No. 99 Tan Cants AUSTIN. TEXAS. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26. 1970 Sixteen l>e<,ek Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin S U GAMES S en * AIM el Vb m SMU al TOG M etal laylar ■ w h a al SUHM SU Navy nu Anay Atotoai al Atoka** 1£G al Tmtoae Oaftdaad al Detroit (peal Greea Bay at Dalhe (pre) D earer a t Houston (pre) Last Week Season's Record Qeergto Tack al Ctoargb Ohtohinu St. at T t o t iw WHw Dame al Winston Cal Georgia Tech 20-9 Oklahoma 28-7 Notre Dame 21-20 Georgia Tech 30-18 Georgia Tech 16-10 Georgia Tech 24-17 Oklahoma 17-14 Oklahoma 35-17 Oklahoma St, 14-13 Oklahoma 31-14 Notre Dame 42-14 Notre Dame 49-14 Notre Dame 38-24 Notre Dame 25-22 Notre Dame 28-14 SYLVAN RODRIGUEZ GARY TAYLOR HARTLEY HAMPTON JOHN CARK KI J, JANET CARRELL TIM SISK Texas 31-14 SMU 28-13 Rice 14-13 Houston 24-7 Army 10-6 Auburn 49-34 Georgia 21-14 Oklahoma 17-15 USU 107 Detroit 14-10 Dallas 21-17 Houston 20-10 8-5 80-34-3 .702 Texas 48-13 TCG 17-14 Rice 31-14 n a . St. 24-15 A m y 33-10 A d m 23-17 LSU 34-17 Oakland 22-10 Dallas 30-10 Houston 17-15 9-4 82-32-3 .719 Texas 48-7 SMU 14-7 Rice 14-10 Navy 17-10 Auburn 24 21 Florida State 33-28 LSU 28-17 Oakland 28-21 Green Bay 35-30 Denver 32-17 6-7 52 24 .688 CRAIG BIRD Texan 35-10 SMU 28-27 Rice 16-7 Houston 33-30 Army 14-12 Auburn 24-17 TSU 27-3 Oakland 34-28 Dallas 44-31 Houston 27-24 7-6 77-37-3 .675 Texas 49-7 SMU 3121 Rice 14-7 Houston 42-28 Army 21-10 Auburn 24 21 Georgia 24-14 Tulare 10-7 Detroit 31-28 Dallas 17-10 Denver 35-31 9 4 79-35-3 .692 Texas 45-14 SMU 21 17 Rice 17-14 Fla. S t 34 21 Army 21-17 Auburn 38-27 IS V .350 Detroit 24-21 Green Bay 24-17 Denver 34-21 Guess (t) Expert • Texas 45-7 SMU 17-10 Rice IOT Houston 28-14 Navy 14-7 Auburn 24-14 Georgia Tech 34-17 Okla. S t 21-17 Notre Dame 24-17 LSU 28-3 Detroit 31 21 Green Bay 24 17 Denver 35-11 Guess (t) Expert "TU,-, I ne McGee' # 1776— Betsy Ross Stripes: N oth ing new in the Fabric from one o f A m ericas oldest shirt makers but a revolution in sty’e and comfort. 4 inch d o ve " collar. Two button cuffs Body shape and square tail with deep vent. Red, white and blue or blue white and red. A ll cotton by Eagle. $ 13.50 iodinating Ties about $ 8.50 C UNIVERSITY Guadalupe A t 24th DOW NTOW N Congress A t Eighth Pig* 16 Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE D A ILY TEXA N Gary Taylor Steer Athletes Compete Down South HELD OVER! XA M ild of a western. BDV sort of a cowboy. F E A T T I R E S : 1 2 :0 0 - 1 :4 0 - 3 :3 0 - 5 :1 6 :4 0 - 8 : 2 0 - 1 0 :0 0 ‘~*'S.'I.'-'-'-'-'--- Longhorn mound ace Bart Hooton lost his chance in the World Amateur for a second shutout Baseball Championships when knocked out of the box in the ninth innings of a game with Canada Tuesday night. The U.S. team went on to win 4-3 in the tourney being played in Cartagena, Colombia. In Hooton’s first starting assignment, the junior fireballer recorded a 14-8 shutout in going the distance. Friday, Texas thinclad Dave Morton joins Hooton down south. Quartermiler Morton will be one of two Americans to participate in an independence day festival on the island of Barbados, West In­ dia...His best times this year: half-mile—1:50.4 and a 47-flat quarter. A&M Moves Up, Down? Sure enough, as “A&M Worry Week” cam­ paigners broadcast, evidence comes the Aggies have improved. They’ve slipped from the “Bottom IO” poll into the shaky No. l l spot...On the other hand, the Texas-A&M line has gone from 33 to 3314 points. that Now that we’ve mentioned the Farmers, on to bigger and better things, Arkansas before Notre Dame...Razorback All-America defensive tackle Dickk Bumpas say’s theres no actual hatred be­ tween Big Shootout No. 2 gunslingers. “You’ll never see any late hitting on purpose. Out there’ll be a fantastic effort on both sides. We’re just kind of instruments of a rivalry between two states.” 1116 Dallas News says, “close Texas sources have indicated that head coach D a rrell R o y a l might be inclined to reject even an Orange Bowl big should Arkansas win invitation Shootout...Certainly Royal is not pleased at being an ‘alternate choice the Orange Bowl.’ ” to LSU for the You think the decision, Cotton Bowl over Orange, was a tough one for Notre Dame’s gutty quar­ terback, Joe Theismann? He may have been second best just one too many times to let No. I slip away this go *round...“You think for a minute that I considered not coming,” he offered. “We sure wouldn’t think of trying to fool anybody about wanting to play Texas”... Apparently Will Grimsley found holes in the way the Irish will approach USO this week. He chose the Trojans to upset Notre Dame, who can relax with bowl in hand...That late-season syn­ drome, which has seen Stanford lose twice after wrapping up a Rose Bowl bid, has the state’s columnists making their yearly call for a post­ season playoff. Blackie Sherrod’s solution: “Have the bowl games replaced by playoff games. Let each of the old established bowls host one of the playoff games. Alternate the national championship game between the four major bowls—Cotton, Sugar, Orange and Rose” . . . whatever is done, the NCAA has to take the first step—soon. Cage Challenge Texas has produced more Academic All-America selections than any other school. Since the honor was first given to footballers in 1952, the University has been honored as having top student-athletes 12 times. The first, Maurice Boke (1959). The latest, Bill Zapalac and Scott Henderson, both 1969 honorees who are re-eligible this year . . . One of the classiest cage crews in the country this year? Florida State, who’ll help the ’Horns open the new season in Gregory Gym Tuesday. It was the Seminoles who whipped Jacksonville last year. They return virtually intact and will start four high school All-Americas. In a confidential poll with the IO SWC faculty reps, Texas Football says, “If the issue were to be decided today, the Cougar bid for mem­ bership would be rejected, probably by a single vote.” And so, contrary to popular opinion, not everybody is thinking of A&M at this time. In fact, not everybody is thinking of Big Shootout No. 2. That would be Notre Dame’s Theismann. He’s getting married Dec. 5. I R A I N S * I f c A M S T R A N S ★ T E X A S N. Lamar Blvd.—451-1/iO 6400 Burnet Road — 465 6933 A T T E N T IO N . N O S C H O O L F O R REST O F W EEK . SPEN D T ' i ^ k p y D A Y S W IT H US. 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Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page h5 Aggies Hungry SYLVAN RODRIGUEZ Texan Sports Staff Ever since 1916, players and coaches from Texas AAM and Texas have given up turkey and dressing in favor of IOO yards of turf and a lump of very tough pigskin. the Aggies Gourmets they are not, but when it comes to old-time rivals, few teams can sur- p a s s and traditional as Longhorns foes. Thursday, the 77-year- old series continues as the L o n g h o r n s extend their Memorial Stadium carpet to the Aggies at 2 p.m. before a n 61,000-plus crowd. expected The Aggies, who have managed a 2-8 record for the season, will be spoiling for last a win season game as a victory over the nation’s No. I team would make their season. in this their T h e ’Horns will be carrying the third longest modem day win streak with 28 straight victories into the g a m e plus scoring machine which Is averaging 46.2 points per game. But the some Aggies must have a hidden potential since they whipped highly rated LSU 20-18 and then narrowly lost to powerhouse Michigan, 10- 14. Further, timing may be a factor in favor of the Aggies. For the second (and last) year in a row, Texas will not end its season with the Farmers but will still have to face Arkansas. After “ Big Shootout No. I ” last year, anticipation for this year’s Dec. 5 match has been brewing for a year. Injuries also have hit T e x a s . Fullback Steve rib Worster has carried 434 times for 2,217 yards and 34 touchdowns while helping the Longhorns to a 28-1-1 mark through his college the Texas carreer. But in is still B u l l d o z e r questionable condition for the Aggie battle. Worster sustained injury a against TCU two weeks ago. All-America Woo Despite his performance in the two remaining games, tile Bridge City product is already second-best rusher in Texas history. His rushing total ranks behind leader Chris a l l - t i m e Gilbert’s 3,231 net total. Within the last two weeks, Worster has been named All America by the Newspaper Enterprise Association, Football News and Kodak. He earned a ranking of the fourth in Heisman Trophy voting. If the series record is any i n d i c a t i o n , though, the Steers should be expected to take a win. Texas holds a 53-18-5 ledger and a hug® lead of 34-4-1 over A&M kl Austin. As for games held specifically in Memorial ’Horns have Stadium, the racked up a 21-1-1 score sheet with A&M getting its only victory in 1956 by 34-21* First Foes are only ever N o t the longhorns and the Aggies long-time rivals, they are the first college opponents each faced. They played for the first time in 1894—Texas’ second season and A&M’s first. Prior to that historic meeting, the Longhorns h a d played teams (See F O R LO N G H O R N , Page 3 .) College... without cooking (After all, you only go once!) Heflin is now . . . for uni­ versity women who demand too much from college to be held back by cooking ; and dishes and curfews. Heflin means 21 meals a- week served in . . . daily % maid service . . . a sparkling pool . . . salon dryers . .V * off-street parking . . . spe­ cial campus bus service . . . 24-hour protection ser­ vice . . . and infinitely more. Heflin. Because you only v; go once. Apply now; there s no waiting list. Heflin 2505 LONGVIEW. 477-6371 Page 2 Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Unsung Heroes H alfb ack Billy Dale and con­ verted split end Danny Lester are two o f the mainstays of the Longhorn attack. H orology: the art and science of time measure­ ment. E very Rolex graduates with a straight 4.0 index. Loft, the Rolex O yster Perpetual D ate. 30-jewel autom atic chronometer with stainless steel case and 14kt gold bezel, pressure proof to 165 feet under water. With matching bracelet, $335. Right, the Rolex Thunderbird D atcjust. 30-jewel autom atic chronometer with stainless steel case and revolving Mkt gold elapsed-timo bezel, pressure proof to 165 feet under water. $295. With stainless steel and 14kt gold brace­ let, $380. JOE KOEN SON Since 1888 . . . " ll 'bere Au i fid cnee** 105 E. 6th C onveniently Located Just O f f the Avenue For Longhorn Upset (Continued from Page 2.) listed nebulously only as “ D a llas” “ San An­ and tonio.” Texas’ 10-game w in streak from 1057 through 1966 is the longest in the series. A & M ’s longest is three games. Since 1910 the Aggies never have beaten Texas as often as tw ice in a row. Besides W orsted Texas m ay have to do without the services of defensive end David Arledge, out with a knee in ju ry, and defensive back G a ry K eithley, hobbled with a sprained ankle. But the Aggies have been having injury troubles also. Last year the Longhorns A & M field general Lex Jam es, sidelined w ith an elbow’ in ju ry is expected to start but m ay give w ay to sul>stitute Jo e M ac King. King sparked the Aggies in a losing effort against R ice and was the leading rusher in the SM U game. on their w a y to the national championship steam rolled o ver the Aggies, 49-12. ’Horn h a l f ! ) a c k Jim Bertelsen broke the ice quickly scoring on the fourth play of the gam e w ith a 63-yard dash. Before the half, the Steers struck for a 39-0 m argin. La ck Experience Perhaps the m ain trouble w ith Aggies is inexperience. The Fa rm e rs w ill start nine sophomores and have but four seniors. Texas on the IO other hand w ill start seniors offensively and four defensively. scored w ithin the first before the game. The victo ry minute of p lay and recorded a shattering 7-0 upset. It knocked A & M out of the Rose Bow l. Two years before that in 1938, A & M was 4-3-1 and Texas 0-8. Bu t Texas won it the winning 7-6, point on its only successful extra-point try of the season. scoring W in for R o ya l Texas shocked the F a rm ­ ers again during R o ya l's first ye a r at Texas. The Steers stole a 9-7 win from the Aggies, who w ere 8-1 earned the ’Horns a bid to the Sugar Bow l. The most rem em bered come-from-behind w in cam e in 1963 when the Longhorns w ere on their w ay to a national title with an un­ defeated record. The Aggies lead 13-2 but w ere downed by an Orange ra lly to the tune of 15-13. Circum stances surround­ ing the ’63 game show a lot of resem blance to Thurs­ d ay’s classic form at. T hursday’s meeting m arks the second tim e since 1963 for Texas to go into the A& M gam e unbeaten. The Aggies have never handed Texas its first loss of the year. Scoring Record Texas’ biggest win m argin ' of all tim e over A & M w’as a 48-0 shellacking in 1898 and Southwest Conference in y e a r’s 49-12 action, stomp. last Texas has now scored in 83 consecutive gam es ex­ tending their school record. ; L a s t tim e Texas was shut out was in the 1963 Cotton I Bow l game by L S U , 13-0. The traditional Turkey D ay clash has also been one of upsets and come-from- behind rallies. One of the greatest upsets in the history of college football occurred in 1940. The Aggies were riding a 19-game winning streak and w ere defending national Bu t Texas’ “ im m ortal thirteen” champions. Z I O L O 6421 Burnet Lane Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AHD SERVICE Texas Offense Jerry Sisemore 83 Deryl Comer Bobby Wenseh 50 64 Bobby Mitchell Jim Achilles 57 66 Mike Dean 76 23 Danny Lester Eddie Phillips 14 35 Jim Bertelsen Billy Dale 22 Steve Worster 33 Defense 77 Bill Atessis 80 Bill Zapalac 70 Carl White Ray Dowdy 71 Stan Mauldin 85 86 Stan Hicks 34 David Richardton Scott Henderson 61 40 Alan Lowry 21 Mike Bayer 41 Rick Nabors A g g ie O ffense 34 Joey Herr 70 Benny Dewitt 67 Jim Parker 57 Ted Smith 69 Leonard Forey 74 Ralph Sacra 80 Homer May 10 Lex James 42 Steve Burks 22 Johnny Gardner 41 Marc Black Defense TE LT LG C RG RT SE OB LH RH FB LE Roy LT RT SLB RE LLS RLB LH RH Saf --- - 87 Max Bird 68 Boice Best 56 Bruce Best 81 James Dubcak 96 Todd Christopher 66 Van Odom 59 Dennis Carruth 33 Ed Ebrom 25 Robert Murski 26 David Hoot I 36 Dave Elmendorf SE LT LG C RG RT TE OB TB WB FB LE LG RG RE LIB M IB RLB LCB RCS SS FS C ap'n Dave Says “SHAPE UP O R SHIP O U T " COME CHANGE YOUR OLD, ROTTEN, RAGGED JEANS INTO FASHION BELLS. RECENTLY IN A FAR AW AY LAND, W E CAP­ TURED AN ELF WITH A SINGER. SHE MAKES A MEAN STITCH THAT WILL APPLIQUE YOUR WHOLE BODY. TRANSFORM FROM STRAIGHT TO LIVING COLOR BELLS........................... 4.00 ADD COLOR AND LENGTH........................... 2.00 COVER HOLES WITH LITTLE CREATURES . . . . 50c Wha said all watches were alike? T h . sophisticated styling and «u* oerb accuracy of this new O m e g a strap watch puts it in a class by itself. Y e llow top, steel back F I I IS n o r it s h H B B H U F S . H I O I I M K S , I KI 3 ’ T I F 6 SItEFTALL’S O n the D rag af 2268 G u a d a lu p e O P E N ‘T IL 9:00 P .M . T H U R S D A Y d i r e c t D I A M O N D I M P O R T E R S bobboms H A N K S OPEN IO TIL 8 GRILL FLASK SALE! 20%% ON ANY FLASK Reg. 2.95 up! TODAY Thru SAT.! r n OVER IOO N A M E -B R A N D LIQUOR SPECIALS ADVERTISED BY US IN LAST WEEK-END’S TEXAN and STATESMAN STILL O N ! 'J *|rt W ILD TURKEY 5th 101 pr. St. Bourbon I 1 / R IP P L E C H IV A S R EG A L 5th 7 ftft 12 yr. Scotch 86 pr. f 77 W IN ES ............... 5th 0 / B O O N E’S FARM APPLE W IN E ....5 th O O A f t * BACARDI 5th Q A f t P. Rican Rum 80 pr. w.77 JIM BEAM 86 pr. Straight Bourbon 5th 1ft I 7 Jero's Hot BUTTERED RUM BATTER P a r t y M ix e rs ! LLOYD'S London Dry ft ftft 5th w.w7 G IN 90 pr. SM IRN O FF VODKA A Af\ FULL Q UARTS 80 pr. *I.*I7 AQ U AVIT Bommer’under from Germany ........5th 3,* J 7 r J A A P P LE JA C K Laird s Brandy 80 pr. 5th A A f t ir.77 C O IN TREAU 80 pr. J* 7 ft Orange Liqueur 5th W./7 RICARD 90 pr. 5th A ftft French Anise Aperitif Tr.77 W ine s a l e of See Today's Austin Newspapers Beat Arkansas Stickers ................... vflft* i U 16 or. Ja r ............. 1 a H ji Fireside Lodge Hot SPICED W IN E MIX (Add to any red wine) MAKES 2 FIFTHS f t f t * pkg. JLI TONITE W H IS K Y SO UR MIX Box of 6 Jiggers ........... 07 f t f t * Ronrico's DAIQUIRI MIX Box of 12 envelopes 0 7 f t f t * p u s s y c a t mix Box of 12 envelopes O w rn * PINK C H A M P A G N E ORAND M AISO N -J / f t or COLD DUCK .. 1.07 Andre A G G IE TOILET TISSUE f t f t * ................... 77 A D U L T • PASS-OUT • STRIP-TAC-TOE P A R T Y • B U M P S I GRINDS • OFFICE PARTY G A M E S • OH PEG IT •A D U LTER Y • N E M O 1809 G U A D A LU PE 1209 RED RIVER 478-5903 I 5501 AIRPORT BLVD. 476-8990 I 452-7104 Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 Yearling Aw es Foes Guevara Resembles O n e -M a n Line By ALAN TRUEX Texan Sports Staff Imagine a 6-6, 280-pound high school fullback who runs a five- flat 40 and also makes the All- West Texas basketball team three years. Such phenomenons exist only in storybooks or horror movies, you say. But Robert Guevara, who to play came out of Marfa defensive tackle for the Texas Yearlings, is most definitely for real. He’s faster than some receivers and bigger than some mountains, and as Yearling Head Coach B ill Ellington says, “We’ve never had anyone quite like him.” Unbelievab'o Strength “You can’t believe how strong he is,” Ellington beams. “The other day we h a d a 210-pounder O p en A t 6:^0 S h o w S t a r t s 7: WO* • A d d e d D I S N E Y 3 “SEAL ISL/ J * Color PLUS — FEATURE No. 2 RAWand VIOLENT! a m m m m f H H n i m ! - COLOR [JR] - & Page 14 Thursiliy, November 26, 1970 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N X X X SO ADULT.. OME'X 'IS PCT ENOUGH I N O W YOU C A N REALLY SEE lf ALL IN 3-D THE WILDEST YET THE FIRST TIME IN HISTORY A 3-D X RATER SPECIAL A D M ISSIO N $2.50 GLASSES FREE IF YOU M ISS THIS PICTURE YOU'LL HATE YOURSELF PLUS O N SCREEN # 2 A n o th e r C a n t Rtn*r S tu d io s P r e s e n t a t io n —■ AII C o lo r — A ll S ou n d P l u s o n e h o u r o f so u n d s h o r ts In b la z in g c o lo r . A lw a y s th e b e s t a t A u s tin ’s f in e s t T h e a tr e . Top Scorers Likely S W C Statistics T eam Texas A rk an sas Tech SM U R ic e TCU A&M B a y lo r S E A SO N S T A N D IN G S C O N F E R E N C E STA N D IN G S L T P ct. P ts. 0 0 1.000 318 .900 393 .727 213 .500 136 .444 154 .350 158 .200 156 .200 110 T e a m A rk an sas T e x a s T ech SM (J TCU R ice B a ylo r A&M W L T P ct. Pts. 1.000 233 I OOO 201 .714 90 67 .500 98 .333 .333 70 .333 80 OOO 72 0 0 2 3 4 4 5 6 6 5 5 3 2 2 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 L a st W eek'* R e s u lts : A rk a n sa s 24, T ech IO; SM U 23, B a y lo r IO; R ice 17, I CU 15. T h u rsd ay’s S ch ed u le: T e x a s AAM a t T e x a s, 2 p m . S a tu rd a y ’s S ch ed u le: R ic e a t B a y lo r. 2 p m ; SM U u t TCU , 2 pm . T e a m T e x a s A rk an sas T ech TC U SM U AAM R ice B a y lo r H igh G a m e: TOTAL O F F E N S E G P is Y ds 8 650 3561 10 804 4399 11 793 3647 IO 755 3305 IO 739 3054 IO 710 2748 9 591 2236 IO 659 2213 658, A rk a n sa s Av. T D 445.1 43 439 9 49 331.5 27 330.5 21 305 4 16 274.8 19 248.4 16 221 3 IO (TCU) T eam A rk a n sas T ech T e x a s R ice SM U AAM TCU B a y lo r L o w e st TOTAL D E F E N S E t i P U Yds 10 688 2421 11 742 3125 8 542 2294 9 672 2773 IO 708 3109 IO 741 3456 IO 715 3481 IO SII 3649 Y ie ld : 96. R ic e Av. T D 242.1 13 284.1 19 286.8 l l 308.1 19 310.9 27 345.6 30 348.1 28 364.9 31 (VM I) G a m e R U S H IN G P la y e r A Sch ool P ly s Y ds T I) A vg 227 1068 3 97.1 M cC utchen, T e ch 762 12 95.3 137 W orster, T e x a s 800 6 80.0 199 H am m on d , SM U 636 9 79.5 109 B e rtelsen , T e x a s 161 695 3 69.5 R h od es, TC U 553 IO 69.1 119 P h illip s, T e x a s 602 5 60 2 192 W illiam s, B a y lo r 415 2 59.3 90 C ardw ell. R ice HO 641 3 49.2 H a rg ra v e. T e ch 104 434 3 48.2 H od ges. TCU P la y e r & S ch ool M arsh, B a y lo r S h effield . AAM O dom , T e ch K e ith k y , T e x a s A llsh o u se. R ice C arter. TC U H u ffm an, TC U Curry, A rk an sa s M oL arty. SM U P U N T IN G N o. 84 58 59 29 51 32 22 28 67 L o n g e st: 76, Johnny Y d s. A v g . 40.6 3411 2274 39.2 g 2218 37.6 I 1088 37.5 I 1866 36.6 e 36 5 rn 1169 36.4 I 801 1014 36.2 I 34.9 I 2339 O dem . T ech (SM U ) P la y e r A School H ixson, SM U J a m e s, AAM M on tgom ery, Ark Ju d y. TCU N ap p er, T ech Sou th all. B a y lo r P A SS IN G A tt. Com p. 144 IGI 101 99 86 52 255 205 172 219 155 150 Int. P ot. 56,5 13 13 49.3 58.7 6 45.2 17 55.5 l l 34.7 9 M ost Y a rd a g e:: 381 Y ard s TD 8 5 IO 4 9 4 A vg. Cont p. 18.0 11.2 10.1 9 9 7.8 5.2 (2 T D S), H ixson 1548 1190 1523 1178 979 824 PA SS R E C E IV IN G I l a y e r m w H am m on d , SM U D a v is, B aylor M apps, SM U D lcu s, Ark M ay, AAM G r im m e tt TCU F le m in g , SMU D o ssett, SM U gilt Y ds T it 40-1 2 42 41 706 3 347 33 I 4 541 36 5 479 26 0 269 25 I 254 25 334 24 2 G am e =- SCO RING P la y e r & School TD F O Pta Avg 0 72 9 0 W orster, T e x a s M cC lard, Ark IO 79 7.9 0 60 7.5 P h illip s, T e x a s F e lle r , T e x a s 4 54 6 8 B e rtelsen . T e x a s 0 54 6.8 H igh G a m e: 24, G ary II a rn - m ond. SM U (N M S U ): B ill Burnett. Ark (TCU & S te v e W orster, T e x a s (SM U ) 12 0 IO 0 9 L o n gest F G : 60, B ill M cC lard, A ik (.SMU) anilin.”'!!,ii In Cotton Bowl DALLAS (Spl.)—The odds are two to one that the Cotton Bowl Classic will present the top major college scoring team in the nation Jan. L And that's whether Notre Dame plays Arkansas or Texas. The Razorbaeks ran into Texas Tech’s rough defense Saturday in t h e Southwest Conference’s “Little Shootout” and lost their national scoring lead as well as their Southwest Conference total offense lead. And the Razorbaeks lost them to the same team. While Texas took the week off preparing for Thursday’s traditional meeting with Texas A&M, the Longhorns passed Arkansas as the country’s highest-scoring outfit and as the SWC’s most p ro lific attack. UT Barely Ahead In both cases, the margin was slimmer than a Debbie Drake devotee. Texas’ 39.8 sewing average barely shades runner-up Arkansas with its 39.5, In SWC total offense, Texas took away the lead Arkansas held last week with a margin of 1.9 yards per game, 447.0 to 445.1. There’s even a good chance the Cotton Bowl Classic will match The finest Italian foods in Austin and wines served in authentic old- world atmosphere at La Casa Gondola 4207 Medical Pkwy. G L 3-7085 O P E N T H A N K S G I V I N G Spaghetti & M eatballs $1.50 Lasagna ................. $2.00 All d in ners serv ed w ith g a rlic bread and sala d . F r e e g la ss of w in e or w in e cooler p er dinner w ith th is ad. Good A n ytim e. lf You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service d e n i e r f^or ^ J is ia n • S t u J i 'ie J presents "The China Story — One Fourth of Humanity" BY ED G A R S N O W — Author of Red Star Over China IN C O L O R 7:30 & 9:00 Adm ission 50c TUES., DEC. I Batts Hall the nation’s two soaring top teams. Notre Dame was fifth last week with a 37.4 per-game average, but fell to 33.6 after its 3-0 decision over LSU. Still, the Irish will rank among the top IO teams with one game to play against Southern Cal, which has given up 78 points in its last two games. busy cementing Versatile Haimnuad While Texas and Arkansas were their reputations among the nation’s top teams, SMU’s Gary Ham­ mond was busy cementing his reputation as one of the most versatile athletes ever to grace the Southwest Conference. in The junior tailback, who led the conference rushing before being injured at midseason, came up with eight receptions Saturday and took over the pass receiving lead. Last year’s SWC receiving champion, Hammond is one of five Mustangs among the top IO pass grabbers. The But Hie really big news tor SMU was the return to action of all-time NCAA passing champ senlof Chuck Hixson. quarterback, who missed twtil .straight games with a knee im* jury, was on target in the 23-10 victory over Baylor and pushea his per-game completion average to 18.0. The national leader^ Seamy Sixkiller of Washington, was averaging 18.8 going into laflg Saturday’s game with Washington j State. McCutchen First Texas Tech’s Doug McCutchen became tile fifth runner in SWC history to go more than 1,000 yards in a season when he rushed for 75 yards against Arkansas tel push his season total to 1,068 yards. He fell 32 yards short of averaging IOO yards per game, as he carried tally 15 times for a respectable 5.1-yard average against Arkansas’ SWC leading defense. 7:00 p.m. OR 11:00 p.m. SAN ANTONIO MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM ONLY TICKETS: S5-S4-S3 TO EACH CONCERT IN AUSTIN AT WILLIES RAYMOND’S DRUG At Box Office Showtime SAT. GRAND I FUNK RAIL" ROAD I THIS I SAT. NOV. 28 (HUMBLE PIE from E n glan d ) CONCERT WEST — JAM PRODUCTION The RENDEZVOUS OF TEXAS U. the O LD-W O RD ATMOSPHERE A N D NEW W O RLD SOUND! 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O P E N T H U R S D A Y For Reservation C all 453-5676 EVERY WEDNESDAY LADIES NIGHT - LEG CONTEST UP TO S250.00 PRIZE Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 13 Nixon Fires Hickel W A S H I N G T O N (AP) — President Richard M. Nixon fired Walter J. Hickel Wednesday night as interior because, the White House said, they did not have a relationship of mutual confidence. secretary of the The White House said Nixon personally gave Hickel the word he was fired at a meeting that began at 4:10 p.m. CST. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Rep. Rogers C. B. Mortem of Maryland, chairman of T h e Da ily T ex a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin ............. ......................... Cyndi Taylor ........................... Imae News Editor Issue Sports Editor ................................................ Eddie Kenndy Make-Up E d ito r Wire Editor ...................................................................... Steve Dial Opinions expressed In The Daily Texan are those of the Editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University adm inistration or of the Board of Regents. Sylvan Rodriguez The Dally Texan, the student newspaper at the University of Texas a t Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications. Inc., Drawer D, U niversity Station, Austin, Texas 78712. The Dally Texan is published Sunday. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holiday per­ iods, September through May. Second class postage paid at Austin. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-5244), at the editorial office (J.B. 103), or at the news laboratory (J.B. 102). In­ quiries concerning the delivery should be made In J.B . 107 and adver­ tising In J.B . 111. The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is National Education Advertising Service. 360 Lexington Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017. The Daily Texan subscribes to the Associated Press, United P ress In­ ternational Photo Service and the New York Times News Service. The Texan is a m em ber of the Associated Collegiate Press, The Southwest Journalism Conference and the Texas Daily N ewspaper Association. the Republican National Com­ mittee, will be nominated by Nixon early next year to head the Interior Department. In the meantime, Nixon d e s i g n a t e d Interior Un­ dersecretary Fred Russell to be acting secretary. Hickel, a Republican who gave up the governorship of Alaska to join Nixon’s cabinet, has been a figure of controversy within the Administration since he wrote the President the last May Administration was needlessly alienating young people. that Although some Nixon aides said at the time the President would have welcomed a resignation f r o m Hickel in­ ternational publicity surrounding the letter, Nixon was non- commital in his public reaction. following It is known, however, that the chief executive was disturbed that Hickeys supposedly private to communication him was p r i n t e d a Washington in newspaper before it reached his desk. Asked why Nixon fired Hickel, Ziegler said: feels “The President the required elements for a good and continued relationship that must exist between a President and his Cabinet members simply did not exist in this case.” He went on to reiterate that Nixon “feels is extremely it important for essential elements of mutual confidence” to be shared by a President and a Cabinet secretary and said anew that Nixon and Hickel lacked such “mutual confidence.” Ziegler said Nixon had been contemplating a change at the helm of the Interior Department for some unspecified time and had reached a decision to dismiss Hickel earlier this week. Because of the Thanksgiving holidays, sports the Thursday special will be the last issue of The Daily Texan in November. The regular publication schedule will resume with the Dec. I issue. 0 Sport Coupe Mokes the fun of driving easy to afford — n o w ! ^ E v e n on young budgets. The 850 Sport Spider an d Sport Coupe a re so easy to own they're almost .•"beginner's cars" for the sport enthusiast. Yet each one is fully equipped with real sport cor detoils like a dash-m ounted tachom eter, direct reading fuel, tem perature end oil gauges, front-wheel disc brakes, radial-ply tires, contoured bucket teats and a sure-stroking four-forw ard speed synchromeshed stick shift. The Spider is an authentic Bertone body. Tells you right aw ay why a Spider seats only two! The Coupe has a rear seat for really close friends and the same sporting Stance and equipment as the Spider. BBBB, At your dealer now, fully equipped, really rally ready. Come in and ask: How d o e s Fiat do it for th e Price? Page 4 Thursday, November 26, 1970 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Raiders Cited By President Future Missions Left in Question W A S H I N G T O N (AP) • « President Richard M. Nixd% decorating four key faqures in th e futile weekend raid cm a Norfll V i e t n a m e s e prison carom promised Wednesday the UnfteO States will do all it can “at (ho in otile® table and diplomatic ways” rescue America® to prisoners of war. Tliis was Nixon’s first direct comment on the episode—and hat in question the possibility left that future rescue missions of tho same sort must be tried. He (SBS not elaborate on what he meant by helping prisoners “in o&OB ways.” Thousands Ready aimed The chief executive quoted Adm. Thomas Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, as telling him “we could have had thousands of volunteers” for an operation at plucking American prisoners from cells in North Vietnam. said on thSf Thanksgiving eve, AmericaiHI could all be thankful that fh® nation has such men as thaw he honored. He spoke of it ast “a day that makes us very prowl of the United States.” Nixon that a in series The medal presentation was thai of Aft* latest ministration moves to overcome any criticism of tile Son Tay mission by picturing it as # heroic deed in which Americana risked their lives to save theijf fellow's. Mercy Mission The President said of the medal recipients: “Theirs was a mission of mercy.” The chief executive presented these awards: • The Distinguished Service Medal to Air Force Brig. Gen* of J. Manor, L e r o y Morrisonville, N.Y., planner cl the rescue attempt and vet (Tan of 345 combat missions in World War II and Vietnam. 49, • The Distinguished Service Cross to Army Col. Arthur IX Simons, 52, of New York Cit* who led the assault. • The Distinguished Service Cross to Army Spec. IXJ. Tyrone J. Addorly, 27, of Philadelphia, for disregard of his own life in approaching automatic! heavy weapons fire and “neutralizing** the enemy with return grenada fire. • The Air Force Cross ta Tech. S"t. Leroy M. Wright, 38, of Little Falla, Minn., a helicopter crewman who helped lay down cowering fire during evacuation of Son 'Fay after suffering painful injuries to his left foot and ankle daring h s craft s landing in the prison compound. Wright was on crutches at the ceremony. MUSIC fos^ e Yamaha Pianos Guitars Recorders by M oeck - C ung Aulus - Dolmestsch Harmonicas Kalimbas Kazoos Jaw Harps and other exotic instru­ ments U SE D Pianos & Guitars A friendly place to shop. AMSTER Music & Art Center 1624 LAVACA 478-7331 Rogers Seeks Funds Says Cambodia Not Another Vietnam Campus News in Brief Newsmen Barred from Carriers Saigon In an unprecedented move, the U.S. 7th Fleet barred newsm en Thursday from its two canners in the Tonkin Gulf, extending a news blackout on American activities over North Vietnam during tile weekend. Spokesmen conceded the move was made to prevent newsmen from interviewing pilots from the carriers Hanger and Hancock who participated in bombing raids against North Vietnam. It was understood here the orders cam e from Washington. I he ban also appeared designed to prevent reporters from finding out more about the American commando raid on a prisoner of w ar cam p west of Hanoi. ‘Incursions’ Bring Aid Plea D A K A R , Senegal President Sekou Toure of Guinea called on all “ friendly countries” Wednesday for fighter and bomber planes to help fight a new series of “ enemy incursions" he blam es on Portugal. The appeal on the radio in Conakry, the capital, w as addressed to nations outside Africa and asked “ for all the im m ediate help they judge possible." A United Nations investigative com m ittee was awaited in the Guinean capital. Toure said that “ this mission does not totally satisfy our request." He had appealed for U.N. airborne troops. Erwin, Le M a istre H esitant By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Secretary of P. Rogers S t a t e William p r o m i s e d Wednesday that proposed funds to aid Cambodia will not turn the Southeast Asian nation into another Vietnam. intend “We have no military forces nor advisers in Cambodia, nor do we to send any,” Rogers told the House Foreign Affairs Committee. He said also there are no present plans to supply with C a m b o d i a sophisticated military equipment. the panel in support of a Nixon for $1 Administration request billion more in foreign-aid funds in the current fiscal year, in­ cluding a total of more than $250 million for Cambodia. Rogers appeared before “ I made it clear that we had no intention of letting Cambodia become, in terms of American involvement, another Vietnam,” Rogers said in reference to his testimony before Congress last i April. “We adhere to those principles, ' and this request is consistent with I them. It will not make Cambodia Oaks Fate Doubtful By JENNIFER EVANS Texan Staff Writer to final After listening tile Com­ mittee! to Save Tile Oaks plead their case Wednesday, University Regents Frank C. Erwin Jr. and Joe M. Kilgore and Chancellor-elect Charles Ive Moi sire said they still see no worthwhile reason for buying die apartment complex. In the hour-and-a-half informal the committee recom­ meeting mended that the building, at the comer of 21st and Oldham streets be converted to University office space. that T h e y the claimed demolition contractor could be paid off for $5,000, the building would cost $41,000 and restoration of die building, which is partially demolished, would cost between $93,000 and $100,000. Thus, the Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes ★ SA LE ★ SHEEP SKIN RUGS M a n y Beautiful Colors ★ L E A T H E R S A L E Various kinds, colors — 50c per foot ★ Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 After the Texas-Arkansas game. Trines may give you something else to celebrate. 1971 Gremlin to be given away by Trim's after the big game. Nothing to buy. Just register at Trlni’s. Drawing to be held 6 p.m., Saturday, December 5. You need not be present to win. See car on display now at Trlni’s. 1507 Lavaca BTA? WSSja SERVING FO ODS O F M EXICO total cost to the University for the 10,000 feet of office space would be about $150,000. The administrators said The Oaks is situated in an area of future University expansion and may interfere with its develop­ ment. LeMaistre also said no University group had made a clear proposal for use of the b u i l d i n g that economically justified its purchase. tile least appealing “The appeal being made today ; I’ve is heard,” Erwin said, after ex­ plaining his efforts to acquire the i land for the University through the Office of Urban Renewal. the business of “We’re not in preserving monuments.” explained Chuck Stahl, representative of the American Institute of Ar­ chitecture and the Texas Society of Architects, the reasons for preserving The Oaks apartments. He listed four awards that the complex had received its outstanding design and for said the University would receive much for saving such a building. favorable publicity After the meeting Erwin and I.eMaLstre said that even though the administration had been trying for ll months to find a ase for The Oaks, they had not succeeded and were opposed to the committee’s proposal to save it. Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Com plete Autom otive Service S E R V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N V P - MO* «* O U R SPECIALTY The Only Independent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET R O A D Across from G u lf M a rt GL 2-0205 CLO SED SATURDAY our involvement another Vietnam. It will help to reduce in Vietnam.” Rogers, to com­ in response mittee questions, said he doesn’t feel the resumption of bombings in North Vietnam would have any effect one way or the other on the Paris peace talks. “I don’t think it will have any effect one way or the other,” Rogers said. He said, however, the North Vietnamese would attempt to make it appear the action was affecting the talks, and would avoid the discussions “but I don’t believe it for a moment.” On the other hand, Rogers said, the recent successful Cambodian operations leads Mm to believe “prospects for progress at the talks might be enhanced because the other side might not think Hie war is worth while.” So far, however, Rogers no progress has been made in Paris. added, In response to a question from Rep. John V. Tunney, D-Caldf., Rogers said the State Department was consulted in advance of the U.S. commando raid on the Son Tay prisoner-of-war camp in North Vietnam. Rogers added, when pressed by Tunney, that he had not consulted Congress. “My attitude on that (con­ sultation cwi toe raid) is that no one should know,” Rogers said. “I didn’t tell anyone In State who didn’t need to know.” Then Rogers asked Tunney: “Why would you want to know that at a given hour an attempt would be made rescue prisoners?” to Tunney said he felt it could endanger the Lives of other prisoners, represented a change the U.S. war policy and in thought leaders should be consulted. congressional AU ST IN ’S BEST V W SERVICE Ben W hite Phillips 66 Service ALL W O RK 100% GUARANTEED ONLY LOCAL INDEPENDENT G A R A G E WITH M O D ER N FACTORY TRAINED M EC H A N IC S 1815 W . BEN W H IT E BLVD. 444-3313 Film n' Photos 501 VZ. [9th — Next to Uncle Van’s Pancake House OPEN 9:00 a.m. — 8:00 p.m. S P E C I A L 12 EXPOSURE CO LO R PRINTS 1 99 GAF 1 2 6 - 1 2 ................. 88 ° OFFER G O O D N O V. 24 - DEC. 9 Is a Better Buy im ported direct Sheftall D iam onds are the cutters in Belgium to our Austin O ffice. As Direct D iam ond Importers our pledge to you is: fin er quali­ greater \a lu e — Com pare and see that our ty collection offers you the best buy in a D iam ond. from SHEFTALL’S On tin* lira* at Guadalupe OPKX ’TIL 9:*0 P.M . TIU'KSDAY DIRECT D IA M O N D IMPORTERS ALSO VISIT SHEFTALL JEWELERS IN ALLENDALE VILLAGE Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 A & M Bonfire Draws Protest COLLEGE STATION (AP) — They just don’t make traditional f o o t b a l l games any more traditional than the Texas and A&M Hianksgiving Day contest — at to Aggies and Longhorns. least B u t what’s th is ? A protest? the huge is aimed at cen­ toward the Well, only against bonfire that tralizing Aggie victory each week before game. spirits Aggie spirits need all the support they can get. The team is 2-8 in the won-lost column and goes against the nation's No. I power Thursday in Austin. But such a bonfire, say some students, is a waste of time. Although they are antipollution, they did not make much of an issue of this. Instead, the time in environmental they say they didn’t waste was spent im­ provement projects. Not a single stick of wood would they carry' to the S te of the conflagration. But without the antipolluters’ help, a 90-foot-high pile of logs burning was Tuesday night gathered for The school dismissed classes Monday so students could ga tiler tho logs and stack bonfire. The anti polluters balked. them for graduate One protesting group painted an elem entary school instead of totin’ wood. Another, composed o f environmental engineering students, started a pollution survey of creeks around here. A third planned to spend Wednesday cleaning litter from a playground. On Auction Block — U P I T elephoto. i _ tm ■ _ Darrell Royal (I). Longhorn head coach, and fullback Steve W o rste r (c) present one o f W o r k e r 's jerseys to Joe Pearce, a member C y stic Fibrosis Research Center. The jersey will be auctioned off in Little Rock along sim ilar shirt d o n ate d by A rkan sas with a qu arte rback Bill M o n tg o m e ry . Remember. . . After the game everybody meets at. . . the finest ring available. Spirit Blaze Draw s H uge UT Turnout DL C a lla n art f i n e s t C jo - ( j o Q ir ts r\>oont .y i n i t in i 1605 Cast -Ave. 472-0000 Tickets: S4, 55, $6 ALL SEATS RESERVED Limited Seating December 7 8:00 P.M. Austin Municipal Auditorium Faze Productions Presents F R O M E N G LA N D THE MOODY BLUES O N E P E R F O R M A N C E O N L Y With Special Guest: TRAPEZE B O T T O M S U P R A Y M O N D S D R U G M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D S G I B S O N S (on Ben W h ite) T IC K E T O U T L E T : By JAN JARBOE the Wednesday night’s traditional A&M bonfire at Town Lake largest Longhorn sparked spirit last fa lls Arkansas boost which still con­ t i n u e s to haunt Memorial Stadium. turnout since 6.000 Approximately chilk*d fans cheered Head Coach Darr el Royal and Cactus Pryor, sports announcer, spurred support for the Aggie game. they as Royal in his spirit speech asked for the continued support of the student body in the A&M clash. Royal said, “ With only two more games we are coming into the last stretch and with the No. Created by John Robert! Choose Your Diamond 1/4 C T ................. 29.50 1/3 C T ................. 39.50 1/2 C T ................. 99.50 ~'£30 <• u n uPe 307 VV. 19th St. R A D IO F O R T O P Q U A L I T Y IN S T E R E O E Q U I P M E N T A T R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S Ph.: 478 6o09 • G A R R A R D • FISHER • EICO • S O N Y • M O T O R O L A • C R A IG • K O SS • FISHER • JENSEN E A S Y T ER MS SALES & SERVICE THE BAND ~ IN CONCERT a presented by THE TEXAS U N IO N ENTERTAINM ENT COMMITTEE (A First Productions Concert) j p A t e t k y B e A b s y S - t O F F to P CF S SHO Pi ft> s\e v £ IHCfcVSSe it is standing I ticklish situation. I ask for your support so that we can have one more shot at ’em .’’ a Royal maintained the 13-year- old tradition of introducing senior football players at the Aggie b o n f i r e , by presenting 16 graduating players. The now familiar ‘‘Woo’’ chant erupted when the senior captain, Steve Worster, was introduced. A Texas Cowboys spokesman named Sigma Nu fraternity as the annual bonfire winner of contest the presented and fraternity with a trophy. Cowboys awards were also presented to Alpha Zi Delta and Alpha Delta Pi sororities for first place in the weekly spirit contest the initial Keynoting the entire pep rally the ignition of was bonfire the strains of “ The Eyes of Texas’’ by the Longhorn Band. to flickering orange flames and a maze of people with their “ horns up,” as one sign put it, painted a patriotic picture. Patriotism was not limited to students because m any older the people Aggies,” small children in University sweatshirts formed “ horn sign.’” chanted and traditional several “Beat the it was P e r h a p s vivid recollections of tho 1967 A g g ie gam e that bolstered Wednesday s spirit effort as Texas prepared to Stadium Thursday. enter Memorial Whatever the reason, another A&M spirit boost succeeded in ‘Tallying” the fans toward one more Aggie clash. MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM W ED.-DEC. 2 - 8P.M. • RESERVED SECTION TICKET SALES CO N TINU E AT H O G G A U D ITO R IU M BOX OFFICE {OPEN 9-4) A N D M U N I­ CIPAL AUDITORIUM (OPEN N O O N TILL 5:30) m UT STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF: $4.50, $3.50, $2.50 (ID's Required at Door for Admission) A JI 50 Penalty will be charged st the door for those foiling to present current UT orange & white ID card for admittance. G E N E R A L A DM.: $6, $5 a n d $ 4 ^ ^ Page 12 Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE DA ILY TEXAN 2717 RIO G R A N D E ROUTE No. I VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Students Sunday Night Special Complete Dinner for $3.25 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak Ju st present your blanket tax or A u d ito r s receipt to C a sh ie r 2 3 0 0 Inte rregion al O N L Y 2 B L O C K S F R O M M E M O R I A L S T A D I U M Six Stars Enter Hall of Honor CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 6 -Cyprlnoli Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle 1-Penpoint 4 Small vessel 9-Definite artic!* 32 Girl’s Rams 13-Dipper 14-Fish eggs 35 Pennant 17-Simpler 19 Athletic groups 21-Knock 22-Merganser 24-Weaken 26 Girl's name 29-Gazed searchingly 31-Uppermost part 33 Obstruct 34 Pronoun 35 Once around track 37-Shallow vessel 39 Brother of Odin 4 0 Decay 42-Short sleep 44-Number 46-ls mistaken 48 Pale 50 Departed 5 1 -Help 63 Ship of the desert 55-T reats maliciously 58-Prodigy 6 1-Lamprey 62-Famed 64-Silkworm 65-Existed 66-Skid 67-Hit lightly DOWN I -Catch 2-Mountakt in Crete 3 Ridicule lightly 4 -Entreaty 6-Damages 7-Beverage 8 Shakespearian fish king 8-Three legged stand IO Garden tool l l -Without sud (poet.) 16-Stair post 38 Mournful 2 0 Posed for portrait 2 2 Steeple 23-Engine 25-Explosive noise 27-B lackbird 28-Catkin 3 0 Man's nickname 32-Dance step 36 Animal's foot 38 More recent 41 Spoors 4 3 Moccasin 4 5 Piled fabric 47-Occupy a chair 49-Tstied 52 Lairs 64-Manufactured 55-Stitch 56 Edible seed 57-The sun 59-Period of time 60-Part of face 63 Note of scale 5 6 7 a IO l l 3 SS4 4 13 16 I? I 2 12 15 y;/y : ; V 22 23 Y U I 30 24 r n 36 35 41 42 47 rn48 52 17 18 '■VV. 20 &21 25 31 43 32 44 37 r n 49 50 E - ; 54 26 27. 28 38 M39 45 M 59 60 53 < < • 57 w58 63 7? 34 40 46 61 65 M$$51 55 56 62 & 66 Distr, by United Feature Syndicate, lac* I i 9 14 33 64 67 for the Boston Red Sox and once beat the New York Yankees eight consecutive times in the 1940’s. He’s in the cattle business at San Marcos. • The late Holly Brock, captain and star playmaker of the Steer basketball teams in the late 1920’s. Brock was all-SWC two seasons and held league scoring marks. He was a suc­ cessful in Houston at the time of his death earlier this year. insurance executive • The four years each late Lucian Parrish, captain of the 1906 grid team who lettered in football and track. Parrish, who earned three degrees from the University, was an all-Southern guard. A U.S. congressman from Henrietta, Parrish was killed in a car accident while campaigning for the U.S. Senate in 1922. • Bowie Duncan, captain of the 1907 Longhorns who caught the first touchdown pass in South­ west history. Duncan, who still lives in Egypt, Tex., caught the pass from Winston McMahan to help Texas beat Texas A&M. He has been a merchant, rancher and farmer far more than a half- century. ADDITIONAL CLASSIFIED ADS M i s c e l l a n e o u s L E A R N TO F L A Y gu itar, b egin n er and a d v a n ced , D R E W THOMASON. 478- 2079. LEARN TO FLY? THE BIRD'S NEST FLYING CLUB o ffe rs the best in flig h t tra in in g and sp o rt aviation. 272-5337. Zuni N E L S O N 'S G IF T S : c o m p le te se lectio n j e w e lr y : A frican and M ex ica n im p orts. 4612 South C on gress. 444-3814. Indian G ROK BOOKS, 503 W est 17th, IO p er­ cen t d iscou n t, c o ffe e ; a good p la ce to b e; M on d ay-S atu rd ay, 10-9. 476-0116. W a n t e d I N E E D F O U R A rk an sas m y fa m ily . C all 473-8666. tic k e ts for W A N T E D . U .T .-A R K A N SA S tick ets. Cash. A ny tim e, 442-2954. Use Texan C ia ss ifieds Advertise To For Fall Housing P E A N U T S F o u r modern-day athletic greats representing four sports plus two early-vintage football the stars were enshrined University’s Longhorn Hall of Honor Wednesday. in Former Gov. John Coruially in the made ceremonies the Terrace Convention Center on the eve of the Texas-Texas A&M football game. presentations at Master of ceremonies was Wilbur Evans, executive director of the Cotton Bowl. The newest Hall of Honor recipients include: • Jim Reese, Texas’ first national track champion who won the NCAA mile in 1925. Captain of the track team, he was a two world-record member of medley teams. He has taught school in Dallas for more than a third of a century. relay • Tile late Chal Daniel, all- America guard on the 1941 powerhouse grid team who was killed in a plane crash during World War II. He was a native of Longview. • C. C. “Tex” Hughson, all- SWC pitching great who led Texas to two conference titles. He posted two 20-game seasons Texas Memorial Museum is open seven days a week with hours set at 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Sat­ urday and 2 to 5 p.m. Sun­ day. There is no admission charge. Four floors of per­ manent exhibits are devoted to the earth sciences, history, biology and anthropology. FOR ALL THINGS GOOD- IT SYMBOLIZES OUR APPRECIATION • & >-------------- (OM ( IT'6 SORT OF A CANOE OF G LADN ESS ----- WOODSTOCK IS GLAD THAT HE TA5TES TERRIBLE WITH CRANBERRY SAUCE.. sjM*t* vA- lo % V? w ill have more meaning when you send UNIVERSITY CAMPUS SNOW SCENE CHRISTMAS CARDS In natural color & on handsome I S double fold cards. • I 'i • IAI ■ J \ ((Kl tdliKlK enoAC,emcnr p i n e , SHOP AND SAVE $ 2 5 0 . ^ ^ Student Charge Accounts Welcome I E VVE L ERS ; J 2236 Guadalupe 2236 Guadalupe NEXT TO HEMPHILL'S SWC Teams Near End of Grid Season in Frogs While Texas and A&M are locked traditional their Thanksgiving Day struggle, four conference also-rans will be at turkey dinner, home enjoying awaiting Saturday season finales. SMU, trying t o end its season w ith a w in n in g record, travels the tu r n p ik e to Fort Worth to c o n tin u e its heated rivalry with the Homed Frogs o f TCU. in recent weeks, D is a p p o in t in g the resembled have Minnesota’s Vikings in color only. Fred Taylor’s warriors were embarrassed by Texas two weeks ago, 58-0, but last week in time to fall to Rice, 17-15. Speaking of Rice, the Owls take a sentimental journey to Waco for Bo Hagan’s last game as wise the Owls Hagan an­ man of nounced his two resignation weeks ago, and the three Rice captains vowed that the squad “would do anything in its power to win its remaining games.” That they have done, so far, spanking A&M 18-17 before felling the Frogs. rebounded SMU (5-5; 3-3 in SWC) at TCU (3-6-1; 24 in SWC), 2 p.m. The Mustangs can wrap up fourth place In the SWC standings with a decision over their North Texas foe, while a TCU triumph would assure the Frogs of no worse than a tie for fourth. Both of the teams depend on slide quarterbacks for offensive sparkle and both quarterbacks, Chuck Hixson of SMU and Steve Judy of TCU, are coming off injuries. Hixson returned after missing two games to lead the Mustangs to a 23-10 win over Baylor last week. The Mustangs’ the 1969 pass Gary Hammond, receiving champion, regained the r e c e i v i n g lead with eight receptions last week and is still ranked among the conference’s top rushers. The game will be TCU leads the all-time series, 26-19-7, and won five to SMU’s in the ’60’s. four (plus a tie) last the collegiate encounter for Hixson, who leaves Mockingbird Lane after setting NCAA records for most pass completions and most attempts in a career. RICE (4-5; 24 in SWC) at Baylor (2-8, 1-5 in SWC), 2 p.m. Both teams could move up in the final conference standings with a win. Rice could tie fourth with TCU and SMU if Owls beat the Bears and tops SMU, or could tie for fi with a victory and an SMU will over the Frogs. j Baylor, on the other h< could tie TCU and Rice for to end a comeback season on R the Baptists can high note if master the Houston school. The Bears’ Derek Davis rn a ken his last bid for the SWC pas* r e c e i v i n g championship. He currently trails SMU’s Hammond by (me catch, 42 to 41. Baylor has lost four straight since the!* last successful effort, but the total margin of the four garnet was only 31 points. Rice utilized the big play to TCI) last week hopping back to Fort Worth, Macon Hughes returned a kickoff for 99 yards (a school record! and six points, John Cardwell scored on a 74-yard run, aud Hughes came back to scamped 48 yards to set up the winning field goal with 31 seconds to play, Baylor leads the all-time series^ 26-22-2, and won in the 1960’su 64. send Vols' Kell Selected AP's Top Lineman By Hie Associated Press the Tennessee T h e way coaching staff it, 65 looks at percent or better in grading a player is winning football and 80 BEANIE SAYS: “SINK THE SARGE” percent or better is championship football Chip Kell got 82 percent foe Saturday’s effort against Ken. tucky, and Tennessee in turn go! 360 yards on the ground, a 45-0 victory and a berth in tile Sugae Bowl against Air Force. For that performance, tile 0- from 240-pound foot, Decatur, Ga., was named National College Lineman of the Week by The Associated Press. senior Kell was an All-America a year ago, when he also won tile Jacobs the Trophy outstanding blocker tile Southeastern Conference. The coaches say he’s even better this time around. as in Campus Christmas Tree Scene C A R D S The perfect way to say “Merry Christmas” t o f r i e n d s , relatives . . . All the Longhorn Exes on your list. Beautiful natural color Christmas Concert scene taken from 1970 Cactus on handsome double fold cards. available at: • Co-Op • Hemphill's on the drag • The C rown Shop, 29th at Guadalupe • Journalism Bldg. 107 Page 6 Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN UT Soccer Season Closes With ACM By SYLVAN RODRIGUEZ Texan Sports Staff Texas’ soccer squad clinched its third consecutive league title last week dowTiing TOU 5-0, but still have one more fight blocking they an undefeated season as face Texas A&M at IO a.m. Thursday at Zliker Park. The Steers earned the Texas Collegia ti1 Soccer League crown with an 8-0-1 season record. Tile St. Mary’s Rattlers were the only team to m ar the Orange ledger with a tie spoiling an otherwise perfect season. Though TOU was shut out on their home field in Fort Worth, diey impressed Texas co-captain Roger Garner. “They have a lot of potential, and they played us with an all undergraduate team. In a couple of years they should be real strong,” he said. with a 7-2-1 mark. Texas A A M beat the University at Arlington in a bitterly fought 2-1 contest and could tie Trinity for third place by defeating Texas. the University St. Mary’s Rattlers wound up in second place in tile league by defeating of Houston last weekend, 4-1. The win gave die Rattlers a 7-1-2 record and 16 points to Texas’ 17. They tied Trinity as well as Texas, and suffered their only loss to the Aggie team, which t h r e a t e n s Texas’ undefeated season. Trinity, which tied Texas A&l 3-3 in a nonleague encounter last weekend, finished in third place Houston finished in fifth place in the league, ahead of Texas the University at Tech and tied for sixth, and Arlington, Stephen F. Austin, in eighth. Rice beat Midwestern, 4-0, in Wichita Falls to tie TCU for ninth place. Midwestern finished last. Tile 11-member league will engage tour­ in a post-season nament in San Antonio, Dee. 5 and 6, with several other teams invited from Texas, New Mexico and Louisiana. I Tile Aaqle Game To Honor POW's L o n g h o r n - A g g i e Thanksgiving Lay game will be dedicated to American prisoners of war and men missing in action in Southeast Asia, Al LuncLstcdt, j b u s i n e s s manager of In­ tercollegiate Atliletics, said. T h e pre-game dedication ceremony will begin with a at- j calling statement tention to the men wlio have been in enemy captivity longer Hum six years. special The statement will note tiiat j its North Vietnam is Geneva Convention agreements regarding humane treatment of j pOYV’s. ignoring An estimated 25 graduates and former students of tile University ; and A&M are among more than 1,500 Americans missing in ac- j tion. Four-hundred and thirty of that number are known to beI prisoners. The Longhorn Band will salute the armed forces at the ceremony and the University's Army, Navy and Air Force ROTO will present the color guard. and will Four Air Force RF-4 Phantom jets from Bergstrom Air Force fly over Memorial Base will the Stadium ' ‘missing man a maneuver in wliich one plane in the formation peels away from tile symbolizing thus rest, missing soldiers. formation,” form Before die ceremonies ROTO members will man tables with p e t i t i o n s requesting humane treatment for POWs. Maj. Robert R. Brown, Air F o rc e ROTO, said, “ I am hoping for 60,000 (the number expected to attend the game) signatures.” Mayflower Bonuses For the kind of move you de­ serve, rely on the bonus fea­ tures only Mayflower offers. • Schooled, accredited movers • The only total Air-Ride fleet • No loading on tailgates • The finest packing material and methods For com plete Information about all the other bonuses you enjoy with a Mayflower move, just call us. American Mayflower Moving and Storage Services 6100 Airport Blvd. G L 2-2591 DOBIE! SHOPPING MATT 21st Sc Guadalupe NOW OPENING M E N ’S HAIR STATIST 21-G RESTAURANT COMBS ’N SHEARS - MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS CAPITOL CAMERA STUDIO GREEN FASH IONS Sc FABRICS MAGIC RAINBOW— THE GREAT WALL CHINESE IMPORTS C L O T H IN G BOUTIQUE A N D M O R E T O C O M E ! FREE PARKING IN DOBIE CENTER GARAGE 20th & WHITIS Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 GRA DUA TE HOUSE has unex p ected F O R SA LE F o r S a l e A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . S e r v i c e s KEY P l INCHING. CONSULTING. Low PROGRAM M ING. fa st s e r ­ vice. AR BEC, 477-6366. 3005 C ed ar Si. F re e p a rking. ra te s, E X P E R IE N C E d isse rtatio n s. i.eyendecker. P a rk . 476-8532. [> typist. 50c pc P e c a n T heses r page. G res a p a Pi rs. N a ta lis 'I r a ile r CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING R A T E S E ach Word (15 word m inim um ) ^ -JU ........... .......... * .......... 5 ' ............................................ * ! ...................................... WjJ-g Each Additional Time Student rate one tim e E a c h ad d ition al w ord 20 C o n secu tiv e Issu e s IO w o r d s 15 words 20 words .............................. .. I col. Inch „*••••■*•••*»•••*• • co in c h S co I “ch 4 Co!! inch C la s s if ie d D is p la y I column x one inch one tim e I -..III E a ch Additional T im e ................................... * '« 00 .................................... ..................... W2*.W ........... * (N o co p y ch a n ce to r consecutive issue r a te. » • . L O W STU D ENT RATES less for 75c th * first 15 words or tim e. 5c each additional word. Stu­ receipt dent must show Auditor's in Journalism and pay Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y through Friday. in advance DEADLINE SCHEDULE Tuesday Texan M onday, l l OO s . rn. W ednesday Texan V a e id a y , 11:00 s .rn- m Thursday T exan W ednesday, ll.O S a.m . Friday Texan Thursday. 11:00 a.m. Sunday Texan . . Friday. 3:00 p.m. “ In the event of errors m ade la aa advertisem ent, im m ediate notice m ast be given as the publishers are responsible for only DRF. incorrect Insertion. All claim s for adjustm ents ahould be m ade not later than SO days after publication." F o r S a l e TO P CASH PRICES paid for dia­ m onds old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop. 603 Commodore Perry 476-0178 DREW ’S RECORD EXCHANGE. Used j L P ’s traded, sold. 1624 Lavaca, 478- 2079. PORTABLE TVs: Limited late used 19" supply of lnstant-on W estinghouse b-w. $55. 444-1345, 442-7475. 4305 M anchaca Road. ultra clean y ARTIN GUITAR D U E xcellent condition, with hardshell case. $330. #78-2079. J E N SP E E D BICYCLES, French and lfioO Manor Italian made, ten speeds Road, 477-2504. •GS HONDA 350cc with helm et. $300 cash. Call B a rry , 478-1506 Also com ­ plete sc u b a rig. $125. STUDENT NOTICE UNCLAIMED FREIGHT has received new shipm ents: SEWING MACHINES— (8) brand new 1970 zig zag sewing m achines with full factory guarantee. Nationally adver­ tised brand to be sold for $35 each. T hese m achines have built In controls for m aking buttonholes, fancy stitches, henting, sewing on buttons, darning, m ending, and overcasting, plus m any •th or features. STEREO CONSOLES (4> brand new gtereo consoles. These 1970 nationally advertised m odels are in beautiful wal­ nut finish with 4 speaker system s & world turntables. They feature powerful solid state chassis to he sold for $75 each. fam ous BSR COMPONENT SYSTEMS It Includes turntables, speakers, am plifier, & dust Cover $59.95. ELECTROLUX (3) vacuum cleaners to be sold for $39 95 each Email monthly available, paym ents also BankAineHeard & M aster Charge. M erchandise m ay be inspected at UN­ CLAIMED FREIGHT, 200: Airport Blvd. (between Manor Rd & ’9th St.) O p e n to the public 9 a.m . - S p rn. Mon.- F ri., - Sat. 'til I p m. T H R E E S P E E D BICYCLES. E nglish m ade. 1600 M anor Road. 4om efficiency a p a rtm e n t. $135, all bills paid. M anna Ka! A p artm en ts, 405 E ast. I 31st. 472-2147, 476-2633. BARRANCA SQUARE APTS. new. W ith in w a lkin g B rand d is ta n c e U.T. E ffic ie n c y and one b e d ro o m a p a rt­ fu rn is h e d . $130 up. m ents, c o m p le te ly in fo rm a tio n c a ll For 478-7713 o r 454 0239 LA FIESTA APTS. 40 0 East 30th fe w single vaca ncies a v a ila b le f o r 4 p e o p le and for I e n tire a p a rtm e n t a J a n u a ry I. F o r in fo rm a tio n c all 477-1800. ON E BEDROOM a p a rtm e n t convenient to C am pus. On Shuttle B us Route. W ater, g as paid. W ith lau n d ry facili­ ties and off s tre e t n ark in g . E l D orado A p a rtm e n ts, 3501 Speedw ay, 472-4893 or 478-1382. H e l p . . W a n t e d CHILD CARE WORKER. C ounselor to w ork w ith em otionally dis­ T ran sp o rta tio n tu rb ed av ailab le from W im berley. $1.50 p e r hour, 31 hours p e r w eek. adolescents. and to THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN THE CASTILIAN • • • • Pool Sauna baths 20 meals weekly Apply for Sprang! 2323 San Antonio 478-981 I 21st & G uad alu p e 472-8411 STOP BY FOR A TOUR! SUITE-APARTMENTS • Lounges, conference rooms, TV rooms • 24 hour security • Swimming pool • Gam e room Public parking garage • Reading room •A ttra c tiv e dining commons • Shopping mall and restaurants • 20 meals a week & meal contracts Page IO Thursday, November 26, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN MATH. S e m e ste r R ates. A vailable often as a c c e s sa ry . F o r B usiness, L iberal- P re p a ra tio n . G .R .E . R a te s A rts M ajors. G u a ran te ed MATH EN AMI CS, 452-1327. R esults. G roup PIA N O LESSONS. B eginners an d a d ­ vanced. C all 472-4722 R o o m s M EN. PR IV A T E. Llv in groom , kitchen, y a rd . m aid . T h ree blocks bus. Shop- i ping. Bills paid. 406 W est M onroe. MEN PASO HOUSE o f Fall rest fo r V acancies a n d / o r Spring sem ester. L a rge, c a rp e te d ro om s: in e v e ry ro o m , p a rk in g R off g e ra to rs lo t, c o lo r TV an d lo u n g * . d a ily m a 'd service . $ 4 5 /m c n th . C a ll 478-3917 a fte r 5 p.m . R easonable ROOM AND BOARD, m en r a te s plus good only. food. Ch.se to C am pus. On S huttle Bus R oute. 2710 N ueces. 477-8272. E M E R G E N C Y . W ILL PAY m o n th ’s r e n t o r d e p o sit to tak e o v e r c o n tra c t room . M aid serv ice. Two fo r m a n ’s blocks from C am pus. C all 472-8997. U nfur. H ouses WIG AND BEAUTY serv ices. Save 25 to 50 p e er CML C apitol B eau ty College, G uad alu p e a t 16th. 472 3292. LEA RN TO PEAY g u ita r, b eg in n e r ad v an c ed . D R EW THOMASON c u r a r ! 2079. N; 4 ' H o u s e s , U n f . bed! .se to U niversity. Two bath. B ig fenced y a rd w ith p e c a n fre e s. A lm ost now c a rp e tin g throughout. P a n e le d den. drapes, nice neighborhood. C all a fte r 5pm , 476-8289, o w n e r. L o s t & F o u n d $25 R E W A R D fur hist dog. S m all grey poodle and w ire h a ir m ix lost Town I .ak e a re a . O range collar. A nsw ers to Jo-Jo. C all 412-0464; o r H ouston collect, 621-2397. R o o m & B o a r d THE CONTESSA 2706 M uscat & CONTESSA WEST 2707 R io G ra n d * 476-4648 Rooms ava a b le now fo r th e S p rin g se m aster. 20 m e al* p e r week, sw im m ing lim ous ne serv ce, s e c u rity g u a ra p o o l, on d u ty 7 n ig h t* per week. THE BARRONE MEN'S DORMITORY 2700 N u e c e t 4 ^6 -464 8 — 472-7850 ro o m * a v a i'a b 'e fo r th e W e wiH have tw in b e d ­ in c lu d in g S p rin g sem ester, d e d ro om . 20 m ea's p e r week, da y ma d service, sw im m ing p o o l, fre e p a rk­ in g , e tc . I 5813. M E N S C O - O P S ROOM & BOARD— About $70 a Month A pplications a r e now being accepted for n e x t se m este r. W rite M en’s Co-Op Council, 340 T ex a s Union, o r com e by and v isit any h o u se : C am pus G uild R a m sh o rn R oyal S ta g T helcm e T L O K. 2854 W'hltls 710 W. 21st 1805 P e a rl 1910 Rio Grand* 1909 N ueces 1903 Rio Grande ROOM AND BOARD a t L yle House. to ta k e o v e r c o n tra c t. $90/m onth. 477-7596. to cam pus, need som eone Close R o o m m a t e s MALE ROOM M ATE N E E D E D th ree from C am pus. $75 m onthly. blocks bills paid. A fter 6 p.m ., 472-6497. 472 4825. G IR L S TO SH A RE Xwo bedroom apart- I merit. 2207, 116 L a k e tra c e . Call Jo- I ' len 444-0819 a fte r 5:30 p.m . w eekdays, j A PA R T M E N T : FOURTH G IR L now- or J a n u a ry . $65-month, bills p aid. M aid , serv ice, pool, S huttle Bus. 477-4826. _ _ — ----------------------- girl F o u rth needed for Spring. $62.50, bills paid, j LAKE FRO N T STUDIO. I j T ennis, pool, Shuttle eight. 442-4459. _ N E E D M ALE ROOMMATE for S pring S e m e ste r a t T he E s tr a d a A p a rtm e n ts. Call D u n can a t 441-1521. F E M A L E SH A R E fo u r bedroom house. U nexpected v a ca n cy . Color TV. $48- m onth, bills. A vailable now. 476-8141. m e n t w ith F E M A L E SH A R E two b edroom a p a r t­ th re e girls. $56-mon th. O ccupy J a n u a ry L 307 E a s t 31st, 204. 444 1429. N E E D TWO FEM ALE ro o m m a tes. IV O tw o bath a p a rtm e n t n e a r bedroom , [ C am pus. $55 plus e le c tric ity . 478-2617. STUDIOUS BUSINESS stu d e n t needs sim ila r to sh a re a bedroom a p a rtm e n t. C all 477-4379. ro o m m a te two j T y p i n g BOBBYE D E L A F IE L D T Y PIN G S E R ­ VICE. T heses, d isse rta tio n s, report*. M im eographing. R easonable. III 2-71H4. LAURA BODOUR — 478-8113 {Close to U.T.) Tl>e finest personal y o u r U niversity w ork. U niquely low ra te s. typing of all T heses, d isse rtatio n s, re p o rts, etc. Also m ultliith in g & binding. R e fere n ce s upon re q u est. A N N E ’S T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . (M a rjo rie Anne D elafield). T heses, d isse rtatio n s, te r m p a p e rs, B. C. re p o rts, law briefs. Ditto, m im eo g rap h in g , m ultliithing, binding. 442-7008. 442-0170. D E A D L IN E T Y PIN G SE R V IC E . F a st, a c c u ra te . Low ra te s . N e a r C am pus. T e rm p a p ers, th eses, d isse rtatio n s. 476- 2047 a n y tim e. TH EM ES, R E PO R T S, le c tu re notes. R e aso n ab le. M rs. F r a s e r , 476-1317. Just af 27th & Gt J CUD® 9 A Jbu\ f T y p in g M u ltliith in g . B inding Th® Complete Profession#! FULL-TIME Typing Service t*» tailored the need* of U niversity students. Spec. ii K o boar# equipm ent for science, and engineer­ ing th eses and d isserts (tons. language, P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d GR 2-7677 2707 H em phill B urk P a p e r s , B.C. EX PER IEN C ED AND DEPEND ABLE. tin sis, d isse rtatio n s. M rs. M arilyn H am ilton. 444-2631 ’til 8 p m . report*, QUALITY T Y PIN G SE R V IC E E *I p erienced. BS-Business. IBM ele ctric, sym bols. R easonable. ribbon, carb o n Mrs. Jo n es. 454 3884. se c re ta ry . Briefs. TO P QUALITY T Y PIN G , fo rm er legal d isse r­ tatio n s, Science, e ngineering sym bols. Mrs. A nthony. 454-3U79. th eses, VIRG INIA S C H N E ID E R T Y PIN G S E l£ VICE. G ra d u a te and Und« r g r a d u a ts typing, p rin tin g , binding. 1515 K oenig Lane. T elep h o n e: 465-7205 EX P E R IE N C E D d isse rtatio n s, TYPIST’ IBM Theses; executive. etc C harlene S tark. 453-5218. Sym bols. D ependable. J AND I , T Y P IN G S ervice. All se rv ic e * reaso n ab le. a c c u ra te . We try h a rd e r! 452 7883. 454- 1934 E X P E R T T Y PIS T , T heses, fessional Mrs. Tullos, 453 5124. briefs. B U . re p o rts. IBM rep o rts, S e le c tu s. p ro ­ binding. P rin tin g , R e asonable. T erm CITY W ID E T Y PIN G & PR IN T IN G . theses, d isse rtatio n s, up A resum es. delivery. C all 476-4179, No answ er. 453- 9162. pap ers, Pick NORTHWEST. NEAR AI Ian dale. Y ears to help you. 465- typing ex p erien ce Just North of 27th & Guadalupe Anti/ ^ibvtui, • T y p in g . M u ltliith in g . B inding U R A U The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to tailored the needs of U niversity students. Special keyboard equipm ent for science, and engineer­ ing theses a u d d isse rtatio n s. language, P h o n e GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk WOODS T Y P IN G SE R V IC E . N e a r C am pus. Law , T hesis. M rs. Woods. EX P E R I ENCED-TY PIN G . R eports, eta, My hom e. 458-3546 an d -o r 453-2079. ROY W. HOLLEY 4 7 6 - 3 0 1 8 T Y P E S E T TIN G, TY PIN G , P R IN T IN G . BIN D IN G VIRGINIA CALHOUN TYPING SERVICE P ro fe ssio n a l T y p in g AU F ield s M u ltliith in g an d B inding on T heses and D isse rta tio n s 1301 E dgew ood 47S-263( a E P O R T S . THEM ES. T H E SE S, d isse rtatio n s. R easonable ra te s . M rs. K night, 4011 Speedw ay. 453-1209. Just North of 27th & Guadalupe M B A T y p in g . M u ltliith in g . B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to ta ilo re d th e needs of U n iv ersity stu d e n ts. Special k e yboard e q u ip m e n t fo r science, and e n g in e er­ ing th eses a n d d isse rtatio n s. lan g u a g e P h o n e GR 2-3210 a n d GR 2-7677 2707 H em phill P a rk F IR S T F IV E PA G E S 45c each . th e a fte r 35c each. 442-5693. Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS 4 7 6 - 7 5 8 1 311 E. l i t h R o o m & B o a r d Call 84 7 2787 collect In W im berly. C ontact M r. K ahn o r M r. G rayson. F E M A L E TO SH A R E a p a rtm e n t n e a r C am pus. $75. C all 472-6649. 1/2 block +0 Campus T u t o r i n g NNIHIL THE GGIES ik(ocUu, H O O K ’EM H O RN S JJrlltons SIFTS AN D DECORATIVE ACCESSO RIES 316 Guadalupe G R 7-7276 O N - T H E - D R A G G O O D LUCK ’HORNS EL CHICO RESTAURANT "Enjoy Your Victory Feast" IN H A N C O C K CENTER AFTER THE G A M E FOR FO O D & DRINK SCHOLZ GARTEN A U ST IN 'S FAVORITE W A TER IN G SPOT 1607 San Jacinto G R 7-4171 19th & Rio Grande G R 6-3475 2904 Guadalupe G R 6-5110 T. W. MARTIN TEXACO SERV. "Where Service Is Our Specialty ’ 7 D A YS A W EEK Wrecker & State Inspection Service Dr. Pepper 2422 Guadalupe G R 2-9266 1023 W. 24th GR 8-0619 ADAMS SERVICE CO. A u t o m o t i v e r e p a ir — b r a k e s AIR C O N D IT IO N IN G SERVICE KEY TO BEAUTY IN DIVIDUAL STYLING ’B A C K O F THE HUT’ 19th and Guadalupe ES ALL THE W A Y H O R N S I BONANZA STEAK HOUSE 2815 GUADALUPE OPEN AFTER THE G A M E TO SERVE UT FANS! STAYING OPEN TO SERVE UT FANS! DURHAM'S Business College OF AUSTIN "The School of Specialized Training" Free nationwide job placements for our graduate! Call or Write for Free Information 600 Lavaca G R 8-3446 TRIUMPH SUZUKI DBL TRIUMPH M O T O R C Y C L E SALES "W E SERVICE W H A T W E SELL" 5120 Burnet Rd. 452-7554 DROP IN AFTER THE G A M E 1911 East 7th G R 8-7783 19th and 472-7511 Guadalupe BRACKENRIDGE AUTO SUPPLY D ISC O U N T O IL A N D AU T O PARTS Open Until 6:30 p.m. AUSTIN SAYINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION "4 LO CATIO N S TO SERVE Y O U " AUSTIN BODY WORKS EXPERT BODY W O RK AT REASONABLE PRICES 24 Hr. Wrecker Service 1310 E. 6th St. G R 2-3522 You Can Trust Your Car To The Man Who Ii ears The Star VILLA CAPRI TEXACO • AIR C O N D IT IO N IN G • WRECKER SERVICE • BRAKES • TUNE-UP • TIRES A COMPLETE LINE OF TEXACO PRODUCTS O P E N 24 H O U R S G R 2-1352 FREE Pick Up and Delivery until 10:00 P.M. OPEN AFTER THE G A M E Sam Slaughter's Food Stores SERVING THE UT AREA 2412 E. lit S R 2-7243 19th and Lavaca 3221 Rad Rlvar orth Interregional Hy. A t Capital Plaza 1008 Lavaca 478-9641 CO M PLIM ENTS OF: The Americana Thaatre The Southwood Theatre The Texas Theatre The Burnet and Chief Drive-in Theatres H O O K 'EM H O R N S QUALITY IS EVERYDAY CASTILIAN Beauty Salon experienced operators to serve you LONGHORN SHOE SHOP 2108 Guadalupe 477-1021 2323 San Antonio 478-0775 "Look at Your Shoes, Other People Do" AUSTIN MOTORCYCLE CO, INC. SERVING CENTRAL TEXAS SINCE 1923 1611 Guadalupe 472-3181 472-8788 SAGE "YO U R PASSPORT TO A BETTER STANDARD O F LIVIN G 1' E C O N O M Y ENGRAVING COMPANY Artists and Engravers 6500 Airport G I 2-6421 910^/2 Brazos G R 2-3542— G R t-5335 RAYMOND S DRUG STORE MARTIN'S KUM BAK Checb Cashed and Money Orders Many Complete Cosmetics Lines -D IR T T S" 2706 Rio Grande G R 2-2134 2808 Guadalupe GR 8-0413 454-4141 rn These Merchants — They Support The '