T h e Da i l y T e x a n Student New spaper at The University of TexasK Vol. 69 Price Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1970 V-two Pages In Three Sections No. 142 t m # z+vO&'X > --: jiaeaS wsimsm Fall to Spring I The University grows, with a N o. its students football team and with who dance, view the world from dark* colored glasses, grow their hair long and wild or just listen as the music flows over them. * ; " l . « r M B R 1! ■ < * T * Round- Up: By RUTH DO YLE Assistant Managing Editor . Round-Up is more than a raucous weekend overflow­ ing with beer, drunks and dancing. hard, lithe young bodies. They come to run, pitch, pass and pfay their hearts out and to wear the proud orange and white uniforms. They are known as Longhorns. It is merely a symbol of the close interplay of man with the campus and his environment which is the Uni­ versity in its essence. But the University is no vacuum. Students live in the outside world just as they exist inside the sheltered pre­ cincts of Parlin Hall and the Main Library. The campus is a conglomerate of people coming from places far apart with different purposes to unite under an orange Tower and form one mass student body. Bearded, sandal-wearing radicals and almond-eyed women garbed in gossamer saris mingle with the sons and daughters of W est Texas ranchers and East Texas refinery workers to form the 30,000-plus student body that is the University. They laugh at the same jokes, they play the same kind of games. They differ in their politics and study at varying levels of intensity. Yet a majority of them will leave with similar diplo­ mas and identical memories. The memory of a touchdown run under the hot sun at Memorial Stadium may bring back college days or it might be the remembrance of the gray-blue approach of a Texas norther framed in the plate-glass windows of the Academic Center. And then there are the men who form a large part of the University's activity, athletics. From Wisconvn and from the tip of Texas they come bringing with them their sports know-how and their They campaign for national political candidates out of busy Austin offices. They worry about the state of the nation and the world's environment. Sonde feed hungry children out of an East Austin center. Others work for a "model city" down on E 1st Street. They are involved in saving their fellow men and stu­ dents whether by providing a "bad trip" service at the Y or b y a gita tin g a gain st the effects o f pollution and a tar-aw ay war. Along with them, the University has spread out of the Austin center and farther into the world A t Winedale, M cAdam s Ranch and Paisano Ranch, the University is attempting to return to the land. A t ai^ n°' a Poet communes with the environment. A t M cAdam s Ranch, University groups are given the opportunity to meet in a peaceful, pastoral setting, campus 1 * 7 flT , . the,b,Ust 'Ln9 world of Austin and And at Winedale, the arts are provided a natural set- ting. ifsdfnd thus' +he Un!ver$!ty !s' !n truth, a "round-up" in It is a round-up of people in one ameliorating spot. Man, the Campus, the Land Interplay to Form a University It is a round-up of men and athletes. It is a round-up of man and his interests, his quest or now e ge, his love of the land, his involvement with the rest of humanity. And Round-Up, in its name, is symbolic of this. RIoun^'.U P bas been a hodge-podge of the a, traditional celebration complete with flowing beer and mammoth orgiastic parties and a new attempt at relevance to University student interests. The crowning was moved up so thaf she might reign over the festivities for the full week. In previous years, the sweetheart had been crowned nearer the end of the week. Campus elections were held Wednesday, on April ;.a y ’ mferiecfm9 a more serious note into the I L celebration. And the beer distributors rubbed their hands in glee Unfortunately, it has also seemed to be a menaqe of under w W *be an°ual fraternity parties to get disappointments. Judith Crist, noted critic, drew capacity crowds main- y >ec^u^ of her fame and not because of the incon­ venient 0:30 a.m. speaking time she was given nor because her speech was widely publicized. M any students expressed dissatisfaction because the speech coincided with peak classtime. The best of Round-Up this year has been the old. showcase, a multi-media extravaganza, has proved one of the most Interesting parts of the celebration. Big news is the revived Round-Up parade. Tentatively dignitaries and celebrities who plan to ride m the parade include Mayor Travis LaRue, Presi­ dent Norman Hackerman, Playboy's April Playmate, Barbara Hillary, Andrew Fabacher, the commercial beer ad star and Joe Namath, star quarterback of the New York Jets. University Sweetheart, Diane Swendeman, was crown­ ed among festivities Monday night in Municipal Audi­ torium. According to reports, alcoholic consumption at these celebrations reaches gigantic proportions. And hotels are filled for the weekends. Som e are girl friends arriving for the party-filled •mae+ons l rfh mg| to see the wild University at its worst. ° U " u re hi? h schoo|-a9e teens com- Round-Up 70 will doubtless be a disappointment for some, a meaningful experience for others and to some fun" time. just a memory of a p J/j th® result of a group effort on the part of the Round-Up Committee who are to be commended for their attempts at relevance." LAnut IOO passengers stranded for three days in a hijacked airliner for a Japa­ nese deputy Cabinet minister. The nine students, who want to fly to North Korea, a- greed to take Shinjiro Yamamura, vice transportation min­ ister, with them instead of the weary passengers. Yama­ mura volunteered Thursday as ransom for the passengers. Sn key a Abe, Socialist member’of Japan’s parliament, a r­ rived here shortly after midnight Friday a t the demand of the students to identify Yamamura, whom they do not know. Abe, who visited North Korea last year as a member of a Socialist party goodwill mission, said he did not know why the students had nominated him. In Tokyo, Chief Cabinet Secretary Shigeru Hor! told a news conference the hijackers said they would release the passengers after dawn Friday following the identification of 36-year-old Yamamura. Teamsters Strike Reportedly N ear End W A S H IN G T O N Teamsters and trucking negotiators were reported Thurs­ day to be close to a three-year wage agreement for 425,000 truck drivers, and some striking workers already were re­ turning to their jobs. ‘ The secretary is quite optimistic th at a lot of progress has been made,” said a spokesman for Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz. However, many of the thousands of striking drivers in dozens of cities remained off the job while the national con­ tract talks continued in Teamsters Union headquarters here. Sources said bargaining teams headed by the acting Team­ sters President, Frank E. Fitzsimmons, and chief industry negotiator Ray F. Beagle had narrowed their earlier 80- cent gap in wage positions to a difference of about 30 cents. And they were continuing efforts to compromise. ‘Patriotic’ M arch Set for Saturday W A SH IN G T O N The leader of a March for Victory predicted Thursday that up to 100,000 persons would parade here Saturday in “an answer to the hippies” and a challenge to the Presi­ dent to win the Vietnam war. Dr. Carl Mclntire, Collingwood, N .J., a fundamentalist radio preacher who is chairman of the march committee, said it is a Christians’ and patriots’ march. The parade will take the same route from the foot of the Capitol, along Pennsylvania Avenue, and to the Washing­ ton Monument that 250,000 antiwar demonstrators took last Nov. 15. “We are challenging the moratorium march and the en­ tire hippie concept of immediate and total withdrawal _ and th at is surrender,” Mclntire said. Smith M a y Back Pot Law Revision A U ST IN Gov. Preston Smith appeared Thursday to be considering a recommendation that the next Legislature lower the pen­ alties for possession of marijuana. He spoke to a conference he called on public health and drugs. “Many say harsher penalties would curb the use of drugs. Is this true? If it is, why the rapid rise in convictions, espe­ cially in view of the severe penalties just for the possession of marijuana? Scare tactics, without fact or reason, will not work,” Smith said. WASHINGTON (AP) - Lead­ ers of a union of air traffic con­ trollers agreed in federal court Thursdy to order their men back to work by Hie weekend and end a that has curbed air travel throughout the country. sick-call walkout THE AGREEMENT, announced in U. S. District Court by Judge George L. Hart Jr., followed a five-hour closed session with Justice Department attorneys and the three Professional Air Traffic Con­ trollers Organization — PATCO. officials top of Hart then dismissed contempt proceedings against the three — attorney F. Lee Bailey, PATCO's executive director; Michael Rock, the union’s board chairman, and Jam e L. Hayes, the president. What effect tile court agree­ ment would have on these plans apparently will depend on how ejective the union leaders’ back­ i e work call is, Union spokesmen said Wednesday they would not go back the government agreed to third-party participation. to work until Claim Refuted By Cambodians PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — The Cambodian govern­ ment declared Thursday that American forces in South Viet­ nam do not have the “right of pursuit” to thrust into Cambodian territory during battles with North Vietnamese or Viet Cong. The statement was issued fol­ lowing reports that U. S. and South Vietnamese forces were now stating they had this right when chasing Viet Cong forces that retreat into Cambodia for sanctuary. The statement said: “Faithful to its policy of strict neutrality, C ambodia will not in fact accept the right of pursuit carried out on its territory.” The statement added that the g o v e r n m e n t protested all violations of Cambodian territory “by foreign armies, from which­ ever camp they may be.” DESPITE THE agreement, the slowdown continued Thursday with large numbers of controller absent in the FAA’s 21 regional control c e n te r which handle high altitude traffic. Bad weather snow, wind, fog and heavy rain —■ covered the eastern two-thirds of tho nation, adding to the snarl and leaving travelers with can­ celled flights and long delays. The strike-ending agreement provides for PATCO officials to announce at a news conference Friday that “normal operation of the air traffic control system should be restored at once” and to urge controllers to return to work for their next normal tour of duty. THE APPEAL TO PATCO members, according to the agree­ ment is also to be made through telegrams and telephone record­ ings. Tile judge said he expects the parties to report back to him on the progress in carrying out the agreement. He said he would prod them into action if there is any delay. He noted that his action still left contempt proceedings against the union scheduled to be heard {L A VASCA_. Digiunate sino a1 15 Abrilel REGULAR 25.00. N O W 17.50. 3 DAYS ONLY. APRIL 2, 3, 4. JOE NAMATH ROUND UP PARADE SATURDAY, 12 NO O N WILL RIDE IN THE (NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY) CASTILIAN BEAUTY 4 7 8 -0 7 7 5 SHOP 2323 SAN ANTONIO S C e e t FRANK DENIUS TO TH E A U STIN SCHOOL BOARD PLACE 4 - A PR IL 4 / felcdye *K/'* responsibility . I. no kidding. .< ' -rf Southwestern Bell A n E q u a l Opportunity E m ployer Cam pus In terview s For Engineering Majors April 7 -8 Page 2A Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN I W M City Refuses S M C Permit Round-Up Parade Given Approval Johnson said. that JOHNSON MENTIONED since SMC composed of is University students, the parade should be carried out near the campus or in another area large enough to accommodate the stu­ dents. Malcolm Robinson represented SMC at the council session. is “My sole purpose in­ fluence you gentlemen to allow students to express their First Amendment rights,” Robinson said. to Robinson recommended that the council not make a decision on the basis of personalities. He said members their decison solely and only on the basis of letting SMC express what they believe. should “base “Austin is a unique situation and you have to bend a little forward sometimes.” Robinson told the council members. He said SMC members are a new generation and respectable students. “WHEN CONSIDERING A pal* ade permit, it is considered if it comes at a very busy time,’* MacCorkle said. He further said the that Congress Avenue busiest on Saturday afternoons. is After the failure of the parade request, Robinson said he ao cepted the decision. SMC mem­ bers are consulting lawyers on legal questions brought about by the decision. The Round-Up parade permit was approved quickly with a 7-0 vote in favor of the parade. New Discusses His Goals By CHRIS .MEREDITH News Assistant Students’ Association President­ elect Jeff Jones is “looking into the bureaucracy” to determine the specific steps he will take to accomplish action on the issues he raised during his campaign. Jones, the first political radical ever elected student body presi­ dent at the University, has said that if the ordinary channels of student to government produce results in areas of stu­ dent interest, he will call for stu­ dent agitation. “Agitation” as defined by Jones includes rallies or peaceful demonstrations which “show public support” of in­ terested students. fail of Jim Arnold, elected vice­ president Students’ the Association in Wednesday’s run­ off, supported “exhausting all before m e t h o d s resorting to agitation.” Arnold said, however, that he considers peaceful demonstration a legiti­ mate means of expression. available By virtue of his office Jones will become a voting member of the Advisory Council on Student Affairs, the Athletic Council, the Committee on Student Organi­ zations, the Committee on Stu­ dent Living Accommodations, Texas Student Publications Board and the Texas Union Board of Directors. By SUSANNE SULLIVAN Staff Writer Austin City Council approved Thursday a permit for the 1970 R o u n d - U p parade scheduled Saturday and refused a permit for a Student Mobilization Com­ mittee April 18 parade to protest the war in Vietnam. Council also approved a parade for the Texas State Knights of Columbus. C o u n c i l m a n Ralph Janes recommended the council vote on the SMC the motion died for a lack of second­ ing. issue. However, SMC requested a permit for a parade on one-half of the street from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. April 18. The parade was to assemble on the Capitol grounds, move south on Congress Avenue to 6th Street, west on 6th Street to Lavaca, north on Lavaca to lith Street and then east on lith Street to the Capitol entrance. SUG STILL plans a legal dem­ onstration along the sidewalks of the parade route. A spokesman from SMC said the demonstra­ tion, backed by the American Civil Liberties Union, will begin a t the same time and place. Council had refused another SMC permit two weeks ago by a three-to-three split vote. Council members Les Gage, Janes and D. R. Price voted in favor of granting the permit. Mayor Travis LaRue and Coun­ cilmen Stuart MacCorkle and Joe Atkison voted against the pro­ posal. Councilman Jay Johnson was absent from that council session. The latest SMC permit con­ tained a change in the parade’s starting time. Assembly time was moved from 2:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. Johnson believed the parade permit should be denied. “The University area has miles of streets the traffic of the downtown area,” that do not have Weather: • Sunny • High: Mid 70's • Low: Low 50's ■ . “ I think that there was also a certain element that cast votes for Jones out of a morbid curio­ sity to see what would happen, how the molecules would react,” McClellan said. UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Norman Hackerman was not predicting anything. He said only that next year is “bound to be different” and that the would like to meet Jones and talk to him before I say much.” Only Krier had much to say about next year’s possibilities. “If he broadens his base and takes responsibilities, he could have a very good year and bring great change. the “ If he loses his broad base, it will be easier to isolate Jones and make him ineffective. President-Elect -P h o to by Rick W illiam s Je ff Jones, elected Students' Association president W e d ­ nesday, dances to a Love-In tho band Thursday outside Union Building. Jones Vote Seen as Protest Reaction Against Leadership, Administration Jones said he expects to be most productive on the TSP Board. This board regulates all University student publications including Tile Daily Texan. Jones said he will move to abolish a clause in the Regents Rules which makes decisions of the TSP Board subject to regent approval. One of the first questions Jones will face is the restructuring of •student government, approved in Wednesday's student referendum. Jones said he would work for a structure “ tending toward a participatory democracy.” Among Arnold's immediate in­ terests in student government is reforming “ the discriminatory policy in University housing.” He explained for dormitories are identified by race on their application forms. that applicants In his campaign Arnold empha­ sized the need for student gas, food and clothing co-operatives. The business college, he said, is running a feasibility survey to determine price margins in these areas. lr. 4 Student voting power,” said Arnold, “ is an area which has been much neglected the past.” If students were mobilized in Travis County, he to vote explained, County and City ad­ ministrators would be much more responsive in areas of student interest. By LYKE THOMPSON UPSON News Editor the election of Most University leaders con­ tacted Thursday by The Texan see first radical student body president as the present a reaction against administiation student government. a n d the “ I was surprised. In electing the students were Jeff Jones, reacting against the adminis­ tration and the student leader­ said Ernie Haywood, ship,” student body vice-president. In his assessment Haywood re­ flects the opinions of the present student body president, the candi­ Jones’ own date Jones beat. campaign manager, the Dean of Students and numerous Student Assembly members. SURPRISE WAS apparent when with the first returns ec­ static supporters and .stunned losers flooded into the hall in front of The Texan offices and a s p o n t a n e o u s celebration developed that lasted nearly an hour. presidential “ He got a broad base of sup­ port. Skipper Dippel. the conser­ vative candidate threw him his support. I have also heard that some fraternities backed him,” said Joe Krier student body president KRIER SAID be thought the the vote was a criticism of BIG D A D D Y P IZ Z A H A S FREE DELIVERY O P E N U N T IL 2:30 A . M . on F R ID A Y S & S A T U R D A Y S 12:30 A . M . S U N D A Y S T H R U T H U R S D A Y S Located in the FLAGON & TRENCHER nresent wav stiirfant present way student government is run. G e o r g e Metessky, Jones' campaign manager, said the Oct. 15, 1969, Vietnam War Mora­ the Waller Creek and torium, incidents played Chuck Wagon vital the showing “in student that student government is a weapon of the administration against the student. roles Jim Arnold, vice-president­ elect, found his strong support, too, came from dorms and co­ operatives. ‘Tt was very much a protest Texan Interpretive it was a vote. And reaction against the present way student government is run by people In places like the dorms, who have been left out,” he said. tile Ken Sparks, loser, said “ regardless of who made the run­ off, Jones would have won. The mood of disenchantment and the inability of student government to relate to the campus were important reasons for Jones’ w in-1 ning.” One person who was not sur- prised was Dean of Students Steve McClellan, who called the vote “ unusual, but predictable.” and shows “ IT IS A reflection of student their a n g e r dissatisfaction in not getting things done. Certainly it was a protest against the administration and ah that deal with the estab­ lishment. SALES REPRESENTATIVE Excellent current and long range opportunity for man with A rt history or Art interest. Previous sales experience desirable, but not necessary. Must be capable of dealing effectively with college students and faculty. Salary and commission plus benefits and automo­ bile provided. Extensive travel. Address replies to MR. ANTHONY MARSIGLIA FERDINAND ROTEN GALLERIES 123 W . M u l b e r r y Street Baltimore, Maryland 21201 Si STORE WIDE SPRING SALE ALL STOCK DRESSES • SLACKS • SKIRTS SUITS • JEWELRY • SHOES Our Locations Are: H A N C O C K C E N T ER O N THE D R A G A N D IN S A N A N T O N I O ip * Men of all ages have found out in the wearing that they look great when they’re in shape — especially when the trimming effect of sup­ pressed waist, wider lapels and higher center vent are subtly en­ hanced by the new six-button double-breasted with three-to-button. R P puts great faith in this model . . . stocks a wide selection o f stripes and solids in a wonderful weight Dacron® polyester and wool. Build your warm-weather w ardrobe on the double. This suit is one of your best buys at 95.00 I nenland I Re y n o l d s DOW NTOW N CONGRESS at 8th 472-4123 UNIVERSITY GUADALUPE at 24th 476-7674 frubft April 3, .Um IH E CLAAX TFXAN even receive a second from the seven-man panel. Ironically a similar request f o r a Round* Up parade this Saturday was unanimously approved by the judge councilmen. W e can only that the council has no political objection to the Round-Up C o m ­ mittee. It is obvious to us that S MC, tk hose slate is spotless in terms o f past programs it has sponsored, the rights o f has been denied peaceful assembly and demonstra­ tion. I he council’s action was even TK o Tse because no rationale was offered to defend the rejection o f S M C s application. On e councilman said that S at ­ urday afternoon, the time request­ ed for the parade, was one o f the most congested times for traffic, a statement we view with some doubt. the Ro un d- Up parade is Y e t scheduled l l a.m. Saturday and will probably extend into the afternoon. for Councilman Jay J ohns on said the activities o f SMC, which he said is a student group, should limit its activities to campus. This argument seems to indicate that the councilman does not c o n ­ sider students equal citizens of Austin, which they should be. It is unfortunate that Austin has elected a council that has demo n­ strated so little progressiveness. But we can live with that. W h a t impossible to is almost is a narrow- live with however, sighted body that fails to recog­ nize the importance of freedom o f expression. suppression Th e Austin C i t } Council T h u rs ­ day rejected another Student M o b ­ ilization Committee request for a parade permit, apparently for lit­ tle reason other than a disagree­ ment with the g r ou p ’s ideology. Councilman Ralph Janes rec­ ommended that the permit he a p ­ proved, hut his motion did not Egg rot I exists? that L S U s basketball sensation Pete Maravich had been dropped from school. Maravich was the top scorer in collegiate basketball during his three years o f varsity play and set an all-time scoring record during the middle of his senior season, completed tx\ o weeks ago. He i m­ mediately signed a contract with the Atlanta Hawks o f the N a t i o n ­ al Basketball Association for a re­ ported $1.9 million. I he article said that Maravich had been dismissed "due to pr o­ longed absence." T h e increasingly prevalent mot ­ to that one must have a degree or an education to succeeed n owa ­ days would no doubt be wasted words on this future millionaire. James Reston Order a must An Associated Press report car­ ried inconspicuously on the back sports pages o f the* Dallas M o r n ­ ing News I hursdav gave notice B v P A I I. S PR A Ka. FN Eggroll Staff “ What do you think, sir. about the publication of your fourth issue?” we asked this celebrated oracle. to “Just groat!” I feel a profound inadequancy in trying to explain exactly what Eggroll is all about—“ bi-monthly is a good magazine of satire” is only a catch phrase, but if starting point. Tile Triovurate, which name, as well as all other ovulary allusions, is our way of (he classic paying homage dilemma of whether the chicken anteceded the egg or was it the other way around, is an alliance of three uncommon heads, poct-- philosopher, prophet and writer, united in a holy crusade whose subtlety and tenets are forbearance should be the guiding principles of man’s relationship to man. that wit and wisdom arc the premises upon which most worthwhile literary endeavors arc grounded, and that tomato hubris souffle Is the fittest of foods for the gods. Though we have all grown since that first issue of there are still strong Eggroll, elements of truth in our state­ ments of editorial policy as we published them then. John Rasco .take wrote that “we should. upon ourselves the sacred role .“destroying” by of Thom. that . . Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: • Be typ ed triple-spaced. ® Be less than 250 words. • Include name, address, and phone num ber of contributor. M a il letters to The Firing Line, The D aily Texan, Draw er D, U T Station, Austin, Tex.; or bring letters to the Texan offices, Jour- nalism Building 103. 1 A rt Buchwald -©1173 — Kindness generates kindness to bo you have become. I have made a study of this. The th ag ti it lacking, besides seems money of course, for our postal that no one tells employes people who work for the post office what a good job they’re doing.” is “But they’re not doing a g od job.” “They’re not doing a good job because they feel no one carrs if they do or not. their WE WERE WALKING past a structure in the process of being built and passed five workmen lunch. My friend eating stopped. “That’s a magnificent job you men have done. It must be difficult and dangerous work.” Tile five men eyed my friend suspiciously. “Ah! That really is impressive. in sharing with -Jane Shane Women’s Liberation TtUO HANOS To the editor: Mr. Acree asked in Thursday’s Firing Line why women do not attempt, to gain equality under the Selective Service Act as well as in other areas. Women’s Liberation prefers to in co-operation with men work to build a new society where war is unknown. With peace for all humans as our goal, we naturally T h e Da i l y T e x a n Student Newspaper at U T Austin ISSUE S T A F F Associate News E d ito r.......... News Assistants ..................... . . . . Editorial Page Assistant Assistant Amusements Editor ........ Assistant Sports Editor Make-Up Editor ...................... Wire Editor ................................ ............................ Copy Editors ........................................ Katie Fegan Frenchy Golding, Chris Meredith ......................................... Cliff Avery ................................ Don McKinney ......................................... Steve Dial ....................................... Paul SoRelle Robin Bracher, Anne Hagy .................... Joe Phillips A m m r lo Yesterday's P u rr!* ~P i ? | p . E . A C tE i L l l Tpl A J 3 J B o r d e r B a 'r ' e I . T OR Bf Di i j S P T u j P P B I ] ' fy B F A lc T iS B iB C ^ j E l p g A R J E E A J- B M a ^ o u a r s r i In n M s j . I n M e ' T a N p g T f M i T o s l A R N jB fF A R jg e - L I S i l o r e A P p A p ] 38-Race of lettuce 3 / Field flowers 4 0 Beast 4 3 Football position (abbr.) 4 5 Conjunction 47-Leases 4 3 Antlered animal 4 0 Roman garment 5 0 Renown 54 W e ig h t s India 56-Tibetan gazelle 57-Ugly, old woman 5 3 Nahoor sheep 61-Threetoed sloth Page 4 A Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Distr, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. i " Election Results Budget View ed by Assembly I I g g Arebeeture A & S Business Communication Education Engineering Fine Arts Graduate Law Nursing Pharm acy Campus-wide Totals PRESIDENT Sparks Jones MeHam Arnold VICE-PRESIDENT ASSEMBLY AT LARGE PL Velez McCleary 53 1,359 665 208 546 387 101 210 277 54 176 4.236 166 3,109 431 301 285 ,334 219 701 248 35 51 124 2,475 334 218 202 228 164 553 397 21 33 74 2.021 714 27.3 588 474 132 292 263 63 182 55 1.463 664 213 509 379 94 142 175 47 140 iffliwniffliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiH! 5,885 4,549 5.080 3,891 113 2,558 275 237 212 193 154 592 204 21 57 4,614 Honor Days Set for Weekend L e a d e r s h i p and academ ic Honors D ay P ro g ra m s will be to held F rid a y and S atu rd ay recognize stu d en ts excelling in oo-cu rricu lar and scholastic ac ti­ vities. * Tile m ost excellent teacher a t be also will th e U niversity honored. The Honors D ay L eadership Convocation a t 2 p.m . F rid ay in th e Texas Union A uditorium will honor inter­ national stu d en t, co-op student an d rep rese n ta tiv es of honorary serv ice organiza lions. outstanding th e These stu d en ts and oth ers will be recognized for th e ir w ork in cam p u s organizations in serv ice to students. The Mike F lynn, Silver Spur, and A m o am ong M arjo rie D arelik aw ard s Nowotny oth ers being given F riday. a re The acad em ic Honors D iy P ro g ram at IO a.m . S aturday in Hogg A uditorium will featu re a new teaching excellence aw ard, the Je a n Holloway Award. The w inner of th e aw ard will l>e selected by D r. John R. Silber, d ean of the College of A its and Sciences, and an ad hoc com ­ m itte e on th e basis of te ac h e r evaluations m ad e by students and re p o rts from g rad u atin g seniors. Sterling Holloway, an A ustin atto rn ey and fo rm er president of E x-S tudents’ Association, th e established in honor of his wife who h as a PhD in E nglish and a law d eg ree from th e U niversity. th e aw ard He suggested the following c ri­ te ria for selecting the w in n e r: • Sharing w ith his stu d en ts of field for his excitem en t knowledge. • E vidence of in terest in stu ­ den ts as individuals. • M aking th e course difficult, Cooley Cites Gains Medical Research calling for h ard w ork and a t the sa m e tim e m ak in g it interestin g enough to be enjoyable. In addition, Silber will p resen t th e B rom berg A w ards for teac h ­ ing excellence. R ecipients of sp ecial sch o lar­ ships and aca d em ic a w a rd s as w ell a s those stu d en ts in th e top school or 3 p ercen t college will be honored. th e ir in R abbi Levi d a n of D allas, a fo rm er th e reg en t, will give H onors D ay A ddress. H e will be introduced by P re sid e n t N orm an H ack erm an , who will m ak e brief re m a rk s in recognition of honor students. D r. Ja m e s H itt, s e c re ta ry of th e Austin c h a p te r of Phi B eta K appa, will announce w inners of th e scholastic ho n o rary aw ard s. A m o Nowotny, fo rm e r d ean of student life, will preside. of television Closed-circuit tr a n s ­ th e H onors D ay m ission p ro g ram h as been a rra n g e d in th e A cadem ic C enter A uditorium in anticipation of an overflow nudience in Hogg A uditorium . Rv KATIS! r m i v By KATIE FEGAN Associate News Editor The Student A ssem bly d is­ cussed allotm ent of a $63,000 budget and voted to brin g activ ist sp eak on Abbie Hoffman cam p u s session in a T h u rsd ay night. lengthy to The Union Speakers C om m ittee had voted e a rlie r to bring Hoff­ m an , a defendant in th e Chicago conspiracy trial, only if he would a g re e not to p a rtic ip a te in any activ ities not planned by the co m m ittee. T he assem bly voted to request th e com m ittee m ake an th a t a g r e e m e n t with Hoffman w hereby he would be bound to en g ag e in any activities planned bv th e com m ittee but would not be the co m m ittee had no appearances scheduled. re stric ted during tim es ^ The resolution also directed the Union board to finance Hoffman if th e Speakers C om m ittee failed to do so. A req u est th a t the assem bly the com m ittee vote to censure fo r not ab atin g $1,000 to bring H offm an cam e a fte r a com m ittee decision ea rlier Thursday. ch airm an Roland C om m ittee M oore said th e com m ittee had e a rlie r planned to engage Hoff­ m an but had becom e convinced b y to his speech a t , Colum bia U niversity a p p e a ra n c e m ight cau se a riot. th a t such reaction The com m ittee voted not to in­ v ite Hoffman unless they could have would sp eak only a t com m ittee-spon­ sored events and not p articip ate in o th er activities. a ssu ran ce h e A ssem blym en dissected each allotm ent on th e 52-item budget, m aking m inor changes in its final form. Consideration w as not com ­ plete a t press tim e. M em bers voted down $1,500 for th e p urchase and m ain ten an ce of a c a r for P ro ject Info and the By JE FF NEWMAN Dr. Denton A. Cooley, Hous­ card io ­ t o n ’ a w orld-fam ous v ascu lar and h e a rt tran sp lan t surgeon, told a group of U niver­ sity students in tile T exas Union A uditorium T h u rsd a y night of the obstacles to m ed ical progress. “ It is sa id th a t p rio r to 19.10, A m ericans sp en t m o re on funeral flowers re ­ se a rc h ,’* he .said. on m edical than ■Hie speech, in Surgery.** w as p a rt of the Round- Lip *70 I .celu re Series. “ P ro g ress M ental developm ent has four stag es, Cooley said, “ Form ation, m a t u r i t y , and sen ility ." Inflexibility to CHARACTERISTIC of this do velnpm ent is “a dwindling of our V ourage saki, quoting fo rm er HEW S ec re tary John W. G ard n er, until the period of inflexibility new' ideas a re uncom fortable and resisted. fa il’.’’ he in And now here loss of to fail m o re ap p aren t the is co rn ag e than in scientists, ho said. Hut the thought of transp lan tin g hum an organs and other a n a ­ tom ic p a rts is fa r from new, he said. Two b ro th ers in tho D ark Ages a re reputed to have tran s­ planted a leg. Though probably a m yth, tho two w ere canonized, but only a fte r being executed for the operation. “ I ’m hopeful I n ev er reach Former Director To Discuss TV television Kenneth Adam, fo rm er d irector of th e B ritish for B roadcasting C orporation (BBC), will lecture on ‘‘Television in This World a t 8 p .m . F rid a y in Busi- ness-Econom ics Building 150. A dam Is a correspondent for new spapers in lo n d o n and for the M anchester G uardian. sainthood,” Cooley said. THE MOST DELK ATE prob­ lem brought on by tran sp lan t s u r­ g e ry w as the question of w hat constituted d eath , ho said. Personally, Cooley h a s reach ed a sim ple definition. “ T ic cen te r of o u r life re s ts in the b ra in ,” he said. Cooley described death as a p ro cess, instead of a single event, of term ination of organ functions. T he brain, how ever, is the m a ste r the of o th ers cannot live autonom ously. lesser org an s, and the H em e, when the b rain is dead, th e en tiro organism is “clinically dead, ’ and extraction of a b e a t­ ing h e a rt is not im m oral, he said. to im m o ral deny a re c ip ien t,” he argued. “ IT WOULD be Cooley, who h a s perform ed a to ta l of 21 h e a rt tran sp lan ts, is surgeon-in-chief th e T exas H eart Institu te in Houston. a t from zoology. His H e w as g rad u ated the U niversity In 1941 with a m a jo r in achievem ents ranged from scholastic excellence to v arsity ath letics, being a d ­ m itted to Phi B eta K appa and th e T exas Cowboys am! letterin g th re e y e a rs in b asketball. He received his MD from Jo h as Hopkins in 1944. : JOE NAMATH W IL L RIDE IN THE ROUND UP PARADE S A T U R D A Y , 12 N O O N BIG DADDY PIZZA HAS FREE DELIVERY O P E N U N T IL 2:30 A M. en F R ID A Y S & S A T U R D A Y S FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH OF AUSTIN 12:30 A .M . S U N D A Y S T H R U T H U R S D A Y S 4700 Grover Avenue, 452-6 1 68 Located in the FLAGON I TRENCHER Sunday, April 5 I DATE DINNERS S5.00 • The nicest place in A ustin to take a date. Hors d'oe , o u F o r - E ntertainm ent nightly by Pair Progressive. DoionXlse K W O f W I STOAT! in Town Hors d ’ oeurves c Soup or Salad Rib Eye Steak Vegetable and Baked Potato Kahlua Torte or Sherry M ousse IO a.m. Forum H our: "G ra ss C a n Be Blue — The Ten O ’­ clock Turn O n ,” an d oted perform ance of blue grass music by the Fri­ illustrated, annotated, anec- d a y M ountain Boys: Charles Taylor, mandolin; John Thompson, banfo; Phil Hardgrave, guitar; Sherrill Williamson, bass. a.m. W o rsh ip Service: "Possibilities Unlimited." Sermon: Rev. Don W . Vaughn, guest speaker and minister of the First Unitarian Church of W ichita, Kansas, concluding the 3-day annual convention of the Southwestern hosted April 3-5 by the Austin congregation. Unitarian-Universalist Conference IO a.m. - 12 noon: Church School Classes, Children’s W o r ­ 1122 C olorado 478-4628 ship, A rt s and Crafts. y goon .... d \ SIGN OF THE TIMES _ 41ST ANO INTERREGIONAL ■ m w H U E n n c u iu n A L 38 Gamy t a d Hoffman Visit Gets Okay C om m unity m ittee. Involvem ent Com­ Some assem blym en a ttem p ted to cut R ound-U p's $4,000 allot­ m e n t to nothing, while others sought to double it. A fter lengthy discussion, figure w as ag reed upon. the o riginal D avid M incberg moved to block allo tm en t of any funds to r the H ouse of D elegates in a motion th a t failed by a w ide m arg in . Funds w ere denied the I n te r- D orm Council, w hich has not the been active this y e a r, and W ashington In tern sh ip project. Co-op housing w as given $708 over its original $1,760 to finance visits by In te r Co-op Council m em b ers to cam p u ses in D etroit such and housing been successful. w h ere h av e B erkeley, sy stem s T h e Housing Com m ission allotm ent was increased to $9,21 from $6,427. Funds for a sem im in highe course on problems increased fror education were Student Ba to $200 Association funds were increase* from $100 to $895. $1,500. resolution empowering In other action the body passe* a th* Student Living Accommodation; Committee to a ct on requests bj dormitory residents concerning visitation rights and appointed A Napier to the Co-op board. SUMMER LUXURY FOR UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS WOMEN madison-bellaire apartments. 717 W . 22 S t. Austin, 78705 (contract meals if desired) dexter house. 1103 W. 24 St. Austin, 78705 madison house. 709 W . 22 St. Austin, 78705 REASONABLE RATES FOR THE SUMMER SESSIONS. come see. come live. 478-9811 o r 478-8914 (don t miss our full p a g e ad in this issue CONGRESS AND SIXTH GR 6-8331 SHOP TODAY 'TIL 5:301 ROUND-UP BERNARDO'S CO O L SANDALS 14.00 Step softly this weekend and through summer in Bernardo’s foam cush­ ioned sandals! Sketched from top to bottom: buckled T-strap in brown or white: classic T-strap in red, white, camel, navy or brown; toe thong in brown or white. W hen you think of sandals can you think of any other name but Bernardo? SHOE SALON, SCARBROUGHS STREET FLOOR Friday, April 3. 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page S A Horns Face Slumping Red Raiders rn rn rn __ • w rn Texas Baseball Fortunes H inge on Early Series mm • " . B r T H ! M O R R T S Assistant Sports Editor f h r * f i r . r f A f the first of con ch. two for the t e x a s r n . . r n * S outhw est LUBBOCK — Collective for; st a n d Conference fam ine, in the persons of T exas juggle a two- a n d T exas T ech, year-old Southw est Conference b aseball sc rip t when they m eet h e re this w eekend in a th ree- g am e league series. It w as two season s ago th a t the Longhorns c a m e to the P la in s struggling w ith a 1-3 SWC reco rd , an d facing relegation to a spoil­ e r ’s role if unequaled success w as not theirs. FORTUNATELY f o r Cliff G ustafson’s first club, how ever, it m anaged and a finished th e '68 season owners of an o th er conference cham pionship. sw eep, P re se n tly he is pursuing his th ird , piloting a club on a 19-4 te a r and visiting a league entry w hich is but 7-9 and 0-3 in con­ ference w a rs a fte r th ree losses in a series with u p sta rt R ice. is the retu rn in g rub. Tile Red Which R aiders, their entire sta rtin g lineup w ith the exception of an exceptional second base com bination. J e r r y H aggard and J im M ontgom ery, and possessed of two strong arm s in sophom ore lefthander Ja c k P ie rc e and senior rig h ty G ary W ashington, w ere expected to challenge the Long­ horns for the league vanguard. Instead, in them ­ strongly selves sim ilar to th a t w hich confronted they now find a position . — T exas two y e a rs ago in Lubbock, nam ely, of unequaled success being vital to conference sur- vival. send out With that end in m ind, Tech coach Kal Segrist, a Bibb F alk protege, will junior college tra n sfe r G ilbert V asquez in F rid a y ’s first gam e, follow him with Doug H am in the nine-inning nightcap, and then use W ashington on S aturday in hopes of moving T echsan backs aw ay from the wall. seven-inning The rotation leave s Pierce, to whom the spring has not been kind, a b y stan d er. H e has stru g ­ gled all spring, is 0-3 and is ro t even listed a s the top Tech relief hand. THAT JOB falls to a freshm an, Ruben G arcia, used extensively as a s ta rte r by S egrist but due for bullpen w ork th is w eekend. So far tins season, Vasquez is 1-0, with a 1.91 earn ed run figure, while Ham stan d s 1-1 and 2.08.' W ashington s record is a losing one, the big rig h th a n d e r standing O I so far, with a 2.86 era. G arcia, 2.56, h as the m ost decisions of th e four who figure to see the bulk of the w eekend w ork, w ith a 1 2 record. E lsew here, Tech will send out a lineup closely resem bling th a t w hich m anaged one win, a 2-1 decision for P ie rc e over T exas rig h th an d er J a m e s S treet, in a series in A ustin la st spring, but th e the nam es belies R ed R a id e r problem s. fa m iliarity of MAX MARTIN, a m uch-derided figure in the C lark Field series, re tu rn s a t c atc h e r with his .317 b at, and Don Shaw will again first, but H aggard and play M ontgom ery left a gaping hole. An replacem ent, injury h a s sidelined Hag- junior g a r d ’ s college tra n sfe r John M cGuire, and unlettered senior Steve Prinz will rep lace him . At shortstop, Doug I horley is the leading Tech h itte r w ith .323. In the outfield, Steve H urt, the cleanup m an in Austin la st y e ar, re tu rn s in left, and R andy W alker still plays center, but the incum ­ is bent right, Don McKee, in another P la in sm an with problem s. injury The new leadoff h itte r is sopho­ m ore South San Antonio product, Mike Mark], sw itched to leftfield before T ex as’ sw eep of the open­ ing SWC series w ith SMU a fte r a y e a r of pitchhitting and fill-in work in the infield. McKee is com ing off the shelf, a broken a rm having kept him out of som e e a rly spring action and depriving T ech of yet an­ other .306 league hat. A fter its first 37 gam es, the R a id e rs are hitting only .231 as a team , and th e ineffectiveness of of pitching lack P ierce, depth and in ju ries have forced S egrist to sw itch and juggle and se a rc h for an effective — and healthy — com bination. left At first base, Gene Salmon’s scholastic the ineligibility door a ja r for an o th er South San ex. John L angerhans, now hitting .397 and. with six home runs, tied with four-base producers, Salmon and catcher Tom m y Harmon. last y e a r’s top L ang erh an s’ 34 runs batted In w ith 23 g am es of the present schedule elapsed put him within five of la s t y e a r’s leader, right- fielder D avid Hall. juggling but, GUSTAFSON has likewise done h is sh a re of to S eg rist’s discom fort, with dif­ ferent resu lts and ta k e s a te a m third- into Lubbock whick ranked nationally and lengths a h ead of the league by m easu re of g am es won and lost. is W ESTERN DAY F R I D A Y — W E S T E R N D U D S A P P R O P R IA T E A L L D A Y — A L L O V E R C A M P U S COWBOY BARBEQUE F R ID A Y — 11:30 lo 2:00 p.m. TICKETS — $1.50 NORTH S ID E O F U N I O N ROUND-UP PARADE S A T U R D A Y 12 noon 20 Floats, Bands, Beauties and V.I.P.'s ROUND-UP REVUE S A T U R D A Y — 1:30 after parade Eastwood (Delt) Park — Beer and Band .Wound ( a A T A V U r f ROUND-UP CONTINUES SUMMER LUXURY FOR UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS WOMEN madison-bellaire apartments. 717 W . 22 St. Austin, 78705 dexter house. I I 03 W . 24 St. Austin, 78705 (contract meals if desired) madison house. 709 W . 22 St. Austin, 78705 REASONABLE RATES FOR THE SUMMER SESSIONS. come see. come live. 478-9811 or 478-8914 T exas will visit Lubbock with its pitching corps still less than righthander in ta c t, rem aining among B urt Hooton the wounded. sophom ore A fter w inning 12 gam es, losing none and allowing but 0.88 earned ru n s p e r gam e in 1969, a bicep sidelined tendon Hooton. He w as late-week candidate for relief work only on the Plains. h as a injury THE CORPUS C HRISTI p rod­ u c t is 3-1 in 19(0, but his earned- run figure h as clim bed to 3.24. With Hooton a question m a rk — Texas does not count on his being available to s ta rt —Gustafson will look to Ja m e s S treet (4-0, 1.50) in the seven-inning first gam e on F rid a y , choose one of two rig h t­ handers, senior L a rry H ardy (1.80 and w inner of four stra ig h t a fte r dropping his first two ’70 decisions) o r junior W alt Rothe (2-0. 0.41) the nine-inning nightcap, and retu rn on S aturday tw osom e or th a t w ith one of sophom ore lefthander Mike B eard (4-0, 2.51 but an e rra tic operator of la te ). in Hooton is a candidate for relief junior N atl w ork, along w ith S a laza r (2-0, 1.48). F rid a y ’s doubleheader is set for the usual I p.m . sta rtin g tim e, with the single gam e Saturday scheduled for 2:30. A ustin radio station KOKE-FM (95.5) will c a rry th e gam es, with the IO m inutes prior to gam e tim e. broadcasts beginning Lost and Found Senior righthander L a r r y H ardy, who lost his first two starts this spring but has bounced back to win four straight, is a g o o d bet to fill injured Burt H o oton w h e n the 'H o rn s face Texas Tech. H a rd y is unscored on in his last 16 innings. in for Golfers, Netters UT To Test Mustangs Tho Texas golf and tennis team s both face Southern M ethodist F rid a y , with the n e tte rs m eeting the M ustangs on P enick Courts S aturday, and the linksters taking th e ir show on the road to D allas’ Glen L akes Golf Course. Jo e Anderson, G eorge Ma chok, Tom K ite and D ean O verturf tour the 18 holes a g a in st th e ir second conference foe, a fte r beating R ice 6-0 W ednesday. The golfers face A&M Tuesday and will enter the All-Am erican Houston April 15 to 17. T ournam ent in The tennis tea m rolled to a 7-2 victory S tate over M ichigan T hursday, and will open con­ ference com petition ag ain st the Ponies. A gainst Hie S partans, n e tte rs John Mozola, Avery Rush, John Nelson, Ron Touchon, M arc Wie- gand and R andy Sherfy took vic­ tory sets. Mozola b eat D usty R hodes 6-4, 6-1; R ush beat R oger T aylor 6-1, 6-3; N elson whipped R ichard V etter 6-3, 6-2. Jim Rick M urray dropped 6-4, 7-3 lo Mike M adura; Touchon won over 6-1; Siegler W iegand beat Cliff D rysdale 6-.l! 6-2 and Sherfy took 6-4. 5-7 and 6-4 m atches from Tubby R ojas. 6-1, In doubles Rush-Mozola b eat V eticr-R hodes 6-4, 6-1; N e lso n - Touehon won over Siegler-Taylor 6-1, 6-8 and 6-3. W iegand-Robert C am pbell lost to D rysdale-R ojas 6-4 and 8-6. EVERY COLUMBIA RECORD THE STORE! (8 TRACK AND CASSETTE TAPES, TOO!) APRIL 3 66l 7 ONLY LIST Y O U P A Y 4.98 5.93 3.32 3.99 6.98 4.66 DYLAN DONOVAN CASH CHICAGO SIMON & SLY GARFUNKEL STREISAND BLOOD, SWEAT JOPLIN & TEARS BEAUTIFUL DAY TOM RUSH FLEETWOOD MAC SANTANA CHAMBERS BROS. AND ANYBODY ELSE YOU CAN THINK OF records 2310 Guadalupe 478-1674 O D E M . M O N D A Y - T H U R S D A Y 9:30 - 9:30 V ^ l E I N . F R ID A Y & S A T U R D A Y 9:30 - M ID N IG H T Texas to Try 'Loaded' Relays Field Longhorns Shoot for Two Victories ROUND-UP PARTY? By VAUGHN ALDREDGE Sports Editor I ('xas coach Jack Patterson will be juggling his runners in Friday and Saturday’s forty-third annual Texas Relay’s with the intention of making strong bids in two of the sev­ en relays. The distance medley baton event, which is fourth on F ri­ day night’s opening slate beginning a t 6:30 p.m., will fea- ture converted quarterm iler Dave Morton on the opening 880 leg, a distance at which he recorded a state-leading 1:49.4 last weekend at the Corpus Christi Relays. Byrd Baggett will follow Morton on the 440 leg. Two of Tartan Trio T e x a s t r i - c a p t a i n s (l- r) S k i p A r c h e r , M i k e M o s l e y a n d F r e d C o o p e r w i l l l e a d t h e L o n g ­ h o r n c o n t i n g e n t i n t h e t a l e n t l a d e n T e x a s R e l a y s . Sears m f - - M k t P = — fey Sears Rugged Engine Fan Belts Resist heat and abrasion. Sizes to fit most cars. the Steer tri-captains will bring the race home, with Mike Mosley running the 1,320-yard three-lap leg and Fred Coop­ er on the anchor mile. Cooper turned in a fine 4:05.8 in an open mile at the first of the season on the new Memorial Stadium T artan track and this will be his first return engagement of the campaign. The outcome of a distance medley often hinges on the anchor mile, and Cooper will be up against stiff competition. Leonard Hilton of Houston, one of the three favorite team s in the event, recorded a 3:59.7 anchor leg on the Cougar indoor world record effort at the Astrodome two m onths ago. Brigham Young, by pre-meet analysis the top team in the event, will counter with a stable of great middle distance men, as will Texas a t El Paso, the other squad expected to finish high. IN THE TWO-MILE relay the Steers will inn the same men, substituting only freshman Mike Tibbets for Baggett. The order will then be Mosley, Tibbets, Cooper and Morton. Mosley ranked high among halfmilers in the country last season with a fine 1:48.3, and while his best of this season has been a 1:52.2, he has worked several meets in the mile run in preparation for his 1,320 distance medley leg. Tibbets has recorded a 1:53.5 and the ’H orns’ coaches, Patterson and assistant Jack Daniels, know th a t his will be the critical leg of the event. If he can clock close to the 1:50 level, the Steers will have a shot a t the victory. Cooper, while prim arily a miler, clocked the Steers’ fast­ est split for the indoor two-mile relay at the Astrodome. His 1:48.6 was exceptional for an indoor effort early in the season. ANCHORMAN MORTON ran the half prim arily in high school where he set the state schoolboy record of 1:49.9. His C orpus Christi effort was one of the few times in his three-year college career th at he has returned to the two- lap event. The strongest sprint stable th a t Patterson has had In his seven years at Texas will shoot a t the two shorter re­ lays, but will not be rated as good bets against the likes of Texas A&M, El Paso and Oklahoma State. Mickey Ryan, Baggett (who is a sprinter first and a quarterm iler second), Bill Tooke and Carl Johnson will try to improve on their 41.2 best of the season, bu t they will up against Oklahoma State’s 39.9 and the Aggies’ 40.1. Stan McDaniels will substitute for Tooke in the 880 re­ lay pielims and if the team qualifies, Morton will move into one of the spots for the finals. RYAN, BAGGETT, MCDANIELS and Morton also will take a shot at a spot in the mile relay, where six of the top 11 team s in the country will be in Memorial Stadium. P a t­ terson also has a sprint medley group waiting in the wings to join the field if two of the eight entries already in the field scratch. The event is strictly invitational, with only eight top team s scheduled to run. But, in case of a scratch, Okla­ homa is the top alternate while Texas is second on the waiting list. The Horns may also enter a four-mile relay if the size of the field permits. The other Steer tri-captain, Skip Archer, will enter the ’ loaded 440 medium hurdle field, but he will be up against the likes of American record-holder Ralph Mann of Brig­ ham Young. FORREST NOVY, with a best of 22-9 will be in the long jump, while Greg Hackney and W yatt Tompkins mav try! the high jump, again if the size of the field permits. Randy Nichols and W arren H art both will double in the J shot put and the discus, where they rank among the s ta te ! leaders. Nichols has throw n 56-3 y2 and 167-1 w'hile H a r t 1 has gone 57-3 U and 162-5. Jim Mallard will try the pole vault with a best of 15 feet, and \\ alt Chamberlain will throw the javelin with a top m ark of 211-9H. Dan Kaspar (190-7) m ay also bel a late entry in the javelin. • JOE N AM ATH W ILL RIDE IN THE R O U N D UP P A R A D E SATURDAY, 12 N O O N Automotive Service Center ® O c t a - M a t i c G a s • I g n i t i o n S y s t e m • B r a k e S e r v i c e ® B a t t e r y S e r v i c e • T u n e - U p • M u f f l e r S e r v i c e W C u s t o m U p h o l s t e r y a n d T r i m S h o p • F r o n t E n d A l i g n m e n t I Double Stirrup I ire Pumps Handy pump to keep in your car trunk for emergencies. 18-in. rubber hose. M A K E Y O U R FIRST S T O P THE BOTTLE SHOP! H e r e s the best way to buy BACARDI FULL QUARTS G E T T H E S E 4.69 S T R A I G H T B O U R B O N S P u e r t o R i c a n R u m WILD T U R K EY X » 7 1 9 I. W H A R P E R .,,...............................,. 4 A 9 ...................,5 .0 9 W. L W ELLER O LD C H AR TER I.",...........................,.5 .0 9 G R A BROOKS A t . ........................,.4 .2 9 DOUBLE SPRING S S S : , . 3.99 BOURBON S U P R EM E « „ ...................3.59 J . W. D A N T S s:..............................„ h 3.99 .......................^ 3.99 A N C IEN T A G E ,* 3 .3 9 K EN TU C K Y B E A U „ . 3.79 A N TIQ U E A p . ....................................., .............. „ 1 9 9 O LD S U N N YB R O O K S C O T C H W H I S K I E S CHIVAS R EG A L l l s : ......................,„ 7 A 9 .......................... „ 6.39 CUTTY S A R K . 5.99 JO H N N IE W A LK ER R ED . . . 4.49 Y A T <9 iv J / " ™ :" '':................ CHRISTY A BROOKS so p r . ... Quart 4d9 TEAC H ER S 86 pr.............................Quart 6.39 s o p .................................................................... ...........3.59 LEG A C Y GOLD COACH 80 ..............................3.49 , , PO TT RUM s o t !,Ud....................Quart 3.99 RONRICO R U H » T . Ri“ " ....:....5* 3.59 GO LD COACH VO D KA s o , . 5 * 2 . 8 9 » 3.88 S M IR N O FF VO D KA LLO Y D 'S LO N D O N D R Y GIN 90 ^ 3.99 S EA G R A M 'S E X T R A D R Y G IN 9? . 3.49 COLD DUCK LaRonde .................................... 5th 169 5th 99c LIEBFRAUMILCH St. Paulinus * ' 5th 129 SCUPPERNONG WINE from Virginia GRAND VIN ROUGE 1964 5th oor Red French Bordeaux................................. cfjk 59,. PINK CHABLIS Gibson's HARD CIDER Gibson's................................................69c ROSE D' ANJOU Latour's French 5th 149 Rose in white ceramic crock................. CHILEAN RIESLING or BURGUNDY................ M 99c SCHLITZ MALT LIOUOR 8-oi. Cans— 6-paclc SCHLITZ! BUDWEISER Cs. 24 glass c a n s 3.99 SCHLITZ Cs. 24 c a n s.........................................4.25 ATLAS PRAGER Cs. 24 c a n s ....................139 5-Quarts of Motor Oil Sears Regular Motor Oil is a top- I quality non-deter- , gent oil. Made of 100% oil. 2-Quart Automatic Transmission Fluid Provides smooth operation in all weather. Cools and lubri­ cates. For most U.S. cars. Detergent Proof Paste Car W ax Cleans as well as waxes in one easy step. Won’t wear off after detergent wash. r — " Watch "W ide W orld of Sports" Every Saturday, and "NBA Basketball" Every Sunday ABC-TV Channel 7 Lubrication Our servicemen don’t cut corners. They hit all the recommended grease spots when you ask for a lube job. Sears does the job right. SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE Satisfaction G uaranteed o r Y our Money Back Sears SEARS, ROEBUCK A N D CO. HANCOCK CENTER 4lst and Interregional DIAL 452-921 1 Automotive Center Hours Monday through Friday............... 8 a.m. ’til 9 p.m. Saturday.......................................... 8 a.m. ’til 6 p.m. • 1809 GUA DA LU PE 4785903 '• ' J I 1209 RED RIVER ■4768990 SPARTAN “S T 5501 AIRPORT BLVD. H H A ” Specials Cash or Check — No Deliveries Friday, April 3, 1970 THE D A ILY T E X A N Bago 7 A Weekend Schedule FRIDAY AU day All day Texas Relays Western Day 11:30 a.m. - 2 p.rn, “ Fat Im a” 11:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. Cowboy Barbecue Memorial Stadium Entire Campus North end of Union Building North end of Union Building 12:30 p.m. ii 2 p.m. II 3 p.m. SATURDAY AU day April Playmate judges saloon girl cos- North end of Union Building fumes. Winner will escort Miss April to dinner. Honors Day Texas Union Auditorium Leadership awards convocation with re- Texan Union Auditorium ception in Faculty/Staff lounge. Texas Relava Memorial Stadium Round-Up Parade begins at Jester Cen­ ter. down the Drag and ending at 26th Street and Speedway. Round-Up revue. Refreshments, beer and popcorn. Parade trophies announced. Eastwood Park 18 Days Remaining Census Takers Busy Census takers have 18 days left to collect data on local residents. The district office of the Census Bureau in Austin sent 499 census takers to cover the 15-county district, one of 399 districts in the Uniter! States. They are among 185,000 head hunters and flush toilet counters who will count about 205.000.000 people in 50 states and the territories. After the census takers have completely covered the district, the information w ill be deposited in the local office. “ Absolutely no information will bo extracted this office.” in director John C. Wheeler said. “ We only calculate preliminary population and housing totals which will be announced to each city over 10.000 and county before our office closes.” Jeffersonville. Ind., where they will be microfilmed and com­ puterized. Results w ill be an­ nounced by the U. S. Secretary’ of Commerce by Dec. I and then published in book form by the government to be sold to the public at cost. A great number cf local, state and national businesses and departments of the government are holding up plans while they await the books release. Wheeler said. The questions make some peo­ ple angry because they feel it’s n o n e of the government’s business, he added. But “ if the government knows more about the quality of housing, it can help those comm unities where the quality is particularly poor,” he said. If the government knows where people of various national origins are located, and where children are bilingual, money can be spent more wisely on setting up and complementing bilingual educa­ tional programs, Wheeler said. “ Every question was evaluated carefully by the Department of Commerce and a congressional 1 committee. The government only asking questions that really needs to know’.” is it Special Round-Up Dances! A N N O U N C IN G T A N - T H R O U G H but no see - through BIKINIS! 2614 RIO GRANDE presents FRIDAY APRIL 3 "PLAYBOYS OF EDINBURG" 9:00 p.m. — 1:00 a.m. SATURDAY APRIL 4 OMAHA Haw found in town} (C O A T & TIE 2614 Rio Grande 2614 Rio Grande 9:00 p.m. — 1:00 a.m. Everybody Come! Both Nights! Architects Present Survey of Ecology By GARY L. BO W ERS A massive white blob and a telephone pole structure give a new’ look to the entrance of the Architecture Building. They're an outgrowth of Survey — exhibits, events and activities planned bv the School of Ar­ chitecture to create an awareness of the environment. “ We are surrounded by a structural environment but not aware of it,” Marc Brewster, a said co-ordinator, S u r v e y Thursday. attitude of “ The Survey is to make people aware, and to let us know what they are concerned about.” A walk down the main hall of the Architecture Building reveals a colorful display of student projects, which been evaluated by guest lecturers. have will present a film made by his .students. A “ magical mystery tour" will he conducted starting at 10:30 a.m. Saturday in the Architecture Building lobby. It’s a four-hour environmental and structural study of Austin. Genesis beginning at 9 p.m. is the last Survey program. Addi­ tional information and tickets f< r the tour and Genesis are avail­ able in the Architecture Building lobby. Curtis Link Gets Term Probation THE TWO structural environ­ ments outside the building are the hasty work of third and fourth year classes. “ With the University growing larger, we need to take time to let people in other schools know what’s happening in our school a n d George architecture,” Langdon, co-ordinator of Survey, said. Ach vines Friday will be two film and lecture presentations af 9:30 a.m. and 8 p.m. with a review’ and discussion of .student projects at 2 p.m. GERALD O GRADY of tile Uni­ versity of New York at Buffalo and director of the Media Center at the University of St. Thomas in Houston, will discuss film maker’s use of environment, said Brewster. Skip Perkins, professor at the University of Southern Louisiana, One of five persons charged in the “ sunshine” incident Last Nov­ ember w’as given a five-year probated sentence Thursday in 147th District Court for forging and passing checks. After the probated sentence was passed on Curtis Guy Link, a non-student, Dish Atty, Bob Smith authorized dismissal of another charge against Link resulting the “ Sunshine" incident. He had been charged with disturbing the peace in a riot situation. from Tile “ Sunshine” incident o<-cur­ red Nov, 6 when Austin police­ men apprehended a 14-year-old r u n a w a y nicknamed girl, “ Sunshine,” in the Texas Union Chuck Wagon. As part of Link's probated sentence, the court ordered him to return to his parents in St, Louis, Mo. WESTERN DAY FRIDAY — W ESTERN DUDS APPRO PRIATE ALL DAY — ALL OVER C A M PU S COWBOY BARBEQUE F R ID A Y — 11:30 to 2:00 p.m. T IC K ET S — $1.50 NORTH SIDE OF UNION ROUND-UP PARADE S A T U R D A Y 12 noon 20 Floats, Bands, Beauties and V.I.P.'s ROUND-UP REVUE S A T U R D A Y — 1:30 after parade Eastwood (Pelt) Park — Beer and Band ^ p u n c/^ A . I ’A Y A . round C V Y ; CONTINUES € Pict-O-Gram Presents ■ L IN D A A N D F R IE N D S in "FUN AT SHAKERS" F e y D an a— h a v e n 't seen yo u i n a lo n g tim e — *Vhat 1 ch a doing? iW'-H ^ Dobie Memorialized In Building's Name Dobie has been selected as the name of the high-rise structure under construction at Guadalupe and 21st streets. late noled Meredith McClain, a graduate student and teaching assistant in German, submitted the name of Southwestern the w riter and University professor, J. Frank Dobie. Miss McClain said she “ felt that there should be a memorial to someone as important to Austin as Dobie.” She cited his literary promin­ ence and local conservation ef­ forts. As another reason for her choice, Miss McClain explained that she is against the popular trend of selecting names from “ imported cultures.” The Scope Corporation, the Ca­ lifornia-based firm that owns the building, selected MLss McClain's suggestion because it w ill add a touch of “ Texas heritage and personality to the student com­ munity.” For submitting the winning en­ try in die contest, Miss McClain is entitled to live two semesters in Dobie free of charge beginning in the fall. M alina Succeeds G toy na as Director Dr. Joseph F. Malina Jr.. as­ s o c i a t e professor of civil engineering, has been appointed director of tile University's Environmental Health Kngineer- ing Laboratories. Malina succeeds Dr. Earnest F. Gloyna, who became dean of the College of Engineering April I. AUSTIN SPEED EQUIPMENT 4115 Guadalupe — GL 3*691 your Austins newest and most eco nomical speed center. Buy, sell, speed goodies trade where you save cash! Low ov­ erhead prices — such as I or 2 barrel chrome air cleaner only $1.49. 6I/2" foam filter chrome air cleaner for all 4 barrels only $4.49. Super big boss double throw down 14" paper element-flows 1050 CLF.M.-chrome air clean­ er reg. $12.95; only $7.95. Come by and see “ Smilin' " Ed Becker, Austin's oldest living (?) speed equipment salesman and save $$$. Parking in rear and side also 9am-9pm weekdays . . . 9am-6pm Sat . . . 12 noon- 6pm Sun. Discounts with this ad. Interested In water renovation solid waste production, and collection and disposal, Malina is directing a project in Waco to evaluate using plastic sacks for just domestic refuse. He has the study of a completed feasibility of hauling refuse by rail to disposal sites. Malina indicated that he is at­ research the treatment of tempting to start a program on waste from pesticide plants. A member of the American Society of C ivil Engineers, Texas W ater P o l l u t i o n Control Association and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Malina has served as a con­ sultant for the World Health Organization and the U. S. Public Health Service. Malina graduated from Man­ hattan College in Riverdale, N. Y., in 1957 and received his mas­ ter s and doctoral degrees from the University of Wisconsin. Fair Housing Commission Students with problems con­ cerning housing—contracts, deposits, eviction, repairs, etc.—should call the Students’ Association F a i r Housing I nion ( ommission Office: (I to 5 p.m. Building 301 Monday Friday). through Telephone 471-3721 (8 a.m. to I p.m. Monday through F ri­ day). = ROUNDUP: SPECIAL WATERHOLE SCHLITZ cans 6-pak 1.29 j BUDWEI5ER glass 6-pak 1.291 • ROMA Wine Ii gallons 1.191 ROSE, C H IA N T I B U R G A N D Y • DOURO FATHERS ROS’E 1.29 j • I r n I# rn V IS IT OUR NEW TAP BAR S A M E L O C A T IO N • Three blocks west of University campus • Fully furnished \ Spacious apartments two bedroom one bedroom efficiency. . . • All-electric kitchens V; • Sensible round-the clock security w jj • Swimming pool J, a ; W * S # I S W • No hour »$.S J, f Lo. • ' "v-1 restrictions - • M ale guests until W 1 ,j weekdays, l-Saip's 2 a. rn. weekends ; '*& * w e * y t ; • Restaurant S H ® ! .. ■ i * ; '■•.••• • Shopping mall (soon to open) * ■ • M aid service *'•■•'5 * ^ ;; T ' • Launderettes on 4 ^ every floor • Individual climate control • Parking garage ^ -4 * • Roof-top sun deck ' Come and see for yourself.;Hardin North is different! Convenience, independence, security in a new i style for living, ✓ */ - Returns from throughout the forwarded to country w ill be A C A CIA FRATERNITY H A R D IN N O R T H Apartments for Girls 801 West 24th Street Si 2-476-7636 Schlitz, Budweiser, Lone Star OPENING SPECIAL I Pitcher Rah kAm e h ic m d E S E S 2900 DUVAL 2418 Guadalupe GR 8-3536 Page 8A Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEX^If Great! Debbie, Becky and I w ill meet you at SHAKEUPS on Guadalupe. We'll get to see ^ old-time f l i c k s , tool Is n 11 Stan cute? No Curfew Plan Studied By ROBIN BRACHER Staff Writer More and more University coeds may soon discover the wonderful world of Austin after 2 a.m. on weekends as women’s dormitories consider abolishing traditional curfews. With the success of curfew abolition at Jester Center, other University dorms m ay also capi­ tulate to popular demand de­ pending on the approval of peti­ tions now under consideration. submitted The dorm s’ student governments have identical pro­ posals to Mrs. Alys B o d o i n . m anager of Women's Residence Halls. to the According petitions, coeds over 21 win not have hours nor will those under 21 who have parental permission. All agreed that freshmen first-semester should have curfews. I rn proud of the very m ature and responsible way the girls handled the petitions, and we’re to get the decision, hopeful though implementation will take tim e,” said Mrs. Bodoin. the coeds “ Most parents have confidence In their daughter’s judgment, as 87.5 percent of in University dorms have blanket permission to sign out a t any t i m e for anywhere. T h i s is almost parallel to no curfew at all,” she added. The petitions must also be approved by Dr. Firm an Haynie, director of Housing and Food Sendee; Dr. Stephen McClellan, dean of students; and the Sel­ Living Accomo­ den t-Faculty dations Committee before final President b y consideration Norman Hackerman. Panhellenic Council has given each sorority the opportunity to vote on extended hours for that chapter. The new particular possible curfew is I a.m . Sunday through Thursday and no hours on F riday and Saturday. The parents decide whether their daughter will have curfe* a t Mayfair. Dexter House, Hefli Manor and Madison House hav hours for freshmen and uppei class privileges for sophomore in which a nigh and above supervisor lets them in after thi building is locked a t the standan midnight and 2 p.m. curfew. Contessa and Contessa W est currently under regular hours will make a decision soon abou' possible curfew changes. Scottie Rite Dormitory has no immediab plane for changes. HEW Ex-Head To Talk Tonight Wilbur J. Cohen, form er secre­ tary of the D epartm ent of Health, Education and Welfare, will be guest speaker a t the twentieth anniversary celebration banquet of the University’s G raduate School of Social Work a t 6 p.m. Friday a t the Villa Capri Motor i Hotel. Cohen, dean of the School of; Education a t the University of \ Michigan at Ann Arbor, will be j the first in a series of lecturers | for the year, talking on “ Social I Priorities for th e Seventies.” Cohen served as Secretary of HEW under President Lyndon B. Johnson from March 2, 1968, until the end of the Administration. Aw are Girl ^ SHAKE!1 S a t R e a g a n S q u a r e i s l o i s o u r f a v o r i t e . MOVIES AT BOTH SHAKE!r S PIZZA PARLORS ARE FROM I like the cartoons k. Tor children. ^ 1 6 M M Feature Film Service Saturday Race To Fill 2 Posts Ten Austinites V ie For Seats on Board Austin School Board election Saturday, with a University stu­ dent and a professor of health end physical education the races for Places 4 and 5. in Charles L, Dietz, a 26-year old University law student, ‘has an­ nounced his candidacy for Place 4, held by Dave Smith, who is not seeking re-election. Others seeking the Place 4 spot are Mrs. Leona Barfield Mrs. Carl Turney, F ran k Denius, Mrs. Edna Canino and Hunter Hurst. of Stanley Burnham, In Dr. charge the University’s athletic rehabilitation program, is being opposer) in the Place 5 race by Mrs. Virgie Badger. Will Davis (the incumbent) and C. B. Hodges. spoken Candidates have at public meetings on questions of school desegregation and school system finances, such as teacher salaries. Some of the candidates in support of have come out school board budget increases. Nine of the candidates for the two. races were Interviewed on a televi cd Thursday night pro­ gram by members of the Austin League of Women Voters. Mrs. Barf eld said her main goal would be to have a teacher pay increase. Mrs. Turney proposed a system of national schools of high-quality e d u c a t i o n , with competitive to insure quality’ curriculum. • ini no recommended bilir gual and multi-cultural pro­ gram s for children with non- English speaking backgrounds. requirem ents Mrs. Denius has called for an im- cur­ school proved vocational riculum. Hurst, said the school system shou i be more responsible for prepa; g students for life after they leave school. Dim?, bas called for a budget as to the budget in crc • >? and was quoted sating. ■ Don’t fit education the bud • ?, but fit to the education.” Davis sa a1 the board should i consultant in hiring a employ new school superintendent Hot ges has proposed a special for handi­ education urogram capped students. r,e I un aha m rails for a program the “ untapped finan­ h un public-and private to . equal opportunity’ edu­ 1° c e p ro v i; cation. Round-Up Staff Edition E d i to r ............................................. SoRelle Sports Section.......................................Vaughn Aldredge Amusements Section ............................. Don McKinney, Middy Randerson Staff \Y Titers...........................Enrique Breceda, Charles Davis, Steve Dial, Ruth Doyle, Mike Fluitt, Pen- nie Freeland, Sara George, Jim Morris, Joe Phil­ lips, Jim Shanahan, Cicely Wynne Contributing W rite rs ...................Faye Bartula, Randy Elliott, Howard Lindsay, Molly Madsen, Rachelle Meinstein, Jane Roe, Julie Ryan, Cyndi Taylor Art Work ................................................................................................................................Don McKinney MMIMIMMnBminiAMlMllftPffi Campus News in Brief AUSTIN CLUB FOR THE DEAF will meet at 6 p.m. Saturday in Town Hall, Hancock Center. AIESEC will m eet a t 7:30 p.m. Sunday at 717 W. 22nd St. to hear P. L. Bevier talk about “ Job Opportunities in Austin.” CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION, University Episcopal students’ organization. w i l l present American Folk Mass. written by Ian Mitchell, at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in All Saints’ Chapel. GOVERNMENT DEP ARTM EN T will m eet at 9 a.m. in Jester Auditorium 121 for Government 610a and 610b advanced stand­ ing examinations. ORANGE JACKET ROUND-UP BREAKFAST will be held at 9 a.m. Sunday the Texas Union faculty dining room. in UNIVERSITY SOCIETY FOR ATHEISM will meet at 1:30 p.m. Sunday in Union Building 334 to hear Madalvn M urray O Hair speak on “ The Need to the University on Radicalize Atheism.” T o d ays Events speak Company, on will “ Television in This World” in Building Business-Economics 150. 8 p.m. M asters Association of the G raduate School of Business holds a Round-Up party’ a t the Elks Lodge, 700 Dawson Road. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. P re registration forms available in front of the R egistrar's Office in the Main Building. 7, 8, 9 p.m. Media ’70 presents a multi-media slide show in Academic Center 21. 7:30 p.m . Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship meets at 1907 Pearl St., Apt. 3. in Parlin Hall IDI 7:30 p.m . Campus S p a rta n ;’ Club to I meets present a forum and discussion. 8 p.m . Kenneth Adam, former director of British Broadcasting d r i v e a l i t t l e — s a v e a l o t I * c t I /J ct 1/2 Cl 3 /4 cl 7 |* L < ' 5;; # 31.50 » 4 1 0 0 # # # 225.00 275.00?$ 125-00 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP SO) Commodore Berry Hoi.* “ I i AUSTIN 476-0178 WEEKEND SPECIALS!!! BUY A KUB. BAG OF ARROW CHARCOAL A N D GET A PINT OF ARROW CHARCOAL STARTER FREE! BIG 21-QT. CAPACITY HEAVY DUTY ICE CHEST ONLY Reg. S2.3S. THESE SPECI AL PRICES GOOD IN AUSTI N AREA 7 - E L E V E N S T O R E S O N L Y - T H R O U G H S U N D A Y , APRIL 5th If Vou Need Help or Juvt Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 176-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service C H U G - O - U I G ROUND-UP DEAL W it h the purchase of a 6-paclt or more you g e t a 2 5 pint of our win© for only I dime. Usa© beer »p»c'a!i alto In alfa cl "THE A N T ! ESTABLISHMENT ESTABLISHMENT" O p - 1 IO a.m. th!* Fri, A Sa). PLEASURE UNITS Bridgestone 90cc — $279 175cc - TWIN - $425 350cc - GTR $699 Aff POE priest include oil injection ti full w arran ty BRIDGESTONE OF TEXAS 453-9429 4117 GUADALUPE A FLIGHT CLUB can be fun — Ours Is! KOMMAND AIRE KLUS R a g s d a le A v ia t io n 4 5 2 - 6 9 1 4 Join Today! 0 MOTOROLA car stereos SPEEDWAY RADIO 3 0 7 W est 19th 4 7 8 - 6 6 0 9 < - I ! i. Alive to the world, ready to live all there is. Independent. . . secure . . . Hardin North girl D I V I S I O N O F T H E S O U T H L A N D C O R P O R A T I O N ms for Cirfs 801 West 24th Street 512-476-71 W%- 'r F < '- ' <• ■ %.> M. ■ . * * 1 Ci ?v V? ' ■' § . ¥ stir a j ■ ' .; Friday, Ajjrii 3,1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Pogo 9A F o r R e n t A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . » M i s c e l l a n e o u s ■■ L o s t a F o u n d F o r S a l e U S E D B / W T V s. Good - hotter - ve ry good, $25.50 u p . A ustin T V Service 4305 M anchaca Road. H I 4-1345 T O P C A S H P R I C E S paid for d ia­ monds. old gold. C ap ito l Diam ond Shop. 603 Comm odore P e r r y 476-0178. ~ MOBILE HOM E LOTS O W N E R FIN AN CED DESSAU NO RTH IH 35 $1 995 OO fo r 60’ x 150’ lot — paved streets — c ity w a te r — e le c tricity — n a tu ra l gas — 2 miles to school — bus service — 5 m inutes to I B M — IO m in ­ utes to T I —■ 15 m inutes to down tow ti. C lose to stores and w ashaterlas — good restrictio ns — ca ll 836-1709 . 836-1294 D R E W S R E C O R D E X C H A N G E Used Lava ca. sold. 1624 traded, L P s . 478-2079 S A I L B O A T special.' S p o rty 15' flber- glass ' A lp h a '' T h e big, fast board- boat fo r tw o couples. O n ly *395! W in d ­ w a rd Sailboats. 465-9215. 453-1768 an y­ tim e. 3969 C O R V E T T E . 11.000 miles Y e llo w coupe. F o u r speed 350. air. M edical reasons S a crifice M ike W ise. 477-6511 Ex ten sio n 302. Residence. 444-0610. D IS C O U N T S on everything. F re e gifts P R I V I L E G E C A R D M ore A R D M er tio n ca ll R ich ard . 4 962 65 OTO. V e ry good condition. N ew motor, paint, brakes, exhaust State inspection. A fte r 6, 442-6659 THE SUIT SHOP M E N 'S S U IT S . S M 50 and S59.50, Va- lues to $110 S ilk & wool. dacron & wool. all wool. Sizes 37-52. regulars & longs, 2 & 3 button Plaid s, stripes & solids. 3006 Guadalupe 10-6 M . W . F . S A fte r hours 453-4045 - CT.A s s m a n a d v e r t i s i n g R A T K S E a r h W o r d (15 w o rd m in im u m ) one tim e $ $ $ OS M in im u m ( h a rc r ....... . ......... S 1.50 (15-word m a x im u m > • S tu d e n t ra te .15 .50 • E a ch a d d itio n a l tim e JO < o n se c u tlT e Issu es IO v urds lo words 20 w o rd s C la s s ifie d D is p la y I co lu m n x one in rh one tim e S 1.50 E a c h A d d itio n a l T im e .......... S 1.10 .................................. S I OOO ................................. S I J . OO SI5.00 ........... (N o c o p y ch a n g e fo r c o n s e c u tiv e issn e r a te s .V 56 F O R D truck engine Six (-Minder 3 speed transm ission. *60. 452-3590. (S IB S O N S P A N IS H electric g u itar t h i n 1 body. double pick up. Fin e condition. SISO o r best offer. 47S-0086 DACHSHUND PUPPIES A K C re p stored. C ear red and dark red. Championship b ood Ice. A p p ro ­ ximately 5 week* old. M ale* $75, fe ­ me,cs $50. For information cal' 453-1028 before Friday noon. N O T V S E T ? r> ,»., p a ll (be Alpha M a n ! B / W & the New Color portable# at Reasonable R ent Lease, Rent. hv Sem ester or Rent-Purchase A L P H A T V R E N T A L S C all G R 2-2692 fo r m ore inform ation North Central effluences. New, car­ peted, draped, complete kitchen; range, oven, qarbaqe disposal, refrigerate!-. FC bath, ample storage and parking. A- partment manager: 454-6811, 454-8903. W a n t e d EXTRA SP A C IO U S • A LL BILLS PAID * L O W ST U D EN T RA TES IS word* or lest for 75c the first time, 50c each additional time. Stu­ receipt dent must show Auditor s and pay Journalism Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M onday through Friday. in advance in T A R R Y T O W N — W h ite fram e 3 bed­ room 2 ba til House on large shady lot o v e r 2200 sq. ft., living, d ining and spacious split-level fa m ily room. OH ( A, good carpeting dishwasher, dis­ posal w ealth of cabinets and closets. D ouble garage w ith 2 workrooms, fenced back yard . Quiet-close to F T ; C all 477-5091 and shopping center. 7 V V loan can be assumed. Sale bv ow ner 477-3374. ment H I G H E S T P R I C E S paid fo r fu rn itu re ranges, refrigerators. M A B R Y 'S . 6611 N orth Lam a r. 453-5800 N ig h ts 465-0006 I N F I RN r S H E D house fo r m other and tw o I T sons. P re fe r H T area Sept­ em ber first occupancy. 472-3552.' \\ AN F E D : One bedroom garage ap art­ in I , .T. area for m ale senior. Fu rnish ed 2 bedroom, fu lly carpeted large closets and storage area Pool. I at 10 Disposal, central heat and air On shuttlebus line. $175 m onthly. SAN SALVAD O R APTS. 2208 E n fie ld 4T2-3697 453-4045 BARTON V ILLA G E M in tfe* from downtown. I and 2 bed •ooms, furnished or unfurnished. Dish­ washer, depose', carpets. Special rates ■or ba ance of semester. 442-9326, 444-7968. O N ® ® h T )R O O M . A ll u tilitie s except e lec tric ity 4316 B u ll Creek. 454-8018. I bedroom apartm ent, cen tral a ir and heat furnished cable T Y . Low Sum m er Rates C all 478-5167 after 6 T H E W E S T E R N E R 2806 H em p hill P a r k M A D - F U N N Y - S A D L E T T E R S ? Received a "cla ss ic” le tte r from home ( parental wisdom, advice, an xiety a bout w h a te v e r)? W e d like it for social- psych research p r o j e c t . A no nym ity guaranteed! Send "L e tte rs ” H25 M c In ty re . A nn A rbor. M ichigan to N e w fa c u lty couple looking fo r 2 bed­ room unfurnished apartm ent, duplex, or sm all house v e ry near Cam pus or between Campus and D owntow n. W ill be in town to see premises A p ril l l & 12 . W a n t occupancy starting A u g u st C all P ro f. B ill. 472-5983. D E A D L I N E S C H E D I ’L E T u e s d a y T e x a n M o n d a y . 11:00 a.m . W e d n e s d a y T e x a n T u e s d a y . 11:00 a .m . T h u r s d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y . 11:00 a.m . F r i d a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y . 11:00 a m. S u n d a y T e x a n . . F r i d a y . 3:00 p.m . A ttention m arried students! W h y not b u l a house? I have ti v e ry attractive tw o bedroom, one bath. T ills is a per feet is flexible The price is *12,500 and the e q u ity F o r m ore Inform ation call D ale ('a lie n 476-7011 and 476-8965 N leman. H an ks and P u ry e a r. first home and the financing low is 2 BLO CKS FROM C A M PU S SUMMER RATES D I N E B U G G Y bodies, parts V W headers, speed parts. 454-9089 V W repair. 477-4972. IO Gate- 54 V O L U M E S G re at Books. . w a y to G reat Books. IO G reat Ideas. *17:. and 9 m onthly paym ents. $14. 444-4263. V O IC E OF' M U S IC tap erecorded speak­ ers plus G arrard tu rn tab le 3 month old G a rra rd also. 327-1887 A K C D O B E R M A N rin s e rs Good tem- permnnt. Seven weeks old. B la c k and rust. H I 4-3423. C A N O N P E L L I N cam era w ith lenses, f u l l filters, and acces­ range of sories 926-6985 after 6 p m. N E E D E D . Y oung mother to keep child Q U A R T E R D E C K A partm ents 2308 E n tw o bath (eig h t m onths o ld ) 8-5. 5 d ay week. , flPld, . I niqup two bedroom from $16). A ll bills. 476-1292 476-9247. 472-7170 1969 P L Y M O U T H Road R u n n e r w ith M E N 'S E X P E R T alterations. Austin T ailors. G reenwood Towers. 1800 La- rad io and 383 cu a ir. power, in *2500, 454-1716 evenings. vara. 478-7379. S e r v i c e s CO-EDS S P R IN G & S U M M E R Vacancies — P riv a te & double rooms available. N ice — Spacious — F u ll* carpeted — C entral heat & a ir Ma/d * service " " I & S 1 J* !™ 1™' -m i >1 T w o blocks Campus. 2411 R io G rande. C ali G R 8-4205. rn 1969 C H E V E L L E M a lib u Red 14 200 miles perfect condition, standard l£8Hn,l;55i'ln radio. 307V8, dependable. *1990. 478-6119. P A N T Y H O S E close-out: Sho rt, long ' extra long only She pair. Ju n io r w a te r skis $12.50. 478-3254. A F G H A N H O U N D puppy — o n ly o n e ! J, -T Jshr°w quality. T erm s avail able. Stud service 452-4975 TIRED O F STAND ING IN LINE FOR A LO USY XERO X C O P Y ? T A N G L E W O O D NORTH A N I C E P L A C E T O L I V E I D IP L O M A T - I • I L°J iy a w e ’H m ake a good copy Spacious I or 2 bedrooms w ith v a rie ty VA 603 W . 13th num ber 117 or call 476-4879 or 477-7203. baths have large nook fireplaces 2 cable T V furnished. Excellent location. C L 2-0060 1020 E 45th " : ' Sp; r 3 4541 'W A Y THE HAMLET • 1100 R E I M I P H O N E 452-3202 N O R T H OF PH K C M E M A T H E A T R E tw o bedroom, two bath u n it availab le SP K.r®ur}d floor w ith private patio. Furnished nr unfurnished, extrem ely spacious and w e ll decorated CO N TIN EN TAL III APTS. ■rn) R e d r i c e r Largo 2 B R beau A ll built-ins. pot beds in bedrooms hie pd. bv own* phone — 453-3081 lully furn. laundry, w a ter gas apts — (2-dble. T V ea- E o f show ing , N O W RENTING FOR SUMMER M A R K V — A ve . D ii 15 1 B R . Fu rn . built-ins. pool Pd. by owner. J ip ' (2 dblo. beds) All w ater, gas T V cable F o r show ing phone: 451-3850. W A LK IN G DISTANCE _.R E N T , N S F 0 R SUMMER I B R F u r n Ants. in most ap ts.' Built-ins. pool, w ater gas T V cable pd. v ou nor. 'owing phone: co s p e e d w a y (2 dble beds M A R K V Et $115 . 4540 S A N G A B R EL - $105 ■ J 25 i I M A N O R RD. - $115 2 bedroom. 2 bath apartm ents. IO m inutes w a lk from Campus. Sw intitling pool M aid service S tu d y and recron ti on room S o mrm r rates $-lt> On/mon th per person — A ll bills paid. Males and females LF FONT APARTMENTS 472-6480 - 803 W . 28th L E A R N TO I L A Y G U IT A R , beginner i and advanced. G uitars also repaired. D rew Thom ason. 478-7331. mG IF T S — handmade In d ia n low elrv. M exican Im ports — 4612 S Congress. Open IO to 6 444-3» l 4 . Largest Used Book Store in Austin SAVE SAVE — CO M E TO VILLA A RC O S SPEC IA L SUM M ER RATES THE BOOK STALL 6103 Burnet Road 454-3664 , , furnished apart- n u e e k d a .vs 't il 9 p.m.. Sat. 9:30-6. s w i m - ___________ Sun. 1-6 * * L u x u ry ny, ments. Dishw asher, cable T V. ming pot I bus line. ■ 3301 Speedw ay to Campus, on Shuttle- 476-5607 L Y R I C S N E E D E D b y composer w ith N e w Y o rk publishing com pany Send words w ith name, phone num ber: Ja m e s M ark. 1411 Lavaca. Austin. j ( I S I G M P I C T U R E fram ing 50G- off large selection. .3-6 this week ooh s s w s i g r - T h " A i" '” e - 500 C O M E T O Birdsnest and learn to fix- I n £ J ‘3 C u b 272-5337 or 4781 , ART S H O W AND SALE Saturdav-Sutidav, 10-5. sis W e st Tenth I aim ing®. sculpture, jew e lry batiks J e r r y Beagle Lu c ia M c K a y . by K a v George. Refreshments. C A P IT O L Coin Company. B u v , sell 'r a d ? a ll old colas and currency.’ 3004 Guadalupe. 472-1676 T V Cable 454-2436 DRASTIC REDUCTION! SU M M ER RATES W a n t t o — washer, disposal: walk-in 1. bedro? m : a/c: oaneied dish- (Inset and F A W N R iD G E APARTM ENTS OR RENT? BUY, SELL, 1 - 5 2 4 4 : 1969 H O N D A S-90. E x ce lle n t condition. Reason fo r soiling, want bigger bike H e lm e t included. $250 412-4052. informa- c n v v t c o SO N Y O s for system $100 444-85" sorted eight track cartridges . , , u ........ eight track recorder-plav T ; P ' a W A lso as- reco rd er M ike y o u r own eight tra c k tapes — *200. 442- reels. Speakers. S T E R E O tape "ard 19,0 I R H M P H Bo n n e ville 650ce 1200 miles. Excellent condition $1300 C a ll P h ilip N oh ra. 472-1676 between 10-5. I R U M U H TR-3, new p a i n t ne w . 77 7 . 7 r brakps' w ire Wheels, heater. Tonneau 4 / 7 - 7 4 3 5 M r O w ner asking *695 or best offer. . '^ 8L ________________ _____________________J FO REIG N C AR SERVICE PROBLEM ? Je ro m e Shield and his crew w i l l per- form the finest service w o rk on vo ur foreign auto and at honest prices V is it TII at V ector System s on Old U S. just \Y est of Balcones H ig h w a y 183 o r ca ll 454-4983. FO LK SIN G IN G every W e d night 8-12 w ith D R EW T H O M A SO N g u ita r pickers and singers welcom e A L F IE S FISH & C H IPS 2120 Guadalupe VILLA FONTANA 1951 Sabine Now renting for surrtmar— Summer rates L O C A T E D N E A R L A W S C H O O L Luxury I bedroom. A / C . carpeted, swimming pool, laundry. C a ’! after 6 — G R 2 1774 N O W RENTIN G FOR SU M M ER H A L L M A R K A PT S, 708 W . 34th S in B e au tifu l! v A ll built-ins w ater, gas F o r si ' I B R apts. b->ds>. Pd. bv owner, laundry, phone: 5 M IN U T E S F R O M UT N O W L E A S IN G S U M M E R RATES T H E D EL P R A D O A PTS. 303 W . 40TH STREET f w 11*10wSe type apartm ents A T T R A C T I V E E F F I C I E N C Y $105. One bedroom *.’.25 CIO W e st 30th. Lease No single undergraduates, pets, c h ild ­ ren. a v a i l a b l e I Jishu asher, near S h u ttle 451-2589. N O W dispost >125. 4. One bedroom pool, paneled. — Avenue " A ” . r B e au tifu l fu rniture. P le n ty of p arking S w tim m in g pool M anager Apt 103 T i D c e ~ ~ L A R G E , three-wav speaker sys- , tems L ik e new. H ardw ood cabinets, blo models stereo *50 453-854.3 __ ___________ A rte r h, 412-6659. -__ — E I G H T tra c k ear tape deck. T h ir t y tapes. $250 value for $100 A d m iral to­ B I N G ® . T ouch & S e w sewing machines <7 o f them ) a il are slant nei>dle models 1130 and are fu lly equipped to zigzag, make buttonholes, and fancy stitches. These *5 ^ Jl v F ® c* r r y fu ll guarantees and w ill be so.d on a basis, only S39.95 each. M o n th ly pay- --- ments available. T h e y m av be Inspect- 1961 R G A color T V 23 ed and tested at Unclaim ed Fre ig h t, 2003 A irp o rt B lv d . N o rth (o ff 19th S t .) C L 4-2549 6 a.m.-6 p.m. Mort'.-Fri Sat. 't il I p.m. N o sales to dealers. first eome-first served' 472-7889. 5 to 9 p.m — to $15 C O U C H E S , ''H F '. $75. firm Je r r y . 477-9174 — *145/best'o ffe r ' S o n v *350 't a p e ^ e c k ' choirs *15 stove *25 bed. DOS W e st 12th tables I ’ j 1969 Y A M A H A R 3 350cc Geared T o r h ig h w a y and city d rivin g 453-0617. H e l p W a n t e d N O L E A S E —----—____ SU M M ER JO B S IN EUROPE Sw itzerlan d H u r m-COa S bargain11 ia En glan d. n irga.n. and G e rm an y guaranteed fo r e a rly ap- coni8s. f lace" aent plicants. X'arious job descriptions de­ pending upon y o u r interests and qua­ Jo b s are assigned on a il! alations. flrs t served basis. A p p ly no w ' COme' ------- ---- parking. 453-7608 a-ga new I a-d 2 b e d rc r unTurn.'.hsd. Com o ere ith T appen range. Pool, private ba G E lcitc~e( n a tio n a lly 'a d ver ti s e d* st ereo c o ^ o le ^ in speaker audio system . *88 each M o n th­ ly Lf.fTTh’t. available.__M av be inspected Iii W arehouse at Unclaim ed Fre ig h t 2"93 A irp o rt B lvd ., N o rth (o ff 19th St i 't il I p m . » a.rn.-6 p.m. M on.-Frl Sat No salt's to dealers r N M ,B O A R D hydroplane ? 4 h p _ M cC ullou g h engine. License/reg is’ ra- $350/best o ffe r ^ H kT a]p n0t roqulrrd J . 9 T - R e clin in g bucket seats, f° ur door sedan fo ur speed mue,. 0850 CU c a s s W F 3000 Reppnt i s . ........ STUDENT TRAVEL 2226 G uadalupe G R 7-4340 W A LK TO C A M P U S R o o m s ROOMS FOR SUMMER 2614 Rio Grande 477-4984 Air, Feat, porter service $50 Summer Semester JO B S ! JO B S ! and more J O B S ! Students, Teacher*. Stateside and Jo b s. ternational rear-round Jo b s ; occupations and trades. Enjoy cation whi e you earn. H urry! The lobs are taren early. Recreational Summer In­ Jo b s ; Jo b s. A ll W r 't e : '‘JO B S '', P.O. Box 475 Dept. C P 128-1, Lodi, C alif. 95240 ete^tr'ieitvhU U le bUS r0Ute l' SH 0 P lu C O N Q U IST A D O R APTS. 2101 Sari G ab riel G R 6-9363 afte r 5. a va- —__________ ____ best R A V I N E T E R R A C E * A v a ila b ly now W a lk in g distance U T ' G R 8-552^h Ci0~set' desk- s to ra g e T p a c L , C O N V E N I E N T C A M P U S ....... ............... two y o u r , ,la rg e bedroom*, living room dining \ / c bath. *125. G R 2-3163. G R 6- G IR L S , make good m oney n, SJm.rp ti,T’e show ing vour friends o ur kitchen I a n d '# pnmty ° Se' 3 4 1 3 7 3 between u8l9. in A p a r t m e i m t s , F u r w . G O IN G TO SUMMER SCHO O L? LiVb AT THE FINEST . ECO N O M ICALLY! . . The Chaparral Apartments ® A r A M « K M m T & TBd lT R 0 0 M S O N L Y F O R 1 T O I i t W T R C A M PU S • C EN T R A L AIR A , I RAC I VE ^O UN GE • C O LO R TV • P O O 1 MAID SERVICE • QUIET STUDY RO O M REDUCED RATES FROM $32.83/PER MO I4C6 lfY isit o u r m o d e l t o d a y ' 24C8 ..EON I D U R R E s j t E V E N T S T E A C H E R 1 is neea>'d at the ranch unit of Th,, i B ro w n Schools, to teach units of study . . for adolescent and older retarded stu- c* ?• a r ? « n are w unrig to tra in 4 t o , b(> energetic and we r S f x T 1 S ta rtin g sala ry T * ,0 b«feoom s upstairs da: - f r id a y . 12:30-4 m atlon call 478-6662. Y r U o rk ln ^ hours. Mon- , „ J n!nK area F o r m ore inter- L G Patio, and m any other features. * P H O N E 45 "-3202 O F T H E C IN E M A T H E A T R E furnished or unfurnished. livin g pass- b ar- s i)a<'ious closets p rivate huge downstairs, THE HAMLET g u n s e l or is needed at the ranch 9395 B ro w n Schools. P re fe r — - j k L aground in education but not neces- F F F I P t f v c v a ad t h close U T . •ary. W e w ill program In q u ire 3001 hour W o rk in g hours l l W I Monday- im 1 ap artm en t 304- 476-8500. 4761 MMday. F o r m ore info rm atio n call 478- S ta rtin g s a la ry S i 56 n l r r x A l i * $1,30 b ills paid. train fo r this special : A / c _ I A V A I L A B L E A p ril two bed­ rooms. livin g room, dining, kitchen Convenient Campus $125 444! _____________ I. A/C. L OAL-! Tr,hnU T? m un 0 - J4 6 / A R B Y S R O A S T B e e f R estau ran t needs to worlc counter C all Jo h n P a rn e ll or Sam B a tv . 472-1582. ______________ . 43L2 D U V A L . Lux u rio us, quiet Casa , — S I M M E R Su m m itview Apartm ents. One bedroom, a/c new fu rn itu re $125 plus bills, 1714 S u m m it! eld R o ad are a ). 472-1838, 472- 0256 \ A G E N C IE S , , v./j,r ueuroom a/- I Krugs 34 POSADO DEL NORTE N e w spacious M editr ■rranean and Span ' ish decor. I bcd mon I bath /lh. bath i I A ll built kitchen Carpeted, drapett . A /C & C / I I. W a te r. gas a nd T V cable diag pool. i o.. G R 2-6234 'vs ca ll G L 3-2013. C all G rigs bv & or afte r 5 and Sum !; paid. S w im Drastic Reductions! Summer Rates THE BRITTANY 300 Carmen Ort. 452-2784 454-1355 FRENCH C O L O N Y 5506 Grov BR — 8 BR — ll, G L 2-0507 fr om — H OO sq. ft. from $155 S U M M E R R A T E S 2 oedroom $125 Sw im m in g pool »II b ills pa ■ cable, a/c & c/h d including shuttlebus ,, to U T. Call G rig sb v & Co.. G R 2-6234 or a fte r 5 & S u n d ay ca ll R alph T ip pett. G R 2-1263. O N E bedroom ap artm ent W a l k Campus. C e n tra l a/h. U tilitie s paid except elect! i.-iix. $125. ( nm an,Ye A Par; men’s. 2800 aw .slier. A fte r 5 477 SAXONY APARTMENTS A fu ice to ; ve, loads of parking, security patrolled. day or Wednesdai P r S T Perm anent counter w o rk at b e a n e rs 3514 Burleson Road. 442-4d87, I r in g e benefits. E L E C T R O N IC S repairm an part tim e M ust be able to re p a ir stereo hi-fi i or* * x i e , Y .T ’i. Tr. 7 ''or*>*'r* ra*iI**, rtf-: Radio B R A N D N E W - S U M M E R R A T E S I * 2 BR ap l Shack. I d H an co ck C a nter. B t W * f a t , , large, p , o . ! , d S d mnnll d itiom d, g as/w ater paid $155 T ra v is Heights. 451-9658, 452-3408. T00™- carw te d , a ir con- 1509 MARK XX 3815 G U A D A L U P E D u p l e x e s , F u r n . ' ’ o r a r a n i- l ^ t K f ^ S 5* S 5 v , «S> U ,s.ur" r,ler (5 (e « . " s i fk e '" ' p I ut* ’ U LL! r r i 7 47/ -e. 'U : 1 r flu n , " ' 'n*' I**'*! ro o m .ip ;.rtm e n ’ N O W LEASING C L E A N cu t man between ages 20-30 M editerranean (aun­ te r receptionist. H o u rs between 12 dry, all built-ins, over sized kitchen* furnishings, pool, T ^ e r ^ l v ,6 -a-V — ro w e r 19th and Lavaca. 478-7218. P r n ' A P b lV — ^ rId ^e ' 7 * ' . gab TV cab e pd. by o w n e r '- J125 U P. For showing phone — FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED APTS. 454-6234. ee-UTu / decorated, maximum privacy, large pool. C ,0 G U S . for prix.-, en-erta:n:„g wlfh g rill , „ d pool table. Call GR I-5244 W ILL LEASE TO ACCOM M ODATE YOUR NEEDS To Place a Texan 476-7011, 476-8965. Nieman, Ha n k * , & Puryear. Ju s t south of R ive rsid e between Ro yal Crest and P a rk e r 1616 Royal Crest Phone: 444-6631 Classified Ad N ew one bedroom with dishwasher, dispose’, cable hook-up. A ecol co m to rfab e ‘ow maintenance apartment near UT located 4307 Avenue A. $130, a l bi s paid. Cai! D an Callan, SUNNYVALE APTS. 1300 S U M M IT SUMMER RATES — $120 UP L u x u rio u s ly furnished I & 2 B R aDts w ater, gas' TV Cable pd b y owner. M ust see these to ap preciate! F o r show ing — apts nd7 ' , a11 phone — 442-9495 or 444 5110 Call GR I -5244 To Place a Texan Classified Ad Page IDA Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN L O S T : L a d y 's gold w ris t watch. N am e S U M M E R J O B S I N E U R O P E « m ! W S ? J S V * ck- c iM w LOST F E M A L E PU R E BRED B E A G L E " B e s s .'' 5 months old. In M ain B u ild in g around 2 p rn. W ednesday N o collar S m all w hite spot on left shoulder $20 rew ard offered K e ith H ow ard 45.3-0847. F O U N D in front o f 2707 R io Grande, sm all black fem ale puppy. 472-8934. R o o m m a t e s B u s i n e s s O p p . in England. Placem ent Sw itzerland. and G e rm an y guaranteed for e a rly ap­ plicants. Variou s jot) descriptions de­ pending upon you r i n t e r s and Qua­ Jo b s are assigned on a lifications. l o w ! C° me' f ‘rSt * erved basis- A p p ly STUDENT TRAVEL 2226 GuadaluD# G R 7-1340 T y p i n g B<^ l £ B * £ E L A F r E L D T Y P I N G S E R - Tt*Pses- dissertations reports vt.m, M im eograph mg. Reasonable H I 2-7184. ROY W. HOLLEY F E M A L E S H A R E spacious three bed- room home P riv a te bedroom bath Evenings 560/month. D a y s 471-7253. 452-4-91 < 476-3018 t y p i n g . P R IN T IN G , b i n d i n g Just North of 27th & Guaduacaiupa I M A L E O R F E M A L E R O O M M A T E S 2 bedroom. 2 hath apartm ents, ‘ 0 minutes w alk from Cam pus i _ I Sw im m in g pool M aid service Stu d y and recreation room Sum m er rates *49.50/month each — A ll bills paid. J LE FONT APARTMENTS 472-6480. I 803 W 28th — F E M A L E S H A R E apartm ent fo r two A/C. storage room pool $65 each I N e a r U T , 476-8500. 476-3088 M A L E L A W student seeking roommate for furnished efficiency' apartm ent I near Stadium . P riv a te , a/c. bath-show-; er utilities paid: clean in g ! service. *42.50. 2055-B Sabine 472-1043. carpeted N E E D R O O M M A T E to share room two blocks front Campus. Y ou r share *25 all b ills paid, C all 478-5167 a fte r six! F E M A L E to in apartm ent next fail prof e rr b ly on W e s t side of Cam ­ liv e pus. G R 1-5569 evenings H o u s e s , F u r n . A V A I L A B L E N O W T w o bedroom cot­ tage 12 blocks north of U n ive rs ity A ir conditioned Adults no pets *130 two persons: *132. three persons. G R 8- 5850 afternoons R o o m & B o a r d THE CONTESSA 2 "Ch N see* * t-9~bh Inspection invited for Sum m er & F a ll Seme#ter# • E’eqant living for young women ® 4 girl su 'es • 20 mea1' week • TV • Pc I • Study hail • Sun deck • Maid service • Laundry room • Free parking BARRONE 2 '3 0 N ••■es Invited Inspection for Summer & Jail Semester* TV lounge 20 mea’s a week Maid • Pool • Parklnq Experienced management 478-8345 or 477-9766 The Contessa West 2707 Rio G ro^da 4?6-4o48 Inspection invltod for Sum m er & F a il Sem esters • Elegant living for young women • TO meal, week • Kitchen & dining ares in each suite • Pool • Free parking • TV lounge Ma d service Laundry facilities Study hall • Sun d °:k FULL-!IM E Typing Servic the tailored students fo r in « theses an I 'd i ^ Y ' a t i o f i cn k in e e r* needs f U n ive rs ity keyboard equipm ent Jangling sp, Ph one G R j __________ 2707 l l >2 to and 'm ph 111 G R 2-7677 ’’ark b e a u t i f u l ’ Special type f< language, N orth thong. O L 1-307; 'Y P IN G . r engine Unit ers A ll kinds. M n An- s a t i s f a c t i o n - Dissertations specialist F.x B B A . I B M Ex ricnced \ R A N T !■: K D reports. Leg al t ‘ t w i t h 453-8650. E X P E R I E N C E D V carbon ribbon R 3881 LM electric, tes 451- N o H idden Char; T yp in g P rin tin g M u lt 11 (th lug G raphic A rts A-PLUS 5 )1 W est N O R T H VV _ t> Ping c 581.3. \ T V ) L a w '’b riefs le c t u r e Not -i (R arin g Ith Strc (x V I 41 ] E S T Y P I N f W a n t % (CL Bit and G R 2-7677 lull P a r k I n c ’IN G S E rgradua :5 KOCH y p l* L L o w T ullos C L T L •'a I M I :d to t) Ing these) Phone V IR G IN IA S O I N E ! V I C E . G r a d u a t e typing, printing, b Lan e Telephone; *: E X P E R I E N C E D ar „ rates. la s t servic 3-5121 E X P E R I E N C E D T ' ous. dependable T dissertations Mrs 444-2831 an i time’ wood. 892-0727 after VI RGU TYP! irs M a b y J Sm all- 5 p.m. T Y P IN G . T H E S E S . Neat, accurate wt D rive and Balcones dissertation* e ’c. rk - N ear Hancock THE GOVERNORS fo r men Room A Board — 20 M eals a W eek 23 sa.lboat — a ir conditioned — larg e rooms — m aid service — 2 color T V lounges — gym, « . . . £ f £w V acancies fo r Spring 2612 Guadalupe 476-5658 MultlHthtng* Theses and j 1301 Edgewood Professlo na! T ’ Ping F ie ld inc! R tiding on 478 262 MAYFAIR HOUSE Dormitory For Men & Women Room & Mea's, $125 mer *h p~s La M ayfa ir bu* to a- d from Car the hour —■ M a 'd service — heated p o d — C o lo r TV — Pr par, ng area — De / pick up dea (ice — ice machine — Laundry dillies. 2000 Pearl — 472-5437 Ca I about our M ayfa r Apt*. SEE MAYFAIR AND COMPARE 2000 Pear 472-5437 TOWER MANOR 1908 U n iv e rs ity — 477-2185 Open fo r inspection for Sum m er & F a ll Sem esters L iv in g room. 2 bdrm.*.. 2 full baths, kitchen * d ining area in each suite. Ulrgant liv in g fo r young women T V E le vato rs Maid servic* Sun deck F u lly a/a • Fre e parking • Lau nd ry facilities • Stu d y hall • I blk Campus • 19 m eals/week lounge OI o —oc n TO U.T. r • Dorsi >|- I ! vpi r g binding of a il ■our I ' 'H U hlng en nu ersitj w o r Theses, dissert at ic f i t I«! I v \ * . fast. Vs J* n r f ! I , ,1 peris m-tlcul >pt rience. Phone L a u ra B o d o u r: 478 8113 W O O D S theses. Ilt y w ork Woods. 472-1825 T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . Themes, dissertations. M u ltiiith Qua- isonable rates. Mrs. Just North of 27th % Guadalups Am fab/, MBA * T yping . M ultilithi.ng. B in d in g I he Complete Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Service to tailored the needs of U n lve rs ltv students. Special keyboard equipm ent for science, and engineer­ ing theses and dissertations. language Ph o n e G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k E X P E R I E N C E D typist. Theses, aril- oles dissertations, etc. 50c p er page n>T?,l e t P T enl cr ko r- T ra ile r Pa rk . 476-8532. f " a n G rove T H E M E S , reports, lecture nob conable. H rs . Fraser. 476-1317 “S. Roa- T u t o r i n g M A T H T U T O R 453-816-1. m aster's degree FOR MEN Cio** to U.T. A/C, maid service, weekly or monthly rate*. Taking room reserva­ tion* for Summer a t reasonable rate*. Mr*. Lyle, 2800 W hitis, 476-1712. Coaching or remedial assistance SPANISH OR SOCIAL SCIENCES Mrs. W illiam s, 2710 Nueces, 477-8272. Call 477-8192 after 3 p.m. ■ When you've made it, make it Peart We’re all trying to make it from day to day. Some of us in the spotlight. Others, behind the scenes. Everybody makes it in his own way. Everybody’s somebody to Pearl. When you’ve made it, let your beer say so. Pearl says so. With better taste. It’s a better beer. When you’ve made it, make it Pearl. Pearl Brewing Company: San Antonio, Texas, St. Joseph, Missouri Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag* FRIDAY 6l SATURDAY OM LY! — 10% OFF ON ALL WESTERN WEAR WESTERN FELT HATS 12” WRANGLER JEANS MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS coo M E N S Vi W H IT E J E A N S 498 # W e C a rry Every W estern A c c e ssa ry You M ight Need, From Boots to Hats. W E S T E R N S T R A W HATS I9.8 R O U G H -O U T C O W B O Y BOOTS 199.5 all sizes 5 9 8 LEVIS JEANS COS For Sun c Surf,Check These Values! BEACH Men's and Ladies' PANTS SHORTS SHIRTS W ild Assortm ent of Styles and Patterns TIRE TREAD SANDALS TEXAS NO. I SWEATSHIRTS WESTERN & M O D W e N ow H ave O u r Com plete Line of J A M S & S W I M ­ W E A R at LEVIS FLAIRS You W ill A g re e That O u r Selection C a n 't Be Beat DISCOUNT PRICES Store ll t), ), Page I2 A Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Judith Crist: Critic With Strong Convictions B t C H A R LIE DAVIS By CHARLES DAVIS Amusements Associate Amiability may not be among the saintlier virtues, but to at­ tempt to be pleasant at 9 a.m. should not go unsung. Therefore I hail film critic Judith Crist even before the interview began far her surprising good nature. How­ ever, even with pleasantries, as she chats she also chides with strong conviction films and in­ dustry goings-on of which she has a definite viewpoint. the she Plunging headfirst was cremonies. sarcastically the question whether she had any inside hunches on the upcoming "Oh, a week Oscar winners. how before re­ heroic," marks, yet she states that she has no hunches but preferences and suppositions from trade talk. WHILE FOR BEST actor she would hope for Jon Voight in "Midnight Cowboy," she thinks it will go to John Wayne for "True Grit." She is not angered in the least for she feels Wayne was marvelous in the role and guesses that people will probably discount Voight for his extreme newness to the business and the fact he will have other opportuni­ ties for the honor. In and just cater to a youth market are underestimating the intelligence of the American pub­ lic with their cheap stuff." YOUTH IS a short-lived period In a life and movies like Anton­ ioni s "Zabriskie Point" shows youngsters of 1967 in 1970. Rather than "youth this movie," drive to make good movies that know no generation gap. far there should be striving a She cited a movie like "Mid­ night Cow'boy" that is "simply a movie about life, that is true and the explicit things in the film that might tend to offend were very necessary. real." And, In a general discussion of movies of the last year, Crist groups "Easy Rider" and "2001" into what she calls "a Rorschalk movie" in which just like the ink­ blots, one reads into these films what he wants. She objects to lack of 'definite ft degree the statement on the the part of screenwriters for "Easy Rider " " I DON’T HUNK Peter Fonda knew what he wanted to say," Crist explains, "and I feel one should only make movies when one has something to say that can t be In any other medium — I don’t think they said knew what they wanted to say and this is also my objection with ‘2001.’ After Stanley Kubrick made the movie, he then wrote a book with his collaborator and tried to tie up the ends.” taken Further blasting "Easy Rid­ er:". . .Ifs a rotten movie and has one actor in its named Jack is great who Nicholson who carries it. But, even young people a r e n ' t in really philosophically by a couple of drips who sit there saying ‘yea, man, well — we blew it, man’ the but thing artistically and it as an experience, there are about five explanations far the film and you can get very mad and argue about it. which is good. Anything that stimulates is good." if you discount take FAMOUS FOR HER listings in New York magazine of her yearly "IO best" and "IO worst" films, there was a difference of opinions among those in attendance to the choice of "Hamlet" as one of the "IO best.” Qualifying herself Miss Crist clarified, "It is the first cinematic ‘Hamlet’ rather than a filming of the stage play like the Russian or Olivier ver­ sion.” She enumerated new out­ looks on the relationship between Gertrude and Claudius plus the attempts by Hamlet to titillate a 17-year-ofd Ophelia. As for dislikes Miss Crist ob­ jects to the attitude director Sam Peckinpah took with "The Wild Bunch." She describes it as; •ft totaUy amoral movie. Peckinpah has pretended that he attempted to show how vile kiUing was. What’s so new about telling us that violence is no good that s just like teUing us that sin is not nice. The violence that he show’s us is absolutely point­ less violence of a bunch of no­ good people killing others who are less than no-good. If they want to kUl each other off that’s their own problem—who cares. If he thought anybody was going to have sympathy for this bunch of people, who w-ere basicaUy Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, that was stolen from the WiUiam Goldman script, he was kidding himself." DISCUSSION turned the to industry closing down of big moviemaking and Miss Grist again pinpoints where the wounds were opened up. Misuse of funds seems the malady of the picture tem- business specifically with the helm. permental stars at ‘ Take last instance for Elizabeth Taylor movie," she recalls, " 'The Only Game in Town’ —you make a rickety-jun- kv thing like that for $11 million dollars—I mean you could have made 11 people very happy and I think this movie makes nobody happy including the people in it. this "Taking a little play that could­ n’t even work on the stage and using Elizabeth Taylor, who im­ mediately warrants payment of SI million, and move Las Vegas to Paris. And why did she want to be in Paris, because Burton was in Paris making ‘Staircase’ which should have been made in England." EVEN THOUGH Miss Crist levels much of her own venom at films and film makers, the roles are occasionally reversed, for example, when director Otto talk Preminger appears on a show and refers to her as Judith "Christ.” She rebuts whenever she can and she pours forth her ‘Christ-thing* irritation: "The rather annoys me — it’s the slight connotation of sort of a Viennese-schmaltz fuhrer. Mixing that with this ‘Christ-business’ is on the moronic level of a woman who used to write me when I was a young reporter who used to address letters to me this way; so, after about the fifth time it was enough — you know, it’s so cheap, and he keeps on making these rotten movies lose money on top of it.” that Whether she is saturated with moving reviewing and finds it more difficult to look freshly at films, the Montreal-born journal­ ist compares it not intentionally for ego to the job of a surgeon: "Not a pretentious analogy, but like a doctor, not all becomes the same — maybe he sees an interesting liver or .you give me a appendix; perfectly awful movie and I’m very, very happy with it." take to . . Review er C riticize s —P h oto by Ike B aruch. fi!m critic, Judith Crist, in­ talks about the movie University dustry before students W ednesday morn­ ing in the Texas Union A u ­ ditorium. Four TV Specials Dominate Viewing Best actress choice is English- star Maggie Smith far "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,” but she is reasonably sure of Liza Minelli taking the award. "The academy operates or, sentiment,” assures Miss Crist, "and Liza's mother died last year, and it’s Judy-Judy-Judy and Judy never got the Oscar she should have gotten for ‘A Star is Bom,’ and Liza s father is a very' good direc­ tor in Hollywood far many years and maybe it’ll go to her. There's that old saying: ‘if you get into telephone booth and you cry, you’re gonna win an Oscar.’ ” FOR BEST riC T m E . Miss Crist would like to see "Z” , but since it is nominated for best foreign film and because it is a foreign film, she w'ould like to see "Midnight Cowboy" win. However, she suspects "Butch Cassidy" but she is not dis­ pleased for she considers it, "a real good-time-good movie." Supporting players favored are Gig Young, on agreement with myself and she chose Catherine Bums for her impressive role in Frank Perry’s "Last Summer." Young went "out of character" in her estimation and she could be happy with no other winner [ for best supporting actress but Bums. "They (the academy) can real­ their own sen­ if s ly wallow in timent,” says Crist, "and a b o u t time they remembering where sentials of the business are. These nouveau-moguls who come started the es-' special is Rodgers and Hammer- stein's "Cinderella" on channels 5, " and IO. This Is the wily musical written by tile duo far TV. Don Knotts has his own special on channels 5, 7 and IO at 8 p.m. Andy Williams and Juliet Drowse ane his guests. This is a preview of w hats to come next fall when he has his own show. Rowan and Martin. Diana Ross are Dinah and Lucille Bal] Shores guests on her re-run special at 9 p.m. on channels 5, 7 and IO. Additional Viewing: 6 30— 12 Kl v in e N un " s ienee S e r i a l M usical F s n t a s y - md( 7 .0 0 -1 2 Bra fly Bunch i in f .C o n t m o n u i C om m ent i j o —i s o h o s t a n d M rs. M u ir J}. 42 N am e o f the Game B Ar, * ^ o v i e -R am oo a n d J u l i e t ’* OO—* J. IO D o n K n o tts S p e c ia l o v, 9 .00—4 B racken s W orld ,p Conte the B rides . J 5 7, lf) D inah Shore Special i* Love, A m e ric a n S ty le in on I*4 >’*‘1™* W elby. M D. IO 0 0 - 4 lo 12. 42 Nev vs, w ea­ 7. ther. sp o rts TI ,n -p- ‘ nt lo M en- G riffin in im ? iv.JO — 4. 42 J ohn ny Carson J ?heIWo%"\ia” nken,,el" MeeU 9 NK T P la y h o u se 2 Moyie- -• -Black P a tc h " 2 " Ilight Zone IO N ew* 12 OI WESTERN DAY F R I D A Y — W E S T E R N D U D S A P P R O P R I A T E A L L D A Y — A L L O V E R C A M P U S COWBOY BARBEQUE F R ID A Y — 11:30 to 2:00 p.m. T IC K E T S — $1.50 n o r t h sid e o f u n i o n ROUND-UP PARADE s a t u r d a y 12 noon 20 Floats, Bands, Beauties and V.I.P.’s ROUND-UP REVUE S A T U R D A Y — 1:30 after parade Eastwood (Delt) Park — Beer and Band ROUND-UP f A Va rJ By SAR \ GEORGE Amusements Associate it One tiling about TV, tries to aim its programs to people and of the physically, Friday programers did an excellent job. ages, mentally night all As usual, two specials are on at the .same time, 6:30 p.m. For those viewers who like science the NBO Science and puzzles Special ' Tile Unexplained" is on channels 4 and 42. Tile other Show Features Surrealistic Art Two Houston art collectors, Mr. and Mrs. Jean de Mend, are lending the University Art Museum nine works of surrealism that will be on exhibit through May 3. to The pieces are on display in Gallery 17 of the museum. According to Dr. Donald B. Goodall, director of the museum, the de Mend works represent the ' ‘ p r i n c i p l e sources of the primitive, fantastic, automatist ic, naive hvper-sophisticated figuration" that make up the sur­ realistic movement. and The late Rene Magritte, a Bel­ gian, has two oils in the show, "L'Empire Des Lumieres VU" and "r,a Folio des Grandeurs." The remaining seven artists are represented by a single work each: • Giorgio de Chirico, an Ital­ in Rome. lives ian who "Melancholia." • The late Rumanian artist “Unfolding V i c t o r Brauner, Hoad." • Malta, a Chilean-born artist in Paris, "Let May who lives First be First." • Man Ray, an American In Paris, "Suicide." • Frenchman Max Ernst, "The Sirens Sing When Reason Falls Asleep." The late A ves Tanguy, bom in T ranee but later an American citizen, "Untitled." • Wi lf redo Lam. a Cuban liv­ ing in Italy, "La Visitants." The works have appeared in international and n a t i o n a I exhibits. The de Mend exhibit is one of four which opened Sunday at the museum. Others are paintings, drawings and prints done by Afro-Americans abroad, a selec­ tion of ancient Persian art ob­ jects and a collection of eon- temporary prints. 12,000 BC & Sat ^ ^ 1 ' 1 n r ' 11 ■! 12,000 BC i f c / v v v Robin Siler Featuring Krowbar and his Orangutang Gang “ from Sa n A n t o n I O i i SK Y l l An Armadillo from Vienna is In research in the area. 316 Congress *1.50 Admission r n Festival to Celebrate W inedale Anniversary the dedication of Celebrating the third anniver­ sary of the \V inedale Inn Properties of the University, the 1970 Winedale Festival will be held April IO to 12. Events scheduled a r e : • April IO, piano concert by Miss Drusilia Huffmaster, artist - in-rcsidence at Southwestern Uni­ versity, 7:30 p.m. • April ll, performance by the Texas A&M University Sing, ing Cadets, 3 p.m., and produc­ tion of a play in German, “Onkle, Onkle" by Guenther Grass, 8 p. rn., by a cast from the Universi­ ty’s Department of Germanic Languages. • April 12, candlelight per­ the University's formance by Madrigal Singers, 2:30 p.m. Members of the Winedale Inn Council will be hosts for recep­ tions after the performances. A scheduled barbecue picnic is concert by April l l at 5:30 p.m. following the Singing the Cadets. A German band from Reagan High School will play for the barbecue. All events are open to the pub­ lic. Prices are $2 for the Huff- master concert, $1 far the Singing Cadets performance, $2 a plate for the barbecue picnic, $1 for the German play and $2 for the Madrigal Singers’ concert. The package price for all five is $6. The three events scheduled far April ll, a $4 value, have a pack­ age price of $3. AU proceeds of the festival will go to the Winedale Inn Properties publication fund. Reservations for Winedale Fes­ tival events may be made by telephoning Area Code 512, 475- 3094 or Area Code 713, 278-3430, by addressing Winedale Inn Properties, Box IL Round Top Texas 78954. L e v o B U I . F REEP . c u p s ! IPtPCS tifVf/Atf ere " [ S L R C X LITES » • " - * # < & . COLO R _ HUEBL J * - * ‘r * o I g w * a agfesiisegj l« W - S R f S S M r n H R S ^ f + s f i c K B j POSTERS^ m m k t IL B o tto m ' h M X C B N S^ I V r nlo Norman Eaton's Polonaise 23 FL O O R S ABOVE R O U N D -U P ss SUNDAY BRUNCH 9KXI to 12:00 Fresh fruits, pastries, eggs Benedict, huevos rancheros, omelets, breakfast meats. 2.50 Children under 12 1.50 SUNDAY LUNCH 12:00 to 2:00 and SUNDAY DINNER 5:30 to 9:00 Large salad assortment, roast beef, baked ham, chop suey, baked halibut. 3.50 Children under 12 1.50 Y'all conte! You m ay meet A m e ric a 's m ost s p e c t a c u la r athlete! Joe N am ath is c o m in g here to o p e n his b ra n d new restaurant, B ro a d w a y J o e 's! S u re to sc o re with you is a fantastic s u p e r s t a r a m o n g s a n d w i c h e s that J o e is p a s s in g to fans with training table appetites. I t ' s ' T h e S u p e r b u r g e r V A 3 - d e c k e r thriller that's beefier than J o e s fo rw ard w a l l — with c h e e s e , lettuce and c o n d i m e n t s to your taste. O r p e r h a p s your favorite will b e the " T o u c h d o w n ” Roast B eef S a n d w i c h , h eape d h igh a n d juicy. O r the C l u b h o u s e S p e c i a l - S t u f f e d S h r i m p Basket. Why not try our real H e r o - the S u b m a r i n e S a n d w ic h ? Q u a r t e r b a c k a n d J u n io r B u rge rs, too. Not to m ention fries, s h a k e s , drinks. Y o u call the p l a y - w e aim to sco re . T h e n a m e of the g a m e : F L A V O R ! S S S Austin's best view of the Tower and Campus. R e m e m b e r — J o e N am ath at B ro a d w a y J o e ’s. H ave a party with his frie n d s— y o u ’ll g o hom e ch eering! B l MEET JOE Between 2 - 4 p.m. at the GRAND OPENING SAT., APRIL A Ic e 's 1122 Colorado 478-4628 5725 N. Interregional Friday. April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Raga Jag CHICK-A-GO-GO SOUTHERN FRIED C H ICKEN OFFER EXPIRES JUNE lit C O U P O N Buy an individual order and get No. I order FREE C im iM p n -w -n t thin co u p o n ) t r o £ Eat your heart out, but save your appetite for April 15! NEW! SO »i*T s e rv ic e Guenther Grass Play Stated for Friday “Onkel, Onkel” to be presented by the Department of Germanic Languages, the story of Boll in. a systematic man con­ tinually frustrated in his attempts to commit murders. tells Performances will be at 8 p.m. Friday and .Saturday and at 4 p.m. Sunday in Batts Auditorium. The play will be presented in German, but a detailed synopsis hi English will be available. Tickets are 50 cents for stu­ dents and faculty and 80 cents for others, and are available from professors in the Germanic languages Department or at the door. Dr. W. F. Michael, professor of German, Is director and Dr. H u b e r t Heinen, associate professor of German, is producer. j Union Films | To Screen | The Texas Union spon- | sored Saturday Morning I Fun Club will run six films in the Union Auditorium at IO a.m. Saturday. Tho films are free to students. Also scheduled: April l l Son of Paleface April 18 The Time April 25 May 2 May 9 Machine The Haunting Seventh Voyage of Sinbad Adventures of Robin Hood The Sunday afternoon perform­ ance initiates a four-day sym­ focusing on works of posium Guenther Grass deluding navels, plays and poetry. Grass also is an artist of note, and his illustra­ tions are used on both the play program symposium schedule. and the World-famous in literature for the creation of the dwarf in his novel “The Tin Drum,” Grass is an important figure in modern German politics. Additional performances of “ Onkel, Onkel” will be given at the University of Houston, Cullen Auditorium, at 8 p.m., April IO; tlie Winedale Inn Theater at Barn, at 8 p.m., April ll, and at the annual convention of the Texas Association of German Students at Our Lady of the Lake College in San Antonio at 8 p.m., April 18. S H O W IN G DRIVE-IN THEATRES TONIGHT »t 3 ............ He made evil an ar., virtue a vice...and pain a pleasure! SAMUEL I ARK OFF I - JAMES H. NICHOLSON ' “The last w ord in thrillers. Terrific.” “" G e n e S h a lit, L ook M a g a z in e Stone Ram This statuette appears in the University Art Museum's current show of ancient Persian art work. Persian Culture Exhibited that reflect An important assemblage of art objects ancient Middle Eastern culture from 2,000 B. C. to about 600 A. D. is on exhibit the University Art Museum. in “ Persian Treasures” is the title of the show which will remain on view through May 3 in the Museum’s mezzanine gallery'. The objects are on loan from the private collection of New V ork art dealer Mehdi Mahbou- bian, who will supervise the in­ stallation of the exhibition and talk with art students about the pre-Lslamic works. Included in the exhibit are var­ ious types of jewelry — earrings, pins and necklaces of turquoise, rock crystal, amber and ether stones; pottery vessels made from black, red and gray clays, and numerous ornamental figures of bronze, gold and iron. A miscellany of tent pins, spearheads, daggers and swords also is included, as well as more than 50 illuminated manuscript pages. The museum Is open to the public without charge. Gallery hours are I to 5 p.m. Sunday, IO a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through to I p.m. Friday, and 9 a m. Saturday. V o g u e to Use Art W ork By University Student Several works by a senior art student at the University appear in this and next month’s issues of Vogue magazine. Jose Maria Barrera created a gold chian necklace inlaid with black pebbles that is worn by a model in a two-page photograph in the April Vogue. In issue of the May the leather magazine, handbag and vest designed by Barrera will be featured. a headed INTERSTATE HELD OVER! F E A T I R F s ti no . I . oo i :OO - 8:00 TO THE * basement ceerefHtK/ig E G F ITHE ADVENTURERS [To ex cite ea ch other they ignite the world! Academy Award Nomination-Best Picture of the Year T R A N S -A- T E X A S FEATURES 2 : 0 0 - 4 : 3 0 - 7 : 0 0 - 9 : 3 0 b jr j | Held Over! 5th Week ~j 2224 Guadalupe St.—477-1964 OPEN 1:45 • $ 1 .0 0 ’TIL 5 P.M . MOST NOMINATIONS FOR ANY PICTURE mew our sr im a w ri ANNA MASSEY ■ SONJA ZIEMANN - JOHN HUSTON riocxiriM AH TUR BK AUN ER * v l O U I S M HEYWARD- * " injy R ICH ARD M A T H E SO N « * * * . , 0 » 'JA M E S IH. N IC H O L S O N -*S A M U E L Z. ARKOFF - a m c n o * CY E N D FIELO mmc *t BILLY STRANGE - - AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL "crow .C O L O R .K a w n m * 2 n d F E A T U R E P L I S : 0 ™ ‘ATriC JUDY P W Z -fM C Q cT H R CPr- Nan Ma£HM PAXTON QUIGLEY'S CRIME WAS PASSION AND HIS PUNISHMENT FITS EXACTLY! C H I E F D R IV E - IN O PK N 6:15 S T A R T S 7:15 LONGHORN SOUTHSIDE D R I V E - IN O P K N 6:30 S T A R T S 7:13 T W I N O P E N 6:30 S T A R T S 7:15 r-> 11^.1- > * • I ’ • • I y : lf I -J/T/oc ri -v-i -• ..-..Y:.-..-'..qr. PUT THE C A T H O L IC STUDENT CENTER OVER YOUR HEAD FOR JUST A QUARTER. this f rid a y hear: the strict te m p e ra n c e an d m o ra l tu rp itu d e b a n d (n o t open th is sa tu rd a y ) »>o-1 armour *™oo(Tt9rm Ive never met a girl I didnt like!’ Fred C. Dobbs A C A D E M Y A W A R D NOMINATIONS BEST PICTURE INCLUDING: BEST ACTOR BEST ACTRESS “ Has thai youthful n«*crnt which places it in a league with Zeffirelli’s ‘R om eo and Juliet” ’ -J o h n Mahoney, FM and Fine Arts Magazine An instant classic. It has a hainnier-Iock on history, perform ances pathos and ro o tin g interest I” - Archer Whiten. N.Y. Post as HENRY VHI R i c h a r d B u r t o n Genevieve B ujoed IN THE H a l W a l l i s PRODUCTION as ANNE BOLEYN ( A # ( o f tffe hiousatib D ays Co-5lirrinj I r e n e Pa p a s Anthony Quarte-John Colicos I— r*i, m WIE w BRISCH tO U tt-N M M * KOMO SOMLOVE • u - . * * , t, MAXWELL MOERSCH • m m i, CHARKS .-'ARROTT ftMMfcMM I ** IS - A tJN-VESS*; KTOS!.TEOHICOK*'- TAtsA.TSjOh* m katttomrrno NOW SHOWING! • FEATURES • 2:05 - 4:35 7:05 - 9:35 NOW SHOWING! $1.00 ’TIL 2:15 P.M. Page KA Friday. April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN rn PX if 'N I I P I i i Everything that excited 50 million readers Is now on the screen...and morel f / RATED " R " •JERRY BRESLER Production MTussycat i i itafHnj IAN McSHANE'^ ^ E R - M A R S H A L L - J O H N GAVIN 'SEVERN DARDEN - JOYCE VAN PATTEN t, LALO SCHIFRIN t o w t o , R O N MATEAIJ ■ tatoi >, JERRY BRESLER • * * c » - « M NOW SHOWING COLOR by Deluxe* United Artiste * FEAT.: 1 2 :2 6 -2 :1 9 -4 :1 2 6 :0 5 -7 :5 8 -9 :5 1 ♦PARAMOUNT FC TURI JOSEPH £ LEVINE PRESENTS THE LEWIS GILBERT FILM OF THE ADVENTURERS Based on fie Novel “TbE ADVBtTURERS" by HAROLD R088NS C O L O R CHARLES AZNAVOUR ALAN BADEL CANDICE BERGEN I TROMM Y BERGGREN DELIA BOCCARDO ERNEST BORGNINB ROSSANO BRAZZI OLIVIA da H AVILLAND BEKIMFEHMIU JE­ ANNA MOFFO LEIGH TAYLOR*YOUNG FREE P A R K I N G rn, A Lavaca STS7’ INTERSTATE D O O RS O PE N 5:15 A U S T I N THEATRE “ S K I R K T SE R ­ V I! K " 7 :3 7 “ H O R S E ” 5 :3 0 - 9 :5 8 ALBERT R BROCCOLI « HARRY SALTZMAN IAN FLEMING S E K E VAN K I.E E P J O H N P II I LE I I* L A W ON HER MAJESTY’S . SECRET SERVICE” I DEATH RIDES A HORSE K l l l UWM I t nW lM fc TiCMMtCOLOR* Untied Artist* I TECHNI8COPC* United A r t is t s T E C H N IC O L O R ' P A N A V IS IO N » F R E E ^ A R K I N C A T A L L T IM E S Art Show Features Graphics Collection LAST 5 DAYS Today Open 6:00 P.M. FE A T U R E S 6 : 1 5 - 3 : 1 0 - 9 :4S ®.m , M A TIN EE TOMORROW Pleas® C all F o r F ea tu re IT’S THE SWITCH OF THE CENTURY! programmed for " Hi-Voltage Hl-Larity Circle of Dead tiy h i c k vt m i a u l * I D - . . n , — i - i i o t o T i Ihe Bijuberti Players rehearse a scene from "Spoon River Anthology" to stage at the Methodist Student Center April IO and ll. Clockwise from top right are Nan Elkins, George Pearson, Katherin Rao, Alex Mar­ shal, Bro. Dunstan Bowles and Linalice Carey. Cello Student Wins Contest cello Linda Judd Frym an, 'a grad­ uate the student University, won first place in the orchestral instrum ents division in a Southwest regional competition conducted recently in Fort Worth at by the Music Association. reachers National Mrs. Frym an, a student of Prof. George Neikrug, received a $100 cash aw ard and an op­ portunity to compete April 13 in sonnages I I ; ” Adolph Gottlieb, a screen in colors, "Rosy Mood;” Otto Dix, a lithographed self- p ortrait; Allen Jones, lithograph, late Yasuo "W om an;” the Kuniyoshi, "Three Lindner, Dancers; s c r e e n p o s t e r colors, “ U n i v e r s i t y A rt Museum, lithograph, Richard in B erkeley;” Conrad Marca-Relli. lithograph with collage, "Untitled IV ;” Nathan Oliveira, lithograph, "F ace,” and Gio Pomodoro, lithograph, "Double Red Spiral.” Gallery hours are I to 5 p.m. Sunday, IO a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 9 a.m . to I p.m. Saturday. High School Pianists To Compete Here from F uture pianists high school will compete Saturday in the University music depart­ m ent’s second annual Concerto Contest. The Is a $2,000 s c h o l a r s h i p in the music departm ent and an opportunity to perform May 3 with the Univer­ concert sity Symphony. The appearance will bring an extra $200 cash aw ard to the winner. top prize Twenty-three young pianists in the eleventh and twelfth grades of Texas and several other states wUl be competing for honors from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Music Building Recital Hall. Dr. William Race, professor of piano who is in charge of the contest, said the judging sessions a re open to the public. Members of the piano faculty the music departm ent will in serve as judges. Dr. and Mrs. Irf Allison of Austin contributed $1,000 toward the first prize scholarship. Allison is the founder and ex-president of the National Guild of Piano Teachers. Other prizes include a $750 scholarship for second place and a $500 scholarship for third place, plus cash stipends for appearing in concert with the University Symphony. About 70 prints by contempor­ a ry artists are on exhibit in the University Art Museum. exhibit, "Contem porary The P rin ts,” the from is drawn private collection of Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Clark of McAllen and from gifts of prints the Clarks have earlier m ade to the perm anent the museum. collection th at of The Clark graphics will be on view until May 3 in a portion of the Museum’s m ain gallery. Dr. Donald B. Goodall, director of the museum, said the Clarks a re "ra re collectors who a re able to make close contacts with artists, and thereby continue to assemble works of very high quality.” The McAllen couple whose avo­ cation could almost be considered a vocation, make frequent trips throughout the United States and abroad their wide range of contemporary art. In rn id-April they will be exploring the museums and a r t centers of Amsterdam, Munich and Zurich. to acquire Among artists represented in the print show are Karel Appel with a lithograph, "Deux Per* Sculptor to Complete Work Made of Earth 1116 building of an earthwork — a large form molded out of dirt, covered with wet clay and allowed to harden into a perm a­ nent structure — is being spon­ sored this week by the University a rt d ep artm en t Building the form is Je rry Roth- man, ceramist-sculptor of the University of Iowa, who has been working on the project since Thursday and will finish it Satur­ day from IO a.m. to 4 p.m. He is constructing the earth­ work at the studio of Ishmael Soto, assistant professor of art, 306 Eanes Road. the MTNA’s national collegiate auditions in Miami. She holds a bachelor of music degree from the University of Kansas and received the m aster of music degree in 1969 from the University'. In tile music department, Mrs. Frym an is a teaching assistant the String Project and also in plays cello the Collegium M usicum . in E arlier this year she won the orchestral instruments division of the Texas Collegiate Artists Awards Auditions. She also has been selected as one of 26 young musicians in the United States to compete May 8 in the National Auditions for Strings sponsored by the Friday Morning Music Club Foundation in Washington. Mrs. F rym an is the form er re­ cipient of first-place honors in the Bloch Young A rtist Competition and the Holtzschue String Award in Oklahoma City, STUDIO IV Rated “X ” 2 2 2 E a s t 6 th P h . 4 7 2 -0 4 3 6 SPECIAL LO C AL PREMIERE! GENESIS ll NEXT WEEK Tues., April 7 at 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. Wed., April 8 at 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. Thurs., April 9 at 4:30, 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. Union Theatre — Students - $1.00 Pl I IC 2nd SIZZLING " X " RATED HIT F L . U J in C O LO R SJH . K S 9 RTE.D. L A D IE S FREE A N D W E L C O M E M IL IT A R Y a n d c o l l e g e s t u d e n t s w e l c o m e Cinema 40 Presents S P E L L B O U N D By ALFRED HITCHCOCK FRIDAY, APRIL 3 7 and 9 P.M. Jester Center Auditorium Admission FREE w e s t s c r e e n NORTH SCREEN BOX OFFIC E O PEN 6:30 - SHO W S START W X A B B 3 BV UA ! H U I SSTM aVTO HS M C COCOS SY MQVHU®_____________ "IN THIS O N E YO U GET A N O R G Y THAT IS A N O R G Y!" J U D IT H CRIST. N E W YORK MAGAZINE p r r - e t rn An adult look at a police detective 20T H CENTURY FOX PRESENTS FRANK SINATRA THE DETECTIVE — EAST SCREEN BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 S H O W STARTS 7:15 A C A D E M Y A W A R D N O M IN A T IO N FOR BEST ACT O R DUSTIN H O F F M A N DUSTIN HOFFMAN MIA FARROW ; ',-4/ ■ ■■■'• > *• 6 't f TTTS I ? i r i r i k k a . i e &NKA0ISH PETER YATES JOHN MORTIMER mM m s " P L U S CO-FEATURE ' BESTW AC T R ESS0 1 M -I— ACTRESS MAGGIE SMITH p D! u i t u A W A R D N O M I N A T I O N S — BEST SONG — "JEAN* 2a » c i N t u i r . f o i p r e t e n d Q f ^ S Iis S ZfeanHrodie ‘'Maggie Smith Birrin g A FRANKOVICH STURGES PRODUCTION GREGORY PECK RICHARD DAVID CRENNA • J A N S S E N S JAMES GENE FRANCISCUS -HACKMAN 3| ACADEMY 111 AWARD NOMINATIONS BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY! BEST SOUND ACHTEVEMD® EES! VISUM 5FFECX8I eo-etarrfag LEE GRANT • NANCY Penavisio: T R A N S -fr T E X A S TODAY O P E N — 5:45 F E A T U R E T IM E S 6:00 & 8:45 TODAY SE A T S *1.00 ’T IL 6 P J I . —442-2333 S A T U R D A Y & S U N D A Y F E A T U R E TIM ES 2 - 5 - 8 SA T U R D A Y « SU N D A Y O N L Y S-,RONMOGDf-^ 0M R R E E l f . « -• >SHW WALLBas>fen^" tatoaantfiycs^LDNEL EOT” 16400 Burnet Road — 465-6933- TEEN DISC. C A R D $1.00 C H ILD (U nder 13 W /P ) F R E B BO X OFFICE & SNACK B A B O PEN 6:15 P.M . N O W G IV IN G B O N U S C H E K '; .BU N U b LH EKS I M i L ^ ^ S ^M others Day Confest I PO PCO RN T H I N S ? I H ave You Entered Our James Bond is back! H A! Bl RT R BROCCOLI m HARRY SALTZMAN present ■ IAN FILMING’S JAMES BOND OOT7-' "ON HER MAJESTY’S SECRET SERVICE” PANAVISION^ Im ] t e c h n ic o l o r * ® knifed Artiste piD8! C U N T EA STW O O D “A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS' 9 These Keys Are Hot! H ow W o uld You Like to know All Summer that you hold < key to Paradise? These Keys are hot . . . and going fast (W ho s ever turned down Paradise?) Now you can swing on the tennis courts . . . soothe youi warm body with others in the cool waters of two (2) swim. ming pools . . . bask in the glorious sun while takinq an ex­ hilarating sail on the deep blue Colorado. A n d . . . set amongst the picturesque r o llin g green pas- ures is your luxurious abode — wall to wall c a r p e t i n g - tree cable TV and many other enticements for your every whim and desire. Lead yourself R I G H T N O W down the path of Paradise at L A K E T R A C E ! W e are working all Summer on wild new things so you'll be surprised when you come back to your Paradise and a little more! W O W ! ! ft's too much! 2217 South Lakeshore Blvd. AUSTIN • PHONE: 444-3917 T h e Da il y T ex a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas at Austin A U S T IN , TE X A S, F R ID A Y , A P R IL 3, 1970 Three Students T h e y ’re not so different from you. A pole vaulter, a singles player, an d a pitcher. They're athletes, Texas athletes, which m akes them g o o d at the sport the love, and which makes tnem winners. But in reality, they're no further aw ay than the next desk. Round- • UT Athlete Seen as Individual In Diversity of Spring Sports By V A U G H N A L D R E D G E Sports Editor The crowds aren t nearly as big. The contestants are much closer. You can see their faces while they catch and run and swing. You d o n 't really have to be there the moment play begins. A n d sometimes you can put yourself in their places — and understand how it feels to compete. There are many kinds of sports that g o on in the spring. O n e is nearly available all the time. Round-U p week could be a time for experience, to follow the varied action. To let it relax you, or excite you. To loll in the sun of the third base bleachers at Clark Field during M o n d a y 's baseball doubleheader. O r to nod with the action of any o f the three tennis matches during the week from the grandstands of Penick C ourts. * 9rassYi breeze blown fairways o f M o r­ ris Williams golf course during the W ednesday rounds, or to lean with a sprinter or tense with a jumper during Friday and Saturday's track carnival in Memorial Sta­ dium. It's even possible to lean on the rail at the bottom of the stadium wall and take in a football spring train­ ing scrimmage, unpestered by bourbon down your pants cuff or a scream in your ear. A b o v e you and outside the big horseshoe arena, the h o i se ^ of construction and the dust in the air remind that in the fall the character o f sports changes. O n e sport rules in^ the fall, and though the bigtim e aura o f Tooball is satisfying in its own season, so too is the diversity and individuality of the spring. Individuality may be the key to appreciating the d i­ versity of the spring. A s a golfer or a tennis player, a pole vaulter or an outfielder must rely on himself, the spirit of individual com petition perm eates his nature. Enjoying a spring sport can comm unicate this feeling to the spectator. A pp reciation for athletic prowess and acnievement is part of the pleasure, but understand­ ing how a shot putter feels before his last toss, when he knows how many inches he must improve to win or place, is part of enjoying spring sports. A n d extending those feelings through success or failure is another part. These things are ail a great factor in fall football, too, of course, but the massive anonym ity o f a gridiron clash before the multitudes cannot com m unicate diving for a fly ball and missing or rolling in a 50-foot putt. W hen you read the results of a baseball gam e you find the losing pitcher, but football statistics do not list losing quarterbacks. Longhorns Offer Variety The Texan s Round-Up edition is designed to inform the University community and the campus' many visi­ tors of the many facets o f the complex world o f sports which revolves around Texas. Spring sports encompass varied events and varied athletes. The Round-Up issue leads you through the im­ mense and exciting world of the Texas Relays, one of the largest track and field carnivals of the sport, annu­ ally the official beginning o f serious outdoor com pe­ tition across the nation. It shows you who to watch in the top events and tells you about the men behind the scenes. It combines a bit of history with a full rundown on the present and the near future. ,for+unes L University's nationally ranked baseball team are forecast in the diamond section, sur­ veying the prospects among league opponents as the Steers head into the all-important conference race. Rice and old nemesis A & M , along with lesser antag­ onists Texas Tech and T C U join forces with the demon o f injury to block the 'Horns' road back to the College W o rld Series at Omaha. The football section discusses the spring prospects and the various positions that are up for grabs after graduation losses. The classic battle between quarter­ back prospects Eddie Phillips and G a r y Keithley is stu­ died along with a review o f last season’s national cham­ pionship success. A review o f the swimming season Including 'Horn participation in the N C A A meet is another feature. The progress of both the golf and tennis seasons to date and what lies in the future for both round out the issue's offerings. Spring is a time o f diversified involvement and spring sports on the 40 Acres offers the opportunity. The Round-Up issue mirrors these opportunities. 43rd Relays to Feature Top Baton Teams doubtedly make the difference Drake and Texas could chal­ lenge but again it would take a top effort on the part of all hands to stay with the three top seeds. In the four-mile, El Paso might be considered as a mild favorite, but they'll have to beat Brigham repeat Young crown. Houston will compete three deep, but they lack a fourth quality four-lap man. to earn their The sprint medley has became, over the last three or four years, the glamour event of the Texas leg of the Midwest carnival circuit, which accounts for too fact that the world record was Jim R jim-anchored set by Kansas here in 1967. Last season Kansas State, with a terrific anchor leg by Swenson, missed that Relays and global mark by only four tenths when they ran 3:15.6. Four of the top six times for the entire national season were set in that race by the Wildcats, Rice, Kansas and Texas. The event is now invitational only, and toe top eight seeds as of entry time during the week were Kansas State, Kansas, North Texas, Rice, ACC, Drake, Nebraska and Oklahoma State, Oklahoma is toe first alternate should anyone scratch, while Texas is the second alternate. By YAUGHN ALDREDGE Sport* Editor Nearly KW university, college arui high school teams with forces numbering more than 1,300 en­ trants will converge on the University’s Memorial Stadium Friday and Saturday for die biggest and best Texas Relays In history. Steer head trade coach and Re­ lays director Jack Patterson, who has been associated with the big meet for more than 30 years, said Tuesday this year’s meet will undoubtedly field not only the largest contingent of trackmen in its history, but also the best in terms of quality. Texas A&M’s crack stable of sprinters, led by quartermile world record holder Curtis Mills and his younger brother Marvin, will field the top Southwest Con­ ference entries to do battle with the annual assault of the Big Eight and a host of top inde­ pendents. lead from K a n s a s , Kansas State, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State will the northern c o n f e r e n c e while pre-season NCAA meet favorites Brigham Young and Texas at El Paso, a l o n g with Houston, will represent the top threats from independents. Other entries range from Nation s Best Tracksters Threaten Record Assault Minnesota, the only Big Ten entr>% and Bowling Green in the northern Midwest, to Pepperdine from the West Coast Altogether 31 university division teams have entered along with 29 college class squads and 3-1 Iiigh schools. Nine women’s teams have also entered the competition. Rice will send a good enough contingent to defend the league honor which the Big Eight has muddied somewhat in the last te n years, but it's not likely that the Owls will be up to the perfor­ mance that won them tile Out­ standing Team category in the 1969 edition of the first of the three big Midwest relay car­ nivals. After Texas, the teams the Kansas and move on Drake Relays within the next three weeks. to One of the two marks which are expected to fall is in the sprint relay, and it is the relays standard which has stood the longest. The great Abilene Christian foursome of 1957, led by Olympian Bobby Morrow, turned a 40.2 13 years ago, but the mark should its stiffest test of that span Saturday afternoon. receive lias yet A&M, with a team composed of Rookie Woods, Donnie Rogers and the Mills brothers, has already clocked a 40.1 this season and to be pushed. Oklahoma State, with its great sprinter Earl Harris, has been timed the in 39.9 earlier current campaign, and the race should be between these two. in The Cowboys’ 39.9 came over Texas at El Paso, but if the western branch of the University can find two other sprinters to team with its great duo of Clyde Gleason and Mike Fray, they could be a definite threat ’in the short race. Glosson has run 9.2 for the century while Fray has turned in a 9.3. Hie best time in the relay for die Minors this year, though, has been a 40.5. North Texas State is another local dark horse, having clocked a 40.4. Among the other Big Eight Invaders, Kansas should have the in the best shot at an upset sprint unit contest even though its top sprint hand Julio Meade is primarily a 220 runner. While the Aggies rate an equal nod along with Oklahoma State in the 440 event, they should stand wadi above the crowd in the 880 relay, where the experts their greatest say potential. Curtis Mills took a few stalls at the 220 last season when he wasn’t tearing up quartermile competition and clocked a fine 21 fiat. they hold Marvin Mills, who has started his freshman season in great style, ran his first competitive furlong last weekend and clocked a league leading 21.2. Rogers, a freshman, has matured into a s p r i n t e r with outstanding potential while Woods barely missed making the NCAA 100- yard dash finals last summer. Tile Relays record in the event again belongs to ACC, with a mark of 1:22.6 which, when set in 1961, was a world record. At the Corpus Christi Relays last the week, Aggies would be after this par­ ticular relay in the Austin car­ nival, with an eye on San Jose State’s world mark of 1:22.1. rumors arose that El Paso will mount some threat to the Farmers in toe 880 circuit as will Kansas. The Miner pair of Glosson and Fray, both equally adept at the 220 as the IOO, if not better, will be joined by state time leader Harrington Jackson ( 21.0) . top target of The mile relay, the favorite event of any track meet, should the be another Aggies, who sped to an astoun­ ding 3:05.7 indoor time in the Astrodome ago. Injuries have kept A&M from reaching that level outdoors, but they may be ready to return to the spotlight Saturday. two months Anchoring the four lap unit is naturally, Curtis Mills’ forte’. while the rest af the quartet will include Marvin, who has a 46.7 split to his credit, Willie Black­ mon (46.7) and either Harold McMahan or Don Kellar. Rice, with three members back from last year's NCAA runnerup team, rate a* definite possiblity to take the event for a second straight season, since the victory last year cemented their position as the outstanding team. Bill Askey, Chip Grandjean, and Steve Straub are the Owl veterans, and all dim? ranked on last year's list of top quarter- milons in the country. The Rice time of 3:04.7 ranks as an all— OUTSTANDING TEAMS OF PAST RELAYS ^956 ................................................. 'V ‘ Kansas ...................................................................... Texas -^958......................................................................Kansas .................................................................... Kansas 1959 •*960....................................................................Houston 196 1 ...................................................Abilene Christian 196 2 ......................................................Texas Southern 1963 .................................... 1964 ...................................................................Missouri Texas Southern ] 966 .............. Southern University; Texas at Austin 1967 ....................................................Texas Southern 1968 ........................ Texas at Austin; Southern Univ. 1969 ............................................. Rice; Southern Univ’. I S r time state best for the distance. their return Not far behind in that NCAA race, though, was ACC, and the star Wildcats quart ermiler Roger Colglazier plus No. 2 man Mark Fry. While its time so far this season is not great, ACC definitely has the potential to contend. El Paso, if they choose to run, Kansas and Oklahoma are all rated by pre-season forecasts as among the top ll teams in the event in the nation, which means that six of those’ highly rated units win be at the relays. The two-mile relay should be one of the hotly contested events of the entire meet. Defending champion Kansas State, which set the Relays record of 7:02.7 last year, returns its entire team, anchored by their great halfmiler Ken Swenson. Swenson pulled the Wildcats into two first places in last year’s meeting, along with teammates Dave Peterson, Bob Barrow and Jerome Howe. though, and Tile Wildcats recently lost the NCAA indoor two mile to fierce rival Kansas, the J ay hawks should rate as a slight favorite in this event. The Kansas team of Jim Neihouse, Roger Ka tho], Dennis Stewart and Brian McElroy will make the battle for the crown a heart stopper. Tile University team of Mike Mosley, Mike Tibbets, Fred Cooper and Dave Morton rates as a long shot darkhorse and It would take an inspired combined effort for the ’Horns to win in thus race, which is one of the two strong Texas units. Three teams stack up as dual favorites in both toe distance medley and the four-mile relays, and El Paso, toe defending champ in both of them, may find itself playing second or third fiddle. Brigham Young has been established as odds on favorite in the two relays. The distance medley, which is run 880, 440, 1,320, mile, should see Houston, which ran an ex­ cellent time indoors at the Astro­ dome, give the Cougars from Utah a stiff test with El Paso very close. The strength of each team's closing miler will un­ Director ‘Horn C oach Jack Patter- *on handles the difficult task of directing the mam­ moth track carnival in 1970 for the seventh year. Referee Rice track mentor Emmett Brunson w ill handle all deci­ sions arising from disputes and misunderstandings In his role as meet referee. ■ TO M RUSH Chi* Tom Rush seems to have made a career of exposing talented new song writers. For instance, he sang Joni Mitchell’s songs years before she recorded them herself. He also picked up on a young writer named James Taylor, whom The Beatles later signed to Apple. Tom’s new album is brim-, ming with his latest discoveries. Murray McLaughlin, whom Tom met in Canada, contributed‘‘Child’s Song’’and “Old Man SongTDavid Whiffen, another Canadian^ repre­ sented by ^Driving WheeL" ATI three pack a lot of emotion into their lyrics, and Tom’s style brings out all they have to offer. His album also includes a » rocking version of Fred Neil’s “Wild Child,” a sensitive reading of James Taylor’s “Rainy Day Man;’ and five other lyrical gems, J Sure, a lot of people can make a career out of finding song writers, but it still takes an artist to turn a song into a real find. .Someone like Tom Rush., Also avaifiuHeontaper^^B ON COLOMBIA KROKOS 9 Paga 2B Friday, Aprfl 3, J970 THE DAILY TEXAN • MMS) 9 WIA — ■ ■■ 1970 Texas Relays Schedule Spike-Based Blocks To Debut at Relays small and which has many needle-like spikes instead of the large spikes old style of two which were pounded the into ground. The University sprinters who have been using tile spike-base blocks for several months claim they are just as stable under the pressure of a sprint start as the conventional blocks. With more and more schools and stadiums around the country turning to synthetic, all weather tracks each year, the Patterson blocks likely will become popular additions to regular equipment necessities. Something else new at the Relays this spring will be a new assistant director under Patter­ son, assistant track coach Jack Daniels, who took over his position early in the fall. Daniels, or Dr. Daniels, rather, (with a doctorate in physical education from Wisconsin) is not new to Southwest area track having been head track coach at Oklahoma City in the early 60’s. Daniels was a member of two Olympic teams, winning a silver medal in the modern pentathlon c o m p e t i t i o n at Melbourne, Australia, in 1956 and a bronze at Rome in 1960. He trained for that competition in San Antonio after graduating from Montana State. He took his master’s from Oklahoma in 1965. Daniels returned to Olympic competition in the 1968 games at Mexico City but this time it was as an altitude training expert, a subject on which much of his academic work has been done. His research has also involved other phases of biological effects on humans from athletic activity, especially in distance running. Daniels’ duties are primarily with the distance runners on the team, accordingly, and he aided Patterson in the cross country program in the fall, when a very young group of University har­ riers won the conference champ­ ionship in an upset equal to the regular season victory last spring at Waco. FRIDAY - AFRIT, 3 Morning Fteld Events (Prelims .and Finals) 9:30 a.m — Javelin (University- College) Fresh­ 11:30 a.m. — Discus (University-College) Fresh­ man Field man Field (Prelims) 9:30 a.m. — Long Jump (University-College) 9:30 a.m. — Shot Put (University-College) ll :30 a.m. —• Long Jump (High School) 11:30 a.m. — Shot Put (High School) Morning Track Events (Prelims — IO a.m.) 440 Yard Medium Hurdles (University-College) 440 Yard Relay (High School) 440 Yard Relay (College) 440 Yard Relay (University) 120 Yard High Hurdles (High School) 120 Yard High Hurdles (University-College) IOO Yard Dash (High School) IOO Yard Dash (University-College) Sprint Medley Relay (High School) 880 Yard Relay (University) 880 Yard Relay (College) 880 Yard Relay (High School) One Mile Relay (High School) One Mile Relay (College) One Mile Relay (University) 120 Yard High Hurdles (Semi-Finals if necessary) IOO Yard Dash (Semi-Finals if necessary) Night Fteld Events (All Finals) 6 :00 p.m. Long Jump (High School). 6:30 p.m. Shot Put (High School) 6:30 p.m. High Jump (High School) 7 :30 p.m. Long Jump (University-College) Night Track Events (All Finals) 6:30 p.m. Master’s Mile (Age 40 and over) (Pre­ dicted Time Basis) 7:00 7:15 7:30 p.m. 440 Yard Medium Hurdles (University- College) p.m. Two Mile Relay (High School) p.m. Distance Medley Relay (College) Distance Medley Relay (University) 8:00 8:05 p.m. 440 Yard Relay (Girls) p.m. Sprint Medley Relay (College) 8:25 8:45 8:50 Sprint Medley Relay (University) p.m. Three Mile Run (University-College) p.m. 440 Yard Dash (Girls) p.m. 880 Yard Relay (High School) 880 Yard Relay (College) 880 Yard Relay (University) SATURDAY, APRIL 4 Afternoon Field Events (Prelims and Finals) 1:00 p.m. Pole Vault (University-College) 2:00 p.m. High Jump (University-College) 2:00 p.m. Shot Put (University-College) Afternoon Track Events (All Finals) 2:00 p.m. Four Mile Relay (University) Queen Ceremonies—Relays Dedication 2:30 p.m. 120 Yard High Hurdles (High School) 120 Yard High Hurdles (University- College) 2:45 p.m. IOO Yard Dash (Girls) IOO Yard Dash (High School) IOO Yard Dash (University-College) 3:05 p.m. Two Mile Relay (College) Two Mile Relay (University) 3:25 p.m. Sprint Medley Relay (High School) 3:35 p.m. Sprint Medley Relay (Girls) 3:40 p.m. 440 Yard Relay (High School) 440 Yard Relay (College) 440 Yard Relay (University) 3:50 p.m. Jerry Thompson Mile Run (Universitv- College) ‘ 4:10 p.m. One Mile Relay (High School) One Mile Relay (College) One Mile Relay (University) iHtmnfiiiinimtiwiHiiiiiiiiiJiii Rice Cinder Coach Brunson Tabbed As Relays Referee By VAUGHN ALDREDGE Sports Editor University head track coach Jack Patterson will be directing his seventh Texas Relays Friday and Saturday with a field that is impressive in both quantity and quality, a tribute to the job he has done in his administrative capacity of the carnival. in In addition Patterson has three Southwest triumphed Conference meets his since arrival on the 40 Acres and also produced two outstanding teams for the Relays. Noted as a sprint coach in his days at Houston and Baylor (where he won another trio of league titles), Patterson has had more success in the middle dis­ tances since coming to Texas, establishing impressive marks in two mile the mile (3:05.5), sprint medley (7:18.5) relays and developing (3:16.9) such talent as Richard Romo, Preston Davis and David Matina. and Besides being a great technical and inspirational coach, Patter­ son has been an innovator. The forty-third a n n u a l Relays will unveil to the track world the latest of his contributions to the sport. Patterson, while in the process of selecting the type of synthetic track to be placed in Memorial Stadium, noticed that the usual metal sleeves inserted into the track during construction for the purpose of anchoring starting blocks would often tend to tear up the rubberized surface when the blocks were removed. After the Tartan track was laid in the stadium last summer, Pat­ terson set about to develop a new system for anchoring the blocks which would be equally effective in terms of stability but more practical in terms of maintenance for synthetic surfaces. the His solution arose from same source as the new multi­ spike brush shoes. He developed a triangular base which attaches to the underside of the blocks Emmett Brunson, a familiar and respected figure in South­ west and national track circles for many years, will serve as the 1970 Texas Relays referee. longer Brunson, who has coached at Rice University since 1934, Is the dean of conference sports, having tutored than any other SWC coach in any sport. Among are his many membership the Helms in Foundation Hall of Fame and a position on the U. S. Olympic coaching staff. achievements In addition to his many years of successful coaching, Brunson was an accomplished athlete, winning the league mile title in 1928 and 1929, and alw the 880 crown in ’28. His Owl teams have been named the outstanding team at two previous Relays, including last year when a closing victory in the mile relay won Rice that honor over strong bids by Kan­ sas. Kansas State and Texas at E] Paso. Brunson has coached five SWC track teams and championship impressive list of national the champions and Olympians which have come from his Owl rosters testify to his ability to develop individual potential. dramatic victory Fred Hansen, a Cuero native who became the first pole vaulter to scale 17 feet and who produced for his a country in the 1964 Olympics, is probably Brunson's prized pupil. Vera McGraw, Jim Gerhardt and Ed Red are other Brunson- coached Olympians, while hurdler Fred Wolcott was another world record current holder. His assistant coach, Bobby May, was another national cham pion Owl hurdler. The teams two crack relay which gave Brunson the most valuable team of last season’s relays also went on to the NCAA meet in June to establish all-time state bests in both the 440 and mile (39.5 and 3:04.7, relays respectively). coach Texas Relays meet director and Jack track University former is Patterson Brunson hurdler, winning the NCAA intermediates and captain­ ing two Owl teams in the late Thirties. another Brunson's duties as referee will involve making decisions on any' questions arising from compe­ tition, and he will be assisted WRIGHT SLACKS ARE FOR iOOKIMO D ^ M O O G ^ ^ by a Jury of farmer great coaches from around the state. Members of the Jury will be Frank Ander­ son of Texas A&M, Clyde Little­ field of Texas, Pop Strahan of Southwest Texas, Oscar Frazier of T arlto n State and Oliver Jackson of Abilene Christian. Daniels assistant director. Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes S A L E * SHEEP SKIN RUGS M a n y Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SALE Various kinds, colors — 50c per foot Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 K0DAC010R PRINTS Film In at 4 P M , . . Prints ready 48 hours later at 4 P.M. J st quality prints. See our dis• play of all the latest in cam­ eras and equipment. Full repair service. S T U M PHOTO 59th at Lavaca & Cameron Village Longhorns! Ifs Ring-up Time! Hook one! Put uour own hranH am > Block Base Texas track coach Jack Pah- tenon has perfected a new needle spike triangular base for starting blocks shown here by Steer sprinter Byrd Bag­ gett. ROUND - UP 70' YOU BET IT ISI AND IT’S THE TIME OF YEAR TO HAVE A GOOD TIME FORGET YOUR WORRIES, FIND A DATE, & GET IN YOUR ACT. W E AT BRITTONS HOPE YO U ENJOY YOURSELF. "THE KEN" "THE SUTH" "THE CASE" "THE CON" "THE MAC" and "THE COOK" ZALES CUSTOM CHARGE STUDENT ACCOUNTS INVITED Avery special new breed of dass ring Yours exclusively. Would Zales give you a bum steer? ^B ritto n s Wright Slacks are for looking good on the hanger and on you. The secret? Fit. So if you want good fashion in. the sea­ son's newest colors and fabrics, think Wright. Wright Slacks . . . try them on for size at any good store. wright slacks ZALES* We’re nothing without your love. JEW ELERS 704 Congress [7440 Hancock Center _______________ ©Z■ " ■ ; J p S trife ,* s Salb’s top thrown of 67-5 brings him dangerously close to Randy Matson’s Relay record of 68-8, but it will take a super effort for the Jayhawk giant to get the mark. spring Steve W ilhelm and Doug Knop arc the the other two members of the terrific trio, a group which swept the Austin meet’s shot competition and last, placed one-two-four in the discus. Knop is the defending relays champion in die disc, as Salb is in the shot, and his more famous teammate will probably be his biggest competition In the plate event this year. Ervin Jam s of the University of New Mexico w ill push the two Kansans in the event, as they were ranked two, three, and four in national pre­ season ratings of the fop colin* gians in the discus. The high jump will be another event with a loaded field, with six entrants having cleared the magic seven-foot mark. Brigham Young sports a pair of the top rated jumpers in Ken Landmark and Dan Mendenhall. Landmark has scaled 7-1 while Mendenhall has cleared seven even. The Cougar's star jumper Chris Celian, wrho finished second in the NCAA meet last summer did not make the trip. Scott English of E l Paso has soared 7-01, as has Jackie Causie of Southwest Louisiana while Ray M cGill of Kansas State and Tim Heikkla of Minnesota have both jumped seven even. B ill .Schmidt of North Texas State opened eyes around the track world with an early season javelin toss of 260 feet. IO Inches and he should dominate that event. rules supreme. Among tile runners who haven’t quite the fame of a world record, but who always seem to find extra effort with a baton in their hand, Kansas State’s Ken Swen­ son Swenson anchored two winning Wildcat units at Last spring's relays, es­ tablishing a new meet record in the two mile and missing the sprint medley record by only four tenths of a second. Incidentally, the meet record in the sprint medley also happens to be Hie world record of 3:15.2 set by Kansas with Jim Ryun on the finale leg in 1967. Swenson recently ran two ter­ rific anchor legs on the same relays in the Astrodome Indoor meet putting indoor sub-1:4R half- mile legs back to back with only an hour t rest between the two Texas’ Dave Morton and Mike Mosley should also turn in top half mile performances. Mosley ran a 1:48.3 open time last year and is now rounding into shape, while Morton topped the stare RSO list for this young season with a good 1:49.4 at Corpus Christi. W ild c a t Ancho Kansas Stat® star haifmil#r and relay man Ken Swen­ son, 1970 s Outstanding In­ in th® University dividual Division, heads up the mid­ dle distance field. jM a aM U iW — p ra y S C H W IN N BIC YC LES PARTS & SERVIC E A LL M AKES UNIVERSITY BICYCLE SHOP 4225 G U A D A LU P E STREET AUSTIN, TEXAS 78751 453-1049 C. C. K IN G - iM, tj-■ « H t lf you think you're getting a great shave with a razor blade, fed your rice. A razor blade can give you a good, close shave on toe ea^y Darts of your face. Like your cheeks. Because your cheeks are almost flat, like a razor blade. But vehat about the hard- to-shave parts of your face? Feel your neck Feel how your beard grows down on part of your neck? And up on another part? (Some beards even grow sideways.) To give you a close, comfortable shave on your neck, we designed the Norelco Tripieheader with 18 self- sharpening rotary blades that shave in every direction. R d your chin T he Nore Mo Tripieheader has 3 Mic'-ogroove-* shaving heads that f oat to follow the curves of your chin. The heads go in where your chin goes in, and out where your chm goes out, To 'g • e you a really close sh'ave, Without irritating your skm. or render: tests, the r eheadrr shaved as close oi 7 cmser than a stainless steel blade in 2 Cut of 3 shaves.) Feel your upper lip The hard thing about shaving your upper lip with a razor b;ade is shaving close enough. Ag a n , the unique Norelco design lets you maneuver eround your nose and mouth. to shave your beard in every Erection. / Rd your sideburns The biggest problem with shaving sideburns is to get them straight, and ev en on both sdes. The Norelco Tripieheader has a pop up b mmer tho1 'cts you see exactly what you’re trimmmg So It s a lot harder to make a mistake. Now, run your hand over your whole face. lf your beard feels uneven, maybe you should be shaving with a Norelco Tripieheader. It comes in two models. The Cord Model Tripieheader (with easy flip-top cleaning), And the new Rechargeable Trip eheader (the shaver that gives you up to twice as many shaves per charge as any other rechargeable). Either one will giv« your face a whole new feel, Terrific Trio Kansas weight threesome of Karl Salb, Steve Wilhelm and Doug Knop (clockwise from low. or left) return to terrorize Relays opponents. ’sr*’*** « .......... h - ' V M cDonald' And isn’t that one of the main reasons why you come to McDonald s? Pius good-every-time food? Pius sparkling clean surroundings? Those are the three ingredients that make McDonald’s such a happy place for fam ilies. . . 4'your kind of placer’ McDonald^ is your kind off place, 5 - = ^ T JA 28!8 Guadalupern Try our other 3 locations, too! 7950 Burnet Rd. 5355 N. Interregional 303 E. Oltorf ©M cDonald’s Corp. 1968 Page 4B Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN t 1070 North American Philip^ Corporation, IOO Last 42nd Street, New York, N. Y. W I T . w you can’t get any closer Diamondmen Rough League Slate By JIM MORRIS Assistant Sports Editor find Texas Friday will In Lubbock examining the difference a year makes — and Cliff Gustaf­ son's baseball Longhorns w ill be aiming to avoid falling victim to in different fam iliar names places. a Three antagonists the Long­ horns left behind on their way to Soul invest Conference championship last spring, catch the league favorite on their home grounds this year, and Gustaf­ son's entourage may not find the atmosphere so hospitable as that in which they did battle in 1969. league fashioning a 14-2 In clocking last year, Texas was quick out of the blocks and never headed, and at the expense, along the way, of TCU and Rice to the greatest extent possible, with Texas Tech a much maltreated victim. also The SWC skirmishing began with a triple defeat of TCU with Texas putting together a double header win behind Jam es Street and Larry Horton, in relief of Burt Hooton, and wrapping up the series with a comeback on Saturday on David Chalk's pinch triple. Once offenseless SM U had been disposed of in Dallas in three straight as Street fashioned a no­ fielding ballclub statistically with a .969 average last year, but he’ll have to wait to see whether the replacements for Haggard and Montgomery continue that tradi­ tion. Texas will find no more con­ torting a situation in Fort Worth, where two-year antagonist Je ff Newman is backed by many more hitters and not an inning pitch from 1969 was lost, to grad­ uation or otherwise. A bad start against Rice, with the Frogs dropping a doublehead­ er before pulling out a single game, again hurt and Purple Gang’s start, but they’ll get a chance to recoup April 24 and 25 when Texas visits. Remembering their problems at Austin last spring, they figure to be ready, but Coach Frank Windegger will need tighter pitching and some steadier fielding hands — t h e Frogs’ .934 mark was the league’s worst. Hitting ie no worry — TCU was at the other end of the conference scale with a .300 ten rn log to second place Texas’ .276 Frogs, for Newman’s is the name bat, but it was second to that of center- fielder Roger Williams in club hitting last spring. Offensively the (See Title, Page 6.) Double Take am Both 'H orn catcher Tommy Harmon and the Texas Tech short stop check a Red Raid­ er attempted double play in the 1969 series. —Huff Photo hitter and Hooton and Hardy followed with masterpieces of their own. Rice was the next Austin victim, falling prey to Street and Hooton and Chalk's bat, which produced the storied four-homer doubleheader. Baylor fell hard in Waco in a Friday doubleheader before rains ruled out the Saturday single game, and Texas, 11-0 and looking back at its pursuers, looked to claim the championship against Texas Tech, in another key home series. They did so, with Jack Pierce’s 2-1 defeat of Street in the series opener only a delaying action, with Hooton supported by IO runs in the Friday wrapup and Tech strongman Gary' Washington beaten on Saturday. A split in a regular-season ending double- header at College Station was anti-climax, nothing more. SWC competition ended with Texas 4U games better than runner-up TCU, Tech down by 5 and Rice 5U back. Pointing toward Lubbock and the first road action of 1970, Texas would probably accept that graciously. Gustafson wasn’t committed to three-game series at each site when he took his first Texas team, the champions of 1968, into each of these league waystations: single-game weekday and two- game weekend home and home dates were still the SWC rule, with one exception. That being Tech, but it ap­ parently mattered little to Texas: j three wins at Lubbock picked a j Ix)nghom group that went in 1-3 ] off the floor and got the moving toward first. The 1968 games at Fort Worth produced a split, with center- fielder Jack M iller, starting as a sophomore, suddenly a horner run threat; Texas took two at as Hardy had his Houston coming-out with 17 strikeouts} against the Owls. But last season found Southwest Conference fathers ruling a new makeup for conference baseball competition, consequently and Gustafson and Texas this year face the “ . . . and home” seg­ con­ ment Fort frontations Worth and Houston. three-game in Lubbock, and And off what comes back to those coaches, 14-2 seems heady stuff. At Tech. of the chief com­ batants. only second baseman Je rry Haggard and shortstop Jim Montgomery are gone, and coach Kal Segrist, a Texas-ex, returns mainline arms Pierce and Gary Washington other and regulars. six the axiomatic Replacements for Haggard, the .400, league’s leading hitter at .311 SWC and Montgomery, a stickman, won't come easy—they were Raider “ glue” as Tech pursued Texas — but Pierce (3-1, 1.75), a left­ hander cutie, and Washington (4- 3, 2.72) are effective arms and catcher Max Martin, .317 in final league hitting rolls and a quality ballplayer despite the derision in last year's series, outfielder Don McKee (.306) and third baseman Je rry Owens (.306) provide hit­ ting. Segrist also returns starters at j (Dick Shaw ) and in the first other two outfield spots (Randy Walker and Steve Hurt, the latter his cleanup hitter against Texas in ’69), and had the league's top Specializing in the "In" Look O n ly you and your Barbar know you'va had a haircut at Medical Arts Square BARBER SHOP 2915 Red River THERE S A NEW TASTE IN FINE MEXICAN FOOD IN TOWN It's an exciting taste designed to please the entire family. Try Trini’s Luncheon Buffet, all you can eat for $1.35, or select from a variety of Mexican delicacies on a family oriented evening menu. 1507 Lavaca OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH AND DINNER 'BuddaSu&matfo W EE K EN D S P E C IA L S & Saturday SILAS H O W E BOURBO N 86 proof IO years old ................ DANT OLD STYLE W H ISK E Y 86 proof IO years old ............. EARLY TIMES BO URBO N 86 proof 4 years old .................... BO URBO N SUPREM E BO URBO N 86 proof 4 years old .................... OLD TA YLO R BOURBO N 86 proof 4 years o l d ....... SE A G R A M S VO 86.8 proof Blended Canadian Whisky SU N N YBRO O K BO URBO N 80 proof 4 years old .................... KENTUCKY BEAU BOND IOO proof Bottle in Bond ............. J& B RARE SC O T C H 86 proof ................................ BALLANTINES SC O T C H 86 proof ............................... ..... H IG H LA N D MIST SC O T C H 80 proof ........... .......................... BEEFEATER G IN 94 proof ....................................... BUD W EISER 24 — 12 oz. Glass Cans ............. - Stuff Photo Fire balling strike-out artist James Street has recovered injury to from early season post a 3-0 record. UT Baseball Coaches Few But Effective With his two Southwest Con­ ference championships two seasons as Texas coach, Cliff Gustafson tradition follows a Which has b e e n 56 seasons a- building. In When he came to the Univer­ sity from South San Antonio High School. Gustafson replaced a lea­ gue legend in Bibb Falk, the winner in his 25 seasons as coach at Texas of 20 SWC titles and the only two national champ­ ionships on Texas* books. Between 1940 and 1967, with three years subtracted for World W ar ll service, Falk ’s I/inghorn teams won 477 games and lost 177. In league pLay, he was 278-84. Falk picked the most impres­ sive means of signalling his return from the service, coaching league titlists nine consecutive from 1946 to 1954. Texas’ con­ ference record during that period was 111-19. Between 1911 and 1939, W. J. "Uncle B illy ” Disch formed the path Talk was to follow — his Texas teams won 512 games against 180 defeats for a .744 w i n n i n g percentage. Disch league champion coached 20 clubs. FOLKS WITH BIO APPETITES REALLY 00 FOR WE L - M0UTH-WA TERIH6 W VITTLES AT BONANZA! COME BY ANO SAMPLE SOME FOR YOURSELF. 1 W IT H BAKED POTATO, TEXAS TOAST AND SALAD 2815 GUADALUPE Strong color knits help yon across summer. The bright hold stripe knits by Cant give you a great mate for your shaped pants. I he Hold Knits are at Clyde s — Come see ’em. they are so fine , . , Machine washable too. 2350 Guadalupe Friday, Afiril 3, J970 IHE DAILY .TEXAN gag* SB a in Baylor and hard-bitten old rival Texas A&M. Ken M cRay, lefthanded sophomore, was a particular antagonist, and returns along with other seasoned pitchers in B ill Duncan, Dave Dorries, Fred Barton and Rick Dufiek. M cRay was 2-1 in conference, and his 1.16 era was the league's best. Duncan, with 2.31. and Dusek, with 2.52, also had low eamed-run figures. two SWC Tile Bear offense suffered in 1969 when an injury slowed first baseman Bill Dykes, all-league and a .353 SWC hitter as a sopho­ more. Dykes did return for a .333 league average, but batted in only runs. Baylor coach Dutch Schroeder w ill look for offense from Dykes and John sophomore Centerfield^ Dodgen (.282 in conference), with the former switched this year to third. Returning starter Roland Lundy, a sophomore, will man first, with Skip Balthrop, another regular, at second. Barton w ill help out Dodgen in the outfield. in At A&M Coach Tom Chandler is never counted out — the Aggies would compete with Texas if they fielded twelve-year-olds. That won't be necessary this spring: Chandler returns strong pitching righthander Dave Benesh (4-1, 1.70) and lefthander Doug Rau (2-3, 1.77). Outfielders Boyd Hadawav and Dave Elmen­ dorf w ill provide offense, and regular shortstop Jim Raley returns, hut strong outfield bats in Bob Long (.373 and twice all- league) and Bob Arnold won t be easily replaced. Texas’ chief antagonist over the past several season of conference baseball, Texas A&M won’t be overlooked, but given the road series with which Texas is faced in 1970, those games must of necessity draw their concentra­ tion, perhaps leading up to a season-ending confrontation with the Aggies with league championship at stake. the The baseball bromide says win­ ning at home and splitting on the road should produce a pen­ nant — Texas will point for considerably more that, beginning this weekend in West Texas. than Title Defense . . . (Continued from Pago 5.) W illiam s’ .396 was second on conference rolls to Haggard and well ahead of .333 for Newman, but Infielder out ~ fielder-pitcher was the league's best in batting in runs, with 17 to his credit, total bases (43 land home runs (8). senior the After a year and a half at f Iii rd base, Newman was moved to the outfield by Windegger in mid- season of 1969 and a combination of third baseman Gary Vasseur and shortstop Glen Monroe was installed on the left side of the infield. Newman will stay in the outfield this spring, and also see work as a relief pitcher, a role he has filled for two seasons. In addition lo his .396 hitting, Williams was the leading Frog ba sestet lcr, with 6. returns Windeggf’r another outfield starter as well in Larry (.300 season), plus Grimland Vasseur (.244), Monroe (.324 )and second baseman Dick Turner, only a .132 hitter last year but a .309 league stickman and an All-SWC-utility infielder in ’68. A l l - l e a g u e catcher B ill Ferguson, a three-year starter whose ’69 SWC batting average was a strong .326, outfielder Dick in SWC) and first Gage (.373 We do nice things for students. And their pocketbooks. We know student travel is important. But expensive. So we're helping to bringdown the cost. For example, you can have a $21 room at the Conrad Hilton Hotel in Chicago for just $9. And rooms at similar reduced rates at 60 other Hilton Hotels and inns from Oregon to Florida. So, if you're a student, let us know. Fill out th is cou­ pon and send it to Hilton Hotels Corporation, Travel Department, National Sales Division, I he Palmer House, Chicago, Illinois 60690. We'll send you a pamphlet listing the hotels and inns participating in our special rates program, and an offi­ cial Hilton Student Identification Card to use when you register. x College address Classof 19 Come Visit the Hiltons e I I a I I I I I I 8 8 I 8 I 8 I I a i I baseman Larry Pell ('.300r must be replaced, and infielder Wayne (.343) was another Morrison’s strong hat which is gone. Fergu­ son's replacement at catcher will be football safetyman Ted Fay, out for football last spring but a .273 hitter when he played as a freshman. looked Seasoned pitching, absent In Fort Worth last spring when Windegger for replace­ for graduated starters ments Mickey McCarty and Chuck Machemeh, seemed a plus for 1970, with top lefthander Jerome Hall (8-1 and trouble for Texan Jim in the series at Austin), Chase (4-2), Rod Monahan (2-0), Bob Shaw (2-0), Rick Rickard (5- 4 ) James Shebesta, without a won-lost returning. Despite record, all problems against Rice, the situa­ tion still must be counted as better than that of last year. sophomore and At Houston, when Texas visits April 30 and May I in a series moved up to avoid a conflict with SWC track, there are no awesome statistics, but material sufficient to warrant Gustafson’s, and the league's, respect, rest of the especially after the twin defeat of powerful Texas Christian. Start with the pitching where twice lettered s e n i o r David Ownby, a righthander, was 3-2 for 39 1-3 innings of conference duty, with a 2.97 earned run average. He's supported by junior Scott Wise, a lefthander with two monograms, sophomore David freshman Steve Holder Pettit, and another sophomore. Donnie Brogna, who was 1-1 and 3.04 in SWC play and also ran fill in at third and in the outfield. Rice coach Doug Osburn will first baseman have ali-league Dick Fuqua, a in .372 hitter conference, to nchor the infield; he'll need the experience, with brilliant shortstop B illy Costa among the departed. Second baseman George Davis and third baseman David Hilton (.311. in SWC batting), both un­ derclassmen, returning starters. a r e two replace Apart from Costa, the Owls m u s t other graduates, catcher Ronnie White and outfielder Je rry Reed, both three-year starters, as was the departed shortstop. Owl prospects are anything but awesome, but Texas catches them in their cozy Houston ba byard. No cinches are Texas’ two re­ maining home series: more pests j Cavalier Apartments University Men & Women SUMMER & FALL NOW LEASING 2-BEDROOM APARTMENTS All Bills Paid M AID Sc JA N IT O R SERVICE CABLE TV, S W IM M IN G POOL, W A S H IN G FACILITIES Name----------------------------------------- 307 East 3 I st Street Home address____________________________________ STUDENT DISCOUNT MOW AT PERRY ROSE FIRESTONE SORES Students may receive their Discount Cards by presenting their orange student ID C a rd to any of our four convenient •TIRES -BATTERIES • BREAK £ FRONT END SERVICE • Philco Television-Radios- S t e r e o s and Refrigerators • Speed Q u e e n W ashers and Dryers • H oover Vacuum Cleaners • W arin g Blenders plus many other items available through our C a t a lo g u e O rder D e p a rtm e n t PERRY ROSE FIRESTONE • NORTH 8415 RESEARC H BLVD. P h o n e 452-6464 HW V a n d B u rn e t Rd. L a m p a sas H w y. H R S. ; 30-6:30 183 B etw een X. Lamar • CAPITAL PUZA SH O PP IN G CENTER • P h o n e 454-5221 • D aily 8:00 A .M .-8 : 0 0 P M . • SAT. 8 A.M. - 6 P.M. • NORTHWEST AT G U LF MART 7930 B U RN ET RI). Ph. 454-7668 A PPLIA N C ES Sc TV N ot a t thU location 7:30 to 8:S0 P M. • DOWNTOWN - Rh & LA V A C A • PH O N E GL 2-6464 • PH . 472-4141 7 A M. - 6 P.M . l b s * 68 Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN ' v < < ill a m n * ‘V * j i Ter Out! Steer third baseman David Chalk slides into second a little late as Oklahoma's Scott Har­ rington makes the tag in time. - stair Pi low Golfers Open League Season W ith Eyes on Aggie Crown The University golf team, their waning fortunes revived by a solid victory over Rice Wednes­ day, will continue in pursuit of their twenty-sixth SWC title in a match against SMU Friday at Morris William s Golf Course. The Steers’ main competition in the conference race w ill be defending champion Texas A&M, but the Aggie victory was con­ sidered an upset, and the ’Horns have returned to their perennial position as league favorites. Despite the graduation of career stars Rick Massengale 'Horns and Chip Stewart, the in early have played solidly season matches spring, paced by sophomore Tom Kite. The high point of the spring campaign has been the Border Olympics, where the Texas team defeated powerful Houston. this Kite took medalist honors by a wide margin in that touma ment, which came shortly after his commanding victor}’ in the squad's qualifying tournament, the Massingill Trophy compe­ tition. The Steers followed the Border win with another triumph, this time at the USU Intercollegiate in Baton Rouge, tournament Texas returned to Austin to its Intercol­ own Morris \\ illiams legiate and took a good opening day lead over Houston. But the C o u g a r s , defending NCAA champs, overcame the Orange lead with a hard Saturday charge to win the meet by l l strokes. The ’Horns had previously won the con­ secutively from the Cougs, and the defeat seemed to bring on a slump. traveled north The the during to In­ University of Oklahoma tercollegiate and them­ selves in fourth place after the first recovered somewhat to take third against the good field. Steers the holidays round. They found twice the Atascocita The season opener in late Ja n ­ In­ uary’ was tercollegiate in Houston, where the ’Horns lost to Houston. In mid-February the Steers traveled back to Houston for the L. R. Intercollegiate where Goldman they again found themselves run­ nerup to Houston, a familiar posi­ tion for Texas for many years. After the SMU match Saturday, the Steers wiLl receive the stiffest test of the conference circuit as A&M visits Morris Williams next Tuesday. Coach George Hannon will keep the early stumbles of 1969 in the memory of his golfers, but the Aggies have the talent to take advantage of any breaks, as they proved last spring. April IO the Baylor Bears visit Austin for a match after which the Steels will travel to Houston again for the All-American Inter­ collegiate tournament, which Is annually the largest college golf action outside the NCAA meet in the country. The 'Horns return to conference action April 20 against Arkansas followed by old at Texarkana nemesis Texas Tech in Austin April 24. Fort Worth is the sight of the TCU match April 27 and April 30 and May I are the dates of Individual championships at Houston. conference the WELCOME TO ROUND-UP BUY ONE TOSTADO & GET ONE OF OUR 25* FOOD ITEMS FREE. 1 1: 3 0- 1: 30 M O N D A Y thru FRIDAY CO-TENANT PA R K IN G TO THE SOUTH APRIL 6 - APRIL IO 2800 G U A D A L U P E PLENTY O F FREE PA RKIN G r n Hannon . , . linkster tutor. WELCOME TO ROUND-UP SAFE W E E K END W e have FOUR Locations to offer you some of the finest entertainm ent in Austin. TEXAS END ZONE 4412 North Lamar HOOK ’M LOUNGE 3405 Guadalupe THE CHAPARRAL 710 West Ben White Blvd. POODLE DOG LOUNGE 6507 Burnet Road • BEER • GO GO Girls • Sets Ups • Pool Tables (NO MINORS) locations. W e every one a very happy and The Sp ey re r Touch Elusive 'H o rn split end C o tto n Speyrer re­ turns for the third and final act of his aerial career in 1970. - S ta f f P h o to Year That Was replaced B l a m e r in the OU game the year before? the Royal played role of gambler and Street played the role of mystic; Speyrer played the role of acrobat and Billy Dale played the role of sub-tumed-star . . . and Texas played the role of number one. those Opening gam es are tradition­ in which coaches, ally the players and answers to that have laid heavily on their minds all summer. find tho questions alumni than The California game, however, raised more questions it answered. Jam es Street's arm was questioned as were Charles Speyrer s hands and S c o o t e r Monzingo's leg. Sophomore Jim of Bertelsen flashes showed spfwl, power and balance . . . and loo?'1 footballs. A television to sportscaster afterw ards had remind a long-faced Royal that Texas had indeed won the game. tasted longhorns Back home on the AstroTurf, the sweet revenge at the expense of one of their greatest tormentors over the past two seasons — Texas Tech. Navy was a laugher. Bertelsen scorr.i on the Steer’s first play from scrimmage and the reserves began earning their letters early. But going into the annual blood bath in Dallas, Texas, to quote Royal, "Hadn’t been extended.” Speyrer’s the case the year As was lot of questions were before, a answered in Dallas. Oklahoma raced to a 14-0 lead and threw up an iron wail against Texas’ running game. But then the truth was m ade known: Street really could throw a spiral and those curious appendages on the ends arms weren't of shingles after all . . . and Texas wouldn’t fold under pressure. Thp Steers hosted Rice two weeks later and looked like they were taking another week off to go with the previous one. Despite a sluggish offensive performance, Texas won in a walk. SMU be remembered as the one in which each member of backfir’d rushed y a r d s . for over IOO game will The the starting | Baylor: the week of the Great Tummyaehe. With over two dozen players under the weather, Texas figured to have trouble with the "new' look'' Baptists. Royal was worried. Longhorns were begin-; ning to turn the same color as the AstroTurf and thundering fullback Steve Worster retired from action with a re-injured ankle on the opening kick-off. I TCU's “cockroaches” came to town to see what they could “fall into and spoil” — a quote Royal would just as soon forget — but awesome running back Norman Bulaich didn't get the ball enough and sophomore sensation Steve Judy didn’t have time enough. Texas’ Tommy Woodard exited with a knee injury and Royal wondered if he would have tight ends enough, Sophomorish A&M had been having troubles all season and the Steers fit into the pattern perfectly. Worster showed that he could run backward as w>ell as forward, Randy Peschel showed that he could catch the ball in a crowd, which was to bf signifi­ cant later, and Speyrer showed that he could pass — which made for interesting conversation but not much else. A r k a n s a s was typically Arkansas. Players were biting and crying and salivating and ABC was looking like a “treeful of owls.” Nixon boldly predicted that somebody would win but Texas wasn’t a candidate for that honor until the fourth quarter. Street slithered through clawing Razorback* for a TD and two- I point conversion and Peschel took J Street's fourth and two pass on the run. Ted Roy took it to the shadow of the goalposts and Bertelsen took it over. And, by I jimminy, that Tom Campbell was some halfback, after all. The Cotton Bowl and Notre Dame: all kind of speculation was in the offing. Could Texas run against Mike McKoy and the other Irish behemoths? Could Notre Dame stop Texas ’vaunted ground attack? ’Aho would start tackle: Scott Palmer who at replaced Carl White the Arkansas game who replaced Leo Brooks in the SMU game who in plerrirk Apts. LEASE N O W FOR FANTASTIC REDUCTIONS S U M M E R & F A L L L l XI BV I Bit A P T S W I T H C E N ­ T R A L AIR I) ISH VV ASH KR, DI S­ P O S A L . BOOK CASK, C A R P E T , I A I M I R V — TV C A B L E . W A T E R , OAS E R K E — BEG C L A R R E N T A L TO *140. ON S I AIMER LE A SE N O W $ 9 9 & $1 19 W e llin g Dirt. UT - O n Shuttle Bu* Rf. M e r . A p t. IDI IM E. 32. 476-5940 o r 453-0570 Grid Spots Up for Grabs back and Worster back to full­ back. will come back but we have to go ahead as if they won’t.” split lithe, writhing Elsewhere, Charles Speyrer, the end returns with a chance to gamer the school career pass receiving record. The spindly Speyrer snagged 26 aerials as a sopho­ more and had 30 receptions l a s t fall. Twrenty-nine during the com­ ing season W 'ould give him the record. At the opposite end of the line, three aiV relative unknowns toiling at tight end. Jay Cormier, who that commuted between position and guard in the fall, runs ahead of redstarts Jerrel Bolton and Dan Terwelp. But Steer coaches are hopeful that one or both of two talented, ex­ perienced hands will shake off knee in time for fall duty. injuries Deryl Comer, an All-SWC selec­ tion in ’68, sat out last season and may be available for action this year if a transplanted tendon gives his knee needed strength and if he can work himself back into shape. Tommy Woodard, who alternated with Randy Peschel last year as a sophomore, is also a prospect Said assistant coach Jim Helms, “We hope those two Af the tackles, Bobby Mitchell runs at departed AU-America Bob running mate Babby Wuensch a McKay’s spot with McKay’s old fixture on the other side of center. Wuensch, one of the squad’s most dedicated players, kept from being unanimous McKay All-America as he made the one team McKay didn’t. Mike Dean returns at one guard at and Randy Stout another, with two-year letterman Jim Achilles, a two-year under­ study for Forrest Wiegand, holding forth at center. Defensively, tile team of David and Goliath returns at ends to wreak havoc on enemy quarter­ backs. David Arledge, the ’Horns mini-pass rusher at 180 pounds, teams with 6-3, 250-pound Bill Atessis. Atessis, however, is not in school this semester so fresh­ man Bill Rutherford holds down the fort. At tackles, junior Scott Palmer and sophomore Carl White are the top choices, with ’69 starter Greg Ploetz a scholastic casualty. Both Palmer and White have starting experience and are cap­ ably backed by sophomore Travis Roach and transfer Ray Dowdy. Bill Zapalac and Scott Hender­ son return at linebackers, with Zapalac’s back-up, Stan Mauldin, having moved to the inside to fill the vacancy left by Glen Hal- sell’s departure. Letterman David Richardson ta at rover backed by freshman R. J. Childress. Mauldin will have to stand off a strong challenge from redshirt Randy Braband while Henderson and Zapalac are letterman Larry by backed Julius freshman and Webb Whittier, respectively. to The remains secondary a puzzle, although Danny Lester and Rick Nabors are proven hands. Donnie Wiggington, sine*! returned the quarterback corps, was tried at the vacant halfback spot but has given way to another transplanted quarter­ back, freshman Alan Lowry. Also in contention for the starting role there are redshirt David Ballow and freshmen Mike Bayer and Dennis Duckworth. the placement Happy Feller returns to head up specialists, while the punter will be chosen from a group composed of Kerth- ley, Itowry, freshman Alen Moors and volunteer Steve Adger. Bv STEVE DIAL Assistant Sports Editor What do you do for an encore . . . besides pray a lot? I-ct’s face if, folks: there just ain't no way you can bo better than the best, which is what Texas wras last fall. Tile Aggies claim they can reach up in the stands and pull out someone to sub into the game in a crucial situation, but they’ve always been incredibly curious individuals. Besides, if s a little bit harder to try to replace five offensive five defensive starters. and leadership Particularly when one of those is a quarterback whose gutsy and determination, flair has been the single most important element in a 20-game winning streak encompassing two Southwest Conference champ­ ionships and one national title. Eddie Phillips is the heir ap­ parent to the throne vacated bv James Street but may be pushed by freshman Gary Keithley. Phillips seem s to have the knack for Darrell Royal’s Wishhone-T offense and is an accomplished runner. But those who have always yearned for Royal to dis- c o v e r a potent passing attack drool ait the thought of the big freshman standing tall, cool and confident in the pass protection pocket Atter three weeks of spring drills, however, what many had figured to be a battle for the position had failed to materialize, with Phillips holding a decisive edge. The spring’s Great Experiment wras conducted elsewhere as full­ to back Steve Worster moved to replace Ted Roy, halfback whose graduation will signal the last of the famous Roy clan in Orange and White. Underrated as a runner, Roy nevertheless wras one of the team ’s most punishing ball car­ riers and it was his blocking that often leveled the opposition on Jim Bertelsen’s runs. Worster's move was brought about to get the best possible combination of players into the lineup. There apparently was never any doubt about Worsteds ability to handle the halfback chores. A Texas coach has been said that to have maintained Worster could play anywhere but q u a r t e r b a c k , split end or defensive back. But Texas coaches shuddered at the thought of having Bobby Califon back up Worster for a third consecutive year. Callison, an effective blocker as well as an explosive runner w i t h good speed and quickness, has been referred to as the best player Royal’s staff has had who has not been a starter. Callison started his varsity career as a halfback but had some difficulty handling pitch­ outs, hence the move to fullback. At the beginning of spring drills, Worster and Bertelsen made up the halfback tandem and Callison fullback chores with split the Billy Dale, a junior halfback last year who scored the winning TD against Notre Dame. But Callison W’as visited with a knee injury that will likely keep him from effective work during the spring and the project was scrapped, sending Dale to half- is whale puke ROUND-UP GEAR It’s the stuff they add to th# world’s most expensive perfumes. For the world's most expensive women. It’s also the name of a new group and a new music. Nine of th# weightiest musicians ever together. Blowing as one. AMBERGRIS. It s Larry Harlow, Jerry Weiss, Charlie Camillerl, Harry Max, Jimmy Maeulen, Billy Shay, Lewis Kahn, Glenn John Miller cmd GII Fields. Their collective working experience? Very deep. Maynard Ferguson, Tito Rodriguez, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Orchestra Harlow, Modulo, The Latin Dimension, Lionel Hampton, Eddie PalmierL AMBERGRIS. It’s whale rock, Youna. soulful, spirited. Original. AMBERGRIS. It s also the name of their first album. On Paramount records and tapes. AMBERGRIS, I Paramount! PABAMOUNT RECORDS a d i v i s i o n o l FAMOUS MUSIC CORPORATION A CULT + WESTERN COMPANY . . . chisled from head to toe. This six button suit PAS-5014 presents you as you really Welcome to Round-Up TRY AN ARBY'S are— daring & assertive. The longer coat with higher center vent smoothly tops the flared trousers. $100 "ACTION” That s right! Action sun­ glasses by Bonneau. The spotlight will be on you when you wear the latest styles that set you apart from the others. from $3 Griffons H,-** c . I J-* Creators of Arbys Roast Beef Sandwich © 1 9 6 8 , A rty ? • Inc. 1715 Guadalupe 5400 BURNET RD. On the Drag . . . 2346 Guadalupe . . . GR 8-3411 Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN S 7B PEREGRINE PERFORMANCE CENTER A N N O U N C E S A N E W A U T O M O T I V E R E P A IR F A C IL IT Y F O R F O R E IG N A N D P E R F O R M A N C E C A R O W N E R S O F F E R IN G P R O F E S S I O N A L T U N E - U P S A N D S E R V IC E 1601 L A V A C A 477-7007 O P E N F R O M IO A.M . 'TIL 6 P.M. 10% DISCOUNT ON PARTS WITH THIS AD. Boot Headquarters Just pull them o n — y o u ’re set to w ork in com fort! 12- inch N atural Retan leather uppers. “S w e a t-P r o o f’ flex­ ible split leather insole that stays fresh, w ill n ev er crack or curl. O il-resistant N eop ren e s o le and h eel. S p ecial h eel m old ed counter for perfect fit. No. 1199 SW S . . . trotted for comfort w% w- ‘ « , i ^ " T " and performanco TRY 'E M , S H O E S | e l , V M A N Y O TH ER STYLES IN ST O C K . SIZES 6 To 16 A A To EEE W idths RED WING SNOE STORE 5504 BURNET RO A D (A c ro ss From G o o d y e a r) 454-9290 K A P P A A LPH A S Q uarterback Battle Keithley Tests Phillips By STK VE DIAL Assistant Sports Editor The legend was bom in Dallas on the sun-bathed floor of the facing 85 Cotton Bowl There, yards of grass bounded by a scant two minutes, James Street licked his fingers, looked at the clock and red - clad ll angry Sooners and stepped to the line of scrimmage. Those same 85 yards and two the later, S tnet and minutes I-onghoms had a comeback vie torv; 18 games later they had a 20-game win streak and a national championship . . . thus, the legend. Now Slick has thrown his last fourth-and-two pass, wriggled for his last two-point conversion and swaggered off to the pitcher’s mound to work his magic there. He has left behind more than a memory, more than a legend. He has left behind a question at quarterback — he mark always did know how to build ten- sion. Nobody questions the physical ability of Eddie Phillips or Gary Keithley. What is suspect is their ability to survive in the pressure cooker in which Street thrived. But then, nobody knew what he would do under pressure until he got there. So the big battle in the spring was to be for the man-under job. After three weeks of drills, the contest continues in theory only, with sophomore Phillips having been given the nod over freshman Keithley — that Ls, until fall and the pressure returns. Phillips a quick, is — mechanically speaking—Darrell Royal’s kind of quarterback: clever runner with enough arm to get the ball there when he has to. Bigger and faster than Street, he is as good a runner, if not better. Keithley stands tall, cool and confident under a pass rush. At 6-3 and 200, he gives away a step or two to Phillips in speed and quickness. He's a different typo of runner — strong, one who earns a linebacker’s respect and makes a safety shoot for the ankles. But running is admittedly not his strong point. tile relish Tile Alvin product agrees with observers that bls major asset is his passing. Those same ob­ servers thought of Keithley setting up solidly behind the Veteran Texas line and effort­ lessly flipping passes to willowy split end Charles Spearer, who could, in his senior year, estab­ lish himself as Texas’ most pro­ lific pass-grabber after serving two tours of duty as the “other half’’ of the ’Horns’ big-play com­ bination. Though Phillips has amply demonstrated his heady running skills, he has yet to be involved in a “pressure’’ game while in Texas uniform. He split time his f r e s h m a n year with now-departed Monte Johnson and spent a redshift year on the bench while Street was just beginning to build tile legend. He logged considerable time in the frequent routs of '69. thus gaining a wade margin of experience on Keithley. But as one coach was quoted as saying, there on ex­ just ‘He's not perience; he's there on ability.” If Keithle\j develops the feel for the offense that Phillips already to have, he will have seems in a n o t h e r shot at No. the fall. There will be a lot of people taking shots at No. I in the fall and the performance of Phillips and-or Keithley under long fire wall determine how Street’s legend is remembered. I The Fisherman Filling the shoes of unbeat­ en Jam es Street will be the m ajor facto r d e cid in g the the success or 1970 Longhorns. failure of A N N U A L ROUND UP CELEBRATION S A T U R D A Y N I G H T APRIL 4th 8:00 p.m. 'til 12:00 p.m. Fiesta G a rd ens on Town Lake featuring The Fabulous C oun t Down 5 from Houston, Texas Gallons of cold Bud on draft Minimum Cover Charge Directions: LH. 35 South, take Town Lake Exit, back under bridge, a n d m a k e a sharp right a t f i r s t corner. Proceed on to F i e s t a Gardens. Page 8B Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN The Candidates Eddie Phillips, top, and G a r y Keithley p ro­ vide the com petition in the race to find a signal caller c a p a b le of extending Texas' 20- ga m e winning streak. CHOICE BEEF SMOTHERED IN RICH GRAVY, CRISP FRENCH FRIES, TOSSED SALAD, TEXAS TOAST ALL FOR $1.29! YOU'LL APPRECIATE THE REALLY FAST SERVICE, TOO! O p e n 7 a.m . - 1 2 p.m . Net Future Bright Owls Top Roadblock You dont have to be a mathematician = C + 8 d to know Levi means: inexpensive durable casual attractive Distinctive Store For Men/In A e CO-OP/Ph. tH-TZi! For Coach Wilmer Allison and Texas tennis, th* 1970 challenge comes early. Allison’s young group is picked to chase league kingpin Rice — and the Owls and Longhorns will meet in a Southwest Conference match on the Penick Courts Tuesday. The outing will be only the Longhorns’ second SWC action, the opener coming against SMU Saturday, also the Austin court. tm In Zan Guerry and Mike Estep, Rice coach Sam Giammalva, an Allison protege, the returns two league’s top operatives, followed by Alberto closely “Tico” Carrero. in led Rice through Estep and Guerry, two of the the top ranking amateurs country, the regular conference season unde­ feated last spring, but skipped the conference individual meet to travel in Europe on a U. S. Lawn Tennis Association tour. They teamed as freshmen in 1968 to lead Rice to a second place finish in the NCAA meet behind UCLA but faltered last summer, slipping to third. Despite their absence from the league individual meet last May, Rice still won that version of conference play. Carrero won the singles title after being seeded third and defeated teammate Mike Hamilton in the finals. The two teams up in doubles but only advanced semi-finals, lasing to John Ragland and Pet# I aust of A&M, the champions. the to The ’Horns split 3-3 with the Mustangs in last season’s regular competition, the Ponies and return much of their material including three Australians. In addition, freshman star Woody Blocher bolsters the team. Against these Allison will send a squad which numbers only one senior. John Mozola, the top seed in last year’s SWC meet at Waco. Behind Mozola, Allison will work with junior Rick Murray, sophomores John Nelson, Avery Rush and Marc Wiegand, and freshman Ron Touchon. Junior Ray Rhodes and fresh­ man Robert Campbell are others use din non-conference action. Aside from a Thursday match with visiting Michigan State, Allison’s group had put up a 4-2 record in dual meets, winning in Penick Court matches with S o u t h e a s t Oklahoma, LSU, Tulane and North Texas State, and losing in road contests with Pan American and the University of Corpus Christi. the Corpus Christi In addition, Texas was booked In Inter­ collegiate and Rice Invitational Tournaments, both coliecting- grounds for tennis talent After the Rice match, th ® ’Horns visit Baylor April l l and then return home against TOU April 14. They brave the wilds of College Station for a match with blood rival A&M on April 18 and then travel to the in- famous Lubbock home of Texas Tech April 25. The Tech playing surface Is widely-known and feared among conference brothers because it is of a slippery and very fast sur­ face unlike any other set of courts in the league. Therefore, each SWC visiting team is at an a u t o m a t i c disadvantage by traveling to play the Raiders on the Caprock. April 27 Arizona visits Austin just for a non-league match before the conference meet April 30 to May 2 in Houston. Hopefully some Stew racquet men w i l l then be able to go on to the NCAA meet June 15 to 20 in Salt Lake City, Utah. a philosophy A l l i s o n ’ s schedule closely matches the pattern he follows each year, one which is built once around described as something akin to “hitting yourself over the hea with a hammer because it feel so good when you stop.” Parti cularly exemplary was Corpu Christi; one of the top tenni schools anywhere, they adminis tered a 9-0 beating, but Alliso’ values the competition. Apparently, it’s a winning fo- mula. Allison has coached for SWC championship entries, sec five finish second and the othc three come home third. In add tion, there has been three leagu singles winners and a SWC-wii ning doubles entry. Allison succeeded the late Di D. A. Penick as tennis coae' after compiling notable creden fiats as a competitor. He wa the NCAA singles champion ii 1929, was the national single: winner in 1935, and competed a Wimbledon and in the Davis Cup matches, serving on the latter team from 1928 through 1937. And in 1970 he will be aiming to make up ground on the Owls, the acknowledged class of the conference. Allison . * . racquet mentor. We May Be 'The' Only 'Tavern' In Town, And We Try Our Darndest To Act Like It Because we know you can take it or leave it. And as you know, in some instances that just isn’t possible. l beer drinking anything but a hit-or-nrnss proposition. i ' T : L Sen'* d ‘T A I ! * “ ™ COrn,r ,or 78 * • * « . w*’v* ’earned to m o i . For example, your order includes com­ pletely frozen pitchers and mugs. Thats to make the constant 33-degree temperature of the beer taste even colder. And your beer won’t sit on the bar get­ ting warm while you’re drinking in the atmos­ phere. W e d like you to do both at the same time. So our waiters and waitresses make sure your order is in front of you in three minutes. For those who know the value of a buck and a quarter, our Happy Hour-And-A-Half each weekday from 3-4:30 p.m. during April is just extra gravy. Same service, same beer, lower price. Come down and taste a little tradition at the corner of 12th and Lamar. W e d like the opportunity to give you a cold welcome. I o x L O I A k A A n I Z t h Of L A M A R M itt Advertise Your Student Housing Now In The DAILY TEXAN * Trained, Responsible Resident Manager * Convenient to Campus * 40-Foot Swimming Pool * Now Leasing for Summer & Fall * Laundry Facilities and Luggage Room * Personal Desk, Walk-in Closeti * Quiet, Luxurious, Contemporary Decor * Special Summer Rate* ess* d-*i9-d -J -sr- sSrz sal?® Each La Fiesta apartm ent d in ing room , wall bookcasa, walk-in closets, m any oth er conveniences in clu d in g m aid and janitor se rvie#. is in d ivid ually a ir-co n d itio n e d an d fully carp atad, a n d ta c h h as a liv in g L * L in d ivid ual desks, tw o b ed room s, a n d e x £ a s t o r - o . n * " ’ ° ° mt’ * ‘ P * C*- " w ,l! « l " . ;. / ;. *” *- • .......... co m fort.!,!., p l . . . . . . . u r r o u . d m , , < M , y ™ LA FIESTA APARTMENTS for m ore inform ation call: 4 7 7 -1 0 0 0 400 EAST 30th STREET STU D EN T S A R E L O O K IN G N O W F O R FALL & SUMMER HOUSING CALL GR 1-5244 NOW FOR QUICK SERVICE You Get 15 Words For One Low Price! 20 Insertions For Only Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 9B A Place n the Sun And the light made this re­ turn uncomfortable for John on Mozola, C oach Wilmer Allison's 1970 Texas entry. senior only Mis Ends N C A A Horn Swim Season Texas swimmers Bruce Robin­ son, IVank Salzhanfiicr, and div*»r Steve McFarland made tho long Journey to the NCAA swimming •xxi diving diamplonsh^pg in Salt Lake Qty last weekend and came back empty-handed. Rc*>inf?on, in the midst of a bout wvti the flu, did not come close to his best times bi th*> three events he swam. Salzhandler, nlfhoti gh su i mm i 11 g < red i hie in b o t h breaststroke t i m e s •Vents, did not make the finals, ansi did not better his fastest time. McFarland did not finish bi the top qualifiers in dx? diving •vents. R was the Texas Indiana University against the world bi the teem •tendings, and trio failed to score a point bi the Southern high-altitude meet Methodist was seventh and th* University at Arlington was four­ teenth. Robinson swain a 4:31.61 in th* individual medley-, a 400-yard 2:07.42 in Die 200 medley and a 2:07.93 in the 200 back. Tho times he turned were not close to the University records or the coei- ferenoe records he holds. Salzhandler. entered in the "100 a n d 200 - y a r d breaststroke svents, did not make the finals. and Mg times were not as fast the school and conference as mark ho holds in the 200. He turned in times of 1:01.40 in the I Od yard and a 2:14.56 in the 200. McFarland finished well-below the top qualifiers in tile one and three-meter diving events. Alti­ tude seemed to be a major factor in the performances of the en­ tries, with only 77 of 635 entrants bettering their seeded times. For the Texas skinelads, it was a year of seven dual-meet wins and four new school records and two new conferee e marks. by perennial The I/xighoms hung up the seven straight wins before being dumped f o e Southern Methodist Freshmen led th© way for the school and conference marks, and only two 1 Robinson and Salzhandler, took first places at the conference meet this year. Hank Chapman, who finished I his twentieth year aa tlx* ‘Horns' j boss, took his tankers to victory over Kansas for the first meet of the year in January. It was the first time the Texans had beaten the Jayhawkers in several years and opened the door for victories over Rice and Texas A&M out of town, and against Arkansas, TOT, Texas Tech and jj Eastern New Mexico at home. The Steers’ only loss was at the hands of die SMU Mustangs in Dallas March 4, and it was at the end of the cight-moet cam­ paign. ROUND UP a t the ACTION (JUST OFF 5500 N. L A M A R ) CLUB mum FROM FORT WORTH BABY (Formerly The Next Door Neighborhood) SATURDAY HIGHT PALL RABBIT 831 H O U S T O N — 454-7873 „ m SAE BOTT ATA . ZBT AETF acacia K S SCHLITZ fe AU iMiluiaukee GENUINE DRAFT BEER Brenmasters Private Recipe 3e I OB Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN THE HOEFGEN COMPAN 1917 EAST 7th St Hamath to Ride In Procession New York Jets qurterback .Toe Namath will be among the digni­ taries riding the Round-Up in parade Saturday morning. After the parade, Namath will attend the finals of the Texas Relays in Memorial Stadium. He will arrive in Austin late Friday night. Namath also is in town for the opening of one of his franchise restaurants. After his appearance at Round-Up, Namath will be at. Jo e’s A u s t i n ’ s Broadway r e s t a u r a n t to meet with customers. M iss April to Appear Parade Participant By JOE PHILLIPS Playboy magazine's April play­ m ate arrived in Austin Thursday night and will participate in the closing activities of Round-Up 1970. is featured Barbara Hillary, a Milwaukee native who in the centerfold of Playboy's April issue, will make her first ap­ pearance at Round-Up during Friday's noon Cowboy Barbecue. Margaret Moore of the Round­ up Committee said Miss Hillary will choose her Saturday night supper escort from among Uni­ versity males dressed as saloon girls in the Western Day Queen contest, which will be part of the activities of the Cowboy Barbe­ cue. A 21-year old blonde. Miss Hillary is described by Playboy as a beauty who has "followed her nomadic impulses far and frequently.” Miss Hillary worked in New York City as a "Bunny” for a Playboy nightclub. Following her appearance af the Cowboy Barbecue Friday Miss Hillary will attend a Beta Theta Pi fraternity party from in to l l p.m., and a Zeta Beta Tau party from l l p.m. until midnight. Saturday morning Miss Hillary will take part In the Round-Up the Parade. The winner of Western Day Queen contest will escort the playmate to The Barn, an Austin restaurant, Saturday night. Following she will supper, make an appearance at an Alpha Epsilon Pi party from 9 to IO p m., an Alpha Tau Omega party from IO to ll p.m. and a Sigma Alpha Epsilon party from l l p.m. to midnight. M is s A p r i l . Barbara Hillary. Revised Parade Set Saturday l r r w m t v t r n ? By CYNDI TAYLOR i "UT—Yesterday. Today and Tomorrow" will take to campus streets at noon Saturday as the '70 P a ­ theme of the Round-Up rade. Bands, floats and celebrities will be on hand to help mark what planners hope will signal a return of the parade to the grandeur the in Round-Up celebration. it once held The parade was discontinued . . to 1965 after t .. the from 1958 procession had dimmed to what was described as "a shadow of its former self” during the 1930s and 40s. Its reinstatem ent five years ago almost went unnoticed with students preferring to honor Round-Up’s party tradition. Taking all this into considera­ tion, members of the Round-Up Parade Committee have worked all year to produce an ex­ travaganza of a parade. and Tomorrow,” IN ACCORDANCE with the pa­ rade’s theme of "UT—Yesterday, Today this year's parade will bear quite a resemblance to those of yester­ year. The parade will begin at Jester Center and proceed west on 21st Street, north on Guadalupe, east on 26th Street, ending at 26th and Speedway on the corner where the first Round-Up Parade began 36 years ago. 'Underground' Shops Cater to Hip Tastes Among the myriad Austin bou­ tiques, discount houses, drugstore palaces and hucksteries deluxe that vie for Round-Up visitors’ business, a few genuine under­ ground shops remain. Some arp leaving the under­ ground to venture into the more commercial, competitive world of business, but th e y are still run by the young, in ago or in spirit, and they focus on w hat’s im­ portant in young eyes. "hippie” Maya, one of the more "hip,” less establishments, began as an art gallery and in October, 1967, import shop added clothes In February, 1968, and now is often referred to as a boutique. "Funky tilings,” a t Maya in­ clude sheepskins, foot-wide wildly printed scarves, bronze and silver jewelry ranging from anklets to the ears. c a n d e l a b r a Guatemalan and waterpipes. beads seed for Sunshine Shop and the Under­ ground City Hall, otherwise known as Oat Willie's Campaign Headquarters, are more like the traditional head shop. Sunshine Shop s main offerings are leather goods (wrist bands, bags watchbands, and belts, sandals made by Jerry and Craig and Thomas’ Vests). Sid Kalman keeps a stock of medallions, rings, imports, sun­ brass and wood glasses, and incense posters. pipes, Oat Willie's concentrates on reading m atter, E ast Village Other, other newspapers, and "Exotic and Crackpot L iterature'' includes Crawdaddy and which Eggroil magazine, joke books, and Radical America Komiks, to nam e a few. Many posters, mostly erotic, are available. The date was Saturday, April its 14, 1934. Round-Up entered fourth year and added its to schedule of events the first all­ student parade on the campus in eight years. HORSE-DRAWN buggies car­ ried University President H. Y. Benedict and Austin Mayor Tom Miller at the head of the parade. They were followed by fraternity and sorority floats, University sweethearts, the Orange Jackets, Texas Cowboys, 124th Cavalry, and the Longhorn Band. in ride Cars have replaced the horse drawn buggies, but University President Norman Hackerman and Austin Mayor Travis LaRue the 1970 parade. will Andrew Fabacher, Joe Namath and Miss April Playmate Bar­ bara Hillary, will also ride in the parade. Again there will be floats, fraternity and University t h e Orange Jackets, Texas Cowboys, sweethearts, * sorority and the Longhorn Band. Two riding clubs—UT Canter Club and Brush Creek Saddle Club—will bring their horses and student m ilitary will be the represented by Angel Flight and the Navy Buccaneers. In all, 50 units will be entered the parade. in trophies for Following the parade, an "Aft­ er P a rty ” will be from 1:30 to 3 p.m. in Eastwood Park, where the procession will disband. Each float in the parade will depict some aspect of the University as seen "Yesterday, Today or To­ morrow ’ and the best entries will be awarded at this tim e. Refreshments will be served and Custer's Last Band will provide music during the free, "everyone’s-invited” celebration. the parade were Plans ’70 made by Parade Committee, a Student Association group headed by Barbara Hoffer. the Round-Up for KINETIC ART S E R I E S ll Celebration Started As Weekend in June By RACHELLE WEINSTEIN In the days when the University was "The Forty Acres” both literally and figuratively, alumni gathered at commencement time every year to revisit familiar scenes, renew old friendships, and rejoice again in taking part in the activities on the friendly campus of their alma mater. Today's Round-Up includes se­ veral activities which began many years ago, and excludes some others which were thought of as traditions. Round-Up traditionally includes the selection of the University Sweetheart, the All-University Dance, a barbecue and athletic events. ORIGINALLY the event was a three-day weekend but in recent years a week of activities have been planned. In its early years Round-Up was used for class reunions and to show the alumni the progress o f program. building Buildings were dedicated at this time and reunion luncheons were held. the For 45 years this reuniting of Texas exes took place in June. In 1929 the Executive Council of t h e Ex-Students’ Association recommended that this annual meeting be held in the spring so students might participate and be hosts during the homecoming. The change was also made so that visitors could see University life in full swing rather than in its last stages at Commencement time. A year later the name of the reunion was changed to Round­ up. The 56th anniversary of t h e University and the fourth annual Round-Up were combined in 1933 for one of the largest and w ell- in Round-Up planned activities history. THE EVENT was highlighted by art exhibits, theatrical produc­ tions, Round-Up ball and revue, and was climaxed by a three-act play depicting the history of the University. The cast required more than 1,000 people and in­ the musical of cluded organizations of the University. all In the late 50's the building of Round-Up parade was initiated. sororities, dorms Fraternities, and coops built floats for the parade for trophies. competition in Floats were judged In the ca­ tegories of the most comical, the most beautiful, the most educa­ tional, and most unique. In the late 50‘s the building of floats was discontinued only to be revived in 1965. ROUND-UP REVUE was also discontinued during this period. Most of the changes to the old Round-Up came during the late 5G's because of a de-emphasis on extracurricular and lack of student interest. activities Athletic events, especially the Texas Relays, have long been a part of Round-Up. In the early years of Round-Up the Ex-Students’ Association and the University staff did much of the planning, but students were quick to be added as helpers es­ pecially and sorority participation. In Round- Up’s evolution students h a v e been given an ever-increasing part in the activity until today it is almost entirely planned by students. fraternity for Pizza Inn THE N A T I O N ’S FASTEST G R O W IN G PIZZA CHAIN! Pizza Inn Pizza is made from a secret recipe of O ld W orld sauces, dressings, and dough which cannot be copied or SO U T H W E ST PREMIER equaled. Salad with our Pizza Inn special dressing. a d v a n c e s e r ie s t ic k e t s o n s a l e n e x t w e e k AT H O G G A U D ITO R IU M BOX OFFICE 7915 Burnet Rd. Hrs. 11-11 Weekdays - 11-1 Fit & Sat. S P R I N G IS HERE! ( L E TS C E L E B R A T E ) INCLUDING A T T A C K A N D CASSE! ,E ON EACH A T $4.66332 iscount records, inc. 2310 Guadalupe 478-1674 ODEM. M O N D A Y -THURSDAY 9:30-9:30 I CIN. FRIDAY & SATURDAY 9:30■ MIDNIGHT A H 3, 1870 T H I DALY TEXAN b g . M B Multi-Media Marks Scene at Round-Up B y F A Y E B A R T U L A Through extensive utilization of slides and sound. Round-Up 70 has turned on to the multi-media scene. In addition to slide lectures, the Round-Up program includes a five-screen multi - media show backed by Beatle-Zepplin-Joplin sounds which was presented Wed­ nesday aud Thursday in Academ­ ic Center 21. The presentation, entitled “ Va­ lues and Culture Systems,” was created by Media 70, a student media-enthusiastic group which grew out of the Dean of Students Office last summer. Utilizing l l slide and film pro­ jectors, the show points out “ the today's values society, alternative values, and where man is going,” Media 70 member Kenny Meyer explained. that exist in THE SHOU contains r a n d o m s l i d e s depicting University culture and offers quotes by Bert­ rand Russell, Mae West, Eldridge Cleaver, and Horton the Elephant among others. One uncredited quote state, “ Truth l i e s in a WARNING! It is a felony to rob or attempt to rob a soda water vendor, or candy . . . or cigarette . . . vendor M A X IM U M PUN ISHM ENT $1000 or FIVE YEARS in the penitentiary . . . please . . . please don't ruin your life by such acts! R E W A R D I $100 leading for information to offender's arrest & conviction. Please phone G R 2-7243 AUSTIN BOTTLERS ASSOCIATION fourth floor closet in Waggener Hall.” Advertised as “ a complete or­ gasm in 28 minutes 33 seconds,” the creators of the presentation boast of “ eleven hundred feet of film, twelve hundred carefully created slides, and pressureless sound waves.” chemical The group, headed by Bill Gu- rasich, engineering m a j o r , previously produced multi-media shows for Freshman Orientation and “ That Drug Tiling,” a drug conference for high school journalists held on the University campus in Novem­ ber. THE 15-MEMBER group holds as a motto, “ to stamp out the printed w o r d , ” Meyer comment­ ed. This is evident in one of the slides which states “ the printed word is no longer compelling.. . ” A booth housing a mini-media is being maintained by show Media 70 to promote the final show scheduled Friday at 7, 8, and 9 p.m. Drawing the largest crowds at Showcase was a 16-screen multi­ media show, “ Man Communi­ cates,” shown every quarter-hour by the School of Communication. DEPARTMENTS of Journalism, Speech, and Radio-TV-Film and the Center for Communication Research comprise the School of Communication, the R T F depart­ ment having been tile leader in introducing the multi-media form to the University. To create the 16-screen rear projection area, members of a School of Communication Show­ case committee stacked 16 steel Charles MAGNAN DO CTO R O F M U S IC Teacher of Voice and Piano THE W EST G A T E H O U SE 1122 Colorado Apt. 15IO TEL: 477-7162 g ? © ? 3 S m s z & z _____________________ ROUND-UP DANCE SPACE OPERA Friday & Saturday 1411 LA V A C A 472-3236 (?fie € fu e rci/ JFhfy FRIDAY O N LY! 3 FACES WEST also Segle Fry Closed Saturday, April 4, for private party H A P P Y H O U K 5-ti D A IL Y B E E H y* P JR IC E K A n i v V m ARE YO U O N E O F THOSE W H O USES EXPRESSIONS LIKE JEEPERS or GOLLY DARN THATS O KAY. DO YO U R TH IN G C A U S E Y O U 'R E A L W A Y S W E LC O M E AT Sco Pro Lounge 609 W . 29th HAPPY HOUR 4 - 6 EVERYDAY, OPEN SUND AYS UNDER N E W M A N A G EM EN T B A N ’ S SUPERMARKET LIQUORS it 500 LA V A C A 5353 BURNET RD. 1327 SO. C O N G R E SS G R 8-5423 H O 5-8689 H I 4-1089 C U T T Y SARK Whiskey .................... t Scorch Whiskey 12 years old . ' S CHIVAS REGAL 8 6t JOHNNIE WALKER RED b b c jC Scotch W h isk ey VAT 69 GOLD or REGULAR 86 pc • Set toh Whiskey ...................... BALLANTINES ‘ S W r ' . ey ............ ............ ...................... CRR STI & BROOKS r e :; Whiskey.. ...................... O LD W O R T H Y 86 Dr:-" Scotch Whiskey 8 years old . . B&L SO i r • S etch W hiskey HIGHLAND MIST SO or • S orch W h iskey ........................ ........................ . . . . 5th . . . . 5th . . . . 5 t h ...5 t h . 5th . 5th • 5th . 5th . 5th CLUB COCKTAILS Daqu n, Whiskey Sour, Old Fashions 8 oz. Can Ready Mixed ............... 52 proof PERECT HOST Box of IO pkg;. Drymix .................. ............ HOLLAND HOUSES MIXES 16 oz. Bottle, All Types .............................. ROSES LIME JUICE W est Indies, Sweetened 7 oz. Bottle 49 ' 12 oz Bottle 7 5 JIM BEAM 86 proof Straight Bourbon W h is k e y ............... 5th KENTUCKY BEAU 86 proof Strvo h t Bourbon W h is k e y ............... 5th SUNNYBROOK 80 proof Sfrainht Bourbon W h is k e y ............... 5tS OLD CROW 86 proof Straight Bourbon W h is k e y ............... 5th ANTIQUE 86 proof Straight Bourbon W h is k e y ............... 5th OLD GRAND-DAD 86 proof Stralaht Bourbon W h is k e y ............... 5th MATTINGLY & MOORE 86 proof S tr a th ! Bourbon Whiskey ............. 5th J. W. DANT 86 proof O ld Style Whiskey ........................... 5th WINDSOR CANADIAN 80 proof Canadian Whiskey ................... . . . , 5 t h EZRA BROOKS 90 proof Straioht Bourbon W h i n e y ............... 5th EARLY TIMES 86 proof Straight Bourbon W h is k e y ............... 5th PRIVATE CELLAR BOND IOO proof Stralaht Bourbon W h is k e y KENTUCKY TAVERN 86 nroor S o u g h t Bourbon W h is k e y ............... 54h 5th QUART SALE OLD C R O W ................. 86 proof Straight Bourbon Whiskey ANCIENT A G E ............ 86 proof Straight Bourbon Whiskey GOLD COACH .Vt1,*....... BO proof D r ille d From Grain . . . . BELLOWS B O U R B O N ___ 86 proof S+ra ght Bourbon Whiskey KENTUCKY TAVERN 86 proof Straight Bourbon Whiskey TEACHERS SCO TCH........ So proof Straight Bourbon Whiskey Puerto Rican Rum ............... GORDON’S VODKA 30 proof D;' filled from Grain ....................... 5th BRUGAL RUM BO p : FLEISCHMANNS GIN 90 proof Distilled from Grain ........................5th RON RICO RUM 80 proc! Puerto Rican Rum ........................... Sth ALMADEN WINES 5th are’ Burgundy, California Cha bl is. Sauterne 5th 5th ........................ HARVEYS BRISTOL CREAM T r -,-5d from England ANDRE CHAMPAGNE Ca Tor- a P ok, W hite, Cold D u c k ....................5th LANCERS ROSE Portuguese Sparkling Rose BERTOLI CHIANTI iT -• w '"e ........................................................5th DURO FATHERS ROSE Portuguese Rose W in e LIEBFRAUMILCH, 1967 i,>eu".s German W in e GASTON de LAGRANGE ....................................5th ................................ .5 t h .............. ..........5th .................................................. 5th ' Cognac BUDWEISER 24 G ass Cans SCHLITZ 24 Cans LONE STAR 24 Glass Cans .............................................. C A S E .................................. C A S E .............................................. C A S E The Art Of Communication Showcase visitors await the start of the School of Commun­ It ii ication s multi-media exhibit, one of many being used during Round-Up. "M a n Communicates.” —Photo b r Ike Barucfc, box frames, the fronts covered with shower curtain material, in four rows of four to form a com­ posite rectangular screen. Pro­ jectors beam slides in various patterns from behind the shower curtain screens. Opening with a full screen s c e n e from Michaelangelo’s Sistine Chapel creation fresco in which God extends His hand to Adam, the first man, the show proceeds visualize man’s development through communica­ tion from prim itive cave etchings to modem technology. to I THE REMAINDER of the show “ modern problems focuses on based on the idea of the prota­ gonist, ‘every man,’ who having viewed the problems turns and walks aw’ay,” Gordon Marsh, committee member, said. The media montage touches on : Vietnam, pollution, overpopula- ^ don and race relatione. A three-month effort supervised Richard Byrne of the radio-tele- vision-fiim department, the media show was co-ordinated by gradu­ ate students Mel Russell, Ken Stedman and Phyllis Rienska; 1 9 7 0 Barbecue Sef for Friday The Cowboy’s westem-style its traditional barbecue makes Round-Up week debut Friday. The luncheon activities w ill be livened by a band and a “ Play­ boy” playmate. The barbecue features not only barbecue beef, potato salad, bea­ ns, bread and cold drinks or tea but the Fat Im a band and Miss April. Barbecue w ill be served from I I a.m. until 1:30 p.m. in the area north of the Texas Union. Pre-meal tickets can be pur chased from Cowboy members for $1.25 but will cost $1.50 at the barbecue. Gordon Marsh, and Susan Boyd, sophomore art major. OTHER MINI-MEDIA shows and visuals contributed to the multi-media orientation of Show­ case. A series of slides depicting the Spanish treasure involved in tile recent Je rry Sadler controversy are being shown in the Balcones Research Center booth. The treasure, consisting partly of medallions, crosses, and cannon remains, is temporarily at the Balcones Research Center being prepared for exhibition at the Texas Memorial Museum. Science-oriented exhibits, such as those of the departments of physics, astronomy, chemistry, and engineering and nuclear re­ search groups, utilize slides, movies, ami audio to clarify tech­ nical processes, present research data, and point out problems needing scientific attention, such as pollution. THE DEPARTMENT of Special Education employs slides in a machine, a Pupillometer, which measures pupil size wlien the eye encounters visual stimulus. Var­ iance in the pupil size, a sign on the machine states, can be interpreted to reflect the mental activity and emotions of the viewer. Results of this research may be applied to the treatment of retardf'd individuals. “ Child of Clay,” a display by the Department of Curriculum and two Instruction, utilizes .screens and taped sound to pro­ ject images of children as they grow and learn, showing the importance of proper education in the intellectual development of children. Texas Student Publications uses slides ami film to introduce the publications and staffs of The Texan, Ria ta, The Ranger, The Cactus and Tile Texas Engineer­ ing and Science Magazine. of Music, Other booths with multi-media or visual displays are the Depart­ ments Classics, Linguistics, Foreign Languages, Special Education, and Physical Education; the Graduate School of Library Science. School of Business, and Longhorn Band. Welcome R o u n d -U p Visitors you will enjoy dining at VILLA CAPRI _____________ RESTAURANT Students Sunday Night Special Complete Dinner for $3.00 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak rn I rn Just present your blanket tax or Auditor’* receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional O N L Y 2 B L O C K S F R O M M E M O R IA L S T A D IU M BEACON OF MERCY FOR STARVING STUDENTS! (HUNGRY) The familiar sign of Holiday Houses signal the way to a variety of delicious flame-kissed hamburgers, thick malts and shakes, hot fried pies, cokes, lime-or-lemon- ades, French fried potatoes and onion rings, and other goodies to stave off those hunger pangs. You get that famed Holiday House quick service, too. Easy to reach from anywhere on campus. Make it a regular noontime or after-hours stop. H e i l D A Y 12B Friday. April 2, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Bottled uade, l f a c r it y cl th. C o b o la Com ww by, AuMi* Coca-Col. B o ttle Company N O . 3 — 2606 G U A D A L U P E N O . 2 - 2009 G U A D A L U P E m o u s e TWO UNIVERSITY LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU ja x x x o a i 6500 AIRPORT BLVD. CURITY COHON BALLS SCHICK PLUS PLATINUM SOFT- EES (Cotton swabs) JOHN- SHEER- STRIP 3AND-AID ENVELOPES or TABLETS (4 for 88*) PRO TOOTH BRUSH KODAK HARTRIDGE HAIR SET TAPE T2 for 88*) CUTEX OILY POLISH REMOVER (3 for FLAIR PENS (4 for 88*) BOXED Candies 88*) (3 for 88*) COVER GIRL MAKE-UP CASHMERE BOQUET (2 for 88*) KLEENEX FACIAL TISSUES (4 for 88*) SPECIALS GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY APRIL 8. J FRISBEE KH mow cases® ! TRASH CAN ■ ■ LINERS HOOVER VA- H CHUM BAGS P. DENIM SLACKS tm WOMEN BRAS A ■ HOLIDAY ■ THERMOS BOTTLES ■ GRASS SHEARS '?S| COSTUME * ® (50 FOOT) (FOR ALL DRINKS) KITCHEN TERRIES PLAY SHORTS or POLAR SHIRTS SOCKS "RELY-ON CAULKING CARTRIDGES CANVAS OXFORDS WATCH BANDS s - t DRY MIXES 9 | SOAKER HOSE 5 RECORDS for 88* TURTLENECKS POLO SHIRTS (infants) RUBBERMAID TURNTABLE PLAY BALLS TABLE NAPKINS CREST PINK DEP VO-5 Hairspray SCOPE Mouthwash (2 for 88*1 (Regular & Mock) TOOTHPASTE Mon.-Frl. 9:30 a.m. — 9:00 p.m.; Saturday 9:30 a.m. — 7:00 p.m. i f - KOHR CONVENIENT SAGE CHARGE April 2, 1970 IHE DAILY TEXAN (ta If you like Honest to goodness draft, you can draw a mug from the big keg — or — pour three mugs from the little one. They taste the same because they are the same. Honest to good­ ness draft. And you can take the Handy Glass Keg with you. That’s why this new generation premium draft is way ahead of whatever’s in second place. If you don’t believe it, try it. H P I I ne new generation premium beer ■ • Pas* J 46 friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY! TEXAN Lone Star Beer Company of Austin Airport Blvd. and Highway 290 Phone — 454-3551 T h e Da ily T ex a n Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin A U S T IN , T E X A S , F R ID A Y , A P R IL 3, 1970 As It Is This is University land — the graphic [upper left) begins an odyssey to Univer­ sity land holdings which include W inedale (upper right), M c A d a m s ' Ranch and J. Frank D ob ie 's Paisano Ranch. Dobie's re­ treat (lower left) is now occupied by R o b ­ ert G ra n t Burns, Texas poet, but an old ranch house still stands on the property [middle right) and Barton Creek continues to run below a fortress-looking ridge (low­ er right). '■ 'W r T * * ' ' r ■, : I - - . lilt!: § l l Round By d o n M cK i n n e y Am usem ents Associate fne land holds all that is man's, it provides the struc­ tural base for everything he builds, yields the foo d he eats and contains the basis o f his recreation. The Am usem ents staff has traveled to three o f the Univer­ sity land holdings to round up the facts, history and Impressions o f these areas that few students know exist. In our trek across Central Texas, we have in effect tried to round up our impressions o f the land that the University directly or indirectly controls. In a period when ecology is com ing to the forefront, we feel these land holdings and what the University is doing with them are important. 5 D A V IS By C H A R L E S D A V IS Am usem ents Associate house annually houses a G erm an play perform ed by students and faculty o f the Departm ent o f G erm anic Languages. Paisano is the ranch J. Frank Dobie used for many years to write many of his famous books on Texas ranch and rural lite. Th© ranch now provides a seclusion for . _ Three Land Holdings Show Diverse Face of University young artists for six month stave r,.rr*n+Fv, T young artists for si, month stays. Currently, Texas poet Kobert G ran t Burns is staying there. The M c A d a m s Ranch is not a bit of Texana, but it is a place out of the city where University organizations m ay retreat for overnight or weekend meetings. It o f­ fers every modern facility trimmed with seclusion. Th© . . . . * Ranch is operated through the Ex-Students' Association. The Am usem ents staff feels that these three parcels o. toe land we have trod on for years are of interest to students, we feel that they offer a side of the Univer­ sity that very little is known about am ong the student Winedale Maintains Historical Look It goes beyond the "S a v e the G r a s s " cam paign o f last spring and it even goes beyond the attempts to save the na tu rally of W aller Creek. These issues are all rn the past, but these bits of natural Texas are still alive and upon v.ewmg, remain very much in the natural state. Three sites, three land holdings, three pockets o f ground - - sprawling urban m egopoles haven't spread their multi-story buildings, high power lines, airports and ail that goes with a city over these. s t n n n T ^ l 7 attered Lshowe,rs cm 1! ^ H igh w a y 71, the rain c a c h in g the C ity o f Round T op and s ^ Iln e d _ W ienCed:fery| n T t0 +° U n ! v e r ‘ The outskirts o f W ined ale m ight cause urban snoot!- 0u.tsk,rJs of W ined ale might cause urban snoot!- £ 8SS .+° n se ' fo.r ^ b a c h ' s C a fe and a nearby mini- 4 a m L 2 . m I . I - L . C C T A r i P f t Z N r a I t . are ' ess ™ an Impressive. But, W ined ale itself j ey e‘ca tcH n g antiques presents a look that close! c l reP res®nfs ar\ area which drew settlers even before stephen r. Au stin made it a part o f his first colony. There is W inedale out near Round Top, a tract o f land that holds one of the last vestiges o f early Texan^ M iss the S t a a e c o a e U n l? TU9 i ,c ° mP rij es W ined ale is ' Thea£ e Land Fo,ur S q ^ e Barn, the n n k i . ~ ! . n y , . - p . t i i . -d . .1.1.- Th. m a s «k * , Ih . t k „ , . . _ Carolina. Each man owned a section o f land side by side and built separate double log cabins in 1831. These cabins were later joined under one roof to make a barn tor the em erging W ill Townsend family, following W ill's marriage in 1834. A t this same time, it is believed that the first segm ent of what is now called the Stageco ach Inn was constructed. The inn served as loft sleeping quarters; arid shed rooms were a d d e d at the back as the family increased. Later, the brothers sw apped several property rights ' a,nd Smg,e brofher J ohn sold the former XA/-.. ? W .l Townsend property to Kentuckian C ap t. J o h n York H ow ever Y ork's exploits as an Indian-Mexican ousted his defaulting tenant for businessman Sam uel K. Lewis in 1848. Lewis period o f ownership indicates that he brought the house to it's present charm and size. Lewis more than doubled the housing with additions of a log kitchen and smokehouse to the rear o f the main structure Frosting was sp re a d " b y home-owner Lewis as he e n j o y e d G erm an artist Rudolph M elchior to sten­ ch molding and decorate the home with elaborate and colorful paintings. To |ustify the cost o f expansion, Lewis began to put his decorative property to work as a stop­ ping place for stagecoach passengers. It then becam e known as the Sam Lewis In n " despite the fluctuating character o f country travel routes. -r^ r ' u" i j L i t * land-holding. tt,e +,me to sPend ^ p r o v in g his Texas Joseph G e o rg e W a g n e r Sr. purchased the Lewis es- York gave the now W ined ale portion to a Silas Sher- man for what is noted as "a small down paym ent." Sherman failed to pay-off his debt to York and York e' rS m 8 8 2 ' T ile Slles!* " em igrant o a s s e d T passed the property several years later to his son, J o s- S death |Un' 0r 9 " er fHe Pr0pert* until h!l (See WINEDAlaE, 20.) m e M e n 's Suit and Sp ortcoats for Sp rin g N O W 40% O F F Regularly NOW Mi Pride in Craftsmanship Ninth Street East Bell Botto m s 14.50 Seagoing Bell Bottoms Jeans Antiques: Reliving the Past Yesterday's Friends A m o n g the treasures in the Inn a t W ine- S ta g e c o a c h dale are an old spinning locally-made (I), wheel a fiddle and rocking chair. By JIM SHANAHAN Amusements Assistant is an unimportant half-forgotten To most but the very, very old, intangible" and the past relatively entity, found only in the dusty memories and of faces. Although tim e cannot be reversed, there is a lure in tile tilings of another era that can transport one of romantic inclina­ to a different place and tions time. names The Stagecoach Inn a t Wine- dale in northeast Fayette County is a bastard child of the Nine­ teenth Century. The main house of Texas cedar, (an antique in its own right) serves as a store- house for articles whose values, monetary are beyond estimation. and otherwise, The square nails which hold the massive oak and cedar tim bers together were forged by hand and still hold fast. If the wood grain of a door didn’t please the eye of one of the early German set­ tlers, he would hand paint the desired grain so realistically that IOO years la ter only the most dis- I I I crim inate observer can tell the difference between it and the real +hing. There was indeed a close­ ness between the early artisan and wood that could shame most modern woodworkers. In the main room downstairs there is a blend of the primitive and the elaborate. Against one wall there stands a finely crafted china cabinet dating from the early 1800's filled with priceless German china plates and fig­ urines. On the floor a few feet away is a cabbage-head cheese box used by the women for stor­ ing just about anything. Across the room is a wood and wicker daybed built in the 1700’s and brought from the E ast by one of the imm igrant families. At va­ rious places about the room hang lamps which burned animal fat from rendered livestock. In front of an open window rest carved chalk figurines, also dating from the early 1800‘s. The room is dark and quiet. In a room off to the side sits a Dover chest of 1775 vintage. Here, as in modem day hope farm girl chests, she hoarded would someday use as a m arried items which some the local A M U SE M E N TS PH O T O S Jim Shanahan, D on M cK inney, M I L A Y O U TS M iddy R anderson, D on M cK inney G R A PH IC S D on M cK inm woman. There is a wooden flax comb near the windowsill. Up a flight of stairs whose fir­ mness reflects the stability of the entire house, the main bedroom commands a view of the expanses to the north and west of the inn. The offset fireplace appears to be of rough-hewn marble but is actually more wood decorated by the talented artisans. On the top of an empire-styled chest lies a German prim er with Biblical stories that fired the imagination of young farm children. An embroidered towel with the stitched n a m e “M aria Miller” hangs on a door near the pine wardrobe made IO years before the Civil War, Over the cotton m attress on the bed stretches a quilt which is equally as old. The personal items of the bedroom lead one to think that he is not alone, though the room remains perfectly still. the predecessor Back downstairs lies the room where guests were entertained and family hours were passed drinking of Shiner beer. An ancient fiddle surveys the scene from its throne n ear an empty tankard. Tile heavy wooden furniture and the pencil portraits of early owners consecrate the room and absorb the darkness. This room also is still, but listens hard enough, he should not be sur­ prised to hear a haunting laugh, for if any room be alive, it is this one. if one There are too many things a t Winedale to mention them all and give their history. They cannot be adequately described in a few’ words, for then their beauty is passed over. For those who cherish the memories of days not too distant but lost forever in the pages of books and the head­ stones of overgrown cemetaries, Winedale Inn is haunted by the ghosts of time that will eventual­ ly sunder even the men of tom- morrow. (Continued from Page IC.) in 1961, when Mrs. Hazel I xxi bet­ ter of Houston bought die estate and interested another buyer in philanthropist Miss Ima Hogg. found to and its near-original Miss Hogg, an avid collector treasures, used her of antique personal the resources talents of architect John Young to restore fully tile Winedale es­ tate form. Influenced by University Chan­ cellor H arry Ransom, Miss Hogg tile the property donated University in June, 1965, for stu­ dent research on the Germanic cultural influence in Texas his­ tory . The Lauderdale House was moved onto the property for pur­ poses of housing students doing research in academic fields re­ lated to ethnic studies. to Also moved onto die property and restored by Miss Hogg is Hazel g Lone Oak Cottage, a gift of Mrs. Ledbetter, used ’ as an exhibition area and curator’s of­ fice. On the site of the original kitchen is a log kitchen donated SYNTHETIC WIGS Featured in our window each wee! "Playgirl's H airstyle o f the W eek, A ll M e n and W o m e n 's Q u ality Leather G a rm e n ts and A ccessorie s N O W 'A ica Leather Colle ction ing In Leather W e D o n 't H a ve M A Y A FOR W OMEN G ig a n t ic Inventory o f Dresses, Blouses, Pants N O W 50% O F F Antique Fur Coats ..... Battari Women's Boots Battari Women's Boots ... Large Irian Shoulder Bags Small Irian Shoulder Bags Gerson Chain B e lt s ...... M A Y A THE STORE OF CHANGES ivaca All wigs & hairpieces are available at reasonable prices. BANKAMEflfCARO M o n d a y thru S atu rd a y 10:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. W E H AVE STYLISTS TO SERVICE ALL Y O U R W IG S A N D HAIRPIECES. Your Round-Up HEADquarters P L A Y G I R L W IG S P age 2C. Friday, April 3, .1970 THE D A IL Y TEXAN 809 C O N G R E SS C A P IT A L p l a z a Culture Flourishes VZ here Barn Noises Once VZ ere Heard By CICELY WYNNE Amusements Associate It is indeed an odd place to hear a concert pianist. Tall cedar pests support roof. Visitors walk on the dirt floor the modern and, after seeing exterior, wonder in which century Winedale s theatre barn belongs. the high The bani was built around the the century, probably the remnants of an old turn of from cedar and oak timbers. the In 1963, renovation began as the exterior became modem, complementing facility’s expanded uses — as theatre, art gallery and concert hall. But the rustic interior character the Winedale atmosphere. Miss Ima Hogg, donor of the land, wanted it that way. retained in keeping with its Overseeing the work personal- , — V U ^ i u i u t v r A c t i v e U l t ? a n i floor. Most of the original frame stands. In general, the bam has been openi'd up into a theatre. Sides, three galleries and dress­ ing rooms were added, as the hayloft and stalls disappeared. Last year, the second stage of renovation began. Some o f the support beams were removed to improve the sight lines; lights from the drama department were installed. By extending the sides, seating capacity was increased to 150. The increased size allows the bam greater flexibility in pro­ gramming. Apart from the plays, the theatre hosts occasional ait exhibits, art classes, chamber music and piano concerts and workshops. Wayne Bell, co-orthn- ator for the Winedale properties, said the shows should relate to Texas history and art, but that any group may use the facilities. Most groups who participate in this programs come from Austin, Houston and Texas A&M. In the past, University groups such as the Madrigal Singers and Colle­ gium Musician have performed in the bam, As a theater, the bam provides an intimacy and atmosphere un­ like most others. Prof. Wolfgang Michael annually directs the De­ ■ - * , ' l x % ; H Germ an Heritage Rooted in Texas a picturing Inn Visitors to S ta g e c o a c h retrace two centuries, per­ haps g ra n d ­ m other bent over the sew­ in g machine, or the fam ily men ga th e red around a pit­ cher o f cool beer under the din in g hall ceiling. The thea­ tre barn rem inds p assersb y that W in e d a le also serves the present. of Germanic p a r t m e n t Languages’ German play at Winedale. He attributes the plays* packed houses to the fact that Round Top is largely a German community. Aside from th® warm audience reception, Michael finds the bam structure exciting. “It provides a certain improm­ ptu atmosphere, with the small stage and dirt floor.” He remem­ bers last year when the back­ stage flooded and the actors had to walk about on planks. Sine® then, the outside has been drained to prevent flooding, and a hard compound has been added to the dirt floor. Actors are separated from the audience by a few steps, conse­ quently, their physical relation, ship during a performance is un­ usually close. The stage itself is flexible because of platforms that can be erected on it. From April IO through 12, th® Winedale Fine Arts Festival will be held in the theater. People from Texas colleges have been invited, the German players under Michael’s dire­ ction. including the buildings such as who made i t, w h e n , construction and material used. “ Winedale is a part of Texas heritage,” Jeffreys said. “The Stagecoach Inn is not a house where someone used to live, but a museum. The Inn is a collection of articles used or that might have been used by settlers in the 1840’s.” Jeffreys tries to make Winedale as authentic as possible. One day in October of 1968, as an experi­ ment, he soaked some meat in i salt water and smoked it in the I-°g Smokehouse for two weeks. He hung the meat up and left it. One can’t help but think of the moldy meat in the smoke­ house. “ 2 m ■ Adventures G alore £ 2 ORIENT/EXPO70 ■ E S C O R T E D T O U R ® t v June 11 V . Jcg ' ^ 30/34 Days SI995 ■ p""" * ■ ■ ■ 5 ■ « B Relax in Romantic Hawaii Discover Enchanting Jap an Enioy Swinging Hong Kong JhP'ST* Exotic Bangkok v ?? .Cr 1ambo ! i < $ IM K^rjk =-*- = manor costs less — offers more IPCjy with a supervised system to let those with parental perm ission come and g o as they please. w ith 21 w eekly m eals a n d continuous Sund ay d in in g service. with am ple free p ark in g in an area adjacent to the residence hall. with bus service from our front door to get you to your class on time. now 2505 Longview at 25th Page 4 C Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Paisano Seclusion Inspires Creativity NHERSON * A — .. . . a. ■» ... to stare into for long hours (c); and the a canes in his strolls across the land (r). * sano. A U n iversity property w here a rtists are free to crea te surrounded by integrity of nature. the untouched a half. I faltered a bit at the knee-high w ater over the bridge, but decided if the goats can make it across so could I. open a nail. Bums greeted us warmly and told us that the gate really was link* was unlocked—the hooked over con­ templated murdering McKinney, but then realized that on our walk we had seen its finest light, free from machines and noise and civilized trappings. the ranch in I And that is the beauty of Pai- h 11 VP .‘it I Hr* r.'lOph and 'otn t-» J *v> live at the ranch and devote him­ self to creative work. Mrs. Bertha McKee Dobie, D obies widow, tells the story of the project in a brochure on the ranch. She says that Frank Ward- law, director of the University Press, formed a steering com­ mittee of Dobie's to decide how to make Paisano into a fitting memorial to the man who had lived there. friends RALPH JOHNSTON’ of Houston bought Paisano on an interim basis to gain time, then Wardlaw invited carefully selected artists to donate a painting or drawing to be auctioned at a dinner for the project's benefit. Proceeds from the auction to ­ gether with donations enabled the I niversify to purchase the ranch from Johnston. The Texas Insti­ tute of le tte rs sponsors one six - month recipient with a $3,000 fellowship. The other is sponsored by the Ralph Johnston Memorial Fellowship. As Mrs. Dobie says, “ Talent, R E M O V E D P E R M A N E N T L Y B Y E L E C T R O L Y S IS Step T w * r u n g , S h a v in g , W o x in g or m in g Decile. T O fiC i tor tc m p o ro ry rem oval, fo r C om p lete c a m p i.m e n ta ry c o n su lta tio n — D a y In fo rm a tio n and A p p o in tm e n t fo r or E v en in g C A L L 4 5 2 - 5 6 5 6 JEAN’S ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO M B S . J I A N W H A R T O N — T E C H N I C I A N A cc re d ite e b y 1 9 6 9 D irecto r o f P ro fe ssio n a l E ie ctro lo g istt — 7201 Daugherty — 2404 G u a d a lu p e D R IV E A L IT T L E — S A V E A U 3 I « et. 1/3et. 1/2et. 3/4 e t ' * 31.50 * • # # 41.00 125.00 275.00 275.00 CAPITOL DIAM OND SHOP AUSTIN 476-017S O '/.c', G a o d S n iffle SP\c (/e m W e ’ve g o t a lit t le s o lu t io n th a t’s b i g e n o u g h to h a n d le i t . . . MY OWN H y g i e n i c D eo d oran t Spray for the ou ter vaginal area . . . refresh in g ... g e n t l e . .. Also sn a cleansing towclette. A ll M e n and W o m e n 's Q u a lity Leather G arm ents and A ccessories N O W Jackets • Vests • Dresses • Poncho's • Belts • Purses W atchbands • Etc. From Such Nam es A s Pioneer W e a r • J.M . Buchheimer • D 'N az Jorgeas • An-Ev And O u r Own Line LO V E LE A T H E R S M A Y A M o nday thru Saturday This Trom a C om plete Collection BahkAmericahu Bikinis, O n e Piece suits, Points, C o v e r - U p s . O ffer Is G o o d This W eekend O nly Bag $12. M onogram s $2 and up. Kelly, hot pink, navy, yellow, white and others. Extra covers available at $4. Mmamomm th® shop for appete # 7 Jefferson Square You choose a m a jo r. . , (about 30 semester hours) A nd four interdisciplinary courses . . . (about 12 semester houri) ation A nd the rest is up to you. (totaling 120 semester hours) ST. EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY For more information please write: Director of Adm issions St. Edw ard’s University Austin, Texas 7 8 7 0 4 r s your move. Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN madison house, dexter house. madison bellaire. another university cf texas "triple option", and no. I in off-campus housing for U.T. \ MADISON-BELLAIRE m a d i s o n h o u s e 709 West 22nd~ COME SEE. COME LIVE DEXTER HOUSE 1103 West 24th COME SEE. COME LIVE, M A D ISO N BELLAIRE Page 6C Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN By ix>v McKin n e y A m usem ents A ssociate them som e of Tho land aud thp sculpting of it h as long intrigued poets and their best given subject m a tte r. J. F ra n k Dobie, T exas author, w as one of these people th at w as in love with the land. Tlie sm all goat ranch he um*(1 as a reclusion to w rite m ost of his books, Paisano, still pro­ vides a hide-a-way for authors. The ranch is given over to a six author once every T exas m onths for the purposes of lite r­ ary' creation. The poet in re si­ dence is R obert G ran t B um s. He like Dobie finds backgrounds and inspiration for his w ork from the land. term this for into B u m s said th at on the d ay he moved ran ch Austin th e experienced its first e a rth trem o r In ap p roxim ately 30 y e ars and B arton Creek which ru n s in front of the ran ch house rose above its n orm al level. P e rh ap s this a u stere beginning was th e s ta rt of a series of m inor incidents to color the p o e ts stay . " I w as aw akened one m orning to sound of clum ping on th e front porch. I looked out the window Bums Follows 5 Other Artists Poet R obert G ran t B urns is the tem p o rary resident a t J . sixth F ran k D obie's P aisano ranch. O ther recipients fellowship were w riters Bill Porterfield, A. C. Greenie, Eldon B randa and Jack Causon. A rtist Jose Cisneros, who finished for a project on p r e c e d e d Causon, illustrations “ Horsem en of the B order.” r Touch of Nature A t Paisano the artist anet man ar® with th® land and nature. Robert G ra n t Burns, Texas poet (I) surveys the ranch. Burns uses the same desk Dobie used (upper right) and all in tun® with the setting (lower right). Poet at Paisano Enjoys Solitude Wildcat, Cattle and G oats Keep Him Com pany p rojects, which volum e of poetry and a novel. include an o th er J he relaxed ap p earan ce he pre- enjoying his stay th ere and his reflections about the land show is the Paisano program th at seats is proof enough th a t he is worth the tim e. and saw a herd of black cows looking back the win­ dow.” through Tile high w ater on the creek had w ashed out the fences and the c a ttle had w andered over to be neighborly. O ther visitors a re a wild c a t and a v ariety of goats “ that seem to get into the y a rd no m a tte r w hat I do.” T here have been quietly beauti­ ful events for him to ap p reciate, also. “ One evening a thunder storm cam e o v er and ju st beyond the ridge the sun w as setting. The effect w as to turn th e ground and plants and falling rain into a flowing gold.” Bums also likes the feel of tile land, som etim es he tak e s (me of several walking canos Dobie left behind and w alks down the oreek o r walks the pro p erty lines. He pointed out. “ You can only se e one power and telephone line to on die property, th ere a re no o th ers to d isturb the n atu raln ess of the lan d scap e.” th e world. Poem s Inside the house he h as boxes journals col-' full of notes and looted from places lie h as been around for m ailing lie in deep stack s on the dining table and desk. P e rh a p s th e only thing th a t looks out of harm ony in the sm all house is an elec tric the co n trast is not enough to destroy th e im age of a poet a t w ork. ty p ew riter but B um s him self is of av erag e height w ith longish brow n h air One notices alm ost im m ediately 1 his fingers to have th a t seem lim itless possibility' of m ovem ent. H e for m an y y e a rs studied c la s­ sical piano and before he went to P aisano taught piano. B um s h as one volum e of poetry published th at is cu rren tly out of p rin t. He is w'orkmg on several £ N o need to wait until TOMORROW to buy those things you need TODAY Sears has 3 Credit Plans Read about each of them below use those that suit you the best Sears * * * * * \ iMm vt**00* ' ( y ■ •• " r mumms -zr*' y . ‘A ■ \ t i as-- I > X* ■ \ k ' * us j f . -Z I £ . ./ * ' * J - A V-. / ' / . / BOUTIQUE 2405 NUECES ST. < N ... V T . d 'f .M i V Heavy fashions & Custom -m ade clothes ■ lh-'" M W C f d I A & S S * * * . ^ ’f t , ■ ' ' : % y ; V i i j a r ' ' ' J * - I SEARS REVOLVING CHARGE ACCOUNT Makes all y o u r shopping so much easier — you just say “Charge I t ” 2. SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN Especially useful for b u y i n g home furnishings, home appli­ ances — a host of other things. SEARS MODERNIZING CREDIT PLAN Perfect to use when repairing, improving your home. Special Feature: privilege of a d d i n g home modernizing merchandise to your account at any time without complicated paper work. TOWER MANOR C o m e visit us a n d see w h y so m a n y CREDIT University w o m e n soy Tower M a n o r . FOR THE N E W YOUNG COUPLE y i I is the ideal place to live! L iv in g room, 2 bdrms, 2 full baths, kitchen, & d in i n g area in each suite T V l o u g e E le v a to rs rn rn • M a i d service Su n d e ck E l e g a n t living f o r y o u n g w o m e n Fully a/c Fre e p a rk in g L a u n d r y facilities S t u d y H all I blk. f r o m c a m p u s 19 m e a ls/ w e e k Now Open For Summer 6- Fall Semesters! call: 477-2185 1908 U n iv e rsity Don t ask us! Ask your neighbor — or better yet ask your folks. Who gives better service? Who has a credit plan for every need? Who has quality merchandise — no seconds? Who has served American familiies for eighty-three years? Who still cares about you — the buying public? Mom and Dad Grandpa and Grandma — and the new generation all go for Sears Credit Plans — Geared to serve you better. Open your ac­ count today'. Sears has a Credit Plan to suit Your Needs Open Your Account Today SHOP AT SEARS AND SA V E Satisfaction Guaranteed or Y our M oney Back Sears HANCOCK CENTER 41st and Interregional S E A R S , R O E B U C K A N D CO DIAL 452-9211 STORE HOURS Mon.-Frt 9:30-9 Saturday 9:30-6 Friday. A D ril 3. 1970 T H P H A U Y T P Y A W p ™ nr- This is how It is at Hardin North • Three blocks west of University Ji can^||Si|^ Mph • Fully furnished apartments, two bedroom one bedroom^,^^ efficiency s.* •'. A • \ £ : a J \ • All-electric fj; kitchens - i f ‘\ c V J ' « . ! “ “• ’V - i . , . ,'V i • Sensible round-the clock security 4 ’J-* • Swimming pomjW • No. hopf restrictions • Male guests until midnight weekdays, . 2 a. rn. weekends • . •• ;•' •% • Restaurant , ' • Shopping m a '^ p ' (soon to open)' • Maid service. • Launderettes oh - every floor • Individual climate control Parking garage • Roof-top sun deck Come and see f< yourself. Hardin North is differen Convenience, independence, security in a nev style for living. ■ ■ HARDIN NORTH Apartments for Girls 801 West 24th Street 512-476-76361 Ranch room house was donated by Mr. and Mrs. Kelly McAdams of Aus­ tin “ for the use and benefit of the University of Texas." As many as 50 people may sleep there and there are enough dishes to serve 40 people. For recreation, there’s a swim­ ming pool and screened patio, in Brushy Creek and fishing exploration ‘ what David McGHvray calls "our own version of Wonder Cave—a 30-foot cave and a spring in the rocks which of supplies the water." The McGilvrays have their own house on the property where they have lived since September. “Its use is only limited by the amount of time to imagine it," Roy Vaughn of the Ex-Students’ Association said. Looking around the place, one can imagine many uses for it. The house is almost directly on the road, a mile and a half east of Interstate 3.") on State Highway 79. The front yard is a nice place People Together to play frisbee and there are two swings on the front porch where people may sit and talk. AII sorts of groups could come here on retreats. They might be Irom University organizations or departments—students and fac- ulty. They might be from various groups, meeting to see how they work together, or even similar groups from different schools in the University System, Tile house itself resembles a series of smaller houses, put to­ gether as to grow. it needed There s an efficiency apartment that is separate from tile main house and a guest house close by Brushy Creek. Tile Large dining room and dou­ ble-kitchen area are designed for groups of eight, 40 or any number in between. Dishes, utensils and even a dishwasher are furnished. A group which wanted to meet informally to plan or evaluate could use eitiler the living room or the den, both of which have a fireplace, couches and chairs to and lots of floor space spread out on. One visualizes dis­ cussions demonstrations, sensitivity grouping or game simulation to bring a group to a common un­ derstanding. situations used and For example, a portion of Tile Daily Texan staff could spend a there. What happens on night such it a valuable? to make retreat Tile staff members can sit in the dining room or in the den and talk about the Amusements department and then the whole the other then all Texan and things that they are interested in. They ran be working together, fixing breakfast or building a firo or cleaning up after its all over. They ean wander in tile woods and wade the creek and speculate on the story behind the old house across the road. in Time to Build Up, Time to Break DowrT By MIKE FLUITT Amusements Assistant is ranch The McAdams a godsend. A quiet little world with an atmosphere all its own. It’s a place where frazzled minds can go to recuperate. The ranch recently had a chance to work its magic when eight souls descended on it with rather uncertain thoughts as to what they would find there. They found more than thev expected. Five members of The Texan amusements staff, two new and unsure additions to the staff, and a tired folk-singer came together there, and when they left it was as one revitalized group, not as the three harried, hassled and tired ones that had come. The real purpose of tile visit to the ranch was to study it for use in a feature story,' but it was a good excuse to get away from the University grind for a while. It also was an opportunity for the amusements staff, Middy <‘lu llic < , The clever w a y to keep clothes clean, wrinkle and d u st free, af hom e o r while traveling. Front and back zippers fo r e a sy access to garm ents. Free m o n o g ra m on leather plaque. Patented to p closure keeps hangers secure. G r e y with black tr'm . P U R C H A SE S M O N O G R A M M E D FREE IS. LADIES M ail or Phone Orders Pilled Promptly Charge Accounts Incited — Use our coneen,ent layaway or Bank Americard r • A m tm a n Express • Carte Blanche • Diner's Club • Presto Mueller •915 CONGRESS G R 2-8079 Serving Austin Since 1893 Staffers Share Rural Adventure | A ! A N D Ll Journey’s End M c A d a m s Ranch forms the end of this odyssey to University holdings. land The douche floor screened- in back porch reflects th® wilderness that stretches be­ hind the house (upper right! and the brick exterior of the front (lower right) marks a return to normality and University life. The graphic is a reminder that the land Is always with us, though lf may go unnoticed «t times. city of the short excursion. F in­ ally dam p and a little scratched around the ank les d ie explorers retreated back the “ ran ch ’’ house. to To the beat of imported h a r d - rock and folk rock tile sta ff set about the business of the w eek ­ little a s possible. end—doing a s Bonnie F reeland found a rocker that suited lier fram e of m ind and carefu lly and slow ly hyp­ notized h erself into a relaxed state. Staff w riters Mike F luitt and Jim Shanahan spun a few yards of yarns and a stra n g e re­ laxed sta te settled over the w hole crowd. The slow ed -down p a ce of the open land w as beginning to take hold and the m a g ic m yriad m u sic of the creek could be heard over in front of the the road noises idle, to be house. Not w ishing into G eorgetow n an w as organized and the n e w folksinger D avid Brad- caught street's last few se ts at South­ w estern U niversity. excursion The return trip had added an extra entrepreneur, B radstreet, com plete with guitar. This tim e in for the the crew w as settled n;ght and a s before a leth a rg ic sta te settled over the crew of tile a m u sem en ts staff. Several a ttem p ts to g e t a fire in one of the two fire ­ roaring p la ces finally proved ineffectual, but the sound of soft guitar m u sic from B radstreet and Shanahan added all the n e c essa ry e ffe c ts for a cam p-out inside the house. The hours began to slip by with unim portant, unliterary rapping until the a ssem b la g e one-by-one began to slip silen tly into slu m ­ shortly before ber. S o m etim e daw n sta ffer Don M cK inney provided a wolf ca ll from inside h is d rea m s the picture of isolation. com plete to Lafe afternoon sn eaked in the w indow s and th e fire that evaded us the night before flared ea sily . It w as a tim ely even t, the rain hadn't let up and a chili pervaded the room . This w a s Sunday and the hours w ere m oving tow ards departure but nobody talked about it. No one w'anted to end tile slow beauty o f being together, of being out of the c ity , and of being unbothered by deadlines, c la sse s and quizzes. routine. What it all adds up to Is that there is a p la ce for people to be together unhindered by the sh ack les of a daily M cA dam s ranch is a p la ce to ca lm ly and quietly deal w ith n ag­ g in g routines and business, it is a place w h ere any U n iv ersity organization can retreat and in the light of a different rea lity red iscover the people th ey air* a sso cia tin g with m ost of the year. M cA d am s’ ranch is pivot point for an o d yssey of U niversity land holdings. o e e - r a r i n g t7irl W ho wants a great Ship-Shape Look! n.i.s for Her B y d o n M cKi n n e y Amusement* Associate One w eek of spring w eather does not a i w ays assure a w eek­ end of the sa m e calibre around Austin. Saturday m orning dawned cool and d ism a lly gray as the about sta ff A m u sem en ts preparing the M cA dam s Ranch on a retreat. Sure enough, halfw ay down the highw ay the rain began to fall slo w ly but persistently. leave for set to E xitin g onto the Round Rock highw ay did bring a m om entary change the forlorn w eather, the dogging rain lifted for a brief w h ile, but die sun wa* not to 6how all w eekend. iii Tile long spraw ling house re­ sem b les anything but a ranch house and it ’s not anyw here near rustic. Inside the house w as like visitin g a hom e builder's prime ex a m p le of suburbia. It Is later that a fascination for the entire p la c e begins to im plant itself on tile mind. e x citem e n t to ex a m in e the their Unpacked and with a w e a th e r- staff subdued latest began find. The bedroom s seem ed to stretch to infinity and back. the sw im m in g pool in back m ight any eu ler tim e have looked inviting, seen B rushy C reek could be tum bling over a concrete road­ way-darn two-level sc: acned porch could alm ost have touched the low hanging skyline. and the Curiosity got th e bettor of us and a short sa fa ri w as organized to inc; stig&te tile creek gushing in the background. and rushing Intrepid C icely Wynne m ade her debut as a w ater ballet star after falling into the shallow w ater on the dam . Under norm al circu m ­ sta n ce s it m ight have been tragic but sin ce the rain had turned to m ist it really didn t m atter m uch, E ditor M iddy Randerson, lead­ ing the sa fa ri, m anaged to find in larg t • nest of chiggers the C entral T exas and not to be left alone led Sara G eorge into Hie heart of them . Safaris aj-e known for th eir trouble points and M iss locate R anderson m anaged briar, needle g ra ss and grai burrs just to add to the author, ti to Final Word Bt MIDDY RANDERSON A m usem ents Editor And that's the w ay we sa w it the hand. the plots of earth ii Central T exas that belong to oui U niversity. In this preparing specia Round-Up edition w e all ca m e t< a closer realization of not ou rselves and each other but o the countryside that is the o f e v ery U niversity student foi his four-year sojourn in Austin. We found that the University is not just c la s se s and exam s but a place for reflection, relaxa tion and deeper personal learn ­ ing. W m edale is perfect for absorb­ ing T exas history- and culture in its natural settin g far from pale green w alls, desk s and notebooks. P a isa n o offers an unparalleled o; portunity for the solitude crea ­ tivity craves. And M cAdam s Ranch, w ell. M cA dam s is an alm ost m agical realm where students can join with the environm ent and for a brief m om ent becom e a part of the land that sh a p es them . The first reaction to the ranch is “ this it can't really be for u s ,” but can is, any U n iversity group reserv e a day or a for w eekend. it In this tim e when the problem s of ecology and m an s m isuse of the ea rth ’s resources are com ing more and m ore to the forefront, it that such to know places exist. N ot only do they exist, they are there for our use. Is good In closin g am usem ents th e section of the sp ecia l Round-Up edition of The Texan. I want to lrg e all students to take advan­ c e of what is here, to go to P inedale or spend a weekend at dcA dam s. U se the opportunities ’ou have as a student to get o know the land that is ours. 2322 G U A D A L U P E PIZZA. HUT ROUND-UP W elcom es Everyone at The University o f Texas Make your Round-Up Weekend more Enjoyable by Eating a delicious Pizza at any of our Three Convenient Locations 1809 Guadalupe A ' 2- 7S\ \ 6444 Burnet Rd. 454.4141 1011 Reinli (C apital Plaza) 454-2477 A j a r Real girl in a teal world . . . learning, living, making each day count a Jittle riiore. Her Hardin North apartment ■* ✓ - v .jA is part of it-alf < . . >. . convenience, Security, . ^ , '■ * • *> t ' ; Jt ' gJH independence . ^ yr on. her way. .. . ~ . a H B Apartments for West 24th Street 512-476-7636 ' * . - - v - , vs " v v. O ' ■ us.i* I Friday, April 3. 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 9Q Multiversity man is president of the Unlver sky at Austin. Sev era I new features will greet returning Exes, such as a new Department of Oriental and A fri­ can Languages and Literatures. Law school graduates will re- ceieve a Juris Doctor degree in stead of the traditional ELB. The Beau ford Jester Dormitory Com­ plex opened this fall to * house 2,0 JO students. Memorial Stadium will receive a new upper deck during the year that will seat an additional 14,000. "Die 61st Texas Legislature has authorized the new campuses for the University System. Basin: This will be a two-year upper-level general academic university in the Midland-Odessa area. It will open for the fall semester in 19<3. Since there are already two junior colleges in the area, no first or second year stu­ dents will be admitted. • Institute of Texan Cultures at San Antonio: This institute is now the Texas State Exhibits Building at HemisFair, The func­ tion of the center will be to pro­ vide resource material for public school children as well as Uni­ versity scholars. • University at San Antonio: This will bo a four-year general j academic institution which will open in the fall of 1973. A spec­ ial feature of the campus will be bilingual instruction in Spanish and English, especially in the de­ partments of education and bus­ iness. D ils aspect of the campus which University at San Anto­ nio will share with University at E l Paso, is an effort to relate to local conditions and needs," said Dr. Kenneth Ashworth, assistant to the vice-chancellor for acade­ mic programs. • University at Dallas: This will be an upper-level undergrad­ uate and graduate general aca­ demic university that opened this fall for graduate students. No undergraduates w ill be admitted before 1975. At present, no fresh­ men or sophomores will be ad­ mitted. The Dallas area will have seven junior colleges by 1975 and these will supply junior- and senior-level students' to Uni­ versity at Dallas. ® University of the Permian • Medical School at Houston will be a full-fledged medical school sim ilar to the existing ones in Galveston, Dallas and San Antonio. Already in Houston are a dental branch, a graduate school of biomedical sciences, and a school of public health. Already in the University Sys­ tem are: • University at Arlington, a general four-year academic uni­ versity that was recently autho­ rized to offer a doctoral degree in engineering. • University at E l Paso, al­ so a four-year college. It offers no instruction past the master’s level. • Several hundred miles from the Austin campus are two research units of the main Uni­ versity — the Iastitute of Marine Science at Pori Aransas and the McDonald Observatory near Fort Davis. The observatory houses the world's third largest (107- inches) telescope. • Nursing schools of the Uni­ versity are located in several ci­ ties, but the Board of Regents has approved a new, permanent home to be built in Austin. RAYMOND'S DRUGS Girls, come visit our new Cosmetic Department at 2706 RIO GRANDE PH. 472-2134 The Bahama Hop to Europe Stopover In beautiful Nassau * enroute to Europe. W e're of- k fering a terrific Island package —then the lowest transatlantic cir fare from the southland. With big DC-8 fan/ jets, wines and wonderful meals, direct to Luxem bourg in the heart of everything. Live it up for a single day or up to 45 days. Call your travel agent now or International Air Baham a, Ingraham Bldg., Miami, Fla. 33131. (305) 379-9591. 'Slightly higher, peak season and weekends. J * U A * * Ti O N A i M n bmfit. ICELANDIC AIRLINES, Genera! Agents UT: A B y HOWARD L I N D S A Y Texas Exes returning to the Austin campus wall realize that It is moving out of .its role as ‘ tho University" to a member of a multiversity. Tho University already has 20 campuses, with five more approved. From one building in 1883 with 221 students, tho University has blossomed into a state-wide con­ figuration with a total enrollment approaching 60,000. Harry Ransom is chancellor of tlte University System, The gov­ erning body of the System is a board of nine Regents who are .selected from different areas of the state. They are nominated by the governor and confirmed by the Senate Chairman of the Board of Regents is Frank C. Erwin Jr. Dr. Norman Hacker- Love is a many-splendored ring I Carot Total W eight $ 3 6 9 r n a t $75 Advertise Your Student Housing Now in The DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED STUDENTS ARE LOOKING NOW FOR FAU & SUMMER HOUSING CALL GR 1-5244 N O W FOR Q U IC K SER V IC E You Get 15 Words For One Low Price! IO Insertions For Only !'!i S " T 5 0 20 Insertions For Only OO Page IOC Friday, April 3, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Ready to Be Tapped I t l . . Ihese kegs are awaking the beer-quzzlina rush of Round-Up perty-goers. . —Staff Photo Local Liquor Barons Cash-!n on Round-Up B y M O LLY M ADSEN When you’re out of Schlitz. Pearl, Bud . . . . or whatever your favorite brew . . . you might just as well forget Round Up! Local beer distributors plan not to face such a situation, and are stocking up to meet tills year’s Round-Up rush. The biggest weekend in t h e dealer s year w ill see the aver­ age fraternity spend $1,000 on beer, some groups floating up to 50 large kegs during their two evenings of parties. BU D IVEIS E R B R E M E R IE S sold .)2 kegs last year to a frater­ nity they preferred not to name. To give one an idea just how much liquid that is, remember las year's Eyore’s Birthday Party, where only 40 kegs of Pearl were consumed. That celebration was attended by thousands of Univer­ sity students and members of the Austin community. in mind, the average Keep k r" holds IS 1; 2 gallons or 620 gallons w'ere consumed to cele­ brate the birth of the donkey in Winnie the Pooh. Cost per keg is about $20. Mack Burnett, warehouse sales manager for Pearl beer, said that on an average weekend he sells about 20 kegs of beer to Austin fraternities. During Round Up weekend he releases approxi­ mately 250 kegs. J . DAN BROWN, owner of the local Budweiser distributorship, owns the largest cooling facili­ ties in Austin. He has the capa­ cify to refrigerate 1,700 kegs, and therefore, doesn’t nm ! to sfock- pile kegs in other cities. Harry Berry, vice president and general manager of Schlitz Distributing Company, has found it necessary in the past to store beer in San Antonio for tile Uni­ versity’s celebration. But Taverns and lounges notice a slight drop during the spring weekend. the breweries aren't the only merchants to feel a rise in profits. Bottled and canned beer sold in area store* is also in demand. Local liquor stores evidently don’t feel die boom. Sales hit about the same level as on a big football weekend. Makes a beer distributor wan­ der what he’d do without April 3rd and 4th. Some Sales Boosted By RANDY EI.LIO T T To many of the merchants on the Drag Round-Up means a boost in aspirin or liquor sales, but to some it just means another day’s work. Eldon Powell, who's been sell­ ing flowers for 3-years on the Drag, says, ‘As far as my busi­ ness is concerned I don't realize it’s (Round-Up) going on." He reminisced back to when floats, formals and parents were in­ volved and said " it helped my business then." J B. Camp, assistant manager of Sommers Drugs, agreed with Powell in saying that tile floats really helped business. He said little dif­ there probably is a ference between income in Round-Up week and other weeks but "we haven't noticed it." TH E \ ARS1TY Theater man­ ager, said. Joe Cromleigh, ‘ ‘ R o u n d - U p doesn’t affect business at ah. lf you have a good show they’ll come anyway. I here is no big surge or drop in business." Many merchants view Round- terms of more people in Up means more money. Bob Jacobson, owner of G il­ lett \s men store, quipped, “ More people town means more people in the store. Visitors come in and pick up things that aren’t worn at home." in "Round-Up attracts a lot of out of town people and this increases the purchases of gifts," D. M. Sheftall, manager of Sheftall’s jewelry, said. "M A N Y TEXAS-EX E S come flack to buy their class ring during a time like this," said Sheftall. He said that last week a graduate of 1938 had returned to purchase his ring which he could not afford when he graduated. restaurant, T or I^arry Rainosek, manager of Chambers the I exas Relays at the close of Round-l’p week means the most of his business. "On Saturday I have a big increase from noon until the middle of the after­ noon,” Rainosek said. Although Round-Up may have if no, effect on some little, merchants the same does not apply to all. Like in the case of C. L. White­ head, manager of the Bottle Shop liquor store, nothing but success can flow from a full week of parties, W H ITEH EA D SAID , "Round- Up doubles our business. We prepare for Round-Up.” He ex­ plained that they order a little extra and that they "sell more beer kegs at this time. I n c o m e "higher priced stuff during stated. this increases because is sold tim e," Whitehead "Weather depends a lot on what is bought,” said Whitehead, " If it’s hot they buy beer and if its cold they buy hart! stuff to u'arm them up." At Hemphill’s the big sales go in favor of Texas souvenirs. Mrs. Gensie B. Hemphill said, "U T souvenirs, mugs, trays, stuffed animals, sweat shirts and any other items with a Texas emblem on it are selling items. We always have plenty of Texas seals on hand." ash Sometimes business Is felt after Round-Up is over. Such is the case of SheftalTs jewelry. Sheftall said, the Monday after Round-Up engagement rings are often sold." "On h o r iz o n s ! unlimited METAPHYSICAL BOOKSTORE HERMETIC PHILOSOPHY ALCHEMY TAROT ASTROLOGY INDIAN LORE ESOTERIC PSYCHOLOGY CLASSES NOW FORMING IN TAROT PHILOSOPHY 1008 W e s t Avenue 478-6673 Hours: 10-6, Monday thru Saturday m u m R e a c h out, e xp a n d y o u r w o rld of peop le and id e as at the U n iv e rsity of P e n n syl- v a n i a S u m m e r S e s s i o n s . O v e r 2 9 0 co u rse s, from A r c h a e o lo g y to Zoology, offer cre dit tow ard an und e rgra d u a te , flraduate or p ro fe ssio n a l degree. For com ple te inform ation, m ail ih l * coupon today. D Newt Four special co u rse s in m usic at Teton Village, W yom ing. Ju ly 2 0 to A ug. 28. Name- Addrest. City_ State- -Z IP - UNIVERSITY of PENNSYLVANIA S u m m e r S es sio n s Room 15C, C o lle g e H a ll ^ P h ila d e lp h ia , P e n n s y lv a n ia 19104 RAYMOND'S IS OPEN ALL DAY AND HALF THE NIGHT Round-Up Effects p ’!;*. . - ■-.. : % *> Building Skywards Si&ri&w&w MWgMMM ~P h oto hjr Rent Pert* Tho rising University Center Is seen through scaffolding at the Humanities Research C e n - fer cifA. 0 7 O A K I I I C C ' C C C T n r r - r 2706 N U E C E S STREET RESIDENCE HALLS FOR YOUNG WOMEN OF THE UNIVERSITY 2707 RIO GRANDE ST. We Invite Your Inspection For The SUMMER and FALL Semesters | | I J; I I THE CONTESSA: • 2-STUDENT SUITES • 4-STUDENT SUITES Private Bath Semi-Private | THE CONTESSA WEST: • 3-STUDENT SUITES - Each has Private Room • 4-STUDENT SUITES - Semi-Private w /Lounge • 6-STUDENT SUITES - Semi-Private AFFORDABLE LUXURY FOR TODAY’S COLLEGE STUDENT. B ro W M O B S * * a s s * — — ------ M H a m i i Com e b y or For gf j Information and Brochures Coty Almay Andrea Revlon Lanvin Cord ay Chanel bio • kur Jean Nate’ Mary Quant Max Factor Jean D’Albert Houbigant Christian Dior Marcel Germaine Helena Rubenstein 16 NAMES TO OPEN YOUR EYES TO FASHION and his to you I street floor cosmetics • Chauffeur Driven Cadillac • Living in Elegance • Ice Machine in Contessa • 3 Blocks from Campus • Fully A ir Conditioned • 20 Meals Per Week ® Kitchenette in all Contessa Vilest Suites • Swimming Pools and Sundecks • Color TV • Free Parking • Laundry Facilities • Maid Service • Experienced Supervision THE CONTESSA 2706 Nueces St. Austin, Texas 78705 477-9766 CONTESSA WEST 2707 Rio Grande St. Austin, Texas 78705 476-4648 frid ay , April 3, J 970 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g . J J C ^ _ G ‘ M [<^ 1SPOI4 1u\s M e e n o n OXLC fcUT&it OU Ex or- -TM^ M C U S T " B g S ^ t C A o - ' P & o p c c . ^ l j ; - f l u o - 4ZM& 444*3* 3£0,©fc v<4i;jo ?&#>?.• It^>. i t ’s f o r r e a l . . . ‘ t T l l C f o s f i r n 478-98H 2323 San Antonio ag e I2C Friday. April 3. I970 THE DAILY TEXAN f