T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas at A ustin V o l. 7 1 , N o . 3 4 T en C e n t s AU STIN , TEXAS, T H U R ? ‘'U S T 26, 1971 Sixteen Pages 471-4401 J o Okays Budget JU Ct f f City Integration bis. deluded in Appropriations educational program s designed for un­ derprivileged black and chicano children. No action w'as taken since the report was not in final form. The three program s are for kindergarten, social studies and m athem atics. All three the Southwest Educational com e the kin­ Development Laboratory, dergarten program in both English and Spanish. is available from and E arlier Wednesday the board learned the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals granted the federal government a nine-day extension to file a brief in its appeal of the Austin desegregation case. The new deadline was set for Sept. 3, and the Austin Independent School D istrict will have until Sept. 13 to file its b r> f a s a reply. The D epartm ent of Ju stice gave three reasons for requesting the extension: • Joe Rich, the attorney who tried the Austin case and who m ust w rite the brief, two w as in preparation involved for desegregation hearings Aug. 3 and 14, lim iting the tim e he had to write the brief. • The Austin case record consists of m ore than 1.100 pages and 122 exhibits. The required copying of this record was not finished until Monday. of the • The extension will not prejudice the school rights district—since in­ its tegration plan, which the district court had ordered into effect for 1971-72, defendants—the implementing it is Thieu to Continue Elections Despite Candidates Decision Referendum Slated Voters to Get District Question By STEVE DIAL Associate News Editor The question of electing City councilmen by districts has been taken out of the hands of the newly-created C harter Study Commission and will be placed in the laps of Austin voters. * M ayor Roy Bulter announced at a Wednesday press conference the apparent resolution of legal questions concerning a petition calling for a referendum on the issue. The petition, filed with the City clerk last week, proposes a “ 6-1’ ’plan, whereby six councilmen would be elected from geographic districts with the m ayor elected at-large. Presently, all council m em bers are elected at-large. “ This petition will have to go on the ballot,” Butler said, adding “ we’re really In the unhappy position, as far as the people working on the ch a rter commission a re concerned, of having their work go for naught.” The commission was ap­ pointed to study the City charter and m ake proposals to the council regarding several facets of City government. Tile proposals are to be subject to a referen­ dum. Butler indicated the commission will not make a recom m endation on the method of council election, as both its proposal and the erne presented in the petition (Wild conceivably be passed. “ reg ally , tile problem Is once the petition has been file*!, th ere is nothing the City Council can do,” Butler said. T here had been some question whether Citizens for Equal Representation, filer's of the petition, could w ithdraw it. City Atty. Don Butler ruled however, the only w ay in which the petition’s proposal could be kept off the ballot would be for enough people to w ithdraw th eir signatures from the petition to m ake it inadequate. The petition m ust be signed bv IO percent of the city ’s qualified voters. Butler estim ated the num ber of qualified voters to be 94,000. GER says it collected 10,000-plus signuatures. T here has been no speculaion regarding a date for the referendum . Councilman Jeff Friedm an said the City attorney's opinion was that the signatures on the petition, once validated, would rem ain valid until the end of February. The c h a rter commission will have to present its other proposals in tim e to be put on the ballot with the election plan, since the ch arter can be amended only once every two years. The council will hold its regular weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Crockett High School. This will be the council's second night meeting since it took office Night sessions are to be conducted in various communities within Austin and are used to get added public response. An informal hearing concerning proposed location of a new Southwest F ire Station Is among the item s on T hursday's agenda. The council is considering a recom m endation the station be built on a small site in G arrison Park, a 40-acre tra c t on M achaca Road adjacent to Crockett High School. F o rm al public hearings on the m atter are to be conducted Sept. 23. Also on the agenda is a public hearing on the p ro p o s e 1971-72 budget. The council also will consider four Model Cities proposals involving ap­ proxim ately $260,000 in Model Cities and City Model Cities Administration Funds. School By JOHN POPE General Reporter The Austin School Board approved Wednesday night a 1971-72 budget of $38.4 million, which im ­ plementing the Austin plan for school in­ tegration. includes $712,850 for The controversial plan was approved July 19 by U.S. Dist. Judge Jack Roberts, and the federal government is appealing th at ruling in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. the expenditures in­ tegration plan are $331,000 for 40 ex tra buses, $134,840 for 40 m ore bus drivers and increased m aintenance and $178,360 for 13 additional portable classrooms. Among the for Bill Lynch, Austin Anti-Busing le a g u e chairm an questioned w hether most of the (Related Story, Photo, Page 2.) budget expenditures that w ere increased by nearly $4.8 million over the 1970-71 y ea r w ere the result of the integration-by-busing plan. He justified his scrutiny, which lasted an hour, by .saying, “ I w ant people who believe as I do to know how much it costs in­ try to tegration).” the Austin P lan (of school Both Board President Will Davis and board m em ber Mrs. E.A. Delco told Lynch most of the increased costs were the result of norm al growth. “ I fs not fair to say th at some of the things th at have been done can be laid at the door of integration as a negative point,” Mrs. Delco said. Expenses in every category—from ad­ m inistrative costs to prices of new band and chorus uniforms—were increased. O ver­ all expenses—minus the cost of paying off debt on bonds and interest coupons—w ere $38.4 million, up from la st year’s total of $33.6 million. The board also approved the tax ra te s necessary' for financing the 1971-72 budget— $1.14 for operation and m aintenance (up 4 cents from last year) and 46 cents for debt service (a 6-cent. increase). The board also heard a report on three SAIGON (AP) — President Nguyen Van Thieu confirmed Wednesday he plans to the presidential election Oct. 3 as hold scheduled, crisis the generated by withdrawal from the race of his only two opponents. political despite U.S. A m bassador Ellsworth Bunker called on Thieu tw ice during the day apparently in to av e rt a one-man cam paign and proserve a t least the facade of a dem ocratic election. renewed efforts Thieu, however, told a cam paign meeting he intends to m n unopposed regardless of the consequences, indicating he rejected any new proposal m ade by Bunker. THE MEETING between Thieu and Bunker w ere the fourth and fifth in the week since the am bassador returned from consultations in Washington. Sources in the U.S. E m b assy said the am bassador has apparently played all his cards. U.S. officials have suggested privately th at a one-man rac e with Thieu the only "andidate rould have serious ram ifications the Nixon A dm inistration's Vietnam for Council Rules to Relax W a g e Freeze Teachers May Receive Pay Hikes During Economic Clamp would change its mind ra th e r than pursue a course of open defiance. “ not sure whether it changes anything or not.” After M artin m et with L. P atrick G ray IIL assistan t U.S. attorney general for the civil division, G ray announced no legal action would be taken against Sm ith's stand. HE SAID Texas teachers can be paid over a 12-month period, thereby meeting one qualification of the directive, but he questioned the terminology “beginning of contract period.” The Ju stice D epartm ent had been ordered to prepare a suit against tile State for violating the freeze. A decision against th e State would have resulted in a $5,000 fine each day the freeze was violated. “ I'm not sure of the en tire meaning of It” in the context of the directive, Stephens said, adding th at he, too, would w ait for a more specific outcome from M artin’* Washington trip. the council’s to present a light at While seemed the tunnel for State teachers, TSTA director of publications Traxel Stephens said he w as ruling Tuesday the end Martin has said a final determination from the council should be handed down within several days. Until then most State officials agree they are “ up in the a ir.” policy, aid. A including a possible reduction in from communique acting prem ier Nguyen Luu Vien confirmed that the Oct. 3 balloting was “being promoted in line with th e election law’.” SOURCES SAID Vien told officials the w ithdraw al of Vice-President Nguyen Cao K y and retired Gen. Guong Van Minh did to proceed not influence Thieu's decison with the election. Both quit the racy* charging Thieu was rigging the elections. K y’s naaip will appear on the ballot, through a legal technicality. the According to Vietnamese sources, Thieu he was campaign m eeting told prim arily concerned with getting out the vote in the countryside, where he expects to win solid support. ★ ★ ★ South Vietnamese forces went on the offensive Wednesday south of Da Nang in an attem pt to head off an enemy terror cam paign before it began. forces The allied high com m ands expect Com­ munist-led launch widespread to rocket, mortar and terror attack s across South Vietnam In the next few days to disrupt the country’s N ational Assembly elections Sunday. South V i e t n a m e s e m ilitiam en, spearheaded by an arm o red column and covered from the a ir by allied aircraft, slashed into North Cong troops twice south of Da Nang aim ed a t preventing enem y attack s on district towns. V ietnam ese in a sweep A communique from Saigon headquarters said 46 enem y soldiers w ere killed, one prisoner W'as captured, It V ietnam ese casualties. taken said there were no South and 12 weapons were In the predawn hours Thursday, enem y gunners fired two rounds of an undeter­ m ined type of shell into the Quang Trung training center six m iles northwest of Sai­ gon. No casualties w ere reported. Before the w arnings of a possible increase in enem y activity w ere issued, a m ajo r U.S. am m unition depot a t Cam Ranh Bay w as blown up, and the enemy shelled five other Am erican installations including the big air base at D a Nang. the said The U.S. Command Initial assessm ents indicated about 50 percent of the ammunition dum p a t Cam Ranh B a y w as destroyed and th ere was som e dam age lo facilities nearby. The com mand did not disclose how’ much ammunition w as in the dump. Tile Saigon com m and reported 26 attac k s on South V ietnam ese m ilitary units and civilians, including eight shellings. THE EXPULSIONS started a t 2-45 a.m ., a U.S. spokesman said, and continued for n early 13 hours. E ven after the blasts halted a t midafternoon, fires raged until afte r d ark and prevented ordinance ex p erts from entering the the depot dam age and pin down the cause. to assess Tho U S com m and said five A m erican servicem en were injured slightly b ut none v as killed. Air F orce operations a t the ad­ joining air base closed down for seven hours. and Viet 35 miles Three months ago, a band of V iet Cong sappers blew up six fuel tanks cap taining 1.5 million gallons of aviation fuel at Cam R anh Bay. The base, once regarded a s the most secure in South Vietnam , w as the site of visits by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1966 and in 1967. Registration Descends On Befuddled Students By JAN JARBOE News Assistant I/ist students flock information, course c a rd s a r e dropped on the floor of Gregory Gym as som e poor freshm an scream s for help— these are symptoms of registration which began Wednesday. the reg istra r's office for to Woody Keith, assistant reg istrar at the University, reported it w as a relativ ely calm day for the first day of registration, but “ there were sev eral problem s.” Most problems hinged on the failure of students to read the instruction sh eet in their packet. tim e card for paying bills. Keith emphasized fee bills will not be mailed, and students m ust pick up th e ir “SOME PEOPLE have been getting nut of the gym w ithout getting a Ump ’o pay bills. I don’t know’ how they do it. lf students don’t p ay hills they won't know w here to go when classes begin since schedules will be distributed when bills a re p aid.” hp said. Keith, who estim ated 15.000 students would register by F riday, added. “ Students tit rough to older students who w instructions They ju st don't read listen t (Related Story, Page IO.) registration the old way and it messes them up. Things arn different—the: no sectionize^, no card-pullers, no linos." a ra Wednesday was also the first day for advising. Adviser signatures m ust bo en the packet) before students a re allowed in the course schedules (a green card in the gym. ADVISING locations a re listed on Pages 5 through 9 of the Sem ester v a r a Fees will be collected beginning Monday, T.C. L eriik a r, U niverity b ursar, said Schedule. Wednesday. “ We will bp at the gym Monday and Tuesday to collect fees.’’ F or those students who preregistered in the spring and sum m er a" I I in Main F 1 lost their course schedules, a duplicate m ay be obtained the Office of Accounting. In addition, pictures for blanket taxes for preregistered students v ll from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m.. at Monday through F rid ay (Aug. 30 to Sept. 17) 200. Tile office will close Labor Day. "■-> -\v •: 132, ■ taken C r gory KEITH SAID appl •oximatelv 23.700 preregistered in spring and sum To m ake schedule changes, those students mu.>t endure the tumultuous route cf r. adds and drops which tentatively begins Monday. The total estim ated enrollm ent for fall is 40.500. W. Byron Shipp, re g istra r and director of admissions, said Wednesday. This figure is only 1,411 over last fall’s total enrollment of 39,089. Shipp attributes the m inim al increase to a combination of factors—the recen tly implemented enrollm ent control plan and the jum p in tuition prices. Although no students w ere result of enrollm ent control turned aw ay as a m easures. Shipp said he believes “ the fact that we had it m ay have caused m a n y to apply elsew here.” Economic changes have taken their toll on the ov er all en ro llm en t Both resident and nonresident students paid a higher tuition ra te than la st y e a r, and miscellaneous expenses such as the building and student services fees w ere hiked. WASHINGTON (AP) — A little-noted ruling bv the Cost of Living Council has opened the way for most sohool teachers increases during P re si­ to receive salary dent Richard M. Nixon's 90-day freeze on wages and prices. The National Education Association said the ruling affects 80 percent of the nation’s 2.1 million teachers. the ruling Under issued Tuesday, teachers who are eligible for paym ent on a 12-month contract basis but who will begin work this fall on a 10-month basis (Related Stories, Pages 3 & 8.) m ay be paid salary increases if the contract provided them prior to tho Aug. 15 freeze. A spokesman for the Office of E m ergency to system s with 12-month contracts increases were con­ Preparedness said school under which salary tracted for prior the freeze. the ruling applies “ It’s just a m atter of equity,” said Jx>u to OEP director Neoh, special assistant George Lincoln. is THE THEORY behind the ruling, officials said, th at some teachers working on their salary a 12-month basis would get increases while working in sum m er school, while those who began work the fall on a 10-month basis might be denied I heir salary hikes if the ruling had not been issued. in to The Cost of Living Council said a teacher does not have to be physically at work prior to receive a salary hike, as long as a 12-month contract system containing pay raises for teachers existed prior to the freeze. the freeze Asked whether tho ruling would cover most of the nation's teachers, a spokesman for the Office of E m ergency Preparedness said, “ T hat's the w’av I read it.” On the basis of the council’s decision, the T eachers’ Association of Montgomery teachers Wed­ County, Md., advised nesday in­ creases this fall. Last week, teachers w ere told they would not get their raises. they would get their salary its Austin Still Has Doubts By C U FF AVERY Associate News Editor U k e th e dollar in President Richard M. Nixon’s economic program, State officials a r e “floating” after the “little-noticed” ruling handed down by the Cost- of Living Council Tuesday—and th eres no land in sight* Jack D illard, a spokesman for the at- tom ey-general's office, said Wednesday the njling—which according to The Associated P ress “ app ears to have cleared the way for thousands of school teachers to receive the wage-price salary problem freeze—leaves T exas’ unchanged something clearer.” in creases” during “ unless we get special ATTY. GEN. Crawford Martin appeared before in the Cost of Living Council the ruling Washington T uesday—the day was handed down. M artin consulted with council Executive Director Arnold Weber, appealing for Texas for an exemption teachers and S tate employes who w ere to get a pay raise Sept. I. While alm ost all states sta rt their fiscal years Jan. I or Ju ly I, Texas, says Texas State T eachers Associon data, is tho only state that begins its fiscal year Sept. I— during the 90-day wage price freeze called by Nixon Aug. 15. Alabama is the only other state faced with a m idfreeze beginning of the fiscal year as its term begins Oct. 1. Gov. Preston Sm ith’s press secretary , for m ore the need Je rry Hall, echoed specific inform ation. thing, “THEY’VE TO U) us ono then they’ve told us another. I don’t know how' it would change anything, but w e're holding com m ent until we get m ore official guidelines from tho Office of E m ergency P reparedness," the agency adm inistering the freeze. ' Some State officials are sim ilarly per­ plexed. Said one: “ I don't mean to he critical, hut I think they (the Cost of Living Council) a re hogged down” trying to get the freeze underw ay. Smith had ordered agency chiefs and school districts to comply with the 62nd L egislature's p ay raises in defiance of the wage-price freeze. Smith declared Nixon could not nullify a S tate law and th at Smith was bound to uphold the le g isla tu re 's ac­ tion. But M artin Issued an opinion Monday nullifying Sm ith’s action, and Comptroller Robert S. C alvert, the State’s p aym aster, said he would comply with the M artin opinion. left then for Washington to M artin appeal for raises, a p ­ the S tate’s pay parently hoping the Cost of Living Council, headed by form er Texas Gov. John Con- the T reasu ry ), nally (now se cretary of M aybe a Prayer W ill H elp W hile going through the paces of registration at G re g o ry Gym , one student seeming­ ly genuflects in awe of his surroundings as ha pauses to fill out a course card. — Texan Staff Photo by STANLEY FARRAR. Alternative Black School Planned Group fo Protesf Busing By KAREN JUSTICE News Assistant residents, Providing an alternativo to the proposed boycott of public schools by E ast Austin the A u s t i n W e l f a r e R i g h t s plans Organization Wednesday to hold school in Tile Children’s House, 3210 Rosewood Ave. afternoon discussed Mrs. Velma Roberts, president of tho organization, told a sm all and gathering of 20 parents two shutdown of students the E ast Austin schools and sub­ sequent busing of their students to other schools is “nothing but a racial issue now.” THE CLOSING of Anderson High School and Healing Junior High has led to the threatened boycott of school system if the two schools are not reopened. U.S. Dist. Judge Jack W. I ’m black,” “ I don’t “ I ’m helping with the boycott she ex­ because plained. like w h at’s being done. Why get our kids up at 6 in the morning and bus them to North Austin? We pay tax es like everybody else. Why not use the money to improve Anderson and Healing instead of busing the kids?” Mrs. R oberts and Mrs. Johnson lack of com ­ com plained of a munity support. "People keep saying, ‘I ’ll be happy to help you out, but I don’t want m y nam e associated it’,” M rs. with Johnson said. and other She outlined plans for students, parents concerned black citizens to canvass black shops, cafes, b a r b e r other businesses for funds to operate the alternative school. beauty and stores, shops “ I HAVE stressed to students and parents a t all the m eetings that we’re going to have to m ake sacrifices,” she said. “ Anything good th at comes to black people, w e’ve got to suffer for.” Mrs. Johnson also m ade it clear to students th at “ it’s up to you to learn, if you W'ant to. Now if a lot of kids com e over to our school because they heard it’s a fun thing, you know w hat the news m edia and w hites will say: ‘They didn’t w ant to learn anyw ay’.” UNIVERSITY OMBUDSMAN o r fa c u lt y m e m b e r , S t u d e n t s a d m i n i s t r a t i v e with U n iv e rs it y p r o b l e m s J a c k c o n t a c t should S tr ic k la n d , Hogg- B u il d in g 1 0 3 Ot - t i M o n d a y th ro u g h F r i d a y ) , T e le p h o n e 471-3825 o r 4T1-1805. refused Roberts ordered the schools shut down after he tried busing white students to E ast A its tin for three days, Mrs. Roberts said. White parents their children be bused, “ so he just ‘it won't gave up and work’,” she charged. “ Then he and the D epartm ent of Health, Education and W elfare closed the schools.” said let to The m ain objective of the boycott and alternative school is to get Anderson and Healing ex­ reopened, Mrs. Roberts plained. an just want education within our own com­ m unity.” “ We is Until th at goal reached, however, the group plans to hold school—which they hope to have accredited—at Children's House, Mrs. Carlean Johnson, one of the boycott organizers, said. “ We’ll begin soliciting funds M onday,” she said. “ Tuesday, w e’ll m eet the kids at their buses and pick them up. Students will to businesses ex­ w rite letters plaining how feel about having their schools closed, how they w ant an education and how we need funds to operate our alternative school.” she said. they This weekend will be spent cleaning up Children's House for use by the school, Mrs. Johnson added. She expressed hope all sym pathizers would come by and help in clean-up operations. Should a large num ber of the to boycott students choose busing and the instead attend alternative school, Mrs. Johnson said, classes will be taught in to accomodate all split shifts students. ANDERSON said m ost of student Gregory Jones, 16, the students he knew would keep off the buses and attend alternative school instead. He added he didn’t know how long the tense situation would last. The planned boycott of busing “ is a struggle between black and W'hite,” Mrs. Roberts continued. “ You can’t pretty it up anymore. We’re fighting against the racial side of this issu e .” P arents and students at the m eeting joined Wanda Mitchell, at senior i n Huston-Ti Hobson the voicing situation confronting Healing and Anderson students who “ have been done w rong.” sociology m ajor College. over indignation GROOVY RUDI'S DOES IT AGAIN! WITH THURSDAY NIGHT SPECIALS SHORT SLEEVE KNITS GREAT FALL COLORS DRESSES OO 41 IOOO REAL C O O L NUMBERS AT A REAL HOT PRICE These Prices G o od On Th ursday N ig h t O nly 5:30 to 8 p.m. 2322 G u a d a lu p e CAIRO (AP) — Behind in­ creasing talk of a new w ar writh Israel, A rabs find them selves in a g reater state of disharm ony than a t any tim e since th e last w ar in 1967. Awareness of this has prom pted Arab leaders to move quickly this i UT SPECIAL ADD COLOR TO YOUR ROOM! CARPET SAMPLES — 25c UP REMNANTS — $1 YD — UP RO O M SIZE FLORAL & ZEBRA RUGS CARPETS OF AUSTIN 4600 BURNET RD. 454-9676 ATTENTION STUDENTS! HOUSTON CHRONICLE 1/2 PRICE A gain This Fall! Delivered! C A L L 477-4485 Co-Op East Co-Op East has all your required casebooks. W e have select Horn­ books, Smith, Gilbert and Mitchell Outlines. W e have some recommended books. A branch of the U n ive rsity C o - O p e r a t iv e Socie ty . Co-O p East buys back used books. But in accordance with Co-O p policy, no books will be bought back until September 6. Yes, you can get through all those textbooks with R A S S L (reading and study skills lab.) Free, one month classes enrolling now. •STUDY TECHNIQUES •VOCABULARY •TEXTBOOK CO M PREH EN SIO N •SPEED READING •TEXTBOOK SPEED FLEXIBILITY Children's Other Choice? The C h ild re n s H ou se, 1210 R osew ood A v e . m ay be established as an alternative school in answ er to the c lo sin g o f A n d e rson H ig h In School and H ealing Junior H ig h Sch o o l East Austin. A ustin W e lfa r e R igh ts O r g a n iz a - tion discussed project plans W e d n e sd a y . — Texan Staff Photo by IKE BABE CH. Arab Disunity Grows month to set their own houses and neighborhoods in order. repeatedly warning he will not let 1971 end without resolving the of T r i a l s opponents, and Sudan or allegedly corrupt officials, are under way this week in Libya, Egypt as Arab diplom ats launched a diplomatic offensive to win support af next m onth’s U.N. General Assembly session for the Arab claim to land occupied by Israel in 1967. The gloomiest public view' of the Arab world was expressed Tuesday by King Hussein of a Beirut Jordan. He new spaper “ the disarray and weakness of the Arab world has never been w’orse. Tile Arab countries a re not yet strong enough to take on Israel.” told President Anwar Sadat of is of a different view, E gypt E a s t M i d d l e diplomatically or by arm s. c r i s i s — force of Egypt is bound with Libya and Syria in a new federation of Arab to states. This present front against Israel. a more united is an attempt Thp trial of form er V ice- President Ali Sabrv and ll other prominent Egyptians accused of plotting to overthrow Sadat, was opened Wednesday in Cairo, then postponed until .Sept, 4. In Libya, three form er prim e m inisters are among 107 defen­ dants whose last week on charges of corruption. trials hogan N A A C P R e je c ts Boycott of School chapter of The Austin the NAACP “ will not at this tim e” support a black boycott of .schools advocated by 250 predominantly black E ast Austin residents in a Tuesday night rally a t Rosewood P ark, chapter according president Velma Overton. to Of a scheduled chapter meeting the at 7:30 p.m. Thursday Carver Branch Library, Mrs. Overton said no particular plan in WORRY NO MORE lf -von h a v e a h a r d tim * obtain in g “ A u to m o b il e In< turaneriod. consisting The local NAACP chapter’s I.egal Defense Fund and tho Mexican-Ampnean Legal Defense Fund w ere granted the right to intervene in the case by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Tuesday. from busing, Overton did admit, however, that a plan allowing for more t w o • w a y possibly the Health, deviating Education and Welfare D epart­ for ment (HEW) plan calling extensive crosstown busing to achieve integration, would be advocated by the Austin NAACP chapter. But he was not ready to disclose details. 26th and Red River Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00. Sat. 9-1:00 for more information call A332 JESTER CENTER 471-3614 Page 2 Thursdayf August 26, J .971 THE DAILY. TEXAN Berlin Negotiations Near Completion Ll. S. O K Imminent WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of State W illiam P . Rogers discussed with two en­ voys Wednesday the new Berlin agreem ent am id indications the U.S. governm ent will soon approve the pact. The West German governm ent gave unanim ous approval Wednesday to a draft agreem ent on Berlin, worked out in 17 m onths of talks by the am bassadors of the United States, Britain, F ran ce and the Soviet Union. SOVIET AMBASSADOR Anatoly F. Dobrynin, leaving his Washington post for home consultations, also discussed the in a m orning meeting Berlin agreem ent w ith Rogers* that ranged over various in­ ternational questions. took up State D epartm ent press officer Robert J. McCloskey said Rogers and the Soviet item s which will diplom at also com e before the secretary of sta te and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko when the two meet at the U.N. General Assembly opening this fall. He gave no details. MCCLOSKEY SAID he noes not expect th a t Washington review of the agreem ent, improving civilian access to West Berlin, will encounter any substantial problems. He said U.S. officials will be going over the draft text to make sure the m eaning of the language used and legal points are properly dealt with. Other U.S. officials said they expect form al approval of the agreem ent by the Big Four governments in about two weeks. It will be up to West and E ast G erm ans to work out nuts-and-bolts details of carrying out the access agreem ent. After that, the big powers will pass on the new setup before it takes effect. Ex-01 Tells Of My Lei FT. MCPHERSON. Ga. (AP) — A former moldier saw a testified Wednesday he woman and a boy shot by My Lai in full view of C opt. E rnest L. Medina. Gerald Henting, Jackson. Miss., who was attached to Medina’s Charlie Company at My I-ai as a demolition expert, said he w as walking in front of the Army captain w hen a shot rang out and a boy fell. A short tim e later. Henting said, Medina w as standing beside him when he saw a woman m n from a rice paddy. “ I saw her get shot in the head,” he said. Two other prosecution w itnesses who w ere n ear Medina during the assault on the Vietnamese village M arch Iii, 1968, testified during the day. One said he saw bodies but no one ac­ tually killed and the other testified he saw the killing of a woman Medina has said he shot because he was afraid she was reaching for a weapon. Henting testified the boy and th< woman w ere sl ai n before Medina conferred with a superior officer. Henting said tho officer told M edina: “ These' killings have got to stop." A short talked with tim e after Medina the other o ffic e r , Henting said. an old man w as taken from hF house just inside the village and apparently was shot as the com mand group passed by. He said he didn’t actually see the shots fired, but heard the vicinity autom atic w e a p o n s fire from where the man was boing held seconds after the command croup passed. in the assault The Army m aintains Medina learned early that bis men were shooting down civilians but m ade no move to intervene. Medina has said he sjx'nt most of the assault on the periphery of the village and w as under the impression his men were engaged in a fire fight with a Viet Cong battalion. U nder the draft agreem ent, the Soviets acknowledge for the first tim e they share with three W estern powers ultim ate responsibility for access to Berlin. the The accord calls for unimpeded flow of civilian traffic between West Berlin and West G erm any. T raffic blockages on E ast G erm an auto, railroad, and canal arteries have caused friction for years. West Berliners also would be allowed under the p act to visit E ast Berlin and E a s t G erm any periodically. And the Soviets would gain the right to set up a 20-man consulate in West Berlin. the pact are Not affected by the air corridors to Berlin or m ilitary traffic, which the western nations have .jealously guarded as their perogative as World W ar II oc­ cupation powers. Wallace Faces Suit On Busing Conflict MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Defied by a school board and rebuked again by a federal judge. Gov. George C. Wallace faced m ore opposition on his school busing stand Wednesday as a Negro attorney asked a three-judge court to order the governor to show cause why he should not be held in contem pt. suit connection with W allace’s ordering school boards in three A labam a counties to disregard integration decrees that necessitate busing. The court took no im m ediate action. cam e Tile In The motion was filed by Montgomery atto rn ey Solomon Seay Jr. within hours afte r one of the school boards, in Limestone Country, decided to disobey the governor’s executive order, and one day afte r a federal judge for the second tim e had told W allace he h ad no authority to intervene. Seay is a law’ p artn e r of State Rep. F re d G ray of Tuskegee, one of two Negroes in the Alabama Legislature and for m any the Late Dr. y e a rs a close associate of M artin Luther King Jr. The motion contended W allace’s recent ord ers and accom panying public statem ents constitute “ a general policy” of opposing statem ents were his integration, designed to “ induce or coerce local school officials requiring to disregard orders desegregation.” and It asked the court to prohibit the governor from making further “ public statem ents, proclam ations or o rd ers” which to discourage compliance with court decrees. tend W allace, meanwhile, got ready for still a n o t h e r federal authorities over busing. He was expected confrontation with to to speak R epresentatives presum ably to recommend action. the Alabama House of a.m . Thursday, a t ll conference The governor previously had called a news but for presum ably will w ait until after he ad ­ dresses the House, to talk with newsmen, perhaps to announce still m ore school or­ ders regardless of w hat the courts say. 10:30 a.m . Seay’s request for a show-cause order w as based on previous w arnings from the sam e court directing Wallace to keep his hands cif the schools. The court a t one tim e had jurisdiction over all but one of the schools the continuing controversy. involved in The w arnings cam e in 1963 afte r Wallace. In his first term as governor, had used State troopers to delay the opening of a newly integrated school a t Tuskegee and again in 1967 when the court ordered im­ m ediate statewide desegregation. W allace’s first wife, the late Lurleen B. W allace. wras governor in 1967, but her husband had much to do with running the State governm ent. The Limestone County board, winch only Monday had agreed to go along with the governor’s order to reopen predom inantly black New Hope Junior High School, an­ nounced Wednesday it had changed its mind and would keep the school closed a s Dist. Judge Sam C. Pointer Jr. in Birmingham had instructed. the board said A source close to the change cam e after two m em bers conferred Tuesday with Pointer and w ere w arned they would be fined $1,000 a day for contempt of court if tho predominantly black school were reopened. F T . MEADE, Md. (AP) — A platoon sergeant testified W ednesday that Col. Oran K. Henderson did not pursue interrogation of a group of GI’s returning from My Lai a fte r he received a single “ no comment to a question about whether anything unusual had occurred at the South Viet­ nam ese hamlet. Sgt. LM Isaiah Cowan, then the top NCO the Charlie Company platoon of Lt. in William L. ('alley J r., was the first witness at Henderson’s My Lai coverup trial to say he had been questioned in Vietnam about the m assacre. IN ANOTHER presentation to the jury, th e prosecution played for the first time at any of the six My Lai court-m artials tape recording of a 40-minute composite radio air. ground and naval units participating in the M y Lai assault. from various transm issions The tape, m ade iii a command bunker, m onitored reports of 84 dead Vietnamese, the killing of “ dinks” little enemy fire, (Vietnamese) from helicopter gunships, but Coverup' Charged Henderson Trial Develops Summit Debate on Lockheed Loan D e b a t in g the $ 2 5 0 m illion loan g u a r a n te e fo r L o ck h e e d A i r ­ c r a ft C o r p . are (l-r) A r t h u r Burns, c h a irm a n o f the F e d e ra l R e se rv e Board, T re a su ry S e c re ta ry J o h n C o n n e lly and W illia m C a s e y , c h a irm a n o f th e Se c u ritie s a n d E x c h a n g e C o m m issio n . T h e y m et fo r tw o a n d a half h o u r s W e d n e s d a y in W a s h i n g ­ ’E m e r g e n c y ton w ithou t r e a c h in g a con clusion. T h e y form the L o a n G u a r a n t e e B o a r d " which, u n d e r law p a sse d b y C o n ­ gress, m ust o k a y th e loan. Freeze M ay Affect Hikes Status of UT Rate, Fee Increases in Doubt By JENNIFER EVANS General R eporter W hether the national 90-day wage and p rice freeze will b ar the planned increase of certain University costs probably will be revealed this week. Internal Revenue Service D istrict D irector R.L. Phinney said Wednesday. In question is an over-all average 5 percent increase in room and board rates for U niversity residence halls, apartm ents and trailer park. Also in question are the inquired student services fee, slated to increase from $19 to $21, and the required building use fee, $26 to $41. the portion of blanket Another planned increase is a. SI hike in in­ tercollegiate athletics. However, the total blanket tax price has actually been reduced from $21.30 to $18.50. tax for Phinney said he has called a meeting with University adm inistrators at IO a.m . Thursday. By th at tim e, he said, he hoped the Office of to have been notified by Em ergency P rep aredness of a policy decision on these increases. investigate com plaints PHINNEY SAID the IRS is empowered to freeze violations and to answ er questions for the public. IRS sends to OEP any questions of possible violations and enforces any O EP authored outline of policy, he said. of Those with queries m ay call an IRS wage- price freeze inform ation center at 475-5233. SEVERAL OTHER questions as yet unresolved have been referred to OPIP by the Austin IRS. including: If a rental property is sold and improved, can rent then be raise d ? Can the rates of a kindergarten or day the costs care center be raised or are considered “ tuition?” One m ajor question, important to resort towns and university towns, has been an ­ said. Landlords m ay swered, Phinney rates, even return to higher w inter if sum m er rates w ere in effect when the wage-price freeze w as announced, if: • The higher ra te s do not exceed those charged in the last month of winter. low’e r • The sum m er rates w ere a common practice, not just the lowering of year-round rates. The purpose of the increase in U niversity said N evada Blackburn, housing ra te s, Housing assistant Food S ervices an d director for administration, is to cover rising costs in m aintenance, s a la rie s, food and other are as. The in creases were ap p ro v ed by the Board of Regents Dec. 4 ar.d scheduled to take effect Sept I. Mrs. B lackburn said the Housing and Food S e rv ic e is not drastically affected by the possibility of Hie increase being blocked, sin c e the first bills of the y e a r are not m a ile d until mid- September. However, the service is left w ith no way to answer students who inquire whether the rates will be lowered, she sa id . A com parison of the schedule of proposed the these c o n tra s ts Increases ranges of total long session c o s ts : shews in 1971 $1,008—1030 920— 912 Jester Kinsolving Andrews, C a ro lle rs. Littlefied Moore-Hill. Simkins B rackenridge, Roberts, le a th e r San Jacin to Brackenridge, Deep Eddy apartm ents 33— 45 Colorado apartm ents 140— 216 788 396 264 Trailer park 6.5— 85 15 1972 $1,058—1.158 966—1.066 827 416 277 152— 227 37— JA 78— 98 13 * no apparent hint of what the assau lt would develop into. “ When we got out of the helicopter we were gathered in a group,” Cowan said. “ Col. Henderson talked to us and asked, ‘Did anything unusual happen?’ The senior m em ber of l.C . Ja y A. the group—Sgt. Buchanan—told him, ‘No com m ent.’ After this, we moved out.” THE SERGEANT, now stationed at Ft. Jackson, S.C., replied “ No sir,” when asked by C apt. Anthony Smith, tile assistant prosecutor, w hether Henderson had further questioned the soldiers about events a t My Dai March 16, 1968. Henderson. 51 on Wednesday, is accused of willful dereliction of duty by failing properly to investigate reports of th e killing of civilians by troops under his com mand. The officer, then com m ander of the lith Brigade of the American Division, also is charged with failing to report actual or suspected w ar crim es and of Brice lying to a subsequent Pentagon inquiry into v-W news of the m assacre did not becom e public for more than a year. Cowan told tile jury of seven senior of­ ficers th at afte r setting up a defense perim eter just outside My Lai. his platoon “ received word to cease fire. Tile operation w as under investigation.” Cowan said he was told this by Galley— least 22 leader had convicted civilians—after of m urdering the platoon a t conferred with someone which had landed near their position. in a helicopter THE DAY’S first witness, S. Sgt. Dennis R. Vasquez. described the scene later on th e morning of M arch 16 in the tactical operations center of Task Force Baker, the lit h Brigade unit operating at My Lai. Vasquez. at the tim e a captain assigned a s artillery liaison officer to the task force, said M a j.'F re d eric W. W atke, com m ander of a helicopter battalion supporting the assault, entered the bunker. “ I observed his face,” said Vasquez, who a service and re-enlisted as left the se rg e an t. “ He looked mad and walked straight over to Maj. Charles C. Calhoun and balked to him .” Vasquez slated, however, he did not know w h at Watke said to Calhoun, operations and executive officer of the task force. In his opening statem en t Monday, M aj. Carroll J. Tichenor, the prosecutor, said he would show th at a report by then W.O. Hugh C. Thompson, a helicopter pilot, resulted in Watke going to the command center the My Lai mission. to complain about he also Vasquez a said preassault M arch 15 briefing. He ch arac­ terized as a norm al “ pep talk’’ H enderson's urging for an “ aggressive” operation the next day. attended Smith Asks Co-operation To Stop Highway Deaths By The Associated Press Tf cu rren t traffic safety m ethods don’t work, the National Guard m ay be called out to help the State Highway P atro l and local officials on holiday weekends, Gov. Preston Smith said Wednesday. SMITH TOLD the G overnor’s Traffic Safety Committee. “ It has been suggester! that we declare a state of em ergency on three-day holidays and call out tile National to supplement activities of State Guard Highway P atro l and local police where necessary. This has never been done in Texas. “ It is predicted that m ore than 50 persons will die in Texas traffic crash es over the Labor Day weekend. If w e can’t do better than that, alternatives such as this must he given the future." Smith said. serious consideration in Smith urged “ every police chief, sheriff and public official in Texas to unite with us a t the State level to help reduce this prediction and the awesome holiday toll.” THE GOVERNOR said deaths, as of List F riday, Texas, 84 m ore than a year ago. 1971 traffic total 2,109 in “ Texans a re being killed at the rate of three, four, five and six at a tim e largely in head-on collisions on State and rural the crashes on highw ays,” he said. “ F ata l accidents on interstate highways, supposedly the best engineering answ er to safe driving, are up 24 percent Most of in­ terstates a re one-car accidents caused by excessive speed or alcohol.” John Clark, director of the Southwest reported on drunk R esearch driving tests m ade last month in San An­ tonio in which professional race car drivers consumed controlled am ounts of alcohol. .10 “ The demonstration alcohol the percent presum ptive in­ lim its in State toxication, is entirely too generous,” Clark said. Institute, revealed law for content. blood that tho "T hree of five d riv ers were highly in­ level. The toxicated a t fourth was severely im paired and the fifth w as making five to 15 tim es more driving erro rs than when he w as sober.” .10 percent Forecast for Thursday is partly cloudy and w arm with a slight chance of afternoon and night-time thundershow ers. A high of SU and low of 74 is expected. Market Declines Under Profit-Taking Pressure N E W YOUK Early large gains in stock prices Wednesday were partially eroded by profit-taking pressure. Trading was active. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, after rising 8' - points early in the session, closed ahead only 4.24 at 908.37. A dvances on the New York Stock Exchange led declines by a relatively narrow margin. The New York Stock Exchange Index of 1,300 common sto ck s rose 0.04 to 55.46. The American Stock Exchange index was unchanged at 25.24. The Associated Press 60-stock average was up 1.6. Of the 1,147 issues traded on the American Stock Exchange, 47 declined, and 427 advanced. Amex volume rose to 4.04 m illion shares from 3.98 million shares Tuesday. Astronaut Q uits Space A gency WASHINGTON Neil A. Armstrong, first man to walk on the moon, announced Wednesday he is quitting the U .S . space agency and will go back to to become an his native Ohio engineering the at professor University of Cincinnatti. told Armstrong, who turned 41 this month, reporters he will continue to be a consultant to the Space Ad­ and Aeronautics ministration. N e i l A . A r m s t r o n g > ■. w a P r e ss Chott Insurance Firm to Initiate Four-Day W o rk Week SAN ANTONIO The United Services Automobile Association disclosed p lan s Wed­ nesday for a four-day work week on a trial basis for its 3.000 employes. Officials said the insurance firm is believed to be the la rg e st com­ pany in the nation to adopt the plan for all of its employes. A 12-week trial of a four-day, 38-hour week will begin Oct. 4. Robert McDermott, president, said directors reserved the option of cancelling the experiment. “I think the four-day work week is the most exciting change in today’s business world since child labor law s were introduced,” said McDermott. Squeals of delight from the firm ’s many women employes greeted the decision, which McDermott announced before a throng of employes gathered on the company grounds. Directors approved the m ove earlier Wednesday. fhursdtx, Auaust 26. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag. t St. Louis Mayor Claims Press Abuse M a y o r A lfo n so J. C e r v a n te s o f St. Louis sa id in a press co n fe re n ce W e d n e s d a y he will a p p e a l the dism issal o f his $12 million libel suit a g a in st Tim e, Inc., for an article pub lish ed in Life M a g a z in e which ch arge d he h ad “business a n d personal ties with g a n g ste r s.” The origin a l suit which w as d ism isse d asked fo r $12 million in actual d a m a g e s and $10 m illion in punitive d a m a g e s . Editorials Inside the pressure cooker ‘ Grim determ ination” sm acks rath er of the Shermanesque and is perhaps too dour and heavy-handed a description for the current mood in the various tents of U niversity publications. A tolerance for levity and a sense of the burlesque are almost indispensable ch aracteristics of a w riter or journalist. Even so, it has been a long sum m er of sober assessm ent for m any besieged residents at 24th and Whit is streets. And some of the consequences, for all their necessity, are unfortunate. On J u l y 30 the Riata. Texas' only literary magazine, was cut from a sem i-annual to an annual publication. On Aug. 9 the average size of The Daily Texan was reduced by one page. On Auc. l l The Cactus \earbook was nearly forced into m im eograph form and will still be substantially sm aller than the 1971 edition. Wednesday The R anger m agazine staff elected to postpone the Septem ber issue three weeks until they could solicit enough advertising to offset printing costs. Bul for all its u n h a p p y consequences, the w ar with the regents has not been without certain spiritual gratification. As the smoke thickens t has become evident that while the courts will be the ultim ate determ inant, we are still arm ed and healthy. We are discovering in our own m y o p i c wa> what oppressed people the world over have known for centuries: that sacrifice for a just and united cause h a s its own rew ards. IX FLUSHER T IM E S , Texan editors could be found leisurely reading copy, barking orders and smoking cigars in the best M enckenese tradition. There w as the comforting security th at operating costs and to the Old Guard m essy budget considerations could all be professionals and clever m achines. Now these editors a re often discovered sitting on high stools in dim light, poring over credits and debits like so m any night clerks in sm all town hotels. left Once TSP Board m eetings w ere fraught with ir r e v e r e n c e and high jinxs, rem iniscent, on occasion, of the Mad H a tte r’s Tea P a rty . Indeed, in a frolicsome mood six m onths ago TSP nearly passed a motion to purchase a granite tombstone to be engraved: Texas Student Publications 1921-1971. Now these m eetings are tense, often solemn affairs with students and faculty alike working into the shank of the night to meet each thrust and p arry of the regents. However, on a broader but no less relevant level it is exceedingly difficult to rally and m aintain unflagging support from 40,000 students. We realize that unm itigating em phasis on collective spirit will come to sm ack of high school pep rallies. Nor do we wish to bludgeon you with strident polemics. R ather we hope in the m onths ahead to breed a sophisticated and intelligent rapport with the student body, one which will enlighten and not (‘loud or w ear out the issues. Stay abreast of developments. Stay in touch with us. And don't expect lo see a white flag flying from this quarter. Editor's notes E arlier comm ent on the subject aside, it is the viewpoint of The Texan th at any voter registration drive is a good thing. This of course includes Al Lowenxtein's Countdown ’72. Low’enstein’s organization has m any obvious shortcom ings, but its intentions m ight in the end be good One read er com m ented that “ for the first tim e, a voter registration conference was held dealing with the issues and educating young people, blacks, browns and all liberals.” The Texan fully agrees and praises that aspect of the conference. • • • Any dump Nixon cam paign has one strike against it. There is no candidate who can unite the opposition—the D em ocratic P a lly or otherwise. Muskie, McGovern, M cCarthy, Hum phrey, Jackson and H arris—each candidate has his own peculiar shortcom ing and none c o u l d provide the opposition with a united front. Time m ay push one opponent forward, but it seem s unlikely at this point. President R ichard M. Nixon seem s the possibility of his re-election into alm ost a surety with m oves like his wage-price freeze and announced plans to visit China. E ach such move undercuts the D em ocratic opposition by stealing one of its bandwagons. to be solidifying • i t Student Government P resident Bob Binder and V ice-President Ken McKam have not been paid in recent m onths because the U niversity has refused to fork over their money. The U niversity says the blanket lax funds to pay the students a re state funds and therefore the students are state employes. The students fail to see the U niversity’s logic. They say the funds are student funds, and it seem s obvious to them if the students elected them then they are student employes. Thus refuse to sign University-supplied affidavits declaring them selves State employes. they The two student officials are considering a suit to determ ine w hether they a re State employes or student employes. The Texan urges them to take their law yer, Jim Boyle, and get a judge to decide ihe question once and for all. 4 IW ic a y . Aug-O' 2k- J STJ. TH£ CAIL { TEXAN I C A U T S A T \ I o a u t ^eep r (am t w ork". I BATe" wop i hate- i •SO U IL MARRV Mg ? 50 THAT AT LAST WOLL de Mi Ne! AMP, IU Ting, m eel eoeev WITH VOO- A M ? FCO- UKE A MAM AOA IU ' (c) 1971 New York Times News Service SHANGHAI — In the present delicate sta te of Chinese-American relations, one problem is th at the few A m ericans per­ m itted to visit here are not qualified to judge or even understand m any of the things they are shown. China's use of needles instead of drugs as anesthetic in m ajor surgery illustration of is only an the problem, but aw aiting the day when experts are allowed to come back to China, the am ateurs will have to report as best they can. My wife and I spent four hours yesterday a t the Hun Shan Hospital in the middle of Shanghai. This was form erly tile Chinese Red Cross Hospital and is now the center of experim entation with acupuncture in Chinese brain surgery. WE WERE properly sterilized and not only allowed into the operating theater, but urged to talk to two patients while they were undergoing surgery for the removal of tum ors of the brain. They were anesthetized m erely by the insertion of very thin three-in ch stainless steel needles into the body — usually w ith one needle inserted into the web of flesh — or, as the Chinese surgeon called it, ‘ the joined valley” between the thum b and forefinger — and they w ere not only per­ fectly conscious while their skulls were laid open before us but rem arkably alert with­ in half an hour afte r the operations. The first patient w as a 41-year-old worker from the Da Chin oil field nam ed Wang. He kept up a conversation with Dr. Chiang Ta-chieh. his surgeon, while the doctor m ade the incision for the removal of a sm all tumor in the occipital-parietal lobe of the brain. THE SECOND patient W’as a 54-year-old m an nam ed Chuan Leao, who had been suffering from epilepsy as a result of a rath e r large tum or in the frontal lobe of the brain. He seemed sensibly puzzled by being introduced to a couple of American stran g ers during his ordeal but was cour­ teous and patient, and we listened to his com m ents while the tum or was removed and even watched him eat orange slices and ask for m ore while the operation was going on. a also shown tum or of We were subtotal thyroidectomy on a 47-year-old woman, the excision of a cystic the sub- m axillary gland on a 13-year-old girl who got up from the operating table and walked to her room, and a m ajor operation for the removal of the tubercular right lung and one rib from a 24-ye-ar-old man nam ed Chen Chien. in his inserted In some ways, the operation on Chen Chien seemed even m ore astonishing than the brain surgery. His only anesthetic was a single needle right shoulder at an acupuncture point identified by the .surgeon as Pi Ju. He lay on his stomach with a vast gaping hole in his the back, gasping of tile rem aining lung, but was wholly conscious through the ordeal, talked quietly to questions and, like the epileptic patient, ate through which you am id see coherently answ er and in James Reston A view from Shanghai fruit while receiving blood transfusions. IT IS VERY hard for any nonprofessional to sort all this out. Even the Chinese doc­ tors are divided about how acupuncture works and a re actually arguing out dif­ ferent the Chinese official journals. theories in that The old fixed by traditional Chinese m edical theory is that there is a “ channel” in the the critical acupuncture body and points are this channel. The m odem Chinese (looters, who approached (his whole subject with considerable skep­ ticism . reject the traditional channel theory and are m ore the theory that there a re certain nerve center^ that govern feeling and can be affected by needle penetration. inclined to believe in THE INTERESTING thing here, however, is that, while they cannot agree on the theory of how needle anesthesia works, they it does a re work, and the p ragm atic evidence and not waiting for theoretical justifications. they a re operating on increasingly convinced that One in all troubling diversion this for a visitor is that the im pressive objective evidence of the medical uses of acupuncture is always mixed up here w ith subjective psychiatric ex­ planations. ideological and even For exam ple, all the patients we saw on the operating table were clutching their little red books of Chairm an Mao Tse-tung’s philosophic and moral teachings. And the doctors and surgeons, after participating in the operations, were explaining that the success of im ­ portantly on trust between doctor and patient and on a common faith in “ Mao Tse-tung thought.” this system depended Dr. Chu Hsi-chi, the “ responsible person” a t the Hun Shan Hospital, explained that he always had careful philosophic and ideological discussions with patients before trust were their operations. Faith and im portant the whole system, he said. to the success of ASIDE FROM is enough objective evidence of practical this. however, there information to medical of acupuncture by justify somebody mole scientific than newspaper reporters. use exploration the in The Chinese government is a long way from agreeing with the U.S. government on international political questions, but it is fairly close to agreeing there should be a much wider exchange of nongovernment personnel and nonsecurity information. The doctors and public health officials here are clearly persuaded that needle anesthesia is effective, particularly on the upjter part of the human body, and that it Is cheaper, safer and to postoperative complications. less subject Also, Chinese officials, like Chinese doctors, make a great deal of wanting to help the whole human family. So maybe the time has come to get some serious rn ed i c a I between Washington and Peking. Something Is really going on here, and it Is clearly too im­ portant to be left to newspajier rep o rter* exchange going Tom Wicker A reasonable chance' (o) 1971 New York Times New* Service WASHINGTON — It will be disappointing to m any A m ericans that Duong Van (Big) Minh has withdrawn from the South Viet­ nam ese presidential campaign. On the face of it, his stand recon­ ciliation” seem ed to offer m ore hope than P resident Thieu's hard-line position against any concessions to end the war. for “ peace and But the political situation in which Big Minh found himself was clearly intolerable. And once he had withdrawn, so—in all probability—w’as th at of Vice-President Nguyen Cao Ky, whom President Thleu then tried clumsily to reinstate in the race. the Suppose, for purposes of comparison, that P resident Nixon had jailed Hubert Hum­ phrey, runner-up of 1968. Suppose Nixon, had then been able to impose an that would m ake, election law for 1972 say Edw ard Kennedy to run. ineligible Would anyone blam e Edmund Muskie for w ithdrawing from the race, on the ground th at the incumbent was so determ ined to win at any cost there was no use for anyone else to run? im m ediately In fact, the runnel-up to Thieu in 1967, Truong Dinh Dzu, was im ­ prisoned and still is. He was a peace candidate, but Thieu is im partial in his determ ination to be “ re-elected.” This year, he rigged th a t Ky, the hawkish Vice-President, has been unable to get the necessary signatures to validate his candidacy. the election law so T hat left only Big Minh as anything like a serious candidate—which he certainly would have been in anything rem otely like a fair election. Noting in a new sletter that he had been chairm an of the group th at overthrew Ngo Dinh Diem the V ietnamese Buddhist Peace Delegation to P a ris commented tersely: “ Becau.se of this he has the sym pathy of the people.” in 1963. In fact, if Ky had been left alone to run. he would no doubt have divided the loyalties of the m ilitary men on w hom Thieu’s power ultim ately depends. those conditions, which could only have come about in a relatively open and fair election, Big Minh might well have been able to win. In th at the certain in an election rigged for But Mihn correctly perceived to losing allow himself to be candidate the inevitable re-election of Thieu would be to connive a t the P resid en t’s “ victory’ an appearance of legitim acy it would not deserve. lending to On the other hand, ihe combination of the wit! draw al of a popular national hero from a race he fears is rigged, together with the spectacle of Thieu alone on a to op­ ballot he had effectively closed position, will not only dram atize the situation; it might also mobilize and unify the diverse elem ents of opposition to the Saigon regim e in South Vietnam. And it will surely diminish the ability of the pro- Thieu American government to proclaim his as a legitim ate, dem ocratically chosen regim e. These considerations—and no doubt plenty caused of American pressure—probably Thieu to reverse himself and let his couit validate K y’s once-outlawed candidacy. But with Big Minh having w ithdrawn, there is no reason for the Vice-President, either, to lend himself to the spurious validation of the ordained re-election of Thieu, and his lieutenants say he, too, will withdraw. Tl»e situation m akes a mockery, of course, of Nixon’s oft-repeated pledge to give the people of South Vietnam a “ reasonable chance” to choose their own government. This is not just because Thieu clearly intends to rem ain in power as long as he can. Many of those who might have supported Big Minh represent elements of V ietnamese polities that a re neither pro­ com m unist nor anathem a to the Viet Cong the North V ietnam ese—the very and interim elements government, growing out of a peace set- around which some dem ent, might have been arranged. What does th at mean for the American position in tho P aris talks? If it has been to tho that a favorable reaction feared seven-point program of tho Viet ttf>ng woul^ dam age Thieves re-election chances, and if it was hoped that his re-election am id be presented the world as satisfying# Nixon's “ reasonable chance” requirem ent, both fear and hope have l*>en effectively destroyed by Big Mink's withdrawal. to Unless Ky can find some good reason to run, there is no good reason, therefore, why Nixon should not now move promptly to arrange for the withdrawal of American troops regain from Vietnam, Ironically American prisoners of w ar. enough, Thieu’s dictatorial hand on the speed Washington’s ballot recognition of that fact. box may and to Texas Student Publications, Inc. P. O . Box D, University Station Austin, Texas 78712 Enclosed is my check for $ .................... 0 Fall 1971 semester subscription only ............................................. $ 5 5 0 □ Fall and spring, 1971-72 ............................................................ ’ * $|0.00 □ Contribution .............................................................................. $ 4 j g t 7 eg f~] Remitance for a C a c tu s ..................................... ? N a m e M a ilin g C it y .. ........................................................... Address State Zip T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin j ohn Reetz ...................................................................................... Loj-j Rodriguez EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR ..................................................................... NEWS EDITOR ................................................................................ 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The D aily Texan, a stu d e n t new spaper a t is pub­ The U niversity of T exas a t Austin, lished by T exas S tudent Publications, Inc., D raw er D, U niversity S tation. Austin. T exas. 78712. The Daily T exan Is published Monday. T uesday, W ednesday, T h u rsd ay and F rid a y ex­ cept holiday periods S e p tem b er through May. S econd-class postage paid a t Austin, Tex. News contributions will tic accepted by tele­ phone (471-4101), a t Hie ed ito ria l office (Jo u r­ n alism Building 102) o r a t the now's labors! (Jo u rn alism Building 102). Inquiries c o n f e r delivery should be m ade in Jo u rn alism Billie 107 <471-5244) and advertising bi Jo u rn al Building 111 (471-3327). The national advertising rep re sen tativ e Ih e Daily T exan Is N ational E ducational v e rt I sing Service. Inc., 300 Lexington Ave.. I York. R Y ., 10017. The D aily T exan subscribes to The A elated P ress, T he Nev Y ork T im es News ! vice and U nited P re ss Intern atio n al Telopi Service. The T exan is a m e m b er of the A tho Southw est Jnm elated C ollegiate P ress, ilsm Conference (md the T exas D aily Ne p a p e r Association. I was just trying to help . . . TMf^Wc'AiS A rt Buck wold Russell Baker The roaring surf and stereo 1971 CACTUS HURRY • • • HURRY • • • PICK UP YOUR have signed 5 7 , 0 00 people requests ac­ use companied by affidavits attesting to officially approved blood lines. them, to IN ANY EVENT, who is going anywhere? Nobody, to judge from this jam. A pedestrian walking up toward the fantastic tra ffic Rolling Stone zone says that a policeman has told him that no traffic has m o v e d anywhere in this town since 7 :30 this morning. Oh well, at least we can sit h ere and w atch the jets with the latest human fro m New York dump black filth down on us. lo ad Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle of nature speakers in the garden of robins? Yes. The answer surely yes. speakable August vacationers question the sistency of our children. if cats ate stereo instead is It is only this un­ of to con­ tempts us intellectual crush that in But where shall we escape it? To the beach perhaps? Too dangerous. Sharks have been sighted jeeps and the su rf; dune buggies cruise the sand. It would be humiliating to be run over by a car and seriously mangled while dozing on the beach. After all no one would stretch out half naked on a towel on the New Jersey Turnpike. Escape, w here do you lie? Ah, w here else? It may be as crowded here as in Calcutta, but it is still, for all that, Ajnerica. Key in the old ignition, feel of plastic leather against thighs, the reassuring whinny of 360 fiery horses with light and the appetite of an oilwell fire. the curb, aw ay Away f r o m sound- greatest reproducing e q u i p m e n t th at credit can buy, away from the insane urge to take a spray gun of deadly chem ical insecticide to the rose thorns and the m oth­ eaten gray cat. Away! Away! the speed of from the Into the country? Out tow ard the the rolling dunes to watch being p refab rica t'd h o u s e s erected? No, no. Better thinK again. Last night out on that load a car bearing cheering youths bom barded this very m achine with em pty beer tins. Good lads, no doubt who were sim ply recharging their batteries; still, as insurance people have gotten about paying off. . . . finicky car as Tennis is out of the question. of course. There are only 16 tennis courts within 20 miles, and (c) 1971 New York Times News Sendee NANTUCKET, Mass. - It was sum m er. August. Wet, dank, mossy, steam y, bumed-up, crab- grassy August, the month when every psychiatrist in A m erica closes his couch and vacations. the And evidence here can be believed. prizefight A c c o u n t a n t s , t e l e v i s i o n p r o m o t e r s i cam eram en, radicals, smdent custom s inspectors. . . everybody else, if the attic August. Up the in g reat stereo .speakers pound the air, as arrogant as a flight of B-52 s hunting peasants. Down the the Umbers and out along beam s of the old sum m er house, their dreadful pulsations trem ble. The entire structure quivers in the grasp of these mighty elec­ tronic noise pumpers. THIS IS probably the sound of su m m er present. Wails of nisi ic heartbreak. Hallucinative shrieks. from E lectric reedy women affecting a y earn ­ ing for the grave. drums. Moans It in dreadful hating no ise* as fashionable as those very special noises without noting im m ediate psychic and moral im provem ent, a re and truly dreadful noises, and the house agrees, for it Is clearly begging for m erry . Ah, passe so soon. yet—. They It is dreadful out there in the garden in A ugust The glory that was Ju n e—sitting there, hunkered down against the next wave of wiId-ros<» thorns, feeling the surge the magnificently alienated of baw ler howling out of the attic stereo speakers, one can think of hair raising hut p h t.w -s like “The glory that was Ju n e .” nothing it HOW DESPICABLE is not to hunker down there aw ash in love for nature. Yet, the young . right about nature. ones a re W here, as they keep asking, would we Ik * without it? Across the lawn strolls the gray cat. the one with the moth-eaten hind­ q u arters, chuckling at the robin she has clasped squawking in her mouth. Would America's famous youth be so enchanted by the beauty 5 Climbing species of pepper 6 Raised level of turf 7 Man s nickname 8 Simple 9 Occurrent® I O Lair 1 2 Printer’s measure 14 Negative 1 7 Lampreys 2 0 Inquire 24 River ri ck 2 5 Roc t nt 2 7 So be it! 28 Whip 2 9 Faison rootstock 3 6 Brim 3 7 Industrious mammals T W I ACROSS I Pigpen 4 Hebrew month 6 Domesticated l l Dairy product 13 Football team 15 Faroe Islands whirlwind 16 Bishop's headdress 18 City in Nevada 19 Afternoon party 21 Antlered animal 2 2 Printer's measure 23 Pertaining to the stars 2 9 Funny story 3 1 Command to cat 3 3 Pronoun 3 4 Symbol to r silver 3 5 Priest's vestment 3 8 Greek letter 3 9 Babylonian deity 4 0 Prefix: not 4 1 Told falsehood 4 3 Lease 4 5 Meadow 4 7 Sun shad# 50 Sun god 5 2 Repulsive 53 Encountered 56 Son of Adam 58 Heroic events 6 0 Artificial language 61 Shooting star 63 Reach 6 6 College officials 6 5 Steamship (abbr.) • 7 Label News you never saw There w ere many great news stories the that never m a : a papers. These were my favorites. the cult Charles Weatherspoon hated abstract a rt and th at wont with it. When he heard there was going to be an ab stract art exhibition he subm itted a painting done by a chimpanzee and then he waited to see the results. The day of judging arrived and a group of distinquished a rt cri­ the aisles, tics walked down studying each painting. Then they cam e to W eather - spoon’s entry. They all stopped and stared and finally the silence was broken by Jam es Corrigan, the greatest abstract-art expert in the United States, who said. ab stra ct “ That's lousiest the painted by a chimpanzee I ’ve ever seen.” that excitedly. “ It was No. 345.” ‘‘Then you shot m e down,” • O O Maj. Roy McMullen, World War ll ace, who was shot down in his fighter plane n ear the end of in the w ar, was stationed Germany in 1961 as com m ander of a squadron. One day he was visited by Friedrick von Ralston, a Luftwaffe fighter pilot who had been appointed liaison officer to McMullen’s outfit. two started exchanging w ar stories and Von Ralston told of the day he shot down a P-38 over Stuttgart. The “ I was shot down over Stutt­ gart" McMullen said, “on Nov. 12, 1944, in a P-38.” “T hat's the day I shot down said the plane,” Von Ralston McMullen said. w as m e.” “ Y ah,” Von Ralston said, "it • “ Why you no good SOB.” and hit Von said, McMullen Ralston right in the teeth. • • Chuck Winthrop, who weighed only 140 pounds, w as too light to m ake the Wallaboo University football tried so team, but he h ard that the coach took pity on him and let him suit up for every gam e, though he always kept him on the bench. In the final gam e of the year archrivals, against Wallaboo's G a z o n g a Tech, Wallaboo's first-string quarterback w a s injured in the second quarter. In the final quarter, Wallaboo** second-string quarterback was also injured. Gazonga was leading 6-0. The coach looked down the bench and his eyes met Chuck's. ‘ ‘ P l e a s e , coach,” pleaded ChucK. “ My parents cam e 2,000 miles to see me play. Send me in.” The coach shook his head. “ Y ou're too light." “ I f s my last year. Ju st let few m inutes.” me play for a Chuck cried. The coach got up from the bench and walked over to Chuck. He put his hand on his shoulder and he said. “ No. you're too light. We'll finish up the gam e without a q u arterb ack .” And Wallaboo did. Tile final score w as still 6-0. YEARBOOK They Are Being Handed Out N O W Behind the JOURNALISM BUILDING-in the circle the CACTUS yearbook please bring your UT orange ID card for identi­ fication A n o t h e r p u b lic a tio n o f T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L IC A T IO N S , IN C . If you plan to write only a few checks each month, don’t keep a lot, of money in your account, and, hate service charges, there’s only one checking account for you. TexasSpecial. Here’s why: There’s no monthly service charge. No minimum balance requirement. Checks are personalized free. All you pay is $2.30 for twenty checks. No other charges. The checks are Texas Orange, immediately recog­ nized by Austin merchants. Free checkbook covers are orange with white TexasSpecial trademark. If this sounds like your kind of account, come in and start one. Only one bank has TexasSpecial. US. AmericanBank Downtown at Sixth & Colorado • FLIC 9 477-65S1 6 Motor Bank Lanes open from 7:30 A.M. to 6;00 P.M. Thursday, A ugust 26, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g * 5 M e x i c o C i t y * O f Overcrowding, (c) 1971 New York Times News Service M EXICO C IT Y - Tho largest urban center in Latin America is suffering one of the worst crises of its 450-year history — an uncontrollable growth rate, widespread poverty and unem­ ployment and a severe pollution problem. aggravated The situation is being con­ the by stantly m i g r a t i o n of hundreds of thousands of peasants and their families to Mexico City in search of work and hope. The migrants are establishing hundreds of slums — known as “ lost cities" — around the capital’s perimeter where they live in insanitary conditory, in­ variably without running water, electricity or other muni ii pa I services. With no work available, tin v invade the more prosperous parts of town during the day. begging or trying to sell fruit, candy, chewing gum or trinkets. TH E POPULATION of greater Mexico City is now officially estimated ai l l million — a six- f Id increase in 30 years — with a' least 1.4 million people living in 450 lost cities. According to one recent estimate, the capitals population could reach 29 million bv the year 2000. for most The inhabitants of districts that the account of papulation are suffering from high unemployment, a severe housing shortage, drainage totally inadequate for the heavy rainfall and poor transportation. in Even those living luxury residential areas can complain about not infrequent blackouts and water shortages, constant traffic jams and the deteriorating environment. This scene is perhaps not un­ common in other Latin American cities: the difference here is the sheer scope of the situation in what is already the fifth largest urban center in ’he world. The eight-month-old govern­ of President m e n t Luis Echeverria Alvarez has com­ mitted itself to rehabilitating the capital — "a profoundly human city" — but the problems seem astronomical in resources available. to making relation the to it tile summer A PRINC IPAL project involves trying to rescue a 35.800-acre zone known as Lake Texcoco, which in season is a shallow lagoon and in winter is an enormous dust bowl. The Aztec Tenochtitlan. now Mexico City, was built on the the site of rainy city of H A V IN G A P A R T Y ? NEED A BARTENDER? C A L L 478-7488 Bradley School O f Bartending - L O B B Y S U I T E — C O M M O D O R E PERRY BLDG. lake, but most of it has been drained or has dried up through over-use. A planned $45-million in­ vestment will include a new town for 250.000 people, drinking water and a drainage system for the slums that ring the lake, forests in the area to prevent erosion and tourist attractions. The also government has launched an attack on serious air and water pollution problems trying to control the discharge from the 5,000 or so factories that surround the city and the exhaust from a million vehicles — bota reflecting economic growth. in The city authorities' efforts to solve the problems were oom­ p h 'ated June when Mayor Alfonso Martinez Dominguez resigned reasons for political after six months in office. The new mayor, Octavio Sen ties, has had to start anew to a certain extent. the According to a recent survey carried out by liberal newspaper Excelsior, more than three million people in Mexico City are unemployed, there are 1,000 miles of unpaved roads, a million people arc without public two services, hospital bods thousand inhabitants and 1.7 million people live in dwellings with only one room. there are only per D u ring the current r a i n y Migr , Problems Pollution me roads in me : -i cines are covered with mil l or Urge pools of w a te r and t e shacks, made of W'xul, cardboard and metal shorts. often co’I m-a*. Children p l a y or look for food in open refuse dumps, mothers or children line up to c Heat v. tor in buckets fix rn t h e C o m m u n a l pump and y< mg mon s' md around wa dng fo- wert;. THE HIRTH ra*o in the slums is even higher th; n in tho <•< un- tryside and, since no official family-planning prog:mn exists, few families ! 1 vo less than seven or eight children. According to in one ciiv district, Excelsior, there infant is a 60 percent mortality rate. Rarely do more than one or two of the survivors attend even primary school. crime's Robberies of and violence among the po >r tak^ place with relative impunity since police protection is inadequate. The University Teaching and Field Sen.. , Bu: u is ex,, ting ..OOO to 10,000 students to enroll fall, Dr. L .E . McDonald, for assistant director of the bureau, said Wednesday. Bor the last five years, the b u r e a u its enrollment. I. . : fall, me service recorded 6,300 students. doubled has Registrar n f >r t ie fall will be Aug. 30 Mon lay ami We Sept. 2. It will be cond the Joe C. Tim nips rn ( Center. A refresher course in is a new noncredit fours will be offered in Lie fall. This course is one of nr re th i IOO night coursf s offered bv th University Dive n of Extension. rump ire up some tQf Unfree si ty'Village Park one hour free in Hardin North Garage WBerryTree 7 3 1 W . 23rd STREET AT RIO GRANDE _ 'BM ELECTRIC CALCULATOR ADDERS TYPEWRITE! TYPEW RITERS PORTABLE & ELECTRIC ADDERS & CALCULATORS RATES FO R TERM Month or Week A LL RENT APPLIES 90 D AYS O R RENT-BUY r. 2234 G U A D A LU P E 476-3525 5134 BURNET RD. 454-6731 library->tudy - g y m - AN “IT’S FOR REAL’’ STUDENT GOVERNMENT - sauna bath - P I N G P O N G split from the HASSU apartment living of mfke Cascan 478-9811 2323 San Amania ..dayroom. - WOMEN - ONLY, MEN-ONLY. OR COED FLOORS - k itch en ettes / Page 6 Thursday, August 26, 1971 THE D AU T TEXAN 'N o Lock Bus with Pinocchio' LIU Telephoto. stam ped on his wrist by his first grade Jan t Simmons, so that when the te a ch e r, school d ay is over all he has to do is match the ch aracter on his wrist with that on the side of a bus. While students at the Urlvc-dl/ numbers to guide them to the c bus, homeward elementary school Henryetta, Okla., have c o 'c fi c racters to indicate which vc hic! board. Bruce Lunsford, 6, g< rs Prison 4(0% l rn rn SAN FRANCISCO (A P ) — A the demanding federal suit government take over control n I operation of San Quentin P r n was filed in U.S. District Court Wednesday bv five inmates cf ti * life “ J I <1 S < W R I S T M r f i l t e r M C \ . . . rn v ni t. o r s n \i. a nciu D o n ’t Miss the T- - I THE ORIGINAL AME. SCAM ' FRIDAY AUGUST 27ih Tickets at R A Y M O N D S D R U G S and GIBSON S (P n V/h if W Suit rn r n o €> O to e © © rn t ■ inmates were "caught lr ti . n of rru estrous terror." Tile action asked the federal int a federal master •'n u to operate and St.iie prison and to cf treatment the court to a] or com mi: control the gate invr prisoners. It charged that "San Quentin is I; mg ojM*rated in a criminal. cr a* J ; ! id inhuman manner" and “ ii; • State of California no t is capable of maintaining I ■ control." ’File suit c tiled for removal of c e Warden James Park A.%s< awa. mg investigation by federal or State officials “ to determine whether he encouraged, sanc- tlo; i < I. or ordered murder or assault on the prisoners in the maximum security Adjustment Center. Attorneys Phil Ryan of San Francisco and John Douglas Vaughn of San Rafael filed the suit five Adjustment ( ’enter inmates, including Ruchell M agee. the for Ma ee is accused with black militant Angela Davis of murder and kidnap in the August, 1970, Mot rn County courthouse shooting in which a judge and three ab­ ductors died. The center is where San Quentin officials say Soledad Brother George Jackson, 29, was after shot and killed Saturday two white convicts and three shot and white guards were slashed to death. 26, the John Clutched®, 28, and Floeta surviving Drumgo, Soledad Brothers, also were among the center's 27 first, tier inmates whose were link e!;ed during the break at­ tempt. cells HANK's GRILL Hank's Famous Frfed Sfesk 2532 GUAD. vLUFE 2 pcs. M o at, Fr-: r os, Salad, Hot Rems a Bulter 5-9 p.m. only C * c J * Reg. S1.35 H a p p y Hour 2 . j r . Daily Light or D . k Lg. P it c h e r ............................................... 1.00 Sm . P it c h e r .................................................. 75c Lame Come see Congress Parr f thing you've wanted in an ap north IH 35 and US 183 (Resea all these features: See Ii hat's New! 1 - r‘i e ■ • most luxurious I bedroom apartments. Every- I and rn the best location in North A u stin - Ju st off rch B i . A special touch of elegance for the discriminating with • Laundry facilities • Individual hot water • Only 5 miaul rte.rn and IBM . IO minute' 15 minutes from stat and Westing!::,:, rn. • All utilities paid supply State I from a caon Furnished or Unfurnished • Dishwasher, disposal, and refrigerator • Shag carpet throughout • Drapes • Central heat and air conditioning • Swimming pool OPEN TODAY 8 a.m. Until Dark or call 452-4148 U. S. Pullout Obvious Correspondent Sees Evidence of War End (Editor’s Note: A year ago, Associated Press correspondent Peter Arnett left Vietnam after eight years of covering the war, during which he won a Pulitzer Ile Prize recently thrw weeks. Here is his appraisal of how' Vietnam looks to him one year later.) reportage. for returned for his By PETER ARNETT Associated Press Writer SAIGON (AP) — America Is getting out. Both m ilitarily and, in a sense psychologically, m ost Americans here feel their w ar is ending. inescapable the im­ pression gathered in a three-week return visit by this correspondent after a one-year absence. That is The sights and sounds of with­ draw al are everyw here. You see it in Qui Nhon, again a fishing village and no longer the hectic, noisy supply center for the thousands of GI’s who fought the bloody battles at la D rang and Dak To. The airfield is closed. Tile few Americans are civilians. YOU SEE it flying over Viet­ broad Vietnamese nam . The highlands rem ain studded by the circular patterns of fire-bases that were and tom in w ar's h aste the jungles by men and bulldozers. But a close look rev e als they ara abandoned. encam pm ents from You h ear the sounds of with­ d raw al in the conversations of the level rn id d I e Am ericans. upper and When I left V ietnam a year ago th ere were m any American officials and m ilitary m en who still identified Saigon’s goals with those of the United S tates, a “ we will prevail together’’ philosophy. One h ears much less of th a t now', in traveling around Vietnam and looking up old acquaintances m an y now in high positions. th ree weeks of The Americans who have directed the U.S. effort in Viet­ nam , spending years w orking in the provinces in dusty, scruffy towns, or using th eir expertise to move mountains in Saigon, seem th at President R ichard M. Nixon m e an s what he say s about pulling out. Even m en known as haw ks seem to accept the fact the situation has changed. assured “ A L W A Y S THERE was tom orrow .” c om rn e n t ed one young American, in V ietnam ese and an exi>crt on the country, as wre talk ed during dinner. fluent “ There was alw ays the hope th a t years of advice and coaxing would finally surface adequate leadership the Vietnamese arm y , when the Saigon govern­ m ent would cleanse itself of obvious corruption and petty sell- in Interest an d begin to respond to the n e e d s of the countryside, when th e enemy would pack up and go h o m e ,” he said. T h ere is no tomorrow for the A m erican s now in Vietnam. “ Any programs refo rm s not today will unlikely be realized im plem ented when we leave,” the young A m erican said. and High on the list of remaining p ro b lem s is military leadership. “ We know all the secrets of ex- counter-insurgency,” one A n AP N e w s Aaalysis pcrien ced American commented. “ We h a v e perfected techniques of indoctrination and p acificatio n that a r e superb. As I said we have a ll the answers, except the an sw e r to one question: How the hell do you get leaders?” In th e view of m a n y seasoned Americans here, the le ad e rsh ip problem goes right up to P re s id e n t Nguyen Van Thieu, who h a s disenchanted them by law sponsorship of an election th at h a d the effect of sharply lim itin g opposition candidacies in the presidential election. forthcoming O ne American worker said: “ The o nly reason we stay on now' is p atern alism . We have got to lot go now for better or for w orse. We cannot hold on to th e V ietn am ese forever.” National Rolls Hit T h e WASHINGTON ( A P )— T h e government’s I a te s t welfare released Wednesday, statistics, the first decline in the show nation's relief rolls since they began ballooning th r e e years ago. persons num lter receiving public in May- the latest m onth for which statistics are available- decreased 37,000, or 00.3 percent, from April to 14,369,000, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare announced. of assistance followed The May drop a m arked slowing in w elfare growlh the previous m onth. But an 11 FAV spokesman it will require “ another month showing a decline before we can really call it a trend.” said F o r reasons the shrinkage was government specialists cannot explain, most that of tile fam ily program portion of fam ilies headed by benefiting 'Hie drop unemployed fathers. in Welfare Decline th ere was 34,000 persons, cr 3 9 percent, despite from April continuing high unem ployment. A sm all increase in th e number fam ilies re­ of female - headed the ag­ ceiving aid resulted g reg ate 16 recipients, to 10.2 m illion persons in th e family program . decline only of in T his total is still 23 percent m ore than the S.I million persons receiving family benefits in May 1970. The rem aining four million tho recipients w elfare relatively of stable aged.blind and disabled persons. states an d Puerto a r e num ber Nineteen Rico reported drops fam ily programs from April. in their In a further indication of holt- tightening by states, th e average w elfare payment p e r dropped for alm o st $2 a secutive month rn o n th Public- assistance paym ents totalled $1.5 billion in Mav. family the second con­ $183.75. to th e T h ey entertained no illusions about th a t troubled possibly lie ahead for the South V ietnam ese. times O n e-q u arter of troops are a million still in A m erican Vietnam, but they are in low profile, no the of­ longer on fensive. They have pulled b ack th e Demilitarized Zone, from th e Cambodian border. from They the base cam ps a re at w aitin g to go home. T h e South Vietnamese arm y is try in g to fill in the huge gaps left b y the American divisions. T hey h ave taken over the w ar. A m e r i c a n casualties have d ro p p ed well below' a hundred a w eek . The South V ietnam ese a c a s u a l t i e s have held n ear th o u sa n d killed and wounded e a c h week. T H E R E ARE Military s ig n s 1 th a t som e call heartening. The M ekong Delta where the w ar first , b e g a n is generally subdued, w ith j e n e m y strength down one-third to 31,000 arm ed men in the la st 15 j m o n th s. Only half the m onthly losses of 2,000 men are en e m y b ein g replaced. Tile III Corps reg io n around Saigon is sim ilarly q uiet. in But the central highlands that and the I Corps region the borders North Vietnam, Communist forces are as strong in those areas as they were in the toughest days of the war. And while obviously war-weary and bloodied they still exhibit strong and deter­ spirit leadership, mination. initiative The North Vietnamese have in these retained the the South Viet­ regions while namese have gotten progressively weaker with the departure of U.S. “ So what can the strategy be divisions. A suggestion that two infantry n e w those divisions be regions was in Saigon. Vietnamese formed turned down far “ So what can the strategy be for Saigon when the Communists attack, as expected, in spring next year to show America and the Chinese they are a force worth reckoning with?” asked one A m erican of long military experience. “ DOES SAIGON send troops from the the D elta to protect north? lf they do, they will have real trouble in their back yards; already 80 outposts have been overrun this y ear in an upsurge of guerilla activity.” Unsettling patterns of behavior the Viet­ are apparent within namese army. An American official said there are increasing instances of banditry by soldiers who hold up buses and stores. like the “This the National deterioration of Chinese the in armies 1940’s,” he said. is disquietingly late | is T h e pacification program j continues with massive American ! backing. Nearly IOO percent of the population statistically under governm ent control, but American analysts now say that even in a fully pacified area, the Viet Cong can still recruit IO percent of the adult population, giving them a theoretic recruiting base of 600,000 adult Vietnamese. In the boiling cauldron that is Saigon in August. I got the im­ pression the Vietnamese population had not yet come to terms with the American with­ drawal. Enough GI money was still flowing to oil the wheels of commerce. that DORM ROOM DILEMMA? 3 Great Solutions ... c PILLOWS -fur-like — velvet — corduroy — L IN E N — F L O R A L — B O L D PRINTS — G ia n t Floor Cushions BEDSPREADS $ 7 9 9 and U P -Floral -Stripes -Solids -Prints -Corduroy — Drapes to match some spreads $ 1 9 9 and UP — C o n te m p o ra ry — O rie n ta l ($3.99 & up) — Fur-like ($4.99 & up) ALL AVAILABLE AT EACH LOCATION B A C K T O S C H O O L H E A D Q U A R T E R S T .a r K f s t a n i l f i n e s t s e l e c t i o n of D e c u n i t i v e P i l l o w s . th e World B e d s p re a d s , A r e a Rutis a n d Fi rs in 10% S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T on nil m e r c h a n d i s e a t Pillow P a r l o u r . H u e P a r l o u r , B e d s p r e a d P a r l o u r w ith th i s c o u p o n o r S t u d e n t 1.1). ^ Pillow Parl6ur ^ j y nettle creek D A L L A S P r o m e n a d e Q u a d r a n g l e 2800 B o n th D a lla s B e tw e e n K e n t Shop a n d K .M . K a h n Store L n s t Side C o lt B d . B e tw e e n A ra p a h o & B e lt L ine R ic h a rd so n Bedspread Parlour T O W N A rnV N T R Y V IM ..U T E C o r n e r o f K im berlv a n d T o w n it HIGHLAND V IL L A G E 4050 W e s th e im e r C ountry B lvd. FT. W O R T H NEIMAN' M A R C U S In The S q u are I n fro n t o( a n d a d j a c e n t to N eim an M arcu s A U S T I N lil t i III, A X Ii M AI L 2nd F lo o r n e s t to Jo sk e ’a H O U S T O N COME HELP CHANGE THE WORLD YOU CAN YOU KNOW. BY JOINING US IN THE GREATEST ADVENTURE THE H U M A N SPIRIT CAN EVER EXPERIENCE - GETTING TO KNOW JESUS CHRIST We Invite You to COLLEGE LIFE at 9:00PM SEPT. 3 at the ALUMNI CENTER and our Fall Retreats on Higland Lake CLIP A N D M A IL TO: Cam pus Crusade for Christ 2303 Rio Grande Austin, Texas 78705 or call 472-9476 __ . □ I would like to talk to someone personally . ,, . , , .. . I about this great adventure. q $enc| more information about getting Austin A d d r e s s ................................................... ........ .......... to know Jesus Christ Phone ....................................................... ........................................................... .................................... .. □ Tell me what C .C .C . is all about. SPONSORED BY CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST KICKOFF FPB “THE WEEK OF THE BALLOON!pp HOT AIR BALLOON LAUNCH TOP FLOOR OF THE DOBIE GARAGE. FEATURING T-BUCKET ROADSTERS. DUNE-BUG6IES, FUNNY CARS, DRAGSTERS. OFF THE ROAD VEHICLES. ROUND’NROUND CARS, FULL-CUSTOM CARS WITH STEREO. TV. & LIGHT ORGANS. CARS WITH *1000 PLUS PAINT JOBS. MOTORCYCLES INSIDE TRE SHOPPING M ALL. CUSTOM CAR SHOW! FROM CONSERVATIVE STREET BIKES TO FULL-CUSTOM CHOPPERS. LOTS OF PAINT AND CHROME. FREE! VOTE ON T H E ’MOST POPULAR OF SHOW. TOP’O’THE GARAGE SATURDAY, AUG. 28 nome: C E N T E R SHOPPING MALL 21st and GUADALUPE Thursday, August 26, 1971 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 7 KICKOFF FOR "THE WEEK OF THE BALLOON!” Painters Union Joins Opposition to Freeze WASHINGTON (A P ) — Tho 200,000-mrmbcr Painters union aroused President Richard M. Nixon Wednesday of ruining the nation’s economy and joined mounting labor opposition to his wage* price freeze b v telling its members to “ strike if recess?’ y " for higher pay. Tlie painters, one of 12 AFL-CIO unions vowing to challenge the freeze in courts and Congress, said it would authorize strikes even though any wage hikes ii might win can't be paid until the 90-day freeze is lifted or struck down by the courts. 'T o r months, Nixon has ignored AFL-CIO recommendations to revive an economy which he ruined, particularly in the area of unemployment,'' said the painters union in a previously unpublished letter to its members. "Strike if necessary to obtain what you consider to be a fair settlement, get a signed agreement," the union said. “ See to it that the increased portion of new wages and fringes are placed into an escrow account" until legal questions are settled, it said. In other developments: • AFL-CIO President George Meany met with President I.eonard Woodcock of the independent United Auto Workers to map a joint push in Congress against most of Nixon’s new economic proposals, and a meeting of IOO labor lawyers Is scheduled Thursday to discuss a legal fight against the wage freeze. • The AFL-CIO American Federation of Teachers saw a slight beam of hope for some of its members in a new ruling by Nixon's Cost of Living Council thaf some school teachers may get previously contracted pay hikes. the problem," said a “ We're happy about that, but It still doesn't solve teachers union spokesman. " I t puts a premium on foot-dragging boards of education that were waiting until two days before school opens to sotllp their contracts. Tho freeze came along and they're home free." • Tim Cost .of Living Council said teachers In 12-month contracts can get wage hikes negotiated before the Aug. 15 freeze. • The one million-member AFL-CIO In ­ terna tonal Association of Machinists said the wage freeze is especially unfair to three million federal workers, including many of its members working in government installations. The machinists union said it would fight to try to get federal workers tile wage increases, and also criticized Nixon’s announced cutback in federal employment. ® Rep. John Culver, D-Iowa, announced a House foreign economic policy subcommittee which he heads will hold hearings next month on long- range international monetary co-operation. • A federal judge in Norfolk, Va., lifted his order requiring a sharp increase in busing of school children because the city’s privately owned bus line would lose money transporting them under the wage-price freeze, which bars a fare increase scheduled for next week. Sunday Initiation Set Krishna Rites Open to Public A public fire sacrifice ceremony, administered by members of the Hare Krishna movement, will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Austin Temple, 290fi Dancy St. Tshan T)as, president of the temple, said the ceremony symbolizes the formal acceptance of Krishna students by the spiritual master. Thp Swami prepares the sacrificial fires and sprinkle varying colors of sands in symbolic patterns as the students wait to b e initiated. The ceremony is a “ formal event." Das said, in which the students "formally make the connection between the spiritual master, a bona- fide representative of God and the Ixird.” The first “ vedic fire sacrifice" to be held in Austin is analogous to a foster father obtaining custody of a son,Das explained. “ The faster father accepts the son and promises to protect his well-being. The spiritual master prays to God for the student's well­ being,’’ he said. A vegetarian feast will follow the ceremony to celebrate the oc­ Labor Chieftains Confer Leonard Woodcock (I) United Auto Workers president, and George Meany, AFL-CIO president, met Wednesday in Washington to plan strategy against the Administration’s wage-price freeze. Pink? rd.) Three students will bo initiated: Sankarsan Das Brahmachary (formerly Stephen Bridge), Parasara Das Brahmachary (formerly “ Ron the Beadman’’), Pulasta Das Brahmachary (formerly Chm — U P I Telephoto. casion. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . S e r v i c e s T y p i n g • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S I set.. C a ll 337-2216. PUBLiC NOTICE $1875. 444-5393. C I A S S I F I F P A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S E a c h W o r d <15 w o r d m in im n m ) j .07 . ........ $ .06 ..........$ ...7 5 . ........ $ ...0 5 a d d itio n a l F » rh A d d itio n a l T im e S tr id e n t r a te en e tim e avn rd E a r h 20 ( o n seru tix P ssuea IO WO rd * 15 V O rd * 20 WO rd s c o l. I 2 co l. 3 c o l. 4 co l. C la v x ifie d D is p la y r o lu m n \ one I E a c h A d d itio n a l T im e In rh in r h in r h in r h .......... ................. ........ . .......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11 oo ........ $15.00 ........ S19.00 ■ a . . .« « • . ........ $38.00 ...... $70 on . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........ $96 OO ........ $120.00 . . . . ................ tim e $ 2 10 ........ $ 2.00 n rh o n e (N o r o p y c h a n g e fo r c o n s e c u tiv e is s n e r a t e s . ) 15 word* or less fo r 75c th* first tim e, 5c each ad d ition al word. Stu­ receipt d en t must show A u d ito r’s and pay Journalism Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d ay through Frid ay. in ad van ce in D E A D L I N E S C H E D U L E M on day T exan 3:00 p.m. T u e s d a y Texan M o n d a y . 11:00 a.m. W edn esday T exan f rid a y , T u e sd a y , l l OO a m . T h u rs d a y Texan W e d n e s d a y . 11:00 a m . F r id a y Texan T h u rs d a y . 11:00 a rn. “ I n the e v e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e in a n a d v e r tis e m e n t, im m e d ia t e no tice m u s t he u h en a s tile p u b lis h e rs a re re s p o n s ib le for o n ly O N E in c o r r e c t in s e rtio n . A H < la tin s fo r a d ju s tm e n ts s h o u ld th a n 30 d ays a fte r p u b lic a t io n .1” lie m a d e n o t la t e r F o r S a l e P O R T A B L E T V s 19’’ A d m iral a 11- • hannel. U ltra clean , little' usedI B /Vt. ’eft). P h o n e 444-1345, 442- $66 50 7475. 4305 Maneha< a R oad. (fe w S U N P I S H — A M E R I C A S most popular sailboat. New stock of Sunfish parts j :st arriv er! N ew and used sailboats a ll sizes S a ilin g Im p o rts. 926-5804. U n c la im e d freight has received several n e w shipments, and w e are relaying these the trem endous new buys p ub lic. to cartons. S in g e rs 1971 Singer Sew ing M a d ! nes <5> some sc latest models. cr. peed to z i g g. buttr 'thole, mono g ra m and m uch m ore $49.95 each, cash or term s. R P F F : C U R A T O R S A-, i p. 971 Models $75 S Y S T E M S C O M P O N IN T - W a ln u t tm ish. G a n it’d turn tab les Po w erfu l so­ lid v is 1'' cl od Speakers $49 95 Vise 1971 Console S tere o s, w a ln u t with B S R tern tables, solid state. 4 speakers. long w a in it stereos, with $69 95 8 ft A M - E M multiplex: R a d io and built in 8 tra c k , retail $599, Close-out $29? D O L L Y M A D ISO N includi! b ran d ro w Bedroom sels. double dresser, tied To he sold for fro .vht and storage charges. J- ? 95 p er sr* Also 7 livin g room groups to be sold for $79 95. j bl r C losing r t a 'l m e rch a n d ise this week to m ak e room for p ew shipments. F in ­ an cin g availab le. B an k-A m e rto ard A V a s t e r C barge. Open To The P o i T h ru F rl., Sat. T i ll 1:00 i • o A M * 6 P M Mon. 6535 N . I. A M A R S O N Y C O M P L E T E system ■ re sistin g of r e c e iv e r, speaker- and ch an g er. A v e r y good b iy for someone. 476-6733, 454-6141. stereo F I A T 124 S P O R T S Coupe, ’69 model. One ow ner, excel!, nt condition. i9,i)O0 m iles A /C, M ic h e lin radials. Use speed. 345-0695. late E X T R A L A R G E two bedroom CH/C.Y, pool. Shut'te. $185. lulls patd 2208 En field. 472-4841 453-4047 THF BLACKSTONE from L a w S< ho I L u x u ry livin g I block m a 1 s e n ice L iv e u La- i apart m ent is carpeted, draped, centi ti heat and a ir U tilities paid Designed for I i persons per apartm ent 2 hi dr- rn. 2 | hath i p atib ie . F a ll I I 2910 R E D R I V E R In d ivid u als m atched w ith c o m - i room m ates. N o w 476-5631 leasing for A P a ra g o n P ro p e rty W O O D W A R D APTS. 1722 E . W ood" r d 444-7555 ' # S p e cial student oriented clusters. • S w im m in g pools. • M oderate pre • ~ w th ai! utilities p aid — no hidden ch arg es! • O n ly 5 minutes to U .T . • C om plete on-premises w ashateria. • I'cee all-channel T V , • A m p le p arking for tenants & guests. H M R L T D C all inform ation on for h d r singeing for spilt ends and shag ruts i54-09£4 LEARN TO FLY © ijarsn tesd toto — $'25 n th# ‘ A W B E L L A N C A C H A M ’ . G E O R G E T O W N F L Y IN G S E R V IC E F A A anc- > so 863-2220 ichooi N E E D H E L P m oving ’ W e have two ' • ton pick-ups. $7.50 p er load. C all 451-1777. anything $7 loads in town Spec. ii freak estim ates, ('a ll 472-4459. T H E B U G Inn repair rates, student operated. 1814 Volksw agen Good W e st 36th 465-0517. H e l p W a n t e d SA X O N Y APARTMENTS K v *-■, tor r . • C l e >- S I HI, tipper division couples. U n usu al opportunity for g rad u al* or F o r S a l e R o o m s T O P C A SH P R I C E S paid for diamonds, M A L K P R IV A T E bath ana entrance. It, old gold Cap ito l D iam ond Shop 603 N eeds car, ha ve p lace to keep ! C an help In shop fo r p a rt rent. 451-2776. C om m odore P e r r y . 476-0178 V W . ’fin. G O O D C O N D IT IO N . Sedan. N e w tires, 37.000 471-7555. 471-1773. L e a v e m essage w hen n ecessary. $1350. 1070 H O N D A 175 S C R A M B L E R 1500 I m iles. A d u lt owner. O utstanding tra il . - street com bination. S550. 451-1373. S O L ID S T A T E c a d e t t e re c o rd e r; Gibson L o s P a u l g u itar and case, cord. strap ; Y a m a h a acoustic guitar. A ll like new . In q u ire fro m M aggie, 453- 6058. 5 H P H O N D A T R A I L 70. T w o used po rtab le ty p e w rite rs. 1001b. dum bell f o u r Tbs G R A H A M P L A C E . Ro om s for men, U n ive rs ity . I i i rn nth, hills paid. 452-2361 w e e k ­ days, 472-2789 nights and Sun day. blocks from N O R T H W E S T A U S T IN . P r i v a t e " en­ trance. carpeted. < a oh. $75 month No B re a k fa s t, sm okers, drinkers. P r e f e r C hristian student o r m atu re w o rkin g person. R e ferences. 453-5556 R fter 5pm. telephone included. T W O R O O M S and bath. Fu rnish ed, a c, n e a r Shu ttle Bus, p riva te entrance. F o r m ales. C a ll 452-7733. I ’65 M U S T A N G C O N V E R T I B L E . V-8, stan dard shift. $375 as is A lte rn ative Bo o k Store. 913 W e st 24th. 478-0284. N E W L Y W E D S S E L L I N G ex tra T V . I960 S e a rs $60 o r 1967 Zenith $50. B e th 19’’ portables. 478-1744. C O N N T E N N O R sax. $325. J n p erfect condition. See a t 4112 A venu e A, 3. betw een 1-4 w eekd ays. C O M PO N ENT CLOSEOUT BSR, G arrard , end PE turntables fr-- $39.95. Speakers $ !5 /p e 'r. Stereo cc- p o te n t sets w rn 8 track A M / F M u p iller, 2 speaker system, and BSR + rr just $129 while 4 sets ast. Ur fab © aimed Fre ght, b535 N . La- ar, M O N D A Y thro .o'- F R ID A Y 9-6, Saturday ’t G O O D A LL W O O TEN DORMITORY F O R U N I V E R S I T Y M E N 3112 G uad alup e 472-1343 and s i r " rooms, $50-$55 ■lid:! toned, carpeted. Double per month. A ir re- frig erato r. porter service, open house, new lighting, balconies. F o r R e n t E t R N ] S H E D - U N F U R N I S H E D ap a rt­ m ent for rent. 2 bedrooms, I D baths Plmrm 444-2811. P A R K I N G $6 month A R C O S e rv ic e Station, co rn er of W e st 19th and San Antonio Streets. 478-3282. R o o m s PASO HOUSE 18 r 3 VVett A v a. M F N F °c o n d L - c i e r S mm»r a-d va- cancie* Low a i $30/montr Laroe dou­ c e or ' r o e e aro**®4 rooms A / C , maid! serv re, re b in aeon room, co'cr I V iii lounqe, free cark nq C a 47P 3917 after 3 r rn. TEXAN DORM FOR MEN I9C5 1907 N U E C E S C o m p lifa 'y remode ed $44 4 4 /m v H r fall end spring, central air, maid ser- v e, p enty ref-’aeretors parking. Two b ocks bom Campus. C a I resident rn -naa®--, 478 5113, p -, and THE PHOENIX 1930 San Antonio 1 block o r 3 m inutes w alk in g from C am ­ pus.. N o w l e a r n s F a ll & Spring. New student ap artm ents. C om pletely reno \ated building w ith ne w d ecorator de fu rn itu re — shag sign carpets, d rapes extra sized double beds in e v e ry single free p arkin g — contract m eals a va ila b le interiors & ne w C a ll 476-9265. furnished, A I R C O N D IT IO N E D room and hath. for driving in exchange land lady. D riv in g schedule set up to fit schedule. C o m e r hus se rvice to U n iv e rs ity . M e als not fu r­ nished R e fe re n c e s required. Phone G R 8-7796 for appointment. student's TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD C ALL 471-5244 A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . 1970 V O L K S W A G E N S Q I ’ .A R E B A C K W hite, sunroof, 13500 miles. Ex ce lle n t condition $1975. C a ll 454-3313. F O U R C H A IR S , lam p, hutch, bookcase. ch a ir and ottoman. Reasonable. 928- 0571. 5511 Delwood D riv e . 1970 G TO , $3095. U N D E N T E D lu x u ry B E A U T I F U L L Y fa m ily c a r for young or old. C a ll 472-0250. 451-4550. R E C O N D IT IO N E D up. 6.000, IO OOO. 7243. 2501 Colby Cr U R conditioners $39 rid 13,000 B T U . 926- H O U S E H O L D S A L E . Goods: K itc h e n - I ch ild re n 's fu rniture, pliances, W oodm ont. 472-0959. clothes ap ­ curtains, S a tu rd a y 9-5. 2104 1970 F O R D S E P E R V a n 20,000 m iles, new tires. V-8, standard. W holesale. T E N U S E D T V sets for sale H o m an n ’s T V S e rvice , 5245 B u rn e t Rend. C all H O 5-9911. A C C ! T R O N B A T T E R Y - p o w e re d w a tch ; Good condition. O rig in a lly $175, w ill I sell $75. C all 476-0220 V O L K S S E D A N , 1962. N e w tires $475 1970 Y a m a h a E n d u ro 125cc. R e b u ilt August I. $395 444-9328. 1968 H O N D A S90 Sad d le bags. $225 A n u K l O W N E R . 471-1534. 345-319! M i s c e l l a n e o u s Z uni N E L S O N ’S G I F T S ; com plete selection je w e lr y : A frican and M e x ic a n im ports. 4612 South Congre.-s. 444 3814. In d ia n L E A R N to p 'a y G U IT A R , beginner, advanced. D re w Thom ason. 478-7511. 178-2079. SKYDIVE Austin Parachute Center For further information after 9 p.m. CALL 477-2416 tim e guarantee. W o n ’t rust or S A P P H I R E C H R O M A T n a il file. T T T I se it's effiency. $> 50 postpaid Httie.v, Box 17234, D a lla s. T ex as 75217. P A R K I N G B Y S E M E S T E R $.50 2418 San Antonio, one blot k from Cam pus PARKING $28 SEM ESTER UNIVERSITY Y 2 b!ocks from Campus 472-9246. N O L E A S E I L I end 2 bedroom, furnished or H jrn ish ed . C arp et, air, G .E . d'shwath- range, ba.cony, er, disposal pool. 2 bocks from Reagan H ig h . Tappan 453-7608. THE OUTDOOR STORE F o r S a l e 1608 Lavaca Now Open CAM PING SUPPLIES A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . a i b d spots , Frost ? paul, ca b 's TV, ri •t- v a r '“ free re*' d e b to r, pot and c .b ream, 2 * .-dr!#*. Large I fl-d 2 bedroom apartments, A r r ' ad and ,n{ m'shed. 3 floor pans, 4 c o l o r schemes. 1616 Rey a' C rest 444-663 I. TO W N H O U SE LIVING AT ITS VERY BEST! French Colony Leasing Now tor Fall Spacious comfortable living In these oversized studio apts., lovely furnishings! 2 BR— I IOO SQ. FT. FROM $175 I BR — 850 SQ. FT. FROM $140 Luxury Extras Include Free TV Cable, D^hwa'hers, Disposal 5BOA Grover St. 451 2465; 453 7595 v ice N e a r C am pus W e L U X U R Y A P A R T M E N T S M a id ser­ find room m ate for you. M a y fa ir A partm ents, 1906 P e a rl. ra n AVAILABLE FOR FA! L I Bedrooms & 2 Bedrooms Summ t — 1008 W . 7: ? — 4 ? 55?2 Voyageurs — 311 E. 3 U t — 478 6776 La C a la d e - 130? 'N. 24‘ h -- 472 1098 VE AT THE FINEST____ ECONO M ICALLY THE CHAPPARAL APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Sc BEDROOMS ONLY FOR I TO 4 CONVENIENT T O CAM PU S 3 STORY W, ELEVATOR FIREPROOF CONSTRUCTION MAID SERVICE AMPLE M Lt POOL • • CENTRAL HEAT & AIR # AMP! F P A R R I N O • NO INCREASE IN RENTALS APAR i M ENT FOR 4; $65.00 PERSON MO. A PA RT M EN T FOR ?: $82.00 'PERSON/ MO. BED RO O M FOR 2: $52.0C PERSON MO. Visit O u r M odel O r C a ll T o day GR 6-3467 M F . & M R S . B O S W E L L M A N A G E R ! L. T U R N E R , 2408 Leon FALL RATES $129.50 Large two bedroom near down- (own. SwimmAg pod, carpefed, a c, wood paneling. 442-3910 472-9147 LE FONT 2 nedroom, 2 hath apartm ent All bills paid, m aid service furnish! d. sw im ­ m ing pncd. study .-iud recreatio n room w ith ping pong bible, la a d ry facilities lh minutes w alk to m ain building. In d iv id u a l c ontract at $61 50/person. A Nic e P la c e T o L iv e . 472-64SO 803 VY. 28th C A M IN O REAL EL PATIO 2C 10 Salado IDEAL FOP STUDENTS 2 BED ROC M S 2 P A T H S PARTIES A ll utilities paid — cable, furnished. Shuttle B u s stop, se cu rity guard on rooms. 2 pools, grounds. 3 dishw asher, disposal, w a lk in closets, eoyered parking a va ilab le. 476-4095. lau n d ry 2 couples needed to w o rk part tim * In a residen tial setting utilizing an Inter­ d isc ip lin a ry approach w ith 8 adolescent boys Room and board provided while on duty. Position requires I day and I night a w eek and 3 week ends per month riiI- plus tips A p p ly in person, 8102 So Oh Congress or eal^ 282-9192. F E M A L E 2-6 D A I L Y tex pick up first L ive if preferred C a ll 12-1 at 471-7324. g rad e child and help until 6 It: W A I T E R S W A N T E D , g raduate students p referred $3-$4 per hour. Ex p e rie n ce in person. Polonaise required. A pply R estau ran t. W estgate Building. R E A D E R S N E E D E D student, ( ’all 454-2753. for blind Law' MODELS W ANTED For o t c * v on ai p hotographic work Sr - . d be attractive, but experience not r»o . '*d . CA I 472-1832 from 9 to 5. needed T E N M E N and S atu rd ays. Sharp ap pearance and ca r ne cessary. A pply Jo e Norwood, ®x U T football p layer, at 700 R io G ra n d 1-, 2 pm d aily. In person evenings to A ll b, s p a d , A r r i rd , ca/rh, dish­ i afte r 6 G I. 4 2067. washer, disposal, r - - rn UT B ,s Line. W A T P IR B F l ’ W IT H m a n y accessories C a ll 414-7126. 476-3720. S e r v i c e s C LO SE CAMPUS PARKING i N e m ink. 1930 San d'f. $45 res walk. Brand rev/ enclosed Lard-' .rfaced lot. Antonio. Only 43 spaces. Get them wh d trey per semester. Call Jim Turner, 477-5777. Page £ Thursday, August 26, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN! W EHEEESnM G R A D U A T E t r a n s la te S T U D E N T needed e c o n o m ic stu d y lo from E n g lish to Spat 476-7514. TYPIST Full Pm a —— Night Wcr< - 6C W PM -— Fr day & Sa turd ay n"gig f r fOTT -- A Fermanen’ job — Va Insura n c e cation, Ret rernent & Do eof app y unless ou can nnee the aoc v e c.ondifions Cor 'act Arf Rinn Phone 453-65' 3 Day 471-5887 Night R o o m & B o a r d F A L L V A C A N C IE S for girls at R a m s ­ coed Co-op, 7l(t W e st 21 s t. a r m d t • at ( 'er.tt horn 478-6586 A N D R O O M students 20 m eals per w e <>k B O A R D . U n ive rs ity Fre e lau n d ry facilities, m aid • or parking, vice, sw im m ing pool. a o. Phone 477-j 9766 or \ isit 270f, Nuei es. horn. W A N T E D . G I R L student live in in ex henge for babysitting and light housekeeping Need own transportation 327 1875. I;, urn pros dud to A N D R O O M B O A R D . students 20 m eals p er week U n ive rs ity Fre e parking, la indry facilitie s m aid ser vice , sw im m ing pool, a r. Long session rates from $! 060. Ph o ne 172-7850 or v is it 2700 N tier‘es. DEUTSCHES HAUS FALL CONTRACTS Do you want tx ' ■— .© y-> r German wk q * - ny -q cr ■ ", C'-id food M ien? $105-$I IO/ c-n ve n e n t a/c, m o n ". C e 4 7-P86S cr come by 2 'O I N u * ce : H EBREW HOUSE CO-OP a rn o u rc ® ., $ ! I S/ m 0 - tr-. ro-m arri h'o ad . Kosher meals, umq ,e env r01— n r 1. r c » - iq s , fail I' 6 W-v.l A er u# 477-0151 T u t o r i n g S A I M O N E Y ' . F u lly equipped' tx p. ty. n'-ng mndlng - A il te'rm dissertations C ity w id e s. 4.0 41,9, 6 n rn -midnight any s Just N orth of 27th & Guadalupe Am « " i r i n g M u lti!, thing. B in d in g M P A / The C jmplete Professional f u l l -t im e fc l y p m g S e r v i c e L l Y ; 1. r : I'm vers Special k. board eQulpm science, and engine " f language ng theses and dissertation*. * Phox.e G R 2-3210 and G R 2-76T7 2717 H e m p h ill P a r k EXPERIENCED ' ‘o rt.u h .na, et,- TYPIST? The« I j - 5 . x . c u ». ( barton* Stark, 4,’ 1-5218. W (T O I.S T Y PIN . I ' S E R V I C E ! N , “ '. ’ s‘ G a w , T h e s is . M r s . W oe LAURA b o d o u r 478-81 13 ( C e r e to U T.) I - , ■ nest r typing e f your Un /ars 1 *y work. T M A O' * e r r ret *j A hir.g & binding. T ,h 'l l m . R K P O R T S ! le ctu re T R e as 'n able. Mrs. F ra s e r. 476-131 • AI I B O N R I 111 IO N SeleTtoie in " n 1 ght O u t by - 478-0753 a n y t im e M A R J O R I E A D E L A F I E L D - No ti typing service. R eports a M a ste r Charges honored 442 7008. R arikA m erlcar'd Just North of 27th & Guadaltup# • T y p in g . M u ltilith in g . B in d in g M B A 0 The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service tailored to the needs o f U n iv e r s it y lan gu o r*01* 1 k° vboar'1 equipment for science, and engineer­ language L G ing theses a n d dissertation*. e n K in e * ^ Ph o n o G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 Hemphill T a rk L E A R N to p lay G U IT A R , beginner. adxanced. D re w Thomason, 478-7331. 478-2079. ; 1 sl B E A U T I F U L T Y P I N G . " h r ie f^ dissertations. Spec ial type for language M rs ’nj,ulcering, m icn< r, Anthony 4,54-8079. T U T O R IN G B Y Hum anities, business 451 4557 g rad uate student.. R o o m m a t e s W A N T E D : F E M A L E room ates with ap artm ent on Shuttle Route. G all Elizab eth, 453 4048 or 476 7561 M A L K N E E D S room m ate Contact at 2017 Bluebonnet or t it 340j M A L K . F E VI A E K share two bedroom, two bath ap artm ent. All conveniences Le Font, 803 W . 28th, 472-6480 N E E D E D ; Q U I E T to sh are m odem suburban home South Austin. Own room $44 plus hills. M i Light.sey. 441.5368. No deposit or lease. Pe ts w elcom e. fem ale lib e ra l R O O M VI A T E N E E D E D to share mobile homo A C, furnished T w o bedroom. R ills paid, $70. Inform ation. 385-2006 M A L E . Q U I E T g iad u ate or to share ap artm ent near Cam pus. $77.50 plus e le c tricity. 478-7832 477-5282 up p erclassm an room m ate. fourth fem ale T H R E E G I R L ? need two bedroom Beau tifu l ap artm ent near Cam pus. $.50 month plus electricity. Room m ates a r r Junior nursing, sophomore jou rnalism , senior biology' students. 478-0296. M K . ! V m J 'L T S T Y P I N G B e r v ie * - P a * P Kast anrl nr' r i ir f't*. 412 5693 V I jz 5 J A ’ L Y S C H N E I D E R T Y P I N G dp’. .7 .Ll and Un- f l t t g r." I Hate typing, printing, binding. ’ K-trniK TAmo. io le p h n n e ; 465-7205 : '-I aquate , R S F RVT G D . B v it E . I 4 L t'A F 1 E L 9, T h eses. d is s e rta tio n * HCp2-7184 M im P0 K raP hl'1K- Reasonable'. T Y P I N G E X P E R T rp . T h e s e s . S * ! k 1V P I S r. I R M briefs. B C. S r lo r t r lc . re p o ts . b r a R O Y W . H O LLE Y 476-3018 T Y P E S E T T I N G , T Y P I N G , P R I N T I N G . B I N D I N G Just North of 27th & Guadalup# E N J O Y T H E B E N E F I T S of working w h en you w a n t to, m anaging your own business and unlim ited profits. B e a S ales m an ! 928-0073. I H A V E AN ap artm e n t and need a fem ale room m ate to help share ex penses. If you are Interested, call C in ­ dy H erring A C 211 769-3920 M B A T y p in g . M u ltilith in g . B in d in g Toe Complete Professional IN S T R U C T O R S W A N T E D , p a rt tim e — evening w ork. F o r m a l training, ex r \ i • > I I I I Cl I cedent pay A pply 2 pm-8 pm. A rthur n I I ti 11 I JI I ^ , ‘ t t ' i a . \ , i i : i i 2 I f '/ t ’;rn roommates n ■■* led to snare . . , . 3 bed mom ho .se with FU LL-T IM E Typing Service s l'd e a20l-Aan re StUdi0' 4501 0,1'ldalupe I 3rd y*-r L e v S' .dent (m a le ). 5 rn n Re? drive from (J E. corner U T. Pri/ate b ed ­ W A I T R E S S W A N T E D for country club. M u st be 21 y e a rs of age. No ex­ p erience necessary. C a ll 264-1966. room, o ffice far ties, central A / C carpet, etc $75 p®r month, all bills : D R I V E R W A N T E D 40 m inutes each P ai«L 465-6594 week day to tran spo rt first g rader I -------- __________ _ I to d ay care .m u st have c a r Texas F E M A L E . C O N T A C T K a re n Johnson at 7.584 C h evy < ’base. 101 a fte r 5 or cad ■f p n s e references insurance, , E ve n in g s : 442-5859. , 836-4870. ext. 43. l l 30-12 30 to tailored ‘ he needs of University students S p e cial keyboard equlpmen ,langtlaKf'L science, and engineer mg theses and dissertations. Ph o ne G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k S M A L L W O O D T Y P I N G — 892-0727 5001 Sunset T ra il, off Ben W hite, 4600 L a st south L a m a i O vern ig h t m inute themes, dissertations, theses. typing Child Abuse Rate Up; Doctors Ask Change (c) 1971 New York Times News Service NEW YORK — The scream s carry beyond locked doors and closed windows, but to the doc­ tors who deal with battered children, the sound isn’t carrying far enough. The incidence of reported child abuse in New York City went up 549 percent between 1966 and 1970 and rose again in the first six months this year. law requiring PART OF THE increase can be attributed to a 1969 New York State doctors, nurses, hospital and social se r­ vice personnel and school of­ ficials, am ong others, to report cases of child abase and neglect. the soaring statistics as sym ptom atic of the tim es and a result of the American belief that physical force is a legitim ate procedure in child rearing. experts sam e But see in “ One or two children are being killed at the hands of their own parents thus country every day,’’ said Dr. Vincent J. Fon­ tana, chairm an of the city’s task force for child abuse and neglect. He term ed “ conservative” figures indicating that 50 children in the city died each of as m altreatm ent. quoted w hat he result year a “ These ranging children are beaten with instrum ents from m ere fists to baseball b ats,” he said. “ O thers are being burned over open flam es, gas burner and cigarette are strangled; others a re suffocated with pillow’s or plastic bags, and some are being drowned.” lighters; some in THERE ARE no accurate figures available on the num ber of children physically, sexually and em otionally abused this country each year, but estim ates range upward from 500.000 Dr. of Brandeis David G. GU University, two-year a after analysis of about 13,000 child- beating reports in the 50 states, estim ates th at as m any as 2.5 million children are physically abased each year. His definition, however, includes all w hether minor or serioas. What can be done to solve, or at least alleviate, the problem? GU, impatient of what he calls s h o r t - term “ B a n d - A i d ” advocates a p r o c e d u r e s , the “ revolutionary change” in value system the th at permits striking of children. “ If we w ant to do away with the phenomenon, we must do away with the structural causes,” he be s a t i s f i e d with symptomatic treatm ent.” shouldn’t said. “ We Gil’s first priority would he outlawing the use of any physical force on children “ in the public domain.” At present, he said, only two states. New Jersey and Maryland, have such laws. “ There should be laws against corporal punishm ent in schools, juvenile courts and child-care facilities," he said. “ I personally law should apply feel to homes, too, b ut I'm not naive enough to believe that could be enforced.” the Gil, a professor of social policy, has found th at “ American culture in subtle wavs encourages the certain measure of use of a rearing in p h y si c a I children." force A PUBLIC opinion poll taken by the National Opinion Research at reinforced the University of Center this belief. Chicago Americans in general were said to have a “ culturally determined pe r rn i 8 s i v e attitu d e” toward corporal punishment. “ Rarely, is corporal if ever, punishment adm inistered for the benefit of the attacked child,” Gil said. the needs of the attacking adult who is seeking from his un­ relief controllable anger and stress.” “ Usually, serves it Gil’s second suggested solution w as “ doing away with poverty,” a recommendation which would, he said, m eet with “ considerable opposition,’* sweeping By JAN JARBOE News Assistant Bicycle freaks m ay be feeling the stress of bureaucratic red tape when they try to register their pollution-free, easy-to-park method of transportation. City officials have few bicycle licenses left, and a spokesman Nude Bather Case Dropped by Court Tho case of Mary Catherine Tingle, 22, charged with disor­ result of derly conduct as a bathing the nude, has been in dismissed by Precinct 4 J astite of the Peace Vernon Pfluger. Mrs Tingle w as arrested Aug. I and accused of “ creating or calculating to cre ate” a d istu r­ bance when she went swimming just in off “ Hippy Hollow” Commanehe T rail at the nor­ theast end of Lake Travis. In dropping charges, Pfluger said tho State failed to prove its claim , adding the state the ha*! no law nudity alone. to prosecute for C o n s t a b l e Eugene Collier testified Mrs. Tingle's arrest cam e after he had witnessed her floating upon a raft nude. Pfluger said the scene could not have been observed unless a spectator purposefully sought it out. Mrs. Tingle s a rrest followed several com plaints voiced by “ Windy “ Hippy Hollow” P oint” residents throughout the sum m er that bath ers in the area disturbance were treatin g and a Dobie to Show Autos, Bikes An estim ated 40 custom- m ade cars and bicycles will the be parked Saturday in Dobie Center m all and g arage when the Dobie C e n t e r M e r c h a n t s Association sponsors a free ca r and bike show. entries M embers of the River City Rods Club and the Sports Car Club of Am erica are to contribute the show which will be held from to 8 p.m. Any l l a.m. prospective entrant may contact Doug Crossland at 472-9293. in is invited The public to vote on their favorite vehicle, and the top five winners are to receive trophies. All en­ tries are to receive a free dinner at The Place. said for F ire Station No. 3 Wednesday “ it will be the middle of September before we get some m ore licenses.” This station is a t 201 W. 30th St. The Austin City Code declares bicycle registration m andatory and sets a $50 fine which can be levied to enforce the policy. However, the clause is rarely enforced. The general consensus of some officers seem s to be it is hard to fine youngsters for unregistered bikes. is Bicycle en­ registration couraged because in case of theft is an outlet for recovery of it the bike since a perm anent record is kept. Registration stations a i cam pus m ay the be U niversity constructed, b ut this has not been confirmed, U niversity Police Chief Donald Cannon said. University registration constructed, a re s t a t i o n s U n i v e r s i t y security would register bikes for the City. I f The m assive increase laid In the for stricter policy cam pus bicycles on groundw’ork rules regarding their use: • Pedestrians have the right- of-way over bicyclists. Church Sees World's End 'Processeans' Startle New Yorkers with Costumes (c) 1971 New York Times News Service renowned CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — New for their Y orkers, ability to stare through almost anybody, have been doing double- takes on Fifth Avenue at young persons dressed in black or gray with the signs of Satan on the points of their collars. The visitors, who drive in from Cambridge, also w ear crosses at their necks, but the red three-horned head of a goat th at holds the eye. is it “ Are you devil w orshipers?” ask less the curious. Others, curious than an g ry , make rude rem arks. The visitors do not worship Satan. They a re m em bers of the the Final Process Church of the in Judgm ent, and believe • Bicycles cannot be ridden and pedestrian walkways on sidewalks. • Bicyclists m ust comply with all stop signs, yield signs regulations, traffic and other although bicycles are allowed in either direction on Inner Campus Drive. • Bicyclists m ay be parked only in racks provided for th at purpose. presence of Satan—and Christ—in everyone. They also believe in a sense the end of the w’orld is near. THE 8-YEAR-OLD church, in London, which was founded claim s a lay following of several thousand. Passers-by who express i n t e r e s t , a re offered well produced, soft-cover books with titles such as type and large “ The U ltim ate Sin,” ($5) and “ Humanity’ is the Devil," ($2.50) The young persons live here in a is four headquarters Process centers—the others are in New Orleans, Chicago and Toronto. They hope to m ake New York the fifth. for one of three-storv house that . The Cambridge center is led F ath er Christian, whose by secular nam e is Jonathan De Peyer. The household includes his wife, five other Processeans of various rank (F a th er Christian is a “ m aster” ), three infants, two little boys and a shy German shepherd nam ed Beelzebub. The 2 5 - y e a r - o l d British clergyman obliged a reporter this weekend with an introduction to Process thought. “ Theology is based on the unity of Christ and S atan,” he said. “ They are two sides of one coin.” with Christ representing love, the the ultim ate good, and evil, TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 _ o \\! L sot u. to*. Natural food* i atopic $ 3U*taurartt love. Man, F ather absence of Christian said, m ust recognize the presence of both as forces that guide him. Although Processeans consider themselves Christian in that they they are followers of Christ, in differ from other Christians a number of w ays—chiefly, in speaking of the equality of the forces of Satan and Christ, as well as of Jehovah, a god they associate with self-discipline, and Lucifer, a god they associate with idealism indul­ gence.” “ gentle a n d THE CHURCH does not engage in black m agic or place nude a lta rs or practice women on associated with other rituals various satanic cults that have sprung country recently. this up In F ather Christian, who has blond shoulder-length hair, spoke gently, but with conviction and humor, about his church. these are “ We believe the latter days and that, something in future—we’re not rooting for a particular date—will be the end of the planet.” the near Drawing their conclusions from the Bible, Processeans believe “ Christ is once m ore walking the earth, not in the role of Saviour, but F ath e r Christian put it. God gave man free will, he said, and m an has m ade a m ess of things. judge,” as as T H E O R I G I N A L A M E R I C A N T O U R I N G C O M P A N Y P E R F O R M A N C E W - O F S E L E C T I O N S F R O M T H E ROC K O P E R A WAS A K N O CK O U T. A I N T E N S I T Y T H A T W I T H A O O R A M A . PA T H O S A V D D R IV IN G P I E R C E D TO T H E H E A R T ” G l o r i a D e n k o -A m a ril lo D a ily N e w * £ For Family Excitement Se# THE ORIGINAL AMERICAN TOURING COMPANY 8:30 P.M. AUGUST 27th FRIDAY Tickets at R A Y M O N D 'S D R U G S M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D and G IB S O N ’S Ben White Only) £ • ffiKnnDfSBtf 5134 BURNET RD. 454-6731 2234 G U A D A L U P E 476-3525 RENT COLOR TV TYPEWRITER PHONOS TUNERS RECORDERS PJS I TV'S TURNTABLE ADDERS FM RADIO SOUND ISYSTEM AMPLIFIERS SPEAKERS IBM ELECTRIC CALCULATOR Save 2 5 % rant by Samaster 'Cycle Rules Stiffened Freshman... W e welcome you to the University! W hile you're here come by and see us! Your STUDENT HOUSING Ads NOW in The DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED tv You W ill Be Am azed at the Quick, Fast Results For So Little Money! CALL 471-5244 You Get 15 Words For One Low Price! Insertions $A 15 I InsertionsS^ C O O For Only I For O nly I tm Jr Ttiimda* August *6, MSU TMS DAILY TfeKAN Rag* 9 I Rhodes Fund Sign-Up Open scholarships A p p l i c a t i o n s and in­ formation about Rhodes and Marshall for in study 1972-73 are available from Dean Jam es R. Roach in Main Building 203. in Great Britain scholarships are Rhodes awarded single men to between the ages of 18 and 24 and are for two or three years of study at Oxford University. A l t h o u g h juniors may apply, recipients of Rhodes almost scholarships always graduating seniors. a r e Marshall scholarships a re for men and women who will be under 26 on Oct. I, 1972, and who will have earned a degree from an American university by that date. The Marshall stipends provide for at least two years of study at any British university. is given Preference to those who will be unmarried during first year of study, but married students may apply. the Winners of Rhodes and Marshall scholarships who are called to military service may postpone their study abroad until released from duty. The upper age limit for applicants may also be relaxed in the case of can­ didates whose studies have been interrupted by military service. Completed scholarship a p p l i c a t i o n s must be returned to Roach by Oct. 6. Free Universities' on W ane Absence of Cohesion, Motivation Cited as Reasons (c) 1971 New York Times News Service the the In New York NEW YORK — It was ju st a that the “ free few y ears ago sw ept university’’ movement across the country after th e 1965 student uprising at Berkeley. Created by dissident students and faculty m em bers, free universities w ere intended often — but not alw ays — as counter­ cam puses to existing institutions. F re e U niversity of New York (FU N Y ) operated independently in a loft on 14th S treet. Others w ere m ore university - related s u c h cam puses a s Stanford and San Francisco S tate and in cities such as Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Austin, Chicago and Boulder, Colo. Their goal was a college experience nobody dictated a curriculum and w here all decisions would be m a d e by the m ajority in a participatory d e m o c r a c y . Free m e an t academ ically and politically free, while everybody was expected to In­ pay a structors generally were unpaid, their teaching a m atter of con­ science and devotion. fee of about $10. in which o n free AS COLLEGES prepared last it w as week for another term, c l e a r university th e movement was running o u t of steam . T he New York v en tu re had long since disappeared, along less vibrant efforts. with m any Others w ere down to a handful of students. Still others had evolved into other forms under official university auspices. To m any observers of the academ ic scene and the youth rebellion, a significant signal of the w ithering of the m ovem ent was the the rec en t closing of Midpeninsula F ree U niversity at Palo Alto, Calif. Once considered the m ovem ent's standard b e a re r the with 1,200 students in 1968, institution closed its doors last enrollm ent month w hen dwindled to 70. Its fate reflected p r o b l e m s those throughout the movement. typical of its Paul L au ter and F lorence Howe, authors of The Conspiracy the Young, who are sy m ­ of the free university pathetic movement liberalizing and influence on existing institutions, that have reported nevertheless “ only relatively few of the early its to f r e e universities Midpeninsula was one of sturdier rem nants. survived.” the THE PALO ALTO version was in 1966 by a group of founded Stanford University graduate students. Eventually it was joined by a student-run college within Stanford known as The Ex­ periment. One of the founders, Alan T ra iste r, said at the time conventional in s t u d e n t s educational “are not centers encouraged to think, nor are they afforded meaningful training to help critical the i s s u e s confronting mankind today.’’ T he new institution, he added, a vitalizing force in the community. to become u n d erstan d seeks The only plan was T here would be grades, that in anything would be taught in­ which th e re was sufficient no terest. prerequisites, no no exam inations, no formal lectures. But w hile th ere was agreement on w hat w as not wanted, there less certainty about what was w'as to b e the positive goal. Tile result w a s a smorgasbord of courses. Typical for the nationwide the Palo Alto m o v e m e n t , catalogue included a heavy dose of New L eft political offerings along w ith m uch that was either esoteric or, in contrast, almost vocational in nature. There were courses, for example, on guerilla w arfare, neo-colonialism, and the M arxist view of freedom. There were and photography and creative writing, on the history of m athem atical thought, and on Plato. But there were also offerings in such fields as Japanese pottery and bird­ watching. courses film on W h a t went wrong? The following are some factors: For for political instance, • Some of the problems were political. A substantial minority of the participants considered the venture not as an alternative to conventional education but as a in­ power base a surrection. radical group that called itself the Venceremos (“ we shall win") in seemed more the so­ forging alliances with called street people, the Black P anthers and the radical Peace and Freedom Party’ in creating a new form of higher learning. Increasingly, elections and decision-making becam e an exercise in radical efforts and dictation. interested than • As the political forces took in­ those who had been over, terested reform dropped out. This inevitably had academ ic in its effect on serious academ ics turned away. faculty, and the • Ironically, so did m any of the radicals. When they sensed the venture no longer appealed to sufficient num bers to be worth taking over, they lost interest. • As informal, unstructured counter-universities lacking cen­ tral purpose, tho free universities w ere largely exercises in dilet­ tantism . At their most serious, they differed little from well-run ex­ tra-curricular activities on the traditional cam puses. While the l a c k and direction at first m ay have ap- eventually peared utopian, turned lack of motivation into and cohesion. requirem ents of it the old Two student researchers from Williams College, who prepared a highly sym pathetic paper on the Palo Alto venture when it in 1969, was still going strong nevertheless observed it that looked more like a supplem ent the institution to creation of a new one. To prove their point, they said they had free a s k e d university they would do faced w’ith an either-or choice between M idpeninsula and Stanford. Virtually all opted for Stanford. Stanford-based students w hat than Minorities Relate Ethnic Studies Begin By RICHARD FINEGAN News Assistant The inter-relation of and political facto rs in the lives of chicanos and blacks in the U nited States is reflected in the U niversity’s Ethnic S tudies Program. economic social, Through an “ mterdLscplinary’’ approach to the subjects of Mexioan-American and Afro-American studies, th e program allows a student to gain a broader understanding of those minority groups. “ It’s difficult to talk about Mexican-American politics w ithout being keenly aw are that this is caused b y economic .situations,’’ said Jose Limon, assistant director of for Mexican- A merican Studies in Sid Richardson Hall. the Center Dr. G eneva Gay, acting chairm an of the Center for A fro-Am erican Studies in Je ster Center, ex­ th a t under an interdisciplinary program , plained courses are listed under their different disciplines, in A fro - or subjects. For example, a student American studies wanting a course in black politics might take Ciovernment 370K, Politics and Race. Both the Afro-American and Mexican-American studies centers provide their students with course listings from other departm ents which relate to ethnic studies. Tho University offers a bachelor of a rts degree in either .studies with concentration in ethnic chicano studies, black studies, or both. Students concentrating in Mexican-American studies are required to have a “ firm grounding'’ in one d isc ip le , Limon explained. These include such areas as history, sociology, anthropology and government. In addition, the students must take a “ core” of 12 hours of ethnic studies courses, Limon said. The Telephone Counseling and Referral Sendee has issued a list of the m ost sought a fte r answ ers on cam pus, hoping to help alleviate som e of the during problem s registration. students m ay encounter Most registration problem s can be solved by contacting the R e g istra r’s Office, 471-5321, or the Supervisor of Registration, 471-5865. If further help is needed, student advisers m ay be reached in the Dean of Student’s Office, Speech Building 114, List Issued To Solve Problems w here they will be on duty from 9 to 5 p.m. daily until Friday. Also, confusion has arisen over the $21 services fee appearing on registration bills. This is not to be mistaken for the optional blanket tax charge. The services fee covers buses, intram ural sports and the Student Health Center services. In addition to the student services fee, an op­ tional student activities fee, form erly known as the blanket ta*, m ay be purchased for $18.4(1. This fee was decreased from the previous $22.50 when the Board of Regents removed Texas Student Publications from student activities fee funds. For the m arried student, a spouse’s blanket tax m ay hp purchased for $23.50 a t the Gregory Gym ticket office and entitles the husband or wife to all blanket tax privileges. Blanket tax pictures will be taken in G regory Gym 200 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m ^ Monday through F riday, Aug. 30 to Sept. 17. Students m ay add and drop during the first four days of classes. After the fourth cla.ss day, students m ust have instructor, departm ent and dean to add a course and approval of adviser, departm ent and dean to drop a course. approval of Information concerning advanced placem ent tests the M easurem ent and can be obtained Evaluation Center, 471-3032. from Anyone losing an ID card m ay have a new one m ade for $1 at the B u rsa r’s Office Monday and Tuesday. Shuttle bus schedules m ay be picked up Monday at the Texas Union inform ation desk and a m ap of the various routes will also appear in Monday’s Texan. The swimming test for entering freshmen and transfer fem ales will continue to be given Thursday and F riday from 8 a.m . to noon and I to 5 p.m. in the Women’s Gym. Telephone num bers for U niversity dorms, offices and professors not listed in the telephone book m ay be obtained by calling University information, 471-3434. - I BACK the HUT PRESENTS LIVE ENTERTAINMENT THURS., FRI., SAT. N IG H TS COVER C H A R G E : PURCHASE OF O N E SM A LL PIZZA BACK of the PIZZA HUT 19th & Guadalupe 472-7511 STUDENTS! Here's the E A SY W a y to Order Your Own . . . 1972 CACTUS YEARBOOK STU DENT H EA LTH C EN TER 105 W . 26th Street ESTABLISHED I M A IN T A IN E D TO PROVIDE OPTIM UM H E A LT H FO R A L L STUDENTS F M K m i r i F C L r l L n U L n v l L J k* atten ded at any time. It you luitaln Injury or Sutter sudden illness requiring Immediate af- tention, rep o rt to the Health Center immediately or telephone 478-5711, the staff physician of your choice may ba made in person or by telephone P A I I T i y C A D D A I U T k J E M T C nUU I inc A l l VITI I ulCrl I v — 47l-3082. Clinic hours are 8:00 a.m. to 5:45 p.m. daily M onday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. on Saturdays. N o offica hours on Sundays or officiol staff holidays. E M E R G E N C Y P H O N E 478- 5711 APPOINTMENT PHONE 471-3082 Payment of your feet at registration entitles you to the following! 1. Medical services of staff physicians. 2. Routine medications and dressings. 3. Routine laboratory and physical therapy services. 4. Administrations of preparations prescribed by your personal physician. 5. Specialty care as deemed necessary by referral only and as authorized by the Health Center, but not including ca rt for chronic conditions, removal of tonsils, repair of chronic nasal conditions, etc. 6. Operating room service a n d anesthetic materials, for urgent surgery. 7. Room, board, and staff nursing service for: 14 days hospitalization in each Fall or Spring semester 8. Ambulance or car service to the Health Center when authorized by the Health Center. Certain other services available to you require minimal charges, lf you require any of the following, you will be charged for: 1. Diagnostic X-ray studies. 2. Services o f a surgeon, an anesthesiologist or special consultant. 3. Special nursing care, tissue examinations, special laboratory determinations, intravenous medication, blood transfusions, special drugs, orthopedic appliances and crutch rentals. 4. Prescriptions filled in the H e a lth Center Pharmacy. 5. Specialized diagnostic studies such as arteriograms, myelograms, mammograms, and electrocardiograms. 6. Pre-maritai examinations a n d food handlers’ certificates. 7. Room end board for hospitalization In excess of allowed days. Further details are published in Appendix C, General Information Bulletin. Your Health Center can provide the great majority of any required medical care. However, it is strongly urged that you avail yourself of adequate JteaMi Insurance to cover unexpected and unpredictable emergency situations. Ifs 11 kl 11 :e special ordering" a whole year's supply of memories in advance! The Cactus, The University of Texas at Austin yearbook, will contain reflections and highlights of all the big activities of the coming academic year . . . athletic events, Creek activities, special features, pictures of all your friends . . . and more ... much, much more! S IM P L Y FILL O U T THE O R D E R B L A N K BELOW, PLUS A C H E C K FO R $7.88 A N D M A IL IT T O D A Y ! O R D E R O N E N O W ! 9. Service o f the Mental H ealth Section* Texas Stu den t Publications, Inc. P. O. Box D Austin, Texas 78712 Enclosed is m y check for $7.88 (inclu. tax). Please enter m y subscription for eAC,H S 1972 Last First M id d le State ...................................... Z ip C o d a Name Austin Address ........... Home Address — Street. C ity ............ ........... C lassification ................ Fage IO Thursday August 26, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Industry Feels Pinch NY Girls All Hang Let (c) 1971 New York Times News Service NEW YORK - Is the girdle going the way of the whalebone corset? Or the push-up bra of the Forties? Or the waist-cincher of the Fifties? it’s obvious To New York girl watchers this hot summer, the girdle is losing its grip, and the though less future of the bra, precarious, is in doubt. “Let it all hang out” seems to be the philosophy of the blue jeans and miniskirt generation, even when what is revealed is 20 pounds overweight. the The older or more conservative woman of middle America hasn t j o i n e d back-to-nature liberation. But she’s moving out of zippered and boned garments into lightweight girdles that round, rather than flatten. comfortable, THE PROMISE of closer fitting fashions for fall and winter has sent a wave of optimism through the corset industry. If the shoe people have managed to bring back wedgies, perhaps the Fifties waisting is due for a revival. that then came pinch. First Tile industry has been feeling the the wakeless dress, the short skirt, reeling blow, and pantyhose. But spokesmen say the industry has bounced back with the resiliency of their new elastics. As women shed their shackles and corset departments began to shrink, girdle makers went back their designing boards and came up with new ideas. to Most of them have made up the slack by going into different garments: body stockings, body shirts and swimsuits and items such as the printed bra and bikini, which can be worn on the beach as well as under dresses. In addition, the girdle itself has been redesigned and a more realistic look at sizing has been I t’s taken by slowing up on the small size that industry. the wound up on the reduced table and concentrating on making the ample woman more comfortable. TODAY’S GIRDLE is an en tirely different garment than the iron maiden affair of 20 years ago, made of cotton or silk and paneled with heavy elastic. The discovery of lycra, an elasticized nylon, took pounds off it. Bones have virtually disappeared and so have a lot of zippers. Even in size XX (meaning extra, extra large), today’s most popular garm ent is the panty girdle with short legs and removable garters. fashion director of Van Rallte, a lingerie company that now also makes bras and girdles, has had a long career the corset business. Before her move to Van Rallte, she was at Warner’s, the corset and bra giant. M a r i o n Sherwood, in in the most remember when corsets “ I profitable w e r e department the store,” she I said in her office recently. “ We had only white, black and a pinkish color known as nude, and we stressed fit and function. A customer went to an expert corsetiere who had been to a training school and w'ore a tape m easure around her neck. A woman was encased in a zippered corset that went above the waist and a long-line bra that met it. The the figure. Everybody was pushing into and pointing whatever in fashion that year.” silhouette was themselves to remold idea was to “ EVEN IN the Fifties, the the Merry or waist-cincher Widow (a strapless, boned affair that come the waist) was necessary for Dior’s New Look or Anne Fogarty's paper-doll shirtwaists. At Warner’s, we used I to make special Merry Widows ; for Audrey Hepburn, who couldn’t have been thinner.” Miss the Sherwood psychology about the feminine body has changed drastically in the last decade. says IHE $ MINUGH SHOP JIH til JACINTO (Tivu turrut (uni) 474-5138 l l MUEHE! IF lEUCIOIt IFUClTEtSEI • ST YI I JIIIWICKS .. ONE UNITE 8th £ B ed B iv er W ed. JAM SESSION JIM MING • H ap p y H ou ri Daily Beer S I a Pitcher 4-8 • • N EV ER A C O V E R • REGISTRATION FOR FALL TERM Openings for 4 and 5 yr. olds NEW NURSERY i DAY CARE FACILITY • H A LF BLO C K F R O M UT. C A M P U S • BRIGHT N EW B U IL D IN G A N D P L A Y G R O U N D • ALL P R O F E S SIO N A L STAFF • H ALF O R FULL D AY • H O T L U N C H E S SERVED CONGREGATIONAL NURSERY A N D CHILD CARE CENTER 408 W. 23rd St. 472-2370 M rs Ji:r>y C ecil, D ir e c te P e > e n , 11 V i s i t s W e l c o m e d C A T H O L IC ST U D EN T CENTER 2010 University Avenue 476-735 Austin, Texas M A S S S C H E D U L E Sa tu rd a y .................. 7:00 p.m. S u n d a y .............. . 9, IO 4 11:15 a.m. I 1:20 a.m. in basement 5:30 p.m. Rev. W alte r Dalton, C.S.P. Rev. Edward Lundy, C.S.P. Rev. Charles Brunick, C.S.P. Rev. Arthur M ouser, C.S.P. Sr. A n n M cK e a n , C .S .A . M r. D avid Paredes D a ily .................... 12:05 and 5:05 C onfessions 4:30 p.m. M onday-Friday) M onday-Friday) N E W M A N C L U B meets every W e e nesday at 9:00 p.m. in the Lobby of the Student Center. IN Q U I R Y C L A S S begins W e d n e sd a y, Septem ber 8th, at 7:30 in the Student Center. P R E - C A N A Conference are held throughout the year. The first of the series will be Septem ber 21, 22, 23 at 7:30 in the basement of the Center. C O U N S E L I N G available by appointm ent or drop in basis. C R E D IT C O U R S E S offered by the C a th o lic Student Center are: Bible 304 Introduction to the N e w Testament, Fr. C h arle s Brunick, C.S.P. Bible 304 Introduction to the N ew Testament, Sr. A n n M c K e a n , C .S .A . Bible 305 Religion of the O ld Testament, Sr. Ann M cKean, C .S .A . Bible 3 I7 W M a rria ge 4 M orals, Fr. Edward Lundy, C.S.P. • Tonight Only (Juliet of (The Spirits by Federico Fellini Thurs., Aug. 26 ri K ’V LF V v , ' ' v % * * * - I f f P l r v v * «- ■ . ' ; . - , I l r ■ I * Nj ;.._ • v" .... BATTS AUD. 7:00 & 9:30 .75 T h e Da i l y T e x a n RESULTS YOU CAN ADVERTISE IS WORDS AT ONE LOW PRICE Runs IO Times for only $Q 15 Total Runs 20 Times for only $1 ROO I m f Total Thursday, August 26, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* (I F a s c i n a t in g W i n d o w W a s h e r Actually, it w asn't the w indow washer, Larry Johnson, who attracted the crowd below him while clim bing the H olly Su ga r Building C o lo ra d o Springs. W h a t app ears to be his audience was a host of people inspecting a new sh op p in g mall experiment. — U P I Telephoto. U N IV E R S IT Y O M B U D SM A N fa c u lty m e m b e rs o r S tu d e n t* a d n iiiii" itrn ti\« I n lv e rs lty w ith .luck p ro b le m * c o n ta c t sh o u ld I 0 S S tric k la n d , H oe ic B u ild in g < 'or. They may for identification by a person without a driver’s license. cards will l>e used contain To obtain an ID card, an ap- to the DPS plicant must go Driver s License Office, fill out an application form, present a b i rt h other documentary evidence of identity and be and dan* of birth fingerprinted and photographed, Temple said. certificate or There is no age limit for the holder of the carri, which will cost $5 and expire every four years. YOUR SENIOR RING •e rn rn • # Early Registration For LSAT Urged Candidates for the School of Law and most other American law schools should register soon to take the Law School Admission Test. The test will be given Oct. 16, Dee. IF, Feb. 12, April 8, and July 29. law Because many schools select their freshmen classes in the spring preceding entrance, candidates are advised to register for the October, December or February tests. Tile LSAT is a half-day test measuring academic and writing ability, An admissions application must also be completed. C re a te d by John Roberts Largest Selection Best Diamond Prices COM ING TO AUSTIN SEPTEMBER 9th JOHN DENVER • AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM S THURS., SEPT. 9 - 8 P.M. R E S E R V E D $450/ S350/S250 S E A T S Only AF: - 2706 Rio G ra n d * 2807 San Jacinto n Dobia Canter R A Y M O N D 'S D R U G R A Y M O N D 'S D R U G - R E C O R D T O W N — • - The 1st Austin Presentation from KRM H R A D IO Details — 103.7 — FM STEREO 2236 Guadalupe "N ext to Hemphill’! JA M PR O D U C T IO N SO U TH W EST C O N C E R T S present* THE H aven s C O N C E R T FRIDAY, SEPT. 3 - 8:00 P.M. SAN ANTONIO CIVIC AUDITORIUM ALL SEATS RESERVED $3.00 - $4.00 - $5.00 TICKETS N O W ON SALE AT DISCOUNT RECORDS • OAT WILLIES DISC RECORDS (Highland Mall) u c t e e PROUDLY PRESENTS.. WED., THUR., FRI., SAT. PRIDE *'The Best In Entertainment. . • At The Lowest Prices” Cover: $1.00 W ed & Thur $1.50 Fri & Sat BEER: $1.30 Pitcher $.30 Glass 23rd and Pearl Streets IN N E W H A R D IN GARAGE COMPLEX 477-6135 Quiroga Chooses Nots Over 'Horns B y B A N D Y H A R V E Y assistant Sports Editor sburgh Pirates for an estimated $20,000. No one is sure who I longhorn B aseball Coach Cliff Gustafson ace will to fireballer Burt Hooton on the mound next season. replace unveil .School, But it won’t be Roger Quiroga. Quiroga, all-state p i t c h i n g from Galveston Ball sensation High told The Texan Wednesday night he has accepted the a one-year contract with Washington Senators, nullifying a intent he signed with letter of the this sum mer. University earlier He is the second Steer diamond signee ’Horns. Houston R eagan shortstop Craig Reynolds signed with the Pitt­ reject the to team Quiroga, who signed with the american League last Thursday, said the Senators told him not to announce terms of the contract. But he said he believes he has a “better d eal’’ than Reynolds. The 0-2, 187-pound right-hander revealed he had a bonus for signing plus an incentive bonus should he advance from Class aa to aaa next season. also Quiroga, after registering at Galveston Junior College Tues­ day, the Senators will pay for his education. He will report at the beginning of spring training in 1972. said Gustafson who learned of the signing In a last Thursday telephone conversation with the noticeably h u r l e r , wasn’t disturbed with the situation. counting a l t h o u g h m ost Longhorn supporters w ere on Quiroga to fill in for Hooton, who joined the Chicago Cubs early this sum mer instead of finishing his eligibility at the University, G u s t a f s o n said he w asn’t depending on the freshman to be a mainstay “even though he m ay well have been. “ It does hurt.” Gustafson continued. “ But the those are breaks. When you go after that type of boy you lose som e of them. I'm sure it turned out well for him or he would have com e here.” Arter oerng selected rn me n m round of the major league draft in June. Quiroga said it would take “an awful lot of money for m e to forego an education." Quiroga, admitting the offer w as “substantial but not exactly said I wanted," what the Senators upped their bid “ four or five tim es” since first talking to him in June. They had until Monday, the day Quiroga w as to have entered the University, to sign him or he would have been frozen in school for three years. “They were getting worried,” Quiroga said. “ They were scared I wouldn’t sign before Monday. I guess if I had been sm art I could have held out longer.” 305 W . 19+h PRICES G O O D THURS, thru SAT H IG H L A N D M ALL Famous Brand WHITE BELL BOTTOM JEaNS Values to IO00 Red uce To SIZES 27-38 G u ys & G als KNIT SHIRTS Where Everybody Loves To Get “OUR PANTS'’ G uys & G als KNIT SHIRTS Values to 8.00 Reduced To LONG & SHORT SLEEVE * v t Famous Brand HOP SACK STRAIGHT LEG JEANS Reduced A 88 Reg. 8.50 HIGHLAND MALL ONLY BOYS JEANS rn 5.00 & up SIZES 2-16 Slim & Reg. Boys Shirts H O U S E O F J E A N S B O O T E R Y BRING IN THIS COUPON A N D REGISTER FOR FREE WATER BED TO BE GIVEN A W A Y SEPTEMBER 17, 1971 N A M E .................... A D D R E S S ................................... P H O N E ...................... ST O R E H O U R S HOUSE OF JEANS BOOTERY Mon. • Fri. IO • 8:45 - Sat. 10 • 6:45 HIGHLAND MALL Mon.-Sat. 10:30-9:00 and up Huge Selection BAN KAM EBICABU v/e(cme fiedT Peg© 12 Thursday, August 26, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN t STUDENT “a Discount Card spps Joe Phillips Wishbone Incident F The best of m em ories a re soft and sw eet, of tim es of leisure, love and delight. Y et, som e m em o ries scratch the soul like broken glass ra th e r than sooth like velvet, and recall tim es of pain, d ish earten m en t and d efeat. The w orst of these pains is inevitably associated w ith love, but p rid e is not fa r behind. And pride w as the ta rg e t W ednesday night as m em o ries of J a n . I, 1971, brought back all the pain of sh attere d illusions. The stim ulus for the m em o ry was television, ABC’s "T h e W ishbone In c id e n t.” And the m em ory itself w as the Cotton and, Bowl—an event of crowds, color, "T e x a s F ig h t in 1971 at le a st, defeat for the T exas Longhorns. I had forgotten the m ost painful d etails of the g am e— .Steve W orster displaying the g race and sure-handedness of an infant learning to feed him self . . . E ddie Phillips hobbling in a daze to the sidelines a fte r a fourth q u a rte r collision w ith a N otre D am e linem an . . . and the ch eers and yells of the Irish in the post-gam e locker room bro ad ­ cast. DKR: 'Be Gentlemen' The film begins with stra in s of "T he E yes of T e x a s” and ends w ith a sober D arrell Royal extolling his sullen and sulking g ian ts to "be gentlem en about it.” These clips a re n t p a rtic u la rly painful. B ut the rest of the film m o re than m ak es up for these fleeting m om ents of pride. T h e re ’s a scene of N otre D am e's A ll-A m erica end T om Gatewood using w a te r glasses like pieces of a chess set a s he explains I he T ex a s secondary . . . and then m ore scenes of Gatewood as he deftly proves th a t he eith er u n d erestim ated his own talen ts o r o v erestim a te d those of the ’Horn defensive backs. the problem s of outw itting T h e re ’s a clip of Royal poetically com paring the W ishbone offense to top vintage (“ I t ’s just like th at good wine; it takes tim e ’’), and then discovering th at som ehow it tu rn ed as sour as cheap vinegar. And then th ere s the gam e. T exas scoring on a field goal shortly a fte r Phillips opened the g am e with a 62-vard scam p er. N otre D am e re ta lia tin g w ith a touchdown p a ss from Joe T heism ann to Gatewood. T e x a s ’ Danny l a s t e r fum bling the kickoff and the Irish quickly increasing the difference to 14-3. A nother touchdown by N otre Dam e, and the Irish sta y in a sem in ary the night before the g am e seem ed to be reaping dividends. 'Horns Com e Back Then, T exas com ing back with the poise of a squad w hich hadn t taste d defeat in the previous 30 gam es and scoring a touchdown on a long, m ethodical drive. The two-point conversion and the gam e rem aining w ithin reach, 21-11. An Irish field goal in the closing m in u tes of the first half dam pening ’Horn spirits, but victory still possible as N otre D am e leads 24-11 at the interm ission. T here a re scenes of a half-tim e pep talk in the T ex as locker room as Royal exhorts the defense to “ stop th e m ” or the offense will have no chance of ca tc h in g up. And then the fru stratio n of the second half follows as the Horn defense faithfully c a rrie s out in­ structions while the offense continually and seem ingly habitually fum bles aw ay ev e ry choice. the coach s The end for the ’Horns actually p re ced e s the last gun by sev eral m inutes when P hillips a tte m p ts another of ihe q u a rte rb a c k c a rrie s w hich plagued the Irish throughout the afternoon. Instead of a long gain, how ever, the p lay stops ab ru p tly when Phillips sm ashes into a N otre D am e linem an and suffers a m inor concussion. And, as the ABC co m m en tato r concludes. “ The T exas attac k , without Eddie Phillips, is a study in futility.” Take away the racing stripes, radial tires and racing wheel and what’s left? Electronic fuel injection Fully synchronized transmission Four-speed stick shift Front-wheel disc brake* Torsion bar suspension A ir-co o le d rear-mounted engine Double-|Otnted rear axle Two trunks (front & rear) Four seats (buckets up front) end about 26 miles to a gallon of aas The V ofcsw ogen Type 3 (A third kind o f car) *CB" SMITH VOLKSWAGEN ® Comer of Fifth and Lamar Aurtm, Turn 476-91 SI W D m Km i VW Dh W ©euTMont/t^ et ak e LO NG & SHORT SLEEVE To SIZ E S W- ' * * • ? 9 k R f f 4 | 9» ir« I i i i t n m * * r© « * t iM M R i I Spitz Shatters World Record Santa Clara Star T a k e s A A U Honors HOUSTON (AP) — Mark Spitz of Santa Clara, Calif., set a world the .•(•cord of 55.01 seconds in icn’s 100-meter butterfly Wed­ final qualifying the National AAU nesday *n heat Swimming Championships. of Spitz owns listed world the record of 55.6 set in 1968 at I/rng Beach, Calif. ‘I just felt great coming into this meet, that’s all I can say,” Spitz said. SPITZ* CLOSEST rival was ■ he y Hall, swimming for Phillips 66. Hall was timed at 56.31. Spitz’ mark came after world holder Susie Atwood, record record holder Debbie iormer Meyer record and American holder Mike Stamm were pushed to limit before making Wednesday night’s finals. the to clocking Hans Fassnacht of West Ger- nany thrilled the crowd with a 1 : 0 4 .8 2 5 lead qualifiers into the finals of the men’s 400-meter freestyle. The world record is 4:02.6 by Gunner arson of Sweden. American , (“cord holder John Kinsella of j/is Angeles was in qualifying at 4:07.025. MISS ATWOOD, the world record holder in Hie women's 200- meter backstroke, had only the fourth best time of 2:27.293 in the morning qualifying heats at t Glenbrook Park pool. third Donna Marie Gurr drew the f a v o r e d No. 4 lane after leading a ll qualifiers with a 2:25.445 docking. Miss Atwood’s world record Is 2:21.5, set in 1969 at Louisville. a t 2:06.1, Stamm, the American record the men's 200-meter holder in barely backstroke qualified for the final with a ' 11.440. Charles Champbell of Pasadena, Calif., was the leading qualifier with a 2:08.009. No Changes: By ROT MARK Assistant Sports Editor Noncontact drills are a drag. On a late summer afternoon they are even worse. After watching endless running, passing and blocking drills the eyes get bleary get see waiting to knocked down or maybe even bloodied a little. somone B u t these practices are necessary to get into the proper physical shape and after three days of conditioning Darrell Royal’s Longhorns will don pads Thursday and start knocking each other around. ticularly how the “ super sophs” will perform. “ It’s hard to evaluate a team they’re not hitting but when tomorrow (Thursday) we ought to be able to tell a lot more. Even then we won’t know a whole lot about this team until the real along—an test actual gam e,” 'Horn head coach commented as he and his staff prepared to attend a party a t Stephen University Spurr’s home. Spurr and Chan­ cellor Charles LeMalstre attended t h e Wednesday afternoon workout. comes the President “THESE BOYS have excellent morale and attitude and are willing to m ake the sacrifices to build team, a real workman’s they have a attitude,” Royal said. championship Three days of practice have done little to show Royal how this squad compares last year's SWC champs and par­ to T H E session PRACTICE Wednesday was routine. No one quit, was injured or failed to show up. “ It was just a routine session, and we decided to let the boys go a little early because they had worked hard and it was pretty hot out there today,” Royal said. The team worked on all phases ARMY RESERVE & N A T I GUARD The 4 I6 2 D -U S A R School can help you earn advancement and maintain active status. Football Drills Prove Little, Longhorns to Begin Contact of the game and Royal said no player looked especially good nor did anyone look particularly bad. Ray Dowdy, a senior defensive tackle, was criticized by Royal earlier in the week because of his lack of conditioning, but Wednesday Royal said Dowdy was coming along .real well.” . T H E situation INJURY remained the same with senior and safety Tommy Woodard end David senior defensive Arledge still out. Woodard is suffering from a back injury and Arledge is attempting to come back from knee surgery. Sophomore Tom Landry was moved to Woodard’s spot and sophomore Craig Arledge has stepped in to replace his older brother. The ’Horns will work out Thursday morning in shoulder pads and contact drills will begin in the afternoon. £pKSMMNK;f I Middle Earth J Bad Trip Conter p.m. - 3 a.m. Sunday through Thursday 8 p.m . - 5 a.m. Friday and Saturday Mobile Units 472-9246 2330 Guadalupe No Names, No Hassle. 5 I a I I ; ’Cinniirainifwffi” •'in!':;* Shoe Shop Vc make and repair beth and limes * SALE * SHEEP SKIN RUGS M a n y Beautiful Colors ★ LE A T H E R SA LE ★ Vat toes kinds, colors — 50c per too* Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 1614 Lavaca 478-9309 ALPINE RENTALS 204 E. 53rd 4 5 2 -.9 2 6 A P P L IA N C E R E N T A L S A representative will be at The R O T O BU ILD IN G A U G U S T 25, 26, Sc 27 to greet you and assist you with any military problem. • K eg Beer Cooler* • Range* • A ir Conditioner* • Dorm Size Refrigerator* • Com bination Electric Range* & Refrigerators • B / W & C o lo r T.V. • All N E W Equipment Rent Daily • Wkly - Mthly • Wa maintain all unit* AN ECOLOGY CLEAN-UP DIVE WILL BE HELD SATURDAY, AUGUST 28,1971 TIME: I P.M. ■■ 5 P.M. At: W in dy Point on Lake Travis (off Comanche Trail) ALL CERTIFIED SCUBA DIVERS W ELCOME Thursday Special Chop Sirloin •J 09 served with salad, baked potato# and texas toast Bonanza Sirloin Pit S P O N S O R E D BY U N IV E R S IT Y U N D E R W A T E R S O C IE T Y A N D E C O L O G Y A C T IO N 2815 Guadalupe 478-3560 th* Southern M ethodist’s Julian Glosson, Southwest C onference's first black football coach, watches a Mustang player during a dummy drill. First Black Coach — U F I T e le p h o to . Astros Fall to St. Louis, 4-1 A T T E N T I O N HOUSTON (AP) — Joe Torre banged out three straight hits and Ted Simmons slammed a two-run homer Thursday night as the St. I/yuis Cardinals beat the Houston Astros 4-1 for Steve Carlton’s seventeenth victory. to Torre had a walk to go with a double, single and triple as he raised his league leading batting average .360. The Cardinal veteriui knocked a eross two runs with his double in tile third. It followed hits by Carlton and Ted Sizemore and gave St. Louis an early lead against young Ron Cook, 0-3. Houston’s only run came off Doug Rader's twelfth homer iii the fourth inning. Rader, the Astros’ leading power hitter, had two hits in four at-bats. Bob Watson also went two for four as the Astros totaled only seven hits. Cook gave up only six hits and two runs during the seven innings he pitched, but reliefer George Culver was tagged for two runs in the eighth. J Middle Earth j B § Aid for Bad Trips 9 p.m. - 3 a.m. Sunday through Thursday 8 p.m. • 5 a.m. Friday and Saturday University “Y” No names, no hassle Mobile units available 472-9216 | ^ ; liuinniiiBintfliiiutiiiiMuinimimmGHnitnat^iniiniifPiiaBRtmntniiiiisM Carlton, a lefthander who lost 20 games last year, is headed for a complete reversal of form this season, with a 17-7 record. He went the distance against Houston, striking out five and walking three, and he also con­ tributed a base hit. S t. Lolita H oulton 002 WW WSO— I 9 (I IOO OOO—l 7 0 OOO C arlton and Sim m ons: Cook, C ulver CS) and H iatt. W—C arlton, 17-7. L— Cook 0—3. H R s—St. Louis, Sim m ons (4). Houston, R a d e r (12). K O T A L L , S E N IO R R IN G S N E E D B E A L I K E Baseball Standings ladelph ltrv a l W .-st W ednesday’* R esults lls 4, Houston I irrh 13. At a o g o 7, P h i l a d e l p h i a 0 T hursday’s C a m e s G am es Scheduled. AMERICAN* L E A G l R K a-t W. L . ........ is 45 ......................69 59 .................. 07 62 BAlUtnort I v t r .It Boston N ew Y ork W ash Inst. >n Cleveland Oakland K a n sa s C ity c h .a j f o . . . . . 04 . . . . 53 50 W est h2 . . . . 97 OD (it ret. GB - .031 .539 ll .519 14 ,490 17 .421 26 .391 3 0 4 - .641 .52S 14l a .464 20 .473 2144 .449 24C. .429 27 M ilw aukee .......... 54 W ednesday’* R esult* B a ltim o re 0. Chicago 3 H am is City 7, Boston 5 M ilwaukee IO. Cleveland t Tattrolt 6. M innesota 2 Mew Y ork at O akland, night T h u rsd ay’* (la m e * M ilw aukee, I^irkwood C leveland, L im o (6-11). N (8-1) Bt. ton. C Up (13-12) a t K a m a s City, W right (3-5). N Chicago, Wood (17-9) a t BalUmore, P a lm e r (10-6). N W ashington, Bosnian (1-18) a t Cali­ fornia, M urphy (6-13), N Only g am es scheduled Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service S E R V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N V E H IC L E S IS O U R S P E C IA L T Y Th* O nly Independent V W G a rage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET R O A D Across from G u lf M art G L 2-0205 CLOSED SATURDAY U se Texan Ciassifieds There’s more than one way to do a UT senior ring. At Z&les you get a custom job of your own design, choice of style, stone and engraving in 14 karat gold. STUDENT ACCOUNTS INVITED ZALESJiWtMRt IO Vxz dont have to be b d l to be h ip p y IW O DIFFERENT TRIPS from the MUSIC PEOPLE Rock 'n Roll with TEN YEARS AFTER Country Folk from KRISTOFFERSON NON-TRANSFERABLE 1971-1972 Season/Activity Fee JH-8.40 I •THD, KAREM RUTH ’ < 5 4 HA 0 0 6 0 I Columbia Distributed by Columbia Records LIST 55.98 N O W l i s c o u n t r e c o r d s ^ # 2310 Guadalupe 478-1674 LIST 54.98 NOW OPEN: Mon. - Thurs. 9:30-9:30 FrL & Sat. 9:30 to midnight LISTEN TO KTAP & K-98 FM ' KTAP OPEN 6 7 0 8:30, K-98 FROM 6 UNTIL 6. YOU SHOULD GIVE A LEESON.H (BLANKET TAX) 40 c „ • Home Football • Home Basketball • Cultural DISCOUNT • Away Football • special o t o Events Entertainment • Home Baseball • UIL Events • Texas Relays TOTAL VALUE $114.50 YOU SAVE $96.10 # N E W IN ST A N T DELIVERY. Photos taken in G re go ry G ym 200, 8-12 and 1-5. Monday through Friday, August 30 — September 17. # Pre-registered students may purchase the Activity Fee at the Bursar's Office, Main Building 8, 9-12 and 1-4, M onday through Friday, beginning September I. # Faculty, Staff and Spouse Activity Fees are available at the Athletic Ticket Office, Gregory Gym 115, 9-12 and 1-4, Monday through Friday. Thursday, Auflwt 26. 1971 THE D A IL Y T E X A N Pag* 13 C h am be r of C o m m e rce Image Phony Author 'Exposes California get together to escort him out of town, it should surprise no one, least of all the author. For what he is saying is that the chamber of commerce, Rotarian view of fake— California hardly any Californians live that this propaganda way—but is not only that only obscures the realities that do exist. frightening He sees the state as the place where the strands of society are becoming unraveled. And he sees what w ill take its place as a antidemocratic technological construct in which men of littoral ideas w ill not be able to live. He die “ parafacist” in the title. serious about is The chamber of commerce view, one which magazines like to emphasize, complete with technicolor photographs, is that it is an outdoor paradise and the inhabitants happy. They spend their time surfing, skiing, driving sports speeds, cars at high opening bottles of seltzer water and generally living the good life. A N XI-C A LIFO RN IA ; R e p o r t From (H it First Parafarist State: by Kenneth Lamott: 272 pages; Little . Brow n; $6.95. B y THOMAS LA SK Ic ) I JH I New York Times News Service If the citizenry of California, w h e r e Kenneth Lamott now lives, "*> * If I m z m ' I f d e p o sits, eviction, F air Housing Commission Students with problems con­ c e rn in g housing—contracts, repairs, e tc .— should call the Students’ I Association F a i r Housing Commission Office: Union (I to 5 p.m. Bu ild in g RU F rid a y ). throw Ii Telephone 171-77% (8 a.rn. to 5 p .m . Monday through Fri- | M o m ) •> f d a y ) . S T U D I O r V 222 East 6th 472-0436 OH SCREEN NO. I 2nd BIG W EEK WOMEN'S LIB AND GIRL'S PRISON IP ® ll A IV! 0 U N T 473-5411 7 1 3 C O k lG 'R C a s ' A V E N U E 51.00 'TIL 2:15 FEATURES: 1:05 - 2:50 - 4:35 6:20 - 8:10 - 10:00 V X /rh , * MI I ’v 1 7 CARLTON * HASTON THC Q M « f c .(Tpi M A H $1.00 'TIL 2:15 1:30 ■ 3:35 - 5:40 It is a view that never con­ in state, siders the political leadership of the its stunning mediocrity and with ideas so simplistic that they would have been out of date even in the last century. It takes no notice of the people of color though the state has always had a considerable number of Mexican-Americans, Chinese. Japanese, East Indians and the like. Before Watts, says the author, they were invisible. And if these people are bestirring themselves now, it is in spite of rather than with the help of the powers that be. E V E N W H E N outdoor activities are pursued, there is an edge of desperation to them as if they were not an integral part of life, but an escape from them. The separation of life and work is as great in California as in states less fortunate. His description of a well-to-do clean, suburb tennis playing e m p h a s i z e s the hollowness within: of alcoholism, .suicide and divorce. rate high the Half the marriages in tho stato,_ he claims-, end in the courts. In one county. San Mateo, seven out of IO m arriages end disastrously. In another. M ann County, in 19H9 and 1970, divorces outnumbered traffic deaths. dram atic THOUGH H E deals largely with what he has himself ex­ perienced, he does not slight the m o r e and well publicized encounters between the students and the establishment, the utterances, some dangerously irresponsible by Gov. Ronald Reagan and his minions, the unhappy adventures of hippies, beatniks and street people. Ile approves LAM OTT’S conclusions are all negative. the loosening attitudes, for example, Roman Catholic the within Church, roles of the activist young nuns and priests who are willing to take on their bishop. But he shrinks from the notion that such a movement may end up with store front congregations. Harriott's indictment of his state is so severe that it is hard to think of any society that would please him. His own views, unrelenting, bitter, hopeless, are thus, not only commentary, but part of the true bill he has been drawing up. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Exclusive F o r Austin. Gigantic 35MM Panascope W id e Screen Projection RITZ ARTS 320 E. 6th 478-0475 OPEN 12 noon til IO p.m. Ail Movies Shown At The Riti Arts Are Premiere First R un For Austin X "T A K E A L O O K " X Now Austin has the finest, most advanced movies produced today. For your enjoyment we bring you* 3-hour, all color, all sound, newest type adult programs "ver produced. These movies are the most eroti# adult films seen anywhere. The Most Sensa­ tional Adult XX Rated Films Ev°r Produced For Your Pleasure ->1 1‘ K R IG M VI "HARD ACTION" ' "FRUIT COCKTAIL' N O T SUITABLE FOR Y O U N G PERSO N S T h e s e Movies Brea) All Bo* Office Records In New York, East & W est Coast. BOX OFFICE OPEN 7 :30— SHOW S T A R T S DUSK! EAST SCREEN SOUTH SCREEN Jo h n W ayne • R ich ard B o o n e "B ig Jake " PLUS — C O -H IT S H O W IN G BOTH THEATRES JOHN WAYNE A Howard Hawks Production “RIO LOBO” Technicolor* fGj^E& * THIar## K iOUTH S ID TIA I *■__IAH E ^ 7 ivJ L Bm White ^ * 4 4 - 2 2 9 6 _ TNfarae L*li In Ii* F ir st P la n e t ,th e n B e n e a t h , n o w . . , ------------------------------- mmrm 2 q lh Century-Tox presents ESCAPE t S f t e P M E r r n " d I a n e t l f ! A ; f .... ■ H I BY DE LUXE Roddy McDowell — Kim Hunter til i i G PLUS CO -H IT S H O W IN G BOTH TH EATRES THE "BIG J O H N ” PICTURE OF ALL TIME JO H N W A Y N E — STEWART G R A N G E R " N O R T H TO A LA SK A " — < (II.O R — W EST SCREEN BOX O F F IC E O PEN 7:30 S H O W STARTS DUSK “The funniest movie I’ve seen this year! Just go, run to see it!” — N ew York Post I K Ii E H L0t¥£RJAf)D O T lliR A R M IG E R S S P CRC COLOR [ R j < ® PLUS CO-FEATURE SHE DRIVES KNEES! MEN TO HER SUSPENSE! u m .jLWrnm e v e ry o n e is d y in g to m eet Girly 'J.C . Superstar Set for Friday The controversial rock opera “ Jesus Christ Superstar” w ill be presented bv the Original American Touring Company in Austin Friday. The single performance is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. in Municipal Auditorium. This version of the rock opera has gathered good reviews as the players have performed across the country. The Milwaukee Journal critic called it “ an exciting, emotional event” while tile Armadillo Daily News de­ scribed it simply as a “ knockout.” Made popular by the best-selling album, the music retells the Easter story with a new interpretation. It is one which often criticizes Jesus and his followers. But it is also one which has aroused the interest of drama critics who for the first time, began to take the rock opera form .seriously. Tile cast is headed by B illy Barnes, a black, who plays Jesus. Denny Belime, Perry Como’s nephew-, apjiears as Judas. Again, the interpretation is new, “ Judas is always played as weak because no one wants to play a traitor, but Judas loved Jesus and that's what I try to reflect,” Bellinp once said. Joe Morton, who plays Pilate and also sings in the male chorus, is a veteran of the New York production of ‘H air” and “ Salvation” as well as “ Charlie Was Here and Now He's Gone.” The musical director and pianist for tile show also Issac” handled the music for “ Last Sweet Days of in New York. Tickets for the performance may be obtained at Raymond's Drugs, Montgomery Ward and Gibson’s on B e n White Boulevard. Dr. W o l f g a n g Michael, professor of Germanic Languages at the University, is the author of a new study of German drama in the Middle Ages. The professor’s work, “ Das Deutsche Drama Des Mit- telalter,” has just been published in Germany by DeGruyter. is “ Was the ist D ram a?” question Dr. Michael poses. With many new details he explores the evolution of German drama from the Tenth religious plays Century, plays originating in the early Fifteenth Century, to the humanist plays which appeared 20 years before carnival to in the Reformation. " I have tried to open up new pathway's,” Michael says of the many studies he has pursued since his own doctoral disser- in­ research. t a t i o n vestigations have been conducted in libraries of major German- speaking countries as well as in France, England and major U.S. libraries. His Examples of tile professor's “ new pathways” came in his discovery that the first important German edition of the Passion to the Thirteenth P la y dated rather than Fourteenth Century as previously thought. Biblical Traitor Denny Belime, as Judas, sings a song in the controversial "Jesus Christ Superstar" scheduled for one performance Friday in Municipal Auditorium. German Professor Writes Drama Book • I PHOTOS Television PASSPORTS RESUMES S U P E R H O T S E R V IC E STUDTMAN PHOTO 19th at Lavaca • Cameron Villag# W h a t g o e s ex) in p rison is a c r im a FORTUNE ANI) MEN’S EYES Theres only one way to get a better view of prison life © MOM METROCOLOR I S FE A T i p c q _ 4 . * _ * . io OPEN 1:45 • $1.50 Til 5 p .m . T R A N S * T E X A S I T R A N S ★ T E X A S il 'l l l iv i'l 'l 'l ■ U2J W. Bm Whit! B‘Td -442-2333 FEATURE i IMES 1:30 - 3:30 - 5:30 - 7:30 - 9:30 What one can find on television Thursday night appears slightly the more interesting than weather, but a few memorable moments may be squeezed out of some movies. “ Baby the Rain Must F a ll” has Steve McQueen and*Lee Remick going for it in the story of a ex-convict and his nct-ao-success- ful return to life. At 8 p.m. on channel 5. Deborah Kerr again proves she is one of our greatest actresses in “ Tile Sundowners.” Tile story concerns a sheepherder family in Australia. Robert Mitchum and Peter Ustinov also star at 10:30 p.m. on channel 12. It might be interesting to sec what Elaine Stritch, star of the is Broadway hit “ Company” • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • f t ( I I R I ^ T 0 “ I H E T O I R i v e , C O M P A W S R E N D I T IO N O E SU P E R S T A R ‘H A D IT-G O O D D R A M A . G O O D S IN G IN G A N D G O O D ^ ® A A M I S I C , , , ” Ton* M cC'arthj -T n lsi W orld Don’t Mils Th* E*citement O f THE ORIGINAL AMERICAN TOURING COMPANY 8:30 P.M. AUGUST 27th FRIDAY Tickets at R A Y M O N D 'S D R U G S M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D and G IB S O N 'S (Ben W hite Only) doing on television. She appears in a comedy special with Joey Heatherton at 9 p.m. on channels 4 and 42. T H I ■ ''D A Y 'S S C H F ,D I 'L B 6 30 I' sn I,ti.42 A( Hon P l a y 0.ms# 12 A lias .-smith and Jo n e# 5.7,10 F a m ily A lta ir IO La n c e r 9 W ashington W eek in R e v ie w 7 p.m . 5, 7. 7:30 p rn. 4 t_’ lr ansi de 9 NKT Playhouse 6 F a ll P re vie w 12 Bew itched 8 pm 12 Danny Thomas 7,th M o v ie ti N F L Football- Houston "The Frozen Dead v t . I > a lia s 8 .30 p in 4. IC Adam 12 12 I ’an August 9 p m . 9 The A m e ric a n Busin ess S> stem IU 30 p rn 4.42 The Tonight Show 5.7 Merv Griffin lit I tan August 9 i reatlv r Person I I p m. 9 Politics, Growth and Con­ flict l l HO p.m . IO T w ilig h t Zone Joseph ll Cevine por-snts a Mike NiCn ii# Farr starry Jack Nicholson • Cand*# Bergen > "‘Carnal Knowledge' is brilliant A feast of a film!” — Judith Crist, N. Y. Magazine Mike Nichols, Jack Nicholson, Candice Bergen, Arth ur Garfunkel, Ann Margret and Jules Feiffer. — Carnal Knowledge. TR' J D e s ig n s Richard Syiben • Written oy Juies Feeler • Executive Producer Joseph E Levin# An Avco c — SSY Picture j-> O I T R A N S * T E X A S _ 2200 Hut cock Drive— 453 6641 m m oaftim6400 Burnet Road - 465 6933 T R A N S ★ T f e 'X A S O PEN 1:45 F e r r e t 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - IO Paw List Suspended P R K K S R K IU C F D I N T H . 6:15 OPEN 7:45 BIG JA K E 8:45- 1:00 OPEN I HR. BEFORE S H O W JO H N W A Y N E BACK TO SCH O O L W EEK John Wayne Richard Boone "Ski Jake" M H W W f J A GNEMA CENTER FUMi PRESENTATION TEOrAOO* P/NAVjgeu* JOHN W AYNE, “RIO LOBO’ ONLY 11:00 Technicolor* [Q)< ^TR A N S *r T E X A S OPEN 7:45 • START 8:45 WH U I amar Riva .AM.HIO Free Admission: Now Giving Bonus Checks Good for FREE T R A IN RIDES O N I I L TOOT BEFO RE S H O W T IM E (ST A R T IN G AT 7:45) 8:45 — 12:20 F R O M T H E 20>6 Century Fox present AN ARTHUR P JACOBS PRODUCTION I SCAPE TROM THE PLANET Of THE APES AiaTAUF TRUNPY/ERIC BRAEDEN WILLIAM WINDOM/SAI MINEO a-v) RICARDO MONTALBAN..! a*- n« PODGY McDOWALUKlM HUNT LR BRADEORO DILLMAN E T n f A p E S If You Need Help or Ju st Someone Who H ID Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Tim e The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service WHAT A WAY TO FEATHER YOUR NEST! It’s the webfoot wonder with the 24-karat J ),' 7 layaway plan! x Walt Disney \ production* TECHtHCOLOgP dean JONES sanw DUNCAN joe FLYNN Tony ROBERTS • S U james GREGORY MMvvue if Who* M mr «i»;i IM ®mm» Plus D ISN EY'S "P R O W L E R S of the E V E R G LA D E S" C olor D O O R S O K E N 13:46 F E A T . : 1:10-3:25-5:40-8:00-9;SS - Where your nightmares end... W i l U M begins. COLOR ■ rn MMM a* rn m mm rn aaa C O LO R B y D e L U X E C IN EM A SC O PE IU :b U IM sa I P a g e 14 Thursday, August 26, 1971 THE DAiuY TEXAN Michaels Moving Up Singer Reveals First Rate Talent STEAL THIS BOOK; by Abble Hoffman; Grove P ress, New York, 1971; 308 pages; SI.95. By JAIME FERNANDEZ Amusements Staff Abble Hoffman m ay have transcended art his fo rm —the cosmic put-on—in his la te st opus, Steal This Book. As the most histrionic celebrity of the New Left, he has willingly favorite been able to command attention on another level by his very existence. As the high priest and lamb of American sacrificial has counter-culture, Hoffman been m ade both a scapegoat and a star. He has used this position con­ demnation of the corrupt nature of an economic society, he has scored a victory of irony: Steal keeping with his In Contempt Riddles Hoffman Handbook espoused any action and em ­ ployed any method to keep the the un- Movement visible and dergTound revolution alive. Consequently, he has been portrayed by the m ass media as something of a pipe dream — .sinister \Lmble but empty, a ineffable to reality charmer to others. som e, an Hoffman has become, in a society that needs heroes but has Totally none, negatable on one level, he has antihero. an This Book really m eans Buy This Book. But he has m anaged to keep integrity antiheroic intact, in the eyes of the counter­ culture. his It is in this contradictory sense nonordinary and of ordinary that Steal This Book reality operates like Hoffman assumes the qualities of a pipe dream . and If you take the book seriously, the you can 't help hut notice im practical ludicrousness of nature. If you take it as a sort its of cosmic Joke, yon cannot help but notice the seriousness of purpose with which Hoffman has addressed himself to the project. S t e a l This Book openly preaches revolution as a means of survival. Economic revolution by “ripping off’’the goods and services produced by the unjust corporate baronies of Hoffman’s America. Military revolution by guerilla warfare and random acts of violence involving homemade bombs explosive devices. other and Trapped by his own ideological consciousness, Hoffman has yet the moral to come up with suasion with which to draw support for his vision of America. He has become too concerned with the downfall of society to propose a viable alternative. He has recognized his own powerless position and fallen victim to the only lack of power—violence. alternative to to It is that distant, Impersonal sort of violence, though, of in­ potentially others citing injurious criminal and possibly actions. to ' take is hard It seriously a book with so con­ temptuous an outlook on other human beings. “Lee Michaels 5th;” Lee Michaels; A A M SP4302. By MIKE MYERS Lee Michaels, to coming campus Sept. l l , may well be one of the stars of tomorrow. With five albums out, Michaels is just gaining the ear of the public. single It was not until the strong- selling “Lee Michaels 5th” and th at culled the album, “Do You Know What I Mean,” that the public became aware of Michaels. from For a performer who decided on a musical career after being turned on during a Jefferson A i r p l a n e concert, Michaels displays a surprising amount of talent. Minus the heady am ­ in so often plification electric music, he creates a type of electric funk. Michaels is good at delivering powerful vocals while ably backing himself on the keyboards. found Solo Artist Tickets Available Season ticket brochures for the University Solo Artist Series for the 1971-72 season a re being mailed by the College of Fine Arts. Mail orders will be ac­ cepted through Septem ber or as long as supply lasts. Appearing on the series will be Christa Ludwig. G erm an mezzo soprano; John Ogdon, English pianist; Yong tick Him, Korean violinist; John Alexander, tenor a n d Andre Watts, pianist. faculty and Season ticket prices rem ain the sam e as last season: $10 adult, staff and $4 $7 snidest. Tho $4 student ticket represents a savings of almost 75 percent over the $3 single admission price for each concert Brochures are being sent to subscribers of the monthly Fine Arts Calendar. P ersons wishing to be added to the m ailing list m ay w rite to U niversity Box Office, Hogg Auditorium, Box 7547. Brochures m ay also be picked up at the box office in the auditorium. Tile box office will begin selling the window tickets at season Monday. the policy Continuing of previous years, only a limited num ber of season tickets will be available for sale lo the public, with the m ajority reserved for blanket tax holders. Blanket tax holders m ay draw free tickets to each concert a week tickets in advance. Any rem aining after the draw ing will be sold at the door the night the concert. The box office of opens 45 minutes prior to each concert; there are no reserved seats. The series is sponsored by the in co­ Department of Music operation with the Cultural En­ tertainment Committee. For information on the series or on any fine arts event, call 471-1444 or 471-3806. Daily Horoscope A B IE S: Do not ca u se arg u m en ts settled w hich will have to m o rro w ; the resu lts m a y be bad. be to TAI B i st T oday Is good for h ard w ork an d m en tal pursu its. G E M IN I: You will h av e quite a tran sactio n s bit of pow er In sm all an d pu rch ases. C A N C E R : Much activ ity will govern the d a y ; g et control of m ost of em oUons early. L EO : This Is a good day to get. ah ead of y o u r neighbor. Catch him off g u ard . VIRGO: You will h av e g re a t control lf o v er y o u r em otions things do happen to go w rong. today, even LIB R A : D ealings with o th e rs w ill h av e a v ery fo rtu n ate outcom e SCO R PIO : T oday will be b e tte r th an usual Y our sa rc a sm w o n 't b e qu ite a s obvious. SAGITTARIUS: You will g e n e ra te a feeling of au th o rity in d ealin g w ith bu siness associates. CAPR IC O RN : A m en tal low w ill be y o u r lot today, b ut don’t ta k e it o u t on others. a n e u tra l day. those aro u n d you. is so m ew h at of so d o n 't a g g ra v a te AQUARIUS: T his P IS C E S : Go ah ead an d do th a t w hich you h av e been p u ttin g off for th e la st week. NICK LAWRENCE START THE F A IL OFF IN STYLE AT "THE SKOL ROOM" T O N IG H T R A K U 3709 U K E AUSTIN BLVD. TAKE ENFIELD TO LAKE AUSTIN, TURN LEFT — 2 BLOCKS N OCOVER BEER / suepts 472-0414 THE YEARLING LOUNGE — BEER & W IN E TO G O TAP BEER — $1.00 A PITCHER O N THURS.-FRIDAY POOL — PIN BALL M EXICAN FO OD 10% off on Beer & Wine To G o With Coupon 300 SOUTH CONGRESS UT Solo Artist Scries Pre a n ted by Dept- o f M u tie rn cooperation with Cultural entertainment Committee John Ogdon, piano “ an exquisite pianist” —Vienna Nov. 7 Yong lick Him, violin “a genius” — Leonard Bernstein Jan. 25 John Alexander, tenor “ A beautiful voice” —N.Y. Post Fob. 20 Season tickets also available! $10 adult; $7 faculty; $4 student On sale at University B o x Office in H ogg Aud. beginning Aug. 30 * * * Christa Ludwig, mezzo soprano—“without equal” —NA’. Tim es Oct. 22 Coming -in person- five fop stars in classical music FREE on Blanket Tax (Draw before free tickets one week concert at University Box O ffice) The UT DEPARTMENT OF DRAMA announces the availability of SEASON TICKETS for its 8th Season THE M AJO R SERIES FOR THE 1971-1972 SEASON DIE FLEDERMAUS by Johann Strauss Sept. 14, 15, 17, 18 8:00 p.m. H O W T O S U C C E E D IN B U S IN E SS W IT H O U T RE A LLY T R Y IN G by Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock and W illia Gilbert O C T O B E R 4-9 8:00 p.m. S E B * NO V . 8-13, 15-20 8:00 p.m. T H E T H R E E SISTERS by Anton Chekhov A C R Y OF PLAYERS by W illiam Gibson FEBR U ARY 14-19 8:00 p.m. M A R . O P E R A (To be announced) lf, 14, 16. 18 8:00 p.m. A M ID S U M M E R N IG H T 'S D R E A M by W illiam Shakespeare A P R IL 17-22 8:00 p.m. BONUS .. BONUS .. BONUS T H E S E A S O N T IC K E T H O L D E R IS ENTITLED T O P U R C H A S E T IC K E T S F O R O T H E R D R A M A D EP A R TM E N T P R O D U C T IO N S F O R '/2 T H E BO X O F F IC E PR ICE. M.F.A. W O RKSH O P SERIES THE REHEARSAL by Jean Anouilh SEPT. 26-29 Theatre Room BIRTHDAY PARTY by Harold Pinter N O V . 10-13 8 p.m. I p.m. THE SUBJECT W A S ROSES by Frank Gilroy O C T O B E R 13-16 Lab Theatre PRIVATE LIVES by Noel Coward DEC. 5-8 8 p.m. 8 p.m. EXPERIMENTAL SERIES (To Bo Announced) A P R IL 14-19 Theatre Room SEASON TICKET ORDER FORM Ticket Information Genera! Public Single Admission ------ U.T. Student, Faculty, Staff Admission M-Th $2.00/Fri.-Sat. $2.50 M-Th $I.50/Fri.-Sat. $2.00 'G e n eral Public Seaton Ticket: •U.T. Student, Faculty, Staff: $8.00 $6.00 (Save 4 0 % ) Seaton Tickets include 6 M aior Productions & Admission to W orkshop Series and Experimental Series at '/j Price— Reservations M U S T bo made in ad ­ vance. Please tend mo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S e a s o n Tickets at $8-00 •••••• • • • • ...Season Tickets at $6.00 Amount Enclosed Name . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Addrest ..................... Phone C ity ................................................. Please make checks payable to: University Box Office Box 7547 The University of Texas Austin, Texas 78712 Single adm. fo r each concert: $3 N o reserved seats For info: 471-1444 Andre Watts, piano “ prodigious . . . sensa­ tional” —San Francisco Exam iner March 5 P lea se Include a eelf-addr eased stam ped ens elope I'.T. Patrons should check category. ......................Student Faculty .......... Staff Called “the Elton John of LA,” Michaels has gone through many changes since his first effort, “Carnival of Life,” was released several years ago. From the initial release, on which he did not even utilize his piano-organ talents, Michaels evolved into a screaming organist laying down t h i c k , per­ formances in “Lee Michaels!” “LEE MICHAELS 5th” is a return to the roots of rock. Oldies such as “Willie and the Hand Jive,” “Can I Get A Witness” and “Ya Y a” have been revived, com­ and Michaels’ personal positions, such as “Didn’t Have to Happen” and “Oak Fire,” are notable. overpowering Pouring forth soulful vocals in a voice perfectly suited to the has rock medium, Michaels surrounded himself with the always capable Merry D ayton, percussionist Joel Larsen, and a studio number musicians. Nevertheless, is it Michaels who m akes the album move, interspersing a variety of rhythms with changes from organ to piano. adequate of Opening with “Keep The Circle the sets Turning” Michaels tempo, crying, “Keep the circle turning Keep the love light burning There’s no need for you to be yearning If you keep the circle turning— Help me now I” His razor sh a rp organ punc­ tuates each stanza creating a sound of electric funk. nicely Following a fine rem ake of The Johnny Otis Show’s “ Willie and the the Hand Jiv e ,” on which pounding drum s and slicing organ are by Jackie Kelso's blaring sax Is his own “ Didn’t H ave to H appen.” i A melancholy mood is created here as, in the voice of despair, ! Michaels sings, complimented Side 2 leads off with “ Do You Know What I M ean?,” followed by two oldies, Lee Dorsey’s “ Y a Y a” and M arvin G aye’s “ Can I j Get a W itness.” M ichaels is ( particularly forceful on the la tte r . composition, as he wails out the i lyrics in a passionate m anner. in is displayed Michaels' gift for a variety’ of songs “ Oak F ire .” Here Michaels sings a smpte uninventive melody yet generates in terest by using his to hit, b reak and slide voice around the notesi creating an unusual vocal styling. The album ends with th e up tempo “ I Don’t Want H er.” and The th at adage the m usic “ the only constant is change” typifies the of career Michaels. The ability to adapt to these changes, coupled with his vocal and keyboard talents, give Michaels an excellent chance lo become a sta r. GENESEE! Tfffc M U KOO fix TONIGHT A T ^ ^ ^ | ■ Newly Remodled Draft B e e rl [t o n ig h t ] IN SAN ANTONIO LED ZEPPELIN ii k m h i s u m RESERVED $£00 ^/$J0 0 ^ $ ^ 0 0 PLENTY OF TICKETS AVAILABLE AT D O O R A JAM PRODUCTION Mall Orders Being Accepted for _ 8 DOG. FRIDAY, OCT. 8 $G-$5-$4 NOTE I I I I I I I I ■ I S E A S O N T I C K E T S For information, clip coupon and mail to: Cultural En­ tertainment Committee, Texas Union Room 350, Univer­ sity of Texas, Austin, Texas 78712. Our phone number ti u l t u r a l 471-5319. n t e r t a i i u n e n t o u i i i i i d e e FOR NON-BLANKET TAX HOLDERS Please send C.E.C. Season Ticket information to; N A M E ADDRESS CITY ZIP LEON RUSSELL Plus R E D D I E K I N AUSTIN MUNICIPAL SEPT. 1971: SEPTEMBER 2,1171 PLAYBOY And The Shelter People 8:30 P.M. to be Leon Russell didn t get the W o rld ’s Champion H ip Okie by acci­ dent. H e earned it on Stones sessions, by w riting Give Peace a Chance, by team­ ing up with Joe Cocker— and he’s just paid more dues w ith Leon Russell and the Shelter People (Shelter), one of the best rock albums so far this year. Russell practically invented w hat m ight as well be called Okie that shit- kicker Gospel sound, heavy on Baptist-re- rock— w ith riv al piano and chorus— and it gets as good on this album as you’ll ever hear. H e works wonders on Dylan's It's a H ard Rain Gonna Fall. wails through a loving­ ly ironic piano-pounding tribute to Little Richard on Crystal Closet Queen and lopes through She Smiles like a River, a rolling hill-folky ballad apparently in­ spired by L ife Is like a M ountain Rail­ way. And th eres more— much more. T I C K E T S : *3.50, *4.50, *5.50 AVAILABLE AT: • Raymond's Drug • Discount Records • Montgomery Wards • Disc Records (Highland Mall) in e r t ia 40 P r redente Z Jh ird —d n n iin / S c ien ce i d ii lion - I d a u t a Sit l ) i (til I distil a f Tonight: Village OF THE Damned with George Sanders "— AN UNNERUING FILM OF STRANGS BLOND CHILDREN FORCING THEIR EVIL WILL ON ADULTS." r n Union Theatre 7:30 & 9=30 Adm. .75 Thurs. Only FRI. MODESTY BLAISE in Batts Aud. 7:30 & 9:30 SAT. FORBIDDEN PLANET in Batts Aud. 7:30 & 9:30 SUN. FACE OF FU M ANCHU & (Start 7:30) BATTLE IN OUTER SPACE IN BATTS Thursday, August 26. 197.1. THE DAILY TEXAN Page IS UT Scientists Find Possible Alternate Pill' hormone which was announced In June. F u r t h e r experimentation resulted in the synthesis of the actual hormone. This process was later duplicated by scientists at the Salk Jolla, Calif. Institue at L a E X P E R IM E N T S conducted at Tulane have shown the hormone to he extrmely powerful when injected into rats. A few billionths of a gram almost instantly made the pituitary release nearly a hundred times more luteinizing hormone than is normally present in the blood. is in the already Folkers said the new synthetic being hormone la­ produced boratories and its availability will greatly aid research which had formerly been hampered by tho scarcity of the substance. institute’s The researchers are presently further experiments conducting with they the hormone which hope will result in another “ p ill” to the world help balance population, Folkers said. By ANN BENNETT Staff Writer The findings ot a group of U niversity scientists concerning the discovery of a hormone which might serve as a new means of birth control w ill appear in the next issue of Biochemical and B i o p h y s i c a l Research Com­ munications. Institute Dr. K a r l Fo lkersi director of Biomedical for the Research, announced the hor­ mone synthesis at the Twenty- International Congress of third P u re and Applied Chemistry held last month in Boston. T H E HORM ONE controls the release of luteinizing hormone which functions in ovulation and is essential to conception. to regulate ovulation The releasing hormone m ay be used to facilitate conception, the scien­ tists report, or it can prevent fertility by not allowing tile release of luteinizing hor­ the mone. the required Folkers said the promotion of fertility appears to he feasible future, but additional in research will he to utilize the hormone in preventing conception. E X P E R I M E N T was T H E in co-operation with performed scientists in New Orleans, directed by Dr. Cyril Y. Bowers, professor and Endocrine director Laboratory of the Tula ne Medical School. of medicine the of Folkers was aided by Drs. Jaw-kang and I I a n s Chang. Conny Bogcntoft Bruce L. Currie. S inverts son, The scientists’ study of the luteinizing releasing hormonei which began a year ago, resulted first rn the creation of a syntho'ir Sex Knowledge Poor College Students Reveal Ignorance (c) 1971 New York Times News Sendee N E W Y O R K — It may come as a surprise to those who picture today's youth as wild products of a permissive age, but there is a startling amount of sexual ignorance among the nation's more than seven million college students. In talks with students in recent months, m any faculty members have been amazed by such questions as: • Is it true there are some days I can conceive and some days I can't? • Can a person get pregnant standing up? • Can you get pregnant the first time you have intercourse? As a result of such questions and other student pressures, dozens of colleges have acted to bridge the sex gap with remedial sex education measures. Some college n e w s p a p e r are e a rn ing columns of sex advice. There have been these major developments: too A growing number of schools are offering courses on human sexuality, some are although titled “ fam ily living,” which give basic instruction on the human textbook body and reproduction process. One alone, Human Sexuality, is used at more than 200 schools. In a recent limited survey of 35 colleges, the Sox Information and Education Council of the I nitod States, a private agency, found that 29 listed 45 different courses on sexuality for credit. “ Con­ The council concluded: siderably more is being done in tho w ay of sex education on the undergraduate is generally thought.” level than the Under student pressure and the leadership of young doctors such as Dr. Takey Crist at University of North Carolina, more schools now provide a wide sex counseling on range of abortion and birth control at student health centers, once limited to handing out aspirin and diagnosing mononucleosis. arguments aside, those doctors have determined that the tragic problems of un­ m arried mothers and illegitimate babies spreading venereal diseases and medical c o m p l i c a t i o n s from cheap abortions are based in large part on ignorance. They believe the best w ay to combat such prob­ along with Moralistic lems is to increase sex counsel­ ing. Yale, Explicit sex handbooks have in­ appeared at many schools, Boston cluding Duket University and the University of Rhode Island. Although generally p u b l i s h e d independently by s t u d e n t organizations, surii guides are often welcomed by school administrations, in C H EM IST R Y D E PA R T M EN T will give an advanced placement exam for Chemistry 301 at IO Buntine a m . Thursday Auditorium. is mandatory' for entering fresh­ men who Intend to register for 301 and who have had high school chemistry not more than three years ago. exam The G E N E S E E will play from 3 to 5 p.m. Thursday on tho Texas Union Patio sponsored by the Union Com­ Entertainment mittee. For Unknown Reasons W ith the help of interpreter Yoshihiro Ito (I), Mrs. Tamu Takahashi of Tokyo explains to Val Tenorio, Potter County sheriff's deputy, the circumstances surrounding the shooting Tues­ day of her husband, 25, near Amarillo as they were hitchhiking from New York to Los A n ­ geles. N o motive has yet been found, and stolen possessions, with the exception of two cameras, have been recovered. -U P I Telephoto. Female Campers Report Molesters 19 and Two women, 20, reported to police early Wed­ nesday they were victims of an assault with intent to rape while camping on Mt. Bonnell. The women, residents of Great Falls, Mont., and Anoka, Minn., received minor injuries from the attack. H ie they w e r e said awakened at 3:30 a m . Wed­ two nesday by two males carrying a rifle who ordered them to “ take the j off your clothes.” When women the attackers ■ struggled with the women, then | fled. No suspects were in custody. refused, TO P L A C E A T E X A N C L A S S IF IE D A D C A L L 471-5244 u liiiral * k * ahi Hilt to e n to rla in n io ift Hie Cultural Entertainment Committee THE TEXAS UNION announces THE 1971-72 C. E. C. SERIES FOR BEANKET-TAX AND SEASON TICKET HOLDERS SALE! GET BACK TO CLASS WITH SAVINGS ON OUR MORE POPULAR THAN E V E R MEN'S HARNESS BOOT 20.90 Regular 27.00 Right now before classes start you can save 6.10 on your favorite boot! The harness boot is completely masculine and teams up with jeans as well as sportcoats and flares. Brown waxhide eather with harness straps, b’/j- 12. Don't delay! A t this great price they'll leave in a hurry! ST RE FT F L O O R , D O W N T O W N F IR S T LEVEL, H IG H L A N D M A L L W eek of September 12th Tuesday, October 12 Sunday, October 24 Thursday, October 28 Sunday, October 31 Tuesday, November 9 Saturday, November 13 Tuesday, November 1(5 Saturday, January 22 Tuesday, February I Sunday, February 20 Monday, March 13 Special Rock event to be scheduled THE PROPOSITION THE ROYAL W INNIPEG BALLET HEAVY ORGAN W ITH VIRGIL FOX & PABLO’S LIGHTS AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CONCERT THE ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATRE THE JAMES GANG® FERRANTE & TEICHER THE CONCERT SOUND OF HENRY MANCINI W ITH ORCHESTRA OF 40 LORIN HOLLANDER "COMPANY’’ "BORIS GODUNOV” (in English) presented by the San Antonio Symphony Society, Victor Aicssandro, Musical Director Thursday, April 6 THE WORLD S GREATEST JAZZ BAND AUSTIN SYMPHONY CONCERTS: Tnn C C A r i lip A. si n S y rn phony, M a irk e Pf ■ f "• tod n ,m b 'r r f reserved seat*. frrp of rharq® for A , r-d p a r' rmanC®' for ti a rev. '.PAP* W A Un -'* t-y F , O ffic e . Scheb M ' n HA A . -j L ' r . rn I. - n • A n n A , n r a d n I A M R A M , C n m p - ar And • F» 7 lym pnory inq y °A r RA RP loncnrt Pa rfOrrrAn •• > A " --J,-,..ants L r P a n le t ' a * H o ld e r * to d ra w a I - Ia's mfly be drawn At tha 'a • -. • I a 1 pa.f-.rm anrp s b e q in a t 8:00 I ' M • n h D A V : D D A V n P A - Pianist A j H a m 3 t: M Arch I P A S S I O N A C . C these concerts will be provided. Round top fare is 25 cents, Exact chanqe is required. M G O S t M A T T H E W , Part A r ' 26, P R O M E N A D E ( O N C .LR T , Conductor to b® announced Transportation to DRAWINGS: Dm z/inqs for A L ! R ia - *® 1 Ta H o ld e rs beqrn fiv e w e r id e v s p n >r to e a r n ® a n t un a-,-, -.per f ad o th erw ise and contin:,® as -mr et- ary th a t a R a m a n i a * be -.-own w hen e a ch b e la t is d r a v e . Tickers m ay b e dra w n -nq a 8 tickets a re a v * 'a'o a It a t the U n iv e rsity Box O f f ic e in H o q q A u d ito riu m . H o u rs to b e a n n o u n c e d . RESERVED SECTIONS: it* he'd m M A ud ito r j ti, 'with th ,f Spar Ec lats " be drawn in rp'-erved lections. RESERVED SEATS: For th a C L C . f n e c a ! Events and the H E A V Y O R G A N C o n c e rt on O c to b e r 28 in hloqq Auditorium ! ticlpts will be drawn by reserved seats. SINGLE ADMISSION TICKETS: ADMISSION REQ! IRE- MENTS AT THE DOOR: A I a on*- a m a r 1 Fvenrs CAO be p ir c- A '- d et the M o o a, $4. Lower F oor Raar, $1 B a c o n y Front, $4, B a c o n y Rear, $3, t-« C L C S p a ' a ■ r h * ad Af th a door. E c la t s for ••ar pl ar Front, $5, Lower Floor lab /duals rr -t pre rant t h o r B 'a nla t Tax An d the tic I et drawn or the r events Those fa nq to do so a I be ch arred a penalty at the dour. •n Ticket in c r d ° r to bo adm itted to C .E .C . TRANSPORTATION: r or events halo Sched Zed to be announced on the day of the performance. Exact char.qe is required. in M u n icip al Auditorium , round trip “ b artered bus transportation will be provided at cents for students. SCHEDULE CHANGES: .uh it it the Com m ittee's hope that A lt! case cf chanqe, attem pts will be made to schedule other events. the Series can h e mt fered as announced, the proqram is subject to chanqe. In C.E.C. INFORMATION: The Com m ittee may be co n tacted by telephone at 471-5319: it may be written at tertainm ent Com m ittee Texas Union 350, (U n iver. of Texas, A ustin, Ie * 78 ’ 12) the following address: The Cultural En­ S H O P D O W N T O W N M O N D A Y A N D T H U R S D A Y T IL 9. 474-8331 S H O P H IG H L A N D M A L L M O N D A Y T H R U S A T U R D A Y TIL 9. lag© JA Thursday August 26, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN