Would you gi\e the development of a co-operative day care center a high priority rating as a need for your fam ily? - ■ lea tors poser* protesting * err S tate :: Government to file disci • University pen* T h e S ' *•? a State fur i> collected by T ” refer®. i * Student Gov are State en required to s St.-ie entp'.ov*^ Bob Bird er m.er.f prest withholding s adntirtts'r-.vve Benson, who affidavit, had u\Va rp no* problems ’ B i h o w e . e r. G o v e r n m e n t r it the res' of a is not paid- one) campus...........your residence Would you be willing to work on a fair share time com­ mitment to a co-operative day care center?--------- As a married student fam ily what are your most prevHn needs? day care centers-----------financial planning------- — baby sitting---------- in­ creased recreation programs---------- social contact with other married couples for fam ilies---------- Counseling resources---------- Other- food co-operative-------- * educational programs If You Need Help or .lust Someone tth® Will Listen Telephone 176-7 TI At Vnv lime The T e le p h o n e Counseling and Referral Service are not given hormone injections. Would you prefer day rare facilities located near (circle F o r S a l e 5 :30 pm ' if i ff) xnvFRTisrsa h V T K S . .05 Ix x uea .07 .06 rd (la word nnlnlmnm) S Each tddltlnnal lim*! ....... $ htndr-nt r a t * o ne t im * K a' h additional w o rd 20 C o n * * ' a tle e IO w o rd s 15 w o rd s 20 words 1 ml. int ti tor h 2 m l, 3 col. inrh 4 col. Inch Clft«*m *d D isp lay I ro lam n t on* inch on* tim* I 2 in E a c h .......... I 2 OO ......................... .. ......... .*«*#.*«•*#»*» ....... . .... . ................... . SI I OO . 115.00 . sn on . $38 OO . $70 OO . $'*6 OO SI.70 OO .A d d itio n al T im * ........... I No c o p r ch a n * * for c o lu re n ti TS inane rate *.) • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T ES lets (o r 75c th * firtt 15 w ordi or f ro*, 5c each additional word. S tu ­ dent mutt ihow A u d ito r* race ip t in ad van ce in Jou rnalism end pay Bldg. 107 (rom 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d ay through Friday. D E A D L I N E S C H E D U L E T n e sd ay T e x a n M o n d ay. 11:90 a ni. T h u rsd a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y . l l OO a m F r id a y T e x a n T h u rs d a y , l l OO a m. “ In the e v e n t of e r r o r s m a d e In an a d v e r tis e m e n t. Im m e d ia t e n o tic e rnu-t be Kl m n a s the p u b lis h e r * a r e re s p o n s ib le to r o n ly O N E In c o r r e c t In s e rtio n . A ll c l a im s fo r a d ju s tm e n ts th a n at) sho uld be m a d e n o t ■afer d ays alte r publication " i i: • () ( "J) ’ .'S O L E S $79 95 ,) y it yrht ba • ! st received a f.nt rf 4 brand new stereo con- i i - 1071 nationally advertised finish re In be a itiful walnut f yrterns arid world IW C , 11lrntabies. T h e y feature % * 4 cr , , radios and p o w e r fu l solid |y $70 95 each or small ( I n' laimed Freight, I arr ar 9 a rn 6 p m ., Mon.- ;nerit ■ ri Sat. 'ti! I. rn ll “ I A i ’.f.K T V s : Lim ite d su pp ly of lnstant-on . e bv. $55 441 1345. 442-7475.1 I: ta used 19" ( i Tm tit • 1305 M a n c h a c a R o a d . _ FO P f ■ ii P R I C K S paid for diamonds, j o:,;, if,I D iam o nd Shop. 603 (ll(l , r ornrn- co P< t ry. 476-0178 in still ca rto n * (5), r»71 S IN 'G E R sewing machine* are T h e se nome Singer's la te d models and are equipped to do m o st kinds of rowing, such as zig -/ag Milch, buttonhole . sewing on t At/ms, monogram!!.):, and rn u h more $49.95 each cash «.r terms. Unclaim ed i relK-.t. 6535 N. I .arn ar; 9 a rn 6 p.m. Mon.-E r l . Sat. 'iii I. T W O Y E A R obi 250'C K a w a s a k i O ' l e for $62.j With 2 m miles. W ill sell Ca' ll. < "ii 444 Hoi3 afte r 5 30pm. ' , : C O M P O N E N T S Y S T E M S 1971 compo- (.'.) « om plele with .speakers, f ., i 'l b esc i n i l a b i e , and d .st cover J , jiv t,;,!-. ston/.'-d sets will tie sojd for $09.95 cacti. U n ci a rued Fre ig h t, 6535 Lam ar. S I 'N K ISH - A M IsR IC A S most popular sailboat N e w stock of Sunfish p arts ic e d sailboats ; ,r r i\ 'd N e w and V a ,lin g im po rts. 926.6804 I, . t i l l Si/. S M IT H C O R O N A 250 e l l ' trie portable new, W ith cmm* htig typewriter COV cf, 441 UH i ,. 196:: I )O D G K I MOO J oil 8 O'cllnder v;:5 cubic inch. 472-0370, 476-9-43. U'l " W A C radio, while walls, , age, oil pressure gauge, ix i■ i * • ta.rad t! r o-hr.ut. $1,595. 478-1657 or 32. 08.,.,. tachometer, and excellent In low arn regularly main condition rr pi re co rd in g j- i i per album, no w att stereo am- S T R A C K custom P I . , $45 478 718.3 after 5 p rn. 1968 I M W 4 D O O R sedan, g re y, good '. i,nditlon. $1,200. 478-8874 a fte r 3. > ' M A R T I N j - -. - s t r i n g . . i.-c si' ii, s a c rific e . $200. C a ll 454-1158. G u i t a r , »’> M i s c e l l a n e o u s W a n t e d T A K E P IA N O L E S S O N S from Applied Piano major. All ages and all levels a r ' r-j.ted. ' ail 476-1796. $50 R E W A R D F O R In fo rm atio n about rental larg e , old two story house or larg e g a ra g e . 477-3516. SA N T A M A S I A A PA RT M EN TS * designed for fa m ily liv in g " A C 68 P L Y M O U T H , 4 door. V-8, and ric e . _____________ 0 .to m a tif SI.095. 836-0781. tires. V e ry N e w new D e c e m b e r 1969). 1363 P I A T 124 S P O R T S Coup* (B o u g h t Ivjw m ileage, 5-sp*ed Mi che! in radial*. A C. E x tra clean. S2.350. 346-063' 1970 V O L K S W A G E N C A M P E R . A C, j rap* deck. S3,150. 327-2235. speakers. 15.000 mb®*, i F A R F I S A O R G A N 43 keys, 12 key bas* p lu i am p lifie r. Good boy. C a ll 4;>3- 3184. __ _____________ 1966 P O R S C H E . R e b u ilt engine $2500. 472-1800 o r 441-3312. ________________ _ S W IS S D E S S I N A nub-m lnlature 85mm .Iud- < a m e ra w ith accessaries, $100 v>n D ip rr c hri re'f*r for Volkswajcon $50. R an d o lp h Berry, 475-2148, 477-8751. 1370 Y A M A H A 125 E n d u ro (y e llo w ). P e r f e c t b ody and m e ch an ical co n d i­ tion (n e v e r ra c e d ). $425 W ith b u m p er f a r r i e r , tw o helm ets, and kidn ey belt, 1450. 454-8446 a f t e r 5 P rn. S O N Y 660 T A P E re co rd er -- m ust sell - best offer 476- p erfect condition 9269. I $475 S U P E R D E A L - A m l bomb — Loaded '63 S p o rt F u r y 476-9269. Zuni N E L S O N ’S G IF T S ; complete selection Jew elry: African and M exican Imports. 4612 South Congress. _______________ 444-3814. Indian A A A C O N AUTO TRANSPORT Free ca'" ar# ab a to r®'.o r '' r. a d- a's 21 or c r ie r an/wf-era U .- .A . 9'2 C c""em * Da at, Tex#* 2 i 4-742 4272 L E A R N to play G U IT A R , beginner and advanced. D rew Thomason. 478-73-31, 478-2079. ___________ SKYDIVE Austin Perdchu’a Center For further inform s*'on •vier 9 D .m . C A L L 465-7074 W A N T E D : G O O D home fo r four y e a r old ne .tare d fem ale Siam ese cat. C all 454-9997 a ft e r 5:30 p rn. H e l p W a n t e d $637.33 PER MONTH (full f in e ) 8071 N I . a m a r 454-3518 1 bedroom — S 23 2 bedroom — $ 5 3 bedroom — $128 a i V • ai pa d A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . ‘ n - g * * — 9 *»r" p c '# 'y r ' p e r- - 9-*-*, a ' d r s T t ’"■* even -qi. t pot * or.* r e q . ' * o '’e r *#* c t # ro . r q p ao t ■» # 'd o . f g '- r g persona - as. Mo- o ' q e * P * ' a n ce ' a &; . for c • s b j t ro t required. M en s'", , ’d b e spor‘ s — 'b e d . A a p p i’cant* m .s* be an * to a ’ on" wa- wi*h t'ra opec'. *e sa' crested person* tray apr. / a* 627 W e s t 3d " St. IO a m . to I p m . Q U I E T A T M O S P H E R E . One and two bedroom. N orth, sm all ch ild ren O K Gas, w ater, cab le furnished. N o lease. $U5-$135 . 454-8853. ___ O N E n e a r .shuttle bus. P r ic e d right fo r su m m er B E D R O O M furn. apts, F’ rom $110. 609 E 4.Th, 476-2633 n e a r la w school, M A R R I E D S T U D E N T S . S m a ll com plex leasing at su m m er I B R furn. apts $120. gas and rate s w a ter Od T H I : B A C C A R A T S , 3703 Har- mon, 453-7190, 476-2633. 1968 O P E L K A D E T R S four speed. D isc brakes, t r a ile r hitch. One ow ner. 1 $850 o r o ffer. 441-3876 B E A U T I F U L , L O N G H A IR E D w h ite fem ale kittens. H a d shots A v a ila b le 8/21. $6 G all 476-1153 afte r I SAN ANTONIO N IT N O Y House of F u rn itu r e Is G v ',r ; ’ concern t a ) cr-er nq C o aq# ■ 1971 K A W A S A K I 250 Endu ro. M ust sell ■ in p e rfe c t condition. O n ly 600 miler,. D avid . 451-2105. E l e c t r i c t y p e w r i t e r portable Sm lth-Corona 120. Pa n aso n ic 8 tra c k stereo tape yste m . P,otl one y e a r old. 454 3839. ! P H IL C O also c la s s ic a l V a t a r C a ll 454-6178 a fte r S T E R E O sale, fo r M O V IN G . M U S T Sell P h ilro A C stereo F o u r speakers. UT IF’ co n ve rter, desk, etc. l i e t off' ■ 476 0898 1969 H O N D A M O P E D . $115 Fin e condition. H e lm e ts insurance, o ther . extras in' dcd 478-3562, P a x 1674 16’ C E N T V L Y ll K H O V ! EP. Condition. $: 595. C a ll 327-9032 appointm ent M a rin a. to see a t I •' e lle n t fur L akesh o re i O N E W O L E N S A K 6250 'a p e re co rd e r 55 w a tts R M S p er channel T h re e 1 heads, echo sound on .sound 454-2753 I B R A S S D O U B L E bed. 444-8589. j 1969 P O N T IA C L e M A N S . 16.200 m ile s Fin e condition A f . p ow er b rakes and steering, rad io C a ll 441-4818. i L a te '69 C A D IL L A C . M in t condition $4,200. f a l l 477-0759 17,000 m ile s between 6 h p m DISCOUNT STEREO 1 0 % -5 0 ;'o ok Kenwood -- c 'o — - Y H - A R -- Sony — Sco tch ott-er* K you fin d * « * r p f ' * , cr. % b s ck before you b .y! m o vin g ! Opening a t 1513 M a n o r R o ad J u 'y I . Closed Ju n e 18-30. R o o m & B o a r d r o o m A N I) B O A R D fur $fK) for six w eek s< n!< U : a t R am sh o rn coed Go­ Street. 478-6586. op, 710 W e st 21 vt B o a rd e rs only also w elcom e. if w illin g F O R Y O U N G w om an. $70 m onthly, less in household t a r . chores R o llin g w o o d a re a . N e e d 327-0697. ass ist lo TOWER MANOR FOP. St EU A N O W O M E N O ' / one block from Campus. Summer room and boarci: $149.50 for 6 wee Irs. 19C 3 U ' jor. Ty A v e r * 4/3 2185 R o o m m a t e s M A L E , F E M A L E sh are two bedroom, two hath ap artm e n t. S u m m e r rat'-, 49 .VI month each. M a id se rvice , fu r­ and Stu d y b ills nished. recreatio n room and ping pong table. L e F ont. 803 W e s t 28th. 472-0480. pa J all F E M A L E N E E D E D for F a ll to share lux try one bedroom ap artm ent. Close to ca m p u s. Shu ttle. $80 plus e le c tric ity . 477-4271 A U D IO C O N S U L T A N T S O F A U S T IN 45? 3950 w e 'd e /i after 5, a d r / weel'eeo* F E M A L E R O O M M A T E cozy house w ith m e ch i' k. $47 50 plus \-t share bills 444-3002 l ite IO YEAR M A N U F A C T U R E R 5 G U A R A N T E E WATERBEDS , S IN G L E T H R O N G ! I K IN G SIZE MALE, FEMALE , -t-jjjjn \no bedroom , two baff apartment. ca -. M a r i j service, furnished, a l bills paid. Study > and • . - I ping pong room i tab'a. rnrer re ’ * 49 SO recreation • LE FO N T , SO I W e s t 28th, 472-6480. do-;'..®. U p to $ ),4C'j . 5e"ri resume V P. O . Box 12256, San A r.to r’o, Texas 782 2 Eq ual O pportunity Em ployer. D A N C E R S W A N T E D . A p p ly Poodle Dog L o nge afte r 11 a rn. 453-9410. C O M M IS S IO N S - renew als P a r t tim®, C ir c L :G health agents. T ra in in g I counselor. P a lm , 453-6741 f Succe! i out of M O N E Y R E G I S T E R E D un d e rg ra d u ate tate students w an ted as sub- Je c : > for psychology e xp erim en t $1 75 f'ir one ho u r's work. C all Ja n e t B y r d at 171-5104 tor tim es. the A u stin Dor t be hassled by Jo t m arket H e re Is the closest y o u 'll e v e r come to fu n w o rk. N o p res su re te le ­ phone sales, com m ission p ay a ve ra g e s to $3 75 p er hour. T w o shifts $1 '/I a v a ila b le : M o n - K rl , S u n - Th rs . 5-10. H a ir, dress, etc , no hassle. 11-4 o r ( a ll R a n d y or Donna, 454-4882. C o m m u n ity D evelopm ent P la n n e r : with the M id dle R io G ran d e D e v e lo p ­ ment C o un cil, a nine-county reg io n al •ommission Q u ilific a tio n s M a s t e r ’s ta 1*1 inning or Econom ics, or re late d fie ld ; ,r B a c h e lo r 's and one-year e x p erien ce. A b ility Inde­ to w rite well and w o rk pendently. S ta rtin g s a la ry $10,000.00. An Ko tai O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r. A p p ly . R ic h a rd I* Thom as. E x e c u tiv e D ire cto r, M I D D L E R IO G R A N D E I) E V E L O C M E N T C O U N C IL , P O B o x 1461, Del Rio, T e x a s, 788-40 512 775-8514. T u t o r i n g I G I I T A R In s tru m e n ts | furnished. L e a rn to ul-ay before y o u ) • buy a g u ita r. Be g in ners w e lco m e . ( all LFL S S O N S ! I ’ Jo h n n y M cyerson , 465-7552. D R E W T H O M A S O N is b ack M e x ic o C ity . f r o m 1 j I M A T H . S E M F IS T E R R a te s. A v a ila b le often as r e c fs s a rj'. F o r Bu sin e ss, Li- 1 her;*!-Arts M 'ltors. C . R . E . P re p a ra tio n . R ates. Results. a n te ' ti G ro u p Cl I M A T H E N A M IG S , 452-1327. I L F A R N T O P L A Y G u itar, b eg in n er and a d va n ce d . D re w Thom ason, 478-7331, I ' /■ M $19 WITH THIS AD PA D S / G D f R A M E S IN S I O C K WATERBEDS OF TEXAS 403 E. 6 )h A r6-1200 IO 6 O P T M I TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD 478-2079. CALL GR 1-5244 T U T O R I N G B Y G R A D U A T E student*. - business cou rses. 451- H u m a n itie s 4557. L o s t g F o u n d A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . APARTMENT LOOKING? YOUR TIME IS VALUABLE. OUR SERVICES ARE FREE. I fP fllM «■* T f I I I'd ' I *** * I- ■ • K A p a r t m e n t s , U N F . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . R o o m s T y p i n g IOO E a s t R iv e rs id e D r iv e 444-3337 $ 40, p s e'en*' >/. 2 bine** to la w A P a ra g o n P ro p e rty Snhon . 2800 Se c v 472 536°. F o r R e n t PASO HOUSE I6C3 W . i t ^ .,. E X P E R T T Y P I S T . T h e s e s , b rie fs Mrs. Tullos. 453-M24. IB M Se !e< r - ' " * *• ' s'rce s. ?d roorr%. A |„4 :r TV T yp in g . M The Comp FULL-TI MI th, tn t nn.A r e Prof T P U G-ando s’ . I v for I) j tag ti Ph C A SA DEL R O N O W L E A S N S F O R S U M M E R stores, L a rg e pool, b ills paid- hand y to I.aw Shuttle. C ity buses. School, m ailbox 1 bedrooms. 3 b ed room s 1 bath 2 bedroom s 2 baths P.eas na hie. 3212 R e d R iv e r . 478-1834. 452-8715. N O L E A S E Larg e I a-ri 2 L e d - '— re -ad C arp e t, a r, G .E . d *.-**--• r a c c '/ , f c - r . 't a ' * ', poci. 2 c ocr$ from 5 a».gan H qh. "ar.r.an range, 453-7608. C O M A N C H E E*v Cenc'-j* and I bed ro o "* . $ 3 to C a 478 3 9 !1 at**' I c r SINGLE ROOMS tre e p • tie*. a J r-: a I D E A L L A R G E : P riv a te bath, furnished bcdroon in quiet neighborho'.i F' r Busin ess or Professional w m a A fte r five, 476-9051. R E A L I T Y V a ' A T IS I T ? a ' a - F l e i $55 a r -.'th r *-d t v •- .* « | p ri. aq®', and a - ,f- *q e t a you bf ry. IO *' a comm H E B R E W H O U S E C O O P I fees W . A v * . 4 ” ' G S P E C I A L R A T ES FOP. Y E A R L E A S E ! SUMMER RATES $120 R e g u l a r r a l e s $130. La r g e T w o b e o r o o m n o q r d o w n t o w n . S w im - , rn r g p e e ! , c a r p e * e d , a c, w o o d p a n e lin g . 442 3910 472-1985 W O O D W A R D A P T S . 1722 E . W oo d w ard 444-7555 242 unts 8 sep arate clu sters • S p e cia l student oriented clu sters. • S w im m in g pools. • M o d erate p rices w ith all utilities p aid no hidden ch arg e s! • O n ly 5 m inutes to U T . • C om plete on-premises w a s h a te rla . 9 F r e e all-channel T V • A m p le p a r k in g fo r te n a n ts T>- *« - rn «.> • ms C ity A i, papers, the*-. Typing. 476 4179, 6 n.m.-n dnight a n y day. <1 Just North of 27rh I Quads' j r * M B A T y p in g . M u l t l l l thing. B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typ’-g Service to th® tailored j ’udi nts for mg theses an d d i s s c r u:s. re®ds of U n iv e r s it y Spo< .al kl-- board e q u ip m e n t sMenc® and eng.r® er- language Phone C R 2-3210 and C R 2-7677 2707 Hom ph.ii P a rk I E X P E R I E N C E D I disxet tai) :. , ! Charlene S ta rk , 453 52R ob T Y P IS T . 11 ,M exi T h e s ® % i ve va/ a * v • '.cl r CJA » i r e t i n e (to LL j l A N L e — $-05 W A L K V a c a n c y in 1-bedroom a p artm e n t, P a n e led . A /C , carpeted. On shuttle V O L K S W A G E N , M E R C E D E S , V o lv o K o .,V ille m ech an ic offers ch eap est j rates g u a ran te e d service. tow , m a jo r Jobs. H am ilto n A utom otive, Kerr- F’re e bus I . A ll b ills paid except e le c tricity. Ville, (512) 357-8777. F A S r S I , IV R Ext 'dli ut pi u . ;tl ’ypitlK of p. p. . lions, i .ngli« h ces b ackground. 476 120o I Ll scv. '! I mum it > s, so. E l s <.n- I;,. ri­ ENVOY APTS. 2108 San G a b rie l C a ll T e r r y B e lt a t 476-9363. H A I R L T D . C a ll in fo rm a tio n on , for h a ir singeing for spilt ends and s h a g 1 cuts 454 0984 ) L I F , A a R D ' : a* • . dissertations , ,A F I .LD - Not. J st th* ® . ' a n d I Dnk An i rh i p ! I'* i" M aster » b arg es hoi M a ste r C h a rg e s honored. 412-7008 r d ai - L E A R N T O P L A Y Guitar, beginner and advanced. D re w Thom ason, 478-7331, S U M M E R E F F I C I E N C Y . F'our blocks cam pu s. T re e s, grass, A C, carpet, no deposit, c le a n and cheap. 472-4076. 478-2079. O N P: B E D R O O M A P A R T M E N T $115 a month plus e le c tric ity 454-0269. M a r ­ rie d students or grads only. T y p i n g M A Y I I FLEUR DE LIS 404 E . 30th S E R V I C E : . B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G dissertatio ns, Theses, reports, M im eographing. R e aso n a b le . H I 2-7184. i i>8 i.r L u x u ry 1 bedroom ap artm ent. S u m m e r rate s. W a lk in g distance o f Cam pus. W a ll to w a ll carpet, larg e closets, cable T V , dish w asher. Sh u ttle B u s . W a te r, gas paid. 477-5282. P R E T T I E S T C O U R T Y A R D I N A U S T IN com e see At L a m p lig h te r A p a rtm e n ts Fa b u lo u s clu b for p riv a te parties, pool, outdoor g rills. Plu sh and p riv a te in­ teriors w ith w e t bars, w alk-ln closets. S e r v e through bars, bonk shelves, p ri­ v a te bedroom wings. F'rom $149.50, all bills paid. 2125 Ashdal®, off B u rn e t R o ad I block north of Anderson L a n e C a ll 452-3298. tho University of Texas, v.i I Conscientious and proficient secretary- typist, with eleven years of experience typing reports, theses, dissertations, and term papers fo r students ail kinds of take cf meticulous care to type every student s work carefully proper form , composition, and correct spelling. N e w IB M Executive, carbo n rib­ bon, e 'e c tric typewriter, e q u ip p ed w th science and engineering symbols, lf you are exce1 ant quality, experience, and d ep e n d ab le *er- vice, please dial 478 0762 accu rate y, interested observing receiving in M A RG A It K I S TY PIN G Sits ® too ! " T p a c e F a s t and ar'ea r a te . B C re ­ ports, 70c p e r paso 442-5693 V I R G I N I A S C H N E ID E R T Y P I N G i ; . d : ui iati' I n- tsp ny, printing, b in d in g . s I . I : \ I < fle ig r a d u a te I I ii.) Koenig L a n e . Telephone: 465 7JOO and j N O R T H W E S T . N E A R A llan dale Y e a r s lo help yo u . 465- ( p i n g ex p e rien ce W O O D S I 472-4825US T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . N e a r ThCsis' Mls' Woods. Jus! North of 27th h. Guadalupi M B A T y p in g . M u ltilith in g . B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service S O U T H S H O R E A P A R T M E N T S O verlookin g T o w n L a k e and A u stin skyline. Convenient U T , Be rg stro m , and downtown. F'um ished, unfurnished. I bedroom from $135, 2 bedroom I and 2 bath fr< rn 182.50. A ll bills p aid — cab le T V . O N E A N D T W O B E D R O O M F U R N I S H E D A N D U N F U R N I S H E D In c lu d e s: C a ­ F'rom $135, a1! b ills paid ble TVL fu lly carpeted and draped, beautiful land scape, fa m ily area. C h ild ­ ren w elcom e, pets allow ed. Convenient to C T . Shuttle Bu*, and Downtow n. B R O W N S T O N E P A R K A IM 'S. 5106 N orth L a m a r 454-3496 A P a ra g o n P ro p e rty W ILLO W IC K APARTMENTS 600 South 1st 444-0687 On® and two b®dr'>oms B e a u tifu l creek, trees. N e a r downtown and U n ive rs ity . A P a ra g o n P ro p e rty JU S T C O M PLETED N EA R UT-D O W N T O W N 1113 W e s t I QtL Street N E / / F U R N IS H E D EFF C E N C Y / PART- a l b ’ s pa d. Storage c oset M E N 'S :or each acartm ®-*. C arp e te d , central air/heat, TV cable. O r / $125 per month. M g r. 202, 477-3972. S P A C F J F O R m ale s o r fem ales In two bedroom, two bath ap artm ents. $47 50 month, bills paid. P a rk in g , pool, m aid, shuttle. 2408 Leon, 476-3467. G E N T L E M A N T O be broom, 2-bath ap iirtm en t lu x u ry 2- $83 83 month, bills paid, parking, pool, m aid, shuttle. 2408 Leon, 476-3467. share THE BLACKSTONE L u x u ry livin g — m aid s e rv ic e ' L iv e A block from L a w School. E a c h a p a rt­ m ent is carpeted, draped, ce n tra l heat and air. U tilitie s paid. Designed for 4 persons p er a p artm e n t 2 bedroom, 2 bath. In d ivid u a ls m atched w ith co m ­ patible room m ates. S u m m e r ra te s ' 2910 R E D R I V E R 476-5631 A P a ra g o n P ro p e rty finn . apt w/pool, C L O S E T O U T — shuttle bus I B R la u n d iy , S u m m e r rates. F'rom $110. E L C H A P P A R FIL, 407 W . 38th, 454-9267. 476-2633. O A K K N O L L q uiet seclusion o n ly m in ­ utes from dow ntown & U T . P r iv a t e ba I cones and patios, pool and rec. ' room. 620 South F’irst, 444-1269, 476-2633. , T W O B L O C K S to U T , I & 2 B R eft. j apts. C arp et, A /C . sw im m in g pool. I S u m m e r rates from $120. A ll B ills Pa id . M A U N A K A I, 405 E . 31st. 472-2147, 476-, i 2633. S U M M E R R A T E S on eft., I and 2 bed- j room furn. apt. On shuttle bus. F rom ! gas A- w a te r pd. $ 1 1 0 JA C K S O N S Q U A R E , 4410 A ve . F , 452-9810, 476- 2633. T W O B E D R O O M apt. n e a r shuttle bus route. Wood paneling, carpeted, all fall ; built-in kitchen I $1X5. F I E S T A P L A C E , 4200 A ve. A, i ' 465-8823. 476-2633. S u m m e r $150, PARAGO N PROPERTIES 1300 C ity National Bldg. 472 4171 8:30 to 5:30 Q U A R T E R D E C K , T W O bedroom , two \ bath. D ishw ash er, cable T V , pool, Shuttle B us. p riv a te . $160 plus electri- ■ I c ity . 2308 E n fie ld . 476-1292. I T R F . A T Y O A K S — b rand new. 40' lu ­ x u ry pool. One bedroom, huge trees, ; p ark like setting. S u m m e r lease $119.50, , nothing co m p arab le. 3700 M a n ch aca. I I I 444-7764. S H O R T W A L K c a rria g e house. G round to T o w e r. Converted flo o r._ Tw o entrances. W a lls of bookcases. A C . One to th re e adults. No lease req u ired . $300 including utilities. 1902 N ue ce s. G R 6- ___________ 8683. N E E D M A L E to share three bedroom hom e on L a k e A ustin. C a ll 327-0993, a sk for T om . LAURA BODOUR 478-81 13 (C lo se to U.T.) The finest personal typing o f all y o u r University work. Theses, dissertations, reports, etc. A lso m ultilithing & b inding. to tailored the needs of U n iv e r s it y students. S p e c ia l keyboard e q u ip m e n t for language, science, and e n g in e e r­ ing theses an ti dissertations. Ph o ne G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7G77 2707 H em phill P a r k B E A U T I F U L T Y P I N G . Reports, b rie fs, theses, d issertations. Special t y p e for language. M r s . science, engineering, Anthony 454-3079. L A R G E R E W A R D . Lost, by Sou thridg e Kerm t Is, V e r y sm all ad u lt fe m ale cat, g rayish striped, short h a ir. tim id light o ran ge blotche I-oxt betw een 6/14 I (M o n d a y ) and 6/16 O w ners 472-2500 Dm V W C A M P E R , pop •D tailed. E x c e lle n t r-or.dltion fa c to ry E x t r a t a n k . HO v o lt connection. $39a. 4i4- top r I F O U N D P O O L I ie W ill re tu rn In ex­ ( all ch an g e for ac cu ra te description 471 1336, ext. 7, Don Reed. I /Y O w n fT ' ■ I Komc. c e n tra l air. P a r k w ith ■-pet mg. S h e d . W a s h e r. m obile i w l . E x c e lle n t ..m illion. $3,250. 385-4484. S T E R E O X ' I T X E N T ..ny A M F M stereo equipm ent, re c e iv e r, A K i i table, A R sp e ake r*, S o n y tap e deck. ll or part, p ric e d right. 478-6733, 4.i4 111. M L E L E C T R I C piano. K u sto m base a m p lifie r. L ik e new . 477 3167. B L A C K Sheph erd, P U P P Y , G e rm a n p a rt found on D ra g T h u rs d a y m orning C a ll Suzanne, 477 0338. I / JS T O R S T O L E N : < 'am ora Y a s h lk n from Com m ons T h u rsd a y T L S u p e r m o rning . C a ll Jo h n F ox, 478-3047. TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD C A LL GR 1-5244 Page 8 Tuesday, June 22, 1971 THE SUMMER TEXAN imes Report Reveals Ground Troop Plan the finest ring available. fighting the guerillas in the South nor any combination of the two offered a solution and said so in a memorandum circulated on June 28, the study reports. Force bombed an ammunition at Xombang while 19 depot propeller driven A-1H fighter- bombers of South Vietnam struck the Quangkhe naval base. litor’a Note: The following d e , the third in a series ling with classified documents U .S. involvement in Vietnam. reprinted from the New York ten of Jane lo. Because of the of the article, only the re important excerpts are orbited. The fourth and fifth id ea of the series will be luted, if and when a favorable decision is handed down on rights of The Times to publish material.) By NEIL SHEEHAN 5) 1971 The New York Times News Service ! President Lyndon B. Johnson rided on April I, 1965, to use lericxn ground troops for of- lsive action in South Vietnam muse the Administration had /prod that its long-planned jmbing of North Vietnam— fbi ch had just begun—was not >ing to stave off collapse in the nith, the Pentagon’s study of Vietnam war discloses. He rd e m l that tile decision be kept cret. T he period round-combat increasing is ihown In the Pentagon papers 1 0 ie third major phase of ►resident Johnson’s commitment lo South Vietnam. This period form s another section of the >resentation of those papers by l i e New York Times. of involvement the the In the spring of 1963, tin* study [discloses, Johnson Ad- [m inistration pinned its hopes on a ir assaults against the North to [b reak the enemy's will and [persuade Hanoi to stop the Viet Cong insurgency in the South. 'H ie air assaults began on a sustained basis on March 2. “ Once set in motion, however, I th e bombing effort seemed *o I stiffen ra th e r than soften Hanoi’s t h e : backbone, as well willingness of Hanoi's allies, particularly the Soviet Union, to w ork toward compromise,” the study continues. as the enough, AND SO within a month, the the account continues, with Administration recognizing that th e bombing would not work quickly crucial decision was made to put the two M arine battalions in South Vietnam on the offensive. landed at T he 3,500 Marines Danang on March 8—bringing the to ta l United States force in South Vietnam to 27,000. Tile restricted mission of the Marines had been th e static defense of the Danang airfield. already to offense the public, As a result of the President's w ish to keep the shift of mission im­ from defense the to perceptible received no April I decision publicity “until it crept out alm ost bv accident in a State Department release on June I,” tn the words of the Pentagon wtudy. New Warnings O f Failure In high Before the opening of the air w a r in the spring, warnings were •minded the Ad­ ministration that It would not micceed. Now there wore war­ nings that a ground war in the South might prove fruitless. Tile ; w’antings came not only from I I r ruler Secretary of State George ; W. Ball, as a dissenter on Vietnam, but also from John A. McCone, director of Central Intelligence, who felt th e actions planned were not strong enough. long known On April 2 McCone circulated the rn memorandum within N a t i o n a l Security Council Asserting that unless the United States was willing to bomb the North “with minimum restraint” it was to break Hanoi’s will, unwise to commit ground troops to battle. “ IN EFFECT,” he said, “ we will find ourselves mired down in combat In the jungle in a m ilitary effort that we cannot win and from which we will have extrem e extracting difficulty ourselves.” Ball’s dissent came from die opposite side. He believed that neither bombing tho North nor But the President, the narrative continues, was now’ heeding the counsel of Gen. William West­ moreland to embark on a full­ scale ground war. the The study also says that two of the President’s m ajor moves involving the bombing campaign in spring of 1965 were designed, among other aims, to quiet critics and obtain public the air war by support striking com­ promise. for a position of The air attacks had begun Feb. 8 and Feb. ll with reprisal raids, code-named Operations Flaming D art I and II, announced as retaliation for Viet Cong attacks at on American Pleiku and Quinhon. installations IN PU BLIC Administration statem ents on the air assaults, the study goes on, President Johnson broadened “ the reprisal im­ concept as gradually and perceptibly as possible” into sustained air raids against the North, in the sam e fashion that him the blurring the shift from defensive to offensive action on the ground during the spring and summer of 1965. describes analyst second “Although discussed publicly in very muted tones,” it goes on, Flam ing Dart “ the operation constituted a sharp break with past U.S. policy and set the stage for the continuing bombing program that was now to be launched in earnest.” It was on Feb. 13, two days after this second reprisal, that J o h n s o n ordered Operation Rolling Thunder. An important influence on his unpublicized decision was a memorandum from his special assistant for affairs, n a t i o n a l McGeorge Bundy, w h o w a s heading a fact-finding mission in Vietnam when the Viet Cong attack at Pleiku occured on Feb. security “ A policy of sustained reprisal against North Vietnam” was the strategy advocated by Bundy. AS SEVERAL chapters of the Pentagon study show, a number of Administration strategists— particularly Walt W. Rostow\ chairm an of the State Depart­ m ent's Policy Planning Council— had that “ calculated doses” of American air power would compel North Vietnam to stop the Viet Cong activities. for years assumed Both Bundy and Taylor had reoom mended p l a y i n g down publicity on details of the raids. “ Careful public statements of the government, U n i t e d States combined with fact of continuing air actions, are expected to make it d e a r that military action will continue while aggression con­ tinues.” But focus of public at­ tention will b© kept as far as possible on DRV aggression; not on joint GVN/US military operations. Rolling Thunder finally rolled on March 2, 1965, when F-100 Super Sabre and F-105 Thun- the U.S. Air derchief jets of EUROPE for SUMMER SCHOOL? GROUP FLIGHTS For UT Student*, Faculty, Staff and their immediate families NEW YORK to LONDON-PARIS $210.00 Round Trip C o n firm e d D ate * a n d Reserva­ IN C R E A S E S ! t io n ! N O P R IC E Th«*» fligh t* are n o n -sto p via Boeing 707 su pp le m e n tary carriers C A L L Euro-American DIMENSION, Inc. Ph. G e n e F ick le r 452-8458 N ig h t or Day ENROLL N O W for Summer Classes Ballet T ap Jazz Acrobatics Pre-School Ladies Exercise GL 3-3706 Call 926-8060 — GR 2-9086 Innette S c h o o l o f 2),an ce <^L)uval troops, counting those already in Vietnam. AT AN April I strategy session, to send Johnson had decided ashore two more Marine bat­ talions, which Westmoreland had asked for In a separate request on March 17. Johnson further decided support forces in South Vietnam by 18,000 to 20,000 men. increase to the that “ The initial steps taken,” “ indicating in ground to have been build-up appear study grudgingly says, the President . . . and his advisers r e c o g n i z e d the tremendous inertial complications of ground t r o o p deployments. Halting ground involvement was seen to be a manifestly greater problem than halting air or naval ac­ tivity.’ Confusion And Suspicion There was some confusion, suspicion and controversy about the President’s approval of an 18,000 to 20,000 increase in sup­ port troops, which, he explained, was m eant “ to fill out existing units and supply needed logistic personnel.” On April 21, McNamara told the President that 11,000 of these new men w'ould augment various existing forces while 7,000 were l o g i s t i c to support troops “ previously approved forces.” tile additional From April l l through April two Marine 14, battalions were deployed a t Hue- Phubal and at Danang, bringing the total maneuver battalions to four. it AT THIS point, the Defense Department, the Joint Chiefs of and Westmoreland S t a f f , collaborated—as turned out, successfully—in what the study cart-before- little calls horsemanship.” It Involved the deployment to South Vietnam of the 173rd Airborne Brigade, two battalions that were then situated on Okinawa in a reserve role. “ a The Enemy Responds \ T h e question of final presidential approval of the 17 j battalion recommendations now’ became academic as the enemy i NO AIB STRIKES had been the President authorized by b e y o n d initial Rolling the Til under raids and, according fo the study, the ambassador was long delays irritated at “ the between strikes, the m arginal weight of the attacks and the great ado about behind-the-scenes diplomatic feelers.” the With concurrence of Westmoreland, Taylor proposed “ a m ore dynamic schedule of strikes, a several week program relentlessly marching north” beyond the 19th Parallel, which Johnson had so far set as a limit, “ to break the will of the DRV.” The next Rolling Thunder strikes, on March 14 and 15, were the heaviest of the air w ar so far, involving IOO American and 24 South Vietnamese planes against barracks and depots on the North Tiger Vietnamese coast and tile am ­ munition dump near Phuqui, IOO miles southwest of Hanoi. Island off For the first time, the planes used napalm against the North, a m easure approved by Johnson on May 9 to achieve the more efficient destruction of the targets that McNamara was seeking and to give tile pilots protection from antiaircraft batteries. from OPERATION Rolling Thunder was being an shifted exercise in air pow’er “dominated by political and psychological to a “ m ilitarily consideration” m o r e sustained bombing program” aimed at destroying the capabilities of North Vietnam to support a war in the South. significant, hopes But the shift also m eant that “ early Rolling Thunder could succeed by itself “ in persuading Hanoi to call off the Vie! Cong were also waning. that not Westmoreland predicted that tile bombing campaign against the North would show tangible results until June at the earliest, and that in the mean­ time the South Vietnamese Army needed American reinforcements to hold the line against growing Viet Cong strength and to c a rn ' out an orderly expansion of its own ranks. He asked for reinforcements equivalent two American divisions, a total of about 70,000 to started attacks that provided the Pentagon and Westmoreland with a battlefield rationale for their campaign to have American troops take over the major share of the ground war. As portrays the manpower debates continued in March and April, the study the military situation: “the Viet Cong were throughout inactive unusually March and April. There had been no major defeat of the enemy’s forces and no signs of any major shift in strategy on his part. Hence it was assumed that he was merely pausing to regroup and to assess the effect of the changed American participation in in air strikes and in the Marines.” The first two battalions deployed at Danang on March 8. the war embodied Viet Cong “By mid-June, 1965,” it asserts, “ t h e were “systematically forcing the GVN to yield what little control it still exercised in rural areas outside the Mekong Delta.” Westmoreland said, “In order to cope with the situation outlined above, I see no course of action opened to us except to reinforce our efforts in SVN with additional U.S. or third country forces as rapidly as is practical during the critical weeks ahead.” WHAT HE asked for added up to a total force of 44 battalions. Just as intense internal debate was beginning on the request, there was a “credibility” flare-up deriving in­ junction of secrecy on the change of missions the Marines for authorized on April I. Johnson’s from On June 26, Westmoreland was given authority to commit U.S. forces to battle when he decided “ to t h e y were strengthen the relative position of GVN forces.” necessary Divergent Views at Home recognizing The opposition to Westmoreland had “its day in court” late in June and early In July, the study in Saigon, says. The embassy the “ w h i l e seriousness of the situation in than South Vietnam, was sanguine about the prospects for success large numbers of foreign troops were brought in.” On May 4 the President asked less if 2915 GUADALUPE 6321 CAM ERON RD. Impossible to Reform the Texas House? "Hie Dirty Thirty" thinks It can be done! For contrlDutions Information, or volunteers write: P. O. Box 13086 Austin, Texas 78711 Congress for a $700 million supplemental appropriation “to m eet m o u n t i n g m ilitary requirements in Vietnam.” During the questioning after the exchange this announcement, took place: ON JULY SO, the Joint Chiefs approved 44 maneuver battalions for deployment, involving a total of 193,887 U.S. troops. By the end of the year, U.S. forces in South Vietnam numbered 184,314. Precisely what Johnson and their M c N a m a r a expected decisions of July to bring within the near term “is not clear,” the are study “but manifold they indications were prepared for a long w ar.” there that says, Created by John Robert* Prices Start at $32.50 1/4 Ct. Diamond $29.50 EW E L F, R S 2H36 ( iu < id a r a * e a FOUM FAMOUS NOONER SPEC IA LS! g ra itiiic jra ra iE jie jia r E ifE ira ra ra I I a i I a I i i G § This price good ONLY: M W F & T T S S E On Wednesday . .. Enchilada Dinner try our famous for only 90£l § s Like Mama, like Son.. .True Mexican 6012 Burnet Road (Near W. 49th.) S lid le u SJI EJ I GJI ellojjendJi'gJIcJTcbJI eJTejfil Important Announcement! m m UT coeds agree ti scene fur the 70* Hardin North . -I with freedom, priv in you security Are yours to enjoy. You'll love the swingin' scene at H A R D IN NORTH V , ifs the fun place to live while attending the University. Stop in and see for .your­ self . . . w ell be glad to show you one of our living suites* rn H ARDIN NORTH, 801 West 24th Street, Phone St2/476 ?63b is now Co-Ed. dormitory is now accepting reservations from both University men and That's rig h t... The Contessa, luxury off-campus women for accommodations during the 1971-72 school term. The Contessa is the ultimate in luxury hotel style living at the University. Each room beautifully furnished with carpet, drapes, study space . . . comfort and convenience in a relaxed a tmosphe re . Your choice of private or accom m odations with a roommate. All rooms have access to T.V. lounges, s wi mm in g pool, sun deck, g r ou p study area an d dining room where three delicious meals are served daily— Monday through Saturday, with late brunch and sumptuous buffet on Sunday. All the conveniences and com forts of home await you at the Contessa; daily m aid service, private parking, parties such as La s V e g a s N i g h t , and Hallow een Dance, and more. Give us a call at 477-9766 or 476- 4648 or drop by T h e C o n te s sa , 2706 Nueces . . . Tuesday, June 22, I97I THE SU M M ER TEXAN Paga 9 Art Takes New Direction Health Foods Gain Popularity B y J U L IE BY A N Amusements Staff The in the renaissance of natural foods which began in California, Colorado and other centers of the reached culture has counter Austin last two years. People who wanted to eat food as it was before the advent of chem ical fertilizers, pesticides and fungicides and mass com­ m ercial preparation techniques found they had to produce it or find wholesalers themselves. Such was the case with the owners of three Austin “ organic” food stores: Plat. Tile Good Food Store and The 29th Street Food Stoic. IS used “ O N LY FOOD in making Hominy grits,” the label of one of the natural food brands proclaims. This apparently self­ evident statement gains weight when you read some of the labels of commercial products (try instant mashed potatoes). Health food stores try to get a ll of the food as it grow s without additives. Flour is made of whole grain ground in a stone m ill. not stripped of the vitamin-laden outer husk of the grain. Cooking and o i l hydrogenated if from spoiling, but cold-pressed to avoid destroying the nutrients. to keep heated not is different “ Commercial food producers have considerations from ours.” Steve Shaw, co­ owner of The Good Food Store, says. “ They consider ease of handling, slapping and preser- v a t i o n and mass-production methods, without any regard for the kind of food they end up with.” B R EA D FO R the three stores is Earth Bread from a bakery on Webberville Road or comes from the D aily Bread Co. at Armadillo World Headquarters, “ both stone freak operations that D E P A R T M E N T o f R - T - F JreAen ts S C I E N C E F I C T I O N F I L M S FRIDAY. JUNE 25 ' ROBINSON CRUSOE ON MARS” SATURDAY, JUNE 26 ‘'200 V' B U R D IN E H A LL A UD ITO RIU M and 9 P.M. ADM. 75c F R ID A Y ADM. $1.00 SA TURD A Y N O W ! OPEN 1:15 ADULTS $1.50 UNTIL 5:30 Feature! 1:30 - 5:00-8:30 “ O N E O F TH E A L L U M I 7 Academy Awards including, - LAST DAY TRANS ★TEXASwarn 2200 Hancock Drive— 453 6641 G R E A T F IL M S !" B E S T P I C T U R E ! q j i A R A B i A j ALEC GU INNESS-ANTHONY QUINN JACK riAffKINS-JOSE FERRER ANTHONY QUAYLE Claude rains arthur kennedy Omar sharif., . . « lewdly fcy Prayer! 8? ROBERT BOIT 3AM SPlEGCl DAVID LEAH SUPER MMAVIS<0N 70* I Howe* P-'U» TECHNICOLOR* by . rn peter O'TOOLE „ u ret- 12224 GuadaiuoiSt—477-1964 MICK JAGGER/JAM ES FOX/ANITA PALLENBERG OPEN 1:4b • 31.00 ’TIL 5 P.M . Features 2 -4 6~ 8"-"10 ENDS TODAY performance. TX) NO ONE UNDER 18 WIL! BE ADMITTED (X) C Starts T O M O R R O W J THE MUSIC m LOVERS PA N A V ISIO N C O LO R by DeLuxe* U nited A rtis ts I Al GI ENDA IACI (SO N T R A N S ★ T E X A S OPEN 1:45 • $1.00 'TIL 5 P.M. FEATURES 2 - 5 - 8 1.423 Vt. Bin WUK* B r l —442-233J DIRECT FROM ITS SENSATIONAL ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT! E l liP s T o r a l. S k a Academy Award Nominations C Starts T O M O R R O W ) U FEATURES 2 - 4 OPEN 1:45 • sometimes don't always manage to deliver,” M arvin Webb of E a t comments. Bu t the bread arrives containing “ organic stone ground whole wheat flour, water, organic gluten flour, raw honey. . .good vibes and love.” All three stores plan to supply raw milk, now that sale of it has been approved by the City Council. Eat is adding fresh produce this summer, from its own acreage near Brown­ wood; the other two stores get theirs from the farm ers’ markets in San Antonio and any local farmers or people with backyard gardens that they can get it from. All of it is not organic; when it is, the store labels It, and it c o s t s more. Organic food pi-oduction is expensive because it requires hand-tending in place of large-scale spraying for weeds and bugs. The Good Food Store Is a large, airy wood-floored building at 1101 W . 5th St. Fifty-pound sacks of flours and grains, from which the customer’s purchase Is scooped by the people tending the store, are stacked on the flour. A giant drum of raw mesquite honey Is tapped for each purchaser. H ie store also offers a whole line of m e d i c i n a l teas, the home remedies that were used before the era of the corner drugstore. T U E GOOD FOOD Store was started with funds the couple saved from a potter’s studio they ran near the Palo Buro Canyon. It corresponds to the other stores in them have depended on bank loans or other financial backing. commercial that none of Stan Potz, part-owner of The 29th Street Food Store, between Lam ar and Guadalupe streets, has more emphatic reasons for financial “ That’s independence. taking money from the devil . . . When you take money from a bank, you're in debt to them and you have to start doing things to the store to make money for tile bank.” Relying only on profits to expand the store means that “ the store grows as people want it to grow. If they want to buy food here. it grows.” If they don’t, it folds? “ Yes. and I ’d be happy it,” he replies. to see M EA T IS NOT sold at any of the natural food stores at present. E a t w ill add meat from Shiloh Farm s, a religious co-operative in Sulphur Springs. Ark., when they find a food freezer. the four-to-five-month All stores report a gradual increase in business, over the 13 months E a t has been in business and life span of 29th Street and The Goo/1 Food the customers are young or people in their fifties and sixties who remember food as they used lo eat it. Store. Most of By D A V ID ST EK O LL Amusements Staff with One of the most technically is plexiglass, “ a meticulous craft­ relates University art The difficult areas of sculpture w o r k i n g requiring sman.'' professor medium requires special tools, dust free atmosphere, and a lot of time to produce a flawless w ork. Paul Hatgil. Because of basic limitations on PARAMOUNT mwi Y I 3 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E $1.00 TIL 2:15 - Features 1:35-3:10-4:45 6:35 - 8:15- 10:00 all tools and materials, the plexiglass pieces done by Hatgil have been geometric shapes, rather than more organic works. The fact that the plastic comes in thin sheets lim its anyone not h a v i n g industrial complex equipment in tho shaping of the material. Tile plexiglass sheet* are “ very expensive.” according to the artist, and require hours of polishing on the edges to catch light without distortion. Hatgil became interested in plexiglass two years ago in his class in 3-D design when some STUDIO IV 222 East 6th 472-0436 ON SCREEN NO. 1 MIDNIGHT A N D ODDLY STUDIO IV ON SCREEN NO. 2 GET M O VIN G AND Color Shorts ALL FILMS RATED "X " Where your nightmares en d ... W i U J I I K D begins. COLOR [I S T A T E 476-5066 719 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E $1.00 TIL 2:15 - Features 1:40 - 3:20- 5:00 6:40 - 8:20- 10:00 /Irs!Planet.then Beneath.noW.. E S C A P E presents ara ■ ■ ^ P L A N E T or T R A P E S I HOWSON* COLOR BT Of. LUXf* [CS VARSITY 47W35I 2 4 0 0 G U A D A L U P E S T R E E T LAST 4 DAYS! 1:00 'TIL 2:15 FEATURES 2 — 4 — 6 — 8 — 10 M G M prevent* CO umtAa PiCTLTES Ald RAS TAR PRODUCTION PRESENT a RAY STA RK W M K H E R B E R T R O S S ProductionBarbra Streisand■George■jjfanl iT R A N S ★ T E X A S " t i / H W U Pana vi so n Color W IN N E R 7 A CAD EM Y AW A RD S 6400 Burnet Road — 465-6933 I' M. 6 BEST PICTURE 4 BEST ACTOR FOR 1970 UHtlN / : 4 b bl A K I ti:4b COMPLETE FOODLINE IN SN A C K BAR IN C LU D IN G The Owl andthe PussycatR J ■rem* I LECH RUSSELL! MAD DOCS & ENGLISHMEN I— t * l i p ANION C .Mu., I ti .'MMM r . n m r . i : It SCOTT/ MALDEN i i a IU . i i f M T T O N " J iwm mccmtmt i unum I sm m ia FtooocnoR HIAM HcCAATWT tUM USJ SIHAffSU color lr Ct un - [hp; & - OlMlesiOd 1 5 0 “A C O C K EY ED M A S T E R P IE C E !” - Joseph Morgemtern, Newsweek 2o- An Ingo Preminger Production Color by DE LUXE* Panavision* Page IO Tuesday* June 22. !97i THE SUMMER TEXAN Excitement J U E S P * t0 fen, likes dame! ii Paul Newman is Hamer — c L U i — WOODSTOCK STARRING JO A N BAEZ JO E COCKER 8:19 (R| m u m n i i t a l Glass of Many M o od s An example of the recent trend to plexiglass sculpture, this work, conceived by Paul Hatgil, exhibits the multiplicity of designs and shapes offered in plexiglass art. of his students tried to work in inex­ the medium. Feeling too perienced to answer their question*, he began plastics to himself. experiment with that material in A lot of pride is revealed by the artist, whose works have enjoyed wide critical acclaim and a variety of showings. A recent honor accorded tile sculptor was being invited to exhibit several pieces “ Tran­ sparent and Transluscent A rt” featured only the show which nation’s in plexiglass and resin sculpture. the Florida artists top 18 in P ’- 'W j T R A N S ★ T E X A S IHM! . .| p ■ j i m , i 8 :4 o rn. t O . ; ■ 7 \ UY OPINION. THIS MO­ TION PICI I RV. IS A PRO PH FCY. IT SHOW’S IX ACT- LY wai O’ corm h a pply, AXD PEOPLE BIA I FR BF LI EVE FFA T Bennett, Toronto T e le g ra m D O O M S D A Y ? In describing why he enjoys working with the material, Hatgil I don't discount said, “ Plexiglass art is a new' direction for the artist to take, the although traditional materials. Being a man-made m aterial, plexiglass ic more representative of our age.” When sculpture*. Hatgil states he never makes a scale drawing or model, because this makes him feel somewhat redundant in creating the actual piece of sculpture. planning a The artist, although enjoying the current popularity that his plexiglass work has received, now feels it is time to go into different material. “ M y a primary concern is design; what I do with the materials, not the materials themselves.” f « n-jHEN 12:15 MATINEE i Feature 12:30-2:50 5:10-7:30-9:45 pm 1MJ DISNEY™-, HES mw? F r od in Panavision^and M etrocoicr1 R I '-'-ii'1 _ PLUS — C * MOM KELLEY’S HEROES C L I N T E A S T W O O D First Time At Popular Prices Continuous Performances , . s P A R K j « g ^ C / 7 , AN C W T T N T f A O . : c " ‘ ~ .................. ofthe i 'r "V IX. of Edvjrd Grieg Mw*** Toralv Maurstad Florence Henderson Christina Scholhn Frank Porretta >» IS *p*c-jt Oscar Flomolkd Robert Morley Ldvvard G. Robinson Harry Secombc CU if m«l Jot/nat’Kli Aibu-I ind Tap, a.i lafela I;tm MC .etaiftl STARTS TOMORROW OPEN F E A T U R E S 7:30 - A D U L T S 2:15 2:30-5:00 10:00 $1.50 U N T IL 5:30 r a asr & -sa? * * ti re v stmam&r I V. i | G I TRANS ★TEXASWtom2200 Hancock Oriva—453 6641 J *"> . <*.- As You Like If CO NCERTS University Jazz Ensemble’s rhythm section of drums, piano find bass entertains at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the Chuck Wagon. Longhorn Band’s Festival of Music, Part III. entitled “ Circus Music Tim e,” takes place at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at the East M all Fountain. Admission is 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for children. “ Curious Fauna,” performed by the Department of Drama, will be in Hogg Auditorium Thursday through Saturday. D AN CE DRAM A “ Curious Fauna,” performed by the Department of Drama, will be in the Theatre Room Thursday through Saturday. “ Scrapbook,” an original play written by Timothy M iller, will be presented by the new American Revival Theater at Town Hall in Hancock Center Thursday through Saturday and on June 30. F IL M S ‘‘Hannibal,” with Victor Mature and Rita Gam, shows Tuesday at the Open A ir Theatre for 50 cents. “ Lilith,” starring Warren Beatty and directed by Robert Russell, shows Tuesday, sponsored by Cinema 40. “ Sherlock, Jr . and Buster Keaton Rides Again,” starring Buster Keaton, is presented at 8 p.m. Thursday iii Batts Auditorium by University Film Classics for 50 cents. “ You’re a Big Boy Now,” writh Peter Kastner, Elizabeth Hartman, Rip Torn, Geraldine Page (Turn's wife), Karen Black, Michael Dunn and Ju lie H arris shows at 7 and 9 p.m. Wednesday iii the I nion Theatre for 55 cents. G A L L E R IE S “ Painting—non objective acrylics,” by Bob Twinier, are in die Union Art G allery through Ju lv 2. L E C H 'R E S “ Can You Dig It? : 'Die African Aesthetics in Afro Americ an Com­ munities” is the title of Dr. Roger Abrahams' speech at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday in Union Building 304 and 305. Abrahams is a professor of English and anthropology and director of th" African and Afro- American Research Institute. T I K S P A T d a y A R I L S : Som e of the project* y-*u lu n e started should produce results today. T h is Is a good tim e for c r i­ tical evaluaU o n. T A I B L S : T h e restlessness you have felt the last d ay o r So should be­ am today. Y o u r m oves are c le a re r now. t i \ anish G K U I V I : T h e re is an em otional re* to tone the d ay. Y o u r reasoning faculties are not quite clear. Don t re ly on them too much. ( I M K R : Y o u ha ve a g reat urge to if only you today, do something could decide w hat. M echanical or interpersonal line* w ill lie good L M I : You w a n t about som ething, friends would he well a d v 'sod le ave .von alone today to rant and anything ra v e Y o u r to A I K< ,o : Don t expect that meat com putor you re ly on so m uch to w ork p articu larly w e ll today There iv a fog around y o u r m e m o ry banks. f .lH R A : As you begin this new effort, you yourself m ore find w illin g to shoulder your load. N ow *s the tim e for productive work. should S C O R P IO : D o n 't m oralize today It w ill lie ap p re c ia te d even lev* til an usual, and the ch an ces are y o u 'll be wrung a n y w a y . S A t . l T T t R l t * : At the prevent you though nothing much feel as happening. Y o u a re when you m ake y o u r own action ' s in a period ( \ P U K O R N : T h is is * pr d a t iv e day for you stay old the d a y is yours. if you start ear!.'' and late B e on Urn ball all day­ A in M ill- * : Y e s te rd a y was great To m orrow w ilt be bad T o day is tile transition perio d between these two extrem es. P I M K S : T h e re w ill be fa t-breaking opportunities for you today, W I IIN F X I I VV A R I I * : Continue w o rkin g tow ard t i- goals you set re ce n tly. Y o u vin id m ake some substantial p ro g re s' to ! T A I R I *. s ta rt W *h<* end i es its ><• . desire Y o u r effr t1 has been s h a k y lately. B e more stable -rd I G E M I N I : This is a d ay in which you are decide forces A vailable w h ich a rc yours to shape t l v outcom e T here ( \N( K R : If vo.. ret ii at -I observant, thl- day w ill shap* you rath e r than 'h e o ther w a y around. T a k e unlit) -I . - ot - L M I : V t f ee! U t e sh t g ti d e s of forces surrounding you, but none of these seem to respond to your com m and today. V in c o T il • - a :t• it dr I " r energ y pres -ut for y ou to copt me­ in at "least an in tu itive sense Hide you r own destiny U R B A : If you insist ,,n siding w ith losing causes, lose g enerally position carefully . spent that you " too E v a lu a te > m r Sr O R IT I) Y-e.! , t ta • a nose-dive today it does. be re ad y to prop it up and dig in tv - a harder, -• lint • r< If > '! 5 A r . I T T A R I I v s .. m e a r e forces bedding be! ad the so* ne* w h ich w ill m ake them selves felt in a if w dn> s. St tv ale rt f A P K K rift N Y tan* d ru m m e r be iii* g en rn tsh w Uh a wet noodle today. Can y* a do something about it ‘ 'i pct -I dis Arf I A R II S : 11- * i can for an em otional crisis today. I t w ill probably' a rriv e during Ute m orning TISI K ; if - ,,.1 re! ,* > ' v sn v I I e v e r y t h in g y o u 'v e - together and do it nm I * \. t v - ••«! to p • to i f -I- — M r iv I. A aa it I \ r I Oms MO I tits turn Oink ... iL B r i g i t t e B u r r i o ) “ K A Vt A *1 T R A ” •lane Fonda • S P IR IT * i i i T H E . \ I KF: A l)” ♦ •corge f, si-oll K a rl VI alden ” P A T T O N ” Donald “Sutherland I llio ll I . mild “ M A * ! ! ” IR ) nti ( i r iir iif C. sro lt K a rl Malden “ P A T T O N ” Donald Sutherlan d Filii*.it I .mild “ M A S H ” (R ) I ' “ k A M A s t T R A” R rig itte Bard o t •lane Fonda • S P IR IT S OF T H E <\> D E A D ” LONGHORN Putman at 183 N. •Indy Brow n R o b e rt Collins ‘The B ig D oll llo iiae’ Ailm ent P ric e M a rth a D y er ‘House of 1,00(1 Dolls’ It AT F U G rn r vt tv it) TIX) INFI NSI I IIH x «11 XI, E R I I I H K H I N ^NDROEDA STRAIN r -svixA min ii Oma; - im*! ISI SCREENINGS AT 12:00 - 2:25 - 4:50 7:15-9:40 G A T E , Me " n r " i l l be seated IA U I L . during last III minutes BARGAIN MATINEE l i n o 'T I K 1:30 I M O N . th ru * AT. (except sun. * llolld .v s) C A P R I 472-0442 521 E. 6th DOORS OPEN DAILY 11:30 A.M. BRAND NF.W FIRST RUN "P IE C E S O F 8" & " D I C K & I" A L L C O L O R A A L L s ift NIF ESCORTED LADIES FREE W ITH MEMBERSHIP FEATURES C H A N G E FACH FRIDAY NEW SHOW EVERY WEDNESDAY OPEN 12 NOON CLOSE 10 P.M. THE ULTIMATE IN STA G M OVIES 35MM P A N A S O N IC FILM The End Is Coming — P i n s — Sa M M 600 SEAT Bold Cheesecake A L L C O L O R _ A L T . * O t N I* m u vt LUXURIOUS THEATRE A OF SUITABLE FOR YOUNG PERSONS l ^ i t z ^ J le a tr e ESCORTED LADIES FREE W ITH MEMBERSHIP 320 E. 6th St. 478-0475 Like Father... Pat Wayne Trails Footsteps O f Famous Parent 'Duke' By KATIE FEGAN Associate News Editor Patrick Wayne, 31-year-old son of actor-producer- director John Wayne, hopes to follow In his famed father’s footsteps as a “movie sta r,” playing action roles in family films. In Austin to promote “Big Jake,” a new movie in which he co-stars with his father, the younger Wayne said Monday most theater audiences go to movies “to be entertained instead of to see and hear someone's opinion on something.” “ MANY PEOPLE IN the movie industry try to complicate the idea of what a story is,” he said. Though being a movie star is his goal, Wayne sees acting as only part of this. “ Each actor goes after his goals with equal zeal. But the public makes a star because they see something in him they can identify with or believe,” he said. He believes he will not be able to rise to screen prominence in the w’av his father did because “ there are no longer any major studios. And the studios built stars, guaranteeing them a certain number of pictures and building up an image.” Though Wayne lam ents the lack of films with good stories, he said screen writing is a hard field to enter because a w riter must be a member of the Screen W riter’s Guild to write but to get into the guild he must have written for the screen. WAYNE’S MOVIE CAREER began when he visited his father on a set. The elder Wayne asked him if he would like to be in the film, and on his son’s agreement, gave him a sm all part. Though Wayne has great respect for his father, who Is widely known for his conservative view's, he differs with him on some political m atters, including the Vietnam war. “ I think war is insanity,” he said. “ I can see no logic in expending 45,000 lives. And the idea of a limited war is ridiculous.” While he disagrees with sending men overseas to fight in limited conflict, he is uncertain whether he could support the U.S. operation lf its scope W'ere widened. Y o u t h m o v e m e n t s , particularly those against air pollution, draw Wayne's support. Though he appeared in several movies before entering college, he graduated from Loyola University in California with a degree In biology. 609 W. 29th He had decided in his junior year he w'ould try PITCHER OF BEER O N L Y 90* W IT H T H IS A D SC O PRO 477-0548 OPEN EVERY DAY AT 3:00 P.M. for a film career. His current picture, his seventeenth, casts him as John Wayne’s son. The film, produced by his elder brother Michael, also stars his half-brother John Ethan, his father’s 9-year-old son by a second m arriage. IN THE STORY, a Texas cattle baron (John Wayne) and his two soas (one of them Patrick Wayne) go the cattlem an’s grandson (John Ethan Wayne), wrho has been kid­ naped. into Mexico after The cattlem an and the son played by Patrick Wayne are not close. In one scene, Patrick hits his father in the jaw and is promptly flattened. The film, which opens at the Cinema in Capitol Plaza July 9, also stars Richard Boone, Maureen O’Hara, Chris Mitchum and Bobby Vinton. J A f c E R O O M 1501 S A N J A C IN T O 476-2459 T O N I G H T Hew, Exciting Sounds! A L B A WED. S L E E P Y S T A G GIRLS FREE! ’ You’ve got a blind date with The Saxon Pub. Crowel's Enthusiasm Fails to Equal Charles T h e S a x o n P u b L w , ------------------- respond with thusiasm. the same en­ The class straight middle blacks and whites and fast young hipsters of both colors who paid $3, $4 and $5 to be entertained wasted Hie best part af any Ray Charles show: boogying with the man. Charles was a delight, punc­ tuating his numbers with raps about how much he loves women. He couldn’t sit still on his piano bench during either his so n g s or his raps. Running through a represen­ tative selection of his hits—all of them would have taken days— Charles pleased ell segments of the crowd. A Paul McCartney the “ Yesterday” wooed tune sen- timental oldsters and his final number “What’d I Say,” although failing the passive audience to its feet, seemed to strike a favorable chord within the collective heart. to bring was given a haunting African flavor by the soft jangling of eight tambourines. The failure of the audience to respond physically created an “What’d I Say,” originally a driving Jerry I>ee Lewis piece, i n c o n g r u o u s scene of 30 musicians working to reach people’s emotions, as the people seemed only superficially moved. The exchange of energy was grossly unfair. Charles performed for an ad­ ditional hour with his band and choir. Nary an “encore” cry was raised from the spectators. If You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service UC t o t PRESENTS . . . WED7 - T H U R S . - FRI. - SA T . S U N D A N C E 'T h e Best In Entertainm ent . . . A t T he Lowest Prices” 23rd and P earl Streets IN NEW HARDIN GARAGE COMPLEX 477-6135 HUNGRY HORSE 1809 S A N J A C IN T O 477-0432 F in ed In Folk Entertainment TUESDAY NITE B O B B R O W N (of Kingfish) WEDNESDAY NITE Dem Beautiful G re a sy W h eels plus Skiffle Band THE FEED BAG F a t T asty Sandwiches and Noon Tim e E ntertainm ent H A P PY H O U R 3 - 6 P.M. 25c a Glass $1.00 a Pitcher You’ve never been there. Because we’ve never been here. Choose from ten delicious Sir Loin Burgers (6 oz. choice USDA chopped sirloin each), steaks, seafood, sandwiches, soups, salads and so on. Reasonable prices. Live entertain­ m ent— in The Saxon tradition. And during our Grand Opening Celebration (through June 26), there’s a free mug o f beer w ith each meal served.* Bet you’ll be back for more. 38th Street at Interregional 454-8115 •P roof o f age required. Donft Photo by DAN FRI ZZ F I L. Poi rick W a y n e . . . the second generation By CRAIG VAN DYCK Amusements Staff The King of Soul, Ray Charles, gang as only he can Saturday night at Municipal Auditorium to no avail as the aging audience watched placidly. Charles, his soul choir the Raelettes and the Ray Charles in a slickly Orchestra turned professional yet rousing per­ formance. Their energy, however, was left hanging in the air as die sparse crowd would not 5. 7 CBS News: POWS 9 Perindlco 9 30 p rn 9 T hirty Minutes 10 p.m. All channels news except 9 Fem inine Fitness 10 IO p.m . 4, 42 Joey Bishop 5, 7 M erv Griffin 9 San Francisco Mix 13 Movie: "The Uninvited” ■ J 941) 11 p m. 9 Jean Shepherd's A m e r i c a 11:30 p m . 9 Non-stop to Everywhere Midnight 7 Ne vs Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y >- >- >- > >- >- >- >■ >- >- >- >- >- >- >- >- >- University 'Y' S U M M E R FU N FILM P R O G R A M Presents BLACK SABBATH starring Boris K arloff Based on short stories by Tolstoy and Chekhov. TUESDAY - JUNE 23 Batts Auditorium 8 & IO PM 75 ‘ University 11Y " Benefit Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y R E N A ISSA N C E S O I RIO G R A N D E 476-6019 “RENAISSANCE” A U STIN , TEXAS A N N O U N C E S A T H E BEST OF THE HO M EM AD E SOUPS SA N D W IC H ES BEER W IN E CHEESE & BREAD Two movies highlight Tuesday television viewing. Ingrid Bergman’s first Ameri­ can (1939) film “Intermezzo” shows at 7:30 p.m. This is the first in a four-week series of David O. Sriznik classics. Marion Brando fans will want to catch “The Night of the Fol­ lowing Day” at 8 p.m. Wednesday night is really bar­ ren, even for television. The only program one cannot get cynical about Is “Just Jazz" featuring the tenor sax o f Gene Ammons. Hear his soul at 7:30 p.m. Tl'ESDA VS SCH HDVTX ! e M p m . 12 M o i SQ’iad 4. 42 n m Coshy 7. IO Heverly HlllMOi** 9 Ne .vs T p.m. A 42 Don Knottj T r» p m . 7, 12 Movie I ■'Intermezzo" fi, 7 Green A ores 9 Southern resp ectiv e am ) S Heehaw I p.m. 4 Mov'o: 'Tin* Riley's Hade In T ow n " (1065) 42 Movie: "The Nlsrht of the Following Ray" 9 Advocates ) 9 V) 5 Ail In tho F a m ily I p jn . 12 Marcus Welby HYE HUSIC NITELY AT THE ONE KNUE em S RED RIVER tues.: DIRTY BLUES • HAPPY HOURS • 4 - 8 p.m. MON. - SAT. BEER $1.00 PITCHER NEVER A C O V E R • IN FO RM A L LECTURE Dr. Roger Abrahams Can You Dig it?: Tho African Aesthetics in Afro-American Communities Wednesday, June 23 12:15 p.m. Texas Union Art Gallery Sponsored by the Texas Union PHOTOS COMBINED W I T H THE B R A N D N E W : H O T D A IL Y SPECIALS R EU B EN "SO U TH O F T H E BO RD ER" H A M H A W A IIA N M O R N AY SHRIM P REM OULADE H A W A IIA N D E L IG H T CHEF SALAD ALA JU L IE N N E LIVE E N T E R T A I N M E N T R ICK STEIN — THU RS. & SAT. G R E E N W O O D FRI FULLY AIR C O N D IT IO N ED PASSPORTS RESUMES SUPER HOT SERVICE STUDTMAN PHOTO 19th at L a v a c a • C a m e r o n V i l l a g e R E N A ISSA N C E missI the All New SUMMER STUDENT DIRECTORY On Sale N O W at the Following Locations: • University C o -O p • Garner & Smith • Hemphill's Stores • Steno Bureau J. B. 107 only You'D find thousands and thousands of names, addresses and phone numbers of University Summer Students neatly packaged in an attractive S '/j" x l l " directory. Tctely N E W br 71. Tax Included Tuesday, Juna 22, 1971 THS SUMMER TEXAN Page kl Road Rules Changed I HEMPHILLS BOOK LOVERS BO NANZA State Inspection M ade Tougher A ' ' v . ' a I m p * ? ' ' lh •• x -- ' JBI $ I,;HI ~ A A > > STARTS TODAY! BUY T O D AY — While Selections Are Complete! 2 2 4 4 Guadalupe ONLY! H abitual drug users w ill be forbidden to drive and c a n be ja ile d up to two years an d fined up to $1,000 if they do. A t p resen t police departm ents a re u n ce rtain a s to how this will be enforced. T he list of drug a d d icts will m a in ly com e from fu tu re con­ victions. locking F o r theft protection, a new rule p rohibits leaving a c a r u n at­ tended without first stopping the e n g in ei ignition, se ttin g the brake and rem oving the keys. The negligence fine is $1 to $200. AND a policem an has been m a d e a FLEEING from the m isdem eanor, with a maximum penalty of s ix months in jail an d a $500 fine. Gov. P re s to n Smith has sig n e d a bill a d d in g tires to the list o f items in m andatory' in c lu d e d annual au to inspections. A safety inspection sticker w ill not be is s u e d for a car if a n y tire has b ro k e n fabric or la c k s at least one-sixteenth of an in c h two distant points. of tread a t This is effective now. re q u ire m e n t Along w ith the added sa fe ty measure c o m e s an added price— driver's lic e n s e s will be $1 m o r e than the c u r r e n t $6. UT Professors Begin Leaves from T h re e professors the College of Engineering w ill be ab sen t from the U niversity on one-year leaves allowing th em to teach , study and work a t other institutions. professor Beightler, engineering; THE THREE are Dr. C harles of S . m echanical D r. John R. Watt, associate professo r of m echanical engineering and a s sista n t D r . of m e ch a n ica l p r o f e s s o r engineering. B.V. Koen, B eightler, who been selected as a Fulbright le c tu re r h a s D allas - F o r t W orth a re a POW wives said in a le tte r to an B a rn e s Saturday he "unconditional" obligation to go to P aris. h a s T he letter said B arn es m ust h av e been aw are of the p roblem s in h e re n t in trying to a r r a n g e a m e e t i n g with C om m unist au th o rities when he ag re ed to go. T he challenge was d eliv ered in session of joint a F ebruary’ Congress by computer m a g n a te R oss P ero t of Dallas. POW wives said if B arn es is unable to go to P aris h e should send someone in his place. R ich a rd West, B a rn e s’ press se c re ta ry , if speculated B a rn e s does not go, "fiv e o r IO people will be chosen to re p re se n t T e x a s." th a t T ransportation a rra n g e m e n ts h ave been made for the tr ip and reservations h a v e hotel been m a d e in Stockholm an d P a ris, W est said. Tile le tte r from the POW wives said to it would be im possible re tu rn the funds already p aid for expenses involved in the trip . "T h e greatest injury’ w ill be lf B a rn e s doesn't do anything a t all a fte r m aking the co m m itm en t," the le tte r said. for the 1971-72 academic y e a r, will serve a s a visiting professor at the U n iv ersity of F reiburg, Germany. He the is co -au th o r of a book. Foundations of Optimization, which won th e Ranchester P riz e on for operations re s e a rc h in 1967 a n d the Book of th e Year award fro m the A m e ric a n I n ­ dustrial E n g in e e rs in 1969. Institute of publication b e s t Watt w ill in Atlanta. As teach and conduct research a t G eorgia Institute o f Technology a visiting p ro fe sso r, he will h a v e a dual ap p o in tm en t In the School of Industrial Engineering and th e Health S y ste m s Research C enter, Piedmont H o sp ital Annex. IN RECENT YEARS, Watt h a s taught m ulti-disciplinary cla sse s in hospital m anagem ent, d esign in and collaboration with hospitals in Austin- engineering la y o u t Koen, w h o se specialty Is In nuclear k in e tic s and optimization, ! will work w ith the French A tom ic j Energy C om m ission’s Center f o r Nuclear S tu d ie s at Saclay, n e a r Paris. In addition, he will g iv e le c tu r e s at the F re n c h regular for N u cle ar National Science a specialized g ra d u a te school In s titu te a n d Technology’, h a s recently recognition received He h is for national in t h e p i o n e e r i n g work developm ent of the self-paced system of instruction for use in engineering courses. If Y ou Need Help or Just Som eone Bilo Will Listen Telephone 476-707S At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service BOTTLE YAGO ROSE' $ 1.00 W IT H THIS AD W H IL E SUPPLY LASTS AT RENAISSANCE Barnes Doubtful About P O W Trip K Br BARBARA LAU Staff Writer Driving in T exas m a y be safer because of the 1971 L egislature's "ru le s of the ro a d ’’ and auto Inspection requirem ents. The new traffic rules, which take effect Aug. 29, w ere passed to conform T exas to the federal vehicle code; a step required for continued federal highway con­ struction aid. police One rule is designed to keep the street. dam aged ca rs off in­ if the A fter an accident, specting finds officer "dam age to the ap p aren t extent th a t repair before passing S tate inspection," inspection hp will rem ove sticker, and the c a r m ust be checked again in 30 days. it would req u ire the TO HELP p revent accidents, a row rule prohibits any flashing lights or electric signs within 1.000 intersection without a highway commission perm it. feet of an Also, front seat overcrowding — having more than three people In the the seat driv er's 'dew or interfere with his control of the c a r —is for­ bidden. they block if for backing in A provision on driving reverse m akes d rivers respon­ sible safely and "without Interfering with other traffic.” Backing on the shoulder or roadway of any controlled access highway is also prohibited. IN ADDITION’ riding in house they a re being trailers while pulled and watching a battery television set from tho driver's peat are against the law. By JAN JARBOE News Assistant Lt. Gov. Ben B arnes agreed in F ebruary to head a delegation to P aris to pressure the North Vietnamese peace delegation for the release of A m erican prisoners of war. Now, th e re is doubt as to whether B arnes will m ake the trip. At a Capitol p ress conference last week, B arnes said he had ffpoken with R ussian authorities and delegates, seeking an audience concerning the POW situation. peace P aris He has not declined to head the 1,300-member delegation to P aris, but he indicated he would lf it appears the trip would be unproductive. MASS in S P E C T R O S C O P Y SEMINAR will m eet a t noon I .ab Tuesday Building 214 to dem onstrate and to explain new’ d i g i t i z e GLPC—-Ms spec­ trogram s. processes Biology _ I D R . ROGERS ABRAHAMS, professor of E nglish and an­ thropology’, will speak on "Can It: The African You Dig Aesthetics in Afro-American Communities,” in the Union Art C a l l e r y at 12:15 p.m. Wed­ nesday. BEGINNING BRIDGE LESSONS will be taught at 7 p.m. Wed­ nesday, in Union Building 304 and 305. A N A N D A MARGY YOGA SOCIETY’ will m eet at 7 p.m. Tuesday, at 1701 Mohle Drive to teach hatha and other forms of yoga. THE DUPLICATE BRIDGE i ( L I B will m eet a t 7 p.m. Tuesday in Union Building 304. THE U N I V E R S I T Y AN- THROPOUOGY SOCIETY will present "R ecent Excavations at the George C. D avis Site In E a st T exas," a lecture to be given by D r. D ee Ann Story, in a t Business-Econom ics Building 161. p.m. W ednesday 7 R E C O R D E R S W E H A V E T H E L A R G E S T S T O C K O F R E C O R D E R S I N A L L O F T E X A S . PRICES START AT $1.95 Special Pearw ood Schriver T E N O R — Regu larly 42.50 Reduced to 24.95 (Slightly Im perfect finish) M O E C K • K U N G A U L U S • D U L M E T C H AMSTER MUSIC 1624 L A V A C A W I T H E A C H P IT C H E R O F TRINKS TEXAS SPECIAL FREE NACH O S B E E R S A N G R I A or 3 to 6 p.m. M o n d a y through FV 1 ay, N o o n to 5 p.m. Saturday. RES Lavaca at 16th OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH A N D DINNER Page 12 Tuesday* June 22* 1971 THE SUMMER T EXA N to of a ll ed . th ey s o rts . r e v e r e d h a rd b o u n d F r a g o n a r d K36, GB KAT ACTING. Ed. b y H al B urton, 266 P h o to s o f o u ts ta n d in g p e rfo rm an c e s by L . O liv ie r. S y b il T h o r n d i k e , P . A sc h ro ft, M. R ed crav e, E d it h E v a n s, J . G ie lg u d & Noel C o w ard w ith th e i r o w n co m m en ts on th e ir m a jo r ro le s a n d on how th e ir c r a f t . le a r n e d S 'a X l i q . O rig. Pub. a t $10 00. N ew . c o m p le te od. O n ly $3.95 KfifiO T AROT SSE E N C Y C L O P E D I A OE KEN A ISSA NOE AN O MAROGI E ART. Ed. by R en o H u y g h e . O v e r illu s., 45 in fu ll ICOG w orks of a r t color plus m a p s. M a g n ific e n tly illu s . A’olum e c o v ers th e 5 m o s t i m p o r t a n t c en tu rie s in w o rld a r t - f r o m G io tto through d a V inci, M ic h e la n g e lo a n d R em b ra n d t a n d B o u ch e r--p a in tin e . a r c h ite c tu r e . ceram ics, sc u lp tu re , ta p e s tr ie s , e tc . SE x l i q . P u b . a t O rig $20 00 Softbound O n ly $5.95 1544. MATHEMATICAL IM ZZLES A OTHER BRAIN T W IS TE R S B y A S. F ilip iak . D e lig h tfu l b o o k d e v o te d to m a k in g a n d so lv in g o f m e c h a n ic a l puzzles m o s tly m a th e m a tic a l o r g e o m e tric a l. O n iv SI.OO P u b . at $.2,95. 1246. TUE C O M PL E TE ETI K I N G S OF REMBRANDT. By B Sr S H a r ­ ris. Forew ord by V an P o n to n . I n tr o . b y F. G etlein. O v e r 375 e tc h in g s o f th e w orld’s m o s t a r t i s t , a rra n g e d by s u b je c t m a t t e r w ith in fo rm atio n on d a te s , n u m b e r o f s ta te s a v ailab le a n d a s p e c ia l s e c tio n of disputed w o rk s. RU x 11. O n lv $1.95 10% DICTIONARY OF A M E R I C A N PROVERBS. P r e f a e e b y M a r k V a n P o re n . H u n d re d s o f s a y in g s lis te d alp h a b etic a lly by s u b je c t r e f le c tin g th e m eltin g p o t o f A m e ric a n c u ltu r e , its philosophy a n d fo lk lo re. P u b a t Jfi.oo O n ly $1.98 Horizon History of C H R IS TIA N IT Y . B y R.H. B ainton. 490 r e p r o d u c tio n s — in s u p e r b F u ll C o lo r o f o v e r 150 p ain tin g s, s c u lp tu re , ta p e s tr ie s , iv o ­ rie s, illu m in ate d m a n u s c rip ts , e tc . in ­ th e C h ris tia n T r a d itio n . sp ire d by t r a c e s in fo r m a tiv e R ev eren t, e n tire glorious s to ry o f C h r is tia n ity a n d fro m c la ssic al p a s t o f to d ay . 9 ' i x 12Y4- 432 P a g e s . P u b . a t $18 95. S p e c ia l D e lu x e E d i­ tion. O n ly $12.95 fill. PICTORIAL H IST O R Y K717. B y OF THE C O N F E D E R A C Y . of L a m o n t B u c h a n a n . H u n d re d s la rg e illus. F o r th e f i r s t tim e th e w hole vivid s to ry of th e C o n f e d e r a te S ta te s of A m e ric a . 8 x IOU. O rig. P u b . a t $7.95 K3t. M A C R A AI E A FO R K N I T T I N G P R O J E C T S WTI HUI T N E E D L E S . B y P . B o e h - to fo llo w m . O ver IOO in stru c tio n s fo r m a k in g th in g s o u t of wool o r c o tto n y a m —h a ts , h u la sk irts, beach b a g s, ta s s e ls , ta p e s t r y , cases, etc. O rig. Pub. a t $2 95 O n lv $1.00 1071. FILTER F R AMI NG. B y M. R y ­ d e r. S tep-by-stap p h o to s o f m o u n tin g an d fram in g jo b s illu s tr a te th e b a s ic fo r ru le s d o -it- p ro c e d u re s and y o u rse lfe rs a n d fa c ilita te d e a lin g s w ith p ro fessio n al f r a m e r s . Pu b . a t $2.95 O n ly $1.98 9970. CAPITOL C A P S U L E S F R O M ALABAMA TO WYOMING. C o n c is e H isto ries of th e 50 S ta te s a n d T h e ir C apitols. F u ll-p a g e p h o to o f e a c h s ta te capitol. A n a r m - c h a ir v is it to e a c h a r ­ O f c h ite ctu rally a s w e ll a s h is to r ic a lly . P u b . a t $3 80 O n iv $ t.4 » 9984. TAROT R E V E A L E D . A M o d e m G uide to R e a d in g T h e T a r o t C a r d s . B y E den G ra y . T h e 78 c a r d s a r a a u th e n tica lly illu s tr a te d in th is e a s y - to-use e x p la n a tio n o f th e m y s tic sym bolism on th e s e a n c ie n t fo r tu n e tellin g c a rd s. 9 ’i x 6 q . O rig. P u b . a t $3.95 O n ly $1.98 3811.THE BOOK O P T H E H A N D . A a Illustrated History of P a l m i s t r y . B y F r e d G ettings. P r o f u s e ly illu s tr a te d w ith m o re re p r o d u c tio n s fro m old hooks a n d d o c u m e n ts a n d w ith p h o to g ra p h s a n d p a lm p r in t s . How a n d p re d ic t th e fu tu re , a n e w s y s te m th e d if f e r e n t h a n d for classify in g I n f o rm a tiv e , a n d f o r m s fascin atin g h isto ry ’ of p a l m i s t r y in th is deluxe S ’4 x 1114 v o lu m e . to m o v e m e n ts Old T e s ta m e n t illu s. E a s y c h a r a c t e r th a n 200 i n te r e s t a n a ly z e s ta te . ro o ts O n ly te x t a n to $3.95 O T H E R o f v a r ie ty L e t te r s c o n te s ts A dd ress ed s im p le a n d 864. M U SC L E B U IL D IN G GA M ES . B y L. Sr G . F r a n k e d N e a r ly IOO illu s. e x e r c is e s , A a th le tic c o m p e titiv e g a m e s fo r fu n a n d b o d ily s ta m in a . P u b . a t $2.95 O nly SI 99 K238. D E M ON OL OGY AN D WITCH­ C R A FT : to -LG. L ock hart, E s q . b y Sir Walter Scott. Bart. C o m p le te re p r in t of th e 2nd E d itio n o f th is c la s s ic w o rk on s u p e r s titio n a n d th e d a r k s id e of h u m a n n a tu r e . N e a r ly 400 p a g e s B y M .P . T u r o ff. O v e r 350 illu s. N o w O n ly $1.98 975. .AI A K E T O P O T T E R Y & Other C e ra m ic Ware.. d e sig n , P r a c t i c a l a n d h a n d lin g m a k in g , d e c o r a tin g tile s, je w e lry , a r tic le s o f c la y fo r d o lls p lu s o b je c ts .ta b le w a re . P u b . a t $3 95 in s tr u c tio n O n ly $1.98 H O W o th e r a n d on 401. J A P A N : A History In Art. 237 B y B ra d le y S m ith . W ith w o rk s o f a r t r e p ro d u c e d in F u ll C olor. A u n iq u e ly b e a u tifu l b o o k a n d m o s t r e m a r k a b l e re c o rd o f Its c u ltu r e c o n ­ a p e o p le a n d ta in in g a m a tc h le s s c o lle c tio n of p ic tu r e s s u p e r b ly p h o to g ra p h e d . D iv id e d in to IO h is to ric a l p e rio d s fro m th e M eiji, to th e h e ro e s a n d s a g e s , it c o v e r s li t e r a t u r e , re lig io u s a n d th e a te r , m u ra ls , s o c i a l \ s c u lp tu r e , c e r a m ic s , p rin ts . 9 L i q . P u b . a t $30 OO th e A r c h a ic O n ly $14.95 c e r e m o n y , o f by a d s p h o to s 1900-1920 b e a u tifu l P O R T R A IT 2665. E A R L Y A M E R I C A N CAR A D ­ V E R T I S E M E N T S . S e le c te d bv Q. illu s. D a v id B o w e rs . H u n d re d s of th e fro m R e p r o d u c tio n s In c lu d in g B u ick , p e rio d C a d illa c , C h a lm e r s . E lg in , F o rd , F r a n k l i n , H u d so n , lo c o m o b ile . T ie r c e A rro w , S tu tz , e tc . 8 q x l i q O rig . P u b . a t $9 95 O n ly $2 98 K H I. D A V ID DOU GLA S D I NC AN- U S A . S E L F 325 th e w o rld - s tr ik in g re n o w n e d p h o to g r a p h e r , fa m o u s fo r h is Includinsc P ic a s s o 's P ic a s s o , Y a n k e e N o m a d , e tc . T h is. o n e o f h is is a s u p e r b th e A m e ric a n p e o p le in a c tio n , a d r a m a tic c lo se -u p a n d p a n o r a m ic v ie w o f th e m a k in g o f n a tio n a l p o litic a l c o n v e n tio n s a t M iam i B e n c h a n d C h ic ag o , th e r if ts b e tw e e n y o u n g a n d b e tw e e n th e c o n flic ts s tu d e n ts a n d p o lic e , a n d th e o th e r h is to ric e v e n ts t h a t o c c u r re d th e r e H a n d s o m e ly p ro d u c e d re c o rd of o u r tim e s —a to g iv e P u b . a t $18.50 a P r e s i d e n t to ow n a n d r e c o r d o f O n ly $4.95 t r e a s u r e l l x 14. b o n k s fin e s t old. th e a t 8427. G E O R G E CATLIN And The (Md Fr o ntie r B y H a ro ld M c ­ C ra c k e n . F a b u lo u s p ic tu re a n d te x t p r e s e n ta tio n o f th e w o rk of d e a n of th e c e n t u r y 19th i n ­ In d ia n p a in te rs A m e ric a n th e m y s te r io u s M a n d a n c lu d e s t o r t u r e c e r e m o n y , s c a lp in g , m e d ic in e m e n . F la th e a d w o m e n , rite s , w a r r io r s , illu s tr a tio n s , 36 e tc . 167 full e o lo r o f th e o rig in a l p a in tin g s . 9 x 12. P u b . a t $13,50. s e c r e t p u b e r ty O n ly $5.95 in 1372. THE C O M P L E T E BOOK OF G A M E S AN O ST U N TS . By D A. H in d m a n . Illu s. N e a r ly 2000 s e le c ­ tio n s in th is h u g e 440 p a g e c o llectio n o f in d o o r a n d o u td o o r a c tiv itie s b all fig u r e p u zzles, g a m e s , w o rd a n d r a c e s a n d r e la y s , g a g s a n d stu n ts, p a r t y m ix e rs , s k its, e tc . O rig . P u b . a t $7.95 N ew , c o m p le te ed. O nly $2.98 2353. FL O W E R A R R A N G IN G . B y J o y c e R o g e rs. L a v is h ly d in s w ith in 300 p ic tu re s F u ll C olor. B e a u tifu l, h elp fu l, e n ­ te r ta in in g hoo k c o v e r in g all a s p e c ts a n d u s e s of flo w e r a r r a n g in g . P u b . a t $7.50 in c lu d in g 32 p a g e s O nly $2.98 2659 THE P E T E R AJAX PO ST ER BOOK by P e t e r M a x . T w e n ty fo u r g ia n t 12 x 17-Inch fu ll-c o lo r p o s te rs. e a c h p e rfe c t fo r fr a m in g , o r h a n g in g u n f r a m e d by le a d in g p o s te r th e a r t i s t In th e w o rld . I n c lu d e s c o n c ise th e a r t i s t a n d so m e b io g ra p h y of p e r s o n a l r e fle c tio n s o n th e n a tu re , q u a lity , a n d s ig n ific a n c e of his a rt O n l\ $3.95 S o ftb o u n d . K 130 DOWN ON T H E F A R A !: A Pi ctur e T re asury of Country l i f e In A m eric a in the Good Old D ay s. C o m m e n ta ry ’ b y S te w a r t H o lb ro o k . H u n d re d s o f p h o to s. H e re a r e fa rm h o u s e s of e v e r y k in d , th e ir fa m ilie s a t w o rk a n d p la y , a n im a ls , s u rre y s tow n a n d b u c k b o a rd s, m e e tin g s, m a il o r d e r c a ta lo g u e s , e tc . s x l i q , O rig . P u b . a t $5 OO. e q u ip m e n t, O nly $” 98 T H E C O M P L E T E 8 7 1 3 . ILLI STR ATK!* ROOK OF YOGA B y S w am i V is h r u d e n a n a n d a . O v e r I to full r a g e p h o to s All th e e s s e n tia l k n o w l e d g e : a s a n a s , b re a th in g e x e r c is e s , c o n c e n tr a tio n , m e d ita tio n d ie t, p h ilo so p h y , tra in in g p ro g r a m s , e tc O rig . P u b . a t $10 on lo n g e v ity , O nly $3.9" now TO F I RXI'-R OI D 1980 A M ER IC AN HOUSEN Bv H L . 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D o -It-Y o u rself K it w ith b rig h tly c o lo re d p a p e r p a tte r n s in to a n im a te d to to a n im a ls , d e c o r a tio n s —w ith w e a r , illu s tr a te d b o o k . b y P a u l L ohel, E d s i g n e d A m e r ic a 's f ir s t P a p e r te e r . Size 12 x 12. P u b . a t $1.49 in s tru c tio n O n ly $1.90 p a r ty 6310 WOOD CARVING. B y F r e d a S k in n e r. Illu s. w ith 68 d ra w in g s Sr 24 p h o to s . A c o m p a c t In s tru c tio n a l to c a p t u r e a r tis tic g u id e on h ow ty p e s o f w ood, f o r m s tools, t r e a t m e n t a n d p r e s e r v a tio n , jo in in g , la m in a tio n , e tc . O rig . P u b . a t $3 95 in w ood, N ew , c o m p le te e d . 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In c re a s e y o u r < a m p b e ll. How' a n d in c o m e s p e c u la tio n c o m ­ m e r c ia l a n d r e s o r t p r o p e r ti e s ; c itie s, co n ­ s u b u r b s d o m in iu m s a n d c o o p s for b e g in ­ n e r s a n d e x p e r ie n c e d in v e sto rs O rig P u b . a t $7 50. in v e s tm e n t re s id e n tia l. f a r m l a n d , O n ly $1 98 a n d in 261 Gilded Age 1 T H E N IN E T IE S B d by A m e ric a n H e rita g e . O v e r IOO Ii in s., 36 In l ull C olor. G a y n o s ta lg ic k a t a liv e ly w o rld b y w o n d e rfu l I w r ite r s Inch H e y w o o d H ale B ro u n , \ \ A. S w n n b e rg , f e a r le s s f o r m s ta bv H G W ells a n d C h a rle s D a n a G ib so n a n d m a rv e lo u s p ic tu r e s th a t c a p tu r e th o e x h ’a r a tin g s p irit of th e tim* s I uh. a t $4.95 O nly $1,98 a n d p h o to s, o f sy m b o ls K3I3. R E M E M B E R W H E N : A Loving Look at D a y s Gone Bv p o s te rs. 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O nly $1.98 E a c h CENTI RY T W E N T I E T H M A S T E R N , v o lu m e illu s tra te d w ith 40 p a g e s of high- q u a lity c o lo r p la te s p lu s 30 o r m o re m o n o c h ro m e su m p tu o u sly p ro d u c e d . E x a m in e s th e w o rk of s o m e o f th e g r e a t e s t p a in te rs , sc u lp to rs a n d a r c h ite c ts of o u r tim e w ith in fo rm a tiv e h ig h ly ip x ts. $7.95 V a lu e E a c h O nly $3.95 I960. GAI DI 1982. KENZO T A N G E 1990. LE CORR! S I E R 1996. MONDRIAN 2000. PICASSO c o r , O R I I I- WORLD O F 653. R O S E N . B y X . F ie ld . N e a rly 200 p ic tu re s , 39 a r e In s p a r k lin g co lo r. to A w id e -ra n g in g , p r a c t i c a l g u id e ro s e g ro w in g a s fo r a ll p u rp o s e s h e d g es, s ta n d a r d s , g ro u n d c o v er, in c o n ta in e rs, a n d old rn v a rie tie s . 814 x l i q . $9 95 V alu e O nly $2.98 n e w e tc th e K667. L A RO USSE E N C Y C L O P E D I A o r T H E E A R T H F o r e w o r d b y S ir V iv ia n F u c h s . In tr o , b v C a rro ll I,. th a n 500 P h o to s Sr F e n to n . M o re D ia g ra m s , M o stly In C olor. C o m ­ p re h e n siv e . a u th o r ita tiv e a c c o u n t of tile a n a to m y a n d h is to ry of o u r g e o lo g y , m in e ra lo g y , p la n e t, p a la e o n to lo g y —a n s w e r s a l m o s t r \ p ry finest ion. 8 1 j x l i q . O rig . H a rd b o u n d od P u b . a t $22 00. S o ftb o u n d O nly $5.95 AR ­ A M E R I C A N K 2 I 6 . AV CHITE CTUR E F r a n k L loyd B y W rig h t. E d . B y E . K a u fm a n . 2.50 illus. T h e p rip f-ip le s o f o rg a n ic a r ­ c h ite c tu r e of th is m a s t e r b u ild e r in te x t an d p ic tu re s ra n g in g from in ­ fo rm a l s k e tc h e s to h a n d s o m e p h otos. 9 ’ ; x 1211 O rig . P u b . a t $17.50. N ew , c o m p le te ed. Only $ 1.05 K903. Ed Mc Mahon's BARNI DE C OM PA NIO N. D ra w in g s by P . In - te r la n d i. T h e Jo v ial c e le b r ity fro m T h e J o h n n y C a rso n Show c o n c o c ts 'ro u n d th e b a r a h ila rio u s b le n d of jo k e s , and tr ic k s . P u b . a t $3 95 Only $1.90 g a m e s , s tu n ts , b e ts, K926. SONGS OF T H E G R E A T A M E R I C A N WEST. E d . by I. S illier. by E . R o b in so n . O v e r M u sic cd 150 illu s. A u th e n tic m u s ic a n d w o rk s o f th e p io n e e rs w ith o v e r KW so n g s a r r a n g e d inc!. S w e e t Bt ts y F ro m P ik e , S a n ty Anno, D a y s of '49, O ld C h ish o lm T ra il, T h o K a n s a s F o o l, J e s s e J a m e s , Big R o c k C a n d y M o u n tain , e tc B ib lio ­ g ra p h y A- d is c o g ra p h y . SR x IK * . Only $1.95 P u b . a t $12.50 fo r p ia n o Sr g u ita r g lo rio u s JACKSON' POLLOCK. in F u ll C o lo r. O n e o f c o m p ila tio n s 110 K283. th e illu s. 63 m o s t of P o llo c k a v a ila b le , S h o w s w h y his lib e r a tin g felt s tro n g ly in A m e ric a Sr. E u ro p e fro n t F o r tie s to p r e s e n t a n d th e in flu en c e o f D a d a Sr S u r r e a lis m on h is w ork. 9 a \ 121 $9.95 V a lu e. in flu e n c e h a s b e e n Only $3.95 . a u th e n tic a lly K687. WILD L I F F ON TH E PLAIN I NDI AN AA .AR­ A HORRORS OE ih e FA R E . R e v e a ls c o m p le te life, w a r f a r e an d a d v e n tu re In A m e ric a in c h C u s te r 's d e s c rip tio n o f "W ild B ill,” S h e r m a n 's te r r i b le m a r c h a n d p io n e e r In d ia n h is to ry a n d c u ltu re . th e o rie s o f h is to ry o f in d ia n IN SHOWING. By R C O rig . P u b . a t $20 .50. Only $3.95 K704 Hand writing A nalys is: YOUR S C R I P T M a r tin . H ow o th e r s b e tte r a n a ly s is . T e a c h e s how id e n tify c u rio u s c h a r a c t e r tr a its P u b . a t $2.95, to k n o w y o u rs e lf a n d th ro u g h h a n d w ritin g e a s ily O nly $1.49 to K837. T H E R E H ( TA NT PR IN ­ C E S S : A L e g e n d of L o v e in S ia m . F u ll-C o lo r Illu s. C h a r m in g fa iry 1nle a b o u t w in n in g th e h a n d of a p r in ­ c e s s . A g es 8-12. T u b . a t $.5 00. Only $1.98 c a r Illus. c a r e , P r o fu s e ly S p e c ia l $4.95 K108. P R O P O S I T I O N 31 To Legalize G ro u p M arriage. B y R .H . R im m er. T he a u th o r o f th e l l a r r a d E x p e rim en t p r e s e n ts a n o v e l o f a n a tte m p t to le g a liz e g ro u p m a r r i a g e in C alifornia v ia th e b a llo t.O n ly $1.90 2917. THE FIX-IT ROOK B y A. Sym ons. w ith draw in g s a n d c le a r in s tr u c tio n s fo r a n d h e a tin g e lectrical, p lu m b in g , re p a irs. g a r d e n in g , p ain tin g a n d o th e r h o u s e m a in ­ tenance. O n ly $1.90 P u b . a t $2.50 883. THE STORA' OF M E D I C I N E . By R. M arg o tta . H u n d re d s o f illu s ., m ostly In F u ll C olor. I .a r g e CS1 a x l i q ) h a n d so m e v o lu m e p r e s e n ti n g th e e x citem e n t an d p ro g r e s s fro m a n cien t s o rc e ry to m o d e m m ir a c le s of vaccines, d ru g s a n d s u r g e r y . O n ly $9.95 Pub. a t $17.95 K272. NATI RE S W AYS: H ow N a ­ ture Takes Care of Its Own. B y R o y C hapm an A n d rew s. 141 illu s., 72 F u ll C olor re p ro d u c tio n s o f p a in tin g s bv A ndre D u re n c ea u , S te v a n D o h an o 's Sr others. T he s tr a n g e a n d w o n d e rfu l in w h ich N a tu r e 's c r e a t u r e s w ay s th e m s e lv e s f o r s u r ­ h a v e equipped vival. F a s c in a tin g , e n te r ta in in g a n d beautiful. An e x c e p tio n a l b o o k fo r ail the fam ily. 8 x l l . O rig. Pub. a t $10.OO N e w , c o m p le te cd. O n ly $4.95 194. MATHEW' RBA D Y: Historian With a Camera B y J .D . K o ra n . O v e r 500 nills, in c lu d in g e x c lu siv e p ic tu r e s from re s tric te d B rady H a n d y c o lle c ­ tions, F ir s t a u th o riz e d b io g ra p h y of A m e ric a 's le g e n d a r y C ivil W a r p h o to g rap h er. O rig. pub. a t $7.50New, c o m p le te od. O n ly $3.95 3192, MARY T H O M A S ’S H K - v T I O N A R Y O F E M B R O ID E R Y *; STITCHES Illu s. w ith 305 d ia g r a m s showing how e a c h s titc h is w o rk e d , , V in d e x of in a lp h a b etic a l o rd e r, a n 3 uses for e ac h s titc h p lu s a n u m b e r of photos. A c la s s ic a l g u id e r e is s u e d In response to p o p u la r d e m a n d , od. i Orig. Pub. a t $3.50. N e w c o m p le te O n ly $1.98 V 2 IS. I IIF I LL CSTR ATH) NS O F I R E J HERIC REMINGTON. C o m m e n ta r y by Owen W iste r. C o n cise b io g ra p h y ” and acco u n t o f R e m in g to n ’s w o rk ■md c a r e e r by M a r ta J a c k s o n . 200 of the h est of R e m in g to n ’s d r a w in g s and Illu stratio n s fo r m a g a z in e s a n d books. 814 x l l . 256 p a g e s . O n ly $3.95 b la c k 8431. B I S E S , T R O LL E Y S A N D TR AM S. B y C h a s . S. D u n b a r. O v e r p h o to s & 200 Sr w h ite in c o lo r. e n g r a v in g s ; 24 fu ll p a g e s H o rs e - d ra w n c a r s tro lle y s , s te a m a n d N a p h th a c a r s a n d i n te r u r b a n s to th e m o d e rn h ig h ­ w a y b u s e s , th e w o rld . th ro u g h o u t 8 '4 x IL $7.95 V a lu e . O n ly $1.98 c a b le a n d 1577. YOU C A N COOK FO R O N E L o u ise (OR E V E N TWO). B y I ick o ff T h e p e r f e c t co o k b o o k fo r th e b a c h e lo r o r th e c a r e e r g irl, a n y o n e liv in g a lo n e . E a s y to m a k e , ta s t y r e c ip e s w ith e c o n o m y a n d n o w a s te . P u b . a t $4 95. O n ly $1.49 b y C a ld e c o tt. 2959. T H E A N N O T A T E D MOT HER GOOSE I n tr o d . St N o te s bv W m . S Sr C ec il B a rin g -G o u lrl. O v e r 200 I I I n s . C ra n e , G r e e n a w a y _ R a e k h a m . P a r r is h & H is to ric a l W o o d c u ts. T h e c o m p le te e x t a n d Illu s tr a tio n s in a fu lly a n ­ n o ta te d e d itio n c o n ta in in g m o re th a n 1.000 rh y m e s o rig in a l, v a r ia tio n s , s o u r c e s a n d a llu sio n s. O rig . P u b . a t $10.00 N ew , c o m p l e x ed ., O n ly $3.95 s e p a r a t e T H E C O LLECTED S y m o n s . 214 /A p p reciatio n E d . 8 3 2 6 . D R A W I N G S O F AI BREA by B E A R D S L E Y . b y B A rth u r T h e m o s t illu s. H a rris . u n iq u e , c o m p r e h e n s iv e c o lle ctio n e v e r p u b lis h e d —fu ll of B e a r d ­ s le y ’s d e c a d e n c e , s e n s u a lity a n d sin . In c h a ll m a jo r p re v io u s ly w o rk s c a ta lo g , s u p p re s s e d , in fo r m a tiv e la r g e a s e c tio n o f w ic k e d fo rg e rie s . 8 q X l l . E x t r a o r d in a r y v a lu e . O nly $2.98 c o m p le te a n d te x t a n d m a n y b e a u ty a n d 2905. T H E T R E A S U R Y O F T H E G UN. B y H a ro ld L . P e te rs o n . A g o rg e o u s v o lu m e w ith h u n ­ d re d s o f m a g n if ic e n t F u ll C o lo r P h o to s , r a r e p r in t s Sr d ra w in g s , p iu s te x t c o v e rin g th e h is to r y of th e g u n fro m to m a g a z in e a r m s . S iz e 8 '4 x 1194. P u b . a t $15.00. in fo r m a tiv e g u n p o w d e r O n ly $7.95 liv e ly 9997. THE G O L D E N A G E O F THE AMERICAN RACING CAR. By G riffith B o rg e so n . W ith 220 photos Sr d ra w in g s . T h e c o m p le te sto ry of th e m e n , Hie m a c h in e s , the tra c k s, th e e n g in e e r in g a n d th e g r e a t y e a r s the betw een W orld W a rs I & If w h e n A m erican r a c in g c a r s a c h ie v e d classical p e rfe c tio n . 8 x l i q . Pub. a t $12.50 O n ly $3.95 fe a ts of 93!I. KITE MAKING ANO I LA ING. Ry II. R id g w ay . Illu s. w ith p h o to s & 39 d ra w in g s o f p la n s . P r a c t i c a l guide e n ­ ch an tin g m a te r ia ls , m ethods, a c c e s s o rie s , w in d , fo r m in g clubs, etc. O rig. Pub. at $3.75 to e n jo y m e n t o f sk ill—to o ls, O n ly $1.99 th is 6369. A M E R IC A N SH IP M O D EL S A nd How To B u ild Them . B y V R. G rim w o o d . F o r e w o r d by H o w a rd I. C h a p e lle . C o n ta in s a c c u r a te p la n s a m i d r a w in g s fo r c o n s tr u c tin g 12 a u th e n tic s c a le m o d e ls of A m e ric a n s a ilin g v e s s e ls : g u n d bow, a n c h o r h o y , b u g e y e , w h a lin g sch o o n e r, e tc . w ith all d e ta ils o f rig g in g a n d g e a r . 7 q x 1014. O rig . P u b . a t $7.00 N ew , c o m p le te e d .. O n ly $2.98 9 9 5 1 . H E N R Y ’S W O N D E R F U L M ODEL T F lo y d C ly m e r. A fo n d a lb u m o f 500 p h o to s, c a rto o n s , a d s, so n g s, Jokes a n d in ­ ab ou t A m e r ic a ’s fo r m a tiv e fa v o rite c a r . F o r th e co n n o isseu r th ere a r e s ta tis tic s a n d d ia g r a m s. 834 X l i q . O rig . P u b . a t $5.95 1908-1927. B y O nly $2.98 te x t CL e v e r y c o lle c tio n K796. Inspirational R e a d in g ! T H E F A M I L Y ALBI M. E d . by A. & N . D e M o ss. B e a u tifu l fo r fa m ily of p o e try a n d p ro s e w h o le a n d s e a s o n a l o c c a s io n fo r in c lu d in g N ew Y e a r ’s. h o lid a y l i v e l y E a s t e r to s e le c tio n by G ib ra n , L in co ln , L o n g fello w , e tc . 19 F u ll C o lo r P la te s . S im u la te d le a th e r b in d in g . P u b . a t $1 95. C h ris tm a s . Only $1.49 w ritin g s in c lu d e s D ia n e 8161. G R E A T R E C I P E S FRO AI T H E WORLD S GR E A T COOKS. Col. b y P . H a n e y . 300 e n c h a n tin g r e c ip e s o f .Tulia C hild, J a m e s B e a rd , C ra ig H e le n C la ib o rn e , E v a n s B ro w n , F a n n ie F a r m e r , e tc . E x t r a o r d in a r y h asty d is h e s c o v e r in g all c u is in e s s e le c te d fro m co o k b o o k s. O rig . P u b . a t $7.50 c o lle ctio n of th e w o rld ’s O nly ft .98 f a v o rite L u c a s, KS 12. T H E VANISHING F R E N ­ C H M A N : T h e M y ste rio u s D isap * p c a r a n c e o f L a p e ro u s e . B y E d w . AV. A lle n . U n o rth o d o x P h o to s . b io g ra p h y o f th e F r e n c h a d v e n t u r e r a n d h e ro w h o se e x p lo ra tio n s a n d r o m a n c e s to A la sk a , S ib e ria , th e S o u th S e a s Sr A u s tra lia . Only $1.98 P u b , a t $3.75. to o k him 25 R by E d . K631, T h e Kenn edy A ss as sin ati on In E ditorial Cartoons: A NATION G R I E V E D . R a js k i. F o r e w o r d b y A rth u r S c h le s in g e r , J r . e d ito ria l o v e r C o lle c tio n a f te r p u b lis h e d c a r to o n s .TF K s g r e a t d e a th s o rro w a n d loss fe lt th ro u g h o u t o u r c o u n tr y a n d w o rld . P u b . a t $5 OO 200 s h o rtly Only $1 99 re fle c tin g of 936 WOOL S T ITC H E R )’. B y C G . to T od. A < o m p le te e m ­ b r o id e r y w ith w ool in* i ta b le c lo th s, h a n d b a g s , e tc . w ith s p e c ia l s e c tio n on c re w e l w o rk . 20 Illus. O n ly l l 90 g u id e th e 433. T H E GR E A T IRON TR AIL : The S to r y of th e F ir s t T r a n s c o n tin e n ta l R a ilr o a d . B y K W. H o w a rd . W ith 23 P h o to s . B lood, s w e a t a n d d o lla rs b u ilt firs t m o d e m A m e ric a n r a ilr o a d . 2(MX) m ile s fro m O m a h a to S a c r a m e n to , a n d th o s e w h o p e o p le d th e p r o je c t w e re a m o tle y a s s e m ­ b la g e "f e x p lo re rs . Iro n m e n , la b o r e r s , an d fin a n c ie rs O rig P u b . a t $8.50, N e w , c o m p le te In v e n to rs , e d . o n ly $2.98 r e c ip e s by I .’(I Com pl ete bean cookbook. By V. B e n n e tt. t r e a s u r y of II! is. B ig b e a n th e M a itre D ‘ a t M a r k H o p k in s H otel, S an F r a n c is c o . C S Sum tu I c an Soup. S u in g B ea n s C a n d ie d N a v y N U 'o ise, (ii i! d m o th e r s B ro w n S u g a r B e a n s , S o u th e rn Spo o n B re a d , e tc . P u b . a t $5 9 I. Only $1 98 Benns, IN D I A N 117. * ESKIMO AR­ U I Al I s D F NORTH AMERI ! A. B y c . M iles. O v e r 2nOO e x a m p le s th is p ic to ria l guidp. In c lu d in g 7 in c o lo r p la te s , c o v e rin g th e m a j o r k in d s of N o rth A m e ric a n n a t i v e - in a d a Ave ip o n s, p o tte ry , bn k e try , b o a ts, r e g a lia , e tc . w ith te c h n ic a l d e ta ils o f m a n u f a c tu r e a n d lo re a b o u t th e u s a g e f a r b a c k a s p re - C o lu m b la n tim e s . 834 x l i q . P u b . a t $25.00 Only $5.95 fro m na a r tif a c ts all o f tools, in TO tr a n s p o r t F A R E W E L L ST E A M . 79| . T e x t by D. Plow ’d e n . P h o to g r a p h s 145 g r a v u r e . p h o to s s u p e r b T h r illin g p o r t r a i t of r a il and w a tu r­ bo n m th * in s te a m e r a ; lo c o m o tiv e s, p a s s e n g e r lin e rs , tu g s , fe rrie s , c a r g o b o a ts . e tc . 8'a X l l . I ’iIU>. at $10 00 Only $3.95 M S I. L E G E R . HO Illu s. 63 In F u ll C o lo r. S tu n n in g , c o m p le te s tu d y of L e g e r 's c a r e e r a n d v a rio u s s ta g e s In in s d e v e lo p m e n t. 93* x 1 2 5 3. $9 .9 6 Only $3.95 V a lu e . la s t o f th e c o n trib u tio n K SU . R and M cN all y ’s P I O N E E R A TLA S ( ll THE AM ER H AN AA E s t . to W e s te rn V a lu a b le w ith A m e r i c a n a F a c s im ile th e m a p s o f 15 r e p r o d u c tio n s of M ate s o f o u r e a r ly W e st a s f ir s t p u b lis h e d in 1878. A lso c o n te m p o r a r y r a ilr o a d m a p s . tra v e l l i t e r a t u r e of th o s e d a y s, in fo r m a tiv e h is to r ic a l te x t, l l 1* x l i q . P u b . a t $10 00. Only $3.95 a d s . a n d Is su e s HORIZON h a rk A M E R I C A N HE R IT A GE MAGZINR MAGA ZINE: a n d C h o ic e A s s o rte d th e m o s t s e le c tio n of f a s c in a tin g in Hie w o rld . E a c h ' m a g a z in e s ” Issu e c o n ta in s 15 to 18 In fo rm a tiv e , th o u g h t-p ro v o k in g a r tic le s o f m a n 's p a s t w r itt e n by th e g r e a t h is to ria n s o f to d a y E a c h hag o v e r IOO illu s ., 25 In F u ll C olor. H a rd b o u n d , 9*4 x 12’*. Q u a n titie s lim ited . T u b . a t $.5.00 an d $6 OO e a c h Only $1.99 each 1977. COINN A N D COIN COLLEC­ TING. B y lf L in c c a r. In f o r m a tiv e d is c u s s io n s o f ev o lu tio n of c o in s- th e ir s p r e a d th ro u g h o u t th e O ld & N ew W o rld s ; th e ir m a n u f a c tu r e ; a n d how to s t a r t Sr k eep a coin c o lle ctio n Only $3.95 $9.95 V a lu e . KW*. ROAVAN AN D M A R T I N ’S LAI g h i n . T h e h e st jo k e s, o n e - lin e r s , g ra ff iti, a n d s ig h t g a g s fro m th e h ila r io u s TV show . F ille d w ith lo ts o f p ic tu re s a n d c o lo r p h o to s. G u a r a n te e d la u g h in g fo r h o u rs , w ith th e s a m e h ila rio u s d ia lo g u e th e y u se in th e show . P u b . a t $6.95. to k e ep y o u Only $1.49 K459. T R E A S U R E —H ow and AVhern To F in d It. B y R L. N e s m ith Sr J . S . P o tte r , J r . H u n d re d s o f p h o to s, d r a w in g s Sr m a p s. S to r ie s o f am i tip s s u n k e n fin d lo st m in e s , r o b b e r s ' t r e a s u r e sh ip s, fo r tu n e s , w ith In s tru c tio n s fo r u sin g a m e ta l d e te c to r . 63* x 9 q . T u b . a t $4.95. on w h e re Only $1.98 to J .S K686. SL A N G And It* Analog up*. By F a r m e r Sr W E H e n le y . In tro , by T h e o d o re M. B e r n s te in . P io n e e rin g w o rk of le x ic o g ra p h y of of Ih e E n g la n d Jarg o n , folk, e tc . w ith n ic k n a m e s , d ia le c t, e x a m p le s o f u sa g e . 8 'z x l l . S o ft­ b o u n d . O rig . p u b . a t $8.95. n o n s ta n d a r d a n d c o llo q u ia l. la n g u a g e N e w , c o m p le te cd. Only $3.95 HEMPHILLS 2244 GUADALUPE — On the Drag OPEN: 8:15-5:00 DAILY — 9:30 -1:30 SAT.