Registra .ruction Cited Senate Recommend ~ By BECKY BROWN The F aculty Senate voted Monday to adopt, with minor am endm ents, a com­ m ittee recom m endation that preregistration the U niversity be abolished and a a t modified “ fieldhouse reg istratio n ” be in­ stituted. The of the report preregistration was based on of a com m ittee headed by Dr. Robert Jeffrey which pointed out to the Senate th e im ­ plem ented at the U niversity has “ inherent failure. w eaknesses” its largely dependent These w eaknesses a re on tim e” larg e am ount required for the system he said. preregistration responsible procedure of “ lead rejection Senate’s F aculty the for as D epartm ents scheduling courses in April cannot be sure of w hat professors’ plans will be when begins, he argued further. The student’s choice of courses in April, Jeffrey pointed out, often becomes the wrong choice by fall because of w hat courses he took or the fall sem ester actually did not take during the sum m er. A large num ber of adds and drops was caused by incorrectly m arked course request cards, often 7 or 8 percent, which were rejected by the com puter, the com m ittee reported. •JEFFREY ADDED the preregistration procedure is not working satisfactorily a t any other the U niversity. institutions sim ilar to the report, Although no opposition was evident in the voice vote on there was conflict during debate, generally based on two points. The first was that the report ignored the advantages of preregistration. students F i f t y - 1 w o percent preregistering got exactly the courses they requested, it w as noted. However, Dr. Irwin Spear pointed out that, while the students got what they had requested in April, this w as not what they necessarily wanted when they began the fall sem ester. He declared the m ajor aspect of to be “ due to changes in students’ positions.” the problem the cf The second point of opposition w as th at registration would not either method of T e x a n Staff P h o t j by PH IL HI BLK . Faculty Says 'N o M o re ' D r. R o b e rt C . Jeffrey, sta n d in g, w ho h e a d e d the F acu lty S e n a te c o m m itte e which p ro p o s e d a b o lish in g p re registration , p o in te d out to the S e n a te M o n d a y the p re ­ r e g istra tio n p ro ce d u re h ad "in h e re n t w eaknesses." A lth o u g h there w as som e o p p o s i­ tion d u rin g d e b a te of the re co m m e n d a tio n , the v o ice v ote to a p p r o v e it h ad no o p p o sitio n . D a il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 71, No. 62 Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, O C T O B E R 5, 1971 Ten Pages 471-4401 d Fieldhouse Plan shortage a n t , . of U niversity's classroom s and funds, which w as term ed basically the reason students do not always get the courses they w ant. Dr. Ira Iscoe suggested that “ perhaps this institution has reached an situation.” Some m em bers felt this problem should be the thrust of the report. im nossble th at a Struck from the report was a recom ­ two-day drop and add the gym nasium mendation period be scheduled during the fall sem ester 1972-73. It was gcncra’ly such a period would be un­ felt necessary if registration occurred just the week nreviouslv. two days of classes first th at the in in ANOTHER CHANGE in the report was the addition of graduate students to those the first day of register on allowed registration. Previously, report had the read : “ Provide for the registration of only seniors on the first day of reg istratio n ." to the and 1972 fellows: for the The report as adopted now recom m ends: • T hat discontinue the U niversity fall preregistration procedures spring beginning with sem ester p reregistration that period registration be reinstituted the week prior to fall sem ester. 1972, with im provem ents a half d ay s of as the five days of registration rath e r than the past, b etter location with air con­ ditioning. require each departm ent to have approve a faculty m em ber present to s c h e d u l e im plem ent “ liberalized procedures.” such as abolishing the section changes. sectionizers five and return to changes and for • That continued decision preregistration for the spring sem esters be on a postponed until p reregistration for 1972 can be analyzed. the experience of spring • That the possibility of a m onetary penalty for late drops be studied. • That the president appoint a special com m i'toe the possibility of com puterized reg' "frof ion a week prior to the beginning of the sem ester. study to The Faculty accepted Senate unanimously fhe recom m endations of the Enrollm ent Control Task Force for con­ trolling enrollment for 1972-73. also The recom m endations are in keeping with 1971-72 control policies already a p p lie d to division entering transfers. However, time, controls are extended to upper division transfers. lower the first freshmen and for U P P E R DIVISION transfers would be subject to a priority aprlication period, and a quota of 3.900 would he set for the fall th e task sem ester. Dr. G erhard Fonken. fcrc^ m em ber who presented the report, explained the quota is adequate to adm it all those now applying. in Controversy in the Faculty S enate cen­ th e report tered around a statem ent that “ preference will be given to Texas residents who are transfering from junior this provision colleges.” It was argued m ight those students who attend four-year colleges near their homes for financial reasons. the exclusion of lead to Several am endm ents aimed at waiving this policy for students in various situations w ere rejected. Spear pointed out th ere were too m an y special cases to allow for and that, therefore, the report should be left a s w ritten . The rep o rt was then accepted without am endm ents. 4 Solons Ask Mutscher Out By DOTTY GRIFFITH General Reporter indicated Monday Four m em bers of the “ D irty 30" reform they would coalition move to impeach indicted House Speaker Gus M utscher if he refuses to resign a n i lf Gov. Preston Smith refuses to call a special session to consider the m atter. Rep. Lane Denton of Waco said he has asked for an appointm ent with Smith T hursday to request a special session. A Smith aide, Carlton Carl, said Smith would probably m eet with Denton and a num ber of other representatives then. Denton in­ dicated telegram s will be sent to all House rnem bers requesting their support. the “ D irty 30’ Other m em bers of a t­ tending the Capitol news conference w ere Reps. Tom Moore of Waco, F rances Farenthold of Corpus Christi and Walter Mengden of Houston. Moore called resignation of M utscher, who has said he has no intention of stepping down as speaker. Moore term ed in office M utscher’s decision “ absolutely intolerable." M utscher is under indictm ent on two charges of bribery in fraud connection with the Texas stock to rem ain the for scandal. Moore said he doubted M utscher will reconsider his decision in spite .of advice both from House opponents, such as the “ D irty 30” and from his political allies. is unlikely Smith will m ake a move It to call a special session at this tim e, ac­ cording to Carl. A constitutional question w as raised, when Moore said that if all else failed, “ We will have no recourse but to call en a sim ple m ajority of m em bers to sign a into proclam ation session). im peachm ent proceedings. The House has 150 m em bers, and a m ajo rity of 76 can vote to convene it. The Constitution, however, has no the House to begin (calling . Moore specific provision for im peachm ent of the speaker, but refers in statute to “ all State officers." Mrs. Farenthold. an attorney, indicated she has doubts concerning fhe House’s power to impeach the speaker and said she felt sure such action would be challenged in the courts. calling in £or M utscher’s resignation said. “ Texas has become a disgrace before the nation, if not before the world.” Ho said M utscher, who retains his seat on 4?ie five m em ber Legislative R edistricting Board, “ could elim in ate those who oppose him " and, in the event Mut­ scher is convicted, “ Texas would have been red istricted by a convicted felon.” At least When asked w hether im peachm ent might hurt M utscher’s chances for a fa ir trial, Moore conceded it might, but in the case of his voluntary resignation, “ people would think m ore of the sp e ak er.” one Austin rep resen tativ e, M aurice Angly J r., the lone T rav is County Republican, favors im peachm ent and ex­ pulsion. Angly said Monday, “ To rem o v t M utscher from the chair but to allow him to continue to work the floor w ould produce nothing but a puppet show as he would continue to lead that group of cronies known as 'the team .’” Austin Reps. Wilson Forem an and Harold Davis w ere com m ent unavailable for Monday afternoon while Rep. Don Cavness, also of Austin, chose to “ look m o re closely” at the D irty 30's plans. Robin Hood's Hot Paints Arty Caper BRUSSELS (AP) — A m an depicting him self as a modern-day Robin Hood dem anded $4 million Monday for E ast P ak istan i refugees in return for a missing painting, “ The Love L etter," by Seven­ teenth Century Dutch m aster Ja n V erm eer, Toe Brussels new spaper I^e Soir said on* of in­ reporters, W alter Schwilden, terviewed the man at his request and sawr the painting. It w as stolen last m onth from tile P alace of Fine A rts in B russels. its The Dutch State Museum in A m sterdam , which owns the painting, valued it at up to S3 million. Schwilden reported in Le Soir th a t afte r an anonymous phone call he m e t a tall, m asked young m an in front of a village church. He was then Pinfolded an d taken by car to view the painting. Schwilden said the m an identified himself the Belgian province of as “ Thyl" from Limburg and com pared him self the m ythical hero of F landers, T ijl Uilen- spiegel. to According to legend. U ilenspiegel helped the poor against th e rich and becam e th# F lem ish version of E n g lan d ’s Robin Hood. Schwilden w rote th a t Thyl dem an d ed $4 the Caritas charity am ong Bengali million be given organization for refugees. use to Halt Set In Strike N ixon to Invoke Taft-Hartley Law KEY BISCAYNE, F la. (AP) - President R ichard M. Nixon within the next few days injunction will seek a court to halt, a t the West Coast dock tem porarily, least strike. He m ay expand the move to include strik ers a t Atlantic and Cult Coast ports. Announcing t h e r r n v p early Monday night. P re ss S ecretary Ronald L. Zingier said Nixon would act form ally to begin invoking T aft-H artley law provisions after flying back to the White House. Nixon’s first step will he to appoint labor five-m em ber hoard of inquiry to look into all negotiations involving dock workers and the m aritim e industry. He will do this in an executive order. the board reports, Zingier said, Nixon will direct the Ju stice Departm ent that would at to seek a court least halt the 96-day-old West Coast walkout for RO days. injunction Once The big question, Zingier said, is w hether Nixon will seek a nationwide injunction or act on a selective basis, meaning a move against the West Coast strike. The walkout in A tlantic and Gulf ports last F rid ay and obviously has not the economic began y et come close im pact of the Pacific strike. to having Ziegler said Nixon decided to use Taft- H artley procedures after being informed late Monday afternoon that negotiations in the West Coast strike had reached an im ­ passe. The press secretary' said Nixon received this word from director George Shultz of the Office of M anagement and Budget. H ie board of inquiry will he headed by Prof. Keith Mann of the Stanford University law school. He said tile other panel m em ­ b ers were being selected. The presidential board might he able as early as Tuesday night. spokesman said to report the to Nixon Zeigler said N-xon already has decided an antistrike injunction will he sought, at the West Coast. He said. “ The least on President feels that this that he will tim e is of such seriousness take Taft-H artlev action.” the situation at Representatives Se e k Sp ea ker Im p e a c h m e n t Four m e m b ers o f the "D ir t y T h irty " told new sm en M o n d a y they plan to m e et with G o v . Preston Sm ith to seek w ays an d in d ic te d H o u se Sp e ak e r G u s M u tsc h e r m eans o f rem ovin g fro m office . L e ft to rig h t are Reps. T om M o o re , W a c o ; Frances Farenthold, C o r p u s C h risti; W a lt e r M e n g d e n , H o u s- ton, a nd Lane D en ton, W a c o . — U P I Telephoto. House Supports Pay Freeze (AP) — WASHINGTON P resident Richard M. Nixon’s order for a $1.3-billion six-month delay in a federal pay raise w as upheld by the House Monday 207 to 174. The Senate has yet to act. A host of southern D em ocrats joined Republicans in turning back a House move to m ake the pay raise effective Jan . I instead of next Ju ly I, as Nixon ordered. It w as the first congressional vote on any of the P resid en t’s emergency' economic proposals, and he said a veto of his action postponing the pay raise would torpedo the whole package. Sen. Frank Moss, D Utah, plans to press the Senate Wednesday or for a vote in Thursday. E ith er the Senate or the House can override the P resid en t’s pay-raise deferral action, without concurrence by the other cham ber. The Senate voted 65 to 4 Monday to give (Related Story, Page 2.) m em bers of the arm ed forces a $381-million annual pay raise in addition to a $2.4-billion increase the already-enacted included legislation to extend the draft. in In other developments on the economic front M onday: • Tho Cost of Living Council ruled th at retailers must keep available at each store a list of maximum prices perm issible under the wage-price freeze. • AFL-CIO President George Meany urged Congress to take active control of the economy. He told the House Banking Committee that Nixon has proved unworthy of trust in his moves to stabilize w ages and prices. • Dock strikes continued on West, E ast and Gulf Coasts am id indications that the President the prolonged West Coast tie-up if a settlem ent is not reached quickly. is preparing to act in By KIRK BOHLS When the month of Septem ber is ripped off the calendar, you ran be certain that one event, a tradition since 1929, will not be far behind. And th at s what is known as “ OU W eekend.” i t s that 5 ep, time again. Tim e when D allas hote r, become cram m ed with students from Texas and Oklahoma, Time when streets becom e a soli ! stream of honking cars. Time when jails become packed and policemen appear in herds. Time when Big D becom es an alcoholic w onderland. And, than 70.000 will assem ble in the Cotton Bowl to w itness the traditional collision between these two nationally-ranked pigskin powers. The gam e will be locally televised a t 2 p.m . (CDT) by KTBC- Austin. Both sixty-sixth m eeting of the two schools on opposite sides of the border, with records. With O klahom a’s 33-20 trim m ing of the U niversity of Southern California and the H orns’ 35-7 pasting of Oregon’s Ducks last Saturday, the two com- team s will enter unblemished this, the If this Saturday, the Longhorns see red the fact that red and white are O klahom a's school colors w on't be the only reason. It will be the blood in the eyes of the OU players, not to mention their fans, who will be seeking revenge for last that Texas tacked on the in­ y ea r's 41-9 score vaders. The O range and White have lost only once in the last 14 years of Head Coach D arrell Royal’s reign in Austin. In his four varsity seasons at OU, Royal, as a player, evened the score with D: H ello Again! incidentally, tim e when the Texas Longhorns do battle with the ‘Boom er’ Sooners from N orm an, Okla. the State Fairgrounds. annual classic on their in TO PFT IT another way, it s a tim e when New Y ea r's Eve com es to D allas a couple of months early. OU weekend has come to m ean to U niversity students w hat apple pie and motherhood m ean to the A m erican flag. They’re inseparable. For th e twenty-sixth consecutive year a sellout crowd of p artisan football fans num bering m ore b atan ts upped their slates to identical 3-0 m arks. Texas leads the series with OU by a com fortable m argin, 42-21-2. in the AP poll RANKED NO. 8 last week, O klahom a’s triple option offense has accum ulated 118 points, while its stingy defense has allowed a total of 49 in th ree contests. Situated at the No. 3 position in the heap of the country’s best football team s, the Horns have am assed a sum of 91 points on offense and lim ited their three opponents to a m eager 17 points. Texas, winning two and losing two. Just a m ere 42 y ears ago (seem s like yesterday), Texas put it to our neighbors across the Red River, 21-0, and this historic event m arked the beginning of the annual October ritual. R ichard Boldt, adm inistrative assistant, said there a re “ b etter than 10,000 tickets available to U niversity students.” He expects these to last at least until W ednesday. A total of 4.539 w ere draw n Monday. He confirm ed reports it definitely will be a sellout. The D allas police departm ent hag it plans to act identically to last year. It will not allow any violation of the law, but it won't try to suppress the football fans from having a good tim e. said Lf. T erry Hauck, adm inistrative assistant to the D allas police chief, said. “ Special em phasis will be given to preventing frays, assaults, obnoxious intoxication, destruction of behavior, excessive indecent property—public o r private—and conduct. We will enforce the State liquor law s.” any According to Hauck, there will be “ between 600 in­ the D epartm ent of and 700“ law enforcem ent officers on hand cluding reinforcem ents from Public Safety. ANY MISDEMEANOR is subject to a m axim um $200 fine, depending on the offense. Hauck said police w ere expecting good co-operation from most students, and that they are not anticipating much trouble. A little over 400 arrests w ere m ade last year, a slight increase from the previous year s all-time low of 350. So, that it's reached time again. And who’s to say, when all the dust and commotion settles am id the debris of em pty fifths and tom -up ticket stubs, w hether the city of Big D, site of the annual Blast, will still be standing. Chances are it will be—after all, there'll have to be yet another OU Weekend next vear. Opponents Charge Rigged Elections Thieu Says Communism 'Defeated Van Thieu SAIGO N IA P ) — President claimed Nguyen his overwhelming M on d a y majority re-election was a defeat for communism in South Vietnam for democracy. victory and in a But charges of fraud mounted as swiftly as results were posted In Sunday’s uncontested balloting. Vice-President Nguyen Cao K y V, - , * > ■ ,1 \ V v , ' • '•: >v-N m . By P A U L C O O LEY Staff Writer The University administration faces a complex of problems in dealing with minority recruitment which can hp solved through the existing equal educational op­ portunity policy set up by the Board of Regents, Dr. Robert b. Mettlem said Monday. Mettlem. assistant to President Stephen Spurr, responded to a recent Department of Health, Education and Welfare report c r i t i c i z i n g the University s minority recruitment. Mettlem "The equal educational stated. opportunity policy was set up for the benefit of students, regardless of color, whereas th" now defunct PPIO and C LEO a d m i s s i o n s programs were discriminant to whites." all The former Program complement, for Educational Opportunity and its law the school Council on I^gal Educational Opportunity, allowed the waiving of the required SAT and USAT scores for admissions in favor of a more relaxed criteria on the behalf of minority students. Tile programs were dropped because of tho policy statement of the Board of Regents insisting ad­ mittance he based on "a c ­ creditation standards and con­ sistent with maintaining a high quality of educations." M e t t l e m stated "possible minority students do not know the University point of view. Project Info has been aimed at in minority high this purpose schools for several years but has results desired.” not had the BOOK ST A L L T o BOOK STALL ll 6103 BURNET RD. 454-3664 1512 LA V A C A 477-1053 Huge Selection of Used Paperbacks & Hardbacks #STUDY NOTES W E •LIT-SCIENCES-LAW TRADE •FICTION-NONFICTION PAPERBACKS til ft B>*k«l«\» til « Sunday HOOK STAM. It BOOK STAM. I B e rl» d n .\ « S a t u r d a y * ft.SO I OO ft SO t il ft t il 6 ft ' ' B t u r d a y S u n d a y * C l o s e , ! f t : 3 o t i l fi rH E BALFOUR CLASS It I AC • LIFETIME GUARANTEE • FOUR WEEK DELIVERY • YOUR DIVIDEND • NO DEPOSIT # TIME PAYMENT Jewelry street floor electronic i y ;’> sViUCHCbb i1 > V > 'h is VC-'c y v ‘ e • ‘ w- • i v I 0 ;;.. \ good prices-plus dividend STEREO EQUIPM ENT by KLH, Sony, Dual, Garrard, Fisher, Dynaco, Panasonic. STEREO H EA D PH O N ES by Ross, Superex, mwm O — 4L co \!i "T o o *— « l» » ‘ * '* THE BRIDAL SHOPPE Sony. C O L O R AND B LA C K & W H IT E TV by Sony, Panasonic, Zenith. PO RTABLE CASSETTE RECO RD ERS by Sony, Panasonic, Craig, Ampex. PO RTABLE AN D TABLE A M - AM/FM R A D IO S P H O N O G R A P H NEEDLE REPLACEM ENTS PA T C H C O R D S R E C O R D IN G TAPE AN D A C C E S S O R IE S downstairs radio-TV-stereo Page 2 Tuesday, October 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN 4016 N. L A M A R lg . P itc h e r ............................................. y.oo Sm. P itc h e r................. 7 ^ " I b°lievp Mettlem said, condition of this University tragic. We would more minority students." the is like to have area Another con­ serious cerning the minority recruitment problem is that minority students are afraid the University because of the high academic rating, Mettlem said. to comp to "They are afraid that they finally hav> the chance for a college education and do not want to go somewhere where they may fail out." he concluded. this "Both H E W and Dr. Spurr regretful is agree s i t u a t i o n , ’ ’ added Mettlem, "although we have progressed, we have not progressed enough.” a Federal Pay Hikes Criticized by Many WASHINGTON (A P ) — The .struggle over federal pay an­ tedates the current presidenlial wage freeze, going hack to 1%2 when a program was begun which has doubled the govern­ ment’s payroll to $50 billion a year. increases since Federal employes have enjoyed IO salary the program to upgrade their pay was begun in an effort to make Uncle Sam competitive with private employers in the quest for talent. w he n The drive for "comparability” was begun during the Kennedy Administration New Frontiersmen were gearing up the government to heat the Soviet Union to the moon and take a m ore activist role in moving the country. When the comparability pav raises began, th''* starting rate for a G SI clerk was $4,010. Now it is $6,202. But the jump gets larger as you move un the scale. Average pay the govern­ for ment's Grade 13 version of the junior executive h,pU> in the defendants BUT LEST anyone suspect him of turning middle cla ss, Hoffman, one the Chicago o f Seven conspiracy trial, said with a laugh Sunday, exactly shapin' up!" “ I'm not in He said he w as urging his followers to reg ister to vote for two reasons: “ One, to be able to got on juries. My chief fantasy is to hang the Jury of the next presidential assassin,” he said. “ The other reason is to vote in college towns, with local elections. I f s still meaningless to work for candidates on the national level. But we should go for radical com munity control on the local level,” he said. “ In recent changes in the laws, it m akes a lot. of sense to engage in elective politics as an experim ent. I f s possible th a t rad icals could win. Berkeley is a s ta rt. And look at Cambridge. Mass. Someone like Daniel Ellsberg running it, could for m ay o r could affect change it and could win.” IN BERK ELEA’, Calif., a group of rad icals recently w ere elected to the Town Council. Cam bridge, the home of H arvard College and M assachusetts is also the Institute of Technology, home of E llsberg, who is charged with illegally possessing the Pentagon papers. also Hoffman suggested that m em bers of his Youth International P a rty as well as people in prison should start running for local office. He ruled out his own candidacy by asking, “ M e? W here?” Then he added. “ Anyway, not this y ear. the I ’m going away—out of country. But I can 't tell you w here because then it wouldn’t be going away. Everyone would be th ere.” He also ruled out a new photograph of his short hair. Kosygin, Economic O fficials Visit A ra b Countries MOSCOW Soviet P rem ier Alexei NL K osygin left M oscow Monday for visits lo Algeria and Morocco, part of the wide-ranging travels by Kremlin o f fic ia ls seen as an effort lo counter growing Chinese diplom atic in­ fluence. The departure announcement by the Soviet news agen cy T ass said Kosygin was m aking the trip at the invitation of Algerian President Ilouari Boumedienne. However, reports from A lgiers have said the Soviets took initiative for the visit. Kosygin was accom panied by three leading trade and econom ic officials. Their inclusion in the delegation showed econom ic questions would play a prominent role in talks with Algerian officials. However, ob­ servers in Moscow regarded it as unlikely the prem ier would un­ dertake a trip solely to discuss business affairs and that M oscow’s role in the Arab world and its com petition with Red China w ere likely to be key factors behind the journey. Stock Market Show s N e gligib le G a in s N E W YORK The stock market eked out a sm all advance Monday, unable to m aintain strong early gains in stepped-up trading. For most key issues, price fluctuations w ere sm all, but two glam our issues were sharply lower. D isney closed down 9% at 99* •_>, and Polaroid finished the day down 5 \ at OGU.. Steels, utilities and airlines w ere strong. Rails w ere generally lower. Analysts said the news background w as generally favorable for a m arket advance, but brokers said investors still w ere som ew hat reluctant to m ake com m itm ents until further details are known about P hase 2 of the new Nixon econom ic program. Negotiations Begin for Sharpstow n Building H O U STO N The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. w as authorized Monday to start negotiations for the sale of the Sharpstown State Bank Building and adjacent properties for $5,353,000. The FDIC is liquidating the bank that closed its doors nine days after the bank and its founder, Frank W. Sharp, w ere nam ed in a U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission civil injunction suit filed Jan. IS in Dallas and alleging stock manipulations. Hoffman said he had become angry with the current version of the youth m ovem ent because “ the rock m usic has go: ion bad, tho dope lousy. E v e ry tim e I turn on the television I see long hair. another movie sta r with Tile hip < ult has been taken over by W arner Bros.,” he said. “ I h ad to disassociate myself from th a t.” By LIZ BASS Associate News Editor the Student Bar The P resident of Association (SBA) and the ed ito r of the P eregrinus, the law school yearbook, have asked the Texas Union Board of Directors the budget to program m ing allocation for the School of Law. reconsider cuts in •Tohn Howard, SBA president, exnressed dissatisfaction with tho hoards’ action. Ho said he had assum ed the law school w as autom atically to b e budgeted for $3,800. th o sum which the la st two years. it has received for PEREGRINES EDITOR Charles Dry term ed the situation a “ continuing dispute” and said the Union Board did not notify those at the m eeting the law school of last spring at which the funds w ere cut. “ The board publicly adm itted they didn’t the give m eeting last spring,” Dry said Monday. notification about us proper The School of Law la te r requested $7,500 the the operation of program s for for benefit of law students. Howard said, however, the board decided to allocate “ a m easly $2,900" for activities a t the law school. H e explained law students donate ap­ proxim ately $20,000 annually to the Union the $5 per sem ester student b ecause of activities fee wrhich each student is required to pay. In addition, students pay $2.50 for tile sum m er session. HE SAID the current Union allocation retu rn s to the students only 8 percent of their contribution to the Union. C ry said there is “ not too much equity” the Law' the allocation w'hich “ ax es” In and Society lecture series. In place of the form er Union subsidy tile board of $100 has decided to bring one legally oriented speaker a year. to the lecture series, Ory said the new appropriation also m akes changes in the literatu re available in the nonlegal reading room. Instead of the previous $800 per y ea r allocation, which supplied the reading room with 75 to IOO m agazines, t h e hoard “ has decided to limit to a copy of the selection to 20 m agazines in their Union reading room .” the 15 Hp also challenged the board’s contention th at law students are provided adequate services through the Union program s since “ the av erage law student does not use the Union or its services.” instead of HOWARD SAID until several vears ago the Union SI p£r the law student gave sem ester the current $5 per sem ester. He added when Hie students voted to increase their contribution to the Union, the L Ilion m ade “ prom ises” to help law students “ which they have not k ept.” Ory said the other services which the Union says benefit law students are not really services because, the Union dining facilities, “ they m ake a profit off of their costs and 8 percent of w hat we give is all w e’re entitled to.” it. They recover 92 percent of like Student Governm ent Bob President Binder. Union Board m em ber and third- y e a r law student, said, “ I personally am in favor of reconsideration.” Manuel M irabel, chairm an of the Union Board. into con­ sideration the interests of individual groups, we re getting on the ridiculous side." said. “ Once w e take He said there law students, who a re getting more than the re st of the students.” a re “ only 1,600 HE EXPLAINED they (law school) get $ percent of their contribution as do all other groups. He said the rest of the 92 the m ain­ percent of tenance of the building, the bowling alley s and personnel costs. the funds goes to Mirabel said the Union offers as m any services to law students as to other students with “ equal inconvenience to everyone.” the hoard will probably two the appropriation He said reconsider three m eetings because m eeting w as spent on this issue. for the entire not or last Howard said the problem might possibly the Student Constitutional be resolved Court or the adm inistration. He said it m ight be a feasible solution to ri Rodriguez MANAGING ED ITO R ......................................................................... John Reetz NEWS ED ITO R ................................................................................. Cyndi Taylor ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR ......................................... Mike Fresques ASSISTANT NEW S EDITOR ...................................................... David Powell ASSISTANT TO TH E EDITOR ............................................... Lvke Thompson SPORTS EDITOR ............................................................................... Joe Phillips AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ..............................................................T heresa Kane FEA TU R ES EDITOR .................................................................... Robin B racher Issue News E ditor ........................................................................................................... Steve Dial G eneral R e p o rter ...................................................................................................... Dotty Griffith News Assistant.,- ................... Gay b n Finkloa. Belva W illiams, Rose Sharp, Paul Cooley E ditorial A ssistant ................................................................................................ Charles G rim es Associate A m usem ents E ditor .......................................................................... K ristina P aledes A ssistant Sports E ditor ................................................................................................ Scott Laird Make-Up E d ito r .......................................................................................................... Steve H orner Wire E d ito r ............................................................................................................. M arcia Aronson Copy E ditors .. Suzanne Schwartz, Suzanne Freem an. Penny Heilman, Joyce Hotchkiss pi < • < o Opinions ■ the are those of th* editor or tile v. r id of article and are not n ecessa rily those of tie- U niversity adm inistration or the Board of Re tent*. I '■.« Daily Texan In Te The Daily , a student newspapei at is pub­ The U niversity of T exas at Austin, lish ed by' T exas Student Publications, in ov­ er D, U niversity St a I, on Austin. Texas, 7*71;.’. The D aily Texan published Monday, Tm day. W ednesday. TI .rsday and F riday < rapt holiday and ex rn periods A ugust throng- e paid at Austin, Tex May. Second-class p o -’ N ew s contributions will be accepted by tele­ phone (471-4401). a l the editorial office (Jour­ nalism B iiiih-g 103) or at w e new s laboratory i lo umalixrn Building 102>. Inquiries concertini', olh cry should be m ade in Journalism Building in Journalism 107 Building 111 1 471-5244; and advertising (471-3227). The natl mal advertising representative of I lie Daily T exan is National Educational Ad­ vertising S ervice. Inc., 300 Lexington Ave., New Yolk. A Y., 10017. The D aily Texan subscribes to The Asso­ ciated P ress, Tile New York T im es N ew s Ser­ vice and United P ress International Telephoto Service. The T exan is a m em ber of the Asso­ ciated C ollegiate Press, the Southwest Journa­ lism Conference and the T exas Dally News­ paper A ssociation. fo g* 4 Tuniday, October 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN* VOO 60 Stop­ p le s HO CABADA - HkVo (NJ AMERICA. I M S ? IM MAPS A M ER IC A . VCO SO SH O P ­ P I E IKJ FR A M C F ID U 60 SHOp- PIMS IM EM ctA K JD - \ _/■*" s*k’ 7 I ££ AMERICA - CVE RVTttlKJ6'5 MARE JAPAtO. IKJ IF MORE Cf US IjJOULP gUV COR 0(jOK) POUK' I c r a p HAVE HAP H P RAISE THIS VEAR- 6V6RVTHIE3 i M A U E A M ER IC A . IR ump v t C W ftft 'V tiftL 10-3 W-’cm V. ShttmM natures giant predator (c) 1971 Now York Times News Service Washington — In th e whole m ysterious gift of life, w hat m ost astonishes and ex­ cites is diversity. No two hum an beings a re the sam e. The tiniest snowflake, the m ost distant sta r, intricately veined the leaf of a tree a re each unique. From jack rab b it to giraffe, from crocodile to swan, from tiger to hum m ingbird, n atu re delights in varieties of form and phenomena. Overwhelm ed by this profusion, m a n ’s deepest intellectual drive is to understand, classify, to find self-consistent structures. But from this drive also springs m a n ’s m enacing will to power. the In the realm of understanding, there is the random indeterm inacy, alw ays event, the inexplicable phenomenon which fru stra tes and beckons. But in the realm of power, hum an beings know quite enough to ex ert control and to m ake them selves and their m an-m ade environm ent conform to a b stra c t p atterns. This hum an effort m oves strongly tow ard suppressing variety . In technology, economics, education and even th e ephem eral world of fashion, the g reatest danger is alw ays the tendency toward a deadening sam eness, law, politics, tow ard a loss of variety for the sake of control. large state universities and Since different persons have different needs and values, there should be m any different kinds of education. T here is nee I for small p riv ate colleges, for women’s colleges and th a t m en’s are colleges, religiously oriented and that are those for c o ll.aes which ex­ secular, wholly perim ent freely and those which adhere to a traditional curriculum . soh als for es a re col! B IT RELIGIOUS in­ creasingly abandoning the disciplines and em phasis which m ade them distinctive. Ivy League colleges a re adm itting women, and women’s colleges a re adm itting men. Now com es the House Education Com mittee, which lins w ritten a Iii tie provision into the tile higher education bill. colleges th a t if they adm it any substantial num ber of the other sex, they h ave lost control of their adm ission policy. Hence­ forth, they have to adm it students of both sexes on an equal basis. receive any federal aid, tells to It It never m ade m uch sense for Yale or Princeton to adm it a sm all num ber of women to their u ndergraduate colleges or for equivalent w om en’s colleges to adm it in to m en, but as p riv ate institutions they had the right they chose. try any policy Now they find them selves facing a rapid, their ch a racter fa r roaching change intend. which they did not anticipate or A tnaly hum ane politics, call it liberalism or conservatism , would help a society to protect diversity. But h ere the power cf the law is again used to m ake life level and uniform. of the new popularity In another sphere of education, th ere is the "open classroom .” P ressu re is building up from paren ts and adm inistrators for teachers to learn this new’ approach to teaching and put it into effect. Yet w hat works for some childre n will not work for others of different social background or em otional m aturity. is W hat not n atu ral for others. Cultural faddism is one of diversity’s deadly enem ies. is congenial for some teachers ill together. What IN THE MARKETPLACE, profit m argins is and diversity go fashionable can be m ade m ost profitable the sam e fashion can be imposed on if th e la rg est num ber of consum ers. The m otherly woman in Akron who w ears a size 16 is bullied into w earing the game style as the young, size-10 sw inger in New York. E v ery A m erican car of .standard size is m ade low’er, w ider and more {xjwcrful until adults, doubled over, a re now entering their hands and knees. them almost on None is so com fortable c r as easy to en ter as the high square London taxi. is to Man erad icate a natural trav eler because sam eness oppresses and the unknown in­ vites. But technology and economics work together the unexpected. E veryw here the hotel com panies and the office building speculators erect the sam e tight little boxes with low ceilings and m ean interior perspectives. The decorator is then lavished upon the lobbies and cocktail lounges in on effort to create spurious identities. But the monotony, like the is inescapable. conditioner, a rt of hum the the a ir of The worldwide ecological m ovem ent is not only a response to the life-threatening dangers of pollution, but also a b elated affirm ation of the im portance of diversity. Man, the giant predator, has destroyed countless other species. He m enaces e v e ry creatu re from the m ighty blue whale to the hum ble butterfly. Only now does m a n realize th at if he ic n atu re’s sole survivor* he will not long outlast his victims. The firing tine In support of consumer rights To th e editor: My husband and I a re am ong the ever increasing num ber of Austin ap artm en t dwellers. We both work and a re considered to be fairly responsible citizens. R ecently we have had dealings w ith a larg e fin n th at builds and operates ap artm en t com ­ the south side of Austin. Tile plexes on la rg est is off of R iverside D rive overlooking Town Lake. This Is w here m y husband had lived for the la st two years. complexes these cf I am a som ew hat staunch supporter of consum er rights, and I feel that the hun­ d reds of people, mostly students, th at still live in this complex and those still aw aiting completion of their apartm ent, a re being taken advantage of. In the two y e a rs th at m y husband lived in this complex and in th e m onths that I have lived there since we w ere m arried, w e have* been w itness to some of the m ost Incredible m isinform ation and some of the m ost outright flagrancy of the law that w e could ever imagine. the This complex h a s in the past two y e a rs the added a new phase each year. At present tim e, workmen a re f truggling to com plete the third phase, winch w as to in mid-August. From have been finished o ur balcony, we could watch this con­ struction and we did so with considerable interest. Let m e tell you w hat we could see and w hat we heard. F irst, w e noticed th a t lum ber being used w as of the v ery cheapest quality. A workm an told me the lum ber w as so cheap th a t the 2 x 4 beam s would split w henever he drove nails or staples into the sturdy-looking brick exterior, we were told and could see for ourselves th at there w ere v ery few, if any. supports placed to hold the brick to the w all. We also noticed that when the second and third stories were added th ere w ere no supporting beam s of an y kind that extended from one floor and another. One concrete slab was ju st poured onto the roof of the apartm ent below. them. As that for During the heavy rain s last month, we saw stone retaining w alls collapse because of poor m asonry. We saw ap artm en ts flood with w ate r because of poor drainage. We saw’ p art of the ea rth w ash completely aw ay from one corner of a building leaving the corner hanging in mid-air. We w ere also told by some of the work­ men th at the contractor went to the border on weekends and brought back truckloads of illegal Mexican im m igrants to do a large p a rt of the work. W hat all this am ounts to is that the owner and the contractor are building a v ery large ap artm en t complex for a relatively sm all am ount of money using the cheapest labor available and are materials and renting professional people a t exorbitant prices. students them and Austin to fix in HOWEVER IT SEEMS, th at oven a t these excessive ren tal rate*;, the com plex cannot afford to m aintain the c li ap artm en ts and build new ones as well. So th ey withhold from the security deposit of each tenant the complex a con­ who m oves siderable am ount oi money to p ay for w hat routine m aintenance, such as they call sham pooing touch-up painting of heavily trav eled a re a s of the a j u tm e n t. This action is specifically for­ bidden by the lease and yet the ap artm en ts do this routinely and even claim it as a stan d ard practice. carp ets and the I think the tim e h as com e for some sort of control to be placed on this firm and the m any other ap a rtm en t com plexes in Austin guilty of illegal end irresponsible practices. The Austin A part­ should m ore m ent Owners Association carefully control in­ vestigate such illegal practices. its m em bers and the sam e Tile Austin building inspectors should condemn and force an end to such poor construction before it resu lts in the injury and deaths of those persons unfortunate enough to be living there. The im m igration authorities should such contractors Mexican labor. naturalization an I to prevent take steps from exploiting cheap The residents of the com plexes should be very careful to read their lease and to be sure to abide by it. In turn, they should force the apartm ent owners to abide by them . Any illegal or unfair practices should be presented to the U niversity F air Housing Commission and to tile B etter Business Bureau, lf no satisfaction can be obtained, it is very easy to get together with your neighbors and file a "class a c ­ tion’’ suit ag ain st the ap a rtm en t owners. One can also file an individual suit in the local justice of the peace court. It is really disgusting to m e lo see such large com panies such an unfair taking advantage of its ren ters, especially students who can afford it the least. I would hope that a few costly law suits would end such illegal practices. Sharon Sutherland Ford, BA Coverage defended To the editor: the In an e ra such as the one in which we live, w here freedom s of press and speech a re constantly under fire, it is, in m y opinion, shocking for one who professes to be a student of journalism to call for the limited reporting of news o r even the repression of certain items from the news in an attempt to protect the readers from them selves. My referral, of course, is to the letter by Tom A. Goitz to "The Firing Line” concerning coverage of Wednesday’s Tower suicide. The argument of Mr. Goltz does deserve consideration, however, and if found to have merit, should be put to use in connection of other issues in The Texan. For instance, a lack of reporting in the case of the Bauer House might have kept tile regents from pulling the wool over the "eves of Texas” time and again, and a lack of reporting in the Texas stock fraud case might lead to an end to corrupt State officials. Admittedly, suicide is a tragedy, but Hie blame for such tragedies rests not with the members of the news media who only report on society, but rather with the society itself. Steve Boswell G uilt by association? To the editor: Janie Jachimczyk of the Women’s la w Caucus has raised several objections to the Police Action Project of the Criminal Law Association at the School of Law. (The dress I was quite shocked upon hearing at the PAP meeting that women were to be ex­ cluded. regulation, while disappointing, was hardly surprising.) Tho letter quite correctly states that the ob­ jections tho police have are, I) public opinion of fem ales riding in squad cars at 2 a.m., 2) the feelings of the police officers’ wives and 3), which the letter omitted, the feeling by the individual officer that his job would tie hampered by his duty to protect the female. All three of these ob­ jections are remedial. The one thing that has not hpcn remedied so far is the attitude of Chief Miles. He seem s to be the main, and probably only, obstacle. (whether actual or imaginary) But, there are those wrho would withdraw law school funds and facilities from the project, thereby killing it. This is a classic example of "throwing the baby out with tile bath water.” Unsuccessful attempts have been made in the past to correct the situation, hut that doesn’t mean these attempts should stop entirely. Whenever an organization or institution is discriminatory, in­ elimination stitution will the d i s c r i m i n a t i o n . Only one minor manifestation of it will be removed W’hile the root cause remains. cf that organization or stop in no way The letter also states that the general attitude of Hie male students was, “Gee, we re so rry you-all can ’t ride. . .but why ruin it for the rest of us?” This is sim ply not so. Use of such reasoning could lead to the assumption th at fem ale students wore saying, "If we can’t go, then you can’t, either.” Both statem en ts show an equal amount of absurd logic. Another contention is that participation in the PAP, in effect, condones discrim ination by sex. Ridiculous. Does Ja n ie ’s presence a t the University m ean she condones its racist admission policies? I am positive she would lie tho first to deny it. and respect bring m utual The contact between police and students can un­ derstanding. This is the goal of die project. Elim ination of the project would deny that is alive, sexual goal. While th e project discrim ination has a chance (albeit sm all) to be stopped; without the project, thoro is no chance at all. Philip It. Lorway Mid-Law ’Cutting corners* To the editor: I w as saddened b y Keith Blackwell’s letter in Monday’s paper which termed Mi.ss Moment A rm istead’s jum p from the Tower as an a c t of “ courage” and which approved of her "taking the easy way out” as m erely "cutting corners." Cutting corners. That p h rase brings to mind a bridge which collapsed into tlie Ohio R iver a few* years ago, the trag ic accidents which led up ta Ralph N ader’s cam paign for auto safety television sets which exploded standards, and caught on fire during the ’60’s, and the intravenous supply bottles of a medical found ta supplies com pany which were contain these events the result of deliberate planning, or did they tak e place because of careless m istakes m ade by someone “cutting c o d ners?" fatal contam inants. W ere True, a person should have the right ta say whether or not he or she w’ould live or die, hut what right has someone to risk another’s life? It is tragic that a society created conditions that caused Miss Ar« misfead to desire an end to her own life, but it is even more tragic that that same society cultivated in her a thoughtlessness for the lives of others. Had someone had the misfortune of being struck by Miss Armistcad as she fell, that “courageous" act of suicide would have become one ol homicide. Perhaps Mr. Blackwell would approve ol a regular “jumping hour” each day for tho Tower. Then those who wish to display “courage” can do so while those W'ho value life stand safely out of the way. Kent Yates, Freshman Room 234 San Jacinto An alternate University course in teaching kin­ dergarten will be taught over KLRN, channel 9, in a new approach developed by Dr. Clyde Martin, professor of curriculum and instruction. Dr. Martin teaches what she believes to be the first and only televised course in kindergarten in which instruction available in education students see kindergarten classes in progress. the country “The 16-part film series was video-taped by TV Airs Classes By EILEEN KT RL ANDS KI KLRN in an in actual kindergarten situations Austin public school,” she said. The series will begin with a child's first day in class and then will be divided into traditional subject areas of kindergarten instruction, such as art, literature and music. “With each session there is a lab with questions (the classroom situation).” student analyze to help the The course Is to alternative kin­ dergarten teaching methods, Dr. Martin said she believes because: the .student sees a classroom .superior situation rather than reading about it in a text­ book; he takes the course in the privacy of his home and if there is something he does not un­ derstand in the session, he has a chance to watch it up to three more times. The kindergarten course, to begin Oct. 18, will be offered four times each week throughout th# semester: Monday at 3 p.m., Wednesday at 9:30 p.m., Saturday at IO a.m. and Sunday at 3:30 p.m. The program, in its second year of operation, has met with “great response ’ according to Dr. Martin. Other Texas colleges and universities have shown interest in the films. “We have had quite a few schools use our films in teaching their own early childhood courses,” she remarked. “We have even had inquiries and requests for use of the in other films from colleges and univerisities states.” Not solely education students have found the course valuable. It is also a practical course for parents and future parents. “I have had parents with children attending kindergarten view the films to gain insight into what their children are really like,” Dr. Martin pointed out. Many students take the course for noncrpdit just for the experience it will give them in rearing and understanding their own children. The three-hour course bs being offered through KLRN in co-operation with the Division of Ex­ tension. For further information concerning the course, persons may write Mrs. Myrtle Boyce, KLRN-TV, P.O. Box 7158, Austin, Texas 78721 or telephone 471-1631. City Growth Alarms ZPG G r o w t h does not to mean Jack according p ro g n ^ s s , Jewett, president of Austin Zero Population Growth, who thinks "Austin should be alarmed by its present growth rate.” J e w e t t said Monday a population growth study of the preceding decade that urban growth caused substantial increases in city services costs while quality declined. shows The study, “Is Population G r o w t h Good for Boulder Citizens?,” was prepared by th# in the Sixties Boulder, Colo., (pop. 70,000) ZPG trends chapter and documents during the wholesale and consumer price Indices, personal income, City expenditures, the number of Qty employes related to city size and th# crime rate. While personal income per capita in the United States rose 35 percent during the decade, for cities between 200,000 and 300.000 the cost of running a city in­ creased 50 percent. For cities between 500,000 and one million, city costs rose 90 percent, while cities over one million saw a whopping 190 percent increase in city costs, the study claims. But while costs increased, the the services study maintains, city oi Boulder q u a l i t y decreased. Jewett said the study shows that population growth costs the taxpayer money. "Austin has already reached its ideal size,” he said, "and will double in the next 21.7 years.’* Crossword Puzzle Answer to Ywtenlg N Punt* 3 Earth goddess 4 Chemical compound 5 Mi x 6 Helmsman 7 Roman road 8 Note of seal# 9 Guido's high note 10 Pieces of dinnerware 11 Obscures 23 Country of A frica 16 Held in high regard 19 Breed of dog 20 C jt in long slits 23 Consumed 2 6 Mental images 28 I n f in i t e artize 29 Preposition 31 Conjunction 3 2 Liquid measure (abbr.) 33 Boundaries 3 6 Declares 37 Novelties 3 8 Habituate 3 9 Poem 4 0 Pretense 4 3 Short Jacket 4 4 Sorrows 4 7 Place 4 9 lamprey C l River In Italy 53 Symbol for tantalum Professor Given Beckman Award University Prof. Matthew Van Winkle has been awarded the Henry Beekman Professorship in Chemical Engineering. Van Winkle Is an authority on vapor-liquid equilibria in complex separation processes systems, and fractional and extractive distillation. Henry J. Beckman, an Austin the r e s i d e n t , professorship In memory of his mother, Mrs. Mary Schultz Beck­ man. established Mrs. Beekman, who died In 1912, “ reeogni7.ed the importance of technology to the lives and well-being of people in a rapidly changing world, and felt strongly die need for advanced education in said Dr. Earnest F. Gloyna, dean of the College of Engineering. it,” He termed the professorship “a tribute to her rare perceptiveness and foresight.” Van Winkle Si experienced in r e s e a r c h , development and consultation with the chemical end petroleum industries. He has written three books and more Vian IOO technical articles. A University faculty member Kincp 1947, Van Winkle has also the University of taught Michigan and Pennsylvania State University. at P F A N I T S ACROSS I Boy attendants 6 Heaped 11 Dispossess 12 Style of printing 14 Anger 15 Name 17 Residua 18 Parent (colloq.) 19 Greet nuisances (colloq.) 21 Exclamation 22 Beef animal 24 latin conjunction 25 Told falsehood 27 Organ of bearing 28 Cooled lava 29 Youngster* 3 0 Reverse sequence of 33 Hawaiian wreaths 34 Guido's low nota 35 Possesses 37 Keen 38 Teutonia deity 3 9 Waistcoats 41 Part of "to be’’ 4 2 Renovated 4 5 Exclamation 46 Plunge 48 English royal family 4 9 Greek letter 50 Lethargy 52 Regard 54 Rock 55 Fur bearing mammals DOWN 1 Buccaneer 2 Halil SHE'S INVITE? US OVER FOK A SAME; CP “HA HA,HEKMAN THERES CNW OKE THINS TWAT WILL 6E T ME TO IUAIX a a \ K ACROSE W K - • • fire opals $129. T * * t * on - th# - drag lit floor University Recruits Relate Experiences Volunteer W ork Rewarding By BONNIE COX Staff Writer For students who get tired of "people talking but not doing anything about it,” the Austin State Hospital needs those who could “give a little of their time to help a lot.” a Skipper Vaughn, blind University student and volunteer worker for the State hospital, encourages others to “have a gratifying experience” by getting into the program. St., will A VOLUNTEER orientation program, which will be held from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Volunteer Service Center, 4110 Guadalupe feature from all phases of speakers volunteer work who will recruit new helpers. Speakers will !”- clude Gail Martin on child psychology, Dr. Arthur Hess.n ua treatment of alcoholism, Wayne on the Mrs. importance of Paula Womach, Matthews volunteer treatment team and Dr. John Millner on adolescent programs. co­ ordinator for volunteers, notes the volunteer workers to a more effective treatment program. In July, 1968, the hospital had 3,300 patients. Census figures for this month show the number has dropped to 1,625 patients. THE HOSPITAL HAS had "unbelievable Success with long term patients who respond to the volunteers when they won’t to us,’’ Mrs. Womach said. “Last week one patient finally admitted the reality of his situation to a volunteer when he wouldn’t admit this to a hospital employe.” Student volunteers are not pressured about the time they spend at the hospital, Mrs. Womack confirms. However Bill Beard, a University volunteer, “hates to miss any day because it’s really rewarding and a lot of friends with everyone.” being fun Is one of Jerry Bell the University freshmen volunteers who will have a chance to work at the hospital through out school and “then come on the payroll as full-time if they are interested in it,” says Mrs. Womach. Bell entertains many of the patients by playing the guitar and also gets practice by playing before an audience. CHARLES BELL said he feels “it takes as much time as you want to put into it, but you’re given a lot of inside experience.” Bell, who worked with a regressed patient for a year and a half on a one-to-one basis, confirms, “There are great needs out there. It’s a real challenge, and the volunteers are usually able the patient’s front.” to break through Another student, Suzi Dussy, began her volunteer work with patients on a one-to-one basis and Is now helping an 18-year-old black who is learning the ways of the civilized world. This boy was found chained in a backyard at 16 and Miss Dussy is now able to reinforce wrhat’s being taught to him and give him an outside contact. in For students participating the orientation program, Mrs. Womach says, “They won’t be called to work because they re not obligated to work. It just helps to have informed people in this area.” As Vaughn states, “This is a chance air opinions, communicate, and help their attitudes toward people.” students for to CLINIQUE I Vh P'toiucfo, ifo Plop*#*, GUhljMltt&C J>Cjt fJtV/4 You* Eve* f \*JL Here’s dermatological research turned into a dramatic reality...a battery of skincare and makeup products that are allergy tested, fragrance free and really quite remarkable. 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The series shifts to Oakland for 3 Tuesday, with gam e No. Oakland M anager Dick Williams left with only 10-game winner Diego Segui to throw against the third of four B altim ore 20-game w inners, after w atching Vida Blue and H unter whacked by the heavy-hitting Orioles. P alm er, Jim pointed Williams, who out followng tho opening defeat he h ad "one ace left even though they trum ped my first ac e," saw Brooks Robinson E lbe H endricks collect hom ers along and Heroes o f B altim ore — U P I T e le p h o t o . FHe sluggers who helped th e Orioles' d e fe a t O akland, 5-1, and grab a 2-0 lead in the best the dressing o f room M o n d a y . Brooks Robinson (I) and Elrod fi va p la y o ff, cele b r a te in Hendricks hit homers while B o o g Powell w alloped in 3 runs. two round-trippers and drove Today Oakland, 5-1 with Pow ell in a seven-hit attack. M i k e Cuellar, m eanw hile, checked six hits, the A ’s on pitching out of sev era l jam s with the the aid of a pickoff and c o n t i n u e d conservatism of W illiam s, who in the sixth inning had clean-up hitter Tom m y D avis sacrifice. The A’s w ere able to crack through against the 34-year-old Cuellar only in the fourth on a Sal Bando double and a sin gle bv D ave Duncan despite getting the first runner on base in three other innings. Pow'eli. w hose two hom ers g a v e him a total of four in playoff action dating back to 1969. ap­ liked w hat he saw of parently Hunter's to pitch Robinson. He also tagged a first pitch for a hom er in the third inning, a drive deep into the right field bleachers. first in PITTSBI RGH —N elson B riles took heat treatm ent on his right thigh; Juan M arichal played catch with coach Ossie V irgil; m anagers Danny Murtaugh and Charlie Fox sat on rocking chairs and talked with reporters. rested This w as all the action Monday as the Pittsburgh P irates and San for F rancisco G iants T uesday’s third gam e in the best- of-five National League playoffs. The team s are tied 1-1, with the (a s m any rest of gam es as necessary) scheduled for Pittsburgh’s Three R ivers Stadium. series the The 28-year-old B riles, a spot in Pitts­ reliever starter and burgh’s drive the Flastem to D i v i s i o n cham pionship w as M urtaugh's pitching choice in the third gam e. The P ira tes lost the playoff opener 5-4 with Steve B la ss the starter, and won the second gam e Sunday 9-4 although starter Dock E llis only lasted five innings. The P irates are depending in their slugging prow ess for an 32-year-old e d g e M arichal, an 18-game winner this over the season as the Giants won the W estern title on the last day of the right­ hander. season behind the City Rugby Squads Split with Dallas The Austin rugby tea m s split their two g a m es with the D allas the Austin tea m s Saturday a s B lacks beat the D allas Rugby Club 22-8 and the Golds lost an exciting one, 18-13, to the D allas Harlequins. In In the Black gam e, D allas scored first for a 4-0 lead before the B lacks rallied to take a 10-4 half-tim e the advantage. second half, the B lacks shut out the D allas team while scoring 12 m ore points them selves in run­ ning the final score to 22-8. F ive different players scored tries, and three con­ Butch Engel kicked versions to round out the Black scoring. In the Gold-Harlequin contest, the D allas team took an 18-4 half­ tim e lead but had to hold off a strong Gold com eback as the Austin club closed the final score to 18-13. Alan Truex Greg Ploetz: Small & Slow At 6-0 and 205 pounds, Greg Ploetz is undoubtedly too sm all to play defen sive tackle for a national cham pionship football team —or, for that m atter, for any college football team . Ploetz, in fact, would be considered sm all for a defensive end or a linebacker. N evertheless, he is the starting right tackle for the Longhorns. A s P loetz ‘T m too slow to play anyw here else. (pronounced pletz) explains it, “ I played five g a m es at linebacker two years ago, ’ he continued, "but there w as the problem of speed. I don’t have an y.’’ So Ploetz finished tackle. Then bad grades his threatened to finish both his athletic and academ ic careers. junior year at P loetz w as ruled ineligible for the 1970 season, and m ost people figured that w as the end of him. He w asn't even mentioned in the 1971 football press brochure. Didn't Plan to Play “ I didn’t think I’d play again .” Ploetz admitted. I’d better start studying and con­ “ I decided centrating on m y education.” P lo etz’ interest in academ ics probably surprises m ost people, sin ce th ere’s a regrettable tendency to pin the “dumb jock” label on any athlete who in the classroom . In P loetz’ ca se the tag fails is particularly inapprorpiate. H e’s probably one of the m ost articulate athletes on the cam pus. P loetz is a fine arts major, but he sees no in­ congruity between enjoying football and enjoying art. “ I can look at football as a form of a rt,’ P loetz says. “ It’s a type of expression. I m ean I can watch a guy play football and tell pretty w ell what kind of personality he h a s.” If Ploetz had had to choose between art and football he probably would have taken his paint brush and would have written off football. But last sum m er T exas coach es convinced him he could both paint and play. "I realized that I would come out better financially if I played and had my education paid fo r,” Ploetz says. Still, he w asn’t in playing condition. “ My it was trying to problem w asn’t losing weight, put it on.” he says. " I had slipped down to 180 pounds, and it was hard to get the weight back. During the year I was off I hadn’t done much to stay in shape—just a little handball.” "It didn’t seem to hurt him a bit to m iss that y e a r,” Head Coach D arrell Royal says. “ He played well for us before, but h e’s a little better this year. H e’s had three excellent gam es.’’ N o t Much A b i l i i y Asked w hat m ade Ploetz such a goad player. Royal doesn't list any physical assets. “ He’s got a lot of com petitiveness and drive, an awful lot of pride,” Royal says, which is the nice way of saying that Ploetz gets by on attitude rath e r than ability. Royal adds though, that Ploetz is stronger than you might think. “ You look at G reg and you think he’d get blown right out of th e re ,” the coach says, "but that just doesn’t happen.” Ploetz acknowledge* that "our opponents have tried to run at me a lot a t the beginning of the gam e.” though, So far, little success. “ Randy B raband helps out a lot,” Ploetz explains m odestly. they have met D espite his size handicap. Ploetz d o e s n ' t mind facing larger opponents. "I have problem s if I’m playing somebody who’s really huge and can drape himself all over me. but generally I'd ra th e r play someone who's big and slow than someone w ho’s sm all and quick.” But it really doesn’t m ake a whole lot of dif­ ference to Ploetz, who is, by his own ad m ission slow and sm all. ' • 4 r n W :: 1 - 5 2 4 4 M O N . T H R U F R I . 2 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 F o r S a l e F o r S a l e R o o m m a t e s H e l p W a n t e d R o o m & B o a r d C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T IS IN G R A T E S E a c h W or d (15 w o r d m i n i m u m ) $ .07 .06 ......... $ ............$ . . . 7 5 . ......... $ . . . 0 5 E a ( ti A d d it i o n a l T i m e s t u d e n t r o t e o n e t i m e E a c h a d d i t i o n a l w o r d 20 C o n s e c u t i v e I s s u e s IO w o r d s 15 w o r d s 30 w o r d s inch I c o l . in ch 2 c o l . i n c h 3 c o t . 4 c o l . inch C l a s s i f i e d D i s p l a y I c o l u m n \ o n e in c h o n e t i m e S 2.10 ......... $ 2.00 E a c h A d d it i o n a l T i m e ......................... .. .............................. • ......... $15.00 ................................ ......... $19.00 ............................ ......... S3K.00 ......... $70.90 .............. ............................ ......... 896.00 ............................ ......... $120.00 ....... si I oo (N o r o p y • h a n c e fo r c o n s e c u t iv e i s s u e r a t e s . ) • . L O W STU D E N T RATES less for 75c the 15 words or first ti m e , 5c e a c h a d d i t i o n a l word. Stu­ d e n t m u s t show rec e ip t a n d p a y in Journalism B ld g . 107 fro m 8 a .m . to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y th r o u g h F r id a y . in a d v a n c e A u d ito r s D E A D L I N E S C H E D U L E M o n d a y T e x a n I d d a y . T u e s d a y 'I c v a n M o n d a y W e d n e s d a y r e x a n 3 :00 p . m . a r n . 1 1 : 0 0 I u e s d a y l l OO a . r n . T h u r s d a y T e x a n \ \ e d n e s d a y . F r i d a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y a m . l l :00 11 :0 0 a m . “ In th e r \ e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e in a n a d v e r t i s e m e n t , i m m e d i a t e n o ti c e m u s t b e g iv e n a s t h e p u b l i s h e r s a r e r e s p o n s i b l e i n c o r r e c t t i l c l a i m s fo r a d j u s t m e n t s i n s e r t i o n , s h o u ld t h a n 30 d a y s a f t e r p u b l i c a t i o n . ” t o r o n ly O N E lie m a d e n o t l a t e r h;*s N IT -N O Y p a c k s , d e s k s , c h e s t s , c a b i n e t s , d r e s s e r s , s o ­ g l a s s w a r e , fa s . K a r - b a r . 1513 M a n o r R o a d . 477-0550. e m : M a t t r e s s h e a t e r s , r a n g e s , g a s A F G H A N H O U N D S , a n d a g e s . a t S t n r l a n e w h e r e q u a l i t y b e ­ g e t s a a l ity . C h a m p io n s t u d s e r v i c e s . 452-IOTA c o l o r s a l l '6 9 C O R V E T T E C O U P E . R e a l b e a u t y . C a ll 477-7204 o r 836-1300 e x t e n s i o n 6656 a n d a s k f o r .lim . 'TI C A N A R Y Y E L L O W V W c o n v e r t i b l e . J o h n , 451- A M -F M . F o u r m o n t h s o ld . 4208. F O R S A L E . m a c h i n e '6 8 N e lc o z i g - z a z s e w in g f o u r - d r a w e r e d in n i c e c a b i n e t . $125 o r b e s t o f f e r . 474-1738. OLD BLUEJEANS C O R S A L E : $ 3 . U psta'rs a f FRESH PANTS 1 24th & San A n to n io 472-134! BILL KASSON Y A M A H A . . . N O W d o e s tu n e - u p s & m i n o r re - p m s o n H o n d a & K a w a s a k i . . . O i l e r s t h e s e s p e c i a l s ( t h i s w e e k o n ly ) f e n d e r le v e r s $ 2 / p a i r Y a m a h a E n d u r o b r a i t e & c l u t c h l e v e r s $ 2 / p a i r S m a l l H o n d a Y a m a h a E n d u r o $3 e a c h M in i b ik e s ' c l u t c h e s $7.50 H o n d a N G K - E T I X K a v y n s a k i s u r f a c e g a p p l u g 9 9 c e a c h F R E E m o t o r c y c l e & le n s e s $1.30 e a c h t r a i l b ik e h a n d - ta i! u g h t b r a c k e t s ■ 1607 South Lamar 444-7482 — t i i o n - . — ; book P O R T A B L E T V s : all- c h a n n e l . U l t r a c l e a n , l i t t l e u s e d B /W , 'N P h o n e 444-1345. 442- ID " A d m . c a l $66 50 d e w • 7 4 7 5 . 4305 M a n c h a c a R o a d . S A IL B O A T . 18 t r a i l e r , tin g s . $375. C a ll 452-1348 a f t e r 2 :3 0 fo o t. S a il s , f it­ T O P C A S H P R I C K S p a i d f o r d i a m o n d s . tm o u d S h o p . 603 t ' a 5 vol o ld g o ld . C o m m o d o r e P l> 476-0178 \Q U A R I U M S T h r e e U r g e s t a n d s , d y n a f l o s , lig h ts , t a n k s w ith e v e r y t h i n g . C a i! 452-1348 a f t e r 2 30. S U N F I S H —- A M E R I C A S m o s t p o p u l a r s t o c k o f S u n f is h p a r t s s a i l b o a t s u lb o a t. N e v J s t a r r i v e d N ew a d s a n d v o d I m p o r t s , 926-5804. : sT ¥ r~e o _ R S/ E • % a d g e t c d “ A B E S T B U Y " b y to p t e s t t h e m w h ile t h e y l a s t c o m p a n y . C o rr C o n s "8 .Id - 80 k it s . D y n a c o S C A o u r o n I h r h p o w e r e d s t e r e o lo w c o s t. r e c e i v e r s . S o n y r e c e i v e r s . M a r a n t z D u a l c h a n t e r s , G a r r a r d c h a n g e r s , t u r n t a b l e s , ’■.I r a m p a t . A R .- o ld c h a n c e r a n d m a n y o t h e r to p b r a n d s . S T E R E O C E N T E R 203 E a s t 19th A c r o s s 1 9 th f r o m J e s t e r C e n t e r PANTS: $5. 300 p Y r o" corduroy & d e n im b e l i- b o tf o m s O N SALE UPSTA RS a f FRESH PANTS 24th b San A n to n io 477-1341 M A K E O F F E R O N C O U C H , d i n i n g s e t, b e d r o o m s u ite , a n t i q u e d r e s s e r , a n d c lo c k M is c e l la n e o u s . 1401 S t. E d w a r d s , 231. 441-2512 a f t e r 5. ’64 V W K A R M A N N G H IA . G o o d c o n ­ d itio n . $550. C a l l a f t e r 5 p . m . , 453-1557. C A M P E R . H O U S E - ! 'A R . N e w e n g i n e . J i m , t h a n 200 m ile s . C o n t a c t I.e s 1601 W e s t 6 th , u p s t a i r s . 1966 D O D G E p a n e l, f lo o d e n g i n e , c l e a n , g o o d c o n d i tio n . 411 4871 8-5, 444-2043 r e c e i v e r , D u e l 1218 K U H S P E A K E R S , S o n y S T R -4 5 A .M /F M r e c o r d c h a n g e r , S o n y T C 165 s t e r e o ••-•ism t i e d e c k w ith a u t o m a t i c 476-6733, 454-6141 r e v e l > a f t e r 5. "70 J A G U A R X .J6 r a n t y f > > lo p s , bi h e r - g r e y a / - . a ll \ VI-I-' M -SW . s e d a n , p o w e r , w a r ­ a u t o m a t i c , b lu e . im in rh t e p h o r <■ i n t e r i o r . 476 UUU V -1 7 4 (P L A S T R O N 140 h p M er* m i x e r . F i n e s t , m o s t s o u g h t a f t e r sk i a n d fu n s e ll. c o n d i tio n . M u s t E x c e l l e n t b o a : $2150. 476 1178. 165-9231. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . l ./ - / 2 be ircc'T i, 2 be te a p a rtm e n ts dg nm pee cable, run deck & la rge pool. GREAT O A K APARTMENTS one f o c i '' to law school three blocks to U.T. From $220. A i ! BILLS PAID 4-77-3388 Page 6 Tuesday, October 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN M I M E O M A C H IN E , g o o d c o n d i tio n , in k a n d p a d s in c lu d e d $25. 477-3835. M U S T S E L L 1965 M u s t a n g V -8. S t a n ­ d a r d . R e d . $495. 476-0244, 472-0482. PUBLIC NOTICE I n c l a i m e d f r e i g h t h a s r e c e i v e d s e v e r a l r e l a y i n g n e w s h i p m e n t s , t h e s e th e p u b lic . a n d w e a r e b u y s t r e m e n d o u s n e w to to b e s o ld B R A N D N E W S E W I N G M A C H I N E S a d v e r t i s e d b r a n d W e $35. N a t i o n a l l y 1970 z ig - z a g s e w in g m a c h i n e s l a v e s c o m p l e t e w ith 25 y e a r f a c t o r y g u a r a n ­ te e . f o r $35 e a c h c a s h o r s m a l l m o n t h l y p a y m e n t s . T h e s e m a ­ c h i n e s h a v e b u il t- in c o n t r o l s f o r m a k i n g b u t t o n h o l e s h e m in g , d e c o r a t i v e s t i t c h e s , s e w in g o n b u tt o n s , d a r n i n g , m e n d in g , o v e r c a s t i n g , a n d m a n y e m b r o i d e r i n g o t h e r f e a t u r e s R E F R I G E R A T O R S — 1971 M o d e ls $75 K' u p C O M P O N E N T S Y S T E M S — W a l n u t lin is h , G a r r a r d t u r n t a b l e s . P o w e r f u l s o ­ lid s t a t e c h a s s i s , a n d s p e a k e r s $49.95 A ls o 1971 C o n s o le S t e r e o s, w a l n u t w ith B S R t u r n t a b l e s , s o lid s t a t e , 4 s p e a k e r s . $69.95 lo n g w a l n u t s t e r e o s , w ith A M -F M m u l tip l e x R a d i o a n d b u ilt- in 8 t r a c k . C lo s e - o u t $299. s e ts , D O I,L Y M A D IS O N —• B e d r o o m b r a n d n e w in c lu d in g d o u b le d r e s s e r m i r r o r , c h e s t a n d d o u b le b e d T o b e s o ld li v in g f o r $69.95 p o r s e t. A lso 7 r o o m g r o u p s to b e s o ld f o r $79 95. C lo s in g o u t a l l m e r c h a n d i s e t h i s w e e k to m a k e r o o m f o r n e w s h i p m e n t s F i n ­ a n c i n g a v a i l a b l e . B a n k - A m e r i c a r d & M a s t e r C h a r g e O p e n T o T h e P u b lic 9 A M - 6 T M M o n T h r u F r l . , S a t. T ill 1 :0 0 8 ft. 6535 N . L A M A R 1965 C H E V R O L E T IM P A L A f o u r d o o r s e d a n . V 8, A -C . G o o d c o n d i tio n . $795. I . 836-4051. E x c e ll e n t 1965 M U S T A N G . S t a n d a r d t r a n s m i s s i o n . e n g i n e I LOO o r b e s t o f f e r . C a ll 444-8693 a n y - ' ti m e . c o n d i tio n . S m a l l I R I S H S E T T E R , 16 m o n t h o ld f e m a l e lin e s . $125. M rs I | H oi rn H ey , 836-3325, 9015 S la y t o n . c h a m p i o n s h i p b lo n d I T909 H O N D A CL350. $525. B ik e 1 1 sh m g b o a t , t r a i l e r , m o t o r . W e e k d a y s a f t e r 5 30. 327-2626. t r a i l e r . $250. WATERBEDS $ 1 8 . 5 0 5 y e a r g u a r a n t e e F 're e l i n e r to I s ' 20 c u s t o m e r s a t G A N D A L F S 102 FT 3 1 s t 472-1472 1966 M A L IB U C o n v e r t ib le V -8 $500. G o o d c o n d itio n . C a ll A n n e b e f o r e 5 -0 0 475-2664: a f t e r fiv e . 477-0820 C A R L T O N IO s p e e d . E l e v e n w e e k s o ld . L e s t o f f e r b y m i d n ig h t T h u r s d a y . C a ll J o h n , 4(2-2319 V A R I G I I T A R , t h r e e m o n t h s o ld U s e d ' l u s t s e ll. $150.00 w ith 153-7823 a f t e r 12:00 p .m . to c a s e M o n d a y - F r id iv. l e a r n on C a ll X I.N U O O I J A l D IO -L A B , O o illis c o p e K C 6060, B r a n d n e w , $125. 478-5843. t o T e l l A r tle y I O p e n - h o le flu te S ix m o n t h s o ld $250 1 Q U IN B A N D . N E E D : 442-6397. I A L F ’A R O M E O 1969 S n y d e r C o n v e rt!- 1 h ie , AM l-'M, N e .v P i r e l l i s , I m m a c u - I I l a t e . O w n e r m u s t s e ll. S e e a t I n t o m a - | ti m a l M o to rs , 12th a n d J .a m a r o r c a l l ' ! J o e , 475-2782, 327-0184. I 19**3 H O N D A ( B 450. E x c e l l e n t c o n d i- 45! 3617 9.000 m i le s . H e lm e t. • on I a H e r I OO p rn 40 W A T T a m p l i f i e r A M -F M s t e r e o 8 t a p e d e c k , 2 a i r s u s ­ 245-5434 $100. s p e a k e r s . * rn* k p r e - a m p p e n s io n S U T S U . * 1971 T R I U M P H B o n n e v ille E x c e ll e n t c o n d i tio n . $1250 f ir m . 472 5893. 1971 P O R S C H E 911 C ull w a r r a n t y , $3650. C a ll 452-6047. 2800 a c t u a l m i le s i m m a c u l a t e c o n d i tio n R S A _6;j0, 1969 M u s t s e ll E x c e l l e n t c o n ­ d itio n . 476-9266 o f f ic e T u e s d a y a n d T h u r s d a y 8-2 478-7341 C H A R L I E , H U S K Y K F IK S H O U N D p u p p ie s , s e v e n w e e k s O n e m a le . tw o f e m a l e s $20 C a l l A n n e b e f o r e 5, 175-2664 M A L E N E E D E D f o r o n e a p a r t m e n t . $ 8 7 .5 0 /m o n th f r o m C a m p u s . AH b ills p a id b e d r o o m S ix b lo c k s 453-6444 tw o b a th . M A L E , F E M A L E s h a r e tw o b e d r o o m . I n d iv i d u a l c o n t r a c t $ 6 1 5 0 p e r p e r s o n , b il ls - m a i d s e r v ic e f u r n is h e d P o o l. L E F O N T A p a r t m e n t s , 803 W e s ' 2 8 th . 472-6480. L E F O N T A p a r t m e n t s , 803 W e s t 2 8 th F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d i m m e ­ d i a t e l y . L a r g e o n e b e d r o o m A C /C H . $67 50 c a r p e t . N o r th . s h a g d i s p o s a l, 454-6005. F E M A L E N E E D E D tw o b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t . C h a p a r r a l A p a r t ­ P o o l. S h u ttl e . to C a m p u s . 471- m e n t s A ll $70 p e r m o n t h . C lo s e 24:>5. h ills p a i d s u b l e a s e to F E M A L E R O O M M A T E tw o b e d r o o m h o m e a f t e r 3 :3 0 $61.00 p lu s a p a r t m e n t to s h a r e l a r g e 2- s t o r v in t h i r d h ills . 453-5917 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D . 3107 S p e e d w a y C a ll a t n ig h t. B o b P e n to n . 472-4625. M i s c e l l a n e o u s N E I J s O N ’S G I F T S ; c o m p l e t e s e le c ti o n a n d je w e lr y ’ : A f r ic a n i m p o r t s . 4612 S o u th C o n g r e s s . I n d i a n Z u n i M e x ic a n 444-3814. H I L L E L — O P E N f o r s tu d y in g , s m o o z i n g 7-10 w e e k n i g h t s . 2105 S a n A n to n io . to p l a y G U IT A R . . D r e w T h o m a s o n . b e g i n n e r . 478-7331, S A I L O N T O W N LA K E R eef 2-9 weekdays ti s j 'b o a t or canoe, I 2-9 weecends Students take Shuttlebus Rente 8 to 1800 S. Lake’,hor©. SKYDIVE Austin Parachute C e n te r For further inform ation a fte r 9 p.m. CALL 477-2416 EARN $'s WEEKLY : fo r services. Physician Blood p 'a s m e dcno 's needed. Cash paid in atrer.aance. O p e n Tuesday through Saturday, 8 a.m.- 3 p.m. A U S T IN B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S , IN C ., 409 W e s t 6 th . 477-3735. T r a v i s . R E N T S A IL B O A T f u n — b e a u t i f u l L a k e t h r o u g h B o a r d k e e l b o a t s , 1-8 M a r s h a c c o m m o d a t i n g Y a c h t S a l e s — b y M a n s f ie l d D a m CO 6-1150. b o a t s B U M P E R S T I C K E R S . D e s ig n y o u r o w n w ill p r i n t a n y t h i n g c h e a p . 454-6907 m a n e n t l y w ith m e d i c a l l y R E M O V E U N W A N T E D H A I R p e r ­ a p p r o v e d e l e c t r o l y s i s . U n i v e r s i t y e l e c t r o l y s i s 477- 4070. J L N N I N G S MO V IN G -H A L L IN G ^ AH t y p e s o f m o v in g L a r g e , s m a l l. 7 d a y s w e e k E x p e r i e n c e d H I2-7233. G I.2 1923 N E E D to T e x a s -O U t i c k e t s g a m e . M u s t k n o w ’ s o o n a s p o s s ib le F O I R N E E D I M M E D I A T E S I T T E R f o r 5 m o n th o ld b o x $50 m o n th , 12 0 0 -6 :0 0 f o u r d a y w e e k . A f te r 5 :0 0 c a ll p m . 453-5585. L o s t & F o u n d F O U N D : P a i r o f g l a s s e s . C a ll 454-6095. L O S T S IL V P 3 R S t. C h r i s t o p h e r ’s m e d a l o n g o ld c h a in . R e w a r d $ 1 0 ' N o q u e s ­ ti o n s a s k e d . J e r r y L e v in s o n , 452-0507 N E W E S T N E A R C A M P U S ! F O R S A I I. W ir e H a i r e d F o x T e r r i e r r e g i s t e r e d P u r e b r e d , p u p p y n o t 926-7359. | $25 "U 111 8705 EDUCATIONAL SALESMAN FOR OLD ESTABLISHED SC H O O L Perm anent posit’on in A .-tin . G o o d in come, b riq h t H H . re. P-eter backqro.,nd n fesfinq and cc nselinq, b „ t rn .vt be experienced in sees. Proiess'onal, d q- r tie d , no high pressure. Phone 478-5194. a p p l i c a t i o n s a n d H E L P W A N T E D . T h e B u c k e t fo r g e n e r a l w o r k e r s T u e s d a y . O c t o b e r 5 th b e t w e e n f o u r P .M . o n ly . s a n d w ic h c h e f s is ta k i n g u ti l i t y I A p p ly I tw o a n d I G R A D U A T E S — r e s e a r c h a n d w r i t e in y o u r o w n fie ld f o r m o n e y W IL L IA M S P O . B o x 4222, R o c k - : P U B L I S H I N G . fo r d , 111. 61110. BARTENDING The J o b That Pays Bradley School O f Bartending — (O S B Y S U ITE — C O M M O D O R E PERRY BLDG. TEL. 478-7488 P A R T -T IM E JO B D U T I E S : R e m e l t i n g of m e t a l in a p r i n t s h o p . C o n te c t A r t Rinn Journalism Bldg., Rm. zp I a fte r 6:30 P.M. A p a r t m e n t s , U n f . U n i v e r s i t y H o u s e *“*“■ R O O M S S I N G L E m e n s d >r m R o o m a n d b o a r d f o r F 'all : a n d r e a s o n a b l e fo o d s e m e s t e r . G o o d r a t e s f r o m C a m p u s , b lo c k s S h u t t l e B u s r o u te A C , m a i d s e r v i c e . 2710 N u e c e s , 477 x272. T h r e e . W a n t e d 4 6 T I C K E T S O k l a h o m a - T e x a s g a m e 214-231-1328 c o l i n :t o r w r i t e R o b e r t T r a i l , R a m b l e w o o d 13830 I n g r u m , D a l l a s . D O L L A R S F O R O L D T E S T S f r o m D r W h e e l e r 's Z o o 330 ( p a r a s it o lo g y ’). C a ll • 'l a y 441-7137. 444-6189 a n y t i m e N F 1 E D S T U D E N T to H u n g a r i a n . to 10 30 t i a n s l a t e l e t t e r p r n .- m i d n ig h t. r a i l 471-1946 A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . s t u d i o tw o b e d r o o m S E E T H E L O V E L I E S T A u s tin a p a r t m e n t s R e a s o n a b l y p r i c e d . F 'o r i n f o r m a t i o n c a ll 451-2465 in N O L E A S E F o r R e n t ——*......... . ........................ I a * d 2 b - d r o o r q a p a r t m e n t s P a- 9 n n ' c o r“ - S n a q e v o e t f e n c e d p a ho O' ba cony. I A id e - -.rn S I 80. 2 bedroom , ? bath fy rr 3 i pa a. 1401 St. Fq *e rd s fu rn i s h e d ©d $ 2 3 5 . Dc va or ca I 442 5 j6 9 . T u t o r i n g L E A R N b e g i n n e r . a d v a n c e d . D r e w T h o m a s o n , 478 7331 to p l a y G U IT A R , S T A T T U T O R I N G . A ll b u s i n e s s m a t h 478-2079 451-4557. M A T H , S E M E S T E R R a t e s T G w a U a b l e o f te n n e c e s s a r y a s L i b e r a l - A r t * P r e p a r a t i o n G u a r a n t e e d R e s u lt s O n R a t e s . M A T H E N A M I! ,’S, 452-1327 F o r B u s i n e . * G R I M a jo r* ,i> U N I V E R S I T Y L I T E R A R Y S E R V I C E S e x p o s ito r y i n s t r u c t i o n P e r s o n a l in b u s i n e s s w r iti n g . 477-9043 G U I T A R L E S S O N S . G u i t a r s fo r s a b C a ll B ob. 441-1485. M A T H T U T O R I N G M a s t e r s D e g r e e *4 h o u r C a ll 453-8164 I and 2 bedroom , furnished or Lecce unfurnished. C a rp e t, air, G .E . d isk-v-Ash- ranqe, ba cony, er, disposal, Tapp an pool. 2 blocks from Reaqan H ig h . 453-7608. C A L C ! 1.1 S 808A. B. 476-7883 b e f o r e 3, a f t e r IO J o h n C lo s e to C a m p u s P H D S T I .D F .N T . G o v t c o u r s e s , q u iz o u t, a s s i s t a n c e o n 610, a d v a n c e d re I M t h e s e s s e a r c h p r o b l e m s , p a p e r s , 1922. E X P E R IE N C E D d i s s e r t a t i o n s , T Y P IS T . IB M e t.- C h a r l e n e S t a r k . 4 ;.: 5218. T h e s e s . executive. I J u s t N o rte o f 27-h & G u a d s l.jppa tyM i& A fin t T y p i n g . M u l t i ; ,thing. B in d i n g The C om ptete Professional FU LL-TIM E Typing Service t a i l o r e d t o t h e n e e d s o f U n iv e r s e I for l)aifguugLCUt l ( knL,.b0aL1i ! e‘JUlPme m g th e s e s a n d f c ^ a t l X Phor.e GR 2 .321J and GR 2-7677 3707 Hem phill pa,.* p a r t i a l l y - j.-,V.’ • " V,’ 1 : e x .r n : J J L - •lot o v o ; h a n d i c a p p e d LAD ‘ .' C Y *’ U •••k k e e p in tw e l v e mon,) c o u r s b u s i n e s s E X P E R T T Y P I N G ’ in niv horn.- i m m ' 1 1 VV-H A u s t i n , 474 1760 ' J U K U ■ p r i n t i n g , o in d in K w i w d ' : AII s s ® ' t e w ' r ” " ' 0"*- c l i - & | a ; . a r n . - m i d n ig h t a r *1 *9, b ' C L O S F : IN . B e i - I, p e r s o n a l " ty p i r ^'(,1 1 1 lith m g , b i n d , n g L a u r a Bodoar* 47 W O O D W A R D APTS. 1722 E W o o d w a r d • S p e c i a l • S w i m m i n g p o o ls . • M o d e r a t e p r i c e s w ith a ll u t i l i t i e s s t u d e n t o r i e n t e d c l u s t e r s . 444-7555 p a i d - n o h id d e n c h a r g e s ! • ( I n ly 5 m i n u t e s to U T . • C o m p l e t e o n - p r e m i s e s w a s h a t e r l a . • F’r e e a l l - c h a n n e l T V . • A m p le p a r k i n g f o r t e n a n t s A g u e s ts . FALL RATES $129.50 Large tw o be d ro o m near down- low n. Swim m ing pool, c a rp e te d , a / c , w o o d paneling. 4 4 2 - 3 9 1 0 472-9147 S e r v i c e s H A I R U T O C a ll i n f o r m a t i o n o n fo r h a i r s in g e i n g f o r s p l i t e n d s a n d s h a g c u t s . 4>4-0984 ROY W . HOLLEY IDA PRESS 504 W e s t 24th M u ltic o p y service. S pecializing in handbills. C a ll 477-8351. 476-3018 TYPESETTING. TYPING. PRINTING, BINDING J u J N o rih of 27rh & G u a d a lu p e P I A N O L E S S O N S . B e g i n n e r a n d rn! v a n c e d . ( a ll 451-3549. f i m B R IC K K IV I! R O O M , a i r c o n d i tio n e d , c a r p e t e d . C o u p le . L e a s e , d e p o s it , n o p e t s . 707 G r a h a m P l a c e a t R io G r a n d e a n d 2 5 ->2 S t r e e t . 476-0833 C A M I N O REAL to U T . 6 b lo c k s JUST RELEASED LA R G E I B E D R O O M T y p i n g f I P A R K I N G B Y M O N T H . 2418 S a n A n to n io , o n e b lo c k f r o m C a m p u s $12.50. 476-3720. R o o m s S H A R E O L D E R H O U S E o n L a k e w ith 2 IO m i n u t e s U T p r o f . a n d f a m ily . r o o m s . $125. 327-2445. Use Texan Classifieds to Advertise for T O P LA C E A TE X A N CLA S S IFIE D A D C A L L 471-5244 Fall Hou sing F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T A ll b il ls p a id , c a b le , d i s h w a s h e r , d is ­ p o s a l. p o o l, 2 r o o m s , S h u ttl e l a u n d r y r o u t e , c o v e r e d p a r k i n g a v a i l a b l e . B u s 2810 S a la d o 476-4095 C A M I N O REAL — EL P A T IO 6 b lo c k s to U T . 2 b e d r o o m 2 b a t h s . A ll b ills p a i d . N E W L Y D E C O R A T E D — S H A G CA R P E T r o o m , 2 p o o ls , l a u n d r y d is p o s a l, p a r k i n g s e c u r i t y a v a i l a b l e . C a b l e , w a s h e r , c o v e r e d d i s h ­ g u a r d , 2810 S a la d o 476-4095 G R E A T l / ) ( ’A T IO N . L u x u r y o n e b e d ­ r o o m , n e w c a r p e t i n g , c o v e r e d p a r k in s . s u n d e c k . h ills a n d c a b l e p a id . O n ly $150. 2812 N u e c e s . 472-6497. A V A I L A B L E b e d r o o m n e t s w e lc o m e d T h r e e b u s r o u te s . a p a r t m e n t , I M M E D I A T E L Y O n e f u r n is h e d . A ir, 476-1708. 2504 L e o n . a L K V I L h, . G r a d u a t e V k w p I Nr J A - S C H N E I D E R T Y P I N G I n t y p i n g , p r in t in g , b in d in g • i d e r g r a d u a t e ; I o l a K o e n ig L a n e . T e le p h o n e . 465-7205 a n d ! A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G .. R e p o r t s , b r ie f s th e s e s , d i s s e r t a t i o n s . S y m b o ls M r J l r 'S' A n th o n y . 454-3079. W e x p e r i e n c e d IB M . A c c u r a t e , r a t e s . 327-1534. T 5 P IS r . f a s t P i l e d r i c .s e rv ic e . L o w n ,'Y . l i t e r a r y s i :RVR ,.,s S e l e d r i c . C a rlto n rib b o n 1 'NIK , . b o la D i s s e r t a t i o n s , T h e s e s F i t s ' I i B r ie fs . T h e m e s 477-9043 s v m S' ’ B S E R V I C E 1 renor-K H I 2-7184 i l i m J h°'s,, s’ D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G d isserta tio n s, 8 r a f h in g . R eason ab le! T H E M E S . REPORTS, lecture n o t e . ' R e a s o n a b le . M r s. P’ranor, 476-1317. T h e s e s , K T PhF; R7 * , TYPIST i b m Selectrlcj r e p o r ts b r ie fs . p r o fe s s io n © 1 r e p o r ts . P r in tin g , b in d i n g m im in g . M r s. T u llo s . 453-5124. B C S O M E O N E A S S U M E H a r d i n N o r th flo o r s e m e s t e r , 477- c o n t r a c t . F o u r g ir l T w o v a ( a n c le s . S p r i n g 1895. s u ite . 2 n d W E T Y P E lectu re notes reports. W ill p ick u p and deT vm ! T H E M E S, I .................. R e a s o n a b le . 444-0394 . o r t s . N PlE D R O O M M A T E S . S h a r e 2 -b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t 24th a n d R io . S u p e r c h e a p a n d f r ie n d ly . C a ll 477-7117. d e p e n d a b l e . E x p e r i e n c e d E D U C A T I O N A L T Y P I S T . A c c u r a t e a n d fo r . m a t s R e a s o n a b l e r a t e s . M r s M u r llv n n ‘u l l > n n H a m i lto n , 444-2831 in a il ’ W A L K T O C A M P U S b e d r o o m O n e p lu s e l e c t r i c i t y . P a n e l l e d . A /C . D e e p c a r p e t . to c a m p u s o n 2 1 s t. O n F i t e b lo c k s s h u ttl e . O n e 2101 S a n G a b r i e l . a p a r t m e n t . $120, ENVOY APTS. 476-9S63 a f t e r B OO p m . F O R M E R 2732 S E C R E T A R Y w ith K R A s tu (1 e n l h y p in g . 4 5 c / p a g e . 451- T Y P I N G S F .R V io p ). P r o f e s s i o n a l ty p i n g r a t e s a 5 ifK S ivi 1 m a U e r R e a s o n a b l e I a l e s . 2405 N u e c e s , 472-6753 W O O D S T Y P IN G 472-4825.US’ N e a ' S E R V I C E . ’ T h e s i s - M r s ' Woods. * T y p i n g . MultUI thing. B i n d i n g M B A U The C o m p le te Professional F U LL-TIM E T y p in g Servi ce f M u d ,r m f o r I n u m g iB h ilim i i " a n d th e s e s a n d d i s s e r t a t i o n s . , * H (’n r e. l " <> t h o , n , f d s o f U n iv e rs ity k e y b o a r d e q u i p m e n e n g i n e e r P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2 7 0 7 H e m p h i l l P a r k t A R B O N R IB B O N S e l e c t e e . I n m i d ­ n ig h t ( i n t b y 8. 478-0753 e v e n in g s . F A S T . A C C U R A T E to s t u d e n t s a t h o m e . C a n n ic k t y p i s t d e s i r e s i.vpe im u p / d e l i v e r . 263 2276. ^ ^ / y U R I E D E L A F I E L D S E R V I C E . T h e s e s , d i s s e r t a t i o n s , " h ' - 'h s . S a v e m o n e y M iiltilit.v p in g . c o m a m . J t e ^ P o g r a p h l n g ' v., T Y P I N G la w 4 V'» 70CW e C a r M a s t e r C h a r g e . Just N o rth o f 27th & G u a d a lu p s tywdA fim jiduj, M .B .A T y p i n g . M u l t i l l l h i n g . B i n d i n g The C o m p le te Professional F U L L -T IM E T y p in g Servica t o t h e n e e d s o f Universes t a i l o r e d s t u d e n t s . S p e c i a l k e y b o a r d e q u i p m e n fo r e n g i n e e r s c i e n c e , In g t h e s e s a n d d i s s e r t a t i o n s . l a n g u a g e , a n d P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2 7677 2707 H e m p h i ll P a r k M axlen ha rye honored. S M A L L W O O D T Y P I N G 892 0727. 5001 S u n s e t T r a i l , L a s t m i n u t e a n d o v e r ­ p a p e r s , n ig h t d i s s e r t a t i o n s , n e w s l e t t e r s , b u ll e ti n s ty p i n g . T h e s e s , t e r m Royal Praises Sooner Running Game DKR Press Conference By ROY MARK Assistant Sports Editor Darrell Royal’s Monday af­ ternoon press conference should It could easily be compete with any soap opera any day. Royal can tell as ghastly a story as anyone. Take Monday, for example. televised. “I just hope we can hold them (Oklahoma) under 500 yards. “They have an excellent of­ fense and great speed around the for 517 comers. They rushed yards against USC. That’s bur­ ning it up.” And, oh yeah, by the way, Royal was pleased with the win over Oregon Saturday. Enough said on that, back to those ogres from Norman. “They have as fine a team as anyone In tile country.” “You have to lode hard to find a weakness on their team.” “There’s just not a phase of the game they don’t play well.” Royal’s woes increased Monday crew of walking as Texas’ wounded added some more men to their ranks, most notably Jimmy Moore and Eddie Phillips. “I’m sure Eddie’s out for the game. His leg is more tender, more painful, than it has ever been before,” Royal said. “I’d be tickled if we got Jimmy back in three weeks. They don’t think anything is tom, but they’re going to find out for sure today.” And then, after building to a climax with the Phillips and Moore injuries, Royal, the master of suspense, let a new injury be known. lunch “Over (Glenn) Gaspard told me he couldn’t bend his wrist,” Royal pa in fu lly today recounted. Also, Jim Bertelsen, Bobby Callison and Tem Landry are nursing injured shoulders but will probably be ready for Saturday’s clash with OU in Dallas. David Arledge is out for the season and Stan Mauldin is not ready to start. So where does that leave the Longhorns? “ Oklahoma looks tough, awfully tough,” Royal conceded. not giving W h e n out superlatives to the Sooners Royal did last Saturday’s game with Oregon. talk about “I was happy with our ball 'Horns Start Work; O U Around Corner Head Coach Darrell Royal less gloomy after the through a little appeared a Monday afternoon Longhorns had run light practice session. that It wasn't that the team looked all impressive—after all, they weren’t even wearing pads. What pleased Royal was that some of his injured players showed signs of recovery. Linebacker Glenn Gaspard, La* example, almost gave Royal an ulcer when he informed him at lunchtime he couldn’t bend his right wrist. But it turned out that, as Gaspard described it, “it was just a bruise. I ’ll keep it wrapped during practice, and I ’ll have whirlpool treatm ent on it, but I ’ll be OK for the game.” there “The game,” of course, is Oklahoma, next Saturday, and while Gaspard is sure to make several other it, Longhorns who probably won’t. Quarterback Eddie Phillips was not and Royal repeated he is “ definitely out. at practice, are Donnie Wigginton Is our m an,” Royal said. and will miss Split end Jimmy Moore is on crutches a minimum of three weeks. He has torn cartilege in the right knee. knee Another Stan Mauldin, is on Royal’s also “ definitely out for OU” list. victim, But back to the good news, or at least the better news. Running backs Jim Bertelsen and Bobby Callison, who had suffered sore shoulders, were running well in practice. Royal reported. “ I ’m not even worried about them, ’ j the coach said. “Their in ju rie s; are nagging, but they're n o t; serious.” If Yod Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Connseling and Referral Service NEWEST NEAR CAMPUS! one block to law school three blocks to U.T. GREAT OAK APARTMENTS Luxury 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartments shag carpet, cable, sun deck & large pool. From $220. ALL BILLS PAID 477-3388 gam© with Oregon. I thought Donnie (Wigginton) directed our team well. (Greg) Ploetz and (Randy) Braband played ex­ cellently on defense as did Alan Moore the end of the toward gam e,’’ he said. Royal said he was “dejected” over the injury situation. P at Kelly and Dean Campbell will continue as the replacements for Moore while Wigginton will start the game for the ’Horns. Rob Riveire will be the backup quarterback. G aspard’s wrist was a big question m ark Monday as he had not had it checked by the team doctors. If the injury situation seems bad now, in 1966 Texas went into the OU gam e with nine starters out of the lineup—which is tho last the Sooners have time defeated Texas. Royal closed the meeting by summarizing the Oklahoma team . high water like moving over level ground, maybe even over downhill ground.’’ “ They're ★ SALE * SHEEP SKIN RUGS Many Beautiful Colors Shoe Shop We make and repair beets and shoes Capitol Saddlery ^ ★ LEATHER SALE ★ Various kinds, colors — 50c Der toot 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 BERT'S BAR-B-QUE BUY ONE SANDWICH FO R 40* GET ONE FREE W IT H THIS C O U P O N 11:00 A .M . to 11:30 P.M. October 5 TU ESDA Y O N L Y 610. W . 19th THE BEST IN VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS 100% GUARANTEE — MODERN FACILITIES BRAKES TUNE-UPS CLUTCH — TRANSMISSION — ELECTRICAL EXPERT ON VALVE & ENGINE REPAIRS OPEN SATURDAY — BankAmericard Master Charge W E H A V E A C O M PLET E PARTS DEPT. GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE 1621 EAST SIXTH 477-6797 l A S e i J U E M A J O R S NSA speaks your language And furthermore, if you are especially adept in certain foreign languages, the National Security Agency is ready to give you immediate language assignments, advance^ refresher, or special vocabulary training or may even train you in an entirely new language. I Career language positions are available in the fields of translation, transcription, analysis and documentation. Fluency in speaking is not essential, but knowledge of idiomatic, colloquial and dialectal variations is desirable. At NSA you will be joining an Agency of national prominence—a unique civilian organization responsible for developing "secure” communications systems to transmit and receive vital information. NSA offers you this opportunity to further broaden your knowledge of modem language or area studies, and to use your talents in a challenging and rewarding career while you enjoy also the broad, liberal benefits of Federal employment. In return, we ask that you not only know your language, but that you be flexible, naturally inventive and intellectually curious. That's a lot to ask.. .Do you fit the picture?, Where to g o . . . what to do: Language applicants must take the Professional Qualification Test (PQT) as a prerequisite to NSA interviews for employment. Pick up a PQT Bulletin at your Placement Office, th* sooner the better. It contains a brief registration form which must be received in Berkeley, California by October 13 (for th* October 23 test).* College Relations Branch, National Security Agency, Fort George G. Meade, Maryland 20755. Attn: M321. An equal opportunity employer, M /F. •November 24 for the December 4 PQT Test NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY Tuesday, October 8. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 A Stopped Sooner -Texan Stall I’hoto. O U fi by th, d y Br. id; Ic o n C rossw hite is taken down c , Ltan M a u ld in (85) while Ran- I (53) prepares to put the finishing touches on the tackle. The action cam e in last year's clash with the Sooners which Texas won 41-9. Beats Texas A&l Soccer Team Tied by Pan Am ci and s\\ inds > rule the fate OI nr teams as they lowly Pan tie before by a 1-1 s A il 9-1. y '-amp played in Ann riran used a ■ ii defense and a the in upsetting ■ inp to their third is, the Longhorns’ tip < :i a shot by !> after taking a teammate Gentil rn equalizer came Hi the aid of the ) the top comer beyond the vain •per Joe Torres. In the Texas A&I contest, the ’Horns scored four goals before “ playing in the rain ’’ toward five more goals and a final score of 9-1. In taking the early 4-0 lead. Oscar Garzon and Gentil Marin each added a goal, and Vallejo put in two more before the heavy rain began. Playing three inches of water, the teams settled down themselves, enjoy especially Texas. Tile Longhorns scored five more goals, Garzon getting three more, as Texas ran the score to 9-1. in, at places, to Texas still holds first place in i die Texas Soccer League’s i Southeast Division with a 4-0-1 record. They have a two-week before playing rest a doubleheader against Trinity and St. M ary's on Oct. 16 and 17 respectively in Austin. in iiuitniniuiiiiJinuiiiutisifiiiuiiiuiiuiuuiiiiiiiiiiRUituiiuiiMmiuiittByi Middle Earth | - * ^ Aid fo r Bad T rip s 9 p.m. - 4 a.rn. Seven Days a Week Also 8:30-4:30 University “Y” No names, no hassle Mobile units available 472-9246 M i m m m m m Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service Across from Gulf Mart G L 2-0205 CLOSED SATURDAY The Only Independent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET R O A D S E R V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N V EH IC LES IS O U R SPECIALTY Sn inrin ‘Ob the Dr**’* Noxt to Co-Op Gemologists - Jewelers - Designers Tuesday Special RIB EYE 2 9 served with salad, baked potatoe and texas toast B O N A N Z A SIRLOIN PIT 2815 Guadalupe 478-3560 IM Eleven 1. Phi Gamma Delta (3-0) 2. P.E.M. Club (3-0) X Acacia (3-01 I. Sigma Phi Epsilon (3-1) 5. Buzzards (3-0) 6. Hill Hall (2 0) 7. Stars (3-0) 8. Kappa Alpha (3-0) 9. Bushmasters (3-0) IO. Roberts Hall (3-0) IX. Tau Delta Phi (3-0) TI I i s week’s highlights: No. I Si ■ n t Phi Epsilon rallied to defeat Delta Tau Delta, 18-6. Bandala Chi Alpha shut out Alpha Epsilon Pi, 20-0. The Black Hawks edged the Recruits < a penetrations. Tin* Hulk • held on the Hole-in the-wall, 13-6. to defeat Freshman Coach To Narrate Film The Texas Union Ideas and Issues Committee will meet at in noon Tuesday the Union A ii d i t o r I u rn to see filmed highlights cl the Texas-Oregon game. coach football David McWilliams, assistant freshman and former Longhorn grid star, will I and make narrate film comments on the up-coming Texas-Oklahoma game. the ;f; EARN C A S H WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed I f .if ’ M ale Donors O n ly A ge s 18-60 '■ .;i> - 11-21 W IT H P A R E N T A L C O N S E N T Caish Bonus Programs for Repeat Donors Austin Blood Components, Inc. ! o)9 W est Sixth 477-3735 \ ff S H O W I N G N O T f f - O M N H H I S T , T H I : IU I A L S O T I I I B K U . f> T s r \( M INIS IN A l S T I V RITZ ARTS C O N T IN U O U S S H O W IN G S I? K O O N TILL - 11:45 P.M. Escorted Ladle! Free with Membership Story Still Good Entertainment I s I "H E A D PARTY" ALSO IGM M "PUBLIC A C T I O N " "HAPPY HO UR" DAILY 5-6 P.M. — $2.00 ADM. T R A N S ★ T E X A S N O W ! O P E N 2:15 A D U L T S $1.50 Until 5:30 "A round the W o rld " 2:30-8:15 "W e st Side Story" 5:30 2200 Hancock Drive — 453 &641 O S " '~R OR THF F1 RST Ti ME 'P i Ii I T M 142J W. Ben Whit! Birt. — 442-2333 O P E N — 4:45 $1.00 'TIL 5 P.M. FEATURES 5:00 and 8:30 TRANSMIT » C A A S , Winner of 7 Academy Awards ‘BEST N^PICTUREI* rn wIS M OPEN 7:00 • START 8:00 N O W G IV IN G B O N U 5 C H E K S G O O D FO R FREE A D M IS S IO N SWI N. Lamar Blvd.—451-1710 FREE T R A IN R ID ES O N U L T O O T BEFORE S H O W T IM E (S T A R T IN G AT 7:30) FREE G IV E A W A Y S W A T C H FOR EARLY BIRD JO E NAMETH* H I TH E LAST BIEBEL ■ 8:00 I 12-00 ALSO THE PROFESSIONAL’S 10:00 L E E M A R V IN H I R T L A N C A S T E R - — ,!R J --- T P A N S ic T E X A S A N W H H I »m»r Riva - f l S l . I G O D j H U X O F F I I E O P E N 7:30 — SH O W S T A R T S OI M y H STARTS WEDNISDA Y *A B lack... s i W hite... ALL Woman! The story of a beautitul girl s lifetime between the ages of 19 and 22. NATIONAL Ct NT RAI PICTURES Presents t h e ( ^ g r a s s h o p p e r ■BemeCUO** . CU I-- [RCS* Guadaluoi St—477-1964 STARTS TOMORROW S K E T S m X YOU BLED MY MOMMA YOU BLED MY POPPA BUT YOU WONT BLEED ME I . . I •!■! rti«k|UI . I .• !!. .. P# *• t T-H, WA . .. fc.~ M M y ViN VAN P tfB LtS int JIRHY GROSS p'lsent SWEET SW UTBACK S BAAOASSSSS S1 KG I CiRiLMBHON INDUSTRIES Amite ■ COHU «• - ... Mn.l. Page 8 Tuesday. October 5. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN “ West Side Story;” starring Natalie Wood, Richard Beymer, R i t a Moreno and George Chakiris; screenplay by Ernest Lehman: directed by Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins; at the Americana. is (Editor’s Note: This the second of a two-story feature on “Around the World in SO D ays” Side Story”—two and showing movies which together in Austin.) “Best are By JOHN POPE Staff Writer is “ B e st Side Story,” which is still top-flight entertainment, in an awkward stage. The play was produced on Broadway in 1957 and the film was made in 1961. so it is too old to be current. On the otiler hand, it is not old enough to be deemed romantic. Admittedly, some of the film ’s touches date it—finger-snapping, wno needs the world when you own the moon cmd stas. short-haired bouffant hairdos, skinny tie*, dancing the toughs, twist, white-topped shoes and expressions like “ Daddy-O.” Some of the songs—notably “ Je t Song’’ and “ Cool” —are in a now-passe style—more rock 'n ’ roll than rock. HOWEVER, most of up them s t a n d well—“ M aria,” “ Somewhere” and “ Tonight” are hardy perennials, and Leonard Bernstein's music and Stephen Sondheim's lyrics are still ex­ cellent. is evident lyrics. Til is Sondheim has a talent for in­ jecting skillful, satiric barbs into his in “ Am erica,” the Puerto Ricans’ litany of gripes about their lowly status in the United States, and “ Gee, O fficer Krupke,” ’ the Am erican delinquents’ complaint about adults’ failure to cope with their children's problems. The idea behind “ West Side Story' —transporting “ Romeo and Ju lie t” from Verona to the New York slums—was novel in 1957, and it is till good. compact Tile mood of “ West Side Story,” intense emotions fed by slum squalor, is heightened by settings—fenced the tawdry playgrounds, s m a l l , fire escapes. The gyms and specific feud between anglos (Je ts ) and Puerto Ricans (Sharks) is never spelled out, but we can get an idea of how hemmed-in youths would tear down anything in front of them their to break out of surroundings. reason tile to*’ IN T H IS grim setting M aria (N atalie Wood), a Puerto Rican, and Tony (Richard Beym er), an anglo, meet at a gym dance and, of course, in love. immediately fall N aturally, their love is beset by problems. At a rumble the n e x t the Mercutio-Tybalt duel in “ Romeo and Ju lie t” —Tony knifes M aria's night—paralleling b r o t h e r Bernardo (George Chakiris), who had slain Tony's friend Riff (Russ Tamblyn). Later that night Tony is gunned down by M a ria ’s Puerto Rican fiance. Miss Wood and Beym er are good, though he seems too clean to be a hood. One of the film s pleasant surprises is Miss Wood's ability to cope with a Puerto Rican accent. R ita Moreno, who pla\s M aria’s best friend, gives the best performance in the film. She is fiery and passionate, and she can dance up a storm. Once you get used to hoods dancing in the inner city streets, you realize bow good Jerome Robbins' choreography is. Though twisting a short interlude of provoked guffaws among the audience, most of the dancing is arid was executed skillfully g e n u i n e l y appreciated. The SAT., OCT. 9th SAT., OCT. 9th A R M A D ILLO PRESENTS RAVI SHANKAR WITH ALLA RAKKA PLAYING TABLAS ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY 478-465 8:30 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT — DISCOUNT RECORDS, OAT WILLIES, BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS 53.00 OCT. 15-14 TRACY HELSON & MOTHER EARTH OCT. 15-14 ■ T R A N S * T E X A S ■ 1423 W. Bin ^ teBtrt^4 2 2 3 3 T Starts TOMORROW $1 OO TIL A WEEK DAYS FEATURES 6-8-10 j a n e F o n d a C d o n a l d / u t h e r i o a d in an alan j pakuia production Mute p o io vis cr *> technicolor i [Kl fro'" warner b’OS . <*$£>* a Kamey lc ju e serv ce Shocking. Beautiful. Brilliant. Sensual. Deadly ...and in the end, only they will survive. 7224 Guadalupe St.-47M3o4 Open 1:45 • S1.50 'TIL 5 PM Features 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - I O (“ B R I L L I A N T ! ' ^ Nev»*diy PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS "friends" technicolor* lh M I SIC i n E L T O N .KH IN H E LD O V E R 2nd Week FEATU RE 6:05 - 8:00 - IO p.m. L A S T D A Y cot.UMH A PICTURES Piese-ts a ees production DRIVE! HE SAID R I P A R A M O U N T 7X3 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E THEATRES $1.00 TIL 2:15 1:40 - 3:20 - 5:00 6:40 - 8:20 - 10:00 DOC» » * STACY KEACH FAYE DUNAWAY h a r r j s y u UU inDOC” A FILM BYFRANK P E R R Y MIKE WITNEY W.tjmIj PETE HAM?*! DuctedmiProrf.**!VyF?AHIPOT Cwbrteiry; MMT United Artists LAST D A Y ! $1.00 'TIL 2:15 1:40 - 3:20 - 5:00 6:40 - 8-20 - 10.00 S T AT E 476-5066 71 9 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E SAMUEt Z. ARKOf F *nS. 4 I M O N D A Y S O N L Y A 1984-type dilemma faces a young couple on M ovie of the Week at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday on channels 12 and 24. The late Van Heflin stars in “ Tile Last Child,” set sometime in the future w'hen couples are lim ited to one child each. He plays a senator trying to help <3 young couple about to have their second child. “ Man classic a Thousand Faces,” starring Jam es Cagney, Dorothy Malone and Jim Backus, is shown on channel 12 a ’ 10:30 p.m. It is the biography of horror movie star I>on Chaney. T I K S D A V S S C H K I ) ! L R The of IO G le n C am p b e ll G oodtim e 6 'IO ii rn I. r,. 42 Ironsides 5. 7. • 12. 24 M od Squad l l 7 p in 7 .30 ii in ll M asque! ad(» 1. o. IX S a rg e 7. IO ti av ali F iv e O 12, 24 M o vie 0 T h e A dvo cates The F a st C h ild " R u s h e rs " 8 30 p.m. t. 6. 12 T he Fu n n y Side 5. 7. Cannon IO Room 222 0 W a r k Jo u r n a l 9 p.m. 9 30 p rn IO. 12. 24 M a rc u s W e lb y M D 0 P e rs p e c tiv e s on V io len ce 7 Ch ira Ko T e d d y R e a rs 42 B ill A nderson S h o w 4 Four-O n-Four: M in o rity F o ru m HAVING A P A R T Y ? NEED A BARTENDER? CALL 478-7488 Bradley School O f Bartending - L O B B Y SUITE— COMMODORE PERRY BLDG. ti. ONE KNUE $ 8th & Kfd River fu el. • $ ANGELA * A ™ & the ROCKETS • H APPY H O U R S • DAILY 4 - 8 p.m. BEER $1.00 Pitcher • NEVER A COVER • • • • • • • • • • • • • irhnrd Roundtree M o s e s Gunn “ S H A F T ” R o d T a y lo r Y v e tte M im icn v “ D A R K O I T U B S I X ’’ (R ) Vincent T rice J o s e p h Cotton “ H R . T H I I IK S ” J o h n Itlooin “ T R K I N C H K I M B L E TW H HK MI KI ) T R A N S P L A N T ” fC.Pl LONGHORN Putman at 183 N 454-3880 Jo h n W ayn e R i c h a r d Woolie “ B I G J A K K ” J o h n Wa.Mie J o r g e R i v e r o “ R I O L O B O ” S t e v e M c<)iieen S h a r o n F a r r e l l ‘TH K B K I V K R S ’* lf. 1*1 How to Succeed' Does By SUZANNE SHELTON So, you're the t y p e who gets a kick out of seeing middle-aged executives pinching girls on the bottom? You'll love “ How to Succeed Business Without Really in Trying,” the d ram a department p r e s e n t a t i o n which opened Monday in Hogg Auditorium. Question: What’s the opposite of a sex m an iac?” Answer: “ A businessm an.” You couldn't possibly laugh at lines like that? Ju st go and enjoy. There are som e incredible sets by John R eese Rothgeb and all expensive-looking k i n d s c o s t u m e s , courtesy David Draper. of the acting And som e of is superb: aa Bud Ja c k Galze Frum p, a sort of cross between Abraham Lincoln and a vulture; Ja n Holeywell as a too-hot-to- handle hooker cum secretary. Kelly Payne plays a perfect Horatio Alger in a success story that m akes second-string the quarterback from Whittier look pale. But what suffers in this musical comedy is a lack of humor. Who ran really laugh at secretaries mooning over m arrying the boss. crooning “ How often can you fly from the land of carbon paper to the land of chintz?” Now, really. The only way to play this thing Is sideways and satirical. And unfortunately som e members of the Department of Dram a figured that out—and som e didn't. There are a couple of really good numbers—the coffee break scene where the office workers get the DT’s when the coffee pot goes dry. That one rings true. And Payne’s solo in the men’s to his w a s h r o o m , mirrored mug, in You.” singing “ I Relieve Rut there are liabilities, too. Tile second act begins at IO p.m. The script is banal beyond belief. The in Monday night's first act, played somewhere of cacophony. especially orchestra, key the in comedy see a dance routine On the other hand. it’s a relief in a to m usical is not em barrassing, but delightful—a sort of Broadway pirate dance resplendent with eye patches and hot pants. that In balance, “ How to Succeed” is a slow-paced m usical comedy with some very good moments, quite solid acting from the likes of Sissy Gaetjens a s R osem ary and Beth Klein a s Smitty. And a lousy script that needs a big helping of it irony palatable. yourself. But Through at Hogg Auditorium. In a way, it’s the perfect lighthearted comedy for Economic Plan Phase II. see Saturday to m ake for go C A P R I C O R N : A n n o y e d with s o m e o n e o r a r o u n d y o u ? M a k e s u r e t h a t it Is n o t y o u r f a u l t b e f o r e acting. s o m e t h i n g A Q U A R I U S : Y o u a r e f e e l i n g t h e u r g e do s o m e t h i n g , lo c a n ' t : d e r i d e w h a t . O r g a n i z e t h a t e n e r g y , a n d y o u w i l l m a k e s o m e u s e f u l : g a i n s . b u t y o u P I S C E S : T h e n e x t t r o u b l e , in in a g o o d p o s i t i o n t i m e y o u s e e lend a h a n d . t o do s o m e o n e a. on r,r e t h i s r i g h t n o w . DEPARTMENT of R-T-F C1NEMATEXAS FALL 1971 JPresents T O N I G H T "SINGING IN THE RAIN* (1952) Directed by Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen Starring Gene Kelly, D onald O ’Connor, Debbie Reynolds Shows at 6:30 P.M. and 9:00 P.M. JE S T E R C E N T E R A U D I T O R I U M Season Ticket $7.00 Admission $.75 Charcoal Hamburgers Old Fashioned ACRO SS THE STREET 3-DAY SPECIAL (ORN DOO Reg. 45* NOW ONLY 33c (all meat warner blanketed with creamy rich batter on a stick) Your choice of mustard or ketchup SAVE 12c G O O D TUES., WED., THURS. OCT. 5 thru OOT. 7 411 W . 24th 472-5032 now ro I | f k J I O ffic^ w orke r, rush fo the aid of J. R. Big- (Richard Lemin), president of World giey W id e W ic k e t C o., after Ponty Finch (Kelly Payne, sta n d in g left in light suit) knocks him T e x a n S t a f f P h o t o b y B E N E P E R E Z , i e x a i l r> ia u Make a Good Impression in th . dr.m a department', musical d own "How to Succeed in Business Without Really in H ogg Trying," which opened Monday Auditorium. BBs W ip e Out Return M yth B y M I K I ] S M A D E R S Amusements S t a f f “ S u r f s U p ; ” T h e B e a c h B o y s ; Reprise 6453. Especially because I'm one absolute raving Beach Boys fan and count tim Beach Boys among my favorite four all-time groups, it hurts to say their new the poorest Rlbum they've ever done. is one of top It is, though. E v er since Brian Wilson quit dominating the group around 1969, the Beach Boys have bren in a music. I quandary; and th andary has deepened into the biggest abyss this side of the Grand Canyon. Surf’s I Jardine “ Surf's Up’’ ) Thankfully, Al and Bruce Johnston (whoso songs arc especially nice—“ Disney G irls” is lovely and probably tho hest cut on seem content with writing nice, unassuming songs: Carl and Dennis, however, have become obsessed mi th going “ m odem ” the last year or so, and the amount of execrable m aterial produced by them keeps grow ing with every album. Mike I/n e, well, everyone should have been knows he Ixack in 1965. kicked out way Wilson at this point seems a bigger enigma than ever. Over­ all, the Beach Boys more of a democratic operation, while necessary' for the survival of the group, h is not the decision to make successful on a musical been level. Granted second-side deficien­ cies such as “ A Day in the Life of a Tree” being possibly the worst thing the Beach Boys have ever put on record, “ Surf’s Up” rating title of Most Over- Rated Pile of Nothingness E ver to Become a Myth, and “ Feel Flows'' being boring enough to render sleeping pills obsolete, the the first side of “ S u r fs Up” is quite adequate. Especially “ Student Demon­ is great stration Tim e,” which and should by all justice be a sm ash hit—the C oasters’ “ Riot In Cell Block No. 9” updated! “ Surf's U p" doesn't rock, the songs are decidedly inferior to the standard the Beach Boys have set over the y ears, the B B ’s singing has markedly group deteriorated, and the production on “ Surf’s U p” Is literally quite abominable because of its milky, indistinct sound. all I t s truth, depressing. pretty “ Surf’s Up” does demonstrate one valid though: Good groups don’t last forever. Even groups one’s eventually break up, die or sputter out in a m orass of sheer weariness. favorite very tunii. i i imiii, imiitiiiwn i iHiimmmwmiiwiMMiiiiiMiiiiMiiwmm Annual Art Faculty Exhibition To Display Variety of Styles the When annual Art Faculty thirty-third in the University Art Exhibition opens Sunday Museum, viewers will see styles of art that are poles apart—and many in between. Traditional oil and water color paintings—such as Spanish landscapes by Prof. Loren Mozley— contrast with Assistant Prof. Gibbs Milliken’s eye- catching “ Fetish,” an assem blage of wood, bone, fur and eagle feathers that present a contemporary image related to aboriginal voodoo symbols. The more that 200 works on exhibit were created the art department studio by 41 members of faculty, ranging from full professors to teaching assistants. On the opening day of the show, the faculty artists w ill he honor guests at a 2 to 5 p.m. p u b l i c reception of the museum. in the Archer M. Huntington Gallery Prof. Donald B. Goodall, chairman of the art department and director of the museum, writes in the foreword to the exhibition catalogue that the faculty artists appear in the exhibit in “ their prim ary role a s artist and collectively only because they are teachers and colleagues.” drawings, Paintings, photographs, jewelry, sculpture, graphics, wall hangings, batiks, punched rugs, advertising and book designs, ceram ics, typography and embossed plastics are among the item s to be on display. The faculty art show will rem ain on view through Nov. 7. presents DEATH TED NO CO VER! Cold Beer - Wine Coolers 25c rj 12th & Red River 478-0292 THE HUNGRY HORSE 1809 S A N J A C I N T O 477-0432 Finr-0 in Food and Entertainment MORE FREE BEER! J D R I N K FREE F R O M 8:4 5 - 9 : 1 5 P.M. EVERY TUESDAY and Bonnie Hearne — c r o s s w i n d s A talnntpd couple that can play anything Ya ll come & Dig em QUEEN CAPRI THEATER 472 0442 521 E. 5th OPEN 11:00 A.M. ’TIL? OPEN SUN. 1:00 P.M. ’TIL? UNDER N E W M A N A G E M E N T C A L L F O R M O V I E TITLE — W E C H A N G E M O V I E S EVE RY F R I D A Y M I D N I G H T S H O W FRI. A SAT. 11 :00-2:00 BEST X-RATED M O VIES IN TOWN WITH THIS COUPON — 50c off Regular Admission NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED 1 0 0 % A I R C O N D I T I O N E D ST O M O I V TWO SCREENS 222 East 6th 472-0436 ALL M O V IE S RATED X 35 mm "BACKSEAT CABBY" A N D "ANIMAL LOVERS" 16 mm "DEVIL'S LITTLE ACRE" W EDN ESD A Y IS STUDENT DAY: AIL TICKETS HALF-PRICE WITH STUDENT LD. W ATERLOO SOCIAL C H B T H EA T ER 7 th & Red River presents tonight JUG BAND MUSIC W ASHBOARD WILDCATS N O C O V E R W E D N E S D A Y CHARLIE CHAPLIN In “Tho V agab on d ”, “Th# Count” and “A Night at tho Show” 25c C O V E R THE CENTER FOR A SIA N STUDIES PRESENTS S N O W C O U N T R Y A FILM BASED O N T H I NOVEL IY Y A S U N A R I K A W A B A T A W IN N E R O F THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE, 1968 “A BITTERSWEET, EROTIC STORY OF THE DOOMED AFFAIR OF A DETERIORATING GEISHA AND A TOKYO d ilettan te:’ ONE SH O W IN G ONLY! TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5 8 P.M. BATTS AUD. 50c — t i m e SH O W IN G AT 3 D R IV E - IN ’S SHOWTOWN ★ BURNET ★ SOUTHSIDE T W I N D R I V E - I N D R H E - I N T W I N D R I V E - I N BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 — SH O W STARTS DUSK SHAFTO Ilk name. SHAFTO Mi gam*. M E T R O C O L O fc { 5 ) 4 * M G m {^ PLUS C O - FEATURE AT E A C H S H O W S H O W T O W N - SO U TH SIDE R O D T A YLO R YVETTE M IM IEU X “DARK OF THE SU N ” — BURNET — RICH ARD W ID ­ M A R K - A U E N ALDA "M O O N S H IN E W A R Dai! (o r b u s i n e s s a s u s u a l A B I E S ; P l a n t o d a y . T h e r e a r e v e r y f e w i n f l u e n c e s the to w h i c h y o u a r e s k y t o d a y . s u b j e c t In T A I B L S : Y o u will g e t t i n g a n n o y e d w it h a n d r o m e s y o u r w a y . lo o k out find y o u r s e l f t h in g s , li ttl e if a m a j o r p r o b l e m G E M I N I : Try' to p r e s s f o r w a r d w it h e a s i l y d r if t if y o u y o u r p l a n s . Y o u a s a d o n 't r u d d e r l e s s s h i p t o d a y c a n C A M K B : B e p r e p a r e d fo r a m i n o r d i s a s t e r in y o u r l o v e lif e t o d a y . T h e s e a s lo ok s t o r m y . L E O : W a n d e r a w a y f r o m y o u r u s u a l r e s t o f s e e w h a t is d o in g . Y o u m i g h t fin d haunts a n d t h e w o r l d s o m e t h i n g y o u like th e V l B C i O : Y o u s h o u l d b e h a p p y t o d a y . ; Y o u c a n p r e t t y w e l l d i r e c t y o u r s e l f , j s o m e t h i n g w h i c h n o t e v e r y o n e h a s the a b i l i t y to do. L 1 B B A : G o o u t o f y o u r w a y to g o o u t o f y o u r w a y . Y o u s h o u l d a v o i d : o p e n c o n f l i c t w it h a n y o n e . l e a d to s o r r o w t o d a y I t w ill S C O R P I O . Y o u a r e in a v ery ' s e n - j A m e n t a l m o o d . D o w h a t the m o o d i t e l l s y o u . e v e n t h o u g h y o u ' l l h a t e | y o u r s e l f in m o r e n o r m a l t i m e s S A G I T T A R I U S : s i t t i n g i A r e a r o u n d b e c a u s e y o u th in k g a i n s will I c o m e e x p e c t t h a t , w h y b o t h e r g e t t i n g u p I in the m o r n i n g ” to y o u ’ R e a l l y n o w , if y o u y o u H A N D M A D E 6-W A Y PUZZLE BLO CKS C A N N O W BE PU R C H A SED AT X E S E S S T m T E S W O S L S S E C T C O U N T R Y ST O R E C O M P O U N D 1304 L A V A C A O R F O R C U S T O M O R D E R S : C A L L ITA — 454-8977 or W rit * N A N C I - Rf. No. I, Box 55-C C E D A R CREE K, T EX AS W h I L C O d o t 6421 Burnet Lane d a Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE YOUR SENIOR RING Created by John Roberts Largest Selection Best Diamond Prices c rn del Ow 2236 Guadalupe "Next to HemphillY' UNIVERSITY FILM CLASSICS presents Makes And Remakes T h e S i d e S h o w PRESENTS GREETINGS When Uncle Sam calls, youth replies with hilarious schemes to evade the draft-. Begins and ends with President Johnsons claim: “ Im not saying you never had it so is a fact, isnt it? In between, the film refutes the presidential good. But that optimism. Ii W * w W & abt. I M r V l i' NPP) « • W st IL a Outrageous satire on the Vietnam War, sex, movies, computer dating, paperbacks, voyeurism, the Warren Report, pornography . . . in fact, Village Voice and Esquire. Directed by Brian De Palma (1968, color). GREETINGS PLUS: THE LITTLE RASCALS IN "BORED OF EDUCATION" — ALSO: "THE CRITIC" WEDNESDAY/JESTER AUD. 6:30, 8:30, 10:30 P.M. ADM ISSIO N ONLY 75c GUNGA DIN (1939) DIRECTOR: GEO. STEVENS WITH: C AR Y GRANT, DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, JO A N FONTAINE SERGEANTS THREE (1962) DIRECTOR: JO H N STURGES WITH: FRANK SINATRA, DEAN MARTIN, JOEY BISHOP A COMPLETE DOUBLE - BILL BOTH DAYS * * * * * —I,—i- -|ruin, WED. 7:00 STEVENS (1939) 9:20 STURGES (1962) THURS. 7:00 STURGES (1962) 9:00 STEVENS (1939) BATTS AUD. 50c per feature Tuesday, October 5. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 9 Sex Bias Investigated UT Seeks End to Discrimination Essay Award Slated A new award, the W alter Prescott Webb Memorial S c h o l a r s h i p , w ill he presented next spring as part of the 1972 Junior Historian Essay Writing Contest. The $100 award, given to the high student school submitting the best paper on an ecological subject, w ill honor the memory of the distinguished h i s t o r i a n , W alter Prescott Webb. T h e Junior Historians clubs, founded in 1939 by Dr. Webb, are organized in many Texas senior and junior high schools. The parent body of the the University-based Texas State Historical Association. organization is at Thp Webb Award, funded the TSHA, w ill be by annual presented meeting Junior Historians April 7 and 8 in the Austin. Deadline J u n i o r Historian essay contest is March I. the the for of Other prizes to be awarded for the essay contest are a $100 seholarship given by the University Institute of Latin American Studies the best paper on Mexican - American history and a $100 scholarship from the TSH A's Leslie Waggener Memorial Fund for the best general history paper. for any E f f o r t s to discover and eliminate discrimination against women on the University campus have been intensified by administrators. The effort took the form of a paycheck insert designed to call a t t e n t i o n the possible to discrimination p r o b l e m . All to S e p t e m b e r U niversity personnel were ac­ companied following statem ent: paychecks the by “ A special committee has been appointed by President Spurr to make a thorough review of the p o s s i b l e existence of sex discrimination on this campus with respect to students, faculty, and staff. i n v o l v e d " If you have any information of any situation on the campus w h i c h s e x discrimination, please submit as much information as possible to the Committee on the Status of Women, Main Building 205. the department “ All information w ill bp held in confidence by the Committee, but it w ill be necessary for you to furnish your name and the name of for verification purposes. Personal conferences w ill be arranged for you with members of the Com­ mittee if requested. Appointments can be made by calling the office of Dr. Lorene Rogers, chairm an of the Committee. ’ Tile paycheck insert was the first action of the Committee on the Status of Women, a group appointed by President Stephen Spurr in Ju ly . The committee is mpus News i I p m. Tuesday D E P A R T M E N T O F GEOLOGICAL SCIEN CES w ill meet at in Geology Building IOO. Guest speakers w ill bp Terry7 Lei fete and E ll McComb, who w ill s p e a k “ Post-Mining R e c l a m a t i o n cd Bauxite Deposits, Jam aica” and “ Speed Reading.” on D EPA R T M EN T OF PHYSICS w ill hold a plasma physics sem inar at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Building 218. A Chem istry s t a t i s t i c a l mechanics and thermodynamics sem inar wall be at 4:30 p.m. in Physics Building 203 and an atomic molecular sem inar w ill bp at 4:30 p.m. in Physics Building 440. D U P L I C A T E B R I D G E P L A Y E R S w ill meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Union Building 317 for a pair tournament. Swiss team playoffs w ill take place in Union Building 304 and 305 at the same time. O R B I T A L M E C H A N I C S SEM IN A R w ill meet at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Engineering Lab Building 113. Prof. Leon Blitzer from the U niversity of Arizona at Tucson w ill speak on “ Or­ bital and Rotational Dynamics of Satellite Motion.” RASSI, w ill hold registration for classes in vocabulary, reading comprehension, study skills and speed reading from 9 a.m. to noon and I to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Frid ay in Jester A 332. SA ILIN G CLUB w ill meet at 7 in Business- p.m. Tuesday Economics Building 151 for free sailing lessons. SPANISH CLUB will meet at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Batts Hall 201 to discuss meeting dates, programs and activities.. The e x e c u t i v e committee and faculty advisory council w ill meet at 6 p.m. with Barbara Hanson. STUDENT’S L IB will meet in Eastwood Park at 9 pm . Tuesday to celebrate Denise's birthday. TEXA S OUTING CLUB w ill meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Union Building 325 to plan a back­ packing along D evil's Backbone near Wim berley. trip TEXA S UNION IDEAS AND j ISSU ES COMM ITTEE presents Longhorn Coach David M c­ W illiam s with film highlights of the Texas-Oregon game and comments on the upcoming Texas-OU clash. Hp w ill speak a t Union in noon Auditorium. the UNDERGRADUATE MICROBIOLOGY S O C I E T Y w ill meet at noon in E x ­ perimental Science Building 115. Ray Collins w ill speak on D R I V E A L I T T L E — S A V E A L O T I J Cl I 3 ct I ’i ct 3 4 cu I ct w 2 7 5 .0 0 ’ * ■ 3 1 .5 0 4 1 0 0 1 25 0 0 2 2 5 0 0 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP 6 0 3 Ccm m oiore Pp rry H o tel A U S T I N 4 7 6 0 1 7 8 A C H IE V E Y O U R G R E A T E S T P O T E N T IA L T H R O U G H S E L F E X P L O R A T IO N & P S Y C H E T R O N IC S With a highly sophisticated, complete new technology PsychEtronics is able to display, record, and give controlled bio-feedback training over the full range of comm only detec­ ted dominant brain wave rythyms. Structured into a carefully developed course of study based on recent psychological developments and designed to achieve a higher level of personal fulfillment, this results in a practical and useful path to a happier life and greater goal realization. L A W V E R , S T U D E N T , S A L E S M A N . IN D IA N C H IE F Whatever your inclination Enhanced mental capacity, control, motivation & confidence can’t hurt! F R E E IN T R O D U C T O R Y S E S S IO N S Sunday 3 PM Monday & Tuesday 7 30 Psydji'ironies 302 Wesl 15,h ^treet Suite 200 _______ ______,__ PANTS! FLARES! BELLS! (all famous nam* brands — O N S A LE !) REG ISTER FOR FREE OUTFIT! Reg. Price $8.00 9.00 10.00 I 1.00 12.00 Sale Price $3.19 3.59 3.99 4.39 4.79 YOU SAVE $4.81 5.41 6.01 6.61 7.21 i SEAT COVER 13231/2 Koenig— 2 lights west of Lamar IT’S WORTH THE DRIVE TO SAVE Page IO Tuesday, October S, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAf headed by Dr. Jackson, a newly vice-president of the named University. In a progress report to Spurr said late in the prevented the from accomplishing last week, Dr. Rogers vacation schedules summer committee many of its goals. had However, in commenting on the progress of the committee Dr. Rogers said, “ We have been quite active since the first of Sep­ tember both as a total committee and as sub­ committees.” Group members, acting their subcommittees, are concerned with staff, faculty and student problems. three separate in “ These groups,” said Dr. Rohers, “ have been working on a questionnaire which we hope to be able to put together for submission to all employes of the University. “ In the meantime wp are in­ in every serting a statement inviting anyone who paycheck has evidence of discrim inatory practices or situations at the to bring evidence University before The subcommittees have also started their in­ terviews with selected members of faculty and staff.” the University investigation committee. through our Dr. Rogers said her committee interim would make another report near the end of November and a final report no later than April 30, 1972. Serving on the committee with ; Dr. Rogers are Joseph Culver, J director of the U niversity Pe r- 1 s o n n e l Office: Dr Natalie Barraga. special education; Miss Nevada Blackburn, housing and food services; Dr. R. M. Brown, vice-president for student, affairs; Dr. Marian Davis, prof. of art; Miss Florence Escott, Bureau of Business Research; Dr. W . O. S. Sutherland, associate dean of the Graduate School; Mrs. Jean W illiam s, English and Dr. Rose Shorev, prof. of home Ann economics. Deadline O ct. 13 Groups to Register is Get. 13 the deadline for campus groups to register as organizations. official co­ B. Dean Edwin ordinator of student activities, said Monday. student Price, According to Price, this is the regular compliance deadline for reregistration of organizations that were registered during the previous semester. Failure to meet this deadline rem its in the organization being restricted as in an official student group, which case it cannot reserve U n i v e r s i t y facilities, use U niversity publications for an­ nouncements, raise funds or post signs on campus. In addition the group w ill not be permitted to reregister for six months. The deadline, however, does not apply to new organizations. Organizations formed after the to deadline w ill bp permitted register any the semester. time during To remain a registered student organization, each group at the beginning of each semester must comply with Institutional Rules, Chapter 6, Section fi-405(a), (b). the According these rules to group must select authorized spokesmen who w ill conduct | business matters relating to the , University', such as reserving i rooms for speakers or per- ■ f o r m a n c . e s . These official spokesmen are also responsible the for submitting a group's officers to the Student Activities Office. list, of An affidavit of membership must also bp completed and filed at the Student Activities Office by the organization's spokesmen. Approximately 75 new groups have registered this semester, according to Price. There are u s u a l l y about 400 student organizations on campus. ‘ ‘ V i r a l Defective Particles of V SV .” Interference by STEREO SPECIALIST U N IV ER SIT Y SPORTS CAR CLUB w ill meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Business-Economics Building 166 to organize. U N IV ERSITY ‘Y ’ needs people at willing Johnston High School. The ‘Y ’ is at 2330 Guadalupe St. tutor math to • HOME AND CAR STEREO • T.V. RECEIVERS COMPLETE STOCKS: TAPES, NEEDLES, BATTERIES • RADIOS • TAPE RECORDERS SA LES A N D S ER V IC E E E 13W A V 307 W . 19+h St. RADIO PH. 478-6609 Parkinq in "ront ultural iilcrtainm eiit oui u tilise The Texas Union presents THE PROPOSITION Musical, Satirical, Improvisational T heater TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12 8:00 P. M. Municipal Auditorium Tickets Free to Blanket Tax Holders TICKET DRAWING BEGINS TOMORROW ai HOGG AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Bus Schedule Will be in The Texan on Day of Performance Bob ■ C T good looking £ puff sleeve SHIRTS 2 0 % OFF o tt 's BI R TH DA OPEN THURSDAY TILL 8 P.M. BETTER fen $ KNITS 4.88 others 6.88 ENTIRE STOCK SHORT SLEEVE SHIR TS PRICE HISI • • BELL i JEANS & PANTS O O • LARGE SELECTION • FAMOUS BRANDS BLUE JE A N BELLS i o o i • » YOUR CHOICE I O 50 ENTIRE STOCK SANDALS 1/ 3 off L ENTIRE STOCK Ants P (FLARE) Off REG. 10.00 to 20.00 KNITS NOT INCLUDED Boh E l l i o t t ' s NEW IMAGES FOR MEN 2426 GUADALUPE BankAmericard ALMOST ENTIRE STOCK OF YOUR Sat' FAVORITE <■> LOW-RISE Jeans % OFF KNIT SHIRTS • ALSO • TANK TOPS