Dean Keeton 'Would Accept' UT Presidency By DAVID POWELL News Assistant School of Law Dean W. Page Keeton said Friday he would accept the University presidency if it were offered to him. Keeton told The Texan, “ I would accept the presidency, or I would have withdrawn my name from consideration a long time ago.” The veteran dean is rumored to be one of three nominees whose names were for­ warded to Chancellor Charles LeMaistre Nov. 30 by the Presidential Selection Com­ mittee. seek LEMAISTRE, HOWEVER, said Wed­ nesday he would “further con­ sultation” with the panel. (His statement came in the wake of a Dallas Morning News report that all three nominees were to Regents’ Chairman “ unacceptable” Frank C. Erwin Jr.) LeMaistre added that he would not “ be bound by apy re fin e m e n t that ie not part Institutional Supplement.” One of the the section of chancellor to present his own nominees to the regents. the supplement allows Last week, strong faculty and student support materialized for Keeton. More than 250 faculty petitions supporting the dean were handed over to LeMaistre. Begun by Law Prof. Allen Smith in the law school, the petitions quickly spread to other faculty circles. “ It was not an organized effort,” Smith said Saturday. “ It was as close to spontaneous as you can get.” SMITH SAID no effort was made to “ persuade” faculty members to sign the petitions. The petitions said, “ We enthusiastically support his (Keeton’s) nomination. In our opinion, he has all the qualifications of a great president of UT Austin and we urge his immediate appointment.” Dr. Paul English, professor of geography, said Friday, “ I signed one (petition).” “ Keeton is one of the most distinguished men on the campus,” English said. “ He has built a great law school and is widely regarded in the state.” English said Keeton could be a unifying force at the University. “ At a time w'hen there seems to be a major dispute,” he said, “ Keeton together.” seems able to pull us ASKED ABOUT Keeton’s faculty support, English said, “There is broad support for all men of his calibre.” Smith, asked if the petitions will have an influence on the selection process, said, “ Yes, I think they will.” He said Keeton wras “ unique.” “He has the respect of the faculty, the students, legislature,” Smith the alumni and the said. “He can unify the University.” Smith emphasized Keeton’s rapport with the Legislature. “They’ll know that what he says he is going to do, h e il do,” he said. Many of Keeton’s former law students now sit in the lawmaking body. Keeton, 62, could only be president for three years, Smith pointed out. and created “BUT BY the end of that time,” he said, a unified “ Keeton will have dissident university elements the University a place where distinguished men will want to come. That is not the case now.” together. He will make brought the Meanwhile, the House of Delegates, In a Thursday night meeting, passed with only one dissenting vote, a resolution backing Keeton. The read: “ The House of Delegates goes on record supporting Page Keeton as its candidate for the presidency of the University of Texas at Austin.” resolution The resolution said that, as president, Keeton “would respect the basic rights of the faculty and student body” and “he has proven his administrative ability in his iv as dean of the law school.” THE HOUSE intends to solicit student signatures on petitions favoring Keeton’s bid and deliver them to LeMaistre. the presidency “With all the support I have received for faculty colleagues and the student body,” Keeton said, “I don’t see any greater compliment for one w-ho has been at the University as long as I have.” from my Keeton said he did not “know much about the petitions.” The dean Is widely known in government, legal and academic circles. l T.S. REP. J .J. “ Jake” Pickle of Austin told The Texan Saturday, “He’s a hell of a m an.” “ I like him very much,” Pickle said. “ Page Keeton is one of the most capable men in the United States. He is not only a great is a lawyer and tremendous personality,” jurist, he Calling Keeton a “progressive, intelligent citizen,” Pickle said he would “ rank him at the Mp of any list of outstanding men.” 'an also is a familiar face at the lany of his former students now egislature. clashed nd Erwin the 1968 over an appropriations legislature that wrould have School of Law for special in * * thh ; % design £> ^ ^ law sch ^ g. ^ In the f a ^ % % The L e?;^ another E. v* Oo state law s t -A o* wras adopted. f rx V would have prohibited to the law faculty from ca Foundation without 9 - A rider, said it was ° “ attention” of the ^.the rider “a slap llll!llllll!lllllfi!!!nit:!lllBliIliinili:i!!nm;iH Number Changed For Texan Offices If you want to rail The Daily Texan, don’t be surprised if you get a voice that routes you to a new number. Die phone number of Texan news and editorial offices has been changed to 471-4401, but the Texas Student Publications Business Office, The Texas Ranger, The Cactus and all other TSP publications will keep the same old 471-5244. niinnDnDni You’ll Increase Your On The Spot! S w T h e 1st Time Ever... m + r • World Fam ous Evelyn Wood Reading Dynam ics offers you l|S|jFf,ee glimpse o f w hat i f s like Ijd able to read and study g rouch faster . • Y o u ’ll see why President Kennedy invited Evelyn W ood to the White H ouser tip "teach his advisors and thb Jo in t C h ie fs of; Sta ff How to*read faster. - Y o u ’ll actually be taught how to read and study faster during the exciting S p e e d - Reading Lesson. Y o u ’ll .hear what the faculty m em bers of one of A m e ric a ’s forem ost colleges says about Evelyn Wood, and watch them read-fast! W e want you to decide for your­ self the value of becom ing a Speed-Reader, Evelyn Wood style. Y o u ’ll find this Special Free o f­ fer of increased reading speed to be an exciting and unusual experience. For the first time we are offering a Special Speed- Reading Le s­ son to provide you with a glimpse of what it’s like to be able to read and study alm ost as fast as you can turn pages . . . . i ' m ». . and you’ll actually in the techniques participate that will improve your reading and study speed on the spot! Lim ited Seating Available at Each Lesson. B ecau se of limit­ ed seating capacity, we ask that you please call the num ber list­ ed below to Reserve Y o u r Seat. Choose the time m ost conven­ ient to your schedule and call now for Your Personal Reserva­ tion. W Limited Seating Available CALL 476-6755 To reserve your Seats Lessons! Law Reform Urged 600 Attend 'Citizens' Hearings' at UT not to prevent or destroy lives, but to save them,” she said. “ You should see the relief and the disbelief on women’s faces at being able to talk about their problem without being rejected,” she said. Seven some almost crying, some straight­ forward, did explain their per­ sonal reactions to illegal abor­ tions. such women, One young woman said she received an expert $1,000 abor­ tion, but it left severe emotional scars. A graduate student went straight to Mexico City with her b r o t h e r , had a 20-minute operation and went sightseeing later that day. and pregnant A WOMAN who found herself just penniless before her divorce told of aborting herself by striking her abdomen with a heavy book, rendering herself later infertile. sent A black mother of three reported being the hospital by her doctor, who performed an abortion without her her knowlege. consent even or to Dr. Joe Trull, pastor of Crestview Baptist Church, and Rev. Bob Breeand, pastor of the Methodist Student Center, said the Baptist and Methodist churches both back abortion reform. James Strickland, assistant director of the Austin-Travis County Human Opportunities Corp., also spoke. “ IT TAKES the self-interest of the middle class anglo to get the point the Texas to Legislature,” Strickland said. He asked for a public abortion clinic for the poor. across Spokeswomen from Houston B’nai B’rith, San Antonio, Fort Worth and Houston chapters of for N a t i o n a l Organization and Women, the Galveston Citizens for Abortion Reform made brief proabortion reform statements. Roy Lucas, attorney who heads the James Madison Constitutional in New York, Law criticized of abortion the United States. Institute the laws reasoning In “ Abortion is the only type of operation that interferes with,” he said. the government DR. HARVEY KARMAN, of New York said, “The basic issue is your right over your body.” In a noon press conference, Kantian explained his “non­ traumatic abortion” and showed the device that accomplishes it. The Karman Cannula, which, Karman said, costs 2 cents to like a plastic make, drinking straw with two notches near the capped end. looks “A woman can come in on her lunch hour, undergo about a minute of scraping and aspiration without anesthetics and walk out unpregnant in fifteen minutes,” he said. “THE $25 PROCEDURE causes no blood loss, ruptured cervix or psychological trauma,” Karman said. room Lenore Boston, a nurse with emergency experience, not-so-pleasant described process of aiding a woman semicomatose from an improper, illegal abortion. the “No woman should have to De in a hospital with a bleeding, maimed body,” she said. Absent Legislators Miss Abortion Rally By JENNIFER EVANS News Assistant approval Overwhelming of repeal of the Texas abortion laws was voted Saturday by about 600 people who attended the Citizens’ Hearings on Abortion held in the Union Building Main Ballroom. The heard audience the testimonies of a gynecologist abortion contesting Minnesota laws, seven anonymous women who discussed their own illegal abortions, Baptist and Methodist pastors, a doctor who has in­ vented an improved nontraumatic abortion device, a leader of the Human Opportunities Corp., an attorney expert on abortion laws and a nurse who has cared for emergency abortion cases. Sarah Weddington, Fort Worth attorney who won last June a federal case ruling the Texas abortion statutes unconstitutional, chaired the sessions. After the conference a march to the State Capitol for a rally was held. MRS. WEDDINGTON said all State legislators had been invited to the hearings. Only two, Reps. Ben Bynam of Amarillo and Fred Orr of De Soto, attended. “Call it fetuscide lf you will/’ said the first speaker, Dr. Jane Hodgson, who told why a law­ abiding gynecologist who had never even received a traffic ticket decided to perform abor­ tions and eventually to challenge a state abortion law. “The original reason for an­ tiabortion laws,” she said, “was the fact that abortions used to be more dangerous than child­ birth. Now, since that danger is for the most part erased, the law is ‘cruel and archaic.’ ” Susan Dennis, a University graduate student who works at the Birth Control Information and Problem Service, Pregnancy echoed Dr. Hodgson’s plea. “WE NEED abortion reform Th o u g h approximately IOO proponents of Texas abortion reform sought the attention of State legislators Saturday af­ ternoon, their appeals met failure as none of the Texas lawmakers could be found in their Capitol offices. “ We've Invited the legislators their offices this af- to be in Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes ★ SALE * SHEEP SKIN RUGS M any Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SALE ★ Various kind*, colors — 30c per foot Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 to discuss means of temoon legal abortion reform,” Mrs. Evelyn Sell told a gathering on the Capitol’s south lawn, but reformers met locked doors. support, legislative Before their vain attempt to seek the reformers heard messages from other state and national sup­ porters of legalized abortion. The reformers all called for legalized abortion to become a back-up for birth control. Mrs. Sell, a founder of the Texas Citizens for Abortion Reform group, chaired the public rally. She the gathering, “This is a historic moment as you are a part of the first public march in Texas to show support for legalizing abortion.” told Representatives from abortion reform movements in Houston, Galveston, Austin, San Antonio reduction on sport coats and suits and Corpus Christi also called for tile 62nd Legislature to repeal the current abortion code, which reformers labeled as “archaic” and a woman’* “legislating personal determination.” The rally from resulted rn march, wrhich concluded Satur­ day’s Citizens Hearing* on Abortion. The hearings were held the Main Ballroom of the in Texas Union. After adjournment about 150 participants took to the streets their to demonstrate desire for abortion reform. Marching dowm Guadalupe Street to the Capitol, marchers carried signs bearing slogans such as “Every child has a right to be wanted,” “Abortion is a woman’s right,” and “El abortion es una decision personal.” Many people observing the march seemed curious about what the marchers were trying to accomplish. Several of Anatta groups policemen were present to “assist the marchers and make sure nobody gets run over,” ss one officer explained. Strung out in a two-column fashion, the march was slightly longer than two city blocks. Week to Highlight Communication A w a r d - w i n n i n g films by University faculty, multi-media shows and guest speakers will headline Communication Week, Feb. 6 to 12. Guest speakers will include James Blue, film maker and director of Rice University’s Media Center; Ed Hauben, World representative; Don G a m e Hillman, national director for television, radio and films of tho American Cancer Society; Sam Petok, public relations manager of Chrysler Corp.; and James Avery, regional public relations director of Humble Oil Co. Continuing events during th* week include a photography d i s p l a y by photo-journalism students the Texas Union Gallery and a dome media show between 7 and IO p.m. nightly inside a dome constructed on the Main Mall. in Editors of Texas newspapers classes journalism will visit throughout the week. The week will commence Feb. 6 with Parents’ Day. A tentative list of events Is displayed on the bulletin board on the first floor of the Jour­ nalism Building. UNWANTED HAIR REMOVED PERM ANENTLY By Medically Approved Electrolysis r7— L a RUTH WILCOTT, D.C.T Froo Consultation Day Or Evening By Appointment AUSTIN ELECTROLYSIS CUNI Established 1953 602 13th H M Y and TOMORROW 3:00 P.M 5:30 P.M 8:00 P.M. C A M B R ID G E T O W ER • 19th A T L A V A C A the suits are marked down Va to Vi sport coats are marked down Vs to Page 2 Sunday, January 31, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN SveltfKWood READING' DYNAMICS 2304 Guadalupe WI} Registration Nears End Voter Sign-up Facing Possible Sunday Finish The deadline for voter registration ii midnight Sunday. Registration stations will be open until midnight, and mailed ap­ plications must be postmarked by that hour to be accepted. Black and chicano leaders said Friday an extension of the deadline would help prospective voters in East Austin. Florence PL Temple, director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said it would be helpful if there were more time to re fu te r vote"* from the black community. She estimated that been 3.000 persons registered from East Austin through this campaign. about have As of yet, Austin chicano organizations have made only a limited voter registration drive on the East Side. HOUSE action is expected next week on a bill passed by the State Senate Friday to extend the voter registration deadline 30 days. Arthur Guerrero, head of the Concerned Citizens for Equal Representation, has led the drive at the Pan American Center, which will be open until midnight Sunday. light. He Volunteers the center will offer transportation to persons unable to get to tile center or other substations. registration has been from said LUCHA, a chicano organization, will have sound-equipped cars in the neighborhoods urging citizens to mail their registration cards or to go to the nearest substation. effort Mexican-American Youth Organization has made no concentrated in registering voters in E ast Austin, according to Rogelio Munoz of MAYO. However, Munoz said individuals have helped the chicano organizations of East Austin, w'hich are registering voters. MAYO chapters have concentrated in registering voters in South Texas, he said. FRITZ ROBINSON, tax coliector-assesor, said a voter registration extension would most benefit East Austin because it would allow more blacks and chicanos to register. Travis County voters are not registering In as large numbers as in other years because of said there was a “ good Robinson. He added rush” of voter registration during the last week of January. Robinson described 18- year-old registration as “good.” the election off-year, Betsy Palm er, University student who is co-ordinating the campus registration drive, said between 11,000 and 12.000 University students have been registered through th* campus campaign. U.S. Bombers Stage Raids its striking power by stationing two up aircraft carriers instead of one in the Gulf of Tonkin. A third U.S. carrier was being held in reserve. Tile three can provide more than 200 bombers for strikes in southern Laos. to the strikes In addition the carriers, other American bombers hit a t Laos from bases in South Vietnam and Thailand. from In all, the United States can m uster 500 or more bombers in the war zone for daily raids, many of them capable of several missions the relatively short jet-flight distances. in one day because of On the battlefields, no major ground action was reported in South Vietnam. Weinglass Speech Set Attorney leonard Weinglass, famed for his defense of the Chicago 7, will speak Saturday morning for CliaRenge 71. The Chicago 7 were convicted of con­ spiring to incite a riot during the 1968 Democratic and crossing state lines with intent to foment a riot. convention national Weinglass is currently engaged, along the with attorney William Kunstler, defense of John Sinclair, head of the White Panthers. He also Is working with attorney Charles Gary In the New Haven trial of Bobby Seales, Black Panther leader. in Explaining the reason for Weinglass’s appearances, a Challenge spokesman said, “We wanted someone to give a good soUd presentation of the radical viewpoint. If you w’ant to look at this topic from all the radical sides, you have view.” to present Weinglass self-styled appeared with revolutionary and Chicago 7 defendant Abbie Hoffman last April in Gregory Gym. Their joint appearance was made possible by a $2,000 appropriation by the Texas Union Speakers’ Committee the Students’ Association. and Approximately 600 students are enrolled for Challenge *71, which will feature the and Responsibility.” topic Registration wiU continue through Monday, and possibly Tuesday. “ Freedom SAIGON (AP) — About 400 U.S. bombers pounded southern Laos and the northwest comer of South Vietnam Saturday in around-the-clock raids aimed at an ominous enemy buildup of men and supplies. Tile intensified bombings, coupled with statements by Secretary of State William P. Rogers in Washington fanned speculation there that a large South Vietnamese ground drive into Laos was imminent. If so. the objective would be to sever the Ho Chi Minh trail in southern Laos—the jungle-hidden network cf roads and byways that is North Vietnam’s only way to send reinforcements and supplies to its soldiers in South Vietnam and Cambodia. INTELLIGENCE reports indicate a major dry-season buildup by the North Vietnamese along die trail, notably near the outlets leading into the sensitive northern sector of South Vietnam. the Apparently, despite four-month-old U.S. aerial campaign by R32 Stratofortresses the North and smaller fighter-bombers. Vietnamese a re pushing through sizable numbers of supply laden trucks. At least enough trucks have arrived to alarm allied commanders over the threat the buildup poses to the withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam. at In Washington Friday also voiced concern over the North Vietnamese buildup and its threat to the American pullout. conference Rogers, news a SO FAR the m ajor U.S. counteraction has been the sustained aerial bombing in I vias and in the northwest corner of South Vietnam In the Khe Sanh area close to the Laotian frontier. U.S. B52 bombers struck Saturday near Khe Sanh for the third successive day and for the seventh time in the last bio weeks. Khe Sanh is a former U.S. Marine base where in 1968 the Marines withstood a 77- day artillery and m ortar siege and aban­ doned it shortly after the siege was lifted. In line with the intensification of the U.S. bombing campaign, the 7th Fleet beefed Autobahn Blockade Enters Fourth Day BERLIN (AP) — A virtual East German land blockade of Berlin went Into its fourth day Saturday, with Chancellor Willy Brandt defiantly stressing West Berlin’s ties to West Germany. President Gustav Heinemann, one of the West German political figures to whose presence the Communists objected, bringing the autobahn harassment, decided on unexpectedly to stay an extra day in West Bertin. He farm youth representatives who m et with him in his the Communist that Berlin harassm ent had taken on dimensions that “ come close to being a blockade.” told West German residence Heinemann said latest disruptions the showed how important It is to free West Berlin from disruptive actions that threaten Hie foundations of its economic existence. As Brandt spoke to a Social Democratic party rally for the March 14 city elections, border officers were reporting road delays of up to 23 hours, despite lessened traffic. E ast German trucks also were caught in the long lines, moving ahead only as their turns came. ties disputed by The E ast German pressure tactics are aimed at breaking West Germ any's ties with West Berlin, the Communists, cautiously endorsed by the western allies wfho want to safeguard their own absolutely necessary and rightful by the West Ger­ mans. rights and considered The city lies behind 120 miles of Com­ munist-ruled E ast Germany. Final Countdown Nears Astronauts Stuart Roosa, A la n Shepherd and E dgar Mitchell (l-r) hold a briefing session in preparation for launching Sunday. Lift-off for the A po llo 14 crew the is set for 2:23 p.m. Liberalized Abortion Laws Praised by California Doctor By RICK CODINA News Assistant Practicing abortionists can not. only retain a sense of integrity’ but may also experience a lessening of guilt feelings, a San Fran­ cisco physician and author of a book on childbirth said Saturday. Dr. John Miller, who has practiced for libera! 27 months under California’s to California “ I know of many women from Texas their that came abortions,” he said, adding tliat Texas would be forced to draw up liberal abortion legislation “ if not this year, tile next, or the year after that.” to have “There is no way in the world that you can stem the tide,” Miller said. Proposed Revenue Plan To Have Some Strings is WASHINGTON (AP) - The Nixon Ad­ special ministration revenue-sharing legislation to keep a t least a local spending of the shared funds. thread of federal control over tightening its The rules to be proposed will not be restrictive as grant-in-aid programs, as officials say, but will be designed to ensure that federal money flowing to states, cities and counties will be spent for the broad purposes outlined. The special revenue-sharing legislation calls for eventually replacing more til an IOO grant-ln-aid programs set up for specific purposes. Nixon has called for $11 billion to be spent on special revenue sharing in the first full year. The money Is to go for purposes-urban six community development, rural community develop­ ment, education, manpower training, law enforcement and transportation. broad The problem is tied in closely with the attempted dismantling of present grant-in- aid programs. What happens for if federal funds now going for poverty-ridden school children should be spent for a new office for the superintendent? instance*, Using that example, a Treasury Depart­ is ment official said the Administration considering two approaches: • Write the distribution formula so that the money earmarked for education wrmld go to areas with the highest number of poverty-stricken children. • Specify in the legislation that a certain portion of the federal money going to the school districts would have to be used to benefit poor children. Other rules are being considered, but the basic idea is to make sure that all the strings of federal control are not removed. In addition to special revenue-sharing, Nixon has proposed $5 billion in general shared revenues, presumably no-strings- attached, block grants to states, counties and cities. But even in that area, die government •ays it will insist on some controls. abortion laws, spoke at a press conference in the Union Building. “Before the California abortion laws.” Miller said, “we W’orked in continual hypocrisy, advising our patients to go un­ derground for help—to Mexico or illegal practitioners.” “WITH THE new' law's,” he continued, “ I can still hold my head high as I w’alk down the hospital halls even though I am now an abortionist.” Under California statutes, each hospital’s Abortion Committee can grant abortions if it believes the women’s mental or physical health may be impaired by the pregnancy. In effect. Miller explained, no one is denied an abortion except on technical grounds since the committees consider any unwanted pregnancy as jeopardizing the mother’s mental health. IN ADDITION, the California laws allow women with limited financial resources to tile operation using Medicaid undergo protection coverage. Despite recent cutback in welfare funds by Gov. Ronald Reagan, Miller noted, Medicaid applicants have not been denied. the “This may be operating on the theory that abortions are cheaper to the taxpayer* than welfare children,” Miller speculated. Although the California laws are more liberal than most, Miller believes they are still inadequate. “ I favor the New York laws which grant, quite literally, abortion on demand. I also believe that all available facilities should be set up to handle abortions, though T can see some real hazards in some cases In practicing abortions from an office.” LAST YEAR, Miller said, 1,089 abortions were performed a t his San Francisco hospital—a number which was Increased by the influx of out-of-staters seeking help. Muskie Plans Cautious Campaign 'Top Democrat' Working for Party Nomination in '72 for By WALTER R. MEARS AP Political Writer WASHINGTON(AP) — Sen. Edmund S. Muskie is courting the commitments and hunting the money he needs to cam­ the White House, paign heeding in that careful quest his own political advice, “If you’re going out on a limb, take a lot of people with you.” from Maine senator The limb he the is on already mentioned; an­ a nouncement that he is a can­ didate for the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination will be just that, a formality. Politicians know it. Muskie said they don’t even bother to ask, simply assume they are dealing with a candidate. formal is But the season is early. It is phase one, and Muskie’s m ajor public concern to preserve what he already has, the ranking of top Democratic prospect for 1972. IT to work privately, the Senator Hotel in Sacramento, base wth Calif., possible political allies; lining up financial support. .is in a suite at touching tim e SO The public phase is there, too. the the speeches, of course; appearances. television the interviews, all the things that fashion an image and fuel the polls. Muskie calls that visibility, and he doesn’t want to overdo it now. with nearly two years to go before presidential elec­ tion time. field “ We haven’t concentrated on the job of nailing down political c o m m i t m e n t s across the board,” Muskie said after five days of politicking in California, the state that will the biggest delegation to the 1972 Democratic national convention. But Muskie and his advisers they have a cadre of claim nam e Democrats lined up, ready to announce their support later in the season; when the impact will be greatest. “WE’RE pacing it as we go along.” said Muskie. California’s D e m o c r a t i c in past l e a d e r s h i p has presidential c o n t e s t s been strong on ideology, a major force at the liberal side of the party spectrum. But Muskie men sense now a mood of political pragmatism, even at the ideological purity. expense of As Muskie put it. Democratic politicians now are convinced that “Nixon’s beatable” in 1972. What are they seeking in a candidate? “ A winner, I guess.” Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota, the only an­ the candidate nounced for presidency, was on political patrol in California, too. It is a state essential to McGovern if he is to overtake Muskie and outdistance other rivals for the 1972 nomination. B u t Muskie promoters claimed they were making headway with Democrats who had backed the late Robert S. Kennedy or former Sen. Eugene J . their presidential contest two years ago. McCarthy in A nagging question for Muskie their early men is whether dossier of undisclosed com­ mitments would dwindle should tile Maine senator falter in the public opinion polls which have shown him running even, and in one case ahead, of Nixon. “ Depth of commitment that growls as is something the the con­ time vention shortens,” Muskie said. “W e're still two years away, after all. To expect people political the whole across fram e before spectrum to agree on one m an at this point is expecting too much.” MUSKIE SAID he would like to reach soon the stage at which public commitments will begin. But he said he doesn’t wnnt to move fast, will con­ centrate on organization now', and increase the visibility of his campaign later. too Muskie said he has simply not decided when he will formally declare himself a candidate. But he said his unannounced status is no problem when he deals with politicians. in “You're the only fellows who over ask m e if I'm a can­ didate,” Muskie, shoeless, his told a group of shirt open, reporters the president’s suite at a San Mateo, Calif., motel. But the In Sacramento, k e y n o t e . Muskie’s speech text accused the Nixon Administration of displaying “an utter disregard . . . for the voice of Congress” by sending American aircraft on over combat missions Cambodia. remains caution Muskie disowned it. “I will not ‘utter the words disregard,’ ” he said, because use technically the Administration has not violated a congressional ban against the involvement of ground in Cambodia. combat forces THEN THERE was the m atter of his conversation with Soviet Prem ier Alexei N. Kosygin, during his two-week tour abroad. In a television interview with e n t e r t a i n e r Merv Griffin, Muskie said he had wanted Kosygin “ to know first-hand from m e” that there is a body of opinion in the United States concerned about the cost of arm am ents and hoping to see it reduced. suggestion of Outside the studio, he bristled his that a at description tile Moscow conversation suggested he had outlined a position rivaling that of the Administration. Later, Muskie told reporters “ I never once raised the Ad­ ministration or its policies as a target in my meetings with any of these people . . . “ What I did with Mr. Kosygin Is present my point of view it without might differ the Ad­ ministration’s point of view.” suggesting where from at of economics the University of Maryland, speaks on “The National Income and Quality of Life” at 3 p.m. Monday in Burdine Hall 602, his lecture is the first of three sponsored bv the Departments of Government and Economics and the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs Lectures Committee. inc aces t rom Ute university library or any of its branches are official University communications requiring immediate attention. Students who fail to respond to library notices will be referred to the Office of the Dean of Students. A Japanese consumer bought a roll of 2,000 sheet toilet paper and out af curiosity decided to count the sheets, according to The Wall Street Journal. the roll Discovering she that counted was 400 sheets short, she took it back to the store awner and they proceeded to count several other rolls. AU of them only had 1,600 sheets. Consumer beware; you m ay be short-sheeted. Market Shows Gain for Week NEW VORK Contrary to the predictions of many experts, the stock market went through another week without a serious setback and actually made a small gain. Not only were prices up, but volume on the New' York Stock Ex­ change reached a weekly record of 100.87 million shares, surpassing the previous high of 92.28 million shares traded in the week ended last Dec. 4. The Dow Jones industrial average advanced 7.19 points for the week to 868.50 while the New York Stock Exchange index of 1.200 common stocks rose .53 to 52.64. Koster Cleared, Then Censured WASHINGTON Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster, cleared Friday of cover-up charges in the alleged My Lai m assacre, has been censured and could receive further stiff administrative penalties, the army said Saturday. Lt. Gen. Jonathan O. Seaman, 1st Army commander at Ft. Meade, Md., handed Koster a “letter of censure.” Tile general tenor of the letter was to censure Gen. Koster for his failure to report civilian casualties and to insure that the cir­ cumstances of these casualties were investigated promptly and thoroughly,” die army said. Seaman found that Koster “did not show any intentional abrogation of responsibilities” while commander of the Americal Division at tim time of the alleged My Lai massacre of more than IOO South Vietnamese civilians in March, 1968. Sunday. January 31, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Rag* 3 The firing line Out-of-state students necessary More thought needed on tuition hike Editorials Efforts to increase drastically tuition for out-of-state University students are coming closer to completion, thanks to the “em ergency” status given Austin Rep. Harold D avis’ proposal to hike the fee from $200 to $700 per sem ester. While the House has not yet approved Davis’ measure, chances are good that it will pass, judging from the quick approval given it by the House Appropriations Committee. Although The Texan realizes the necessity of raising tuition for nonresidents both as a m eans of increasing revenue for the University and as a meagre (every little bit helps) attempt at cutting down enrollment, it would constitute a grave injustice to every out-of-state student now enrolled in the University if this increase was levied on them with such little notice. NO MATTER HOW it’s cut, $500 per sem ester and $1,000 per year above their budgeted educational expenses would force many of the nonresident students now enrolled at the University to drop out or transfer. For any student a situation such as this could have trau­ matic effects on their degree plans, but most particularly for upper division and graduate students. If the Legislature does adopt the $500 is proposing, it should apply it only to incoming students; or if it feels compelled to affect all out-of-stato students, it should use a graduated scale, setting a limit of not more than a $100 increase for graduate and upper division students now enrolled and $200 for lower division students. increase that Davis This is not to suggest the The Texan endorses a $500 per sem ester hike. A much better plan, as Austin Sen. Charles Herring has suggested, would be a reciprocal scale, whereby the nonresident would pay the University the same tuition it would have cost him to attend a public institution in his home state. But each legislator should consult his conscience before passing increases that would force hard-working students to any tuition abandon their degree plans for lack of the necessary cash. Franks furious finish True to form and to nobody’s surprise, Frank Erwin (referred to as “ Frank the Magic Regent,” in allusion to the song “ Puff the Magic Dragon,” by the New York Times) announced his intensions to quit as chairman at a meeting of the Board of Regents Friday in Dallas. No successor was elected, since E m in ’s resignation does not become effective until the adjournment of the March 12 meeting in Austin. YET ERWIN DID NOT act like a retiring warrior Friday — on the contrary, he was dressed in full battle regalia. His first display of hostility cam e early in the session as President Ad Interim Bryce Jordan presented the “Faculty Work Load System ,” prepared by a group headed by Dean George Kozmetsky of the College of Business Administration, which pointed out that “at least two-thirds of the University faculty work between 50 and 70 hours per week, the average for all faculty being about 60 hours.” Grumbled E m in; “All this report does is legitimize what is already going on. We have professors who are not teaching, and I don’t think we should pay professors to spend time on self-appointed committees to tell us how to run the University.” Then came a two-hour debate over Chancellor Charles LeMaistre’s motion to abolish the “Rebel” theme at UT-Arlington. President Frank Harrison, Student Congress President Hugh Moore, and Short­ horn editor Don Sloan all criticized the “Rebel” theme as contributing to a divisive climate on campus and recommended LeMaistre’s plan be accepted. BUT HALF-A-DOZEN Arlington businessmen, ex-students and fraternity men (including one from Kappa Sigma, Erwin’s fraternity) argued against abolition, providing many overt appeals to racism. The regents’ favored abolition, seven to two, with Erwin and A. G. McNeese voting against. McNeese told the board he didn’t believe in allowing a “small minority of militants” to force such a measure on the board. Erwin didn’t give any reasons, later telling a reporter: “I don’t have to give any reasons.” Once more the subject of the limitation on the office of the students’ attorney came up, E m in recommending that attorney Jim Boyle be denied the right to represent students in litigation against the University, whether in court or in academic or disciplinary hearings. “This is something that has to be done because the open meetings law requires that we post five days notice on all action we plan to take,” E m in said. “Since this was an emergency item at our last meeting, we have to ratify it today.” Boyle delivered IO minutes worth of arguments on why students should have counsel (which, in most other places, would be akin to saying that students should have parents). He told of his experiences working with the poor as a legal services attorney in Louisiana last year, noting that in becoming their advocate “people who have lived for years in an atmosphere of distrust of governmental authority have come to realize that tile system can work for them, too.” APPLYING THAT TO his advocacy for students, who hold many of the same attitudes toward University administration that the poor of Louisiana did to the government, Boyle showed how the rule proposed by Erwin was a reaction to the effectiveness of his office. Actually, E m in likes it better when students are apathetic toward the administration or vent their grievances outside the “proper It has been su g g e ste d that a n y senator w h o talks about s e n d in g A m e rica n troops into C a m b o d ia should lead the charge himself... channels” (then they’re m ilitant), because he doesn't have to deal with them on equal footing. After Boyle finished, Erwin called the question and the board ap­ proved the restriction, with Regent Joe Kilgore of Austin dissenting and Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson abstaining. Finally came Erwin’s moment of personal glory. “My work for the University has been a labor of love, and I take that have been ac­ great pride complished,” he said sternly as he read his long-awaited letter of re v - impressive things in the truly But all things may have not been accomplished for Erwin — one of the last hem s of the meeting, introduced by Regent Jenkins Garrett of Fort Worth, charged LeMaistre with setting up a committee of state newspapermen to study The Daily Texan and its relationship with the Department of Journalism. THE CHARTER OF Texas Student Publications comes up for renewal on July 6, but the regents would like to have the report of this committee by the March 12 meeting. A similar comm ittee’s report in 1985 in reaction to an antiwar editorial resulted in restrictions upon editorial content in The Texan, including a system of prior censorship. Noting E m in ’s antipathy for The Texan and the fact that his resignation does not become effective until the adjournment of the next meeting, we suspect that he has not accomplished A T J , he set out to do . . . but more on that later. To the editor: Injustice to nonresident students now enrolled in the U niversity is a certainty under the proposed tuition bill under con­ sideration at tile State Legislature. The law, House Bill 43, has been reported favorably the House Com m ittee on Ap­ out of propriations assured passage during legislative session. virtually cu rren t is the and THE BILL WILL LEAD to two major Inequities; that of forcing the non-resident in reliance student who cam e upon tran sfer to the effect of ex­ elsew here, and having cluding m any nonresident students from attending the U niversity in the future. to T exas tuition figure low the While the tuition now charged out-of-state students is adm ittedly low, the fact rem ains th a t m any students cam e here for that very reason. Forcing the tuition increase upon the nonresidents now attending the U niversity would serve as a tra p for these students. Many undergraduates would have to retu rn to their homes, because the low tuition here offset the expenses incurred trav el ex­ living aw ay from home and transferring, m any of these penses. By students would be in danger of losing m any hours of credit, necessitating more tim e in obtaining their degrees. to be incurred THE PROBLEM IS INTENSIFIED if one considers the plight of the g raduate and law student. Many of these students have w ives (or husbands) and families, and the costs in moving would preclude their doing so. Also, tran sferrin g while in graduate school or in law school is virtually impossible, and w hat does the student do who has just one y ear left to finish a doctorate, and the tuition is raised to a level th at will keep this student from com pleting his work? Is this bill aim ed a t aiding the tax p ay er as it claim s it is, or does it have the effect of discouraging future nonresident students from attending the U niversity? While the quality of the U niversity is recognized, a re th at Texas stands on we a p a r with such S tate schools as the University of California at Berkeley? The proposed tuition for a student going the y ear round would be $2,100, while a t Berkeley, it would be $2,033. The costs a t to say trying Guest viewpoint Spring offensive By DEREK JEFFERS In it has becom e the w ar Student Mobilization Committee recent weeks apparent in­ creasingly in Southeast Asia is not winding down. The United States continues to pursue its basic w ar aim s of m ilitary victory in Vietnam and Cambodia and Laos. th a t is conducting one of Recent revelations show th a t the United S tates the biggest aerial cam paigns of the w ar in Laos using fighter bombers, B-52 bom bers, gunships, and reconnaissance airc ra ft with special secret equipment. tactical liberally used IN CAMBODIA, U.S. helicopter gunships in direct co­ a re being ordination with Cambodian and Vietnamese ground troops which signifies a step-up of U.S. aggression in th at country. “ a ir conduct concluded, supposedly L ast June 30, when U.S. a ir operations President w ere Richard M. Nixon said the United States would interdiction only m issions’’ saying nothing about co-ordinated strikes with Cambodian and V ietnam ese troops. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird said on several occasions that A m erican aircraft would not conduct tactical operations in close com bat support of Cambodian units. Even earlier, Nixon had said th a t “ when we come out our logistical support and air support will also come out with them .” Obviously these statem ents w ere lies, intended to veil from the American people and the world the U.S. governm ent’s real intentions. WITH THE UNITED STATES com m itted to the support of the Lon Nol governm ent in Cambodia and with that governm ent’s shaky political and m ilitary position, it is obvious th at U.S. m ilitary m ight well have to Cambodia. If to be applied th a t governm ent seriously threatened, it is alm ost a sure bet th at U.S. ground troops will be reintroduced into Cambodia to com plem ent the B-52, gun­ ships, reconnaissance planes, etc. falls, or in force is L aird piously denies this eventuality. “ No, th ere are no such plans. We will n o t-an d I rep eat it again, not--commit United S tates ground com bat forces to Cambodia directly or indirectly.” senator stated explicitly Sounds definite, but perhaps a m ore realistic assessm ent w as given by Sen. John Stennis D-Miss., on CBS News Wednesday. The the C o o p e r - C h u r c h Amendm ent which proscribes U.S. ground forces or advisers from re-entering Cambodia m ight have to be changed the Lon Nol governm ent appeared to be on the verge of defeat. th at if IT IS OBVIOUS to every thinking human being that Nixon will not pull out all the troops and the airplanes unless the United S tates achieves a m ilitary victory, is m ilitarily defeated, or is forced to pull out by the American and V ietnam ese people. The task of the antiw ar m ovem ent in this country is to force Nixon to w ithdraw IMMEDIATELY— all G I’s and all war m ateriel. AT THE SAME TIME THAT the United States is escalating its military aggression in Southeast Asia, American GI’s are escalating their protest and their resistance to the war. As recently reported in the national news media, many GI’s no longer simply “accept orders,” but consider these orders in the light of personal danger or basic morality. All civilians should do their utmost to support these GI’s. the spring. Monday, In the face of the current situation in Southeast A sia-especially the significantly stepped-up air role played by the United States-it is vital that the antiwar movement organize the largest possible demonstrations Student t h i s Mobilization Committee to End the War will be holding its first meeting of the semester in the Union Junior Ballroom at 7:30 p.m. Plans will be mapped out for the biggest possible spring antiwar of­ fensive. Everyone who opposed the war and desires immediate and total withdrawal should attend this meeting and contribute their skills and ideas. Page 4 Sunday, January 31. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN schools such as the U niversity of Michigan and the U niversity of Wisconsin would be lower than those at the U niversity of Texas. UT is a good school, but le t’s not kid our­ selves! Schools of the calibre of ours, such as the University of Missouri or the University of N ebraska, have a tuition ranging from $1,250 to $1,400 per 12-month period for nonresidents. When we com pare this with the proposed $2,100 for the University of Texas, it becomes clear th at other con­ siderations besides aiding the taxpayer are behind this bill. OUT-OF-STATE RESIDENTS a re a vital asset to our university. The School of Law is recognized as one of the best in the nation. But the calibre of the school is greatly enhanced by the nonresidents that attend. The high average of entering law students on the aptitude tests in greatly bolstered by the nonresidents. Statistics also show th at a very high percentage of nonresident students rem ain in Texas after graduation. The University is responsible for im porting much of this brain power into the state. THE PROPOSED TUITION increase will serve to drive these very qualified students elsewhere. The sim ple fact is th at the low cost of education brought them here to begin with. If everyone is concerned with m aintaining the high quality of education then some nonresident a t our schools, students a re a necessity. in If tuition Is to be raised, It should be set on a level with other schools on a p ar with ours, not in a range of schools offering the way of faculty and much m ore facilities such as Berkeley or Wisconsin. ALso, those who have relied upon the low tuition to attend school here should not be penalized for th at nonresidents th at choice. The fact come here speaks strongly for the idea th a t a reasonable tuition will increase the quality of if I am not m istaken, quality the motive of all concerned wi h education in our state. the school, and is their choice in making Gerald Holtzman School of Law Erwin ignored To the editor: torn nearly attem pts to m ake out F ran k Erw in has the U niversity of Texas down to the ground that with his professors a re resigning, not because he is m ism anaging his public tru st, but because they had been playing a bit of nickel-ante on Saturday night with research grants. Unfortunately our “ businessm an” chairm an of the Board of Regents ca n ’t read the figures on the U niversity’s books right, so every tim e he opens his mouth his charges a re shown to be factually wrong, and are universally ignored. F or exam ple Newsweek, ignoring his rem a rk s about A rrowsm ith’s “ lucrative playhouse,’* correctly has an just printed describing Arrowsmith “ renowned classicist” and “ one of the most widely lauded g rad u ate in education,” and correctly describing Erw in as the incompetent vulgarian he is. article as teachers U.S. MEANWHILE, IT SUDDENLY turns out that a seven-day-a-week, 24-hour gam e for a thousand dollars a chip has been going insurance companies on with banks and guaranteeing the IOU’s, and that among just those great Texas politicians Erwin thinks should be telling us how to educate the young. Now we professors find our­ selves in the role of A braham Lincoln with the angry congressm an, if that old story is true. The congressm an charged Into tho White House to accuse Lincoln of being soft on the Rebels — which is what Erwin accuses us of. “ S ir,” he said, “ you are leading this country straight to Hell, and you are not half a m ile off now!” “Well,” replied Lincoln, “ that is just about th® is it distance from here to the Capitol, not?” Robert David Armstrong Associate Professor of Classic® Exempt foreigners To the editor: I am a foreign student from Germany who wants to contribute some final con­ siderations towards the possible tuition hike for nonresidents. It was always the policy of the University of Texas to open its doors to foreigners so that the U niversity com­ m unity and the country could benefit from the cultural and academ ic exchange. This principle will be severely dam aged if the tuition increased as proposed. Most foreign currencies lie well below the dollar, and the financial burden for the individual will be alm ost unbearable. Scholarships alike will be distributed to a much lesser degree. Any Texan who w ants to study in Germ any will pay a tuition ranging som ewhat from $50 to $100 as a nonresident per sem ester. is IF THE LEGISLATURE will approve th® m easure calling for only a reciprocal fee for out-of-staters, the only fair solution of this problem will be approached. Another p o tab ility to exem pt foreign students from the tuition hike and leave it on the existing level, since this p articu lar group is so sm all that the im pact of this measure wi hardly be felt. is Rainer Godan Government T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin EDITOR .............................................................................................. Andy Yemma MANAGING E D IT O R .................................................................Lyke Thompson CITY EDITOR ..................................................................................... Cliff Avery ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR ................................................ j ohn Reetz ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR .................................................... Cyndi Taylor SPORTS EDITOR ................................................................................. ‘ Steve o ial AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ............................................................. cicely Wynne FEATURES EDITOR .................................................................... Katie Fegan ................................................................................................ Faye Bartula Issue News Editor News Assistants . Rana Shields, David Powell, Steve Wisch, Miles Hawthorne Ed Cook Editorial Assistant .................................................................................................... Charles Tips p]ujtt ............................................................................... Assistant Amusements Editor Make-Up Editor ..............................................................................................WWWW Debby Bay Wire Editor Copy Editors ....................................................................................................... M artin Crutsinger ....................................................................... Kathy Bridges, John Pope Opinions expressed In The Dally Texan are those of the Editor or of the writer of the article and are not n ecessarily those of the University admlnlstraUon or of the Board of Regents. The Dally Texan, the student newspaper ai the University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, Inc., Drawer D, U niversity Station. Austin, T exas 78712. The Daily Texan is published Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holi­ day periods. Septem ber through May. Second class postage paid a' Austin. News contributions will he accepted by tele­ phone (471-4401), at the editorial office (J.B. the news laboratory ?°t?c e ™,lng toe delivery (J.B. 102). 103). or at maHo be should m ad e In J.B . 10/ and advertising In J.B . 111. t i , representative o f « r t u £ aJJsa J : e,*an Jon National Education Ad- Lexington Avenue, New Yorit J? Y a d v e r t is in g lo o n I ? J?, -♦Ti'®DE’aily J e.xan subscribes to the Associ­ ated Press, United P ress International Photo Service and the New York Tim es News Service. rvm J e.xan o ,s 8 qj,^m her of the Associated C ollegiate P ress, The Southwest Journalism C onference and the Texas D aily Newspaper AssociaUon. Today is the deadline! Legislature responds APPLICATION FOR VOTER REGISTRATION CERTIFICATE N a m * (Please Print) TRAVIS CO UNTY, TEXAS ............. D a t e ......................... 19. H om e A d d r e s s ................................................................... .............. . (lf Route and Box No., also show Street or Road) C it y Z ip C o d e (Male) A g e .............years. (A pplicants over 21 years old who do not wish to state exact a g e m ay fill in blank Sex (Female) with "o ver 2 1 " or "2 1 -plus") if under 21 years, give full date of birth.................................................. Resident of Voting Precinct ....................................... . N a m e or N u m ber [c e r t ify that applicant is a citizen of the United States and has resided in Texas more than I year and in the county and city t l T y f S l d i p n J an jS>.mon+hs im m ediately preceding the date o f this application, except as listed under E X C E P - T in k le l l O N S below. I understand the givin g o f false information to procure the registration of a voter is a felony. J ! - - X L . j ' more i n t ? w u u n i y G n u * 1 1 a n i f n i l I --------------- L . J _ I . m a l l I • m ai _ t ±L • . w a . # i n j r c a i a I I U ■ ' l f I . • i . . • I • » Show date o f arrival by M o., D a y & Year: E X C E P T IO N S : lf in Texas less than I year................................................... ......................................................................... lf in C o un ty less than 6 mos. ..................... ............. Signature o f applicant or a ge n t* lf in city less than 6 mos...................................................... A g e n t's relationship to applicant........................................... M ail Certificate to following tem porary a d d r e s s .................. * N o one can a ct as agen t except husband, wife, father, moth- if not to be m ailed to er, son, or daughter home address above. More firing line Right to peaceful sentiments To the editor: the subscription I appreciate entered for me to Tile Daily Texan by the unknown donor. I am a bit sentimental about this student publication which dates back to the time I was Issue Editor of the Daily Texan every Thursday night in the early ’30s. The Texan has changed since my day along with the times and while I don’t agree with all the policies I recognize your right to have and express these sentiments as long as this is done in a peaceful manner. expressed therein, ' Rep. Menton J .Murray Lombardino To the editor: I greatly appreciate your letter and the information concerning my subscription to The Daily Texan. I will appreciate being informed of the various items of interest which The Daily Texan staff presents readers. to all of its I am concerned about our young people for I believe that its the youth of America are greatest resource. I believe also, that we must establish better communication channels through d i s c u s s i o n of urgent con­ temporary issues. to My office will always be at­ tentive the affairs of all University youth. I look forward to reading this most outstanding student newspaper. Rep. Frank J . Lombardino Calhoun To the editor: Just a note to thank you and my anonymous constituent who has made it possible to receive on a daily basis, The Daily Texan, during this session of the legislature. Frankly, I do not have time to read your paper thoroughly every day but I do look at it along with many other newspapers I appreciate and having the viewpoint expressed therein. If you anonymous see my donor, please thank him for me. Rep. Frank W. Calhoun Allred To the editor: Thank you for notifying me of my subscription fine newspaper. I am enjoying having it each day. to your Further thanks to my young friend John T. Mitchell, who is responsible for the subscription. Rep. Dave Allred Bridges Dear Mr. Rider: take Please let me this op­ portunity to thank you personally for presenting me with a gift subscription to The Daily Texan. As a graduate of the University of Texas and as a State senator, to I welcome student acquaint myself with this opportunity opinion and with activities of the University. I assure you that The Texan will be read daily and that therein the opinions contained will be given every consideration. Sen. Ronald W. Bridges Harding To the editor: I do wish to my to extend my ap­ anonymous preciation thoughtfulness to donor for his The Daily Texan, for as time permits I shall enjoy reading it. Rep. Forrest A. Harding Finnell To the editor: I want to express my sincere appreciation for my subscription to The Daily Texan to you and to the contributor who made this possible. I am pleased to receive and though-provoking this r e a d newspaper. Rep. Charles Finnell Witnessing perversion of regental power HENRY JACOBSON'S PRICE S A L E OPEN EVERY THURSDAY TIL 8 P M. According to The Texan’s account, Tare feels that “after four years in college, the student is not as emotionally m ature concerning the armed forces as when he arrived on campus.” TARR’S ATTITUDE is typical of the m ilitary mentality — the equation of emotional im m aturity with possession of an education, particularly when that education has exposed to the individual the brutality that is the foundation and the military philosophy. fabric of a that philosophy un- Because d e r I i e s system which specializes in the dehumanization of the ‘individual and rejects the worth of an individual as a human being, it is only logical that Tarr should find education and the military incompatible in many instances. One wonders how long it will ’round rallies be before Spiro T a rr’s flag. Steve Dial Senior, Journalism • t IM SHOES Reg- P. S. WHEN VOU THAT ROUND-HEAPEP KID, GIVE HIM A PAT ON THE HEAP FOK M E " To the editor: on Several years ago I gave a University “The lecture Autonomy of the University.” In that lecture I recited the answer given by a distinguised friend and colleague when he was asked, “ To whom does the University of Texas belong?” The late Dr. Frederick Eby answered without the world of hesitation: scholarship.” “To scholarship. in this country, WHAT MR. FRANK ERWIN fails to understand is that, while a State university is a political institution the politically selected regents are simply trustees for the promotion of He misun­ derstands the history of higher education. Of course there were State and Church-dominated universities in the Middle Ages, and later. Also, student-facuity dominated colleges and univer­ sities. Some practiced some form of thought control (catholicism, protestantism, and the like), but none went beyond that. That is, heresy did not go so fa r as to include and proscribe dissent. regents as The university Is not to be run like a private corporation, with the a board of directors. As a m atter of fact, with very few notable exceptions, a regent to judge the professional merit of a professor. A professor can be judged only by his peers. And I include his students as junior peers. is not competent in a variety of I ’ve served research and administrative this and other assignments, in countries. I have been a full professor here for over 30 years. It is very disheartening to wit­ ness the perversion of regental power. OF COURSE, THE CONCEPT of faculty autonomy and power is foreign to this country. But also foreign to this country is the assumption of professional (and other) omniscience by a layman on the Board of Regents. I am terribly depressed. As an (M Ed, 1931), as a alumnus professor (1940—), I am grieved by the consequences, present and future, of megalomania. George I. Sanchez Professor of Latin American Education Hands in till To the editor: The politics of Texas is funny. For years Texas liberals have been trying to enact reforms in our state and national govern­ ment, usually with negative results. Now suddenly everyone wants reforms, as once again conservatives have been caught with their hands in the till. Of course our “silent m ajority” will sleep through the whole affair, so once again it is up to make sure our Statehouse initiates reforms and puts sharp teeth in those reforms. lethargic to us IT IS THE SHAME of our country that action only comes after some tragic episode, such as “ equality” coming after riots, lowering the voting age after the m urder of students on our campuses. If allegations against our State leaders are true, don’t become apathetic, but support candidates who will work for Texans and not those who desire increased wealth, from Texans. taken Larry R. Sands Central power To the editor: As a recent graduate of the University, presumably inured to the flagrant growth of Erwin’s autocracy, cannot but be amazed by the occurrences since I left Austin in September. I Here at UC Berkeley there is no love lost between students and regents, yet no single regent, or even all 24 of them, would stoop to harassing a single campus or questioning of the prominent faculty. Such m atters, if they arise, are properly han­ dled by the appropriate campus administration. integrity A SURPRISING NUMBER of people here know of the infamous Mr. Erwin, and they know the Silber, Arrowsmith, n a m e s Carne-Ross, and Shattuck and further, they know of the state of repression at Texas. Such knowledge does little for Texas’ national reputation, but four then neither does losing acclaimed professors do much for a school which was rated ‘most improved' in the recent American Council on Education report. DE TOCQUEVHLLE STATES is centralized, that as power fewer men of distinction are willing to contribute their ser­ vices to the people. Very sadly, he is being proved right at the University of Texas. Gerald Streit BS Chem ’70 Human beings To the editor: for the first youth. Now, For the last 15 years I have retail merchant on been a Congress Avenue in downtown Austin. Those who patronized my business were in general young children and their parents, and because of this I seldom met the college-aged as m anager of a new business, I am time selling merchandise to students from the University of Texas. I am very pleased to say that I find these young people to be some of the nicest and I have ever served. Although these students may have long hair or “ hippie” clothing, underneath all of this disguise are good and honest human beings. It is unfair that the mass media present such a biased view of these so-called “ hippie” youth. that only the young people who do bad things make the headlines, the good and kind young but people go unrewarded. finest customers It seems Jake Groner Embarassing To the editor: After receiving such national publicity, let alone city publicity, one would think Frank Erwin would want to resign from sheer embarassment! Mr. Marat Sade To the editor: To restore my credibility as an instructor, etc., I w'ish to correct several amusing errors in The Texan’s coverage of my seminar, rich “ Intellectual Women In American Culture.” According to the a r­ ticle, the m aterial in my course “explod Sade’s (es) M arat that women should conception only think with their glands.” I was very surprised at the trans­ formation of my original allusion to Mort Saki, the comedian, into and something indeed strange—Mr. M arat Sade. (As m o s t undoubtedly readers recognized, the reporter changed the title of the play “ Marat-Sade” into a proper name). Perhaps the dram a had altered the reporter’s view of reality and encouraged her to merge the distinct per- s o n a l i t i e s of “revolutionist” M arat and the Divine Marquis. If she was under its spell, no wonder she mistook my reference to Playboy’s interview with Mort Sahl for the play. Although I rather like the idea of a Mr. M arat Sade, let’s put the slash back in the title for the record. I would also like to correct the to M arat statement attributed Sade, Mort Sahl: from far “ urging” women to think only with their glands, he judged them incapable of doing otherwise. Perhaps the Marquis and M arat would have agreed with him. The Marquis de Sade was extremely interested in women’s glands and he certainly treated women as objects—maybe he was the great wizard of male chauvinism! I have no idea what M arat thought about women’s glands and-or brains, although his fate at the hands of Charlotte Corday—who job on his did a very nice viscera—suggests too, might have been a chauvinist to the core. that he, Susan Conrad Instructor, American Studies Immaturity As recorded (correctly, I trust) on Page I of the Jan. 28 issue of The Daily Texan, Selective Service Director Curtis W. Tare appears to hold to a philosophy espoused by most tyrannical governments — that an educated populace poses a threat to the state. Alex Marsh To the editor: T. STUDENTS ONLY DRY - CLEANING LAUNDRY "QUALITY AT STUDENT PRICES IS NO ACCIDENT" Only af THREE CONVENIENT ON CAMPUS LOCATIONS • W I 3 C L JE ST E R • M I I C L JE ST E R • 53 K IN S O L V IN G Driskill Cleaners & Laundry LARGEGROUP S U I T S a n d s p o r t COATS V 2 m t iff4 VCbar^r Director.:'J Craig Ct O ' - Flight fit Hotel M66OO VIA U N IV E R S A L A IR W A Y S DC-8 StretchJet • 250 Seats Sprin ^ B r e a l April 2 — April 8 Beverley Braley . . Tours . . . Travel 4 0 Acres Club Box 7 9 9 9 / Austin Hardin North 8 0 3 W est 2 4 th St. 5 1 2 4 7 6 -7 2 3 1 R/T Air Dal/Sat/Aca Land Portion Administration fee $98 $63 $ 5 In the e v e n t o f R / T a ir fa re is b a s e d on fu ll o c c u p a n c y o f the a irc r a ft. u n o c c u p ie d se ats, the air fa re w ill b a c o r r e s p o n d in g ly a d ju s t e d p e r C A B re g u la t io n s. SAVE ‘IO00 ON THE LAND PORTION OF ACAPULCO AT SPRING BREAK BRING THIS C O U P O N TO BEVERLEY BRALEY TRAVEL 40 Acres Club Lobby or Hardin North O N L Y O N E C O U P O N PER P E R S O N • This offer expires at 5:30 P M , February 2, 1971 o>oN sM rs 3 * l Q o o A S S T . C O L O R S Z IP -O U T L I N I N G WINDBREAKS l l O h! [ % i l REG. 69.50 GENUINE SUEDE & SMOOTH LEATHER & SM O O TH LEATHER COATS 34 7 5 O k USE AMERICAN EXPRESS / ) W y J M E N ' S W E A R MEN'S W EAR 2222 Guadalupe N E X T T O T H E T E X A S T H E A T R E Sunday, January. 31, 1921 THE DAILY TEXAN Pan* r 'Skins Allen In-Speyrered By ALAN TRUEX Assistant Sports Editor th e o rder know college seniors will be drafted. in which the available. He was drafted six­ teenth. Next tim e you feel the tem pting p redicting the pro draft. like a t­ impossible, try It’s about forecasting earthquake o r world. as easy as th e next California the the end of THE PRO DRAFT is as un- p r e d i c t a b l e as the D allas Cowboys, Denny McLain and the Indianapolis 500. No m a tte r how m any All- A m erica scouting reports you exam ine, you w on’t team s and You can look for w hat rhym es- with-Heisman and whose brother is playing pro ball. You can check w eights and heights and tim ings in the 40-yeard dash. You can w atch the Senior Bowl, the Hula Bowl and the Mineral W ater Bowl, th e East-W est, North-South, Up-Down gam es. But you still won’t know who will d ra ft w'hom in w hat round. the pro scouts know Not even that. THEY ALL said E lm o W right th e b est college athlete w as Chuck Hixson, the scouts said, would go in the second or third round. He went in the thirteenth. So, when the scouts told Cotton Spevrer he had a chance of going early, the P ort A rthur native just smiled. After all, th a t’s w hat they w ere telling everybody. But then the NFL team s began announcing their selections, and near the top of the second round w as Charles “ Cotton” Speyrer, split end from Texas, chosen by Washington. HE WAS the first Southwest Conference player taken. After him cam e such illustrious nam es as Bill Atessis, Steve W orster, Chuck Dicus, Bill B urnett and Bobby Wuensch. Surely somebody’s com puter had blowm a circuit, m ost fans f i g u r e d . How this league stringbean survive full of jolly green giants? could in a W hat Coach did Redskin George Allen think w’ould happen when Dick Bukus o r Mike Curtis crunched Cotton Speyrer? But after recovering from the surprise— and Speyrer ad m its he w as as surprised as anybody— you have to wonder if George Allen is really as crazy as he seems. SURELY ALLEN knew about Speyrer’s 4.4 speed in the 40- sam e a s Bob H ayes’. And as for the size question, is even Je rry Levias, who is alive than Speyrer, sm aller and well after two seasons in the big tim e. is he Indicating not that worried about size. Allen called Speyrer after the d raft and said he preferred speed and quickness to weight. Although Allen has a reputation ignoring for rookies, Speyrer reports that “ he told me I have a good chance of playing next year. He says I will be used as a wide receiver and a punt and kickoff retu rn er.” COULD BE ALLEN saw or heard about S peyrer's touchdown bombs in the 11169 Cotton Bowl or his shoestring catch of Ja m e s S treet’s in the 70 Cotton Classic. Then there w'as that m iracle touchdown in the fading seconds of the UCLA gam e. fourth-and-two pass Could be, Allen m ay have thought, that this kid is a winner. ACADEMY’S S ave O n S u r p l u s Torrid Baylor Topples Rice WACO (AP) — Baylor tied an all-time Southwest Conference scoring record with a 119-96 blistering of defending chamnion Rice Saturday night before 7,800 fans in H eart O’ Texas Coliseum. Baylor, which is now in second place with a 3-1 m ark, tied the m ark se t by Texas A&M against Southern Methodist in 1969. Eight B ears w ere in double figures in the blitz as Bavlor shot 56 percent from the field. Rice shot 46.3 percent. William Chatmon, playing only sparingly because of foul trouble, led Baylor w ith 20 points and 14 rebounds. Je rry Hopkins added 18. Tom M eyer was high for the Owls with 17 points as Rice dipped to a 2-2 SWC record. SM U 90 Ark. 88 DALLAS (AP) - Larry Delzell two p ressure free throws sank two seconds rem aining to with a give tingling 90-88 Southwest Con­ ference basketball victory over A r k a n s a s Saturday a regionally televised game. Southern Methodist in SMU is now 2-2 in the SWC race and A rkansas is winless in four games. Aimer I.ee of A rkansas fouled Delzell as SMU stalled for a final shot. Delzell, from a Highland P ark, was l l of l l from the line for the day. junior John Searles of A rkansas had the gam e 88-all w ith 49 tied seconds left on a layup. Arkansas, down 55-50 a t half­ time, reeled off IO straight points before Steve P utnam hit a jump shot to put SMU on the board in the second half. The Razor- backs built a seven-point lead at 74-67 midway through the period. The Mustangs pulled even with 9:33 left on Bobby Rollings’ frc£ throw'. The gam e seesawed back and forth from th at point. Tech 76 A & M 6 5 COLLEGE STATION (AP) - Texas Tech w ent from one point behind to IO ahead in a three- minute stretch en route to a 76-65 Southwest Conference basketball v i c t o r y over Texas A&M Saturday. to 3-1, The Red R aiders, In running took their SWC record charge of w hat had been a close contest midway in the second half and stayed to 15 points ahead the re st of the way. from seven Greg Lowery scored 24 points to pace the w inners. Gene Knolls had 14 and Steve W illiams 13. Bill Cooksey and Steve Niles scored 19 each for the Aggies. 'W e're No. I Irish Dumped by lllini, 69-66 CHICAGO (AP) — Sophomore Nick Conner’s two baskets in an overtim e period Saturday night gave Illinois a 69-66 upset victory over seventh-ranked Notre D am e in th e opener of a Chicago S t a d i u m basketball double- header. SOUTHERN California defeated Loyola of Chicago, 97-73 in the second gam e. In the final 12 m inutes of regulation tim e, both the Blini, ranked eighteenth, and the Irish played slowed down basketball and tried to se t up shots. D uring th e span th e score was lead tim es and tied changed hands five times. four the With 90 seconds to go and the score tied 61-61, Notre D am e’s John Pleick missed a free throw and Illinois stalled for 85 seconds trying to s e t up a play. E ven­ tually B lin d s got the ball out of bounds, but Rick Howaj w a caught b a c k c o u r t^ the nail and N otre Dame regained possession but three tim es m issed shots ai tim e ran out. wa! 3 na of sta rt overtim e SOPHOMORE N ick W eather spoon put Illinois ahead 63-61 ai the ant N otre Dame never caught up Conner’s drive-in w ith 50 second! left m ade it 65-62 and in the fina seconds as N otre D am e wa! trying to call tim e out, Connei walked in to dunk another shot. Howatt potted 19 of his tota 30 points in the first half a s thi Blini took a 35-32 lead. Austin C arr, the nation’s secon< leading scorer who entered thi gam e with a 37.8 average, wa held to 23 points, collecting on! one of his fabled corner shot in 12 attem pts. The victory gave B lin d s a 9- Iris: season m a rk w'hile slipped to 10-5. the Govt. Surplus 5 GAL. Jerry Cans, Reg. $3.95t S.OJS. price $1.98 NEW ARMY TYPE CANVAS FOLDING Cots, $4.88 ft Up Bayonets, $1.77 * Cen. Govt. AMMO Pouches, S.O.S. price 25c GOVT. TYPE FOLDING Shovel, $1,88, Cover Free Cm. Govt. Surplus m e t a l d o u b l e Bunk Beds, S.OJS. Price $12,88 , GEN. GOVT. SURPLUS B e l t s with BRASS BUCKLES, S. O* S. price 29c Gen. Govt. Surplus 30 CALIBER Ammo Boxes, s . o a . r*. 59c, NEW Camp Stools, f t f r M e, S A S . jr ic . 65c COYT. TYPE Comforters, $3*95 r up Gen. C ote Sgrpkt , 16X32 GEN. PURPOSE I Squad Tent, Wright from 250 to 3 0 0 1 1 k , C o f t coft about $1000.00, &OJS. price $25.00 NEW PLASTIC 2 OC AL. Garbage Cans, 'Chest Waders $2,97 ft ap* Gen. Govt. Surplus Backpacks $1.95 .od „. Cm. G ovt Surplus Khaki Pants, Good Condition, 5.05. prk. $ 1 . 0 0 % Gen. Govt. Surplus Gas Mask Bags. for Hunters, Campers, Rock Hounds and many more uses, S.O.S, Price 77c new Panchos, ah caon, S.O S. Price $1.77 c t. Machetes $1.77 & Govt. Surplus s t a i n l e s s s t e e l Canteens just 59c looo b ig Ammo Boxes Reg. u $ 5 . * S.O.S. Price $1,00 All roads lead to Academy, the most interesting stores in the Southwest. 3 Big Stores To Serve You. 4103 N. INTERREGIONAL HWY. 603 EAST BEN WHITE BLVD. (ACROSS FROM TRUCK CITY) 8103 RESEARCH BLVD. choose From looo Sleeping Bags, all at 1/2 Price during this sale. Gen. Govt. Surplus LONG OR SHORTSLEEVE Khaki Shirts, Good Condition, S.O.S. Price 50c. . . , L ite Rafts 812.88 u p Barracks Bags 50c Each rn g i rn Th un m m y k i nu m*# jtm L mL 9 MLA ITM H. Storoi^u S&e Soutbco&it j t m Closed Saturday but OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY Rag* 6 Sunday, January 31, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN ONLY THE CHOSEN FEW... CAN QUALIFY POR ADM ISSION TV OUR Kit ch en, thereto BE INTRODUCED TOA TESTED COM­ BINATION OF SPICES AND CAREFUL CUL­ INARY CRAFT. THE RESULT: FRIED CHICKEN WAT DELIGHTS AND SATIS­ FIES,SERVEDIO YOU WITH SNEED AHD COURTESY.' TRY SOMEHOW! tieiiD Ay noose 2606 GUADALUPE Frogs Leap by Horns League-Leaders Hand Texas Third S W C Loss By CRAIG BIRD Associate Sports Editor Eugene "Goo” Kennedy, with a varied career behind him and an uncertain future ahead, played for the present Saturday night and led TCU’s Purple Frogs to a 76-70 blitz of Texas. to TOU after Kennedy, the 6-6 leaper who transferee! two seasons a t Fort Worth Christian Junior College (after playing for a business college that played a Junior college schedule) may not be allowed a second year of eligibility as a Frog because of his three years of competition in the junior college ranks. is about all However, the thought that he the won’t return comfort he gives the opposition as he had led TOU to a 4-0 conference ledger. KENNEDY made a shambles that was of a Steer defense designed to keep the ball away from him by refusing to miss when a pass did filter through to him, connecting on l l of 14 attem pts and cashing in on six charity tosses for 28 points. The lass was epecially bitter for Coach Leon B lacks squad in that it put the Steers’ backs to the wall in the Southwest Con­ ference race with a 1-3 record in spite of a good offensive effort (50.0 percent field) which was cancelled by a miser­ from the able night at the free throw line (56.0 percent). the ALREADY DECIMATED by injuries (probable starters John Mark Wilson and Erie Groscurth season went out before began), the 'Horns got yet an­ other blow after the game when preliminary diagnosis indicated guard Mike Dukes suffered torn cartilage in the game and m ay be lost for the season. "They played their hearts out,” an emotionally drained Leon Black said of his players as the Steers showered and dressed. "We did a real good to rebound even with them (TCU had only a three rebound edge), we had the same number of field goals they did—but the free throw line was the obvious factor.” job THE ’HORN DEFENSIVE plan was to use a collapsing man-to- T exas (70) B lack Howden B ro ste rh o u r D ukes B lacklock E lliot Louis Lenox 0 I-an erton B lan k e n b k le r 0 T eam Total* TCU (76) Hall D e g ra te K ennedy W illiam s F erguson V illarreal H urdle T eam Totals 6 6 l l 0 3 2 0 28 6 IO l f fra ft fta reb pf tp 8 3 16 S 2 I I 4 5 0 3 I 0 l l I l l 0 0 7 I 0 I 0 6 50 14 25 88 22 70 fr fga ft fta reb pf tp 5 12 I 6 7 15 3 IS 9 l l 3 28 2 5 2 2 0 IO 4 4 3 2 6 3 1 0 0 1 2 6 16 0 15 6 14 6 1 2 7 4 7 2 0 0 28 80 20 28 41 20 O fficials — Sm ith and Covin A ttendance — 7,500 effort with man set-up that kept as many people as possible between "Goo” and the bali. Kennedy negated this fantastic shooting night, but it still forced TCU to take the outside shot as Simpson Degrate tallied IS, Ricky Hall 12 and Jim Ferguson IO. a Texas, meanwhile, had most of its rebounding strength wiped in the first half as Lynn out Howden (at 14:42) and B.G. Brosterhous (4:45) got whistled down for their fouls. Still, the Steers clung to narrow leads for the first IO minutes of action before yielding It to the visitors and then claimed a tw o point lead at the half-time buzzer. Down 40-41 with seconds left, Ralph Elliott (playing heavily in and relief of both Howden Brosterhous) hit a lay-up and drew the foul. The 6-8 sophomore sank the charity toss and the ’Horns were up by two at the half. After intermission, Texas made its move to keep a jinx alive (TCU hadn’t won at Gregory Gym since 1959), again holding the than half for more the second stanza. lead GUARD JIMMY BLACKLOCK, led the drive, hitting four jump shots and a layup as the steers looked up at a 58-53 bulge with the game three quarters gone at 9:57. Then TCU went into a man-to- man full court press and slowly chipped lead, holding the ’Horns scoreless for a four-minute period. away that at Finally, at 7:02, a push shot by Ferguson nudged the Horned Frogs ahead at 58-59. They never trailed again. to break At 5:48, Billy Black cashed In on both ends of a one and one the penalty situation Orange scoring drought and put the score at 60-61, but by now TCU was controlling the tempo of the game. Doggedly, the Steers kept shadowing the Frogs, but the key point inthe game came with 3:54 left. DOWN 64-65, the Horn defense (now switched to a zone) forced the outside shot by Hall, the 18- footer grazing the rim as it fell from the backboard. With the ball s u r r o u n d e d by orange-clad players, Coco Villarreal slipped through and put the ball back up for a 67-64 TCU lead. The few remaining orange for a comeback were hopes dashed at 1:28 when Howden sailed off the floor to block an outside shot by Degrate with the score 68-70, but was whistled down for his fifth personal when he came down with the ball and, when Degrate made both free throws, the Steers were down and out at 68-72. Yearlings Win, 131-68 Wogs, Records Tumble By JOHN WATKINS Associate Sports Editor You just might say Larry Robinson had a field day. The 6-6 forward from Hobbs, N.M., broke a Gregory Gym scoring record with 55 points as he led the Texai Yearlings to another per­ formance — a 131-68 win over hapless Texas Christian Saturday night. record-breaking The Yearling point output was five better than the gym record set by the 1969 Texas freshmen in a 126-76 rout of the Aggie Fish. Of course Robinson didn’t do It alone. Four of his team m ates were figures, and Yearling guards Dennis Shidler (17 points) and Harry Larrabee ( l l points) had six and l l assists, respectively. in double Overall, the Yearlings turned ad- disadvantages into tw o Robinson » new heights for Gregory. V O L K SW A G E N ... 100% G U A R A N T E E D FOREIGN C A R REPAIRS Free Pick Up end Delivery Service WELCOME BANKAMERICARD V.W . ■■MYICX GILBERT'S A U T O M O T IV E SERVICE 477-6797 1621 E. 6th BEDWAY 307 W . 19th St. Ph.: 478-6609 RADIO “The Biggest Little Stereo Store in Austin” • SONY e CRAIG e UHER • MOTOROLA • KOSS • JENSEN SALES & SERVICE EASY TERMS • GARRARD e FISHER e Elco press box observers to wonder if the final Yearling production would be 144. Not a bad guess. The second half was a replay of the first, with the Wogs' man- to-man defense remaining inef­ fective against the Yearlings. Lenox emptied his bench except for the injured Johnson. Reserve guard Paul Hiltpold netted 16 points on seven field goals and two free tosses, good enough for third-best among the gam e’s leading scorers. Robinson bested by five the previous Gregory Gym scoring record, 50 points by Texas Tech’s Dub Malaise in 1966. S C H O L Z GARTEN 1607 San Jacinto H O U R 4-6. PM . ALL PITCHERS * l ° ° ALL BOTTLE BEER 30* CLOSED SUNDAYS to Tech and vantages In registering their fifth win of the year. Last week’s 94-83 loss loss of Lawrence "Spider” Johnson with a pulled thigh muscle were moved to the plus side of the Orange ledger. the "The kids just don’t like to lose,” a happy Coach Bennie Lenox said after the game. "They knew they would have to take up the slack since Johnson didn’t play.” After the Tech loss, Lenox said the defeat would be "good for the kids if they took it in the proper way.” Whatever way that is, that’s how the Yearlings must have taken it. Robinson, obviously satisfied with his performance, was quick to give tile credit to his team ­ mates. "They were the ones who m ade it possible,” he said. "They just kept giving m e the ball.” Things started off bad for the Wogs, now 1-5 on the year, and grew progressively worse. The closest the Christians came in the first half — discounting the first exchange of shots — was six points (12-6) with a little more than four minutes gone. Lenox’s crew went to the locker a more-than- r o o m with comfortable 72-34 lead, prompting HAPPY HOURS DAILY 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. PITCHERS 24 oz. MUG GLASS ALL BOTTLES $1.00 40c 20c 30c George's Tavern No. 3 1608 LAY A C A Kite Among Walker IO to Longhorn golfer Tom Kite was named Saturday the U.S. Walker Cup team for tho second consecutive year. Texas fresh­ man Ben Crenshaw was named first alternate to the 10-man team selected the U.S. Golf Association. by A l s o named were John F a r q u h a r , Am arillo; Billy Campbell, Huntington, W. Va.; Jam es Gabrielson, Atlanta, Ga.; B i l l y Hyndman, Huntingdon Steve Melynk, Valley, Jacksonville, F la.; Jim and Simons, Bulter, Pa. P a.; John M. Winters Jr. of Tulsa was named nonplaying captain. the finest ring available. Kite was a m em ber of the squad which defeated the British team 10-8 for the Walker Cup in 1970. The 1971 meeting, the twenty- third between the two teams, will be held May 26 and 27 a t St. Andrews, Scotland. The com­ petition was held in Milwaukee, Wis., last year. Kite Joins U.S. Amateur champion Lanny Wadkins and Marvin Giles, Richmond, Va., and Allen Miller of Pensacola, Fla. as returnees from last year’s team. HEBREW HOUSE C O - O P KOSHER MEAL C O N T R A C T S AVAILABLE 1606 WEST AVE. 476-5586 Created by John Robert* Choose Your Diamond 1/4 CT.............. 29.50 1/3 CT.............. 39.50 172 CT.............. 99.50 tasadelOro J E W E L E R S 2 2 3 0 t< u a i l a . - u z n wan Staff P hoto by B E N E PEREZ. "G o o " Kennedy Eugene Lynn (55) H ow den scramble for pos­ session of the ball in TCJU's 76-70 victory. Texas' and YOU CAN BUY DULCIMERS AT AMSTER MUSIC 1624 L A V A C A 478-7331 MARYLAND FRIED CHICKEN includes: 0 J 2 Pcs. Chicken t I Roll • 25c Order of O French Fries • ____ T exas Y earling* (ISI) S laton R obinson K ru g er S hidler L a ra b e e H iltpold S tacy Jones C ulver S m ith Ja m e s W ard fsr-fga ft-fta reb pt* 12 55 9 17 11 IR O 2 4 0 o 3 2- 5 9-10 I- I 3- 3 5- 8 2- 4 0- O O- 0 2- 2 O- 0 2- 2 I- I 5- 8 23-43 4-13 7-19 3- 9 7-10 0- 5 I- 3 I- I 0- 0 O- 3 I- 2 T eam TOTALS P e rc e n t TCU WOOS A lex and er M arano B row n Vann W right Stinson W hite M onroe K elly T e a m TOTALS P ercent 131 27-36 52-116 44.8% 75% (68) fg-fga ft-fta reb pts O- I IO 17 5- 9 2- 5 8 5- 8 9 3 3- 4 4- 5 8 I- 2 9 4 2- 3 0- 0 4 5-11 6-12 3- 9 2-10 O- 3 2- 5 4-10 I- 2 0- 4 23-66 34.8% 22-37 59.5% 68 3 28 9 4 9 6 4 3 2 0 2 0 8 78 13 6 2 6 4 5 6 0 3 8 53 WII.CO H O H T D A . 6421 Burnet Lane Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service SERVICING VO LKSW AG EN yp'-'irM cc ic; O UR SPECIALTY The Only Independent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET ROAD Across from Gulf Mart G L 2-0205 C LO SE D SATURDAY The Chicken Whose taste is ABREAST W ith the Times sooo . . . Shake a Leg: 1422 TOWN CREEK DR. (Town Lake) 444-9224 1009 R E IN L I 454-5469 (Capital Plaza) 18(0 W. B E N WHITE BLVD. 444-8254 (Sooth) • STOP PANTS, SHIRTS, KNITS & STUFF that’s our thing . • . D O Y O U LIKE: The Soft Feel? Corduroys? Blue Denims? Brush Corduroys? Brush Denims? Low Rise Sailor Bells? Button Through Western Jean Bells? Pants With Pockets? Patch Pockets? Without? Flap Pockets? Elephant Jean Bells? FOR the short tall skinny fat HE 6l SHE SIZES? — Well, 2 7 -4 0 BOOTS? We got them — DINGO — of course L O C A T IO N — W e are on the D R A G Get the message — we got what you might want IMAGES BY Exclusively for the University of Texos students and their immediate families Low Rise Jeans? Beltless Pants? FLIGHT I TUNE 6 Dallas to Brussel# AUGUST 6 Brussels to Dallas —61 DAYS ABROAD — FLIGHT 2 V i a A i n o i l e a n n y OI s A n i m i s JUNE 8 Dallas to Brussels JULY 21 Brussels to Dallas —42 DAYS ABROAD— FLIGHT 3 A m o n a n C l y OI:: A u Z i n c s JUNE 7 Dallas to Brussels JULY 5 Brussels to Dallas - 2 8 DAYS ABROAD- $265°<> FLIGHT 4 JUNE 7 San Antonio to Amsterdam JUNE 28 London to San Antonio - 2 1 DAYS ABROAD- $295°° Like Working With Children? CAMP LONGHORN "America's Number I Camps" C H O IC E O F 3 TERM S — JU N E 3 0 -J U L Y 24 JUNE 5-29, JUNE 30-JULY 24 JULY 25-AUG. 18 FLIGHT 5 V i a A t l a n t i s A i r w a y s f MAY 25 Dallas to Frankfurt AUGUST 17 Frankfurt to Dallas —84 DAYS ABROAD — $125 to $225 per term (Room, Board and Laundry Furnished) INTERVIEWS - COLLEGE MEN AN D W O M EN by Directors: Helen Frady, Bill Johnson, Tex Robertson and Bob Hudson SPACE LlMITED1 APPLY N O W Authoring Trtvnl Agent C h in a r D tractor x Crai| Beverley Bratty ...T o m ... Travel 40 ACRES CLUB Box 7999, Austin, Tex. 803 WEST 24th STREET UNIVERSITY VILLAGE (512) 476-7231 Bob Elliott's 2426 GUADALUPE Sunday, January 31, 1971 THE D A ILY T E X A N Page 7 WiPwywuimiw! ■■■ nim' I M New Group to Work For POW s Release formed In response to a speech made last week by Texas billionaire H. Ross Perot, “ Austin Cares” The w a s to organization letter stimulate writing to North Vietnam to free prisoners of war. Perot, who gained public at­ campaign designed citywide Frid ay. is a tention last year with his efforts to obtain release for Am erican PO W ’s, spoke at the Austin Rotary Club last week to spark interest in a “ village campaign” o f Sim ilar organizations have been formed all over the country. letter writing. Dan Crowley, vice-president of WHOPPER BURGER FEBRUARY SPECIALS ........................TACOS 19c MONDAY TUESDAY .................... BURRITOS 19c WEDNESDAY ..............CHALUPAS 19c THURSDAY ... .WHOPPER BURGER and 16 oi. DRINK 59c G o o d A t A ll Four Locations • 29th and Guadalupe • 5100 N. Interregional • 1148 Airport • 5100 Burnet Rd. Southern Union Gas Co., w ill be chairman of Austin general Cares, Inc. George K. Meriwether II I , Austin National Bank vice­ president, will be vice-chairman. The pftncipal aim of Austin Cares w ill be to get the Austin population letters to write personal the to Hanoi asking release of the 13 prisoners from Austin now in North Vietnam. “ We want to include every­ body” said Dave Smith, who is in charge of public relations for the group. He said the organization would try to reach public schools, the University churches, and community in their efforts to mobilize letter writing. “ We want to get everybody we can in the to w rite. Travis County area . . Tile object is to get as many letters as possible.” Dan Crowley, chairman, said that people can send their per­ sonal letters of concern about the prisoners to “ Austin Cares,” Box 1600, Austin, Tex., 78767. EATING ON THE RUN? LET A BIG FLAME-KISSED BURGER TAKE CARE OF HUNGER, FAST! CLO SE TO CAMPUS, GEARED FOR FAST SERVICE, DELICIOUSLY! ttftU D A Y . HOUSE I % 2003 GUADALUPE Hatfield-Af cG overn Favor 7 3 7 c Proposal Gains Popularity U.S. Withdrawal Copyright, 1971, American In­ stitute of Public Opinion. PR IN C ET O N , N .J., Ja n . 30- Public support for the Hatfield- M cGovem proposal to end U.S. troop involvement in Vietnam by the end of this year has grown dram atically- from 55 percent last September to 73 percent in the latest survey, conducted in mid-January. I n the earlier survey Republicans, men and persons with a college background were the about equally divided on in the latest survey, proposal; Bomb Threat Disrupts Co-Op The University Co-op was evacuated at 2:15 p.m. Friday after a telephone operator was told a bomb would explode in the building in 13 minutes. The call turned out to be a hoax. the General Manager C. W. W alker said the store was evacuated after telephone operator alerted Co-op employes. E m ­ ployes ushered patrons out of the store in a “ smooth and orderly” fashion in less than five minutes, according to W alker. The store was reopened for shortly after police fire department officials business and found no trace of a bomb. DRIVE A -LITTLE - - S A V E A LOT I /Act. 1/3 ct 1/2 ct. 3/4 et. le t. 31.50 41.00 125.00 225.00 275.00 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP 603 Commodore Perry Hotel AUSTIN 476-0178 ilteeeeeeeeee SPACE LIMITED ON EUROPE STUDENT G RO U P VIA SCHEDULED N K W Y O R K L U X E M B O I D A L L A S / Luxembourg f 2 0 U K G $160 IGHTS R UNES R o u n d T R I P In cl. Tax Depart M ay 20— Rtrn. Aug. 20 Call 478-7784 HARWOOD tours 2428 G U A D A L U P E l a r g e m ajorities support. expressed The proposal was introduced last year in a Senate bill, spon­ sored by Oregon Sen. Mark Hatfield and South Dakota Sen. George McGovern. The bill provided that the only m ilitary funds that could be spent in Vietnam after April 30,1971. were those for the orderly termination of operations and the systematic withdrawal of armed forces by Dec. 31, 1971. In the recent announcement of his candidacy for the presidency, McGovern pledged to remove all Am erican troops from Southeast Asia if elected. Other findings recorded In the latest survey-showing increased the war-help pessimism over for in increase explain the sharp s u p p o r t the Hatfield- McGovem proposal to withdraw all U .S. troops by the end of the current year. A new high has been recorded in the proportion of Americans (59 percent) who believe the United States made a mistake getting involved in Vietnam. It is interesting to note that six in IO of those who feel we did not make a mistake getting in Vietnam express involved the Hatfield- s u p p o r t McGovern proposal. for To obtain the results reported, personal interviews were con­ ducted on Jan. 9 and IO with a total of 1,502 adults in more than 300 scientifically selected localities across the nation. This year. Would you like to have your congressman vote for or against question was asked: this proposal? A proposal has been made in Congress the U.S. to require government to bring home all U.S. troops before the end of this September: The following table compares the latest results with those from Poll Results % Saying Congressman Should Vote in Favor Jan. ’71 Sept. ’70 % Point Change % NATIONAL ........................ 73 Men •........., , . . 6 7 ................................ 78 Women Republicans ........................ 61 Democrats .......................... 78 Independents ..................... 71 ................................ 60 College High School ........................ 75 Grade School ..................... 80 16 % 55 64 48 61 53 47 57 61 +1* ^ - I +1* +17 +18 +13 +16 +19 H O C Director Resigns Post Carol Coffee, director of the H u m a n Opportunities Cor- p o r a t i o n , resigned Thursday night, it would be frustrating to continue as director in view of budget cuts and salary poverty freezes agency. saying facing the Coffee, who has been HOC’s director three years, an­ nounced his decision at an HOC board meeting. for the H e said the w ar on poverty would continue to exist, but, he federal government said, continues to place requirements on HOC it cannot meet unless it gets additional funds. that HE CITED a 6.5 percent budget cut the agency w ill suffer next year and a freeze in salaries already in effect. Because of the freeze, ordered by the Office of Economic Opportunity, several key staff positions cannot be filled, he said. Coffee said he w ill continue with the agency until the end of this fiscal vcar, which ends April 30. In by OEO. the new fiscal year, the agency w ill be placed on probation LaSalle Barnett, HOC board president, said the agency w ill only be the first six funded by OEO months of year, fiscal the receiving the other six months funding after the agency has shown it has “ moved forward.” Barnett said several programs, including the neighborhood center program, had been criticized by an OEO review team. The team reported “ the neigh­ borhood centers were too small and the program was not ef- OPENING CAROLYN HARRIS POWERS TEXAS UNION ART GALLERY MONDAY 7:00-9:00 FREE MUNCHES fective to get enough people into them,” he said. problems with setting up and getting started. Since Carol has OEO FUNDS are applied to neighborhood centers and ad­ m inistrative salaries. The agency also is funded by the Department of Health. Education and Welfare and the Department of Labor. said Barnett “ un­ fortunate that Carol had to resign at this time. it was “ Over-all, Carol was a good director.” Ira Dr. Iscoe, University representative to the HOC board, said, “ Carol has worked very hard and as a former president of the board it • was a pleasure to work with him. He rendered much service.” ISCOE COMMENTED that the usual life of an agency ad­ m inistrator is “ 14 months to 18 months. Coffee has lasted three years.” Another HOC board member, Richard Moya, said, “ I hate to see him resign. He did a very good job as director of a very difficult program.” J a m e s Strickland, HOC a s s i s t a n t director of ad­ ministration and planning, ex­ pressed “ deep regret” at Coffee’s resignation. “ Carol came to the agency when it had untold number of been director HOC personnel has increased from 20 to 200 and funding has almost doubled,” he said. Oysters in Shells Appear on Street BEAUM O N T (A P ) - Oysters have been In the oyster shells being bought for se on city streets. turning up C o u n c i l m a n Conrad Mang called attention to the problem this week after receiving com- piaists. City Manager Charles H ill said he is investigating. From an ecological standpoint, protecting beds against dredging is beyond the C ity’s powers. oyster live Oysters in the city street base sanitation cause a m aterial problem. Mang said he received com- from the odors plainst about decaying oysters. City officials said they buy the oyster shell only from Texas- based companies. A MESSAGE FOR FILM MAKERS The Third Annual Riata Film Festival (canceled last October due to technical difficulties) h a s been rescheduled for Saturday, February 27th, in Burdine Hall Auditorium. Entries are open to stu­ dents and non-students with 8 mm, Super-8, and 16 mm films, sound or silent. Persons who submitted films last fall are urged to do so again. Entries will be judged and prizes will be awarded. The dead­ line for submissions is Friday, February 19th. Please include name and address on each film and bring film entries to the magazine office, Journalism Bldg., Rm. I IO. CAPITOL CAMERA HAS ARRIVED AT DOBIE CENTER PHONE: 476-3581 . . . . PHOTOGRAPHY — CUSTOM FITTED Sponsored by Page 8 Sunday, January 31, 1971 'THE DAILY TEXAN A n o th e r publication of T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L I C A T I O N S , IN C Solon Humor 'Grave' Satire Rides Some Amendments By JOHN POPE Texan Staff Writer Despite the burden of responsibility State legislators carry, a session rarely passes without a to enliven the proceedings. touch of humor or satire In debate several years ago over Rep. John Fields’ burial insurance bill, which included a $3,000 limit for funeral expenses, one legislator opposed passage. “ Suppose a man and his wife had paid this amount, and suppose the husband died and last request, which was to be cremated,” he said. the wife decided to honor his “ Well, you'd just have a $3,000 fire,” Fields replied. Another example of grave humor oc­ curred after passage of a bill supported by undertakers. “ One thing about it—they’ll be the last ones to let you down,” said the a measure. legislator who had supported Cemetery humor appeared in debate over a bill allowing cemetery plots to be moved without approval of next of kin if the land became valuable for com­ m ercial development. again “Could you consider this urban renewal the dead?” Rep. Curtis Graves of for Houston asked. Graves later participated in debate on a bill to allow chicken to be sold by the piece, such as a wing or drumstick. Previously, chicken could be sold only by the pound or by the entire bird. “ Is this a chicken-plucker bill?” he asked. is black, suggested an Graves, who amendment allowing “possum by the piece and watermelon by the slice.” Chickens were the subject of another of Graves’ debates. This tim e the subject was inv ft bill designed to discourage the portation of out-of-state eggs. Graves proposed an amendment requiring all such eggs to be labeled. Rep. Neil Caldwell another amendment to require all Texas hens to lay eggs imprinted with the State seal. added Despite such outbursts of wit, several long-time Legislature observers think recent sessions have been relatively humorless. “There's absolutely nothing funny that goes on in this building,” Bob Duke, an attorney, said. State solons are “much tamer and more serious how than they used to be,” Robert E. Johnson, Legislative Council chairman and a former legislator, added. In recent years, “ there has been more to be done, and they’re applying themselves to it,” he said. One of the less inhibited events occurred on the last day of the 57th session in 1961. The session’s most important issue had been a general sales tax. As the session drew to a close, the bill’s proponents a t­ tempted last-minute action on it. During a pause in the activity, Caldwell burst into a solo of “Taxes, My Taxes.” Later, Rep. W.T. Oliver and other House members brought in boxes of Hawaiian leis and distributed them to their colleagues who favored the tax. Oliver chanted, “Last call for the boat to Hawaii,” referring to Gov. Allan Shivers’ trip there for the annual Governors’ Con­ ference. Another legislator yelled, “The grass skirts for the secretaries are coming later.” The outfits never arrived. The final vote was a tie. The Speaker, using his privilege to vote in such cases, voted against the bill, which died, 72 to 71. Later that morning, a few legislators could be seen leaving the Capitol, still wearing their leis. During the 59th session, a House bill wa* introduced to allow a person to take th* State bar examination and obtain a license to practice law if he had finished two years of law school and had served three term s in the Legislature. In committee, one of the bill’s opponents, who was noted for his use of satire, suggested an amendment to permit anyone who had taken high school biology end had served two term s on the House public health committee to become a brain surgeon. An early example of legislative hijinks occurred in 1913, when prohibitionists won their fight against liquor after a rousing oration by their leader, who was drunk. During World War I Rep. H arry V. Fisher, in a patriotic move, wrote a letter to President Woodrow Wilson volunteering his services in any manner to America. Proud of his loyalty, he had the missive read before the House. Some of Fisher’s friends took the liberty of “replying” for the President and having the “ answer” read aloud. “ Offer accepted. Get a shovel and start digging ditches,” it directed. Another humorous episode in the early years of this century involved Rep. W.A. “Cap” Williamson, whose colleagues sent him a note saying, “I am the lady in the red hat. If you love me, rise and m ake a speech.” Williamson rose and spoke, but no red hat was present. Although Texas legislators and the bills they propose may sound strange, they will never top Oklahoma’s law making it a crime to kill a whale within 50 miles of the state’s borders. To save time in drafting their state’* C o n s t i t u t i o n and laws, Oklahoma’* legislators simply had adopted all ti California’* legislation. (LEFT) TTie House Cons+ftu* tional Am endm ents C om m ittee meets after the morning H ouse session to bring different points to light on amendments under consideration. (BELOW) A legislative page picks up a bundle o f news­ papers to be delivered to an office. The youngsters original­ "p a g e -b o y s." ly were called But as the messengers becam e a tradition and the position be­ cam e more form al and digni­ fied with higher standards for applicants, the title was short­ ened to " p a g e ." to their hom etow ns (ABOVE) A fte r presenting his points, Rep. James Slider listens to the committee dis­ cussion that follows. M o st sen­ representatives re­ ators and for turn the weekends except those living close enough to com ­ to Austin daily. Some mute from distant districts cr with small children m ove their fam i­ lies here for the legislative ses­ sion. (R IG H T ) A lull between er­ rands or perhaps a lunch break gives this page a moment of in which to catch up respite "o u tsid e ” reading. on some Pages: 'Capitol" Messengers 49 Boys Run Legislature's Errands 8-to-5 By BOBIN BRACHER Assistant Features Editor Forty-nine well-dressed, well-mannered boys literally run the 62nd Texas State Legislature. From seating a senator’s friends by his desk to carrying messages from one office to the other, the 31 Senate and 18 House pages do most of the footwork during the five-month session. “This is the smartest group of pages that has ever been around,” praised Mark Rose, an assistant in charge of the Senate pages. “They’re all intelligent and can talk with you on your own level and above.” sergeant-at-arms Each prospective page contacted from his district senator mendation,* and sponsorship, sergeant-at-affms’ office did choosing. the for recom­ the final and the The boys range from l l to 16 years old. Most are from Austin but a few live here with friends or a family that offers pages a place to stay. “Each page ha* to make hi* awn arrangements with hi* school," said Rose. "Many hire a private tutor — others just ■ria* the semester for the experience of working here. “They pick up assignments at the beginning of the week and hand them in on Friday*. They’re excused from work bere to take tests. Those from other towns •UMI oaa arrange assignments sod tests with a sister school In Austin while still being enrolled in their home school.” The pages, usually sitting on a long row of chairs in the Senate chamber, work directly out of the sergeant-at-arms’ office. A senator will call in with a message to be delivered or an errand to be run and a page then is assigned to him. A senator also can ask that a page be assigned to help in his office for the afternoon. When the Senate is in session, two pages, seated in alternate chairs at the back, serve each aisle of senators. After a senator has risen to speak, a page comes forward to take his speech or proposal to the secretary of the Senate and the reading secretary. “ When a page is working on the (Senate) floor, he really has to pay attention to what is going on among the senators in order to be ready to run messages or speeches,” said Rose. “ They learn a lot just by listening to everyone speak, and they know what is going on with different bills.” Many pages have gone over copies of Sen. Mike McKool’s fireworks bill and seem worried about its possible effect on their own fun. “We give them reading m aterial, like a pamphlet on “how a bill becomes a law” and then have small tests. They need to know how the system works and who th* senators are and where they sit,” said Rose. House pages are paid $5 a day, seven days a week, whereas Senate pages ar* paid $8 a day for the same amount of time — an 8-to-5 work day. “The pages are really conscious that they’re actually making money,” said Rose. “Some of the guys told me they’re saving their money for high school — for w’hen they have dates.” Photos by Rene Perez and Phil Huber Sunday, January 31, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag« t Severirisen s Numbers Thrill Capacity Crowd B y ST E V E RENFROW Nows Assistant "Doc” Severinson, the brightly- attired trumpet virtuoso, looked slightly out of place standing in front of the blue-uniform-clad U.S. Air Force Band. exactly It wasn’t Johnny Carson's "Tonight Show” Or­ chestra, but "Doc” was there, outfitted in white boots and bell­ bottoms, a rose-colored shirt and maroon sports coat, playing his silver Getzen trumpet at a free concert before an overflow crowd in Hogg Auditorium Saturday night.. The long-haired (for someone over 30), moustachioed hornman played with the USAF Band, conducted by Col. Arnold D. Gabriel, in the concert performed for the College Band Directors National Association, which met at the University this week. "Second a SEVERINSEN WAS the soloist Concerto for o n Trumpet,” piece written especially for him by Sgt. Floyd E. Werle, chief arranger for the USAF Band. And, though Severinsen may not have looked “ at home” with the concert band, he certainly sounded comfortable. W h e n asked which he preferred, concert or jazz work, he replied, " I t’s just whichever one I’m doing at the moment.” Sever insen gave the audience four encores after he had proved his concert trumpet, and he finally had to tell the throng, "If I had an expertise with encore prepared, we'd be doing it now. I suggested backstage that maybe I could just come out and play the parts that I goofed up, but I better not do that ’cause I ’d have to play the whole thing.” S E V E R IN S E N IS a big favorite among the readers of Playboy magazine. Those readers, mostly college-age, elected Severinsen the Big-Band Leader and first trum pet in the Playboy All-Star Band Readers Poll. Of the award, Severinsen said, "Yeah, it’s a great honor, but you still have the next day and to get up practice. really "A kind of thing like tonight is the greatest honor. Being invited to come here and play before these kind of people is really the thing.” Severinsen has two college-age daughters. One was graduated from Kilgore Junior College in Kilgore, the other finished junior college in Virginia. as Kind words for college youth are not uncommon from the 43- year-old trum peter. "It seems the only hope the United States might the survive generation currently graduating from college, the ones rap as w'ho are militants. If these young people aren't heard from, then I don’t know how we can survive.” a nation that taking the is is Also on the program besides in Second stint Severinsen’s Concerto were Aegean Festival Overture (Makris-Bader), George Washington Bicentennial March (Sousa), Third Suite for Band Salad Strike: Lettuce Controversy Mounts As Grocers Remain Neutral contracts covered by Teamsters contracts. . also growers . . Act and Relations Act.” the N a t i o n a l L a b o r HI I MlimH' ....... . Co-Op Workers Set Union Meet The Co-Op Workers’ Union will meet at 8 p.m. Monday to in Union Building 317 labor- discuss management and contract negotiations. current dispute a The dispute arose when the Co-Op management cut work hours for many employes and laid off two workers. Jan Fenner, Union Executive Committee member, told The that T e x a n I management said the action was taken because "they spent too much money on personnel last sem ester.” Saturday ( J a g e r ) , Washington Grays and Sinfonia (Grafulla-Reeves) Sacra (Werle). the The Werle piece was saluted by a standing ovation originated by the college band directors. idea of Tile piece praised rock music in religious warship and unusual facets as a four-piece rock group made up of USAF Band members and a brass and percussion quartet performing the balcony. contained from such By JIM ROBINSON The controversy over the let­ in in that Is based here continues tuce boycott California Austin. food stores The controversy centers over whether should support the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee’s boycott on lettuce that is not picked by that union. Many stores have contracts with the Teamsters Union. UFWOC, however, does not recognize the Teamsters as a legitimate representative of the field workers. “ T H E Y ’ V E S I G N E D A printed 'sweetheart agreements,’ ” said Kerry Grombacher, of the Austin Lettuce Boycott Committee. from Joe Williamson, m anager of Kroger Food Store on Burnet Road, states the grocers’ position on the boycott: letter "We believe farm workers should have the same (collective bargaining) right . . . However, the California lettuce controversy involves a jurisdictional dispute between the Teamsters and the We believe it is UFWOC inappropriate for us to take sides in this jurisdictional dispute . . . We have purchased lettuce from covered by UFWOC growers . . . CUF Funds Used for Fines " I t’s all been blown out of proportion** to was Larry Jackson’s reply Saturday charges that he had used Community United Front Funds to pay 98 dollars worth of parking tickets. A check written Jan. 14 for payment of 13 parking citations and drawn on the CUF account was the start of the controversy. And m atters were only made worse when the check was returned to the Corporation Court for insufficient funds. The check was sent back to the Austin National Bank Jan. 22 by the City’s chief cashier. Jackson maintains the check has been paid after being rerun. "T H E CLAIM that the check had in- sufficient funds was a technical mistake on the part of the bank,” the activist said Saturday. The chief cashier, George McCulloch, said he would not know' if the check had been cleared by the bank until Monday morning. In reference to the legality of Jackson’s actions, chairman of the Austin Solicitation Bank Rejects $98 Check Board R. V. Miller commented, "I haven’t reviewed the permit that was given them (CUF) to see if it covers that sort of thing. " I ’ll definitely look further into it,” he said. All of the tickets in question, according to Austin police, wrere placed on an Olds­ mobile stationwagon registered to Mary N. Newell. The lien holder on the car is listed as the Capital National Bank. There is no mention of CUF in the registration information. JACKSON TOU) The Texan Saturday CUF has been paying the installments on the car. "Everybody knows that the car is used by CUF,” he said. Capital National Bank did not have the information available Saturday to verify who was making the payments. Corporation Court records show there is an additional $51 of tickets on the same car. This group of eight tickets is shown to have been paid Monday, but officials in the court said the means of payment cannot be checked until Monday. T H E M AJO RITY of both groups of tickets was Issued on Guadalupe Street between the 2100 and 2400 blocks. "Since we don’t have a perm it to park free we have to park on the street while w e’re on the program ,” Jackson said. He explained that CUF finds it easier to pay the tickets than to fight for the permit. collecting campus for "Austin shouldn’t ridicule us; they should give us a free parking perm it,” he said. Corporation Court Clerk Richard Hill said th at if a check is returned a second time, a criminal complaint is sworn out for the arrest of the person to whom the vehicle is registered. . >5 ’ The controversy takes on im­ mediate significance in light of a Texas Union Board of Direc­ tors’ meeting Thursday. Til a board voted to recom m end to the University produce supplier that the Union should buy only union- picked lettuce from the grc\ ers. The Union, however, refused to to a the University commit complete support of the boycott. "We simply think that t h i s is a m atter for the c o n s u m e r s to solve. It’s too late for C o n g r e s s said Grom­ to do anything,” bacher. Faculty Polled On A&S Split the arts and The Students’ Association began sciences to determine favored polling faculty Friday whether a majority division of tile college. Students’ Association President Jeff Jones has said most of the f a c u l t y is "overwhelmingly opposed” to the division. But Dr. Stanley Ross, provost-designate for arts, sciences and letters, has said an “overwhelming majority” of the faculty is not now opposed. "Results of an October poll which favored keeping the college unified were included in Friday’s questionnaire,” J i rn Arnold, S t u d e n t s ’ Association vice­ president, said. The new poll asks if tim the faculty now' favors division. Jones asked that all forms be returned to Union in person Building 321 or by faculty mail by Monday night. "WE DO NOT believe it is right for us to discriminate in favor of one union or against another.” "I feel that Kroger quite ob­ viously takes sides in the m at­ ter,” in response to the Kroger statement. said Grombacher "They’re buying Teamsters lettuce just as fast as they can,” he said. " It’s very similar to the purchases made by the State Department.” statement The Kroger said, "The channel for solving this problem is through action by the Congress of the United States. the Congress, "THOSE WHO SUPPORT the UFWOC should take their case to than conducting a boycott which in­ terferes with the right of food store operators and die freedom of supermarket customers.” rather "I just can’t see Congress doing anything about this m atter any time soon,” said Grombacher. "The farm workers were com­ pletely left out of the Wagner Ex-HEW Economist Offers 3-Part Series Olson, D r . Mancur an economist who recently served as deputy assistant secretary in the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, will give a lectures beginning at 3 p.m. Monday in Burdine Hall 602. series three of He will be speaking through Wednesday on the theme "Social Indicators, The Quality of Life and Resource Allocation in the Public Sector.” ; ii •••• ■#:*><& ess rn :••••, ___ ' j i l l H o n e a ^ n - s a * . m o n . t h r u s r i . 8:o o -S : oo i i ; ■:/i v.y ■ -* \ i’ m:'--y ■' ' •• y y ?v :, * : ' y ;■ rn y - w .,;:, ;k;- ■ - ' t , ? I ■< : •"'T'LY ■ : / V > f:. . ' • • r n F o r S a l e F o r S a l e F o r S a l e A p a r t m e n t s , F u r i m . T u t o r i n g H o u s e s , F u r i m . T y p i n g '68 V W T U D O R s e d a n , g r e e n : N ew tir e s , 24,000 m ile s . E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tion. L ow c a s h p ric e . 263-2789. O N E B E D R O O M a p a r tm e n t fo r C lo se to C a m p u s. S h u ttle . $ 7 5 /m o n th . ! r e n t. N E E D M A T H T U T O R IN G ? S ta r t b e fo re y o u g e t b e h in d . G ro u p ra te s , p r iv a te C all 451-2391 o r 478-9152. , r a te s . 478-5846, 476-0757, 452-6631. c le a n ho u se. T A R R Y T O W N . L A R G E , E q u iv a le n t th r e e b e d ro o m s . F u r ­ n ace. a / c , m a n y c l o s e t s s t o r a g e s p a c e . G R 8-5528. to N O L E A S E D u p l e x e s , F u r i m . R o o m m a t e s t w o b e d r o o m , ■furnished o r u n ­ L a r g e f u r n i s h e d . C a r p e t , air, G . E . d i s h w a s h e r , _________________________ _____________________ d i s p o s a l , T a p p a n T w o b lo c k * R e a q e n H iq h . la r g e on# b e d ro o m . A /C . G r a d u a te s o r fa c u lty . r a n g e , b a ' c o n y , p o o l J Q U A L IT Y , C L E A N , q u ie t, I *87 .V) no hill* 47R-89r.Q C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R A T E S tim® E a c h W ord (15 w ord m in im u m ) $ ........... $ .07 .06 ............$ ...7 5 ........... $ ...0 5 E a c h A d d itio n a l T im * S tu d e n t r a te o n e E a c h a d d itio n a l w o rd 20 C o n se c u tiv e Issu e* IO w o rd s 15 w o rd s 20 w ords 1 2 3 4 C lassified D isp lay I c o lu m n x o n e Inch o n e tim e $ 2.10 E a c h A d d itio n a l T im e ........... $ 2.00 ......................................... $11.00 ......................................... $15.00 ......................................... $19.00 ..................................... $38.00 ..................................... $70.00 ..................................... $96.00 ......................................$120.00 col. inch col. inch c o l. inch col. inch (No c o p y chan*® for c o n s e c u tiv e is su e ra te s .) • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S le u f o r 7 5 c th e ; IS w o r d * o r first | tim e, 5 c e a c h a d d it io n a l w o rd . Stu - i d e n t m u tt *h o w re c e ip t in J o u rn a lism a n d p a y B ld g , 107 fro m 8 a.m . t o 4 :3 0 p.m. M o n d a y t h r o u g h F rid a y . in a d v a n c e A u d it o r '* D E A D L IN E SC H E D U L E T u esd ay T ex a n M onday. 11:00 a.m . W ednesday T exan T u esd a y . 11:00 a.m . T hursday T exa n W e d n esd a y . 11:00 a.m . F r id a y T exan T h u rsd ay. 11:00 a.m . S u nday T ex a n . . F r id a y . 3:00 P .m . “ In th e e v e n t ef e r r o r s m a d e In an a d v e r tis e m e n t, im m e d ia te n o tire m o s t be g iv e n a s th e p u b lis h e rs a r e re s p o n sib le fo r only O N E in r o r r e r t In se rtio n . All c la im s fo r a d ju s tm e n ts sho uld he m a d e n o t th a n 30 d a y s a f te r p u b lic a tio n .’* la te r F o r S a l e 1969 C H E V Y SS 396 c o n v e rtib le , b u c k e t s e a ts * a u to m a tic , p o w e r, a ir, 20.000 m ile s. O nly $2,500. O ra n g e w ith w h ite in te rio r. 441-2379 o r 475-4468. STUDENT NOTICE S e w in g M a c h in e s —$35 . a 2 ' * v hrnT n alrT p w ^ lw ighi i . h « TTth f m f fmMy N»- $35 e a c h o r m o n th ly p a y m e n ts a v a il­ able. T h e s e m a c h in e s h a v e b u ilt-in co n ­ fa n c y tro ls fo r m a k in g b u tto n h o le s , s titc h e s , fe a tu re s . in s p e c te d In w a re h o u s e T h e y m a y be a t 2003 A irp o rt B lvd. (b e tw e e n M a n o r R d I & M W - O P ? " & th e p u b lic fro m til I p .m . a rn.-6 p .m . M o n .-F rl. S a t. a n d m a n y o th e r H A M M O N D O R G A N . F u ll k e y b o a rd a n d p e d a ls . $850. 444-1107. 1964 F O R D S P O R T C O U P E . C h ro m e sp ee d . E x c e lle n t 2R9 F o u r m a g s , co n d itio n . R e a lly s h a r p 478-5607. $695. 1970 H O N D A CB-350. E x c e lle n t dltlo n . $695. C all 476-5207. s y s te m s . W a ln u t r w o C U STO M M A D E s p e a k e r e x c e lle n t ___________ 1965 C H E V R O L E T “ E c o n o v a n ’’. M a n y new p a r t s In e n g in e . M u st se ll soon. c a b in e t, fo u r C all J o h n . 472-8769. W A T E R B E D S , fin e s t on F u lly w a r r a n te e d . F iv e th e m a r k e t. le ft, $99.50, t a i I n c l u d e T ^ 1 7 2 8 . ________ ___________ C H R Y S L E R 1955 Y O R K E R N E W s te e rin g -b ra k e s , AC, R A H . tr a n s p o r ta tio n e x c e lle n t c le a n , J E N S E N C O N C E R T g u ita r T w o 15" s p e a k e r s S till in w a r r a n ty . 477-3145. s p e a k e rs . In e a c h c a b in e t. P o w e r V e ry 472-5697. 1969 KT120 S u z u k i, u n d e r 3.000 m ile s , to a p p r e c ia te . p e r f e c t c o n d itio n . S e e 474-2933. S H U R E V O CA L M A S T E R P A. s y s te m . I OOw RM S. 6 -in p u ts. U se d 2 m o n th s . $550 c a s h . 474-2501. 441-3765. 1967 C O R V E T T E C O N V E R T IB L E . L ik e b ra n d new . 4 sp ee d , 350 h .p , A M -FM . $2,600. M u st s e ll by o w n e r. 451-2272. ’71 CB350 H O N D A p lu s e x tr a s . 800 m ile s. R e a s o n , w a n t 750. $650. C a ll now , 454-1230. '66 VW E N G IN E . R e c e n t r ln g s /v a lv e s , n e w c lu tc h . $150. H e a r a f t e r 6, 926- R O Y A L T Y P E W R IT E R . G o o d c o n d i­ tion. W ill sell c h e a p . A fte r 6 p m , 288-1362. 1965 K A R M A N N G H IA . E x c e lle n t c o n ­ d itio n . G re a t tir e s , 30 m ile s on g a l­ lon Bill, 478-3917 a f t e r 3 p m . ra d io . E x c e lle n t 1967 VW C O N V E R T IB L E . A M -FM c o n d itio n . m a in ­ te n a n c e re c o rd s a v a ila b le . $1295 o r b e s t o r o ffer. C all w e e k e n d s . 454-6388 a f t e r 6pm 3299. C O M P O N E N T SO U N D tu n e r (50 w a tts ) s p e a k e rs . As is, fir s t $100. 442-9622. s y s te m . T u r n ­ a n d ta b le , a m p S O L IT A IR E D IA M O N D w e d d in g Y ellow gold. w o rth s a c rif ic e . C all 465-7276 a f t e r 5pm . set. $200. W ill '66 F O R D C U STO M . A u to m a tic , a ir. $585. 478-9941 a f te r 5. 1968 C H A R G E R . A ir, d is c b r a k e s , m a g w h e els, ta p e d e ck . Bo B o re n , 444-7900, j 444-0628 $1600. I A m p lifier, SC O TT S T E R E O R e c e iv e r o r D y n a co C h a n g e r, VVharfedale W 60E S p e a k e r s . 476-6733, 454-6141. D uel 1219 - 1970 BSA V IC T O R S P E C IA L 441cc. T w o T O P C A SH P R IC E S p a id f o r d ia ­ m o n d s o ld gold. C a p ito l D i a m o n d S hop. 6o3 C o m m o d o re P e r r y 476-0178 D E L IC IO U S S T E A K S A N D R O A STS c u t I n te rr e g io n a l. ------------------------------------- w e e k s old $800. 452-0050. to o rd e r. L o n e S t a r M e a t C o., 1717 TV P O R T A B L E S . U se d b a r g a in s fro m F O R SA L E , 1955 C h ry s le r . Good co n $19.95-5125 C o lo r. $19.95-$125. C olor, A fte r 5, 465-6036. RAW BAW . i'U - 7 0 n 454-7014. : a itio n d ltlo n . $300. 478-4568. taoo O R IG IN A L C L O T H E S F O R O R IG IN A L P E O P L E A T IS IS If y o u d o n 't s e e w h a t y o u w a n t, w e m a k e It fo r y o u a t a p ric e y o u c a n I ( m a le & fe m a le ), m a ­ a ffo rd . C lo th e s a c c e s s o rie s , ite m s , c ro c h e te d c r a m e ’ a n tiq u e fa b ric s , h a n d -s c r e e n e d p rin ts fro m A riz o n a , a n d m u c h m o re . W hy buy s o m e th in g o r d in a r y off ra c k w h e n you c a n h a v e s o m e th in g s p e c ia l for le s s ? S to p by I s is . 608-D W. 12th. j O pen M.W. 11-5 :30, T .T . 11-7, F S. 11-6. ( I te m s a t 20% c o m m is s io n ) . a c c e p te d on c o n s ig n m e n t th e A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th a p a r tm e n ts . IO m in u te s w a lk fro m C a m p u s. S w im m in g p o o l M a id s e rv ic e S tu d y , r e c r e a tio n ro o m a n d pool ta b le $61.5 0 /m o n th p e r p e rs o n A ll b ills p a id . fe m a le ro o m m a te s p a c e M a le a n d a v a ila b le LE FONT APARTMENTS — 803 W . 28th 472-6480 O N E B E D R O O M A V A IL A B L E on S h u t­ tle B u s R o u te . P o o l. CA. w a te r - e a s 3501 E l D o ra d o A p a r tm e n ts . p a id . S p e e d w a y . 472-4893 o r 478-1382. BARRANCA SQUARE APARTMENTS 1965 P O N T IA C T e m p e s t $700. A ir, a u to m a tic , V-8. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . 478-3544 a n y tim e . K-103 C o lo ra d o A p a r t­ m e n ts. new. W i t h i n w s ' k i n g d i s t a n c e B r a n d U.T. E f f i c i e n c y a n d o n e b e d r o o m a p a r t ­ m e n t * , c o m p l e t e l y f u r n i s h e d . $ 1 3 0 u p . I ’59 M S A 1500 C O N V ER T IB LE P o p u l a r y o u n g c' a * * ie * p o r t * t e r . B r i g h t r e d . Look* g o o d , run * g r e a t . A f u n c a r lo v e r , f o r i p r i n g ju s t a n o w n e r . V e r y n o t t h e s e a f t in *uch g o o d * h a p e . O w n e r a s k i n g o n ly $ 3 0 0. 4 7 4 - 1 2 2 7 . t r o c k l i c k i n g . N e e d * a f e w of F O R SA L E . T w o P o ly g la s s ti r e s F70-14. le tte r in g . $30 e a c h . 10% u sed W hite C all 452-7140. F o r i n f o r m a t i o n c a ll 4 7 8 - 7 7 1 3 o r 4 5 4 - 0 2 3 9 S T U D E N T S E C T IO N , fo u r a p a r tm e n ts le ft. T r a v is H o u se A p a rtm e n ts , 1600 R o y a l C re s t D riv e . 442-9720. S O U T H S H O R E APTS. O V E R L O O K IN G TO W N L A K E A N D A U S T IN S K Y L IN E C o n v e n ie n t U T . B e r g s tr o m & D o w n to w n F U R N IS H E D /U N F U R N IS H E D I B E D R O O M F R O M $135 $ B D R M . I & 2 B A T H F R O M $147.50 3 B E D R O O M F R O M $182 A L L B IL L S P A ID —C A B L E T.V . 3 00 E. RI VE RS IDE DR 4 4 4 - 3 3 3 7 A PA R A G O N P R O P E R T Y H A IR L T D Call for information on j room U 20.25, t h r e e b e d r o o m $ 1 3 3 . 4 5 3 - 7 6 0 8 . W a n t e d S e r v i c e s G IL B E R T 'S A U TO S E R V IC E b u y s u s e d V o lk s w a g e n s. 1621 E a s t 6th. 477-6797. h a ir s in g e in g fo r s p lit e n d s, a n d s h a g c u ts. T r y o u r n e w e x c itin g s a lo n . 454- 0984. P IA N O L E S S O N S . B e g in n e r a n d a d ­ v a n c e d . C all 472-4722. VW M E C H A N IC , tu n e -u p to o v e rh a u l. G ood w o rk . R e a s o n a b le . 266-1608. K E Y P U N C H lin e ? V O L T I n s t a n t P e r ­ W hy w a lt in s a v e s y o u r so n n el K e y p u n c h S e rv ic e tim e ! W e p u n c h a n d v e rify v a lu a b le o r y o u c a n r e n t o u r m a c h in e s a n d do y o u r o w n. C all 472-6916. C o m e by 308 W. fa s t, re a s o n a b le , r e lia b le , a n d c lo se to C a m ­ pu s. lo th , S u ite 302. V O LT Is S tu d e n t o p e ra te d , T H E B U G -IN N . V o lk s w a g e n r e p a ir . s tu d e n t d is c o u n t. T o m m y A rn o ld . 1818 W est 86th, 452- 4066. H ID D E N V A L L E Y S ta b le s . B o a r d a n d r id e y o u r h o r s e fifte e n m in u te s fro m C a m p u s . F in e s t box s ta lls , s ta l ls w ith p a d d o c k , p a s tu r e , b ig lig h te d rin g . H u n t c o u rs e . R id in g le ss o n s , s h o w -p le a s u re . 247-2324. A p a r t m e n t s , U n f . MA-SON M A N O R APTS. 1137 G U N T E R U n f u r n i s h e d air, h e a t . O n e b e d r o o m $107.50, t w o b e d - a p a r t m e n t * . C e n t r a l 926-4362. R o o m s RO OM IN P R IV A T E h o m e . $45. P o o l w ith b e a u tifu l y a rd , c lo se to U n iv e r­ sity . 472-2696. M A L E S T U D E N T , 1609 C o lo ra d o . S in g le ro o m . $30, ro o m p r iv a te h o m e, s w im m in g pool, $45, 1301 W est 29th. G R 2-2696. s in g le E N F IE L D . G E N T L E M A N , L a rg e , c le a n to ro o m . B ath , s u n d e c k . E q u iv a le n t h o tp la te , e ffic ie n c y . R e f r ig e r a to r , a n G R 8-5528. U R G E N T . N E E D s o m e o n e to ta k e o v e r J e s t e r c o n tr a c t b e fo re F e b r u a r y 6. C all 471-2777. L o s t & F o u n d L IC E N S E D D A Y C A R E — E A S T . a g e s . 2-6. P e r s o n a l a tte n tio n , p la n n e d a c tl- n a lls m B u ild in g , ( a ll K a th y GR1-5244. R E W A R D F O R L IG H T E R b e lie v e d lo st ro o m , se c o n d flo o r, J o u r- la d le s ’ _ ............ In „ „ v ities, w e ll-b a la n c e d m e n u s. 926-0352. H e l p W a n t e d h a s a p a r t H O L ID A Y H O U S E . 6800 B u rn e t R o a d fo r tip s . C a ll tim e n ig h t o p e n in g C u rb e tte . $1.45 h o u rly p lu s m a n a g e r , GL3-5155. W O R K IN G M O T H E R n e e d s s o m e o n e to p ic k u p a n d c a r e fo r s m a ll so n , M -F , — | P L E A S E F I N D M E . L a r g e fe m a le gold a r e a . U n iv e rs ity dog, " S h a d ” R e w a rd . 472-2786. I LO S T N E A R W a g g o n e r H a ll, f r a m e g la s s e s in b ro w n c a s e . b la c k I f fo u n d , p le a s e c a ll 478-1383. $50 R E W A R D fo r In fo rm a tio n on r e ­ c o v e r y of 1968 T r iu m p h B o n n ev ille, b u rg a n d y w ith O hio p la te . 528-8306, DV81998, C o n ta c t A sh b y C le v e la n d , H o u sto n . P O R T A B L E T V s : L im ite d la te u s e d 19" u ltr a c le a n W estin g h o u se b-w . $55. 444-1345, 442-7475. 4305 M a n c h a c a R o ad . --------------- --------------- s u p p l y o f in s ta n t-o n SA H , BOAT. D o lp h in S e n io r; b lu e a n d w h ite , 14-feet, six In c h e s, good con- s ailin g In c lu d e d , fre e t r a d e fo r c a n o e o r t r a i l e r d ition, instructions; $475, k a y a k . 476-1517. ----------------------------------------------------- - S T E R E O C O N S O L E S (4) b r a n d n e w s te r e o c o n so le s. T h e s e 1971 n a tio n a lly a d v e r tis e d m o d e ls a r e 1970 T R IU M P H T I G E R 650. 4400 m ile s In b e a u tifu l w a ln u t fin ish w ith 4 s p e a k - L ik e new . M u st sell. M ake o ffe r Tw o e r s y s te m s & w o rld fa m o u s B S R tu rn - h e lm e ts. 476-5091. ta b le s . T h e y f e a tu r e p o w e rfu l solid s ta te — c h a s s is to be so ld fo r $75 e a c h o r s m a ll 1963 FO R D . P o w e r m o n th ly p a y m e n ts a v a ila b le . U n c la im e d F r e ig h t, 2003 A irp o rt B lvd. (b e tw e e n 478-6722. M a n o r R o ad & 19th). O pen to th e p u b l i c ---------------------------------------------------------------- fro m 9 a rn. to 6 p .m ., M on.- F r i., S a t. A FG H A N H O U N D F u n 't il I p .m . lo v in g c lo w n s. T op show q u a lity . S tu d — ----------- ——---------------------------- s te e rin g , b ra k e s A.C. W as $350, now $250 o r b e s t o ffe r P U P P I E S . s e rv ic e . 452-4975. p o n e n t COMPONENT SYSTEMS. s e ts c o m ­ 1971 c o m p le te w ith (3) s p e a k e rs , Garrard tu rn ta b le , a n d d u s t c o v e r. T h i's e tra n s is to r iz e d s e ts , , will b e sold fo r $59.95 e a c h . U n c la im e d F r e ig h t, 2003 A irp o r t B o u le v a rd . fully r > ... . B IC Y C L E S F R E N C H IO s p e e d s a n d E n g lish 3 sp e e d s . S a le s, p a r ts , a n d s e rv ic e . N eile W olfe, 471-7955. A M P F X s p e a k e rs a n d C A S S E T T E w ith s te r e o tu rn ta b le . A lso, b la c k a nd w h ite TV . 444-0768. . . S T E R E O . F IS H E R 250 tu n e r. G a r r a r d SI.95 tu m ta b l a m p a n d ible, Sony ta p e d e c k . E le c tro v o ic e EV IA. R30D .sp eak ers. All o r p a r t fo r s a le 476-2736 — -------- ------------- --------------- - 1966 BSA 650cc L ig h te n in g m o to rc y c le A lso, M o srite hollow body b a s s g u ita r ----------- w ith c a s e . 476-2736. f o r w a rd g e a r s , d is c b re a k s , J U N E 1969 F IA T 124 c o n v e rtib le , five ra d ia l tire s . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $2750, 444- 8933. T ry a n y tim e . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . W OODW ARD APARTMENTS 242 units — 8 separate dusters liv in g c o m fo rt fo r sw in g in g S p e c ia l s tu d e n t o rie n te d c lu s t e r s o ffe r r e la x e d s in g le s . 2 s w im m in g pools. M o d e r a te p ric in g w ith all u tilitie s p a id — no h id d e n c h a r g e s ! J u s t D/a b lo c k s o ff S. In te rr e g io n a l. O n ly 5 m in u te s to U .T O n ly 3 m in u te s to F u lly a p p J ia n c e d k itc h e n s C o m p le te o n -p r e m is is w a s h a te r ia . F r e e a ll-c h a n n e l TV . A m p le p a r k in g f o r te n a n ts A g u e sts . U N F U R N IS H E D F U R N IS H E D tow n. I b e d ro o m .................. $129 50 . . . $154.50 2 b e d ro o m I b e d ro o m ................. $149.50 2 b e d ro o m .................. $179.50 Page IO Sunday, January 31, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN 1970 H O N D A SL350. R u n s p e rfe c tly . $550 C all 453-6835 a f te r 2. P e r f e c t on r o a d o r d irt. ------------------ — 22“ 1969 F IA T S P ID E R . 12,000 m ile s, g o o d U g ly B us R o u te . E a c h a p t. Is c a r p e te d , c o n d itio n . AM ra d io . $1350. C all 471- d ra p e d , c e n t r a l h e a t A a ir. All u tilitie s p a id . D e sig n e d for 4 p e rs o n s p e r a p t. 2 1847 o r 442-3073. • b e d ro o m —3 b a th . I n d iv id u a ls m a tc h e d , 1970 Y A M A H A 200. E le c tr ic s ta r t, co m - w ith c o m p a tib le ro o m m a te s . C o m e S e e ’ --------------------------- ! L iv e ’x b lo c k (ro m L a w S ch o o l on th e — - T H E B L A C K S T O N E L U X U R Y L IV IN G — M A ID S E R V IC E ! b in a tio n s tr e e t a n d tr a i l bike, ex - c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $475. D ick , 478-3779. --------------------------------------------------------- 1960 VW . G O O D e n g in e , tir e s , b a tte r y , 1 „ n i n - 29 1 0 Red River r-, . 476-5631 2-4. 478-4568. A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y r a d io . T r a n s m is s io n fo r p a r ts . $125 o r b e s t o ffe r. 477-5660. r D a rts. $125 o r b e s t o ffe r. 477-5660. tro u b le s . G ood N E A R C A M PU S . S h u ttle . M o d e m . AC. tier* $120 2800 S w ish e r, to $135. I C l C l K l M C , P O P A I O R ? L W ' ^ ' N l l N O T C J K A J U J D f or.nl p o o l. 472-5369. SC H O O L C A R . ’59 O ld s 98 All p o w e r. R u n s w ell A /C , 478-4418 e v e n in g s, w e e k e n d . $270. 64 G A L A X IE 500. A ir, a u to m a tic , n e w tir e s , p e r f e c t r a ­ co n d itio n . dio. 453-2639. SO N Y S T R A C K ta p e p la y e r /r e c o r d e r . L e s s th a n six m o n th s old. M ust sell. G re g , 444-4521. LA FIESTA APTS. 4 0 0 E. 3 0 th r o o m m a t e * N e e d I o l d e r w o m a n , m e n t o g e t h e r . F o r I y o u n q w o m a n , I y o u n g m a n , 2 y o u n g i n f o r m a t i o n call f o r 4 7 7 - 1 8 0 0 . SO N Y S T E R E O T A P E , e x c e lle n t c o n d i­ fo u r y e a r w a r r a n ty . M ust se ll tion, -— --------------- — --------- im m e d ia te ly . C all G re g A llen . 444-4521. TW O O N E B E D R O O M a-c a p a r tm e n ts . 1504 W in d so r R o a d . $125 an d $130 ------------------ . ■■ ti " ■ :t . H A S S E L B L A D 500cm . 8 0 m m P l a n a r , w ith o u t u tilitie s . G R 7-1303, 472-5757. N ew w ith full y e a r w a r r a n ty . $650. 385-5863. 1968 G .T .O . M u st s e ll. $1400. Good c o n ­ d itio n , m in o r w o rk . No p o w e r e q u ip ­ m e n t. C all now . 441-3263. N E E D S O M E O N E le a s e T o w n L a k e . S h u ttle b u s . O n e b ed ro o m , $165-m onth, a ll b ills. K eep o u r d ep o sit. 441-2787. to a s s u m e i (kill* in a we ll t o t a l c o s t o f $ 6 0 will c o n f i d e n t i a l l y A e x p o s e y o u r p l a n n e d r e * u m # t o 2 5 0 t o p c o m p a n i e s w h o h a v e c u r r e n t l y h i r e d f i e l d . S a v e y o u r s e f a n d y o u r e m p l o y e r u n d e ­ i n f o r ­ s i r a b l e p l a c e m e n t m a t i o n n a m e a t a n d a d d r e s * t e e s ! F o r Full t e n d o b i g a t i o n in y o u r c h o i e n n o t o N a t i o n a l R e s u m e S e r v i c e , P . O . Box 1 4 5- A , P e o r i a , III. 6 1 6 0 1 . 1970 650 T R IU M P H B o n n e v ille . P e r f e c t sell, 5,000 m ile s . M u st c o n d itio n le a v in g th e c o u n try . 1310 P a y n e . 1961 A U ST IN H E A L E Y 8,000. Low m ile ­ a g e ,In m in t c o n d itio n . B o d y , e x h a u s t, w irin g , a n d m a n y o th e r s b e e n re b u ilt. P75. F o r In f o rm a tio n c a ll 471-3567 a f te r p .m . p o w e r b ra k e s , 1967 C U TLA SS 442, s te e rin g , tr a n s m is ­ sion, a ir c o n d itio n e d , A M -FM , c ru is e r , a d ju s ta b le s te e rin g c o lu m n . $1275. 478- 8276. p o w e r a u to m a tic F e m a l e r o o m m a t e w a n t e d 1. L a r g e 2. L a r g e 2 b e d r o o m , $6 5. 3. B e d r o o m , b a t h , o n ly $ 5 2 . I b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t , $82 . t o s h a r e : E a c h p e r m o n t h . Ail bill* p a i d . S h u t t l e . p a r k i n g , m a i d , Pool, T H E C H A P A R R A L , 2 4 0 8 L e on , G R 6 - 3 4 6 7 . G R A D U A T E H O U S E h a s c ie s, o n e m a le , o n e tw o v a c a n ­ fe m a le . S h a re a p a r tm e n t w ith tw o . 472-4403. 476-3632. CLASSIFIED AD CALL GR 1-5244 M i s c e l l a n e o u s Z u n i N E L S O N ’S G IF T S ; c o m p le te s e le c tio n a n d M e x ic a n Im p o rts . 4612 S o u th C o n g re ss . 444-3814. je w e lr y ; A fric a n I n d ia n P A R K IN G : S E M E S T E R $50: m o n th ly $12.50. D ia g o n a lly a c r o s s S a n A ntonio r e a r o f V a rs ity T h e a tre . S tr e e t M c A d a m s P r o p e r tie s . 476-3720. fro m U S E D T U R N T A B L E S , p o rta b le s te r e o s b o u g h t a n d so ld . S e rv ic e on a ll m a k e s . M u sic R e p a ir S e rv ic e . 11706 S p rin g h ill D riv e V in c e n t P . F u n k . 836-0748. Z E N IT H T R A N S O c e a n ic ra d io . N ew R o y a l 7000. D is c o u n te d $85 b e c a u s e of s c r a tc h . S e e a t C e n tra l T e x a s Ap­ p lia n c e C o m p a n y , 904 N o rth L a m a r . 476-6076. C O V E R E D P A R K IN G . % b lo ck fro m C a m p u s. $15 p e r m o n th T h e C a s ti­ lia n , 2323 S a n A n to n io , 478-9811. R o o m g B o a r d U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C Y fo r m a le s tu d e n t. T h r e e m e a ls d a lly — M o n d ay th ro u g h F r id a y . A ir c o n d itio n e d . H ud so n H o u se . 2510 R io G ra n d e . 478-7650. H U N G E R P A I N S ’ G e t fa s t re lie f a t T h e C a s tilia n . W e’re now o ffe rin g v a ­ fo r S p rin g . 2323 rio u s m e a l c o n tr a c ts S a n A n tonio. 478-9811. 1722 E. W o o d w a r d 4 4 4 - 7 5 5 5 2291. 1970 H O N D A F O U R 750cc. O nly 1000 m ile s . P e r f e c t c o n d itio n . $1095. 476- e le c tr ic ity . 345-1322, 453-2178. L U X U R IO U S . Q U IE T C a s a R o sa . 4313 D u v a l. O r e b e d ro o m . $139.50 p lu s TO PLACE A TEXAN Just North of 27th & Guadalupe IflprtliA Au* 'fy/rfui, M .B .A T y p in g . M u ltlllth ln g , B in d in g r f The Complete Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Servi ce to ta ilo r e d t h e n e e d s of U n iv e rs ity s tu d e n ts . S p e c ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip m e n t fo r e n g in e e r­ sc ie n c e , in g la n g u a g e , a n d th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s . P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k M A L E , fe m a le s h a r e tw o b e d ro o m , tw o b a th a p a r tm e n t. $61.50- m on th. M aid s e rv ic e , fu rn is h e d , a ll b ills p a id . S tu d y a n d ro o m a n d p in g p o n g ta b le . L a F o n t. 803 W est 28th, 472-6480. r e c r e a tio n M A L E LAW o r g r a d u a te to s h a r e la r g e o ne b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t. s tu d e n t $70 p lu s e le c tr ic ity . 452-3189. N E E D F E M A L E F o u r p e rs o n s , le a s e . s e rv ic e , ro o m , S h u ttle . $55, b ills p a id . to pool, m a id ta k e o v e r s tu d y D e b b y , 477-1429. S h a re N E E D TW O tw o ro o m m a te s a p a r tm e n t R iv e rs id e a r e a . $52.50, b ills p a id . 472- 9859 a f te r five. F E M A L E b e d ro o m L A U R A B O D O U R — 478-8113 (C lo se to U .T .) T h e fin e st p e rs o n a l ty p in g of all M A L E : S H A R E la r g e o n e b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t n e a r C a m p u s . $80 m o n th . C all Bob. 478-2158 . a f t e r 5. M A L E . TW O B E D R O O M , tw o b a th . C o lo r TV , s a u n a . S h u ttle . R iv e rs id e . $60, b ills p a id . 442-7493 M A L E G R A D U A T E s tu d e n t n e e d e d to s h a r e la r g e tw o b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t. p a id . N o rth - E a s t A u stin . $85, F u r n is h e d . 451-2496 a f te r 5. b ills N E E D F E M A L E to s h a r e tw o b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t w ith th r e e o th e rs . $55. O n S h u ttle R o u te . 476-5814. ro o m G R A D U A T E F E M A L E s h a r e tw o b e d ­ $55 p iu s e le c tr ic ity S o u th A u stin . Q uiet. 444-0875 o r 478-4495. a p a r tm e n t. d u p le x N E E D M A L E ro o m m a te to s h a r e a p a r t ­ fro m U .T . C a m ­ m e n t. T w o b lo c k s p u s. $65. 472-6113. 474-2542. M A L E T O S H A R E fu rn is h e d tw o b e d ­ ro o m a p a r tm e n t. S h u ttle B us, c o lo r T V , pool. $65, b ills p a id . 444-0917. F E M A L E N E E D E D to s h a r e E s tr a d a $57.50, n o b ills. 444-1270 A p a rtm e n t o r c o m e by N o. 154. N E E D M A L E G R A D U A T E o r la w s tu ­ d e n t. H a v e th r e e b e d ro o m s tu d io la k e h o u se w ith b o a td o c k . 20 m in u te s fro m C a m p u s on L a k e A u stin , $85. C all 454- 1669, 442-4607. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d . O ne fro m S ta c y bednnom h o u se a c r o s s P a rk . $50. C all D ehhl. 444-3002. T y p i n g ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3018 T Y P E S E T T IN G . T Y P IN G , P R IN T IN G . B IN D IN G y o u r U n iv e rs ity w o rk . U n iq u e ly low ra te s . T h e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n s , r e p o r ts , etc. A lso m u ltlllth ln g A b in d in g . R e f e r e n c e s u p o n re q u e s t. i E X P E R T T h e s e s , fe s sio n a l M rs. T ullos, 453-5124. T Y P IS T . b rie fs , B .C . re p o rts . IB M r e p o r ts , S e le n id e . p ro - b in d in g . P r in tin g , I V IR G IN IA S C H N E ID E R T Y P IN G S E r I V IC E . G ra d u a te a n d U n d e r g r a d u a te ty p in g , p r in tin g , b in d in g . 1515 K o e n ig i L a n e . T e le p h o n e : 465-7205 Just North of 27th & Guadalupe w&riJiA Ain H .B .A f i T y p in g . M u ltllith in g . B in d in g Th© Complete Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Service to th e n e e d s o f U n iv e rs ity ta ilo r e d s tu d e n ts . S p e c ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip m e n t fo r a n d e n g in e e r- sc ie n c e , in g la n g u a g e , th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s . P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k R E A S O N A B L E ! E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IS T . FA ST . th e se s , d is s e rta tio n s . C o n v e n ie n tly lo c a te d . M rs. R o u n tre e , 444-0852 o r 442-1670. T h e m e s , s e c r e ta r y . T O P Q U A L IT Y T Y P IN G , f o r m e r le g a l d is s e r­ ta tio n s . S c ie n c e , e n g in e e r in g sy m b o ls. M rs. A n th o n y . 454-3079. th e s e s , B rie ls, E X P E R I E N C E D d is s e rta tio n s , T Y P IS T . etc. IB M T h e se s, e x e c u tiv e . C h a r le n e S ta rk . 453-5218. N O R T H W E S T . N E A R A lla n d a le . Y e a r s to h elp you. 465- ty p in g e x p e r ie n c e 5813. Just North of 27th & Guadalupe V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N T Y P IN G SE R V IC E P r o f e s s io n a l T y p in g AU F ie ld s M u ltlllth ln g a n d B in d in g on T h e s e s a n d D is s e r ta tio n s 1301 E d g e w o o d 478-2636 D E A D L I N E T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . Q u a lity -lo w r a te s . BC re p o rts , p a p e rs , s y m b o ls. 476-2047 b rie fs . A ll th e se s , a n y tim e . T H E M E S , R E P O R T S , le c tu r e n o te s. R e a s o n a b le . M rs. F r a s e r . 476-1317. E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IS T . 40 c e n ts p e r p a g e . F a s t s e r v ic e . 442-5693. R E P O R T S . T H E S E S . d is s e rta tio n s . R e a s o n a b le r a te s . M rs. T H E M E S , K n ig h t, 4011 S p e e d w a y . 453-1209. J . A N D I,. T y p in g S e rv ic e . A ll s e r v ic e s . S y m b o ls. R e a s o n a b le . A c c u r a te . W e t r y h a r d e r ! 452-7883, 454-1934. B O B B Y E D E L A F IE L D T Y P IN G S E R ­ V IC E. T h e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n s , re p o rts . M im e o g ra p h in g R e a s o n a b le H I 2-7184 ty w id u K M B A T y p in g . M u ltllith in g . B in d in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Service to ta ilo r e d th e n e e d s of U n iv e rs ity s tu d e n ts . S p e c ia l k e y b o a r d e q u ip m e n t fo r e n g in e e r­ sc ie n c e , in g la n g u a g e , a n d th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s . P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2-76T? 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing A U S-TEX D U P L IC A T O R S 476-7581 311 E. I I th B 0 4 R D O N L Y . $ 4 5 /m o n th , R a m s h o rn C o-op. 3!6 b lo c k s fro m C a m p u s. 710 W OODS S E R V IC E . N e a r C a m p u s. L a w . T h e s is. M rs. W oods, T Y P IN G W e s t 21st. 478-6586. 472-4825. M A R J O R IE A. D E L A F IE L D T y p in g t e n n b rie fs, S e rv ic e . T h e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n s , B C . p a p e r s , m u ltllith in g , bin d in g . 442-7008. re p o rts , Dictionary W ar Criticized At Calm SM C Rally Friday Miss Bolieu later said plans for the spring include rallies, m a r­ ches and soliciting the help of servicem en who a re against the w ar in Vietnam. She also said the exact dates for the spring offensives would not be known until after SMC’s national con­ ference, which m eets Feb. 19 to 21 in Washington, D.C. The closing remarks from Kahn w ere also a to action, call rem inding those present of the w ar in­ in Southeast Asia and viting them to bring a friend to the Monday meeting, “ We must organize ourselves to reach out to th e people who have real power,” Miss the Bolieu said. By MILES HAWTHORNE News Assistant About IOO people turned out for a Student Mobilization Committee antiwar rally on the West Mall a t noon Friday. High point of the gathering was a speech by Dr. Robert P alter, professor and history. philosophy of the war His address moved from a in critical view of the Nixon Southeast Asia and Administration’s “war by dic­ tionary” to a call to ‘‘swell these demonstrations again.” “The military and political leaders are dwelling In a fantasy world. Instead of bomb, they say interdict.” said Palter. “The U.S. incapable of winning Army (the war) sense of their winning,” he continued. in is last presidential them as HE RELATED his activities In election, the ‘‘working describing giving within the favorite contributions candidate, writing letters and voting. The result was disap­ pointment. system ” t to his The Young Democrats and Young R epublicans and sim ilar groups should be aw are of the “ stick and c a rro t” method, ac­ cording to P alter. The carro t is used to lead people along. the case of the present A dministration, the carro t is one ideologies, he of sem antics and said. “ The stick, however is a re a l stick. In “ It m ight be a good thing to swell these dem onstrations again, though w e’ve seen the lim itations they have,” he said. He called for students to “ join th e swelling num bers of us who a re looking for an alternative.” THE APPLAUSE was the first response from the otherwise quiet audience. P r e c e d i n g and following address were Dotty Patter's Bolieu and Brad Kahn, respec­ tively, both of SMC. of spoke Miss Bolieu the to last April’s Cam­ reaction urged invasion and bodian students to attend a planning session at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Texas Union Junior Ballroom for a “Spring Antiwar Offensive.” HOME OF DISTINCTIVE PARTIES BRUNCHES BUFFETS LUNCHEONS TEAS DINNERS AND COFFEES CALL 444-4747 ALL THE PIZZA YOU CAN EAT 11:30 - I P.M. M O NDAY - FRIDAY BEER NIGHT SPECIAL , $100 I ALL NIGHT PITCHERS PER PERSON M O NDAY NIGHTS ARRETED OURTEOUS PIZZA HUT 19th and Guadalupe 472-7511 6444 BU R N ET RD. 454-4141 ION REINLI (C ap ital Plaza) 454-2477 . . . ANOTHER SPECIAL THIS COUPON GOOD FOR . O O ° FF ON ANY LARGE PIZZA 1971 CACTUS BLUEBONNET BELLE NOMINATIONS ARE N O W BEING MADE. PICK UP AND RETURN NOMINATION BLANKS TO: •••• •••• •••« JOURNALISM BUILDING, ROO M 107. DEMAINE. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 12. 4:30 P.M. the CACTUS yearbook Sunday, January II, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11 Lion Ushers in Year of Boar San Franciscans and tourists watch a traditional Chinese lion prance around Union Square for Chinese New Year festivities. A big parade Saturday climaxed the celebrations and ring in the Year of the Boar. — U P I T elephoto, Chicano Course Draws IOO Seminar Explores History, Current Problems in A course recent chicano history a ttra c te d more than IOO U niversity students this semester- -shattering an original enrollment limitation of 25. Raymund P aredes, instructor of American Studios 370, feels the is the result of student reaction UT Commissions Lead N R O T C List total of 43 The U niversity’s com missioned Marine second lieutenants last y ear placed first among college and university Navy ROTC units in the nation. In second the University of North Carolina, with 30 new lieutenants. place w as E l e v e n lieutenants were the c o m m i s s i o n e d U niversity’s Navy ROTC unit. from other received U niversity T w e n t y rank their graduates the Officers Candidate through took the Course. E ight Texans Platoon L eaders Class route. Three others will be lieutenants the organized M arine Corps in com­ Reserve, and one was missioned the highly through competitive E nlisted Scientific Education ProgrLim. aw areness of and concern for the chicano problem . P ared e s’ course objectives are in chicano studying problem s investigating history from 1910, cu rren t en­ problem s couraging individual Involvement. is conducted as a The class sem inar with two sections. and said P ared es th e academ ic treatm en t of chicano problem s will be balanced by practical from sev eral Mexican- insight A m erican Youth Organization leaders in the class. He believes they will provide an enthusiastic stim ulus for the class, both in in­ discussion volvement. personal and Joaquin Rodriguez, MAYO secretary , said he registered for culture lack of the sem in ar to supplem ent the inform ation on present and Mexican-American to define his personal identity as a chicano. Although the students are the M exican-American, m any anglos are registered. Rodriguez said he thought the anglos enrolled out of and concern for th e chicano problem. the m ajority of intellectual curiosity course in Rodriguez said he was not expecting th e class to become Involved with the chicano com­ munity in Austin. He said the purpose of the course is to inform to provide a base rath e r for action. than P ared es expressed a desire to involvement, not as a inspire class but as individuals. Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle 44 Latin conjunction 46 Pronoun 48 Dress protector 51 The caama 53 Withered 57 Prefix: not Bo rrefhc down 60 Conjunction 62 Roman Catholic (abbr.) 64 Earth goddess 6 Grapple 7 Torrid 8 Kiln 9 Legal seal (abbr.) IO Gaseous hydrocarbon 12 Preposition 14 Mephistopheles 17 Hawaiian wreaths 20 Spoken 23 Exclamatios 24 Pronoun 25 Short jacket 27 Soft drink 30 Egg-shaped 32 Lampreys 35 Manifest 37 Keen 38 Strip of leather 39 Pens 41 Great Lake 43 Box ACROSS I Macaw 4 Prefix: 6 Entire l l Habit 13 Cooks bi oven 15 Man’s nickname 16 Er( dishes I S Exclamation 19 Note of scale 21 Matures 22 Conjunction 24 At this place 26 River islands 28 Tierra del Fuegan Indian 29 Muse of poetry 51 Plumlike fruit 33 Printer's measure 34 Affection 36 Paradise 38 Compass point 40 Part of church 42 Girl’s name 45 Prefix: three 47 Unit of Kalian - currency 49 Command to cat 50 Girl’s name 52 Plunges 54 Teutonic deity 55 Near 56 Scoffed 59 Symbol for tantalum 61 Individual 63 Astate 65 Odor 66 Compass point 67 Goal DOWN High card Part of boat Conjunction Unconsciousnes Greek letter D istr, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc, Z I PROGRESSIVE ROCK UNLEASHED! EVERY NIGHT! IS K98FM STEREO AFTER 9.00 PM s e e R e o Quickie-Trip To ^ L A R E D O 3 D A Y S - 2 N IT ES T R A N S P O R T A T IO N , HOTEL, M E A L S IN ROUTE, R E C E P T IO N , LEA VE FR ID A Y, 3 P.M. RETURN S U N D A Y , 9 P.M. D E P A R T U R E D ATES: FEB. 5, 12, 26 M A R C H 12, 19, 26 A P R IL 16, 23, 30 M A Y 14, 21, 28 D O U B LE O C C U P A N C Y [SKIM) GM ••• ••• ••• RENTSTEREOS RECORDERS SPEAKERS AMPLIFIERS F.M. RADIOS | RECEIVERS — TUNERS to RECORD CHANGERS Save 25% RENT BY SEMESTER Special Saving on Stereo System C o n ­ soles with Stereo FM We Give Yon Free 90 Day Option "O ' r r r ' , ‘ 2234 Guadalupe 476-3525 5134 Burnet Rd. 454-6731 W E SELL R E C O R D E R S 1.95 end uo AMSTER MUSIC I #.74 L A V A C A 478-7331 Goldie, Sellers Amusing Duo Provides Entertainment “ There’s a G irl in M y Sonp;” starring Goldie Hawn and Peter Sellers; by M .J. Frankovirh and John Boulting; directed by Ray Boulting; at the Fox. produced B y K R IST IN A P A R E D E S Amusements Associate “ Laugh-in’s” crazy, giggling blonde, Goldie Hawn, and Peter Sellers, the romantic but clumsy detective of “ The Pink Panther,’* join forces to make “ There’s a G irl in My Soup" an amusing little comedy. Robert Danvers (Sellers), a gourmet of “ telley” fame, specializes in wine, food and . . . women. English The first conquest we see is that of a bride. Actually it is not a “ conquest," but one last time for the two before she leaves on her honeymoon. AS D A N V ER S’ E Y E falls upon a guest at the bride’s mother murmurs, “ Lose It gracefully, darling.’* the wedding, of Danvers’ The next scene is done to the tune television program. At the end of the show on the bed. we hear Danvers’ closing comments on TV: “ A simple little menu that anyone could knock up at home.” Then Danvers meets Marion (Goldie Hawn). the Marion is an American girl who ropes. evidently knows Danvers meets her as she Is leaving a swinging party, an­ noyed with her boyfriend, Jim m y for bringing (N icky Henson), another girl in to live with them. M A R I O N A C C O M PA N IES Danvers to his apartment where she proceeds to laugh at and thwart his usual lines of seduc­ tion. Danvers ends up sleeping on the couch and then finds that he cannot get rid of her the next day. Marion moves out of Jim m y’s pad and into Danvers’ apartment. And then he finds he doesn’t wrant to do without her. Danvers takes Marion to France with him to participate in a wine-tasting festival. Besides getting drunk, Marion also manages to give everyone impression the Danvers are married. that she and Danvers goes along with the Joke and the two of them spend a few blissful weeks driving around the French countryside. T H EN D A N V ER S’ job takes them back to England where they are beseiged by photographers and newsmen who want the story on his “ marriage*1* After they have escaped the reporters, Marion tells Danvers that she is going back to Jim m y. The Don Juan is shattered (is he getting old?) and even asks her to m arry him. But after she leaves, the phone rings . . . ifs his boss’ French secretary and Danvers’ eyes light up. Miss Hawn’s performance Is quite good, and she is convincing in her role of a young American girl who is out for a good time, even if she finds that her heart still belongs in a wall-to-wall postered drummer's pad Instead of luxurious, T V star’s apartment. in a S E L L E R S P L A Y S the playboy in his usual style. But his trite funny because they lines are were meant to be trite. There's nothing in “ There's a G irl in M y Soup” that w ill place it on “ The IO Best L ist." But I don’t think it was intended to be. But for those of you who want a break from the deep, symbolic movies of relevant social com­ ment, soup’s on. 'Readers Theatre' Plans Performance “ Readers Theatre*’ w ill be the ox- Theatre Unlimited next for penmen! as it raises the curtain week with on George Bernard Shaw' s Don Juan In H ell” at 8 p.m. Wed- consecutive four nesday Marsha]] „ producer-director. ENDS TOMORROW S B T R A N S -A-T E X A S ■ 1423 W Bai W8 tt BM. — 442 233i fr o m C o n tin u ous S h o w in g 1:00 P .M . Producers Suspend All Passes A fftOOUCr? Of AMURCA* HAP ORM tWTMWllMl MC W T R A N S ic T E X A Smm N O W ! O PEN 2:15 Features; 2:30 - 5:15 * 8:00 Children 75c Any Time 200 Hancock D a v e —453 6641 “As dazzling a cavalcade as has ever been put on a screen!" — New sw eek M agazm » . T o r a ! . i S r a ! I R A N S ic T E X A S URNET "Oilskin 6400 Burnet Road — 465-6933- CH ILD (6 TO 12 W /P ) F R E E A D U LTS $1.50 % TE E N DISC. CARD $1.00 rn SN A C K BAR O P E N S 6 P.M. T m n m OF TIC M E OF M a r a s THE FORBIM PROJECT" IA IBWERSAl PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR* ^ ^ ■ F M A V lS lO r PSYCHO ANTHONY B E R K IN S V E R A M IL E S THOI TROPE.. HUMAN? ANIMAL? en MISSING UNK ? SKULLDUGGERY i urn* mal rcTuw ) TfWMIICOtO*® TECHNICOLOR® FROM WARNER BROS I .............. J * ’’™ CO - HIT r a U L IM EW M aiM a s C O O L H a i\ ID L U K E so>«, m ccm nm m z ptisai _ broo* amt hMbSruutRosmait ncHKsur rumm* now n n a mss tna un w TOE LOST MAN" O PEN 1:45 FEATU RES 2 - 4 - 6 - 9:40 (Sneak 8) (X) T H REESO M E (X) “FRU IT ILY B E A U T IF U L M O V IE !” —Vincent Canby, N.Y. Tim e* “OUTRAGEOUSLY K IN K Y M A ST E R P IE C E . O O !” —Andy Warhol “BO DY TO BODY IS TH E N AM E OF THE G A M E.” —WCtS-Mto lickerish Quartet? f THE NEW RADLEY METZGER MOVIE. IN EA STM AN COLOR. Distributed bv T X Audubon Films Starts W E D N E S D A Y ! Persons under ll not admitted “IN MY OPINION, THIS MOTION PIC T U R E IS A PROPHECY. IT SH O W S EXACTLY WHAT CO U LD HAPPEN. AND PEOPLE BETTER BE LIE V E IT.’* — T B en n ett, Toronto Telegram This is not o Religious Picture. Bul GOD Help Us Anyway! l\lo Blade Of Grass Metrc-GoMwyri Mayer presents NO BL/,DE 0 F G R A SS Starring Nigel Davenport Jean Wallace /Anthony May/Screenplay by Scan Forestal and Jefferson Pascal Produced and Directed by Cornel Wilde/Filmed in Par,avision* and Metrocotor MGM A< StfedCO at** — ac • I j Page 12 Sunday, January 31, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN SID N EY PORTIER “ I LOVE MY...W IFE" “ I LOVE MY...WIFE" B O X O F F I C E O P E N 8:30 — S H O W S T A R T S 7:04 STUDIO IV 472-0436 222 EAST 6th O PEN 12 N O O N PRIVATE ADULT MOVIE CLUB 3 H O U RS OF SIZZLING 16mm C O LO R M OVIES THAT LEAVE NO DOUBT ABOUT THE N EW FREEDOM OF THE FILMS. X X X RATED MOVIES - ESCORTED LADIES FREE 'PREVIEW TONIGHT! PARAMOUNT 8:20 — STATE 7:50 W H A T H A P P E N S W H E N A N ENTIRE T O W N STO PS S M O K IN G FO R TH IRTY DAYS. D IC K V A N DYKE — BOB N E W H A R T INTERSTATE NOW! THEATRE F E A T .: 1 :40 - 3:20 6:00 - 6:40 - 10:00 (SN EA K 8 :20) Behind every "successful" m an is an understanding w om an ...or tw o ...or three! w ELLIOTT GOULD "I LOVE MY...WIFE” IN A DAVID L. WOLPER Production A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR* (Rj<£» FREE PARKING INTERSTATE HELD OVER! STATE DOWNTOWN 719 CONGRtSS THEATRE F E A T I B E S : 2:20 4:15 - 6:05 9:40 (Sneak 7:50) Little Fauss and Big Halsy are not your fathers heroes. MAMON rcxm t W M BOBCAT BEDFORD (TWH A ll J. POLLARD R LUTU FAUSS AHD BIO HALBY AN ALOUT L HUDDY PRODUCTION :V / W : Hm,i I. (^AVISION • Co s bv MOWLA* A PARAMOUNT PICI J# FREE PARKING INTERSTATE VARSITY 1402 G U A D A l U P f THEATRE • F E A T U R E S • 3 - 4 - 6 - 3 - 1 0 NOW! Barbra Streisand George Sega) The Owl and rthe Pussycat S P S S o ParJ.tson Coof I ^2 ( HELD OVER! TH I FA N T A STIC W E E K THEATRE ••BAI E B S ” 3:02 - 6:30 - 9:57 ‘ T O W N E B S ” 1:15 - 4 43 - 8:11 —AM c*-*? JACK JBO —new TTI SA T LEMMON DBMS THEOUT-g-nWMHBl SII I/ 1 WI/* af ii* 6 rn On IOT1* IS I IN Va ADJACINT TO THI ATRI o m s INTERSTATE DOORS OPEN I -.OO AUSTIN 1110 SO CONGRESS tam tm aam a am ft ta gat tm »at t att TfCHHKOtOfi * i PARAMOUNTPtCTURf FREETARKlNGvAT ALL TIMES Play It Like It Is The King's IV combo will join the University J a n Ensemble Sunday For a 4 p.m. per­ formance in Hogg Auditorium. Admission is Free. Jazz Guest Group The King's IV , a combo which plays six nights a week in an Austin night club, w ill play a guest spot with the University Jazz Ensemble at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hogg Auditorium. Admission is free. The four-man group, all of whom are University students, w ill play some original m aterial by Mike written Stevens, who plays piano and organ. prim arily The King’s TV was formed about eight years ago when Stevens, B ill West, drummer; Ike Ram irez, trumpet and a bass player got together as students at Baylor University in Waco. Numerous engagements in Austin caused the group to transfer its Jon home base here, where M clver joined up as string bass, replacing the one who was drafted. continue television. The combo has appeared In throughout Texas large clubs and has made two appearances Its on educational to members take classes; Stevens is a doctoral is a student senior in government; Ramirez is majoring in business; and M clver, who also is the regular bassist with tile University Jazz Ensemble, is a junior in radio- teievision-film. in music; West Also appearing with the en­ semble w ill be regular vocalist new J M arilyn Byrd, in a arrangement of Burt Ba chara cb’s “ Make It Easy on Yourself,” as well as Brian Taylor, flutist making his fit's! solo appearance with the ensemble. A freshman majoring in music education, has won Taylor numerous awards In the last few years, including first place in a concerto competition last spring sponsored by the U niversity. He was principal piccolo with the All-State Symphony three years and was named Out- s t a n d i n g Musician at the Brownwood Stage Band Festival last year. for p i AN n s c th ea tr; FOX Theatre 6757 AIRPORT BLVD. • 4 5 4 - 2 7 1 1 O PEN 12:00 HELD O VER! 5th Great W eek! M’cim M*«nm ^ ■ G o o d ! Charter Flights For Student Group* and UT Faculty HOUSTON TO LONDON ROUND TRIP *2 7 0 °° Call Euro-American Dimension, Inc. PH. Gene Faclder 452-8458 The cast of local players w ill consist of Joe B ill Hogan, the D evil; Nan Elkins, Ana; Dick Giesecke, the Statue; and M ar­ shall stepping in to read the title role. the new The production is a challenge dinner-theater t o organization. M arshall describes the plot; “ Don Juan goes to hell and finds out it Is not his cup of tea. He is trying to find a way out by attempting to make the devil see that his place is in heaven-where it isn’t quite so dun!” Readers Theatre w ill be a regular Wednesday night feature with adult at $1.50, children 75 cents. F o r further Information reservations and telephone 478-6479. tickets B B B B B B B B B B B B RITZ In F U L L C O L O R THEATRE • J Three Hours of 16mm Adult Movies! w 1 hr, w ith So u n d • A Y ou M u st B e 18 Y e a r * Old A J Open at Noon ^ • Admission $2.00 J W Q Private Movie Club • r n W 320 E . 6th S t. P hone 478-0475 0 • R a te d X ” W • • • • • • • • • • D D PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRI ST KIS Aii Mac6raw * Ryan O'Neal A LL SEATS $1.00 U NTIL 1:30 E X C E P T S U N D A Y S Management Does Not Recommend for Children — SC REEN IN G AT — 12:30-2:25-4:20-6:15-8:10-10:05 CAPITAL PLA ZA N O . INTERREGIONAL MWY. mc A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION I I PETER SELLERS I GOLDIE HAWN M JX a tS a tfjn ! I U M fSe tg ) I C O I,O B F r o m C o lu m b ia R This time.. they've really gone p , 2 o PANAVISKT Color by PANAVISKT Color by OE LUXE’ Beyond *■ * the Valley of the Dolls n « i b ( x S H O W T O W N C O -FEATU RE SO U T H SID E C O -FEATU RE B O X O F F I C E O P E N 8:30 — S H O W S I A . . . 7:00 20th Century Fox presents HARD , . CONTRACT PANAVISION* COLOR by Deluxe TW IN SOUTH SID E 710 I Ben White 1296 UUD F O R G I V E S . . . T H E B U C K A N G E L S D O N T ! Brutally Clashing Head on in a Fury of Blood and Burning Rubber! COLOR ev uo. if i *8 P L I S — CO - F E A T U R E , r f' f / iG -i •A.Ji fla tte n HDGBLS T H E Y L I V E P L U S — C O - F E A T U R E V , Surprise I Lift The Toilet Seat as if it were the nest of a bird and I see cat tracks all around the edge of the howl Richard Brautigan M Y R E THI x Y H I k I U l l IV AU D b l DK I? ONES! UNION BALLROOM 8:00P.M. T U E S .-F E B 2 Co-sponsored by Cinema 40 & Eng. Dept. Ll, Play Defines Order One of Shakespeare’s great history plays, “Richard II,” will be produced b y the department of drama Feb. 15 through 20 in Hogg Auditorium. Jam es Moll, who directed “ Hamlet” at the the University director. last season, is “Richard II,” the twenty-fifth yearly Shakespearean play by the d e p a r t m e n t , describes the usurpation of King Richard II by Henry Bolingbroke, father of Henry V. George Stratton will portray King Richard, and Perry Silvey will be in the role Bolingbroke. John Sucke will appear as Gaunt, Alton Curb as North- timberland, Bruce McGill as York, John Berwick as Aumerle and P a t Spears as Mowbray. Harryetta Warren will play the 'Richard ll' Queen, Pamela Pugh and Janice Miles will alternate the Duchess of Gloucester, and Mona Fultz will portray the Duchess of York. as POLITICALLY. THE PLAY represents a struggle between an old and a new order. At issue is the principle of divine right of kingship. The dram a is strengthened by the fact that the advocate of the old is weak and the new, strong. to the line see his Bolingbroke was first successful usurper since William the Conqueror, but he did not live safely established. At the end of the play, Henry finds himself in the same position as Richard w as- confronted by rebels, but without the support of the kingship prin­ ciple. Film Deadline Near For Contest Entries ex who draws the comic strip “Buz Sawyer.” the In his recipient letter of endowment, Crane said, “It’s my wish that c r e a t i v e o u t s t a n d i n g scholarship, achievement, not should be considered in deter- or m i n i n g recipients. It is intended to en­ courage originality and creativity rather than pedantic excellence.” Judges will be Russell Lee, lecturer In photography; Robert Schenkkan, professor of radio- television-film and director of the Communication Center; Rod Whitaker, associate professor of and Dr. radio-television-film, Stanley T. Donner, professor and chairman of the Department of Radio-Television-Film. wmmrnm MHT Challenge Film Schedule The following film® will be shown on the days preceding the | I opening of Challenge ’71. The films are free to Challenge regis­ trants. General admission is 55 cents for University students and $1 for others. MONDAY Spartan!* Academic Center 21 5:45, 9:00 p.m. A Man For A H Seasons Union Theater 4:15, 6:30 & 8:45 p.m. TUESDAY Mein Kampf Academic Center 21 4:45, 7:00 & 9:15 p.m. A Man For All Seasons Union Theater 4:15, 6:30 & 8:45 p.m. WEDNESDAY A Man For AU Seasons Union Theater 4:15 p.m. Milk.:, . n m Musical Melodrama Tickets Go on Sale Tickets go on sale Monday for “Rags to Riches,” a musical for school-age children produced by the Department of Drama. The play will run the first three weekends of February the Dram a Building Theater Room. in and $1 Admission is 50 cents for children adults. Reservations m ay be m ade by telephoning the University Box Office, 471-1444, between 9 a.m. for and 4 p.m. Monday Friday. through The first weekend show times are 4:30 p.m. Friday, 1:30 p.m. Saturday and 1:30 p.m. Sunday. The second weekend, Feb. 12 to 14, as well as the third weekend, Feb. 19 to 21, will observe a s l i g h t l y different schedule: Friday at*8 p.m .; Saturday at 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m .; and Sunday at 1:30 p.m. The Center for Asian Studies WHEN PLACED IN the context of Shakespeare’s history plays, “Richard II” appears as a kind of prelude or beginning of eight plays that follow a sequence. The eight can be seen as two cycles- four on the rise of the House of Lancaster II,” “ Henry IV, Parts I and 2,” and “ Henry V” ) and four on its fall (three parts of “Henry VI” and “ Richard III” ) (“Richard The historical sequence can be summarized as: order main­ tained by the principle of divine kingship; order interrupted and resultant consequences; order restored. Order was of particular importance to the Elizabethans, whereas the notion of liberty was somewhat in­ beyond tellectual grasp. their “ Richard II” has been called Shakespeare’s “great political passion play,” in which a parallel can be drawn to the Passion of the Gospel story. is J . DOVER WILSON wrote further: “ ‘The Tragedie of King Richard the the Second’ tragedy of kingship. It depicts in moving pageant and in figured, colored and flowing verse the agony and death of a sacrificial victim in the person of the lo r d ’s anointed—of a semi-divine being, as all kings appeared in those days, slain upon the a lta r . . . a great dram atic ritual.” Advance sale of tickets for the production will begin Feb. 8 at the University Box Office in Hogg Auditorium. Admission is $2 for the general public and $1.50 for facultyt staff and students. All seats are reserved. time C u r t a i n each production is 8 p.m. The box office opens one hour before the play begins. for 4 0 p resen ts Clc i n e m a "THE TRIAL" directed by Orion Welle* TONITE-SUN. JESTER AUD. 7:30 & 9:30 ADM. 75c NELSON'S GIFTS 4612 So. CONGRESS Phone: 444-3814 • ZUNI INDIAN JEWELRY • AFRICAN & M EXICA N IMPORTS OPEN IO a.m. to 6 p.m. “ GIFT’S THAT INCREASE IN VALUE” C^inematexaS S p r in g presents TUESDAY, FEB. 2 Gene Autry in “BELLS OF CAPI STR A N O ’1 and Lath Larue in “KIN G OF THE BULLWHIP” THURSDAY, FEB. 3 FRIDAY, FEB. 5 G eorge, Franju’e ' JUDEX Arthur Robison', “W A RN IN G SH ADO W S” JESTER CENTER AUDITORIUM ADM . 75c 6:30 & 9:00 P.M. SEASO N TICKET $7.00 presents MICK JAGGERS T A N T R A and LOUIS MALLE S CALCUTTA “City o f the D rea d fu l N ig h t ” BATTS HALL TUESDAY and W EDNESDAY FEBRUARY 2 and 3 7:00 P.M. 75c D EA D L IN E : Student film makers at a Feb. the University have 19 their deadline entries in competition for the 1971 Roy Crane Award in the Arts. submitting for The contest is limited this year to and films. Undergraduate graduate students may enter works in either Super 8 or 16 millimeter film, of any length of two minutes or more. To the annual Roy Crane the Southwest Award of $400, Creative Film Center this year is adding another $400, giving this year’s winner or winners $800 in cash. The winner also will be eligible for an additional award of $1,000 to be used in making another film for the Southwest Creative Film Center. The center was established at the University with a grant from the Corporation Public Broadcasting to encourage young film m akers in­ novative works. to produce for Entries in the contest for the Roy Crane Award in the Arts should be submitted before 4 p.m. Feb. 19 in Academic Center 17. The winner or winners will be announced on Honors Day, March 27. T h # award was established by Roy Crane, Texas- annua! Viewing Tonight event, and Sunday should be one of those rare "good viewing” days in television land, beginning at I p.m. with tile launching of Apollo 14. AR three networks will cover the programming will be pre-empted. "A Bad Case of Shakespeare” will be shown on channels 6 and 42. The program, an unusual blend of spoof and profile, la part of NBC’s “Ex­ periment In Television” series. At 4 p.m., all regular Additional Viewing i I t m . A 7. IO Lassie • 'JO p.m . 4. 43 D isney < IS Wild Kingdom 5, IO H ogan’* Heroe* 7 Bewitched T p .m . 13 T he FBI 5. 7, IO Ed Sullivan 7:80 P.m. 4. 43 Bill Colby I p.m . 4, 43 Bonanza 5. 7, IO Glen Campbell 9 "The F irst Churchills" 13 Movie — "Companions Nightm are" I p m 4, 43 The Bold Ones 6. IO The Honeymooner* 7 Marcus Welby, M.D. 9 "Orpheus, Then and Now’ In U ' * rn. All Channels News i. All i.m. 4 Johnny Carson p.m. . 7 The F B I 13 Mo via — "Hold Back The Dawn” .. 43 Movie — “ Midnight L ace* . . . 10:45 p.m. 5 Merv Griffin l l P .m . 9 D. W. Griffith n im s 11:80 p.m. 7 Movla — "The Maverick Queen" LIBERA LIBERES IN Q U IR E A T BO O K STALL ll 1812 L A V A C A GUITARS 1 5 % OFF OUK ENTIRE INVEN TO RY O N E M O N T H O N LY AMSTER M U SIC 1424 L A V A C A 478.7321 HAWAII SUMMER SESSION WITH HOWARD TOURS ORIGINAL STUDY TOUR In th* PACIFIC Cam co lle n credits while enjoying summer In beautiful Hawaii with tha nationally famous Howard Tour*. 22nd annual year. Enroll at University of Haweli Minoa Campus or In tha San Francisco Stat* Coital* c la m s at Waikiki where you choose pass/fall or alphabetical grades. With us you “live" In Hawaii, not just see It-you person­ ally enjoy the very best of Island fun, not Just read about It. Price includes Jet roundtrip from West Coast, Waikiki Kotel-apartment with daily maid serv­ ice, and most diversified schedule of dinners, parties, shows, sightseeing, cruises, beach activities, cultural events, ate. APPlfi HOWARD TOURS, INC.; I l l •rani An.t Oakland, California 94610 Nonconforming Arf By MEL PRATHER Amusements Staff Elisabet Ney A rt Museum, which is becoming known for presenting new ideas in art, is currently featuring the work of a multi-medium artist with dif­ ferent moods of expression. Theatre Unlimited Try-outs Planned P a rt casting for two shows on the “ Plays for Living” schedule will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday a t Theatre Unlimited, 15th and Waller Streets. The plays, written around current sociological problems, are under the auspices of Austin Child and Fam ily Service, a United Fund Agency. Actors will be paid for each performance before P-TA’s, churches and service club groups. “The Man Nobody Saw,” requires two young black men and a woman in their 20’s, and two white men and a woman in their early 30’s. “ War of Words,” needs a young woman to play a baby sitter, and a m an and woman of any ethnic group to play the parents of two sm all children. F o r further Information call 478-6479. M r s . Sally Griffith, the exhibitor, is showing her different pictures done in oils, acrylics, photo-collages, d r a w i n g s , enamels, monoprints, blueprints, photostats and Xeroxs. Though some of these mediums are still art world, Mrs. new to uses them with G r i f f i t h professional ease and skillful assurance. the Her work, which ranges from the abstract to the semi-abstract, represents a variety of different styles the medium. also parallel that Not wanting to conform to any trend, Mrs. Griffith has let her imagination be the guide and has p r o d u c e d m a n y n e o - impressionistlc pictures that are original and uniquely her own. Collages, which ar# still fairly recent in Austin a r t c i r c l e s , ar# used frequently by this style- setting artist. Using the black and whita color medium, Mrs. Griffith presorts a well-balanced picture of smooth flowing Intricate thought and detail. Her work, which has b e e n exhibited in Austin a t the Ney Museum is becoming accepted for its new appeal different use of and mediums and exprssion. fall, this last Having studied art at Iowa State University, the University of Houston and the Institute de San Miguel de Allende, she did the post-graduate work University. a t 0URTE0US ONE GOOD THING ABOUT MONDAYS? BEER NIGHT A T T H E PIZZA HUT & BACK t 0h fe HUT PITCHER OF BEER $1.00 ALL N IG H T M O N D A Y N IG H T 19th & GUADALUPE 472-7511 IN CONCERT ( L O N G A W A IT ED RETURN E N G A G E M E N T ) SIR DOUGLAS QUINTET Z Z TO PS W ILDFIRE ROYAL JESTERS FEB. 6th • B . . . i . j Presented by JAH PRODUCTIONS S A N A N T O N IO M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M Reserved Sash: Floor $4.00 — Balcony $3.00 (P R E V IEW IN G THEIR N A T IO N A L A L B U M ) Tickets Available la An attal SATURDAY • • ».*; 7:30 P.M. (F R O M C A L IF O R N IA ) on Blo Graado Si. »*?*• . . . . st • Nomination Blanks For THE 1971 CACTUS TEACHING EXCELLENCE AWARDS MONDAY, FEB. 8, 1971 RETURN TO: JOURNALISM 3 ROOM 107 The Cactus Teaching Excellence Awards shall glv# recognition tach year to University fac­ ulty members, teaching assistants, and associates who have shown excellence in their respec­ tive teaching fields. Nominees must have taught classes at The University of Texas at Austin for a minimum of two (2) years (including the present academic year) at the time of their nomination. Any student or registered student organization may nominate. NOMINEE'S N A M E ............................................................................................ DEPARTMENT .................................................................................................. CLASS(ES) TAU G H T THIS SEMESTER .................................................................... (including name and number) COURSES TAU G HT IN PREVIOUS SEMESTERS & DATE (that you know o f ) .................. PLEASE WRITE A PERSONAL EVALUATION OF THE NOMINEE'S A C A D E M IC AND PRO­ FESSIONAL ACTIVITIES, W O R K W ITH STUDENTS, A N D W H A T SPECIFICALLY MAKES THE N O M IN EE A N EXCELLENT TEACHER. Name of Registered Student Organization (rf nominated by such) Name of Student filling out this form Sunday, January 31, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 13 \ FOUR JUMBO SHRIMP, CRISP FRENCH FRIES TOSSED SALAD TEXAS TOAST TOWER— R E S T A U R A N T 2809 San Jacinto SPECIAL LOW PRICES # Schlitx & Bud Draft 1.25 pitcher # Regular 2.00 "Hurricane" (includes souvenir glass) 1.50 # Regular 1.50 "Squall" (with glass) 1.00 # Regular 1.00 W ine Coolers (with glass) 75c 12th ft Red River Open 8:30 PM 478-0292 BW — — — — WHI Board Moves Building Site D ALIAS (Spl.) — Iii action by the Board of R egents F riday, the the previously designated site for a proposed new building a t U niversity a t Austin was changed. T he board approved a recom m endation from th e Austin and S ystem adm inistrations that a G raduate School of Business Building be placed on the present location of P earce Hall, one of the cam pus’ oldest building (constructed in 1908), which served for m any years as home of the law school. P earce Hall currently houses a variety of offices and classrooms. The graduate business building originally w as destined for 21st and Speedway streets. By moving to the P earce Hall location, the building for the G raduate School of Business will be im m ediately adjacent to the Business- Econom ics Building. The regents’ action leaves open the 21st and Speedway site as a possible location for another proposed structure, a new G eneral L ibrary Building. At its Dec. 4 meeting, the regents earm arked an are a on Speedway currently occupied by the Radio-Television Building a s the future site for the general library. Subsequent studies have indicated, however, th a t that particu lar site “ is probably not la rg e enough to contain the 400,000 sq uare feet of space which undoubtedly will be necessary for the new general lib ra ry ,” according to P resident Ad Interim B ryce Jordan. F inal site selection for the lib rary will be m ade a t a la te r tim e. In other action related to the Austin cam pus, th e Board of R egents: • Approved a recom m endation by D r. B ryce Jordan, president ad interim of UT a t Austin, setting M ay 22 as th e dedication d ate for the Lyndon Baines Johnson P residential L ibrary. P resident Jordan Binil!l!!lll!llllll!lllll||!!ll||!l(lllJJ||ll||||llltl)ll!lll!ll!ll|IIIIIIIIIIJIMI!llS B!llHllllltlUIIIHIIIIII!inHIIIUIHlllum)lwni:iHimm>llimiin!IWIII!BllllHn!HHmiHIH>[llllin told the B oard that plans for the dedication a re under way. • R atified the aw ard of a construction contract of $7,950,000 to the B. L. McGee Construction Co. of Austin for the Communication Building and Texas Student Publications Building, and appropriated $9,950,000 to cover the construction contract, furniture and furnishings and m iscellaneous fees and expenses for the project. • R atified the aw ard of contracts totaling $204,858.39 for fur­ nishings and furniture for E a st Campus R esearch L ibrary Project. The various aw ards w ent to the D allas Office Supply Co., the Wilson Stationery an d Printing Company of Houston, Stew art Office Supply Co. of D allas and A m erican Desk M anufacturing Co. of Temple. • Accepted an annual interest gran t from the U.S. D epartm ent of Health, E ducation and W elfare for a proposed Engineering Teach­ ing Center I. The g ran t is for an annual am ount of $135,000 for a period of 30 y ears or a total of $4,050,240. The federal grant will be used to pay the excess of in terest over a 3 percent ra te charged on bonds allocated to construct the new $8 million building. • A warded a construction contract to the J. C. E vans Construction Co. of Austin for a landscaping project p rim arily along the west side of the Austin cam pus. The project, which involves retaining walls, landscaping, additional lighting and sidew alks, will extend along the north side of 21st Street from W ichita to G uadalupe streets, along the e a st side of G uadalupe from 21st to 24th streets and along the south side of 24th from G uadalupe to Whitis. • Authorized the Office of F acilities Planning and Construction and the C enter for P lasm a Physics and T herm onuclear Research to conduct a feasibility study of constructing a m ajor fusion research facility a t th e U niversity’s Balcones R esearch Center, at the northw est boundary of the Austin city lim its. ACAPULCO.. ACAPULCO.. ACAPULCO.. .ACAPULCO ... ACAPULCO '71 ADVENTURES SPRING BREAK • APR. 2 - 8 FROM $149 OO THIS LOW PRICE INCLUDES: ‘ ROUND TRIP JET AIRFARE , . j * Round Trip Transfers From j j , , . ‘ SIX NIGHTS HOTEL ACCOMODATIONS Acapulco A irport To Your H otel * p , , . Admissions To * Yacht Cruise Around Acapulco Bay Acapulco W ith Open Bar and Mariachis Nightclubs i i lamnimiwiniinniiBifltffliBnnnnfUinintmiimiimimiitinniininnfiiiniHifnniijmimftnimniiimni'mimmnnmrrnnimjiiifmnininmnmnrnnnmnitnniiiiiflmni BRRniF=f= 111 T E Ft H H TIO HRL. Campus News in Brief Cambodians 'Broaden Army Exclusively for the University of Texas students, educational staff, and m em bers of the Im mediate families. Income to the c h artere r In excess of the carrier’s charter price plus administrative expenses will be refunded pro rata to th# charter passengers. Air $97 R /T SAT-ACA LAND $48 Administrative Expenses $4 the 284th B attalion. They a re between the ages of 16 and 23. A few, like Ouch Keo Mony, a re m arried, but none have children. She and h e r husband, who both have the ra n k of private, earn about $31 a month. Ouch Keo Mony is one of 24 children, 13 of whom died in infancy. She is m ore than m ost Cambodian educated soldiers, “ I have also been trained as a nurse — for I can give in­ jections and I am very proud of th a t,” she said. Beyond that, however, she , knows nothing of a m edic's life. She has never seen the faces of m en in pain o r the corpses that lie on the roads or a re stacked in trucks to be sent to Phnom Penh. For Inform ation W rite: Bill W e s t — C h a rte r D irector Acapulco Adventures '71 P. O. Box 12512 Austin. Texas 78711 or contact agent: VW Adventures, Inc. 2323 San A nton io St. C as tilia n Lobby Austin, Texas 78705 4 7 8 -4 7 0 0 SPACE LIMITED! - SIGN UP NOW! ADULT PROGRAM O F ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH will m eet at G regg House, 209 W. 27th St., Sunday to h ea r C harles Alan W right and T. M cCormick, C h a r l e s law, speak and professors of answ er questions on recent taking place a t developm ents the U niversity. The m eeting is scheduled for IO a.m . A IESEC will m eet a t 7 p.m . M onday at 717 W. 22nd. St. to discuss solicitation plans. CAPITOL CAMERA CLUB will m eet a t 7:30 p.m. M onday in the City Health D epartm ent Auditorium, 793 E. 14th St., to prom ote photography. has CHOIR will m eet a t 7:30 p.m . M onday in Hillel Building, 2105 San Antonio St. COMMUNICATIONS JOB PLACEMENT resum e form s, schedules of com panies this interviewing on cam pas spring, l i s t s supplem ental specifying w hat m a jo rs certain com panies in Business Econom ics Building 134 o r Journalism Building 106. GAMMA DELTA EPSILON will seeking, a re m eet a t 4 p.m. Sunday in Dobie Conference Room. INTER VARSITY will m eet at 9 a.m . Monday in Union Building 325 for a sem inar. M ark P a t­ terson will speak on “ Is Christ the Only W ay?” LAW LIBRARY will be open around the clock beginning a t IO p.m. Sunday and continuing through m idnight on F ridays. The Saturday schedule is 8 a r n . to IO p.m . The library will be c l o s e d between midnight F ridays and 8 a.m . Saturdays, and from IO p.m . S aturdays to IO p.m. Sundays. ROUND EARTH SOCIETY will m eet a t 8 p.m . Monday in A rchitecture Building 105. Dr. Corwin W. Johnson will speak on “ Legal Protection of E n ­ vironm ent.” in to discuss S T U D E N T MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE will m eet at 7:30 the Junior p.m. Monday Ballroom spring antiw ar actions. They a re also m e e t i n g Sunday th e A cadem ic Center Auditorium to show “ G ullivers T ravels” and “ Davy C rockett.” in (c) 1971New York Tim es News Service PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Ouch Keo Mony, a sm iling and the plum p 18-year-old girl Cambodian Army, has alm ost completed her basic six weeks training a grenade for the first tim e. and h as throw n in An infantrym an in Cam bodia’s rapidly growing arm y — now believed to num ber m ore than 165,000, although no one can be su re — Ouch Keo Mony is a t K am Baul, Cambodia’s largest training center, south of Phnom P enh on Route 4, a 30-minute drive from the capital. to craw l joined training T here a re no records of how the m any women have arm y. T heir basic is sim ilar to w hat the m ale recruit learns. Ouch Keo Mony now through knows how barbed w ire with a Chinese-made recoilless from heights, to m arch in step with a drill instructor shouting “one, two, one, tw o,” and she h as even fired her rifle several tim es. H er weapon, however, Is not loaded because enough is not th ere am m unition in the camp. jum p rifle, to “ I L IK E the life of a soldier — it is a good one,” she said. “ I joined the a rm y just after I w as m arried, when my husband did. He w as pleased drat I did, too — we have the sam e ideas. We detest th e Viet Cong and we see how they a re trying to steal our country tom us. Well, w e are going to squash th e m .” Ouch Keo Mony speaks with em otion and feels im portant. The w ar in Cam bodia and h e r new j role as a soldier have provided w hat her life probably always i la ck e d : a feeling of excitem ent. Women a t the K am Baul I training center a re not shown leniency, nor do they have special privileges, according to officers. They a re “ serious, consiered eager to le a rn and disciplined.” “ They don’t com plain,” Sgt. Pheng Seang K im said, when asked. do MALE SOLDIERS not snicker a t the sight of a squad of women m arching, even if some of them tend to w addle a little bit and if th eir trousers seem a little tight across the hips. T here a re 17 women the F irs t and Second Companies of in W hat? A World Famous Restaurant Giving A 10% Discount To University Students That’s Right! W e A t McDonalds A r e Aware That The University Student Has Limited Funds, So W e Decided To Help Out. It May N o t Sound 7 o W here They W ere T w o Years Ago. You Thought W e Gave Change Back Before, T ry Us Now! All ILre Ask Of You Is That You Show Like Much But It Does Bring Our Prices D ow n Your Student LD. Before Ring Up The Sale. So Take A Break And We'll See You Soon. Your Friendly McDonalds. Brittons 2 PRICE SALE SPORT SUITS COATS DRESS SLACKS Reg. $80 — J I J J Reg. $ 3 0 — $ 9 ) OFF 2 OFF S i OFF KNITS I I S T E G A L G RO U P OF K N I T SHIRTS $8 — $1S 2 OFF HE A T Y COATS & JACKETS Reg. $40 — $80 / 2 OFF ON ALL WOOL SHIR TS DRESS SHIR TS Reg. $9 — $ 1 6 LEATHER & SUEDE COATS Reg. $ 9 0 — $ 1 5 ) OFF SWEATERS Reg. S14-S3J I N CA RD IG AN S, CREWS, V-NECKS & COLLARED STYLES. N O W / J OFF 2 OFF V2 OFF tflHKAMEMCMI ALL SALES FINAL Uritfon$ 'McDonald’s LJ LU Page JL4 Sunday January 31, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN OFFER G O O D O N L Y A T THE 2818 GUADALUPE LO CATIO N. O N THE DRAG . . . 2346 GUADALUPE . . . GR 8-3411