T h e Da il y T e x a n
Student New spaper at The University of Texas at Austin
Vol. 71, No. 122
Ten Cents
AUSTIN, TEXAS, THUR
MUARY 27, 1972
Fourteen Pages
471-4401
Connally Blamed
For Trail Rejection
Official Alleges Interference
By RUSTY TODD
and
MIKE FRESQUES
General Reporters
State Sen. Wayne Connally of Floresville
urged a Parks and Wildlife Department
commissioner to cast the vote which killed
plans to open a 30-mile public hiking trail
through the Texas Hill Country, another
commissioner said Wednesday.
governor,
Commissioner Robert Burleson of Temple
said Connally, a Democratic candidate for
lieutenant
Com
missioner Max L. Thomas of Dallas prior
to last weekend’s commission meeting and
“ chewed him out” about possibly sup
porting the trail plan.
contacted
IN EXECUTIVE SESSION,
the com
mission then reached a three to three tie
vote, thus killing the proposed trail.
“Connally’s contacting a commissioner
seemed strange
to me,” Burleson said.
“ Thomas doesn’t even live in Connally’s
district.”
Smith Raps
TV Report
Gov. Preston Smith issued a short, terse
statem ent Wednesday denying a television
report that House Speaker Gus Mutscher
would
proceedings
impeachment
against the governor if Smith calls a special
legislative
before Mutscher’s
bribery trial ends.
session
bring
television
Rosser McDonald, Capitol correspondent
for Dallas
station WFAA,
reported Tuesday night Smith had received
the message through Mutscher's lawyers.
McDonald did not name his information
source.
a
Smith
report
labeled
“ total,
the
unadulterated fabrication—a f a n t a s t i c
fiction” and said he had never been con
tacted by Mutscher’s lawyers.
. “ I can only assume that the intent was
a malicious effort to discredit a legitimate
and
reasonable governmental decision,”
Smith said. “ Either Rosser McDonald or
his secret source is a liar.”
Black Students
Connally, who was chairm an of
the
Senate Parks and Wildlife Committee
during the last Legislature, said he had
talked with Thomas but “did not influence
his decision.”
THOMAS WAS in Austin Wednesday to
m eet with Parks and Wildlife Department
officials but could not be reached.
The proposed trail, which stretches along
an abondoned railroad track from Comfort
to Camp Stanley northwest of San Antonio,
was supported by State Sen. Don Kennard,
the Interim Committee on
chairm an of
the
and
State Parks and Recreation,
the
Comprehensive Planning Division of
P ark s and Wildlife Department.
The planning division spent more than
two years and $72,000 on a feasibility study
of the trail .path, Kennard said.
trail
“ The
is probably
lost,” he .said.
“ The property will likely be sold before
the commission could reverse its decision.”
Southern Pacific Railroad owned the 300-
acre strip of land, but when the tract was
abandoned, a legal clause returned about
15 percent of
the original
owners.
land
the
to
THE RAILROAD COMPANY has offered
the State its land for around $120,000. half
of which would be paid by federal funds,
but the other owners have adamantly op
posed the trail, Kennard said.
Commissioner H arry Jersig of San An
trail, Kennard said,
its path were
and bearded
tonio opposed
because
scared
people’’ would be attracted to the area.
the
ranchers along
that
“long-haired
“ The commission can condemn land for
public use,” Kennard said. “ If adjacent
the
property owners can block a park,
people of Texas will have no new parks.”
Approximately 475 property owners along
the proposed trail have voiced opposition
to the plan, and more than 4,000 persons
across
the state have signed petitions
supporting it.
COMMISSIONERS PEARCE Johnson of
Austin, Jack R. Stone of Wells and Burleson
voted for the trail, and Commissioners Joe
K. Fulton of Lubbock, Jersig and Thomas
opposed it.
Fulton and Thomas have not been con
firmed as commissioners bv the Senate,
and Kennard said he would do his best
to block their approval.
— U P I T elep h o to .
H enry Kissinger
A d vise r to President Richard M . Nixon
gives details at a W h ite H ouse Press
Conference W e d n e sd a y of his role in
secret peace negotiations in Paris.
Editor Candidate
Withdraws Name
senior
Eddie Kennedy, a
journalism
student, withdrew Wednesday night as a
candidate for Daily Texan editor, leaving
opponent David Powell the first unopposed
candidate for the post in recent memory.
Kennedy cited “ personal reasons” for his
decision, adding, “ I i i continue to support
(Related Stories, Pages 2 & 3.)
and work for The Daily Texan and wish
the best luck to David.”
The Texas Student Publications Board of
Directors refused certification Monday of
Surveyed^
Poll Hits Misconceptions
By SUSAN CHAMBLESS
A survey of black students conducted during the fall sem ester
should dispel some misconceptions held by “ the larger student
body,
the administration and possibly some blacks,” John
Galloway, who conducted the survey, said Wednesday.
THE SURVEY, which applied to several phases of University
life, was completed by about 200 black students.
Galloway, an American Studies senior, said the survey will
benefit such groups as the student services staff, the dean of
students staff and several campus black organizations. Galloway
suggested the findings of the survey be used to initiate activities
concerning problems faced by blacks.
One idea Gallow'ay cited which wras showm to be false was
its
the belief that blacks attend
academic
showed 72 percent of
University blacks came to Austin because of luck accident,
convenience and family pressures.
the University because of
reputation. The
survey
The survey revealed many problems besetting campus blacks.
The two most frequently named were financial and academic
troubles. Galloway pointed out that the survey showed concern
for “adjustment to college routine” which means blacks do
not “feel at home” within the University.
Most questions on
the survey are of a social nature,
Galloway said. There should be more complete integration
into the University, he said.
The survey also indicated that black students lack black
campus leaders with whom to identify. How'ever, when asked
to “name the black person on campus whom you feel to be
the most effective spokesman for black students,” blacks named
Noah Richardson, Black Student Union chairman, and Galloway.
Galloway said another social problem Is that many blacks
feel the University System does not care about them. He cited
the recruitm ent policy of not being prejudiced either for or
against minority races to back up this conclusion.
The survey also indicated that black students usually find
little social
that such
organizations as the Cultural Entertainm ent Committee could
plan some black-oriented activities.
in Austin. Galloway suggested
life
GALLOWAY SAID he undertook the survey project with the
approval of campus black organizations. He said that other
surveys of blacks during recent years have dealt with ideologies
while his survey was more practical and pertinent to the
University.
Bates Present for Votes,
Senate Official Testifies
CORPUS CHRISTI (AP) - The secretary
of the Texas Senate testified Wednesday
that Senate records show State Sen. Jim
Bates of Edinburg voted on 22 roll call
votes between IO a.m. and 4:19 p.m. May
6, 1969.
Bates Is being tried on a charge that
he received a stolen diamond which Adrian
Lambert said he took from the heme of
Corpus Christi lawyer Edmond J. Ford.
Prosecution witnesses
testified earlier
that Bates went to Rosenberg at 2 p.m.
May 6 to get a five-carat diamond ap
praised by John Herfort of Herfort Diamond
Ring Co.
Charles Schnabel, the Senate secretary,
testified that records show Bates voted on
solid waste in Texas waterways between
2:15 p.m. and 2:30 p.m.
Schnabel also testified that, based on
records he has, Bates never left the Texas
Senate for more than a few minutes except
during the lunch hour.
Under
cross-examination
by Nueces
County Dist. Atty. William Mobley,
Schnabel said the records also chowed that
Bates did not make any affirm ative action
during the afternoon session.
However, a page by page check of the
Senate Journal showed that 22 of the other
30 Texas senators were listed as having
taken some sort of affirm ative action, such
as introducing resolutions or speaking out
on some subject.
The only
time Bates made any af
firmative action was during the morning
when he submitted some committee reports,
Schnabel said.
Schnabel said that on each roll call vote,
he checked each senator to see how he
voted and determined if he was physically
present. He said it would be impossible
for him to note wrongly that a senator
was present and voted on a roll call vote.
Mobley also got Schnabel to admit that
he watches mostly for negative votes and
records
the rest of them as voting for
the issue involved.
The record showed that Bates made three
negative votes during the day. One was
just before the noon recess and the other
two were in the late afternoon, perhaps
as late as 4 p.m ., Schnabel said.
N.Y. Plane
Hijacked
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.
- A
(AP)
Mohawk Airlines plane bound
from
Albany to New York with 42 passengers
was hijacked
to W estchester County
Airport Wednesday by a man reported
by the pilot to be brandishing a gun
and claiming to have a bomb hidden
under a blanket.
The FBI immediately sent “ several
to the scene and took
sharpshooters”
charge. When the plane arrived at the
suburban field, the hijacker allowed the
passengers to get off but held three crew
members—a stewardess,
the pilot and
he co-pilot—as hostages, demanding that
$200,000 and four parachutes be sent to
he plane.
The first successful hijack for ransom
took place last Thanksgiving eve, Nov.
24, when a man calling himself D. B.
Cooper
from
Washington, D.C., to Seattle, demanded
and got $200,000
two
parachutes, bailed out with the money
and disappeared.
in cash and
flight
over
took
a
Two sim ilar attem pts since failed.
* O rie n t s ProposaI
A n gl s ISI. Vietnamese
PARIS (AP)—The North Vietnamese have
dismissed President Richard M. Nixon’s
Indochina speech as a political maneuver
and claimed he broke a promise by
talks between Henry
disclosing
Kissinger and the Communist delegation to
the Paris peace talks.
secret
to
Initial Soviet reaction
the Tuesday
night speech was negative, but the non
com m unist world’s response was generally
favorable. Although .some U.S. allies in Asia
were cautious, there were expressions of
hope that the plan would lead to settlement
of the war.
THE NORTH Vietnamese delegation’s
angry reaction Wednesday to Nixon’s ad
dress followed an unfavorable comment by
(Related Stories, Pages 2, 3 & ll.)
the North Vietnamese radio. It said there
in Nixon's plan
was “nothing new”
for
troop withdrawal deadline
setting a U.S.
and new South Vietnamese elections
in
return for release of U.S. prisoners of w'ar.
But neither the statem ent nor the North
the
V i e t n a m e s e broadcast
proposals.
rejected
Moscow's regular night-time radio news
program Wednesday said it “ contains not
a word on readiness of the United States”
third candidate, Amusements Editor
a
Miles Hawthorne. Hawthorne
lacked
completion of J322, a required journalism
course in new's writing.
Texan editor Lori Rodriguez said she
would ask Student Government President
Bob Binder to reconvene the board, possibly
to reopen the race or reconsider its action
on Hawthorne.
She said she hopes the board will meet
Thursday in hopes of beating the ballots
to the printer.
Election Commission Chairman Hal
Hegemeier said ballots would go to the
printer at 8 a.m. Thursday.
“ If Binder doesn’t call me and say
there’ll be a meeting tomorrow' ^Thursday),
I ’ll go ahead and
the ballots,”
Hegemeir said, adding that if he is notified
of a meeting he will “ make every effort”
to postpone sending the ballots.
send
By Texan press time, Hegemeier had not
been notified.
Hegemeier said he W'ould honor Ken
the former-
nedy’s request and remove
candidate’s name from the ballot.
Kennedy’s action leaves Powell’s .selection
as editor virtually assured, since write-in
votes are not counted for Texan editor.
In 1970 Jan Marston, backed by
the
“ Ying-Yang conspiracy”
supported
eventual-victor Jeff Jones for the student
body presidency,
for
editor. But to win, a candidate must be
certified by
the TSP Board and must
therefore appear on the ballot.
ran as a write-in
that
Miss Marston gathered enough votes to
force a runoff with winner Andy Yemma—
had the votes counted.
Conceivably, Kennedy, accredited by the
board, could reverse his position and be
counted
candidate, but
Hegemeier said such a move could cause
confusion for voters and vote-counters.
as a write-in
to withdraw its m ilitary units—including air
and naval forces—from the other countries
of Indochina.”
to
ACCORDING
the Nixon plan
text
released by the White House, “ withdrawal
of outside forces from Indochina” would
be one m atter subject
international
supervision.
to
announcer
The Moscow'
the
indicates “the United States
statem ent
intends to attempt to keep in power the
proArneriean regime in Saigon.”
said
He predicted Washington W'ould approach
the P aris peace talks “ from a position of
force and insist on unconditional acceptance
of the plan.”
ll
Hanoi Sure to Reject
Cease-Fire-Clifford
there
WASHINGTON
(AP)—Form er Defen.se
Secretary Clark M. Clifford said Wednesday
he believes
the
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong will agree
to President Richard M. Nixon’s peaix1
proposal as long as it contains a cease-fire
provision.
is no chance
that
Clifford said he also doubts that the North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong would agree to
Nixon’s proposal
for South Vietnamese
elections.
the
C l i f f o r d , a
longtime adviser
to
Democratic Presidents, was secretary of
last year of
defense during 1968,
President Lyndon B.
Johnson’s Ad
ministration. When he assumed the office
Clifford was a supporter of the Vietnam
war, but he left office a dove, saying later
he changed his mind on the basis of what
he had learned in his year at the Pentagon.
to lie aware of
the North Vietnamese position because they
had been
all cease-fire
proposals for three and a half years, Clif
ford said.
The United States had
turning down
tin
to
the American
A statem ent by
the North Vietnamese
delegation to the peace talks assorted Nixon
m ade more threats and this wras a “ brazen
challenge"
people.
Moreover, it added, his speech “ testified
to his perfidious maneuver to deceive the
American electorate in this election year.”
talks with Kissinger,
Nixon’s adviser, the statem ent continued:
to unilaterally make public
“ Tn deciding
the content of the private meetings that
his delegates proposed and prom i sci I
to
keep secret, Mr. Nixon gave further proof
that his Administration was very easy to
break engagem ents.”
Turning
the
to
the
As to the secret talks themselves,
tho
statem ent went on: “ At the public sessions
and the private meetings, through the in
the U.S.
term ediary of
delegation, and through the U.S. President's
special adviser, Mr. Kissinger, the Nixon
Administration did not
two
questions
just and
logical peaceful settlement of the Vietnam
problem.
respond
the
fundamental
chief of
for
to
“IT REFUSED to stop the Vietnamization
of the war, to pull out from South Vietnam
the totality of U.S.
troops, m ilitary ad
visers, m ilitary personnel, arm am ents and
w ar m aterials a s well as those of the other
foreign countries
to
dismantle U.S. m ilitary bases
in South
Vietnam, and to cease all a ir and naval
activities as well as other acts of war
against the Vietnamese people in both zones
of Vietnam.
the U.S. camp,
in
“ It persisted In m aintaining the group
of Nguyen Van Thieu and refused to give
up its commitment to the latter. On the
contrary,
it sought by every m eans to
impose on the South Vietnamese people tho
U.S.-created Saigon puppet regime, its so
called ‘constitution’ and its ‘laws’.”
THE VIET Cong delegation is P aris said
Nixon’s speech “sought on one hand to
conceal
the policy of prolongation and
extension of the war of agression followed
by his Administration, and on the other
hand to continue to avoid a serious response
to
legitimate demands of the South
Vietnamese people.”
the
Professors Doubt Intent
O f SE Asian Peace Plan
In private. I think it was electioneering,**
he concluded.
“ The argum enrs were more for domestic
talks,”
Prof. Robert L.
the peace
for
than
consumption
government Assoc.
Lineberry said.
Concerning
the prisoner of war Issue,
Hardgrave and Lineberry said Nixon would
help affect their release if he would with
draw U.S.
the bombing
troops and stop
of the north.
“ Hanoi has all the trumps. Nixon isn’t
holding any at all,” Lineberry added. He
said Hanoi considers POW's w ar criminals.
“ I think it’s a sincere effort to try to
added.
they
get America
“ However,
it’s not
(Hanoi) have tim e on their side.”
out,” H ardgrave
realistic since
University government professors were
dubious Wednesday whether President
Richard M. Nixon’s Southeast Asia peace
announcement was intended as a real peace
plan or a political move.
Robert L. Hardgrave, associate professor
of government, said the announcement was
not designed as an offer for peace but
to consolidate opinion at
as an attem pt
home. Hardgrave added
is
genuine in his effort for peace, but his
effort is belated.
that Nixon
Hardgrave also said Nixon must get the
country out of Vietnam before November
because there is “political writing on the
wall.”
Richard H. K raem er, assistant professor
of government, said
the President early
in his Administration announced he was
planning to withdraw troops at his own
determined
this,
K raem er said, he has left himself little
to bargain with.
rate. As a
result of
“ People
simply going
through the motions whether in public or
in Paris
are
Mrs. Johnson Lauds Project
Citizens Organize
To Improve Lake
Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson highly praised
the beautification program of the Citizens’
Committee for a More Beautiful Town Lake
at
the group’s organizational meeting
Wednesday in Mayor Roy Butler’s office.
“ Austin is a city you can fall in love
with and the lakefront potentially is the
center of its beauty and usefulness,” she
said.
MRS. JOHNSON said she hopes Town
Lake in the future may rival the beauty
of the river walkway in San Antonio. She
also referred to the “using, using, using”
of the Potomac River in Washington for
recreation as a model for the Town Lake
program.
She
is dedicating the proceeds of her
to
the
another
book, “ A White House Diary,”
program
is guaranteeing
$10,000 to give it a financial headstall.
and
Mrs. Johnson inaugurated the program
Dec. IO, planting the first tree a t Vista
Point on the northern lakeshore.
THE CITIZENS’ Committee hopes
to
raise $100,000 locally to supplement State
and federal funds for enhancing the Town
Lake area. The committee’s purpose is to
coordinate city groups and agencies
in
terested in the beautification project.
said
June,
P arts of the beautification plan include
a hike and bike trail along Town Lake
Jack
to be completed by
Robinson, superintendent of parks. Planting
of a variety of trees by February also
is planned to insure many colorful plants
throughout the year along the lake, he said.
to
form subcommittees to contact local civic
groups and media to inform Austinites of
their proposals.
The committee plans
to reconvene
INDIVIDUALS or groups may sponsor the
planting of trees through the committee.
“ Success of this program will add another
answer to the question ‘what is there to
do in Austin,’” Mrs. Johnson said.
Members of the committee include Mrs.
Stephen Spun*; Don Berman, president of
the Austin Sierra Club; Mrs. Lowell
Lebermann and Vie Mathias, m anager of
the Austin Chamber of Commerce.
/
— Texan Stall Photo*
For Beauty
I .
University Regent Mrs. Lyndon
Johnson spoke before the Citizens’
Com m ittee for a More Beautiful Town
Lake W edn esday in M a y o r R oy But
ler's office.
Page 2 Thursday, January 27, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN
Campus Leaders Respond
To Nixons Peace Proposal
Reactions to President Richard
M. Nixon’s new peace proposal
ranged from favorable to skep
tical in a poll of campus political
organizations Wednesday.
Bucky
S t u d e n t
Kahn,
Committee
M o b i l i z a t i o n
spokesman,
the peace
called
proposal “just another trick. Re
m em ber, Nixon once promised to
end the draft, and his promises
to end tile war resulted in the
invasions of Cambodia and Laos
and the murders at Kent State.”
for
M O T I V E
the peace
proposal, according to Kahn, is
the
‘to extract the U.S. from
worst military position
it has
been in. The North Vietnamese,
and Cambodian
Pathet Lao
revolutionary arm ies have all
this
impressive victories
won
month. Even the recent massive
bombings failed to halt the trend.
Now, to salvage victory, he holds
up his peace plan to the people.
If it is accepted, the status quo
rem ains. If not, then Nixon has
m ade
the North Vietnamese
appear to be the aggressor.”
that
the
emphasized
United States has no right to be
in Vietnam “another six months,
another day, or another hour. We
have never had
to
determ ine the fate of the Viet
nam ese people. Only they have
that rig h t.”
right
K A H N
the
Young Americans for Freedom
chairm an Robert Caraway also
disapproved of the peace over
lie
ture. “ We didn’t like what
said. He isn’t being true to the
the Eisenhower,
goals set by
Upton
is everything
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Kennedy and
m i n i s t r a t i o n s . They were
dedicated to the preservation of
an
independent Saigon govern
ment. but Nixon wants only to
the
obtain
prisoners of war. This new
proposal could open the door for
a lot of bad things, and we are
skeptical.”
release
the
of
A mixed review was given by
Dan Boyd, president of the Young
Democrats. “ In general,
it’s a
good proposal. However, the lack
of a definite date for total with
drawal could be a problem. There
Fire Victim’s Condition
Reported Satisfactory
fire, was
Susan McDaniel, a University
coed severely burned in a Jan.
13
in
s a t i s f a c t o r y condition at
Brackenridge H o s p i t a l Wed
nesday.
reported
to help her
Miss McDonald suffered second
and third degree bums when she
to her burning apart
returned
roommate,
ment
Janet McKee,
a University
junior.
A
the College of
Education, Miss McDaniel lived
the
at 317 E. 18th St. when
predawn fire ignited.
junior
in
is nothing to be gained by staying
longer, we should set a date.
I suspect
that even
“ Also,
though we
are withdrawing.
Nixon will continue to fight a
proxy war
to
South Vietnam,” Boyd added.
“This is not good.”
through our aid
that
DERRICK Jeffers, spokesman
for the Young Socialist Alliance,
said, “We think Nixon’s speech
is an attempt to escalate the war
peace
by
this
using
phony
same
proposal. This
the
is
proposal
the Vietnamese
have rejected before, because it
requires them to lay down their
arm s. Especially significant
is
the one sentence stating that if
the proposal isn’t accepted, the
U.S. will step up
to
protect
remaining American
servicem en.”
the w ar
of
THE ONLY wholly favorable
opinion was voiced by Gary
the
Metcalfe,
president
University Republicans.
“The
President showed that hp is still
trying to get us out of Vietnam.
His peace offer was generous,
and did the right thing by not
tying us down to a definite with
is the only
drawal date. That
bargaining power we have left.
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Ex-Senator Gives Talk
Yarborough Says Student Regents Legal
By DOTTY JACOBUS
News Assistant
“I represent the heartbeat of
the people of
Texas,” former U.S. Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough
told a crowd of 400 students Wednesday night
in the Union Main Ballroom.
YARBOROUGH opened with
comments on
University issues, saying
the appointment of a
student to the Board of Regents is within the realm
of legal possibility, and “All it would take would
be an appointment by the governor and Senate
approval.”
Yarborough
is running for re-election
In the
Democratic primary.
Yarborough professed to “deplore” efforts to
abolish the office of students’ attorney and said
for student
“ Student money should be spent
welfare.” He pointed out the importance of the
Bill of Rights on the college campus as well as
in the courts.
The pollution problem, the no-knock provision
of the Crime Control Act, the economic situation
and the need for an adequate program of national
health care were cited as the m ajor “dilemmas
of our affluent society.”
THE NO-KNOCK provision is “a threat to the
sanctity of our homes,” Yarborough warned, and
“ the shadow of the concentration camp hangs over
America.”
the
Of the no-knock clause, Yarborough sa ’d he
recently appointed Supreme Court
the Con
hoped
justices would have a reverence for
stitution.
He strongly endorsed
the passage of more
stringent antipollution legislation. “The laws mu^t
be enforced impartially and without exceptions,”
Yarborough said, adding that this generation must
take the necessary steps in protecting the en
vironment. “The next one might not have the
chance,” he warned.
T e x a n S ta ff Photo.
Campaigner
. Ralph W . Y arbo ro u gh .
Focus on Texan, Funds
TSP Hopefuls Voice Views
The sole candidate for Daily
Texan editor, David Powell, and
eight contenders for the Texas
Student Publications Board spoke
at a Wednesday night meeting
sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi,
journalism fraternity.
Powell voiced his three basic
concerns to a group of journalism
students.
“ T H E B O A R D of Regents is
still somewhat hostile. Chancellor
rejections of our
LeMaistre’s
funds
request
the
for
funding still open.
question of
.inadequate
Second, we have.
coverage on The Texan. We’re
not into campus news as much
leaves
.
forget
as possible. And third, we’ve got
to do the utmost to insure that
students are fully informed about
the upcoming elections. We tend
the Board of
to
that
the
Regents are appointed by
government.”
*
Stating his disagreement with
Lori Rodriguez’ politics as editor,
Powell said, “ Lori has taken a
very narrow view. Andy Yemma
saw the job in a very broad way,
and I see it more as he did.”
Yemma served as editor
im
m e d i a t e l y prior
to Miss
Rodriguez.
POWELL, 20, a
jour
nalism m ajor from Dallas has
junior
student
JOURNALISM
served on The Texan as news
assistant, editorial assistant and
associate news editor. “I’m not
proposing any radical changes.
The Texan is slow to change. We
can do some fine tuning, though.”
ap
plicants for Place I on the TSP
Board
Powell Banning,
Richard Finegan and Pam Mayo.
According to Banning, the board
should “ interfere to the smallest
amount
possible with Texan
publication,” and quoted Eugene
Meyer, former Washington Post
publisher: “The newspaper must
serve as the conscience of
its
community. . .its duty is to the
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interests of
its owners.”
in
like
than
libel.
FINEGAN, who
transferred
from San Antonio College works
as news assistant on The Texan.
“ I don’t see any justification for
I
censorship other
served on the editorial board of
the paper at SAC. and know what
it’s
that
to work
situat'on.” he said.
Miss Mayo said
“ Mandatory
funding is one cf the most im
portant issues, and there is no
way to get this other than
to
put it on regular student billing.”
BETSY H VLL. unooposed for
Place 2, said, “ One of my m ajor
interests is the election of the
managing editor. The staff meeds
someone compatib’e with them.
Compatible not com batable.”
Seeking Place 3
are Gary
Baldridge and
Joe Dacy TI.
Baldridge said he was “ stirred
with interest after reading Lori’s
editorial.” related to running for
the TSP Board positions.
D A C Y emphasized the $100.00(1
deficit of The Texan, “ We can't
do anything until we clear up
the debt. The morale has gone
down and I think money would
solve
the
the problem. I'm on
staff and I’ve seen enough in our
working to see what The Texan
needs. I think salaries should he
boosted.”
is
like a snowball in
Rana Shields and Tim Donahue
are vying for Place IV. Diane
Cadis withdrew Tuesday
from
competition. Donahue has been
on the board for a year and a
half, and
the only present
m ember running for re-election.
“ I feel
the
hell of the TSP’s past sins. I t’s
vital
the operating board
have someone with experience.”
Miss Shields said. “ I ’m very
familiar with the TSP. The TSP
crisis directly affects me and my
job.” She has worked for a year
as news assistant, and
is now
an associate news editor.
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Book Controversy Continues
As Author Arrives in U S.
NEW YORK (AP)—Author Clifford Irving
arrived from Spain on Wednesday and
reiterated
that he personally handed
Howard R. Hughes a $275,000 check for
the billionaire's autobiography. Irving said
Hughes replied: “Thanks.”
But Irving, arriving a t Kennedy Airport
with his wife, declined
to be questioned
further, saying he had lost his voice in
talking with reporters in Spain.
The money part of payments McGraw-Hill
says it m ade to Hughes through Irving
later was deposited and
then withdrawn
from a Swiss bank by a mystery woman.
Three checky were involved in the case.
Irving said in an affidavit last week he
personally gave Hughes one chack
for
$50,000 and another for $275,000. He said
he gave the third, for $325,000, to a man
he knew as a Hughes aide.
At the airport, Irving was asked whether
he personally gave Hughes a check for
$325,000.
Irving’s
attorney, Martin Ackerman,
interrupted to say, “We don't want to be
pinned down to amounts right now.”
then
said,
“No,
it was
for
Irving
$275,000.”
Meanwhile, an affidavit in which Hughes
denied cooperating in the preparation of
Irving’s book and another book about his
Thursday, January 27, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Psq& f
PO W Plan
'Generous'
Relatives of Captives
Respond to Proposal
By The Associated Presa
Several relatives of American prisoners
in Vietnam Wednesday praised
peace
and
of war
President Richard M. Nixon’s
proposals,
positive. But there was some doubt voiced,
them generous
calling
Tile next move in efforts to end the w ar
and win release of POW’s is up to North
Vietnam and the Viet Cong, agreed four
leaders of the National le a g u e of Fam ilies
of American Prisoners and Missing
in
Southeast Asia.
But, they added, they will not be satisfied
until their husbands, brothers and sons ar#
home. And they intend to follow through
with their plan to keep the issue before
the voters in this presidential election year.
Til KY ANNOUNCED plans to create a
Nonpartisan Political Action Committee
through which the league will publicize th#
POW issue and various candidates’ position*
on the m atter. However, they said a t a
nows conference,
they will not endorse
presidential candidates.
Miss Sheila Cronin, sister of a man held
prisoner in North Vietnam for five years
and a national coordinator of the sm aller
and more m ilitant Families for Im mediate
Release, said Nixon’s Tuesday speech had
too many holes.
Miss Cronin, 25, of Silver Spring, Md.,
the Nixon
the eight points
in
“ President Nixon didn’t say anything
about withdrawing from Cambodia or I,aos
or about aircraft in the 7th Fleet and in
is
Thailand. I ’m leery. I hope the plan
accepted, but
thes#
points.”
I ’m worried about
MISS CRONIN said
the Fam ilies for
Im m ediate R elease will go ahead with
previously announced plans to campaign
in slates with presidential prim ary election*
for candidates who favor a fixed deadline
for withdrawal of U .S . forces from In
dochina.
“ I’m not real optimistic, just cautiously
optimistic.” said Judith Blevins, wife of
an Air Force captain missing for mor#
than five years.
“ I think it was a fair proposal, but I’m
just going to wait and hope it does some
good,” she snitf of the President’s offer,
aired to the nation Tuesday night. " I don’t
want
too much until
something definite comes in.”
think about
to
it
Linda Ann St. Pierre, another of several
persons surveyed, said she was “ real en
couraged.” But she added: “ I think w#
have
the North
Vietnamese say, though. I never get my
hopes up any more until I see what th*
other side has to say.”
to w alt and sco what
Her husband, Copt. Dean Paul St. Pierre,
has been missing in action for nearly four
years.
Mrs. John Held, whose husband also has
been missing nearly four years, expressed
disappointment.
“The thing I’m disappointed ta ta that
politics ta still Involved with this, and th#
election coming up probably affected thi*
proposal’s announcement,” she said.
— L C I T elep h o to ,
staid of
proposal:
Getting the Point
Komar, a Hindu holy man, demonstrates his powers o f endurance, as he sleeps on
spikes at a Fort W orth shopping center. W hile he is a Hindu holy man, Komar has
never been to India, and although he is a recognized psychic, he doesn't believe in
psychic powers.
State High Court Says
Regent's Land Deal Legal
Tile State Supreme Court
ruled Wed-
nesday that the purchase by regents of
the 588-acre University of The Perm ian
Basin campus site near Odessa. Is legal.
The unanimous decision overruled
the
finding of the 3rd Court of Civil Appeals
a t Austin in favor of the lower trial court’s
findings which supported the regents.
landowners
The plaintiffs, private
in
Fetor County, expressed concern over the
presence of high pressure oil and gas in
stallations, claiming that these made the
proposed site “ unsuitable” for a campus.
“ The first tim e one of these university
m ilitants hits one of those lines with a
bullet, there will be an inferno,” attorney
John VV. Stayton of Austin told the court
a t a Nov. 3, 1971, hearing.
The high court agreed that a “ plausible
argum ent was m ade against the suitability
of the site” , but it added, “ whether the
site was a good one or a bad one is not
for us to say.”
The surface pipelines under question are
on the 308 acres designated to become the
“ Campus Core.” The regents’ general plan
was to have these pipelines removed
an outer 280 acre “buffer zone.”
to
While this has not yet been accomplished,
“ the regents accepted the conveyance of
both tracts” with the provision that “ no
the
action
University should take place unless .
. .
the pipelines and other
facilities were
removed.”
activate
operate
and
to
The Supreme Court overruled the appeals
court decision that since the land donated
to
the regents w’as bought with County
bonds, the requirem ent that the land he
obtained free of debt wras violated.
“Clearly there is no debt to the State
in the ordinary sense of the word. The
regents did not buy the land from anyone.
There was no unpaid balance,” the court
said.
the
The Supreme Court also dismissed
plaintiff’s claim
the Ector County
that
commissioners had exceeded their authority
when they bought the outer 280 acres for
a park and then donated it to the University
System.
life was ruled valid Wednesday by a Stat#
Supreme Court justice.
Justice Gerald P. Culkin m ade the ruling
after hearing argum ents
in chambers.
Hughes swore the affidavit in the Bahamas
on Friday before a notary
in
Nevada.
licensed
Questions had been
raised about
Nevadan’s legal status in the Bahamas.
th#
In the statem ent, the recluse indsutriallst
said he “never authorized” authors Robert
P. Eaton or Irving to publish “anything
by or about me.”
EACH MAN has written a book claimed
from conversations with
to be derived
Hughes.
“ I do not personally know either Robert
P. Eaton or Clifford Irving,” the Hughes
statem ent said.
Howard L. Eckersley of Nevada, said
to be a Hughes confidant, notarized the
affidavit in Nassau.
Acceptance of the affidavit was a victory
for Rosemont Enterprises, which claims to
have exclusive rights to Hughes’ life story'.
The Nevada corporation has asked the
courts to prohibit distribution of the Eaton
book, called “My Life and Opinions:” the
Irving book. Eaton excerpts in the Ladies
Home Journal,
in Life
magazine and paperbacks.
Irving excerpts
Lawyers opposing Rosemont sought
to
have
the
the affidavit disqualified on
grounds that only a m em ber of the U.S.
consulate in a foreign country could attest
to the authenticity.
Irving told newsmen before he left his
home in Ibiza in the Balearic Islands that
he was returning to try to untangle the
mysteries that have arisen over the pur
ported autobiography of the secretive in
dustrialist.
AT THE SAME time, Irving's New' York
lawyer, Ackerman, was quoted as saying
that he had summoned the author back
here and that “Cliff has nothing to hide.
He’ll take on all inquiries.”
later,
however, Ackerman’s
secretary said no news conference was
anticipated upon Irving’s arrival. Ackerman
himself was unavailable for comment.
Hours
Before leaving Ibiza, Irving said he was
flying to New York for a court appearance
In a libel suit against him over a previous
book.
In coming to New York. Irving and his
wife, Edith, passed up a request from Swiss
police to go to Zurich for questioning about
the mysterious deposits and withdrawals
of the checks from McGraw-Hill.
Forecast for Austin and vicinity calls for
considerable cloudiness with occasional
through Thursday. Decreasing
light rain
c l o u d i n e s s and cooler on Friday.
Precipitation probability 30 percent through
Thursday night. Southerly winds 5 to 15
m.p.h. shifting to northwesterly on Friday.
High Thursday is expected to be in the
mid-60’s with an expected low in the upper
50 s.
Dow Jones Stocks Continue Decline
NEW YORK
Stock market prices dropped for the sixth straight session Wed
nesday. Trading was moderate.
T ho closing Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks fell 5.57 to
889.15.
John Smith, an analyst at Fahnestock & Co., noted the market
Wednesday just picked up where it left off Tuesday.
The market rallied briefly Tuesday with the announcement President
Richard M. Nixon would make a major foreign policy address that
night, but closed lower.
“Investors felt there was nothing new in the speech, and so the
market resumed the pattern it had traced in the past six sessions,
and prices dropped,” Smith explained.
Noise Limits Urged
WASHINGTON
The Environmental Protection Agency said Wednesday the federal
government should establish noise limits on aircraft, and other tran
sportation equipment, construction equipment and internal combustion
engines.
It w as learned also Wednesday that the E P A is drafting plans to
broaden the sale of lead-free gasoline.
In a report to Congress, EPA said the technology already is available
to control most forms of noise but is not being applied because of
“ inadequate social, economic, or governmental pressures for noise
abatement.”
Temporary School Taxes Ordered
SAN ANTONIO
A federal judge issued an order Wednesday that allows Texas school
districts to levy taxes and issue bonds while the State draw's up a
new system of financing public education.
Chief U.S. Bist. Judge Adrian Spears signed the order on behalf
of himself and two other federal judges who declared the financing
system unconstitutional last month.
Responding to a motion for clarification filed by Texas Atty. Gen.
Crawford Martin, Spears amended parts of the original ruling “in
an attempt to dispel all possible doubt as to what was intended.”
Board Candidates
State Platforms
G. Baldridge
S. Armstrong
J. Adkins
Election Set for Wednesday
R. Shields
P. M ayo
P. Kelly
(Fd*tor’s note: The following are statement# by
candidates for the Texas Student Publications Board
Wednesday elections. Candidates who could not be
reached for comment Wednesday will be given an
equal opportunity to state their platforms in Friday’s
Texan.)
PLACE I—AT LARGE
“As
• Sally Armstrong:
(Young
Socialist for Jenness and Pulley), I am dedicated
to making The Texan a student newspaper rather
than an organ of the
journalism departm ent. I
support tile four major planks of the YSJP.
a YSJP
“ Since other campus organizations a re active in
m ass liberation, I would give more emphasis to the
liberation movements.”
• Ronnie Franklin: “ My prim ary goal would
be to first obtain operating funds for TSP on a
permanent guaranteed basis so that TSP and Tile
Texan can continue to operate. Secondly, I would
hope to move the board in an attem pt to challenge
the legality of the regents’ rule prohibiting delivery
of the Texan to off-campus nonsubscribers.”
• David Gentry: Unavailable
f o r comment
Wednesday.
•
Patrick Kelly: “ I believe much needs to
be done in straightening out relations between Austin
and the University. The Daily Texan should take
the lead in developing all methods of communication
term s of personal
between
contact between students, citizens and community
leaders.”
them, especially In
PLACE 2—AT LARGE
“ I believe the best publisher is th# one that In
• John Adkins: Unavailable
f o r
comment
terferes the least.”
Wednesday.
• Andrew C arr: “ I will try to m ake decisions
that somehow' reflect directly the view’s of students,
whether or not those views align with those of the
regents. I would
the
publications to the board; right now they have
only token control.”
to return control of
like
• Lynne Denis: “I ’ve a1 was been
interested
in The Daily Texan. I thought the TSP Board would
be interesting. I ’ve worked for lawyers a long tim e.”
“I believe students should have as big a part
as possible in running TSP. I would push for more
student control. I w’ould like to find out m ore about
the trust agreement also.”
• Drrek Jeffers: “I am one of
the Young
Socialists for Jeness and Pulley, I want to turn
the Texan around to build student movements.
“I want tile Texan to be controlled by students.
There should be no censorship. I want to build
a student defense of
The Texan against such
problems as the TSP controversy last sum m er.”
PLACE 1-JOURNALISM
“I believe
• Powell Banning:
that student
members, especially
journalism
department, should make every effort to protect
Tne Texan and other publications from any en
croachment on
the ad
ministration.
independence by
those from
their
the
• Richard Finegan: “ As a student journalist
and as one who has also worked as a professional
reporter, I feel I have an understanding of the
problems that face student publications. I feel the
m ajority of the current board has not indicated
any
the constitutional
freedom of the press to which student publications
are also entitled.
commitment
strong
to
• Pam Mayo: “ I would like to have seen dif
ferent and more deliberate action by the board
concerning funding for publications and the Ranger
decision.
“ I would work for a m andatory funding system,
sim ilar to tile Texas Union fund, rather than the
optional system set up now.”
PLACE 2—JOURNALISM
•B etsy Hall (unopposed): “I want to represent
tile students on the staff as well as in the journalism
department. Since I am on tile Texan staff, I mainly
want to give Tile Texan a voice on the TSP Board,
since the board selects the managing editor, which
is a pretty im portant decision.
“ I will represent the Texan staff.”
PLACE J—JOURNALISM
•G ary Baldridge: “ I will try for a closer and
more understanding relationship between student
and faculty m em bers of the board.
“ One of my goals will be a revision of the present
TSP Handbook
avoid
the
disagreem ents like the candidate eligibility m atter
that came up during the last meeting.”
board
can
so
•J o e Dacy II: “I think I could lend genuine
objectivity to the board. They need someone with
an open mind. I have no political affiliations.
“ Also, I would try to get more money for TSP.
TSP is $99,000 in debt, and we cannot efficiently
run and we cannot put out good publications when
we are that much in debt.”
• Diane Callis: Unavailable for comment Wed
nesday.
•T im Donahue: “ As the only m ember of the
past TSP Board running for re-election, I can
provide insight to the board. I consider myself
the leader in the actions taken by the TSP Board
in regard to the legal battle with the Board of
Regents in 1971. I was the author of the proposals
which guided our legal actions over
those long
m onths.”
•H ana Shields: “I am running because I think
I would be good for the TSP Board. I would like
to see someone who knows something about jour
nalism on the board. I have worked on The Texan
for a year and a half, and I think I have a good
idea of what the running of a paper entails and
a good understanding of the problem of censorship.”
F. Banning
C. Brown
D. Collis
A. Carr
J. Dacy
L. Denis
T. Donahue
R. Finegon
R. Franklin
J. Franks
D. Jeffers
D. Gentry
— Texan Staff Photo#
B. Hall
r
For years, student editors and reporters serving on the staff of The
Texan have raised the dander of University administrators, regents,
professors and students.
It is a simple fact of life that one cannot please all of the people
all of the time. It is a blatant reality that only a fool would commit
his energies to such a futile endeavor.
Consequently, it was no surprise to The Texan when Regent Jenkins
Garrett called for a study of The Texan and its relationship to the
University’s Department of Journalism. The day was Jan. 29, 1971,
the place was Dallas, and surely the die was cast.
One remembers rem arks heard in halls of the Journalism Building.
Conversations between professors or professors and students would
contain an admonition to The Texan.
“Beware,” they warned, “ if you anger the administration and the
regents this time, you may not survive it.”
Winter’s winds are chilling. Perhaps this is what insulated The Texan
from cowering in face of the impending “study.” Texas Student
Publications’ 50-year charter was quickly running out, and we knew it.
Or, perhaps a devotion to one’s chosen profession marked our path:the
sure knowledge that journalists, like others, cannot compromise their
integrity without losing dignity.
Winter faded into spring and a new controversy presented itself.
A team of Texan investigative reporters learned that the University
had remodeled a home for Chancellor d iaries LeMaistre without
taking competitive bids, thus violating State law. Furthermore, it
was apparent that University officials had no intention of disclosing
where the funds for “Bauer House” had come from. “An anonymous
donor” was said to have contributed $600,000 to erect the manse. To
date, that “donor” remains anonymous.
The furor that ensued was well reported. The Texan broke the Bauer
House story and forced Regent Frank C. Erwin to account partially
for the University’s actions before a special State Senate investigative
committee. Clearly, The Texan embarassed the regents, and the battle
lines were again redrawn.
The result of all of this was a veiled threat cast by the regents, a
James Kilpatrick
Editorial*
On the
carrousel
government agency, that The Texan, a journalistic endeavor, would
be altered. At last, after a rather nonthorough investigation, LeMaister
presented his panacea: a new TSP, with only journalism students
having voting membership on the publishing board.
This compromised The Texan’s responsibility to its student readers,
By vesting publishing responsibilities solely with journalism students,
it was clear that The Texan could easily become a departmental house
organ, rather than a campuswide newspaper.
At last, after what seemed to be an eternity of conferences (some
public and some not so public), the TSP Board opted for a trust
agreement with
the regents, naming a government agency (the
regents) as publisher of student publications and demoting the TSP
Board to the status of “operating trustees.”
The new board of directors included four places for journalism
students and two places for at-large members. Thus, journalism
students who number about 1,200 received twice as much represen
tation as the rest of the students on campus, who number about 36,000.
Also, the trust agreement stated that the election for TSP Board
places and editor must occur at least three weeks before the Student
Government elections. This means that candidates for these positions
must start planning campaigns in the first weeks of the spring
semester, If not earlier. The first weeks of each semester art
traditionally hectic at The Texan. Each semester a new managing
editor takes over the day-to-day operation of the newspaper, and get*
ting settled takes some time.
Add to this the chaos that editorship campaigns have traditionally
yielded, include interest in the journalism places, and the chances
are that you’ll come up with a concoction as easy to organize as a
caesar salad (rotten egg included).
Understandably, it is important to separate Texan staffers cam
paigning for editor or TSP Board places from the regular operation
of the newspaper. This gives each candidate the time he needs to
wage his campaign and also insures that The Texan will not feel the
pressure of staff members running against each other and will remain
unified in its efforts toward a fair reporting of each day s news.
The moves that started last January, almost one year to date, have
now reached fruition. Indeed, the next TSP Board will be strongly
influenced by four journalism students and three journalism faculty
members, representing vested interests rather than the campus at
large. The Texan has suffered because of the odd timing of these
elections, and a new editor will be elected almost four full months
before taking office.
One cannot blame journalism students and Texan staffers for not
fully understanding the implications of that “sacred ’ trust agreement.
Indeed, it is difficult to say if anyone knows where this carrousel wall
stop.
One place on the new board has already been filled, as one candidate
was not certified and another withdrew'. The new board member is
also a Texan copy editor.
So, Chancellor LeMaistre and distinguished regents, I salute you.
Surely, you have won. For it is difficult to envision a “free and un
fettered” newspaper where one special interest group dominates a
board of directors and copy editois may censor The Texan’s elected
editor.
—STEVE WISCH
Managing Editor
McGovern: a nice guy finish
EXETER, N.H. — George McGovern,
senator from South Dakota, turned up in
this old New England town tile other night,
one year to the hour after he formally
a n n o u n c e d his candidacy
the
Democratic nomination. The occasion had
its ironies.
for
Diming a year of unrelenting labor, tile
senator has created the most proficient
campaign organization in the business. He
has attracted top professionals from the
old Kennedy and McCarthy teams. He h a s
crisscrossed
the nation, averaging four
speeches a day. He has spent a million
dollars. One year ago, according to the
polls, he was the choice of 2 percent of
the Democratic cliairmen. He has gained.
He is now the choice of three.
In some of the polls, to be sure, this
decent and affable man comes off better.
But not much better. It seems woefully
unfair. By all the yardsticks, McGovern
ought to measure up as the liberals’ liberal.
He should have inherited, by this time,
all those legions of shaggy boys and lissome
those
girls, all
blacks, Jews, chicanos, welfare mothers,
tenant farmers and foes of the war in
Vietnam whose ardent support could speed
intellectuals, all
those
him on to victory. Where are they? They
cannot be perceived; t h e y are miesing
persons, presently unaccounted for.
M cG overn CAME to Exeter toward the
end of an 18-hour day to speak to students
and faculty of the Phillips Academy. He
was harassed by a gnat-svvarm of j'oung
Socialist Workers whose stinging animosity,
considering McGovern’s almost
flawiess
record, seems especially unkind. They
buzzed about the stately campus, passing
out leaflets that attacked the candidate by
name. Within the auditorium, they unfurled
a bedsheet banner from the balcony—a
banner that bore a device politely rude:
“ Please Not You in’72.”
A George Wallace, caught in a similar
situation, would have turned it to h i s o u t i
advantage. Sweet are the uses of adversity.
McGovern studiously ignored the incident
and allowed himself no more than the
flicker of a grateful smile when an in
dignant professor,
just below',
snatched the offending banner down.
sitting
McGovern made all the right answers
to the Exeter questions. Would he reduce
the power of the Pentagon? “If I didn’t
have that hope, I wouldn’t run.” Would
he cut military spending? He would cut
The firing line
New critical low
Congratulations to The Daily Texan and
to amusements writer Bob
particularly
Doerschuk for truly a new low in critical
essays. While Mandril allegedly “mixes
moods and Muzak,” Doerschuk mixes
closed mindedness and stupidity in his
enjoyable per
analysis of Mancini’s
formance last Saturday night. It seems that
in Doerschuk’s attempt to compare Man-
rini’s soft style and talented musical sounds
to “gutless” nostalgic gook, he has shown
himself to possess all of the qualities of
an antiestablishment pseudo critic. As to
the
of Doerschuk’s
aspect
criticism, I can detect little grounds for
most of his comments, which leads me
to suspect that he knows little about music.
Now I’m no authority on music, but after
having played the violin for five years I
can see that Doerschuk isn’t, either.
technical
Brian Pollard
Government
men have in the past served and protected
students and continue doing so now.
Where’s the respect, Kenn?
Finally, without passing on the rightness
or wrongness of Texas’ marijuana statutes,
I should think that one’s opposition to any
law would inspire him to work as a citizen
to have such a law changed. It has been
done before and could be done here. In
stead, Skinner seems to be advocating that
people risk losing their rights as citizens
and even more freedom than he already
claims they have lost. For a cheap thrill
he would have them spend time in prison
for no constructive purpose, and at the
expense of what could have been promising
careers. So why not work for a change
in the law if it means so much instead
of berating people who are simply doing
their job upholding it?
Michael Parker
Junior, Journalism.
The people's choice?
To the editor:
Kenn Skinners letter in Tuesday’s Firing
Line show's his willingness to break laws
which don’t suit him and to castigate those
sworn to uphold and enforce all our law's.
True, the lives of nine people arrested last
Thursday may be permanently marred. If
so, it won’t be because what they were
doing was moral but because they were
breaking the law.
While it may De easy for us as individuals
to choose which laws we should or shouldn’t
obey, the police have no such easy solutions
in their enforcement of the laws. They have
their duty to do, whether they personally
agree with a law, whether it Is an unpopular
law on campus, and whether their per
formance of their duty will subject them
t o
and
“recimination” by such people as Kenn
Skinner. Skinner states that when the police
serve and protect students they will be
treated with respect. This is very nice of
him, but I hasten to point out that those
“revolution”
threats
of
SI urn lovers
To the editor:
Reaction
to Dr. LeMaistre’s remarks
concerning housing west of the University
seems to indicate Texan editorialists and
governor’s
readers
statement a while back that “some people
like to live in slums.” Where were you
when Preston needed you?
agree with
our
Patricia L. Davis
Crossed Crossword
To the editor:
The United Features crossword puzzle
you carry is so tame it is suitable only
for secretaries and freshmen. Couldn’t you
find one that has a little content to "it?
The New' York Time puzzle would be an
excellent substitute if you could get hold
of it.
Otherwise its a good newspaper—keep
it up.
Terry Welch
Engineering Science Building SSS
it by $30 billion. Did he agree with Sen.
Muskie’s view that the time is not right
for a black vice-presidential nominee? “ I
happen to think the senator underestimated
the tolerance of the American people.”
Yet none of this ignited a spark. Tile
applause was w’arm, the crowd friendly,
the young people respectful, but at 0:30
p.m., w’hen the rally was over, it was over.
Not even a corporal’s guard of students
trailed McGovern to his car.
THIS IS TOUGH turf for McGovern. It
is widely believed that Muskie has a lock
on New Hampshire’s 20 delegates to the
Democratic convention, and what is widely
believed is probably so. McGovern’s pur
pose is merely to look respectable, to come
out of the March 7 primary with his can
didacy not badly bruised. The growing
assumption is that nobody but nobody will
look good in Florida on March 14. His
make it or break it date falls April 4 in
Wisconsin.
is
important
Yet New Hampshire
to
McGovern. If he trails Sam Yorty here,
it will be hard to maintain his credibility
in the race. He is therefore making the
earlymoming rounds of factories, the better
to shake a few cold hands. He is hitting
the high schools. He is working hard in
Hillsborough and Rockingham counties,
down on the Massachusetts line, where the
Boston spillover offers a chance for mop
ping up.
liberal Democrats
His prospects are not hopeless. McGovern
got a needed boost IO days ago, when a
caucus of 2,000
in
Massachusetts gave him a ringing en
dorsement. On the day he came to Exeter,
he wrang some publicity out of the support
of a covey of Nobel laureates. His specific
recommendations for defense cuts, wrong
as they may be. in the conservative view,
provide a dramatic contrast with Nixon.
McGovern’s problem, six months before
Miami, is that he is simply too nice a
guy; and the way it looks now, when they
call the roll down yonder in July, he W'ill
finish where nice guys
finish. Under
Durocher’s law, that's last.
Copyright 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Register
to Vote
at these locations:
Business-Economics Building M all
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East Mall
Jester Center
W e st M all
University ’Y'
Registration
to date:
20,000 (est.)
3 days left
TV cartoons contribute to national violence, says study group . . .
Randy Fitzgerald
An arbitrary standard
Recent arrests of University students on
marijuana charges indicate once more the
vigor with which
enforcement
authorities are senselessly attempting to
persecute those whose drug lifestyle con
stitutes a “nonvictim crime.”
law
As if the marijuana law itself wasn’t
enough of a restraint on individual liberty,
past incidents have shown a law agency
trend toward flagrant violations of the Bill
of Rights to reap “mass arrest” benefits.
A
of
PRIME
EXAMPLE
this
authoritarian trend was the Dallas Lee
Park raid in which more than 300 persons
were rounded up and jailed on mere
suspicion of having committed a drug-
related crime. One Dallas area attorney
went so far as to label the Lee Park in
cursion “a police state tactic comparable
to Nazi Germany.”
State
law enforcement agencies have
initiated concentrated efforts to eradicate
through employment of
marijuana use
u n d e r c o v e r agents and
informers.
Imaginative states like California are in
the process of deploying elaborate sur
veillance devices and pot sensitive canines
to detect marijuana and other drugs.
In terms of arrest figures, these pot-
related efforts resulted in 60,000 marijuana
busts in the state of California alone in
1969. This was accomplished at a State
expenditure of nearly $100 million excluding
prosecution costs.
IT SHOULD BE clear these law agency
undercover escapades and vast monetary
and man-hour expenditures have resulted
in thousands of arrests but In no way have
such preventive measures stemmed the use
of marijuana.
An estimated 24-million Americans have
experienced the effects of the forbidden
weed and at least eight million of these
can be termed regular users. Not since
the infamous era of alcohol prohibition
have so many individualistic Americans
defied the moralistic virtues enacted into
law by this nation’s unseparated church
and state.
By attempting to enforce the criminally
harsh marijuana laws, a growing segment
of law enforcement personnel and resources
are being diverted from the areas they
are needed most—prevention of life and-
property crimes.
MARIJUANA USE has yet to be proved
harmful to the human body. Even if proof
were to be forthcoming that pot is as
harmful as alcohol or tobacco this in itself
would not constitute sufficient grounds to
institute criminal penalties for its use.
Marijuana
laws have also become a
means for suppressing political dissent as
evidenced by the 30-year prison term given
Houston black activist Lee Otis Johnson
for passing one joint to an undercover
agent. Plants and entrapment have become
“ ethical” devices undercover agents use to
apprehend “suspected” or even ‘'potential"
marijuana users and sellers.
Another point emphasized by proponent*
of marijuana legalization pertains to the
enforcement of
laws
breeding open rebellion. There can be no
respect for laws which in themselves hold
no respect for individual freedom.
such unpopular
Penalties for marijuana use range from
two years to life imprisonment In Texas
to a maximum penalty of seven days in
the County jail for possession in Nebraska.
This vast
laws
should be proof enough some semblance
of common standard should be made. Th*
best standard would be no standard at all.
inequity between State
T h e D a i l y T e x a n
Student Newspaper of UT Austin
ED ITO R.....................................................................................
R odrigue
MANAGING EDITOR ................................................................. steve Wisch
CITY ED ITO R ....................................................................................................Liz Bas*
ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR .............................................. Debby Bay
SPORTS E D IT O R .......................................................................’ ’ Alan
AMUSEMENTS EDITOR .................................................. Miles Hawthorne
FEATURE EDITOR ..................................................................... Cliff Avery
Issue News Editor .............................................................................................
Tijjy
General Reporters ........................... .......... Mike Fresques, John Pope, Rusty Todd,
Randy Fitzgerald, Sheila Franc!*
News Assistants ..................................... Susan Chambless, Mary Barnes, Dotty Jacobus
Editorial Assistant ............................................................................................. gteve
Associate Amusements Editor ................................................................ .'..' cicely Wayne
A c t a n t Sports Editor .................................................................................... Ed Spaulding
Make-Up Editor .................................................................................................... Marie
Wire
Linda Spaulding
Copy Editors .......................................... Gayle Reaves, Joano Ruhland, Joyce Hotchkiss
I hotographers ........................................................... Marlon Taylor, John Van Beekum
Opinion* expressed
In The Dally Texan
are those of the editor or the w riter of the
Article and are not necessarily
those of the
University adm inistration or the Board of Re-
gents.
nallsm Building 103) or at the news lnhnr«fnr»
rater*
(Journalism Balkline toil
delivery should he m ade in Joumnlfsm BulMhlS
107 (471-5214) and advertising In^
Building 111 (471 3227).
Inm an!.?
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The Dally Texan, a *tudent newspaper at Thph n nn v 1 ’r w „naI • ed Is*1/1 g ,rei?r(,sentaUve of
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V w l w v
The University of Texas at Austin,
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m
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y o u ’ d have
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“I WOULD NOT have
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not had a good deal of ac
ceptance from the students.
And I felt th at I had.”
a n d
Duncan, caught between
ad
the U n i v e r s i t y
m inistration
37,000
students who sometimes feel
unloved, seem s to be con
scious of the pressure on
him to stay in the middle
of the road.
“I can’t speak for students
a concensus manner.
in
Ronnie
Franklin
TSP. Board
Place I
A t Large
for '72
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& S'ACJK§ - 1972
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knows? Willis Recti might never
be back.”
So. at 29, Reed’s career Is
definitely in jeopardy, and his
teammates realize it, although
they remain hopeful.
“ His future
is definitely
in
limbo,” said Walt Frazier. “ He
doesn’t feel too confident.
It’s
easy for him to get down on
himself, not being able to play
much
this season. Maybe he
won’t be back this year, but he'll
work hard all
this summer,
knowing him, to come back next
year.’’
Next year, however may not
lie soon enough for the Knicks,
who currently trail the front-
running Boston Celtics by four
games
in the N BA’s Atlantic
Division.
“ We'll just have to go ahead
without him,” said Je rry Lucas,
who has taken over Reed’s post
at center. “ Theres always been
the hope in the back of our minds
that he'll come back—there still
is.
“ If not, ITI just try to do the
best job I can.”
Worster Acquired
By Grid Cardinals
ST. LOUIS (A P )—The St. Louis
football Cardinals announced the
acquisition Wednesday of Steve
Worster, former University of
Texas running back who played
last season
the Canadian
in
Football League.
Worster was a
fourth-round
draft choice by the Los Angeles
Rams in 1971. He signed with
the Hamilton Tiger-Cats but was
suspended by the C FL after four
games because of an arrest on
possessing
of
a
marijuana.
charge
Worster was arrested at his
apartment where he was en
tertaining friends. He said he had
no knowledge of the marijuana.
Tho 6-0, 210-pound
fullback
scored
and
averaged 5.1 yards per carry
with Texas.
touchdowns
36
The Cardinals, to get the rights
to Worster, gave the Rams a
fourth-round draft choice thev
had obtained when they traded
Don Parish to Los Angeles in
October.
1/3 ct.
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S E R V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N
V EH IC LES IS
O U R SPECIALTY
Youngsters Hold Key
To UT Track Season
holds the national junior college
120-high hurdles record. He holds
the Texas record in the 120 highs
with a 13.6 mark.
Lightfoot, considered by Price
to be the outstanding high school
track product in the country last
season,
tied the national high
school mark in the 120 highs with
a 13.5 but has run a 13.4.
season.
HODGES w'on’t be the only
school record holder to return
this
Thomas
(discus), B ill Oakes (high jump)
and Carl Johnson (100-yard dash)
will all be returning to add
strength to the squad.
Alan
include
Other outstanding newcomers
recruited by Price and assistant
B ill M iller
freshman
Bishop Dolegiewicz, a shot putter
and discus man; B ill Smalley,
a pole vaulter from Cisco Junior
freshman Don
College
Ausmus, a shot putter.
and
All told. Texas will be returning
15 lettermen to accompany the
freshman talent that has been
channeled into the program.
In evaluating
the over-all
strengths of this year’s team
Price feels that Texas will be
strong in the hurdles, the sprint
relays and the distance medleys.
Price also feels Texas w ill have
respectable two and
four-mile
relay teams.
P R IC E MAINTAINS that the
over-all strength of the team w ill
be improved in that Texas will
be able to contend in the sprint
relays, anchored by Johnson, and
in several of the field events.
With the optimism of a coach
who has a bevy of talent to work
with Price feels that Texas could
climb back on top of the South
west Conference this season but,
tempering his optimism with
reality, he says it is too early
to tell the outcome of this track
season.
At any rate, as Price says, It |
is going to be a real interesting
year.
Crenshaw Leads by IO
In Massingill Qualifying
B y ROY MARK
Assistant Sports Editor
In Memorial Stadium things
are a little quieter in the spring
than in the fall. The hordes of
padded
thickly
loudly
and
moaning
football players are
gone. Darrell Royal’s tower has
been wheeled away to rust in
a corner and new people are now
practicing within the vast con
fines of the 75.000-seat stadium.
Cleburne Price, starting his
is
second season at Texas,
directing the activities now, as
he prepares his track team for
the 1972 campaign that will see
the Texas
in
run
several major national meets.
trackmen
THE 1972 version of Texas
track and field should be con
siderably
last
stronger
season when the ’Horns placed
third in the conference meet.
than
The slant on this year’s team
Is, without a doubt, youth. There
are only five seniors on the team
and many freshmen are counted
on to help carry the load.
“ It should be a real interesting
leason. We have a tough schedule
and a lot of young kids, but we
had a good fall, and I have a
lot of confidence in these boys,”
Price commented as he watched
a practice session in progress.
“ I feel like we signed some
of the top track prospects in the
country last season and with the
NCAA champion Ben Crenshaw
fired his third consecutive subpar
round Wednesday to take a 10-
stroke lead in the qualifying for
the Massingill Trophy.
Crenshaw turned
in a five-
under par 67 to go with previous
rounds of 64 and 70, in extending
his margin over second place
Tom Kite to a full IO strokes.
Kite had an even par 72
Wednesday.
The tournament, now at the 54-
hole mark, was played at Morris
Williams Golf Course Wednesday
after the first two rounds were
held at the Austin Municipal
Course.
Golf Results
Ben Crrnshaw ..
Tom K i t e .........
Bren t Buckm an
L ad d Larson . . .
Jo h n ny Dill
. . . .
George Tucker .
Tony P fa ff .......
David Roberts .<
P a u l Darw in . . .
Bob H arw ell
P T -2 0 1
72— 211
72— 21*5
7 0 — 218
70— 222
77— 223
74— 223
76— 225
76— 226
78— 227
WILCO
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Cleburne Price
. . . 'real interesting season.'
boys we have returning we could
be strong. W e have more strength
in the sprints and the field events
this year, and that’s where we
have been weak in the past,”
Price said.
It is the thought of the hurdlers
that brings a smile to the hand
some Price’s face.
“ W E ’R E R E A L L Y going to be
strong there with Randy Lightfoot
and Gordon Hodges. They’re
really two fine athletes.”
Hodges
junior college
transfer from Houston where he
is a
In third place are Brent Buck
l i n and Ladd Larson, each with
218 scores. Larson and Johnny
D il l both broke par with rounds
of 70 Wednesday.
The tournament, which ends
next week, will last a total of
144 holes, and determines the
members of the 1972 golf squad.
M E M B E R
A M E R IC A N G E M
S O C IE T Y
Your edecasion
Ain’t (complete
witout one of our
Klass Rings . . .
D IR E C T
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Strong with Glove, Bat
. . . Texas first baseman John Langerhans faces decision.
Scores
C O L L E G E }
ii Ronnie
Jack so n ville 84. Flo rid a St 82
Louisville 77, St. Louis U. 59
Davidson SI, Princeton 74
Va. Tech 105, W est Va. 10-4 (3 OT)
Duke 77. W a k e Forest 66
V irg in ia 112, Johns Hopkins 70
Penn RO. La Salle 66
Nebraska 64, Okla St 63
Tem ple 76. Gen. Wash. 73
Kent. St. 75. Bowling Green 65
St. Jo h n ’s, N Y 72. Hofstra 64
N ITA
Seattle 131, Atlanta 119
Chicago 117. Houston IO?
B altim o re 1 1 6 . B u f f a l o 1 1 4 (O T I
M ilwaukee 120, Detroit OI
Philadelphia 113, Cincinnati 102
A B A
N ew Y o rk 118. Kentucky 10'
Franklin
TSP. Board
Place I
At Large
(rd. Pol. Adv.)
I O O R i n d s o f
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new to p a ss our test is a g o o d
o ld car.
It ge ts our 1 0 0 % g u a ra n
tee that we'll repair or replace
all m ajor m echanical p arts*
for 30 d a ys or- 1000 miles,
whichever com es first.
That shows you what we
think o f o car that d o e sn ’t act
ifs ag e .
^engine, transmission, reor axle,
front axle assemblies, brake system,
electrical system.
1971 V W SED A N ,
I T O C
Std-, Lt. Blue 1 / 7 3
1969 V W SED AN,
I / A r
Std., Air, Radio IQ /3
1971 V W SED A N ,
Std., Lt. Blue
I T F A
I / D U
1971 V W C A M P E R , O y l f l E
Pop Top
. . . . J i / D
1970 Karmann Ghia
Coupe, Std.,
Radio
.......... 1895
1970 V W Fastback,
Automatic,
AmFm Radio . 1 7 / J
1 0 7 E
1971 V W SU PER BU G ,
Std., Radio, Sc 7O Q C
Many Extras . . Z 37 3
1970 V W Squareback,
Auto., Air,
Radio
n O Q C
.......... Z 3 7 3
1971 V W Fastback, Std.,
770E
Air, Radio,
Radials & MagsZ/73
1970 V W Fastback, 1 0 7 E
Std., Radio
. . 1 0 / 3
1970 V W SED A N ,
Std., Radio
I / A P
. . 1 0 / 3
1970 V W Squareback,
Std - A Ir-
Radio
7 1 E n
JLI bU
1971 V W Squareback,
Auto., Air,
Radio
A A A r
Z 7 7 3
1966 V W 5TA. W A G .,
De'u,
| nnr
Sun Roof . . . . IZ73
"C B" SMITH VOLKSWAGEN
Corner of Fifth and Lamar
Austin, Texas 476-9181
Y ou r D o w n to w n V W D e a le r
Thursday, January 27, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7
Langerhans' Lament:
Sign Now or Hold Out
B y DAN conn T R E
Sports Assistant
“ To sign or not to sign, that is the question.”
With apologies to William Shakespeare, such is
the predicament that I/>nghom first baseman John
Langerhans finds himself in.
Recently selected In the secondary phase of the
amateur draft by the Chicago Cubs. Langerhans
is undecided about signing a pro baseball contract.
Says Langerhans, “ J don’t know if I will sign or
not, but it doesn’t appear as if I w ill.”
THE HITCH in the negotiations is the amount of
money tho Cubs are willing to offer the slugging
first baseman to leave school before his final
season of eligibility.
“ I just want enough to make it worthwhile to
pass up this year,” says Langerhans. “ I really
value the opportunity to go to college.”
This makes the third time Langerhans has been
drafted by th® pros, and he has one more time
to enter the player pool if he doesn't sign this
time around.
OUTSTANDING prospects are usually drafted
when they graduate from high school, junior col
lege, after their twenty-first birthday, or when they
finish their college eligibility.
If Langerhans doesn’t sign now he will find
himself thrown back into the player pool and will
take the chance that the team drafting him next
time will offer him a more lucrative coin tract
than the Cubs have.
The South San product is coming off a superb
year in which he batted .413, hit 12 home runs
and batted in 60 runs. The homer and R B I figures
are University records.
Langerhans also expresses disappointment over
his positron in the amateur draft. He was the third
player picked by the Cubs and under the system
of the major league draft, he was picked for a
minor league team in Illinois. Conceivablyt he
could be assigned to another farm club.
“CHICAGO is a good organization to go with,”
says Langerhans, “ but I feel the type of ball we
play here is equivalent to class A or AA leagues.”
These thoughts are echoed by Baseball Coach Cliff
Gustafson, who says, “ .Some people have said we
ar® equivalent to either Class A or AA, although
it is hard to tell.”
In comparing major league prospects he has
coached with Langerhans, Gustafson says “ Each
boy is different, but he is the best power hitting
prospect we have had and he is an outstanding
fielder.”
It ought to be testament to his ability that
Langerhans lias been drafted previously by tho
Minnesota Twins and Milwaukee Brewers. “ I feel
like I can make it,” says Langerhans, “ and I
want to play ball real bad, but the money is the
big thing.”
WANTED
CAMP COUNSELORS
(Alive)
COLLEGE MEN AND W O M EN
(Who Like Working With Children)
b f
C A M P L O N G H O R N
A M
I
I/
I A l/ A
For Boys
For Girls
"America's Number I Camps"
Choice of 3 Terms
June 5-28 — June 29- Ju ly 22 — Ju ly 23-Aug. 15
*125 to *225 per term (Room, Board & Laundry Furnished)
COUNSROR INTERVIEWS AND RE-UNION
by Directors — Helen Frady, Bill Johnson,
Tex Robertson and Bob Hudson
FORTY ACRES CLUB
Monday Jan. 31
10:00 A.M . Till 5:00 P.M.
Page 8 Thursday, January 27, f 972 THE DAILY TEXAN
• w*
** \ N * -
T h e D aily T e x a n C l a s s i f i e d A d s
PHONE 471-5244 MON. THRU FRI. 8:00-5:00• • ri\ .
s >- < - ■ V; . s , •
*§& W$>M% WM$>&
,
>
•* < ,
- .V
s -
* t
s V
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8
' ii
v
*
'
s
.
.
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r
F o r S a l e
F o r S a l e
S e r v i c e s
A p a r t m e n t s , U n f .
A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n .
A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n .
L o s t & F o u n d
T O P C A S H P R I C E S paid fo r diam onds
old sold. C ap ito l D iam o n d Shop. 603
Co m m o do re P e r r y . 476-0178
___________
’68 M U S T A N G 289 4-speed, R & H R a d ia l
T ire s e x c e lle n t condition, 51,000 m iles.
478-6109, -$1900.
CLASSIFIED ADVEBTISINQ
RATES
E ach Word (15 word m inim um ) ^
I •®fi
..$ ...7 5
, $...05
Each Additional T im e
Student rate one tim e
E ach additional word
.
20 C onsecutive Issues
. $11.00
......................
IO w ords
. $15.00
..........................
15 words
. $19.00
..........................
20 words
. $38.00
......................
1 col. inch
. $70.00
......................
2 col. inch
. $90 .00
......................
3 col. inch
.$120.00
inch
......................
. . . .
Classified Display
I colum n x one inch one tim e $ -• m
.......... $ Z-W
E ach
4 col.
Additional Tim e
,,
(No copy ch an ce for
consecutive issue rates.)
DEADLINE SCHEDULE
Monday Texan F riday.
3:00 p.m
Tuesday Texan M onday, 11:00 a.m.
W e d n esd ay T exan
.
Tuesday, 11:00 a.m .
Thursday Texan
W ednesday. 11.00 a.m .
F riday Texan Thursday. 11:00 a.m.
„ . M
“ In the event of errors m ade In
an advertisem ent, im m ediate notice
m ust be given as the publishers are
responsible for only ONE incorrect
insertion. All claim s for adjustm ents
should be m ade not
let®* than 30
days after publication.
• . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S
less for 75c the firs!
15 w o rd * or
tim e, 5 c each a d d itio n a l word. Stu
receipt
dent must show
in Journalism
and p a y
Bld g. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
M o n d a y th ro u gh Friday.
in ad va n ce
A u d ito r's
F o r S a l e
40% OFF
the n o rm a l re ta il p ric e of
fo r the re m a in d e r of this
a ll posters
month.
G A N D A LF'S
102 E. 31st St.
B-18 1964 V O L V O . N e w clutch, shocks.
and sta rte r. A ir conditioner. $<00. 4.6-
________
0422.
finish. W o rld
J U S T R E C E IV E D five 1972 delude solid
state consoles, in beautiful handruobed
walnut
renowned B.S.R.
turntable A M - FM - FM - Ste re o radio and
A speaker audio system, $69 ea. M o n th
ly terms availab le. They may be
in
spected at U N C L A IM E D F R E IG H T , 6535
N . Lamar, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. M on . thru
_____
Fri., Sat. ’til I p.m.
It.
3 BRAND N E W BEDROOM SETS
in c lu d e d double dresser, mirror, chest,
and double bed. To be so d fo r $89.95
per set. Payments are availab le. W e al
so have 3 living room groups. U nclaim ed
Freight, 6535 N . Lamar, O p e n 9 a.m. to
6 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Sat. 'til
I p.m.
S P O R T Y P O N T IA C F I R E B I R D V 8 in
top condition. 1969 m odel. A u to m atic,
fa c to ry a ir. $2480. C a ll 477-3358.
B R A N D N E W S E W I N G M A C H I N E S
$35. N a tio n a lly ad ve rtis e d brand. W e
h a v e 1972 zigzag
sew ing m ach in e s
co m p le te w ith fa c to ry g uarantee, to be
sold
to r $39.95 e ach ca sh o r sm all
m o n th ly p aym e n ts. T hese m ach in e s
h a v e built-in co n trols fo r m akin g but
tonholes, hem ing, d e co rative stitches,
sew in g on buttons, darning, m ending,
o ve rca stin g , em b ro id e rin g and m a n y
oth e r featu res. T h e y m a y be inspected
an d tested a t U N C L A I M E D f R E I G H T ,
6535 N . L a m a r , 9 a.m . to 6 p.m . Mon.
th ru F r l . S a t till I p .m .________________
J U S T
R E C E I V E D
tapes.
Suggested lis t p rice is $5.95, to be
U N C L A IM E D
$1.99.
sold
F R E I G H T . 6535 N . L a m a r . N o D e ale rs.
8-track
only
for
FREE AMPLIFIER C LIN IC
M O D E R N
S T U D Y D E S K S , w a ln u t
fo rm ic a and steel. A lso s e c re ta ria l
s w ive l ch airs. 2226 G uad alup e. 477-4340,
452-4431.
R S U
S T E R E O C O M P O N E N T S ^ )
Including
tu rn tab le, a m p lifie r, speakers,
and dust c o v e r in w a ln u t finish. $49.95.
U n c la im e d F r e i g h t 6535 N o rth L a m a r.
10'x57' M O B I L E hom e (1964 N a t io n a l-
good co n d itio n ). C o m p le te ly furnished
two bed
—
room , w a sh e r, d ry e r. C a ll 382-2839 fo r
inform ation.
includes A C /CH. carpet,
R O L L E I 16S su b m in itu re 16mm c a m e
flash a t
film ,
ra. A u to m atic, case and
carton s B & W
tachm ent. T w o
ASA25. 476-8894.
U P R I G H T P IA N O . Good condition. $150.
supplies.
T w in bed. $10. A r c h e r y
474-1856.
A L L L E A T H E R G O O D S 30%-50% off
at T h e W h ite House, 1806 L a v a c a .
Clothing, belts, bags.
ca m eted,
10'x50' M O B I L E home. T w o bedrooms,
fu lly furnished, a ir condi
tioned, w a sh e r. E x t r a clean. C a ll 442-
7961.
A K C R E G I S T E R E D dob erm an pinchers,
two b lack m a le s an d one red m ale.
$85. 442-5688.
G O T M A R R I E D , got pregnant, c a n 't
get in o r nut of 1970 T riu m p h Suit-
fire. 12.600 m ile s. O n ly $1650. H elp. C a ll
451-3205 a n y tim e.
Discount Stereo
Most Brands
Low Prices
Full Warranty
453-1312
$3
BLUEJEANS
S O M E O L D & F A D E D .
S O M E W A S H E D J U S T O N C E .
FRESH PANTS
24th & San Antonio
M U S T S E L ! , b y S u n d ay,
'56 C h evro
le t w agon. 283, H u rs t R a l l y wheels. 17
mpg, m aro o n and b lack. B e s t o ffer
o v e r $300. 2520 Lo n g vie w , a p artm e n t
213 o r c a ll 474-1636 a fte r 5.
T E A C 1200V reel to re e l tap cd eck w ith
echo. $175. 441-1610.
STEREO CENTER
N O W AVAILABLE
5000X R e c e iv e r, S an s u l 2000A
S a n sui
R e c e iv e r, A lte c Bo lero S peakers, S h e r
wood Model S-7300 R e c e iv e r. Sherwood
M odel 7900 R e c e iv e r. D y n aco A m p lifie r
S C A
.SO. So n y T u rn tab le , S o n y Tape
D ecks. M odels 366 & 580, AR-5 Speak
ers. <& R L H S p e a k e rs . . . and other
fine stereo equipm ent.
203 E . 19th St.
476-6733.
P R I N T I N G . B I N D I N G . R e p o rts, theses.
d issertatio ns. S t r ic t
M a s te r
rates.
T hesis-D issertation S e rv ic e . 451-4357.
C harge.
L o w
U n iv e rs ity
q u a lity .
XEROX COPIES
4c EACH
single co p y rate
reductions 6c each
Q u a lity copies on plain bond paper.
S A N P E D R O S Q U A R E A P T S .
I f
an
storage,
you w a n t
e ve ry th in g — p r iv a c y ,
a p a rtm e n t w ith
space, quiet,
view ,
location, c h a rm , new
condition, co ve re d p a rk in g — plus g a r
dens,
firep lace, e x tra baths and all
usual am e n itie s a t $275 bills p a id — c a ll
for appo intm ents. 2704 S a n
478-2708
Pedro,
UNIQ UE CA RPO RT SALE
G IN N Y 'S C O P Y IN G SERVICE
F o r R e n t
South A m erican artifacts. Paintings by
Fearing, Frary, others. Ski1 s, short wave
gear, chair with ottom an, qlobe, boy's
microscope set, chess tab le, etc. Friday-
Sunday corner W a y s id e and M a rio n .
2200 San A ntonio 2nd floor
I block behind The C o -O p a t 22nd
53rd. 452-1926.
476-9171 or 452-8428
N O W LEASING
$135 MONTHLY
A LL UTILITIES PAID
ALL ELECTRIC,
I BEDROOM APTS.
• F U L L Y F U R N IS H E D
• F U L L Y C A R P E T E D A N D D R A P E D
• D IS P O S A L
• L A R G E W A L K - IN C L O S E T S .
R E N T A L S — D o rm size re frig e ra to rs. T V
and stereos. A lp in e R e n ta ls, 204 E .
2506 Manor Rd.
474-5550
T H E
C O M P A C T
R E F R I G E R A T O R S
and B / W T V fo r re n t b y se m e ste r
o r month. C a ll C e n tra l T e x a s A p p li
a n c e C o m pany, 6225 B u r n e t R o ad ,
454-4526.
D u p l e x e s , F u r n .
FALL RATES $129.50
tw o bedroom near down-
Swimming pool, ca rp eted ,
Large
fown.
a / c , w ood paneling.
474-2649
S O N Y TC-200 stereophonic re e l to reel
tape
D re sse r, 4904 L yn n w o o d 453-1868.
F reezer, Desk,
re co rd e r— $85,
outrageous p ric e s
D O Y O U O W N A V W ? D o n 't p a y
for re p a irs. C a ll
836-9972,
professional,
for
g uaranteed V W re p a irs.
454-2496
P A N A S O N IC R E E L to re e l stereo tape
deck. A u to m a tic re ve rse . A m p lifie r and
speakers. E x c e lle n t condition. 453-3185.
L E A R N P I A N O from ro ck m u sician
w ith c la s s ic a l background. $4-hour. 478-
9175.
I E X P E R T W A T C H
' guaranteed, best ch eap est in town, free
pick up and d e liv e ry : G up ta. P e tro le u m
i E n g in e e rin g B u ild in g , R o o m 403, 441-
: 6142.
R E P A I R I N G ,
A R E A — quiet,
E N F I E L D
d isc rim in atin g g ra d u a te or p rofessor for
e fficie n c y a p a rtm e n t. N o a n im a ls . $80.
476-8959.
1954 C H E V Y stationw agon. 474-4867.
R E M O V A B L E H A R D T O P F O R 69-72
T riu m p h T R 6 . E x c e lle n t condition. $150
or best offer. L a r r y 1:30-3:30pm, 454-
2992.
A V G . 25 P E R C E N T O F F ! M a g n avo x
components, televisions, C ra ig home c a r
units. F u ll w a rra n ty . T rip le R elec-
troniCS-appliances. R a n d y R e id , 471-
2479, 1308W Je s t e r .
1965 V W B U G . N e w tires. E x c e lle n t
m e ch a n ic a l condition. $600. T e r r y , 477-
.9926, 385-1707.
'64 F O R D 390. O v e rd riv e , fo u r door,
m aroon, five good tire s. $500, best offer.
154-8204.
1971’ a H O N D A 750.
E x c e lle n t. L o w
m ila g e. W in d shield & F e r r in g . O ther
extras. $1295. C a ll M a x , 444-2816.
F I R S T - F R E E
C O P P E R T O N E
refrig erato r-freezer. D oubledoor,
ad
ju stab le shelves. C lean, good condition.
$115. 442-5693.
S U P E R - E I G H T M O V I E c a m e ra . Auto,
m a n u a l exposure. S lo w ,
fast motion.
6 p o w e r e le c tric zoom. W a s $199.95,
only $99.50. T o m , 478-1973.
1970 T R I U M P H B O N N E V I L L E 650ce.
E x c e lle n t condition, lo w m ile a g e , v e ry
good bike. $1000. C a ll 451-4296.
H e l p W a n t e d
T O P L E S S C A S H IE R S . A p p ly in person
222 E a s t 6th, Studio I V T h e a te r.
T R A N S - A M E R IC A N D IS C O U N T C L U B S
has found and train ed 30 of the hest
people
in A u stin to se u p e rvise T A D C
agents w ho m a y now a p p ly : F u ll &
p a rt
tim e rs selling 5 hours w e e k ly
should e arn $37.50 m in im u m : m ore
learn . T w o hours d a ily can
as y o u
m a k e y o u r d a y just rig h t, e a rn in g $75
w e e k ly , paid insu ran ce, o ther fun-time
benefits. C a ll 478-4994
(9-7 d a ily ).
O V E R S E A S J O B S F O R S T U D E N T S
A u s tra lia , E u ro p e . S. A m e ric a , A fric a
etc. A ll professions and occupations
$700 to $3,000 m onthly. E x p e n se s paid,
o ve rtim e , sightseeing. F r e e in fo rm atio n
:|V/ant
to —
W rite . Jo b s O ve rse a s, D ept. 6A
B o x 15071, S a n Diego, C A 92115
_______________________________
B E D R O O M ,
T W O
tw o bath
ap artm e n ts. M a id d aily , w a lk to C a m - , coating,
lu x u ry
L O S T P U R E - B R E D shepard. R in T in
T in original. L ig h t face, w h ite u n der
Ja m e s , 477-
R e w a rd .
tagless.
pus. Sh u ttle Bu s. $225 m onth ly.
P e a r l. 478-6775.
70.
A P A R T M E N T F O R re n t: W a lk to C a m
pus, two bedrooms, $210 includes bills.
918 W e s t 23rd.
E F FIC IE N C Y , $110 plus electricity.
Fu rn ish e d , one block L a w School.
2800 S w ish e r. 472-5369.
L U X U R I O U S Q U I E T 14 unit C a c a R o
sa, 4312 D u v a l. One bedroom $139.50
plus e le c tric ity . 315-1322, 453-2178.
E M E R G E N C Y .
T O
S U B L E A S E b ea u tifu l one bedroom
ap artm e n t. S h u ttle a t door step. C a ll
an ytim e , 442-4074.
N E E D
c a rria g e house. T w o outside
S H O R T W A L K T O T O W E R . C o nverted
en
tran ces. all night shopping a t co m e r,
kitchen.
including
utilities. G R 6-8683, 1902 N ueces.
lease.
$300
No
C O Z Y EFFIC IEN C Y
APARTM ENT
C A /C H , carpet, carport. For
I
quiet graduate student with ref
erences. $120. 451-1011.
L O S T N E A R H A R D IN N O R T H , n in e
w eek Md kitten. H a if Siam ese, h a lf
A byssinian. G r a y w ith striped tu m m y
and larg e ears. W e a rin g purple c o lla r
and hell. C a ll Jo e o r B ry n n , 474-2661.
910 W e st 23rd.
F O U N D : L o st k itty b y
ow ner can ha ve It back. C a ll 472-6731.
Je s te r. R e a l
G O L D
L O S T :
glasses
or D rag . R e w a rd . 471-2400. 474-2174.
hexagonal w lre - rim
In b row n T S O case, C a m p u *
L O S T : H A L F of larg e oval turq uoise
stone. V e r v old ring. M u ch loved. 441-
3443. R E W A R D .
S e r v i c e s
H A I R L T D . C a ll
info rm atio n on
for
h a ir singeing fo r split ends and shag
cuts. 454-0984.
P IA N O L E S S O N S . Be g in n e r and ad
van ce. C all 451-3549.
T u t o r i n g
2222 APTS.
on Town Lake
S T A T T U T O R IN G .
A ll business m ath .
O R E preparation.
451-4557.
Ne*v small comp'
rooms. C H / C A .
bills paid. Snag,
shopping.
444-2070
x. A t
$155
pool.
bed I M A T H
w eekly,
465-7680.
$170,
all
jttle. N e a r
Sh
603.
SOS.
E ve n in g s . D a ily ,
se m ester rates. In ex p en sive.
926-5712.
B U S I N E S S ,
M A T H ,
arts.
education m a jo rs our specialty. E x
perienced
V e r y
ce rtifie d
reasonable. M a th e m a tics, 452-1327.
teacher.
lib eral
j T W O B E D R O O M A P A R T M E N T . $170-
I m onth plus e le c tric ity . AC-CH. dish-
w a sh e r, pool. 912 E a s t 40th, 205. 452-
i 1175.
R o o m m a t e s
M A L E , F E M A L E sh are two bedroom ,
two bath. In d iv id u a l c o n tra ct $61.50 p e r
person, bills-m aid
furnished.
Po o l. L E F O N T A p a rtm en ts, 803 W e st
28th. 472-6480.
s e rv ic e
F E M A L E
R O O M M A T E
to
sh are furnished nne bedroom a p a rt
m ent. W ill ch an g e locations to a c co m
m odate lf n e ce ssary. South A u stin p re
ferred . E v e n in g , 414-6349.
needed
F R E E R E N T till M a rc h I . F e m a le to
sh are lu x u ry tw o bedroom n e a r R iver- I
side w ith one o ther g irl. 444-3855.
luxurio us
N E E D F E M A L E ro o m m ate to sh are
a p a rtm e n t
g rad u ate student and young daughter.
$75 and split utilitie s. C a ll 454-7173
a fte r 6pm.
NAV.
w ith ,
bedroom ,
F E M A L E T O S H A R E e x tra larg e two
tw o bath a p a rtm e n t w ith
tw o others. $53.33 plus bills. Close
C am p us. 472-7755.
I F E M A L E R O O M M A T E : To sh are two
bedroom , tw o bath lu x u ry townhouse
|
with one o ther student. $100, b ills paid.
I N orth A u stin o ff 1.35. 465-9762.
I F E M A L E T O S H A R E
tw o bedroom
a p a rtm e n t w ith 23 y e a r old w o rkin g
girl. $70. N o rth east. A fte r 6, 926-7785.
C L A S S I C A L G U IT A R L E S S O N S .
E x p e rie n c ed te ach e r and p erfo rm e r.
$5-hour. 471-1161.
ca r.
V O L K S W A G E N O W N E R S T U N E your
ripo ff
the auto
racket. P r iv a t e classes F e b r u a r y 7,
836-9972, 451-2496.
re p a ir
B e a t
T y p i n g
Just North o f 27th & Guadalupe
tywzU /m
M P A V
M .B .A
T y p in g
M u ltilith in g . B in d in g
The Complete Professional
FULL-TIME Typing Service
to
tailo re d
th e needs of U n iv e rs ity
students. S p e cia l keybo ard e q u ipm ent
r° r
language, science, and engineer*
mg theses and dissertations.
P h o ie G R 2-3210 an d G R 2-7677
2707 H e m p h ill P a r k
T Y P I N G .
Spanish.
50c/page. E n g lish , F re n c h ,
C a r o lin C ate s W y lie , 453-
b b R Y I C L .
B ° B B Y E D E L A F I E L D
T Y P I N G
dissertations,
Theses,
[sp orts. M im e o g rap h in g . R e aso n a b le .
H I
i 1S4.
M A L E G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T needs
L u x u ry , AC, on T o w n
! L a k e , Shuttle. P ills paid, $87.50. 442-
room m ate.
3093.
T Y P I S T .
E X P E R T
r h e s e s .
S e le c trlc .
reports,
briefs.
professional repo rts. P rin tin g , binding.
M rs. T ullos, 453-5124.
I B M
B .C .
THE BLACKSTO N E
L u x u r y liv in g — m aid s e rv ic e ! L iv e Va
block
fro m L a w School. E a c h a p a rt
m ent Is carpeted, draped, c e n tra l heat
and a ir. U tilitie s paid. D esign ed fo r 4
persons p e r ap artm e n t. 2 bedroom s. 2
bath.
In d iv id u a ls m atch e d w ith co m
p atib le ro o m m ates.
2910 R E D R I V E R
476-5631
A P a ra g o n P ro p e rty
LEASING NOW!
PONCE DE LEON
• Striking I & 2 bedroom apts.
• Dazzling decor
• All the extras
• Appliances by Hotpoint
$185, all bills paid.
2207 Leon St.
472-8253
UT A R EA — N E W
LA CASITA
APARTMENTS
d i s h w a s h e r s
C A R P E T S
B U L S P A ID
40' POOL
2900 C O LE (3 Bldks. Law School
I Bldk. Shuttle Bus)
476-1262
327-1466
CH,
L A R G E T W O bedroom , one bath C A /
ca rp e t, disposal, pool, Shuttle
Bus, one block L a w School. $220. A ll
bills paid. 472-3914.
C A S A DEL RIO
only o
ie
left. 2 bedrooms, 2 beths,
$240. E
ills p « :d. Large p oo 1, near Law
School.
3212 Red River, 478-1834, 452-
S H A F T — I t ’s
the song,
not
I f s
the
the
m ovie,
i f s not
m agazine. B u y
1 9 6 3
O rig in a l ow ner. 444-6102, m a k e offer.
P O N T IA C
C O N V E R T I B L E .
1970 V W B U G . R a d io , a ir. $1695. A fte r
5, 442-1298.
B A S S
F E N D E R
a m p l i f i e r .
B A S S M A N
condtion.
T o g eth er o r se p arate . C a ll Chuck, 926-
469$.
A N D
E x c e lle n t
w heel
R E F R I G E R A T O R , D I N E T T E ,
table,
c e n tra l h eat unit,
television, g ran ite , hitches, hig h ch a lr,
b icycle. 452-1312.
co vers,
S U Z U K I X 8 250cc. R u n s g reat,
good.
paint. Asimg*$250. C a ll G R 1-1718.
tran sm ission ,
R e b u ilt
looks
recen t
1969 P L Y M O U T H R O A D R U N N E R .
L o w m ileage, good tires, E X C E L L E N T
shape. 383, four speed. 472-1210, S teve.
I
M E N ’S R E D T H R E E S P E E D Sch w in n
ra c e r. L ik e n e w condition. $55. 452-1958
a fte r 5.
R o o m s
N. E. M ERCAN TILE CO.
1600 M a n o r R d .
Antiques
and
co llectab les,
vin tag e
clothes,
c o m ics
an d
pulps,
art,
g lassw are ,
k itch e n
p rim itiv e s, a r t
tles, Insulators, tins. etc.
A ls o lin e of good used item s.
Open W ed-Sun 't il 6pm
P O R T A B L E G E stereo $50. A lso por
tab le ty p e w rite r. 441-2438 o r 444-8589.
PA SO H O U SE
1808 W e s t A va .
M E N
Fall vacancies. Large d o c b 'e or s’ng’e
ca rp e te d
service,
rooms A / C , m a'd
refrigerators in each room, co lo r TV in
lounge, free parking.
| T H E
P H O E N I X , 1930 S a n Antonio.
CA-CH, m aid se rvice . One block to
free p arking , singles avail-
C am pus,
I able. 476-9265 a fte r 2 p.m . w eekd ays,
| all d a y S a tu rd a y and Su n d ay .
C H E A P R O O M S . F U R N I S H E D . $40 p er
m onth. 706 W e s t 26th. 478-9829. Con
tact F it z or S te ve .
nouveau, ro ck e rs,
tab les,
trunks, bot
C a ll 478-39IT
• NEED SO M E BREAD? •
— U N I V E R S A L S T U D E N T A I D —
la rg e s t
student discount
“ A m e r ic a 's
p ro g ra m '' is now- in te rv ie w in g in Austin.
D o n 't hassle the A u stin job m a rk e t —
check this o ut:
A p p e a ra n ce — no hassle I
H o u rs to fit an y schedu le!
E a r n $25-$100 w e e k ly ;
F u ll o r p a rt tim e!
A d v a n c e m e n t and tr a v e l opportuni
tie s a fte r g rad uatio n:
M u s t be ab le to co m m u n ica te w ith
o th e r students!
C a ll o r co m e by
U S A., In c .
OOI W . 19th
(19th and P e a r l)
478-2525
R E G I S T E R E D N U R S E S .
Im m e d ia te openings fo r reg istered n u r
ses fo r in te n s ive c a re unit, e m e rg e n cy
are as.
room.
and m ed ical-su rg ical
C a re e r opp ortunity
ex
pand in g fa c ility . E x c e lle n t frin g e bene
fits, s a la r y co m m e n su ra te w ith satis
fa c to ry ap p licab le e x p erien ce. A p p ly
personnel office, B ra c k e n rid g e H o sp ital.
lath an d E a s t A venu e, A ustin. T x . 78701.
512-476-6461, ext 338, 339.
An equ al o pp ortu nity e m p lo y er.
in m o d em ,
E A R N E A S Y $'s
“ help i
sellin g
photo ce rtifica te s.
In y o u r sp a re tim e
student’’ discount
472-4219.
W A I T E R S W A N T E D . A p p ly 2505 L o n g
vie w .
1968 F I R E B I R D C O N V E R T I B L E . 350,
four b arre l, H u rs t th re e speed, P S ,
disc brakes, runs w e ll. 441-2438 o r 444-
8589. M a k e offer.
S H O R T W A L K U T
p riv a te
R e frig e ra to r
$90,
paid. 1902 N ueces, G R 6-8683.
a v a ila b le .
entrance.
T O W E R ! A C
shopping.
utilities
n ig ht
PART TIME SALES
M A I L O R D E R
Seiko
w atch es at H o ng K o n g prices. F r a n c is
J A P A N E S E
Lee, 472-8717.
1953 C H E V R O L E T . N e w generator,
voltage reg ulato r, b a tte ry. R a d io and
R O O M F O R R E N T . C o lle g e g irl. N ic e
front bedroom w ith k itch e n p rivile g e s.
$45. G L 3-2851 a fte r 6pm.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - i
S A L E Goodall W ooten
F O R
room
co n tract, p riv a te hath. P o r t e r service.
Fantastic new p rod uct! V ery strong stu
dent ap p e al. Everyone a prospect. W o rk
your own hours. Shou'd averag e $5/nour.
C a '! Future C o rp o ratio n .
441 4151 5-8 p.m. weekdays.
BUY,
SELL,
OR RENT?
Call—
GR 1-5244
for a
3715.
Classified Ad
In The
Daily Texan
J A N U A R Y 27,
noon-9 p .m .
heater. Good condition. $195. 454-9422.
N o deposit. S p e c ia l rate . C a ll 478-8608.
J A N U A R Y 28,
noon-6 p.m.
M c In to s h engineers w ill test y o u r re
ce iv e r, pre-amp, o r am p, F R E E , re
it w as
g ard less of m a k e or w h ere
bought.
A L S O F R E E KIT TEST
come to H I G H F ID E L IT Y ,
IN C .
1710 L a v a c a Ja n u a r y 27 & 28.
D avid.
M U S T S E L L '69 V W K a rm a n n C h ia.
R econditioned engine. $1495. E x t r a
clean, good tires. 1621 E a s t 6th, 477-6797.
and ca n va s
1956 F o rd pickup, 1961 engine w ith steel
cam p e r. T w o spares,
lockab le ca rg o space. E x c e lle n t con
dition. 385-2323.
E X C E L L E N T 1970 V W K A R M A N N
tires.
(h o m e ) 512-
G H IA . AC, au tom atic, good
(o ffice ) 512-4754348;
B e ll
229-2170.
1970 H O N D A
dition. $550.
C B 350, e xcellent oon-
C a ll 472-5188 7pm to Spm
or a fte r 12.
$40 double, $75 single. AC, kitchen
shared, phone, seven blocks U T . Coed.
472-2273.
1964 C H E W S S V-8, $400. 477-9359. C a ll
a fte r 7 p.m . p re fe ra b ly .
W E D D I N G D R E S S . H E A D P I E C E , ve il,
fo r spring o r
train . B e a u tifu l
and
su m m er. Size 7. C a ll M a rth a , 926-8623.
F O R S A L E . 1971 K a w a s a k i 250 En d u ro .
L o w m ile a g e . C a ll 451-2105, a sk fo r
G IB S O N 12 strin g g u ita r Good tone.
N eed m oney. C a ll E d d ie , 476-8719
an ytim e. 1909 N ueces.
1971
H O N D A
A stro co m -M arlu x
CB-175.
$450.
A lso
tape deck. $300.
Bo th good condition. 452-1276 a fte r 6.
R o o m & B o a r d
T O W ER M A N O R
A p a rtm e n t D o rm ito ry fo r
M e n & W o m e n
I B lo c k from C am p u s
Room and board $127.50. Three meals
$65 mon*h. Two meals $55 month.
1908 University A venu e.
478-2185
'69 V W . G O O D condition. N e w tires,
la rg e r
a ir conditioning, radio. N eed
N E E D S O M E O N E to ta k e o v e r Moore-
H ill room co n tra ct an d Je s t e r board
ca r. S a c rific e . $1200. 471-3234.
co n tract. Phone 477-0675.
P O R T A B L E
S m ith Corona.
E L E C T R I C
P o w e r
ty p e w rite r.
return . E x
T W O W O M E N to fill double room s in
coed co-op. N e a r Cam p us, cheap, fun.
ce lle n t condition. $125. 477-7387.
C all 478-6586.
T Y P E W R I T E R
S E R V I C E M A N .
q u a lifie d shop experience. 20 hours
w e e kly, 8:30-5:30 M -F, Sat. 9-4. B e e k
m a n ’s, 2234 G uad alup e.
R A D IO S E R V I C E M A N , q u a lifie d shop
exp erience. 20 hours w e e k ly , 8:30-6
M-S. B e r k m a n 's , 5134 B u r n e t R d .
F E M A L E C H A F F E U R S .
Q u a lific a tio n s : A t t r a c t i v e , g o o d
p erso n ality.
salary’,
ap a rtm e n t, m in k uniform . F o r p erson al
in te rv ie w c a ll J i m Jo n es, 345-3627, 345-
3623.
B e n e fits :
Good
| C O M B IN A T IO N
G O
G O
d ancer.
w a itre s s . T o p p ay. M u st be
: tra c tiv e -good p erso n ality . P a u l Stone,
I S it 'N B u ll, 3500 G uad alup e. 453-9831.
_______________________________________________
E X P E R I E N C E D B A R T E N D E R , sharp
c o c k ta il girls, bus boys. A p p lic a n ts
8611
m a y
B a lco n e s . N o phone ca lls please.
betw een
3-5pm.
a p p ly
at-
E A S Y J O B , L O W P A Y . N eed someone
to su p e rvise one y e a r old a t p la y 9:30-
12:30am, M -W -F. $3-day. O w n
tra n
sportation. 472-6388 a fte r one.
1968 R E N A U L T
33.000 m iles.
IO.
R a d ia l P re s. V e r y good condition.
S O U T H W E S T
W h o lesale
and used equipm ent. C a ll an ytim e ,
S T E R E O .
$795. C a ll 472-7192.
441-2194. P h il.
V A R S I T Y H O U S E C O -O P
(g rad u ate
w o m e n ) has room and board opening
(s ) $85-month. 2309 N u e ce s. 477-0225.
I
J O B F O R G I R L w ith ca r. H o u rs 2-5pm.
$1.60 a n hour. C a ll 477-7805
in
te rv ie w .
fo r
A p a r t m e n t s . F u r n .
TYPIST
F u ll- tim e — N ig h t W o rk — 60 W P M —
F r id a y & S a tu rd a y nights off — A p er
job — V a ca tio n , R e tire m e n t
m an e n t
& In su ra n ce .
Do not a p p ly unless y o u ca n m e e t the
a b o ve conditions.
C o n tact Art. R in n
P h o n e 453-6508 D a y
471-5887 N ig h t
NEW ADDITION TO THE
B u s i n e s s O p p ,
All Bills Paid •
CLOISTERS APARTMENTS
W A N T E D P E R S O N (s) ?
In
d eveloping rid in g or tra in in g stable.
W ill le ase land and building. C a ll 282-
1504 fo r d etails.
interested
W A L K TO C A M PU S
I sh are tw o bedroom
T W O M A L E R O O M M A T E S N E E D E D , I
lu x u ry a p artm e n t. •
Shuttle, firep lace, a ll bills, $55. 412-3456. j
L a r g e I & 2 bedroom a p artm e n ts. C A /
C H . pool, sundeck. S h u ttle routes 4 & 5,
d ish w a sh e r & disposal, all b ills paid.
C a ll 478-6776 o r com e b y 311 E . 31st,
102.
F I E S T A P L A C E — 2 bedroom furn. apt.
in U T area, ca rpeted, wood panelling,
a ll
n e a r
shuttle bus. $180 pius elec. 4200 A ve .
A. 465-0529.
kitchens,
e le c tric
built-in
L A F O N T A N A —
b e lt deals
in town on
room apts, all
the
luxurii
optional shuttle bus to UT.
priced from $144. pius e'ec.
I and 2 b e d
s p I
Furn.
units
1230 E. 38'/2 S tre e t
454 6738
S T U D E N T S
F E M A L E
three I
bedroom house. L ib e ra l, studious at- |
m osphore. $45 plus sh are b ills. C a ll ;
327-0933.
sh are
C O N S E R V A T I V E
N E E D E D .
sophom ore. Ju n io r m ale room m ate. T w o j
bedroom a p a rtm e n t one m ile C am p us. ;
AC. $55. 453-5518.
F E M A L E
S H A R E
a p a rtm e n t w ith three seniors. $75, a ll
b ills paid. N e a r C am pus. 477-3048.
N E E D E D
T O
F E M A L E T O S H A R E two bedroom two
sto ry ap a rtm e n t w ith pool. C h ristia n
a fte r 11pm, 465-9597.
W a n t e d
ROY W . HOLLEY
476-3018
TYPESETTING. TYPING,
PRINTING. BINDING
Just Norfh of 27th & Guadalupa
fflpAxAa. A m
*
T y p in g . M u l t i ll th in k . B in d in g
M B A /
The Complete Professional
FULL-TIME Typing Service
N E E D E D
S T U D E N T
S L A T E
T R A N
and
E n g lis h . C a ll 471-3062 nights. A s k for
Je ff.
in H u n g arian
le tte rs
T O
to
tailo re d
th e needs o f U n iv e rs ity
students. S p e cia l k e y b o ard e qu ipm ent
fo r
language, science, and e n g in e e r
m g theses and d issertatio ns.
EL PATIO APTS.
N eed a fe m a le c h e m is try m a jo r for
tutoring. C a ll 472-6437.
P h o n e G R 2-3210 an d G R 2-7677
2707 H e m p h ill P a r k
A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n .
O N E B E D R O O M , larg e sw im m in g pool.
n e a r C am pus, on bus route c o m e r
39th an d S p e e d w ay , 453-1312.
W O O D W A R D APTS.
1722 E . W o o d w ard
444-7555
S p e cia l student orien ted clu sters.
S w im m in g pools.
M o d erate p ric e s w ith all u tilitie s
p aid — no hidden ch a rg e s !
O n ly 5 m inu tes to U .T
C om plete on-prem ises w a sh a te ria .
F r e e all-channel T V .
A m p le p a rk in g for tenan ts & guests.
•
Discover
"THE ADOBE"
Luxury Efficiency Apartments
Pool
T.V. Cable
Fireplace
Central Heat
A . C .
Mexican Tile
IO E. 37th St.
Call 477-9954
(Shuttle Bus)
478-1382
After 5:00 & Weekends 472-4305
N o w re n tin g S p rin g S e m e s te r
2 bedroom , 3 bath fo r $215, a ll b ills
paid. C ab le T V , pool, bus.
2810 R io G ra n d e St.
M g r. A pt. 304
476-4095.
W A L K
ap a rtm e n ts
F u r n mini-
T O C A M P U S .
full carpeting .
fe atu rin g
A-C, stu dy room, p a rty room . pool, and
all bills paid. M a u n a K a i 405 E . 31st.
Stree t 472-2147.
O A K K N O L L —-Quiet, p riva te , unusual
apts, o n ly m inu tes to U T . 2 bedroom
furn. units w ith balcones. patios, dish
w ashers. ca b le T V . pool, an d p a rty
room. 620 S. 1st. 444-1269.
T H E C O N S U L — L a k e s id e lu x u ry livin g,
big 2 bedroom furn. townhouses, fu lly
appointed e le c tric kitchen, pool, a ll bills
paid. P e t s w e lco m e . 1201 T in n in F o rd
R d . 444-3411.
V I L L A D E L R E Y . M in i ap artm e n ts,
fu rnish ed an d ju s t y o u r size. U n ex
pected v a c a n c y . $129. a ll b ills paid.
4000 A v e n u e A . 454-1857.
A p a rtm en t,
Q U A R T E R D E C K . 2308 E n fie ld . L u x u ry
tw o bedroom, tw o bath.
W ood paneled, fire p lace , ca b le T V , dish
w asher,
pool,
shuttle bus. F r o m $190 plus e le c tric ity ;
476-1292.
sw im m in g
disposal,
N E E D 1-4 P E O P L E to take a p a rtm e n t
co n tra ct. $64.50 each, b ills p aid . M a id
se rvice , sh uttles 5,0. 476-9096.
CH-CA,
W A L K T O C A M P U S . O ne bedroom .
carpet, disposal,
p erson al shuttle. $135 p lu s e le c tric ity .
G R 6-2511.
c a b l e ,
two bedroom ,
M A L E R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to sh are
two bath a p a rtm e n t
w ith th re e others. $65, b ills paid . 476-
8430.
L A R G E
T W O
I M M A C U L A T E
B E D R O O M . E n fie ld a re a . C arp eted,
la u n d ry, cable,
CA-CH. pool, -Shuttle,
b ills paid. 472-4841.
M i s c e l l a n e o u s
D IS S E R T A T I O N S , theses, and re p o rts.
2507 B r id le P a th , L o rra in e B ra d y , 473-
471a.
Z uni
N E L S O N 'S G I F T S ; co m p lete selection
je w e lr y : A fr ic a n and
M e x ic a n Im po rts. 4612 South Congress.
444-3814.
In d ia n
C L O S E
of
M u ltilith in g ,
478-8113.
IN . B e a u tifu l, personal ty p in g
w o rk .
L a u r a B o d o u r,
U n iv e rs ity
binding.
y o u r
P A R K I N G B Y M O N T H . $12.50. 2418
S a n Antonio, one block fro m C am p us.
476-3720.
EARN $'s W E E K L Y
Blood plasma donees needed. C a in paid
for services. Physician
in attendance.
O p e n 8 a.rn.-3 p.m. Tues., Thurs., Fri.,
& Sat. O p e n 12 noon-7 p.m. W e d .
A U S T IN B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S , IN C .,
409 W e s t 6th. 477-3735.
L E A R N T O P L A Y g uitar, beginner,
ad van ce d . D re w Thom ason, 478-7331,
478-2079.
D O Y O U H A V E T H E N E W Y E A R S
B L A H S ? . . . A R E Y O U B O R E D W IT H
L I F E ? C A L L 472-5811.
M A C R O B IO T IC P E O P L E U N I T E .
form ing.
M a c ro b io tic
co o p e ra tive
C o n tact G ro g o r J i m a t 474-1715.
LEARN TO FLY
for $125
Includes ground school and 1st solo
In
B e lln n c a C h am p.
G E O R G E T O W N FLYING
SERVICE
( I ) 863-2220 o r 863-6094
P A R K 24 H O U R S a
b y the sem ester.
d a y fo r 30c a d ay
H O 5-6363.
P A R K I N G , $35-semester. T w o blocks
fro m C am p us. C a ll F re d , 474-4281.
ing. printing, oinding — A ll
S A V E M O N E Y — F u lly equipped; typ
te rm
Papers, theses, d issertatio ns. C ity W id e
typing . 475-4179, 6 a.rn.-midnight a n y
day.
G e t y o u r typing done b y a professional
W h o ca re s. T yp in g , printing, binding,
d rafting . 50 ond e n g in e e r
ing theses and d issertations.
Ph o n e G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677
2707 H e m p h ill P a r k
T H E M E S .
R E P O R T S ,
R e aso n a b le . 476-1317, M rs . F ra s e r.
la w
notes
M A R J O R I E
D E L A F I E L D
S E R V I C E — Theses, dissertations
T Y P I N G
la w
briefs,
reports. M u ltilith ing , m im eo.
graphing. S a v e m o n e y — come Sonih
B a n k A m e ric a rd , M a s t e r C harge. 44>
THE ESTABLISHMENT
M in i a p a rtm e n ts b y B a r r y Gilling-
w a te r. F u ll y fu rnish ed w ith sh ag c a r
peting. B r ig h t w h ite and y e llo w fu rn i
ture. D ish w ash er, disposal, and sw im
m ing pool. O n ly
from
453-1671.
tw o blocks
.
U N W E D M O T H E R S .
. A b o rtio n is
not the best an sw e r. T h e re is a better
w a y. T h e M E T H O D IS T M I S S I O N H O M E
in S a n Antonio offers co n fid e n tial co m
p lete s e rv ic e s ; ex p e rt m e d ic a l c a re ;
p rofessio n al co u n se lin g ; fu ll a cce p ta n ce
and p le asan t liv in g situation. Adoption
s e rv ic e for baby, if desired. C a ll co llect
(512) 696-241J o r w rite D r. S p e n c e r
Sto c k w e ll — P . O. B o x £8410 — San
Antonio, T e x a s 78228.
Thursday, January 27, 1972 THE PATLY TEXAN Page f
Vehemently discussing a scrap of paper on the floor • •.
the players poke sly fun at it
but then defend it against an intruder.
Down with the Audience
communication by example la next to unbelievable.
to Impossible
Theater has eliminated the audience. To go see “Armadillo World
Series,” you have to join the cast.
The production contains elements of a rock fest, psychodrama,
enounter group and improvisational theater, but it is something else
entirely. Doug Dyer,
its creator and instigator, calls it “crowd
theater.”
After a few scrambled performances last week in the great gloomy
main hall of Armadillo World Headquarters, when an extroverted
rag-tag of players and musicians gained simpatico and cohesion,
the group has evolved a repertoire or course of events, subject to
permutation at every moment.
“ Armadillo World Series” Is boring to watch. It does not promise
the satisfaction of a breathtakingly polished performance, achieved
after weeks of meticulous rehearsal, which enchants a sophisticated
audience. The moments of art come as a sudden magical surprise.
“Forget yourself and you find art,” one member said.
TRIBE OR CROWD THEATER is meant to be experienced. Most
common scenes are a group of people huddling, dancing or thinking,
not exciting to an onlooker. The director may boom scattered riders,
but among the anarchic cast, oommunication by explanation is next
The process is this: the leader sets a task, such as to begin
whispering, “This is the church, this is the steeple, open the door,
and see all the people.” The group begins and gelts louder and louder,
adding body movements and facial expressions, until the band starts
in with chords and a drum beat and the group spontaneously starts
singing the rhyme in harmony.
WHETHER “ARMADILLO WORLD SERIES” Is a landmark in
theater development remains to be decided. But some startlingly
fresh innovations have already resulted, the notion of “oral scenery,”
for Instance, where a babble of phrases describing a setting furnisher
the scene.
Another aspect Is the inherent dramatization of the Texan ethos,
which ranges from the down home Texas rock sound (not C&W),
to folk heroes who include Janis Joplin and Sam Houston, to life
styles which include barbequed beef and the original blue jeans.
AND THE SONGS that the group makes up are also uniquely Texan
because they are based on the musical patterns inherent In Texan
accents and speech patterns.
For those cynics who ask whether the Austin counter-community
has crumbled, the answer is plain: not on your armadillo.
Dancing transforms into a heave-ho ritual.
. . .Boxed in.
P h o t o s h r
l*liil H u b e r -3 0 -
S t o r ie s bvW
J e n n if e r E v a n s
Celebrating tKe buried heart of Texas.
Participants were encouraged to bring “fantasy items.”1
E volution of un Infant G enre
(Editor’s Note: During Intermission of “Armadillo World
Series,” up in the hodge-podge loft-studio of Jim Franklin,
armadillo artist and live-in emcee of the Armadillo World
Headquarters, Franklin, Doug Dyer, the 29-year-old creator
of the series, and some members of the cast examine
themselves and the night’s activities. The performances
will be continues publicly this week, also.)
DOUG DYER: I didn’t expect the huge amount of energy
everybody has. I had been working with New Yorkers
and they are very reserved and they sit down. These people,
you know7, are ready to scream, jump around and throw
their arms, half a chance and they’re goin’.
At first they could only stand with their hands in their
pockets and their bodies half-bent, like this, in this stooped
fashion, head down, the way w7e all learn in the South that
isn’t supposed to offend anybody. And everybody was
standin’ around, bendin’ in half, doin’ that on the first
night so that they would seem like, “Well, you know I’m
just a nice person here, uh, duh,” like that.
JIM FRANKLIN: I never did like those square dance
thangs where everyone. . .my ma sent me.
One of the guys told me that on the first night he got
stoned to come in because, he said, he thought he had
to be real uninhibited and thought it would help. And it
finally turned out that it was just an excuse, but then last
night he came down without even drinking a beer and
he said he got high just off being here.
DOUG DYER: Now that they know that they can Jump
around and throw their hands in all directions and that
probably someone else will do it with them if they do it,
everybody is loosened up.
JIM FRANKLIN: Sometimes I still feel self-conscious,
because sometimes it still feels like elementary school or
basics. I know it’s going to gradually get into being more
and more jelled. . .and I’ll know more of how I can do
it. Right now I feel like I ’m trying to learn rudiments.
I probably wouldn’t feel this way if I were 16.
It’s like trying to learn something that you can use right
away. A language means that you have to go on a trip
some time.
DOUG DYER: Well, it is going to be a trip. But it’s gonna
happen now; it starts now; it’s not somewhere else; it’s
not something in the future.
While it’s going on, I ’m having to start it and clear
everything out of the way and remember w hat’s going
next, and I ’m also very nervous. I just trust my own
judgment about when something isn’t goin’ well. I feel
like a janitor, of sorts. God as a janitor, exactly.
GIRL IN THE CAST: The times I feel the best in the
whole world are when I ’m doin’ something with other people
and something with other people that takes a lot of energy;
and doin’ something with other people that takes a lot
of creative energy—and the janitor sweeps all the s - t out
of the way.
MAN IN THE CAST: You just feel some sort of force
that you either become a part of or it becomes a part of
you. It’s something that picks you up and takes you out
of what you really are and puts you somewhere completely
different.
GIRL: Sometimes it Is like pagan rites. You wonder
all these times, you’ve been hearing about all these pagans
who are out there, doin’ all this stuff and they’re “min
dless.” But sometimes the mind isn’t necessarily the highest
being. There are other things you can trust more than
your mind.
JIM FRANKLIN. It takes
a lot of control to lose con
trol, to lose it in a controlled
way. I don’t mean going up
in the Tower and losing con
trol.
ANOTHER MAN IN THE
CAST: To me if s a m atter
of someone giving me a di
rection and you h a v e to
create something right off
the bat and not have any
hang-ups about, “Is t h i s
right?”
ANOTHER GIRL IN THE
CAST: It’s learning how not
to say, “I don’t know how to
do that.”
Doug Dyer
DOUG DYER: We’ve all given up a lot to live this trashy
way. We’ve given up hot showers when we want them
and big cars and you could have got ’em if you had worked
a little harder and stayed in the pro-gram and cleaned
people’s teeth for the rest of your life, but you chose to
live your life free! You can just go down the street or go
somewhere else or do what you want to do, but people
are going to say, “Trashy, trashy.” They’re not going
to rent to you.
And we recognize ourselves as armadillos. We don’t know
what we are any more than an armadillo does.
That’s our group playing again. Look, there’s this big
sheet of plastic and if s not very wide and if s real long:
it goes the whole length of the theater diagonally and let’s
start, let’s pull it out and keep it low on the ground and
keep it low like this and stretch it all the way out and build
it and shshshshshsh, and we have to all stand around it,
and so we get it high in the alr—
*age TO Thursday, January 27, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN
Students Help Staff Center I Connally Files I
For Slate Post ;
To Improve Community Life
Legislator Sees
J
Enrollment Estimates
Guide Book Policies
If there aren’t enough copies
of a textbook for one of your
courses and extra copies have to
be ordered, the reason is that
someone underestimated
th e
number of students that were to
be in your course, spokesmen at
University area bookstores ex
plained Wednesday.
for
PO LIC Y guidelines
the
operation of the University Co-Op
textbook department say, "The
for estimating
basic guideline
for textbooks
market demand
s h a l l
anticipated
enrollment as submitted by the
the
be
assigned
authorized person.”
instructor, or other
W ilbert Schwausch, assistant
m a n a g e r of
the Textbook
Department at Hemphills and
Mrs. Eleanor Bennett, manager
of Garner and Smith bookstore,
also said that orders for text
books were based on expected
enrollments or past exoerience.
L. N. Jaquet, manager of the
. Co-Op Textbook Department, said
the Co-Op receives reports on
textbooks and enrollments for the
spring semester from professors
by Oct. 13.
Seniors Reminded
O f PE Requirements
Occasionally, University seniors
fulfilled
they haven't
discover
education
physical
t h e i r
requirem ents
graduation.
for
Rather than panic, they should
contact Miss Betty Thompson,
director of instructional courses
for the Department of Physical
Instruction.
"Students
the
University are required to take
in
four semesters of physical
struction to graduate,” said Miss
Thompson. "But there are ex
ceptions to the rule.”
enrolled
at
E x c e p t i o n s are
transfer
students, students with physical
discharges
students who
place out of physical instruction.
and
Transfer students receive credit
for physical education
other schools. If a student comes
taken
into the University with 15 to 29
semester hours credit he is still
required to take three semesters
of physical instruction; 30 to 44
hours credit, two semesters; 45
to 59 hours, one semester. If the
transfer student has 60 or more
hours credit then he doesn't have
to take any physical instruction
at the University.
To receive a physical discharge
a student must present a letter
from a physician stating he may
have
"absolutely no physical
activity.”
exam
The placement
for
instruction consists of
physical
written and practical skills parts.
If a student scores 70 percent
or higher on the written exam,
he then takes the practical skills
part.
"When a class runs out of
books and an extra order has
to be made, the professor w ill
give an estimate of the extra
number of
textbooks that he
needs,” Jaquet said.
TH E BOOKSTORE managers
agreed that the time for an extra
order of textbooks to come in
varied with the publishing com
pany but usually Look between IO
days and three weeks.
In case a textbook
lost,
another copy can usually be
found at one of the bookstores.
Is
Mrs. Bennett said Gamer and
Smith w ill usually have copies
of all textbooks on hand until the
end of the semester and then
those that have not beer. sold and
w ill not be used again are
returned to the publisher.
Schwausch said if Hemphill’s
Is uncertain that a book is to
be used again, they w ill send the
book back at publishers’ return
deadlines. Copies of books that
w ill be used again in a coming
semester or used books w ill be
kept on hand.
O rga n iz a tio n s to Offer
W o m e n 's Scholarships
t o
Approximately 30 scholarships
w ill be offered by 13 Women s
organizations
University
women for the 1972-73 long term.
Applications for the scholar
ships, which range from $100 to
$500, may be picked up from Mrs.
Dorothy Dean in the Dean of
Students Office, Speech Building
106. Deadline for the applications
Is March I.
us News in
AN G EL FLIG H T will accept
m e m b e r s h i p applications
Thursday and Friday in Union
Building 330 from 9 a.m.
to
neon and from I to 4 p.m. A
photograph and 50 cents fee is
rush
required. Details about
will be supplied at that time.
AW ARE will meet
from noon
to I p.m. Thursday in Union
Building 221
to discuss plans
for the spring semester.
BA PT IST STUD EN T U N I O N
will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday
at 2204 San Antonio St.
to
worship. Phil Strickland of the
Christian Life Commission will
speak on Christian vocations.
D EPA RTM EN T OF C H EM ISTRY
S T E R E O
• HOME & CAR • RADIOS
• T.V. • TAPE RECORDERS
tapes, needles, batterie s
SALES & SERVICE
( S p.B E D W A Y
RADIO
307 W. 19th
473-6609
a
w ill meet at 3:30 p.m. Thursday
in Chemistry Building 104W to
hold
chemistry
special
seminar, division of organic
chemistry. Dr. Jam es Little of
Water Associates is to speak
on "Organic Synthesis Using
High
Liquid
P r e s s u r e
Chromatography.”
D E P A R T M E N T O F
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES w ill
meet at I p.m. Thursday to
hear Robert Folk speak on the
"Black Phytokarsts from H ell”
and Ernest Lundelius on the
"Pleistocene Faunal History of
the Nullarbor Plain .”
I N S T I T U T E OF
LATIN
AMERICAN STUDIES AND
D E P A R T M E N T OF AN-
THROPOLOGY w ill meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday in Business-
Economic Building
for an
illustrated public lecture by Dr.
George
J. Gumerman on
"Rem ote Sensing Techniques in
the
the
Ecology and Archaelolgy of the
Tehuacan Valley, Mexico.”
Interpretation
of
PSI CHI w ill meet at noon
Thursday in Union Building 304
to hold a sandwich seminar.
Guest speaker w ill be Dr.
George Parker of the Depart
ment of Psychology. Topic w ill
and
b e
Behavior.”
Attitudes
"Sex
S P A N I S H CONVERSATION
CLUB w ill meet from 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday in Batts H all
201.
TEXAS STI DENT EDUCATION
ASSOCIATION w ill meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday In Union
Building 300
first
spring meeting. The movie
"Ju st One More” w ill be
shown. A ll education majors
are welcome. Refreshments
w ill be served.
their
for
UT STAFF MEMBERS win meet
at noon in Union Building 325
to organize and associate.
insurance
Retirem ent, health
security win be
and
job
discussed.
W E E K D A Y W O N D E R
PRODUCTIONS w ill meet at 6,
8 and
IO p.m. Thursday In
Buslness-Economics
Building
"Casablanca” win be
150.
shown.
Thursday
WOMEN’S ABORTION ACTION
COMMITTEE win meet at 7:30
p.m.
th Union
Building 325 to hold their spring
meeting. Guest speaker Sarah
Weddington, lawyer, win talk
about "Abortion and the Law'.”
EARN CASH WEEKLY
Blood Plasma Donors Needed
MALE DONORS ONLY
CASH BONUS PROGRAMS FOR REPEAT DONORS
Austin Blood Components, Inc.
Dr.
Joseph P . Witherspoon,
director of the School of Law
graduate program, founded the
Citywide Committee for Human
Rights (COHR) In 1966.
The committee operated, on a
$700 budget, out of one room of
a vacant hospital at 1106-B
Concho St. and was staffed by
IO volunteers and 12 students.
Today with a volunteer staff
of 450, half of which are
University students, the CCHR
provides
to 650
free service
persons a week and operates on
a $20,000 budget.
purpose. Witherspoon explains, is
"to provide a concrete means by
which a person can place himself
in the mainstream of Austin life .”
irs services
through four main programs: an
extensive educational program,
job placement, a fam ily service
program and a youth program.
renders
CCHR
Since September, 1968, more
than 600 persons have obtained
better jobs and more than 200
persons
the
equivalent of a high school
diploma
training and
tutoring at the center.
received
through
have
The Human Rights Center’s
The center also deals with legal
p r o b l e m s , fam ily conflicts,
financial problems and medical
care.
CCHR plans to open a health
center at 1106-B Concho St. on
Feb. 15. Dr. Mathis Blackstock
of Austin has volunteered to run
the health center.
W I T H E R S P O O N , CCHR
executive director, devotes 12
hours a week to raising funds,
recruiting volunteers and over
seeing the center’s activities.
CCHR receives no federal or
State funds; It is supported by
the community. Approximately
110 organizations, including large
The New RO YAL 1200 Electric
W ID E C A RRIAG E
W ITH CASE
AUTOMATIC REPEAT
ROYAL
AW ARD
SERIES
ASK ABOUT TERMS
LET US SH O W YOU THE
ROYAL ELECTRONIC
CALCULATOR TOO!
B E R K m n n s
______ t h e « t B P 8 o s t o r e
a WE REPAIR-CLEAN
TYPEWRITERS-ADDERS
22 34 G U A D A L U P E • 476-3 52 5
5 1 34 B U R N E T ROAD • 454-6731
FT - mg J p m f | m g |g p | n p f p m
ip - 1 iT B iT iffT T IP
corporations, banks, women’s
groups, University and church
groups contribute much of the
center’s funds and manpower.
Most donations, however, are
from individuals, with a large
from
p e r c e n t a g e coming
University professors and ad
m inistrators.
Local schools, the University
Co-Op and the Texas Education
Agency donate books
the
center. Equipment for use or
repair and sale also has been
donated.
to
R EC EN T LY , one manufacturer
the center 12 electric
local hardware
air-
gave
typew riters; a
s t o r e
conditioners.
donated
two
NELSON'S
GIFTS
4612 So. C O N G R ESS
Phone: 444-3814
• ZUNI INDIAN JEWELRY
• AFRICAN & MEXICAN
IMPORTS
OPEN IO a.m. to 6 p.m.
“ GIFTS THAT INCREASE
IN VALUE"
‘Crucial* Issues
<
4
State Sen. Wayne Connally {
filed Wed- }
of Floresville
nesday as a candidate for <
in the a
lieutenant governor
{
Democratic prim ary.
Connally, younger brother J
of Treasury Secretary and
former Gov. John Connally,
said he expects "interest”
but no public support from
his brother in the race.
Connally deposited
the
$1,000 filing fee for the race
awaiting current Supreme
Court deliberation on
the
constitutionality of filing fees
in political races.
"There are many crucial
> issues to be resolved by the 4
Legislature
the days
In
ahead and during the course
of this campaign I w ill ad
dress m yself to these issues
and make my views known
to the people,” he said.
Connally said he supports
a two-week moratorium on
the scheduling of bills to be
heard on the floor of the
in
Senate to prevent the
troduction and approval of
bills in the last hours of the
session without
adequate
study.
If
ii
10% DISCOUNT
TO ALL STUDENTS AND FACULTY ON ART
SUPPLIES AND CUSTOM FRAMING.
One day services on custom framing.
House of Frames
5437 INTERREGIONAL
CAPITAL PLAZA
45
“ U N W A N T ED H A IR PR O BLEM S ’
REMOVED PERMANENTLY BY I
ELECTROLYSIS
Stop Tweezing, Shaving, Waxing or using Depila-
I
tories for temporary removal. For complete infor- M
mation and appointment for Complimentary Con- p
lulation Day or Evening —
452-5656
Jean’s Electrolysis Studio
-In#
Mrs. Jean Wharton - licensed technician, 1962 - 5
accredited by 1972 Directory of Professional Elec- J
trologist. Eye-febbing also available
7201 Daugherty
INTRODUCTORY
SALE PRICE
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OFF - 10.00
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10%- 10.95
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OR
RENT
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to
BUY,
SELL
or
RENT
Some
thing?
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The
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TEXAN
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Quick, Fast Results
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For Only $Q 15
Insertions
InsertionsS^ IC OO
I J
I For Only
«
i ' m 11 i i i i i | i m 11111 i i ii
OPEN: 8-3 p.m. Tues., Thur., Frl. & Sat.
- - k
' : V ' I
12:00 NO O N-7 p.m. Wed.
409 W. 6TH
477-3735
A PAPPAGALLO
SALE
ALWAYS MEASURES
UP!
Pappagallo flats 30% off
Scarves and Belts 50% off
CD
W S F *
P l
W m
k ll;
Boots $15 (were $40)
appaaafiJaJ
afifiey.
i t i l t
" ..I
jp fcy:
in Reynolds-Penland on the Drag
ROUND TRIP: DULAS - BRISSES
MAY 24 - JULY 14 *273."
-—STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND STAFF OF THE UT
SYSTEM AND THEIR IMMEDIATE FAMILIES ARE
ELIGIBLE.
— CONFIRMED RESERVATION & ALL NORMAL
AIRLINE SERVICES
— Price is based on minimum capacify of 225 passengers
and includes $8.00 per person administrative costs.
Maximum capacity: 252. Pro-rated refunds will be
made if minimum is exceeded. Carrier for flight is
World Airways. Aircraft to be used is DC8-63.
CALL OR WRITE:
A IR TRAVEL
454-0582
P. O. BOX 7952
UT Station
AUSTIN, TEXAS 78712
jewelry by
James Avery
Crown Shop
2 9 th i t h e D ra y
photos
PASSPORTS
RESUMES
■s u p e r h o t
I SERVICE
STATMAN PHOTO
| I9th a1 Lavaca • Camaron Villag#
Thursday. January 27. 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN Page l l
Voter Registration
Processing Slov/
Students registered to vote in
Travis County need not worry if
received
have
t h e y
registration certificates.
not
registration
Tile Student Council for Voter
Registration has Just processed
forms
2,500 voter
from October. They were filed
with tile County tax office Friday.
These registration certificates
will be mailed as soon as
tax
possible, Fritz Robinson,
assessor-collector, said Wednes
day.
Persons registered with SCVR
who do nor receive a reg'stratlon
certificate by the first week on
March should call the SCVR of
fice, not
tax aesessor-col-
lector.
the
After Monday, students can no
longer register with the SCVR,
but will have to go to the County
tax office In the Travis County
Courthouse.
Robinson ravimmerrdrs register
ing by Monday, enabling citizens
to vote in city elections scheduled
for March and April.
H o d H o n t t v d f i P r v s v n t s
a music for austin
K M F A ■ F M 5 t h A N N I V I R S A P Y G A I A BENEFI T C O N C E R T
FRANK DeVOL
H o l l y ,voud C o m p o s e r - C o n d u c t o r - A f ra n g r * r
LES ELGART
O n g i n S h o r o f S o p h i s t o c a t e r S w i n g
BOBBY HACKETT
T h e M a n w i t h t h o G o l d e n C o r n e t
LEOPOLD LaFOSSE
C o n c e r t V i o l i n i s t C c # d n c t o i
EARL SCRUGGS
N a s h v i l l e ' * 5 - S tr m g B a n j o K i n g
;
/
FRAN W ARREN
T h e S w i n g E r a s G r e a t V o c a l i s t T o d a y
X
LaFOSSE BACH ENSEMBLE
B a c h S t i m g s a n d H a r p s i c h o r d
, S r ‘ .
‘
' V ' f t
K M F A STAGE ORCHESTRA
3 5 I n s t r u m e n t a l i s t s w i t h S p e c i a l G u e s t
F R A N K B E T T E N C O U R T ^
*
,
,
-
'
M U S K / - !
r . ’ F f C T ' O N B l D I C K G O O D W I N
' ' P O U N C E D BY P O D F I N N E D Y
J
•
V S I C A t
/• P P / - N G I . A M U I S b '
I G v O I .
l o t OSSE A M D D U D I K . N
I
U Q h i i N G L f P ' D G F R A D N E Y
S T A G I N G BY
I V I E H E N D R I C K S
ti
i
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r n
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I O A M . ■— 6 P M .
'Dedicated' to Reform
GOP Leaders
See Party Win
By JOHN POPE
General Reporter
A Texas Republican leader told
reporters Wednesday morning
that Texans have had
their
“sensibilities offended” by State
officials and that they are looking
to the GOP for change.
“We are absolutely dedicated
to bringing
this about,” said
Peter O’Donnell Jr. of Dallas, the
s t a t e ’ s national Republican
committeeman, who participated
in a Capitol press conference with
state party chairman George
vice-
Willeford,
chairman Mrs. Malcolm Milburn
m d Mrs. Tobin Armstrong, co
chairman of the GGP National
C o m m i t t e e
Texas’
Republican committeewoman.
State GOP
and
top state positions,
THE FOUR leaders issued a
five-part statement telling of the
party's confidence in its ability
to win
its
emphasis on multi-candidate GOP
primary elections,
the GOP’s
efforts in recruiting gubernatorial
candidates, the party’s optimism
that “several well-qualified” GOP
candidates will file for governor
and dedication “ to a winning
effort.”
Mrs. Armstrong
she
was confident Republicans could
the 1972 elections
do well
because of the “ complete break
said
in
down of State government.” She
dted the filing fee law, which
was passed under Democratic
and declared un-
leadership
c o n s t i t u t i o n a l , and
the
that either
redistricting plans
un
h a v e
constitutional
been
subjects of litigation.
declared
have
been
or
Because the filing fee, which
had
party
financed Texas’
primaries, has been ruled un
constitutional, Willeford
said
the GOP will have to look to
voluntary donations and workers
to hold the May 6 elections.
All four emphasized that as
many candidates as possible
should file for spots in the GOP
primary and that the state party
would keep neutral until after the
May 6 balloting.
SO FAR, the only Republican
to file for governor is Sen. Henry
Grover
of Houston. Other
p o s s i b i l i t i e s—like Byron
Fullerton, associate professor of
law\ and even astronaut Neil
Armstrong—have been mentioned
as candidates for the office.
slowness
apparent
O’Donnell said the reason for
t h e
of
Republican signups is that these
persons “need to go to as many
people as they can” before they
decide to run to get solid com
mitments of campaign support.
County Sheriff Race
Soap Box:
Peace Proposal Viewed
r n
J. Seaman
B. Cottrell
With Mixed Reactions
Question: “What is your reaction to President Richard M.
Nixon’s eight-point proposal for peace?”
J. R. Seeman, five-year senior, architecture: “It seemed
to me to be politically motivated. Since the secret talks were
getting nowhere, what is the purpose of making a public
proposal? If he really wanted to get anywhere he should have
set a definite withdrawal date.”
Bob Cottrell, 21, junior, history: “Supposedly, LBJ tried secret
negotiations about 1966, but as soon as Hanoi would agree to
U.S. demands, Johnson would introduce new, tougher demands,
This is just a campaign ploy.”
Jane Henderson, 20, junior, linguistics: “This Is obviously
just for the campaign, but the upcoming Peking visit must
have had a lot to do with the timing. Nixon has to have some
kind of plan in mind before he goes to China. I like the six-
month withdrawal plan. This has to be done gradually or the
POW’s could be used as hostages. He has to make sure that
the POW’s will be released first. This should have been done
two years ago.”
Mark Rentz, 20, junior, government: “Definitely a political
move on Nixon’s part, especially since he is going to Peking.
But, he left out a lot of things. He did not specify what a cease
fire would consist of. And he did not talk about Leas or Cam
bodia. There are over 120.000 secret agents in South Vietnam.
Members of the National Liberation Front can't vote freely
if they’re worried about constant surveillance. Ifs amazing
to expect a complete exchange of prisoners before the war
is over. Nixon is creating a false fantasy about an exchange
of prisoners because, in the whole history of wars, there has
never been a complete exchange of POW’s before negotiations
were completed, and negotiations are a long way from being
completed in Vietnam.”
Harlon Tamon, 20, junior, government: “At the beginning
of each of Nixon’s speeches he refers to his campaign promise
H. Tamon
T. Hainze
to get us out of Vietnam and then mentions something about
having a plan. Well, in this ‘plan* I didn’t like the fact that
he mentioned nothing about tile air war. There was nothing
said about bombing during the cease-fire, but he has said that
he plans to keep our air bases in Southeast Asia.”
Charlotte Magness, 19, sophomore, anthropology: “I don't
see how Hanoi is ever going to agree to anything unless we
are more definite. Hanoi has too much at stake to just quit
and exchange prisoners. And, on the election Issue, I don’t
see Hanoi agreeing to an election unless Thieu drops out of
the race.”
Rene Vincent, 19, junior, American Studies: “I'm sort of
surprised that he had done that much. He’s put the Democrats
in a bad position by taking all their Issues away from them.
The speech changed some of my opinions. It makes Hanoi the
‘bad guys’ in other countries as well as in die United States.
I don’t know how effective the peace plan vail be, but I think
you could call it progress.”
Tom Hainze, 23, graduate, government: “He’s Just saying
the same tiling he always has. He thinks Vietnam is two
countries, and I think it’s just one. So docs Hanoi. If s just
a political proposal to get Nixon re-elected. If it doesn’t work
he can say ‘I tried.’ ”
Sherrod Smith, 23, graduate, physics: “It changed some of
my ideas on Nixon. If everytliing he says is true, then perhaps
he hasn't been as wrong about the war as it has seemed in
the past. But I don’t think it will have a great deal of effect
either on Hanoi or her allies.”
Carolyn Boyvey, 20, junior, music: “I don think Nixon should
be criticized as much as a lot of people are doing. They seem
to think he’s not doing anything. This proposal and the speech
should prove that he has been doing something. It’s just that
there is no simple solution.”
SIT N' BULL
Go Go Girls
FOLK SINGERS NIGHTLY
3 POOL TABLES
3500 Guadalupe
453-9831
Thursday Special
Chop Sirloin
1 0 9
sarved with salad, baked potafoe and texas toast
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OPEN AFTER 12
FOR FOOD, FILMS,
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472-7315
KRMH F.M. PRESENTS
2815 Guadalupe
478-3560
The Original National Touring Company
experiment
THEATRE
presents
A MULTIMEDIA EVENT
JESUS CHRIST
SUPERSTAR
January 27
8.00 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium
Raven Files for Post
position of sheriff, I will be more
than willing to work with the
population,
blacks,
chicanos, students and all other
peoples of our county.”
induding
Raven said he would allow
weekend prisoners an opportunity
to work with dvic organizations
and on special projects, such as
park beautification and baseball
field maintenance.
The candidate has served as
a military policeman, deputy
sheriff of Travis County and as
a Department of Public Safety
patrolman.
THE HOOKOM
3405 GUADALUPE
TONITE IS AMATEUR NITE
...............$50
1st Prize
2nd P riz e ..................$15
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3rd Prize
AUSTIN'S FINEST GROUP OF TOPLESS DANCERS
SUBLIT DANCE FLOOR
OPEN 4 P.M.
PA R KIN S IN REAR
453-9029
ARMADILLO WORLD HEADQUARTERS
PRESENTS
GREEZY WHEELS
WI SWEET MARY
COLD BEER
THURSDAY, JAN. 27 8:30 P.M.
525I/2 Barton Springs Road
75c Covet
Travis Raven Jr. filed for the
office of Travis County slieriff
Wednesday
“com
and
munication is my main goal.”
said
the basis of what
After filing in the Democratic
primary, Raven said, “ Unlike
some candidates who are running
on
in
cumbents have or have not done,
I am running on the basis of
what I can do for the people
of Austin and Travis County.”
the
Raven dted jail reforms, Im
proved budget controls, courtesy
services and protection programs
as points in his platform. The
candidate explained that courtesy
services would emphasize the law
enforcement officer’s relationship
with
that
the community and
Improved public relations and
communication would be part of
this program.
law
If elected, Raven said he would
employ University students on a
part-time basis at the County jail.
Mentioning
students and
psychology majors as examples,
Raven said such a program
would “give students the Idea of
how jails are run, while per
mitting them to work with a full
time Jailer.”
An advisory council Raven
said, would also be established
with blades, chicanos, students
and prisoners as members. “The
council will discuss the problems
and wants of people
the
county,” he said.
in
“ My platform also calls for
plans that will insure a well-
organized
and working com
munication between the sheriff’s
department and other law en
forcement agencies,” Raven said.
“When I am elected to the
museum of light
offers
The Surrealists
films and cinepoems
DALI & BUNUELO
CHIEN A N DALO U
RICHTER'S
RHYTHMUS 21
DULAC & ARTAUD'S
SHELL & CLERGYMAN
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
ART BLDG. AUDITORIUM
7 & IO p.m.
75c
climb aboard
the mind of a
Texas truckdriver.
multi-film
multi-image
multi-sound
shows at 4:00,
5:30, 7:00,
8:30, 10:00
daily.
$2.00, $1.50 Students
Q o ° & -
r
n
G O ,
%
TICKETS: $3, $4 & $5
Tickets Available At: Raymonds I Si 2
Montgomery Wards
MARX
BROS.
IN
4°y
BLUFF ■
m m i
KOM), “I
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FREE PARKING
THE BIG STORE
THE M A R X BROTHERS EXPLOIT THEIR IN SA N E COMEDY O N
W E R Y FLOOR A N D IN EVERY OFFICE OF A DEPARTMENT
STORE. HARP A N D PIANO B Y HARPO A N D CHICO.
Thursday, Jan. 27
Union Theater
7:00, 8:30, 10:00 p.m.
75*
YSJP
Jan Sterling Set
For 'Butterflies
One of the most popular plays—both with audience and
critics—of the 1969-1970 Broadway season will be presented
at 8 p.m. Monday in Municipal Auditorium.
Leonard G ershes prize-winning comedy “ Butterflies Are
F ree,” stars Jan Sterling in tho role of Mrs. Baker. Eileen
E ckart created the role on Broadway; it is now being played
by Gloria Swanson.
Miss Sterling, a veteran of both stage and films, will head
a cast including John Spencer as tho blind son and Pam ela
Gilbreath as tho girl next door.
The comedy tells the story of a blind you'b's fight to free
himself from his mother and his love affair with a kooky
actress in a Greenwich Village loft. Hew he finds his way
to bed and what happens when he dees Is the source of much
of the play's humor.
Produced for tour by Tom Mallow, Ken Shaw and Arthur
Whitelaw, the latter of whom produced tho show on Broad
way, “Butterflies Are Free” is directed by Elizabeth Cald
well, set design by Richard Seger, costumes by Robert
Mackintosh, and lighting by Jules Fisher, all of whom worked
in these sam e capacities on the New York “original."
Tickets are priced at $3.50, $4.50 and $5.50 and are on
sale through Friday at University State Bank and both
Scarbrough’s stores. On Saturday, Sunday and Monday, all
tickets will be at the box office of Municipal Auditorium
only.
lilPIIMIIIIIil!'1
Stage Stars
. . . (top to bottom) Jan Ster
ling, John Spencer and Pame
la Gilbreath.
Ex-Student's Art Displayed
Recent
paintings
John
S t u r t e v a n t ,
a University
graduate, are being featured in
a one-man show a t Laguna Gloria
by
Art Museum through Sunday.
S t u r t e v a n t studied under
Everett Spruce and John Guerin
of the art departm ent. The artist
Daily Horoscope
A R I E S : M a r k
tim e . G e t
is
r e a d y
t h a t
fo r w o rk
b u t d o n 't s t a r t It y e t.
y o u r s e lf
to c o m e ,
T A I R U S : Y o u r a t titu d e c a n b e Im
p ro v e d . Y o u s h o u ld e x a m in e y o u r
m o tiv e s a n d
lf th e y
t r y
re a lly sh o u ld be w h a t th e y a r e .
to d e c id e
G E M IN I: W h en y o u a t t e m p t a n e w
th in g ,
th e
y o u
r a m if ic a tio n s " O r d o you J u s t f ig u r e
t h a t e v e r y b o d y i t a f f e c ts c a n ta k e
c a r e of h im s e lf?
c o n s id e r
d o
C A N C E R : A r e f o r m m o v e m e n t m a y
its w o rk s .
t r y
B e c o m e
lik e , b u t
m a k e s u re t h a t i t Is on y o u r te r m s .
In c lu d e y o u
In c lu d e d
in
if y o u
to
notes, however, that no one artist
served as his sole influence.
“ My paintings stem
from a
very personal involvement with
art. The nature of my paintings
comes from an outgrowth of my
personality. They are not
in
fluenced by any one artist or
style,” he said.
Tile
titles
The delicacy of his paintings,
whether oil on canvas or acrylic,
generates an ethereal quality.
to some of
the
paintings m ay suggest the artist's
imaginative approach
to each
new work, often humorously.
“ A Grasshopper Steps
to the
Road." “A More Famous Fish,”
“ A Choice of Survival,” “ The
“ A Praying
Mule's
Jew els,”
“Only
Mantis Fantasy,”
th#
Dream Remains,” “ I've Got tile
Houston Texas Blues Again.”
“Tribolitp Phacops Revisited”
are among those exhibited.
HLs drawings may even have
more humor
titles:
in
“Venus Drawing 3800 5B,” “ Soft
Leaded Imaginings,” “Artificially
Yours" and “ A Pigeon’s Map".
their
is
an
presented. The
In conjunction with Sturtevant*
paintings
Indian
work,
exhibition
exhibit includes Indian artifacts
borrowed
Memorial Museum. Most of the
articles are
south
from
western Indian tribes, such as
Navajo, Pueblo, Seminole, Hopi,
Zuni, Papago and others.
Texas
from
the
the
L E O : E v e r y o n e n e e d s
fa ll b a c k
a n d re g r o u p o c c a s io n a lly . T o d a y is
p ro b a b ly a b o u t th e b e s t c h a n c e y o u
w ill h a v e to do th is fo r a w h ile .
to
V IR G O : A n tis o c ia l in s tin c ts c a n ru in
y o u r d a y u n le s s y o u s t a r t a t o n c e
th e m .
to
o v e rc o m e
L IB R A : I n te llig e n c e sh o u ld n i l e y o u r
d a y an d n o th in g e ls e
SC O R PIO : E v id e n tly y o u
t h a t
th in g s w ill a lw a y s be g o in g y o u r
w a y . o r t h a t y o u c a n a lw a y s n u d g e
th e m a
if th e y d o n 't. B e t te r
r e - e x a m in e th is p h ilo s o p h y .
S A G IT T A R IU S: S e n tim e n ta l
th in k
little
w ill m a k e
a c c o m p lis h
it d iff ic u lt
a n y th in g
C A P R IC O R N : S o m n a m b u lis ts do n o t
a lw a y s h a v e th e ir e y e s c lo s e d . F o r
e x a m p le , ta k e y o u r a c t iv itie s to d a y .
fo r you
u s e fu l.
fe e lin g s
to
A Q U A R IU S ! B e t te r
th o u g h ts m a k e
b e t t e r p la n s , a n d b e t t e r p la n s m a k e
b e t t e r r e s u lts .
P IS C E S : S a tu r a te y o u r a tte n tio n w ith
r e s o lu tio n s o f a c tio n
— P . Nick L a w r e n c e .
All The BEER
You Can Drink
for $3.00
AND
TNE ROCKY HIU
BLUES BAND
"A GOOD TIME IS
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HAPPY HOURS 1:30-6:30
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1523 TIN N IN FORD RD.
OFF E. RIVERSIDE
J e n n ifer O ’N eill
G a ry G r im e s
“ SU M M E R O F
’4 :“
D a v id N ie v e n
L ola A lbright
“ THE IM P O SSIB L E
Y E A R S ” IR)
Cameron Rd. at 183
SH O W T O W IM U.S.A.
4 5 4 -8 4 4 4
TWIN
“ P L A N E T O F TH E
A P E S ”
“ B E N E A T H T H E P L A
N ET O F T H E A P E S ”
" E SC A P E FR O M T H E
P L A N E T OF
T H E A P E S ” (G P )
Ie
I
«
I
J e n n ife r O’NeiU
G a ry G r im e s
‘SU M M E R O F
’42”
D a v id N ie v en
L ola A lbright
"TH E IM P O SSIB L E
Y E A R S " >R>
L O N G H O R N
Putman at 183 N.
4 5 4 - 3 8 8 0
"L O Y E M E ,
L O V E MY W IF E ”
P in s!
“ C A N D Y ”
(X )
R a ted
N e One U n d er 18
A d m itted
» a q e 12 Thursday, January 27, 1972 THE D A ILY TEXAN
Rock
Procol Harum Returns with Style
“Procol Huron;** A&M; 46502.
By BOB DOERSCHUK
Amusement* Writer
all
You
rem em ber Procol
Harum. They were th e stately
English group
recorded
" W h i t e r Shade of Pale,”
instant
s o m e t h i n g of an
vanished
masterpiece,
t h e n
that
forever from
right?
the public view,
Wrong,
fortunately.
Procol
Harum is back, a quartet now,
a little less cerebral but a lot
m ore consistent in their latest
album, “Broken B arricades.”
There a re still snatches of that
mystical,
that
characterized their early work,
illusory quality
I N T E R S T A T E T H E A T R E S
PARAMOUR
$1.00 'TIL 2:15
1:35 -3:40-5:45
7:50-9:55
ALBERTR.BROCC0LI ana C a o m
HARRY SALTZMAN present
t i f*B *L #
n
■ ■ ■ ■
J a m e s B o n d007 ^ flemings
D ia m o n d s Are Forever
United Artists
LAST DAY!
C Starts TOM ORROW J
...A SATISFIED CUSTOMER
IS OUR MOST IMPORTANT
PRODUCT!”
*
_ _ _ rn
in
“ Song
particularly
for a
D ream er.” Most of this record,
however, is more down-to-earth
rock, sophisticated in concept and
catchy
composition but often
running-through-your-head
type
music.
easily
The
“ Simple
centers
around a hesitating rhythm that
grows more intense as it keeps
an
striving
Into
un-
u n l e a s h e d beat. An
Sister.”
break
track
best
to
It
is
M iddle Earth
Aid for Bad Trips
9 p.m. - 4 a.m.
Seven Days a Beek
Also 8:30-4:30
University “Y”
No names, no hassle
Mobile units available
472-9246
in
series of
tile end. A
the beginning
complicated
chord
is embellished with a
changes
tricky riff played by tile ba^s
alone
and
building up to a brass and string
climax at
lot of
Zappa’s m aterial is like this—
even
though the melody m ight
be too difficult to sing, it still
sticks
in som e
in your mind
mutated but irreslstable form.
“ P O W E R FAILURE”
is
another one of this variety. The
chords are even easier, the beat
more restless and there is a long
drum workout in the middle all
of which add up to make this
one
toe-
the most successful
tapper of the collection.
are
other delightful
moments. Listen
“ Broken
to
B arricades,” with
its swirling
triplets, and see how easily
it
can pull you
into a m usical
euphoria;
it’s
like watching a
if your
tide roll
tonal
in. Or.
tastes lean more toward harder
There
rock, the Harum obligingly drives
and
“Memorial Drive”
in
“ Luskus Delph.”
Of course,
the Mouth”
spots here and
there are a row
weak
there.
is
“ Playmate of
mostly a Robin Trower guitar
in
solo which proportionately
creases
and
cliche
decreases listener interest as it
wears on.
output
AND THE words of the om-
a
n i p r e s e n t Keith Reid,
mysterious half-member of
the
group who has been writing the
Harum lyrics ever since
their
first album, tend to lapse Into
poetic blithemgs that are better
received as
to the
days of psychedelic pretense.
throwbacks
But
tile faults are few and
easily forgiven. Procol Harum,
the prodigal son of English rock,
has come back a t last. Welcome!
W fth U n cle R e m u s mnrl the crrttart
fro m Jo w l C h a n d ler H arris' cla ssic talma
W a l t I ) i s n e v * s
S a n g
t h e Sm ut!
TEI ll M f OI.OH
*’* '
e*«#lX*Orrt
Plus " W E T B A C K H O U N D "
O P E N 5:45 P.M.
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S tarring
DIANA KJAER • ROBERT STRAUSS
INGER SUNDH • TOMMY BLOM
ANNE GRETE
S T A T E
Detective Harry Callahan.
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together for the
first time!
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A . BANKOVICH BBOOUCTlO*
NATALIE WOOD ROBERT CULP
BOB & CAROL 4 TED 4 ALICE
ELLIOTT GOULD DYAN CANNON
Clint Eastwood
Dirty Harry
VARSITY
A U S T I N
”
A FRANKOVICH P*OOUCDOK —
.nm im-
M a m o u
infifii)
t r u m a n
m u # ny
newer £
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ham Columbia Plctufaa
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a
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Starts TOMORROW!
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< ! i U s t f k S .- )
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H O L
T ZZ
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WEDNESDAY IS STUDENT DAY:
ALL TICKETS HALF-PRICE WITH STUDENT I.D.
Batts Aud.
rn
Y S A
Omrt'day. January 27. 1972 THE DAILY TEXXN fu n
'
Niven Book Oozes Wit, Tales
Famous Names Adorn Autobiography
A $40-a-wcek job as the “ first
and worst salesm an” for
Jack
Kroindeer’s new, post-Prohibition
21 Brands,
Inc., did not seem
promising, but in the meantime
Niven was adding to his list of
Influential acquaintances, and the
influential acquaintances felt that
Hollywood was the place for him
to be. So Hollywood it was.
a
ANI) THE MAGIC bogan to
work. It is not clear exactly how
it worked—it might ha\> been the
result of
steambath with
Douglas Fairbanks, or a polo
game at D arryl Zanuck’s
in
which N iven’s pony bit Zanuck
on the behind, or a party aboard
an English cruiser that ended
Irbing
with Niven's hoarding
Thalberg’s copy of HM S Bounty,
or an off-color lim erick mouthed
in desperation during a screen
test, or a combination of all these
incidents; but in almost no time
at all Niven, still without any
acting experience to speak of,
was signed
to a seven-year
c o n t r a c t by Metro-Goldwyn-
M ayer.
From that point on it was a
joyride
which
culminated in the role of Phileas
Fogg in Mike Todd’s extravagant
stardom,
to
8th & Bed R iv e r
I THE ONE KNUE I
EASY STREET
©
rn
rn
rn
rn
•
HAPPY H O URS
D A ILY 4-8 p.m.
BEER $1.00 Pitcher
t h u r
• T
N e v a A C O V E R *
“The Moon’s ft Balloon;” by
David Niven; 380 pages; Put
nam; $7.95.
By CHRISTOPHER LEHMANN-
HAUPT
(c) 1972 New York Times
News Service
in
film star
D avid Niven's account of his life
and times, the first juicy all-day
lollipop of the new book season.
W e have here,
is bouncing
Oh, perhaps some readers w ill
find it a touch on the English
side, especially in the early parts,
“ horrible
where young Niven,
little boy,”
from
school to school and later trying
to make a go of a career as
an arm y officer. But even here,
there are Nessie, the Cockney
prostitute
(who used to picnic
with tile 14-year-old Niven at one
of his schools), and Trubshawe
the compleat eccentric, not to
mention N iven’s racy wit and fine
sense of the absurd.
there
And everywhere else
In
the
successes,
book
are
comedies,
h e a r t b r e a k s ,
g l a m o r o u s names, more
glamorous names and
insidey
Hollywood gossip.
ALL IN ALL an amusing story
with plenty of out-loud laughs.
to
So we fall back on N iven’s
career—no disastrous plunge. The
secrets of his success seem to
have been a capacity to meet
and charm important people, and
a willingness
try almost
anything. After a youth and
young manhood of ripening these
talents—at
the expense of a
a
school
a
fam ily,
m ilitary college (Sandhurst) and
an infantry regiment who did not
a l w a y s understand—Niven
decided to resign his commission
and seek his fortune in Am erica.
system f
Tues. thru Sat.
M A N C H ILD
“ Around the World In 80 Days”
and an Oscar for the portrayal
of the lonely m ajor in Terence
Rattigan’s “ Separate Tables.”
there were
But always
the
glamourous people who seem to
have fluttered around Niven like
moths around the candle (or vice
versa). There was Chaplin
to
advise him to “ learn to listen.”
There was Garbo swimming nude
In various swimming pools. There
was Benchley to cable him from
Venice that “ streets full of water.
Joseph
Advise.” There was
Kessel eating a champagne glass,
“ stem and a ll.”
TOWARD THE end of his tale,
Niven fights with the urge to wax
and
sentimental,
common
a
of most
failing
disastrous
Hollywood autobiographies. But
just as he has managed to keep
his ego in hand, to depraoate his
talent without protesting
too
much, to drop a ton of names
without actually .seeming a name-
dropper, he wins the last fight
too, more or less.
At the end he finds a new
generation beating at his door,
blowing grass in bis face and
telling him that “ it was cats like
mc.
the movie
business with our bad taste and
lack of im agination.”
.who ruined
.
He is telling as, T take it. what
his life demonstrates—there are
more ways to get high than one
can shake a stick at.
p re s e n ts
TO N IG H T
6:30 and 9:00
Otto Preminger Festival
ii
Laura
(1944)
W ith Gene Tierney, Dana Andrews
and Clifton W e b b
A tale of love and murder in Manhattan high society . . <
JESTER AUDITORIUM
75c
$7.00 season ticket on sale in Social W ork
Building, 212 and at the box office
A service of the Department of R/TV /F
THE CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE
T H E T E X A S U N IO N
P re s e n t s
LORIN HOLLANDER
P I A N I S T
TU ESD A Y, F E B R U A R Y I, 8:00 P.M.
A U ST IN M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M
TIC KET D R A W IN G C O N T IN U E S T O D A Y — H O G G B O X O F F IC E IO A . M . -6 P.M.
FREE TO BLA N KET TA X H O L D E R S — BU S S C H E D U L E IN T U ESD A Y 'S T EX A N .
Noted Pianist
Lorin Hollander, pianist whose theories of communicating
with audiences have earned national headlines, will appear
at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Municipal Auditorium. Tickets for the
event, sponsored by the Cultural Entertainment Committee,
may be obtained at Hogg Auditorium Box Office.
Nostalgia Show Set
“ Jesu Jo y of M an’s Desiring”
currently on the pop charts as
“ jo y” by Apollo IOO.
The concert also w ill feature
rear-screen projection on some of
the performances by Scruggs,
Devol and Hackett as well as
special staging and lighting.
A ll seats are reserved and are
priced at $3.50, $4.50 and $5.50
with a limited number at $10.
Tickets are on sale
the
U niversity area at the Fine Arts
Box Office, U niversity Co-Op,
U niversity State Bank and at
High Fid elity Inc. at 1710 Lavaca
St.
in
After Monday all tickets w ill
be at the auditorium box office.
C o n c e r t o W in n e rs
S y m p h o n y S o lo ists
Stephen F . Austin College, has
been principal flutist with the A ir
Force Band of the South and the
Southeast Asian Band. He and
Miss Kern are pupils of John
Hicks.
and
University
Smith has been a member of
the
Austin
Symphony Orchestras as well as
Jazz Ensemble
the University
and University Symphonic Band.
He served on the faculty of the
Point M usic Camp in Wisconsin
for two summers and currently
teaches saxophone at Westlake
High School.
Chumley, a
freshman who
studies with W illiam Doppmann,
won the U niversity’s annual high
school piano concerto competition
last spring.
The concert w ill be broadcast
live on KUT-FM radio.
Six winners of a Department
of M usic concerto competition
w ill solo with
the University
Symphony Orchestra at 4 p.m.
Sunday in Hogg Auditorium.
The six students are baritone
Ryan Allen, horn player Jam es
Baker, flutists David Bonner and
Diane Kern,
pianist Robert
Chumley and saxophonist W alker
Smith. Stuart Sankey, associate
conductor of the orchestra, w ill
conduct.
ON THE
are
PR O G R A M
“ Don Quixote” songs,
R a ve l’s
Gordon
for
Jacob ’s Concerto
H o r n , Domenico Cimarosa’s
Concerto in G M ajor for Two
Flutes, Prokofiev’s Concerto No.
3 in C M ajor and Glazounov's
Concerto for Alto Saxophone.
leading role
Allen, a graduate student who
studies with M artha Deatherage,
in the
played a
U n i v e r s i t y Opera Theater
production of “ Die Flodermaus”
in September and in “ Cosi Fan
Tutte” last spring.
Baker, a senior studying with
Wayne Barrington, has been a
member of the Austin Symphony,
the U niversity
Jazz Ensemble,
the U niversity Symphony Or
the University
chestra
Symphonic Band.
and
M ISS K E R X is a candidate for
the m aster of music degree,
having received a bachelor of
music degree
from Lawrence
U niversity in Appleton, Wis.
Bonner, who form erly attended
Recital to Feature
American Songs
S a n d r a Rogers Alvernon,
soprano, w ill give a recital of
Am erican songs by Copland, an
aria from Pu ccini’s “ Turandot”
and works by Schumann and
Faure at 4:15 p.m. Friday in
Music Building Recital Hall.
She w ill be accompanied by
Barb ara Betty B a tik at
the
piano. The recital is part of the
b a c h e l o r of music degree
requirements.
A student of W illa Stewart in
the Department of Music, shp
played the role of Tebaldo in the
1970 University Opera Theater
production
“ Don
C arlot.”
of Verdi’s
For those who have a yearning
for nostalgia, Austin wall play
host Wednesday to a cast of
popular music artists from the
past and present who w ill
recapture some of
the best
moments in popular music during
the last 30 years as a fifth an
classical
niversary
music
station
K M FA .
salute
nonprofit
to
F M
The benefit concert, sponsored
by Rod Kennedy, w ill feature
seven guest stars and two or
the 8 p.m. per-
chestras
f o r m a n c e
Municipal
Auditorium.
in
in
Headlining thp production wall
be Hollywood composer-conductor
Frank DeVol
( “ Cat Ballou,”
“ D irty Dozen,” “ Pillow T a lk ")
who will conduct the 35-piece
K M FA Stage Orchestra in music
from 30 years of movies and TV
scores including his own “ M y
Three Sons,” “ The Happening”
(popularized by The Supremes)
and others.
Guest stars
for
the benefit
include five-string banjo player
E a r l Scruggs ( “ Foggy Mountain
Breakdown!” ) with his guitarist
great
P e a rls;”
sons Randy and G ary;
Jack ie
Gleason mood music golden
cornet player Bobby Hackett,
recreate his Glenn
who w ill
M ille r 1930’s recording of “ String
form er Claude
of
Thornhill
Fran
vocal
W arren, whose
recording of
“ Sunday Kind of Love” sold more
than a million copies; Columbia
Records’ all-time best selling (40
L P ’s) big band leader Les Elg art,
w'ho wall play standards
like
“ Stella by Starlight” as well as
new' baroque rock arrangements;
s o c i e t y pianist-leader Frank
Bettencourt, who w ill play “ Love
Story” with
the 35-piece or
chestra, and concert violinist
Leopold La Fosse, who w ill lead
his 17-member LaFosse Bach
Ensem ble in music for strings
in
and harpsichord by Bach
cluding the original version cf
W eekday W o nd er Productions
presents
Ca SABLA
starring
H U M P H R E Y B O G A R T
Ingrid Bergman, Peter Lorre
and Sydney Greenstreet
B.E.B. 150
THURS., JA N . 27
PRESENTING THE SOUTH TEXAS PREMIERE
rn rn
0 §€
S t f
re n tie r
T h e S i d e S h o w
Academy Award —
SUNDAY
The RED
& the WHITE
A HAUNTING MASTERPIECE
ABOUT THE ABSURDITY A N D
EVIL OF WAR BY THE H U N
G A R IA N DIRECTOR MIKLOS JANCSO.
Best Foreign Film
Elio Petri's
Investigation of A
Citizen Above Suspicion
BATTS AUDITORIUM
75c — 2:40 & 4:30
Awards:
Cannes Film Festival —
Special Ju ry Prize;
International Critics' Prize
"One of the year's ten best."
— John Simon,
New York Times
Judith Crist,
New York Magazine
MONDAY
SHOOT
the PIANO
PLAYER
FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT’S
HALF-THRILLER, HALF-PARODY.
“I W AS ABLE TO D O A N Y
THING,’’ SA ID TRUFFAUT.
BATTS AUDITORIUM
75c — 7:20, 9, 10:35
A 1971 Italian Film — In C o lo r— English Dubbed
Friday and Saturday
Jester Aud. 7:30-9:45 Adm. $1.00
For Maria Callas,
ifs a natural.
■rn' S M ■ L
BATTS
AUDITORIUM
A Euro Inlernotionol Film in c o lo r (rom N e w line C in em a .
Medea. Maria Callas’first dramatic movie.
Directed by Pier ftiolo Pasolini.
plus
S A L O M E
starring A lia Nazim ova
(Short F ilm , 1922)
7sOO
and
9:30
Tickets will be sold at each evening performance at the
Batts Auditorium box office. Box office opens at 6:30.
Tues, thru Thurs. Students $1.50 Non-Students $2.00
F iW T4 T W J a v . January 27, 1972 THE DAILY TEXAN
■*=>'
SCOTT
TOWELS
V IV A
BIG ROLL
BK SAVINGS THIS WEEK at H.LB.I
SHOP and SAVE WITH THE INFLATION FIGHTERS! I
INFLATION
■ FIGHTER I
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INFLATION
FIGHTER
RANCH STYLE f * ™ 1*
GREAT WESTERN
BEANS
NO. 300 CAN
INFLATION
I FIGHTER I
I SPIC/A I I
PARK
MANOR
Mellorine
HALF GALLON
INFLATION
I FIGHTER J
I swim
VILLAGE
PARK
PURE CAN E
SUGAR
5-POUND BAG
L IM IT - 3 A D D ITIO N A LS 17c
LIMIT - 2 A D D IT IO N A LS 39c
Limit — I With $5.00 Purchase or More
Without $5.00 Purchase or Additional 63c
33'
BOSTON BUTT
PORK ROAST
V
(WHOLE)
CENTERS and
ENDS M IXED S
PORK
C H O P S * *
• POUND •
POUND...
PORK STEAK0 :„67
ALL MEAT FRANKS"-^ 49
Frozen Food Values:
* Mary Ellen Bakery Treats:
ORANGE JUICE
COOKIN'BAGS «
CREAM PIES m,„ «»„
Coconut, Chocolate or
Lemon .................. 26 oz. lf
T O ^
"ounce can 5 for Sl.OO
4 -$1.0fl
GREEN BEANS » . . . . .
French, or Chopped Brocoli,
IO oz. pkg. I J
PATIO DINNERS
Mexican, Beef Enchilada, ^
Comb, or Cheese 12 oz. size
COOL N' CREAMY Z
Bird’s Eye Assorted flavors
ind......................... 4 pack D O
T I V
if
EGG0 WAFFLES
« , ORANGE JUICE
....................... 13 oz. size ‘t i l
Minute Maid ....1 2 oz. can 3 3
„ «
C IN N A M O N
ROLLS
HOMESTYLE
Package
of 6 . . . .
FRESH L A R G E L U S C IO U S
STRAWBERRIES
PINT BO X
E A C H .....................
BUCKBERRY PIE
Reg. 69c
.................... each 3 #
LEMON JELLY ROLL
................................. each
STRAWBERRY ROLLS
•.................Jumbo pkg. of 8 “ 3
joe
APRICOT LATTICE
COFFEE C A K E .............each ‘l r
BUTTERMILK PUFFS m ,
........................... pkg. of 6 3 7
BLUEBERRY STRUDEL
............................ Pkg. 5 9 *
DESSERT
SHELLS
M A R Y ELLEN
PKG. O F 4
2 5 '
SW EET J U IC Y V A L E N C IA
ORANGES
4-LB. B A G ....................
FRESH C R ISP A LL VARIETIES
APPLES
3 LB. C E L L O B A G .............
J O H N S O N & J O H N S O N
it
baby
powder
MFGRS.
1.29 VAL.
14-OZ.
SIZE
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RIGHT GUARD
A N T IP E R SP IR A N T
D E O D O R A N T
Gillett*
MFGRS.
1.69 VAL.
8-OZ.
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. . . .
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LOTION
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M FGRS.
1.69 VAL.
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